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Office Phene 8, ResldencePhone 268, H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Office at A. R. Guyton’s Livery Barn. 25 tf Colorado Springs Denver Ly Much has been said and writ- ten about Colorado’s beauty, but no words or pen can ever make you realize fully its mag-. nificence. You have to go ‘, there—see the grandeur of its ‘ mountains—feel the bracing cli- mate—enjoy yourself in pas- h times characteristic of this American Switzerland; riding, driving along roads that run over the crest of lofty moun- tains—through forest covered ‘ valleys. Besides you have ten- nis, golf, baseball—any of the outdoor sports you're used to at home. Bathing places, fam- ous for the medicinal quality of their waters—beautiful parks, in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, where bands play, the latest “‘wrinkle”’ in amuse- ment features is found. ‘ The is the industrial side of the state, too—enormous steel works—smelters, etc. Visit Colorado this summer. Don’t hesitate for fear it will cost you TOO much, and when you go, travel via MISSOURI 1 =| PACIFIC “The Highway to the Heights” ER A train service complete in every particular. Ask for information regard- ing rates—the best time to go— and what it will cost. We are thoroughly posted on these mat- ters and will be glad to advise i you. MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN E. C. Vandervoort, Agt Butler, Mo. Frank P. Prosser, D.P.A Jopiin, Mo. | No, 206 Kansas City Accommodation Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, toe Connty of Bates, In the Circuit Court, Fetenary term, 112, in vacation Augast 25, 1911. 8. R. Forbes, Plaintiff? ve. David Norris, if living and if ¢ ceased then the unknown consort, heirs dtvieees, a jen- ; @ 8 orimmediate mesne emy ¢vo'on ary or involantary grantees of ai:! Uavid N: rris, decensed; Green E. Story, if living nad it de- Ceased, shen the unknown -consort, helre, devisees, doners, alfenees, vr immediate, Meene, or remote voluntary or involun- ey grantees of said Green E 3.or,, decessed, Def-nden 6 Now at this day comes the plaintif herein, d ules his petition under that the bell ves there are persons interesied in the sutject matter of hi: pe ition whose names he can not insert therein, because they ar- to him uuknown That eal ' unknown defen the unknown coneort,-heirs, devisees, or immediate, wesne or remote, voluntary or juvoluntary grantees o' eaid deiendant, Da id Norrie, it he ia deceased, and derive their in- terest {n ‘he eubject watter of hie vetition by inheritance or d: vise from the sald Davi. Noi- ris, deceased, said Wavid Norris naving ac- fred title to the North ‘West auarter or the jouth Ger ter uf sec‘ion Twenty-four, of Township Forty-Wne, Range Thirty-Ihree (which ia of the subject matter of plaintif’s petit'on) by entry from the United States gov- ernment in the year A D., 1356 never conveyed the sane to any ony, eo far as shown | by the recurds of lant titles kept {a and for Bates county,, Micsour!, by reason of which | sald unknown p raona, hold the appearant fee simple title to the lend las* above described, | their respeciive inter: sts therein, being un- | known to plaintiff, And other of the unknowa de‘endants, to wit: The unknown consort, heirs devisees, donees ailenees, or immedi | ate mesne orremote, volun ary or involantary | grantees ofdefendant, Green E. Story, if be is deceased the said Green KE. Story having ac- | quired the title to the Exst halt of the ~outh- | Mest quarter of sectl.n Tseuty-Four, Town- ; Ship Fort:-Ooe, Range Thirty-Three. Bates | County, Mis‘ourl (which Is of the subject mat- | ter of the petition of plaint f by entry from | the United Stater Governmentin the year A | D , 185, and rever conveyed the sanie to any | one go tar as chown by the records of land titles | kept in and for Bates County, Miegouri, by | reason of which, exid unknown pereons hold | the appearant fee simple title, in and to the | land last above described their respective i (eeres therein being unknown to this plain- tif, to feel better-y as Iw: Sabie Mv wood, Ind. LLEN, standard remedy has cured thousé have been tr | - Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk, in va- | cation, that the eald defendants, roth named | and unknown and each and all of them be | notifed y publication that plainiif hae com- menced a svlt againet them in this Court, the ulceration, fibroic that table them of all rignt, title and interest, or appear- aot rignt, title and interest in and to ali the realestate herein sbove and in Bie pest Hon, de- ecribed, and by the jndgment and decree of said Court, vest the absolute and fee simple ttle to the. whole of said real estate in the plainti@’, as against the eatd defendan's, and asking the court to adjudge and declare said defendants and each and all of them to be | barred and eatcp: ed frum ever setting np or | claiming any right, title or interest in or to the real estate above described or any part thereof, | and that nnl+ss the aaid defendants be and ap- | Bae at thia Court, at the nex term thereof, to | be begun and holden at the Court House in the | {ity of Butler, in said county, on the firs? | Monday of February, 1912, and on or before the | | Sret day of sald term, answer or plead to the | | petition in raid cause, the same will be ¢ ken ae contersed, aud judgment will be rendered ac- cordingly. And itis further ordered that a copy hereof be published, according to law, in Tug BUTLER WEEKLY TIMKS, & newspaper published in eaid county of Bses, tor four weets successively, published at least once a week, the last inser- tion to be at leaet thirty days before the first day of said next Febrnars term of this court HO, MAXEY, Circuit Clerk. A true copy of the record, Witness m\ hend, and the seal of the circuit court of Bates County this 25th day of August. '911, 47-40 H O. MAXEY, Circuit Clerk. eee E. that it is impious were fired upon [seat] We complain Veussoune PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN their own folly. Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. | June 17, 1911 A difference is ‘ever. In Europe | NORTH. ‘been inherited. No, 208 St. Louis & K. C. Mail & Ex.t No 210 Southwest Limited..... mai Kanese City stock Local Freignt..... ...... SOUTH, No, 209 Southwest Limited............... . 207 K. C. & Joplin Mail & Ex.. No. 205 Nevada Accommodation No, 291 (Local Freight)... adopted on the tion that they are body.—Republic. INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 608 Madiaon Local Freight. No 87 Madison Accommodat! Any one can Ss hoilin, No. 688 Butler Accommoda‘ion. No. 604 Butler Local Freight............ 12:01 p.m. 3:50 p.m. Freight trains Nos, 093 and 694 carry paseen- gere on Interstate Division. No other freight tralns carry passengers, 5 All freight for forwarding muet be at depot ESCAPES OPERATION WasCured byLydiaE. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Elwood, Ind.—‘‘ Your remedies have cured ime and I: have only taken six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkhai’s Vegeta- one bottle of Compound, but kept on raid to stop too soo2.”—Mrs. Why will women take ¢ an operation or ar: } half-hearted existence, missing three. | fourths of the joy ean find health in Lyd Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been the L wled with ments as displacements, inflammation, ties, periodic pains, backache, indiges- | tion, and nervous prostration. | object aud general nature of which {eto divest| If you have the slightest . ompound will help you, write to Mrs, Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for advice. will be absolutely contidential, and the advice tree. A Defense that Condemns. We are told by champions of the | inviolability of things as they are} to cry out against | the high cost of living, because is high all over the world. It is high in France, where the peo- | ple are rioting because, of it. high in Austria, where on Sunday | themselves. last mobs barricaded the streets and manner by the troops. we in America complain? | getting on better. of going to the trouble of subduing ‘anew continent and erecting a new nation if we are to repeat the Old | World mistakes and labor under the| Old World disabilities? P The people of the United States are suffering from the same causes which have produced. hardship and lawlessnesss in Europe and through discriminating taxation is responsible. War, privilege, monopoly, wa these tell the story here as well as in | i France o¢ Austria. national fears and jealousies, out hereditary abuses, out of aristoc: training and out of popular ignorance. In the United States they have been political party within the past genera- Half an hour is all the time re- uired to dye an article with UTNAM FADELESS DYES. the goods with the dye is all that is necessary. Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue aud authority of a special exte:- ble Compound. was sick three months and could not walk. I suf- ered all the time. he doctors pal e one, and down my right leg. 1 began en TL had taken ouly er) 272 N. LE y outa s y, of when they . Pinkhan’s ydia for female ills, ant nds ot women who such ail- 1 tumors, irregulari- doubt Pinkham’s Vege- Your letter i i | | lh FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Stockman. | Woven wire is uséd a great deal , for reenforcing concrete and in some | cases old barbed wire is also used. | This is one place where barbed wire | may be.put out of sight and those, who have had horses or cattle mutila- | ted in barbed wire fences are glad of it. A great many think it rather Strange that the mail: carrier must work on Christmas Day and have; Labor Day and some other legal holi- | when we get parcels post the mail carrier will not be able to carry all the mail on a motorcycle. | Now is a good time to see that the | pump, the well and the windmill are: in shape to supply water through the | winter without any ‘‘fixin’.”’ If there | isany time that is worse than any | other to run short of water it is dur- ing cold, stormy weather. I cannot remember any August! when there was as much fall plowing , done in my vicinity as this year. The cornfields are practically free from: weeds and the farmer who does not, feel that next year is going to be the) “best ever’’ should take a vacation and chirk up a bit. No one can succeed without having | the knack of making money, but in knack of spending money must be combined with the knack of spend- ing money. Persons who do not) have a fair share of these two knacks generally have a hard time to make | both ends meet. | It it absolutely painful to see how! some of the aged parents dig and | save in order that their children may | e more money to spend—in many | ses to burn. Perhaps it is the nat Ce living It is} in the traditional Why should because we are not What is the use and Extortionate ste— | to be noted, how these policies ha They grow out representation oi a beneficial to every- do it, as simply notlater than eleven o’ciock @ m.or be held Ar a = : == Ly tr > A little “CLENO” for followin; Interstate five o’clock p. m, Office Phone 20 ain in morning. DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseas.s ot Women and Children a Specialty MISSOURI House Phone 10 BUTLER - day’s torwarding. Freight for ivieion must be delivered before No freight billed for this E. UG. VaANDERVOORT, Agent. : OR. 3. T. HULL. Dentist ard’s Studio. Entrance same that leads to Stew- Butler, Missouri North side square { used now will prove that “A stitch in time saves ten” if you will use Cleno with your young fowls. It will surely tid them of mites and lice and cause them to become healthy OR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 broilers, layers and eventual- T. C. BOULWARE { tion is ued from the office of the clerk of ite circuit court of Bates county Missouri, re- turnable at the October term 1911 of gait court and to me directed in fevor of Farmere Lumicr Company and against Dallas W Lunn, I beve levied upon ann seized all right title, intereet and claim of the sald Dallas * Lunn iu arc to the following dercribed real estate, towi Beginving at a point two hucdred thi ty-fcur and 52-100 teet west of a point elev-n bandred twenty feet north of the eoutheast corner cf tection thirty-three (33), town+hip forty iwo (42), range thirty-one (31), Bates county, 1 6- sourl, and running thence north one handrec forty feet; thence west eighty foarfeet; thence south one hundred forty ieet; thence exet eighty-four feet to the place of beginn'ng. S52 ees} being parte of lote 68, 6! and 6% in iilham’s addition to the ot of Adrian, Bates County, Missouri, and J willon Saturday, the 2lst day of October, 1911, between the hours of nine o’clook in the fcre- noon and five o’cl-ck iv the afternoon cf tat d-y, at the east front coor of the court honee, in the city of But er, county of Bates aforesaic, sell the same or so much thereof as may ve required at pablic vendue, tothe highest tidcer for cash in hand to ie ae execution aud . J, BULLOCK Sheriff of Bates County, Miesouri. costs 49-td Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue and authority of a special execz- tion tesued from the office of the circuit ceri of the circait coart ot Bates county, Missouri. re- tornable a e Mav term, 1911, of eaid court and to me directed in favor of the Bankere ipealenia Physician & Surgeon ae a a OO ae What you Buy we Stand by Office North Side Square, Butler, ie ue waite followin cr bed at eis CI. AW’ S al Poco yg Se ae ae stety-tnree (6 in the city of Rich Hill, Mo, Saturday, the 7th day of October A. D 1911 Prescription Orug Store B, F. JETER, pete nud ave rstocks in the alteruoon of that ‘ NORTH SIDE SQUARE. Attorney at Law Notary Public WA gag nd FE ey ae cp Bast Side Square Phone 196| Sedat isreiah i "bane'Sp sata at seco | BUTLER, MISSOURI er Ea es nerit of Baris County. Mies’ ari ‘ ral love of parents for their o ng that drives them to it, but to} e bystander it looks like they would | howing more real love by permit: | ting their children to learn the value of money by letting them earn it} Those who have a rather poor stand of corn this year are doing con- | siderable crowing because their corn | is better than the corn raised by those | who have a heavy stand. No one ean blame much. Those who are careless with their seed had better crow while the crowing is good. | A new thing about corn that can be noticed in this vicinity is that the fields that were planted early and were waist high on the Fourth are not as good as those that were plant- ed later. Science isa great help in farming, but it can’t make weather that is ‘‘bully for corn.” Many of us failed to get a stand of it tame grass where the seeding was done last spring and no one in this vicinity has cut any timothy or clover for seed. It looks as though the de- mand for grass seed will be brisk and | | “| the supply short next spring. There is no law to compel anyone | to cut the weeds along the roadside | adjoining his farm except the law of | jcommon sense. Aside from the fact | that such weeds are an obstruction | to winter travel and an eyesore to a! neat farm it is a weed seed patch that | will scatter week seeds to the nearby | fields. | To get away froma telephone line | and not to hear the jingle of tele-| phone bells in a farm house seems} just like getting away back in the| backwoods, now. Instead of a “‘nice} thing,’’ the telephone has become a| necessity on the farm. I would not | know how to do without one. Ihave seen very ‘few hay stacks} this summer and fall. For one thing, the hay crop has been rather light all over the country, but the folks have been putting away what they have in a safer place than in a stack. Those with limited mow room have been baling. It is best to make haste slowly with ; breaking sod ground that is intended for corn next year in order to break up the winter quarters of the cut- worms. as late as possible in the fall. The only way to be good neighbors to some folks is to not neighbor with them. It may be all well enough to visit often, but I find that some folks | will not stand the test when it comes | to lending or borrowing. It is a pret- ty good plan not to lend or borrow any nore than seems absolutely ne- | cessary, anyhow. | _ One of these days there is going to | be a shakeup in our system of hand-} ling the products of the farm. There | are now too many middlemen who | take their profit out of the deal be-| fore the produce reaches the “‘ulti- mate’ consumer. We are support- ing an army of these go-betweens, who are unnecessaries, pure and simple. i days free. It is a pretty safe bet that. ] order to be a complete success the |’ ithe go in schoolhouses. jand work perfectly. Flying a: always feels confident of \ pure and wholesome food when using DrPRICES CREAM Baking Powder A Pure,Grape Creamo Tartar m\ Baking Powder Made from Grapes The corn crop, 1 have always ob- served, looks the best at about the ne itis ready for the shock. The ears stand out more prominent then, and if there is a chance for becoming optimistic over the crop we ure apt to become so just at this time. It eems to look about 20 per pr than it does after fro: denude the stalks of leaves hrunk on the ears. husks has ‘es seem to | I know of a number of country schoolhouses that have been equipped with them this fall. They are easily tended and are said to more evenly heat a school room than a regular heating stove. Consumption of fuel is probably a matter that rests with the janitor, which is usually one of the older cholars or the teacher in) person. Some teachers, J he d, can burn twice as mucl a com- mon heater as other at furn Ipen j abse coal achers. on the run and They could Some folks work think it a slow walk. complish more by reversing the or- y timing thous der, and more stil! from one job to another, doing a li atone thing and a little at another th his r keeps a man well up w Inever like to put corn fodd he st wet, either from h dew in. For some ye I did not own acorn binder but hired oth- ers todo the cutting for me. One man especially was an “early bird.” He would be in the field before sur binding up fodder that wa with dew. ed in the stock, even when he lie until well towards noon before shocking. Since buying a corn bind- er, | can cut when the corn is in the best shape for cutting, and wait until the dew is off in the morning before starting. Cotton gloves will be soon on dis- play again. The cotton glove is the best thing that ever came around for choring and wear in fall weather. I This invariably blacken- | ly remember when men and boys t to ‘try’ themselves to cut shocks ina day. The fast corn ¢ usually threw his shocks tog and if they stood up over night so Was because of chance. Forced to Leave Home. y year a large nuinber of poe whose dur racked with coughs to another and not alw ter w. ] But this is ce sure. There's a t Dr. King’s New covery cure you at home. “It. ¢ me of lung itrouble,”’ writes W. R. Nelson, of Calamine, Ark., ‘‘when all else failed and I gained 47 pounds in weight. Its sure the king of all cough and lung cures.” Thous: owe their lives and health to it positively guaranteed for — c« coldt, la grippe, asthma, croup throat and lung troubles. 50¢ and $1.00. Trial bottle free at F. T. Clay's. State Fair Stock and Corn Judging Contests. Any farmer's son who wishes to enter either the Live Stock or the Corn judging contest at the Missouri State Fair should send his name and application immediately to Seeretary John T. Stinson, Sedalia, Mo. In the Live Stock contest be distributed in 16 priz cludes a $50 cash. scholars Two Year Winter Course in ture beginning November Ist, Any farmer's son under 25 years of age who has not attended an Ag I tural College is eligible. Contes must report at the Judging P: onthe Fair Grounds at 8:00 a. Monday, October 2d. In the Corn Judging contes will be awarded in 11 .prizes one of | which is a $50 cash scholarship to the Two Year Winter Course in Agricul- ture for the term beginning Novem- Ist. Any farmer's son under 20 years of age who has not attended an Agri- cultural College is eligible. Con- ‘testants must report to the Agricultur- usually start in husking corn with a, dozen pairs of them, but the second al Bldg. on the Fair Grounds at 10:00 a.m. Monday, October 2d. Missouri Potatoes. \dozen is usualiy needed before the | crop has been cribbed. A corn crop that will not wear out a dozen pairs of cotton gloves is not a very big ‘crop. I figure that gloves at ninety ‘cents a dozen is cheaper than wear- jing one’s fingers thin. | Cutting corn at so much per shock lis nearly a thing of the past, since ithe advent of the corn binder. J can | [have just received a car Toad Missouri River bottom potatoes. better potatoes are grown anywhe and I am offering them for sale close margin to turn them quickly. $1.20 per bushel, nothing less than 1 sack sold. Come early while they last. W. J. Bullock’s Meat Market, S. E. Corner of Square, Butler, Mo. 47 tf. | Fortune Telling Does not tuke into consideration the one essential to wom- an’s happiness— womanly health. The woman who neglects her health is neglecting the For without health love loses its lustre and gold is but dross. Womanly health when lost cr impaired may generally be regained by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. very foundation of all good fortune. This Prescription has, for over 40 years, been curing delicate, weak, pain-wracked by the hundreds of thousands too in the privacy of their homes ing to submit to cate questionings and offensively repug- without their pant examinations. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter free. All correspondence held as sacredly confidential. Address World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N.Y. Dr. Prexce’s Great Famity Doctor Boon, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, newly revised up-to-date edition—1000 pages, answers iz lain English hosts of delicate questions which every woman, single or married, ought to know about. Sent free, i plain wrapper to anv address on i 21 one-cent stamps to cover mailing only, or in cloth binding for 31 prong eect alanine naraee eee SD