The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 26, 1911, Page 2

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Se aie aA. “ A FEW OF THE MANY USES FOR - J ap-a- Lac FLOORS-It is the best and"most durable finish ever manufac- tured for use on either hard or soft wood floors. FRONT DOORS-—Weather-beaten doors look like new when coat- ed with Jap-a-Lac. It resists the sum and moisture. WOOD WORK, FURNITURE, ETC., which has become marred, scratched and worn, is renewed and beautified, when coated with Jap-a-Lac. WICKER FURNITURE—Coated with Mahogany, Ox-Blood Red, Gloss White or Malachite Green Jap-a-Lac looks better than new. OLD CARRIAGES—coated with Brilliant Black Jap-a-Lac are renewed and given new life. REFRIGERATORS, WAINSCOATING, ETC., finished with Jap- a-Lac, resist moisture and are given a geautiful and durabie finish. IRON FENCES, .RADIATORS, REGISTERS, WATER PIPES, HOT WATER TANKS, ETC., when coated with Jap-a-Lac, always look well. Use the Gold, Aluminum, Dead Black or Brilliant Black. PORCH FURNITURE, coated with Jap-a-Lac is renewed and beautified, and an elastic and durable finish is obtained. Use Enamel Red or Enamel Green. LINOLEUM AND OIL CLOTHS, finished with natural or clear Jap-a-Lac, look better than new, and resist soap and water, thereby promoting the life of same. OLD AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, AGRICULTU- RAL IMPLEMENTS, ETC., Jap-a-Lac-Ed with either Bril- liant Black, Red, Green or Empire Blue, look 100% better and are.given new life. The cost is nominal, and the work can be done successfully even by an inexperienced person. NOTE—One coat of Dead Black Jap-a-Lac applied on plate racks, tarnished chandeliers, picture frames, fire fronts, lamps, etc., produce the new artistic Wrought Iron Finish which is so popular. When used on furniture with which the cloth- ing comes in contact, the Dead Black Jap-a-Lac should be rubbed lightly (after it is thoroughly dry) with a soft flannel cloth, to remove any of the coloring matter the wood failed to absorb. “Easily Applied” “Quickly Dried” No Home is Complete without Jap-a-Lac. FOR SALE BY CULVER'S . FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Stockman. All rotten or decaying fruit and vegetables in the cellar will havea deteriorating effect on the flavor and keeping qualities of the crop now be- ing placed in storage there. In selecting seed corn don’t over- look the fact that the stalk is the source from whence the ear drew its sustenance, then study the type of stalk that produced the ear you choose for seed. Note that it is healthy, vigorous and of the proper proportions from base to top. Don’t shed machinery haphazard, Put it away in the order you will need it next spring, oil and repair it; and next season’s rush work will not catch you napping, as it does most farmers at this time. Hog wallows are still in vogue, and always will be, but they demand some means of drainage, else they, become stagnant, + germ-infested places, unfit for any living thing to come in contact with. A subscriber of Mitchell county, Iowa, would like to get a little advice from those who have had experience relating to the advisability of hiring a shredding outfit or purchasing a small one and doing the work your- self. I would be very much pleased if someone could answer this sub- scriber’s inquiry. It is reported that the acreage of sugar beets is to be greatly increased next year. If the present price of sugar is an indicator of what the beet raiser should get for his crop it would seem that beet raising would be a short cut to Easy street. One authority puts the value of hog manure at $8 per head per year. This may be right, but it sounds rath. er queer to those of us who hark back to the time when it took a fine| 300-pound porker to bring that money | in the market. It is almost impossible to build corn | 24—J. P. Sutton, Butler, $16. RESULTS OF CHARTERS’ HOG 25—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $28. Paid. 28--J. E. Harvey, Montrose, $15. 1—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $66. 2—W. B. Wallace, Bunceton, $50., 30—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $40. sas, $24, 34—C. E. Warford, Altona, $27. 35—Wm. McKibben, Butler, $20. 36—M. Wetterhold, Drexel, $19. 5—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $50. 6—J. P. Edwards, Butler, $26. 7—Eugene Smith, Pittsburg, Kan- 9—A. J. Erhart & Son, Adrian, $30, 39—Wm. Z. Baker, Rich Hill, 10—S. Heathuron, Rinehart, $20. 11—S. N. Hodgson, Parker, Kan-! sas, $36. 12—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $24. 13—Jerry Callahan, Athol, $23. 14—W. G. Sellon, Butler, $26. 15—Roy Wilcox, Butler, $18. 16—Bert Harriman, Pilot Grove, | 41—John Belcher, Raymore, $26. 42—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $25. 43—Eugene Smith, Pittsburg, Kan. sas, $23. 44—A. L. Pipes, Butler, $15. 45—S, Heathuron, Rinehart, $15. Attention Farmers. 18—Frank H. Kent, Shelbyville, | Wednesday, November Ist. $50. | Anyone living in Bates county i 19—J. P. Canner, Butler, $21. 20—J. A. Herman, Butler, $16. 21—Wnmz. Seelinger, Butler, $20. 22—C. E. Henry, Butler, $22. 23—L. L. Wix, Butler, $15. on both white and yellow corn. | | You might be a winner. Newlon Grocery Company Want Your Business We handle good groceries and will treat you right. A car of good potatoes just arrived. Butter and Eggs Wanted Newlon Grocery Co, (Coles’ Old Stand) SALE 26—Frank Brumett, Carthage, $30. 27—O. F. Peipmeyer, Appleton City, No. of Animal, Purchaser and Price | $21. 29—J. N. Huddleston, Butler, $16, 3—Wm. 0. Powell, Greenridge, 31—J.S. Santurper, Higginsville, $33. $34, 4—Ed. R. Dorsey, Girard, Kansas,! 32—Walter Ray, Lewis, Kans., $45. $36. | 33—S. N. Hodgson, Parker, Kan. sas, $25. : 8—Ray Johnson, Southmound, Kan- _37—Frank Brumett, Carthage, $21. sas, $41. 38—J. R. Nave, Kansas City, $30. $23. 40—W. B. Wallace, Bunceton, $20. $56. 17—Lawrence O'Keefe, Stilwell,| The corn contest now being con- Kansas, $49. ducted by the Peoples Bank will clos eligible to enter corn in the contest. | Attractive premiums will be awarded Enter ten ears of your best corn. shocks that will stand up in our hard winds unless they are securely tied. Where the tying has been neglected and the shocks are twisting down it means hard work and lots of it to fix them up and save the crop. Weare hearing a great deal about soil robbers at present and it seems that the robbers are not getting a very rich rake-off. Perhaps they might do better if they would use farmers Hume, Butler, I buy the best I will give Wi Mules 4 to sharper tools and more elbow grease. Our president has honored us with a visit. It may be said that he came, he saw and he—er, yes, perhaps he did, but we must wait until later to be sure. Any leaning or twisting shocks of fodder or hay stack tops blown off will mean a lot of high-priced feed wasted when the fall rains strike them. Be sure you are not keeping two head of stock where you have grain and roughage to winter only one. It is better to keep one animal well than to half keep two. Would it not add to the health of yourself and family if you would se- lect some of the choicest, smoothest and healthiest hogs from your herd and feed them those rations which are clean, pure and wholesome, kil} these animals for your winter’s meat supply? Keep the high-wheeled wagon out of the orchard. Not only does it cut up the sod, but it is more apt to brush and peel the lower limbs of the trees, and it is a great deal more in- convenient to pour fruit into than the low-down wagon, with its broad tires. Great care should be exercised in turning the stock toa luxuriant growth of meadow pasture which has been held in reserve for this season, as it usually is productive of serious diges- tive derangements if not carefully managed. Turn the stock in by slow degrees for two or three days—only an hour or two at a time—until they become accustomed to the change in rations. During a dry time we are all wish- ing for-rain, sometimes even praying ie iS I buy more market horses direct from the SHOW ME YOUR C000 DRAFT HORSES Rich Hill, Friday, Bring in Your Good Horses, I buy Them from 4 to 30 Years Old, from 800 to 1800 Pounds SHOW ME YOUR GOOD DRAFT HORSES AND CHUNKS I ALSO BUY GOOD FAT OLD PLUGS Don't forget the date as I come to buy S. Lowenstein than any man in the world Thursday, Oct. 26 Oct. 27 Oct. 28 Saturday, that grow and pay the highest Cash price. more for good horses than anybody. Il buy Branded or Unbranded 8 Years Old—Must Be Fat like a man a cow hardly ever kicks unless there is something to kick about. Potato digging time is with us and when it is possible it is a good plan to throw the tubers out and leave them | on the ground long enough so their eyes can get used tothe sun before | picking them up. Painting young apple trees with | pure linseed oil and white lead is} said to protect them from rabbits, mice and borers. It looks reasonable | \ and is worthy of a trial, at least ona small scale, but no turpentine or dry- | er must be used with the paint. Those who were waiting for rain before using their King drags have! got what they were waiting for. Ev- erything comes to him who waits and | sometimes it comes in bunches. When I was a boy and did a little! husking for the neighbors after the} corn on the “home place’’ was all in| the crib, not a wagon in the country was equipped with a shoveling end- | gate. All used shoveling boards, and almost stood on our heads when “starting the load.’’ Nowadays, all | have shoveling endgates that let down at the back, and some of the larger | corn farms are being equipped with power elevators, thus doing away with shoveling entirely. The world certainly ‘‘do move.” Printing Commission Answers! Tolerton. Jefferson City, Mo., Oct. 24.—Sec- retary of State Roach went on record | paylng for the printing and distribu- for it, and when we get about a week of nice, sloppy, soaking, mud-making rain we begin to grunt around and wish ‘“‘this everlasting beastly weath- er” would change sometime. The weather is with us all the time, but it can’t change to suit us because we are so changeable. Three tons of hard coal and a cou- Sore teats is one of the main causes of kicking cows and when a gentle ape it, ba tion of a report from the State Gaine | and Fish Commissioner, which con- tains a number of large pictures of the Governor and the Game and Fish “Afloat on White ‘The protest of the Secretary of State isa continuation of the controversy parts of the report. bec geaas organ Rpenesaape Acre Governor’s perusal, as he is already 'inous treatise on meterological condi- ‘to print the hundreds and thousands today as being opposed to the State | - Dispersion Sale. fully aware of the important bearing this has on the protection of the State’s game. | “The State Printing Commission | does not regard as necessary volum- Sale will be held on farm one-half j mile east of Virginia, Mo., on Friday, November 3d, 1911, 45 head thoroughbred~Duroc Jersey hogs— Consisting of a few extra good boars and gilts of September, 1910, farrow; 2 tried brood sows; the bal- jance are boars and gilts of May, 1911, | farrow. 3 calves—One early spring heifer; 2 summer calves, 1 steer and 1 heifer. TERMS—$15 and under, cash in hand; over that amount 9 months time will be given on bankable note with interest at 6 per cent. 6 per cent dis- count for cash. No property to be | removed until terms of sale are com- plied with. JAS. H. PARK, Butler, Mo., Route 5. J. K. Harmon, Auctioneer. tions, nor does it regard it necessary of letters your department has re- ceived, the printing of such corre- : spondence not being pertinent in the matter of the enforcement of the | game laws.”’ Commissioner Tolerton says that |he will print and distribute the report, leven if he has. to bear the expense himself. , Circuit Court. Spencer vs Mo. Pacific Ry. Co.; plaintiff takes non-suit with leave to move to set aside.

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