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Sheriff's Sale in Partition. B B. McQaeen, Plainti ve. Eley, or Ele Moore et al, Defendan's, To the Cirouit Coart of Bates counts, Mi 1 October term, 1911. etree By virtue and authority of a decree and ord»r us ae nae By. ty et court, in He at ave ed » and ofa certified copy th reo! dated October oth, 1911 Twill on 4 Saturday, November 25, 1911 between the hours +f nine o’clock ‘n the tore- | DOD, Bnd five o’vlock in the afterncon of thu: day, at the east door of tie court houer, in the sy of Butier in Bates county, “irsouri, sell at public: vendne, to the highest bidder, the follo+ing described real estate in Batescounty, Mis-ouri, to-wit: Beginning at the southeast | Corner ot the northeast quacter of the northeast qu-ricr of section twenty-tour (24) 1n township | or y-two (42), range thirty-three (88) running thence west seventeen (17) chaine; thence north ten degrees east, twenty-six and s'xty one- hundreth chaing, thence cast thirteen sn _one- | fourth cha:ne to the northeaet corner of aad fection; thence s-uth twenty cnains to the place of beginning; alco brginning one hundred Seven and one halt ro + eaat of the northw-s: corner of he south balf of the northeast qaar- ter of said section, ronning thence south tw nty-six (26) rods; thence¢ast ten aod one- half (10 1-2) rode; hens north twen'y-six (26) Toda; thence west ten and one-half (101 2) rods to place of beginuing, containing in all thirty acres, More+ r jegs, ‘Office Phone3, —_ResidencePhone 268, \ ‘H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI pecan a R. Guyton’s Livery Barn. Term: To the highest bidder f VISIT hand aoe Wad. BULLOCK, 52-td Sheriff of Bates County, Missouri. Notice. Notice 1a hereby given, that letters testa Mentary upon the eatate ef Jobn Harryman, deceased, have been granted to ‘he un- dersigned, by the Bates Coun’y Probate vour!, in Bates County, Missourl, bearing date the 2nd day 0: Uctober, 1911. All persons having claims against said estat: are required to exhibit them to the under- signed for al'owance within 61x montha after the date of said 1 (tera, or they may be pre cluded from any benefit of such - state; and if | such claims be not exhibited within one year | from the date of the la-t insertion of this publi- cation, they shall be forev+r barred JOHN BROWNING, | MARY HARRYMAN, | 52-4t Executors Pueblo. Colorado Springs Denver THIS SUMMER Notice of Final Settlement. Noticeie hereby given to all creditors aid otbera interested in the estate o Jesse *. Schmidt, deceased, that I. J. H. Schmidt, exerutor of raid estate intend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of the | Bates County Probate Court, tn Bates county, State of Miesouri. to be held at Butler, Mis- sourl, commencing on the 13th cM of Novem- ber, 1911. J. H. SCHMIDT, Bl-dt Executor. 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: there—see the grandeur of its mountains—feel the bracing cli- mate—enjoy yourself in pas- 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 Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Rarey N. Maxey and Pearl Maxry, his wife, by thelrcertain deed o trust, dated January 26, 1910, and duly recorded in the of- fico of the recorder of deeds in and tor Bates county, Missouri, in book 204 at page 391, con- veyed to John Mills as trostee, the following described real estate lying and b. ing situate in Bates county, Missouri, to wit: The east half of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of ection thirty-six (36) (except one acre in extent along the west sid« thereof), also three acres off the north tide of the south- west quarter of the s uthwest quar their waters—beautiful parks, ter of eald aection thirty-six (36) all in towns A ship forty-one (41) of range twenty-nine (21), in the shadow of the Rocky containing in all 22 sores, fa re or iees, to ae: cure the payment of one promissory note folly described in ssid trnet deed, and 3 Whereas, default has been made in the pay- ment of the interest falling due on eaid note and the same js long past due ard wholly un paid, making the whole of the ilebt secured by said trust deed “ue and payable under the terms th reof, and Whereas the said John Mills, trustee as aforesaid, has in writing dated Angust 28, refused to act as trustee aforesaid and exercise the powers and perform the outies confered up nhim ty said trust deed, Now, therefore, I, W. J, Bullock Sheriff of Bates County, Miasou! nd acting trustee, as provided in said trast deed, at the request uf the legal holder o’ said note and trust deed, will pro- ceed toeell the whole of the above decribed real estate at public auction, at the east door of the conrt house, in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on Satarday, the 11th day of November, 1911, or so much thereof ae will be sufficient to satis- fy the debt aforeasid and the vosts of sale, under and by virtue of the powers conf red upon me by and pursuant to the terms of the trnet deed atoreraii. W_J. BULLOUK, Sheriff of Bater County, Miesuuri, 51 at and Acting Truaee 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 PACIFIC “The Highway to the Heights” » 1911 Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue and authority of a special execn- tion is-ued from the office of the clerk of ihe circuit court of Bates county. Missouri, re- turnable at the October term 1911 of sald court and to me directed in f-.vor of Farmers L' mber Company and against Dallas W Luho, I have Jevied upon anv seized all right title, interest and claim of the sald Dallas * Lunn in and to the folluwing de. cribed real estate, towit: Beginnirg at a point two bu dred thi ty-four and 26 100 teet west of 8 point elev n hundred twenty feet north of the coutheast corner of section thirty-three (33), townrhip forty two (42) range thi FIs =0Be (81), Bates county, Mis- sonri, and runolng thence north one hapdred forty teet; thence west cighty four feet; thence south one hundred forty ieet; thence east eighty-four feet to the place of beginn'ng. Sa'd property being parts of lote 68, 6: and 65 In \ iiham’s addision to the city of Aurian, Bates County, Missouri, end 1 willon 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 you. S ae / MISSOURI \ PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN / Naw! oe E. C. Vandervoort, Agt Butler, Mo. / Saturday, the 2let day of October, 1911, between the hours of nine o’olock in the fore- noon and five o’civck in the afternoon of that dsy, at the cast front «oor of the court house, in the city of But er, county of Bates aforesaid, sell the same or so much thereof as may be required at public vendue, tothe highest bidder for cash in hand to satiefy’said execution and J. BULLOCK. costs J. . 49-td Sheriffof Bates County, Missouri. OR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseas.s ot Women and Children a Specialty BUTLER - MISSOURI Frank P. Prosser, D.P.A || Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 ) Jen DR, J. T. HULL Dentist - ee | Entrance same that leads to Stew- ; ard’s Studio. North side square _ Butler, Missouri OR. H. M, CANNON Phone No. a T. €. BOULWARE Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. You Need Not Pay i Cash for a VICTOR The product Grapes | Flaky Biscuits DeliciousCake Healthful Food made with IDe Prices| CREAM | Baking Powder] | | | | of Simultaneous Meetings in Butler | Churches. | The Ministerial Alliance has ar-| T. J. Day Breaks a Leg. T. J. Day, proprietor of the Butler | Marble Works sustained a badly} | looked in the handling of the ewe flock is the need for exercise. ‘1 nis is particularly true in winter. It is ranged to hold meetings in the sev- broken and crushed leg Saturday | eral cooperating churches, beginning morning as the result of the heavy ; next Sunday and continuing as long base stone of a monument falling | as may seem profitable in the individ- ual congregations. ‘ The.purpose of these meetings is. to help the religious life of the people | of Butler and vicinity in all the! churches. We believe that all peo-| ple have more or less difficulty in’ living as well as they wish. Some) get discouraged, some find that duties | press on them so hard that they do not seem to get time for the religious life, some get into doubts, some feel that they have not been fairly treated, | and others find amusements more at-| tractive than the religious work. It) is the sincere desire of the members of the alliance to help all such ‘people | as are willing to be helped. To this! end we invite the attendance and| help of all the people of the communi- | ty. Itis hoped that all may attend! regularly the church of their choice. The churches and ministers are not competing one against the other in these meetings but are trying to work together for. the good of all. It is therefore hoped that all members and friends of each particular church may give to it their loyal support in these meetings. ‘‘Let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works.”’ Trusting that we may have your prayerful sympathy and earnest cooperation in this work, weare ~ Your fellow-servants, Butler Ministerial Alliance. Gives Aid to Strikers. Sometimes liver, kidneys and bow- els seem to go ona strike and refuse to work right. Then you need those potent little strike-breakers—Dr. ing’s New Life Pills—to give them natural aid and gently compel proper action. Excellent health soon fol- lows. Try them. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. | Better Than New York. “No newspaper in New York City has half as much cireulation as The! Kansas City Star. “The reason is manifest. No paper | in New York—morning or evening—| is as good a newspaper, as clean in tone, as independent in thought, as honest in conviction and as cosmo- politan in its news-sense as the Kan- sas City Star. A paper as good as the Kansas City Star in New York Swill circulate by the million.”—Wil- liam A. White. | difficulty the stone was removed from ‘Harry Latham upon him while he was directing the | erection of a monument at the ceme-| tery | Mr. Day, with two assistants. had unloaded the base stone from a wagon and in attempting to raise one end so that a prop might be placed under it, | the stone fell to the ground, catching Mr. Day’s left. leg and falling with such force as to drive his foot and | ankle into the hard earth. With some | the injured man and he was taken to his home on North Main street. | Killed a Pelican. Ervin K. Russell, a tenant on the Delmar K. Hall farm, three miles south of Lone Tree, killed a 15-pound Pelican on that place Monday morn- ing. There were two of the fowls fogether at a watering place on the farm, but Russell unfortunately had but one shell for his shotgun. The bird was shot through the head and neck. He brought it to town Monday afternoon and left it for Anday Rus- sel, the local taxidermist, to mount. The wings from tip to tip measured more than eight feet and the gular pouch under the fowl’s bill had a capacity for fifteen or sixteen pounds of fish. From all appearances it was a specimen of the American white pelican.—Harrisonville Democrat. Marriage Licenses. . Butler Grace Gerkin .....Butler Fred McCall.................. Butler Beulah Browning Butler Chas. Wright. . Butler Te6 ABHUEY 56. csc cenees ee Butler R L Beaman................. Spruce | Myra Snodgrass.............. Spruce Sanford White (colored)....... Butler Anna Phillips (colored)........Butler PL Wells... Kansas City Anna Burris. . Kansas City Best Newspaper in America. World’s Work, a magazine pub- lished in New York City, printed an article by Mr. Chas. Grastv, himselfa noted. publisher, of Baltimore, in which The Kansas City Star is re- ferred to as ‘‘The Best Newspaper in America.” Aids Nature The great success of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- TALKING MACHINE We'll arrange EASY TERMS ae What you Buy we Stand by CLAY'S - Prescription Orug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. | “The right place.’ B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI Missouri Potatoes. I have just received a car load of Missouri River bottom potatoes. No better potatoes are grown anywhere, and I am offering them for sale at a Or ran ied ce oe Gand $1.20 per bushel, nothing less 1 sock ld Come ¢ while they Bt Aad hac iacirsia! , Mo. Discovery’’ supplies Nature with body-build- ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con- densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature the necessary strength to the stomach to digest build up the body and thereby throw off lingering 2 The ‘‘Discovery”’ r:-establishes the digestive and nutritive organs in sound hecith, Durifies something ‘‘jast as good,** FOR HIRieecIt pays better. you are thiaking of the cure not the profit, se there’s nothing “just as geod’ for yodt. f2y se. FEEDING BREEDING EWES EXCESSIVE FATNcSS UNFAVOR- ABLE TO REPRODUCTION. 'F. B. Mumford, Dean of College of | Agriculture, University of Missouri. There are certain fundamental prin- ciples which govern the care and CHANGE IN WOMAN'S ing is favorable to reproduction. Vegetable Compound. is, however, true that a method of | feeding which induces excessive fat-, ness is unfavorable to reproduction. A full and generous supply of food throughout the year is the best possi- ble practice for handling the breed- ing ewe. Another point that is often over- | | in the highest degree unwise to take | a flock from summer pasture, where | they have enjoyed unlimited freedom | and constant exercise, and shut them jin a small vard and keep them there | the entire ; should be insured a constant and res- ) ular ithe y winter The ewe flock amount of exercise throughout Un ordinary conditions tnere 1s ‘no need of feeding grain to breeding The sheep ts one ewes ir summer of the mo uccessful and persistent grazing animals on the farm They will eat a much larger oaumber ot plants thas either horses or cattle, ; and are more useful in clearing a pas- ture of weeds or brush Ewes are ordinarily bred in the fall, and at this time the pastures are fre- quently short and the animals really | suffer for a generous supply of good food. It is always desirable, before mating, to give the ewe flock a gen- erous supply of good food for at least two weeks before turning in the ram. If possible turn the ewes on fresh pasture. It is also a good idea to feed them heavily with grain during this time This practice “flushing” by the English shepherds, | and the claim is made, not without some reason, that this insures a larger number of lambs, that the ewes come in heat more uniformly, and that the lambs are stronger and healthier at birth. When the ewes are taken from the is called Well-Fed Lambs. Some fested more or less seriously ‘with sheep ticks, and if they are not treat- ed for this condition the parasites will interfere seriously with their thrift during the winter. It is also a good practice, therefore, to dip them in some good dip which -will kill the ticks. This should be done before cold weather. The ration for the winter should contain some grain; one-half pound, of corn per sheep each day, together with all the clover, alfalfa or cowpea hay that the sheep will eat is a good ration for breeding ewes. Some corn stover is an excellent roughage and will be relished by the ewes. In case it becomes necessary to feed the ewes through the winter without clover, al- falfa or cowpea hay, then the grain ration should be of corn and linseed meal in the proportion of five of corn and one of linseed meal, or of corn and bran. This with stover, mixed hay and possibly some straw, will bring the ewes to lambing time w« strong condition. Timothy hay is a very unsatisfactory roughage to feed to sheep. It is best to have the lambs come in February or March, provided warm quarters can be supplied. Otherwise April 15th to May 1st is perhaps a) better time. After the lambs have, been born the ewes should be fed | heavily on grain, and in the writer's | opinion the lambs should be fed from | Lirth until time of selling. | It is customary to provide a lamb creep (a small pen) into which the lambs may go to eat and find hay, and into which the older sheep can not go. It is undoubtedly true that) the grain fed to lambs at this time will yield a greater return in gains made than at any other time in the life of the lamb. | TREAT SEED WHEAT FOR SMUT. | The stinking smut of wheat causes considerable losses almost every- where that wheat is grown. It is easy to safeguard against it, and this should not be neglected. The seed may be treated in several ways to kill the spores of the disease. Any one is effective. A solution of bluestone (copper sul- | phate) made of one pound to five gal-! lons of water will be satisfactory. The seed should be immersed in this solution for ten minutes. Skim off the grains that float, as they are in- fected. Then it should be spread out on a floor or wagon bed to dry. Ur formalin may be used, making the so- lution of one pound of formalin to fifty gallons of water. It take thirty minutes for this to do the. work. Hot water is also sometimes used ef- fectively. Graniteville, Vt.— ‘I was passing through the Change of Lifeand suffered trom nervousness land other annoying symptoms, an ean truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has . proved worth mountains of Fyyemnever forget to tell friends what \ Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me luring this trying period. Complete restoration to health means so to me that for the sake of other ‘ug women I am willing to mak rouble publie so you may pubiis! his letter.’— Mrs. Citas. Barciay, wE.D., Graniteville, Vt. No other medicine for wom: ills has received such wide-spread un- jualitied endorsement. No other med- itine we know of has such a record of cures as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For more than 80 years it has been ‘euring woman's ills such as intlamma- tion, ulceration, tibroid tumors, irreg- ularities, periodi¢ pains and nervous prostration, and it is unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice is free, and always helptul Woman Wins First in Land Lottery. Rapid City, S. D., Oct. 24.—Mrs. ‘Mary J. Kendall, who drew claim No. 1 at Gregory, valued at $10,000, has a husband who is a paralytic and she has been employed at day labor to support herself and her husband. She has woven carpets by day, herd- edand milked cows and cared for her husband at night. She formerly lived at Keystone, S. D. Twelve years her husband prpspected for gold withoutsuccess. She has one married daughter, Mrs. F. Milton Hazleton of Keystone, S. D., and one son, 20 years old. Among the first 2,000 drawing 54 claims were won by Missourians. , The drawing continued Wednesday and Thursday, three thousand names being drawn each day. Fach package of PUTNAM FADELESS DYE_ colors more goods, brighter and faster colors wi less trouble, than any other lye. Pleasant Hill Hotel Burns. Pleasant Hill, Mo., Oct. 24.—The Taylor Hotel, a 32-room brick struc- ture, burned this morning. The building was owned by Fred Heins, of Kansas City, and W. W. Hon, of Pleasant Hill, owned the furniture. C. D. Moore, formerly of El Reno, Ok., was the landlord. C. H. Beard, of Omaha, a guest, was awakened by smoke and ran through the building giving the alarm. Several guests were bewildered when the lights went out and were lost in the smoke. Young woinen employees of the ho- tel led them to safety. S.C. Staf- ford, a traveling man of Burlington, N. J., and Thornton Byram, of Har- risonville, escaped by sliding down a rope. NERVES Young and old have them. Some abuse them. They get tired, starved. SYMPTOMS :—Loss of sleep and appetite, in- digestion, irritability, eventually wrecked con- stitution. Alcoholic remedies stimulate only. Scott’s Emulsion soothes and nourishes, feeds the nerves. A natural nerve-food, con- taining the salts of H phongdiites lodine ‘eal Glycerine. NO ALCOHOL. LIFE | handling of all breeding animals. 1t/ . A : |is a mistaken idea that sparse feed- Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkham’s maeaeaiot