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36 feet long, 8 feet wide, 6 feet in front, 4 feet in back. ments 6 feet by 8 feet—just the thing for brood sows, not properly housed is two pigs. having this house—12 pigs at $2. saved in 12 years to pay for the house 8 times. We can furnish you this house complete; dimensions for frame, Boxing, for partitions, sides, ends and doors, $34.95, if roofed with Rubberoid Roofing $31.95. Roofed with gal- nclude the sheeting, making a complete hog house. If this house is make it shorter at correspondlingly less cost. ke a cooler roof in summer and-a warmer one e slope it will have will last as long if not longer. and roofed: with the best Red Cedar Shingles, for vanized Corrugated Iron $36.50. These prices i too large and would accommodate more sows than you hav We think the best roof for this hog house are shingles as they will mai in winter than either of the others and th Make $24 Extra on Your Ho By Building a Hog House » roof sloping one way. The house to be divided in 6 apart- It is estimated that the average loss per litter where sows are Suppose you have six litters and from each litter you could save 2 more pigs by —$24.; almost enough to pay for a good hog house, e you can saved out of 6 litters—enough Gunning Time in the Ozarks. Springfield, Mo., Nov. 19.—What- ever advantages other parts of the state may boast, the Ozark country now is demonstrating its right to be known as the ‘hunting grounds of Missouri. Each year hundreds of sportsmen from all over the state rush to the inland counties of South- west of Missouri, where railways and dense population have not disturbed forests filled with game. An abund- ant supply of quail, turkey, squirrels, foxes and other wild game is there. In the last three weeks many hunt- ers have bagged their quota of squir-| rels and partridges and a few of the WOMEN MAY AVOID OPERATIONS By taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound The following letter from Mrs. Orville Rock will prove how unwise it is for women to submit to the dangers of a surgical operation when If you will call at our yard we will be pleased to show you the lumber that you will need in building the above house and also the different kinds of roofi | it may be avoided By ene Lydia ing. by We are selling Doors, Windows, Sand, Gravel, Cement, Laths, Lumber, Rubber Roofing, Galvanized Roofing, better marksmen have been able to E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. take home a heavy burden of wild! She was fourwecks in the hospital and came home suffering worse » Corner ot the orth: ast quar 4-2t Land Tile, Brick, Lumber, and Sewalls Paint for houses, barns and all kinds of out buildings. Logan-Moore Lumber Company BUTLER, MO. PHONE 18 : SS — INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 608 Madisou Local Freight......... No 87 Madison Accommodation.. EAST. No. 638 Butler Accommoda*ion.. No. 694 Butler Local Freight... gere on Interstate Diviaion. tralns carry passengers. Missouri Pacific Time Table rw Office Phone 3, ReaidencePhone 268, turkeys. Turkey hunting in the White River region has received an impetus by | the sudden arrival a few days ago in| Hollister, Taney County, of -a big flock of wild turkeys. Fora time it | demoralized business in the little vil- lage and turned barber and baker, | blacksmith and banker into eager sportsmen, all determined to take! home at least one of the big flock. The abundance of game in the region is due in a large measure to the big St. Louis Park and Game than before. Here is her own statement. Paw Paw, Mich.—‘Two years ago I suffered very severely with a dis. 5 placement. I could not be on my feet for Ha long time. M physician treate me for seven months ithout much relief id at last sent me to Ann Arbor for an operation. I there four weeks worse f My mother advised é me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, NORTH. ; ~ No, 2°6 Kansas City Accommodation. 6 20a, m, Preserve in Taney County. F It Com. and I did. Today I am welland strong Fs No. ane St Loule ak. c. Mail & Ex.12 Bs pm, prises six thousand acres in which’ and do all my own housework. lowe q lo 210 southwest Limite 1:4" p.m. hunting i ibi " id | health to Lydia E. Pinkham’s i unting is prohibited. There the wild | my health yen ‘ BUTLER Toca! Freigae ”” 2 i850 Sm ee Vegetable Compound and advise my be STATION No. All freight for forwarding muet be at depot SOUTH. No. 209 Sonth west Limited .............. No 27K.0 & ight tr-ine Nos, 693 and 694 carry pusren- pe No other treight ; notlater than el+v.n o’c.ock a m or be held + for following dav’s forwarding Freight for Int: ratate Division must be delivered before . fiveo’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning. + GU, VANDERVOORT, Agent, MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. E B. McQnen, Plaintiff ve. Eley, or Klea Movre et al, Defendan’s, Io the Cironit (onrt of Bates county, Missouri, October term, 1911. By vir‘ue and authority of a d-cree and ord+r of sale made by the said court, in thea’ ove eptitl-d auge, ondofa certided copy th reof, dated October 6th, 1911 I will on Saturday, November 25, 1911 between the hours: f nine o’clock n the fore- | noon and five o’clock in the afternvon of that day, at the east door cf tre court house, in the city of But'er in Bates county. ¥ tesouri, vent live stock diseases? Such a Farmer and Breeder for two years| book is the Missouri Farmers Hand |and a copy of the Missouri Farmers | Book which is a handsomely bound Hand Book free. Your money back | and printed volume of between 300] if youare notentirely satisfied... Send | and 400 pages. Besides the above 2 dollar at once. The supply of these | chapters which are by the leading | Hand Books won't last long—so don't | j experts in the U. S. it also tells you delay. how to build up the soil of a run a down farm, how to make money out of the Dairy business, how to keep Percheron Stallions H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Cmca ah Ne R. Guyton’s Livery Barn, 7 a teaspoonful of thyme, salt and pep- per to taste, stitch up the openings and truss or tie the goose into shape. \If not fat, lay thin slices of pork on | ee — | the breast, and bake in a hot oven for forty-five minutes; if the goose has considerable fat, omit the pork. Take the goose from the oven, pour pour off all the fat, sprinkle the bird all over with salt and pepper and dredge with flour, and return to the joven. When the flour is delicately | browned, pour a teacupful of hot wa- |ter into the pan and baste the goose often, dredging it each time witha slight sifting of flour toabsorb the fat. birds multiply and spread over the| friends who are afflicted with any surrounding country. {female complaint to try it.”’— Mrs. —— | ORVILLE Rock, R. R. No.5. Paw Paw, Michigan. HEED THE WARNING. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For thirty years it has been the stan- dard remedy for women’s ills, and has positively restored the health of thou- sandsof women, Why don’t youtry it? Many Butler People Have Done So, When the kidneys are sick they give unmistakable warnings that should not be ignored. By examining the urine and treating the kidneys upon the first sign of disorder, many days of suffering may be saved. Sick kidneys expel a dark, ill-smelling urine, full of ‘“‘brickdust’’ sediment and painful in passage. Sluggish Taking the College to the Farm. The newest thing in the line of Agricultural training offered by the | Missouri College of Agricultural is kidneys cause a dull pain in the small the Branch Short Course. During of the back, headaches, dizzy spells, ime ates Be Boye vel ont tired, languid feelings and frequent ort Courses will be given at var- rheumatic twinges. ious points in the state. At each one Doan’s Kidney Pills are for the kid- the College of Agriculture will furn- neys only. If you suffer from any of ‘8h two men who will spend their the above symptoms you can use no @Mtire time for five days in giving in- struction in dairying, farm crops, Butler people recommend Doan’s S%!s, fruit, live stock, poultry or Kidney Pills farm management. In general the Mrs. B. F Johnson, 200 South | SUbiects taught will be suited te the ohoy oe : «qp | SPecial needs of the community. better remedy. Main Street, Butler, Mo., says: sell at public vendue, tothe highest bidder,the; your hogs from becoming infected C : follo s1ng desoribed roul estare in Bateecounty. | With cholera, how to care for fruit , Asmall goose should bake at least ‘ Since the number of Branch Short Siacousttssrwits. euloning as (sie eoatueset | Mares and Filleys for Sale 4* hours, if frequently basted, rat December 1908, I suffered intensely Since te m aay elie of he northeast jas rier of tection twenty-tour (24) in townabip fr y two (42), range thirty-three (38) ranning thencé west seventeen (17) chains; thence north. ten degrees east, tweniy-aix and 8 xty one- bundreth chaing, thence cast thirteen nn one- fourth cha.ns tu the northeast corn: r of sad section; thynce 8 uth twenty cuains to the place of b ginning; al-ob ginning o + bundred seven and une hal! ro ¢ east of the northw-s corn rof he sourh balf: f the nor:beast qasr- ter of said eection,_ running thenc» south twe nts -aix (26) rods; ‘hence: ast ten and on+- half (10 1-2) rot«; ben « north twen y-eix (26) Tod+; the: co wert ten and one-half (101 2) rus to place of beginning, containiug in all thirty acres, more «-r leas, Term : To the highest bid: r for ceeh in hand WwW J. BULLOCK, 52-td Sherif of Bates County Mis-ouri, | trees, how to prevent ‘typhoid fever, tuberculosis, maliaria, and how to keep your premises sanitary and free from disease, how to keep your stock You don’t have to go out of Bates county to |a large one will require more time in proportion. Remove the goose from the pan when done, drain off most of get the best Percheron | stock. All registered in | Percheron Society. | Call and inspect stock. | Farm 3 miles east of Butler. from getting killed by lightning, how to cure Poultry diseases and many other things which space forbids our | mentioning. This great book, the! greatest compendium of Agricultural and Live Stock information ever of-| fered to the farmers of Missouri, was ‘compiled by Geo. B. Ellis, Ex-Sec’y | | of the Mo. State Board of Agriculture | J Ls W. Ba rn ha rt the fat, add half a pint of water and thicken, if necssary with browned flour. If the gravy is not salt enough, season with pepper and salt to taste. Goose should be served with-apple sauce. A Father’s Vengeance Would have fallen on anyone who at- from kidney trouble. My back ached j so badly that I often thought I could: not endure the misery any longer. | Finally I used a box of Doan’s Kidney anes goede ole work, oh Pills, procured at Clay’s Drug Store, (ee ae SBpomunity, (08 men Wi ” |push and enterprise to secure for nel epi lech ‘their community a benefit that is of- For sale by all dealers. Price 50; (7e" CO! ya L Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, fered this year for the first time in gents: ithe history of Missouri New York, sole agents for the United | "° MStory oF Missouri. ‘i ; Full particulars concerning the States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and | Branch Short Courses may be had by 5 | writing to F. B. Mumford, Dean Mis- | souri College of Agriculture, Colum- they will be given to those localities which apply first and which show the take no other. Farmers, Attention! |and Managing editor of the Missouri Butler, Mo. eae Saoan Gone bar eee A BARGAIN. bia, Mo. hide Haven’t you felt the need of abook; Farmer and Breeder—Missouri’s = a | powerless before attacks of kidney Rae | Newspaper Staff Resigns ; . which would give you the latest in-| greatest farm and stock journal which formation on the planting and raising is published at Columbia, the home of Corn, Wheat, Oats, Alfalfa, Cow-'of Missouri’s famous Agricultural peas, etc.—which would give you the | College and whose mission is to bring latest thought about the breeding, | the farmers of this state into closer feeding and care of Cattle, Hogs, | touch with this great institution. No Horses, Mules and Sheep?—which | thinking farmer should be without it. would tell you how to cure and pre-|For one dollar you will receive the trouble. ‘‘Doctors conld not help The Downes, \him,’’ he wrote, ‘‘so at last we gave ' . | him Electric Bitters and he improved Yule-Tide Dollies—Cream together wonderfully from taking six bottles. half a cupful of butter and one cupful It’s the best kidney medicine I ever of sugar; add gradually two wellbeat- | SaW.’’ Backache, tired feeling, nerv- en eggs, one tablespoonful of cream, | titties troebte tune) fa Bed one teaspoonful of ‘vanila, a pinch of sy, diabetes or Bright’s disease. Be- salt and three cupfuls of flour with! ware: Take Electric Bitters and be which have been sifted two teaspoon- safe. Every bottle guaranteed. 50c fuls of baking powder. Stand for an 4t F. T. Clay’s. hour in a very cold place, after hav-! ¢, 99 ing beaten in the ingredients. Have | Scotty” Gets Ready to Wed. Recipes. Joplin, Mo., Nov. 14,—On account ‘of the policy of the paper, the entire ‘reportorial and editorial staff of the Joplin Morning Tribune, Joplin’s new paper, resigned in a body Sundav _morning. No question of was con ‘cerned, “Too many bosses,’’ the staff said today, was the cause. There ‘are forty-seven stockholders of the paper scattered over Jasper county and it was on account of their inter- ference in the news department of Y- A Warm Bathroom PERFECTION | lin a long shallow box, separately, E that the in a warm room. The chill of a cold room is dangerous ing out of the hot water. is Oil Heater brings bathroom or bedroom of warmth you want in five or ten minutes, All you gc ope a & s if i zres Es is : mother should be careful children take their baths after com- ready a tin cutter in the shape of a doll about five inches long; take a portion of the dough on the board at cut into dolls. Brush each doll over with milk and dredge lightly with powdered sugar. Use currants for eyes, and when enough dolls are fin- ished, bake on greased pans ina moderate oven. When cold, deco- rate the skirt of each doll with ruf- fles of frosting. Return to the oven long enough to set the frosting, then let get cold; wrap in sheets of waxed paper. and in packing, place the dolls packing firmly with tissue paper, and before closing the box add a tiny Christmas card and a bit of holly, ty- ing the box with scarlet cord, or Christmas ribbon. Roasted Goose—If there is any doubt about the tenderness of the goose, do-not roast it; braise it with it was roasted, and will be eatable. In order to have the best result, one should use a braising pan, and this is a necessity in every kitchen. Singe the goose, and wash it well in hot before drawing. After removing the entrails, wipe out with a damp cloth; then stuff with mashed potatoes that have been seasoned with powdered ples, corns. sage, a tablespoonful of onion juice, long, slow cooking; it will look like | soap-suds to clean the skin, drying | been | Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 19.—Just ,to show that he has enough money left in his boots to buy a home, Wal- ;a time, roll out half an inch thick andj ter Scott, better known as ‘Death | Valley Scotty,’’ has let plans for the | erection of a $35,000 residence on his | $13,000 lot on the Cienega Hills. That | little detail attended to, Scotty intends leaving on a special train for Chicago ‘ina few days to carry out a little i scheme “‘to keep from becoming lone- |some.’’ In Other words, the Death | Valley miner is going East to get a | Wife. | Scotty’s residence will be in Old | English style, 80 by 180 feet in dimen- sions. Inthe rear he proposes con- | Structing a facsimile of Death Valley, one acre in extent. Here the burn- jing sands, gloomy ravines, desolate peaks and water holes will be repro- duced faithfully, and rattlesnakes, | coyotes, lizards and sage brush will be scattered about in a realistic man- ner. ‘‘Slim,’” Scotty’s mule, will roam at will in the miniature desert. Balked at Cold Steel. “I wouldn’t let a doctor cut my foot off,” said H. D. Ely, tam, Ohio, ‘‘although a horrible ulcer had the’ e of my life for four I used ‘Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, and my foot wes soon a completely cured.’ (ea oe. br ‘at F. T. Clay’s. — the paper which caused the whole trouble. Horton Mercantile Store Sold. Ovid Mullies has traded his 140 acre farm over near Foster for the Horton Mercantile store in Hume and will take charge on December 4.— ‘Hume Telephone. Nell—Isn’t she a peculiar girl? She, wouldn't look at him when he was rich, but now, after he's lost all his money, she accepts him. Tom—Well, you know how crazy every woman is to get something that’s reduced. A factor for pure food ante-dating all stafe and national food laws en