The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 7, 1911, Page 2

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Farmers, Attention! Haven't you felt the need of a book which would give you the latest in- formation on the planting and raising of Corn, Wheat, Oats, Alfalfa, Cow- peas, etc.—which would give you the Jatest thought about the breeding, feeding and care of Cattle, Hogs, Horses, Mules and Sheep?—which would tell you how to cure and pre- vent live stock diseases? Such a book is the Missouri Farmers Hand Book which is a handsomely bound and printed volume of between 300 and 400 pages. Besides the above chapters which are by the leading experts in the U. S. it also tells you how to build up the soil of a run down farm, how to make money out of the Dairy business, how to keep your hogs from becoming infected with cholera, how to care for fruit trees, how to prevent typhoid fever, tuberculosis,. maliaria, and how to keep your premises sanitary and free from disease, how to keep your stock 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 and Managing editor of the Missouri Farmer and Breéder—Missouri’s greatest farm and stock journal which is published at Columbia, the home of Missouri’s famous Agricultural College and whose mission is to bring the farmers of this state into closer touch with this great institution. No thinking farmer should be without it. For one dollar you will receive the Farmer and Breeder for two years and a copy of the Missouri Farmers Hand Book free. Your money back if you are notentirely satisfied. Send a dollar at once. The supply of these Hand Books won’t last long—so don’t delay. $3.50 Recipe Free, for Weak Men. -_—— | “Send Names and Address Today ~-You Can Have it Free and Be Strong and Vigorous. Ihave in my posession 4 preacription for ner- vous debility, Isck of vigor, weakened man- hood, failing memory and ame back brough on by excesses, tna ual drains, or the foliles of youth, that bay cures so many worn and nervous men rightin thir own homes—wi'h- ont any additional he p or medicine—that 4 think every man who wirhes tor-gal: hiaman- ly power snd viril ty, quick'y and quie-ly, ehouluh veacopy, Sol bave determind to gend a copy of the preacription free «f churge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envilope to a.y man who will write me tor it. ‘Ths pres*ription comes trom a physician wh) has made a special stady of men and t am convince it a the surest act nx combination for the cure of tficient manhoo. aod vigor failure ever put together Ithink I owe it to my fellow wan to send them a copy in confidence so that any man any- where whois -eah and discourse! with re- pened failu es may atop ‘rugging himeelfw th armfnl patent mevicines, «cure what I be- Neve in the quickest -ecting r-storat ve upbuild ing, SPOT-1OUCHING rem-d ever arvised, and eo cure him-elf at home quietly and quick- uy, Jost drop mea line tike this: Dr. AK, bingon, 3542 Luck Building D. trot, Mich., and I will send you 4 copy of spl nd: recipe in a plain ordinary envelop» free of eharge. A xreat mans doctors wold ci: arce $8 00 to 8510 for merely writing out a pre scription like thie—bu. 1 send it entirely free Office Phone 3, ReeldencePhi ne 268, BATES COUNTY SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS By Supt P. M. Allieon. Miss Bertha Craven of Marshall re- ports the following pupils as having spelled all the words in a two weeks’ test: Esther Kipf, Anna Kipf, Nellie Welliver, Frank, Olive and Hazel Emerine, Pearle Tharp and Effie Cameron. Virginia has a very good enrollment and a fair attendance. Leonard Swarens, Fay Woods, Irene Hereford, Opal Barber and Leslie Swarens have not missed a day. They have more tardies than they shouid. Miss Jessie Miller is teacher. New Home hasa good attendance and but few tardies. Edgar Sivils, Oral Shannon, Myra Lee, Walter Cole and Clifford and Oscar Bennet have not missed a day. Miss Sylva Good- rum is teacher. Foster has a good school in every department this year. All the rooms are doing good work. Mr. A. ‘C. Moreland is principal and Misses Una Judy and Emma Parlier are assistants. | The pupils are active andstudious and are ready for a test any time. Mt. Zion has held a pie supper and} are having the school room papered | and are going to add to their library some. Lawson Brayton, John Arch- er, Earl, Frank and Charles Finch have not misseda day. The-work is moving nicely with Miss Grace Gallo- way as teacher. Worland has a fair attendance but several are out of school that should be attending. Norman Schrogan and Edgar and Maude Smithy have not missed a day. Many have not been tardy and those in attendance are do- ing good work. Miss Ellen Mullies is teacher. Red Top has a very good attendance but this is one of our small schools. The house needs some repairs very badly in the way of fastenings for the doors. Ruthy, Ada and Mabel Carter have not been absent this year. Miss Vera McHenry is teacher. Old Walnut has recently had an en- tertainment and they have purchased a case for their books and a globe. Vida and Fay Thompson, Bertha | Moore, Gladys Coreton and Opal and |Tommie Whitten have not been ab- sent. Miss Lucile McKinzie is teach- er and is doing good work for them. _ |Greenview has a very good attend- ance and while the day I visited them was very stormy all but two were! present. John Briscoe, Benjamin Carmichael, Birl and Edith May, Ree Woodfin and Amy Wilson have been present every day. Miss Georgia | Moore is teacher. Grandview has a large enrollment and a good attendance but they al- ways have. Ola Ayers, Louis Berge, Rannie Butler, Connie, Linnie and Thelma Craven, John Burge, Ethel Grimsley, Mary and Dorothy Harper and Rudolph Nestlerode have not missed a day. They are having the best school in several years. Miss Bonnie Wolfe is teacher. Belmont has a good attendance though it is one of our small schools. The pupils are good workers and are willing to try a test anytime. Helen, Nadine and Eleanor Leonard, Virgil and Mary Burk have not missed a| ing of pupils away from home and home influences with no one: to look after them or that very particularly cares for them isa very bad feature of our presert system. IT Is SERIOUS. | Some Butler People Fail to Realize the Seriousness of a Bad Back. | | The constant aching of a bad back, | The weariness, the tired feeling,. ‘fhe pains and aches of kidney ills Are serious—if neglected. Dangerous urinary troubles follow. A Butler citizen shows you how to avoid them. 4 J. C. Reavis, 315S. High St, But- ler, Mo., says: ‘“‘I still recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills as I consider them a most reliable kidney medicine. We always have a supply on hand. I was subject to rheumatism twinges, so accute that I could not stop. I al- so had trouble from kidney secretions and my sight was affected. Doan’s Kidney Pills, obtained at Clay’s Drug Store, helped me so much from the first that I continued their use until I was well.”” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. : Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. 7 2t U.S. Scenting Big Plot, Watch. Labor Leaders. Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 3.—‘‘The United States Government and the California authorities are co-operat- ing to uncover one of the most gigantic conspiracies ever conceived in the history of this country.” This was the declaration to-day of Assistant District Attorney W. Joseph Ford, second in command to District Attorney John D. Fredericks and the man who was arrested in Indianapolis for alleged illegal extradition of John J. McNamara. “It is only a question now of whether the Federal Government or the State authorities can reach certain persons better and bring them to justice more effectually,’ continued Mr. Ford. Ford has been in charge of the gathering of evidence for the prose- cution, and, while his chief, District Attorney Fredericks, was resting on a ranch near here to-day, Ford occu- pied himself with the details of the McNamara case. Ends Winter’s Troubles. To many, winter is a season of trouble. The frost-bitten toes and fingers, chapped hands and lips, chilblains, cold-sores, red and rough skins, prove this. But such troubles fly before Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. A trial convinces. Greatest healer of Burns, Boils, Piles, Cuts, Sores, Bruises, Eczema and Sprains. Only 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Democratic Meeting in Butler Saturday, Jan. 6, 1912. Hon. J. E. Williams of this city, chairman of the Democratic County Central Committee, working in con- junction of State Chairman, J. B. Fancy Goods China and Books and Novelties Novelties For the Right Present For the Right Person At the Right Price Come Right to Us THE BAZAR South Side Square BUTLER, MO. Belle Dudley to J H Dudley lots 14, 15, 16, blk 24 Amoret $1. T Monroe Smiley to J Bowen 9 a Real Estate Transfers. O M McGuire to O W Lamb pt lot 5 blk 72 Rich Hill $(Omitted) JAMES B. M’NAMARA PLEADS GUILTY 1sec 14 Rockville $100. Jared Griggs to Lena Griggs 80 a sec 24 Hudson $4000. Maud P Betz to W H Crook tract sec 36 Spruce $400. W H Betz to W HCrook pt blk 5 Joenstown $400. H Oberlander to M C Oberlander 80 a sec 18 East Boone $7000. M C Oberlander to W M Frazier 80 asec 10 East Boone $3800. Special sale of $10 and $15 suits TO MURDER Thos Watson to Sarah I Avery lots 10, 11, 12, blk 102 Rich Hill $750. | H H Benjamin to T C Whisler 70 a} sec 27 Homer $1500. | W K Thomas et al to W H Thomas lots 1 and 2 blk 189 3 add Rich Hill $1. Sariah A Smith to Fred Blanset lots 31 and 32 Worland $250. Johannah Hayen to Meekna Wiemn- | |ers 40 a-sec-36-West-Point-$1800.—- C B Swezy to H D Requa 40 a sec Brother Admits Dynamiting the Tron Works Former Probably Will Get Life Im- prisonment, Latter Fourteen Years. Los Angeles, Cal:, Dec. 1.—James —_ H. E. MULKEY, Registe eterinary Si on BUTLE I-8OURI Once A: R. Guyton’s Livery Barn. Percheron Stallion Mares and Filleys for Sale You don’t have to go out of Bates county to get the best Percheron stock. All registered in Percheron Society. Call and inspect stock. ‘Farm 3 miles east of Butler. . day. Mr. Jas. E. Park is teacher and has his school in fine condition. Enterprise was getting ready for a big cyphering match so did not get to| see so much of their work. Elmer and Arthur Hardinger, Norman and Amy Eggleson and Willie and Verne Armstrong: have not missed a day. Mr. Louis Chapman is teacher. Tygard has a very fair enrollment and a good attendance and but few tardies. Vivian and Wayne Wolf and Margaret Wright have not been ab- sent or tardy, in fact, but few have been tardy. Vivian Wolf has missed but one word in spelling this year. Miss Mayme McKibben is teacher. Jessie Perry, Earnest Tourtillott, Margaret Stone and Pearlie Tourtillott of Ovid school sent in some’ of their. regular:work in language and ‘litera- ture that is good, but they always do good work. © ; px Quite a number of our teachers are putting their local meetings later in the year in order-to advocate con- solidation some and we are hopeful of carrying this in some of our town- ships. The country people are com- ing to realize more and moré the im- portance of high school work and that the only way for country boys and girls to have these advantages is to have the school tn the country. The town high schools are not able to care [Shannon of Kansas City, is arranging for a big Democratic Rally day to be held in this city, according to present arrangements, on Saturday, Januarv 6, 1912. Prominent speakers from all over the state, including such wll known Demoarats as Gov. A. M. Dockery, Judge Francis Trimble and Hon. J. B. Shannon. Emulsion keeps children healthful and happy. Give them a few drops of this strengthening’ food- f medicine every day and watch them grow: IT PREVENTS Croup Whooping - Cough Bronchitis B. McNamara pleaded guilty tomurder in the first degree in Judge Walter Bordwell’s court today. His brother, John J. McNamara, secretary of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, entered a plea of guilty to having dynamited the Llewellyn Iron Works in Los Angeles on Christmas day, 1910. James B. McNamara’s confession clears up absolutely the tragedy of the explosion and fire, which, at 1:07 o’clock on the morning of October 1, 1910, wrecked the plant of the Los Angeles Times:at First and Broadway and caused the death of twenty-one persons. - For nineteen of these deaths the McNamara brothers were indicted and J.-B. McNamara; was: on_ trial |- specifically for the murder’of James J. Haggerty, a machinist, whose body was found nearer than that of any}-- other to the spot where the dynamite was supposed to have. been placed. Bofh men will be senténced on De- cember 5, when it is expected District Attorney John D. Fredericks will ask,|. for life imprisonment for “James ‘B. |" McNamara, the confessed. murderer, and probably fourteen years for his brother. Thé ‘men’s’ are con-|" sidered saved, The great contention .. 13 Lone Oak $2200. about 1-3 off at American Clo. House. ~Y- é , A Warm Bathroom that’ the children take their baths \\ in a warm room. chill of a inig‘out of the hot water.

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