The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 15, 1912, Page 2

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1 Know a Bank By the Men Behind it We invite attention to the personnel of our board of Directors. 5 You will find them men who have made successes in Hite, not through speculation, but by thrift and industry alone. It is a sufficient guarantee of prudent, conservative management. Directors of the Peoples Bank Wm. Seelinger J. R. Jenkins R. F. Harper J. E. Thompson Alva Deerwester R. A. Piggott T. W. Legg A. Lindsay B. P. Powell M. A. Carroll Chas. Radford J. M. Christy J. W. Eggleson W. A. Simpson E.E.Morilla J, R. Simpson Wesley Denton The men behind “The Bank on Which you can Always Bank”’ *'Give the Peoples Bank at least a part of your business in 1912,” Peoples Bank Butler, Missouri Public Sale. ' Having sold my.farm, I will sell’ at ‘my residence 5 miles east of Butler, jat Summit Center school house,, on | - Friday, February 23, 1912 ‘the following described property: ; 11 Head of Horses—1 bay mare ifive years old, weight 1600 lIbs., in ‘foal; 1 gray mare eight years old, | weight 1600, in foal; 1 bay mare seven ‘years old, weight 1500, in foal; 1 mare three years old, weight 1500, colt by ‘old; 1 mare colt; 1 horse colt; 1 sad- |dle colt; 1 old mare. 8 of the above! ,and good. | 3 good milch cows, will be fresh in ‘spring. | ; 12 Head of Hogs—11 shoats, weigh | 60 Ibs.; 1 good brood sow. | Farming implements—1 farm wag- ‘on; 1 McCormick binder; 1 corn! planter; 1 riding plow; 1 harrow; 1) (14-inch walking plow; 2 sets work. iharness. 15 tons of hay and many! | other things too numerous to mention. Terms:—All sums of $10 and under | cash; sums over that amount a credit, of 10 months time will be given on! |bankable notes drawing 6 per cent from date. 2per cent discount for jcash. No property to be removed ‘until terms of sale are complied with. | Sale to begin at 10a. m. sharp. | Lunch on grounds. T. L. FISK. | Col. C. F. Beard, Auctioneer. Indian Killed on Track. Are Ever at War. Near Rochelle, III., an Indian went to sleep on a railroad track and was killed by the fast express. He paid for his carelessness with his life. Often its that way when people ne- at war, joy and piles. form. irritation, inflamation or swelling. me, in a short time, of a terrible! -Cough that followed a severe attack . @ Grip,”’ writes J. R. Watts, Floyda- da, Tex., “and I gained 15 pounds in’ weight that I had lost,” Quick, sate, reliable and guaranteed, 50c and $.100. Trial bottle free at F. T. Clay’s. : The Bates County Poultry Associa- tion will consider bids for the con- struction of exhibition coops to be used at their annual shows. The coops are to be collapsible of the regulation size, 2 1-2 feet high by 2 feet deep and 2 feet long; are to be made of wire or wood, no cloth or paper being used, The prices are to be on lots of fifty or more coops. The sealed bids with specifications as to construction must be in before March Ist, and may be sent to Miss Austin Rosser, Butler, Mo. The Trials of a Traveler. E. E. Youngs, E, Berkshire, use Dr. King’s } troubles they are unequaled. 25°cents at F. T. Clay’s. Buff Orpington setting or $5 per hundred. flock. All pure stock. see. Mrs. A.-M. McFadden, | There are two things everlastingly | But Bucklen’s| : Arnica Salve will banish piles in any | water pipes ought to get down deep It soon subdues the itching, It | renovating than it has hadin a num-| “Tama traveling salesman," wipe t., | “and was often troubled with consti- |” x pation and Inaigertign till I began to | lines to prevent freezing. ew Life Pills, which | Ihave found an excellent remedy.” | For all stomach, liver or kidney} Only | pymped 900 feet. Many told us that Eggs for sale from 2 best pens $1 per} 75 cents | per setting or $3 per hundred from; Come and 17-2m. | R. F. D. No. 5, Butler, Mo. 16-2t Echoes From the Farm. Freezing that gets down to buried |M. C. Wilcox, Clerk. | enough to give the subsoil a greater | glect nae bone t a i ig gives comfort, invites joy. Greatest | ber of years, your, eu BLOM! ile arn healer of burns, boils, ulcers, cuts | wings Nev ist nM dt bruises, eczema, scalds, pimpies,, Water that is in motion will not and so prevent a da rous at skin eruptions 7 De TY | fa. : F | lung rouble, completely cured. Clays. uptions, Only 25et# at FT | freeze easily, so many let the water, ‘run a little all the time where possible _to prevent freezing. The pump lines, _on the farms suffered more than the! Water systems in the towns, because it was impossible to keep the water. j- | moving enough in the shallower laid Something like six years ago we} laid pipes through which water is/| | pipes laid eighteen inches deep would | never freeze here, but the man from | | whom we bought the complete outfit | ‘told us to pay no attention to such } talk, but to dig three feet deep by jactual measurement every foot of the | way and keep the dirt well over the; | pipe all the time, especially through ; 'the yards. We followed his instruc- ‘tions and were fortunate in not hav- | ‘ing the pipe frozen. j THESE SIX LETTERS — From New England Women Prove that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women. Boston, Mass.—“I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), and could get nothing to check them. I began taking Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound (tablet form) on Tuesday, and the following Saturday morning the hem- orrhages stopped, I have taken them regularly ever since and am steadily aining. ‘ e “I certainly think that every one who is troubled as I was should give your Compound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief.”—Mrs. GrorGE Jusy, 802 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass, Letter from Mrs, Julia King, Phoenix, RI. henix, R worked -stea othe om the tin as 12 years old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feel- ings. I had soreness in my side near my left hip that went aroun to my ‘back, and sometimes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days. I was not able to do my housework, i “Lydia E, Pinkhana‘s Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in every way. You may use my letter for the good of others, I am only too glad to do anything within my pores to recommend your medicine.”—Mrs. JuLIA Kine, Box 282, Phoenix. Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan, Willimantic, Conn. Willimantic, Conn.—‘‘ For five years I suffered untold agony from female troubles causing backeche, irregularities, dizziness, and nervous prostra- tion. It was impossible for me to walk up stairs without stopping on the way. I was all run down in every way. ‘“*T tried three doctors and each told me something different. I received no benefit from any of them but seemed to suffer more. The last doctor said it was no use for me to take anything as nothing would restore me to health again. So I began taking oe ag E. Pinkham’s sy eastaule Compound to see what it wer! do, and by taking seven bottles of the Compound and other treatment you advised, I am restored to my natural health.”—Mrs, Erra Donovan, 762 Main Street, Willimantic, Conn. Letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana, Augusta, Me. Augusta, Me—"Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured the backache, headache, and the bad. pain I had in my right side, and I am perfectly well.”—Mrs. WrnFIELD Dana, R.F.D. No. 2, Augusta, Me. Letter from Mrs. J, A. Thompson, Newport, Vt. Newport, Vt.—“I thank you for the it benefit Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eight bottles and it did wonders for me, as I was a nervous wreck when I began taking it. I shall always ak a good word for it to my friends.”—Mrs. Joun A. Tompson, Box 3, jewport Center, Vermont. Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehem, N.H. Bethlehem, N.H.—‘ By working very hard, sweeping carpets, washing, ironing, lifting heavy baskets of clothes, etc., I got all rundown. I was sick in bed every month. “ This last Spring my mother Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound for me, aaa already, I feel like another girl. I am r and do not have the pains that I did, and do not have to go tobed. I will tell ai! my friends what the Compound is doing for me.”—Miss Graciz B. Dopps, Box 133, Bethlehem, N.H. For 30 Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable mas boos Ceo senadard remo forfe- The potato loss has been consider- | able by freezing. One of our neigh- bors kept an oil stove in his cellar continuously during the coldest |weather, taking it out only when | warmer weather came, but after ‘that, when it seemed the danger~ was } ‘over, he lost forty-four bushels. ‘|The cold seemed to get in the cellars | and deeper into the ground after the weather moderated, even after it jthawed a little on the surface each day. | It takes only a little figuring, ap- parently, to prove that the landlord ‘is not trying to “‘hog it’? by asking} ‘the prevailing prices charged renters. | {He is only trying to get prevailing ERH 'side; 2 coming three-year-old horse | \colts; 1 bay filly, coming three years; ‘horses are Percheron stock, all fat, A Public Sale of Prize Winning POLAND-CHINA ——— Brood Sows ——— ‘3e% Adrian, Missouri i Sold at Thursday, February 22, °12 ' Major B. Hadley 55422 Young Hadley 57562 Giant Wonder 59357 . Big Spot 47595 A $ King Blain 49506 three boars weighing Orphan Hutch 57520 1000 pounds each. Expansion Hadley 61923 Our claim on herd boars is that you cannot find their equal in any herd in the state. 18 tried sows—the pick out of our herd and the H. H. Harshaw herd,'which we bought iast fall— 35 yearlings and the balance spring gilts. Included in this offering is a good part of our show herd of last fall, which won so many prizes at the American Royal. Every hog is practically immune, having been innoculated in the fall of 1911. In this offering we think we have as geod a lot of sows and gilts as will pass through any sale ring this winter. Get our catalogue and see the brood sows we are put- ting in this sale; the tops of two of the best herds inthe state. 20 head of the best sows are bred to Major B. Hadley, the greatest Hadley boar living to-day. COME RAIN OR SHINE, as the sale will be held in our big 40x60 sale tent. Plenty of room and if weather is cold, will be well heated. Come and see this offering and if we have misrepresented these hogs we will pay you for your trouble. FREE ENTERTAINMENT for all parties from a dis- tance. We have no mailing list. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. TERMS CASH AUCTIONEERS: —Cols. Harriman, Sparks, Robbins, Beard, Harger and McCombs A. J. Erhart & Sons gether with the income on the invest- ment netted the owner represent both sides of the case between landlord and tenant. Although the rent may seem high to the tenant, it is usually HERD BOARS.. Including Grand Cham- pion of last American Royal Stock Show, and not so high that it brings a greater of interest is now 6 per cent, and interest than could be received were with land costing $40 to $50 per acre, the value of the farm converted into, this means from $2.40 to $3 per acre, money and the mony loaned on real to say nothing of taxes, insurance and estate mortgage. The prevailing rate upkeep of the buildings. IF YOU CAN SOLVE THIS + his investment, ;rates he could easily secure at less \bother than to have the money tied up in farm land which requires more jor less overseeing. The only remedy appears to be a reduction in the price ‘ of land, and that does not seem prob- able, unless the price of everything | else takes a tumble. One year we planted a few acres of our upland to a large, deep grained |corn we had been growing along the ‘creek bottom. This trial of it satisfied ‘us that we raised less corn by attempt- jing to grow the big stuff than as if |we had planted a medium grained jcorn, Though a fair corn season, a jmedium sized sort grown alongside | yielded more and better corn, the big | stuff not lengthening out in the ear as jit should. The ears were short in |length though big at the butt, and | Were terrors to husk. Too much of | it were awkward shaped nubs. | There are still many renters who | do not know where they are to farm | the coming season, and with moving | day only four weeks away. There is \a probability that some will have to | move to town, if they can find houses | vacant to. move into. Never before | has it been so difficult for renters to |locate, mainly because the renters | seem to be greater in number than the farms for rent. The higher rent charged is a factor with some, many jdeclaring they will quit the farm rather than pay it. Enough are pay- ing it, though, so all farms for rent jae being quickly snatched up. se | . The price the renter must pay, to- PRE i] As an advertisement we will give these awards absolutely and unconditionally free to the persons sending in the NEATEST correct Solution of the “THIRTY- SIX PROBLEM.” There is positively no lot or chance connected with the solu- tion of.this problem. It:is a contest of SKILL.. The NEATEST Correct Solution of the problem will be awarded the $500 Player-Piano and the other awards will , be distributed in the order of merit. Fourth Award A Handsome Violin Outfit Value $25 Fitth Award A Handsome Guitar Outfit Value $20 ditional ewer First Award A Beautiful Player-Piano Value $500 Second Award A $350 Upright Piano for Third Award A $350 Upright Piano for ht Ad- is to the next 86 neatest cor- rect solutions. DIRECTIONS: Take the numbers from 8 to 16 inclusive and place them in the squares so that when added together vertically, horizontally and diagonally, the total will be THIRTY-SIX. No num- ber can be twice. Use this or a separate piece of paper or material. Be sure your solution is correct and make it as neat as possible, for much,depends on neatness as well as correctness. The names of the gentlemen who have consented to act as judges is a guarantee that the awards will be distributed to those who deserve them. In case of a tie, the judges being unable to decide between any twe solutions, each will receive equal prizes. Don’t delay. Send in your answer Quick. You may get the beautifal Player-Piano! Sacsn nf that en E. D. ELLISON, D. ise Names of the Judges School of Law and Preudear at basa sociation. A. O. THOMPSON, Manager of Badger Lumber Company. J. B. NORDYKE, Manager Savings Department National Reserve Bank. - Frazior-LoBalio ‘Mi Mail or Br yo Sloe

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