The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 29, 1912, Page 7

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bp ef INTERSTATE, q ’ WEST. No. 698 Madison Local Freight, No 37 Madison Accommodation... EAST. No. 638 Butler Accommoda‘ion... No. 694 Butler Looal freigh Missouri Pacific Time Table No. 206 Kansas City Accommodation. 6 2 No. 208 St. Louls & K. C. Mail & Liu agi) BUTLER aoa Gay toch STATION —~ wihtecouiena, ‘ No. 207 K. C. & Joplin Mail & E: No. 205 Nevada Accommodation. No. #1 (Loral Freight)... for Iollowteg day’s Interatate 12:01 p, m. 3:50 p.m ‘train in morning. Freight trxins Nos. 698 and 694 carry paseen- gers on Interstate Division. No trains carry passengers. other freight An (relene for forwarding must 45:308 m. notiater than eleven o’olock a. m.or be held 1:36 p m. jing. vision must be delivored before fiveo’clook p. m, No freight billed for thie E. UG. VanDERvoorT, NoeTH. be at depot ~ Freight for RI PACIFIC Agent. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOUEI, } ,, County of Bates. In the Circuit Oou t for the Twenty-ninth Cir- cuit, Coanty of bates, State of Missouri, before Honorable C. A. Calvird, Febroary term, 1912 In the matter of the Rich Hill Coal Mining Company, & corporation. The petition verified by % majority of ite Board of Directors for the dissolution of the Bich Hill Coal Mining Company a corporation under the laws o! Mi-souri, hnving been filed in the Circuit Court for the Twenty ninth Cir- cuit, Bates County, Missouri, and the several efficers and ail the stockholders of suid corpor- | ation having entere! their ‘voluntary appear- ance thereto in said Court at the time of filing of said petit‘on, or those thereof who did not enter their voluntary appearanc? in satd Court having been notified by a summons under the hand and seal of the cl: rk of said Court, recit- ing the filing of said petition, its general pur- poee and nature and citing th em to appear 1s Wy 4t | aaid Court on a day to be named in eald writ to | | show cause, if any they h-ve, ageinst euch. | diseoln:ion, it is now ordered by the Court that | all persons interested in the Rich Hill Coal | be ani ereby are required to show canee, {if any they have. in thie court, on ur befo the 20th day of March 1912 why such corpora tion shoul not be dissolved | And notice is hereby given that the general vature of eaid application is a prayer for the | dissolution of said corporation, use its ob- jects and purposes having been accomplished, its deb's patd and all of its aesete distributed, |there is no further occaston to naintain its ! corporate existence, and it is ordered that this ! notice ba published according to law. C. A CALVIRD, Judge. A trne copy of the record. | In teviimony whereof, I have hereun- to set my hand and affixed ths seal of | (sgax) said Court at office, in the city of | Buler, County‘of Kates, State of Mis- | sonri, this the 27 h day cf February, | 1912, H. O, MAXEY, Clerk of Circuit Court. CONDENSED OFFICIAL STATE- MENT OF THE MISSOURI STATE BANK As rendered to the State Bank Commis- sioner at close of business, February 20, 1912 RESOURCES q Money loaned......... Overdrafts (only) Real Estate (including bank building). Furniture and fixtures. Cash reserve............ Total Resources... LIABILITIES GCapital’stock:, .... cneicnaes Surplus and undivided profits. Deposits. “The Old $276,122.31 327.70 20,843.47 3,000.00 94,433.92 $394,727.40 dubious doodomonten $ 55.000.00 16,432.59 323,294.81 FL ONO) $394,727.40 Reliable" The Walton Trust | Butler, Mo. | [eu eeon on eeeridenne Surplus Fund and Profits (earned)..........102,004 40 Always has cash on hand to loan on farms in Bates, Vernon, Barton, Cedar, Dade and Polk coun- ties in Missouri and in Oklahoma on five or seven years time, at lowest rates of interest. PAYS INTEREST ON TIME DEPOSITS. i We own and keep up complete Abstract of Title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Wil stracts. Fees reasonable. For idle money we can arrange for you to re- ceive interest for a few months or years and you hold high grade security for it. DIRECTORS John Deerwester Wm. W. Trigg C. A. Allen John E. Shutt J. B. Walton Frank Allen J. B. Walton. Wm. E: Walton.. oh pany | Min ng Gompany. & corp>ration as aforesatd, | they Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. By suthority and in pursuance of a decree and or'er of sale rendered #nd mate by the | Circult Court of Rates County, Mtssonrt, at the | Fevruarv term thereof, i#12 in a case there pending wherein Mary L. savyreand Earl Sayre €re plamtids, an? Bith Sayre is defendant | and ordering and jecre ing partition and sale of the fotlowing describe: real estate in Bates Count, Missouri, to wit: The east half of tots one and two of the north west guarier and the weet haif of lote one and two ofthe north east quarter allin section six (6) township thirty- nine (39) range twent -nine (29) subject to a trust deed for two thousand three hundred dollars and interest in tavor of Wiliam Hi. Adems trustee for William R ©: mpton which ia recorded in hook 185 at page !2 in the office of the Recorder ot Deeds of Batés County Missouri, also subject too trust veed f r «ne hundred aod sixty-one dollars and interest favor of the same parties recorded in book 183, at page 597 in the otfice of the reco ‘der of deeds of Bates County, Miesouri, I will on Wednesdiy, March 20, 1912, | | | | between the hours of nine o’clock ia the fore- | ;hvon a d Ave o’clock in the afvernoon of that | day at the east front door of the court honse in | Butler, Bates County, Missouri, sell at pu lic | Out-cry to the highest bidder for cash in band all of aid real cetate, in accordance with eal: | order and decree W. J. BULLOCK 19-td Sheriff of Bates County, Missourt Sheriff's Sale in Partition. Maggie Bolin and D. 8 Bolin, her husband and Wm. E Walton guardian of M M Combeor uneound mind Plaintiffe ve {Mason Combs. Hilton Combe, Plato Combs Sylvester Comte Jr , Roy J Stubbs, Homer Davail, The Farmers Bank of Bates County, pany, Defendants In pursuance of 8 decree in “i by.the Circait Court of Bates County suri at ite February term 1912, in the re entitled action, I the undereigs of Batca County, Miesouri, will on Werlnesday the 20ih day of March, 1912 at the east front door of the court house in Bat i ler, Miesourl. offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the foliowing des- pennee real eatate in Bates County, Missouri, - Wit: |. The sonth half of the south eaet quarter of | Seeti: n Twenty-two (22 he noren half of east quarter of jon Twenty-seven in Township Forty-nine (49). Range hirty (3) Bates County, Missouri. Onie K, Wg. BL Sherif of Bates County, Miessuri artition rene Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. | Joseph E. Mosley, Plaintiff va. | Sarah E Mosley, Robert Mosley, Lula Black- | more (nee § osley) Clyde Mosley | Mosley, William Mos) | George R. Mosley, Defendants In the Circuit Court, Bates, County, Missouri | By virtne and authority of a decree and order | of sale made by the esid Court, in the above en- titied cause, and of @ certified copy thereot, ‘dated February 6th, 1912, 1 » illoa | Saturday, March 20th, 1¢!2 | between the hours of rine o’clock 'nt ¢ fort | Moon and five o’clock in the afterno -n of that i day, at the east front door of the Court Hous: jinth city of Butl-r, Bates connty, Missouri, | sell at public v-ndue, to the highest bidder, | the tollowing described real estace, vi All that partofthe East halt of the North weet quarter of Section Twentt-eigh (2s), | Townahi:: Thirty eight (st), of Range Thirty | (30) that lies North nnd East of the Maris des | Cygnesriver containing 55 acreé, mo:eor less, allin Boetes ‘‘ounty Missouri, for in hand | 8 provided by said order of sale. ' W. J. BUL q wid Sheriff of Bates County, Missouri $3.50 Recipe Free, for Weak Men. Send Names and Address Today ---You Can Have it Free and Be Strong and Vigorous. I have in my posession a prescription for ner- ‘ous debility, lack of vigor, weakened man- hood. failing memory and jame back brongh’ mn by excesses, unatual drains, or the follies of youth, that has curea so many worn nervous men right in their own bomes—with- ceseceeeeees 8 55,000.00 | | ehould hive 8 copy. out any additional he'p or medicine—that 1 think every man who wiehes tor n bisman- ly power and virility, quickly and quietly, Sol have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain, ordinary pele envelope to any f: mao who will write m Th's prescription comes from a physician wh has made 8 especial study of men and | am | convinced it is the surest act:ng combination for the cure of veficient manhood and v!gor tallare ever pat together I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence e0 that any man y where who is #ea\ id discouraxed with re- ted failn:es may stop drugging himeelf with armful patent medicines, secure what I be- Heve is the quickest-acting restorative u He j with the records daily a ing, SPOT-TOUCHING remedv ever. devised and 20 cure himeelf at home quietly and quick ll furnish RELIABLE ab- i | aan I will send you @ copy of thi y Just drop me aline like thie: Dr , 3542 Luck Building Detroi recipe in a plain ordinary envelope free of' charge. A xreat many doctors would cnarge | $8 00 to $500 for merely writing ont a pre- scription like thie—bus I send it entirely free. | OVER 65 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE A. B. Owen C.H. Dutcher W.E. Walton .-..... President Vice-President sketch and description alate aaa eitetch ont secRan Pes invention is iy. Communica- tions: on Patents j Miseowii, The Duvall Percival ‘Trost Com | pany and the B. Leibetadter Millinery Come | Sherif to make resistance, to avoid compli- | |Bain, the first juror | blockade, the children of the public | Lumberman who has been expelled | from-the Union League club of Chi- cago on charges connected with the | Lorimer Case. JUAREZ IN HANDS OF REBELS ' SUPPOSED DEFENDERS MADE | BUT FEEBLE RESISTANCE. | FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Stockman. “Sixty Years the Standard February is stalk-breaking time, or it used to be with those who now own stalk cutters, and it still is with) those who don’t. Cutting is certainly | better than breaking, but it is a slow job compared with breaking and can, only be done when the ground is not frozen. System is what counts in choring; and feeding. If there is anything that makes us all complain, it is to have the frost go out of the ground witha rain. Here is hoping that it will not this spring, but it likely will. It is a common sight to see the rent- | ers pass on the roads these days, one | going east and the other west, or one | north and the other south. Sometimes | it is an exchange of locations, and |, F each thinks he is bettered by the | Ing Oly, vacations and not enough change. This is a queer old world, | evasive Haan soles or is it the queer people who make it In conducting the germination test, queer? {remember it is not simply the seeds Ifind that a good grain drill will that sprout, but the ones which show pay for itself in seed saved in time, |the most vigorous and healthy germi- to say nothing of how soon it will re- nation that you can depend upon to pay its cost in putting the grain in propagate a profitable stand of plants. better condition. I find that two} bushels of oats are giving me as good | time we can take down our books and Dre , RICE BAKING POWDER A Cream of Tartar Powder Made from Grapes NO ALUM These blustery days are the very Captured Machine Guns Bought Ex- | pressly to Protect City—No | | Looting or Disorder. i El Paso, Tex., Feb, 28.—Juarez is | in possession of the Mexican rebels. | | Firing only one or two volleys and | | meeting no resistance, except a few | scattering shots in reply to their first volley, the rebels marched into the town, They captured the machine | guns that had been purchased to re- | pel them, and took charge of the mu- ‘nicipal offices, the custom house, the | barracks, the jail and other public | | buildings. The rebels*made the assault by en- tering the outskirts of the city from the northwest, and firing as they en- tered. They used rifles and one can- non. The few hundred men in Juarez | ,as defenders fired a few shots from | | various points of vantage and then were ordered by their officers to} | cease, | The Mexican consul here, E. C. | Llorente, said the officers decided not States. the | was | enter {eations with the United | United States troops patrolled | border at the time the attack | made, apparently ready to i 'Iuarez if El Paso should be endan- | | ge.@!. | | The rebels advafced .in order and appeared to be under perfect control jor their %fficers. Emilio Campa was jin command of the attacking party. The rebels say they will maintain or- der and arrangements are being made ,to restore communication between E! | Paso and Juarez if the United States | ‘troops will permit. i No looting accompanied the taking | of the city. GOVERNMENT INTO MILL STRIKE Action of Authorities at Lawrence, Mass., Regarding Disposition of Children to be Investigated. Boston, Feb. 28.—The federal gov- ernment is to investigate the action of the municipal authorities at Law- |rence in preventing the exportation of strikers’ children from the city. Dis- trict Attorney French has announced | that Attorney General Wickersham has ordered him to determine whether the municipal authorities of Lawrence had violated the Interstate Commerce Law by preventiing ihe railroad from | carrying out its contract with those , who had arranged to send their chil- dren out of the state. | BERT FRANKLIN PLEADS GUILTY Detective Employed by Darrow Ad-/| mits Trying to Influence | Dynamite Juror. Los Angeles, Cal. Feb. 28.—Bert | Franklin, a detective employed by | Clarence S. Darrow, pleaded guilty to depends upon the seed, and not the; having attempted to “influence” Robert | James B. McNamara, the confessed dynamiter now serving a life term in San Quentin prison. | | sworn to try jer, stands as three bushels used to when | Pencils and “make our heads save sowing broadcast and harrowing or Ur heels’ by planning every detail disking to cover. ho! the season’s work soon to come. Judge any fowl you contemplate) Have you any plows to yet sharp- purchasing by the flock from which ened this spring? The blacksmith it springs, rather than. by individual | isn’t crowded with work now, but he traits, ‘will be a little latter on. Grain and hay are so high in price | When both grain and cob in corn that team work is costing a good bit 4re crushed and fed to the horses, be of money. Teamsters can no longer | SUre to make oats, bran or oil meal afford to work at the wages charged about one-third of the rations, as the even two years ago. I was talking cob portion of the chop is so dry and with a teamster recently who said Woody that it is apt to lie heavily on that the $4a day he could get now the stomach, causing gastric colic. In left him less than $2.50 did five years | fact, it will not do to feed this ration ago. Said he was paying sixty-five | alone to horses in anything but mod- cents for corn and $10 to $12 for hay. | erate quantities, especially where they stand in the stalls considerable of the time. Whenever their manure be- gins to turn dark and hard, whether they are working or not, something must be done to loosen their bowels and assist in turning the manure back to a somewhat softer and more golden color, which can be accomplished by decreasing or cutting out entirely the corn and cob feed and giving more of the laxative rations. If your corn was ridged when laid by last summer—and the level culture fellows say it should not be-—and you wish to work the ridges down level with a disk harrow, try taking the two outside disks off the disk that has seven disks in a section, and straddle each row. I find that this works better than to double-disk the ground, lapping half, and the draft is much lighter. If the disk has only six toa section it may be necessary to take ‘off only one disk from each. The Trials of a Traveler. ; Now is a good time to scour up cul- i ee A eee tivator shovels and plow shares. “and was often troubled with consti- A neighbor of mine bought a new pation and Indigestion till] began to fanning mill and seed grader, and he US¢ Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which keeps it in a room of his granary nee Hoi eran allt: se . For all stomach, liver or kidney where the door is so small the ma- troubles they are unequaled. Only chine had to be taken apart when put 25 cents at F. T. Clay's. in. He _ has since found this is quite an advantage, since it prevents ac- commodating neighbors who want to borrow it and take it to their grain instead of bringing their grain to the mill. He says anyone is welcome to use the mill where it is, but none can rack it to pieces hauling it from place to place. The hedge fence that shades the road should be cut down—no guess- ing about this—and it should not re- quire the operation of the law to com- pel the owner to see that it is down. A hedge south of the road not only shades the grade, making it dry slow in the winter, but it keeps the breeze off in the summer, making traveling exceedingly warm on horses. There Deal Seeks Treasurership. Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 26.—Ed- ward P. Deal of Mississippi county today filed official notification with the Secretary of State of his candi- dacy for the Democratic nomination , of State Treasurer. Mr. Deal lives at Charleston and ral times has represented Mis- i county in the Legislature. seve Are Ever at War. There are two things everlasting] at war, joy and piles. But Bucklen’s Arnica Salve will banish piles in any form. It soon subdues the itching, irritation, inflamation or swelling. It gives comfort, invites joy. Greatest healer of burns, boils, ulcers, cuts is no excuse for Ni tall hedge just bruises, eczema, scalds, pimples, south of a public highway. skin eruptions. Only 25cts at F. T. Clover, alfalfa or grass seed bought Clay’s. at the lowest price may turn out to be =e the most expensive in the end. It all . Tax Notice. Alltax payers are notified that a penalty of 2 per cent will be added Feb. 1 ,1912. Please call and settle and_ save ae L. S. RADFORD. 13-tf. price, as to which grade is the cheap- I haven’t any particular kick to make against the modern school, but The original charge against Frank- | it does seem to me that some of the lin .of having bribed Bain was dis- | missed. St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 28—As the street cars'in South St. Joseph were not running because of the snow [tends to lead them away from work To School in Patrol Wagon. |instead of how to do the work better porces coming 3 and to more advantage than did. | lows just out of college who are look- | 16-4t -: learning the youth of today is getting FOR SALE:—8 head of good mules coming 3 years old, and 4 head of and 4 years old. “daddy” _ Will sell them on easy terms. There are too many young fel: | Nuckols Bros., Butler, Route 8. schools and their teachers were taken to school in police patrol wagons. About 20 children were crowded in- to a wagon at a time. Concrete Coffins for Dogs. Chicago, Feb. 28.—An exhibitor at | the cement show at the Colliseum an. | nounced that his firm had decided to manufacture concrete coffins for dogs | and other household. pets. The inno- vation, he said, had been decided upon because of numerous inquiries from persons owning such pets, Kansas Snow Going Fast. Topeka, Feb. 28.—Reports received here from all parts of Kansas showed that the snow was going away almost as fast as it came Sunday. The Santa Fe main line from Hutchinson west was not opened as was expected, and probably will not be open for an- other day. Woman’s Power Woman's most glorious endow to awaken and hold the pure 2 worthy man, When she Io: it and still loves on, 10 one in the wide world cca know the heart agony she endures. The woman vio sufiers from weak- ness and derangement cf hier special womenly or- ganism soon loses the power to sway the heart of aman. Her gener:! and she loses her good looks, her st her amiability and her power and pre: tc asa worman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with the assistance of h:is stali of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many thousands of women. He hes devised a successful remedy for woman's ail- ments. It is known as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It is a positive specific for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, regu- lates, strengthens and heels. Medicine dealers sell it. No honest dealer will advise you to accept a substitute in order to make a little larger profit. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. Dr. Plerce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and strengthen Stomach, Liver and Bowels.

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