The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 14, 1912, Page 7

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Ke Missouri Pacific Time Table: NORTH. No, 206 Kansas City Accom: No, 208 8t. Louis & K. C. M No 210 Southwest 1.1 Kaneae City Stoc! Local Freight...... ... SOUTH, No. 200 Southweet Limited .... No. 207 K. C. & Joplin Mail & No. 205 Nevada Accommodation No, 291 (Local Freight)... BUTLER STATION P 43. mM, 1S pro INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 698 Madisou Local Freight.. No 37 Madison Accommodation.. BAST. No. 688 Butler Accommoda*ion.. No. 694 Butler Local Freight. Freight trnine Nos. 63 .a gers on Interstate Diviaio tralns carry passengers. All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than eleven o’clock a. m or be held for following day’s forwarding Freight for Interatate Division must be délivored before . fiveo’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning. E, U. VANDERVOORT, Agent. PACIFIC IRON MOUNTA 'y en: No Other freight | | sey, . ‘yay | said Court on a day to be named in said writ to | 5 | show, cause, \c any they” hve, against tach Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. isroln'ioa, it is now ordered by the Court that | . all persons interested in the Rich Hill Coal DVB ROY Ue BOA ne en oe Ole wee In the Clroult Cou t for the Twenty-ninth Cir- | Mining Company. & corporation as aforesald, | Cironit Court of Rates County, Miagonri, at the cuit, Connty o! Hates, State of Mi-sonri, | be and they hereby are requ Tee On oe bararg | Fetruary term thereof, 1912 ‘in a case there before Honorable C. A: Calvird, February | {any they have in thie Court, on or before | pending wherein Wary L. savre and Entrl Say re term, 1912 the 20th day of March why such corpora: | sp. piaiptite, and kil h Suyre ie detendant ‘ | tion chou}. not be dissolved. | and «rdering and Vecre ing partiti inthe matter of the Rich Hill (oal Mining! ~ And notice ia hereby given that the general Of the following deeeriha real ei Company, 8 corporation. « | nature of said application is a prayer for the | orth! MCEREI IK torrie. Meee The petition verifed by % majority of ite | dissolution of said corporation, 2 2 Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, tes County of Bates. rd ecanse its Ob- one and two of the north we ‘ salt rae 5 ve ' Board of Directors for the dissolution of tbe | jects and purposes having veen accomplishe, | eee haltor juin Soe. Ha NPR ORE er an e he north east Ri ill Coal Mining Company a corporatfon | its deb's patd and all of ite aesets distributed, u rj auger in lenn al Missouri, having been fled | there ie uo further occasion to maintain. Its | tine (89) ah seretun al (i) (30) are Fy in the Circuit Court for the Twenty ninth Cir- | corporate existence, and it is ordered that thie trnat deed for two thousand three hundred cuit, Bates County, Missouri, and the several | notice be published according to law. {dollars and interest in tavor of Wiliam [1 officers and ail the stockholders of said corpor- | C.A CALVIRD, Judge. | Adnme trustee for William & C: mpton which ation having entere! their voluntary appear-|. A true copy of the record. | 1a recorded in book 185 at page 592 in the office ‘nce thereto In said Court at the time of filing | In testimony whervof, Ihave hereun’ of the Recorder of Decis of Bates Count of said petition, or those thereof who did not | to set my hand and affixed the seal of) Miesonri, aleo ent ject toa trnat need fr « Ra enter their voluntary appearanc: in said Court , (sxaL) said Court at office, in the city of | hundred ‘aud sixt ial dollars and interest in having been notified by 8 eummons under the | Buler, County of Bates, State of Mie- | ravor of the sain parties recorded io book 18) hand and seal of the cl+rk of said Court, recit- | | sourl, thie the 27 bday cf Febrasry, | at page 507 in the oifice of tne recorder of deeds ing the filing of said petition, its general pur- | 1912, H.O. MAXEY, of Be County, Micsouri, I will on pose and natore and citing them to appear in| 19 4t Clerk of Cirenit Court. | UD gel : : | Wednesdsy, March 20, 1912, | between the hours of nine o’clock ia the fore- | noon 8 d five o’clock in the afternoon of that | day at the east front door of the court house in Butler, Ba:es County, Missouri, sell at pu lic out-cry to the highest bidder for cash in band | all of ‘aid real estate, in accordance with said | order and decree W. J. BULLOCK, CONDENSED OFFICIAL STATE- Fish dae RCS i MENT OF THE > - MISSOUR) STATE BANK [=== Maggle Bolin and 1). S Bolin, ber husband and | Wm. Walton guardian of M M Combaor unsound mind Plaintiffs As rendered to the State Bank Commis- sioner at close of business, February 20, 1912 ve ;Maeon Combs. Hflton Combs, Plato Combs Sylvester Comts Jr, Roy J. 8tubbs, Homer Davall, The Farmers Bonk of Bates County, | Missourl, The Duvall Percival Trast Com , | pany and the B. Leitstudter Millinery Com- pany, Defendante | In pursuance of a d+cree in partition ren- | dered by the Circutt Court of Bates Crunty | Missouri at its February term 1912, in the! ; Sbove entitled action, I the undersig ied Sherif! | of Bates County, Missouri, willon We. neaday the 3d day of April, 1912 at the east front door of the court house in But | ler, Miesouri, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol!owing deer- eribey real estate in Bates County, Missourt, wit: The south half of the south east quarter cf! Secttun Twenty-two (22) and the norun half af | the north eact quarter of section Twenty-seven , (27). sll in Township Forty-one 41). ‘Thirty (39), Bates County, Missonri. | : W. J RULLO“K | 19-td Sheriff of Bates County, Misconri RESOURCES $276,122.31 327.70 20,843.47 3,000.00 94,433.92 $394,727.40 Money loaned Overdrafts (only) Real Estate (including bank building). Furniture and fixtures Cash reserve Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. Sarah K’ Mosley, Robert Mosiev, Lula Black- more (nee Mosley) Clyde Mosley James N ‘ eee Mosley h che C, Mosley and Jeorge R. Mosley, Defendants 7 . 323,294.81 In the Circuit Court, Bates, County, Missouri By virtne and anthority of a decree and order $394,727.40 of sale made by the eaid Court, in the above en- titted canse, and of ertified copy therco!, | 5 dated February 6th, 1912,1 + illono Wednesday, March 20th, 1912, ' between the hours of nine o clock ‘nt'e for:- | | noon and five o’clock in the afternon of that | day, at the east front door of the Court House, inth city of Batler, Bates ree Miesouri, eell at public vindue, to rhe highest bidder, the tollowing described real esta.e, viz: = : Allthat partofthe East half of the North West quarter of Section Twenti-eigh’ (2s), | Townahi ; Thirty eight (3:), of Range Thirty ...§ 55,000.00 Capital stock 16,432.59 Surplus and undivided profits Deposits Total Liabilities “The Old Reliable” allin Bates County Missouri, for cash in hand as provided by said order of sale f W. J. BULLOCK, lg td Sheriff of Bates County, Missouri. Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue and authority of alias execution feaued trom the office of the clerk of the circuit court ot Bates county Missour!, returnable at the May term, 1912, of said court and to me directed in favor of Micaourl State Bank and Range | Are you farming for the sake af the Joseph EK, Mosley, Plaintiff {nate you as a successful farmer in the ‘e | highest sense? | FARM FURROWS. | Farmer and Stockman. ; A lamb dropped in cold, damp | quarters or on the ground means a | weakened or dead animal. | The main objection tor storing corn fodder in the barn is that it brings a | nultitude of mice and rats as winter | boarders, but those who have the room can overleok that. This digging corn shocks out of the snow every day in adddition to the other chores is what makes some people say that the farmer’s life is just one blamed thing after another. The farmer who buys his breeding stock early pays a good, stiff price, but he secures the select of the herd. Why not plan to keepa few swarms of bees? For the amount of labor and expense involved they will return ‘more clear profits than any other branch of agriculture. Take special care of the earliest! calves, They are the ones that will bring you the big price this fall, or develop into fine specimens for the} improvernent of your stock and dairy herds. Sixty strength and free from 3” PRIGE'S| ‘BAKING POWDER Years . the Standard for purity, healthfulness. Made from pure, ; grape cream of tartar, alum and phosphatic acids. Oats are unequaled for calves. = Unless the stalks on last year’s cornfield are taller and of larger size than ordinary, it will not be necessary to run the stalk cutter over the ground, as the job can be done much earier and quicker by hitching a horse to each end of a twenty-five or thirty- foot pole the size of a stove pipe, and dragging it down the rows. If this is done while the ground is still frozen, every stalk will be broken off at the surface, leaving the ground in prime shape for stirring. In digging your wealth from the soil remember that it should be done in a manner that it should be done in| money, a manner that will leave the land Gontinue to throwtoutarféwoseeds fertile enough for your posterity to lor.heads of grain to our friends, the produce something on which to sub- birds and they will repay us many sist after you are gone. fold when the season comes in which One of these days, when the horses they deal death and destruction to come in sweating slightly under the| borers, worms and insects in garden, collar, thus softening and loosening | field and orchard. the,dirt and grime that so often cause sore shoulders, take your mittens, a} .. : a corn cob or the regular horse brush | losing a few seeds by their failing and clean the face of the collar off © 2"ow where you do early planting, alll, |since the loss will be small if they nore jare wasted. If they produce an How many times did you visit the | a ‘ ® Didn't have ti io {early érop, it will be worth from school this term! idn't have time? twice to three times as much as that produced later on. If you want good, delicious apples right up to the time next summer’s varities ripen, carefully wrap several choice ones separately in clean, thin paper as you take them from the storage pits, pack them in barrels and boxes, place a layer, and set them away ina cool, dry, well-ventilated spot. This is a. period at which one is most apt to neglect salting the horses, out-of-date machinery, but the differ- ence in field value amounts to considerable in the course of a few seasons. The singing hen is the layer and if there is not song among your flock something is wrong and you should immediately ascertain what it is and remedy it. ank baking powder cans, saving every one of them, as there are scores of things they can be used for and they are as good as tin cups that cost You can well afford to run the risk few dollars and cents you'll get out} jof it, or are you going to see that the} 'boys and girls are trained up and| ' educated in a manner that will desig- The coming of spring means the coming of the agent. About every- thing is now sold by the traveling agent from a thrashing machine to a bottler perfume. much ground a good ear of seed corn will plant? It is just that much ground that is not planted when the ear is poor seed. When I read an article in which seed corn is referred to as ‘‘corn seed’’ I know where to place the writ- er of it. He is some poor fellow grinding out stuff in a city office, and probably never spent more than a week, all told, on a farm in his life. There are certain expressions that town farmers use which give them of the seasons during which they need it most. With so much dry grain and roughage being fed and no | summertime greeness, salt is of prime importance in assisting digestion and promoting good health among the animals. moon. A neighbor told me so after- wards, and informed me that the meat would not keep or would ‘“‘all fry away in the pan.’’ He waited ence in the price of old, shop-worn, | sometimes | Trim the tops off salmon, oyster , Did you ever stop to think how cattle and sheep, although it is one | Last year butchering day on this} farm was in the wrong time of the’ cent of the deaths last July were + —DOs- borne, 1 have levied upon and seized all the right, title, interest aod claim of the ssid Anna Shane Osborne ard T. D. O borne, of in and to the foliowing described real eatate to-wit: Beg nving 90 feet north of the :oatheast cor- ner of section Fifteen (15) in Township 40 Range 31, Bates County, Missouri. and running thence west 3 chains and 10 links, variation 6 degsees 15 minutes, ‘hence north 172 feet; thence east paralell with firet line to point due north of point of La Af thence south to place of beginning, all lying end being in the sald county, and State of Missouri, and I will (30) that lies North »nd East of the Marias des eed —— ———————— —_———e Cygnes river. containing 55 acres, moreor less Butler, Mo. ;on ARC TCTO HEUTE SORTER ..$ 55,000.u0 Monday, the sth day of April, A. D,. 1912 sora s 102,004.40 |) Stren tne hours of nine, o: clock tn the fore: day, at the east con't house door, in th« city of Butler county of Rates aforessid, sell the game, or so much the eofas may be rquired, at public vendne, to the highes: bidder tor cach in hand to ecatisfy said execution and costs W.J BULLUCK, 21-td Sheriff of Bat: s County, Miss: uri 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. We own and keep up with the records daily a complete Abstract of Title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Will furnish RELIABLE ab- 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. Notice. | __Netice is hereby g ven, that letters of admin istration upon the estate of C. K, Ferguson, de- {crased hav: been grauted to the undersign- ed, by the Bates Count, Probate Court in Kates © unty, Mi souri, bearing date the 26th day of Febraary, 1912 All persons having claims against the estate are required to exhibit them to me for allow- ance, within one year from the date of said letters or they may be precluded from any benefit of anch estate; and if said claims be not exhibited within one year trom ‘he date of the arlication of this notice, they will be forev-r Date of lact insertion, March “8, 1912. ee E. J. FERGUSON 21-3 Administratrix. For Sale. About 100 tons of good bottom hay. Will sell in quantities to suit. Also native lumber. Also some good horses and mules. Kern & Beatty, Butler or Rich Hill, Mo. DIRECTORS Frank Allen John Deerwester Wm. W. Trigg C. A. Allen John E. Shutt. J. B. Walton A. B. Owen C.H. Dutcher W.E. Walton Wm. E. Walton............. President J. B. Walton.... . Vice-President ETE ae: A Frank Allen. .. Secretary he nbsone toten’ Gh ter is or - CA, Allén.................. Treasurer $5.50 per hundred. a sale Mrs. A. S. Milhorn, 17-tf Butler, Mo. “jsuch a slow method of selling the ___. \in his grain drill for the first time has t. a greater husk than any other oat I away. One rainy day in early spring a neighbor of mine gathered all his boys around the kitchen table, and from a pile of shelled seed corn in the center they sorted the odd-shaped and inferior grains from those that were perfect. That was before the day of corn graders, and while it turned out to be quite a job, my neighbor always contended that it paid. He uses a grader now. Selling nearly all the hay and grain raised on the farm isa sure and not until the moon was right before do- ing his butchering and lost all his meat, while mine kept perfectly. Now, I would like to have some of the moon fellows tell me what it is a sign of. Lucky is the man who has seed po- tatoes in plenty, for the price is going to be almost prohibitive by planting time. Many of my neighbors did have seed in plenty a few weeks ago, but the January temperature got under the cover and they have long since been fed to the hogs. It is bad enough to lose seed when it is ordi- narly plentiful, but worst of all when is so scarce and high in price as this year. farm. Sometimes a man may not think he is doing so, but he certainly is. The downfall of a farm begins Eighteen dollars per bushel is the price asked for clover seed by our local dealears this spring. This means a small acreage of clover seed- ing, but it is not necessary to advise those who buy to try their best to get a stand. Fool advice is sometimes pretty near an insult. The Men “Who Succeed as heads of large enterprises are men of great energy. Success, to-day, demands health. To ailis to fail. It’s utter folly for a man to endure a weak, run-down, half alive condition when Electric Bitters will put him right on his feet in short order. “Four bottles did ma more real good than any other medicine I ever took,”’ writes Chas. B. Allen, Sylvania, Ga. “After years of suffering with rheu- matism, liver trouble, stomach dis- orders and deranged kidneys, I am again, thanks to Electric Bitters, sound and well.’"’. Try them. Only 50 cents at F, T. Clay’s. Missouri’s Stork is Busy. Jefferson City, March 8.—-Dr. Frank B. Hiller, secretary. of the state board of health, gave out a statement today of the births and deaths in Missourj in 1911. There were 73,858 births and 43,390 deaths for the period stated. The ratio of deaths for the entire state, based on the government census for 1910, was 22.42 per cent and the death rate 13.17. January claimed the greatest num- ber of deaths, 4,807, and September the least, 3,029. Kansas City shows a lower birth rate and a higher death rate than St. Louis. There were 4,664 births and 3,966 deaths in Kan- sas City last year, giving a birth rate of 18.77 and a death rate of 15.96. For the same period the birth rate in St. Louis 21.83 and the death rate 15.68. There were 15,001 births in ithe city of St. Louis and 10,775 deaths. Tuberculosis claimed the greatest number of victims, 5,035 more than 11 per cent. Pneumonia comes sec- ‘ond with a record of 4,521, or more than 10 per cent. More than 23 per | children under 2 years of age. Dunk- ‘lin County has the highest birth -rate, ‘above 40 per cent, and Buchanan 116 percent. Dunklin County also has | the highest death rate, more than 23 ‘per cent, and Worth County has the | lowest death rate, a little more than 5 | per cent. | This is the first report ever made ‘in the state covering the vital and mortuary statistics. What We Never Forget according to science, are the things associated with our early home life, ‘such as Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, that {mother or grandmother used to cure ,our burns, boils, scalds, sores, skin ‘eruptions, cuts, sprains or bruises. | Forty years of cures prove its merit. | Unrivaled for piles, corns or cold- | Sores. Only 25 cents at F. T. Clay’s. when the owner of it makes up his $$$ $$$ mind there is more money in selling what he raises than there is in feed- ing it at home. Early seed buyers get the cream of the seeds. The man who sows Texas red _ oats | case of the organs distinctly feminine. every day by considerable adjusting to do before he will get as much seed sown as when sowing the common varieties of white oats. The Texas red is a longer, sharper-pointed kernel, with tive tonic for the whole system. of home. local treatment so universally insisted every modest woman. We shall not particularize here as to those peculiar ever saw. Last year I set my drill at full capacity and sowed none too much. Select your farm machinery and insist upon your dealer furnishing you with the latest improved and up- to-date models. There is little differ- binding for 31 stamps. Facts for Weak | Women Nine-tenths of all the sickness of women is due to some derangement or dis- ions incident to women, but those wanting full information es to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the People’s Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser—1008 pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of cent stamps to cover cost of mailing ow/y; or, in cloth Address Dr. R. V, Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Such sickness can be cured—is cured Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. It acts directly on the organs affected and is at the same time a general restora- It cures female complaint right in the privacy It makes unnecessary the disagreeabie questioning, examinations and upon by doctors, and ‘so abhorrent to the symptoms of 21 one-

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