The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 9, 1913, Page 7

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| | | Walton Trust Go. BUTLER, MO. . Capital and Surplus Fund $300,000.00 The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Financial institution in Bates County Atways has money to loan on farms in south- west Missouri and Oklahoma at LOWEST inter- est rates, and on five or seven years time. Pays Interest on Time Deposits for Six Months or Longer for any Idle Money You Have We own and keep up daily with the county rec- ords acomplete Abstract of Title to afl lands and town lots in Bates county, showing title from the day the land was bought ofthe United States down to this time. Will Furnish Reliable Abstracts Fees Reasonable For almost 40 years we have been lending our money on farms and afterwards selling the mortgages to life insurance companies, savings banks, trust companies, and to hundreds of individual money lenders without any of them losing a dime of interest or principal, or paying any expenses. Persons desiring SAFE INTEREST BEARING investments can always get them of The Walton Trust Company. FRANK ALLEN, Secretary C. A. Allen, Treasurer W. E. WALTON, President J. B. WALTON, Vice President Directors © C. H. Dutcher John E. Shutt J. B. Walton A. B. Owen Wn. W. Trigg Wm. E. Walton John Deerwester Frank Allen C. A. Allen 5SIAE A I PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseas.s ot Women and Children a Specialty BUTLER - MISSOURI fice Phone 20 House Phone 10 visiti: ret” OR. J. T. HULL Spr Dentist wntrance same that leads to Stew- ard’s Studio. North side square Butler, Missouri DR. H. M. CANNON * DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. C. BOULWARE Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. B, F, JETER, Attorney at Law = Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles i Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid- neys and Back. Wouldn’t it be nice within a week or £0 to | begin to eay goodbye forever to the sca'ding | dribbling, straining or too frequent passage of | urine; forehead and back-of-the he: ches; | the stitches and pains in the back; the growing | | muscle weakness; spots before she eyes; yellow skin; sluggish bowele; swollen eyelids or ank- | les; leg cramps; unnatural short breath; sleep- lessness and dec pondency. 1 have a remedy for thebe troubles that you ean depend on, and if you want te make a | QUI’. K RECOVERY, you ought ‘0 write and | greta free dollar package of it. How to obtain | my Kidney 4d Bladder medic nes free:—Just | drop me 4 line like this: Dr. A. E, Robinson, | ; K21l0 Luck Ballding Detroit. Mich , and I will | cend it by mail, postpaid and free. As you will | ! see when }0u get it, this remedy contains only | | pure, harmlees medicines, but it has great! healing and puin-conquering power | It will quickly show ite power once vou ure ; it, 60 I think you had better see what it ie with- | ‘outdelay. I will send you a dollar package | free—you can use it and cure yourselfat home {| Ifyou think thie matter over, you will see | that I could not afford tc make this liberal offer | unless 1 believed my medicines would cure; ORS. CRABTREE & CRABTREE Office in Gench Block. *Phone No. 301. Dr. J. W. CRABTREE. Internal Medicine and Surgery. Residence *Phone 194. For Sale. Two medium size mares. Good single drivers. 51- CARPENTER & SHAFER. General Practice. Diseases of Children. Residence Phone 511. aa ee You make no mugs with PUT- NAM_FADELESS DYES, as they do not stain the hands or spot the kettle. Dr R. E, Crasteee. | | Kidnry and Bladder troubles —adv. B | | a | O-ZO-NOL Heals Itchy | Irritated Skin | Brings relief from all itching burning ‘eruptions; soothes, cools and heals ‘inflamed and irritated skins. Stops ' itching quick! | over night. Eczema, Tetter, Barber’s | Itch, Salt Rheum., Pimples, Rash and | Roughness vanish after a short treat- ment. | add easily applied remedy. Get a jar! | today. | 25 and 50 Cent Jars 5-4t At YOUR Druggist ‘interest on time W. F. DUVALL, President, DUVALL-PERGIVAL TRUST CO. CAPITAL and SURPLUS, $100,000 FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate Farm Loans of interest with privilege to pay at any time. Abstracts We have a complete get of Abstract Books and will fur- nish abstracts to any real estate in Bates county and examine and perfect titles to same. 4 We will loan idle money for securing : Investments reasonable interest on pe he sou Hiro security. We pay J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. Backache, Straining, Swelling, etc. | 8-4t | Judge of Probate. | of the circuit conrt of tsates county Heals chapped hands others interested in the estate of Cornelia C Order of Publication. STATK OF MISSOURI, { ,, County of Ba’ In the Circuit Court, February term, 1918, in vacation December 31d, 1912. Joseph Everingham, Plaintiff, vi Almon Wy Frank Bay Jessie Wrightand the unknown consort, heirs vevisees, donees, imiveqiate, meane and remote, vol- untary and involuntary grantees of P. L. ss yatt, dece: De'endante. url tu the above named de- the plaintiff, herein, Attorneys id files hia petition under vath alleglig, among other things, that the defendants, Almon Wyatt aod Frank Wyatt are nonresidents of the Stxte of Mis- souri, and further alleging that there are or may be p: raons interested in the subject mat- ter of the petition, whose names are unknown to the plaintiff and fur tha’ eon cannot be ipserteu th: rein und that ae far ae known the claim and intereet of the ui wo persons are the consort heirs, de donees, immediate, mesne a: ote, voluntary involuntary graptees of P, L. Wyatt, who wae the beneficiary in a deed cf trust of recoid im the recorder’s office of Bates Couuty, Mis- eouri, in Book 8 «t page 35 Whereupon, it ie oruered by the clerk, in va- cation that defendants be notified by publica that plainiff has commenced a euit hem in this court, the obj+ct and gen- eral nature of which is to precureanorderand jadgment or this court adjudging an declaring the right, title und interest of the parties plain- tif and defe..dant in and to the South half ot Lota and Sin Block Four of Warner's Addition to the 'own, now city, of Butler, Missour!, and to cancel, annul and re- lease of record a deed of trust therein referred to and above mentioned, same being of record in Book 8 a page 85, Recorder’s Office of Bates url, th» said defendante be and appear at this court, a. the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the first Monday in Februafy, 1913, and on or before the firatday of said term, answer or plead to the pe- tition in said cance, the aame will be taken confessed and judgment will be rended a cordingly. And itia further order:d thata copy hereof ding to law, in the Butler county of Br pnbiishes abt once & Week, the last inse! | tion to be at least thirty days before the first | day of the said next Februars term of this court. H. O. MAXEY, Circuit Clerk A true copy from the record. Witnesa my hand, and seal of the ‘[sgat] cirenit court of Bates county, this 3rd day of December, 1912 [Tate H, lurk. O, MAXEY, Circuit Order of Publication. | ! | STATE OF M URI, {ss } County of 88. In the Probate Court for the County of Bates November term, 1912, Katate of J, Milton Wells. Deceased, | Marshal F, Davis, Administrator. Order of Publication Now at thie day comes Marshal! F. Davis, Administrator of the estate of J. Milton Welle, | deceased and presents to the Court his Petition, | praying for on Order for the sale of co much of | the Real Estate of said deceased as will pay andsatiefy the remaining debts due by said | estate, and yet unpaid for want of sufficient assets, accompanied by the Accounts, Lists and Inventories ag required by law; on examl- nation whereof it is Ordered, that all persons | Interested in the catate of eaid deceased, be notified that ayptica:ion as aforesaid has been made, and unless the contrary be shown on or | before the fret day of the next term of this | court to be held on the fourth Monday of Feb- } rnary, 1913 an Order will be made for the sale [of the whole. or ao much of the Real Estate of said deceased a; will be sufficient for the pay- ment o said debte; and it is further ordered that this notice be published in eome newspap-r in Bates County, Missouri, for four weeks be- fore the next term of this court, and that a i | | Dollar Packa 'e@ | py ofthis notica te served on cach of the | pales of deceased, residing in Bates county, aforesaid at least ten days prior to the first County of Bates.” 598 I Carl J, Henr\. Judge of the Probate Conrt, | day of the next term of this court 4 | STATE OF MISSOURI, | held in and for said county. herepy certify that j the foregoing is a true copy of the original ‘ sat | Order of Publication therein referred to, 88 Kidney Medicine FREE | (isine ppear ofrecord in ny oles, Witne-s my baad and seal of said Court, (sEzaL] Hone at office in Butler, Bates County, Missouri, thia 15th day of November, A. a CARLJ, HENRY, Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue and authority of a general execu- tion 1raued from the oiice of the clerk Mi: souri, returnable at the Febrnary term. 1913, of -ald Court, and to me directed, in favor of First National Bank of Appleton City and sgainet E. . Griffith, ' have levied upon snd seized all the rivht, title, fo terest and claim of the said K, P. Griffith of, in and to the following de- scribed reul estate, to-wit: The west half of the southwest quarter of section one; and the northwest fourth of the northwest quarter and thy north twenty five neres of thy northeast fourth of the nor hwes! quarter, and the northwest /ourth of the south- wert fourth of the northwest quarter of section twelve, except that part of the above de cribet ir ct ass gned and set apart as a homee'ead of sald vefendant, which homes ead thus set Apart is dvscrived ss follows; to-wit: The north twenty-five acres of the nertheaat fourth of the northwest quarter and a strip of ground three hundred feet cast and weat and five bun- dred feet north and sonth in the no theast cor- ner of the northwest fourth of the North west quarter of secrion twelve. Alt sitnate in township thirty-nine of range twenty-nine, Bates c unty, Missourl ‘All lying’ and being in the said county and State of Missouri; and I will, on Monday, February 3, 1913 between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- | noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, at the East Court House Door, in the City of butler, County of Bates aforesnid, sell the me, or 80 much thereof as may be required, lat Public Vendue, to the bichesat bidder for cash in hand, to satisfy said execation and costs. W. J. BULLOCK, 12-td 8a Sheriff of Bates County, Mo. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ia hereby given to all creditors and . Gil mor , deceased, that I, A. L, Gilmore, admin- id+atate, intend to make final «et- at the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Missouri, to be held at Butler. Missonri, A reliable, effective antiseptic commencing on the 24th sy ct February, 1913. L GILMORK, 1a-4t Administrator N :tiee of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and others Interested in the eetate of John 8. art, deceased, that J, 5S. V. Kbart, administrator of said estate, intend to make Gnel settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates coun- ', State of Missouri, to be held at Hutler, (ssourt, commencing on the 24th day of Feb ruary, 1913, Ss. V. EHART, 12-48 Administrator. Notice. Netice is hereby g'ven, that letters of admin- istration upon the estate of J. E. Warford, deceased hav- been granted to the under: ed, by the Probate Court of "ates county, sour, bearing date the 7th dayo: Januar, persons 91 all) ving claims against sald estate are reece to exbibit them to the undersigned for allowance, within si: ths after the Gate of said letters. or they may be from any benefit of such estate; ani claims be not exbibited within one year from the date of the last insertion of this puvlication sa fom! be forever barred ‘te of last insertion, January 23, 1918. L. L. WARFORD, Notice of Final Settlement. Noticeis hereby given ‘o all creditors and others int rested in the eatateof Eitwar! Ward- erman, deceased, that I,J. H. Warderm: ex: ecntor of sala estate, Intend tomake tinal ment thereof, at the, next term of th- County Probate Court, in Rates county, State of Misgour!, to be held at Hutler, Missouri, commencing on the 24th of Febroary, 113 itt J. WARDERMAN, GINSERVE. THE. MANURE IT RAPIDLY LOSES ITS VALUE IF NOT PROPERLY CARED FOR. By M. F. Miller, Professor of Agron- omy, College of Agriculture, University of Missouri. Of the different ways of handling manure no other is so saving of fer- tility as that of hauling and scatter- tag the manure as it is made. This gives the least possible chance for loss, either through leaching or fer- mentation. It is true that there are nuilions of dollars’ worth of manure wasted annually in Missouri through impcoper handling, It is a common nd a. wasteful practice to pile the tanure out of doors and haul it onto ihe fields two or three times a year. Experiments have been made which show that manure exposed to the weather for 100 days may lose half ot its fertility. There are at least two good ways of handling the manure. That of haul- ing to the field directly is one of the best. When the ground is too soft to haul onto the field, the manure is stored under roof. Another practical method is to al- tow the manure to accumulate under A Manure Pile That is Losing its Value. an open shed where stock is running. As the manure gathers it is packed down by the stock running over it and. kept moist by the liquid manure. In | very little loss. | this condition there This method is easily followed when there is an open shed close to the horse or cow stable. Some men allow their manure to rot before applying it to the land, This is a common practice with gar- deners. When treated in this man- ner manure acts more quickly, be cause it is well advanced in decom. position, However, for the farmer this method cannot be recommended its organic matter and some of its phosphorus and potassium. It should be allowed to rot in the soil so as to save practically all of its fertilizing | material. The liquid manure, which is so often wasted in the stable, is a valu. | i The manure has lost about one-halt | | Solving the Problem of Fertility. | ‘ble fertilizer and should be gathered n the bedding and handled with the olid manure. The two common sources of los: ire by leaching and by fermentation. | The first is prevented by keeping the nanure under shed. The second is | yrevented by keeping th manure moist wv by keeping it compact so the air is cluded. When a pile of manure smokes” it is losing fertility and tould be scattered or moistened By | | | | ‘ouring water over it. As soon as the farmers know how nuch their lands need the manure ‘nd know the conditions which pre- ent the manure from losing its fer- ility, it will be handled as carefully ; 5s a crop of corn or other grain. | TEACHES MANY FARMERS Sollege of Agriculture Gives Practical Instruction in Short Winter | Courses. The College of Agriculture has siven instruction to more than 1,500 farmers in the short winter course. This course was started fifteen years ago and the attendance has continu- ally increased. There were 279 in attendance last year, besides Pour- een women who ‘cok the course in iomestic science. Instruction is offered in animal hus- sandry, agronomy, dairy husbandry, arm management, veterinary science, orticulture, poultry husbandry, and shop work. ° Work begins this year on November {st and continues for four months. It is divided into two terms of seven veeks each, the second term begin- uing January 6th. Two years’ work is offered and students who complete the work are given a certificate. FEED THE GROP TO STOCK’ | LIVE STOCK MORE PROFITABLE | THAN GRAIN FARMING. | By F. B. Mumford, Dean of College of | Agriculture, University of Missouri. What the farmer wants is a scheme | of soil conservation that is profitable. | If live stock farming conserves fer- | (tility, but is not profitable, then it ‘need not be further considered. But live stock farming is profitable, 'and is more profita‘le than any other system of permanent agriculture that has been used. The average annual ‘net income from stock and dairy | |farms in the United States for the ‘ten-year period ending with the year | {1899 was 11.42, while the income from | \hay and grain farms was only $7.72 | |per acre. In Missouri the income ; |from stock farms was $9.55 and from | ‘grain farms $7.69. The most prosper- jous and best managed farms through. j out the corn belt today are the farms where live stock is a large, if not a chief factor of production. Exclusive grain farming as prac- | ticed from New England west to the !Dakotas has left behind a trail of | depleted soils, and where carried on ‘for too long a time, ruined farms and ; abandoned homes have marked the | way. When we remember that at a | very conservative estimate the stover ‘or stalks, leaves and stems of the |corn plant contain not less than 24 | per cent of the total feeding value of | the entire plant, and that under sys- |tems of exclusive grain farming all *! this material is so utilized that only | its humus value ‘a saved, we must | conclude that there is another method | whereby this valuable feed-stuff may | be first converted into animal prod- ucts. Such a method is certainly to | be recommended. | What is needed to maintain and {improve the fertility of the soil? The | investigations on this matter are clear. | There are four things needed under | existing conditions to supply, directly or indirectly, to the land. These are vegetable matter or humus. phos- phosus, nitrogen and potash, It ia correct for us to say that in any well- planned system of li the humust supply can be easily sus: tained, The nitrogen can be rapidly | increased, and the phosphorus and | potash supplied either through the ap- | plication of fertilizer directlly, or by (No, 202K. C, Mail & Ex... cc. 8: | No. 209 Squthwest Limited the purchase of foods to be first fed; MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION NORTH. No, 206 Kansas City Accommodation 6: | No. 202 Looal Freight, does not car- ry passengers......... ...... -10:50 a, m. No. 208 St, Loule & K. C. Mail & Ex 12:40 p m, 2 * 10:40 p,m. 0 TRAINS W No. 201 K, C.-Joplin Mail & Ex No. 201 Lacal Freight, does not car- ai passengers, 11:65 p.m. 7 No. 207 K. C, & Joplin Mail @ Ex... 1:08 pm, | No, 205 Nevada Accommodation...... 9:40 p. m, INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 698 Madison Local Freight, car- ries passeugers haa 38 Madison Accommodation EAST BOUND ARRIVAI No. 37 Butler Accommodation. No. 694 Butler Local Freight.. 5:00 p. m. Freight trains Nos, 693 and 6!4 carry passen- gere on Interstate Division. No other freight traing carry passengers. All freight for forwarding muat be at depot notlater than eleven o’clock a. m or be held for following day’s forwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before five o'clock p- m, No freight billed for thie train In morning. E, U. VaNpERvooRT, Agent. KNOW IT WELL Familiar Features Well Known to Hun- dreds of Butler Citizens. A familiar burden in many homes. The burden of a ‘‘bad back.” A lame, a weak or an aching back Often tells you of kidney ills. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for weak kidney Here is Butler testimony. J. D. Stewart, 404 Vine St., Butler, Mo., says: “Too frequent passages ock farming, of the secretions from my kidneys bothered me greatly, especially at night. Ialso had pains in my back and hips and s subject to dizzy ispélls. I lost strength, felt languid and weak and suffered from soreness | children introduced by Dr. Maria Mon- ‘knowledge a pleasure instead of a pain, Clever children advance with greater rapidity and backward ones to animals and the manure later ap FAGIIS, foares on F | plied to the land. across my loins. After trying reme- Live stock farming carried on tor ‘ies and doctors’ -prescriptions with- the purpose of farm improvement ts out being helped, I learned of Doan’s | mot an untried experiment. Not only Kidney Pills and obtained a supply at ] Spas eT Clay’s Drug Store. They cured ime, WAY TO TEACH CHILDREN thus convincing me of their merits.” | Stat For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.—Advertisement. 12-2t | American Women Visit Rome to | Learn Montissori Methods of Train- ing Youngsters. Rome.—Dr. Lillian W. Johnson of Memphis, Tenn., an authority on ed- ucational subjects, is in Rome with . Miss Foa of Chattanooga, having come to study the system of training young Office Phone 5, Residence Phone tissori, whose institute at the Porte San Pancrazio has a European repu- tation. The fundamental idea is to let each child develop without — re- straint according to its special apti- tude and to make the acquirement of show unexpected powers of develop- | ment in branches of self-chosen study, it is said, WOMAN GETS $500 FOR SMILE Wife of Essex Bank Cashier Is Re- membered in Will for Being Pleasant. London.—Among bequests by the late Miss Alice Johns Hodges of Chelmsford, Essex, is one of $500 to Mrs. Walker, wife of a cashier at the local branch of the Capital and Coun- ties bank. Mrs. Walker received the legacy simply for smiling pleasantly at Miss Hodges as they left church. When told of her good fortune, she said she used to sit near Miss Hodges in church, and as they came out she smiled at her and exchanged a few pleasant words. H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary urgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Omice at A. K. Guyton’s Livery Barn, 2h tf , OVER 65 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Marks Desicns Copyricuts &c. Anvone sending a sketch and tel AD may " certain our om free whether nition is probably pa able. Communt astrictly contidential. HANDBOOK on Patents, tree, Oldest agency for securing patents, tents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, Without charge, in the Scientific. American, Ahandsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culat f ie Journal, ‘Terms, $3 @ A little lad was found on the street rying very bitterly because his cart was broken. The kindly disposed stranger endeavored to cheer up the little fellow by saying: “Never mind, my boy, your father can easily mend that.” “No he can't,” sobbed the boy. ear: four months, $l. Sold byall newsdealers. ‘My father is a preacher, and don't UNN & Co,3618roadway. New York know about anything.” < ‘Branch Office, 62 F St. Washington, D.C. Wetcome Worps To WomeEN Women who suffer with disorders peculiar to their sex should write to Dr. Pierce and receive free the advice of a physician of over 40 years’ experience skilled and successful specialist in the diseases of women. Every letter of this sort has the most careful consideration and is regarded as sacredly confidential. Many sensitively modest women write fully to Dr. Pierce what they would shrink from telling to their local physician. The local physician is pretty sure to say that he cannot do anything without ‘‘an examination,’? Dr. Pierce holds that these distasteful examinations are generally need- Jess, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to, them, Dr. Pierce’s treatineat will cure -ou right in the privacy of your own home. Ii:s ‘‘ Favorit: Prescription” hes cured hundreds of thousands, some of them the worst of cases. It is the only medicine of its kind that is the product of ularly graduated i ihe ecty cas 00d enough that its makers dae Sorat tes otory n on its outside wrapper. There’s no secrecy. It will bear examine- tion. No elcohol and no habit-forming drugs ere found in it. Some paaicans te mince Draping Por lg -povansnege thay votes Tags : ith health. "es Di ry Medical A iation, Dr. V. Pierce, President, take the advice received end be well.

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