The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 29, 1913, Page 6

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Decisive Influence ity requires satisfactory banking connections. the bank than his money. est depositor. and we invite your account. ‘‘The Old Reliable’”’ Missouri State Bank THE WALTON TRUST CO. BUTLER, MO. Capital ; ‘ : $250,000.00 Surplus Fund _. . - —_-50,000.00 The LARGEST and STRONGEST Financial Institution in Bates county. Always has money to loan on farms in South West Missouri at low interest rates on five or seven years time with privilege of payments before due. Own and keep up with the county records a complete Abstract of Title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Furnish RELIALE Abstracts. Fees reasonable. PAYS INTEREST on Time Deposits for Six Months or longer. DIRECTORS Frank Allen C. A. Allen A. B. Owen John Deerwester C. H. Dutcher J. B. Walton John E. Shutt W. W. Trigg _ Wm. E. Walton Ladies and Gentlemen Boys and Girls It is our desire to bring home to you how our bank can help you to a greater success in your material affairs. The price of prosperity is industry and economy, and those who will not pay the price, reap only penury. We all make enough money but only the few save it. Come in and let us talk these matters over with you. J PEOPLES BANK “The Bank on Which You Can Always Bank.” | DUVALL-PERGIVAL TRUST C0. | CAPITAL and SURPLUS, $100,000 FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Farm Loans oy ‘e have money td loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay at any time, Abstracts Maes cates Nes ements teal. estate in Bates county and and perfect files to same. i will loan idle. fe We Jl es roe se perutiog yom Everyman of integrity and thrift in this commun- It does not make so much difference to the officers of this bank how much money a man has in our bank, we want his name on our book. His influ- ence and friendship are often worth even more to The strength of our institution and the standing of its officers are such that we have no hesitancy in presenting our advantages to the largest or small- Our ways of satisfactorily serving you are many, ‘the leaves, On many good farms 4 H The object tm handling, the “first class” leguminous ha; and on some farms none at val to evaporate: this water is due largely to the fact that. leaf structure is destroyed i thy is more easily grown and heat of the sun, and at the seme time vested, and this is the crop thal prevent damage from other sourcés. farmer understands handling . Supposing the clover to dq ¢1 However, the value of legume tke afternoon, the’ ted shoul being realized more and more 1 there is perhaps more being growA {dries a little, so that the eum and) in Missouri every year. Briefly, wind may have the greatest secret of curing clover is to get action. The heavier: the rahi of the water in the: plant withou' the less drying. the weather, the more juring its feeding- value. : it should be stirred. Twice’ tedding |. Time of Cutting. : is usually enough. ‘When sufficiently | Probably the first point to decifej dry to go in the mow,’ the less: han- is the time of cutting. It is generally.| dling the better. There ig a constant agreed that the latter part of the full'loss of leaves, and as it becomes drier bloom stage is the best time. 1 ithe loss Increases. largest quantity of the best quality With all conditions favorable, the of: hay can be cut then. From theé/hay should be ready to mow the|for return to October 81st. Fare|’ period of full bloom until the seeds:fafternoon of the day after cutting. | $2.90, are formed there is a decrease in all7As soon as a sample bunch twisted ; i nutrients with the exception of crude | in the hand tightly shows on moisture a eee So Ger Tickets on BUTLER MISSOURI fiber, in which there is sometimes afijon the outsides of the stalks {t is Fare $4.75, tes an appreciable increase. There is a loss |,ready to mow, and no tine should be |" Hollister, Mo., Summer Chautau| in total weight, and as the plant ap- {dost in doing so. _ a proaches maturity the crude fiber It will happen in the most of cases qus, June ist to Sept. 30th. Final oR. 1 T. HULL pure Limit Oct. 31,. 1913, Fare Dentist : To ‘Pertle Spetcga;: Mo. Season DR. J. M, CHRISTY takes on a woody character. The jthat clover cannot be cured in one day. This necessitates bunching or shocking, for if left in the swath the dew is liable to damage it. If good weather can be depended upon, the curing may be completed in the win- row. When the weather’ is doubtful it should be shocked, for if once it loss of leaves and finer parts in hand- fh Louis, Mo. Season is Ist, ard’s Studio. turp limit to October 3ist 1913. at rate of $11.10 for the round trip. : Pertle Springs, Mo., International : sever tad dry fe and its wale tw Bible Students Association, May aith| OR. H.W. CANNON ; -30th, June 1, 2and 3. Good return DENTIST ee pycciediy, leaaened June 13, 1913 for $2.85. Butler, Missouri When the clover is put in cocks, East Side of the Square these should be small rather than E. C. Vandervoort, Agent. Phone No. 312 large, if quick curing is desired. The ‘ eocks are simply miniature stacks. a : They withstand light showers, but $3.50 RECIPE FREE, have very little power to shed water, FOR WEAK MEN T. C. BOULWARE ;and a heavy rain is Hable to soak Physician & Surgeon them to the bottom. To prevent this ~—}some Have adopted the use of caps made of cloth and held on the cocks ‘either by four pins or by a weight |at each corner. “This increases labor Thayein session ‘al ition fc . | and expense and has not been adopted nervous debi hr, lack of eee ~ B, F. JETER, Send Name and Address Today—You| Office North Side Square, Butler, — Can Have It Free and Be Strong en Diseases of women and chil- and Vigorous ren a specialty. Accurate experiments have shown a difference of 319 pounds per acre fail vy generally. oe . ing memory an A back, : : ’| Before going into the barn clover | Worn and. nervo righ: Side S Phone 1 in favor of the full-bloom cutting. , Boing homes—withons East Side Square one 186 should be absolutély dry so far as wit BUTLER, MISSOURI The larger yield was also much better quality of hay. dew and rain are concerned. —It is surprising the difference between the ald have @ copy. No action of the sap, or water in the ieee aatiet fuser Te OR. ROBERT E. CRABTREE ling over-ripe clover is sometimes | stalk, and water that falls on the tion comes from mae 5 hes mates special study of men ead 1 am General Practice. sufficient to render the hay nearly | outside, either in the form of rain & arest- A sop iastion ad Diseases of Children. worthless. or dew. ‘The reason is not hard to t) ehissheash On the other hand, it has been de-| find. The air is always filled in the | °¥t, ‘ TELEPHO NES termined by experiment that clover | summer season with spores, or min- ey 1s contiaance ey ot ne] Office 301 Residence 541 hay cut earlier than full-bloom con- | ute forms of vegetable life, which de- weer ore ail oe a cdlncourn maa co Office in Gench Bldg. tains so much water that it is hard | velop into moulds, mildews, and such fe el seecare what _SocRanas hn epee IAL 1S Sy A to.cure. It does not produce the] like. These are brought down and NG od : ‘ery largest yield until about that stage. deposited on the clover by rain, and nd so cure himee!: Jatetly T, ‘i HALSEY, M.: DB. 0. 0. For the best results in curing clover | with moisture and summer heat, at| Dr, nicky dae ote tok Bo ding. Do Eye, Ear, Nose and it should be cut in the afternoon, and | once start up the heating or ferment: |troit, Mich , and I rive tad you a copy of ti Thro at Specialist and the Atting of Glasses the later in the afternoon the better. | ing process, which speedily ends, if ‘Poser gues gies Podge bed Alegks While green it can pass one night in | not interrupted, with the destruetion | charge $3 for merely writing out a ke this—but 4 send it entirely . BUTLER, MO the swath without damage, and then | of the hay. The sap is entirely free | Presorlption i 2 teow it has a full day in which to cure. | from all this. It carries no spores OReP ret Ter lon Baek, mene Node Partly cured clover, however, should} with it, hence does little damage as never be allowed to pass the night in | compared with dew or rain. OVER 66 YEARS’ the swath, for the dew at that time! It is quite true that hay can be put| EXPERIENCE of year is sure to damage it, and then | in the barn too green, and especially there is the possibility of rain. if the weather is sultry or heavy laden It is not always feasible for the} with moisture. Under these circum- farmer to cut his clover at the time | stances, hay is never so dry as it necessary to produce the best hay. seems, and there is danger of mould. Hither the weather or the corn crop Alternate layers of clover and straw may prevent. It will usually be pos- | help to remedy green hay, and this. sible, however, to cut before all the | practice causes considerable amounts heads are brown. of the straw to be eaten by the stock, Curing. ‘ A good leguminous hay {s one of a 9 Patents ; i To get rid of the surplus water and | the essentials to the most gene : tak oug at the same time retain all the nu-| operation of practically ‘all stoc! : beh " trients of the clover when in their | farms. It has-no equal as roughage) SCi@ ‘ rq ‘Wissourl Pacifle Tina Table: best condition is quite a difficult oper-| for cattle and sheep, and it is recom- ‘ ereti ‘ , ation. About 75 per cent of the| mended by some horse-men for young y) ‘ BUTLER STATION clover plant by weight is water. When | horses above good timothy. It fs a the same clover ts sufficiently cured | common belief among hog men that a to go into the barn, {t contains about | part of the ration of the broed sow 25 per cent water. The natural pass- | during winter should consist of good age of water from the plant is through | clover hay. LPP PPP PPP PPP PP PDL PPL IPPPPL WHAT $150 DID WHEN ‘ahead of them. Seven bull calves INVESTED IN A DAIRY COW! Ta" or those head agricutturst’cot Here are five @ generations of pure | lege herds. The mother of the family bred Holsteins, bred and owned by | represented an investment of only]. the Dairy Department of the Uni- | $150 when a heifer. These results| | versity of Missouri. | show what can be done by a com-/ The four cows in milk have so far ‘bination of good breeding and good June 1st to September 90th. Good) == Diseaw.s ot Women and Children-a Specialty ir same limits. Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 Entrance same that leads to Stew- 1913 to Sept. 30th, 1913 with final re-| North side square Butler, Missouri a shy tet “eed

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