The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 6, 1913, Page 3

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Two Car Loads Potatoes are here—time to buy your winter pota- toes—now is time to buy before the advance. * Read Our 3 for 25c Line Choice 2 th can gooseberries........ Choice 2 tm can blackberries. .3 for 25c Choice 3 tb can apples....... .3 for 25c Choice 3 f can pumpkin ...3 for 25c 3 tb can beets 3 for 25c 1 th Vancamp’s can spagetti......... teceececess 508 for 25e 1 th package spagetti......... .3 for 25c 1 fh macaroni..............-....c0005 seseeeeses3 for 25c \ 1th package Vermacelli........... seseeee DB for 25c ‘1 tb package noodies....... 2 tb package pancake flour.......... 2 fb can kidney beans 3 ib can baked beans. 2 t can sweet wrinkle peas. 2. can salmon. 2 tb can string beans. 2 fb can new sugar corn New lima beans. 3 Ibs 25c | New package raisins. 3 tbs 25c New dried peaches.. 3 Ibs 25c New bulk. raisins. 3 ths 25c 3 tb can rhubarb.. 3 for 25c 1 f can Spot Cash Baking Powder.. Public Garage _ Have your autos cleaned and overhauled this winter and it will be ready for spring use. We have the only Magneto Magnet Charger in Southwest Missouri outside of Kansas City. If your magnets on your magneto is weak your car is sure to miss at low speed. Send your magneto to Public Garage and have it cleaned and recharged. We have an expert magneto man. Agents for Overland Automobiles in 1914 Models Norfleet é Ream The Only Independent Grocery, Bakery and Nardware Store. White Front Phones, 144 and 49 BUTLER, MO. West Side Square SACKETT BOARD Don’t overlook the possibilities of Sackett, a plaster board made to keep out the cold. Don’t build without in- vestigating. It is made from plaster of paris and gypsum fiber. In finishing good homes it is nailed to the studding’ and plastered with wood fiber plaster. This gives the ideal wall warm, light and sanitary. To finish, paint with Sherwin-Williams Flat Tone Paint—Ask Us For the chicken house apply without plaster. It will make the house warm. H.C.WYATT & 8&0 Phone 17—Butler, Mo. 7 ClubPrices We take subscriptions to all papers and maga- zines at'lowest prices. We save you time and money and risk of los- ing through distant agencies. We Take Subscriptions at any Club Price or Reduced Price Offered by any Agency or Publisher. Ask for prices~you cannot beat our service or prices. © : Timber lands are being depleted. The people of the United States are using more than three and one-half times as much timber as is gsown. It evident that, sooner or later, pro-, ision must be made to grow more timber. i The national government owns and through the forest service controls 160 national forests averaging more than 1,000,000 acres each. This is less than one-third of the forest land owned by private individuals. The government forests contain about one-fourth the timber now standing. It is estimated that 15,000,000 acres of these forests are at present unpro- ductive, although they are capable of producing tree growth. Approximately one-half of the area now unproductive will reforest nat= urally if properly ‘protected from fire: The other half, however, must be ar- tificially restocked. Such is the prob- lem, confronting Whe forest service. It is necessary that\it be solved in or- der that private owners may profit by the results and experience of the Bov- | ernment when they finally come to realize that they, too, must. do their share of artificial reforestation to Crop of Timber May be Grown from Seeds. National. Government Does Big Work By E. C. Pegg, Forestry Department, College of Agriculture, University of Missouri J. A. BEARD Auctioneer Will cry sales in Bates county or adjoining counties at a very reasonable rate. Have done satisfactory work for others—can do satisfactory work for you—have had several years of success- ful experience—can give you good references. growing which will yield the greatest returns. Timber is a crop, the same, as corn, wheat or oats, but is har- | vested after a long period of yéars. | All land will not produce agricultural | crops, and some of it now used for) this purpose will yield greater re- | turns if trees are grown on it. Be-) sides, a wood lot is indispensible to a farm. Should not the farmer now be- | gin forest planting on a small scale | similar to that which the government | has been and is doing? ° ’ Why is a~wood lot desirable on a farm? In the first place, farmers use | @ great deal of wood in some form or Other, A wood Jot will furnish fence, Posts in a very few years; and some large-sized material may be produced | if a few selected trees are left for a few more years after the bulk of the| crop is cut. Wood wjll always re- | main the cite! source of fuel. In many sections of the country | natural gas replaced cordwood until it gave out. Coal is now largely used, | but will not last forever. Oil cannot | be substituted. Secondly, there are indirect benefits. If the location is | tavorable a wood lot “will act as a} | windbreak for orchards and buildings | BATES COU. | i | MY MOTTO “A square deal to buyer and seller” Call on or Phone me for Dates Phone 7 on line 7 Spruce Yours for business, «. BUTLER, MO. R. F. D. No. 1. Jc A. BEARD NTY SCHOOLS | Valley has an enrollment of 32 and Cutivating a small plantation of young hardwoods, AND TEACHERS 29 were present. They have put in” ~~ | some new seats and new slate black- board this year. The teacher is us- Cherry Grove has an enrollment of | ing one of the traveling libraries. It |37 and 32 were present. They have will cost.him 54 cents for the term put in anew teacher’s chairand desk. ' and he hasa good working. library. a) Mr. J.C. Maxey is teacher for the Any other teacher in the ‘equnty can | third consecutive term. doas much. Mr. Omer Randall is Willow Tree has an enrollment of teacher and is doing excellent work. 9and 7 were present. They are hav- -Herrel has an enrollment of 6 and ,ing a good school with Philip Shank- 5 were present. They have a.fine land as teacher. . new building with a modern heating Oak Grove has an enrollment of and ventilating plant in it. Miss Mary 45 and 40 were present. They have Wayland is teacher and is doing good done much good work on the build- | work as she always does. ing and have ordered a new organ. ; Patty has an enrollment of 14 and | The teacher Miss M. Kate Pharis re-| 14 were present. They have a new cently held mother’s exercises and | jacket for the stove. They have a fifteen of the twenty-three mothers class in the ninth grade but not in all were present. | the other grades. Miss Jennie Dono- Compton was not in session. The van is teacher. — ‘teacher ha¢ gone visiting. Adrian has the best enrollment in | By Supt P.M. Allison maintain our timber supply. Just how is it to be done? This is the way the forest service goes to work, Virst of all, th® entire field force is asked each summer to report on the seed crop. Then, when the seeds ripen. fielf parties are sent out to gather them. Squirrels Help in the Work. Most of the seeds collected are of cone-bearing species, seeds greatly desired by squirrels. It is cheaper to collect cones from squirrel hoards or from trees on logged-off areas be- cause of the ease of gathering. Asa usual thing, the areas collected are far from railroads, so the cones are spread out in the sun to “cure,” or, if it will not take too much time, they are .packed and hauled out and shipped to a seed-extracting plant. Here the cones are dried in racks. Many seeds fall out as the cones open up. The remainder are removed by flailing the cones and putting them in revolving screens. The seeds are then stored until needed. Some time before the planting sea- son begins the areas to be restocked are selected and the methods of re- generation determined, A great deal of the work has been by direct seed- | ing—sowing a few seed in carefully } prepared seed spots or sowing them broadcast either on snow or on soil somewhat roughly cultivated. In 1910 23,000 acres were seeded in this manner. During the same year 2,000; acres were planted with seedlings grown in nurseries owned and man- aged by the government. Timber Is a Crop as Much as Corn. ; Land should be used for forest | i HOGS HARVEST CORN WELL) By F. S. Mumford, Dean of the Col-| lege of Agriculture, University of Missouri. The practice of hogging off corn is one that is meeting with much favor among pork producers. The scarcity of farm labor, the cost of harvesting | and the further fact that it has been | demonstrated that more pounds ot pork may be produced from an acre of corn when harvested by the hogs | themselves are good reasons for the | growing popularity of such a practice. | Nor must the importance of pastur- ing off the crop on the ground and | thus returning to the soil the greatest | amount of fertility be overlooked in| discussing the merits of pasturing off corn with hogs. Another fact which makes corn as a crop to be hogged down of import- ance to the man who p! rotations and handles economically {s that on most forage crops the hogs do not come off well | kind of a movable or temporary fence | the corn is dry and no leguminous and also improve the general appear- Elm Grove has an enrollment of’17 its history and especially in primary ance of the farm. Again, nearly every and 16 were present. They have a/and high school. The work is better farm has some land which, for one. littl hool with Mrs. Ne ie | the and th le feel that reason or another, is not suitable for es WE ee Tee WUC Ver aw e People ee a farming. It usually lies idle year aft- | Gilliland as teacher for the seventh | they are getting value received. er year, although it could be made time. ' Foster has the best enrollment they prodiictivenltplantediito ines: Johnstown has an enrollment of 29; have had in.geveral years and es- ; One of the greatest hindrances 'o)/and 26 were present. They need’ pecially in the high school. They orest planting by farmers has been come repairs here and especially | have improved their building very the difficulty of securing suitable ma- leet A ilding | ay and 7 terial at a reasonable cost. It is only | S0me means of cl losing the building | materially and added another teacher in very recent years that the business | against loafers. Miss Flora Koontz /| to the faculty. of growing forest tree seedlings has | is teacher again and does good work.| Star has an enrollment of 21 and 16 been on a firm footing. Before that | ; the small amount demanded was un-| Shelton has an enrollment of 39) were present. They are doing good certain and nurserymen had to get and 33 were present. They need a! Work as they always do. - They con- very high prices for their products. | library in this school. The teacher|template having an entertainment The high initial cost of nursery- finds it rather difficult to do all the} Soon for the benifet of the library. Brown mvalieh shipping expense | work without this. Miss Pattie Mc-|Miss Grace Moreland is teacher and uncertainty of securing plants! , . ‘ j fi ‘ when desired have had a very dis- Aninch is teacher and is doing well. jGgatn, couraging effect on farmers, Condi-’ Enterprise has an enrollment of 31. Miller has an enrollment of 18 and ral nurseries are ma very fair attendance. They need a/@ighth grade class here and some are clusively for the production of forest | *' : . /anxious to finish to get into high library too. Miss Ethel Haynes is| ‘ a : fe ;school. Miss Ruth Wayland is teach- - tree seedlings which sell at reason- able prices. There is a more or less | teacher and no teacher is making a} di f b | more earnest effort. | er and is one of our best. definite market for them. ae .| Shady Dell has an enrollment of 13 | as {and 13 were present. They have or- ‘DOCTORS DID ‘dered a slate blackboard and are NOT HELP HER | needing it badly but it is hard to ' But Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- However, it is no longer necessary for the farmer to buy seed or seed- lings of nurserymen. He need go to no further expense than his own time and effort spent in collecting and growing seeds in his own farm nurs- ery. Much of the work may be done at odd times, especially the collect- ing. If a small part of the garden is used for the nursery site and as much care is taken of the seedlings as of the garden truck there is every rew hurry a railroad. Miss Mary Sharp jis teacher and is pleasing all concern- Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. : etable Co: Kvelyn B. Hesket, Plaintitt. son to believe the work will be a suc-, ble Compound Restored a ve. B pete Hera TER CRORE innie Ford, Columbus © esket ‘ohn J. cess. Mrs. LeClear’s Health— Hesket, Charles Hesket, and Pauline Crab- | tree, a minor, Defenden | In_the Circuit Court of Bates County, Missouri. Her Own Statement. Detroit, Mich. —‘‘I am glad to dis- cover a remedy that relieves me from By virtue and authority of a decree and order | of sale made by the said Court, in the above entitled cause, and of a certified copy thereof, | dated October lth, 1913, 1 will on Saturday, | November 8th, 1913, between the hours of nine o’ clock in the torenoon, and five o'clock in the enernene oF that di t We cout ast door of i the Court House, city of Butlerin Bates my suffering and/ County, Miesouri, sell at public vendue, tothe pains. For two years| nighest’bidder, the following described real suffered bearing | e8ta e- viz: * The south half ofthe south west quarter of Ae ae a got) section twenty-elght (28) and the north hale of run down. I was| the north west quarter of section thirty-three Wunder a nervous|° silin township forty (40) of range thirty- | (31) strair and could not | tor ean in hand, in accordance with the pro- sieep wm night. I vigjons of the decree and order of sale aforesaid. went te eoctors here | S2etd ] in the city but they did not do me any ap in 10 days or two weeks. If the hogs are limited in this way they will have fresh forage from time to time | and will clean the field up much bet- ter as they go. For this purpose some must be supplied. Before placing the hogs on the corn | they should be got on full feed of | new corn gradually by starting them on a few stalks and increasing until they are getting about all they will | clean up. They may then be placed | in the field to do their own harvest- | ing. j The hogs should be turned into the | corn field when the dent has just goed. - formed in the kernel. They will do! — ; Seeing Lydia E. better at this stage than if the corn | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compeund adver- is allowed to get harder. If cowpeas | tised, I triedit. My health impreved have been planted in corn it is not, Wonderfully and I am now quite well necessary to feed any grain. supple | ®84in. No woman suffering from fe- ment. Neither may this be impera- male ills will regret it if she takes this tive if the corn is rather green. If medicine. ’’— Mra. JAMES G. Assignee’s Notice. IN THE MATTEROF THE ASSIGNMENT OF kG. HARTWELL. W. J. BULLOCK, ASSIG:! { All credito?s of the above named R. G. Hart- wetl are hereby notified that the undersigned, as Assignee, in the above matter will be at_ the office of cane, Treasurer, Bates County, Mis- sounl inthe city of Butler, Missouri, on the 19th day of November, 1913, ‘at which time and - place I will proceed to adjust and allow claims and demande against the estate and effects of BR, G. Hartwell, the said Assignor. 52-4t W.J. BULLOCK, Assignee, 336 Hunt St., Detroit, Mich. forage is supplied in addition to the corn it may pay to supply a small amount of some feed high in muscle building nutrients. For this purpose onefourth pound tankage per 100 pounds live weight a day will answer. The tankage may be fed dry in a trough-or mixed with water to form a slop. For profitable results it fs of po eal to supply an abundance of ‘water to hogs on a full feed of Another Case. Philadelphia, Pa. — ‘‘ Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound is all you claim it te be. About two or three days before my periods I would get bad backaches, then pains in right and left sides, and my head would ache. I called the doctor and he said I had organic in- flammation. I went tohim for a while but Leki! det rh tenses ggyetorts 8 { Notice. . * Definition of Joke. - a woman takes Gualy.—Smart Set. a and Gus f AS

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