The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 25, 1915, Page 3

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Butohering Notes. _ Butcher hogs at home. : Give Pears ae jpat no feed <a ot - for a ore killing. ~ _ Columbia, Mo.}~ Bieed the hogs with an eight- > [ich straight-bladed knife. : ‘ ‘ |. Be sure bleeding is done before. General orchard praning will scalding or the skin may be left ‘come tater, but remove the dead,}tov Ted. ; dineased, or broken limbs at onee.| -\ heavy blow with an axe be-/] Just Received the Largest Order of | a ‘wounds left. where/tWecen the eyes will stun the ani- bas: Sets EE apt ee ae mal before sticking. Califo Canned Goods Ever by fr by ladd used he meat may spoil if the ani- Ly speed souitees for pes mal is excited before killing, or ' Received by us ‘ ers. and other diseases. They the weather sare afterwards. se58 ‘ ] : | should be praned back to the liv-|) Scrape as quickly and rapidly Until December 25, 1915, we are going’ to make the’ same oe ly ‘es they never | 28: Wood #0 as to leave a smooth |?*, pei ee is ara . The/}. price in quantities we did when we took titire orders,’ get. our pounds per hog this:medns a loss }s oF of organizing bofore,| WOund.Which may be painted to Ba gua to serape|! price and deal You will want some extra good canned goods to the farmers of the state ol They must quit rganizing ing the policy keep, out diseases. : er ill be tintahed for extra occasions and if you buy CALIFO you know you have something like $16,000,000—and of fev aut for hi j olf nba Make cider, ‘vinegar, or dried} Ceding will be finished morej} the best. thia in view of the fact that we|0f “every farmer for himec? and | apples of culls. Those that are cele ae Hie aaa tes on. 8 ASK US ABOUT THE DEAL are in the midst of the greatest ex-| ‘© pik vebréesiit a about Hore net good enough for this purpose pe p slope with its head down port demand for American meats Ferm se should be fed to the hogs, and the}""": we'hdve known in many years |Cules—helpless only because they | yorthiess or decayed fruit. whi Keep the hog ri i : have never assembled their Meklbarrel. Tf the animal is lett Just Received our the slightest question. The far- mers of Missouri ly market During ‘the eight months follow- ; i +. | clings to the tree should be taken 2 ‘ ‘ ing the outbreak of the European|®treneth—a lppoigaat behead Ricrp off and destroyed in some way|Pressed against the barrel the hot C da we we exported nearly Woo, |emmaed mam a nemerecs and 8 ocuae it unlycontine ceo camo Een fat part Xmas Candy 000worth more American” meat 5 4 “jer codling moth, or the rmape Carcass. | ty products than’we did during the carne ante Pag rine iy ia he of such diseases as bitter vot eat Di cehaeecr ct if ater OVER 10,000 POUNDS TO SELL AT 10c POUND eight months preceding it—and : cab. ea oe wee Watch for our candy add. We have some new varieties have speculated on what farmers - i . lime, some concenrated lye, or a could do if they wonld co-operate Grass, weeds and litter should PALIN we have never handled before. Most complete line ever seen yet, despite this fact, thousands of handful of soft soap thas been Jorn Belt farmers lost money in ( be removed from the base of each : in Butl pa Shek ‘ «yj and stand together. Now they : n . added to the water. in Butler, é ter while for the coming winter|% 0neer have any choice in the feral agniaat the tee ther. are| to" thermometer. Do not |[ 4 Just received shipment of SILVER WARE, best grades on the prospect tueven darker: matter. We are facing a crisis and likely to girdle the tree during|®{t™pt_to seald with the water the ees ‘ : “\[edoubt whether one farmer in| oT@anization. has finally become a} ,: ito, ‘Any decaying plant above 150 degrees. A good scald yet our price on flour and feed. ‘a hahdred’ realizes the seriousness | ™@tter of self-preservation. _ As growth makes a good winter cov- |?" be obtained at 140 degrees BUY YOUR WINTER POTATOES NOW of the present deplorable state ofthe producers of the genes ér for orchard lands, but precau-|'"" it takes longer. : AND SAVE MONEY. ‘affaire’or its true significance for foodstuffs, farmers ee an aie tion should be taken’ to prevent , In spen)ae the careass, split eee ; the future. Here we are in the|PoWer to. say: through what chan- fire from spreading to the orehard the pelvic bone between the hams est line of guaranteed axes only 50c. with a knife by cutting exactly tone witha knifecit wit toi] We Will have Pictures and tiels their products shall pass in reaching the consumer—and here is where the blow must be struck for tibe hase prevail hes ueint | winter rains or melting snow for Bae) y, £0 ees Be Ver URE water standing in the orchard is nopoly’s machinery. : .. | likely to do damage.—J. ©. Whit- The great Santa Fe Railroad 18/ten, University of Missouri, Col- owned by 40,000 stockholders who | lege of Agriculture ; . . :) © years ago, placed its management | wi hae are baad the in the hands of a strong board of | Frank Taylor Elected Su : principles anc practice 0 ome directors and in immediate charge yer per : butchering and curing. There is is E. P. Ripley—one of the best The Grand River Drainage Dis-jnething to prevent ithe farmer railroad men in the Country. Evy-| trict of Cass and Bates Counties} from having the hest without the en so, if we are driven to it, why | Missouri, held its first annual el- t aeeee of big store bills EES should not farmers get together |¢ction of an officer in the Rest}for salt pork. Both he and the build their own packing plants, | Room of the “court house last |Sterckeeper will profit if he cures 2 Passenger car $390.00 go over the heads of the Packers| Monday. At the election of sup+/meat for his own table and uses 5 Passenger car $440.00 F. 0. B. DETROIT d_sell direct to the consumer? | ¢rvisors, about one year ago James | th: money saved to buy things : There are 277,000 farmers in Mis- | H. McCulloh, George 8. App, J. H.{he woudn't otherwise get souri. If 100,000 of them would| Nowlin, C. l. Vansandt of Cass put up $10 each, it would equip | county and U. G. Blankenship of Nursery Hapervon Law. j , a good sized packing plant. If| Bates county were elected. They} Uo you want San Jose scale or corporations in other lines of bus- | cast lots for their tenure of office {other dangerous insects or dis- : 9 on your fall planted fruit iness can be owned and conducted | and it fell to Mr. Vansandt‘s lot | eas u by thousands of stockhdlders,|to serve one year, so the election} trees?) Then watch all deliveries|| The Only Independent Grocery, Bakery and Hardware Store " wrsery stock and see that each Phones, 144 and 49. Garage 3 BUTLER, MO. if this cover is abundant. Drain the low places. in the or- chard which are likely to -eolleet + midst *of the greatest trade bal- ances in'the history of the Nation «so ‘huge in fact that New York rather than London promises to become the future financial cen- ter of the World. Many of our steel plants, automobile manufac- turers and other suppliers of war munitions ‘are literally rolling in new found wealth and as a re- sult the wild speculation in war stocks in Wall Street during the last’ several months has kept hun- dreds of clerks working day and night. Mind you, I don’t say that this is'true of industrial enter- prises generally but it is true of those who are dealing in war sup- plies—and yet, large as the for- eign orders have been for guns, ammunition, aytomobiles, auto trucks and other war staples, it is the meat products, wheat, cotton and Nosese of the apesean a me ich are. responsible for the Hott tinge OE the enormous trade -balances. which are without pre- .cedent‘in our - history—and yet, “notWithstanding tfis fact, the far- mer is in the midst of positively ruinous. market conditions: In other words, so helpless is the far- mer to. protect himself against the industrial vampires -who set an arbitrary price on what he pro- duces that while others are reap- ing untold millions of profit out of the European situation, the far- mer is being compelled to furnish _ the things which keep body and soul together for the poor devils in the foreign trenches at a tre- mendous loss—while the big meat - packers, determined to make tlie ‘most of their opportunity, are hammering prices with more bru- “tak abaridon than ever before in their history. Th the meantiine,the: consumer equally -helpless-at-the other end of the line, pays the same old price—and hence on the one hand we have a “‘high cost of living’’ while upon. the other.we have a state .of affairs which is driving one side of the center, but do not . 7 let the point of the knife get be- Descriptions of 2 the FORD TRACTOR next week. If you want a books on tractors leave your name at the Public Garage. We only have a limited number. First come, first served. . Was Z hind a rib, These methods are used at the Missouri College of Agriculture isn't: there sufficient intelligence | Monday was to choose his succes-| of ck and 1 among farmers to do likewise? Of | sor. one has an official inspection cer- West Side Square g course, the legal machinery of the! There were two candidates, Mr.|tifieate signed by L. Haseman, state and federal governments} Vansandt and Frank Taylor. Mr, {entomologist and chief inspector would have to be brought into im-} Vansandt was the ditch - opposi-} This « cate of nursery inspec- mediate play to protect such an|tion’s candidate. He received 3,-|tion is issued by the Agricultural undertaking—and_ with farmers | 562 votes. Mr. Taylor was the car Xperiment Station of the, Uni- unitedly back of the movement, |didate of those who stood for the | Versity of Missouri and indicates Yo u H avea does anybody doubt that these|digging of the ditch under - the|that the stock in question has a ces. ee ee forces would be brought into play |‘*Plan of Reclamation’’ adopted} een found ‘apparently free Building Prob- 4 as never before? 1 am not say-|by the-Board of Supervisors. Mr. | from dangerously injurious in- Ea ing that this is the way to solve|Taylor received 5,622 1-2 votes. sects or plant diseases’ by — the , the problem. 1am merely suggest-| He was declared elected, and im-/ chief inspector or his deputy who ing it. What I do say is that mediately qualified. The voting "ay also sign. : A something must bé done—and|was done by acreage, each land-; It any trees are delivered with- that quickly. | owner within the district being; out such a certificate, the law : ; The great essential step now is entitled to a vote for each aere | und your own protection both re- | 1 } : ; Hn ayrey to organize. First, we must call|0f land.—Cass County Merroeret. | wuibe tat hae a roe ee en ro gammncesne — ty habia . ———_ ; e ehie spector Mserles, a . ss perfect 4 county organization and |D?- Anna Shaw He Quik an fete. |obambin, Missouri neni rage President. ; Stock shipped in from othe oo ogee en Psscporacontet a New 2h 1 Nae ae cD Alin states must have a certificate possible every school distriet. The! Howard Shaw, who has been pres- ie suspector of that state may moment 40 or 50 counties havelident of the National American! ign inqead of the Missouri in- been brought together in this way,| Woman Suffrage Association 11 speetor . a powerful state organization | years, will not be a candidate to! mareavcnts wliostake ordérs ii should be: perfected and from ‘its | sneceed herself at the convention Miagouri are required to have very inception the movement must to he held in Washington Decem-| written permits to sell nursery Lt: =, tome a hoe bed yd 14 to 19 it was announced to-| stock, and farmers and fruit- ) y. y ers e thousands of bright country boys] Missouri, lowa, Kansas, Illinois, De. Shaw, who has been an ac-|;| We fete conedi a wig on poset and girlsto the already over-|Indiana, Oklahoma and Nebraska | tive worker for equal suffrage for! ho a auetake tye tale sondern erowded cities, increasing farm]will band themselves together ‘in thirty years, made the announee- | without such \ permit should be mortgages and tenants andjthis way, they will represent: a| nent in an open letter. jreported. Dealers in fruit’ trees spreading everywhere a condition|foree more mighty and powerful] .«« During the past year,’’ read |, ten have comtiheates per- of Agricultural despair which. is|than any other American Agricul-jp,. Shaw’s letter ‘I have been! nitting ‘them to. carry on this fast taking’ the heart.out of farm|ture has ever known—a force increasingly’ conscious of the! trade. even though they do not life and -hanging like a black|which will be able'to wrest the wing Te 2 to the * spoken | act as oi t 5 , growing response to the “ spoken | act as the official agents of par. Poem pean ag § bicery opened Seer taoa word on behalf of this cause of ticular nurseries. every farm land. from those . | i i i Nor are these conspirators rests upon every farm in the land OD <eBecaiasd .of the unparalled! an pagel aga te ihe tent. with merely robbing the and who levy an unholy tribute | jarge audiences drawn to our side! Agricultural Experiment, Station Li tage -aner and consumer on beef, ; every wiorsel of meat and) everywhere I. have bécome con- hopes to secure better and clean- j “and niatton bi \ Ovi h ot ae iss vinced thet my highest service to} er nursery stock, but the coop- Aer F tela movement 4 BR VER YER Let Us Help 7You Solve It A HOUSE? A BARN? A GRANARY? ASILO? WHAT ARE YOUGOING TO BUILD? Whatever it:is we can help you—show you new ideas—give you free building plans—save you. time and money. . We don’t merely sell lumber—WE. GIVE SERVICE. Come in and talk it over with us. We wish to call your attention to our splendid stock ‘of— Southern Yellow Pine - “The Wood of Service’’ It’s the Lead wood that we for all sround building and eral purpose wood—it has greater ing sti th: ite Oak and a reste ee, “than White Onk, "Rosk Elm, Hard Maple, or Big Shellbark Hickory—it’s the wood that age improves. s ee Ly Lael let see you how a we fre er yor: Get A free an ans. Coste ni it aed, lps i ple othing to obtain of our service | Fe t the suffrage movement can be best! eration of the nurserymen and § 3 given if I am relieved of the ex-|truit. growers in this work is : Ale dy this mov it is acting duties of thé presidency.”’| neeessary if success is attained. Ye ATH sere = ae Mrs. J. N. Ballard Dead. and| . Can Suspend Physici | Ova sts ta;. ay eetinea ye. ‘Jefferson City, Mo., Nov. 17. | Mrs. Josephine Stark Ballard, ad ’ tke ight of igi Sao “or| Widow of the late Senator J. N. . heath te Saran the tin ge | Ballard, died st this ome of her AD emphases vs jsom, John S. Ballard, at or,| > : we ondact”” and kia, Monday, Nov. 15, | "Phone 18 Butler, Mo. be ee | The remains were brought to The ini Sepreme | nee. old home at Montrose where oF Et & funeral services were held at the " M.E. Church, South, of which sh of Cole” county, fe aay tael payee cg eh ‘of the health Cole _ DR. R. BE. WALSH, (Beccessor te Dr. Cannon)

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