The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 8, 1916, Page 7

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PEOPLES. BANK, | securing you We pay CAPITAL sed SURPLUS, $250,000 FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Fart LOQMS. cf interest with petetage to pay af any time Abstracts. We ves ast of Abstract Books and will fur- \ nish abstracts examine and We will loan idle money for Investments, rrs.cnabie interest ea, good om : interest on time deposits. We have money to lem on reel estate at «low rate oe na J. B DUVALL, Vice-President, 5 ’ Vaal | PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. 3. T. HULL ~ Dentist Gatrence same that leads to Stew- ] ard’s Studio. Nerth side square Butler, Missouri Po oB, FETER, | Riterey at Law . , Publ that Shin Seeare tpioos 100 BUTLER, MISSOURI T, L BALSEY, @. D. 0. 0. Eye, Ear, Nose and Threat Specialist end the Sitting of Glasses BUTLER, HO , Phone SEE THE and pressing. tively clean but ‘a guilty Hats Cleaned and Blocked \ All work guaranteed and prices reasonable: We post- everything . Gemve ever Poupiea Bonk DR. R. RB. GLOYD Graduate Veterinarian Livery Phones, Office 128 ; Res. 358. 30 4t * Coods Called for and Delivered. CROUCH BROS. No, 7'S. Maifi'Se. Phone 171, Butler, Mo. FARMERS. BANK : of Bates County — to Mrs. Roach PERL the See ‘ en. | school fund of ri, to». All of lots one (1) and two (2) in block one hundred fif- ty (150) in Rich Hill Town Company’s second addition to 'the city of Rich Hill, Mis- souri. - ee And, whereas, said mortgage’ ‘was executed to secure a bond for five hundred dollars, duly ex- ecuted by. the said A. C. T to the said County of Bates for the loan on moneys belonging to the aid County ; ( And, whereas, default has been made in the payment of the prin- | cipal sum ; : Now, therefore, I, the under- signed, Sheriff of said County of Bates, having been thereto direct- ed by an order of- the ‘County. Court of said County of Bates, entered of record on the 3rd day of May, 1916, will proceed to sell the above described. premises, or such part thereof as may be nec- essary, at the East Front Door of the Court House in the city of Butler, in said County of Bates on the 10th day of June, 1916, be- | tween the hours of 10 o’clock in the forenoon and 5 0’clock in the afternoon of said day, ‘said sale to be at public auction to the highest bidder for cash. _ HARVE JOHNSON, 31-4t Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sale. By. virtue and authority of the office of the Clerk of the Cir- cuit Court of Bates County, Mo., returnable at the May term, 1916, of said Court, and-to me directed, in favor of Beech Rosier and against J. R. Groves I have levied upon and seized all the right, title, interest and claim of the said R. J. Groves of, in and to the following described Real Es- tate, to-wit: , _| East half of the west half ‘the west half of the east: half and the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter and the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter and the northwest quarter -of the southeast quarter and thirty- five acres off the north part of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter, all in section (12), township (42) range (33), Bates County, Missouri. All lying and being in the said county and State of Missouri; and‘I will on Wednesday the 14th day of June A. D., 1916, between the hours of*nine o’clock in the forerioon and five-o’clock in the afternoon of that day, at the East Court House ‘door, in the City of Butler, County of Bates, aforesaid, sell the same, or so much thereof as may be required, at Public: Vendue, to the highest bidder for cash in hand, to satis- fy said execution and costs. , 82-4t =. = Harve Johnson, Sheriff of Bates County, Mo. eee, Roach Has ‘14 Reasons’ Now Jefferson City, Mo., June 4.— Secretary of State Cornelius Roach, candidate for the Demo- cratic nomination for Governor, returned last night from a cam- paign tour of a week out in the State. About 3 9. m., a few hours after his return, the stork visited his home and left an 11 1-4 pound baby -girl. ‘ 1 This.is the fourteenth child born iand is. the tenth four being boys. : for Secretary of State first in 19 I children; Mrs. Roach and this latest addition: to 4 most interest- farmers | Du Pont } ‘The 40,000 Mitsouri Team Plays the Poorest Gane of Benson. the next few weeks should use Before the largest crowd that just as little skim-milk in it as 8 turned out to see a ball game/| possible because (1) if bought on Butler in many years the home|the butter-fat basis, he gets im played the poorest game/nothing for the skim-milk, (2) it who will be selling cream during | .: Pate ot New York, June 3.—The pro- ley have played this year and of| takes less ice to cool it and less| posed 200 million dollar motor car urse they lost. : work to haul and handle it, it| building combination, including Hupp pitched another good |costs less to ship it, and (3) the| Willys-Overland, Chalmers, Hud- game and should have won with|skim-milk in thin cream sours and|san and Durant companies, will @ny sort of support, as Pleasanton | forms small lumps of curd. did not carn a run. Tink Ellis invade Henry Ford’s field with a Creamery men advise the farm-| cheap motor car and one of the itched the last three innings but/er to sell only rich cream because| greatest commercial wars in the- iP “}it was no use,_the game was al-|it is an advantage to all parties|history of the country is impend- ready lost and the error habit had|concerned. Every bit of skim-|ing, according to Wall Street re- too great a hold to be shaken off. | milk is needed on the farm as feed | ports today. The home team outfield, New-| for calves, chickens, and pigs, and some, Caruthers and A. Union of the John N. Willys and lis is}it does harm instead of good if| W. C. Durant interests brings Du- @s good as any amateur bunch in|sent to market in the cream. Of| Pont money into the combine, say the country and take care of ev-| course, if the cream is sold by the} Wall Street men, who point out erything that comes their way. pint or quart instead of on a but-j that Ford’s anti-preparedness _ Orear on third and Williams on|ter-fat basis, the story is some-| campaign is contrary to the Du- second played a fine game in the| what different, but wherever the | Pont interests. peid but had a bad day at the|grading system is in operation, Jat. The only local men to cross the|is worse than wasted so far as pan was Newsome in the sixth in-| both buyer and seller are con- ning. He got a long two bagger| cerned. and advanced to third on a field- er’s choice and scored on a wild pitch, ; The boys want another chance ; fat Pleasanton and are sure they} El Paso, June 3.—As a result of can win. Manager Ellis is nego-|the conference between General tiating with two new _players,|Gabriel Gavira and General J. J. both of whom have had league ex-| Pershing, all Mexicans and com- perience and hopes to secure their) manders in Northern Chihuahua services for next Sunday’s game] will be instructed to keep: awa with Appleton City. from the patrol zone which the The score: American troops now occupy. Announcement of that was made by General Gavira on his return to Juarez. Mexicans under General Luis Herrera, were sent into the Bat- opilas mine district today to dis- perse bandits reported to be threatening American property. Jose Chavez and his band were routed yesterday in the Parral dis- trict after a brief fight with Gar- ranzistas. Mexicans to Stay Away from Army. v ° > w @| RomMooHScoOND Poore, ss Mayes, rf Rice, 2nd C. Leisure, ¢ B. Leisure, 1st West, If Porter, 3rd D. Leisure, ef Wilson, p ie te SUC — SH AwWwISNSS DHOHRSoHNONT > rlomsocccooccct 41 9 27 The new corporation will be a every bit of skim-milk marketed | holding company of which John N. Willys will be president. “This corporation will be the biggest thing in the motor indus- try,’’ Willys announced this after- noon before he left St. Paul. Formation of the syndicate is in § the hands of Lewis Kaufmann, president of the Chatham and Phoenix National Bank of New York. Willys said: “‘The management of the new corporation will be controlled by the motor car interests and not by the affiliated banking interests.’’ State Treasury Shows Increase in Balance. Jefferson City, June 2.—State Treasurer Edwin P. Deal yester- day filéd with Governor Major a statement showing the transac- tions and conditions of the Treas- ury for May. This statement shows a_ slight increase in the géneral balance over that of April 30. The figures Tatil further notice, according to General George Bell, jr., sol- diers whose enlistments have ex- pired will be retained in the ser- vice under the terms of their re- serve clauses, The quartermaster’s depot at Fort Bliss has shipped 200,000 field rations to General Pershing’s army. 2 base hits, West and Mayes. Stolen bases, 7. Left on bases, Pleasanton 11. Base on balls, Wilson, 2. Struck. out by Wilson, 11. AB H PO A. Ellis, rf Williams, 2nd Newsome, If Orear, 3rd Balance on ‘hand April 30, $6,- 132,80.06; receipts,, $769,351.47; disbursements, $751,670.01, leav- ing the general balance $6,150,- 491.52. There is a balance in the gener- al revenue fund of $186,586.09; in the State school fund of $1,365,- 490.36, and in the Capitol Build- ing fund of $1,826,454.63, there were 10/ Ri H. Ellis, 1st & p Henry, ¢ Caruthers, cf C. Ellis, ss Hupp, p & Ist Sherman, ss wouncsoorold 0 2 DO He DO ee DO — 34 5 27 11 2 base hits, Newsome. Sacrifice hits, Orear. Stolen bases, 4. ; + Left on bases, 8. Bases on balls, Hupp 1, Ellis 2. Struck out, Ellis 1, Hupp 5. Time of gaihe 1:58. 4 240 Pound Pigs. With corn above 50 cts. hogs eat their heads off very quickly. The hog that takes two or three months to get on full feed never brings you a profit. ~ When you are ready to put your shoats on feed, begin with the B A. Thomas Hog Medicine. Use regularly and watch your shoats round out into fat hogs in nine months-—hogs going well over 200 pounds and as high as 240 pounds, Fi theaverage feeding and ju will see why the B, A. Thom- as medicine is a good investment. Try feeding out your hogs on this plan and if you are not more than Pp , we will refund the cost pf the medicine. : C. C. Rhodes Pharmacy, 33-1IMOKM Hess’ Old Stand. ‘Who Captured John Brown? Philadelphia, Pa. June 2.— Who captured John Brown at Harper’s Ferry in 1859? , An orator, at the memorial ex- held at a local cémetery Tuesday made the assertion United States Marines, led by bert E. Lee, made captive the leader, although Grand men who heard it, declared ‘atatement false. : ver, Marine Corps officers ed in this city say, the fact members of the United States es Corps, and not soldiers of army captured John Brown, Il-established. : inty Superintendent ’ of pols A. C. Moreland hora 8 “}eae The balance in the general good roads fund is $425,818.82, arising from the following sources: Apaches Routed Villa Band. American Field Headquarters, Y s Near Namiquipa, Mexico, June 2|__ Sale of option stamps, $29,- (via wireless to Columbus, N. M., 751.26 ; good roads fund, $17,- June 3).—The twenty Apache In- 359.01 : corporation registration dian scouts from Arizona routed a| t#X,, $63,295.46; automobile regis- Villista band near Las Varas Pass| tration, $315,413.09. yesterday, killing the bandits D e Suit Filed. leader and wounding another Villista. The Indians, commanded] (Charles Edwards of this city by Lieut. James Shannon of the through his attorney J. A. De- Eleventh United States Cavalry,! Armond last week filed suit in received no casualties, . ,|the circuit court against J. L. The Apache scouts, led by Chief Fisher and Harry Fisher in which Jesus Velasquez, were on the trail} he asks for #500 damages. of the handits. for a week, accord-| awards claims that. on April ing to Shannon’s report, received 91, 1916, Harry Fisher was driv- at field headquarters today. The! ing an automobile at an unlawful scene of the fighting is forty miles speed when he ran into a buggy south of Namiquipa. occupied by Edwards and his Another American cavalry de-lthree children, bruising up the tachment has found a_ Villista] horse so that it could not be used he of one hundred rifles in @| fo» several days and making it mountain cave fourteen miles} wild and afraid of automobiles so south of headquarters here, that it is no longer safe for the former bandit revealed the loca-| use of his family. tion. [ “ A GOOD FRIEND. A good friend stands by you when in need. - Butler people tell how Doan’s Kidney Pills have stood the test. Mrs. Stewart en- dorsed Doan’s .over four years ago and again confirms the story. Could you ask for more convine- ing testimony? Mrs. John Stewart, 407 Vine St., Butler, says: ‘‘I had kidney. trouble and rheumatism for about ayear. The pains in smy back : were constant and felt as if some- longer military property, the en-|one was trying to pull me in listed men at Fort Myer, through! pieces. My head ached. The kid- sheer love of the animal, * having| ney secretions were often scanty. bought him at auction, and for|I felt sick and weak and just fair. this reason the question of -his|ly dragged myself around. forage had to be put up to Secre-| finally used a box of Doan’s Kid- tary Baker. Under the unusual| ney Pills, procured at Clay’s Drug .cireumstarices it was felt that his|Store and they gave me_ great case calls for special military dis-|help. I- continued taking \ them | pensation. and they restored my strength, I had a beeen apy se Eten increased and my health became. HPA Bilis in Right oars. ._ |better.”” (Statement given = All speed records between: Chi-| tember 11, 1911.) : cago and St. Paul were shattered} On April 28, 1916, Mrs. Stewart last Saturday when a Chicago,|said: ‘‘I shall never stop reeom- and Quincy train} mending Doan’s Ki Pill te made the trip of 431 miles from} anyone who needs a good \Chicago to St. Paul in eight hours| medicine. They have never | and three minutes, an average of | to keep my kidneys in fine sa an hour. The train was) tion.’’ : if a eedative drug for : Army Horse Retiring ‘On Pay’. Washington, D. C.,. June 4.— “Rodney,’’ a faithful army horse, who has served the Government steadily for 20 years, is to be re- tired from active duty and cared for by Uncle Sam. for the re- mainder of the animal’s life. Rodney is a horse with a his- tory and has been identified with artillery organizations as a drag- ger of cannon since he entered the army in 1896. The horse is no

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