The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 21, 1916, Page 7

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a ae » No. 21 Joplin Passenger. . Building Business Prestige A checking account with the Peoples Bank is more than an agent of convenience in fin- ancial transactions, it is a reputation builder “It signifies systematic management of busi- ness affairs; a‘good sound banking connett- ion and a good standing in the community. Our officers will be glad to discuss these features with PEOPLES BANK ‘The Bank on which you can always bank.’ | DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST Cf. rattle HEE SIL BOR 0 . We have meney to loan on real estate at a low rate Farm LOaMS oY ictercet with privilncs te panes ats Abstracts We have a set of Abstract Books and will fur- , nish abstracts to any real estate in Bates county and ¥ examine and perfect titles to same. We will loan your idle money for you, seouring you Investments reasonable interest on pe Bl dectciy. We ley |. interest on time deposits. | W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. SEE THE Clothes PROFESSIONAL CARDS - DR. J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same on leads to Fox’s i Studio. North side square Butler, Missouri 1 CAN. A HEN MAKE SOME. THING FROM NOTHING? A Mistake Which Often Causes Failure. In an experiment conducted at the Missouri State Poultry Experi- ment Station, twenty hens in each of two pens were cared for exact- ly alike, except one pen was sup- plied with crushed lime rock and oyster shell, while the other was not. The pen which was supplied with lime in some form laid 1600 eggs in the same time that the pen without lime laid 161 eggs, which is almost ten to one. This indi- | tains only about enough lime for one shell for each ten other parts of the egg. There are many farms whieh do not contain enough lime to shell a ‘dozen eggs, and in such ease, the farmer must either supply the lime in some form or be content with a small yield of eggs. TN as The writer has talked with many farmers who said their chickens were no profit and the words spoken were true, but the hens were not to blame, for a hen nothing, and if she doesn’t have |, enough lime in her system to make | t the shell, nature docs not permit | ), her to make the egg, soft shelled , eggs being produced from other | material. While this is not the only mis-| take made which causes low egg | cates that the feed and water con-|- cannot make. something out of| ' Appleton City Won, Butler lost another base _ ball game Sunday and it was a mighty poor game at that. The manage- ment in order to insure a good game had imported a_ shortstop and an outfielder in addition to their regular players, but it was no use, they proved to be the worst kind of, gold bricks, espe- cially the shortstop, who mussed up every play that he had any- thing to do with. Hupp pitehed a sood game and.with any kind of support should have won. easily, ‘ut it was an off day for every- body and so we lost. When _ it was all over and the score was counted up it was found that Ap- | pletén City had the long end.of a " to 13 score. The Appleton City | boys are a nice bunch of fellows jand some of them are good ball | players but they were lucky Sun- jday. Itcis to be hoped that the hoys have all of the errors.out of their system and will now settle {down and play the game that they jare capable of playing, as they have two fast teams booked for is week. Friday the All Na- tions, a team eomposed of Japa- Chinese, Hawaiians and | F nese, H fast Pleasanton team causes than a lack of shell-forming| ,,,. They elair will another game, Wilson Pays Anyway. arious other nationalities will be ie. attraction. ave lost but two games out of ie last sixty played. Sunday the nto come Je GUARANTEE | ve Cole’s Original eee = Hot Blast © Heater Your Money Back! You get back the original cost of your stovein the fuel money saved each winter. Could you ask for more? oy 1. We guarantee a saving of one-third in fuel over any lower draft stove of the same size, with soft coal, lignite or slack. 2. We guarantee Cole’s Hot Blast to use less hard coal for heating a given space than any base burner made with same size firepot. 4. We guarantee that the stove will hold fire with soft coal or hard coal from Saturday eve- ning to Monday morning. 5. “We guarantee a uniform heat day and night with soft coal, hard coal or lignite. 6. We guarantee every stove to remain absolutely air-tight as long as used, 7. We guarantee the feed door to be smoke and dust proof, 8. We guarantee the anti- puffing draft to prevent puffing. 3. We guarantee that the rooms can be heated from one to two hours each morning with the fuel put in the stove the evening before. All we ask is that the stove be operated according to directions and connected with a good flue. (Signed) COLE MANUFACTURING CO, (Not Inc.) : (Makers of the Original Patented Hot Blast Stove) Bs production, yet it is a very import- | ant one. 1 | No one can afford to feed high priced feed without first supply- Long Branch, N. J., Sept. 16.— iCongressman Thomas J. Scully, jof the Third New Jersey district, jannounced today the receipt of a This guarantee cannot be made on any other heating stove. you want comfort and economy put one of these heaters in your home. If ing the equally important but cheap material for building the egg shell. | The lime may be supplied in) the form of crushed oyster shell, crushed lime rock, or a mixture j { B, F. JETER, | Attorney atLaw Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI iH i i 1 i | ee ! { t i For practical cleaning and pressing. We posi- tively clean everything but a guilty conscience. T, J. HALSEY, M. D. 0. 0. Wats Cleaned and Blocked Q Eye, Ear, Nose and : Throat Specialist All work guaranteed and 5 Si and _ dave “s ee PALO eel Office on South Side Square Phone No, «6 Coods Called for and Delivered. CROUCH BROS. No. 7 S: Main St. Phone 171. Butler, Mo. FARMERS BANK of Bates County - “MISSOU ' DACIFIC PON \ MOUNTAIN Capital - $50,000.00 Surplus - $50,000.00 Undivided Profits $5,000.00 TIME TABLE Butler Station CORRECTED MAY 7, 1916 We offer-the best of C5 NORTH service in every department We solicit accounts of any size 4 Ky G, Bagriss .050ccc.s00 K. C. & St. Louis Psg 210 K, C, & St. Louis Psg SOUTH No. No. No. PPP BRB BBB No. 97 Joplin Passenger: No. 206 Nevada Passenge: No. No. 64 Local Freight. “ WEST (Leave) No, 683 Madison Loc: No. 687 Madison Passen We Pay Interest on Savings state, Division must he detvered | te- Missouri Troops Threatened. Hr cis tain le meine ss Laredo, Tex., Sept. 17.—Two Madison and local freights carry pas- | egmpanies of the Second Missouri eae LR, Twrman, | Infantry at San Ignacio, 45 miles AS south, are taking extra precau- tions to guard against a threat- - Cutting Trees. ened attack from the Mexican side The right. of a telephone .com-|tonight. Rumor had it that 75 pany to chop down trees along the; shots had been exchanged, which road is questioned in a suit down} Was , discredited. | Anonymous Rockville way, where a farmer|threats of an intended attack sued the manager of a telephone | have been received. — exchange for cutting down the} Otherwise Mexico’s independ- trees in front of his place so that}ence day has been marked with a line of poles could be put up] nothing further than a bull fight and wires strung. The jury in aj across the river, Americans cross- justice’s court aight the ery ot ing to witness it. for the loss of the ———— pester yd Stock Sales— trees and $5 because they were piled in the road. The telephone Are being held all over the coun- try all the time. You as a stock dry and crush, Fowls need grit | besides this lime. Crushed flint | sand, ete., does not supply the! lime, but they are good to grind | the food. For further information. on poultry subjects, address, Mis- souri State Poultry Experiment Station, Mountain Groev, Mis- souri.. Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. Angeline Brown, Plaintiff. vs. Daisy L. Fancelor, Martha Gibbs, Thomas Judson, Charlotte Wal- ters, Lafayette Gillaspie, Joel. Gillaspie, U. S. G. Gillaspie, Milt Hodge and The Walton Trust Company, Defendants. In the Cireuit Court of Bates County, Missouri. By virtue and authority of a decree and order of sale made by- the said Court, in the above en- titled cause, and of a certified copy thereof, dated Aug. 15th, 1916, I will on Friday, Oct. 6th, 1916, between the hours of nine o’clock in the forenoon and five «clock in the afternoon of that day at the east front door of the Court House, in the City of Butler, in Bates County, Missouri, sell at publie vendue to the highest hid- der, the following described real estate, viz: A part or portion of the east half of the west half of frav- tional section number four “(4), township forty-two (42°, re) Time, sand, and water, then Te home, cheek for $2,500 from President Wilson. The money is to be di- vided among Monmouth county hospitals in accordance with the president’s agreement in accept- “‘Cole’s Hot Blast Makes Your Coal Pile Last” Look for the name Cole's on feed door to avoid imitations ing Shadow Lawn as his summer When a committee of Mon- mouth county citizens, headed by Congressman Scully, made ar- rangements for the engagement of Shadow Lawn, Colonel Greenhut, the owner, refused to accept rent- al. The president, however, —in- sisted on contributing the sume re- quired to charity and refused the tender of the place under any oth- er conditions. Ball Players Make Good Soldiers. Port Royal, S. C., September 16. -—Americans are latently the best bomb and grenade throwers in the world and are capable of waging wonderful trench warfare in case of hostilities. say United States Marine Corps officers in charge of recruit training at this place. “The average American youth early learns to throw -a_ baseball with speed and accuracy and it is because of that, we, as a nation, are especially fitted to wage the modern war of the trenches. Base- ball is encouraged at all our sta- tions and the skill displayed by marines—even untrained recruits --in the bomb and grenade throw- ing practice is really remark- able,’”’ said Drill Sergeant Moore today. Early Frost. Some people, who got up early enough last Friday morning, say that there was a light frost in some parts of the county, but not Hardware, Stoves, Implements, Furniture BUTLER, MO. 1 Killed, 7 Injured When Auto | Pellagra Cure Discovered. . Mia biiaye. |. Washington, D, C. Sept. 17—An Lancaster, Mo, Sept. 17.—Ray experiment just concluded by the Fogle, former cashier of the Far-| United States Public Health Ser- mers and Merchants’ Bank and vice at two orphan asylums at son of C. C. Fogle, an attorney,! Jackson, Miss., has demonstrated was killed and seven other men that the disease known as pellagra seriously injured last night when! can be eured by proper dietary an automobile struck a bridge be-) measures and has shown apparent- tween Glenwood and Glenwood | ly that its appearance is not due Junction, The machine, driven by | to any one article of food, but to James Keller, was demolished. | an ‘unbalanced’ diet, Farm House Burned. 10 to 7 Offered on Gardner. Odds of 10 to 7 are being of-) A farm house in) Deepwater fered by Democrats in St. Louis; township, oecupied by Cleve that Col. Frederick D. Gardner! [unter and owned by Cal Fergu- will be elected Governpr. Even | son, was entiPely destroyed by with these liberal quotations it is| fire Thursday of last-week. It is hard to) find Republicans who! not known how the fire started, will take the Lamm end. as there was no one at home at Tom Kearney, turf broker of; the time, Mr. Hhinter being in Ap- that city has a commission of $10,- pleton City and Mrs, Hunter be- 000 to wager against $7,000 on!ing at the home of her father, Gardner, ‘Wm. Grage. ig Range thirty-one (31), begin- ning at the southeast corner of the west half of said frac- tional section thence running north with the east line of the said fractional half section 118 78-100 rods tothe north line of Bates county, thence west with said county line fif- ty-seven rods, thenee sowh 118 78-100 rods to the south line of: said fractional half section, thence east with the said fractional half section line fifty-seven (57) rods to the place of beginning, con- taining 42 2523-8000 acres enough to do any damage, how- ever, it was a warning that winter was approaching and cleaning out furnaces and getting them ready and putting up heating stoves has been the order of the day for the last few days. Frosts were report- ed all along the eastern border of Kansas and the western border of Missouri, which aeeording to the reeords of the weather bureau in Kansas City, is the earliest in 14 years. The freezing point was nearly reached in some places in Kansas, the temperature dropping to 33 degrees. Here’s a Vacation Tip more or less; in Bates coun- ty, Missouri; subject to two trust deeds one for $2000.00 and one for $80.00. Terms of sale as follows, viz: Cash in hand. 48-4 HARVE JOHNSON, Sheriff of Bates County. It Happened Here, Too. Range peddlers sold a lot of kitchen stoves to St. Clair county farmers from $70 and $80 cach which were just the same as (sce- tompany appealed to cireuit court. raiser appreciate the value of —Clinton Democrat. , healthy looking animals. Of Netice to Farmers. course it increases their value, but impossibility : ef |they need a regulator and tonic pro-| to help nature keep them in condi- and|tion. B. A. Thomas’ Stock Rem: edy is guaranteed by us to give satisfaction or we refund your * C. ©: Rhodes Pharmacy, [481m OK. M. Butler, Mo. ola were selling for $60. However we do not remember having seen in the Osceola papers any adver- tisements of $60 ranges, so the purchasers were not wholly to blame.—Clinton Democrat. If you know of a good item of news be sure there are others who would like to know it. Tell us.” Coterie held last Wednesday the home of Mrs. J. T. Hull, the following officers, previous meeting were installed: Mrs. W. Mrs. E. N. Chastain, dent; Mrs. J. T. Hull, recording secretar responding Mattie Boulware, treasurer. Wednesday Coterie Installs Officers. At a meeting of the Wednesday at elected at a E. Walton, -president; vice presi- Mrs. R. R. Deacon, eor- secretary ‘and Miss This was tlie first meeting of the society since last. June and meet- ings will be held regularly every other Wednesday from now until next summer. ‘ A wise one avers that some of women’s prettiest gaments are not made for public exhibition. Must have acquired this knowledge at ‘8 private seance. In the White River Couniry of Southwestern Missouri ond Northern Arkansas, you'll get mere of what you want in the way of a real vacation than anywhere you can go--even though you traveled three times“ the distance and it cost you ten times the price. Only a short ride away—éasy to reach. Hotels, boarding-houses and camps everywhere—comfortable and inexpensive. MISSOURI ‘PACIFIC “<P t Way to Pleasent Places” See our asent. Ask for booklet on the White River Country—ret all particulars—whatever information you from L.R. TWYMAN, Agent Butler, Mo.

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