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Preposed Amendments te the| Helps Everyone Should Know. Always use ice water when mix- j ine pie crusts. | Grated Irish potato on a burn is both soothing and healing. Joint and concurrent resolution sam) Add a little sugar to the pan- mitting to the qualified voters of the state leakes and see if they aren’t im- of Missourl, an amendment te the Com | stitution thereof, neerning pemivm te! proved, - Constitution of Mi FIRST CONSTITUTIONAL ANEND. | MENT. before Dad " ‘an gale hot water poured over it, That at Tues nt . wing the first M cooking, HB. there shall be suits b Pat plenty of butter into the rs of Missourl for alry . ts = be following cowsttte eake that you wish to keep for yewit: E : faurticle IY of the Cem | SRY length of time. x Ae gaye | Yee will keep twice as long if onstitutto comtutuma | Wrapped ina newspaper before prominting 206 4 \ being placed in the ice box. of, peusions to the Be VW anything boils out of your may De provked att wots onto your stove, sprinkle salt ee ’ 5 ye t TUTIONAL AMESB | Uiberally on the spot, and it will fasuas sean | memove smok the burnt odor. Proposed by -Initiative Petition, \ bet ke and! volivin t aes To empower th n preserving or jellying, place to create, by ap law, @ State Raed x sterling silver spoon in: the jar ey Arte OWEN SeeO) aericaltural “tems jar glass, and you need fear no nd to insue bonds, and astheria! a 3 ~ sy i ane reprinting Gf One Milton Dottars iar | Sanger of the hot syrup breaking 000,000.00) out of the State [trsaiiees fr wour glasses. het » t ie and ond ot sald bank fremtaxetem, | _\ teaspoonful of lye to a.gallon sod caildating any legistation Reretetere of oiling water will take the MISSOURI STATE LAND BANK AwEND. S*OKY Dlack from the bottom of MENT TO THE CONSTITUTION, kettles and pans. Allow the. pan Proposed by legul voters by Luithattee et j iling s tion for Petition nee ihe: taitiadee sand Reaver | Set in the boiling solution for ality Neon the foll. that notl shall be serve sendut Proviston Constitutées, |@ few minutes, then rub. with a act a Spectal law ary orth OR BM | be known as the Missouri State Laud Bauk, (disappear. d credits, to appropriate state mowers as |) A loan th ald thereof, aud exempts fe! she New World whence tin. in also debenture | large commercial quantities is ex- valldutiug of any law }by the Gen | Ported. @ral Assembly in aceo ve herewith, in as an alloy ap- Missouri that the Constumtiup be s¢ amended | pears to be very old. Before the Cu provide as follows: - 3 Letees! / nact @ spectal Raw te | s 1G create corporation to be known aa, the 8tors the natives of Peru and Bo- make loans tex secnred by deeds of q trust or mortgixes upon agricultural tamds | AGA, made use of tin as an alloy same with all snitable and inetdemtal And to enact other spectal nee ly to-amend avd tm oF to supply ontastone Capon era EL at ee at. | bash or cloth and the black will with powers to mobilize and tiquidtes taru | Agee ae 4 H Bolivia is the only locality of state, county and municipal taxes all of | “by it, and providing for the ivi The deposits are large, Be it enacted by the fe of the Stare af | RNA the use o eral Assembly te dere | Coming of the Spanish conquist- Missouri State Land Bank, with power ty | Livia, in the vicinity of Lake Titi- and lo issue nture bonds agaist the with copper to make bronze. or at other sesstoms of | ects: therein Healthy Hogs Resist Cholera. Hogs are not as resistant to dis- ease at this season of the year as hey are in the spring when get- ¢ an abundance of green for- and having access to a wide we his nee ‘y therefore, | tw give them more attention and million benture ean aN | wetter care to offset seasonal con- i he Asset x >>. * e. with ths provisions of Ser ana 2) ions and danger from new corn. hereof stall be deemed vatld frou aad ateee || the adoption hereof, -Do not feed in the same lot, or THIRD CONSTITUTIONAL awene | OX The same acre of ground, day MENT, after day. This contaminates the Proposed by Initiative Petition. feeding places, and also attracts after duty 191%, the TORS, pigeons, and sparrows re of, the introduction tat Ye av y y pedi if CHAR WINES MAPRSe ae eee LO AY have been feeding with nf tntoxicating Hawore te tb 5 holera infected herd. Throw reuribing, a pecaee (the feed out in a different spot mil re} a) eau) > 317 7 ii tatuten anal bees | CE day, thus giving the pigs a cipal Laws in conflict therewith. }elwan plate’? from which to eat. posed amendment to the r i of Mixsourl, to ie nies Reyer] The water supply is of much voters vf the State of Missourt for thete ortance to the health of the eral leet pescile gs at this time of year. Old of November, A. D. W16. probibitt . ws ver miauufartnre oft the: tateotution Hee gen] NL Wallows are never good, but are not so bad if the hogs can have pure water to drink, but if forced to bathe and drink in the Prohiiiting after July first, manufactu State of mental HOUSE GRANT WAS WED Inq! when to Vaccinate Hogs Against AUCTIONED Cries Old Dent Home, Once One of ” Since the season of the year is . Louis, Purchased pproaching when hog cholera us- Bone re jnally beosites most prevalent the ubject of vaccination is being dis- St. Louis, Sept. 27.—The old | cussed very extensively. In fact Dent home here, in whieh U, S_/ more attention is given to vacci- dy. lar army was married to Miss| factors to be considered in hog Julia Dent, was sold at auction! :wanagement. In some communi- here today to John H. Gundlach | cies in Cass and Bates counties for $4,325. Mr. Grundlagh bought | nearly every farmer has vaccinat- the home to preserve it. jed his hogs by the simultaneous The property was owned by method while in other communi- the board of education, Mfr,/ties there hasn’t been any vacci- Gundlach‘said he was willing to; ation done at all. In most cases turn the home over to-any organi-| farmers in the latter communities zation for the amount he paid for! sre going to wait until it becomes it, and that he would held the) property until.a fund was raised /2s 8 matter of fact, it will not be ecessary for them to do but very to purchase it for preservation as | for t ue vaccination where they are a historieal relic. ation r The Missouri Historical Soeie. |=! co-operating in trying to keep hog cholera eradicated. ty has been raising a fund to pur. t The use of anti-hog cholera chase the home. At the time of the Grant-Dent |»erum is a big factor in helping nuptials in 1848 the house was one | ihe farmers ‘to save their hogs of the best in St. Louis. Today) when it is needed. Its use how- the district where it is located is/¢ver, has become sort of a habit a manufacturing and cheap reem- | With a great many farmers and ing house section, For a time the | they often use it when it is not Dent home was a rooming and} !ecessary. The idea seems to pre- at a hog is immune because he s been vaecinated by the simul- neous method. There are a large number of mers in Cass and Bates coun- Telegrams received in Rich Hill who have suffered heavy loss- this Thursday morning from Lees) »< during the last two seasons by Summit, Mo., by John A, Winston | osing this treatment in herds that and C. W. Orris, announced the} were absolutely healthy at the death of Frank P. Smith, of Bast | tine of vaccination. i While in some cases it seemed as if good-results had been ob- served for 20 cents. Well Known Railway Conductor Dead. Walnut street, this city, whieh oc- | curred at the home of his son-in-! : law, Homer Spencer, Wednesday jtsined but in a course of two to afternoon, Sept. 27, 1916, after aj four months the hogs began get- lingering illness of hardening of) ting sick of cholera and had to be the arteries, says the Rich Hill Re | r--vaccinated, because the immun- view. Mr. Smith was about 63 had run out and the infection years old, and for 25 years a resi vd been put on their farms by us- dent of Rich Hill. Mr. an@"Mrs. | ‘ng this treatment. | Smith left here some ten days age j— The argument is made by some for Lees Summitt to spend , the) that the simultaneous treatment winter with their daughter and) will not put cholera ona farm. A husband. | herd was visited a short time ago Frank Smith was for many} Where the owner tried to im- years # popular Mo. Pacifie pas-]}umize sixty nice spring pigs, ry to vaccinate their: hogs: i . hoarding house where meats were | \#tl among a number of farmers senger conductor on the Kansas/there were sixteen left, two or City-Joplin division. He was re/three of them sick. These hogs liable in all his dealings, affable | #d been re-vaccinated but it did in his manner and a warm heart-) Yet seem to check'the disease and ed man, and had a legion of}the owner had lost some of the friends. He was a member of the | breeding hogs that were thought A. 0. U. W. in which he carried} te be immune. ‘ a policy for $2,000, and also the} The matter of immunizing hogs Order of Railway Conductors with | Should be carefully considered as a policy of $3,000. He is survived | there is considerable risk of caus- by the widow and one daughter, (We a big outbreak of cholera in a Mrs. Homer Spencer. felean territory. In the event this Funeral service and burial at) 'vatment is to be used the hogs Lees Summit: at 2 o'clock Satur; Should be held in quarantine for day, September 30th. Jat least twenty-one days, dipped jand premises thoroughly disin- the sfolition thereof and ret of the Stat Constituéion, {pal Laws in contlict. ther except wine for sacramental pnepo: R a AG he manufactured In or lutroduent tebsee | URC Wallow holes or feeding places. of Missvurt under any / Pare water will aid materially in Keeping the herd cholera free.— the giving, exchanglug, bartering, selling or dispostug of intoxicating liquors im we State of Missouri, except wine meatal purposes, prescribing a same “tub” serious trouble can yl th enacted by the people of thie Stace | be expected at any time. See fsourt: I th Rr haar ny f Section 1. From aud after Jute ese | Rt They have an abundance of W17, uo intoxtenting Manor or tue | Whe Water to drink, situated near Person who sells, exehause or disposes of intoxieat ind to any persen in the irl, or who manufactures, or bute State iby gaan |) Riek inte, or attempts te tntrodnes het Xolle: Acric wy tos Eee eae? | SOUT, College of Agriculture. twine a roesanisl far = " —————. the purpos tld; shall be guilty wf a! ‘ Collar Galls, mitsdormnn Upon couvietion sbail de shed by a the of not less thaw three | dollars ner more than ove thon 5 PEE] sand dollars, or -by imprisonment tt the) Tannic acid is one of the very County dal not texx thin, six wombs mel hect remedies for coll lg ae more than twel Hths.or bY both sue St remedies for collar galls ac- Se RE METRE jeording to:L. S. Backus of the laws of the State ond tana | Missouri College of Agriculture, yay ng with the 0 wection, are hereby repeated “& ®t can be sceured from any drug | Store and is easily applied by rub- | ing slightly over the collar every smarning and evening if the horse is working. Collar galls usually appear eith- jer at the top of the neck or at ‘the point of the shoulder where an huproperly fitted collar rubs. it is important that the collar be STATIC OF MISSOURI, Department of » Cornelius f hy initiative pe the q anyeut | kept clean at all times in order rote that it may be kept from cutting Stite of t office ty the, tO The neck, but special care in Gly gf femerson, this Sth day of Septem} Keeping it clean is necessary after {Seal ] tthese galls start. ‘‘An ounce of {prevention is worth a pound of Oe or. | eure. os State SNES OT al List of Letters | Remaining ancalled for in ne . ‘ 4 ipost office at Butler, Mo., for the ; ENTS wry awe — beg . week ending October 3rd, 1916: custont eee Be oe > es - Chas. R. Brown, Miss Marie Jen- this city and W. T. Cole, of the} Miss Bess Moore. northeast part of the county, te] These letters will be sent to the meet with their sisters and hold aj dead _— ptead Bescon wa family reunion. For the last four} 1916, if not delive exore. in years the reunion has been held — for hes pach Pape) Tin, at El Dorado Springs, but last }. E. Williams, Postmaster. Sunday they met in this city at the home of the Judge where a] Bitten by — Commits Beacon, N. Y., September 30.— honor of the gathering and’ if] Temporary insanity induced by the brothers and-sisters were not|illmess, following the bite of a SECRETARY © Cole Family Reunion. quite so young as they once were, scorpion, while on a march to Mc-| ga they showed that they still appre-| Allea, Tex. in July, is believed to ciated good cooking. Those prea-jhave caused the suicide here to- + | Olagsay Be Third Infantry, New i Missouri; Mre. RB. , New eet wierd Sree Mie-| York National Guard. A well cooked meal is a power- love.. t 5 : ? % E i £ E $ ; {fected when turned out in order to isa in Kansas. ‘ i Crossley’s Car Found protect the neighboring hogs from The Cadillac touring ear, which | being exposed to cholera. was stolen from the garage of} There is no danger in putting Wallace Crossley of Warrensburg, } cholera in a herd by using the. candidate for Lieutenant-Govern-|serum along treatment, In prac- or on the Democratic ticket, on the | tically all cases this treatment will night of August 9th, was found) farnish protection until the infec- Tuesday afternoon by the Kansas/ tion can be killed out when prop- City police, after it had been aban. | er measures of sanitation are used. doned by Frank Lewis, “| Lack of co-operation is respon- ‘brains’? of the famous Lewis}sible for the “large part of the bandits. The car was found five! wide spread of cholera. This is miles from Kansas City, Kan. on {an important factor in checking the Kansas side. ; jthe spread of any disease. It has The body of the var showed| een hard to understand why any hard usage, and had several bullet | one will allow the sick hogs to run holes in it which carried out the} at large with the balance of the theory that the Lewis bandits had | herd and spread infection over the used the car in their _race from the farm. There are just two sources police in Oklahoma and Kansas} of cholera : The sick hog and the where they had a running fight {‘tead hog. The sick hog should be with the officers. The mileage in-/ quarantined in close quarters and dicator showed that the car had) the dead ones burned at once and been driven 7,000 miles. the premises thoroughly disinfect- Ree a es ee fed with fresh slacked lime. f >| An article appeared in the i Rev. 6. A. — Returned to} papers a short time ago that advo- < jeated shooting the buzzard. It Rev. C. A. Waters, for the last | would be a far easier task to burn year pastor of the Ohio street M./all carcasses and there wouldn’t kK. Church, was returned here for| be anything for the buzzard to another year by the conference|jearry. Buzzards are not apt to which met in Warrensburg. Rev.j ight on- your farm unless there C. S. Hanby was sent back to] be carrion to feed on. Rolla, where he has been since| It seems the better plan of hog leaving the Butler church. Other]management would be to take assignments, Appleton City, J. C_] geod care of the hogs in keeping filbreath; Adrian, W. S. Court-]them free of parasites and supply- ney; Amsterdam and Amoret, I.]ing plenty of good water and N. Faurot; Drexel, O. R. Sides;|forage. The rations should be Montrose, C. L. Gawald; Hume, | properly balanced to get the most C. H. Ocheltree; Rich Hill, Everet | economical gains. C. Wright; Rockville, Robert] Where the hogs are kept thrif- Honeycut. ty and the proper measures of san- itation put in use it will not be Butler Teachers Wide Awake. |"ecessary to keep the hogs im- To-day Professor McClure starts} Sanitation all the time and vac- an extension course in History at}eination only when necessary. Butler for the benefit of the M. I. Hurley, teachers there. The Butler teach-| Field Demonstrator in Hog ers seem to be a wide awake|Cholera Control. : group. Last year Dean Phillips ve an extension course in Edu- Coal for Sale. coal in_any quantity on cational Sociology to the same group of teachers. The above clipping from the} hand at all times at the Gutridge Normal Student, the Warrenaburg|coal bank. two miles east of Normal paper, shows that the But-|Sprace. H.H. McLendon. 51-4t® elr teachers are an ambitious body, always working to add to their equipment as teachers. . 3 4 i i f y e LJ No More Doctor Bills when you replace the old stove with Cole’s Original Hot Blast fd eS Cleanliness and fire-holding re- ‘ aera neay nota oa | Sects ee” night with little attention, instead paictens Ne ie Mbakiig toey of the hot and cold changeable id dhe results of the old stove. Chgehea a tie Srmaren ane POPPY The sizzling base heat makes | Desrts to the parents, floors warm and comfortable for Besides all this, the guaranteed the baby. feel saving soon pays for the —A warm breakfast room and stove. Burns any fuel—hardcoal, early morning comfort bd 2d soft coal or wood. ° opening the hot blast fuel-sa If you have an eye for comfort draft on the coal put in stove the and economy you will come in night before. = today. : S & . **Cole’s Hot Blast Makes Your Coal Pile Last” Avoid imitations — Leck for Cole's on Feed Door ee! , Gench Bros. @& © Woe Hardware, Stoves, Implements, Furniture ad act BUTLER, MO. PRAM er - What About the Hessian Fly? = unteer wheat showed fly injury = las 1. ston Gs sssian st fall. : fly b pan ak Tig the Hessian 4. Question. You are right, y be controlled? my neighbor just across the road Answer. Yes. It can be con- sowed his wheat last fall on Sep- trolled easicr than almost any tember 25 and the flies damaged other injurious field crop inseet. "t badly last fall, but what can I 2. Question. Does sowing but ReeeOngani| zh | : Pe Answer. Or, ize your neigh- See Nepae nah borhood and cooperate with every | sown on or soon after the fly-free pplieat sshhehtlee ale ee date. For the. northern third of *@ yh a Dractice ne pacar Missouri the date is about Octo- ity, EM gaat capes: | ber 1; central third, October §;/ lf Possible get all your neighbors anal Nonthent third October 16. “*! to destroy their volunteer wheat 3 “ ~ and delay sowing until the fly- 3. Question. Well, you. are | free date. ~ s wrong there because I sowed my/ aie ik : A “i Write to the College of Agricul- wheat on October 15 last fall and tare, University of Missouri, Col- Neen Bayes gb Seri umbia, Missouri, for a poster bul- Flies i Ey a jletin telling how to control the s in my wheat field. How ean Hessian fly. Post where your ; pay apie a wllents went I Lae slag can see it, as unless they x ‘ : ight the fly with you, their flies through the fall and winter prae- may kill your wieatee Ts J. Tal- tically free from injury by the . : . Hessian fly, because the wheat neg mean ii of greats came up after nearly all the adult flies were dead. You noticed no’ Most people think there is a law injury by the fly-this spring until in Missouri against killing buz- } about the last of April. The Hes- zands. There is no law to this ef- sian flies that destroyed your feet, and has not been for af least i wheat crop came from early sown many years. Buzzards are a men- fields of wheat or volunteer wheat} ace to live stock production, and within a mile of your wheat field,! therefore should be killed and and this early sown wheat or vol-| burned. **Shoot the Buzzards!’’ Here's a Vacation Tip’ short ri Only a Tide away—easy to and camps everywhere—comfortable and Inexpensive. MISSOURI ‘PACIFIC -“Pleasant Way to Pleasant Places”