The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 23, 1916, Page 6

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~ DEMOCRATS 104 TO | rer aa ae | The European War a See Saw, GENERAL ASSEMBLY | During the past week the war in Kurope has developed into a In State Senate G. 0. P. Has Only | sort of see’saw. One side will re- 8 Members and 64 in the REPUBLICANS’ 72 IN | - House. a town, and the other side_ will Jefferson City, Nov. 20.—Sev report that they retired to a; retary of State Cornelius today completed an unoffic compilation of the membership of the newly elected general assem- ly quiet along the French front ial are better off than ever. hiv of Missouri. tives when cast up will not mater. gion being about the extent of ially alter this compilation, hostilities. He gives the Democrats a total téns have been successful, Austria-German forces are membership in the new body ot con- lod and the Republeans 72. is divided between the two houses erm This tinuing their drive through west- | Wlalachia and are reaching | port that the enemy was driven} from his position in such and such | Roavl:| stronger position and that they | Things have been comparative- | The official fig. a bombardment in the Somme re- | In Rumania the Teu-| The) | | as follows: Senate--Demoerats out for the town of Craiova, a) i, Republicans 83, house Demo. railroad town midway between | erats TS and Republicans 64, Orsova, in Hungary, and Bueha-| None of the mincr parties have rest. oe representation in either house. The fighting in Macedonia, | Last year there was one Progres- from the Cerna river to Lake | sivein the house, Bresha, has resulted in- a com-/ Farmers will predominate in plete victory for the entente S d d E Ridi he house but will not have a ma- troops aecording to the — dis- pee M4 an asy | ng jority in that body, There will patches from Paris. sonaestee sesso eno eeteTs Seta aan eaHRERTS ANISH a cSeHSSNEER ASIN There’s little comfort in most low priced It has long.42-inch, easy riding, shock ab- bein the neighborhood of 40 far- Sunday the Serbian and French 5 ry 2 Bs a Le mers in the house and 34 lawyers, forees drove the Austrian and Cars. You can’t use their speeds. They sorbing cantilever rear springs. In addition There is one preacher in” the’ Germans out of Monaster, in Ser- jostle you—they ride roughly — they the 75 B Overland is a longer car—104- house, three editors, seven mer- via, and it is reported that the don’t hold the road. inch wheelbase. And it. has 4-inch tires. chants, seven real-estate owners Servian king will establish his! li cn a number of physicians and one’ capital there at once, : The $635 Overland is different. It is not ts smoothness and ease of riding at any undertaker. Cold weather has set in on the only the speediest of low priced cars— speed would do justice to a much larger In the senate there are sixteen Russian front, and as a conse- : and heavier car, ; ten as, ave three aan nen En Ae BOE But you can use the full speed of its power- Come in and let us demonstrate. That’s i mankers, three real estate dealers, on rere. re iil zi * ay wdrugeist, a jeweler, an insur: The best posted military erities ful motor when you need it. the best kind cf proof. i ance agent, a clerk and a eon- are of the opinion that the war rn) tractor, Will Jast well into next year. CLIN KEN BEARD & ISLEY i 5 BUTLER, MO., Phones 229, 516 RICH HILL, MO., Phone 157 = i Last week there was a report that , both side§ were ready -for peace and in a short . time President Wilson would tender his good of- There is a college president in the house and one author. The latter is Charles Us Beéker of Polk county, who varies his life Bem crank gras ate gnmENNETEMENENES LILLE LORILI RRO Pe cen cca The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio “Mado in U.S.A.”’ asa farmer by writing several fices as a peace maker and that “thrilters’’ cach month, He a protocol would be signed and writes detective and Wild) West that while it was in effect a way farses ssoasesr nelson oceesicaesseuierstiseisarycoiea stories. Beeker was fomnety a would be found to end the war so} Wansas City newspaper man, that cach side would be satisfied. 5 1 1 The undertaker is Representa. But it seems that there is no com-| Thousands of Dollars Lost Laughing at Yourself. Fall Exposure is Most Injurious}sary that uny large amount be to Dairy Cow ;spent for their housing but barns inon ground on which the belli-| zerents could come to any sort) of an agreement and it looks as/ of Newton coun- that the rive-eleet Pog 1 Politicians figure Through Rusting Machinery. Laughter is a mark of intelli- genee only when one is able to “Exposure to cold rains in No-| ‘should have tight walls and a good roof, Care should also be “Gentleman from Newton’? being . “iq ‘ q + . awa eatin oe i" . P HJaugh at himself, to smile with; vember is often more injurions to} a Deinocrat and he w voc? - if the pl ; rome 0 gj; All farm implements — sho 2 F een ¢ : take ake thé i ' De noerat at d having voeation-_ if the pl wy would come ton thing ar pl uld others at his own awkwardness,| dairy cows than the colder but, taken to make them sanitary. al identifivation with the business and the fighting go on until one/now be under shelter and be put) vying, shortcomings and person-| dry weather of later winter, ©€.! Fire, lightni oes of Governor-eleet. Gard- or both sides have to stop on ac-|in first-class condition for next al lianitios eee A leven tes 3 . 2 i ire, lightning and tornad al peculiarities. One needs a cer-)H.”Eckles of the dairy depart-| have no rules of warfare, they 1 have easy access to the count of exhaustion.~ of the incoming ad- al ear ministration, The preacher member of Early Day Bates County Physi- the seasotrr, The binder should be re- paired now and not when you are} ready to begin work. Delay at harvest time may mean the loss tain amount of wisdom to know when he is making himself ridic- ulous. and wise enough to put himself He must be. big enough | sa S. | ment of the College of Agricul-| ture of the University of Missouri The cow unlike a fat steer s no layer of fat for protection. come as a thief in the night. You should prepare to meet them at any time. Place your: insurance with Choate & Fulbright an old house is Re 7 O, Dix e Me- cian Dead. : dollars. The same prin-|‘ c i CO Dea . Dixon of Mc te i ; cole telae ne ie aa Le in another’s place and see him-) Bad weather and exposure causes/and reliable ageney with sixteen : Dr. J.T. Warren, 72 years old, fea cn aah aaa self as others sec him. It is then|a drop in milk production. of the leading old line companies, See ere ae of Sprague, died Sunday, Nov. 19, aT ot oa ‘ far Pec tana ap tale that laughter serves the purpose) Every cold rain should find the| having a total capital stock of 1916, at the home of his son-in- Oo many jarmers are care css | of a corrective and means of self-| cow protected. It is not neces-| over $30,000,000.00. 51-tf Death of Mrs. H. B. Robinson. _ law, Lyle Dickey, of Minneapolis, with the equipment which makes discipline. Mrs. TE. B. Robinson, of Kansas Kansas, after about a year of ar-|f#rming a paying business. In) pit this requires a certain | City, died at the home of her terial selorosis, says the Rich Hill] CVery, section of the State farm HucaAtlon vasionewiicis nob cve| — daughter, Mrs. Hdwin B. Sparks, at St. Joseph, Nov, 14, 1916, aged 4 years and 14 days. Mrs, Robinson had been in fail- ing health for the past year and 1 had been deemed advisable to send her to the home of her daughter at St. Joseph, where she could have perfect rest anc eutet anid her failing health and strength, but it sof no avail and) soon after reaching St. Joseph she beeame much worse and in spite of all: that loving hearts and hands could do she grew weaker and af- Review. Dr. Warren and family left Sprague recently for Minneapolis on a visit. He was one of the pioneer physicians of this part of fhe country, having located in Old New Home, this county, jabout forty years ago, At that time there Was no Rich. Till, Fos- ter and Hume and Dr. Warren drove all over the west part of Bates county and over into Kan-| sas ministering to the affligted. He is survived by his wife and ‘two daughters, Mrs. Lyle Dickey, of Minneapolis, Kansas, and Miss perhaps recover machinery can ‘be seen out in the weather for weeks and months at atime. Such practices eat up the profits of the farm. What would the farmer think of the manufac-| turer who neglected his machin- ery? The manufacturer would be a mighty poor business man, yet} the farmer, who is the greatest! producer, allows his machines to} rust and go without tare. | Every farmer should have a place to store his machinery, A} sinall building of simple construc- tion, located between the house; and barn, is best. A long shed not more than 18 feet wide, pro- eryone, possesses, edy of his life this ability to jlaugh at himself kept him sweet and human, saved his wit from irony, and cynicism and enabled him to laugh, not at people, but with them. .It is this trait: of quaint self-ridieule and aloofness {rom that petty sense of dignity which spurns’ self-criticism whieh constitutes the true sense of hum- All the great humorists from Aristophanes to Mark Twain have had it. Half the fun of life must be enjéyed at one’s own ex- or, ie Geek ee $ | SE AG a SOS Ss vided with continuous doors] PCRS SRT AI OUTGE UG CARER RndcaE| sides in Kans { ity. Fos. along one side ipeinine. auaene A man may be dead in earnest the close of the day, just as the! te ody ins Drones LOS ees ient for removing implements | his devotion fo some great Bee ter Tuesday and funeral services, Pp cause, as was Lincoln, yet “keep lingering twilight had darkened Pace , : declare aniveme* | conducted by Rey. W. Miller, the distant hills, her pure spirit | ore held_at the Salem. chureh released from its bonds of elay,) and interment made in the Salem passed into the great beyond. | plements in repair. than a wider building. A small shop included at one end is a cat convenience inkeeping—im- his faith in himself and his ideals. It is this sense of humor which Lineoln had it, | and with all the sadness and trag-| unt il preserves balance and saves —a man from bigotry and fanaticism. Here’s-a Vacation Tip OTR \ ut a pemetery She was a devoted christian, al-|°°™°°™™ When your implements are ; i In the White Ri Co h , peeneerseecrreneeneey .3 cpa reage For want of it among good peo- nm the ite River Country of ways active in church work and brought in from the field inspect Southwestern Missouri and Northern was for many years a member of| REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS [them very carefully and note all ple and reformers many a noble Arkansas, you'll get more of what you cause has failed and many a ‘ N want in the way of a real vacation than the Ohio street M. E. Chureh in| repairs needed on a tag and tie moral ideal has been rendered al- ‘Amelia Cox et al to W..M. Kel: anywhere you can go—even though Carefully Room = we this city. At the time of her}, > ey 00 cogs 99 it on the implement. a death she was a member of the : Pot iad Peni EE) Dos. clean and oil all bearings and i ali wants you traveled three times the distance Beaumont M. E. Church at Kan-|" Wj; look over wooden parts. If the|’™ ‘ and it cost you ten times the price. W. J. Mullies to J. N. Ellis 80 xeres section 19 Walnut $4,400.00. D. E. Keller to W. D. Whinnery lot 10 block 24 Amoret $850.00. Mrs. A. L. Kendall to R. L. An- derson part block 12 Merwin sas City. For several years she had been president of the Ladies Aid society of the Beaumont church, holding that position at the time of her death. paint’ is hecoming worn, put on a new coat to prevent the wood from shrinking or swelling. Place the machine under shelter and re- move the tag when all repairs have been made in first-class con- People into Closer Touch. The attomobile is the enemy of isolation. A man with an auto- Autos Bring Only a short ride away—easy to reach. camps everywh inexpensive. Hotels, boarding-houses ere—comfortable- and and MISSOURI ‘PAGIFIG A beautiful life is ended, a $450.00. we ici ¢ Ngee omy christi | A ek 5 ition. i mobile living twenty es from neh chelates fharanter, Mal” BO, Rip W. D: Riegel aces ee a town doesn’t feel that he is far “Pleasant Way to Pleasant Places” gone to its reward, but leaving an influence that will long be felt by those who knew and loved her best. Her near surviving relatives are the husband and three daugh- ters, Mrs. E. E. Sparks, of St. Joseph; Mrs. J. D. Tathwell and Mrs. Roy C. Williams, of Kansas City; also her father, A. G. Sher- wood, and a sister, Mrs. E.. P. Reno, both of Netawaka, Kansas, and one brother, W. H. Sherwood, of Kansas City. XXX. Briscoe Dwelling Burned. Fire destroyed the residence of Walter Bricoe, together with the contents, near Foster at 6 o’clock part block 18 Couch’s addition Butler $1000.00. Frank Loveland to G. H. Love- land 10 acres section 12 Wset Boone $585.00. John W. Jones to Sylvester Ehart 31 acres section 1 New Home $1,500.00. S. W. Barr to W. A. Carpenter Villa’s Second Wife Dies. Juana Torres de Villa, to a letter received here. protection of farm machinery in Missouri would mean millions of dollars in the pockets of the far- mers each year.—E. W. Lehmann, Missouri College of Agriculture. Time to Guard Car Radiator. The sudden drop in tempera- 80.acres section 8 Summit $5,000.|iyre reminds motorists the time is approaching when anti-freeze solution should be put in the rad- iator, if the car is to be run in El Paso, Tex., Nov. 20.—Mrs.|the winter months. The usual who] formula for the mixture, 60 parts claimed she was the second wife| water, 20 parts denatured . alco- of Francisco Villa, died recently] hol, and 20 parts glycerine, prob- in Guadalajara, Mex., according] ably will be changed this winter on account of the price of glycer- Mrs. Villa lived in Los Angeles ine, which is selling for about away from it. It is therefore small wonder that more than half the automobiles manufactured this year are being sold in the country. Some of the hig com- panies are selling more than twice as many machines in the country than in the cities. The high priced cars also are having a ready sale in the country, much to the surprise and delight of their makers. There are millions of persons living in the fringe of our great cities, who when they go ‘‘up town,’’ must take more time in which to do it than a far- mer auto owner living twenty miles from town takes to go. to theatre or church. And besides, the farmer auto owner goes = e ipcvans Stared ote information you need from : L.R. TWYMAN, Agent DR. R. R. GLOYD -@RADUATE VETERINARIAN I do all work pertaining to the veterinary Monday morning. There was no water supply at hand and nothing| Cal., was saved except a few house- hold articles. The origin of the after Villa took the field as| $1.50 a quart now. Motor dealers a bandit, coming-here at the time|say a solution of 60 parts water, of the Carrizal affair in Jume.|35 parts alcohol and 5 parts gly- comes with greater comfo: auto is killing the dread \ tion of country life, and the time is la- near at hand business including state work. I STRIVE TO°PLEASE fire is believed to be from flying from a flue setting fire to roof. The loss is estimated at i yr Chihuahua $1,000, with insurance.— | be . She ‘was ordered deported and|cerine will prevent freezing at 20 Villa, who elsim od tol quaetiey of glyessian to weed to i quantity is evaporatio below zéro. A -small m of the alco- when every lanter in the LE Phones: Office 128; Res., 358

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