The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 14, 1918, Page 7

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9 y e e It’s Easy to Have a Sanitary Kitchen Walls and ceilings of Cornel!-Wocd-Eoard, painted or kalsomined in any color will make your kitchen an attractive room to worl: in, The special treatment cf this guaranteéd wall board make it moisture and fire resisting. Nailed right over old walls or dirzct to studding. It will trans- form any room in the Esucc. Unequalied for gar- ages, chicken houses, all farm buildings,. repairs, Iterations, etc. Write for sample and handsome views. Panel Suggestions FRE. As’ your dealer. Corneil Wood-Board is % in, thick, 22 in, and 49 in, wide, standard lengtha, H. S. WYATT LUMBER CO. BYUu MISSOUBI Cornell Wood Products Co. (C. O. Frisbie, Pres.), Chicago. <tr. The Hot Springs of Arkansas More than a mountain resort, more than a fashionable playground— these wonderful springs, with their mysterious health-giing waters, have become world famous as Nature’s Greatest Sanitarium the United Set apart by States Government for the benefit of humanity, Where modern medical science joins hands with the wonderfui - curative agencies of nature—a retreat for the careworn or stiffering in the great, bezutiful out-of-doors. Water is the Greatest Eliminator of Human Ills and the Hot Springs of Arkansas are the Greatest Waters Known to Mankind Patronized every year by more than 15,000 people from every part of the world—the recuperating station of our army and navy, the training ground of the world’s greatest athletes, the assembling place - of statesmen. and the rendezvous of society. There is no Substitute for the Hot Springs Bath ‘The marvelous cures cannot be exaggerated. No one can afford to deprive himself of the quiet rest, the exhiliarating joy and the wonder ful toning-up that comes from a course of these baths, coupled with the rehabilitating influences of the mountain ozone and woodland landscape. Luxurious hotels, medium-priced hotels : and high-class houses with every modern convenience, boarding The Way There is Via The Missouri Pacific “THE PLEASANT WAY TO PLEASANT PLACES” We haven't space to tell you about this wonderfi resort which. has an international reputation. @ Send for a copy of our handsomely illustrated book, written by William Marion Reedy. C. L, PLAIN, Agent Butler, Mo. Order of Publication. State of Missouri, County of Bates, js In the Circuit Court of said Coun- ty and State May Term, 1918: Ip Va- cation March 12, 1918, Mrs. Minnie Seelinger, Mrs. Etta Fisher, E. T. Wilson, C. C. Wil- son, Hoy S. Wilson, W. P. Wilson, J. E. Wilson and C. A. Wilson and Mrs, Stella Hall, Plaintiffs. vs. The unknown heirs, devisees, donees, consorts, immediate, mesne and re- mote grantees of Pleasant Young, and of John M. Wells and of Kate Anderson and of James Anderson, ‘Defendants. : “The State-of-Missouri-to the above designated defendants: ‘ You are hereby notified that the plaintiffs above named have filed their petition in the above named cir- cuit court, returnable to the May term, 1918, of the Circuit Court with- in and for Bates county, Missouri, to be begun and held at the court house in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the fourth Monday in May, 1918, wherein the plaintiffs al- lege. that they are owners of and in fact have the legal title to’ the East half (E. 1-2) of the south- - east quarter (SE. 1-4) of Section thirty-three (33), and. the South- west quarter (SW. 1-4) of Sec- _ tion thirty-four (34) and the South half (S. 1-2) of the South- eaSt quarter (SE. 1-4) of Section thirty-four (34), all in Township thirty-nine (39) of Range twenty- nine (29) and the East twenty- eight (28) acres of lot two (L. 2) of the Northeast quarter (NE. 1-4) of Section four (4) in Town- ship thirty-eight (38) of Range, twenty-nine (29) all in Bates County, Missouri, and that they and those under whom they claim title to said real estate have been in the open, continuous, exclusive and adverse possession of the same, paying all taxes assessed against said land for more than thir- ty-one years last past, during which time none ef the defendants nor any- one under whom they might claim title thereto, have been in possession thereof or paid any taxes against the defendants can not be inserted in the petition because they are unknown; that the unknown heirs, consorts, devisees, immediate. mesne and re- mote grantees of Pleasant Young may claim some interest in said real estate by virtue of a deed of convey- ance made to Pleasant Young bear- ing date of May oth, 1856, and re- corded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Bates County, Missouri in Book “C” at Page 288. That the said heirs, consort, devi- sees, donees and grantees of John M. Wells may claim some interest in said real estate by virtue of the fact that the deed by which said John M. Wells attempted to convey, and in fact did convey, all his interest in id land, which is of record in Book ’ in the Recorder's office aforesaid at Page 202. That the unknown consort of James Anderson may claim some interest in said land by virtue of the fact that she did not join in a deed of record in said Recorder's office in Book “IL” at page 534. That he unknown heirs’ of Kate Anderson, one of the grantees in the ty. on Pa ee the 16th day of March A. 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 lic Vendue, { cash in hand, to satisfy said execution ction before the federal courts soon- and costs. 19-4 deed last above referred to, is not shown by the records of Bates coun- ty, Missouri, to have ever conveyed her interest in said land in the name of Kate Anderson, notwithstanding, it is averred that she, as Kate Smith, with her husband, conveyed her in- terest by deed, which is of record in| said office in Book 62 at Page 453. It is therefore, by the clerk of this court, in vacation, ordered that the above named defendant be and ap- pear in this court at said May term | | and on or before the first day of said term, plead to or answer said petition, or the same will be taken as con- fessed and judgment rendered accord- ingly. It is further ordered that a copy of this petition be published in the But-| ler Weekly Times, a newspaper pub- lished in Bates County, Missouri, for | four successive issues, the last in- sertion to be at least thirty days be- fore the first day of the next May Term of this court. i H. O. MAXEY, Circuit Clerk. : A true copy from the record. Witness my hand and the (Seal) seal of this court this 12th day of March, 1918. H. O. MAXEY. 22-4t Ni Circuit Clerk. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of .special execution issued from the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court o! Bates County, Mo., returnable at th« May term, 1918, of said Court, and to me directed, in favor of State of Mo. ex rel J. H. Stone, Treasurer and against George Clark, I have levied upon and seized all the right, title, in- terest and claim of the said George Clark et al of, in and to the follow- ing wry ieee Lots (15), (16) in the town of Merwin, Mo. ing and being in the said Bates C real estate, to-wit and (17), block (13) All ly 11, | State of Missouri; and I . D., 1918, between the hours of | ‘Jaine o'clock in the forenoon and five | -cntatives to transmit to it a certified ‘copy of the vote in Congress by which may be required, at Pub- to the highest bidder for! > J. W..BAKER, Sheriff of Bates County, Mo. © >< Card of Thanks. =| re desire to express-our thanks to) our kind friends and neighbors for | < kindness and assistance during l and death of our dear wife | quest for special representation -for same and that the names of all the; SHORTAGE OF WORKMEN DELAYS SHIP BUILDING /HAD PIMPLES Town. Talk Tablets only medicine that : cured. A beautiful skin, either in man or. woman, a skin free from pimples, Drastic Action Declared Necessary to Prevent Tie-Up of Program - —Unions Told of Situa- tion, But Fail to Act. * March 8—Wooden with myself. One day a friend told me about Town Talk Tablets and I Washington, ships on the ways of the Puget sound |} blotches, blackheads, sores, patch. | told her I would try them. I got a district almost ready to launch in ef on) spoty) and the oily and peste. and the Stfest taey, pad upen s earance common to c ‘a onderful. most immed- the race for tonnage to defeat the |} some, is a treasurable possession, | fately the pimples commenced to submarines, are being held up by a| About one person in every five has | disappear and iy skit! became an unsightly face, purely on ac- | Clearer. I continued until I had taken six bottles and“! -was thor- oughly cured. My general health, too, improved from the beginning, and today I am a healthy, happy woman, with a clear skin, free from sore or disfigurement, a proof of the far-reaching effects of Town shortage of caulkers, which officials of the shipping board, said today was due to the refusal of two unions to co-operate. |.._The caulkers’ union and the broth- count of the diseased condition of the blood, Mrs. Pauline Gibson Rochelle, N. Y., says: “For years I suffered humiliation from the condition of my _ face which never seemed free from little of New Jerhood of catpenters have been’ in- |] pois ana Talk Tablets.” t s pimples, It looked ter- Thi , a formed of the situation, but without |] rible and felt worse. I tried al) aryonouWnoeacutecaii Teapeacnated kinds of washes and ointments with result. Immediate action is declared | vith disease or impure matter. ; 3 |} no relief.. I took every sort of med- They ; ‘ 4 necessary to prevent.a tie-up of the } icine advertised as a cure, but my haneoue ot lem vereree ‘try Pacific coast program, and there were | fice ed Ree ead Ts them today for any form of dis- intimations tonight that the shipping | whatever they gave me dnly seemed skin, Bnd ALEK E Loa oie ave board’ is prepared for some drastic | {° iake it worse, Really I gave up | tion. $1.00 a bottle, Mailed by Home in despair, I didn’t know what to do Relief Laboratories, Boston, Mass. step if all other means fail. § | William L. Hutcheson, president, of | the carpenters, was told of. the need | for caulkers, and his attention called | to the unreserved assistance being} given by other shipbuilding unions to! — the nation during the war, Hutche-| Pershing Will Get Supplies And! son, officials say, replied that his or-/| Allies Wool, Minerals and | ganization had listed thousands of | Pyrites. trained caulkers, whom he would be ‘ r | glad to mobilize for the nation’s work | Washington, March 8.—Under the fe the shipping board! granted his re- jcommnercial agreement _ between the United States and Spain, the formal the carpenters on the wage adjust- jsigning of which in Madrid was an- fient board, & jnounced today, not only will General | Pershing get supplies from Spain for EEE SPAIN AND U. S, SIGN | AGREEMENT ‘FAT FOLKS LEARN HOW TO REDUCE “YOUR WEIGHT A Simple, Safe, Reliable Way. The caulkers’ union of Seattle, his ‘ es HeeieM | which controls caulkers in the. Puget| is troops, but a French credit in} People who are over-burdened with gound district, is said to have re- | Spain is arranged, and the Spanish j|superfluous fat, know only too well fused apprentices permission to work | government permits free export to} the discomfort and ridicule that over- with them in order to learn the trade, ithe allies of pyrites, minerals and eee Reeve i ee . ’| manufactured w you are carrying around 5 or 10 although the union has only 183 mem- | M&nufactured wool, , pounds of unhealthy fat you are un- bers and at least 600 are necessary These and other details of the|necessarily weakening your vital ow iS in ThaGHatee nena: lanned #&reement, which becomes effective | foatn and are carrying a burden which ~ put in the water the ships planned. neal aoe fi {destroys the beauty of your figure. fo reompletion this year. immediately, were made public to-| ‘There is no need of anyone suffering night by the war trade board, }Be- | si superfluous ie If you want to ed epee Peer é ees -,_|reduce your w it in a simple, safe Hepell atneniiea sides the free export of pyrites, nin- “and reliable without starvation, 2 erals and woudl, which the bea diet or ti exercise, end as : i Ai ech eta a 2 much time a you can in the en alr Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hertz v ed as “a concession of decided | breathe deeply and get trom any good fast week at the Baum home to the entente powers,” Spain druggist a is of tassco; take one tab- st 1 1 a ‘ ie Nae earaes we (det after each meal and one before re- Miss Lela Wayland spent Satur lM permit-the eXport of other iring at night. egret. night and Sunday with Miss Salina com dities to the extent that home | Weigh yourself once a week so as to INewlon, who is home from sehool /teauizements will permit, This is IU van ieeuniaean ait oft. Gene d bi s ae : scitia finandine ap | Welaht and) don off the treat- for a visit. addition the specific licensing O! |} ment or even skip a single dose until Mr. and Mrs, Black and family tle sep yeneral Per- You are down to normal, Mr \ ' : i ¥ 2 seco is absolutely harmless, | visited Sunday at the Henry Dono-, for 1a Bee RATS: thleemueina dimoulnniAta yan home. ; ‘ ‘ a large gned to consume the excessive The » Ve number of mule e by increasing the ren= TRO SVs th ACh, night Fame tneaee Toner Ne power of the blood. fven @ at the home of gton, n return for supplies granted this ys’ treatment should show a coumtry and the allies, the statement |" ble reduction in weight, foot- cers. were installed , bevome lighter, your work seem and lighter and more buoyant sion of your whole The following of for the ensuing | Miss Grace Venerab | Miss Ella § Ruth | Blac “the United States assures | In its ne $s) er President, feeling takes posse being. iry supplies of cot- 1 petrol the amount. of the ly export of these commodities | xed in the agreement at a ch will cover the genuine? os. vice-president, Irer, who suffers from hould give this treat- is nothing better, Miss mor being figure Elling superin- in mes ' \ Ss tendent, Miss Veva Ellington; pianisr, Bae peel put ne me Miss Ruth Jones; chaplin, Mr. Hallie 1 ey OP Senay ise oe pain OH MY STOMACH Turpin; mission teacher, Miss Ruth > CUE UTE an Ape ni are viWeudeaaal stock of cotton against the time of ay . Nae i RS se “T had stomach trouble so badly that res : onelus ace. F na Mr. and Mrs. Hi Cummings took the : anos Hones Ri bet - supplies’ (nothing, 1 would digest hetait jdinner Sunday with Andy Cummings. asad Brantes Senet BABpASs ante Hamilton, Port- Pee ean ans said the board, “to the extent that Maltese Hae rome eaule ja amily. i sy eae a ; ie S secure The two M Robinsons spent they can be spared, satisiying home from Argo-Phosphate, the new recon- Sindy. with M rae St ys requirements in the United States and ae ive, stomach tonic and system Ne ees ae ares fi for the needs of the United | > « hi I Miss § E vion entertained the PTO : ‘ wh ne that 1 ate would Me in | a8 Salina ae ri. | States sociates in the war. ach like a lump," she ex- following girls at a bunk party Thurs- | S would form and I woulda ss all the time. I got so I day evening: Misses Stella Hendris, | Didn’t Enforce Zone Order. lcould hardly keep anything” down, Carlie Howard, Ruth and Lela Way-!| | drying to get relief, I had my stomach 1 en Saelinae | Washington, March 7.—John E,|pumped out, but even this did not help jland and Dawn Seelinger. | ‘ els me us I continued just as bad. Mr. Tom Cartright, from camp,/| Dougherty, nerd ae pee pit Kept hearing s9,much about Areo: I fetta! eal is . orney, an epu nite ates osphate tha’ ought maybe It jvisited Sunday with his uncle, Joe My |might help me and I decided to try ft. Clark and family. | Marshal Williams whose territory in- Mr, Charley Henry fftled his silos ,clides Rock Island, Ill, have been last week. | suspended for thirty days for lack of {sympathy with the policy of the D | partment of Justice regarding the sale jof liquor and enforcement of the law {in vice zones adjacent to army | camps. Suspension of the two federal dis- 'trict officials was considered officially jan indication of the determination of I have taken two bottles and to my surprise I am already feeling fine. 3 can eat anything and,I am not troub- led at all, “I am completely rid of my old stom- ach trouble that I had for three years. -I have not felt so well for years and 3 am certainly glad to endorse Argo- Phosphate because I want others to be helped by this wonderful medicine.” “The spirit of wanting to help others is what makes suffering men and wo- men give these splendid public en- dorsements of Argo-Phosphate,” sald a local druggist. WILLIE. Buchanan and Roosevelt. Because the outgoing president be- fore Lincoln, James Buchanan, said nothing, or did nothing, one way or |the other, to help Lincoln to win the jwar, he was justly -censured by the | the Department of Justice to en- nion people, and he died “unwept, /force strictly anti-liquor and vice unhonored and unsung.” But = sup-/regulations about army and navy Taking Liberty Loan Bonds in Trade, camps. Field officers of the depart- ment will be expected to take action on their own initiative té remedy im- proper conditions, it was explained, and not await prodding from the de- partment. pose Buchanan, had filled the press with articles against Lincoln, against the cabinet, and against the conduct of the war, what would the Union veople have done? Yet, here comes -President Roosevelt, abusing Wilson through: he daily papers and magazines, be- littling the cabinet, and denouncing the conduct of the v While there may be a little truth what he says, s to mistak every truth is not e paraded in print’against our coun- try in time of war, But where Roos velt publishes.one truth in his fur- ious attacks upon administration, “T hope that the merchants of the country, upon a more careful consid- eration of the subject, will discontinue their efforts to sell merchandise and take Liberty Loan Bonds in pay- ment,” say retary McAdoo. The Secretary states that he has no doubt that merchants offering to take Liberty Loan Bonds in exchange for tuated by patriotic such transactions tend to defeat a primary object of the {bond sales, as they jthrift and increa expenditur tonds so taken in exchange in most cases are _ Three Bates County Boys to Jeffer- son Barracks. tin MeCoy Wilson, and Elwin nt MeQuitty, of Rich Hill, and Oscar O. inter, of Appleton City, three re Bates county boys, have responded to the call for more men venge Belgium and Poland. isted in the st artillery Pre to dise« to hel They e ce ‘ ho rag ala a and y they left tor Jefferson jmmediately sold in the open market, ie ait mS ne i ah aa th Barracks, where they will be equipped which tends to suppress the market ident, the Secre ot War, and tic and assigned to their regiment.) price and adversely affects sales oi \rmy, has been flatly contradicted by | When they enlisted all three were | clean-cut evidence. Yet, he keeps) cingie, but a few hours before he left, n. He ought to be sent to Germany, | yfr. Pointer, who is a rural mail car- as Vanlandigham was sent to the | rier 1 of the Appleton City office,/ these Government bonds purchase voutbern = Confederacy. — Westen | was married to Miss Mary I. Dun-| for permanent investment by th ‘ Spirit (Osceola, Kas.) March Ist.- | : sad “ A ALARA ee s ( ; oa : jean, of Rockville, who ‘accompanied | ple and paid out of savings, thus not a jhim to the depot and with a smiling | only providing funds for the Govern- |face bade him goodbye. She will} ment but effecting conservation of make her home with relatives at/labor and material; exchanging them Rockville until her soldier husband | for merchandise therefore defeats this returns. | purpose. J future issues. | The strongest efforts are made by the Treasury Department to have Test for National ‘Dry’ Law. Albany, N. Y., March 7 —The New York Assembly adopted today a reso- tion requesting clerks of the United States Senate and House of Repre- Cocotone Skin Soap A asc CAKE FREE Have you tried this famous soap for the skin, if not send the cou- pon below in at once and try this wonderful soap. It will cleanse the skin and give it the delicate color and freshness so much desired by everyone. the federal prohibition constitutional mendment was declared passed. | hat may result in bringing the con- stitutionality of the congressional cr than dad been expected. Assemblyman Tuckerman, Repub- lican, who suggested this course of | procedure, announced that with the certified copies of the resolution in thé possession of the assembly that CUT THIS OUT Cocetone Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Dear Sirs:— COCOTONE CO, ATLANTA, GA. 5 acs Your Cocotone Skin Soap is I hay Yoco! hody would be in a position to state Perfectiy selightfal, it | makes Soap Dut ‘i’ Fou wit Geng ms a ee \f : skin soft ani ver re- cal fi leased in the courts that the New York|| eves chy ai noe and‘gives _ | {fv enclose' six two-esae tarape’ to Legislature had not waived its riggi to question the validity of the vo cover cost of mailing, packing, etc. NOMe ....6...seccveccreenseseneeeeeeesere Address wonderful results in improving the complexion. Kind me six cakes by return mail for ~ order encloged. be -He intimated that he to delay action on the feder- t by the legislature until ‘ours truly, . Miss Jos, M. Johns.

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