The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 5, 1902, Page 1

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BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1909, 4 e Ol. | RICHMOND ) ; PCS acon, PS TONE, TOUCH, DURABILITY. The most popular pianos on the market. Awarded Grand Prix, Pars Exposition, 1900. Awarded Gold Medals, Buffalo 1901. ‘We have in stock two car loads of Richmond, Baldwin and Howard Pianos, We cordially invite the public to call and ex- amine our goods for themselves. Our instru- , ments are indorsed by best musicians of Butler. Prices Moderate. Terms Reasonable. We sell on installments as low as six dollars per month, or any other convenient method of . payment to the customer. Liberal prices given for old instruments in exchange. Thanking you for 5 patronage, we beg to remain, Yours very truly, The Weatherholt Music Co. oe | An Essential Thing, And there are many, in the management of a bank, is the personal, painstaking care of its Ofiicers. Recognizing this responsibility the officers of this institution keep themselves in touch with every important detail of the bus- iness. And the outcome? A generous and steadily increasing patronage, , wor Bank Body Turning to Stone. Indianapolis, Ind., June 1.—One of the most inexplicable cases ever re- corded in the medical annals of the West exists at North Judson, Ind. Within the past thirty days hundreds of physicians from all portions of In- diana and from adjoining states have visited the villige to examine the per- plexing probiem presented by Eli Green, Green. in short, is turning tostone, He is attlicted with a malady for which no enre has been devised. His museles, his skin and his flesh are} slowly turning to matter as hard, andeven harder than the bones of his skeleton framework To the touch Green is dead; only the feeble action of his heart, the organs of’ breathing and digestion and a fertile and imaginative mind evidence any Ilfe whatever. The physicians who visited the suf- ferer declare that he is aftlicted with a disease that runs its course in sev - en years, not a day more ora day less. Green has already dragged out his existence over four of these years only three of his short span of life remain. Virginia Items. We heard it and jotted it down, What happened in and out of town. Antonio Houston and wife of Kan- sas City, are visiting his aunt, Mrs. | John Huffman. They attended chil- drens day at the Christian chureh Sabbath and took dinner with his| cousin, Mrs. Ed Thornbrough. Jas. 1. Wolfe, of Burlington, Kan., is spending a week with his father and mother, He night at his brother D, C. Wolfe's, with a phonograph. Report says the young folks enjoyed the music immensely, It was something new for the children, Miss Margie Hays of Kansas, is spending a few days with the family of C. W. Wolfe. Childrens day at the Christian Church was well attended. The house was not large enough to hold the crowd. On account of bad wea th- er last week the children did not get to practice much, but they did nicely, Large crowd at the band supper on last Tuesday night. It was too cold for ice cream. They cleared $21.75 had it of been warm they Sofar as the medical recordssho w, would have cleare:! as much more, there is not recorded more than one| @uite a number from Butler and Am- other parallel to the case of the In- sterdam. The Amoret band played diana sufferer. This was reported |&me fine music. from Sydney Australia, where Jac-| Childrens day at the M. E. church ques Moritz wae afflicted with the|8¢Xt Sabbath, in the morning. Chil- same terrible malady. Eight yeara drens exercises ('rook’s school house ago Moritz was seized with sickness |!” the afternoon at 3 p.m. ary effort made by the e have no he privilege’ as Groceries, and Confectionery, Cigars and Tobacco, Heavy and Shelf Hardware, Cuttlery, Guns and Aminunition, Buggies, Wagons, Harness, Queensware, Lamps, Stoves and Tinware, Farm Machinery and Im- entertained the| young folks of Parktown Saturday | plements, Iron, Steel, Nails, Barb Wire Baled Hay, Salt, Bran, Shorts, Corn Chop, Buggy Paints, Glass and Putty, Pumps, Ete. Deering Binders, Reapers, Mowers, Rakes, Twine and Oil. It will take a god binder to handle this wheat crop and the Deering will do it, cutting a full swath and binding all it cuts. Deering Twine will reach farther than any other. See the new Deering Mowers and Rakes, Ohio Cultivyetors, Moline Cultivators, D. M. Seehler Bugyies, Kentucky Wagons, Buford & George Oak tanned harness Elwood field and hog fence, Big 4 tllour, Chase & Sanborns cofiees, Boka teas, Majestic steel ranges, lowa hay forks, Ocean wave washers, Standard churns, Ur, Hess stock food, Dr, Hess poultry food ' Porters hay carriers, and steel track Cattaraugus Pocket knives Cattaraugus razors, Some Good Prices for you. Stracreen doors pain‘ed green, physicians to relieve it. It was not|¥et to interview the delegates from| with spring hinges, knob and hook, | amenable to treatment of any de- this town since the convention. We], thick, all sizes, 7c. | scription. From the patient's feet a hear a little side talk. Some think numbness began to creep upward. that it isa good ticket, clever gen- That was the first stage of disease. tlemen and capable of ‘filling the The numbnesasteadily ascended, and | tices if they could @nly get there. seven years from the day that the One fellow said he had not hard any 1\ thick ,all sizés 90c, Spring hinges and screws 10¢. Door springs 10¢. | There is a great difference in sereen malady first displayed itself the sick- thing said against trusts, about the wire cloth, we sell Wickwire Bro’s | ness has eaten its wav into the pa- ull dinner pail or beef. One fellow tient’s brain and had frozen the|S#id they ought to attend prohibi- faculties of his mind into st oneexacte | tion convention June 30th, at Butler ly as it had hardened the muscles, |®"4 listen to Volney B. Cushing of flesh and skin of his body, Then| Maine, talk about the dinner pails, death relieved the sufferer. the trust: and the laboring man, i elias AARON, Car Load of “White Faces.” Appleton City Journal. The Egger Hereford Cattle Co., at this place on Friday sold to Mr. Wm. Humphrey, of Belton, Mo.,a ear load consisting of 25 head, of fine young thoroughbred Hereford bulls and the same were shipped that day to Mr. Humphrey’sextensive ranch near Mound Items. A good deal of rain. Farmers say it is too wet to plow their corn, Geo. Thompson had a fine mare killed by lightning not4ong ago. The hail storm ruined eighty acres of wheat for E. F. Boswell W. J. Crews went to Foster to at- Spruce Items. Plenty of water and grass: {is the latest. " Health is reasonably good in this gection of the county. T. H. Dickinson bas been quite ill for the past week, The bell telephone line from Mont- | Fose tu Butler is progressing nicely. The Modern Woodmen are eresting | # new Licll at Spruce. ‘Geo. Troup is erecting a new dwell- jng in Spruce. LM. Kretzinger has justcompleted an addition to his hovse, dut Newlerry and wife mide a usiness trip to Appleton City Sat- day. 4 ‘A. L. Gilmore killed a Ueef Friday and supplied his neighbors with some fine fresa meat. Geo. Keen, wife and baby were the guests of his motherSaturday night. Rev. Howard, of ElDorado Springs, *hed at Oak Grove school house Sunday at 11 0’clock. Childrens exercises were held at the .. M. E. church at Spruce. Chas. West says he is going to Ar- kaneas City to reside the rest of his \ ARS L. Gilmore has a fine bunch of ; ready for the market. Dad Mitchler had a fine two-year- nicely. conga prnenne from ’ sojourn in Oregon. ia oenekelved from Galena, I. yorte the wheat crop good in rt of the eee }. Ewin, wife and daughter will ¢15 fora three months’ ae a memorial we send love and| more respect for those burglars than was largely attended andadelightful time is reported. Dr. Colson and wife, accompanied by the latter's parents and sisters, who are visiting her, and Rev. Vivian and wife drove ont co the peautifal home of I. M. KretZiuger last Wed- Deep Water. " Frontz From .he New Country. OmeGa, OKLA TER, May 29, 1902, There has more rain fallen here during the month of May than in two previous years. A large spring crop planted and the ground keeps so wet they cannot get into the fields, Grass never was better at this time of the year. Cattle that went through the winter on straw feed, are doing fine. In this, immediate local- ity, the wheat dried out during the winter, hence the crop will be light. A large acreage of oats beingsown which look fine and promise a large yield. There are quite a number of good residences being built in this country evidence of prosperity. There has changed hands a ntmber of farms during the last winter and this spring, prices ranging from’3 to 5 thousand dollars per % section. The writer's farm is not for sale for less than $45 per acre. For the beneft of relatives and friends who may chance ¢oread this, we are somewhat scattered. Our daughter and family are thirty miles from us. We are all enjoying reasonably good health at this writ- at James best wishes to al). Yours in F.C. & L., Horace Carrer, | nection with the shooting. Belton and go from therein comany with other cattle to his ranch, con- taining many thousands of acres in the state of Chihuahua, Old Mexico. Mr. Humphrey, as might be expect- ed, isan experienced stockman and it did not take him many minutes to make his selection of animals that he wanted when he looked upon the Egger herd. Both he and his ranch manager were delighted with the} tend quarterly conference aud hear Elder Cobb preach one of his big ser- mons, Mrs. Ira Hardin of Nevada, Mo., is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. W. Crews. Mr. Hardin is working on the rail- road. We met Nathaniel Lockard and son Bryan, going out to his farm. J. B. Rice has 15 aeres of tobacco planted and is_in_ good shape. genuine cortland, the best made and | have all sizes from 16 to 48 inch in | both green and black. ‘All steel long or short handle, | square point sholves, each 0c, Blizzard freezers | lquart,each - - - $125) 2 quart each - 1.50 | 3 quart each ee ee 1.75 | + quart each : 2.00 6 quart each fir i! 2.60 S quart each _- 3504 All of our freezers have cedar cut- | side buckets. Don’t buy freezers with | pine buckets, they wont last like | Low gasoline stoves 2 burner - $3.50 3% burner 4.50 Tall gasoline stoves 2burner - 4.50 3% burner : 5.50 Low coal oil stoves 2 burner perfection 8.00 3 burner perfection 10,00 Gasoline ovens Perfection with door — - 1.25 Sloans genuine Round oven - 140 Shepard's Lightning Freezers, triple motion, best in the tuarket, all have cedar buckets 2 quart each $1.70 8 quart each : 1.95 4 quart each 2.40 6 quart each 2.95 S quart each 3.70 10 quarteach — - 5.50 White Mountain Refrigerators from 86.50 to $17.00 cedar. These are ice savers. Gur beauti The Olson cream separator does | ful line of water coolers. the work perfectly, we are glad to 2 gallon each F150 note a reduction from former prices. | gallon each 2.00 10 vallon $5.00 | 4 gallon each 2.50 15 gallon 6.00 | 6 gallon each 3.00 20 gallon 7.008 gallon each 3.0 We want your butter, eggs and chickens at best market prices in exchange for goods. purchase and Mr Egger was equally expects to plant about three acres more. pleased with the price received. aon Tom Zimmer has his fine hay barn completed. It will hold about eight hundred tons of baled hay, and the prospects are that lie will get it filled. Fritz Chambers has a fine new buggy; get ready girls. Lockard and Kline have bought a thresher and are now ready for busi- ness. One of Uncle Geo. Ruddle's nephews All Mimore Double Branch Items. Crops are looking well, although that has been planted needs plowing bad. Some corn to plant yet? There is going to be an abuudance of hay this year from the prospect now. There will be no fait -f any kind in this seccion with exception of a few apples. Some road work is being done in this part at last, and more badly needed. Rev. Wix left an appointment to preach at the Cifres school house’ the fourth Sunday in June at eleven o’clock a. m., also at four p: m. Children’s Day was well attended, and an interesting programme was! rendered. 5 | On account of the rain Saturday | the entertainment at Pléasant Gap! was not very w-ll.attended. : not take care of without help, there is such an accumulation of them. They litter the whole system. Pimples, boils, eczema and other tion, dull headaches and many other troubles are due to them. Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Pills He Likes the Burglars Best. Chicago, May 30.—Daniel Hill, the | wealthy board of trade man, who, Remove all humors, overcome all ne ee. He says the old fashioned wal shot a week ago, was to-day al- their effects, strengthen, toue and | *#Y is good enough for him. lowed to talk by his physicians, —_ invigorate the whole system. “I was shot by burglars,” said he.| “1 had salt rheum on my hands so that I “And I want to say that I have alot could not work. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla ‘aud it drove out the bumor. I continued for the people who have been insinw-' 1.4 0, paowy, Rumford Falls, Me. ating that Mrs. Hill had some con-! Cure and keeps the promise, -QEACON BROS. & C0, of Ky., whom he had not seen for 20 years, is visiting him. Bryon Lockard will leave soon for Kansas, where he hasa large acreage | of wheat. W. F. Maddy is hauling brick to Wall his new cistern, Wm. Walls came in one day last week to see his father. He is in a wholesale house in Pittsburg, Kun. We notice the republicans have selected good men for the various ' Are impure matters. which the skin, | sleeves and work if we win all the liver, kidneys and other organs can | ticket. eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired | attended and an excellent program feeling, bilious turns, fits of indiges | was carried out. offices, We will have to roll up our We met Uncle John MeCan going over to instruct the Nightwiue Bros. | in the mystery of tobacco culture. Childrens day at Passaic was well Mrs. Turner of Rich Hill, and sister of Ft, Smith, Ark., are visiting their sister, Mrs. J. B. Rice. Bro, Scott will preach at Passaic the 7th and 8th. Everybody invited. Col. J. N. Sharp has finished shear- E Degree for Helen Gould. New York, May 31.—New York its use till the sores disappeared.” Mas, | University will confer the degrees of master of letters upon Miss Helen Hood’s Sarsaparilia promises to | Miler Gould, Miss Emily Butler and Mrs, Henry Draper, who have served | Thursday evening. as president of the women’s advisory commnittee. The degrees will be cou- ferred at the commencement exercises in Metropolitan Opera House next Dr. William P. Martin, for many years president of the University at advisory commit- tee. The degrees will be commences ment orator, Gray Hair “*T have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor for over thirty years. It has kept my scalp free from dandruff and has prevented my hair from turn- ing gray.’’— Mrs. F. A. Soule, Billings, Mont. There is this peculiar thing about Ayer’s Hair Vigor —it is a hair food, not adye. Your hair does not suddenly turn black, look dead and. lifeless. But gradually the old color comes back,—all the rich, dark color it used to have. The hair stops falling, too. $1.00 @ bottle. All druggists. If your d ist cannot suppl: send as one dat lar and we wih express you a bottle, Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office, Address, J. €. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.

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