The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 7, 1905, Page 7

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See that $200 rocker. Knight Adrian. 44t Mrs. Louis Radford went to Jasper county Sunday on account of the serious {llness of relatives. Joe Meyer left for 8%. Louis Tues- day evening to be on the market few days. He was accompanied by his niece, Mildred Poffenbarger, who was on her way to West Virginia, make her home with aver The city authorities announce that directly following the holidays the electric light plant will be shut-down to make needed repairs, which will probably take ten days or two weeks. Coal oil lampé will have to be brought out for that period. Dr. John R. Hull and Miss Jose- phine Walters were married in Adrian last week. Dr. Hull is a popular | young dentist of that town and the bride is a handsome and accomplish- ed young lady, very popular in that community. THe Times extends congratulations. pla ~_R.R. Deacon and the editor of Taz ' “ sizes in stylish long coats Tinks enjoyed the hospitality.of Mr : and Mrs. J. G. Walker, to a magnifi- cient Thankegiving dinner, at their $7.50 to $20.00 delightful country home, six miles u , southeast of Butler. They went out _ AND A VERY LARGE LINE FOR is sibey © tell day Gik *Det tl White.” Fifteen Mr. and Mrs, Henri L. Gaddis, of Seymour, Iowa, arrived Wednesday night and remained until Monday, Don’t Miss The visiting at the country home of Mr. and Mrs, J. A. Padley. Mr. Gaddis is editor and publisher of The Sey- SLILSS SS IL GL SSIS SSL SS SL ALS ASSAD AL LAL * ‘ mour Press and is a brether of Mrs, ' Shoers Pad. — . sia : We are in receipt of a letterfrom| See our stove vessels, Knight] Bring your eggs to us, we take} Saresmen Wanrep.—To lookatter | Clothiers our old friend J. 8. Arbuckle, Clovie, Adrian, 446 tem fn exchange for goods same as| Our interest in Bates and adjacent e Of Mandkind. Se Special Bargains — IN — - Our Cloak and Fur ‘ Department DURING OUR GREAT Bargain Sale. ; es We are showing a fine lite of all Come and see them. § McKIBBENS. | 3 EGGS TAKEN SAME AS CASH, Cal., who is enjoying health and pros- cash, 44-#f. Sam’. Levy & Co, | counties, salary or Commission, perity on the Pacific coast, He dee! ae The Victor Wil Company, plores the act of Grand Old Missouri eveland, 0. oLtt in last year’s election and asks to be remembered to his many*Bates coun- ty friends. M. M. Carroll informs us that his brother, John, who has been inthe} Mr. Oscar Wilson and Miss Sarah Indian ‘Territory taking treatment | Welch of the Sprague neighborhood tor dropsy from the Indian doctor, | Were married by Rev. J. R. Strong at Rav. Don Buxton, ROH TOE Oe Ws Writes that he has fully recovered | the parsonage of the M. E. Church, Buxton, formerly of this county, now rand will be home shortly. A notice| South, yesterday afternoon at 4 of Kansas City, died at a hospital in John Barnhart returned from Cres-|0f this case was published ia Tue! o'clock, The happy pair are among Denver, Col.,on Decenibor Ist of con. i vr . f se a : sumption, Don was born and raised | \ ton, Iowa, this week and brought tive! |S some time ago aud was con-| Bates County's best: young people | . : ; i \ LARGEST STOCK IN BATES COUNTY. registered Percheron brood mares, sidered rather remarkable. The lo- | and the Review hopes for their sue: this county and went with his \ bought of E Fugier & Son, We are|°4! doctors had exhausted their akill | cess.—Rich Hill Review, father to — City about ten , ' : hd icici ie | years ago, He graduated frou Wil- Th \ e | The glad to see this splendid stock and specialists in Karsas City had! ae the py gular meeting of Butler} jiam Jewell C held ne ie e | | P given him no hope, when by chance : Ham Jewell College and was a young brought into our county, He now ite d t thi In ciawia A 1 | Lodue, No 4, A. F. & A. M. held man of bright promise. The re. Good | CLOTHING HOUSE | Good has one Percheron stallion and eigh- Ae canta voit nesias paar ila {Saturday night, Dec. 2. The follow-| mains were brought to Butler and f Clothes | | Shoe teen mares. ee ee eee | ing officers were elected and installed | gervices were conducted from the | | The Fraternat Inn Company has! An iastramout was tiled ia Recor! | for the ensuing year: W. F. Hem-| Baptist church Monday afternoon Store. | RIGHT WAY Store.' closed a contract for 300,000 press |ur Ewing's offica at Nevada yester. | Street, W.M; GE. Cable, 8. W.; H.| by Rev. Sam Brown, of Kansas City | i : : . : 1H. Lyle, J. Wad. 6.€ P ee vie ‘ ed brick from a Coffeeyville, Kuusas,|day, says the Mail, that is seldom ; ‘14! ¢ Wi: J.C. Clark, Treas,; 8. and interment was made in Gak Hill Ja peers St firm. The rough lumber fur the! coon, ‘The paper fs a deed of seperi | T. Broaddus, Sec. The following ap- | cemetery. — oo = [building was purchased of thelcion, which was executed by Mra, | Pointed: I. 'T. Clay, 8. D; H. H. ; Mare, Phaeton and harness for! Riverside stoves, none better.| World’s Fair..Wrecking Company.|Doroles and Bert McEwen. ‘The in. | Holloway, HDs dW, Packer, 8.8; | ~ Phra eal at thie office. | Knight, Adria. ta Work will he pushed just as repidlyT+trument says that Mra Me Swen re- | T. Harper, 1.8, W. W. Ross, -_ ame aa ; , a ‘i dete Il le : 4irtwo | Chaps OD. Austin, Marshal; Bb.) % J.C. Halewas uptrom Roswell, New| Mr. and Mre C. P. Catron, Mr.and| °° the weather will permit. linquishes ell legal claim to their two arshal; B. 1. | 3 i Mr. Ira 'T. Jones has restened hiv| children, Uddie, aged twenty months, | Rosamond, Tyler. position as assistant cashier with |®. Ethel, tive months, and that Mr the Hume Bank. Mr. Chas Horten, McEwen is to eare for them to the ! jr, has been elected to fill the vacancy, | best of his ability; that they have | 1 onisunder the name of Jeasie John. | and entered in upon the duties of agreed to separate, but Mrs. Me | son, Omaha, Nebr., was found deadin that office, December 1st. Mr. Jones} en is allowed to visit their chi). bed Monday afternoon, with the gas has not yet decided what line of busi- | ren. : | turned on and two half empty bot- ness he will pursue, but will likely re- tles, one containing chloroform and main in Hume thie winter.—Hume the other landanum, on a chairnear Telephone. her. Letters in her possession indi- cated that she was a trained nurse, but ‘she had made every effort to conceal ber identity by distroying all papers and letters that contained her name. Mexico, the first uf the week, Mrs. Sam Walls were down from Adrian to attend the social session A stylishiy dressed young woman is " ‘niture for Christ- ‘ A nice piece of farniture istered at the Jefferson Hotel St. mas present. Knight, Adrian. 44t | of the Elks. W. 0 Jackson, was over to Apple-| Mr. and Mrs. John M. Pharia, of \ton City on Monday taking deposi | Pleasant Gap townehip were in But fons in a law sult. ler Wednesday trading. Tue Times County court is in eession this | acknowledges a pleasant call. week with Presiding Judge McFad- den and associate Justices Bruce and Armetrong present. Pictures and picture frames, Knight, Adrian. seed years thia early. Mro. C. F. Jackson, of Kansas City.) a6, op McFarland and son epent Thankegiving with ber — Clyde, arrived trom Nashville Tues- 8. T. Brosddus, returning home Mon- day evening. Clyde stood the trip @ay. : well and while extremely weak is fast Judge William Cole renewed for his | convalescing. ter, Miss Lena, who pha na Edward Armstrong, who {sattend- , dey important position as stenogra-| i, commercial school at Kansas \/ per in Kansas City. City, came home to spend Thanke- Canron- Weiner Elevator Company giving, returned to his studies on ie reeeiving corn. 52-tt | monday. Mrs. Nancy Adair, mother of John B. and Oliver Adair, died at her home in Fortuna, Mo., last Wednesday, after a short {illness of pneumonia. | She was 78 years old and had been | in feeble health. She was born in Kentucky, but came to Moniteau county with her parents when but thirteen years old and where she; A young woman school ried married and raised a family of eight | from Tulsa, Ind. Ter., registered at children, three of whom, with the) the Blossom House in Kansas City husband and father have passed to | as Miss Pet Wafulon Friday. Sat- the great beyond. Funeral servicer | urday night she was discovered dead were conducted on Thureday. Jobn|in her room. An autopsy showed B. Adair, who was present at her | she had undergone a criminal opera- death, returned home Friday after| tion, but her death was attributed This has been an unprecedented cold snap for Thanksgiving weather. The young people have enjoyed ex- cellentekating, the firet timein many Chas. Kauffman, the retired groce who had been in the business in this city close onto forty years, met with a serious and probably fatal accident at Richards, Mo., yesterday after. noon, ssys Monday’s Ft. Scott Tri. buoe. He jumped from a buggy which he thought was overturning, end sustained a broken leg near the thigh. A Hume boy left his home some time ago to seek his fortune in Kan- sas City, says the Telephone. For _KUH. NATHAN a FISCHER CO. Misses Helen and Lucy Sterritt} Uncle George Blankenbaker re-|® months nota word was heard ho Conerel. cr. _ drag. Her home was WHAT YOU WANT "have returned to their home in Neva-| membera us with renewal, observing pom Hine. bent then Gaye ago bie Mrs. Gwin VanMeter fell down the on & z os Prien ag Neos da alter a week's visit to Jessie and | his custom of nearly thirty years. father received the following brict stairs at home Friday evening and Se a ee Lola Ra; He is one of Bates ty’e oldest | letter: “Dear Pa: Meet me under : a ae went to Kansas City Monday and 6S a 8 0 8S y. county's o the old bridge to-morrow night after fora time it was thought she Was) took charge of the remains. The Holiday goods, Knight, Adrian. | #ttlers aud 4 substantial farmer. duck; Fring with 00's blanket or killed. Dr: Christy was hastily sum-| officials so far have been unable to — FOR THE — moned and administered to her. She | secure evidence to cause any arreste had been a cripple for some time} in the case. The woman was about | $ LEAST MONEY from the effects of a fall some time thirty years old. 4 ago, in which her leg was broken. While going up the steps her crutch| Whencold weather tirst makes its slipped aud she fell to the bottom, appearancs, it is human nature for alighting on her head, rendering her people to make preparations for win- naconecivus. Mre. VanMeteris about chain Pie ap is noexcep Mens Suit and Overcoats 65 years old aud owing to heral-| tion, and he begins to look around ready eatee} led condition the gravest for winter quarters. A country jail, $3.50 to $22.00. i chies aie entertained for Let, warm and comfortable, with a bu- mane jailer, who sees that his charges Mrs. Berry weui insane on a Frisco | nave plenty of good wholesome food, train out of Kansas City last Friday | with tobacco on the side, isa very and with two pistols drove all the} enticing place for him to epend the Occupants out of the coach. When/| winter months. Two of thesegentry Girard, Kan., was reached the car} Saturday afternoon blew into But was run on aside track and left. Up|ler and prozeeded to swipe a horse to Wednesday noou, wheu we go to | eullur snd other articls f: om iu trout press, she still held possession of the| of McFarland Bros.’ shop. They car and continued to shout at every | were apprehended, pleatied guilty one.who approached. She had been | and Judge Hemstreet gave them an withgutfood or fire all that timeand | orderon Hotel Morris for thirty days the weather had been extremely cold. | board. This is a hard matterforthe } evening she took pillows| officers to manage. A jail sentence blankete in over the transom | iso punishment. A healthy rock two oll stoves to be| pile with a ball aud chain, no work car. She imagines thet | no food, sa mighty good preventi- ; tive. The much talked of whipping 44¢ | ‘Thos. J. Smith returned the first of Senator Stone presented William | the weck from Colorado, where he Warner’s credentials to the Senate | had gone on important legal busi- Monday and, introduced Senator | ness. He visited Grand Junction, Warucr wh: took the oath of office | Colorado Springs and Idaho Springs. Charles Suilia aud Miss Mabe! E. E. Holt and Mre. Frank P, #<endall, were married by Key. W. F. | Browning, of Hudson township, were Baker, at the M. E Parsonage in | in Buuier Saturday on legal busineas tis on Thoraday evening lag. | and complimented Tae Tues office, of Frank R. Robinson,} fon, D, A. DeArmond. left for which was postponed b° | syashington on Friday evening to be railroad echedules, will i» | present when Congress convened on on the evening of January | Monday. He will probably be retain- ed on the rules and judiciary com- mittees, Jobn Barnhart sold two young @ suit of clothes, Ihave a hat.” Sam. L. Coleman, of Deep Water’ with his son, Joho, a youth sixteen years of age, passed through Butler Monday on their way to Colorado Springs. The young man fssuffering from pleurisy, and Mr. Coloman-is taking bim there in hopes.that the ehange of climate will benefis him. They may conclude to go on to New Mexico. Mr. Coleman will be gone about 20 days. John will remain out there this winter. WE HAVE THEM Boys Suits and Overcats $2.50 to $12.00. Ee } Boys Suits and Overe-:'> $1.50 to $6.00. ~ JOE MEYER, The Clother Weare informed that the parties interested in the natural gas fran- chise make n positive claim that un- egiving evening and left heron stallions, of hi ising |!¢°° ont-rseen obstacles arias, that tokens of love and | oe week, LE weston gee Tied tho trate will be laid to and in But- ave for him. and Will Harwood gos the other. ler in ninety days. The pipes are al- ry re of Rev. Dr. Towell’e him an unexpected vis- Bates a 3 = b ag oe]

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