The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 13, 1906, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

The Butler Weekly Time: VOL. xXvil. BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 138, 1906. NO. 46 The live stock show will be held at o ae Home Thursday of next week. No oe DAIRY MAID CREAM SEPERATOR. 10 15 gall 20 gall aa $3. #! ons 34. ge ions DEACON BROS & CO., HARDWARE AND GROCERY HOUSE. Lambertville Rubbers. COSTS A ARE LITTLE THE MORE BEST WEAR ON TWICE EARTH. AS LONG. POFFENBARGER & EDWARDS, i Exclusive Agents. Virgina. Judge Cole and wile, of Butler, spent Sunday with Clate Wolfe and | Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McCo this neighborhood a few weeks. of last week to attend his grandpa’s red hog sale and visit his many friends. Some of the boys think he fe looking after a sunflower out in Kansas, he left Saturday morning selves. fora Democrat candidate for the Legislature. Aaron took 24 head of hogs to Hume Tuesday of this week that was bought at the sale. John Foster and Geo. Lockridge each took 6 load. They by es Pmt peer yaa s some one with them. Uncie Ass. abuggy Sunday. He stood the trip $$ Ballard Items. Vane Walker shipped {n some atock cattle from the south last week. time. ‘ and has come to stay. ol.last week. . / es Nickells, of Leo’s Summit, at- | T. J. Pitts’ family will occup, tended Aaron’s sale. Stuckey property on North Mr. Cassady, of Hume, is employ- | street. ed to teach the winter school at Vir- Afoull line of millinery goods wil) arrive at Virginia the last of next fever, Dr. Crabtree in attendance. teach the co: y Rouden, of near Cornland, were the | tives, weet of town, Sunday. = “ Miss Visa and Marion BELLE. last Saturday night and | Sunday. Mrs. Anna Wilder has returned to her home in Richard, Mo. She has | girl Get ready for the Kodak Contest. $5.00 WORTH di best in Colllec- tomate a developed by amateur. ) $2.00 WORTH - Kodak supple, given tor best ploture tn colle taken Kodaks and develope by poco Contestant must be res!- dent of Bates county. ie yaar! sate o1w. been visiting friends and relatives in | WF notified of the burglarly and An ice cream supper was given by last Sat- urday night in honor of daugh- Walter Wolfe came home Tuesday | ter, Carrie, whois home dn & it from Kaneas City. Quitea number of young folke were present and every one seemed to enjoy them- Miss Mae McKibben, of near Vir- for Blue Mound on the 8 o’clock 'ginia, visited Miss Mary Walker late train. He willbe @ reader of Tae |Saturday night and Sunday. We the burglarly. Tnaes the next three months. He is | hear Miss Mary is going to attend school at Nevada this winter. We wish her much success anda nice There will bean ice cream supper at Star uext Friday.night. The pro- coeds will go to buy alibrary. Every one isinvited to come and bring A. C. Stuckey and wife moved their Thomas Huffman says it isa fine | household effects to Butler the first Kew they were not in Butler the night of ain Harry Douglas {s serfously ill with Rev. J. A. Smith {e‘vielting his old home in Kentucky. Therefore there week at Miss Bertha Coburns. was no preaching at Fairview Sun- Aaron. | day. Miss Eva Asbury left the last of the Peru Items. week for Warrensburg, where she will ming year. Mise Stella Morgan and Elmer |. M.M. Greer and family visited rela- A Georgia judge hae decided that {tis not Ctitinls ensauls to kise a againet her will. doubt there will be a large atten- dance of people as a fine stock show always draws a big crowd. Mrs. Susie Kerr, while temporarily iasane, committed suicide last week, by jumping from a bridge 18 feet high on to the railroad tracks, in the south part of Greenfield, Mo. This makes the eleventh person to die a violent death near this unlucky spot in the last ten years. The sheriff's association of Missow ri held a session at Jefferson City Friday to discuss the constitutional amendment to be submitted at the November election to make their term of office four years instead of two years, as the present constitu- tion provides. ' Lynn Tew Sprague, who has been contributing for some time a series of historical character sketches for The Outing Magazine, writes in the September number of this magazine @ very human intimate charactor sation of Harrison of “Tippecanoe.” Mr. Sprague seems to have grasped the essence of the Indian fighter’s character, and the famous old gen- eral lives before us in these pages. Burglarly at the Democrat Office. The safe at the Democrat office were burglarized Friday night and a small amount of change and some papers valuable only to the owners, was taken. The papers afterward being found at the Welton lake, just east of town, where they had been left, with written instructions to the finder to return them to Sam Davis of the Democrat office. The officers Sheriff Morris, night watchman Crutsinger and constable McAninch, began a search for the guilty parties. Saturday evening Oscar London and Will Stubblefield, two Butler boys aged 17 or 18 years respect- ively were placed under arrest on & warrant sworn out by nightwatch- man Cruteinger, charging them with Mr. Crutsinger says after placing the boys in jail he and Dr. McAninch secreted themeelves in the jail and overheard a conversation between the boys and another prisoner, in which the two boys gave full partic- ulars as to how they gained entrance to the office, and which held the matches while the other worked the combination to the safe. We understand the boys deny all knowledge of the burglarly andclaim the robbery. THEY PAID ALL BILLS. And the Old Settiers Have Money Left for Next Year. The officers of the Old Settlers Soclety met at the Sheriff's office on Wednesday night and audited and paid all bills and accounts against the Secretary for the year 1906. Treasurer Drysdale’s report shows the following: Received from all sources .....8155.00 Paid premiums and expenses. 122.00 This is about twelve dollars more than the balance on haad one year ago. The Old Settlers are all right financially and every other way, and while death is reducing the member- Butler Record. Two Quakes in Hawaii, _Honolula, Sept. 10.—Two feland of Hawaii, but it is stated not | Spruce; M V Nix, Butler; Judge J A ship the addition of members tegain-/n.441. Basler; John L Stanley, New fngon the grim monster. Aboutone Home; James A DeArmond, Butler; re eta as hie petal WB Dawson, Rich Hill; John Kamm, rolls at the meeting this year.) pisasant Gap; W B Dayideon, Sprace; W H Browning, Mt Pleas- ant; C G Weeks, Osage; H H Nichols, Butler; Wm Witt, West Boone; earth- Stephen Smith, Mingo; Simon Gor- quakes. are reported trom Hilo, on don, Butler; that no damage was done. After| (Courier Journal, has accepted an in- | one of these shocks hundreds of dead! vitation to speak at Louteville, Ky., fish wore thrown upon the beaches. | nt the welcome to be given William Apparently they had been ecalded to Jennings Bryan, and will preside at FALL ANNOUNCEMENT. To show you the most com- WE ARE NOW READ plete line of FINE WOOLEN DRESS GOODS, SILKS and other new and up-to-date merchan- dise ever shown in Bates County. WE ARE DAILY Reeeivin our Fall and Winter line of Ladies, Misses and Childrens cloaks. Come in and see them. plete than itis this sea- son. Weshow all tee latest stylesin Mens, Boys, Childrens suits Commencing Saturday, Sept. yards the best STANDARD SILK FINISHED PRINTS AT 4c PER YARD, Come early as the best go first SSS 28 inch Outing Flannel we will sell at 5c per yard. All colors. One choice lot of new grey dress goods, 56 inches wide, reg- ular $1.00 yard value. They will go at 75c per yard. — —_ - on - SAM'L LEVY MERCANTILE Co. EGGS SAME AS CASH. The following visitors were regis- tered at the Democratic Headquar- ters the past week: Drs. 0 F Ren- ick and T F Lockwood, Butler; C F Rains,|Pleasant Gap; L K Boehm, New Home; D T Owens, Shawnee; RiA Belt, Lone Oak; I H Ellington, Pleasant Gap; Volna McFadden, Charlotte; HC Mills, East Boone; Harry Jenkins, Mound; A Borders, Asheville, North Carolina; E A Claw- son, Mound; B F' Moore, Butler; A L Gilmore, Deepwater; J R Braughton, Shawnee; A D Hyde, Prairie; P M Allison, Pleasant Gap; H H Morris, New Home; J Emmett Hook, Hud- son; Andrew J Sellers, New Home; Jeff Taylor, Grand River; WJ. Bul- lock and V H Phillips, Deer Creek; James Smith, Butler; Thos N Board, SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS 8 Not Giving Them Away-But Almost January lst, 1906, when we withdrew from the combine and began selling goods as we pleased it was the prediction of the “Trust” that we would last only thirty days. But they were false prophets—we are still here, doing business at the old stand and selling more goods than any hause in Bates county. Read the following as @ sample line of how we are giving you bargains: Croft & Allen bitter chocolate, while {¢ lasts \ lb cakes 0 0 $ rS) 15 cents. Best old wheat flour, Old Glory, per sack, each sack 8 guaranteed, $1.00. Best old wheat flour, Perfectian, every sack guaranteed, per sack 95c. Best white shorts, per cwt 95c. Why pay 25c for apple vinegar? We guarantee every gallon of ours, 20c to be pure. Best granulated sugar, 18 lbs for $1. Best —< ar, per cwt $5 50. Ball-Mason half gallon fruit jars, dozen, 90c. Ball-Mason quart fruit jars, dosen, 75c. Tin cans, quart, wax included, dozen 40c Try our Lipton Ceylon tea, like you tried at World’s Falr. We have the sale for the best quality. Y Don’t — we eell rope, nails, washing machines and ies and can eave you money on all. ‘ele-Naptha soap, per bar, 5c. Silk soap, 9 bars for 25 cents. Old Country soap, 6 bars for 25 cents. Lemons, per dosen 25 cente. Tangletoot fly paper, 4 double sheets for 5 cents. NORFLEET & REAM, rocer. SSSSSSSSSSSSSSES volce, but little regard for the musi- Kansas Negress Out of Jail. caleffect. Her singing made life so wego, Kan., September 10.—| miserable for near-by residents that ‘ary Weathers, @ negro from Par- | the commissioners decided to release sons, who hae spent the greater part | her if she would leave the county per- PS gabe Rint ad in the P very § manently. She accepted the terms persistent singer and has a sonorous and was released. ’ Silvers, Mt Pleasant; C F Thomas, New Home; Chas Baker, Pleasant Gap; Isaac Lockridge, Elkhart; Geo Williams, Merwin; Jas Gilmore, West Point; F Coleman Smith, Butler; T $ Grimsley, Homer; J B Rice, Mound; H DChambers, East. Boone; W B Welch, Summit; W M Hardinger, Charlotte; Fred Cecil, Walnut; Kzra 13BSSSSSSS99S599S9SS99S Henry Watterson, editor of the . Senator Carmack, of also one of the speak- It is aaid the governors of near- all the southern states will attend meeting.—Nevada Mail.

Other pages from this issue: