The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 15, 1907, Page 7

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Master Sam Canterbury, son of} Mrse.I. M. Smith fell down the George M. Canterbury, and Masters | basement stairway of her home Sat- George and James Canterbury, sons | urday afternoon and rece! ved painful ofSam F. Canterbury, of Kansas | bruises, but fortunately no serious City, were the guests of Miss Eleanor | injury. Morrison the first of the week Governor Folk bas appointed R Evelyn Briggs Baldwin, the noted|M. Kemp of Eldorado Springs, a Arctic explorer, who has made three | member of the Nevada asylum board attempts to locate the north pole|of managers. Gov. Folk recently and fs contemplating « fourth, was | appointed Senator Wright of Nevada fo Nevada lust week. He is a rela- us TAKE ADVANTAGE een Yoibeiade WR Are most too warm to be member of the board. Senator Of the low prices _ fe or iow gh wo kind tive of Geo. C. Baldwis, ofthat place.| Wright and Mr. Kemp take Dr. Wur-] we are now mak- The stock of the Deacon Hardware|"8Y'® 8nd Hon. John Montgomery’s | ing on all light- ONE OF OUR Company, of Harrisonville, has been | Places on the board. ‘| weight clothing. RGE SUITS soid to the Burch Bros, TheDeacon| Grandma Miller, widow of the late BLUE SE Hardware Company has been locat-| Alt Miller, who is living with her son, Will make you happy and edon the ame corner and undercon-| A. A. Miller, on Mechanic street, while len’s Suits Low as $3.00 trol of the Deacon family for 42 @ | years. Mise Lila Steele came down from St. Louts on Sunday to spend a part of her vacation with her old Butler in the kitchen, became dizzy and fell, her head striking the cook stove, | cutting her face and ear. Dr. Christy | was called. Grandma Miller is in her | 87th year, and is unusually active make you look well dressed. ; WE ARE ALREADY RECEIVING NEW FALL CLOTHES friends, and she has a host of them for one of her age. j here, as no girl was more popular} Jobn B. Adair, who ie traveling coe open to your than Miss Lila when ehe lived in| for the Kansas(ity OllCo., Sundayed nspection. Batler. with his familyin Butler. Mr. Adair, Low as $2.50 ALL LIGHT WEIGHT “‘Mojor,” Jesse Trimble'sdog wasa | "00 Went on the road with a view ot f \ improving his health, says the change mer, Seca & Co, 7 CLOTHING victim to the folsoner fiend last ia busthens tisthods bas bess hel week. A veterinarian did all hecould Now on Sale at a Discount. tor Major, but he gave up the ghost ficial. He ts traveling in southwest STYLE WALK-OVERS __[|[erteenttotn dog nee, | Mlwoot "oa" mats theo) wae kind and obedient and possessed é NEW FAL Children’s Suits Low as 50c. NOW ON THE ROAD. much intelligence. The largest mule in the world was The o , The A delighttal change in the weather se . eoy yo Yards in Just Arrived Good Good gi | too pleceBunday evening, following me eal coer pr Dray ot | , Mo.,and | Cltes CLT HOUSE Stee Piston yeas tng wrens ool for 40 ant wed 1900 | STYLISH SUITS Store ; tore, and the thermometer went down |P0UDds. It was shipped to Pitts. many degrees. The cool weather burg and will be placed beside ahatr-, For Fall and Winter wear We fit your head, feet, form and purse. continued the fore part of the week, | 08 horee, and the antmals used for | ne ET exhibition purposes.—Ex. | — | The St. Louis County Court has put the lid on Coroners’ iuquests, ex- cept where there {s suspicion of foul play. The Judges of the court at Clayton declared that thousands of dollars had been expended iu inquests of which there was no possible neces- salty. Some people strain at gnats and | swallow camels. They clamor for the enforcement of the law against the venders of ice cream, pop corn | and cigare, in which no one fe injur- : ed, and yet they remain as silent as the grave in relation to enforcing the | law in cases where absolute {njury to others {s committed.—ElDoradoSun, : The Third JAR OF MONEY Now in Operation. A Key WITH EVERY $1.00 ‘PURCHASE, §=— | Joe Meyer isin the St. Louls mar-| T. L. Fisk, one of Summit’s prom!-| Dox licks lips of Chicago woman Stale wank. a nent citizens and substantial farm-| who committed culcide with potson ers, favored us while in Butler Satur-| and dies as result. Endeavored to All low and tan shoes at cost at) 4, be sympathetic on hearing victim sap gwaenns Mr. and Mrs, Frank James, of Chi- | 87°82: Miss Arbogast, of Foster, has been cago, came down the first of the} Rooms ror rent: I have several vialting in El Dorado Spriugs. week %o visit the family of J. W.| nice large rooms for rent, elther sin- Ray Tyler, the Butler tinner, has | Smith. gly orin sults. Suitable for light his name added to our growing list. Attorney A. J. King, says the Ne- housekeeping. Reduction on alleummer fabrics at, vada Mall, fe circulating a petition| 42-2t Mrs. A. 8, WeppLe, Hill’s Cash Store. asking Gov. Folk to pardon Dr. J.| Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Culver, of Mo-| About $1,000 worth of soap has .R. H. , of Trenton, Ills.,| 8 Todd. nett, Mo., are spending the week | been contracted for by the citizens of ee : with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H.| Nevada in order to secure the enter- fe visiting her sister, Mre. A, H.Cul-| James N. Sharp and John Eichler, ver. son of L. C. Eichler, were in Butler| Culver, and Mrs. Ina Tiffany north- | price. Mre. W.J. McAninch and children |" Friday and complimented us| West of town, Dave Owens was in from Shawnee sealer ak plead weno are vistting relatives in Independ- pleasantly. “Why,” asked @ Missouri paper, | Saturday, called and favored us sub- hae pa wes wroagdeih ence. Dick Grim and wife and Tom Walls | “40¢8 Missouri stand at the head in| stantlally. Dave is an old settler of h bat = i a ; ' and wifecame down from Kansas|F@!sing mules?” ‘Because,” sald] Bates county and lived in this town- | 8U°h & great difference in valuation. Racket goods are going fast at City Monday to attend the funeral | ®2°ther paper, “that fe the only safe|ship for many years, was always re-| L.B. Ashbaygh, an assistant in Hill's Cash Store. ot Mre Ramey. place to stand.” garded straight as a string and al-| the legal department of government ' Clark Wix attended a meeting of Mies 0 Col latin W. H. Warford, an early settler| ¥8Y8 lived up to his obligations. at Washington City, was ts Butler Missour! postmasters at Brookfield, ee ‘mega Volyer, who has been) | 4 substantial farmer of Spruce the first of the week taking deposi- last week. visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed. Austin, township, was in Butler Tuesday on tions in the claim of Guyer against N hi f hool dresses Se aes Wtennne hoes the business and favored us. Mr. War- the U.S. government. Theclaimant i mw ging! <9 e aed h Store. last of the week. ford’s farm adjoins Ballard. claims that he was running a hotel vas O¢ per yard.—Hill’s " | Mr.and Mrs, Harry B. Robinson| \jn9 H. 0. Clark and Mrs2D. A. in Butler during the war and ,that Wantep:—Girl todo ~ ng and Mra. H. M. Tyler, came down * Federal soldiers took from him goods ee to Mrs. - + S@wards, | from a on Monday 10) fret of the week. Mrs. DeArmond to| be married soon to the partner of 2 cae on, ane apa ~~ thelr automobile. vistt friends and Mrs. Clark will go| her late husband. : American Beauty Corsets, all styles | yayor Al. Daly, of Nevada, is re-| into camp with her husband. from 25c to $2.50 at Hill’s Cash covering from a serious operation. * Being an amateur sportsman, in a Store. It was feared at one time that he| While Robert Barton was paint-|way ourselves, we can sympathize Miss Tillie McQuillan, of Chicago would not survive, ing his barn last week thejjladder | with the scribe on the Atchison Globe ie McQuillan, , ; gave away and he fell 15 feet, break- | wh arks: “E an saves & has been visiting Mr.and Mrs. Harve | The lid was on so tight at Metz, fog his knee cap. He fs in a very daha bakes pelle wast The soap factory of L. W. Holland, which is now located at Pleasant Hill, 1s to be moved to Nevada, Mo., according to the Nevada Herald. It would be much better for the farmers if their lands were assessed , at somewhere near their true value, ' then the rates could be reduced, | When a farirer values his farm at $50 per acre, it doesn’t look well to JOE MEYER, The Clothier. We acknowledge a pleasant call and bueiness favor from Harry J. Clark, wealthy young farmer living about five miles of Amsterdam, ju:t over the Kansas line. Mr. Clark and his wife spent Sunday with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. G. Walker, suutheast of Butler. Mrs Hale, of Sheldon, and Mrs Graham, of Ams- terdam, two cther daughters were present forming a kind of family re- union. At the C. P. A. Piente, at Hess’ grove, west of Adrian on last Wed- Ivis announced that the second trial of Harry K. Thaw will not be held until the January term of court and along with that announcement comes another that Mrs. Stanford DeArmond went to St. Joseph the| White, widow of Thaw’s victim, will \ Our good german friend M. Weimas, of Amsterdam, accompanied by his sou, Henry, and neighbor, George Uschkrat, complimented us and had his dates set ahead. Mr. eS f old clothes to go hunting In, | Wot { bstantial f f . Mo., says the Times, that you could | crisical condition.—Amoret Post. lot o : elmas is a substantial farmer of nesday, young Harvey George had a een not even buy a clgar or ham eand- R but the only hunting he ever does {s| Weat Point township. Mr. Uachkrat bottle of pop to burst in bis band. Judge and Mrs. Allen Wright, of wich, last Sunday. Use of brown sugar for coloring|for the clothes, only to discover that| came to thi county this spring. He! Theexploston threw glass in his face, it latives f ae ay . Lete Sacket and his family left for Austin, Mo., on Monday, where he Dave Reece has secured the coneract | has atand rights for the four days of purposes violates law of Missouri, according to Pare Food Commission- er Washburn. Ruling will affect his wite has given them away.” came over from the “old country” and one cf his eyes -was seriously in- three years ago. jured. It was an unusual accident, andcan be accounted for only on the Only a short time now until school is called. Scholars have begun to Missouri fe the only state west of : ar supplying the Butler schools with | the annual bean picnic. many vinegar manufacturing houses. | oun she days and teachers are New York which has a nickel and co-| *eory that it was a defective bottle, coal.—Review. Last Monday all laws enacted at| D. J. Field, of Richards, fs using a making the final preparations. Time balt mine. There is only one other | 1 4¢#49confined in the ordinary com- goes faster now than it use to. We can prove this by all the olderchaps, who were boys a few years ago. Guess because {ts a fast age. Any- how, {¢ appears that way. Ben Eller, who had been confined in the St. Joseph’s hospital for three weeks from the effects of an opera- tion for appendicitis, returned home the last of the week, accompanied by his father, Henry Eller and sister, County Clerk Weeks went/tdown to| Mise Emma, who had gone to Kan- Rich Hill Tuesday. Some of hia|®* City for shat purpose. friends accuse him of going down to| Geo, Pearson, of the country north- sympathize with Bro. Wiseman, but} ast, has been making extens{ve im- Mr. Weeks vigorously denies the al-| provements about his home, and legation. now hasit fixed up in grand style. Ason of Sherman Reemer, of El-|J.T. Davis has just completed the dorado Springs, had a narrow es-| work of putting in 500 feet of 3-foot cape from death last week,He was | concrete walk for Mr. Pearson.—Re- knocked down, trampled and kicked | view. bya vicious cow. His injuries were Hon. Thos. J. Snjth returned from 4 trip to Bowling Green, Kentucky, Miss Florence Marriott, whojhas a|the“ast of the waek, where he went good stenographic position at Mus-|to visit his mother, who is growing kogee, I. T., is now at the home of! old in years, being now in her 84th her parents, Mayor and Mrs. W.J./year. She fs still in good health and of Rockyille.—Appleton | strong mentally. Mr. Smith endeav- ore to get back to see his mother) prot GK. Green returned from Mrs. Carl Stuck, of Nevada, killed | 00° year. Warrensburg Tuesday, {weere he had ground hog in her chicken yard} The Rév. David Dwight Biggers, | been in attendance at the Warrene- mercial pop is not strong enough to break thin ce. The news dispatches tel! of an ath- letic young Oklahoman who captured @ shark off Virginia Beeeh, Va., by catching it by the tall with his hands and dragged {¢ to shore to the great edification of a crowd of bathers. He was evidently one of the rough riders who are in the habit of running down wolves and killing them with bare hande, the habit learned from our strenuous president in the big pasture. My office is No. 9 West Ft. Scott street, Butler. Phone No. 293. You can call and talk, or talk by callin central. It is better to come and tel: me what you want. No man isin better position to do you good, whether you wish to buy or sell, Don’t walt until the rush ison. It may be singular, but I don’t do busl- ness on the square—I am one block south. W. O. ATKESON, The remains of Mrs. Ramey were brought to Butler Monday noon from her home in Kansas City, where she died Saturday evening. They were taken first to the home of her sister, Mra. George Dadiey, and trom there to Oak Hill cemetery. Services were conducted by Rev. Criss. Mrs. Ramey was the daughter of Mr. and Thomas Connor, | dents in attendance, the second best|Mre. Thomas Walls, old citizens of millionaire, 40 write his|attendance of counties {outside of | Butler, who moved to Kansas City a . At will “require many | Johnson, Jackson county being first.|few years ago. She was well known him to facts; Thomas Douglass, a Bates county | here where she epent most of her life. jasper , boy, eon of ex-Recorder Douglass, | She leaves two grown children, Sam rs was a graduate this term. Walls, of Adrian, waa her brother. 4 tion engine to haul his hay to Migs Ethel Pratt entertained last | the special session of the General As- | *°8¢ week at her home in Appleton City | sembly, except those with emergency | *herall road. His hay train conslets for Rich Hill friends. clause, became operative. of the engine and five wagons. Each ; wagon {is loaded with two tons of Miss Stella Weltmer, of Nevada, | Miss Raby Owen and Miss Lucia) },y, Mathers, returned to their home in pape > Tenday. etait: Adrian ‘Sunday, after a pleasant| Our old friend Emmet Staley, for- saad _* visit with Miss Jennie Owen. merly of Mingo township, for several years past a resident of Dayton, Dr. T. W. Foster and Dr. Pearce, Washington, sends remittance to of Kansas City! performed an opera- | have his dates act ahead tosAugust, tion for appendicitis on Mrs. John | 199g, Little Agnes, five year old daugh-| Wright on Tuesday morning. oo - vee te aly’ ag — Mrs. J. R. Crooks orders her paper changed from Butler No. 5 to Santa lisg Susie Clay is spending the | Cruez, California, where she has gone kat the home of her brother, | ¢o make her permanent home. Olay, in St. Jomph. Governor asks Attorney General McConnell came over Satur- | ¢o oust Herpel and Johnson under fing from Clinton to vielt the | derelict official act. Hadley doesnct believe he is sufficiently empowered. Marriep:—At the home of the bride’s parente, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rayburn, Miss Stella B., to Mr. Pey- ton B. Davis, of Appleton township. Miss Anna Darwood, of near Ap- pleton City, in the Ohio post office 004, has been of these mines in the United States which produce these metals;in oxide forms. This mine is located in Mad- {son county. The products of the smelter are ignot nickel, black oxide of nickel, oxide of cobalt .and blue vitriol. “*Twill pay you to buy your china Christmas gifts now at 25 per cent. off.—Hill’s Cash Store. A Sunday train was put on the Interstate road on the ilth and hereafter will beon the regular sched- ule. This was not brought about by the spiteful fling ofthe Bates County Record at Prosecuting Attor- ney Dawson last week, but because the old Missour! Pacificis determined to live ap to all the laws,;,the least as well as the greatest, if it does lose money in the effort. Ex County Clerk Jno. F. Herrell and wife were called to Adrian the last of the week on the information that their son, Geo. F. Herrel had injared himeelf in lifting fa heavy show case in his store. qGeorge sue- tained a severe strain to his back and chest and was laid upfor several days, but it is not thought*Jany per- manent injury will result. weeks’ visit with her! Harrisonville, and {s helping Joe at Winfield,| Mayers’ force out while he ts in St, by | were about sixty Bates county: stu se

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