The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 2, 1908, Page 4

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)

‘ i The principal difference be- tween Mocha and Java and Arbuckles’ Ariosa Coffee is | ,, that Arbuckles’ Ariosa costs you less and has more Coffee |:: taste. ARBUCKLE BROS., New York City. TALES ON NIGHT RIDERS. Their First Fight With the Au- thorities—How One Man Was “Brought-to Time.” Metropolitan Magazin Back ta the year 1906 the open SUES MODERN WOODMEN, A Clinton Man C Claims Injury in His Initiation. Saturday night Howard Plot- his attorneys, Peyton A. Parks and C. A. Calvird, filed suis in the Henry County circult court, for personal injuries agatnst the Modern -odmen of America asking $25, 000 damages. In his petition he alleges that the Clinson team of Foresters tn the fol- viasory ceremony on March 161908, cs - placed him in a box 18 to 24 inches “Then be ean the persecution. They | high and then caused the same to drove away my negroes and 108) collapse. As a result, he claims to more They threatened to scrape} have been ruptured and has since (uproot) my plant beds. All one] }een confined to his bed sustaining night my sons lay on guard tn the], severe permanent tnjury whieh will woods, Toward morning the Nght} prevent him pursuing his usual Riders came and the boys opened up- | neans of livilhood. on them with buckshot. The riders} 4 prominent local member of the fled In pante yelling with pain; 80 We] order when tuformed of she sult, sald, knew we had shot some but did not} “We are tn deep sympathy with the ner by a rt , SHOTGUN DUEL IS FATAL. Texas Man Goes to Death Defense of the Stingy Man. They say | am stingy. All rights, ‘les it go at that; lam stlogy. But |did ydu ever hear that I was a dead | beat? There was a time when | Battle at Sunrise. threw my money and stood off my jereditors in order shat I might be, Dallas, Tex., June 29—In a duel \known as a good fellow, but now I with double-barrelled shotguns at save my money and’ pay my debis, *Urlse, Green Liveey killed his an- There was a time when I spent ten | *8gonlst, Gilbert Reese. The battle dollars of an evening, bumming sook place at Blackburn Lacy’s saw around with the boys, and owed the mill, nine miles south of Longview, sailor for the clothes on my back; 02 the Sabine River. Livser gave when I went riding every Sunday bond at Longview after Reese’s with a livery rig and did not pay my | 4¢4*h. board; when I thought {s anevidence, Both were lumber men, and thelr ot smartness to buy cigars and quarrel was of long standing. Fol- drinks for other people, but now! lowing a recent encounter, they de- think {s an evidence of sound sense|*Tmined to settle their differences for a man to save money for which | “!th shotguns. They agreed to go he is compelled to work, tn order, °° the south side of she mill and to appeared over the bluff, Liveey crept cautiously around she mill, hie gun in the hollow of his arm Reese etarted from his place of concealment under @ projecting por- tion of the engine-hovse at about the same time. He caught sight f Liv- ney first, and before the latser could | bring his gun {nso position had fired both barrels at his antagonist As the smoke cleared away, he saw that he had missed, but before he ‘could re-load, Livsey had emptied both barrels into Reese's head. He died in twenty minutes Rvese leaves |» wife and two children. Three Drowned in Mankato. Mankato, Minn,, June —Miss Eva Ehler, 16 years old, her guest, Mise Maud Worlds, 19 years old, of. St, | Peter, and Max Sues, 20 years old, that he may realize something from | ire on sight at any time after sunUp! were drowned in the flood waters it. For thisdam called stingy, bus) 80d before the day’s work had be 1 can etand ft; in fact, I rather enjoy #"9- the title, for there are so many shift. Long before daylight the men took leas fools in this town who {magine ‘heir positions, and, with guns at caused by the overfiow of the river bere. The girls had gone in bathing jin Cornelia street, which was over- flowed. Miss Ebler sank and Miss Worlds went to her rescue. She too, that they are good fellows, hoping half cock, waited patiently tor day-| went down and Max Sues then dived h stillties began, when a band of! know who they were neighbor in his present condition | x ne 0 ner a wee scraps ofclosh! Afser thas defense of our property eepee Bede css ve to render|*0 realize on thelr wanton waste of ‘Bt. As the firat rays of the sun jfor them. He did not come up. Lidlug shelr faces and yuns over thelr! we were ostracized—we and elght or] him any assistance within the bounds | ™oney, that I am glad 1 cannot be e shoulders rode Into the iivsle town of ten ovher ‘hill billies’ around here. | of reason in a fraternal or neighbor: classed among them. Ask the Dill amen ieee ies eames rin aetna Trenton in Keutucky, Ls wasnearly They threatened to burn my baros./)y way, But we firmly contend that collectors about the good fellows, * : midnighs; 9 solitary watchman saw! They did scrape up and destroy one | we » soclety are ia no wise responel- The bill collector will tell you astory ; DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST C0. Q snom, bub they were too quick for ofmy plant beds, They pus matches | Je for his present condition and will worth listening to and they will aleo } j Alm and before te could give the and dynamite in my wheat, Eight] resias to she usmost any effors made) tell er that the stingy men pay H CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. larm he Was 6 und and bis mouth of us had to go to northern Ken} go pus upon us the responsibility of Promptly. ; : NS with oakum. Lo the cen-| tucky to get a thrashing machine, rh condition,” , There aren lot of good fellowein| ¢ Farmers Bank Building, Butler, Missourt. ‘ f she place was # storehouse, escort tt here under arms and escort 175 ADAY. this town who have not money FARM LOANS. We have money to loan on real j , nsousmall fvevory for making plug it back again after guarding ft night FOR TEDDY, JR., $ seeemgho ny _= pi sg are estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay atany time. and smokfug tobacco, Bursting fo) and day and fighting off those who —_—— stingy fellows here who began life un- ; ee se tired these aie would have dynamtted us. They A Common Laborer’s Lot Will der mere unfavorable circumstances ’ ABSTRACTS. We have a complete hedg of abs- | and then, plug on tieir horses! have cut us ous of church, ordered : ; than the good fellows, deserve the H tract booker and will furnish abstracts to any Real Estate tn rodeaway. \ oneinTrentonknows the school teacher to send away the] b@ That of President’s Son. [name ot being stingy, for a stingy Bates County and examine and perfect titles to same. é bo shis day wao were the invaders, | ‘hill billy’ children, drove one school} puoi Minn., June 29—When|™®2 seldom stints bimeelt or ble INV ESTMENTS. We will loan your {dle : \fow Weeks later a storaye shed as ma'am out of her job because she young Theodore Rousevels reports family, but he often refuses to throw } money for you, gecuring you reasonable interest on good secur- } ston alsotu Kentucky, was shat. wouldn't do 1% and made war upon tor work to John C. Greenway, man his hard earned money away, and ¢ ity. We pay interest on time deposits fred by sou explosive” Theneame my wife by horsewhipptog our negro ager of she steel company’s mines on very properly. A stingy man ie sel- i W. F. DUVALL, Preetdent ; A DUVALL. Yee? $ Yow on tie of 1906 shat will bands and threatening to kill any ie Western Masaba range, about dom bothered for donations, and al } lowe free Ae lent. hy i : fog af ae j cotben by the Ken negro Woman WhO 86 TOO OM OUT. om now. he willbe om: A Aike—the-nitme—Feund t ALL, Treasurer. D.YA’ le Examiner, t tu kleus Princeton. Into thelr land—so that my wife who ta over pioyed, is fs sald, with the ordinary among the papers of.an Atchleon | SIAN AVE NARA UEDA CRIS ROLDAN RRL ist rode enough “Night Riders’ sixty has to do all of the work atthe labaver » mine, probably asa man who died rich —Atchison Globe. | $6606000000006064060000000000R0SSOREbRSSOECOSSCCESS go lit tail) capture the plies, Mak tubs and fn the kitchen, Is has been washerman, earning the goodly sum sausinc manasa reine i Kops cers of she mayor, police more than three years now of con- of $1 72 aday. He will be expected It Can't Be Beat, F A RMERS selobber otficers they kept off the move now 1 sould nobel "hl to work ten hours a day; hls com-| ‘The best of all teachers ts experlence. a ‘Nene by menacing them with sheir pantons will be workmen from the|C. . M. gpk of Silver Ciky, North moasch to the largest “stemmery”’ tn Bears the ment inthe rough North, and bis]ior gpom hime CER Bea $iw Sombi—n place where halt a mill soa particular duty will be to wash sand cena age see ad Cidney ton pounds of tobacco were being ino from the. ore. tried It and find {ta most excellent OF BATES COUNTY. Fs repared tor she pipe and clgarette vey Southern Illinois is Called However, young Roosevelt will live| medicine.” Mr, Harden fs right; {t's ih! fhe Briton Egypt. at the home ofthe manager, who|*e -_ . all — also for —_—— i he bale of wo white haired Ken- atnion Journal. was sp ottcer of his father’s “Rough weakness, lame back, and all ron ‘ a tooklan is @story that many others, ihe year 1824 was very wet Riders,” and may hope for a ratse, pe sicrg arspiodheg might sell, 1s is given just as he Heavy rains fell frequently. Cornon| Pyere te no Hkellhood of the young | at Frank T. Clay’s drug store. 50c.| pein + ee flat lands was a total failure. This TT | We are protected against robbery by insurance and our LARGE bold tt “ft bave given up tobacco. The croft have juss marketed will be-my last. When this trouble began, | was growing thirty acres of tobacco, Liisve about tive hundred acres of; laid. The association came to me god asked mé to sign the pledge. A os of my nelghbors said they would go she way l did. I have been sort of 4 leader around here, 1 suppose aoihavealwars had a great many friends, “{ aaid ‘No | won't go tn that with you. You have only $200 worth of stock, you haven't any property, you haven't #ny security. The ware- h you ask me to ship to fs run by two mon who have been dismissed rom the sobaceo exchange for “nest ne tubaceo and robbing thelr cus tomers They sre dishonest. You! have co standing at the bank. I prefer to run my own business. Bus f will do this: Twill reduce my acre- age an! hold off till you sell your crop before marketing time.’ | the days of Pharaoh and his ruler, as , Hlinols, dependent upon the south- | need Egypt. college man going to work tn the year the weevil destroyed the wheat) ottices, according to one of thesuper- after it—was harvested. The next | in tondonts, indeed, tt is the partle- year, 1825, there was @ remarkable] y147 object of she President to have growth of thistles on the branch bot- his son do, hard, out-of-doors work, toms. The winter of 1830-31 was] sion as will give him theexercise he known as the winter of deep snow. needs and the opportunity to show The snow was a depth of from $Wolit, mettle. The rough fellows of his and « half to three feet on a level. It Jos are @ kindly, ff heterogenous crlt.cd much and was very destruc- group. He will not have the least tive to fruit trees. The weather was! eo uiie with them so long as he {nvensely hot. Both in 1831 and avolds running counter to the pe- 1832 the early frosts so injured the cullar prejudices and superstitions of corn as to entirely render it worth- ve commades less for almost any purpose. r ‘i During the years between and in- CASTORIA. cluding 1824-32, 0 nearly corres- Beare i, The Kind You Have Always Bought ignat ponding to the years of famine in a f tA Quantrell’s Servent Dies. Kansas City, Mo., June.—Jobn No- ern part of the State for so much|jand, the only negro member of xraln, particularly cora, that people | Qnantreil’s band of guerrillas, died {u remembrance of the Bible story ||asss week at she Jackson County began to call the part of the State} Poor Farm. He was taken there which had been so helpful in time of | two weeks ago. Noland was devoted to Quantrell, and followed the fortunes of the fa- he made Joseph to be, the people of Gardner Ball-Bearing Typebar Joint L.C Smith & Bros. Typewrite “ALL the writing ALWAYS ia sight” we said. Then we did it. Others TRIED TO, but we DID. “my Work? Dothey! Use- ful here as in any other machinery. Send for the Book. Also have one of our demonstrators SHOW you, No expense to eithes method. L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter Co. oF See 812 Delaware St., Kansas City, Mo. Ball Bearings —in bicycles, sew- ing machines, all sorts of run-easy mechanism—Why not in the mous guerrilla chlef as personal servans. Several years ago an organization of the survivors of Quantrell’s band was formed and an annual reunion is held each summer. John Noland was 3 unique and conspicuous figure in these gatherings. Wetmore Shows He Testified. Repablic. Colonel Moses C. Wetmore declared that he not only did not refuse to aseiss in the prosecution brought by former Attorney General Crow against the Continental Tobacco Company, in 1900, but he appeared as a witness and testified before Refree John P. Butler in the antl- hd trust inquiry. Attorney General Hadley, in his statement comparing his record with that of former Attorney General Crow, stated that Crow’s failure to convict the Tobacco Trust was not due to any fault of his, but to the failure of Senator Stone and Moses C. Wetmore to produce the evidence in the cases which were brought at their instigation. “That {s not true,” sald Colonel Wetmore at hie office in the Carleton building. “I appeared before the Referee and gave testimony. I still have the transcript of my testi- mony.” He shen produced the document. Will Go in Training. White Plains, N. Y., June.—It was’ learned Wednesduy thas Secretary of State Root will arrive at Mul- doon’s Sanitarium on the outskirts of White Plains on next Saturday afternoon to undergo a course of training for the benefit of his health. Is may algo be possible that Willlam H. Taft, the presidential nominee, will accompany him. Mr. Root would have arrived at Muldoon’s Tess cure establishment Wednesday Proof. E, A. BENNETT, Hower Dvvai., F, N. DRENNAN, . A, BENNETT, Pres. down conditions. Best too for chills | p ond malaria. Sold under guarantee | 9 ; : F, DUVALL, Cashter, iP ae CORLISS SAFE, guaranteed by the manufacturer to be Burglar DIRECTORS, Ciark WIx, Frank HOLLAND, O. A, HEINLEIN, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. J.J. MeKEE, Vice-Pres. HOMER DUVALL, Asst. Cashier. J.J, McKes, J. W. Cuoate, W. F. Deva, | | but for the fact that there will be an important meeting at President Roosevelt's house at Oyster Bay on Saturday which will be attended by Secretary Root and Tutt. After that meeting it is thought that Mr. Root will start in an automobile for White Plains. Mr. Muldoon said that he had no idea how long Mr. Root would remain at his sanitarium. Indian Maiden on Market. Fort Sill, Ok., June 29 —Another of the annual coming-out dances of young maiden, having reached that period of her lite when ahe fe to be . permitted to select a husband. | The Indians spent several days in, preparation, clearing away under. brush, cleaning off the dance grounds, | gathering dead timber for the hig, fireand moving thelr tents andcamp | equipage to the grove that encircles, the prairie uBon which the dance | takes place. : The dance lasts two or three, nights, und at the conclusion some! brave wi!l announce bis formal en. | gagement to Miss Lillian, The mar-| rlage may take place this summer or| be postponed until fall when another | dance will be held fo honor of the| wedding. Bondejand Stocks.............cececee Capital Surplus Fund and Profits.. Total Deposits... The Bank: money to loan. patron could offer. The Trust Co.: in Oklahoma, on lo: Gem City Business Frank Allen Dr TC Boulware C H Dutcher John Deerwester Dr J M Christy JB Walton © Wm E Walton, Pres , Dr T C Boulware, Vice-Pres., - 4+ B Walton, Cashier, ad a a a aaa a a ‘The Missouri State Bank The Walton Trust Co. OF BUTLER, MISSOURL. Furniture, Fixsures and Title ‘Abstract Books Cash on Hand and in other Banks.. BOM ievssscvenrnian oooscocceceos é 4 Consolidated § Statement Made June 11th, 1908. ASSETS § the Apaches is in progress on the Money loaned on farm mortgages and personal . ; security Fort Sill Reservation, Lillian, o fair = Real Estate, including bauk building. $536 461.43 23,876 25 1,000.00 11,395 10 170,899 83 Nesinebivisigieseeniseneeee essed $743,632.61 ..$110,000.00 81,038 46 552,593 16 adsdedbssbeessssssenseseriesseeet $743,632.61 Receives deposits, buyes notes and always has Does a general banking business. Deposttory for the public funds of Bates county. We want your and will grant every accommodation that any good bank Under State Supervision and often examined by bank examiners. We offer falthtul service and absolute safety for deposi. Loans on farme in Bates, Vernon, Barton, Cedar, Dade and Polk counties, Missouri, also time andatlow interest rates. Have complete Title Abstracts to all lands in Bates —— Iseues time certificates of deposits bearing interest and payab! tranefer you a farm mortgage for any idle money you may have 38 years continuous experience in lending money on farms and after selling the mortgages to 300 and over investors without any ot them losing one dollar of principal or interest. DIRECTORS CA Allen JR Jenkins CR Radford le in 6 or 12 months, or Freak ‘ Vovis m Max Watnee Shuts Wm & Walton Tyler AB Owen B P Powell Frank M Voris, Vice-President, F Allen, Sec., C A Allen, Asst. Sec., Jesse ESmith, Aset. Cashier. gadsctzZ .a-4-4

Other pages from this issue: