The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 30, 1909, Page 11

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C. E. ROBBINS AUCTIONEER Will cry sales any where, Live Stock and Farm Sales a Specialty. Graduate of the two best auction schools in the world. President of the Missouri State and Vice-President of the International auctioneers associations. Made 143 sales the Past season, in 8 | — ~atemm""north of Peoples Feed ‘a } \ | \ | aa \ we \° Our stock of is ~ quality, consisting of Smoke different counties. in Bates county combined, and circulation. fogging lawyer to look after you My terms are reasonable, Send range fora sale. -quaintance with the farmers and or ask for free booklet of complet advertising for a public sale. Te: me early for choice dates. I cover more territory than all the auctioneers If you had a member of your family very sick, or if you had a case in court where all your savin hire an old quack doctor to attend their w tainly employ the best physician or the best attorney available. The same rule should hold good in the hiring of an auctioneer, as he is your agent on sale day and you have little to say asto how your earnings shall be disposed of, Italways pays to hire the best. Call on or address me at Amoret, Mo. Dates made at this office, Phone 36," Wire at my expense. C. F. BEARD, Auctioneer. Butler, Missouri. Have thirteen years of successful selliog. Have wide ac- thi on the value of your property and will get for you the best possible = The high dollar and a square deal for both seller and the yer is my record. Having made a majority of the largest and best sales gives me a thorough knowledge of conducting large sales. It pays to employ the best—one who has more than a dozen years of solid experience, which is certainly the best schooling. Send Address, Butler, Mo, Phone 5s. can give your sale bills a wider gs were at stake, would you ants? or an old petty- r interests? No, you would cer- for free circular on how to ar- C. E. ROBBINS. stockmen and thoroughly posted e instructions on arranging and rms reasonable, See or write Horsehoeing and | General Blacksmith Done Quickly Work At our New Shop on Havana street, just Yard. I solicit your business. A. T. Maupin, 47-4t Proprietor | | AN YOU Sab as clearly as you ever did? If you cannot it is your own fault, for we have eye-| glasses and spectacles to fit all eyes and all noses. We are prepared to test eyes free of charge and fit proper glass- es at reasonable prices. OPTICAL. - GOODS Hello, Central! GIVE ME 165 Who is 165?—Why BULLOCK & KEYS’ MEAT MARKET The one that is sanitary and up-to-date. They runa “Square Deal” market and will apprecite a trial. Their aim is to please. LET’S TRY THEM. KILLED HIS PARTNER. Eugene Hays, a Cattleman, Shot His Partner, Edward Hayes, in Kansas City. K. C. Times, Following an all-day wrangle over a dissolution of partnership, Eugene Hays, a wealthy cattleman of the Osage Reservation in Oklahoma, shot and killed his former business asso- ciate and life long friend Edward Hayes in the barroom of the Sexton Hotel. Four bullets were fired by Eugene Hays and three entered Edward Hayes’ forehead. He died instantly. He was about 45 years old and lived in Pawhuska, Ok. The men were not relatives. Edward Hayes was sitting at a|hos been rambling’ about, all the way | table in the barroom waiting for his dinner to be served. Edward Lewis, bartender at the Sexton, says that Edward Hayes arose as Eugene Hays approached him and seemed to put his hand to his hip pocket. In a sec- ond Eugene Hays had covered his man with a revolver and began fir- ing. “He tried to get me, but I got him first,’ said Eugene Hays directly af- ter shooting. Once Killed a Man in El Reno. large and of the very best | 4 Glasses, Field, Opera, Read- “ing and Eyeglasses, etc. Oklahoma City, Sept.-Edward'Hays, who was killed in Kansas City, was “WHO STRUCK BILL PATTERSON?” |Business Man of Higginsville Tells of a Famous Incident. “Who struck Billy Patterson?’’ You are quite familiar with this question. You have heard it hun- dreds of times before and you proba- bly have never heard it answered. You have heard it asked by persons who had no idea who Billy Patterson was or whether or not such a person ever really existed, for it has become a stock expression signifying an un- answerable question. But now comes T. M. Lake, for- merly of Fauquier county, Virginia, and now a business man in this city who says he knows al labout the strik- ing of Billy Patterson. Mr. Lake was a younger friend of the man who struck Billy. Billy Patterson, according to Mr. Lake, was the Bill Adler, of Rich- mond, almost 75 years ago. He was a big beefy man who loved fighting almost as much as he loved whisky, and preferred the two together. On the day which made Billy's name immortal he had secured the whisky, but was finding it difficult to find trouble, in such respect were his powers held, although he had taken up his position in the middle of a much traveled sidewalks and was making all passers take to the street. He was particularly insulting to a crowd of medical students who had just been dismissed and were on their way to a student's hotel nearby. Among the students was Albin Payne, a young man from Fauquier county, a relative of Admiral Raphael Semmes and a man of fighting blood, and when the group of students he was in met and submitted to the in- dignities offered them by Billy Pat- terson his fighting blood was roused. “Let me at the bovine he said.’’ He walked straight up to the bully. Perhaps Billy was too surprised to defend himself for only one blow was struck and Billy went down witha dull thud. It was believed at first that Patter- son was killed and the students fled to the hotel where they held a hasty meeting and vowed never to tell who struck Billy Patterson. Young Payne was spirited away to another students’ hotel nearby. Hardley had he gone before the police were at the first hotel, demanding the man who struck Billy Patterson. They had followed almost on the heels of the fleeing students and had no in- formation except the man who struck the blow was one of them. Every student in the hotel was questioned but each denied that he had struck Patterson. Although it soon became known that Patterson was not seri- ously injured the students kept their secret, though the whole town was asking who struck Patterson. Dr. Albin Payne was afterward one of the most noted physicians in Virginia. He was also known as a writer of magazine articles, under the nomdeplume of Nicholas Spicer.—Jef- fersonian. $375 Mothers Oats Fireless Cooker | The Mother's Oats Firele cooks without fuel. It se the fuel problem and the de Tt saves 80% of your pies: 90° of your present k you own a Mother | simply place you want to prer boiling point, put the pad in gotobed. Vi keep cookin: burn or spoil. or joints or ve visit yo without any bo shbor, go to the m Now, there is only one way that you Mother's Oats Fireless Cooker, unless by being a user of Mother's Cereals cereals, prepared in the largest mil! everywhere by the best dealers in eve town, In every package we pl. coupon, and when you have 125 cou we'll send you the $3.75 Fireless C. for nothing. If you want a Fire's Cooker in a hurry, you can either buy ten p res. of MOTHER'S OATS or av; other Mother's Cere F get the Cooker imme by paying SLUS in ess upon the following bas’s: 50 coupons and$ .75 cash 35 coupons and .£0 eas'y 25 covpous and 1.00 casi THE NEW HAVEN ng, the food w:. em in the Coc! ught of a hoi, stuffy kiche to go to a store and pay $3.75 for it, and ¢: . wae WES. GREAT WES. Operating more Uatmeal Mills than any other one concern NEW YORK ask him to delicious every mea buy your il over « quite ac Fireless C coupons, W sl : by wisf “RN CERE PHILADELPUIA CHICAGO all for the packages Mothers Cc ages, in w! But the best way of all is to go to your grocer and supply you with A Mother’s Kit which contains a complete assortment of different cereals for every palate and for Not only is it an advantage to staple cereals in sufficient quantity at attractive prices (just as it's cheaper to buy four by the barrel or butter by the crock) but in every Mother's Kit there is in addition to the saving of siderable sum of money, a special voker Certificate, equal to eighteen hich, when added to the coupons from in the kit, enables you to secure.a mere g 89 cents. A Mother's sts of eighteen assorted packages of ls, packed in sanitary sealed pack- h they are guaranteed to keep in ! mn indefinitely, {Mother's Ovts, standard size Mi Yvilow Corn Meal White Corn Meal \ : Hearts Toasted) oned Steel Mother's C of Mother’ neal ses cf Mother's Gronulated Hominy 2 gackages of Mother's Coarse Pearl Hominy + Kit ean be purchased at your ters oy simply paying $1.95 (a lule more at distant points). yn The grocer himself will either \ redeem your coupons and tj} ‘deliver the $3.75 Fireless 1X Cooker, or, if you so de- sire, send the coupons and 89c directly to us and ‘we will ship the cooker toyou, express collect. AL COMPANY PITTSBUROB ALBANY ST. Lous ‘\Gleanings From THE TIMES Columns a Quarter of a Cen- tury Ago-Oct. Ist, 1884. Senator George G. Vest spoke at the Walton Opera House to a large crowd on Monday. He was introduc- ed by Judge S. F. Hawkins, chair- man of the meeting. | Major Dick Allen, of New Home | township, while in the city attendiug \the George Vest rally, informed us |that he had taken 180 pounds of | honey from five hives, which netted him 20 cents per pound. From 12 gums his neighbor, Joe Vaughn, sold 300 pounds. The amount of monies received in the county treasury last year for the schools, as shown by the county clerk’s report to the state superin- tendent, was $79,464.81. Theamount of principal belonging to township and public school funds is $102,917.83. MO. SHEEP BREEDERS’ ASSN. Annual Meeting at Sedalia on Night of October 6th. The third anaual meeting of the Missouri Sheep Breeders’ Associa- tion is hereby called to be held in the *. ’ | court house, Sedalia, at 8 o'clock on the night of Wednesday, Oct. 6 (dur- ing Missouri State Fair week), to re- ceive the reports of officers and com- mittees, and for the election of offi- cers and two members of the board of directors for the ensuing year. A program that will interest all sheepmen, on which prominent flock- masters from other States have as- signments, will be rendered. * All members are urged to be present, and all sheepmen and farmers inter- ested in sheep husbandry, and the public generally, are cordially invited to attend this meeting. | Whisky Made Him an Incendiary Coffeyville, Kas, Sept. 26.— {When I have a drink in me I have {no other desire than to see a fire,” | was a part of a confession that Roy Kennedy, laborer, made to the |authorities of Nowata county, Okla- |homa this morning when charged | with incendiarism. | Kennedy was arrested Saturday night by a group of residents follow- jing the breaking out of two fires. | Thirteen fires in the last six weeks, ‘entailing a loss of $200,000 in build- ‘ings, is included in Kennedy’s confes- ' sion. Every Saturday night there has been from one to three fires. The residents were badly worked up and guards were kept on the street every night. At 10 o'clock last Saturday night, fire broke out in the business section. Guards at Strother’s lumber yard saw a form come from a clump of weeds near the Missouri Pacific tracks. They intercepted the man _ Death of Extreme Fashions. Chicago, Sept.—Goodby to the girl who resembles a human slat or bean pole; also that will be about all for the feminine person who loads on top pounds of excelsior and other hair; likewise “the hook’’ for the woman who wears such a long and tight cor- set that she can not walk or bend over. The national dressmakers who are flocking in from every direction for their convention, sound the death knell of these extreme fads. They also vouchfare that the new styles will locate a woman’s waist about where nature intended it. For two seasons woman’s waist from her shoulder blades to her knees but the new styles will get it back in- to the proper longitude. Hereafter, the dressmakers hasten to assure the public, it will be possi- ble to know whether a woman is coming or going also to guess, with some degree of certainty, whether or not she has her dress on upside down. i|John A. Johnson Left $18,000. G. B. Hickman returned from Southern Mo. last week, where he owns a sheep ranch. Ex-Sheriff Meek, who had been on of her head from two to seven a business and health trip in Illinois, §. H. GROVES, Pres., {returned home last week. Dr. Renick is the most disconsolate man in town. His wife is ona visit to Odessa. | The heavy iron bridge east of town, over Mound branch, on the Johns- | town road, was washed out Saturday ; ‘night and carried a-<considerable dis- | tance down stream. | Night on Bald Mountain. | On a lonely x. Alex. Benton of Fort Edward, N. Y., climbed Bald} Mountain to.the home of a neighbor, | | tortured by Asthma, bent on curing) | him with Dr. King’s New Discovery, that had cured himself of asthma. | This wonderful medicine soon reliev-' ed and quickly cured his neighbor. | Later it cares his son’s wife of a} severe lung trouble. Millions believe | its the greatest Throat and Lu on Earth, Coughs, Colds, | ately cu A Fever, Grij Wh 50c and $1.00. Trial Guaranteed by F. T. Clay. St. Paul, Sopt.—Frederick W. sheep industry is eligible to member- ship in this association, the member- ship fee and dues being $1 a year. M. V. CARROLL, Sec., Sedalia, Mo. Tipton, Mo. and while they were questicning him as to what he was doing, fire broke out in a box car. Kennedy was plac- ed in jail, and, following a severe “sweating’’ lasting a yy confes- sed, assigning whisky as the cause | for his misdeeds. He was later re- moved to Vinita for safe keeping. i amen, —Style isnogood if the garment ‘> won't hold Why pay your good mon whether they will look stylish after you have worn them a month? stylish clothes without snowing I ES Pe » > You can know if you wear Clothcraft J Clothes. «Xt Wr ’ it. ey for >\ Clothcraft All-Wool Clothes They are the only clothes of all wool at $10 to $25 in America that have a Signed Guarantee protecting you against disappointment. They give you Style Insurance at no added cost. MERICAN CLOTHING HOUSE. HUGS HSL Ae nee 4 oe

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