The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 23, 1911, Page 3

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Is the Heart of the Home Equipment the modern, kind. out to buy—a perfect furnace plant. nace we know of. time. request. ; DR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side 49-tf over Star Bakery. DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. BUTLER MISSOURI Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 DR. J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same that leads to Stew- ard’s Studio. North side square Butler, Missouri OR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. G. BQULWARE Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. ——_ = Th Now is the time. time is the time to install a furnace. Then the furnace—that must be good, too; costs you a trifle more—costs us more, too—but it is by far the cheapest, which would be proved very shortly, too. We believe the good ROUND OAK furnace has more and greater points of merit than any fur- We think it is absolutely the best of them all. When correctly installed it will do more heat-making with the same fuel than any construction in the business, and wear a life- Anybody Can Lose Money You can make more money on your hogs if you feed them our Hog Regulator It will pay you to’get a pack- age at once. e guar- antee it to please you. CLAY’S Prescription Drug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. ‘‘The right place.’’ E =——_ HAT is a Guarantee good for if your furnace doesn’t work? If you were going to buy a furnace would you not rather en- trust the business to someone who knew right at the start what could be done—nothing problematical about it? That kind of furnace work is being done—WE doit. It’s the new, Nothing left to chance or guesswork—every- thing figured out in a PLAN right in the beginning—the location of furnace, warm air, cold air, size of smoke flue, depth of base- ment —all harmonized, so to speak, to produce what you started Summer Good furnaces and good furnace work interest us, and should interest you. Furnace book, ‘‘Warmth and Comfort,"’ on N. Main John Ray *™ Butler, Real Estate Transfers. D J White to B F Wooderson lots 9 and 10; part lot 8 block 111 1st addi- tionsRich Hill $500: J L Snodgrass to JESnodgrass 1- il int 60 acres section 9 and 16 Deep- water $300. J E Snodgrass to J L Snodgrass 6 acres section 16 Deepwater $300. 5 F Snodgrass to J E Snodgrass 60 acres section 16 Deepwater. $300. Homer Duvall to J E Smith part lot 1 block 42 Butler; part lot 1 block 6 Montgomerys addition Butler $4000. B H Hinderliter to E F Kincaid 265 acres section 6 Howard $17225. Harvey Beshore to A W Padley 23 acres section 7 Pleasant Gap $950. Geo W Weineinger to T W Robert- son 145 acres section 1 Osage $5800. Phillip A Karr to S F Clark 1-3 int 293 acres section 14 and 11 Osage $5000. JK Norfleet to E C Webster 20 acres section 8 Lone Oak $715. G T Williams to H G Requa 40 acres section 17 Pleasant Gap $2040. C MCruse to T B Tedd lot 203; part lots 202 and 204 Adrian $1237. Myrtle Bobo to to W B Gamble 100 acres section 27 Walnut $5000. John Damm to Wm Dunmire lots 4 and 5 block 170 2nd addition Rich Hill $260. . Wm Dunmire to Ellis Shipman lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 15, 16, 17, 18, block 170 2nd addition Rich Hill $450. M H Fouts to FG Snuffer 5 acres section 29 New Home $375. : Nancy Dunham to J E Smith 160 acres section 23 West Point $7000. Anna Mace to Eloona Carter 20 acres section 8 Elkhart $1600. John W Rexroad to R D’ Rexroad lots 13 and 14 Hustons 1st addition Adrian $1000. J E Smith to Nancy Dunham part lot 1 block 42; part lot 1 block 6 Mont- gomerys addition Butler $2500. G F Raps to A H Gallup lots 53 and 54 block 21 Papinville $650. Nora Logue to J M Morris 80 acres section 14 Grand River $4250. A P McKinley to Sarah M Marshall lots 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, block 17 Amster- dam $600. Geo W Burton to L O Troxell 70 acres section 19 Deepwater $4200. JW Archer to Harry French 80 acres section 16 Charlotte $4800. $ S Trice to G’W Burton 80 acres section 17 Charlotte $7200. Millie M Field to Mary L Powell lot 5 part lot 6 block 36 Rockville $100. S S Summers to Joe Lasure 10 acres section 5 Walnut $150. S B Beckett to Marion V Harper 80; acres section 10 and 11 Charlotte $2400. LE Webb to J O McMullin part block 2 Cogswells addition Butler $850: Mares ‘and Mules For Sale. Kern and Beatly have on the ranch at old wire bridge on the river, 12) head of young draft mares, all in foal and are the right kind. Also 4 span of 4 year old mules, some good young | draft geldings, several span of coming | two year old mules. These young! for good Public Sale. Having sold my lease I will sell at public auction at my residence 6 miles southeast of Butler or 2 miles south of Summit Center school house SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1911 the following described property: 4 head of horses—Consisting of bay mare 8 yrs. old in foal to jack; black mare 5 yrs. old bred to draft horse; gray mare 6 years old bred to draft horse; brown horse 8 years old, a good driver. These are all good-work horses and the mares are good breeders. 1 good milch cow 5 years old giving a good flow of milk. : 7 head. of hegs—Consisting of 5 extra good O. I. C. brood sows all bred to registered boar; young O. I. C. boar; some shoats. Farming Implements—John Deere edge drop No. 9 corn planter with 80 rods of wire just used one season; Busy Bee cultivator; J. I. C. cultivator; 12-foot harrow; 16-inch sulky plow; 14-inch walking plow; double shovel, new; 12-foot hay rake; Peter Schuttler wagon, a good one; wagon box; scoop board; Sayers & Scoville buggy, near- new; old buggy; set of work harness; half set of work harness; set of single buggy harness; carriage pole; extra heavy pair of lines;. water trough; some barrels. Feed and Grain—About 150 bushels of corn, some seed corn. About 6 tons of clover and timothy hay, baled. Some loose hay in barn. Some household furnitureand other articles too numerous to mention. About 5 dozen hens and some roosters and chicken coops. About 300 or 400 hedge posts. TERMS:—All sums of $10 cash in hand, over $10 a credit of nine months time will be given on bankable note to bear 6 per cent from date. 2 per lcent discount for cash. Terms of sale to be complied with before prop- erty is removed. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock. JOHN F. CLARK. Clyde Robbins, Auctioneer. Manning Wilcox, Clerk. On a Journey With Her Doll. It’s a lot of trouble, traveling with a family of small childrenanda aquan- tity of cumbersome baggage. Miss Alva King, 5 vearsold, was convinced thoroughly of that by the time she reached Kansas City Union Depot this morning. Little Miss King was on the way, unattended, from San Francisco to the home of hergrandmother, Mrs. J. C. Bracken, in Butler, Mo., and she had in her care twolarge, fuzzy-head- ed blonde dolls, a Theodore bear (brunette), a bulky, adult suitcase and la handbag. It certainly seemed to |Miss King that her cares were too much, and she was inclined strongly to discard the suit case. | “I haven’t had achance to comb |those dolls’ hair since last night,” she told Mrs. Ollie Everingham, the depot matron, with whom a railroad attendant had left her. | It was veryannoying. Andtomake matters worse, Miss Kinghad laid her ichewing gum on the window sill of ithe Santa Fe carin which she had ‘been riding, and then rabbed her el- bow init. It was not until she had County Court. Road case of Asa S. Rosier, W. C. Berry et al, vs. G. F. Gentry, E. W. Cutting, et al, decided in favor of petitioners. Engineer ordered to locate and construct said road. Annual report of County Highway Engineer E. B. Borron approved. J. Harland Porter appointed Jus- tice of the Peace of Homer township. Bond of Henry Christman to keep dramshop approved. On the Wing. Too late for last week. E. Fink’s new barn is going to be afine one, itis progressing slowly, it is going to outlook the house. Wm. Witt about a year ago built a fine large barn, big enough to shel- ter all his stock and this winter he has built a two and a half story square house with about twelve rooms. Now it is ready for the paint. Willey says he built to stay not to sell. Charley Williams has built a hen- nery 14x50 big enough for 500 hens. Elmer Robbins has 25 head of goats for sale, Butler route 8. Miller Robbins & Bentley have bought them a new horse power wood saw with which they are doing some rushing work. Cyrus Nestlerode was up_ near Lone Tree Saturday and Sunday to Dramshop license granted E. C. Teft. Dramshop license granted J. L. Garrison. County clerk ordered to collect costs in case of A. Ramey vs. Mab- bott & Richardson from A. Ramey, see Geo. Metcalf. MS Clifton has rented the Ed Ward tt and is there fixing it up. remonstrator. Appointment of Fred Crabb, dep- uty constable of Osage township ap- proved. W.R. Bell, Wm. Nix and F..C. Smith appointed commissioners to procure deed from Bates county to lot 3 in section 1, township 38, range 31, for George Wineinger, assignee of George Weddle. Petition of C. V. Evans, N.. J. Adams et al, for road in Deer Creek township, continued. H. O. Maxey, circuit clerk presents cost bills in the amount of $176.40. Wire bridge across Mound Branch condemned. D. A. Bean appointed Superintend- ent County Farm for term of 1 year at a salary of $50.00 per month. Semi-annual settlement with treas- urer approved. Ordered that unless Vincennes Bridge Co. of Vincennes, Indiana, completes work under contract dated Sept. 7, 1909, on or before March 15, 1911, prosecuting attorney is direct- to bring suit on bond of said com- pany. Petition of C. Crusa, A. Traxler, et al, continued until March term. Dr. T. C. Boulware appointed sec- retary Bates County Board of Health for a term of 2 years from January 1 1911. Motion to maintain Ladies Rest Room in County Court House car- ried by the following vote: R. B. —s Campbell, Yes; Wm. F. Wolfe, Yes; Frank Fix, No. James A. Flemming appointed County Highway Engineer of Bates county for the term of 1 year ata salary of $900.00 and expenses. Said expenses not to exceed the sum of $300. Petition of J. F. Kern etal for ad- ditional work on drainage ditch, and remonstrance against by R. N. Mont- gomery et al; continued to March term. Court adjourned February 17, 1911, to meet first Monday in March. He is pitting a new roof on the smoke’house. Crit Erwin went to California a few days ago to make his home. About two weeks later tis wife and two children followed. Win. Baker of R. F. D. 7 went to Sedalia to attend the hog sale and ex- pects to buy if it will raise the class of his herd. He already has some fine ones. About two weeks ago one of John Halfert’s little girls sucked a blue calico strip one half inch wide and three inches long up her nose, in five days she almost went wild. The doc- tor was called and took it out. She is all right now. Guy Metcalf out-minded the mumps. Today was his first day out and he has’ gone to work. Lewis Porter’s saw mill on Root Branch is at a standstill for repairs. Ira Wiser is concreting a cellar for Frank Holland. C. S. Nestlerode has a good span of brood mares for sale, cheap. We had a good rain Monday eveand night and an awful high wind, No damage that we have heard from yet. Bud Grider bought 80 acres of J. S. Pierce unimproved. $37 1-2 peracre. Albert Zinn who has just arrived from Oklahoma and says there are three trains on the road all the time hauling water for family and stock use. J. B. Thomas will move on the ridge east of the Dixie school house. Nat Barnet will take his place this year. M. N. Public Sale. I will sell at public auction at my place, 1-2 mile north and 5 3-4 miles east of Amsterdam and 1 mile west of Elkhart Store, on MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1911, the following property: 22 head of livestock 7 head horses and mules—1 span mare mules coming three years old, 16 hands high, broke to work; 1 horse mule and 1 mare mule, well matched, coming three years old, 15 hands high; 1 span mare mules, com-! ing two years old; 1 coming three- year-old saddle-bred horse. Cattle—1 milk cow, fresh in spring; 1 two-year-old, fresh in summer. Hogs—5 thoroughbred big boned Poland-China gilts, eligible for regis- tration, two bred to farrow April 1, others not bred; 2 Duroc-Jersey gilts, bred to farrow during February. Sheep—5 ewes, bred to lamb_in Tribune Poeinncariiy Sinaponded About the time Judge Huckeby, owner of the Rich Hill Tribune, was appointed postmaster, he leased his paper to Bert Mattison and Luther Fry, young men of this city. Some time after this Mr, Fry transferred his interest in the lease to Mr. Mat- GOES Iron Beds, Mattresses, and many o ON We have.sold lots of stuff —have a big lot of............ . Springs, Dressers, and Chairs TO SELL YET - AND Kitchen Cabinets, ‘Side Boards, ‘Extension Tables, Childs Beds, Steel Couches , xr things that you. will need/and this _is the one opportunity to buy them - thejowest; Closing out Sale Sond geldings of marketable age. Can make easy terms. Call Kern at, Butler or Beatly at 19 on line 10 out of Butler before you go over. 17-2t Kern & Beatly. Marriage Licenses. Victor Randall. ..,........... Butler, Lizzie Stuffing............... Butler. R. EaSpears... . Johnstown, Lena Ulmstadt. . Johnstown. A. Heyen... . Amoret, Mary Kelley... . Amoret. A. A. Ferguson -Amsterdam, Gertie M Cox...........Amsterdam. Clifton Ferguson............ Adrian, Nealie Clemets........... ... Adrian. H. E. Brannock............ -Butler, Sylvia Plunkett... C..A. Stallcup.... -Rich Hill, Jennie Loving..... +e... eRich Hill. Wife Got Tip Top Advice. “My wife wanted me to take our wrtes D Frankel, of Stout Oki, jed attention. had the chewing gum removed, her face washed, and had eaten a bow! of |crackers and milk that she was in any humor to give her family much need- She will leave for But- ler at 7 o’clock to-night. Falls Victim to Thieves. S. W. Bends, of Coal City, Ala., has OtT, 11a Wi apparent success iti. the past few months, when it had become rather indifferent. Mr. Mattison announced that he had thrown up his lease, and Judge Huckeby, in consequence of the government post he holds, not being in a position to continue the paper, has concluded to permit a temporary suspension. March. 1 buck. Grain and Hay—600 bushels corn in crib. About 8 tons timothy in rick in field. Farm implements—1 wagon; 1 hay frame; 1 buggy; 1 McCormack 6-ft. mower; 10-ft. dump rake; 1 sweep rake; 12-ft. harrow; one corn planter with furrow openers; 1 riding lister; a justifiable grievance. Two thieves stole his health for twelve years. They were a liver and kidney trouble. Then Dr. King’s New Life Pills throttled them. He’s well now. Un- rivaled for Constipation, Malaria, ow” Dyspepsia. 25c at F. T. Commercial Club Meeting. Ata meeting of the Butler Com- . | mercial Clubheld in the county clerk’s office Friday evening, February 17, Col. S. W. Dooley was appointed Secretary to succeed W. B. Weeks, who a short time ago tendered his * | resignation because of an excess of duties in other lines. J. M. Brent, of Chicago, conferred with the club on the proposition to establish a canning factory here, cap- italized at between twelve and fifteen thousand dollars, business men and Okla. iveon cured the boil Quickest ine of time. Tritt’ oy mea. T. returned to bis » after a visit | Nyhart. farmers of the vicinity to take the stock. Mr. Brant’s plan received favorable consideration. For Sale. +800 good hedge posts, ten cents é@ach.. Seven miles southwest of But- ler, ‘one and. one-half miles east of ’ 18 It -:- 14-in. gang plow; 16-in. sulky plow; 1 disc cultivator; two-row New De- parture cultivator; 16-in. walking plow; 1 set work harness; 1 grind stone; chicken coops and feeders; some household goods, including 1 range cook stove and many other things too numerous to mention. TERMS:—On all sums of $10 and under, cash. On.sums over $10-a credit of 9 months time will be given on bankable note, to bear 6 per cent interest from date, if paid when due; if not paid when due, note to draw 8 per cent interest from date. 2 per cent discount for cash. No property to be removed until terms are com- plied with. Sale to commence at 10 o’clock a. m. 18 2t-:- G.W. ARMENTROUT. C. E. Robbins, Auctioneer. R. L. Scott and W. W. Rubel, Clerks. Mr. Mattison made a good paper of the Tribune for some time, but was lacking in both working capacity and experience in business management, and it takes both of these to hold up acountry newspaper. Besides this, Bert has been in indifferent health and failed to devote the necessary time to his work required to score success.—Review. Arizona Statehood Delayed. Washington, D. C., Feb. 20.—State- hood for Arizona is impossible at this session of Congress for two reasons; first, because the returns of the elec- tion held on February 9, cannot be canvassed and certified under the law in time to reach Washington for action by Congress; and, second be- cause Congress is opposed to the Constitution as drawn. Fresh Batteries. Such is the view hitherto expressed Just received a fresh barrel of| by Delegate Ralph Cameron from that “Rock Island” dry cell batteries. Aj Territory, and to-day reiterated. guarantee to be the best battery ever} -He quoted the act enabling the produced is on each cell. Especially | people of Arizona to form a Constitu- constructed for Telephones, Automo- | tion and State government to support biles and Gasoline Engines. For sale | his statement of the impossibility of only by Ray: Tyler, the Tinner, Phone | obtaining any actiongupon the instru- a Main St. 15-tf | ment at this session.

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