The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 16, 1911, Page 3

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{ { ee Pon 4 OO OO 0 ee ee ee te ee ee ee ee Hudson R Ra Newcastle, Westchester County; the or CHURCH ‘County of Westchester, the New York Telephone Company, and Wil- and stick of furniture if we can help it. in this sale. written the following was in wretes 30 full size iron beds 6 &% size iron beds 20 full size mattresses 6 % size mattresses 6 cot mattresses 1 sideboard 3 combination book cases 7 chiffoniers 6 extension tables 20 rocking chairs PEE ES SESS \ ‘ t t a r t t t ‘ 0 New York, March 9.—Mrs. Nixola pie ; i »»{trustee, and on Sept. 8, 1893, the Greeley Smith Ford, site fel ‘Andy aronerty was sold to Mrs. Glendenin Ford, a former St. Louis newspaper for $10,000 man, and her sister, Ida Greeley E. Cc. (Growley) attomey. for’ Mra Smith, granddaughters of the late) rod and Miss Smith, said that the Clerk of Westchester County papers in two suits they have instituted in connection with the Chappaqua estate of their grandfather. The defendants named in the suits are Mrst Gabrielle Greeley Glendenin, adaughter of Horace Greeley, and her husband, Rev. Frank Montrose Glendenin; James C. Farrel and Kathryn Farrell, his wife;. Mary E. Smith, Anna W. Tompkins, Mary L. Beecher, the New age Central & ne own 0 Room Heater le bur Hyatt. The first action is to have canceled and set aside a decision, judgment and final order of the Supreme Court, confirming a sale by a trustee of the Horace Greely property to Mrs. Glen- denin. Israel G. Haight is the trustee, who in 1883 sold the 80 acres included in the estate to Mrs. Glendenin. The other defendants are persons to whom Mrs. Glendenin subsequently sold or leased portions of the estate. The second action is one of waste, and in it Mrs. Ford and Miss Smith ask $20,000.damages from all the de- fendants for the destruction of certain buildings that were on the property, COUNTRY SCHOOL HOUSES The Round Oak Room Heater is ie penvsest the best made and fitted stove of its k It will last for a great many wre a perfect condition. It will burn any kind of fuel successfully, hard or soft coal, coke and wood. It makes no clinkers with soft or hard coal. makes the smoke clear. . It holds the fire all night—sure. It warms the floor. It heats the room equally in all parts. and most swiltly wo and it supplies an adundance of fresh, pure warm air for the teachers and: scholars to breathe. It is simply constructed and easy to manage —a child can operate it. It obviates window ventilation, preventing colds. The smoke pipe can be removed for cleaning Bala sere disturbi rine ie the ventilating s: alae It adds to the ing capacity Itis ehteniy placed in one corner 9 of the room. Together, the Stove and the Round Oak Ven- tilating System do ly the work rey, were to do—the room warmed equally in all friar ‘and the foul ait is is hustled our speedily and the results re- : ees, para arent nn Heater can be used wet an aby aymem of venation. : naace of a railway station and a tele- phone, for the building of certain streets, avenues and highways, and for permitting of other persons to enter upon and take possession of cer- tain portions of the estate. In the action to have the judgment The hot blast burns the gas and soot and © The ventilating system is the most powerful ; rking method yet devised, ‘wear a life-time, ““Warmth and April 1st into the building next to A. L. Fox meat market on North Main street and do not want to move a single We Will Not Consider Cost The stuff is yours at a lower price than you ever had high grade furniture offered—now is your golden opportunity. On Monday, March 13th, when this ad was 100 a aang chairs from $4.80 to $12 set 10 childs high chairs 12 childs rocking chairs 8 library tables 20 go-carts and baby buggies 4 steel couches 6 kitchen cabinets 3 pads for same 3 kitchen sofas 7 dressers 1 childs bed 1 commode 1 buffet 3 office desks 1 office chair 1 lawn swing 14 pieces lawn furniture 5 porch swings 12 couch covers A lot of Rug Fringe and several other things—None of Which we Want to Move— TKey are yours at a’big bargain if you want them. 5 A. H. Culver Furniture Co SLMMD ALA LAD A Ga Granddaughters of Greely Sue.|late Mrs. Horace Greeley. Subse-| time has been estimated anywhere at quently Mr. Haight was appointed | from $100,000 to $160,000. _ Cruisers Arrive at San Diego. San Diego, Cal., armored cruisers Maryland and West Virginia have anchored here, com- McChesney-Mitchell March 13.—The| united in marriage at the parsonage} 19 4t of the Ohio street M. E. church, Mon- gi ; ; pleting the naval forces under Rear| day, March 13th, Rev. J. M. Carter Horace Greely, have filed with the| | aine of the property at the present Tamiral Those. A GOOD ROUND OAK JOHN RAY SELLS THEM officiating. FURNACE Amsterdam Items. From the Enterprise. C. W. Travis and Ben Canterburry, real estate and insurance men, of But- ler, were in this section Friday look- ing after business matters. Ed Baily drove two cars of finished cattle to Paccaic Saturday and shipped them to the St. Louis market. He has purchased the W. A. Gage cattle and will place them on full feed. Hon. J. W. Lewis, Bates county’s representative in the state legislature, spent Sunday with his family north- west of town. He returned to Jeffer- son City Monday by way of Butler. Prof. Charles, one of the promoters who are here trying to open a busi- ness college in Merwin was here the latter part of last week trying to in- terest some our citizens in taking scholarships. The jolly prune peddler, Frank Koontz, was around making his reg- lar calls on our merchants Tuesday. Frank, like the rest of the boys, is patronizing the trains during the mud- dy spell. The condition of T. I. ie who has been confined to his bed for sev- eral weeks from an attack of paralysis, is reported to be greatly improved. There is hope now of his recovery from this attack, which has been an unusually serious and obstinate one. Suggestions to Water Consumers If you have a meter all the water passing through it is yours, and you should pay for it. No meter regis- ters more than goesthroughit. Your service may leak or your meter may not be read correctly. To test the meter for a leak see that no water is being drawn, watch the dial marked “4.” If the pointer moves at all there isa leak. Ifyou doubt the correct- ness of the meter or the meter reader, take a vessel of known capacity and draw 7 1-2gallons of water. If the pointer on dial ‘‘1’”’ has made one revolution, then it agrees with your measure and is correct. Wé instruct our meter readers to always call for someone to see the meter read. If you have no meter put your ear to the service pipe occasionally when no water is being drawn. If there is a leak you can hear it. If the leak or waste isin your service your con- tract requires you to call a plumber at once. If the leak or waste is in the service of others or the company’s mains they will appreciate the favor if you will call the Superintendent. It is a misdemeanor to draw water from any service without a written permit from the Water Company or Jas. R. Mitchell and Miss Mary|t, allow others to use your hydrant McChesney, both of Amoret, were] without such permit. Butler Water Co. A Coon Hunt in the East. A delegation of Washington busi- ness men who left the city one night recently for a coon hunt along the shores of the Chesapeake Bay had something to show for their long vigil around a tall oak tree when they re- turned home. A 20-pound coon was brought to town by the sportsmen. The Allegany Hunt Club and Paul Y. Waters of the Chesapeake Beach Rail- way Company were the hosts. The huntsmen went to Chesapeake Junc- lee in ONDE ae Suite semen IS THE HEART OF THE HOME EQUIPMENT What is a guarantee good for if your furnace doesn’t work? If you were going to by a furnace would you not rather to entrust 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 do it. It’s the new, the modern, kind. Nothing left to chance or guesswork—everything figured out ina PLAN right in the beginning—the location of fur- nace, warm air, cold air, size of smoke flue, depth of basement—all harmonized, so to speak, to produce what you started out to buy—a perfect furnace plant. Now is the time. Summer 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 furnace we knowof. We think it is ab- solutely the best ofthem all, When correctly in- stalled it will do more heat-making withthe same fuel than any construction in the business, and Good furnaces and good furnace work inter- est us, and interest you. Furnace book, prt,” on request. Missouri. Mr. Waters. ‘an io iat hey. were in the midst of one of finest hunting areas in that part of Mary- land. John McWelch, with half a dozen trained coon dogs, led the way. By 8:30 o’clock a trail was struck, the dogs leading the party toa tall oak south of Chesapeake Beach proper. Then the long vigil began. The huntsmen built a fire near the foot of the tree, axes were uncovered and the sportsmen took turns in making chips fly. It was after midnight be- fore the tree fell and the coon was driven from its retreat. The animal scurried through the branches of the fallen tree and out among the dogs. It required several minutes for the dogs to subdue the game little animal. —Washington Post. - Bankers are Out $24,500. Banks of St. Louis will lose $9,000 unless the State Legislature sees fit to reimburse them. The amount of money was put up by the St. Louis Clearing House last year for local banks to help carry on the work of the State Board of Im- migration. The only assurance they that the money would be re was from Governor Hadley and Immigration Commissioner Tohn Ht lature to make this seo n the agile had a fused to appropriat amouni aah an - re pied oe TRY SWIFT’S ertilizer ~ ON CORN, OATS, FLAX, POTATOES, TOMATOES PEOPLES ELEVATOR CO. als BUTLER, MO. ‘He Helped Build Two States. Long Beach, Cal., March 12,— Judge Harper Samuel Cunningham, formerly of Kansas, la‘er of Oklahoma and New Mexico, died here. He was 70 years old. The body is to be sent to Gutherie, Ok., his old home. A widow add one son suryive. Judge Cunningham, or senator, as he was most frequently called in late years, helped build two states. He began his political career as receiver of the federal land office at Salina, Kas. years ago. He went to Okla- homa soon after the opening, where he became attorney general of the territory in the administration of Gov. Cassius M. Barnes. He was first president of the Oklahoma State Bar Association and organized the state library. He was several times mem- ber of the territorial and state legisla- tures, serving in both branches. The Scottish Rite Masonry of Oklahoma was organized by him and he was the first inspector general, being of the thirty-third degree, One year ago he resigned as state senator and inspector general and went to Santa Fe, where he became the Scottish Rite inspector general of New Mexico and Arizona. He at once became a state builder and was selected as one of the members of the New Mexico constitutional convention. Several weeks ago his health broke and he went to the coast, hoping for improvement. Old sofas, cloth-covered chairs and all cloth-covered furniture can be made to look like new by priasng the cloth with a hot solu- tion of NAM FADELESS Dysg. Better Use for Convict Labor. News dispatches tell usthat through the efforts of the labor unions the end has been brought in sight of the prac- tice in Missouri, of selling convict la- bor in competition with the labor which the “unions” are designed to protect. For the credit of all othe in- fluences in the state we hope the la- bor unions were not alone in their advocacy of the abolishment of con- tract convict labor. Certainly if any profit is to be made from the labor of the convict that profit belongs to the society he has wronged; to the people taxed to bring about his apprehension, conviction and detention, are not to sharp contractors who seek bargains in hnman brawn and who gather, vul- ture like, where states’ prisons rear their walls. And if the labor of con- victs is to be used in partial atone- ment to the people against whom of- fences have been committed, we do not know how better that end can be accomplished than by employing it i in he building of public road he-b abolishing the selling of convict labor gives the contractors a little time to bring their arrangements for prison labor to a close, and as fast as that is done we hope to see the the convicts working out of doors as far as practi- cal—and especially working on pub- lic roads.—Kuralist. For Sale or Trade Imported German Coach Stallion Epilog 3541 Black, eight years old, aid 16% hands high, 1650 Thisjis one of te! pounds. Curran, who said they would =e. the the finest horses in the re.|State and will be sold at a bargain. Seseee vsolMcFarland & Sons Springfield

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