The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 5, 1915, Page 8

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)

township can produce. q took several days to celebrate it. Orchard Grove. ‘|dinner. Phere wereg about 30 I present. In the afternoon they Poffenbarger. & Herrell, the| went to Round mound and insurance men, were out in this!) oq their pictures taken. part of the country last Thurs- 7. : isit day and took dinner with Mrs.|. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler are -visit- _|ing their daughter in Nevada. W. I. Cassity. : Boost the Booster Club of| Dr. Norris, wife and daughter, Pleneant Gap. ‘They gave an|Mrs. Mitchell, spent Sunday af- ternoon with Lewis Culbertson. ice cream supper Saturday night ‘ SUNSHINE. for which the proceeds of $20,00 go for the premiums at the big polite fair September 4th. abet idl Merwin Items. come and see what Pleasant Gap- Mr: and Mrs, Gobege Pevaee and family of Kansas City came The threshing machine is still };, Tuesday for a visit with rela- in the neighborhood waiting for | tives, another dry spell. It was stop- if ped at M. E. Stouffer’s Friday Zannie Owen ae bee evening with a big rain which Kansas, is visiting his grand- mother, Mrs. M. B. Hayes. Mary Hicks night and Sunday and Lytle Shanon. The party at Fleener hall Fri- day night was well attended. A good time was had by all pres- ent. was followed by another Mon- day morning and also an electri- cal storm. The lightning struck W. L. Cassity’s hen house with very little damage. Bert Beach was up Monday} from Appleton City looking for | a pair of mules, | Mr. Ellington went to Apple- ton City Sunday to take his sis- ter, Mrs. Brooks, who has been} visiting here for some time, daughters, | spent Saturday with Miss Lizzie Weiden returned to Kansas City after a week’s visit here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Weiden. Mrs. Johnson and Harry .Burnham of St. Joseph Dorothy and Helen, of Kansas/is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jim City, are visiting her father,/ Walters. Thomas Bolin. Mrs. Bert Owen and son went John Woodfin delivered |to West Line Sunday for a few day’s visit with her mother. Mrs. Wm. Patterson returned home Sunday after a visit’ with her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Clyde Patterson. | VERGINA. wheat to Butler Monday. Don’t forget Sunday avery Sunday at 10:80, APPLE BLOSSOM. school | Misuse of Mails Charged. Kansas City, Mo. Aug. 2.— John Cirrincione, alledged lead- ‘er_of a black hand band which has ‘heen terrorizing inhabitants of the Italian quarter” here for some time, was charged with us- ing the mails to deffraud beiore \the United States district court here today. His bond was fixed at $5,000 and his preliminary examination set for August 10. The charge was based on let- Summit Happenings. Mr. Lacy gave his neighbors a | treat in the style of a hay frame | ride to hand concert. We judge from the noise they made it must have been a joy ride. Mrs. Guyton and Mrs. Ed-/ wards made Mrs. Robt.Sturgeon a pleasant visit Sunday evening. | Mr. Wayland is planning to start south in a few days. Mrs. Wayland’s health is not improv- ing and they will try an over- land trip and camping. Nellie’ Corn. rains, all point toward a ehriiade of immature . this fall. prepared to ‘‘can it’’? The live is an will have to do the best he can. eral weeks distant. A silo’ .to|| worthiess corn stalks. Now mind'you this was not 25 :bushel per acré.corn, but corn that would not be successful“ must be air tight,!] pave made over & bushels to the acre. the walls ‘smooth, and strong Come to our yard and ask us-who these men are and if you are interested we will take you ‘out to enough to withstand the out-|] talk to them, it will not cost you a cent.and we will take you in our FORD. ward pressure of the silage. A This is a proposition worth investigating. It's a ONE PIECE CLEAR FIR STAVE, SPRING LUG, silo that meets these require-,| HINGE DOOR, EIGHT CABLE,SIXTEEN ANCHORS, money making silo proposition. Sold on easy ments will be successful regard- less of the material with which it is built. Missouri Agricultural Experi ment station at Columbia con tain valuable hints on silos the use of silage. Free and instructions for help start the silo, where pay his traveling expenses. Killed by Spider Bite. J. E. Lawson, 65 years of age, Richards, died about ten days ago. bune. Mr. Lawson came to the coun- try near Richards about twelve years ago from Shelby, Ia. ters alleged to have been writ- ten by Cirrincione demanding money and threatening death. No action has been taken by the federal government in the case of eleven other men arrested with Cirrincione, they having been released on nominal bonds. Kathelene Wayland had birth day one day last week. a It Several of her girl friends went ‘to her home Friday for an all day picnic. Sunday Kathelene’s sister, Mrs. Tayler, gave a big SOW WHEAT And if you want.to raise good wheat, sow Armours or Empire Fertilizer with it, and don’t for- get that we are agents for same and want to supply you with what you need. There is a vast acreage ‘of corn ground that has been abandoned and should be sown in wheat. Sulky and Gang Plows Don’t forget that we handle the best Sulky and ~@ang Plows on the market and our prices are right. We have the John Deere, Emerson and J. I. Case, and they are all good ones. Don’t fail to come in -and see the. Deere Gang with quick detachable. shares and chain eveners. They are entirely: dif- ferent from anything on the market. We also have some Sattley and Kingman Sulky and Gangs that: we are selling way down. : Van Brunt Grain Drills We are agents for the celebrated Van Brunt and Superior Grain Drills with and without Fertili- zer attachment and if- you want the best on the amarket, don’t fail to see these drills. We have some } Roderick Lean Disk Drills we are closing out at $50 each, and some Hoosier 5 disk one horse drills a $17.50 each. If needing a drill of any kind, we ought to be able to sell you. We also have a good stock of Disk and Smoothing harrows, Land Roll- ers, walking plows etc., that you may need to pre- © pare your land for wheat. — Wagons and Farm Trucks We have a good stock of Schuttler, Mitchell and Davenport Farm Wagons.and the best stock of Farm Trucks in Bates county, and our. prices afe way down. We also handle the Jotin Deere Low Down Manure Spreader which is the only spread- er made with the Beater on the axle. We costes handle the Campbell Straw papears | nie Pierce of Chicago. The funeral will be held Tues- day afternoon at 2:30 o’clock and the remains will he shipped to his old home at Shelby, Ta., for burial. i The spider bit Mr. Lawson while he was about some work on the oil wells on his farm, a number of which have been drilled during the spring and} summer.—Rich Hill Review. Mrs. Jason Woodfin Dead. C. J. Sells received a telegram Tuesday evening conveying the sad news of the death of daughter, Mrs.-Jason Woodfin, which occurred at | Horseshoe Bend, Idaho, Tuesday, Aug. 3. Mrs. Woodfin was a from consumption and about | eighteen months ago she was; taken west hoping the change of climate ‘would benefit her health. For a time she seemed} to improve and hopes were en- tertained for her recovery but! recently she grew worse, death | finally resulting Tuesday. Build Silos to Save Immatare The lateness -of planting, ‘thie slow growing season, and sed What dre you eoing do with your soft cornf Are you stock farmer can profitably utilize this soft corn | by putting it into a silo. The’ silo investment which pays high interest on the live — stock. farm. The man who has no silo _| Now is the time to build the tsilo while filling season is sey- Bulletin 133 and other publi. cations on-silos and silage by the | and plans building concrete silos can also be op- tained. A man will be sent to the | farmer desires and is willing to| a well kuown farmer of near Monday morn- ing at 9 o’clock at his home as a result of being bitten by a spider |’ The poison from the spider bite, although it did not cause him much pain, | fer ed for that the sald Maggie, Bur- caused a very severe kidney t in or to said reai estate under trouble and he sank rapidly, tf oo. b. Detroit af ‘ re t e x i saya’ Monday's Ft. “Scott Ohms yell, (00 Mc m nme asta sanueey Just think of it cheaper than a good horse and _He i viv: te, luntary and in- is survived by one son, Ernest, |jmesne and rome, or dohn Boyd fa i who made his home with him, |have"er’ may claim ‘some. Interest” | Watch for Our Special Premiums for the 7 or to sa premises under an . and one daughter, Mrs. Min-|0T to said, premises under and by | Ri ~ Deeds of Bates Coun- Arte lee Missourt, fn Deed of Trust Book Can Peas No. 2'size,..... 3 for 25c his | No, 16 at page 324. Can Pumpkin No. 3 size..... 3 tor 25c sufferer |?! . Anything But POOR FODDER? > If a neighbor and 4 friend would tell you how you could make sla 12 acres of poor corn stalks produce you $300.00 worth 6f good marketable feed would you not listen to his plans? j You haveda neighbor that lives in five or ten miles of you that has been doing this very thing. for several years. Farmers right here in Bates county have told us, and ‘we can. introduce. you t ‘theec men any day in thie week, that they sold from $200.00 to $300.00 worth of feed from 12 acres of terms. There is over SO of our silos in use in Bates county. | 4 Get our prices and terms, save the corn stalks. LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER CO. Phone No. 18. BUTLER, MISSOURI. FO $390 ORDER OF PUBLICATION. In the Circuit Court of Bates Coun- ty, Missouri, October Term, 1915. August 3rd, 1915, in vacation. eat of Missourl to Maggie Burrus et | You are hereby notified that the | plaintiff, Maud Fisher, has this day filed her petition in the Circuit Court of Bates County,” Missouri, Seainet you and others, wherein it is alleged that she is the owner of and in .fact has the legal title to the South half of Block Four (4) of Couches Addition to the town, now city, of Butler, Missouri, and that there are persons whose names cannot be inserted in said pe- | ition because unknown and_ which said unknown persons are herein _re- FOR A 5 | PASSENGER FOR A 2= PASSENGER ’ FORD 79, and appearing of record in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds. in Bates County, Missourl, in Book N-1 at page 646 and that the defendants, the unknown consort, heirs, devisees, |donees, alienees, and immediate, buggy. We will have 3 carloads of NEW FORDS this month and 4 carloads next month—8 to the carload. Will have a carload new Fords next week. Fleming L, Burrus, and Maggie Bur- rus, his wife, to John W. Abernathy, as trustee for Wyatt & Boyd, a part- nership composed of H. C. Wyatt and John R. Boyd, said Boyd being now dead, which deed of trust bears date March 27, 1879, and is of record in Deed of Trust Book 16 at page 190 in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Bates County, Missouri and that the nknown consorte, heirs, ‘devisees, donees, alienees, and immediate, mesne and remote, voluntary and in- voluntary grantees of J. P,~Campbelle and the other unknown members of the partnership doing business un- Ber the name of J, P. Campbelle & Co., do or may claim some interest in land to certain real estate under and | by. virtue of a certain deed of trust ‘made by Fleming LL. Burrus and Maggie Burrus, his wife, to A. | Bers ag Trustee for J. P. Sampbelie: Ae bearing date November 8 1879 iand being of record in the office of Fair on Ford Cars. TIRES--Let us tire YOUR. CAR the next time. We have the largest stock and variety tq select from: south. of ‘Kai City—over -$3,000 : Automobile: ‘tires’ States tires, Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup tires, ‘Fisk tires, Goodrich tires. Grocery Department Can Goods, cheapest in the wanes Ging of our business. Just think— Can Hominy No. 3 size.. aes Can Kraut No. 3 size... Can Tomatoes No. 3 size iI. You are therefore notified to be and appear in the Circuit Court of Bates County, Missouri, to be begun and held in the court house of Bates !Gounty, Missouri, on the first Monday October, 1915, to answer or plead said petition or the same will be taken as confessed ana judgment ren- dered against you accordingly. It is, ordered by the Clerk in va- ‘cation of the Circuit Court that a {copy of this order be published In the Butler Weekly Times for four inser- | tt tions consecutively, the last insertion to be not less than ‘thirty days be- fore the first day of the next term. of i this circuit court. H. O. MAXEY, Circuit Clerk. {A true copy from the record. ~ Witness my nand the seal of this 3rd day of July, 19 Can Sweet Potatoes No. 3 size Can Baked Beans No. 3 size.. Can Pie Peaches No. 3 size. Can Apples No. 3 size... Can Apricots No. 3 size. “Can Table Peaches No. 3 size. Can gallon Peaches No. 10 size. Can galion Pie Peaches No. 10 size. Can gallon Apples No. 10 size.. Can gallon Cherries No. 10 size 1 gallon best Syrup..... Pie “1 gallon best White Syrup. Now is the time—if yo to and t this (Seal) ait—you will be too late. nut township, Bates county, Mareh 21, 1880, and had lived in the county all her life. She was, Woodfin, Jr., who with young children survive her. The remains will be brought | to this county and interred in| the. Woodfin cemetery in Wal-} nut township. Strike at Remington Plant. Thign, N. Y., Aug. 2.—The big Remington Arms plant here was threatened with a tieup by a strike today. The difficulty said to be over the putting into effect of the 8-hour schedule. When the men went to work ‘this morning they were handed slips of paper on which ‘were given the scale of wages. The men asserted they were docked and ‘refused to go to work. - The arms* company, which is aidan the same management as three | some of which are not yet com- Ethel Sells was born in Wal-/{ married March 22, 1900 to Jason | . is | the Bridgeport plant, is _just|: moving into its new buildings, |: H. 0. MAXEY, Circu Califo Demonstration in the store, Sat. Aug. 7 Every One Invited te Attend We have about 2 carloads Old Wheat Flour. If you want to keep trouble out of the kitchen, buy your flour for the summer - now. Our price is cheaper than any one. Fleur will be higher. Yours, Starr Given 25 Years, Chandler, Okla., Aug. 2.—The | jury which will try Claude Saw- yer, charged with having been implicated in the raid on the two banks at Stroud several months \ago, was not completed this af- | ternoon. Selecting -of the jury |wkas commenced following Hen- ity Starr’s plea of guilty to hav- jing participated in the double bank. robbery. Starr is aceredit: ed with having been the leader ;of the band, and was sentenced to twenty-five years in the pen- itentiary. h Fojlowing Sawyer’s trial, Bud}. Maxwell, or Charles Johnson, e will” be placed on trial. wis Estes, who’ with Starr wounded ‘and captured. fol- @ the robbery, has ple - and is being held: ; nced to be used as a witness in the three trials. ;

Other pages from this issue: