The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 25, 1915, Page 8

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Ten venti a Tesday Russell Armentrout started to. carry, snail and has inch to it ever. since— Clay. H “Wallace, wife and bake motored down from Altamont, Mo., Saturday and spent Sunday with Mrs, Wallace’s father, A. J. f Smith. —Adrian Journal. Not to beoutdone by Schell ‘City and Rockville, who have 8 croquet league Hume has organ- ized a horseshoe pitching club and challenge all comers. Monday the long looked for dynamo for the electric light plant arrived and Tuesday. the city was all lighted up. and a large number of residences also were using electric lights.—Drex- el Star. 4 Everett Conyers of Sprague and Miss Mary Brady of Metz |i- were united in marriage Sunday at 2:30 o’clock p..m...The wed- ding took place at the Methodist parsonage, Rey. T. C. Puckett of-' Standard Serum Tested according to requirements of U. S. Government — ADMINISTERED BY * Z : Frank BUTLER, MO. Telephone 13 on 14. Just Arriy Another Car of Sulzberger’ s High- -Protein Tankage “THEY LIKE IT” GUARANTEED ANALYSIS Bone-Building Phosphates. . ae ‘Crude Fiber (Maximum)...........0.......ccccccccececaeennes 100 POUND SACK $2.60 Special Prices in Large Quantities Gannon Hlevater Company. TELEPHONE 32. BUTLER, MO. Hillstrom Executed at Salt Lake | | His death was instantenous. — City, Utah. | Hillstrom was convicted of the ‘ 5 imurder of John G. Morrison, a “Salt Lake City, Utah, Nov. 19. grocer and his son, Under Utah ~—Joseph Hillstrom, condemned law he was allowed to chose be- murderer, whose case prompted | tween shooting and hanging. the intercession of President Wil-| President Wilson twice appeal- son, the Swedish Minister to the/ed for further respite for Hill- United States, and the ‘American strom. The President’s second Federation of Labor, was put to/ request, made yesterday, was de- death by a fifing squad in the! nieq by Gov. Spry. as not based State prison at 7:42 a. m. today.|on any new facts. - rT ere The one best allavound gun—for ducks,’ geese, foxes, for trap shvoting and all small game—is the 12-gauge, 6-shot _ Marlin = The Safest Breech-Loading 3 Gun Buih. Aa ial: For snipe, quail, vend e, woodcock, squir- tels, its, etc., or 20 Faves, ha the jpower of the ad witnot e be arms were completely and his feet burned off. The rest| 1! E. Walker Have vaccinated 3000 with fine results. _ RAISE IN PASSENGER RATES. They Object to Mileage Book Clause and Expect to Appeal To Federal Court. Missouri Railroads will not ac- cept the Missouri Public Service Commission ruling, made public last Saturday, giving them an in- erease to 2 1-2 cents in passenger rates within. the State, it was learned today. A elause in the ruling which would require the roads to sell 500-mile mileage books ‘‘to bear- er’’ at 2 cents a mile, is the stumb- ling block in the railroad’s ac- ceptemece of the increase. They claim, in a statement issued yes- terday, that everyone world buy mileage books, that the whole family could ride on one ~ book; and that ticket scalpers would come into existence again. The railroads probably will ap- peal from the decision by filing a suit in the United States District Court, asking for a ratification of the 3-cent passenger rate allowed by the Interstate Commerce Com- mission, In the meantime the flat rate of 2 cents will prevail throughout the State, as it has in the past several years, during litigation. The Commission’s ruling does not become effective until Janu- ary 1. Prior to that time the rail- roads will have filed their suit in the, United States District Court, it is believed. Lost His Life ir. Burning Barn: Saturday evening between 7 :30 and 8:00 the large barn of Mr. Christ Kohlenberg was discovered to be on fire says the Drexel Star. The Kohlenberg farm is about ning miles northwest of Drexel. Mrs. Kohlenberg . discovered the fire and immediately. told Mr. Kohlenberg, who rushed te the barn in his stocking feet to res- cue the family driving horse. He was seen going into the barn but he did not come. out and the ag- ony and suspense was almost un- bearable. As soon as it was pos- sible to search in the ruins they began, and a little after 12 0 "lock they found him. His head and charred of his body was not burned so to-date feature: ide 28 well as out; Shots It'sa for, pes gun a beautiful It's just the gun you wantt Yio Marlin Reoarms Cs, 28.16-30.Ga, Repeaters with Visible Hammer, $21.80 42 Willéw 8t, New Haven, Conn. badly as the oats had fallen over him. Mr, Koblenberg was a man about 60 years of age and had been in this country oho 40 years, Wabash Sues for License os Missouri. 4| ficiating.—Metz Times. ——_—_——— | ra noaps Not To ACCEPT NOT TO ACCEPT Judge P. A. Bruce, who had been spending the past eight months at various points of inter- est. in California, was here yester- day and today on a brief visit with his brather, Wesley A. —=—xX—X—«X—XK—<K<X<&<—=<—<_/T_P_ 7; = _—__ _ _ __—X——sSSS_ =! Bruce.—Cass County Democrat. Clint Looney can’t understand women nohow. First one sued him because he didn’t marry her he did. Clint seems to’ have ‘catehed it a-going and a-com- ing.”’—St. Clair, County Demo- erat. Rev. preaching part time at the Chris- {ian church at this place, has been hired by the church board for full time and_ will probably move here in this winter. His home at present is in Kansas City, The chureh is very fortunate, in- deed, to secure the services of such jan able minister—Amoret | Leader. Stephen Conger, 67 years old, a farmer living six miles east ‘of Rockville, enroute to Joplin, who stopped at the Depot Hotel Wednesday night accompanied by his wife and physician, died suddenly this morning just after he was placed on the Joplin train. The body was removed to the Turpin morgue and was _ later shipped to Rockville, says Thurs- day’s Nevada ‘Post. William Gilmore Lackey, son of Thomas and Mary Lackey, was born on the Lackey home- stead, April 11th,.1880, and de- parted this life November 13th, 1915, at the home of his brother, Harve, in Amoret. The funeral services were held at the Chris- tian Church, Rev. Trader officiat- ing, and interment made in the Jackson Cemetery in the family lot—Amoret Leader. Col. J. D. Allen, clerk of the Supreme Court, returned today from ‘a hunting trip _in--Bates and then she -sued, him bevause} M, Trader, who has been! county. He confined his hunting excursions to a lake. He bagged a dozen mallard jducks. There have been few ducks this season, even in the swamp regions of Southeast Missouri, where they |'s are usually to be found at this|; season in gréat numbers.—Jeffer- f] = City. Democrat-Tribune Nov. Albert E. Glass, secretary-treas- urer‘of the Southwest Poultry. Association, and owner of the cel- i ebrated poultry farm, known as A THANKSGIVING TURKEY BECOMES A BIGFAT TURKEY BY BEING FED A LITTLE FROM DAY To DAY. A THANKSGIVING BANK ACCOUNT BECOMES A FAT. ONE. BY THE SMALL DEPOSITS THAT YOU MAKE: FROM TIME To TIME. YoU ARE JUST AS WELCOME IN OUR BANK WITH A.SMALL DEPOSIT AS WITH A BIG ONE. LOTS OF SMALL DEPOSITS MAKE THE BIG FORTUNE. START A BANK AC- count ‘NoW-You WILL BE THANKFUL. NEXT BANK WITH US Missouri State Bank “THE OLD RELIABLE.” Low Rates on Farm Loans Weare in a position to make farm loans at a low rate of interest on either 5, 7 or 10. years time, with privilege of making partial payments on interest paying dates. All pay- ments of principal and interest pay- able at our office. We make ab- stracts to all real estate in Bates county at reasonable rates. The Walton Trisat Co. BUTLER, MISSOURI = Current snare Fy 8,000,000.00 IMPROVED EASY IRON elatein Heights, situated weet | ‘eee:

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