The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 20, 1916, Page 2

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)

family came to Drexel where they have since made their home.— Drexel’ Star. Church Societies. The Evergreen class of the M. KE. Church, South, Sunday School was entertained Thursday after-| A Car Load of noon of last week by Ales, Frank | ARISTOS FLOU ae | . SHORT STORIES |Of Local Interest, Clipped from Our Exchanges. | _The-business of the El Dorado | iSprings postoffice has increased | jto such an extent that the office | ‘will be raised to the second class | July 1. =A Sunday school will be held each|ed Bates county in the inter high | postmaster Sunday in the Probate Court room | at the schoo] 10 a. m. Death.” tend. |surgeon, died at the home of his pleasant afternoon notwithstand- ‘father, H. R. Willems, in Ap- ing the inclement weather. pleton City last week says~ the) The Ladies Aid and Missionery | ; Journal. Society of the Baptist church met | | Friday afternoon with Mrs. D. | T ° eTOUS Cc a = | John Willems, a veterinary served and the ladies spent a very Tnis Week i : | ~ Windsor had two suicides in| Chastain. After the regular | a oes four days recently eda Hen-jhusiness had been transacted : ‘Ty county Democrat. W. T. Dun- jjight refreshments were served. | ‘ean took his life with a shot! The Doreas Circle of the Chris- jgun and Lee Cora Hart, took ear- | Oana pe anes Oke ‘tian church was _ entertained | bolie acid. |Thursday afternoon by Mrs. | Get ” our Sugar Now | A-special election has been | Chas. H. Burgess and Mrs. T. W.) jealled at Rockville to elect a city | Arnold at the home of Mrs. Arn- |marshal and to vote on a propo- old on Ohio Street. In spite of 'sition to issue bonds for an elec- the rain, which continued most of |trie light plant. (the affernoon, there was quite a | ‘ large number of the members | | Rev. R. L, Wood, for several present and they were well repaid | ,Years the Baptist minister at for braving the weather as a jolly | | Adrian, has resigned to accept a good time was had. | call to a church at -Gainsville, ~ \Ips, Ba Armstrong entertained Mo., says the Journal. the Young Ladies Auxillary of! Car Load Pure Cane Sugar GROCERIES Large No. 3 Can Sliced Pineapple, Regular 35c at... .15c ri a pag) apj¢ a Oo ag er | No. 2 Can Peas, extra Can String Beans, 3 for...25c Henry Fair, who-has been city ue sped Ct a ny | sSionebe (4 gallon syrup, dark ......35¢ | treasurer of Adrian for over thir- ane Ee f Onn 4 an i Ae | . 3 CanPie Peaches, Peeled | 4 MGR WHite Sota. 40c || tY, Years, has always kept his Rl " i se o i Mm. C.| Cea: Aas books so they would balance ex- | “A'S. 2ohn Krinn and Mrs. C, | Su RUE Raat pes te ae Can Pumpkin........3 for 25c ne na Na casted mee: im 'V. Hilt entertained the members: No. 3 Can Tomatoes...... 10c cept once. The auditors got him *) Das Palins Ghvista (Sundae | No. 3 Can Kraut, 3 for....25c | 7 bars Rub-No-More Soap.25c out of balance one cent on one Of the La Palma Christa Sunday) school class of the Christian | church, at the home of Mrs, Krinn | on west Ft. Scott street Friday! evening. occasion, says the Adrian Jour- nal. Pow- No. 3 Can Sweet Potatoes10c | 7bars “ “ * No. 3 Can Apricots, 2 for.25c | No. 3 Can Hominy, 3 for.25c | Package Raisins..... 3 for 25c | ig revival is i ress in Ginger eeee 25c~ A big revival is in progress }Hume. Rev. Burke and his singer | Ra | f have arrived and are holding) A Pioneer Gone. | GCHSCO 5.4 5s aan: ere 25c, 50c and $1.00 |! mectings in the big tabernacle Mrs. Nannie J. Howe, widow of erected by the people of Hume. B. F, Howe, passed away Sunday It is a union meeting and it is morning, April 9, 1916, aged 70 hoped that much good will result years, 5 months, and 15 days. | from it. Grandma Howe, as she was known and loved by all, was born in Montgomery county, Ken-/| tucky, and = with her parents moved to Illinois where she was | married to Mr. Howe about fifty | years ago next August. About 47} years ago they came to Audrian | county where they lived for two} years before coming to Bates | | W. H. Dunn, Norm Crews, Otis! county. Twenty years ago they | Sigler and others, whose names moved to Amsterdam from their | | we did not get, enjoyed an excit- farm north of Butler, and have jing wolf chase last Friday after-| lived here ever since. Mr. Howe | Loose-Wiles Crackers BY BOX 7c POUND Not a marriage license was is- sued in Cass County from Mareh 25 to April 13 says the Cass Coun- ty Democrat. Don’t the girls in Cass county know that this is leap year and that the boys are | just hanging hack to give them a | chance? ——+ Chick Feed for your little chickens 2 1-2c Pound SCREEN WIRE, all sizes. Let us figure on your bill. ; FORD AUTOMOBILES Let us have your name on our mailing list for Ford Times, a very interesting paper, published in Detroit. Call and get one or let us have yourname |) noon, which lasted more than | preceded his wife in death about | _and we will mail you one. |four hours and terminated in! two years ago.—Amsterdam En-| ‘their catching a large female | terprise. il ae AEs | A Fine Lime Stone Grass Cattle’ 7 | After once giving up the plan, | Ranch Sale | the good roads enthusiasts of | 600 acres in Greenwood county | ; Cass County are circulating pe- vane Good fencing good | titions to he preséated to the sanch improvements; lots of fine | The Only Independent Grocery, Bakery and Hardware Store eae, ee hei that a ideal living water. About 100 acres in| Phones, 144 and 49. Garage 35 COLOR Ue EeO ALO sh se Me * cultivation, balance all fine lime| West Side Square BUTLER, MO, ea eee ; Le SREUS ROBES tO stone grass, good sod. If sold in mild rock roads across that coun- | 20 days $20 per acre will buy it. | | ty. . |$6000 cash balance time and| Following the resignation of | terms to.suit. We can suit a man| /Edward Kelly as assistant post-| for, any kind and sized farm or | master of Rich Hill last week,|ranch. Ask for | Jamison appointed W. A. Nelson & Son, | school declamatory contest held Miss Gertrude Marsh to that posi- | 13-tf Fall River, Kansas. ~ “ll in connection with the annual | tion. _ Miss Marsh has held a posi: | Sunday |meeting of the Warrensburg |tion in the. postoffice for many |Central Missouri Teachers _ As- | years and is thoroughly familiar After} sociation at Warrensburg last |with her new duties. 'Thursday, was awarded first place, James recited ‘How Rube |Plays’’, the same selection with .| Which he won in the county con- | wolf.—Adrian Journal. Butler Boy Won. James Simpson, who represent- Christian Science Services Christian Science Services and house. More Oil Leases. | Services:11 a. m. ‘t, ‘Probation court W. H. Sage filed six more oil} and gas leases in the recorder’s | office last week. The land lies in West Point and Elkhart town- ships and aggregates 315 acres. It looks ‘more and more as Subje The town board met Monday night in the council chamber and organized by electing officers. D, A. Bean was elected Chairman, I. All are cordially invited to at- th iy though people who know oil and gas land think that this is a good | field. About twenty-five leases | have ‘been filed on land in differ- ent parts of the county and drill- ing is under way in the neighbor- hood of Amsterdam and the pros~ pects are said to be good for eith- er oil or gas or both. jtest_at Rich Hill, | Bowersox, Treasurer, and George -Jimmie came very near failing | pahiman Clerk Pollutax was |to appear at the auditorium fiscedvad $3.00. The dog tae levied ive oe Be | Te rae ap wt be Nga on male and $2.00 pear and say his little piece, there | oH Gee coils Lee jwas no Jimmie. Prof. Coonrod,; (Chester (. Epley and Crystena | thinking that some of the Co-eds|(, Cox were united in marriage might have kidnapped him, or-/hy Rev. H. A. Pfost at his home ganized a searching party, and | Wednesday evening, April 12, Jimmie was found fast asleep in|.1916. The young people are his room, where he had gone to numbered among the best in Elk- : ——— take a nap and had failed to wake | hart township and are receiving |T0o Many Butler People Neglect in time. The sleep so refreshed | congratulations from their Early Symptoms of Kidney sp that he proceeded to win first | friends. They will reside on the Trouble. place. | rae Walter-farm in Mound township. If ; A >, 1 , i your back is lame—if you Prof. Coonrod, principal of the |__Adrian Journal. foalldulli tired andl worn aay Butler High School, read a fine . | paper on the Junior High School.|| John Adamson is the champion} If you have hard headaches, backaches and dizzy spells— In the track meet the Harrison-| hunter in this section. Last: Fri- i ‘i A ville High School team took first |day evening he succeeded in bag-| If the kidney secretions are dis- place, winnning four firsts. ging four monster white pelicans, | ordered— ; : which were on display in town| Suspect _ your kidneys Must Operate Sleepers. Saturday morning. The largest |‘‘take a stitch in time.”’ — ‘ i one of the birds measured 8 feet} Use Doan’s Kidney -Pills, the Jefferson City , April 16—A|5 inches from “tip to tip’? and|time-tried, home-endorsed kidney ; ruling announced by Judge John weighed a fraction over fourteen | remedy. G, Slate, in the Cole county cir-/ pounds. The birds were shipped| - It may save you from some ser- cuit court sustains the ruling of | to Kansas City where they will be | ious kidney trouble. the public service commission, re-/ mounted and returned to Mont-| Make use of Mrs. Craven’s ex- quiring the Missouri Pacifie to rose.—Montrose Recorder. operate sleeping ear service on its! ; : train between St. Louis and Car- thage and Joplin. i SUSPECT YOUR KIDNEYS and Graduation Gifts of every kind and char- acter —every price and purpose. Look our over for suggestions. For instance, see J. W. Alexander, 76 years old,/kota St., Butler, says: ‘‘Some ¢ 1 fe f died “at his home in Drexel,|years ago I suffered from kidney The Missouri Pacifie will ap-|March 29th. He was born. in and bladder complaint.' I had peal from this ruling to the su-| Fayette county, O., and married dull, heavy pains across the small preme court. This sleeper service | to Annette Harrison, daughter|of my back and my héad ached. SMITHS’ Beek and Stationery Store it is claimed by the railroad is maintained at a considerable loss. The reason, as shown by the testimony taken in the hearings before the commission, is due to the fact that the St. Louis and San Francisco railroad, being the shorter and most direct line be- tween St. Louis and Carthage and . Fraternal Inn Building «Just Around the Corner” Joplin, gets the bulk of the busi- ness, of Captain Scott Harrison in 1863. In 1876 he came to Missou- ri with his family and located in Marshal, where he lived one year when he moved to Harrisonville, where the family lived for two years while improvements were being made on their farm north of Burdett. They lived on this farm about 20 years. About 16 years ago Mr. Alexander and I used Doan’s Kidney Pills, pro- cured at Clay’s Drug Store, and they took effect at once, reliev- ing me. I have had no sign of kidney complaint since.’’ Price 50c at all dealers. Don’t simply ‘ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s - Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Craven had. Fos- ter-Milburn Co., Props, Buffalo, N. Y.- 26-2t, Peete] Your Young Cave and Pigs i Cheaper than dairy milk = by feeding them BLATCHFORD’S — CALF MEAL AND PIG MEAL BLATCHFO! MEAL makes early weaning BLATCHFORD’S FIG (boned, vigorous, ecurdy pigs. ~ Early weaning means twolitters from each of yout brood Foye cach year and the advantages of the early pork market. For older pigs, brood sows ¢ three-i pound of ‘Blatchford's Pig Meal, pare tears Craixed with the other Tod, inireases the vitality and improves the quality of pork and bacon, Try it on the runte and watch them catch up. it the factory {At your dealer's ot $1.40 for a 100-pound bag a BLATCHFORD | CALE MEAL FACTORY The Fei Subatieute for Woekegas Misois 25 Ib. Sacks...... jiisdadwcie eae eles 100 Ib. Sacks..... acai seeeee 4.00 For the older stock use our SPECIAL FEED composed of Linseed Oil Meal, Bran, Corn Chop, and Cane Molasses, mixed in perfect proportions. Also Alfalfa, Molasses Feed, Linseed Oil Meal, Tankage, Bran, Shorts, etc. Cannon Elevator Phone 32 BUTLER, MO. Everybody Knows That when they have a man or boy to walk eight or-ten blocks through the rain or snow to take their grocery order, somebody is going to pay for it. Besides, what's the use, when you know all you have to do is Phone 77 and get for One Dollar: SSPSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS$ $SSSSS$SSS an A rs aA S3SSSS3333 ESSE SSS SSSSSSSESSSS And lots of other things you can buy for $1. The place where your dollar goes the farthest, because they take your orders over - the phone, thereby saving the dollars for the consumer. The place where everything is kept fresh and clean, where you get your money’s worth or your money back. Highest CASH price paid for Eggs, at GOSNELL’S GROCERY **7* 17 Ibs. Good Rice . 12 Ibs. Good Dried Peaches 13 Cans Good Corn 13 Ibs. Good Raisins 15 Ibs, Beans 13 Cans Hominy 12 Cans Kraut 12 Cans Pumpkin 11 Cans Salmon 13 Cans Oysters 25 i» Hominy Flakes 42 th Chick Feed 20 Quarts Peanuts SSS$SSS$$SSFSSSSSSS HSS$SHHHS; SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSS: We Can Supply Your Spring Needs See us before buying your Field and Garden Fence, Nails and Barbed Wire, Sulkey and Gang Plows, Corn Planters, Disc Harrows, Lawn Mowers, Lawn and Porch Swings, Refrigerators, Oil and Gasoline Stoves, Garden Tools of all kinds. Screen Wire and Screen Supplies, Builders Supplies, Furniture, Rugs, etc. Come in and see our stock and get our prices. GENCH BROS. perience. ' See ' Mrs, BCeaven, 00 | ————__________=== ’ (U. S. Government License 32) Vaccinate Your Hogs Tel. 564 JButler References furnished on request. Ask for booklet at Peoples Bank. Rep. Standard Serum Co. FRANK E. WALKER 306 W. Mill

Other pages from this issue: