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| | | Ss Sia aR ea Aaa gibi Ladies Jacket—28 inches long made from twilled cheviot—color black—Franklin collar— full draped sleeve—double breasted large horn buttons—a splendid value—our Price only $3.00. No. 331. Ladies Jacket—made from al! wool English Covert Cloth 28 inches long—New Style Man- dolin Sleeve, a Jacket of unequale: Oe only $10.00. These Garments toget mense line of capes Bonels—Serges—Chevi: box front, | Come and see them. i] The above—represents d value— | at prices never before offe oad This cutis designed to represent our im- consisting of Beavers jots— Worsted—Plushes | Astrachan and fur, both plain and elegantly trimmed. Prices range from $2.00 to $20.00. one of the styles of our full and complete line of Misses and Child- rens Cloaks and Jackets—which we are showing red. her with hundreds which we are unab Respectfully. Ladies Jacket—28 inches long made of very Fine Wool Beaver, colors—Black or Blue—Full Draped Sleeves, double breasted, box front, an ARE YOU INTERESTED IN LOW PRICES ON LADIES, MISSES AND CHILDRENS JACKETS. IF 80 COME T0 WE OFFER THE LATESL STYLES. EVERYTHING OUR OWN MANUFACTURE. US} No. 300. extraordinary good value for only $5.00. Ladies Jackets, 28 Inches Long. Made of very fine all wool Boucle, Full one of the Jauntiest Melon Sleeve. Jackets of the season, made by high class new tailors. le—in this space—to display are all stylish—all good price--every article carrying within itself the convincing proof that in its purchase you are saving money. show you throug this department and thereby verify our statements. Our price only $10 00, and all low in We will be pleased to SAM LEVY & Co. é OLNEY’S FLRM STAND. | On the other hand the Umted States | BURNED ALIVE AT THE STAKE. Secretary Olney’s construction of | is better prepared to defend her Old man Filley has the silk stock-| { BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES | ings crowd of the republican party A Perilous Ride. } Monday evening as Mrs. Fisher i ips evita CR NM Oe | J. D, ALLEN Eprror. J- D. Atren & Co., Ptoprietors. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The WeEkty Times, published every Thursday, will be sent to any address one year, postage paid, for $1.00. careers =a Semeet John J. Ingalls announces that he will be a candidate for the U. S. Senate to sueceed Peffer. ar State Auditer Seibert has an- nounced himself a candidate for a third term. if he don’t look out Bates county’s son will out Pace him in the race. www ae The St. Louis Globe-Democrat, one of the ableat republican papers in the United States, does not favor the nomination of McKinley by the party for president in 1896. It is a matter of comment why the | Republic should be so induetriously naming congressional candidates for the sixth, while ignoring all other districts in the state. ————— Without the aid of the Populists neither party can organize the rext senate, and strange as it may appear both parties want the Populist on the other side.—Osceola Democrat. Thos. H. Carter, chairman of the republican national committee has called the committee to meet at the Arlington hotel, Washington City, December 10th, to designate a time and place for the meeting of the national conyention in 1896. badly demoralized, and they are the Monroe doctrine, in his note to | now making faces aud throwing | the British Goverment on the Vene- | York in which Filley took an active e'ectrified the world. This is the first part, the silks have had the sulks, construction ever placed upon this aud now Col. Dick Kerens, the remarkable doctrine by a Secretary would be leader in the state, has of State in an official communication written a letter “sassin de ole man.”|to a foreign nation and it’s patriotic Filley is sawing wood. | ring has quickened the sluggieh | blood in American veins more than anything that has transpired since the war of the rebellion. After re- viewing the bourdary dispute at length between the British and Ven- ezuelan governments Mr. Olney, in diplomatic language, notifies Great Britain that the United States will not permit a further extension of her boundary upon the American conti- nent. That the boundary line be- tween these two governments is a matter of grave doubt and must be arbitrated. Itis said that Mr. Olney’s Tho. etateubocrd ot agriculture | Communication admits of no double construction and gives to England the alternative of receding from her bulldozing and brutal course of treating her weak little adversary in South America, and yubmitting the matter to arbitration, or of locking horns with our Uncle Samuel for the third time, and it is further said that The Butter Tres is authority for the stutement that Gen. B. G. Boone of Clinton, is being impertuned to become a candidate for governor, and that he is giving the same seri- ous consideration. Gen. Boone is a fearless and courageous map, is well known throughout the state, has legal attainments of the highest or- der and his integrity and capability are such as to well fit him for the of- fice of Missouri’s chief executive.— Appleton City Herald. | will hold a farmers institute at Fos- ter, Monday Nov. 11th. A number; of prominent speakers and agricul-| turalists will be present to address, the meetings and it is highly im- portant that the farmers and busi- ness men of that section make all arrangements to entertain these| gentlemen in a hospitable way. They | Mr- Cleveland and Mr. Olney are should also see to it that the insti-|Perfectly indifferent as to what tute is well advertised. It will pay|COUTSe she may pursue. If England the farmers of the community to} turn out and attend the meetings as they will be highly entertained and) instructed. A meeting of this kind) held in as rich and prosperous a} community as Walout township _ fought to be made a great success. | American countries to americans. recedes from her declared policy of dealing with South American gov- ernments, then she admits the tena- bility of the Monroe dostrine which she has regarded se lightly in the past, and the present administration will have the glory of preserving PrN ERS RINNE SERS AD A I eS = A A To RO rights against the world than ever before in her history, and can whip | mud at him. Ever since the reported zuelan matter, has astonished that | any nation or combination that may | conference of party leaders in New government beyond measure and | be sent against her. The St. Louis Republic is very solicitous about the next nominee for congress from the sixth district, and is industriously naming candi- dades for our people to choose from. We opine the democrats of the 6th Missouri district are competent to select their own nominee and will probably do so when the time comes without any assistance from out- siders. Perry, Ok., Oct. 24.—A move was made this morning to arrest mem- bers of the Perry school board be- cause they would not admit colored children to white schools. Colored children obtained a mandamus ten days ago compelling mixed schools, but Superintendent Augustine would not admit colored children, and now the attorney for the negroes will move against the board. Washington, D. C., October 23.— Secetary Carlisle will leave here on Sunday for Covington, Ky., to regis- ter, and will remain there only long q@nough to put his name on the list, returuing to Washington Monday evening. He will again visit Coving- ton on November 5 for the purpose of casting his vote for Hardin and the entire Democratic ticket. It’s about time for Republicans to give us another chapter on the ruin wrought by the Wilson bill. The general manager of the Burlington route says that business is better by $10,000 a day than it was a year ago and it is not the moving of the crops —Osceola Democrat. Another Reported Massacre of Arme- nians. Constantinople, Oct. 28.—Another terrible massacre of Armenians, ac companied by the outraging of wo men is reported to have occurred quite recently in the Baiburt district, between Erzeroum and Trebizond. According to the news here, a mob of about 500 mussulmen started to drive the Carpenter team from their residence to the store, the hitch rein came down and when she got out totie it up, leaving her baby on the buggy seat, the horses took fright and started to run. The lady tried to grab her baby but was es | received | and Lazes, the great majority of| whom were armed with Martini Henry rifles, made an attack upon the Armenians inhabiting several | villages of that vicinity and set fire to their houses and schools. Armenians fied in terror from their As the, dwellings they were shot down as. they ran, and a number of men and women who were captured by the | rioters, it is added, were fastened to | stakes and burned alive. The Ar- menian women who fell into the hands of the mob, it is also asserted, were outraged and brutally muti- lated. It is cburches were deserted and the vil- lages pillaged, the cattle and all the portable property of any value be- longing to the Armenians being car- ried off by the marauders. During the disturbance 150 Ar menians are reported to have been killed. The surviving villagers ap struck by the wheel and knocked down. The team whirled the buggy around and started down the road leading south from town, but turned again into the alley, up past the stable and out on the street, across lots aud ditches, up town where tLey were captured and the baby res- cued.—Border Breeze, Amsterdam. Diptherta 1s Epidemic. Topeka, Kan , Oct 24 —The board of education has ordered the schools in North Topeka closed on account | of diptheria, and is probable that all the schools in the city will be closed. | Parents are greatly alarmed, and also stated that the; s | ment was 5,200, with 1,500 absentees |reported. There have been about plied to the Governor of Baiburt for | many have taken their children out of school. Last Monday the enroll- seventy cases of diptheria in Topeka this fall with twenty deaths. From | 2 to 5 new cases are reported daily. Liberty, Mo, people are gazing in open mouthed admiration at a brick on a drug store wirdow which protection, who, after hearing their 7* takes-from the Chinese wall by one of its citizens. It is supposed to have been made 300 years before Christ If the drug store is of the usual north Missouri kind, it is man- complaint, sent three policemen to the scene of the massacre after the slaughter was ended. The number of Armenians massacred at Erzing- | jan is now said to be several hun | dred. The Turks have also attacked | U{u¢turing brick every day a good the Armenians in the district of | 1¢#! harder than the specimen from Gumushdagh, near Trebizond, and | China but as a usua! thing they do | NOt exist so long—Nevada Post. slaughtered many of them