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No matter who is he’s time prosper ity if} To start the ball rolling pose to offer the given in clothing. Cold weather ts here and overcoats will come handy. lowing special price. Mens all wool Kk feither clay or half $12.50-the best value ever offered for the money. Mens all wool overcoats—the very best grades— We have now only $10. overcoats for worth it. Men all wool $6.50, same grade at $7.50. This is ever made on these eoats. Mens satinet and save money. our president and your president and lets all pull together to make the next four years a r Ov $2.00. Pay your election bets here wah for elected president Ke | 4 eturn to the old possible. we pro- best values ever We quote the fol- ee Ss only ersey overcon satin lined AN BS “3% VEN. Auburn Melton sold same y o> and they were % % 2S beaver overcoats as others advertise the lowest price OR SX 2" G ereoats as low as NY, “ye aN “SS UTTER WEEKLY TIMES LOCAL ITEMS Good 80 acre farm for sale or ex nge. J. A. Sirvens. 35-ft. Trains are snow bound in Wyom-| The great battle of ballots for 1896 ie over. Tramps burglarized a box car at Parsone, Kansas, the other night. The Eldorado Sun issued a souve hir edition, handsomely illustrated, week. dudge Lay will commence circuit | tourt in this city next Tuesday. The locket will not be a heavy one. The Butler republicans were very | jubilant over the national returns mnouncing the election of McKin- | i. James M. Vaughn, a pioneer citi-| tn of Monroe county, died at his tome near Paris Saturday, aged 75 years. The election returns were received tthe opera house Tuesday night. Heretofore all have gathered at the ourt room. John B. Henderson's war record is Qt a brilliant one, but he has gain fda name and fame as an innocent Purchaser of county railroad bonds- Hon. Waller Young, of St. Joseph Bp %e of the best known and most Btominent men and politicians in this state is reported to be dying at bis home. A great crowd stocd about the| Polling place in this city Tuesday. The election, however, passed off quietly and every man was allowed | to vote as he pleased. | Butler was handsomely decorated Saturday with bunting and flags. Al- @ Yost all the business houses were m decorated anda large per cent of lings followed suit. | ma jority. | fier and nerve builder. Hard times ought to cease right now. Will the Iowa farmer burn corn for fuel now. Wheat ought to go to $1 a bushel and corn 40 cents. W. J. Bryan will yet be president: Mark the prediction. dG Missouri stands by the faith. The entire democratic ticket was elected. The returns indicate that capital removal has been defeated by a large Well, the republicans have got their Major, the country, the gold stendard and they have a right to be happy. Neuralgia is the prayer of the nerves for pure blood. Hood's Sar- saparilla is the one true blood puri- Mt. Pleasant township broke the record for voting Tuesday. The vote is the biggest ever polled in the township. Bates county cast a full vote in Tuesday's election. If there was a vote lost it was because the person was sick and unable to get to the polls. Ben Harrison defeated Grover Cleveland, and then in turn Grover Cleveland defeated Ben Harrison. In four years the people will get enough of McKinley, and Bryan will win, hands down. Now we want to see those good, times promised under gold stand- ard. The mills and factories should | open at once and the four million | ‘laboring men out of employme at put to work. About 200 Butlerites attended the | blow out at the Hill Monday night An! excursion train wasrun. The flam | beau club went down in full uniform | | | and furnished the fireworks for the| oceasion. The crowd in Rich Bill) \was immense and all for Brysn. J | Judge DeArmond is all right | day was fair and weather pleasant That little stream called salt river | {is filled with boats. FF. Busch came from Oklabom What has become of Riley Ball?| Democratic by Unprecedented Merjor- to vote tor Bryan. ites, In most of the states Tuesday the | a WJ. Bryan Mojorities. | ‘ Lon V.Stephens,............ 1563 President Cleveland weut to his|p A DeArmond 1483 Woodley home to hear the news of Geo. B. Elli... 101s | the election. Hervey C. Clark,........ . 1421 John Harper end Harry Cannon) E C. Mudi,... 22.22.22... sil | came down from Kansas City to cast A. B. Owen..... 0 ........... 1154 ' their votes for Bryan. Rom, dohnson. <5... 2.2... 1057 | Jim Fraskiiog has come back to ae NG Booe Begg os TEE ‘ : ; OR Pe kk sie 1113 | utler, he attempted to vote but the Save j fe s a a pn Goleman o)< 22 524 judges refused to accept his ballot eae es Bre a i iW. T. Kemper. 413 The Free Press kept in the rid Capital removal, Yes......... 1442 | Heoftharoad to the ead of the We will publish a tabulated st: zt rattle. Sichbomcnees is not wis | ment of the county vote next week. dow, Bro. Atkeson. | ; The democrats shook the brush in| Mr. Bryan's record iu ninety days | old Bates this time is 543 speeches and 17,831 miles of : : The Tines will give the Judge DeArmond carried Henry |county by 1,000, 819, Bates gave him 1,483 A solid delegation from this state is claimed by the Cowherd of Kansas | City has more than 2 to cougress democrats. 600 majority. | | office of public administrator for four years, and he will make a good one. Dr. Wilson aud Irvin Gordon, two | of Nevada’s most prominent citizens | hada personal encounter on the \ streets of that city Saturday over | politics. | quarter horse. However he did not Uncle Kit Harris was the firet | expect much and therefore was not | disappointed. man to place his ballot in the box in this city Tuesday morning. It was | straight for Bryav, the state and | county ticket. “Oklahoma” Bill. alias William | Payne, suicided at Kansas City Sat | urday by shooting himself. He was | out on bond, charged with highway robbery committed in Oklahoma. this district at the liek he is running in this county, Johnson and Henry, will be about 5,000. W. H. Hupp came down from Kan sas City on the early train Thursday morning. He said the betting in | the city when he left was 2 to 1 that United in marriage by Wm. M. | Bryan was elected Dalton, Judge of Probate, on Nov. | 3d, 1896, Walter A. Cooper and Miss Bertha M. Kimbrough; W. M_ Rich Mrs. Sam’l Welch requests us to kindly ask the boys who removed her gate on Halloween night to re- ardson and Miss Rosa M. Jones, all | turn it and no questions will be of the parties are of Rich Hill, Mo | asked. Miss Ruby Rosser, of this city Atkeson, poor fellow, has few was awarded the prize in the story , sympathizers He balked in the competition offered by the Midland | middle of-the road, and would neith- Monthly, a literary and art magazine | er pull or get out of the way, conse- published at Des Moines, Iowa. The quently he was run ever. Times extends congratulations to! ji the talk about trading E C. Miss Rosser- Mudd off failed to materialize and Our old friend F. F. Busch, who | the report put in circulation that he went to Perry, Okla., in the spring, | could not carry his own township returned, with his wife and baby,| proved a boomerang. He carried last week, and will make Bates coun- | every township in his section and ty his home. Mr. Busch is an his precinct gave him a handsome excellent gentleman and the Tres | majority. is glad to welcome him back to the | county. | Highest Honors—World’s Fair. “IDES: H. B. Liston, populist candidate | for congress published a letter a few | days before the election advising his | supporters to drop his name and | vote for DeArmond. To have given | the matter better publication Mr. Linton ought to have come off a week earlier. The Butler Academy foot ball team has developed into one of the best teams in this part of the state; they showed Friday that they were eapable of handling anotber team in good shape, when they defeated Harrisonville by a score of 16 to 5 | Ap E : from at Harrisonyille. er Saniterant! 40 ae the Standard. KONOOTSSSSOCSCOOOOSOOS SIX BiG Ties gi mens suls al - - - $5.00 Our mens overcoats a $0u boys suits at - - - - = (ur boys overcoats at Cur childrens suits at - - it. Our childrens cape overcoats at 1.29 Mens and Boys blanket lined Duak coats 90c- JOE MEYER. THE CLOTHIER. | 3SOCLO000 0000 0008880008 and Johnson by| Judge Brown will attend to the | Al Smith ran pretty well for a itruvel. He went through ail this) election without an accident or missing an | returns for Bates county in tebulat-! 1 appointment | ed form next week. | | i Judge DeArmond’s majority in | gold standard merchants to learn} “lrobbing him of $30. Forsythe is a BATES COUNTY. WOGDIOSOOIOOOIOOODOL OOOO OOOO, YOU MAY MAKE UP YOUR MIND THAT WE ARE ABLE AND WILLING TO SELL STRICTLY RELIABLE DRESS GOODS g CLOAKS CARPETS g AND KINDRED LINES OF COOD DRY CooDS AT ABSOLUTELY LOWEST PRICES g McKIBBENS. PSA OGIOGS ‘2 Friend Holcomb, the populist can | Will McKinley give Gen. Buck- didate for prosecuting attorney, was | ner a cabinet position? He ought badly defeated by his opponent, | to. 5 Harvey C Clark. Shirley Childs, whe is traveling in If it would take three times the | Kansas for an implement company entire stock of gold in the entire | came home to vote for Bryan. country to pay the home and farm’ During this campaign Judge De mortgage debt of only seven westerD| 4140nq missed but o saeaks states, how long will it take western | Rad cogtacks BLO road use im to miss bis train or he would have gone through the campaign without a dis- | appointment. 1 ; ment that their interests lie with those of | their customers—not with Wall street and London! James Shannon, J. W. Lewis and Frank Wallace are under arrest at Nevada charged with burglarizing Schroder’s general store in that city. The thieves got $10 80 in cash from the money drawer, and carried off about $300 worth of silks and other articles. Preparations should be made to care fur the poor of this city this winter. Cold weather will soon be here and the por will of necessity suffer if relief ig not furnished. Times have been hurd, and employ- ment for those who would work and earn their own living has been hard to get, therefore, many honest, in- dustrious people will have a hard time during the winter if assistance is not rendered. John Belton, a policeman of Clin ton, has brought a damage suit for $500 against Ed Forsythe, a well todo farmer, for accusing him of The cold-blooded murderer of Dr, Lockwood should be hunted down aud punished. A crime of such mag- nitude should not be treated lightly. It is the duty of every officer and good citized, especially in the north part of the county, to do his utmost in running down the essassin. Mrs. Max Weiner entertained a republican and got drunk and noisy large number of her lady friende last during the democratic rally and the Friday to an old fashioned dinner. officer disarmed him ofa knife and | the ladies were dressed in costumes placed him under arrest. Forsythe | befitting the days of their grand- claims that in making the arrest the| mothers. A jollier crowd would be officer robbed him of the $30 hence | hard to get together. The menu fopeuit: | was elaborate and served in a man- ; : | ner that would have done credit to Mrs. Eliza Dilto, St. Joseph, | their ancestors. Mrs. Weiner is one widow of A. F. Dilto, a former z : | of the best ent 9 wealthy citizen. was robbed of $2,-! —— 000 Sunday evening. She had just | prepared to leave her house to go to town. Hearing a noise at the back door she went to investigate the | killed by the fast mail train on the cause and was grabbed by the rob | M. K. & T. railroad near Calhoun bers. She refused to tell the hiding | | ane was about 25 yeara of place of her money and the robbers | lage and an idiot from birth. He choked her into insensibility and | | kpew his name aod that wasall. His lransacked the house. The old lady | parents died when he was a small was afraid of banks. | boy and his home since has been at ==.) thi f “Over $100,000 in $20 gold pieces | bg a was paid out up to2 p. m, the | closing hour, Monday,” said Chief | Clerk Ricker of tha United States | Subtreasury in response to a query | | propounded by a reporter for the | St. Louis Chronicle. ‘The average, amount paid out each day is from} $30,000 to $40,000. The cause? Weil, I don’t want to say. The coin was exchanged for treasury notes.” James Gauff, an idiotic inmate of the poor farm of Henry county, wandered from the farm and was Violators of the law im Missouri must look out for the penalties. Dr. | Holloway, 2 prominent citizen and | druggist of Fairfax, Atcheson coun- ty, was fined $1,142 and senteneed | to jail for six months for selling | whisky illegally. He was convicted on 30 counts. He belongs to one of the most highiy respected families of his county. —Ex. Miore Medicinal value in a bottle of Hood's Sarsa- pa illa than in any other preparation, <ill is required, more care taken, more expense incurred In its manufacture. It costs the proprietor and the dealer but it costs the eo er less, a8 he gets more doses for his money. curative power is secured by its peculiar combination, proportion and process, Judge DeArmond wound up bis | campaign at Rich Hill rally Monday night. He has beena faithful stew- art inthe cause, and has been on | the stump conetantly since the cam- | paign opened. His work has not | been confined entirely to his own) district as he haa done valiant work in other parts of the state. There lig no better campaigner than Judge DeArmond and he never tires in $:: the rights of the nihil which make it peculiar to itself. people are employed and more space or- cupied in its Laboratory than any other. wonderful © pflected and more tes- timonials reeei san by any other. herease year by sts, @ talking true democracy and fighting The Whole Story | Of the great cales attained and great |eures accomplished by Hood's Sar- @ separilia is quickly told. It purifies $= enriches the blood, tones the rae and gives strength and vig- lor. Disease cannot enter the system eS by the rich.red blood which ,eomes by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla ‘than ever befor ns might be Sarsaparilla $1 per bottie. | Hood's Pills cure nausea, sick |headache, indigestioc, biliousness. | | all druggists. 25¢. The One True Blood Purifier.