The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 22, 1897, Page 5

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LADIES! While the men ar e busy in the field this week and too tired at night to read the paper, we address our “ad” to you with the hope that its perusal may be profitable to you as well as ourselves. in working gar-ne Please suggest to your folks” that we are “men selling some great bargains nts—that Our 50c OVeralls When the new tariff bill goes into | effect the women of the country will | be the first to discover who pays the tariff, the home buyer or the for | eigner. Professor L. B. Allison, principal of the east school building called | Saturday and renewed his subserip- | tion. Professor Allison is one of | Butler’s oldest and most substantial | citizens and fora number of years was assistant principal at the Acad emy. The county hes no better educatcr. Marmaduke Camp United Cenfed- | erate Veterans, No 615 is entitled | to four delegates to the reunion at| Nashvillé in June. Any member of | $1,000. Has the Dingley tarift bill any-! thing to do with the recent decline, in wheat? The city council of Clinton went | gunociog for economy in city effairs last week and a generel cut in sala-| Axe ries Was inaugurated all along the. |line, from mayor down to night-| watchman. Marshall, Mo., |derly at Slater to-day. | fire at that place yesterday he was The cut eaves the ‘city | | April 16.—A. T. | George, a commercial traveler for a | Sr. Louis grocery house, died sud- At the big} helpiog a customer save his stock, j and was run into by @ man earryi ing | a box of tobacco. “He died from the | injury. —.., For Wear When Traveling NA euitof this Kind is jaunty and comfort. | able. Blue Serge and Black Velvet were chosen for the Costume with Braid for dec- oration and Dimity and White Linen for the shirt-waist. Sach a toilette ts easily procurable for trem $4.d to $5.00 accontin to the fineness of the textures selected. OF this sum 6 cents pays for the Butterick Patterns. q Do Not Fail :- to viait our Dress Goods department where we carry a full line of goods well suited for has Serge Camel's-Hair, as. Our Trimmings coun- ters are also well stocked. The prices are reasonable and we feel sare we oan suit you. Our Corset Department _ Is replete with the very best fitting corsets made. Weshow sammerr corsets at Sicand sinisuorere-weinmtable ieoiiomanunnsctonmehi the camp who is in good standing | and wishes to go a8 a representa \ LS. Curley, a populist editor ot | tive is eligible and can get a certifi | Perry, Oklahoma, has been arrested | cate by applying to the commander by the government on the charge of | or the adjutant at Butler, Mo. | using the mails to blackmail the wife si |of @ prominent bauker of Perry, by | T. J. Carroll, a farmer living two | sending her threatening letters. The| miles east of Rockville, lost his year’s | blackmailing business wa3 slso tried supply of meat, including a can of | on several other prominent women lard, by theft one night last week. | ia busivess men. The thieves broke the lock to the | smoke house and carried off nine hame, five sides andacan of lard. Mr. Emmitt’s smokehouse was also entered the same night and a supply of his meat was taken. The which are unueually good. We also « have the Chicsgo Waist in summer style. When you want to be sure Your Hosiery is Good. Youshould purchase frem us. We show Misses ribbed hese, fast black. at Se, lie, 200 23. Tan colored at le, 150, 2 Oxdlood at 25c. Up to Date Styles in Carpets and Lace Curtains at the Lowest Prices. McKIBBENS. has all seams felled—has patent extension straps and is the equal of most overalls sold for T5c. Yhat we are selling a very good overall—mens—for only 29c, and the usual 25c “Brownie” overalls for children for only 19c. Notice our 19c and 38c Mens Work Shirts. You'll pay that much for the cloth in any store, and we save YOU the labor of making. Tell them we sell the regular $1 plow shoe for $0c and the “Selz” shoes fer only $1.25; and DON’T FORGET that we save you from 25 to 50c on every pair of Laties and Misses shoes over regular shoe stores, See our Ladies genuine Dongola shoes at $1.25. Note what an elegant shoe we give you for $2 in latest coia toe and gen BUTTERIC } Costume 8970 PATTERNS ! Shirt-Waist so51 Marshal Field, the great Chicago | merchant, when asked his opinion of the Dingley bill, said: “It is the worst tariff bill I ever saw; not only | as regards the rates of duty imposed, but in the complicated and ambigu- ee ous methods of imposing them.j - = SS enn ee — - — a age io the ted | Bear in mind the great victories Receiver Rinehart, of the Conk- at will not have to be interpreted | won in Iliincis, Michigan and Ohio, | jing B Banks, of Ver week. The busband of this lady was arect PE ot ee ns y by the supreme court.” la couple of weeks ago, are all ac- closed by the etate bank examiner, sent to the asylum Saturday a week . | credited to the d rath ago. The family is very poor and a | New York, April 19 —Mrs. Maria | Seat edt Ose ne COmOCr ANS petty some time ago, states he has the money ready to settle all claims person who would steal from them | —— age = SS Williams Bros. are s-ling a culti would not be worth recognition | damages from the ird Avenue | vated uncolored Japan tea for 35c, - ES among the most degraded demanncn | Street Railroad company for the | and a Mocha & pat coffee for 25¢ —~ the Se of — “1 the lower regions death of her father, General Thomas that is now the talk of Bates county. raeg eerste) ae ah ee t f Ewiog. Tbe General was knocked toloan. This is one instance where Evan Coleman, assisting his fath | down and fatally injured by a cable a receiver has done his duty faith- | fully and well. RARE SAAS The Rockville Reflex says some sneak thief stole about 5¢ bushels of corn from Mrs. Martin Kaufman last Everett Morilla, son of Charles Morilla, a farmer residing a short \distance east of town, and Mi-s Fannie Ellington, daughter of J. D. Ejington. a prominent farmer resid. er’s force of government surveyors | car on January 26, 1896 He was in the Indian Territory, met with a | formerly amember cf Congress from sad accident one day last week. Iv | Ohio and was a cousin of Secretary To Oust Rich Hill's Marshal. felling a {ree a limb struck him | of State John Sherman. Mrs. Martin Jefferson City, Mo., April 16— uine “Vici? Kid. Don't fail to see those Misses Dongela Oxfords at 50c and 65c. They are worth $1.00 elsewhere. See these goods and you'll not regret reading this ad” ee ss ee Oo hl across both eyes, completely de | sued for $50,000 damages. stroying the sight of one eye and it | is thought injuring the other so | badly it, will be impossible to sive | it Mr. Coleman was raised from a} son of W. P. Coleman, former su perintendent of the smelters. A Pair of Youthful Suicides, Fayettville, April 16—Two young | sons of John Hesson,livirg at Green boy to manhood in Rich Gill, was aj i laud, five miles south of Fayettville, j aged 9 and 15 yeara, con mmitted sui ing two miles north of Pleasant Gap, eloped to Harrisoaville We inesday of Jast week and were married. The {groom is about 19 years of age, and until recently was a student of the Academy. The bride is but 17 and a handsome young lady. The Times wishes them much heppiness and Attorney General E. C. Crow insti- tuted quo warranto proccedings in division No. 2 of the Supreme court this morning to oust the city mar- she! of Rich Hill from his offiee. The proceedings recite the fact that George H. Page, who was elected to cide while their parents were away | from bome, both took a bath, drese- ed in their best clothes, wrote notes | to their parents, pinned them on the the office at the recent municipal election, was a delinquent tax payer; that he owed the city taxes which he prosperity. Samuel Smith, who about two j weeks ago made a deadly assault on It is highly probable Butler will his step mother and her sister with Julius Heckadon is a new sub- teriber to the booming Tras. Mr. A. Shulenberger has address changed from Butler Prairie City. his | to} Mrs. Cenia Hoagland is a new wbscriber to the booming Truzs this week. John J Hammond. of Sprague, has bought the roller flouring mills at Rockville. Our substantial farmer friend F. | M. Fort, of Ballard, called yester-| day and renewed. | The New York chamber of com merce continues its warfara against the new tariff bill. S.C. Estes, one of our good sub: | seribers and prosperous farmers, | called and renewed. The new walk to the court house on the south side has been complet ed and it’s a good ove. The state board of equalization taised the assessed valuation of Jas- per county 20 per cent. Wilber Park, one of our prominent farmers will be a reader of the booming Tiwes hereafter. Sheriff Mudd and d>puties are busy serving papers and getting things in shape for the June term. A. R. Keeeer received the sad news by wire Saturday, of theserious illoess of his mother, who resides at Sandyville, Iowa. The fine weather for the past week has put the farmers on their mettle to get in their corv, and the | planter bas been clicking. Mrs. J. A Van Cleve of Marrinette, Wiecc nsin arrived in this city yeeter day evening and will spend several Weeks visiting her aunt, Mrs. Power Was entered by burglars Friday “Right, and goods and eurgical in- Struments to the amount of $200) Was taken. Dr Adame’ drug store at Richards : The parsovage of the Obio Street -E church is undergoing repairs, \ Andon this account Dr. Jones has} taken up quarters at the Lac'ede e| hotel for the present Hen ©. C Dickinson, ose of Clin- | ton’s most prominent attorneys and | democratic politicians, spent Mon | /® day in the city on legal business, and paid the Tres office a pleasant call. | Tres. | about Have you heard of the cheap prices Williams Bros. are making on their flour? The ministers at Mexico, Mo, have headed 2 movement to shipa car-load of corn to the famine dis tricta of India. W. S. Mudd, of Adrian, was in Butler Saturday end called on the Tiweg and renewed. Mr. Mudd had just returned from an extended trip through Washington and other western states. Read the adveriisements in the They point to the live, ener getic business houses of the town. In trading with men that advertise | you are alwaya sure of the best | goods and lowest prices. The following named gentlemen | were in St Louis the first of the | week attending a meeting of the Giand Commandery of the State: Capt. F J. Tygard, “‘W. W. Ross, “4 i 8. Crowell, O. D. Austin and E. Kipp It now looks like Nevada will get her long talked of electric street rail- way. The iron for the rails has been selécted and notice is given by the projectors that work is to begin in ten or fifteen days. The little eight year-old soa of Mr. and Mra. M T. January, of Ne vada, while playing with bis brother on Friday last, was thrown to the ground and in the fall sustained the fracture of both bones of the left | arm. Wm E. Walton left Monday even- ing for Hot Sprivgs, Arkansas, to visit his wife who has been spend ing several weeks at that place for | ; her health. His return trip will be through Texis, and he is to visit Port Arthur amovg otber plarccs ia that state. In trading with merchants who advertise, you never get old sta'e, shelf-worn goods. A bustling busi ness man turns bis stock over several | times a year and thereby ke+ps 2 | -upply of fresh goods on band all| Always trade with alive} the time. merchant. The graduating class of the pallic class of the publie s schoo!s for ‘97 | was banquetted at the residence of} Mr. and Mrs. George Carrutbere, | a mile west of town, Friday! evening last. excellent time, enjoying themselves | to the fullest extent. a corn knife, at their home near Hu mansville, Polk county,because Mrs. Smith refused to rent him her farm for another year, confessior and saya he wants to be has made a full them i in o heaven. the door, took strychnine and went to bed. Both died befcre their par ents returned home. bade the parents good by and ex pressed the hope that they meet The note left We understand the stock in the pro ject bas about all been taken and a meeting of the share holders will be held in a few days to fully consider details, settle on plans and begin The class had a most at hung for the crime. The bodies of both women were terribly hacked and mutilated with the knife. Bob Ingersol is losing cast as a) lecturer. His recent attempts at ridicule of Bible and the Christian religion in St. Louis and Kansas City, 18 termed by the papers as threshed over straw and uviaterest- ing to those who paid to hear him. Bob is fast becoming a back number. He is getting old, and in a few more years at best, will pass away and his body, with but few tears, will be consigned to the grave without re ligious consolation and the great orator will be forgotten in the on- ward march of a busy world, and perchance like other infidels greater in the world’s history than he, no taonument will be erected to ia his resting place. The People are Convinced When they read the testimonials of | cures by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. They are written by honest men and/ women, and are plain, straightfor ward statments of fact. The ‘people | | have confidence in Hoods’ Sarsapa- | rilla because they know it actually | and permanently cures, even when | other medicines fail. Hood’s Pills are the only ey ‘ take with Hood's Sarsaparilla. — and yet efficient. You Know Your Own Business But Let us Give You A POINTER That you'll have to be quick if you want to save money on your wnillinery bill; We cansave you 50c on every dollars worth you buy. A new lot of childrens hats and pretty flowers to complete the line, so you can buy all your bill of us. SOME PRICES. WHICH: TELL THE TALE. $4 50 HATS FOR HATS FOR HATS FOR HATS FOR HATS FOR HATS FOR HATS FOR ON DOWN THROUGH THE LINE. CUT RATE MILLINERY STORE eS SOUTH Postoffice. - work. The company will buy the Lewis block on Obio stveet and re model the buildings, putting the property in first-class condition for the purposes for which it is to be used. The location is admirable, the buildings are bran new, and a hotel at this point well managed would certainly be a paying investment We learn a gentleman who has had large experience in the business bas agreed to take the property when put in shape and pay a good rental investment. The case of C. P. Coleman, tried before Judge Dalton Monday to eetablish hia residence as to whether he lived in Bates or Henry county, resulted in locating him in Bates Mr Coleman owns about 260 acres of land in this county, near Johns town, and 18 aleo the possessor of considerable pereonal property. He isa batchelor and for years, owing to his helplees condition, bas made bis home with relatives in this and Henry county. It is also claimed that his mind bas become unbalanced, and that a short timeago he adopted a child to whom he has given or in- tends to leave bis estate. His rela tives who have taken care of him. we understend, cbject to this procedure and itis probable the matter as to 3 53 his responsibility to traneact busi z ness and dispose of hie property will yet be tested in the courts. Mr. Coleman is some 69 or 70 years of Leer » Boys » Long Pants MENS ALL WOOL SUiTS « Childs } $4, 11 $5, 11 $6, 2:87, 188 | WE ARE > HEADQUARTERS aa FOR GOOD CLOTHING AT : LOW PRICES --: JOE MEY ER: Work Shirts and up. Percale Shirts THE CLOTHIER Extra Heavy Socks 4 Pair Se. ac See Our NOBBY ¢ fone | $3.50, - $4, - BOYS $5, - $6, - $7. <4 plant, Andy, and may you profit by SPR ORR PEPE OE | the experience gained. i | | | AAA R RPA PPP PRRPBIN DLP RPP APA s The Best World. age and from parelysis or some oth er cause has lost the use of his legs and is helpless The lawyers inter- ested in the case are J.S. Franeiseo, Graves & Clark. T. J. Smith, of this city, aud C. C. Dickineon, of Clinton. Andy Hackett has laid aside the pencil, kicked over the paste bucket, laid off his coat and gone to work for the Review. A very sensible conclusion, after having given his time and telent toa lost cause and unappreciative party. Mr. Hackett was editor of the Bates County Ap peal, the ovly intelligent, energetic avd well edited populist paper ever published in Bates county. He be lieved in practical politics and op o~= ©! posed the middle-of the road, droutb, graeshoprer idea of running the cam ae | psigas when tke bins were bursting wihcorn. For ths reason the of 3 | fice seeking depar ment of the pop julist party gave him the marble heart 5 and being usabie to overcome the 2 | prejudice of the Fopu! ar evd of bis ‘le | party be submitted to 36 laws of | gravitation, and his paper fel! to the +e arth to rise no more In the de 5 of the Appesi 4 party bas lsat its est defender ) end brightest editor ¢/ was started in an urlioly cause, it} 2 died of ctarvation. A terrible warn Qiivg. Peace to the ashe: of your in the near future have another hotel. | did not pay until the day after he was elected to the office, and that the City Council issued him a certificate of election in clear violation of the ordinances forbidding anyone from holding a municipal office who isa delinquent tax payer. was taken under advisement by the court. The matter the populist | : | The Appeal! Genera S Appvd Has been given by the purchasing pub- lic of cur enterprise in placing before them a large and high quality stock of BOOTS AND SHOES. We shall continue. We shall even do better. Better opportunit- ies were ever open to would-be pur- chasers of shoes, be- cause our assort- ment is now unus- large and’ prices are very low. ually MAX WEINER. me

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