The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 15, 1903, Page 5

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)

Special Cloak Sale. Satuyday, Oct. 17th, one day only, ‘our New York cloak man will be here without fail with $helr full line of Indies and misses cloaks, capes and furs. Don’s forget the date OCT. 17 Good Clothes At prices otheré ask for the © ordinary’ kind you should visit the old reliable AMERICAN. @ |scatacit dss chaditencunc year. A little two old child of Mr. It is @ pleasure to us as well year aa to our customers to show Fry, in Deepwater township, got hold the kind of Clothes we do. - of some medicine tablets, which con- Tailors Fit shortly afterwards before mecical Ready-to-wear prices aldcould be summoned. Funeral Ten to Twenty-Five Dollars, services were held Monday. There will be a yotng eonverts reception of the converts of A. B. Hobbe meeting at Spruce, Tuesday evening Oct. 27 at the hall and the churches. Services begin at 7 p. m. A special request that all new con- _| verte be there. By order of com. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. McFarland went to Foster to see Mrs. McFarland’s father, E. P. Mille, who is quite ill at his daughter, Mre Cass Mills’ home. Mr. Mille ig partially paralyzed and hie extreme age makes his recovery very doubtful. Jeff Herndon, one of Howard town- ship’s prominent young democratic farmers, was @ pleasant caller while in the city last week and favored us with a renewal. Mr. Herndon owns a fine farm near Hume, has it well stocked and is prosperous, W. F. Hill, of Hill's Cash Store, one of Butler’s live and energetic merchants, has returned from Kansas City, where he went to purchase goods. He is offering this week a line of bargains in the different de- partments of his store, which cannot be duplicated in this county. Uncle Joe Smith, our highly es- .| teemed old friend, of Walnut town- ship, was in the city the last of the week on business before the court and did not forget to call and favor us with a renewal, which has been his custom for the past twenty years. J.8. Franklin and Charley West, two of Walnut township's progres- sive and influential citizens, were pleasant callers the last of the week and favored us with renewals. Both these gentlemen were early settlers and assisted materially in building up that section. $5.00 to $25.00. @BAARRR Renn 2 2s oe Overcoats. For the smallest boy or largest man. TWO TO TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS. We also show the strongest line of Mens and Boys Shoes In Bates county and make LOW PRICES. Nothing but a square deal offered. Our guarantee of satisfaction insures you against any risk. » Ha |AMERICAN | GOOD CLOTHES § CLOTHING HOUSE. § suor STORE, Mn and Boys Outfitters. % STORE, One Low Price to all. you. Come and see them. 98¢ to $25.00. Our new Furs are inand are more beautiful than ever. There are many of the beautiful fox scarfs in the lot which is a very stylish fur, and we have marked them . VERY MODERATE in price for quick selling. Come and see them. We also show a line of infants cloaks 75c to $6.00 and childrens cloaks from to fit age 2 years up. tay" We take grocery orders same as cash. McK! BBENS. Lowest prices for good goods. Tmaxs’ Telephone No. 37. Pens ‘oil eloth and linoleum at TEE Wninsticicirinminninrancerenenpaniemmcemenenn | MORONS, New golf gloves at McKibbens. Mr. and Mrs, Joe Meyer left for St. , It you want GOOD shoes get them | Louis on Sunday. Mr. Meyer will | at \ cKibbens. buy goods, while Mrs. Meyer will visit Ducks are in and good shooting is | 'elatives in St. Louts and in Illinois, reported on the Butler hunting clubs! spjeudid work shirta for 50cat Mc- reserves, at Camp Patterson, near Kibbens, jyhart. Four show cases for sale at Mc- ibbens. Elmer Voris, who is holding an im. portant position with the coal com- pany at Amsterdam, was in the city last week on business. He was hay- ing some trouble with his men and was afraid of a strike. We acknowl- edge a renewal through the courtesy of his sister, Miss Nellie Voris. $2.50 to $10. Thomas Wood sends us renewal} tor his paper. He is at Oklahoma City, Okla., and is doing well, which his many friends here will be glad to Our Misses Cloaks are made with the same care as the ladies. Cut full to the size, Stylish materials and the best cloth ever put in J. 8. Hemstreet,-a retired business man of Delavan, Ills., is visiting the family of his brother, Judge W. F. H.C. Lyons, a prominent farmer and stockman of North Vernon, in Hemetreet. Good window shades and curtain| sompany with James Park, made us cloaks for the ong asked. 15¢ grade silkoline 12Ke at hey Tee a pleasant call on Monday. Mr. Cloaks to Fit Age 2 up. bens. Jobn B. Armstrong will have aj Lyons is a breeder of the Duroc hog A beautiful line silk embroidered and had been out to see G. W. Park and Son’s fine herd. They traded back and forth to improve their breed. Mr. Lyons was much pleased with the Park hogs. D. D. McCann, deputy sheriff of Bates county, was commissioned by Governor Dockery Second Lieutenant and Battallion quartermaster of the 2nd Regiment N. G. M. He is detail- ed on detached duty as quartermar- ter at Brigade headquarters. Dike has acted as quartermaster at sever- alencampmenté and is familiar with the duties. Heis a rustler and will make most excellent man for the to report, is much improved at the office. time of going to prees. She has been Our old friend C. W. Smadding, of very sick for several days and her . W. ‘ Walnut township, brought to our — ones Ganges AF Sh ae sale of bis stock and personal effects on the 28th of this month. Watch for his bills and advertising. Chas. LaFollette and family have Infants cloaks, 7T5c to $6.60. returned from Siloam Springs, Ark., and will speud the winter in Bates ( Bqounty. Mr. Walton will leave ina few days ie for the east. He will join his wife in cabo a new bested Boston and together they will go to ; Vermont where Mr. Walton hassome T. H. Nicholson, wife and a business interests to look after. ter, Miss Winniford, of Toulon, Ll's., are visiting O. H. Heinlein and other ae po hg suite, extra relatives in the city. er . Frank Trone, who was so badly Another new jot of fine woolen un- 4 derwear for women $1 atMcKibbens | 2¥"t in the football game, we are glad to report, is considered out of Our esteemed young friend Art L.| danger. His father and slater came Gilmore, who is serving on the petit | from their home in Arkansas thelast jory from Deep Water, favored us | of the woek. with a renewal. Ladies union suits 25c, 50c, 75c, Mrs. Maggie Gibbs, 8 poor widow | ¢1, 1.95, $1.50, $2 at McKibbens. ‘with small children, advertises for washingandironing. Sheisaworthy|, Mrs. Cora Blankenbaker was a north approach to the Osage river woman and deserving of patronage. - pleasant caller on Saturday and fa- Chiet among the social functions of | bridge north of Schell City, shall be ; ‘ vored ue with a renewal. She is con-| low le, on|the week was a reception given by| kept up by Bates county, while the — om a ne -_ " templating a visit to an aunt in San ; south approach will be looked after k: Antonio, Texas, at an early date. by Vernon county, the main span to be cared for by the courts jointly.— pction guaranteed. Mrs. Maggie he ye aig ct their lady friends. The rooms were| Nevada Post, 8th. ° Gibbs, fret street south of Ft. Scots, |‘ vest 9 os ,|bowutitlly decorated with vinesand! 1 Bevington and Mise r John Ford’s residence. 50-3t . Bevingto = Clara Endres were married last Fri- Grant highly esteemed : i day morning, at the home of her ro henpew ed 2th. ‘ r aunt, Mrs. Louisa Endres, by Probate McKibbens. Mie i Grocery Orders Taken Same as Cash. We are placed mate: obligations to Presiding Judge Jno. W. McFadden for the report on the Bates county poor confined in the asylum at Ne- vada. The Frisco will build a 500 foot spur from the coal switch to the I. E. Mitchell farm. J. G. Holland and F. E. Mitchell will sink a coal shaft | on the latter’s farm. About 40 car the two mines.—Hume Telephone. courts held a joint session Tuesday night in which it was agreed that the ~,|and daughter, Mrs, H. C. Clark, left} W. B. Tyler was in the city thelast | Judge Jno. A. Silvers. The wedding ‘| she first of the wek to join the W.R {of the week having a doctor examine | was @ surprise to the relatives and Hearst party at Kansas City for a|his hand, which was badly ewollen | friends of the contracting parties. New Mexico] caused by a cat scratch. Mr. Tyler| Mr. Bevington is the son of 8, G. Bevington, recently in the real estate = j CERT few days before, but the wound was | business and now looking after his Snes abnoediod friend J. W. Min. hood. Yur. Hearst has invited a|so slight that he had given it no at- | father’s large landed interests in this number of es .and Con-_| tention, until his hand and arm be-| county. The bride is a pretty and gan to swell and he suffered consider. | charming young lady, daughter of boom|able pain and it itched constantly. | Mrs. Jno. Endres. Tas Trxs joins Tus Tricks sincerely trusts that no| their many friends in congratula- serious results will follow. tions and best wishes, The new Prince Albert and Box Coats are here and are very hand- some. They are priced from $5 to $25. Our Cloaka are without question the most stylish made, the best fitting and the best val- ues in the county, They areman- ufactured in the largest and best factory in the country and by union labor. We do not offer a single sweat shop garment. We mark each garment in plain fig- ures and eell them that way. You do not help pay for your neigh- bors cloak. More satisfactory to Orders For Special Fur Garments Taken. Misses and Childrens Cloaks, Come and Visit our Cloak Deparment Mrs. George W. Ellis, we are glad | loads per day will be shipped from | The members of the High School foot ball team have very wisely dis- banded for the season. The deplor- able accidents at Appleton City two | Weeks ago, where two of our boys were badly hurt and one not yet out of danger, threw a damper on the game, as it should. The science in The Vernon and Bates county|the game, where strength, activity and skill should win, has been dis- placed by brutal force, and the ob- ject of the players now seems to beto knock out your opponent, even if you have to maim or cripple him. As the game is now played, It ia brutal, debasing and should not be encouraged. Prescott, Arizona, papers received at our office speak of several large mining deals which have been man- aged by Ed. 8. Campbell, an old But- ler boy, who is now operating in that country. The Arizona Journal-Miner- speaks of Mr. Campbell as a thor- oughly reliable business man and practical miner with largeexperience. The property which Mr. Campbell ia now handling promises large return. He has interested eastern capitalista and the operations will be carried On an extensive scale. Ed. Campbell has many friends here who will re joice in his prosperity.

Other pages from this issue: