The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 30, 1905, Page 2

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ner. ! | | | I | { | | | | Getting Ready — —FOR—— opto We are straining every nerve to get our store in shape to display our immense line of HOLIDAY GOODS We need room. We have lots of staple win- ter goods you need. Letusswap? We will give you bargains for your money. We would rather have the room than the goods and you would rather have the goods than the money at the prices we are selling them, so come and get what pou need. Caps for men and boys 1-8 off regular price. Gloves for men and boys 1-3 off regular price. Some B-oken Lots of Mens Fine Hats. Fine tur stock good styles, but we are out of some sizes. The regular price was $148, 198 and up to 2.98, li you can find your sizs, you can get a bargain only 98c A SS Se SS BSBSBBeEFtBSeSQ—m Gast Values in Mens High Grade Pants, This line of pants are made better, look better and han any line we have ever looked at and you pay no more than for the ordinary kind. We have them priced to suit every purse 85c, 98, 1.23, 1.48, 1.08, 2.20, 2.48, 2.98 and 348, Ifyou need anything in the line, tt will pay you to look at them. fit bette PPP BP BS SSS SB SSeSGFenr Bargains in Rugs. We have just received a lot of rugs, and we find we haven't room to display them, so we have marked them to make a quick sale and get them out of the Way. - —_————— — - —— - Jute Rug 24x50 only 39c Jute Rug 36x72 only 73c oS 2 Brussels Rug 27x58 only 98c Smyrna Rug 20%x58 only $1.48 NICE FOR CHRIsTMAS PRESENTS. BBB ED BA BB BBB ADAM Underwear. The time to buy underwear IS NOW, while you can get wiuil liae of sizes. We posttively know that our underwear values sre not beaten by anyone, and sre fora head of the average stores. Childrens under- wear from 19 to 25¢ that are more than worth the mo Loates two niece anita, fine Eevptian ent. ton, shaped vests fuil size pants, unsurpassed values price each vests or pants 25¢, PQ PAB ELAS BBA BDBAB®_D® Childrens Union Suits. There is a reat difference in the way they are made. If you get a well made garment they are satisfactory otherwise they are not. Our childrens garments can- nat be improved upon. Good full sizes shaped like 50ec goods gussets, when needed best trimmings and buttons, A-1 in every particular, all sizes = 25c Ladies Union Suits. Good full sized garments 25c “Qneita” and other well known brands—the best that can be produced ail sizes up to 9 worth 65¢ Age Our price only PPS BSR SSBB OAGewr BBG SBP Rr Misses and Boys Underwear, Two piece garmente or union} suite. The kind that give satiefaction. Ifyou want to pay 25c we can please you. Ifa better grade is wanted we can Age BHOW YAU GSC VAlUCs Bt...s.ssserserersersereenseesseeseees Some odds and ends or broken sizes at half price. FBS SSS SSOeQOGQSoeGQG—m OUTING FLANNELS. We have sold five times as many yards of outing thie fall as lacs. Why? The reason is plain to us. Price and gnality are the cause, we have been giving real GENUINE BARGAINS 27 inch wide outings, heavy and fine excellent be dark patterns worth BC, OMMY.......svecessssereseens oe Full yard wide cream outing heavy fleece—a (0¢ grand bargain at the price ODly............---sssss0 Mill remnants or short lengthe—about 10 yards Qc in plece worth 12% ODLY.......:sssessessseceseererssseanersnenss ew et ee eae Big Bargains in Ladies Belts. All new styles and worth double the 95 and 35¢ Price We AEK.........06 sesesesssesenenseesseneneees You will buy if you see them. APB SBeSSeSeSeGee—m Now styles tn, tedtar GOllars and Neckwear, than ever. The most dainty creations REAL HIGH AKT. 25, 48 and 75c. PPPOE SB SS HODOABAOAS We have had so many, alter looking atound Blankets. come back and buy of us and tell us our blankets were the beet values, that we are they are. We buy convinced that peers || Governor Folk delivered an ad-| | drese over the body of John Clay, the prison guard, who was killed by con- | victs attempting to escape last Fri-| day, in which he said: “Manis born, | he breathes, be Ives and has his be ing, and he dies. In the brief journey ‘ across life’s span to eternity a mac = may achieve honor or dishonor. The deidiitiete greatest honor that & mam can at- tain is to die at his post of duty.|Four Convicts Led by This brave man, whose mortal re- mains this afternoon we return to Harry Vaughan, Dyna- mite the Prison Gates. mother earth, has achieved that dis- recreant to his trust and saving his - life, or being faithful to duty and to Escape Into the City and Are life of a coward. I would rather, far of Missouri, through the next gener- Killed. Deputy Warden and his life for his state, is now being laid greater eulogy than this cannot lx II, E. Spencer, Convict From Lutes County, Smuggled livein the hearts of a grateful people. | y tivetion When the desperadoes in their wanton break for liberty came upon bim, he had the option of being die, He chose the latter, ard he chose w:1; for it is better, far bevter,| — Ragaptured After a Run- to fill a bero’s grave than to live the a rather, tw this man in his grave than ning Fight. the richest man in all the world, with coward’s heart. I want the state teens be Two Guards and One Convict al assembly, to erect monuments here and ag Clinton, where the cour- ageous old Confederate, who gave Three Remaining Con- to rest, and on each of these monu- victs Wounded. ments I want inscribed the words, oman “He Died at the Post of Duty.” A paid to any man. I want the names of John Clay and Ephraim Allison to | I want their bravery to be enshrined {n song and story, though their bodies are in the dust.” in the Pistols and Dynamite. At 3:15 o'clock Friday afternoon four convicts, viz: Harry Vaughan, P John Blake, George Ryan and Char- from Kansas was convicted for the les Reymond, walked into Deputy second time in the United States! Warden See's office and commanded court in 8%. Louis on Monday morn-! yin, go throw up hishand, See at ing for appearing before govern: | sempted to draw his pistol and was ment department for pay. The Stat |. throe times. Two visitors were ute prohibiting that act was passed) in the office, who with the Deput; in 1864 and Burton {s the first Sen-} wegen wane marched to the a ator ever convicted under {t.. Since) cates, Gateman Clay had justopen- then Senator Mitchell, of Oregon, | 44 the inside gates to admita wagon. was convicted under the same Stat-|F. attompted to block the way and ute, Burton was found guilty on) 9... shot dead. The convicts rushed five eounts and court could sentence into the enclosure between the gates | iQ him to two yeare in the penitentiary | and puiledthegates shut, ‘They then and fine hin $10,000 on each count. | gamanded Col, See to open up the The case will probably be taken tO! big outside gates, which he toldthem the Supreme Court of the United }). was unable to do, but directed | States. Burton was ‘accused of 8C-) them to a side gate and asked that cepting a fee of $2,500 from the} it he opened, when Captain Ephraim Riaito-Grain and Security company | ajiigon appeared, pistol in hand and to use his influence with the Post | demanded the convicts to surrender Joseph R. Burton, Senior Senator office department. The Senate seat | -pyo. food and Capt. Allison fell dead is vacated without actton of the Sen-| picy thon hastened to the big gate ate. and dynamited it. vhrough the opening aud began fir The st everyupdy in sight as they meets ii Jefferson City December 27-| made tor the Mo. Pac. Depot. Col. 29, Tho program {gs attractive. | See seizad a rifle from a guard, and Frm two totive each afternoon] being reiuforced by u guard named | twélve departments will hold sessions | John Burner, gave parsuit and ac offering every teacher opportunity | tively engaged the convicts in a run to take part in discussions of prob-| ning fight. They succeeded in killing lems in which he is specially interest-| Hiram Blake. The convicts when ed. Gov. and Mrs. Folk will tender|near the depot came upon a farm the teachers a reception at the Man-| wagon driven by Orville Lane. This sion on Thursday evening, December | they captured and keeping Lane be- 28, Arrangements have been made | tween them aud the pursuers, started for reduced railroad rates and teach-| west through the city. They had ers will be entertained !n the homes] goneabout six blocks when Vaughan of Jefferson City at nominal cost. | was shot through the hand and lost Every teacher should take advan-|hisgun. They then surrendered. tage of this opportunity tosee the} Harry Vaughan was a desperate public building, penitentiary and|criminal. He, with three others, held other places of interest in our state/up Conductor Trickett’s train at capital. Nassua in 1895, shot Trickett in the face and robbed the train men. For this they were given ten years sen- tences. On his release Vaughan went to St. Louis and in less than a year had a fight with detectives, in which three of the latter were killed, and Vaughan was convicted and sentenc- od for forty years. Ryan sent for Warden Hall Mon- day night and confessed to him thas H. E. Spencer, eent up from Bates county on the charge of having bur- glar tools in his possession, and who finished his term on Nov. 9th pro- cured the pistols in Kansas City, went to Joplin and stole the dyna- mite, returned to Jefferson City in the night and climbed ‘the peniten- tiary walls with tbe aid of an 18foot ladder, and concealed the weapons and explosives under Vaughan’s a bench, according to plansmade before Spencer was released. The plot embraced the blowing hole in The States Teachers’ Asscciation fing ut 9 0 They rushed 0 A A blast in an excavation for the Scarritt estate on Grand Avenue, in Kansas City, on Monday morning, killed Andrew Knight, a laborer, who had been placed on 9th street be- tween Walnut and Grand Avenue, as a guard, and several others were more or lesa badly injured. Knight was struck by a rock nearly the size of a water bucket, part of his head carried away and he was killed in- stantly. He was telegraph opera- tor, not over 19 years of age, andhis home was in Detroit, Mich. He had been in Kansas City only a short time and failing to secure work asan operator, he went to work for this contractorasa common laborer only four hours before he was killed. Marehall Field, jr., who was shot ina mysterious manner Wednesday of last week in his home in Chicago, died at Merey hospital in tbat city | the prison walle, a rush to the Mo.| For on Monday evening. Circumstances Pac. tracks, where an engine was to indicated that it was s case of at-| be seized, ran over the Morean river tempted suicide. But Field denied} anda bridge blown up to prevept thie to the end: and claimed that it| pursuit, then the convicts would take was sn accident. His wile and fath-| to the hills. } ,er, o> merchaud prinve, was ia New| Governor Folk offered $800 for Million Women Sign Paper Philadelphia, Pa., November 27.— | mon hierarchy bas broken the A meeting of the executive commit- tee of the National league of women’s organizations, formed two yearsagu to onoure the contiauance in the United States Senate of Senator Reed Smoot, of Utah, was held here. Wo- men from all sections of the country ‘| were present. We have consigp- ed tous to sell at once 12 NEW HOME sewing machines, The Ruby 5 draw. er drop head, fine oak woodwork Bull bearing” and the highest running machine made, Agents price $25, our price $19.00. New Ideal 5 drawer drop head, sweel . front, golden oak wood- work, ball bearings New Ideal price $35 our price $25.00 No. 1 New Home, No. § 119 fine golden oak wood & work, drop head, ball bear- ing, all parts adjustable * and interchangeable, the highest running machine New Home price $45 our price $30.00 No. 2, New Home 118, sweel front, fancy carved, made. ball bearing, all parts adjustable, the best machine they make, automatic lift head. New Home price $65, our price $35.00. We will sell these ma- chines one-half down $5.00 per month till paid for. They must be sold in the next 15 days. Best attachinents with each machine. Don’t pay agents two prices, when you can buy the best made at wholesale prices at Skirts and Cloaks. At greatly reduced prices we must clean these out to make room for other GOODs: $12 00 long cloaks at. 15.00 long cloaks at 8.98 30 inch tan coat.. 7.98 30-inch in castor No collar... 4.48 27 inch black coat.... 6.48 27-inch black boucle. 2 48 27-inch black coat... ise A few broken sizes at 50 and T5e School cloaks, the finest line in the town prices from.... +++. $1.50 to $5.00 These are reduced ices. LADIES READY-10. WDAR SHIRTS just received 75 new skirts, few fancy plaids at for every-day wear __Bb..... i A few tan colored skirte. 2.50 Few black brocaded at.. 2.50 Few fancy check skirts a: 3.00 Big line black brocades Ab........00...ceccsesecsecseeees 3.00 Big line black brocadee at..... $3 50 and 4.00 : Few odd skirts at cost to close out. Few extra sizes 28, 29, 30° and 32 waist measure, we are showing a atrong line at 6 small price. YOUR BUTTER, CHICKENS AND EGGS will buy anything in our houee, or we will pay you casn for them. f : REDUCED PHICES ON 3 ANY LINES OF GOODS. eooosoooooscocoocoooososososss The memorial will state “ches Smoot has never raised his» against these doctrines, and the Smoot’s Removal. nant which it gave to the States when stutehvod: was ed.” | The petition has been signed 4 nearly a million’ women, Roget : Presented by a senator from each. state. A letter was read atfator dey’s meeting from the Womenis, American Clab of Salt Pity, Rates ee Mormon It was announced congress

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