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Want a \ Pair of REGAL SHOESN —and so does every other well-dressed man here. They're the smartest shoes that money can buy—exact reproductions of expensive metropolitan custom models, They're made in quarter- sizes, giving you an exact fit. Regal Shoes are the greatest shoe values in the world—that's why we sell them. Let us show you the new Spring styles, Hiram Nichols Shoe Co Saved His Money. Lightning Damage Reported. Will Brown, a farmer, who lives, R. E. Hoover has just returned near Arlington, in this county, hada from an extended drive through the startling experience, and came out of country, settling up losses sustained it with credit, due to a rare presence by lightning during the rain and of mind, or else to sheer luck. Mr. thunder storm of a day or two ago. Brown was driving home after dark, He reports the following: and when he reached Bugg's bridge, The home of M. L. King, a few on Obion, north of town, he was hold-| miles south of town, was badly dam- ing the reins with one hand and had aged. A portion of the roof of the the other hand in his pocket clasping building was reduced to splinters, the a roll of money amounting to $19.5 Just then two negro highwaymen the building did not take fire. The commanded him to ‘throw up his family, in the house at the time, were hands,"’ and he promptly obeyed, but considerably shaken up, but no one when his hands went up, he clinched was injured. that money in his fist, and the high- M.S. Brown, residing five miles waymen never saw it or suspected southwest of town, lost a valuable that he had it’ They searched his horse, and had another badly crip- pockets and found 15 cents, which) pled by lightning. was all they got. When ordered-to| Mrs. Smith, of the country south, drive on you may be sure he lost no} lost two head of milch cows, anda time doing so.~-Clinton Gazette. number of other minor losses were A Missouri W. C. T. U. Home, | Settled by Mr. Hoover on his trip.— es : Rich Hill Review. Carthage, Mo., Sept. 13.—A home : es for old W. C. T. U. workers of Mis-| It is rumored that there is likely to souri was given to the state organiza. be another change at the asylum tion at the session of the annual con- When the new superintendent Dr. vention here by H. P. Farris, Prohi- Lamson, takes charge. Supt. Will- | bition candidate for governor of Mis- 8° appointed J. T, Reavley, former- souri in 1908, The home consists of ly chief of police of Nevada, super- a large hotel and grounds comprising fifty acres, known as Artesian Park, near here. supervisor may be appointed. Super- visor Reavley is said to have been loyal to Supt. Willson.—Nevada Mail. Another Car of Old Srearhe sa Glory Flour At the same old price--$1.45 a Sack Why not use the best when you can buy it cheaper than the inferior? Just received a new lot of crackers, only 6c by the box. é We have our corn husking goods in. We ’ have gloves, husking pegs, hooks, and mittens with pegs. We have anything you want for husk- ing corn. See our line. WP SONNE DOVE BURG SBN 6555s us ois cgcces bose pedebotevgoedoneaine Stove pipe 6 in. one end and 7 in. at the other, only.. + 7-in, stove pipe only.. oe oles Best corrugated elbows only re Pee a Py Re We have stove boards of all kinds and sizes. Brass wash boards 40c kind only,.................6. Sraeee Coal buckets of all kinds. bs Table syrup like others get 40c for, our price.............. Don't pay 60c for BEAR BRAND syrup, our price. 50, flue knocked down, ete., but luckily } LOOKING BACKWARD. Gleanings From THE TIMES Columns a Quarter of a Cen- tury Ago-Sept. 17th, 1884. We learn that a bank will shortly | be organized at Hume, with a capital | of $10,000. | The Democratic county convention | nominated the following ticket: Rep- |resentative, A. Henry; Treasurer, R. |S. Catron: Pros. Atty. W. 0. Jack- ‘son; Sheriff, W. F. Hanks; M. L. Wolfe, Surveyor; Jas. Bell, Public Administrator; Dr. E. L. Rice, coro- |ner; W. W. Denney, Judge South | . ays f | Dist.; W. H. DeJarnett, ‘ia North) No lady is likely to with- Dist. . draw her hand when she has Henry Livingston left Monday for| the pleasure of being watch- the Indian Territory to engage in the ed in that kind of a way. If stock business. Miss Laura Wood left Tuesday |¥°U have an idea of purchas- |morning for Omaha to visit her par-|N§ @ Watch or any other ents. articles of Mrs. W. F. Hanks visited her son | Jimmie last week at Osage Mission, Kansas. | | Harlan Turner and Howard Trimble have returned from a prospecting | tour through Kansas. | Alawn party Thursday night by va 3 : |Miss Belle Davis at the residence of| don’t run away with the idea J. R. Jenkins was largely attended. | that you can do as well else- | E. A. Ewing and Miss Ella Wil-|where as you can here | liams attended the Pleasant Hill fair) Whether you are a purchaser sas —_ ‘or not we will take pleasure | Quail are reported very numerous |. : |this year. jin showing what we have to | Amoveis on foot to construct a/ffer, You will be particu- ‘street railway around the public larly attracted by our large, square and to the depot by way of complete assortment in all | Ohio or Pine street. lined E. D. Kipp has accepted a_ position le jin the Bates County Natl. Bank as | bookkeeper. | Ove Harris and Miss Emma Etzler | were married last night at the resi- }dence of the bride’s parents, five | JEWELER ; miles northeast of Butler. | Watching Her Watch Inspector N. B. JETER MISSOURI WEST SIDE It PALI ay | S. B. Lashbrook left for a few weeks ATIP ON CENSUS PLACES. visit with relatives in Kentucky. | Miss Luella Dickey has accepted | the position of city telephone opera-|(jties in Missouri, Kansas and tor, | C. L. Mills, bookkeeper ir the | Oklahoma Where Examina- DOUBT DISAPPEARS. Real Estate Transfers. Warranty Deeds. Jas S Combs to Annie and Wm Y s : Arnold lot 5 blk 1 and lots 5 and 6 blk No One in Butler Who Has a Bad 2 Pecks add Butler $3,250. | Baek Can Ignore This Double A H-Jenkins to Mollie L Ives. west | é \2 lot 5 blk 8 Williams add Butler | Proo 1000. | ‘ Annie | Does your back ever ache? 2 Rd “ex ean hog Faak © *) Have you suspected your kidneys? «wich levee | Backache is kidney ache, AL & Elizabeth Cameron to Jacob) |.) ". : Powell lot 4 and pt lot 3 Harpers sub-| With it mopar yrds? a division of sec 26 Mt Pleasant twp| Sleepless nights, tired, dull’ days. $3500. : | Distressing urinary disorders. Ella M & C RHome to Fanny Hem-| Cure the kidneys to cure it all. street west 70 ft blk 29 Butler $2500. | Doan’s Kidney Pills bring quick re- Benjamin E Harrison to Thomas E | lief. — 3 Burris 120 a sec 32 Mingo twd $4000. | Bring thorough, lasting cures. Annie E & Wm M Arnold to Jas S| You have read Butler proof. Combs lot 2 blk 8 William’s add But-| Read now the Butler sequal. ler $2000. | Renewed testimony; tested by time. EW Stephens et al to Jared Aj Mrs. J. C. Crutsinger, 412 Adams Griggs pt sec 13 Rockville twp $500. | St., Butler, Mo,, says: ‘‘Doan’s Kid- Katie Lane to Geo Rapp & A H/ney Pills have been used by myself Gallup lots 3&4 and W 80 ft lot 5 and two other members of my family blk 1 in Pappinville $250. | with the best results. I doZnot hesi- George E Long to Fred Barton 80 | tate to recommend this remedy as a a sec 15 Howard twp $6500. |cure for pains in the back and other John S Robinson to John Mack pt! troubles caused by disordered kid- sec 14 Rockville twp $350. | neys.”” Mary Frank to Fanny Hemstreet| On Nov. 30, 1908 Mrs. Crutsinger W 1-2 blk 59 Butler $1800. j added to the above: “It now gives Farmers Lumber Co. to Thomas B/ me pleasure, two years after having Hall pt sec 33 Deer Creep twp $1500. | taken Doan’s Kidney Pills, to say J E Harper to N E Young N 1-2 lot | that the results they brought have 2 blk 7 Couche’s add Butler $735. been permanent. This remedy is GH Payton to W R Payton 1-2 int} occasionally used in our family and lot 8 blk 24 Amoret $200. never fails to bring the best reliefs’’ William Chester to Geo P Huckaby| For sale by all dealers. Price 50 lot 8 blk 71 Rich Hill $25. cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, G W Riffle to Gus Keinberger pt! New York, sole agents for the United sec 22 Mt Pleasant twp $800. | States. A W Nighswanger to L Cunning-| Remember the name—Doan’s—and Ra int 160 asec 34 Mingo twp| take no other. BG Mains to Arthur ‘Duvall part ‘ sec 22 in City of Butler $3050, Concerning Asylum Reports. W W Burrows to F HSteuck 50! After the disruptidh of the official acres sec 28 Prairie Twp $500. | management of State Hospital, in this Edward Lawrence to John W Van-| City, when the facts as could be best dyke lots 1, 2, 3, 4,&5 blk 4 Glas- | and fairly ascertained were given cow add Rich Hill $200. | publication, a Nevada correspondent Nancy Welcome to John Allison |f4 Kansas City paper has the un- lots 9 & 10 blk 28 Rockville $200, __| mitigated gall to assert thatthe state- JR. Field to John C Simpson 47 a| ments published in Democratic news- sec 5 Hudson twp $1. |papers that the trouble was caused Andrew G Anderson to W H Long) by factionalism is false. But every 80 a sec 36 Deer Creek twp $5400. |fair minded citizen, whether Demo- SeanT Yar vernal crat or Republican, when pinned Case of Telepathy. down to the solid truth, honestly visor, and the report is that another, Bates Co. Natl. Bank has severed his | connection with that institution to ac-| cept the cashiership of the Adrian | bank. \ R. J. Starke, county clerk has the tax books ready to turn over to the township collectors. | Marriage “of “a Popular Bates County Young People. Appleton City Journal | At the pretty country home of the |bride’s father, Alonzo Bellomy, a | well-known and influential citizen of | Hudson township, at high noon Wed- nesday, Sept. 1, 1909, Joseph C. Mc- |Elhaney and Miss Bessie Bellomy | were united in marriage by Rev. Dr. J. M. Carter, pastor of the Methodist Church in Appleton City, in the pres- ence of only immediate relatives and intimate friends of the two families. The marriage of this estimable and popular young couple is a source of much gratificatlon to a large circle of friends who have known them from tions Will be Held. Washington,September.—The Civil Service Commission has selected sev- en cities.in Missouri where’ examina- tions may be taken by residents of the state who are candidates for the three thousand temporary clerkships in the United States Census Bureau. } The first of the examinations will be given October 28, but no appoint- ments will be made until the first of next year. The successful candidates will be given work at from $600 to $900 a year and will be allowed to re- main in the service for from six months to two years. The cities in Milan, Sept.—A remarkable case at- tributed to telepathy is reported from Capua. A woman woke a few’nights ago in a terrible state of delirium. | knows such is a fact. | These ambitious Republican lead- jers are eager to gain control of the Republican ‘pie’ and have caused Calling her friends and neighbors she | this disruption at the state asylum told them that she had just seen an There is doubtless an honest differ- apparition of her husband, who for | ence among these gentlemen as to two years past has been absent in| the management of this great institu- New York. Hd appeared to her to | tion, but there is, above all this be lying ina hospital with one hand | scramble, a greater and paramount covering his breast, and he told her | interest—that of the state and its un- that he had been gravely wounded. A few days later a cablegram from America arrived informing her that her husband was dying, having been stabbed by an emissary of the black hand, Missouri selected for the examina- tions are: Kansas City, St. Louis, St. Joseph, Columbia, Jefferson City, Kirksville and Springfield. In Kansas the examinations will be held at Emparia, Fort Scott, Law- rence, Manhattan, Salina, Topeka and Wichita, and in Oklahoma at Ardmore, Enid, Guthrie, McAlester, Muskogee and Oklahoma City, Ten infancy. The groom is a son of Squire W. A. McElhaney, for a num- ber of years a substantia? aud useful citizen of Hudson and a young man who possesses a most excellent char- acter. He is industrious and exem- plary and worthy in every way of the love of the estimable and highly priz- ed young lady who is now his wife. We understand that the young cou- ple have rented one of Mr. Menden- hall’s neat little cottages in the south part of the city and will make their home in town during the winter at least. 3 An elegant ‘‘infair’ dinner was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McElhaney, parents of the groom Sunday. No Mail if Dogs Are Vicious. Washington, Sept. 13.—Mail car- riers are not years ago when the twelfth census was taken many of the clerks on the temporary roll were placed on the permanent roll and covered under civil service, but this will not be done in the case of the fourthcoming cen- sus. The Civil Service Commission announces that none of the clerks of this census will be eligible to transfer to the classified service. Why Is This Thus? When old man Dockery, the “watchdog of the treasury” turned over the reins of government, Mis- souri was out of debt, taxes had been reduced to lower figure than ever be- fore known in the state, many im- provements had been made and all our institutions were their affairs well administered:' Not- and} | fortunate wards. | It’s a pitiful spectacle to the people ‘of the state to see this great and | humane institution dragged into the |mire and muddy waters of ‘partisan | politics. —Nevada Mail. A FARMER’S PROFIT —_—It's-not at he is an easy way to save: makes but what he saves. Here Every building you paint lengthens its life and adds to the appearance of your your buildings by PAIN est on money invested Every gallon of Sewall’s Pure Liq you use increases your the appearance of your THE PRICE PER ACRE. Man farm. In lengthening the lite of TING them will save you inter- in new buildings. uid Paint savin, ¢. and also by: increasin; farm by painting, INCREASE: People are making for- tunes buying up old shabby-looking farms, painting up and selling them again at big profits. Now is an ideal time to paint—the wodd is dry and the weather not too hot. Paint before cold fall ra good investment. Weare selling Paint with Sewail’s Pure Liquid ins comes and you will make a Galvanized Corrugated Iron Roofing : that has the full we: square feet; No. 2 loads it; No. 28 wei, 85s weighs ans and have it in stock at all times. And remember we handle the r 100 We buy it in car best RUBBER ROOFING unloaded another that money can buy. We have just car and therefore have saved the middle man’s profit, factory, and saving to you We are selling the ~ are here all because in buying in car loads - direct from iso save local freight, whieh all y" Good, Old Acme Plaster the kind that never chips off or cracks, TEE IT to do the best work of any plastey rane We will be at the Bates Coun We will have something 8 inbereas yoo enone we our home is in BUTLER; ; and we WE GUARAN- terest