The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 18, 1909, Page 8

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These Clothes Look New | as Long as A suit that will look smart and hold shape until it’s worn out is worth 100 per cent more than one that looks shabby and out of shape as soon as the newness Isn’t that so? wears off. Clothcraft All-Wool Clothes will wear out in time, But until their /ast day, they will hold their snap and their style, They are stilfully and honestly made out of nothing but pure wool cloth, That's why they last long and look well as long as they last. Each suit carries a Signed Guaran- tee that insures you against disap- pointment, AMERICAN CLOTHING HOUSE One Price When a Man Leaves Missouri. Occasionally a good man grows dis- satisfied with Missouri. The milk is| too yellow, or the honey too sweet, and he doesn’t like them to flow over his landanyway. So he parts with his farm, sells his live stock and other things too numerous to mention and moves to Oklahoma. Then he takes | his good Missouri money and buys a farm which to-day is and to-morrow is | not, because the wind has blown it away. Or he tries Colorado and slushes around in mud irrigating a strip of bottom so narrow that a cow | can’t jump into the field, because she jumps over it. Then he hears of Texas and goes down to hunt the bag of gold at the end of the rainbow. In the daytime he scratches sand burs out of his horse’s flesh and at night centipedes crawl over his face. When his money is all gone he be- gins to feel like he did when ever he strayed away from home. He yearns for good old Missouri and the yearn sticks in his throat and chokes him until tears come to his eyes. He would give a month’s work to see the cows standing at the bar on his old Missouri farm and hear the horn blow for supper. Memory is a marvelous painter and paints the things that we like best. It pictures to the traveler the corn silk- ing in the field he once owned, the they Last And they cost no more than common clothes—$10 to $25. They are the ONLY guaranteed pure wool clothes at these prices im America, If every man in this town knew how good these wonderful clothes are, we would have to double the size of our store, You can find out how good they are today, Clothiers. clover stretching away in a carpet of red and green, richer than the rugs of Persia. It shows him the elms as they whisper to his children at play beneath them, points to the roses in the corner of the old fences and in infinite detail points a thousand things that touch the heart and its whimsical power. Happy is the man who wakes from sleep to find that he has wander- ed from Missouri in his dreams only. —Ex. If you use PUTNAM FADE- LESé DYES and are not satis- fied, we will refund your money one you free enough dye to m A “Freak” Law. If you should write a check for less than $1 after January Ist 1910, you subject yourself to the possibility of a fine of $500 or being imprisoned for six months in jail. Protests by the hundreads are being filed by mer- chants, retail houses of all kinds es- pecially those doing mail order busi- ness and all men in general, against section 178 of the penal law, which provides that no person shall make, issue or pay out any note, check, memorandum, token, or other obli- gation for less than $1 intended to circulate as money or to be received or used in lieu of lawful money of wheat yellowing for the harvest, the the United States. HADLEY AND WAR. NER AGREE ONA | PLAN OF ACTION. | The Senator Will Not Oppose the Re-Election of Walter 8. Dick- Committee. Jefferson City, Nov.—After a con- ference between Governor Hadley and Senator Warner, which lasted pretty much all of Friday afternoon and until nearly midnight, some def- inite potitical plans for the future were outlined. From what Governor Hadley said regarding the conference at his office, the following outline may be given: There will be no warfare between the federal and the state administra- tion men. Senator Warner willleave for Washington Friday, but will re- turn to Missouri shortly; and if Sena- tor Stone, ina public speech the lat- ter is to deliver here Thursday night of next week, undertakes to outline a Democratic policy involving the Tariff Law or state issues, Senator Warner will reply to him and the campaign will be opened forthwith. Senator Warner and his friends will not oppose the re-election of Walter S. Dickey. as chairman of the Republican State Committee and the active head of the campaign next year, Akins Must Keep Out. If Thomas J. Akins undertakes to defeat Mr. Dickey he will be told to keep quiet and enjoy the emoluments of the postoffice at St. Louis, or something to this effect. Senator Warner does not believe that there will be any opposition in the Republican party to his renomina- tion, and he will be ready to go into the fall campaign just as soon as Sen- ator Stone fires off his first political speech, which, as stated, will be No- vember 18. Governor Hadley has promised to take a part in the state campaign, but will largely confine himself to a dis- cussion of issues involving a public utility commission with state func- tions, a proper regulation of the liquor traffic and an improvement of the _ey as Chairman of the State/ Adrian Journal Notes. Melville Ward fell last Friday morning and his head struck a rock, inflicting an ugly wound over his right eye which caused him to take to his bed for a time. We are pleased to armounce that he has about recov- ered from the injury. — Mr. and Mrs. Sam Walls entertain- ed a number of young people at their elegant home on First street last Sat- urday night. They are royal enter- tainers and on this occasion they Mrs. Arthur Walter, who has been sick atthe home of her parents in Butler for the past three months, re- turned home Sunday. The many friends of this popular lady will be pleased to learn that she has almost completely regained her health. D. B. Reist dedicated his new barn last Thursday night by turning it over to classes Nos. 6 and 7 of the Metho- dist Sunday School and they held an oldfashioned husking bee: Those present, and there was a large num- ber, report a most enjoyable time. Mrs. Lydia Moudy, who was oper- ated on for the removal ofa tumor some weeks ago, is rapidly recover- ing. She is now able to: walk about her room and expects to leave the hospital in a week or ten days. Her friends here will be pleased to learn of her rapid progress toward recoy- ery and hope that she may soon be able to come home. Mrs. Cassie Kimball tired of living, committed suicide in Kansas City Sat- urday night. ‘We. know nothing of the cause aud have no desire to speculate. The body was shipped to Adrian for burial Sunday night and taken tothe home of her brother, Theo Banford. Interment was made Tuesday. We know nothing of the deceased, but know her brother to be a worthy gentleman and highly re- spected citizen. P. K. Wilson and wife have been visiting in Adrian and vicinity for the past week. They have resided in have sold out there and are moving to Montana, where they own a ranch undeveloped resources of the state. Apparently it is not the governor's intention at this time to discuss na- tional issues, save in general terms. He will leave these for Senator War- ner and others and confine himself largely to home issues. Republicans on the Offensive. It is the governor’s idea, and also the idea of Senator Warner, that the state campaigns should be made ag- lieve that the Democrats should be placed on the defensive right at the start, as they were in the last cam- paigh. Senator Warner believes that the protection afforded zinc and lead in measure party issue in Missouri. Why shouldn’t Mary have a ‘good time now and then with her . friends? — John’s dinner will be just as well cooked since a Mother’s Oats Fireless Cooker is in the house; it will be just as hot and steaming. Mary paid nothing for the Cooker; she saved coupons out 0 and other Mother's Cereals, and secured a $3.75 Cooker _ free. She’ saves 80% into the kitchen at all, and she of her goes isn’t forced to bend all afternoon over a hot stove; she arises an hour later than usual, and doesn't — to prepare fast. epare Mother's Oa + breakfast. gressive from the start. Both be-|st the new T: Bill will prevent that back the grain, have brought about a becoming much of @| condition wholly unlooked for by the y grain It is the understanding here that been affected. Minneapolis Senator Warner’s visit to the national be a capital at this time has to do with sev-| rate of $5,000,000 a week for’a short| ‘ering partner’s hands, sped collector time. The demand has now drop- were pleased to meet them. Kills Her Foe of 20 Years. “The most merciless enemy I had for 21 years,” declares Mrs. James Duncan, of Haynesville, Me., “was dyspepsia. 1 suffered intensely after eating or drinking and could scarce! sleep. After many remedies had ed and several doctors gave me up, I tried Electric Bitters, which cured me a8 ng Now I can eat any- . Tam 70 years old ge . get my Bg tion, fi of appetite, kidney frou, female com tic From Arc to Tropics PERFECTION Oil Heater ‘(Equipped with Smokeless Device} With it you can go from the cold of the Arctic to the warmth of the Tropics in 10 minutes. The new Automatic Smokeless Device prevents smoking. There is no possible question about it. greater: a more and a sure conversion of all the heat-energy in the oil. the heater and In a cold room, of heat 10 minutes you'll have a glowing heat that carries full content. : Turn the wick up as high as it will go—tio smoke—no odor. , In everything that appeals to the eater, with its new. automatic smokeless device, de» Perfection Oil cisively leads, Finished in Nickel provident and the fastidious, the or Japan in various styles. BOY ROBS BANK; ATTEMPTS LIFE WHEN CORNERED. Kansas Youth, 17, Aided by Lad, 15—Cashier is Shot in Jaw. Eudora, Kas., Nov. 15.—Driven to bay by an armed mob, Earl Bullock, the 17-year-old bandit of Lawrence, Kas., who twice within the last month has robbed the Eudora State Bank, murdered a policeman, shot another himself in an attempt to commit sui- cide near here Friday afternoon. paddies tsa his shooting of Fred Eudora State Bank with his day's cleari Accompanied by William McKay, 15 years old, of Jacksonville, Fla., Bullock held up the bank. Although hold-up, Bullock shot him through vers. The Young Man’s Chance. The betrayal of the public on the tariff question by the republican par- ty will mean the defeat of many con- gressmen and senators. Changes are likely to occur in districts strongly re- publican.as such changes occurred in 1890 and 1894. Now is the time for the young man to enter polilics. There ought to be an out and out tariff reformer nomi- nated by the democrats in every dis- trict and aspirants for the nomination should begin NOW and earn the Arkansas for several years past but] man and probably fatally wounded | nomination by an active canvass. Brass bands are not fecessary. Let the young men who have a taste for and will engage in the sheep raising] Bullock’s attempted suicide follow- | public life and an interest in the peo- business. Their many friends here|ed his second robbery. of the bank/| ple go out into the country precincts, call the farmers together, read the 8 platform and then the the democratic platform, pointing out the necessity for an income tax and then call attention to the income tax amendment, The people are sound at heart and Starr offered no resistance to the|honest in purpose. Let the work of education go on and success to the and am|the jaw. Snatching more than $800, | congressional aspirant who wins the and] Bullock fled, followed by his com-|nomination by proving his devotion panion. Each youth had two revol-| to the public welfare and his ability to deal with the questions now before lame back, its un- : equaled. ‘Only 50c at ‘4 T. ‘Chay's Harry Wilson, cashier of the rob-| the country.—Commoner. Minneapolis, Minn., Nov.—Farm- ers of the Northwest, by holdirig trade in banking circles. Money ped currency into the country at the —_ : bed bank, spread the alarm, and a Farmers Holding Back Grain. | crowd of citizens, armed with shot- guns, rifles and revolvers, pursued the boy bandits across the fields. to swim the Ka the boys lost ground, anda few min- of November and eat Quaker utes later the mob was at their heels. Gare ar'tnls month the suit ix McKay surrendered, Bullock, health and ‘ength the " pose wilt mean that oar nae snatching on, hale ith in the year will find them doing a patch of woods. is 382227. Try This in November, : Be if i ge connected with the pursalt, stepped the boy fired. His

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