The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 27, 1911, Page 5

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HA American Clo. QUALITY “THE DAYLIGHT STORE" ‘Boys’ a VE YOU LOOKED AT OUR ‘$10 Worsted Suits Evety thread pure worsted yarn, not a thread of cotton, and made up.in the latest styles. They are worth more money. nd Girls’ Shoes From One Dollar up ‘ BOYS’ SCOUT SHOES $1 75 and $2 Ficuse CORNER Mrs. H. M. Booth, of Rich Hill, visited in this city Tuesday. T. B. Fager made a business trip to Rich Hill Wednesday. Mrs. Ed. Culver and baby are visit- ing relatives and friends in Kansas City. : J. D. Allen, clerk of the Supreme Court, visited home folks the first of the week. Mrs. Ina Tiffany has returned to her home in Kansas City after a short visit in this city. Chas. W. McFarland and Harry Gough made a business trip to: Kan- sas City Wednesday. ARE YOU READY FOR YOUR SPRING, SUIT Step in and let us show you the latest styles. Men’s Pure Worsted Suits $10 and up Boys’ Nobby Suits ‘Long Pants $5 to $12 Jos. Murray of Amoret ‘is visiting in Florida. Mrs, J. R. Jenkins is visiting in Kansas City. Mens easy shoe—Black-Arnold. Dr. T. D. Bgooks of Amoret spent last week visiting in Kansas. L. S. Radford’ made a_ business trip to Ft. Scott, Kansas, Friday. Khaki pants $1.00—Black-Arnold. Joseph Blocker of Adrian has pur- chased an automobile. Mrs. J. M. Carter visited with friends in this city the last of the week. Khaki shirts—Black-Arnold. Dr. Floyd Bates of Adrian has pur- chased an automobile. ’P. C. Carpenter made a business trip to Kansas City the first of the week. Help double our hat sales this year. . Black-Arnold. Miss Pauline Crabtree has returned from a visit with relatives at Sprague, Mo. 16. H. L. Tucker has returned to ,| Kansas City after a short visit in this city. ° Buy the straight brim hats at Black- Arnold $1.50 to $2.50. Miss Elizabeth Duke, of Adrian, visited in this city the Isst of the week. Ed Bailey, of Elkhart, transacted business in Butler the last of the week. Oxfords $2.00 up. Black-Arnold. Major F. H. Crowell spent several days in Kansas City the first of the week, = Mrs. W. B. Dawson, accompanied by her little daughter, is visiting in Rich Hill. Work straw hats in abundance, 10c Black-Arnold. J.,W. Jamison, of Rich Hill, Hon. ansactea DUS Wednesday. O. M. Drysdale is putting a concrete walk in front of his lots on Main street in Amoret. Come in and get your size—19 work shirts at Black-Arnold. Judge R. B. Campbell went to Kansas City Tuesday morning to at- tend a Masonic meeting. Children’s Stylish Suits $1.50 to $8 Wash Suits 50c to $1.50._ one out. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. ‘Herrell visited the first of the week at the home of their son George in Adrian. B True blue work ‘shirts 50c. Try Black-Arnold. J. A. Messick, of Elkhart township, made a business visit to the county | store.—Merwin Clipper. seat the last of the week. . Mrs. M. J. Brady, of Kansas City, ‘is visiting at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. A. D. Brixner. We Sell the Best Dress- . ed Men in Butler The Butler ball team defeated the Archie team in a. hotly contested | Board of Pharmacy. game.Sunday by a score of 8 to 3. Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Stansbury, of Rey, J. A. Jarred delivered the ani- Johnson Stotts wascalled to Roche- | port, Mo., Thursday on account of the | versary address for the Odd Fellows serious illness of his nephew. _at Foster on Wednesday evening of You can’t go wrong if you buy a, this week. blue serge High Art suit, $10 to $25.| Arguments were begun Tuesday Black-Arnold. morning in the ouster proceedings A Kansas City Southern fence gang | against the International Harvester is overhauling the right-of-way fences | Company before the Supreme Court along the Amsterdam section. ee banc Mrs. Sam Walls returned to her! H.-A. McDaniel and Miss Lola Clark, home in Adrian Thursday after aj both of Nyhart, were united in mar- short visit with friends.n this city. | Tiage in this city Wednesday, April ‘Cass. /19, 1911, Judge B. F. Jeter officiat- Bring in your coupons and SAVE | ing, money. Black-Arnold. MERE aN tede ta taen en 5 . Mr. and Mrs. John Hider of Nevada ree — atid ii visited last week at the home of Mr. oe and Mrs. S. S. Williams at Merwin, || WANTED—To buy good driving ‘horse, buggy and harness for family Mrs. Emma Hoch, of WichitayKan- ,,... . sas, visited the last of the week at the | WORE ae eee home of her aunt, Mrs. W. F. Jack- | Bont | A. B. Argenbright and daughter, ‘| several days this week, and compli- Henry Crawford, of Speed, Mo., , was a business visitor to’ this city | mented The Times with a most pleas- | |ant call. Buy your suit of us and get a sujt home in Kansas City after a short visit here at the home of Chas. Ar- genbright. Pierce Hackett, of Amoret, wasa business visitor to this city Thursday and in accordance with his custom case free. © Sam Levy Merc. Co. | made The Times a most pleasant call. Arthur Waddell ‘came down from; Sedalia, the last of the week, for a short visit with his parents in this city.. ‘ : Mrs. Nannie Kash, of Johnstown, | visited the first of the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Coleman | of this city. i | All wool suits from $10.00 up, Sam Levy Merc. Co. Jesse Guage, of New York, N. Y. larrived in this city Thursday for a| visit at the home of Prof. and Mrs. L. | B. Allison. Miss Carrie Wright~has returned Mr. Hackett is Amoret’s new mayor. Harry Davidson received a message Sunday announcing the death of his mother at her home near Ft. Dodge, | Towa. He and Mrs. Davidsonleft Mon- | day to attend the funeral.—Adrian | Journal. . W. C. Knorp, of Pleasant Hill, vice | | president of the State Poultry Board, was in this city Saturday on business | connected with the District Poultry | | Show which will be held in th January 2-5, 1912. from very choice matings, $1.00 for fifteen or $5.50 per hundred. _—‘17-tf. from a week’s visit with relatives and friends at Kansas City and Inde- pendence. We are headquarters for popular priced clothing. Sam Levy Merc. Co, Mr—and-Mrs.i:—h ard;—o Madison, Iowa, came in Friday for a visit at the home of Lou Smith, south- east ‘of this city. The condition of Mrs. S. E. Norton who is seriously ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. C. B. McFarland ifi this city, is unchanged. Newton Dunn left Friday for Par- sons, Kansas, after a short visit atshe home of his sister, Mrs. A. S. Milhorn, east of this city. id Crawford fine shoes are-better, Sam Levy Merc. Co. Miss Mayme McBurney, of Amster- dam, is here this week helping in the millinery department of the Witter Nobby hats for men and young men. Sam Levy Merc. Co. Gaylord W. Vantrees has _success- fully passed hig examination as a reg- istered pharmicist before the State Boys’ knickerbocker suits from $1.50 to $7.00. Sam Levy.Merc. Co. will be held in the M. E. Church, South, May 8, 1911. Extra good music, inte and the best of preaching. You can’t afford to miss these meetings. Arrange to attend the entire conference. T. S. Pascnall, who has been in Humboldt, Kan., for several weeks taking treatment for a stroke of par- alysis he recently suffered, returned home Monday much improved, says the Amsterdam Enterprise. He was accompanied by his son, Ben, of Moran, Kan. A. R. Guyton, on Thursday, April 20, took possession of the Western Livery and Sales Stable which he re- cently purchased from Harley Smith. Mr. Guyton is a hustler in every sense of the word and will without doubt -| keep the establishment up to the high standard upon which Mr. Smith has placed it. Circuit Clerk H. O. Maxey Wed- nesday morning received the man- date of the Supreme Court in the case of John B. Egger, plaintiff in error vs. Error to Bates County Circuit Court, Drainage District No. 1, dis- missing the Writ of error and assess- Okmulgee, Oklahoma, left Saturday night enroute to Chicago after a short visit with friends in this city. Mrs. Robt. Atchison hag returned to her home in Archie after a visit Why Not You ? ~~. [sion and sdusual came in and CLOTHIER | his kick to the editor." - Mrs. Walter Hurst, of Kansas City, |ing the costs in the case against John visited the last of.the week with Mr. |B. Egger. rh en and the fam-| ir, and Mrs. J. H. Baker, of West tact: ¥ , |Deepwater, accompanied by Dr. The winner in the State song con-] Lockwood, went to Kansas City Tues- tést will soon be announced by the|day-for the purpose of consulting a Miss Celestine, have returned to their | is city children died sunday at their home, the Journal. The little one had been sick for several weeks and its death did not come as a surprise to the family and friends. Funeral services were held on Monday. Walter Matthews, one of the prom- ising young business men of our little city, was united in marriage to Miss Venetia Hoke at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hoke, in Joplin, Mo., Wednesday, April 12, at8 o’clock, Rev. Fumilliner, of that place,’ officiating.—Amoret Post. The funeral of Mrs. P. K. Hulse who died at the home of her daughter Mrs. Ed. Dalton, at Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, Tuesday, April 18, was held at the M. E. Church, South, of this city, Friday, April 21, 1911, Rev. J. A. Jarred officiating. Interment was made in Oak Hill cemetery. Judge Bruce’s brother, Adam V. Bruce, died at Salida, Colo., April 9th. The body was brought back to Pleas- ant Hill for burial, says the Adrian Journal. He was the youngest of ten brothers, and six of them and one sister attended the funeral, one living brother was unable to attend. The Bruce family originally consisted of ten boys and five girls, seven boys and one sister are still living. After the funeral five of his brothers and two nephews came to Adrian for: a brief visit with Judge and Mrs, Bruce. The body of Adam Bruce was laid to rest in the lot beside those of his parents. Insane Patients at Farmington “Victims of Gross Brutality. Farmington, Mo., April 24.—Citi- zens and officials of St. Francois county have so aroused over the gross mismanagement of the State Hospital No. 4, at Farmington, that they have adopted drastic resolutions condemn- tng the hospital management, and the cotnty court has notifed the board of managers that until there isa change in the management no further pat- ients will be sent to the institution, and that hereafter patients will be! sent to Fulton. | An investigation has been ordered | by the Governor. ‘ The brutal killing of J. F. Taylor, | an inoffensive and helpless patient | who had beeen sent to the hospitial for treatment, was the first of the; nine miles southeast of Adrian, says One of Mr. and Mrs.’ John Moles’} LABOR LEADER ARRESTED AS DYNAMITER OF LOS ANGELES TIMES BUILDING. Detective Who Made Arrest and In- vestigation Arrested as Kidnapper. Charged with murder in connec- tion with the explosion that wrecked the building of the Los Angeles’ Times, Oct. 1, 1910, causing the death of twenty-one persons, John J. McNamara, secretary-treasurer of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron ‘Workers, was arrested at Indianapolis Saturday at the organization headquarters and in company with others suspected with being implicated was taken to Los Angeles, Following is a summary of the de- velopments in the case up to date: Detective Burns and aids raid barn at Tiffin, Ohio, owned by father of Ortie McManigle and find between 300 and 400 pounds of dynamite. Indianapolis police seize books and correspondence of Iron Workers’ Union after breaking safe in head- quarters. ; Raid on home of mother of Mc Namara brothers in Cincinnati results in finding large quantities of electric wiring and other appliances. Burns in interview says arrests will clear up big plot and end “‘reign of terror’’ under which building con- tractors have been living for months. President Gompers of American Federation of Labor says “legalized kidnapping’’ of accused men is plot on part of capital to destroy unions; declares he knows the accused men |are free of any guilt. | Confession of Ortie E. McManigle |implicates two brothers and two oth- \er men in Times bomb murders. Prisoners are delayed on way. west by auto accident near Joliet. Police admit McManigle was sweat- ‘ed while held prisoner for a week in |a@ house in South Chicago. | A confession implicating four men and including the complete story of the wrecking of The Los Angeles Times building and the killing of twenty-one men on October 1, 1910, is in the hands of California authori- ties. The maker of the confession in addition to the Los Angeles explo- sion has told how he and the same four men have planned and carried out more than a dozen other bomb most recent glaring events that have | €XPlosions, resulting in the loss of brought down the wrath of the com- ‘Several more lives and upwards of munity on the institution. | $3,000,000 worth of property damage Closely following it was the case | —all the outrages being incidental to of Mrs. Anna Wells, a patient who labor fights. had been confined in the institution; Detective Wm. J. Burns was served /more than two years, who gave birth | With a warrant charging him with to a girl baby. The mother and in-| Complicity in the alleged kidnapping fant were taken to the county court} °f J, J. McNamara, secretary-treas- and told they would be better off in| Ure? of the International Association ithe county infirmary as the poor | of Bridge and Structural Iron Work- house at Farmington is designated. |€rs. Released on $10,000 bond. Harris Bissell and Pate Swain are | prisoners in the Farmington jail, held Barred Rock Eggs for hatching| without bond, ona first degree mur- der charge, pending their preliminary | hearing May 2. Mrs, A. S. Millhorn, Butler, Mo. = The Nevada District Conference | Butler Christian Church. Sunday, April 30. Bible school 9:30. ‘‘Young Mens’ Day.”’ Communion and preaching 10:45. | Found An Old Tax Receipt. T. C. Robinson, of Sprague, Mo., 'while rumaging in the basement of \ the court house some days ago found an old tax receipt which was issued jto John Daniels of this county in | 1844 or 1845. The receipt reads as follows: “Received of John Daniels 10 cts. Discourse topic, ‘“‘The Mighty Works of Christ.”’ Christian Endeavor 7 p. m. Evening sermon 8:00 p. m. Topic, “The Teacher with Authority.” WM. M. MAYFIELD, Minister. Township Assessors, Notice. The township assessors of Bates county are hereby called to meet in their annual association at the court house in Butler, Mo., at 2 p. m. on Saturday, May, 20, 1911. The county court will meet with the assessor's on that day and discuss questions of revenue of the utmost importance. Let every assessor of Bates county be present. H. O. MAXEY, Pres. Bates County Assessors Ass'n. 27-2t P. G. BUCKLES, Sec. USE JA ‘in full of his state and county taxes |for 1844, (Signed) Z. Isbell, Dep. Col."’ The receipt was writteh upon an excellent grade of paper, which although yellowed with age, showed origionally black, had faded to a dark brown. Fraternal Building Association Directors Elected. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Fraternal Building association, held in the Walton Trust Co. building in this city, Wednesday, April 19, the following gentlemen were elected directors: W. O. Atkeson, Frank Allen, T. C. Boulware, J. R. Douglas, J. R. Jen- kins, T. L. Pettisand Wm. E. Walton. P-A-LAC little evidence of wear. The ink, — On your Furniture, Floors, Wood Work, Iron Beds, Bath tubs, Radiators, Stoves, Willow or Reed Chairs— in fact every article of wood or iron. TRY IT. 20c TO 30c PER CAN GUARANTEED. ‘A. H. Culver Furniture Co. ‘

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