The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 24, 1912, Page 7

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No other line is in the All-Weol Clothes Remember 1910. A Democratic ballot is a vote against high taxes. March with Major and you will win with Wilson. Black & Arnold Clothing Co. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Allison visited near Adrian Saturday. Dr. E. N. Chastain made a profes- sional visit to Kansas City Tuesday. E. C. Vandervoort, Mo. Pacific Agent transacted business in Nevada the first of the week. More overalls 75c, Black-Arnold. | A delightful social session of the Yeoman lodge was held Thursday night. Jersey sweaters 50c, Black-Arnold. J. W. Baker of Rich Hill was in Butler Saturday on a business mis- sion. | 50c Mens Sweaters, Black-Arnold. Mrs. Jessie Ray left Sunday for Kansas City whyre she will join her husband. . Cravenettes $10 up, . Black-Arnold. Miss Clara Hif’of St} Loulé, is en-| joying a visit here with Miss Virginia Lampton. Overcoats for all, Black-Arnold. Frauds in the city are no worse than indifference in the country. The results are the same. Chas. W. McFarland of McFarland & Sons transacted business in Kansas City the first of the week. Boys underwear 50c, Black-Arnold. Mrs. Ella Price of Los Angeles, | California, is the guest of the family of George Price. Flannet shirts $1, Black-Arnold. John Lawson arrived in this city Saturday after an extended trip through Oklahoma and Texas. Boys shoes, suits, Black-Arnold. Talmage Crawford and family are enjoying a visit here at the home of Dr. T. F. Lockwood. Boys sweaters 50c, Black-Arnold. Mrs. T. W. Arnold delightfully en- tertained the Priscilla Club Wednes- day afternoon. : Blue Serge suits, Black-Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Ray are the proud parents of a fine boy, born Friday, October 18, 1912. E. B. Silvers of Kansds City was here the last of the week attending to professional business. u “THE DAYLIGHT STORE” same class. Warm Gloves 50c up, Black-Ar- nold. Judge C. A. Denton has returned to Jefferson City after a visit here with home folks. Heavy work shoe, Black-Arnold. Mrs, Henry Eiler has returned home from a visit with Mrs. O. W. Fairchild in Kansas City. Miss Allie Hurley has returned to Kansas City after a visit here with the family of W. F. Rosser. High cut boots, Black-Arnold. A.M. Frazier of Adrian, accom- panied by his daughter, visited in this city the first of the week. Mrs. Ina Tiffany of Kansas City, arrived Saturday night for a visit here with relatives and friends. Rubber boots, New, Black-Arnold. John Griggs of Rockville has sold his blacksmith shop to a Mr. Craw- ford of Leesville, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Marriott of Rockville are enjoying a two weeks’ trip through Oklahoma. Fall Stetson hats, Black-Arnold. Disfranchisement in Missouri would be a proper sequel to the frauds com- mitted for Taft in Chicago. Miss Kate McGaughey has returned home from a visit with relatives and friends in Kansas City. Mens Caps 50c, Black-Arnold. R. D. Radford, of near Spruce, transacted business in the county seat the latter part of the week. Jas. A. DeArmond and family are enjoying a two weeks’ visit with rel- atives and friends at Liberty, Mo. Heavy underwear, Black-Arnold. Candidate McKinley has not yet ex- plained why he tried to abolish the state factory inspection department. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Holland and Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Watkins of Ap- pleton City visited in this city Friday. Boys overcoats, Black-Arnold. H. J. Travis, proprietor of the United Drug Co., made a business trip to Kansas City the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Elliott are at- tending the General Baptist Associa- tion which meets in Kansas City this week, Boys caps 25c, 50c, Black-Arnold. Mesdames E. T. Dawson of Hume and Geo. Craig of Rich Hill are guests of the family of W. B. _Daw- son. ‘ You had just as well get the best when it costs no more. FOR MEN. Guaranteed all wool and to give satisfactory service... Klosed Krotch Union Suits Hole Proof and Phoenix Hose for Men and Women WE SHOE THE FAMILY ALSO. American Clothing House Family Outfitters. Wooltex Suits for Women Made of strictly all wool fabrics and Guaranteed to Give Satisfactory Wear Two Full Seasons $10 up Clothcraft | Hart, Schaffner €» Marx AND CLOTHCRAFT CLOTHES ‘Copyright '312. The Hi Black Gp ‘Mahan of Wookes Carmen * C. H. Letton, of the Carpenter & Shafer Manufacturing Co., made a business visit to Kansas City the latter part of the week. Boys school pants, Black-Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Chas Flickinger of east of the city are the proud parents of a fine girl, born Monday, October 21, 1912. Go to Cagley & Turk for horse- shoeing.—Advertisement. 52-tf It would be interesting to know just why McKinley voted against that eight hour bill. But McKinley will) never tell us. | M. C. Wilcox, 0. W. Smoot, E. C. | through Oklahoma. day for Creighton where the former with a mercantile house. Queen Quality Shoes All colors T. W. Fisk Wm. Ciggell of Adrian, one of The Times staunch friends. of northern Bates was in ‘the city Tuesday and made us a most pleasant call. The only sure way to defeat that single Tax Amendment is for every country Democrat in the state to go to the polls Nov. 5th and vote against it. of the bank of Adrian. Mr. Allen is a gentleman of exceptional ability, is conservative and is an excellent busi- ness man. : Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Cannon, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Day, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Warnock and Major and Mrs. F. H. Crowell drove to Pleasanton, Kan- sas Sunday. Queen Quality Shoes Never wear out T. W. Fisk Major’s pledge of good roads is backed up by his record. Through his activities as Attorney General he has turned more than $100,000 into the good roads. day Sunday school convention Tues- day, October 29. All those who are interested in better Sunday schools please attend. Prosecuting Attorney W. B. Daw- spoke at Windsor Friday night and at Deepwater Saturday night to large and enthusiastic Democratic audiences. Mr. Dawson reports that he was royally entertained. Mens Suits and Qvercoats $7.50 to $25.00 Boys Suits $2.00 Reliable Clothes —Low Prices. JOE MEYER, the Coie. and Overcoats $5.00 to $15.00 Childrens Suits and Overcoats to $8.00 Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Mills left Mon-| ry.” Miss Geneva Keeser has resigned her positon as cashier with the, Nor- fleet & Ream Grocery Co. on account of ill health, Miss Alma Wyer will succeed her to that position. Q Every ueen Quality Shoes Always fit T. W. Fisk Democratic Congressman | running for re-election in Missouri voted for tariff revision bills which the poor; would have reduced the cost of liv-| squealing and who can win without | bragging; who is considerate of wo- | ;men, children and old people; who! ing $650,000,000 annually. Queen Quality Shoes All new styles. T. W. Fisk The Globe-Democrat has set up its biennial screech about prosperity. | Some people always get prosperous 'as soon as the Republican campaign fund begins to circulate. Hon. Wallace Crossley of War- rensbnrg was in the city Wednesday and delivered a highly interesting talk on state and national issues to la large audience at the court house. We acknowledge a pleasant call. It was the Democratic party that | Feduced the state tax levy from fifty | cents to fifteen cents on the $100.00 | valuation. And it was a Democratic |precedent which Hadley sought to overthrow when he tried to treble | the taxes. Wm. Satterlee, well known in this city, died Tuesday morning as a re- | sult of breathing the dust from ce- ‘ment during several years work in | building concrete sidewalks, the con- {crete dust hardening in the lungs. |Heis survised by a wife and five children.—Adrian Journal. Jim Sheern is an efficient assist- ant to J. Emmet Hook in the man- agement of his modern ranch north \of the city. He states that he has a good job and likes his ‘‘boss’”’ mighty well. Jim has the reputation of be- ing a very industrious young man so this is apparently one of the in- stances where both parties to an agreement are fortunate.—Rockville Booster. Here’s the Nev’ York Sun’s de- scription of a gentleman: A man who can lose without ‘is too brave to lie, too generous to cheat, and who takes his share of ‘the world and lets other people have Let the people be warned in time. | theirs, | Krapp, Clarence Howard and Nels! McKinley is running as a ‘‘wet’’ can- Wysong left Tuesday for a tripjdidate in St. Louis, while in the pro-|. : hibition districts he is running as a) feather to his already well ornament- Is he deceiving you? has accepted a responsible position | L. R. Allen has been elected cashier | Walnut Township will hold an all} pleasant call. | ‘went to sleep in 1910 surely do not | |need to be reminded that it is decid- | \edly more pleasant to “wake up’” be- fore the elections than after. | Dr. J. M. Norris, Eye, Ear and | Throat Specialist, will be at his office 'on Wednesday and Saturday of each week after November the first.—Ad- 'vertisement. 52-tf. | Mesdames J. B. Armstrong, Ed- ; ward Armstrong, T. J. Day and R. R. 'Deacon delightfully entertained at ,eards Thursday afternoon in honor of | Oklahoma. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Stout left | | Monday for their home in Bartlesville, | Oklahoma, after enjoying a visit here ‘at the hame of the latfer’s parents, |Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Brown, southeast of this city. | Extensive preparations are being made for the Poultry Show to be ‘held in this city November 4, 5, 6, 7. | Bates is one of the leading poultry | counties in the state and the fanciers ‘take great interest in these exhibi- | tions. | Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Irene Welch, | formerly of this city, to Mr. Ira Clyde | Foster at Denver, Tuesday, Septem- ber 24, 1912. The happy couple will ; be at home in Pueblo after Novem- | ber 1st. With the approach of winter the | wool trust again begins exacting its | yearly toll of death. We are expend- ‘ing millions to fight disease and to | check the iniant death rate—but we are still taxing the baby’s flannels with a tariff of 143.67 per cent, and | croup, pneumonia, tuberculosis and dead babies are the result. Does it |mean anything to you? Someone has asked if the Repub- | licans are going to use corrupt meth- ds in St. Louis this year, as they did in 1910. Be assured that they will use every method known to standpat reactionaries of the plutocratic plund- }erbund. Corrupt methods? What kind of methods would you expect to be employed in the service of Taft and the candidates who endorse his tainted nomination? Will be held at the court house in the Probate Court room every Sun- day morning at 11 o'clock. All are cordially invited. Subject “Probation After 'ed cap Friday when he sold at auc- |tion the Peterson farm, 3 miles north | J. E. Hunt, one of The Times’ | and 3-4 miles east of Virginia, secur- valued friends of near Adrian, was in| ing a price of $52.50 per acre. Mr. | the city on a business mission Mon-| Robbins has been highly successful day and favored us with a most! i in the real estate auction business, |in fact so much so that he has been Those country Democrats who | forcedto forma real estate firm to, take care of that end of his business. he new firm is to be known as Robbins & Wilcox. If Taft’s nomination was tainted | with fraud, as Hadley charged and proved, what has since occured to make it pure? Was Hadley a paid advocate at Chicago, or is he a paid advocate now? What was dishonest in June cannot be honest in Novem- ber, and attempted disfranchisement | added to open fraud cannot remove | Fern Simon were united in marriage of diahonor nor make it possible for Mrs. C. C. Day of Oklahoma City, ‘an honest Republican to vote his par- ty ticket this year. that’s clean inside and out; who neith- | er looks up to the rich nor down to! Col. C. E. Robbins added another | McKINLEY FAVORS MONOPOLIES In this day and. age of giant mo- nopolies the trust ridden consumers are reviewing with interest the record upon the trust question of every man in public life, and the searcher occasionally finds some very interesting information. Especially interesting is the record of John C. McKinley, the Republican nominee for Governor in this state, who bears the unenviable record of casting the only vote against the fi- nal passage of the anti-trust legisla- tion in the 42d General Assembly. This bill as presented for final pas- sage was a substitute for Senate Bill 188, and was entitled ‘‘An act to pre- vent conspiracies or the creation of monopolies for the purpose of keep- ing up the price on coal, ice, food products, lighting or fuel oil, or other necessaries of life, or creating arti- ficial scarcity of such articles or necessaries,”’ The Senate passed this bill by a jvote of 28 Ayes, and 1 Nay, five |members being absent with leave. 'The gentleman who cast the single Nay vote was the right Honorable | John C. McKinley whom the stand | patters are moving heaven and earth |to elect Governor of Missouri. | Will the people of the state give their support toa man who deliber- ately and publicly aligns himself with ‘the interests by voting to allow them to fix exhorbitantly high prices upon the necessities of life at the expense of the farmer and the working man? We think not. Mr. McKinley’s record on this bill may be easily found by reference to page 650 of the Senate Journal of 1903. Because of the tariff tax on build- ing material it costs just twice as much to build a home as it did fifteen years ago. You may think you are | paying a higher rent, when as a mat- ‘ter of fact, the trusts are simply col- lecting the tariff tax through your ; landlord. Steel trust officers admit under oath that they sell their product more cheaply abroad than at home, and the American voter is asked to con- \tinue taxing -himself for the benefit of the steel trust. But in this year of our Lord 1912, the American voter is opening his eyes and he is going to | stop the steal. ° Pete Denning of Charlotte town- |ship, who is a standpatter from start | to finish was in town Tuesday pre- | dicting the election of Mr. Taft. It is | to be feared that Mr. Denning has al- ' lowed his desire to greatly warp his | judgement. John Dowell of Adrian and Miss from the Republican party the stain | at Springfield, Illinois, Wednesday, ‘October 16th. Mr. Dowell is the son /of Jd. E. Dowell editor of the Adrian | Journal. Walton Trust Go, BUTLER, MO. Capital, full paid Surplus Fund... Undivided Profits.... The Oldest, Largest a Institution in $250,000.00 50,000.00 9,500.00 nd Strongest Financial Bates County Always has money to loan on farms in south- west Missouri and Oklahoma at LOWEST inter- est rates, and on five or seven years time. Pays Interest on Time Deposits for Six Months or Longer for any Idle Money You Have We own and keep up daily with the county rec- ords acomplete Abstract of Title to all lands and town lots in Bates county, showing title from the day the land was bought to this time. of the United States down Will Furnish Reliable Abstracts Fees Reasonable W. E. WALTON, President J. B. WALTON, Vice President FRANK ALLEN, Secretary C. A. Allen, Treasurer Directors

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