Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ to make your purchase of a fall suit, coat or dress without first visiting us. We havea line which will meet all your exactings in Style, Fit, Qual- ity and Value. If you should prefer making up the material we are sure that you will find exactly what you want in the new Woolens we are showing. We have New Trimmings which will enable you meet fashion’s latest requirements, : Brocaded Velvets, Meteor Crepes, Poplins, Brocaded Silks, Brocaded Eponges, Serges A Good Invest- ment is to get a good suit or coat when you are buying one. We have faith in the gar- ments we are selling and can assure you that you will not find anywhere a suit, YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO MISS ANY OF THESE BARGAINS. 25c wash crepes........ 15¢ 27 by 50 Axminster rues. Gee. $2.50...... $1.65 WAM. i505 has ces 8c ~, coat or dress which will Turkish towels ees please you better. Gere: (eer 48c fees ie 40c to $1 To Part Com- We have experienced fit- A few more light a Jack and Jill cloth, n ters and a dress maker al- weight dresses.,.. 42 price extra strong............ *15¢ pany ways at hand. with a large broken lot of Men’s E. & W. Dress ‘Shirts. Worth regular- ly $1.00. We will sell them for only 50c ‘Stripes, checks and solid colors Wizard Triangle Oil Mops, $1 and $1.50 Every Garment Fitted FREE WALKER-McKIBBEN’S THE QUALITY STORE ,26 KILLED, 50 HURT, IN Farmers are Best Citizens Anderson-Leedy The Butler Weekly Times, Wilson to Free Islands. | Washington, D. C., Sept. 1.— ers __|Whatever is done by the United | Editor and Manager | States with respect to the Philippine | s Sige | anne isto be guaged by the best eolintered at the Post Ofice of Butler, Mo. 88 | interests of the the people of the| : a ES —| Archipelago and not by what might PRICE, $1.00 PER YEAR be construed as selfish purposes of = the American Government. Printed on Thursday of each week ROBT, D, ALL A FARMER’S EDITORIAL The farmer in certain sections o the Middle West feels that in this f and Francis Burton Harrison, newly {appointed Governor General, take of | ,the question of Philippine indepen- WRECK IN FOG ON NEW HAVEN ROAD In Two Crowded Wooden Pullman Coaches, Which are Splintered, the Inmates Die in their Berths. |New Haven, Conn., Sept. 2.-— | Twenty-six persons were killed and That is the view President Wilson | nearly fifty injured, some of whom may die, ina rear-end collision this morning on the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, six miles Jefferson City, Mo., Sept. 3.—The relative influence of country and city life upon the production of crime are discussed in a book shortly to be is- sued by Thomas Speed Mosby of this city, on “*‘Causes and Curses of Crime.” Mr. Mosby cites statistics | to prove that the majority of crimin- als in proportion to population, both in this country and in Europe, come from the cities and not from the coun- try districts; and he shows that the Mr. Byron Anderson and Miss Irene Leedy, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. M: Leedy, stole a march on their friends and were married at the Park Ave. Methodist Parsonage, Saturday evening at 9 o’clock, Rev. J. H. Cleaves officiating. .They were attended by Mr. Earl Weik and Miss Lorene Rand. The groom is the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Anderson. The young couple left summer of uninterrupted sunshine early Sunday morning for an auto a he has suffered the extreme penalty. From the wash bench on the back porch he has seen the cloudless dawn, and from the meadow gate he has looked across the barren pasture atthe glory of the summer sunset day after day, stunned by the merci- less repitition, bouud hand and foot on the stationary wheel of things. The pigs out on the east forty eat- ing dollar-a-bushel corn are dropping Fi fi now, a policy of active preparation cane A Bigs esr eae wears in value to the point of absolute UN | por granting the independence within | 2° both of wood, splitting them in M. E. Church South. Par i was ey to agin salability. Cattle which the Sun's) | few years will be pursued by the two, and tossing their wreckage and Sabbath school at 9:90. 1 he pronounce: a case of pto- habitual smile has forced to the mar- three score of mangled human beings slap oP Sel maine poisoning. The doctor re- é SHOES ket at half their value are lowing out in the country road where men on! horses look down at the dried. up Years ago people merely hoped such years would be few. To-day such conditions must be met and con- quered. And the final remedy must be the storage battery of individual idence, according to information to- | north of here. day at the White House. | .The President, believes that the! |United States in the profoundest ‘sense, is the trustee of the Philip-| pines and to carry out its trusteeship wisely is the keynote of the policy of | the administration. | It was indicated at the White House | | that, while no proposal for immediate | United States. . Token ‘to Maxey. Mr. Maxey in a brief assurance of the Club’s appreciation and respect. The charm is a beautiful piece of workmanship, solid gold, elaborately engraved, embossed with the emblems ,independence was being considered | The first séction of the White Mountain Express, bound for New York, speeding at probably forty miles an hour in a thick fog, rushed by a danger signal, it is said, and crashed into the rear of the second section of the Bar Harbor Express, a 100 feet beyond the block sig- | nal, The White Mountain engine cleav- ed through the two rear Pullman ; some alive, some dead, on either | side of the track. The third car, also of wood, and beuths over a fence paralleling the track fifty feet distant; mattresses, bedding and clothing found lodg- ment in the telegraph wires. “honest farmer” is indeed a reality | |and not an imaginary personage who | is simply referred to in political cam- paigns for the purpose of catching the country vote. Mr. Mosby was formerly Pardon Attorney of Mis- souri, and is the author of the law creating the Missouri State Board of Pardons and Paroles. He believes that the best citizenship of every na- tion is produced od the farm. Preaching morning and evening. _ Atila.m. Rev. J. E. Alexander the Presiding Elder will preach. Prayer meeting Wednesday even- ing at 8 o’clock. these services. W. J. Snow, Pastor. You are cordially invited to attend M trip to points north. Both are well known young people of our town and have the good wishes of all who know them.—Rich Hill Review. Ptomaine Poison I. C. Deardorff and family, of Grand River township, became vio- lently ill a week ago last Sunday af- ter eating a meal at which oysters were served. mained with them several hours be- fore he got them past the danger point, and they are all on the road to ! stream and then drive the herd on in| Circuit Clerk H. 0. Maxey has been | occupied by forty boys on their way| Th business of the Fourth Quar-| recovery.—Adrian Journal. comfortably shod, but he ; the dust. |presented with a handsome watch bible ppd tne at Sonmooke terly Conference will be held Friday es ae can rest oe that his 4 Corn must be cut to savethefodder;charm by the Chautauqua Com-|Me, was lifted into the air and almost | °Veming at 7:30 in the church. It is Marriage Licenses footwear yg tye in H which later will probably rot at the mittee of the Commercial Clubinrec-| completely off the track. The car | portant that every member of the GNI odes PACKARD ghee for Botha } joints: because cut before maturity, | ognition of Mr. Maxey’s valuable ser- /fel] on its side crumpled up, crushed Board be present. Bre — ao occasion. Come in and let tes and fruit ripens juiceless and stunted | vices in acting as platform manager | two of the boys to death- and injured|, EPworth League at 7p. m., Sub-| 7¥r feedgs. ; or falls shriveled from the stem. Na-| for the Chautauqua just closed. several others. ject: League Rally Day. Leader| 1 p westoff .... t ture has sent seedtime but forgotten D. K. Walker, as chairman of the| Some of the victims of the two rear | MtS- Ona Price. Emma Colvin...... the harvest. committee, presented the charm to|pylimang were hurled from their| Preaching at 8 p. m. W C Chamberlain . Josephine Aherns conservation. The only way to travel | of the Masonic fraternity. Baptist Church P saohaiten dhe ian Ch This is Vacation Time. the road during halted seasons is with —_—_ The most of our dry, hot weather the stored energy of former years Schools Open is past. Workers are returning from| . Sunday School 9:45 a. m. and with modern equipment to save The Butler Public Schools opened their vacations. Our Bible school|~ Public Worship 17:00. i Monday, September ist, with a total|/ast Sunday was a record breaker Young Peoples Talk: ‘The All| enrollment of 613, with the faculty|Ver year ago. We had a well at-| Seeing Eye of God.’ _ Cheap must give way to the provid- ing of additional grain cribs. They are cheap insurance. <i Silos will take green corn about to expecting many pupils to enroll later. The enrollment in the various schools is as followa: High Washington, 134. Webster, 154. tended, thoughtful and enthusiastic Bible school council last Tuesday night. All our regular services are Sermon 11. a. m., ‘Fruit of the Spirit.” Christian Endeavor 7:00 p. m. FOR EVENING WEAR. A theatre party, dance, reception—in fact any social! function—demands correct- ly shod feet. Any man who is not only correctly and