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AM ERICAN CLOTHING HOUSE epi eae ‘ Black & Arnold Clothing Co. Mayor Cook was a Kansas City visitor Sunday. Best $5.00 raincoats, Walker- McKibben. Orville Ray was on the sick list the first of the week. We want to make this fall our best one on suits and shoes. If you need either come in, Black & Arnold. J. M. Vaughan was a Nevada| visitor the last of the week. Joe Meyer was a business vis- itor to Kansas City Wednesday... Leather gloves 25c, Black & Arnold. Frank Isley of Rich Hill was a Butler .visitor the first of the week, J,, R. Synpson of Spruce town- ship was a county seat visitor Wednesday. W. B. Hanby, of Richwood, 0O., is visiting his son, Rey. Claude 8. Hanby, i lt vill Pay You to visit and a ‘Stylish Fall Suits We are showing and the LOW PRICES we are making. Men’s Suits $10 to $25 Young’ Men's Suits). $7.50 to. $18 School Suits Long Pants \ $5 to $10 5. CLOTHES “Dhe, Daylight Store” LADIES ano GENTLEM EN Who appreciate good Good Clothes and fair treatment will be delighted with the lines we show this season— ‘Hart, Schaffner. é&» Marx, Varsity Fifty-Five ‘$18.00 to $25.00 Sunshine Suits for women $20 to $30 a THE BEST VALUES ON THE MARKET 5 SPECIAL THIS WEEK—Ten Per Cent Discount on All Wool Dress ea One Priced Leaders for 30 years. Boys and mens winter. caps ready, buy now, Black & Arnold. Mr. and Mrs, Len Shubert spent Sunday visiting relatives ‘near Adrian, Julius Levy went to Kansas City Sunday and saw the federal league ball game. John C. Hayes came down from Kansas City the last of the week on a business trip. All new rubber goods, Black & Arnold. Miss Stella Talbott, of Adrian, came down the last of the week to visit Miss Helen Braden. Fall dress shirts, Black & Arn- old. Rev. S. M. Brown, of Kansas \City, preached* Sunday morning jand evening at the Baptist ehurch.. Fall hats and caps, Black & Arnold. Mrs. J. F. Gordinier and chil- dren went to Rich Hill Saturday to visit, her son, Carl Gordinier, and wife. - Mrs, Chris Black teft Weaias day for Franklin, Kas., on a vis- it to her mother, Mrs. Katharine Yarber. New room rugs, fine patterns, Walker-MeKibben. Mr. and Mrs. Sam W. Davis at- ‘tended.a meeting of the Missouri Press Assoviation at St. Joseph last week. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Kerrens and daughters, Eva and_ Rita, spent Sunday visiting relatives in Rich Hill. : Quaker curtain nets, | McKibben. Miss Adelia Langston, of La Russell, Mo., who has been visit- ing Mrs.Walton Allen, returned home Monday. Big Buck work shirts, 50¢, Walker-McKibben. Judge W. T. Cole left Monday for El Dorado Springs, where he will attend an annual reunion of the Cole family. Bradley sweaters, Walker-Me- Kibben. Miss Allene Beauchamp, a member of the High school fac- ulty, spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City. Best school hose, 10c, Walker-McKibben. Mrs. W. W. ‘Ross returned the first of the week from a visit to her daughter, Mrs. Lete Sackett, -in Kansas City. Tommy Walton left the first of the week Yor Lawrence, Kas., where he will enter. the ie slate ty of Kansas. ~ A. B.C. silks, yard wide, 9 Walk- er-McKibben. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hildebrant of Kansas City are visiting Mrs. Hildebrant’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. S.. Williams. . School coven 100,” “nu 12e, MeKibben. Walker- 15e, 25¢, Verne S. Holloway of Kansas City, spent Saturday and Sunday in the city visiting his parents, J. W. Holloway and wife. School Gingham best, 10e, 12 1-2c, 15e, Walker-MeKibben. Miss Nancy January returned of the week after a visit to Mrs. H. H. Holloway in this city. Diek MeGuire last in the south part of town and will operate a market garden. Cliff Ogg arrived in the city the last of the week on a business trip and to visit relatives. Ogg formerly lived in this city. Miss Lizzie Ross, Mrs. Charlie Miller and children, Ross and Josephine, visited relatives in | Kansas City the first of the week. Carthage, Mo., where he recent- ly .purchased a_ confectionary. Mrs. Prewitt will join him in a few days. N.'B. McFarland, who has been ‘| quite ill. for some time was taken to Kansas City Sunday where he entered the Elliott sanitarium for treatment. The corner stone of the Apple- ton City High School was laid Monday of last week. The Ma- sonic fraternnity had charge of the services. Mrs. Frank Mabbott, of. Hill, spent a couple of days in this city the first of the week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Clinkenbeard. Joe Pulliam of northern Bates who underwent a serious surgical operation in Kansas City some time ago, we are glad to learn is rapidly recovering. The Creighton base ball team which was to have played Butler last Sunday and could not get here on account of high water will come next Sunday. - Mrs. Victor Jennings and chil- dren, who were called here last week by the death of her father, Henry Thomas, returned to their home in Kansas City Sunday. Boys suits and shoes, Black & Arnold. Miss Ella Fry, of Topeka, Kas., who has been visiting friends here, went over to Appleton City Sunday to visit her sister, Mrs. Perey Tyler.—Rich Hill Review. Miss Mabel Crockett and Jesse Moles were united in marriage Sunday evening, Sept. 19, at the Ohio Street M. E. parsonage. Rev. Claude S. Hanby officiating. A number of ex-confederates departed. Tuesday for Spring- field, where they will attend a re- _— on Wilson Creek battlef- iel _ Mrs. Albert Schuller and Miss Opal Cole, prominent\young pco- ple of Appleton City were mar- red Clinton geeuraay- of last week. Miss Ethel Mabbot of Rich Hill is pianist and ‘saxaphoné with the. Giersdorf band at Fisk’s a Opera peer ete" a to her home in Nevada the first | week | purchased the M. F. Kinney place | Mr. ' T. J. Prewitt left Tuesday for. Rich’ Cole’s Hot Blast Heaters make a big reduction in your coal bill —see their advertisement and guarantee. “ 3 49-1 Hulett Morelagd of Rich Hill, ‘visited his brother, A. C.':;More- land, the first:of the week. : From bere he went to/Louisville, Ky., where he is a student in the Lou- lisville Medieal College: °"''! Mrs. IH. Gi, Cook and daughters, ‘Tleten and Josephine, left for Kan- ;sas City Saturday where Miss Jo- | sephine will attend school this jwinter. Miss Helen went from there to.St. Louis where she re- (entered the, Washington Univer- ‘sity. Flescher, superintend- jent of construction of the water ‘and light plant went to Kansas | City Saturday returning Monday. | Mrs. Flesher, who had betn visit- jing in Illinois returned . with i him. ; | t ‘In fivi e days last week one per- killed and 37, more lly, by automobiles in St. “toni. 17 Oe a ‘Some Butler drivers seem to be | trying to beat that record judg- ing from the reckless way in which they drive. W. J. White of northeast of Lieut. and Mrs. George DeAr- |mond left the last of the week | \for San Francisco. They will caer ha paras aay) sail soon for the Phillipines where | sail ONS * Riecaigee pees Lieut. DeArmond’s regiment ia (eh of Tamworth hogs was in the : jeity the first of the week and in- ap ‘formed us that he had just . Mrs. H. H. Pettibon, who has | shipped two fine young Tam- | worth hogs to a breeder in Okla- | been visiting her daughters, Mrs. \V. §. Vantrees and Mrs. A. G. | McCullough, returned to her jhome in Deerfield, Mo., the first jof the week. Rev. Geo. L. Seroggs, of Dan- ville, ls., has’accepted a call unanimously extended to him by ‘the Presbyterian church of this city and will arrive about the first of October. |! homa. Victor Roberts, who shot and ‘killed Miss Jessie Duvall in Mob- erly in March 31, 1914, and who since has been a fugitive, is under arrest in Talor, Tex., according to word received Sunday morn- ing by Sheriff Sam Magrader of Huntsville. He will be returned to Moberly. Jack Frazee and wife depart-| © Mrs. H. E. Butler returned last ed the last of the week for Bil-| Week from an extended visit to lings, Mont., where they wil] | friends “and relatives in Indiana. make their future home, Mr,,She was aceompanied home by Frazee expects to-take up a claim her brother, W. Sams, of Ft. near that city. 6 Wayne, who will visit friends and ‘ relatives near town. Mr. Sams Everett Zwahlen made a busi-|was a former resident of this ness trip to St. Joseph the last of county, having left here 32 years the week. His wife, who had | ago for Indiana, where he has been visiting relatives in Kansas | since made his home. City, accompanied him home. Mr. and Mrs: George Graham | 5, of Haskell, Tex.; are visiting rel- atives in and near Butler, Mr.) At the annual session of the M. ehureh, South, conference, held at Slater, Mo.,. last week Rev. E. K. Wolfe was assigned to Graham is a former resident of the Butler chureh and J. E. Cox this city having taught school to Passaic. Rev. W. J. Snow here several years ago. ‘goes to Malta) Bend in’ Saline D. B. Kazee was re- turned to Spruce. 0. E, Vivion, formerly pastor of the Butler chureh is presiding elder of the Mrs. Adeline Stanley — and | county. Rev. daughter, Miss ‘Daisy, who have been visiting Mrs. Stanley's sis- ter, Mrs. Caroline Morrison, re- |) {°'TS" diac turned to their home in Kansas Springfield district, City the first of the week. Dr. and Mrs. oJ. T. Hull depart- According to the Appleton City ed Sunday on an extended east- Journal there were 25, mail saeks | ¢rn trip. They will visit Chicago, filled with Montgomery & ‘Ward | Detroit and Niagara Falls. Mrs. catalogues received at the post | Hull will go to Paughkeepsie, N. office at that place in one week Y., where she will attend: a reun- recently, jion at Vassar College from which ok ischool she was graduated several The Greencastle, (Ind.) Herald| years ago. From there she will contains a note of the marriage | go to Washington, D. ©., where of Lou Delameter of Rich Hill, | she will visit for some time he- Mo., and Miss Humphrey of Ne-| fore returning home. vada, Mo., whieh event took, | Rev. E. K. Wolfe, who was as- place in that city, Sept. 9, 1915.— signed to the Butler M. E. church, Nevada Mail. ea ' a |South by the conference at Slater Willie D. Arnold, who has been! jast week, writes friends that he spending the past week. in this} will arrive in the city in time to city with home folks, will re-| o¢ eupy his pulpit Sunday, subject turn Friday to his home in Paris, | of the morning sermon, “Dealing Texas, where he is employed as a‘jn Futures.’’ In the evening the linotype operator on the Paris | subject will be ““A Name.’’ It is Daily Advocate. earnestly: hoped all the members pjof the chireh will turn out and visitors will be . cordially — wel- comed. « Miss Mary Chambers, forme rmatron at the state hospital who was operated on recently~at the Red Cross Hospital in. Salida,; Leopold Hess,*a prominent cit- Colo., is improving very fast ac-|izen of Adrian, was brought to cording to a- report received here: Butler Wednesday and taken be- today ‘by friends.—Nevada Mail. | fore ‘the Probate Court where he Culver Surprised Monday being the fortieth an- - niversary of the marriage of Mr. and Mrs, AAT. Culver, the Odd Fellows ah of which they are prominent members planned a surprise in honor of the occasion. The mem- bers of both orders met at their rooms in the Fraternal Inn build- ing about 9 o'clock in the ‘even- ing and marched to the Culver home on Ohio street. The sur- prise was complete and for once in his life Mr. Culver was speeeh- less, but recovered — sufficiently to invite them in, when Mrs, Geo. Dixon in behalf of both lodges presented the surprised couple with a handsome piece of silver- ware. A very pleasant hour was spent in conversation and story telling and after wishing Mr. and Mrs. Culver many more anniversaries the guests departed for their homes, The Point. Much admiration for American skill and shibbuilding has been aroused by the story that 10 sub- marines built in hg aaa States and put together in"€anada have sailed across the Atlantic no help from supply ships and are now on duty in the Mediterran- ean. This may be true, and if so the admiration is entirely justi- fied, but one significant point in this connection seems to have been overlooked. If they sailed across they and others like them can sail back, and no pacifist can maintain a successful argument with a submarine after its mind is made up.—St. Louis Republic North New Home. There was no mail on Route 6 from Tuesday until Friday on ac- count of the high waters. This makes the fourth time the river has been out on the bottems this summer and the last raise is the highest for six years. John Heinz is visiting his sis- ter, Mrs. Jack Skaggs and family. “Quite a number neighborhood were ors Saturday. our visit- from Butler Jack Skaggs and family and John Heinz spent Sunday at Ike Kelly’s. Perry Osborne and — family spent Sunday at Mr. Chandler's. Miss Ada with Mrs. Miss Tude Smith made a business Butler Tuesday. Bud Berry and John MeNissick are putting in a concrete bridge between Henry Ehart’s and Brick MeCoy’s. Homer Linendoll was called to Craven is McCormack, staying Kelly and Mrs, Lon trip to ness in the Simpson and Burk case, Rev.’ Lewis Webdell of Butler began’ their Keele and Rev, Col. I. M. Smith, {was declared of unsound mind of Spruce! : township was in the city Monday | and committed to the Nevada = asylum. . Some time last’ spring looking very proud and chesty | and informed us that the stork | Mr. Hess Hepes e suicide | by son, Grady and wife, 2 P it- ‘anid left ria 10 en “baby thought beat by his relatives to | send chim to the state hospital. girl. ‘ - | Wednesday he appeared rational Mrs. Kinney and — daughter, jand consented to the proceedings. Miss Thelma, left Monday for His daughter, Mrs. Sophia Schoor Kansas City, where they will vis- | Was appointed his guardian. it relatives for a few days, when | Mrs. Kinney will go to Wyon- | ing where she will join her’ sons, | the growing of pasture grasses Lloyd and Loraine, who have | and forage crops that make heal- taken up homesteads in that/ thy, vigorous hogs of good quali- atate. ity is the basic factor in success- fal pork production. They are Mrs. H. H. Wyse. of north| raising hogs at a big profit. Of {Bates was taken to Kansas City|course those who are successful londay where. she bg pam Ajrealize the fact that a certain. amount of grain feed is needed the | to grow hogs with a greater prof- she | it; but they use this grain only.as 7\@ supplement to the. feeds har- polled by thé hogs ip the pas- Many now realize the fact that fields. meeting at New Hope Sunday with quite a good attendance. Mr. Keeton and wife, Milt Reeves and wife visited at Clif Ehart’s Sunday. Mr. Adam and family Sunday at Mr. Burton's. Brick MeCoy and family and Homer Linendoll spent Sunday afternoon, at Orval Pickett’s. spent Mrs. Orval Pickett was quite sick the past week but is better at this writing. Cor, Bryan’s Home is ‘‘For Rent.’ Washington, D. C., Sept. 21.— A four-line ‘‘ad’’ in a paper to- day discloses that William J. Bryan, former Secretary of State, is done with Washington as a- place of resicence. The ‘‘ad** follows: . “For Rent—Furnished, Cal- unet place. Thirteenth and Clif- ton streets. . Ww. Apply at premises. W. Bryan.” Calumet Place ix the old home of Mrs. John A. Logan and is one of the beautiful residences of Washington. "3 When Mr. Bryan came here to © be Secretary he rented the place, it is said, at $4,000 a year. The contract for that period, it was et previdet that he should not sublet, but apparen this has been changed. son mt) For Sale—Buick automebile, 1915 model, completely equipped. 79S 48-2 Chas. Daughters of Rebek- with. Harrisonville Tuesday as a wit- ~