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1000 Yard Extra Fine Quality Wide Corticelli Satin Ribbons On sale at the following prices which are the same prices asked at wholesale today for this grade ribbon: Width =~ No. -No. No. No. COLORS—White, Black, Pink, Light Blue, Cardinal, Green, Yellow, Old Rose. This is a rare chance to buy quality ribbons suitable for hair bows, Sashes, Girdles, Camisoles, Kimona Trimming, Hat Trimming, etc. WALKER-McKIBBEN’S The Quality Store For Circuit Clerk: LEOYD GAINES The Butler Weekly Times Printed on week. fire protect thin, Thursday of each fA = a sre Scene aU Agi bs RoBT. D. ALLEN, Editor and Mer New Home Toy d VIGTOR WOLF For Probate Judge: Hy BeSHEPPARD: Entered at the Post Office of But- e ler, Mo., as second-class mail matter. rganiza- ke a per- ters in a all out and neighbors who the city’s affairs. a party ogganization it is very different and most everybody feels free at all times to cuss a party and especially the Democratic party, and its own members are usually as en- = _, thusiastic along this line as anyone. e Demoerats as a plat- es paetongaonealto df course that would apply to the Re- ;| publican party also in a measure, but Butler. Getting out of 5 ~ the Republi e clannis . but there are other BULA AS GENE to be getting, lig service for instance, and For Presiding Judge County Court: b. CAMPBELL RK L PRICE, $1.00 PER YEAR ELEY SERED Thursday, March 14, 1918, For Judge North District: J. M. REEDER We are authorizedsto make the fol- lowing announcements, subject to, the Democratic primary of Bates Connty to be held in August, 1918: The Declaration of Principles in- troduced into the Democratic City Convention by Judge C. J. Henry and For Representative: HERMAN O, MAXEY For Recorder: GEO, J. MOORE \ing their own party as obtains among the Democrats. A Republican ticket jat this time was out of the question. {The Republicans had the control un- der the bi-partisan plan without the . which suited them fine. it looked like the Republi- cgns had enough and were trying to get out from under. No one ex- | pected them to put out a ticket. | Secretary of War Baker has ar-| (rived in France and is now, no doubt, } i getting a lot of first hand informa-! ‘tion on the war as it is actually ‘being | fought, and the things he is seeing | will give him a much clearer concep- , tino of his job, and that is what eve man who is big enough tor a job looking for. We are assured that} there is nothing diplomatic in Mr. ! er's trip and that we can readily! ibusy man and he can’t be bothered | ; With diplomacy., His business in| France is to find the most efficient | ‘way to whip the Boches, and if past |performances are an indication, he, j will acquire considerable useful infor. imation, as he has always done when {given the opportunity. The more one |knows of Mr. Baker, the. more con- {vincing it becomes that he !man for the job, and we are begi ining to realize that he is a pacifist {very much the same type as the re is t lof us. He’ wants peace if he has to} : e |lick some one to get it. ‘ | There 1S Only | Japan's threatened invasion of Si-j ! beria is furnishing the pro-Germans in| this country with a great deal to talk }about these days and the “yellow {peril” is once more being exhibited jto the American public in all its “fearsomeness.” As a bugaboo it Has lost none of its old time potency. and no doubt some folks are pretty much worked up, but the most of us are not sufficiently enlightened to understand why Japanese troops in Eastern Siberia are any more of a peril than German troops in Western Russia. Any way, this war has taught us that these are degrees of peril and until we rid the world of the one that is yellow clear through we refuse to be greatly excited by a peril which seems to he yellow on the outside One Way | TO INSURE CLOTHES ECONOMY AND THAT'S TO BUY QUALITY CLOTHES—HONEST FABRICS AND EXPERT _ TAILORING. YOU CAN'T HAVE A LASTING, SATISFAC- " TORY FIT WITHOUT THEM. GOOD FABRICS ARE SCARCER THAN EVER THIS - SPRING. THEY'RE HARD TO GET. THE SELECTION IS "IMPORTANT. PLAY SAFE. BUY KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES AND RELY ON THE REPUTATION OF THE » HOUSE FOR TOP QUALITY FABRICS AND FINE * $25, $35 hese, and and] he haven't the same proclivities for cuss- | WOULD YOU KNOW WHAT FASHION HAS FOR EASTER? To some the conservative appeals; to: others the extreme. This store is an impartial collector of the best in all sty!es. You will find here the many new ideas that the foremost style creators have evolved for the fashionable women of this coun= C4 try—with a reflection of what Paris has decreed for the world. < You will find suits and coats in really new fabrics, and really new colors, with hosts of little individual touches to insure your fashior leadership in this community. - Select from a wonderfully camplete assortment of coats and suits From $15 to $40 - Beautiful New Skirts New Lerner Silk Waists New Silk Dresses | from $5 to $15 $3.50 to $6 $15 to $25 WE HAVE WARNER'S CORSETS IN A FASHIONABLE DE- SIGN FOR EVERY IMAGINABLE TYPE OF FIGURE. Warner’s Corsets WARNER'S CORSETS really form the backbone of our corset department—so confident are we of the per- _ manent quality of Warner’s Corsets. And in these times, when we must search the market for dependable mer- chandise, to know that there is a manufacturer upon whom we can count for guaranteed service, makes corset selling quite worth while. IF YOU ARE NOT A DEVOTEE OF WARNER'S CORSETS, TRY ONE OF THESE NEW MODELS THAT HAVE JUST ARRIVED. $1.25 to $7.50 a rMcKibbens| — THE QUALITY STORE Walke | Peoples Bank Caif Club No. 1 Holds | eagerly forward to the time when it : Meeting. would arrive. The. Calf: Club organized by About the first of ot Ae Bo Peoples Bank held its second meeting eee fabdei ‘, 3 saying that the calves would arriv las ee ay ee pour am the Court |i” Butler October 13th 7 pee Room. } s F jearly th: Mr. E. G. Bennett, state dairy com-/ 5, jae Mase We one Bromine. missioner; was present and delivered | Aa i ‘ ; om to see the calves, so went to the de- ae interesting and instructive ad- | pot to see them unloaded. Misses Marie Smith and Fannie wa, gol geen a hs stig Mcaay Bottoms read~ papers, which were loaded on hay frames. They were much gg by the boys and girls hauled once around- the square and of the Club. A It is with pleasure we give them pate lear Eaciget ting ule al space in the columns of this issue. took their picture. They were Shar {unloaded at the north side of ‘the | bank, and a number was tacked on each crate. The boys and girls went in the bank and drew a numbér and then looked for the crate with the Corresponding number. } and two eggs, but this did not satisfy- its hunger, Next was, what will be its name? But “Lady Wesley” was quickly de- cided on in honor of Mr. Wesley Denton, Occasionally I fed it eggs in milk. Then it was fed whole milk until it began to get stronger. Then I added shorts to separated milk and fed it that. Later I -fed it kaffir corn and cracked corn. I keep it in the drive-way of the. barn in bad weather, and in pretty weather it runs out in the barn lot. e Fannie Bottoms. The Peoples Bank did a thing for Bates county last fall_when it made it possible for one hundred nine boys and girls to each stein heifer calf. | jt fs the | ceived a Notice from “A _ LADY DENTON One day last summer I was looking over-the county paper when I saw 2 notice from the Peoples- Bank, say- 4% ‘Marie Smith. Bank: