The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 1, 1882, Page 8

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At REY! Book Cases, FuURNIT Double Lounges, Bedsteads, Spring Beds, Matresses. Pillows, Ct lrobes, Tables, Stands. all kinds, Consisting of Parlor Suits, Chamber Suits and Safes, Cribs and Mirrors. oa eo >) ie een SS an 2394 EPS5—- Metalic Cases, Caskets, Coffinn, Burial Suits and EMBALMING FLUID, by which we can preserve 4 body any THE FINEST HEARSE In Southwest Mssseuri, which we furnish free fo customer PICTUsE GOODS Oil paintings, chromoes engravings, albertypes, aittrotypes, frames, i card, nails, screw eyes. BRACKETS. Book Shelves, Clock Shelves,, Paper Shelves, Comb cases lamp brackets, match safes, towel rolls. hat racks, BABY CARRIAGES, Bird Cages, mocking bird, red bird. robin and —OF— canary cages in Polished Japaned and Brass wire. Jewett, Fleenor & Co. East side of the square. Also desired. means of ings, gla Ay ak ould i Whose Terms are one price and cash or approve }note. We buy the best goods at the best places for spot cash and arc not afraid of cempet We v nt our goods to be as rep- resented and mean what we say. In proof of this we only ask you to 239-13-1W. ee = LOCAL The ows have resumed specie payment, and kows grease is plenti- ful in town at lively prices. Kun Kuako, Professor of the Chi- nese language in Havard college, died a few days ago. Ob that name. Mr. T. W. Childs will publish a dead beat list next week that will surprise the natives. Look out for scalps. _ pee ses Si Mr. B. F. Sudduth has sold his farm near the city and will remove to Vernon county some time duri the year. NEWS The man who advertises large will get rich. He who don’t will scratch a poor man’s head all the days of his life. : Another new house almost com- pleted, and another will soon be un; der construction. ? Judge Tutt has two children sick wiih the diptheria. As yet the cases have not developed into serious ones, we are glad to say Notwithstanding the mud Mr. Legg has resumed work on his buggy man- ufactory building. Go it, Mr. Legg. We rejoice in your pluck. We are glad to inform our readers that the hens have resumed business again. Hens fruit is not scece now in the city. Lay on McDuft. Some vf our young men don’t seem to relish ice cold baths. Well, believe they more pleas we t along in August than in freezing weather. | We went around to-day and found a good many Mossback Democrats, ut abiding the action of the party and supporting its nomimees niakes them Mossbacks. People are continually asking us what’s the news? We tell them once tor all that we sell our news at fifty cents per month. cket, ha? Do you tum- ble to the r; The hotel de Simpson lost a board- der Friday. Mr. Jas. Asbury, of Rockville, came and took out the small fifteenth amendment. Jim looks grieved, he does Arthur had_ thirty-seven guests at hig first State dinner. The local couldn’t attend, owing to prior en- gagements. We would have made forty had we been present. We are informed that the School Board the charges against Professor Brown and continued him in his place at the Wes- tern scheol house. We are glad of it. ot Directors dismissed , A man sold his wite in St. Clair county the other day day for $150. She must have beer a good one, and pretty e demand is great or the supply limited in that county. too, er else Fase oF Tue Lio made among all the beasts a: which could boast of the largest family. So when they came to the Lioness and aske: “shew many do you have at 2 birth,” she replied, ‘only one, Dut is a Lion.” -B great stir was ' j Port of lawyers and cour Quite a number of land buyers are with a view of purchasing. money down. Mr. James Millner sold his farm price we did not learn. took place Thursd: handsomest meat shop in the South. Their tools and furniture are of the latest style. The floor is even paint- ed. box. jottee township has.réem risonville. . At the sale of Dudly and Smith, about four miles southeast of the city on Friday, corn, cattle, horses and mules brought big prices. House- hold and kitchen furniture didn’t sell for good prices. The Powers Bros. and Mr. Jeff-, ress will put down macadam in tront of their business hou8és*on' the south side, and also Asphaltum side walks. Good for that. The south side will boom pretty Already the business houses on that side compare favorably with any in the city. soon. We saw on yesterday a photo- graphic group Judge Brown's fatter, mothet, sisters and brothers ot the in all eleven in numbcr. Judge included, and ranging from seventy to twenty group makes a very The handsome pic- |ture, andis much prized by the j Judge. Sam Crouch was sted, Satur- day last on the affidavit of one | Minerva Stewart, charging fthe said Sammie with the crime of unlawtul abiding and cohabiting with one | Ellen Cave. They’ both belong to the ebony colored population. The | trial took place to-day before Squire Stephens. ‘the Probate Court was in session on Friday and the following business was transacted: The first annual settlement of A. Neptune, Perry deceased, was filed and ap- | proved. estate by | dian of Ella Hagan and Ida Hugan, ' The report oi sale ot real John H. Newton, guar- was filed and approved and deed ordered to be made of said real estitte. The uing term of 5 ates county circuit court promises to t an interesting one. There are sev- feral cases on fhe docket for trial in- :volying nice questions of law, in which aconsiderabie amount of prop- erty is at stake. ‘ing rapidly. consequent jimcrease Litgation is increas- upen ti ot the population and i | growth in business circles. Business t = All right. cers. i now in Bates looking at the country Come on. Here’s the place to put your lying about five miles northeast of: town to Mr. W. H. Moore; at what ; Sdott, Everything is as nice as a band} The Rev. J. i ecpteae Char- ed to the | Bard of Directorsof that Co. woul ity. The Rev. gentleman belongs) weet last Friday and periect the ne- f° the Baptist denomination, pod 8 cessary financial arrangements for in charge of a congregation at Har- ‘si. rapid construction of the road, begets litigation, and Bates will have} ;to contribute largely Good News. | Ex-Sheriff Atkison jon Monday evening that he met jgentleman inthe city on Saturday intormed levening last, just from Fort Scott. us a of three-quarters of an hour’s duration | S, There is a man living in Butler, who saw a rain fall in San Francisco . that raised, he said, the Pacific ocean eight feet. That man can go up land that while in that city he met head, he can, as the champion —. | Judge Waters, president of the Ft. St. Louis & Chicago Railroad gay a pair of mules to The sale'!Co., who told him that Judge Wal- Holly Nichols for $300 cash. ester- Mr. C. T. Tracy sold on Lauptam Butler iters said he had started east to make j, the best muie market in the coun | exhthition of the map, profile ithe route recently surveyed sary to build his road, ,and that Judge Waters was expect- ling a dispatch from the C. & A. di- ‘rectors on Saturday last, upon the ‘receipt of which, the Judge would ‘commence the building of the road ‘at once. A Grand Entertainment. The Butler Cornet and Reed band, will give an entertainment at Evans | Hall on Thursday evening, March ‘2nd. Judging rrom the characters on the program, it will surely be an in- teresting, and exceedingly jolly con- cert. The boys have been practice- ing for weeks, and their parts in some of the most excellent selections, There will be well learned. enough fun in the evenings proceed- ings, to last a considerable while, and some ot the finest music ever listened to, A grand combination entertain ment will be given by the Buter Cornet and Reed Band at Evans’ Hall on Thursday night next. We earnestly hope that our people will turn out and give the boys a rousing big house. They deserve it, and we feel no hesitancy in saying to those who may attend that they will be amply repaid for their trouble and jexpense. It ishome talent and ought ‘to be supported. le the City Meat Market, they will be} given until the toth, of February pay up. All bills not paid at that time, twenty-five (with amount) until all names 215 tf. | | | | administrator of the estate of J. H-\\ii1he published in the Daily Times, + 1 | are disposed of. A certam man in the city bought a package of butter weighing six pounds, and out of that package he butter. That gets away sold ten pounce f besides some he sent home. wrth Prof. Tayler’s hex trick. we think. We don’t know yet wi nvited to {Rich H thing we do kno We'll get some of the won't we, Mr. ——: A temate whe troubled with cold teet ds, pain in the iide and back, palpitation cf the heart, monthly sup- | pression or excesses. wil ‘ing at Chicago he found upon an &c. of i it to the wide, anc petween C. & A. Co. that, that company was lot there is a walk 6 feet in width. | willing to advance the means neces- and that the d handsome. This is tair warning to all persons(with- | lout respect to color or race) owing bille? 1882, to: 4 Wemot & Spann Space thet arrangements to get the mofscy ‘to try and don’t you forget it. {build his road, but that upon arriv- - - The Butler Cemetery has been laid and around each The gronnds are circular in form and are susceptible of being. made very The old race course will be converted into a drive. The association will meet soon, when ar- rangements will be made to pat the lots on-the market. Sam Crouch, colored, was tried abiding with and cohabiting with one Etlen Cave of the same complex- ion. After a rough and tuinble fight between the lawyers, the jury found the aforesaid Sammie guilty charged, and imposed a fine of $25 andcosts. He languishes behind the bars. The colcred troops fought nobly. as There bangs against the wall just | illustrious trio, Andrew Jackson, chless The first named ot this trio, was a far-secing, pr ctical states- }man of spotless integrity and a sol- | dier that never knew defeat nor fear the constitution it was handed as down to our fathers by the founders | jof the Republic and a sublime ora- tor. The third, a great pacificator that stood on the brink ct his coun- try’s political Yordon and poured its troubled the off of peace on waters, who by his genius and capti- vating oratory swayed the angry pas- sions of his countrymen and won for ‘himself ‘*the proud appellation cf the ' great commoner.”” But these great +men have long since failen asleep in hut their countrymen wove 1} wreath and laid it about their death, a laur ed to history, and to-day they live in ‘the hearts of all patriots. The con- ‘trast between Jackson, Webster and clay, and the Grants, Blaines and Arthurs is as a sparkling diamond in the soft mellow light of the electric lamps to the dull glimmer of a nickle in a mud hole. + Maried. Febuary the 26th.—At the resi Mr. Bowden, on Mr. M. L. Wol nee delion To stomach s rengthen: nothing Store. off in lots 16 feet long and 20 feet; on yesterday, Monday, before Squire | Stephens on a charge of unlawfully | | over our head, steel engravings of an | Daniel Webster and Henry Clay. | The second, a great expounder of i venerable brows and sent them crown- } of | Logs Wanted, Lumber Cheap I will pay 75 cents per hundred teet or good logs. Fill bills on short notice. v for 60 cents per hundred and for half at my old stand on the Miami. ' 4S-tf H_ G. Thomas. | Maddy wantsall the butter and eggs he $8 can get. Highest market price guaran- teed. 12-2t Look here. ye farmers of Bates county. We will sell you a sulky plow and guaran- j tee it to run as light as a walking plow of i the same size, or giv it to you. \ r2tf Hahn & Co. j _Farmirg implements and ceeds of all ! kinds at fr2tfj Hahn & Co's. | All goods sold at a profit | t2tt Hahn & Co. FARM FOR SALE I will sell my tarm situated six miles southeast of Butler, containing 120 acres a bargain, if applied for soon. i Jacques Snider. Cooking stoves—tne very best in the market. Tinware by the quantity, large or small; all very cheap. x n§-tt Hahn & Co. A Farm for Sale. Two hnndred and twenty acres, four miles Northwest of Butler. “Two houses, one barm, two orchards, three wells, two prings, two ponds and never failing branch water. Land mostly under tence and cultivation. School house handy. n2 3m. | G. W, Seevers. { 300,000 Lath in scock at i 239-3-13-1t Dubach & Co’s. Buffalo Boots and Shoes. Much of the hary goods we now ofter, lis of this celebrated work, examine | at the Factory Store. ' McClintock & Burns specialty of Ma- Is. 239-3t-13-1t ‘Dem Goiden Slippers | | Dont suit the complec- | t ustomers here, others that} jwill g p,cheap at the Factory Store. | McClintock & Burns. n any quar cheap at 135t D. Dubach & Co.'s. | A$2,75, Gents Oxtord tie, sewed, for 325, at the Factory Store. McClintock & Burns * ot Kaw and Mo. riversand D. Dubach & Co’s. : | 2,800 bushe jae 239-3-13-1t i i Ladies fine cloth tup button boots, re-} duced from $2,50 to $2,60 per pair, at | Factry Store. McClintock & Burns. | IARY FREE tor 1882, with improved Interest Table, Calendar, etc. Sent j to anv address on receipt ofgtwo 3c stamps | , Address CHARI E. HIRES, 48N.a ! no6-4w Delaware Ave., Phil pe SUOnTS i UCRATIVE EMPLOYMENT ; Muthe winter in farming districts. large returns for comparit:vely little labor | For full iculars address immediately | ORANGE IUDD (0.715 Broadway, N. PY: no 10-4t } tor Very ‘3. A. Fahnestock’s! | NVERMIFUCE. now over fftr ye: } e was offered as a , Worms, and f has stead! since this remedy for that time its reputa- y increased until at the knowled ot the wor | not be too yy the AHNESTOCK ution must be examine cach iple name of ie must look } Is are ‘B. A.” 10 4t ! i 00 ? NILUVN'S V A.S.Martin & ] tthers in Stayic Mi La Goods, Notiou-, Fornishing Goods, Clouwke, Uarpets, Groceries and Queen- nds of ountt wanted. We buy entirely tur Spot Cush on RE and dety com petition sf gtiality old stand of M.S. Cownes & Cea and cordially invite everybody @ 1 visit unand save gmoney by so dem Martin& Co- Su.ts, Produce asian ACNE yey lies are ake

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