The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 8, 1882, Page 5

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NEWS, LOCAL Shobe & Co. sold on Saturday las a pair of mules at $350 cash. That’s the way mule meat sells in Butler. An Grant lived boy. exchange sa that the life of a common The idea of about three thousand people coming to town on Saturday’s and nobody getti » is very discouraging x s ig on a high-lone- to the The work of opening the various coal mines and sand quaries in the vicinity of the city will be resumed as soon as the weather will permit. | Glad to hear it. The Street Commissioner Monday commenced yrading the _ street opposite the business house of the McF: 1 Bros. on the south side preparatory to putting down the macadam. Rah for the south side. She’s booming. The Francisco Bros. have put | down « neat sidewalk in front ot | pheir residence on Fort Scott street. Well, gents, that begins to look as though something was going to hap- Rah for the Friscoes. ten soon. Pottery is the first of all arts. The first job we have any historic account of in the clay business was the mak- ing of old man Adam, and _ the first | fruit we read of was neither peaches | nor pears but thé forbidden fruit. We are informed that a subscrip- | tion will be circulated witha} view to raising money with which to | establish a reading room. We trust | soon our people will contribute to this enterprise liberally, it is a good that kind. and let us have it. Mr. Alexander Lewis and Miss | Mary Strokes were hitched up to the matrimonial Monday i Park & Mathis’ :estaurantatg o’clock by Squire H. M. Cannon in his most exquisite style. The Squire had ona standing collar and biled linen shirt, he had. H wagon WanTED.—Sonie enterprising grocery firm to establish a branch | store about halt way between the public square and the Butler Acade- | my. ‘‘There’s millions 1n it.’’"-;[Re- | cord | Another thrustat the business men | around the square. The Carthage Patriot says that | Nip and Tuck came to that town | the other day. Well what of it? We have ¢kem in the queen city of the | Southwest every day and Sunday | too, and we don’t parade them be- tore the public like the Patriot does. The plattorm at the depot is literl | _ ally cuvered with the household goods ! of new comers to our county. There \ won't be standing room left in Bates | at this rate soon. Come on though, | Bates can accommodate one hundred } H | thousand people easily. \ We can’t see for the life of us what anybody wants to kill Queen Victo- ria for, she is one of the most harm- | less old ladies that we knew of It; is said of her that she is a good, kind, | agreeable mother-in-law, and that al 1 of her sons-in-laws like her yretty | well. Mr. tbe erection of a brick building. two stories high, and 30 feet wide by So long, on east Dakota street, the first ot next week. Bully for Dakota.— North Main had better look sharp. | The house will occupy the site on) which Mr. Albrant’s blacksmith shop | Ira Allbrant will commence | now stands. i The Nevada Daily Democrat start- — to publish the names of the gentle- | Pmen who are in the hands of their! friends for Congressional honors in! this district, bet upon reflection | found out that life was too short. He got as far as a baker’s dozen, | and, strange to say, there is not al colonel among them. | Poor Marshal Morgan looks dis- | consolate. He went thumping around i all Saturday and Sunday for a ripe | one, and nary afone did he get. We | suppose Marshal, that you may con- t i sider us in cahoot with you in that | ef chronic female complaints and irregu- | i fighting red-top arrangement. of; which we spoke some time since. | We'll expect rare and racy times | 4 from you every Monday morning. ! = { Do you hear us? t } of its mother. | Fraud.”’ SPRAGUE & HUNTER Successors To W. E. Walton & Co. usicalEmporiumButlerMo Dealers in Pianos and ‘We Handle the celebrated Mathushek. Steinway & Son. Deckers. Chickering. Weber Or any make of Pianos you wish. Also the Estey, Geo. Woods,, Smith Amer- ‘ican and the Shoninger Or- ‘'gans with bells. and will sell Remember that we can, you ‘ments as cheap as you can thing and Butler needs something of | buy them anywhere. Organs. Haines. instru- |Weare also Agents for the of the 'teading and: Best machines _and you'll be convinced. RBEM Te SE KER—On Feb. -4, 1882, at the res RL dence of her husband five miles ~outh- | M. wite of © one Years and west of Butler, Mes. E D. Rucker, aged ttwer thirteen days. Another home another heart made sad by the di of its beloved object. Death is desolate, zath made al- ways sad under any and all circum- | stances, but far more blighting and | | unconsolable when it robs the young husband of nis wife and the infant One can look with and composure of more resignation upon the death bed scene the aged, than they can upon that of the | young. To witness a young moth- er’s last conscious struggle in the throes of physical death, holding with dying gr her bosom, while the father stands by with heart breaking with grief, is certainly a sad, very sad scene to look upon. Mrs. Rucker was a very estimable lady ; a kind mother; a true, loving, christain wife She was of great comfort and assistance to her hus- band who, though having exper- 1enced much trouble, and encount- ered many difficulties, was still struggling for a home, and in the almost immediate hour of success husband and his wife, the pride of his ambition, | | passes away and heis left alone to | fight lite’s battles, Mr. Tilden’s income is said to be | $150,000 a year. He makes more than Hayes robbed him of. and does | not bear the character of ‘*National | It is said that by a decree | of Providence a man who takes that which don’t belong to him never en- joys 1t—-hardly ever. Then, whata melancholy outlook must be Hayes’ future. Fable of t joness.—A great stir was made among all the Beasts as to which could boast of the largest family. So when they Came to the Lioness and asked ‘how many do you have at a birth,’ she reply-/ ed, “only one, but it ie a Lion.” The moral was, ‘‘Quality comes betore quantity.”” The same may be sald in contrasting many things with which we deal. One would desire a single superior article to halt a dozeninferior ones. The same may be said of medicine and for ex- ample we will mention English Female Bitters as a positive remedy for the cure larities. The mere name ot this medi- cine instills the most implicit confidence, because it has been proven that its qual- ity is far superior to anything else of the ind. Females prefer one bottle of this to half a dozen of others which possess no merit. 14-20 sp the darling bahe to | Personai. | —Mr. J. H. Langsford, of Me- | Donough ceunty, Tinois, sp+ several days with his nephew. Mir. | Langsford, last week. —Mr. W. J. Stafford and W. M. Hunter, residing near Adrian, called their and left a reminder of good —Frema card received recently we that Dr. Jj. H- | Christy will return trom New. York ! about the roth, where he has | the winter in the study of his are informed pro- fession. —Our friend A. J. turned from Ohio, this time to stay. | Al. will hang out his shingle in But- | J | ly cured her. Mo. (his profession, the law. Success to ! him. | —The accomplishe | sitys, of Appleton City | their grandfather, Mr. G. W. | sity, Esquire. We trust the young i ladies may enjoy themselves in the | queen city of the southwest. —Mr. Sam’! Levy left Monday tor | St. Louis, iby Henry Levy, who ' Sunday, and both proceed to New | York to buy their spring stock of goods for their mammoth establish- went dow i | ment in this citv. —L. R. Nichols and M. H. Tow- |! bridge of Burdette called at the | Tres office on Tuesday. They | report that an oil shaft will be sunk j near Burdette some time about the Ves: of May by a gentleman trom Litchfield, Mlinois. ; —Mr, J. E. Armstiong. 2 | substantial tarmer and Republican Stalwart of Charlotte township, call- | } very the Tuwes one day last week. Mr A. owns and lives on one of the | finest tarms in the county, 3° portion of which he was offered the round time since. shoule be used by all casses in preference to all others. It is the cheapest and most ' reliable purgative ever offered. It has | stooa the test and gained an enviable re- | putation wherever used. It is the only large j size aperent that sells at 50 cents 2 bottle | It acts on the stomach, and bowels, with- ; | out nausea, griping or any trouble what- fever. Its taste is pleatant, its action is | mild and it never fails. It releives sick j headache, acid stomach and heartburn } instantly. 14-20 i will for the Tues a day or sosince. | spent | mith, has re- | ler in a short time for the practice of | Cas- | s, Where he will be joined | ed and renewed his subscription tor : sum ot $50 per acre for only a short } Reasons why Bailes’s SALINE APERIENT | Guitars Wiolins Rosir. Sheet Music, Music Books ete. Wealso keep a nice stock of Sheet Music, Music Books and Instructors. Also musical merchandise consisting of Baajos Flutes Fifes ‘ Piccclos Se Violin and Guitar Strings. ‘Violin Bows, Bridges: and in the world; 14-3m A GIFT FROM HEAVEN. Wo Medicine Stands Higher Marsh’s Golden Bal-am. 0 had taken a severe cold, w pat and | ngs. LJ.M. Scott, Chillicothe, en Balsam is for sale by & Co., druggists, Butler, rs everywhere. 50 cents and $1-00. mar I-tm Go | Large bottles 5 ! fail to try it. A. Henry received a dispatch from | Jefferson City Monday that the noted case of Henry against Bassett, | to recover half the fee inthe Railroad | bond case, which was decided here | | and finest running machine I ever ; for Bassett, was reversed and remand- ed by the Supreme Court in favor of A. Henry. Man’s Ingratitude- This is an ungrateful world to say the least. A man will act like a lunatic when he has the Itching Piles, and declare that he knows he can’t live another day, yet he applies Swayne’s Ointment, the in- tense itching is allayed at once, he gets cured, and goes down to the lodge without one whit of gratitude. When asked why he looks so cheerful, he dodges the ques- tion by an indifferent answer It’s jus like a man though, is’nt it? Mar. 1-dw-1in A certain saloon keeper city showed a ‘ies reporter ¢ cular received by him from New York since. It was simply « proposition to furnish the cir- a few days ; saloon man all the counterfe the wanted at very low fic ' eentleman referred to cnclosed the circular in an envelope and address- ‘ed the same to the Chief of Police wes. i of New York Citv. American Ladies- The first impression Sara Barnhardt re- ceived of the American ladies manitested itself thusiv:—‘‘Oh! ze ladies, za fre so beautiful, such clear complexion | never see before,” all of which is due to the universal use of Swarne’s Ointment for skin diseases, which insures a clear and clean complexion, and a healthy color. | This recalls to mind the divine precept “cleanliness is next to Godli Mar: dw-rm chew of Happy Thought is economy. | I can now | s praises, tor it quick- | Don't | money | The | for land returned Monday. 'wasin town Friday and gave the | Times a pleasant and_ profitable call. It you are suffering from indigestion or any complaint of the Stomach or Bowels, you wi'l obtain great relief by using Ash Bitters, asthey have t gently relieving these or- ng thein in a good sound and healthy condition. 13-tt | i i oO! > purest, finest, is Happy Thought | tobacco. 14-3m Read The following testimonials concern- ing the Domestic: | Mrs. J. B. Newberry s4 | never sewed on an easier, con Domestic for all kinds of work. Mrs. Louis Page says: Since I | began using the light running Do- _mestic sewing machine, I feel hap- pier than ever before. Too much cannot be said of the light running Domestic and their merits. Mrs. Abbott, Butler, Mo. ' The three quarter cabinet Do- mestic that I got of you is the “easiest sewed on. Mrs. J. K. Bruglar, Butler. Iamwell pleased with the Do | mestic machine that I bougnt of you itis so nice and silent. Without flattery, I think it the best machine ever made. Mrs. S. Clark, Butler, Mo. Mrs. Dr. Mo.. says: Iwould not be withou, ia Domestic sewing machine; it is ne plus ultra. Iam well pleased with the Do- mestic machine, and money could not buy another equally as good. Mrs. John Randall. \ hundred of testimonials of a Hvuco Siemur NOTICE OF SALE. Notice is herebv given that by virtue of an order of the Probate Court of the coun- | ty of Bates, made at the February Term, | g8S2, thereof, 1, F. M. Voris, andministra- ! tor of the estate of Henrv Farmer, deceas- ed, will on i Toursday, March 28d, 1882, | at the court house door in the city ot But- ' ler, county of Bates, and during the ses- ' sion of the circuit court of said county of ! Bates, sell at public auction all the inter- est of Henry Farmer, deceased, in and to the following real estate to-wit: Fhe west half of lot one (1) ot the northeast quarter of section No. 5, township 39 | range 31. Also the north one-halt ot lot i No. 1 ot the northwest quarter of section ‘No. 5, of township No. 39 of range No. | 3x, in Bates county, Missouri, for cash in hand, on day ot ssle. 4 mri-gt Fra xk M. Vorts, Adm’ rs Matchett, Johnstownt | New Home, White and Davis, Sewing Machines. Three at Bottom Prices. Give us a trial Dr. M. $. Leach, of Chicago, | ly of Mulberry, this county, | | was visiting his old home last week, | fect of most pertumes The Dr. | } | i i Grateful to Invalids. Floreston Cologne is invalids, because it is refreshing without the sickening et- Mar 1-1m Happy Thought Tobacco, is too, too. 14-3m Christopher Takes this opportunity to express hix thanks to the people for the kind recep- tion given him, and for the liberal patron age bestowed upon him during the first month of his stay in Butler. His busi- ness relations have been more than satts- tactory, in fact he has had a ‘*Boom” and it must, zvill and shall go on. For a fine suit of the celebrated Wama- maker & Brown ‘custom made” goods, leave your order at the Factory Store. n242 McClintock & Burns. Christopher buys his goods at head quarters, and con- . | sequently cam sell you goods cheaper than and lighter running machine than the | any other merchant in the county can buy them. Come and satisfy yourselves ot this fact. For Oxtord Ties, at about your own price, call at the Factory Store. n2z42 McClintock & Burns, Farmers if you want the Best Meal in the world for 25 cents. Call at Guss Bennert’s Restaurant, South side square. 13 2t Cash Paid Down tor any quantity o | produce brought to me. Z. J. Williams For Ladies button kid shoes, very low in price, call at the Factory Store. n242 McClintock & Burns. Pure Maple syrup and sugar at A.S. Martin & Co. Christopher can show you a nobby line of Gingham» and Fancy Dress Plaids. Also a tull line of suitings. For a fine kid slipper, call at the Facto- ry Store. Mcchintock & Burns. Christopher has the best and cheapest line of Corsets in Butler. An examination will convince you. For fine calt boots af cost, call at the Factory Store. McClintock & Burns. Buy the baby’s shoes also, at the Facto- ry Store. McCiinteck & Burns. In Jaffa’s, C. S. Wheeler is below ail. 14-tf for hats and cape McClintock & Burns. Try the Factor; n242 We want to say to our farmer friends, that we are selling the best class of Gro- ceries, at lower prices than other grocery stores, tor the reason that we do not have to hire extra clerks, as we are in the hard- ware and implement. trade. In imple- ments, we are in the lead of all others. Having the highest grade of goods. 14-tt C. S. Wheeler. fn

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