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SOUTHERN SENATORS. How They Are Supposed to be off in the Way of the World’s Goods. Washington, November 4.—A local writer, who is a native ot the | south and an ex-confederate, says of | the financial standing of the southern | senators: Morgan of Alabama, has an in-/| come of $8,000 per annum from his law practice, and resides in an inte- rior town, where living 1s pensive. Pugh, also ot Alabama, is also a lawyer, and makes about $7,000 in the practice of his profession. Garland of Arkansas, is about $75,000, made by planting and the practice of law. Walker, Garland’s worth $20,000. Lamar of Mississippi has real es- tate worth about $25,000, and if he were able to attend to it, would have As znd to, worth colleag the best law practice in the state it is, he has all he cares to at which brings him about $3,000 a} ear. Senator George has made his mod- erate fortune by the law and g, and in this v has ac d Harris of $60,000. His fo s real estate in Memphis, which yields him a handsome income. Ss his section. ed at $100,000. y Jacksons a rich His fortune is estimat- Besides his income trom real estate he has a valuable law practice worth about $10,000 a year. Neither Ransom nor Nance the North Carolina senators, can be called Wealthy, though they ar well todo They are both lay m good practice. It is a question of doubt. any one, whether he himself, just what Mahone of Virginia is worth. Thathe has saved a hand- some fortune from the wreck ot his railroad enterprises both his and enemies believe. He is anywhere from $500,000 to ooo, but all work. Camden of West Virginia is very rich. Heisrated as twice a millionaire, with a fortune which is fast increasing. Kenna the junior Senator of West Virginia, has no tortune to speak ot except youth, health and courage. The Kentucky Senators are both well off. Beck has a fine estate near Lexington, dnd a comfortable resi- dence in the town itselt,besides some mterests in the West. It is. stated that he is worth about $250,000. Williams is a large landowner in one of the finest’sections in Kentucky and is rated perhaps $50,000 below his colleagues in fortune. Jones of Florida has a comforta- ble residence in Pensacola, besides other real estate, worth $40.000, and 2 legal business which is $6,000 annually. Brown of Georgia is one of the richest men south of Mason and Dixon’s line. It is impossible to say what he 1s worth, but those most likely to know put his fortune at $5,000,000, which is increasing ev- ery year. Gibson of Louisiana 1s the second in the matter of wealth of the South- ern Senators. His property, esti- mated at a low valuation, would ag- gregate $1,500,000. Jonas, the senior Senator from Louisiana, has a comfortable for- tune, consisting of real estate and securities of not less than $So,000. His law practice is one of the most profitable in New Orleans, and is worth $15,000 to $20,000 annually, and is growing in value. Maxey of Texas is a rich man for his section. He is the president ot the bank in his town, Paris, and has lands, railroad stock and bonds easi- ly worth $100,000, besides a fine business as an attorney. Coke ot the same state is worth perhaps $20,000, mostly in real es- tate. Cockrell of Missouri owns a nice Property in Warrensburg and has a fine plantation, with a good law Practice of $7,000 annually. He is worth $60,000. Vest, the other Missouri senator, whether knows friends rated 1,000, guess estimates are good for th | f 1s known. is not improbable that the traditions | ot that time may have do with sions. ber, in the vear of our L at the city of St. being then and there a duly appoint- | ed and qualified notary public for the and eve city of St. Lous, and state sour, and then and and executing the said office of nota- ! ry public under the constitution laws of the state of Missouri, did te- | loniously attempt to grant, and sellto one Benjamin F. Hammel Angelos, for the pri $600, to be thereafter paid to him, ja On real estate security 1 time at six per cent interest and commission Terms to s 35té. | is well off, owning some good prop- | erty in Kansas Citv, and taking care of a good local business at the bar | worth about $8,000 each year? Wade Hampton mav be called well to do, with a prospective for- | tune and a present income of $8,000, | besides his pay as senator. Butler of South Carolinia has an | | income trom his profession which is very handsome considering the lthe condition ot things in South | Carolina. AVENGERS. not ex-} JESSES j penn They Shoot at Charley Ford, Miss Him, and Run Away. organization of avenging e the death ot Jess sassination of the Ford boys. »y the as- | ley Ford expressed hi: suspicious of ti er Bob j weeks Charl the ing at the no Last T county. en they « they we made h pe ¢ athim. It was dark at and on tl iccount prot the tact that they missed stead of tur and Ford dre house ction from Ashe did ‘rs sprang to their feet they sprang forward th the whence the shots came. so the ave and ran to their horses, which mounted and rode away on. Ford fired at them, butit is not known that he hit any of them. is due to the fact that he expecting an attack. Ford’s readiness | had been Apprehensive of Negro Viclence. Nortolk, Va., white Novenber 9.—The people of Southampton county are apprehensive of an out- break of negroes. Telegrams have | been received at Portsmouth asking | | for assistance in the event of trouble. | The mayor has a posse of citizens if | t the summons Yesterday comes. drunken negro told the servants of < o'clock last every white in Southampton county. The whites at Nev Baykins and Branchville sent scouts | at No-| was winte family that at 12 night 1,000 negroes intended to. sl: ames, Franklin, | | noon oft to learn what was going on ticeable, and nota negro This gave ad-| seen } in the usual places. ditional color to the report and the est and costs. women and children were taken to the woods and guarded. Telegrams | State that the negroes who work a the railroad stations have not been | seen since yesterday afternoon, and | the people are preparmg to defend | Two Trains their homes, but thus far no trouble | | Two 1 It is impossible to say | the prevailmg apprehen- ord, 1882, Louis aforesaid, Mis- holding of there and L bargain ht th e and consideration ra ot e said Henry A. Newman, the said | Springs at Las Vegas, the ancient Office ot notary public as aforesaid | City of Santa Fe, the silent abodes | held by him.’’—Nevada Mail. of —_$—$—____ eb Mon y te Lean of to 5 tthe borrower. Sims & Tucker. fee ed to the under aenea AGS | the follow: | note are past du } between the hours of nine o'clock in the | The Atehison, Topeka & Santa j Two Trains Da whether there is just ground tor the | | One Tr. ,of any class trom San Francisco. Against Newman. (QE via Pueblo and Colorado Springs. THE SANTA FE RAILROAD DINING | | dia rubber. journey an agreeable one. THREE ROUTES | Denver, Leadville, Gunnison, Salt | ake City, Ogden, Las Vegas, San- | j ta Fe, ‘Albuqurque. El Paso, Chi ! zahua, Tucson, Guaymas, Los! years | Yosemite greet the eye of he tourist, | small and unite to ak: any one of these / three trans-continental lines of travel attractive and interesting. 5 Lrver diseases, headache, and constipa- j tion, caused by bad digestion, S quickly cured | | py Brown's Iron Bitters, | “Lewis, Iowa—Dr. M. J. Davis sa} | “Brown’s Lron Bitters give the best of sa’ faction tothose who use it.” 5 GARFIELD, lowa.—Dr. A.T. Henack sa. | “Once using Brow Tron Bitters prove: | its peri ority © ver other tonic prepar- { ations.” | McREYNOLDS: & SCHWENK | Booi& Shoe Makers BUTLER, MO. and JE ‘TALBOTT, iT. Mer NON PARE a “BALL. ! s. & Co. re rant J. P. OPPOISTE OPERA HOUSE. The h t room furniture } in the c id the finest liquors and in the market. Free Lunch Every Day. Trustee’s Sale. ! Whereas, Rich j T. Curry, his wife, bearing date A recorded inthe k county, Missouri, i 2 y their deed of trust. | 2, and duly | ot Bates | 0. 26, page 200k g described tes county, “half of the ion twenty-f torty-two (42),0 thiitv-one (31), n trust to secure the payment of one cer.ain note and coupons in deed ot trust fully described, and, w reas, cou- | pons numbered two and three, of said | and unpaid, and the whole of the principal having been de- clared due and un Now, therefore, at the request of the legal bolder ot said | oupon note, and by virtue of the au- | hority in me vested by the terms in said | deed ot trust iully set twillon | Wednesday. November 2Sth, 1883, sourt, heast quarter ), township o'clock in the atter- | ast front door of city of Butler, d, expose to sale | forenoon and five at dav at the court house, in county of Bates aforesi /atpubhe out cry tor cash in hand the real estate in said de dof trust and this notice described, or so much thereof as | may be necessary to pay said debt inter- the F.M. AL EN, Trustee. “Fe R. RK. ITS PATRONS WITH ins Daily through Kansas. ly to Colorado. | ly to New Mexico. | SERV Three T. ins D CASSIDY SULKY PLOWS BUCKEYE PLANTER SHOE DRILLS, BARBED WIRE, CIDER ‘FINE ESTABLISHED 1870. BENNETT & WHEELER Lyon&Nol . DEALEXS IN (North Main St.) Tin te HARDWAR E ANC G RO CERIES, te doors soutn ote fa Heapavanrens ros re Cessna tt POSTO ie - Cortland Soring Wagon groceaiel and Top Buge2aies. HARDWARE Rs The Mitchell RacineFarm Wagon & uyienswarpl | Hapgood Light DraftSulky Plow, Haish close barb GE <: a Steel Fence Wire. noe » eiunmogl Guaranteed to be Satisftrnctory. —— = hy NORTHEAST CORNER SQUARE, - BUTLER, MO- aes il | i ‘a> NER , NORRTIT-WEST CORNER SQUARE & Having embarked in this business again I respectively mvite all my old patrons and friends to call and see 1 Ihave a most excellent line of “ stoves and timware and it being my exclusive business can sell at astonish Ww ing low prices. i pitd * CHAS. SPRAGDLD E. qu »po R. R. DEACON |& is now receiving in car lots, for the fall trade, BAIN WACONS RACINE SPRINC WACONS, | AGENTS. Mo TOP BUCCIES. |BUTTLER‘- —- MISSOURI f ‘2 WALTON & HUNTER, $100 to $z00 per selling our fine books and Be ite to J.C. McCurdy & Co, ge ‘opule Mo. Good pay tor agents, ae mad. Ww BAKER SPRING PRESSORE GRAIN DRILLS, |b | | Cards. | | MILLS, ST. JOHN SEWING MACHINES, : a s fe Wood and Iron Pumps, and a | good aialled on receipt cc came stamps. Hearne & Co. P.O. Box 14% LINE OF HARDWARE, STEEL, NAILS, WAGON WOODWORK, Etc. R. R. DEACON, BUTILER MQ. N. Y. Ely’s Cream Baim, i Unequaled tor cold in the head, deafnem agreeable to use- IRON, PH fa pra the and Cream Baim has gained an enviable ly to Arizona. | ly to Old Mexico. | in to Utah. Pwo Trains e es, tt ic ite jb estuumonialse By mail, pr id, excitement. Southampton county | One Train Daily to Nevada. After Twenty ears on the | volumes, the choicest literature ih ji adalat itera Aree id = eet 2 ee | Wrongsideot Life a Virgin- | world. tov-page aloeue tre Low- | ce packag Pp was the scene years before the war | Two Trains Daily to Calitornia. | Taresthe Tabte. | est prices ever Soir” Nat ec i by deal- | by all wholesale and retail druggists. 1 by Stage. rail or s | we ers. Sent tor examination betore pay- | 25 4t ELy’s Cress Bata Co. Owego, N.Y of a bloody slave insurection, and it | @N¢ connects by stage. rail or steam- | | er with all pomts,on the coast, in the | | west or south-west. ir something to) on, y ONE CHANGE OF CARS| liver fortwenty vears,” said Mr. S. {| Hancock, ot Richmond, Va., halt sadly, to | as thongh thinking of that ee | a section ot his lite. Kansas City Through trams car- w | the liver from the human anatomy ’ imaucter tna e = Try it sob Ina nut shell here is the charge | |PULLMAN SLEEING CARS- | ‘Bad enough—twe ty years of that Vr Deee lhe ene ooo om ill against Henry A. Newman: to Denver, Colorado Springs, Pue- | sort ot thing,” responded | — Bees | mailed to any address on receipt of 2% ec = ‘ee ere blo, Deming and El Paso. | “What was the upshot of it? Seoure Healthy | cents in stamps by Hearne & Co. Pub “That Henry A. Newman, late ee ees E a | “The upshot was that some time ago r| lactiontotheLiver jj.hers, P. O. Box 1457, New York. SEINGGINGE SS Teuk fee “THE THUNDERBOLT,”’ | went down to Scott’s drug store in thie | relieve all bil- 2 d eeEY OF Sh “ouis, and state}. = the fast throuch train be. | city, and bought onc ot Benson’s Capcine | = eeentous tronblow. y : x aforesaid. on the 20 dav ot Septem- beeen Kaas =a ¢ ee aa Dense | Corous £ s, applied it and wae re- Ssaaeaisame einer ay ; Mo Griping. Price 25c, All Draggiste ansa _ a 2NVE: t ALL, are the beston the continent, y care 1s taken to make | Take the direct route to Eueblo, | and San Francisco, via e “Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, ilroad. The Grand Canon ot the | rkansas, the healthgiving Hot | tne Cliff-dwelers, the quaint pu- | los of the Zunis, the Grand Canon | the Colorado, and the tar-famed | | Peved ina tew j pound as though my liver was made of In- ters—act promptly. Look for the word; North half North East, East half South fs J 2s Z Capcine, which is cut in the genuine. |, st, Sec. 21, Township «1, Range 30 “Why, my child that is not nson’s | price 25 cents. Seabury and Johnson, | Amaaiese a BE 3° Capcine Porous Plaster,” said a father to TO THE PACIFIC, | Chemists, New York. Ror NoGripin -.? safe and rust SEWARD A. HASELTINE, é | PATENT SOLICITOR & ATI'Y ATLAW, | (=<: ; Seow I nt gira iieee receaicase give me my money, I'll get what wai SS elsewhere.” € we at ci | reputation wherever known; displacing all other preparations. Send tor circw | lar containing full information and relia RATHER TOOLONG, | — BOOKS--500,000 “How long did you say?”’ **Twen ears, Isaid. Up to the time mentioned I had suffered from diseased | ment on evidence ot good taith. John B. Alden, ¥ | Music Without a Teacher! P. O- Box 12. IS Vesey St., N. Y. ee oe r’s Instantaneous Guide to Keys ot = Piano and Organ, Price $1. Will teach any person to play 20 pieces of music in joneday. You couldn’t learn it fiom 4 Publisher. «At times I almost ished it had pleased Providence to omit hours, and am now ase MADE ON PURPOSE. | One of Those Mistakes? Which are More Frequent than Profitable. SALE. : | FOR Benson’s—unlike the old kind of plas- containing t6o acres, with house of five his little daughter, after examining # | rooms, one good well and 100 apple trees dackage she had just brought trom the drug store. Fy | “Ien'tit, Papa? i’msorry, but I asked a good peach orchard. There is 154 acres | 40 OO ge poset al know {ce of this land in cultivation, 40 acres ot fall | he toek the 25 cents you gave me to oay Plowing, 16 acres of wheat, This farm Is | tog gr with,” exclaimed the child positive ted $ miles northeast of Butler, in! jy «faybethe drug man made a mir «nee township. Will be sold separate, | take." De ee or all together at327)2 or separate at $25, «[}1 go’round mvyselt and see,” wa f and $30 per acre, cash. For particulars the geatieman’s comment as he donned | bearing, and other small fruit, including | The B2: callon Ben. B. Canterbury, Butler, or T. | nig ceat and hay. B. Noland on the farm 27-Im. “Why didn’t you send me Benson’s plaster, instead of this cheap and trashy thing?” Gry ctimate cures, : : = TARO. Eerie. lee Mp toate costes | ‘“Why,I thought that would suit you 3 = | just as well.” “You thought! you thought! What | business had you to ‘think? I don’t par you for thinking, but tor filling my orper | kaid the indiguant caller, contemptuous ly. “There! take that thing back and