The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 2, 1884, Page 2

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BUTLER NATIONAL BANK y=} Opera House Bloc! BUTLER, VO. Cash Capita JOHN H. SULLENS T.W. CHILDS,. Wa. E. WALTO land Surplus, - Vice President. Ase’t Cashier erk and Collector. DIRECTORS Booker Powell, W. Walton, r. I. C. Boulware, D. Williams. Gre judge J. H. Sullens, Dr.N, L, Whipple, | \.L, McBride, T, W, Childs, Frank Votis, Wo, F, Walton, C, H, Dutcnes J. Rue Jenkins. OTHER STOCK HOLDERS: G, B, Hickman, C, C. Duke, John Deerwester, QO. Spencer, John B. Ellis, -, R, Estill, 3S, Q. Dutcher, > I, McKee, Henry Donovan. x H, Humpt rey, Large Fire. and Burglar Proof Safe with time lock, een eeenots canject to check at sight, Loans money buys and sells ex change and does a #eneral Banking bus- mess. Your busines: s respectfully solicited. BATES COUNTY National Bank. BUTLER, MO ORGANIZED UN 1871, Capital paid in, - - $75,000 Surplus - -- - Large Vault, B urglar-Proof Safe with Time Lock We ure prepaedte to doa general bank- ing business. Good paper always in demand. Buy and sell exchange, receive deposits &c., &c. DIRECTORS. Lewis Cheney, gui! Pyle her to live handsomely in enry. : oe ‘i i ie eeveringham: | Washington till the en | ot her davs. j J-Ryan, : Jefferson passed his last days in DF.D.D. Wood, ery Aiea = : Cee much Cistress, and was really atraid Geo W. Miers, b F. J. Tygard. OFFICERS. LEWIS CHENEY - - President 1.C. CLARK - - - - Vice Presiden P.t. TYGARD - - - THE HORNS Grocery House C. DENNEY at shar well Known and popular stand on the East side ot tne square. are leading the GROCERY TRADI: ta" BUTLER. ms Pheir stock 1s composed of Feed Flour quatiy of IN and the best | Staple and | | Fancy Groceries, | Glass, Queensware and Cedery. THEY ARE At EXPENSE the LESS Phau any therefore do ‘They house in elty, and not fear competition pay liberal prices for Produce solicit continuance of the pat nage of their many customers, and will gladly attend to their wishes at | any and all times. i Goods delivered in the promptly. Chas. eity Limits _Denney. .--Cashier. | $ 20.000 | Cashier. | } run j plexties. It is tn, PRESIDENTIAL WEALTH. Our Chief Magistrate. Were Never Successful Money Makers. Grant 1s estimated at $209,- nakes har richest lent since nanan. i Andy | an Abrakam J.incoln each lett $50,000. Frank Pierce entered the | White House poor, but went back to Concord worth $60,000. Millard a snuy une out of tort j | way | Fillmore made | the law, and was comparatively mech when he became Preside Gen. Taylor saved his army sa and umstances y- de ; Was in independent cir | when elected to the Presidenc | held the office hardly a year half, and left a property worth $50,- | 000. the death of Harrison made him | President, and he marned a in Miss Gardiner. He went out ot | office a rich man, but he became a leader in the Confederacy, and his sunk in the general James property was ruin occasioned by the war. K. Polk had good make money betore his electioa, and he was an economist by nature. Ue left $150,000. Martin Van Buren was the richest of all our Presidents, his estate being estimated at $800, ooo. He made money as a lawyer and also as a policician, and his_ real opportunity to estate purchases became immensely has his heirs. Andrew Jackson was not a money- making man. He hved after the expiration of his term of | profitable, but his money almost entirely wasted bv nine ye offce, and left only a large landed estate commonly known as the Her- mitage. John Quincy Adams was a methodical business man and an economist. He left about $60,000, j Which at that time was a large jsum. James Monroe v so poor became the Samuel L | Gouveneur, in this city, where he in his old age that he | guest of his son-in-law. | died. Madison was more success- | fullin taking care of his money, and | | lett his widow a property which en- H ‘S | abled i that his > would be sold | shenff. He was an object of public | charity and a subscription was open- fed in his behalt in this city, but his the be- ired. Old worth death occured so soon that i nevolent effort was not requ Adams lett a W. ashing tor day, John estate 30,000 was 4 weaitn be Mount ee Vernon was not productive property, man for his his due to | marri | solely | but Mrs. Curtis brought hin a large | sortune which she inherited from her | first, husband. Viewing cur Presi- dents inamerely pecumary estimate. j there are a hundred men im t city ald Jeach of whom ex buy out i whole of them. When one contem- plate ther true worth. however. jone sees how utterly poor mere wealth becomes in comparison. ‘A Husband's Part. The home ought to be a harbor ; of rest: but it the wife oughtro make | it so ter the husband, none the less ought the husband to make it so the wife. If she should greet him | with a restfull presence, he should | bring her a cheertul one. Tie man who holds his umbrella over himself anv leaves his wife to take the drip- Pings ts a poor husbar wha ta few ot us under house hola cares and leaving our wives to take the pitiless rain of pelting per- of Governor | Jewell that when he was carrying on his shoulders the burdens of a the political anxieties of a great presidential cam- great business. and all Paign, he always brought to his home a bright face, and a ch ery } word, and a seemingly light heart: {so that c care lew out ot the window door. In as life, fishness is the truest and best serv. we takes that when be entered the this all other phases of unsel otself. The man who best cure of his wite finds in very act the best refu ige from the aging cares of hisown business. The wife | | ought always to feel the load lifted | off her shoulders when her husband | and aj Tyler was a bankrupt when | fortune | been | J the | united weight is crosses the always. not But she does :on sold at Kirk-- time the he country round ab about > next tall just lis its highest and | when the bloody lave been dipped int ani- line for the last time before the No- We often wonder half surface to | vember battle. ever the | stalwartism and -breedism | come to the disturb | smooth sailing of the Some business mect- | ings of the lodges questions like milstones are easily seen through. Big Things. An Iowa man drank three quarts ot cider in three minutes. A sea dog was killedon the beach near Long Branch, N. J., not It weighed 243 pounds. long ago. j While trapping near Bridgman, Mich., William Williams caught an eagle that measured 9 feet. Mississippians teel very proud of their State library in the Capital at ackson. It comprises S,000 vol- | umes. A party of Baton Rogue, La., bird hunters recently killed 1.400 | | | robins with sticks. A ten-foot alligator was captured Texas. | recently near Waxahatchie, The Government envelop factory Conn., ton of { at Eiartford, uses a | gum a week. Robins are tound in flicks of to,- | 000 in the neighborhood ot Powhat- A man recently killed 480 lan, Va. j of the birds. | residing in that miles, in A lady 60 years old. Rochester, N. Y. v to Brockport, | an hour and twenty-five at New 1874—the h > skated from c twenty ninures, The river Orleans is an inch aboye ghestf on re- cord. Thee lature bled yesterday in ext ussem- session which | aly last a mont. at Dayton, Oh to a remarkable extent will prot Epizooric prevails hio, and ts re- ported worse than ever before Tue fected tne bill Massachusets house has de-: oviding deaters shi seine whipped. + issue of standard silver dollars he week ending March 22, was ; 28 Blass: for the corresponding pe | iod last year was 218.495. Kate Douglass, sentenced to hang in st. Louis for | murder. had her case reyersed by the colored,who was supreme court yesierday morning. A cow horn + feet rr inches long and 1S inches in diameter at the hase !1s on exhibition at Monticello, Fla. An ow! measuring ches from tip to tip was recently cap- | tured in Franklin county, Ga. | 4 feet and 2 in- | | | ange fish was recently captur- block island, Newport. It was four feet long, and it had a! mouth ten inches wide. It weighs 200 pounds. The highest rate of postage from this country is to Patagor Helena eents an 54 ounce. Charles White of Thorndike, Me.. has three yoke of oxen whose | 12,210 pounds. Une asures eight teet four inches, yoke and weighs 1,865 pounds. New Orleans recently had a baby | show with rinety-nine infants on ex- hibition. The first pnze by a 7-months-old baby that ed thirty-one pounds. was won weigh- has [tas The United States Treasury he biggest spittoon on record. a great oblong wooden box as t ig as lies of the lead to accommo— a at bed, filled with saw-dust. It foot which and employes and yaseMent at tour flights of stairs the various stories, dates the Government others, aboy not State ot NIIEEOI ri that plaintitts have commenced a suit inst themin this court, by petition and af ne objec gen na- ture of which isto partition and divide among the above named parties as heirs of John P. Clemmons, dec the tol- low described re ate in the } county of Hates, and State Missouri to-wit: The southeast qu er of the southeast quarter, the seuthwest quarter ot the southeast quarter,and the south- east quarter of the southwest quarter and part thirty acres cf the soutnwest quarter 2 est quarter all in section Iso part twenty acres of the north- west quarter of the northwest quarterand part seven acres of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section (16,) sixteen also part ten acres of the southeast quarier of the southeast quarter of section eight all in township forty-one range thirty-two, and that unless said detend- ants be and appear at this Court, at the next Term thereot, to be begun and hol- en at the court house in the city of But- ler, in said County, on the and day ot June next, and onor betore the sixth day of said term, if the term shall so long con- tinue, and if nof, tnenon or betore the last di t said term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly. And it is further ordered, thata copy hereot be published, ac cording to law: in the Butler Weekly Times a weekly newspaper print- edand published in| Bates county Mis- souri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion, to be at least four weeks before the first day of the next term of said court J. R. JENKINS, (ircuit Clerk. > copy trom the record. Witness my hand and the of the crcuit court of county this 17th day ot Maren. 1884. J. R. AENKIN 1S-4t Circuit C jerk A tru i spar Thursday, March 27, 1884. o'clock in the the atter- front urs ot nine ck in east > ci between the hi forenoon and five o° noon of that da county i'* Bull Durkam i they enjoy 1t. cs stl. ations and Weakness of the KMidmeys,Blad- dera ES ee ee your sted Led for ‘“wonto nanos RENOWNED | SPecirig wo. 13, NO. 13, COCA, BEEFSIRON A BLOOD, ‘BRAIN & NERVE Ti E TONIC. it da ke econ atone toe aoe 3 the a a Discov moter with full particalars, CHAS We SCOTT MD Ramee City, Mo. Use Dr. scoTr s LIVER PILLs. B <=RS | NORTHEAST C¢ \FRANZ BERNHARDT Butler, Mo NA. A Maynard, THE POST OFF SE aw Yar ATE E SUBSTLEQY BOOKS AND ERY NUTS, ANDIES OVS EM IN VRGE VARIETIES of Implements ever brought » Bates county, The Casaday Sulky Plow, Farmers “riend, Brown & Keystone Planters, the Haworth check Rower tor all planters. WEIR CULTIVATORS | | | Vhe new Weir all Iron and steel combined cul- { tvators, the new Pekin, all iron and steel com | bined cultivators, Butord Rock Island, Weir, Furst & Bradly, Canton, Chpder & Morrison Plows. Headquters tor BARBED WIRE The Bain Farm wagon, the Racine Wagon, the Baker Grain Drill, Harrows kinds and a tull line of TOP BUGGIES, Iron, Steel Nails, and wagon wood work, and the only exclusive line of Shelf Hardware in the city. R. R. DEACON Spring of all NEW HLEV ATOR WE ARE IN THE | GRAIN MARKET, ‘Alive and kicking. Best facilities | for handling Corn in Bates ° County. DUMPS empty aload of corn in two minutes. No dan th nn wag | once. We have regenerated the Grain Market ot Wutler, and 1 bee | worth thousands of dollars to the farmersof Bates ¢ punty In addition te ™ corn we handle all other kinds of Grain. LEFKER & CHILDS H TON ome Le Oe BE POOL: OO RAP te eS ee a. | ESTABLISHED 1870. i bennett, Wiheeleraeuo,’: HEADQUARTERS FOR THE a Celebrate. John Deer Plows, Cultivators and Stalk Cutters \, MITCHELL FARM WAGON | Ac And Cortland Spring Wagons, nd ngines and Deep Well Pumps. Hais :. ul the finest line o! GROCERIES. and best selected stock of Hardware in the City. » Steel Fence Wire, a Close Bi ARE. - BUTLER, M@ IRNER SQU rouncng to located it: Ji WELLER. iinat 1 the public have Buter to iy future home. st umd best as- ches and desever brought + which I will iiaving nad m. se min lac- ture of watches locks in En- rope, lam now >pared to repair Watches snd clocks. no matter how -nor how badly they abused. By bringing | htem to me, you can have them put ultgood running order and guaran tee satistactio sell cap tor ca = exper

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