The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 5, 1886, Page 8

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oo | UN Summit. | Pasture to Let. | : Bates County ° LOAN 2 LAND CO ~ s - o * - oa ; e iy, Jas. K. Brugler & Son Managers, Butler Mo. This Company loans money at the lowest rages and buys good notes. We also make loans on improved farms for the Missourt Trust Co., of Se- dalia, Mo. If you want accommodation, call. We have a large line of fine improyed farms, grazing lands and city property for sale or exchange. Choice investments tor capitelists. Baby Carriages in endless variety, from $4.00 to $25.00 at P. J. Jewett’s, Opera block. LOCAL ITEMS. The hitch rack around the court yard should be repaired. Monday members present, County court convened morning with all J. M. Boreing in attendance on county court Mon- day. J. K. Brugler & Son have five improved farms for sale cheap and on easy term r6té Mrs. R. ot Rockville, was The Grand Opening. Sam’l Levy & Co’s opening last Thursday mght was a success in ev- } ery par rand detail, and shows that no pains or expense had spared to make it the grandest dis- | play of dry goods, silks, satins, laces, clothing, } | been muslins, boots, shoes, mil- | linery, and in tact the thousand and one innumerable things that go to, make up his immense stock of goods. Hundreds and hundreds of our peo ple took advantage of the occasion | to witness the free exhibition, and, long before the hour for opening the street in front ot his establishment ; was thronged with ladies and gen- Jackson, ot Sherman, Texas, 1s visiting her daughter, Mrs, D, A. Colyer. Sam Jones and Sam Small, the two great evangelists, are holding forth at Baltimore. The best line of men’s and boy’s plow shoes—all styles, and at prices tar below all competition. Max WEINER. Hurt & Mathis moved their barber shop to E! Dorado Springs Tuesday. Both are excellent barbers and we wish them abundant success. At Max Weiner’s shoe store you will find the largest stack, the latest styles and the lowest prices, on all kinds of foot wear County court met Monday. So far considerable business has been transacted, the opening ot new roads. mostly relating to I have the best line of men's and boy’s fine shoes m button, lace and congress, at lower prices than any other house can make fos same qual. ity of goods. Max WEINER. Cleanliness and Godliness go hand in hand, The preacher, to promote it, gave this com- mand: Go into every household where raiment is unclean And tell them the merits of Water QvEEN, At all first-class dealers for 5 cents. Itch and Scratches of every kind cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Use no other. Ths never tails. Sold by D. L. Haggard and W. J, Lnasdown, druggist, But- ler, Mo. 5-lyr The waren guren! the WATER QUEEN! Oh, how I love to use it; It makes me sweet, it makes me clean, And this is why I always choose it. See your dealer and get a cake; 5 cents. With bright eyes, yet gray, lusterless hair. Parkers Hair Balsam will restore lack or brown prematurely lost, stop its falling, Don’t surrender your hair with but an. effort to save it. no 141m Albert Bad ladies’ and children’s he v to make room for his Now is your ¢ gley has a nic ot which 2 line shoes at a bargain, grocery stock. gains, Ben. B. Canterbury & Co. will lean money on improved land at the lowest rates of interest and give you privileges ot payment that you can’t get elsewhere. Call and get their rates, 21 Spring Wagon for Sale. No. 1 platform spring wagon al- Os ae for sale by McFarlaod ts to close out chance tor ba tlemen anxious to gain admittance, | and when the large double doors were opened, poured in like bees into a hive, and soon had the immense rooms filled to suffocation up stairs | and down. | The whole house was brilliantly | lighted, and each department was tastefully arranged and showed off | to their best advantaze. The mil- linery department on the second floor under the supervision ot Miss | Bailey, was so beautifully arranged and decorated it would be the height of folly to undertake to give even a| bird’s eye view on paper, and will | just be compelled to say that those | ot our ladies who tailed to attend | and witness the same made a great | mistake and they are the losers by | not attending. in addition to going to such a) great expense in placing his entire stock of goods on exhibition to please | | our people, Mr. Levy went to the extra expense of presenting each and every one with a token of friendship | in the shape ot a handsome souvenir | which was accepted with the best of | wishes for the future success of the | Mo. 2 grand | merchant prince of southwest In brief, the opening success, and a monument to the shrewdness, sagasity and enterprise | ot Mr, Levy and his corps of accom modating and intelligent clerks, who did all in their power to make all, visitors welcome. { Ladies remember we are still re- ceiving new shaped hats in. straw | goods, ana inyite you to call and see them. Mrs. Kren The New Survey. A corps of suryeyors has been at work in the northern part of this courty for several days. They have | been running a line for the St. Louis, | Kansas City and Colorado. The survey runs northeast trom Bert | Scott, diagonally through Richland township,then through ‘the northwest | corner of Lake and the southeast corner of Metz. It crosses Osage township and intersects the L. & S, at Manion, and trom that point runs out of the county through Blue Mound. From Nevada to the nearest point on the survey is about eight miles. At present the projectors of the) road are having trouble with the capitalists who have been furnishing , the money, but they appear to be | confident that the enterprise will be | pushed through without material de- lay.—Nevada Mail. Give it Up. | If the war is really over, why do/ certain papers laud Jeff Davis to the skies, whenever they have a chance, and then attempt to sit down on Wade, who has made more apolo- | gies for being in the Union Army than any man in the United States? We cannot see why this is thus.— Record. We are receiving our new lace goods, they are something new, sty- | lish and different trom anything we | have ever betore handled, call and see them. Ladies | Mrs. Kennett According to the Atchison Globe Krohn could, if he would, the election the can te al committee signed an agree- ment with the wholsale liquor deal- ers and brewers of Kansas promus- ing that the republican governor, if elected, should pardon all offenders convicted under the prohibitory law, That would indeed be a story worth | hearing. Will somebody stir up | the doctor just once for iuck?—K. tell the t three wecks before the last story face republi cen would let up without my saying | | anything to you about it, but as 1) | the wnatter, | your lies to yourself and you will be | and alone I ougi:t to have | ployment, which she | | On learning of her untortunate con- jcare to keep the strange | dence in the northwest part of t! | city the latter part of last week. IE LEABO INNOCEN Genertlly speaking, farmers are Eighty acres ot good pasture, tame ——-eoe. Compelled to Speak in Self-Defense. | about through planting. grass, 6 mil southeast of Butler, —_—_e——- We've heard some say that their | to let. Ing this office or of > corn is not cow ur 1 they will t* W. Harpinec. Mr. Editor of the Henry County | corm ts not comma u d they will it r. WwW Democrat. have to plant over, but in most of | lee! L Tee!!! Sirn:—As it light to mention my paper so often and in such a rude | eems to be your de- name in your manner, calling me a wife murderer, when I am as clear of such a crime} as you dare be, I can no longer hold You have been slan- long time, bur I thinking that you my tongue. dering me for a have borne it all, am compelled to speak in regard to you will accommodate me very much by keeping my name out of your paper. It you cant speak the truth like a man, then keep much much more thought of by me. There is an old saying that every dog shall have his day, my time will come in the sweet by and by, and then there are several that have been slandering me that will be anxious to apologize for what they have said about me; it is a sad misfortune to me that I ever met with such a mis- fortune, but I can say boldly and above board that I am innocent of | the charge that is against and her farewell note that she left me is sufficient to show that it was suicide, the sym- me, pathy of the peeple instead of their jill will. Other papers please copy at my request. Respecttully, Joun T. Leaso. Deserving of Pity. About three weeks since a your | girl, presumably 16 years old, rat! without money, | Carth She was not long in making known good looking and from arrived in this city t once proceeded to ast succeeded her errand and of West Park avenue in q: em- in every evic } d c finding. She gave lence | an of a girl of chaste uy acter, but she had only been in the house about ten days whenshe made | know n the history of her She | had promised to marry her lover, case, which is truly sad indeed. said she who had succeeded in accomphshing her ruin, and that atterwards he re- tused to tulfill his obligations to her. her sister drove her from She c succeeded in getting a situation as a dition ; home. came here where she | domestic as above stated, but natu- not woman rally enough her employer did under such embar circum- girl re- turned to Carthage last Friday. She 2 more plead with stances, and accordingly tl says she will on her sister to take her in and care her, and if she then refuses she will | home.—Rich Hill | for go to the orphan’s Herald. A Mis- sissippi editor took objection to some of Sam’s local personals, whereupon Sam said that ‘it t Sam Small is ia trouble. here was anything he did have it was supreme and un- utterable contempt for these one- | horse editors who haven’t got sense enough to feed a calt, who undertake to shape morals correctly.’’ Then the editor called Sam a liar, and observed that it ‘‘would turther say that the lie is given in any way Mr. Small desires to take it.’”_ Mr. Small took it a third down, and the bal- ance in one and two years, and so the matter stands. All of which would prove that the theory of the meek and lowly Jesus 1s an exploded idea down in Mussissippi.—Kansas | City Times. Mrs. Siceloff A. G. Sherwood’s purchased = Mr. handsome resi- is a beautiful place and hor was at a bargain.~Mr.and Mrs.Sherw: will leave Ladies,’ fine kid and g ester make country, at 4 They b Misses’ a \iax Weiner’s shoe store, eat-any in the city, “We don’t have to recommend Parkers Hair Balsam but once,” writes Mr C, A. Burger, druggist, ot Liberty, N. Y, “Af ter that it stands on its record.”” Itstops euipeat gone ues original color, soft- gloss. ceptionally ciea dandruff- - rae | resentative, | Professor, out the fields we’ve noticed the stand ! | will be good. p candidate tor rey Prot. Hinton, has been re calling on the boys in Summit the past week. The ! if elected, will good representative for Bates coun- ty, and also a bold effort toward | breaking the power, by legislation, of the monied corporations that are bleeding the people of Missouri to death. Mrs. John Hays, of Spruce town- ship, has been yery sick and not ex- pected to but is some better. She is the daughter otf our esteemed old friend, R. C. Allison, ot this township, and we hope to hear of her speedy recovery. Elder Price, pastor of the Eliza- beth Chapel Christian church, will preach at the Summit school house on the 4th Sunday of each month: at live, now 4 o'clock p. m. Parties from the vicinity ot Mon- trose have been in ths township looking after broom corn seed. They report seed very scarce in that locality and think from the present outloook that not more than one-third of a crop can be raised this season. Some of Summit’s farmers may strike a bonanza yet in the broom corn bus- iness. It that gentleman down the way in Deepwater township will call on Mr. H. he will tell him find a female barber. It is a shame where to an to always wear long s supersti tious no- tions. Mr. Potts, r broom cor who sent to St. Louis ed, will be. under seed, of getting other necessity as they were old and damaged seed and failed to sprout. Firms sending be to farmers should for recommendec all right. such seed 5 1 } held accountable all dam especially when being sound and The article from the Carthage Patriot, published m the Times, headed **Perfectly Ruinous,”” taken m ection with other existing corruptions is enough to cause halt of the people of Missouri that they may inquire into the source of such outrages which are daily being The fault 1s law-makers practiced upon them. undoubtedly with our or the ones whose duty if is to see | Tt con- that the law 1s duly administered. to corporations the people, as and demand there is not a law sufficient trol such c one man, should arise it of our legislature. they should lkewise demand of our civil officers its faithtul administra- And a failure of either, in which the tault exrsts, the should torever al- tion. to bring necessary reliet einate them from the people and disqualify them from further claims on Men holding pledged and in honor bound to work for the best of the whole people, that they are interested parties or too many of them are in these monied corporations or they have mistaken their pledges and worked for the in- terest of the tew and against the many. There 1s a remedy tor such evils and unless a change takes place in the not distant future, it will be applied however severe it may be. We are a born democrat, rocked in a democratic cradle, and love the principles of the grand old democrat- ic party, but haye grave tears that a continuance of such corruption in the party will bring it down to dis- OxSERVER. Ben B. Canterbury & Co. loan money oa — ved land : their suffrage. such offices are interests but it seems grace ana ruin. will the Farm for Sale. I will sell my Situated in Section i, in summit township, 15 hundred acres. Divided in lots to suit p haser. Terms easy. A. HaMitton. make a! pair | lromze the Butler Ice To get the purest and best ice pat- Company, post office hrough the with prompt: attention. all taken from the Orders sent will meet heir ice was creek and is ot th Make it a point to see the elegent | line of cultivators at R. R. Deacon’s. 22 tf Insure 1 in the Dwelling House Insurance Company otf Boston, Mass. Capital $300,000.00 Reserve tor reinsurance, 165,653.98 Surplus to policy holders, 8307,081.00. The Greatest Offer of the Age. Twelve thousand dollars in gener- al merchandise to exchange for good improved unimproved land or good city property. I have also a nice 80 acre farm, and city property, to exchange for meichandise. For further particulars apply to J. W. iiarsert, Shelbon, Mo. or I most heartily recomend Dr. Jones Red Clover Tonic to all who may be su ffering from dyspepsia. constipation, general lassitude, or azy of the uumous complints arising from a disordered liyer. Haye used the Clover Tonic in my tamily for years, and it always giyes satisfaction. Should any one doubt the origin ot this testimonial they can be convinced by serding a self-addressed P. O. card to Chas G. Armstrong, Monticello, Platt Co, Ill. no23 1m. MONEY TO LOAN AT SIX Per Cent. interest, on long time ot with pri paying before due if desired. We do not send borrow- er’ cations away for approval, but de without de- lay, and at Once. We have of money on hand to be | land. Par- ties wis! ase call and get o furnish the money at e on the were furnish money nount ing to | r te at once, or We can The Warron & Tucker Tf there 1s, then | Land Mortgage Co., Butler, Mo. RESTON New ‘/RAILRUAD SHOW Born In 1886. With an idea of what a progressive people want. One old fashioned ring circus. One me nagerie of birds and animals. One Sp wf deep sea monsters. One blooded st: pepart- ment for the farmers and bree’, », One Tee elevated ie forthe lovers of sport au times of ancient Rome aud modern tim One Meseum of living curiosities, curious mem and women, Teens’ we ei of the creators on hand. The wi St ' two living, breathing heads. An for the school children, the scholar. the mechanic, the laboring men, and all lovers of art, science, skill and nature. Strictly -:-Moral! 3 Shows Daily 3 FOOTED H0 George Wren, the two-headed bo: _One to all adver- j eal i|\WEDNESDAY MAY I9th, 1886. NO CHANGE OF DATES! 1% (1 ie i 7 | a | Gran a Stree C t Parade mM the ant rooms fitted up at 8 cost of Mc ion ollars, reduced to igeed ae upwa a day. European plan. va ornin ig! * | Sapplied with the best. Horse ears, on the ¢t the | elevated railroad to all depots. big | live better for less money at she Out of the Ash I am now al for business in my ne Tron Carriage Shop) where I will be pleas ea to see my old eng, tomers and many new ones. I am prepared to furnish buggies off cheap, medium or fir grade as custom may wish, at lowe known prices. keep on hand all _ jof buggy repairs and do all kinds of bua and wagon repairing and repainting. Come and see me. | T. W. LEGG ~The best stock of men’s boy’s youth’s women’s, misses’ and ch ren’s foot wear, at lower prices th any other house in the city, at Weiner’s shoe store. h Of all the soap I’ ve used or seen, My favorite is the Warrer QueEN; It leads the van for general use, Although opponent give abuse. 22-2m —- At all first-class dealers at5 Ben B. Canterbury & Co, loan money on improved land at lowest rates of interest, and gr privileges of payment that you elsewhere. Call and get th 2 get rates, Listen toa word of warning; Guard your health with proper meiug | Shun, as you would shun contagion, 7 Every soap but WATER QUEEN, Five cents per cake by all Srst-class @ Spring Wagon for Sale. No. 1 platform spring wagon most new for sale by McFai Bros. 22 J. K. Bruglar wants more cations tor first-class loans. 7 cent. mterest and commissions, Insure Conk property with §. Newbill. He keeps a Record business. Genuine maple molasses at Gramgt store, fresh from northeastern Spring Wagon for Sale. No. 1 platform spring wagon most new for sale by MeFi Bros. In slippers, I have anything that made, in men’s women’s, missess children’s styles, all grades prices. Max Wen Notice + Pursuant to an order made by th ty court of Bates county, Mo., April term thereof, I wiil on May 3rd, 1886, while the said court session, at 1 o’clock, p. m., at front door of the court house, in Mo., let to the lowest bidder the fo contracts, to-wit; One bridge complete over Miami 4 in Elkhart tp., at Fry’s Mill cro One bridge complete oyer Bushy between Pleasant Gap and townships. One bridge complete over branch, at the northeast corner ship 38 range 31. Superstructure and substructure the avove work to be of Burr Oak Also at the same time and ¢ tracts tor making all meee | these bridges, will be let by cul All bids subject to app Plans and slips ip as nile esescemtcpbesiiiap einen whut a sich spacll ee teen neocon tinier county court. ot the work can be seen at my © court house- M. L, WO! B1-4t Bridge @ Important. When you visit or leave New York Oty, Expressage and Carriage Hire: n Hotel, opposite GF than at any other firet-elass DRS. ZENICK & BOYD Physicians as Surg E “ee

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