Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Sa Se RE A ie excruciating pains by its action on the comlition, and restores the working order. Ayer'’s Sarsaparilla has effect in our city, many most remarkable cures, a num- ber of Which baffled the e sof th most ex physicia Were it f many nacessary, I could give the names individuals who aye been cured | this medicine. In my own a tainly worked wonders, relievit Rheumatism, after being troubled with it for years. Ta this, and all other diseases arising from impure blood, there is no remedy with which I am acquainted, that affords such relief as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.—k. H. Lawrence, M. D., Baltimore, Md. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla cured me of Gout and Kheuimatism, when nothing else would. It has eradleated every trace of disease from my system.—R. IH. Short, Manager Hotel Belmont, Lowell, Ma I was, during many months, 8 sufferer from chronic Rheumatism. The disease afflicted me grievously, in spite of all the remedies I could find, until I commenced using Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. I took several bottles of this preparation, and was speed- fly restored to health. —J. Fream, Inde- pendence, Va. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas, Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5 M. W. MIZE, | LOAN And Real Estate BROKER. | INSURANCE AND NOTARY PUBLIC. | 6 PER CENT Money to oan’ On Improved Farms, i! Five years time, with privilege to || pay before due. | agen i } Office over Bernhardt's jewelry iH : store, ! SIDE SQUARE. i I NORTH | i | NESW ENGLAND TRUST CO. SIXTH AND WYANDOTT ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. PAID Ul’ CAPITAL, - $150,000. Interest on deposits. Long time city and tarm loans in Missouri and eastern Kansas a specialty. paid Thos. T. Crittenden, President; J. H. Austin, Vice-President & coun- selor; Watt Webb, Secretary; H. B. Blevens, Treasurer. JOHN A. LEFKER & CO. Agents for Bates county. Office over Ed. Steel’s grocery store, north side square. Lowest rates of interest; Iberal terms on payment, both principal and interest on limited amount of money; no delay, when your papers are satistactory, the money is ready. Call and see betore you borrow. FINE SUITS. In every e price and quality Made to Order T guaranteed a fitin every cas Call and see me, south room grange store. JE. TALBOTT, ay. > OOOO eal | with Parker’s Tonic, « Merchant Tailor | morning.’—Brooklyn Eagle. THE FATAL FOLDING-BED. somes ined an Innocent Man and } tace of a frien 2d to inqui- ted a e of sorrow and ‘Do 1 look mourn ful?’ he asked. *Do I bear the ap- pearance of # man whose soul has been entered by the iron of adversi- ty? Weil, that’s the may I teel, ‘You know, I moved day betore yesterday. Well, burt by the un- feeling remarks of my late landlady and the tact that she retained my trunk as a gayed (amour, I suppose) | 1 sought the sonclusion of a west side boarding house. The room is pleasant and the man who occupies the other half a halt a very nice tel- low. Night betore 1 went home early, and when ready my chum boldly approached an innocent-look- ing piece of turniture, and atter a little sparriag tor time let in with right and lett and brought to view a comfortable bed. I had never seen a folding-bed before, and was a little astonished. However, I remarks but turned. Last night my chum was out and I din’t know what what to do. I loafed room, now and then casting a glance made no around the at the tolded bed and admiring its con.pactness and air ef gentility, but somehow I did not feel like tackling But it it all by myself. had to be done. [remembered that my chum had first litted up the top. I did that. But when 1 let go it came back with a slam that startied the baby owned by the second floor front into a wild symphony ot woe. Then I sat down and thought. To gain time on the bed I undressed. Say, did it strike you as chilly last might? No? Well, itwas. Indeed, it was cold. The combination of that tact and my abbreviated costume urged me to renew the attack, This time I pushed the top past the center of the spring, it went on with a nose loud enough to @rouse the pug in the room across the hall. By that time I was reck less. I seized a strap and pulled. The whole thing began to come. I and when released strapped it halt way and considered, Considering was hard work. So It come But it didn’t go far was holding. I pulled. and I went. enough, and the bed caught me. The Charleston man on the floor below dreamed he was at home. ‘Well, when I got out and took an inventory I was minus considera ble skin, but the accession of eye- brow balanced things. The bed was open, but the middle was below the average. But I was too impatient to be particular. With considera ble emphasis I turned out the gas and rolled in. As soon as I hit the bed it shut up—that is, as close as n could. It was close enough. about ten minutes I would have swapped places with any ot the sev en anarchists and given him odds When I got out ot that place there was not enough lett of the bed clothes to make a respectable bandaye, I know, because I tried it. What 1 suffered you will never know. ‘This morning the landlady in- formed me that, had she known I was subject to delirium tremens, she would have refused the admittance that gave mea chance to ruin the Teputation of her boarding house. As I lett the house the boarders poked their heads outand whispered ‘That’s him; he had ‘em bad last might,’ and similar encouraging re- marks. No, I won't go back. It wouldn't by any use. Futheamore, I’m going to change my fpolitics. Two years ago | had lots ot money and was prosperous. I became a prohibitionist, and have had hard luck ever For since. Henceiorth I am for whisky, and plenty of it. Good hy.’—Chicago News. You can’t work to much purpose unless you are well, but you can build up your health ‘ and strength and work will n become easy. It sets the lungs, liver and kidneys in working order. Coughs and colds vanish betore it Take it in time. ; 4,” said the land- t costs to run this yes, I ‘You have no lord, thow much hotel.” ‘Oh, Whitegoods ; ave,’ ‘Il paia my bill replied | | suffer | A Freak of Nature. St. Louis, April 28.—Imported ot nature need + ntro- duced into St. Louis now. "er cit- ave awakened to the necessi- freaks. yir own ty of supplying The gone now occupying the Carondelet, ts the iit- at 1s iY tle daughter of Munday, who A. Black, Mua Graud and §Keoln avenues. father ot the child is 22 years old, and 19. The little girl is known by the name of Ruby, and She the motber 1s now four montus old. 1s healthy, and of a good size. The peculiar features about her are that h about one ner body is covered wi hundred and fifty spots of a dark brown color and covered with hair. The spots are ot the size of a silver dollar, the one on the back being much larger, however. and extend- ing the fulllength of the body. It is entirely covered with hair, and the skin ghas a grain something like | morocco. When the child was born there was no hair on the spots. It began to appear when she was about one anda half months old, and has grown The hair On some of the spots 18 beginning to to be about one inch long. come out, while on others it 1s in- creasing. The doctors, as weil as the parents, tail to understand the cause of the appearance of the strange spots and their capillary cov ering. All South St. Louis is exci- ted over the strange little visitor, and hundreds daily go to look at her and wonder at the strange sight. “Fell Dead at 106. Old Aunt Mason Eckels, an an- cient negress living north of the city, one and a halt miles. dropped dead in her door yard late Tuesday atter- noon, while teeding the chickens. Olid Aunt Mason was probably tne oldest {person in the State—she claiming to be 106 years old. She came to this State from Kentucky, in a very early day, with the Cecil family—was sold to the Eckels, and when that estate was settled, she was soldto Mr. Tutt, who owned her when the war broke out. She was then treed, and for a long time has lived by herself, She was considered a kind of for- where she died. tune-teller and witch by the negroes and was consequently shunned by them. She was the tamily nurse of a family of ten children, the youngest of whom is Mrs. Brooks, whois now about 65 years old. Aunt Mason claimed to have been grown when she went to live with the family, the oldest child then being a bady. She was a remarkable old darxy, retaining her faculties well, although otten sick. Her remains were in- terred this afternoon, at the colored graveyard in the north part of the city.— Clinton Democrat. Chronic Coughs and Colds. And all diseases ot the Throat and Lungs, can be cured by the use of Scott’s Emul- sion, as it contains the healing virtues ot Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites in their tullest form. Is a beautiful, creamy emulsion, palatable as milk, easily di- gested, and can be taken by the most delica Please read: ‘I consider Scott’s Emulsion the remedy par excel- lence in Luberculous and Strumous At- tections, to sav nothing ot ordiaary colds and throat troubles."—W. R.S. Con- NEL, M. D., Manchester, O. -*1am use ing vour Emulsion Cod Liver Oil witn Hypophosphites for an affection ot my throat, and tne improvements are beyond my exnectation.’’—D. Taytor, M. D., Coosawatte, Ga, 23-Im. The latest accession to the Amer- ican colony in Canada is the paying- teller of the Union Trust Company in Philadelphia. This gentlemanly teller, Taggart by name, has long been a patron of the prize ring, and has backed his pugilistic favorites in the handsome manner known only to those who are using other people’s . ials of the bank say that their confidence in him was unbounded. They Mast Have Something. If Mayor Roche had the measies all the office-seekers would present Petitions ask them.—Chi ago News. In the spring, hundreds of persons trom b carbuncles, other eruptive diseases, to purge itself of impurities, and that it needs the powerful aid which this | js afforded by the use of Ayer’s Sarsapanila. hat | successtul towns ot the country have i all A contemporary consoles himself as to'lows: Newspaper bustles are | | ing him te give it to and } ; ; These are! | evidences that the system is irving} to make your city If you lively, make it. but get up and work for it. Don't go to sleep, Get in Advertise and favorably. If vou have any property imp. house, viean Make vour and you whi property will be w more dollars in the market. It you are dong reasonably well, advise vour tar away friends to co and invest near you. Work steadily tor your home place and home inter- bests. Trade help your | ealers your money | ; | ome as much as possible, and it is likely to he!p vouinreturn. The been made so by property owners | m- | saad at] pulling together. Public mvestme provement is an pays. Don’t waste your time over some dirty neighborhood quarrel; and hold back all ard tor some good, and you will find yourself benefitted. Get atit. Wakeup. Rustle. ‘There | is no time to be lest, and every little helps. Toot your horn and toot it loud.—Mexico Ledger. Beware Ointments tor Catarrh That Contain Mercury, ot sstrov the sense the rough h article ot on prescrip- as the Id to the trom them. ired by h Cure, manufact & Co., Toledo, O., con- u.y and istaken inter ly directly upon the blood and surtaces of the system. In i's Catarrh Cure be sure that Ine, it is taken internal- Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. tains no and acts mucuous buying I hi ly and made in Cheney & Co. BasSold by Druggists, price 75¢ per bot- tle. 23-1m you get The wife of a high official in the royal hoseho!ld of Italy, living in Genoa, has been arrested and sen- tenced to five day’s imprisonment as a kleptomaniac for stealing several pairs of silk stockings trom a shop. Her arrest has caused a great sensa tion on account of her position in society. now made of back numbers. It is pretty rough to think that a man’s best journalistic efforts shall thus be sat upon. [t crushes all the glory out of the profession, and were it not fact that an editer can feel that he has not only brightened a woman’s mind, but improved her tor the = Fa AWS for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that Castorta cures Colle, ~ pation, { m itas superior toany prescription J Sour Ster » Eructation, mmowntome.”” =H. A. Ancurr, M.D. ao Dene TOR a 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication. Tax Cuntacr CompanY, 182 Fulton Street, XY, MW FARLAND BROS. -232+! Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in, Harness and Saddlery, POONER PAT. COLLAR None GENUINE UN “TRADE MAR Spooner Patent Collar! —PREVENTS CHAFING CAN NOT CHOKE A HORSE Adjusts itself to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames “ia: place better than any other collar. SCHWANEFV’S= WAM TUG SECTION shape, he might throw up the sponge} Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops and retire from the world of bustle and ueception. Order of Publication. STATE OF MissovuRI, } County ot Bates. , In the circuit court of said county, June term, 1887, The Adrian Banking Company, a cor- poration, plaintiff, vs. Ashby Hamil- ton and William W. Hamilton, defend- ants. Now atthis day comes the tiff herein, by its attorney, before the un- dersigned clerk of the circuit court in yacation and files its petition and affida vit, alleging, among other things, that defendant W. W. Hamilton is not a resi- dent of the state of Missouri: Where- upon it is ordered by the Clerk in vaca- tion that said defendant be notified by ss. publication that plaintitf has co a suit against him in this court, by p tion and attachment founded ona note tor three hundred and torty-two cents, and that his property is about to be attached and that unless the said W. W. Hamilton be and appear at this court, at the next term thereof, to be gegun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in sa ty, on the sixth day ot June rext, and on or betore the sixth dav ot said term, it the term shall so long continue, and it one dollars and cou not, thenon or before last day ot said term—answer or plead te the neti- tion in said cause , the same wil as confessed, dered accordingly against him and property sold to satisfy the same. be it turther ord a i be published according to law, ia the Butler Weekly Times a weekly newspa- | per printed and published 1n Bates coun- | ty Mo., for tour weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four Weeks | betore the first day of the next term of | J. C. HAYES, Clerk. ve taken and judgment will be ren his And »y hereot said court. Witness my hand and the seal ot {seac.] Circuit Court ot Bates county, this 18th day ot March 1887. A true copy trom the record. Hl ine j 4 | Hampden silver stem winding wateh- | &c, at cost prices. J. C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. ALESMEN oldest. largest and best known Nurseries a West i j ‘nem from Some i earned over$vinaday Eber sex. yous¢orol< Capital Bot required. You are started free. Those woo start at sose ‘we absolutely sare of snug little fortunes. All is so to $3 per day WANTED! STARK NURSERIES sass from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS, SOUTH SIDE SQUARE BUTLER MO. FRANZ BERNHARDT’S es, trom $11 to higher prices. American ladies stem winding gold watches from $25, All up. silverware, Role agent forthe Rockford and Aurora Watcher, in Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, very <ueap. JEWELRY STORE, Is headquarters tor fine Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &c. Spectacles otf all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses. You are cordially, invited to visit his establishment and examine his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices, ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED B.A, FAHNESTOCK’S ESTABLISHED 1827. It ts now nearly sty Me edger Beary ’ ut their er RMIFUG ase * New Pra riz& Co. Pi not safely be dispensed with in any foenyer eee wit 'y family. | petiahle and effirice at foge ® } Yours.&c, J.W BUBEARD. MD. | needei a THOS. H. HANDY, MP. J.B. SCHWARTZ & 00, ws. a. r'shnocicck aco., Pittsburg, Pa, Sele