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TWAL BANK Block, BUTLER, MO. ll pers [louse S66.,000, apital, - $5,000 URPLUS HN H.SULLENS. WALTON - President +-+eeeCashier -Ast Cashier, | Clerk and Collector DIRECTORS , | _T. C. Boulware, IM. Tucker, dge J- H Sullens, R, Simpson nk Vorts, H, Dutcher Booker Powell, | Green W. Walton Jahn Deerwester, C. C. Duke, W., E, Walton, J. Rue Jenkins. Receives deposits, loans money, and nsacts a general banking business. Weextend to our customers every ac- »modation consistent with sate bank- CORRESPONDENTS. frst Nat'l Bank - wrth National Bank - nover National Bank - New York 5 run ESE eee sr E 8 (Organized in 1871.) OF BUTLER, MC. - $75,000. $ >1.000 President, Vice-Pres. Cashier. ee : Red -- fe MEWBERRY, FARMERS i Costs Less tu Feed 50 Hogs With IR. JOS. HAAS’ & POULTRY REMEDY * DISEASE, the extra pork it puts upon the hogs lurn three times its costs. and feeders who have used it write ider it a sure cure and do not intend to at MD.4 Walk used Dr. Jos. Haas’ hog remeay a nod it as asurecure for hog chol- Tam sure it has saved me from $00 ; Frank L Hannibal, Mo. have sold it in a doze: | , and have never | failed Brown & Mil ie used your medicine fi ; F, Walter, Knox Ci it the Leer’ prevent for prevailing | R. Dawson, Denver, Mo ett refamnienel it to all having hogs d with cholera, T. A. Bufford, le, Mo is NORTH MAIN STREET —o—-- DRUG STORE) First-class in every respect. OPEN EVERY DAY 1\ WEEK. PFRIZELL & RICE, BUTLER, MO. fo. “THE HORNS. CHAS. CENNEY|" At Old Stand, East Side Square. NEW GOODS Fresh and Nice and Comprising every- thing in the GROCERY And Provision Line. COUNTRY PRODUCE) Of COME AND SEE ME. Chas. Denney. )RICKLY ash > BITTERS T wane cu BARC O ow lig pact roa all kinds wanted. Lo 11 not be without Haas’ hog remed juree times the present pri John Castin, Grant City, Mo Haas hog remedy does all he claims for satisfied it will b, aside from k. Th if it If in putting A, ifthe medicine is properly ng for hogs Wed :, Browning Mo TH! using your Fr ve not had the among hog: bemuint nS Courtright, Peculiar, Cass Co, Mo RAND- Phe best thing of the kind I ever used. 0. remety ia eg) giteeett. Hannibal Mo y is giving general satisfaction. — A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo S, $2.50, $1.25 and 50 cents, % pound cans, $12 50 sale by & CRUMLEY, Butler Missouri. yer box are authorized by me to receive and for- plications or the insurance of young inst diseases “ys of insurance will provide that I | Highest Market price y py ansared hog which dies from diseases eins fed the Temedy Haas,V. s ndianapolis. Ind a jON, om STRONG’S PILLS! aper. wae | °4, Woli Tried, Wonderful Renewing Remeaie SAMMTIVE PILLS Ean ars ne Bowes rritying Bi husrae sale ching and bracing the ren ewe iy in te ‘om [VOo Kare iste cO., Phiiad... Pa. It has stood the Test of Years, | in Curing all Diseases of the | BLOOD, LIVER, STOM- | paperelye mere | fies forbids its ose as a de It is pleas- ant to the taste, and as! easily taken by child- ren as adults. PRICKLY ASH BITTER BITTERS CO [PRICE] DOLLAR) grlocisand ind Rameas Orr | ADVERTISERS ican learn the exact cost of any proposed line of | — - ‘on as I began. and exterminated the} Gy3y about half as much in the aver- OUR MOTTO opposing force every time—every| .,¢ of distilled spirits as they did : > eat ines. two weeks—where would the war twenty years ago. | SS. — have been? Why, you see yourself, oe ~ = samPerfection in Principle. a t : ¥> J 2 ‘An End to Bone Scraping. , | advertising in American | “=: papers by addressing ‘Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St, New York. Send 10cts. for 100-Page Pamphues SEWARD A. HASELTINE, PATENT SOLICITSR & ATTY AT Lavi SPRINGFIELD, MO. thanociaset at Washington. D.C) Correspondeas< fequested, Lecuiries answered free end promoe EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. To All W; anting ‘Employment. Twain asa Soldier. The following i He wis | t cles in this coun try—to-wi dimensions of my milits ary services in | ¢ the ployment who will se stamps for postage. ,cival war just two weeks SS ee ata our extraordinary. etter In that brief time I rose from We would like to have the address of all the | private it Suess : agents seuiey maciine colctorsigndicarpen: | Eo ate to second lieutenant. The any reader of this $ offer, to send us at once i such they y ters in the country, paper who reads t monumental feature of my campaign the name and address of was the one battle which my com- Address a 2 , : ever offered mand fought—it was in the summer moucy. ,of 1861. If I do say it, it was one | of the bloodiest battles ever fought FOR lin human history; there is nothing BILIOUSVESS: approaching it for destruction of human life in the field. if you take in | consideration the force engaged, and | the proportion of death to survival. And yet you do not even know the jname of that battle. Neither do I j It had but Ihave forgotten jit. It is no use to keep private infor }mation which you off. | Now look at the way history does. | Ittakes the battle of Boonville, fought nearby, about the date of our slaughter, and shouts its teeth loose SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPTATHION, DYSPEPSIA, 2 heune, can't show r ri canlive athome, ana make more money at work forus, than anything else in this world. Capital notneed- ed; you are started free. Both sexea; all ages. Anyone can do the work. Large earnings sure from the first start. Costly outfit and terms free. Better not delay. Costs you over it, and yet never even mentions ours; doesn’t even call it an ‘affair’, doesn’t even call it anything at all; nothing to send us yous address and find out; | never even heard of it. Whereas, if you are wise you will do so at once. | i 2 H. Hatrett & Co., Portland, Mane. | what are the facts? Why. these: In ———— | the battle of Boonville there were SCHWENCK & ‘OLDEAKER. jtwo thousand men engaged on the | Union side and about as many on the | other—supposed to be. The easual- | ties, all told, were two men killed and | not all of these were killed outright, but only half of them, for the other man died in the hospital the next day. I know that, because his reat uncle Boot & Shoe Makers: — | Who spoke three languages and was BUTLER, MO. | perfectly honerable and upright, al- - | though he Was second cousin to my gr had warts all over him. Boots and Shoes to order he | and used to—but never mind about Boas ithat now, the facts are just as T say, Shop nerth side ot Square. 49 tf | and T ean prove it. Two men killed | in that battle of Boonville, that’s the to be made. Cut this out | whole result. All the others got and return itto us, and we will send you free, some- thing of great value and ! on both sides. Now then, in importance to you; that will start you in busi- | our battle there were just fifteen men ness which will bring you in more money right av was a stranger. TO HAVE aa THE hee MUST BE KEPT IN ORDEP. ANPORD'S | sex, all ages. Something new, that just coins Lieutenant. On the other side there important chances of a lifetime. Those who are | gasta, Maine. thought he was an army of observa- bigger | than an army of observation would in away than anything else in this world. Any | engaged, on our side—all Brigadier one can do the work and live at home. Either * Generals but me, and I was a Second money for all workers. We ‘will start you: capital not needed. This is one of the genuine, ambitious and enterprising w not delay. | WaS one man. He Grand outiit free. Address True & Co., Au- | We killed him. It was night, and we | tion; he looked like an army of obser | vation—in fact he looked | | the daytime; and some of us believed and he was trying to surround us, some thought he was going to try to turn our position. and him. Poor fellow. he probably wasn't ration, after all, but Sp wasn’t our fault; as I say. he had 'all the look of it in that dim light: {It was a sorrowful circumstance, but {he took the chances of war, and he | drew the wrong card; he over estimat- jed his tighting strength. so we shot Jan army of obse) fm Any crusgice will tation The White: is ‘King g Hite and took his things. 600.000 an {of the world the where KinGor SEWINGMACHINES IT 18 THE BEST MADE, LIGHTEST RUNNING,': QUICKEST AND SIMPLEST In the world- Now, then, for argument. bee Popularity Univeral. | NEEDLES. OILS AND PARTS FOR MACHIN ALL sued it. I withdrew to private life. and eave the Union side a ch: There. now. you have the whole thir Sey RESPONSIBLE DEALERS AND 2 who wis | SALABLE G oops. WHITE SEWING VACHE C0 WPAN 921 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. ‘B2-MENTION THIS PAPER. ina nutshell; it was not my pr in th when my cours he true | this michtic st the hearts and speech of Americans, our land, ament, and contemplate these sublime results | t and he | suffered the likely result; but he fell asthe brave should fall—with his face to the foe and fect to the tield—so we |} buried him with the honors of war So began and ‘ended the only battle in the history opposing | force was utterly exterminated, swept 'from the face of the earth—to the last man. And. yet you don’t know the name of that battle; you don't feven know the name of that man. Suppose T had continued in the war, and gone the conflict would have been too one sided. There was only one honorable course for me to pursue, and I pur- | from ence rt determined. that tremendous ; contest—it was my retirement from «it that brought the crash. It left the t T stoy ited sist his freest of free of the civilized empires | & of the earth. in mt thers. in progress, civil war, and the effect which | they had upon the general result. I] there is no North. no South recognize the importance of this | more, but that as in the old time. it to history, and I come prepared.|is now and will remain forever, in | up with the deere ive circulars x Here are the details. I was in the our country, our giant em- | hi § our flag, would not wish it | otherwise. No, when I look about me | « I feel, deep down in my heart, that I | 1 acted for the best when I took my | shoulder from under the Confederacy and let it come down.” , He finished in a roar of applause | % that shook the room Gentle as the Breeze of Evening.” This line of old hymn appropriate when applied to ant Purgative Pellets.” =I like to take pills if I can avoid it,” we often hear persons say, “because they constipate me so.” now the “P. lets” never do this. They are so gen tle and iild that their effect is almost | precisely similar to a natural move if ment of the bowels, and no unpleas ant effects are left behind. “Look here,” said the editor of a Dakota paper, on his return from a to the office boy, “I see you say in this week's paper that ‘Major Shorteard, our esteemed fel- low townsman, dropped in yesterday and ordered his paper stopped.’ Now, what in the name of Great Scott do you mean by that kind of talk? You don’t seem to catch on to the first principals of journalism. Now you should have put it like this: ‘Old Pete Shortcard, the notorious tough of this city, tried to bulldoze us yester an is quite Pleas don’t | week's absence, day by ordering his paper stopped. As he had never paid a cent, and we took in ten cash subscriptions within two hours. we can probably live through it. Ta ta, Shorty.”—Dakota Bell. Food for the brain and nerves that will invigorate the body without in- toxicating, is what we need in these days of “rush and worry. Parker's Tonic restores the vital energies, soothes the ner and brings good health quicker than anything you can use. Blushing blushes for shame. dis No While women of the world may wear cheeks of marble, is a one the innocent country lass is made red by being looked at. The perjurer tells his story without a change of and confused by the lawyer who is hired to supress truth in courts of Court roses are said to blush They Pol iticians never blush, but they grow justice. unseen. are very foolish using S.S.S any }and smaller, | up my general system. began to take the Spec | ne rvous that I could not sleep for color; the honest witness is flushed | red in the face over the spirit of the | ntold Suiferings—A Ten Year's Expe- rience. Near I wood, Ga.. Dee. 6. "86. > ten years TI have that time J atment of the ected i ee ealths s ms Atlanta, Ga., and “Wher 5 i EE Ur : i whom were able to this es Bee ee oY give velef or assurance of cure Fon ee at ect : : rh " I turned to the use of patent 3 - is the only royalty; ! medicines, several of which I used one Proper ee le ruled by th istest and without avail. My doctor in Dawson, oe he said had long been a ject | wholesomest laws and government | who had attended me for twenty of dispute and bad blood in war cir yet devised by the wisdom of men, ; Years assured me that I could not live year. About two years ago I began at once ny tumor in prosperity and in promise; and | yielded to its intluence; it grew softer and my general health, | which was badly run down, was built se of the tumor Finally, I felt so well and my general realth was so good, that I stopped pire and the flag floating i in its firm- | the Swift Specific, and went on per- forming my household duties. But, of cou! » as T had not persisted iv he use of the medicine until the tu nor had entirely disappeared, I could only look for a return of the ailment. Again T resorted to the use of Swift's | Specific, with the same happy results us on the first occasion. This has | been repeated several times within | the last two years, the medicine never | failing to reduce the tumor and build When I first ic, I was so j hours on retiring. I felt that if 1 ii ust held my feet still for a few min | utes by of will, that it would thrown me into convulsions. That nervousness the S. 8. S. entire- ly cured. My pain was so great that my physicians urged me to keep un- der the influence of morphine all the time, and to abandon hope of recov- ery. When I began the use of the Specific, I was on the bed half my time, a helpless invalid. This year I have been able to do all my own cooking, except when I was down with a severe cold. MRS. M. E. SASSER. Blood and Skin Dis eases mailed free. The Swift Specitie Co., Drawer 3 Atlanta, Ga. force have Treatise on Twenty years ago John Flynn shut himself up in his house near Mar Mich., {twenty years uutil taken out the He and has a son who hasn't and remained there for by offi lived with quette, other di his sister, been out of doors in nine years. The young man was hidden and couldn't be found when the officers searched the house. Flynn was unkempt and dirty, and fought the officers like « tiger. In chronic diseases, medicines should be restoring, and not debili tatin, in their action. The wonder | fulstrengthening and curative effects \realized from the use of Ayer’s Sar- sapa sustain the reputation of this remedy as the most popular blood purifier. Malanial poisons contain the germs If these mulate in the system, jof dangerous diseases. acc poisons and claim modesty as an : Picay campaign, ice.—New Orle inherit: Without beautiful hair no womgn is beautiful. Is yours falling off or faded? The loss is vital. Parker's Hair Balsam will preserve your hair and give back its gloss and youthful color. Clean, elegant. perfect. Pre vents dandruff. The Americans are the most tem perate people on the globe. according tostatistics’ We drink about as much wine as the British, but only about one-hundredth as much as the French. gallons. Edward Shepherd, of Harrisburg, fll. savs: “Having received so much benefi Electric Bitters, I teel it: let suttering humanity Know had arunning sore on my leg for ant ar vears bone scraped or leg amputated , instead, three bottles ot s and seven boxes Bucklen’s / and my I is now sound Electric Bitters are sold at an fitt well.” cents a bottle,and Buckien’s Arnica Salv at 25¢. per box by John G. Walker. We drink of all kinds of liquor about thirteen gallons per head, while the Germans drink about twenty-five gal- lons. the English over thirty-four gal- lons and the French over thirty.eight But the Americans drink my dociors told me I would have = Electric rnica Bilious, Intermittent 01 sure to follow. Ayer's anted specific for ic bil iy j Ague C ‘ malaria. | At 16 a girl thinks she would like to marry a dude, at 18 she thinks she wants to marry a foreign count, at 20 she is satisfied with an editor, at 25 she will put up with a banker and at 30 she will take anything from an organ grinder down.—Pierce Eagle. Yesterday we were again married. It will be remembered that both of our former wives eloped with the foreman of the office. To avoid any future inconvenience of the kind we have this time married a lady who is herself a compositor, and she will set the type while we hustle for the ducks who still owe on subscription.—Dak | ota Mail. Jay Gould is notorious as the great American snail eater. He picked up + |a taste for the “escargots” while out t in New Mexico. The Mexicans are fond of snails. t Bostonians grate radishes imto a sauce for fish. The people there are d| becoming feverish and everything in 2 |life mus: be highly spiced to satisfy their excitable natures. i siti natisinvidnta tissue intent Lnsieiiadtnanseannaonmninenine i