The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 1, 1887, Page 3

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Lt BUTLER NATIONAL BANK, —IN—- Opera House Block. BUTLER, MO. Capital. - SE66.,000, | WRPLUS === $5,000 JOHN H. SULLENS........ President Wu.E. WALTON Cashier J. RUE JENSINS, «+2002. Ast Cashier, U ON KINNEY....-- Clerk and Collector DIRECTORS, Dr, T.C.Boulware, Booker Powell, j.M Tucker. Green W. Walton judge J- H Sullens, John Deerwester, .R, Simpson C. C. Duke, rank Voris, W., E, Walton, rles! ¢.H. Dutcher ]- Rue Jenkins, ND " Receives deposits, loans money, and \DES { wansacts a general banking business. Weextend to ourcustomers every ac- ROM wmmodation consistent with sate bank- ing. COKRESPONDENTS, C, First Natl Bank - Kansas City. Fourth National Bank - St. Louis. Hanover National Bank - New York. sHT | ———--—-—- ---—-_ ORG BATES COUNTY ERTS (Organized in 1871.) OF BUTLER, MC. tOM , 00 Capital paid in, - - $75,000. Surplus opie $ 71.000 fc MEL TYGARD, = ~~ President, Cl" MGHON, J. B. MEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. ly, J,CCLARK - - - Cashier. FARMERS It Costs Less tu Feed 50 Hogs With \DR. JOS. HAAS’ HOG & POULTRY REMEDY Setateed As A PREVENTATIVE] tan to lose one by DISEASE, meause the extra pork it puts apon the hogs vill return three times its coste. ers and feeders who ha’ follows: leonsider it a sure cure and do not intend to without it M LD. Johnson, Walker, Mo Isasuccess and we cheerfully testify to Griftin & Bro. LaPlata, Mo have used Dr. Jos. Haas’ hog remedy and MA recommend it as asure cure for hog chol- Sie 1am sure it has saved me from $300 used it write x Frank Lee, Hannibal, Mo. have sold it in a dozen instances, no cure pay, and have never losta cent. It bas luver failed. Brown & Mills, Louisville, wo. Thave used your me e for several years. F, Walter, Knox City, wo Ifind it the best preventive for prevailing onl c, = ipa pend: Mo. recommend it to all having hogs WMicted withcholers. TT. A, Buford, Louisville, Mo 8’ hog remedy if it John Castin, Grant © Mo Dr. Haas hog remedy does all he claims for C. P. Haxton, Louisville, Mo m satisfled it will pay for itself in putting ‘flesh, aside from keeping hogs healt! : Thos. il, Logan, Grant, Mo. Your remedy gives better satisfaction than way other, 8. B.S h, Perr: amconvinced, ifthe medicine is properly fiven, itisthe thing for hogs 7 W. J, MeCr: sing your remedy 1 lera among hogs. John $ Courtright, Pecnliar, Cass Co, Mo. Wis the best thing ofthe kind I ever used. A.. sgett, Hannibal Mo. Your remedy is giving general satisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. PRICES, $2.50, $1 2 pound For sale by PYLE & CRUMLEY, Butler Missouri, , Browning Mo. have not had the and 50 cents, yer box ns, $12 50 Who are authorized by m e to receive and for- Niel antler or the insurance of young ase thal wae insurance will provide that I te Highest Market price while Weng nee i od aay: dies from diseases 08. Haas,V. S., Indianapolis. Ind. | DR, STRONG'S PILLS! t ‘ he Old, Weli Tried, Wonderful Ith Renewing Remeaies. ATROWG'S SANATIVE PILLS Knee Atv; he Rint. Koguiating the Bowels, Purifying Recents! meaneing f Tm Malarial Taint A per- aad alt By ie cudache, Constipation Dillons Visorders, a *Couzhs,Cotds, WMAS'S PECTORAL PILLS = Srspers ane geri vowsle. ae presions Been iag and bracing the ‘yoy Te vigor and health to every ¥ ts. For rss Cedar St. 0.Y Cay rfectly Safe and always Effectual. | today r iy bY 4 Goarnntced snperto others, or Cash refand me . Po. DRUG STORE First-class in every respect. OPEN EVERY DAY IN WEEK. | | | cafes | | FRIZELL & RICE, BUTLER, MO. am CHAS. CENNEY At Old Stand, East Side Square. INEW GOODS Fresh and Nice and Comprising every- thing in the GROCERY And Provision COUNTRY PRULULE Of all kinds wanted. COME AND SEE ME. Chae. Dennev. The best and surest Remedy for Cure of all diseases caused by any derangement of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilions Complaints and Malaria of all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of AS DTTSRS It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the system, restores and preserves health. It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to prove beneficial, both to old and young. As a Blood Purifier it is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle. » ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost ‘of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaver Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St, New York. Send 10cts. for 100-Page Pampmet { SEWARD A. NASELTINE PATENT SOLICITOR & ATT'Y AT LAY i cen gy So KASKINE Science emerying from Darkness, that the most delicate stomach will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA, | ner of Moultrie county, who empan- AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. To All Wanting Em: Killed in the Asylum. Windsor. T., Mar ion of 1; : n of —A sensa nd one very Se ployment. le A Ithy farmer of Whitney township: Moul te county. became der sent to the insane red and was asylum for treat n a aking fr 5 ment about two vears avo His lear and this fact makes it safe for us to lad : es g offer to all who are out of employ- | malady being of somewhat mild | ill give our business a to clear at least $:00 Any agent that ays’ trial and fai type he was permitted the usual free ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, Can return | 7 ; : s unsold to us and we will refundthe | dom of the institution. and at times | paid for them. Any agent or general agent who would like ten or more counties and work them through sub-agents for ninety days and fail to clear at least $750 ABOVE ALL EX- rexsgs, can return all unsold and get their money back. No other employer of agents ever dared to make such offers, nor would we if we did not know that we have agents now making more than double the amount we guaranteed ; and but two sales a day would give a profit of over $25 a month, and that one of our agents took eighteen orders in one day. Our large de- scriptive circulars explain our offer fully, aud these we wish to send to everyone out of em- ployment who will send us three one cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure the agency in time forthe boom, anc go to work ‘would come home and return volun tarily to the asylum. The last trp home was from October untilf the middle of April. His friends had _ hopes of his ultimate recovery. On | May Ist his sons received a message from the asylum saying that Peadro | wasifound insensible in his bed, and aoe ene timed ga our extraordinary ofr. | this was"closely followed by another We would like to have the address of all the | announcing his death One of} his sons itnmediately set out after the corpse. and the interment took place near his old home. Nothing further was thought of the matter until W. L. Bowen from Windsor came home from Anna, where he had been for treatment, and told Peadro’s friends jthat he (Peadro) had been badly | treated while there, and that he was No bad ettect | told by other patients in ward C that ese | they had seen him beaten badly : aes | enough to kill any man. This coupled | with some suspicious circumstances | concerning the statement of the man No Ringing! ner of death, which purported to be Ears j due to a broken blood-vessel. eaused agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen- ters in the country, and ask any reader of this paper who reads this offer, to send us at once the name and address of all such they know. Address at once, or you will lose the best chance ever offered to those out of employment to make moncy. Renner Manuracturine Co., 116 Smithfield St., Pittsburg, Pa (THE NEW QUININE.) No nausea Grisamaie | the sons of Peadro—one of the county | superintendent of Moultrie county, the other an attorney of Sullivan— jto have the body exhumed and an inquest held. This was done this morning by Dr. E. L. Harden, coro- § Pleas’nt pure A POWERFLL TONIC and will kee pe | law. he has absolute control any tel vs. A Merciful Ged prises that are full ofabu i : n god wha, V x the sof ? osed to inflict. sou hy the process, is small of a god ». while oth ures which the rested 7 nption of this 1 habitual in eclesiasti cruelty, thoug : Nils, Cecusionaily oeeurine in Land speculation is one of : % spe and still sometimes picto man to ¢ becoming kinds of to ive Isthated. is so in lerable to the better-natured, that some theolos ship of Teel | to that there are portions of the area mother earth. aus distinctly deny it, drop it out of their : | arly this change can zi It is a | not cease until the beliefs in hell and tangible and indestructive form of damnation di appear Disappear property of the most priuitive char- | ance of them will be aided by an in acter, and its possession appeals to < joes quiet ve over which. under the | t. of the glo — : creasing repugnance to justice. The Ms inate love o: red t scrts . his pve f nature and of Visiting on Adam's descendants freedom. When. however, land is through hundreds of generations, dreadful penalties_for small trans gressions which they did not commit; the damning of all men who do not avail themselves of an alleged mode of forgiveness, which most men have never heard of; and the effecting a reconciliation by sacrificing a son who was perfectly innocent, to satisfy the umed necessity for a propitiatory tim; wre modes of action which, as- eribed to a human ruler, would call forth expressions of horror; and the ascription of them to the ultimate cause of things, even now felt to be full of difficultic not held for its practical utility in the way of improvement or of the enjoyment which ample means will allow the owner, but is a mere mat- ter of investment for the rise that may take place, it often proves the most precarious and unsatisfactory of all earthly possessions. Senti- ment in such cases will not make up for the depreciation of value or the difficulties of sale and disposal. It ean notgbe taken from market to market, but must await the current of trade toward itself. The tide of progress and the selection of locali ties for development often follow the most capricious laws of chance, and Spencer. mall Leak will sink a great ship; and what at first appears to be a trifling cough is apt to culminate in consumption if not properly attended to in time. For consumption, which is scrofula of the lungs, and for all blood and skin diseases, Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discove has no equal. By druggists. hopes of advantage are of the most illusive nature. Nothing besides actual disaster gives a more gloomy and forlorn aspect toa region than to be suffering from the blight of some unfortunate laid speculation, with former inflated prices material- ly reduced, and the once brilliant NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION, Bi.v0OD PURIFIER, York, was cured by Kaskine of extreme mala- rial prostration after seven years sufferin; He had run down from 175 pounds to on Kaskine in June 18x86, went to work in one month, regained his full weight in six months. Quinine did him no good whatever. the most respected citizens of Bridgeport, Conn , says: all hope details will be sent on applic medical advice. or sent by mail on recei THE KASKINE CO ery Wante ds ho wish steady employment to take nice light work at your home and make easily from $1.00 to $3.00 a day address with stamp Crown Mt’g Co., 294 Vine St., licious, and delicacy commend it to all. RHEUMATISM, and all Germ Diseases. THE MOST SCIENTIFIG AND SUCCESSFUL Superior to quinine Mr. F. A. Miller, 630 East 157th street, New began Mr. Gideon Thompson, the oldest and one of ‘‘lam ninety years of age, and or the last three years have suffered from ma- and from the effects of quinine poisoning. cently began with Kaskine which broke up the malaria and increased my weight 22 5 fracture ri aree ieces cre bad fracture, two large pieces of Mrs. T. A. Solomons, of 159 Halliday, st. | broken bone being removed. The Jersey City, writes: “My son Harry, eleven Ete se 5 vears, Was cured of Malaria by Kastine, after; NeXt examination was of the side. fifteen months’ illness, when we had given up | Letters from the above persons, giving fall any special $1.00 per bottle. Sold by? pt of price. 54 Warren St., New York Kaskine can be taken without DIES and GENTLEMAN You should ‘incinnati, © overROOT BEER age, 25 cents, mak > gallons of a de- sparkling, temperance beverage. Strengthens and purifies the blood. Ita purity Sold by all druggists and storekeepers Its causes, and a new and EAFNESS cece CU Ee es at your own home, bv one who was deaftwen- ty-eight years Treated by most of the not- ed specialists without benefit’ Cureb himself in three months and since then hundreds of others. Full particulars sent on application. T.S. PAGE, No4l West 3ist St. New York. “IT STOPS THE PAIN IN ONE MINUTE. Aching backs, hips, and sidea, kidney and uterine pains, weakness and inflam- mation, rheumatic, neuralgic, sciatic, eudden, sharp and nervous pains and strains relieved in one minute by that new, elegant and infallible antidote to pain and inflammation, the Caticura Anti-Pain Plaster. 25 cents; 5 for $1; at all druggists or Potter Drve@ anp CuEMICaL Co., Boston. SS, HAIR BALSAM the popular favorite for dressing the hair, Restoring color when , and preventing Dandruff. ft cleanses the scalp, stops the hair falling, and is sure to please. S0c. and $1.00 at Druggists, HINDERCORNS. ‘Thesafest, surest and best cure for Corns, Bunions, &c. Stopsall pain. Ensures comfort to the feet. Never tails tocure. 15 cents at Druggista. Hiscox & Co., N. ¥. S| kK School Fund Mortgage Sale. Whereas, R. J. Starke and [Mary E. Starke, his wife, by their school fund mortgage, dated August 4th 1883, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county, Misseuri, in book No. 20, page 171, conveyed to Bates county he following real estate lying and be- ing situate in thecounty of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit. The east one haif (1-2) of lots No. three (3) and four (4) in block No. two (2), in Montgomery’s third (3rd) addition to the town (now city) of Butler, which con- veyance was made to secure the payment of two school fund bonds fally described in said school fund mortgage, and whereas default has been made in the payment of the annual interest | duethereon on the firstday of May of each year tor two years. By the terms of said mort- | gage it is provided that should default be made | in the payment of the principal orinterest or | any part thereof, at the time when they shall | become severally due and payable, according to the terms and effect of said bonds the then acting sheriff of said county may without suit on this mortgage, proceed to sell the property hereinconveyed and mortgaged. Now, there- | fore, in pursuance of an order of the ‘county | court made at the May term, 1537, ofsaid court, I will proceed to sell the above described prem- ises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court hou in the city of Butler, county of Bates, and state of Missouri, on se Thursday, June 2nd, 1887, between the hours of 90’clock in the forenoon | and 50’clock in the afternoon of that day for the purpose of satisfy debt. inter and co: GEORG: . EBROOK x Acting Sheriff of Bates County. elled a jury of prominent citizens. Dr. Fry, of Mattoon, assisted by Dr. Beals, made the autopsy. The evi- dence was given in secret to the jury. avery natural appearance after its twenty days’ interment, except that the head was badly swollen and one side very first thing was the examination of the very bad discoloration on the left cheek bone, caused by a very jthree ribs being found broken an the chest badly discolored, cause: as the foreman of the jury said, by some heavy weight upon the chest, which probably broke the ribs at the same time. colorations on the body showed very plainly that the patient had received bad treatment from someone. worst spells he could not have beefi | that his death was ec: | (d'saster. will be brought in The body whenexhumed presented of the face discolored. The Other bruises and dis- Tn his very hard to manage. as he was over 67 yer rs of age and would not have weighed more than 120 pounds. At a late hour to-night the follow- ing verdict was rendered: We, the jurors empanelled and into the death Peadro, do find used by wounds sworn to inquire of Bayless G. inflicted by the officers or attendants in charge of the Sovthern Hospital for the Insane at Anna, Til. Land Speculation, Throughout the country there seems to be greater activity in the buying and selling of land. Land companies are forming for the con- trol of vast areas, and fabulous prices are realized in comparison with val- ues a few months ago. this movement in land is from a real and legitimate demand and in obedi- ence to the progressive development of the country in certain sections. With the immense immigration which is going on, with the extension of railroads, township and other enter- prises which make healthy growth and civilization, favorable tracts for commercial and manufacturing pur- poses, for farming and for the hab- itations of man naturally are sought for and find enhanced values accord- ing to the attractiveness of the lo- cality and the prospects for the fu- ture. But a great factor in these rises in value and of the popular activity ulation. intentions and fair th and development, prospects w Much of} and excitement in land is mere spec- Bad enterprises, and those which may be conceived with honest | of| serious. from books to men, and prospects turned into a desert of un- None feel their position than those who, as the expression goes, realized speculations. more keenly are “land poor,” suffering from the paradox of great possessions in real estate, and yet with all the embar- rassments of poverty. Tantalized with the sight of ample areas of in- trinsic value, they are actually una- ble to avail themselves of any benefit unless perhaps by a ruinous sacrifice. Any great movement in trade or business is likely to be followed by reaction graded by the violence or the sudden of the impulse. With the so-called booms in land all 2eSa over the country, with an expansive area to draw upon, we may reason- ably expect ere long to record the collapse of many of the enterprises, and find an array of confident in- vestors who were beguiled by hopes based on elaborate paper plans and showy certificates of stock, hopes as hollow as the high-sounding titles sand as unsubstan- of the enterpris tial as moonshine.—Boston Courier. Conversation. A talent for conversation has an extraordinar value for common, everyday life. Anyone who has this gift enters in a social circle anywhere. How everyone's face brightens at How soon he sets all the wheels in motion, encouraging his entrance. the resources of the reserved and shy, subsiding the facile, and making everybody glad and happy. To con- verse well is not to engross the con It to do all the ta It is not necessary to talk with very great brillianey. A man may talk with such surpassing pow- is not er and splendor as to awe the rest of the company into silence or excite their envy, and so produce a chill where his aim should be to produce heat and sunshine. He should seek the art of making others feel quite at home with him, so that, no matter how great may be his attainments or how small may be theirs, they find it insensibly just as natural and pleas- ant talking to him as hearing bim talk. The talent for conversation, indeed, more than anything else in life. requires tact and discretion. It requires one to have more varied knowledge. and to have it at an in- stant and absolute disposal, so that he can talk just as much or just as little as the occasion demands. It requires the ability to pass instantly and with ease from the playful to the but which | from the mere phrase of courtesy to | | will ultimately come to naught save | the expression of sentiment and pas- 9 being2{ sion. Housekeeper. different sorts of bugs. wings of anothe gether. on, © humbug. A Religious Humbug. Sam Jones.] One of the professors in Harvard University was a great bugologist He had all sorts of bugs the world ever saw in frames, and he studied bugology until he knew all about it, and had thousands of specimens of And the mischievous students took the legs of one bug, the body of another, and the . and put them all to- rture puts them to just li gether, and carried the bug in to the old professor, with his thick glasses d laid it on the table, and said: “Professor, what sort ofa bug is this?” The old profes looked at it, and turned it around and looked at it, and looked “Gentleman, this is a humbug.” And this is just what we mean by areligious at it again, and said he, He has the head of a chris. tian, the feet of a dancer, the tongue of a tattler; the appetite of a drunk ard and the laziness of a shirk, and you put him all together, and he is the finest speciman ofa humbug you ever saw. Ingersoll’s Apositrophe to Whisky. A few days ago Col. Bob Ingersoll sent an old friend a very old jug of rare With the foll « lines in the Colonel’s well- known chirography: whisky. it were of the most that ever drove the a feast or painted land It is the mingled souls of wheat and corn. In it you will find the sunshine and the “T send you some wonderful whisky skeleton fr scapes in the brain of man. shadow that chased each other over the billowy fields, the breath of June, the carol of the lark. the dews of night, the wealth of summer and antumn'srich content, all golden with Drink it and you will hear the voices of men and maid- ens sing the ‘Harvest Home,’ mingled with the laughter of children. Drink it and you will feel within your blood the starled dawns, and dreamy, tawny dusks of many ‘perfect days. For forty years this liquid joy has heen within the happy staves of oak, longing to touch the lips of man. In General Debility, Emaciation, Consumptiou, and Wastiug in Children, Scott’s Emulsion ot Pure Cod Liver Oi? with Hyphusphites is a most valuable tood and medicine. It creates an appe- tite tor tood, strengthens the nervous svstem, and builds up the boay. Please read: “I tried Scott’s Emulsion on a young man whom physicians at times had giyen up. Since he began using the Emulsion his cough has ceased, gained flesh and strength, and trom all appear- ances his life will be prolonged many years. Ihave been in Hospital service jor the past twenty years, and never have used auv preparatior. with greater satis \faction."—Joux Sctriyan, Hospital Steward, Reform School, Morganza, Pa, 7-1, imprisoned light.

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