The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 15, 1887, Page 3

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BUTLER JONAL BANK. a! r ——J} pera Louse Bieck. |. oo BUTLER, MO. apital. - S66,000. | -- $5,000 | prLus | ouN H.SULLENS | -- Cashier WALTON - ng [EN INS, «eee Ast Cashier, ts] cH EY....-Clerk and Collector. | 1$ tri send li } rn DIRECTORS , Booker Powell, Green W. Walton pr, T. C- Boulware, ded y. Tucker. Wi Ye “ H Sullens, John Deerwester, B.S . C. Duke ni impson . le Gal Sa yore, Ws, E, Walton, . iH. Dutcher J. Rue Jenkins. D-BY taclaim Receives deposits, loans money, anc yularity cao tsa general banking business. nive: Weextend to ourcustomers every ac: medicing gmmodation consistent with sate bank- ecident, ing. amily wu; 1 his m CORRESPONDENTS. °o his irst Nat’! Bank - Kansas City. ey, ‘fourth National Bank = - St. Louis. Pp tthout: Hanover National Bank - New York. Is stab _—————— — e BATES COUNTY ~lational Bank. pradils (Organized in 1871.) 6 Is not 8 to Life eer, re amon nd wher d atone @ best a ’ OF BUTLER, MC. fapital paid in, - hurplus - - - f.1.TYGARD, - H0N. J. 8. MEWBERRY, .C.CLARK = = : $ 75.000. $ >1.00¢ President Vice-Pres. Cashier. of ble FARMER It Costs Less tu Feed 50 Hogs With | DR. JOS. HAAS’ H0G & POULTRY REMEDY As a Prev TATIVEY IE tan to lose one by DISEASE, meause the extra Ue it puts apon the hogs vil return three times its costs. ee and feeders who have used it write Lo Teconsider it a sure cure ani do not iatend to @¥ithcut it. M D. Johnson, Walker, Mo. Risasuccess and we cheerfully testify to Griffin & Bro. LaPlata, we used Dr. Jos. H Tecommend it as aso Frank ‘rank Lee, Hannibal, Mo. We have sold it in a dozen in: noe Fs es Wpay, and have never tosta cent. It has wrer failed. Brown & Mills, Louisville, mo. Thave used your medicine for s F. Walter, Knox City, mo Ifind it the best preventive for prevailing Theartit wad See all bavi hos recommen: all having ho; MMlicted with cholera, T.A. Butford, sis Louisville, Mo Iwill not be without Haas’ hog remedy ‘if it tat three times the present aren “ John tin, Grant Dr. Haas hog remedy d A C. P. Haxton, Louisville, Mo. Tam satisfied it will pay for itself in putting flesh, aside from keeping hogs healthy. Y Thos. H. Logan, Grant, City Mo. ‘our remedy gives better satisfaction than “Tam convinced, if the’ madieine te papers | ced, e medicine 1 fen, it is the thing for hogs. ated fi W.J. McCray, Browning Mo. ince using your remedyy have not had the aaa among ee. on- ohn s urtright, Pecnliar, Cass Co, Mo. ee Wis the best thing of the kind I er used. . al A.J Leggett nibal Mo. Your remedy is giving general satisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. id 50 cents, yer box ~ 4 $12 50 ing For sale by il PYLE & CRUMLEY, = Butler Missouri. ent ‘Who are authorized by me to receive and for- or. Le tions or the insurance of young —— contracts of inburance will provide that I Wall pay the provide that Highest Market price lor every insured hog which daa from d i While doing fed the Temedy. genie: Jos. Haas,V. S., Indianapolis. Ind. OR, STRONG'S PILLS! Old, Weli Tried, Wonderful Health Renewing Remeaies. STRONG'S SANATIVE PILLS For.the Evse: A speedy eure for the Be e@plaint. Regulating the Bowels, Purifying . Cleans alaral Taint. & feteure for Si iache, Constipation Mall Billo Dicrdces AMONG PECT CALL PILLS <Sysetyse te 1 at Are perfectly Safe and always Effectual. Used to-day regularly by 10,000 American Women. Guaranteed rior to all mor ers, or Cash refunded. Don't waste any address. Send 4ce WILCOX sPECIFIC Co. s for particulars, hilads., Pa. cistern and pump in kitchen, fine well under cover, good barn, wood and house, lots of fine truit, flowers in fusion, nicest place in town, close to the square, good cistern, small fruit, shrubbery,trees dition, price $300. porches, good well, $750, easy terms. | wood house, good cistern, nice location, close in, $goo, easy terms. | fruit, blue Brass, flowers, good c | splendid cistern, 4 magnificent home, price $1,500, | barn, shade trees, shrubbery, evergreens, flowers, close in, price $1,200. stable, coal house, good neighborhood, ness property $1,500, house, stable, fine well, $1,000, easy lerms. ; lot, stable, coal and wood house, fine well, price $700, easy terms. change, from 40 acres to 600 we can fit you out in any kind of a trade vou want. We have 200,000 acres ot land in Minue- sota and Iowa, $150,000 in Kansas, 6,000 in Dakota, besides town property every- where. i acres adjoining corporation, good young house, on Water street, close in, terms ni ance one and two years. “What a man does is the thing.’ jess nostra: first. Sold by all Druggists, or | 6 acres ground in city limits, $8oo. 4 room house, good cistera, Cogswell addition, Stoo. room 2 story 15 hou Ty 15 house, good ¢ ro- Price & Price $4,000, easy terms. 2 alley in rear, go €., price $1,100, dirt cheap, + room house, good weil, Walley’s ad- | | Corner lot, Fort Scott st, 4 rooms. 3 Large corner lot Ohio st. 4 rooms, new 4 rooms, 1-2 acre, lots of evergreens, ar Corner lot Ohio st. 4 rooms, good wel!, 3 rooms‘ Mechanic st. good lot, well, 500. 4 rooms, South Main, adjoining pub- ¢ square, lot 4ox100, make good busi- 6 rooms, 3 lots, smoke house, coal 4 rooms, North Main, close in, large Farms, oceans ot tbem to sell or ex Don’t buy until you see us. House 1 story, 3 rooms, good weil, 4 1-2 rchard, large supply small truits, very retty place: price $1,000. x 6 room house, corner lot, 75X247, new Asy. One large large Ict on Water street 75x 473 price $450, on easy terms. 5 room house, North Main street, lot oO, cistern, new barn for 4 horses. e place; price $1,000, halt cash, bal- LEFKER & CATRON, North Main Street. NORTH MAIN STREET ee DRUG STORE First-class in every respect. \ OPEN EVERY DAY IN WEEK. | es | | (FRIZELL & RICE, | } | | | i 10. 6 Foe BUTLER, }) 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 all kin COME AND Chas. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. To All Wanting Employment. ges to our agentsa: ention, but in its salabi that will haadle it with energy now at work are making from $150 to Stoo month clear and this fact makes it safe for us to make our offer to all who are out of employ- ment. Any agent that will give our business a thirty days’ trial and fail to clear at least $:00 in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, Can return all goods unsold to us and we will refund the money 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- PeNsgs, 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 $125 a month, and that one of our agents took eighteen orders in one day. Our large de- nem the grand creati orious Womanhood: hem the high ide bul hath understood for them the lofty mou ing o'er life’s desert wast eaten Dead Sea A Sy them pall upon their taste. wiy upward, modest violets, which are bloom: In some shaded. coo! retreat; Woman reaching out strong tendrils, scriptive circula lain our offer fully, and hese athe wales: Of4 in P. Mi en een net he Le : : ployment who will send us three one cent bas roa, = ae < had ied it when he was weak | it into the gulch with an oath. But. stamps for postage. Send at once and secure de eee and sick And he paused and con- | = * ane id the agency in time forthe boom, and go to work Woman int n sick : soe " after all, it) was a chispa, and on the terms named in our extraordinary offer. Standing where the tried have stood, sidered why he had broughtit with him | the foundation of a new bag We would like to have the address of all the Breaking bread for questioning spirits, to-night. He had not the slightest d adi sel agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen- Wearing crown of motherhood ; S = ae 2 sitest) must be laid soon. He climbed down ters in ae country, and sak any mendes of this | Woman delving, sculpturing, carving, intention of using it, but Wild} after it with feverish haste. A jagged: paper who reads this offer, to send us atonce | ac g ing, Bs betas Minar hee pee te 3 ste. agg the name and address of all such they know. Making still this ada: Bill always carried a gun. Then quartz rock cut his hand; he was glad, takes much to ma! y It takes more to make a woman.” ‘Address at once, or you will losethe bestchance | ever offered to those out of employment to make Moncey. Renner Manuracturixc Co, | Smi tsburg, | et the fire te b higher, ith the rocks, 2 a 33 ; : : ame ze | Sleeps the lady, but the woman : Br0r) Yes, it was sorrow that filled his eyes Be err rene Ack abn See Ess veers cans sO how could you do it! Another stumble! K i E Audie eta ee Be are ieee residence and Dick s. but he was sure] -pake care, Dick; you had better wipe | And who climb the mountain steep, the trail was bewitched to-night, and | your eyes, if you want to find that Write upon the heart this ads Dick’s bag of dust, which he had hid- | (pispal ; ow it is a true one Ss much ton es more tor P. Brown, in Womas (THE NEW QUININE.) | pnal No badettect | oe -- BUSTER BILL. No headache ! No nausea | How He Saved Keno Dick From Robbery. inging | | “ “Ho. By Jupiter!” said Buster Bill. It might have sounded harsh from any other inhabitant of Gold Run, but coming from the lips of Buster Bill it was different; for Buster Bill had deep blue eyes, and his yellow hair curled into a top-knot on his small, round head; and Buster Bill had not yet at- tained to the age of reason, being but eight years old. Also, Buster Bill, with his yellow top-knot protruding through the hole in Keno Dick's cast- off sombrero, and his sturdy little knees smiling through the holes in Paddy Noonan’s discarded overalls, was as irreconcilable with the idea of harshness as oil with water. “By thunder! PH bet you my big- gest chispa you can’t do it!’ went on | Bill, decisively. | The two persons so unconscious of Cur’s quickly Science emerging from Darkness, Pleas’nt pure A POWERFUL jTONIC i that the most delicate stomach will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA, RHEUMATISM NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION, yand all Germ Diseases THE MOST SCIENTIFIC AND SUCCESSFUI BLOOD PURIFIER. Superior .to quinine Mr. F. A. Miller, 630 East 157th street, New York, was cured by Kaskine of extreme mala- | rial prostration after seven years suffering. | He had run down trom 175 pounds to 7, began en Kaskine in June Isss, went to work in one month, regained his full weight in six months Quinine did him no good whatever. Mr, Gideon Thompson, the oldest_and one of ~ ae = ave ade. ve the niost seapestel citizens of Bridgeport, | NS Scorn would have made—well, aoe ue lam ninety years of age, and | without exaggeration, seven of him. for the last three years have suffered from ma- : : : laria and from the effects of quinine poisoning And they might have been truste d to Trecently began with Kaskine whieh broke up | make seven out of him had they heard the malaria and increased my weight 2 S of his crushing verdict. But Bill, when he woke up in the old, sunny gold pocket on the hillside, and heard the twotough nuts of the camp plan- pounds.’? of lia f mn a by kh ine, after . Solomons, | 5 | When we had given ap | fifteen months’ illness all hope Ale ning for the robbery of Keno Dick’s Letters from the above persons, giving full < Sf i = details will besent on application. eabin, had sense enough to lie still and save his remarks till none but the yellow poppies could nod defiance to him. In the course of his six years’ resi- dence among the trees and bowlders of Gold Run there had been nobody to whom Buster Bill looked up as he did to Keno Dick. Although he was on intimate terms with the whole camp, therefore procuring for his mother a monopoly of the washing on that por- Kaskine can be taken without any special medical advice. $1.00 per bottle. Sold by or sent by mail on receipt of price THE KASKINE CO., 54 Warren St., New York and GENTLEMAN sh steady employment e nice light work at your home and make s from $1.00 to $3.00°a day. You should address with stamp : Crown Mi’g Co., 294 Vine St., Cincinnati, 0 Hitiiox» ROOT BEER Package, 25 cents, makes 5 gallons of a de- licions, sparkling, temperance beverage. Strengthens and purifies the blood. _Its purity | tion of the High Sierra, it was to Dick and delicacy commend it to all. Sold by all : alone that he turned in his extremities. When he had forgotten to bring his mother the box of starch for which she was waiting, or when the new bar of soap had accidentally slipped from his pocket, down to the sump of the shaft he had been superintending, it was Dick who had stood in the door of his cabin while Bill dashed under his arm —a wall firm and secure against the druggists and storekeepers. Its causes, and a new and EAFNESS inecesstal GU es at your own home, bv one who was deaftwen- ty-eight years. Treated by most ofthe not- ed specialists without benefit. Cureb himself in three months, and since then hundreds of others. Full particulars sent on application. T.S. PAGE, No 41 West 3ist St. New York. renee eee ae ee progress of the female Avenger. It mation, rhe neuralgic, sciatic, | was Dick who remarked that the next strains relieved in one minute by flow who fell down that sump would = Sea ocicara Anti-Pain Fi 2 | come up cleaner than he had been 95 cents; 6 for $1; at all druggists or Porren | Sittce he left the States; and it was Dave axp CHEMICAr Co., Boston. Dick who fished ont from the store- house under his bed the twin to Bill's burof soap, and sent the avenger home rejoicing. And Dick had been out on a pros- pecting tour for two days, and was not expected back until to-morrow night. Bill had intended to accompany him, but Bill's mother was of the opinion that he might be wantin’ fer sumthin’ else, and w'at time had she fer ter be runnin’ arrants? So Bill had stayed at home, and this afternoon he had been cautioned not to set fut off the hill, fer indade she was not blist wid the voice of a stame-whustle. Bad luck to him fer bein’ that like a flea thet nobody cud put their finger on him. ADVERTISERS Therefore he had crawled into the can learn the exact cost | deserted pocket, and, until half an | hour ago, had slept the sleep slept only of any proposed line of | by the boy who knows his mother <i . . | wants him. Then he had started wide advertising in American | awake to Iisten to the robbers’ plots . fand the plots were against Keno papers by addressing i: |D Geo. P. Rowell & Co., PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Scio eess , and Dei hair falling, and is sure to please. ‘SOc. and $1.00 at Druggists. HINDERCORNS. _ for ick. | Billstared after the retreati fures, dimly seen att il] Lt so ow t sembrace Newspaper Advertising Bureau, | hill, an : at down to embra 10 Spruce St, New York. j a-colored Knees Send 10cts. for 100-Page Pamphie+ announced the news in open me ' at the Gold Run Hotel that night. t SEWARD Buster Bill. Was it fer = OATENT SOL had thus been Sexi sinecamp? Was Associate at V Requested. Laguiries «! struggled with in the tre the branches made another scoop at it, | and the trail kept getting mixed up den so securely in the sack of flour, while Bill threaded a needle to sew the opening and made it like a sack, them say that they would rip every thing open, and they would be blest if Keno Dick them. would have left such lonely little cabin, and Bill had shaken his head doubtfully when Dick laughed and He shook it again as he struggled on, and suddenly discovered that he had reached the cabin by nearly dropping the shotgun into the gulch nard by its door. far back on the trail, but there was no time for it, and he dug under the rear of the ¢ quired by constant practice in eluding the Avenger. him. was there on the where a slight cut would get it out. The sound of feet low-spoken words and the door gave way! apostros to re- ny and the wind bushes, and the holes | up new He had heard would be stolen. could hide his dust from Keno haul Dick the reckless a Nobody but in said that it was all right now. Buster Bill had left his breath abin with a velocity only ac- A providence untsual in the case of small boys enabled him to drag the gun, barrel foremost, successfully after He felt the flour-b: side g. The dust next the wall, outside and a few Every one, on entering a dark room, knows the momentary feeling of irreso- lution; fumb pering in an awe-struck way that they heard the low whimpering of a grizzly cub; as their knees began to knock together, the grizzly mother answered as a loving mother should. awakened Dick’s lone cabin, and when the mother rubbed against reached out and felt the hairy body, there was a yell that jarred the flour in the sack, and the trail smoked with the flying footsteps of the departing braves. and it was while the men were ng for their matches and whis- Yes, it was unmistakable; and But her slumber-song no responsive chord in a leg, and a hand And Buster Bill sat in the middle of the cabin, engulfed in Dick’s uld bear- skin, and, while his yellow top-knot stood upright from fear, he laughed, and growled, and whispered, and hugged his gun. “By thunder, I hain’t sneaked round the old bear's den on Bald Peak fer nuthin’!’ said Buster Bill. . * * . > a The next morning, when Keno Dick rode over the summit twelve hours earlierthan he was expected, he looked down on the camp and beheld a scene of surprising activity. It was one hour after sunrise when he arrived in front of the Gold Run Hotel, and listened without a word to the stupendous news. A couple of Mexicans had robbed Mike Dorsey's cabin and vamoosed. — Dick's own cabin had been broken open, but every thing was in order, except that the bear-skin lay in a heap on the floor, Buster Bill was missing, and his mother was in hysterics; if he listened, he could hear her crying on the hill. Keno Dick listened with the im- movable face that had characterized him at the table, and then turned the mustang’s head toward his cabin. He was accompanied by a sympathizing delegation, who, knowing his love for the Buster, suggested that he drop in and console the mother. He refused curtly, as her ‘toch hones” floated down to the trail, and the procession took up its march, presumably to show him the tousled bear-skin. But Dick made no comments, for a dull tion forced itself upon him and would not be put aside. Of course nothing had been touched; he could see that for himsé Of course not, but he would loo} and make sure look and s he ¢, sus} sifted knew where you ke; and addition to the eabin and to furnish it s and whistled | in the style betitting another and an an- The tallest branches x mupntk and seemed to But the bag was) gone now, and (rying to scvop ) Buster’ Bill, was gone with it. His = ee he) hands clenched in his pockets and one : old shotgun he had of them touched something hard. He do from under the Avenger’s | drew it out. It was the chispa he had nose, as he sat nodding after sUP- | got for Bill over in Georgetown. He gun had belonged to bis) had been intending to tell him he found * wondered, as it caught : iton the summit, for Bill was sharp and it was not best for him to know of and he struck it ag; wouldn't have minded the loss of the Look up! Look up! Oh, little Buster Bill, forgive me!” smniled. scared you into telling where it w They had mentioned incident- | , , ally that they were going to rob anoth- er cabin, but that did not concern Bill. Oh, they were going to rob Dick. floated through his brain. was broken arm or a swelled and aching hea lay by in Dick’s arms and told his tae: and at the end Dick saw that he Was ste ne with one of the deep sUitsin the side of Paddy Noonan’s overalls, and ev many efforts he drew forth his hand an into the gulch r Bill | The boys glared di gust at Keno Dick Tesponse to their sym- ast they went away, and in front of the Reno Dick had place this time, two days over Miss way up the he I ted hat bag contained and ih it would take to build an Bessie adustt nst the rock. He “What! Bill! Little Bill, lying here! The Buster opened his and eyes “Oh, Bill, T see it all now. They uid then chucked you inte the guleh!” Phe Buster sat ut. Visions f Wild Bill, t and noble, His honor What cared he for a up st the ato stake. ewas a world of Then he ared me! The owfal scorn in his tones. said “Aud it was so blame dark I walked Dut the bag went with Itlowed that they might go : 1 the cabin any way, so TI jest sEpped it into my po Ly And Keno Dick bowed his head and wept. “But by thunder! won't them fellers when they reads it in’ the said) Buster Bill. —May {rgonaut. me, f swear pape Coop r, in - <2 WESTERN PROSPERITY. The Stupendous Growth of the States and Cities West of the Mississippl. The striking feature of our progress in the extreme West is in the unprece- dented settlement of the country, and the concurrent growth of its railway system. We built over 7,000 miles of new road in 1876, and shall probably over 8,000) miles in) 1887. apart from side-tracks, re and, in some cases, double But the great bulk of this y railroad construction is west of the construct This newals, is opi. The growth of the new cities in this region is some- thing phenomenal, Chicago and San Francisco have been _ built up almost in our generation; but the growth of St. Paul, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Omaha, Denver, and a dozen other points that might be men tioned, has been so rapid as te b« sarcely credible. It is only a few years since a congressional wit sneered at Duluth as “the zenith city of the unsalted seas,” but this is no longer a jest, but a fact; for in seven years Du- luth has increased its population from’ 3,000 to 35,000, and it is keeping thi: increase up. Chicago, of course, con- tinues to grow, but itis having rivals at all points of the compass west of it own longitude. The great depots of grain, provisions and lumber, instead of being concentrated at Chicago, now come directly cast from its more West- ern rivals. In the olden times, during the decline of the Roman Empire, the mighty hordes of the barbarian emi- grants came from Central Asia, with arms in their hands, to occupy the rich and fertile plains of Europe. But the huge tides of emigration from Europe and the Eastern States pour over the Mississippi, bringing with them tools and capital, to occupy the vacant land and subdue the wilderness. The censuso} 1890 will tell of the stupendous growth: of the cities and States west of the Mississippi. There is nothing like it in ancient or modern history.—Dem orest’s Monthly. <2 Manures tor the Garden. Farmers’ gardens are generally fer- tililized more heavily than any other | part of the farm, but almost always with stable or barnyard manure. This, ag it 1 is not a complete fertilizer, and its weak point generally a de- fici of phosphe acid, and on sandy ardeners, who use of manure than fa t lying, profitable to ck sion- ng, perhaps, one year, ten dred weight of phosphate of lime to a single crop. alterna- tion of manures is found to important as rotation of cr is found so essentialin farm p \ —Indianapolis Sentinel.

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