The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 22, 1887, Page 3

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BUTLER oMMTIONAL BANK, —IN— @ j vera House a BUTLER, MO. apital. - SGG,oo00, $5,000 URPLUS DIRECTORS, rma, eats x, T. C. Boulware, Booker Powell, “Tey Tucker. Green W. Walton idge J- H Sullens, John Deerwester, | R, Simpson C. C. Duke, BY Frank Voris, Wo, E, Walton, tnimoq [C.H. Dutches J. Rue Jenkins. ty of ersal tir Receives deposits, loans money, anc ly use, Pansacts a general banking business. smen | Weextend to our customers every ac ) Work Pommodation consistent with sate bank- out t CORRESPONDENTS. — irst Nat'l Bank - Kansas City. needs fourth National Bank - St. Louis. National Bank - New York s best BATES COUNTY ‘ational Bank. (Organized in 1871.) cou. | OF BUTLER, MQ. pediae — iefor fapital paid in, - - $75,000. $ 71.000 President plus: +--+ - 1. TYGARD, - N.J. 8. MEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. CCLARK - - : Cashier. DN iets emery rr ARMERS t Costs Less tu Feed 50 Hogs With DR. JOS. TLAAS’ & POULTRY REMEDY As A Preventative] to lose one by DISEASE, the extra pork it teturn thr: times its cos’ Without it M D. Johnson, Walker, Mo. isasuccess and we cheerful 5 Griftin & Bro. LaPlata, Mo. bave used Dr. Jos. Haas’ hog remeay and I am sure it ha "0 nk Lee, Hannibal, Mo. fe have sold it in a dozen instances, no cure It has oy, sad have never lost a cent. led. Brown & Mills, Louisville, ™: tare used your medicine for several years. F. Walter, Knox City, xo FH! findit the beat preventive for prevailin C. B. Dawson, Denver, Mo” ewomg «E Deartily recommend it to ali having hogs AND. with cholera, T.A. Buford, . Lonisville, Mo Will not be without H. hog remedy if it three times the present price. John Castin, Grant City, Mo. Haas hog remedy does all he claims for J. P. Haxton, Louisville, Mo. for itself in putting . P. Ha: am satisfled it will pa: fea, spp gas ing hogs healthy Soar Samad . Logan, Grant, City Mo W. J. McCray, Browning Mo wera among hogs. ohn S Courtright, Pecnliar, Cass Co, Mo isthe best thing of the kind | ever used. A.J Leggett, Hannibal Mo SSSR? on al ho are authorized by me to receive and for- or the insurance of young U_applicatios Pe Axainst diseases contracts of insurance will provide that I Pay the Highest Market price er le be fed the remedy. ‘Os. ,. STRONG'S PILLS! Old, Welt Tried, Wonderful ith Renewing Remeares. ROWS $ For the Liver. ry A speedy cure for Corap Bk ort . Purifying é entre ¢. A per- or all Bilin —_— = Couzhs,Colds, = Dyspe > worthlevs Orsi. Soi dy giisia Send 4 cent POX SPACIFIC © Block, \. nts upon the hogs @ used it write leonsider it asure cure ani do not iatend to testify to and Tecommend it as asure cure for hog chol- ved me from $s) gives better satisfaction than Smith, Perry, Mo. cine is properly eusing your remedy] have not had the i oar remedy is giving general satisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. ng CES, 0, $1.25 and 50 cents, yer box =4 ) pound cans, $12 50 us For sale by i LE & CRUMLEY, r Butler Missouri. —— insured hog which dies from diseases Haas,¥. 5., Indianapolis. Ind. . Phileas... Pa © acres ground in city limits, $500. 4 room house, good cistera, Cogswe addition, $00. 2 story 15 room house, gx cistern and in kitchen: ern and pump in kitchen, tine 1 ~ : a under cover, good bar » wood and coal house, lots ot fine t tusion, nicest place ir square, Price $4,000, easy ter story 6 room 7 house on Pi ot 10oxiyz alley in rear, good well, and good cistern, small fruit, shru etc., price $1,100, dirt cheap, room house, good weil, Walley’s ad- i pricé $300. Corner lot, Fort porches, good well, Large corner lot Ohio st. 4 roo wood house, good cistern, nice locs close in, $goo, easy terms. 4 rooms, I-2 acre, lots of evergree fruit, blue grass, flowers, good cx | splendid cistern, a price $1,500. Corner lot Ohio st. 4 rooms, good well, barn, shade trees, shrubbery, evergreens, flowers, close in, price $1,200. 3 rooms‘ Mechanic st. good lot, well, stable, coal house, good neighborhood $500. : _ 4 rooms, South Main, adjoining pub- lic square, lot gox100, make good busi- ness property $1,500, 6 rooms, 3 lots, smoke house, coal house, stable, fine well, $1,000, easy lerms. ‘ 4 rooms, North Main, close in, large lot, stable, coal and wood house, fine well, price $700, easy terms. Farms, oceans ot tbem to sell or ex change, trom 40 acres to 600 we can fit you out in any kind of a trade vou want. € have 200,000 acres ot land in Minne- sota and Iowa, $150,000 in Kansas, 6,000 in Dakota, besides town property every- where. Don’t buy until you see us. House 1 story, 3 rooms, good weil, 4 1-2 acres adjoining corporation, good young orchard, large supply small traits, very pretty place: price $1,000. i 6 room house, corner lot, 7 47, new house, on Water street, close in, terms eusy. €asy term magnificent home, One large large Ict on Water street 75x 247: price S450, on easy terms. § room house, North Main street, lot 7§x150, cistern, new barn for 4 horses. nice place; price $1,000, halt ash, ance one and two years. “What aman does Is the thir DAUG STORE First-class in every respect. (PEN EVERY DAY 1 WEE. FRIZELL & RICE, BUTLER, MO.j ie G Bp THE CHAS. CENNEY At Old Stand, East Side Square. NEW GOODS \ | Fresh and Nice and Comprising every- thing in the GROCERY And P COUNTRY PRODUCE COME AND SEE ME. Chas. ATRAORDINARY OFFER. To All Wanting Employment. ir offer to all who are ou Any agent that will give ou Gays’ trial and fail to clear at lea nis time, AB least $750 ABOVE AL! EX- can return all unsold and get t back. No other employer of agentsever to make such offers, nor would we if we not know that we have agents now making ; le the amount we guaranteed, and but two sales a day would give a profit of er $125 a month, and that one of our agents k eighteen order none day. Our large de- to clear ai ¢ pl. wish to send to ev ment who will send us agency in ti the terms named in We would like to have the address of ¢ solicitors and c his offer, to nc | and address of all such | at on, a willl a KASKINE (THE NEW QUININE.) No badettect | | No headache | , No nausea No Ringing | Ears { Cur’s quickly Science emerging from Darkness, Pleas’nt pure | A POWERFUL TONIC that the most delicate stomach will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA,) RHEUMATISM, | NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION, wand all Germ Diseases | i THE MOST SCIENTIFIC AND SUCCESSFUL } BLOOD PURIFIE Superior to quinine | Mr. F. A. Miller, ith street, New York, was cured by of extrem | rial prostration after + tie had run down tron on Kaskine in June i nonth, regained bis full weight Quinine did M n six months. | uno good whatever. } i Gideon Conn., says: ‘lam lompson, the oldest ot for the last three years have st laria and from the effects of ne po recently began with Kaskine which br the malaria and increased my weight | Letters from the above persons, giving full | will be sent on appli Kaskine can be taken without any special medical advice. $1.00 per bottle. Sold by, or sent by mail on receipt of pri THE KASKINE CO., 54 Warren St., New York LADIES and GENTLEMAN Ww 8 nte who wish steady employment to take nice light work at your home and make easily from $1.00 to $5.00 a day. You should ess with stamp *g Co., 24 Vine St., Cincinna it ROOT BEER Pachage, 25 cents, makes 5 gallons of a de- licious, sparkling, temperance beverage. Strengthens and purifies the blood. Its purity and delicacy commend it to all. Sold by all druggists and storekeepers. FAFNES Its causes, and a new and is successful CU Fe Eat your own home, bv one who was deaftwen- ty-eight years. Treated by most ofthe not- edspecialists without benefit: Cureb himself in three months, and since then hundreds of others. Fall particulars senton application. T.S. PAGE, No 41 West 5ist St. New York. hips, and sides, ki po pectin e eS inflam- atl mation, rheumat neuralgic, eciatic, sadden, sharp and nervous pave and strains relieved in one minute by jon {it was Monday. E | fashion, And so The sai “ My let twill come te A ith tottering limbs that almost fail, He creeps each morning to the m: And hears with ever new regret “ Not yet. old man, not yet. not yet." And so he waits in silence dumb The letter that will never come. Ah, me! poor madman Are dupes of fickle « estiny: In ceaseless hope we waiting For missives that were neve: to see the harvest grown that we have never sown: < the harbor mouth to ‘The vessels that will never sail: We wait to see our garners filled With fruit of field: We wait in gathering For 's that will ne . W. Foes, ian Dotra —— 0 - A CUTTING TONGUE. How It Drove Mr. Beaton to Seek a Fortune. even We Free Presa, Shifless?”” Elihu Beaton repeated the word his wife in a tone. He w ist the door- post of their litle brown cottage at the end of alane, a mile out on ‘the city road’? from the village of Fairmount. His heart had been full of contentment a moment before, as he mentally summed up the mercies of the ne ended year, and of wondering admira- tion as well, as he watched the crim- tlory of the sunset above Mount and it surprised aning aga *m glad we built here, where we can see the sun set and rise over the dear old mountain,’’ he had innocently remarked over his shoulder to his wife, who was “flying around’ in the kitch- en, preparing a supper with a most ap- petizing smell. “It beats all how pretty that sky is to-night, Hesper."’ Mrs. Beaton had been washing that morni That “goes without sayin Decause she was a New England wom- woman, and because lly of course (in aul been what her houschold), there she called “boiled pot’? prepared after reakfast and set well back on the t stove, as a good Mearty, sensible of iner, that would trouble no to look after it, but would “cook itself.” Breakfast, the prospective dinner, and Elihu being then well out of her way, Mrs. Hesper turned the sleeves of ber gray print dress up over her well- rounded arms, put on a large, bib- apron and a pair of rubbers, and bent over the wash-tub in such an energetic that, at ten o'clock, every cloth was in its place on the line, at eleven the floors were mopped, and the house in apple-pie order, and at twelve, to a minute, Elihu’s favorite dinner smoked upon the board, and his wife, in her clean, afternoon dress, with shining hair, and a pink ribbon at her cellar, waited to catch the first glimpse of him, coming from the village, whith- er she had dispatched him to purchase groceries needed for the ensuing month. She waited in vain till half-past one ock, and then ate her own dinner, }! of wrath against the absent one, t she sea y noticed how cold the ables had grown. elegant and infallible antidote to and peta the Caticura Anti-Pain Plaster. 25 cents; 5 for $1; st all drugzists or Porrer Dave aNp Cagmicat Co., Boston. HINDERCORNS. ‘The safest, surest and bestcure for Corns, ae. Stops all Ensures comfort to the feet. Never: tocure, 15 centsat Druggistea, Hiscok & Co, i. KE. SR SS ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing st 100-Page Pamphie 10 Spruce Send 10cts. for SEWAR® “.: fhe afternoon wore Just as she kettle on for te hu drove up 1, and, after attending to the entered the kitch- en with his and hands full of pac mind full of the wondrous story of the old friend who had detained him so long. “You used to know Jim Hunter as well as I did, when he was a boy, Hep- sey,” he remarked, unheeding her black looks. **And you know how the neighbors al! said he'd never come to any good, when he ran away from his step-father’s house and went to sea. He did come to good, though! He left his ship and went to the mines, and now he owns a handsome ranch out in Texas, and has more money than I can count ina day. I should have asked him out here to see you, only he was in a hurry to catch the night train for New York, ‘so I waited to see him off A good fellow, Jim is. He deserves ht inck, every bit of it” Mrs. Hepsey ass pock ages, and liis out the tab ly I: 1 i | ¢ dimer twice over lted the fire, rattled | word fell Driven him, by that one stinging wor} net as the re false word, too, which she ought rown that he could not, ang t bear. vShifless! [must have been quite fto say it”? she thought, en kitchen do g, loc »king tow Weald t Hepe ter a lengthened beside mysel vy a8 she stood in th ‘ vf course! Sepen RDN OI ece December even wite, who had just torn the sunset on the distant hill, ‘Thera -door, and _ \ ha am of the | {°YCr Wass better worker than Etihte e in Fairmount. I'm sure this fartta «Was diss Ghows the difference since he left MARES ay < 1e difference since he left and one does by me as they agree the land. Well, ve re you?” eyes roved over the | ad cae cal eee ae j only myself to blame for it all! OR: had sowed, reaped and | how sorry’ I ani! 0) EUhu! (Riiee where in the wide world are you? | Ob, if you could only come hom@an@ | forgive me, how happy I should be!” } Asob choked her, and she raised hee apron to her eyes. Looking across | those snow-covered meadow lands tp- ‘And goto the store, and there lav long, to gossip with your Jim | . While I'm waiting here for obliged to get your for you in one day,” rejoined) Hepsey, = ng the warmed up “boiled dish’? on the table with a bang that thoroughly testified to the strength of the yellow ‘nappy’? that held it, ‘And standing there, now, mooning about the sunset, when any fool might know that water was want- ed from the well before tea!” “I'll bring the water, Hepsey.” It was the ‘soft: answer,’’ although it did not “turn away wrath,” so far as words concerned. But the tone in which it was Spoken betrayed rising temper on Mr. Beaton’s part. He took the pail, turned the east corner of the house on his way to the and Hepsey saw him no sit ward the hills, she had seen Deacon George gray horse and green sleigh turn in at the gate of the George home stead, had seen the end-door of tie great red house tly open, letting ottt the comforting glow and light ofan open fire upon the kitchen hearth, had seen the deacon’s wife, fair and rosy in her healthtul middle age, while tio “bound boy’’ led the fat, gray horse ay ton good supper in its warm stable. Her own kitchen was now rosy with the light of the flames from two well- seasoned logs upon the hearth, and the tea-table was spread with good things for her lonely tea, yet she could not turn from the spec'acle of her neigh bors’ household comfort, although sho gazed upon it through her tears. Suddenly the gray cat and the black eat, who had been basking side by sida in the heat upon the hearth, rushed to the door with the same peculiar ery of welcome with which, as kittens, they had been wont to greet their master’s r two years i fc things, and were we room, As he walked upon Dur alon with his eyes he ground, a strang proeess w in Elihu Beaton’s mind. r the ten years of their married he hut endured Hepsey’s contin- a matter of course, with tiem rebellion. Bat, on this evening is heart was softened —full of old) memories, old dreams, and hopes of plans, long since laid aside and well-nigh forgotten, tll the four hours’ conversation with the friend of those early s had recalled them, and with them the spurt of en- thusiastic, adventurous daring that had lent them their beauty and their life. Never had this one discomfort of his otherwise prosperous and happy life so jarred upon him as now. “If 1 was to go away, brother has gone, and come back rich, on comit A step. coming round the east corner of the} as if from the well-roon, sounded on the snow. A voice, with’ an odd tremble and quaver in it, saide “Pye breught the water for tea Hepsey.”’ Looking round with a pale, seared as if she expected to find a ghost } Mrs. Beaton saw her hus- band, ruddy, brown and bearded, wit® . new tin pail, filled with water, in his hand. * * * . s s > wone yout it, Hepsey, * exclaimed Elihu, when his wifo arms around his neck with a ier to be forgiven. ‘wav as no a} ab more threw her as Hunter's} <)) she would have a higher opinion of eae marth Sek ie pete peat me,” he thought, glancing back once fay proud and angry, and not cari more at the sunset light upon his] ya geh you might’ suffer when yote home. could not find the least trace of me He set the tin pail down softly by the about the farm. well-room door, and strode away across How did I go, do yots ask? Walked over to Stainton, acrog the fields toward the distant town. lots, and then by train to New York, Halfan hour later, his wife went forth, | a. on to California, like a fool as t impatiently, to eall himin toeat. An} wast pony k enough long be hour later, and she was wildly calling > wouldn’s : ; : y fore ] got the yutomy pri his name, s she, with her h istily sum- | tet me come back till I had made m moned ne rs, sought him up ane] fortune at the mines where Hunter down the f Bat search and s: as she might, with the late repentance born of love and tears, all in vain. He v gone! No one in Fair- mount knew less or more than that of Elihu Beaton from that autumn after- noon. * ® * e ° brother worked. And [ve done i Hepsey—at least it will le a fortune in a place like Fairmount, and there’y iothing in reason that you may set your heart on, in future, that I can not afford to give you.” “O, Elihu, don’t, don’t be so good!” sobbed his wife. ‘I don’t deserve it, when I drove you away from home.” “Not a word more of that, I insis& my dear,’ said Elihu, as he drew hes into the house and closed the door. “We were two fools, and we know it now; and we shall be wise enough in the future, I'm sure, to make ourselves as happy together as God intended us to be when He gave us so many bl ings. Now dry your eyes, Hepsey, a let me have a real homelike, eomforta- ble supper with you once more. Bles me! How bright, and cozy, and pleas ap? i ducs look, to be sure! And here are these poor little things actually re- membering me—glad to see! Just look at them, Hepsey—how they liek rand!’ said the farmer, bending dows, with an unsteady laugh, over the twa cats, as they stood on their hind feet to caress him. *| And Mrs. Hepsey, glancing at the Two years passed slowly by. The good people of Fairmount resembled every other ‘people’ in one respect, and rarely paid any great or long-sus- tained attention to the troubles of their neighbors, so long as their own affairs remained in a healthfully prosperous state. Consequently, the place which Elihu Beaton had filled in munity, was soon filled up. grew used to thinking of him as they thought of the dead. No one expected that the mystery of his fate would ever be unraveled—in this world, at least. No one except his wife. His wife, who was already designated in the if notin their actual The Widow Beaton.”* not, the small com- Every one minds of man thoughts, as tihn’s disappearance was her, the profound my-rte toall others, They hai to themselves, being on a hy-rond, ot} group, saw plainly two large, some distance from the vill: and on | ling tears fall from her husband’ “rey the rare occasions whe hasl | as he bent above his pets, and look visitors, or “extra hands,” Mrs. Bes-|jnto the joyous, welcoming fire ton had treated her husband with all due respect. She knew, and she only, how often she had tried the patient, kindly man to the very last verge of endurance by her acrid tongue. Over and over again, even in those days, she had ris- en, of a bright, sunny morning, resolv- ing not to give way, that day, to her temper. And then the fire would not draw, or the kettle would boil over, the biscuit would burn in the over, or her pet cat would get under her feet as she was hurrying from the table to the stove, and up the angry words would bubble, and Elihu, being the | only human creature at hand, would Margaret Blount, in Ballou’s Magasin. He Won't Stay Long. “Billy Bliven is awfully unpopular with the landlady, ain't he?” said one of the young lady boarders, referring to a young traveling man who had re cently taken up his abode there. “Yes, and I don’t wonder at it. Did you see what he did this morning? Hie just waited unti! he knew she wae looking and then he put three spoon fuls of sugar in the sirup.” “He did! I guess he won't stay long.’ —Merchant Traveler. —_—__+ + +__—. | pay the penalty of the “general de- —Many carefully conducted exper+ | pra ity of inanimate things,” till he | ments have proved beyond a dove i rush out of the house, | that young animals p much better ring a mild pre to; for feeding thau do those which hage “It did beat all why a | long passed their years of growth. Ki weman sho ant to act sc a pro- | this fact were more generally realiz4 wuld render his wife ten | there would be fewer old animals kepp, gry than before, until and farmers would change their stock for her wrath to die nat- ; much eftener than | a their pra have already learned ean old cow or they know thas be obtained, tice. Many buy: better than to purch: pair of oxen, Lecai rj no gain i ant ed. ay her hand upon i had tri . in ghe old days, to we 1 a ple i speak in a ple | tone, yet how signally had s ‘And, at the last. she had fai him from the home he loved she often cost fully equal when the animal is again © —_ Pekin vi ula MCAD SEA HSE NR iDEN nce

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