The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 22, 1887, Page 6

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_ Perf fect Hair Indicates al wealthy condi- tion of the p and of t through which s himent is obtained. When, in conse nee of age and dis- ease, the hair thin gray, A Hair V it, re lust id freshness I have used Ayer'’s Hair V for a long tun and am convinced of its value. When I was 17 years of age my hair began turn gray. I cormmen using the Vigor, and was surpr at the 1 effects it- produced not only restored the color to my hair, but so stimulated its growth that I have now more hair than ever before J. W. Edwards, Coldwater, Miss. Ayer's Hair Vigor, Bold by all Druggiets and Perfumers. Ir You ARE suFFERING from debility and loss of appetite; if your stomach is out of order, or your mind confused; take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. This medicine will restore physical force and elasticity to the system, more surely and speedily than any tonic yet discovered. For six months I suffered from liver My food did not became weak and I took six bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was cured. and stomach troubles. nourish me, and I very much emaciated. —Julius M. Palmer, Springfield, Mass. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa, jx bottles, $5. Gold by Druggiste. Price $1; . W. MIZE, | | us | nd Real Estate BROKER. INSURANCE AND NOTARY PUBLIC. #7} lence 6 PER CENT Money to Loan ; On improved Far || Five years time, with privilege to | pay before due Office over Bernhardt’s jewelry store, NORTH SIDE SQUARE. a nn AS ee ce NESW ENGLAND TRUST CO. SIXTH AND WYANDOTT ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. PAID UP CAPITAL, - $150,000. j Interest paid on deposits. Long time city and tarm loans in Missouri and eastern Kansas a specialty. ©) | Thos. T. Crittenden, President ; J. 52) H. Austin, Vice-President & coun- i 4 selor: Watt Webb, Secretary: H. B. Blevens, Treasurer. " JOHN A. LEFKER & CO. jAgents for Bates county. side square. Lowest rates ot interest; erms on payment, ind interest on re saistactory, Sall and see betore you borrow. NF SUITS. In ey ery style price ar ia fitin every c up stairs No tre M JE. TALBOTT, Merchant T . and Office oyer Ed. Steel’s grocery store, north liberal both principal limited amount ot oney ; no delay, when your papers the money is ready. } | | {sure you | PAPER ROOFS. the Manufactare » Tiles. Processes: Employed in of Fibrous Pa | colored sands, av: be imparted to the tiles, which, aft | the application of the enameling mix- }ture and wre baked side the inherent lightness of the pulp tiles, which obviates the necessity of a heavy frame to support a weighty roof, the pulp tile being tough and not brittle like slate, is far less liable to be broken from blows, stones thrown upon them, or. human — footsteps. Again, slate tiles can not be laid com- pactly together a roof on account of their brittleness, which their being drawn tightly nails. Throuzh the fil may be driven close home shingle hereby? ling them closely to the bed and together without any possibility of lateral movement, or ng blown away in high winds, as loosely fastened on roofs Nails penetrate the pulp tiles more easily than shingles, and line closer to .being more elastic than wood I's National Builder. ~<e POULTRY POINTS, Some of the Characteri on prevents together by ous ies Sure to Be Wanted in the Coming Fow!. Breeding for fancy outward marks enters too largely into the improvement thriftiness in liness to fatten, prolificacy in egg product, size, quality of flesh, and disposition, are some of the tiel cha of poultry. Hardiness, growth, re essen- t ties which should st firs’ Color and markings of plu form and size of comb and wattles, and other outward peculiarities, are often aseful as indications of the more sub- stantial qualities, but of themselves are of no practical value of poultry-keepers, profits on the sale Is, do not care to give their feed and time to the prodnetion of enormous combs, or finely-marked plum Those who keep poultry for eggs principally, prefer the kind of fowls that produce the greatest amount feges from the food consumed. It makes no difference to them whether the fowl! is silver-tipped or not. ‘Those Ip nails | as in} attle SY old elephant engaged ina battle on | small that he slipped out ot the log iting recent up he crept with indifferent thought ¢ had ever done, reverted to the t xfor his local paper he subscribt was in the habit of borrowing it from his neighbor, and thus detraud- On this ing the printer. {without an effort. Jter. T 1¢ received a fatal wou and fell j to the ground, where he laid under a neap of slain. The obedient ani- mal stood still while the battle clos who wo 1 ! Want of fowl th ure trot vod and car amount of good meat. The farmer and other persons who choose merely for the money there is in the eggs and meat will probably eare very little for the fancy points so ea refully bred by fanciers. Small combs and w attles, solid colors, shape- ly, but smooth, plumage, good legs, with bodies shaped and constituted for the particular use the for, are some of the cha to be wanted in Pratmie Farmer, ee Identified by a Blue-Coat. fowls are brea acteristics sure the coming breeds,— “Madame, can you give a hungry n something to eat? and a very dy tramp eyed the woman of. the house expect: antly. “Why don't you go to work?” she isa place for every an in whieh he may at least earn his bread.” “L quite agree with you, madame! ] think every man has a calling for which he is peculiarly fitted. [was unhg appily cut out for a school-teacher? I say unhappily, insomuch as I can do noth- ing else, and there are so few places in whi ch a woman can earn a livelihood without lowering her standard of re- spectability, I would rather starve than claim my birthright at her expense! So if you can give me nothing to eat you can at least tell me the number of blocks to the ri iver and show me suf- ficient respect to come to-morrow morning and identify my body as it lies in state at the morgue.” ~ She didn’t have any thing cooked, but she gave him a quarter, and a policeman next morning identified him before a magistrate.—Deiroit Free Press. 5 The Proper Caper. “Do you I don’t think it’s the proper yund and call on Miss Grace every evening on your way home to supper,” remarked a Ci ti young man to an it’s quite the corre T have the cquaintance, that int tense et thing Tas- | 1 on’s word for | She is the Idol of my Heart. Well, then, why don't you dosome j thing to bring back the roses to h er { cheeks and the light to her eyes? Don't you see she is suffering from nervous debility, the result of female weakness? A bottle of Dr. Iarter’s Iron T ic will brighten those pale cheeks and send new life through the wast- ed form. If you love her take heed. — story of an Ton There is a beautiful the plams of India, He was stand- d-bearer and carried on his huge back the royal ensign, the rallying point of the Poonahost. Atthe be- i ot the figh ‘mahout,”? ot he lost his mas- } } | give him the word to halt, when driver, around him and the ensign he He toct retusing to advance or retire, as the hotter ed carried. never stirred a conflict became and fiercer, untilthe Mahrattas, seeing the stand ard still flying steadily4in its place, retused to beleye they were being beaten, and rallied again and again roundthecolors. And all this while, amid the din of battle, the patient animal stood straining its ears to that voice it At the tide of conquest lett the field de- catch the sound of would never hear again. last serted irattas swept on in 1in pursuit of the hing foe, but the ele- sade and dy phant, like the stood there, around and with the dead os or in its pl the ensign waving days ven the coms or where its master No Then they hundred miles away, mand to halt. bribe threat could move it. sent to a village, one and brought the mahout’s little son. to Lhe poble hero seemed remem- t yer given his authority to the little child, the shat- tered trappings, clinging®as he went, and immediately, with all paced quietly and alow away. Ayer's Sarsaparilla operates radi- cally on the blood, thor oughly cleans- ing and invigorating it. As a safe and absolute cure for the various dis- orders caused by constitutional taint or infection, this remedy has no equal. Take it this month. It outrivals all—Dr. Sage’s Cat- arrh Remedy. Brace up. You are teeling depressed, vour appe- tite is poor, you are bothered with Head- ache, you are fidgetty, nervous, and gen- erally out of sorts, and want to brace up. Brace up, but not with stimulation, spring medicines, or bitters, which have tor their basis very cheap, bad whisky, and which stimulate tor an hour, and then leave you in worse condition than betore. What vou want is an aiterative: that will purifv your blood, start nealth action of Liver and Kidrevs, restore your vitality, and give renewed health and strength. Such a medicine you will find in Electric Bitters and only so centsa bottle at hiss G. Walker's oe Store In General Debility, Emaciation, Consumptiou, and Wastiug in CWildrea, Scott's Emulsion ot Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hyphosphites is a most valuable d medicine. It creates an appe- or tood, strengthens the nervous | and builds up the boay. Please } I tried Scott's Emulsion on a| man whom physicia § up. Since he b uision his cou aS er will be witho had sometimes | * oe SS CASTOR 1A RARER AVG DB_ER{AIVV@VV¥BUAIALH bd as l wy ~ for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that (recommend it as superior to any prescripuon Se au =m known to me H. A. Arcner, M.D. 3 Worms, 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. ¥. Without injurious medication, Tax Cextace Coxrasy, 12 Fulton Stree xy 8B everyone who | he catarrh, asihma anda bad cou | », so that Icouid tell them | i All that Know me here now how I have suffered, (I have been | y ] D B ince 1858,) and say to me that “I m so glad that you tound something ; that could cure you.’’ Everyone says, “how much better you look.’? The doc- tors say they are glad I tound Hall's Ca- tarrh Cure as they could not cure me. I cannot express my gratitude to you for the good Hall's Catarrh Cure has done. ee can use as much of this let- ter as will do the afflicted good. Publish Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in, ess and Sadilery, Harn itto the whole woild—it is all true aud they should know it JOSEPHINE CHRISMAS, 27-1m 4oo East North street. SEND for Publications. SPOON ER PAT CO LLAR describing Min- pr th Dakota, Idaho, : vernment I LANDS ington and Oregon, the Free and Low Price Railroad Lands in the a ern Pacific country. The Best Agricultural, MECH ing and Timber Lands now open to 5 fete mailed free, Address CHAS. BLAM oF STICH WiLL HOLD Land Com. N. P. RL B., st BoM Inter State Business Bureau. John A. Lefker & Co., Managers. Office on north side, over Steel’s.; We make a specialty buying, NoNE GeNUINE. UNLESS STAMPED Wit THIS “TRADE MARK~ ot selling sel langing farms, town Sieeen nities. Ree Spooner Patent Collar! one link in a chain of twenty-three counties—nine in Missouri and four- teen in Kansas—and any business intrusted to us will receive the atten- in the chain if If you have real estate, either farms or town property, or a stock ot goods ot any kind you want to sell or exchange, place it in our hands and we will find you a custo- mer. If you want to borrow money at lying rates we have it. We are the agents forthe New England Trust Co. that bas an unlimited amount of money to loan, andthe fact that Gov. T. Crittenden is its president is sufficient guarantee that tairness and hberality are its watehwords. Come and have a chat about —PREVENTS AN NOT CHOKE A HORSE Adjusts itself to anv Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stite hing, will hold Hames %n place better than any other collar. SCHWANER’S= AML TUG SECTIO Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops CHAFING tion of every office advisable. see these things and if we don’t do we will do you no harm. us you } EB COACH STALLION Judge Webster. Will make the season of 1887, atT. K. Lisle’s teed lot, Haggards old stand, near the southwest corner of the square. Butier, Mo. JUDGE WEBSTER is a Mahogany bay 17 hands high, fine style and action and weighs 1,750, pounds, TERMS: $15. to insure mare in toal, by season, and 37 single service, money due whentact is ascertained. I will also stand E. C. Chery’s imported | i } from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS. SOUTH SIDE SQUARE BUTLER MO. $10 stallion ARAB, at the ‘same place. ARAB isa snow white, 15 1-2 hands high, 9 Years old, fine style and action and a number one roadster, both saddle and harness and a surperior breeder. Was imported from Arabia by the New York Theatre company in 1881. TERMS: $10 to insure mare in foal, money due when tacts are known, $7.50 by the season and $5 single service, It mare bred to efther of the above ‘tal- lions, leaves county or changes owner- ship, insureance is torfeitea and money must be paid whether mare is in toal or not. A lein will be reserved upon the colt tor services ot either stallion. Care taken to to prevent accidents but will not be responsible should any occur. D. A. COLYER, Butler, Mo. LLACE, will handle stallions Three ounce Elgin, Waltham) and! Hampdensilver stem winding watch- es, trom $11 to higher prices. JAS. V American ladies stem winding gold watches from $25, All &c, at cost prices. up. clocks, THE BUTLER WOOLEN MILLS Are now ready tor businees, Special Attention given to silverware, jewelrA, Sole agent forthe Rockford and Aurora watche:, in Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, very cacsp. JEWELRY STORE, Ts headquarters tor fne Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &c. Spectacles of 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 A.FAHNESTOCK’ Si Most Universal yack zed throuhen m Confections. made more for the purpine at p ail over « antry; but their shart tinues to dalip chat norms, and <prem i feverish. sometime CUSTOM WOR Such as Roll Carding, Carding. Spinning and Weaving Will exchange ESTABLISHED 1877. It is now nearly s/xt Years nince ths remedy for Worn BLANKETS, pene FLANNELS, JEANS and YARNS for ! MO., MAY FISHER, :

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