The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 6, 1887, Page 3

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BUTLER | For Sale. | © acres ground in city limits AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. cistern and pump in kite ae : en, fine well under cover, good barn, wood and cual house, lots ot fine fruit, fusion, nicest place in to IN flowers i square. Price $4,000, ea nora House Block, |,,; 22 ° roo" lot 1o0xig2 : lley in rear, good wel g004 Cistern, small fruit, he tern hrubber | 7 x BS « ee* ap, ' s BUT LER, MO. |_, 2 room house, good weil, Walley’s ad- | eee sais i | ditton, price $300. | akes it safe for eC | Corner lot, Fort Scott st, ooms, Gta cee ES hes, good well, $750, easy terms. | ‘and fal to clear at least | - | arge corner lot Ohio st. 4 | | VE ALL EXPENSES, can re jtale - %$66,000, | wood house, good cistern, nice lnerting. | d to us and we will refundthe | ‘ap? e : use, good cistern, nice | close in, $ i » nice location, ney paid for them. Any agen { lose in, $900, easy terms. | agenewhaiwould lketenor more y 55,000 4 rogms, I-2 acre, lots of evergreens, | Work,them through sub-agents for ninety days | - $! E . lots ot evergreens z y ( pies eR: fruit, blue’ grast, flowers, mene nt | and fail to clear at least $750 auovE Att Ex: splendid cister Ser veNsgs, can return all unsold and get their \ — plendid cistern, 4 magnificent home, | moneyback, Noother employer of agentsever | 3 , y P price $1,500, dared to make such offers, nor would we if we | ; Sorner Ic fo st : “ did not know that we have agents now making HN H. SULL «eee President orner lot Ohio st. 4 rooins, good we more than double and but two sales over $125 a moat’ he amount we guaranteed; day would give a profit of and that one of our agents «++++Cashier WALTON, - -Ast Cashier, barn, shade trees, shrubbery, evergreens, | RUE JENKINS, flowers, close in, price $1,200. wih helio F C. x 3 rooms‘ Mechanic st. vood ee took eighteen orders in one day. Our large de- Beenie cee Clctm ane CONC Cor ee ievicoal Nadie oid ono well, | scriptive circulars explain our offer fully, and 3 » coal house, good neighborhoed, these we wish to send to everyone out of em- $500. _4 rooms, South Main, adjoining pub- lie square, lot 4ox100, make good busi- ness property $1,500, ployment who will send us three oné cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure the agency in time forthe boom, and go to work on the terms named in eur extraordinary offer. DIRECTORS : We would like to have the address of all the },,T.C. Boulware, Booker Powell, 6 rooms . | agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen- . J 3 lots, smoke t Tucker. Green W. Walton | house. ctabla fre rouse, Coal | ters in'the country, and ask any reader of this ej H Sullens, John Deerwester, ian stable, fine well, $1,000, easy | paper who reads this offer, to send us at once ea mar) erms. the name and address of all such they know. Simpson . C. Duke, rooms, N ee epee . ‘Address at once, or you will lose the best chance Vor Wx, E, Walton, ice Maule, ¢ one Main, close in, large | Qver offered to those out of employment to make rif, Dutches J. Rue Jenkins. ‘ » coal and wood house, tin money. Rexxar MANUFACTURING Co., H. well, price $700, easy terms. - Farms, oceans of tbem to sell or ex change, trom 40 acres to €00 we can fit you out in any kind of a trade vou want. nsacts a general banking business. We have 200,000 acres ot land in Minne- Weextend to our customers every ac- | sota and Iowa, $150,000 in Kansas, 6,000 ;modation consistent with sate bank- | in Dakota, pesides town property every- “ Don’t buy until you see us. , $ ene Ouse I story, 3 rooms, good well, 4 1-2 CORRESPONDENTS. acres adjoining corporation, yood vad orchard, large supply smali iruits, ve pretty place: price $1,000. 6 room house, corner lot, 75X247, new house, on Water street, close in, terms @usy. One large large Ict on Water street 7 75% 2473 price 3450, on easy terms. 316 Smithfield St., Pittsburg, Pa Receives deposits, loans money, and Kansas City. St. Louis. New York. iret Nat'l Bank « fourth National Bank - over National Bank - ATES COUNTY Y | BATE New Strength, rcing from Darkness, new b. tor 4 horses. place; price $1,000, f halt c. ance one and two years. (Organized in 1871.) “What a man aoe iathe thing. Happy Days, iy ne LEFKER & CATRON OF BUTLER, MC. 26 North St, Sweet Sle: A POWERFUL TONIC that the most delicate stomach will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA, RHEUMATISM, NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION. ‘| gital paid in, - - $75,000. afurplus - - - - $71000 President. IL TYGARD, - - - - wet 8. MEWBERRY, — Vice-Pres. C.CLARK - + - Cashier. seietinnnsintpannltoce - ~ jand all Germ Diseases. . THE MOST SCIENTIFIC AND SUCCESSFUL FARMERS | BLOOD PURIFIER. Superior fto quinine. “Por eight years [haddumb ague intolerably Wished myseif dead a score of times. I never f pott ItCosts Less to Feed 50 Hogs With Ml] pk. JOS. ILAAS’ that held it happy day I ETE app atop. I stand by every word of i Toole, Sch this. —Thes Mr. John iN. Cowrites le, fects. 1 terribly run down when Lh is, of Kaskine, the new It helped me at . once. 1 gained 35 pour Have not had such good health in 2 yea * Mrs. Caroline aes : , dota ate sieeve ar at g it thre ened: A - OPEN EVERY DAY IV WEEK. | J eeseeeen: Y i Letters from the above persons, giving full As A PREVENTATIVE} details will be sent on application ——o0-. ued | Kaskine can be taken without any special ty ot Bin to lose one by FR ieal advice. $1.06 per bottle, orsix,bottles real eee IZELL & RICE, Sold by cine, DISEASE, 7 or sent by mail on receipt of price. i eae THE KASKINE CO., 34 Warren Sf., New York se the extra pork it puts apon the hogs ‘Wee Fil return three times its costs. ‘ é BUTLER, MO. = er hong and feeders who have used it write p.. | WA NTED 1 sto Work for us consider it w sure curs ido not iatend to ie | t their homes 7 to $10 per ’ Without it. M D. Johnson, Walker, M Ved week can be quietly made No photo painting Kisasuccess and we cheerfully tes J Ss \ no canvassing. For full particulars at ih Boe, Griftin & Bro. LaPlata 5 address, at once, CRESCENT ART CO., able, Bibave used Dr. Jos. Haas’ hog remedy = Milk St., Boston, Mass. Box 5170. recommend it as asure cure for hog chol- )and lam sure it has saved me from $20 1,000 Fri Hannibal, Mo. | —~—~— best Wehave sold it in a dozen instances, no cure py, and have never losta cent. It has Deere i aa ovROOT BEER makes 5 gallons of a de- eed His i i Package, 25 cen ue holes _ Brown & Mills, Louisville, mo. T H E H OR TQ Packag ens Mee ae erica! ave used your ae 4 athWe Strengthens and purifies the blood. is purity ttso plind it the best preventive for prevailing Sane au eee sear ly a to a ‘old by al C. R. Dawson, Denver, Mo druggists and storekeepers. rh ae : , on heartily recommend it ali having ‘hogs licted with cholera. A. Bafford, Lonisville, Mo Iwill not be without Haas’ hog remedy if it ong three times the present price. hen Jobn Castin, Grant City, Mo nga, pT Haas hog remedy does all he claims for C. P. Haxton, Louisville, Mo. sof {lam satisted it will pay for itself in putting ” flesh, aside from keeping hogs healthy. tlete Thos. H. Logan, Grant, City Mo. “a Your remedy gives better satisfaction than other, 8. B. Smith, Perry, Mo. am convinced, ifthe medicine is properly m, itis the thing for hogs. _ . J, McCray, Browning Mo. — | Since using your remedy] lave not had the vlera among hogs. John 8 Courtright, Peculiar, Wis the best thing of the kind I e A.J Leggett, H Your remedy is gi general satisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. EAFNESS Its causes, and a new and successful CU Fe Bat your own home, by one who was deaftwen- 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, No 41 West 3ist St. New York. KER’S GINGER TONIC ‘Asthma, Indi gertion,, tnward Pains, amacia Ginger itescrts 8 Cars+ i wit 5 wer over disease unknown to remedies. — Gy tne yusecl ‘PaRKER'S GINGER TONIC. y the timely use itis lifeand serene to the aged. at Drug- Piscox &Co., 168 William Street, ¥. Y. pesmi init Sect d pene eer “DEA THE PEC TENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED EAR DRUMS PERFEGELY RESTORE TUE REARING and perform the work ofthe sataral dvum. Invisible, comfortable and always in position, All conversation and even whispers heard distinctly. Send forillustrated $1.25 and % cents, yer box 25 pound cans, $12 A le by LE & CRUMLEY, Butler Missouri, CHAS. CENNEY ‘ ‘Address or call oa F. HISCOX, Who are authorized by me to receive and for- bag rT we applications or the insurance of young ist diseases. ‘ = ne zs Sel 1 contracts of insurance will provide that I At Old Stand, East Side Square. jor Prall pay the Highest Market price every insured hog which dies from diseases le being fed the remedy. Jos. Haas, Indianapolis. Ind. NEW GOODS Fresh ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American ‘ OR. STRONG'S PILLS! ra Old, Weli Tried, Wonderful lealth Renewing Remeaies. SANATIVE PILLS Fer.ths Zvsr: , ~ A speedy cure for Complaint, Regulating the Bowels. Purityin wood, ansing from Malaral Taint. & pei eure for Sick i. aad St fot, nick Headache, Constipation We S'S PEGE SIAL PILLS <Sy Nice and Comprisin thing in the GROCERY © COUNTRY PRODUCE | | Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 3 3 Bureau, w Yc .- Page Pamphie* Newspaper Ac 10 Sprues Send 10cts. for 100- CRR SEWARD A. HASELTINE, COME AND SEE ME. | paTENTSOLIGITOR ATTY ATLA Chas. SPRINGFIELD, MO. tAssociatel at fequesied, isquir iy mi any address. if | "Mucox srxcaric Denney. » $500, pan w. 3 n To All Wanting Employment. ij ; i 4 room house, good cistera, Cogswell : : d ie ee A cent addition, Stoo. ant Live, Sacseey 908 eee 8 s 2 story is ¢ : »t 1 icle , | 4 ry 15 room house, good cellar, : ! papers by addressing - A DIPLOMAT’S SPEECH. Ghoulish Glee.t Jefferson Davis ex year of his Am Amusing Sr: y of Lord Ponsonby and pletes the rvous Interpreter. ve Democrat. The {callous souled wretch who jwrote the | blush from the ruddy cheek of chik above would steal tl aul ple, to pr ram Sultan 4 hood, or tear the gold from the y aay laving wen Xe or tr , H e- tar o. st 5 ae Sa s of a skeleton; and should} Bebechiie neo ceeed aotdenversesan d= orothers go to war again he would of Mr. Frederick Pisani, Chief | ever venture (farther than to rob Dragoman of the Embassy, to wri a hen roost or horrify d out a trar » lan- into the T band of old women. Just as well guag it by He “ s drag out the b f i | was instructed not te pay ention ag 1e bones of Abraham Lin to Lord Ponsonby’s utte the audience, but, when quested by his Excellency, he Was to repeat the folly and his work was a failure. and = Davis He prepared speech, and subsequently the represented replies, which had likewise been pre: pared in answer to the iy | between them brothers went to war. language, of which his ExceNency | Homes were made desolate, the ery was able to guess the by purport. Lord Ponsonby gave these directions as he knew that Mr. Pisani was aneryous man, and might find it difficult on such an oceasion to ren- der the Amb: lor’s language ade- quately into eloquent and polite Turk- ish if not prepared beforehand. The Ambassador and members of the Embassy in uniform, with numer- ous cavasses, proceeded in the siate kaik from Therapia to the Sultan's palace. To each attache a banner or flag was given to carry for presenta- tion to the audience. jotted a Turkish long All tl of the Porte were assembled at the pal- ace, and od in two lines on each side of the tanas the Ambassador and suite entered the hall. rent the air from Gulf, but by Lincoln prevailed. quarter of a century ago. To me was al- banner, on a very erescent and sp Mountain Green with boys Ministers and other dignitaries has sworn allegiance. Keeping my eyes fixed upon the Sul- tan as I entered, [lowered unwitting the pole and banner, which were ver, heavy, and nearly carried off on the s ae gee spear the’ fez of one of the Ministers) | (ceectave the silvery baw of age. TE This wucherie’” produced a sup- | Jeff Davis has nothing to show for pressed giggle from an 4 TOE g Clog Cone mes cony Means during the most important history especially as Lord Ponsonby — had Z : not warned the members of the Em- } of the greatest nation ever blessed bassy of the nature of the address he was about to deliver, and of the in- structions he had given to Mr. Pisani. Advancing with great dignity near to where the Sulton stood, and putting out oceasionally his hand as an orator might do, Lord Ponsonby commenced with a very grave expression of coun- tenance, counting two, three, four, five, ete.. up to fifty, oecasion- ally modulati as if he de- sired to: make an impres the minds of his hearers, putting emphasis upon some numbers, and smiling with satisfaction and pleasure when he reached the higher numbers of thirty to forty. Of his Excellency honorable defeat, a failure. sane, and will ever prevail as g his voice hearts of the people—St on upon ern themselves. A man who course knew that the Sultan, his Ministe ae : and other officials at— the court were the living utterance of a son, dead to not acquainted with the sh lan- | shame, to honor unknown.—Benton= # ville (Ark.) Journal. On concluding, he turned to the in- terpreter and motioned him to speak. Mr. Pisani recited in very eloquent and flowery Turkish the Ambassador's prepared speech. When Lord Ponsonby commenced the enumeration, I hid my face behind the banner, and pinched myself sharp- ly, to check the outburst of laughter which inwardly convulsed me. The Sultan replied, expressing his sense of gratitude to the British Gov- ernment, histhanks tothe British naval and military forees and their com- manders, as also to the ambassadors. This Mt. Pisani translated. Then Lord Ponsonby commenced again to count from sixty upward, pausing now and then as if dwelling upon particular numbers, which, by his voice and gest- ure, it would appear he desired espe- cially to impress on HL I. M.'s mind. Mr. Pisani again repeated the lan- guage which he had been desired to prepare. The trophies were handed over to officers appointed by the Sultan to re- ceive them, and the Ambassador and his suite retired. Not one of the Turkish officers pres- ent during the audience appeared to have the slightest suspicion of what was taking place, and even if they had subsequently learned that the Ambas- sador had counted instead of making a speech, they would have comprehended that the desire of his Excellency was that his prepared speech should be clearly and properly translated by the interpreter on such an interesting oc- casion.—Murray’s Magazine. ——__< 2 Ballard’s Snow Liniment. no wound it will not heal. frost bites. chilblaims and corns. A Solution of the Flag Question. returning of the captured flags: ment daring the war. South writing about them. a mormument with onr teet. ” Ancient Persian Gems. dred years to come. —_—— A well-known European collector of g | coln and say his life was devoted to directly opposite views; and upon the issues of the orphan and the widow's wail Canada to the force of physical strength only, the idea of Abraham That was over a Many, many years since, beautiful flowers have been strewn over the graves of gallant soldiers, alike have the dar- ing deeds and true heroism of the swarthy sons of the south been re- cognized and acknowledged by the Over a quarter of a century has the old stars and stripes floated from every hand in the South, and every heart Yet comies one man. who is willing to lift the veil, and fling an insult into the wrinkled face, trip the totterings of years, or his long and eventful years of trouble, by the smiles of God, then is the life of every man who follows the stars and bars to a glorious, yet The main cause for which Jeff Davis con- tended is right, and prevails to-day, long as liberty and independence are in the ates rights and the rights of the people to gov- can thus fling a taunt at old age, should pray that his mother’s ghostly spirit should never again rise to recopnize There is no pain it will not ree lieve, no swelling it will not subdue, It cures Austin Tex. . June 26. —The Aus- tin Citizen, a weekly paper, edited by a colored man, thus alludes to the “Considerable excitement has been caused all over the country on account of President Cleveland’s ac- tion in reference to the Confederate flags capured by the Federal Govern- It isa great pity that old reminiscences should haye any occasion to rise in the minds of the people, either North or The flags are not worth half the money that has been spent in It the Gener- eral Government has them let her bury them beneath the sod and raise Grant and Lee joining the right hand ot fellowship, with a suitable inscription thereon. Then let both North and South come and see where the last em- blems of discord lies buried beneath With peace in one hand and prosperity in the other, Ameri- ca’s sons will read with joy a hun- Ten Things a Baby Can Do. Tt can beat any alarm clock ever invented wal family up in the morn Give it a show fair and it can stuash more dishes than the most in dustrious servant girl in the country ad with the most ei pert tumbler in the cireus ring. It can make Tt can fall down oftener ess provocation th more genui over a sunple brass pin than its mother would over a broken back. Tt can choke itself black in the face with ¢ ‘eater case than the most accomplished wretch that ever was executed. It can keep a family in constant turmoil from morning till night and night till morning without varying its tune. onee It can be relied upon to sleep peacefully all day when its father is down town and cry persistently at night when he is particularly sleepy. It may be the naughtiest, dirtiest, ugliest, most fretful baby in the world, but you can never make its mother believe it, and you had better not try it. It can brighten up a house better ° than all the furniture ever made; make sweeter music than the finest orchestra organized; fill a larger place in its parents’ breasts than they knew they had, and when it goes away it can leave a greater blank than all the rest of the world put together. The Nineteenth Century Club is an organization that will consist of an equal number of men and wo- men. itis hardly to be expected that they will agree on all subjects; butit can surprise no one to learn that Dr Pierce’s ‘Golden Medical Discovery’? is unanimously pro- nounced the most successful remedy extant, tor pulmonary consumption, as has been demonstrated in hun- dreds of cases; it positively arrests . this disease and restores health and streagth, it adminis , stages. By drugg No F's Nor K's, The following announcement print- ed in the Rocky Mountain Cyclone, shows how completely ihe English language is adapted for sudden and unforseen emergencies: “We begin the publication of the Roecay Moun tain Cyclone with some phew diph- phiculties The phrom whom we bought our outphit, type phounders phailed to supply us with any ephs and cays, and it will be phour or phive weex bephore we can get any. The mistaque was not phound out till a d We have dered the missing letters, and will have to get along without them till they come. We don’t lique the loox uy this variety ov spelling any bette than our readers, but mistaques will happen in the best regulated phami 1 or two ago. or- and iph the p’s, h’s, x's and q's phai use of Aver’s Ague Cure. lains an The Remembrance of Eight, Years. Trenton, Todd Co., Ky., Feb. 25 upper lip tor eight years. to heal it. One gave me a smal cure.”” did me no good. course of eighteen bottles of S.S.S. The ulcer or cancer healed beauti sCar. ered in its early’ hold out, we shall ceep (sound the ¢ hard) the Cyclone whirling aphter a phashion till the sortsarrive. Itis no joque to us—it is a serious aph- No injurious effects can follow the It con- unfailing gantodine and specific for miasmatic poisons, to- gether with remedial agents which purify and re-invigorate the system. Gentlemen—I had a sore on my Seven different doctors attempted in vain bottle for $5, which was a ‘‘certain It is needless to say that it About two years ago I became uneasy, as people thought I had a cancer, and I took a The rezult was a complete cure. fully, leaving scarcely a perceptible From that day I have beenin | | Bronchitis. i cific ha | ancient gems has just sent tothiscoun- | Ballard’s Horehound Syrup, ab- excellent health, the Specific having | try fourteen antique turquoise pebbles, solutely cures Bronchitis and all} thoroughly cleansed my blood | collected in different parts of Persia | jiher diseases ot the baci — creased my app and perfected - apne s ungs. It gives instant relief an 1: . i A ters from the Koran, inlaid with gold. Lung 5 my digestion. In a word, I feel like vill c yors gh. dheltore will cure the worst coug in some The pebbles are so old that has faded unt it has become | They are curiously engraved with lete | | quoise blue otwithstanding Cin almost whi |his wife, who has left b s. though she ati is the home of Fidelity. a man of that city | anew woman, and best of all, th eight year cancer is gone Yours sincerely, Mrs. W. P. Cannon. land Skin Dis- George Gould is looking up in the world. Hes nov Ttaliar @€ of the entirely. ie

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