The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 21, 1888, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“WITH YOU ONCE MORE — -F.M.GRUMLY &60, | ried and she was stilla young mar- With a Clean Fresh Stock of | | DRUGS. Mi Stationery, Paints, Oils, &c. 2 Come and see us as we can do you good and would be glad to see you. First door south of Bates County nat’l bank. j | | | | i | 1 i | The BUYERS’ GUIDE is issued March and Sept., each year. It is an ency- clopedia of useful infor- mation for all who pur- chase the luxuries or the necessities of life. We ean clothe you and furnish you with all the necessary and unnecessary s to ride, walk, dance, sleep, t, work, go to church, and ia various sizes, STATE OF MISSOURI, i County or Batss. 5 In the Circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, October 15th 1888, the state of relation and to the use of Os- Micio collector of th ‘nu the state of plaintia vs. Jokn A. Moberg and J. L. Rix, dmninistrator of John A. Rix deceased, de- fendants. Civil action for delinquent taxes Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county in the state of uri, in vacation and files her petition, atating among other things that the above on defendants are non-residents of the tate ofMiesouri. Whereupon it is ordered by ‘the ssid clerk in vacation, that said defendaats be notified by publication that plaintif bas commenced a suit against them in this court me petition the object and general nature of ich ig to enforce the lien of the state of Mis- soari for the delinquent taxes of the year 1886. amounting in the aggregate to the sum of * @63 75-100, together with interest. costs, com- mission and fees, upon the following described tracts of land situated in Bates county, Mis- 3 one seven, eight, nine and ten In twent e (21) in the city of Rockville, and that ‘ania the said defendants be and ap- at the next term of this court, to be begun id holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, uri, on the first Monday in February 1889, and on or before the sixth day thereof (if the term shall so long continue, andif not thentbe- fore the endof the term,) and plead to said ition ing to law, the same will be as ‘confessed and 23 ment rendered ac- cording to the prayer of said petition, and the jescri! real eatate sold to satisfy the same. ~ And it is farther ordered by, the clerk afore- said that a copy eS lished in the But- > ter Weekly Tings, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Butler, tes county Mis- 7 |» for four weeks successively, the last in- m to be at least four weeks before the day ofthe next term of said court A true copy from the record. Witness my hand-as clerk afore- “(emat) said withthe seal of said court hereunto affixed. Done at officein Batler on, this the 15th se ap a 1888. JOHN C. HAYES, 47-40 Circuit Clerk. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, 88 County or Batxs. in vacation, October Lith, i8es, "the state of vacation, F lith, 1888, the state o! Missouri at the relation and to the use of Os- - @ar Reeder, collector of the revenue of Bate: county in the state of Missouri. plaintif,, vs. ‘e ver, defen: s Civil action for deli quent taxes. Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by cher attorneys, before the u! oq ares clerk of Pee cenit court of Bates county in the state of in —_ — a on es stating among other 6 above Samed: defendant, D. O. Dever non-resi- dent of the state of Missouri. upon it is by the said clerk in vacation, that said be notified by publication that tiff has commenced a suit inst him in court By eaten, the object and general mature of which is to enforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of ‘the years 1880 and 1386, amounting in the ag- seagate to the sum of $14 31-100 together with : » Costs, commission and fees, upon the following described tracts of land situated Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: Lots 8, e ii, 12, 13 and 14 of block 15, the west half of lot Zand lots Sand 4 and the east half of lot 5 and 7,8, 18, 14, 15, 16,17, 18, 19, 1 of block'22, and lots 4. 5, 33, 23 jots 1, 2, 3, 4,5, 6, 8. 9.10, 11, 12, 18, l4and 150f block 35 and Tots 5, 12 and 13 of block 32 and lots 10 and 11 of Dlock 34 and all of block 22, all of said real es- tate being in the city of Rockville; also 2 ac: the east and south part of the north east quar- ter of the north east senrer of section 14, and one acre the west and south part of the north é@ast quarter of the north east 3A, both of said last mentioned tracts being township 58 of range 29, and that unless the said defendant be and appear at the next term ‘ofthis court. to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first -. Monday in Shae | 1889, and on or before the ‘sixth day thereof (if the term shall so long con- Vnue, and if not then before the end of the term,) and plead to said petition according to Taw, the same will be taken as confessed and ent rendered according to the prayer of said petition, ard the above described real es- tate sold to satisfy the same, And it is further ordered by. the clerk afore- Said that a copy hereof be published in the But- ler Weekly Ties, a weekly newspaper print- ed and published in Butler, Bates count » for four weeks successively. the last : Sov heg at —— son a before the oirst day next term ofsaidconrt. A true copy from a eed ee : itness and as clerk afore- {emat}) said with the seal of said court affixed, Done at offi 4m Batier, on this the 11th day of October. Iss, * SOHN C. HAYES, Cireuit Clerk. | other subject than “John Brown.” | rst lady, and no one will be able, uarter of sectien ; H } Married on Speculation. New York, Nov. 14.—Mrs. Jacobs a widow aged 60, set out eight or nine weeks ago to find a husband to cheer her dechning years and help her run the crockery store in Fulton street which she had owned for sev- eral years and from which she had {accumulated a snug little fortune. She engaged a friend to hunt upa husband for her, promising to pay him well for his trouble and to give the man who married her $1,000 as soon as the ceremony was perform- ed. The matrimonial broker intro- duced David Mandosa, a cigar maker aged 21,to the widow as a candi- date for her hand and the $1,000 prize, and in a few days Mrs. Jacobs became Mrs. Mandosa. vermacher performed the ceremony. Mrs. Jacobs paid her broker hand- somely and not only gave the cigar maker $1,000, but gave him jewelry and other presents valued at $500 Two weeks after their marriage Man- dosa dissappeared. After waiting | ried woman, and she is just the }same sort of a woman to-day that Rabbi Pul- | LADIES OF THE WHITE HOUSE. The Good Wife Who is to Goin and the Good Wife Who is to Go Out. A lady who certainly “does know all about it” from the way she talks said to a New York World reporter on Friday: “T have known Mrs. Harrison as a neighbor ever since I was first mar- she wasthen. When I knew them first they lived still in the little cot- tage with the two rooms on the low- er floor, the room on the one side of the hall being the parlor and the other the family sitting room. They were very economical and careful in those daysand there was rarely a fire in the little parlor, but instead all guests were taken into tha sitting room where Mrs. Harrison sat and sewed and tended her babies as she is even now attending to her daugh- ter’s. She loved her children, and she was a good mother in every way to both Mamie and Russell. They have certainly done well. Mamie is married to an ambitious and reliable young merchant, and the boy, Russel Harrison, is already arich man. He was a superintend- ent of the assay office at Helena for a number of years on a salary of $2,500 and was just about to resign from that when one of his men whom he had diseharged for drunkenness and incompetency, accused him of crookedness in his accounts. Of course both Russell and his father demanded a thorough ex:mination of his affairs, and he was fully exon- erated. After this he did resign, and is now president of the Nation- al cattle company, which he organ- ized and put into operation, and has besides a large interest in a cat- tle ranch in Montana, and, I think, a horse ranch, too. He is said to be worth now between $150,000 and $200,000, and is now only a little over 30 years old. His wife is probably one of those who will be with Mrs. Harrison in Washington, besides her daughter and her sister. Mamie has never in vain for his return Mrs. Mandosa obtained a warrant from Justice Walsh for his arrest ona charge of abandonment. Mandoso was found in a boarding house in Market street, this city, last night and taken to Brooklyn. held for examinatlon. married the He was arraigned and He said he widow because he thought it a good speculation, not seeing a clear to make $1,000 in any easier way. Piles! Piles! Itching Piles. Symproms—Moisture, intense itching and stinging; most at night; scratching. worse bv If allowed to continue tu- mors torm, which often bleed and ulcer- ate, becoming very sore. SWAYNES OINTMENT stops the itching and bleed- ing, heals ulceration, and in most cases removes tne tumors. At druggists, or by mail, for 50 cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, Philadelphia. 32.yr Fred Douglass, who has been re- ceived with consideration and re- spect in almost every city in Ameri- ca and Europe, and who has not been refused hotel accommodations before in twenty years, was turned away from one hotel in Leavenworth on Tuesday night, upon the claim that the house was full, although the reg- ister showed that only fifteen rooms out of a much greater number were taken. He was warmly reeeived, however, at another hotel where he was given the best room at the dis- posal of his host. When Mr. Doug- lass again goes to Leavenworth to lecture he will probably select some ‘What Am I to Do? The symptoms of billivusness are un- happily but too well known. er in different individuals to some extent. | They diii- A billious man-is seldom a breakfast eat- er. Too frequently, alas, he has an ex- cellent appetite tor liquors but none for solids of a morning hardly bear inspection atany time it 1s not white and furred, itis rough, all events, His gtongue t The digressive system is w holly out of order and diarrhea or Constipation may v f blood. and often headache and acidity or fiatu- / bea symptom or the two may alternate. re are otten Hemorrhoids o: ever There may be giddiness lence and tenderness in the pit of the stomach. To correct all thisif not es- tect a cnre try Greens August Flower, it cost but a trifle and thousands attest its efficacy. $tlyr, e ow. will | been really pretty, being always so pale as to look extremely delicate, but she is a bright, musical, spendid- ly educated and well bred girl. Mrs. Russell Harrison, on the other hand, is not only clever and attractive but a very beautiful and splendid man- nered woman. T have noticed that Mrs. Benjamin Harrison is called a pretty woman. Pretty she never was. but good and kind always. She is short and quite stout; she dresses very well and keeps herself up to the times, and above all things she is a good house- keeper and a good church woman. At this point a listening woman broke in saying, with an alarmed look upon her face: “Will she meddle, do you think, with the state dinners and the ad- ministration?” “Don't you be alarmed, my dear,” was the answer. “If you knew Gen- eral Harrison you would never ask that question. No one meddles with what is his affair without his per- mission, and more than that Mrs. Harrison is so completely a woman of sense that I am sure she would consider it was none of her business. She is, I tell you, a woman of great sense, and a kind-hearted, well-bred woman besides. Her married life has been a happy one, and she re- spects her husband's ideas and he respects hers. She will carry the same ideas into the White House, I am convinced. She will be her own either to make her uncomfortable or betray her into a false position.” “How about her entertaining?” pur- sued the one who had evidently a | most masculine taste for things that } are good. | “In Indianapolis Mrs. Harrison jhas entertained well. Never ex- | pensively and for the sake of fashion, but always well. When they were | in Washington they escaped always from entertaining elaborately, for Mr. Harrison is an honest politician and nota rich man, and it was a |matter of economy. But when it | mouth but was the child of poverty ; mud pies in Peoria, Til.. but for all state law disfranchises them. Serves ; (comes to its being a portion of oe them right! i duty Iam sure Mrs. Harrison will falfill all social and official require- ments and do it handsomely.” “And the famous punch?” “I do not believe that Mrs. Ha- rison ever had a punch in her house that was worse than President Har- rison’s egg-nog; you know, that was made with cider. -Before I went abroad I noticed that Mrs. Harrison had imbibed some of the ideas of the advanced women of the day, but T have no notion that she will ever carry them to any great extent. She is not a Puritanical, narrow minded woman, she is simply a good woman She has always been devoted to church work, and for years and years taught the infant class in Sunday school. Soisthe general a good church man, for that matter. I vot- ed for him myself to be elder in our church when he was but 32 years old. And his record in the church has been just like that in his home and in his political career—without smirch. Iamas good a democrat as ever lived, but I do know a good husband anda good father anda good man when I see him. Passenger Freight west. applv to Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice having had placedin his hands by an East India missionary the tormula ot a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure ot Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al! throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Neryous complaints, after having tested its wondertul curative powers in thousands of cases, has telt it his duty to make it Known to his suffering fellow. Actuated by this motive and a_ desire to re‘ieve human suffering. I will send free ot charge, to all who desire it, this re- ceipt, in Germac, French or English, with tull directions tor preparing and using. Sent by mail by addresing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, 149 Power’s Block, Rocheste N. Y. PLACE YOUR PROPERTY WITH D.W.SNYDER & CO His Recreant Wife. Leavenworth. Kan., Nov. 14.—A sensation has been caused here by the reported escapade of Mrs. E. C. Dustin, a bride oftwomonths. The man in the case is Charles M. Laue, advertising agent of the Leaver- worth Sun, who is a goodlooking,} NO dapper little fellow, with a collegiate education. Mrs. Dustin left her | MORE home Monday evening in company with Lane, ostensibly to goto the postoffice, but did not return. The next morning she sent her husband word to come and see her at the Planters house, to which he re- plied that if she had any business with him she should come to the house. Dustin does not care to say much about the af- fair, though he is satisfied something 1s wrong. Tamers, &: wherever i Tell the good news to the suffering— At last is a remedy found, Texas Express Local Freight... S. L. & E. DIVISION. GOING WEST. NO MORE GOING EAST. Passenger....- (Lexincton & Sournern Braycu.) Commencing Sunday, May 13th, and antil turther notice, trains will leave Butler as follows: GOING NORTH. Kansas City Express.. Kansas City Express. Local Freight ....-.- GOING SOUTH. 0egig5 Ae M ++12:40 P.M. All passenger trains make direct con- nection for St. Louis and all points east Texas and all points south, Colorado, California and all points west and north- For rates and other intormation E, K. Carnes. Agent. REAL ESTATE BROKERS. Soros MITCHE EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe, and Effective Remedy for SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, Producing Long-Sightedness, & Rester- ing the Sight of the Old. Cures Tear Dro Tumors, Red Eyes, Matt ASD PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF AND PERMANENT CURE. Also, equally efficacious when_used in other maladies, — $2 Uleora, inflammation ez a may be Sold by all Draggiste at 25 Cente. MO. BUTLER, LL’S Which might have saved had they known it Many who’re ander the ground. Tell of the ‘‘ Favorite Prescription,’’ Bid hepeless women be glad— Bear the good news to poor creatures, Heart-sick, discouraged and sad. “Female diseases,” so terrible in their effects, and so prevalent among all classes, cau be cured by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. Just the other day that sober pa- per, the Philadelphia Public Ledg- er, said: “Just think of men who, five days before the election, can sit down, as the members of the Orien- tal society did, to discuss “Quanti- tative Variations in the Calcutta and Bombay Texts to Mahab-harata’ and similar exciting subjects!” 01 oF orrheea, for six A Sound Legal Opionion E. Bainbridge Munday Esq., County Atty., Clay Co., Tex. says: ‘Have used Electric Bitters with most happy results My brother wasvery low with Malaria Fever and jaundice, but wascured by timely use ot this medicne. Am satisfied Elertric Bitter saved his life. Mr. D.I. Wilcoxson ot Horse cave Ky. addsa like testimony saying: He posi- tively believes he would he have died, had it not been tor Electric Bitters. This great remedy will ward off, as well as cure all Malaria Diseases, and and for all Kidney, Liver and Stomach Disorders stand unequaled. Price soe and $1, at Walls and Holt the druggists. Extract Emma Abbott has made $75,000 profit on real estate in Denver. No one can take more delight in money gains than Emma. She was not born with a silver spoon in her and in her early days used to make In Philadelphia the women take ; she loves money surpassingly well. | | naturally to the bicy | we Pression, Softenin; banity and leading to misery, Premature Old Age, Barren: in either sex, Involuntary byor mae $1.00 a boz, or six boxes for$5.00, sent by mail prepaidon receipt of price, WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES Tocure any case. With each order received byns sia, and NER’ and debilitat: z the inte! builds up worn out Nerv: MENT, a guaranteed Heatlache Nervous Pr: DOR. HEN i on JOHN O. WEST & CO, 862 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS., Sole Prop’s West's Liver Pilis. It relieves ail fed conditions of the sys {| lect, and bedily functions; es: nids dizestion ; re- sores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings back | youthful strength and vigor. tase, and In the state of Michigan duelists | ] are not permitted to vote. The/ SEE PROPERTY LIST NI DEMOCRAT. EYE-GLASSES WEAK ti od Eye Lashes, Health is Wealth! Losses and on of the brain. seif- Each box contains EWS: Sor# an A Most Effective Combination. ‘This well known Tonic and Nervine ts gaining as acure for Debility, Dyspep- ‘VOUS disorders. It is pleasant to the A used regularly braces the System agains . the depressing influence of MU ilaria. Price—$1.00 per Bott e of 24 ounces. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. I believe Piso’s Cure for Consum) saved Biitor Enquirer Eien juirer, ton, N.C., April 28, 1887, The Best Cough Medi- cine is Piso’s CURE Fron Coxsumrtion. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. a HARRISON & MORTOR "a. Ills’. with aumeroas super ©. “a Aon ° Concer les, Liver-Moles, Pim- ples, Black-Heads, Sunburn and Tan. A few applications will render the most stubbornly red skin soft, smooth and white. Viola Cream is not a paint or Pomiectocosee defects, but a remedy to cure, t is superior to all other preparations, and is guaranteed to give satisfaction. At drag- gists or srailed for 50 cents, Prepared by G. C. BITTNER & CO, : TOLEDO, OHIO. * SOLD{LY J. EVERINGHAM. 1 vr. (2 ALESMEN ™ be t= WANTED! eras ee manent le "ARH NURSERIES ssee This ol¢ Eayitsh Famtly Medicine le use for 86 years, all over the Ww for Bile, ludigestiun, Liver, &e. Of Pure Vegetatle Ingredients. FREE FHOM MERCURY. FARMERS! —__+«s 0+ sa@y-TO SAVE MONEY SEE-"@S A. C. SAMPSON, Rich Hill. D. H. HILL, Hume. J. G. McPEAK, Foster. C.S. PUTNAM, Adrian. HUGH M. GAILY, Amorett J.S. PIERCE, Virginia, or : D. W. SNYDER, Butler, *< For a Policy of Insurance in the 4 DWELLING : HOUSE :C6., THE ELDREDGE , Seat Special inducements and protection to deriers. A Boden gad J. C. GEITZ, £1319 Not t St. Louis, Mo. Western Agent. COFFEE hermatically OUND PACKAGES.

Other pages from this issue: