The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 28, 1888, Page 3

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Capital, - iG .0O00 SURPLUS $6,500 JOHN H.SULLENS * BOOKER POWELL, -ee+ President Vice Preside Wu.E. WALTON,....-.......Cashier. |. RUE JE INS, ...... Ast. Caashier, ON KINNEY.....Clerk and Collector. DIRECTORS Dr, T. C. Boulware, fe Tucker, Booker Powell, Green W, Walton John Deerwester, Dr. N. L. Whipple Wm, E, Walton, ]. Rue Jenkins. ludge J- H Sullens cet Hickman Frank Voris, -€.H. Dutche« Receives deposits, loans money, and transacts a general banking business. Weextend to ourcustomers every ac- commodation consistent with sate bank- ing. CORRESPONDENTS. First Nat’] Bank Fourth National Bank Hanover National Gank - Kansas City. St. Louis. New York. COUNTY " Ir pret Surp!ns : et. TYG HON. J. my, J.C.CLARK - cr « Tl | TS In every style price and quality y style j 1 ) | Made to Order JE. TALBOTT, 47 ly Merchant Tailor. (SCOTS EMULS! OF PURE COD LIVER G:L 4uD HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Riilk. So disguised that it cna bo taken. digested, and assimtiate’d’ by the most semsitive stomach, when the piain cil eamnot be tolerated: ani by the com bination of the oli With the hypopRos phites *s mach more e Remarkable 23 8 Ces Persons gain rapic!y SCOTT'S EMULSION is a1 icians to be the Finest Best prepa- Tation.in the world for the reli f and curs of GENERAL GZ0i) DISEASES, E COLDS and CHRO The cemedi y ADVERTISERS > can learn the exact cost of any propesed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St, New York. 10cts, for 100-Page Parnphe. ' \O a D ne ene QO NNR \ G FY ay in Vs Three larce buildings, Faculty of 2, from 18 States. Highest advantages in Music, Health, Aceessibiti D.D. Pres’t, She Tried and Knows. A leading chemist of New York says: “No plasters of such merit as the Ath-lo-pho-ros Plasters haveever before been produced.” They are a novelty because they are not made simply to se », they are the best that ce, skill and money ean produce, and will do what is | claimed for them. For sprains, j aches, weakness, lameness, etc., they are unequaled. 44 Fulton St., Sandusky, 0., Nov. 21." The Athlophoros Plaster acte ike magic. It is the beet I ever tried and I have used many kinds. Our droggist raid “plasters are all about the same" but Tdow't think so now. I sprained my arm and shoulder in July, and it has been painfal since, but it does not pain me at now. Mrs. Witiis MaGiLi. 4&@ Send 6 cents for the beautiful colored pic- ture, “‘ Moorish Maiden.” | THE ATHLOPHOROS CO. 112 Wall St. W. Y. T. L. Harper, Treas. Geo. CANTERBURY Sec’y. | P. C, FurKerson, , Pres’t. J. EVERINGHAM, Vice-Pres’t. THE BANKERS LOAN & TITLE CO. Incorporated under the laws of Mo. LAND TITLES EXAMINED & CERTIFIES: First Mortgage Loans Made on Farm and City Property. Local Money for Short Time Loans.} Office west side square, BUTLER, MO. a = 4 = i a @ acer aa & = bs i 2 — 1 s = as as = bs! i Ce: = tS = Hh = ies le = 6 pe aa) <u ie ~ 3 SS ty a @ a SB wa > - O 8 ap ee OQ i | | 6 C= | ft i) = PBEie Q 2 HS ke Sie ee es Me i ig e) =| ree SS ae po nd = td ¥ has revoiu- tionize d the world during the half century. Not last among the wonders ot inyentive prog isa method and system of work that can be pretorm- ed all over the country without seperat- ing the workers fromtheir homes. Pay liberal; any one can do the work; either sex, young or old; no special ability re- quired. Capital net needed; you are started tree, cut this out and return to us and we wiil send you free, something ot great value and importance, that will start you in business, which will bring you in more money right away, than any- thing else in the world. Grand outfit free, Addiess Tyue & Co., Augusta, M ne. I.yr. SOOO Fok A certs wanted to THA Lita: - = = VICES OF Grover Cleveland Fol! and complete from bis boyhood to his Lowis, with percnal yemiaivcences, incidents und anecdotes, Profusely iluatrated wii t ‘wood engravings, Selden harvest. free to all. Soringtieta. Mass. my remedy to Cure the worst cases. others have failed is no reason for not now receiving acure. Send at once for a treatise and a FREE LE of = INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for 2 trial, and it will cure you. Address H.G. ROOT, M.C., 183 Peam Sr., New York A life-long study. I WARRANT . Because | Because He Ansoved the Ladies ef His Heuse. | i] | Owingsville, Ky., Nov. 21.—About , | 9 o'clock last night Judge E. R. | Withers, 2 well-known and promi-| nent citizen, shot and instantly kill- | ed a negro desperado named Lewis Daniels at Sharpsburg, this county. The weapon used was a double-bar- reled shotgun loaded with slugs. Both loads took effect in the negro’s | head and blew it almost entirely off. Daniels was known as a vicious desperate and dangerous man. For some time past he had been a source of the greatest annoyance to Judge Withers’ family. On several occa- sions recently the negro had gone to Withers’ house in the absence of that gentleman and outrageously abused the lady members of the family. A few nights ago he pre- sented a pistol in the face of Mrs. Withers and threatened to kill her, but when the lady screamed and as- sistance came Daniels was gone. Last night Judge Withers heard a noise in the kitchen. Taking his | gun he went in and found Daniels and ordered him to leave, remarking that he had already annoyed his fam- ily enough. The negro attempted to draw a pistol, when Judge With- ers fired upon him with the above result. watch that 1 fit goes, as when it stan Alas! how wany women, though household and children need their care, are necessanily idle, because suffering from diseases peculiar to | Toall such Dr. Pierce's | their sex Favorite Prescription is a precious boon, speedily curing internal flammation, leucorrhea, ment, ulceration, tormenting period- | ical pains, prolapsus, ‘-bearing-down” ing, weak stor neryous prostra tion, and tendency to cancerous dis- ease. In all those ailments called “female complaints,” it is the most relinble specitic known to medical acience. Men and Wemen- Mrs. Humphrey Ward, author of “Robert Elsmere,” intends to visit this country. Levi P. Morton, representing $20,- in | displace | = 5 q | of them are doing. they are charged sensations, morning sickness, bloat-} A TRAIN LOAD OF BUFFALO. Fighty-Three of the Shipped from the Far Northwest St. Paul, Mir Nov. 21.—The Manitobas fast freight from Winni- peg brought in a queer load of cat- tle yesterday in the shape of 83 buf- falo. The herd is the famous one raised by Warden Benson. of Stony Mountain, N. W. T., since 1877, from & young bull and four heifers. They have been bought by C. J. Jones of Garden City, Kansas, who has for some years been making a special | study of the buffalo, and he has at present a herd of 50 on his ranch in Kansas. He began crossing them with cattle and his experiments have been successful, the half-breed buf- falo being a hardy and striking ar-} imal, while much less wild in its na- | ture. The raising of the bison has become a profitable business, as 50c | a pound for buffalo meat can be ob- tained in Chicago. The animals will be shipped south to-day. Cattle- raisers everywhere are watching the Jones experiments with much inter est, and bison in their wild state are almost unknown, a fact which makes the attempt ty domesticate and per- petuate the species the more inter- esting. jhave amore excellent way. How to Water Plants. Vick's Magazine: I am one of many who love fowers and lim- ited in 1s of them, and | ! > to struggle against some ob- | stacles in their culture, particularly | through cold weather. things which troubl the watering—it One of the me most was easy to splash water and mud over the sides of the pots and down on whatever might be below or around unless I was exceedingly careful. But now I I cut out strips of tin, which is supplied by passe tin cans, and bend them into the form of cones, varying from uu so | one to two and 2 half inches in di- ameter at the mouth, and in leugth being two-thirds the depth of the | pots, the larger sizes, of course, be- ing for the larger pots. I plant these eones, one ina pot, at the side a little distance from the end, with the seam turned toward the root of the plant. and the top sunk to the level of the earth. It is an exsy mat- ter to introduce water from the noz- zie of a sprinkler, with no danger of slopping, and the earth is not hard- ened as it is where moisture is ap- | plied extensively. Of course. it is alittletrouble, but who begrudges that when the plants are concerned? The cones do not American Fject Mason City, Ia. hundred more were served on settlers on the Des | » out of thei doors and windows th d at a Moines river lands settlers houses, their furniture yesic rday. ariy were in the the and barred company make ises and when mud rag st The la against The lan er. no comprom- the scttlers tues to buy their land, 4s muny over from $15 to $25 an acre. Trouble has thus far been happily avoided | | but the settlors around Le formed a union n ROS. gh have Boynton jas their president. that this union will issue a cireular outlining their grievances and mak ing known their intention. | Yesterday was the coldest day lyet, and its sharpness furnished oc- 000,000, is the wealthiest man ever elected to the vice presidency. The Princess Sophia of Prussia is learning Greek and the crown prince of Greece is helping her as they are to be married. Lord Luean, who recently died in London, was the man who gave the order for the famous charge as Bal- aklava—the charge of the light brigade. What would King Milan ‘o in America? He has recently called up- on the Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria to protect him against the Austrian caricaturists and the latter has complied. It is said that the gackwar of Ba- roda, who has been spending the summer in Italy and Switzerland, is on his return to India. What a ‘warm reception his ten mother-in- laws and fourteen wives will give | him. G. W. Childs, Anthony Drexel, Marshall Field and others propose to raise $100,000 for the benefit of Mrs. Gen Sheridan. The wives of great men shall not suffer straight- ened circumstances in this country. In the staging days O. J. Brown of Claremount was a well known New Hampshire stage driver. He cele- brated his 80th birthday recently by driving a load of friends to Wind- sor, Vt., banqueting them in elegant style and then driving them back. Ballurds Snow Linament Is the best Linament in the world for animals. It will wock wonders where ever any pain or inflamation may be tound, Every ownersofa horse should have it in his stable. For Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, Galls, Lameness and all in- flamation on animals it stands without a parallel. Thece is no pain Ballard’s Snow Linoment will not releve, no swelle ing it will not snbdue. No fwonnd it will not heal. Pyte & Crumley, Agents. Nevada, Mo., is spending some of its time punishing illegal voters. A Kansas man, presumably a republi- can, is now behind the bars for at- tempting to redeem Missouri. Should a few such “voters” as this one be sent to the penitentiary it would haves good effect and serve as a wi to imported floaters.— Springfield Leader. |easion for a very graceful act, | which the historian was witness. ja West end horse car sat a poor j mother with a ehild in Lb | The clothes of the mother jand could hold but little | The bandaged eyes suggested that the mother had been to was wrapped in a {shawl that would be | against a sharp wind. A lady on the other side of the car arose to leave; on her arm was folded a comfortable looking shawl. In passing she spread this over the ichild. ‘Keep it,” she said in a low voice as she passed out.—Boston Record. > arms. or i oO more mending. child, whose loctoer, little a sieve ac miserable but Montreal, Nov. 21.—It is report- ted from Quebec that a northwest gale and blinding snow has prevail- ed since Monday. Anxiety is felt for the safety of a number of vessels | which have been started for Sauge- nay and the mouth of the gulf. The gulf shores are icebound. Fisher men are suffering for food and some of them who were caught in the snow are badly frozen. Three feet ofsnow has fallen in the three days at Sault Sie. Marie and the thermometer touched 6 degrees below last night. Farmers in Que- bec and Ontario have been caught unprepared by the early cold snap and their stock is suffering severely. The weather in this neighborhood is the coldest known here in Novem- ber for nearly a score of years. The glass registered 8 below this morn- ing. Last night the Allen line steamship Pomeranian caught fire here. She is covered with ice from the freezing of the water used in extinguishing the flames. She will probably remain until spring. Consumption 1s on the Increase. From recent statistics it appears that consumption is on the increase through- out the western states. The principal cause, it is stated, is due to neglect of common Coughs and Colds. It is the duty of all persons whether of delicate | or robust health, to have e remedy at hand at ali times in readiress, HOUND SYRUP will cure any cough except ir the last stages of consumption. | Astitch in time Saves nine, ays keepitin the house. Pyle X Crumiey agent. « It is expected | | of | In | past | and ai cough crcold may be broken up betore } it becomes seated. BALLARDS HORE- | rust out for some time, and when one is potting the plants it takes only a seeond to insert them. Pites! Itching Piles. romMs—Moisture, intense itching ng; most at night; worse a Ir allowed to continue tu- mors torm, which often bleed and ulcer- Piles! ate, becoming very sore. SwayNes O1IN os the itching and bleed- in removes the tume by mail Philadelphi ion, and in most Cases . At druggists, or o cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, 32.vr 4. special to the Yesterday an im- for scme ¢n irying in vain fora chance Loek Haven, New York Times mense days be hawk which had to swoop down on Simon Clay's pou - uv chicken, re- aber On SOruC- ree bei ee | thing suce yard. The i y enough, jning itself in ¢ | hawk lifted the and was movidg uway when the cat recovered fromits surprise and bega nn and cla Feathers be to squ gan to tumble out of the hawk in showers, and the big bird, which ight of 100 feet with eeing that it had ooxed its talons, and had reached ai its unusual prey caught a tarts the eat dr pped toward the earth \ like a plumb bob. ' The hawk must have been woeful- ily hungry, for the cat and sei & swooped down on it again before it reached the ground. That was a good thing for the cat, for if it had | struck the earth at the rate it was going ail nine of its lives would have gone out at once. But this sec- ond capture was bad for the hawk. He grabbed the cat near the tail, and had hardly recovered himself sufficiently to resume his upward flight, when the cat twisted around and reached for the hawk with her claws. Ske caught the big bird’s throat in her teeth and set the claws of her fore feet deep in the feathers of his neck. That was the end of | the fight. The hawk. pounded and flapped his great wings, but it was of no use. His wind was effectually shut off and he fluttered to the | ground with the cat and by the time | the two reached the earth the big bird was in his last gasp. The interesting and novel contest in midair was witnessed by several | persons, and when they reached the spot where the combatants came down the cat sat by the side of its | vanquished foe complacently licking | wounds the hawk’s talons had made, which were deep but not serious. Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice having lad placed in his hands by an East India missionary the formula 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 relieve human suffering. I will send free ot charge, to all who desire it, this re- ceipt, in Germac, French or English, with tull directions for preparing and l using. Sent by mail by addresing with | stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, (39 Power’s Block, Rocheste N. Y. cIJACOBS Ol, CONQUERS PAIN. SMO]|0} SE SIM MAN “HY Woym Suowe ‘no sqosef 4g Jo samastA arp 07 Asnsoy gouaUTWD 10 U2IN ‘a ‘AUOWILIV a ‘ANVdWOO UAIZOOA ‘V SAINVHD SHL ee WUAHMAUAAA SUA1VAC ONV FLSIDDAUCG AW 108 ‘Ainsvoss SOxEPS PO}UN OY} JO Asvjos90g “ySSy 0}27 ‘uoryonsesgo pun souctsadxa youossed umo fu wos, nope sis & 8 a a 2 =e Rus 2 TF a The Staunch Old Democratic | Newspaper, THE MISSOURI REPUBLICAN Has changed the name of the daily issue to —THE— St. Louis Republic, And reduced it subscription rates, One Year, without Sunday... .- -++-S,00 One Year, including Sunday...... 810,00 The Weekly Republican Ten pages every week. Is the cheapest and best paper in the country. CAMPAIGN RATES. One Year........ sane ens From Jane to December 1.. rere eey tens December. rr From September to December 1...... From October to December 1. ae =A Of either pattern shown above will be sent, Postage Froe, to every new sub- scriber for a period of threo months or longer. pee tw Sample Copies free io any address. ADDEESS, BLI8, St. Louis, Mo. LENT Missouri Pacific Ry. 2 Daily Trains 2 TU KANSAS CILY, OMAHA, Texas and the Southwest. 5 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORADO SHORT LINE Ty PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN fCFFETT SLEEPING CARS, Kansas City to Denver without change? lt. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenges and Ticket Ag’ty : ST LOUIS, MO.

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