The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 17, 1889, Page 3

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aS { Rheumatism and Neuratgia Cured in Two Days. i The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov | ered a compound which acts with traly marvelous rapidity in the cure of Rheu- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it to cure any and every case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia in 2 DAYS, and to give immediate reliet n chronic cases and etfect a speedy cure. On receipt 2f 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the rescription for this wonderful compound which can be filled by your home druggist atsmall cost. We take this means of giving our discovery to tne public instead of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will gladly refund-money if satistaction is not given. THe INprANA Cugmicat Co., Jo-19F Crawtordsville Ind NEVER OWE’S Farisc AGUE CURE ‘snd TONIC BITTERS. $500 if it fails to PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM \Cieanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. sf} At Once voOto sell the Comdiete and Graphie ONLY AUTHE HISTORY OF THE JOHNSTOWN FOOD, Profusely Hlustrated with views of all connected with the terrible : mighty inundation $1.50. Liberal Te DEMAND IMMENSE for Untiit to HUBBARD BROS., 2 XHAUSTED VITALITY UNTOLD MISERIES Resulting from the Errors of Youth, Folly, Vice, Ig- norance, &c., may be cured at home without fail or exposure. Infallible and Confidential. Larze Treatise, 200 pages, only $1 by mail, sealed, postpal Small book, with endorsements of the press, free. Send now. Address the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W.H.Parker, No.4 Bulfinch St.,Boston,Mass, sorts HINDERCORNS. The only sure Cure for Corns, Stops all pai eomfort to thefect. 15e. at Druggists. Hiscox & “55. CONSUMPTIVE Have Ewes ‘a oe Asthma, Indigestion! Use tt etl by from defective nutrition ition the » worl ADSO- torm and fire Sheet Metal SHING of the country, wood shingles prices free L AL ROOFING New York. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS BED CBOSS DIAMOND BRAND. heat i relabieiliversue Nene Fait Ask for Chichester’s English: ~~ ee SP rita ae ‘wrappers, a oo Ri etd Ac. eanmeyee from LADIES ae Nemeeeees ‘Chemical Co., Madison Sq.,P! HIMRops CURE f° ASTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians and sold by Drug- giste throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUFG CO, SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. eEeE_—_— The most APPETIZING and WHOLESOMB TEMPERANCE DRINK fa the world. TRYIT. Ask your Druggist or Grocer for it. ‘ C.E HIRES, PHILADELPHIA. General Devol was formally in-} ducted into his office as revenue col- | lecter at the opening of business | hours to-day. His first official act was to notify the present force of deputies and clerks that they might continue to discharge their duties under the new administrstion as in the past. Col. W. F. Cloud was ap pointed deputy of the first division with headquarters in this city. to take the place of Albert Richardson resigned. Col. Cloud served in a similar capacity under Philip Dop- pler. The change of administration was effected without a jar and every fa- cility was given the collector by Mr. Hasbrook and his assistants. It is believed that the new force of depu- ties and clerks will not be named be- fore the close of the month.—K. C. News. O listen! On the breezes glad voices come to-day, From many a wife and mother, and - this is what they say: “The ‘Favorite Prescription’ works cures where doctors fail. Best friend of suffering women, O blessed boon, all hail!” If every woman who suffers from diseases peculiar to her sex, knew of its wonderful curatiye powers, what a mighty chorus of rejoicing would be heard throughout the length and breadth of the land, singing the praises of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Itis the only medi- cine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, that it will give sat isfaction in every case, or money re funded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. White Caps Stabbed. Appleton, Wis., July g.—August Belz was called to his door by adoz- en White Caps last night. The tempted to flog him for alle beating. Belz drew a_ bowie and slashed right and left, cutting a number of his lants, giving one a probably fatal wound in the stom- The White Caps escaped with their wounded, and Belz got safely back into his house. as: ache. William's Australian Herp Pill. If you are Yellow, Billous. constipated with Headache, bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out your liver is out of order. Onebox otf these Pills will drive all the trouble: make a new being out of you, cts. 47-yr- 2>vle, Agent Mr. J. R. Grinstead, Senora, Ky., says: My children have sometimes had boils and other signs of blood impurities, with loss of appetite, ete., at which time I have found Swift's Specific a most successful remedy, inno instance failing to effect a speedy and permanent cure. Swift’s Specific is a great blessing to humanity, says Mr. P. E. Gordon, of 725 Broad street, Nashville, Tenn., “for it cured me of rheumatism of a very bad type, which I had been troubled with for three or four years. a S. S. S. cured me after I had exhaus- ted everything else. Mr. Russell Myrick, of the firm of Myrick & Henderson, Ft. Smith, Ark., says he wishes to add his testi- mony to the thousands which have already been given to Swift’s Spe- cific. He says he derived the most signal benefit from its use to cure painful boils and sores resulting from impure blood. When taken for a few days, pot- ash mixtures impair the digestion, take away the appetite, and dry up the gastric juices which should as- sist in digesting and assimilating the food. Swift's Specific has just the opposite effect; it improves di- gestion, brings appetite, and builds up the general health. Conversation is slow to-day. The prize fight is over. Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice having had placed in his hands by an Kast 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 its wondertul curative powers in thousands of cases, has telt it his duty 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 using. Sent by mail by addresing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, tested to make it Known to his 149 Power's Block, Rocheste N. Y. S JACOBS oll TERRIBLE SUFFERINGS. BURYING THE DEAD. How Various People of Asia Dispose ef Human Corpses. H India, though a swarming hive of | people, did not impress me as a *‘e try of cemeteri as did Turkey and TEACHING GOOD MANNERS. EQUITAB LE LOAN AND INVESTMENT | ASSOCIATION ‘The Most Hopeless Task Which Mortal Man Can Undertake. But fine manners no code can teach. If they are conscious they become ar- tificial, and are fine no longer. Aman Persia. This is, of course, owing to | indeed may be eae Perhaps no man ever wit- 7 e taught to avoid gross- mee z the Hindoo custom of cremation and j ness and impudene A OF SEDALIA, MO. nessed more physical suffer- the fact that the burying races form | take them for ease. The youth who | ing than | | CAPITAL STOCK, $2,000,000. This association issues aj series each month, on payment of membership fee ot One Dollar per share. We pay cash dividends semi-annually on Paid Up Stock. We loan money anywhere in Missouri. Parties desiring to make investments tor i terest or to procure loans will do well tosee J. H. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo. but a small proportion of the popula- tion, But as soon China was reached the silent cities of the dead came again to the fore with greater prominence than ever. One stands on the walls of Canton, near the five-sto- ried pagoda, and sees the hills to the north all covered with graves. It is the same near any Chinese city. The living occupy the city and the level ground, the dead the hills. No corpse is allowed to be buried within the walls of a Chinese city, and without, the vast cemeteries cover the hills, with no fence or other limitation about them. The Chinese family which can afford it, builds a ‘‘horse-shoe grave,” or bricked vault on the hillside, with the end built up in the horse-shoe form. Poorer people stick their dead in shallow graves, on which a small tablet of wood or stone is put. In some districts of Quang-tung, near the head-waters of the Pe-Kiang river, the cemeteries consist of big jars set in niches of the rocky cliffs of the Mae ling mountains. As you pass along the foot trails you see the steep rocks above, thickly studded with those big earthen jars, in each of which is a human body in a sitting position. In the rich alluvial plains, where no uncultivated hills are available for burying the dead, a graveyard resem- bles very much a white ant village in Africa. The graves are sugar loaf mounds, thickly clustered together. While John Chinaman pays great re- spect to the dead, he takes care that they do not appropriate much ground that is of value to the living. The cemetery of a Chinese village among the rich rice fields covers very little ground in proportion to the number of graves. It smed to me that bodies must have been placed one on top of another, or stood upright, so thick were the tapering mounds. The Chi- nese graveyard is, on the whele, a less disreputable 2 Turkish or P vaults H. H, MEIGGS, the Great Raltroad Contractor of S. America, whose autograph ts here shown and who writes: “St. Jacobe Oil has accem- plished wonders. It hasmy positive indorsement.” . As an example—Daring 1870 and 1871 twe thousend Americans died from mala- rian and rheumatic fevers out of four thousand in Peru, attracted thither by large wages paid by Meiggs, who had contracts amount- ing to $136,000,000. In this field there- after St. Jacobs Oil did its good werk. Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere, THE CHARLES A. VOGELER 68. BALTIMORE MD. ICURE. FITS! When I say Cure I do not mean merely to stop them for 8 time, and then have them re- turn again. 1 mae A RADICAL CURE. puffs a cigarette when he is walking with a lady, whois free and easy in- stead of scrupulously courteous in his address and tone, may be told that he is merely ungentlemanly vulgar; and if he choose he may correct his be- havior; certainly he would correct it if the lady showed him that she re- quired the correction, The impudence of young men generally reflects the weakness of young women. If they required courtesy there would be lit- tle insolent freedom of behavior upon the part of their cavaliers. What may be learned in the cultiva- tion of good manners must be acquired in the school of experience. It is, of course, a superficial and external knowledge which is so acquired, and its extent depends upon the power of accurate observation. Is it not Goethe's Connoisseur who asks to see the best pictures? But what deter- mines the best? Is it the state of the owner, or their degree and kind of reputation? The manners which strike Daisy Miller as fine, and which she will emulate, are not those which would attract another. The manual, indeed, is the result of observation. It is a lesson drawn from experience, and its value depends, therefore, upon the fact that it is drawn by Daisy Miller or by another. The better rule is the more general one—not to think always how you are behaving, but always so cultivate that kindlin of feeling, that generous sympathy and friendly understanding, which will uncon- sciously regulate behavior. The lovely lady of whom we were speaking, whose sweet smile and good- morning children crossed the street to see and hear, had studied no manual, but was taught by her own kind heart. Had she been cold, selfish, haughty, supercilious, her m sr, however dazzling, would have been icy. The manual will do no harm if you use it to correct obvious faults of behavior. But good manners spring from a good heart. They may be imitated, indeed. oy Or Address R. C. SNEED, Sec e Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned Abner A. Conard, administrator with will an- nexed of the estate of Sabina Hiple, deceased, will make final settlement ofhis accounts with said estate as such administrator with will an- nexed, at the next term of the probate cour. of Bates county, Missouri, to holden at Butler, in aaid county, on the 12th day of Au- A gust, 1889, . &. CONARD, 31 Administrator, with will annexed. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ia hereby given, that the undersigned C. F. Pharis, administrator of the estate of John Irvin deceased, will make final settle- ment of his accounts with said estate as such administrator, at the next term of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, to be holden at Butler, in said county, on the 12th day of August, 1559. Cc. ¥. PHARIS, Administrator Public Admimsitrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby given, That by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, made on the 27th day of June, 1559, the undersigned Public Administrator for said county, has taken charge of the estate of William A. Nash Il persons having claims against said estate are requi to exhibit them to me for allow- ance Within one year after the date of said or- der, or they may be areaaden from any bene- fit of such estate;and if said claim be not exbib- ited withintwo years from the date of the publication, they will be forever barred. This 2sth day of June, Issy. J. W. ENNIS, Pablic Administrator A life-long study. I WARRANT my remedy to CURE the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving 5eer a Send at once for a treatise and a FREE of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Express and It costs you nothing a trial, and it will cure you.” Address H.C. ROOT, M.C., !83 Pean: Sr., New Youn, S2-4t Order of Publication. STATE OF MISS County of Bates ‘ Be it remembered that heretofo: regular term at the Bates 3 court begun and held of the court house in look are sometimes seenin a v dilapidated condition. When passing | The e : an Soe be city of Buth in said county, on t i ee Sar ie i = - The manne of Aaron Burr were eet Mooday. cas tae. cat ahice rrough the ive quently peeped | called fascinating. But they were th of July in and seen the crumbling chromo nners, the ingenious mim- - the skeleton. and tender color. Gild- iery of dee In some ing and plating there will always be. be trave But we must remember that gold and e ae . . arly this . . : Now at is ¢ of the Particularly his the | silver are still the only precious | yy ite sttorn ease in t ted tricts, - George W. Curtis, in Harper's defendant, ¢ shere e oer: i atine 7 a resident of the 5 Missouri: Wherea where th copoerephy 1 undulating Magazine. it is ordered by the court that said Aetendans plain. The where the soil is ——+ +e be notiti ae publication that peed has i ar } mar oj < commenced a suit against him in this court by thin, are then the cemeteries, and COUNTRY HOMES. petition and aflidavit the object and general a rigid spirit of economy has a Ua ers = nature of which re &B Mechanics lien ne Se thel aliennie fon A Contrast in Rural Vamily Life That Is | for the sum of $176.17, legally filed in the office relegated the alignment of the Noticeable E where. BTANe Sonate oi Ba y of public roads there, too, rather It has been my privilege to visit a | April, ts against the following described ian thrdurhethe falas) | f She é : ., | property, to-wit: A. tract of land beginning patents than throu ye felds. In such a} great many rural he In some it | i,s6y chains southof the northeast corner of | ence strictly co district the t in the company of the dead all day long. Among some of the aborigines of China their ceeme- tery is The dead, swathed in matting, are lashed in an upright position to the stems. Here they remain until the ravages of time, birds, insects and the elements have re@uced them to skeletons, when the bones are washed in hot water and buried. These people tie up the male bodies in one grave and the female in another. The Japanese in the matter of ceme- teries, as in so many other things, are more in consonance with our ideas panty, south ence g. being part st quarter of improvements e described - Henderson seems no wonder that children prow up tired of the humdrum: for from morning till night the sume routine prevailed day after day. They must do this and do that, and if a little tardy there was scolding, and when they did as directed there was never so much as a ‘‘thank you.” Often I grieved for many a boy and girl just nearing manhood or womanhood, knowing that their hearts and minds were starved. See them come into the setting-room at evening-time, after the day’s work on the farm, or in the kitchen, and them sit down so weary and spiritless, with nothing to TRADE NAR In cane your mark ix not rey @nt Office, apply to Br immediate protection. tor COPYRIGHTS for books ete. quickly procured. Address MUNN & CO., Patent GENERAL OFFICE: 361 township 41, 11 4 2 bamboo grove. situated on said real estate as aly and that unless tue said Leonard be and appear at tlds court, at t next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the fourth day of November next, and on or before the sixth day of said term, if the term shall so long continue then on or before the last day of said term—answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly ‘And be it further ordered, that a copy hereof be published, according to law, in the Better WEEKLY Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Missouri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at ieast four weeks before the first day of the next term of circuitcourt. A true -opy of see than any other A The cemetery | interest them—no nice books or] therecord. Witness my hand aun the sea = is usually inclosed in a neat wa Z ‘ oa ; |skax}] the circuit court of Bates county, is usually inclosed in a neat wall or | papers; no innoc ent games to quicken this first day of July, 1889. ca fence, and, like the houses and gardens | though no confidential talk with JOHN C. HAYES, | and every thing else in that country, | father or mother, perchance about ate Hada tes is often a work of art. The graves are miniature flower-beds, and one sees there marvelous stunted trees, trimmed into fanciful shapes, quaint bits of rock, shells and other adorn- ments. From the Sea of Marmora to the Gulf of Pichili, all across bréad Asia, the Western eye is offended by the bald obtrusiveness of the millions some farm product which was to be raised or sold; no bright rooms to make home attractive. It was work, work, with no thought beyond ‘“‘saving money”; the parents seemed to care only for what the children could help them ‘‘make”; and no part of the pro- ceeds, however small, was given to the children, to encourage them to work, Trustee's Sale. Whereas ,James P. Harper, by his certain deea of trust dated the I5th day of May, 185, and recorded in the recorder’s office of Bates county, Missouri, in deed book 35, page 616, conveyed toC. L. Mills, as trustee, all his right, title, interest and estate, in and to the following described real estate situated in the county of Bates, state of Missouri, viz Lots numbered twenty-seven (2 POPULAR ROUTE —TO— TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA and s 2 vei Qs) i ill of Adrian, : TN Japanese have learned, like us, to | gladden their lives. secure the payment of a certain promissory ST- LOUIS AND THE NORTH AND EAST, note in said deed described, and whereas the said note has become due and is unpaid, and whereas the said trustee, C. L. Mills, refuses to act, and whereas more than nine months have elapsed since the death of the said James P. Harper. Now, therefore, in accordance with the provisions of said deed of trust, and at the request of the legal holder of said note, I will proceed to sellthe above described real estate at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, in the county of Bates, state aforesaid, to the highest bidder for cash, at public auction, on Tuesday, August 13th, 1889, between the hoars of nine o’clock in the fere- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day to satisfy said ma ene bees the cost id ex ses of executin; ‘is trust. ee GEO. G"GLaZEBROOK, Sheriff Bates County, and ex-officio Trustee. cover them up with flowers and fence them in.—N. Y. Post. _— Impure Water and Ice. Other homes were almost ideal. Bright rooms; books and papers; in- teltigent conversation; a general air of refinement; loving words between parents and children; perfect trust of the entire family. For each act, how- ever trivial, the kind ‘thank you” was given, and a request was accompanied with an “if you please.” No harsh words, hardening the temper of the young; and the day's toil was pleasure because the labor was appreciated. The heads of such families are re- warded by their children’s love for DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF Haspsome Day Coacuey © —And— ; PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO “It is very hard,” says Prof. Tonry, “to convince some people that a glass of perfectly clear, colorless water, with no odor or taste, may be more impure than water coming from the kitchen sink which has been used to wash cooking utensils, yet in many cases I have found such water as to the direct communication of which with a stable yard or privy vault ‘ them and of home, and there will be — = = TEXAS POINTS, here could be no possible doubt.” ‘ ? : This ra ‘aviking atta. pag Me. mo nneod: ar desire: Luke aging pores Trustee’s Sale. With direct connection for Califor- Tonry is able to demonstrate that it is ict others, orto, the; streets ior, amuse. Whereas. Absalom Melton and Virginia nia and Mexico ment; they will prefer their own homes. Most children have taste for the beautiful; give them some thing of Melton, his wife, by their deed or trust dated October 26, 1885, and recorded in the re- corder’s office within and for Bates ede Missouri, in book 40, page oon conveyed to the follo based on a multitude of well-studied facts. There is no absolutely pure water in nature, but there are limits ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- ING CHAIR CARS ON * rustee described ; : beauty for their own—a picture, s | undersigned trustee, the following descrived beyond Gyhieh | they contamination, of book, an animal to pet, or whatever Fee iste, ato of Masooerl to-wit: ALL TRAINS drinking or cooking water can not be safely allowed to go. The presence of chlorine in water indicates the kind of organic impurity dangerous to health. A drop of solution of nitrate of silver is a convenient test. If it produces in a tumbler of the water in question a white cloud, chlorine and its related impurities are present to a probable | rous extent. Boiling will, as a j =. ae disease seed The =| She—Do you not think, Mr. Horsey, ular theory that freezing eae | that Clara Hendrix is a very charming | lots one (1), two (2) and rth half of The no! val three (3) of the south half of ies (1) township thirty-nine (59) of range thirty-three (33), containing one hun- Gred and twenty acres more or less, which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note fully described in Enid deed of trust, and whereas, default has been made in the payment of said noteand more than one year’s accrued interest thereon, now long past due and unpaid, Now,therefore at the request of the legal Ider of said note and pursuant to theconditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above deserib- ed real estate at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Thursday, July 18, 1889, between the hours of nine o’clock in the foret noon and fire o’elock in the afternoon of tha, day, for the purpose of satisfying eaid debt interes! oRts. a soma ¥F.M. ALLEN, Sl-at Trustee. they incline to, and then witness the pleasure it will bring to them. En- courage the children in all that tends to ennoble; and in old age you can look upon sons and daughters refined, intelligent and a blessing.— Alice, in N. —Between— SEDALIA A N D HANNIBAL —Andon Night Trains— FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS, Making Direct Connection in Union Depot's with Express Trains In All Directions. For Tickets and Further Informa- tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent. Geo. A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, Receivers ~ J. WALDO, GASTON MESLER, Gen. Traf. Man. Gen. Pas. & T’kAgt Sedalia, Missouri. Two Charming Girls. water Mr. Tonry thinks is incorrect. | girl? . s “Pure ice,” he says, ‘is almost as | Mr. Horsey (with great delicacy)— hard to obtain as pure water.” He | Well, yes, Miss Phoebus, but you can mentions a case where typhoid fever | give her ten pounds and beat her hands was traced directly to the use of im- down.—N. ¥. Sun. i pure ice.—Raltimore Ss :

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