The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 31, 1889, Page 3

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phenmatism and Neurat Two Days. [he Indiana Chemica! Co ed a compound which acts jgarvelous rapidity in cure Rheu- ism and Neuralg: We guarantee it cure any and every case ot acute jgfammatory Rheur ism anc euralgia ig 2 DAYS: andto give imme reliet chronic cases and ettect aspeedy cure. Pon receipt 2f 30 cents, in two cent , we willsend to any address the prescription for this wondertul com pound ich can be filled by your home druggist gsmall cost. We take this means of ing our discovery to the public instead d putting it out as a patent medicine, it coe much less expensive. We will godly refund money if satistaction is not fn. THE INDIANA CHEMICAL Co., Crawtordeville Ind ve discov with ot Sold bs —— ’ d R OWE S FAIL! NG AGUE CURE and TONIC BITTERS. $500 if it fails to cure. C. B. HOWE, M. D., Seneca Falls N. Y PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautities the hair. p luxuriant growth, Agents W ONLY AUTHENTIC, Co HISTORY OF THE JOUSSTAW Profusely Ulustrated wit connected with the mighty inune ntad At Once TLUC Oto sell the aphic Fu), sorts | 5), al ‘Ter DEMAND IMMENS® for Ontiit to HUBBARD BROS.. 21 Resulting from the Krrors of Youth, Folly, Vice, Ig- norance, &c., may be cured at home without fail or exposure, Infallible and Confident Treatise, 200 pages, only #1 by m Small book, with endorsements of the pre: Send now. Address the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W.H.Parker, No.4 Bulfin Boston, Mass, HINDERCOR ‘The only sure Cure for Corns. Stops al comfort to thefeet. Lie. at Drug; in, Ensures: 0., N.Y. €o. ivE ion? Use Freee ss Oo OE: “38 CONSUMPT GER TONIC. Have you Cough, B o cured 4 arising: and 31.00. ats Withput any by im lately Sheet Mata SHINGLES Ue ofthe country, wood shingles pri free Ss Pa v L ROOFING CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS CROSS DIAMOND BLAND. KS) Original, best, only genuzne and PIES Werkin pill forsale “Never F i BG) Ask for Chichester’s Zingli ; fiamond Bran: in red me- BAP alte Boxes: sealed With biuerib- N no other. Ait pilis in pare ‘ board boxes, pink wrappers, are a dat from LADIES me be Annee omg nt ‘Paper. Chichester Chemical Co. Madison Sq.,Phila.,Pa- HIMRops CURE f" ASTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Coagh, Croup and Common Colds. gusts taroughwat the World. Send for Poe Sanne. HIMROD MANUF’G CO., : SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. ee @ MI IN LIQUID NOBOILING EASILY MADE Y]| THs PACKACE MAKES FIVE GALLONS The most APPETIZING and WHOLESOME TEMPERANCE DRINS in the world. TRYJT. Ask your Druggtst or Grocer for it. C.E HIRES, PHILADELPHIA. a Cured in, ;4 { truly | JAPAN’S SACRED DANCE. Picturesque Ceremony Conducted by Young Priestesses. From Kasuga gate the upper avenue of lanterns leads the way to the Wa- kamiya shrine, dedicated to the early gods of the Shinto religion. Here the old custom of the sacred dance is kept up, and a group of young priestesses | are waiting to repeat the measures | danced by Uzume before the sun god- dess’ cave in prehistoric times. The | | i little priestesses are all between the ages of nine and twelve, as timid, gen- tle and harmiess little things as the deer that often stray in and watch them. Their dress is the old, old cos- tume of the imperial court, a pictur- esque lower garment or divided skirt. of the brightest cardinal! red silk, that half covers the white kimono, with square sleeves and pointed neck, filled up high with alternate folds of red and white. When they dance they wear over this loose kimonos of white gauze, painted with the wistaria crest of the Kasuga temple, the front of the gauzy garment half covering the red : ie and-the back pieces trailing on Their faces are plastered so thickly with white paint that they lose ali expression, and, following the old fashion, their eyebrows are shaved and two tiny black dots high up in the middle of their foreheads take their place. With lips heavily rouged the countenance is more a mask than any thing human. The hair is gathered together at the back of the neck and tied with loops of gold paper. and then folded in soft white paper, allowed to hang down the back. Long hair-pins, with clusters of wistaria and red camellia, are thrust across the top of the head, and fastened so that they stand out like horns over the forehead. In detail the costume is not pretty, but in its general effect it is singularly bright and picturesque. One can have as many priestesses and as long a dance as he will pay for, and as soon as the money is handed over the two p t et into their ceremonial and high black hats and, ng before the an- cient drums, chant, pound and blow on doleful pipes an accompaniment for the little dar The rec solemn enc and each dancer has a fan anda bunch of bells, from which dance is ers. hang long strips of ight-colored silks. They advane , glide to right and left, rai fans, shak fe rsacred baby rattles, and with anges in the measure repeat the me figures and movemer tain length of time. If ¢ more money they continue repeating the same thing, and the priests can wail the endless accompanim by the hour. “To us the dance is simply a curious and picturesque custom, but one should see the faces of the devout old pilgrims, who have hoarded up their money for months and often years for the trip, to know something of what it means tothem. It is really pathetic to see their faces glowing and their ey filled with tears at their sat cle that liv almost faction with the fine specta- snt is so rar in their an eV and which crowns th summer pilgrimage to the old shrines of their faith.—Cor. St. Louis Glo e- Democrat. = Where the Sun Does Not Set. A scene witnessed by some travelers in the north of Norway from a cliff one thousand feet above the sea is thus described: ‘The ocean swept away in silent vastness at our feet; the sound of waves scarcely reached our airy lookout; away in the north the huge old sun swung low along the horizon, like the slow beat of the pendulum in the tall clock of our grandfather's corner. We all stood silent, looking at our watches. When both hands came together at twelve, midnight, the full round orb hung triumphantly above the waves, a bridge of gold run- ning due north, spanning the water between us and him. There he shone in silent majesty which knew no set- ting. We involuntarily took off our hats; no word was said. Combine, if you can, the most brilliant sunrise and sunset you ever saw, and the beauties will pale before the gorgeous coloring which now lit up ocean, heaven and mountain. In half an hour the sun swung perceptibly on his beat, the colors changed to those of morning, afresh breeze rippled over the flooa, one songster after another piped up in the grove behind us—we had slid into another day.” —__- + >___. —*You don’t know, Jehones,” said his editorial visitor, ‘what the temptations are that assail the polit- ical journalist. Publishing your modest little society paper, as you do, you have to deal with a constituency unlike mine in every respect. Your manhood is not assailed. No attempt is made to buy you openly. You, my friend, have never been approached by any political emissary who wanted to purchase the support of your paper outright for $500 to $1,000, or some such paltry aum.” ‘Never! replied Jehones, with a wistful, yearning look.— Chicago Tribune. — ee Piles! Piles! Itching Piles. Symptoms—Moisture; inten: | and stinging; most at night; | scratching. worse If allowed to continue tu- : mors torm, which often bleed and ulcer- by ‘ate, becoming very sore. Swa LINTMENT stops the itching and b ing, heals ulceration, and in mo: removes tne tumors. At drugg ‘ by mail, for5o cents. Dr. Swayne X Son, i Philadelphia. 328 vr | ollections “A LITTLE NONSENSE.” —Miss Dollie Footlite, who made a complete mash on the trombone player, refers to him as the ‘great horn spoon.”—Terre Haute Express. —A man who formerly acted as fire- man to a locomotive refers to his rec- of that time as tender | reminiscences.—Merchant Traveler. YELLOW FEVER THEORY. The Disease Travels Only in Sun-Light and | Forty Feet a Day. “People are always discovering something known before they were born,” growled a Harlem refugee who has spent some time in the South. “Here's a newspaper that says ‘the novel theory that the yellow-fever mi- After I finish breakfast at Mrs. | Tobe travels about only when the sun Slimdiet’s,” remarked CUhumley, “I is shining is advanced in a letter from feel like a martyr.” “I see,” observed | General F. E. Spinner.’ , Why, that’s Dumley; “you have suffered at the| old as yellow fever itself, I really PATRI ee eo psingigisl I was shooting ducks in Flor ea ee a in the winter of 1877-78, when the reat ae i Ae a aa ae fever broke out in Jacksonville. It Second dude—‘‘My deah fellah, one is | "25 necessary for us to sail up there, for the heat and the other is for the mrenty) miles, to get supplies. Among mid igom knowsaulaictasiwall our number (it was a little settlement pine actconcmy acnlaciooght ayot just started) was a Louisianian, who was.” Texas Siflings. : ae ad sail = ee ville. He ack . was as) anxiously i re was not ‘Ah, really, doctor, do you think} dancer of the unacclimated members aship a good place for detectives to a i go in an emergency?” ‘Certainly, den ggg crew of four catching Mr. Fatwit; the very best.” ‘Why “<Not the least,’ he said Ny. so?” «Because detectives are always | wy, ; < searching for clews and they can find . an cbemigors gariciens get more clews on a ship than any other Fe sump. ea we e ie the wind serves as it does now, we'll lie place that I know of.”—Ocean. = 2 z ., | off in the river until eight o'clock. —Jawkins—*‘Want Softleigh to join our literary club? Why, I don’t oe through our business lieve he ever read any thing but “It is a well-known fact,’ he ex- Mother Goose and the book of eti- plained, answering inquiries, ‘that quette in his life” Hogg—‘Ah, but | tore j : : Z ‘e is not the slightest danger of in- then he has such a high forehead, you fection unless you remain in the in- know, and wears his eyeglass with f . - Res fected town during the night. Then, such a very intellectual air!” —Judge. too, the disease travels in circles about —‘Pve brought back that ring I j i each center of infection at the rate of ” pie a he said} about forty feet a day, and outside of a Sora an ae ae SSH EE these circles one is perfectly safe. I didn’t it fit? “No,” ‘he said, sadly, | jearned all that while I was a boy.’ I thought—well, that is—well, you “Well, we went to Jacksonville.” see, bought it for a certain finger, but | saia the New Yorker, “got our sup- ., 7 2 . “6 she roe eewearitsony thao tus plies and our dinner and some other come’back with it- ms Weekly. | things I need not schedule, and sailed —Not an Expert—First tramp— } athalf-past four. Near where we were “You look right respectable this morn- staying was a town which maintained ing, Joe. Second tramp—“Well, I} a Shot-gun quarantine, but the St. ought to. I paid ten cents fora shave John’s is nearly five miles wide there and clean up.” First tramp—‘Can | and we slipped by. Ten days after vow Bee Cleaned three times fora quar- | that we went up there and tantalized ter?” Second tramp—(indignantly)— | them about our trip to Jacksonville. “How do I know? I never got cleaned | Mad? Why. they wanted to lock us three times, yit.”—Drake’s Magazine. up! But we went to.Jacksonville sev- —Newspaper man—‘‘Did you see | eral times after that clever little puff I gave you this “How about that forty feet a day morning about your recent success in } progression? O,1 don’t know about business, and how well youare do that, but the other business held Potts (gloomily)—‘Yes, I saw it.” good."—N. ¥. Telegram. Newspaper man—‘*Well, weren't you eee es pleased?” Potts (earnestly )—‘*Shes there w seven creditors house this morning bef —Terxas Siftings. —In 4 race between The riders and itv that the Comsumprion Cured- re ired trom pratice inhis hands by an the tormula ot a emedy tor the speedy cure of umption, 1, Ast and al! stions, ) a positive tor Nervous Debility laints, after having 1 curati powers ases, has telt it his duty 1 to his sutfering fellow. iby this motive and a desire to man suffering. I will send free U who desire it, this re- 1 Germac, French or English, ii directions for preparing d ailby addresing with aper. W. A. Noves, Rocheste N. Y. > breakfas a zebra and an ostrich. ruel in the extreme, us painful to see the stri ebra was compelled to carr The o h was in high feather at first, but when the zebra came out ahead, it went and buried its head in} + the sand, though perhaps if it had had | -S more sand it might have won the race. —Yexras Sittinas. DON'T Id ot your: ight thi Ori run on. You Block, But it may run o pneumonia. Or >» Power's THE USEFUL SKUNK. armers Make a Mistake in Destroy- ing the Little Animal. h despised skunk is a good wl the farm and great mistake in per- uting and destroying this humble little animal. The few eggs he pur- loins from the farmer's ben yard very poorly compensate for the great number of noxious insects he destroys. In May, he is sometimes seen about sundown, on some elevated spot, Pneumonia is death it- The mtv entomologist. ratus must be kept uctions and Otherwise there is parts, head, nd lungs, entirely cured s German Syrup. t already, thou- < of people can tell sands : en cured br it and A eae hi eure 2 Betis watching for the May beetle as he only 75 Rete (ae eee wheels his droning flight, and he saves 4-1 vr ¢ ow. | him, too, not in the sense spoken of in the immortal elegy, but between his teeth. He will sit an hour at a time gathering in the destructive beetles. He is a persistent hunter, and in his nocturnal rambles moves along with nose close to the ground: his sense of smell is so acute not an insect, larva, above ground or below, cape him; his eyes now glow with un- usual brilliancy as he scans e and branch for the hidden pre tobacco plantations his services are considered valuable. Several years ago tobacco was culti- vated to some extent in the adjoining town of Brighton. The writer, wish- ing to get some of the worms to rear moths from, called on a gentleman owning a plantation in the town, and made known his object. The reply was, ‘‘Take all you can find; we want to getrid of them.” In going through the rows I noticed many holes in the in the ground, five or six inches deep, but could not make out the object, as they did not seem to have any thing to do with the tobacco. I mentioned the fact to the gentleman, who smiled as he told me that it was done by skunks to obtain the tobacco worms that had left the plants and buried themselves to undergo their trans- formations, but were forestalled by the keen-scented animal ané made to serve as food.— Vick's Magazine. —_—steoo— —The latest instance of economy is Wallets for School-Girls. “The German doctors,” says the St. James’ Gazette, ‘profess to have dis- vovered a new danger. They assert that the custom of carrying portfolios to school has a tendency to distort the figures of young girls between the ages of eleven and fourteen. Parents are exhorted to provide wallets for their young daughters, which can be carried like knapsacks on the back. In many parts of Germany this equip- ment is already in use; and to the un- accustomed eye of the stranger noth- ing is more comical than suddenly to come upon a crowd of little girls trooping out of school, each provided with a knapsack for the march. The next funniest thing to be seen among school-children on the continent is the long pipe or the bilious cigarette of the diminutive Dutch boy.” ——_soo————_ —Paterfamilias—‘‘Why, Ethel, you don’t mean to tell me you want to marry that bald-headed Prof. Wise- man!” Ethel—“It is true he is bald, but think how many young men of to- day are bald on the inside of their heads.” — The Idea. Drunkenness or the Liquor Habi Positively Curea by administering Dr. Haines’ Gelden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea Boston man leclin withovt the knowledge ot the person tak- that of a ae ra ingit; is absalutely harmless and will buy a compass to take into the Maine etfect. a permanent and speedy cure, | woods. He said that he was a singer, whether the patient is a moderate drink- | and could save expense by using the er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of | compass of his voice.—Burlington Free drunkards have been made temperate | Press. men who have taken Golden Specific in | = their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking ot their | own free will. It never fails. The sys | “Mystic Cur’’ | tem once impregnated with the Specific | for Rheumatism and Neura | it becomes an utter impossibility tor the | curesin 1 to 3 da | liquor appetite toexist. Fortull partic H counteracting th ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC co., 185 ' [t will not tf Race st. Cincinnati. . + Lansdown, dr ' i Abner 4 nexed of the estate of will make final settlement ofhis accounts with said estate as such administrator with will an- mexed, at the next term of the of Bates county, Missouri. to Butler, in said county, Eh rin y on the 12th day of Au- 3 ee C. F. Pharis, inist: Jake brie ae rator of the estate of ment of his accoun' ith said est; “Bt. Jace! has accom. administrator, a Bext term of the ais ere tes court of Bates connty, Missouri, to be holden plished wonders. It hasmy at Butler, in said connty, on the 12th day of OTR | so ‘August, Isso. C.F. PHARE Csemaitn tome as S order of the probate court of Bates county Missouri, made on the zith day of June, Te the updersigned Public 3 said county William a are required to exhibit them to me for allow- ance within one year after the date o! der, or they may be y Gt of such estate:anc if said claim be not exhib- ited withintwo years from the date of the pacens they will be forever barred. This STATE OF MISSOURI, } os { ss. Be it remembered that heretofore, to-wit: at a that defendan’ ar . is ordered by the court that said defen: e commenced a suit against him in this court by petition and a) ‘ nature of which is to enforee a mechanies lien for the sum of 1 of the clerk of t April, Issy, section 3 sitnat and th . cA orth 250-10 chainsto beginning, being part of the north half of the northeast quarter of = ae ree Notice of Final Settlement. hereby given, That the unders: Conard, admi Notic: S JACOBS O]] TERRIBLE SUFFERINGS. a Hiple, deceased, probate court ne holden at Perhaps no man ever wit- nessed more physical suffer- ing than H. H. MEIGGS, the Great Rallread Contractor ef S. America, whose autograph ts here SA, shown and who writes: CONARD, Administrator, with will annexed Notice of Final Settlement. Noticeis hereby given, thatthe undersigned will make final settle- Admi As an example—During 1870 and 1871 twe thousand Americans died from mala- ria and rheumatic fevers out of four thousand in Peru. attracted thither by large wages paid by Meiggs, whe had contracts amount- ing to $136,000,000. In this field there- after St. Jacobs Oil did its good work. Sold by Druggists and Dealers Bveryohere. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., BALTLMORE MD. ICURE FITS! When I say Cure I do not mean merely to stop them for » time, and then have them re- turn ugain. 1 MEAN A RADICAL CURE. 1 have made the disease of EITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, A life-long study. I WARRANT my remedy to OuRE the worst ca: Beeause others have janed is no reason jor not now receiving a cure. end ut once for a treatise and a FREB BOTTLs of my INFALLI REMEDY. Give Expres and Post Onc: it costs you nothing a trial, and it will eure you.” Address 4.G. ROOT, N.C., 123 Peant Sr., New Your Public Admimstrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby given, That by virtue ofan Administrator has taken charge of the estate ‘of All persons having claims against said eatate or- bene- recluded from an: th day of June, Ine. J. W. ENNIS, Pablic Administrator. 32-4t Order of Publication. County of Rates Yeguiar term at the Bates county circnit court begun and held of the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the tirat ponerse June Iss), and afterwards, to-wit: onthe first day of July, Issv, the j 1 day of pro- ceeding were had, to-wit: The R_J. Hurley Lumber Co. plaintiff! against Leonard S Henderson, Luther 5. Williams and William E. Walton, defendants. w at this day comes the plaintiff herein, s attorney and file its affidavit, alleging Leonard 8. Henderson ate of Missouri: | ent of the upon ant aint has notified by publication that avit the object and general 7. legally flied in the oflice 8 court on the th dav of again-t the following described to-wit: A tract of land beginning hs southof the northeast corner of . township 41, ran county Uri, thence West 4 ¢ s, th resid, the improvements above d Tibed SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN , ESTABLISHED i845 and on or . if the term . then on or ARCHITECTS & BUILDER Edition of Scientific American. Agrest success, Exch issue contains eojorec eee lithographic plates of country and AL renlecatrtn cerns cesor pubiic buildings. | Nume und full pisns and speciticatior Witness my hand and the se « court of Bates county, JOHN C. HAY Cireuit Cierk. 0 euch as contemplate bailding. 25 cts. a copy. 5 "rice a year, MUNN & CO., PUBLISHERS. deed of trust dated the and recorded in t county, conve right following described re: county of Bates, state of Missouri, vi at the request of the leg: will proceed to seli estate house Bates. state a’ for cash, at public auction, on between th noon and tive o’elock in the afternoon of that day to sat and expen Sheriff Bates County, and ex-ofticio Trustee. Trustee's Sale. Whereas ,James P many be reenr ed by appl to MUNN D.. Who have had over $9 Years’ experience and have made over .- teu Spplications tor American and Foreign patents. Send for Handbook. Correspund- ence strictly confidential. TRADE MARKS. In case your mark {is not istered in the Pat- ent Office. apply to MuNN & Co.. and procure immediate protection. Send for Handbook. COPYRIGHTS for books. charts, maps, @tc. quickly procured. Address MUNN & CO., Patent Solicitors, GENERAL Orvice: 861 BRoapway, N. ¥. Harper, by his certain th day of May, Iss, of Bate » page 616, as trustee, all his state,in and to the estate situated in the Lots numbe even ( and lage of Adrian, » was madein trust to A certain promissory ribed, and whereas the tue and is unpaid, and refuses months fli the at the east front door of the in the ¢ y, August 13th, 185, hours of nine o'clock in the fore- dnete together with the cost of executing this trast GEO. G. GLAZEBROOK, THE POPULAR ROUTE | —To— TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, t ST- LOUIS a AND THE NORTH AND EAST. DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF Hanpsome Day Coacues, —And— PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope- less. If you have premonitory symp- toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of ieee ee don’t delay, but use PISO’S ror CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents TEXAS POINTS, : With direct connection for Califor- — nia and Mexico ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- i ING CHAIR CARS ON | ALL TRAINS —Between— SEDALIA A N D HANNIBAL © —Andon Night Trains— i FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS, In All Directions. - For Tickets and Further Informa- E tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent. — Geo, A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, Receivers _ I. WALDO, GASTON MESLER, ~" Gen. Traf. Man. Gen. Pas. & Tk Agt Sedalia, Missouri- *MATRALESS « FOR « SHAMPOOING -

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