The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 7, 1889, Page 3

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III. RAE AETLE SECT: ee rere ae eerie ss Minister Phelps will not got | THE POULTRY YARD. i S aber. e will fatlin before September. Hi _ | How to Secure a Profitable Yield of Eggs in | pemissed in the next congress. His Cold Weather. getures give him the appearance of dude, but men who knew him rec- ognize him as aman of ability and force. He has both ideas and ex- ion and knows when to speak or jeep silent Popular authors in England com- pand reasonable prices for the skill of their pens. Mrs. Humphery SULLIVAN UNDER ARREST- For very early eges warm, comfort- | able houses, proper feed and good care are nece: ;. If the hens have to} use all the feed they get to keep them. | selves warm, if they are not supplied with food containing egg forming Laws in Mississippi. kept clean and well ventilated, the | ters in a carriage. egg basket need not be a large one. The roof of the be tigit. the the knot hole His arrest was poultry house should ; athe 3 aa battened and | 20T of Mississppi approved by Gov- red, or the entire { ernor Hill. co He Must Answer to a Breach of the | | New York, July31.—John L. Sul- | | livan was arrested in this city to- | material. 2nd if the houses are not | night and taken to police headquar- { | made on a requisition of the gover- | OF GENERAL iNTEREST. —The amount of strength exer- , Cised in an ordinary hand-shake is eleven pounds. —The loftiest mountain is Mount | Everest, or Guarisauker, of the Him- alaya range, having an elevation of 29,002 feet above the sea level. —A Georgia lover. when refused by his adored, whipped out a razor and sticed off one of her ears. After this little evidence of affection she con- cluded she would have him. —Here is a new field open for thé industry of woman. A lady in Min- } Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ) County of Bates = Be it remembered that heretofore. to-wit: ats Tegular term at the Bates county circuit court begun and held of the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the first Mondayin Jane 18, and afterwards. to-wit: onthe first day of July, 1889, the same being the twenty-fifth jrdicial day of said term, among other the ‘following pro- ceeding were had, to-wit: The R_ J. Hurley pamper Col peers against Leonard S. Hend: » Luther S. Willi ad Willi e Walton, defendants. ams and William » is day comes the plaintif herei by its attorney and file ite ahidavit, alleging that defendant, Leonard 8. Henderson, is not aresident of the state of Missouri: Whereupon it is ordered by the court that said defendant be notified by Publication that plaintiff has commenced a suit against him in this court by petition and affidavit the object and general Ward has been offerred $5,000 for a story of 30,000 words, and John Strange Winter has refused an offer of $2,000 for his next novelette. vent draughts, and the floor made ina way to take no drainage from the out- side and be perfectly dry. For ventila- tion, any plan whereby the fouls can coccrreeameteg be supplied with pure fresh air with- Bhenmatism and Neuratgia Cured in} out being subjected to draughts will Two Days. suswer- On how many places is it a pleasure to visit the hen house? Although there has been a great change for the better during the last few years, the average hen house is stiil shunned by all who are not obliged to visit it. This is not surprising, as it is full of lice in summer, and in winter is foul with the stench from a year’s drop- pings. ‘This need notand ought not to be. The poultry on a place, especially if a pure breed is kept, should be a “joy forever.” They never lose their interest, Each has its individuality, its likes and dislikes, like all other stock, and a half hour spent in watch- ing them is always full of pleasure, The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov ered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure ot 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 ettect aspeedy cure. On receipt 2f 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for this wonderful compound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. We take this means of giving our discovery to the 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. Tue INDIANA CHEMICAL Co, 40-1y7 Crawtordsville Ind sides covered with tarred paper to pre- | Sullivan was arrested at10 o'clock at the Vanderbuilt hotel. Inspector Byrnes, who was accompanied by de- tectives and Sargent Adams, took Sullivan into custody. When the inspector was shown to Sullivan’s room the champion returned his smile, saying: “I heard I was want- edand intended going to police headquarters to surrender. I did not know I had violated any laws.” The inspector said they would go to police headquarters together. Sul- livan said: “All right,” and they were dnven there. Sullivan was placed in a cell. Billy Muldoon and Charlie Johnston called on Sullivan shortly after he was arrested. The penalty for prize fighting in Mississippi is a fine of not more nature of which is to enforce @ mechanics lien neapolis makes a good living by teach- | for the sum of 8155.17. legally filed in the office ing whist, and a lady at Camos, Idaho <r aa ofthis court on the 24th day of 5 2 . . aimst the fol Territory, is a practical shoemaker. property, to-wit: A tract rer meee —More sheep and lambs killed | 1.46% chains south of the northeast corner of section 30, tewnship 41, range 29 Bates county, Missouri, thence weat 4 chains, thence south 250-100 chains, thence east 4 chains, thence north 250-100 chains to beginning, being part of the north half of the northeast quarter of section 30, aforesaid, and the improvements uated on said real estate asabove described and that unlees the said Leonard S. Henderson be and appear at this court, at the 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 saidterm, if the term shall so long continue—and if not, 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. the Burier WEEKLY Tinks, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Mr ssouri, for four weeks encoceelysiy satis last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first day of the next term of cireuitcourt. A true -opy of the record. Witness my hand and the cent of iskaL] the circuit court of Bates county, this first day of July, Iss9. JOHN C. HAYFS, 33-4 Cireuit Clerk. in New York than in any other city in the world, over two million head being slaughtered annually, and, with the increasing demand for mutton and lamb, the chances are that she will | continue to hold first place for some | time to come. —A man in Lonvale, Ga, drove a Piece of steel filing into his eyeball and asurgeon spent some time in vain en- deavors to extract it. Finally he brought a powerful electro-magnet to his aid, by means of which the of- fensive particle was at once removed. It was over a quarter of an inch long and its entire length had been im- bedded in the eyeball. —A popular young Kansas City woman committed suicide because she fancied herself too homely to live. Her and seldom without profit. Something new can be learned at every visit. The droppings should be raked up, and the floor cleaned at least twice a week; every day would be better. No one who has tried daily cleaning would go back to once or twice a week. The former keeps the house so much nicer and sweeter, and the work is so much more easily done that the little extra time consumed dees not count. Clean the nests so often that the eggs will never be soiled. Short straw or hay will answer very well in the nests in than $1,000 and not lessthan $500 or twelve months imprisonment in jail or both. All aiders and abet- tors are punishable by a fine of not less than $100, or imprisonment for six months, or both. Consumption 1s on the Increase. From recent statistics it appears that consumption is on the increase through- out the western states. The principal cause, itis stated, is due to ne; common Coughs and Colds. winter when the lice plague is not 01 Guty of all persons whether ot delicate be feared and fought against, but in} 4, robust health, to have e remedy at summer, little of any kind means lice, | hand at all times in readi s, anda and then an : 7 Sie a st of sawdust or fine sand }| cough creold may be broken up betore s ” WALLS & HOLT. . 5 eet ; with a sprinkling of carbolic powder it Se ND SY aed BACAR. HORE. ae 2 or diluted carbolic acid will keep these | OL : ten cove rs - except in the last stages of consumption, pests out. With thorugh cleaning out] \ stitch im time saves nine, Always of the droppings, and renewal of the} keepitin the house. Pyle & Crumley sand, or whatevc s used on the floor t % and dropping boards, as an absorbent, if ventilation has properly attended to, the house will alw: be swe and clean, a pleasant place to visit, with noting to offend the sight or nostrils of the sensitive.— American Agriculturist. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM MB Cleanses and beautifies the hair,| Promotes a luxuriant growth. been THE RUSSIAN CAPITAL. St. Petersburg’s Extraordinary Side-Walks and Capricious Climate. One of the most extraordinary things about St. Petersburg is the unevenness of the sidewalks. It must surely be accounted for by a reaction against most eS NEW YORK FASHIONS. the prevailing flatness of Russia. = —_— é che = Shia eee Even in leading thoroughfares the Resulting from the Errors of Youth, Folly, Vice, Ig- favorite Garnitures ylish Head-Gear—[ og os RES 5 eeanioes Bec. 1 ercaredist tome withoatiailer | Elegant Outside Wraps. sidewalks, instead of being made, as exposure. Infallible and Confidential. Larze ‘Treatise, 300 pages, only $1 by m: Small book, with endorsen 3 of the press, fre Send now. Address the Peabody Medical Instita’ or Dr. W.H.Parker, No.4 Bulfinc! with us, as level as possible, abound in the most treacherous wps and downs. How drunken men survive a walk through the streets is to me an unsolved mystery. In Middlesborough The wide aps and galloons which have been so extensively used, remain a favorite rniture for winter costumes, and appear in new elegant scaled, postpa matelasse and broche effects on bands | ° : HINDERCORNS. ee Ae ane , | it used to be profanely said that the ‘The only sure Cure for Corns. Stopsall pain. Fnsu! both wide and narrow. Many of the s comfort to thefeet. 15c. at Druggists. Hiscox CoN new all-wool suits from P: ure fin- | Quakers, who had laid out the town, purposely elevated the sidewalk a couple of feet above the roadway in some of the streets in order to break the necks of drunkards. Possibly a similar benevolent motive prompted the construction of the trottoirs of the Russian capital. People get used to ished in simple tailor style, but with a departure in the shape of these rich gimps and passementeries as decora- tions for shirt and bodice. The En- glish coats which sompany these dresses are likewise adorned. There is but slight bouffancy to the back ABS OW Have ik PARKER'S Q the worst cases and is the best remedy f from defective nutrition. Tarcin tian. CONSUMPTIVE Bronchitis, Asthma, Indigestion! Use thas eured Tills arising ic. and $1.00, Sheet Metab yess eit hate age was twenty-six. <A few years ago she became imbued with a crushing sense of her homeliness and refused several offers of marriage because, as she said, she could not inflict herself upon any man. The peculiar phase of the matter is that she was far from being homely and was well to do in her own right. —Twenty years ago, Mr. Jackson, of Kentucky, by some hocus-pocus, made his partner Tallaferro lose a good bit of money. Then the twosep- arated, and in the course of time Talla- ferro died. Very lately his wife re- ceived from Jackson the full amount of her husband’s loss with legal inter- est thereon—along with the statement that the wicked partner had gone to Australia, and grown and flourished to equal its famous gum trees, but could not rest easy until he had re- stored what was lost by reason of him. —The question as to what a‘ 4 etarian” actually is having arisen in a discussion of vegetarianism in London, anexpert gives the following defini- tion: ‘‘A vegetarian is one who, for any reason, abstains from all foods and food adjuncts which are obtained only by the destruction or loss of animal life—i. e., the flesh of animais (fish, flesh and flowl), and the products of such flesh (dripping, gravy, lard, suet, animal and fish oils, ete.), and who may use, at his or her option, such an- imal products alone as aré yielded by the animal kingdom without loss of life—i. e., milk and its products, eggs, honey, ete.,—in addition to the food products of the vegetable and mineral kingdoms.” —The block system as it is now termed in railroad parlance, is simply the division of a railway into certain numbers of what are called telegraph districts, the distance between which is determined by the amount of traffic, Trustee's Sale. Whereas , James P. Harper, by his certain deea of trust dated the 15th day of May, 1335, and recorded in the recorder’s office of Bates lissouri, in deed book 35, page 616, >. 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 (27) and twenty-eight (23) in the village of Adrian, which said conveyance was madein trust to secure the payment of a certain promissory 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, 1 will proceed to sell the above described real estate at the t front door of the court house in the Butler, in the county of Bates, state af aid, to the highest bidder for cash, at publ uction, on Tuesday, August 13th, 188), between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that y¢ day to nid note together with the cost and expe ot executing this trust GEO. G. GI EBROOK, Sherif Bates County, and ex-ofticio Trustee. Trustee's Sale. Whereas, 4 MeCoun a single man) py of trust dated S timber 1, a recor and for IT é © within ouri. in book 49, page 4¢ ened trustee, the hh i being situate in the coun- ¢ of Missouri, to wit alf of the southwest quarter of teen (Is) and the northwest quar- the — northwest quarter of section twenty-one ( all in township thirty-nine (5%), of range thirty-two ( con- one hundred and twenty acres more or ich conveyance was made in trust to f ten certain notes fully lof trust, and whereas, cn made in the payment of the ast due and unpaid, since iich default under the terms of trust rs the whole debt , therefor he request of the le- ed premises at public pst bidder for cash, at the purt hous, in the city county of Bates and state of Mis- vendue, east front door of th: of Butler, souri. on storm and fire applied Art- | drapery, but the manipulation of each SHINGLES rand at a] fold is highly artistic. ” many parts ssfully with alogne and 1, SHEET & ofthe country, co-operat wood shingles Ila: rices free ‘rt METAL ROOFING New York. Following the caprices in gowning, golden brown copper, red, terracotta, orange and gree ‘e combined with black on stylish head-gear. Folds, tufts and aigrettes of the color of the background of the bonnet fabric form the trimmings. The new toques are pretty and very becoming. They are long, brimless, oval crowns, smooth at the back and much trimmed in front. This shape is a cross between a bon- net and a round hat, and is in high vogue just now as a demi-season model. The halo hat, the ‘Tosca,” and the Spanish round hats worn last summer reappear in felt and vel- H]MRop's . CURE *” KSTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping any thing, and after a week in the city you become so accustomed to the sud- den shiftings of gradient as hardly to notice their existence. In the same way you become accustomed to the dvornik, who sits dozing outside the door of every public building or tenemented house. At first nothing seems more monstrous than the pres- ence of this sheep-skin clad mortal at the door of your hotel, motionless and somnolent all through the night, but after awhile you cease to notice him. He is supposed to be a substitute for police, and, as he survives the winter, he may be supposed not to feel the frosty nights of a Russian spring. The weather was extremely capricious and each block station has signaling instruments by which the signal man communicates with the box at each Thursday, August 22, 1889, between the hour: and 5 o’elock int {9 o’clock in the forenoon afternoon of that day, for a = = - PD se sfying said debt. interest side of him. Now when a train enters | the narpose of satisfying said dept. tate any block a semaphore signal is} 36-4 Trustee. lowered, and no train is allowed to follow until the one in front has reached the end of the block, when the signal is raised and at the same time lowered for the block ahead, etc., The block system in use in Europe and in this country generally employ mechanical devices for lowering and raising the outdoor signal, but these, it is thought, will eventually be re placed by automatic devices. Trustee's Sale. Whereas, James A. Rains and Rosana Rains his wife, by their deed or trust dat December 1, 1886. and recorded in the re- corder’s office within and for Bates county, Missouri, in book 38, page 155, conveyed to the undersigned trustee, the following described real estate lying and being situate in the coun- ty oi Bates, state of Missouri. to-wit: The west half of lots four (4). and five (5), in the northwest quarter and the west half of the west half of lot six (6) in the northeast quarter of section four (4) and t north half of the west half of lot three in the northeast quarter of section five (5) all in township thirty-nine (33), range twenty-nine (29), containing one hundred and twenty acres Drunkenness or the Liquor ‘i+bi Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians and sold by Drug- giste throughout the eee Send for Free pie. HIMROD MANUF’G CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. = during the early part of May. A bright warm sun in the morning might be followed with piercing winds, with sleet and snow in the afternoon. It was never safe to stir abroad without an overcoat. Natives admonished me sol- emnly, as if I had been manifestly bent on suicide, because I left mine at home whenever the sun shone. Every one wore a top-coat in St. Petersburg till well into June. The ice in Lake La- doga, I was told, was the great refrig- erator of St. Petersburg. It was not till past midsummer that summer could be said to have set in on the Neva. Never in any city have I seen so many men and women with faces swollen as if from toothache as in St. Petersburg. vet. Gray, suede, ecru and gray-blue felts are shown, with ‘‘aureole” brims eovered with ostrich-feather bands and trimmed with very large ostrich- plumes. Gold and silver stars, gal- loons and pins are handsomely used on expensive bonnets and hats. Black ribbons with brilliant cashmere bor- ders are employed with admirable ef- fect, and pretty little Quaker bonnets of black or moss-green velvet are this week displayed in the ample windows of an importer on upper Fifth avenue, these simply decorated with half wreaths of brilliant autumn foliage in shaded velvet. ‘The variety of elegant outside wraps displayed this season is marvelous, for no two models seem alike, and the ex- — Contemporary Review. rere hibit appears to be anendlessone. In DON'T previous seasons la mode decreed a cer- tain fixed length and style for outside garments. Now every style seems to obtain, from the natty hunting jacket and short seal coat, to the long, sump- tuous French garments of heavy bro- cade and Lyons velvet, fur-banded and fur-lined; with countless dressy vis- ites, military coats, newmarkets, driving-jackets and peplum capes and pelerines as a happy medium—N. ¥. let that cold of yours run on. You think itis a light thing. But it may run into catarrh. Or into pneumonia. Or into consumption. Catarrh is disgusting. dangerous. selt. The breathing apparatus must be kept healthy and clear ot all obstructions and offensive matter. Otherwise there trouble ahead- Pneumonia is Consumption is death it- is} ee { | -—Leaves and dead branches return | Positively Curea by administ-:izg Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea withovt the knowledge ot the person tak- ingit; is absalutely harmless and will ettect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drink- er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. It never fails. The sys tem once impregnated with the Specific it becomes an utter impossibility tor the liquor appetite toexist. For tull partic ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race st. Cincinnati —Hartford is literary, but not geo- graphical. When the bronze image of H. Wells found its present resting- place on Bushnell Park, this inscription was chiselled into the base: ‘Horace Wells, who discovered Anzsthesia” And a pretty society girl, happening to pass that way, read the inscription and wrestled with the problem therein suggested until she reached home; and jthen, with her brows knotted with | perplexity, she said to her sister: “Millie, where is Anwsthesia?”— Puck. more or less, nade aubject toa prior deed of trust for nine hundred dollars, which con- veyance was made in trust ts» secure the payment of two certain notes fally describedin said deed of trust, and whereas, default has been madein the payment of said notes, now long past due and unpaid, Now,therefore at the request of the legal holder of said notes and pursuant to theconditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above describ- ed premises at public vendne, 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, August 22, 1889, between the hours of 9 o’clock in the forenoon and 5 o’clock in the afternoon of that day, for the purpose of satisfying said debt, interest and costs. F. M. ALLEN, 36-45 Trustee. BESS RN ON Notice of Final Set*lomes:. Post. Notice is hereby given, That the u Everett Walton, Admi oft =: eration, deceased. wil: m: s ent 0: is accounts with estate such administrator, at the uext term. of pre. **Msstic Cur? All the diseases of these parts, head, | nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs, can be delightfully and entirely cured by the use of Boschee’s German Syrup- Tt vou don’t know this already, thou- | sands and thousands ot people can tell bate court of Brtes conaty, Missouri, te be r to 3 da y you. They have been cured br it and holden at Butler. in s: © on the Ith | CouRteracting the poison in the sv | “know how it is themselves.”* Bottle day of August, 18. WALTON, | it will not tail, 75 ce Sold by W. J.| only 75 cents. Ask any druggist. $ Lansdown, druggist, Butler, Mo. S-6m4 4-Ivreow. to the soil the same substance the | | trees take away. FOR 5 Consumetio® It has cared THOUSANDS of cases prono’ by doctors hope- less. If you have premonitory symp- —Bakers in Holland work on Friday and Saturday twenty-six hours with- | | out intermission; other workmen have | toms, such as Co’ Difficulty of “long hours,” and yet Americans re- | Peer don’t di but = $s = BES f bei | PIsos FoR CON! D. jveive the chief criticism 0! ing | immediately. By Druggists. 25 | “overworked ” ' SJACOBS Ol], CONQUERS PAIN. | 2 gis Zo > = 3 pee § 3° n> ais eee yk z4< Resi 8 ais 39%|F gee Am c = 24. a al TE Ra & jd a8 ws 2 3 sEgttia | z®2es% sf x Jdhvt_ 2 | I CURE FITS When I say Cur I do not mean merely to stop them for s time, and then have them re- turn again. I MEAN A RADICAL CURE. I have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, A life-long study. I WARRANT m: to CurRE then ‘worst Gases. Because vm ks failed is no reason for not now receiving acure. Send at once for a treatise anda FREE of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give ress and Post Office. It costs you nothing a trial, and it will cure you. Address H.G. ROOT, M.C., 183 Peat Sr., New You. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN ESTABLISHED i845 Is the oldest and most mechanical paper publist circulation of any pay ws A great success. Uthographie plates < ces or pubiic batidin and full plans end such as contemplate bali 2 cts. a copy. MUNN &C pa % nd for Handbook. ence strictly conddential. TRADE MARKS. In case your mark is not istered in the Pat. ent Office. apply to MUNN & Co.. and procure immediate protection. Send for linadbook. COPYRIGHTS for books. charts, maps, @tc. quickly procured. Address MUNN & CO., Patent Solicitors, GENERAL Orrick: 81 Broapwar, N.Y, Correrjniade THE POPULAR ROUTE —To— TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, ST- LOUIS AND THE NORTH AND EAST. DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF Hanpsome Day CoacHEs, — —And— PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO TEXAS POINTS, With direct connection for Califor- nia and Mexico ‘ ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS —Between— SEDALIA AN D HANNIBAL —Andon Night Trains— FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS, Making Direct C tion in Uni Depot's with Trains In All Directions. For Tickets and Further Informs- — tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent. Geo. A. Eddy and H. C. Cross, Receivers J. WALDO, GASTON MESLER, Gen. Trat. Man. Gen. Pas. & Tk Agt Sedalia, Missouri-

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