The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 13, 1889, Page 8

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YGIENE OF THE FEE How to Treat and Trim Toe-Nails—Some Practical Suggestions. Dr. Izard, a Parisian authority on the health of the feet, writes as fol- lows to Le France Parieur regarding the nails: ‘A most important part of the hygiene of the feet has for its ob- ject the nails. To-day an absurd cus- tom imported from China decrees that the nails of the hands should be al- lowed to grow long, but it does not apply to those of the feet. These last must be cut regularly or they will grow so fast as to fold under the toe, form blisters and be as much of an an- noyance to the boot as they are in walking. They become in such cases very painful at the roots under the in- fluence of the least pressure. To evade all such accidents it will be well tocut the nails each time a foot bath is taken. The water will soften them and permit them to be pared easily without danger of tearing them. Scis- sors are sufficient for this operation. The difficulty is to know whether it is better to cut the nails in a semi-circle or in a direct line. The following is the rule generally observed: When the toes are well formed and the nails equally 80, when the pressure exercised by the shoe does not cause any deviation, the nails should be cut in a semi-circle in conformity to the rotund configuration of the extremity of the toes. But when these are displaced or deformed by the action of the shoe care must be taken on account of the deformity to always give to the nail that is being pared the shape of the extremity of the toe. If it be not so pared and if the sides of the nail are left to pro- trude while the middle part has been cut, the least lateral pressure on the extremity of the foot causes the pro- truding part of the nail to enter the flesh of the protruding toe. Too nar- row or too short shoes are apt to pro- duce much annoyance. In such cases the nails must be cut in conformity to the shape of the toes. To prevent the nail from entering the flesh of the big toe the nail must be cut on the square rather than on the round. So say several physicians, but I am not of the sam» opinion, because experience has taught me that this vicious con- formation does not in the least depend on the manner in which the nail has been pared.” ——_~+ ee —___ NEW YORK FASHIONS. The Growing Popularity of Braided Gowns —Novelties in Furs. Braided gowns continue to be greatly in demand, and two pretty ex- amples of this kind are well worth de- geribing. The one is in myrtle-green eloth, braided elaborately in a mix- ture of myrtle green and gold. The pointed bodice has a shaped vest of braiding, whilé similar designs are brought down to a point below the waist, starting from under the arms at either side. Tho skirt is arranged with long draperies brightened with braiding and opening on the right side over a graduated panel formed entirely of five knife plaitings of myrtle-green cloth. With this gown a double shoulder cape of cloth is worn, made with a high collar covered with green and gold braiding, and so arranged that it can be worn cither standing up or turned down. The other gown is in a warm, red shade of brown, called dahlia, with a full skirt, plaited on one side and trimmed there only with two long lines of terra-cotta braid- ing, reaching from waist to hem and forming a kind of panel. The boiice is cut very short in the waist, and Opens in front over crosswise folds of terra-cotta silk, sur- mounted by a Directoire jabot of fine- ly-plaited cream lisse. The bodice is further finished with a wide collar turned back so as to show the braid- ing with which it is ornamented. It is somewhat early to touch upon fur-trimmed garments, and yet they are already displayed in the shops. One example is a trim little jacket made in what is technically known as black-ribbed coating, and arrangedina very becoming manner in front, with two waistcoats. The lower one, of cloth, is cross-wrapped and handsome- ly braided, while the upper one, which is like a plastron, is covered entirely with black Astrakhan fur. The deep collar is lined with the same fur, and can be worn either turned down or standing up a la Medicis. The deep cuffs are also of Astrakhan, as well as the edging of the Open jacket front and the two covered buttons at the back on the waist line. This jacket is novel and stylish, and, as our English cousins say, has very “smart” effect. — Leslie's Weekly. ——~+e___ —It is only in the comic newspaper that the small boy gets doubled up by eating green apples and gives the un- dertaker ajob. The small boy in real life will start out nutting in the morn- ing, and before he returns home in the evening he will have put himself outside of halfa peck of green apples, a dozen big turnips, a quart of chest- nuts and three pints of spring water, and attack his supper with the appe- tite of a half-starved bear. Next morning he feels well enough to re- peat his tramp and feast, —Norristown Herald. ———~+e____ —An under-fed Orchard, says a com respondent of Orchard and Garden, is apt to prove as unprofitable as an un- der-fed animal. The fruit is scanty in quantity, size and quality, and such | fruit is getting less and less profitable every year. According to my experi- ence, orchards much receive as good | culture and as much manure as a grain field; and when they get it, will pay €8 well as, or rather better than most crops. T.L: PETTYS. Produces ER DEALERS Staple:Fancy Groceries, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE. iCICARS AND TOBACCO,) A. O WELTON PETTYS & WELTON IN Always pay the highest market price for Countrv East Side Square. Butler, MO ANOTHER SPLEANDID CIFT !! ELEGANT To every new subscriber or renewal for the Weekly Globe-[Jemocrs (10 Pages) ONE YEAR THE BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVING, “THE SCOTCH RAID” A group of cattle and sheep (by Rosa Bonheur)- “THE HORSE FAIR,” which was, until recently, the premium with the WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT. gaThe price of the WEEKLY GLCBE-DEMOCRAT. one year and the engraving “THE SCOTCH RAID,” is only ONE DOLLAR. Subscribers desiring both pictures can have “The Horse Fair” 25 cents extra. Postmasters and news dealers will take subscriptions, or remit direct tothe GDOBE PRINTING CO. Ses"Send for sample copy of paper. Deeds of Border Bandits. Brownsville, Tex., Nev. 5.—-At the Jesus Maria ranch, in Hidalgo coun- ty, bandits surprised and captured the son of a wealthy ranchero, Don Jesus Carza, and are holding him for ransom near the county line. The body of an unknown man, probably killed by the bandits has been found. The coroner and jury have gone out to try and identify the remains. Painful Boils. About three years ago I was trou- bled with poison in my blood, very irritating and painful boils breaking out allover my body. For two years I suffered with them, trying all sorts of remedies, and doctors’ prescription without avail. Becom- ing disgusted with doctors and med- icines I had used up to this time, I| concluded to try S. S. S. and the re- sult was far beyond my expecta- tions. A few bottles left me in better health than I had been since enildhood. I consider S.S. S. the only medicine that will thoroughly purify poisoned blood. T. K. Mayfield, Horse Cove, Ky. A Valuable Tonic. Ihave used Swift's Specific with good results. As a tonic, it is valu- able; as a blood purifier, it is relia- ble. Rev. J. H. Jefferson, Winston, N. C. Keep it asa Family Medicine. Harrison, Ga., under date of Sep- tember 22, 1889. Swift's Specific | with the best and happiest results. | A half dozen bottles entirely reliey- jed my sister of a severe case of had a scrofulous affection that has | bottles of SS. S. Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC co. Atlanta, Ga. 1 elections lead dividing up the of- rible accident is reported from a cotton. A half-starved cur dog was jleft on guard. Soon after reaching ' the cotton patch the mother of the jhome by a blast from the horn. | Within thirty minutes the boar | fended the child and paid the pen- | alty with his life. | Phillip McKim, of Scotch and Irish ekg) Bradley. writes from | o¢ the$ Metropolitan club, Washin | service of John Jay, of has been freely used b ily } wi Ft iene ob da ec House | receives $1,800 a year from the gov- | | ernment. jScrofula. My wife has frequently | | found her blood purified and her | j health improved by S.S.S. I also! 3 : | ot in the hignest terms of j been entirely cured by taking a few | | nerous reliet in the worst ; cu e where all others WORK OF ART A companion piece of for Killed bya Hog. Memphis, Tenn., Noy. 5.—A hor- plantation in Nonnconah Bottom, 6 miles from the city. The 2-year old negro child of Wm. Stiles was killed and partially devoured by a hog. The parents left the child in their cabin and went to the field to pick child heard an uproar at the cabin and returned there. She found a ferocious boar standing over her in- fant with bloody tusks. The child had been disemboweled and halt the face torn away. The frantic mother picked up an ax and dealt the ani- mal a terrific blow on the back as it fastened its tusks in its prey to make off to the woods. The child was rescued and carried into the house, where it breathed its last in three minutes after being moved. The father and son were summoned was found and killed. The dog had de- He lay near the child with both legs broken and his body ripped open. ee President Harrison has obtained a new steward for the White House. parantage is Zieman’s successor. For many years McKim was steward g- So ton. Recently he has been in the this city. | LENGTH OF A DAY. Interesting Studies Made By a Welle Known Man of Science. Prof. F. H. Bailey makes the state- ment in the Boston Journal of Educa- | tion that the day contains exactly forty-eight hours, and that the week. though seven times as long as the day for any one locality, is, upon the earth as a whole, only four times as long. *‘We readily perceive,” he says, “that the natural day travels around the earth with the sun and never ends, it being day or daytime continually on the half of the carth toward the sun and night on the opposite half. The date, or almanac day, travels the same way and with the same speed and if it had no place for beginning or ending it would always be the same date. “We will commence with the begin- ning of the first day of the year. It is the moment of noon December 31 on the meridian of Greenwich, forenoon over the western hemisphere and after- noon over the eastern. The mean sun is exactly in the south, and at that moment, the first day of the new year is born. Where? Not at Greenwich. The civic day begins at midnight, and it is midnight on the 180th meridian at that moment. and there New Year's day begins. As the sun travels west- ward from Greenwich across the At- lantic and America NewYear’s marches westward across the Pacific and Asia, conquering the earth at the rate of one twenty-fourth part every hour. By the time the sun reaches the Mis- sissippi valley it is evening of the last day of the year in England, but Janu- ary 1 hold sway over one-fourth of the earth—that lying between the 90th meridian east of Greenwich and the 180th. “Six hours later, when the sun has traveled half w around the earth and is over the 180th meridian, New Year's has reached Greenwich and Sways one-half the earth. In another six hours the bells of the M sippi valley are ringing in the new year, but it has been on earth eighteen hours. And in six more the sun is again over the meridian of Greenwich, and New Year's exists for a single mo- ment over the entire earth. But Mother Earth does not stop her waltz- ing, nor old So! his westward journey, and the 2d day of January puts in his appearance where the Ist did twenty- four hours before, and immediately commences chasing his elder brother around the earth at the rate of more than one thousand miles an hour, the chase continuing for exactly twenty- four hours, during which the portion of the earth under the sway of Janu- ary 1 is continually decreasing and that of the 2d increasing. “Another method of presenting the same facts may be considered better. Think of the d past and future as threads each wound upon its own spool and of sufficient length to reach, when unwound, around the earth at the equator. The spools are kept at the 180th meridian—those bearing past dates have been used, future dates awaiting their time, and always two in use at once. When it is noon at Greenwich oa the 31st of December the spool bearing that date is empty and its thread girdles the earth Beside it, rotating about the same axis (the 180th meridian), is the spool dated January 1; and at that moment some power capable of traveling 1,000 miles an hour seizes the end of the thread and flies westward; the thread un- winds. The other spool rotates at the same velocity, but is winding up the thread of December 31, dragging it around the earth, the free end keep- ing exactly even with the advancing end of January 1. Each thread is ex- actly twenty-four hours unwinding and the same winding up again, and the portion of the earth lying north and south of the unwound part of each thread bears its date, conse- quently each date exists upon the earth for forty-eight hours, or a little more than two complete rotations of the earth upon its axis. It is evident that the thread of any day has been unwinding seventeen hours when it reaches the seventy-fifth meridian west of Greenwich, that it is twenty-four hours dragging itself across the line, and that it will be seven hours longer before it is entirely wound upon its spool and the date is past for the en- tire earth.” —_+ += __ The Street Railroad Business. The importance of the street rail- road business when compared with the magnitude of the steam railroads of the United States is very striking. The figures of 1887 show a tabulation of 148,998.60 miles of railroad and 20,- 582 passenger cars, and passengers carried but 428,295, But the following figures are more amaz- ing: The horse cars of the city of New York carry 199,491,735 Passen- | gers, almost half as many as are car- | ried by all the steam roads in the United States. If to this number are road we have a total of 371, ried in New York City alone as are | annually carried by all the steam rail- Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. We desjreto call your atteation to a/ remarkable article which we are selling a large amount of. One that is spoken} Praise by all It gives instanta- i coughs. It wil Nave failed. It is BALLARD'S HOREHOUND SYRUP It is absolutely the best known remedy for coughs, colds, consumption cr > bronchitis, sore thr. chest, ash- dali throat who have used it. dise, ‘roads of the whole of | States. the United roads in that State. the electric line of the West End Com- Pany, of Boston, carries nearly 10,- 000,000 more passengers than all the steam roads combined. —Railway Age. —_++e__ —None but a mean man wil braid his wife for powdering h on @ Sweaty day and then turr and comb his back hair u bald spot on the top of h Dansville Breeze, | added those carried by the elevated i 4, or | almost as many passengers as are car- | onthe Errors of You! and Physical Debility, The street railroads of the i State of Massachusetts carry over 44,- | % | 000,000 more people than all the steam One road alone, | Consumption Cured. | An old physician, retired trom pratice} having ‘iad placed in his hands East India missionary vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, } Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al!} throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Neryous complaints, atter 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 retieve human suffering. I will send free ot charge, to all who desire it, this re- ceipt, in Germac, French or English, witht directions tor preparing and using. Sent by mail by addresing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, 149 Power’s Block, Rocheste N. Y. Y of ORY THE WAR b ry fF THE WI re Narrative of ‘FOUR YEARS PERSONAL KXPERI- ENCE 4s NURSE” in Hospitals, Campa, and on the Battle-feld. No other book has drawn so many tears. Bright, Pure and Good. of matchless interest and profound pathos. tf els at sight to all, The “booming” book to make moncy on now a fe Belidas 4 3a Gupetition, 300) pags, tem, and old \e- in fiom) Glat thousand: (75,000 more Agents Wanted. Women. Dlatance Be hindrance, for we Pay s and give Extra Terms. Write for circulars to Hartford, D. WORTHINGTON & O04 Conn. $30: PORTRAIT While introducing our fine work, if you send us a photograph of yourself or any member of your family, we will make you a full life-size Crayon Portrait Free of Charge. The only consideration inposed upon you will be that you exhibitit it to your friends as a sample of our work, amd assist us in securing orders also that you promise to have it framed suita- bly so that the work will show to advantage Write your full name and address on back of photo to secure its safety. we guarantee its return Our offer is good for a few days only. and the sample portrait is worth $30, being as fine as can be made. Address American Por- trait House, 5 and 6 Washington St. CHICA- GO. ILL. Largest Life-Size Portrait House in the World. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. “By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of diges- tion and nutrition, and by a careful applica- tion of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Eppsiias provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills It is by the judicions use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradualiy built up until strong enough to resist every te! cy todisease. Hundreds of subtle m ies are floating around us ready to attack wherev- er there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well forti- fled with pure blood and a properly nourished frame.’’—Civil Service Gazette « Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold ouly in half pound tins, by grocers labeled thus: JAMES EPPS & CO., Homepathic Chemists, London, England. Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians and sold by Drug- gists throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUF’G CO.,, SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS. Red C ross Diamond Brand. ‘The only reliable pill for sale. Bafe sure. Ladies, aak Draggiat for te Diag Brand, io red metallic bores, sealed Diueribbor. Takemo other. Seed de. Lindieg” teeter; by math Bee teeer etter, Uy mm 4 Chichester Chemical Co, Madison Be Phileda PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair, motes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray ir At ii + Youthful Color. eoecand gL Obee Dafne MASON & HAMLIN ORCAN AND PIANO Co. BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO. NEW MODEL ORGAN, STYLE 244, (_ Contains a five octave, Nine | Pier. Acticn, furnished in a large and handsome case of | solid black walnut. Price $99 cash; also sold on the Easy HireSystem at $1 per quar ter, for ten quart when or- gan becomes propertp or per- (son hiring. The Mason & Hamlin “‘Stringer.’’ invented and MASON patented by Mason & Hamlin in 1882, is used in the Mason & & < Hamlin pianos exclusively. Remarkable refinement of HAMLIN | tone and phenomenal capacity to stand in tune characterize s ( these instruments. POPULAR STYLES ORGANS AT $0) $78 $46 AND UP. Organs and Pianos sold fox cash, Easy Pay- ments, and Rented. Catalogues fres. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE | A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise EXHAUSTEDVITALITY UNTOLD MISERIESH ee or | unfittin; victim for Work, Bisiness, the Married or Socal ‘Relation. | Avoid unskiilfal pretenders. Possess this great | work. It contains 300 rosalSvo. Beautifcl | binding, embossed, full gilt Price only €1.00 by | 5 jp plain ‘wrapper. a j ‘ospectus Free, if you apply now. tinznished acthor, Wi H. Parker, M. cewed the GOLD AND from the National Medical Assoc: this PRIZE PHY: ination for AY on NERVOUS and ILITY.Dr.Parkerand acorps ensmsy be consuly . by mail or in person, at the o’ ABODY MEDICAL INS' No. 4 Bulfinch St., Beston, Mass., to whom all rders for books or letuers for edvice should be | directed es above. ito the -VUND PACK A: aa Trustee's Sale. Whereas Sarah E. Ow and Reuben S_ Owen he: deed of trust dated the 23rd di: ee vey to Henry C. Wilson, trustee, the f ae ing described real estate situated in the of Bates and state o: ouri, to- wit: The west half of the southeast quarter section ‘ty (20) and the north half if northeast quarter of section twenty-ni ea in township forty-two (42) north and in Tangy thirty-three west of the fifth (3th) prim meridian, to secure payment of the eum of - one hundred dollars, secured, to be aid their ten certain notes of even date wih nad trust deed and payable to the order of Willig, F. Leonard, one July Ist 1886 and one @ six months thereafter until all are paid, interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity. And whereas it provided in and by said dsed of trust that case of defanit in the payment of either of agig notes or any part thereof, when the shonld become due, then all of said notes with interest up to the date of sale, at the el of the legal holder or holders thereof should at once become due and payable, and on the said trustee shall advertise and sell said emises. And whereas the notes due and yable on the first day of January and July A. D. Iss9, arenow due and wholly unpaid, nd all of said notes and interest have been de- clared due and payable to the legal holder thereof amounting. on the day of sale to the sum of one hundred forty-six and 100 dol. lars, including the costs and expenses of this proceeding And whereas by the provisions of said deed of trust, the legal holder of said notes may nominate and appoint a su in trust in case the trustee named, Hen Cc Wilson, should decline to act. and the said Henry © Wilson having declined to act and ed having been appointed his or in trust. Now therefore at the Te- gal holder of said note.I will.as on THURSDA HE FIFTH BER A.D between the hours of 3 o’clock a.m and 5 o’clock P m., of that day, at the east front door of the court in the city of Butler, county of Bates of Missouri, sell to the highest bid- . sh. the above described premises, i right and equity, including homestead said Sarah E. and Reuben S- Owen “STER M. HALL, Trastee, quest trustee afores Public Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri. made on the let day of October, 189 the undersigned public administrator for said county, has taken charge of the estate of Julia A. Medley deceased. All persons having claims against said es- tate, arerequired to exhibit them to me for allowance within one year after the date of said ore or they may be precluded from any ben of such estate: and if said claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this publication, they will be forever barred ‘This 5rd day of October, 1889. J. W. ENNIS, Public Administrator, ee Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Thomas J. Perry (a single man) by his deed of trust dated May 1, 188g, and recorded in the recorder’s of- fice within and for Bates county, Mis- souri, in book 52, page 33, conyeyed to | the undersigned trustee the following described real estate lying and being sit- uate in the county otf Bates, state of Mise -ouri, to-wit: Lot three (3) in block twelve (12) in Willisms extension of Williams addi- tion to the town (now city) of Butler, as the same is marked and designated on the recorded plat thereot, which con- veyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note tully ge- scribed in said deed of trust,and whereas, default has been made in the payment of ‘he interest on said note, and the same is now long since past due and un- paid, and by tre terms otf said deed of trust, if default was made in the pay- ment of the interest when said interest was due, then the whole of the principal was to become due and payable at once and the holder ot said note having declared the principal due. Now, therefore at the request of the le- gal holder of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed te sell the aboye described premises at public vendue to the high- est bidder for cash, at the east front dcor of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and stafe of Missouri, on Wednesday, October 30, 1889, between the hours of nine o’clock in the torenoon and five o’clock in the after- noon. of that day, for the purposes of sat- isfying said debt, interest and costs, F, I. TYGARD, 46-4t Trustee. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ¢ - County of Bates. , Serpe In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, October Sth, Iss? Henry Wat- son, William Farreil and John E. Hayner, laintifis, ve. Annie Babcock and F. L: ‘outy, defendants. Now st this day comes the plaintiffs herein by their attorney, T. W. Silvers, Esq., before the undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Misscuri, in vacation and file their petition alleging, among other things that the defendants, Annie R. Babcock and F. L. Prouty are non-residents of the state of Mis- souri Whereupon it is ordered the clerk in vacation, that said defendants notified by publication that plaintiffs have commenc- ed a suit against them in thia court by Petition, the general nature and object of which is to obtain a decree of this court declaring that certain notes secured by a trust ceed h fore executed by the plaintiff, William Farrell to the defendant Annie R Babcock upon the nor*»esst quarter of the northeast quarter and the “If of the southeast quarter of the nor. Ast ‘F of section eight (5), town- ship thirs; n'r (53, range thrirty-three (33). in Bates coumiy, Missouri, and which ssid trust deed is recorded in book 16 at page 364, of the records of trust deeds and mortgage 1 the office of the recorder of deeds of Bat«. van ty, Missouri. have been fully paide ard dis- charged. and that by reason of the p ment of said notes said trust deed became a now is null and void, and that thecloud on the title to said land cansed by the record of said trust deed be removed. And that unless the said defendants be and appear at the next term of this court, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, Bates eount; = Missouri, on the third day of Forney. D. 139, and on or fore the sixth day of said term,if the termi shall s0 long con- tinue—and if not, then on or before the last day of said term—answer or plead to the peti- tion in said cause, the same willbe gaken 2s confessed and judgmert will be rendered ac- cordingly And it is farther ordered by the clerk afore- said. that a copy hereof be published. according to iaw, in the Butler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper prin ished in Butler, Bates eounty four weeks successively. the last be at least fo: weeks before che the February court. A 46-4 JOHN C. HAYES true eo from th JOHNS C. HAYES Circuit Cle t’y for plaintifs. { (

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