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THE FINE Premium Stallion MAMBRINO CHIEF JR., MAMBRINU CHIEF JR, willstand at my barn one mile trom Butler court house, Bates county, Mo.,on the Rich Hill road, at the low price of $20 for colt. to stand and suck, payable when colt comes or when mare changes own- ership or about to be removed trom the county, or being bred to another horse Ia such cases the service fee will be due and must be paid, Mambrino Chiet Jr.took first premium at Nevada fair last September,in roadster ring,and also first in general purpose ring, and second in ring forthe best stallion of any breed, twelve or fifteen competing in each ring. Care will be taken to prevent ac- cident, will not be responsible should any occur. Breeders are invited to see poenmatism and Neuralgia Curea?! Two Days. jana Chemical Co. have discov} pein’ compound which acts with truly ois Pee acidity i in the cure of Rheu- are and Neuralgia. We guarantee it pare any and every case of acute matory Rheumatism and Neuralgia 2 pays, and to give immediate relief chronic cases and ettect a speedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent we Pill send to any address the rac ption for this wonderful compound can be filled by your home druggist va] cost- We take this means of | ving our discovery to the public instead jaf putting it out as a patent medicine, it much less expensive. We will poaly refund money if satistaction is not fn. THE INDIANA CHEMICAL Co., 10-1" Crawtordsville Ind Time Table. L. &S DIVISION. TRAINS RUNNING NORTH. IN RR DEACON, : THE ONLV EXCLUSIVE HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENT HOUSE BUTLER. | Ss: aicide ofa Young Girlin a Cemetery. Utica, N. ¥., March 31. ona young s cemetery Ww ith an empty laudanum vialnearher. The only name found was Mary L. Eagles field and this was on the envelope containing a cabinet photograph of the deceased taken in Albany. A note was found worded as fol- lows: “T have worked until I am tired of it. Ihave no right anyway on earth. Won't some charitable per- son bury me without going to a great expense? My brother is in Ber- lin, Wis. I haye written to him to pay for my burial without taking me away from here. Bury me in the No. 304» passenger noe a ™M-\the stock before breeding elsewh+ 312, local fa Season closes July roth. ; m, goaypaseengcr SPE WESLEY WARNOCK THE SINGLE TAX IDEA. TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH. Agent for C. S, Concklin. No. 301, passenger 12:30 p.m DESCRIPTION AND PEDIGREE. ae ey E “ sty local 5:00 * Mambrino Chiet Jr., dark bay, black A T: x, Not on Land, But on the Value 303, passenger 9:40 ** | points, 161g hands hight. wei 13 St. L. & E. DIVISION. of Land No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. “6 arrives 25 p.m. 3: E. K. CARNES, Agent. pounds, fine style andaction, good ba with heavy quarters,teet and le as any horse in the county,can ter than a three minute gait, Gisposition, any one can dri Sired by Abbott, 1st dam by McLx Mambrinro Chief, sire ot the d Alice West 2:26,Stranger 2:28 ar sire of Veritas 2:20,2d dam by Mark thony thoroughbred, 3rd dam _ by ei Many peopl > do sot fully compre- hend the single tax proposition. Be- : | low is given a brief exposition of the | doctrine set forth by Henry George’s standard: W. E, TUCKER, DENTIST Forester, 4th dam by Imported Bedford, Hivaee - x nls ’ AAS ELE ee riers The single i contemplates the BUTLER, - MISSOURI. |Old Mambring Chief No. 11, {abolition of a!l taxes upon labor or 1st dam Big Nora by Bay Messenger sire of Jim Porter 2:28}3, 2nd dam Mrs. Caudle, dam ot Ericson2.20',, Bay Messenger by Harpinus, son of Bishop Hambletonian, dam a Messenger mare, ee by Caliban 394 sire of CF Clay 2:18, Cyc 3's, Cooster di: um, Coun itle man, son of Ry edicke “Hambletonian 10) 2nd dam Belle by Belle Morgan 61, Cal- iban 394 by Mambrino Pilot 29, sire of } Hannis 2:17 and 6 others in the 2:3 ist dam Cassia by Cz eae M Clay ae sire ot Durango 2 a»Mary Clay Mambrin» Pi y Mambrino the products of labor—that is to say, the zbolition of all taxes save one tax levied on the value of land, irre- spect Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Lawyers. J. H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. Office, North Side square, over F. Jewelry Store.g 11, 1st dam Juli W. JACKSON John Morgan ATTORNEY AT LAW, 2:26 and 6 ott t Ma ao) Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, eee ee ~. wood 2:13; wer Badgley Bros., Store. roughbred son 0 Eclipse. ive of improvements. Since in all our states we now levy some tax on the value of land, the single tax can be instituted the _| Simple and easy way of abolishing, | all the t levied, and commensarately in by | Barnharidt’s one after another, s now and values, until we source fs z one all | ent; the revenue “| being divided betw nts and the gener: n local govern: | ate and | nent as the reve- governments PLDES Hi. sarTit, 2 ATTORNEY AT LAW. Butler, Mo.§] eS TIMOTHY. nae pincer arn. one|cruments, or a direct assessment be- mile trom the court house in Butler, ing made Mo., on Rich Hill road, at the low price of $15 tor acolt to stand and suck, paya- ble when colt comes or when tmarej changes ewnership or about to be remov- ed trom thecounty, when service a: B will be due and must be paid. Care will] The single tax is not a tax onland be taken to prevent accident, but will) and therefure would not fall on the | not be responsible should any | Season closes July 10, 180. Breeders | use of land and become a tax on are requested to see this stock betore | Japor, breeding elsewhere. WESLEY WARNOCK, It is a tax, not on land, but on the | | Agent for C. S. Conchlin. value of land. Thus it would not| fail on all land, but only on valuable | land, and on that not in pr ee | to the use made of it, but in propor- | Ove nue from direct taxes is now divided Will practice in all the courts. between the local and the state gov- Special at- tention given to collections and liti, ey laims by the general govern- | Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ment upon the states and paid by} collected in this | manner. | them from revenues tees ac ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, down’s Drug Store. over Lans- DESCIRPTION AND PEDIGREE. Timothy, bay stallion, black points, 16!4 hands high, fine style and action, good bone and muscle, a f trotter, | hasto be seen to be appreciated, has proved to be remarkably sure, his cc last year are large and fine with good action. Sired by Alamo fr., Ist dam Nelly by Zachary Taylor, who took tst premium at Cincinnati,O., both as asaddle enon and as best roadster, showing a 2:40 gait in both rings. 2nd} dam Old Nelly by Tum Crowder, sire of the dams of John W Conly Belvia Lockwood 2:25,Cooley 2:20, Frank 726, Modesty 222614, Tom Crowder by old paciug and trotting Pilot, sire of Pilot Jr., grandsire of Maud S 2:083;,J I C 2:10, Nutwood 2:18, Alamo. Jr.,by Alamo Sr. 2.34 by Almont 33, son of ‘Abda Na 15, son of Hambletonian 10, dam ot Alamo Jr., by Prinze Albert, son of Imported Fyde; 1stdam vy Imported Margrave, 2nd dam Mary Seldon by Sussex, 2nd dam Exchange by Richmond, rd books vol. 1st, page 95, Alamo Sr., by} Alment 33, 1st dam by Brown's Bel- | tounder son of Imported Belfounder. W. W, Agent. AGE & DENTON, © ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. cBride’s Store, note Mo.§ tion to its value—the premium which | the user of land must pay to the owner, either in purchase money or in rent, for permission to use valua- ble land. It would thus be a tax, not on the use of improvement of land, taking what would otherwise go to the owner as owner, and not as user. | j Pivessians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s ig-ly But.Ler, Mo. In assessments under the sirgle | tax all values created by individuals use or improvement would be ex- eluded, and the only value taken} into consideration would be the value attaching to the bare land by reason of neighborhood, ete. Thus the farmer would have no more taxes jto pay than the speculator who held T. urecon. Office north’: side square, uable building would be taxed no ren a specialty. }more than the man whe held a simi- My entire stock of (Os emeait Wa J qT, WALLS, c | The singie tax, in short, would call upon men to comtribute to the PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Dry Goods public revenues not in proportion to Roce ponsnwess cone panera ove what they produce or accumulate, aron 3 it = = @ . vannah eaeet aot ot Pine. ake but in proportion to the natural op- portunities they hold. It would DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- tases. C. BOULWARE, Physician and must go at cost, as I have deter- Jone free to apply labor or expend | jcapital in production or exchange | | without fine or restriction and would | leave to each the full product of his j exertion. { | would thus make it impossible for a similar piece of land idle, and the | man who on a city lot erected a val- | thus enabling our people to share through free exchanges in all the advantages which nature has given to other countries, or which the pe- culiar skill of other people has en- abled them to attain. It would de- | stroy the trusts, monopolies and | cerruptions which are the outgrowth | of the tariff. It would doaway with | the fines and penalties now levied | onaby one who improves a farm, | erects a house, builds a machine, or} in any way adds to the general stock of wealth. It would leave every | 1 . It would, on the other hand, | ‘byt taking for public uses that value | ' which Atnaics to land by reason of the growth and improvement of the the holding of land unprofitable to the mere owner and profitable only to the user. It community, make speculators aud monopolists to hold natural opportunities unused or only | half used, and would throw open to | labor the illimitable field of employ- ment which the earth offers to man. It would thus solve the labor ata tion, do with involuntar poverty, raise wages in all occupa- tions to the full earnings of labor, away > make overproduction impossible un- til al human wants are satisfied, ren der laboi-saving inveutions a bless- to all, and cause such a distribution as wealth as would give | to all comfort, leisure and purticipa- tion in the advantages of an advane- ing civilization. The ethical principles in which the | single tax is based are: 1. Each man is entitled to all that his labor preduces. Therefore no tax should be levied on the products of labor. 2. All men are equally entitled to what God has created and to what is gained by the general growth and imyrovement of the community of which they area part. Therefore, no one should be permitted to hold natural opportunities without a fair return to all for any special privi lege thus accorded to him, and that value which the growth and improve- ment of the community attaches to land should be taken for the use of | the community. ing A Scrap of PaperSave jHer Life It was just an ordinary scrap of wrap- | ping paper, but it saved her lite. She was in the last stages ot consumption, told by phvsicians that she was incura- ble and could live ouly a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a scrap of paper she read ot Dr. King’s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bonghl a large bottle, it helped more, bought another and | grew better tast, so0ntinued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, mined to quit business on account | ' . fe of health, therefore, now is your | compel them to pay just as much Nyy time to get |for holding land idle as for putting Missouri Pacific A \. ‘it to its fullest use. = IN. DRY GOODS | The single tax therefore would— | | 1. Take the weight of taxation of | NOTIONS. HATS, CAPS, | of the agricuitural districts where | e 5 and has little or no value irrespec- Clothmgand Undewear tive of improvements, and put.it on | towns fe is no “Sham” sale to reduce the stock, but is a genuine pers out to quit business. Come and I }me and buy your dry goods cheaper than you ever bought them in your life. Q = sian 2 KANSAS CITY OMAHA, COLORALO SHORT LINE and per acre. 2. Dispense with a multiplicity of itaxes and a horde of taxgatherers , duce its cost. | 3. Do away with the fraud, cor ‘ruption and gross inequality insepa- 9 Daily Trains, 5 rable from our present method of | 1 Kansas City to St, Lou “AARON HART pak taxation. which allow the rich to es- [Souli-Weat Se Corne - - - Square.! leape while they grind the “oes —_—__e—_—_—— i } PUEBLO AND DENVER, { 1 = BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS FOR MEN ONLY! mpesansas City to Denver without cn H. General P2 earried off, can be ascertained with | and certainty than any ‘Land cannot be hid or and its value greater ease nge Cc. TOWNSEND. and cities where bare land | ae to a value of millions of dollars | simplify government and greatly re- | weighing 140 pounds, For fuller partic- | ulars send stamp to W. H. Cole, drug- gist, Ft.Smith. Trial Bottles of this = Discovery free at all drug- gists. | Henry George has been heard | from. He is now lecturing in New | South Wales. The burden of his | talks is the single tax idea. | repeat Tacoma, Wash., is no 8x10 place. A new building going up there now | will contain four plate glasses, each | one 112x130 inches. In Montana gambling is lawful, | but one must take care of his debts '—you cannot collect them by law. Some solons have singular ideas. There seems to be plenty of saline element in the world. It is officially announced that there is enough salt in the Peeside | oe in England to for $00 years. | was a young professor at the univer- | sity there. jas he did before the doctor warned potter's field, anywhere; only lay me STRANGE DEATH-BED SCENE. to rest. I hope I will succeed in ending my life.” AV se SS drinks s POS FER 1ennase Professor Drinks to His Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, SaltRheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by all druggists. Wife’s Health in Champagne While Expiring. A most novel and remarkable death-bed scene took place in Vien- na three weeks ago. The hero of it Uma oe Grant’s Book No Longer Sells. A large book-jobber who has sold hundreds if not thousands of sets of General Grant’s “Memoirs” tells the work has at last become a drug in the literary market. selling it over He was a man of great brilliancy and learning. Four years ago he fell ill of an incurable dis- ease and his physician warned him that only a radieal change from his gay mode of life could hinder fora short time the progress of the mala- dy. The young professor answered quietly that he would die as a phi- jlosopher should die, ate, drank, studied, lectured and danced exactly “We are now » he said, “at $3.25 in cloth our counter, and there are light sales of it even at that. price. We have a number of sets on hand, and my partner agrees with me they are ‘dead stock... Few books have had such long life with us as Grant's but like all others, it must have its day, nnd it has. Have the publishers been left with many on hand? That I cannot say for certain, but I was him. A few weeks ago he lay down on his death bed. He read the same beoks and talked of the same frivo- lous amusements as usual up to one|told on very good anthority only a evening about three weeks ago.|few days ago that they were carry- About 5 o’clock the doctor told him |ing something like 60,000 sets. If that he would die within a few]that is true, they will have hard hours. The young professor dis-| work to sell them.” cussed many topics entirely foreign to the subject of his fast approach- ing death with his wife night. “T feel well, very well,” he said to her finally, “so well that I would like to drink a bottle of champagne with you before I go. Kiss me—for I may go while you are away—and then have the wine put on ice.” His wife obeyed. A few minutes later he took the bottle from the servant's hand, poured out the wine for his wife and himself, emptied the glass to her health, flung it on the floor, and dropped back on his pil low, dead. The Vienna dailies, which have a constitutional prejudice against pub- lishing the full name of any person of high social standing, mention the hero of this strange scene only Herr Prof. P. He was an in- fidel.—St. Louis Globe Democrat. Consumpuon Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice ng liad placedin his hands by an India missionary the tormula ot a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure ot Consumptio Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and throat and lung affections, also a posi 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 suttering fellow. Actuated by this motive and a_ desire to re'ieve human sutfering. I will send tree ot charge, to all who desire it, this re- ceipt, in Germac, French or English, with tull 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¥. until mid- The cnterestiney Maceice from Castle Garden show that last year 2,313 immigrants landed with Kan- sas their recorded destination, while 4,828 were bound for Missouri. In answer to the natural assertion that this shows the evil effect of prohibition it appears that 6,324 went to Iowa. So the prohibitionist of Kansas ean ask the democrats to give other reasons for the failure of the state to attract foreign atten- tion. as as Best thing He Ever Saw. The following is an extract froma letter written by Mr. D. A. Reynolds editor and proprietor of the Herald, Lyons, Mich., under date of Janua- ry 11th, 1890: “You will observe that I have given your ailvertise- ment position on the first page of the Herald, while other propriety medicines have to take the run of the paper. The reason for doing this is, that upon receiving your “copy” a number of the cures effcet- edseemed similar to that of which my little son was suffering, a case of blood poison, or irritable sores breaking out all over his body. To- day he is entirely free from disease, and one bottle of Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) did the work. Now this is the reason for giving you the po- sition, as I consider Swift's Specific (S.S.S.) the best medicine I ever saw. I wish you unlimited success it your business.” The above is a sample of letters | which are coming to us all the time. S. S. S.is nearer infallible than any medicine known to mankind. Merit Wins. We desire tosay to our citizens, that tor years we have been selling Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King’s New Lite Pills, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have giyen such universal satis- faction. We do not hesitate to guaran- tee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, it satisfac- tory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity durely on their merits. all Druggists. The festive jack rabbit is a strict vegetarian, and will not touch grease of any kind, nor will it tackle vegee tables that are seasoned with grease. Orchardists in Colorado take advan- tage of his fastidiousness and pros tect their trees from his incisors by rubbing the body of the tree with a , bacon rind. Ballards Snow Linament Is the best Linament in the world tor janimals. Itwill work wonders where tver any pain or inflamation may be | aound. Every ownersota hore should | have itin his stable. For Sprains, Cut Treatise en Blood and Skin Diseases | Bruises, Galis, Lameness iar all ine mailed free. | fiamation on animals it stands withou . : a parallel. There is no pain Ballard SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., | Snow Linoment will not releve, ——— Atlanta, Ga. | ing it will not snbdue. No .wonnd it w } not heal. Pyie & Crurnley, Agents, Patti believes in Wagner's music. | Salt Lake City begins to attract She says he has no weak notes; they | Festern capital. A New York hfe all mean something. They are worth! jinsurance company will put up a big money when she sings them. | building there which will cost 14 nillicns. The Mormon Mecca ood place, but as isa 4a prospect € infant as Level to stay. much opp: without honor, country.