The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 3, 1890, Page 7

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Having purchased the stock of goods kuown 4 Grange store consisting of FRIES & DRY/GOODS, I desire to say to my many friends ifiat Ihave re NEW FIRM? NEW GQODs?! the plenished the stock and fitted up fihe store room in shape and I would be glad to Mave all my old friends call aud see me. PRODUCE 9F ALLJ KINDS WANTED. I will guarantee my prices gn goods to be as iow as any store in the citp- Call and see me. a ss PETTY Ss. ARPER & ATKISON The “GOOD,/LUCK” Merchants DEALERS IN Groceriks, ee fisions, Queensware an elf Hardware. The ACidrated gins. uare. RS. W. a House Corner : al C r HEN ON a 2. of Body and. ecta be OPED ORGANS PAR-SOF 1 coo ‘}. THE BEST IN THE Wood Base Heater, all the leading makes of Heating Stoves. K STOVES WORLD. Harper & Atkison, BEW MILLINERY. aShionable Dress-making. HBest Goods West of Chicago | at the Prices Asked. -FINEST STOCK OF MILLINERY IN BUTLER, ny) ¢ EK PRICE TO DISCRIMINATION, A REASONABLE PROFIT AND HONORABLE DEALING, IS OUR MOTTO! O ATKESON. e. This Coal will be sold at the bank at 44 ce “Horse Shoe Missouri. ALL - BUTLER, MO. AL: COAL! COAL! 4 1-2 cents per bushel at the bank. leased land on Squirre Beck's farm about one half mile north be, will say that I now havea large quantity of coal mined ts per bushel. W. R. JENKINS, Bates county, Mo. WATERPROOF COLLAR on CUFF THAT CAN BE RELIED ON INOot to Split! INOt to Discolor!? BEARS THIS MARK. TRADE (O LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. ‘FEMALE sith year opens Sept. 4! Faculty, Litera- anguages, ies. Science, Music athem: Painting. Elecution, Business Course, ete. Location health: Buildings entai eam heated am ress R. E. BIN =, Bus. Mgt. LEXINGTON, MO. ed, renovace s and re shige i For cat RD. President. or | FIRESIDE FRAGMENTS. —It is said that the onion is a great sleep inducer. and about equal to qui- | nine for malaria. —In making steamed cu stant stirring is necessary after pytting in the thickening ingredients, to get a smooth, creamy result. Three eups prunes, one one teaspoonful extract o tablespoonfu vinegar. Stew, seed and mash prunes; add sugar, lemon, and vinegar. Have mixture rather juicy and bake with two crusts. —Housekeepe —If you wish your floor mattings to look as fresh and bright at the close of the summer as when they were laid in the spring, see that they are carefully wiped off after each sweeping with a soft cloth, wrung out of salt and water. Souffle: One each of grated corn and sweet milk, two eggs beaten very light, a small teaspoonful salt and one and one-half tablespoonfuls sugar. Mix well and bake in a buttered pudding dish forty minutes) Eat as soon as done.—Orange Judd Farmer. —Creole Pudding: Beat eight eggs with half a pound of sugar, halfa pound of butter and the juice of one lemon. Line a deep dish with puff paste, cover with quince preserves, pour over alittle of the mixture, lay on more preserves, then more of the mixture and preserves. Bake and eat with sauce. —Boston Bud- get. —Cream Pie: Four tablespoonfuls of rich cream, one tablespoonful of flour, apful of sugar, one cupful of cold yelks of two eggs, flavor with lemon, line a pie plate with pastry, pour in the mixture and bake at once, make a meringue of the whites of the oggs, spread smoothly on the top and brown delicately.—Koston Herald. —There is no artistic reason why you should not have a wood-engraving hung in an unpretentious frame in your par- lor, if it is a good wood-engraving. If you have two crayon pictures, or tgvo pictures in black-and-white of any kind, a wood-engraving is easily bought, at small expense, which is really a master- piece in its line. This you can make the top of your pyramid of the black- and-white group. Be sure to select a wood-engraving which will show across the room what it means.—Demorest's —Prune Pie: cup lemon, ¢ sug: pint rket price paid for Country Produce, and goods sold | Monthly. Remember the place—the big —Marble discolored by smoke can be cleaned by benzine liberally applied, and rubbed off with aclean flannel. If not then quite clean, apply a second time. Soap takes the polish from mar- ble. Polish with linen cloths. To take iron stains from marble, use an equal quantity of fresh spirits of vitriol and lemon juice shaken together ina bottle. Wet the spots, and in a few minutes rub with soft linen, and the spots will dis- appear. —A stoned olive stuffed with a well- flavored chicken force-meat is a delicious tid-bit at a picnic, or for any cold lunch- eon. Select the large queen olives for this purpose, cut with a penknife a slanting lengthwise cut in each olive, and continue to hold the knife next to the stone and thus remove it. It will come out easily. Stone a number, fill the opening with chicken force-meat, and if you wish to keep them perfectly in shape tie each one up and remove the string after a few hours and just before serving. —Pot Roast Ducklings: Put intoashal- low crock a thin strip of bacon anda tablespoonful of mixed spices (whole); clean or truss two ducklings and add hot water or sonp stock enough to cover up half way on the birds. Add parsley and afew celery seed. Place a narrow strip of bacon over each bird. Puton the lid and set the crock in a moderate oven, where the birds will cook slowly two hours. Remove the ducks, strain the sauce, reduce it one-third by boiling, add a gill of cider or claret, thicken with browned flour, simmer fifteen minutes, adding then a tablespoonful of lemon juice and serve with the ducks. HOPS AND INSECTS. Why English Farmers Hail the Advent of the Ladybird with Delight. It is well known that hops are an un- certain crop: they are like eels and like slippery sort of people, you never know when you have got them. Hops may look to be thriving, and really be thriv but that may be their ruin. The mold comes, and they are next to worthless. There isa | certain little fly, too, which is very in- jurious; it preys upon the vine and young shoots, and blasts the farmer's hopes. I have seen one of these flies ; caught, put into a box, and posted to London to some merchant or factor; and soon the report went the round of the papers and the local markets—“Fly in the hop! Fly in the hop!” But the fly has an enemy, before | which he is made to fly, or else is preyed on to his destruction. | enemy is the rather pretty insect, called | in Kent the ladycow, and in most other places the ladybird. It is well known | everywhere; bnt I never saw so many as I have seen in Kent. The farmers hail their advent with delight, for there is then an end of the fly, if it has made its appearance, and physical certainty that the ladycow will hold the garden against him. these ladycows, or rather ladybirds, come from I can not say, but I once wit- nessed a strange phenomenon when on the Admiralty Pier at Dover, for the ladybirds w terally rained down upon the floor of the pier, so that you could not step without crushing them. There were legions upon legions of them. Wherever they came from, they | | | | were doubtless bound for the hop dis- | | tricts, where they would be hailed as a | godsend, as doubtless they were. — All | the Year Round. The French Cook. Young Mrs. Henley (to visitor)—“I have just engaged a very efficient and high priced French cook. She is a per- | fect jewel. Mr. Henley says he couldn't | get along without her.” The visitor—“How nice!” The French cook (looking in through the door)—“‘Shure, missus, an’ skal! I | pale the praties or bile ‘em wid their | Jackets on?"—Munsey’s Weekly. tards, con-, That | Where | | A FAIR PHILANTHROPIST. An Enzlish Girl Who Worked in Factories to Learn What to Keform. Beatrice Potter is at present one of the most famou in England. tall and vigorous, of a decided Spanish type, with bril $s and talked-of women rto the warm ace. Miss Pot- n but itis neither h {wealth that entitles her to | tion she enjoys just now. | e distinc- For several ogist, ng his methods, and strivi ne of the found her jimbibing his do {put into prac jhe preached \aaritt fre ‘ malities an pared to go out in the world to serve j her fellow-creatures. Then did she un- theories pre- |dertake her Startling feat, the {success of w has puther name in fevery one’s mouth. Having read and [heard all manner of grewsome stories of the horrors endured by women in sweaters’ s . she dressed herself in the odious rags won by tbat class, went down nto = the found work, and for two months lived | and labored side by side with those r white slaves of the | needle. ew knew her secret, and so cleverly were her plans carried out that neither employers noremployes ever sus- pected her identity. When Miss Potter had thoroughly informed herself on all minutiw relating to the criminal tyranny the sweaters, and on the exercised hideous lives led by their female vic- tims, she threw off her disguise, re- turned tothe West End of town, gave exhaustive newspaper interviews, and appealed for legislative interference. So strong and unanswerable were her arguments, seconded by her own experi- ence, that Parliament is at present dis- cussing ways and means for righting this great wrong. Miss Potter is as un- compromising a Socialist as is compati- ble with her broad intellect and warm sympathies. Although not of them by birth or condition, her heart is with the people. She has been deeply touched by the manifold miseries of the London poor, and is ready to devote her ardent young life, with all its possibilities of selfish pleasure, to alleviating the wretchedness of the pauper population. In all of these signs of the times one seems to see the slow but sure prepara- tion women are making to fit themselves for self-government. Every day chron- icles the story of some woman who, find- ing her life untrammeled by the more secred duties of home, has slipped be- yond the bounds of narrow conservatism tolend a hand in raising the fallen or strengthening feeble knees. —Ilustrated American. ENGLAND'S ROYAL WOMEN. Their Reputation for Good Looks Is Said to Be Undeserved. What a fiction it is to talk about the beauty of any member of the English royal family. There could not be a More commonplace lot of women. The Princess of Wales is slender almost to emaciation; her eyes would be dull, but for the make-up which surrounds them; her cheeks are rouged and a wig always covers her head, which, I am given to understand, is completely bald. She has little if any bust, she limps as she walks, and she is almost stone dea one way and another, it is rather ening to read the mass of gush that is to be read daily in the British news- papers about this beauty, etc., of Eng- land's future Queen. She is, no doubt, an accomplished, amiable, virtuous woman, but in appearance she is an ab- solutely commonplace and altogether uninteresting person. All three of the Princesses of Wales have indifferent teeth and complexions and wretched figures. Noboay would position. The daughters of the Princess Christian are equally plain looking, and there is no promise of beauty in the young daughters of the Duchess of Edinburgh. As for Princess May, of Teck, who has so often been described as a beauty, all she can claim to possess is a passable figure and good eyes. Her face, however. is spoiled by the way in | Nose which suggests an Hebraic strain | somewhere or other in the family. | Of the many vaunted beauties of Lon- | don society only the Duchess of Leinster® would perhaps pass all over the es also comes unde Londonderry that head, and so does | Gencral Wolseley, who made her debut this year. La lley is now com- | pletely passce and is as much made up jas an opera bouffe prima donna. All the Duchesses are plain-looking women; even the two American Duchesses, Marlborough and Manchester, are too |far behind their youth to claim affilia- tion with Venus. The Duchess of Portland looks like a well-fed dairy maid, and the Duchess of Newcastle bears a marked resemblance | toa youngér edition of Mrs. Cleveland. The Dowager Duchess of Montrose isa | sight for the gods, with her flaxen wig jand canary-colored garments, not to | mention her enormous proportions She \certainly would not be permitted to enter a fashionable New York hotel until her rank had been explained. The Duchesses of Rutland, | while the Duchesses of Abercorn. Ham- ilton, Argyil and Westminster are abso- lutely plain and adelphia Times. Hadn't Any of the Symptoms. Fair Entertainer (to young operator) —What side of the market—is that the | Way to put it?--are you on this week, | Mr. Brokaw? Young Operator (at the other end of the sofa)—I am what they call a ‘bear,’ | Miss Kajones. | Fair Entertainer—Indeed! You—you don’t act the least bitin the world like a bear, Mr. Brokaw.—Chicago Tribune. —Touris: (in Oklahomaj—‘“Do you find ita hard matter to make collections here?” C ope! You see, everybody knows I can hit the bull's eye nine shots out o° ten.”"—Puck. She is superbly handsome, | live skin, big brown | and wonderful | birth, nor een a devoted pupil | look at them twice but for their exalted | which her upper lip protrudes, and by a | | Miss Wolseley, the young daughter of | Leeds, | Cleveland and Richmond are old women, | distinguished.—Phil- | DISEASE OF ANY FORM USE HEISKELL’S OINTMENT. It has been in use many years, and has proved infallible in every case, from simple | Pimptes and Blotches on the face and Sore Eyelids to obstinate Eczema, Tetter and | Itching Piles. old by Druggists. 50 cts. per Bex. Send for Treatise on Skin Diseases and Certificates of Cure. D, C. MIZE, Insurance & Land ACENT. Negotiates Loans on improved farms and will rent and imanage prop erty for non-residents. — Will give all j business entrusted to my care, my personal attention Collections promptiy made and remitted. Office north side over Bernhardt’s drug store Some Need Money, Some Must Borrow! A careful prudent man who wants to borrow money for any purpose will always seek to get the loan where the terms most favorable. We can now offer the lowest rate loan on from one to five years time. Notes drawn from one, two, three or five years. Money Paid out Promptly. Come and see us before you make loan. BANKERS LOAN AND TITLE CO: By P. C Furkersox, Manxacen West Sid@ Square, Butler, Mo. LUMBER! H.C. WYATT & SON, Save money by calling on us for — prices on LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES PAINTS. -And all— ‘Building Material ——Our motto 1s—-—- HIGH GRADES -———— And——_ OW PRICES Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and ovheis interested heestate of D. D. Smith steceased, that I. J. W. Ennis, admin- istrator, and as such in charge of said estate, intend te make final settlement thereof at the next term of the Bates county probate court. | in Bates county state of Missouri, to be held at Butler on the 12th day of February, 1x91. 1 meat J. W. ENNIS, Apsrsrstraton Executor’s Notice. reis hereby given. that letters testa- pof David Atcheson de- to the undersigned on das of November, . by the Probate of Bateacounty Missouri peTsons having claims against srid estate required to exhibit them for allowance to executrix within one year after the date of id letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of ssid estate: and if such claims be not exhibited w two years from the date of this publieltion, they shall be forever barred. Thissth day of Nov., 1590 MARY ATCHESON, Execatrix. Notice of Fi.al Settlement. nereby given to all creditors, and the estate of Martin B atwe, Martin V. Owen and Haggard, exe 3 of said estate, in- inal settlement thereof, at the T e Rates county probate court, in Bates county, state of Missouri, to be held at Batler on ‘th day of February, I, or as soon thereafter as we can be heard in said court M. V. OWENS L. C. HAGGARD. Executors. n Tm Sl-at Junters } third | Beall es: Whereas, Newton Beall b: ed March os. Iseé, and ers offce withi: sunri, ia book Ni tothe ractibed r i and being sitwate in the coan- es and state of Missouri, to-wit: e undivided two-severths of two- the lands belonging to the Milton uated in township thirty-nine ‘one (SI), (Osage) Bates coun- nveyance Wss made in trust ecure the payment of one certain note fully ibed in desd of | been dea Yment ofthe principal more than one year’s thereon, now past due and unpaid Te. at the request of the legal hold- er of said note and pursuant to the conditions of the deed of trast, L will proceed to sell the above described prem at pablic vendue to the highest bidder forcash, at the east front of the court house in the city of Butler, unty of Fates and state of Missouri, on } Tharsday, December 4th, 1890, Detween the hours of # o'clock in the forenoon and five o'clock in the afternoon of that day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and coat. WH ALLEN Mm Trustee. | Trustee's Sale. Whereas, John Dinan and Anna Dinan husband and wite, by their deed of trust dated June 26th, 1838, and recorded ir the recorder's office within and tor s county, Missouri, in book No, 33 page 210 conveyed to the undersigne |! istee the tollowing described seal es- tute lying and being situate in the coun- ty of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: Beginning at the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section thirteen (15) township thirty-eight (3s) Tange No twenty north twenty-seven ( ine (3). and running rods. thence east elev en and one-half (11 1-2) rods, thence south twenty-seven (27) rods, thence west to place of beginying, containing two acres, aleo north halfof the south halfof the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section No IS tewn ship 3s. range No also the following de- scribed land, beginning at the southeast cor- ner of the northeast quarter of the athweat terof section No. 13, township 38 range #, runring thence north four chaina and 38 links, thence west chains and 121-2 links, thence south 4 chains and 3x links, thence east to place of beginning: in all above described neces of land containing eighteen acres more or ess Which conveyance Was made in trust to se- cure the pryment of one certain note fully de- scribed in said deed of trust; and where- as detault has been made inthe payment ot the principal of said note and more than one year’s accrued interest thereon, now past due and unpaid. Now therefore atthe request of legal holder ot said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, | will proceed te sell the above described premises at public yen. due, to the highest bidder tor cash, at thé east front door of the court house, in the city ot Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Thursday, December 18, 1890, between the hours ot Q o'clock in the forenoon and § o'clock in the afternoon ot that day, tor the purposes ot satisty- ing said debt, interest and costs. 1-4t AF. HICKMAN, Trustee aS = Administrator's Notice. Notice 1s hereby administration on W. Mize decease given that letters of the estate of Martin has been granted to the undersigned, on the the 13th day ot September, r8go, by the probate court oft Bates county, Mi-souri- All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them tor allowance to the administrator within one year after date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit ot said estate; and it such claims be not exhibited within two years trom the date of this publication they shall be forever barred. This sth day of September, | 1899. DEC. MIZE, Adr trator. | a Si Public Adwinistrator’s Notice. No is hereby given, that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, made on the ith day of November, Iswo. the undersigned public admistrator for said county, has taken charge of the estate of Emily Cree, deceased All persons having claims against said estate required to exhibit them to me for allow- Within one year after the date of said or- der, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate; and if said claims be not exhib- ited within two years from the date of this ~ publication, they will be forever barred. Thissth day of Nov 1sv0 J. W. ENNIS, Public Apministrator. Honest Work! 2.8! by earnest men and women. We furnish the capital! If you mean business, drop usa card and get some facts that will open your eyes! A legitimate line of goods, and honest men wanted to introduce them in town and coun- try. Don’t wait! Address, at once W. H McLAIN, St. Louis, Me. o1-4 Get WORE THAR GLIDDEN 200FT MORE THAI 4 THER 2 xv AM A STEER im WIRE ee that each spool hus Diamond trade mar’ sanufactured only by Freeman Wire and Irc 4o., Bt. Louis, Mo. Send 6 cents for sample. For Sale by R. R. DEACON, LER, MO

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