The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 18, 1891, Page 7

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Bucklen’s Aruica Salve, The Best Salve inike world for Cuts Sores, or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by H. L Tucker, druggist. system, such at Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Bide, &c. While their most remarkable success has been shown in cur:og SICK Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills aro equally valuablo in Constipation, curing aud pre- ‘venting thisannoying complaint, while they alao Correct all disordors of thestomach stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they onlz ~ HEAD Bately their; ) ma! ‘whooncetry them will find these little pills valu- able in somany ways that they will not be wil- fing todo without them. Butafter alleick bead ACHE {Xs the bane of so many lives that hero is whers ‘womake our great boast. Our pillscureit while Others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small end very easy to take. One or two pills makea dose. | ] They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or 4 eS their tle action please all who tase them. In vialsat 25cents; fivefor¢1. Sold A by druggists overywhero, or sent by mail. CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE NO MORE EYE-GLASSES mo Ae ih MITCHELL’S EVE-SALVE A Certain, Safo, and Effective Remedy for SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, Producing Long-Sightedness, & Restore ing the Sight of the Old. Cures Tear Drones Granulatione Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes, ASD PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF AND PERMASEST CURB. WE may be used to adv: Seld by ali Dr: WANTED -— CHICKENS EGGS I will pay the highest market price for chickens and egg delivered at my store at Virginia, Mo. : Talso have good f-ed stable in connection with my store. y Nexson M. NestLerope EQUITABLE LOAN AND INVESTMENT ASSOCIATION The Equitable Loan & Investment As- sociation issues a series of 1,000 shares each month—and offers to investors an opportunity to sive money and receive a nandsome interest on their invest- ment. ‘The investor ot $ 1 oo permo. tor 100 mo's rec’ $ 200 CO z2¢ “ae a' + 8 + ee “ Pe oe Soa 1,000 00 fe 4° 4 i ges » ft 4 ge s * We also issue paid up stock and pay interest semi-annually. We have money tg loan on good city property. Anyone desiring a good profitable investment or loan will do well to call and see us R. C. SN&ED, Sec’y., Sedalia. Mo J. U. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo. wEAR Brown-Desnoyers SHOE CO.’S rake s taey —t! ays babe SEN, MC Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,SaltRheum Fever, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains | Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- robust enough, but he w tively cures Viles, or no pay required. It from “that tired feeling is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction street car he ST A EE i HYPNOTIZED HIM. How a Strong-Mix ina Street Car. The man was a six-foote so on decided to stand, for he felt that he rest just as much as they. Three or four women needed ti Straps with ostent mus efforts, but they were neither young nor pret and he sat still in his tended to read The door was sudden and a middle-aged car. She corne woinan ente had short iron hair. a Roman n ad steely blue : her mouth wore a determined ¢ sion and there were stiff gray hairs gr on her firm-looking chin. She strong-minded. so much so, in fact, that the man in the corner said to himself that if her legs were half as strong as {her mind it wouldn't hurt her to stand. Under her woolly pood! at aay anomaly, andhe wond« had | usurped one of the perquisites of her more frivolous sisters | Onshe came toward his corner and planted herself directly in front of him. | He buried his face deep in his paper, looked in she carried a tiny, hi t but he could feel her eyes upon him and jhe had the sensation of being under strange influence. He began to | some | feel a sort of numbness in his fingers. the paper dropped from before his face, ing him through and through. heavens! him. He tried to throw off the spell, to sig- nal the conductor to stop the ear—any | thing to escape those eyes. powerless. Suddenly impeled by some unknown force, he rose, bowed politely, and of- Great but he was it meekly. ner of canines all the rest. held it tenderly asa mother holds her babe, but amid the snickers of the de- lighted passengers he held it to his face and kissed it fondly. He thought he was married and that this was his baby. On and on they rode, people came and people went, still the man stood caress- ing the abominable little beast. Finally the woman signaled for the rar to stop. With a grim smile she took the dog from his arms and left the car, and the man. limp and exhausted, fell back into his seat. As his scattered wits returned he found that he had gone four miles be- yond where he had intended getting off, and that he had missed an important engagement. He hailed a cab and re- traced his way. a sadder and wiser man: and lest he sometime should meet some one who was his fellow-passenger on that trip he has moved to another part of the city, and notwithstanding his mortal fear of pneumonia, he is now riding in the front se of the grip.— Chicago Mail. and poodles more than rat Had No Une for a Cab. A sad-faced young man, whose per- sonal appearance indicated that he w accustomed to rubbing against the rough edges of the world, stopped in front of the City Hall one afternoon and entered into conversation with a man who was standing on oné of the stone steps. A cab-driver, with an eye ever watchful forachance to turn a wheel. observed that the man on the steps seemed to be trying todirect the sad-faced young man to some place in the tern part of the city. Waiting until the young man turned to leave, the eab-driver approached him and said: “Have a cab: take you to any part of the city “No,” said the young man. feebly, but with a smile, “I'm looking for the office of the poor commissioner, but I guess I'll walk."—Detroit Free Press. A Little Slow. The English traveler stood or the slippery dock at New York, ready to board the steamer for home. His Amer- iean friend shook him warmly by the hand and bade him farewell. “Be reful in going up the way,” said the latte “It is iey. that matter, however,” he added, next six or seven days.” The Englishman, with a sad, dreamy preoeeupied look on his face, went aboard the ship. Years passed. The American, now a gray-haired old man. was sitting down to breakfast one day when a cablegram, just received. was handed to him. It was from his English friend and con- tained these words: “Ha! H It had bored its way through his skull at last.—Chicago Tribune. —Albertus Vogt. of Dunnellon, Fla., had a gun stolen from him by two ne- groes he had in his employ. |had got some distance from thé house they attempted to manipulate the lock, | but not understanding its mysteries, {the gun went off and shot one of the |men in the ankle, filling it with buck- | shot. pack of hounds, who surrounded the wounded man and ran his companion up a tree. and they were captured. —Wife to Her Husband. by dear, you must go to the theater with me to-night. two tickets—for you and me—to see “All the Comforts of Home.” Hus- band—"'Yes, indeed. iet us go: that is something I have never seen. that sucha toswell told Johnson thing as a beggar starving to death in the streets of a Seotch city was un- heard of. Johnson replied: “This does not arise from the w of beg- rars. but the i Seotehman In Gow the de saw a tombstone under it was t when alive. Atchison Globe ess ont f not the that s mm aded Woman Got a Seat and looked s suffering the let the women already standing in the car. hanging to the ty ing and he saw those cold. blue eyes look- | The woman was hypnotizing | fered the woman his seat. As she took it, without a word of thanks, she | handed him her dog to hold. He took He, who detested all man- | He not only took it and | will be ‘igh sea all around you for the | After they | “Now, hub- | Ihave just bought | It is stated that the total appro- | piiatious of the Fifty first congress , were equivolent to a tax of $16 per! roa the entire population of ted States; or $8 per capita That per annum. is what Tom 1 Us business —K. C. Star Anything was business — that would tak ney out of the treas- ury If the Reed cougress had been reclected the goverment would soon have found it necessary But thanks Reed to make an assignment. tu Providence Tom and his Vandels will be scarce in the new cougress. The World's Fair. 4 Ihe excitement caused by the great eventis scarcely equalled by that pro uced by the great discovery of Dr Miles—the estorative Nervine. It speedily cures nervous pr on, cotite, pain, dullness and contu- sion in head, fits, sleeplessness, the biues, neuralgia, palvitation, monthly pains, ete. C W. Saow & Co., of Syr- acuse, N. Y.; Talbott & Moss, ot Green burg, Ind., and A. W. Blackburn, of Wooster, O., aay that “Vhe Nervine - better than auything we ever sold, a fives universal satisfaction.’ Dr. Miles’ new illustrated treatise the Nerves and Heart and trial bottle tree at H. L. Tucker's drug store. e: on It is greatly to be pittied that the | Missouri Legislature has only seven ore full pay days in which to legis ate. It has been a prolifie body. Kleven hundred bills have been lutroduced in the house. About iSeventy of these have passed the x them the famous True the _tyxing corporations, requiriqy week house. and amo: ose bill ~ measure ly payment of wages, convict cen- tract and other bills which created so much talk at the begin in labor of the session Lave not yet be- come laws; but a bill looking to the resuaining of unregistered billy to engrossiment Friday by the house. and many sub- jects of natio.al importance have been discussed.—[Nevada Mail. goats was sent Miles’ Nerve & Liver Patis, An important discovery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new principle. They pyeedily cure billiousness, bad taste, tor did liver, piles and eonstipation. Splen jdid for men, women and children, ; smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for 25 cents. Samples tree at H. L. Tuck- er‘s Drug Store. tetvr | Tho follow mile wrest of Foaled in Sst. Sine OF c F Clay 2 Cyclone pe No. MAMBRINO CHIEF JUNIOR ‘igh Dam by MeDonans Mamtrin 2nd dam by Mark Anthony | 3rd dam by Old Forester i 4th dam by Imp Bedford The report started Mr. Vogt's | $20 to insure a colt t the county. Will n stand NEW HALL STAMP IMPORTED CLYDE, Registered in Vol. 12 of the Clydeés- dale Stud Book. Bred by Alexander Mutch—Mains of New Hall, Stone ven Scotianc. Foaled April 1SSs— 6 hands high, weight 1,350 in only tair esh; color, bay: white ratch on face, hind teet white, heavy bone and s ed with great activity le and kind. Will be permitted io ve 15 mares at the low price ot $15. tions same as Mambrino Chiet jr Sire. Glenalb 13), Vol6. Dam: Love (152g), Vol 5. Sire of Dam— Garobalda (1661), Vol 4. Extended | pedigree at stable, rnnning back to his | 72th grand sire. MAMBRINO CHIEF JR. His oldest colts in Bates County, are uniform color cannot be excelled by any horse that stands in south-west Missouri. 2 eS ne Ihad a severe attack of catarrh and became so deaf I could not avar common conversation. I suffered terribly with roariny in y head I procured a bottle of Ely’s cream balm, and in three wer could hear as well as ver could, and now I can say to ali those who are afflicted with the wors estarrb, take Elv’s C be cured aby Man, Woman or chil from catarrh —A E New ling. Mich. George Eliot says: “IL suy one reason why we are seldom to comfort our neighbors with our words is, that our wiil gets adulte ted in spite of ourselves, before it can pass our lips Senat r Elect Peffer at oa wild Western picnic a year ago was voted a leather madal as the champ- That ion cauned oyster cater. is the story they are printi iu east. May Thank Her Stars. Mrs Phe narrow escape ot Seasles, of Elaharc, In ar ture dea his wonder She states that “tor twenty years my heart troubled me greatly Tbecame worse. tlad smother ing spells, short breath, ering, could not sleep on my lett side, had much pain in oreast, shoulder and stomach. Ankles swelled, had much heada: he and Gizziness. Treatment dig until [tried Dr Mites and Restorative Nervi me nc Sew Hear rod Cure e. The fir-t bot- te helped me, and Twas soon. virtually cured, Forsaleat HL. ‘Pucker’s dru store. A fine book on the heart and nerves tr Vain improvements is one way of distributing wealth «It is estema ted that to complete young George Vanderbilt's castle in North Caroli na it will require ten years of labor and the expenditure of from 8 to 10 mi lion dollars. Drunkenness—Liquor Habit—In all the World there is but one Dr. Haines’ Golden Specitic. It can be given in a cup of tea or cot- tee without the knowledge of the person taking it. effecting a speedy and perma nent cure, whether the patient is a mod- erate drinker or an aicoholic wreck. Thousands ot drunkards have been cured who have taken the Golden Spe- cific in their coffee -without their knowl- edge, and to-day believe they quit drink- ing of their own free will No harmtul effects results from its administration. Cures guaranteed. Send tor circular and tul particulars. A ‘dress in confidence, Galden Specific Co, 1s; Race Street, Cineimnati, O. cure. asqy “WEST WARD STOCK FARM, PASSAIC, BATES COUNTY. MO. Five Miles North of Butler. day of July, 1891. Ea oe Dark bay, weighs 1,275 pounds fine st never been trained; can st now coming two year old a bring Chief iNo h @¥~ Lady Thorne 2:is Woodford Mambrino of , H | Sire 2H ‘ 2:21 Mambrino Patchen No 58 sire of 17—2:30 hoises and grand sire of 64—2:30 horses and sired the dams of {! 2:39 horses ‘Dalits -4; and wv Ganins Lothers ee yt (Mambrino Paymaster ‘Mambrino Chief No i Stke OF |Lady Thorne 2:18 | NG eet we | ivemn the damon Gol: 2:21 |Mambrino Patchen t lish. No 58 Sire of 30 | horses, grand sire of | 64—2:30 horses and ( ! SIRE OF {Jim Porter and otners in ES i Mrs Candle Grand dam of Clark | Chief No so: grand reed the great Guy 2:12 1-2 and suck, money Jue w sen colt com JACK -—-ARVILLERY This fine Kentucky bred Jack stand at the same stable, at & a colt to stand and suck, or $20 tor ja colts to stand suck. Ar en himselrt to be a fine pe a sure toal ge hi t re his ¢ as Mambr black Ja | up the functions gencraily, lack points, heavy mane P i i sink oF Harry Clay 2 Durango 2 In Mine Dakots and th as in Kansas, South states where exists, the farmers’ alliance is uey t 1 to the denoeratic squarely to the be-Deuiverat. is much very well BY e the ¢ 0. p. tiud aivop hole to Wabis movemen a liarce. Ouce Mean the old) party, they very natural Want to gravi tate into the der oeratic ranks. There ifn in the GD. or any ether repubaoan sheet getting m the way of he ude. Such men as Palmer ean Uways receive the sup port of the m ‘Thr story is told of a German, who took the hands of his clock to the maker to have them. fixed, because they did not keep proper time. Of course, the clock-maker demanded the works, as them lay the trouble. Boils and blotches; pimples and other eruptions on the exterior tell of a disordered condition of the blood within. If you have these indicationa, be wise in time, and take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It puts the liver and kidneys in good working order, purifies the blood, cleanses the system from all impuri- ties, from whatever cause arising, and tones “Golden Medical Discovery” checks the frightful inroads of Scrofula, and, if taken in time, arrests the march of Consumption of the Lungs (which is Lung-scrofula), purifies and enriches the blood, thereby curing all Skin and Scalp Diseases, Ulcers, Sores, Swell- ings, and kindred ailments. It is po' tonic as well as alterative, or blood- sing, in its effects, hence it strengthens the system. and restores vitality, thereby dispelling all those languid, “tired feclings” experienced by the debilitated. Especially has it mani- fested its potency in curing Tetter, Salt- rheum, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick Neck, and En- nds. jolden Medical Dey, " is the only blood and lung remedy, sold by druggists, and guaranteed by its manufacturers, to do all that it is claimed to accomplish, or moncy paid for it will be promptly refunde: Wortn's DIispENSARY MEDICAL 4 DCTA= TION, Manufacturers, No. 663 Main Street, Budalo, N.Y. S500 OFFERED by the manufactur ° Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, for an Micuiabic case of Catarrh in the Head, stock wrill stand for service at my stable half assaic, Bates county, Mo., for the year 1891, the season to commence the first day of April and close on the first ind tail, 161) hands high and yle and action, good bone & muscle, has low quarters, in less than 45 seconds— nd for size, stile, trotting] action§’and (Mambrino Paymaster . < Mambrino (gr sire of Rysdick’s Hamble- \toniam) Son of Imp ' Messenger | Dam the aam of, Gol- Uiah, Wn Noe Be SIRK OF ohn Morgan vacke M Cay Be. 8 sine or M. Clap ds, Cassius s1-+ | Geom Patchen 2:24 1-2 : and 6 (and others in 2:30 list ‘Haminn nx! Bishop's Bambletonian Ea ise of Imp Measenger Messenger& Rocking {ham blood | Untraced due caution to prevent acci- REN To horse-men and hay We will state care select- © as the vers inspe nprove you or fine mber or past or Sat owners risk. CHAS S. CONCKLIN. Prop: J. 5. WARNOCK. Assistant. ietor. | with | his regret that wi | As soon as the full s — a CHINESE NEWGATE. Orient +! Vietims of the Axe Go to the Scene in Baskets All Labeled. We sre new on oar way to the mmch- @reace | execution ground, which Tap. proach most reluctantly. for visions of glittering swords and headless bodies dance before my eyes, says 4 Visitor to Have L not read that the worst kind * stran- sof several of which may uning against the wall?” With a at pull and a gathering of my shattercd nerves we follow Ah Cum through a little gate and sce a long. na a kind of alley a with rows a pots. ea of ground— feet filled irthenware scovered with ar immense Lrows dried palm leat C\ and I gaze at razled. doubtful. infinit = Is it the execution ground or only a potters yard? Almost immediately Ah Cam ends our suspense by breaking forth in his usual rattling way and introduces us to Executioner Number Three--a dried-up, Wizened, little old man, dressed in tat- ters, with a grin so fiendish and diabol- ical that it turns me cold with fear and horror. Nething but a head dripping Ddlood will i Cc The wretched little man ly interprets his questioning. lool: tragically off te a far quic trins again, steps rwmmer, dips ¢ and drags out -asku ft ihe traditional skull, kept always on hand the blood-seeking tourist-a dry. bleached | bone, to compensate him for the agonies of mind he has gone through Still appreciating our disappointment, Executioner Number One — appears brandishing a sword: he goes through a sort of a pantomime—an imaginar cution exe- nd expresses to ourinterpreter are not more fortu- nate in our selection of time, for to- morrow seven men are to be put to death! The place is always open to for- eigners, who sometimes witness the most bloodcurdling scenes. 1 believe the average number executed is 300 per annum. The condemned are brought to the ground in baskets, with strips of paper fastened to their backs stating name, nature of crime and punishment de- served. The ling chee. or 1,000 cuts, is the most terrible of all punishments. ‘The criminal is tied, hand and foot. to the cross, the stabs follow in rapid suc- cession, but never striking a vital part till finally the presiding mandarin gives the sign to the executioner for the last fatal stroke. Ah Cum tells us that the execution-ground, when not used, is taken as a drying-yard by the neigh- boring potters.--N. Y. Journal. HOW ELKS GROW HORNS. In Ten Weeks a New Pair of Antlers Are Grown, With the loss of the antlers the stag changes his disposition entirely and be- comes as docile and tractable as a lamb. He remains in this condition of temper until the beginning of March. when he shows a disposition to lurk in sequested spots of the glen and timidly avoid the presence even of his kind. During this period, on the spot where jthe antlers were, a pair of protuber- ances will make their uppearan covered with a soft, dark, velvety skin. These will attain a considerable growth in a few days. ‘The carotid arteries of these protuberances will enlarge with them in order to supply « sufficiency of —nourish- ment. When the new antlers have at- tained their full growth. which will be in ten weeks after the old ones have been shed. the bony rings at the base through which the antlers pass will begin to thicken. and gradually filling up will compress the blood vessels and ultimately obliterate them. The vel- vety skin that surrounds the bone. be- ing thus deprived of nourishment will lose its vitality and will be rubbed off in shreds by the stag on the edges of rocks or other hard substances. » of the antlers is attained the docile disposition othe elk will disappear and he will become once more for the year the fierce and j unfriendly king of the glen. | The age of the elk, according to writ- | ' { ers on natural history, is computed by the rumber of points on the antlers.— San Francisco Chronicle. Luxury on Wheels. —Parlor-car travel on the lines run- the increase, and this luxury has long | ning into New York is constantly on | | | the parlor-e since ceased te be the peculiar property | of the rich. With the popularization of = has come a change in the | attitude of the expectant porter. He is | still expectant, but he no longer | despises a small tip. and in the case of | travelers taking only short journeys he | sometimes omits the accustomed exac- , tions. and permits his natural victims to find their way off the car without the | Suggestive officiousness that once char- es or mmare Changes ownerhip or about to he re- | be responsible for accipents should any occur: but will u i acterized his manner. Not Far. Mrs. Potts Just to think of you talk- ing to me in such a style!—you who used to swear I was an angel! Mr. Potts—Look here. my dear, that isn't fair: you know it isn’t. What is the use of twitting a man about the lies he told fifteen years ago ?—Jury. Stil At It. Mrs. Pancake (to Tramp)—-What do you do when you are working Tramp-I'm a canvasser. Mrs. Pancake—-What do you eanvass for? Tramp ‘eloping with the luncheon)— My livin’, mum.— Texas Siftings. ~The young lady who made seven hundred words out of “conservatory.” last autumn. has run away from home. Her mother wanted her to make three loaves of bread ont of flour. ottoknow who wiote “Beanuti- it one but desires —from the to the but rarely quote instan ed up for other purposes in public form than for the e+remo

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