The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 21, 1891, Page 7

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Py CURE Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles tnel> ent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Bide, &c. 7 Feanarkablo success bas been shown _ SICK _ yet Carter’s Little Liver Pills are equally rly web Constipation, tithe te soeres sil diagecr4of thoetormacn at reine and regulate Even it arouse HEAD tele en tna tratag gupnit Destoune: iy does notend here,and those eee eee Little pills valu- fing to Popa ing, Gh I Par ulbatch not pe wil ‘ACHE. 'Iathe bano of so many Hives thet here fs where ‘Womakeour groat boast, Our pillscureit while = es , DR.J.W.LOWRY’S Office FARMERS BANK, one door east on Ohio street second door cast of Public School Office hours 8 to 12 Calls answered at all ot Express office. Residence North side of street. a.m zto6p.m times. Ureatment of all diseases both Acute and Chronic Charges reasonable sultation free Medicine turnished. Co All who are afflicted ot whatever Char- acter will lose nothing by calling to see me. Improved Passenger Equipments The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. is now running free reclining chair cars on all throngh trains be tween Hannibsl, Mo, and Taylor Texas. This in connection with its through sleeping car services makes the M. K. & ‘T. Ry the best equip- ped line in the southwest Gaston Mester, G. PP. & FT. Agw ts Sedalia, Mo. W. M. ARNOLD. CONSTABLE MT. PLEASANT POW NSHIP, 1 attention given to private col- Speci lections. John Atkison’s Pension Avency. Over Dr Bveringham’s store rooms West Side - Buter. Mo. (Successor to J. G Walker) DRUGGIST. H.L. TUCKER, | Dealer in Drugs and Medicines Prescriptions Carefully Compound- ed. Anight Clerk can always be had by pulling the Knobin front | | | | | \ LUMBER! H.C. WYATT & SON, Save money by calling on us for prices on LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES. PAINTS. ——And all——— Building Material — Our motto is—— HIGH GRADES PORE, een LOW PRICES [ A TALE OF TWO COASTS. Proves for the Millionth Time that Truth is Stranger than Fiction. You might have on the upper deck had you been at the dock when the Oregon steamed out into the bay. She. a 1, dark ed, dark-eyed woman of less than thirty; he a portly, well-dressed man of less than férty. They were bride and sroum, on their way to Portiand to spend the honeymoon. ‘Teu years ago, on board a dancing barge in New York harbor, they met for the first time. Young Curran was with youthfulness and wine “I want a wife,” he dance. “And I want freedom from stern par- Whic seen way said, after the ents,” said she. . ‘How better to secure is thun by taking a husband? = [ll-a— well—” “Come, don't hesitate; here's a man | who will splice us." And spliced they | were then and there, both looking upon the matteras ahuge joke. The maiden’s father, who bad been anchored in the wine-room before; came into the cabin just as the ceremony was concluded. John Murray—for that was his name— Was dumfounded, for he recognized in ‘he half-tipsy individual who had un- kingly tied the knot an old political henchman, a man fully qualified to offi- ciate. It was a legal marriage. An up- roarensued. The divorce court shortly annuled the marriage, the criminal lawyer, Charles Spencer, being em- ployed by the irate father. Ten years later the bride of a mo- ment found herself a widow in San Francisco with two children and an aged father to care for. For awhile they lived on Tehama strect; they then moved to Brannan street.near Seventh. For two years they had been on the golden coast, but their life was any- thing but golden, for poverty had found John Murray iu his old Her name was Mrs. Marray Driscoll, and she signed it in full to the little note she wrote to the agent of a certain building here asking that she might be appointed as janitress. The same portly, well dressed man that accompanied her to Portland y terday called on her the next day. little widow colored with pleasure; surely she would have the place now. “You are a widow, I believe, Mrs. Driscoll?” was the first’ business ques- tion. “My husband died thre “You are from New York Ps: The y ars ago.” “Yes, We knew better times there, s “Were you ever married before?” no—yes—that is—why, you see——” and she hesitated as the recol- lection of her girlish prank came back toher. Then gathering courage “You see, it was only a joke, sir. was married once before to ay man named Morris Curran, but “I am that young seapegrace’s older self,” said the agent, and then there was a scene. Their courtship was brief, and then they were off on their honeymoon. — onal Labor Tribune. MATERIAL FOR MIGHTY ARMIES. I ng The Gigantic Forces Which May Yet Face ‘ach Other in Europe. ‘The United States, which admittedly does everything on a large seale, gave proof during the late domestic war of what it could do in the way of placing vast armies in the field, hundreds of thousands upon cither side. The shock of these enormous forces when only parts of them were thrown together upon oceasions between the beginning and the end of the struggle was felt al! the world over and excited the interest of military leaders everywhere. But since % many and important changes have occurred in the art of war, chief among them being the substitution of new arms and ammunition for the old. Military invention has sought to ren- der protracted wars and many battles impossible; they must necessarily, under the new order of things, be short, sharp and decisive—exeept possi- bly in a country of such v resources and extent of territory as ours. Since 1871, when the Franco-Prussian | | I: war came to an end, the great con- tinental nations of Europe have been preparing for what is feared will be a general struggle. it is not only new tactics, new weapons and new powder they have invented, but those interest- ed have set up new positions of offense and defense, and especially have they effected means to place enormous hosts in the field at short notice, and to quickly transport them from place to place. Almost first in the plans of Rus- sia, Germany, Austria, France and Italy is the system of strategieal rail- roads. With their preparations far advanced or completed, it is evident that the late federal and confederate armies of the United States would make but meager show compared with the forces that the countries of the continent could bring into the field. An English military writer sets down the population of Russia in round numbers at 120,000,000, one-sixth, or 20,000,000, of which, it is stated, can be, first and last. drafted into the army. That, however, an extravagant claim. Assuming that France should be Russia’s ally, in the | event of war, as it is likely she would | be, she has a population of 40,000,000, or 5,000,000 men fit for soldiers. Together these two countries might have a mili- tary contingent of. say, 20,000,000, from which it would be practicable to promptly reeruit a foree of from 3,000, 800 to 5,000,000. | On the other side there would be Ger- | many, Austria and Italy, whose ags gate population approximates to that of Russia. To these there might be ; added the 20.000,000 of Turkey, and finally the 39,090,000 of Great Britain and Ireland. From these combined populations there could be drawn, it is | estimated, a | than those of R as large or larger and France. It is difficult to imagine such gigantic forces opposed to each other. and of course would not eppesed i y e battle. their enormous pro- portions sugges! men could be different be so but mauch is sa intervals ever oceur.— Philadelphia Ledger. them standing | largest hotels could be deposited in it, | and portiens of fences in its course, | burying them or carrying them away. | yea SOCIAL DIFFERENCES. Hl General Equality of Human Beings Utterly Impossible. Hi Were a single family to be cast upon | the shore of a fertile but uninhabited island. the struggle between man and natur ld begin at e to once the full limit of hi Such terms its of property. inheritance, “private property,” | “capital and labor,” ‘higher and lower }elasses.” and the ideas for which they | | stand, might never be known to them. | tut as the pepulati ner re- | strictions on the use of property, and | ! yovernment in some fi would be re- | quired nerations, | fameng the ye degrees | | of ability. and mental, would | bbe found. Gifke es would arise, and he perpetuated environments. That would oa such an island mar parts of t dissimilar which inevitably occur sts itself in all he world. Customs and laws differ, but wherever society € eral general distinctions appear. poor, including not only paupers and the indigent, but those who earn barely enough to support them, and whom the sickness of two or three days would transform into objects of charity, con- stitute in most countries an immense majority. In the United States, owing toextent of territory, fertility of soil, mineral resources, navigable rivers, sea-coast, variety of climate, isolation and the need of development, the poor have been less numerous than in the old world; but they are now increasing more rapidly than heretofore. At the other extreme are the rich.the mere income of whose: possessions at current interest, with only the care necessary to superintend their invest- ments, is sufficient to support them in luxury, though many of them may con- tinue in business for its pleasure and power, or in the hope of adding to their wealth. Between these is the great middle class, having ‘neither riches nor poverty.” subdivided into those who are hopefully pressing upward to the envied station of the rich, and those who, from infirmity, losses, the rise of new modes of transacting business to which they can not adapt themsclves, and misfortunes, are declining toward poverty. Intellectual gifts and acqui- sitions make other distinctions. In all nations the number of the ignorant is far greater than that of the learned, le in the first por e number rs of the globe a r well-infor med.—Dr. J..M. Buckley, in Harper's Magazine. NOVEL RAT TRAPS. Five Milk Cans Cap! Ro There were five old milk cans in an frequently used storehouse connected with a grocery in the village of Avoca. A few days ago twoor three boys were in the storehouse playing. They placed the milk cans in a row and amused themselves for awhile by pitching ears of corn at them, to see who could put the mostin aecan. There were ears of in each can when the boys quit and left the storehouse. The y the proprietor of the store had oceasion to go into the storehouse. The sounds that greeted him at first startled him. Jt was a ceaseless grating and thumping and = squaling combined. He went to one of the milk cans and looked into it. ze was alive with immense struggling to get out. one of the tive milk cans contained a swarm of rats. It was not until Willis learned of the boys and the corn that he could explain the presence of the rats in the The rats had jumped down into the cans to get the corn, but it was im- possible for any one of them to get out again. How to dispose of the enormous number of rodents was at first a puzzler to the groceryman, but he finally hit upon a plan. He put the covers on the cans and secured them, and rolled the to the creek. Then opening the i just enough to let water run in the | cans, he filled each one, and drowned the rats. When the cans were emptied, the least number of rats in any can was found to be twenty-three. One can had forty-one. ‘There were one hundred and | I fifty-three rats in all. When people thereabout want to rid themselves of rats, they know how to do it effeetual- ly.—N. Y. Sun. re 153 Rats iz corn ears. The Professor Named A class in natural history tried to fool their teacher, so they put a woeodpeck- er’s bill on an owl's head, topped it with a kingfisher’s crest, set this upon a heron’s neck and a quail’s body, added a pair of swallow's wings, fastened on one side a hawk’'s foot and claws, upon the other side a snipe’s leg, then finally stuck on a pheasant’s tail and sent the specimen in to be named. The profes- sor said it was undoubtedly a new spe- cies, and he called it Trickus conglom- eratus.—Golden Days. —Lake George ha ‘Ahatural euriosi- ty. Abouta mile south of Caldwell, in a field, is one of the largest holes that anyone has ever seen. It was started quite a good many years ago by heavy nd has continued to expand un- til it is safe to say that several of the leaving room for a number of other buildings of no small dimensions. The washouts have carried the earth into he lowlands and scattered it abroad, and the cave has swallowed up trees Rach year the hole grows larger. and question is where it may reach in } rs to come ? —There may be no such thing as bad | luck, but it would be difficult to con- | an old Johnstown ( Pa.) carpenter ‘ington of the fact. At the Johnstown flood he lost dand all his property. Friends viwe TddavVS AOU MOO» WHOA T cl " -£aqunoo sty} ut epuar , id puv se]448 [[8 JO SeIpp¥g “soud ANVIUVDN oyy SON, sai = Re a & = ES R = & we Se a 2 : = = = = = = 3 2 2 2 = = = — s 1 v poou s19UMO estoy 4vqy Bury id oq} ‘so1g puspaugoyy soy punog MA. eLqnod be 62% 0F OLF Wosy ssousvyq uo et ‘Kqunog sej¥g jo ueur ssoulUy Jeeu0 ‘ = ATE oo BSe@s cae A B rR eos e eo aD ie — ss atin PORS azo z Vaundryimaids hope is the” vipye Every fionth many women suffer from Excessive ot Scant Menstruation; they don’t know who to confide i: to get proper advice. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfield’s Female Regulator a Specific for PAINFUL, PROFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Book to ‘‘ WOMAN” mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. Beld by all Druggists. i F Ciry thuvLEY & Dicer CoO ab. Burien. $5. Boys’ <y —_ re w. net ler sale dealer t agency, get then ta TAKE NO SUBS send er eat U L. Dougias Shoes © ank your WHY IS THE W. L. DOUCLAS| $3 SHOE cenflEmen , THE BEST SHOE Im THE WORLE Tt is a seamless shoe, with no mee i oe the feet; made of the best fine calf, st; and easy, and because we make more shoes grade thin any other manufacturer, it equals a2 ved shoes costing from $4.00 to $3.00. 00 Genuine Hand-sewed, nok oe ever offe: lor $5.00; equals Laported shoes which cont from $8.91to 812.00. 00 § wed Welt lish this ed the finest calf Shee, fine calf, 'e yitshe counfortomie and durable. The best ie crf; no Ladies %: ry streng and dural have given ‘then a trial will wear no other make. 83.00 and $1.75 school shoes are "worn by the boys every where; they seit on thelr merits, as the increasing sales sh 00 Hand-sewed oagola, ver on smiported shoes costi Lendies® 2,30. Misses are the best fine wei wear ayear. | better shoe ever offered at one trial will convince those | S| AGENTS coil Ni ne Reveridge’sAn- le np a purse for him and he wen second child. He then wen oma, and there the vned to Okl a. remaining chi Here another flood washed 1 of his earthly possessions and other day a third flood beggared him and drowned t Cooker. ooking utensil eveT Sells at'sight. One Agent sold over 1700 in one town. One sample Cooker free to good agents. Advertising matter furnished. For icularsad- it are sefter than those of her | 339 L.ivingsten 8 Those who | IRETTE- SOAP: | Ni it saves both her time andher bor, shell find that her clothes with a STATE OF MISSOURI, trilliancy glows neighbor, | Manutactured ealy by i, FAIRBANK & CO., ST. LOUIS. tf" Wh a \ ' 1,4 ny FOR = Ber crat and: saVOUS DEB. 24 Weakness of Body and “tind, F..-c sor E-zcosnesjaOiior ¥ Tos: ion om SU States an Fernles Cora Deseriptive Books ceptanation ar.) proot: s+ ddurees BRIE MEDICAL C2., Bi) ENTLEME N! YOUNG 45ND OLD, svfferiny from nervous inv luntary I the effects of youthful we will senda Pegitive Cure upon receiptot S200. Perfectly barmlese, Over twenty yenra in «uccessful use. As an infallible, gafe and rod ence, it has noe equal, Communica- town strierly confidential, Particnlars and testi. monials muiled (sealed) free. Address THE FOUBSORC MEDICAL CO., Breeklrn, N. ¥. Pare foriemestnce loss Cnteclons, Sermatorraee, ‘missions, Spermaterrhea, OZMANLIS ORIENTAL exact SEXUAL eee euien PILLS with each Box. Address o., 2019 Lucas Ai ST.LOUIS, - "MO. ‘Missouri Pacific Ry. 2 Daily Trains 2 TO KANSAS CITY and WMAHA COLORADO SHORT LINE To | 5 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis THE | PUEBLO AND DENVER, | Kansas City H. C. TOWN General Passe ‘SEND. \: her attormeys. before souri, to-wit | day of Nos PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS | to Denver without change pa of Publication. } ‘County of Hates. _ renit court of B: ne county, Missonri, enue of Bates connty tm the state of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. WA. Stephensand the anknown hei u' Brien Guinn, defendants Civil action for delingtent taxes. Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by Tsigoed elerk of county in the state of 1 files her petition uelg Other things that be heirs of O'brien Guinn are onot be inserted in the peti rein that they are the owners of said and derive their title by inheritance tis ordered by the said clerk in reuit court of i vacation, that eaid defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced @ suit against them in this court by petition and atidayit the ct and general nature of which ts to enforce the Hen of the state of Missouri lor the deliaqdent tances of the years Iss and is), amounting in the aggregate to the aum ot 3: SU, together with interest, costs, cammis- sion and fees, upon the following described Uacts of land sitwated in Bates county, Mis- The northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section thirty-one {51} township forty [40] range thirty-one [31], and thet unless the defeudants be and appear at ihe next term ofthis court to be begun and holden inthe city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first Monday in November, inul, and on or before the sixth day thereof, if the term shaliso long continae, and if not then before the end of the term, and plead to said petition according to law, the same will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered according to the prayer of said petition, and the above described real estate sold to satify thesame. Anditie further ordered by the clerk aforesaid that » copy hereof be publish- edin the Bath | Weekss Tinas, a weekly newspaper printes ard jul lished in Butler, Bates county, Missen i lour Weeks auc- cersively, the Ja-'i ' vc be fat least of. teen days before r w.yofsaidcourt. A trae copy from the recurd, Witness my hard asclerk aforesaid with seal of said {exat] court hereanto affixed Done at of- fice in Butler on, ban the 14th day ot HAYEs, August, Is. JOHN C By LB. Stance, Creuit Clerk. G Deputy Clerk. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates In the Probate Court for So county of Bates, August term, 1891. Estate of James Laney decensed, J ‘W. Ennis admiststrater. Order of Publication. Now comes J. W. Ennis administrator of the estate of James Laney, deceased, presents to the court his petition, pri ing for order for the sale of 0 much ot the re estate of said deceased will tisfy the remaining debts due ind yet unpaid for wi companied by required y law in auch ordered, persone interested in the estate of said <i, be notified that application as afere- been made, and unless the contrary can be shown on or before the firstday of the next term of this court to be held on the second Monday of November next, an order wilt be made tor the sale of the whole, or so much of the real eatate of said deceased ne will be sufficient for the payment of said debts; and it is farther ordered, that this notice be published in some newspaper in this te, for tour weeks before the next term of this court, further that a copy of this notice be served id deceased residing ye betore the first 1,W 'T. Cole, judge of the probate court, held in and for said county, hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of tae origin- alorder of pablication therein re- {-kaL] ferred to, a8 the same nppe: record in my office. Witness my hand and seal of suid court Done at oftice in Batler. Mo., 13th day of October, Ise. W.T. CC a Jule of Probate. Order of Publication. SYATE OF MISSOURI, ?,, County of Bates io In the Probate Court for, the county of Bates, Angust Term, Inv}. Estate of Julia A Medt- ley, deceased, J. administrator. Order of Publication. Now comes J W Ennis administrator of the estate of Julia A. Medley deceased, peesentes to the court bis petition praying for an orde: tor the sale ef so much of the real estate of said deceased as will pay and satisfy the re- maining debts due by said estate, and yet un- paid for want of suflicient assete, accompanied by the accounts, lists and inventories required by Jaw in such case; on examination whereof it is ordered, that ail persone interested in the estate of said deceased, be notified that appll- cation as aforesaid has been made and unless the contrary be shown on or before the firet day of the next lerm of this court to be peld ov the second Monday of November next, an or- der will be made Jor the sale of the whole o~ so much of the real estate of said deceased ay will be sufficient for the payment of said debte and it is further ordered that this notice be published in some newspaper in this state for four weexs before the next term of thix court. And further that a copy of this notice be serv- ed on each of the heirs of said deceased living in this county at least ten days before the fret the next term of this court. E OF MISSOURT, ¢ ,, County of Bates, I, WT Cole, Judge of tba Provate Court held in and forssit county shereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original or- der of publication therein referred to, asthe same appears of record in my office. Witness my hand and seal of aaid Court Done at office in Butler, Mo., 13th day of October, Isl W.T COLE, Jadge of Probate Trustee's Sule. q Whereas J. S. Franklin and Ma Franklin his wife and S. fE. Coe his wife, by their ek of trast dated November Ist, iss0, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No. #0 e 317 conveyed to the undersigned eee the foliowing describ- cd real estate lying and being sit me tp the county ot Bates and s! of Missouri, to-wi: All of lot No, seventy-thiree (73) and lot No seventy-four (74) and No. forty-one (41) of Worland, Mo., a8 shown by the recorded plat thereof which conveyance was made im trust to secure the payment of two certain notés fully described 1n said deed of trust; and wherea defaalt bas been made inthe payment of 1 principal of ssid aotes and the annual inte: thereon, now past due snd unpaid. Tefore at the requeet of the legal hol d note aud pursuact to the conditio: deed of trast, I will proceed to sel! the above described premises at pablic vendue to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, coun- ty of Bates and state of Misevuri, on Saturday, November 14, 1891, between the hours of nine o'clock in the fore- noon and five o'clock in the afternoon of that {seat} 47-48 ie E. FP. Coe and Eva day, forthe purpose of satisfrin; — debt, interest und coste. SAM WEST, si-td Trustee. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given, thatthe undersign- ed J W Ennis, administrator of the estate of Martha J Spaw deceased’, will make fin: Loe tlement of his acceants with said estate such administrator at the mext term of the probate court of Bates county. Missouri, to be holden at Butler, in s3id county on the 9th day of Nov. 181, 47-40 Ses sSnr eee eNO ote EN os Notice of Final Settl ment. Notice is hereby givento all ereoters others interested in the estate of Ei { Sims deceased, that I, vobn F. trator of said estate, intend to tlement thereof, at the next ter | county probate court in Bates cennty, state of hel Missouri, to Batier, Mo , on the "ta JOUN ¥F. SIMS, Administrator Notice of Final Settlement. Notiec« is hereby given administrator ot | decased, | counts * | atthe ne ndersigned estate 01 Peter Duncan holden at Butler in n day of November, 19} A. P. DUNCAN, Administrator.

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