The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 4, 1891, Page 8

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aoe AM es LN H Mh DRU A Pure Fresh Stock of GS AND MEDICIN An Elegant Collection of Fancy and Toilet Goods. A Fine Line of Stationery & Fancy Go pecial Attention Given to COMPOUNDING PRESCRIPTIONS A Fine Assortment and Reasonable Prices worthy of your attention and Inspection. AT COST---My stock of | saddles and light buggy harness and tents go at cost ’till Jan. 1st. Now 1s your time for bargains. tf R. L, aneves. LOCAL ITEMS. N. M. Nestlerode, at Virgima, is euragent at that point and is au- | thorized to receive subscriptions for the Times and collect and receipt | for money due this paper on sub-| scription. tf Call on R. S. Catron for insurance on stock against lighting. 29-tf | _ | the IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS. PAINTS, OILS, &c. ACCURACY AND ABSOLUTE PURETY GUARANTEED. Lust Wednesday afternoon, at a ‘shooting match on Clark Creek, Bill | Gray Sparks was accidentally shot) payerd and Frank Adison. ud oth by his nephew, Jim Sparks, a boy ten or twelve years old | lying town taking aim at his mark with a rifle, and Bill, not noticing / him, started to walk between him and the mark when the boy tired, ball striking Bill about | one-fourth of an inch below the left nipple on the sixth rib, where it glanced a little, then going straight | through his lung came out just be- ‘low his shoulder blade.—Hartville Press. Jim was Why use impu.. cistern water when Pastures Improved Patent wa- | ter filter is guaranteed to purify it Howard County Democrat.-—/ For Sale by Bates county is to have its first an- nual fair the 28th, 29th and 30th of | this month and Rich Hill has cap- tured the pudding. What's the mat- ter with the county seat of Bates | anyway? Calland see that $2 50 sewing machine at C. Spracue & Co. 45 tf Butler, Mo. Jno. C. . Hayes, circuit “clerk of Bates County, was down from But- | ler, yesterday, to attend the races. Mr. Hayes did not patronize the book makers. devoting his money to a better pur- pose—having just completed one of the handsomest new Butler.--Review 30th. Call at the music store and exam- ine that $58.00 organ. F. M. Atren & Co. Butler, Mo. Farmers Take Notice! In spite of persistent opposition the firm of Pharis & Son propose ¢ see that the producers of Bates Co. receive the highest market for their Butter, Chickens and Eggs. Butler is the best Butter, Poultry and Egg market in Bates county, and Pharis & Son, on South Side of tributed very about t Square, have ma cee k oipe terially to bringing is re- sult. 50-4. Notary Public, ac DWE R. S. Catron, knowledges all kind of papers He evidently intends | value | | Bensert-Waee.er Merc’t. Co. 38-tf 4 newspaper in Ohio recently brought suit against forty-three men | who would not pay their subscrip \ | tions, and obtained judgment in each | | case for the amount of the claim. | Of these twenty eight made affida- vit that they owned no more than the | - MeGuire boys, jlaw allowed, thus preyenting at- | tachment. Then under the decision of the supreme court they were ar- rested for petit larceny and bound | over in the sum of $300 each. All but six gave bond, which six went to | jail. The new postal law makes it | larceny to take a ;aperand refuse residences in- to pay for it.—Toledo Blade. Uue of the most remakable per sons in attendance ou the general Baptist association is in the vener- able Mrs. Mary Baskett of Calloa, Macon county. Mrs. Baskett was born in Madison county, Kentucky, in 1800, has lived in Misseuri since 1825; met Washington Irving at her father’s house in Howard « 1 1832; has been a member of the b tist church ic. 48 years. a of the t preserved ar tive ladies o She writes with her o years ago t aloue niece in Helena Mont. aunt of Col. man —Colu i She i of the States- a Statesman Swiitzler mbi | caught fire and burned part of the | roof off and was then quenched... .. } last Sunday.... S. Please Call. PACE & TRIMBLE, Druggists, EAST SIDE e-. FIRST DOOR sana OF SAM LEVY & CO, eet MoO. Virginia Items Red John Foster. J. Lockridge, ers whose names we failed to learn. composed a hunting party which bad quite an experience on the night of the 26. The boys had treed what | they supposed to be a coon but they found they had tackled a wild cat before ‘'«y got through. It whip- ped a dog, and ran Trobridge some- thing less than a mile, when it was! killed by some of the hunters’ It Wasa monster and four or five more. are said to be domiciled in the | woods, just laying for their bold bunt- ers.. .Henry Feeback bought a fine mare from Israel Nestlerode..Graut Garner sold his big bay horse in Butler Saturday for a good price... ..J.G. and M. J. Cuzick will have; a public ai] Nov. 11, 1891..... Very dry in this section.....Fire by some ! i means of accident caught in the Hus- | | i | sey field from Lewis Porter's engine, | burned west over about 200 acres, burning hay, fencing for J- W. Park ' and Lee Browning,some corn for the but the loss was -John W. Hensley's house | small... . John Armstrong of Yokum was over | .E. Nestlerode has | his barn completed and it isa dandy. | Emanuel it outlooks your house... .. W. M. Lucas has a fat hog missing which weighs about 150 pounds. , Mr. L. says be will pay for iis ievov- | ery... Mr. Geo. Barnett of Amoret Sundays in tuwz of late..... Parish Nickell brought out a load of furni- ture from Butler Saturday. Mr. N. says he is tired of batc! . The literary here is not a failure. A pa- per Saturday eve..... All kinds of drinks pure in Virginia because there - is not enough water to adulterate it- Joe Hensley and fa have gone thwest for their health : Mr. Neal Porter who las been sich for some vut moping around again.....Whenin town eall and see my 10 qu. granite iron bucket | am giving with every 1 lb. can of baking powder N. M. Nestizrone | Delightful /by the McFarland orchestra and | report a pleasant time. “There is little more pitiful,” says the Atchison Globe, “than who has lost his mother. The neigh a boy bors come in and are kind to his sis ters in their efforts to comfort them; but the boy seems to be out of reach of their sympathy. They can not understand his grief, or that he grives at all. He Joes not sit around, or weep into a lace handkerchief, he gees out and cries on his sleeve be- hind the barn, while his sisters in the parlorare having their tears wip- ed away by kind hearted, motherly women with candy in their pockets. A boy is so awkward and rough, and noisy, and when the only one in the | world who believed in him or his posibilities lies dead in the house, his heart aches the same as a girl's.” All parties knowing themselves in | debted to the late firm of Steele, | Walton & Co., will come forward and settle with me at once and save costs Everette Wattoy. The social event of the season, so tar, was the ball given at the Palace , hotel last Thursday evening, by the young society men of vur city. music was furnished dancing was kept up until 1:30 a. m. At 10 o'clock supper was served at Endres restaurant. Those present Visitors from abroad were: Rich Hill—Misses Mamie Burns, Cora Smith, Eva Ferguson, Grace ,and Bertha Scott, Hattie and Jo Al len, Nell and Kittie Harris, Messrs Evan Coleman. Ernest Payne, Pete , Railey, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Massie. Harrisonville—Misses Leno Brown, Ida Cummings, Messrs W. H. White and Harry Baily. Nevada—Misses Jeunie Rice, Glessie Moore. Messie Walker Harris Herbert I Louis—Messrs son. Springfield Leper and Ferg Miss Wade Notice to School Boards. The Leader Auto school desk. the be on the market can be seen at my laundry in Batler. Call and seei alic Noiseless ix, Agent The state flower of Kansas is the | sun flower, the columbine is for Col. | orado, and the poppy for California. As this state has never adopted any flower, but is the natural home of i all of them, free to attach itself to whatever flow- | Excelsior Springs | has adopted the hollyhock as its} patron flower And could it have} done better than to have selected | this wholesome old flewer that al-; ways stands wide open, as if to give | glad welcome to all comers be they old or be they new.—Ex. every town or city is erit may fancy. We Can and Do Guarantee Dr. Acker’s Blood Elixir, for it has been fully demonstrated to the peopie of this country-that it is superior to all other preparations for blood diseases. It is a positive | cure for syphilitic poisoning, ulcers, eruptions and pimples. It purifies the whole system and thoroughly builds up the constitution. Double Branch Items. Rain, rain, we need a good rain. Potato digging is the order of the | day....Mr Wm Requa left for Ne- | vada ini week... .Mr Padley is hav- “My Daughter's Life \3 ing his apples bared; in the orchard Was saved by Hood's Sarsaparilla,” says Mr. B. B. Jones of Alma, Me. “She had seven running sores in dif- | - Rev Browniug of Butler, preached at the branches on last Tuesday and Wednesday....Mr R R Earsom and ‘ferent places on her body, but on _ giving her Hood's Sarsaparilla there was marked improvement and now | | she is well, strong and healthy.” Hood's Pills cure constipation by | restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. They are the | best family cathartic Pubic Sale. I will sell at public sale on my! farm in Spruce fownship, 24 miles | northwest of Johnstown, Saturday | November 21, 1891, the following | personal property: one fine stable _ horse, Englishshire & Morgan, 5| years old, imported from Mlinoia | last spring. One Fine Keutucky | ' Jack, 9 years old, purchased of Col- yer Bros, one fine young jack, two) jennets, tive brood mares, two geld- ings, two yearling colts, three auck- ing colts, one a mule, four milch | cows, two of them Jerseys, four 7 sey heifers, one Jersey bull, some/ thoroughbred Poland China sows, two Plano binders and other ma , chinery aud farm implements too numerous to mention. and under cash, on sums $5 a credit of 10 months with- out interest if paid when due. other- ise to draw 8 per cent from date. approved security, at 10 o'clock a m E C. OGBULN gE, Auctioneer 50 3t Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for _Pitcher’s Castoria. gon are very eck at present....The ‘sale of Willie and Charlie Bryant was well attended and things sold well... .Prof. Young is very sick at presenti . Some of the farmers are | eribbing corn....Week before last | marriage bells hear to ring and on | inquiry we found that Mr. Charley | Beard and Miss Thene Baker were ‘united in matrimopy. We extend congratulations....Mr Scott left for the nation last week...... Weas says he don't know why George did not go...Miss June Ellington, who has been attending meeting at the Branches last week, has returned home....C W Porter is giving Mr Steve Huit's house a new coat of toate Noares | The meeting at Double Branch. conducted by Rev Miller, assisted by Revs. Webb and Brown- ing, have had 23 additions. Dixtr. ES IVORY SOAP 99* Pure. THE BEST FOR EVERY PURPOSE, é g €

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