The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 25, 1892, Page 7

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_ CURE Jrernipriyharebentnggeed pend Nausea, mecenusne tee = H } Headache, Carter’ equally neidabiotn Constipation, curing and pre- complaint, while they Seo ch stimulate the correct all disorders of thos Hirerand regulate tho bowels, Even if they only HEAD they would bealmost priceless: ler from this alstremaneom pia (ati ert {an‘riadand ‘patel; their goodness does ere,and those Paice Seeger find these littlo pills valu- on iodo witheate ACHE (Isthe bane of so many Hives that here is where wemeke cur great boast, Our pills cure it while not. ) Carter's Little Liver Pills are very ‘very easy to take. One or two pills makea dose. ‘urges bury tele gentle nction pleasgall wha (se them, in vislaat25 cents; fivefor $1. Sold pean eo ees on sont — aon Re yn small and lease all who plause. stop lim thing.’ of Col Stone yovernor | He will be cere and -Nevada Mail | Rey. HH. ‘of the Iowa Methodist, says edituii have tested the merits lof Ely’s Cream Balm, and believe | |that, by a thorough course of treat- jinent, it will cure almost every cas aa catarrh. | jally: Every ‘vionth many women suffer from Excessivé of Scant Menstruation; who to confide ¢ Don't confide in roper advics. SPuuiic. : anit IRREGULAR i-71" mailed free. 2CO., Allanta, Ga. \Wv \ il bee’ eS | SIZES AND STYL Requirements of Cvorybody. | THEY ARE THE VE For Sa'e by Bennett-Wheeler Mer cantile Company. Bere, Prompt, Positive | Cure for Impotence, Loss | of Manhood, Emissions, Spermatorrhe: Nervousness, Self Distrust, | the side, Loss of Memory, &c. py make you a STRONG, Vigor- OZMANLIS ORIENTAL SEXUA Seminal | Special Directions Mailed im with each Box. Ballard Stow Listmest Co., 919 ST.LOUIS, + je. mo. re h | | | | | : | A well to do, good looking youn, batchelor of Jefferson City jing badgered by the young ladies of Ja club there for jried. club. | liefs. | 2 wit | Te oene sai anin= ve Bi =< ee MEDICAL COx GUSEALO. CA Hax S00, ret DP as PFS REO ver Cot mone by nedies pyc aN salt es, that Sots one’s business oF | Whi fistep and m3 pro hock the skin and Dbeautiie Ro wilnkies of Mabbiness follow t dorsed by physicii acting eocs PATIENTS, TREATED BY MAIL. Sroee,| Warmiess. No Starting. Of. 0... F. SAYBER. ements THEATER. C8 gure tho health <3 id Somplexi =o is treatment, weber at that, Twill go sinwhich | made my money t yon. reader? | will in due | if you wish | work, rap aa Can't Head Him Off. | “This race of Col. Stove’s reminds | ome ine org 'me,” said the well known Methodist | minister, Dr. Prottman, “of a story | I once heard of the dramatization of the life, character, and death of Gen The stern character of Jackson was received with ap At last came the | bed scene und the ascension of the hero's spirit. y boys turned to the other with, 311 do you think General Jacl | when he sa, unknown,” LS seas. Long before the | Sheriff James Cooper. They were! jeral Jackson who, according cong, the pi se returning from taking two ivsaue | a Q: tents and kept hae i jae 7 persons to Neyada. To night Wolf ed flocks ards. v them bo also made their an ing, a some knowl In made of col dences of to show tanning Here one of the gal- Went to about that,’ wanted to he did replied Pall, for all h—i couldn't e started tod» That is somewhat the w: He started out to b- of plicao ue and powers on earth factured it in varic nishing coy | itis tot that we are indebte tie forms of footw D. D., editor | Ministers, as a class are afftic ! _ head and throat trou seems to be more We cannot Crean Bila too | employ vers did the terials are u almost precis: vogue hund true that have fou Jing thet a imend Ely’ 3 ghly.” T used Ely’s Cream —, |M We Balm for dry _it more La cure lmarry the girl] purpose 1} of your club which on secret is full of you elect leather was us There were sort of cireula Each girl went away in a cor ner and used great caution is her ballot | her hand writing. | vote was that there were nine vores jeust, each girl receiving young man remains a batchelor, the club is broken up and the girls are {all mortal enemies, united in the one determination that they paring disguising The result of th money. % [speak to that nasty fellow Chronic Suffered For Her Beliefs. Maud—She is a woman who suffered a great | Ethel—Dear me! | beliefs? Maud—She believes that she wear a No. 3 shoe ona No. and a twenty-six inch corset on thirty-six meh waist.—Ex. A Fatal Mistake. Physicians make no eve than when they tnform the patient heart troubles little conse- ‘tiles, the noted has proven the cen- on heart disease, | that nervous | the stomach quence. Indiania specialist trary in his new book | whieh may be had free at MW. L. Tucker's drugstore, who mends Dr. | Cure, which has the heart remedy in the world. vous and organi | fluttering breath, pain or eee in und recom- | Miles unequaled New Heart largest sale ct any It cures ner- , short breath, guarantees pulse, tainting, smothering | His Restoratiye Nervine cures h headache fits, ete. 2 dropsy pete S WANTED | CULVER & LANE'S, ue q i West side Square. Cash, Dry Goods or Groceries. CULVER & LANE. When you go tothe Post Office for your mail, why not price ‘STATIONERY, SOAPS AND TOILET ARTICLES, Just Received 25,000 Envelops from N. Y. 130 Ibs Teilet Soap from Philadelphia, CIGARS, sex, young or old, | From Baltimore, amd s general assortment of | ‘they live. Any one STATIONERS SUNDRIES. | We have all these things and lots of others in QUANTITY! QUALITY! PRICE! suit any buyer. ant prices and see if'we are not correct. POST OFFICE EOOK STORE ch will Examine goods LTHE AGE OF LEATHER. lest Commodities in the The ob funner is very nearly right ‘leather dates from time a Tubal | mals was | Cain 1} brass found The ancient >» skilled in the Et manu- |) and for various purposes besides that of fur- | Indeed, se builde for the o fara ory and the re- ean searches 0 haologists the Egyptians we the shoemakers who were worthy of the name. It is a fact, too, that tanners of to-day h the same methods as About the same m: and the pre y r to wee in years ago. It s of the present day uns of grea shorten- ne required to fec onvert a hide ssses into le and that steam power and modern ne much to expedit ss of finishing the leat , the principles of tanning remain ae same | as they have from the first eather was very early used as a cur- r this the Romans employing silver or brass came History g that tients as a of exchange. aid, on good authority, that so late ng med It is as during the reign of Louis XII. of | France the country became so im- poverished, and, as a consequence, money was so scarce that little pieces of leather, with a small silver nail driven through exch were in general use as few specimens of this leather money are still in existence, but are only to be found in the possession of numisma highly prized ists. by whom they are However, the manufacture of leather has ever been a slow and tedious pro- cess compared with most other in- dustries, and even now, with improved processes of tanning and _ finishing, months are required for the tanner to eonvert the hide of an animal into leath- er. There is. t00, a popular opinion ex- tant that tanners do not make as good leather now from hides that are tanned in three months’ time as they used to turn out when nine, and even twelve, months were necessary. This is a mis- take. Asa matter of fact, better leather is made to-day from hides in from sixty to ninety days than was manufactured in the old w It should be remem- bered, however, that hides are tanned in precisely the same manner now they have always been. ‘That is, the some agencies are used for combining it with the gelatine of the hide and for converting it into leather. Modern tanners have simply discovered methods by which the tannie acid is made to penetrate more quickly into the pores of the skin. This is om- plished partly by frequent manipula- | tion of the hides while in the vats, and partly by special treatments for keep- ing the pores of the skins open during the tanning precess. It is a fact well known to all tanners that any method or process which will hasten the union | of the tannic acid with the hide short- iatly the time necessary to ens 1 convert Of late talk of tan several methods have been tried, but with indifferent success. Ther te into leather. years there has been much does greatly aid in the tanning process. In the old days of tanning the hides, after being dehaired and made ready, were placed in the tan vats, and there in untouched and un- allowed to rem | months, and in some cases even longer, | until the tannin in the liquors, thor- | oughly uniting with the hides, had con- verted them into leather. But after a zovered that by putting the hides into a revolving wheel, or | drum, which had first been partially filled with the ¢an liquors, the time nee- essary to convert them invo leather was time it was d greatly shortened. Asearly as 1823 an English tanner © idea of foreing the tan rs into the hides by hydrostatic | ssure. Ly this method he greatly id, as he used a frame on which the hides had to | be tacked before being put into the wheel, and as the hides had to be cut to fit these frames, thus causing con- siderable waste and damage, the pro- conceived t lic V3 lessened the time of tanning: cess was abandoned. It is hardly to be doubted, however, that with the spirit of push and enter. prise now manifested by those en-| gaged in the manufacture of leather | the future will see wonderful improvements in this important industry, and that science and elec- tricity will make it possible to convert | hides into leather in as many hours as it now takes days. If this is done at all the shoe-consuming public need have no tears that it will be aceom- plished at the expense of the excel- leney of the material which goes into its foot wear, while tanners themselves can rejoice in the fact that they, being able to turn their money several times @ year, can make beth better and cheaper leather than ever before.—N. CS Advertiser. and Cooper regis jearl iy. biew out the gas and was soon jithe great beyond. ———___ loh’s Porous Plaster, | by H L Tucker ning hides by electricity, and Ss no doubt, however, but that electricity ed for from nine to twelve Blew Ont the Gas. Carthage, Mo, May 12—Jobn A. O. ‘W e l tC O n psig | Wolfe of Rolla, Judge of the County ' court of Phelps, was in the city to . leather is of the very! dey en route home in company W ith | ered at the Har. lipgton hotel, inteuding to take the [early morning train. Wolfe retired ound asleep. The night watch eae «=: QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE Plug. aud located Hy inj co wes was @udsaved from going to} For lame baew, side ur kest, use Shi- | Price Sects. + He was a quiet locking, al }man in a pastorial sort of black broadcloth suit and a felt bet with ie p ili My Ist ATE OF MISSOTRI.? }broad brim, such as are worn by ISsouit| acl IC y. }sColonel” and “Majors.” Next to him in the car sat two young men who were telling stories about per- |sonal experiences on the road, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. One of {them related with much gusto an eucounter which ke had recently had witha desperate western man, the weapons being cards. The game was poker, the special occasion was that old familiar ‘big jack pot” which so often figures in profane history, and two principals were each armed with straight flushes. “It was a dollar limit game,” re- marked the young mar, “aud we bet sixty seven times him. He had a sequence flush, queen nnd then IT ealled high, and I had one king high. You shoud have heard him swear” 1 noticed that the o'd man listened with great attention to the story, and at its cone’usion he exclaimed with much candid astonishment, “You called him!” The youngster blushed and acknowledged his guilt. “Welll wel!” said the old man shak- ing his head, “these times 1s suttin- ly not what they use. tubbe. You see, Teum from Tennesse, and we ain’t up to this way er doin things. Why, I'm j;Jayin’ a hand yit that wuz dealt tory pa, in 757. Him au old Judge Dubbin of Murfrecs- boro, they set into a game one night in September of 757, an’ they bet an” bet an’ bet. An’ when they run out of cash they bet nulcsan then hosses an’ then niggers, xn’ at Jas’ they tuk to bette’ aeres of lan’ an’ then they ran outer every avd in was agreed thet the han’s shud be put in sealed ervellup an’ nuked un’ kept in the vault of the bank till both on ‘em got more stuff. Vell, it went on that a way off * on till the war eum and the ole Sedge has died an’ pop was killed at Seven Pines, an’ tien Jim Dabbin he tuk his ole Ttui dad’s. Well, gerelmen, we're jist bettin’ yet man’s place a whenever we git the cash an there aint no signs of quittin’ but I wud suttir La.’s of poy’s bin’s before I « long sigh of of patient resignation while the two and the other men in smoking compart- y like to see them old) Jedge Dab UNnNgStE ment regarded him as one worthy of veneration, even if it was only as| a liar. Pears’ Soap jAlw avs . and he sighed a Fancy Groceres, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. CICARS AND TOBACCO, Produces pay the highest market price for County East Side Square. Butler, Mo+# Order of Publication County of Briers ene lin ihe cirenlt cour « i nnty, in vacation il With, is: Hess Withite, plaintig, B. yr. Sosan Brugler, Mamie & Dailv Train 2) TO KANSAS ry. and OMAHA | COLORADOSHORT LINE Mercer andl. Il, Mercer, defendants. Now at this day comes t plaintiff’ herein by his attorneys, Silvers & Silvers, before the unders clerk rireuit court of Bates coun . ci and files his petition alleging, among other things, that all of the above named defendants, J. B. nrugle! Susan Brugler, Mamie Mercer and I H Mercer are non residents of the state of Missouri Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vaca- | thon that saidjdefendants be notifled by publica- | tion that plaintiff has commenced asuit against | themin this court by petition the object and THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLWAN GUFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas . C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and ‘Vicket A’gt ST. LOUIS, MO. | | before the last day of said term—answer or Troprietor ef Elk Horn Stables. Se ' Having purchased the ElK Horn barn | and Livery outfit of J. W Smith, andj ing added to the same a number ot | first-class Buggies, and horses, I can say | “| interest semi-annually. We have money h to the public that I now have the In southwest Mo. Horses and mules | bought and sold, or stock handled on commission, Stock bearded bs the day week ormonth, With 16 years exper- ience Mr Lewis teels xble to compete with anv L very barnin this section. Callard see him CB LEWIS & CO | \ husband, on Septembe: 5 Daily Train, 0) Kansas City to St, Louis, y to Denver without cnange a HE—— West Ward Stock Farm, —THE HOME OF~— a = 100 Which would you rath- er have, if you could have your choice, transparent skin or perfect features ? } | | All the world would | choose one way; and you | can have it measurably. If you use Pears’ Soap and live wholesomely the best complexion Na- ture has for you. All sorts of stores sel! it, especially druggists; all scris of people use it. RONZE TURKEYS FOR SALE, FANCY BRED, INQUIRE OF LAURA CONCKLIN, otherwise, you will have | PASSAIC, M9. Willi C. Rood’s MAGIC = ALE ie pertect Latics’ Tailor stems of Square Measuremrsy iyeticyentein oat a inelading see pesrest Agent sent ~ s = ‘ inte pS estigate AGERTS wines | Tne Kood Magic Scate Co., Chicago, Ile lof the finest equipment, via Iron Moun amotio Chiet Jr. | Pacific Railway for the Y. l reaching St. Lo ed uncerelothing, from neces to feor. 2 & To \eensee nature of which isto procure a re and finding of the court that a note given Marriet A ns and Lewis Adams her . for $1,000 to \ Peter Brugier, borrowed money, was assumed by. andiully paid off by the plaintiff on or the maturity thereof: to declare ta certain trust deed now of record in book pee thin the ofice of the recorder of ates county, Missouri, which trust | deed oh exeented by said Harriet A. Adams | and LewiAdams, conveying in trust to J Rrugler, tOecure payment of said Note the following lan n Bates eounty, Missouri, viz: Lots one at two, northwest quarter, and the west half of t | northwest quarter Ot the southeast quarter of section 3!, township Ry range at which jueeee as it now stands of record isan ap- northeast qnerter, and the arent lien on said Jamis null and void “a to ask a decree of court laring the tvust deed to be void and removity the cloud on plaintift’s title occasioned teeby and for other proper relief, and that un the said defendants be and appear at thissgourt, at the next term thereof, to be begun arXholden at the court house in the city of Butler‘g said county on the 7th day of Noy Is2,next, andWqor before the third day of said term, if the t shall so long continue—and if not then on plead to the petition in said cause, the same | will be taken as confessed, anid judgement will C.B. LEWIS & CO. | before the tiret day of the next November term | of the circuit court JOHN ©. HAYES be rendered accordingly, And be it further or- dered that a copy hereof be published, accord- ingtolaw in the Butler Weekly Tinss, a weekiy newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Mo., for four weeks successive- ly, the last insertion to be at least fifteen days Cireuit Clerk \ true copy of the record. Witness my hand and the seul of the {szat] circuit court of Bates county,this 2 day April, Isv2 INO. C. HAYES. 2 Cireuit Clerk, EQUITABLE LOAN AND_ INVESTMENT ASSOCIATION The Equitable Loan & Investment As- sociation issues aseries ct 1,000 shares each month—and offers to investors an opportunity to sive money and receive a nandsome interest on their invest- ment. ‘lhe investor ot | $ 1 00 permo. for 100 mo's rec? $ 200 00 He | 2 ss LS wet 4° 3 aes 66 eos tes gt Ses ee a) a 1.000 CO cone fe oe A on ag #4 es Se We also issue paid up stock and pay to loan on good ci property. Anyone desiring a good prc e investment or | loan will do well to call and see us, Best Livery Barn. R. C. SNEED, Sec’y., Sedalia. Mo J. 11. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo For avon to Read Ifyou desire to {take a delightfnl trip for either health or pleasure, would advise you to xoto Hot Springs, Ark., ‘the Carlsbad of America,’’ jocated in the heart of the Ozark Mountains, surrounded by besutiful scenery, | fine drives and walks. and the most healing waters in the w Reached in solid trains Route. For descriptive and illustrated pi phlet, FREE, write Company’s Agents or Gen eral Passenger Agent, Mo. Pac. R'y Co., St. Louis, Mo. | Eleventh International Convention. Y. P. s. C. E. Arrangements have been made by the Cen- tral Missouri Delegation, Y. P. 5. © E., for aspecial excursion train over the sissoari P.S.C_ E. Inter- Convention to be held at New York th to lith, Ise2 Special trains will lia July 4th, 12 o’clock midnight, is the following morning, lis, Cincinnati and Wash- ington, D. C., passing through the most pictur- esque mountain Cacenere east of the Rocky mountains, and the besutiful valleys of the **Old Dominion,’’ reaching Washington, the National t a reasonable hour in the afternoon. op-over privileges wili be granted both goi By de- poriting tickets with Joint Agent, ew York Terminal Lin an extension will be made on final return limitto include August 15, isvz. Stop overs will siso be silowe1 within final limit of ticket for thoee desiring to viait the celebrated mountain resorts of Virginia. For fall itinerary af the trip and farther informa- tion regarding sleeping car accommodations, Fates, ete ,cailon or address A Chairman Transportation Committea, ‘ Mo. thence viele Scientific American TRADE — ee Pi ase COPYRIGHTS, etc. jormation and free e Handbook write to MUNN & CO. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Qidest bureez i patents in America. by us is brought bef: ery patent taken out Ehetd lic DY & notice given ch tree Of charge in the Scientific American Largest circulation of any scientife paper in the Korid. | Spiendidly illustrated) No inte Man should be without it. 2 ear; $10 six months. Address MUNN & LISHBRS i Broadway, New York.

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