The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 16, 1892, Page 7

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ce ae ee i ee Te mee | Thetr Immense Work and Their Small Headache and relieve all the troubles 4 Drowsiness, Bari in aa the Cae ae &c. eS erensien’s _ SICK bas Cor erred en apre ually valuabloin Constipation, curing ani ating thisannoying complaint, while they also ‘sil disorders of thestomach stimulate the rand Tegulate the bowels. Even if theyonly HEAD qrotnann doen notend boncetry them will find these little pills valu- iin ways that they will not be wil- todo withoutthem. But after allsick head ‘bane of someny Hives that here fs where make our great beast, Our pills cureit while ‘s pee Liver Pills are very small and easy to take, One or two pills makea dose. phey are ee vegetable and do not gripe oF or , but by their gentle action please all who hem. In vialsst 25cents; five for $1. Sold Fans ih athena MEDICINE CO., New York. PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE | Estabiished 32 years. Regular graduate of TWO MEDICAL COLLEGES, PERIENSE SW. Consu'ta ae laboratory fern anywhere securely s¢ ted: VOUS DEBILT yen B, Indtscroti rs atin, | MIDDLE AGE edeposits in urine, « 0 second stage uf & My Ana or nexperi- ately, explaining “Te ies," Biocd equent or ricture, uments or prin. nyerous. GR. SiS, STH ST.MANSAS SITY, MD Sr LUPE 3 i 8 i : jure, Prompt, Positive on for Impotence, Loss Manhood, Seminal Emissions, Spermatorrhea, Nervousness, Self Distrust, Lezs of Memory, Ac. Will make you a STRONG, Vigor- ous Man ace $1.00, 6 Boxes, $5 00. Soecial Directions Mailed with each Box. Aadress 4 Falisra Snow Lintmont Co., 2010 Lucas Ave. ST.LOUIS, m0. 7MANLIS }) RIENTALES Sucy and pesbes ir ° you Know? more ill result from an pealthy Lver than an. pr cause-Inigestipn, Consti- ion, Headahe, Biliousness, Malaria tually jattend it. Sanford’s liver Isvigorator vegetable specifi¢ for Liver rders and their atcompany- evils. It cures thousands not be oncof than? Take Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. jour Druggis: will stpply you. 1 i Scicntific American is for CAVES’ TRADE MARKS SESIGN PATENTS _contaicRS, ete. 1 B te out b Sins sees ‘nm Out ce given a ercbarse in the eit aperiran ace lie by 8 noth every Dottie S STRICTURES. to Fora NTLEM = & AND OLD, suffering ijuvolautary losses, the edfect} of goueatal | excesses, we will send a BP tive @: re ceipt of $3.00, Perfectly b Over years in successful use. n infallible, Dommunica- co., nN. FOUBORG MEDI vingeten &t.. B | Year’s gifts, | and e | received | 000 of pieces of mail matterevery y | at a quarter before ten at night. ¥. PARIS POSTMEN. RATS AS DISEASE BREEDERS. A Prominent Physician Thinks They Are Unequaled in This Respect. The Paris postmen have lately had Dr. S. E. Weber, assistant state vet- some attention paid to their condition erinarian of Pe snnsylvania, read before by the government, and it has brought the Keystone Veterinary Medic their hard jabors and many virtues to ciation, at the Colleg 3 light. In all there are 1,562 men work- paper entitled ‘The Rat as a Disease ing on the seven daily distributions of Breeder.” The essayist adv: the mail in the great capital. These theory that the rat is a nitter of are divided into three classes “one some of most danger disease: old Paris, one for the annexed which afflict humani and one for printé ed matter. is tuberculosis or consumption. He city is di ections,” weich in cited the results of post-mortem exam- turn are into “quar * inations on more than one of each of wt d by four pi the animals in proof of the Paris par excelleme then discussed the bes “tips.” a postmen. rid of th only thr Dr. Weber said that nowhere do: nually, rec ubiquitous rat do more harm as a ¢ gratuities. ease transmitter than in the energ, and barn, where he comes or private person who does not tip tem th wie cattle and horses. well once a year. in part, follows: One man in each qua rom nibs time whereof the memory after the et runneth not to the contrary the and in some rat has been looked upon as one of the rich mansions often most persistent enemies of the human dollar bills race. He has destroyed the garnered In the treasures of m alone mc Pay. icians, a for the s housand theory, and t way of getting en. ot who get “Mm. the far in contac The paper, er is delegaded to look -nnes, ™ banks and he gets hunded as gifts ee n e than ial quarters of P; five millions of regp- tered letters were distributed lions of farmers, ren- dered millions of acres valueless to the husbandman, undermined houses with- y postman who delivered om out number, and even depopulated 1 two cent fee it. This' whole provinces by bringing the labor made quite a handsome addition te! of men to naught. their salaries. j test upon the traditions that tell us ‘The postmen distribute about 659,600.) of the wonderful doings of the Pied arin’ Piper of the eS for Hamelin, important | Paris. o'clock in the morning, and the last is tington, ‘twice mayor of London,’ and This is the just punishment he meted ont to at every private house in the remotest/Bishop Hatch in his corn-choked castle quarter as well as in the business sec- on the Rhine. He has been a pest in tion. \¢very clime, and will so continue to be The postmen are carried totheir beats | tntil in the development of the distant from the general and quarter post} itture he shall either disappear or offices in huge omnibuses drawn by | into some harmless, guiltless white stallions, which get the ; feature as useless as the axoloid of ground at a tremendous rate. This | Nexico or the lazy hellbender that rests hurrying ‘bus, with the gaily uniformed | his boneless body in the muddy bed of postmen jumping out of it right and} th Miama river. left as they reach their points of deliv-| “Ther ery, is one of the curious sights of Paris. | forthe rat. While at all times prompt The bus picks the men up when their| totake for his own use the choicest beat is finished. fod that man can provide for himself The various sub-offices are connected | therat does excellent service as a sez with the central pneumatic dis ch | engr and consumes tons of refuse ma- station. In all of them, and in cigar | terial which, if allowed to putrify, stores, one may buy the telegraph post | would become the certain means of pes- card (open, 6 cents; closed, 10 cents), | tilenee and death. It is only asa s which will be sent by pneumatic tube | enger that he seems to have been de- to the point nearest its destination, and | signed; and it is of record that the ter- for the rest of the way by special mes-| rible plagues which used to turn the senger. This service is so perfect as | townsand cities of western Europe into almost entirely to supersede telegraphio | charnel houses have been but little messages within Paris. known in those places since rats began Actors, managers, professors, busi-| to be among the greatest factors in the ness men, the police, every s of per-| economy of the animal world. sons use this handy little eard, which “The plagues and pestilences of by- rarely takes more than half an hour in} gone centuries do not decimate the pop- sit from point to point. Many large | ulationof western Europe nowadays, ness houses use hundreds of them|} it istrue But while they have given daily. their ovn stamping grounds a wide The printed matter postmen have the | berth they have not been routed out by hardest’ work and are paid the least. | any meats. It is possible that the rats Some of the loads hie they carry who held to rid England of a pesti- tremendous. They deliver a million | lence caried the germs of the disease prospectuses in a single morning, from } to Turkejor to Hindostan. This brings end toend of Paris, with perfect case. | me to tht consideration of a subject N. Y. Journal. which wilat once present itself to the ae eae mind of tie medical scientist as one of Care in Small Things. ._,_| the most itportant ever called up for The elderly woman is too apt to think discussion. that her appearance is not of any im- “When th reader thinks of the count- portance, and she neglects the small be-| jess numbe of rats that infest the longings of dress, wearing a badly-made | regions occupied by human beings, of shoe, too often ill-fitting gloves, hand-| their wonderful reproductive power kerchiefs that are neither fine nor pretty | and of their seemingly neless ee anda neek-dr ssing that has nothing to rapid immigration from one dwelling recommend it, unle: ome one should | place to another, hundreds of miles approve of slovenlines Young women away, he must admit that if it is possi- can afford to dress plainly, but it is the} pile for the rat to convey dis: women who are elderly who have @] from pointto point this por right to the elaborate and rich clothes. | 3, incalenlsble. ag We are very apt to conclude that what] stricken London and sought another the mother is the daughter will be, | field, did he leave the plague behind or and when a young girl claborately | gid he keep ashare of it to distribute gowned is seen with a mother dressed | e}sewhered in the most dowdy fashion the conclu- “I h@elreason to believe that the the daughter will resemble the mother, dangermns diseases which afflict human- This may be true or not, but it is injus- | jty—disases that have for ages baffled tice to the girl, and more than wrong | the skillof the ablest scientist in the in the mother not to be as young in| the wad.” YB heart and appearance as she possibly = UTE AEG ciara It was in a little country schoolin the mounttins of Pennsylvania! One of Fillets of Silk « or Velvet For the Hair. Fillets and coronets of silk or velvet| the sebolars was a bright little Irish girl whose only difficulty was in the ribbon are worn in the The por- tion that bands the head is either a flat! study geography. After much labor bias piece or is softly braided. A smart] her teaher had succeeded in giving her little upstanding bow at the top.a little! a fair gart, when she one day asked t to the left side, finishes this bit of faney | child ifshe knew the name of the ca. head deco! on, Which was devised for] tal of the United States. use as well as ornament, as it | Nama’am,” “Wal, Iv and then you cially contrived as a means of holding | 1 4 down the very short lengths of hair} must ty to remember it,” not doubting which show untidily about the ears of | the pul understood the meaning of the somany fashionable women who took word*eapital” as used. “It is Wash- up the fad of clipping the hair upon | ingtog™ and just back of the temples. They With smiling and have now wearied of the fashion and! cheelgthe girl exclaimed: have let the hair grow ont. It isat “Why, I thought he was dead long } ago!=Detroit Free Press. over ¢ se germs r for evil When he left plague- is espe- © di present not long enough to reach and be coiled in with the back hair, and therefore the flying wisps. The fillet | or coronet bands them closely to the head.—N. Y. Pos Very Suggestive. Young Mr. Dolley—How lovely those fleecy white clouds look lying ninst that blue sky. Miss Flypp—Ye: like delicious ice saucers. Dolley—Y-e-s—er, some cream, Miss Flyp) Miss Flypp—Don’ teare if Ido. How kind of you to suggest it, Mr. Dolley.— Brooklyn Life. Ap Experienced Architect. Architect—About what size house would you like? Gottrich—It need not have few friends. Architect—Ah, but \plenty friends when done. —N. Y. Week Asking Too Much Said Judge Duffy to a convicted factor: Ithas been proven that you bur- ried a honse, stole a ham, and ‘aed another man’s name to a note.” “You have also been sailing under the filse names of Smith, MeMuilen, Goodrich and Perkins while you were committing your crimes” “Well, Judge, you did'nt expect me to allow my own honest name to be Meationed in connection with such vis 3 and dragged through the male: | fo indeed. They look cream on great blue would > you like | | | } —“What? Fell down stz How did jt happen?” ‘‘Why, you see, I started to go down. and my wife said: ‘Be careful, John... And I'm not the maar to be dictated to by any woman; andsgo—well, down I went.” M’Yes— “‘4ng he got some lovely bruises to | show for it; andservedhim right. Man is Born to be dictated to by woman. Drake's Magazine. Sy be large I} you will have} your new house is —She—“He has deceived me shame filly.” Her Father— fe young rascal. How has he deceived Yw2” She—‘“Bcoo—heo—he let me de- che him before he told any one he was rig.”—N. Y. Herald. Ne horsew hip ~—Mrs. Greenback—“Did you find the locality where you stopped in England healthy?” Mrs) Coupon—“Well, Ij | should say S°- Very often our hotel bill. would gain several pounds in a day,” —Chicago Inter Ocean. 2 {Spee eae uires— “You're naturally a kind- | naheoa, agreeable fellow, John. Why} gins, “what's the he rain of terror.” Blaggins, “is the shower that | & up when your wife has her best | on.”—Washin tton Star. ~I say,” said BI ‘Ten of terror | col bon His record does not | The first delivery is before eight| part he played in making Dick Whit- | is but one good word to say | How to Suc 2 the ¢ xreat probler orily solve Margaret E Deaton ana J) 1 ner hasband, W A Wright and J | Wright are plaintiffs and Malinda Frazee # DL Frazee her husband, Harriet D Cobb Fred Cobb her husband, Mary A Marsta Christena Maddy and W F Maddy her husband CD Denvy, Cordelia Denny. James Denny Malinda Denny, Milo Hill, Alvin Hill, Ella ) Hill, Harriet da Butler and Fred Batier he husband, Eunice J Wright, Newton E W = Frank J W right, are defendants, a ied copy of which decree has been delivered to ie by the clerk of said court commanding me as sheriffof Bates county, Mo.. to eell the | real estate hereinafter described at the Novem j ber term Isy2, of said court. Therefore. ia pursuance of said judgment and decree f. ( | W Hartsock, sheriff of Bates county issouri, | will on 25th, 1892, Friday, November 2 between the hours of nine o’e¢lock in the fore- noon and four o’clock in vhe afternoon of that day. and while said cirenit court is in session offer for saleat public auction for cash, to the highest bidder, at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, the follow- | ing deseribed real estate to-wit The northwest quarter of section twenty- seven (27) and the northeast quarter of the and the south half of the southwest quarter ot G4) all in township forty (4 of range thirty- one (31) in Bates coun Missouri, and the west half of lot three [3] of the northwest quar er of section five [5] of township thirty-nine ] of range thirty-one [41] C: We Sherif of Sherifi’s Sale. By virtue and in pursuance of a judgment and of Missouri, rendered at the June term thereof Im? wherein W A Wright J RWright, Margare: E Deaton and James Deaton Mary C Dark and Preston Dark her husband plaintiffs and Eunic Wright. Frank J Wright, Newton E Wright, milo Hill. Ella Milt! and Alven Hili defendants, a certified copy of which decree has been delivered by the cler of said court commanding me as sheriff of Bates county, wo . to seil the real estate here- inatter de-crived at the November term, olsaidcourt Therefore in pursuance of said judgment and decree. 1, CW Hartsock sher- iff of Bates county, wi-souri, will on Friday. November 25:h. 1892, between the hours of niue o'clock in the fore noon and tour o’clock in the afternoon of that and while said circuit court isin session for saie at public auction, forecash, to the higheet bidder at the east trout court house in the city of Butler, described real estate. to-wit: The east halt of lot of the northesst quarter of section five 3) the west halt of tye Go of the borth west qt (4) the west haif ot ti of the northwest qu the south half ofthe w eat halt « of lot six je the northwest quarter of reetion four (1) Us south half of the ext ha't of lot six (6 northeast quarter t west three fourths of the half of lot six [1] of & r section five [3] except a str id ves the north halt af door of he following thirty-two fer east hall of bow (ring), will never have oc- casion to use this time-honored cry. It is the only bow that cannot be twisted off the case, and is found only on Jas. Boss Filled and ether watch cases stamped with C4 this trade mark. Ask your jeweler fora pamphlet, or send to the mancfacturers. Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. weasren 10M AN industrious | subscriptions, make co! te ae business in herown ioealiy ty. References Si2 PER WEEK. OFFICE OF CATHOLIC PUBLICATIONS, Ave. and Ste, -¢ CHICAGO, ILL, — —— SOINE Money selling Beveridge’s Au- tomatic Cooker. Latest and best cooking utensil ever invent- ed. Seilsatsight One Agent sold over 1700 in one town. One sample Cooker free to good agents. Advertising matter furnished. For ful! particulars ad- dress W.E. BEVERIOGE, BALTIMORE, Md. ] = eabsusted by ailments that [ovnid rot doany work. nerompanying fice ures show the result of 3 months? treat. F Event. I now feel like a now bei a ‘ou never smile?” Old Bonny- G tor oil has not failed in any ease | ist enat sou it once, and it tock me se to ref¥ye warts to which it was ap. to get my face back I've been Plied Qce a day from two to six weeks Afra Be to repeat it” Pa: “Weae Lams, Debuts HINDERCOR®S._ - sure cure for Cors- 5 a: bres ot te which Some taii be- south west quarter of section twenty-seven (27) | the southwest quarter of section tihirty-four | decree of the circuit court of Bates county state | her ‘hneband, | the | CATHOLIC LADY, Order of Pubhieation. E OF MISSOURI, ). unty of Bates. , sate Court tor the county of r term, 18 eveased, H, P. tor Order ot -ublication. P Nickell Braden i at mes D the court order tor Lestate of said Asse lists and served on ceased resid at Luis court. OF MISSOURI) nyo pss ot the probate nty, her «is an stract copy of t lieat rein reterred t ppears of record ins my hand and si [SEAL] Done at office 1oth day of October, 1s2. WT. CORE, Judge ot Probate nt as the sam y Butler, Mo, 147 rill s Sale. aod authority of a transcript ed trom the office of the re circuitcourt of ates courty, returnable at the November term, t892, of said courtto me. directed in favor of Missouri State Bank and against «© atharine McCoy, I have levied and d upon all right, title, i terest and claim of, in and to the tollowing described real estate situated | in Bates county, Missouri, to-w i The east half of the southw j of section twenty-three (23] township jlorty-one (41j range thirty-one [31], { Nate County, Missouri, I will on Friday, November 25th, 1892, | between the hours of niie o'clock in the torenoon and five o’clock in the atter- noon of that day, at the east front door ot the courthouse in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same or sO mach thereot as may be required at public vendue to the highest bidder for | cash, to satisty suidexecution and costs. C. W.HA<TSOCK, Sheriff ot Bates County. By virtue executior cierK of | Missouri, t quarter | Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue and in pursuance of ajadgment and | decree of the circuit court of Bates county state M i, rendered at the June term nacertain action in partition G RWright, W A Wright, Mary Dark and Preston Dark her husband, Mar- garet BE Deaton and James Deaton her husband are plaintiffs and Harriet Ida Butler and Fred Batler her husband, Alvin Hill and Ella Hill, are defendants, a certified copy of which de- erce has bee red to me by the clerk of | said court commanding me as sheriff of Bates unty, Mo,, to sell the real estate hereinafter Tibed at the November term, 1892, of said berefore, in pursuance of said judg nd decree 1, CW. Hartsock, sheriff of ates county, Missouri, will on Fridoy November 25th, 1892, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and four o’clock in the afternoon of that day, and while said circuit court is in session, oder tor sale at public auction, ‘or cash, to the highe t bidaer, at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, the following described real estate, to-wit: ibe north half of lot six (6) of the northwest quarter of section four (4) except a strip six- een feet wide across the south side of the east oalf thereot, also the east one fourth of the north hail of the east half of lot six (6) of the nortbeast quarter of section five (5) alsoastrip thirty-two feet wide acroes the north half of the east halt said lot six (6) of section five (5) adjoining the last deecribed tract of land all in township thist i (39) range thirty-one (31, in nates county, missouri Cc. W. HARTSOCK, Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a general execution issued from the offic of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, returnable at the November term, 1 of said court to me urecved in favor of Missouri State Bank and against J A Powell, have levied and seized upon all right, title, interest and claim of, in and to the following described real estate sita- tod in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit < haifof the southwest quarter of (1.) and the northwest quar- t quarter ofsection twenty ip forty-two (42) range thirty Mis 2 t ec I willeon Friday Nouscnilc: 25th, 1892. between the t o' nine o'clock in the fore- noon and tive o’clock in the afternoon of that day at the east front door of the court house in the city of er, Dates county. Missouri. sell the same or +0 h theseof as may be requir- ed at pablic vendue tothe highest bidder for cash to tatisfy said execution and costs. CW HARTSOCK, Sheriff of Bates County ur Notice. In the matter of the Assigned estae ot C. Cotherin, Geo 1) McNeil, Assignee November Term, 1392 Bates Circuit Court. Notice is hereby given that on the 1st day ot December, 1592, I will submit to the circuit court ot Bates county, ae said assigned ¢ disposition thereof, the amounts received anJ the an mounts paid out and on what account, and will on that day, having tully discharged my! igations in that” tbehslf as asrignee, disposed or said assets, ask to be dis ged trom said trust and tor release neretrom as such assignee and tor re- ny bond dsmen therein. . Mo., this Oct. 22, GEO D McNEIL, nee of C CoTHentn Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to ali fand all others interested tn the est. | loin W Mediew deceased, that I, istrator of satd estate, i final settlement thereot on} ke Rae atthe next term ot 2nty probate court, in Bates ty, st ot Missouri, to be Butler, 3 Mo., onthe 14th day ot ber, 1892. j. W. EN ‘i November, the Bates Witness | alot said court} 1892. creditors HAVE SHOWN THAT PRICKLY Above all best ada other rem od to this cl PURIFYING THE 81000 a COUNTERACTING SIALARI: IT WILL CURE All complaints arising from a sordered conditic the; Liver, the Stomach, [ neys and the Bowel pepsia, HoeNiteal Constipa- tion, Inc «=. s ick Head- ache, Bi slaints, etc., etc., ) ly to its} beneficen , It tones up the system and | restores perfect health, is purely vegetable in composi- tion and pleasant tothe If you have not tried it, TRY IT NOW! at prve- GISTS HAVE IT FoR SALE. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO., ST. LOUIS, MO. West Ward Stock Farm, —THE HOME OF— Mambrino Chief i DD BRONZE TURKEYS FOR SALE, FANCY BRED, \QUIRE OF LAURA CONCKLIN, PASSAIC, MO. CB LEWIS & CO. Proprietor of Elk Horn Stables Having purchased the Elk Horn barn and Livery outfit ot J. W Smith, and having added to the same a number of first-class Buggies, and horses, I can say to the public that i now have the Best Livery Barn In southwest Mo. Horses and mules bought and sold, or stock handled on commission, Stock bearded bs the day weekor month, With 16 years exper- ience Mr Lewis teels able to compete with anv Livery barn in this section. Callard see him cB LEWIS & CO SCALE Ls LeAies’ Tailor DIE leg Syaam of Eqsere Besearemess, by which you cas extaii Four ovm act ‘Will C. Rood’s MAGIC .O00 sold. Bent on Thirty Daye Trial. te wegen ape Don't falito investigate fi Bon’ auto investince AGENTS WANTED The Rood Magic Beate Co., Chicago, Ill. Notice of Final Settlement. ors interested in theestate of Those H Summy deceased. that I. Elmira A Sammy, adminis- | tratrix of said estate. intendto Snail settie | mest thereof. at the next term ofthe Bates , | county probate court _in Bates county. state, of Misaonuri, to be held at nutier on the b4th d m- | of November, ieee. | FLMIAR A Sta a Administ:

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