The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 30, 1893, Page 7

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“Castoria is so well adapted to children that Irecommend it as superior to any prescription known tome.” H. A. Ancuzr, M. D., 111 So, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. ¥. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Scour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, Kilis estion, Without injurious me¢ ion, Tus Centacr Comp sy, 77 Murray Street, CALL NOTICE. W. G. WOMACK, ’ C. F. PHARIS, R. R. DEACON, SONS & CO. T. W. FISK. LEE CULVER, A. L. McBRIDE & CO. HARPER & ATKISON. R DEALER FOR THE UNEXCELLED Hunicke Bros’. ~™ BULLION» HAT. They are the Best for None genuine withow the money. OR THE the Trade Mar’. Hunicke Bros. mB. So HAT. MANUFACTURID SOLELY By HUNICKE BROS., ST. LOUIS, MOQ. is 1.00 A YEAR! Always P| | eee The Kansas City Weekly Times, d contains information and entertainment for the household. SAMPLE COPIES SENT FREE. 50 CENTS FOR SI= MONTHS Worms, gives sleep, and promoces di N.Y o@9LCORO8CCC® Ceeused: Get the Best. the best weekly paper in the Southwest: It consists of twelve pages From 15 Ww cEDEom 1s ge fe FINUECTION y Fass month by XS le: E re naimmetes sae toned Y ULL eo or int fel e's. S8 OT} “TREGENTLEMAN'S FRIEND. "yz OM, Sise.the sith or imtertery yatt oaecs husincss cy i ION SYRINGE free with every bottle. Doce not STAIN, FREVENTS. STRICT RE: ORRNGA and GLRET in Ox to Foun days. Re LEUCORREGAcr WHITES. | 4. . . 'S._ Sent to any Adaress Ih MaNUracTURING CO, LANCASTER, OMI. Endorsed by physicians and No Starving, ‘EnssCrean Bala Fo, ATARRH THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHERS, 68 ‘Warren St. New York. Price 50 ct OO » One reason why Scott's Emulsion of Pure Nor- ian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime Soda has had such a large sale is because it is Almost as palatable as milk;’ but the best reason is Fz its curative properties are unequalled. It cures { cough, supplie. the waste of produces Wh and builds up the entire sfstem. tt’s Emulsion | cures Coughs, 9 Consumpt:on, Scrofuta. fall Anaemic and Wasting bases. Prevents wasting in a Abno-t as patsiatic as ently the genuine. Pre- & Bowne, Chemists, New 2° Enmuision health, clears the skin and beausifies the complexion. No wrinkles or fiabbiness follow this treatment leading society ladies. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL, Harmless. 1d 6 cents in starmps for particctars to OR. 0. W. F. SNYDER. M'VICKER'S THEATER. CHICAGO, ILL PERSONAL AND LITERARY. —Mrs. Martha J. Lami of the Magazine of Am who died recently, had health for n oldest boar The hotel | times, but s: changed h the editre S | | | | | water Becess: | ask pe | thorities. ‘anted, neh au- but he had a grea 1 lb of per- p. “I wonder how the re able to keep a ca fi ly once said to him, in hisown house, and the poet ator —Voltaire tragedy of one own which cont: | many verses 1 ed from othe thors one cf these bits came from his lips, Piron, the poet, made a bow, with great seriousness. “Why are you doing tha Voltaire med at length, with extreme 2. “Keep on, monsieur,” said Piron; don’t mind me. It is mer iy my habit to salute my acquaintances.” —Some ladies never, never derstand that a man of letters should sometimes be left alone in his den. Byron himself says that, however much in love he might be at any moment, he always felt, even when with the fair, a hankering to Se back in his untidy library. There isa story of Lady By- ron’s entering the den and ask ing: “Do I disturb you, Byron?” ‘Yes; damna- iN answered Childe Harold, in an in- telligible if not a pardonable irritatior. can un- lishing firm of Sampson, Low, Marston ays of American spelling: “An n author objects quite as much asan English author does to have his spelling altered, and although [ heartily join in wishing that the spelling of En- glish, or, should I say, British and American writers was identical, still, fifty millions of people have a right to please themselves, and even to consider that they are nearer to the English of our common forefathers than we are.” —It was Count Montrond who said to Alexandre de Girardin of a young man who was beginning. to make a brilliant reputation, and whom Girar- din did not appreciate: “Hasten to recognize him, or he will not recognize you.” His valet waited on him one morning most unsuccessfully. He could find none of the toilet articles Montrond handed them to him, re- marking: “You mus, admit that you are lucky to have me here. Without me, you certainly could not wait upon me.” —At a dinner given to Turner, the | painter, who twas an inveterate cock- ney, the talk turned upon one of h drawings of South coast scenery—a view of a distant river, with a grey- hound at full speed after a hare in the foreground. A guest was examining this plate with admiration, when Turner called out: ‘‘Ah! I see you want toknow why I have introduced that ‘are. It isa bit of sentiment for that’s the spot where ‘Arold ' foot fell, and you see I'ave made ic; re- an ’ound a-chasing an ‘are!” HUMOROUS. —A Lover's Generosity.—Rosalie— ‘Is your fiance gener Grae | “Well I should say so. He just me gaged his house to buy me a ring. Vogue. —Little Boy—“What's the difference | between high chureh and low chure Little Girl—Why, don’t you know One says ‘Aw-men’ and the other says ‘Amen.’ —Tid-Bits. —Wasn’t He Right?—"Did you enjoy yourself in the count j bet. And the funnie the hired man unmilking the cows. Indianapolis Journal. —Crummer—"I suppose the winds they have in Cl 2 Vokes—"Ye: All you take there of that remains.”—N. Y. Herald. —Judged Like a Man.—Miss Draper —“Your watch, Mr. Jumper, should be Mr. Jump “Wh Miss Draper—“It has such a plain, open face."—Jeweler’s Weekly. strong go blow aw —Teacher— part of a knife your father carr Young Hopeful of the corkserev “What is the principal For instance, why does aknife in his poeke + Sir, because Spassvogel. —Miss Porter—"Did you notice the ; blank look of that gentleman who sat down on his silk hat?” Mr. Murray— | “No; but I'm glad you didn’t hear the ; blank words he used.”—Princeton Tiger. | »—Elsie—‘You are a flatterer, doc tor.” Dr. Cheatum—*‘Why, Miss Elsie, | it is quite impossible to flatter you. | If I should say that you were an angel, | Tshould not be flatterin; | —angels.”—Boston Budget. | —Wife—“I£ you lose your collar but- | ton so ea: Tshould think you would | tie a piece of string to it.” Husband— Isn't it enough to lose | “Great Scott! the collar button without going to the | expense of two or three balls of twine @ week?"—N. Y. Herald. —The tall man was telling a story. | He said: ‘I was there in the middle of | the great prairie fighting the red devils | —" “Meaning Indians?” inquired the jfatman. “No,” replied the tall man. “I will be honest with you. I had the | the jim-jams.”—Bnffalo Express. —‘Well, Bobbie, did you enjoy your | visit to the museum?” “Yes. mamma.” | “Do you remember any of the nice | things you saw?” “Oh, yes, I remem- | ber lots of them.” “‘And can you tell ; me what they were called?” “Yes, | most of them were called ‘Do not | touch. Tid-Bits. —R. Bi: Marston, director of the puk- | Johnny?” “You | t thing I seen was | Ss: but not the | ig you, but the | CF GENERAL INTEREST. i aarce i —On June 25, 1798, congress passed | en act authorizing all merchant vessels | to defend themselves against any seizure or restraint on the part y vessel under Frene bdue and capture colors; and prize ral custom pre- France during the On the edge of the ng the highway a sheaf of Standing, to which all the the village is called “the is the property of the or other homeless wayfarer who to carry it away and profit by t of contribute, | rer’s first the recall of a nor in colonial times came } sachusetts. This was in 1768. assachusetts assembly, after de- ing they would not rescind their lar letter, adopted a petition to g, asking for the recall of Fran- Bernard, the provincial governor, “that one more worthy to represent so great and good a king might be sent to preside over the province.” —A recent application of aluminum to the frames of vye-glasses has attract- | ed some attention. The weight of the frame is almost imperceptible, yet the lenses are softer than without. rims. As the amount of aluminum used is ex- small, the difference in price nm such glasses and those with steel frames is trifling. The fact that aluminum does not ccrrode especially recommends it for this use. —A railroad with a gauge of but 24 inches is now building in North Caro- lina. Itis to run from Hot Springs, near the Tennessee border, to Laurel river, a distance of24 miles. Its course is through avery mountainous country, touching also a fine farming section. ‘The main purpose of its construction is to get out the timber on about 70,000 acres of land. A type of mogul engine is being built for the little road. A watch is composed of 98 pieces, and over 2,000 operations are used in its manufacture. It takes 308,000 of the small screws which are used to weigh a pound. The hair spring is a strip of steel about 914 inches long, 100th of an inch wide and 27-10-000th of an inch thick. A 20-1,000th part of an inch’s difference in the thickness of the strip makes a difference in the running ofa watch of about six minutes an hour. —T wo prospectors in the region south- east of Mount Ranier found recently in a wild, desolate spot the remains of a camp, with cooking utensils and canned provisions scattered around about.- A mile from the deserted camp they found the bones and antlers of an elk and the bones of a man mixed together and scattered about, and near by the barrel and half-deeayed stock of a gun. The supposition was that the man was a solitary prospector who, out hunting, } e first petition for | had wounded an elk, which had turned | on him and killed him, and then died beside his body. —One of the best arguments for good roads is contained in a calculation re- cently published in one of the engin- eering papers. It states that on the Worst earth roads, not muddy, but sandy, a horse can draw only twice as much as he can y on his bac’ fair earth road, times as muce! good macadamized road, 9 times as much: on a stone tr times as much, and on metal times as much. The men who use the country roads can therefore make money by im- proving the roads, rather than by buy- ing new horses every year or two. | —Two muskrats came up the drain into the cellar of Mrs. Sarah Howard's | house at Houlton, Me., a week or two Ago, and, being unmolested, they soon | became so tame they ventured into the kitchen. They tried to fraternize with | the old cat and ate out of her saucer. | The cat never molests them, but the kittens occasionally cuff them and » them away from the milk. They made a nest under the cupboard in the kitchen and now are tame enough torun around while the folks are about without any manifestation lof f nd will even sit up and sniff at a hand held toward them. —Observant persons who frequently ass along Twenty-seventh street oppo- te the Madison Square Garden find in | the car works the in the cosmopolitan ¢ iw i a constant lesson | racter of New | York's iness relations. Not onl; are th outgoing new street rs lettered in such fashion as to proclaim their destination for cities in all parts of the United States, but in many in- stances the zppear of Spanish words upon the shows that they | co, the West Indies A resident South | ace | | German Are With Lesse Broadly speaking, German schoolboys have no time todo schools forlorn of grounds, and are so desperately with lessons that all their nd vitality is used up in © endeavor to get through the work y allotted to them. They really have no opportunity from the com- mencement of the schvol term to its close for running or jumping, playing at ball or marbles, paper chases, or any of the other amcsements to which En- glish schoolboys as a rule devote them- selves with an eager assiduity seldom ; displayed in the dry and thorny pursuit of know edge. When a German boy exhibits symptoms of exhaustion and debility. caused by overwork—which under the present scholastic system is only too frequently the case—his pa- rents enter him at a gymnastic institu- tion, and compel him to attend one or two evening cuurses of “scientific calis- | thenics,”very possibly at the expense of | Overweighted Finding His Petrified Body. Several months ago a squad of miners in w Mexico discovered a cave in which they passed the} night. On coming out im the morn | ing they saw in the opemmg wnat appeared to be a body Ou examin lug it th ub t was a human corpse a tried at that. About 15 years ago when the oilic-rs were rotatter the James aud Yourger | boys, Bruce Youuger left his me in Missouri ard took refage ja the} Guadaloupe mountains in southern | New Mexico ' ro Whom the | Younger family bad raised went with tia and regularly carried food aud ition to the fu em the eave, and, on several asious, Mrs. | Biffle stated. she and Bruce's sister visited him. On one oceaision the negro made his regular visit to the |bandit but he never returned and | from that time nothing has ever been | heard of Bruce Younger. It was i: ! this eave that the boly was found. |! All of Youngers relative: ‘ept one | have identified the petrification as that of the dead outlaws body. It! is now at D-nison Tex, and will be} taken to Boston to the museuim.— Clinton Dem Greek children used the charm to bring sunshine than Ameri can children do; they sang “rain, vain, same go away.” More powder was burved in mak- ing the Hoosac caual that in the war of the Rebellion. A large coal mine uses almost the same. ir isorders of the sto: c ot nha: mac liver and tegulage the bowels, E: ~ HEA chathor would bo slmost priceless te those wha Bubice from this d. Ven if thay only y ways that they will not bo wik -outthea, But afterallaick besa ‘st here ia where ‘ _eeureit while tsare small and or two pills makes dose, ble an: do not ripe ot ‘tion please all w! 3; five for $1. Sold by crugyists everywhere, or sent by mail CARTER PEDICINE CO., New York. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE mt: Why Suffer? When you can be Cured Your Painter has often wasted time and material in trying to obtain a shade of color, and has even resorted to the use of zoaty mixed paints, the ingredients of whic! he knew nothing, because of the diffi- culty in making a shade of color with white lead. This waste can be avoided by the use of National Lead Company's Pure White Lead Tinting Colors These tints are a combination of per- fectly pure colors, put up in small cans, and prepared so that one pound will tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead to the shade shown on the can. By this means you will have the best paint in the world, because made of the best materials— Strictly Pure White Lead and pure colors. Insist on having one of tke brands of white lead that are standard, manufactured by the “Old Dutch” process, and known to be strictly pure : “Southern” “Red Seal” “Collier” These brands of Strictly Pure White Lead and National Lead Co.’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors are for sale by the most re- liable dealers in paints everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send to us for a book containing informa- tion that may save you many a dollar; it will only cost you a postal card. NATIONAL LEAD Co., 1 Broadway, New Ye St. Louis Branch, c Clark Avenue and Tenth St Administmtor’s Notice. Notice is herebv given that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, made on the 28th day ot February, 1893, the undersigned pub- lic administrator for said county, has taken charge of t! e estate of Pheoba Ad- dis, deceased, All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them to me tor allow- ance within one year after the date of said letters, or they may de pre- cluded from any benetit of said estate; and if said claims be not erhibited within two years from the date ot this publication, they shall be forever barred. This 2th day ot February, 1893. ; J. W. <NIS, 1§ Pablic Administrator. Order of Publication. Scate of Missouri, ee County of nates Be it remembered, That, heretofore to-wit at areguiarterm ofthe Bates county circuit court began and held at the court house, in the elty of Butler. in said county and s onthe second Monday in February, 1=%3 and afterward, to-wit: on the 3rd day of March, the same being the Seventeeth Jndi- cial day of said term, among other, the fol- lowing proceedings were had, to-wit: De Thousands are suffering with Torpid Liver-the symptoms are Depression of Spirits, Indiges. tion, Constipation, Headache. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorater is a reliable remedy for Liver Disorders. It cures thousands every year; why not try Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator? Your Druggist will supply you. — a Bir = N. ATs enue He Kan; {FOLKS "Whee t tran your OT ereatvent Riva age bases ; mt a 3 nts tbat Teouid net sit ou teed? CONFIDENTIAL. taps for particulars t> F. SHYDER, M'VICKER'S THEATER, GNICASS, TLL. CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, OESICN PATENT: informati. d free palletes Forint & con on ware tents America. . 361 BROAD’ Sirery patent taken Out bs te terse ber om is ore, the pablic by 8 notice given free of charge in tho Stientitic American Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the world, Splendidiy illustrated. No tntelligese man should be without it. Week! cary $L00six months. Address BM Sr on beplisuzns, 361 Broadway, New York City. WANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS I will pay the highest. market price for chickens and egg delivered at my store at Virginia, Mo.- I also have good feed stable in connection with my store.& Nexson M. Nesrirrope. NEW YORK CORRESPONDENC HOME STUDY © Mize. administrator of the estate of Mar- tin W Mize, deceased, plaintiff ys. The Bate: County National Bank,Clara D Cooter, Bet- tie Harrison and H H.Mize, defendants Order of Publication, Now at this day comes the defendant. The Bates County National Bank, herein by its attorneys DeArmond & Smith, and file its af- fidavit, alleging among other things, that de- fendant H H Mize, is not a resident of the state of Missouri.’ Whereupon it is ordered by the court that defendant be notified by pub Neation that plaintiff has commenced a suit against him in this court. by petition and af™i- davit, the general natur id object of which is to enforce the payment by the Bates County National Bank, one of the defendants herein, to the plaintiff, ofdividends which have ac- crued on certain shares of stock of said Bank the certificates of which were issued to M W Mize. as trastee for Clara D Cooter, Bettie Harrison and H H Mize said certificates being numbered 23). 231 and 232 for two shares of the | Pparvalueof one hundred dollars each and which stock and the dividends thereon are claimed by said plaintiff as the administra: of the estate of said M W Mize and that unless the :aid H H Mize be and appear st this cour. at the next term thereof, to inand heid at the court house in the city of Butlerin ssid county on the 12th day of Jane. 1993 next on or before the third day of said term. term shall so long continue, and if not on or before the last day of said term, answer or plead to the petitien in said cause, the | same will be taken as confessed and judgment | acopy hereof his position in his class at school. | “Turnerei,” however, is not presented } to him in the light of play, but down-} right hard. physicai_ work, which may } Productive of development to his muscle and benefit to his generai health Without affording him any keen sense of recreation.—London Society. ( least fifteen days be: be published, according to law in the Batier Weekly Times a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Mo, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at fore the first day of the ae term of = — a true copy oftherecord. Witness m a and the seal of the cireuit court rt of {-EaL} Bates county, this 3rd of March. 1385 JOHN C HAYEs, Cirenit Clerk. will be rendered accordingly. And be it further ordered that | =15 Daily Train, 5 243 BROADWAY N.Y. INTRODUCTORY LECTURE Missouri Pacific R’y, 2 Dailv ‘Train 2 KANSAS CITY and OMAHA COLOR ALO SHORT LINE Kansas City to St, Louis, THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, POLIMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without cnange H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket A’gt ST. LOUIS, MO

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