The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 6, 1893, Page 7

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for Infants and Children. “‘Castoria isso well adapted to children that Irecommend itas superior to any prescription knowntome.” HA. Ancuen, M.D., 111 So, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. ¥. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, KL Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di gestio Without inj: medication, Tus Cextacr Coupny, 77 Murray Street, N. Y vor: CALL NOTICE. W. G. WOMACK, Cc. F. PHARIS, R. R. DEACON, SONS & CO. T. W. FISK. LEE CULVER, A. L. McBRIDE & CO. +HARPER & ATKISON. i i Ask the above merchants for the celebrated Rich Hill high patent & Jersey cream flour. OSHOSOMVSSSSSSOSODHSDAEOSBSEBISOQOOS ie % me | | SOME FACTS ABOUT ° e@ Hunicke Bros’. Hunicke Bros. \e |.) BULLION a5 TL B.S 8 HAT, HAT. le ' | 1. They are the best Hats for the money. _ le 2. They are made in every desirable shape to suit every taste. ig | 3. They are the only hats guaranteed by the manufactur- |g si ers to be unexcelled for durability. le f > 4. Somany are daily sold that the manufacturers can j 9 afford to use nothing but the best materials. e | e 5. None Genuine without above Trade Mark. fe q | Manufactured only by HUNICKE SBROS., ST. LOUIS, MO. © L . 9 je | a OSTDHOSCP@SNVEVSCDSOSCSCSHSSE 1.00 A YEAR! Always Getthe Best. a s City Weekly Times, {s the best weekly paper in the Southwest. It consists of tw and contains information and entertainment for the household. SAMPLE COPIES SENT FREE. 50 CENTS FOR SIX MONTHS wy i Fitts ALYO0R f Fines rs i OM Al jure the health or interfere with one's business or THE GENTLEMAN'S FRIEND. “"y2 leasure, It builds up and improves the general sthe 1d be YRINGE treo The Feans elve pages , From 15 ‘ cE D Ere Ibs, Our PERFECTION 8' not 5’ panties the complexion. with every bottle. follow this treatment. a TAIN. PREVENTS STRICTURE, id leading society ladics. ry BORE EC CORE Rene Ware om 2 PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. | CONFIDENTIAL. oe ey SHES : armless. No Sta Send 6 cents fn stamps for ters on P ‘particc! OR. 0. W. F. SNYOER. M'VICKER’S THEATER. CHICAGO. FLL MALYDOR MANUFACTURING CO,, LANC. OSITIVE CURE. 66 Warren St. New York. Price 50 Consumption That dreaded and dreadful disease! sWhat shall stay its ravages? Thousands say Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian : # cod liver oil and hypophosphites of lime and soda has cured us-of consumption in its first stages. Have you a cough or cold acute or leading to consumption? Make no delay but take THE P BLY BROTHERS, Scott's Emulsion Gures Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Anseraie and Maativet Diseases. w eee zees® | Fe | Cherokee strip to graze and waiting NEBRASKA’S DISGRACE Impeachment Proceedings Beann Against Corrnpt State Officials. Lincoln, Neb. March | peachment pre cfiici and are at last in full b} ! sensational trial ever | braska’s histo since the impeach- ment of Governer Butler will scen be in pro The jong delayed blow fell tiy before noon to day when the advisory commission of jimpeachment reported to the house tbat all the evidence had been read, jand it was the unanimous opinion of ithe three emiuent lawyers that im- | peachment procedings would fie | lagainst every member of the state | ‘beard of public lands and buildings, | /and that in justice to the state such | | proceedings should be at ouce insti | tuted. The report was adopted |by the house this afternoon, and the | Senate at once, on being notified en- itered the joint conyention at 4 | o'clock to prepare the articles of im- peachment. The only point on which the law- yers differed in making their report ' to the legislature was with reference ito tne condition of affairs at the |Lincoln insane asylum. Judge | Pound held that there was nothing to show that in that case the board jhad received any notice of erooked- |ness that was going on, and could not be presumed to be guilty in the absence of such evidence. The oth-¢ jer members of the commission held however, that the board could not | have been ignorant, and if not in collusion had been grossly negligent and derelict in their duty, and were therefore culpable. 30 —Im- two ex-offici t, and the most sown in Ne- state ls (ag i Husker. From the Chicago Tribune. “Uncle Jerry” Rusk’s official suc- cessor in the agricultural department Secretary Morton, who is a practical farmer, declares that he can husk more corn than any man west of the Missouri river. “I think nothing of husking 200 bushels ina day when the weather is propiticus” he says. Iu a shucking match with ex-Senator Van Wyck of Nebraska a few years ago Mr. Morton claims to have beat- en his rival bad hours. in a stretch of six The prize in this contest was a sorrel colt which the secretary still possesses. Domingo Gana has been nominat- ed for Chilian minister to the United States in place of Blest Gana. A great flow of natural gas has been struck at Cherryvale. Kan., and the citizens are expecting a boom. The resolution in Catamarea, Ar- geutine, has not been suppressed. Disorders are reported from nearly all the departments of that state. Irying Latimer, the recaptured Michigan convict and murderer, told an interesting story of his es- cape and capture. See the World’s Fair ter Fitreen Cents Upon receipt of your address and fifteen cents in postage stamps, we will mail you prepaid our Souvenir Portfolio of the World’s Columbian Exposition, the regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one, we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art anda thing to be prized. It contains fall page views of the great buildings, with deseriptions of same, and is executed in highest style of art. If not satisfied with it, after you get it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address, H. E. Bucxtey & Co., Chicago. Ili. It is reported from Guthrie, Ok., jthat hundreds of Texas cattle are being unloaded at Ponca in the | settlers are indignant. The Rev. Thomas Spurgeon, scn | of the late renowned London Baptist j Minister, has been called to the pul- \pit of the tabernacle of his father | for a year on trial. | Two churches and sixty five other ‘buildings in the mining town of Kaernatin, Germany, were destroyed jby fire. At least fifteen lives were lost. Peculiar Advertising. Advertising a | peculiar way in / Kemp’s Bal: peten medicine in the Which the proprietor of for Coughs and Colds is indeed wonderful. ‘Ho authorizes the druggiststo gi ocallsfor it a sample bottle y tl ee es try it before purehisings f large bottles are 50c and $100. We adyise a trial. It may save you from consumption. A REMARKABLE OPERATION. Polling the Tooth of a Hippopotamus—A Molar Four Inches Long. “George,” opotamns be- gerie in win- ter quarters at Phila pulied the other ¢ had been ai of be m kno ness the ope George was end of the the stall w e Baby Ruth, the four-months-old ele- phant, are quartered. When the sur- geons ente: the apartment he seemed to be suffe i great pain and lay in a semi-stupo: in the corner of his stall. It was only after he was repeatedly called by name that he lifted his im- mense frame the fence that bounded his captivity. Then Head Keeper George W. Arsting- : aie stall patted him on the nose and in- | , duced him to open his mouth so that the tooth could be plainly seen. Mr. Arstingstall explained the nature and effect of the trouble, and told how it would eventually render the blind unless it was remedied. To give the scientists an exact idea of the mag- | nitude of the impending operation the keeper had a few measurements taken. When fully open the jaws were found to be a little over three feet apart, the depth of the jowls being about six inches less. Across the front of the mouth the animal measured eighteen inches. Four big tusks, sixteen inches in length, protruded from the lower jaw and an equal number from the one above, The diseased tooth was away at the back of the mouth. Though the most clumsy and ill-favored looking beast imaginable “George” seemed to be intelligent and even affectionate, responding to each command of his | master. It was intended to chloroform the beast, but after considering the matter Mr. Arstingstall conclfided that it would be better not to do so, as he feared that it would be impossible to pry open “George's” jaws when he was once asleep. Besides, it would take several gallons of the anwsthetic to stupefy the animal, and its adminis- tration might result fatally. Accordingly two of the ssistants tempted “George” to keep his mouth open by holding slices of bread in front of his eyes, while Keeper Arstingstall made ready his forceps. Several times the keeper touched the tooth with the cold steel, but each time the animal pulled away with a yellof pain. Water was streaming from his eyes and blood was oozing out in drops all over his head and neck. The other nals in the room, at- tracted by his cries, began to trumpet and groan in sympath. The noise was deafening. Even ‘Baby Ruth” seemed to realize that something unusual was going on. Finally, by a dexterous twist, the operator fixed his forceps, and in a see- ond the whole trouble “George” gave an awful tooth, which proved to be four inches long, left his he settled back in his y was) over. yell as the more than tha w relief. Before le n the keepers dressed the wounded jaw with cotton big water monster some tempting delicacies. —Washington Star. FRENCH LOVE SONGS. Tuneful Romance of t Troubadours and love pleventh Centary ouveres. songs of France may be traced back to the time of the Crusad- ers and chivalry, when the influence of women began to be felt in society they were no longer treated as inferior beings, but set up on a pedestal to be worshipped. The troubadours and trouveres singing from one end of France to the ot mingled with this new cult all the beauty and romance of nature, all the love of spring. the de- light in trees and flowers and nightin- gaies, the rapture of sunset and sun- rise, the music of rnnning water. Thus the eleventh century seemed to bring a new world into being, but it was only that men learned tos: nd that feelings i 1 found their nto words and melody. Songs as his still exist and > popular, a 40 accompaniment tothe old simple airs, M. sot justifies his claim for them to be placed higher in the scale of art than their more modern successors. In this old world of se: the most remarkable the pastorals. connect this name wich unreality, and to see the shepherdesses in ex from a courtly poi truly, the pastoral songs and poems. which owed their existence to trouba- dours and trouveres did at last find their way to town and court, and the original “Robin et Marion,” itself popular in the right sense even to this day, was the forerunner of ‘‘Tircis,” ‘‘Aminte,” “Philis,” ‘‘Lisidas’—all the dancing throng with ribbons and crooks which made M. Jourdain ask: ‘‘Pourquoi tou- jours ces bergers?” These mock pastorais, as everybody knows, are a study in themselves. They have not interfered with the old peasant pastorals, any more than the ordinary popular love songs of the mid- dle ages have disappeared because so many of them, losing their way, strayed also into the artificial air of courts, and thus lost, too, their own special charac- ter. Yet they have lived a double life, like other songs, aad linger on in their old forms among their old companions in the peasant world to which they really belong, and of which, on its sentimental side—which exists in spite of the esprit gaulois—they give a true picture.—Coatemporary Review. ntimental song 3 is that of rds and least And . Not Sufficiently Explicit. Judge—Prisoner, what is your name? Prisoner—In what state? — Kate Field's Washington. ‘oasting hill doesn’t pay you for~ the walk up it is a sign you are getting old.—Atchison Globe. walked to the edge of | animal | d.and then th of | and | A Child Poisoned Sedaliz, Mo. March 29.—Ray- | mond, the S Yost, of Richard after- the effects of a peculiar year old son of lied is City, c s azo the anned sserved by nk a anK 2 [tion. At all druggists. soc and St. the woods has either been killed or sold away from the scenes of his youth j Even the familiar grunt of the old razor back | chillea. The Jast bog in this neck of forever of sow has been Down the in bottoms great droves once gamboled on the green, and parched hides in the rippling waters, there is now ueither a trace nor grunt These sad reminiscences, together with the scarcity and awful to con template high prices of hog meat, leads us to suggest that it would be a good idea to plant out more hogs aid fewer dogs.—Excelsior Springs Standard. cooled their a builders use he best «izSess f materials— lumber, brick, lime, cement, . sand— whatever goes into the construction of a building; they employ only the best workmen and pay the best wages; they get better prices for their work than their less careful competitors, and always get the best contracts; they paint their work with Strictly Pure White Lead manufactured by the “‘Old Dutch Pro. cess” of slow corrosion, and with one of the following standard brands : “Collier,” “Red Seal,” “Southern” For colors they use the National Lead Company’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in small cans, each being sufficient to tint twenty-five pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the desired shade These brands of Strictly Pure White Lecd and National Lead Co.'s Tinting Colors, are ‘or sale by the most reliable dealers in paints ywhere. peint, it will pay you d to us for a book containing informa- mu are going to nat may save you many a dolfar; it wiil ly cost you a posta! card to do so. NATIONAL LEAD Co., 1 Broadway, New York, St. Louis Branch, Clark Avenue and Tenth Street. Administrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, made on the 28th day ot bruary, 1893, the undersigned pub- lic administrator for said county, has taken charge of tl e estate of Pheoba Ad- dis, deceased, All persons having S against said estate are requi exhibit them to me tor allow- ance ithin one year after the date of said letters, or they may be pre- cluded from any benefit of said estate; and if said claims be not erhibited within two years from the date ot this tion, they shall be foreve. barred. 28th day ot February, 1893. J. W. ENNIS, } 16 Public Administrator. Order of Publication. State of Miesouri, ? nty of rates.’ 5 5% Be it remembered, That, heretofore to-wit at areguiarterm ofthe Bates county circuit court began and held at the court house, in Fishing river, where the festive shoat | rustled for the early corn,and where | Aa. ew York. ~2. SHALL PRICE | Do you Know? That more ills result from an Unhealthy Liver than an other cause-Indigestion, Consti- pation, Headache, Biliousness, and Malaria usually attend it. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator is a vegetable specific for Liver Disorders and their accompany- ing evils. It cures thousands why not be one of them? Take Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. Your Druggist will supply you, ; I Seneateity sepie to TREATED BY MAIL. darnioas, No Starving. Send 6 cents in tor w& stamps for particalars 98. 0. WF. SAYDE®, M'VICKER’S THEATER, CHICAGO, ILL. Ms TEN COPYRIGHTS, For information and free Handbook write to N & CO. Broapway, NEw York. Oldest bureau for securing patents in America. pat Ev it taken out by us is tht bef TESpablsy siete sere as inthe Scientific American est cirenlation of any scientific paper in the id. | Splendidiy illustrated. No intelli ; : 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. Nestiexope. the city of Butler. in said county and state, on the second Mond. in February, 1:93. and afterward, to-wit: on the 3rd day of March, the same being the Seventeeth Jadi- cial day of sald term, among o' low C 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 Miseouri. Whereupon it is ordered by the court that defendant be notified by pub lication that plaintiff has commenced a suit ageinst him in this court. by petition and af- davit, the general nature and object of which is to enforce the payment by the Bates County National Bank, one of the defendants herein, of dividends which have ac- ares of stock of said Bank the certificates of which were issued to M W j Mize. as trustee for Clara D Cooter, Rettie Harrison and H H Mize said certificates being | numbered 25), 231 and 252 for two shares ofthe | parvalueof one hundred dollars each and which stock and the dividends thereon are claimed by said plaintiff as the administrator of the estate of said M W Mize and that unless the -aid H H Mize be and appear is court at the next term thereof,to and held j at the court house in the city ler in said pegcey Sars the l2th day of June. 14%: next, and on or before the third day of said term. if the | term shall so Jong continue, and if not. then | on or before the last day of ssid term, answer! or plead to the petitien in said cause, the | ; Same will be taken as confessed end judgment | will be rendered aceordingly. H And te it farther ord that acopy hereof he published, according to law in the Batler Weekly Tixxs a weekly newspaper i and published in Bates county, Mo., for four msertion weeks successively, the last i to be at {least Sfteon days before the first day of the next term of the cirezit court. Atrze oftherecord. Witness my hand the seal of the court of this 3rd of March. cee eee Onin Geren . Missouri Pacific R’y. 2 Dailv Train 2 KANSAS CITY and OMAHA COLORALO SHORT LINE 5 Daily Train, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, POLIMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without change H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket A’gt 3ST. LOUIS, MO

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