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YOU WIJ.L FIND THE BEST GRADE OF F-U-R-N-1-T-U-R-E! CARPETS, Window Shades, Picture Frames, And Carpet Sweepers for the money in Southwest Mo. Also UNDERTAKING IN ALL BRANCHES. When in need of anything in my line, let me quote you prices before purchasing, they will help you. G. B. HICKMAN. TOBACCU AS AN ANTIDUTE. THIS PIUTURE AND THAT. The Weed Said to ve Efficacions in | Make Me a Populist. Preventing Cholera. (From the Nebraska State Journal.) MARCH, APRIL AND MAY H |A RAILROAD BUILT FOR % | Is the Time tor Catarrhal Dyspepsia— | | Remarkable Achievement of an SER as Obscure Financial Napoleon | The symptoms of catarrhal dys- | pepsia are: Coated tonge, pain or heavy feeling in the stomach, sour From Southern Texas came a man | stomach. belching of gas, dizzy head, who built 600 miles of railroad with sometimes headache, despondent | a $5 bill and faith, and the bill was | feelings, loss of appetite, palpitation ;2 borrowed one. He moved up of heart and irregularity of the bow- from Corpus Christi to San Antonia | els. ' with all his possessions heaped ona} For this condition Pe ru-na two wheeled cart. He got a charter found to be an admirable remedy | to build arailroad from San Autonia| [nu all cases it brings prompt rehef} to Aransas Pass. He graded a mile|to the painful symptoms, and in a! of it, throwing a good deal more |large per cent. of cases it makes a} than a shovel of dirt with his own! permanent cure Pe ru-na soothes | hands. The receiver of aunother/the inflamed mucous surface, aud road loaned the indefatigable builder | thus strikes at the root of the dis- enough old rails fora mile of track.|ease. In cases where the inflamma- In a distant part of the state was/tion has been so severe and contin- purchased an old engine which had! uedas to produce extreme irritability been condemned six years before and | of the stomach, the remedy may be sent to the shop to be wrecked tor! taken in small doses at first, diluted scrap iron. Two old cars were/in water; but, as soon as theimprove- picked up somewhere else at a bar-| ment is sufficient to permit the full gain. And that old engine drawing | dose to be taken undiluted, it is the those old care, steamed into San| better way, and the cure is so much In Texas. From an Austin (Tex.) Letter. is} 22 KENTUCKY JACKS, Just arrived and on »at HARRIS & LISLE'S stable, Butler, Mo. This is our eighth shipment of Kentucky Jacks to Bates county. We have more extra large mammoth Jacks than ever before. Knowing that the | demaud here is for extra bone, weight, style and action and superior breeders, we have taken especial pains to supply that demand. The ma- jority of these Jacks are 15 bands high, black with white points. Those desiring Jacks will do well to see this stock. We also have two good 3 Stallions for sale. All this stock will be sold low for cash. Address, D. A.& H. H. COLYER, Butler, Mo. j First Publiehed April 20th, 1588. Trustee's Sale. Whereas M S Strickler and Laura F Strickler | New York, April 16 —Considerable Antonia. On engine and cars in Stop for a moment, O Time in your flight, . * : idee mee ae oS bold lettering was painted in lamp- Make me a Populist, just for to-night, wore rapid. Pe ru-naisalso a spring medicine which at once removes the husband and wife, by their deed of trust dated SSs. and recorded inthe recorder’s and for Bates county, Missouri, O S4 pa; conveyed tothe under- | discussion has been aroused in med- icial circles by the statement of prominent physician of this city that tobacco is a powerful agency in the prevention of cholera. Opinion is divided, but it seems to be the be- lief of the majority that the weed is efficacious to certain extent. There are prophylactic advantages of to- bacco smoking, and even as far back as the seventeenth century medi- cine men advised their friends to smoke in times of great epidemics. It bas been noticeable in this part Let the black flag of despair be unfurled, Darken the light in this giddy old world: Give me a whirlwind of trouble and strife, Cartain with darkness the bright side ot life; People the future with phantoms of woe, Feed me on crow, muster, feed me on crow. Pause, Father Time, and throw open the gate, Jam so weary of eeling first-rate: Pasture me out where the picking is short, Scou' ge me with hunger and hear me cavort; Teach me to sit in contentment all day, Howling ‘* Reform’’ while my neighbors make hay; Fill my fat head with swift-moving wheels, Then I shall know how a populist feels. Make Mea Plutocrat. Stop fora moment, O Time in thy flight, Make me a Pluto just for to-night; black, “S. & A. P.” With one mile} of old track and with the equipment | of the old engine and the two old) ears Uriah Lott started the Aransas Pass system. There has been some} tall financiering in the history of| railroad building in this country, but | there isn't anything which, for daz | zling pluck, quite approaches the story of the building of this 600 miies of road in Texas. cause of all affections peculiar to the spring season by purifying the blood of all contaminations and in- vigorating the whole system. Two valuable books, No. 2 settirg forth in detail the treatment of ca- tarrb, coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis and consumption. in every phase of these diseases, and No. 3, on spring remedies and diseaser, will be sent free to any address by To the one mile of track three) The Peru na Drug Manufacturing were added—three miles by a dick | Company of Columbus, Ohio. Now let the pirate’s black flag be unfurled, Give me a cinch on the stupid old world; Let me right in on the ground floor of life, A corner I want in competitive strife. People the country with dupes I can bluff, Feed me with boodle, I’m out for the stuff. of the country that in times of great epidemics those working in the to- bacco factories have been almost exempt from the diseases. Experi- ments have been made recently which are saic to prove that the smoke of tobacco on the micro- germs of dental caries is very bene- ficial. Recent experiments have been made in Europe with tobacco smoke upon cholera bacilli and the germs were destroyed or rendered harmless in proportion to the} strength of thenicotiue in the cigars. All of the germs experimented with, however, were cultivated on gelatine substances, and in the human sys- tem there would, of course, bea difference. The subject is likely to receive the attention of medical ex- perts this summer in all the large Nothing now is of much importanec ' centers, | for I cannot extend my influence be | yond myself. Youth is delighted with applause, because it is consid- tered as the earnest of some future good and because the prospect off | life is far extended; but to me who ;am now declining into decrepitude, | there is little to be feared from the malevolence of men, and yet less to \ be hoped from their affections or es three weeks ago while that officer |teem. Something they may yet was reading a warrant for the ve-! take away but they can give me ero’s arrest, was found dangling »Othing. Riches would now be use- han a sign board at Sanlin’s corner | less and Ligh employment would be in this town early “this morning. | pain. My retrospect of life recalls Shortly after 11 o'clock last night a| to my view many opportunities of mob of about forty masked men| 00d neglected, and much time quietly entered the jail. The jailer | squandered upon trifles and more was overpowered and the keys ta-| lost in idleness and vacancy. I leave ken. The cell in which the negro ;® sreat many designs unattempted was incarcerated was unlocked and | aud many great attempts unfinished. the prisoner taken out and hanged. | My mind is burdened with no heavy The lynching was executed so quiet- | rine, and therefore I compose my ly that no one except those who par- | self to tranquility; endeavor to ab- ticipated in it knew anything about | stract my thoughts from hopes and it until the mob began firing pistol | cares, which, though reasoa knows | bullets into the suspended body. them to be vain, still try to keep oa ae eS their old possession of my heart: ex- Longfellow’s second son, Charles {iheck witltnereue amit ahecnee: Appleton Longfellow, died in Cam- | which nature cannot long delay, and bridge at the Longfellow house on | hope to possess in a better state Friday morning. 2 RO HOLE gee | that happiness which here I could : a or ea oy Sf scans a | not find, and that virtue which here prostrate wii lth eens Nahant. Last September he was | pL are well enough to be taken back to), _ oan 25 tee Cambridge, but he had a relapse a) Nashville, Tenn » April 20—A few weeks ago and died from a short | telegram ams received here. early attack of pneumonia. He was 4S/ this morning by the | adjutant gen- years old. He was dangerously |¢'#! from Tracy City in the east wounded in the war before he was | Tennessee mining region, announc- 20. In early life he had visited |itg that a battle was in progress Pause, Father Time, and throw open the gate, Tam a thief, and I’m feeling first-rate, Pasture me out where the picking is fat, Bloated I'd be, sir, a gay Plutocrat; Teach me to sit in contentment all day, Out of the tax-payers making my hay; Close my «lull ears to victim’s appeals, Then I shall know how a Plutocrat feels. HH. M. W. An Old Age. Dr. Johneon’s Rasselas “Praise,” said the sage with a sigh, “is to an old man an empty sound. I have neither mother to be delighted with the reputation of her son, nor wife to partake of the | honors of her husband. I have out lived my friends and my rivals HANGED TO A SIGN-BOARD. A Negro Murderer Quickly dealt With at Morrilton, Ark. Morrilton, Ark., April 10.—-The lifeless, bullet-riddled body of Flan- nagan Thornton, the negro, who shot and killed Constable Bates India, China, Japan and the soutb-| and that one of the guards had been | ern seas and was always an euthusi- mortally wounded and another hurt. tic yachtmar. anes a | reports and the state guards here commissioners and | hag been held at their armory. At | 5 o'clock about 100 soldiers and er- The county the supervising architect of the San Antonio court house have been in- | which slaves are kept have become | This had been anticipated by earlier | er for some second hand rails which | a street car company bad bought from a narrow guage company. On| this basis a credit trade was made with a Pennsylvania rolling will for 10 miles of rails. When they arrived there wasn’t enough money in the treasury to pay the freight. But it! was got somehow. Ten miles of| track gave the foundation for bonds | which built forty miles more and so! f the system grew into its present sone Sieh ht er ln pe proportions. This man who built \the best terms ae TLBTEGE the Aransas Pass system rode from rates yet offered by anyone San Antonia to Chicago at one time, |i this line of business: agcritical period of his ‘enterprise, | Notes drawn tor one, two, without a cent in his pocket. He ie ; hree or five years- had transportation, but he hadn't a | Down in Africa they prefer the meat of the Angora goat to the choicest mutton. The. natives of that country cannot be taught to eat rabbits, as they think the poor little creatures are the abode of evil spirits. $500, 000. We desire to place outon Have somemoney to loan : | pauable on or before a Given thing to buy focd, and he went | date. through hungry. Calland see_how cheap | we can let you have money.- ' The Bankers Loan & Title Co It is asuggestive fact alwnys suf-| P. C. FULKERSON, Ma ficiently considered that ‘as soon as —_——— any organ or faculty falls into dis-! Wanted — use it degenerates and is finally lost | dy work: zood chan altogether.” Leisure Hour. L A alary and expenees from start; stea- ce for advancement. i | BROWN BROS. CO., Nurserymen, Chicago, Through all tbe ages | Minois. that man bas had the power cf) — speech this power has not beer fix | DEA ed in any degree whatever by heredi-! goth 4 ty. It is regarded as definitely proved that if a child of civilized parents were brought up in a desert | place and allowed no communica- tion whatever with man, it wouid never make any attempt at speech. Hee eee eo rautak tak CUSHIONS. Whispers heard. Com- ‘all Remedies fall. Sold by F. HISCOX, k. Virite for book of nroofs FREY: PARKER'S | HAIR BALSAM t Uptothe last century it was not uncommon to find persons living | inawild state in the woods and France, Ger | - many and Russia, who were utterly | incapable of speech, though they) i Bs ali could make sounds in imitation of | jure th remedies that the cries of wild animals. Certain! Best parasitic insects have so completely | degenerated that they possess neith- | Harotex. So Starving. er eyes, legs, beads, mouths, stom ee E ee . achs or intestines. forests of England, ptha (\ Ny T} h one's SI Animals that | ¢, burrow and live under ground lose/ the power of sight or have eyes that | ae th are merely rudimentary. Slave ants Cheney & are or Omio, City of Torepo Lucas County. ik | Cheney makes oath or partner of the Co., doing that he moftF. f. business in the jand working ants have lost their | ‘ity of Toledo, county and state afore 3 i satd, and that said firm will pay the sum wings through being kept entirely) ot ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS ior a life on the ground The s leach and every case of catarrh that can toa hi 8) ie epee | not be cured by the use of Hall*s Ca- ters in som colonies of ants in| tarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. | Sworn to betore me an: scribed in . |My presence, this6th day of December so hopelessly dependent on their! A: D. 1886 slaves that they not only will not! ae seek food, but are incapable of feed-; — ing themselves, and will starve with | Hali’s Catarth Cure tstaken internally . | and acts directlv on the blood and mu- food before them unless a slave is cous surtaces of the s:stem. Send for paesent to place it in their jaws. A W Greason, Notary Public. | testimonials tree- | F. J. CHENEY « CO., Toledo, O Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 2 | B"Sold by Druggists, 75c. This liniment is different in composi-! CORRECT n from any other liniment on the! Mussouri Pacific Time Tabte, |market. It is a scientific discovery, | | which results in its being the most pen- etrating Liniment ever known. There! are numerous white imitations, which | may. de recommended because they pay! ithe sellera greater profit. Beware of! Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. | tillery left for the scene. The con- 3 | flict is a renewal of the old war over The war of free miners against ; convict miners. Tennessee's convict lease system | has broken out again in a deadly battle at Tracy City. now at the scere. dicted for couspiracy. Rebels in Chihuahua, Mexico,have Troops are| captured $40,000 in silver from a | pack-team. : i | Paralysis. ; Sold by H. L, Tucker, Nort Bocnp these and demand Ballard’sSnaw Lini-| Passenger. 4: imeut. It positively cures Rheumatism, | Passenger, { Neuralgia. Cuts, Sprains, Bruises, | Passenge-, 9:25 p.m. | Wounds, Sciatic and Inflammatory & heu- | Local t eight + 10:05 a.m. matism, Burns, Scalds, Sore Feet, Con- Sovtrn Bots tracted Muscle, Stift foints, old Sores, P. ‘ = Pain in Back, Barb wire cuts. Sore Chest See eee oe: a hroat and is fally gbenefic:al i anaes 2 = : orl is especially ¢! cal ints 1:46 p.m nger, 9-1:37 p.m. Local Frei; signed trustee the following @escribed real es- tate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri. to-wit The southeast quarter o! ter of section thirt west quarter of the tion thirty-three all in township forty of range thirty- 1] west of the Atth cipal meridian and containing eighty more or less which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment ofone_ certain and the south in said deed of trust, and whereas, defauit has been made in the payment of the interest as therein provided, and the same is now past due and unpaid. Now at the request of the legal holder of said real estate mortgage bond and pur- suant to the conditions of said deed of trust isesat public vendue. to the nighest bidder for cash, atthe east front door of the court house in the cityof Butler, county of Bates and state of Miseouri. cn Friday, May 26th, 1893. between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costs. LUCIUS H. PERKINS, Trustee. Trustee's Sale. Whereas H B High and Adora R_ High tember 15th, 1891, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No. 107 page 186 conveyed to the undersigned trustee the tollowing described real estate lying and being situate in the county ot Bates ane state ot Missouri. to-wit: The west half of lots one [1] and two (2] of the northwest quarter ot section one [1] and the east quarter of lots one (1] and two (2) ot the northeast quarter ot section two in township nine (39) of range thirtv-one the west halt of lots seve 17 and $) of the northwest quarter ot section three (3 jin township thirty-nine (39) of range thirtyl30) contai i 200 acres,which conveyance trust to secure the ayment of one certain note tully described in said deed of trust and whereas detau!t b:s been the paymentot the principal ot note now past due and unpaid. Now theretore the request ot the legal holder ot said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, 1 will proceed to sell the above described prem ises at public vendue, to the bidder for cash the court hi e,inthe city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Thursday, May 4'h, 1893, between the Lou forenoon and five o’cloc noon of that day for the istying ssid debt, intere J. D. ALLEN highes Yclock in the in the after- 1rposes of sat- e Of nine < etween the hours of nine a. m and five o’clock p m., atthe front door of the Bates county court house in Butler, Bates county, Missouri. I will, as trastee in a deed of trust made by David B. kequa, dated the first day of October, 1 recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds in Bates county, Missouri, on the second day of October, 188i in book 46, at pag eell the n rtheastq ter of the southeast querter of section thirteen (3) in township thirty nine (39) south, of range thirty-one (il) west of the fitth principat Meridian, situated in the eaid Bates county, Miseouri, at public vendue, to the highest bid- for cash, to satisty the conditions of the | thereos, at the next term of d deed of trust, the note and interest there- y being past due and unpaid and defanited. L tus H ERKI Trustee. Slonceker, vler & Switzer, Ati’ys. Notice of Final Settlement. iereby given that all creditors rs interested in the estate of ichardson, deceased, that | J Ennis administrator of sai estate, intend to make final seitlemen the Bates Bates county, d at Butier on county probate court, in state of Missouri, to the Sth dav of May, 1% Sy ” Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ishereby given to all creditors, and all others interested in the E. Trowbridge, deceased, tha! administrator of said estate, final settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates county probate cour? in Bates coun- ty, state of Missouri. to be held at Butler, on . Admistrat Notice of Fival Settlement. tice is heres given to all creditors a: all others interested in the est of D. Wirt deceased, that I,J. W. Eusis adminis— trator of saidestate intendto make fin>! tlement thereof, the mext term Bates county probate court. in Bates county j state of Missoari, to be heid at Batier on the thesth day of Msv. 3 J. WwW. 4-15 IS, Admisistrator. Notice of Final Settiement therefore, | I will proceed to sell the above described prem | noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that | his wite by they deed ot trust dated Sep- } nd eight | made in | said | | southeast quar- |. uthwest quarter of sec- | acres | real estate mortgage bond fully described | i --GCOODLOE-- This fine young saddle stallion will make the season of 1893 at my j barn, 5 miles east of Butler. Goop ok, Bay Stallion, bred by John | TP. Woodford, Mt. Sterling, Ky. Foaled | in 1888, sired by Blue Jeans, one of Ken- tuckv’s greatest saddle stallions. First dam Kitty Fogg, by Beauty; 2d dam Puss, the dam of more high-priced sad- | dle horses than any mare living or dead; | third dam the tamous Haggard mare. | Blue Jeans, sired by Philips’ black horse, | he by Gen. Tavlor; 1st dam by Gray Eagle jr.; he by Gray Eagle; 2d dam by Oden’s Crockett,ne by Roanoke, 3d dam | by Potomac, 4th dam by Sir Archie, Beauty was sired by the noted sire Magic, sire ot Post Boy, 2:23 1-2; Clem- mie G. 2:15. Mystery jKeno 2:33 1-2 ; and many other fast ones. His first dam | by Benton's Diomede; 2d dam by Crip- | ple, son of Medoc;3d dam by Tiger Whip | he by Blackburn’s Whip, he by import- jed Whip. This stallion is not only a tashionable bred saddle horse but has y.{ one cross that inakes him connected with | some ot the best and fastest trotters. | Goodloe is registered as No. 587, in Vol 11, National Saddle Horse Breeders’ Association Register, Louisville, Ky. Perms :—$15 for colt to stand aud suck Care taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur. 18 3m G. D. ARNOLD, STALLIONS at the east tront dcor of | —AND— JACKS, Si ee Five Belgion Draft Stallions Imported March 28th, 1891, | | | sous 3 to 7 years old. ed to be sure foal getters. a even lot ot colts. gata nad Bose just the kind the market demands. Gan show colts by each stallion. No stallion has been allowed more than one service a day since coming to this country. ist and 2nd premiums on dratt colts and sweepstakes on dratt stal’ions at La ee district tairin 1891. All stock tui fcbinisaprties All recorded. Stock can seen at C. B. Lewis’ jj: ble, Butler, Mo. wis’ livery sta All have prov- WESLEY WARNOCK, Agent. | FRANCIS & FLANIGAN, | Owners of Belgian dratt stalls i | 0 one. harness staliion, browns g seat jold in 1892, 16 1-2 hands high, has rove ed very sure and extra Sreeders, One } saddie Stallion 15 1-2 hands high, 4 years i old in 1892, goes ail the saddle vere j One jack 5 years old, 15 1-3 hands hich. Has proved an extra J an sure breed: it the times_ er. For sale at prices to Sui WESLEY WARNOCK,