The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 28, 1893, Page 6

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ie sn iphtnatl re nS ce WRITTEN Misourt Paciac Erme Table Arrival and Geparture of passenger trains at Hutier ~tetion. Noata Bow Passenger. - = a.m. Passenger, ss p.m. Passeng p. Im. Local Passenger. = = rassenger, : - Passenger, >, = Local Freight - uething New. The Kansas City, Pirasburg & G sailroad is now open and ready £¢ yoth passenger and ‘ight trate: from all stations on its line between Sulphur Spring-, Ark_ eosho ait Joplin, Mc Kan., wi Pitishur, Kansas City, Mo. if you are going to Kansas Cit St. Louis, Chicag hortheast or east, or to Denver, Ox den, Los Angeles, Saw Franciseo, Portland or any point in the west and northwest, give the new line a trial. Magnificently eqaipped pas- senger train daily through to Kansas City without change, connecting with lines from Kansas City te all points, insuring the traveler quick time, low rates and excellent aceonunodations. Merchants are’ requested to rememm- wer this line in giving reuting orders for freight shipments, as the expedi- tious and careful handling of all con- signments will be guaranteed. For additional information, call on near- est agent of the company, or address the undersigned, JAs. DonoHUE, 4ien. Fr’ght & Pass. Ag’t, Kansas City, Mo. Non 8 WOMEN 3 make $10.00 ¢ a a day sellin: Wonderful Christy Bread Slicer.” Write quick for terrijory. Cuaisty KNire Co., Fremont, Ohio, h Diamond Brand. wi @OVAL PILL s jenuine. les LADIES, ask letter, by return ) Testinopials, Name Paper 1€0.,Madison Square. Youthful Color; Cures scalp diseases & hair falling ‘B0c,and $1.00 at_Druggists Av Ou CONSUMPTIVE Wes Hin NOERS REOR taienion, Pain, Take in time. 5ucts, ‘The only sure cure for Corns, nor fore or HISCOX & CO., N. ae CHATTERBOX THE KING OF JUVENILES. i ver been made for young people which compares in value, or has had one-tenth the sale of this great annual. Millions of copies have been sold. The new volume for 169) st ready, and has over 200 large and entirel several new stories, (each a book hundreds of short stories, anecdotes, etc. best Xmas present possible for boys and girlsct all ages. der from your bookseller or of us. ESTES & LAURIAT, Publishers, Boston. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING, EPPS’S CUGOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the apera- tions of digestion and nutricion and by a careful application of the fine properties of well selected) cocoa Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper, a delicately flavored bev- erage which m@y save us many heavy doetor’s bills. [tis by the judicious use of such articles of diet th the constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency ‘to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many afatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure 1 nd and properly nourished frame.”—Civil Service Gazette, Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins, by Grocers labeled thu umes Epps & Co., Ltd., Home pathic Chemists, London, ook’sCottonRoot COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old physician, Successfully used | monthly by thousands of Ladies, ts the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis- offer inferior medicines in place of this, Ask for Cook’s Cotton Root Compound, take no substi- | tute, or inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage In letter and we will send, sealed, by return mail, Fullsealed | particulors {n plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 stamps. Address » Pond Lily Company. Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. Sold in Butler and everywhere, by all druggists. The Most Successful B ly éver discov. ered, as it i certain tm ite effects and docs not blister. Read proof be! KENDALL'S “SPAVIN CURE. Tapwor, O10, Jan. 10th, 1883. Dr, BJ. Kexpatt Co. Gents>I have been using your Spavin Cure With remarkable success on a Ring-bone of jong standing. It's a sure cure. 1 think, most every case. Yours truly, REYNOLDS KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. nee = Lours, Mo., April 27th, 1892, Genta > eS Eespatr's Spavix Crre.” and it had the effect. sere eee pee peapectlie Te a Terrible Sprain on Mois ours, ER SERIE SOLD BY ALL DEUGGISTS. iN BLOOD. How xe Tale of ar Jadian Massacre Wat Told to the Soldiers. arrived at ‘Niobrera river zt bo'cl noon.tnd were ther so far behind the Indian band we were pursuing that it as Ge termined 40 give up the and wait there f tachment to | We were eae So Sao ieket on our right and Exerybody saw at a settler’s dog, sud crossing of the k in the aftez- came cut of a began howling. } glance that it wae everybody realizeé in an instant wkat his aetions signifieé. 2 he ce ee bowling and was a gaunt y of <ne men After a lon, hrew up his he gain —a Jong-drawn, quav- chill over the major. oraay point nort? and hewleda, every men, and eves made look up from t , detail a serges men to fellow the dog. as he turzed to the said the major, commander of E cabin on the far side of the thicket. port and I will send oneal As we eaught up our horses ie ceased howling that he understood. trotted away at the head of the detail | and led us straight for the proved to be a fringe or curtain hiding a lovely little valley, and as soon as we passed through it we saw the cabin skirmishing order, and cabin at a walk. tance had been passed we sneak out from the cove and run for the brush-covered hillside. moment later which were perched on the roof and aps asleep »xroached the There are dead men in ther pered the sergeant as we came toa halt. and they tried to burn the people out Look at the bullet holes! of blood under the door!” The dog advanced to the door, sniffed at the blood, and then head and howled dismally. “We must use this log to ” continued the sergeant. Indians brought was too hot. See the trickle where the e licked the blood off the gra There has been a terrible fight here. altogether two—three!” That's it—one- door gives way. We dropped the log and retreated a while the excited eabin and whined barked, and finally gave utterance to a how] so full of lamentation closed their ears to the Every man was palefac The sergeant should s but he hesitated, and it was only after a great effort that he pulled himself together and step or two, sprang into the that some trembling. to look in, they had crawled together to die four men, a woman, and two chi r about seven old respectively. with boards instead of sash at the windows, and of crevices between through which a bullet might find y. How long the we could not determine, had been dead for twenty-four hours It was a log | bad language, or being offended b. | men, with el “You can see how rgeant, after sending the command came down the dians, fleeing for the and warn- }side of their own fore Look at the bullet holes! See how many from every direction, even down through the roof. must have last man or two was able to handle a gun when the got the alarm and left. and father. y down his rifle and crept over to his dead wife a and flung hisarms over them. that on the floo: We removed the boards from the two windows to let the white surface o: a floor board we found covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who | 5}, ¥ : | This place is honey-eom) more light, : a split log used as a serawl traced There lay the splinter whieh , and within six | had been used : inches of it were the fingers of a In the semi-darkness of day or the night his rude pen had written in | the ground floor opposite | geant-mg j and roughly blood the words: but me, and Tm hard hit. Send word That was all | his fingers, and ye gave them burial in t and burned the broke camp the linter fell from he sank down ne died knowing that he was among fr Chicago Times. ERRAND-MEN OF LONDON. | A Splendid Corps, Two Thousand Strong | —Their Duties, Pay and Manners London has no trouble with | messengers who | dirty and saucy. is too big : such non- Landon mere ae nt have about and surly falicwe as e = mes: certain quarters of New York London has learned by ex- we wot of. | perience, and, farther helped to the form: corps by the generosity of the military and naval offi So it has to-day the very best of messengers in existence. There was at one time in many of } our states a “‘soldier-messenger corps,” which utilized the services of veterans of the civil war who had lost an arm or a leg and who could carry messages ordoiight work This corps has died | fairs i in the name of the king. | out. Bat the one ix London, similar in origin and formation, is more vigor- ous aml profitable then ever. The London Commissionaires’ corps numbers two thousand men, every one of whom has seen service in the army or the navy and reost of whom are sound of mind ané limb. But wounded and parti men are also weleome. ‘“Seme em- ployers,” says Sir Edward Walter, the founder of the corps, “go out of th y crippled leg or rm.” Tke corps grew ap inthis way. There Was some years a led the gea fund an fond. It y a letter written by the Robert Peel. whe pointe abominable way in which departments were managi in the Crimea, and the conse¢ was that a great sum of money raised and the late Mr. MacDonald of the Times. went out to Constantiaople to distribute it A good deal was spent: in pr: for the necessities of the men trenches. Later some of the 1s started was employed for similar purposes in | India: but there the ne done in India than in the Crimea. After that, about 1865, it seemed that |the .mwoney was frittered away for »| merely temporar: help. So Walter said to his famous brothe Walter, of the London Time: would be better if this were given to art an off Ss’ endowment for the corps of commissionaires. Just found- ed and struggling, it would help we need to make it a settled insti- tution.” That course was followed and the money obtained furnished an in- come with which the officers and staff of these two thousand men are pai Once started the institution did such admirable services that old officers en- dowed it richly. The duchess of West- minster left it forty thousand dollars Officers sometimes give the fund ten thousand dollars. ‘T want to see the service ext*nded; and they are right. For it is one of the very best services which apy city in the world possesses. The men are all handsomely uniformed; they are all teetotalers; they are universally polite: they ex- pect no gratuities, although they often get them. They never “play ball” in the street or sit on the curb-stones watching a game. They never swear in public; they are fit companions for any lady, and, in fact, hundreds of ladies employ them to accompany them toand from theaters. They are paid twenty-five per cent. above the average market rate of wage Their reputa- tions are spotless and they can be trusted with large or small sums of money. Now see how they are employed. If you enter a London club a uniformed commissionaire opens the door, an- swers your questions or gives you your letters. He is hired at so mucha day and goes to his own home or to quar- ters at night If you want a messenger, a commi sionaire comes and departs at the mili- tary quickstep when you dispatch him. In hotels they attend the doors and do all the errands. In fashionable res- taurants they are the attendants in the outer halls. At great public dinners they take the hats and cloaks and an- nounce the guests and call the cabs ve us the At theaters they take tickets and mar- } shal? crowds and run with messages. At weddings and funerals they have their place. A child or an invalid lady can be sent anywhere in their company without running a yrisk of hea rowdyism. Most of these old soldiers are erect, quick-paced, good ry a little d th titude is mili y. Thev > known and trusted all over the kingdor Bankers will employ them when the. will take no other class of se ants out- never loiter. quieker than boys,f Most of them have They never smoke when on duty. They ure not out of place ina ¢ they are quite at home in a The headquarte corps is at 419 St monly known s of this exe. and contains the lar; aled, uniformed, soldi who have faced death many fields. There any day any employer wandering in search of th article, “the man he want his needs supplied with an ¢ completeness which will astonish him The d after man is called u s work is. proce nd the tells him he has to go to a bank employers in need of stea men desire to have done. It is needless to say what a boon such a corps, recruited from a high elass of men, no matter whether th have been soldiers and s: and kept in as fine di as the London men, would be to eve metropolis. It would meet a w: ng more and more pressing every year. lors or ne Every city is tired of the service of crown hirelings, who do not even who almost fling a letter in your face when | they bring it to you, and who sneer openly if taxed with incivility. Miser- | ably paid, they give miserable servi —New York Journal unde! listen to what you have to sz ce. —*Frost torches, set up, fifty to the acre. ia buch during a recent cold s | Every farmer who tried the “frost j 2 ved hiserops: on other farms | S | where they were not used, much dam- | age was done by the cold. torches —The title mayor comes from the French and originally signified “one | who keeps guard.” He was the head | steward of a city, administering its af- y toemploy men who have lost a essityy was not | so great, for things were much better | jin the proportions of one and on whole at- |t to an oftice on or whatever his rank is tend a bazaar, deliver handbills, act as watchman, or any other of the thou- sand and one things which London nt which is grow- composed of long takes saturated with kerosene, were wheat fields on Hickory Hill, Saratoga county, | Weloek:! WOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. —Union Cake.—One-half cup butter, one-half cup milk, one cup sugar. one | and two-thirds cup flour; one egg, not beaten; two-thirds of a cup of raisins, twe teaspoons of baking powder, and one of lemon extract.—Detroit Free Press. —Parsnip Fritters —Boil in salted | water until tender; then trim the par- snips into neet strips of the size of a cigarette. Di fritter batter and fry in deep fat quickly. One egg. a large tablespoonful of flour and milk enough to reduce it to the consistency of thick cream will fry quite a dish of parsnips. Gentleman. Rub te a er teacupfuls sugar, with one-ha ful butter, add one teacupf slowly. three teacupfuls flon which is sifted two te: ing powder, and one t poonfuls bt aspoonful ex- tract of lemon or bitter almond, and | lastly the whites of three e stiff, Bake quiekly ina square. tin.— Orange Judd Farmer. Chicken ala Royale.—Season roll boiled chicken in flour, and bi in butter. Serve with sauce of tablespoonfuls of braided flour, ree cupfuls of chicken stock, one-half bay leaf, one teaspoonful each celery, salt and chopped parsley. Boil twenty winutes, strain and add eight chopped mushrooms. Cook ten minutes. Add the yolks of two raw eggs and the j of one-half of a lemon.—Good House keeping. e Quinee Apple Sauce. —' thirds of apple sauce to quince. Peel, quarter and co quinces, and stew them ina very water till tender. Press them ihr coarse sieve and add them to the stewed apple, add three-quarters of a pound of sugar to one pound of mixed apple and quince. Stew quickly till done: the longer it is boiled the dark the color. Omit the lemon in the apy when made with quince.—Hoston Budget —Pepper Mangoes. —Carefully cut the tops from large green peppers, and remove the seeds: put a teaspoonful of salt in each one, rub the inside thoroughly with it, stand them up, and cover with cold water. After standing over night, drain, rinse and fill with the following mixture: Two large onions chopped, two tablespoonfuls each of sugar and mustard seed, one table- spoonful each of grated horse radish and celery seed, and one teaspoonful each of cinnamon, cloves, ginger and pepper. Put on the covers, tie tightly, set in a jar and cover with strong, cold vinegar.—Country Gentleman. —Onion Soup.—Put half a pound of good butter into a stew pan on the fire, and let it boil until it has done making a noise; then have ready twelve good- sized onions, peeled and cut small; throw them into the butter, add a little salt, and stew thema quarter of an hour. Then dredge ina little flour, and stir the whole hard; and in five minutes pour in a quart of boiling water, and a quarter of a pound of the upper crust of bread cut small. Let the soup boil ten minutes longer, stir it often; and after you take it from the fire stir in the yolks of two beaten eggs, and serve it up immediatel) Jhio Farmer. —Spicel Beef Ham.—Make a pic! half salt, one-half pound of sugar. one-half ounce of saltpeter to one gal- lon of water: boil and skim, and when pound 0 jeold throw over the beef hams. Let in pi particul kle for nine day: to turn them every nutes, but do not wipe. ly a generous supply of all- thoroughly to the hams, wrap each htly with string and hang up to dry. In about two weeks you gin to use if. desir Rural New | Yorker. TWO POINTS OF JUDAISM. One Is That of the Pious Ra the Other of the Hebrew Anarchist. “The Hebrew anarchists at us,” iveness for our sins on of | ‘ment. [heard one of them say: those hypocrites! They think be- they fast ani pray one da lie and cheat atany othe Ibnt the scoff can ve. The p 1 the snness for sins men. hese can makin 20d the w man no amount of me. but I mast sho returning to mye vic of that which I to and fasti misrepresent At this time h should unite to win tt so that the f yuntry may © tion needs vill they abuse.” Said a Hebre rabbis say pious J ten worlds. Heaven's del poor wrets the miserie: and the hundred and three hun ture worlds. And lieve all th tt selves to be ¢ ings We te ali the glory We are loo are not worr: N.Y. Sun. other fort in t Young Spoonamore watch}—Dearest me 1 didn t think it was so late. Did you? Miss Iphigenia (heroically suppress- ‘o, indeed. Itseemed to me about twenty-onge hours earlier.— i Chieago Tribune. ing a yawn)— s beaten | then place them on a table to | Have r jspice, cloves and black pepper, rub can be- hospitality anarchist: “The contains for the with | ing at his 's nearly eleven {Eruptions and similar annoyances are caused by an impure blood, which will result in a more dreaded disease. Unless removed, slight impurities will develop into Scrofula, Ecze- ma, Salt Rheum and other serious results of | | | | 9 Lhave for some time been B. d fous a | j | a sufferer from a Severe ‘blood trouble, for which I ‘took many remedies that Blood did me no good. I have now taken four bottles of with the most wonderful results Kin enone the test heaith ever knew, have gained twenty pounds and my friends say they never saw weil. Tam feeling quite like a pew ae JOHNS. EDELIN i i Cur T reatise On Blood and Skin Diseases | mailed free to any address. | SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. a St. Louis Republic Free TWICDAWEER--10 PAGES EVERY WERK A Great Semi-Weekly. ONLY $1 A YEAR. Any reader of the Butler Weekly Scan get the Pwiec Re- | public free by sending in three new yearly subscribers to’ The Republic « In addition to obtaining the great- est news weekly in American, every subseriber to the Republic will save ten times the pp of the paper, or Tmore, every year by the special offe made subscribers from time to ti Sample copies of the Republic will be sent anyone upon receipt of a pos tal ecard request. Address all order: THE RE bt BLIGC, St. Louis, Mo Trustee's Sale. Whereas Elijah Miller a single man, Robert T Miller anc Cordelia Miller bis wife, and George H Miller, single by their certain deed of trust dated April 4th, Isa, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county. Missouri, in book No, 105 page 64 con- veye the undersigned trustee the follow- ing described real estate lying and being sitn- ated in the county of Bates and state of Mis sonri, te-wit: The southea-t quarter of the southeast quar- ter, and the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter, and five (5) acres off of the south end of the northeast quarter of the northesst quar- ter of section thirteea [13] township forty-two 21 rang? thirty [50] and the south half of lot in the southwest quarter and the east halfofthe northwest quarter [except twenty (20; acres off the north end thereof] and allthat part of lottwo [21 of the north west quarter lying south of Grand River. all in section eighteen [18] and all that part ot the south half of lot two (2) of section seven (7 lving south of Grand River all in town- ship forty-two |42] range twenty-nine (29) containing 270 acres ‘nore or leas. which con- veyance Was made in trust to secure the pay- ment of certain notes fully described in id deed of trust; and whereas,default has been made in the payment of said notes now past due and unpaid Now therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said notes and pursnant to the con- ditions of said deed of trust, i will proceed t> sell theabove described premises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash at the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates and etate of Mis- souri, on Tuesday, January 9, 1894. between the nours of nine o'clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the atternoon of that cay, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costs dat R. G HARTWELL, Trustee. Trustee's Sale. Whereas J. J. MeNissick by his deed of trust dated December Isvl, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Rates county, Missouri. in book No 102 page 590 convexen to the undersigned trus- tee the following and being situate atate of Missouri The west one-th' block No. thirteen nthe county of Bates and ~wit ef lot No three | trust to note fully deseribed in said deed of trust; and whereas default has been made inthe pay pal and accrued interest jueandunpaid Now there | foreat the req | and pursuant to the conditions trust I will proceed to cell the | ed premiees | bidder for hou ini the city of B | Bate es and state of Missouri Saturday Januar: between the hot | noon and five o’e i day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costes. cC. DUKE, 4-4 Trustee ove deserib- patie vendue to the highest 6, 1894, | J.J McKiscick has no interest in this property. Order of Publieatior. State of Missouri, ¢ County of Bates. 5 ge it remem i, that heretofore, to-wit of the court, begun end held | the city of Butler, in t 1 county and sta afterw! ber, Iss3. the same being the 2ist judicial day of the said Nover lowing further} aty E. Pad! I Perkins Company of the state of Kansas, rn Farm Mortgage Trast Company of of the state of Colorado, Margaret ‘A Shaver and N Lansing defendants Now at this day come plainti®’ herein by her attorneys. Gra Clark. and files ants are not resi- by the court commenced a s court by petition and | eneral natureof which souti in record book 47 | Wherein she conveyed to Lu trustee for W J Neill, bene | ing described real estate | mate in _— county. fo northea | township of said term if th term sha. if not then on or before the & answer or plead to the vesitic the same will be taken as conf ment will be rendered acco And be it farther ordered th be pablished according to law | Weekis T: speper printed nd published in Bates county, Missouri, for | four weeks successively the last insertion to | be at least fifteen days before the first day of | the next term of the circuit court. 'A true copy ofthe record. Witness my {sBar] hand and the seal of the circuit court of Bates county. this (th day of Dee. 1885. 4 JOHN C. HAYES, Cirenit Clerk, opy hereof | n the Butler} i leseribed real estate lying Jin inthe town, now city of Butler, which conveyance was’ made in ecure the payment of one certain of the legalholder of said note said deed of sh atthe east front door ofthe clock in the fore- afternoon of that vunty cirenit court house in .on the second Monday in November 188%. ana to-wit: on the ith day of Decem- The Kansas, The Western Farm Mort- allegins among! notified by] Cheap Holiday Excursion @ates Kan- sas City Pittsburg Gulf R. R. Round trip excursion tickets will be sold December 23rd, th, 25th, 30th and Sist, 89S and January 1st 1894 with tinal limit for return to January 3rd, 1894 between all stations on this line at ONE FARK for round trip. Take advantage of this liberal rate and visit your friends, nearest Agent of the Company will give your furth- er information if desired JAMES Doxonur, t., Kansas City, Mo. Gen’l Pass. A VANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS, De drop in and see N. M. Nestle- rode at Virgima. Mo. He will give you the bighest market price for chi eges and hides. Also tukes subscriptions to the Butier Weekly Times, at $100 per year and as agent is authomzed to collect and receipt for the paper. | Newson M. Ne CB. LEWIS & C0, Proprietor of Elk Horn Stables TLEKOD Waving 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 week or month, With 16 yvears exper- ience Mr Lewis teely able to compete vith any Livery barn in this section, cB LEWIS & CO Nand see him Scientific American CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, DESICN PATENTS, COPYRICHTS, For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO,, #1 Bhoapway, New York, Oldest bureau for securing patents in America, Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the Scientific American | Largest circulation of any ales Paper in the World. | Splendidly illustrated, No tncelligent an siz months. Address MUNN A coe ERS, $61 Broadway, New York City. Bure, Prompt, Positive OZMANLIS Fgk eect Emissions, Spe ORIEN TAL epee 33 Of Memory, vs sd make you a STRONG, ous Man Price ‘$1.00, 6 S E XUAL: Boxes, $5.00 Sneciai Directions Matied . Aadress Liniment Co. 2919 Lucas Ave. ST.LOUIS. - MO, WILCOX COMPOUND ANSY® PILLS SAFE AND SURE. Unscrapulous persons are ¢0 tel Senne, So agers Compound Tansy Pills, the genuine are put up in metal boxes with re ved trade mar Shield, 2ecept no worthiess nestrum, fisist on atalllruggists. Seud 4cenesfor Woma uard and receive them lymall. W ileox Speci teCo. Philia.Pa, Fast Time Elegant Pullman Service Reclining Chair Cars (2) To ST. LOUIS KANSAS CITY CHICAGO ano tne « Missouri Pacific Ry.” H. C. TOWNSEND, |General Passenger and Ticket Agent, $T. LOUIS.

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