The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 1, 1894, Page 7

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‘re you bil-ious, bled with Jaundic Caste in Mouth » Cuustipated or trou- Sick Headache, Bad T. sul Breath, Coated Tongue, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hot Dry Skin, Pain in back and. be tween the Shoulders? f Chills and Fever, & ' If you have any of these »ymptoms your ! liver is out of order and your blood is ' slowly being poisunc because sot liver does not act properiy Herbiue } will cur any fer of the Liver, j Stomach or Bowe It no e¢ § i a Liver Medicine. Price 75cts. Free t trial bottles ar HL Pucker*s sto W A\ TBI --AG ENTS willing totravel, ‘< who will devote their whole time to soliciting for Nursery Stock. Permar : tent paying positions for hustlers. 2 i Customers get what they order and the best « uality. Ad- dress, Hope jes, (Gnost complete on this continent. er & Barry, Proprietors. New York. Locheste O10 tos Elegant World's ta Views GIVEN AWAY ee The St. Louis Republic TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'5 FAIR VIUWS, each porttolio con taining 16 views and each view ac cuvately deseribed. Views of the Mail Bail tings, Strte Bai! tings, th Midway, Views of Statuary, ete * These ten portfolios will be giv. without cost to anyone who «i send five new yearly subscribers + The Twiee a Week Republic, wri 35 CO the regular subserniption pric: Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. C. HAGDORN The Old R-liable PHOTOGRAPHER North Side Square, Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photographing executed in the highest style of the art, and at reasonable prices. | Crayon Work A Specialty All work in my line is guaranteed te give satisfaction. Cali and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN Trustee's Sale Whereas Mary 8. Kinder, single, by her deed of trust dated , November sth, Isvl, and recorded in the recorder’s office withi in and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No 107 page 265 conveyea to the undersigned tras- tee he following described real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: The southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section fifteen (15) except six acres out Of northwest corner that li north and west of Walnut creek, leaving 3{ acres con- veyed; also all that part of the south half of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section fifteen (15) that lies south and east ut creek containing 13 acres more or in township thirty-nine (39) of range thirty-three (33) and containing in all 47 acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note fully described in said deed of trust; and whereas default has been made in the pay- ment of the annual interest on said note which renders the whole debt due and the same remains past due and unpaid Now there- foreat the request of the legalholder of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust. I will proceed to sell the above describ- ed premises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash. at the east front door ofthe court house, inthe city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Thursday March 1, 1894, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, for the purposes of satisfying said. debt, interest and costs. . D. ALLEN, diet Trustee. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI? ,, County of Bates. 5 % a é Jn the sircuit court of Bates coun! i Missouri, acation, January Ith, Isvt. The atate of uri at the relation and to the use ofS H. Fisher, ex-officio collector of the revenue of Bates county, plaintiff ys. A. C. Widi- combe, defendant 5 ‘Civil Action for delinquent taxes Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys. before the undersigned clerk oftne circuit court of Bates county in the state f Missouri in vacation, and files her petition Statin among other things that the above stating i fendant, AC Widicombe, is a non- yesident of the state of Missouri. Wherew 4 is ordered by the clerk in vacation that gaid defendant be notitied by publication that 5 ntiff has commenced a suit against him in court by petition the object and general re of which is to enforce the lien of the ‘of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of year 182, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $20 50, toxether with interest. te, commission and fees udon the foilow- costs ccribed tracts of land situated in Bates ang deseefiesouri, to-wit: The southwest quar Taection § of township 38 of range 3), and the northwest quarter of section 17, of town- 7 ‘38, of range 305 also the northeast quarter ship S\jouthwest auarter of section 17, town- range 30, ai that unless the fendant, be and appear at the next ofthis court, to be begun and holden of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, ‘second Monday in June 1S, and onor efore the thirdday thereof (ifthe term shall ong continue and if not then before the end Steneterm, and plead to said petition accord- af to law, the same will be taken as confess - - EN judgment will be rendered according ; oe prayer ofsaid petition and the above ‘real eatate sold to satisfy the same it is further ordered by the clerk atore- that a copy hereof be published in the But- ‘eokiy TIMES, a weekly newspaper printed it ccessively the last insertion te ifteen days before the first day of the nonce court. ss. de! uary. 184. HAYES, Cireait Clerk Ellwang- | A Sound Liver Makes 1 Wel Ma; HUNT OF THE OFFICE-SEEKER. De- Renewed Day by Vay Until Hope ferred Miketh the Heart Sick. the who haunt the are office cers. but a goodly srtion of them are. says the Wash- ton Stur Sot capit from all sec- country and represent all Of the ‘They come tions of the classes of all great 1 the lay after ost fc importun Iatry be turned ‘y are pursuing ry day torn loo: srand fre “sO i general + south end of the to erowdi in thei: A majority « r for the nds. By time the chapiain is fin- ished the bits of cardboard begin to fall in showers epon the desks of the | Statesmen en do not to send These gent! o through their m | have time to ¢ | fore the The visitors hand their cards to one or the other of the numerous doorkeepers to the great sofas scat- I be- ters are by pted and ass leather-covered ¢ tered around the await the result. a tants an r It is noticeable fact that women largely in these waiting and anxious throngs about the senate entrances. Perhaps itis thought that their earnest solici- tude will more favorably and deeply impress the men who are supposed to control the dispensation of official Phey are of all ages, appear- ances and conditions. The fashionable society woman elbows her more hum- ble sister of the work-a-day world, and blushing, diffident young girls sit and wait by the side o in the r and yellow rustles against the simple garb of the humble poor, and beauty smiles into the face of decrepit Many of them wait long and pa without a favors. ently reward. ‘Their senator is “not in,” or he is “engaged,” or he sends word: “Please call again.” And the reci of the mes: goes away witha heavy heart and troubled countenance, to gain in a few days and try it all GIANTS AMONG THE PLANETS. Mighty Jupiter, Wh en Times Tha’ Diameter Is E) of the Earth, Our most eminent astronomers do not pretend to give us exact reckonings on the great floating worlds outside of our own solar system, but within that monstrous aggregation everything has been reduced to certainty. ‘The king- pin of this solar system is Jupiter, “mighty Jupiter, the colossal giant of all the sun-kissed worlds.” His diam- eter is about 88,000 of our miles, being about eleven times that of our own globe; the circumference 275,000 miles at the equator, which would give the giant a volume exceeding that of the earth by 1,284 times. Were it possible, says the St. Louis Republic, to bring the earth and Jupiter so close together that the distance sepurating them would be no greater than that which | now separates the earth moon—about wondrous sight would be in store for the residents of our little globe. The world of Jupiter would appear to us to have a diameter forty times larger than that of our usual mighty attend- ant, and the surface of his disk would occupy a space greater than that of 1,600 full moons. And this giant of planets is removed from the sun by a distance of 496,000,000 miles; has an orbit of more than 1,000,000.000 miles in extent, and makes a circuit of its celestial track once every 4,332 days. Thus it will be seen that a year on Jupiter is equal to eleven years ten months and seventeen days on our globe. The im- mensity of the world of Jupiter and its orbit may be approximately measured by this comparison: In order to com- plete its orbit in the time given above it must speed around the sun with a velocity of 700,000 miles a day, or a lit- tle more than eight miles per second. from the A QUEER RAIN THEORY. Perspiration from the Soldiers Given as a Cause of Showers After Battle. A most extraordinary theory has re- cently been propounded, says the Bos- ton Globe, to show the reason why rain usually falls after a severe battle has been fought. The ancients used to attribute the phenomenon to the generosity of some diety who was kind enough to make the attempts to wash away the traces of man’s degradation as soon as pos- sible, and later on, when cannon came to be used as a means of destroying life, the detonations of these machines were said to cause the wonderful down- pour of rain. But more prosaic, up to date people And this is how they go to prove it: One soldier will, in the course of twelve hours’ fighting, give off six gallons of water. He drinks much. Thirst for gore, glory, and water go together on such occasions, and the total amount of moisture given off by one man is said to be sufficient to cover twelve square feet three-quar- ters of an inch deep. Now, of course, all this perspiration evaporates and goes up into the at- mosphere. The atmosphere, becoming unduly charged with moisture, offers itself on the slightest provocation to the formation of clouds, and in nine eases out of ten rain falls immediately condensation sets in. A Short Sentence. Mr. Justice Maul once addressed a | phenomenon of innocence as follows: “Prisoner at the bar, your counsel you innocent; the counsel for ution thinks you innocent; I innocent. But a jury of your own countrymen, in the exercise of such common sense as they possess, which does not seem ta be much, have found you ‘guilty, and it remains that I should pass upon you the sentence of law. That sentence is, that you be kept in imprisonment for one day; and, as that day was yesterday, you may {now go zhont your business.” reception-room to | predominate , 240,000 miles — what a} of to-day put it down to perspiration. | VIRTUE IN A LIE. \ Snitor’s Narrow Escape From Re- jection. Yes,” said the man with the im- perisi, “it always paya to tell the truth. I remember that once, when { was 2 yood dea! younger, I came; mighty near losing the woman who is sow wy wife because I lied a bit ~ “To her?” asked the express man. “No; to her father. I was a young sprig of a clerk thes, with but little money aud no prospects in particu | lar [ had se my wife at on n the girl who is now} or two places I had been, and I was dead in with her. I figured around and got per-} mission to call on her, end it love Wasn't loug before I had proposed and bad | been accepted. “Then came the tug of war. I} had to g» aid ask her father for her | haud. He was rich as mud and had the reputation of being the ugliest | jold skate in the world. 1 got my |courage up Ove morning, though, ‘and walked iuto his office and struck jhim for the girl, After I told him |woat I wanted, he asked me to sit ‘down and we had a long talk. He inqurad into my prospects and my hab ts und all that, and wourd up by inviting me to dinner next day. I was tickled to death, for I thoyght I had mide a hit with the old man, and [ went to dinner the next day in hi.h feather. “The dinner was fair, but the Then the ladies went away aud the old mav produc ed cigare. He offered oue. I took it and lighted it. So help me, it was the poorest weed I had ever tackled. Then he poured me anoth er glass of wine and told me to drink it. The old man made great ado in putting his away. He smacked his lips, sipped it as it were priceless Tokay and beld it to the light in an ecstacy of admiration. “‘Great wine, that, don't you think? he asked me. I said that it was the best I had ever tasted “*Ohb, yes, continued the old man, Limported that wine myself |Hasa most magnificent bouquet There's nothing like it in this coun itry” | wine was execrable. me | “I assured him that I was confi dent of that. Then he went on praising it, and I chimed in with him and said three words for every one of his. Icalled ita nectar fit for the gods. I told him that it remind ed me of some very rare vintage which Thad once tasted in New York, anda lot of other guff like that, and wound up by assuring him that the damnable cigar that I was trying to smoke was the most frag rant Havana I had ever lighted. “The old man seemed pleased. | He fairly beamed at me. I was cen gratulating myself, when that I had }made an excellent stroke and was feeling on pretty good terms with myself, when the old man straight jened up roared: ‘Young man, you jeans marry my daughter', I ventur- }ed to ask him why. aud he roared | again: Because, sir, you are an in- |fernal lin! You have sat there to- | day and perjured yourself about the slop we have been drinking in the i place of wine. It is the worst con jcoction I ever tasted. And that cigar cost about 2 cents. You area jliar. The truth is not in you. It it jis, you are a coward. Yeu didn’t | dare tell me what you thought of | this stuff. I want neither a liar nor a coward for a son in law. Get out.” “With that he stamped out of the ;room, and there was nothing for me to do but go home. I made up my mind that the game was up, and I | was disconsolate. I tried to see my | sweetheart, and was baffled at every jturn. For thee days I was heart- |broken. Then I got a note from | It read like thie: ithe old map. |*Young man, on second thought, I | have made up my miad that I need ja good liar in my business, Take | the girl if she wants you, and I will give you an interest in the firm.” “— | Bu ffalo Express. ° At Ozark Monday night burglars robbed the post-office and four jatores. $61 was taken from the post-office; $9 in money and about 50 watches from L. C. Welch; $30 from McCracken’s grocery store, and asmall sum of money from Wolfe & Johnson. A furniture store w: TWU WESTERN MILLIONAIRES. Incidents Regarding P. D. Armour) and Marshall Field. i Probably the nebest two sen in| Chicago are Phillip D. Armour and} Marshall Field. Mr. Armour bas always been noted as one of the hardest worked men in town, says} the Philadelptia Press. It used to be said of bint that no ove ever saw) him get to his desk in the morning | With has been relaxing somewhat of the diseipiin: except the night watchman in two or three years be that he has so long placed upon himself, and now he seldom gets to the office before 7 o'clock the s—varly for the rest of hu uanity, but late for him To the public Mr. Armour kuown largely by reason of his gifts, such, for instance, as his donatior of a million aud a half of create the Armour institute benevolence, however, extends very many directions. Every morn ing of his life by Lis direction $100 is placed in his desk in currency in mornu Is dollars to Ha ip This sum he gives away during th day to applicauts for relief He nev er gives @ penpy to a person whos case has not been personally investi gated by one of his agents, unles- perhaps, the applicant brings a per- sonal letter from known to Mr Armour Nearly every worthy charitabl+ enterprise in Chicago has his name some one weil CAST for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” 4H. A. Arcuen, M. D. 1 So, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Castorta cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, 43, gives Sleep, and promotes ¢) Kits W ERVE Srepaec Ss Woodertal remedy emory. of Brain ED! :: Cherrous diseases, such as Wea ake!uiness, Lost Manbood, Night. Sse of power ia Generative Organs of either sex caused outhful errors, excessive Use Of Lobaced, o to Intirmits. Consumption or Insanity. Can Gt MANHOOD RESTOR uaranteed to cure power, Headache. ness,all drains an y overexertion. fants, which ie: t iz s b: wu Jaruggists. ho other. Write fort j inp.ain wrapper. Actress NER VESEED CO., For sale in Butler, Mo., by J. H. FRIZELL, Druggist. “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.” GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPOLIO “JIT IS SO NOMINATED IN THE BOND.” upon its list of leading subscribers Any new charity which is started i> usually latd first before Marshal! Field or Mr. Armour. Not only doe~ the latter give liberally himeelf, but he influences other men to give. An instance of this may be cited Within a few days a well known cit- izen laid the subscription book of » new charitable enterprise before Mr Armour. He was asked to head th. subscription. He did so in this way Upon the second line he put hi first line vacant. Then, turning te his visitor, he remarked quaiutly, “You'd better go to Field next and tell him Ileft the front row there for him.” The caller went at once to Mr Field and showed him the book first line vacant for yeu.” “H-m m,” said Mr. Field, thought | fully, as he put his name down for a thousand. a lot these days. Negro Democratic Convention. St. Louis, Mo., FVeb.—The Mis souri negro democratic convention met here this afternuon, twenty tive delegates being present, represent ing fourteen counties besides St Louis. In the call for the conven in Missouri and to advance the in terests of the race in industrial mat ters. An organization was effected with Hon. J. Milton Turner, ex people in matters industrial and po litical. This evening a mass meet Chairman Turner. The convention will conclude te morrow Blood-Craz~d. wife with a case kuife during a quar rel at breakfast. ing her dead, drove his{children out of the house at the point of a revol ver. He then poured kerosene oil about the room and overturned the cook- stove, setting fire to the house. Westfall then cut his own throat and | wrists and went to av old shed and hanged bimeelf. Mrs. Westfal! was reseued before the flames bad reached her body.but will probably die. | | Marderer Brittian Committed te Jail. | West Plains, Mo., Feb. 19 —Con | istable Brittian, who killed Charles! Anderson in Benton township, had; his perliminary trial and was seut te; jail without bail. His mother whe had also been arrested for the crime! burglarized but nothing was taken. Local thieves are suspected. was released. The body of the mur- dered man was taken to his fermer name down for $1,000, leaving the|Stewart: Horsemauvship; by H C. Mervin. “Mr. Armour wanted me to tell you Mr. Field,” he said, “that he left the “Armour is costing me tion the objects were said to be for the elevation of the negro democrat minister to Liberia, as chairman, and a platform adopted asking for a proper recognition of the colored ing was held, which was addressed at length in an eloquent manner by} Benton Harbor, Mich , Feb. 21.— Frederick Westfall, a farmer living in Riverside Township, attacked his Mrs Westfall was dangerously wounded about the face and neck, and her husband suppos- Warranted Columbias. With every Columbia is a warrant—backed by the oldest bicycle house in America—the largest in the world a factory which does not turn out poor work—a plant of superiative excelleuce in machinery and skilled work- men—a reputation unmatched in cvcledom—all theee things guarantee the Columbias—folks make no mistake in Columbia buying—book about Columbias, too good fora catalogue—45 beautiful engravings—easy to read—comprehensive—free at Columbia agencies—by mail for 2c stamps "BOOK OF OUTDOORS. Unbiased articles, with no advertising in them, on all high-grade outdoor pleasure. Cyciing, by Julian Hawthorne; foot ball, by Walter Camp; base ball, by J_C. Morse; rowing, by Benjamin Garno; cano ing, by C. Bowyer Vaux; Lawn Tennis, by F. A. Kellogg; Yatching, by George A. Magnificently illustrated by Copeland, Merrill, Benls, Gallagher, and Shute, with covers in ten water colors, by G. H. Buek of New York. All for 5 two cent stamps.§ POPE MFG CO. Boston, New York, Chicago, Hartford, I—ELY’S CREAM BALMi_Cleanses che Nasal ‘Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammati ithe Sores, Restores T: ion, Heals ‘aste and Smell, ‘and Cures Gives Relief at once for Cold in ead Apply into the Nostrils. It ig Quickly Absorbed. 50c. Druggists or by mail. ELY BROS,. 66 Warren St., N.Y. 65 Cents Per Month. If you would keep posted, subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY TIMES, The best daily paper west of the Mississippi River. 7,00 A Year. FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! ——-THE . Lous Globe-Democrat, Eight Pages each Tuesday and Friday, 16 pages a week. A Great Semi-Weekly Paper! Only one Dollar a Year Any reader of this paper can get it free by securing aclub of three sub scribers and forwarding their names, ON THIS BLANK, with $3 Dollars ToGLOBE PRINTING CO., St Louis, Mo. Remit by Bank Draft, Post-office or Express Order, or Registered Letter. clipped from the Brrien Weexry Ties, published at Butler, Mo. Sample copies will be sent free on application. ORDER BLANK. To GLOBE PRINTING CO., St.§Louis, Mo.: Herewith find $2.00 and the names of three subscribers on blank Plerse send the Teusday and Friday Globe Democrat for one vear to me and to each of the subscribers named Name of sender home in Illinois.

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