The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 23, 1894, Page 7

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i HOW YOU CAN REDUCE LABOR AND THE WEAR OF CLOTHES BY USING CLAIRETTE SOAP BEST PUREST AND MOST ECONOMICAL. | SOLD EVERYWHERE | “wr THENK FAIRBANK COMPANY. Sr.Loms. R J HURLEY, Vice Pres Bates Co, Elevator Go, (INCORPORATED.) BUTLER, G. B. HICKMAN, Psevipest. Missouri. DEALERS IN Grain,Seeds,Flour, Feed and FarmImplements. | Branch House at FOSTER and SPRAGUE. Bay” Flax Seed to Loan to Farmers. A HANDFUL CGF wv...1 MAY BE A HOUSE-— FUL OF SHAME.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO _ STOREDE aiiswonagefut remedy MANHOOD RE This wondcrtur remedy 8 Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Lost Mant oot, Nightly Emissions, Nervous. ive Organs of either sex caused ora, exoersiveruwe ot vobuces. opium orstine nsumption or epata. Wit Can carriedin ‘ith a BS order we druggists. ct inplain wrapper. Address NEB VE SEED CO., Masonic Tempie, C. For sale in Buuer, Mo., by J. H. FRIZELL, Druggist. A ALM. 7Gleanses the Nasal 8, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, sold in Head. Apply into the Nostrils. It is Quickly Absorbed, s0c, Druggists or by mail. ELY BROS..66 Warren St Nareecs (Sexeress (8 LEWIS & CO. rox gar | MIANDRAKE Liver ( Comp taint Proprietor of LuesPus Elk Horn Stables AUCTIONEER. ened, will cry sales | joining counties > asthe atisfaction gnaranteed or no pay. MAYESBU RG, Bates county, Mo romptly attended to PETER EWING. Dr.Kimberlin EVE AND EAR Nose, Throat Catarth. S. W. Cor. 9th and Main Streets, “Junction.” | Having purchased the Elk Horn barn and Livery outfit of J. W Smith, andj having added to the same a number ot | first-class Buggies, and horses, I can say to the public that I now have the Best Liverv Barn In southwest Mo. Horses and mules} bought and sold, or stock handled on commission, Stock bearded by the day | week or month, With 16 years exper- ience Mr Lewis teels able to compete with any Livery barn in this section. Dr. Kimberlin will visit Butler the | G21) ard see him CB LEWIS « CO! Third Saturday of every month. | Office, Day House. | Intirmarye | Call and Settle. LOWEST3=RATES [get mich‘ e_prae, cae | p> Direct Lines i Fast Time | Elegant Pullman Service Reclining ¢ Chale Cars (Fx2) ST. Louis| KANSAS CITY CHICAGO ano tHe ~——WORLD’S FAIRF Your nearest #; for particulars ASK Sustatartsst| Having sold my store building, I desire to close out my stock of goods by September 15th. ‘Also all persons knowing themselves indebted to me are requested to call and settle their accounts without delay. WANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS. Deo drop in and see N. M. Nestle- rode at Virginia, Mo. He will give uu the highest market price for chickens, eggs and hides. Also - subscriptions to the Butler | eekly Tres, at $1.00 per year and as agent is authorized to collect and receipt for the paper. Natsoxn M. Nzst1znop. “Missouri Pacific Ry. H. C. TOWNSEND, Seneral Passenger and Ticket Agent, ST. LOUIS. | gate-tender at the Central station, to | gota ss?” | | got a pa | | out "bout them.”—Buffalo Express | HEARD IN THE CAR. How One Young Lady Furnished a Sar- | 5 ESseNTH Le prise for Another. Ks Two si things met in a O iy street-car. y hadn't HE ALTH 2 other for s and they t ULCERS or? Ls K ig & 1 % K 4 “«& | 4 % BOILS, source t SORES think 2 is to be ¢ ot “Why not? at a ; isn’t the | ¥ % AS % n the city. | LISS > “ts on horse-races, drinks. not!” ——— nks like ried home in a very ~~ night last week.” = J “T can’t believe it.” | = 2 “Oh, it’s true. They say Blanche | = — won't believe it, either. Are you not = oS noms Te her | = Ss “Well, perhaps she doesn’t deserve 2 any sympathy, marry such a fellow z I don't sympathize much with her my- i o3 self.” = “I don't believe she is going to be | = married to him,” said the one ingray. | > “Don't you? Why = “Because I'm to be married to him | myself next month. This is my corner. nm Good-by.” mm And the sweet young thing in gray oOo stepped off the car, leaving the sweet young thing in brown gazing after her in wide-eyed amazement.”-—William Henry Siviter, in Puck. CULPABLE NEGLIGENCE. Somebody Forgot the Danger Signal With Disastrous Results. The other day, when it was blowi great guns and snowing omnibuses and hat ricks, and the Broadway crowd was struggling to maintain its precari- ous footing and at the same time along toward home, a disorganized heap of clothes was shot out of a bar- oak’sCoion ot COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old physician, Successfully used mthly by thousands of Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis- covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer inferfor 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 willsend, sealed, by return mail, Fullsealed | particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 ae * ys, Address Pond Lity Company. room door, and skimming the snowy | *#™ps- 4s a = i No. 3 Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. surface of the sidewalk, carried down | < ; erm Sold in Butler and , by| three pedestrians. From out the bundle of clothes a man unexpectedly materialized, and it would have been difficult to tell from the face of that man and from the appearance of the surprised people who were thus uncer- emoniously bowled down with h which of the four was the most asto' Granwy ian ished and angry. But the ludicrous ap- | the coat and dispe peared to strike the bum first—pos- | Reccomanded by t sibly because he was more accustomed : to this sort of exercise—and he shook “FLY FIEND.” euepratee! hoises and cattle trom any sects tiv nets. the snow out of his neck and grinned. $2 lon “What do you mean, sir?” i the of hor un entire first man to recover, caressing a|S¢#son. leware of imitations. Addrass sprained knee and looking around upon | Crescent Mtg. Up.. 2109 Ind. Ave. Phil the gathering crowd; “what do you mean, coming out here in that sort wy of fashion?” ee I've a half notion to kick you, sir!” |4.1:1 enthusiasts, this is vour opportunity eried another man, picking his hat out | See orter HOME ANID CGOUNLRY of the snowdrift and slapping it across | MAGAZINE, Price ? allen’ deniers his leg. or 53 east roth street New Mode PARKER'S 7 | . gentlemen, I— “Explain yourself, sir!” HAIR BALSAM “Well, really, gentlemen,” said the a Se bum, gradually edging out of arm’s Never Fails to. Restore Gray AS z } 7. Hair to its Youthfu Color. reach, “I am not to blame. They ‘ad should have sent a red flag out ahead, sce?"—N. Y. Herald. ARE YOu rker's Ginger Weak Langs, Deo HINDERCORNS. ‘The only mure cure for Co ops all paid. Io. at Druggists, or HISCOX & CO., N.Y. HE WANTED A PASS, And Was Anxious to Know If It Would Be Good Face Value. S'posin’ a man had a pass over this here railroz said a man with a faded overcoat and a tangled, gray beard, “he c’u'd ride for nothin’, hay” at’s what he could,” tS THE BEST. NO SQUEAKING $5.C ORDOVAN, FRENCH& ENAMELED CALI WE i. BOUCLAS replied the whom the query was addressed x ent ; 5455 5° FNECALFAKANGAOD is for nothin’, hay? $3.59POLICE,3 Sots. mduetor wouldn't ask fer no 222 52-WORKINGMENS | $2.$1,75 BoysScHOOLSHOES, nly not.” n't be no snap-game about it. Seti ay? IfThad a pass Vd use it jest | $33F EST DONGOLy like a ticket, hay?” | SEND FOR CATALOGUE "es; yon blamed old fool | ' W-L-DOUGLAS, The old man was rather astonished BROCKTON, MASS. : z i w. lL. by this outburst, and he retired toa oe bench to think things over. | You can save money by pur Douglas Shoes, After a | _:vertised shoes in the world, and while he came up to the gate-tender and coughed a couple jdon’t wanter be intruc he sa uid, of times. “2 n’. pardner.” | 2 “but I wisht ye'd tell me one “They wouldn't be no danger that a man’d hafter pay if he had a pass, would they" | “No; not a bit ing such fool ques’ WILCOX: COMPOUND What are you ask- ions for? Have you SAFE AND SURE. Upscrupulous persons are coun; fteex Compound sils, the genuine are put “No, not yet,” replied the old man, edging away, “but I writ down for one tother day, an’ I kinder wanted t’ find Shield, accept no worthless nostrum, insist on thegenuine, atall. A Hint to Lovers Gus De Smith—Why do you and your by mail. W tleox Speci tie Co. PI '/in architecture and will be the most and | the United States. Mrs. Shepard makes also other! the newspa tums to| which he was interested. Because, we are the largest manufacturers of | ANSY.@ PILLS | T meal bores with registered trade mark of | jen: UL Drag = pened ecnteter | { place 0 fard and receive thems f eet wilco: bila.Pe, —Highton | goosssasssassassasancasancssasany J RES GMS ANS Sue —The Very Re general of the E worth $250, 0 homas Casey, vicar (Pa.) diocese, died ven nearly asu dur.ng his active 1 —A Christian when prusession be profe It i akes a good church at preacher ready been 000, “and will proba at least $120,000 at tical year in Apri nd has wi r months lest two of her most eminent . M. Auguste Bonvie for many years was at the | moderate liberal party | univ y and chureh. Gret t, representative of yse of th eee | a few! head of the | the Geneva heol ne eater ofa sfoneich ng church in ne, IL She ha: ays the New York Tribune, pre and spoken | several times in New York and Brook- | lyn during the last three years, and has made a most favorable impression | on all who have heard her. —Dr. Andrew V. V. Raymond, who was elected to the presidency of Union college recently, has sent his formal acceptance to the board of trustees. He will resign the pastorate of the | Fourth Presbyterian church in Albany | in order to assume his new duties His guration will take place on June . the day preceding commencement. | —Rev Algin Grout, one of the oldest | American missionaries, died in Spring- field, Mass., recently, at the age of about ninety and one-half years. Mr. | Grout graduated from Amhert college e in 1881 and from Andover seminary in 1834, and soon after being ordained as | a minister to Cape Town, where he en- | gaged in missionary work among the Zulus To reach his post he went | through three hundred miles of abso- |lutely savage country. He remained } in Zul d until 1870, assisted by his | wife, who survives him. Mr. Grout | aided in translating the Kible into the | Zulu language. | Mrs. Elliott F. Shepard is planning | the erection of a church near her coun- try home on the Hudson as a memorial {of her husband. It is to be beautiful | costly chureh edifice ever erected in | it a point to carry out every enterprise | that her husband was engaged in in | such a way as he would done had he | lived. There is no difference in the | > to different charities, no changes have been made in the household or sr or in any other thing in The old em- ployes and servants of the household jremain and in every way Mrs. Shep- j ard’s loyalty to the memory of her hus- | band is very touching. WIT AND WISDOM. onel draw well in You bet! Gits every *—Atlanta Constitu- —“Does the Washington?” cork the first pull! tion ch stances, what were in my shoes? lost. —Hallo. —Great men are they who see that spiritual is stronger than any material force; that thoughts rule the world. — talph Waldo Emerson. —Docetor (toservant girl)—Well, now, what is your particular affection? Ser- vant Girl (bashfully)—Please, sir, he’s a clarinet player.—Journal Amusant —Many build as cathedrals were built; the part nearest the ground fin- ishe but that part which soars to- ward heaven, the turrets and spires, forever incomplete. —Beecher. —‘I get awfully bored with Mr. | Crusher's attentions.” Miss Caustic—I should think you would be annoyed, having him alw: devoting himself to | the other girls, dear.—Inter Ocean. Good thoughts are blessed guests, and should be heartily welcomed, well fed, and much sought after. Like rose leaves, they give out a sweet smell if id up in the jar of memoty.—Spur- | geon. | —Fond Under the cireum- would you do if you St Louis Girl—Get ro) (Girl Mother—O, professor, will my daughter's voice? The pro- or (who has heard daughter's voice) —No, madame: nobody but a justice of the supreme court is fit to try it —El- mira Gazette. “What do you think of Mr. Hardhit's execution?” said Miss Gushey at the musicale. ‘I hadn't heard of it,” said Old Growley, ‘but I think it’s a good when does the hanging tahe —Brooklyn Eagle (who has been out be- | tween the acts)—A remarkable play | girl go so much to the Grand Central depot? I see you there every day. Charlie Knickerbocker—I'll let you OZMANLI into the secret, but please don't give i of Manhood, Seminal | thing to wash it down?—Boston Trans- into the secret, please don't give it Ssccune tes pees away. In the depot we can kiss each Neroousness, ‘Self Distrost, P’ ORIENTAL EA Jemory ona you a oe Ly one of usis going off on the train. If we were to kiss each other anywhere else we would be arrested. Great | scheme, isn’t it?—Alex Sweet, in Texas EES SEXUAL tee terse See PILL: Husband—Don't you think that you - -- jare rather unreasonable te expect me, = take you toa ball, stay awake until | | four o'clock, and then getup ateight to go to my work? | Wife—I may be a little unreasonable, } | but it’s perfectly brutal of you to men- with each Box. Aadress Ballard a —— Co, 2010 ti A Louis, = uO. Mrseuri Pacific Time fabte, Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. NortuH Bounp a Sas ee Passenger. : = $347 a. m. j tion it —N _Y. Weekly. | Passenger, S 42 Pp. m. Green Gages. Passenge-, : : & p.m. Woman—I want some plum colored | Local © sight + 11:20 a.m. crepe de chine. SovutH Bounp Clerk (pulls out roll)—Here it is Passenger, S - Woman—But this is green. | rassenger, . ss Clerk—Plums are never ripe at this | Passenger, . = time of the year, ma'am —Halla Local Freight - 7:16 a.m. Sars, Prompt, Pesittre Cure for Impotence, Loss | ac. — i fan rice $1. 6 Soecia! Directions Matted | thus far, is it not? So much food for | reflection! Mrs) Highton—That you find it necessary to go out to get some- —Shoe Dealer—If a woman should teome in and ask you to show hera common-sense shoe that would not pinch her foot, what would you do? | Would-be Clerk—I'd bring out a shoe | about two sizes too small for her.—In- dianapolis Journal. —Despondency is not @ state of hu- mility. On the contrary, it is the vex- ation and despair of a cowardly pride; nothing is worse. Whether we stum- ble or whether we fall, we must only think of rising again and going on in our course. —Fenelon. —Another Blighted Being.—Footinit good, —I asked Miss Sugarman last night | saw in me to love and now I n't. Gazzam—Why? “Why, ei her to thinking about it, and at last reports she was further away om finding any reason than at frst By the time. she gets through there'll | be another blighted being—me!”"— Bos | for wa | ly Pure White Lead, | of perfectly pure colors in the HE bestinvestment in real estate is to keep build- Paint well painted. protects You sell—many a the house and saves repairs. sometimes want to good house has rema nt of paint. The be, though, ‘the best none.”’ That means Strictly Pure White Lead cannot afford to use + To be sure of gettir i unsold hould nt oF azz nts. 4 € look brand ; any of these are sate “Southern, “Red Seal, “Collier.” For Covors.—National Lead Co.’s Pure Me hite Lead ean Col ite Lead he desired shad no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combi diest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead. A good many thousand do! saved property-owners painting and color-card. L LEAD CO. jouis Branch, : Tenth Street, St. Louis. WANTED rO Exchange for Farm: $15,000 stock of lumber and hard- ware, situated in good Illinois town, doing good buisness, want good farm. $16,000 stock of gents furnishing goods in good Ilinois town of $0,- 900. Want good farm. $12,000 general stock, residence and store building $6,000. Largest and best ‘store west of Salina-Railroad center. Want good farm. 0000 stock $16,000 is in groceries and provisions, bailanee dry goods, shoes, and clothing, doing good busi- ness of $10,000 a month, no competi- tion. Want $25,000; in good impro ed farms or rental property and $8,- 000 to $10,000 cash. $18,000 general stock, well situated, doing a large business. Want good farm and three or four thousand dol- lars cash. ars have been y having our book on Send us a postal card neral stock. Want good farm in eastern Kansas at its value. Noinflation, $3,000 stock of hardware and $2,500 stone building and will put in from $1,000 to $5,000 in good notes, due September 1, 1894. Want good farm $4,000) general stock want good farm and $1,000 cash. Will assume sinall encumberance. 500 hardware for good farm 35,000 genera! stock and 000 dwelling in good north Missouri town for good farm. $8,606 dry goods, want ood farm and $35,000. Will assume $35,000. $6,000 stock dry goods, want good farm. Address, G. W. GLARDY, BUTLER MISSOURI. Dissolution Notice. Mo., July, The co- -partner hip existing Lee Culver and A H Culver constituting the gro- cery firm of Lee Culver & Co., has this day been dissolved by mutual consent, A. H Cul- ver retiring Lee Culver will continue the business, colleciiny all accounts due the firm and assuming all obi! i-4t Elegant World’s Fair Views GIVEN AWAY ———_ By —— The St. Louis Republic TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S FAIR VIEWS, each portfolio con- taining 16 views and each view ac- cuvately described. Views of the Mail Buildings, State Buildings, the Midway, Views of Statuary, etc. These ten portfolios will be given without cost to anyone who will send five new yearly subscribers to The Twice a Week Republic, with $5.00 the regular subscription price. Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. C, HAGEDORN The Old Reliable PHOTOGRAPHER North Side Square. ! Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missonri. All Styles of Photographing execit-d in the highest style of the art, and at reasonable prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to sive satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. | ton Traveller C. HACEDORN.

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