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KANSAS CITY, @ @ MISSOURI. ular greduate —authorized by the state, and conced- ed to be the lead- ing and most suc- cessful Specialist in BLOOD, NERV- # OUS and URINARY a (a i T Oeeret OLDEST ano ORiCINAL 10 WEST NINTH STREET, {NEAR JUNCTION.) ._ IN Diseases. Nervous Debility With Its Many Gloomy Symptoms Cured. Lost Vitality Perfectly and Permanently Restored. Syphilis Cured for Life Without Mercury. Urinary Diseases Quickly Relieved and Thoroughly Cured. is Dr. H. J. Whittier invar-) for the past two years, left with his lably successful? Because he | z. makes no promises that he | fawily yesterday for Southern Mis Avoid cheap cure-alls and unskilled physicians, and consult | Dr. Whittier in person or by letter (giving | They camped last night near Reger, symptoms) and receive the cand{d opinion of a physician of long experience, unquestioned | cannot fulfill. skill and sterling integrity. MEDICINES from our own laboratory fur- nished at small cost and shipped anywhere secure from observation. TREATMENT never sent C. O. D. FRE CONSULTATION. URINARY ANALYSIS. Office hours—9 to 4 and 7 to 8. Sunday 10 to 12. . {To Health and Emergencies | Cuide! for 6 cts. —stamps—to prepay. | Call or address in strict confidence DR. H. J. WHITTIER, West Ninth Street. Kansas City, Me we Pacific ‘Time Arrival and departure of passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortx Bounp Passenger, : - 4:47 a.m. Passenger, - - 2:42 p.m. Passenge-, : : Q:1§ p.m. Local cveight - 11:20 a.m. SoutH Bounp 7:16 a.m. 1:55 pm. 9155 p.m. Passenger, - - Vassenger, _ - Passenger, - - Local Freight - Mexican Mustang Liniment for Burns, Caked & Inflamed Udders. Piles, Rheumatic Pains, Bruises and Strains, Running Sores, Inflammations, Stiff joints, Harness & Saddle Sores, Sciatica, Lumbago, Scalds, Blisters, Insect Bites, All Cattle Ailments, All Horse Ailments, All Sheep Ailments, EAT REME ¢ Table, | 55pm. | dow It Came to Be a Protection Against i t Spirits. n is considered a great | Acoomnted For. ~The f Senator Peany City, Mo., Jan. 2 Sistine urt, co an Liepresentatives Start and Swanger, to day completed the tack of « State treasury unting the cash in the The task was a big worked hard all this morning. | There is a httle over $700,000 in the one and the court fay yesterday until treasury and it was found correct to! cent. The department is in fine shape and the court will likely give Mr. Stephers a merited compliment in its report to the General Assembly. Ladies member that disease becomes in- curable Sawyer’a Pastilles will positively cure long standing cases It heals and cures Sold by HL Tucker Four Feartully Feartully Burned. j Milan, Mo., Jan. 2 -——A man named | Crooks, who has lived in this city | Bouri, traveling with team and wagen about eight miles west of this place, and while his wife was getting sup per ber clothing accideutly caugh: | tire and burned her almost beyond ‘recognition. Two of the little girls, | who caugbht hold of ber while she were also horrib'y The husband was badly about the face aud band- while trying to extinguish the flames. was burning, burned. burned American Institute Farme’s Clo. A Committee from this club re- wort the wines of Alfred Speer, ot Passaic, N J, the most reliable to be obtained, and that his Oporto Grape makes a Port’ Wine superior toauy inthe world | Hi~ Claret and Brandy have no superiors. The known in and Mond: worst sbow storms ever Alabama raged Sunday Ly. | Ladies—Dr Sawyer’s Pastilles are effectual for | femate weakness. pain on top of the head and lower partof the back It strengthens and | cures Sold by H LE. Tucker. The Missouri legislature convened yesserday. The house is Republican by a majority of 16. You will never know positvely what a won- derful remedy Dr. Sawyer’s Family Cure is until you try it. [twilleure you of # sour stomach. Sold HL Tucker The first Baptist chureh of Chatta nooga, Tenn, which cost $100,000, was destroyed by fire last Sunday. Zano invigorates, stimulates and builds up | the broken down system Zano cures mental and nervous tebilityofmen Sold by H. L. Tucker Five horses are under inoculation , at Washington City for the purpose lof producing blood eerum for the cure of diphtheria. Dr. Sawyer’s Family Cure cures stomach trouble Dr yer s Family Cure cures liv- ercomplaints, cures kidney dificulty. Sold by H. L. Tucker. Reports from «a point near the seat of the recent outrages iu East- (ern Turkey place the number ot | slaughtered fally 15.000. Zano invigorates mental power and tones broken down nervous system resulting from lost manhood. Zano cures nervous and sexual debility of men. Soild by H. L. Tucker. Armenians at The board of managers of the ex Confederate home at Higgiusville, Mo., will meet in this city next week for the purpose of considering # bill for the transfer of the institution to | the State. Dr Sawyer’s Pastilles used in time will care | Get a free sam- | any case of female weakness. Penetrates Muscle, | ple package from the following named drug Membrane and Tissue gist. Sold by HL Tucker A New Orleans dispatch says that Quickly to the Very {six inches of snow fell Sunday at Seat of Pain and Columbus; four inches at Starkville, Water Valley, Holly Springs aud Ousts it in a Jiffy. | Grenada, Miss.; and 10 to 12 inches Rub in Vigorously. Mustang Liniment conquer Play [Man or Beast well | !! 1 Tucker. again. Administrator's Notice. administration on the estate of Chas Sevier, signed on the 3d day 1894, by the probate court of Bat county, Missouri. benefit of sai fouh daims be not exhibited wit! from the date of this pub- | fication, they shall be forever barred. | { November, 1894. op peal OW. P. SEVIER. Adwinistrator. Notice is hereby given, that letters of ll persons having claims against said mutate are required to exhibit them for allowance totheadministra- newspapers tor within one year after the date of | ass of aaid letters, or they may be precluded , | estate; and | dii at Arkansas ity, A n ontopofthe head and er’s Pastilles will ure you. Sold by Do not suffer with p in the back when lr absolutely and positive! Horses are dying with diphtheria in the vicimty of Carlyle, Ill. Over 100 cases are reported. that the horses — with distemper. E Ladies can be positively 4 those irregularities, es! 2D | It is said are affected first The glands of tke neck then swell to an enormous size. relieved from all distressing symptoms were granted to the under- | and diseases by using Dr Sawyer's Pastilles, of November | Sold by HL Tacker. Dr. Parkhuret of New York, ina sermon last Sunday said that the that daily serve up a undigested matter without scriminatiun to their readers were rapidly becoming a public nuisance. bow (ring),will never have oc- casion touse this time-honored cry. It is the only bow that cannot be twisted off the c cases stamped with this trade mark. CJ Ask your jeweler for pamphlet, or send to the mancfa-turers Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. What Nerve Berries have done for others OF isTH DAY. MEN é:.ily, Quickly d and Permanently Restored. 30TH Day. A positive cure for all Weaknesses, Nervousness, Debility, and all their train of evils resulting from early errors and later excesses; the result of over- work, sickness, worry,etc. Develops and gives tone and strength to thesex- ualorgans. Stops unnatural losses or nightly emissions caused by youthful errorsor excessive use of tobacco,opium and liquor, which lead to consumption and insanity. Their use shows immedi- ate improvement. Insist upon having the genuine NERVE BERRIES, no other. Convenient to carry in vest pocket. Price, $1.00 per box, six boxes, one full treatment, $5.00. Guaranteed to cure any case. If not kept by your drug- gist we will send them by mail, upon receipt of price, in plain wrapper. Pamphlet free. Address mail ordersto AMERICAN MEDICAL CO., CINCINNATI, 0. Fx aaa: ae and is found only on J: 3 \ \ ase Boss Filled and ether watch : Ma who are r all, of is usual ist dem course, a bit of iron is a very useful thing to have about you atany } esand the demons gen- good reason for b “But why om ask, in partie a horseshoe te piece of ore than piece of od Tuck mas iron iron? Well. 7 depends more upon the i than on the special shape or function | of the horseshc the s itself more ps wu rope, at least. i the horses | and the domestic beasts in general that | are specially liable to the hostile at- tacks of “the little dais fore the elves and trolls st likely to be dreaded on farms or in the coun try, where horses and cattle most do congregate. > if you want to upa bit of iron the fiery darts of th stables or cov place where nothing is more lik th shoes. We Eu- sthees ones on you (which is the est sees them), to come handy orseshoe. ity for i it can be vads almost Besides, it has obvious congr the place and object. a readily picked up in the anywhere. Furthe ore, it is pro- vided beforehand th convenient | holes, by means of which you can | readily hang it up. « own house door or stables. The various cheapness, ease ing would he fair start in life F: eharm against fairies, trolls and evil spirits gene 3 without other more special advantages. ee orseshoe is believed. ly, even any STORED HIS GAME. A Maine Hunter Who Had a First-Class Cola-Storage Vault A gentleman who was at work at the Howard slate quarry in Willimantic, or “No. 8” as it then called, twenty ago, says deer were as plenty then in the weods north of Sebec ~~ could was lake as any: ask for + Bea dr iggist. ook’sCotton Root Tuck>r, 4\ COMPOUND. ‘A recent discovery by an old physician. Successfully used nthly by thousands of Ladies, Is the only perfectly safoand reliable medicine dis- covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who 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 particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 stamps. Address Pond Lily Company, No. ‘isher Block, Detroit, Mich. Sold in Butler and everywhere, by all druggists. The St. Louis Republic Free, Special offer to Readers of This Paper.—A Great Metropolitan Pa- per Is Indispensable Now. The “Twice-A Week” St. Louis Republic will be sent Free For Oue Year to any person sendiug, before January 31, 1895, «a club of three New yearly subscribers, with $3 to pay for the same. Already the clans are gathering for the fray in 1896. aud 1895 will be tull of iuteresting The skirmish will ve thrown out, eveuts, Liane of campatgn arrang ca for the great contest mn 96 The remuning short session of the Democrine Cousress, to be fol- lowed stiertiv by a R publican Con gress, with « Demoer t in the Presi dential chair will be productive of events of inca'culable interest. In fact. more political history will be constructe1 during 1895 than in any year since the fou: dation of the lump in the movem- nt: of public opinion. You can get three new subscribers for The Republic by a few minutes’ effort Remember in The Republic year. Try it, At Once, and see bow easily it can be done. a package of sample copies, write for them Cut out this adyertise- ment and send with your order. Address The St Loum Republic, St Louis. Mo 7ORL~ =< SEL OS 5 “SINGOV “OO “QUIK YITITHM LLINNAG PInoy: sie Aue Gosvel [CUOTIppS ue FQ} *Ba1AZ0O0o 04} S2op JT¥q 29770q snot J. [HOOD 94} [IA OS sm fectually. \ Deetrual: ‘Sold be HT. Tucker. Ladies— For diseases of poe ery it is mild bat wom © ———— 2} AA sno Government. and a a) without a! newspaper will be Ike a useless subscribers get a paper twice-a week | for the price of a weekly—only $1 a! If you wish) The slate comp: large number | of men emplo; boarded them in camps, the as Iumbermen board their crews in the woods. To} keep the camp supplied with fish and meat they kept a hunter ed every day. The supply nev n| short, but some of his methods were | peculiar. He evidently kept fi callin the winter occasions, the gentleman pany came in from Bangor unexpected- ly late in the evening. But they only had to say trout to Stone, the hunter, and he would start off in the woods to return in fifteen minutes with a hand- some string of fish, apparently just taken from the water. He would bring in deer in winter in much the same way. ny hoon veral com- season. On si His manner of doing this, says the Chicago Times, the gentleman ex- plains, for he went with him once and learned the secret. He took the deer sled out to bring in the game, and the workman went along to help haul it. They did not go very far into the forest when they came to a lot of ever- green boughs heaped upon the snow. Here Stone stopped. Lifting the boughs he tipped the pile over, and the looker- on, who wondered what he was up to, was scared nearly out of his senses when a big buck bounded up out of the hole and fell flat on his side. His feet were tethered so he could not stand. Stone had caught him, tethered brush and snow against future emer- gencies. This was his system of cold storage. | Skillful Handling of a Fire Engine in| Rapid Motion. | | vAmong other exhibitions of their | skill given by the detachment of | British soldiers that visited this coun- | try last year,” said an uptown resident | to a New York Sun man, ‘was the | driving of a piece of light artillery | with the horses going at a gallop be-| tween obstructions that were scarcely | farther apart than the wheel tracks | without touching them. and very beautifully they did it, too. Iam liv- ing now in the neigborhood of a fire engine that lies in a cross street just | offan avenue in which the elevated railroad runs. Well, you ought to see | the engine turn into the avenue from | the street between the pillars going to | a tire. Ofcourse the pillars are very | much farther apart than the artillery | ; obstructions were, but they are taken onacurve instead of going straight, and then, too, they are rigid and {m-j| movable; to hit one with the horses on } the jump would mean to wreck the engine, or at least to disable it, and | there must not be any mistake, and |} | there isn't. They go down the avenue | jon the gallop and they turn out be- | | tween the pillars with the same swift {certainty. Good driving? makes you laugh to look at it. and just the same kink of driving is done by all the men in the department crery , time they go toa fire.” Why, it| H The Raby Castie Fire. | | Here is an instance of a fire that has | | been burning forcenturies. According j | to the testimony of the duchess of | Cleveland, the great hearth fire in the | hall of Raby castle has never been suf-} fered to expire. This castle is perhaps | the noblest and most perfect specimen | of feudal architecture in England. | him and buried him alive under the | ~ the inaneuvering dove and the plans | | thereof, to secure the | cancelled and for naught held, | court, | and holden at the court house in the city of | Febrai TRADITION OF THE HORSESHOE.| XX Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantce is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness, Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy aud natural sleep. Case toria is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend, iN Castoria. Castoria_ so well adapted to children thas as superior toany prescription icine for chil me of its * Castoria is an excellent @ Mo have good effect upon their ¢ “ Castoria I recomme known to me. Ds. G. C. Oscoon, Low Mass. Tl A, Ancaen, M. D., {St Brooklyn, N. ¥ s in the children's denart on highly of their e peri “ Castoria is the best remedy for children of “Our phy: Tam acquainted. I hope the da ot | ment have spo distant when mothers will consider the re: terest of their children, and use Cas’ ad of the various quack nostrums which destroying their loved ones, by forcing morphine, soothing syrup and other hurt agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.”’ Da. J. F. Kincneros, Conway, Ark. | Aten C. Surrs, Pres., THREE MONTHS “ABSOLUTELY FREE OHI St. Lows Globe-Democrat Eight pages each Tuesday and Friday. sixteen Pages Every Week. 3eyond all comparison the biggest, best and brightest news and faw- ily Journal published in America. PPrice, One DOllar a Year. Will be sent FIFTEEN MONTHS FOR ONE DOLLAR to any reader of this paper not now a subscriber to Tuer Griose-Democrat. This blan~ must be used to secure benefit of this extraordinary offer. CUT IT OUT It is worth three months freesubscription. Fill in your —_____—___* name, Post-Office and State, and maii with one dollar (Bank Draft. Post-Oftice or Express Money Order, or Registered Letter,) direct to CLOBE PRINTINC CO., St. Louis, Mo. Sample copies of Tur Grove-Democrax will be sent free on application. ORDER BLANK. To Globe Printing Co., St. Louis, Mo. we only have among our jes what is known as regular are free to confess that the ria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Usirsp Hosprrat axp Disrensaay,, Boston, Mass Herewith find $1.00, for which send to address giyen below, THE GLOBE--DEMOCRAT, twice every week, for fifteen monthe, as per your speciai offer to readers of The ...... published at Town Name of suscriber__ Post office. Be sure to use this blrok. Itis worth three months tree subscription Order of Publication. OF MISSOURI? | County of Bates, § °*- i Notice of Trustee's Sale. {First publication December 13. 1894.) | Whereas, on March Ist, 18%, Thomas W Childs and Sarah E Childs, husband and wife. made, executed and delivered their deed of trust for the purpose of securing the payment of three bonds, one for the sum of $100 due March 1, Is*7, one for the sum of $200 due March Ist, 1883, and one for the sum of $1,206 due March Ist, 1x1 in sald deed of trust de- scribed, wherein they conveyed to the under- signed, Ibavid H Ettien. trustee, the following described real estate situated in the county of Bates ard state of Missouri, to-wit: _ Twenty-five (25) feet off the east end of lot Number one (1) block No. nine (9) and twenty five (25) feet im the northeast corner of lot No. two (2) block No. nine (9) im the town (now city) of Butler, Mo., described as follows to- wit: commencing at the northeast corner of block No nine (%) thence west twenty-five (25, feet, thence sonth one hundred (100) feet thence cast twenty-five (25) feet, thence north one hundred (Ju0) feet to the place of begin- ning according to the ‘recorded plat thereot together with all the improvements and ap- purtensnces therennto belonging; and whereas on the 22pd day of March. 1886. et 2:25 o’clock p.m. said deed of trust was duly recorded in book 4 page 100 of trust deeds of the rec- payment of s certain | ords of said Bates county, Missouri; and. note and debt therein failly described dee! whereas said deed of truet provices that upon non-payment ofthe debt secured by sald deed of trust by the makers thereof, the property therein described may be sold by the trustee for the purpose of raising th the debt thereby secared: bond for $1 20 due March } due and unpaid. STs Iu the Circuit Court of Bates county, Missouri in vacation, December lith, Invi E F Wilds plaintiff, vs. The Ger Insurance Compa- ny,of Freeport, Illinois a corporation under the laws ofthe state of Illinois, defendant Now atthis day comes the plaintiff herein by his attorney raves & Clark, before the un- dersigned clerk of the circuit court in vacation and files his petiticn and affidavit, alleging ong other things, that defendant, The Ger- man Insurance (01 y,of F rt, Illinois ration under the laws the state of not a resident of the state of Mis- souri. Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation that said defendant be notified by pub- lication that plasntiff has commenced a suit against it in this court the object and general nature of which isto have a certain deed of trust made by plaintif, E F Wilds and wife, to J D Allen, trastee for the Missouri state Bank cony rter of section twenty-two (22) in townshiy forty-two of range thirty-one (31) in Bates county, Missouri, which said deed of trust isefrecord in the recorder’s office of Bates county, Missouri, in book 107 at pag ance Company of Freeport, ration foressid, be and appear at this the next term thereof, to be begun whereas, said . 11, is now hotice fe hereby given that, the waderhiguos ven atl, ie ft David H Ettien, the trustee ia ald deed of trust, under and by virtue of the authority vested in me by ssid deed of trust at the request ofthe owners of said bond wili Droceed to sell the above deseribed resi estate at public vendue to the highest bidder for casi: at the front dour of the county court house of Bates county, Missouri, at Butler the count: seat of eaid county, on < Tuesday, January 15, 1895, between the hours of nine o’clock = soon and dvs o’ciock in the Frectinndigtcers Ratler, in saidcounty, on the eleventh day of ¥ next, and on or before the third day of said term. if the term shail so long continue and if not, then on or before the last day of said term—anewer or plead tothe petition in ssid canse, the same will be taxen as confess- ed and judgment will be rendered aceordingiy And be it farther ordered that a copy hereof = _—— einrins law. in the Batler eekly Time~. a weekly newspaper printed and published In Bates county. “Missouri, for | foar weeks successively the last insertion to | be at least Gfteen days before the frst day of the next term of the cireait court | JOHN C. HAYES. Cirenit Cierk Atraecopy of the record. ‘Witness mr and the seal of the cirenit cour: {ear} ———_ ity, this 15th day of De- 34: JOHN C. HATES, Cirenit Clerk. trust. DAVID H. ETTIES, Trustee. Edward C Wright, attorney.” i i i ete ac ah