The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 16, 1895, Page 6

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y Raa RACH soit CLARDY & BRUNER, Real Estate and Loans. Do you want to sell your farm, if so list it at once with us. We are now preparing a large amount of advertising matter for distribution in Iowa, Illinois an who has just associated himself d Nebraska. Mr. J. U. Bruner, with us bas large acquaintance in Towa and Illinois in the real estate business. Have been engaged in running excursion trains from these states to Southwest Mo., for the past year. age over ary firm in Southwest to buy or sell. Yours fo: Our extensiv: e connection gives us the advant- Mo. Come and see us if you wish r business, ;Clardy & Bruner. Ballard. Ite ms We had a big rain and wind storm here Friday night. Mies Ella Hayes of Archie was visiting the family of J. B. Hayes | last week. Miss Lena Griggs, of California,is at home visiting her parents. J. B. Hayes and Jim Woods mark- eted their hogs at Adrain Monday. | W. B. Cole and family spent Sat- urday night with his uncle Billy Griggs family. Mr. George Dennis and Stella McMillan were married at Walnut Grove, church,Sunday night Rev. Walkup officiati Mre. Emma J obn ony Miss | 8 od at W. B. Coles Sunday. | Sam Griffith and wife visited rela- tives in Urich one day last week. Dr. Wolf visited friends near Shawnee Mound, Henry | county Sunday. Misses Anna Griggs and Julia Douglass went to Butler relatives and | Saturday. | this season. Y. C. Combs was eyenings ago. Johnny Herrman is helping his brother, P. J. Herrman, this week. W. H. Elliott was in Butler, | Saturday. Stillwell planted corn, Monday morning. Jack. over 8 few Colored Sam Jones. Baltimore, May 9.—Bishop Wes- loy J. Gaines, of Georgia, who has been presiding over the conference \ of the African Methodist Episcopal church here has attracted much at- tention by his quaint and effective ‘oratory. One of his ways of calling conference together was this: “Get together, boys! Get togeth- /er! And some of you fellows had better drop those long faces you're | carrying around here. “Why isn’t it just as easy to smile as to weep? | One of the incidents of the general | election was that a large number of persons received one vote each. To Our miller was grinding Monday | a laugh which greeted one of these asit was too wet to workin the! fields. George Chandler wants to buy a good milk cow. E. L. McClenny and Chriss Greer has sweet potatoe plants. Miss Jennie Johnson was visiting W. B. Coles family last week. Several was breaking young horses | Saturday,as it was a good day while the ground was soft. Tom Evans and brother passed through town en route for Butler. Mirt Anderson visited relatives southwest, Sunday. Hick Ray and family was intown Monday. Misses Ida and Cora Crow enter- tained a few of their friends at their | home Thursday right,a nice time was had. C. R. Cole has got him a big straw hat and has commenced to farming. There was an ice cream supper at ! John Bowdens, one night lasi week. | Mts TLETOE, Diseases unfriendly to women are positively cured by Dr Sawyer’s Pa-ti Ask; your druggist for a free org dee It heals wndeures. Sold by ILL Tu Culyer Items. John Lentz home folks, Su Andy Ray Monday of Thos. Hendrix talks of shipping out one hundred cattle this week, of Adrian, visited the ast week and they are fine ones too. J. H. Gardner's wife is conva- lescent. Allen Price, of Butler, was out visiting his son and old friends in Spruce. Call at Geo. pipe, as he found it. The children of Tom Stover and N. Davis visited their grandparents, southeast of Butler. W. S. Ray drilled his corn. Sam and Geo. McCandless, two old neighbor boys, called, Sunday. They are farming near Butler, where we hope they may do well. Mr. C. D. George, of the Warrens- burg Normal, visited at his brother- in law, J. D. Allen’s, a day. Carl Decker was out in style, last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Willey, of Maple Grove, were on Central ave., Sunday. John Sealinger and family visited at J. P. Herrman’s, Sunday. Dee delivered our school teacher to his mother, Friday after school. C. J. Greer is up with the times on cheap goods end higher prices for your produce. Our smith is a full edged black- smith. Jas. Bradley goes north to sell the Graham clippers. = Sam 0° Banion is: working for Gea Wells. T. P. Stover and son are farming | Huff's and get your, lonesome votes the Bishop said: | “Never mind, boys: I’ve known | many a horse that was away behind | in the back stretch to come out first | under the wire. | The advice of the bishop to his | ministers to be alive in the pulpit | created a profound impression. “Ginger up, boys! Get lively aim at the moon, even if you can’t hit it- Never go into the pulpit unless | you are prepared to preach. It is | Said that if you open your mouth wide God will fill it. He will—with wind.” The Bishop in one of his short sermons paid his respects to the preachers helpmeets—the wives. “You women,” he said cut cunning capers before you catch the man of your choice. You crimp up }gimp up and manage and to look too just too sweet for anything, and no wonder a himself, ‘Why that’s the only woman a man ean love.” Then when you get you a man do you keep on looking sweet! | Not by a good deal. Many of you| allow yourself to get slipshod and | slouchy, and I dare & to wonder after a while what he ever saw in you in the first place.” man thinks to a man begins Invest Your Change. A silver quarter is about as much as some people care to invest inj; medicine for immediate use. Spend | this sum for a package of Simmons | Liver Regulator, powder. | It’s the woman's friend --cures sick headache in the right way, and quickly, too; jast as good for biliousness. All Armed. Perry, O. T.,-May 9 —From As- ‘sistant United States Attorney Hoffman, who has just returned! = OE from Washington C where court is being Chronicle correspondent le terrible state of affairs. It seems that Jeff Wi Bob Moore some time ago and that ns of a Williams was put on trial Monday. | Everybody has taken sides in ‘the ae | the he q he| Bland 1s Modest. Denver, Col., gressman Richard P Bland of Mis- sour, who will lecture in Denver |next Saturday night on “The Twen- lty Years’ Battle for Silver, and the! ,” is resting quiet- |ly inthis city, as he is suffering from the effects ,of the g He | said today: “I have not heard of the efforts of | | my friends in St. Louis in the way) jof securing for me the nomination | for President by the free silver | Democrats in 1896. In fact, 1 do} |not think that Iam the y yroper man |to select. In my public life I have never made a fight to get personal advantage for myself Especially is | this true in the silver cause. | fought for the cause itself. among my Democratic friends for me {to be an available candidate. | Rather than try to make friends and | build up for myself a political tuture | I tried to advance the cause I advo-| cated. This has made me less avai | There are plenty of good men in the | ranks who would have greater! ! the Democrats stirred up during my terms of office, and I feared I suc: | ceeded a little too well to expect | success in a Presidential canvass.” If Mrs. Tome is te. be believed Ex-Governor Lewelling, of Kansas, | isa thrifty fellow. He is worthy | specimen of your good, honest,every day Populist. The Governor took | a contract to furnish butter to the, Topeka asylum. The Ex-Governor | billed it to the asylum as “star creamery butter, and Mrs. Lease says that 298 pounds of it was “rot- ten as soap grease.’ The record shows that Gov. Lewelling charged the State these 298 pounds. At the time first- class creamery butter was on an average worth 20 cents a pound, while country butter such as the May 9.—Ex-Con-| Ihave) In do-} ing so I have made too many enemies, | CO able as a candidate than many others. | strenth than I. I have tried to ua ! ‘Tutt’s # 23 cents per pound for| 7 | Swallowed by the River. | Jeflerson Clty Tribune. The old town of Gyoso, Pemiscot | county, has tumbled into the Mis: /Sippi riveranda new town of the Same name is being built further | | away from the river. This is not the first Missouri town to be swallowed up by ariver, The Ste Genevieve of to-day is not the original ori town which » ment in M | disappeared y lin, in How flou | of it re st seitie- Old Frank- cn the opposite dozen ye stick of stood the chan ARE YOU BA 4 NK q*. RUPT; in health, ined by ex- liver, cc }and all kir 3 Liver Pills an absolute cure. Praising Him. Governor furnished, in good condi- tion, was worth from 10 to 12 cents. | —Clinton Democrat Whast She Wanted. The Suda Hardware Co., of Louis- iana, offered a complete cooking out- | fit free to any couple who would get | married in their window, and the} only answer thus far received is from ‘a Hannibal girl who said that if the firm would offer a whole outfit of parlor, bed room, dining room and | sleeping furniture, carpets and a piano, pots, pans, room curtains, and kitchen | ets, she and her fellow would sider the offer, but otherwise | were too hard to marry. TEx. times Hot in Topeks a. Topeka, Kan., Nay 9.—People in Topeka suffered to-day because of t. At 2 o'clock this afternoon | the reliable thermometer registered | 6 degrees above zero. The inhabitants” say that this has been | the hottest first week in May 11887 when it was 97 degrees lon the Sth, inst. The | the extreme heat, “oldest reason for Sergeant Jennings | jof the weather perce says, is the) jlow barometer extending from Colg-! rado to the great lakes, causing a wind from the svuth across , Warm ' Kansas Castoria. for Castoria, clung to Castoria, When she trad ( ave them Castoria, Newark, oO. May 9.—R 9.—Rev. P.G.; , Consultation arg and free | Meath, a Baptist minister, and for a killing and the Court-house is filled| long time au enthusiastie worker in with fcmed men, and e riot is feared | every hour. tthe A. P. A, | nouncement publicly made the an- to-day that he will George East isa prominent leader! shortly abandon the ministry in in the county and he declares that | Williams shall suifer for the murder, while Williams’ friends are deter- mined that he shall not be punished. old People | adding organ: 2 formance ‘or Bitters is an excellent appe! } digestion. Old peop | cy what they need drug store, rt and aids Lé find it just exact- i ctrict | ing, Your liver and Kidney are not ‘order to unite with the Roman ‘Catholic Church, of which his moth- erisa member. In explanation he says: kettles, refrigerators, | nee | gridiorns, flour chest and ash buck-! con- | | | \ | | i DR REA & co., and Th branch ¢ HOTE,L E MAY 28, PALACE TUESDAY, Mo. One Day. | ten exe = treated and cur: | upon him gentleman! ously and frankly tells th he co: r not lers the case ca’ Prices reasons Correspondence Address |. Rea, sas City, Mo. “I have grown weary of religious -:- controversy. It has brought to me a stumbling block. Protestantism jis never at a loss to devise some | generally when you get up in the morn | doing their work. Why don’ t you taxe | Parks Sure cure. If it does not make Price soc at your | you feel better it costs you nothing— jSeld by H. L. Tucker: term of the Bates. county probate court, in| Bate poe in othe ish day chiar Iss, atier ning on ‘0! ‘SF, | oa . SYLVIA Ca’ TON, 2-4 (Administratrix old town ng His Rooms Crowded. Everybody Satisfied,Many | | Allour shoes are equally satisfactory M4 MM NM MM A Does the Question of Proper Bicycling Dress Bother You? E desire to help every American woman to ride a bicycle. Therefore COLUMBIA BICY- CLES are $400 this year, and are lighter and better adapted to women’s needs than ever. There are also light and attractive patterns for women’s use in Hartford Bicycles at $80 and $60. eeeeee OROR ORC) Bicycle Here’s an Idea costume boils To help solve the problem of proper cycling costume, we have had prepared a set of six handsor — lithographed pa- anes 9) as by most of women’s The set is beauti- ful and instructive. #eeeee gowns. address, with a dainty little book CLING FOR WOMEN, for five 2-cent Address Publishing Department. Pope Mfg. Co., Hartford, Conn. Mailed to any on BICY j j 1 | | (MMMM MMMM i | DEACON BROS & CO. agent | Butler. Miss« for Columbia and Hartford Bicycles “HE THAT WORKS EASILY, “WORKS SUCCESSFULLY.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO B-ELY'S CREAM BALM. Cleanses the Nasal Bi es, Alleys Pain and Inflammatien, Heals Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures Give > Relic: at once for C ‘old in sists or by mail, ELY BROS. So W; ts sous GLAS | $3 CE 1S THE BEST. FIT FOR AKING. yo 5S. COR DOVAN, FRENCH & ENAMELLED CALF. °45359 Fine CALF&KANGAROD | SS.SOPOLICE,ssotes. | CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS COP YRIGHTS, yo eg ae tat me For a UNN& CO m1 munca. ‘A Handbook of ine itents and bow to ob- catalogue of mechan CHOOL 1 SHOES, ADIES- 232. $175 “pest OONGOLy | MACY | Over One Million | People W. L, Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes | They give the best value for the money. it. ia equal custom in style and j N a =, caring qui ics are unsurpassed. Tre P | ee = a | Nature's Seuencce re —S——S——— yo | Remepy , Dealer, wh | pear here FoR Rae / M ANDRAKE Agent wanted. Levee ae at once CompPLaint PLAY FITS! 2) aS pre- a by the medi- Send for pamphiet. oct ee mt DISSPPEAR WITH BU st the advertis od "" pase Factiti wiv To. RE FOR ALL WHO AND TWESTY THIRUTE OUR G thet | SEW 4ULSTeEL VERT SUPEION IF 2D CUTTER, WORTH "$40 at $1] O tiie Tine =legant Pullman Service cli ing ¢ — Cars (* ST. Louis KANSAS CITY gre AND THE ASK ure robe “Missouri Pacific Ry.” rs H. ©. TOWNSEND, Cenera! Passenger and Ticket Agest, ST. LG ARGE WINDMILL SS AEP BUTE i THiie TowEEs oF Cs THIS | vertisements mar ‘or Con. "Isih, Meck well & Fillmore Sts. ;Ubicage |

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