The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 13, 1895, Page 6

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Aare a 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 and Nebraska. Mr. J. U. Bruner, who has just associated himself with us bas large acquaintance in Towa and Illinois in the real estate business. Have been engaged in running € ion trains from these states to Southwest Mo., for the past y Our extensive connection gives us the a vent: age over any firm Southwest Mo. Come 4 to bny or seil. Yours for business, Clardy & Bruner. Brush Lodge. Virginie, Mo., June 11, 18 ret of Beauty The people of Brush Valley held) js l;ealth. The secret ofl oth i 1s | a meeting Saturday night, in thein- 4). power to digest a ! terest of the farmers finance. The ee ee ; a proper quanity of | meeting was opened by John M. tie ’ Porsey, who made some brief re a s can never be done when | marks about how the Government | the had got people in debt, how bankers ¥, and Wall Street had taken the life blood out of the toiling millions,bow they controlled Cleveland the Con- gress, the United Staies, and the lemocratic and republican parties were twin robbers, all working’ . against the interest of the farmers. ‘ie Mr. Jamison moved that John M. . es Porsey be elected president, and | the motion carried, Joe Curly moved ! that the president be given power | to appoint the rest of the officers. The president appointed Wm. Men are no happier when rich Honey, vice president; Bill Funy, | than when poor. How can they be? secretary; Samuel Gander, foot treas- | Do you think some great millionaire urer; Petter Fritz, Chaplin. It was is any happier driving some famous moved that we have constitution and | trotter who enjoys a national repu- by laws. , tation and has cost his owner several Mr. Peterson moved that none be | | thousand dollars than a $15 a week allowed to join that was a banker, | clerk hiring a livery stable horse lawyer, doctor, printer, preacber,|#24 driving out with his best girl? merchant, sohool teachers, and rail- ple a whit. For $150 a poor man road men, none but farmers. Mr. | C0 own a horse that will give him Pottee called the chaplin, Peter | just as much pleasure as a $40,000 | Fritz, for his opinion as he thought Maud S_ There you have the whole we ought to follow the advise of the | thing in a nutshell. chaplin. Peter Fritz, said, brothers | Russet A. Atcer. {shall give you what the Book says; ENJOYED HIS FIGHT WITH POVERTY. about mankind. Dear brothers we | taught that no man liveth unto him- | self and further, Luke 1‘) fore then gavest not thou my money | into the bank, that at my coming | | might have required my own with usury. brethern that there were banks in the time of Christ and r does not act it’s part. | you know this? | | a The Thing in a Nutshell. I am surprised that anyone should think fora moment that happiness depends upon wealih. I was very happy during my early struggles with poverty. I enjoyed the toil, privation and hardship I endured to win wealth When a laborer in a New York ship yard, when swinging the use of them /a pick and shovel as a miner, I was I think it is necessary to have|as happy as I can ever be. I must lawyers, so as to make deeds and ex- | therefore answer your question by plain contracts, and to see that none saying that I do not think wealth are wronged; everbody use doctors; | brings happiness. | and how would we have anything to Jousx W. Mackay. reud, if had no printers, they should have their rights as well as other folks; and there is the preacher, it is said how shall we hear the Gospel without a preacher; mechanic, how would we get along without work men to build our houses; school teachers have there work to perform 3, where. | You see was recommended. | WHAT GOVERNOR MORTON THINKS. — | When I was a poor young wan of 20 years, clerking in a country store, Tused to think that if by any wild) freak of fortune I could ever accum ulate $100,000 I should be the hap-| piest man alive. Now that I possess | in teaching the children; how could that amount, and possibly a little) we get along without railroads, it O™ I do not think I am really any happier than in my poorer early days. Happiness is in no sense, dependent upon wealth, for the fact! is that when any of us snatch an hour from life’s cares to enjoy any of it’s pleasures we enjoy them just! as much whether we are millionaires | or paupers, and for the time being | | we forget that we are either. Levi P. Morrox HAPPIER WHEN HE WAS POOK For my part, I can only say that I am not one iota happier now than I was in the days when I had not a | dollar that I could call my own, save, that for which I worked from sunny Now that my circumstances have improved I can only wear one suit of clothes ata time, and that suit is no better than | the one I wore then. I ate three! square meals daily at that time, and now. Then I! had no responsibility and no cares. I only had to be at my post and do! |my duty, and when my hours of! work were over my mind and body | were free as those of a bird. TI} costs lots ofgmoney to build roads and cars and they cannot haul peo- ple for nothing. If we hai to hauleverything from New York and Philadelphia in wag- | ons like our forefathers it would be a long time between beer drinks,and we must have them; then there is the merchants, they are of use to farmer to handle the eggs, butter and chickens and furnish coffee, tea and sugar in exchange for the same, we cannot get along without the merchant, he is a part of the farmer. Brethern no man liveth to himself, we must have wheat, cattle and hog | buyers, they are all a part of the | morn to dewy eve. farmer and the farmer is a part of the above named profession, one | part cannot exist without the other, brethern it is our duty to remember all mankind. Bill Funy movedjthat all cle be admitted, Bill Honey objected to bankers and any person that charges usury, Bill Funy’s motion carried. | Moved that at the next meeting we discuss free coinage of silyer. The | president appointed Bill Funy and Bill Honey to open the discussion. | A Memper. sss | cannot eat any more touched the pillow and sleep sound. | ly till morning. Now that I have the Are you Billious, conszipated or trou- | Weight of vast interests and b ed with Jaundice, k Headache, bad | taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated | tongue, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry skin, pain in the back and between the shoulders, chills and tever, &c. If you ness cares constantly resting upon me, both in and out of working hours, I | do not sleep so well as then. All) have any of these symptoms, your liver | j things considered, I believed I was, is out of order and your blood “is slowly } | quite as happy, if not much happier, | being poisoned because your liver does | when I was poor. not act properly. Herbine will cure ali he t advan ry : disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels ! be ees tages and privi Ith: ies alivecwedictne. 2 >: leges which wealth confers, I do not 75 cents, eres tcial battion ar JH. 7 believe that it brings happiness. ‘Tuckers drugst re. 4817 | Gro. M. Pruimas. jing at Catoosa, I. T, | grove of Claremore was fatally shot | j hung by his captors, | ment is very strong against him. i man, if i | Dicksons. Mr. M. G. Mulhall a distinguish- | estimates | ed English statesman, that an ordinary farm hand in the United States raises as much grain! jas “three in England, four in France, | | five in Germany, or six in Austria.” | He might have conti par bh the com- on into all fields of end sult. Yet there are people who in- sist on shackling the powers of American progress by curtailing the markets and opportunities through a of tariff legistation. Mr. that with un- ties this coun- try would command the rkets of s of prod- ed opportun ‘the new world in all kind lucts. —k. C. Times. F atal Use ot penta Neosho, Mo., June 3.—This morn- Sheriff Mus- | by Frog Davis, notorious tough and | desperado, who had only last week | jreturned from a two years sentence | jin the penitentiary at Detroit. To | day Sheriff Musgrove anda deputy | attempted to arrest him, seized a gun and shot Musgrove and | fled. At last account he was still at | | Little Bay Lumber com; lupe but as an army of men are after | day near what is known as | him he will no doubt be captured to day. If so he will undoubtedly be! as the senti-| £100 Reward $100. The re ed to lea dreaded di tional disease treatment. Hail’s Catarrh C internally, acting directly blood and mucous surfaces of tem, thereby destroying the four ot the disease, and giying the patient strength building up the constitution nd assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so. much faith in its curative powers, that they otter One Hundred Dollars tor any case that tails to cure. Send tor list of testimonials. Address J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo O B68,.Sold by druggists, 75c. An exchange says an editor was writing up a local theatrical enter- tainment and he wanted to be par-| ticularly nice in it, so he mentioned| the names of several young ladies! and wrote “they filled their parts to | He then went home to dream that all delinquent subserib | | perfection.” ers had paid up all arrearages and a year in ady out with the to drive all e The printers went | diabolical conspire 1 the editors when the paper | delivered to its patrons it was found they had put an “n” in the} that | pl nce of an “r” “parte. | The ladies all have big brothers and | |the editor is now bic ding ina swamp | in the word | full of rayenous animals and poison- | ous serpents. Texans Fight in € court, Houston, Texas, June 2—At Sny- der, 16 miles northeast of this place, Justice Eubank’s court yesterday developed into a pistol war in wl aman named Dic is four s & man named Chapman, and De ants. Dean were the par land against Dickson, which caused the trouble. one of his Dickson was killed and badly nan and Dean 1, was shot by He is a father-in law of one of the Chap A. Good Liver. Keep your liver active and you'll not suffer with biliousness—there’s the secret. When bilious try a | cent package of Simmons Liver ' Reg- | ulator, powder. Take it on th tongue, or make a tea. You'll |/no more pills Norf Va, Thomas saw George Nash, with) whom she was in love, standing on | a street corner in conversation with janother woman. Stepping up to Nash she suddenly pulled a revolver from the folds of her dress and fired three bullets into his body. Nash June could go to sleep as soon as my head fel] and while the woman stood over | of. him he drew a revolver and shot her twice in the bead. She fell beside | her victim in the gutter Both died immediately. Removal. We take pieasure in announcing that} troubles and liver complaint from the user. It is the only medicino that is guaranteed to cure these diseases or no pay. Parkssure cure is sold by H. L- Tncker, when he| insane, and | | appeared and was wounded, as ident. It is thought that Chap- 'man and Dean will both die. 6.—Sabina | Drowned by a Big Fish. Jefferson City, Mo., May 21.— 1n Harnett, who was fishing in the Osage river, 25 miles from here, caught a cat fish weighing 105 pounds on a trout line, and was try- ing to land it when he lost 1 was drawn into fish. He had wr. ance an by end of the line around his hand and in the struggle the succeeded in drowning him. The body was feued with ¢ pling hooks and the fish captured Washington, D. C., June ¢ Worthington C. Ford Bureau of Statistics, imports of sugar for May, 1895; the total ported at the five York, Boston, Baltimore, phia and San Francisco wa 599 pounds, valued at $10,289,434 The returns of May, 1895, are heav ves out the! the month of quantity im- ports of New Philadel- 30,697, | ier in quantity than the imports in May of any previous ye should therefore be ace aS | breaking the record. Camden, Ark., Jur wreck oceurred on the Mi of tke ny yester- | “Happy Hollow,” in Calhoun county. The | engine jump ed the track and caused | the wreck. Those k outright were: Melvin Routhkerford, Frank Sloan, Joe Airson. > wounded jare: Jobn Colhey, 'Ed Hopkins and Ji tranger whose name was | De alton was also inj ure d “Saver al | others received s ght injuries. | een June 6.—A} North | inse, number of farmers in this vicinity | are reporting that portions of their} eorn fields are being ravaged by cut | worms, in some cases almost the| | entire crop being taken over limited | areas. It is thought. that this has been lar, gely owing to the prevalence of the past dry weather, | and that since the rainy season has set in the difficulty terminate. however, MOTHERS. INSURES Safety FRIEND” Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk. | PERS? FRIEND | BRADFIE! L Dp REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. REAL Tan a Want to will speedily] DEACON BROS & CO., Butler, Missouri. @ Highest Quality of All. :« Bicycles x The Standard for All. ed your eves upon the beauty 1895 Columbias ? of the s? Have you ed them with all other makes? ing can you know how fully ibia justifies its proud title of the for the World.” 5100 > ycles, next-best in quality, for 80 and $60; *50 for boys’ tandard Hartford Bic General Offices and Factories, HARTFORD, Conn. BRANCH STORES: Boston, San Francisco, New York, Providence, Chicago, Buffalo. AN ART CATALOGUE ot these tamous wheels tree at any or will be mailed for two 2-cent stamps, Col 99999050690 09000600000000000000000000000000000 Agency, 0990S OO96006004400F6599F6050O0F0F90099O7 9409005 OOO SOO SHOOT OOOH OTS FHVOO TF IOFOS IOI O OE OGTIIIT INT 4 WARARARRRAARRAARARD. agent for Columbia and Hartford Bicycles “A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR- GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLIO peLY’ S CREAM BALM Cleanses the Nasal pas ges, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals res, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures ATARRH W; L. sDOUSLAS | 1S THE BEST. FIT FOR AKING. SHO CORDOVAN, FRENCH & ENAMELLEO CALF. ¢ 453.50 Fine CALF &KANGARCO. PSorvnicits Gay ° 3-29 POLICE,3 sores. D OBTAIN A eee For a js28 $2.W mnt EXTRA FINE: er and an honest opinion, write to nsw oC SLADIES - — $17 BEST BONGO BS ShO FoR caratocur 1 wipe ne oon BROCKTONMASS : i ¥ ilivstrated, has by far the Over One Mittion People wear the |W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes | | All our shoes are equally satisfactory | They give the best value for the mone | | They equal custom shoes in style and fit. | fF wearing qualitics are unsurpassed. | The hese are uniform, rk in the contains beau- photographs of new »uliders to show the tracts, Address , 361 Broauway. and bling parr soa gi on sole, wil sell the ghes | place James L. granted to the 7th day of Apri bate court of Ba 3 d, were undersigned on the 895, by the pr. counts said estate, vit | them for allowance to the adminis- of said letters, or they may be pre-/| | cluded from any benefit of said estate | two years without cost. atter this date Parks Sure cure will re.| and if such claim Therefore, with j move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney | | within two years from the date of | | this publication, they shall be forev-| you see it? be not exhibited | er barred. This 15th’day of May, 1 L. Administrator. ' SPECIAL OF two dollars and get *, : fe r trator within one year after the date | ‘OUr | sufficient.” diameter, at 2%c. per Seon They do not rust, shrink, lea! taste to water, nor tin. They can be put N and thus are protected; of all sizes Send for price | | Gesigne for substructure and % nie | water supply. IARTER AK, | 3lst. 1895. Send two new Send four new subscrivers with dollars and receive the paper | “Do you know a good thing am - A word to the wise is Addresss Tue Rervezic, St.fLouis, Mo.

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