The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 3, 1899, Page 7

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oe es ee S Uncle Sam’s new colonies will prove a The Kansas City Times. EVER Age does not nece feebleness and ill hea nearly all of the sickness am older people can be avoided. Most elde eS, S. is a Great Blessing to 7 it Gives Them ponte ate ry” susccpuble tp ; their blood pure they can so gene ig. by puri umulatio: and impart- ole body. It increases and sends new life- e blood, hew stre ppetite, blood throt entire Broadway 8 and had nc I was sick in di ma terribly on cne on account of my I took a dozen bottles of S 1d Tam happy to say that as well as I ever did in my life Mr. J. W. Loving, of Colquitt, 2 eight ep years I suffered vortures from < ption on South Boston, writes: enjoyed g. 477 of my , T would never be . S. and it cured me skin. I tri one by or Bix, W inst me jbe well again. I finally toc ay blood thoroughly, and now I am in perfect health s.S.S. FOR THE BLOOD 1 can build up and strengthen one which is guaranteed ithe only remedy whict ple, bec aus e BP irom: potash, met maging minerals It is ma nd hia no ebemice als whatever fait. S.‘ Ss. I ee veumatism, ¢ ft ood. Metter, Open S h Books on these dis ases will be sent free by Swift Atlanta, Ga. ———_— — = 6A HAND SAW Is A GOOD THING, BUT NOT TG SHAVE WITH.” SAPOLIO is ae alee THING FOR noes CLEANING. McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddelrv, South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Stoe We keep everything that horse owners need Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. Single harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand harness from $3 to $15. Saddles of ail styles and prices, from the cheapest to the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankets dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and soaps full line machine oils and axel grease. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade for new ones. We, have the largest retail har ness store in the Southwest ,and our ha ness are all made at home. One hundred and thirty sets on hand. Come, inspect and get our "99 prices. We will surprise you. McFARLAN D BROS. BUTLER, MO: ani Ciy Tims), RAGEDORN WESTERN IN LOATION AND | The,Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. A Daily Paper Devoted Entirely to | Has the best equipped gallery in SENTIMENT. Western Interests.—Read this Southwest Missouri. All Offer to Readers.§ Styles of Photogrphing | executed in the highest style of the ince of great interest to the American peo- | generally, and particularly with the | taldents of the great southwest—the chosen | id of the Kansas City Times. The war has | essed on nearly every reader the nec . get having a live metropolitan daily news- | ne second invasion of the eae: | lo Rico and Cuba by the commercial forces | the United States will be attended by many | Testing events. Yankee enterprise with plement of improved machinery and wide @ business methods, will effect as start- | & revolution as achieved by Yanke ors and soldiers in the recent compen: Progress of this peaceful army 0: men will be chronicied in the columns of | In addition, there be congressional elections in all the | es of the union this fall. | 8n indication of the prevailing sentiment | -— the country, this contest will be fraught | an cunttalintoestandinordertokeep| THES GREAT NEWSPAPER OF- With the movements of the. political chess a swore seat =e pkg ger zinta h events daily transpiring , mall Pee tme ie disibuted over the} THE GREAT WEST : e should send your order without delay for | Kan sas City Kansas City Times. | ly and Sunday 1 year $4.00 j ly only 1 year $3.00 | Star 81.00 | e ter portion of Missouri, Kansas, Ne- | ly and Sunday 6 month $1.00 art, and at reasonable prices, Crayon Work A Specialty. | All work in my line is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. Cc. scsasashaupivcsiinns a, Oklahoma, Arkani and Indian | ry. a want 8 live up-to-date arene printing | news and uncompromisingly dem: mg: | in the broad western sense of the wo! Si Smonths - Week Times 1 year Address KANSAS CITYTIMES. By Mail, Daily atd Sunday, $4.00 a Year The Weekly, One Year - - + 25 Cents Res 08 e——E—Eeeee=e The Mission of a Rose. There it stood in a beautiful vase | /On a small ebony stand in the front window of the drawing room. The Satin draperies swept down on either |side of it and all around glittered jrare and costly br.c a brac, yet that rose was the fairest of them all. | But all the sunlight that streamed | through the window revealed some- |thing fairer than the rose. Reclin- jing on a couch and intently engaged | | with a book lay what seemed indee ed | |to be a living counterpart of the} | rose The fair face so full of though- | fulness and the expression of the} a dream “Helen! Helen!” called a musical} voice in an impatient tone. ‘What are you going to do with Our pet rose whea you go to New York? I’m sure I can’t take care of it for you.” said Helen. “I have found an asy- | lum for my rose.” “Oh, who is to haye it, you have} so fewjintimate friends here?” “Well, Ethel, you remember the little pale- faced girls to whom we} give sewing! “What! Mary Seaverns? idea! stances want of flowers?” “For just the same reason as I do,” said Helen. noticed how wiastfuily looks at the opening buds?” “Yes, but Helep, just think of that rose on a table with ham, cheese and bread, and stifled in the little close room where Mrs. Seavy- erns washes and irons!” ‘Well, Ethel, if I were obliged to live in euch a roem I think a beauti- ful rose would make me happy.” “Oh, Helen, you are to sentimen- tal; poor people have no time for sentiment.” “You will see, Ethel, that my pet rose will be just as happy in Mrs. Seaverns’ kitchen as in our parlor. I do notibelieve roses ever inquire if their owner is rich or poor. I wish you could ;have seen how happy Mary{seemed when I offered her my rose.” “Well, Helen, that may be true, but;I never thought of it before. In fact, I never thought those poor people had any idea of beauty, and I never before thought of giving to the poor anything but what they really needed. * - - * What an In a day or two Helen carried the beautiful rose to its new home. It was placed in a very small room on a stand near the only window. As she came into the room a pale,sickly leoking woman was leaning back in her chair. “See, mother, what Miss Helen has brought us her beautiful rose tree; there’s one rose in full bloom, and two buds.” Her mother’s face brightened as she said: “How kind Miss Helen is!” “Yes, I know you will feel so, mother,” said Mary. “She has given us so many things yet this seems to be the best of all.” But little did Helen realize when she gave the rose to Mary of the in- visible thread which was twined around it. One day in spring a gentleman called at the home of Mrs. Seaverns on an errand, and his eyes rested on the beautiful rose, and he stepped upto it admiringly. “That was given to us,” said Mary, “‘by a young lady as sweet and beautiful as that rose.” yeu” asked the stranger. “Ob, because we are poor,” Mary, “and do not have many pretty things, so Miss Helen gave us that.” “Helen,” said the stranger, “‘may I ask her other name?” “Yes, Helen Pearson.” “Is she here now?” asked the gen- tleman, eagerly. “No, said Mary, “but you can find | out all about ber by inquiring at her} |aunt’s house, Mrs. Montague, 8 street.” | and she had believed her lover dead, | | but this letter told her that he still) lived and loved her dearly, and the) rose had accomplished its mission. —Boston Post. beautiful seemad like the picture in| “Make yourself easy about that,” | What can people in her circum | “Have you never! United States Minister Harris has | Mary always! “And how came she to give it to said | As a result of this Helen soup a letter in a well-known handwriting. | | During a number of years spent)” labroad she had well loarned the) writing, and had loved the writer,| | but there had been a sad separation, | ‘/ No Empire in America. A copyright dispatch by W. R. Hearst, from Trieste, Austria, says: There was a dramatic scene this afternoon at the Mirarmar castle, the former home of Maximillian. Dewey took Minister Harris and the legation staff and Congressman Foss on a Jaunch to the sea wall of Maximillian’s old home. Standing on @ granite flight of steps from which the Archduke embarked to establish his imperial throne in Mexico, Dewey looked at the castle | towering above the lovely gardens | and terraces and said: | “It makes my heart bleed to thiok | jot that brilliant Archduke, after de- | signing and building such a home | jas this, to have left it all fora bloody |death on American soil. When I | |look at this noble place and think on |the rough grave he filled, I can not! |help pitying him, yet, it right} that the ead should have comeas it | | did, for there must be no empires | |founded in America. There can be jno other end for those who aitempt | was |to establish thrones cn our side of| | the ocean.” There were something ironical in| | the sight of the servants of the em-| | | peror of Austria bowing and smiling | | before the man who destroyed the| | fleet of the Emperor's niece in the| ceserted home of the Emperor. |miral declined, saying that he did| }not want to leave his oes He wi | stay here two weeks, | Naples, thence to Gibraltar and then | home. Shake Into Your eBhoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet cures painful, swollen, smarting, nervo feet and instant!y takes the sting out of c |and buhions. It’s the greatest comfort covery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease m tight ornew shoes feel easy. Itis & certain cure for sweating, callous and not, tired feet. Tryitto-day. Sold t drug: and shoe stores By mail 25 cents in stainps. Trial package rree Address stead, LeRoy, New York. Girl’s Remarkable Sleep. Hannibal, Mo., July 25.—-Miss Ida Forbes, of this city, has been asleep since Monday a week ago, with the exception of ten or fifteen minute intervals, amounting in all to about nine hours. At first the physicians thought she had been hypnotized but they now believe that the condi- tion is the result of a nervous dis- order. What did you say the baby’s name is? asked the visitor. “William Hen- ry.” “How oldis he?” “Over a year. He was born in May, 1898” The visitor pressed his forehead and reeled. “What's the matter?” “A boy!” he gasped. ‘Born in May, 1896, and not named Dewey!" —Har- per’s Bazar. Be Careful too careful of No woman can be her condition d fore her little o or improper t something wrong. MOTHER’S | Fi RIEND is the on that is safe to relax a: lieves mo the pai tapid recove From a letter | woman: ‘*I ha | wonderful | for the lz just as rec Drugzists sell it et $1 per be | THE BRADFIEL D | REGULATOR co. } Noties | to Contractors. Pp mac mst 9th, 1599, Wednesday Augu let by public outery to lowest bidder o } for building a wood bridge across on line beteen section five (5) and cig’ ship forty-one (41) range thirty-one 5th principal me: an — and speci Fabre on file in county clerk’s —, ‘a JOHNSON. B-3t County Surveyor. invited Dewey to visit Vienna hefore | returning to New York, but the Ad- | nS. Olm- | then go i STYLISH TURNGUTS. Safe Rigs Furnished on Short Notice for Parties, Weddings, and Calling. Horses and Rigs carefully cared for | Bara near Southwest Corner of the SAFE RIGS for FUNER ALS. | tate, are required to € Ash: butler College. LSO9Y. Articulates in ali Courses With the State Unive DEPAR'TMENTSe Preparatory, Elocution ollege, Shortban a: Vecal Music University, Typewriting, fnet. Music Normal, Telegraphby, Art. A Faculty of Specialists. Four Terms Each Year. Tuition Modorute, Laboratories Equipped for Science. For Information Address or See E. A. LUDWIC, Butler, Missourn TABLER’S BUCK EYE PILE OINTMENT CURES NOTHING BUT PILES. A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for [5 years as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. pared ty RISEARDOGN MED. 00., OT. LOUIE. petesbloteoteald WARD & 66., CHICABO DRIVING SEASON FOR 1598. We are Headquarters for PARKE HAIR BALSAM Hever ‘Fails to este Hair to ite Youthful Morir |Guzes scalp diseases & heir fal Bie, and $1.0) at Druggists Write for the free booklet: Rhymes for Thirsty Times. Hires Rootbeer time by the day week or months The is here trade of the town and coer THE CHARLES E. HIRES CO., Philadelphia, Pa try generally solicited. Makers of Hires Condensed Mille All rates reasonable. E. |. WILLIAMS, Prop. “Merry Cosenester's Engiiaa Diamond Brand PENNYROVAL piiLs Origine} and Only Genuine. Square. _ A Mile of Reading! To Choicest Fiction Lite faturc. nef YORK i ENS anu 10c. ‘ MONTH; $1 A YEAR. MY ‘LADY. GREE \ SLEEVES, THE 1 We <102S PF 1 HE SHIELD ERIC mite. x Es produces the above results in:30 days. It acts eee powerfully and quickly. Cures when ail others fail che an pens Young men will regain their lost manbood. and olf ACAI : men will recover their youthful vigor by using ete REVIVO. It quickly and surely restores Nervous pees, Lost Vitality, Impotency, Nightly Emissions. Lost Power, Failing Memory, Wasting Diseases. and {-abase of excess and indiecretion. ° 7. bosiness or marriage. If any CIO oY OIE eee ee ne back the pink glow to pale cheeks sod re storing the fire of youth. i: wards off Jusanits and Consum pti 3. Insist on baving REVEVO, ne other. It can be carried in vest pocket. By mail 31.00 per pectase, or siz for 65.00, ye mm (tive written to cure oF , Circular iree. money. Adarems ~ Royal Medicine Co., “Gschaornse For Sale in Butler by H. L. Tacker signed on the ropate court of Bates “oo editors ant li persons bs z ota or. a4

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