The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 14, 1899, Page 7

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‘With an unusual interest, and in order to keep fra Te OME CURE FOR BLOODPOISON. gaware of the Doctors’ patchwork; You Gan (ure Yourself at Home. blood poison. The doctors are whe nable to get rid of this vile poison, and only attempt to heal up the outward appearance of the disease—the sores and eruptions. This they do by driving the poison into the m, and endeavor to keep it shut in with their constant doses of potash gd mercury. The mouth and throat and other delicate parts then break out jpto sores, and the fight is continued indefinitely, the drugs doing thesystem gore damage than the disease itself. s ral Mr. H. L. Myers, 100 Mulberry St., Newark, N. gondred dollars with the doctors, when I realized that they could do me no good. I had large spots all over my ,and these soon broke out into running sores, and pi endured ail the suffering which th le disease pro- duces. I decided to try S.S.S. asa last resort, and was greatly improved. I followed closely your ‘Direc- tions for Self-Treatment,’ ond the large splotches on 1 chest began to grow paler and smaller, and before lor disappeared entirely. 1 was soon cured perfectly and my skin has been 1s clear as glass ever since. I cured my glf at home, after the doctors had failed completely It is valuable time thrown away to expect the doctors toeure Contagious Blood Poison, for the disease is be- yond their skill. Swifts Sy Ss. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD -acts in an entirely different way from potash and mercury—it forces the ison out of the system and gets rid of it entirely. Hence it cures the isease, while other remedies only shut the poison in where it lurks forever. constantly undermining the constitution. Our tem of private home tr¢ : ment places a cure within the reach of Ww all necessary medical ad- vice, free of charge, and save the y nt the rrassment of publicity. Write for full information to Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. There is not the slightest doubt that the doctors do more harm than good in treating Contagious Blood Poison; many victims of this loathsome disease would be much better off to-day if they had never allowed them- selves to be dosed on mercury and potash, the only remedies which the doctors ever give for J., says: “T had spent a emt “A HANDFUL CF } T MAY Be A HOUSE- FUL OF SHAME.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLI McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddelr, fink’s Lett BAK 5 3 South Side Square 3 Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Sto: We keep everything that horse owners neec Double wagon harness from $10 to $30 single harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand harness from $3 to $15. Saddles of al) styles and prices, from the cheapest to the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blanket: dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and soapr full line machine oils and axel grease. Trin 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 h: ness are all made at home. One hundred and thirty sets on hand. Come, inspect and get our "99 prices. We will surprise you. McFARLAND BROS. BUTLER, MO- Kansas City Times. (. HAGEDORN } | | gas WESTERN IN LOATION AND The Old Reliable SENTIMENT. /PHOTOGRAPHER | North Side Square. i i | A Daily Paper Devoted Entirely to |Has the best equipped gallery ip t st Miss i, All Western Interests.—Read this coe Offer to Readers. j Styles of Photogrphing executed in the highest style of the pase am ay new culonies will jprave a : e of great interest to the American peo- art. sonable prices. ple generally, and particularly with the , and at rea: 2 Tesidents of the great southwest—the chosen fleld of the Kansas City Times. The war has impressed on nearly every reader the neces- ot having a live metropolitan daily news- he second invasion of the Philippines, Porto Rico and Cuba by the commercial forces of the United States will be attended by many interesting events. Yankee enterprise with | eee rant of SS ee and =e e business methods, will effect as start- K. ling @ revolution as achieved by Yankee samples of work. mere and soldiers in the zeoeat campaizns t rogress of this peacefal army 0 usi- Ress men will be chronicied in the columns of i Kansas City Times. In sddition, there Cc. HACE DOR N will be congressional elections in all the States of the union this fall. “= —_— — As an indication of the prevailing sentiment *fthe country, this contest will be fraught Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Calland see THE GREAT NEWSPAPER oF- THE GREAT WEST? The Kansas City Up with the movements of the poltsey chess d, western readers should keep intouch With events daily transpiring By means of fast mail, The Times is distributed over the ‘ater portion of Missouri, Kansas, Ne- i Oklahoma, Arkans and Indian | 0 ry. | Ifyou want a live up-to-date paper, printing | the news and uncompromisingly deme | fatic in the broad western sense of the wo! fou shculd send your order without delsy for | e Kansas City Times. | uy = ered lyear == ‘y only year 3.0 ly and Sunday 6 month 32.00 H Star. ly and Sunday 3 months 81.00 j ce-a-Week Times 1 year 31.00 i Mail, Daily and Sunday, $4.00 2 Year Address By The Weekly, One Year - - - 25 Cents KANSAS CITYTIMES. Kansas City, Mo. = oe: {newly elected officers Fierce Fire at Centralia Centralia, Mo, Sept. 7.—The largest fire which ever occured in | this city took place this morning at 10:30, and burned for five hours | without cessation. It swept away | sixteen buildings, including the Merchants hotel and A. G. Byram’s livery barn. The fire spread |pidly fortwo and a half bl to| leaving nothing but ashes and ruins rap- Opportunities d times build up a good breeding herd, and {in ite trail. went 1 raising horses regardless of} i i y) 9, os Suan 2 nian I This being Thursday at Centraila’s vest not only in the sale of stock in | fair os livery barn in town was ae peer but in the demand there | filled with farmers’ horses and bug is fo ood mares from other farmers. i y : - 8. During the pas = there hes Been gie In Byram’s barn were about fifty buggies and 100 horses All of the buggies burned and about seventy horses an increased interest on the farm, in horse production, and I predict a great- er demand the present than for many years in the use of valuable sires: The suffered a most late M. W. Dunham said only a few|borrible death. The agonizing weak ago: “I feel that better times|groans and cries of some of them ave come for every man in the horse 2 Sek Sonera gata ao ag en a could be beard for blocks. Three my mind this is the key note,to the|™men are supposed to have perished situation. My neighbor sold three four|in the flames, but the fire is too hot ear old geldings for $100. Anothe i i ‘ r $100. Another ves ; hree for $900. Each received all a eae eee es stock were worth. A part of the} The loses is estimated at $2,500 rence between the two sales repre-|or $3,000. J. Cupp, R M Thomas sents the difference between good 1 > . Pod } and bad judgment in a business See bout five years meyer, were overcome by the heat alas very few and had to be carried from the c scene. In the Merchants’ hotel a woman became frantic, door and refused to be rescued and the door had to be forced be she could be gotten out. locked her Missou to the u om )in township forty colts an fattened y a bunch of st The command pesereae = of th aS ke ae hej such default alwa good eS, and 1@]/due and payabl market has never yet been over-|is now past due and unpaid. PRUE Tees 3 row | fore, at the request of the legal tocked with good ones. hrewd | note’and pursuant to horseman need not to toldjof trust, I will pr that in the revival of the hor ndus- | highest ae oS pene ventas. » is a great field of usefulness | of the court house in the city of it in supplying again these|fBatesand state of Missouri, on with stock. All the breeds Friday September 20th, 1899, ayn between the hours of nin and classes of horses have their friends | noon and five o’clock in th on the farms, hence there is room for} day, for the purpose of sat all to aid in supplying the demand for Se — horses great and small, fast and slow, that are best fitted to serve the va to the ast front door uler, ceunty wants of his master man. Sheriff's Sale aoa authority of a general} Big Goat Ranck. sued from the office of lerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Mo., returnable at the Noy. term, 1599, of said court, to me directed in favor of Anna E Keys and again: A. G What is to be the biggest goat ranch in the world has recently been started Wal have at Lamy Junction, N. M., where the} levied — seized upon all the , in- Santa Fe brane Aes esas terest and claim of said defe x Santa Fe branch leaves the main line,| waney, in and to the followis ee gel by Robert Foerderer, a morocco and|estate situated in Bates county Missouri, to-wit: The northeast quarter ection sixteen (16) and east half of northwest quarter of section sixteen (16) and the northwest quarter of sec- tion fifteen (15) and the norhtwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section fifteen (15) and the east halfof the southeast quarter of section nine (9) and the southwest quarter of th east quarter of section nine (9),southw« ter of southwest quarter of secti south half of the southeast quarter ¢ west quarter of section fifteen (15), € the northeast quarter of the northwe: kid manufacturer of Philadelphia, in connection with Lucius Beebe, a leath- er dealer of Boston, and several other capitalists. They bought what is known as the old Lamy grant from the Manzanares family, at Las Vegas, and have already stocked it with forty- five or fifty thousand goats, which are to be used for breeding. Mr. Foerderer om of th 2 of section fifteen (15) all in West Point township is said to use an average of 40,000| Bates county, Mo., I will on skins a day in his own tannery, which Monday, September 25, 1899, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- he has been getting mostly from Cen- tral and South America, but he thinks| 40" and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, at the east front door of the court hou he can raise them cheaper than it]im the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, ae CESS ‘<ie san _q | Sell the same or so much thereof as may be re- costs to import, and it is contended quired at public vendue t bidder that the skins of d kids bred | for cash, to satisfy said execution and cost . ; Cc. MUDI in that climate ar and tough 40-4¢ Sheriff of Bates County, than those from t d moist cou ns tries. The best skims are said to co from the warm, dry regions of north- Africa. There are many small of goats in New Mexico number- ing two or turee thousand, mostly own- ed by native Mexicans, but this first time, so far a an be that northern people have the business to any exte visrass CATARRH A CLIMATIC AFFECTION pharmaceutical rem- edly ELY’S Bad Result of a Poor Polic two years p at least a ver. iC R E 4 V B ALY number of farmers have felt mo | ae ae: zi : | It is quickly absorbee certain that good co would be | Gives rel Agen COLD iy HEAD Ce astea Me vet their situation|Qpens and cleanses munerative, and yet their situation | th. pascal passages. Allye inflamation. heals was such that they were wholly un-j|and protects the memorsne. stores the prepared to produce them. If dur. | eenses of taste andsmell, Nococe. jeury, no injurious drug | loe at drug; | ELY BROTHERS, the farms of the west had been ct down so that nothing but good br ing stock was retained, the work on the farm would have been just as well = ea _, and, of course, a a ea aes ' | newspaper. THE CHICAGO DIs ing i depr |PATCH is the Great Democratic have felt unwilling to pay | Weekly Newspaper of the Country. still with dawning of better in|{t advocates the readoption of the would have been in 2{ platform apd the renomination of advantage of the pros- | William Jennings Bryan. 6 and begin ecdiag| There has never been a political Instead of t ow- | campaign that will eqaal in import- . it was the best ance that of the one to be fought es a aac iaarins Inext year. The republican party, po oh the fe Se vy | backed by the money power of this cases and the poor stuff was retained, | -ountry and Europe, is alert and ag- with the result that very few farmers } eressive. Flushed with the vi are now in a pos breed for tWO| three years ago it will seck by eve or three good col even | though satisfied that pay to do so.— Ex. YOU ARE A DEMOCRAT want a democratic horses at once. supremacy. : Democrats must be up and doing. iThey must wage an unceasing war | upon their enemies. In no better and more effective way can this be done ation than by the circulation of a good, Tamworth A: Record lmeans in its power to maintain its} = 2 0. |sound democratic newspaper. The) =e | pablisher of THE CHICAGO DIsPATCH Wood, F N. | ill send to every new subscriber for Ball, Hamb bs a copy of THE CHICAGO eee j three mont dition to th r3),|DispatcH for ten ce’ Job? | not already taking thi F. H.! cal weekly, send in ten cents at one o- | You shouid not only do this yours ous | but you should induce all yeur friends to join with you. By a little effort and prospe condition, and the Tamworth is gain-| ing in favor among breeders _ Fal progres d . out the Un twenty 5 ribers N. Ball, sec-! THE CHICAGO DIsP. N. Ball, sec-i by William Jenni other democratic leaders. ss THE CHicaco DISPDTCH, Addre: ath TCH is indorsed States retary. Bacillus (plural, Bacilli) is a or kind, of Bacterium. genus, * 1490 and 122 Fifth Ave., Chicago, If you are} ly raise aclub of tenor)... , i | seaying and reinforei Bryan and! “}} A? -f\—-/)>—<¢ => FIG ELE I 435) * e > ' woh IP A_A_&] ay Yas ey | § eo 4 St mm 4 ‘ write for Fr CO., CHICACO, ILL. and Overcoats at 6 Rook no. BOC. Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & ; (Sears, Roebuck & Co. are thorvaghly reiiable. DRIVING SEASON FOR 1599. We are Headquarters for STYLISH TURNGUTS Safe Rigs Furnished on Short Notice for Parties, Weddings, and Calling. Horses and Rigs carefully cared for by the day week or month. The trade of the town and coun- try generally solicited. All rates reasonable. E. |. WILLIAMS, Prop. Bara near Southwest Corner of the Square. SAFE RIGS for FUNERALS. TABLER’S PILE BUCK EYE OINTMENT CURES NOTHING BUT PILES. A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for [5 years as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. Ts. SOLD BY ALL DRUG FREE FOR ANY T GiVE SATIS tareartout. a salt 65 POR FREE Cle write for Sample Beck 5: F. HIKES CO., Philadetpat THE CHAE “Merry Rhymes for Thirsty Times” ent tree, ° Chichester’s ngs Diamond Eramd Nivaovac Picts Gen I ro} (> THE Lg GREAT | | produces the above results in:30 days. Ttecte powerfully and quickly. Cures when all others fai. Young men will regain their lost manhood, and ol@ men will recover their youthfal vigor by using REVIVO. It quickly and surely restores Nervous- ness, Lost Vitality, Impotency, Nightly Emissions, Lost Power, Failing Memory, Wasting Disesses. an@ ell effects of self-abuse or excess and indiscretion, which unSts one for study, business or marriage. && not only cures by starting at the seat of disease, bu ig agreat nerve tonic and blood builder, bring back the pink glow to pale cheeks sod me storing the fire of youth. It wards off Insanity and Consumpticn. Insist on baving REVIVO, se other. It can be carried in vest pocket. By math, 31.00 per package, or eit for $56.00, with» or refoa@ For Sale in Butler by H. L. Tucker. SEO MONET THIS 4D. OFT amt a EEE 4 +s, 4< a apy, $4.2 os womcrkia valet e This Circular Picsh Cape Sais Seal Pied. Sy tee ¢ Rieck Thivet Fer. & SEARS, ROE EARS. £95 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Manns Desicns CoprricHTs &c. tific American. eereperernnentaie sa

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