The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 10, 1883, Page 6

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t : it i igh | test Freak of the Miliw: A Mf sun ‘e:stauding- | one himself, and it is now well nigh | The Lal anna BUSINESS BOO! THE [ ii completed. A’ handsome building { Texas Store : | it ist. Neat. comtortable, substan- | eee Why it was done, we canes EH! tial. Iris an ornament to the town.) George Peak: “When is your) ADRIAN < ‘-ONTIN t TES = pe gre gees . and .a monumcnt to Bro. Webb! ma coming back ?”” asked the gro- THE“CLD RELIABL EWSPAPER | Nai Austin have been named atter fe- | which will ever keep ois memory ; ceryman of a bad boy, as he found | i ; — ee green in the minds of the people. | him standing on the sidewalk when | A Journal For “a0 South and West. | ; Laura, Isabella, stare at you ase j His example 1s worthy ot tmitation | the grocery was opened in the morn- | ese { : = " : large letters, from almost every by laymen well off in this worlds ing; taking some pieces of brick out | - In issuing ws Prospectus tor 1882 Mie ¥ A RG kL & N Ep BRO a nt Bro. Webb gives most lb- | of his coat tail pockets. ‘Oh, she Bess oent Reece icas points tothe com ‘9 See attack Marts Jone, |actr= e support of the gospel | got home at mdmght last night,’ | During the last year, (with the opening | ARE STILL erably tamiliar with Maria Jane, Susan and the rest, but strangers are liable to become bewildered Fy this singular nomeclature. A gentleman trom Dallas, who had only a few hours to spend in our city, wished to take a look at the new capitol, and not knowing | eyery year, and has helped several said the boy, as he ate a few black- churches in other places. He has/ berries ouc of the case. **That’s nursed our churche here until it is| what makes me, up so early. Pa about able to stand alone, and now | has been kicking at these pieces of he has givenit a hone! He will | brick with his bare feet, and when 1 scon go to ‘tread his title clear,’’ to j came away he had his toes in one ne of Christs promised!Mansions ot } hand and was trying to go up stairs where it was, he made inquiry of Gold, above. A prince in Isereal,;on one foot. Pa hatn’t got no se. he will only ‘‘go up higher.”’ | sense.’” 7 a a | “I am afraid you are a terror,’ A Dismantied State. What 1s to be done with the state **Can you tell me how I can find seat said the groceryman as he looked at the new temporary capitol ?’” g y 1 innocent the boy. 1 the face ot oe at’s PaRY > wh. a : 3 That’s easy enough ‘ You ot Nevada? is becoming a question | yoy are always making your par- know where Emina street 1 : ot some interest to the remnant of | nee eae GCBIE ahd Giga won “Ido not. 1 Lave no acquain- z 2 | s some trouble, «nd itis : ¢ its population. It is admitted that | der to me they don’t send you to the out of the | setorm school. What deviltry was y’ io | “ : . the Com | you up to last night to be kicked this tance with any lady ot that name. There is a family by that name i the bottom has tallen Comstock lode, ana as of new lines ot communieation, spreadi in every direction), it has greatly creased itstelegraphic service; augment ed its corps of editors, reporters and cor- | “ respondents; inaproved its mechanical — features; b ed its system ot conden- | tl Subscribe for Weekly Times Only $1 25 Per Year. sing an ranging the news; an main- j| tained in regard to the character of its contents, the reputation it has long held throughout the whole Southwestern country as the BEST NEWSPAPER VRINTED. The REPusBLican has distanced ‘all at- tempts at rivalry or competition, and is now the only Democratic English news- paper published in St. Louis. Its support ot the principles of the Democratic party is universally recognized as strong in logic whilst moderate and conservative in tone In its exposures of the corruption, profli- gacy and evil tendencies of the Republi- can party,.it is fearless and aggressive. But it isin the material interest of the Southand \ est—agriculture, commerce | , ane: ‘WONDERFULLY CHEAP! | Elegant New Editions of Standard Publica In cleor cleanly printed ivst-class handsome Dosa tes with gold ane ane en tee eee Oe BOOKS OF FICTION. WACAULAY'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Selling Harress at a Fearful Rate’ Dallas, but 1 am with them. Does E nma Street live near the new capitol ?”’ The Austin man stared at the stranger for a and then pomung down Magnolia Avenue, moment, he said: **You see where Maria comes into the Avenue ?’’ The Dallas man looked rection pointed out, perceiving a fat old negro woman with a big basket on her arm, nodded his head in the di- in assent. “Well, you must take Maria until you get to the corner ot Elizabeth, and until Peggy and Sarah come together, and then you will be all right ”” ‘Look here, my friend, if you think 1 am that kind of a man be- cause I come trom Dallas, you are most contoundedly ott. I want. you to understand that Iam a_ gentle- man.”’ “You dod-gasted idiot!’’ retorted the Austin man, “if Iwas as bad off for brains as you are, | would bore a hole in an empty skull and hite anegro to pour in ten cents worth of cheap eleomargarine.’’ The Dallas man shook his fist at the native, and said: “I’ve always heard that the State Lunatic Assylum was too smail to accomodate all -the lunatics, but now I know it,’”? and he moved off towards Esmeralda, while the other party leaned up against the corner ot Ann and Matilda, and glared af- ter him as he disappeared in the di- rection of Martha. Webb City Time-.° The new brick church at this place 1s about completed Owing to the absence of Hon. |. C. Webb, the doner, who is spending the win- ter south, it will probably not .be dedicated before spring. Tne fol lowing extract is from the Metho- dist Chronicle : The new church at Webb City, when completed, will cost $4,000, unfurnished. Already we have the deed trom Bro. J. C. Webb. The clause as to the consideration reads: “For and in consideration ot the love I bear for the caus: of Christ, and from an earnest desire to pro- mote his heritage on earth, 1 do grant, by these presents, convey, unto J. C. Webb, E. T. Webb, W. Hall, W. A. Daugherty and James Cook, trustees for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and their successors in office;’? &c. It is a gift prompted bv a sincere love for Christ and influenced by the purest religious conscience. Bro. Webb ‘is a devout man, and firm in his confidence in the religion of tis life. He loves the Southern Methodist Church. - A few years ago he was a toiling and poor far- mer on a little farm which is now in the corporate limits of Webb City. He found mineral on it, and has be- come possessed of a fertune from the discovery. The town was laid out by him and he has derived much of his fortune from it. But he has been its firm fmend and has sacri- ficed for its prosperity. He has Jong desired to see a good church building here, but the people have never felt able or ready to binld. So he just made up his not acquainted stock lode was, tu all practical in tents and -purposes. Nevada, there is not much left of the latter but the e npty shell, from which the kernel has been taken. Nevada was the golden youth of the Union when it was ad- | morning ?’’ “No deviltry, just a little to Chicago to | Stay A month, and she vot tired and | telegraphed she would be at home 3 : x : last night, and pa was down town mitted; the mines, which constitu- ‘and I forgot to give him the dispatch Cre | After he went to bed me and achum ted almost its only wealth, supposed to be inexhaustible, and | thought we would have a Fourth of You see my chum has got a the white and yellow bricks they yreld- | y,),, ed had an effect on the money gre i Hse Gos Gee of kets that was felt throughout the ; her clothes, and after pa got a snor- ing We put some oft them in his room. world. The state was organized on a maguificeat basis. The gover-- Oh, you'd a laughed. We put a nor’s salary $6,000 ; the lieutenant- pair of No, ‘1. slippers with blue governor’s, $3,600, with $1,500 ad- stockings down in front of the rock- ditional as state librarian; the three japiciaie becidemmes boom andi red corset on the chair, and a hat judges ot the sepreme court received | with a white featheron the bureau, $7,000 each, and the other state ot- | ficers and the ; e legis-| é cers and the members of the legis and some frizzles on the gas bracket lature were provided for with simi- | and Seeic ker gain diel Gen lar munificence. These salaries | belonged to girls in my chum’s sis- were thought proper enough in the 5 : : ter’s room. Oh, we got a red para- State’s golden age, but the Ssensopolend ulecneeamithe: Com sol, too, and left it right in the mid- — a dle of the floor. stock lode has exhausted that won- ‘<Well, when I looked at the 1 derful deposit ot treasure and left ee ite de gmeaerg A Nevada attevetinteere) ie atl: out and heard pa snoring I thought 1 zs z c should die. You see, ma is easil lionaires have fled to San Francisco | ‘ y : a excited. My ch sl i and New York tospend their wealth ; ee yc um eb ta wy ne : » that night, and when we heard the the wives of some of them have ‘ door bell ring I stuffed a pillow i taken their share of itand gone to s E P = . = 3 mv mouth. There was no one to Paris, where they are living in an Z é ;,., | Meet ma at the depot, and she hired opulence peculiany their own; the ~ : ee ahack and came nght up. Nebody enterprising mining classes have RS gee ee Be ee eee heard the bell but me and I had to hats Pane 4 go down and let ma in. She was ‘ot gold in that new and more prom- i 3 : ee a pretty angry, you bet, at not being ising territory; Virginia City, the ret ge E = met at the deput.”’ capital, has lust its splendor and " A 2 = x : ‘*Where’s your tather?’’ said she, glory like Tyre and Sidon; and the t alatie ean eter kiaG “] . : s airs, inhavitants of the state who are left | 5 gee es sae }told her I guessed pa had gone to ee Se i sleep by this time, and that he’ gone ar:to maintam a government wiih i sc ._ to bed an hour ago. such a brilliant outfit out of their é fe Wee ry 3 up stairs and looked over the ban- scanty gulch scratchings and little | * 2 i aes = nisters. Ma said something about crops they raise in the vallevs. | 5 Baad ees g There is talk of calling a constitu- | “©2¥™ 400 Cart, and where ts the i huzzy, and a lot of things I could | tional convention to reduce official se ie 2 not hear, and pa swore and said it’s salaries to a more modest level, and : no such a thing, and the deor slam- itis even suggested that it may be eas necessary to allow the state govern- med, and they talked for twe hours.’? I s‘pose they finaily laid it to mu ment to lapse and let Nevada be-| come a territory, or clse divide it | as they always do. cause pa called up among Calitornia, Utah and! me very early this morning, and Arizona. | when I came down stairs he hurt my | feelings. 1 see they had my chum’s The Washington Post says. *- Gov- | sisters clothes pinned up in a news ernor-elected Butler, of Massachu-| paper, and I s’pose when [ go back setts, is al ready accused of Startling | I'll have to carry them home, and nnovation. He is actually writing | then she’ll be down on me too. [ll his own message! A reliable Bay | tell you what, I’ve a good notion to State newspaper asserts that ‘the |take some shoemaker’s wax and g nilemen connected with the vari-|stick my chum on my back and ous departmentshave moved on in| travel with the circus as the double- their serene way, prepared their tra | headed boy from Borneo. A fellow ditional parts of tie message, and | could have more fun and not get have been patiently waiting to be | kicked all the time.’ And the boy called on for copy. No one comes | sampled some strawberries ma case for the manuscript. Doubt and a/ in front of the store and went down vague unrest have seized upon these the street whisthng for his chum, servants of the people as they dis-! who was looking out of an alley to cover that Benjamin Franklin Butler ; Proposes to write his own message.”* This is a trying ordeal for the good old commonwealth. It will shake the pillars of State and the founda- tions ot Bunker Hill monument as fun. You see, ma went some see if the coast was clear. Athens, Ga.,is a city of modern Sampsons. One man named Jacks carries six full bags of shet in each hand with case, and can hold out head with one hand without the same , ‘touching his head in beiag raised; Judge Nicholson has tuken a large nvi! in each hand and carried them } across a room; Wyatt Uphaw, color- ed. has been seen to carry a bale of | dwards’ ‘ cotion on his shoulders, and a man/ the ground, named Harrison carricd three sacks beel Sticks of salt ning 200 pounds each, | is shoulders at one time. alarmingly 2s they were shaker | eo Receet ae kan leneth: W, when the Know-Nothings overturn- B ie ca . k pee "ties = 2 ed Beacon-Hil and buried the Wing Oe eee © cere eet Bas | regency im the ruins of its own re- pectability. In these perileus times the charatable wili indulge Mr. | Hoar in his occasional exhibition of unseemly passion.—-Sedaha Dem. The hollow of Minter E foot makes a ‘hole wn while Clarence Harot’s > Weigl and the mechan —that this paper finds its widest and most productive field Next to col nd commenting upc the most intere ws ot the d i gies are devoted to the prosperity of. THE GREAT MISSI<SIPPI VALI EY And the tributary regions. From it- columns mee senSationalism is carefully excluded, wth the View of making it a welcome visitor to the purest home cir cles. To the farmer, merchant, trader, manufacturer, banker, or business man ot any class, itis indispensable Its_finan- cial and commercial reports are tull and reliable. Every movement ot trade,com- merce, transportation, &c., is faithfully recorded. With all this, it finds room tor a large quantity of miscellaneous reading matter to give variety and entertainment. GET YOUR NEIGHBORS TO SUBSCRIBE. The support and pride otf a first-class newspaper is a large subscription list. The cost, of course, is immense to the con- ductors, but trifling to the reader. May we not ask our friends, who have been with us so long, to aid in extending our circu- iation still further? If your neighbor is not asubscribe , show him the Rrrvsii- canand have himsend in his name. alk it up. Increase the clubs. TERMS IN ADVANCE. TERMS OF SUBSCKIPTION. By Mail—Pastage Free. Daily,i cluding sunday,per vear..- Daily,without Sunday, per year Sunday paper, per year’-+-.. -Weekly, (Monday, We and Friday) per vear...... Weekly, 52 numbers, per year Daily, delivered in the cit) week TT NEWS DEALERS Regularly supplied by us or by the St Louis News Co. at 3 cents a copy. All subscriptions are pavable in advance and d scontinued at the end of time paic for. 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By Wasarvoros Iavize, ene volume, Price in 0.75. = re ‘Ta880°S JERUSALER 1émo, Cloth, 90.75 ; Half Leather, $1.25. —~ “ Cc URES DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, HEADACHE Porrcecosuty ty BROWM MEDICINE & MFC O94, Lewsnwentn, Kas. =a “ome nee AEMAGINTS tre Never Falis!¥ 10HOURS > STOUSHTENBURGH & CB. Fccai» Stray Notice. ‘Taken up as a Stray by James C.Har- rison, living in Grand River township, Rates county isso iri, and posted be- fore the undersi, ned Justice of the Peace on the 17th day oi «ovember, 1882. One small black fille, two years old, large white spot in foréhead, appraised at twen- ty twoand ', dollars, by Thomas Pierce Caleb Ritchardson and F.M. \\ cods. Ap- praisers duly sworn. F.M.Taylor.].P. *2-2t vue nonpareiL |@. & MH. R’y. a Tu. re) Oo N. bay No Change ot Cars.“ 2 | 4 HOURS the Quickest ROUTE J. 0. PLOUGH, Prop. | | —TO same time to LOUISVILLE, From St. Louis via the A. A. BALTIMORE OPPOISTE OPERA HOOSE. HOURS the Quickest ‘ROUTE to WASHINGTON The somest room and furniture | in the and the finest liquors and | market. Palace Sle oaches from St. Low Bree faucn Every Night | isto Louisy Kaltimare and Washington, without change. i | BUT ONE CHANGE TO NEW YORK. Desiring First-class Dividend paying} 4.) 4 ¢ w su opte tin. Stocks or bonds yielding ten per cent. | _ Jhe O- & M. is the Only Line running per naeuines mabe 13Da Trains to Louisville arid Cincin a um, and cver oe Py * A nati in direct connection with all trains Well Secured, | trom the Vest Southwest and North may obtain ful’ particulars, with satistac- | west- tory reterences and testimonials, by ad- | - dressing H. Braispecr, Fin’! Ag’t., 48 / Congress St. Boston, Mass. Mention | a > thieqiepet: 34 (Ono & MIssissiprl e = : 'Iethe only ine By which you can se LKLUGEFORD & HUPP, cure tickets to Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, by way of Washington. the Capital of our « ountry. Ornamental ‘House --AND— all classes of passengers threugh ange of czrs to Louisville and . Painters ice -ye-Hane » : can avoid a Midnight B | Civcinnati, if vou leave St. Louis on trains unless you pay extra fare in on to money paid for ticket. nigh additi IALTY | = Via Cincinnati, making dirrect connec | 2 tion with all roads. gpa@gttz Hours lay S5 to per day at bome. Samples | over by other routes. l worth $5 fr Address Stinson & Co., Portland, Maine. 16-t¥ ~~~ ~~ | S66 aweekin yourowntown. Terms _-PLEASE and &< outfit tree. Address H Hallett & gos tenia Co., Portland, Maine. tity | ASK ANY TICKET AGENT those working for competing is the Quickest and Best Route . Lowis, to Cincinnati, Louis aitimore, Wasnington, and you old the Ohio & Mississippi R'y- ! Whea purchasi:.g, please ask tor Ticket. by this road, for «ale at all offices of coms necting lines. In St. Louis, at 101 103 N- Fourth St. j VW. W. PEABODY, Gen’! Superinter de DELIVERED. 495 pages in cue Vag, om voleane Mi Rm CINCINNATI, | ashi

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