The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 9, 1883, Page 3

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Time Table Mo. Pacific BR. R. Lexincton & Sournzrn Branci. Trains leave Butler daily as follows: GOING NORTH. Texas Expres> (dai opin & kh. C. Express Local Freight GOR fexas Express (daily)-- 9:10 PM Joplia & K. C $5 Cae: Local Freight - Byes Nae FE. «. CakNnus, Agent. Secret Socteties. MASONIC. Butler Lodge, No. 254, meets the first | Saturday in h month. Miami Chapter Royal Arch Masons, No. 76, meets second Thursday in each month. a#he Ee Gouley ‘ ommandery Knights Templar | meets the first Tuesday in each month. 1.0, 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- jay night. Butler Encampment No. 76 meets the ind and ath Wednesdays in each month Lawyers. V. BROWN, Notary Public But- ler Mo. Will draw and acknowledge deeds, contracts, leases and all papers re- quiring the acknowledgment or jurat of an officer- Pp. H. Hotcoms. T. W. SIcvers. Notary Public. OLCOMB & SILVERS :—Attorneys Hs Law, Butler, Mo. Office over Bates County Natior Bank. 5 ae THOS. 1. SMITH. 5. B. LASHBROOK. ASHROOK & SMITH, Attorneys at taw utler, Mo. Wil practice in the courts of Bates and adjvining coun- ties, Collections promptly attended to and Taxes Paid tor Non-residents. Office, front room over Bates county Na- tional Bank. n2 tf. J. S. Francisco. S. P. Fraycisco. RANCISCO BROS. Attorneys at Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in the courts of Bates and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to col- lections. Office over Hahn & Co.’s hard- ware store. 79 ARKINSON & AERNATHY, Attor- neys at Law, Butler, Mo. Office west side of the souare® § a2 HENRY, Atterney at Law, Butler, .e Mo. Will attend to cases in any eourt of record in Missouri, and do gener- al collecting business. W O. JACKSON, attorney at law, «Butler, Mo., office over F, M. Crumly’s, Drug house on West side 261-17-t£ Physicians. J M. CHRISTY, M. D., Homoepathia @ »Physician and surgeon, Special at- tention given to female diseases, Butler Mo. Office, North side square front room overBernhardt’s Jewelry store a5-t T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Wiseases of women and chil- ren a specialty. te gp neeeeneenvnstsnenennineens ne E, L, Rice M. D, J, Everingham, M. D Residence west side Residence east of North Main street sqr, with J, C, | Clark, EVERINGHAM & RICE. PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS, Having formed a copartnership tor the practice of medicine and surgery, tender | their services tothe citizens of Butler and surrounding country, OFFICE in Everingham’s new brick «west Side square. Calls attended to at allhours, day or night, both in the city and country- 241 14 | ‘ | $3. GRAND COMBINATION °S —-THE—— BUTLER W.JEKLY TIMES, ot- { The leading Democratic and ficial newspaper of Bates coun- ! ty and the LOUISVILLE WREALY COURIER - JOURNAL. wne year tor only $2 25, two papers tor little more than the price of one. By paying us $2 25 you will receive tor one year your home paper with the Courier-Journal, the repsesentative news sample copy of the Courier ndo sob, cal examjne a Journal c: Final Settlement Notice. is hereby given that the i nder- Potts, 1 curator of the estate of ©, nor, will make na tlement ot his accounts with sai as such curator at the nextt bat rt of Bates county, Missour be holden az the court house i Ma t thi xt D, 1883, nardian 2: in said county, senyg Pay EOE J? RRM Sep Se & “Enooqvave. meqy seuppe Cuw oy ppoiaad PASS 9. *oGraryg *-syg S0UUOW BOIS | proach to him inelegant and j found ng at this office, | The White House. Gastronomer. “1 have been a visitor a the execu- j tive mansion under every regime | since Pierce went ont in 1857,’’ said my Washington acquaintance, **and se I can speak with some knowledge of the subject. t is just a quarter ot since I put into the White House. of is Buchanan’s President Arthur is the a century first toot all sident successors, ap- deco- When President to nearest rous hospitality. Grant came in the house ceased or a while, at least, General be a hoine, and { a headqus rters. | Babcock was the military secretary and General Dent the major-dome. Even General Horace Porter had not yet developed his gift for after- dinner oratory. With Hayes came a crowd of Ohio village folk, whose ideas of feasting never vent beyond IRISH INVECTIVE. Some Instances of the Richness and Eloquence of the Impulsive People, Catholic World. If the natiye Irish speech is difi- cient in English, of proverbial sen- tentiousness. more than makes amends in the richness and elo- quence of its bitternes and kindness in banning and blessir : ge. “he clo quence of the beggar woman im re- warding charity with blessmg and niggardliness with cursing is widely renowed, and the impulsive speech of the people ine or essing good Hf willis without a r Lin its imagina- tiveforce. There 1sa flavor nd terce in epithet and expression strikes by | oriental in its character in Irish vetu- | peration, and some ot its phrases | more than rivals the Arabic figura- tiveness The tollowing selections | Carleten,are 1s characteristic as any, apples and cider, pie and doughnuts. | although the language 1s full of oth- President Gartield did not live leng enough to give, or fail to give, a so- cial character to White house life under his 2dminis dent Arthur, in spite of tre mest humdrm cabinet that a president ever made the tied about his neck, has executive mansien the most pleasant} pression tamilar and traditonary use, and attractive house in Washington. He has had no help either. widower, as you know. too Stately, neither the cabinet nor the cabinet ladies have been of use to him. weighted by the lace rufiles and white hat of the attorney general. Mrs. Folher is an invalid, and Mrs. Lin- coln is in mourmng. Mrs. Teller lives in Celorado, and when she is in Washington, accoraing te Mrs. Grundy, she teinks that secial cul-/ ture consists in holding up delicately- painted china plates at dinners and exclaiming, with an assumption ef artistic ecstacy, **Well, that’s neat; | it must have cest a heap; duty’s 60 per cent.’”’ any “It has been charged and general- ly believed,’’ I said, ‘‘that General Arthur likes to surreund himself with the politicians with whom he was in- timate in the old quarters the northwest corner et the Fitth avenue hotel.’” in *‘Net at al’ my Washington triend rephed. ‘‘Allthe talk about ‘the boys’ was newspaper talk, based on nothing. If President Arthur has | not turned his back entirely upon | Tom Murpky, Clint Wheeler and Barney Biglin, he has never allowed them te become White house dece- rations, and thev have found better cheer at Willard’s with Tom Ochil- tree than at the White house with Chet. It was expected when Arthur began that if he did not discard ‘the beys,’ he would have a | er equal remark | Cromwell is upon ration; but Presi- | ‘The Brewsters are over- / ‘low-toned | at « **Phe corse **May | vou die with a caper in your hee significant of hanging: ‘*‘May youls”” the | STass grow at vour door and the fox build his nest on your hearth-stone, | and others of even worse import- > and full of the highest degree of im- He is a| aginative bitterness. Aparttrom | not misbecome the meuth of an eas- the Frelinghuysens, who are a hittle | They would tern prophet ina tury ot inspired Those which Sumerous turn to the ill will, matle-diction. give or merely hadinage of satiric affection, or are hardly less graphic, such as are | he Missouri Politics. n and reform nei 1 pt in 18576; the same candidate and the same platform in 1854 would settle the Presidential vance. campaign in ad- Jefferson City Tribune: We hear that ex-s enator Phean, ot St. Louis has the Lieutenant-Governor bee in his bonnet. He may as well irout. He wil Liecuten- ant-Governor ot this State. We will brush be never attend tohim when ever he | his head tor a State office and we will sot forget ir. i Lexington Intelligence: If the Democrat porty should be se coward- | ly as to take the advice of Messrs. Carter Harrison and John O. Priest in regard to the ‘tariff forrevenue’ plank in its plattorm it would serve to die and be de- eternal damned by all honest straight torward men. Moberly Monitorg Charley Johnson is posing as the humanitarian and prohibition candidate tor Missouri. We admire Mr. Johnson tor many ot his good qualities, but he is entirely 0 good to be Governor of this wick- et commn wealth. Somehow he his atid torward men. Marble Hili Harald; We can aothing against General Marmakuke, mly that we consider Judge Carter nus superior for the position aad that would reflect more Jhonor up- mathe State. We stand first, firmly Judge ind uncompromisingly — for “The devil go with you and_ six-{ Carter tor the next governer of the will want for ard pence. and then you neither money nor company,”” State ot Missourt. Sedalia Democrat: Our position ‘Six eggs to you, and half a dozen | has always been a political orginiza- of them rotten,’’ and many other: that require but a moment’s reco! lection ef the familar lrish-English dialect to bring up. There are sev- eral specimens of sustainea ele- quence andffecundity in these sort of backward blessings which have been put inte the ferm of verse, such as the celebrated ‘*Litany of Doner- aile,’’ by Patric O’Kelly,the **broth er bard’? who afforded so much amusement to Scott and his party on their visit to lveland, and whose modesty was signified in the fellow- ing tribune to his own greatness. ‘Three poets, of three §different nation: born, The united kingdom in this age adern: Byron, of England: Scett, of Sootéa’- bleod; And Erin's pride, O'Kelly, great and | Conlederates good. The bard, having lost his watch and chain ot Dubhn manufacture while on a visit to Doneraile and as a conseqnence of being ‘‘overtaken’” with drink, pours furth his maledic- tion on a devoted inhabitantsin some twenty yerses and, until the rhyme onits concluding syllables are exhaust admunistration,’ and if he did there | ¢d with a very graphic tecundity e would be tieuble. We have all | expression. A still more famou- example is the lament et Nell Fla- tound we were mistaken. The pres- ident talks politics te ‘the boys’ when they call on him just as he did, but somchow the White uncomfortable. house dinners made them Early in his administration they were determined upen being received at | the White house table, but one din- | track ner settled them: they found them- selves unaccountably nervous in the presence of the man who had become ! president of the United States; their appetites failed them: the oysters i were chilly andthe soup was cold: | got | has more force and eloquence than | sisted the pressman 3 the cenversation flagged; they knives into e wrong hand, and it dreadfully uncomftortable trying to eat with their terk them spilled their soup and their wine in trying to sep it up with some of overset paper ot the Revenue only, and the best, their napkins. The White house brightest and ablest family Wee it | board was no piace ter them, and the United States. Those who desire to} | they had the good sense to see and acknowledge it. *The keep L away trom the White house dinners j and recept they | n that } crowd would heys’ and net are arly so. @ffensive as iterary d have been if President \ Garfield had lived. ty Jove. i president gees o have earned th always ; | herty fer her drake, and her invoca- tion cf a catalogue of woes upon the **The villanthat ke’’ aitnough man tha‘ | villan that stole it. | stole Nell Flatherty’s dra | gact, almost as celebrated, ‘equally unknown as ‘the Billy Patterson,’* | there must bea belief that he perish- is i althoug!t , ed soon after his toul deed if he was | visited by buta tithe of the misfortunes invoked upon his head. The ballac thas long been a tavorite in the stock- in-trade of the itinerant singers, bu: | the ordinary products of the ha’pen ny muse. i A Charleston boy captured tortv- {four bulltrogsin one day, 1ecent- { The wheat fields in Butler county | are said to promise a most abundant yield. The Citiz s says a larger acreage | Holy Church and the Doge, tion have no business with the pro- hibition movement in any shape, and we shall insist that the Democratic state Convention utterly ignores the question. Failing in this we shall lo all in our power to have the plat- ferm and unequivecally anti-prohi- ition. Lebanon Rustic-Leader: Out in Kansas the brave men who fought he Confederates, in one of their re- unions, sent a formal and _preseing invitation for Missouri ex-Confed- ‘rates to visit them. This is the way real soldiers do. The infamous, cowardly scoundrels who stay at aome and steal horses and chickens, nd murdered men and robbed wo- ‘en, are yery much opposed to ex- reuniuns. But they will meet tor all of that. Columbia Statesman: If anti-Pro- aibitionists in the Democratic party ither wise foment discord and im- pare the harmony of the party by torusting its firebands into its cil, either by the political ostracism ot Prohibition Democrats or by oth- er methods, on their heads will rest tne conscious of such a blunder, to call it by no harder name-a_ blunder )iabel it you please) vith certam dictatorial leaders bet- ter perhaps, in the language of the Sedalia Democrat ‘*considering in all seriousness’’ before committing. **This means busine! coun- what name of the Term Printer’s Devil. Everbudy knows who isthe Prin- cer’s Devil. but there are very tew whe knows howhe came to be so dubbed. Printing used to be called the Black Art, and the boy who as- were called the imps. According to legal.” Aldus Manutius, a plinter at Venice, took a little negro boy left behind by a mercnant vessel, to assist him in his business. It soon got wind that Al- dus was assirted by a little black imp, and to dispel the rumor, he showed the boy to the assembled crowd, and said, ‘Be it known to Venice, that I, Aldus Manutius, printer of the The O1izin of of land has been opened up in Butler | this day made a public exposure of county during the present year ever before for the same time. oo All who think blood, The p | the ‘printers devil.” | that he isnot flesh and come and -opie shows ! BATES COUNTY National Bank. BUTLER, MO. } ORGANIZED UN i871, Capital paid in, - - $75,000. | Surplus - - - ; $ 20.000 | | Large Vault, B urglar-Prooi | { Safe with Time Lock. | | Weare prepared to d | ing business. Good paper always in demand. Buy and sell exchange, receive deposits Xc., &c. DIRECTORS. oa general bank- Lewis Cheney, IC. Clark} Dr. Elliot Pyle Hon. J B. Newberry | E. P. Henry. 1.N. Mains, : | Dr. J. Everingham, | J.J. Ryan, Dr. D.D. Wood, Geo. W. Miers, E J. P. Edwards, W. J. Bard, J. M. Patty, FP. Coleman Smith, F. J. Tygard. OFFICERS. LEWIS CHENEY - - President |.C CLARK - - - ~ Viee © esident MIATYGARD - <= Cashier. SUTLER ‘NATIONAL BANK, —IN— have} = may | Opera House Block, BUTLER, MO. Authorized Capital.{ $200.000 50,000 1,000 Cash$ Capital Surplus Fund BROOKER POWELL,.... T.W. CHILDS, Wa. E. WALTO! C.€. DUKE,... DIRECTORS - President e President -Cashier Cashier Dr. T. C. Boulware, R, D. Williams. Judge J. H. Sullens, A. L, McBride, C, H, Dutche. Frank Votis, Booker Powell, Green W. Walton Dr. N, L, Whipple T, W, Childs, A, H, Humpt rey, Ww, FE, Walton, OTHER STOCK HOLDERS: G, B, Hickman, fohn Deerwester, R. Gentry We-t, John B. Ellis, N. Hines, S, Q. Dutcher, J, J, McKee, Henry Donovan, C, C. Duke, O. Spencer, J, R, Estill, Receives Deposits payable on demand Loans money buys and sells exchange and does a general Banking bus ness. Demonstrated. That smart men average $5 00 to $8 00 per day profit, selling the ‘Pocket Man- The most marvellous little vol- issued. Needtd endorsed and purchased pyall classes. Nothing in the book line ever to equal it. Will prove it. Complete sample and outfit soc. or full particulars “for stamp. Don’t start out again until you learn what is said o this hook, and what others are doing, John Burns, Publisher, 717 Olive Street St. Louis ual.”* ume ever TN T. &. MILLER Co., mcepens asp Imrontzas oF HEREFORD CATTLE COTSWOLD SHEEP _____ BERKSHIRE SWINE. cue Wit Co., Tiiivors, POCKET CUTLERY, nk Erasers. | G-D- | rer Agent, 5 THE NONPAREIL SALOON, J. HOUGH, Proup'r. OPPOISTE OPERA HOOSE The handsomest room the furnit in city and the finest liquors ; wines in the market. Free Luuch Every Night = as ~ Yw Naa alg de Bh W.V, PENTZER DEALER IN FUR . BABY CARRIAGE at all Styles and prices, Good Hearse Always on COPFFING Made and turnished y Orders may be lett. Ae F Evacee Haan ‘iter night oron Sunday, Butler, Mo ve Fans BRIDGEFORD & HOUPP, Ornamental ‘House De iSign Painters Graining, Paper-Hanging, Decoia ting, Sign and Buggy Work a SPECIALTY SSS ti JOHN DUFF PRACILICAL Wacthmaker & Engraver, BUTLER, MISSOURI. 3ETH THOMAS’ CLOCKS 10 HOURS OUISVILLE, 22%, INGINNAMY From Louis via the Bey" No Change ot Cars." HOURS the Quickest ROUTE to BALTIMORE. HOURS the Quickest ROUTE WASHINGTON 4 4 Palace Sleeping Coaches from St. Lou sto Louisville, Cincinnati, Baltimore ind Washington, without change. w sUT ONE CHANGE TO NEW YORK The O-. & M, is the Only Line rannits, ly Trains to Louisville and Cincin n direct connection with all trains rom”the West Southwest and North west. “THE Ouro & MiIssissiprt {s the only line By wnich cure tickets to Baltimore, ind New York, by way ot the Capital of our ( ountry. you can + Philadelphia Washington, ‘arrying all classes of passengers threng*s without change of cars to Louisville and incinnati. By which you can avoid a_ Midmigia hange of cars between St. Louis and Cincinnati, if you Jeave St. Louis on night trains uniess you pay eatra fare in addition to money paid torticket. 232+ Via Cincinnati, making ditrect connew tion with all roads. gegp712 Hours lay over by other routes. -~PLEASE— ASK ANY TICKET AGENT except those working for competing road, ) Which is the Quickest and Lem Rouic I inna, Wouis and vo R? Ticket rol A4OZ Cine TI ¢ Wright & Gloria.

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