The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 7, 1883, Page 3

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Pacific R. R. qime Table 1 GIRL LIFE iN INDIA. & I -—— Gee ee C BATES COUNTY <GTON SovrHERN BRancu. oak, $ ss : r on NTY : aie Batier daily Ad Yollowe: : down to Harvard college. and skin . - | E W IS BRIDGEFOKD & HUPP Trains “GOING NORTH. | Chiidren of Three Years Doomed to them and their skins are tanned ut ’ . Texas re eu 2. : : 5 A Mt Perpetual Widowhood. Woborn and Lynn and other places.”” ationa an k, Ornamental House & K.C. Express «209250 P.M. | a ther pl: prt Freight - 2229:30 A.M. | ails What was Ito do? Lay down th ites eRe Gol OUTH. | Commercial Travelers’ Magazine. ferrule and let that industry go on wae BUTLER, MO. Si P i Fe OC. Expiéss -sscct:goacm, | Onthe day of her marriage she is [Applause.] Not rAp-| ign Painters [ral Freight -----+ -9:30 4. m.| put into a palanquin, shut up tight, ; plause.} Ibrought him before the ORGANIZED UN ist, | Graini: persHiuneine. ecack FE. KX. Carnes, Agent. | #1 carried to her husband’s house. | committee, and with a hard str A ung, Sign and Buggy Work a Ulitherto she has been the spoiled: I got him in evidence bef, ‘ ‘ 2 DB) ~~ , —— -——- = n th por I got nin evidence before it, but} > : Behe : SE : mm Secret Socteties. pet of her mother; now she is to be | the evidence was ruled out by a pa | Capital paid m,--3 / ¥-000. | EC TA Ie Y MASONIC. | the little slave of her mother-in-law, | ty vote. And I produced per—one of them you can Surplus - - - to wait, whose Butler Lodge, No. 254, meets the first ; UPO" whom she 1s Saturday in each month. Miami Chapter Royal Arch Masons, No. 76, meets second ‘Phursday in each | month. | | ik eS — * 70.000 | UNEQUALED FAST TIME! ,Large Vault, B urglar-Proof Safe with Time Lock commands she isto implicitly obey, | window on Washington street any day and tanned skins of our fellow- | of , : : Via the and who teaches her what she is do to to please ber husband—what | creatures, some them good } as Gouley Commandery Knights Templar meets the first ‘Tuesday in each month. 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- | day night. Butler Encampment No. 76 meets the | and and ath Wednesdays in each month {| THOS. 1. SMITH. §. B. LASHBROOK. ASHROOK & SMITH, Attorneys at Law utler, Mo. Wil practice in 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. Frawcisco. RANCISCO BROS. Attorneys at Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in the courts of Bates and = adjoi counties. Prompt attention given to col- lections. Office over Hahn & ¢'o.'s hard- ware store. ao ARKINSON & AERNATIITY, Attor- neys at Law, Butler, Mo. Office west side of the square HENRY, Attorney at Law, Butler, e Mo. Will attend to cases in any court of record in Missouri, and do gener- al collecting business. W, O. JACKSON, attorney at law, will practice in the State aad Fec ral courts. Office at Southwest corner of the square in front room of Thompson Brick, oposite Opera House, Butler Mo. yy V.BROWN, Notary Public But- D. ler Mo. Will draw and acknowledge deeds, contracts, leases and all papers re- quiring the acknowledgment or jurat of an officer. Physicianurs. J M. CHRISTY, M. D., Homoepathia ePhysician and surgeon, Special at- tention given to female diseases, Butler Mo. Office, North side square front room overBernhardt’s Jewelry store ast ¢ Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- ren a specialtv. J, Everingham, M. D Residence west side North Main street E, L, Rice M, D, Residence east of sqr, with J, C, Clark, EVERINGHAM & RICE. PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS Having formed copartnership tor the practice of me e and surgery, tender their services to the citizens of Butler and surrounding country, OFFICE in Everingham’s new brick west side square. Calls attended to atallhours, day or night, both in the city and country. 24 14 (Continued from last week.) How Watch Cases are Made. A plate of sonm GoLp 14 2-10 karais fine is soldered on each side of a plate of hard nickel composition metal, and the three are then passed between polished steel rollers. From this plate the various parts of the cases—backs, centers, bezels, ete. are cut and shaped by dies and formers. The gold is thick enough to admit of all Kinds of chasing, engraving, and engine- turning. The composition metal gives it weeded strength, stijiness and solidity, while the written guarantee of the manufacturers ®arranting each case to wear twenty years Proyes that it contains all the gold that can possibly be needed. This guarantee is given from cetwal results, as many of these cases have been worn perfectly smooth by years of use without wearing through the gold. Denrere, La, Dec. H. 18890. Thave used one of your James Boss’ Gold Watch Cases for seventeen years. I bought it second-hand and know of its haying been used before I got it, but do not know how lo’ It looks good for ten Jearslouger. Did not ect it was s filled case ft sus until so informed by a jeweler a short time since, T most cheerfuily recommend your cases to be all they are represented to be,and more. O. McCRANEY, Dep. Col, Int, Kev, 3 Dis, Jowa, Sead $ cent stamp to Keystone Wateh Case Factories, Phita- delphia, Pa, for handsome Mlustrated Pamphlet showing how ames Boss’ and Keystone Wateh Cases are made. (To be Continued.) dishes he hkes best and how to cook them. It the mother-in-law is kind, she will let the girl go home oceca- | sronally to visit her mother. | Of her husband she sees little or nothing. She 1s of no more account | to him than a little cat or dog would }be. There is seldom or never any | love between them; and no matter how cruelly she may be treated, she husband ot anything his mother may do, for he would never take his wife’s part. the portion of food that 1s to be cooked for her, himself and the children. When it is prepared she places it on one large brass platter, and it is sent can never compyjain to her Her husband sendsto her daily men as we arein every respect be- fore misfortune and disaster brought {them into an almshouse. [Ap- plause.| | It may be my mistortune | or yours to outlive your wife, your relatiyes, and there will be nobody on whom we can depend, and you may have to go to the alms-house, and, having no friend toreclaim your | body within hours, to watch vour death, you may be taken away tor the purposes of dissection, it may be. Be it so! are dissected and all twenty-four but after you to science has been gotten out your re- mains, tor God’s sake‘ and humani- ty’s sake and Christ’s sake, let those the good remains be decently burried and not to her husband’s room. He eats} skinned and tanned tor shoe leather! what he wishes, and then the platter} [Great Applause.] The Republi- is sent back, with what is left, tor! can papers tell me that Gen. Butler her and her children. They sit to- | must go, on account of what he has gether on the ground and eat the re- | done about Vewksbury. Be it so, 1 mainder, having neither knives,|cangoto heaven on that issue, if forks, nor spoons. While she is| nothing cise! [Great Applause] I young she is never allowed to go! appeal to you, brothers: I appeal to anywhere. The little girls are married as young as three years ot age, and should the boy to wh such a child is married die the next day she is called a widow, and is from hence- forth doomed to widow- As wear perpetual hood; she can never again. a widow she must never any jewelry, never dress her hair, sleep on a bed—nothing but a pi brick floor, and sometimes, in fact, not even that between her and the cold bricks ; and, no matter how cold the of matting spread on the hard night might be, she must have no other covering than the the thin gar- ment she has worn in the day, that of the co and st hind of food; and ks must fast twenty-four hours. bit medi- once in two wv she Then not a of food nora drop of water or cine must pass her lips, not even if She must } she were dying. never sit down nor speak in the of her mother-in-law, unless they comm rtodo so. Her food must be cooked and eate Sh ipart tro dis- She is the other women’s. } a graced, a degraded woman. may never even look on at any of the festivals. for h to ceremonies Tt would be an evil marriage « ome do so. She may havebeen a_higt caste Brahminic woman; but on her becoming a widow, any, even the ee lowest servant, may order her to do what they do not like to do. No woman 1n the house must ever speak one word of love or pity to her, it that shows the slightest for is supposed if a woman commusseration to a widow, she will immediately be- come one herself. It estimated that 80,000 widows in India under sixty is there are years of age. Tewksbury. I have found out,. first, that this mn- stitution (Tewksbury) had heen so managed that 71 out of 73 children died immediately at being sent there. I found that fact, and isn’t . either. I found denied by anybo« another thing. I found that, con- trary to law, men have been taken and sold as mere > hun- | dreds; and [am e be- heves that a man, poor or pau- per orconvict, has arightto fill at apauper’s grave. [Applause,] If 1 that. I anybody’ dosen’t believe I offend fore him never | presence | Christian and you, mothers, daughters, jn of ths commonwealth to say whether ht. sment of the men women Tam ri [Applause 1=SPE Indecent Publications St. Louis Republican. Georgia has a severe law against the circulation ot indecent literature and a man ‘named Montrose has beea convicted under it and sentenced to la fine of $1,000 for circulating the |New York Police Gazette. The publisher of the paper has made Montrose’s case his own and will seek to bring the law before a United States court forthe purpose of hav- ing its constitutionaiity pass Every friend of decency and definitely -d upon. good morals will join in the wish that the Georgia law may be upheld in_ its letter and spirit. Itis a good law. Tt as the expression of au effort on the part of a virtuous and honorable l people to keep pure the fountains of instruction and rttect themselves from the foul impurities which, iterature at Nor 1 : } : {These immoral and demorali j the name of | Cities. |spewed out trem m y | sheets, dealing in crime and scan Jal and iably embellished inva alone with piccorial illustrations, are pub- ‘lished and circulated under the liber- itv of the press, but if the liberty of the press, whichoriginally meant and | cught still to mean, the unrestricted {right to speak of and discuss public | affai ! tection for assaults upon { four lit were reconsidered and definition. rs, has become a bul wark of pro- the moral dations of social order, it 1s time su bjected Liber- 'ty as one thing, license is quite an- The one means the right to | to a more severe ther. seek good ends in the individual and ° the other nd to by he public welfar means the nght te do wrong inflict © puoic corrupting its Mora virtue. and sneering : !No harm would be done the people | H of Geor ‘lati within contrary, 2 great In uccon that state. good would be accomplished. - 4 ood wolud be the Police Gazette 1s a d= paper, and st would be a public mistortune, inf ation its whole te ney corrupting. The} a statute is as good a law asj Boss Livreyman NEW STAB LE, One block west of OPERA HOUSE, His Buggies are New His Teams Fresh and Spiriteo and hischarges are reasonable. CALL AND SEE HIM. BUTLER ACADEMY, Opens for its tall term on September 3d, 1883 For particulars address J. M. NAYLOR, or L. B. ALLISON. i 1 THE HORNS a 2 ~ + i { j } { Grocery House C. DENNEY and popular at their well known } ij { | stand on the East side of the square, are leading the GROCERY TRADE IN rse- BUTLER. ‘Their stock 1s composed of Feed Flour and the best qualiy of Staple and hancy Groceries, | | i | | t | the | Glass, Queensware and €vtiery. | i \ | We are prepared to do a general bank- ing business. Good paper always in demand. Buy and sell exchange, receive depusits Xc., &c. DIRECTORS. J. 1 Le Cheney, Dr. Elliot Pyle E. P. Henry, Dr. J. Everingham, jJ. J. Ryan, Dr.D.D. Wood, J. M. Patty, Geo. W. Miers, F. Coleman Smith. F. J. Tygard. OFFICERS. C. Clark, ifon. J B. Newberry I. N. Mains, i J. P. Edwards, W. J. Bard, 4zEWIS CHENEY C. CLARK I. TYGARD - - President: - Vice President. « Cashier. BUTLER NATIONAL BANK: ia I i: F. Opera House Block, BUTLER, MoO. Authorized Ca 200,060 Cash Capital 50.000 Surplus Fund 1,000 BOOKER POWELL,...... T.W. CHILDS. ++ President --- Vice President. ++» Cashier. se’t Cashier DIRECTORS, Dr. T. C. Boulware, R, D. Willfams. 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, Hump rey, Ws, EF, Walton, OTHER STOCK HOLDERS: G, B, Hickman, John Deerwester, R. Gentry West, C, C. Duke. O. Spencer, J, R, Estill, John B. Ellis, N. Hines, S, Q. Dutcher, J, J, McKee, Henry Donovan, J. Rue Jenkins. Receives Deposits payabie on demand Loans money buys and sells exchange and does a general Banking business. es H.V, PENTZi. R DEALER IN FURNITUR . BABY CARRIAGE of all styles ana prices, Good Hearse Always on Hansa COFFINS Made and furnished on_ short notice Orders may be left at F. Evans? stable after night oron Sunday, Butler, Mo viol FIFTY .ORNTS THE WEEKLY ST. LULIS POST ~ DISPATCH spiciest and best tamily | j | tt b iB Z ffered tor 1883 at } ! tyaar, $600 17 ps 10 00 i 1 oo Onto& Mississippi R’y From St. Louis to all points East. TheO XM. R'y is now runsing palace sleeping cars” without change trom St. Louis in 10 HOURS TO LOUISVILLE. 10 HOURS 10 CINCINNATI. 30 HOURS TO WASHINGTON, 31 HOURS TO BALTIMORE. 38 HOURS TO NEW YORK. _2 hours the quickest to Louisville an@ Cincinnatti. 7 hours the quickest to W ashington. 4 hours the quickest to Baltimore. _Equal Fast ‘Time with other lines to New York and without change of cars. DATILY TRAINS. to Cincinnatti and Louisville. With Through Day Cars, Parlor + ars and Pa ace Sleeping Coaches, The Ohio & Nississipp: Railway Is now Running a Double Daily line. OF PALACE From St. CARS Louis to New Yoork With change. Leaving on morning express via the B, & 9 RR andon ning express, via NYLEWRR, No Change of Cars for any class of Passengers. Frst and second-class pas- sengers are all carried on fast exprese trains, consisting of palace sleeping ca elegant parlor coaches and comtort day coaches, all running through with- out change The only line by which you get through cars trom St. Louis to Cincinnate without paying extra tare in addition to money paid for ticket. Por tickets, rates, or particular infor- mation, call on tickets agents of connect- ing lines, west, northwest or southwest. In St Louis atro1 & 103 N Fourth St. a W. W. PEABODY, Gen’] Manager. W. B.SHATTUC Gen’! Pass. Agent Cincinnati, Ohie. G. D. BACON, General Western Passen- ger Ager - Louis, Mo. 33-1 and Southeast ida. Flor Should vou co ville, Chattano: SB &. template A rip to Nash Ch Jacksonville, Florida; or in fact, any pointfin the South or Southeast, it will be to your interest to examfhe the advantages over all other, lines offered by the St- Luuis Iron Moun- tan & southern R’y—‘Iron Mountain Route” in the way of fast time, elegant equipment, &c. At presenta Daily Train is run trom Saint Louis Grand Union Depot, attach- ed to which will be tound an ejegant Pull- man Pa eping Car, which -uns through to > ville, Tennessee, where direct connections are made with ex- press trains of connecting Lines, tor points mentioned above. This Train connects at Nashville with the Jackson- ville express, havir Pullman Paliace Sleeping Car ot the very finest make tached, which runs through to ackeon ville, Florida, without change, For further intor: ton Savanr Ga,: t address F, CHANDLER, C. B. KINNAN, Gen’] Pass. Ag’t. Ass’t Gen’] Pass. Agent. otf. $3. GRAND COMBINATION ’84. —ThE- BUTLER WsAEKLY TIMES, The leading Democratic and of- ficial newspaper of Bates coun- ty and the LOUISVILLE arrel in that. directi = THE. ARE AT e the money possessing quarrel in that direction. z 8 nese j ae 1m a a the and COrptee -IACBX A When a man mito my office = LESS EXPENSE | t WN EEALY cork ER 40. RAL eo eae aie oe ' — Than any house In the eity, anp skin of a woman’s breast, said é ia i therefore do not fear competition. 3 3 ‘ he Astors ew York are soon Z : = i ‘The first and only Plaster “‘Where did this come from—tan The Astors of New York | They pay liberal prices for Produce. to celebrate the centennial ot the ar-! ‘They solicit a continuance of the pat- | ronage of their many customers. and jing direct action upon the draws all di: skin, tinned skin, tanned leather? oe en oF aces ; rival of the ly in this country. ; To t ae tice fats thera; and *Oh,”’ said he, “there 1s plenty ot 7% = GEG aa cs will be shown | Will gladly attend to their wishes at; Special arrangements ma aise this to be got.” “Is there ?”” said I, | Many interesting relics will be shown | any and all times. masters and Agents. | paper of the Reven © beer, . a ou ee 5 i vi vhi = s jot t and ech i “Where does it come from?’ Tie Gee iene SS | SEC sees epee ted § ose who desire ° f x arrie t skins to mar-! promptly. i ary ATC ho hi - “From Tewksbury.’’ ‘‘How does old John carried rabbt ;P tly i POST-DISPATCH, € the Courier, ng at this offi St. Louis. | Journal can do so by No. 6. | Chas. Denney. t get here>’ hh s y St. “Why said he ‘men ket has unfortunately been =

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