Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
N ean Ne. cime Table Pact - SOUTHERN BRranct <GTOS Lexixch Butler d Trains CO ING Te secret Societies MASONIC. ,» meets the first 25 atler Lodge, No _ ‘h month. ‘ond Thursday in ea ommandery Knights T ~ i ouley ( : Gouley ‘frst Tuesday in each month. meets the 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- night. = os ha Encampment N G meets the nd ath Wednesdays in each month LL Lawyers 5. B. LASHBROOK. THOS. 1. SMITH. ASHROOK & SMITH, Attorneys at LawButler, Mo. Will practice in | the courts of Bates and adjvining coun- ties, Collections promptly attended to wad. Taxes Paid tor Non-residents. Office, front room over Bates county Na- tional Bank. nz tt. [.s. FRANCISCO. S. P. FRaycisco. IRANCISCO BROS. Attorneys at | Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in | the courts of Bates and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to col- lections. Office over Wright & Glorius’ hardware store 29 FARKINSON & ABERNATHY, At- torneys at Law, Butler, Mo. Office west side of the sauare 22 HENRY, Attorney at Law, Butler, | A. Mo Will attend to cases in any | court of record in Missouri, and do gener- al collecting business. W courts. square in front room of Thompson Bri oposite Opera House, Butler Mo. 0. JACKSON, attorn e practice in the State and Fed Office at Southwest corner of the | V. BROWN, Notary Public But- «ier Mo. Will draw and acknowledge | , contracts, leases and all papers re- quiring the acknowledgment or Jurat of | die. an officer. } } ese } It happens usuaily, nevertheless, 143 Wt . Physicians. tha srable circumstances, EVERINGHAM, M. D j the intoxicated live even through I, ind Surgeon. Reside side | the feurth stag The temperature | Noth Main street. Office ur srams on | of ¢} how : < ; | s s jotthe body may continue to sink west side of Public Square; first room | : sap j . - | sorth of Olive House. Jone or two lower, but the | ucohol d throuch all oh F;, GRICE M.D-. Belectie Playas. | 10! : through all the | nand Surgeon. All calls prompt- | tissu¢ 1 escaping by diffusion cd te. Office » stairs over] } . ° ie seeee Jfice up stairs over! 144 elimmation, the living centres rae eae bare ved, and so there is a IMCHRISTY, M D., Homeepathic! , ; physician and surgeon. ‘Special atten- {Slow return of power. Tf death | SE Haas to temale diseases. OMe | actually occurs, the couse of it is a orth Main 5 mt reom over P.O. = - ; ae ling north ot P. O.| condension of flurd on the bronchiei me communication « r city. | surtaces and an arrest ot respiration BOULWARE, Phvsi ,| forn echanical obstruction, xeon, Office north in is literally drowned in his iseases of women ¢ | pee Samo! | own secretions. (Continued from last week.) How Watch Cases are Made. Tn buying a silver watch case great care should be taken to secure one that is solid silver throughout. The cap of most cheap silver cases is made of a composition known as albata, which is a very poor substitute ior silver, as it turns black in a short time. The tacks of such cases are made much thinner than those of an all silver case, being robbed in order to make the cap thicker and get in as much as possible of the cheap metal. Another important point inasilver case is the joints or hinges, which should be made of gold. Those of most cheap cases are made of silver, which is not a suitable metal for that purpose. In abrief period it warps, bends and spreads apart, allowing the backs to become loose upon the case and admitting the dust and dirt that accummulate in the pocket. The Keystone Silver Watch Cases are only made With silver caps and gold joints. Incor longand varied ST LOUIS Mo-, Feb. 17, 183. TelKeretone Solid Elwes Wate Gases toe tes best ‘Having no —p 7 Booi& Shoes Makeis BUTLER, MO. Boots and Shoes im best of 1 Shop nerth side ree nn ee BRIDGEFURD & HULP Ornamen: al Honse --AND— Sign Painters Graining, Paper-Hanging, Lecors ting, Sign and Buggy Work 2 stage j true to their duty, the centre that | ent systems of organs die atter each j of those two | lived in Brooklyn, she | master MeLeer, PHY=IOLOGICAL ACTION ;OF ALCOHOL PART IV. the body lies prostrate u be curious movements of ti hol there may these are not stimul: centres of volition, reflected me i trom extended stimulus. They are strange auttomatic movements, as if in the | spinal cord there were still some | i they > and to continue, of s death irregularly, | nearly the end the chapter, } even when the end Through the whole of this last two centres remain longest calls into play the respiratory ac- that then the interval tion, and centre stimulate There during which heart. is an there are no move of diaphragm and the heart, and when they fail the primary deficiency is in The heart continues in motion the longest of all parts. The | peculiarity of the action of alconol is the slowness with ments whatever, save those the the breathing muscles. | i Jing which the two centres that supply the heart and the great respiratory In the comparative satety ef muscle are effected. this lies alcohol. Acting evenly and slowly, the differ- other or t ether, with the exception on which the contin- uance of mere animal lite depends. 3ut for this provision every deeply intoxicated man would imevitably of time, ¢ quantities, of t he ves- C induiged » cnfeeblement minute circulation. us effect und as it leads to additional physiological modifications from a new series of causes. Romance of Two Foundlings. Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. {the right to ri New York, March female 28.—Eighteen I months old, was found one morning on the steps of a New York dence, on East iwenty-third Marked on the word **Dubois.”’ She was adopted by a woman of Sullivan years ago a paby, a few resi- street. the garments was the same name. liuing in county. She was, on becoming of x reasoning age. told of the circum- She and stances of her early hfe. her foster mother moyed to Chicago, and the young lady became anxious to know someth ng ot her Learning that people of wrote ancestry. hei name; Post- | iving the circur stances, requesting him to find out to her ime sending that he ostmaster ha id in were trom 2 young man oi who i iis early history was not the of The postmaster ar to that inquiring to him the letter received ove ed trom Jenme Dubois. and a corres- | pondence was Opened between the it | two. and was a clear case of love at first sig y Finally he visited her with both being equ impressed The first impressions | the other. | grew stronger with longer acquaint- The family | low stro. | ted cats are p for byt who assumes population in! the cellar. t the} estimates place will accommodate just so | | many cats comtortably, and she at- | fectionately drowns the kittens in t to chill or She attrac- warm water in order no give them unnecessary pain. takes only a few of the more tive cats into her confidence, «nd ad | mits them to her parlor to be petted And Mrs. is happy with he: Badeau But this Brock!yn cat asylum is a small and pampered. cats, af- fair as compared with a similar en- terprise in West Chester, Penn. A lady of that town, who has no chil- dren and more money than she needs. built a brick house as a home for destitute cats, and devotes the whole structure, trom cellar to roof, to their She permits her pensioners to regulate accommodation and comfort. y matters im all respects to ly Ives mse > and never drowns a kitten. She simply keeps house for them and does the marketing, and lets the ieline nature have its own play. I two Tales about Bab | ROC. Ox A colored t found a 3edays-old | iby about ¢ from the State line vesterday. to the es made wt tiscovery that | and that she lived on North Mam street. She stated that the baby was porn cn Saturday, and that a co ed woman had offered to adopt reed, and the child way to West Kansas. It appears. however, that the foster | bee sa of her o4 and, it is presumed, deserted it, as | ed that he had tound ground. The police where protection providence. Intemperance and Temptation. Eprror Times:—Two most aw- |! Temperance move- ! facts alway found trgether. great Christian ment of our time, late in getting | started can make no with- | f its | ground against the terrible power ot | temptation. An procession of tipy progress out hting for every inch ot appallingly large Ts, year atter year tripping, stumbling, reeling and wailing down the drunkards delusion, sorrow, woe and continue to go sliding, the steep slippery incline ot doom of thousands of persons, get- ting into boats above Niagara should push out trom the shore, float with the current, and in full sight ot each other, One after another, ‘‘shoot the cataract’ into the abyss. How is it that so many can persist in the fatal way, knowing that tempt: ion al- ways keep so near, alwavs ready with The devil tempted Judas; Judas tempt- ¢, a frana, a mocker? ed the high priest; when the delu- sioned wretch began to see his wretchedness, and wanted them to take back the price of his treachery. what cared they for his tortured con- science? With crushing scorn they retort: Whats that to us, see thou to that. ¢ intemperate man said in his heart: Twon’t be bound by it laws of purity andof God. Now, how do the ns of appetite and J pass ind it mock at the impo- tence of the broken-down will and h le Rn. GB: Ben Butier’s Nerve. Bean-eating Masschusetts never tights duels and Butier’s nerve has 1 to be expended in other ways. no c instance of this occurred m 1856, when Ben Butler was a young practitioner at Lowell. The Buchannan campaign was in fall progtess and a great meeting was being held in the largest hall in the city. Rufus Choate, the great law yer, was addressing the meeting and uis cloguence had thrown them into the wildest contusion, when a jar was felt and a crash was heard. The probably make an arrest for desc tion. A young woman named Hattie Stewart reported to the police yes- terday that she had been victimized into the temporary adoption of an intant She stated that she had left St. Joseph for Kansas City to fill a situation here, and that while | wait- ing at the St. Joseph depot yesterday morning a strange woman asked her to hold a baby fora few moments, in- aggage while she could lift her b to the car. Miss Stewart held the baby, but the woman disappeared, and she accordingly brought the child to Kansas City. The baby was taken charge ot byjthe Woman’s Christian association home on Char lotte street, much to the relief of the woman. Provection in New Jersey. From the New York Times. The iower house of the New Jer- ask prohibit to ature has agreed sey legi congress to enact a law ry went forth, *‘the floor 1s sink- ing.’’ Everyone turned pale and audience rose for Ben Butier came to the front of the beside Mr. Choate, and calling the audience to a halt, said a stampede, when platform there was no danger, that the archi- tect of he building was present, and that he would go with him and ex- amine the building and report to- allay their teelings. This quieted the audience. Butler and the archi- tect made an immediate examina- tion of the hall and tound the danger _very great. Butler at once return- ed and smilimngly assured the audience there was no dan- ger. but as the hall was over- crowded, he advised them to quietly adjourn to the public square, and there Mr. Choate would finish The crowd went quietly out and the catastrophe was averted. his speech. As Butler stepped on the platform Mr. Choate he had whispered to the immi ° laborers | with « halt laugh in order to deceive from Europe. It d that] the audience. This is what he said: the iff was | «fr. Choate I must clear this house trame f Amer | oy hail ali be i hell in five manutac= | yj; , im | ps ees eee New Jersey have imported ed labor Whether employers, having secured their sepply of imported labor are opposed to turther importations, or whether the native and imported element would invoke congres- sional legislation for its pro- | ie Awake Druggists. F. M. are always : Crumley their business, and spare no pains tat and have | best ot every cle in rding to statements con-/ ¢ v have sec the agen- esolutions just vow | cy t srated Dr. King’s New house. Ehey | Disco Consumption. The tor Consump- on curt nown | tion, Coughs, Colds, Horseness, Asth- ma, Hav Fever, Bronchitis, or any ‘affection of the Throat and Lungs. Sold on a positive guarantee. Trial bot- (tlesfree. Regular size $1.00. Edmund About is said to be worth SPECIALTY cance, but, while progressing m their! tection, does not appear. In | about $1,000.000. wont win with the people of to-day It takes FIRST GLASS GOODS LOW PRICES, its entirey too thin. Plain figures, and square dealing to take the cake. Othe may talk but 37—_—_oOo— ed re “AMERICAN” is still on top when it comes to Style, Make & Fit of our Clothing Furnishing Goods, Hats and Caps A THRELKELD, COY & CO. North Side Square, Butler, Mo. il we ask is a trial and we'll treat vou white. i. » Lowest for CASI ae sas Low as the Nv. SB TE TER, Watches. Clocks, Jewelry, Solid Silver and Platedware J te Lin SPECTACLES _ We sell our Good \ I rle ° 5 =<) Uptical Goods CO WATCH. i ’ —— OPERA FIELD, tull line of AND ; MARINE All American ABE GLASSES SWISS WATCHES. Repairing of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, Satisfactorily Done. a J Real Estate and insurance, If you want to buy a farm, house and Jot in town or have your property insured in good reliable companies, call on or write to Ss. B. NEW BILL, EE a!’ ED e_ECRRe Oe AD Office in Opera Building over Bank. P.S. Also lots for sale in west Butler. OUR NEW AMERICAN LEVER WATCH! After months of labor and experiment. we bave st last brought to perfec we CH. is akiey Winding Wate the er Movement, Expansion Balauce, Fuily Je 9 antin the very best manne ‘The Cases are mi f our Celebrates ‘This metal hase ” have some fine vacant g01d in the com Lsceed it cannot be to Jadges. They are Sn Seong and very men, Mechan Hew American LY Lever Fight. Sid at once for $15 each World Manf’¢ Co. 122 Naesaa L ORDERS TO Street, New York a ore the ‘Nes Hg Bea ats Mover with tts advertised good ties as docs ew Watch. It has the advantage of being made of that metal Aluminum ELSE es lee snd Bena neatep psadeere! the ease rank it with best Watches made here. wait to our readors asa Watch that will give entire satisfaction. i It is seldom that we meet with