The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 30, 1884, Page 7

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can On. Us en te Trai neets t and and the cou ties, countie lections. ¢ P west side of the sauare waa able Mo. Pa LexsseTe Gouley Cor Bates day night. Butler Enc s. B. LASHBROOK. AST ee Butl Collections and Taxes Office, front room over tional Bank. ]. S. FRANCISCO. RANCISCO BROS. i Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in the courts of R. R ic ss & SOUTHERN BRANCH. e Butler daily as follows: NORTH. ins a B y MASO: er Lodge, No- in each mor Chapter Roy econd ‘T neet emplar | th. nmandery Kn t Tuesday in eac 1c he firs 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. s « s Aor odve No. 180 meets every Mon Lodge No. 1 76 meets the mpment No each mont! Wednesdays in oO wyers. d ath La THOS. 1. SMITH. IROOK & SMITH, Attorneys at er, Mo. Will practice in Bates and adjvining coun- promptly attended to tor Non-residents. Bates county Na- n2 tf. rts of Paid S. P. FRANcIsco. Attorneys at Bates and adjoining Prompt attention given to col- Office over Wright & Glorius’ 2a NATHY, At- S. e store torneys at Law, Butler, Mo. Office 22 Vv. D HENRY, Attorney at Law, Butler, AA. Mo. ss court of record in Missouri, and do gener- al collecting business. Will attend to cases in any .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. EV Oe an Noth Main street. west side of Public north o Physicians. ERINGHAM, M. D., Physician Residence west side Office UP STAIRS, on Square; first) room f Olive House. d Surgeon. EB L, RICE, M.D., Eclectic Physi- det atte J. M.¢ D RS. Oilice, tront roc Butler, moeopathic Physicians and Sur C. e Surgeon. Ils prompt- rd Surgeon. Alle te. Office uy *s Drug Store. > over HRISTY, W. HE Barrarn, Ifo CHRISTY & BALLARD, over P.O. Alt day or night. ‘ ion to all parts of temale BOULW:. Vhysician Office north side square, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- ren a specialty. (Continued froin last week.) How Watch Cases are Made. A plate of sotip G fine is Lp 142-10 karats ch side of a plate of soldered on ¢: 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 compe needed ion metal gives it strength, stiffness and solidity, while the written guarantee of the manufacturers warranting each case to wear twenty years proves can possibly be needed. that it contains all the gold that This guarantee is given from actual results, as many of these cases have been worn perfectly smooth by years of use without wearing through the gold. Ee Dusvugcg, la., Dec. 14, 1880. T have used one of your James Boss’ Gold Watch Cases for seventeen yeara. I bought it second-hand and know of its having been used before I got it, ‘but do not know how long. It looks good for ten years longer. Did infc (To be Continued.) McREYNOLDS & SCHWENK Boo.& Shoe Makers |, Boots Shop n BUTLER, 0. and Shoes made to order The best ot leather used. erth side or square . to tt BRIDGEFUKD & HUPP. Ornamen ai Hous AN D--- Sign Painters Graining, Paper-Hanging. Dece ra ting, Sign and Bugev Work : Y PECVALTY and consisted ot helmet, t oreast-plate 4& WONDERFUL FIND. - = back piece w e knees an 4 Relic ot th- Chivalry of Spain Deep Ar Zona Mine t Three v se OV Super tena: « cs v c 4 zi t a : : Phe > to Governor Tritle, e 10-4 the permission ot the LESS gone another race sMpany, present heade. Chari The Dece , t the easure x the earth. | to the Smithsonian Institute. ased Novelist. feature Chrome his has been especially the Their arrival created the greatest curiosity in the working of t min among the few whe knew c { Charles Rez the eminent En- ae r ; i - 2 see : a En- | of the United Verde group in the | of it, and in consequence the Gover- glish novelist, who died in) London, | p} I ar - | nor I bee } | Bla ie ake discoveries | nor has been so bored by eager sight- he { would April tr, was born in Sry, at Is den House, Oxfordshire. England. scholar, bo which have been made in seers that he finally determined this it | jindeed warrant an incredulous re- | #fternoon to satisty the general de- His father was an eminent i f i ception were it not for the reputa- | site by placing them on exhibition in and his mother a Jady of unusual in—/ tion and standing of the men who|the rooms of the Chess, Checker tellectual strength. ; He was €@0€4- | stand ready to vouch for them. | and Whist Club durmg this evening, ted at Magdalen College, Oxford. | While many of these discoveries | Where all who wish are at liberty ie After graduation be read Taw, gaim- | have been made public through the | examine them. ed a Vinerian tellowship at the Unie | yoo. press, but one has heretofore From the general condition of the 2 and was He never practiced law, but adopted a versity of Oxtord, in 18. elicited any considerable discussion | warlike relics itis generally suppos- called to the bar the year atter. among scientists. that being the un-| ed that those who one time were im- expecte? opening of an old tunnel by | prisoned and starved to death in the literary life, occupying his earlier | the miners at present working in the | mine, cither by accident or through vears in writing for newspapers and | ine. The tunnel so opened pre-| the action ot rebellious peons. “AMERICAN” magazines. Elis first novel was | sented the appearance of having ca corey j “Eee Wolfingten,”” jpublished' 1 | heen worked many veats aso, in a The tide of immigration setting | 1853. ‘Christie Johnstone,”” issued style still common amone Baers in | toward our shores is subject to fluc- | the same year. was well received. | ycolated portions of Mexico and | tuations, but there exists no reason | “Itis Never Too Late to Mend.’’ produced in 1856, dealt severely with Spanish America. Throughout its | t© anticipate that during the hfe of entire length ttmbers had been placed the present generation it will fail certain abuses of prison discipline. | 4, support the walls for the greater | ach the average height of the past Scattered tunnel lay a excitement. | ten years: immigration therefore, Mr. and created — great security of the workmen. Henceforth every work trom | along the floor of the continues to be one of the great econ- Reade’s pen was welcomed eagerly. | number of stone hatchets with well | @™ic questions ef this country, and The hist of his works encludes, in| worked cdges showing hard service | 1t involves a political proplen> of the to | ' | | iWe se addition to those already mentioned, | iy the hands which once welded } highest importance, that of natural “juhe Courselet Diuetbove, *y4ck \inen, in the center of the apart- | ization. That our naturalization | of All Trades,’? ‘Love Me Little, Finent when it was first opened stood laws are defective in many respects | ove Me (Lone, “Wibmte “biessi" |. crle bout tour feet high, and six is notorious, and the demand for “The Cl and Hearth,” which | inches square on which was painted | their revision will no doubt acquire is, perh tblest of his hooks: |in a pigment obtamed from red added force trom the publication of -‘Hard Cush.” *‘Griffith Gaunt.’ | oxide of copper, across. While the | 80 article by Justice William Strong a Rat wounsetoum Bir Milage] and (2.7, cise weniwere Sti rding | Upen it subject in the .Vorth “A Terrible “Bemptation””— His | with amazement t the. | -lmerican Rez for May. Inthe pen has proved exe tonably Powel | diccovery. one ot the ere same number of the Review, Ed- tul, dealing incidentally with social | jive and perhaps possessed ot win PP. Whipple offers a candid wrongs. severely condemning | avarice than the rest seized the <take | Judzement of Matthew Arnold, as a their perpetrators. | so rudely that it dwindled to dust in| thinker and as a man of letters. Few writers, if any naeicovered a} i5< hana, as didalso the more neavy | coat 2 Proctor, onder the title | wider range than be mithe vamety of | puyhers of the mine on bei ex [Ob <A Zone of Worlds”. writes fiction « in the view ot mo- | posed to the air. At the time two | the vast multitude of the pik ki tives and impulses arising froavother | ineoties were advanced to dred of the earth, known as the is- passions (han that of love. the lenanse (gccarcnce “one bene | tercid. | tne albe Ramla} the Charles Reade was e. suecesstal lan sin acne ned been previously | 26te"". Gerrit L. Lansing essays to | ' hat the multipheation anc dramatis!. Ele published worked by en ns in search | eh “Gold’” | in 1843. first of his plays. | of the red oxide ut c ypper for paint. | tension of railroad lines, and the es- “*Masks and Faces,.’’ *“l wo Lovers | and that the presence of the stake tablishment of low rates of transpor- andia Lite; une he (Same s: dke- boa cross was bat ‘the cesult of | re dered rather than help- nental interference. Prot. Osi ; ed gove Henry £: e, has a highly interesting val,’” followed at intervals. Several | chance: the other w been amatized, | of Ins storic oe had been worked for the copper and notably ‘Griffith Gaunt.”” by Augus- cishs bet oF ta Daly. silver. in which it is very American readers will on *Hlusions of Memory’’. Helen Myr. Reade re- | Indian peons under the direction of member t against Jesuit fathers, and the ore obtained Kendrick Johnson contributes an es the New York Times because it had supped to ecclesiastical coffers in} say on ‘The Meaning of Song” characterized ‘+Gniffith Gaunt’? as! yexico. This last theory was ap-| Finally, there is a joint discussion of an ammoral production. Six cents parently sustained by the presence | **Workingmen’s Grievances’? by damages were awarded the irate | of 4 larce quantity of slag near the Wilham Godwin Moody and Prof. novelist by the jury sittmg on the | yin, but was also apparent!y refut-]| J Laurence Laughlin, of Harvard The deceased writer was 4 {eq by the abandonment of the mine | University. case. man of great force and originality of | 3+ pomt where the ledge was eo es = character. He loved and hated] owing remarkably rich. Both Walker Herald: We learn from G. C. Smalley who has been in bus- iness in Cedar county that a gentle- men by the mame of Benj. Carr with vebemence. His pen was far theories were warmly discussed pro from being squeamish, tor it wrote | and con by their respective support- the truth, snd he was unquestionably |... but that the last one was the s a great master of the knowledge of] ooiect one 1s now established shipped 375 head of — from Ar- : : = : kansas here and about 60 head hav human nature. beyond — cavil. Since the date F ete paces = ean = a 2 died of cholera. There were no ot the discovery the miners, un— A Startiing Discovery : 4 = der the direction of Supermtendent Physicians are o ten startled by remark- were brought in. orp, ot Princeton Col- | article } 1 | | Talk is Cheap FIRST GLASS GOOD / All. American: } able discoveries. The tact that Dr. | Thomas, Dake enesecd oH carstuly tor those who buy hogs to be care-} King’s New Disdovery tor Consumptson | reopening the prior workers. While 7 = i and all Throat and Lung diseasec is daily | this work has been done with the ut- : ' curing patients that they have given upto | most care, it has been done with Pees Tle feoeoe incie® ! view: g vi ee — such rapiaity that x depth of 283 feet | stock ranche east of the city is the this wondertul discovery; resulting in | W#S attained on Sunday last. Early | jargest in the county, and is to be hundreds ot our best Physicians using it | on Monday. while James Dillon and | Peetienthe pest. Mies Highest tae in thier practice. Trial b tree at | Johnny Bright were worki } brougnt in trom Tlinors sixty. high =e ee woe SOO SERRE aes | ee | grade heifers, fifty from Paris, Mo:. Regular size $1.00 : + | surprised to find aniron article,which | and trom other pomts another hun- Died a Natural Desth. ithevat first supposed to be some | Peer ge: ae He nas ust, a gether with bu hant Trayeler. tne Cinciar they immediately reported his herd cf . poor Bill 1s dead."* | the cows said a Louisville the train | the occurrence to Supermtendent i 4, year to year bv selecting the tke other day. Thomas, who was overjoved to dis~f pest ot the heifer calves, until he “Yes Lunderstood so. where did ver in itan fine | peaches at least six hundred cows. an manufacture, This ranche contains over 1.S50c temper. Hlastily rerurnin acres of pasture and adow,. land, tced at Work a vater and timber tha learn of the y, heat ance pl any p.enty of p-en ‘ulars?’’ Nothing, except that he died a partie | with of men, and in less n tar ge torce shade. en hour had exhumed two complete Kaune& natural death.” suits of arnor, in which still remain- ; Rich lisll Euterprese: “Is that so? Why. I was told | ed the ium. temur and tibia of wer- | Arnold, Monday shipped 6 car load that he was knocked down on the riers who long had borne fierce ; ot fine fat cattle to St. Louis over of fights. discovered—was of exquisite make nd had the fife beaten out strect him.”* “Well that’s what they call a_nat- ‘ural death in Cincinnat: now.” Ibs.. apiece. the soldiers ot the sixteenth century, | iuson. Price $5,75 per hundred. Of the armor, one—the first | the Pacitic, the lot averaging 1,400 Five car load ot them ot Milan steel. so much prized by | were purchased from Harvey Rok- 8. B. NEW BILL, disease among the hogs until these ; It would be weil | to-day, it wont win with the people of its Chtrey too thir lt takes } LOW PRICES, Plain figures, and square dealing to take the cake. Others may talk but ne ey Oot SE) Zi ——— is still on top when it comes to Style, Make & Fit of our Clothing Furnishing Goods, Hats andCaps All we ask is a trial and we'll treat you white. THRELKELD, COY & CO. North Side Square, Butler, Mo. ell our Goods as Low as the Lowest for CASH. nT. BoB THE TER, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Solid Silver and Platedware SPECTACLES _ =/ Optical Good Nx Wace. * ; mes —— OPI the celebrated pt for th € ick oul A RUN ROCKFORD R. R. Watches. FIELs, Aloo keeps in stock ¢ tull line of IND MARINE GLASSES - ANY Iry, Sausfactorily Done. Real Estate and Insurance. Tf you want to buy a farm, house and lot in town or have your property insured in good reliable companies, call on or write to EEE’ EE E_ECHEe OH ERD- Office in Opera Building over Bank. P.S. Alse have some fine vac lots for sale in west Butler. OUR NEW AMERICAN LEVER WATCH 2 last browght to ved or engine tarned ome making it Just the 4 all jaduring ‘men wh Strong and vers ham wen, Mechaus ean be read | Watch free b we witisenditc. 0, D. om receipt the balance can be paid have very fine Alam! Beactitul Me Greds of testimonisis but h: st 51.00 «** We have ‘W. H. WHITE. Wy 1998, Writes ~The New American Lever Fight. Sid at once for SiS each MD ALL OXDENE 10 ‘World Mani’gCo, 122 Nassau Street, liew York It is seldom that we meet with an article that so fully 's with its advertised goed qualities as docs the New American Lever Watch. It has the adrantage of being pradnet eee eae . the best a and pe prepareaech 37 A ck en gs at ratches ps le anywhere, We recoim- the case rank tt with plage ét to our readers as @ Watth that will give entire satisfaction.

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