The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 23, 1884, Page 3

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Time Table to. Pacific Br: folio 180 re No. npment Aas Lawyers. ASHROOK & SMITH, 4 At, itler, Mo. W ; the courts of Bates and pun- | ties, Coliections prompt ! and axes Paid for | room over F n2 tf wersco S. P. Fravcisco. | BROS. Attorneys at | ae re ‘0 Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in the courts of 1 and adjoining -ounties. Prompt attention given to col- Office over Wright & Glorius’ store 29 ections. hardware FARKINSON & ABERNATHY, At ~ torneys at Law, Butler, Mo. Offic vest side of the square 2 HENRY, Attorney at Law, Butler, Will attend to cases in any cord in Missouri, and dogenet- business. It is a fact + the James Bo tain more pure gold than meny gold cases The demand for these waich cases has led to the manufacture of a vei poor grade of solid gold watch cascs— low in quality, and deficient in quantity- These cases are made from 4§ to 10 karats, and a 5 or 6 karat case is often sold for 12 or14karats. It is Nor ec: y tok 2 watch case so poor in quality that it will soon lose its color, or one so soft that it will lose its shape and fail to shut tight, thus letting in dust and damaging the works, or one so thin that a slight blow will break the crystal, and perhaps the movement. It IS economy to buy a James Boss’ Gold Watch Case, in which None of these things ever occur. This watch case is not an erperi- ment—it has been made nearly thirty years. Hazieron, Pa, Oct. 4, 182 I sold two James Boss’ Gold Watch Cases thirty Years ago, when they first came out, and they are in Good condition yet. One of them is carried by 5 carpenter, Mr. L. W. Drake, of Hazleton, and only shows the wear in one or two places; the of y Mr. Bowman, cf Cunningham, Pa.; and I can pro- one or both of these cases at any time. SYLVESTER LE, Jeweler. a Rezston *& fave Factorion PEI: cutee (To be Continued.) ‘ MCREYNOLDS & SCHWENK — Shoe Makers | R, VO. Boor & BUTLE Boots 2 = ots an oréer shoes made to best of leather used. Shor 1side ot Sq agott | BRIDGEFORD @HUPP. Ornamental House | —-AND— i i 2 | Sign Painter: Taiping, Paper-Hanging, Decora ignand Buggy Work 2 SPECIALTY | | know Iw "Twas n Looking 1 Dickens wrote —Dry Goods and Mo; the Year ic in Wall s not caused speculati bro: t wives of Stre attempting to buy all the hou ent ingredients for cooking the ed in an time in twelve inning to have clean fa don’t wash them. They unavoid- ably come in contact with clean water while they are in swimming.—Louis- ville Courter Journal. An Oswego paper des months, are be; ibed a fire by saying that “the red flames danced in | the heavens, and flung their fiery arms like a black funeral pall, until Sam Jones got on the roof and doused them out with a pail of water.”’—Tezas Sift- ings. Some young woman of « town in Western Massachusetts thinks of or- ganizing an for the pro- motion of co The motto on k “Tf a with other bought = whisk saloons and di in the lot. It m whether man the it.— When y a w r adjust them in the Ww. v is o1 that st, and that is because there fits t t is to “Where in the world h der wife of her husb mearmy know, nott oilic ave you be nd. » complex are,’ miut- not weil , be one n they be- 3 vood ein you ¥ ent t found.” nearly two thousar would have probs necropolis mu vertised it in the colun p2per, and offered a su Norristown Herald. A malicious boy crea Montreal hotel one day recently by thrusting his head into the dining- room and calling out: **Here comes an it appears 1 ple reward.— oflicer from New York with a warrant.” | It was several hours before some of the most nervous guests could be persuad- ed to come out of the wood turn to their meal. The latest device of « Paris paper | for attracting readers is the engage- ment of two eminent physicians to attend gratuitiously upon its yearly subscribers. Recently the manager of the paper notified one of the physic- ians ‘‘not to prescribe for X any more subscription has expired.’’ The doc- tor replied, ‘So has X.’’—Bas‘on Cour- ter. If a train is advertised to arrive at 11 and doesn’t put in an appearance until 12, itis said to be behind time. But if a man ought to die at 70 and d until he is 90, no one says he is twenty years behind time. Any « who can tell us the whyforene of the thusly will receive, by return mail, a second- handed wooden leg, almost as good 3 rew. — Puck. Walter Dav court the other dx: ee, in listened patienti ja panicin aj and re-j} n’t die } a Washington ; p announce ined Om asurer of the Latonia ts » which was re some weeks of pr: that the best t with the £ au ran up i Frank appeared ictioneer Ww o—. shonut- from oneer? aid he was going, Mr. Helm “Well, for heaven's sake don’t stop him. I had him six months and couldn’t make him go, and if you've got him started, keep him at it!’ The horse went.—Merchant Travel- jor. —>-« -—___— f Moderna Newspaper Work. | The a should ¢ The compen the ation to 0 is, on the no hours are ; their work fre- quent »pointments ness to pr inant n a rule, ends, Work and usc “bur and i they put a red-hot i e made ave pres the nerve kness of th use on ‘The resources ihere will be | she thought, the d ll be ready on short » | The Decline of Beauty. | Art, to reach full development, | requires around the artist and within him a cultivation of beauty of which the Greeks have given an example. This people had, forthe purity of form, for the harmonious proportion of their limbs, and for beautiful nudities, a love {that went to the verge of adoration; | and beauty was, in their eyes, invested with something sacred. This worship of beauty was revived at the renas- cence. In our days, on the other hand, strength and beauty of body are not the ideal. Many things seem to show that a too exclusive preoccupation with pleasing forms, as well as with orna- ments and decorations, are a sign by which we can recognize primitive con- ditions of civilization With those | modern people wno still in an In- ferior grade of ci ation, as with the 3 Arabs, the male sex itself display ecquetry, an y with its strength and physical are, and its adornments. seeks to please es- | jin a ho | too, wh jtime a day. anlbrea renee — = tion gradually destroys these ae mt of the sae o COUNSe!. ed the | Primitive instinct which have been, onor, nid the latter, toward tue) }owever, jing to Mr. Darwin and end ofh ument, ‘I have an idea et ae ark rhe “Your nor,” bre i seas Be teare whether ve him aw 5 cone. 2 jer the convenient and un- ! take it out eontinement.”’— Bath Bea = = torso and vig Last week, when about to break up ry survives ar i tr. = ree mite = Mr. Spurge nue to survive W too often tends to rpose, which is to bring o known as & ce was taken very ili s physician that sie must die. Then he to disappear.—Hopular Science Monthly seni for her dearest friend. ‘*Promise gp, July. me,” she said to the weeping woman, ———— “that you will be 2 mother to my + ; ene et eee oD ae es and universi- dear ren? Yes, love, you ot which only | ‘No, 20,” errupted beauty of its members. Women, than all other per- serve pure the who ought, more to endeavor to pre et form nder their of their blood culture, out beau to be falling into decadence, principal objects of the arts sons, self, seems and tne tendi 250 students and the d an, petulantly, “to my = s J = oa SoS n 20 teac! Htsle “pitebers. cannot.” sobbed 2 hers. her friend; “I do not care to assume — ~ Tree by the Well. ssoil | 1in Miller. ing in Gotham. i great | 1 matter, though, @ many things very cheap in New York. We hear much, for instance, about hich rents, but there are low rents, too. I have seen three very good rooms in a well kept tenement house, in a good and convenient neigh- borhood, for $102 month. Four rooms se of the same kind can be had for $15 2 month. In neighborhoods not sodesirable two good rooms can be had for $7 or $8. There are hundreds of cheap restaurants where a person of small means may get a meal for 20 or 25 cents, and some (certainly not at- tractive, thongh) where he may do so for 10 or 15 cents. Housekeepers may buy groceries as cheaply in New York as any where in the country. Flour is | lways at the bottom price, and it is so with many other things needed in the | kitchen. Meat and butter are high yet, I find in some towns and villages | sixty miles away, where living is sup- | p, that prices are about , yet not more so, on the whole, than in some of the same count In fact, coal is higher ab man nts on the railroads ch ns of tous of coal to and 11 ne now some is of small or even ys Bob Burdette. What would 2? How d anks move long. and cireur lie met the f rown into prison, y and disg tnow? Oh, yes, machu usually esteem a crank most profoundly after we starve him to Harvey ¥ a erank on the subject of the circulation of the blood; Galileo was an astronomical Fulton was a crank on the sub- ject of steam navigation; Morse was a telegraph crank; all the old aboitionists were cranks. The Pilgrim fathers were cranks; John Bunyan was 4 crank; any man who doesn’t think as you do, my son is a crank And by and by the crank you despise will have his name in every man’s mouth, and a half-completed monument to his memory crumbling down in 8 dozen cities, while nobody outside of your native village will know that you ever lived. Deal gently with the crank, my boy. Of course some cranks are crankier than others, but do you be very slow to sneer at aman because he knows only one thing and you can’t understand him. Acrank, Telemachus, is a thing that turns something, it makes the wheels go around, it insures progress. ‘rue, it turns the same wheel all the same time, and it can’t do anything else, but that’s what keeps the ship going ahead. ‘The thing that goes in for variety, versatility, that changes its positions a hundred y, that is no crank; that is the weather-vane, my son. What? You nevertheless thank heaven you sre not a cr Don’t do that, my son. be you coul ie There master at a who after & for add:t the agenc. for a Gatling gun. jication with opinion the starving to gan be s peaceavie.”” Tae ¢ | story goes, apd the Indians sre now t starving quietly. rs The oreat events of history Ina els votume FAMOUS and DEC Ry CAPT. KING. 0.3. A. destroyed in a day.—How Fame er Disasts rhe Memory —Givos Pie G5" Write at ence for full descrip’ oe | Tame. Ase ey Am abseluts relieving and Arter. sive BATTLES OF TH HISTORY FROM THE BATTLE-FIELD. Shows he AGrand tr gle Con: dnstr Maps sad Fi and terme. Address J. ot M SS hildren. notes & st Fs f Without inj: for Rheumatism Pain in § urns, Galls, &c. An Instantaneous Paine ng Remedy. eure Sprains, Campaign

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