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e Mo. Pacific R. ti ; & SOUTHERN BRANCH. Bone Butler daily as follov 1* GOING NORTH. s (daily) - 5 Express - 3 SS Soition Freight 2 MM. | GOING SOUTH. ! daily bares aily ) exas Express --- ‘e y tion Freight- nger trains make direct con- ist St. Louis and all points east pg all points south, Colorado, } ie and all points west and north- | 4 for rates and other intormation FE. X. CARNES, Agent. ‘secret Societies. MASONIC. : wer Lodge, No. 254, meets the first in each month. “pi Chapter Royal Arch Masons, | ; meets second Thursday in each th YY ite Commandery Knights Templar first Tuesday in each month. 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. gues Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- Encampment No. 76 meets the jand ath Wednesdays in each month — / Lawyers: i ¥ <,B, LASHBROOK. \SHROOK & SMITH, Attorne jlawButler, Mo. Will practice THOS. 1. SMITH. in of Bates and adjuining coun- is Collections promptly attended to ed Taxes d tor Non-resid front room over Bates coun jal Bank. 1 §, FRANCISCO. ANCISCO BROS. Attorneys at Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in courts of Bates and = adjoining jaties. Prompt attention given to col s & Gloriu 2Q KANCISCO. \ | | & AB ARKINSO? (ATHY, A ES torneys at Law, Butler, Mo. Office | Law, Bu te cases in ouri, and do ger collecting business. V.BROWN, Notary Publ , contra: ing the ack Residence west s Main street. Office uP si stside of Public Sqaare; first of OL louse. L,RICE, M.D., Eclectic Physi- cian and Surgeon. All calls promp ended to. Office up stairs ly’s Drug Store. and Surgeon. room | over € “ i call oswered at oflice day or ni fet one communication to all parts of th iy, Specialattention given to temale i C. BOULWARE, F and « Surgeon. orth side squar ler, Mo. Diseasesof wemen and chi aspecialty. { F.RENICK, M. D., Physic geon and Obstitrician. Of sdesqvare, over Levy's store. Residence | ‘ott sireets. a hy $21 ditic comer Main and Ft. $ wed From last week.) Cases are Made. one of t t; and Boss’ Gold Watch Cu ators. DB: ne by the t is euspended 2 Besure Boru crow & 8 “sare stamped in the cap of the watch Jewelers are very cautious about en- Sing anerticle unless they not only know | “itis good, but that the character of “manufacturers is such that the quality the goods will be kept fully up to standard. Witiiamsporr, Pa., Feb. 13, 1885. Gold Watch’ Cases go like hot ‘ommend them; they sell themsselves, "Ono of lem ; they ives. Re of Sstomershas had a James Boss* Gold Watch Case EJ cor ag it is as goodasever. With ths ers can al the new and improved cases, which Susse T. Lartu, Jeweler. Ths New Brunswick, W.J., Jan. 8, 1883. ey im No. 9356, known asthe ean ae came into my possession about 185: ‘xen in use since that time, and is stil in good ‘The movement is theone which wasin the t it, and its condition shows that ‘out-worn the movement, whi o _ ‘Martin A. HowsLr, wee. Directors N.J.R. R. & Trans. Co ch is e Watch Cases are made. (To be Continued.) REYNOLDS & SCHWEN v& Shoe Makers | BUTLER, MO. / ‘ ae ape with u c: onl; { for all ac $ tor instruction, and by the 9.G.cz PILOT GROVE COLLECIATE INSTITUTE, PILOT CROVE, COOPER CO., MO. c. B. AND W. P. JOHNSON, Principals. = bar Military disci Uy we i @ under the « care of pre and assistant fe | male teachers- parental care, for male students. Stringent rules, thorough discipline, co hensive instruction and econo: Situated on the M., K.& T Sedalia and Boonville. For further information address “=. B. JOHNS } cre $11,950 iN CASH GIVEN AWAY To the SMOKERS of Blackweli’s Genuine Bull Durham Smok- | ing Tobacco. The genuine has picture of | BULL on every packa = or a For particulars see our next announcement. »g revolvers, KNOW THYSELF, Aen GREAT MEDICAL WORK OY MAM line in| man, errors’ of oid miseries resulting from indiscretion or A book tor everv m and old. [eon one ot v by the Ar years is such as ba fellto the lot ot any pages, bound ir beaut embossed covers, full gilt, be a finer work in every sense—mechani- cal, literary and professionai—than anv other work sold in this country tor $2 50 or the money will be retunded in every instance. Price only $1 00 by mail, post paid. Illustrative sample 6 cents. Send now. Gold medal awarded the author by the National Medical Associa- tion, to the officers of which he reters, This book shoula be read by the young flicted for {t will benefit all—London Lan- reliet. cet. There is no member of society to whom this book will not be useful, » Parent, guardian, instructor rgvman-—Argonaut. Address the Peabody e, or Dr. W. H r Street, Boston, sidered on all di experience. Chronic an have baffled the whether | or hiedicine Insti Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch be con- nd | } | were dying around them.” ; tosmo GLEANINGS. The Yokohama bank will establish a branch in New York. Trade between the United States and Australia is growing rapidly. Art nw were known at Thebes 2,000 years before the Christian era. Mary Anderson, after Lotta, is the althiest woman in her profession. Pomegranates are being cultivated in yield $700 per acre. Amos Perkins, at the age of ninety four, is Treasurer of the town of Uni N. H. ‘ are for sale in fact the atten- lion of called. has written dur reer of thirty-five newspaper essays. oung women of Schenectady olved to girleott any young t smokes or goes out of the neatre between the acts. The United States is now the the world, the in- having been 70 per nd 188%). an antidote for ly when the pa. itodrink and _ his saturated with alcohol. ys of spelling the name of Wiclif than of Shakspeare. are fou in hor- ing from W to Guyeo- cent. between 1870 id to Alcohol is s es, Tang: clivus. Whenever a person is killedona | railway in Mexico the ambitious au- thorities arrest the engineer and put him in prison, especially if he is an American. unlike those nds, are in- reasing. In have increased they Tribur to show still res publishes at poiyga- frequent in exertions are made to ke Over 609 lives we xplosions in th year. Ni led outright, ep therm ost by boiler y during the persons y of the 0 re- i known in 6 ads, jer hes mers now ¢ r sparrows’ and counties. Of tk es. out it eland Det One hundred the Potomac st ot tne relong into as acres. acres of south and > will be con- idid park of Vi made public that Queen fond of fried hominy not ton 3 | gre « nd was found by the sexion turee months later | planting s ss seed on the mound | and haste nation with | tno time rn from her t An Eng the first introd freeing that “during cholera into yn of St. Peters in 18322 hichly-respect- | able firm of iron foun . employing 500 men, informed them that all those | who would not take 2 texspoonful of eharcoal on entering the works in the morning must leave their employ. What was the consequence? They did not lose a single man, while myriads The old question whether .a smoker can tell with his eyes shut if a cigar is lighted or not is revived by a state- ment in the London Grapiic that there are scarcely any smokers among the blind. Soldiers and sailors who lose their sight in action sometimes continue ke for 2 little while, but, as a rule, they soon give up the habit. They say it gives them no pleasure when they cannnt see the smo. and that they cannot taste smoke unless they see it. were | ted a great | ¢ cents { | | | u reclaimed. | | | | 1 { } i : | den seed {ers at New Lebanon. | vented metallic Bouillon. Titus Munson Coan writes to Harper's Weekly that in his opinion Americans do not make enough use of liquids, and especially of soups, in their diet. We live ina dry atmosphere, we have 8 withering summer climate, and, except forthe iced water that we consume during the hot weather, we who es- pecially need liquid foods use less of them than any other people in Christen- dom. ps are used free parts of Europe. in many = The Germans are drinkers of b he Engl of beer and tea, th nd choco- late; bu has no national beverage except during the dog-days, and then he does not pour down enough st the year round. y ional s lant, cannot be called a true beverag certainly it cannot be imbibed at the What, of a com- in special need iquid diet? One d_ especially, and that Except in the citi cans eat very little soup. good bouillon, or pot au feu, the most economical and appetizing of foods, is what we should use far do. “Itis the outcom | Radcliffe, “of ages of people who have had a sy genius for cookery. The animal and vegeta- ble ingredients are lended that the flavor of no one art ; predominant. The bouill or almost all, of the s of those in- gredients w necessary for ti: t oO sue-forming or purposes and for } force production."’ A good pot au feu ; with bread i lent and sufficient | meal, provi s that the pot au | feu is made good piece of meat. A good bouilion may indeed be made from a touch piece, but what remains behind will be innutritious and indi- gestibie, its virtues having gone into the soup. I have remarked in French families that the hous ers provid- ed good meat forthe pot au feu, and, i tho boil it two er three hours, j they take care not to extract its vir- i by too much boiling, so -neat, is good served with a > on ndered the came first color, $s were even All hands sad predicament ced a por- nd the re- } an ion of the party mainder with st nd stones put the maddened animal to flight, and the treed young man slid down and clothed re for break- | himself. He promised to put up the e fallen in- je ars and ice cr eam if the party ave the following on | Would not tell the joke on him. Of “Hominy fried, Her fee rse they will keep ‘mum.’ —Madi- q son (Wis.) Democrat. i ———>*§ y Seen sect known as the ‘Skaking ime esi | >? deserve credit for many use- Sees eo ons. More than half a cen- tury ago they first originated the dry- ins of sweet corn for food, and they first raised, papered, and vended gar- sin the present style. They began the broom-corn business. The first buzz-saw was made by the Shak- The Shakers in- first made of pens, brass and silv $$ __—_ To Be Un-American Is Intolerable. should send his boy to the West to be educated, where life was very lively, very American, says the Boston Globe. | life is very lively. In fact, the distil guishing feature of Western life is its spontaneity. e One cannot pick up a Western paper without finding an account of some sprightly affair closing in this way: ‘‘If the Villain is eaught he will surely be lynched.” hoes Another very common thing is the article ending thus: ‘“Ihe whole coun- j try is aroused, and the murderer can hardly fail to meet the fate of his un- fortunate victim.”’ parties of which the finale is: | wretch was hung toa convenient tree and his carcass was riddled with bul- lets.”’ z | A feature of this very American | Western life, asone gathers from the enterprising local journals, is the af- circular candid- printing in r to that done in 1 printers’ y is superi great compe- attempts to account for ; fairs where ‘‘the ens brook no op- ion, and it is doubtful if the walls able to preserve this form from a violent pos of the jail are in human A well-known writer has said that he | It is indeed noticeable that Western | tin- | A GIFT VALUED AT $95, A beautiful imported moss rose ch 1a tea set will be en away with the person drawing the lucky num- he Tea Set consists of 56 pieces, Baking Poy UI even eae Se me 4 2 ; Ss equal in qualitvty to the estin the market. No Humbe rr cS SSA Call and see it. ‘I. D. Rafter. THE CASADAY SULKY PLOW Will plow in hard ground where all others fail MC FARLANL BROS. MMLA HCIS CANNOT CHOKE A HOR STOC IN ? > S 9 i m7 se + HARNESS & McFARLAND BROS “ ISUOH FH! al WY “ONT Spooner Patent Collar! —PREVENTS CHAFING 4 i Adjusts itselt to any Horse’s Neck, has two Rows of strtch- One reads often of the lively little | “The | ing, will hold Hames in place better t nany other collar, WSE E. C Lae ee rla Walton & Tucker Land Mortgage Co, "EU Ro BH E2Be = bf