The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 4, 1885, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VOL. VIT. JEFF DAVIS PATRIOTIS pe What Bradley T. Johnson Says of the Legal Status of the Con federate Chiet. -owe- of Courtland street, yesterday, ! found two closed doors > nim. the wrong apparently fr “Come in.* he Into the room Dour 1 - und sat reporter, at the reporter @ etal Johnson, Je said General t alacrity, *‘2 with “In Davis In his service > General Johnson then, mu and force, said: my opinion, Mr. Jeffe statesman and a patriot. spirit rson is a 7 long of life, devoted to the people, he has alw been and above cr While opin- | vions differ as to wisdom of his administration of the affairs of tl confederate states while president, no min can question the principles he had maintained «fl his life or the cause ne had espoused. his fidelity to . The ostracism of Mr. Dayis by dis- franchisement twenty years atter the war ts a disgrace to the people who msist upon continuing He was neither conspirator nor traitor, and t have the best of re: that the federal admnnistration afraid to bring to the test sons tor asserting was the ques- al The principles laid down by the supreme court of the United States, a decisions, established tions : wy ton of treason by determination. trial or judi in long series of | two proposi- - That in a civil war citizens who take sides with either party | cannot afterwerds be conyicted of This old as the statute of treasons. 3, treason by civil courts. is as] That the war between the; States was a civil war, with all the Consequences to its adherents War inter gentes. War w: ot Therefore, Sa war between the s' and its supporters were not trattors. | Inthe opinion ot Chief Justice Chase, | this was admitted establi here by the third section of the four- teenth amendment to the constitu—/ tion of the United States, which was a declaration f ates, and yall the states that Participants in the civil war should be punished by disfranchisement, and in no ether way. The recent attack on Mr. Davis was ar decent attempt by the perpetrators disgraceful to t of hemselyes—to stir up of sectional hate for a miser an OSE pur Was unp: ex-confederates are as much devoted to the umon under the toliberty, toy constitution, publican institutions and to de who supp inciples as . tied the unron fe “BaNY Dave distinctly renor BUTLER, DIAMONDS FOR DRILE uation of the Apparatus by Which Accomplished. An »ck Boring comparati heap now ek-drill manufacturer said to n reporter, ‘tand the diam in the dia- ' mond drill cost as much as they did.” > genuine diamonds used in these | diamond-set bit is hollow. , imbedded in it, so that the edge ealled diamond l has an extreme- e tie. reporter asked. re used in the drills. yo one and two carat sent they cost about § are in the rough. The It is a steel stone acarat. They thimble, having three rows in one the rows row project from its face, while edges of those in the other two project from the outer and aphery respectively. The diamonds of the first-mentioned row cut the path of the drill in its progress, while forward | those on the outer and inner periphery of the tool enlarge the cavity **How are the diarmonds set in the The bit is of soft steel, in which holes are drilled. After the diamonds vare fitted the metal is hammered against them so tk they remain tirm.” | so that the steel does minute. | mounted on an upright » tu Do the diamonds wear out? Their edges which come in contact with the rock get 2 little smooth, and and then they are taken out reset, so that a fresh edge is presented “Have all the hollow drills three rows of diamonds?” No. Some have only one row, j these are not very large. The dia- monds stand out from the steel se tting. not come tact with the rock.” «How are the diamond drills work- ed . any- “By a rapid rotation varying here from 400 to 1,000 revolutions a There are different machines used for different kinds ofdrilling. For deep boring a machine with a double oscillating cylinder engine used or horizontal tubular boiler. The machine has a serew shaft made of heavy hydraulic ing from tive to seven feet in length, with a deep screw cut in the outside. The shaft also carries a spline, by which it is feathered to a lower sleeve This gear is double, and connec its upper teeth with beveled dri gear, and by its low teeth with are lease gear, which is a friction gear, and is fitted to the lower end of the feed shaft, tothe top of which a gear is feathered, fitting to the upper gear of the screw shaft, which has one or more teeth less than the upper gear on the feed shaft, whereby a differential feed is produced. This friction gear is at- shaft tached to the bottom of the feed by a friction nut, producing aco} differential and fractional feed. renders the drill perfectly sensitive to the ¢ eter of the work through which it is ps : ning a The drill rod throu iform ressure weld tu aft and the bottom of ywer end of thi is screwed, *huck To the rod the is aw be h swive is tubu and te which e¢ ama-pump. bit he pper anection You can to | their pins inner per- ; | foaming, but } A RUSH OF WATE The Tides of Fundy—Causes of the Great IRS. MISSOURI. WEDNE and river =, small about ar pen to st you wou and the ers of suc upon t ere a male wide and extend- ing as far as the eye can reach, and as some one refers te the river you put on nd discover in the center 1 of despond a narrow, out two feet wid iver, t must be. as he re brid . two of them, but so wofully long and shaky on and high they appear like the very ghosts biédges on stilts. From above, sm appears shelved and cavernous The sides seem to grade sof red and gray mud, aly the pan of bottom rock Avon river and if you ha = You stand mud asse, slot this trickling stream, Can this be the of until tir wched. ws. expected, re expensive dykes, that are reared to ep the water from the =e in the back country: then again vessels lie at the docks of this inland town, high and | is | pseudo river j s here | above the stream | the ; dry, miles and miles from water deep | enough to float them. Do we wait an hour or so, all this will be changed. We first notice the silvery thread of water stop in its course, then the water is seen to flow up stream, and if you turn your head for a few find upon again looking that the silvery thread has grown to a stream fifty feet wide. Twenty minntes later it a raging flood, as wide as the Schuylkill, rushing, and boiling, waves that break against ever pushing on, as if propelled by some mysterious force. In this sudden rush of the waters antmals are often caught; pigs that have wandered out into the mud are overcome by the onward rollers, and fowl have been seen floated away on the waves, cued, perhaps, far up the stream, thirty feet higher than the spot where they were taken up. Flocks quently follow the tidal wave, or bore, as it is called, feeding upon the fish that are cast us the tide goes out. Why the waves should be so hi coming in explained in different ways. One theory is that it is formed by the tidal current rushi nst the rrent of the riv uctions of ht that tend is ae zon . China, a: x and a man ix speed to of birds fre- | minutes you | rising in | each other, | surrounded and | to be res- | ashore, and catching them | t was foun wide and two of charcoal. is about twe « wn u ble for sh at the side or i in “ks. ippe fi The « tion with loc eoc ar! ple are nt as you go ne and when you reach the n the lengt I have no doubt a ring of as deep, containi r of however. for to DAY liamet es tive on the ske MARCH feet ng bits bones t eats this, om of the mor were found in a th ntiful s ey ap 3 lose: take rt the 1, about the e ery hair he top of the ring rt 3 iddle, it an h. We no longer ; you re- member when it was quite the custom to cut a man’s rin a semi-circle hind and then shave his neck up to the poin t where the hair beg: is & pernicious custom. hair grow in stiff bristles down shoulders, and if Ishave a nto It n the chances are I shall have always. practiced last hair, is no longer in proper to brus: the head forward over the ears. The fashion young men, particularly office r, of bangi year h the which style rat th It the to the eck once to do it so many boys, ing their nor is it e sides of The grow. nakes majority of very fashionable customers now part their hair in the middle, so near it that there difference, and that the: from the forehead on also brush it back from the ears. is no brus either or telling the h it side, back and But the one particular point of all istokeep all that part of the hair which shows under your hat clipped close to the head; on the top of your head it may be as long as you choose. The locks straggling around the collar are away out of style.’ “What about the French which so many dressing the h copied | “That was bo: nd clerks method of men run to death by the office and so had to be given up. The English model is now the one we ali follow. It strikes me that the average American has no dearer ambi- tion just now than to present the ap- | a 3 pearance of York Sun. Henry A. “Wise was one of the America has produced. an like a telegraph, write letters T hawe ty noted the w tr 4 the most clog son John does n comy fine Englishmen.’ brig! He chew tob: at thesame time. chewer, and gy times a plug he ition. writer, of tm \ Wise and Joe Brown. htest men could talk 0 ad He was hour. of twen- nopolized o- Are Beir AGT uu BEFORE ave you I] if 3 4 a i i ; § i EXTRA INDUCEMENTS Offe red MOD OEE SL MY RSET IOI i ot RECEIVING were Money 4 t Oo Sce Gur PRICES BEFORE BUYING. CALL AND SEE US, J. M. MeKIBBEN. REET TA LY Be EA ES NT Trustee’s Deed. Whereas, W. D- Craig, his wife, by their certair trust, bearing date A ast) toth, duly recorded in the recorde office ot Bates county, Missouri, in Book No. 23 » 543,conveyed to the undersigned Craig and Susan J. deed ot 1882, the following described real es- tate, situate. lying and being in the county of Bates, state of Missouri, to-wit: orthwest quarter of 32), township torty , containing The east half of the section thirty-two (40) of range thirty-two ( ighty acres more or less, in trust, how- ever, for the following purposes: Ia tot one certs in said deed of trust ereas, said note unpaid. Now, trust to secure the promissory note, tully described; 4 is past due and remains paymen ] nd, ¥ theretcre,at the request of the legal holder ot said note, and by virtue of the authori ty in me vested by ms of d deed of trust, I will, Wednesday, March 4th, 1555, tween the hours of nine forenoon and five noon of that day, at tt ot the court house, in county ot Ba nd sti on clock in t t tront doo; ty of Butler, ot Missouri, sh in hand the and this hereot inter- o'clock tes, notice descr: as may be necessary to p. est and costs Notice of F Notice is hereby g and others interested Be erlin to make final ee eee t next term of the Probate Court, in Bates counts Missouri to be held at Butler, on th day ¢ February, 1885- J.-M, C ERLIN LOOK HERE, FARMEF eee ALBRAN’! WEEKLY MISSOURI REPUBLICAN amece to Get Vatuable f Articles for bur action of their Value: er rticle in the Following t Guaranteed as Represented the Old Reliable Missouri ate lican. the Wee kly Missouri Re ublican rice tion ot which i with the named Ww wich, reliable manutac pany, espec an, and is se 1ail in a satin-lined ¢ ot the watch is $3 Water bur Miss: to subscribe the r lar pric can, for th ce of the ehly ewing Machi arranted tor five years. This machine is fully equal toit not better than similar me- at have been se over try for trom $35 o $18 and Weekly for one yezr thrown i With the Tr-W xf year it is $20. d Mechani rth of tools for 52 Ther

Other pages from this issue: