The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 6, 1886, Page 3

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Table Mo. Pacific R. R (LexincToN & SouTHERN BRANCH.) ncing Sunday,*May toth, and further notice, trains will leave as follows: GOING NORTH. —Texas Express... No een.C. Express... o$t52 AM “ 133-Accommodation.- +1330 PM GOING SOUTH. —Texas Express. 4PM ie, } K.C. Express 5AM “ jgo—Accommodation. <AM ‘Ail passen, ertrains make direct con- gation for St. Louis and all points east tas and all points south, Colorado, ornia and all points west and north- For rates and other intormation ly to I. Lisk, Agent. Secret Societies. SS ——__—— MASONIC. futler Lodge, No. 254, meets the first sour in each month. wmf Chapter Royal Arch Masons, Ho. 76, meets second Thursday in each Gouley Commandery Knights Templar eis the first Tuesday in each month. 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- night. s tler Encampment No. 76 meets the gdand ath Wednesdays in each month ome Lawyers. . D. PARKINSON, Attorney at aw, Uffice West side square, over Landown’s Drug Store. Pere .S. FRANCISCO. S. P. Francisco, NCISCO BROS. Attorneys at Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in me [ise courts of Bates and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to col- lections. Office over Wright & Glorius’ hardware store. 29 Physic aaas.j DRS. RENICK & BOYD Physicians and Surgeons, BUTLER, MO. cowe OFFICE: SIDE SQUARE, OVER LEVY’S. | , } c. Renick’s residence Main and Fort it streets, Dr. Boyd’s residence, Fulton Street, north C! P. church, L, RICE, M.D., Eclectic Physi- cian and Surgeon. All calls prompt- lyattended to. Office up stairs Morris’ Drug Store. over J M.Curisty, W.H. BaLLarp, DRS, CHRISTY & BALLARD, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, Ofice, tront room over P. O. All calls Mwered at oflice day or night. Tele- phone communication to all parts ot the tity. Specialattention given to temale diseases, T C. BOULWARE, Physician and ¢ Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- ten a specialty. PUTLER } ACADEMY batanber 7, 05 For Particulars Address J.M.:NAYLOR, ~ Butler, Bates County, Mo. ser} dit PATENTS! —__ + o - —_—_ Wm. @. HENDERSON, INTENT ATTORNEY AND SOLICITOR, QOFFICEs, 925 F STREET, , P.U.Box 50, washington,D. U. 4 - of the Examining Corps, U.S.Patent a ‘ices before the Patent ice, U. ba ne Court and the Federal Courts." inions given as to scope, valinity, and in- Ment of patents. Information cheerfully Promptly furnished. Hand Book on{Patents rences annexed, FREE. sady. es | nit STORY_OF MY y ot Ge SHEC & MOMARIN, Cincinnati, O BUTLER WOOLEN MILLS an sons of 7:55PM) & Bring 1n your Wool. ploved Having em- O. BRANDT, A man of 35 years experience i the business and recently Fi man ot the Joplin Woolen to superintend the Butler Woolen Mills, would to the Wool Growers ot Bates and surrounding counti that we are about ready fo ness. We will do all kind: CUSTOM WORK. Snch as | ROLL CARDING§ * CARDING & SPINING AND WEAVING, iu the very best of order and guarantee satistaclion. Work shipped from a dis- tance will be received at the depot and prompt attention given to its return. Market price paid tor Tub Washed Wool. 25 tf Butler, Mo. May 19, 1889 J. FISHER, POULTRY 1 am permanently located in Butler and am prepared to purchase and HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH CHICKENS, TUSKEYS, DUCKS, &C. And I want an4 will take all that be brought to me. can APPLES WANTED Can be tound at Bennett, Wheeler & Co’s store. HAND ED pick jJames Smith. Cured with or pain, 25 yrs ie diseases. ANCER Book sent free. Permanently ll on or address Drs. CARTER & RAMSAY, 1114 Main S1., Kansas City, Mo. -Im T W. SILVERS, e ATTORNEY : LAW Will practice in Bates and adjoining counties, in the Appellate Court at Kansas ity, andin the Supreme Court at Jetfer- son City. ge Orrice North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s. 3itt W W. GRAVES, Notary -:- Public.’ Office with Judge John D. Parkinson, west side square, Butler, Mo. | Soe | MONEY! MONE os Parties wanting to borrow money on Farms remember Ist. That we can lend money cheaper than anybody. 2nd. In any sum from $100 to $10,000, and on time from six months to five years. Srd. Interest and Principal can be made pay- able at any day and interest stopped. 4th. Have almost a million dollars already loaned and doing a larger brsiness than ever. Sth. We keep mone have good seeur!|) : have to wait. and to loan so if you clear titles yon don’t 6th. We have two sets of Abstract books made by different parties and make Abstract of Titles by one set and compare with the other and can thus make Abstract of titles that ar correct and we will stand responsib solutely for them. ith. Have been here along time and expect to stay awhile longer. Sth. Make loans with or without Commis Sth. Invite you to come and see us and ourterms, rates and etc. explained to you befe making application elsewhere Bank, Opera House Block, Butler, Mo. | loth Our office is with the Butler National hurts and many sorts of ails of | realize the dangers of European man and beast need a cooling | lotion. Mustang Liniment. THLE HORNS. CHAS. CENNEY At Old*Stand, East Side Square. NEW-GOODS Fresh and Nice and Cc thing in the &ROCERY And Provision Line. COUNTRY PRODUCE’. Of allfkinds wanted4 COME AND SEE ME Chas. RAE PiLLO r Headache, Bilious: ts, Indigestion. Mild but effective. t@" SOLD BY DRUGGISTS, BALSAM ar favorite fo: R 2 > The best Cough Cure you can use, And the best preventive known for Consumption. It cures bodily pains, and all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Kidtieys, Urinary Organs and mplaints. The feeble and ‘and slow! st cases recover their health by of Parker's Tosic, but delay is dan- it in time. Sold by all Drugzists in $1.00. ‘i — HIN The safest, surest, quickest and best cure Bunions, Warts, Moles, Callouses,&c. Hinders their fur- thergrowth. Stopsailpain. Givesnotrouble. Makes the ndercorns cures when everything wrists at Lie. H1scox &Co.,N, ¥ feet comfortable. DR, HENDERS 606 & 608 WranootTE ST., CITY, Regular Graduate in Medicine. 17 ‘12 in Chicago. Authorized to treat all Diseases, Special ines. from # distance treated by mail. Mi canes sent everywhere free from gaze or break ‘Consultation free and confidential, od Case and send for terms. ne eal RHEU MATIS faci TURKISH for both sexes, illust’d, sent seale+ RHEUMATIC CUPE. a : pain in joints ; Cure completed in 5to Send Dr. Henderson, PATTERNS OF ANY SIZE. UNPARALLELED OFFER! EMOREST’S THE BES Of all the Magazines. | Illustrated with Original Steel Engrav- ings, Photogracures and Gil Pictures. Each copy of **Demorest’s Monthly Magazine,” com. 1Ss4, w Cou; nt number with Patt Denney. is, Liver Come PARKER’S DERCORNS ON. , MO. yrapractica Te 7daye. z i for Circulars. Call, orad. jasirsse. Gt panda St Kasco pon ut patterns, of sizes iption early, and secure | DANGERS OF TRAVEL. | Snares That are Set for Unprotected Young Men. | oe » Sept. 1 2 3-—Amenicans litule summer travel, so far as concern the | unprotected and unwary young men. I do not refer to cholera, tor all land- i lords in England know that it 1s only | in France that guests are im such _| danger, and all \ tourists in France | know that cholera 1s ex/ste pas out | | side of Italy. No, the danger 1s far | worse than that, for it is tound alike at the seashore, on the mountain top jand in the private salan—or more likely, the novel-writer’s ‘conserva torv.””) From. this until danger one is never sate he is dead, for it example the case ot a handsome young American doctor, who. re- turning to Paris atter three months in Switzerland came to me pale and | | tri with query: Do} you think that just one kiss is sufli- | | cient grounds tor a suit tor breach of promise ?’’ ned, the Newspaper men are supposed to have general information on all sub- | My questioner was in earnest and | | really alarmed. “One touch of the whole world kin.’ Poor man! nature makes ‘Under this—ahem— what circumstences was is salutation given?’ I demanded, as I adjusted my eye- lasses and tricd to look stern. ‘Under nothing: | it was on top of a monntain,’ he ‘Reckless whole world, then. man! In view of the} The penalty 1s -—but first, have vou ever proposed marriage ?’ ‘2 No; of 1 that ourse not, but Iam] he will propose, and I | am not sure whether I love her enough to marry her or not. I know so little about her. IT only met her here in Paris last May, and all that I know is that she is about 20 years old and 1s from Philadelphia and is said to have $25,000 in her own right.’ ‘How old are you” ‘Twenty-six.’ ‘Twenty-six, and from—’ ‘Boston.’ ‘Young man, you don’t love her enough. Drop her,’ and I wiped my glasses and re-adijusted them. Then I took a pinch of snuff. *But what if she should propose ?’ ‘Bosh!’ Qh, well; but it isn’t bosh. Iam } then as I left that jects, but, 1 contess this was a poser. | atraid I have got into a scrape, and Geneva last week, so I am nervous for myselt.’ ‘What sort of a scrape?’ I asked. ‘Why, he was almost married.’ ‘Thas 1s awful; but tell me about it. Who is the unhappy man and how did he escape? ‘He 1s a member of this last year’s graduating class of Harvard college. His parents live in Brooklyn, and he is to study law when he returns to New York. His nameisR I was stopping at the same hotel with him in Geneva, and so we became ac- quainted. He is a year older than 1; he is 27.” ‘Dear boy; but proceed.’ ‘Well, last Monday he came to my room at the hotel and was in He had PROMISED TO MARRY THIS GIRL, Wednesday, but he was afraid he did not love her enough to marry her.’ *He ought to have been sure of that betore he asked her,’ I suggest- ed wisely. ‘Oh, but he had never asked her. She proposed tohim. They were }out on the mountain together one day and they became separated from the rest of the party. There she was resting and reclining gracetully great distress them—’ ‘Wait! the sake of accuracy. 1. SNe. ne. liner shop in Panis.’ ern | -Oh,’ 1 remarked. I just helped a friend out of one in \ trying to think up some more French words, she said, in broken English: ‘Well, you—ar—going—to me, are you marry not?) West ce pas? He was so surprised he did not know | what else to say, so he said yes. Then she ordered her trousseau and the wedding was to occur last Wed- nesday, but I told him I guessed they had set a trap for him and I advised him to skip, even though the preach- i er was engaged and the guests imvi- ted. So, on ‘Tuesday atternoon, be placed letters in my hands, one to the affianced and one to her mother. He told her he did not love her enough to marry her, but offered to pay anv sum they wanted for his re- lease. I went to the station with see him off and then waited a while to let him get well away be- him to tnghtens even medica! men, as far | fore I delivered the letters. I had | what I wanted to say to you is this: never met the young lady and I tell you it was not a very enviable task to carry her that letter, but I did it. Well, sir, while they were in the act | | ot reading those letters, in my pres ence, and receiving a telegram from him saying he had changed his mind and was coming back on the next train. You can imagine how I telt house. came back there and agreed to marry her next day and | was invited to the wedding but next morning the cere- mony was postponed from 10 0’clock until noon and then just before noon | I his engagement ring and he told me SHE HAD BROKEN THE It how ie felt tor when T was hiving in Vienna a Germ me saw him and he was not wearing INGAGEMENT Wis narrow escape. IT know in girl and it it had) not proposed to heen for my | | mother IT might have married her. 1 had such dithculty in getting out o that that I do not want to get into ‘But you exaggerate the danger,’ i] any more such troubles.’ | | | I said, to console him. ‘Oh, I This Philadelphia girl assumed to be | angry with | | do not know about that. | j me whea I kiss then letters, ed her, and since she has written me | several and in one she re- | terred to the kiss and said that if she had been a German girl instead ot that the kiss have been equivalent to addressing an American would her in the second person singular, and,’ (and the poor chattered in fright), ‘and you know | man’s teeth | in Germany a man neyer addresses a lady second person singular unless | they are engaged.” BESVAL. Ss he Was an Expert. One of the conductors on the ove land road tells of a queer customer that he had for a passenger the other day. The er of middle age, who had been in the west long enough to get a pretty good :dea of that country, and he was eastward bound, not for the purpose ot settling down, but to secure a wife, he having picked one out by letter, as he said when speak- ing on the subject. “You see,’’ he told the conductor in one of their confidential conver- sations, ‘the west is no place for an Thad one of that kind. In fact that was the reason [ happened to go west. I’d been tarming in Connecticut for a good many years, ever since I was a boy. and the wife ot a friend of mine and I got to smiling on each other, and first thing I knew she was suggesting that we skip for the west. She had some money of her own and was a smart woman, and asI had always hankered after a little western ad- venture I concluded tojoin in. Now, | stranger, to tell you the truth, I’ve man was a New England- eloping woman. on a grassy knoll, looking up at the \ to get a farm som * ‘ clouds—as he related to me—and | down, but she worl’ Was this silent girl from | madam’s he She is a French gir; | she 1s from Paris—keeps a little mil- had more adventure than I counted jon. Inghe first place, the woman’s Well he | | mister, she had lit out with a colonel before I knew it. They got married, too.- Well. I didn’t haye much bus® ness on han, and I thought I'd just Sol followed. When il caught them, in Helena, what do you suppose she said to me? She Said, chase them. aid she: thie *Qou are good enough to elope | with trom Connecticut, but you are small potatoes and few in a hill out j here. I'm only taking advantage af | the opportunites which a new and growing country offers.’ “‘After that [lett her alone. You see, she was just cute enough to see | that, bemg on the ground, she could marry in great shape it she wanted | to, and so she threw me overboard. | She’s nich now, and will make a big | splurge in the east some day. But ' Don't bring any eloping women out here. It they elope once, they’ll do it again, and there’s altogether too big a premium: on them in this’ see - (tion, The woman I am | going back atter now is 41 years old, has never been married, and has taught a Sunday-school class thirty | years.—Cheyenne Letter. young A Man’s Strange Calling. | I was sitting im my rooms ot oae of the best clubs in N. Y. one night when one who was so richly dress- | ed that he was a little over-dressed, ; entered and seated himselt at a table He joined in the club and ordered two ; in a group of his acquaintances. | bottles of cham He called tor an old and popular brand of wine, and gave his trends a royal No sooner did he his lips to the wine, however, than he coughed himseli almost into a pagne tor the party. toast. hinmaselt touch fit, dashed the wine glass and all to the floor, and made a great how-de-do for afew minutes. Or in uproar to know the cause of the trouble. The man about town final- ly composed himself and said: “It’s that beastly wine, boys. I don’t know how many warnings I’ve re- ceived never to buy that brand again, and L never will.’* course the whole club room was Otber wine was brought out and drank, A tew minutes later I let the club with my trend, who is am old club man. When he reached the sidewalk my companion said: ‘Why, that 1s getting to be an old trick now. That fellow is an agent for the kind of wine he called tor last. Hus business is to get the club men drinking that wine, and no amount of money is spared to make him successtul m doing so. He probably spends $10,000 a year out- side of fis satary, but IT could name four men .n this city who would be wortn $100,000 apiece to a house.” wine ‘By doing as that man has done | to-night?" I asked. Not at all. Jt these four men y | could name would agree to order one special brand ot wine for one year jand drink no other, all swelldom would be drinking it in halt that time.’—Chicago Herald. Boonville, Mo., Sept. 27.—An incident of faithfulness to a trust has come to light that is a rartv. In 1855 Dr. C. L. Loomis, Presbyte- rian minister, left Boonville for the Corsican mission, leaving some old accounts with Dr. William H. Trigg tor collection. The accounts were collected and the money put at in- terest. Dr. Loomis disappeared and no trace could be found of him until 18758. He was notified of the cash to his credit but refused it, at the same time giving $200 to the Boon- ville Presbyterian church. He again disappeared and was not heard of again until Jast sprmg, when he was located on a small tarm in Connece | husband got on our trail and clung i to it for all of one winter, and in the ‘next place I lost the woman. | “When we got out here I wanted settle We ere and n't do it. then, after a long silence between | went to Idaho prospecting, and be-! | fore we had been there a month the didn’t take any woman long to find it out. While I was only a pla:n sort ot farmer man, she pretty soon discovered that there were judges, ad began to swell. Wo-| Brooklyn or Boston?’ I asked for men are very scarce up there, and it} j tieut. Dr. Trigg sent his son there j and pursuaded the now almost desti- | tute man to ac@ept $7,500 which had | accumulated on $300 worth of bad i debts lett behind 39 years azo. Good Results in Every Case- | D. A, Bradford, wholesale paper deaicr of Chattanooga, Tenn., writes that he was seriously afilicted with a severe cold | that settled on nis lungs: had tried many bh remedies outbenefit, Being induced to try Dr. Ki New Discovery tor Con- umption. did soand was entirely cured Since which time | by use of a tew bottles | he has used it in his tare | and Colds with best r colonels, bonanza kings, silver-mine | experience of t | been saved by Belling Perivet Coupon and you Wonderful Disco WALTON & TUCKER iverornet_ FAMILY SCALES get fen times its value. |- +Atter a long silence, while she | owners, and big ranchers who were Tia Bed john G. Walkeoys tewtin rinigle, | Weigh oat ounce isher, 17 E.14th St. NewYork. | : , is ae Land Mortgage Co, | Wag: Dmees rauan 75 wnstoteta | watched the clouds and while he was | liable to want wives, and, by crackey, | Drug Store.

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