The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 2, 1887, Page 3

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pis Po a . ty. ; | wi practice in Bates and adjoining vity. Wotary -:- Public... w a ° nm. Office north side TE Meo. Pacitic i. a: Cworon & SOUTHERN BRANCH.) ing Sunday, May 1oth, and notice, trains will leave GOING NORTH. GOING SOUTH. Texas Express. ” C. Expres Se Accommodat! ° +93. trains make direct con- Mer St. Louis and all points east 4'gii points south, Colorado, Sia and all points west and north- ratesand other intormation , I. Lisk, Agent. 4 secret Societies. MASONIC. Lodge, No. 254, meets the first in each esrathe Chapter Royal Arch Masons, meetssecond Thursday in each Commandery Knights Templar the first Tuesday in each month. ff 1.0, 0. FELLows. at Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- Encampment No. 76 meets the and ath Wednesdays in each month Lawyers. KINSON & GRAVES, ATIORN«YS AT LAW.. Ofice West Side Square, over Lans- "5 Drug Store. Francisco. S. P. Fraycisco CISCO BROS. Attorneys at Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in courts of Bates and adjoining Prompt attention given to col- Office over Wright & Glorius’ store, 29 W, SILVERS, ORNEY : LAW és, ir.the Appellate Court »t Kansas in the Supreme Court at Jeffer- ever 1ce North Side Square, "8 zitf W. GRAVES, with Judge John D. Parkinson, square, Butler, Mo. Physicians. DRS. RENWICK & BOYD ians and Surgeons, BUTLER, MC. OFFIOE: SIDE SQUARE, OVER LEVY'S. Yaresidence| Dr. ‘a residence, and Fort | Fulton 5! orth C. P. church, (CHRISTY, CHRISTY & BALLARD, HOMOEUPATHIC W. H. BAtiarpD, ‘PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, tront room over P.O. All calls MISSING LINKS. | | Baltimore people read by gas that | | costs only 50 cents per thousand feet. | Lead pipes are said not to be affected | by eae if kept constantly filled. If alternately filled and emptied the pi are readily affected. ‘ oe MONEY! MONEY. OUGHQURE | Absolutely | Free from Opiates, Emetics a: SAFE. | D5 is Rep Star TRADE MARK. —— +0 e+ --—_ Judge Tourgee nas for the subject of | his lecture this winter, “Give Us a | Rest.” The title is exceedingly popular nd Poison. | with most lecture uudiences. ~ | The exclusive right of telling opium | on the Isthmns of Panama has been pur- chased by a Chinaman for $16,000. ‘Lhe governmentwill use the money in re- ducing the national debt. There is one post-office to every 633 people in Canada, and the Dominion has more pest-oftices to the same num- ber of people than any other country in the world. In this republic there is one post-ollice every 1,092 inhabitants. William Weightman, of Philadelphia, is considersd a tolerably weighty man financially. He is oue of the heads of the great @inine concern of that city, and has shaken about $20,000,000 out of the people. Cornell wiversity will confer no hon- orary degnes hereafter, and to become a doctor oflaws under the new rules of that institution it will be necessary for a man to Ql] who Blackstone and Chit- ty were md what Kent and Stevens wrote. It is saidthat the lazy Sultan of Mo- rocco has te most luxurious tricycle in the world. He sits cross-legged upon an embosed couch, curtained and canopied vith silk and silver and gold, while the machine is being propelled by slave labor AdmiralPorter proposes to write an- other boa as soon as his health has grown bdter. He received $30,000 bonus forhis naval history and gets « royalty of20 per cent on all the ks sold. This far he has received about $50.000 in all. Allen ‘Thorndike Rice. editor of the North Aner:can Rev ew, is a brunette. He wearssmall, black side-whiskers, is of mediun height, has a frank, open expression and very expressive eyes. He always desses neatly and is very pleas- ant and qiet in his manners. in Harisburg. Pa., recently, a 2-year- old child got hold of a bottle of whisky and drant two ounces. It then fell in- toa druiken stupor, and its life was saved wit difficulty. It came out of the stupo’ with every indication of hav- ing a trependous head, and demanded water cottinuously. The ferce law of ia, which has had the effect of keeping hogs from roaming unrestrained through the woods, a also had the effect of increasing the number of skunks in the state. Hezs are particularly fond of young skunks, and devoured many of them whm the woods were open to stock. ‘ A resident of Danbury, Ct., touched his finger recently to a well-charged electric-wire, “just for the fun of the thing,” md was instantly knocked down, aml didn’t recover for several hours. He was considerably frightened, and more’ so when told that if he had grasped the wire he would have been killed. German steamers and sailing vessels are crowding out their British competi- tors en the Chinese coast. German masters aad sailors are willing to work for much less pay than British seamen of the same class, while their steam vessels are so fitted as to be run very cheaply. ‘The consequence is that they are taking the coastwise and foreign Parties wanting to borrow money on Farms remember Ist. That we can lend money eheaper than anybody. SURE. AT DaveorrTs awp DeaLens. THE CHARLES A. VOUELER (O., BALTIMORE, ED. 2nd. In any sum from $100 to $10,000, and on time from six months to five years. 3rd. Interest and Principal can be made pay- able at any day and interest stopped. 4th. Have almost million dollars already loaned and doing a larger business than ever. Sth. We keep money on hand to loan so if you have good security and clear titles you don’t haveto wait. 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 ¢ thus make Abstract of titles that are absolutely correct and we will stand responsible for them ith. Have been here along time and expect to stay awhile longer. Brutes, ete., ote. RICE, FIFTY C! DRU AND DE. THE CHARLES 4. VOGELER CO., BALTIMORE. 8th. Make loans with or withont Commission. 9th. Invite you tocome and see us and have ourterms, rates and etc. explained to you before making application elsewhere. With Onur office is with the Butler National Bank, Opera House Block, Butler, Mo. WALTON & TUCKER Land Mortgage Co. THE HORNS: Boot & Shoe Makers BUTLER, MO. CHAS. CENNEY At Old Stand, East Side Square. NEW GOODS Fresh and Nice and Comprising every thing in the GROCERY And Provision Line. COUNTRY PRODUC Of all kines wanted. COME AND SEE ME. Dennev. | trace. Chas. A titled foreigner complains that ee __.___—._ | Americans do not understand the meth- od of address to lords. Some call one g ] CKLY of these importations plain ‘“Mr.,” + BITTERS ae Boots and Shoes made to order best of leather used. The Shop nerth side of Square. wae Oa SANORO'S {2 INVIGORATOR ‘sacure for Liver Complaints and iI!s cansed by a Torpid con- itlon of the Liver, as D: spepsia, Constipation, Bi.iousness, aundice, Neadache, Malaria, Rneamatirm.ecte, It reguiates ne bowels, ies the blood, and strengthens the system, a lavalusble FAMILY REDICINE, Thousands of Tes tmca- sale prove ita merit, Any druggist will tell you {ts reputetion THE ONLY TRUE IRON TONIC others say **Your highness,” and others “Your honor. “Your lordship” and “My lord’? are common means of ad- dress. But there are others, among the most sensible people, who say * res, sir,” or “Lum glad to know you, sir. datoffice day or night. Tele- bd at AS oeeY In Montteal, Canada, recently, a doo Sp. ramunication to all parts of bots Se lives eth Ed tor who had an account with a job pecialattention given to temale - fm Fe, Dreporsie. ‘ent DRS. FRIZELL & RICE. ;PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS AND ACCOUCHEURS. Office over their drug store on North Main street, Butler, Mo. C. BOULWARE, Physician and Te . Diseases of women ani fea a specialty. Made to Order | 4 INF SUITS. _. Inevery e price and quality Lguaranteed a fit in every cas and see me, south room Grange store. JE. TALBOTT, juare, chil- printer agreed to take his pay in work. After he hid had all the printing done that he desired there still remained a balance, und, as his wife was very sick, he decided to have some blank funeral notices struck off with her name on them. He locked them in his desk, his wife got well and found them, and now she talks of getting a divorce. A Picton (Canada) citizen has a bird of remarkable intelligence which he has taught several curious tricks. One of the tricks is to strike a match and hold it for the doctor to light his pipe. This trick it began rehearsing in the doctor's absence not long ago, dropped a match on some ioose paper on the floor, set the woodwork of a window ablaze, and the dwelling narrowly escaped destruction. The bird will be sold. What the friend of the family says: “1t is, indeed, a loveiy child, . Mrs. Yungkuple.”” Who does it look like?” “Well, its eyes resemble yours; but its mouth reminds me more of,"’ etc., etc. What he means: “Great Cesar! What a pug-nosed. flat-faced little beast! It looks more like one of the monkeys in the park than anything else I can think of —tuck. Tramp—Are you the proprietor of this = sir? a sir. Tram ill you please put me un- aati bates hard a0 yon can? Pro- prietor—Certainly—there, how's that? Tramp—That'll doa Now, what I'm pcs All attempts at counterfeiti ly ad larity. ‘De not exneriment--pet ORIGTS AL AND. * re BARTER s LIVER, PILLS Dream Book J. a ey Corects: ample tree to ‘becoming agents, ‘commotion 7 Norfsk, quick ssles Te ty gi ‘Satisfaction euarantec.. Addi OR. SCOTT, 842 Broadway, NFY YORK ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of es ° . in’ at is, don't you wan'ter goes advertising in American | £2 perma ( e dova from the tenth story.— Tid-Bils. ALND 183G 40 AINO BOVW BUY SABNNIHO AOL WVEd _ ene pak by ad Ing Abrakeman in theemploy of the nals 5 Delaware & Hudson Canal Company is ee hes = Geo. P. Rowell & Co., ta very obliging person, and thoughtful $ Newspaper Advertising Bureau, | withal. An excursion party which in- q * 10 St, New York. | cluded many young men and women, ‘ Send 10cta. for 100-Page Pamphet | recently made a trip from Albany to | ‘Emeetual. Lake re and 2s the train would 5 Pat near a tunnel, of which there are a | hy ag SEWARD A. HASELTINE, j many on the line, peietie cali a me ‘erate sont — Bz TENT TT Y x out in stentorian tones, ‘Gents, choose ‘toany = eo eae * ENT SOLICITOR & ATT’ FAT LAW, your partners for the tunnel.” —L fe. POX SPECLFIC CO. Putiads., 7. semoceatel at Wiaencten > C1 Oocemonionn i Bi. j tine, and would pass through the | Chicago, Ft. Scott & Texas RR. | , In speaking ot ‘the Chicago, Fort Scott & Texas railroad, the Macon | Times has the tollowing : { This would make an admirable | SEDALIA BEATEN, >. The Capital to Remiin as It Is. ee Jefferson City, Mo. Jan. 26.— There was it i heise! ! i quite a breeze in the es issouri, and as fine a sec- | house this morning over the capital ot country as can be found any- | removal and to-nig! sig | al and to-night the confidence =a that beamed on the tace of the Se- daha lobbyists at the Madison house har at 10 o’clock this morning has dwindled to the glimmer of a de- parted hope. An almost air Scott to line trom Alexandna would strike the important towns of Butier, county seat ot Bates county: War- rensburg, the county seat of Johnson county; Brownsville or Sweet Springs, Marshall, the county seat ot Saline county; and with a shght deviation could touch Keytesyille or Salisbury, but would most likely touch the latter place and then tollow the old M. & M. grade to Macon. As we have said, this route would be an almost air line, not varying either way more perhaps than three miles. While the A. T. & S. F. is being built with a view to making quick time, regardless of local interests, the Chicago, Fort Scott & Texas is to be built for local and general bus- iness, and to give the southwest an opening to Chicago, or to give Chicago a line to the southwest, which it does not have now since the M. K. & T. has passed into the Missouri Pacific system, a St. Louis road. Fort Scott is a railroad center of considerable unportance, and is in the heart of the very best portion of Kansas, and this new line would, in addition to opening up the southwest to Chicago, proyide a section in Missouri with railroad facilities which 1s now almost without auch accommodations. ‘The names mentioned as directors of the company are a guaranty of good faith of the originators of this proposed line, which would certainly be a valuable and paying one. Bright ard early the capital removal boomers were in the house, and many a knowing wink and many a pitying smile were exe changed between them. It was not long betore Captain Bridges ot Se- dalia called up the resolution to submit a constitutional amendment to remove the capital to Sedaha. Some parliamentry sparring and Kansas City common council ele~ quence tollowed, in which the Se- dahans got the best of it. ‘Ihe boomers evidently had their best foot toremost, and the Jeffersonians were scared. Motions to defer and table were lost with distressing regularity, and finally, after all the filibusterng methods had been exhausted, the vote on the resolution was taken, and it was lost by a vote of 64 to 71, and Jefferson City will exist for two years more. Commissioner ot Deeds for all’ the States, Mr.G. E. Reardon, Baltimore, Md., writes that he suffered for a lo tume wrth rheumatism which yielded to no treatment until he applied St. Jacobs Oil. The two series of articles, **How T was Educated’ and **Confessiona’? of members of several religious de~ nonnnations, which have attracted a good deal attention in the Forum, are to be tollowed soon by twe other series. In one of these will be presented the views of many dif- ferent schools of thought, as the Agonistic, the Evolutionist, the Positivist, as well as those ot Chrie- tian theology, Protestant and Cathe- lic, upon the question, “What 16.0 Onject of Life?* In tne othér, many of the most notable mem ot the dav will centribute instructies and interesting chapters out of the history of their own lives, under she title, “Books That Have Been Mee- tul to Me.” Ex-Congressman Weaver, Post Office Department, Washington D. C., consid- ers Red Star Cough Cure a remarkable remedial agent. It contains no danger- ous narcotics and coste but 46 cents. Proprietary Medicines. A visit to Dr. Green’s Laboratory at Woodbury, N. J., has consider- ably changed our views, and espec- ially our prejudices in regard to what are generally known as ‘Standard Patent Medicines.”? Of course we are getting to that age of life when we are forced to conclude Life itselt is a humbug, and naturally distrust anything that has not withstood long and tried experiences. Being a physician I had the curioritv toknow how such a sale of two medical prep- arations could be sustained for so many years. The perfect svstem upon which the business is conduct ed, and the pharmaceutical arrange ments for the manufacture of the two recipes with which we were made acquainted, are sufficiently convinc ing to us that the August Flower, tor dyspepsia and liver complaints, and Boschee’s German Syrup, for throat and lung troubles, were tor the complaints they are recommend- ed, most excellent remedies, and Butler ought to have a fire engine and a well organized fire company, an‘l we suggest that the young men and the old take the matter mn band, call a meeting at the court house without delay, and discuss this.alle important mutter to the city of But- ler, Should a fire break out at the present time what could be done to stay its progress? It is a serious matter when we come to think ot it, and it’s ot very little use to lock the stuble after the horse is stolen. We believe the people of this city are in favor of providing some means of protection and all that is necessary 1s for some of our enterprising esti— zens to take the matter mn handias® the end will be accomplished, Saliag only regret that in much of our practice, medical ethics prevent us trom prescribing them without mak- ing the formulas public. When we were shown the great quantity of voluntary letters having been tor warded Dr. Green, from all parts ot the country, and from all classes ot people, lawyers, ministers and doctors, giving a description of their ailments, testimonials of their cure, etc.,I feel like endorsing Dr, Green’s suggestion that the Government ac- cept such valuable formulas, and license them for general use by giying protection to the inventor the same as pateats geverally.—Copied from N. Y. Druggists’ Circular of Oct., 1886. Some years ago my mother’s health began to decline; nervous prostration ensued. She had nose ish tor tood and could not sleep, and without strength of course she could not walk without experiencing @ great fatigue. We used the ordi— nary remedies, but without any pet manent results. Stimulants would refresh for the time being, but did not build up the system. We heard of Swift’s Specitic and its tonic effects. We secured several pack- ages of the dry form—the powdered roots and herbs—and after using halt dozen packages my mother has regained her health and strength. She is more like her former selt than she has been for years. She owes her present vigorous health to Swift’s Specific. It is the best tonie I ever heard of. : Oxvanvo J. Hacwerr. Auburn, Maine, Nov. 15, 1886, Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed tree. The Switt Specific Co., Drawez 3, Atlanta, Ga. Croup, Whooping cough, soar throat, sudden colds, and the lung troubles pe- culiar to children art easily controled by romptly administrating Ayer’s Cherry Pecsat This remedy is safe to take and certain in its action. Boston should have an iflux of new blood into the journalistic field. The old city boasts ot having six editors who are cver So vears old. No lengthy advertisement is necessary “It is worth its weight in gold,” is a to bolster up Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. nm expression. But, while the val Scukgd - easily stented, the worth of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, as a blood purifie, never deprecistes. It will eradicate scrotulafrom the system when every thing else tasis. The fund tor Mrs. Logan has reached $60,000 and 1s still mat chi: on. . | E i |

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