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| The Butler Weekly Times. yOL. 1X. BUTLER, MISSOURI. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER Q, 1887. —. += NO. 49 Ellis. president; EugeneStephenson,, The regular shoot of the Butler, Heaven's last, best gift to man | ? | | vice-president; Lotta Brown, secre-/ Gun Club was held on J. A. Pat-. was woman, and man’s best gift to heethe OCULIST, | Stephen Gilbreath an Old Settler Gone | tary; Elvy Brown, tressurer; John | terson’s farm, southwest of town, on Won was the rocking chair. It is MARAE f BLOOMINGTON, {LL | A Little Girl Choaked to Death | Brown, sergeant at arms. by a Grain of Corn. DON’T cold o yours run on. You : think itis alight thing. But itmay'run her comfort of comforts. It is arest | into catarra. id tae aR oy Or for the weary woman; she rocks her | into consu Mind you Oct. 20th. Judges, Noah Nyhart, | | these Browns are no relation. It is | John Hoagland; referee. Franz Bern- iD. #fould respectfully announce that h OOS Cae ee 2 troubles away as the swinging bow} , Catarrh is disgust ng. Paeumonia is 5 Mreested in Butler tor the purpose of | or needless to say it will be carried on! hardt. Vcaststof the dust: it is 2 ree in | 2angerous. “Consumption is death it- ased Eves. Dr. Farley has A shocking accident occurred here selt. in the proper manner. | Following is the score in detail: pit ti 7 . | | bax tay piapearaareae Mca bedes We are pained to announce that | j hours of sorrow; even a creaking | atment of the eve for over thirty years zs The breathing apparatu k on last Thursday, ' rocker that driveth men mad as with ! heat:! 2 fic eee resulting in the SHOOT No. 1. hy and ciear of all obstructions ang wing made an important discovery by | death of a little three-year-old | on Wodues.lay, Oct. 26, after a brief | At 6 live birds, 30 yards rise; en- the ceaseless —— s.ceninetioes Eseenee en Panga Utherwise there is ich be cures diseased eyes witheut |g, : 3 : pi eae | - Wolan, “speak comfortably to her;” wtic and without Pain. His treat- | daughter of Thomas Hines. It} illness of a ! w moments, the spirit | trance, $2 50. of Ethel in: s, aged three years, ; daughter of Thomas Hines, passed iway to soar to the one who gave it. | She rock CE er | Albthe diseases of the-e parts, head, apa as and sews; she rock and Nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs, 1-4 | knits; she rocks and sketches. e | can be delightfully and entirety cured os rocks and does things that a man | bythe use of oschee’s German Syrup. aie can only podialiyliab, under ‘condi- | Tf ou den't know this already, thou- yet does bi y secs that the child about a week | ago was eating some dried roasting | ear corn and was told by its mother to cease doing s0, when suddenly a not injure the eye in cae but is used with satety in cases trom the smailest infant to firm age, and a Cure is guaran . His suceess in treating the. Eye ws te eee ee Patterson ... ee without parallel. Reterences at his fice, Dakota st., one plock west ot the ware, Butler, Mo. Office houis fom i a.m. tos p. m. tt. _ EB, TUCKER, DENTIsT, TLER, - MISSOURI. 4 OFFICE OPERA HOUSE. | Lawyern. Ww. BADGER LAWYER. tice in all courts. All legal business attended to. Office over Bates Co Na- jal Bank, Butler, Mo ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN.uYS AT LAW. West Side Square, over Lans- 's Drug Store. OLCOMB & SMITH, LA LER, MO. Office front room over Bates National Bank. W. SILVERS, TTORNEY : LAW turned at intervals up to Thursday when she seemed to be better. About i sympathy of the entire} yoy. ae ee | 3 o’clock-of that day, however, a viv-| neighborhood ia this their sad be-| Hagedorm... 200... 0008... 11108] leut return of the coughing seemed | reavement. | Pasoctjoat. a £ : 3 i. to go so hard with her that her More anon. Dicer. Monies divided mother picked her up and started to Ea Pie the field, a few rods distant, where Game Law. : SEES SA ot i : ”. a AAS LAM Eight live birds. $3 entrance: her husband was husking corn, ani We publish below the main pro-|qouer. .. 0111110008 succeeded in reaching him and both | visions of the game law. It is un- 11122227 108 then returned, the child dying be |j,yful to hunt within inclosure of ; L100 2 2 2 P13 fore they reached the house. It is Pee ‘ imal Sa ee supposed that a grain of corn got lodged in the wind pipe and during a spell of coughing sank lower and thus ended the little one’s life. It | was buried in the Baptist church- yard in the presence of a large crowd of citizens. Stephen Gilbreath, an old and re- spected citizen who was an old pio- neer landmark here, passed quietly away on last Saturday and was buri- ed on Sunday in the family grave. yard. Atavery early date he with his two brothers, Sims and William, settled in Bates county, Mo., coming from Ill. He accumulated quite a fortune and raised a large and re- This reminds one that death is always | fit of coughing came upon it and re- | w heart felt another at any time without permis- sion. inot less than $10. ki:led between the following dates: | October to February 1; woodcock, July 1st to January 10th; doves, | plovers and meadow larks, Ist of August to February Ist. unless a person trap or net exclusive- ly on their own premises. resident of this state is not allowed Ties divided. vaiting and may come when least | SHOOT ‘No. 2. the | Four live birds, $1 50 entrar perents have Hagedorn Ist money, 2d divided between Hurt and Patterson. sHooT No. 4. Ten clay pigeons, entrance $1: Hurt A violation incurs a fine of Game can be | Deer, from 1st of September to tne Loch of Janonyyturkoyy 26th | Napea TELE SEE LES of September to March Ist; prairie Bieter 2 : 2 : , 1 1 1 1 tno chickens, 15th of August to Febru-| 0 11-9 ary 1st; quail and pheasants 15th of | Tucker Ist money, Hagedorn and Patterson divided 2d. There were five other clay pigeon matches shot, in which “Dock” Pat- t-rson did good shooting, breaking 23 out of 30. The day's shoot closed with a pri vate match between E. A. Ewing and J. W. Tucker, in, which the latter was victorious. It is unlawful to net or trap game, A non- tions of motionless, death-like still ness; she rocks and threads a needle as calmly as though the age of mira | cles had not passed; a woman pho- tographer would sit in a rocker with a camera in her lap and placidly.phe | tograph a group of rocking woren in rockers of various gaits, The rocker is to her a nervine, a nareotic, a stimulant. It is to her all that a cigar is to a man, and a woman with a cigar and a man in a rocking chair seem equally wisfited. The rocker is a certain means of grace; be she “nad as a hornet,” five minutes of vigorous rocking tranquilizes her perturbed spirit, and by the time she has rocked herself out of breath, the gentle, forgiving cadence of the swaying chair tells you that sunlight ed cali has dispossessed the storm, and peace reigns in her loving breast. One of the first Christmas presents you buy your little girl, is a rocking chair; and the last time her grand children see her sitting up, the dear, ioving, God blessed grandina is soft ly swaying in a high-backed rocker, dreaming again of the years when her day dreams were woven in that sand- snd thousands of people can tell you. They have been cured by it and “know how it is themselves."” Bottle only 75 cents. Ask any druggist. 41 yvre ow. DORN & PIERCE—BARBEBs. Shop on North Side Square. We give special attention to Ladies and Children's hair cutting. We keep the best of Barbers, also grind scis- sors and razors. Everything first- class. All work guaranteed. Give us a call. CAL. ROBINSON, ‘BLACK-SMITHING, VINTON, MO. Having located in your midst and opened a Blacksmith and Wagon Shop, l desire to say to the citizens ef this neighborhood that I am an experienced work nan and will do First-Class Work ot all kinds wn my line, Hors: Shoeing Wagon Repairing in wood wriron, all classes of machinery repaired, plow work, etc. Give me a little rocker, now the property of the newest granddaughter. In all those years your boy has changed his toys and comforts and lounging chairs with every changing style, but your little girl has never been long out of trial and satisfaction is guaranteed. C. B. ROBINSON. to trap, net or kill deer, turkeys, quail, snipe, prairie chickens, ducks, brants, or furred animals of any kind, at any season of the year. Any violation of the law can be prosecut- ed before a justice of the peace. Parties informing shall receive half of the fine. It is the duty of every circuit judge to give the game and fish law in special charge to the a rocking chair. A home without a rocker would be like a farm without an orchard; it would still be a farm, but its crown jewel would be miss- ing. In this connection it is necessary to add that the Opera House Furni ture store always has a large stock of the “Crown Jewels.” This fall in particular we have over fifty styles ranging in price from seventy-five | cents to thirty five dollars, and s>me | There being #. goodly number of spectators present, all being anxious to.see a match between Noah Nyhart, John Hoagland and Franz Bernhardt at.5' birds. ‘Bernhatdt objected on the grounds of not having his specks, saying he couldn't see those blamed little things. The dispute was finally decided by a game of seven up, in which Bernhardt was defeated. ‘{Will practice in Bates and adjoining pe etable ienaly Shang wog ae tles, in the Appellate Court xt Kansas | Francis Gilbreath, one of the fore- aa in the Supreme Court at Jeffer- | most citizens of Bates county. In per Urrice North Side Square, over politics he was an unswerving dem- L. McBride’s. 31tf | ocrat, and ‘during the dark days of the late war, it is said, drew upon himself the opposition of his two brothers, who have differed with him in. political yiews. Stephen Gil- breath was twice married, both wives ees i" Phvasicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. grand jury. Sheriffs and constables new styles that will cure sore eyes. 4 HYSICIAN AND SURGEON, being buried before him: » For along | gre required to see that the law is Col. Ji ident of the Ki ? it Orrice—East Side Square, over | time he has been in poor health and | enforced, and are liable to a fine for pe ue ee lax Weiner’s, his death was no surprise. Hehada | failing to perform this duty. sas City and Sabine, Pass railway, i 19-1y Butver, Mo. | large heart possessed of many good 3 prenc: -maginerr~eaan cameras T DO BEAT ALL! qualities which will live long in the ; edthe News thatithe company had vr : ; f memory of those who knew him as Baek Ey Se spent too much: money already, to What a mighty sight of buggies fOR. J. M, CHRISTY, af 063 We learn from A. T. Blanton, of | even think of giving up the buildin ‘Tom. Legg fixes up, and they run as ) fi * | well as in the makeup of his children. | . : giving up 6 : A HOMOBUPATHIC as OUERES 1505 _— Marvin, of the prevalence of|of the road. He came down from slick as new. He set the tires op 7 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Round Prairie Items. ae taeamwagin in that neighborhood | Kansas City in a buggy stopping in our old buggy and did not dish the : Micailseciover®: O. ‘Ail i ia| Nice weather. the past week. — every township that had not met wheels till they looked like an umn wered at oflice meee night. cr Everybody busy. ‘ A mare belonging to a colored | the requirements of the road, urg brella, but took out all the rattle, d Special attention given to temale dis-| Myr. Sanders, of Howard county, |™an by the name of Rippetoe, be-| ing speedy action inthe matter. He fixed the top for $6, put ina cushion C. BOULWARE, Physiciam and ¢ Surgeon. Office north side square, ler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- a specialtv. DRS. FRIZELL & RICE. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS XY AND ACCOUCHEURS., Se over their drug store on North PAn street, Butler, Mo. cee Secret Societies. MASONIC. Butler Lodge, No. 254, meets the first turday in each month. Miami Chapter Royal Arch Masons, 0.6, meets second Thursday in each wath, ley‘ ommandery Knights Templar the first Tuesday in each month. 1,0, 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- Bight. utler ek ment No. 6 meets the d and ath We: nesdavs in each month ockle’s aiiiics Pills. F Tris oa English Family Medicine in is visiting friends and relatives, and will prolong her stay two or three weeks. Mr. Cox, of Ohio, is visiting Mr. King and will settle here if he can find a farm to suit him. : | Mr. John Hines’ wife, who has been sick with malarial fever for a week past, we are glad to learn, is | convalescent. Several gentlemen of the neigh- | borhood met at Mrs. Blakey's last Thursday and erected a house for Mrs. Holt, which is a dandy. Mr. John Stephenson has the brag | corn of the township. He says it is yielding about 50 bushels to the | acre, which, we think, takes the rib- bon. Mr. Eugene Stephenson is running the “spankaphone” at the Rich Val- | |ley school house and says he is doing some good work. Abraham Zwablen had the mis- fortune to lose two of his best horses | last week by spasmodic colic, caused, | he presumes, by feeding cane blades. Messrs. Heibert Walen, came recently affected with hydro-| tells us that they have finally se phobia, and was unmanageable, dur- | cured the right of way out of Kan- ing which time she bit the owner | sas City, which has been in litiga anda couple of his sons severely, | tion for several weeks, by taking an- after which she was killed. It was | other rout2. Unlike otherroads the not known when she received the| managers of the Sabine Pass had bite which occasioned the disease to | been working up and running pre come on her. About the time the | liminary surveys months before any- animal showed symptoms, one of the | one knew what road it was, where it old black man’s dogs also showed | was going or anything about it. signs of hydrophobia, and after bit-| Competing lines have villified the ing another one of his horses, was | managers of the new line and done killed. everything to discourage it, which The occurrence has occasioned con- | goes to strengthen the belief that it siderable excitement in the neigh-|is really coming au‘ going to be an borhood. excellent road.—Foster News. A. T. Blanton, our informant, was | bit by a rabid dog last fall, and went to Howard county, where he procur- ed a “mad stone,” which he claims withdrew all the poison from his system.—Clinton Democrat. A child of James Russell, of Pap- inville, aged two years and two months, fell into a well 32 feet deep a week or two since, and though not killed outright, it died at midnight. a The well is curbed with stone all the One evening this week a large, fine | way down, and asthere were but two mare, worth $150, fell in a well at | feet of water in the well, itis thought “Lun” Dodson’s. The well was 14 | the little one died of bruises and feet deep, 7 feet across, and covered | other injuries sustained by the fall. with boards. IFE cf HILD. DANGFR to I MOTHERand C: | for $1 used a basketful of bolts for | a trifle, and mad - it shinier than my old silk dress. It ooks so good that I ain’t goin’ toluy new ona, although they do say he sella he finest fayton (whatever that £) that ever cule Lo the county. | East roow, Lon B.ock, Dakota St. | Butier, Mo. ' Sane ii’s Sar. By virtue and authority of a transeript exe coon issued from the otic of the clerk of the | cirenit court of Bates county. ——s retarn- | able at the November term, is*7, of asid court, to me directed in favor of H. H Wise and against (acid Williams, I have levied and | seized upon all the rignt. title, and interest lof the said defendant, David Williams, | of, in and to the following described real es | tate, situated in Bates county, Missouri, to- it: | “AH of the northwest quarter of section thir- | teen. township forty-one of range thirty-two I willon Friday, November 25th., 1887; ' between the honrsof 9 0’clock in the ferenoon ' and 5.’clock in the afternoon of that day st the east front door of the court honse in the | city of Batler, Bates county, Missouri, sell mes | game Orso mach therrofas may be reqni: , at [apie hartcceernge Somes ery bidder for } , to satisfy anid ex: conte ee 7G _GUAZEBRO K, * | Sheriff of Bates Counsy ae ee | English Spavin Linsment remover- all hard, sott, or calloused lumps ane | blemishes trom horses, Blood Spavin; d for 86 years all over the world, tor : P Will | : As the animal walked | Mrs. Russell had just used the well i Curbs, Splints. Sweenev, Stifles, 4 Pie, tnd gestion, Liver, &c. | Campbell, Misses Alice McLean and | across it, these boards broke and she | and inadvertently left it uncovered | Sprains, Sore and Swollen throat, hh eae Mary Whipple. of Pleasant Gap, at-| was precipitated to the bottom. The | when the little one walked into it, Conuhei ats Sive Seo hy aneoroak te, Vegetable Ingredients. | tended the Reynard literary last | water in the well was about 6 feet ‘and although rescued by its father l bode. i Wartsnted by Ao Eo nae From Mercurs. 1Fr iday evening. | deep, and the animal had only room | at once, its little life could not be A ee as Bini ae We were informed that Alfred | enough to hold her nose above the | saved. The mother was frantie when POWD ER i ie : ; Notice of Final Settlement. Hines would like for Mr. Robt. Davis | water by turning it around the side | she realized the fate of her darling, | Chronici@atarth asnaile audieatce Notice is hereby given to all creditors and + interested in the estate of Leander UL deceased, that I, CH. Moore, admin- tor, De Bonus Non, of said estate, intend ie final settlement thereof, at the next of the Bates County Probate Court, in ites county, State of Missouri, to be held at itler onthe Mth day of November, Is87 ” © H. Moors. a. Administrator, De Bonus Non. ‘to please have his front gate fixed, jas he was tired of leaning on wind. Ye seribe attended the organization | of the Reynard literary society last | straw, and the brute worked her way | Friday eve. The following officers | to the top as the straw was piled | were elected for four meetings: Mr. ! ‘and fell upon an unique plan for her | to the present time. of the wall. Men found her there! and she is almost crazed with grief rescuc. They filled the well with | another warning to parents, to use all due means to guard against such calamities; mothers especialiy can around her.—Fayette Advertiser. | not be too careful.—Rich Hill Reviev. This should be | Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity. strength and wholsomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, andcannot be eold in competition with the multitude of low = ed in hundre?} of 2 * Ayer’s Sars \ tottles for $5, short weight alum or phosphate powders. Sol onlyincans. Royat Bakixe Powpre Co., Wallst..N. ¥.: 22-48 i a scrofulous c ttien of the hand shou d he treated tke ulcers and erepien:. blood. This d srase bh arilia