The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 9, 1889, Page 4

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ag 7 | ee BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES gD. ALLEN Epiror. J.D. Paasx & Co., Proprietors, TERMS OF SUPSCRIPTION : j TheWeexty Times, published every Wednesda: , will be sent to any edaress one vear, postage paid, for $1.25. BUTLER MISSOURI. WEDNESDAY, UCT. 9, 1889 j Committee Meeting. Notice is hereby given that there | will be a meeting of the democratic central committee of Bates county, at the court house in the city of Butler on Saturday, October 12th, 1889. Every member is urgently requested to be present as business of importance will come before the committee which demands their at tention. D. R. Brave, W. H. Mzap, Chairman. Secretary. ——==— 18 IT GOOD PROPOSITION ? In another column we publish a The grand jury of San Joaquin’ ‘county, Cal., has made its final re ' port concerning the | | Terry by Deputy UT. : gle and fails to find an indictment. | The report says that the killing was deliberate and while the constitu tion and laws of the state require that a crime against its laws should be tried thereunder, the accused was ' taken from the power of the state by | la process eminating from the Unit ed States Circuit Court. This is the blackest eye that state rights has re- | cieved for many a day, and sets aj pecedent unheard of in the law his- | tory or our government. Uncle Sam| is assuming avast amount of author- ity when he permits his officers to shoot down private citizens of a state and then releases them ona process from one of his courts. Now comes the intelligence from St. Louis that Hon. John M. Glover will be a candidate to succeed Sena-! tor Vest. If Mr. Glover uses the! same tactics as he did in his race} for governor, even that country (Heaven)which he claimed as his own communication which, in the estima- tion of the writer, points out a num- ber of defects in the water works proposition to be voted on next Tuesday. We do not coincide with the views and arguments therein set forth, but believing that in a matter of so much importance tothe whole people, that a thorough and impartial investigation should be had and both sides should be given an op portunity to be heard, we cheerfully give it space The Trves has been outspoken and urgent in its endeay- ors to secure water works for But- ler for a number of years, but we unhesitatingly say that our desire for this improvement is not so strong that it would impel us to! support a proposition that we = not consider for the very best inter est of the citizens and property owners of Butler. Now, let us see if this is a good proposition for our people to vote. During the last few years we have had a number of propositions sub- mitted to our town council to erect first-class systems of water works in the city of Butler, besides four propositions at this time, and not one came below the rental price of $4,000 per annum with the excep- tion of Mr. Ingals whose first bid was $4,000, but was afterwards re duced to $3,800, but the city council claim that they had already accept- | ed the Dewey proposition. the number of hydrants. this gives us 75 or 15 more hydrants than was offered by any other company. The water supply is to be from the Mi- ami, the same as all the other bids. The size of the piping is to range from 10 to 4 inches, sufficient. it is claimed by parties who ought to know, to carry all the water neces- sary for any emergency, five miles of main to be laid in corporate city. The machinery used is to be the very best obtainable, the stand pipe to be 110 feet high. 10 feet higher than that of any other bid der. The water rates to private consumers will compare favorably with that of any other, while it al- lows the consumer privileges that the others do not give, such as per- mitting the merchants to sprinkle the side walks and streets to the center once a day, the free use of water to city offices, public school buildings and churches, flushing gutters, fountains for public use, etc., etc. “Deliberation” objects to the proposition because it does not men- tion manufacturing rates. This we believe was put under the head of “special rates” in most of the propo- sitions submitted, and would proba- bly have been so classified if men. tioned in this proposition, from the fact that the more water is used the lower of necessity would be the rates. We grant that section one of the ordinance is too far sweeping when it grants the use of the public streets and alleys and other public places to erect stand pipes and res- ervoirs thereon, but we are satisfied that the board had no intention of granting such powers, and no ad- vantage of that kind will be taken by Mr. Dewey or the company te whom he may transfer his franchise. In conclusion we will say that af- ter a careful investigation we believe it a good proposition for the city of Butler, and we advise our readers to Vote for it et the election next Tnes- day, As to| at that convention won’t give him a delegate. It is said that his wife has a fortune left her by -her mother which she is desirous of “blowing in” on her husband. That be-| ing the case we know of no surer or swifter method of disposing of the surplus than by backing the Hon. John M. in his political aspi-; rations. | The republicans of Mississippi | have nominated a state ticket, and that state ticket is headed by a man who was a brave and federate officer, valient Chalme cou- Gen. ; Thus the “confederate brigadier is | \in the saddle and pushing things in| varied description of merchandise. | We don’t | the camp of the G. O. P.” expect to see the words quoted in many republican papers howe is only when the democracy nates confederates that the News. | oxy : | Furst cousin in their ¢ in Missouri mus t be- atrimonial wo the law declares that blood eousins cannot me Thus little by little ot Mis nt of the grand old provision of the church urry. jis the great commonwealth ;souri advancing toan enfo' {that aman may not marry his grand | mother, his mother’s borther’s wife, jis mother ov,ais wife’s daughter's daughter.—Kansas City Star. Judge Alexander Martin, of St. Louis, has been appointed by the board to the law chair of the Facul- ty of Columbia University. This is the position tendered Judge DeAr- mond. ‘ Skins on Fire. Agonizing, itching, burning, aud bleed- ing Eczema in its worst stages. A raw sore from head to feot Hair gone, Doctors and hospitais fail. Tried ev- erything Cured by the Cuticurs Remedies for $6. 7 CURED BY CUTICURA. , 1am cured of a loathsome disease, eczema, inits worst stage. I tried different doctors and been through the hospital, but all to no arpose. The disease covered my whole body ‘om the top of my head to the soles of my feet. My hair all came ont, leaving me a complete raw sore. After trying everything I heard of your Cuticura Remedies, and a‘ter using three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, with Cuticura and Cuticura soap, I tind myself cured at the cost of $6. I would not be with- out the Cuticura Remedies in my house. as I find them useful in many cases, and I think they are the only skin and blood medicines. ISAAC H. GERMAN, Wartsboro, N.Y. Burning and Itching I was sick in the fall of ISs8 with a burning and itching so bad that in three weeks Iwas covered with a rash, and could not sleep nights or work days. Some doctors thought it might be salt rheum (eczema), and said they had never seen anything like it before. I received no help from any of them orfrom any medi- cine I could get hold of until I tried your Cuti- cura Remedies. After three weeks’ use I was able to work, and kept getting better, until I am now entirely cured I recommend them to all suffering with skin diseases. C. E. OSMER, Taftsville, Vt. Most Intense Itching used the Cuticura Remedies = baby. who was aMicted with eo. Ihave fally for zema, and such intense itching that he got no rest or it. The itching is and my baby is , and is now s healthy: resy-cheeked boy. MARY KELLERMANN, Beloit, Kan. Cuticura Resolvent purest and Humor Cares, and great Skin Cure, and Cuticura =e site skin beautifier, externally, instantly re- Have and = seo and ey —— the —: crusted ry 1pimply — — humors from Pimples to scrofula. ” oe Sol a Price, Soap. 25¢. 1 ivent. $1. pared by the inate Drve axp CHEMICAL CORPORATION, 3-Send for ‘How to Cure Skin Disease 64 pages, 50 illustrations. and 100 caaaeetale: ‘ Cuticura, 50c.; PLES , ‘blackheads, red rough ch oily skin prevented by Caticnra sone ais MUSCULAR STRAINS and pains, back ache, weak ki 7 pnmatam, and seth tat eee ved in one minut! Cuti Anti-Pain Plaster. 25 — as journals howl.—Montrose Democrat | fore November 1, for after that date | The Chief Feanom for the great -= | ess of Hood’s Sirsaparilla is found in article itself. It is merit that w! fact that Hood’s Sarsaparilla : complishes what is claimed for 5 has given to this medicine a popularity an sale greater than that of any oe Ses . rilla or blood puri- Merit Wins fier before the public. Hood's Sarsaparitia cures Scroft!> Bheum and ali Humors, Dy MUMON-S REMEDY ave OI Headache, Biliousness. overe: H Tired Feeling, er i ens the Nerves, Sarangi. hs gists. Siosivforgo 1 BCo., Aputhecarics. Lo SLOTS AND SLIDES. Automatic Chewing-Gum. Hymn-teok and Weighing Machines. “Gol darn it, neaow,” was the ex- clamation of a wrathy rural, as he stood gaping atan automatic chewing-gum machine with the familiar ‘‘slot.” “Them things, mister,” turning tos bystander, ‘tare mighty onsartin in their workings. It ain't a bad kind o” game for them as gets the nickels, but how about the fellow as chucks in his last cent and don’t git his gum?” ‘Slot’ machines are making their | appearances everywhere and in the most curious places. Hotels, stores, news-stands, ferries, restaurants are 1 with all sorts of devices on } fae Sa ws GCONER: ‘E.KIST Composed of ingredients Cooling, Soothi rt adi , it softens ‘culation of the Blood to the its penetrating and dissolv Sin. Perfectly harmless in diseased } ad cari —t$— A WES THSSORYT IN PRACTICE nd Strengthening, allaying Inflammation, relaxing the Cords and Muscles, giving a other compou nds, requires no rubbing or friction, does not blister or irritate py 4 away any callous or foreign substances located between the inner and outer 1 be used in the tenderest parts of Man or Beast without any bad effects resulting therefrom. “slot” principle, and selling al Mos: of these machines are kept in | BELOW WILL BE FOUND DESCRIPTION OF DISEASES AND SPHCcrat. DBERECTIONS FOr UsSsH. good order, being regularly inspected | - by the proprietors who place them. zootic, “| But they frequently ‘don’t work,” as | ae Cavs Hard riding trains, saddle bruis- in = . = 5 ere wrenche in the c of the New Hampshire in the nostrils of the horse, holding friend. Ji often a game of ‘“‘per- p so that he will swallow some of it, 1 5 a ga f h will allay nd gland the throat to pas C8 the inflammation in the|¢ and allow the clogging in | y, giving the animal a . Also bathe the top iy with the nt in sev ngulation er unple on_the contrary, give haps;” if it works, you chase; if it doesn 3 get your pur- . you don’t. Still, ! there are thousands who drop in their | nickels and make no complaint, even ESSE pom IN os oles mediate re In mild ¢ not so Much there’s a knack in it, and that the juired. The Liniment to be us thing can be worked to a charm if you € eR know how. The candy slot is in high favor. Scores of girls drop in their coins and Sprang Enees and Cocked —Hard driving or pulliz E) from the shoul the contracted cords and give a thorough ¢ culation of blood in the v ned part saturate the knee or ankle, Which e hardened Joint Water, giving ing T. H. Jack- if astubborn case. Colic, or Belly-Ache. by. girls. Then there is the fountain the bowels, and allow the foul gas to pass from perfume slot, worked with a penny, and afford instant relief. In se- drench the animal with a strong supposed, 3 ness, the horse being scarcely abl He ca which gives out a wee jet of cologne. | jinck pepper or ginger tea. This treatment This unique contrivance doesn’t always | bas proved successiul in the mostsevere cases, work, but it sometimes gives a scent , Testing ft n: Contracted Feet, weight on it. Th for a cent. Contracted feet are not a cause, but an effect | "jerk or twist. Heat, pa of disease; generaily speaking, to dimin- Weighing slot machines, with their clock faces, are said to be irregular in action, and a customer weighing often would be puzzled to know just what his weight was by these wonderful machines. A candy-motto slot was working ad- mirably the other day as two young people stood spooning in front of it, dropping their nickles and laughing over the prophecies and sentiments in which the chunks of candy were wrapped. They must have spent at least one dollar on the game before they extracted enough sweetness, and as they walked off, sucking their fin- gers and repeating the soft nonsense to each other, an observer might be inclined to say: ‘God bless that slot.” The latest automatic novelty, which has become quite a craze in England, is the box placed convenient in churches and chapels for the purpose of providing folks with hymn-books. The box is a small wooden affair with examination of y the hand. The thrown out of ss will be found ¢ ion of the stifle joint (or knee pan,) will e, either to the ide. Ccuiting | , CAUSES.—Siiding on slippery roads,the 1, is only | turning awkwardly when running, or an + | natural twisting of the limb when the w the body is unnaturally placed upon it. und secondly, remove the cause. s always the result of great violence. —Poundidg of the frog on the hard TREATMENT.—Bathe from the small of the roads, producing fever in it and the heels,| back to the hoof, thoroughly saturating the @rying up the moisture in the shell, causing al inside and 9::tside of the stifle joint with T. contraction of the quarters. | H. Jackson's CoMMON-SENSE LINIMENT. TREATMEMT TO REMOVE THE CONTRACTION, | —Bathe the cords and muscies of the fh a y, and to 2 hinthe horny box. Cont at the heel, is sometimes produ ft 1o8 horn from the the operation of shoeing, so the ju: atthe heel, by the blacksr helping on the contraction, Ti 9 to find out the CAusE of the iructure vecially the re- | during It ciaties or Hiy Sweeny. 1 pulling, stepping on hard: nees and slippery ground, 2e muscles of hip nt, the muscles become att&phed to meness becoming perceptible the horse after a few moments driving. Bathe the horse from the ack to the hock joint, thorough- rubbing, once a day, with Jack- E LINIMENT, and in‘a few be accomplished. Bheumatism. Cavsr.—Stopping in the wind ora draft, after being heated or in the rain. TREATMENT.—Bathe the fore shoulders, spi- nal colum: d across the leins, the muscles and cords of the leg, and pour a little in the hollow under the fetlocks, which will stimu- the heel, and the crown of the foot abo: hoof, with T. H. Jackson’s Common LINIMENT, which will penetrate the ca of the shell and create moisture and life in t foot. A few days after the first applicati pare the quarters of the hoof, beveling ou ward, and not cutting the frog, soas toremove the pressure of the quarter on the frog. Disease of the Coffin Joint. CaAvsE.—Hard riding, pulling, contraction of the hoof, inflammation and fever in the frog, continual driving on hard and dry roads, sud- den wrenches and twists. TREATMENT—Bathe cords and muscles o the leg, apply T. H. JACKSoN'’s COMMON-SED! LiniMenr to the hollow under the fetlock and around the corner of the foot, which will cause & new life in the inside of the shell or hoof, al- laying inflammation, and will make a perma- aslide lid. On the lid there is this | nent cure. late and create a healthly circulation. Relief i ipti ee will immediately follow the apie of TRESE Eon: Corns. T. H. Jackson's COMMON-SENSE LINIMENT. Cavsz.—By pounding the feet over the hard roads and stones, causing bruises on the inner sheil of the foot, and forming clotted blood, which, becoming hard, causes inflammation | oul ders, Breast and Neck. Place one penny in the box and ob- : F : aN if eecotlar oe hase: tain the use of ahymn-book. of the'nerves of the foot. cannes eine ee eee Renee Oates TREATM Thoroughly saturate with T.| TKEAT% SS ae ere oe top of th shouiders with T. H, Jackson's Common- e L MENT, Which will reduce the in- nmation, create a healthy circulation and atrse the sores to heal. CoMMON-SENSE LinIMENT 1h It is quite a scientific arrangement | boliow be + : will penetra and works easily. When the penny is] ing the nard sub placed in the box it acts on a spring | 280 the corns ~v Sweeny, Stoved end Bruised Shoulder. | | gig as the resplendent packages roll } ae eee = ——- out. The next in favor is the chew- | 10% foucie breastand Aerossthe loins thor | Strain of the Stifle Joint. ; ing-gum slot, and largely patronized ily with’the Liniment, which will relax | Syxproms.—Strain of the stifle joint, fs not, | a ; es and draw the inflammation from | by an so clearly marked | Set Fast and Sore Back, vsed by the saddleor harness. Thorough aturate twit y with 1. H, JACKsoR’s SENSE LiniMENT, Ulceration of the Foct or Heel. This trouble seems to be in the foot, : again in the ide at times the ani limps as though pricked by anail_ the lame less pas: Way only to return with great violence. Th i been caused by a disease 1 the back part of the footand heel, from the Tect of bruises, traveling over stony or snags in the foot, or gravel, and frequen! by paring the hoof ‘so ‘allow et touch the ground, which will cause deeply ed ulcers to be formed. REATMENT.—Apply under the fetlock an@ id thecrown of the foot, the ComMoNe # LINIMENT twice a day, which, in ® rt ti Leffect a pernianent cure. of disexses of the foot, it ‘8 1 p outer and inner between the feb : the crown of the | he cavit nd aronnc Enlargement of the Hock. Caused by kicks, severe wrench no particular part ofit se affect inflarumation appea tenderness and ¢ lamenes this kind are left Lo themselves, heat, pain a1 tendern of the limbs gradually pass away but the swelling still remains. In this ¢ the inflammation has terminated in all Uh ligaments and mem branes which wereaffect Thoroughly bathe the hook joint above and below tt, which will cause the or from the in to come out from the Joint, sometimes causing it to swell more thag” it originally was, which will way wi waves it. A few sé use of T. COMMON-SENSE LINIMENT effect a permanent cure. Weak Eyes. There are many kinds of weak oe 0 caused from a stroke or blow of some k nd ee by running hay, straw or corn stalks into eye; some from disease, some from hard pul ing, some frora hard driving, some from om gestion of the brain, and some from the optie nerve being affected. 2 TREATMENT.—Pathe top of the head, above] - and around the eye, and saturate the with T. H. Jackson's ComMON-SEXSE a MENT, which will reduce the inflam: and drive out the slimy matter, carrying itany foreign substances contained therein. INJURIES FROM BARBED WIRE, SORES, Fresh Cuts, Bruises, And ali Gases Requiring an External Application, bathe with 7. HL Jackson's Common-Sense Linimest, WITHOUT RUBBING, —_—_—$_$_$_—— which throws open the slide lid, dis- closing the hymn-book. The penny drops down a secret slit in the lid and is hidden from view and secured from removal. It seems almost like a re- flection on the worshippers, for the au- tomatic beauty ot the workmanship is that the door or lid can not be shut until the verger himself takes the coin out, when the hymn-book is replaced and the door is fastened. There is also an indicator inside the box which shows how many coins have been put in, 90 that even the verger has to be honest. What the future of the ‘‘slot” and “slide” may be, who can tell? Per- haps when pneumatic tubes become as popular as telephones, and are at- tached to our houses and stores, shop- ping will be done by developments of the slot and slide. “Drop a dollar in the slot and re- ceive your groceries for the day” may SACESON’S COMMON-S: some day be as common as ice cards, An English Church has already or- dered five hundred automatic slide hymn-book boxes for its free seats. Who will be the man to start a pneu- matic slot or slide delivery company? —Boston Giahe | and J. W. Morris. SENSE LINIMENT, QUINCY, ILL, BLOWN IN EVERY BOTTLE G. N. CULVER, The Common Sense Linement man, will be, in Butler, from OCT. & to OCT. 2G. Will examine all lame horses and mules | Free of Charge. Headquarters at the , Drug stores of E. L. Rice, J. H. Frizell _

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