The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 16, 1889, Page 3

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Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. (aS SS (When Baby was sick, we gave ber Casteris. qhen she was 0 Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became ftss, she clung to Casteria, (qhen she hed Children, sho gave them Casteria, w. BE. TUCKER, DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. El! Lawyers. ee ° ITH. Y becoas #/PTORNEY AT LAW. Butler, Mo. tice Zin all the courts. Special at- hen Pfention given te collections and tigated inims. Se Cavin F. BoxLey, Prosecuting Attorney.: CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. P oO NT. SMITH Jom. “arrorniy ar Law. Office over Butler National Bank, Butler, Mo. SS W. BADGER LA R. ill practice in all courts. All legal business eae attended to, Office over Bates Co. Na- tional Bank. Butler. Mo. f t ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. ii AGE & DENTON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North ‘Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, ig-ty DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIU PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Special attention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and « Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ren a specialty. Buter, Mo. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh of Pine. Missuri Pacific R’y. 2 Dailw Trains +2 KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, 9 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORADO SHORT LINE To PUEBLO AND DENVER. PULWAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without change H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t, ST LOvuIs, MO. ARBUCKLES’ ~ume on a package of COFFEE is a e<arantee of excellence. ARIOSA COFFEE is kept in ail first-clas Stores from the Atlantic to the Pacitic. COFFEE One of the Queenliest of the Grand Sis- which comprise our matchless union, Missouri stands among the first and queenliest as is fast coming to be recognized. No state in the union has suffered more, and undeserved- ly, from political and other preju- dices, but still, despite all, Missouri has crowded forward by the irresist- ibleness of her own importance to rank among the first in commercial and agricultural importance aud ex- tent of population, and has as yet only commenced to develop and the be seen. extent, and posseses a wealth of natural resources unrivaled by apy area Missouri is larger than a!l New England by an area almost as lnige as New Jersey, and is only excecded in population by New York, Penn- sylvania, Ohio and Llinois. farming lands are unequalled, while within her boundaries are to be found inexhaustable mines of coal, iron, lead and zine and boundless pine. lacks alike the rigor of thenorth and and all the disagreeableness of a wet and dry season peculiar to the Pa- cific slope, but is genial and health giving, and fruit of infinite variety metropolises, St. Louis, Kansas City and St. Joseph, are almost world] been a creditor for over two years. | J Frank T B Thompson marts of trade and busy activity,and | The collector has been put offa hun- G B Seehorn S M Bush are the centers of vast railway trunk | dred times by promises made only to | J A Garrison CA Yeater lines connecting and making tribu-|be broken, and he has worked every | J G Porner R Shaw tary to their indomitable enterprise, | scheme known to the profession |G T Pierce IN Sallee the east, west, north and south. Of! without avail. The other evening J A Price Jas Beagles all the western cities, Kansas City{he happened down at the Third; Wm Hutch J R Walton is to-day, Chicago’s and competitor. the bustle, thrift and tireless energy MATCHLESS MISSOURI. --: R. R. DEACON :-- ——-:—DEALER IX—.-—___ HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS ——S#SCUTLERY AND GUNS§¢3—— Moline Farm Wagons, (Manufactured by John Deere.) "KewE”- BEEWOWGG EE cee terhood of States. In the grand sisterhood of states ossibilities of her future remain to in Misssuri is almost an empire in ther state in our broad country. In cs HeepPerT EP GaP A EK. sp’ a) WG ES Her ————:The Best in the World: BUCKEYE FORCE PUMPS. Gas Pipe Fitting and Pump Repairing. orests of the finest hard wood and Her climate is matchless and he torridity of the extreme south, For a year or two past the collect- | or for a certain Detroit tailor, says the Free Press, has been trying all sorts of pacific ways to get the sum of $13 out of a young man who has The following are the names of | prominent horse men of Verron county, who purchased Common- |Sense Liniment during Culver's three weeks’ stay in Nevada 8 raised in profusion. Her proud greatest rival Street depot and saw his young man | Nicholas ThomasJ A Dixon Here is to be seen buy a ticket for Chicago. | EM Schrogen Alex Greditzer “So you are going west?” he | Jas Wilson L F Darr asked. Wilson & DonmanW A Gregg “Only to Chicago. I'll be back in| J L Richardson J W Forman so characteristic of Chicago, and which eventually will make the city the great interior metropolis of the| three or four days, and then I want | J D Bowman R Thornhill country. Its location, midway be- | to pay you that little bill.” | J Dunkle JS Miller tween the east and the west, the} «Yes, Going to Chicago on a/ F M Carlock Jas Cummins north and the south, is particularly | yigit” | H Barton Cockrells Winston advantageous, and the country can- “Something of a visit; going to AJ Mulkey RC Divers not seemingly avoid contributing to get married.” | J F Blair A C Tterrett its prosperity and imevitable future} «yo: | J E Davis W D Cordery greatness. This fact is evidenced! «Fact. The ceremony takes place | Dr. M E HarrisonJ G Thornton by the establishment already of gi-| at 10 o'clock in the morning.” Peter Rexroad J D Senlet gantic enterprises which alone seek} «4nd you want te be there, of |J E Neathery LH Turpia great centers for their wide field of | (oupger” W S Cassity Wm Nelson operation. : “T should smile!” N Pope J H Caton : Every portion of the state possess] The collector took off his hat, re-| J D Cambell J L Jenkins its special and peculiar advantages, moved his coat, and was peeling off | Sol Simon C W Archer but no portion is more fortunate in| his yest when the other asked him | J L Beagles G F Givens its natural resources than southwest | what was up. W Chaus Joseph Wiswold Missouri, which is traversed by those | = pye been biding my time, and|E L Porter Everett Carter incomparable railway systems, the| my opportunity has come,” he re-| Wm McAllister MV B Page Kansas City, Ft. Scott & Gulf, the plied. HF Weber Sonsley Bros Missouri Pacific, and the M, K.&} appow—what?” |. N H Grady L Shurdle T. whose train service is unsurpass-} «yy, going to light into you. You | M G Owens W D McRay ed, and afford the section all the ad-| 5.6 the bigger man, and I expect to | Jas Gordon Rev Joseph King vantages and benefits of great com- | he licked, but the row will certainly |S Williams Mac Alexandria peting lines of railroad. Prominent | cange both of us to be arrested and|LH Crumpler W L Basket among the cities in this portion of} taken to the station, and you will| WW Cliver S B Stradley the state are Springfield, Carthage; |thug miss your train. Perhaps I | Carl Cooper Joseph Harper Nevada and Butler, all busy, pros | can black your eye, and in that case | Wm Graham C W Powell perous and handsome cities, gTOW-|the marriage can't come off for a|Ed Cromer EL Basket ing rapidly and affording opportu-|yeek. Put up your dukes!” John EMoore 8B F Hatten nity for metropolitan life. Thissec-) «gay,man, you wouldn't be as|WL Rafferty RF Stahl tion is unsurpassed in the product-| jean as that?” CJ Moore W A Gose iveness of its soil and the natural “Thirteen dollars or a row!” WT Mattock John Smith beauty of situation, and is well} «py pay you half.” Wm Mayes P F Brophy drained by numerous streams, and] «The whole or nothing. It’s my | Geo Sullivan Jno Yokeley the altitude, about 1,000 feet, is suf- first, last and only chance. Come|J W Vanatta Dick Thomas ficient to relieve the summer tem-| gouy or put up!” RJ Amos J 1 Clark perature, which is below that of St.| The young man took out his boo- | R L Wilson T T Taylor Louis and other northern points. | a1e and counted out the amount of | J Smith Chas Smith The land is productive, grows every-| the pill, and while he skipped for | C C Taylor R Schonewedder thing, and in abundance, a failure of crops is unknown, and the people W MStoneburnerG M Jones RP Armstrong John Coats the train the other calmly donned his garments and left the depot prosperous and happy, and are gen-| whistling: “I Wonder What My Ma | C B Jones W S MeMillen erally former residents of the north | woyiq Say?” | Mayor C GravesB C Terry and east. There has been a wonder- ne ee | J H Starbuck WL Field fal doregees ao ee eee The Discovery of the Age. DC Yates W 4H Brown on ace = A heade For the infallible and permanent | Fritz Kraemar Wilson Spayde when first the writer visited the cure of rheumatism, kidney affec- | M Sturgeon M Pemberton section and particularly in Barton eounty, of whjch Lamar is the coun- ty seat, and surrounding which was then seemingly an endless waste of wild, uncultivated land, which was ‘alone utilized for cattle ranges, but | which aow is all taken up, fenced \ and under cultivation, and yielding | generous returns to its possessors. | —Plymouth, (Wis.) Reporter. New York and Chicago people | have the World's Fair on the brain land both cities are in danger of -a ee ‘ean get one of their own at a small | cerebro spinal meningitis. The The advanced people of Boston | cost. The mununy market is now | | stoutest heads can not endure too| will feel bumble when they read | so overstocked that lovers of the an-; ne Agee = a eee The women are saying if Colum- Rheumatic Cure is without a rival | bus is to have a monument why not orapeer. It cleanses the blood, | erect one to Queen Isabella of Spain beautifies the complexion, builds up who made possible the voyage of the system, increases the appetite, | Columbus? and restores harmony to the consti. | ~° merch tution. Itis, without adoubt the; ‘The Atchison Globe says: Occa- best medicine now before the pub- | lic, and has stood the test of years, a ae ae as thousands of certificates in our | ously of the “opposition to Ingalls,” possession will verify. For sale by ; but as a matter of fact it is not all druggists at $1 per bottle. Hun- | worthy of mention. nicut Medicine Co., Atlanta, Ga., | ey Manufacturers. 461m — Anybody in love with mummies How Pale, Delicate Women Can Easily To be fashionable in these days it is necessary to be healthy, and the pate, delicate girl that has reigned for so many years must give place to her more robust sister. moet admired is the one having the most healthful glow, and in no other way can this be obtained than by fre- quent physical exercise in the open air. Indeed, many girls when away for the summer almost live in the open air, returning in the fall with com- plexions the envy of more conservative maids, who are afraid of the least bit of sun. The sun is a wonderful beautifier of the complexion, but, like many good tonics, ought not to be taken in too large doses at first. Going from the city, where, even when walking out, we take the shady side of a street, di- rectly into the glare of a noonday sun avoided. In fact, the noonday sun is penetrating even to very healthy coun- try people, and it is not advisable to seek it too often, even for the sake afternoon sun will do all that is de- sired in this respect. Some fair-skinned people are pre- vented from enjoying the country, owing to getting so easily sun-burned. Always carry with you into the coun- try a liberal supply of baby powder. When going out intothe sun apply the powder thickly over the face and neck, and there is little danger of your suf- fering from this painful affection. The powder protects the pores of the skin, which are generally very sensitive to the sun. venient, corn-starch or powder will answer the same purpose. When go- ing out on the water sailing or fishing, powdering the face will save much pain and annoyance, for there are few places in which a person burns so quickly as on the water. parts in cream, but if obtainable, but- termilk is much more cooling and heal- ing. Tan can be removed by applying lemon juice to the face just before re- tiring for the night, letting it remain over night, and washing it off with soft warm water in the morning. A few drops of the spirits of camphor in the wash water two or three times a week will help to keep the skin clear. summer is made as follows: quart of rose water add, drop by drop, stirring all the time, one ounce of tincture of benzoine. it is benzoine, and not benzine. Bot- tle for use. to the wash-water each day, until the water is like skim-milk, and the skin may be kept soft and though you are out in all sorts of weatier. which are generally the first to freckle or tan, take your old lisle-thread gloves that are worn in the fingers, cut off the tops, turn and hem on the inside each finger. in the fields, and are more comfortable than the whole gloves, besides pro- tecting the hands.—Boston Budget. Frequently It Is Caused by Utter Lack of haps you have too much time for sleep. Perhaps you depend too much on sleep for rest and recuperation. is not the sole rest of the used-up nerves. the enjoyment of good company rest the body quite as much as sleep. The dreary monotony of life in many a household, involving this tumbling into bed with the mechanical regularity of a machine at nine or ten o'clock in the evening, does not always rest weary bodies. rise” does not always make a man healthy, wealthy or wise. Numbers of organizations are only capable of five or six hours sleep at a time, and their early lying down to rest is often suc- ceeded by an early waking up anda consequent restless tossing for hours preceding daybreak. The practicers of punctuality are often surprised after breaking their own cast-iron rules and passing two or three later hours of mirth or jollity past their usual bed- time, to find themselves even more re- freshed in the morning than usual. The relaxation of sociability has rest- ed them more than sleep would or an attempt to sleep. But these are condi- tions not so easily reached in the aver- age family. evening of more or less dissipation. SUMMER COMPLEXION. The Beautify Themselves. The complexion the country is of all things to be the complexion. The morning and to ly If the powder is not con- is When sun-burned bathe the afflicted A good wash for the skin during the To one Remember that Add afew drops of this nice, even To protect the backs of the hands, These can be worn —_——+ 2 »—___—_ FACTS ABOUT INSOMNIA. Domestic Recreation. Are you afflicted with insomnia? Per- For sleep Sociability, congeniality and “Early to bed and early to In fashionable life we have a formal, exhausting, mechanical On the other hand, the evenings in great numbers of families are monoto- nous humdrum. They involve the assemblage of the same _ people, the same surroundings, the same paterfamilias yawning over his paper, and the same querulous mamma overladen with family cares. Fresh people with fresh thought, fresh at- mosphere, any thing to stir up and agitate the pool of domestic stagnation, are sadly needed and sadly scarce. There needs to be also a constant suc- cession of such fresh people to bring about these results. The world is full of men and women, and in a better regulated lite it would be their busi- ness after the day’s work was done to entertain each other and give each other fresh life. As it is now, hun- dreds if not thousands of our house- holds are little better than ceils for the inearceration of each family. Thou- sands are thus worn out prematurely from utter lack of domestic recreation. There might be written over the graves of hundreds of thousands: ‘‘Bored to is never good when exposed to the air. jlong astrainon one idea without/ that Paris has opened a budhist tem- | tique can obtain specimens for less} goath by the stagnation of domestic Always buy this brand in hermeticall: sealed ONE POUND PACKAGES. ¥ | mental disturbances. ple. | than $100. life."—Christain at Work. TWO DEADLY REPTILES. finger. edies were right at hand. He instant- romance. deadly, the natives hesitate to kill it. There are few places where this snake will naturally live that haven't got cobras, the natives are so superstitious about them. They vary in length from four to eight feet. The king cobra, so called, is The famous snake charmers of India, of whom I have seen many, exercise a curious art with them. to put them to sleep with the weird music of their bagpipes. The cobra, when about to spring, looks like the devil incarnate. and down south in are the home of the snakes. west India is not very snakey. In some places there are so many snakes that it is simply a hell on earth. There are many other snakes than the kinds I have told you of, and many of them are poisonous, but these are the Kalreit Bite Is Sure Desth, and the Cobra's Almost Sure. A friend of mine in Bengal, in the military service, who was a bachelor, one day invited a friend to dinner with him. The cook house was, as most cook houses are in India, about fifty yards from the house. The friend ar rived and they talked. Dinner time came, but no request to come to din- ner. friend said: *‘Well, I wonder what's the matter with the beastly cook. He's quite late.” hour had passed. Then my friend said: «Well, we'll just go out and see.” And what do you think they saw? Why, above the door, with his head swing- ing from side to side through the tran- som and seesawing back and forth, was a gigantic cobra. The cooks inside were very much afraid and would not venture out, of course. The~guesd raised a shotgun and killed the poi- sonous cobra, though it was hard onthe house. They thought themselves lucky, though, as may be supposed. Nobody ever recovers from a bite of the kaireit, and it is rare that any body ever gets over the bite of the cobra. A doctor in the army there had one that he had half tamed as a monstrous cu- riosity. Half an hour passed and my They talked on until an He was exhibiting it one day some friends when it bit him onthe He was an expert and his rem- applied them and got over it, but if he had had to walk up stairs even he would have been a dead man. Mind you, he was a doctor, One of my editorial associates on the Pioneer, who belonged to the Natural- ists’ brought ina kaireit in a bottle, and was exhibiting it to the members. Club in Allahabad, one day «Tt dead,” said he, and he thought it was, for it was all broken to pieces. All at once the head began to wriggle and bounce around. just as good as it could before. may guess there was a scampering. That is a peculiarity of these snakes. Ww are not. That is another reason why they are so much dreaded. It could bite then You hen you think they are dead they The cobra of which I have spoken is, as you may have read, famous for its ability to charm whatever it comes in contact with, but I never dreamed of the powers of the cobra until I went to India. It raises itself about one-third of its length from the ground, and, distending its great hood, waves itself back and forth. looks as if the snake was cut length- wise in the breast, a little like an open coat. A side view of it gives a mottled appearance of the shape of an inverted pair of spectacles. backward and forward, breathing and blowing in a mysterious way, and the sight is so awful you can’t take your eyes off it. two balls of fire, and when it strikes there is nothing but a blur, it goes so fast. Its hood when open It waves itself Its little eyes gleam like The cobra in India is the serpent of Despite the fact that it is nothing but a big cobra. They are able A strange thing in India is that every thing in the way of a serpent, a scorpion, tarantula or wild animal is the color of the background. matches the soil where it is found. You see a royal Bengal tiger in Amer- ica or England and you can tell it right off, but you see it there and someway its stripes do not stand out and it springs upon you unawares. It The snakes of India are in Bengal Madras. These North- worst. There are also centipedes five inches long, and poisonous lizards that drop their tails off and go right on, thinking thus to delude you, when you have seen them first and get the drop on them.—San Francisco Examiner. Sea His Opinion Infallible. Dr. Bolus (ata consultation)— Well, gentlemen, my opinion is that the pa- tient can not live a week. {Dr. Sawbones, Dr. Squills, Dr. Oc- ciput and Dr. Pancreas coincide. ] Dr. Shingle (a recent accession te the local medical talent)—Gentlemen, I beg leave to differ. The patient will recover. His ailment Is imaginary. There nothing really the matter with him Dr. Bolus (arrogantly)—You cer- tainly do not expect to convince us of the correctness of your opinion, sir! Dr. Shingle—No, sir, probably not. Yet you will pardon me for saying that I was a pension agent for twenty yeara before I became a doctor, and —— Dr. Bolus (with deep conviction)— Gentlemen, if he can’t see any disease in the patient it isn’t there! . (Dr. Sawbones, Dr. Squiils, Dr. Oc- ciput and Dr. Pancreas again coin- cide. ]—Chicago Tribune. —_—__—_»ss—_—_ —An Athens (Ga) young man paid | a father $5 for the privilege of court- inghisdaugtiter. He married another and demanded back the $5. The old man offset the bill with an account for firewood and kerosene oil The mat- ter was compromised. co OE EEA REPRESS ANA ROM HLT SAN

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