The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 11, 1891, Page 7

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Drunkenness — Liquor Hxbit—In al! the World there is but one cure. Dr. Haines’ Golden Specitic It can be given in a cup of tea or cot- without the knowledge of the person ing it. effecting a speedy and perma- nt cure, whether the patient is a mod- ate drinker or an aicoholic wreck. thousands ot drunkards have been red who have taken the Golden Spe- fic in their coffee without their know! due, and to-day believe they quit drink- Bug of their own tree wil No harmtu effects results trom its administration. Cures guaranteed Serd tor circular aud f rul particulars. A ‘dress in confidence, Galden Specific Co,, 155 Race Street, a5 iv Cincinnati, O | NO MORE EYE-GLASSES MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe, and Effective Remedy for SORE, WEAK, & INFLAM Producing Long-Sightedness, & Restore ing the Sight of the Old. Cures Tear Drops, Granulation Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes, AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF AYD PERSASEST CURE, Also, equally efficacious when_nsed In other aladies, such as Ulcers Salt Hheam, B y all Dragcints at 25 Ceats. WANTED -— CHICKENS EGGS. AND T will pay the bighest market rice for chickens and egy delivered t my store at Vityinia, Mo. Talso have good feed stable onnection with my store. Nerson M. NestLERovE. in BRICK LIVERY STABLE. Au ample supply of > Buggies, Carriages, Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c. This is one of the best equipped Sta bles in this section of the state. First Crass Rigs Fursrrnes. At any hour, day or night on the most reasonable terms. Farmers desiring to put up their horses when in the city will tind this, barn the most convenient in town. POTTER BROS. SEQUITABLE LOAN AND INVESTME} ASSOCIATION The Equitable Loan & Investment As- sociation issues a series of 1,000 shares each month—-and offers to investors an opportunity to sive money and receive a nandsome interest on their invest- ment. ‘I'he investor of . 4 1 00 permo, for 100 mo's rec’ $ 200 0O 36 8 ar a 4° 34 8 yee G-« aes cee 86 co Slee ee 1,000 00 joe 8 ogee » 25 ‘ ‘ s @@ -4 Ss ‘ We also issue paid up stock and pay interest semi-annualiy. We have money : to loan on good city property. Anyone desiring a good profitable investment or loan will do well to call and see us. R. C. SNAED, Sec’y., Sedalia. Mo. J. H. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo. INVENTIONS OF THE AGE. What Brains and Enterprise Have Accom- plished im the Last Centary. The present century will be memom able in history as pre-eminently the age of inventions In no other century of the wo..d has the inventive genius of man been so alert or its efforts been so Sgnaliy rewarded as inthis In 190f Steam was successfully applied in nav gat.on in Scotland; in 1807 Robert Ful- ton made his trial trip up the Hudson in the Ciermont, and eleven years after the Savannah reached England from America afte: voyage of twenty-six days. From + day to this the time between England and America has been Steadily decreasing, until now it is 1 than a week Proportional advance bas also been made in other directions. What the Savannah of 1816 would be to an “ocean greyhound” of to-day, the he and pruning-hook of 1 be to the reaper and mower with which the farmer of 1390 rode around his fields and harvested his with ease. The streets of Birmingham, England, were first lighted with gas in Isv2, and those of London in 1814 The first cable railway was patented in 1808, and electric and elevated steam railw crops have since been added in large cities to} secure rapd transit. Lithographic and steel engraving, printed by steam and electricity, stereotyping and ma- chines for making paper, and other in- ventions have made the press one of the greatest—if not the greatest—agents of civilizstion. In 1826 the first railroad in the United States was built, and to- day Europe and America are traversed in every direction with railroad lines. In 1835 Prof. Morse transmitted mes- sages by telegraph, and now Europe and America are next door neighbors, and exchange gossipand news every day. Telephones, phonographs, sewing, knitting and weaving machines, and thousands of other devices for shorten- ing distance, making work easier and 1 fe more comfortable are to-day in op- eration, and still invention goes on. In- stead of the Oriental habit of accepting things as they are and living as his fathers did, every American and every European seems to ask whether be can | not improve upon o!d methods and old appliances. This restless spirit of im- provement has not stopped with mere material successes, whose chief value seems to lie in making the conditions of physical life better. The material advance and the conquests of science and invention have reacted upon the moral, intellectual and spiritual envir- onments, and despite the assertions of pessimists, the wor.d is growing better. Serfdom in Russia, slavery in the United States and n the British pos- sessions have been abolished. Repub- licanism h s been established on the continent of Europe, and the last mon- archy of the New World has given place toa government of the people, for the people, and by the people. In matters moral and rel gious the advance has been scarcely less marked Bigotry and fanaticism have given way to broader conceptions of human duties and rela- tions. Poverty and crime have not been abolished, but a clearer conception of their causes has led to more intelligent means of relieving the one and prevent- ing the other. In the labor world the advance has been so great as to almost constitute a revolution In all the thousands of years of recorded history labor scarcely made the advance it has ach:eved in the present century. Not only in hours of work, but also in re- muneration, social position and pol:t- {eal power the laborer of to-day is ona plane immeasurably above that occu- pied by the masses in the past. For this great result America and Au- stralia are ent tled to the greatest cred- it. Responsibility and power educate, and with this enlightenment of the masses the reign of the heretofore privi- leged classes has ceased. Ignorance can be misled to its detr:ment under the influence of catch-words and false is- sues, but the voters of America, En- gland, France and Australia have now passed that stage. Enlightenment means freedom, and by means of the press, free schools, the telegraph and rapid transit, th s enlightenment takes place on great quest ons with a rapidity which party leaders themselves scarcely realize. But great as has been the progress of the world in recent years, the future will witness grander triumphs. Every material advance will, sooner or later, bring its moral equivalent. ‘The more perfect and rapd the interchange of thought and sympathy between the na- tions of the world, the greater will be the advance. Pess.mists and dotards should be relegated to the cear. Hope and knowledge, the energy and the will “to strive, to seek, and not to yield,” are the watchwordsof the future. —Chicago T mes. Long Cloaks. In add:tion to the mantles and other short form of wraps are long, loose cloaks reaching to the hem of the gown and made with high collars lined with fur. fur also appears on the yoke and border of the garment. Many of the long cloaks for walking or carriage wear are }made of dark cloth or thick woolen | fabric of mixed shades Thecloth ones are ornamented with fur revers and the | woolen materia’s are embeilished with ws) WEAR EBrown-Desnoyers ; SHOE CO.’S TRADE MARK —ruk BALL by 3. M. McKIBBEN, BUTLER, 7ac { Blade. tows of stitching. The pelisses are | made long and close-ftt ng at the back The fullness of the sk rt part is gath- | ered and sewn on to the end of the back, | On some of these new cloaks | A Modified Greek Slave. Wyo., islative transaction Cheyeune, startling I+ revevled this eveni ly comp) jand, it was supposed. all misdeeds hal been ventilated. Daring the Bessi nit was discovered that the Stite was without a seal. Designs were solicited anda dozen were sent to the committee | pattern by Hugo Buechner, a meme; ber of the louse and Jeweler of this It now develops thit the desivu attached to the er- hrolled bill, as approved by the ex- ‘city was adopted. ecutive, alt Twith afree hend re after its acceptance by The a woman, typifying the freedom of the ed arm and one Committers gown figure beX Uti Wyowing. with uplift hand }has given place te a modified Greek 1 on shield, slave of absolute lewdness. t | = ey . jis deep indignation anda full inquiry {wall be had. Miles’ Werve & Liver Pulis. An important discovery. They act the nerves. A new principle. pyeedily cure billiousness, bad taste, tor id liver, piles and eonstipation. Spien id for men, women and_ children. matllest, mildest, surest. 30 doses fot scents. Samples tree at Hi. L. Tuc ers Drug Store. $etve | A Slaughter of lone Paris, March 5.—Ramiasatra, gov- the populace to the goverument to defend them from cruelties, massa- jered 278 persons, ineluding men j women and children belonging to the leading families. The slaughter continued for several days. The lives of the victins were in many cases protracted. = Their heads were sawn off and their bodies were thrown to the dogs. The sur Populay fury has caused the gov ernment to auuounce that the feader will be punished. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, SaltRheum Fever sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box; For sale by H. L. Tucker, druggist. Mareh 4.-—A, was | The assemb- | ted its labors 50 days ago sketches | and a} the joint | of, There | on the liver, stomach and bowels through | They | ernor of the province of Belanond, | Madayuscar resenting petition from , vivors were forced to erect a trophy | composed of the heads of the victims. | of. | Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- | Shoald net Forget Rim. Mo., Mareh 4.—To- night as Friseo passenger train The custom of keeping birthdays ' ismany years old. It is recorded | in the forti-th chapter of Genesis, | “And to pass the third day, which was Phi- | raoh’s buth day, that he made a! feist unto all hi ce May Tha i narr Searles, of Elkhart, Crese-nt, twentieth verse: it came 2approihed a trestle bridge over the Msrimae River about a quarter of amie west flazged down had fallen thr 3) feet from the end of { The it A bh the bridge about of Creseent was horse by a boy OK fer Stars. Mrs oma pr trestle at the © W escape be ot Ind., work boy wrived ture dea his wondertul. She states : ey | “for twenty vears my heart trou bride orly « few moments before greatly. Tbecame worse. Hadsmother | the pus-enger train cume into sight tering, coul pa ae | not sleep on my le had’ mach He saw th danger aid rushed to pain in preast, shoulder stomach. | meet the train, fliggins them with nkles swelle < ch headac G i Ankles swelled, had mu teadache ane | Horning paperas ke rat The pas- dizziness. Treat tdid me no gove | = oe i - until [tried Dr Miles’ New Hear: Cure | Sengers ccowded the platf rms of nd Resoratis 7 2 ano Rea reeS serene. the coach -s to earn th- trouble, and and Twas | : | Forsale at H. I som-. wh) rea ized the dinger they Af : lad nerves tree. of 12 vers, promis-:d he would “be eserpei though Be hoi a The mau who dr not xlone uks to is | remembered.” for the whiskey but he looses time. and to the working excess out the mouey man time is worth | mouey. A Toronto paper figures } out that the drunkards of that city | lost $191,682 in wages of last year | If rheumatism in the ting-rs ; would ouly l-t women alone, they would play on the piano forever. A woman of Augusta, Me., is 96 years old, yet is cousidered one of best piano players in the city. The World's Fair. The excitement caused by eventis scarcely equalled by lduced by the great discovery Miles—the Restorative | Nervine. It speedily nervous — prostration, | change of inte, pain, dullness and contu sion in head, fits, sleeplessness, the blues, neuralgia, palvitation, monthly pains, etc. C W. Snow & Co., of Syr- acuse, N. Y.: Talbott & Moss, of Green | burg, Ind., and A. W. Blackburn, of ; | Wooster, O., aay that “The Nervine sells better than auything we ever sold, 4 the great that pro- ot Dr. cures AN OLD MAID’S SOLILOQTY. “ To take or not to take It, ts the question— Whether It 1s better to end this earthly career A Sree one the smiles of those wuo would msi That lack of lovers canced my lonely state,— Or take the remedies my sisters take, And see my eyes grow bright as tho’ bathed In the tmnjor al fount De " : za | 0 on sought and gives universal satistaction. Dr. | Invain'in Florida's peaceful shaden. Miles’ new illustrated treatise on the | pfthave hears my married sisters say ‘That goort old Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Would bring back color to a faded cheek— Restore the health of one who fain would dle To rid herself of ail the pain she feels.” The aforesaid spinster took the remedy— Nerves and Heart and trial bottle tree at H. L. Tucker's drug store. Before Mrs. = si 1 and forthwith took a husband also, hav: Lease went 10 | Tosained ber health and blooming wearer Washington she said: “Of all tines Thousands of women owe their fresh, bloom- ing coun Dr. ¥ ances to the restorative effects of ‘s Favorite Prescription. It is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flow- ing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppres- this is the time to liv-.” what she thinks of it now. Wouder \ Bese eRe Aens sion Prolapsus, or falling, of the womb, weak 4 ba emale wenkness,”” anteversion, retro- Just now all roads seem to be | back, |female weak sensations, chronic con- leading to Rome. It is said to be | gestion, inflammation and ulceration of tke womb, < growing more rapidiy than any oth ‘er European city. : London wants te be clean but [poy ean it? It has a population of 5 millions and supports only 19 pub- | lie baths. rerutite and cleanse the liver, stomach are purely vegetable and ‘ss. One a Dose. So... cents a vial. | i t -/ WEST W Fi Tho following stock season to commence Foaled in 1SS1. unitorm color cannot be excelled by any Caliban No. 304 f | SIRE OF CF Clay 4 Cyclone MAMERINO CHIEF JUNIOR | 2nd dam by Mark Anthony | Srd dam by Old Forester ‘4th dam by Imp Bedford | which lengthens the waist’ The front, £ 2 is uuite stra ght, wthout plats or| ies roan a see Ge jdarta Over this is a deep cape or | ™Oved trom the county. Wi pelerine coming below the waist and | slightly fulled on the shoulders round a | small yoke piece. with an open Medici jeollar. Sleeves can be added neath if des red. —Chicago Times. “A Uhilanthropist Foiled. Philanthropist—I think you can be under- dents NEW HALL STAMP IMPORTED CLYDE.) Book. ins of }New Hall, 2, Foaled April MAWMIBRINO CHIEF UR. iat Dam by MeDoaalis Mantra redin Vol. 12 of the Clydes- | Bred by Alexander | Stone | ARD STOCK FARM, PASSAIC, BATES COUNTY. MO. ve Miles North of ®8utler. wrill stand for service at my stable half mile wrest of Passaic, Bates county, Mo., for the year 1891, the the first day of April and close on tha first day of July, 1891. ye Dark bay, black points, heavy mane and tail, 16t,fhands? high and weighs 1,275 pounds fine style and action, yood bone & muscle, has never been trained; can show quarters, in less than 45 seconds— His oldest colts in Bates County, are now coming two year old and for size, style, trotting actionSiand horse that stands in south-west Missouri. ‘Manbrnn Chie iNe m Messenger j }¢ Lady Thorne 2:15 | Dam theaam of Gol- | Woo@ford Mambrino \liah. 221 Mambrino _Patche: No 5s,sire of 17—2:5 horses and grand sire of 64—2:30 horses and ired the dams of 4i— 2:30 horses Y JMambrino (gr site of Rysdick's Hamble- tovian) Son of Imp. ( . | Mambrino Pilot RKC. 2:34 5- Sire of < Hannis -4; and 6 others in the 2:30 18 | list labels by~ John Morgan 2-24 Tatkey | Tattle and ¢ oth- | ers ‘Cassia. ... wr / Cassius Me Clay dn, ‘Cassius M Clay Me. 18 Mo, ) | SIRE OF b SIRE OF > | - Harry Clay > 1-t Geo M Patchen 2:23 1-2 Durango 2:25; and 6 Land others in 2:50 list others —Kanbrin Mambrino Chief Mo 1 SIRE OF Lady Thorne 2:18 < Micostort Mambrino |Mambrino Pate! | No 58 Sire of 17. horses, grand sire of *4—2:30 horses and | Sired the dams of 41 2 Paymaster ( | Dam the dam of Gol- hen Wiah. 2:30 ov {Bishop's Bamblebonian | Son of Imp Messenger | Messenger& Rocking | bam blood 7 Mos Coudle Grand dam of Clark ( Untraced. {Chief No sa; grand ine of the great Guy 2:12 1-2 | stand and suck, money Jue when colt comes or mare changes ownerhip or about to be re- | ot be responsible for accipents should any occur; but will use due caution to prevent ac ie E a _ REMARKS:—To horse-men and those TACK——-ARTILLERY | having mares to breed: We will st This fine K cky that we have with grea care ed these three individuals as the verv hest we could find, and that un inspect- ion, vou will be convined that they are the animais through which vou stand at the sam a colt to stand and suck, colts to stand & en himseit to be a pertormer : poe a SgERE ; bie cola. a will be able to itnprove your horse stock. cured so you will not have to use 7Igh, behets 1,350 in only tair & We havea number of fine large box Pate Sesh: color. bay; whi ch n face, j 40 j 4 are z s erutehes at all. ee jaa Joes “aioe . - oa we ae Macibane Chi stalls and pleanty of pasture and all Indignant Cr pple—Great Scott! Do | o'nG Tee : foe at ky a distance, or mares pets EE plac ENE PR eT t with great activity: |Di@ck Jack rt ee vel back | you want to rob me even of my preg Will be. permitted i0| ears, large le to el back hon sional implements?—Texas Siftings —Not Much —Tom— j Saw Fred he was putting up a window jShade” Ja pose he got much on k (absently)—“Do yousup “—Yankee ‘onditions same as Mambrino Chiet jr res at the low price of $15. dats tree of charge—escapes and accidents at owners risk. 1S nds l,loo, bred by Sire. Gienalb (2813), Vol 6. Dam: thana, Kentuch CHAS. S. CONCKLIN, Love (i329), Vol 5. Sire of Dam— ercebe Oni B Proprietor. Garobalda (1661), Vol 4. Extended] frst dam, Black Betty r. TOC Z table, running back to his] Sree will be shown at stable. J. S. WARNOCK, Assistant. Gr, PIERCE’S PELLETS | A GREAT SHOT. Mortitention of a Fox Who Had Reena Robbed of His Tail. s iscurous critters,” said an old ter after gazing thoughtfully some time at the picture of a fox rtisement for the they 1 adorned an adv pewter ht among sinee lo was a Tknow about a ‘em and their pe a nted “em when I was so little that I run over a fence ora are. and kalkerlate there is to know te res stump, an’ shoot A, too. ‘One fonny thing about ‘em is their tail oN it by his tail, an’ he can no mere git along without it than yeu can raise chickens 2 How do Lknow? rse. Tmest allus And he paused pipe, which had gone out ring the lecture on natural history, 1 wai fox sets a dretful si thout s Wh eggs. y. ‘sperience, o° ce k frem * sriene “he said, ‘you all know the old Peacock Tavern is, o° course, way there by the pond on the Brunswieh road - used to be an old Well, and Bill were gunnin’ one day, an’ them hills that lead 1) was pretty near stage tavern. out reund | started fox on 'down to the pond. ne there a Christmas, but there v vent no snow on ‘the ground, tho’ the jond was frozen jover. That fox made for the pond for all he was worth, and [see that if some- thing wasn't done pooty quick we'd lose him, so I says to Bill, ‘Let him have it” but Bill was so excited that he couldn't do anythin’ but holler. And there was that fox goin’ a mile a minute for the ice. “He was as much as one hundred and fifty yards away, but 'da tried him if he'd a been five hundred. Just then he went sailing over a stone wall, and as he rose above it I took a quick aim an’ fired. ‘Somethin’ dropped. and Bill turned to me and said: ‘An- drew, that was a devilish good shot!” | When we got tu the wall there was that fox'’s tail cut off as clean as if a razor had done it. but the fox warn’t nowhere ‘round. “We hunted everywhere, but couldn't find him, when Bill happened to look out on the pond and see a red ball a go- ing over the ice like a streak. It was that fax. He couldn't run straight with- out his tail, but kept rollin’ over and over and over like a cart wheel. We didn't want to lose him, so we followed on and found him away up on Winthrop stream. where he had drowned himself in an air hole, he felt so mean without his tail. That's why I know a fox can’t get along without it. I could tell you lots more about ‘em, but T haven't got time now. vewiston Journal. We both saw it MR. GREELY GOT LEFT. | How the I 1» Editor Was Beaten Out of a Ham. After the Tribune had moved its of- fices to Spruce and Nassau streets, in the old building, Mr. Rhoades came down one morning about nine o'clock and saw a big ham lying on the iron heater, writes a correspondent. Frank- lin J. Ottarson, the city editor, came in and said, ‘Dave, whose ham is that?” “I don't know, ‘Ot,” was the reply. “I only know that when I came into the office that ham was there.” “Give it to me,” said “Ot.” “Nothing of the kind.” said Rhoades. “Ifyou want it, come around and get it.” Ottarson promptly went around and took it. Atl2o’clock Mr. Greely came around and said: “Dave, where is my hain?” “Your ham! Get up to Ottarson’s as quick as you can, and probably you will find it in the pot boiling “Well, confound you,” said Mr. Gree- ly, using more vigorous language, how- ever. “Why did you zive Ottarson that ham?” “He took it,” was the reply. “Ottar- son came down and asked for the ham. I wouldn't give it to him, and he took it.” Next day Mr. Greeley said: ‘“Con- found you, you gave ‘Ov that ham.” “Nothing of the kind.” “Ot says you did.” “He's not telling the truth.” Shortly afterward Mr. Greely unbur- dened his mind to his associates in words something like these: ‘You lot of thieves, I'll have to pin my shirt on my back if I don’t want to lose it among you."-—Chicago Evening Journal. The Next Dental. “They now say that William Tel never shot that apple from his son's head,” remarked Mrs. Livewayte, of Chi- caro, she looked up from the news- paper. | ‘H'm! snarled Livewayte, who is a jmember of the Chicago Literary So- ciety; “the next thing they'll deny that | Daniel Webster wrote the unabridged | dictionary.”—Munsey’s Weekly. Almost a Hint. Dudely—What lovely little fingers ;you have got, Miss Fanny. They are ; hardly larger than a baby’s fingers. Fanny—Yes, ma always said that it would hardly cost any thing atall to get an engagement ring to fit my finger.— Texas Siftings. | | i | i Candia. i “That girl's a perfect poem!” ex- claimed Gazlay, referring to a young lady who was passing. “And what am I?” asked Mrs. Gazlay, | coyly- “O, Shore. blank you are ver West A Woman of Family. “So Fordham Hights has married Mra. Bronson, eh?” “Yes. I'm surprised. too. She is a woman of no family.” “Yo must be had fire Fordy told n.""—Harper’s No. Need to Try. —How long do you suppose a ™man ‘This parrot is worth $500. “What | f | gives it such a tremendozs value?” : A [sant talic.”"—Sparks,

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