The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 2, 1891, Page 3

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\ CORRECT Marsouri Pacific Time Table Arrival and departure fot passenger §& trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bouxn Passenger, 425% a. m. Passenger, = 3:5¢ pe m. Passenger, - - 9:25 p.m. Local ¢ zeight : + 10:05 a.m. Sovtn Bounp Passenger, : 7:04 a. mm. rassenger, . - 2:28 pm. Passenger, - - 1:46 p..m. Local Fre 9°1:37 p.m. BATES COUNTY National Bank. BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. CAPITAL, - + $125,000 00 SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, —Vice-Pres. |. C. CLARK - - Cashier F. M. FULKERSON, DR. DENTIST, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, Dr. ‘Tucker’s old stand. Lawyers. 1. W. Sitvers. J. A Strvers. SILVERS & SILVERS, Attorney-at-Law. Will practice in the courts of Bates and adjoining countiet, the Court of Appeals, Supreme Court at Jefferson City and in the Federal Courts. WALOtice over Farmers Bank; door trom head of stairway. third D* ARMOND & gum. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in) Bates and adjoining counties. s@p-Olfice over Bates Co. Nat'l Bank. ATTORN“YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lane down’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBUPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- cases. Mi C. BOULWARE, Physician and r. Surgeon. Office north side square, Hutler, Mo. Diseasesot women and chil- en a specialty. J. T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- -annah street norrh ot Pine. Potter Bros. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. An ample supply of Busggies, Carriage, Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c. bles in this section of the state. First Crass Ries Fursitueo. At any hour, day or night on the most reasonable terms. Farmers desiring to put up their horses when in the city will find this barn the most convenient in town.$ POTTER BROS. KATE FIELD’S WASHINGTON 3200 a Year; 5 cents a Copy =the brightest Weekly in America Send Fifty Cents to 88 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C., and you will get it every week for 3 months. If you send before De- ember 15 you will receive in addi- tion a fine lithogr: ph of its Editor. KATE FIELD, ANOTHER ACCID Ralph Hall, a Male Driver in Wise | Bros’s. Coal Mine, Killed } Last Evening. | Ralph Hall,a 16 year old the widow Hall, at Shobe, was acci-| ¢. : “| Gutlery and dentally killed at Wise Bros’. wine! Guns yesterday afternoon, in a manner | almost unknown. Young Hall, we SPR | NG WAGONS are told cemplained of feeling uu-| ' | ternoon his dead body was found by | other workmen in the mine, but no! exact knoweledge of | ed the mine, was overcome by smoke | ROAD CARTS, or close air and became <> sick at | the stomach that he lean-1 close quarters that the car pissed over him, badly mangling anil al-} most instantly killieg bin. | well when he went to his work after . ’ ain and Fish Bros the e rcum- i stances leading to it ure know coal car to vomit, as there are traces very sad affair, as Ralph was the THE CELEBRATED | - Sey jis inferred, however, thet the youag i 5 ver the of this and while in this; osition he ‘dinner. Some time during the af man, already nnwell whew he enter was jostled off ani fell into such PLOW, WILL PLOW IN HARD Tins is | sole supported of bis wilowedi th-| FALL PLOWING, WHERE er. State Mine LIuspector Woodson ALL OTHERS FAIL went out to the scene of the disas- | ter this morning leview 24th | | Original The Secret ef Success. 5 WH. 12 Tucker druggist, believes +t the secret of success is perseve Theretore he persists in keeping t in- est line of perfumeries, toilet articles, cosmetics, drugs aud chemieals on the market. He especially invites ail per- sons who have palpatation, short breath weak or hurgry spells, pain inside or shoulder, oppression, nig re, dry cough, smothering, diopsy or heart dis to go to this leogth and first, it might at least authorize th office department to contract for the | carrier service in the different local- | ities mueh as it contracts with stage for carrying the carriers free to post coach companies the mails, leaving ease totry Dr. Miles’ unequaied New| Carry on an express business on their Heart Cure, betore it is too late, Tt has | own account, taking care, of course, the largest sale of any s lar remedy. - Fine book of testimonials tre Dr. |to stipulate for precedence of the Miles Restorative Nervine is ed tor sleeplessness, headache, fits, ete", and it contains no opiates. INSULPAss- mail business and promptuess of de livery. The combinatiou of the mer- | chandise delivery business with the ordinary mail delivery in either of these ways would entirely obviate ; the cost objection to country deliv- ery even if such an objection were otherwise valid. Country Mail Delivery. Chicago Herald. One reason why free mail delivery should be extended beyond the lim ite of cities and large towns is be- cause it would be in the broadest and best sense economical. It would effect a great saving of time to the people in the country. It would take very much less time in the ag gregate for one manto deliver the mail toa score or more of farmers than for each of these farmers to go to the post office and get his mail This is pretty good. 3 Mr. John ©. Goodwin, a carpenter ot | Danville, Ill., writes: About two weeks | ago a heavy saw log tell upon my toot very badly crushing it, so that Iwas un- able to walk at all. [sent tor a bottle ot Balard*s Snow Liniment aot kept my toot well saturated with it. It is now two weeks since that o red, my foot is pearly well and To am at work Had f not used Snow Liniment I should and The farmer could better afford to pay | have been laid up two months. For bh t t 2 each letter, | Petting wounds, spray sores and three cents postage on each letter, |i ices it has nu equal. No Infanti if it were necessary, than to go after | can exist where Snow Li : : : “You can use this le his mail every four days. Whatever| jj) ware ot all white | ment i- ents substi- time the farmer would save by free | tuted tor Snow Linimen: no one e . other Liniment like Ballard’. Snow delivery he could employ so as tOl fF caimect. Sold by ii cen save from five totwenty times the WHI OMEN. cost of delivery, and what he saved would go to improve his condition ees ieupemnieg in some way. It might give him a} Leleela ii ghia daily paper with the quotations, or) piace it might give him any of a hundred | things which he does not now en-| joy. But it is not necessary to increase | the postage on mail matters deliver- | ed by the country carrier service. As | has heretofore been stated in these | i en pretty thor : Sa fe experiment | outside the corporation limits and | in no less than thirty one states that |""° arnes's could We male: 1 free delivery would pay by inducing } eee nee pomgged nae a greatly increased use of the mails. ec) kta) SG, Cana ri i doors. It has been found that the average | the house and battered in the doors. | . Ss fi dash | cost is about $200 per township. In| Seven men in the place made a dash ee ‘and escaped but four women were some townships the increased use of : : « caught and terribly beaten with the mails has not enough to make up es i 3 i oe switches on their bare backs, the ; this $200, but in others it aus been | aap | blood running in streams. One was more than enough, so that on the} average free delivery more than pays| not only whipped but was afterward ae fice oe heentied °" | taken to a stream near by and duck. ' | Bato semovelall double about ed in the freezing water until almost | making the system pay congress dend. The four women were then | should combine with the free de.|S'vem twenty minutes to get out livery of ordinary mail matters an | of sight. : improvement in the parcels post sys- | After that the women literally tem. Itshould make the rate on | *°re down the house. smashing the enchaddiss tan oemeumion books ‘furniture to kindling. The mob was circulars, &c. In other words it | composed of the best ladies of the should consolidate the third and |f¥®- fourth classes of postal matters and | make a uniform rate for them. say) the same xs the present second class jrate of one cent for each two ounces | or fractional part thereof. The daily | delivery of small pack jchandise in the country would be Lashed--Forty Sex in an Ohio Town Ply the Whip. New Brenev. O., Nov. 24.—There at Coldwater, raid made Sunday night by masked women on a disreputable house at that place. Four women had taken their abode in a frame dwelling in the is great) excitement Mercer county, over & up Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,SaltRheum Fever | Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Ct Corns, and all Skin Eru 2 Yiles, or ains tions, and posi- uges of mer- pney refunded. I ecomod: | convenience and Oue wh value of which ean hardiy ture pretty well says: There ts stated. The carriers w Yuse injurv that mav not be wiv bat some kind of conveyance. i they 5 sit ne py ne bre 1 can deliver h s rock letters and ps can see at once how this woud pers. ry Jsave him much time aud expen jand sometimes prevent the inter: } tion of work in the busy s Phe of C | houre, and perhaps a day or more. wh . leugs to Holland, has no fresh water | Ifcongress should be unwilling! except that obtained from rains. | 5 I CasadaySulky ,. , | tact ,a few mowents he imagined he had ‘incurable R.R. DEACON, | DEALER IN— 1 HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS ~w u : Round Oak Stove. i BUCKEYE Force Pumps, FREEMAN'S DIAMOND BARB WIRE, Builders Hardware Iron, Steel, Nails and Wagon Wood Work. R.R. DEACON. A FARMER'S GOLDEN FIND. i A Cotee Pot of Money Scined Upin | Platte County. Joseph. Mo. Nov. 24 —-Abuer Wilson. a farmer who lives uear Iat- au, Platte county, was seining for | minnows ina little creek which runs through his place Saturday when his net caught on some obstruction in the bottom of He remove the obsta- eon- old coffee pot. He} the bank when it | the creek. reached down to stacle when bis hand came in with an thiewit up on broke anda jile of gold scattered itself over the grouud. Wilson's eyes bulged out and for i been dreaming but when he went out on the bank ihere was the brighgt metal. The goid was ull in $5, $10 and *20 pieces,and all bore the date 1857, or prior to that time. showed that there was | $750 in the pot. So i clue as to who is the rightful owne! It is supposed the gold was sunk in | the creek prior to the war, and the | color to the | Mr. Wilson says he is will- | ing to give up the property to any-| ove Who can show a title to it. | count far there is no date on the coins Jend theory Specimen Cases. S. H. Clitford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with neuralgia and rheumatism, his stomach was disar- dered, his liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, | aud he was terribly reduced in flesh | and strength. Three bottles of Elec- | tric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, | Ill, had a running sore on bis leg of ! eight years’ standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen’s Arnica salve, and his leg is sound and well. John} Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large sores on his leg, doctors said he was | One bottle Electric Bit- | ters and ene box Bueklen’s Arnica | salve cured him entirely. Sold by | H. L. Tucker, druggist. . ——_—_____ ! When a man dies that whieh he; had loug suppressed comes out. Aj hitherto unpublished poem by James | Russell Lowell, ertitled --His Ship,” accompanied by a full page illustra tion, will appear in the December | number of Harper's magazine. The Homeliest Man in Butler As well as the handsomest. and others are invited to callon any druggist and gettree a trial bottie of Kemp’s Balsam tor the throat and lungs, a remedy that is selling entirely upon its merits and 1s | guaranteed to relieve and cure all chronic 2cute coughs, ashma, bronchitis and | nsumptto Large bottles so and $1. } Poverty lurks everywhere and es- pecially in Russia. It is reported from St. Petersburg that > million prysous are uuable t> pay their taxes and teat this will let ‘ause a budget A Sound Liver Makes a Man VierouB Well ous, Cor : the > c you ee tria iS LL. Tucker's j Drug Store 44-0 yr. | Passes, with nothing on but your jenviable record. | the first of the world’s cotton pro. | Didn't Dress That Way. A Sedalia railroad man, who was on the road at the time and aequaint ed with the circumstances, tells the Gossiper this: “Pretty Mattie Flake was at one time the only feminine | station agent on the Southern Pa- citie road. The road decided to uni form all its agents, and the contract for making the clothing was let to Cowie Bros. In order to expedite matters Ned Cowie sent the follow- ing telegram to all the agents along the line: “Be on the platform when Ne 19 pants and shirt.” Cowie was thus enabled to meas- ure the candidates in short order and pass on. When 19 pulled into Banning, Cowie jumped off, looked around and said: “Well, where's the agent?” A stalwart youth, who hap | pened to be Miss Flake’s brother, stepped up and asked if he was the man who sent the agent a telegram. , Cowie answered in the affirmative, and the fellow started to climb him. It took an hour to explain matters to young Flake, but everybody laughed so over the matter that the company decided to let its country agents wear overalls. Weuld Settle the Question. Kansas City Star. An impression is rapidly growing throughout the southwest that the proper sphere of usefulness of Hon. William J. Stone of Vernon, is in congress, where he has made such an This impression is crystalizing into public expression asking that the popular ex congress man make the race for representa tive from the state at large iu the event no extra session is held for the purpose of redistricting the state. Col. Stone has given no in- timation as to his probable course, | but close friends are urging him to | congress as the fifteenth member from Missouri. A popular man in the state and especially Strong in the west and southwest, Col. Stone will , doubtless settle the question of con ;@ressinan at large should he an- | nounce his candidacy. The republic to the south believes | that it may become the cotton mart of the world. Efforts are being | made in Mexico to increase the pro | duction of cotton and to make true the prediction in some of the gov ernment reports that Mexico will one day occupy a position among i ducers | —~ | When the i lund must tak water secks its level the} of itself, te. | nt reports fron: the Colorad that th Saiton sca | enty- | of blocks SCIENCE AND !NOUSTRY. +A syndicate has purchased a large tract of brush land lying near Vandaha, Til, and will begin clearing ‘t with 2 view to going into the fruit-raising business on a large scale. Between sev- done hundred negro fami- lies Will be colonized in the townshi, and will engage in the work of clearing. —Anew and effective process of em ployment in the location of deficiené | working in machinery, owing to fric tion, has been discovered. Take a rub ber tube three feet long, place one en,) atthe ear. and pass the other aroun)? the suspected spot or spots, and it wil? be found an easy ter to locate diffeulty and note the periodicity with which it occurs —The statistics of the average size af families in the ~ arious countries of Eu rope, which are of considerable interegt for the status of public morals, are thf following: France, 8.08 members; Den mark, 3.61; Hungary Switzer! 3.94; Austria and Ke gland, 4.08; Germany. 4.12; Holland, 4.22; Scotland, 4.46; Italy 4.50; Spain. 4.65; Russia 4.85: Treland, 320 ~The Overland cotton mill just com pleted at Denver, Col, is one of the largest and best equipped in the world having 16,200 spindles, capable ef i daily output of 22,500 yards of sheeting 4.10; Swedeg | Asthe Rocky Mountain region afford: anample market for this output there is reason to hope that the enterprise will be immediately and continuously profitable, and that it will prove tho pioneer of similar and other manuf turing plants which shall be operated tosupply the wants of that yreat sec tion.—-Washington Post. —Mr. Richard Thoma, of Dorpat, be lieves that he has discovered a liquid which will preserve the natural color of zoologieal specimens. After being washed the parts to be preserved ara immersed in a solution composed of Sulphate of soda, 100 grammes; chlori of sodium, 100 grammes; chlorate of potassa, nmes; nitrate of po tassa, 10 grammes; water, ! litre. Tht parts should remain in the Jiquid from eighteen to twenty-four hours after which they should be kept in alcohol which has been changed onze or twice The color of the animals a little deep ened in tint, is thus preserved.—Par!» Revue Scientifique. —Many have heard s series of rap pings in their rooms, which imaginative people have concluded were spirit rap pings, and which scientists have attrib uted to reasons scarcely less remark- able. One of our readers, Mr. A. Ros signol, chemist at Paris, has sent us, in aglass tube, two little insects which were taken in the act of making their nocturnal taps) They were found in a piece of heavy wrapping paper, but at opposite sides, and about ten centi metres apart. They rapped loudly with, the head by bending it in a sort of see saw manner about six strokes per sec ond, and the one insect answered when the other had finished. Paris la Nature — Archiv fur Eisenbahnen gives the following list: At the end of 1889 there, were 595,767 kilometers of railroad fn’ the world, while t rs before thert , were no more than 31. Of the raik! roads of 1889 Ameri meters; Europe, Africa, $625, and Australia 17,92 Europe the raitroads of the principa’! governments were divided in the fol ; lowing man Germany lad 41,79: kilometers; F: SG 34S; at Brit ain and Ireland, 32,085; Ruasia, 30,140,; Austria Hungary, 01, and Italy, 13, 63. —A consular report on the trade of Kiungchow during 1590 makes mention; of a very strong “silk,” which is madp from a grub called the ‘celestial silk‘ worm,” or locally, ‘paddy insect,” anc; found on a sort of maple tree. The in sect, when fully grown, is thrown intc boiling vinegar, on which the “head” of} the gut or “silk” appears. This is’ sharply torn out with both h drawn!) apart, and is as long as the space be- tween them, say five feet. The silk is “so strong that one single thread of it is sufficient to make a line with which to eatch the smaller kinds of fish.” —At last it isa settled fact that the? water which has been so mysteriously | flooding the desert in Southern Califor aia comes from the Colorado river. / party ina boat has made the voyage! over swift currents, lakes, rapids and}* waterfalls, all the way from the rive: , to the Salton basin. There are crevas’, sesin the Colorado's banks about fif teen miles below Yuma, and the rive; , pours through ata great velocity, cov. . zring the lowlands round about, and- sweeping on in resistless pace into the dJesert. Whatis more interesting ye! the strong probability that this ar- rangement of things isto be a perma- agent one, and that the river is moving ts bed and may soon, by the formation: of sand-bars below the mouth of the trevasses, decide to throw all its waters over this route instead of down to the Gulf of California. —Philedelphia Tele zraph. Imitated Her Eiders. ' A big policeman found a little four. year-old girl trudging along on Niaga: street one evening, and, asshe appeare' to be lost, he stopped her and asked her where she lived) She gave a number on West avenue. “And are you trying t there? Are you lost? iceman. “Yeth, thir.” “Well, you're going inthe wrong d:- nd your way asked the pe rection. Come with me and I'll tale you home.” The ch contented) enough. only a couple n sight of the e stopped and, to her escort uny farder aod maming i “Well, t al} Jersey City vuten de

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