The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 22, 1894, Page 3

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GOOD ADVICE. Young Men Paste The Following Letter in Your Hat and Read it Oyer as Often as Opportunity Offers The following letter written by | Wm E. Walton, to his ward, Ed ward R. Tolfree, is so full of excel lent advice, the Times takes pleasure in publishing the same and recom mending its careful perusal by the young men of this county Mr Walton started on the grand floor, | he knows what he is talking about and his success in life is worthy of | emulation by those young men who desire to build character and pros per in this life. Mr. Tolfree was quite a rich man and at his death appointed Mr. Wa! ton guardian of his son without re quiring bond, and the trust impos ed in kis honor and integrity has not been betrayed, and in a short time Edward will receive a large sum of money as a legacy from his father’s estate with accumulated interest. Young men read the letter care- fully and heed the good advice: BUTLER, MO., FEB'Y 9TH, 1894. Mr. Epwarp R. Tourrer, Deckertown N. J. Dear Ep:—I received yours and should have answered sooner, but the happening of many things inci dent to the closing of the year pre vented. You asked my advice; you are en titled to it. Ten years ago your father selected me iu his will without boud to manage your estate and with your mother rear aud educate you Tappreciated his confidence,and have always felt the sacredness of the trust. Ina few months you will be a man and as an ouly son entitled to it all. I can truthfully say ycur “little for une” is intact, save necer- suy @Xpenditures made for your- self and m ther. Though it was in cash. I have never, during the ten years, used a penny of it individua'- ly, but kept it loaned safely at inter- est and not a dollar has been lost. Youth, just verging into manhood, needs counsel, I am willing, even anxious to advise you though I feel incompetent. How should a young man do to make life a success, is a serious question, especially 80 when we cousider that a large majority of men make failures. It’s important to start right. In surveying the field be sure and select the calling that you have the best natural ability for, and one that you will enjoy the It will be well nigh impossible to succeed in any occupation distaseful to you. Thous ands of young men waste treasure most in following and years #f precious time in prepar- ation for a certain occupation and afterwards tind they had neither talent nor taste for it This is a blunder difficult to recover from. Be careful just here Study yourself and the question ofa calling thor oughly. Make no mistake in this and the battle is half won. Once selected, then enter it with that to excel,—reach y there. Aim high | Building air castles are virtues rath | a single idea, the top and s y than faults and go hand in hand} with ambition. Cultivate ambition, | it’s a trait necessary to success. You} will never reach a point higher than you have desires to go. To succeed in the race of life re | concentration of all your} abilities. Don't scatter! You will} be doing well to become eminent in quires apy one calling, remembering you are almost surefto failif you divide Ours is an age of specialist. The success- ful men of the future will be found largely in their ranks. Industry is essential to success. Occasionally a lazy man, if endowed by nature with a high order of abili ty, will attain distinction, but the great majority of successfl men se | eure fame and position only after) years of patient toil. Ordinary tal ; your energies between two. | yourself and friends be fully reali port to positions of trust and profit It is priceless. to bea matter of discussion certain failure. Equally habits. Don't game. important are persox means. Itis a recommendation fi. a young mun seeking that he employment nds less thas his 1 ise Be content to begin at the bot tom, ever striving to reach tue top Real merit Ain to will bring rke yourself indispe to your employer's busiuess by inak ing your services sv Valuabl he contd not do well with out Iv's along this road that saoco-siu meu have traveled There is bat portry in littie seair business, a8 aeicue duce profit Theories, tos, are vita able in proportion ouly as they yield venefits. The man is necessarily practical. Because he is succe he has valuing men and things successful business sfulis self evideut that mude bai wistakes In few The ranks of young meu seeking employment in business seem over crowded; this condition bas always existed and doubtless will continue, fhis ueed not discourage There is room yet for those reully valuable. Through life you must face compes tion “The survival of the fittest” is the rule that governs. Experience teaches that poverty In youth isa blessing. Overwhelm ing majorities of successful men, whether us statesmen, in the pulpit, at the bar or in the business world, are sous of the poor Opulence in youth tends to devel- op habits of idleness and spending, rather industry aud saving. The positicns of rich and poor in youth are often reversed. The rich young man at twenty is liable tu be poor at thirty, while the poor boy may be a millionaire at forty. The notion is almost universal in youth that its best to “sow wild oats” awhile, become familiar witn This idea is aud fraught with the greatest dauger. It has had much to do with filling the world with hu man wrecks. You don’t have to live on a crater’s edge to know that there are volcanoes than vice aud reform afterwards. erroneous As a man sows, so shalt he reap, is as true now as when recorded in the Holy Writ centuries 2go Our positions are widely differeut Yours, hopeful, inexperienced, un suspecting, educated youth. Mine, verging ou old age and knowing from practical acquaintance with the real and false acquired by a life of coptact with the business world, the disappointments and dangers that await you. You will often be deceived, but your lesses will come chiely from having trusted bosom friends. To avoid this, deal with kindred and in- timate friends as though strangers. Do otherwise and you will end lose your money and make them your euemies. Don't allow your familiarity as to place yourself under such obligations as to hinder you from doing that which is right to protect your interests. Where busi and social relations are too closely blended, busimess usually, it not always, pays dearly for it Don't be tov confiding, neither un- duly suspicious. The world is made up of the good and bad Because Smith is a rogue does not prove that Jones is a rascal Study human nature closely and learn to judge correctly. Finally, permit me to say uess you make it fairly, but will place you just where you belong. May the brightest anticipations of ent, if coupled with ambition and industry, will force recognition and | acheive success in the same field/ where high ability if shackled by) indolence will utterly fail. Pluck | perseverance and hard work will) win. Personal integrity is another re | quiste. The business world is built | largely on confidence. Destroy con | fidence and the whole structure is damaged, if not ruined. Always guard your good name as a precious jewel. It's your capital and passe | raise my hand to my ed, is my wish. : Very Truly Your Friend, W. E. Warroy. Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 4£ Mrs. Hamilton, Cambridge, Ils., says: I had rheumatism se bad I could not face. Ballard’s Snow Liniment has completely Itake pleasure in inform neighbors and triends what it has done torme. Chas. Handley, clerk tor Lay | & Lyman, Kewanee. Ills., advises us Snow Linimeut cured him of rheuma- tism Why nottryit? It will surely do you good. It cures all inflamation, wounds, sores, Cuts, sprains, etc. Sold by H. L. Tucker. Your standing asto | honesty should be so bigh as never To hold the confidence of the the public is essential, for without it is almost Be prudeut, frugal, sober | No respousible posi | ble postion is open to the gambler. | | Live economically and withiu your, AUEENSWARF AND GLASSWARE CICARS AND TOBACCO, promotio....| Sere | lu the! relations with | customers to reach that degree of | that your career in life will be what | The world will judge | -/ineident at Nashville Staple: Produces | Mistaken For A Burglar. Paduea, Ky., Feb dana, Ballard county, last night, Ida a burglar at the window and draw ing a pistol from b-neath her pillow, fired. Accry and fall followed. Investigating she found that she had shot and killed her sister Patty, aged 28, who had risen and gone to The two had been sleeping together and Miss Ida had not from her side. a the window for some purpose. missed her sister Rather Steep. Than take in any other torm is what Y people think and Parks’ Tea r e¢ tor fust these folks. It cures con- stipation and though uot a_ cathartic moves tne bowels cvery day Sold by H. L. Tucker. is { He Bought “Gold” Brick. | Toledo, O., Feb. 15.—The grand |jury is investigating a gold brick The Jobn Groil, a farmer, and he paid $6,697 for two brass bricks, after they had been tested by government a ease victim 18 ayers last lin the leading hotel of this city. Officers claim clues. to have important Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price25 cts per box For sale by H. L. Tucker, druggist. Ingalls- Jones Incident. | Atchison, Kan., Feb. 14.—John J. jIngalls has returned to Atchison. | His explanation of the Sam Jones is that the , night before his own lecture in Nash- j ville he attended Sam Jone's meet- jing, being anxious to hear the man. During his remarks Jones said he would dismiss his meeting the next night as he desired to hear Ingalls. In the same connection he spoke | very kindly of the Kansas man. At ‘introduced himself to Jones and talked with him a moment. This A. O Welton c- Fancy Groceres, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. ‘ pays the highet market price for Countv East Side Square. Butler, Mo- | 15 —At Bal-| Powell, aged 30, thought she heard | week. The swindle was perpetrated | | Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, SaltRheum Fever | | the close of the services Mr. Ingalls | Fruit Damaged. Doing Well. Lamar Democrat. of A thor oughly bankrupt treasury a | the Missouri State Horticultural so lciety, bas returned froma ten days’ | trip through the fruit districts of the state. revenue system burdening the coun- try in the interest of the few and shutting off its revenues—a country He has seen and cousult ed many of the county horticulturai | societi reports |from many regarding the fruit pros |pects for the coming The | peach crop in the state will almost ibe a failure, he says. stimulated to a vast overproduction for home use and denied a foreign cmarket by a vicious MeKinley law— the monies of the country largely locked up in wild and in many cases and has received Ss year baseless speculations—a government siiver bulhon uing therefor its notes pa The warm | purchasing and coir | Weather this winter brought out th: ble in \tender buds prematurely and there | old coin, an enormous mortgage or cently cold wave killed them. Nort ‘che wealth and industries of the will be {Country executed by a billiow dollar |no peach crop and south it will be of cere little value. ‘irreparably damaged in | of the Missouri river there s aud binding its successors The pear crop is al to its payment—lavish extravagance in every department of the service— dl these confronted the many j tions of the state and cherries | been injured in the northern ¢ por democratic ia iministration upon its advent to | power ties. “The reports Mr | Goodman, “that the strawberry a: raspberry yields this year in th state will only be half as great a- last year.,, The storm came—tbe panic jee aad | collowed—it didn’t require but a few months to reveal the baukruptey and | gotten condition on which the gov- ernment was doing business. ABR We are moving slowly and cau- tiously, but we have an abiding faith in th. democratic party for correct ing every wrong and undoing harm- This be Sudden changes in gov- For tig relief and cure ot a col the head there is more potency in Ely’s Cream Balm than in anything else it is posible to prescribe. This preparation has tor years past been making a_ brit- liant suecess as a remedy tor cold in the head, catarrh and hay tever. Used tr the initial stages of these complaint- Cream Bilm prevents any serious devel- opment of the while almos numberless cases are ot record of radical cures of chronic catarrh and hay fever atter atl other treatments have provec ot no ayail. 6 in no legislation. ean dove Bring your old | ina day romental politics often work injuries st the beginuing but prove beneficial in the end re & = 2 3 e a s FI = el a 3 E as a 3 of Bates county, Mo. The = systoms, Heavy Verdict Against The Katy. Popeka, Kan., Feb. 14 —The jury Arties as Gen ay inthe United States Cireuit court Richoad. Va. Peb: 15 Sarak foul’ afternoon rendered a verdict of S d, Vi Feb. 15. e al}. Juballal Bayly tae supervieor ¢ $15,000 damages for the plaintiff i e : Eka e ; i B Pr 1 j “J b the Louisiana State Lottery, and th oa thespersounb iu} eye caes of Jo! z and one of the conspieuou f£. Ormsby against the Missour, : x) , aud Texas railroad company. confederate corps commanders, me user Sy sigan Ormsby was permanently injured in with a severe accident this afternoon 2 i bynehb H ae nding |? wreck at Hartford, Kan., a year L uU fe Pp Was sceu 1g Peel wen ce ae era ago. He sued for $25,000. the stone steps in front of the post oftice when his foot slipped and he fell to the pavement down severai steps. He was picked up in a dazed condition and carried to his home in that city. He is attecded by a phy siciap, but as yet nothing detinite cau be ascertained as to his condi tion. past the old general, who is now fully SO]. te of 12 feet per second. years old, has been failing percepti bly, and many friends have notice: a general breaking down. He has up to this time, been making daily Young Wives business trips to all parts of the Who are for the first time to I KILLED HIS WIFE AND cniip.|°ty:, 38 boped that this wonder | undergo woman's severest trial | ful vitality and constitution will pul | we offer him through. Mothers Friend” this conunty cFARLAND 8ROS. Butler, Missou addles of all sty made i 5 » best STEEL FORK “COW BOY SADDLE” and trade in on new ones. most Donble wagon harness from ; second hand harness from $3 to $1 a An explosive with power equal to that of high-grade dynamite is being made in Germany from a prapara- tion of commow hemp. Some idea of the heat’s enormous power may be gained froma medical item which says that it forces blood For some mouths through the arteries at the average that horse owners need. t Bound for McFarland Bros, the | t “A Drunken Doctor Commits a Brutal An Emporia Belle Preters a Postoffice Crime. remedy which, if used as directed a few St. Louis, Mo, Feb. 14.—Dr. Clerk toa Wealthy Chicagoan. | ..s before confinement, robs it of its Arthur Dwestrow delivered himself Sunday evening Eva Baxter, an | DAIN, HORROR AND RISK TO LIFE to the police yesterday evening say acknowledged belle of Emporia, Kus , | of both mother and child, as thousands who ; ; ; : ao have used it testify. ing he had accidentally shot his|left her home ostensibly to visit a! bas ee = x 5 “used two bottles of Motures Frrenp with wife He refused to talk further | friend, but was driven to a minister rvelous results, and wish every wo: has to pass through the ordeal of child-birth to ow if they will use MoTHERs FRienp fora few sit will robconfinement of fain and suffering, rdinsure safety to life of mother and chit about the matter. at the family and married Frank postctiice clerk. On investigation the three to Folsom, a residence 1 ; ins. Sam HAMILTON, Montgomery City, Mo. year old son of the doctor was found} Over a year ago Millionaire Dean x wae 7 8 ie es i by express, charges pre~aid, on receipt of dead, with a bullet through itsjof Chicago became infatuated with $1.50 perbgttle Soldby all druggists. +oce others: mailed free. = BRADFIELD REGULATOR Co., Atlanta, Gs. BATES-GOUNTY heart and another in the head. His wife had received two bullet wounds ia b head, but was still They had been married about four} years, but of late had not been get-} Miss Baxter, proposed aud the jar euts accepted and insisted ou th April. Yesterday was arranged for Miss Baxter to go to Kausas City co buy her wedd alive. in mInarriage ting along happily together. In ajclothes, when she inadvertly learned drunken frenzy the doctor did the|that Dean was there and that her N ti ; B k shooting. Dwestrow is the | parents would insist on her muarry-} a iona an ' a Granite Mountain mine owner. jing him immediately. The elope wed | BUTLER, MO. Dr. Dwestrow is about 26 years| ment foll« oldandshes ts : I¥ 32] ay Bullets Removed From Her Head | THE OLDEST BANK 000 a month fr his father’s es : | ; oe j St Louis, Mo, Feb 15 —There | jis a possibility that Mrs. Arthur ‘ ose ; J. W. Hastain, of Huntingdale,| Duestrow, who, with her 2 year old THE LARGESTIANDETHE}) Henry county, is urging farmers | son Louis, was shot by her husband | NLY NATIONAL BANK through the Clinton papers to raise| Arthur Duestrow, late yesterday, | v BA ot ae CRN sorghum. Asa paying crop he bas im ay recover An operation was| JES IETS EUs this to say: | porformed upon her this morning | CAPITAL, - $125,000 00 “An average crop will yield 200! and two of three bullets inher} suRPLUS, - - $25,000 06 gallons per acre, which will net! head removed. Tue woman rallied | either as syrup or sugar fully 40/after the operation and attending|*.J. TYGARD, - - cents per gallon, and as the seed | surgeons are hopeful. | HON. J. B. NEWBEKR crop should not be less than forty | 1].C.CLARK- - bushels per acre, now worth $1 per | The gigantic earth worms which} bushel, making a return of $120 per | infest the river banks in Gippsisnd | = acre. The labor cost of reaching | Australa often grow to be G feet long } Lawyers. i s = .;and from 1 to 3 iuches in diameter. ! ~ i this result, as above stated, is hard-| 2" a (Raves & CLARK, income of nearly President. , Vice-Pree Cashie> ly more than the cost of raising) | 2 z ae wheat, and almost avy farmer can Hie Se ee aU ete ee = | world is the one in the rooms of the} easily handle from ATTORNEYS AT LAW. forty to sixty ie ; Pantheon. Striking the hands to | acres of sorghum in addition to his! gether is said to make a noise equa! | Office over the Missouri State Bank other crops, and can work up the same as easily by modern methods _as five or ten acres the old way.” to firing a 10 pounder in the open air. Are you Billious, conszipated o: HOMOEOPATHIC At His Child's Funeral. \ Rockford, Lils., Feb. 14.—The fan-j{* eral of Bessie Flanagan the 6-year old girl who was burned to death, was held to-day. The mother is a i, out ot n protestant and the father a Catholic. | being poisoned t The father attempted to throw the | 20 act properl; PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, edatoffice day or night. lattention given to temale dis H Methodist minister out of the house ¢ a : c C. BOULWARE, Physician and | 5 S oF ths “<< a = tt o equalas alivermedicine. Price e Surgeon. Office north sid was all there was of the “conver-| ang would not goin the room where s. Free triai bottles at H. L.} Butler, Mo. Diseases of women ‘ch oe | services were held. irugstere. 48 tyjen aspecialtr.. )

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