The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 16, 1894, Page 6

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Watterson’s New Story. fan Francieco News-Letter. Henry Watterson fancy to the boys at the Press Club, | and while here spent many hours in the rooms of the Pine street organi vation. On the evening before his! departure from the city he talked a sleac audience of admiring listeners. topic was Kentucky, and among his} stories was uve which be guaranteed | average citizen to entirely absord. as new, because of its recent occur It was ilustiative of mountaineers type. Rote Best is one of the best! f Kentucky,” fiery Colonel, ence. the Hows in began the! ‘and we may him a day. body's best friend and is as gentle as a lamb, although he will stand no nonsense. In bis capacity of internal revenue official Le was obliged to make a trip into the Kentucky mountains not long ago. While sit- ting in an improvieed oflice, making a report about the number of illicit stills be has raided, a big, raw-boned mountaineer entered and angrily de- nounced Best for his interference. A hot discussion followed. Best limps slightly, has a had eye, and carries an arm which was injured some years ago He was no match for the giant of the mountains, but did not hesitate to give the latter the lie di- rect. The mountaineer left the office half erying. In the meantime he is every- took quite a) stream of Lbumor to a eroall | pers of this kin His | ing successes i ; They never have much expital and make | United States Senator some | a YOUNG MOTHER'S DANGERS. , The Sea of Advice That Threatens to Over- whelm Her. One of the dangers which beset the feet of a young mother is the sea of ad- vice which threatens tooverwhelm her. She may be an intelligent, educated woman, who has studied and read ex- tensively upon the subject of the needs of childhood; she may be aware of some peculiarities in the constitution of her child, which require differe ment from the majority of ¢ she may have the advantage of ble medical supervision, but The St. Clair County Republican very truthfully says: “George Wag- ner has severed the ties which bound es to the Eldorado Watchman. It was a representative of a class of [reform papers which hes sprung up \since the advent of the people's ‘party It has been noticed that pa tres ido not make shin dren; apa- not all They advocate meas ures Which ae too radical for the thiscan save her from being deluged continually with suggestions and ad-| vice from every one who ev or who equally to do witha baby. Any one who has knowledge of that mechanism, a baby, r has had, | consequently not had, anything The as its orguns say it area inst people who | have: people's party 1 be but these same organs are not supported any intelligent wonderful bit of} would not dare to (Browi : : prescribe any but very simple and| We are enable to draw divers con | harmless remedies for indisposition, clusious from the facts set forth | but the woman who knows nothing | will advise the most heroic measures, and it is a wonder that more helpless victims are not slain by advice. We have often wished that every young mother could say, when advice | is pressed upon her by irresponsible | persons, “Are you willing to take the | consequences of your advice? If my child falls ill as a result, will you As for Mr Wagner, be isa represen- tative populist. When the millenium arrives, the doctrines he would teach will probably be recognized ~ thoughtless Winnie Davis’ Kind Act. Omaha, Aug. 13 —Winnie Davie, the “Daughter of the Confeders sume the anxiety, the care, the e did an ae y : Beas z act today that probably pense? If he is injured, mentally or saved the life of a young woman. | morally by following your suggestions, Miss Davis was passing through will you consider yourself wholly re- sponsible?” on her way to Colorado, when she 5 It is because of this absolute free- noticed on the train a young wo | dom from consequences that people are man who was uctiug strangely. |S eady with their advice. Hold them : ce tothe consequences, and they woulé Quietly inquiriug, she found that | be silenced. is the girl, Alice Weyud, of Hold ‘The only safe road is to press on un- redge, Neb. was nearly famished, hindered by advice, unless given by people who know what they are tal ing about. And this latter class will not be apt to press their opinion upon any one unsolicited, and will thoughtful one. haying eaten nothing for a number of hours. The Holdredve cflicials had put her get give a on the train to “What's friend. the matter?” asked a *'O, that mean cuss from the city just called me the worst kind of a har ‘Why don't you shoot a hole through the sneaking hound?’ thie, ike the rest of the conversation, be- ing punctured with upland varieties of oaths. ‘That's the trouble, whined the iusulted = mountuineer. ‘He's got only one arm aud be can't fight, and he’s half blind and can’t see, and he’s lame and can't run, so if I kill the warmiut, some blessed jury will hang me for murder! Kight People kK Killed. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 9 —One of the worst railroad wrecks ever recorded in this section occurred shortly after 10 o'clock this eyening, when the Oklahoma Rock Island express, eastbound, iz Omaha at 7 a.m, jumped the cverhecd bridge the Union Pacitic, five miles south of I ght and and Texas due oyer con. E people are known to be killed several injured The train consisted of an engine, tender, baggage, smoking car and coach. The engine and combination car went over the bridge, leaving tke coach suspended on the trestle Two and brakeman of the end passengers coach were uot injured. They wen aged to release two othery. Three traveling wen aud two farmers, names unkuown, were also killed. The are buried under the eng engineer aud fireman e. Others are supposed to have been burned to death. In response toa telephone mee- sage from the State prison in the vicinity of the wreck, a relief expedi- tion of physicians, police and fire department went to the scene and rendered all the assistance possible. All the cars were burn ed. Removal. We take pleasure in announcing that atter this date Parks Sure cure will re- move alitraces ot rheumatism, kidney troubles and liver complaint trom the user. Itis the only medicino that is guaranteed to cure these diseases or no Parks sure cure is sold by H. 1. An Infamous Scheme. Denver Col. Aug. 8.—The London Truth recently asked: “Why ought not some one to intéstizate the home for children of W. Cornell, El Cajon Valley, San Diego ¢dunty Cal- iformia. Acting upon the suggestion, W. H. Thompson, secretary of the Colo- rado Humane society, writing under the name of Harper Thompson, be- gan correspondence with Cornell. After a number of letters had been exchanged Cernell wrote: For $10,- 000 we will take care of your boy and see that he never returns to you agein—in short so hide him that he will be as one who is dead.” El Cajon. Valley is a small hamlet having only a few stores. There is no institution of any kind located there. “It is a most infamous scheme to get hold of money and in some man- ner make way with innocent children said Mr. Thompson. rid of her, as she wxs supposed to be weak minded. Miss Davis sup- plied her with food and money ard placed her in safe hands. Kalled Father and Daugh'er. Charleston, W. Va., August 9.— While driving near Evergreen, Put- nam County yesterduy, C. C. Martir, a prominent farmer and daughter, Mrs. Murrel! Melton, aud two child ren one a baby and ove 24 years old, were thrown from « wagon. Mai- tin was picked up dead with his head crushed. Mrs. Melton’s head was also crushed, avd sbe died this morning. A pathetic incident in cous nection with the accident was that the man who found them the children from beneath the debris and went for help. found the baby tryiny to suck’e mother, and the other oue wiping the blood from its mother’s face There are abundant opportunities for a mother to learn how to care for her child properly and intelligently, and though the mother who has bronght up, perhaps, four out of eight children. in utter disregard to all hygiene and the laws of health, and is perfectly satisfied to be ignorant of any better method, will say that she never “bothered” with these ‘‘new way and per children all did “well enough:” yet there is a higher aim than “well enough,” for which the thinking wom- an of to-day strives, and if she turns a deaf ear to irresponsible advisors, she may attain to it, and to the heights of unselfish, intelligently devoted mother- hood which lie before us.—Motherhood. IN A PEANUT FACTORY. How the Nuts are Prepared For the Market at Norfolk. When the peanuts arrive at the fac- tory they are rough and earth-stained, and of all sizes and qualities, jumbled together. The bags are first taken up by iron arms projecting from an end- less chain to the fifth story of the tory. Here they are weighed and emp- tied into large bins. From these they fall tothe next story into la cylinders, fourteen feet long, which re- volve rapidly, and by friction the nuts are cleansed from the earth which | clings to them, and pol that they come out white and glistening. From this story the nuts fall through removed Returning be fac- its: bins e Standing on a four-inech cornice 154 feet above the ground, Jeny Donovan, a house painter, carefully sd so painted the gilded cross on the] 3 oots to the Eee wees steeple of a church at Sulem, Ma ing floor. Imag rows of long, He had his paint pot in one hand] marrow tables, e ivided length- : : } wise into thr by and abrush in the other, and o¢ | yj strips of eat | strip | surround the ec of these sections is ot vy white ¢: of the tat loored witha casionally he turne} to make faces at the crowd The man was druvk and it was with difficulty that he was lured down froin bis danger- ous situation. W enough to understand the ris had run it crazed bim and he has been sent to an insane asylum. below. h moves in- a shoot to n below at the : These slow hen he grew s Upon ti ble dri What Will d Medteal writers c tul remedy tor non-irritating, easy of ap one that will reach the rer ulcerated surtaces. ‘he history to tt efforts to treat c rh is that only one remedy o 1? n that tl arrh nasal c¢ must lication, ote sores re | tral positive section. So 7 proct I has move at this we completely | what the mee these conditiohs and thaa is Ely*s ndful ¢ 1 This s and pleasant ‘ dy has mastered catarrh as nothing else has ever done, both physi aid) oe oY patients treely concede this tacy. Our] pickers, one that is a first. final plun ago a} bag whi love. | Witha the highest market fr aud he took] “rhe peanuts fro drugyists keen it. At Joplin a few nights young man ealled on his lady They were on the law. aseat in the hammock while shej fall only to the s« read froma book. The young man| they undergo | ¥ tables, the these form- fellasleep and the lady beeame in e eeooull ade dignant and left. He woke up at = 10:30 and sneaked off, and he is : the | Separates them from the ke are sold to. the anufac while the shells are gro = up 4 r horse bec uit, shells and | afraid to meet the lady on the street, ers 0 Rev. Horst of St. Louis, while | visiting relatives at Lockwood Tues day started out for a horseback ride. His horse threw him. His foot| wasted, caught in the stirrup and the an-| Purpose imal kicked him to death | A Household Treasure. 3 vegetat but all serves useful —Blue and G some What Aunt Marie Thought. | “Jonah,” remarked Aunt Maria to her nephew, ‘‘why in the name of good- ness did you ever become a preacher?” | this after she had heard him inthe pul- DD. W. Fuller, ot Canajoharie, > says thathe always keeps Dr. Sa = New Discovery in the hous: an | pit for the first time. tamily has always tound the very best), “Beeause, Aunt Mari results follow its use; that n uld not| “I was called.” he replied be without it, if procaral G. A. “Ugh,” “Maybe you Dykeman_ Druggist, C N. Y.,| was, but says that Dr. King’s New Discovery is|a might undoubtedly the best Cough remeds: | Press” that he has used it in his tamilv tor eight vears, and it has never tailed to do all that is claimed for it. Why not try a remedy so long tried and tested. ‘rial bottles tree at H. L. ckers’ Drug Store. Regular size 50, $1,00. ms A Very Thirsty Boy. “Mamma, pleas give me a jink.” ‘Go to sleep You can't drink any more. “Please mamma ——* “Go to sleep, Charley. or I'll get up and whip you~ Say, mamma, when you get up to whip me won't you give me a jink?”"— | N. Y. Advertiser. The Kansas City Star is authority |for the statement that “Mine Inspec tor Evans never attended school a day in his life.” That speaks well! —Bella comes from the Latin through for opportunites in politics. | the Italian, the Beautiful One i | con | every A FRENCH WOMAN SPY. The Career of an Ad Wide Noteriety- The career of Mme. Mill woman rece 1 by the crim fi fucnish abundant material for tional roma Marie e. Her ami Foret. young wom: one Gennot, a rich anc for many years r under her her marriage world, and tr traveler. With him sh delphia and lived rs. Then she nd remained here for some gaged in ness. Next she tu in Buenos Ayres for her there and sh erlin, where she 2d for a time in} went to live led a srlin she ued there her old style of high time to go to a ica, and keep himse. of his fast and extravagant better This he did. and Mme. Gennot was enough not to take the . to heart. She dead and in where she m well to do business time she brought bankruptey. But she managed to Just where her f mained a mystery. somewhat in funds store inthe Rue repc he SO returne LY a somehow or Bretagne, she sold religious books, statuettes. As she her piety, good her, and for three years the hed. Inisst M and ow’s neighbors were pression that she fac ture for a better world however, did not 1 the death of her husl ried on was Christia ins p nder th his al her rs she the business on eount. In the eve company. Her by a cosmop: rust, little n group. a conversat an accomplished musician. But in addition to her re tablishment, sl rried on ina at which she was always t cl ing sp’ In the artof teaching tables how to dance alk with legs she had no equal in derful stories are told of h with the departed, and it is said many prominent men, includ Lytton (“Owen Meredith”), is, ng sulted her. After a time she abandoned the spir- | the its and profitable f to business of ¢ cording to a devoted herse! prominent Paris police, w numerous this busin its eye on many of t preser most mos agents in has them, but to catch was too bol antic for a lo cu in he professic took large cont and great risks, and was “pi last. The evidence against her Was sentenc nt.-—N. Y sive, ive year How Lacing and Padding Spoil the Figure. ed nm eve wonders by exercise. al court of Paris, would a sensa- got tired of or to South Ar om was nalist an on ac’ The pe e was dress- music. and f beyond the reach mue > was to Paris, ips. a other gain. 1 ree business e ime g the their Won- pr interviews that Lord often con- more Ac- the at the they vus to . | PRESSURE MEANS BAD FORM. Fem- scles, Step By Step. le up of little rs continer wk writes a ad He o after principle. s made up of s, little kindnesses, words, loving smiles and One in a million once in his may do a heroic action; but things which make up our life hour and every day.— Free Préss. His orite Animals. Sunday-School Teacher—Do yor animals? Boy—Yes'm “That's oe ou do. animals 2 “Snakes” “Goodness! Why do sou Cause it ain't wicked to k —Good News “Thrifty Device. jordan: Been away, ‘act by Shad must go wh The little pleasant | good | deeds | come | —Detroit a love What ng a bolt, rom | jeight page news; | Star five vearly Z short | m to the ver; \ day | ; Which he s:id that a plate " |in one section and softened iu anoth |municated the fa | tion. ed farms or rental property and $,-} 'Srate oF Onto, City oF Totepo \ Lucas County. Frank } Cheney make oath that h not be cur tarrh ¢ nials tree. J. CHENEY & CO., Tolec BEB Sold t Tie We mt Addresses the | erasa bt man and a citize: Doesn't tell bam | how tu farm, but how to sell, and where aud when, and keeps a vignl- ant eye upon his nights as a skipper a producer nnd atax payer. All the| news, too, wid plenty of “good read- ling’ forthe family. Now read in 100 000 farm houses Fifty-two big vers for 25 cents. To any one who sends the Weekly with 31: ear free Armor Plate Frauds. Washington, D. C., Aug. 10.—The investigation of the alleged Carnegie armor plate suds was resumed to Captain Saupson, the chief of the ordinance of the department, wis the witness The bureaa nav, f interest principal watter was his opinion of th» method of of plans by perce treatment thing hardened er was not to be depended upon Captain Sampson sails plate could jnot be considered uuifor.a if speci mets from different parts varied 20, 000 pounds in tensile strength In ;an extreme cage a difference of 5,000 jor 10,000 pounds might be permit ted Sagucious Coyotes. Gathiie, Ok ,—A remarkable story of the sagacity of animals comes There has rain their this seascn and adil the streams and e) rings have froin Cheyenne county. been very little gone dry, so that there is no place for the wild) animals abounding in thirst adapted to hundreds of acres that section to quench their he soil there ts well ] watermelous aud have been planted by the scattered s ttlers. Since it has become so dry the farmers tind that for the first time, the coyotes are after their melons. Whee an animal becomes thi he goes in a watermelon patch, jumps ou the melon until be cracks it, tien inseris lis sharp bose into the melou and his thirst with soon as one disc quer ches the contents, As »vered this he com- t to the others and on crop of the county fair to be destroyed in this the entire mel bids way. Dicer! lution Notice ip existing between ver constituting the irm of Lee Culver € Co, has this day veen dissolyed by mutual consent, A. H Cul- Lee Culver will continne the . collecting all accounts due the firm ing all obligations Ae CULVER -4t a . CULVER WANTED TO Exchange for Farm: 000 stock of situated in good buisn lumber and hard- rood Hlinois town, want good farm. ‘neral stock, residence Iding $6,000. Large-t store west of Salina-Railroad t good farm. $16,000 is in groceries and provisions, ballance dry goods, rlothing, doing good busi- of $10, yar? a quonth, no competi- Want $25,000; in good improv- 000 to $10,000 cash. $18,000 general stock, well situated, doing a large business. Want good farm and three or four thousand dol- jars cash. $5,000 general stock. farin in eastern Kansas at Noinflation. $3,000 stock of hardware and $2,5 500 | stone building and will put $1,000 to 35,000 in good notes, due September 1, 1804. Want good farm. 4,000 general stock want and 21,000 cash. Will encumberance. 500 hardware for good farm 000 genera! and 34,009 g in good north Missonri town for good farm. S,508 dry goods, and 335,000. W: 36,000 stock dry goods, farm. Address, GW, GLARDY, BEUTLER MISSOURI. its value. stock want good farm | assume $35,000. want good 000 stock of nts furnishing good Illinois town of $6,- it good farm. | and | and | Want good} | | ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT T. J. Switn. A.W. Tuvewan SMITH THURMAN. LAWYERS, Bates Count Natn'l Bank. Butler, M oo 2k A. SMITH, LAWYER. Office over Pettus’ grocery, southwest corner of square, Butler, Mo, ‘areful attention given to criminal, divorce and collection cases. ( ve & CLARK, ATTORNcYS AT LAW. Office over Nort Office over Missouri State Bank ATs Silvers & Denton ‘armers Bank. 4h C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north’side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- BUTLER, MO. Office over thi jen aspecialtv. subsenbers together | the paper will be sent one | | | | | | | | | | i | in from | assume! DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront store. Atl night. Specialattention given to temale dis eases. room over Mckibdbens calianswered at office day or OLDEST AND ORICINAL Dr WHITTIER 10 WEST NINTH STREET, {NEAR JUNCTION.) KANSAS CITY, @ e@ MISSOURI. Regular graduate authorized by the state, andconced- and URINARY With Its Many Gloomy Symptoms Cured. Syphilis Quickly Rélleved and Thoroughly Cured. makes no promises that he Dr. Whittier in ae rson or by letter (giving skill and sterling Integrity. re from observation. URINARY ANALYSIS. Call or address 1 strict confidence THE TIMES’ EVERY JANUARY 1. ‘TILL DISEASES. Lost Vitality Cured for Life Without Mercury. Wh is ‘Dr. i J. Whittier invar- =f cannot fulfill, Avoid cheap andid opinion of a MEDICINES from our own laboratory fur- TREATMENT r sent c.o0.D. Office hours—? to 4 and 7 to 8. Sunday 10 to 12. DR. H. J. WHITTIER, =] s r Kansas City DAY Twice-a-Week JANUARY 1 Nervous Debility Perfectly and Permaaeatly Restored. Urinary Diseases iably successful? Because he cure-alls and unskilled physicians, and consult n of long expertence, unquesticned at small cost and shipped anywhere FREE CONSULTATION. Curie) to case co peepay: \O West Ninth Street. 8 City, Ma R E D U Cc E D! “ ° S Imes ‘TILL Times 30 cents. In order that no one may have an ex ng posted on the he political cam ses has made these rcely cover the cost of deyel- paign of rates, publi- Subscribe Now. Address, The Times Kansas City, Mo. Sample Copies Free.

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