The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 17, 1895, Page 2

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26 K C. Pittsburg & Gulf Time Tanle. Arrival and departure of trains at Worland. NORTH HOUND. No. 7, Freight daily except Sunday 12:10 p m N ue ae ae Sat ; No,1'Expressdaily - - = SOUTH BOUND. No.2,Expreasdaily - - - No. 6, Frieght daily except Sunday Remember this is the popular short line be- tween Knneas City, Mo., and Pittebury, Kan., Joplin, wo “Neosho, mo., Sulpher Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark,, and th direct route from the south to St Louis, Chi- cago, and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Portland and points west and northwest No expense has een spared to make the passenger equipment of this line second to none in the west, Travel yia the new line. oe JAS. DONOHUE Gen’! Passenger Agent, Kansas City, Mo. NEW LAWS, All Citizens of Missouri Should Know What They Are. Jefferson City Tribune, There was a number of interest- ing and important enactments by the last general assembly of Mise souri whose provisions have not ful- ly reached the public. They are well worth knowing about, and the prin- cipal facts of{some of them are given herewith: GAME. In 1893 an act was passed probib- iting the sale or purchase for ship- ment outside the county where kill- ed any quail, pinnated grouse or prairie chickens. The legislature has amended this act to include deer and turkey, so that neither of these can be shipped fora period of five years, but must be disposed of in the county where killed. It is also a misdemeanor now to destroy any wild California Valley, Mexican or Texas quail, or to} catch or injure any Chinese pheasants. It has become unlawful to kill a a deer anywhere in this state be- tween January and October, or to kill a doe at any season during the next five years, or to killa wild song bird at any time; or to kill a wild turkey, prairieSckicken or quail between January land November 1, or any woodcock, turtle dove, mead- ow lark er plover, between January land August 1, or any wild duck between April 1 and October 1. CIGARETTES ‘TO MINORS. All cities, towns and villages in this state are nowauthorized to pro- hibit by ordinance the sale, within their corporate limits, of cigarettes or cigarette wrappers to minors. FRAUDS IN HORSE RACES. Any person who hearafter enters or caused to be entered ina horse race any horse under any other than its true name or out of its proper place, commits a felony and may be sent to the penitentiary tor three years, or sent to jail for six. months or fined $1,000. INFANT BLINDNESS. Nurses and midwives are required to report to a legally qualified prac- titioner of medicine if any infant in their charge shall, within three weeks after birth, giye any indica. tions of having sore eyes. It is made the duty of the health officers furnish nurses and midwives with copies of this law, and any violation of the act is to be visited by a pun- ishment of $100 fine or six months in jail. This law was enacted to prevent blindness in children, statis- tics having shown that three-fourths of the blindness is due to neglect of the eyesight in early infancy. ALIEN OWERNSHIP. Hereafter no person not a citizen of the United States and no corpor- ation not created under the laws of this country can own or hold real estate in Missouri unless the same is acquired by inheritance or in the ordinary course of justice in the eol- lection of a debt. And no real estate can be held or owned in Missouri by any corporation or association in which more than 20 per cent of the stock is owned by persons or cor- perations not citizens of the United States. CHILDREN. It has been made a crime for any person having the care, custody or control of any child under the age of 14 years to exhibit, employ or otherwise dispose of such child to any person, in and for the vocation or occupation of singing, playing on musical instruments, rope or wire- walking, dancing, begging, peddling or as a gymnast, contortionist, rider or acrobat, in any place whatsoever, or for any obscene, indecent or im moral purpose, or in any business, exhibition or yocation injurious to the health or dangerous to the life and limb of such child. Church and school entertainments are excepted. THE TORTURES. Applied to Suspected Chinese before Foreign Consuls. London, Oct. 10.—The pondent in Kucheng describes the trial of « prisoner implicated in the outrages upon missionaries. corres: The accused man is brought in| handcuffed. He is filthy in appear- ance, and has the wild and ghastly look of a starved man, which he really is. The prisoner opens the proceeding by swearing that he was nowhere near the scene of the mas- sacre, and the torture begins. The man is first compelled to kneel with his bare knees upon a coil of chain. His head is dragged back and his pigtail is fastenedto a rack high above his head. A pole is then thrust across his legs and two sol- diers stand on each end of it, crush ing the poor wretch’s knees into the eoil of chain. The British Consul could not stand this method of extracting test- imony and insisted that it be stop. ped. This was done as far as the proceeding in the court room were concerned, but for an hour after- wards the shrieks of tormented pris- oners could be heard coming from an adjacent room, where the torture was continued. When the magis- trates wanted to hear the confessiox ofa tortured man the prisoner was brought back into the court room. If he held back his confession he was threatened with resumption of tor ture. This was usually sufficient to cause the prisoner to tell all he knew rather than return to the torture chamber. Besides the torture described the prisoners were beaten with bamboo sticks until their yells were most horrible to hear. One prisoner appeared in the}, court room unable to walk from the]! beating he had received, and another was unable to kneel because his knees had been broken by the chain links and his thighs had been lacer ated by the strokes of the bamboo rods. In the midst of such misery cakes fruit, tea and wine were served and partaken of by the native officials, who could not understand why the foreigners present pushed these delicacies aside, refusing to touch them. The correspoudent declares that the Powers ought to demand justice witheut torture. The whole busi ness he says, lies at the door of cor rupt officials. An illustration of how space is annihilated by telegraph was offered a few days ago by two clerks sitting opposite each other in a Chicago of fice. One of them was sending a message to New Orleans and the other was receiving one from the same city. The sender wanted to borrow a plug of tobacco from his colleague, but it would have been a breach of rules to ask for it. He thereupon wired to New Orleans and asked the receiver there to tell his partner te hand him a chew. In less than a minute tie plug came ovar the glass partition which separated the two operators. The message traveled considerably over a thous- and miles while only a yard separat- ed the one operator from the other. —Ex. We can hardly realize the fact that it has been but little over 100 yaars since counterfeiters were pub, licly burned at a stake in London, the present boasted center of civil- ization. On March 18, 1789, Chris- tian Murphy was executed at New- gate Tower, London, for the erime of coining. She was bound to a stake soated on a stool, the main tie being a cord around the neck. The funeral pyre was then lighted by the executioner and his deputies, one of the latter of whom finally jerked the stool from under the wretched creature, allowing the weight to fall on her neck. Within 48 {minutes the body was reduced to ashes and buried on the spot where the execu- tion took place —Republic Cure for Headache. 2 As aremedy tor all torms of Head- ache Electric Bitters has proved to be the yery best. It ettects a permanent cure and the most dreaded habitual sick headaches Yield to its influence: bottle and give this remedy a fair trial. Tu cases of habitual constipasion Electric | Bitteis cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and tew cases long resist the use ofthis medicine. Try it once. Large bottles only Fitty certs at HH, L. Tucker’s Drug Store. zl i Deacon Bros, & Co. | Heavy and Shelf Hardware. Cutlery and Guns Tinware and Stoves. eld and Garden Seeds, Buggies, Way and Farm Machinery, wagon i-work, Iron, Steel, Nails, Sa b Wire, Buggy Paints, Machine Oil. Groceries and Farm Produce | COPYRIGHT &3 2 IT HAS BEEN POINTED Out to you a hundred times or more that no one sells our hardware Butus We are especially, long now on heat- ing and cooking stoves, husking gloves and egs, loaded shells, skates, coal hods shelf rackets, stove pipe and elbows, stove boards, wood saws, cross cut saws, chopping exes, sausage Mills, slaw cutters. Original Round Oak. Don’t make the mistake that others did and buy an imitation stove. The good people who bonght these rattle traps one, two. three, four and more years ago are coming tous now sud buying the genuine Round Oak; their eyes are opened, they discovered when too late their mistake; they were promised a fire keeper; they were told that the imitations Oaks were as good as the genuine Round Oak. These profuse promises were not realized. The re- sults are obvious Our sales on Round Oaks are already double that of any other year up to the same date. Honest goods will always win in the end. BARNEY & BERRYS CELE- BRATED New York Club Skates. FOR GENTLEMEN. Are The Best In The World. SCLD EY DEACON BROS. & CO. Low Price Hardware and G:ocery House. The opinion is credited to one of the Rothschilds that within five years the prosperity of the United States will surpass that of any other country in the world There is ground for the belief, not only be- cause of the general revival of in- dustry now in pregrese, but in the prospect for a marked increase in railway building. Perhaps the coun- try may be approaching its maxi- mum of steam railroad tracks That is not probable indeed, but even if it were true, it ia certainly true on the other hand that electric develop- ment is just begioning,that it prom- ises to be extraordinary, and that as/| aresult of it the marketing of all| | publicans in the home of ex Pre: The Indianapolis Victory. = : a | The Indianapolis Democracy de- serves the thanks of all members of the grand old party of the people. Seldom has there been so complete a victory. The overthrow of the Re- ; Sea dent Harrison by a majority of 3, 200 with a net Demoeratie gsin of 6,500 votes, isa triumph of which jany Democrat might well be proud | {The defeat was the worst ever ex perience history of the city. * Democrats all over the country | can follow the lead of the triumph- ant Indianapolis membere, if they will but get together and unite all their forces to one common end. Minor differences should be forgot- ten; personal animosities waived aside; ambitious trouble-makers sent to the rear, and every available en- ergy concentrated to win. In this way orly can success be assured. The party must be purged of dis- turbing elements which haye noth- ing in common with the fundament- al principles of the party,and around them will rally the forces which will win a glorious victory for the party and for principle all along the line. —kK. C. Times. The Shakers have made a great hit. Their Digestive Cordial is said to be the most successful remedy for stomach troubles ever introduced. It immediately relieves all pain and distress after eating, builds up the feeble system and makes the weak strong. is,foods properly digest- ed are better than so-called tonics. The Cordial not only contains food already digested, butis a digester of other foods. Food that is not digested does more harm than good. People who use the Cordial insure the digestion of what food they eat and in this way get the benefit of it and grow strong. The little pamphlets which the Shakers have sent druggis for free distribution, contain much interest- ing information on the subject of dyspepsia Laxol is not a mixture of drugs. It is nothing but Castor Oil made palatable. Justice Jackson’s Successor. Washington, D. C., Oct. 10.—It is reported in Administration circles that Sen. Hill has announced hig de- termination to oppose the confirma- tion of Hornblower if that gentle. man should be nominated by Presi-| _ dent Cleveland for the vacancy caus- ed by the death of Justice Jackson of the Supreme Court. Mr. Hill is quoted as saying that in view of his official record in the Senate the re- quest that he support Hornblower would be little short of insult. It is now rumored that Thomas C. Catch- ings of Mississippi may receive the nomination. Petersburg, Va., Oet. 9.—The re- mains of Gen. Mahone reached here this morning at 10 o'clock. They were met by the members of the A. P. Hill camp, Confederate veteraus, under command of Lieut. Morgan, and a large number of citizens The procession moved to the family resi dence on Market street, where the casket was opened and the dead sol- dier and statesman viewed by his old comrades and other citizexs. Climax Brandy of Grape. This superior yintage of 1876 Brandy, introdueed by the Speer N. J. Wine Co. is highly spoken of by phpsicians. The following testimony from the Baltimore Medical College is one among many: “I am prepared to bear testimony to the value of Climax Brandy pre- dicated upon the ascertained yalue of your productions, and not from general reputation merely. “H. L. Byap, Pres. “Are you in favor of direct or in- direct taxation?” “I'm in favor of none at all. I am the only man whose position on the tariff can be understood.”—Texas Siftings. “Ten years ago,” said the contem- plative gentleman, “I was a bache- 1 by the Republicans in the| We! urge all who are afflicted to procure a} commodities produced or used in! Jor and hustling for a wife.” “And the United States is likely to be| now Iam not only hustiing fer my greatly faciliated by the use of elec-| wife, but for ber mother and two of |tric roads as “feeders” for larger | ber aunts.” He sighed. jlines. The activity now existing in’ The capital removal question now {the iron market is an indication of| before the supreme court has been | what prontises to be an era of great | advanced on the docket and a deci- | -oapaniie New York Weed | sion will be rendered before Decem. PE ang eeeioren Saree eaten ye ber. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts) We taxe pleasure in announcing that Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,SaltRheum Fever! after this date Parks Sure cure will re- Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains | move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney Corns, ::nd all Skin Eruptions, and posi- troubles and liver complaint trom the | tively Cures Piles, or no Pay required. user. It is the only medicino that is is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction | guarantced to cure ‘these diseases or no or money refunded. Price 25 cts per boxt| Gay, Parks sure cure issold by H. L- | For sale by EH, L. Tucker, druggist | Tacker, Removal. | } MOTHERS’ FRIEND” Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk. 1 \ Sent by Mai price, $1.00 p ers” mailed Free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. | | Having disposed of my stock of goods at New Home, to Mr. Shalley, those knowing themselves indebted to me on account will confer a favor by calling and settleing. I want to pay what I owe and must have a settlement in order to meet my ob- ligations. So call and settle. Thank- yours, N. M. NestLeropE Take subscriptions to the Butler Weekly Trves, at $1.00 per year and as agent is authorized to collect and receipt for the paper. ape Nerson M. Nestrerop. Nature's ( ScHENck's Remeoy \> oa ror gar) ManpRake Liver ( LiverPits Comezaint | === C. HAGEDOR The Old Reliable PHOTOGRAPHER North Side Square. Has the best equipped gallery in ‘Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing executed in the highest style of the act, and at reasonabie prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN. CB. LEWIS & CO Proprietor of klk Horn Stables Having purchased the Elx Horn barn and Liyery outfit ot J. W Smith, and having added to the same a number of first-class Buggies, and horses, I can say to the public that I now have the Best Livery Barn In southwest Mo. Horses! and mules bought and sold, or stock handled on commission, Stock bearded by the day week or month, With 16 years exper- ience Mr Lewis teels able to compete with anv Livery barn in this section. Call ard see him © BLEWIS & CO THINACURA ! FOR THIN PEOPLE | Are you thin? Flesh made with Thinacara Tablets by ascien. title process. They create perfect a+similatio of every form of food, secreting t vaiuabl: parts and discarding the worthless. T make thin faces plamp snd round ont | figure. They are the | STANDARD REMEDY | for leanness. containing no arsenic, an 1 anso-/} |lutely harmless. Price, prepaid, $1 per box, 6 for 83 | “HOW TO GFT FAT,”’ free, The THINACURA Co,, 949 Broadway, S_Y./ ' | ing you for past patronage, I am} | Bates county Bank, BUTLER, MO. Successor to |Eates Co. National Bank. | Established in 1870. | Paid up capital $125,000 |A general banking business trans- acted. |F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. j. C. CLARK - - Cashier T. J. Svar. A.W. Tuvrman SMITH THURMAN. LAWYERS, Office over}]Bates County Natn’! Bank. Butler, Missouri. Gass & CLARK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. Silvers & Denton ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW BUTLER, MO. Office over the Farmers Bank. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en aspecialtv. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIt PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over McKibbens store. All callanswered at office day or nigut: Specialattention given to temale die eases. DR. L. SHOCKEY DENTIST. (Successor to Dr. Fulkerson.) Office Southeast Corner Square, over Deacon Bors. & Co.'s Stogg. BUTLER, - - : MISSOURI DR, J.T. HULL DENTIST. Newly Fitted up Rooms, Over Jeter’s Jewelry Store. Entrance, same that leads to Hagedorn’s Studio, north sive square, Butler, Mo. REAL SS TATE. Insurance, Loans and Rentals. We are prepared to handle farm or city prop- erty, sell exchange or rent. We represent reliable insurance companies. We have private money to loan on personal security. All business entrusted to us will receive promptand carefull attention good rigs always ready. Call and see us, MILLHORN & BEESON. Two In Poor Health means so much more than you imagine—serious and fatal diseases result from trifling ailments neglected. Don’t play with Nature’s greatest gift—health. ue you are feelin; and generally ex- hausted, nervous, Browns Tron Bitters and can't work, begin at oncetak- ing the most relia- ble strengthening medicine, which is Erown's Iron Bit- A few bot- cure—benefit . from the pleasant to take. It Cures Dyspepsia, Kidney ané Liver Neuralgia, Troubles, Constipation, Bad Blood Malaria, Nervous aitments Women’s complaints. be renuine— rs ic. $a mill send set of Ten Beautiful World Fair Views and book—iree. ee BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, 14D. cam

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