The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 31, 1882, Page 6

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i i i i i { | } i i t ' “to the approval of all. THE LATEST. The Crops, Damaged by the Late Frosts in Iowa. Senator Ben Hill Improving—Dorsey Gives Bail—Approved. Gave Baul. Washington. May 24.--John W. Dorsey, indicted for conspiracy in the s oute cases, gave $1,c0o bail to-day. Signed. Tenn., M 24.—The ned the bill to fund Nashville, Governor has the state debt at sixty cents, with in- terest at three, four, five and six per cent. Much Improved. Eureka Springs. Ark., May 2 The health of Senator Ben. Hill, of Georgia, who has been here several | weeks drinking the healthy waters of , the Springs, 1s much improved, and his physicians say there 1s hopes of a cure, or at least that his life will be greatly prolonged. The Crops. Keokuk, Ia., May 24.—A special to the Gate City from a number of points in this state the late cold weather terially damaged the crops, except | the corn. Most of this is planting and much of it rottingin the has not ground and will have to be replant- | The raius continue and thus far | strong | indicate that } ma- | late in| 4A WRATHFUL JUDGE. Avother Remarkable Scene in the St. Louis Criminal Court. St. Louis, May 23-— Tu at able proceedir in Stanley W is the case absort day. Late last 1 another thé crin d the ged. Laugh terially c name of t Sooner or late ‘ matter with . Water When he left the bench last ing he had intended badge of servitude and resis hke Grant, he would not under fire. As to the man who ' thor of the article he his contempt. He knew his experience. He was a slanderer and a coward. to au- ath trom was tl Judge Hayden, on hehalf oi Mr. : ; Waterloo, accepted full responsibil- ity for the ar and refused to He considered tne ly illegal le; ! apologize. ac- | tion of the court entir | would take no further notice of ‘the tribunal. The matter. was then dropped. It is believed sthat the matter will remain as it new stands and the sensation is over. When Carthage enters upo tem of manufacturi trosseau may be said | Every mother’s son of us shou! member that with a goed system of manufacturing Carthage may bid tarewell to al) periodical drouths, sys- ding sted. re com re- ed. have prevented replanting, which short crops, etc., and wipe her weep- - k A ite iat tc: | ing eves with the silken ker f ot tender eee Comp ag tate drat iL car independence. Kemunerative labor not mature before the fall frosts. Hourely Becoming Worse. London, May 24.—A_ dispatch from Cairo states that the situation is hourly becoming worse. VERY WARLIKE. is wealth—the more production the more wealth. Ruches lie in brawney hands and stalwart arms, and the more of these that are kept busy the more wealth will be created. W h does not grow like a sunflower, spon- taneously; it is wholly a prod f ct of creation, and naught save labor can Cairo, Egypt, May 24.—The min- istry continues its hostile preparation. A line of torpedoes is being laid along the coast and native carpenters and smiths have been summened to the citadel to-day. All officers were summoned te abandon the barracks yesterday and required to swear to defend the government against inter- vention. An attempt has been made to exact a similar understanding trom the Bedouin Shieks, but they refuse to pledge themselves to resist Turkish intervention. The united squadron has a contract for three months’ pro- visions. THE JEWISH TROUBLES. St. Petersburg, May 24.—The regulations agreed upon by the com- mittee ot ministes anc approyed by the emperor, provides that Jews shall henceforth be prohibited trom set- tling outside the towns and _ villages except where Jewish settlements already exist. The Jews are pro- | hibited from tradmg on Sundays and ! other Christian holidays. These only apply to governments where the | Jews are permanehtly settled. All} contracts of purchase ortenancy with | Jews are provisionally suspended. | THE London, May 24 won by ‘‘Shotover. second, Lorillard’s **Sac “K. Bruce.”’ the favorite, forth. The time of ** 3-5. The bettinga at the start was § to DERBY. ~The Derby was ’ “Quick Time”’ | m’’ third. | came in Attempted Kape. Jefferson City, May 23. —Yester- | day Homer Minior. a ‘negro, at- | tempted a dastardly outrage upon the | person of Miss Kate Fisher, sister- | m-law to Mr. Wm. Wagner, who lives about four miles exst of town. The negro saw the young lady pass ! on horseback, going home. He fol- i lowed and overtook her, when he | rushed at her and pulled her off the horse and attempted to outrage her. Miss Fisher fought him desperately and screamed at the top of her voice, and Fritz Raithel, who was not far off, hearing her cries, went to her assistance, and the negro seeing him ran away without accomplishing his | purpose & Distinguished Party. [Houston Post. The ladies and gentlemen of the Missouri Press Association, who were the guests ot the citizens of | Houston, commended themselves by | their good looks and discreet behavior It would be | dithcult to get so many men together | who would exhibit the unmistakable signs ot intelligence and: good breed- { ing as are shown by our Missouri brethren ; and as to the ladies—well | —they are ladies, and there’s the end of it. The excursiomsts won| — Opinions certainly from the | ou: ; and oper ' soc jnow at large. } ing medicine. | pleasure to be its creator.—Carthage Patriot. We call the attention of our rea ers to the above as equally applica ble to Butler. Bates is a good coun- ty, is growing and will continue to grow until every acre of land in the county is enclosed and rine tenths of its entire area under cultivation. It will then support a county seat of, perhaps, sevenor eight thousand habitants, by making it a market its products. Unless, howeyer, procure manufacturies, shoul‘ live to be centenarians never see it exczed that we we would We we size. have all the necessary facilities for | manufacture; coal in inexhaustible quantities les at our streams are bordered with fine ber and a sufficient and supply of water is to be had. And now is the time to strike. facturing men everywhere we say doors; our tur accessible To manu- come and see tor yours¢ people are mt: hearted facil to our m jay mori six prisoners bound for the State Penitentiary, and placed them in the cataboose for sz © till} this morning. e keep Sometime during {the mght the prisoners burst thei ! > ceil open and all escaped and are pursuit. The make-up in a newspaper of- fice is so used to imposing -on a. stone that is not astonishing if he | sometimes imposes on good nature. Gen. Grant and family expect to | occupy their Long» Branch cottage on the first of June. PILES! PILES! PILES! A sure cure tound at last! No one! need suffer! A sure cure tor klind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles has n discovered by Dr. William, (an In- jan remedy,- called Dr. Williani’s In- dian Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 30 yeurs standing. No one need suffer five min- ute after applying this wonderful so. Lotions instrumerts and electuaries do more harm than good. William's Qintment absorbs the tumors, ailays the intense itching; (particularly « night atter getting warm in Wed,) poultice, gives instant and painiess iad is prepared only tor Piles, itching of tie private parts. and for nothing else. Read what the Hon, J. M. (ofinberry vt Cleveland says about Dr. Vi iliaw* Indian Pile Ointment: 1 base. used scores of Pile Cures. and it affords me anything wi permanent r stonians, and they themselves | Ointment. appeared to be thoroughly satisfied with the treatment they received in the Bayou Citv. For sale by J.G. Walker dru. Fd on receipt of price, $1.00. aaile HENRY & Co., Prop’n, 62 Vesev Street. New York > our§people and cne or in- | forms may for | Officers are im hot ¢ ' pictured by our divines, the weary GLORIOUS ATH! Increased Preparation--- Something New For Butler. Notwithstandi lukewarmness « g the very apparent ore business f July Butler continues. all work devising and arranging every ablishments, the grand 4th are The commi ees fexture that can possibly add to the celebra ot the est and tion, which is intended to be for whole county, except that portion tributary to- our enterprising sister city, Rich Hill. There ure arrangements seing made to award large handsome flag to the township havin display in the procession or the best the on grounds during the day. mittee of disinterested parties will be | ? appointed to act as judges and make the award. eature, there will be estir repr sented in the procession about every class of business ests ler. This feature is something new tor this city, nothing ot the kind ever | | haying been exhibited,before, and, as | | a matter ot course, will ingly interesting. | Each | represented will have a wagon {team of its own, and the display | wili be extensive. | Never before in the history of But- 1 | ler has such preparations been be- | gun so tar in advance for a 4th of } July celebration, and it means the | grandest success ever chronicled here. There are plenty of people jin Bates county to justity two splen- did celebrations—one at Butler and the other at Rich Hill. | The bed of a press needs_making up but once, although ten thousand lie upon it. Yet the blanket must be changed occasion- | ally. i | The inkstands of Moore and Cole- | ridge, and a httle box made of wood {from Dante’s coffin, were among | Mr. Longfellow’s possessions. | Don’t pick up type when they tall on the floor, but spit tobacco juice 'on and walk over them. It adds | greatiy to their usefullness—for the hell-box The editor of a Mississippi paper wrote: ‘Our fair last week exhibited among other things a collection of | but the type setter substi- ** for RIES.” insect tuted ut her watch under her > other night, but couldn’t | re because it And the all the time, | i right under her, | f that at all. | mon a mercurial ket but when he zoes straight tor kethe ulls and »ck Exchange, who clean earned cash, it returns interest, in the way of tense Itching and insuring | When the train bearing the Texas editors arrived at a station in Colora- do, the populace deserted the town, thinking that tne Tesse James aven- gers had arrived. In the most cosy corner ef those bright realms of bliss, so beautifully editor mav iook for his friends, when ‘-life’s fitful dream is o’er.’” <A tnan was s con newspaper Office with one cye gouged out, les nose spread out his piece of raw ione of his cars chawed o vn officer who interviewed | x “I didn’t ke an ar- tin the paper an’ I 2 that writ it. ever alte of Necessity. ed for the want I science can only contrasting the vast Lot suttering cured and pain allev- din modern tires, by the use of | ia diseases. Its <terfzed by the drawl of a score or more ot Ins, whose evil effect sto denounce dthe proverb, oi Invention. ilivsive’ qu have Jett living 1 them. ‘hus is Necessity is the 291-22-1m hard at | the | A com- |} In addition to this inter- | be exceed- | business | and ! i { disturbed % | Customers and , then: ‘On Ft. Scott st. ANUNFAILING FORALL SKIN' REMEDY cyucyas DISEASES TETTER ITCH. SORES. PIMPLES. ‘Ss. RING WORM, stinging, itching, worse at vias Weve crawling about en affected. Asa cure, SWAYNE’S ° in the market. -ct. Stampa. 3 N- Phila, Pa 1 IUPOW PION 1018410 SUsUSVAR [UPOTY PION *auI2Uy, 19PMOd 6, by NEW YORK. These goods Lave no equal in_ quality and handsome style of package. Satisfac- tion guaranteed or no pay. Ask your grocer for J. MoyroE TAytor’s Gold Medal Soda, Saleratus, or Baking Powder, and consult t interests by giving it a trial—you Boots and Shoes made to or best and all kinds of leather used. ‘hey | eaknowledge no superior. g@y~Repairing prompily attended to.-%— Shop north side square, between R. Weil’= and the Palace Hote. | BUTLER. MO. vind ! caver te ! BRIDGEFORD & HUPP. Grnamental House | ~-AND— Sign Painters Graining, Paper-Hanging, Decora ting, Sign and Buggy Work a | SPECIALTY. | The boss livery man of Bates | county has removed his splendid Livery Steck. into the BRICK STABLE tormerly oecupied by Nave & Wain- scott, on North Main street, where he will be always ready to meet the demands of the pubiic for, BUGGIES, H ORES Saddle Horses, and all equipments that are kept at | first-class livery stables. Will also} buy and sell ' Mules and Horses. | every day in the week Sundays ex- cepted. Mr. Lewis is the prince of | clever fellows and is perfectly at} home .in the hvery busines: He always anticipates the wants of his never fails to meet CITY HOTEL MIL Es 3t § 2-2 block trom: of the square. Southwest cor Meals - = F Board UNV (epok PIO” | has fost published a book on oft which is offered tree, postpaid to all ap- plicents. tion for all who suppo flicted with, or liable : the throat or lungs. Schenck & Son, ‘PO, Box 2333, = Beware ud GAPCINE PLASTERS HAVE BEEN IMITATED, And their excellent reputation in- jured by worthless im. Publie are cautioned against buy- ing Plasters having similar sound- ing names. See that the word C-A-P-C.I-N-E is correctly spelled. Benson's Capcine Porous Plasters Are the only improvement: ever | made in Plasters. One is worth more than a dozen of any other kind. | ‘Will positively cure where other remedies will not even relieve. Price 25 cents. Beware of cheap Plasters made with lead poisons. SEABURY & JOHNSON, Manufacturing Chemists, New York. B SURE REMEDY AT LAST. Price s6cte, A MEAD’S Medicated CORN and BUNION PLASTER. Rock Island, I. Manufacturers of SULKY AND GANG PLOWS, Steel & Chilled Plows, RIDING ASD WauKING CULTIVATORS, Listing Plows, LISTER AND CORN DRILL, Harrows, etc., etc. Branch Houses. ST. LOUIS, Mo. KANSAS CITY, Me. ST. PAUL, Minn, = 8T. JOSEPH, Mo. COLUMBLS, 0, MILWAUKEE, Wis. OMAHA, Neb. Write for our Diary, mailed free. t. Charles Stree St. Louis,Mo. r graduate of two Mi has ical Colley THE DISEASES OF YOUTH and MANHOOD AGU 7H WITH- Y A PHYSICIAN of year's - Don’t Tite Hook and svond' brescriptions free” and Electric THE PUBLISHER, Box 234, WORTH SENDING FOR. Dr. J, A. SCHENCK, of Philadelphia a “*Disegses e Lungs and how they can be cuffed” It cont: Bs va le intorma- themselves af- ny disease of ress Dr. 5 boo tiors. The | = PREPARED BY QO. tae GREAT \y Cop zusier URIFIER} A SURE CURE FOR Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, | Nervous Exhaustion arising from | work or excess of any kind, —AND FOR— | Female Weaknesse —IT PREVENTS— Malarial Poisoning and Fever and Ap Andis a Specific for Obstinate ‘CONSTIPATION | PRICE $1.00 PER BOTTLE; SIX FOR $509 | SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWuR MEYER BROS. & Co. Mholesafe Agents. Kansas City and St. | } | wy BITT The majority of the ills of the body aries ; rom a deren: of Ever, cfccting both the stomach bowels. In order to effect @ cure, necessary to remece the cause. lar end Sluggish action of the Ticadache, Sickness at the Stu dn the Back and Loing, cte., indicate the Liver te at fault, and that . gutres assistance to enable this throw off impurities. Prickly Ash Bitters are compounded for this purgr ote mild in their action and effectioe cure; are pleasant to the taste and: easily by both children and adults, fe | hen according to directions, they are: safeand pleasant cure for Dyspepsia, General ee ee Stipation, Diseased idneys, rete 4:42 Blood Prurifiertig are superior te any other cleansing the system (netewshg aa imparting new life and energy to thetw | talid. Ittea medicine end note | intoxicating beverage. i ASK YOUR SROBOIST FOR PRICKLY ASH BITTER, enué teke 20 cthar. PAICH, 61.00 per Hotta, | PRICYLY ASH WS CO SOLE PROPLIETOR a € | pe spi been in constant Vj 4 use by the public for over twenty years, and 1s the best. preparation ever invented for RESTOR- ‘ ING GRAY HAIR TO 1T8 YOUTHFUL COLOR anp |! It cures Itching, Erup- tens and Dandrug. As sb |! HAIR DRESSING it 1s very |i desirabie, giving the haira sliken softness which all admire. It keeps the head clean, sweet and healthy. fy Ge. 2 \\CKINGHAMS py FOR THE : WHISKERS | | wit? change the beard tos | | BLACK at discretion. Being in o¢ | | preparation it is easily applied, aod | | mot wash off. | f. P, HALL & CO., NASHUA, H. B Sold by all Desiers in. Medicine.

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