The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 12, 1887, Page 6

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i fF | : ODA Best in the World. £ NEW QUININE ASKINE WHAT THE PIISICIAYS Say About P HECWATISU Malaria, Dyspepsi::, NERVOUS DEBILITY, Liver, Lung z kidney Disease The eminent and celebrated Dr. Glessher writes: The Kaskine Co.—Dear Sirs—‘‘The first great est successes | had with Kaskine were in chills Aluria. nervous debility, rheuma- pepsta. and liver diseave, and I liar with ite really wonde: ers in curing all the other germ dis Gisorders. particularly where the od bad me disease or impoverished i the di- tion impaired. Strictly apeaking. Kaskine ood puritier we hav 1 use it also ¥ with unfailing success in all dis- liar to women andchildren = Inover dred cases e cured there has never been the slightest bad effect following its mse. and It is far superior to any tonic or nerve medicine ever known to the medical profes- sion.’’ Very truly vours, LM ea-Nen, M.D. east l2tst St., New York Prof. W. F. Holcomb. M_D.,54 Fast 25th St. NEY (late Prof. in N.Y Med Coll.) writes **Kaskine is superior to quinine in its specific wer, and never produces the slightest injury the hearing or constitution.’’ The U.S Examining Surgeon. Dr. LR. Boe writes: ‘*Kaskine is the best medicine ade.” 6t.Francis Hospital,N Y. Every patient treat- with Kaskine has n disch’ gd cured coh hand Hospital, N. Y., ‘‘Universally suc- aul’? Bt. Joseph's Hospital, NY . ‘Its use is Considered indespensable. It acts perfectly’? Kaskine is pleasant to take ant can be used without special medical counsel fend for the great list of testimonials unparal- Teled in the history of medicine. $1.0 per dottle. Sold by er sent by mail on receipt of price. THE KASKINE CO., oh Warren St., New York CURE‘:.DEAF PECK $ PATENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED EAR DRUMS PRRFECT + AasTORE THe WEARING and perform the work ofthe Batural doom. Invisible, comfortable and always in position, All ‘eeaversation and even whispers heard distinet! illustrated book with testinoninis, FREE. Address or G49 Bradway, New York. Mention thie peper. Can be’ Cured by ASTHMA Bees ASTHMALENE To prove thisa FR seni to any one aiflic ua nON, cor Sth and Franklin eo. yes, Rochester, N.Y. Please Don't Forget It That Dr. H. James Cannabis Indica i in Calcutta, India, from the pares ant tet Native Hemp, and is the only remedy, either in country or this, that 4ill positively and Permanently cure consumption, bronchitis Qsthma, nasal catarrh and nervous debility, ot break fresh cold in x4 hours. $2.50 ‘per bottle, three bottles $6.50. (radlock & (> Proprictors, 1082 itace St., Phila, ee Its causes, »n ta new and EAFNESS successful OU. ES Bat + ahd home, bv one who wast vi oent years Treated by most pecialists without benefit. Cured himself saree southe hos sean then bundreds of + Full particulars sent T. 8. PAGE, No dl West Sist St. Now Yate EP Highest Awards of Medal Americassea ai cia ‘The neatest. quickest, safest erial remedy known tor rhe: snd most pow 1 4 atiom, pl m the chest and aly; aces ach peeannces, colds under similar ae, as “Capsicum.” "Capes ne oe aes - ed —— _ utterly worthless and . ; fake no other. All Viraggtste® peptic SEABURY & JOHNSON, Proprietors, New York. — eae tet SEWARD A. NASELTIN PATENT SOLICITOR & ATT'Y AT Lal, sta ee Sry ena OEE Races 8 BP eo ESE CAI nn re at PRESS ED Fn a a 2 EEE Bl eh RM Pl en = t+ a RS SS A A SCR Re acct ADR ad aE Se he A i a oe Ce ge eR near CHOPPED TO PIECES. Sections of a Man's Body Found at | Various Points Near Lexing- ton, Massachusetts. Boston, Mass., Jan. 5.—Lincoln Farmer, while riding toward Lexing ton early this morning, found in the snow about two rods beyond a stone wall at the side of the road the de- tached head of a man with the hair matied with blood It had apparent ly been chopped off with a dull axe. The testures were contracted as if the man had suffered agony. Just above and behind the left ear were several deep gashes, two or three inches lony,. The hair was short, thick and brown, the forehead iow, the nose sinall and the complexion medium, A tew teet away lay a bare arm, small but muscular, severed at the stoulder. ‘The head appeared to be that of a blacksmith. Jumping mto his pung, Brooks rapidly to Lexington, and notitied the authorities of his dis covery, which confirms the suspicion aroused by the finding of bloody drove ciothing in Lexington yesterday that a hormble murder had been com- mitted in the vicinity. Near the arm: was found a blood bosimweared piece of the Evenmy Kecord ot December 28, which cor- tesponded m date and appearance to a bivody piece ot the same paper picked up yesterday near the bundie ot clothing. The latter was so be- smeared with bleod as to indicate bemg used as a towell by the mur- derer. A large rubber horse cover had been thrown trom the road tor the purpose of concealing the remains, but it had failed ot its purpose by landing upon intervening bushes. There was a pool of blood in the middle of the road. The party followed the road for over a mile to a densely wooded bill, On the lett of this, in a deep guy, a naked headless body was tound. Deep cuts in the hip and the murderer’s intention to sever the left limb as they had the nght, which had been tudely chopped off the body at the thigh, foreleg indicated One arm was also missing and presumably was that found with the head down the road. Dr. J. C. G. Futton, who led the party, gave immediate instructions thet no one should touch the remains or approach tuo near the place to destroy such traces ot the perpe: trators of the crime as might exist. A ume table of the railroad between Somerville and Boston was tound in the murdered man’s pocket; also a ticket to Somerville. The left leg of the body 1s still missing. The place where the body was found is a very lonely one. The man might have been murdered, chopped to pieces and thrown out of a wagon without danger ot obser- vation. . A young man named Nowlan called upon the Somerville police this evening and exoressed his belief that the murdered man was his em- plover, George A. Codman, a milk- man of Someryille, who drove away yesterday morning in a sleigh with a young man whom he addressed as “Frank,’! and who was & Stranger to NowJan Codman had collected all the money he could and told Nowlan he did not know when he should return. Codman’s clothes, as described by Nowlan, correspond- ed with those found with the body, especially the mittens, which had been mended with bed ticking. The Police are confident that this clue will lead to a solution of the mys- tery. A dispatch from Lexington states that the body has been fully identi- fied as that of George A. Codman, the Somerville milkman. There is no clew to the murderer, nor has the team with which Codman and his companion tound. Codman gone. lett Somerville been The money with which Started—about $250—is No sufterer from any scratulous disease, who wilt tairiy try Ayer’s Sarsaparilla need despai: ot a cure, This remedy Purges the blood of all impurities, de- Stroys the germs ot scrofula, and infuses pos life and vigor throughout the phys- | ticulars of « double MEXICANS MURDERED. (SRS oe Two Inoffensive Herders Killed and Two More Mortally Wounded. rie! > San Antonio, Tex , Jan. 4.—Par comes little murder from Guadalupe county in a community known as staples store, as i follows: Our community is tern- bly excited over the killing ot two Mexicans and wounding of two others, which occurred on Saturday night, January 1. The facts as elict ed by the corener’s jury, are Jey four Mexicans were herding for Mr. | Simmons and had camped neartheir | work seme tour hundred vards from i the Simmons residence. On the | ght of the murder, while the Mex | supper, about 8 | three—two ne- mu icans were eating o'clock, a party ot | groes and one white man—ran in on | tup of them with six shooters and | began shooting, killing two and | mortally wounding the other two. | One of the wounded men made his | way to another Mexican camp und | ratsed the alarm, but the white peo- | ple present concluded it was a Mexican gambling row and gave no | attention tu it, until sunday morning | it was found that one of the dead bodies had fire, prcbably from the pistol shor, and had burned caught toacrisp, both legs being eutirely npr up to the knees. Those Who saw it say it was a most borri- ble and sickening sight. The perpetrators of the crime are still at large, though several officers are in pursuit with good orospetis ot a speedy capture. Threats of lynch ing are made should the mur lerers be caught. No cause for the aime can be ascertained, as the Mexicans were inoffensive and industrious people. “1 would nut live alway.’ No; not if disease is to make my liie a daily barden. But it need not, good triend, and vill not it vou will be wiee in time. How many ot our loved ones are moulderingin the dust who might have been spard tor vears. The slight cough was unbeeded, the m:ny symptoms of disease that lurk- ed within were siighted and death came Dr Pierce's **Golden Medical Dis@verv” cannot recall the dead though [t has snatched nuinbers trom the verge ot the grave, and will cure consumption in its earliest stages. | A gang of colored boys in Indian- apolis have been making codsider- able money by furnishing a furdeale: there with cat skins, He pays then: 25 cents for a Maltese skin, 15 cents tor a well spotted skin and 5, cents tor the average every day cat skin The Yealer says that Maltese cat skins make the finest of gloves. Nicholas Spear of Hartland,Mich., went home tor a week’s spree one day last week, and next morning put Paris green in the waterpail useu by the family. Then he forgot all about it and drank ot the water hime selt and died. His wite discovered the poison in the dipper before any other person drank ot it. The most severe cough can atonce be removed by Red Star Cough Cure. “Give itto your children by all means,’’ says Prot. Williams, ex-State Chemist ot Delaware, who found it wondertully efficacious. Price only twenty-five cents a bottle. There is money in wood pulp, judging from the demand. Ore mill in Brunswick, Me., has hard work to keep ahead of its orders, running night and day, and pulp made there has gone to Boston and returned in the shape of newspapers within forty-eight hours. _Prickly Ash Bitters warm up and in- vigorate the ttomache, improves and strengthens the dige-tive organs, opens the pores, promotes prespiration, equal- izes the circulation. As a corrector ot disordered system there is nothing tc equal it. 6 Im. A tired and worried woman hur- nied into the Montreal Central police station the other day and asked it there were any stray children recent- ly picked up. She was told that there were five in the different Stations. ‘Well, I’ve lost seven,” she said. ‘Where can the other two be?”’ Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cnts Eruises, Cuts, Ulcers Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Cancer, Piles, Chilblains, Corns, Teter, Chapped Hands, and ail skin erup- cions,and postively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give periect Satistaction, or money refnnded. Prive eo box, 25 cts For leby | STATE OF M:SSOURI, 7 88. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. in every da, to sell a patent 3 itsmenirs. An artic! nt is protected in the exclusive sale by a deed given tor each and every county he may secure from us. With all these advantages to cur agents and the fact that it is an article that can be sold to every house- owner, it might not be necessary to make an EXTRAORDINARY OFFER" to secure good agents at once, but we have concluded to make it to show, not only our confidence in the merits of our invention, but in its salability by any agent that will handle it with energy. Our agents now at work are making from $150 to $600 a month clear and this fact makes it safe for us to make our offer to all who are out of employ- ment. Any agent that will give our businessa | thirty days’ trial and fail to clear at least $100 in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, Can return all goods unsold to us and we will refund the money paid for them. Any agent or general agent who would like ten or more counties and work them through sub-agents for ninety days and fail to clear at least $750 ABOVE ALL EX- peNszs, can return all uasold aud get their | money back, No other employer of agents eveg, dared to make such offers, nor would we if | did not know that we have agents now making more than double the amouut we guaranteed; and but two sales a day would give a profit of over $125 a month, aad that one of our agents took eighteen orders in one day. Our large de- scriptive circulars explain our offer fully, and these we wish to send to everyone out of em- ployment who will send us three one cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure | the agency 10 time forthe boom, and go to work on the terms named in our extraordinary offer. We would like to have the address of all the agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen- ters in the country, and ask any reader of this paper who reads this offer, to send us atonce |! the name and address of all such they know. | ‘Address at once, or you will lose the best chance ever offered to those out of employment to make money. Renner MANUFACTURING Co., 116 Smithfield St., Pittsburg, Pa. e of Publication. Ore County oF Baiks, § In the cireuit court of said county, February term, Iss Elizabeth arrow, plaintiff, vs. Thomas T. Barrow, defendant. Now at thisdav comes the plaintiff herein. by her attorney. Wm. © Jackson, Esq., and files | her petition and affidavit. alleg ng. among other things. that defendant, Thomas T Barrow, is nota resident of the state of Missouri | Whereupon it is ordered by the a ant be not has th a nature of which is to obtain a deer from said defendant on the grounds of desertion and that anless the said defendant. Thomas ‘T Barrow, be and appear at this court. at the next term thereof, to be begun and helden at the court house in the city of Butler, in saic county, on the seventh day of February next. and on or vetore the sixth day of said term, if the term shall so long contin and if not.then on or before the last day of said term—answer or plead te the petition in said canse, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly. And be it further ordered. that a copy hereof be published. according to law, in the Butler Times, a weekly newapaper printed and pub- lished in Bates county. Mo , for four weeks successively. the last insertion to be at least tour weeks before the first day of the n-xt term of circuit court. JLRS WNKINS Cireuit Clerk. A true copy from the record. Witness my hand and the seal of the circuit (Seat) conrt of ates county, this Ist day see? of December, 1836. J. R Jenkins, Circuit Clerk. “THE CENTURY For 1886-7. Tue Century is an illustrated maga- zine, having a regular circulation ot about two hundred thousand copie2, otten reaching sometimes exceeding two hun- dred and twenty-five thousand. Chiet among its mary attractions for the com ing year is a serial which has been in ac tive preparation for sixteen years. It i- a history of our own country in its mos: time, as set forth in THE LIFE OF LINCOLN, BY HIS CONFIDENTIAL SECKETARIFS, JOHN G. NICOLAY AND COL. JOHN HAY. This great Work, begun with the sance tion ot President Lincoln, and continned under the authority of his son, the Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, is the only tull and autho ive reeord ot the life ot Abra- ham Lincoln. Its authors were friends of Lincuin before his presidency; thes were most intimately associated with him as private secretaries throughout his term of office, and to them were trans eriti terred upon Lincoln’s death all his pri vate pavers. Here will be told the inside history ot the civil war and of President Lincoln’s administration—important de tails of which have hitherto remained unrevealed. that they migh’ first appear in this authentic history. By reason ot the publication ef this work, THE WAR SERIES, which ha been tollowed with unflagging interest by a great audience, will cccupy less space during the coming vear. Get- tysburg will be described by Gen Hunt (Chiet of the Union Artillery), General Longstreet Gen. E. M. Law, and others: Chickamaugi by Gen. D. H_ Hill; Sher- man’s March to tne Sea, by Generals Howard and Slocum. Generals Q. A. Gillmore, W. F. Smith, John Gibbon, orace Porter, and John S. Mosby will describe special batties and incidents. Stories of naval engagemeuts, prison lif-, etc., cte., will appear. NOVELS AND STORIES. “The Hunrdredth Man,” a novel by Frank R. Stockton, author ot ‘The Lady, or the Tiger?” etc., begins in No vember. ‘I'wo novelettes by George W. Cable, stories by Mary Hallock Foote, “Uncle Remus,” Julian Hawthorne, Ed- ward Eggleston, and other prominent American authors will be printed during the year. SPECIAL FEATURES (with illustrations) include a series of articles on affairs in Russia and Siberia, by George Kennan, author ot *Tent Lite in Siberia,’’ who has just returned fron a most eventful visit to Siberian prisons; Papers on the rood Question, with ref- erence to its bearing on the Labor Prab- lem; English Cathedral-; Dr. Egghs- ton’s Religious Lite in the American Colonies; Men and Women ot Queen Anne’s Reign, by Mrs. Oliphant; Clair- voyunce, Spirituaiism, Astrology, etc., by the Rev, J. M. Buckley, D. D., editor of the Christian Advocate; astronomical Papers; articles throwing light on Bible history, ete. PRICES. A FREE COPY. Subscription price $4 00 a year. 35 cts. | a number. Dealers, postmasters, and the publishers take subscriptions: Send \ for our beautifully illustrated 24-page | Ccataloge (tree), containing full prospec- | tus, etc., including a special offer by which new readers can get back numbers | tothe beginning of the War Series at a low price. A specimen copy (back num- Ser) will be sent on request. Mention this paper. 4 you afford to be without Tue Cenz | TERY THE CENTURY CO. New Yorx. ! M’FARLAND BROS, j | | CASTORIA for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that {recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” HA Aacuge, M.D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Sour Stomach, Poet aoe Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes @ witfout injurious medication, Tax Cevtavr Company, 182 Fulton Street, By, Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in. Harness and Saddlery, SPOONER PAT. COL CANNOT C WY HORSE'S NECK, HAST WO. ROWS 2 OF STICHING Wilt Botte Spooner Patent Collaz! —PREVENTS CHAFING CAN NOT CHOKE A HORSE} Adjusts itself to anv Hor-e’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames ia. place better than any other collar. SCHWANER’S WANE TUG SOCEM Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops’ 4 —— from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS. | SOUTA SIDE SQUARE BUTLER MO. ardest storm. Tie now POMMEL SLI KER je @ periect riding the entire saddie, Beware of imitstions, None genuine withoet the " trade-mark, Miustrated Catalogue free, A. J. Tower, Boston, Mash Is prepared solely for the CURE ts which Zeict nearly every By giving tone and to tet fanstions. it nee al! female’ . #peedy recovery. Pleasant to taste may be taken at all times with safety. ASr, VIGOROUS HEA’ CURE “<4 free name with states PACKAGE FRFI

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