The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 8, 1887, Page 3

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BUTLE? For ‘sale. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. 6 acres ground in city limits, $Soo. : To All Wanting Employment. | 4 room house, good cistera, Cogswell! = want , Energetic and Capable Agents addition, $700. in every county ia the U Gana- “ ta, to sell a patent article of g ox | 2 story 15 room house, good cellar, irsMeRiTs. An article having a large sale, pay- 4 | cistern and pump in kjtchen, fine well, pes, SAetead aed oft, having cateoes gi | : es and on w agent is prote | under cover, good barn, weod and coal usive sale by a deed given Pe caahaad <a | house, lots of fine fruit, flowers in pro- every county he may secure from us. With a these advantages to our agents and the fact that it is an article that can be sold to every house- owner, it might not be necessary to make am “EXTRAORDINARY OFFER” to secure good agents once, but we have concluded to make it to show, not only our confidence im the merits of our invention, but ia its salability by any agent tusion, nicest place in town, close to the square. Price $4,000, easy terms. Bl ‘k | 2 story 6 room house on Pine street, OCK. | tot rooxig2 alley in rear, good well, and good cistern, small fruit, shrubbery,trees etc,, price $1,100, dirt cheap, | era House 7 yl j that will haadle it with energy. ur agents BUTLER, MoO. 3 room house, good we |, Walley’s ad- | now at work are making from 9850 to $c0o a | dition, price $300. : | month clear and this fact makes it safe for us to age’ tee Ale make our offer to all who are out of employ- Corner lot, Fort Scott st, 4 rooms, 3 meut. Any agent that will give our business a porches, good well, $750, easy terms. thirty days’ trial and fail to clear at least $100 | Large corner lot Ohio st. 4 rooms, new in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, can return ‘ = rs ee ers all goods unsold to us and we will refund the apital. - BGG.000 | wood house, good ciste n, nice locition, mouey paid for them. Any agent or general close in, $goo, easy terms. agent who would hike ten or more counties and ' ; srk them through sub-agents for ninety days -2 e, lots ergre work them through su PLUS - $5,000 4 rooms, 1-2 acre, lots of evergre and fail to clear at least $750 ASOVE ALL EX- PENSES, can return ail unsold and get their money back. other employer of agentsever dared to make such offers, nor would weif we did not know that we have agents now making more than double the amount we guaranteed; and but two sales a day would give a profit of over $125 a month, and 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 cut of em- ployment who will send us three one cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure the agency in 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 at once 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 moncy. Rexxar Manvracturine Co, * 116 Smuthfield St., Pittsburg, Pa KASKINE (THE NEW QUININE.) No badet | fruit, blue grass, flowers, guod ¢ splendid cistern, a magr | price $1,500. | Corner lot Ohio st. 4 rooms, good v | barn, shade trees, shrubbery, evergreens flowers, close in, price $1,200. 3 rooms* Mechanic st. yood lot. well, stable, coal house, good neighborhovc $500. 4 rooms, South Main, adjoining lic square, lot gox100, make good ness property $1,500, 6 rooms, 3 lots, smoke house, coal house, stable, fine well, $1,000, easy lerms. Z 4 rooms, North Main, close in, large lot, stable, coai and wood house, fine well, price $700, easy terms. Farms, oceans ot tbem to sell or ex change, trom 40 acres to 600 we can fit you out in any kind of a trade vou want. We have 200,000 acres ot land in Minne- sota and Iowa, $150,000 in Kansas, 6,000 in Dakota, pesides town property every- where. Don’t buy until you see us. House 1 story, 3 rooms, good w ell, 4 1-2 acres adjoining corporation, good young orchard, large supply small truits, verv pretty place: price $1,000. ‘ ficent h IN H. SULLENS .£, WALTON,.- RUE JENSINS, IN KINNEY.-- DIRECTORS, T. C. Boulware, 4 Tucker. 1. H Sullens, R, Simpson Voris, H. Duicher ’ -Ast ¢ ashier, «Clerk and Collector | dy ' ! | | | | | | pub- busi- Booker Powell, Green W. Walton John Deerwester, C. C. Duke, Wy, E, Walton, J. Rue Jenkins Receives deposits, loans monev, an cts a general banking business. a] Weextend to ourcustomers every a modation consistent with sate bank CORRESPONDENTS. sirst Nat'l Bank wrth National Bank nover National Bank - Kansas City St. Louis New York 6 room house, corner lot, 75x247, new house, on Water street, close in, terms | eusy. One large large Iet on Water street 75x BATES COUNTY ational Bank (Organized in 1871.) OF BUTLER, MOC. N eadache No nausea 247: price $450, on easy terms. room house, North Main street, lot 75x150, cistern, new barn tor 4 horse-. nice place; price $t,oo0, halt cash, bal- ance one and two years. “What a man does is the thing.” LEFKER & CATRON, North Main Street. 5 No Ri Ears were ing from Darkness, Cur’s quickly Seienoe § Pleas’nt pure A POWERFUL TONIC that the most delicate stomach will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA 7 5-00 $ 71.006 e EEYGARD, - - ~ = Presiden ! RHEUMATISM, CCLARR DENBY: Vicere| | NORTH MAIN STREET | | NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION, anime etanenmenetnemente {| ‘and all Germ Diseas ; i = MOST SCIENTIFIC AND SUCCESSFUL FARMERS | = PURIFIER, Superior {to quinine East 1i7th street, New be] It Costs Lees tu Feed 50 Hogs With York. was cared by Kaskine of extreme mala- | ‘ ¥ rial prostratior after s "0 He had run aby from : on Kaskine in June Iss, wi ' DR. JO! . HAA ae. regained his full weight in six months. re| } Quinine did h no good whatever. Mr, Gideon Thompson, the oldesé and one of the most respected citizens of Bridgeport. s0G & POULTRY REMEDY oe eee a ees for the last three years have suffered fron: ma- . laria and from the effects of quinine poisoning. I recently began with Kaskine which broke up the malaria and increased my weight pounds Firet-class in every respect. Mrs omons, of 159 Halliday, St > Jersey ‘ “My son Ha sven years, was cure a by Kai cane , after . ’ ; , ‘ fifteen months’ illness, when we had given up | | OPEN EVERY DAY TN WEEK, | tere: oe is . ere Letters from the above persons, giving full details will be sent on application. As A PREVENTATIVE] —-0-—— Kaskine can be taken without any special medical advice. $1.00 per bottle. Sold by, or sent by mail on receipt of price THE KASKINE CO Warren St., New York gLADIES and GENTLEMAN W:nte who wish steady employment to take nice light work at your home and make easily from $1.00 to $3.00 a day. You should address with stamp sees Crown Mf’g Co., 2 Vine St., Cincinnati, 0. to lose one by DISEASE, rk it puts upon the hogs three times its costs nd feeders who have used it write PRIZELL & RIVE, the ex return { BUTLER, MO.} sure cure ani do not intend to M D. Johnson, Walker, Mo. Risasuccess and we cheerfully testify to IRES? nee Bro. LaFiata. Bo. IMPROV vbROOT BEER recent a aan = = Package, cents, makes 5 galions of a de- ascaved. hee iad a licioune sparkling, temperance beverase- Frank Lee, Hannibal, Mo. ——_—__—— wea Strengthens and purifies the blood. Its purity t y eure and delicacy commend it te all. Sold by all druggists and storekeepers. THE HORNS F J QQ Its causes, and a new an Walter, Ruox tity, wo. - a SS EAFNESS srecesstal CU Ee at mtive for pre & your own home, bv one who wasdeaftwen- . R. Dawson, Denver, Mo ty-eight years. Treated by most ofthe not- Yecommend it to all havin ‘ho ed specialists without benefit: Cureb himself a in three months, and since then hundreds of others. Full particalars senton application. T. 8. PAGE, No 41 West Sist St. New York. IT STOPS THE PAIN IN ONE MINUTE. Aching backs, hips, and sides, kidney Theartil wit T. A. Bufford, ith cholera. y Lonisville, Mo twill not be without Hass’ hog remedy if it three times the present price. Joln Csetin, Grant City, Mo Dr. Haas hog mors 8 for C. P. Haxton, Louisville, Mo. lam satisfied it will pay for itself in putting flesh, aside from keeping hogs healthy. Th and uterine pains, weakness saat, os. H. Logan, Grant, City Mo. mation, Your remedy gives better satisfaction than sudden, sharp and nervous ant other Te SB Smith, Perry, Mo. strains relieved in one amconvinced, ifthe medicine is properly itis the thing for hogs. W. J, McCray, Browning Mo. Since using your remedy} have not had the among hogs. S$ Courtright, Peculiar, Cass Co, Mo. dest thing of the kind I ever used Y . J Leggett, H nnibal Mo. Our remedy is Siving general tisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. CES, 03.50, $1.25 5O cents, yer box 2 pound cans, $12 50 Tor sale v4 LE & CRUMLEY, Butler Missouri. - re authorized by me to receive and for- agteacations or the insurance of young I contracts It pay the Highest Market price ery i red hog which dies from diseases elegant and infallible antidote to pain an Biimmstion the Cuticura Anti-Pain 95 cents; & for $1; at all druggists or Potter Dave anp CHEMICAL Co., Boston. nh the HINDERCORNS. Deniemmenanrece ices eas epee a cents es Huscok & Co., N. ¥. CHAS. CENNEY At Old Stand, East Side Square. NEW GOODS of insurance will provide that I . ra Indianapolis. Ind. a ————— | RONG’S PILLS! | ADVERTISERS 4 rye Old, Weli Tried, Wonderful | Fresh and Nice and Comprising every-] can learn the exact cost | lth Renewing Remeaies. thing in the For the Liver. | PRROMG'S SANATIVE PILLS Ees.tne Mss | GROCERY y sing the Bow Ar of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by Geo. P. Rowell & Newspaper Advertisin 10 Spruce St, New York. 100-Page Pamphie= unifying aint. A per. onstipation 1 Malarval Provision Line. COUNTRY PRODUCE ae can Are yy Safe and alw: Loe ghee Teguiariy b Wenen. Gaaranteed superior to Cthers. or Cash refanded. Doo't © mon: ostrums, T Remedy ¥ all Druggist mite any address. Send 4 cents for particulars } SPECIFIC CO., Philads., Pa. SEWARD A. HASELTINE, PATENT ry leon Sold b: 4D, MO. D.C. Correspoedeuss a free end creme Chas. Denney. j ! } \ | | has | LOW. | or for any other purpose. | idea that there has been a real blood- jhound in the State of Virginia for THE BLOODHOUND MYTH. ee They Were Never Used by Slavehold- ers tor Tracking Negroes er for Any Other Purpose. : eee A Was! the Louisyi The ~Lounger on the Avenue” jumps on the blood hound with both feet this morr mm correspondent of le Courier-Journal writes: g as follows: “It is strange how long the world wil stick to an error, especially if it be either romantic or sympathetic in its tendency. I reckon everybody who has read “Uncle Tom's Cabin” remembers (especially if they were young at the time) how appalling to the imagination were the blood- hounds employed to track the poor runaways. This bloodhound myth lived on uncontradicted until Only the other day I reada ter- | rific account ofa fugitive in the Dismal Swamp country of Virginia, who ran away (of course before the war) and was hunted with bloodhounds. ete. The truth of the matter was that b'oodhounds were never used in the South for pursuing runaway negroes, Thave no y years. A cross of the common | foxhound and Siberian dog has long been popularly known and confound- ed with the true Spanish blood- hounds. and these brutes have been exhibited at dog-shows as “the old- time slave-tracking bloodhounds,” to the great terror and awe of the guile less spectator. The dog used in tracking negroes —whenever any were used—were the ordinary hounds of the South, such ‘as were trained for deer-driving, bear-hunting or wild-hog shooting. If well-trained, they will hunt any- thing that goes on legs, and will hunt up a white man or negro as readily as they will pursue the marauding coon, or his great brother, the black bear, still found in the mountains of the Carolinas. Virgina, or Tennessee, ;common in the swamps and cane- brakes of Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and abundant in the immense brakes on upper Red river, and those that oecupy most or the region be- tween the White and St. Francis rivers, in Arkansas particularly in the | section known as “The Devil's Sum mer Retreat,” about fifty miles from the mouth of the White, immortalized in Porter's famous story of “Bob Herring, the Bear-Hunter,” printed in the old Sirit nearly fifty years ago. The only bloodhounds that ever came into Louisiana or Mississippi were imported from Cuba in 1545 by a wealthy gentleman who owned large estates in the parish of Tensas, Louisiana, and in Claibourne county, Mississippi, who by the way, was a friend, pupil, and distant relative of the eminent republican statesman were three couples of these dogs, and it was thought they might increase the keenness of scent of the hound of the period by crossing the breed. The experiment, however, worked After acquiring a pack in two or three years’ time, Mr. Gil- lespie took them out for trial. They had not far to go before they struck the fresh trail of an old “he” bear of aldermanic proportions, who was making his usual morning trip to the plantation cornfield, where he had fed ever since he was acub. No corpu- lent old gentleman, peacefully going from Maine. There disastrously. aa addressing & ATT'Y AT LAW, | bear I speak of. | | Adolphus Ward. while operating in Deathina Well AF nash 5 A Few Remark: Lissi Clinton Democrat, June 1. is Ries Kissing is by no mesg Sane Soon after : gis by no means universaa 4 o'clock yesterday 3 family, but scengs ternoon a fatal accident occurred to ra mnatter of race and custoia. {a well on Dr. H. P. Gilkeson’s resi Haga ee _ : : and Sons Tesl- is the testimony of all travelers who dence lot on High street. North ; , Wereemployed to excavate the well ofthe from his house to his club, could have been more astonished at an as- sault from tramps than was the old Finally, realizing the situation, he backed up against a cypress, and killed five of the dogs in less than a wiry terrior would kill | the same number of rats. The owner ‘of the dogs had not expected to put up a bear so near, and was without gun. The improved dogs instead jof snapping at the bear and letting | go when he turned on them. as well | trained bear dogs do, just caught jhold and held on, with the conse ed. It bloodhounds quences mei and bear hunters of ,and Mi sissippi con they were. sre foreign innovations.” Louisiang 1 that they ould let their breed of dogs be as | b' ended the . and the 2 and not introduce any Chronic and nasal catarrh posi- ‘tively cured by Dr, Sage’s Remedy. have spent much time among the tribes. Nor is it the general custota African race. Persons familigr with southern plantations will bear us out in the statement that whey immediately following it a esa =a Ss IR — ie pcre ; : SS as heir white sisters- When noise was heard in the bottom of the white ladies meet lady acauaj well which imitated escaping ste: ‘ ae _ oe l ed escaping steam | ances they invariably kiss them but from a boiler. ‘ : We never saw the dusky-skinned dam sels do this. Our knowledge of races does not extend very far, but oux | reading leads us to. the opinion that and | kissing is largely an outgrowth of I several | civilization. Barbarous tribes of all = eenyy — siege kinds abstain esculation, as far as we 8 wee i dapse OT) can ascertain, and kissing progresses about twenty minutes from the’ ex-| as enlightment advances. In this plosion W ard was lowered into the | case, as in many others, men have tp well, standing in the box used for |learna great deal before they find out removing the debris from the bot-| what a great luxury is a kiss, when tom. An ordinary windlass con-| the surroundings are congenial. Just trolled the rope. and Griffith lowered | as we slumber for ages on natural him gradually until about twenty | gas without knowing what a boon if feet from the surface, when Ward | is and even when found years ago ealled out to “haul up.” Griffith | nobody knew what to do with it or drew him to within about ten feet} that it was of value. Al? of the top. when Ward let loose of | of sudden it has been discov the rope and fell backward to the | ered that this heretofore neglected bottom. agent isa comodity of inestimable value. So with kissing. Ifthe wild tribes of the desert had known what a luxury was in their reach perhaps they wouldn't have been so unhappy. How could they know, ignorant things that “there's joy in a kiss, oh, there’s joy and there’s bliss,” as one song writer puts it? In some countries bly twenty feet, when he called to be men kisseach other. Horrid custom! hauled up. His sensations, as de-| Just think of having to kiss a great scribed by himself, were those of | big bearded man. We often wonder suffocation. He remembered he be- | how the ladies can do this, but tastes gan to lose consciousness about the | differ widely and we know ladies who time he called to those at the top, do not object to kissing gentlemen and knew nothing of intervening | (occasionly) especially if he is pass moments until he came to him-| ably good looking and has a pretty self lying deathly sick on the mustache. But we didn’t start out to grass in his yard, surrounded by write an essay on kissing, but only to his wife and neighbors. When observe that it was not near 80 uni brought to the surface Dr. Gilkeson | Versalas one might suppose.—Chiea was totally unconscious, and only | 8° Times. prevented from falling to the bot- tom by the rope tied around his body. He was freely rubbed and re- storatives administered, then placed | W? Clinton. Mr. Wardand W. J. Grifith deeper, and had used several blasts of powder with good success. About four o'clock a charge was fired This continued from three to four minutes. A bundle of , hay tied ina blanket and held by a string was then lowered in the well. which was thirty-five feet deep, this moved up and down times to assi any a Dr. Gilkeson was at home. and with the purpose of rescuing Ward, | who was aspyxiated, had a rope tied | around his body and taking his place in the box was slowly lowered. Five minutes had probably elapsed between the descent of the two men. Dr. Gilkeson had gone down proba- A Remarkable Manifestation, Raleigh, N. C., May 30.—There sa remarkable occurrence at Wil- ona couch ona porch of his resi- | mington yesterday, which has thrown dence. This morning he is feeling | the colored people into the highest almost well. state of excitement and alarm and is Small grappling hooks were pro- regarded by thousands of persons as cured from neighbors, and with |® direct manifestation of divine ropes attached the work of attempt-| Pleasure and warning. Anna Granger, ing to rescue Ward's body was be-|® colored woman, was ridiculing gun. John Oechsli, who was driving and mocking another woman who in that neighborhood, repaired at | Was singing ahymn. Suddenly she once to his blacksmith shop and felt a burning sensatson in her left soon James Lepscum had wrought hand. and on examination found a a hook capable of removing a heavy singular discoloration. _The wordy, weight. With this hook used by “The Church of God,” in blood red Mr. Lepseum and an ice hook in Dr. capital letters, appeared plainly in a Menees’ hands, active work was be-| half circle on the lower part of the gun. Otto Pechstein, with a large palm. The woman screamed and mirror, attempted to throw sunlight acted so wildly that the whole neigh into the bottom of the well, but re-|borhood soon gathered, and from flection could not penetrate the | that, time on the excitement increas dense smoke. Ward's clothing was|ed rapidly. Last night there aba caught several times, and finally a great crowds in the house and vicin- few minutes after 6 o'clock he was | ity until a late hour, and all day to drawn to the surface, Mr. Lepscum’s day persons thronged the place, anx hook catching his clothing ‘under | ious to see the phenomenon. Every- one arm and one leg. His body was body is permitted to see the woman's laid on the grass. Drs. Menees and|hand and the greater number of Jones felt his pulseless wrist and|those who inspect it are much im Dr. Menees said his heart was still. | Pressed. The Granger woman was Ward's death must have been in-| + first so overcome with fear that stantaneous. His head was covered | She had to be kept up by stimulante. with ragged cuts, andseveral bruises The discoloration is not now quite 60 on his forehead and over one eye| Visible as at first. plainly indicated that he had struck head first in the bottom of the well among detached boulders. Further investigation showed that his neck had been dislocated. Fighting Convicts. Tallequah I. T., May 25.—News has just reached here of desperate fight in the Flint district betweentwo — convicts whoescaped from the nation- There are considerably over 60,000 | al prison a month or two ago, and the persons confined at the present time | sheriff of the district and his posse, in prisons in the United States. This | who came upon the convicts in the is nearly nine times the number | mountains and ordered them to halt, of prisoners in 1850, so that, even | but they would not, when the sheriff making allowance for the increase of | and his posse fired upon them, and | they in turn returned the fire. A reg i ular battle was indulged in, the sheriff and one of his posse being of the other population. crime, or at any rate punishment for crime. is much more general than then. That one person side, and killed and ed and not expected ) horse thieves, who fell convicts during the fight, as sisted them, but escaped. This akes seven men reported killed and wounded in that district in the last seven days. out of ev killed on one 700 should be in prison | in 1887 while in 1850 the ratio was| convicts we only one to every 3000 is far from | mortally v ng acheerful reflection. and it is | not remarkable that othe philanthropists are considering the prison problem. with a view to mak- s betides |i ing the system more preventive if not more curative.

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