The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 17, 1887, Page 6

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BRAVE BISHOP. Right Rey. Daniel S. Tuttle Saves the Life of a The Young Lady. The many admirers of Bishop Tut tle in Butler, will read with great interest the following incident which oecurred a day or so since at Sche- nectady, N. Y. The Bishop is noted for his bravery in similar cases where life is endangered. Years ago he distinguished himself by fighting fire in the mining districts of Mon- tana, and now he again makes another reputation of a like character. The dispatch says: “There is no prettier stream than the Mohawk river as it flows by Schenectady, and boating parties en- joy its beauties nearly every pleasant evening. The Right Rev. Daniel S. Tuttle, Episcopal Bishop of Mis- souri, was in town yesterday, the guest of Miss Fannie Paige, a sister of Schenectady’s postmaster and a cousin of ex-Assistant Attorney-Gen- eral E. W. Paige, of New York. In the evening Miss Paige and the Bishop went out on the river in a cranky row-boat. The lady was in the stern and the Bishop in the bow, and both were paddling. Finally the Bishop leaned a little too much to one side and, as a result, the boat careened and Miss Paige was thrown into very deepwater. Bishop Tuttle immediately dived after the lady, the boat capsizing as he left it. The Bishop is a powerful swimmer, and when Miss Paige came to the surface he seized her around the waist and swam with her to the boat, to which they clung until assistance came from two young men who had been attracted by Miss Paige’s screams. The overturned boat was righted and taken near enough to shore to permit Miss Paigeand Bishop Tuttle fo get in and row home. When they arrived at the point from which they started, however, a new diffi- culty presented itself. Bishop Tuttle had left St. Louis in light marching ordey, and the soaking of his clothes was a serious matter with him. But ahappy way out suggested itself, and the Bishop did not have to go to’ bed after all. He and Judge Beattie are nearly of the same size, and as the Judge lives next door to where the Bishop was staying, a levy way made on the Judge's ward- robe, and the Bishop was fitted out comfortable if not clerically. My liver was fearfully disordered and T felt so feeble and languid that I scarce- K4 took interest in anything. Tried all ¢ so-called remedies without reliet un- til I used Pazker’s Tonic, which effected & permanent cure. 361m. David Bash, Little Rock, Ark. Granted by Justice Miller. Block Island, R. I., Aug, 4.—In the case of Hugh M. Brooks, alias Maxwell, now under sentence of death for the famous murder of Preller in the Southern hotel at St. Louis, two years ago, Lawyer Fauntleroy, for the condemed man, appeared to-day before Justice Samuel F. Miller of the United States supreme court, who is stopping here, and applied for a writ of error. Justice Miller allowed the writ, which stays the proceedings urtil the supreme court Bones of the Dead Desecrated. . Boston, Mass., Aug. 10.—A_ hor- ble desecration of the graves of the in Boston has been going on nearly a week on Boyleston t, directly opposite the public The Edison electric light company lug a trench along the street for the of laying their wires and as workmen ascended the hill they tered the tops of the graves vaults. The tops of the graves broken in and their contents out on the side of the street earth, brick and stone. Some of the bones have been hung the fence of the common, where are the object of scurrilous A woman named Dolan sold one the skulls to a young man this ing for 50 cents. He said he }@ Harvard medical student. ‘nasal wh—gu: FACTS FOR FARMERS. | —Iron filings and coal ashes benefit | year trees. plantings pays as well as does thor- ough cultivation of the corn crop. —It is just as easy to break a calf to | be led by a halter as it is to do the same with a colt, and it will often save labor. or land produces milk that is deficient in fatty matters and there- fore better adapted for cheese than butter making. —Every farmer should possess a good chest of tools and a well-ar- ranged workshop. He can easily save the cost of both within a few years. —Peach trees growing near the house, where dish and wash-water are thrown out, are long-lived and free from worms and disease. —Wire netting, two-inch mesh, is now cheaper than boards as material for fencing poultry, and can be more casily arranged and with less labor. —It pays to clean out the coops every day, provided the droppings are carefully preserved. The droppings begin to deteriorate in quality as soon as they reach the floor.—Farm, Fuld and Stockman. —A specified amount of food, say a thousand pounds, evenly divided among four hogs in separate pens, will pro- duce one-fifth more pork than the same amount fed to four hogs together. Ben Perley Poore says salt is per- haps one of the best of all known fer- tilizers for the plum. In its native state, that of the beach plum, it is al- ways found in situations where it is copiously irrigated by salt water, and is there never infested by the evils which so greatly lessen its value in a cultivated state.—Cincinnati Bimes. —Foot-rot in sheep arises principally from pasturing the sheep on damp ground. Wet pastures are not suita- ble for sheep. It is muoh better to compel them to climb steep hillsides, and seek all their food, than to be com- pelled to remain on good pastures that aredamp. A good dry pasture, how- ever, is better than either. —Those who look upon farming as only an ordinary occupation are mis- taken. As Prof. Wrignton remarks, agriculture isa born science. It is full of botany, zoology, geology and ento- mology. It is full of chemistry, from the soil to the growing plant, the ripen- ing seed and animal life which is the crowning outcome. There is no more varied pursuit, and most are narrow in their scope in comparison with it.— Indianapolis Journal. —When fowls have to be confined to to pens their supply of green food is cut off, and, although they can do with- out it, there is nothing they re- lish more and that will tend to keep them in better health. This can be supplied by planting in successions of two weeks, mustard seed. The growth is quick and the fowls are fond of it, and all the trouble you will have after planting is to pull and throw it where the fowls can get it. Mustard greens are also considered very fine by some, and could be used on the table as well as fed to the chickens. —S¢, Louts Republican, THE FEAR OF DRAUGHTS. Suggestive Comments on the Cause of Colds and Kindred Ailments. Foul dusts in rooms can not be got rid of by any amount of sweeping and carpet-beating. The only thing that will remove and replace it is a current of comparatively pure air from the out- side. Except in very cold weather there should always be two open win- dows in each room, on opposite sides. “If we should follow that advice,” the horrified reader will exclaim, ‘we should all catch a fatal cold. Don't I remember a dozen colds I got by being exposed to a sudden draught? Only a few nights ago, when I occupied aseat near the door of a theater, the door was left open during the intermis- sion, and the draught, though pleasant enough gave me a bad cold. No, thank you. No draughts for me!” This logic seems good, yet it is utter sophis- try. As a metaphysician would say, the draught was only the occasion, not the cause, of the cold. @he real cause was the foul, hot air in the theater, which demoralized your skin and re- laxed its blood vessels, so that they were unable to react suddenly and en- dure the healthful, cool air from the street. In other words, it was not the draught that gave you a cold, but the sudden transition from hot to cold air. Such a transition always is injurious to the skin, whether it be from hot to cold or from cold to hot air. But if you are not overheated a current of coid air is never injurious. As one of the greatest authorities on hygiene, Prof. Reclam remarks: ‘Draughts are not injurious unless we are ina glow. To healthy persons they can not Possibly do so much harm as the stagnant air in a close room. The fear of draughts is entirely groundless, though it affects most people in a manner which is simply Indierous."” It is high time to acquit draughts of the charge of being the cause of our colds and to convict the true culprit, the injurious hot-house at- mosphere in our rooms. Why do peo- | ple on river excursions or on ocean | Steamers, where they are to terrible draughts, never “‘catch colds?” Simply because their skins are not pre- viously broiled in hot-houses. — ‘The oe ee ee as to or fever, the fiber of | the wool is od culture of young forestry | TWO ACCIDENTS. A Case of Deafness E ly Cured. | Office of Shaw & Baldwin’s Wholesale ) Peter Coilins Loses His Li ud John Wilburn the Fingers of tight Hand. Two accidents, serious in their | results. occurred at Rich Hill m No. 12, yesterday a little after noon, | by which two young men were badly | injured, and one, Pat Collins, an in- | dustrious young miner about 18 | years of age. lost his life. He was caught between the walland aloaded coal car and horribly crushed, his principal injury being internally. The other unfortunate is John Wilburn, who had the fingers of his right hand caught by a quantity of falling rock and dirt, is badly crip- pled for the rest of his days. All four fingers are mashed to pulp, and presented a sickening sight. At the time of the accident his hand was resting upon the edge of a coal car. It is thought probable that the hand will have to be amputated. Pat Collins, the dead miner, is recently from near Springfield, Ils., having only been in the mines about three months. He is a single man. His parents, who reside near Spring- field, Tlls., were last night notified by wire of the sad fate of their son. —Rich Hill Herald. nne Drunkenness or the Liquor Habit Positively Curea by administering Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea withovt the knowledge ot the person tak- ingit; is absolutely harmless and will ettect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drink- er oran alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking ot their own free will. It never fails. The sys- tem once impregnated with the Specific it becomes an utter impossibility tor the liquor appetite to exi For tull partic- ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race st, Cincinnati, O. London has an artillery company that is three hundred and fifty years oid. Some of the instruments of war in the company have seen several generations of men come and go. Greatly Excited. Not a few of the citizens ot Butler have recently become greatly excit- ed over the astounding facts, that several of their triends who had been pronounced by their friends as in curable and beyond all hope—suffer- ing with that dreaded monstcr Con sumption—have been completely cured by Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, the only remedy that does positively cure all throat and lung diseases, Coughs. Colds, Asthma and Bronchitis. Trial bot tles tree at all Drug Stores. Large bottles $1. Kit Carson’s Son Murdered. Alamosa, Col., Aug. 8.—The re- port reached here this evening from the southern part of the state that William Carson, deputy sheriff of Conejose county, had been brutally murdered in Taos Valley last Thurs- day by Juan Vijil, a notorious char acter, whom he was attempting ic arrest. It appears that when Carson went t@ serve papers on Vijil, who asked the officer to read them, and while he was doing so the outlaw snatched a revolver from Carson's belt and beat out his brains. Carson was the eldest son of the famous scout Kit Carson, and an in- fluential man. A posse has been or- ganized to search for the murderer. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cnts Bruises, Cuts, Ulcers Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Cancers, Piles, Chilblains, Corns, Teter, Chapped Hands, and all skin erup- tions,and postively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect Satistaction, or money refnnded. Prive per poss 25 cts For sale by all Drug- gists. It is said that Secretary and Mrs. Whitney have spent over $100,000 in charity during the past year. They seem to know that lifeis worth living. ace aaa Ne For Rickets, Marasmus, and Wast- ing Disorders of Children. Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liyer Oil with Hypophosphites is unequaled. The rapidity with which children gain flesh and strength upon it is very won- derful. Read the following: “T have used Scott’s Emulsion in cases of Rick- ets and Marasmus of long standing, and haye been more than pleased with the results, as in every case the improvement was marked.”"—J. M. Main, M. D., New York. “I have used Scott*s Emulsion in several cases of Scrotula and Debility in children. Results most Sratifying. “My little patients take it with Pleasure.” —_W. A. Hursvrt, M. D., Salisbury, Hl. | suffering tr the cure | Catarrh Cure, we were in mence the u g he, now f¢ old, who has been afor about eight hit she has been treated by one of the best physicians in the city. We have also tried the useal- | most all the known remedies for catarrh, with no more eess than temporary relet. Manv nights have we lain awake | to hoid her mouth open tokeep her from strangling Her hearing had also be- come atfected. We were afraid that she would never recover. We have now us- ed six bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure, and we believe Nellie to be entirely cured. In a tew days after commencing the use of it we noticed a de~ided change tor the better, and from that right along she has improved, until now she breathes aseasily as any one. She sleeps weil and her hearing is pertectly good. We feel that the disease 1s entirely remoyed. We write this unsolicited letter, teeling that it is due you, and with the hope that others may be benefited in like manner. We can hardly realize that such achange could be effected in so short a time after battling with the disease so long. We are still using the remedy at intervals, as it seems to build up hersystem. You are at liberty to use this in any manner you see proper. We are paged truly, Mr. and Mrs. S. BALDWIN, 220 Franklin Avenue. Beh.Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. 36-1m. years, dur Order of Publication. Stats or Missovrt, County of Bates, ¢ °° In the circuit court of Bates county, November term, 1887. ce z Alfred ’Moudy, plaintiff, vs. William H. Wil- cox, defendant. 3 Now, at this day comes the plaintiff herein, by his attorney, John T. Smith, before the un- dersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, in vacation, and files his petition and affidavit, alleging, among other things, that detendant is not a resident of the state of Mis- souri. Whereupon itis ordered by the clerk aforesaid, in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has com- menced suit against him in this court by peti- tion and attachment in the circuit court o1 Bates county in the state of Missouri, founded upon a judgment rendered in the state of Indi- ana the ba ance due upon which is eleven hun dred and fifty dollars, and that his property has been attached to sa isfy the same, and that un- less the said William H. Wilcox be and appear at this court, at the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court honse in the city of Butler, in said county, onthe seventh day of November, 1887, andon or before the sixth day of said term, if the term shall so long continue, and if not, on or before the last day of said term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as contessed and judgement will be rendered ac- cordingly and his property sold to satisfy the same. And be it further ordered that a cop) hereof be published, according to law, in the Butler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Mo.. for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first day ot the next term of said circuit court. J.C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. A true cupy from the record. Witness my hand and the seal of the circuit 3kaL.] court of Bates county, this 24th day of ay, 1887, JOHN C, HAYES, Circuit Clerk. Order of Publication. STaTE OF MISSOURI, ) County of Bates oo In the circuit court of said county, Jane term, 1887 887, Elizabeth J. Abel, plainti®, vs. Wilham D. Abel, defendant E E Now at this day comes the aintif herein, by her attorney, and it appearing from the re- turn of the sheriff on the summons herein. that defendant cannot be summoned in this action and also from the affidavit of the. plaintiff, that defendantis not a resident of the state of Mis- souri: wheretore it is ordered by the court that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced a suit against him in thiscourt, the object and general nature of which is to obtain a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony heretofore contracted and entered into between plaintiff and defendant upon the ground that the defendant on the 10th day of November, 1883, without reasonable cause abandoned the plaintiff and has failed to provide for the support of plaintiff and has ab- sented himself from plaintiff forthe space of one year next before the filing of the Seat herein, and that unless the said Wilham D Abel be and appear at this court, at the next termthereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said coun ty, on the seventh day of November next, and on or before the sixth dey of said term, if the term shall so long continne—and if not, then on or before the last day of said term—answer or — to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly. And be it further or- dered, thata copy hereof be publishhed, ac- corny tolaw. in the Butler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Missouri, for four weeks suc- ec vely, the last insertion to be atleast four weeks before the first day of the next term of circuit court. re it JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. A true copy from the record. Witnesss my hand and the seal of the circuit SEAL.] court of Bates count, this 17th day of june, 1887. JOH. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. DRS.S.? D. DAVIESON ST. LOUIS, MO., The Great Specialists, and epee ctaneaienen Fane Adtran Dre 2 D: sauna Sick MUSEUM. Mention this paper. Stomach, Liver ise~ and Bowels LIVER PACIFIGH STRICTLY VEG Fetite, Biliousness, ‘or Sale by all D PACIFIC MANUFACTUni« - hood qu SEXUAL sess Dook mailed FREE to all afflicted. Address. Hewlin Medical Co.,Buffalo. N.Y.. U.S.A. C3., ST. LOUIS, MC. Weskness “*Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that {recommend it as superior to any prescription mowntome.”” HA Ancusz, i.D., 111 So. Oxford 8%, Brooklya, N.Y. MW’ FARLAND BROS. -aae« {Keep the Largest Stock, At the Lowest Prices in, Spooner Patent Collar! —PREVENTS CHA FING] CAN NOT CHOKE A HORSE Adjusts itself to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames place better than any other collar. SCHWANER’sS. l SIUTTO) Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops from tearing out. i USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS. SOUTH SIDE SQUARE BUILER MO. FRANZ BERNHARDT’S Three ounce Elgin, Waltham and Qe Hampdeasilver stem winding watch- es, trom $11 to higher prices. American ladies stem winding gold watches from $25, up. All &c, at cost prices. . silverware, clocks, jewelrA, Sole agent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches, puick in Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, very cheap. JEWELRY STORE, Watches, Clocks, Is headquarters tor Sne Jewelry Solid Silver and Plated Wdre, &e. Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses. You are cordially invited to visit his establishment and examine his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices, ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED ereign dineaae: ee fectione, made more for the 7 disea been manufactured ail over bther cause Book Spermifage continues to grow in favor they are irritable and feverish, crav! tossing restiessiy in sleep, moaning and grinding the Many a — B.A. abnestock’ to recommend ‘rom all parts of the country, testify it dently been given to children asa safe argatl of worms mediate to be his own Jadg = = not sufficient. ‘Seve Frasxurs. Hi 3 . HOwaRD Co., Mo. Mesers. JE. Schwarts & te Pittsburg, Pa. |, Geatlemen—I1 have used some of that Most exrellent I remedy tor Worms, and yatati; hi: leadily ine ontil FAHNESTOGK’S =: rts of the world to be ge ry the country; mt their tort Tease of teeth, then be — ESTABLISHED 1877. It is now nearly axty years since this medicine was offered a from that time parts of late than of life ts near: ly. Children often look sometimes craving tenn ne result of these hidden sappers ners. eating ravenously, again returing whol-scae lansured these syraptonis are Sndien ioe ot suspecting the cause of the af in one sense, and to examine every br vive must look closely and carefully to see ti Great caution me: he bays of it. T) bat the initials are Baring ned the o fave the desi paihestock's Vermifuge. and fond it ta | fuze in my effect. I think Sot eatsig nat Es Prati euee can {taner ia Yours. &-., 3.W.H rf 5 4 (LE reliable and tn SUCORSORS To 6., -B- A. Fahnestock & Co..

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