The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 17, 1887, Page 7

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AICKLY acy _BITTERS disappear at once under? its neficial infuence.; Itis purely a Medic:-.c} as its cathartic jer- | Hes forbids its use as 2: PRICKLY ASH BITTERS Go! WU 82.Lovisand Kawsan Cr: | Diners Cheaply Without Publicity, ABSOLUTE DIVORCES without publicity ‘ residing in any part of the United , for desertion, non mpvett intemper- cruelty, ii Blank application for 45 Broadway, fields are scarce, but those who write to Sunson & Co.,Portland, Maine, will receive free, full information about work which sapere Sin a day | Either sez, young oc old tarted free, Those wi one we celaly gure of snug little fortunes, ‘All ia po 3 "Whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Prices to consumers om all goods for or family use. Tells how to aler, and gives exact cost of every~ ig you use, eat, drink, wear, © fan with, These INVALUAB 0KS contain information glean. the markets of the world. \. i mail a copy FREE to any upon receipt of 10 cts. to defra of mailing, Let us hear tre: The BUYERS’ GUIDE ts issued Sept. and March, each year. £9- 312 pages, 1144 tnches, with over 0 illustrations — 2 Respectfully, ONTGOMERY WARD & Ci HW & 229 Wabash Avenue, Chicugo, 1:! ath is Wealth’ order received byus if the treatment doce notettect issued only by JOHN O. WEST & CO,, WW. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS., Sole Prop’s West's Liver Pills, . ousal ‘wear: gonthe ak them. JAMES 2. rb 1s unapproached in Oh iyo ull lines of the above shoes for sale in by. 'LLEVY & CO free, a costly box of goods which help all, of either sex, to more mon- ht away-than anything else in the d. Fortunes await the workers ab- ly sure. At once addresss True & » Matae, Vq-1yr* $100 A WEEE. Heso1 gentlem n desireing pleasant bleempioyment write at once. Want you to handle an article of do- uc use that recommends atself one at sight. STAPLE AS UR. Sells like hot cakes. Profits cent. Families wishing te prac- iPetenemy should tor their. own write tor particulars. Used every ar round in every household. in reach of all. ‘Circulars free Tecei AMPLE FREE. Ad- Domestic M°f’s Co., Marion 48 6m. CINSY GAPSULE THE LATEST DISCOVERY. ~s Celebrated Freparaticn, Safe and Relindie. Iadispensatie to LADIES, & 4 cents for Goaled Circniar. CHEMICAL GQ., Ghicagn, rs | | ao | Band are Doing. Vegas is undoubtedly the queen city | of this grow ing territory, and lately taking pattern after Kansas City, she has developed a wonderful spir- will, if continued, very shortly create another “Whichita boom.” I saw Bob Ford, the murderer of Jesse James, at Las Cerrillos, a min jing town near here, recently. He is penniless, or about his blood money having been exhausted long since by riotous living. Heisa hang- | er on of saloons and gambling dens, so, and manages somehow to make a living. He is cordially detested by the people and miners generally, who selyi often very rough in ways and deeds, are too brave to do the coward trick that removed Jesse James from earth He is alone in all the desolate sense of that word, and it will always be so. Dick Liddle is also here, but he is “reformed,” and is receiving the assistance and moral encouragement of well disposed peo- ple. He is nice looking, very much unlike the brutal Ford in appearace, in actions and in words. He marri- ed a woman of this town, and the people helped them to start on the right road. Don’t fill the system with quinine to prevent or cure Fever and Ague, Ayer’s Ague Cure is the specific for this disease, and leaves no poisons to prevent dizziness, deafness, head- ache, or other disorders. About three years ago the Texas and Pacific railway company under took to sink an artesian wella few miles below Sierra Blanca, which is a little hamlet ninety-five miles east of El Paso. The workmen put the pipe down about 600 feet, when sud- denly an underground cavern was struck, the drill dropping about six feet and a current of air rushed up the pipe. Drilling was ceased and the well was abandoned, the 600 feet of pipe remaining in the ground and giving a connection between the sur- face of this earth and the strange subterranean cavity a quarter of a mile beneath. The phenomenon did not at that time attract the attention of anyone sufficiently interested to investigate. Recently, however, Su- perintendent Judy's attention was called to it and his personal examina- tion and inquiries have developed peculiar facts and testimony about the wonderful well. Gov. Brown stopped to see it on his way here. Not many people live near the well, but those who doresidein the neigh- borhood of it are thoroughly acquaint- ed with it ever sitice it was abandon- ed three years ago. The people near by have been in the habit of go- ing and sitting about the well in summer to enjoy the cool, invigor- ating air that rushes up the pipe. One of the strangest things is the fact that the current of air ebbs and flows like the ocean tides. From about 10:15 a. m. till 10:15 p. m.a current of air rushes out of the pipe with a sound that resembles the noise of a locmotive “blowing off steam,” and so loud that it can be heard for forty or fifty yards. At 10:15 p. m. the overtlow of air ceases and a strong suction sets in which lasts for the next twelve hours, this ebb and flow continuing day after day, and it has been observed by horsemen that whenever they get in the neighborhood of this well strong magnetic forces are felt and sparks are given off if the horse’s mane is touched. The outflowing current of air is believed to possess remarkable curative properties. The people who live near the wonderful well call it the “Fountain of Youth.”—Ex Coming Home to Die, At a period of hfe when budding womanheod requires all her strength to meet the demands nature makes upon it, many a young woman re- turns home from the severe mental strain of school with a broken-down constitution, and her functions disar- ranged, to go to an early grave. It she had been wisely counseled and given the benefit of Dr. Prerce’s “Favorite Prescription” her bodily development might have kept pace with her mental growth, and health and beauty would not have given y Way to decline and death. What Former Members of the James | Las Vegas, N. M., Aug. 1.—Las! * ¢ . * { jit of enterprise and energy, which THE SUMAC FAMILY. | Beautiful Plants Which Sometimes Attain a Height of Thirty Fee in ornas should tsional severe and the smoothsumac, noug the earliest of our eshrabs to colorinthe autumn, and will retain their foliage with its brilliant colors for quite al ept up by Fr season. The smooth surmae grows from three to twelve feet in height, and is similar tor. typhna in appearance; the new growth, however, 1s covered with a whitish bloom that easily rubs off, leav- ing a smooth apd glossy surface. There is in cultivation a cut leaf variety of this species, the fernleaf sumac. ~ It is a very graceful and fine- ly cut leaf, and makes a pleasing addi- tion to a group of shrubs. The dwarf or mountain sumag, r. copallina, will grow from one to six feet in height; the foliage is glossy and dark green, while that of the two pre- | ceding is a dull green; the stem be- tween the leaflets is winged, while that of the other species is smooth. It is not found so common as its large growing relatives; occasional clumps are found along roadsides and in pastures. The autumn colorings are exceedingly bril- liant, the gloss on the surface of the leaves bringing out the tints likea coat of varnish. This is one of the prettiest of the genus. The fragrant sumac, r. aromatica, is quite distinct from the other rieties named, both in habit, flowers and foliage. It forms a rounded, spread- ing shrub, with slender flexible iches, covered in early spring with tufts of bright yellow flowers, and in summer with three parted leaves, approaching in outline those of the poision ivy, r. toxicodendron, but not poisonous. The leaves turn toa brilliant hue in autumn. It really is de- sirable for the lawn or border, as_ it does not throw up troubiesome offsets, and in an open sitiuation makes a neat and well clothed shrub.— Vick's Maga- zine. Young or middle-aged men suf- fering trom neryous debility, loss of memory, premature old age, as the result of bad habits, should send 10 cents in stamps for large illustrated treatise suggesting unfailing cure, Address World’s Dispensary Med- ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. —Prisoners in the county jail at Can- ton, O., caught a big rat, formed a court, gave him a regular trial for his life, found him guilty, and the judge sentenced him to be hanged the next morning at sunrise. At that hour he was led out by Edward Maguire, held ona charge of highway robbery, who acted as sheriff, and when the execu- tion was over Charles Danzisen, held for attempted wife murder, cut the body down. = a Ballard’s Snow Liniment. There is no pain it will not relieve no swelling it ill not subdue, ao wound it will not heal It will cure frost bites, chilblains and corns. A taicUlOUS frisn oun, A Boston servant, like many of her class, does not know her age. She has lived with one family eleven years, and has always been twenty-eight. But not long ago she read in the newspaper of an old woman who had died at the age of a hundred and six. ‘May be I’m as auld as that mesilf,"’ said she. ‘In- dade, I can’t ‘remimber the time when I wasn’t alive.""—Harper’s Magazine. —__ = ___ —The real reasox why negroes live t® such an extreme old age is that they don’t know exactly when they were born.—Shoe and Leather Reporter. Wonderful Cures. W. D. Hoyt & Co., Wholesale and Re- tail Druggists of Rome, Ga., says: We have been selling Dr. King’s New Dis- covety, Electric Bitters and Bucklen’s Arnica Salve tor two years. Have never handled remedies that sell so well, or give such universal satisfaction. There have been some wonderful cures eftected by these remedies in tnis city. Several cases ot pronounced Consumption have been entirely cured by use of a tew bottles of Dr. King’s New Discovery, taken in connection with Electric Bitters. We guarantee them alwavs. Sold by all druggists. Distemper at Lexington. Lexington, Mo., Aug. 10.—Quite a number of horses here have be- come affected with distemper the past few days and considerabie alarm is being felt lest the disease spread. It is thought to have had its origin from the public troughs, at which all the horses are watered, and which have scarcely been cleaned since their establishment. These troughs are a great convenience and are almost constantly used both by the citizens and the country people. , hear jan oldt Dutchmans, but if I do you OLD FATHER DUNDER, His Admiring Young Friends. Vhel i e tulksome more? I vhas oanly some j 1 tell you feller who vas and who lif py dot Bi Vhas [tell you hs grandfa Shacob Hornberger lif. by der Black Forest mit his parents. Dot poy doan’ lie und stheal, but he vhas cruel in his mindt. If he sees some odder leedle . 5 . . i poy he likes to hit him mit a club, und if he sees some leedle girl he likes to pinch ner und make her yell so loud as a cannon. shildren. If you doan’ have some mercy und sympathy for odder people you vhillsome day sthand oop on der gallows to be hung. Vhell, to proceed some more, dot poy Shacob vhas tickled all oafer when he haf some shance to be cruel mit a dumb brute. It vhas his delight to throw stones at some dogs, hunt down cats, und kill off der innocent birds. If he doan’ be cruel to something during der day he doan’ shleep goot at night. Lots of peoples talk to him und giff him goot advice, but Shacob vhas no_ petter. Vhen a poy doan’ heed der words of his parents und frieads it vhas bad for him—werry badt. He vhas on der plank roadt to destruction, und he dies some awful death. Vhell, one day Shacob finds a rabbit mit two proken legs, und he vhas nefer so tickled pefore. It vhas a shance to pe cruel, und he takes oudt his knife to torture dot poor rabbit. A leetle oldt man mit a hump on his pack und one white eyebrow comes oudt of der woods shus den und says: “Vhas you do, eh; Shacob? You doan’ be cruel to dot poor rabbit, I hope?” “I like to Shacob. “But if you touch him you shall be punished.”’ Und now, shildren, vhas you suppose dot poy did? He jabs dot knife into dot rabbit's eyes und laughs ha! ha! ha! to hear him ery oudt midt pain. Howefer, he hadt no sooner done dot dan der old man makes two signs like dot und says: “I turn dot poy into a lean, plind wolf, und I bid him go off mit der Black Forest? Dot rabbit vhas all right again!” Und, shildren, shust like you lif, Sha- cob pecomes a plind wolf, mit all his tibs plain to be seen, und dot rabbit goes scampering off on four legs, mit his eyes as goot as eafer. Dot woll howls mit bunger und pain, und vhile he runs he knocks himself oafer lots of times und vhas padly used oop. If he can’t see he can’t catch something tc eat, und in a littletime he goes deadt. If yousee some rabbit, shildren, you vhill notice how crooked his hindt legs vhas. Dotvhas because dey vhas pro- ken. You notice some specs in his eyes. Dot vhas peeause he vhas cured so queck of his blindness. Dot vhas my story, leedle ones, und I like you to re- member it. Der poy who likes to gif pain to some helpless animal vhill come oop to some badt man. It vhas petter dot our hearts vhas always full of pitty and me: und dot we vhas always rendy mit charity for der unfortunate. - Detroit Free Press. skin him alife!’’ says Another Editor's Testimony. Ringworm has broken out on me every summer for tour years. Three years ago a large sore tormedon the back ot my neck that became the size of a silver dollar. It finally spread all around to my nose and would not dry up. Last summer I took several bottles of S. S. S., which soon permanently dried up the sore, and I have hadno eruption since. Cuas. H. Pratr. Palatka, Fla.. Jan. 20, 1887. From the Lady of the House. For oyer ten years I had dyspep- sia. I tried every known kind of medicine and every first-class phy- sician I could get, nearly all tailed. A tew months ago my husband, who had been cured ot a twenty years’ case ot the same disease, by S. S.S. began to treat me with it. After I had taken five bottles I telt like a new woman. The dyspeysia wag gone, and all teeling of lassitude had disappeared, and I feel built up anew. Your medicine is a house- hold remedy in my family, and I would not be without it for more than it costs. It would be hard to tell which has the most faith in it, me or my husband: but we both re- gard it as the greatest of all medi- cines. Mrs. B. F. Licutroot. Fort Gaines, Ga., Dec. 8, 1886. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3 Atlanta, Ga. 2 Dot vhasa pad preencipies, | | He Tells a Highly Mora! Fairy Story to | dren, may pe you like to | A SWINDLER does not refer possible purchasers to his The Athlophoroes Co. gladly n utierers from rheumatism, ne} “ sciatica, nervous or sick headache, kidney and liver complaints to those who hare been cured of these diseases by Athlophoros, and fi names and addresses of many sto those desiring them. Ath- yhoros is the only remedy for these dis- | eases that can stand such a test. \ ton, Kan., Jan, 14th, 1886. ted with rheumatism for dit had become chronic in its nd after using one bottle of sl have not felt any symptom x months. It done more than ted with neuralgia ad an attack every r taking one bottle, six has only felt it once or twice J.C. Doome. Mrs. Thos. McCue, Sanford Block, corner Sth and Main streets, Dubuque, Iowa, says: “Lam still well. Last winter was a very severe and cold one for me, but I did not have any return of the rheumatism. Athlo- phoros has proven a good medicine far e.” About a year ago Mrs. McCue had a very severe attack of inflammatory rheu- matism, in which the feet and hands were very much swollen, so much so that you could scarcely see one of the ankles, and some of the toe nails were completely cov- ered for many weeks. She had suffered almost the agonies of death. Finally, after resorting to various remedies with no avail, her husband noticed the advertise- ment of Athlophoros. The result of its use was miraculous ; the swelling was soon re- duced, the pain subdued, and she was again upsand around and has not been troubled since. Every druggistshould keep Athloph oros and Athlophoros Pills, but where they can- not be bought of the druggist the Athlo- phoros Co., 112 Wall St., New York, will send either (carriage paid) on receipt of regular price, which is $1J pee bottle for Athlophoros and 50c. for Pills. For liver and kidney d‘seases, dyspepsia, in- digestion, weakness, nervous debility, diseases of women, constipation, headache, impure blood, <ec., Athlophoros Pills are unequaled. 11 | money due when tacts are known, $ | by the season and $5 single service, ; mare bred to either of the above stal- | lions, leaves county or changes owner- THE COACH STALLION Judge Webster. old stand, of the square, Mahogany bay nd action and to insure mare in toal, is le service, is ascert >, Chery’s a n - ARAB isa 9 Years old 4 oadster, both a surperior breeder. orted from Arabia by the New York Theatre company in 1881. TERMS: $10 to insure mare in foal, $7-50 It ship, insureanceis torteitea and money must be paid whether: mare is jn foal or not. A lein will be reserved upon the colt for services ot either stallion. Care taken to to prevent accidents but will not be responsible should any occur, D. A. COLYER, Butler, Mo. JAS. WALLACE, will handle stallions, gee vlsfaue, eatudigestiou, HIS Wats = SOLD BY DRUGGISTS, SEND for Publications, with maps, describing Min- nesota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Wash- ington and Oregon, the Free Gevernment Lands and Low Price Railroad Lands in the Northern Pacific country. The Best Agricultural, Graz- ing and Timber Lands now open to Settlers mailed free, Address CHAS. B LAMBORN, Land Com N.P.R.B., st. Paul, Minn. 25-9t $25,000.00 IN GOLD! ARBUCKLES’ COFFEE WRAPPERS. $1,000.00 $500.00 each $250.00 “ $100.00 “ $50.00 ‘* $20.00 ‘* $10.00 “ For full particulars and directions see Circw- lar in every pound of ARBUCKLES' CoFrEs. 1 Premium, - 2 Premiums, 6 Premiums, 25 Premiums, 100 Premiums, 200 Premiums, 1,000 Premiums, : MANY LAMP CHIMNEYS ARE oftered for sale resented good as the ous PEARL TOP. BUT THEY ARE NOT! And like all Counterfeits lack the Remarkable LASTING Qualities OF THE GENUINE. ASK FOR THE PEARLTOP “ne PEARL TOP is Tanufactured ONLY by Gu. A. MACBETH &CO., PITTSBURGH. PA. BksT THE : eT Preuuns 70 FEMALES. Ji tsa Spee eee eure ‘01 wih eee aoe tending MER and STREN exciting sees MAY BE TAKEN AT Sal ed Nereis xumanae. ‘EmneLe. Fail directions with each bottle. $i.00, JACOB SCHWENCK & OLDEAKER. Boot & Shoe Makers BUTLER, MO. Boots and Shoes made to order The best ot leather used. Shop nerth side ot Square. 49 tf TO HAVE HEALTH THE LIVER MUST BE KEPT IN De. SANFORD'S 1 INVIGORATO tliton ot the Livers ae Byepapai, Onestipations Bueeanpan, Jaundice, etc, ft regetates blood, aed strengthens the system, r (Thousands of Teatimon lale prove ite merit, Any druggies will tell you its reputation. IT IS THE BEST MADE, LIGHTEST RUNNING, QUICKEST AND SIMPLEST In the World. OUR MOTTO: s@r-Protection in Territory. sam Perfection in Principle. sar-Popularity Univeral. NEEDLES. OILS AND PARTS FOR ALL MACHINES. SGP RESPoNSIBLE DEALERS AND AGENTS who wish to handle the pest and most SALABLE eoops. Address tor particulars WHITE SEWING MACHINE COMPANY. gz Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. a@-MNT ION THIS PAPER. TOR SICK HEADACHE, BILAOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION. feel, ir meal, to ALESMEN

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