The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 21, 1887, Page 3

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NLA le sil —jN— | ra House Block, To The Memory of a Loving Wife. While thine absence I deplore. ’Tis for myself I weep Though I behvid thy tace ne more, Tn peace thine ashes sleep, And o’er thy tom I lift mine eye, Thou art no: dead, thou coulas’t not die. n silent anguish, O. my darling wife When I recall thy worth, Thine early end, thy lovely life, I feel estranged from earth. My soul with thine desires to rest, Supremely and forever blest o—— DRUG STORE i gUTLER, MO. Fall well I know if thou wert here, A pilgrim stil with me | Dear as my theme was once, and d. | y > dear Ps 866,000. i] As I was once to thee, but suddenly the light was flown, us $5,500 1 looked and found myself alone. My task is o’er and Ihave wrought Shee | First-class in every respect. With self rewarded teil To raise the scattered seeds of thought . SULLENS........ President \ —o—— Sees eee oe 4 ELL Vice President. | O, for soft winds end clement showers, sete se Cashier. ; tls ¢ sical ad ot [see not frui , I planted flowers. ca Bd Neviernad | OPEN EV ERY DAY I\ WEEK. Those flowers I trained, of many a hue, | Along thy path to bloom, 2 And litte thong pat l must strew DIRECTORS , 7, C. Boulware, These leaves a, tomb. ! dthet tomb I iiftmine eye, Puou art not dead, tivu coulds’t not die. EFRIZELL & RICE, Booker Powell, reen W. Walton | 7 Farewell, ont net a loug farewell, aw Sullens, shit Dedcwester, | BUTLER, MO.| In heaven may I appear, ¢. The tris!s uf my life to tell r.N.L. Whipple | || Wm, E, Walton, | In thy transported ear, J. Rue Jenkins. And sing with thee the eternal strain, Worthy the Laaib that once was slain. G.D.A. Butler, Mo., si S87. s deposits, loans money, and thet Mo» Rent Sebel cts a general banking business. stend to ourcustomers eve: dation consistent with sate ng, ac- SEVEN TO SWING. Its causes, ana a new and e ae ae ank- EAFNES: successful CU Ee Eat your own home, bv one who wasdeaftwen- ty-eight years Treated by most ofthe not- ed specialists without benefit. Cureb himself in three months and since then hundreds of others. Full particulars sent on application. T.S. PAGE, No 41 West 3let St. New York. CORRESPONDENTS. Nat’l Bank Kansas City. National Bank St. Louis. over National Bank - New York. Anarchist Case. » BATES COUNTY ational Bank, ARE CO N S U M PTIV E To Hang Noven.ber 11. Have you Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, Indizestion ! Use paRkan's GINGER TONIC without delay. 1t cured many of the worst cases and isthe best remedy for all affections of the throat jungs, and diseascs OF BUTLER, MC. pital paid in, - - $75,000. in the Cook county jail. The decis F. A. LEHMANN Washington, 1).C. ‘Send tor (ircular, I $> ion of the court affirms the judgment pUS - -.° 1.00 of the court below, and fixed the day IL.TYGARD, - - - - President |° NJ r E of execution as Friday, November 11, iliac ve K A SK I N 4 | 1887, between the hours of 9 a. m. (THE NEW QUININE.) FARMERS i itCosts Less tu Feed 50 Hogs With me & POULTRY REMEDY before the court as the decision wa: in their behalf. rehearing and thirty days from th before the court would consent t A POWERFIL TONIC that the most delicate stomach will bear 4 SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA, RHEUMATISM, NERVOUS -:- PROSRATION. wand all Germ Diseases. THE MOST SCIENTIFIC AND SUCCESSFUL BLOOD PURIFIER. Superiur to quinine. Rev. Wm. Lucas, Rector Grace Chureh, Ra- venna, O. writes: ‘‘I cordia:ly endorse Kas- kine as being just what ha claim, an excel- lent substitute for quinine, with none of its bad effects. Mrs Lucas had a serious form of a hearing could be had next term. ORDER OF COURT. As A PREVENTATIVE, lose one by DISEASE, the extra pork it puts upon the ho; a three times ita‘costs. a feeders who have used it write jer it a sure cure and do not fatend to t it. D. Johnson, Walker, Mo Bauccess and we cheerful: Bro. LaP! - FR Schwab, A. R. Parsons, 5 . | malaria, and z months. Kaskine had her up and around ina few days, and in a short time cured her.’’ Living in the malarial districts of Maryland I became a victim of worst furms of malarial myself with quinine and oth- . Iwas greatly re- duced when I heard of Kaskine. Its curative medical revelation tome. It have sold it in a dozen instances, ni My, and have never lost a cent. Pefaiied. Brown & Mills, Louisvitie, mo Wwe used your medicine for several years. F, Walter, Knox City, mo. it the best preventive for prevailing J. . Dawson, Denver, Mo I ily recommend it to all ha hogs d with cholera, T. A. Bufford, Louisville, Mo not be without Haas’ hog remedy if it three times be present price john of 10 o'clock in the forenoon and troubles. ( 4 I a unanimous. Chemist, Maryland Agricultural College. Letters from the above persons, giving full details will be sent on application. Kaskine can be taken without any special medical advice. $1.00 per bottle, orsixjbottles for $5. Sold by or sent by mail on receipt of price. = 2 THE KASKINE CO., 54 Warren St., New York SRRF EERE Pp je hn Castin, Grant City, Mo . Haas hog renal does all he: claims amar lem . Haxton isville, Mo. flesh, , . H. » Grant, City Mo four re: gives better satisfaction than Tem esaviseed af the eatienne’ te pooper’ 5 em ine is proper! a. it ig the thing for hogs. goat W. J, McCray, Browning Mo ‘sing your remedy] have not had the ure among hogs. M aS Courtright, Pecnliar, Cass Co, Mo. ils the best thing of the kind I ever used. «J Leggett, Hannibal Mo. jourremedy is String general satisfaction. A. H, Lewis, Boliver,Mo. CHILLS # FEVER-aras (nana «MALARIA | EeRESS’ FEVER TONI Is acare and speedy Cure in the most stabborn cases. Te thoroughly cleanses the system of Malaria. maki ‘PRCES, 82.50, $1.25 and 50 cents, yer box 2% pound cans, $12 50 their unanimous decision. For sale by & CRUMLEY, Butler Missouri. are authorized by me to receive and for- lications or the insurance of young inst diseases. u contracts of insurance will provide that I SOB aBSE FFs GF § & FF 000 words. FINE SUITS. } 9 In every style price and quality can learn the exact cost lade to Order \c¢ any proposed line of | advertising in American |Papers by addressing J.E. TALBOTT, | Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, Merchant Tailor! Send 10cts. for 100-Page Pamph:et ADVERTISERS 11 o'clock in the evening, I guaranteed a fit in every case alland see me, up stairs North Main Street. given some one threw a bomb; => - 10 Spruce St, New York. Decision of the Supreme Court in the Finding of the Lower Court Aftirmed— Ottawa, Ill, Sept. 14.—The Tli- ston. The feebi ; and sick, struggling against disease, and slowly dnfting | NOis state supreme court met at 9:30 (Organized in 1871.) the tintely tte of Parkers Gioper foots ees ln gerous, Tave ft in time. It isinvalugtie fer eteyeny | & M., and at once proceeded to de- Sha r8 of stomach and bowels. 60c. at Urugyists liver the long anticipated decision in the case of the seven Chicago An- archists now under sentence of death and 4 p. m. The Anarchists had _| not counsel here to represent them announced, and no steps were taken They have fifteen days in which to file a motion for a close of the term to file a petition in support thereof. This will not act asa stay of sentence and they will have to show very strong grounds the issue of a stay of execution until Judge Sheldon: In this case the court orders that the sentence of the superior court of Cook county of the defendants in the indictment—Aug- ust Spies, Samuel Fielden, Michael Adolph Fischer, Engel, Louis Ling—be car- ried into effect by the sheriff of Cook county on the 11th day of November next,,on Friday, between the hours o'clock in the afternoon on that day. The judgment of the court was The opinion in the case was writ- ten by Judge Magruder of the Chicago district, and is an able ex- position of the law and previous interpretation thereof by eminent jurists in this country, as well as the courts bearing upon the alleged and perhaps real errors in this record. In his work he was ably helped by each of the other six distinguished judges, who made him their spokes- man and through him expressed The opinion covers 225 pages of closely written manuscript and contains 56,- About the first of May, 1886, the y the euthorised to THE you paid for it. é Highest Market price SER ite TRIAL: Be curs fo ong Te oe | Working men of Chicago and other Fae ee match dies from diseases | Feeeg- reve TONIC CO, 3 ST. LUIS. MO- | industrial centres were generally ne be sh oe Sere t worked up by outside influence, and ; greatly excited, especially as to the rs | cieht hour movement. In the midst of this excitement a meeting was held May 4, 1886, at the Haymarket, and it was addressed by defendants Spies, Parsonsand Fielden, and while the latter was making his closing speech at some time between 10 and several | companies of policemen, numbering 180 men, marched into the crowd from their station on Desplaines street and ordered the meeting stop- ped. As soon as the order was plaintiffs in error are charged with being faccessories before the fact. | There are eighty-six counts in the| “NEARER. MY GOD, TO THEE.” | | milictment and these charge the | eight defendants with being present The Last ~Sweet Hours of Prayer” and abetting, etc., and some of them say that they advised and encouraged these lawless acts. Canker humors of every descrip- tow, Whether in the mouth, throat ! arsfomach are expelled trom the system by the use of Ayer’s Sarsa arila : P| No other remedy can com | pare with this as a cure for all dis. order originating in impare blood. Give the Girls a Chance. All over Germany exist what are called “sparcassen” (saving banks), which correspond in a measure to the endowment plan of the American assurance companies. The best known is the “Wilhelmcasse,” named after the emperor, who is its patron. At the birth of a girl the father and mother insure her (kaufen sie ein) in sach a casse for as much as they are able to bestow every year on the fature of their new born baby girl. The amount is paid annually. The aasse lays out the money in behalf of the insured, at interest, chiefly in veal estate. In this way the money sccumulates, and at 18, or her ma- prity, the girl is the possessor of a snug little capital. This will serve her to study any favored profession, go to sume good conservatory, or start in business; and last, but not least, buy her trousseau, if she has a chance to follow woman's truest mission. Now, why cannot well-to- do American women establish such a way of providing for their less fortu nate sisters? What a blessed gift for a godmother to a poor little girl such an insurance would be! I truly believe it would give zeal and en- couragement to many true, poor parents if by this small economy they could help to provide for their dear ones. It is better than a life assurance, for it takes away the “sting of death;” all may live and enjoy the fruit of their economy! How much better a yearly outlay would be, for people in moderate circumstances, than in costly tcys and extravagant dress, by which children are brought up to expect: tions.—North American Review. 80 8 e Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. This simple remedy will positivly cure Consumption, Coughs, Colds ind all Throat an¢ Lung_ troubles, where other remedies have failed. 0 A Man who Wouldn't Dodge Buckshot. I met a remarkable man one day this week on a railroad train. I ai- lude to Edwin Noyes of Waterville. Mr. Noyes was graduated from Brown university in 1837. He had the Latin salutatory and he can yet repeat it. It is fall of compliments for prettygirls and won him many boquets. Mr. Noyes was a tutor at Waterville college for some time. His first law business was the mak- ing of the deed to John Kendall of all the Kendall mills property. This was in 1841. Mr. Noyes is a great mathematician. He can take the calculus to-day and solve problems in railroading that few people care to tackle—curves, frictions, tensic ns, and so on. Mr. Noyes is a man of iron nerve. Your readers piob bly have not forgotten the famous bucs- shot engagement over the line fence in Waterville, when Gilman practised shooting at 100 yards through a knothole at Noyes and fifteen others of iron nerve who were building a line fence. “I never saw men be- have better,” said Noyes. ‘First one was hit in the calf of the leg. Then another got a shot in his wrist. He kept on working. Then I heard the whistle of a bullet past my head. But we kept on and finished the fence. If I had suspected Gilman would use powder and shot, we would have been prepared for him. Iam a fatalist. I think a man who dodges a shot is both cowardly and foolish. If I was born to die of cold lead, what use in dodging? What is to be will be.”—Lewiston Journal. She Is the Idol of My Heart. Well then why don’t you do something to bring » her cheek and the hghtto her eve? Don’t you see she is suffering from nervous debility. the result ot female weakness? A bottle ot Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic wi!l brighten that cheek wonderfully and send life through that wasted form. Ifyou love her take heed. 4 the | How sad and cruel was the fate | those light hearted, happy people so | comes bac! suddenly hurled to their death! seems as if sullen Fate, displezs.d with their happiness, took reve: ge upon them. Merriam Grant, one of the wounded, | who resides at 1409 North Madison | street, impresses the mind with this. She was in the rear chair car with her husband. In this car was a party of six people. might sit together Mr. and Mrs. Grant changed seats with a young man and his bride. Their courtesy saved their lives, couple were both killed. thought this party were theatrical people or concert singers, they were could sing, and they laughed and told stories and anticipated the trip until late at night. composed herself in her chair and covered her face with her handker- chief to go to sleep. Nearly every- body in the car was quiet but the jolly party of six. the young bride was requested to sing “Sweet Hour of Prayer.” Some- thing in the desire to sleep and rest recalled the sweet old song. The y ung woman sang, and all listened while the train sped on. ‘Sweet hour of prayer, sweet hourof prayer, That calls me from a world of care, And bids me at my Father’s throne Make all my wants and wishes known.’’ There was a.pause and the clear voice went up again. **And since He bids me seek His face, Believe His words, and trast His grace, I'll cast on Him my every care And wait for thee, sweet hour of prayer.’’ her audience think that to most of them the morning would never come for another “Sweet Hour of Prayer.” And then what was it? sing it as the last and most fitting song before closing their eyes in sleep, or did an angel of death bring the thought to their minds? ever it was, all raised their voices in the grandest of prayers, ‘Nearer, my God, to Thee,” and, singing it, went to their death. ‘Though like a wanderer the sun gone down, Darkness be over me, my rest a stone,’” went up the melody above the roar of the doomed train. gone down, but they did not know it. them, but they knew it not. And as the little gleam of devilish fire ap- peared far down the track thcir voices swelled in— down the grade. Again the song swelled: **There let the way appear, steps unto heaven.’” ** All that Thou sendest me, in mercy given.’’ life left for each, even when poor Ed. McClintock’s hand was giving its last desperate wrench to the throttle of his engine, the singers sang to their God, who seemed not to be holding them in the hollow of His hand: engine struck the frail. bridge and sank. The car containing the singers crashed like a bolt of Jove through the'two cars in front of it, killing and grinding as a foot killsa worm. In the same instant another car crashed through it and the singers were dead. —Chicago News. back the roses to} much, but not impossibihties. It, j to health and happiness. | Our Minist . to Siam. ay ! A Washington ev» ing paper thus | compliments Hon. J.cob T. Child, | our Minister to Siam: “Hon. Jacob T. Child, Minister of | resident and Consul-General to Siam, k. with many others of tho diplomatic corps abroad, for a short vacation and visit to his home in Missouri. He is a man of wide pop- ularity and high reputation among his neighbors at home. Few men in the far West are better informed and more fitted to represent us abroad than the quiet gentleman who has done so much'to protect our inter ests in the Eastern land to which ho went a distant couple of years since. The Tribune of this city, speaking of him a few days ago, described him as an untamed democrat from the wilds of Missouri, and added his name to the list of ‘Confederate Brigadiers’' who have won thar places under the government their services against it. It is to be questionably a democrat, anda faithful one, and he was a gallant Union soldier during all the days of the rebellion, advancing from the ranks to the command of his regi- ment, and laying aside his uniform only when the echoes of the last guna could be heard no more.” Before the Chatsworth Accident It The story of Ms. In order that they for the young Mrs. Grant jolly and sang so well. They Then Mrs. Grant About this time Food tor the brain and nerves that will invigorate the body without intoxi- cating, is what is neede! in these days ot rush and worry. Parker's ‘Lonic e- stores the vita! energies and soothes the nerves, and brings good health quic\er than anything you can use 4tim, Struck Oil. At 9 o'clock this morning the drill- ers were made jubilant over the finding of oil at a depth of 1,395 feet. About 8 o'clock it was noticed that the drill was passing through a fim white sandstone and about half an hour later through a dark gray colored sand, then into the oil. The company have exhausted their funds and willnot be able to drill a farther depth unless more money is pro cured. Supt. Utley is very jubilant over the prospect and is anxious to be enabled to continue the drilling, and states that to stop at the pres- ent depth would be committing a great errdr. At noon to-day they had reached a depth of 1,400 feet, the depth specified at the start, and unless additional funds are procured nothing more will be done. The Bazoo suggests that active work be inaugurated at once to keep the drill in operation until the true value of the find is realized.—Sedaiia Bazoo. William’s Australian Herb Pills. If vouare Yellow, Bilious, constipated with Headache. bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out your liver fs out of roder, One box of these Pills will drive. all the troubles awad ard make a new being of you. Price 25 cts. ity Pye & Crumty, Agents. Mr. Ingalls Recalls Tuttle. “Senator, Kansas is a great sdl- dier state. I understand that Gea- eral Tuttle is very ;opular there?” “Tuttle, Tuttle, Tuttie,” the sena- tor repeated, tryingto recollect. “O, yes; i nuow Tuttle very well—at . least, I used to know him. Tuttleis. a tailor—a fashionable tailor. ¥ knew him well in my early days in Boston. The firm was Call & Tat- tle. I don’t know whether the firm is the same now or whether it has undergone some change. I never inquired about it since Ileft Boston, but I remember the name very well —Call & Tuttle. I remember, also, that a countryman who was walking along the street one day stopped and read the sign—Call and Tuttle—and entered the shop. The clerk said: ‘Well, what can I do for you, sir?” and the countryman explained that. he wanted to tuttle. Seeing the sign outside and accepting the invitation contained in it he had called to tat- tle. Tuttle, he thought, was some new Boston game that every real gentleman ought to play.” —Wash- ington Post. reports and briefs with him to and from Central Park, where he goes to drive every afternoon, and generally gets into the shady corner of a street; car toread while going up and coming ~ down. He is one of the most stadi- ous men of the New York bar. . : is peer iinont betes talllng oat or faded? ‘The los« is vital- Parker’s Hair Balsam will preserve your hatr and give back it: 1 d youthtul color. Clean, ¢le- a patie: Prevents dandraff. 41-1m., Oh, how little did the singer and Did they What Their sun had Darkness would soon be over “*Yetin my dreams I’d be Nearer, my-God, toThee.’’ ° The speed ot the train increased The way was already in sight. And then with but a moment of ‘* Angels to beckon me Nearer, my,God, to Thee.’” Enough. It was finished. The Colonel E. F. Clay, living near Paris, Ky., wishing to saw the horns off of an ill-tempered bull. mounted a horse and went to the field to drive the animal into a stable. The bull attacked him, gored the horse fright- fully, and badly, though not danger- ously, injured Col. Clay. if Your Lungs Are Destroyed donot expect that Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery’”’ will make new oues tor you. It can do however you have not reached the the last stages otf Consumption, there is hope. But do not delay lest vou cross the fatal ne where help is impossible. The Discovery has arrested the aggravating sweats and hectic fevers, and restored them

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