The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 26, 1887, Page 7

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SS The best and surest Remedy for Care of all diseases caased by any derangement 0! the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation. Bilious Complaints and Malariaof all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of sicly It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the} system, restores and preserves health. | It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to! prove beneficial, both to old and youn: As a Blood Purificr it is superior to a‘. others. Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle. Divorces Cheaply Without Publicity, ABSOLUTE DIVORCES without publicity for parties residing in any part of the United States, for desertion, non-support. intemper- ance. cruelty, insanity Blank application for stamp. aldress, V. W. Barnes, 346 Broadway New York. 2i-ly FOR ADULTS FOR CHILDRE When on a sultry summer’s day ‘The san seems searce a mile away; When comes sick headache And every Then TARRANT 2 R proves a frien! Thet druggists a!! can recommend TONIC red solely for the complaints whic! all womankind. I one and strength t uterine tt. an: corrects dangerous displacements and {rregalari et Itisofyreat value in change oflife. Th GRRELL’S FEMALE TONE Is pre cure affite ‘ives he ym girl! antto the taste and may hy eafet Price, @2 ron Lote ALL DrvGaG NERRLLL DRUG CO..SoleProp..sT. Health is Wealth! of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulneess, Mental Do- pression, Softening of the Brain resulting in in ity and ing to misery, and death. ‘ture Old Ago, ness, ‘of powei in either esx, Involuntary 1 t- orrhova caused by over-exortion of thebrain, self. or over-indulgence, Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00.a box, or six bo: torgs.0v,, WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES Tocure any case. Witheach order received byus for eix boxes, accompanied with $5.00, wo will eend the ‘purchaser our written guarantee to_re- fund the money if the treatment does not: G tees ed only by 862 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS., Sole Prop’s West's Liver Pills, ey by atsempeing 10 Bald upon tes repacation this Stamp, MEANS’ unapproached le { ‘tues OL tae above shoes for sale in Butler by SAM’L LEVY & CO A PRIZ 7} Send six cents 4G detor postage, and receive free, a costly box of goods which will help all, of eithersex, to more mon- ye right awav than anything else in the world. Fortunes await the workers ab- lsoutely sure. At once addresss True & Co., Augusta, Ma?ie, Uq-tyr* TANSY GAPSULES THE LATEST DISCOVERY. Dr. Laparie’s Celebrated Preparation, Safe and Always Reliadlo. Indispensable to LADIINS, Send 4 cents for Sealed Circular. GhIUMET CHEMICAL 6O., Chloage, “AMERICAN GLASS. Manufactories in Engiand Estabiished Over @ Century Ago. Northward in M :ssachusetts as carly as 1638, John and Ananias Conklin made bottles in Salem. Th re is no further record until after the revolue tion. Then, in July, 1787—a century ago—a man named Hunnewell, havi two associates, received from the L lature a charter conferring exciusive monopoly of the manufacture for fif- teen years. The fine for infri iment was £500, the stock was e) pt of taxation and the workmen of military duty. This enterprise took the name gis- | of the Boston Crown Glass company of Essex street. From the first it succeeded, making better window the glass than im- ported. The neighboring colonies | early woke to envy, and n of the workmen were away by flattering o' E that came to succeed in New England was the outgrowth of the Essex street factory, workmen going to Berkshire in 1812, and to Keene, N.H, in 1814. In New York two Dutchmen, Smedes and Bamber, are said to have made glass prior to 1756, but the first permanent manufacture was near Albany, thirty years after. Mr. Hunnewell, of the Boston fac- tory, “had no favor-look toward Albany or Vermont,” but having turned his attention and some of his capital to Suncock, N. H., he was al- most simultaneously attracted to Con- necticut. This was in 1787, the year when he secured the Bay State mo- nopoly, and he seems to have coveted more monopolies. In New York such things were not encouraged, but in Connecticut there had been at different times in forty years ‘special grante< of exclusive privileges,” all however, becoming void from the patentees failing to fulfil the stated conditions. Hunnewell, “attracted of the good sand that way,” set his mind on addressing the L ature of Con- necticut, but the enterprising people recognizing that if there was money in their sand-beds for the Bostonian, there was equally as much for them, blocked Mascer Hunnewell’s schemes by entering upon the manufacture themselves. Itis altogether probable that jealousy of the Bostonian incited the opening up of the industry, and at any rate in 1787-88 one glass-hous was put in operation in Hartford, and another in New Haven. It is not im- probable that among the men enticed away from the Boston factory were those who went to Connecticut to start this industry. Success followed, and in 1789 Washington alludes in his diary to “The Connecticut Giass."—Dr. W. HH. Morse, in Hartford Times. ———__~ ee USES OF THE ROOF. The Social Capabilities of New York City’s House-Tops. By slow degrees the people of New York are realizing the social capabili- ties of their house-tops. In the tene- ment-house quarters, where stress of climate drives the inmates to seek every breath of air available during the summer heats, the roof has long been made use of, though in a rude and primitive way, as adormitory. A few far-sighted capitalists in erecting tall buildings down-town have perceived the many advantages of the roof, and have prepared it for enjoyment. One theater has found its profit in putting a garden and promenade on its upper- most story, and many private house- owners have become familiar with the retreat to their roofs as a relief from torridity and used-up air. But no systematic acceptation of the house- top as an important adjunct to comfor has occurred, and the fact only shows the force of conservatism. The summer climate of New York is quite as hard to bear as that of most Oriental cities, and the custom of spending many hours upon the house-top has ob- tained in the latter for ages. In East- ern countries nearly all sleeping is done upon the roofs, and parts.of most evenings are spent there by the ma- jority. At night in such towns it often looks as though the population had re- tired from the streets to the house-tops bodily. They eat and smoke and lounge and chat there. The wealthier people put up convenient awnings, with curtains and cushions, and enjoy the cool night breezes. The poor live quite as much on the tops of their houses if not with such luxurious appointments. With us one serious drawback is that so many of our roofs are not adapted to such uses, and that they are in fact built closely on the model of cold-climate domiciles. In the course of time there is no reason to believe. that some change for the better will take place. We have certainly ample need for the Oriental roof, flat and free from ob- structions, and it would cost no more to build them so than in the old-fash- ioned style. By the erection of awn- ings an immense space could thus be utilized, and in even the hottest weath- er the temperature of the honse-top would be several degrees lower than inside the buildings. The advantage of adopting this habit to the children alone would be incalculable, and espe- | cially for the children of the poor, who } are literally slaughtered by the sum- | mer heat in the dreadfully close and confined tenement-house rooms. A | very little expenditure would enable | the mothers to use the roofs for dor- | mitories all through the summer, and the custom once introduced its inher- ent benefits could be depended upon to | | } establish it firmly.—N. F. Tribune. ‘ VEGETABLE REMEDIES. A Claim That They Are Doing More Harm Than Mineral Drugs. Regarding the so-called purely vege- table remedies, there is a curious superstition ia the lay mind that all vegetable remedies are comparatively harmless, while mineral substances are much more injurious to the human economy. This prejudice, perhaps, originated some fifty years ago, when the public and the profession began to realize that there was too much giving of antimony and mercury. It always received moral support from the old women, who only knew how to brew herbs, and feared what they did not ux nd. Besidvs, vegetable medi- ¢ ngs to the childhood of the of mineral drugs is the | result ¢f scientific knowledge and the advance of civilization. It therefore, that it has rezarded with suspicion by the ignorant. But the fact is, the pre- judiee is enti without foundation. At the pi t time, a list of poisons used as drugs will show a great preponderance of the vegetable king- dom. We have, for example, such uni- v uly consumed substances as ohol, tea, coffee and tobacco. These “purely vegetable substances’? alone do a hundred fold more to poison and deteriorate the human system than do the whole mineral pharmacopa@ia. But beside these, we have opium. Indian hemp, and the whole seductive list of “purely vegetable’’ narcotics. By far the most powerful poisons to the system are of purely vegetable orig Such, for example, is curarine, which produc:s its effects in doses of a husdred thousandth of a grain, and strophanthim, of which a solution con- taining one part to ten million of wa- ter will kill the exposed heart of a frog. The most subtle and evasive of poisons is the active principle of the “purely vegetable’? digitalis purpurea, while strychnia has probably poisoned more anima ad human beings than any drag but arsenic. Take itas a rule, therefore, the most violent poi- sons, and the substances which pro- duce the most deleterious effects on the human system, are from the vegetable kingdom. The mineral drugs which may cause harm are few in number, and, if we except arsenic, are not especially vio- lent poisons. There is a considerable amount of poisoning from lead, but not through its medicinal use, and the same may be said of the present use mercury. In fine, it is the purely veg- etable drugs which are the most dan- gerous, because it is these which stim- ulate the brain or benumb the senses, induce morbid habits, and eventually establish physical degeneration. We wish that the public could be made to understand this when it is confronted with alluring notices of the perfect harmlessness of ‘purely vegetable"’ drugs.—Medical Record. m8 Willia Australian Herb Pills. If vou are Yellow, Bilious, constipated with Headache. bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out your liver is out of roder, One box of these Pills will drive all the troubles awad and make a new being of you. Price 25 cts. Wy Pyte & Crumy, Agents. | Topeka, Kan., Oct. 20.—Three hundred employees in the various departments of the Santa Fe railroad shops in this city were laid off in- definitely last night. Nea: ly all are unmairied. This reduced the work- ing foree of the shops to about one thousand men. The reason for this reduction is not because there is seareity of work, but in order, it is said, to lessen expenses and the old tolks laugh when they find that the pleasant Cahfornia liquid truit emedy. Syrup of Figs, is more easily taken and more beneficial in its action than bitter, nauseous medicines. It strengtnens the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels, while it arouses them toa healthy activity. For sale by Walls & Holt. : yer, of New Hamp- shire, has vetoed the Hazen, Boston & Maine railroad bill, because of the corrupt methods employed to secure its passage. How Women Would Vote. Were women allowed to vote, every one in the land who has used Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription would vote it to be an unfailing remedy for the diseases peculiar to ber sex. By druggists. B. P. Hutchinson, the noted Chi- cago board of trade speculator, has been reinstated to the board after forty-eight days’ suspension trading after hours. for Batlar rehonnd Syrup 1s the best remedy for Consumption, all Throat and Every bottle is Itis the best remedy guarantee | for children. By 2 decision rendered by : lin | bilts have secured full control of the | Pittsburg & Lake Erie road once @lsore. aster | uncery in Pittsburg. the Vander | ' IT REQUIRES NERVE. | A ‘hrilliny (ncident Related by» London Dealer in Wild Beasts. Many a vouth makes queer resolus tions as to v he wonld like to be and to do, from reading *flash” litera- | ture, or from listening to rose-colored. from those who knew as, ‘If, because they have ime | ed their knowledge from the same sources Thon. ag there people who, in telling th dvene | tures, forget the real and draw on their | i tion. touch of re often these glowing v s ina young fellow’s mind very quickly, as it did once in an incident related by Mr Cross, the London dealer in wild ceived from a of co d family se he requested le young Frenchman al letters fn which e to enter the lions’ den at my receiving house in Earle street. He assured me that his voca- tion was that of a lion-tamer. And one fine day he paid me a_ visit, in company — with three of his compatriots, whom he had brought with him in order that they ight be witnesses of his intrepidity. He asked me if I could give him a situation, and pointing to a cage in which there were three fine African lions, he entreated me to allow him to put them through a performance. I had just time to tell him that he might enter at his own risk when I was called into the office. After the lapse of a quarter of an honr a man rushed up to the desk where I was writing and exclaimed, excitedly, ‘Mr. Cross, one -f the lions is out!’ “Where? I asked, to which he re- plied, “Loose in the building!’ On hurrying to the spot I found the door of the den open, and the French- maninside with his back against the wooden partition, and two of the lions st g him in the face, while the es- caped lion had made for the end of the narrow pas-age, where it was medi- tating mischief to the other French- men, who had taken refuge on the top of a pile of boxes. their faces zs white as a sheet. The first thing I did was to close the door leading to the yard, and the next to get the amateur lion-tamer out of the den. It was well for him that one of the lions had got out of the cage, because the other two were so amazed at the fact that they remained for a minute or two perfectly still. We had great difficulty in mak- ing the third lion re-enter the den, but at last we succeeded, not, however, without some danger. After this had been done I myself went into the cage with no weapon, and simply smoking acigar. My entrance was the signal for tremendous bounding backward and forward on the part of the beasts, which were evidently not a little ter- rified at one of their companions hav- ing escaped. As I stood calmly within the den with my eyes fixed on the ex- cited animals, I said: “You see there is no art in lion-taming, but it requires nerve."” I think the result of that afternoon's adventure quite cured the young Frenchman of his mania for being a lion-tamer. — Youth’s Companion. —— Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world tor (nte Bruises, Cuts, Ulcers Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Cancers, Piles, Chilblains, Corns, Teter, Chapped Hands, and ail skin erup- tions,and postively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satistaction, or money refnnded. — Prive per box, 25 cts For sale by all Drug- gists. Wichita, Kansas, Oct. 20.—Some weeks ago Frank J. Field, of this city, was employed to visit Harper and Authony and gain information of illicit whisky dealers. He made the tour and reported quite a number of names to the county attorney. Yes terday he went to Harper and soon after his arrival, according to his statement, three shots were fired at him aud he made his escape and ar- rived here this morning with his coat marked by a bullet. Pimples, Boil imples, Boils, And Carbuncles result from a debilitated, impoverished, or impure condition of the biood. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla prevents and cures these eruptions and painful tumors, by removing their cause; the only effect- aal way of treating them. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has paren the usual course of Boils, which have pained and distressed me every season fer several years. — Geo. Scales, Plainville, Mich. I was badly troubled with Pimples on the face; also, with a discoloration of the skin, which showed itself in ugly dark patches. No external treatment more than temporary good. Ayer’s Sarsapa- rills effected A Perfect Cure, and I have not been troubled since. — T. W. Boddy, River st., Lowell, Mass. I was troubled with Boils, and my health was much impaired. I using Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and, in due time, the eruptions all disappeared, and my health was completely restored.— John R. Elkins, Editor Stanley Observer, Albemarle, N.C. I was troubled, for a long time, with 3 humor which appeared on my face in ugly Pi s und Blotches. Ayer’s Sarsapa- rill ured me. I consider it the best blood purifier in the world.— Charles H. Smith, North Craftsbury, Vt. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla ists and dealers in med- i do not be persuaded to take any other. | Prepared by Dr.J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. i © Price $1; six bottles, $5. ; tried numerous so-called remedies. To A GREAT MISTAKE i has heretofore been made in the treatment | of rheumatism, ia, and nervous or | sick headache. This is evidenced by the | i i i Ya Dille failureon the part of thousands of sufferers | ut S Pills to find relief, even though they have ex- hausted the skill of various physicians and ytimmlates the torpid liver. strength cue the digestive organs, reculates the such Athlophoros is offered as a safe, sure, | bowers, and are unequaled as au and quickeure, I has bee Sonia and yet eooe sia ang } ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, cause it will do all that, is claimed for it. | In molartal districts their virtues are The Athlophoros Co. will gladly refer any | 7 recoguized, asiley possess pece who desiré to make an investigation to | {Anne Miehersies inf = ¢ . trem that i reliable parties who have been cured | seated. Dose small. tric by it. whan J. E. Gillespie, Real Estate and Loan _ Sold Everywisr ee ,at Atlantic, Iowa, says: ‘My rheu- | Office, 44 Murray St. Now York, Ag y matism first appeared in the hip, and then extended down into the legs through the sciatic nerve. ¥ suffered whether standing DRS.S.# D DAVIESON Pas ron & was with poo anaes oi le ifficulty that k succeeded in hobbling to | ST. LO The Great Specialists, Me don, England, MD New Yoru sud Gteees, Hore =. bea tolafors patients and others 7 Scent Ga waets. — from Self-Abuse and &: my office each day. 1 consulted'‘physicians, also tried every remedy I could learn of without any good eflects whatever. My reat fears werethat I would always have it. AsI was writing a letter to this friend in Chicago, I casually made note of my rheu- matism, and thought no more about it. But my letter wasanswered very promptly, tell- Cases of Gonorrhosa and Mis, Pri g ing me to use Athlophoros; es eating his | Girondgezan4 Tertiary hyped ces mother’s case and cure which was more se- oe on verethan mine. 1 at once purchased a examination of ee esine mas bottle and by the time I had finished a po pres, eve d taking it, my rheumatism was gone. I | stamp. Address, 8 - DAVIESON, was a little too quick to stop, it had not ’ Pie. to » Souips is Great gone entirely out of my system. I had ATOMICAL Meution this paper. another little attack, but another bottle of Athlophoros did the work. It has now been over a year since, and I consider it an excellent medicine, and have recom- mended it to others.” Every druggist should keep Athlophoros and Athlophoros Pills, but alan aay 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 $1.00 per bottle for Athlophoros and 50c. for Pills. .For liver and kidney diseases, dys ja, in- digestion, weakness, nervous debility, diseases of women, constipation, headache, impure blood, &e., Athlophoros Pills are unequaled. 11 mS SEE Tanete Runa nee eae rr BY DRUGGISTs, Stomach, Liver ise and Bowels LIVER PACIF IGpitts STRICTLY VEGETABLE. tion, Dyspepsia, Piles, slaints, Loss of Ay <, Jaundice, ete. Price, 25 Cents. © CO., ST. LOUIS, MO. SCHWENCK & OLDEAKER. Cure Constipation Sick Headache, (ies Biliousnes: ‘or Sale by all Drv PACIFIC MANUFACTUR' Boot & Shoe Makers BUTLER, MO. ——Ir—— Boots and Shoes made to order: fhe : best ot leather used. YOU REALLY WANT Shop nerth side ot Square 49 tf ae apps = BUY, SELL or TRADE) =A PROPERTY, ——CALL ON: D. W. SNYDER. Over post-office. THE HORNS. IT I8 [HE BEST MADE, LIGHTEST RUNNIN QUICKEST AND SIMPLES In the World. OUR MOTTO: s@-Protection in Territory. sax-Perfection in Principle. sa@x-Popularity Univeral. = NEEDLES. OILS AND RPARS — FOR ALL MACHINES. pe gay RESPONSIBLE DEALERS AND AGEI who wish to handle the pest and SALABLE Goops. Address tor particul WHITE SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, g21 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo, sar EN ION HIS PAPER. ARBUCKLES’ of CHAS. CENNEY At Old Stand, East Side Sqnare. NEW GOODS Fresh and Nice and Comprising every- thing in the ‘GROCERY COFFEE is never good when exposed to the air. = Always buy this brandin : COUNTRY PRODUCE == ens wanted. And Provision Line. Of all kind- ‘COME AND SEE ME. ' Cnas. Cennev.; si CC Eva. : ViANTED soret end best known (2 ™maReDs 5

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