The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 11, 1888, Page 7

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BUTLEL wT BAK Opera House Block, BUTLER, MO. —— Capital. - S6G6.000, - $5,500 + +eee President President. -2---Cashier, «Ast Ca shier, Clerk and Collector. DIRECTORS, Booker Powell, Green W. Walton, ahn Deerwester, r. N. L. Whipple Wo, E, Walton, J. Rue Jenkins. pr, T. C. Boulware, J Mt Tucker, j- H Sullens, .R, Simpson Voris, CH. Dutcher Receives deposits, loans money, and transacts 2 general banking business. Weextend to ourcustomers every ac- commodation consistent with sate bank- ing. CORRESPONDENTS. Kansas City. St. Louis. New York. First Nat’! Bank = Fourth National Bank - Hanover National Bank = ee BATES COUNTY National Bank. (Organized in 1871. OF BUTLER, MC. Capital paid in, - - $75,000. Surplus - - -. - $71.000 RI. TYGARD, - - - - HON. J. B. MEWRBERRY, President Vice-Pres JC.CLARK - - - Cashier. In every style price and quality \Made to Order | nmuarantoed a fitin every case alland see me, up stairs North? Main Street. JE. TALBOTT, Merchant Tailor. azty TRADE MARIC NOT AXHDRUG ¢ 3628 Arch Street, Philad’a, Pa A WELL-TRIED TREATMENT a n Read the bro: t DRS. STARKEY & PALEN, MU7 & 1529 Arch Street. Pailadelphia, Pa, ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising‘in American papers by addressing \ Geo. P. Rowell & Co., * Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St, New York. Send 10cts, for 100-Page Pamphiet C4 DINNER TABLE ART. The Importan: N j + = podtanes of Wenner ud Freceies | o- after a few minatcs—it all depends of Arrangersent. Every thing on a dinner table ought to be the best of its kind procu linen, plate, ginss and all else. much time has to be spent at the table that course and untidy ornament is worse than none. One gets very tired of sitting opposite a shabby flower, a bit of cheap velveteen, a crooked array of heterozencous vases! Some modern tables, centered with a tine piece of old marquetry or pleasing. S against old-fa ep laanps and dishes with ¢ saustimenndering muslin in more ssawkward twists in and out the dessert dishes—some scatter dry leaves and red apples. The embroidery, are very in revolt imple devices may be pretty, as a pot or a fabric may | however chez be picturesque, p- But it is not pretty because cheap, or dear either, for the mat of that. als used than the way in which we use them which con- stitutes a success, and it is not every- body who can so drape a table as to make it look ‘artistic untidy. It is and not merely a mistake to drive an idea to death, and I think the tide sets in the direction of untidiness just now. Cheap lace drapes the lamp, cheap silks every thing else, false art squirms and attitudinizes in the electro epergnes even the silver is more massive than good, and a coarse table-cloth often underlies fine Worcester plates. Ali this is as it should not be. Better a simple dish of apples than a preten- tious epergne. Where art is admit- ted it should be perfect of its kind, down to the table-cloth, and a definite scheme should be carried out. Give a certain broidery, the toys and ornamental dishes should obey the lines of its design. Every detail de- mands a raison detre. The blank Sa- hara of table-cloth offers a fair field to a good design, like a wall or a door; at an episcopal palace recently I saw some very ¢ ful ones. The table was dressed with small pieces of fern laid in elaborate patte and dotted at intervals with bl ns, every day a different color. This is not av idea, and it all depends on the tness and precision of the arrangement; but the designs were so pr so firm, and the ings that a really artistic effect was inv ably produced. — Magazine of Art. ——_ + +e ISTHMUS OF PANAMA. A Remarkable Fe ‘ountry That Is Comparatively Unknown. The Isthmus of Panar a strange, remarkable territory, a land still com- paratively unknown, though for more than three centuries it has been one of the world’s bustling highwa Who would expect to find here, on American soil, along the whole route of the pro- jected canal searecly any one save woolly-headed negroes? The sovereign State of Panama, Whose connection with the Republic of Colombia is an extremely loose one, numbers, it is true, as many brown as black citizens —xbout one hundred thousand of each—but the Indians live away from the high road of commerce, in the almost inaccessible interic the tifty and other new the curves so € cro » and even thousand Creoles, Yankees white or partially white who represent the in- and enterprise of the wre almost overshadowed by race. How could it be otherwise, since, in this climate, the white man must almost always be a transient guest, and can never live, inhabitants, telligence country, or oat least) work, — permanent- Ivy from) generation to genera- tion? The Spanish Creole directs politics, the North American or Eu- ropean foreigner manages commerce and public works, but the fact is unde- niable, that unless new mixed races grow up, who possess greater powers of endurance, the more menial kinds of labor will ever remain in the hands of the more vigorous negro. And, since these sanguine, careless creatures when not foreed by necessity to work, are incorrigibly lazy, we tind in this country, which might produce an abundance of the finest food, the strange state of affairs that all the ne- cessities of life must be imported, that wages for the most trival work are ex- ntly high, and consequently the st of living is greater than anywhere else in America, or perhaps the whole world. With the exception of a few plantations of banana-trees, there is no attempt at agriculture, the entire re- gion back from the coast is a wooded, almost uninhabited wildern . divided into different portions by hills and mountains of moderate height over- grown by impenetrable forests. —IJnie- rior. ee EFFECTS OF HYPNOTISM. How the Strange Phenomenon Affects the Subject. The phenomena of the hypnotic series have been divided into three typical Ss, to which Charcot gives the names of lethargy, catalepsy and somnambulism. These words were in use long before his day, but he has fixed their meaning as technical terms. The chronological development of these three states differs according to indi- viduals: nevertheless, when a person un- dergoes again and again the same pro- cess of hypnotization, the cataleps generally comes t. Suppose, then, able— | that we have before us an individual | We nee of shining ob- who has often been hypno hold before his ¢ : & few centimet ject, for exam eury thermor es, at the dis some . the b and he | disappearing altogether. j Man univers! his gaze upon it steadily. On with- drawing the object after a few seconds, upon the individual's susceptibil we find him motionless, his eyes wide open and still tixed on the place where the object was held, and indifferent, at least apparently so, to every thing about him. Raise one of his arms, and it remains in whatever posture you give it; the joints are exceedingly sup- ple, presenting the fleribilitas cerea 30 favorable to the production of the most varied artistic poses. Meanwhile, the pulse grows less frequent and the res- piration becomes superticial; further, | the subject is completely insensible. He may be pricked with a pin, or a live coal may touch his skin, but he has no consciousness of it; and the same is to be said of the other hypnotic states. Finally, he readily adopts suggestions. The subject can be kept in this state for some time, a quarter of an hour, half an hour, or longer; but of 2ll the hypnotic states the catalepsy is the one that ought not to be prolonged, for it produces con- siderable fatigue, the countenance be- comes flushed, tears flow from the eyes on account of the fixed position of the eyelids.—North American Review. ———_ + & —___ THE GREAT NAPOLEON. A Frenchman Endeavors to Prove That He Was of Teutonic Orig When George the Third was at war with Napoleon it was the fashion among English Tories to call the great Frenchman **Corsican usurper.’” M. Peyre, in his new book on the founder of the house of Bonaparte, *‘Napoleon I. et Son Temps,”’ has carried the “degallicanizing”’ of the hero of Gaul to a more distressing extreme. The Bonapartes were not French, nor even of Corsican, but horribile dictu, were of German origin! M. Peyre some re- pute as a historical sch and he has proved on documentary evidence to his own satisfaction that the founder of the empire, like the founder of the Frankish empire, the new Charle- magne as well as the old, was a child of Germany. The Cadolinger family flourished in Germany from the eleventh to the fourteenth century. They were German immigrants, who followed the Roman Kaisers over the Alps, and traded with success among the They were steadfast ys took the side of inst the Popes, and their sympathies were popular and re- publican. They stood forward bravely for all municipal liberties and rights, and belonged to what was known as the “Good Party’’—buona parte. The Cadolingers were, in fact. “Buonaparte”’ in reality long before a branch of their family resolved to become Buonaparte in surname. By degrees they lost their power and wealth. Some members of the Cadolinger family entered into the service of the well-known St. George’s Bank, which owned landed property outside Genoa, and among other places in Corsica. The Cadolingers who settled in Corsica adopted the old poli- tical nickname as their surname. To these Italianized Cadolingers Napoleon Buonaparte’s ancestry is traced by M. Peyre.— the Emperor ———_ +» —___ CURING CONSUMPTION. A Method That Has Proved to Be of Bene- fit to Sufferers. So many reputed methods of cur- ing consumption have at different times been published, raising false hopes in the minds of victims of that distressing malady, that we fee! some hesitation in giving publication to another. But according to an American scientific paper, the method of M. Garcin has been proved to be of real benetit to suf- ferers. Observations have been pre- viously made at certain glass works that the use of hydrofluoric acid— which we may remind our readers is used for etching glass—had a very favorable effect upon these workmen who were suffering from pulmonary tuberculo: From this circumstance M. Garcin was induced to try the ex- periment of submitting his patients to an atmosphere containing this acid. His method is to inclose the sufferers for an hour every day in a small chamber charged with air mixed with the vapors of the acid, the strength of the charge being regulated according to whether they are but slightly at- tacked, or whether they are seriously affected with the disease. The effect of this treatment is said to be most satisfactory, the attacks of coughing diminishing in frequency, appetite im- proving and the terrible night sweats It is to be at further experiments will te the value of this new remedy.— Chambers’ Journal. —_— e >. —It is a well-known fact that a deaf person can tell you what you are talk- ing about by the motion of your mouth, Therefore the deaf are thrice blessed when the brakeman opens the door and fiendishly shout his message.— Puck. hoped t —Gladstone is a great linguist. He talked French glibly to an interviewer a few day and responded in Italian to a demonstration in his honor in Florence. Itis said that if he should go to Athens he could chat with the natives in modern Greek, and that he could addr the students of a Ger- in their mother tongue er rend to them from the Latin and Greek classics. —*Do you use nighteaps, asked his sweetheart. ‘Yes, ed, *‘ with a little suga | | | | prised and amused whe | things. sang i Woodbridge Street Station for the first CARL DUNDER’S TRIP. He Goes to Chicago and Has Several New Experiences to Relate. “Well?” queried Sergeant Bendall, yesterday, as Car! Dunder entered the timein three weeks. yhas gone to Chicago und back,” replied the visitor with pride in his tones. “Is that possible! guardian along?” “Sergeant, vhas I horns?” “The biggest one I ever “Vhell, may pe dot v so. Vhen I goes mit der train a» young man comes oafer to me und says vhas I Carl Dunder? Ivhas, All right. Say, Mr. Dunder, I haf got a new parlor game I like to show you. May pe I make you my agent in Detroit, und der salary vhas twenty-five dollar per week. He dakes three cards oudt of his pocket und throws ‘em aroundt like so.’ “Exactly. That's the old game of three-card monte. You bit, of course?” “Vhell, he says he likes me pick out dot shack of hearts, und Ido so. Den he likes to bet me ten dollars I can't do her again.” “And you bet?” “And you lost?” “Yes.” “Served you right!” “Vhell, may pe so, but vhen I take dot young man by der throat and shoke him until his tongue comes oudt, he makes a bargain mit me. Ae gife me twenty dollar to shtop off on him."’ “He did?” “Dot's how it vhas. May pe I vhas green like some grass, und may pe I know how to come in vhen she rains. Vhen I go so far as Niles an oldt mans comes in der car und says vhas I Carl Dunder? Ivhas. All right. Say, Mr. Dunder, here vhas a big telegram from your wife. Don’t be oxcited. May pe your house vhas on fire, und may pe she likes you to do some errand in Chi- cago. Keep cool und be prepared. Der sharsge it vhas twelve shillings.” “T'll bet it was a bogus dispatch!” “Vhell!”’ “And you got caught!” “Vhell, I take along some bogus sil- ver dot Shake takes in from der boys, und I gif him tree bad half-dollars. He vhas ina great hurry to go, but I see him pooty soon again. He comes by der car window und runs his tongue out at me und says he can lick me in two minutes. Dot dispatch vhas all blank paper. May pe lv so soft as pumpkins, eh, Sergeant?’’ “You did well. Any thing else?” “‘Vhen I goes into Chicago I mect a very nice gentleman, but I don’t know Did you take a some green- him. He knows me. Vhas I Carl Dunder? Ivhas. Dot vhas good. He like to tell me dot I draw a prize in some lottery.”” “That's the old bunko game, and you bit, of course?” “Vhell, if I draws some money I like to get him, don’t 1?” “Of course.” “Und I haf to go along?” “Certainly.” “Vhell, we don’t go more ash two blocks pefore we meet a policemans, und [grab dot barty und lay him on his back, und gif him avhay for some Wunko. The officer takes him avhay und makes it hot for him. Vhas I some cabbage-head?”” “I guess not! Any thing else?” “Vhell, vhen I vhas coming home, und shust before we vhas in Detroit, somepody picks my pocket."’ “I thought it would end that way. How much did you lose?”’ “Lose? I don’t lose nothings. I take oudt all my money und write on a shlip of paper: ‘How vhas shest- nuts?’ und der man who got him comes around pooty soon und says if he lives two tousand years he vhill knock me oudt. I vhas only an old Dutchmans, Sergeant, und I vhas so green der cows bite at me, but may pe I goes to Chicago und back und don’t get lost—eh?’’— Detroit Free Press. Spring Care of Stock. It is not always that the dry and se- verely cold weather of winter is the hardest on stock. Cold spring rains are far worse. But the season is at hand when there is three times as much good attention needed for the successful stock raisers. Calves, pigs, lambs and colts will soon be coming along, and if they are left to perish, the farmer will be whining about his bad luck, when it is only his bad management. In these times of close competition, short crops and low prices, it is only the prudent, careful and watchful farmers who will sail over the breakers without harm. A large portion of cows, and especially heifers, have already been weakened by short feed and cold winds, and they will need more than the usual kind at- tention. Good and experienced farm- ers will attend to these things, without these hints. But there are beginners, and some breeders, though good mean- ing men, who will put these things off until too late. If you intend to pros- y save the lambs, pigs and calves. —Des Moines (Neb.) Register. —__~ ¢ >—___ —An eloquent and popular clergy- man of Troy, N. ¥., a short time 2 preached with gr fervor ¢ day evening a sermon from the text, “Let us launch into the deep.”’ He and his audience were evidently s a closing piec the sermon, **Pall for the Shor { bus, Ohio, preacher, is ina bad _ fix. She has eaten pickles until she has dwindled from 200 to 60 pounds. She can no longer eat. is as dry and hard as apiece of leath- er, and her physicians say that the interior of her stomach and smooth as the surface of polish- ed glass. The young lady is only 16 years old. convention of the American party is in session. to the national convention to nomi- nate candidates for president and vice president. Rheumatism and Neura‘gia Cured in ered a compound which acts with marvelous rapidity in the cure ot Rheu- matism and Neuralgia. to cure any and every case of Inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia in 2 pays, and to give immediate reliet in chron stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for this wondertul compound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. giving our discovery to the public instead of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expens gladly refund money if sa’ given. 400 people were seated in the stand at the Yallbusha county, fair ground yesterday, the supports ga were imprisoned or crushed under the heap of debris. limbs broken. bly secure the coveted place. T indorsed by the majority of the the election is assured. has been put to the tront, its merits pass- ed upon, has been indorsed, and unani- mously given the first place among rem- edies peculiarly adopted to the reliet and cure of all Diseases of Kidneys, and Stomach. guaranteed, isasafe investment. 50C. druggists. early in life. and an archbishop at 47. genius. projectile for rifled cannon. In a Dreadful Pickle. The pretty daughter of a Colum- Her tongue as hard is The Newest New Party. San Francisco, July 5.—The state Delegates will be elected Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov- uly We guarantee it acute cases and effect aspeedy cure. On receipt of 30 Cents, in two cent We take this means of We will action is not Tue Inpiana CHemicart Co, Crawtordsville Ind 1O-Lyr 400 People Fail. Memphis. Tenn., July 5.- -While grand Miss., way. Men, women and children No one was killed outright, though many had The building had not been finished more than a month. People who are gorging them- selves with green apples may be interested in knowing that a bag of hot salt placed on the stomach may relieve it of the cramp caused by the consumption of immature fruit. For First Place. A great amount of political engineer- ing will be done by friends of candidates to secure for their man the first place on »roba- ren if people, Electric Bitters the ticket, and the best man wili Liver being Price and $1 a bottle at Walls & Holt, the Electric Bitters, Cardinal Gibbons was advanced He was a bishop at 38 Senator Hawley is an inventive He has just patented a new It has been discovered that Mrs. Charles Mason, of Fitchburg, Mass., is the authoress of “Do They Miss Me at Home?” ——_s 0 —A mountain lion trotting along be- tween the high banks of snow on the Denver & Rio Grande railroad in Colo- rado recently was overtaken and thrown high into the air. The animal landed on its feet and ran quickly away, ap- parently uninjured. ° —Helena, M. T., claims to have the richest men in the West. A list is pub- lished of capitalists who can draw checks aggregating over $23,000,000. —~ «= —_—_ —The Japanese have only one swear word, and that is as innocuous as our “by gosh!’’ And yet they propose to introduce the telephone into Japan. SOME DOCTORS honestly admit that they can’t eure neater car and Neuralgia. Others say they can but—don’t. Ath-lo- sho-ros says nothing but—cures. ‘hat’s the secret of its success. Years of trial have proved it to be a quick, safe, sure cure. a the has SS ail the good it a a Send 6 cents for the beautiful colored pic- aad ture, “* Moorish Maiden.” THE ATHLOPHOROS CO. 112 Wall St. MY. CONSUMPTION SURELY CURED. To THe Eprror—Please inform your read- era that Ihave a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my reme- dy PREE to avy of yourreaders who have con- sumption if they will —_ isda express a t office address. R ectiuily, T. ‘A SLOCUS, M.C., 1:1 Pearl st., New York, BIG MONEY! Million voters with the only official lives of land, Cartridge success. quick and make $200 to $500 a month. business house JACOBS Q]], FOR NEURALGIA. The venerable BILLA FLINT, Life Senator of the Dominion Parilament, Canada, suffered for a long time with neuralgie faceache, caused by a defers tive tooth, and writes over his auto- graph herewith as follows: “I found St. Jacobs Ol te act like a = y charm.” t Plas — CURES — RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGO, SCI- ATICA, SPRAINS. Suld by Druggists and Dealers Ererywhera, THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO, BALTIMORE, MD. Peck’s Patent Improved Cushioned EAR DRUMS PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING way, cor. 14th St., New York, for illustrated book of proofs free. Write to F HISCOX, %8 Broad- 5000 Agents Wanted at once to to supply Ten CLEVELAND and THURMAN by Hon. W. U, Hensel#also life of Mrs. Cleve exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ ox, Free Trade Policy, &c., com- 3000 agents at work report immense For best work, best terms, appl Ontdit HUBBARD BROS., Kansas City, Mo ANTED Agents to sell ‘‘Elwood’s Grain Tables’? ($1.25) for every miller, graindealer, and ‘Martin’s Average Tables’? (33.00), wanted by every Large demand, liberal terms. E, DARROW & CO., Pubs., Rochester, N.Y. plete. Address HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the batr, Promotes a luxuriant growth, 1s to Restore Gray its Youthful Color, diseasesand hair fants HINDERCORNS. ‘The safest, surest and best cure for Co xT Btopsall pati. Eneires comfort to the f Never tals tocure. cents at Droggists. Hiscox & Co., EXHAUSTED VITALITY Y IE SCIENCE OF THE CENCE] o-§t8%, ts grat OF «J UFE éi Medical Work of the aye on Manhood, Nerv- ous and Physical De = Se bi Premature De- KNOW THYSELF cline, Errors of Youth, Sand the untold miser- ies consequent thereon. 300 } wes & vo., 195 scriptions for all diseases. Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00, by mail, sealed. Illnstrative eample free to all and middle-aged men, Sendnow. The Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Nation- al Medical Association, Address P.O. Box 1895,Boe- ton, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, graduateof Har- vard Medical College, 25 years’ practice in Boston, who may be consulted confidentially, | Office, No. 4 an. Bulfinch St. Specialty, Diseases o} Cat this ove, You may never nec it agala- Missouri Pacific Ry, 2 Daily Trains 2 TO KANSAS CITY, OMAHA, Texas and the Southwest. 4 Daily Trains, 4 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORADO SHORT LINE To PUEBLO AND DENVER. PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS, Kansas City to Denver without cnange H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenger and Ticket Ag’t, ST? LOUIs, MO. ANSY GAPSULE THE LATEST DISCOVERY. Dr. Laparie’s Celebrated Pre Safe and Always Reliable. _Indispensable to LES. Send 4 cents for Sealed Circular. CALUMET CHEMICAL 0, sno. COCKLE’Ssxzz=PILLS This old English Family Medicine in use for 8% years, all over ihe world, for Bile, ladizestiun, Liver, &e. Gf Pure Vegeieble Ingredients. FREE FROM MERCURY. Divorees Cheaply Without Publicity. s DIVORCES without publicity ny part of the United n-support. intemper- Blank epplication fer Barnes. 345 Brostwar, Z-lz ABSOLU

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