The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 1, 1888, Page 3

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R.R. DEACON, HARDWARE AND A FULL LINE OF FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY, TOP BUGGIES SPRINC AND FARM WACONS. Store, East Side Square. FRANZ BERNHARDT’S Sole agent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches. in Gold, Silver and Filled2Cases, very cheap. JEWELRY STORE, Ts headquarters tor fne Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &c. Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses. You are cordially invited te visit his establishment and examine his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices, ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED: unch Old Democratic Newspaper, THE MISSOURI REPUBLICAN Has changed the name The Sta - a Thisis the Tor of the GENUINE Pearl Top Lamp Chimney. Allothers, similarare imitation. This exact Label ison each Pearl TopChimney. of the daily issue to A dealer may say en —THE— and think he has . ° others as good, BUT HE HAS NOT. a Insist upon the Exact Label and Top. 3 For SALE EVERYWHERE. MADE ONLY BY Andreduceditsubscription | SEQ, A. MACBETH & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. rates. One Year, without Sunday. One Year, including Sunday The Weekly Republican i eee Ee ee eee Ten pages every week. Is the cheapest and best paper Fy I believe Piso’s Cure in the country. for Gomattai tion saved CAMPAIGN RATES. life.—A. H. DowELL, Edi itor Enquirer, Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. The BEsT Cough Medi- cine is Piso’s CURE FOR Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 25c. Ofeither pattern shown above will be sent, Postage Free, to every new sub- seriber for a period of three months | or longer. tPSample Copies free to any address. ADDREss, | IOLAGREAM THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. i. 'HIS preparation, without ». “ah z CirSeo?* toa, Livet-Moles, Ean: ples, Black-Heads, Sunburn and % | Tan. <A few applications will render the most stubbornly red skin soft, smooth and BILL NYE AS SPORTSMAN. Some of His Experiences in That Line of Life. I could get along with a hunting suit which is offered me by an ac- quaintance who is just my size. He will sell it to me at half price in |@ fortune by railroad operations. 1 | And yet it was a simple thing, too. Cholly was an only son, and his | father was very wealthy. One day a | train came into the depot with a/ man’s head on the pilot. Going back | seven or eight miles the engineer | found the rest of the man. | But he was dead. He had passed order to buy a barrel of flour with which he desires to surprise and delight his wife. The hunting suit, though four years old, is well pre- served, never having had blood upon it but once, when his gun kicked off the left lobe of his nose. I would also want a handsome, ornamental revolver, with a folding hammer, cartridge ejector, intaglio engraved and plush case for same. This I would need in case I had an engagement at close quarters with an infuriated tomtit. I would alse get a hunting-knife with a tortoise- shell handle, chamois-lined sheath and handsome strop for same. I would need a dozen boxes pink- edge gun wads, an assortment of primers and a pocket compass. I could get along with a Westley Richards iammerless gun with cartridge ejector, screw driver and alligator gun-case, which could be easily bought for $400. This I could use for ornamental shooting at preserves. For shooting domestic animals at short range a top action, laminated steel or twist barrel with choke bore, dust damper, pistol grip, rebounding lock, im- proved check hook and pin, fore end lock, solid head plungers and stench- less breech pin would do very well. I would also need a seven-pound can of Challenge Dog Food and a bird dog to eat same. I would prefer a dog that does not object to living in a flat. Any one who has a good bird dog that would be willing to enter into flat life will do well to consider this op- portunity. I also desire a dog that would not become irritated and un- rexsonable when accidentally shot. Last year I had a good dog with this exception. He would look reprvach- fully at me and go away to a great distance where he could lick his wounds and refuse to come back. He was a good dog, though, and would “charge” when I ordered him to do so, though he had received no train- ing when I got him. Perhaps he learned it from the express company while in transit. He was with me two seasons, during whieh time I did not kill anything of any account except a cow. He then went away and never returned. In addition to the gun I should have a set of loading tools, also wool swab, wire scratch brush, two-prong- ed wormer, flannel wiper, patent choke cleaner, Petmecky cleaner, expansion felt swob, Barclay pattern inside box-wood and brass cleaner, ring shell extractor, hook shell extractor, and three-jointed cleaning rod. One should also have Skimmer- ding’s Imperial Dog Remedies for mange, distemper, canker, impure blood, fits and hypochondria. He should also have “Yelper’s Household Physician for Dogs,” a richly bound and handsomely printed and illus- trated work treating of dog diseases in all their forms. Cholly Van Tinkeybob, a spectacu- lar sportsman of New York, asks me at this juncture to inquire through the columns of the press if any brother sportsman can tell him of a way to grow hair on a dog that is bald headed all over. Mr. Van T.’s dog flushed a small covey of Ply- mouth Rock fowls on his estate near Weehawken last summer and follow- ed them into the wood house, where he fell into a large tank of soft soap ina heated state. As a result of this his hair came out prematurely. Probably there never was anything more premature than the way that dog’s hair fell out. He is now a shocking sight. Cholly now goes about asking his friends if they have seen his nude dog. That is a bit of delicious humor. Any one having a liver and white away. Even the physicians admitted | } that they could do nothing for him- He was Cholly’s father. So Cholly became wealthy. And yet Mr. Gould claims that no money is now being made by railroad operations. But I have been wandering from my purpose. Iwill close by saying that I hope the true sportsman will not take offense at anything I may have said in the foregoing lines. The sportsman with the money, the leisure and the true spirit of the sportsman all united is an object of envy, but the young man with neither of these attributes, who fancies he looks well in copper- rivetted duck suit and puts money into a $500 gun when his wife or his washerwoman 18 entitled to it, makes a mistake. Does the American youth imagine for a moment that Benjamin Harri- son, who a few days ago was dum- founded and thunderstruck by a committee coming like a stroke of lightning from a clear esky to tell him that he had been nominated for the presidency, would ever have attained 80 conspicuous a position if he had frittered away his time and money foolishly while young? ®@No, indeed! He fished plainly with a peeled hickory pole and caught more than anybody. He and Grover Cleveland both can now carry split bamboo rods on both shoulders because they are able to do so, but in their early days they used a tin pepper-box to hold their bait, or put the angle- worms in their pockets with their smoking tobacco.—Bill Nye in New York World Eczema, Itchy, Scaly, Sk:n Tortures. The simple application ot ‘‘SWAYNE’s OINTMENT,”’ without any internal medi- cine, will cure any case of Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ringworm, Piles, Itch, Sores, Pimples, Eczema all Scaly, Itchy Skin Eruptions, no matter how obstinate or long standing. It is potent, effective, and costs but a trifle. 32 1yr Cleveland and Thurman Sure to Win. Sedalia, Mo., July 25.—H. G. B. Debemardi, candidate for register of lands on the union labor ticket and one of the most prominent members of the Missouri state grange, was in the city to-day. Mr. Debemardi isa lecturer for the Missouri state grange and has traveled extensively in the past six weeks in Kansas, Colorado and Missouri. In conversation with your correspondent, he predicted that Cleveland and Thurman will be elected, as tariff reform is demanded by the farmers and workingmen of the country, and the great majority of them will vote against Harrison and Morton. Debemardi is an ardent reformer, prominently identified with the labor organizations of the state, and he denounces protection as a system of extortion but little better than highway robbery. ITCH, MANGE, and SCRATCHES, of every kind on human or animals cur- ed in 30 minutes by WOOLFORD'S SANITARY LOTION. This never tails. Sold by W. J. Lanspown, Drug- gist, Butler ¢Mo. 8-m. That Man. Do you see that man over in the field driving a pair of mules? Who is he and what is he doing? He isa farmer and engaged in plowing. He is the man that moves the world. If he were to go on a strike and refuse to work for a single year, it would produce a more disastrous effect than would result from a universal strike of all the brotherhoods and every- body else; and if he should go out from some real or imaginary wrong, he would paralyze the commerce of the world, on sea and land. Every locomotive would rust in the stall, the cars would rot onthe side-tracks, the song of the spindle and the hum of the manufactory would be hushed and silent, the goods of the merchant would be moth-eaten on the shelves, and the government would be power- less to interfere. That man, though CEDAR COUNTY ALIVE. Gets the Delegation. Stockton, Mo., July 25.—Saturday was a big day for the democrats of Cedar county. A mass-meeting was held to select delegates tothe various conventions. The town was alive with State candidates. Never before were the votes of this county deem- ed of sufficient importance for State candidates to contend for. Cedar county was never before honored with the presence of State candidates, and democrats here were glad to meet them. Among those present Gov. Morehouse, Mayor Francis, J. M. Seibert, Maj. Rucker and Col. Jamison, Col. Tom Park, Col. A. O. Allen and Capt. Trigg were also here in the interest of their friends. The State delegates are for Frances. The fight was between Morehouse and Francis, and the young Democ- racy were victorious. The judicial delegates are, of course, for Judge Stratton, this being his former home. It is supposed the congressional del- egates are for Stone, he being the only candidate in the field. Hon. Chas. H. Morgan, the ex-rep- resentative of this district, was the orator of the day. His arguments were pointed, logical and convincing- Charley has a vast number of friends in this county, and his speeches do the Democrats much good. Mayor Francis made a short talk to his Democratic friends. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts, Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box. For sale by Walls & Holt, the druggists. Wichita, Kan., July 25.—Daniel McCarty and his family, consisting of four children and a daughter-in- law, were all poisoned to-day in a strange manner. The wife purchased this morning a quantity of buttermilk from a neighbor and the whole fami- ly partook of it this afternoon. Almost immediately afterwards all of them were seized with terrible vom- iting and cramps. The entire family were prostrated, and they rolled about on the floor in fearful agony, quite unable to remove to the door to summon aid. A passer-by heard the screams, and medical assistance was shortly ministering to the sick. But it was not for some hours tbat any of them were considered out of danger. Now all have recovered but McCarty and his eldest daughter. So prostrated are these two that they are speechless. No analysis has yet been made of the buttermilk. The physicians differ materially in their opinion as to what was the matter with it. Confessed to Killing Her Husband. Columbus, Ind., July 25.—The feeling against Mrs. Mary Deran, murdered her husband at the Farley House here last Saturday morning, by pouring carbolic acid down his throat, is very bitter, and were she not a woman she would be taken from the jail by a mob and lynched. She told the Globe-Democrat correspond- ent to-day that she only intended to disfigure her husband’s face, so he would not be loved by other women, but did not mean to kill him. She appears unconcerned about the ter- rible crime she has committed and now talks freely about it. Her trial isto take place at the September term of court. To Sue Sam Jones. Carthage, Ill, July 25.—At least 5,000 people from Hancock county have turned from Bluff Park, Keo- kuk, Io., highly disgusted with the was under a six months contract to appear Monday and Tuesday of this week for $300. The association will sue the gentleman for $2,000, as an- A Big Day for the Democrats—Francis Barrett. of th who last night confessed to having | non-apearance of Sam Jones, who| For the Sake of a Reward. Omaha, Neb. July 26.—Mrs. Kate y. the mother of Pete and Tim Barrett, who are under the sentence of death for the murder of the street car driver, Tollafson, at Minneapolis, says that a missing witness has been found at New Or- leans whose testimony will exculpate the prisoners if they get a new trial. This witness is the partner of her son Henry, who is a saloonkeeper at Minneapolis and who testitied against his brothers. Mrs. Barrett asserts that he did this to obtaim {the large reward offered and that if his broth- ers gain a new trial Henry must leave Minneapolis or be shot down like a dog. She says that Henry has confessed that Pete was not impli- cated in the murder. ¢ Southwest Missouri Gold. There is undoubtedly gold in the hills of southwest Missouri, as the following from the Osceola Sun will testify: “Last Sunday Mr. Patton, who is prospecting in Dallas township, St. Clair county, came to town after his mail and showed us six cerficates from an assayer in Arkansas, who assayed the specimens from his shaft They showed respectfully as follows. No. 1, gold $24, silver $2 per ton; No. 2, gold $15, silver $5; No. 3 gold $5, silver $3; No. 4, gold $10, silver $3; No. 5 gold $4, silver $2; No. 6, gold $5, silver $2. This settles the question in our mind as to finding gold in this county. The old gent- tleman was somewhat excted over his find, and will make arrangements to put in machinery at once for mining. Uncle Jimmy Worden gives us a recipe for ridding wheat or corn of chinch bugs, that has been worth hundreds of dollars tohim. Hehad one piece of late corn of five acres, that was black with bugs on the ten- der stalks. He saved it with atrifling expense and a few hours work, and it yielded over forty bushels to the acre. He took a pint of carbolicacid and mixed it with three gallons of water, and with a sprinkler walked between the rows sprinkling the corn and insects. The acid was not strong enough to injure the corn, but-killed the bugs. They disappeared asif by magic and the corn grew rapidly. The odor arising from the acid was death to the bugs, and those who did not die ceased to produce, and disap- peared. Mr. Worden tried the acid on wheat with equally good results. It will pay every farmer to try this. —Holden Enterprise. A Chance to Bet- Henry County Democrat. Kansas City, Mo., July 9, '88. Editor Democrat:—You may say for me, through the columns of your valuable paper, that Iam ready and | willlng to bet ($20,000) twenty thou- sand dollars, or any part thereof, that Cleveland and Thurman will be elect- ed president and vice-president of the United States if they live until No- . vember 7th. This is not wind. 1 mean business. Any party that , wants to take the whole or any part | of this amount can put up at the First National Bank of Sedalia, Mo., : or with Mr. J. C. Thompson and my , money will be ready. Respectfully, J. C. O'Kezre. 1072 Union Av., Kansas City, Mo. . A Minister's Conviction. : Rev. O. W. Winkfield, of Union: Point, Ga., suffered terribly for* twelve years from articular and- sciatic rheumatism. He consulted- numerous ‘physicians and tried all* sorts of medicine. Finally he began, taking the Swift Specific as a forlorn, hope, and by its use he was entirely” | restored. He writes: “I feel like a’ new man. I cannot attribute my, miraculous and perfect cure to aby thing but the Swift Specific. I know that it alone cured me, for nothing» else had done meany good for twelve years. I owe my restoration ané strength for labor aud religious nounced tothecrowd by the secra-| duties alone to this grand remedy, tary. and gladly make this statement for white. Viola Cream is not a paint cr Pomicy tocover defects, but a remedy to cure. t is superior to all other preparations, and | is guaranteed to give satisfaction. At drog- gists or mailed for 50 cents. Prepared by G. C. BITTNER & CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. The Choctaw Indians have had | the benefit of all sufferers from thig most torturing disease, 1! satism. Treatise on bloodand skin disease# wig that will fit a two-gallon dog will do well to correspond with the above He is very liberal with his money. and so price would not intelligent, dressed in homespun, patiently toils o ing the ills he because he does not strike the world ear by year, bear- | some “very highly civilized” lawyers ot shun. and | doing business for them. The day | ALESMEN WANTED! By the oldest. largest and best known Nurser gentleman. of reckoning has come av.d they find | mailed free. inthewWe : c at ee i — len and the le have bread | that they owe lawyers’ fees to the The Swift Specific Co. Drawer gz inthe West. Permanent positions: ood pay. SOLD Y¥ J. EVERINGHAM. stand in the way of a trade. He is} moves’on and the peop! 2 - : é x Ge STARK NURSERIES touts | yrs ‘ yastly wealthy, having amassed quite | to eat.—Ex. | amount of nearly $1,000,000. Atlanta, Gs. ¥ .

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