The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 14, 1888, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

R.R. DEACON, HARDWARE AND A FULL LINE OF FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY, TOP BUGCIES SPRINC AND FARM WACONS. Store, East Side Square. Soleagent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches, in Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, very cueap JEWELRY STORH, Is headquarters tor fne Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &e. Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses. You are cordially invited to visit his establishment and examine his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices. ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED at his first haif hour’ exp 3 sorrow that a storm finds to hardly a better pi than a mos- quito netting, nut els chagrined at being so badly in, but also feels if he n y like ‘Ask for the * | PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM tions guaranteed with £4). IND >. + 5 Cleanses and beautifics the hair.) | 25 (AED. Anydetermined man ean suc: her power to make them more beau- ceed W: us. eculiar edvantages to begin- +: “| ay m r Faille to Re alors ners. Stock complete, including, fast-selling tiful. She used numerous drugs ir to ite Youthful C Dandruff and hair at Drugs specialties. Outfit free. Addres at once. Name this paper. BROWN BROTHERS. NURSERYMEN, falling FRANZ, BERNHARDT’S A WHOLESALE DUEL. Solitude. To go into solitude a man needs | Kentucky Town. ‘as from society. Iam not solitary ' | while I read and write though no-! | Louisville, Ky., Nov. 7.—A des"| body is with me. But if a man | | perate duel occurred here late last | would be alone, let him look at the ‘night in the town of Livingston | stars. The rays that come from | this state, in which five men were | those Honeoye woslinowill separate | : killed and the sixth mortaly wounded | between him and what he touches. | In a political discussion Champion One might think the atmosphere | Mullins and John Martin pulled their | was made transparent with this de- | Ravy sixes and commenced firing at | sign, to give man in the heavenly | each other. The former is a prom | bodies the perpetual presence of the | |inent republican, and the latter a | sublime. Seen in the streets of | government official. The friends of | eities, how great they are. If the \ ‘each too: up the quarrel and in a stars should appear one night in a | | flash 20 pistols were pulled and a- | thousand years, how would men be- | fusilade of shots were fired. For |lieve and adore, and preserve for some minutes the town in a/| many generations the remembrance frenzy and the ivhabitants were | of the City of God which had been | su th Was wi terrorized. Thedesperate aud mad | shown! But every night come out dened :nen fought for several | these envoys of beauty, and light the squires, and one py one fell with | universe with their admonishing their Gea i} woundsand lay bleeding onthe stre i. The tight continued for a quarter of ax hour, when, for want of amunition the sanguinary strife ceased. It was found that Sam Ward, a member of the Kentucky Legislature, John Clifford, an agent of the Louisvilleand Nashville road; John Martin a government store- smile.—Emerson. That Deadly Scourge! The regular consumption is sim- ply lung-secrofula—the active and dangerous development of a taint in the blood. The grand blood cleans- ing botanic principles contained in Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov- ery specially fit it to purify the blood, and prevent the formation of mi W) ' | TWO MILLIONS WERE WAGERED. |In Which Five Men Were Killed in a | to retire as much from his chamber The Heavy Losersand Heavy Winners ' this campaign notwithstanding the New York, Nov. 8.—The 8un says: : There are lots of betters now “in the soup,” as the phrase is. candidates are “in the soup,” of | course, but they are comparatively ' | few when the vast aggregate of elec- | | tion losers is considered. The prin- cipal sufferers this time are the pro- fessional gamblers, the book-making through whom the big betting is mostly done. Beside the money they placed on commission, many of for their own account. ‘lief in hoo-doo and mascot effects and “Cleveland's luck.” tion night, when the returns were very discouraging, some of them continued to bet on Cleveland's elee- tion. James E. Kelly, one of the some very profitable hedging as he had been betting for two months on Cleveland and saw his mistake. there are many gambling men who Really a Campaign of Information. There's been one good feature of —Matt Quay $100,000 Ahead. fun made of the intellectual side of it. Possibly more people are inter- ested to day in political economy in America than any country ever knew before, and this is directly traceable to the closely drawn line of the two parties on the tariff ques- tion. It is a good sign in a nation of general suffrage when the people - are growing more and more to a dis- passionate study of the questions of the day and away from their acquir- ed or inherited prejudices.—Indian- apolis News. Defeated ccessors to the pool-sellers, Shakespeare is to be translated into Chinese. A contemporary thinks that if Hop Hamlet ever gets into a theatre in. China he will never come out alive. The idea is that he will die of old age before the play is over. Who would live in India? Living there seems tv be attended with some difficulty, According to the latest official returns 24.841 persons were killed by wild beasts in that country last year; 22,134 were kille@ by snakes alone. em plunged heavily on Cleveland They bet ith the gambler’s superstitious be- followed in blind worship Even on elec- en who did not lose his head, did But ill “eat snowballs” this winter. Ww Ts. INT £3 ES CHICAGO, ILL keeper; Erank Stewert a representa | |, EnglishSpavin Liniment removes all hard, sof} or calloused lumps and blem- ishes trom horses, olood spavin, curb, splints, sweeney, stifles, sprai swollen throat, coughs, etc. dollars by use of one bottle. Warranted. Sold bv W. J. Lansdown, Druggist, But- er, Mo. TI-t yr and Lost The. Vain of Mer About a year ago one ef the most lovely girls in the state lived at No. 40 Orange avenue, in this city. A pair of large, liquid blue eyes set off a face that would put any picture to shame, and her form was simply iperfect. This young lady was high- ly educated. and possessed all the a qualities that go to make up a socie- : ty belle. Her parents are well to do, wanted for nothing since she was old enough to prattle. But she had one fault, and that fault has proved her undoing. Itis called vanity. She fairly worshiped her own eyes, and did everything in nud she t before she found what she wanted. This last drug made her eyes spar- kle like diamonds, and she used it REVOLVERS. Send stamp for price list to JOHNSON & SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. EXHAUSTED VITALITY HE SCIENCE OF West. Permanent fit free. STARK NURS) V WT 2 fe LIFE, the great GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. : y Neieal Work of te | EPPS’S COCOA. ous and Physical De- BREAKFAST. bility, Premature De- cline, Errors of Youth, KNOW THYSELF ;orstrsnsic ectiptions for all diseases. Gok fi gt cy a0, De the Goll ant “*By athorough knowled, and nutrition, and by a careful the fine properties 0: spplicsiios well-select: delicately flavored bever stitution may be Cat this ove, You may never see It aga ure blood and properly nourished vil Service Gazette. frame.’ ise BLACKSMIH) BOOK AGENTS WANTED ron a Sh BS trations by MARVELOUS | MEMORY DISCOVERY. Any gook learned in one reading. Mind wandering cured. _ Speaking without notes. — Wholly unlike artificial system. Piracy condemned by eme Court } Great inducements to correspondence | t So ty ag Lop Chimne = x mrembectus. with opinions of Dr| Wm e lammond. the world-famed Specialist in Mind iseases, Daniel Greenleaf Thompson, the ee enscmolonist, JM. Buckley, D.D., itor of the Christian Advocate. Richard Proct k the Scientist, Hons. Judge Gibson, Judah jamin. and others. sent post free by { F. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York. others as goo BUT HE EAS Foe SALE EVERYWHERE. MADE ONLY SY WANTED by the oldest, largest and best known Nurseries in the tions; good pay. Out- ;ERIES, Louisiana, Mo. of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion Cocoa, Mr, Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a which may save us many heavy doctor’s bills. Itis by the ju- dicious use of such articles of diet that a con- ually built up until Maze., . W. H. strong enol to resist every tendency to dis- goon M Coll 95 years’ practice in Boston, ease. Hundredsofsubtle maladies are float- who may Beccmsled confidentially. Office, No. @ | ing around ready to attack wherever there isa Bulfinch St. Specialty, Diseases of Man. weak point. ‘e may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with Made simply with boil- ~ | ing water or milk. Sold only in ‘half-pound : k Cy Se ae He has nothing else to do. His oc- &CO., Homeopathic Chemists, sf E Ny London, England. | cupation has expired by request. 4 & The WITTIEST, PRETTIEST JUVENILES z a as : SHOP _ 5 SMO) QUEER PEOPLE rant on | seein: Some Jacksonville physicians é Sharpen Your Own Plowshi d | orawrs ) wines a i i [OB segs Gare ot] samme Bag aera a eee Die known to attack le sent raf > 2 ch ne eco il ——— EMPIRE TABLE FORGE Co... a eter ee nee Cohoes, N. ¥. nna ‘Pry Elopement of the and the Mouse.) ran of the peri! Trankn. charming storie and Prince Thisis the Tor of the GENUINE Pearl Top Lamp Chimney. nilar are imitation. ney. Adealer may say ¥ and think he has NOT. stupor the Exact Labeland Top. SEU. A. MACBETH & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. to such an extent that her eye began to shrivel. This brought her to her senses, and the family physician was called in. But he came too late, and informed the poor girl that she must lose one of her eyes sure, and prob- ably both. The right eye was taken eut some time ago, and she has lost all sight in the left, and will be blind for life. It is one of the sad- dest cases that was ever brought to light in this city——Los Angeles Times. of Lord Sackville West is a reg ular attendant on the Washington races. The red-headed have been favored English Spavn Liniment removes all Hard, Sott, or Callouscd Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, Etc- Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warrant, ed. old by W. J. Lanspows, Drug- giist, Butler, Mo. S-1yr. of Women of France, some of them | at least, are in favor of the restora- | tion of the monarchy. With this | object in view they have organized !an order called the “The Rose of | France.” ° It is patterned after the | the English “Prinrose League.” Are | women as radical as men? William’s Australian Herb Pill. If you are Yellow, Billous. constipated | with Headache, bad breath, drow appetite, look out your liver is order. One box of these Pills will drive all the troubles away and make a new being out of you, Price 25 cts. 47-YT- Seg Mile. Martha Sousares, who won the first prize in the beauty show at Spa., has received in one week one hundred offers of marriage irom bankers and young scions of titied English aristocracy. d, tive of the Kentucky Central Road, | tubes. Liver complaints, skin dis- and Mullins were killed and J. Farn- | eases, and sores, are also ‘cured by brook, a merehant, badly wounded. | it. All druggists. Why the late W. W. Corcoran Sent Over ly nominated by the President to a place in the Navy Department that will give him the rank of Commodore, is known to fame principally as one of the survivers of the ill-fated Jeannette Polar expedition. ica from that terrible voyage was one of the inspiring causes that led the coran, to have brought back to Amer- ica the remains of the sweet song writer, John Howard Payne. pened this way: companions reached Washington after capital. depot on their arrival, and, headed by the music at the White House, the pro- cession started up Pennsylvania avenue. It was a bright, sunny day, and the wide street was crowded. band moved along the avenue it played the heart-touching tune of ‘Home, Sweet Home,” and it tilled the air with the old-time music that has found an echo in every heart for so many years. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent ; i Icers in the lungs and bronchial HOME, SWEET HOME. the Sea for Its Author's Remains. George W. Melville, who was recent- His return to Amer- ich Washington banker, W. W. Cor- It hap- When Lieutenant Melville and his heir rescue they were given a recep- ion by the principal citizens of the An escort met them at the he famous Marine band that furnishes When the In the first carriage rode Lieutenant Melville, and with him the rich banker. Mr. Corcoran had known and befriend- ed John Howard Payne in the strug- gling days of the song-maker, and the tune awoke old memories in the rich man’s heart and suffused his eyes with tears. He thought of the man whose tender lines and sweet music had brought joy to so many breasts, and remembered that his bones lay molder- ing in a foreign land, homeless even in death. Then and there he resolved that all that was mortal of John Howard Payne should find an abiding place here at home. That night he wrote to Secre- tary Frelinghuysen about the matter, and the Government lent its aid through the United States Consul at Tunis, near which place the almost forgotten grave was located. The de- tails were soon perfected, and one bright June day in 1883 the remains of the dead poet arrived in this country and were given a resting place in the land he loved so well. Mr. Corcoran bore all the expense attached to the transfer, and it was the old familiar tune ringing out along the avenue on that pleasant day when Mel- ville came home that first awakened in his heart the resolve to give a lasting burial place to the poet’s remains.— N. Y. Graphic. Piles! Piles! Itching Piles. Symproms—Moisture; intense itching and stinging; most at night; worse by scratching. It allowed to continue tu- mors torm, which often bleed and ulcer- ate, becoming very sore. SwayNes OrntMeEntT stops the itching and bleed- ing, heals ulceration, and in most cases removes the tumors. At druggists, or by mail, for 50 cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, Philadelphia. 32.yr pc ee Cast Iron Vengeance. “Do you remember how, ten years ago, you swore that you would kill} Overmunk?” “Yes.” “He still lives.” “J know he lives, and I am aveng- led. He is married to my divorced | wife.—Cliecago Mail. Great names frequently look very This is one of the strong metaphor- ical expressions, there is a lack of cash or other pro- visions for the rigors of winter. and heavy ones too. men who belong to organizations, are running themselves or friends running for office and who grow enthusiastic and sometimes reckless in the heat of the fray. together, taking large and small bets of money, hats, dinners and drinks is estimated that about two mil- lions of value trembled in the bal ance of this year’s election. t talked of at the Hoffman house and Fifth avenue hotel yesterday, Matt ce individually and with the Philadel phia syndicate he is believed to have won $100,000. His contribution to the betting syndicate was a big block of the Philadelphia Traction Railway company’s stock. Missouri, is one of the heavy losers. He is $30,000 out on the political race, and stood up te the rack even on Tuesday night. his money that the cool Kelly scoop- ed in when he went out to hedge. is a $10,000 loser. $8,000. He lost by his bets on the general result, but pulled out a win- ner by Hill’s and Grant's success. Stephen B. French is probably $15,- 000 or $20,000 ahead. Col. Swords sergeant-at-arms of the national re- publican committee, picks up $40,- own money and some of which be- much out of place. Jobn Milton | | was arrested in New York for steal- | | America. ing cigars; a Pittsburg man named ‘Schiller is up for vagrancy abcut \ once 2 week. while Micheal Angelo | sells peanuts in Detroit. home and the other made ‘sport 6f indicating that There are other losers. of course; They are the have Al- inte consideration, it Among he winners and loosers that were Quay was one of the largest, and Joe Rickey, the big horseman of It is some of Ex-Governor Hauser of Montana, Ed Stokes wins 000 to $50,000, some of which is his longs to some of the Philadelphians. Congressman W. L. Scott of Penn- sylvania, isa heavy loser, the only one among the democratic campaign managers, and it is supposed that Quay will win some of it. Bradley B. Smalley of Vermont, is propor- tionally as big a loser as Mr. Scott. Ex-Congressman Jack Adams is con- siderable winner, and said at the Hoffman House last night that he had spent some of his gains in two telegrams, one to Governor Hill: ‘That’s what you get for being a democrat. Another to President Cleveland: That’s what you get fer not being a demo- crat. Colonel W. L. Brown of the Dai- ly News is a heavy loser, nearly up to $40,000. Senator Jones Neve- da is a good winner, having placed his money through Thomas P. Ochil- tree. Bookmaker Mahoney stands to lose $50,000. The private bets are wany of them being paid. The bookmakers are waiting for some official determination. Amelie Rives-Chandler is an en- thusiastic Democrat. Sheeven wish- es to become the poet of Democracy. She might unite her aspirations on that point with Walt Whitman. When Minister West goes home | ™ain. he will write his “Impressions of What | Cleveland and Blaine? him. “At least Richard Mansfield has fully established himself as a Lon- don favorite, and “Prince Karl” has scored a great success. for months. come sole lessee of the Globe thea- tre, in the Strand. don, lately unveiled in weighs two tons, and it took two hours to hoist it into place by means of a three-legged crane. One remark- able feature about the statue is that the general, instead of the customa- ry sword, holds a rattan cane. To illustrate her thrift it may be mentioned that she is..to have her small yacht; the Elfin, repaired. The boat was built in 1849, and seems entitled to a snug harber and a pen- sion, but Victoria thinks she can get some more service out of it. will he say of Onc sent him | mailed free. It will run Mr. Mansfield has be- A bronze statue of General Gor- London, The economical queen of England: Dr. Pillbags’ Diagnosis. To Dr. Pillbags. Patrick came With a most woeful face; Says he, '‘ Dear Docthor, phat’s your name. Will you plaze trate my case,’’ ‘The doetor loeked him in the eye, His tongue he made him show; Said he,;*My man, you’e going to die; You’ ve got tic-deuloureux.’” “+My faith,’’ says Pat, ‘‘phat’sthet ye say? I’ve got ‘tick-dollar,’ ob! Yez lyin’ thief, I always pay Your bill before I go. I'll have no more to do wid yez, I'l docthor my own case.’’ He took a dose of P. P. P.’s, And wears a brighter face. Use Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets for torpid liver, constipation, and all derangements of stomach and bowels. By druggists. The baton used by musical con- ductors is not a very old “magie - wand.” It was first used in England by Spohr in 1820. John L. Sullivan has gone to” drinking milk and consumes four- Sackville West is said to be a great tennis player. Heis probably too light minded for a deep diplo- — mat. Entirely Free From Taint. Knoxville, Tenn., July 2, 1888. The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.+ Gentlemen—In 1884 I contracted blood poison. It was in its most. loathsome form. Sores and ulcers came upon me until my entire body was absolutely covered. I put my- self under the treatment of the best physicians in the city, but no good . came of it. I could not sleep or rest - day or night so intense was my suf- ferings. At last I began to take 8- $.S. The improvement was slow st first, but after a while the disease yielded, and in ashort time the sores. commenced healing, the ulcers ceas- ed running, and in a few months my body was free from taint I contin- , ued the medicine and to-day am free from taint. My body, however is a living monument to the intensity of my sufferings and the curative pow- ers of Swift Specific. The scars re- Par. J. O'Coxsonr, 123 Depot Street. Treatise on blood and skin diseases } The Swift Specific Ce, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.

Other pages from this issue: