The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 29, 1889, Page 2

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| | t { TN 2 8 a BERTIE: = HOW RUDOLPH WAS KILLED. | Meteo ! Forecasts for June. —— | The Ist day of June is the center | Maurd Ry the Unele of Baroness | of a regular storm riod. It will rm, with Vetsera Who Loved Her. | be very rin forces | ganized and in wotion near the re- rani { ae gions where storms usually originate. -exhaps the most remarkable story | © wis ‘ : Perhay S oh cay that anaeet By about the 3d and 4th they will f sa tragedy is tha 1 o3 Rise renner emer ye . |have spent their foree, and cooler | has just reached Paris. So many tl es et GS - weather in the track. ele true stories have been published aed : pies Shee Ap eral rain rus of greater about the mysterious death of Crown iE ee : ee 2 }less violeuce ea: 9@ EX- Prince Rudolph and the Baroness | ~~" L AWeaniethe 4 2d and | Vetsera that it was thought ail con-| P 1 ed of ereatest probable ceiyable plots had been advanced. dan = c = rer. The latest story, however, and one : Hea nee eel 5 2 About the 7th is a dé oi A which is received with morecredence sas i a ; 2 adver than any other, more tragic | F ‘ as ee Bec Pee! F ionary storms, but here sumiel and violent in it# details than any of | 0"? ees : se } j Cari is 1 solstice aud the effects of the planet 2 syeceding ones. uriously Es Ss pot = : * “|Mars are apt to prolong the dis- enough, the story got to the knowl- Z z 2 ee Se ; x ay turbance and provoke to greater vio edge of the Parisian public through : x . | lence. two of the most famous won ot z , ‘ F About the 10th the sol- rance. : ; : 2 b stice period begins, continuing as Mme. Sarah Bernhardt received a é I eee cee lax . arule past the 21st. A regular letter from a rather exalted person- storm period is central age in Vienna whose relations with é re mm. | the 12th, constituting the period 10th the crown prince were intimate. This 4 } to 16th one of marl imports nce. letter she showed to several persons aes : : >;..| Hard storms within of prominence, and it has gradually Sed t Ne 1 ye almost a physical r reached the ears of other people. ae ther eye h, 13ihand 14 a prudent we the 11th, 1 At about the same time Mme who was playi Judie, Austrian g in the : 5 . {the tempe ive and the clo capital, became possessed of a simi-| —) : cae 1 } \ = : Waria, southerly winds and threat Jar story from two men of notable ’ ie oo aa 4 : ening Clouds Wilh mean di rank who are more or less in her ‘ 3 car Th ought to be great and ger train. This story she told in full to eS 8 M. Maurice Grau, who has since found it to be identical with the in formation contained the hardt letter. A few days ago it was announced quietly in the Austrian new: spape rains at this time. The disturbance of Jupiter and Mars are central through the whole of the solstice period this year, and will doubtless long the in Bern- aggravate aud pro- regular and reactionary; that the uncle of Baroness Vetsera 2 e e ull storms on or “about: these had died at Meyerline. Unti at | Utes: time it a casa ook Gb Irom the 22d to the 28th is the ts aC bat © z y Pee aed last period for June. With the had disappeared, but nobody knew where he was. After his death he was buried without ceremony. The cause of his death was variously given, but there was nothing in the newspapers, and the count was buried before even the newspapers knew of his death. The accepted story now is far more horrible than the climax of “Othello.” It would seem that the count was in love with his own niece. Baron- ess Marie Vetsera. She was, as is aow well known, a woman of singu lar and remarkable beauty, and the passion which she inspired in her uncle was apparently of the most violent nature. He was of Hungar- ian descent, and a man of strong will power. The family objected to an alliance between the niece and uncle, but the latter insisted on having his way. Meanwhile he watched the baroness closely, and was the first man outside the personal attendants of the crown prince to learn of the liason between the heir to the Aus- trian throne and his niece. He said nothing, but watched the pair nar- rowly, and when the crown prince left the embassador’s ball to drive out to Schloss, Mey. erling, the count followed in a closed carriage. He did not attempt to enter the house where the lovers were until very late at night, when he got into the princess’ bed room and found the couple together. There was a sharp altercation. The count, in a fit of. jealous jury, attempted to shoot the crown prince, but the first bullet killed the baroness. In the struggle for the weapon which fol- lowed a portion of the count’s hand was blown off, and it was from the effects of this wound that he subse- quently died through blood poison- ing. The crown prince was of light build and totally unarmed. The count shot him just as the attend- ants ran into the room. Every effort was made to hush the matter up, the murderer was taken to a room up- stairs and put under guard. Pend- ing instructions from the emperor, he went into a delirium inthe course of the night and never left the room alive. The story is worth telling, because it is the only one which i now believed, but no man’s ingen ty can forecast the next heave: of | way back im the early forties the the mystery of the Meyerling —New | first railroad was built in upper Mis- York World. souri. It extended from the brick | mill, four miles south of Richmond, moon between the sun and earth on the morning of the 2$th, the most active part of this period may come at the last. Ordinarily the danger days would fall about the 24th, 25th and 26th. Should heavy rains and electrical storms by any means fall at the June periods, violent voleanic and earthquake convulsions may be expected, especially about the close of the month. The Brompton Hospital for con- sumptives, London, Eng., publishes a statement that 25 per cent. of the patients in that institution had un- suspected kidney disease. Everv drop of blood in the system passes thousands of times through the lungs in each 24 hours. The same blood passes through the kidneys for puri- fiication. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition ar able to expel the poisonous or waste matter the acids return to the delicate tissues of the lungs and produce irritation, which results in the symptoms of what is known as consumption. This explains why 25 per cent. of the con- sumptive patients have unsuspected kidney disorder. Warner’s Safe Cure puts the kidneys in a healthy condi- tion taking the acids from the blood which vitiate the lungs consumption. and cause Farmer Jones, of} Ashland, Ohio, thought he knew the world and scorned to subscribe for 2, newspa- per. No paper could teach him anything, Oh, no! But a brace of bunko men came along one day, and did him up for $2,500, and the next day Farmer Jones subscribed for a city paper. He thinks $2,500 rath- er a high price to pay for a paper, but he can complain of himself only. Balard’s Snow Linament. This wonderful remedy is guaranteed to cure Neuralgia. It isa positive cure. It will cure Rheumstism no matter how long standing It will cure that dull aching pain in the small of the back. It willcure all sprains and bruises It will instantly, take out the fire from at scald or burn, and stop all pain. It is { the most penetrating Liniment in the t world. It is good tor all indamation. | It is guaranteed to do all claimed tor it | or money retunded. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent: , to the Lexington ferry on the nor An Absolute Cure. SBSs ie noe bank of the Missouri river. It was The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINT- constructed, MENT is only put up in large two ounce constructed, owned and operated tin ses and is an absolute « cure torold by Allen & Reeves Lt was grad- sores, burns, wounds, chapped hands, » i ow ral % and all skin “eruptions. Will positively edand hy ~ Wooden rails and the all Kinds piles. ae for the OR-, cars were drawn by mules. Whe IGINAL ABIETI NTMENT. Sold | ¢—; leks 2 sc aie bs F M. Crumley & Ce me Snes first completed an exeursion was box—by mail 30 cants. Iz i-yr (Siven and all the neighbors for sey- lel n }and chairs wer | the convenie | On the her leg broken and badly ‘ | while sitting on the side of the car | with her feet hanging over and be- | ing caught between the mov ted s distant were it to take a ride over the river and return. The ¢ re placed or tl tor | ence of the excursionists. accident oc-} girl had | first curred in w ilroad track. At the of the irl wa alittle child of one of the « ists. Sheriff H. C. i uin at the time of the time of the rs accident the g urs: Perdue was on ace ud says he remembers the oc well. Judge T McGinis was one of the ce very employed to run over the >a while Their r Business Booming. bly no one al revival o enor trom of congenial spirits were discussing brevity the oth ll- known cafe, and the famous congres- editor “One brief and comprehensive re- ports I ever received was reporter. It was during a move- ment that was ostensibly for the purpose of closing the hotel bar- rooms on Sunday evening. I called the reporter up and kuowing that he knew all the barkeepers in the tels, sent him out with ord out whether or not they we on the evening mentioned. That was Saturday afternoon. For three days I saw nothing of him, but the followi ing W palhenuhsy he showed up looking very rocky. what he would do. sional said: of the most made by a ho- to find > closed I waited to see In about five minutes he was at my desk and gravely remarked, ‘No, sir. The bars were all open. A minute later he was asleep ina corner.”—New York Graphic. What Am I to Do? The symptoms of billiousness are un- nappily but too well known. ‘They ditf- er in different individuals to some extent. A billious man is seldom a breakfast eat- er. Too frequently, alas, he has an ex- cellent appetite tor liquors but none for solids of a morning. His tongue will hardly bear inspection atany time; if it 1s not white and furred, it is rough, at all events. The digressive system is wholly out of order and dia arrhea or Constipation may bea symptom or the two may alternate. There are otten Hemorrhoids o1 even loss of blood. There may be giddiness and often headache and acidity or flatu- lence and tenderness in the pit ot the stomach. To correct all thisif not es- tect a cnre try Green’s August Flower, it cost but a trifle and thousands attest its efficacy. 4i-lyr. € Ow. He Passed. “Young man, you want to marry my daughter?” “Yes, sir.” “You have no objections to my asking you a few questions. What's the sure way of coming out ahead on a horse race.” “Don’t bet.” “Very good. What is the best hand in the deck at a poker game?” “Ace high, if you have nerve enough.” What's the best way to get along with 2 woman?” “Give her everything she wants.” “Young man, it’s useless to | ques- tion you further. You are fitted to make a model husband.” Curability of Consumption. This has been a vexed question among physicians, opinions, even in the same school, being strangely di- vergent. Of this, however, the pub- lic are convinced: it is a terribly prevalent disease, and the average doctor meets with but scant success in treating it. Consumption is in reality scrofula of the lungs, and it is liable to attack any whose blood is tainted. For driving out the scrof ulous humors, and thus remove the predisposing cause, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a sov- erign remedy. It purifies bad blood, heals serofulous ulcers, and, what- ever difference of opinion exists as to curing advanced cases of con- i sumption, it remains that many pro- | noenced “incurable” have been brought back from the brink of the grave to restored health and vigor again. to | |S. E., Ordinary Physician to H. M. vars used were fiat | the Queen, in Scotland, the Profes- Edinburgh, r lly the cause of death in all forms of Bright’s disease. It may HE Grain- Saving,Time-Sav- | } result from local affec or from . Money-Saving Thresher | the state he blood Warner's = this day and age. | Safe ( seventive by S More Points of Exclusive ing ination -from the (oS eee ont | blood. E Fa is delighted with its By bs elous work. Walt Whitman's 70th birthday | comes May 31. and John G. Whitti- “? Superior for all kinds er has already written a poem to be N f in, but the only suc- | read on that occasion, and letters cessful handler of all Seeds. | are expected from Tennyson and NTIRE Threshing Expenses | Neon Colonel Ingersol and E. E to 5times thatamount) . Steadman have Pp nised to be mac extra Grain Saved. T. Granger AM. D., P.R. art. Vi BRATOR | the Univ of *Peritonitis is ce- sor of Physic in RYS: ity than all others and remov | ANSHIP, Msterial, es AEM A sh beyond all com- i tachments er to change from a to Seeds. BROAD and ample Warranty given en all our machinery. | RACTION Engines Unrival- exe | William's Australian Hern Pill ed in Material, Safety, Power | Ir you are Yellow, Billous. constipated { h Headache, bad breath, drowsy, no ie s, fenlobe QUEUE livery fe outiet UR Pamphlet giving full in- order. Onebox otf these Pills will drive all the troubles away make a new being cut of you, cts. t Dr formation, sent Free. It tells about this great EVOLUTION in Threshing Machinery. Send for pam- phiet. Address SHEPARD BATTLE CREEK, MICHIGAN I and Durability. Electricity is fast becoming the light of the oc now used on all Russia eans. This clement is NICHOLS & vessels. Rheumatism and Neuraigia Cured in Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov ered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure ot Rheu- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it to cure any and every case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia in 2 pAys, and to give immediate reliet yn chronic cases and ettect a speedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for this wondertul compound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. We take this means of giving our discovery to the publicinstead of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will gladly refund money if satistaction is not given. THe INDIANA CuEmIcaL Co., Jo-1yr Crawtordsville Ind Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, $Philip Heckadon and Margaret Heckadon, his wife, by their deed or trust dated February 1886, and recorded in the re- corder’s office within and_ for Bates county, Missouri, in book 46, page 116, conveyed to the undersigned trustee, the followi described real estate lying and being situate in the coun- ty ot Bates, state of Missouri, to-wit: The north half of the northeast quarter eo cept a strip twenty rods wide off the east end thereof,) andtheeast half of the northwest quarter, all in section No. sixteen (16) in town- ship No. forty (40) of range No. thirty-two | containing one hundred and fifty acr conveyance was made in trust to secu: payment of certain notes fully described in said deed of trust, and whereas, default has been made in the pi aymene of said notes, now past due and unpai Now, therefore at the request of the legal holder of said notes and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above describ- ed real estate at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Thursday, May 30, 1889, between the hours of twelve o’clock m. and two o’clock p m. ofthatday for the purpose of satisfying said debt, interest ae costs. THOS. J. SMITH, 24-4 Trustee. . ALIFORNIA. LAND OF Discover | , “ONSUMPTI A STH UGS, 6x ASE oe ces “A DISEASES THRO ae oe ay. Gurnee Send ‘or metal per battle 3 por Ae NE MED Sherffs Sale. Bv virtue and authority otf a special execution issued trom the office of the clerk of the circuit court ot Bates coun- ty. Missouri, returnable at the June term, 1889, ot said court, to me directed in favor of the state of Missouri: at the relation and to the use ot Oscar Reeder, ex-officio collector ot the revenue of Bates county in the state ot Missouri, and against John A Moberg and J. L.Rix, administrator of John A. Rix, deceased, Ihave levied and seized upon all the right, title, interest and claim of the said defendants of, in and to the tollow- ing described real estated in Bates coun- ty. Missouri, to-wit: Lots one (1), six (6), seven (7), eight (8), nine (9) and ten (10) of block twenty-one (21) in the city of Rockville, Bates county, Missouri, I will on Tuesday, June 18, 1889, between the hours of nine e’clock torenoon and five o’ciock in the atter- noon of that day, at the east front door of the court house in the city Bates county, Missouri, sel! or so much thereot as at public vendue to the SANTA ABIE AND CAT-R-CURE SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY F. M. CRUMLEY & CO. Bee-Try SANTA Apie CHEWING Gem. A natural CalitorniaGum. By swallow- ing the saliva produced in chewing will materially aidwligestion. WOODWARD, FAXON & CO, DISTRIBUTING AGENFS, Kansas City, Mo. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a special execution issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates cointy | Missouri, returnable at the June term, 1889, of said court, to me directed in favor of the state ot Missouri at the rela- tion and to the use ot Oscar Reeder, ex- officio collector of the revenue of Bates county, Missour., and against Samnel P. | Ashcraft, I have levied and seized upon all right, title, interest and claim ot the said defendant of, 1n and to the follow. ing described real estate being situate ad'| aces in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: tor cash to satisty said i The northwest quarter of the north- conte. GEO. G. GLA: ROOK, west quarter of section twenty-one (21) 25-4 Sheriff ot Bates County. | township fort (42)of range twentv- pa = nine (29), all in Bates county, Missouri, | Iwill, on Tuesday, June 18, 1889, between the hours of nine o” torenoon and five o’clock tn y, at the east front dcor , in the city of Butler, unty Missouri, sell the same, or | h be required, at hest bidder for! ion and costs_ GEO. EG: GI. AZEBROOK, 25-4¢ Sheritt Bates County. Dissolution Notice. Notice is hereby given that the co-partner- ship of F. M. Crumley and E. L. Rice. in the drug business under the firm name oi F. M. Crumley & Co. has this day dissolved co-part- nership by mutual consent: F. M. Crumle’ retiring from the firm. The business will still be conducted at the o! a b: L. Rice, who assumes all the September lst, 1888, and will ci nding ac- counts due the firm. This 20th day of April, 1s8g. F. M. Crumiry, TE. L, Rice. 33-38 MO ) Having Moved my DRY COO) ; To my new and elegant }my old customers and the public Generally to ca DRY GOODS | a8xD HYPOPHOSPHITES wn Fl Entire Stock of quarters oq the Southwest corner of the square, a special invitation is extend to @ stock of We ep nothing but first-clasp JE Our horsez are the best, our vehicles rigs. are not excelled. Ix skort we run the L Boss. Liver | Stable | of Butler, andj extend an invitation to all to call and give us a trial. cules ne fi LEWIS & FRAZLE: aie suing —_ drug Co., ARBUCKLES name on @ package of COFFEL - guarantee of excellence. , ARIOSA COFFEE is kept in all first-cl-<« stores from the Atlantic to the Pucs... COFFEE is never good when exposed to the =e Always buy this nd in hermeti: sealed ONE POUND PAC. AGES. It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of canes, oe doctors hope toms, suet as Cz B &e., a t use PISO’S CURE’ ror CON! ON immediately. By Druggiste. 25 cents SCOTT'S |. EMULSION GF PURE COD LIVER OIL | Almost as Palatable as Milk. be rigestedt Sud aestontisted by the, mot ensitive styumach, when the pisin off cannot be tolersted; and by the com ation of the oil with the hypophe® ‘tes $s much more efficacious. Remarkable 2s a fiesh procaeez. Persous gain rapidly while takieg it SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by cians to be the Finest and Best prepee nin the world for the relief and eure of CONSUMPTIGN, SCROFULA. GEHERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, SLDS and gg wage coucHe e great remedy for Cmsumptian, matte fa Children, “ Sold ig alt Druggislt

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