The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 29, 1889, Page 7

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ae eagent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches. is Gold, Silver and Filled Cases IEWELRY STOR. ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY . FARMERS! +22 0-—_ Bay-TO SAVE MONEY SEE a A. C. SAMPSON, Rich Hill. D. H. HILL, Hume. a] 1G. Mer: K, Foster. C.S. PUTNAM, Adrian. HUGH M. GAILY, Amorett J.S. PIERCE, Virginia, or YDER, Butler, For a Policy of Insurance in the WWELLING : HOUSE :CO., D. W.S) nd ace nike ty. KANSAS CITY, OMAHA, lis, nt 4 nt, sf ier, ler, ~§ Daily Trains, 5 THE COLORALO SHORT LIN 4 To? Tog Q Daily Trains 2 TU; exas and the Southwest. ansas City to St, Louis PUEBLO AND DENVER, FRANZ BERNHARDT’S “r= | 1 whorl 5 Is headquarters tor fue Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver Spectacles of all kinds and for all age are cordially invited to visit his estal his splendid display of beautitul good The Besi Waterprocf | 54, tieets the frst | Saturday in each mo | Miami Chapt R 1A Masons, eets second ‘Lhurs in each She j meets the first | {.0, O. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 1So meets ev: day night. | Butler Encampment No. 6 1 jznd g | i i ets the nd ath Wednesdays in each month DENTI-~®, BUTLER, - OFFICE OPERA HOUSE. Lawyers. PILDEN HI. SMITH. ATTORNEY AT LAW Batler, Mo. Will practice Zin ali the courts. Special at tention given to collections and litigated laims. CaLvin F. Boxtey, Prosecuting Attorney. BOXLEY & GRAVES, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. joes T. SMITH, ATTOR: Office over Butler y AT LAW. ational Bank, Butler, W. O. JACKSON, Attorney at Law. Jewelry Store. W. BADGER LAWYER. Will practice in all courts. All legal business strictly attended to, Office over Bates Co. Na- tional Bank. Butler. Mo. | eee & GRAVES, ATTORN&YS AT LAW. 00 WULMAN@BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS cown'e-Drag Store. Sw O**F Hane nt. 4 8. ere re 3 sT sas City to Denver without change H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t, | LOUIs, MO. iC A. DENTON 6G “ ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. pe Ww i SI1"*ALNAdOUd AAS ALVLSOE TWAHer OD PP UHAANS AA 'Ca “Ez S ad ly x ss aot e so 4. eas < O wo A Ca t 1}aNOA AovId HLIM ALUAdCad J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OrricrE—East Side Square, over |Max Weiner’s, 1g-ly BuTieR, Mo. | DR.J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ' Office, front room over P. O. All janswered at Office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- | eases. a Cc. BOUL « Surgeon. Office n de square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesot women and chil- ren a specialty. calls RICE hysician and issouRI. Ot- Crumley & Co. J. *. WALLS, PHYSICIAN oF AND SURGEON. Havan jin medic ti W. EE. TUCKER, | MISSOURI. | A. L. Graves. | Office, West side square, over Jeter’s | , | town Rolling Mili from _ cent in that of unskilled labor at the wat STRANGE ATTACKS. A Young Girl at Peston Has a Narrow | Escape from Being Buried Alive. i Boston, Mass.. May 22.—Pretty Kate Patten of this city, has just passed through a horrible experience which has aroused no little interest Miss Patten, who is 22 years old, after suffering a few days with dipthe was pro- nounced dead Monday by the physi- ans who attended her. She to breathe and the heart discontinu- Just asthe physicians al circles. ased an its action. were leaving roomafter straight- ening her luubs the patient began to | , show signs of life and in a short | t vas able to converse with her | (relatives. Though very weak she j was able to say ina low voice, “I| | : | aw wot dead | | A few hours later the same pri cone through, | either of t the r laying out dead and prepara ithe body were made. The jhad been in this state for | hour when sh nearly n showed the doctor pronounced her comparatively out a of life and shortly after jof danger and in a hopeful condi- | tion. | What's the se in saying that jeatarrh cannot be cured when Dr. | Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is so sure jand positively certain that the pro- | prietors off 00 reward for a case Catarrh which they cannot cure. | A pint of the medicine i DY | dissolving on | the powder in druggists; 50 cents. ge of Sold by all How it Beets to Drop 3.000 Feet. Washington Post: ‘How does it feel to let go ot the balloon when you are 2.000 or 3,000 feet in the air?” Thomas F. parachute jumper. not tell. rap- idly he has hardly time to analyze his fee said Grinley, the misure I can- One comes down so - Macclain, ny partner, compares the sensation. to thai of being u the balloon We cut almost pset in river. loose from the me- chanically, and before we realize we down 28 co ple of hundred feet, and thereafter the remainder of the descent is easy. It does not jaryou until when you i strike on your feet. In fact, there is less jarring to the system than if you jumped off of a six-foot high fence. any appre- }ciable difference in the air to the height which we attain. It is a great deal purer, though, but not as ‘rarefied as you would suppose.” are loose we have shot Neither is there Marvelons Success. has been Ballards Horehound Syrup a marvelous success from its inception. There is no cough it will not relieve. It is guranteed to relieve all throat and lung ailments and fo1 Croup, sore throat whooping cough and all cough its action is very remarkable. Ask tor BALLARDS HOREHOUND SYRUP and take no] other kiad, and you will not be disapont- ed Dr. E. Pyle, Agent.% Reduction of Wages Since the Election. Last week the coal operators of the Pittsburg and Hocking valley districts decided to reduce the wag- es of miners 5 cents per ton, to date from the first of May. The broad Bethlehem, last Friday. were noti- fied of a reduction in their wages of about 35 cents per day. McLana- ban, Smith & Co., of Hollidaysburg and the Hollidaysburg Iron compa- ny have reduced the wages of their puddlers from $3.75 to $2.50 per ton. The puddlers in the Sunberry Nail Works last week stopped work j upon seeing a notice posted in the | mill that their wages would be re | duced to $3.a ton. Last Monday 2 reduction of 5 per cent in the pay of | the employes of the Pottsville i Iron & Steel Co., went into effect. On the same day the wages of near- ly all the puddlers at the Bethlehem | Iron Works were reduced from § 80 to $3.45 per ton and at the All 90 to $3.- | 25 perton. The first of April also | | brought a reduction of 5 per cent in | | the wages of skilled labor and 10 per | | Pennsy ia Steel Works at Ste ton, affecting about two tl five hundred men. The pudd the Lebanon Nut and Bolt Wo t have struck against reduction in of 25 cents a to Wednesday notices were the Clark Thread Wor of areduction in wages jto 15 per cent. Notice | given by the Columbia Iron and on Lancaster that their mill will be | closed o 6th. owing to the dullnes the market, and the: Hincley Locomotive Works of Bo ton, shut down on will remain closed dullness of trade being the cause. Parties know s: week the Monongahela mine will be without work or wages, there bei 6,000 of them, many of ther with families. . edto be should who that before tne end of this ; Music. Mc the ts hear at } + ilight hour—that is if it hay | \ ch HAVING THE EVIL EYE. One of the Most Familiar Superstitions Among the Itahans. when he s upward at an Was nurse let the pens to be the music of the supper | j31ea. Pope Oil. re z € Tid i is What 2 hallowing intlue | that the call to breakfast weaves around }y ime univer- the sovl How many ¥ any i memories of past buckw cakes, te r ten heat pes ore the mind g } uv of days and scenes and as- it that after a lapse of 50 onthe result of base bal up on 2 how these pi the past come tloatin: i mind's eye, radiant with th splendors nd Winging their way into our pres- minding us of the mutability of ali earthly things, and that the squaw of the soiled Italian exile who twist the music of the hand organ will soon pound on the window and de- mand recognition and pennies from the administration. kindles within Such music the arena of ¢ hearts the heavenly hope that the day may yet dawn when the police will have orders to run in all enemies of the human race. How many forgotten memories do your the strains of music awaken! All na- ture is vocal, } cities like New York, where the dis- ete:, they revive, and cause to | like a glowing | e the spirits of music, re- | such | death. In mother her well for its age, his crops are looking that his team is spit at your feet do Sthis you wiil ! same ct of politeness. A per- son who wandered through [Upper | Carnio! ds everything he jsaw woul con } H r ONES. ered Tn Nap of — ende ent which t class used to sh oand the pet uames L they call them by are often so inde- cent that it would be impossible to reproduce themin English and al- Ways so contemptuous that they would be i lation. The well-known habit of Neapoli- ein any other re- tans to offera guest anything he may se has probably the same origin. It is, of course, now to a very large extent only a form of courtesy; but {even now another feeling lurks be- hind, at least in a good tany cases. Your host has been delighted at admiration of his sessions; pos- he would have been ticularly in large disappointed if it had not been so warinly expressed as it was; but mal howl of the leather-lunged vend- | still he is a little afraid of the luck er of garden truck isallowed to blend with the sad, weird the would be purchaser of rai wail of st off ment, while nearer, of the kind things you have bring. staid may By offering the objects you have liked best to you, and receiving clearer, deadlier your certain refusal to accept them, than bofore can be heard the exas-| he puts them in a badlightand thus perating whang whang of the fish horn. counteract the evil effects of your praise. He says to fate, you see It is well that it is so, for what a] their value is not great, after all. k, dismal abode this earth would be, if tomb—what a di there came This superstition, however, is by no means Confined to Naples or Ita- not unceasingly from it to salute the | ly; it is said to be common in China eur of its Creator songs of praise, of | and Japan, and among negroes and joy, of love. And when the shades red Indians. Even in England it is of night have shrouded the earth | pot unknown. In fact, ina ll countries with impenetrable gloom these | when visiting a sick acquaintance it songs of joy, of love and praise con- | is better to say, “I am glad to hear tinue to ascend, thanks to the Amer-] you are a little better to-day,” than ican tom-cat, whose melody is more | «{ am glad to see you looking so excruciating than the Japanese tom-| much better.” tom crchestra.—Texas Siftings. Wim. Roberts, M. D., Physician to the Manchester, Eng., Infirmary and Luuatie Hospital, Professor of Med- icine in Owen's College, says: *Grad- ual failure of strength, increased pallor or sallowness, and disinclina- tion for exercise is one of the promi- nent symptoms of kidney disease.” Warner's Safe Cure is the only rem- edy that is guaranteed to cure kid- ney disease. A few days ago aNew York spe- er two bottles. One contained a sec- Nor is the belief confined to the lower classes. A per@on who is highly educated, very intelligent, and by no me preju- diced in religious matters, was once asked whether the words acted as an evil charm or whether they merely foretold evil. The reply was: “I don’t know; but I do know from ex- perience that whenever anybody tells me I am looking well I fall ill within three days; and the more intimate I am with the person that says it the worse the illness is.” There may be a connection between this super- loom weavers in Cutter’s silk mill at | cialist in pathology showed the writ- | gtition and that of the evil eye—we are inciined to think there is—but tion of a healthy lung of a man who | they must not be confounded, as one had lived in the country and the | is often found in districts where the other the lung of a man who h lived and died in New York. The aa other is unknown. Satisfying all people is the one country lung showed a clear pink thing beyond the reach of Provi- color; the city lung was almost | dence. Last week there were men black, and it was impossible to trace | in Kansas who looked out upon the the veins dirt. The experiment proved, of course, that the air in New York is so impregnated with dust and dirt that the lungs become in as much need of a bath asif they were laid in a bed of charcoal.--Hartford Courant. The new pr bil Sanderson of ria, adaugh- r of a late supr judge of that} e. Sheis 24 and pretty. Ina | ets new opera, elair- as given in TP ° 5 Sy-] aris the other } through the smut and | "#2 and wished for a few days of drouth. Kickers will kick. The spectroscope has made report and declares that all the heavenly bodies are composed of the sa terial. Possibly in 2 short tim spectroscope and teles i able to take a census of “oth worlds than ours. y feel they h, to the Tonic. 15 é | Pe : | The Value of Longevity. Mr. Felix I the value o' “Can there be }and Keats foresaw t sue of their strugglesag: nst bigetry. or that Cer- > gloom of his misery gens of the dawn “Spinoza and Schiller died at the | threshold of their goal; Paseal, Har- “tvey. Macauley, Buckle and Bichat left their ix itable works half tin- ished; Raphael, Mozart and Byron died at the verge of a summit which perhaps no othe proach. r foot shall ever ap Who knows how often, since the | dawn of modern science, the chill of ' death has a hand that had all but lifted the veil of Isis’ temple? Or in how many thousand lives time alone would have solved all discords into hi An increase of ty would indeed, solve the vexing riddles of existence; it would furnish the peculiar endorsement of Tt would fortune a palsied monies? longe Malluck’s conclusion. he vicissitudes of their equalizing tendencies, it would supply a miss- jing link the arguments of that natural religion that trusts the equi- poise of justice in the apparent ca- prices of human fate. The price of longevity would re- deem the mortgage of our earthly paradise”—and it can be prolonged and should be, with care and the use of proper medicine at the right time. Owing to the stress, the worry and the annoyance of every day life, there is no doubt but that tens of thousands of men and women year- ly fill premature graves. Especially after middle life should a careful watch be kept over one’s physical condition. The symptoms of kidney disease, such as becoming easily tired, headache, neuralgia, feeble heart action, fickle appetite, a splendid feeling one day and an all-gone one the next, persistent cough, trouble in urinating, ete., should be diligently looked into and at once stopped through a feithful use of Warner's Safe Cure, which has cured tens of thousands of such troubles and will cure yours. Experiencing no pain inthe region of the kidneys is no evidence that they are not diseased, as those great purifying organs have very few nerves of sensation, and oftentimes the kidneysare positively rotting and being passed away through the urine before the victim is aware he is suf- fering from advanced kidney dis- ease, which is only another name for Bright's Disease. To preserve life and to be well while you live are two cardinal vir tues, nud it is time well spent to give this vital subject earnest and careful attention, not to use the knowledge acquired in a judicious and intelligent manner. Wood made Fireproof. If this could be cheaply an effect- ually done there are few improve- ments which would be more largely conducive to the welfare of man- kind. The following paragraph therefore, which has been lately in circulation, may be fairly pronounc- ed “important if true, and interest- ing at any rate.” It is stated that a New Englander has recently discovered a cheap method of dissolving zine by com- bining it with hydrogen and produc- ing a solution called zinc water. This liquid if applied to certain woods, notably, whitewood, makes it absolutely fireproof, andat a low Edward Atkeson, the Boston economist, in speaking of it at Cornell University, says he regards is discovery as one of the most | important of the age, and one that | will surely revolutionize fire insur- cost. Mr. t ance, as well as immensely decrease the los: The invention is kept secret for the present. Only one foreigner, Sir Lyon Playfair, the English scientist, knows of it. He corroborates all that is claimed for the invention, and says that the in- ventoris abungling chemist, but that he has a faculty of blundering into the choicest secrets of nature's labora- As soon as patents are per- 2d capital interested, zinc | water will become an article of com- j merce. es by fire. ii i 7 4 | (| | i ii eal ae

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