The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 18, 1889, Page 3

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)

phere eee artemis neers Bheumatism and Neuratgia Cured in| St. Louis, Sept. 9 —A mob of arm- ed white men sury The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov} ound which acts with truly pidity in the cure ot Rheu- We guarantee it morning, overpowered Sheriff Evans and took from his cell George Bush, a negro, seventeen years old,charged | with outraging a little white girl of five years, and hanged him from one of the windows of the court house. Marshall, Mo., Sept. boring men, Frank Ble shall, and Frank Cowen, of Gilliam, were killed early yesterday moinivg about a quarter of a mile east of Slater by the Kansns City passenger train on the Chicago & Alton rail- road. Bothare supposed to have fallen asleep on” the track while ism and Neuralgia. a ure any and every case of acute atory Rheumatism and Neuralgia to give immediate reliet n chronic cases and ettect a speedy cure. Li On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent , we will send to any address the ription for this wondertul com pound can be filled by your home druggist We take this means of ving our discovery to the public instead utting it out as a patent medicine, it much less expensive. fund money if satistaction is not Tue INDIANA CHEMICAL Co., Crawtordsville Ind jn 2 DAYS, and ett, of Mar- Thomas H. Anderson, who has been appointed minister resident and consul general to Bolivia, isa lawyer living in Cambridge, O. At one timé he was prosecuting attor- ney of Guernsey county, O. He has been at active politician and served on the republican executive committee of the Buckeye stute. Bathing in a Michigan lake of hair-dye, a Jackson (Mich.) red -hair- ed lass lately had her locks changed to the hue of the raven’s wing. a2. JUST OT THIS WE! TREASURY O: Jewels Of the ible scinating narantive ever written; large ‘ott AW) Desnital tilgstratlons: .; chance of a lifetime; sen 2S ; most liberal terme octavo 800 pages; While in New York Genera! Legi- time narrowly escaped going Ludlow street jail for a printiny 69 University Place, New York. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beantilics the hair, Promotes a luxuriant growth, Jay Gould ha is health this summer. rward to many absolutely fu retirements from business. Hair to its Youthful Color. Prevents Dandruff and hair falling! 1 HANDY WITH PISTOLS. Worthies of the Frontier Who Killed Whenever They Shot. There are no first-class pistol shots in Louisville: there are few east of the Mississippi; indeed, they are not plen- tiful anywhere in the country nowae Withput any exeepti in many parts Jn ante-bwllum days, when the code duello was in vogue in the South, there were a great many famous shots with Woe often read how such JON \ST A strings and weeds in two with bullets tighting-ground. But when the code was abolist c revolver shooting in s out with it, or r the wild Western country, which was then being opened up to settlement. There were never finer pistol-shots nthe world than many of the noted desperadoes and killers who have figured in the romanti of the West. fted out inte HIMRops : CURE f" ASTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians and sold by Drug- gists throughout the world, Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUF’G CO. SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH: VITALITY How Lost! How Re arcely a story about Wild Bill's proficiency with his pistol that is not trite. quickest, surest shot eve He had killed nearly forty time. ‘not counting Indians and greas- ers,” as the bad men used pleasantly y. It was the rarest thing that he shot his victim more than once. His favorite spot in which to plant his deadly bullet was between the eyes. He occasionally shot his man through the heart by way of variation. said that he co ean into the air He-was the ld throw an oyster- and put twelve bul- reached the could also send six bullets through the hole made by the first ball in a target seventy yards away. shooting he never appeared to take aim, but sent his leaden flying on their mission in seemingly the most careless and off-hand way All the killers with big records and private graveyards shot in much the Billy the Kid, Clay Allison, Bat Masterson, Sam Holliday, the Erp brothers, ‘‘Comanche” Jack Stillwell and other frontier all shot with noapparent aim. All of them were professional killers, andin their later days, when abun- dance of practice had made them dex- terous in the art of murder, most of them shot their victims always be- tween the eyes, in imitation of Wild THE SCIENCE OF L' AScientificand Standard Popular Medical Treatise onthe Errors of Youth, Premature Decline, Nervous q Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood. USTEDVITALITY UNTOLD MISERIES Resulting from Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or Enervating and unfittin; tk, Business, the Married’ or Social Relation. same manner. worthies of the 4 mal, eetpaias cou 3 To show how quick these men were, Captain Harry Horn, of the Okla homa show, tells a story of Wild BilL Captain Horn was a deputy sheriff under Bill, and was in the saloon in Deadweod with him when he was Ieilled. Bill was playing poker and was skinning out a haad when his murderer stepped behind him, delib- erately put a revolver to his head, and blew his brains out. Bill was killed almost instantly, but before he top- pled from his chair dead he managed to throw his cards down, get both his pistols out, and cock them. Such mar velous quick action almost passes be- lief. —Washington Post. —_— Oe —Yne preface to *‘Finkerton’s Mod- ern Atlas,” published in 1815, says: “Geography is a study so universally instructive and pleasing that it has for nearly a century been taught even to females, whose pursuits are usually foreign from serious researches. In the trivial conversations of the social | circle, in the daily avidity of the oe- currences of the times, geography has become an habitual resource to the elegant female as well as to the pro- | found philosopher.” GOLD AND JEV ~ from the National Medi: St., Boston, Mase., to ‘Re. 4 Bulainch for books of letters for advice should be has permanently cured TrovsaNDs S pronounced by doctors hope- If you have premonitor. symp- | such as Cough, c a $ CURE For CO} @ liately. 7 ase SUMPTION | ' FOR CONGRESS. J. L. SULLIVAN. The Letter Which the Pugilist Pro- claims his Intention. | sand fold more magnetic than he who, | having marked out an ethical path for To the editor of the Evening Sun: | | —Sir. A good deal has been said | about my becoming a candidate} for congress. I write to say that | after thinking the matter over, I | have decided that when the time comes to elect a new congressman in Boston I will be a candidate on the democratic ticket if the nomination is offered me. There are several rea- sons which have induced me toadopt this course. In the first place I have always supported the party and voted for it. Iam sound as far as my politi- cal record is concerned, and feel that I deserve the support of the party on that score. Then I have personal friends and general admirers in Boston to elect me anyhow. Any man who doubts my popular- ity with the American people has only got to travel about with me to get rid of that notion. Some may criticise my occupation in life. They don’t know what they are talking about. My business is, and always has been, ever since I came before the public, to encour- age physical culture. Young fellows don’t care what they read about a lot of small fight- ers and second rate champions, but the sight of one man witha nation- al reputation and everybody looking up to him fires them with ambition, and encourages them in the task of gettiug up their musele. Many a young man is bigger and stronger because my example has set him to Work. Then besides, with my maches and exhibitions I have entertained hun- dreds of thousands all over the country. I ad, ave also furn through the newspapers, interesting reading to the millions. People have got to feel grateful to those who entertain them. As for my methods of carrying on business and my dealing with oth- er Ey uen, Who can eriticise them? If ke a promise, I keep it 1 have always looked after my friends , and no man can accuse me of not acting fairly with him. A Sunday school teacher can say no more than that. But what I feel to be more impor tint than all else is the work that I |mers. They represent, as it were, Infinite Tact, Not Beauty, Requisite to | Win It. 1 Virtue, unfortunately, does not fas- | cinate. The veriest scoundrel that | t 1 ever drew ¢ th is apt to be a thou- himself, procee ds religiously to follow it. All women like insinuating man- what a garniture of truffles represents on an entree. They give flavor as well as artistic beauty. The fascinating man is always a skilled artist. He must assume, if he have it not, a ten- derness that never loses sight of itself, and he must continually show an ap- Preciation that presents him always in the light of a suppliant on bended knee, and never as one who demands or expects any thing. Nearly all women are vain, and the man who would fascinate must begin by flattering a woman's vanity. But he must likewise take care that his modus operandi is never discovered or its existence ever suspected. Other- wise he is lost. The courage and in- dependence born of possession unfor- tunately incite to the reckless expres- sion of absolute truth, and a man who desires to please a woman should never tellthe whole truth. Suggest it, play with it, ignore it entirely, but reveal it, never! The Latin race are adepts in the art of fascination. Why? Because they are always lovers or pretend to be lovers, which in the end amounts to the same thing. Emerson expressed an unalterable truth when he said: ‘‘All the world loves a lover.” But in order tobe a lover it is not necessary to rush into vulgar protestations of affection. A glance of the eye, a pressure of the hand. the particular curl of the lip in asmile, the hundred trivial courtesies that appeal to the feminine sympa- thies, are embodied in the man who fascinates. And when he has once mastered the secret of feminine incli- nation and the special qualifications of feminine taste his way is clearly marked. Be he ugly as Satan he will not fail in personal maguetism.—Once a Week. Drunkenness or the Liquor Hab: Positively Cured by administering Dr, Haines’ Golden Specific. nbe given in a cup of coffee « hout the knowle is absalutel 1 permar tem once impre it becc liquor ars, add Race st. Cinc Romantic Heligoland’s Doom. Okluhoma squatters are complain- ing that the new land-office is ‘pulling the ground from under their feet,” but the literal meaning of that phrase is at present illustrated on the island of Heligoland, where a stormy sea re- cently toppled over a large cliff, to- have done to keep up the reputation of mong other nations. The best men from everywhere have tried to beat and since I first began I have kept the pugilistie championship of the world in this country. », but failed, There isn’t a self respecting Amer- ican, no matter what tomfool ideas he may have about boxing in gener- al, who does not feel a patraotic pride at the thought that a native- born American, a countryman of his can lick any man on the face of the earth. It is human nature, and this feel- ing of patriotism applies especially to Boston, where I was born, and where I shall appear as a candidate. As to my fitness for the place, I ean prove that in a few words. A man is elected to congress to look out for the interests of those who send him there. That will be my mot- to, and living up to it will be my business. Iknow what is wanted by my friends and the citizens of Boston generally. And I'll try and get it. In ny travels about this country and Europe I have had as much ex- perience in public speaking as most people. Til have no trouble about getting a hearing in congress orin making people pay attention to what I say. Aman who who can quiet a crowd in Madison Square Garden as I have done can make his presence felt in congress or any other place on earth. I therefore announe my willing- ness to enter political life. This communication, drawn up in consultation with friends and with their advice, is the longest one I ever addressed to any paper. Ishall be obliged to you if you print it. Yours truly. Jous L. Serrivay, Champion of the World. gether with its top, stratum of pas- tures and cottages, and at the same time revealed the existence of a cliff undermining at least one-third of the remaining scant area, which has now been reduced to a little less than one- third of an English square mile. Year by year the sea encroaches upon the rocks of the west shore, but the full extent of its ravages was only lately ascertained by the discovery of an old map, showing not less than eighteen different villages, with castles, forts and monasteries, where the water now covers the submarine rocks toa depth of half a hundred fathoms. Like the island of St. Helena, the cliffs of Heligoland rise abruptly from an ocean abyss, which more than probably will swallow up the last breakwater before the middle of the next century. —Albany (N. Y.) Journal. —_—_ e =__ —Light colored fruits, such as pears, peaches and apples, should be dropped into cold water as they are pared. This will preserve their color, but they must not be kept there long, or the flavor will be destroyed. It is not so important to keep peaches a light ‘color as it is pears. In all preserves there is danger of the juice of the fruit reducing the sirup; it ts well to let it remain yncovered for twenty- four hours, and then if the sirup is found thin, pour it off and scald again. —The English sparrows have almost exterminated the wrens. orioles and meadow larks, and in five years more the goose will be about the only native bird left.—Detroit Free Press Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice having had placed in his hands by an East India missionary the formula ot a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure ot Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al! throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Neryous complaints, after having tested its wondertul curative powers in thousands of cases, has telt it his duty to make it Known to his suffering fellow. Actuated by this motive and a_ destre to relieve human suffering. I will send tree ot charge, to all who desire it, th ceipt, in Germac, French or with tull directions tor prepar | using. Sent by mail by addresing stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noves, | 149 Power's Block. Rocheste N. Y. _ MATCALESS » FOR + SHAMPOOING + i 3 d An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL | S JACOBS OlL FOR WATERMEN. lute cure ter old wounds, chapped hands, Will positively Ask for the OR- IGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT. Sold sores, bu andall s cure all by F M. Crumley & Co, box—by mail 30 cants. A NEW DEPARTURE. Solid Trains between; Hannibal and Austin—Through Sleeping Cars Be- and Galveston; and Kansas City tween Chicago Louis and Austin; and San Antonio and Intermediate ~ should be guided by what On Aug. 11th the Missouri, Kan- sas & Texas railway inaugurated a New Quick Train Service on its lines, reducing materially the time between Hannibal, Sedalia and Kansas City & Texas points. trains are now run between Hanni- bal, Sedalia, Ft. Scott, Parsors, Denison, Ft. Worth, Waco, Taylor, Elgin and Austin. These trains car- ry through sleepers between Chica- go & Denison, Sherman, Dallas, Cor- sicana, Houston and Galveston: also through sleeping cars St. Louis to Austin and Galveston; Kansas City to San Antonio via Taylor and Aus The equipment of these trains consist of handsome comfortable smoking cars, elegant free reclining chair cars (between Hannibal and Sedalia on all trains, and on night trains between St. Lou- is & Ft. Scott) in addition to luxuri- ous Pullman Buffett sleeping cars to points above named. 3 and 4 carry through sleepers to and from Chicago and Galveston in con- nection with the “Burlington route” and the Houston & Texas railway leaving Chicago at 5:55 p. m., arriv- ing at Missouri and Kans next morning and day; Texas points the following day. ward, leaving Missouri and Kansas points in the afternoon and evening and arriving at Chicago 9:15 a. m. next day; connecting with east bound morning trains on all roads out of Chicago, making a saving in time from five to ten hours to all eastern no mistake as to the route; For the north and east that your tickets read over the Mis- St. Louis, RHEUMATISM, CRAMPS, ACHES, PAINS AND BRUISES. i Sold by Druggiss ont Desiere Everywhere. The Charies A. Vogeler Ce., Balte., Ma. tin. day coaches, Trains Nos. ES STHNACoucks, ORAL Going north- WUNGS > Sold on Send or circular $] per tettle 3 pr 9 & points. :d further information ply to any M. K. & T. ticket agent. Gaston Mesiter. ass. & Ticket J \.NDENWOOD COLLEGE tion healthful « beau- (ABIETINE MED: ROVILLE CAL SANTA ABLE 3 : eres dr. CC. i. BiGE. “specialties. For cat = logue, ete., address Bev. BOBT LEWIN, D.D., Pres., Bt. Charles, Mo Order of Pablicati Bates county, Missouri, lation and to the use te ofticio collector of the revenue of Bates conn- ty in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, Sheperd B. Philpot and Susan Penn, defend- ST. LOUIS REAL ESTATE e NOW IS THE TIME TO INVEST. A Few Hundred Dollars Invested in Some of Our Properties Will Double itself county in the stat and files her y things that the above named defendants, Shep- erd B. Philpot and Susan Penn, are pon-resi- dents of the state of Missouri ordered by the said clerk in defendants be notified by publication plaintiff has commenced a suit against them in this court by petition, the object and general nature of which is to enforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinqnent taxes of the years Iss4 and 1886, amounting in the ag- gTegate to the sum of $8 61-100, interest, costs, commission and fees, upon the cribed tracts of land situated =z Whereupon it + Py We have recently Iaid out and placed upon the cation, that said market several subdivisions, in which we can offer lots ee prices to first purchasers—a number in each havi traordinary- 2 ments from $ per mont! Eave the best raliroed frequent trains. Our special properties are: together with A few miles west of city limits, on St. L., K.C.& Col. Railway. “Atchison Route.” Iai style; lots from 820 to $1.20 each. ven (11) of section 39) of range thirty-two ( that unless the said defendants be and at the next term of this court. to be begun and holden in the city of Batler, souri, on the first Mond and on or before the six term shall so long continue, before the end of the term) petition according to law, the same will be ta! en as confessed and judgmert rendered accord- ing to the praver of said petition, and the above described real es! Adjotning city limits, twenty minutes from Union depot on Wabash, park styie; large lots at from Bates county M S00 t0 $4.00 - ay thereof (if the and if not then Just south of Tower Grove Park. twenty minutes and plead to said | 7om.U: inion di Mountain) Rai! Other investm: from $1,000 to $350,000—improved and unimproved. THERE Is KO BOOM HERE. e sold to satisfy the | Our prices are based on actual values. Please mention this same. And it is further ordered by the clerk atore- said that acopy hereof be published in the Butler Weekly Times, s weekly newspaper printed and published in Butler, Bates county Missouri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first day of the next term ofsaid court copy from the record CARR & GREENWOOD, Real Estate Agents, And FRANK OBEAR, Resi Estate Broker, © Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid withthe seal of said Done at office this the 23rd_day of JOHN C HAYES, Cirenit Cierk. {skaL} court hereunto ~ ARBUCKLES’ name on a package of COFFEE isa guarantee of excellence. COFFEE is kept in all first-class stores from the Atlantic to the Pacific. is never good when exposed to the air. Notice is hereby given, that letters of ad- Ministration « I ALL MEN whose pursuita place them on the water, wach as Seafarers, Lake and River Craftsmen, Yachtmen, Boatmen, &c., CAPT. PAUL BOYTON, the World-Renewned Swim- mer, whose autograph is here shown,says,as follows: “I don’t see how I could get aleng without St. Jacobs Oil.” — CURES —— — ey DISEASES THROAT — Gunna QuaRANTEED CURE IRN <7 CATARR AND CAT-R-CURE SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY gre Crs wine Gum, i. Gon tty swallow. n chewing will in One Year. y been sold. The terms are ex- —nonthly, fy or annus! pay- on to eed pope Ail our best part of barbs, and facilities, conn fares acd ELMWOOD PARK id out in park pom HILLSIDE BRANDON PLACE sas jopot on, Osk Hill & Crowndeiet (Iron way; lots at $150 to S00 each. ent properties in and around city beper when writing. 16 N. Sth &t., 6t. Louis, Me. saan 804 N. Sth Bt., Bt. Louls, Ke. ARIOSA COFFEE bny this brandin ONE POUND PACKAGES. Administrator's Notice. Brown Aci: ietraier.

Other pages from this issue: