The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 6, 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)

C. FINS} | Union Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. ‘When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When shehad Children, she gavethem Casterta | Hundreds on Hundreds ot Families in W. E. TUCKER DENTIST, BUTLER, Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Lawyers. WV eO. JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. over Badgley Bros., Store. TILDEN H. SMITH, ss ATTORNEY AT LAW. —— Butler, Mo. Will {practice in all the courts. Special at tention given to collections and litigated laims. Carvin F. Boxtey, Prosecuting Attorney.‘ CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. OHN T. SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office over Butler National Bank, Butler, Mo. W. BADGER LAWYER. Will practice in all courts. All legal business strictly attended to, Office over Bates Co. Na- tional Bank. Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, | indifference with DIRE WANT KOTAS. Investigations Only make the Situa- tion the Worse. Absolute Misery. St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 30.—The 2} greater the amount of information received concerning the destitution MISSOURI. |#2 North Dakota the more difficult oes it appear to form au adequate idea of the distress actually prevail- ing there. Not that there is any tendency to exagerate on the part of the sufferers but decidedly the re verse. has hitherto been treated. In the first place the area over which the distress prevails is cei- tainly much greater than was at ti:st supposed. [Mr. Marvin, chairmn of rhe relief committee, feeis vinced from the information 1 iv: ed that nearly 2,000 families, mear- ing a total upward of 20,000 people are in the last stages of destitution. The magnitude of the problem which IN THE TWO DaA- In fact, it is the extreme sensitiveness shown in this respect that is responsible for the apparent which this matter -: R. R. DEACON :-- a 8 2 "es EE ————The Best confronts the twin cities is appall- ing. How to treat the question is beyond the power of any local com- mittee to cope with. So far the coutributions are inadequate to the necessities of the case. A few bun- dles of clothing and a few cash con- tributions have been sent in. In regard to South Dakota, while the distress there is very bad, it is That Conference. Ep. Tres:—As there are 2 con- siderable number belong of your readers ing tothe church of the Uni- not to be compared either in magni-}ted Brethren in Christ, I take the tude or intensity to that of the north- opportunity to ern state. ARKINSON & GRAVES, write you a short ATTORNaYS AT LAW. Probably 1,000 families | sketch of the conference just closed HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS ——#QSCUTLERY AND GUNSteg—— Moline Farm Wagons, (Manufactured by John Deere.) OGG EB ss in the World: BUCKEYE FORCE PUMPS. Gas Pipe Fitting a: nd Pump. Repairing. EAL EE | A Desper ate Battle. Louisville, Ky., Oct. 29.—C. W. Hammond, of Cowan Station, yes- terday turned a fine blooded mare valued at $560, and a large ox into the same inclosure. The two ani- , mals had been together several times Office West Side Square, over Lans-|#¥€ destitute, but they can be nearly by this interestin down’s Drug Store. AGE & DENTON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 19-ly ButT.er, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- tases. r C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, all taken care of by the towns sur- rounding the district. W. B. Sterling, an old resident of Huron, arrived in the city to-day and gave an account of the situa- tion. There no question that a large number of people especially in Faulk and Miller couunties are in a position of destitution—that is to say they have experienced « failure in crops for three consecutive years and last year the loss was absolute. They have no means to purchase either food or fuel as their farms as a rule are mortgaged to such an ex- tent that they can not raise any more money on them. In Miller county there are 8,000 people and one-third of them will need help. They have neither food or fuel. In Huron relief is equally needed. The ladies have formed Dorcas societies and are supplying clothing. FEARS FOR THE DESTITUTE. is utler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- m_aspecialtv. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. dffice, Southwest Corner Square, over son Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- Ynah street norrh ot Pine. RN Aissouri Pacific R’y. 2 Dail” Trains .2 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE | COLORALO SHORT LINE To PUEBLO AND DENVER, , PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without cnange | H. C. TOWNSEND. | { j General Passenger and Ticket Ag’t, ST, LOuIs, MO. | Washington, D. C., Oct. 30.—Up- on presentation of facts by Hon. H. C. Hansborough, representative-el- ect from Nortii Dakota, as to the suffering condition of the settlers in that portion of North Dakota near the Fort Totten military reservation Secretary Procter has granted per mission for the settlers to secure wood from the reservation upon such conditions as may be agreed upon by the post commander ‘and board of commissioners to be ap- pointed from each county in which the suffering exists, the permission to extend to the cutting of fallen timber, dead standing timber and such trees as may be cut with bene- fit to the growth to the remaining timber. Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. We desjreto call your atteation toa remarkable article which we are selling a large amount of. One that is spoken ot in the highest terms of praise by all who have used it. It gives instanta- nerous reliet inthe worst coughs. It wil cu e where all others haye failed. It is BALLARD’S HOREHOUND SYRUP, It is absolutely the best known remedy for coughs, colds, consumption croup, bronchitis, sore throat, sore chest, ash- ma and all disease of the throat and lungs. It yon have a cough or any ot your tamily are afflicted don’t put off until too late, try this grand remedy. Dr. E. Pye, Agent. Rescued from the Grave. Ladonia, Tex., Oct. 29 —The boy baby of Mr. James Darnell. a citi- zen of Ladonia, died Saturday or g body of christians | before but as soon as they entered which opened at Deer Creek chapel | the lot they rushed at each other. Oct. 24. Bishop E. B. Keppart of | Two or three farm hands were pres- Toledo, Ohio in the chair. ent and tried to seperate them but Prof. Kumler of Avalan collese, | narrowly escaped serious injury and Missouri, and Prof. Weller of the | failed in the endeavor. The mare Lane university at Lecompton, Kas., | kicked the ox in the side with both made quite interesting reports of these church schools. In the Lane university there are 235 students and in the Avalon there are 135, a number of these students are from Bates county. There were five young men joined the conference, some ef them were put in charge of ciruits. The statistical ports of the various ministers show @ growing interest in this conference. young The following ministers were left jin Bates county to dispense the gos- peltoall who need it: A. Artez, Deer Creek; W.0O. Snow, Miami; A. Reed, Arthur, which is partly in Bates and partly in Vernon; Jobn Estep, Spruce mission. I should & new mission in and around Spruce, Center. The conference was one of great interest and will never be for- gotten by the people. On sabbath Bishop E. B. Kep- part preached a soul stirring sermon carrying the congregation on wings of love to Heaven. He occupied one hour and twenty minutes, and almost the entire time the con- gregation was in tears. Rev. Thomb was ordained after preaching by the laying on of hands These faithful ministers have gone year and to gather sheaves for the | master. Wilhs T. Inman. Spruce, Mo. H The Two Armies. The enlistments in armies were 2,750,000 and in the navy a sufficient number to swell the grand total to 3,000,000, the biggest | army ever raised in any cause. The close of the war in May, 1865, was 1,000,000, showing that nearly iwo million men had been killed or placed hors de combat. The actual killed jand died were 204,000. The pen- sion rolls a quarter of 2 century af- jter the war is over show nearly one and financial re- | have said the conference projected | Laking, Pleasant Gap and Summit! out to battle for the Lord another | the federal | strength of the federal army at the. | what was pronounced as dead by the| million wounded who still survive. i y A, rai a 2 BUCKLES 1a package of COFFEE is: «utee of excellence. _was laid in its army, from beginning to end of the | to the grave for interrment. Before | gigantic struggle, were only 600,000 | depositing it in the earth the mother | but never more than £00,000 were asked fora last look at her baby. | enrolled at any one time, while 200,- It was granted her, and when the | 000 were the most ever available at lid was removed its hands were seen | one time for active service. Of this coffin and was taken to move and further vation was carri- quest 100,000 of the 600,000 enrolled showed it was alive. It | were militia aud home guards who ed homeand is still alive and bids | never saw ab active battle.—Atlanta | fair to cheat the grave. —— } jattending physicians, and Sunday |The total enlistments of confederate number 100.000 were killed and died: | | feet nearly stunning him, but the | latter recovered and gored the mare | two or three times. Both fought | with the greatest fury. The mare | both kicked and bit, tearing chunks of flesh from the ox with her sharp | teeth, while she in turn was raked again and again by the ox’s horns. | Both were covered with blood, but continued the battle as desperately | 88 ever despite all efforts of the men to separate them. At last the ox | plunged his horn almost through |the thick part of the mare's neck. The blow was fatal, but as the mare staggered, her weight broke theox’s horn short offand she fell and died with it in her body. ‘The ox was so badly kicked and bitten that he died in the afternoon. An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINT- | MENT is only put up in large two ounce | tin boxes, and is an absolute cure tor old | sores, burns, wounds, chapped hands, | and all skin eruptions. Will positively cure all Kinds piles. Ask for the OR- | IGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT. Sold | by F M. Crumley & Co, at 25 cents] a bex—by mail 30 cants. 17 1-yr | A $100,000 Beauty, A beautiful stranger has arrived at the port of New York and to make the tour of the states. She, he, it —the stranger has no sex—hails from sunny France. The beautiful face reflects the genius of a great painter Jean Francois Millet. Its thoughts and the lesson it teaches is one that nature wrote upon the sweet heart } of a poet. Two rustig figures, afew | implements of their rude calling, a | ploughed field, a curtain of hazy evening air andin the distancea | Village spire—that is all-that makes up this $100;000 beauty. It is be- | cause there comes across this rough fields tothe bowed heads of the rustics the sacred music of “The An- | gelus,” singing hope and peace to | the lowly; it is because he who sees the picture z2lmost hears the tones | of the bell and sees the lips of the | peasants moving in prayer, that Mil-| ‘let’s work is so great as to hecome OUTLAWS DOOMED. Six More of the Harlan County Des Peradoes Kalled. Pineville, Ky.. Oct. 31.—News reached this place to-night by relia- ble parties that Judge Lewis met Howard and his gang yesterday on Martin's Fork and killed six of How- ard’s gang without losing a man. Three of the men killed were named Hall and one Whitloek. The other two names were not learned Judge Lewis and fifteen well armed men took dinner near the camp of J. P. Meyer & Co., on the Louisville and Nashville extension, about thirty miles beyond Cumber land Gap, last Friday. Men who spoke principally with the judge say that he is determined and will neyer quit his chase until Howard and his gang are all killed or driven from the country. Both parties are being reinforced daily and more blood shed is expect ed. It is thought that Howard has gone to Virginia, but is expected to return. The best citizens of Harlan coun ty are joining Lewis and with such a determined leader there is no doubt the law and order party will come out victorious and break up the gang that has been a terror to all eastern Kentucky for the last twenty five years. Do You Suffer From Rheumatism. Noone who has not been sufferer can have any idea of the excrutiating agony caused by rheumatism. This painful disease is trequently caused by a stop- pnge of the circulation of the blood, through the muscular portions of the body. BALLARD’S SNOW LINI- MENT will invariably cure this disease by penetrating every spot of the skin and drawing to the outer surtace all poison- ous matter and restoring a uatural circu- lation ot the blood. Every bottle guar anteed. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent. A PERTINENT QUERY. Is the Earth in Danger from the Drill? What Some Scientist Think. Prof. Joseph F. Jones answers, inarecent issue of the Popular Science Monthly the question: “Ig it safe to drill the earth too much?” Scrofula in Chitdren. © The following is taken from a ter written under the date of 1.1889, by Mrs. Ruth Berkl most charitable and christian } of Salina, Kas: “In the early of 1887 ecrofula appeared on tht head of my little grandchild, only eighteen months old. Shorfs after breaking out it spread rap all over her body. The scabs on A sores would peel off at the slighteg touch andthe odor that woul | arise would make the atmosphere @ the room sickening and almost wi bearable. The disease next ed her eyes and we feared she wou lose her sight. Eminent physici from the surrounding country w consulted but could do nothing & relieve the little innocent and gay it as their opinion that the case : hopeless and that it was impossib to save the child's eyeshight. was then that we decided to try Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) That med: icine at once madea speedy and com plete cure. For more than a yeak past she has been as healthy as child in the land.” Cured His Littte Child. My little boy had impurities of blood that were of a scrofulous ture, which resulted in the brea out of an absess on the hip.. I ga him Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) It p rified his blood and restored h health. As _a blood purifier it tainly has no equal. Felix Sink, Salem, N.C. Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free, SWIFT SPECIFIC Ci Atlanta, Ga. The Victim of a Pet Dog. Marshall, Mo., Oct. 31.—Two weeks ago Manny MeMillian, aged | about 18 years, was bitten on : cheek by a pet dog with which h was inthe habit of playing. Th wound was supposed to be acciden: tal, but asa precautionary measu: was immediately cauterized. Th boy attended to his business as usual until to-day when, soon after dinner, he complained of a dryness | in his throat and was soon after ~ The professor assumes the earth to be a hollow sphere filled with a gas- cous substance, called by us natural gas, and he thinks that tapping these reservoirs will cause disas- trous explosions, resulting from the lighted gas coming in coutact with that which is escaping. He com- pares the earth to a balloon floated and kept distended by the gas in the interior, which, if exhausted, will cause the crust to colapse, uf- fect the motion of the earth in its orbit, cause it to loose its place among the heavenly bodies and fall in pieces. Another writer thinks that drill- ing should be prohibited by strin- gent laws. He too, thinks there is a possibility ef au explosion, though from another cause. Should such a disaster occur, “the country along the gas belt from Toledo through Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky will be ripped up to the depth of 1200 or 1500 feet and flopped over like a pancake, leaving a chasm through which the waters of Lake Erie will come down filling the Ohio and Mississippi valleys and_ blotting them out forever.” : Still another theorist has investi- gated the gas wells with telephones and delicate thermometers and he announces startling discoveries. He distinguished sounds like the boiling of rocks and estimated that a mile andone half or so beneath the Ohio and Indiana gas fields the tem- perature of the earth is 3,500 de- grees. The scientist says an immense cavity exists and that there the gas| is stored, that a mile below the cay- | ity isa mass of roaring, seething | flames, which is gradually eating in- tothe rock floor and thinnig it. | Eventually the flames will reach the | | airand aterrific explosion will ensue. _au object of international strife, as| | well as of world wide admiration. | America has captured the prize! jandismore tobe congratulated | | therefor than if she had won a great/ | battle or exported a cargo of wheat. | —Chicago Heraid. | ded io ac- cept the presidency of of Columbia ‘eollege. He ke up his former | style of activity and does not become stupefied by dignity he will infuse | new life into the instution. Ss i seized with cenvulsions, Drs. ©. — Lester Hali and T. A. McClory each — pronounce the case one of unmis- — takable hydrophobia, and have ad« ministered opiates. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts _ Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, SaltRheum 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 all druggists. Tie is a great deal of moving about in the metropolis of the world. Some one figures out that 3 million people walk about London's streets daily, andin so doing they wear away a ton of leather particles from their boots and shoes. It istimenow for Americans to brush up on art matters. “L’An- gelus” has arrived. It is not every nation which can afford to owna $106,000 painting. There is only one “L’Angelus” and we have it. A Scrap of Papersave» Her Life It was just an ordinary scrap of wrap- ping paper, but it saved her lite. She was in the last stages ot consumption, told by phvsicians that she was incura- ble and could live ouly a short time; she- weighed less than seventy pounds. On, a_scrap of paper she read ot Dr. King’s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bonghl a large bottle, it helped more, bought another and grew better tast, sontinued its use and is new. strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing 140 pounds. For fuller partic- ulars send stamp toW. Hf. Cole, drug- gist, Ft. Smith. Trial Bottles of this wonderful Discovery free zt all drug- gists. 4 Tt does not amount to an exodus; but a good many of the negroes of Kansas are into Oklahoma. New York hesitated and lost. The city that undertakes to contend with Chicago must “get a moveon itself.” A Chicago paper mentions marri- | age as a “temporary embarassment” Ifsoa 2cent stamp sent Hunni-} Chicago is an authority on that sub- cutt Medicine Co., Atlante, Ga., | ject- will put you on the way to be cured. Cincinnati is still in the gloom of Their book will be sent containing | black crape. It refuses to be com- wonderful accounts of the cures ef forted since the death of its sweet fected by this remedy by well-known | baby girafie. physicians, clergymen and others. Don't delay, bat address them with, A trust in crackers has been form- stamp at once. Get it out of your ed This will probably be an excuse system before your heart becomes for oyster dealers to keep up the permanently diseased. 50-3t | price of the bivalves. 4 Mave you Rheumatism?

Other pages from this issue: