The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 27, 1889, Page 8

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eee A BLOODY FIGHT. ALMOST FORGOTTEN. The Vanished Popularity of Pere Hyacintha and His Doctrines. To see Pere Hyacinthe at his best, you must seek him in his own church; and to know the real man, one must hear him in his pulpit. The road is j long from the centers of Paris where Amer i His church Clarksburg, W. Va., Nov. 19.—1j t throuch a narrow i : » Rue D' Arras, War of a new character bas broken poe Rue D'Arra: out in West Virginia and blood has! already been shed. Two armed} bands are now in the pitched battle is inevitable isi Sqnatters Take Possession of 10.000 Acres in West Virginia and Fail to Vacate. ate. field an twenty-four hours. ntly Boston rus itali ASE 2 title to 10 | sc > white- capitalists purchased the oe eo i ae : rr Dee eae d nd oppo- 1 have the and New Yo ne als or mineral lands On Sati veyors were sent into the found that it thickiy with squatters. The settlers qui divined the cause of the pres G00 acres of dolpk county. was the surveyors and gave t and minutes to leave. The surveyors :+ | intel! i fused to go and the squatters ope | ee ae Bow rt ed fire upon them. Richard Winn | | lick of Pottstown, fcL per and nd meanness at Its lack of oy every thing Pa, fell dea the first fire and his fled. On Sunday morning the squat ters learned that James Summertie\: of Helvereta had been retained by the purchasers of the land to evict them by legal measures. While bh: did on portions the s th and earnestness of a man who is ving sacrifice ofall that Frenctimen hold dear—applause, mag That such a preacher should occupy s a pulpit, his polished cloquen streaming from the tawdry cotton-i ‘ E drapery of an old | ‘al mecting- was at supper Sunday evening fou house, at prociaims that the shots were fired through the window | former mie Sulpician adheres to as 7 7 * later relic s OTS is a of his dining room and he fell fo: the later rr ligiou dogma of his ma = bl Iwhich | tutity; that the Catholic worid has all ward dead on the table aroun¢ ste but forgotten him; that the Protestant his wife and children were sitting. ee Gee Feil DRA eee Yesterday morning a party of su: | sion; and ye eines veyors and deputy sheriffs heavziy is neithi i estant, but sin armed started for the heart of thy ici ty MGMT al district and the news | former glory or pres battle is simply The squatters are well arme Acolytes, uae iM cue :. ‘ . : any abhoiie determined to resist eviction to tin “ very last. companions power, luxu ificence ce or is of a bloody at needs. 2 is momentarially ex ored, one sees in Roman t busily yaltar and English Spavn Liniment remoyes a Hard, Sott, or Callouscd Lumps Blemtshes from horses, Blood Spavi Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Stifle Sore and Swollen Throat, Co Save $50 by use of one bottle. ed. old by W. J. Lanspows, Dru; @list, Butler, Mo S-1ir. surmounts it alta meanest little chane! London, or Colorado, Mean the seat human mot: men, in shiny broadcloth, most of them old, a few of them young and fail of frenchwomen, i poorty In shelves are such a THE AUTHOR OF “UNCLE TOM? small, swarthy, nervous, She is Mildly Demented but Simple es Hartiless asa Child. —_— Ss writ pression anxious 19 women, pli Hartford, Conn., Noy. .—Mi Harriet Beecher Stowe is mildly mented. ‘The dead, and the once brilliant mind choked with the ashes. She i fires of menial n anpearing to be able « = the preacher, but taken the r Spaniards, R ing, not ez of the smile at the po aghast at the unc anny elements in the heterogeneous cor Vhe can r the + Amerieans ‘ty of the chureh are come « childagain and day she wanders around under ¢} occ: who boughs of the autumn trees i g their dead leaves. She hurmless, and so insiduous has he: ; the approach of the disease that 1: Ma ee over 200 people in speak aware of her condition. rensiens s Two generations ago she Wun a | mse tears from the eyes of the eiviliz: world with the magic of her pei Only last week she wandered out i: to the street alone, an old whit haired woman, bent with the we ight aa ee of years, but simple and harmless is eitea Pee en han = achild. A shawl which hung from | repeated, and With ibis qual Gucecse her shoulders dragged the grom. | ful result. ‘The latest news we have and her hair was in disorder. Sh Suit tention actual membership of the zi A ehureh friend says ration to m4 Hartford ¢ 0 MESMERIC HYPNOTISM. Saceessial Result of 1 Delicate Operation inf The famous many ye z i E which that well known phy what was now being of an operation under the mesmeric z trance is from Paris, where, in the smiled and talked to herself as she Hote! Dieu, a young woman is stated tottered weakly along, and finally » | to have been subjected by Dr. Mesnet crowd of rough street boys wer. | toa painful cu ting operation “of the following her. They laughed called dangerous and requiring 5 ey 3 great delicacy anipulation,” jeered at the pitiful sight, not | Reine rvs As adr are knowing who she was. “Only a lit-|to pain, showing no sign ‘of St tle way,” she said, as she reache. the corner, irresolute as to whic}, | the and awakening.” not from an anws of the Ordinary kind. but froma x mesmeric sleep, ‘wholly oblivious to way to turn. At this moment a Sel | what had taken place.” tleman came along who had knows full particulars of ‘ation be- her in happier days. We this oper Tears sprang fore any satisfactory explanation can to his eyes at the sight. He dispers be offered in Fespect to it; but we may ed the boys and with some difficulty Say at once that similar resuits have . often been reported with little after ef- induced the aged woman to return | fect in the advancement of the sup- home. The foregoing is related by | Posed practice of anzesthesia mesmer- an eye witness. ism. The phenomcna are exceptional. Mrs. Stowe is provided with s of hpoterieal peace at persons nurse, but is allowed freely to go| the moment, the greatest hopes, are about the house. She is perfectly | Quashed quickly by the miserable quiet and has no violent fancies. Her failures with which they are attended trouble seems to be : at anzesthesia differs according to of crooning the old church hymns | Constitution, not largely, but in some of thirty years ago, and is constant- a Si LESS penn aeeice ly humming “Rock of Ages” and ally. There is vais ae tee kindred ancient, mélodies. a ia just as there is of hysteri- And so the author of “Uncle f¢S! hypereesthesia, and when the rep- Tom’s Cabin” awaits the peaceful | Pe8entatives of the first class come quiet of death, and final folding of U2" *e Ce cre merits they Scag . perfec Specimens for his sua- 5 sion that they give him the most tri- umphant returns. These cases call for a special study in regard to anws- thesia, since until they are elucidated there can be no sound progress. We would give an earnest warning on this matter of mesmeric hypnotism, assur- | ing our readers that they must not ex- pect more from it than ults, and these due not to true anwes- | thesia, but to individual peculia | —London Lancet, of Ss An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE ‘T ENT is only put up in la: ith tin boxes, and i sores, burns, And all skin eruptions, Kinds piles, NAL ABIETINE F M.Crm box—by mail pped hands, A ay ill positively “isk for the OR. 8 TRE ae OINTMENT Sot exceptional re- mley & Co, ts 30 conts, ‘ little | his | vis filling | DOGS I!N CONSTANTINOPLE. | Some of the Curiosities of Every-Day Life j in the Orient, Much of the business of Turkey is done by combination. There are vast | numbers of guilds and trades | Tae diffe classe have their own organ | pc have a guild, | head. One of thes ‘National Bank. ts ou who be pounce upon They ieve in close stantinople dog grel variety, isits Cons eor + Con- who ad does not He belongs to the city, and las no in- dividual home. The Turks never think of letting the dogs come into their houses. They consider them un- clean animals, a 2 Constanti- nople has dogs no man in Constantinople ou dog. | They live upon the streets d they sleep day and ir thronged of the hig | think of turning « gers, and from the numb. dogs I have i must be ext up by th of t H iveler tion. } h thousa of the three- y of them They 1 they > doz sof legge re are the on the a common her pups. he long-tailed have and sight is the mothe They variety, but ow ' shorn off were or fter bark > the sound I nopl ulmost en- » and the mad 10W : ee hs ¥ uni lola comes from over- i the Con- The dog sd is the ts probably in proportion to ne could c: overfed feeding, but no ¢ dog can not be ¢ in ryenter, oo CZAR '!S HAUNTED. ot By Ghosts Bat ty a Constant Fear of Assassiy ing, but no ruler of mo been made more ¢ has > of its truth Who was it : ia isa nation?” This, also, is true, and no precautions taken by the Czar ea relieve from the constant apprehension that some desperate act of some desperate man or body of men will ultimately bring about his death. Even in his summer palace, surrounded as it js by a double cordon of suards, letters have been found warning him of his doom. He thas been shot at and attempts have been made to blow him up with dyna- mite, and on his last journey to the interior an accident occurred to the train in which he was, with loss of life, and no one knows to this day whether it rose from a defective rail or was the work ofconspirators. In his summer palace he shifts his sleeping Place from one room to another, and that in which he sleeps is said to be kept secret from all until the next morning. There may be exaggeration in this, but there is no exaggeration in the precautions taken to protect his life. The coaches of the new.train in which he travels are covered with iron armor and lined with cork. It con- sists of several saloons so completely covered that no one can tell from the outside where one saloon begins and the other ends, or in what com part- ment the Czar may at any time be found. Every mile of the railroad undergoes a rigorous examination beforehand, and guards are stationed at intervals to be ready for any emergency. It would be a question | with most men whether life would be ; Worth living under such circum- | Stances. But the Czar is compelled to | bear his heavy burden as best he may, while with an apparently inflexible | will be continues to exercise his des- | potic authority and trusts to the vig- ilance of the special police of “‘the | third section” the conspiracies that are constantly being organized for his London Letter. mon- most to protect him from | destruction.— | Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoris. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, BATES COUNTY (Organized in 1$71. OF BUTLER, MO. Y. 2 TCR E DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. oO e, Southwest Corner Square, over Hart’s Store. Lawyers. CKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Mo. Office, South Side Square, dgley Bros., Store. | TILDEN H. SMITH : i ATTORNEY AT LAW Butler, Mo. I the courts. Special at. to collections and ated isims Will fpractice in tention Carvin F. Boxtey, Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, Butler, Mo. tice in all the courts. LAW. over Butler National Bank, Butler. Mo. W. BADGER LAWYER, - tice in all courts. All legal business 4 Oftice over Bates Co, Na- io. }BARKINSON & GRAVES, & ATTORNAYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. North Side Square, over A. 1 MicBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. 3. R. BOYD, M. D. CIAN AND SURGEON, East Side Square, over ButLEer, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at oflice day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north’side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ren a specialty. J.T, WALLS. PITYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh ot Pine. a. Missouri Pacific R’y. 2 Dailv Trains :2 KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, 9 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORALO SHORT LINE To PUEBLO AND DENVER, |PELLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS | Kansas City to Denver without change i H. C. TOWNSEND. ! Ge neral?Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t, STz LOUIS, MO. i } McFARLAND BRog af — A’ KEEP THE LARGEST STOCK AT THE BEST PRICEs IN HARNESS and SADDLREY: BUTLER NLESS STAMPED W! RADE MARK PATENT COLLAR ———-PREVENTS CHAFING—— CANNOT CHOKE A HORSE, Adjusts itse!f to any Horse’s neck, ‘will hold POONER has two rows of stitching, hames in place better than any other collar. FRANZ BERNHARDT'S Soleagent forine Rockford and A urora watches. iu Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, Very COeaps mye angen Meme eran a i G E.2 ST 2 ’ —~ . ee a is headquarters tor fre Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &e: ind tors jjulv 3 Sgt sr i of b nd examine low prices, NEATLY EXECUTED: his splendid KINDS OF witul goods and ALL ENGRAVING EQUITABLE LOAN AND INVESTMENT ASSOCIATION OF SEDALIA, MO. CAPITAL STOCK, $2,000,000. This association a series each month, on payment of membe ot One Dollar per share. We pay cash dividends semi-annually on Paid Up Stock. | We loan money anywhere in M issouri. Parties desiring to make investments tor | interest or to procure loans will do well) tosee J. H. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo Or Address R. C. SNEED, Sec’y a9 issues hip fee THE ‘POPULAR ROUTE Sedalia. Mo. —TO— DEER CREEK HERD OF ' TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA 4 PURE BREED REGISTERED SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, POLAND - CHINA: ST. LOUIS SWINE. My Grand | AND THE NORTH AND EAST. Breeding Boar Dnke of | Adrian No at head of | DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF my herd, April and May pigs at reasona prices farm located one-half | mile north and three miles east of town. In- spection a: orrespondence solicited. ! A.NEWLON, | ian, Mo. | |Haxvsome Day Coscury —And— PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO | TEXAS POINTS, | With direct connection for Califor- nia and Mexico Notice of Final Settlemen t. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and! Others interested in the astate of Charles A. Miller, deceased. that I, W. R Nelson Ad- ministrator of said estate, interd to make final settlement thereof, at ‘the next term of | the probate court, in Bates county, state of Missouri, to be held at Butler, Me., on the llth day of November, 1339 R. W. NELSON, 45-400 Administrator. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby iven, that letters of aa- ministration ont! Mosher, deceased, were granted toe onae: | ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- pigtstecean arbateleatmge esau” "| ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS All persons having claims against ssid es- tate, are required to exhibit them for allow- ance to the administrator within one year after the date of said letters, or they may be Bet recluded from any benefit of said estate; and —between— fsuch claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this publication, they { shall be forever barred. | SEDALIA AND HANNIBAL This 4th day of eae MOStENT ‘ Z 46-4 * ‘Administrator. —And on Night Trains— FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS. Making Direct Connection in Union Depot's with Express Trains In All Directions. For Tickets and Further Informa tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent. Geo, A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, Receivers U4rr.MORE THan GLIDDEN 1ntoo 2 DIAMG R i STERN... BARE | ‘ee that each spool has Diamond trade mar’ ianufactured only by Freeman Wire and Irc | } 40., St, Louis, Mo. Send écents for sample. | |J. WALDO, ‘For Sale by R. R. DEACON. | BUTLER, MO! Far) GASTON MESLER, Gen, Trat. Man. Gen. Pas.& T’k Agt Sedalia, Missouri.

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