The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 25, 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)

i; i ? Saas Bheumatism and Weuralgia Cured Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Uo. 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 reiiet | jn chronic cases and effect aspeedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for this wondertul com pound which can be filled by your home druggi at small cost. We take giving our discovery to the public instead of putting it out as a pat medicine, it being much less expensive. We w gladly refund money if satisfaction is not given. Tire [Nprana CuemicaL Co, JO-lyr Crawtordsville In Sold bs =" ALLS & HOLT, CALI FOR NIA. LAND OF DISCOVERIES | “i CHILDREN this means of | IN MILLS. | A Picture of Young Innocents in Indus- | trial Slavery. A pallid little child toils in the fae- | tory; his mates are as wan and pale as |he. When at evening from work he | creeps homeward, tired and limp, he sees the merry school-boys strolling back from play, ‘hearty and plump- faced; laughing, leaping, carel a ball, full of fun and sport, hungry from the fresh air and healthy exer- cise. He them going school war: begin to store up in their b mor ns of life’s won- derful story an they | y yester- ; day, already, for two he has ‘been at work. Brief > are the snatches of the story that may reach | his ears while yet they are open to re- ceive it. Ever the task unen i | same thing over hour afte after day, week after w after month, year after year. would like to laugh and leap and play! | But childhood’s privilege for him was long ago abridged. Still, now and} then his thoughts make daring sport while his hands keep on unceasing at | their task: ‘‘What fun ’twould be to | snarl up all these threads, and let the shuttles jump about all helter skelter, like rats in the basement when the} river rises and drowns them out!” | But play for him exists in thoughts alone; and soon even thoughts of play } will cease, since the stream ef knowl- edge is turned away from him, and dulled by lack of use, like a well made tool grown rusty, he soon forgets to think at all. The gates of his mind swing heavily to, and open only to the duties known “As “sian i Bist Coucis ‘ anche ES" aS DISEASES FEHRO 7 ON | oes ae nV cre NTE Send for circular, AL, perlatle 3 or 9. IABLETINE MED! co OROVILLE, CAL.) | SANTA ABIE AND CAT- SOLD AND GUARANTEED 3 Drea ch. IGE. Beer Try Saxra Asie CHEWiy. A natura! Calitornia Gum. ing the saliva produced in chewi matertally aid digestion. WOODWARD, FAXON & CO, DISTRIBUTING AGENTS, Kansas VCit,;, Mo ates. FENALE OLLECE, Lexington, Mo. | Twenty- rst Sessionope = Sept. 4th Issa. Thorough | Course in all departments. 14 Lxperie' land € tent Teachers. Finest Sitaste a in the We lealthful Location. Beautiful bu furnished and home-like rooms. FB STEAM in every room d lighted by € Pron each floor. Health, morals, and manners of pupils marded_and looked after ina refined Christiaa fitines Terme reason apply to A. A. JONES, A. al, President, Lexington, Mo | vg heate F ios MIIS-SNIVLUND-30V7 Croup +Fuoarine + Soap- (tance PPERS and receive a *MATCALESS » FOR « SHAMPOOING - SNIIOOM-aNI- aww? oo (en } ma ” [ end as i= (en ) It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope- less, If you have premonitory toms, such as Cough, Ditticulty of ymp- | Breathing, &c., don’t delay, but_use PISO’S URE’ ror CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents | ;of a common cold because there is | mals hit possible by earbolic acid treatment | | ment of | by treating about three weeks with to the sentry by accustomed entrance to serve coarse daily wants. Then, plodding, he goes through life with body distorted and stunted, with soul repressed and crushed—perhaps he vaguely wonders why; this unsightly ruin of God’s most holy tem; Yes, why is it v Nation | called free? Why amid a| people professing love of Him who le. le. thus in thus loved little children? Whut offense can be charged against these little ones, condemned to and slowly darken arn- ing’s lamp stands freely lit to guide] their fortun ne fellows? Per-| chance for of merit? Great inde | parents are po need of the brat: Yes, ee chil barbi with 1 is th nd offens: theref¢ that law must break. For enat 1 re that the child shall be schooled, but “tis easy to lie ina matter of age, and no one espe So the ch and strong ly e Id slaves keep armed toiling on men in in seck work, or work for scanty hire; for the lords of the have greed; cheap to them labor, and gold is more } On an souls in their eyes, but dear comes that toil to the State. Inancient times ‘twas thought no wail could ever stand unless with the blood of slaves the mortar was mixed. We now are wiser, ion rules upon our mill owners’ heads lies the guilt for the blood of those held in bondage—blood that might swell the veins of the child they not held captive withir Boston Pilot. since Still, we deem, is no more. were — < —— TO PREVENT DISEASE. Beneficial Results of the Liberal Use of ssly |} swinging their bats, at random tossing | Carbolic Acid on Farms. Carbolic acid is very useful where animals are bred and kept. It is a great purifier whether it is a sore or a stable or a pen that needs purifying. It will destroy most of the disease germs that lurk about our premises, if properly applied. A free use of car- bolic acid would often destroy the germs of dise: and prevent sickness among our animals. All diseases are to an extent “catching.” That is true present animalculz, which will try to find a lodgment in other systems than the one that is suffering, if other ani- come in contact with the dis- charges. An animal catches cold in the head. it may run into gleet in the horse, and while other ho} may be able to resist the animalcu!z, if they do come in contact with them, they may not. Hence it is desirable, when animals have discharges from the nos- trils to scatter something like carbolic acid wherever such discharges are lia- ble to be. Oneof our writers on swine mentions that its value has been recog- nized by the commission which investi- gated hog cholera, and reported to the Commissioner of Agriculture. It is commonly used now by the most care- ful breeders of swine. Some use it constantly about the pens and feeding floors and troughs. One writer says ithat even the vapor of carbolic acid will destroy the spores of germs of disease which float in an affected at- mosphere. It prevents the develop- ment of bacteria if used before it has arrived at the glia stage, or massing. Dr. Stetson, of Neponset, Ill, has had remarkable immunity from the disease, though he raises from three to five hundred of hogs each year, and the disease has raged all around him. The beds. pens, feeding floors and | water troughs are never free from the odor of crude carbolic acid. Dr. Det- mers, in his report to the Department of Agriculture in 1880, says he thinks | “to destroy the conditions necessary | to formation of glia and the develop-} swine plague schizophytz,” regular doses of carbolic acid.—West- | 1 ern Rural. seers FARMS& MILLS pied Sale & Exchange. R. B. CHAFFIN & to. REE tcsond. Wa =" Tyt¢ at Ts dint in New York nearly sixty of en able turf performers ‘and for which he hes ) $500,000. ot CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH | ) TEMAYROTAL PILLS. Cross Diamond Brand. oUR aaaee ONE and the NURSERY | 36 BROMFIELD ST., 101 “ND SYRUP. Boston, Mass. remedy The most hand 1 croup, magazine for drawn very closely at Moberly There RATEFUL—C OMF ORT EPPS | $14,090 in the fund appropriated for or | will be a deticiency of about ; NG. | | | t pa collating editi printing and bind- RF tS uy Fee akat lng the new statutes. BREAKF AST: know! They of a time over the postmustership at Serinetield as thoy did over the gov- frame. With boiling w pound tins, bs EPPS 2 CO.) 00K AGENTS WANTED FOR ¥ STORY OF THE WAR yMary A. Li vermore inflammatory own upon and entire! iy incapacitated ine for busin HIMRops "CURE /” ASTHMA atarrh, Hay Fever, Dipntheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians apd sold by Drug: | gists throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUFPG CO. SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH VITALITY ! item, and all I could do tid not di nnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure was ended to me, and I to In a day ai , and in told Mr. ure is the best medicin ered for rheumatism )10 say as much for an- id free and voluntary. } ~ HUNNIGUTT’S RHEUMATIC GURE is a superb Female Tonic and blood purifier, rendering the skin sof& and beautiful, removir blotches, pimples, etc. reasing the appeti' | and {nvigorat ing the system, Send for book DICINE | CO., Atlanta, Ga. see that each sree ne ; Diamond trade maz aanufactured only by Freeman Wire and Irc Jo., 8t. Louis, Mo. Send 6 cents for sample. For — by 2. #. DEACGH., BUTLER, MG cm AScientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise on the Errersof Youth, Premature Decline, Nervous and Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood, BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO. NEW EXHAUSTEDVITAELTY [iam | ORGAN, < cash nf a ~S-UNTOLD MISERIES jis abs oth, Resulting trom Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Exeesses or Overtaxation. Enervating and unfitting the victim | = for Work, Business, the Married or Social Relation. | { The M & Hamlin Avoid tnskilful pretenders. Possess this great | | cString inventet and ‘work. eee ee royal Svo. Beautiful MASUN | aie ted. by Mason & Hamiin binding, embossed, fall gilt. Price, only $1.00 by is used in the Mason & mail, post-paid, concealed in plain wrapper. Illus- « .H pianos exclusively | trative Prospectus Free, if you apply now. The _iRemarkable refinement — 0: distinguished author, Wm. r, M. D., re~ HAMLIN | tone and phenomenal capacity ceived the COLD AND SEWELLED MEDAL eg to stand in tane characterize from the National Medical Association, | PIANOS (these instruments, for the PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHXSICAL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker and acorps of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, eonfi- deatiaily, by mail or in person, at the effice cf w PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston, Maaa., io whomal orders for books or letters for advice ehould be Girected as above. POPULAR STYLES ORGANS AT $22, $60 $78 $96 AND UP Organs and Pianos soid fox cash, ments, and Rented. Easy Catalogues fres. Pay- By HENRY DU —? Mm PD. This iss New and Masterly Medical Treatise, and indi wey youns MIDDLE. an oo RGEC and eee MAN ‘bo is suffering from Lboyang Tere = a alt ah Dcentaee Spirite, Liver Compiaint, Diseases o! Polly, Vice, Igooran Diseases of renity, Vital tai Exhaustion, and D., No. 361 Columbus Avenue, Ae aig ENTIAL. Addreas Hexry Dv Most, M. D., No. tom) 5 0. SON Bonons Mace Prefatory Lecture with numerous testimonials from hich sources, free to ail. in leather, fall gilt. Price, only one dollar, by mail, sealed in plain wrapper, gos is the only Et ELECTRO-MEDICO PHysioLocy< ever ar = is Saey complete and perfect. Itis invaluable , as it reaches EXPERT HOME TREATMENT, DO)SITIVE- the very roots and For all Diseases of Men, by the distinguished author, N ilexry Dc Most, M. D., who has DISCOVERED uy | THE eee OF LIFE AND THE TRUE ES- SENCE oF MANHOOD, may be consulted in trictest confidence, in person or by letter, at his Electro- Wedico lniimmar: $i Columbus Av.. ‘Boston, Mase. “| HEARD A VOICEs IT SAID, ‘tCOME AND SEE.*” Robert Bonner has on _ his farm | d stables not- their day | paid nearly Tt | is ; Amarket has been opened at Mo- a berly for the sale of Bap y r Denominational zre | PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. nineteen years o:; aded. -d John Fess- mine that has paid in two years. He does —A Cats ha im $30,000 j less colored g One of vt Pine d daughter Dow. Tree St from her Gre: a month after sho —Mrs. Mac! the wife the “Bonanza King’ of California, is the owner of the superb robe presented to the Empress Eugenie by the munici- pa of Paris in the time of the See- ond Empire. The robe is of lace, en- tirely covered with flowers. It was made at Chantilly, and took five of the first hands of that celebrated fabrique fourteen years to make it, at a cost of 100,000 fran —The popular Croesus of Spain re- cently died in the person of the Mar- quis de Urquijo. His ecutors have paid into the Spanish tr ent verbs tim, ad it of isury succes- sion duties amounting to £96,000 on his fortune, which eded tive mil- lions fifty yea asa Basque Senator, g Madrid. He sterling. This was gained in ‘The owner had begun life village lad, and died a and ex-mayor of ft £180,000 in bequests to cha 1 his native province, many of which he founded himself, and £20,000 for masses for himself. —President | 7} dee ison and Seeretary Blaine, s ter in the Washing- ton Post, are strikingly alike in the matter of complexion, the peculiar pallor of which dk free’ posure to the be subjected es sunburn, tan or long the ex- h they mg During his stay at Deer Park the President spent much time in the open air, and while at Bar Harbor, in company with t Secretary of an out-of-door life. Yet 22s even atinge of brown to for his summer’s outing. F. V. Hayden the t th developed led was founder sographic: into the } Survey of the United States. He was aman of great ius and a renowned scholar, bunt atic and pec {t was not un- eommon for strangers to follow him for seve blocks, their attention ar- rested by his bowed figure as he almost ran for a few steps—then suddenly stopped, with his gray sharp fixed on the pavement—then ran again fasuddenthought had struck him; then they would inquire, *twho can that poor insane man be?”—Wide Awake. ——-+ « = “A LITTLE NONSENSE.” ast—**What's the score to-day n citizen—**T'wen- ty, I suppose, just as it has always been. I haven't heard of any change.” — Rochester Post-Express. —‘‘Were you carefully brought up, young man?” said the merchant to an applicant for a position in his estab- lishment. r!’ he replied, “I came up on anelevator."’—Boston Post. —Ethel (entering parlor)—‘Oh, Aggie, so glad to see you. (They kiss.) Why, you are engaged to be married.” Aggie—‘‘How do you know?” “I can tell by the way you kiss.”—Rochester Herald. —Messenger (going through West- ern railway train)—‘*Want dinner at Scroggs Corners?” Starving passen- ger—‘Indeed Ido.” Messenge: dollar, please.” Passenger— do you want pay in advance for?” Messenger—‘‘Sometimes the train is late an’ don’t stop.”—N. Y. Weekly. —‘T have a little poem here, and I want to see the editor,” said the long- haired stranger at the door of the sanctum. “Is that so now,” said the office boy, musingly, as he ran his inky fingers through his hair. ‘‘What a pity it is that the editor don’t feel that way.”—Somerville Journal. —The boss barber happened to look toward the new man and behel@ tears as big as gooseberries rolling down the cheeks of that Teutonic individual. “What's the matter, Gus?” asked the boss. ‘Feller I yoost schafed vas peen eatin’ limpurger, und I got me to Vinking of home,” was the tearful answer.”—Terre Haute Express. —A lady, suspecting her female ser- vant was regaling her beau upon cold mutton from her larder, called Betty | and inquired whether she did not hear ; some one speaking downstairs. ‘Oh, | no, ma’am,” replied the girl; ‘‘it was | only me singing a psalm.” ‘Youmay i amuse yourself, Betty,” replied the. lady, ‘‘with psalms; but let’s have no_ hims.” Betty curtseyed, and with- | drew, and took the hint. | —*"Humph,” said Brown to Jones, “that’s a nice way that fellow Diog- enes of whom I was just reading spent his 0 er to his man?” such if eis i | hours.” "—Merchant Travel SJACOBS Ql], “CONQUERS PAIN. Bo & = 4 6 By) ‘ANVdMINCD USIDSOA ‘'V SATUVHD BHL @ smorjoy $8 SUA MAN “APY woym Suours ‘Mo sqozef 2g Jo samatA ap 07 Ajn993 SouaUIWA 10 wn “CIA | WNAUMAUAAA SUNIVAdG GNV KLSIDDOUG AU G10$8 orypasasgo pup oounsadxra jouossed umo fu u0dZ yy “10 8qoove # << | rc Ke = o > a2 D = a rs] ° s = 2 5 < J > ax => oe ce J = °Q ce 7.) we s = o o 4 = o be B = |Aqpvip109 | EQUITABLE LOAN AND INVESTMENT ASSOCIATION OF SEDALIA, MO. CAPITAL STOCK, $2,000,000. This association issues a series each month, on payment of membership fee ot One Dollar per share. We pay cash dividends semi-annually aid Up Stock. e loan money anywhere in Missouri. rties desiring to make investments tor interest or to procure loans will do well tosee J. H. NORTON, Agent, Butler Moe Or paar R. C. SNEED, Sec’y., Seda alia, Mo, DEER CREEK HERD OF PURE BREED REGISTERED oe. CHINA SWINE, My Grand Breeding Boar Duke of — Adrian No 37, at head of my herd, April and May sonable prices ted one-half mite north and three miles east of town. Ins spection and correspondence solicited NEWLON, Adrian, Me POPULAR ROUTE —To- TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, : ST- LOUIS AND THE NORTH AND DOUBLE DAILYTR SERVICE OF Hanxpsome Day Coacues —Ana— PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEP. CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO TEXAS POINTS, With direct connection for Califa nia and Mexico ELEGANT FREE RECL r ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS —Between— SEDALIA A N D HAD —Andon Night Trains— FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOU Making Direct Connection in U; Depot’s with Express Trains In AD) Directions. For Tickets and Further Infor tion, Call on or Address, Ne (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Geo. A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, J. WALDO, GASTON MES) Gen, Trat. Man. Gen. Pas.& Tk Sedalia, Missouri. ARBUCKLES’. name on a package of COFFEE guarantee of excellence. ARIOSA COFFEE is kept stores from the Atlaz

Other pages from this issue: