The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 14, 1890, Page 3

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Rheumatism and Neuralgia Cured! Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Co. have discovj_ ered a compound which acts with truly | rvelous rapidity in the cure ot Rheu-/ matism and Neuralgia. Weguarantee it | cure any and every case of acute \ jnflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia | in 2 DAYS, andto give immediate reliet a chronic cases and etfect aspeedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent} stamps, We will send to any address the rescription for this wonderfal compound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. We take this means of ig our discovery to the public instead much less refund money ‘Tue InpDIANA CHEmicat Co., ) i be! nsive. iy Moir Time Tablie.| L.&S DIVISION. TRAINS RUNNING NORTH. los passenger 4:47 a.m. ' ar lose gO a « 3o2,pasbenger = 5. 3:15 p.m. TRAINS RUNNING SOUTB. No. 301, passenger 12:30: p.m, “ 3il, local ~ 5:00, © 303, passenger ‘# % 9440 St. L. & E. DIVISION. No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. AP ia riet, CMT REE 1 cr<3 sagopa tad E. K. CARNES, Agent. W: EY PUCKER, °° DENTIST, ‘ BUTEER; « MISSOURI." COME, Séithwest CornereSquare; Aaron Hart's Store. ‘Lawyers. J. H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. Oftice, North Side square, over F. Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store.x W. 0, JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros., Store. ILDEN H. SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo.§§ Will practice in all the courts. Special at- tention given to collections and litigated laims. Carvin F Boxvey, Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Wilk practice in all the’ court ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN#YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. ap “DAGE & DENTON, ATTeRNEYS AT LAW, Office Narth Side Square, over A. L. MeBride’s Sac, Butler, Mo.J J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrickr—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, Ig-ly BuTLeR, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIC ; PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- ren 2 specialty. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Residence on Ha- 4 vannah street norrh of Pine. Missouri Pacific By. 2 Daily Trains 2 KANSAS CITY OMAHA, COLORADO SHORT LINE 9 Daily i 9 Kansas City to St, Louis, and THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING K 2s City to Denver with t cnange H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenger and Ticket Ag’t ting it out as a patent medicine, it| i We will f satistaction is not] | ‘any occur. 4 points, 16}. hands hight Ca Dr. C. McLane’s Celebrated ITVER PILLS WILL OURE NICK EEADACHE. Crawtordsville Ing 1 THE FINE Premium. Staion MAMBRINO CHIEF JR., MAMBRINU CHIEF JR, willstand at =] my darn- one mile trom Butler court house, Bates county, Mo*, on the Rich Hill road, atthe low priee. of $20. for colt.tostand “and suck, pavable when colt comes or when mare changes own- ership 6r about to be removed trom the county, or being bred to another horse dnsucilecases the service fee wilfbe duc and must be paid.” Mambrino Chiet ery Jr.tookfirst premium.at Nevada iair last “| Septétiber,in roadster ring,and also first in general purpose ring, and second in ring forthe best stallion of any breed, twelve or fifteen ‘competing in e ring. .Care will be taken to prevent cident, will not be responsible should Breeders are invited to see the» stock betore . breeding elsewhere. ason cleses Tuly roth. WSLEY WARNOCK. Agent tor C. S, Concklin. [DESCRIPTION AND PEDIGREE. Mambrino Chiet Jr., dark bay, black weight 1,300 tion, good back nd legs as good ' pounds, fine style andac pavy quarters,t Sired by Abbott, Marmbrino Chiet, Alice West 2:26,5tr: Sand grand- stre of Veritas 2:20,:d dam by Mark An- thony thoroughbred, 3rd: dam by Old Forester, ath dam by Imperted Bedford, McDonald’s Mambrino Chiet by Old) = Mambrine Chief No. TE, ist d sire Big Nora by Bay Messenger t Jim Porter 2:25',, 2nd dam Mrs. die, Gam ot Ericson 2.20! Bay Messenger by lfarpinus, son of Bishop Hambletonian, dam a Messenger mare, Abbott by Caliban 394 sire of C F Clay 2:18, Cyclone 3s, Cooster 2:26; 1st dam, Country Maid by Country Gentle- man, son of Rysdicks Hambletonian 10, 2nd dam Belle by Belle Morgan 61, Cal- iban 394 by Mambrino Pilet 29, sire ot Hannis 2:17 and 6 others in the 2:30 list. tst dam Cassia by Cassius M Clay Jr. 22, sire ot Durango 2 :233,,Mary Clay 2:233,, Mambrino Pilot 29 by Mambrino Chiet 11, 1st dam Juliett by Pilot Jr. 29, sire John Morgaa 2:24, Tackey 2:26, Tatler in 2-30 list, and grand- S34, j 1 C230, Nut jam by Webster tho- predson of Medoc by American Eclipse. WwW. W. Agent. TIMOTHY. TIMOTHY, bay stallion, black points, Will make the season at my barn one mile trom the court house in Butler, Mo., on Rich Hill road, at the low price of $15 for a colt to stand and suck, paya- ble when colt comes or when mare changes ownership or about to beremov- ed trom the county, when service tees will be dne and must be paid, Care will be taken to prevent accident, but will not be responsible should any occur. Season closes July 10, 18g0. Breeders are requested to see this stock betore breeding elsewhere. JESLEY WARNOCK, Agent for C. S. Concklin. DESCIRPTION AND PEDIGREE. Timothy, bay stallion, black points, 1614 hands high, fine style and action, good bone and muscle. a fine trotter, hastobe seen to be appreciated, has proved to be remarkably sure, his colts last year are large and fine with good trotting action. Sired by Alamo Jr., ist dam Nelly by Zachary Taylor, who took tst premium at Cincinnati,O.. both as asaddle stailion and as best roadster, showing a2:40gait in both rings. 2nd dam Old Nelly by Tum Crowder, sire ot the dams of John W C only 224, Beivia Lockwood 2:25,Cooley 2:20, Frank 726, Modesty 2:26!4, Tom Crowder by old paciug and trotting Pilot, sire of Pilot Jr., grandsire of Maud S e345, 10°C 2:10, Nutwood 2:18, Alamo Tr.,by Alamo Sr, 2.34 by Almont 33, son ot Abdalla 15, ST? LOuIs MO, | son of Hambletonian 10, dam ot Alamo Jr, by Prir.2¢ Albert, son ot_Imported Fyde, 1st dam py Imported Margrave, and dam Marv Seldon by Sussex, 2nd dam Exchange by Richmond, see stud books vol. ist, page 95, Alamo Sr., by Alment 33, 1st dam by Brown’s Bel- tounder son of Imported Belfounder. W. Wy Agents BESS * COST ONE _ FOR | Ithas permanently cured THOT + of cases pronounted by ‘docto Joss. If you hava p: toms, such as Cough, Diff Breathing, &c., don’t delay, but_use PISO’S CURE ron CONSUMPTION . 23 cents i immediately. By Dru: lunatics who burnidg of the bi y*steeday,"is now, csiimated at fifty. pected to turn up. death. All those who perished were -| waved their arms in turbulent satis- R. R. DEACON. THE ONLV EXCLUSIVE IN HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENT HOUSE BUTLER. BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK THE LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. CAPITAL, SURPLUS, -- $125,000 00 $25,000 00 «© A PINNACLE OF HORROR. AwfutSeenes at the Burning of the Longe Po jie Asylum. and finally saving a great many, in | view of the inadequate facilities at | hand. Sister Theresa, the superior- | ess, is broken hearted, and being at | | present in ill health, her name may | be added to the already long list of | vietims, : | As the heat increased statues fell | from their niches to the ground, and then the inhabitants prostrated themselves, crying aloud that the | saints had deserted them indeed. Montreal, May 7.—The number of ) their liyes by the ; asylum at Longe Pownte, nine wiles from this city, Many more are missing but are ex- It is féared that seven tertiary nuns were burned to JABBERING AT THE FLAMES. Among the women the less help- \less eases were placed in the lower {wards aud they were removed with- The firemen were powerless to | out difficulty, but from the upper subc¢ fir i ilding } : a subdue the fire and the big building | wards, where the violent patients was completely destroyed. - Minis: z ; Were confined, there came the wild- The horrible sights that were wit-| ost screams as they resisted the nuns nessed duriag the destruction of the | Wino were beseeching them to make building will never be forgotten by | ty eiy escape. At the windows wo- the spectators, though to the luna. | men could be seen peering Bricaph | mcs a MGS @ LS of puprem> glee, | the bars, grinning aud jabbering at and in their delight they disported | 4), bright flames that went up to themselves among the flames and | ¢ye sky. Asthe heat became more lintense they would grasp the bars the heat en- | women. All the male patients es- caped. faction at the ruin that was being wrought. Not until the walls tum- bled over their heads were their ma- niacal screams ‘ There were incarcerated in the | ang to her rescue came three others. asylum 1,300 lunatics, for the place | They seized their companion and was more like a prison than a hospi-| yop bhlankel to the stairs tal, and last evening not | case, but they were met by a sheet 1,100 had been accounted for. But) of game and all perished. many had escaped into the fields| The patients who had fled from and woods, and the number of dead | tye burning building wandered is now a matter of conjecture and is | about aimlessly clad in scant gar ments, many of them veritable not likely to ever be ascertained, siuce no other record was kept than |Ophelias in their fantistic dress. in the asylum books, and these were | when released many of them wept destroyed im She fire: i for joy and bounded like deers across | the field to the woods. Patients of Fifteen minates before noon the | both sexes escaped and though a cry of “fire” was given. The fire or- | cordon of police was formed, not all iginated ina cupboard in the sec-| the patients were included, and hor- ond ward of the upper story andjribly suggestive rumors were was the work of a patient. Its|brought in by people who came spread was hastened by longitudi-| through the woods to the scene of nal ventilation shafts connected | the disaster. A new dread has come with the towers. The building was |upon the inhabitants from the constructed with brick and was 600! presence of so many escaped luna- feet long, running back from the tics and they will count themselves river half that distance. The main | fortunate if they are not visited by building oceupied the center and on}a series of troubles such as only each side extended four wings, six stories in height. To the east was the men’s wing and to the west the | women’s, making sixty in all. In} the rear was the engine rooms, laun- | dry and store rooms. i When the firemen found tney | were powerless tosave the building | they turned their attention to the inmates and burst in the doors with | axes. Inside, Chief Benoit says, it was such a sight as no fireman ever witnessed. In one ward that he en- tered there were twenty-five patients and at his approach they huddled | and remain there until veloped them. | One of the tert nuns lay sick } in the infirmary on the fifth floor, her ina more than A MANIAC STARTED THE FIRE. mad men can devise. SEEN FROM MONTREAL ROOFS. At the time the fire was burning every high house in Montreal had its sightseers, while the roads were thronged with carriages. The may- or drove out and the aldermen drove eut in pairs. Ladies were there in carts and a few rode on horseback. It wasa strange procession they met. The transport service of Mon- treal was pressed into service and cabs, omnibuses and hacks were re- turning filled with vacant eyed wo- men wearing blankets over their LOSS TWO MILLIONS. | minutes past 11 o'clock. danger, tances. i faction. | together like beasts, entwining their arms into one mass of humanity. He H seized the nearest, but, said he, “I could no more seperate the crowd than I could parts of your horse.” d at them until the fi ‘i eae as = ir pe ae ee | St. Laurient and Point Aux Tremble. 5S = folding them like a shroud cf flame | tis ee and he escaped with his life. | page e THREE FIREMEN NEARLY TRAPPED. shoulders and in front of each wae clad their black robes many were ta- ken to the neighboring convents of Montreal building at the disposal of the nuns | and to-day the building will be stock- ward three firemen | ;ed with provisions. | The laundry of the insane asylum In another were nearly trapped to death. They entered and the door, which had spring lock, closed behind them. As is customary there was no handle on the inside. The door resisted ‘in which 100 patients were housed | during the nigh, took firethis morn- ling. The inmates were safely re- | moved their axes and they rushed to the - - windows, but were driven back by the flames. their per and the men were The “Mother's Friend.” | Not only shortens Jaber and lessens | pain attending it. but greatly di- i minishes the danger to life of both mother and child if used months before « | to Bradfield Regu The chief, suspecting sent aid tothe other side earried down on the building did e patients and made a record The s ed with f he- by turns imploring, beseech- and commanding the patients! ¢ of e may feel proud. persister gon werea pair of weeping nuns mile, at an expense to each pere not bona fide newspaper men will be St. Isador, St. Joseph de Benoit, | entitled to the benefits of the excure son sion. Premier Mercier has | Will correspond with E. W. Stephens exhibition | t Columbia. It seems the new comers have not been able to push either Carlisle or Dickens out of the market. the last year one publisher in Lon- don sold 75,000 copies of Carlyle and 152,000 copies of Dickens. Drunkenness or the Liquor Habi Positively Curea by administering Dr. Haines’ Gelden Specific. tet The Singer pany’s Works Destroyed by Fire. 1 Elizabethport, N. The entire: western Singer sewing machine factory, on First street, was gutted by fire last night. The flames worked their way | to the main building extending along Trumbull street, cleaning out the stock, needle, finishing, adjusting, inspecting and milling rooms. pattern department was also destroy- ed together with 50,000 finished ma chines and 18 million needles. loss is estimated at 2 millions dole lars, fully insured by the Singer company. All work is suspended and over 3,000 operatives are idly gazing upon the burned building. be at last two can be resumed. The fire started in the high clock tower of the main building at 2 few was first discovered by one of the watehmen, but he lost his presence of mindand there was a good deal of delay in sending Toadd to benzine began plosions following idly, and throwing The weekly pay roll of the works amounted to $40,000. We desire to say to our citizens, tor years we have been selling Dr. King’s New Discovery tor Consumption, Dr. King’s New Lite Pills, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and Electric never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have giyen such universal satis- tee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, it satisfac- tory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity durely on their merits. Missouri Press Association. Hannibal, Mo., May Stephens, president, and J. West Goodwin, secretay of the Missouri Press Association, were in this city to-day en route home from a trip to St. Louis, where they had been to perfect ar- rangements Park excursion of the Missouri edi- tors at the close of their convention to be held in this city August i9 to 22 next. about 17 days. from here to St. Paul, therce to Yel- lowstone Park, Helena, Anaconda, : Butte, Salt Lake, Denver, Kansas City and home. the Northern Pacific and return on the Union Pacitic. tance traveled will F.J. TYGARD, - 3 HON, J. 8B, NEWBERRY 3 J-C;CLARK - President, Vice-Pres, Cashier Sewing Machine Com- **Count that day lost whoselow decending sun Views from thy hand no worthy action done,’ For renovating the system elimi- nating all poisons from the blood, whether of scrofulous or malarial origin, S. S. S. has won the name of “Golden Liquid.” To women it im- parts freshness of complexion, beau- ty of form and elasticity of step. This is the long record of a purely vegetable remedy whose fame is widespread over two continents; which has retained its popularity for over half a century, its demand in- J., May 7— front of the The The : 4 creasing at home,and orders coming for it where the English tongue is never spoken. This speaks volumes for its efficacy. Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) 18 not a nostrum of a brief day’s existence, such as spring up like the mushroom but thousands of testimonials from It will months before work men, women, and even reputable physicians attest its solid worth as a remedial agent, and keep it at the front. What convincing evidence further can the afflicted world] de- mand? Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases The blaze out an alarm. e mailed free. the exciteme | he exoltement and SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., tanks of glycerine and | Atlanta, Ga. AN INDIANA MAN NAMED. to explode, the ex-} one another rap- flanes great dis-| George W. Steele Nominated for Gov ernor of Oklahoma. Merit Wins. Washington, May 8.—The Presi- dent to-day sent to the senate fole lowing nominations of officers of the territory of Oklaboma: George W. Steele of Indiana, gov- ernor; Robert Martin of Oklaboma, secretary. Supreme court officials: Edward B. Green of Illinois chief justice; Abraham J. Seay of Missou- ri aud Jolin G. Clark of Wisconsin, associte justices; Warren S. Lurty of Virgina, United States marshal; Horace Speed of Oklahoma, United States attorney. the nominations are said to give satisfaction t> the Kan- sas delegation. George W. Steele, who is named for governor, is a per- sonal friend of Mr. Harrison, and is generally admitted to be a good man for the place. Robert Maetin, sec- retary, is a resident of Oklahoma, as is Horace Speed, United States ate torney. Speed is an old resident of Indiana, and while there was a close: friend of General Harrison. Edward’ B. Green, chief justice, is an able jurist, with an unimpeachable ree- ord. Abrabam J. Seay of Missouri, associate justice, is said to be well and favorably known throughout the state. Jobn G. Clark of Wiscon- sin, associate justice, is known here to the Wisconsin delegation, who secured his appointment. They speak highly of him. Warren Sg Lurty of Virginia, marshal, is lieuw-- 7 tenant of Mahone, at whose request. he was nominated. that Bitters, and have We do not hesitate to guaran- all Druggists. Asa whole Chicago and St. Paul, for the Yellowstone The trip will consume The editors will go They will goon The entire dis- ¢ about 4,000 to exceed $75. Only Those contemplate going @ WEAR wn-Desnoyer: SHOE CO.’ During ven in a cup of coffee ortea nowledge ot the person tak- ly harmless and will and speedy cure, 2 moderate drink- Thousands of ade t a J. M. McKIBBEN, BUTLER, mM

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