The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 14, 1891, Page 2

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No article entering so generally into the food of every household is so generally and vowder. ic with the Throbbing advertisemen brand or‘that is absolutely pur tificates, and yet they are adulterated with ammonia or alum It is to be hoped the I: v will manufacturers and punish them for destroying the stomachs of the unsuspecting consumer. Amid all this fraud and ing Powder stands almost alo: continues to furnish a pure cream of tartar powder at almost the same cost to the people as decs are sold at, yet it costs mu Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder is of the highest strength. It produces the largest amount of leavening power attainable in a pure baking powder. nia or any other adulteration. Housewives who have tested all use Dr. Prices only. Poison in the Kitchen. These adulterated powders are shoved upon test persistency. | trom infatuation, but she hated him | and laved the Irisii ieader. He is j ,Saidto have chellenge:1 Parnell to ‘fight a duel and then to have been hoodwinked by iuzeuious falsehoods. | However that may be, it is certain villai sly adultered as bak- — petites, jthat his petition for a diyorce, al- leging adultery avi naming Parne! as corespondent. win lodged the day before Chi +tmas in 1559 and ‘came up for 15, 1890. , The petition satara.ly ;commotion ia | friends aud e:: jeaid that Parveli would come out of the trial “without a stain on his Lon- A denial yet iwhen the Mrs | O'Shea’s lawyer said that he would | mot cross examine or call witnesses. ; | No one appeared for Pariell and the |ease went undefended | was heard in behalf of the petition {and on November 17 Justice brett | ts in newspapers claiming this e, backed by analyses and cer- trial Noverber take hold of these merciless ; ated the ranka of both deceit Dr. Price's Cream Bak- nies Tt was boldly | me battling for pure food and the ammoina and alum pow- ee wan entered, nage rallec ch more to manufacture. ee It is free from ammo- No powder does such work. Evidence! DEATH OF PARNELL. | Unexpedied Death of the Irish i} Leader at Brighten. | ' London, Oct. 8.—Great Britain | and Ireland were starled yesterday by the utterly unlooked for announ- cement that Charles Stewart Par- nell, the noted Irish leader, had | died suddenly Tuesday night at his home in Brighton. It bad been well =e : 5 | pronounced @ decree dissulving tue ter in which he is understood to L . ! marrage. Parnell’s silence was tuken haye offered his co-operation with | e é is | Bie as a confession. | the regular authorities in the resto- | ratien ef order and the devising of | Then was precipitated upon the Tri f tha test - measures intended to obviate the | Lh pe eee eeeetet ates causes of political trouble in his na- | gles known in Irish politics, Parnell | | fighting to retain the leadershi d tive land. After his return tothe) &. © sh See house of commons, he showed re- a inajority of his old associated fight.) markable ability as a leader aud was ang 10: denne Puce | for years the head and front of | Will Be Given Away. 4 | the local agitation in Ireland. When {| Our enterprising draggist, H. L. Tuck- | the land league collapsed as the re- | sult of the repressive ‘legislation er, who carries the finest stock ot drugs, pertumeries, toilet articles, brushe sponges, etc., are giving away a large | number of trial bottles of Dr. Mules’ cel | }Gormen’s brother demoeratic sena- A BACKSET FORK GORMAN. } { Senator Vest. His Personal Friend, Throws Cold Water on His Boomlet. or ed into town who wax eloquent over the pr tial boomlet of Sepater Gorman. Mr. Vest says that uncertainties that he does not think predict who be the demoeratic nominee. The Missouri accords the Marylander full there are so many it safe to will ability aed for his the force | i, but be does not think Gorman, isintouch with his party on the question of revenue reform. As Vest thinks revenue reform in the para-| al ‘Ss ugeinst mount questien and should be wade | to the exclu- the great issue of “9: sion of force bills, silver and billion-' lollar congresses, he does not cen-! sider Gorman qualified to champion | such a cause. Mr. Vest’s views are, in line with those of a number of, democrats who feel that Gorman; was instrumental in framing many of the “straddles” which preceded the positive committal of the party | to revenue reform by President} Cleveland. j Coming as this dues from one of tors and one of his closest personal known that Mr. Parnell had not en- | adopted by parliament, he orgauiz- | joyed the best of health for years, | ed the Irish national league, which jebrated Restorative and it has been noticed and widely commented on that since the O'Shea divorce developments became a mat- ter ef public notoriety, and since political trouble came upon him the great Irish member of parliament had grown thinner and perceptibly aged in appearance. expected td hear of his death, and no inkling of his illness had reached the newspapers. BIOGRAPHICAL. Charles Stewart Parnell was born at Avondale in the county Wicklow Ireland, in 1847. His father was the son of a gentleman who was at one time high sheriff for the county Meath, and his mother the daughter of Admiral Stewart who command. ed the United States frigate Consti- tution during the war of 1812. He inherited the estate on which he was born and was educated at Har- row school, England, and Magdalen college of the university of Cam bridge. In 1875 he was elected member of parliament for Meath and represented that constituency until the general election of 1880, when he was returned for three constitu- | all Ireland and set back the fortunes | encies including the one he had rep- resented for so long. He preferred to sit for the city of Cork. At the beginning of his parliamentary ca- reer he was a member of the home rule party in which he soon rose to | eminence although a Protestant and personally not popular with the | leading members. In October of the same year he founded and was | made president of the national Irish | Land league. Simultaneously with an agitation | which in 1880 made Mr. Parnell the | supreme Irishman and the virtual | ruler of his country, extraordinary means of relief were adopted for the relief of Irish in distress, in which both England and the United States took a conspicuous part. In | January, 1880, Mr. Parnell visited the United States and created a | feehng that crystalized itself in the | formation of land league associa- | But nobody | | was largely composed of the same membership. Its operations, how jever, were more or less restrained | by law until about the time of the jchange of ministry, when Ireland Thunderer, which had opposed Par- nell continuously for years, of ase ries of sensational articles on “Par- nellism and Crime” and with the ar- ticles were published incriminating letters in fac simile, signed by Par-} nell, Patrick Egan and others. The) dramatic collapse of the Times’ case the vindication of Parnell aud the suicide of the forger, Pigott, would occupy too much space to relate in detail. | In December, 1889, there appear- ed on the horizon of the disturbed field of Irish politice a cloud so small that few regarded it. It hung darkly there for months, growing larger and more threatening the while, for out of it was to comea sterm which was to wreck the polit. | ical fortunes of the foremost man in| of its cause for untold years In 1880 Mr. Parnell became ac quainted with one Capt. O'Shea, and | then first met the woman who was, destined to be his ruin. Catherine | O'Shea was the daughter of the late | Sir Page Wood, baronet, of Riven hall place. and in Essex, England, | sister of Gen. Sir Evelyn Wood, and granddaughter of Sir Matthew Wood, who was twice lord mayor of London and won great popularity in his day by his staunch chawpion- ship of Queen Caroline, the consort of George IV. When Miss Wood met O'Shea she was the reigning belle of Dublin and he was the pos- } sessor of a very comfortable fortune, | which he has since dissipated. About & year ago she inherited a fortune in her own right amounting to near- | ly $100,000. | O'Shea became of one of Parneil’s intimates and was one of bis trusted | tions, which proved the main finan- | cial support of the home organiza. | tion. He was subsequently chosen, its parliamentary representative | take hie life. president in the place of Mr. Shaw. Toward the close of 1880 informa tion of seditious conspiracy was ap- plied fer by the crown against Mr. Parnell and certain of his associates, which resulted in a trial brought to indeterminate issue, but their yirtual acquittal by the non agreement of the jury. When he took his seat for Cork, the young statesman was made leader of the Irish party in | the house of commens. His tacties of obstruction produced a rather strong feeling against him in En- gland, and under the coercion act, which was thought Mr. Gladstene’s government for the restoration of the powers of the crown in Ireland, he was in October, 1881, arrested as a suspect and im prisoned in the Kilmainham jail. | He was release, itis alleged, as the ; necessary by | He even ventured to lodge in her parliamentary adherents. Parnell | September 1. Nervine. They guarantee it to cure neadache, dizziness, nervous prostration, sleeplessness, the il! effects of spirits, tobacco, cottee, ete. Druggists say it is the greatest seller they ever knew, and is universally sat- asta y. They also guarantee Dr. Miles’ New Heart Cure in all cases ot nervous or organic heart disease, palpi- tation, pain in side, smothering, ete. ) again came under the administration | Fine t.ok on Nervous and heart dis-| | ef justice. | eS ee Then came the publication in the} Ageierttural Depression and Laziness. Pre tO. Jordonin the Forum | T Lear the farmers complaining t >- | | s day of high taviffs, and it may be | that they have a right to complain; | jstill the tax on iron was never so asthe tax h+ pays who leaves unsheltered in gre his ::owing machine the storm. The but he paysa high his neidows to grow up to white r tax who leaves roads is high; bat a higher to!l is paid by the may who goes each week to town in mul! knee deep to his horse. property; buat the tax on tim mean it is not so high as which is paid by the who spends bis Saturdays loitering about the villiage streets. All the far ners 1 come arises from the wise use of lis time. One- sixth of his time mets one-sixth of hisincome. Ii ie tas learned to make use of tus tine, all other ills will cure themselyes Rained by the Races. New York. Oct. 7.—Heury J. | Pronk, born in Paris of whelthy pa- rents, received an excellent education and served with distinction through- out the Franco-Prussian war. He wasa good business mau and ac- quired about $45,000 in cash. Two years ago he came to America to e6 tablish a branch of the Rhine Art association ef Cologne. He seon became a frequenter of the race track. him and he Jost steadily. He gave up his business and for the last year bas done nothing but play the races. Last April he lost $7,000 in one day. rowing he scraped together $500. He lost every ceut of it. even forced O'Shea upon Claire as! when he had been rejected by a! neighboring constituency. | After Parnell had been introduced | The Dolliver boys seem to te! A brotber | customed to visit the fair Catharine | of Congressman Dolliver of Iowa has | secretly en her husband's absence. | been elected president of the univer- | os i sity of Utah at Ogdon, with a salary | into O'Shea’s hame he became ac-| house, and they met in other houses | Congressman Dolliver made a fa |its infancy. P. C. Heydrick of Erie, | Parnell | under assumed would frequently absent himself from parliament, and not even the naues. ‘most trusted of bis parliamentary; , whither he } associates would know had gone. At these times, when it was supposed he had gone into re- tirement to better perf the advancement of cause, it is now known that he was eonsorting with Mistress Catharine, surrendering himself utterly to the witcheries of her enchantments. Capt. O'Shea is said to have made us result of a letter tothe prime minis- | some endeavors to wean his wife flashes, nervous ch Prouk threatened several times to Hin wife yesterday morning found him hanging in a closet dead. bright and precocious. of $5,000 a year. He is not over 24. on Jand is high weel and thistles. The tex for good } There is a tax on personal | Luck was always against | Suffice to say that he is very fond of His last plunge was made about | La Sere By pawuing aud bor | friends, it will be something of a check to the Washington and Balti- (more enthusiasts who maintain a lit- lerary bureau for Gorman aud Lave! even talked of holding a public meeting here to give expression to; the sentiment in his favor. | Senator Vest says that Cleveland {will probably 1 \ receive the votes of Missouri in the convention. The world is better for it. The world is better because of such a | remedy as Ballard’s Snow Liniment, be- cause this artrele relieves it ot much pain and misery, and we are thus enabled to enjoy its brighter side. It positively cures all torms of Rheumatism Neuralgia. Headache, Sick Headache, Lame Back, all sores and wounds, cuts, sprains, buis es, stiff joints, contracted muscle, poison, eruptions, corns, weak back, and all pain and inflamation on man or beast. Its the best because its | the most penetrating. Beware ot all | white Liniments which may be palmed oft on yon tor Ballard’s Snow Liniment. Thete is none like it. | Sold by H. L. Tucker. | = When Cleveland refused to take | part in the Ohio campaign, the re- publican press throughout the jcountry had a good deal to say about bis decision, and some of jthem pretty severely. Now Blaine | refuses to held MeKiuley out of the soup bate with a candidate of the peeple’s party, aud McKinley wiil only make lone speech with Gov. Campbell. | How ailent these same republican |papers. Tho leaders in Ohio evi- | dently fear to have joint discussions /in which both sides of the natural questions can be presented to the same audience at thesame time. Sherman refuses a joint de- | | A writer from London says: Leav- jiug the paragraphers to fight it out as to whether the Prince of - Wales smokes cigars worth $1,800 a thou sand or only smokes $1,800 worth of cheaper brands in the year, it may |a brier root pipe and some good to- bacco, and knows how to color = meerschaum as well as if he had had & very extensiye practice of the job. From his letters to the New York | Sun, it is said that Moncure D. Con- way is not able to agree with those good people who are praying for the pardon of Mrs. Maybrick, and he thinks our goverument might be in better business than asking for the {release of a woman who eseaped the gallows only through the populas sentiment which recoiled from the! barbarity of strangling a fair neck. Perhaps electric power is only in et plans for| his couutry’s! mous political speech while he was Pa , claims to be able to revolution. | quite youthful | ize the present methods of obtainiug | eectrical ene The Greatest Strike. 4 ong the great strikes that of Dr n discovering his New Heart itself te be one ot the The demand for is has Already the treat- is becoming revo- pected cures h, gy. He thinks he can! obtain power, heat. light—iu short, , : everyt that electricity can ac Cure has proven m ost importa become asto} complish —by utilizing the electricity in the air and other natural forces Do Yoa Want to Save from 25 to 50 Cents ca Every Dollar you Speud » oppression ring and heart book on heart and The unequalled f 20 cents for postage. ERAL SUPPLY Cu. West Van Buren St., | Chicago, Ill. j i by H, L. Tucker, alse h Nervine for headache, fits, sprees, hot 1s, opium habit, etc. : i CASTORIA RRAARRAAARRRA AY for Infants and Children. “*Castoria is so well adapted tochikiren that J Castoria cures Colic, Constt 5 I recon: i Sour Stomach, Diarrhasa, Eructation, RIGS : Kils wens, gives sleep, and promotes dj 111 So. Oxfor4 St, Brooklyn, N. ¥. Wi % injurious medication, Tae Cextace Company, 77 Murray Street, N. ¥ — A. O. Welton Staple:Fancy Groceres, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE .CICARS AND TOBACCO, Always pay the highest market price for Country Produces East Side Square. Butler. Mo- De. C. MIZE. G. W. CLARDY MIZE & CLARDY Successors to DE. C. MIZF, Real Estate, Insurance and Loan Agents, Desire to say to the citizens of Bates County that v ve i y Bates: y that w aasociated ourselves to- gether for the purpose of conducting the business, so firmly established by our predecessor, beliving that it will to the mutual advantage of ourselves ani our pat- rons. Having made SPECIAL arrangements with one of, BE T LOAN COMPANIES IN EXISTANCE To-day, we are prepared to loan you money at as LOW rate of intctes: ») nt: t ci possibly_be had elsewhere and will make terms as to payments to au t yon w KATE HAVE A LINC OF THE BEST INSURANCE COMPANIES, And a policy from us represents 1 perfect indemnity y oc We expect to do a general real estate and exchange Tonstnces oad theee arent Towel or buy a farm or any other property list it with us, and we oan put you in commani- cation with buvers or sellers. in fact we will make lt largely to your advantase to see us first. We will rent and manage your property, sttend promptly to COLLECTIONS AND REMITTANCES AND PAY TAXES FOR NON-RESIDENTS. ca for You, We inviee goa Ga eine aes hours and good, Office over t's RESP’ POLLY Sealed MIZE & CLARDY. SHIRLEY CHILDS, SELLS THE Mitchell, Turnbull and South Ben WAGON Ss. A FULL LINE OF A notary public can be f will attend to all conve in the city and we will store, BUTLER, MO. Buggies, Carriages, Spring Wagons and Road Carts. Also the celebrated FLYING DUTCHMAN SULKY PLOW SHIRLEY CHILDs NEW FIRM? NEW GOODS? Having purchased the stock of goods known as the Grange store consisting of GROCERIES & DRY GOODS, I desire to say to my mavy friends that I have re- plenished the stock and fitted up the store room in shape and I would be glad to have all my old friends call and see me. PORDUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED. I il guarantee my prices on goods to be as iow as any store in the city. Call and see me. nt HE POSITIVE CURE. S66 Warren 8t, New York, Price s0et Genta ad an ae See BORON On ne OES ROE OEE TE ee tates at Aaa om ee eee acai insite nee

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