The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 9, 1893, Page 7

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for infants and Children. “‘Castorinisso well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” HA. Ancurr, M. D., 111 So. Oxfor? §t., Brooklyn, N. ¥. Castoria curs Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhea. Eructation, Kibs V gestion, Without injurioys medication, Tag Centacr Coxpixy, 77 Murray Street, N.Y W. G. WOMACK, C. F. PHARIS, R. R. DEACON, SONS & CO. T. W. FISK. LEE CULVER, A. L. McBRIDE & CO. HARPER & ATKISON. Ask the above merchants for the celebrated ‘ream flour. Rich Hill high patent & Jersey | q == SS a a SONS. ELS SRR Sa <a e SSSHSOSOHOTOSOSOSOSSCOHOOERE x @ ; e * SOME FACTS ABOUT >» Se Ti a SE, HUNICKE BROS. Hunicke Bros. i HAT. HAT. ° @ i. They are the best Hats for the money. ’ © @| 2. They are made in every desirable shape to suit every taste. ‘@ | 3. They are the only hats guaranteed by the manufactur- le zi ers to be unexcelled for durability. - I *| 4. So many_are daily sold that the manufacturers can ‘< | afford to use nothing but the best materials. {© @ 5. None Genuine without above Trade Mark. é f @ Manufactured onlyby HUNICKE BROS., ST. LOUIS, MO. ec SSCS HCSCSCSHEHCSCSTSEHOHCHCHTSCEHSESEFTVOGOS 1.00 A YEAR! | Always Getthe Best. ee The Kansas City Weekly Times, {s the best weekly paper in the Southwest. It consists of twelve pages p_and contains information and entertainment for the household. 7 SAMPLE COPIES SENT FREE. 50 CENTS FOR SIX MONTHS ALY20 ae) THEGENTLEMAN'S FRIEND. “"y PERFECTION SYRINGE ffee with every bottle. PREVENTS STRICTURE, ‘Ove to Foun days. HITES. cEDFrom 15 F ese jure the health or interfere with one’s business of leasure. It builds up and improves the general ealth, clears the skin and beantifies the complexion. No wiinkles or flabbiness follow this treatment. Endorsed by physicians and leading society ladies. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL, Harmless. No Starvi: ing. Send 6 cents im stamps for te OR. 0. W. F. SNYDER. ‘particalars NeaSTER, OIDs VICKER'S THEATER. CHICAGO, HLL tHE POSITIVE CUR New York. Price 50 ct That dreaded and dreadful disease! What shall stay its ravages? Thousands say Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian cod. liver oil and hypophosphites of lime and soda has ewred us of consumption in its first stages. Have you a cough or cold acute or leading to consumption? Make-no delay but take Emulsion and all Anaemié and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wasting in Shildren, Almost as pal as = milk. Get only the gemntes Pre- « by Scott & Bowne, Chemists, New York. Sold by all Druggists. , gives Bleep, and promotes @ | "| FINE SCENERY AND BAD COLDS. i A Feature of the Glaciers at Grindelwald That the Guide Books Omit. Europe is full of all sorts of devices for endangering and undermining the health of travelers. The big buildings, | churches, palaces, and th ke, where closure | the huge keeps the tempera- ture of the at the same2 cool kL | the year around ness and de trav heat of think coolness hful redue- tion of the temperature of the body untila chill | tells them t But there sponsible for more sic |} score of | | at Grinde upper glacier, is thisdan¢ laden spot. | Nearly every one who goes to Switzer- | land, and that means nearly every one n Europe, goes to see the at Grind ald, although fe indeed, do not r having gone {cause the diffi LESZES > which is re- ness than any The i | pointing scenic effects. who go carry away with thema cold which may pass away, and again may make them lin Lat Interlaken to curse the day they ventured to Grindelwald. The glacier is an hour's walk or horseback ride up a steep and w inding mountain road, narrowly shut in be- cause of the encroaching mountain farms on either side. If you have gone horseback they set you down at a mountain inn with a little pavilion overlooking the valley of the glacier, with its vistas of perfect Swiss scenery. Then one goes through a gate and walks down a winding road, arched with trees, crosses a stony valley, through the midst of which rushes a clear, pure, ice-cold stream, fresh from the base of the glacier, which the sum- mer sun is melting. The glacier is be- fore you, chilling the air which was of summer heat a few yards away. You must h: walked down to it be- cause there is no other way, and you are therefore heated. You stand near the glacier and instantly you are cool. Perhaps you go into the ice’ cavern, for the wonderful colors of the hewn ice are tempting. Ice water is dripping upon you and your feet are soon soaked from the wet boards underneath. You go out and start away, and before you have again reached the little gate near the inn you find that you have the worst cold you ever had in your life. If you are over susceptible you will have chills and fever. - But it is not necessary to go down to the glacier. You may have hear of these perils. So you decide to view it from afar. You sit in the little pavilion with: the superb panorama before, above and beneath you, with the long, striated back of the serpent-like glacier and the stream gushing from its icy ws as the central point of your land- ape. You order something to eat and a bottle of wine, and life seems to be an extraordinarily good thing. For all around you is summer, hot, intense, luxuriant, while abo ou and down in the valley there is winter, eternal winter of snow and ice. But as you sit enjoying, reveling even, blissfully un- conscious of danger, you begin to feel an icy chill, gentle and pleasing at first, but gradually increasing until you look about for furs, and then take to flight with a bad cold, pushing surfaceward within you, asa memento of the gla- ciers. Off that huge river of ice blows a wind that is always wintry, that is felt in its full intensity a mile away through the heat of the hottest summer day. You may escape the wiles of the seore of curio venders urging you to take away a carving or something of that kind as a memento of Grindel- wald’s glaciers. But the chances are that you will not escape that unpléas- ant or perhaps dangerous little memen- to in the shape of a cold which the gla- eier will force upon you —N. Y. Sun. PROTECTING SEA BEACHES. How the Sea is Preve ted from Encroach- ing on the Territory of the La d. It is estimated that about one million acres on the Atlantic and Baltic shores of Europe have become, since the de- of sand du rolling inland, bu iz the fertile soil, and rendering the d barren by the sand showers sprinkled over it; while, following the landward roll of the dunes, came the resistless | march of the victorious sea. The endeavor, then, of these threat- ened countries has been to regain, by slow degrees, the protection of the for- ests sorashly destroyed. First, a break- water or dike is construeted—oecasion- ally a mere plank fence—against which the sand from the beach soon forms long rows of dunes. These sand-hills, usually the enemies of the land, being thus hindred from drifting inland, are impressed into the service of the land, and become its coast-guard against the invading waves. The second step is to plant them with beach grass, or some other sand-loving plant, to bind the | sand together, and. by the succession of growth and decay, finally to form a | soil. We are accustomed to regard sand as | utterly barren, but the plants native to | the coast sands of Prussia have been | enumerated by naturalists, whose esti- mates vary from 171 to varieties. Of these one of the most available is the Arundo arenaria (marram), which | thrives only in sand and i the salt air j of the beach. This in time serves to | prepare the soil for larger plants. | _ In Wrance 100,000 acres of dunes have ; been reclaimed by planting. In that , country the maritime pine (Pinus mar- itima) has been planted with great suc- ‘cess. It does not, however, thrive close ; tothesea’ The ailantus,a tree com- | mon enough in our land, and certainly | sufficiently tenacious of life in our | Streets and fields. is a sand-loving tree. I have seen an abandoned cellar choked FOREIGNERS OP NOTE. Mr. Guapstoxe is by no means the oldest member of the commons, in spite of his 82 years. Charles Villiers is the father of that body, having completed his 90th year January 2 Rev. J CHEssEMAN, thi e Baptist minister dent of the repub x colored man of the most pronounced type, @ y effective orator and pr MME. DE LEsSEPs, so says a fashiona- bie London paper, has recently. written to a friend in England saying that her late that die in Engiand.” MonTacu WitrtaMs, the eminent was SO overcome with stage fright when he made his’ first speech in court, in a horse stealing case, that he would ve given up the profession but for s wife's encouragement to persist. BERNHARDT has sent a diamond ring and photograph of herself in the role of Cleopatra to the English lady who cap- tured and restored to its owner the ac- tress’ serpent last summer. he snake walking, noticed it, attention being drawn the more readily to madame’s “eher python” by the gold chain and jeweled ring attached to it. MEDICAL SCIENCE. Emerics have no effect on horses, which have no gall bladders to be acted upon. A cAsE of bleeding through the sound skin is the subject of a European medi- cal report. Tue imperial cholera commission in struction of the forests, a moving desert | | With healthy ailantus trees, and have | known them to spring up from the root after being cut down and rubbed with salt! It is probable, then, that if it will grow on the béach it will hold its own against the ocean or any other exemy.—Agnes L. Carter, in Popular Science Monthly. Germany announces its discovery that wine—claret or hock—will kill the bac- illi of cholera ina few minutes. Tea will kill them in an hour. ALL the motions and sensations of the various parts of the body are repre- sented in the surface of the brain as on amap. Thus there is a separate brain area necessary for sight, another for hearing, another for the motion of the fingers and so on. NutmeGs have strong narcotic prop- erties. A pint of tea made from two nutmegs, if drunk by an invalid, will produce a sleep of many hours’ dura- tion. The symptoms will be about the same as those occasioned by opium. Nutmegs in the quantity of two or three drachms will cause both stupor and delirium. PRETTY FANCIES. DrespeN china tea bells pretty. in JvuGs are now especially designed for hot milk. Mrrrors of Venetian mosaic come for dressing tables. DEcoRATED china pots are intended to hold condensed milk. Bone dishes are now regarded asane- cessity, and are in many charming de- vices. Rose jars ef crystal and gold of Doul- ton and royal Worcester are now indis- pensable. _ Every sort of article for table use, excepting kniv and forks, is found in Copenhagen ware. Dr N and Worcester candelabra are very popular for the esthetic ban- quets now in vogue. Toast rack for the t ularity v Circular. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. Tur rice crop in the south this year is estimated to be 225,000,000 pounds Tue anthracite coal fields produce more than 45,000,000 tons of coal a year. Tre output of American manufacto- ries for the past year was $7,215,000,000 in value. Last year 1 are very of fancy china are new fast table, and share pop- 1 those of silver. —Jeweler’s 68 feet of lumber passed through the port of Bangor, Me.; 105,544,577 fect was spruce, 24,453,078 hemlock, and the rest pine. Toracco has been successfully raised on the banks of the Androscoggin river in Maine, and one man is preparing to cultivate it the coming yearona arge seale, Tue eariiest machine used for making serews was invented by David Wilkin- son of Rhode Island, for which he ob- tained a patent in 17 There were in isv0 in the United tes eighteen es- tablishments engaged in manufacturing screws. A COUNTRY’S HEROES. » United States Ss to have t bullet in the civil v Tur famous fiv dred-de which was presented to G Prentiss, “the hero of Shiloh, cently purchased from a Nev pawn-shop for fifty-five dollars. Cart. Jonny Apam Coore youngest veteran of the Mexican war, having enlisted at the age of twelve. He is also the pion horse-car driver of San Franci: having been in the business twenty-nine years. A. F. Parker, a street-car conductor in Oakland, ook partin the march with Wol cross the desert to Khartoum, to relieve Stanley, is the fortunate possessor of two medals for bravery on the battlefield, one given by the queen, the other by the khedive of | Egypt. EA: THE COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION. Baron Hirscn, the Hebrew philan- thropist, will visit the world’s fair. Sparn is to have 2 $200,000 building at the world’s fair. hedimensionsare to be 130 by 75 feet. Ex-Prowe Mivisten Crispiand a par of Italian friends prapose to visit th Chicago exposition. Prixcess Louise is engaged on a b ofher majesty, which is destine: the world’s fair at Chicago. Miss Enizapeta Ney. a descendant of Napoleon Bonaparte’s Marshal Ney. is now living in Hempstead. Tex. She isasculptor. At present she is making statues of certain Texan heroes. to be displayed athe world’s fair. hasband has constantly remarked of | . “like Napoleon HL, he will | English barrister who died recently, | had eseaped and this lady, while out | Not Aectdent Bat Murder. Chicago, March 2.—The grand jury returned en indictment this D Law. general superintendent of the Fort Wayne road. The indict the ‘the Forty seventh Street eros-ing of the Fort Wayne | | | | | | result of accident killed outni ly inju ed. The charge is nt a_bailabie on jaai Law will be arrested and jaile i fourteen serious A good citizen, be be rich or poor, always yoes into the jury box wher celled, provided he can and canno get out of it John Jacob Astori the trst New York milliovaire to si ou a jury. eggs in the city court involving damages. It wax in a case abou | S36t Every one to his or her taste. Mrs. Robert Johnson of Soncma. Ca!., hes 200 high bred Ancora cats and three servants devote their en i tire time to them. Mrs. Johnson 1s a widow to whom money is no ob ject, she being worth several mil lions How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case ot Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure F. J. Cheney & Co., Props. Toledo, © We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be tteve him perfectly honorable in hi business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by that firm. : West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waiding, Kinnan& Ma»- vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Q. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly, acting directiv upon the blood ance mucous surtaces of the system Price 75¢ per bot'le. Sold by all druggists. Yestimonials free. 12-1m. There is nothing more desirable than not to try to overdo a thing Captain of United States mail carry ing steamship companics are expre-s ing dissatisfaction as to the new U. S. mail perant. big. They say it’s too Mrs. Matilda Huntingdon, a bux om Enghsh woman of New Orleans, is only 38 years old, though she has just acquired her seveuth husband. She began her extraordinary matri- monial cireer at 14. You have noticed that some houses always seem to need repainting ; they look dingy, rusted, faded. thers always look bright, clean, fresh. The owner of the Fest “economizes” with “cheap” mixed paiuts, etc.; the second paints with Strictly Pure White Lead The first spends three times as much for paint in five years, and his build- ings never look as well. Imost everybody knows that good paint can only be had by using strictly ure White Lead. The difficulty is ck of care in selecting it. The fol- lowing brands are strictly pure White Lead, “Old Dutch” process; they are standard and wei) cnown—established by the test of ye-rs: “Southern” “Red Seal” “Collier” For any color (other than white) tint the Strictly Pure White Lead with National Lead Company’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, and you will have the best paint that it is possible to put on a building. For sale by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send tous for a book containing informa- tion that may save you many a dollar; it | will only cost you a postal card to do so. | NATIONAL LEAD CG,, 1 Broadway, New York. St. Louis Branch, Clark Avenue and Tenth Stre: —e_—___—_—_—_—_—_— CORRECT Missouri Pacific Time Table Arrival and departure ot passenger { trains at Butler Station. Nort Bounp morning for murder againsé Charles} road in which four persons were | Temarkable success bas been { | | Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl { eS ox Dizziness, Nausea, after eating, Pain in the Side, kc. While their most shown in curing Headache, yet Carter’s Little Liver Pits are aluablein Constipation, curingand pre- Ea lating comp other Ste rs of thestomac! orrect all disorde’ 8) hstimulatethe fiver and the bowels, Even if they calp liver and regulate ‘would bealmost priceless to those who c Age eee ee butforta- ately their goodness does notend a those: whooncetry them will And these little pills valu- able in somany that they will not be wil. Eng todo withoutthem. Butafterallsick heed f ac many “ives that here is where bodice nce . Our pillscureit while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. Oxe or two pills makea dose. ‘They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all w! use them. In vialsat 25cents; fivefor $1. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mail. “CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE Ketablished 32 years, Regeler graduate of TWO DOCTOR -z22=2: rewes WHITTIER EXPERIENCE 215 W. NINTH ST., KANSAS CITY, MO. Consu'tation FREE, Medicines from the Doc- tor's own laboratory furnished at emall cest and sent anywhere securely sealed—private. Arising from tha of- fects of Youthful Fol- ites, Indiscretion, Excess or Indulgence, producing Nervousness, Debility, Dimuess of Sight, Self Dis. trust, Failing Memory Physical Decay, Pimples tanta be Unfitness » Dyspepsia, Stunted apement Patoain Baek. Milky Urine he. ‘onatural Drains and Lost Manhood ¢' ociety, Loss of Ambition, Devel- No. It free, (DDLE AGED men ba lke deposits in urine, with fiat the second stage of seminal these cases for life. | Blank No. 1. Diseases, such as Serot ula. Rheumatiom, Ec- and Syphitis, recent or old cases.cured for 'y and surely. No powons used. My treat- ment ts the result of 30 years’ experience and the Hot Springs method. Cure guaranteed never to return. Such cases demand special study and experience. Avoid patent medicines or inexperi- enced hands. Write fur question Blank No. 12 and careful opinion sent privately, oe the disease and why so-called “Remedies,” Blood Purifiers, ete., fail to cure. Complaints, pain- ul, dificult. too frequent or bloody urine, Gonorrhea, Gieet, Stricture, Weak Bindder cured w struments or pain. Question Blank No. ,° ssful new treatment and cure. Blank No.l. My practice is limited to above diseases alone,in them I succeed. State your case and write at once, delays are dangerous. OR. WHITTIER, SR., 21S W. OTH ST. KANSAS CITY, MO Why Suffer? When you can be Cured Thousands are suffering with Torpid Liver-the symptoms are Depression of Spirits, Indiges. tion, Constipation, Headache. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator is a reliable remedy for Liver Disorders. It cures thousands every year; why not y Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator? Your Druggist will supply you. \VEATS, Y TRADE MARKS, DESICN PATENTS, <a COPYRIGHTS, etc For information and free Handbook to Bee ES Seereaane eee, g taken out by us is brought before by anotice given free of charge in the Scientific American circulation of, fie Passenger. - - 4:51 a.m. Passenger, - - 3:50 p. m. = = 9:25 p.m. g - 10:05 a.m. SoctH Bounp Passenger, - - 7:04 a. m. rassenger, - - 2:28 pm. Passenger, - - 246 p..m{ 7 p.m. Local Freight $500,000. We desire to place out on amount of money. Vi | the best termsand lowest | rates yet offered by anyone | in this line of business. | Notes drawn tor one, two.' three or five years- I Have some money to loan; | pauable an or be date. Caliund see hue cheap\ | iwe con let you have money. |The Bankers Loan & Title Co P. C. FULKERSON, Manager. real estate security alarge' Vill give} fore aSiven | ; I pay the highest market price for chickens dete delivered at my store at Virginia, Mo.- Talso have good feed stable in connection with my store.= Nexsox M. Nesrizropz. NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE vv N.Y. co

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