The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 10, 1893, Page 6

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seer eee — mncter a ecieenepeceonr sare ie Tht LIGHT RUNNING PLANG BINDER, Also the World Renown MINNEAPOLIS BINDERS, tandard. Wood and Plano Mowers and Hay Rakes: 3inder Twine, Repairs for the Excelsior Whitley and McCormick Machines. Turnbull and Mitchell Wagons, Columbus Buggies and Spring Wagons. Call aud see me pefore buying. S. W. CURED OF SUICIDAL MANIA. Offered to Give Him all the Poison He Wanted. The Druggsst Unfeelingly Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette. A disheveled man with a green,j. ghastly glare in his hollow, spectral | eyes, dashed into a corner —— late last night, apparently laboring | under intense excitement. His blood- | less fingers were tightly clasped in | his thin palms, and on bis ‘orehead | the great drops stood out chilly and | damp. Staggering up to the pre scription counter he hissed in a sep | ulcheral voice: “Gimme some arsenic, quic Druggists are not in the habit of | lispensing arsenic on demand like | sugar candy, so the clerk laid down | his pestle aud faced about. | “What do you want witharsenic?” | said he “want to kill myself!” gurgled | the frenzied one, hanging desperate ly over the railing, with limp legs lragging on the floor. “Life hasn’ ty no charms for me, and I want to die! Gimme arsenic, quick!” “All right, mister,” sponded the clerk. | cheerfully re- | “You shall have | your arsenic,” and he turned to the ie shelf. | The strangers knees caved in| against the counter with a thump. turned nonchalantly | agein his hand, and with. | The druggist with a pac out the slightest feeling in his care- less voice, went on: “Any man that’s big enough fool want to die hasn't business living, and the sooner you shufile off | the better it will be. Now, stui¥ and take it quick, so get your carcass out of the shop in time to shut up for the night. And for goodness sake don’t muss up the said he, slapping the packet lown on the and turning hack unconcernedly to his work. The fellow feebly shrunk rom the little paper packet and his eyes bulged with horrer. “Wh-wh wh what!” be stammered “You wouldn't give a fel- to kill we can Hoot! counter away hoarsely. ler being with?” “T wouldn't?” ejaculated the drug gist. “Td like to know why not? That's what I gave that to you for, ain't it?) Hurry up and take it and go off and die!” With a disgusted expression blaz- ing on his face the wild eyed cus tomer remarked: “Well, Dil be blanketty blanked! Givea man poison to kill himself with—what’s the world coming to— arsenic himself well, I'll be blanketty blanked! You hain’t got no more feelings than a tin tobacco tag!” And with a look of reproach that soured the pulv. sacch. the suicidal citizen stalked haughtily from the shop, leaving the poison unconsum- ed. Said of People. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s twin | daughters, who have turned forty, | are both unmarried. Mr. Harris, the composer of the (it is said, rea | | the position for thirty | niless, and will support S CHILDS. iret door west Bates Co. National Bank. ~ | popul rsong “After the Ball,” wil’, $100,000 from its sales. Dr. Nanson has taken with him to | the North Pole a phonograph into ‘which bis wife had sung a!l bis favor- ite songs. Vice President Steyenson follows the example of the president and \ pays his hotel railroad bills wherever he goes. “Threatened men live long,” is an inscription on the gold head of a cane presented to Claus Spreckels in Honolulu. and Government employes in Mexico | are volunteering to give up 2 per | cent of their salaries perodically for a while in order to assist the Feder- al government. Miss Fessenden, a progressive | young womat of Massachusetts, has been actively engaged recently, in advising New England girls not to marry “moderate drinkers.” H. M. Curtis, postmaster of | Castle, N. H., has realized the ur- certainty of public place. He was | removed the other day after holdirg New ve years ao two daughters of the late unker E. P. Begamini, of New York rae surrendered their priyate for- | tunes in order to pay the debts of | their father. They will be left pen | by music teaching and stenograp hie work Cut off His Legs. Jefferson City, Mo., John Neighmeyer, August a prominent Ger man farmer living four miles south) take this | of yhis city, met with quite a se ee | accident which will cost him his life | He was cutting timothy with a mow }er when the team ran away with him | and he was caught by the sickle and dragged around the field until one leg was cut entirely offand the other left hanging by a thread Medical} summoned from this city blood hai been so aid was but the loss of great as to render ree very imposs- ible More Gold Sold For Shipment. London, two hundred and forty thousand | , dollars in eagles and bars were si 1d | yesterday by the Bank of England | for Uuited States. 90,000 sove-} reigns were recieved from Egypt and | 11,000 from Portugal. Bar themselves | August 3.—Three millon } gold} | this tube gets inflamed Remarkable Blind Men. George Stone, who is stone blind walks up and down the streets with-| out difficulty, and it is a common jthing for him to walk from hishome | ! about five miles from town, to town | and return. He does it withcut) fear or difficulty although he is perfectly blind.—Cape Era. Jefferson City can boast of a blind man who is far ahead of the Cape} Girardeau unfortunate. Henry Dil lard, a negro resident of this city who lost his eye sight by the pre | | mature discharge of a blast while he was an inmate of the pennitentiary, many years ago, is a wonder to all who know him. He can go to any part of the city without assistance |and makes an independent living by | sawing and splitting wood and fish ing He not only can set out a trot line in the Missorri river but bait end attend it every day by himself This is hazzardous work for many who have two good eyes but Henry has never met withany mishap. He ean take a skiff and cross the river to the Callaway side at any time, and returning, land where he He never gets lost and never Girardeau desires. needs In addition to such remarkable acquirements for a blind man Henry has had considerable ex perience in the matrimonial market having led more than one bride to the altar.—Jeff. City Tribune. any assistance. Senator Vest und wife have been spending soe weel:s in western Vir- ginia on account of the ill health of Mrs. Vest. He visited St. Louis lately and on being asked his views on the silver follows: “On the last Fourth of July I heard an orator down in Virginia say to a vast audience: it that France with only a population of 45 000,000 and a territory only one- thirtieth as large as ours ean keep $700,000,000 of silver on a parity How is it that she, with a population composed mainly of ig- heep a gold 50,000,009 and be able to loan England $15,000,000 as she question, replied as ‘How is with gold? norant peasants, can reserve of did at the time of the Baring Bros. failure? Whatis the imatter with our statesmen that we can't do that? Are we not better than these French- men? What is all this talk of our inestimable material hear so much about? Where are our statesmen? Where are our financiers? Now, that this is the kind of argu- ment that reflects the popular mind | upon the money question. wealth that we How will | it be possible to convert the nation | toa faith in monomets alism—to a a single gold standard?” Held Ups Council Bloffs, Ia... ij newest th ~The | y line oc-| # in the robbery curred here to night. An unknown! er Gans er, ordered the | iow to hold up their | man walked | | Z jand drawi | ntire cOugie jhands. Cha: jing at the les Goff, who was pra time, promptly rose Z fect and grappled with the | would be robber. In the tussle | charged but the bullet struck a truss | j worn by Goffand was deflected. The jrobber then fled. In the case of a colored” preacher jat Springticld sent to the penniten | pee or an assault on a colored | | parishioner, a bystander observed | i th- clergymat. that the evidence showed a clear | defense un the part of of of self | Deafness Cannot be Cured | by local applications, as they cannot | reach the diseased portion of the ear. | | There is only one way to cure deaf- ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is causen by an | inflammable condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. *When | you havea} was in strong demand in the open} jrumbling sound or imperfect hearing | market to-day at 78 ounce. shillings Two million four hundred and} | hearin more gold was} thirty five dollars per | ness is the and when it is entirely closed deaf- | result, and unless the in-} [fammation ean be taken out and this | tube restored to its normal condition | will be destroyed forever: es out of ten are caused by which is nothing but an in- |} [nine le -atarrh, ‘taken from the Bank of England for) gamed condition of the mucous sur- America to-day. A Sound Liver kn a Well Manj by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Are you billious, constipated or trou- bled with Jaundice Sick Headache, Bad i Breath, Coated} Hot between Chills and Fever, &c. If you have any of these svmptoms your liver is out of order, and your blood is your Herbine | will cure any disorder of the Liver, It has no equal as + Free trial bettles at H L Tucker’s drugstore Taste in Mouth, Foul Tongue, Dyspepsia, Dry Skin, Pain in the Shoulders’ Indigestion, back and slowly being poisoned, because liver does not act properly. {| Stomach or Bowels. } a Live: Medicine. Price 75 22-1 year |faces. We will give One Hundred | Dollars for any case of deafness (caus led by catarrh) that cannot be cured reulars free. F. J. Che Sold by druggists which followed, the revolver was dis | = The best 222 materials— lumber, brick, lime, cement, sand— whatever goes into the construction of a building; they get better prices for their work than their less careful competitors, and always t the best contracts; they paint their work with Strictly Pure White Lead manufactured by the ‘Ol cess” of corrosion of the following standard brands: “Collier,” “Red Seal,” ee Sor ithern” For colors they use the Nationai Lead Company’s Pure White L Tinting Colors. These co small cans, each be tint twent desired shade | s of Strictly Pure White Lead St. Ly woon’s PHOSPHODINE The Great English Remedy. Promptly and permanently cures all forms of Nervous BW cakness, Emissions, Sperm atorrhea, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Excesses. Been prescribed ove! yearsin thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Hon- DSire ORE APTN medicine Enon, | (Ask dryggist for Wood’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, leave big dishonest store, inclose price in letter, and we willsend by return mail, Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, six will cure. let in plain sealed envelope, 2 cents postage. Address The Wood Chemical Co., 131 Woodward avenue, Detroit, Mich. | Butler and everywhere, by | all druggists. Sold in Nature's / Scuencn's Remeoy \—_ — za- / Manorake IVER a ~ LiverPitts | Compctaint | ==> The Consumptiv: and Feeble ‘nester’s English Diamond Brand. Priginal and Only 000 Tesi ii Name Paper. er Chemicel Co.,Medison Square, "eld by a VDL Ladies Bee kddeogorsibic in Every good Kitchen. As every ycod housewife knows, the ditfience between appetiz- ing, delicicus cooking and the opposite kind is large:y in deli- cate sauces and palatable vies Now, tbh requi deica vored stock, dug vud the best st Liebig Company’s Sass of Beef ck is e ire for patient, by the use of ot During treatment p: phine until such V any of the va offered for s: Sees st are TABLETS aad take & no Other. Manufactured only by —THE OHIO CHEMICAL (0, 61, 53 & 65 Opera Block, LIMA, OHIO. PALTICULARS FREE. HE pac they employ only the | best workmen and pay the best wages; | d Dutch Pro | nd with one nds of Strictly | Pampb- | PeiTVRGVAL PILLS y Beil rent of. =e ae, / ON . r rane FORMULA GOLD CURE TABLETS. llowed the free use of Liquor or Mor- pall volunta ot keep them, enclose us , by return mail, 0. DO NOT BE DECEIVED into purchasing Ask for EEIET?S * ave used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, an cee ee ener ne een ne en nennnann mare een Nem ates er ¢ Farmers Feed and Wagon Yar We have opened a Feed Yard back of the Farmers } nd are now prepared to take care of your horses and w in putting your teams in our lot you ru: day each, - - - patror See WAGON AND FEED Board horses or mules, age solicited. —< — =o _—] "THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY CROTHERS. 66 Warren bt. New York. Price 60 cta La 5500,000. We desire to vlace o uton real estate security ua large jamount of money: TI 7Ul Cive ithe best terms and lowest | lrates yet pee d by anione in this line of business Notes drain Torones two» three or fire years. Hare somemone toloan Paihia on or before a eiren: \ date. Calland see haw cheap we can let you have money: | The Bankers Loan & Title Co ful Remedy ever discov. , is certain in its effects and does not 5 flister Nead proof below. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. CUAPMOR, Onto, Jan, 10th, 1988, | 3 poiteen using your Spavin Cure le success on B jbane me, one: ending. aes a Ye cures ost CVCryY case, Mo. trul YyNo! KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. St. Lou Mth, Dr. B,J. Kempant, Co oom Mon Abe a I tried your “ Kewpars’s Sraviw Ccre,” id the desired effect. I used not quite |P. C. FULKERSON, Manager. | NEW ors egure hee 7 oh saree, 6 | Spreinoa mists cpeaecenecer et eee | Bef | LORENCE Wi aera aker. FOR HOME STUDY FerCG $1.00 per bottle, 243 BROADWAY N.Y. | P Baosbaret Falls, Vermest. | INTROOUCTORY LECTUR “JT IS SO NOMINATED IN THE BOND.” = Warranted Columbias. ame oe | With every C America— work | men—i Jumbia is a warrant—bached by the oldest: bieycle house in the largest in the world a factory which does not turn out poor i a phot of superiative excellence mm muchivery and skilled work- reputation upmatched in cycledom—all these things guarantee the Columbias—folks make no mistake in Columbia buying—book about | Columbias, too good for a catalogue—45 beautiful er Vings—easy to (read —comprebensive—free at Columbia agencies—by mail for 2c stamps. 300K OF OUTDOORS. Unbiased articles, with no advertising in them, on all bigh grade outdoor ame Cyciing, by Julian Hawthorne; foot ball, by Walter Morse; rowing, by Benjamin Garno; canor ing, by C. ; Lawn Tennis, by F. A. Kellogg: Yatehing, by George A. Horsemanship; by H. C. Mervin Mag avificently illustrated by 1, Merrill, Beals, Gallagher, and Shute, with covers in ten water - H. Buek of New York. All for 5 two cent stamps. POPE MFG CoO. Boston, Naw York, Chicago, Hartford, v Camp; base ball, by J C Bowyer Vau Stewart: EMEMBE ful investigation ud the merits of our Tublets. + A FEW Testimonials from persons who have been ¢ cured by the use of i Hill's Tablets. : ly give them up. monials free, and shall abits in communica- of our TABLETS. FIEST-CLass ff 1.00 our a package o: TRE ORTO CHEMICAL Co.: DEAR S1B:—I have been using your cure for tobacco habit, and found it would do what you claim for it. I used ten cents worth of the gest chewing tobacco a day, and trom one to five cigars; or I would smoke from ten to torty pipes of tobacco. Have chewed ive years, and two Lhave no desire for it. - JAYLOKD, Lesiie, Mich, Dongs Ferry, N. ¥. THE O16 CHEMICAL Co. :—GENTLEMES :—Some time ago I sent. _ for $1. worth of your Tablets for Tobacco Habit. I received right and, although Iwas — — a chewer, © work in less than three days. Truly yours, MATHEW JONSON P.O. Box 4. PITTSBURGH, Pa. THE OHIO CHEMICAL Co. :—GENTLEMEN :—It gives me pleasure to speak a fo. word of praise for your Tablets. My son was eee addicted to the useoft liquor,and through a friend, I was led to try your Tablets. He wasa heavy and constant drinker, but after using your Tablets but three days he quit drin’ and will not touch liquor of any kind. Ihave waited four month before writing Ou, in UrGer tw Know the cure Wis permanent. Yourstruly, of your Tablets cured = MES." HELEN MORRISON. Onio CHEMICAL Co:—GESTLEMES :— Your Tablets neve re wages of your Tabiets, and without any effort on my part. Address all Orders to THE OHIO CHEMICAL Co., 51, 53 and SS Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO.

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