The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 31, 1894, Page 7

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rc en aera a ee Has This Cangzht Your Eye Then stopatminute. Haven't you been a strony protec ist all your life? Isn't your hair getting g and your back bowed? Can't you remember when the tariff was not half as high at present? At that time, wasn’t it easier to find work, Hasn't it been vetting harder for labor to fiud employ hard to pay for it?) And right along with this condition side like a running mate, hasn't the tariff been ineréased until it is pow higher than ever before? And right along now while the tariff ix and easier to pay for it too? ent, and just as the higiest, isn’t labor the poorest paid aud employe ever known? Ts it not foolish to assume that a fear of it being changed back towar that point where it was when times were good is the cause cf the wide- Ppread panic? Honor bright, now, if you were a Free Trader and saw wages decrease in about the same ratio as th: tariff is increased, wouldn't you lay it all to the infernal system of protection? Be honest with yourself and answer. | —KEx. Cure for Headache. 2 As a remedy tor all torms of Head- ache Electric Witters has proved to be the yery best. It ettects a permanent cure and the most dreaded habitual sick headaches yield to its influence: We urge all who are afflicted to procure a bottle and give this remedy a tair trial. In cases of habitual constipasion Electric Bittets cures by giving the needed tone to tne bowels, and tew cases long resist the use of this medicine. Try it onc Large bottles only Fitty cents at Hy, L. ‘Yucker’s Dr Suicide of a Young Woman. Moberly, Mo, 3 23 —Miss Lil- lie Ross, u young woman, committed suicide at dhe Arlington hotel at 9 o'clock tenight by shooting herself in the right temple. She died instantly. She has been a dining room girl and came here about jten days ago from St. Louis, at which place her mother lives. She was arrested to-day on a warrant sworn out by Charles Perry of 7218 South Broadway, St. Louis, charging her with stealing $50. It is thought she was innocent avd that excitement caused her to commit the deed. Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 1 This invaluable remedy is one that ought to be in every household. It will cure your Rheumatisin, Neuralgia, sprains, cuts, bruises, burns, frosted teet and ears, tore throat and sore chest. It you have a lame back it will cure it. It yenetrates to the seat of the disease. It will cure stiff joints, aud contracted muscles atter all other remedies bave tailed. Those who have been crippled tor years have used Ballard Snow Lini ment and thrown aw. their crutches and been able to walk as well as ever. It will cure you. Price soc. Sold by H L Tucker druggist Why has democracy stood the storms and floods of so many years and still lives, moves and has its be- ing? The answer is easy and simple: The party away back under the ori gin of the constitution was builded on arock aud when the high tariff winds came and the floods of politi eal corruption came it fell not. Other structures builded on the sand have come and gone to ruins but the old democrati: house although contain- ing a few false timbers just now like Hill and company will be repaired by some good western timber and stand for generations yet to come. True principle containing the great est good for the greatest number will never die.—Ex. Guaranteed Cure. 2 We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Di. King,s New Discovery tor consumption coughs. and colds upon this condition,. If you are afflicted with a cough cold or any lung throat or chest trouble and will use this remedy as di- rected giving it a tatrtrial and experience no benefit you may return the bottle and have your money retunded. We could not make this offer it we did not know that Dr- King’s New Discovery could be relied upon, It never disappoints, trial bottles tree at H. L. Tuese Drug Store. Regularsize soc. and $1.co, Jefferson City, Mo., May 19.— Governor Stone this evening issued a proclamation offering a reward of $300 each for the capture of William Pp. and George E. Taylor, who mur- dered George Meeks, his wife and two children in Linn county about one week ago. roward of $300 each for the arrest of the unknown bandits who robbed the bank of Southwest City, McDon- ald county about ten days ago and shot and mortally wounded ex-state senator Seaborn. Officers and directors of the First National bank of Little Rock have been sued, by the receiver, for $300,000. He also offered a} To Stop the Sale of the “Sun.” | St. Joseph, Mo., May 25.—The; city authorities have prohibited the | sale of the Kansas City Sunday Sun | © in this city, alleging that it is an in-| decent publication Yesterday R. | Koder and James Free, newsdealers, were arrested, and were tried in the Police court this morning, resulting in each being convicted and fined $25 and costs. City Attorney Myt-| ton says he proposes to arrest every person who sells the sheet in this | | city. Will Sue the Taylor Estate. Milan, Mo., May 22 —Prosecuting Attroney B, F. Price, whom the} ,County court appointed guardian |for Nellie Meek, the survivor of the | brutal murder, will bring suit against ithe Taylor estate for $50,000 jages for and for the killing of ber father and | mother,and thereby depriving her of her only earthly support. Sheriff | Niblo proposed that if the perpetra tors were captured by the Sullivan county authorities to donate the $3,- 000 reward to the little heroine, who is the only living witness to the crime. dam- bodily injury sustained, Extravagance is the bane of Am erican life. We are the most profli gate people of the earth. We waste more in living than would supply food for an equal number of people in almost any country of the old world, and extravagance permeates j;every feature of American existence. Our young men and young women jare brought up to indulgence and profligacy, and in long seasons of prosperity they are taught that labor is not respectable. We thus not only hinder the proper development of the young men and women of the land, but we train them toa mea sure of extravagance that unfits them for usefulness and makes them ill-fitted for just such seasons of ad- versity as are now upenus. These must learn the uses of adversity with more than usual severity, but they must learn the lessons none the less. Philadelphia had a big fire Sun- day. It occurred in a store room in the heart of the business section of the city and before the flames could be extinguished $225,000 worth of property was destroyed. The Democratic State Convention of Missouri adopted a strong resolu- tion against the A. P. A. organiza- tion. Dare the Populist or Repuk- lican parties of Kansas do so?— Spirit, Paola, Kans. California Populists in their plat- form favor Government control of railway, telegraph and telephone lines and the Nicaragua Canal. Benson Wood of Effingham was nominated by the Republicans Wed- terday to oppose Congressman Fith- ian in the Nineteenth Illinois Dis- trict. The Amalgamated Iron and Steel } Workers’ Convention, in session at Cleveland, has agreed on a steel wage workers’ scale for the coming year. The trial of assassin Prendergast at Chicago, has been postponed again Ten of Kelley's Coxeyites have been placed in the hospital at Quincy Ill., suffering with fever. The question of unity of the Pres- byterian churches was the promi- nent subject before the Saratoga Assembly. General Miles has ordered the Fort Leayenworth troops to the Choctaw Nation to drive out the striking miners. About 100 Deputy Marshals and citizens had a hard battle with a gang of 13 horse thieves near Tulsa, I. T., Tuesday. The Iowa Federation of Labor adopted important changes to the} Constitution, elected officers and ad- journed Wednesday. Terre Haute is threatened with a coal famine. Arkansas Medical Association is | meeting at Pine Bluff. W. D- Richman, once a wealthy miner of Cripple, is being anxiously sought by six wives. Fire destroyed $125,000 worth of The Missouri Grand lodge of Odd Fellows bas wisely decided upon the erection of an Orphans’ Home, to be t Cavalry are si en conducted the auspices of ancighty-four pound can- | ,, hes and a railway train | tbat order. aches thickness. a paper published at OF GENERAL INTEREST vel own only to be very grea s under four The assessment made upon the members for this purpose | non on six one Say aa 7 ‘i will be almost incalculable. It will North hast. as for its motto: “All |, - Things Come to Him Who Hustl insure the full attainment of one of and equally consp Ss on the ri the benevolent objects of the order, of the motto is this not ‘and atthe same time add to Mis | souri’s list of such institutions one ,.. |im every way worthy of comparison | ynomeans a thing : od ag pe. 3 Uns | with those already built —Kansas | and. The average | : | of the persons whose obituaries ap- | City Times. peared in the London Timesduring the | Fi | course of a whole week last month was | The people around Grand Pass, | between eighty and eighty-six years, An | ana Sealed ig eRe MAIO county, are searc’ aj and such a record is said not to be un-|5#line county, are searching for 2) common | mountain lion A member of the Royal Meteoro- | a logical society hasexperimented on the | The drouth was broken around | size of raindrops, which vary from a | ¢¢. Joseph, Thursday by a heavy | speck so small as to be almost invisible z . : 5 rain. Crops needed it. ising Agents Medicine Barred.” ‘No Advertisements Taken.” of the past in up to a diameter of two inche Drops | of the same size do not always contain | the same amount of water. Some of the largest drops are hollow. | has ordered a recanvas of the vote —If hosiers know what they are | about the feet of American women «re larger than they once were. Three dozen pairs of women's hose used to be | —_,,, Sean Aa assorted as to sizes in this fashion. | ‘he Leavenworth and Home mine irs No. 8; six, No. twelve, |}Coal companies of Leavenworth, . 92; six, No. 10. The | ius, have advanced their miners | have now disappeared from | among woman's sizes, and the number of larger sizes in three dozen pairs of hose has increased. —In selecting bananas it is well to remember that the fruit which is largest, the deepest yellow and the least angular is, as a rule, the best. One who has become banana wise through looking into their culture in Jamaica, where most of the bananas that come to our market are grown, 5 denies the current belief that bananas |%t Rolla, has are ripened on the plant in that coun- | char try. and, therefore, are much superior to those that are cut green. —California abounds in horticultural prodigies, and the whole state is full of wonderful developments of trees and vine, so common there as to attract lit- | and the gray of Southwest Missouri tle attention. Mengion is incidentally ies z made in a San Francisco paper of a sin- |@nd North Arkansas will be he held gle grapevine, seven years old, on the |at West Plains, August 2ist to 25th grounds of a private house in the city |; ugive limits which covers a space seventy-five | 2OUSIVe. feet square and from which four tons of grapes have been gathered in one season. —Fog is to most people depressing, but if it is not too thick it affords one beauty that is unique. This appears only at night and in places that are well furnished with are lights. These Jamps spread a white radiance through the moisture-laden air above and around them, and, as they sputter and flicker, The supreme court of Michigan out of which grew the salary-grab frauds. wages to 90 cents a ton. | An insane convict at the southern | Illinois hospital for the insane at- tempted to murder a keeper and was captured only after a very desperate fight. Hamilton E. Baker, ex-postmaster been arrested on ges of embezzlement and forg- The amount involved is about 3500 The annual meeting of the blue William Arnwine was convicted of murder in the second degree in the circuit court at Clinton, Thursday for the killing of George Keaton. He will not get less than 10 years in the penitentiary. Owen Grady, a young farmer near the nebulw seen over the roofs and|Atchison, Kas, has mysteriously awnings appear like the reflection of a | 4:. “ 4 great fire, except that the light is white | #84PPeared, and a stranger who was with him is suspected murdered him. instead of redand yellow. When forms are blurred in the mist, and distance is obliterated, this playing and fishing of pallid lights is magical and uncanny as well as beautiful. —The Olympieum was a magnificent temple to the Olympian Zeus in Athens, Greece. The Athenians began this temple in the first period of their great- of having At Joliet, Ill, not only have vege- tables and fruits been damaged by the frost, but the cold weather has exhausted the supply of fuel and ness, the Greek princess of Asia con- | many families could have no fire tinued it, Augustus left it unfinished, | yesterday. and six hundred and fifty years after it is ——— was begun Hadrian completed and ded- icated it. During the dark ages it served as a quarry of building stone for the Athenians. Fifteen lofty Corinthian columns of Pentellic mar- ble, rising to a height of more than sixty feet, are now standing as the re- mains of this colossal temple. Livy speaks of this temple as the only one A negro girl iu the employ of M. B. Asbury, a commission man at St. Joseph, poisoned the family Thurs- day morning by putting corrosive sublimate in the coffee. They nar- rowly escaped death. The girl had Z stolen $5 a few days before,in which in the world undertaken “upon a scale es commensurate with the majesty of the |She had been detected. god. ne — The Pennsylvania Republicans nominated General D. H. Hastings aud a full State ticket at Harrisburg. CULTIVATING PATRIOTISM. The Establishment of Holidays Peculiar to Certain States. Several states of the union have legal holidays which are exclusively their Mrs. Eva M. Blackman, Police own, generally in celebration of some | Commissioner of Leavenworth, Kas., incident in the state’s history or of the Illinois, |e¥presses herself on various sub- birth of some great citizen. for instance, celebrates as a holiday, jects. with a suspension of business and clos- == ing of all banks and public buildings, the 12th of February, which is the birthday of Lincoln. California celebrates with a public holiday the 9th of September, and Ne- vada the 5lst of October. On these Administrator's Notice Notice is hereby given, that letters of administration on the partnership estate of Brooks & Mains, were granted to the undersigned on the lith day of April 1894, by the pro- s the two states named were ad- | bate court of Bates county, Missouri. mitted into the union. All persons having elaims against Louisiana makes a legal holiday and | Said estate are required to exhibit a notable oceasion of the Sth of Janu- | them for allowance tothe administra- ary, on which day the battle of New Or- | tor Within one year after the date of leans was won by Gen, Jackson; and | S#id letters, or they may be precluded See ae Sea S ai rom any benefit of said estate; an — SF cue Ceatn Tees Ae if such claims be not exhibited within battle of San cinto, brates its independence March 2. The territory of Utah makes a holi- of July 24 which is ‘Pioneers’ rth Carol¢na patriotically observes, on May 20, the anniversary of This 17th day of April 1894. I. N. Marys, Admin Surviving partner. istrator. two years from the date of this pub-/| lication, they shall be forever barred. | HRS RRANO LASSE ON CASTORIA for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” H.A. Ancurr, M.D., 111 So, Oxfor3 St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhea. Eructation, Kils Worn, gives sleep, and promotes di gestion, Without iy. ‘ious medication, Taz Csstacr Compisy, 77 Murray Street, N.Y MANHCOD RESTORED!: rod tO CUTE ALLT rs diseases, such as Weak Met . Headache, Wakeiulness, ghtly Emis TTOUS- ldrainsand loss of power rexertion, youthful errors, excessive use of tobacc: ulants, which lead to Intirmity, Consumption or Insanity. Can vest pocket. SI per box, 6 tor $5, by poate ae with yritt arantee to cure or refund the money. Staceists, Ask forit, take noother, Write fortree Medical Hook ser s NER VESEED CO., Masonic Tempie, CHICAGO. y JH. FRIZELL, Druggist. e ‘optuim or sttm= cc For sale in Butler, “A HANDFUL GF L 2T MAY BE A HOUSE- FUL OF SHAME.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO i—ELY'S CREAM BALM_Cleanses the Nasal ‘Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals ithe Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures n is iy Absorbed, . ELY BROS, Se Warren St..N.¥, ‘THE TWICK-A-WEEK SITMES. $1.00 $1.00 Per Per Truro Papers for the Year. Price of one Yoar, Less Than one Cent Per Copy. The Kansas City Times, January 16, 1894, began issuing The Twice-a- Week Times. Hereatter the thousands of homes in which the Weekly Times has been a welcome guest will receive that unrlval- ed paper twice a week. The price remains ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. 50 Cents for Six Months, 25 Cents for 3 Months, The Literary and News Features, which tor neaily a Buarter of a Cen- tury have made this the greatest Weekly sn the West, will be maintaimed. The Twice-a-Week Times will continue a; Newspaper and Magazine in One. ORGANIZE CLUBS. Vo any one who will send The Times Five New Yearly Subscription tor the Twice-a-Week Times, with draft or postoffice moneygorder tor $5 the paper will be mailed FREE FOR ONE YEAR. 4&ddress THE ERANSAS CITY TIMES Sampte copies free Eansas Coty, Me. ——— Eelegant | Masouri Pacific Time Table; Arrival and departure ot passenger ' . ‘ \ trains at Butler Station. j Nort Bounp | Passenger, - - 4:47 a.m. Sees - - 2:42 p.m. ss = = assenger, - - r15 p.m. GIVEN AWAY _ [Loca tecighs 2 eee. a BY SoutH Bounp The St. Louis Republic Passenger,” ‘ | Local Freight - TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S | , Passenger, - + 7:16 a. m. | rassenger, : FAIR VIEWS, each portfclio con- | WANS YO Die taining 16 views and each view ac- 4 curately described. Views of the aNSY-© PILLS Mail Buildings, State Buildings, the | Sraes =e lous persons terfitting Wileox Compou: Tans: ; Pilise the genuine are metal boxes with 5! now “B. LEWIS & CD | Midway, Views of Statuary, etc. | These ten portfolios will be given | without cost to anyone. who will! send five new yearly subscribers to} The Twice-a Week Republic, with | $5.00 the regular subscription price. Address THE REPUBLIC, | ut up in the signing of the Mecklenburg declar- ation of independence, in which the North Carolina colonists proclaimed America’s independence of Great Brit- ain more than a year before the declar- ation at Philadelphia. The 17th of June, Bunker Hill day, is a complete holiday, but not a legal one, in Boston and in the cities and towns which surround it. Rhode Island makes a legal holiday in April of “election day,” the old New England name for the day when the new state government is inducted into office. South Carolina has two legal holidays | which are unknown in other states, the 26th and 27th of December, which are regarded as a part of Chrismas. \ The observance of a special holiday | tends to encourage more than state | pride, for the history of no state is ex- clusively its own, but is related to that of sister states. An “admission day,” for instance, commemorating the state's \ entrance into the union, can only sug- | To be sure of getting a Non-pull-out, sex gest thoughts of national patriotism; | the caseisstamped with this trade mark. nor can the anniversary of a great, i not be had with any other kind. statesman’s or chieftain’s birth.or of a your jeweler for pamphlet, or send for great victory over a foreign enemy, be | one to the famous Boss Filled Case mthers. Going to Buy a Watch? If so, buy one that cannot be stolen, “Th only thief-proof Watches are those with Here's the Idea: rans down inside the gentese (stem) and inta the grooves, firmly locking the bow to the pendent, 30 that it cannot be pulled or twisted of. property at West End, near New Orleans, Wednesday morning. St. Louis, Mo. Proprietor of C. HAGEDORN . sss The Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missouri. All ~ Styles of Photographing Having purchased the Elx Horn barn and Livery outfit ot J. W Smith, and | having added to the same a number ot first-class Buggies, and horses, I can sa* | to the public that I now have the Best Liverv Barn In southwest Mo. Horses and eernris Ali work in my line is guarant bought and sold, or stock handied on vive satisfaction. aa aa mem at commission, Stock bearded by the day execut-d in the highest style of the | act, and at reasonable prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. advantage.—Youth’s Compazion. otherwise than of generai interest and Key. stoneWa' tch C. Co., i PHILADELPHIA. samples of work. | weekor month, With 16 years exper- lience Mr Lewis teels able to compete ° | Li barn in thi ion. C. HACEDORN., Gitscsccchim CB LEWIS & CO i

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