The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 21, 1894, Page 7

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pe.) a Si el | j Multum in Parvo. Every knave finds a gull.—Zim- merman. We make our fortunes, and we call them fate.—Alroy. Where the speech is corrupted,the mind is also.—Seneca. Evil is in antagonisin with the en- tire creation.—Zschokke. From labor, health; from health, contentment springs.—Beattle. Life that ever needs forgiveness has for its first duty to forgive — Bulwer. Cultivate forbearance until your mind yields a fine crop of it.—Spurg- eon. We do not count a man’s years until he has nothing else to count.— | Emerson. What men want is not the power to achieve, but the will to labor.— Bulwer. Indiscretion, rashness, falsehood, levity, and malice produce each oth- er.—Lavater. Wise men measure actions before- | hand, by the rules of reason and tight.—Bishop Hall. The house of the fermalist is as empty of religion as the white of an egg is of savor.—Bunyan. The seeds of knowledge may be in solitude, but must be cultivated in public.—Johnson. I have noticed that providence is on the side of clear heads and hor- est hearts.—H. W. Beecher. Be gentle. The sea is held in check, not by a wall of brick, but by a beach of sand.—Ivan Panin A man who can not mind his own business is not to be trusted with that of the king.—Saville One may live as a conqueror a king, ora magistrate; but he must die as a man.—Daniel Webster. The tongue of a fool is the key of his counsel, which, in a wise man, } wisdom hath in keeping.—Socrates. Uncertainty! fell demon of our fears! The human soul that can despair supports not thee.—Mallet. Conceit is to nature what paint is to beauty; it is not only needless, but impairs what it would improve. —Pope. The universe is but one great city full of bsloved ones, divine and hu. man, by nature endeared to each other.—FEpicteus. The wear sun hath a golden set; and by the light track of his fiery car, gives token of a goodly day to- morrow.—Shakespeare. Conscience 13 the voice of the soul as the passions are the voice of the body. No wonder they often con tradict each other.—Rousseau. They say that every one of us be lieves in his heart, or would like to have others believe, that he is some- thing which he is not.—Thackeray. The base miser starves amid his store, broods over his gold,and grip- ing still at more, sits sadly pining, and believes he’s poor.—Dryden. Inviolable fidelity, good humor, complacency of temper, outlive all the charms of a fine face, and make the decays of it invisible.—Tatler. Language is the armory of the hu- man mind, and at once contains the trophies of its past and the weapons of its future conqests.—Coleridge. Confidence imparts a wondrous inspiration to its possessor. It bears him on in security, either to meet no danger or to find matter of glorious trial.— Milton. It is not so important to know everything as to know the exact val- ue of everything, to appreciate what we learn, and to arrange what we know.—H. More. Never hold any ove by the button or the hand, in order to be heard out; for 1f the people are willing to hear you, you had better hold your tongue than them.—Chestertfield. Proverbs are the literature of reas- on, or the statements of absolute truth, without qualification. Like the sacred books of each nation,they are the sanctuary of its institutions. —Ewmerson. A young man said to Dr. Parr that he would believe nothing which he could not understand. “Then,” said the Doctor, “your creed will be the shortest of any man’s I know.”— A. Helps. The only true knowledge of our fellowman is that which enables us to feel with him—which gives us 8 fine ear for the heart pulses that are beating under the mere clothes of of circumstances and opinion.— George Eliot. | Jamped From a Train. | | Nevada, Mo. June 14.—William | Middaugh of Iuka Springs, St. Clair | | county, jumped from the Missouri, | Kansas ani Texas southbound ex | press at 2:10 this afternoon south of |the Nevada freight depot, and had his left arm and shoulder blade broken. Mr. Middaugh bad board led the train at Sebe ty to come | to Neyada in search of his run away | daughter. | | Speaking of the matter, he said: | |“My daugiter Aunie, aged 14, left | }Lome on the 12th with Relof Hart-| | man of Crescent, Ok. Hartman hes| | been at work for me about three | weeks. Annie fell in love with him. | Ho went away, saying he was going| ito Oklahoma- day, and I learned from some of the | ie left the same neighbors that the coaple had plan {ned to meet cither at Rockville or | Joplin. She took nothing with ber} except the clothing she had on. She | was 14 old last December. | While looking from the car window I thought I saw her in a house near the track as the train into the city. This caused me to jump when years ran I thought the train had passed the station. My wife and other children are grieving themselves death over the disappearance cf our | daughter. most to I want some one to tele | graph my folks that Iam burt.” Mr. Middaugh knew but little of | the man who had led his daughte rl He had a ticket to} Joplin, but since he got hart he is from her home. anxious to be returned hom His daughter arrived at Harwood asmall hamlet on the M K.& T. northeast of this place, yesterday evening. She said she had her home, some thirty miles, to meet her lover at Rockville or Nevada, when they would be married. She failed to find him at Rockville and had start ed out to walk to this city. She was given money by some charitable fourteen miles walked from people at Harwood, piaced in # con- veyance and returned to her home. Her father will be sent home as soon as he can stand the journey. Another professional patriot has been rounded Ex-Auditor of Illinois, Pavey who went up and down the state under the ‘glorious regime of Republicanism,” declaring that ke perjured himself thousands of times to get pensions for the boys in blue, and was elected on that platform, has been forced by the Supreme Court to disgorge $20,000 of the State's funds which he had been wrongfully withholding.—Clin - ton Democrat. up. All Free. 4 Those who haye uSed Dr. King’s New Discovery tor Consumption know its value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it tree. Callon the advertised druggist and get a trial bottle tree. Send your name and ad- dress to H E Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get asample box of New Lite Pills free, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and Household Instructor tree. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing. HL Tuck- er’s drugstore. Neodosha, Kan, June 7.—Th's city is enjoying a growth unprecent ed in these times. Several new op erators have joined the original com pany which discovered the oil field in this vicinity and developments are progressing rapidly. The first regulation oil tank ever erected in the state is in process of construc tion. Real estate men from all over the state are arriving on the ground aad it looks as if a substantial boom was on To Wed His Stepmother. Hot Springs, Ark., June 7.—Coun- ty Clerk Frank Place to day issued a marriage license to an extraordi nary couple. Joshua C. Holliman | asked and obtained license to marry his stepmother, Susan Holliman The bride is the widew of the late Dr. J. C. Holliman, who died about three months ago, and the groom is, his son. The bride is 34 years of ae, and the groom is 21. Mrs. Holliman was the late Dr. Holli- man’s third wife. Clinton, Missouri. Mr. A. L Armstrong, an old druggist and a prominent citizen ot this eater {000 pounds foreign last week | 640,342 pounds Vomestic TT : wart > 1 . jlast year. The stock in Boston is| Frauk A. Parker; Co ; demand is spirit lers }can speculators have just purchased prising town, says: “I sel! some torty| different kinds ot cough medicines, bnt| Wool sales of the Week. Veraon County Primarics. Bostor, June 9.—The Commercial | Bulletin says of the Boston wool) ports from the D markel: tie primary The sales of the wee’ ise 1,150,000 pounds of de id 168,000 pounds forei 1,054,400 pour ie £ net} C. Corr ia domestic and 120,-} Prose: gD, ag: and | recor cand 183,000 | ¢} the sa 7 pounds foreign for me week | ¢] Herry C. £ extremely light for this season of} Thorp; assessor, Jas the year. The imports this year are| Probate Judge, Judsen trivial. The shortage in sales to date | Presiding Judge county ants to 10,832,400 | T+ Shields: Associate Judges ; | Burcham and Jasper McCrary; oner, L. M. Dixon from last year am foreign and but 1,716,313 domestic, while the shrinkage to date in re-| enn ee ceipts amount to 77,457 bales for-| Horribly Mangted. eign and 23,675 b. domestic. The} Jasper, Mo., June 10.—Sam Bowen and dull are contracting with western grow-| four miles east of here,came to town rs for round lots at the|/Saturday and became intoxicated. mill. New Humbold wool has open-| At midnight he got on one of the Mills | who has been engaged in farming delivered tracks of ed at 342, cleav, delivered ut the| the passenger train aud mill. Rbuode Island worsted mills|Wheu a mile south of the city fell | took 60,000 pounds of XX and above off. The wheels of the c passing at 22 cents, but the wool will not}over his body caused almost instant cost over 46 cents secured. Otber|death. His remains were horribly sales are noted at 20 cents. Ameri-|™2ugled. An inquest was held this afternoon and a verdict rendered accordance with the above facts. in 500 bales of Augora wool in Mar- $$ The Kansas state republican con- vention nominated the following tick- et: Governor, E. N. Morrill, of Brown county. Lieut. Gov., J. A. Troutman. of Shawnee county. See- retary of state, W. C. Edwards of Auditor, Geo. Cole of Crawford connty. Associate jus- seilles to be held there for a rise. Democrats are Interested If the Republicans of Missouri are counting upon Democratic indiffer- ence this year to carry any portion | with- of the state, they are counti Pawnee county out reason. Every primary election thus far|tice, W. A. Johnstone, of Ottawa held has shown a largely increased|county. Tr rer. Otis L. Ather vote. The latest, held in Boone|ton of Russe!l county. Attorney county } of 200 votes over that polled two ast Monday, bad an increase | General, F. B. Dawes of Clay county. Chas C. Moore,etitor of the Blue Grass Blade, Lexingtoo, Ky., is hav- ing trouble with the preachers and prosecuting attorney of the county. Mr. Moore is quite an old man and years ago. If there were indifference, dis- couragement, disappointment, or disagreemert, would not the primary elections indicate it by an able decrease in the polling? There is nothing the matter with Missouri It has no confidence in the disposition or the power of either the Republican or Populist parities to deal with the vexed questions of the day. It feels that Democracy is still the one hope of good government, and in that hope it is united, earnest, cnthusias- tic. There will be no defections, no stay-at-homes and no bolters in the Democratic army of Missouri this year.—Journal Democrat. appreci- rare ws an infidel of the most pronounced type and on several occassions has been arrested and prosecuted for blasphemy and at the present time an indictment hangs over his head on the above charge, which he will have to auswer at the July term of court. Democracy. Wm. Silsby, a farmer, living near Cole Camp in Benton county, had his right thumb badly lacerated by a mad cow Friday He was doctor- ing the cow for what he supposed to be buckeye poisoning, was bitten. Two other two mares were also bi same dog aud they were all killed as wellasthe dog. Mr Silsby went to Kansas City for treatment when he cows and tten by the A Terrible Penalty. Atlanta, Ga., June 14.—A terrible story comes from Pierce County, in the southwest part of the State. It is that a negro criminally as- saulted a respectable white woman and ran off, leaving her for dead The woman recovered, gave the alarm and a posse of twenty persons pur- sued and caught the negro. With very little ado they procured a rope and hung him toa limb. In afew minutes they cut him down, and while life was yet in his body, proceeded to flay him. After being subjected to their treatment the negro lived six hours, a part of the time being conscious, Some of the republican newspa pers pretend to believe that it will be an easy matter to defeat Charlie Morgan. They do not get their in- formation from Havers, Thresher and sundry other republicans who \have met him in the political arena. —Lawrence County Chieftain. Mrs Lease wants the nomination for congress at large from Kansas. The old girl had better stick to the lecture field, in it there is more cer- tainty of making her husband a liv- ing. Here’s the Idea Of the Non-pull-out Bow The great watch saver. y from thieves and fa!!,—cannot be the case—costs nothing extra. fe "7 One of Creighton’s merchants, as a means of advertising, stated in his ad, that on Saturday, May 19 he would sel Sav 25 pounds of granulated sugar for $1. Some of his competi- tors made a run on it when the day came by sending parties to buy it in, but the merchant caught on, and began to send them brown sugar, and finally sent them salt, which they readily dumped into their su- gar barrels. Upon finding that part of their sugar was salt, they wanted to fight, prosecute, ete.—Holden Enterprise. The bow has a grsove on each end. A collar runs down insid endant (stem) and ts into the grooves, firmly locking the bow to the pendant. si so that it cannot be FOES pulled or twisted off. 2 iN ; Can only be had with cases stamped with this trade mark. = Jas. Boss Filled Watch Cases re now fitted with this great bow (ring). They look and wear like solid gold cases. Cost only about half as much, and are guaranteed for twenty years. Sold only through watcb dealers. -_ Remember the name Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,SaltRheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, ind all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. I is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per boxt For sale by H. L. Tucker, druggist. ystone Watch Case ca, PHILADELPHIA. Senator Sherman says there is no money in politics. He is a bright and shining example of the truth of his remarks. He enterd politics a poor man and is now worth millions. Roscoe Conkling was about the orily | prominent republican who failed to have never in my experience sold so much of any one article as I have ot Ballard’s Horehonud Syrup. <All who for cough, cold, consumption, and all diseases ot the throat and lungs. they haveever tried.””_ It is a specific for croup and whooping cough. It will re- lieve a cough in one minute. Contains ne opiates. Sold by H L Tacker, drug- gist. 3 use it say itis the most perfect remedy | | make a fortune out of politics. When |he left the United States senate he | was forced to borrow money from a 1NSY.@ PILLS jfriend to pay his railroad fare to ANSY.4 PIL |New York. A poor republican sen- Conrarais Dersons are coun. ator now would be as much of a Famey Eilin, ibe grouse are pat o in curiosity as a dime museum freak.— uid evtng perio mores 5 insist Ex. Woman's ‘Guard snd receive them i py mall Wileex SpeciG@eCo,Phila.Pa. Nevada, Mo, June 10.—Full re-| 1 county show | | Constipation, rrhora. Eruciation, and promotes ion, Murray Street, N. ¥ J “NERVE SEEDS.” $ This 1 iy pak Me: sof Brata Nervous: uiants vest pc NERV Mo.,by J. Hl. PRIZ 4, Druggist. - “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.” GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPOLIO —ELY'S CREAM BALM Cleanses che Nasal (Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals ithe Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures ves Kelief at once Apply into the Nostrils. soc.) Dens sts or by THE TWICE-A-WEEK ‘TIMES, $1.00 $1.00 Por Per Two Papers for the Yoar. Price of one Yoar, Less Than one Cent Per Copy. The Kansas City Times, January 16, 1894, began issuing §The Twice-a- reek Ti yeekly Times has been a welcome Hereatter the thousands of homes the uest will receive that unrlval- in which aper twice a week. The price remains ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. 50 Cents for Six Months, 25 Cents for 3 Months, The Literary and News Features, which tor nearly a Buarter of a Cen- sn the West, k Times will continue a} Newspaper and Magazine in One. ORGANIZE CLUBS. Vo any one who will send The,Times Fiye New Yearly Subscription tor the Twice-a-Week Times, with draft or postoflice money$order tor $5 the paper will be mailed 5 FREE FOR ONE YEAR. Address THE RANSAS CITY TIMES Sample copies free EHansas Goty, Me. tury have made this the gre The Twice-a will be maintaimed, You see them everywhere. Columbia Bicycles Their sales attest their popularity. Catalogue free a or mailed for two 2-ce POPE MFG. Co.’ Boston, New York, Chicago, artford. soem HAGEDORN World's Fair Views The Old Reliable GIVEN AWAY pHotTocrRaAPH ER —_BY——_ The St. Louis Republic Soathe ee : TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S’ a ee FAIR VIEWS, each portfolio con. Styles of Photographing taining 16 views and each view ac-' : curately described. Views of the |°*°C"" od its the highest style of the Mail Buildings, State Buildings, the 9°" *"4 *t reasonable prices. Midway, Views of Statuary, etc. = These ten portfolios will be given’ Crayon Work A Specialty. without cost to anyone who will | send five new yearly subscribers to, All w The Twice-a-Week Republic, wth $5.00 the regular subscription price. , Address THE REPUBLIC, | St. Louis, Mo. | North Side Square. Has the best equipped gallery inv work in my line is guaranteed to ive satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. C. HAGEDORN. { a

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