The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 14, 1897, Page 6

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a ene eI In Day Women mode of s of Yore to adopt this d to use home- made soft soap. ther of things would be considered a har ship in this age of electricity end CLAIRETTE Soap Best for washing w elin é ning. by 2 issour1 Pacific Railway Time Table NORTH 'TOUND, “1040 P Local Freight sees +1029 A SOUTIE BOUND. No 9 M No 5 M. No, 1 4 M. No 311 Local Freight.... ; i M. INTERSTATE DIVISION. No, $49 Depart . see crenseces TOO A, M, No. 300 Arrive. . .... 11:9 AM W. C. Bennve, Agent.” K C Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival aud departure of trains at Worland. NOKTH BOUND. No.7 Freight daily except Sunday No.5 +2 tie belie No 1 Expressdaily................- SOUTH KOU No. 2 Express daily .... No Freight daily except Sunday Nos “ ry : Remember this isthe popular short line be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pittsburg, Kan., Joplin, Mo , Neosho, Mo , Sulphur Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark, ant the direct route from the south to St Louis, Chicago, and pointe north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francieco, Portland and points west and northwest. No expense has been 1 1 1 this line second to none inthe west. Travel via the new line H.C. Orr. Gen’l Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. BACK TO LIFE Came Young Dougherty During His His GOwo Funeral,—Sat Up and Drank Two Quarts of Water, WAS VERY FOND OF SINGING The Sad Hymns of the Mourners Roused Him Wilmington, Del., Jan. 4—The doctors of this City are puzzled over the remarkable case of Frank Dougherty, who lives at Newport, a small town four miles below this Place, and who died Tuesday night and suddenly returned to life on Friday, during the funeral services A wake was held over his corpse Thureday night, and the ceremony continued till daybreak. One of the mourners, Dennis Dougal, a cousin, ot Mrs. Dougherty, cat beside the corpse all night, and while the other mourners were asleep he no- ticed the corpse twitched a little. He sutamoned Mre Dougherty and she awakened the other mourners. The party waited patiently for six hours to see if the McDougal story was a fact or merely an illusion, and at end of this time they began prepa- rations for the funeral services. Hardly had they begun to sing when the corpse opened its eyes and then sat up and peered about the room. Mrs. Dougherty spoke to the bey, and he gave her a faint an swer. A doctor was summoned from Newark and placed in charge of the boy. The fuceral was, there- fore, off. After his revivification young Dougherty called for water aud drank two quarts without stopping Young Dougherty was fond of sing ing and the doctors say that the singing of the mourners had a sooth ing effect on his nerves and caused him to awaken. An aching back, a changes in the urine, h ness, all point to Brig ‘s I to cure the trouble before t e its dangerous stage. Prickly A vertain remedy. It he: kidneys, regulates the Tr, stimulates the ch and digestion, cleanses the bowel! nm used in many severe and obstinate vases with the most gratifying success. Sold by McClement & Co. Ed Perry Removed. Springfield, Mo., January 5.—Ed Perry, murderer of the Sawyer fam ily of Douglass county, whose sen- tence of death has teen postponed from December 30 uatil January 30, was taken to West Plains, Mo., to day by Sheriff George Johnson of Douglas county. The reason for the| transfer is a mystery, further than | Johnson said Perry had too many friends in Springfield. CASTOR rs of ; AavyYy, hich ed to make the passenger equipment of | LOVES A NEGRO. |Wild Infatuation of a Pretty | White Girl. FLORENCE KINNEY, DIXON. | Pugilist Robert Long the Object of Her | Affections. Chicago, [il., Jau. 4 —Miss Flor-| jence Kinney Janguishes in jail for} | the love of a big biack prize fighter. | |She is locked up at the Harrison | Street Annex trying to make up ber | mind on the vexing situation. | | She is 16 years old, the daughter | of Hiram Kinney, foreman of C. H. Henderson & Co's shoe factory at Dixon, Ill. She might have had 50 with fair complexion like her own, but she did not want them after ber big brown eyes had fallen on Robert Long His tace is as black as the masses of raven ringlets that tumble about their eare, but she loved him and ran away to Chicago to marry bim. Miss Kinney ran away from home snd came to this city, where she met Long at the depot. She was accom panied on the train by John Mack of Oregon Ill, a white man. The} trio were seen entering a house in| Desplaines street near Harrison street, that night by Policemen Duffy and Rafferty of the Mazwell street Station. The trio was arrested on general principles and taken to the station. There Miss Kmney gave the name of Ethel La Crosse; but re fused to tell much about herself. After a long and tedious cross questioning she admitted to Capt. Wheeler that she had left her home in Dixon te marry the negro. She gave her father’s address and he was notified) The negro and his canpanion, Mack,were arraigned the next morning charged with abduction Justice Dooley continued to get more evidence against Long and it will be heard to-day. “I met Long at a baseball game at Dixon two years ago,” said Miss Kinney. ‘He came there with a club from Mourt Morris, Ill. There were several negroes iu the club, aud oth er white girls talked to them, and I thought there was no barm in doing so. He sad his uncle was marrie! toa white woman, and that there was no reason why we should not wed,eo L consented. He was going to send ticket for me to come to Chicago to meet him, but I just came anyway” : Long is a heavyweight prize fight> er and during the summer finds en- gagements playing ball with the teams of smaller towns. He is a jet black specimen of his race and is neither handsome or attractive in appearance. He is coarse and brut- al looking and no one who has any- thing todo with the strange case can find any reason why an intelli- gent white girl could fall in love with him. Two weeks ago Long was arrested by the police of the Street Station for engaging in a back-room prize fight with George Washington, another colored bruiser The police at Maxwell station will endeavor to have Misa Kinney pros ecure Long for abduction Deafness Cannot be Cured. bylocal applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the There is only one way’to cure deafr and that is by constitutional remedi Deatness 1s caused by an inflamed con- dition otf the mucous lining of the eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have arumbling sound of | impertect hetring, and when it is entire ly closed deatness is the result, and un | less the inflammation can be taken out| and this tube be restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroye ever; nine casas out oy ten are caus catarrh, which is nothing but an inf ed condition of the mucous surtac We will give one hundred dollars tor any case ot deafness (caused bv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hali’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars tree. F. J. Cueney & Co., Toledo, O. RR.Sold by druggi e mse 75c. Hartshone, I. T., Jan 4 —A wine accident explosion occurred at Alder- son mines from fou! gas this morn | ing between 5 and 6 o'clock The | first five men reached were dead Some 15 or 20 men behind were at} work. The work of rescue is now! on. There islittlehope. The wine! belonged to the Choctaw, Oklahoma! and Gulf railway company. Is Your Tongue throat dry ed and do y ler, drugg’ SLY OLD SLYMAN, How He Tathed te the Young Man Whe Wanted Bis Daughter. From the New York World. This is what Papa S!yman said to young Bertie St. Charwhen he eam to ask the hand of Mami J marriage “Ah, Herbert, my b< want to take my little » hone nest, do you, eb? IT don't kuow about that, Herbert, TL don't kuow about that. (Wipes biseyes) She ¥,and so you rou the is our only girlie, you Kuo life and the light of the bouse (chis voice grows husky.) Bat wand the you love each other, it isn’ for ms or mott to stand in the way of our darting’s happiness, although heaven only knows how we shail live withour her. (Weeps brokenly ) Excuse a father’s tears, Herbert. I would be lacking the vatura! ipstivets of true fatherhood if Fdid not weep oa such occasion as this (Weeps sous more.) But there, then, take her, my boy, although i: breaks my bart to give, herup Txks her and tobe good’ aud kind tober T jer, aud my blessing be upon you both” And this is what Me Slyman said to his wife teu micutes after: “Well, youug Sc. Clair means bus iness, Fure enough. und Mase is off our bauds at last. Lemme see, she’s 28 her next birthday, isn’t sie! Sue's lucky to get such a chance at her age, aud we're Jucky to get her set- tled. We want to hurry things up| a3 fast as we can, aud not give St.! Clair a chance to change bia mince Give Ita Trial. On receipt of ten cents, cash or | stamps, a generous sample will be! mailed of the most popular Catarrh | and Hay Fever Cure (Ely Cream) Balu) suflicient to demonstrate its | great merit. Full size 50e. Exy Broruens, 56 Waaren St. New York City. | My son wae afflicted with cxtarrb. | I induced bim to try Ely’s Cream Balm and the disagreeable catarrhal smell all left him. He appears as weil as any one.—J. C. Olmstead, | Arcola, Ill. Eureka, Ill, Jan. 4—Myron P. Beckelhymer, who poured oil over his clothes, and, when they were thoroughly saturated applied a match thus hoping to end his life, ia atill alive, but ia a critical condition Despondeacy over business trou- bles and protracted iiloess, from which he saw no recovery, was the cause of his terrible attempt at sui-| cide. Beckelhymer was a mass of fire when discovered, and, although the flames were quickiy extinguished, terrible burns bad been sustained. The flesh in many places was fairly baked. Ballard Snow Liniment. 2 This jiniment is different in composi tion from any other liniment on the market. It is a scientific discovery which results in its being the most_pen- etrating liniment ever kiown, There | are numerous wnite imitations, which may be recommended because they pay | at) the sellera great profit Bews these and demand Ballard’s Snow Lini- ment. It positively cures rheum Neuralgia, Spric Brui vi Cuts, Sciatic and Influmato tism, Burns, Scalds ted Muscles, Stitt Joints, Old Sor in Back, Barb Wire Cu Chest or Throat. and is especia ficial in Pararalysis. Sold by H L Tuck- t es, 4 H Londo graph today pul Cais Warning. Jan. 4 « dispatch from Constantinopie saying that the} Czar had cent a mes-nge to the Sul-| cold, a tan recommending him to consider | the remoustrauess and advice of the) | great Powers regarding the reforms | necessary for the Empire. The czar | urther says that the Sultan's ac-! y}ceptance of this advice is an indis-| | pensable con tloa to the iategri of his Empire. © cold and dampness will excite the he blood, hence rhenmatic acl eether with much weakness Exposure lactic acid and pain ‘his trouble and relieve the m all liability of a return of the dis- » the poisons in the blood must be dissolved and eradicated. Lallemanit’s Specific for Rheu- | matism is an absolutely reliable and permane eure. The dose is only twenty drops, yet penetratnig power is so great that it re the remotest parts of the box blood and bones, relieving pai nts, and what is mo ing the rheumatic acid, =o that wrtified aga ice, Sl per vial. Sold b: “lement & Co. With the offic:al returns all in Mr. |? McKinley's plurality is 572,349: his! These figures| | et tn 1900 They| om would be reversed at onea if th majority, may be re now, while § end wages are gc. 2 | Fas LL EE 8 te DJS TIA | A2-GZT7L2 chee “hot considered Sore Feet, Con-| The Daiiy Tele-| } important, com- j future attacks. | T order of “Old, yetever new and simple and beautiful ever,” sings the poet. iv words which might well apply to the most +ffi blood purttier anuity, ps ite: dong xt the front Four-tieed a Duet With Katves. Umanila, Pia, Jan. 6—A duel wth kmves was fought vear here, carly Vesterday uiorning, which two | men we re@ived serious isjurtes. There} were four men engrzed io the dau-l, | James Wooniward and bs soz, Cha-. and Henry Smith aud bis son, Wi ham There bas been bad bloo i} between the meu tor some time and | the) Swurrhs proposed to fight out thr | at the mer vy this) morn quarrel, The Woodwards agreed, | und knives were selected as the Weapens. The Smuhs were mue the more powertul puysically, ard had the Woodwards at a adeanta The B bt lasted probably tive min utes, at the eed of thas time the] Woodwards were oa the grou: d | bieedivg from more than a ecore of wounds, white tae Sa 3 Was Ber- n, 1ously cut. T ie FoUnver Sinith was catin 14 places, one slush having taken off bis nose The elder Sat? |Waecut in eight places, ove stab causing bis bowels to protrude Neither of the Smiths cau recover Toe Woodonrds were also cut in mepy places, but their wounds are tal. The perties are prowlnent bere, the Smiths be jing the oldeat family im the county Tue Woodwards are noted fighters, being at present out on bond for entuex CB Patrick and son to Pieces about a year ag Abomina Catarrh. It is not reasonable to expect to be cured of any ease, no matter how nt and persevering the treat- » When that treatment is alto- isdirected, and can not possi- h the trouble. eet with so much dis- ; faithfully sting of arrh will re one of the :nost ob The only blood remedy, t Sucha Specific). Mr. H. P. Coox. Mr. H. P. Cook, o Ailanta, Ga., Catarrh “Tat tion to the obstructions and throat. This soon became notice- bl nud began to so nience e, that I applied fc was given the usual loc of sprays, washes, et effect of the trea 1 gro worse stead- ‘ily, and seemed to grow deeper toward lungs; my nose and throat were stantly choked up, so that I was all the time hawking and spit to add to it all, the disease became very offensive. I wasunable to obtain much sleep, being compelled to get up constantly during the night to clear my throat and keep from choking. “I tried various treatments without relief, as none of the medicines seemed h the di E nished one bottle, I felt be: tt nued the medicine, and t Properly prepared will sustain life, strength norally wounded and two; © re stoniael ests 0 Ss digestion, th pated ie fond tow wes and puritle pent spurl, PRICKLY ASH BITTERS health, strer and energy the ne y ata time whe ican be of ho ave & ay IT IS A KIDNEY REMEDY PAR-EXCELLENCE. : nat PRICE $1.00 PER BOTTLE. tan Sold by all Druggists ing thirty dive! 1ssOU ‘of Bates. eit COUTE | fon Dect! A BUSHEL OF WHEAT and energy for a long period, but ; PRICKLY = Pwhereny ners ad It SAVES life, when the court th side 0! west qual nine! ‘of range arth ‘And fu a St. Louis, Mo. other a said « ine atthe den at the - McFARLAND BROS, farness and Saddelrge= eather Tree Saddlo McFARLAND BROS. eee THE AUTHORIZED CAPITAL PAID UP CAPITAL SURPLUS FUND Incorporated under the laws of Missouri. Li short time at low rates of interest, allowing borrower to pay back part orall at any time and stop interest. Have a complete and reliable abstract of title to euch tract of land and town lot in Bates Co. The preparation of theee abstracts was begun by our Mr. Walton up to date and made from the Records daily on rezl estate are invited to call and get our rates, terms, &c. hand and for eale first having a few hundred dollars to loan mortgages that are safe as U. 8. bonds. Hitt DIRECTORS titttt LTO J Everingham, Wm E Walton, f Rocker Powell, T C Boulware, J ® Jenkins, CR Radford, FM Vorie, John Deerwester, CH Dutcher, W W Trigg. Allows interest on time deposits. Anthorized Receiver and Aesignee. We solicit your business. N, See’y., Abstracter. in said co wer OF } answer , South Side Square P°="S , Butler Mo. Order Read and See What we Keep in Steg BB OF ths premember We keep everything that hcrse owners Double wagon harness from $10 to single harness, 87.50 to $25; second bs harness from $3 to £15. Saddles of styles and pricee, from the cheapest toth ge" L Civil ac steel fork cow boy and acle leatber apri at = seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blan dusters and fiy nets. Harness oil and 80 full line of mens and boys gloves. buggy tops new and repair old onea. your old harness and saddles and trade new ones. We have the largest retail bar | ness store in the Southwest and our bax ness are all made at bome. BUTLER, MO. N TRUST COMPANY, OF BUTLER MO. $110,000.00 355,000.00 } | $11,000.00 \& ends money on real estate on long or 26 years ago; are Parties wishing to borrow money Have always on Farm Mortgages in amounts from 6200 to $3,000 Persons can be accomodated with interest paying ttt t+ iby law to act as Executor, Curator, WM EF. WALTON, Prest. T J WRIGHT, Vice Prest. J.B. WALTON, Bookkeeper. A. 0. WELT TRE LEADER OF LOW PRICES: GROCERIES AND QEENSWARE WILL BE PLEASED TO HAVE YOU CALL AND EXAMINE HIS STOCK B es COUNTRY ~— PRODUCE AND THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICE FOR SAME. E. ON. ~ IV= =— AVANTED A. O. WELTON. Purely

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