The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 7, 1897, Page 3

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Now for a Vast Navy. 'A Kaneas City Times. Tbs re are signs that the predicted | ig nbout to begiu. Significant items, have lately been appewing in the! newspapers to auncuuce that the | coustruction of the Lew war ves-e'6 | ig being hastened by the vavy de | permment. Aod itis reliably report-| RELE! ed that’ Prestuent McKinley intends | ip bis next aeuual messave to urge} is crease im the navy. | coneress teu very @n siderable in- This is, ¢f course, n c-seitated by the Administration's f- reign policy If we annex Hawati, which lies over 500 wiles trom the weretern the United States. it will be # fine trategic pois,” but we will bave COant # by the .¢mnistration, would also Uiye new deuasds. To defend it Jd need io station there per- euily a fl-et equal to the com ved pavies of Europe We should also need two fle-ts vas ly larger to petrol our own east and west Coasts Alto.ciber we could mauigs tol pry aloug with about fifty times A8 Uierty warsttps us those of avy other vaticn. Our prospect for Necessary ie ese 18 hopeless. We gave a Divy now the peer of vy i Seo h Awet- ica, Atrica or Apstralit. Only or ten nations, ell told, curt-raok us Under the g 8 effecting the ss i entirels not thar is Live], i vidstuce Of aoristant sec- releases WA Rocrevert we bay “fakes steps to Cons rich more wa shys By seentiag a few billto doliara we could bave a maguilicen navy ineig¢t or ten years afcer the outbreek of tos lites No S = Patchwork! @*- One of the most encouraging features 3 ofacure made by S.S.S. (Swift's Specific) is its permanency. Ofall diseases, it is well known that those of the blood are the.most obstinate, and therefore the most aifficult to cure. The medical profession, in fact, have virtuully ad- mitted that a real, deepseated blood disease is beyond their skill. Of course, their admission is not made in so many words, but actions speak louder than words, and their inability to cure, after months and often years of treatment, is sufficient evidence that dis- eases of the blood cannot be cured by doctors. Their mercurial mixtures, al- though taken faithfully, only cover up \ the symptoms of the disease, pesean the patient to feel that he is being cured; but when he is sooner or later seized : with stiff joints, pain in the bones, etc., i the evidence of the doctor’s patchwork isconclusive. Such results cannot be ex- i pected from the use of S.S.S. Being rely vegetable, containing no harm- ‘al mineral ingredients, it isthe only -#¥00d remedy which acts on the true principle of forcing the disease from the system, building up rather than tearing down the health. No loss of hair, no stiff joints, no decrepit mercu- tial wrecks result from the use of S.S.S. os mr. MYERS. Mr. H. L. Myers,of 100 Mulberr: y street, Newark, N.J., made the mistake of re- lying upon remedies based upon mineral ingredients, and for the hundreds of dollars which he invested received only disappoiutment in return. He sa’ “T was afflicted with a terrible blood vas in spots at first, but ad ail over my body. on broke out into sores, and it y to imagine the suffering I en- ich w “Before I became convinced that the doctors could do no good TI had spent a hundred dollars, which was really thrown away. I then tried vari- ous patent miedicines, but they did not reach the disease. When I had finished my first bottle of S.S.S., I was greatly improved and was delighted with the Tesult. The large red splotches on my chest began to grow paler and smaller, T and before long disappeared entirely. I regained my lost weight, became strong- : er,and my appetite greatly improved. . Iwas soon entirely well, and my skines clear as a piece of glass.” §.S.S. isa sure cure for all manne never results from its use. It is Purely Vegetable dnd one thousand doflars wil | eff. rc for a vast ‘ncrease of our navy Henry Trostler Buried Seven-' Trostier wa er «f the Tha ia Theater. b immense navy to uss acd protect vadcu enother writ, Trosler was ing too much attenioo to We. ; i ji A ite rd save sod was again released ‘ 4 f ley was rol lyjr:, = The Nicaragua Canal scheme, sepa ; “i : ; - 2 eeven thirty dave ie whieh to * te susband was arre-te 2 ; ich 1s faved, 1f not advocated. iu sa ies wwe tue couutry, The thirty days ity ard was reat to ao asylum. ment be bas succeeded in convince ing a court that he is now tax, as be bus been releas-d on condition days. who do ro of deportation is still bing imposed Tresiler, pow an old man, found bis whom he bad 1 ft years sgo is now a hards me yourg woman; the wife is has promised not to make any claim upon his wife SANE MAN'S LIVING DEATH | and perfectly sane in the Matteawan Asylum. Gottleib secured a writ of habeas corpus | Justice Dickey granted the re | ‘lease, but with a provs> that he be | kept in the custoly of Gortieib fr} ten days and thea either returned to tbe asylum or sent back to Europe So ouce again, after more than 17 | years’ absenze from the wor!d, Crost jler breathed tne air of freedom. But} teen Years in an Asylum. SED TO BE DEPORTED. | FISK BROS. FISK BROS. — FISK BROS. [The Leaders in Low Prices. | 7 | We will sty to our own trade and | to the people of Bates county that | bave never been trading with ués| : | i hot at a Man in 1880, Pleaded Insanlty! nis first thuugh’s were of bis wife/tnat tue reason we bave not been} and Was Immnred at Matteawat~His land children, At the end of ten giving prices in the we-kly papers) days Gottleb went into court and announced that his client had re fused to lave the country until he bad found his wife and cmld Jus- tics Dickey seut tim back to the asylun. Goitterb, within a few days Former Wife is Dying. New York, Sept. 30.—Heorv J arrested in 1850 for bo tng at Victor Helley, the cash) Trostler hought that Helley had been yay ssault, and instead of ace-ptn + He. Ove day la- Weduesday. old men knocked ut tLe do. r of a little house to utown in Conuecticut not mauy from New Yerk City. ths dvor was opened by a bend some young girl cf 19 or 20. *IT wish to see youe mother,” he sad. “Tam Jobu Miller, ard [ bave be-n s-ut by a mutual friend in New York.” 1x moovths’ sentence pleaded isan t week an After weventeen yeas imprico: mes aNay hat be leave the country within 30 This mey surprise many persone know that the s ntence The girl's lip tremled. in this country “My mother is dying,” While sae sid. awaving his d-parture “You canuot see ber unless it is very § important.” sife, who hid again marred, think og bim dead. The babe The old man's frame was shaken with emotion. he sud. There was someth.ng in his voice thut made the gri’s beat jump Sue uehered bim into the room wher’, on bed lay a pule- faced women. The dying woman gave a sbriek and starved aa if to jump mso the man’s arws. “Hency!" sae sobb-d. “Sarah!” he cried, aud then the dauzhter closed the door upon them, for she Kuew it was ber father who was tuere and felt that it was not a time for even a daughter to iatrude. When Trostler left that little home in Counect:cut he was an aged man. He said good-bye forever to his wife aud cbild. Forever, because ne bad been doomed by tbe cours to eternal banishment from his stopted vountry, and she had been doomed by dis-ase to an early death frostler had ask-d for only one last favor; that his handsome young dsughter stould be brovgnt up 1m h- Jewish faith, and that she should be sert immediately upon the motb- er’s death, which cauzot be but a tew days distant. to Trostler’s rela- ives in New York. Tnen Trostler kissed his wife and daughter good by and then he eame back to New York and an ‘ounced that be was ready to vo oack to Europe or anywhere else it rms : fe pei “Iv is important, ying. For the sake of all Trostler There was a tearful parting and Trostler goes back te Hunzary in a few days Whethe: the Aus rian government will perm: tim to Jand is another matter It is now twenty years since Hen ry J Tr stler came to this country ‘rom Hur gary. His family was one of the wea'thiest in bis native coun- try. He was compelled to earn his own living. He secured employ- meut with Gustav Abmberg, in the Thalia Theatre. He then married In the theatre there was a hand- some carhier ramed Victor Helley. who had been a lieuterant in the Austrian army, Trostler felt that bere was some secret understand- ing between his wife and the cashier "he two men quarreled and the sh+r shot the cashier. The bullet vierced not his heart, but his high nat. That shot was the sigoal for the ringing up of the curtain upon 4 life drama mere remarkable than ny of the make believe plays tha: are seen on the stage Trostlr was arrested, and, on th+ dvice of his lawyer, pleaded guilty o thecharge cf aseault He was s-ntenced to imprisonment for s'x Everybody Says S». is because that rushed in basmes-, aud receiving | cw load after car load of goods that) we bave not had time to give the people prices, but we have now em- pl yed two extra clerks end we wiil try in the future to wait on our rade more promptly. And we owe an apology to our customers that! were here on Old Setil-rs Day, but will say that our ten clerks done the} dest they could, and the people that were in our store and could not get waited ov, 1f they will come back aguin we will treit then the best we know bow. Will cay the farmers that for the past three weeks we have paid fift-en cents per pound for butter, ali the time, aud 10 cents per dozen for egys} wost of the time, and from 60 to 75 cents per bushei for potatves, and ior chickens we hive paid 6 esnts cash and 64 cents ia trade. aud a'l merchants tuat have uot given these prices have not paid the market price Don’t be afraid te drive to our stere with avythiog you haye to sell. You will get the bigaest mar- ket price for it Everything we have 1p Our store is murked in plaw figures ard you wil get on exchange for your produce the sme amount of goods that you get for cask. Look at the Prices: FLOUR. Melrose, high patent, per sack, $1 35 we have beeu so to 4 OS RRR F.J. TYGARD, Jro.C Haves, Abstractor. ot . W. CLARDY, Mayor. CLARDY, EL We do 2 General Real We are now preparing a revised by us. Bring or send us complete you are now listed with us, please 00-9 004 00000000009 HHHOOEPHHOG OLODOOOES RRR RRR RR RR RRA A TA RARAASRAR RARARA Succesors to Cranpy & Braver, Real Estate, Loans + Abstracts. Business, and Make a S,ecialty of Abstracts. Yours for business, CLARDY ELLW csc papssieagseceenen ae ae " See’y. & Treaa. S. F. Wanxocx, Notary. : HON. J. B. NSWSEBRY, J.C. CLARK, ‘ President Vice-Pres't Cashier § 2 > ’ ; 2 BUTLER, Mo. g 2 Successor to BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, $ : TABLISHED DEc., 157 8 § Wa-mayeyey ° A General Banking g 1 Os0,0eu. Business Transacted. : Bates County Investment Co., ; § BUTLER, MO. $ Capital, = = $50,000. ; Money to loan on real estate, at low rates. Abstracts of e 4 title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choice S : securities always on hand and for sale, Abstracts of title ? furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate 3 ; papers drawn, 3 F.J TyGarp Hon. J. B. Newarery, J.C Coann ; President. Vice-President. % | | J.D ELLWOOD. WOOD & CO., Estate and Exchange list of Lands, for sale or exchange description of your property. If give us new description and price. OOD & CO, ioncieauneen Oh IO; SOMOS ODEO) HOM AAD RAH LIKE RATS Gold Hunters Are Caught in the | Alaskan Trap. +} Their Fate, Lake Bennett, B C., Sept. 3 — Uenturion, straight pat, “ 125 White S ar, taucy pit, «140 Rich Hiil tigh parent, 1.35 Jersey Cream, straight pat. * 1.20 We always bave from one to ten ousand pouuds of Power Bros. »yal and Que-n. and can give you any amount at tne same price the mill charges you. We have just received another cu oad of David B. Kirk’s Ensign flour. We have soid this flour for nenrly two years and among all the differ evt car loads «f this flour that we have sold, we have never had our bad sack, and i! you have never triea one sack of Ensign, the next sack of flour you buy try Ensign aud you wil use no other. th Michigan hand picked navy beans, 8 Ibs. fuer 2 pounds of good green coffee, 2 pounds good roasted c ff-e, 3 pounds broken Java coffee, 1 pound of best African Java coff-e, ¢ 1 pound Mocha and Java ecffee, 25 Vhis morning the trim little boat Maud set sail dowa the Yukon, bear- tog your correspendent and four | other men toward Klondike. We «xpect to reach Dawson within two weeks The Maud is my pereoval proper- tv, and I put a high valuat‘o) upon ber. Built at the Like Benn-tt saw ml! of rough-sawed, green spruce lumber, she is 26 feet long by 6 feet wide amid-bips, and bas a carry:ng capacity of two tons. A square sail, 10 by 12 feet, rigged to a jury mast, will serye as a means of propulsion, a-sisted in calm weather by a pair f roughly hewed oare. My traveliug companions, all gold- Ss. S. W. Foote and George Fu'k, botb Rum, Desolation, Despair, Brood Over | All.—While the Viertma Curse | ing a man and his wife. They are nunotecs, are Frank Walthere, of Se- | 5e}a tie; John Duffy, of Montana; CASTORIA For Infants and Children. \stranded in the mountains, with | their outfit, unable to proceed or re- | treat without abavdoning it. The } busband is @ puor man and in de spair. His wife spends ber time in weeping. The couple have four small children in Seattle, Wasb., left there with relatives. The entire famtly fortune bes been epent upoa te Klondike venture and now ail is lost. | Other mea have mortgaged their hones; mavy bave thrown up good | situations; oth-rs again have sold out their busivess in the cities to embark in the Yukon mining specu- lations, aud #!] are caught like rats jin a trap on tbe Skagaway trail. | Ruin, desolation and despair broode jover the region to-day, and many | are the muttered curses, the tears ‘and the vain regrets The men whe | have reached the Yukon over tho of blood diseases, and disappointment | adto Trostler. superintendent, nouths. Then another lawyer Con-| Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonder- a € z , | ful medical discovery of the age, pleasant and inced Trostler tbat he had beer | refreshing to the taste, act gently and positive- nisused. Trostler pleaded insarity, ote eS i g ¥ Stipatson and SS. vas sent to an ineans asylum = Yeare | piace buy and try a box of C.C.C. today; 10,| 1 eedar bucket, 25, 50 cet Sold and guaranteed to eure by olled by. o read the newspapers. Therein he eaw an account of a ebaritable organization in New York vbich mentioned the name of the Trostler He recognized at once in the name He wrote a_ pathetic etter, explaining that he was sane nd bad always been sane, and beg ing bim to spare no effort towards fa cousin. ecuripg his release. Samuel Trostler was be letter arrived, but he turned it over to a friend The friend returned from the asy | um with Aenr Samuel sent, be said, the s dead. rv tusband’s lived in and advice he told ber, Samuel sick One privilege was allow- He was permitted announcement Tte morey whiet was d-fray the fuveral expenses. It wa ~everal years later before Trost’e:’s wife discovered that a cousin of ber the when she went to him for comfort honestly as city, and} when | that tc L pound of Java Blend coffee, L12quart heavy galvanized iron back-t, tae best made, 20 1 beavy welva ized iron coal hod, 21% 1 12 quart covered slop pai’. : ali drag; 1 Western Washing Machise, aAT eer ae round or squure, $2 50 The New Island Sea. 1 Ringer, avy style, 1.50 Tucson, Anz, S-pt 30.—Passen-|6 bars Grand Pas Wonder soap, 25¢ gers who came iu on the belated 6 boxes Murtard Sardines, 25 California train state the cause of I quart bottle Biueing, ; Ms Ene < 5U pounda pure country lard the delay was floods in the Salton per pound O7e basin. Jt was the ramored belief that the waters of the Gulf of Cali fornia had broken over the sand bar which separates tha Gulf from the Pure country sorgbum in apy emount, fresh and fine. Pure cider vinegar per gal | heavy galva: ized iroa tub 20¢ 65e esidents of the stat- of Washington. i the Skagaway. or Whita Pass, trai? Daffy and Foote are veteran miciog | on few in number perhaps 60 all peospeectors, the others are city bred | told, while fully 10,000 have tried it mon, who have followed Various PUr~ | od have been foiled and compelled Eugene Grever, of Ciucin heAtrctrece Wt: ican Woes nati, who accompauied me to Skag- | away, has decided not to enter the | Yukon this fall, and therefore, i- not Benton Harbor, Mich , Sept. 30— ‘nthe party. Ap ruon of my cu | Robert Busb-e, an eld slave, las fic has failed to arrive on the luke, been advised by a Charleston, S. C. aithough pack horses were s2ut for) lawver, that hos former master, jit, and the stuff must bs sacriticed | Bradford North, who died four years Jusless by some lu-ky chance it shell ago, left him $50,000. The old | ne bre ught down th- river after me. | planter left an immense eetate, and | ‘Lhe outfits of the Maulaguregate) ) _ pongn-gs fur Basbee, who hid Old Slave Remembered, L heavy gelvan zed iron five I basing gal ol can If this should prove to be true, Soutbero California have! | set heavy the conti |1 set of good 300 fect H good butcher knife made will \rhe larzest inland sea on | ent, in places more than ce oe ere 2 set good table spoons guar ulf to a point opposite | aa en Yuma, which will then become a] Nails, any s1ze two po ort to the inland sea. In the mean | Lival good s -n Pacific} Ll }ron bound well th | Rope any size per pound z 5 iL good lauters jrecond time this great stretch ot | Brau and sberts always on land at desert has been flooded. Waters) market price the Colorado broke| We carry a'l the latest patterr would come up} rough the g une, many miles of south sould be sabmerged. uis is from river | ibe Southern Pacific were submerg- ve thought, that ber uusbard was /ed = that aoe we mre ones jin pere waite Come in avd see dead. ‘Twice before she bad tried | the 4 ld be * = intolit. Itis cheap and very pretty. we sea, but the waters dried u j to secure ber husband's release bol see es te pads WE BUY | | it con‘ains a particle of for proof that it fotlgr mineral. S.S.S. all ean al be mnailed free to Swift Specific Co., Atlases Ge. without avail. been convicted in New York years 1 be paid | ago and had been heard from since. | They begged him to look into the _ |matter on his return and report to pened them. Gottlieb traced up the records in the case and found Trostler alive .N ¥. Dee 19.1896 {Country sorghum, Ivish potatoes Juawyer Henry Gotthed, wiile! 3 5 Bros —I have usei)} lard, chickens, eges, ducks, | Gs = a | traveling in Hu last year met | Ely’s Creaw B-lm a nember of years i eys, cabbaze, corn. bay, {ing toward Skaga way Hundreds | -ome of Trostler's we jand find 2 kea ioe Iti peaches, p kins, sweet potatoes jare yken in health from the terri- Tee ie ee eas thes eure f the most obstinate | pop corp ms, a v aegats | ble and exposure to which y : 8) ease of cold in the head in less than! honey, bees-wax, butter | hare been subjected during the feousin. Heary Trostler. who had/ 4s bours from the time I felt the} When you come to Butler, come | they caine secon 5 direct to Fick Bros” thing vou have for sale, and you wil cold coming on. I would not be i without it. Respectfully Yours, 283 Hart St. Fred’k Fries. Cream Balm is kept by all drug gists Fall size 50c. Trial size 10c. We mail it. Ely Bros., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City. hd you will be happy. FISK BROS. 5t'e lerate of the latest patterns made store with apy | get accommodation; and take home| pneumonia or pulminary diseases th you one sack of Ensign flour.| nus contracted. Pitiful stories are neerly two tons of provision and) 1.0) his glave for 32 yesra, led bim |baygage. We bave rifles }and shotguns aboard and will keep moos4 rbeu Fish will also be at Lake several to remember bim in bis will n eye out for and ce g the Yukon \s-eured with a gill net Havana, Sept. 30 —The insurgent M-nuel Satillas, who the § Sane assastinated there urrendered to was k by the ; ae ga He put faith in reports of agi CSE Ee Vahe Spanish, that b which sh at = s last wee! Tt is unsafe to longer | Lake Bennett, as aud. The Skagaway deiay = risco. win cr z utd eds of insur trail, +pis bad been set free after surren | has been in a bad condition for seme! | | days, bas become almost impassable se [os jad several thousand goldbunters, It is to be borne in mind always {through in 1891 aud fifty miles of | quecosware —both the decorated and | with their outfi e, now caught upon: that _our nies with Spain ig not & | plain. and have just received #| t,areina pitiabl- plight There 8 | “brein-spatt-ring, «indpipe-slitting” la complete deworalization among | struggle, but merely a part of Han | them. A few are pre-sing vainly | n«'s campaign for the Obio Senator- | onward, the large mejority, sick stip. This fact 1¢ luces its serious | cs t heart, end dsecuraged, are aban-| ness—New York We | donivg their outfi's aud are return ne devs’ rainstorm just closed, and All who use it say taney will undoubtedly die from | it is the most perfect remedy for coughs | cold, consumption, and all diseases of the throat and iungs,they haye eve~ | tried.” Itis a specific for croap and ma ng cough. It will relieve a coug!> i Coata'=> no opiates, told me daily. Basope At one place onthe trail are camp- | $0!

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