The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 7, 1898, Page 8

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eS Doctors Say; Biliousand Intermittent Fevers which prevail in miasmatic dis- tricts are invariably accompan- ied by derangements of the Stomach Liver and Bowels. The Secret of Health. The liver is the great ” driving wheel” in the mechanism of man, and whenitis out oforder, the whole system becomes de- ranged and disease is the result. Tutt’s Liver Pills Cure all Liver Troubles. Missouri Pacific Railway Time Table at Butler Station NORTH BOUND. No. ¢ . 600A. M No. 4.... --1:00P. M No. 10.. - M. No. 312 Local Freight 2. SOUTH BOUND. No. 9..... . -M. No. 5.. M. eee M: No. 311 Local Freight.. i INTERSTAT. No. $49 Depart .. .M. No. oT es Cees <a K. C. Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival and departure of trains at Worland NORTH BOUND. No.7 Freight daily ptSunday 12: i Sai 10 p.m. 0 p. No. 1 Express daily Pp. No. 9 Freight, daily tS P- No. 3 Port Arthur Express, daily, a.m SOUTH BOUND. No. 2 Express daily ..... wean on p.m. No. 6 Freight daily except Sunday a.m. Nos ** on ve + Dm No 10Freight, daily expect Sunday, 30 p.m, No. 4 Port Arthur Express, daily,.. 9:01 p.m. Remember this isthe popular short Jine be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pittsburg, Kan., Joplin, Mo., Neosho, Mo., Sulphur Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, A and the direct youte from the south ‘to St. Louis, Chicago, and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Portland and pointe West and northwest. No expense has been spared to make the passenger equipment of this line second to none in the west. Travel via the new line H.C. Orr, Gen’1 Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. —— EARTHQUAKE DAMAGED NAVY YARD. Loss at Mare Island Placed at $500,000— Operations Stopped. Vallejo, Cal., March 31.--Work in the navy yard has ceased, and the 1700 employes are idle on ile etree of Vallejo, as a reeu!t of last night's earthquake. A conservative estimate of the damage at tho navy yerd places it at $500,000. Only two buildings in the Mare Island navy yard escaped damage, the ad- - | increasing :|speaker would no more think of -| passing -| going direct into the waste basket. ADVICE FROM MR. WANAMAKER. Why He Preters Newspaper Advertising to Other Kinds. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. In New York a few days ago the resident partner in that city of the Wanamaker firm delivered an ad- dress before the Merchants’ assccia- tion on “Advertising asa FPusiness Force.” The speaker based his remarks on a long experience in ex tensive and successful newspaper advertising. He began by saying that a retail business may be-divided into threes parte: the goods to be sold, the persons employed te sell them and the advertising. While the three were considered of equal importance the adverticing was call- ed “the dynamo power of the business,” settirg it in motion and its volume. One point brought out is that the relative im portance of advertising is not taken seriously enough, that is, not regard ed as one of the essentials. The running a business without advertis- ing than of ownimtg machinery with- out a motiye power. He prefers newspaper advertising because other kinds are resisted by the public, that through the mails often Money, it was admitted; can be wasted in advertising. The advertiser may underrate its value and, indeed, give but slight study to its princi- ples, and be soon discoureged. ‘The most successful advertising I have ever known,” said this expert, ‘is that which has been exploited ona very large scale. The man who has had the courage to advertise to a certain extent and spend $20,000 should have had the courage to spend another $5,000 and vitalize all the rest.” In these cases there is a lack of the needful faith and per- sistence Advertising was presented as a vecesaity of the retail business, its pulse, movement and circulation. The newspaper column is the mer- chants’ rostrum. In usiog it to address the publie his statements must be veritable. Advertisements must be well expressed, and the ministration building and ordnance storehouse and workships. The saw mill and paint shops are a mass of ruins and every building except the two mentioned have sustained scme damage. The hospital, a three story brick building is cracked from top to bottom, and every joint seems loosened, while the plastering is strewn everywhere. Seyeral narrow escapes are related, and many pa- tients received severe shocks. In cfficers’ row, every house is damaged, gables down and chimneys demolished. Admiral Kirkland’s house shows the least damage. The house of Civil Engineer Holliday fared the worst. All departments have ceased work, except that of equipment and the yards and docke. The great chimney of the power house is cracked in several places, and will have to be rebuilt. The east wall of the engineering foundry has fallen, and the interior ia badly wrecked. The machine shop which adjoins itis also damaged and the machinery disturbed to such an ex- tent that it will have to be over- hauled throughout. The electric plant which lights the buildings and grounds was badly shaken and flooded so that there will be no light for two or three days. Building 69, used by the genaral storekeeper, is probably damaged the most, and will undoubtedly have to be condemned. The north wall has fallen, and the walls on both sides are cracked. The south wall hangs 6 inches out of plumb. Build- ing 15, just across the street, is in much the same condition, and a blow of a sledge would cause tke south wall to fall. One naval efficer estimated the damage at $1,000,000. All the complicated and expensive machinery is out of place, and will have to ba taken down and put up afresh. The damage at Vallejo alone is estimated at $50,000. Beauty is Blood Deep. blood means aclean skin. No beauty © utit. Casearets, Candy Cathartic your blood and keepit clean, by stirri the lazy liver and driving all’ impurities the body. Begin today to banish pim boils, blotches, blackheads, and that bilious complexi for ten ce: guaranteed Clean illustrations of a good grade. It extra size. Shot by a Negro for Revenge. Havana, April 1.—Guanabaco, tte little town across the bay, made his- torical as the first place where Wey- ler’s slaughtered pacificos was unearthed by American correspond- terday. army, notorious as the murderer of | Gen. Arangueren, the Cuban cavalry | leader, was visiting Dr. Vidal Wed- esas when ke was called to the door by a mounted negro. The lat- ter shot and severely wounded the Spaniard Colonel, and then puttiog spurs to his horse, escaped from town. Arangueren was highly thought of by his troopers, and it is believed the assailant meant to avenge the Cuban leader’s death. Benedicto’s soldiers were infuriat- ed at the act, and ell day yesterday they terrorized the town. The resi- dents were assaulted and a number of arrests made. The excitement coatinues, as the Spaniards demand quick vengeance Benedicto may recover. Everybody Says So. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonder- ful medical discovery of the age, pleasant and refreshing to the taste, act pene and positive- ly on the kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure head, fever, habitual constipatson and _bilio Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. tod 25, 50 cen all druggi - Sold and guaran Fierce Fight Witha L i. Mexico, Mo, March 31.—There was brought to this city to-day a fine specimen of Canadian lynx, which was killed Tuesday night in the woods near Santa Fe, Monroe coun- ty, by Joe Morgan, o hunter and trapper of that vicinity. While Mr. and Mrs Morgan were driving home| on Tuesday evening atout 9 o'clock the lynx sprang upoa Mr. Morgan from a tree. Mrs. Morgan struck the animal with the butt «nd ofa heavy whip and stunned it Mr. Morgan ther killed it after a fierce battle with the beast, which was of Educate Your Bowels With carets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. lve IfC.C. C. fail, druggists refund money Cas+ Free Tuition te Orphans, Columbia, Mo, March 30 —The has been the Wanamaker policy to advertise in a terse, direct style, though freely as to space, and to use a typography which newspaper readers soon recognize as distinctive An anecdote was related of Glad- stone,which the speaker could vouch for as true. The English statesman was asked why he bought the Amer- ican edition of a certain American magazine instead of its English reprint. Mr. Gladstone replied that the American advertising interested him, and was to his mind a means of guaging the material prosperity of the country. Mr. Wanamaker's representative concluded his address by asserting that sound theories of advertising, founded on reason and common sense, are as ccrtain to pro- duce good results as are forces of nature to bring forth a harvest. The growth of business is due to its controlling influences, among which advertizing vitalizes the others It is well known that newspaper adver tising has been the corner-stone of the immense Wanamaker retail trade in Philadelphia and New York, and this address embodies experience rather then theorizing. Indigestive poisons are the bane of the dyspeptic’s life. When sick, see if your sickness is caused by in- digestive poisons. If sc, take Shaker Digestive Cordial. This is the only certain way of being permanently cured, because it is the only way that gets rid of the poisons. You know that fermented food is poison eus. You know that poison is un healthy. Shaker Digestive Cordial clears the stomach of fermenting food, and purifies the blood and system of indigestive poisons. It cures indigestion and the diseases that come ofit. Headache, dizzi- ness, nausea, stomackache, weakness, flatulence, constipation, loss of ap- petite, irritability, etc. These area few of the symptoms, caused by indigestive poisons, cured by Shaker Digestive Cordial. At druggists, price 10c¢ to $1 per bottle. | Itis reported that the cold wave | jtrance. The body was partly turned curators ef Missouri university have decided to give free tuition to all inmates of the Masenic Orphan's ents, was a whirl of excitement yes-| Col. Benedicto, of the Spanish | leTo HELL WITH DIPLOWACY" | Girls’ Art Class Gives Advice. | | Miss Rella A bell of Kansas City One of the Thre: Mederation at a Meeting in New York that Advises McKinley. New York, March 31.—“To Pres-| jident William McKinley: To hell with diplomacy.—Ciase Art school, | | New York city.” The foregoing note was wired to| the president by the 100 members| in the girls’ class of the big art sshool at fifty seventh street and! sixth avenue. The message was not the result of an impulse of the mo ment. The girls held a formal meet ing, called purposely to discuss the warlike situation. The moderators of the meeting were Isa Glenn, whoee father has been mayor of At lante, Ga; Miss Isabel Arnold of Brooklyn and Miss Rella Abell of Kansas Oity. The speeches that were made were worthy of heroines battling fora noble cause. Itistrue few of the! orators were able to say they had read much about the subject er were familiar with the facts involved “But what of that?” as one of them eloquently said “We know one thing for a certainty, that is that the honor of this country is at stake. That honor should be dearer to us than any paltry facts. If honor and diplomacy are at variance, then to hell with diplomacy every time.” The sentiment captured the meet- ing and wes promptly adopted as the sense of the class and was em- bodied in the words sent to the president. Another act of patriotism signal- ized the end of the meeting. It tcok the form of a resolution that the male class in art, numbering forly young men, be immolated on the altar of duty and sent to the front just as soon es the tocsin of war is soucded. The resolution wes drawn up by Miss Alice Lloyd, an art student of this city. The word ing of the teleziam to President Mc Kiuley seemed to meet with the ap- preval of the majority of the class. A cable car on the Argentine ele: tric line in Kansas City, was held up at the Argentine bridge by three home at St. Louis and the Odd Fel- lowa’ home at Liberty. The subject has recently been reviewed and ef- ferts will be made to secure atterd- ance from these institutions. Those of the Masonie heme at St. Louis will not be required to pass exami- vations, as their diplomas from the St. Louis high school, which is an approved school, will admit them to the uniyersity. KIDNBY DISEASES 2fait diseases Foley’s Kidney Cure a guaranteed remedy or money refunded. AtJ A Trimble’s drugstore. Buried Aliye, Baraboo, Wisconsin, April 1.—A horrifying discovery was made at Rosedale Cemetery in Pardeevil’e yesterday. The grave of Mrs. Sarah Smith was unearthed for the purpose of removing the remains, and on open- ing the coffin it was found that she had been buried alive while in a over and the right hand was drawn up to the face The fingers indicated they had been bitten by the woman on finding heree’f interred alive. She had been buried thirteen years A Beacon of Hope. To those afflicted with kidney or bladder diseases is Foley’s Kidney Cure. J ATrimble, druggist. = Drowned ina Tub ot Water. Waco, Texas, March 31.—Rachel Clinton, 15-mcnths-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Sam H. Clinton, fell from the portico into a tub-full of rain- water and was drowned. The older children found their baby sister dead in the tub and their cries brought the parents. Vain efforts were made to resuscitate her Brooklyn, N. ¥ , Dec. 19, 1896 Ely’s Cream Balm a number of years and find it works likeacharm. It | bas cured me of the most obstinate jand frosts of Saturday and Sunday did great damage to the fruit pros- pects in Kansas and the southern part of this state. Rasmus Nelson, aged 80, residing near Monmouth, Warren county, Til., became despondent, and hanged himeelf in a barn Thursday. The eastern banks claim that war with Spain would certainly bring about the free and ulimited coinage ef silver. * ease of cold in the head in less then | 48 hours from the time I felt the Messrs Ely Bros.:—I have used | masked men Sunday night and the conductor, gripman and passengers all robbed of their money and valve ables. Springlime is Sick Tim It is impossible for the system to withstand the demands made upon it just at this season, with- out the assistance of a good puri- fying and strengthening tonic. The changes which Nature decrees shall take place each spring are so severe that a breakdown is almost sure to come. It is wise that all possible assistance be given during this period, as upon this purifying process depends the he h for the entire summer. Everybody just now should take a thorough course of Swift’s Specific S.S.8 "7% Blood le The which thoroughly cleanses the blood of all the accumulated im- purities, tones up and strengthens the entire system, and aids N in renovating and renewing the body so as to render it healthy and strong. Tho ify thei blood with S.S. 8. son are well fortified against the many forms of disease so prevalent lur- ing the dreaded heated term, for it has been demonstrated that the system that is thoroughly purified in the spring is well prepared to ist disease all summer. or remedy on the market | jis equal to Swift’s Specific as a} spring medicine, because it is 1 i ble blood rem- aranteed absolute m potash, mercury and a erais. ; pu up and strengthe coming on. I would not be without it. Respectfully yours, 283 Hart St. Frep'k Frias. Cream Balm is kept by ali drug- gists. Full size 50c. Trial size 1Uc. We mailit. Ely Bros., 56 Warren St, N. ¥. City. Swifts Specific The boy about whom this strange, true story is told wasied away till he seemed nothing but skin and b Then his health turned and t and hearty. The first stage is to many pa- rents. The second is cf deep interest to all parents or friends of ailing liitle ones. Fathers and mothers, who long to have their children health nd happy cannot fail to sympathize rejoice with Mr. and Mrs John F. Williams. ‘Their comfortable home, a short distance from Damon, Ill, is happy now because of the wonderful that are told in words eloquent with simple truth and gratitude, by the mother of the boy. “Our Josie was ni ong,” said Mrs. Willizms. ‘From his birth he was weak when he was two ck of lung fever. this fevez, but the ‘wo years 2g0, Id, he had “ He began fading away beneathoureyes. “He had no appetite, vomited a great deal, coughed cont 'y, his limbs be- k and ema- shesmaitism and he Her Boy was Dying. rink of One ht back from the b “* My husband bought three boxes pills. We began giving Josie ooeiae a pill three times a day. “In three days the child was bri His appetite was better. He began pyre interest in toys and was less fretful, “We increased the dose, i half a pillatatime. He pe pan Fe . in weight and appetite, . “ At the end of this treatment, af | ing ra boxes, he was a new pase: be “He was happy, hearty, enjoy with his little compan wring a “T have no doubt that Dr. Williamg |; Pink Pills for Pale People saved him from | an early grave.” Mrs. Williams made affidavit to the truth of her statement before David Cris a Notary Public. ye Dr. A. A. McCabe examined the child and made oath before Notary Mort that he is now physically sound and | The evidence is completed by Dr, N, A. Jones, who made affidavit before No tary George Rupp, that the child had been _ the ripen pier: by Mrs. Wi iams, as the result of catarrhal pai The action of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill for Paie People on the blood and nervous system, in eliminating poisons and furnish. ing materials for new tissues, makes thema sure remedy for wasting diseases and the of evils arising from disordered bl ves. All druggists sell the pills box for 50 cents; six boxes fcr Px BO ODD OID 9 OOM HITS OOFOCOOOIOED G. W. CLARDY, Mayor. by us. You 00D 999 290000004 COODOOHOIOD O4 OOO OOO00 We are now preparing a revise Bring or send us complete descriptic you are now listed with us, please give us new description and price, HOOP 9 COOHOOOODOS, J.D, ELLWOOD, } CLARDY, ELWOOD & CO,, Succesors to Cuanpy & Buunen, Real Estate, Loans‘ Abstracts, We do a General Real Estate and Exchange Business, and Make a Specialty of Abstracts. d list of Lands, for sale or exchange of your property, If rs for business, CLARDY, ELLWOOD & CO. PLO OD OLY OHHH COO 2000 ODO POO 00 COOLPOOO DOH COOH POO OOPD McFARLA steel] ness McFAR BUTL harness from $3 to $15. seat saddles. dusters and fly nets. new ones. ND BROS. Harness and Saddelry, Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Stock We keep everything that horse owners need Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. single harness, £7.50 to $25; second hand Saddles of all styles and prices, from the cheapest tothe fork cow boy and scle leather spring Lap robes, horse blankets, Harness oil and soaps full line of mens and boys gloves. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade for We have the largest retail har store in the Southwest’ and our har ness are all made at home. LAND BROS. ER, Mo. 4 3 THE NEW TIME, 56 Fifth Av FOOOD 069008095666 5006096 600060 0000 E NEW THE GREAT REFORM MAG + i ivi E. A FRANK, FEARLESS FORCEFUL 2 UNCOMPROMISING OPPOWENT OF PLUTOCRACY ecco Editors :: B. 0. Flower Frederick Upham Adams ms for six cents. e., CHICACO

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