The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 6, 1884, Page 3

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gapie to. Pacific BR. HK. xy & SOUTHERN BRANCH. [psIngTO” Butler daily as follows: gaits GING NORTH. oe EK. C- Expr OLDJOHN BROWN. What Maj. Edwer s inthe S Joe Gazette Thinks of Him AM 50 P.M. asa Hevo. echt ++ 9:30 ALM. AFC OING xs (daily “9:10 eM 2 Expres’ cre John Brown had about as much to wk i . 162992304. MM. do with the destri ction of African Man hanging Slavery as the mythical in the Moon, But for Henry A. Wise—an i Agent. by to oe politic thing MASONIC. any wavs—he would most prob- Lodge, No. meets the first | #blv have been sent to a lunatic asy- Bes ~ 6 - meee month. rare Jui. He might not, it 1s true, * Chapter Royal Arch Masons, |}, Z jami_ Chap i Thursday in each | have remained there any very great neeis SeCOnK hme 4 a. |Tength of time—because along to “i Be oes re | the proportion of crazy people out- se No. 180 meets every Mon- } side of confinement as so much gates Lodge No. ‘oht. greater than the proportion inside— } that he would Auer Encampment No. 76 meets the id ath Wednesdays in each month been to majority to doas have released, | and that speedi'y, if only vindi- Lawyers. cate the right o. the Se they pleased in this idcal Republic, j 5B. LASHBROOK rTHos. t.smitH. | and to abolish all asylums at once Ir 4SHROOK & SMITH, Attorne | upon the principle that the whole raw Butler, Mo. Will practice of Bates and adjoining coun- Collections promptly attended to Taxes Paid tor Non-residents ee, front room over Bates county N Bank. n2 tf. | nation either had or was about to go mad. Even as early as the Colonial Era, Assemblies which adopted the Federal Consti- and in the several State _S, FRANCISCO. S. P. Fraxcisco. | tution, the causes were pointed out “HypANCISCO BROS. Attorneys at | Over and over again which would | Law, Butler, Mo., will practice in | eventually destroy the Union, and by he courts of Bates and adjoining | 14.6 more clearly than Luther Mar- ounties. Prompt attention given to col- Office over Wright & Glorius’ 20 Patrick Henr At that time negro slavery was universal. Attempting to lay an excise on dis- tilled spirits, gave the Federal Sys- tin and jot bardware store INSON & ABERNATHY, At- eys at Law, Butler, Mo. Offic | torn wt side of the sauare tem its first-serious shock. In the HENRY, Attorney at Law, Butier, | W#" ot 1812 there came another, »Mo. Will attend to cases in any | based upon the hostility of New ot record in Missouri, and do gener- collecting business. | England to certain regulations touch- ing her commerce. Secession was li? 0.SACKSON, attorney at law, will HV . practice in the State aad Fedral rts. Office at Southwest corner of the gare in tront room of Thompson Brick, ite Opera House, Butler Mo. openly advocated, und enough is well known wow historically to prove that it would have been attempted but tor the unexpected peace. ‘ Two antagonistic revenue systems, » Notary Public But- 1 draw and acknowledge the mastery, end- ’ : each struggling peds, contracts, leases and all papers re- | ed in the Missouri Compromise ot the acknowledgment or Jurat of . ~ aoa ; ie urat ef) 1S20 Slavery had nothing to do -——-——-—-—-——._ | with this, tor slaves were then c:r ‘= | ried into all the territories withont 4 ! protest. let, or hinarance ; while th: | Pet. RICE, M. D., ctric Physi- | a7 1y-¢ Medan and Surgcon lis prompt: | Nullification movement on the part attended 1. stairs over | of South Carolina was simply amove- mmly’s Drug i ment against the tariff. M. CHRISTY, M. D., Homoepathia Anti-slavery agitators, of course, J.P Physician and surgeon. Speci always existed, and were fierce, ition givento female diseases, . FB. Office, North side square old. and persistent; but they made ee paris Jewelry store ino headway tor a Jong time, and ee ! failed utterly to attract any very con- €. BOULWARE, Physician and | siderable share of pul he attention. eSurgeon. Office north side squar TI ! ey rons 8 : hey t nged ther tactics. In- utlet, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- , j maspecialty. stead ot r solely as they be E gar band of mete agitators, they Apentinned from last sweek-) { be came to i od the Veriest ot det lat- How Watch Cases are Made. | o. g.cs and among the most tratheck rea ing of politicans. They attached The many great improvements intro- duced in the manufacture of the Jas. Boss’ Gold Watch Case, have led to similar im- their cxuse to all the existing ques- tions of the day with which it had no ! Povements in the making of silver cases. | natural counection—snuch as the tar- , Under the old methods, each part of a | tf, the acquisition of territory, the tlver case was made of several pieces of z 2 war with Mexico, the plan to pur- netal soldered together, requiring 2 great amount of cutting and soldering, which t | soltened the metal and gave it the pliability of lead rather than the elasticity of silver. Under the improved methods, each part ofthe Keystone Silver Watch Case is made fone solid piece of metal hammered into | shape. The advantages are readily appar- at, for every one knows that hammerin& hardens the metal while soldering softens it. To test the superiority of the Keystone | Silver Watch Case, take one of 3 oz. weight, Presit squarely in the center when closed, : aad it will not give, while a case of same _ | Weight of any other make will give enough _|lbreak the crystal. The Keystone Silver Watch Case is made only with silver cap i iad gold joints. | 'am Bow and Keystone Watch Cases are made. | (To be continued.) MREYNO chase Cuba, emigration, Know Nothi of a lodgment was finally foreign ism—until something made in the public mind. There were other causes—-some of them sectional, some purely econom- with the vast number emigrants who poured irto the country be- tween the years 1840 and 1869— wh niso powerfully aided the Ab- olitionists; but of themselves, and because of the principles which they tormulated advocated, they neither destroyed slavery or put it in ordinary jeopardy. The North rid of it long befo.e 1861, because it paid her to do so The South held on to it. even to the final arbitrament | of the sword, because every right she fully ical, and some connected toreign ot and got t LDSi & SCHWENK |} claimed in the premises was guaranteed by the Federal Constitu- tion. | Thisis history, and neither the rhetoric nor the bitter invective of : ob- Senator Ingalls can ci rte Boo.d& Shoe Makers BUTLION, Uo. If, however, he wishes to ero out ot Old John Brown secure make a and to insist that he wast a grand, ae wea : + : 1 Bo : ne imspired, God-lifted-up and God- } Ots and shoes made to, order The : : ' best ot leader used. ' annomted man, he must do so upon} hop nerth side ot Square. 49 t =| grounds wholly connected with the a pall, and deluge it as with the rain ot fire and brimstone trom heaven. Tohn Bre s scant predatory war- Z n Kansas——-whe vhe neither showed the true spirit. intelligence. nor courage ofa revolutionist—and his silly if not to say insane raid up- on Harper’s Ferry, had 1 no more to do with the direful storm of 1861, than a shower in April, scarcely ex- wive enough to wet a garden, to do has with the black northeasters which rummage all the coasts, search out flects of merchantmen and the and wreck, and crush the threedeckers as avics of nations, and rend, cockle-boats upon the wa Stripped, therefore, of this awful light of the civil war, which, if ig were permitted to shine upon the water. Stripped, therefore, of awful light of the civil war, this | which, if it were permitted to shine upon the scene, might suggest another Sinia, In + A simple and what becomes of Senator all’s American Moses? uder, not overly brave ; noteven politic; with not even enough of the Oriental tinge ot thought to make ngerous either asa tanatic or ist; given to prayersimply as a hint ot that hypocrisy believed to be necessary for the leader of a band of cut-throats; unfit for the real du- these quire obedience and an abiding faith ties of a soldier. because re- in a cause or a principle; knowing no difference between the service of the Lord and the service of Mam- mon because as an Abolitionists he stole negroes, and as a looter he stole horses; cruel when even cruelty was had sincere, harmiul to the business he in hand, granting him to be never uttermg a thought, a word, or the > which revealed un- of the true fore runner of : coarse, stold, brutal, a a wande medicant; 1 sort of anti slavery jargon ce of a mission, he and o have vould long i | aman hke Henry | it into his | postor. w to f£ um uy over the ne thousend Kansas men ht be named—men who who in Nansas dark days ind stayed there; men who led in thezeivil war and shed plood tot tion sure; men who kept ds clean and their valor un- | -d—men who get but little} recognition in war history, and none | at all in these prose poems which so | on of their to delight the imagin sen- tor Se ator—to have endure ati these things, we say, and finally to be forgotten altogether, are about what most brave men must expect who depend for justice upon a nae tion of stobbers, gushers, and dema- gogues. The Tilden Seare at St. Louis. From the Washington Post (Dem.-) The principal urged against St. Louis as the place for holding the next Democratic Nation- al convention consists in the fact that Mr. Tilden was the nominee of that the re- objection the conyention which met ia city eight years ago, and in sulting theory that should the con- vention ot this year meet in the same place, a renomination of the Tilden- Hendricks ticket would be necessi- tated by the sheer force of old asso- ciations. Whether there is much or little m | the objection, there is just enough | } | validity in it to ope-ate prejudicial against the chances ot St. Louis for | tng the convention, and it 18 aj sort of prejudice which our St. Louis ; riends may find it hard to remove. We do not urge that St. Louts has hut we think it would be unfair and just a le cow: vtorule her out ot the list hecause of a spectral ter- ror, which, if it has to be met at all should be met with coura and can St. Lovis as be as well exe Ms ee Kansas troubles, troubles which! -o or Cinemnati. and much SRIDGEFORD & HUPP. bore no more relation to the great | better there thar New York. > ‘wil War than the fechngs a = man} Ornamental House Se ee ee Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. has who, after being pin pricked, is} -- AND. ; | The greatest medic«f wonder of the Kit aeeete | thrown into the agonies ot hydropho- | world. Warranted to speedily cure Burns i < bia. That Civil War was asa cloud } Bruises, Cuts, Ulcers Salt Rheum, Fever Sign Painter: | Sores,‘ ancer., Piles, Chilblains, Corns, se. whicn had heen siowly terming and Praming, Paper-Hany ing. Decor Teter, Chapped Hands, and a | skin erup- a L z ‘eathering tor fifty. vears. It was! tions, guaranteed to cure m_ every in- # tng. Sign and Bugey Work » lack evntel <3 . it} stance, or money refuuded. Prine 25 cts Yack. wrathtul, and accusing. | per box. Forsale by F. M.¢ rumly & Co. | was to cover the whole Innd as with PECIALTY 6a }no of my race, | from this time on. If I must vote for white can- didates | will vote for those that claim to the convention ; | TETH AND POINT. Eight Good Reasons Given by a Colored Man for Being a Democrat Below we copy an article from the Grenada, Mississippi, Sentinal, writ- ten by a sensible to colored man show why he is a Democrat. 1 Iknow that a great majerity of the white population ot the United States are demoerts, and it is to the interest of friendly to the African with be Va t people About half of the population north are Democrats, and the great 1 of southern white people. showing Talk is Cheap ———o0—____ . 22 = - 2 4 > but it wont win with the people of to-day, its entirely too thin. It takes FIRST GLASS GOODS that a great majority of the whole i white race are Democrats. I OW PRICES 2 Because I thoroughly under | 5 stand the southern white people, and | they understand me and my race, and if 1, by my conduct, gain their good will, and show that we can live together in peace, they will pro- tect my race now and hereaiter, and in the future no doubt my race will need their trendship and protection. 3 Because all the half nullion ot immigrants that land in the United States each vear and the poor labor- ing people of the north are naturally opposed to myrace, keep on the best terms possible with the people at home. ro § <nowledge that while my race 1s improving in education by means,.of the good schools the Dem- ocrats give us, the white race are more intelhgent than my own and can give the state better government for both races. I acknowledge that the Dem- tic party has given as good of- 5 ficers and as good government since 7876. They have kept up the free schools and ma better than e them they were, and have passed no un- | just law a oO. gainst my race. and ahome of my in I don’t want untr ! 1 faNxc stirred u} i vy were under me—when T was distress, and gave me meat and bread out of their stores on credit-—I al- 20d that when I moon ways fee! bett terms with them; and F know thine thing 1 please them more than | for me to join the Democratic party 3 } hence tor the sake of myself, my wife and my children, and the future 1 am a true Democrat id for most of the white people are not for « tew independents who only want my vote to get office, Who can do me no good, and who will go} back on me when it suits them, after they get the office. Plantation Philo-ophy. way o° de De snake ’ LT allus gits outen de man whut is too smooth. is a heap slicker den de toad, an he’s nine times as piZen. When a man comes to de conclu- sion dat he’s gwine ter be jesez hap- py ez he ken, de wol’ will begin to imprube frum dat bery minit. Some men is lack de_ luther-wing bat. Gwine roun’ da makes a_ big show but hole ’em up ter de light an’ yer’ll fine dat dar ain’t no meat dar. Dar nebber was a man so strong dat whisky couldn’t fling him. He may be a migaty fine rasseler, an’ may hab flung ebery man in decom- munity, but when he Jocks horns wid He may cut np some mighty fine capers and las’ whisky, he’s gone down. ‘splay powerful muscle, but at vil top bim and fling him in dat he neber woulder picked Travel- whisk a place out fur Je fall.--Arkansaw er. Never Give ip. If vou are suffering With low and de loss of appetite, gene bottle bey =F. M. 6 | store. Thope to have a little piece | iW, crumly & Co. city drug Plain figures, and square dealing to. take the “AKe, Others may talk but =—=—BlHhhuwweS— “AMERICAN” i Ss still on top when it comes to Style, Make & Fit of our Clothing Furnishing Goods, Hats and Caps We sell our Goods as Low as the Lowest for C! ELKELD, e Square, treat vou white. COY & CO. Sutler, Mo. ' t N o BUTLER DRUG HOUSE. oF ‘SHUEW & GO. an excellent ne ! J. H. HiT o North side square, Butler Mo wi sundri is now re to 4 pure Drug yt SPECTACLES Agent for the celebrate a ROCKFORD R. R. Watches. ches. Clocks, Jewelry, Solid Silver and Platedware « »mplete Line of Sy Uptical Goods, —— OPERA a) Be NS FIELD, { : a : "ieee AND : MARINE All \mel can pai SWISS WATCHES. = _——— | | BOOKS AND STATIONERY. NUTS, CANDIES, TOYS ETC., IN LARGE VARITIBS. ly Papers and Periodicals always on hand. surg cal operation, truss torture or de‘ention from labor Patients from abroad can re eive ‘reatmert and and trus.cs cause lumbago, kidney and bladder impair ood and bring on impotency and Relieved and cured withc by Dr. J. A. Sherman's « eave for h me day. Rupta pressed spirits, ctions 2 nervous system, | bility, disordered blood, weak consti- ; Sheth Gee Ole a nek, All these roubies remove and primitive soundness re- i tution,, headache, orany disease ofa bile as. Dr. Sherman’s treatment. Book, with concinuous indorsements for the lious nature, by all means procure ® » past thirty-five vears from physician . clergymen, tarmers and others tle of electric bitters. You will be oe Pho have been cures mailed tor :< nvthe, of “se Vienna porate prised to see the rapid ag nat St. Louis, ¥o.. hz i red patients in Dr. Sherman's iStus- will follow; You willbe inspired with 04 pamphlets, hired men ‘o personate them, «nd publishes them as patients he ' new life; strength and activity willreturn, 70°C eq ‘This bold fraud t« dupe the afflicted is Sully expo-ed in an illustrated pain and misery will cease, and hence- | i ecular which is-ser anvone who writes for it. Sirce the reduction of terme forth vou will rejoice in the praise of ents are daily coming from all parts of the Days ot con- Electric Bitters. sold at fifty cent= a reseway. and Saturday each tation at New York office, week.

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