The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 8, 1884, Page 4

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SN Eprror. Weexty Trt , will WEDNESDAY, OCT., DEMOCRATIC FOR PRESIDENT, GROVER CL ELAND, JOHN WALK# ROBERT McCULLOCH County Tieket for Representative, IENRY. ‘Treasurer, mR. S. CATRON. Sheriff, HANKS. Prosecuting Attor W.0O. JACKSON. For Surveyor, M. L. WOLFE. Public Administrator, JAS. BELL. Judge of South Dist. W. W. DENNEY. Judge ot North Dist. W. H. DEJARNETT. or Coroner, DR. E. L. RICE. For For For For APPOINTMENTS. Hon W. J. Stone will speak at the following time and places in Bates county: Johnstown, Saturday, Oct. 18th, 2 p.m. Sprague, Monday, Oct. 20, 2 pm Hume, Monday, Oct 20, 7 pm Shobe (at mines) Tuesday, Oct 21,7 pm P Butler, Wednesda Adrian, ‘Vhursday, Oct 23, 2 pm Rich Hill, Saturday, Nov 1, 7 pm A. Henry Ww. ©. will speak as follows: and Jackson Saturday, Oct. 11, Deepwater. Saturday, Oct. 11, Douglas schoo i house, Hudson tp. i Tuesday, Oct 14, Papinvi Wednesday, Oct 15, Rich Hill — } Thurs + Oct 16, Pleasant Gap i Saturday, Oct 18, Mulberry. The above speaking will take place at night, except in Deepwater, which will be at 2 o’clock. The various townships will see that all arrange- ments shall be made and that they have rousing meetings. ‘ committees and clubs in the By order of committee. : STaRKE, }. R. Siupsox, : Secretary. President. Blaine says he wants every voter to read the Mulligan letters. Why did he try so hard to keep them back nd write “dure this letter 2? TICKET: | A SLIGHT COMPARISON. In what taith can the repub party < ple of Batesc power a wo i c i nent of ¢ oc s | Bates ¢ | } neig S = credit as i te Now v sk, 4 c p sentin asking the the county w cause he would lish deliberate w ! loth. GW now has s s ette i ae : j any kind: ne ! ne tos is c \ p> j A Now \i v t party can only be know ts st aie “ naa ala : willful fals ta tions, and the tion f - ens G ‘ blican party in Bates Hab] : - . < : ible of prosect 1 in pu been so bad that there is not a good honest citizen who w 1 not Y es $ = a that sh 1 1s ust such er admin s- | ‘ : 2 ; }campaign and it is stickine to its tration as was wit here f 2 re au Fae Ghia feo : 5 | text to the d of the better ele | 1865 to 1973, when = S | “ales ss ment of the republican party, who {came into power. z 5 : | = f do not advocate su ectioneering. | 1 eet as j Ore Sir > Republican congression- behold they at the very outset anxious Iling to cohabit with fraud and a tair and impartial comparisen of the history of the two parties in_ this | county, no tax payer or voter in the county will be so blind to his own reinstate interests as to wish to republican party in power. THE PEQULLAR POLICY. No one is so blind as he who will The Repudlican makes } such rapid evolitions from one ac- see. | cusation to another, that before | can be answered it is talking about It has been labor- one | something else. jing for several weeks to discover |something wrong in the financial | statement of the county ade out by | the county clerk last spring. Failing ! to discover any great fraud that had j | been committed by any official. its | vents its spleen by calling it a nates that | something very dark has béen cover- pre— tended statement and inti edup. Mr. Starke politely request- if g wrong in ed the editor of that paper, he thought there was anythr his statement of the finances, to come, in company any two | gentlemen of his own choosing, to fies 2 | his office and he would take pleasure in showing | s records and explain not plain. A prominent republican, who, by the anything that was book-keeper, and express- is an excellent way, ned the statem it was true and of Mr. | Offered to subnnt Wilson's We to arguments, the statement ] and have it full complete as contemplated by law, but this he retused to do. In f the retuses to be convinced, but prefers to pursue the course better suited to his low, groveling nature— that of trying to besmirch i itor ot the State him say whether or not and was Sia tew days ago fi | corruption, to sell out for a mere | the | the char-! t at Nevada to endorse Dr. al convention which me led lent candidate Churchil pen | for con us the followiag note. Eprror Times:—You will ¢ | song to any bidder who will buy ! 4,, , acement out of your | their wares. We believe that with s Iam out ot the congres- | sional race. Yours Truly, A. Churchill. The doctor has certainly chosen a | wise course as he stood no more | show of get the | than Nick Ford does of being elected | district on independent shute | Governor. | We predict that after the election j in November Peter Wilson will dis- | i { cover, by the immense numbers his | party will be snowed under, that his acces talent is not appreciated in | this county and he will fold his tent 'and silently steal av We | endeavor to write him a fitting obit- will luary. } j Another judicial decision disquiets | the prohibitionists of Iowa. In _ his | charge te the Grand Jury at Musca- Judge tine the other day, ided that justices of n who recently de the peace hav Oo jurisdic’ cases arisi r the new prohibi— | | tory laws, instructed the Grand Jjur- ors that the buyer, as well as the seller of liquor, is Zuilty of an imdict- } {able offense. It follows that the buyer cannot be compelled to testify | as that would be to against the sell compelling h criminate m | himself. ed the jury that where a person i or. ganized body or association—such induced or encouraged any as the Temperance Alhance or the Law and Order League—tu buy ot against the seller, not only is he in- lipuor tor the purpose testifying PE s dictable on his own contes but the on, or or- nembers of such society ganization would be guilty of con- | piracy and should be ind } Verily, the | that crime jot the most stringent icted enactment prohibitory ng to congress from this Hayes, | him- | ly allow me space I will say : 1 L nwe are. still 1 L oteeer ler and This society was oe in captunng and ing the thieves. 1 } } ness, saddles, « two recovered by rk was slow peace and t wa s hors g {soon be abolished. We are not ashamed of anything that we have done and we hope that other socicties will let us | know what they are doing. N. E. STEPHENSON. ~ | Fair View Chips. William Hedden started for Ken- | Judge Hayes also mstruct- | for | Were not aware of } j tucky, on a visit. Everybody went to the dedication at Sprague last Sunday, Willie Yeates has been very sick for several days but is improving as his physician has been able to call! on him. What caused so many of the | young folks to laugh in church last I Sundy night? Because they saw (something new) a cat. Chas. Falor attended the fair at! Kansas City. Hl “Bill you had better be ‘‘keertul’’ ! - how yeu speak of yourselt and P. | M. F. for some of the hovs are out of humor about st, I have not heard the young ladies say a word against the vindication. P.M. Ford attended the St. Louis Exposition last week. The heavy rams that fell last week have spoiled a vast amount of prai- nie hay for the Farmers. E. W. Sheddrick aims to start to; Springfield Mo., soonto spend the | winter. | Who said that Billy Gault did not vote for the greenback candidate. Williams Bro’s. sold Mr. Arnold of Sprague sixty head ot three year old steers tor $3,840. Mr. Crabb’s building is very near- ly completed. St. John Shot at. Sullivan, Ind., October 2.—Some | anguish, consulted Dr j villain fred into the car in which Governor St. John sat on his way LE | trom Carlisie to Terre Haute last The ball passed through the mak- the side on which St. John sat and a lit- tle in front of him. The train just slowing up south ot here when the shot was fired, 1t being exactly 8 o’clock. The governor took the matter coolly and no disturbance was made and many on the train the occurrence. There is no clue to the motive or identity of the person who fired the shot. night. window on the opposite side, ing a clean hole and lodgi m was | old, had a tumor of his ey | with hull on, and turned blue color. j and Ear Infirmary. s is se W t ; overtook u Y st. oO i e J ister, O z junction to prevent the fu: con- struction of the Kansas City, Clinton t ilroad mi ime itloo Once upon Butler would have ar: Z here to the Gulf, via Walnut. grading was about « paid for, but the cars have not the same arrived. It may b way with our Clinton triends. Drowned. A young man named W Mathews, of this city, met wit! fate last Sunday about 12 0’clock. had ity, and he the The heay ins swollen { an- creek near the other young man were floating on a log in the baek-water, when they pushed out into the main unnel. The made a latter’ became trightene and for the bank, log and young Mathews leap which turned the vent down to mse no more. His body was recovered about three- quarters ot an hour afterward, but it was too late to resuscitate h The remains were interred in the ceme- tery, here, Monday. He was anem- ploye in the Woclen Mills here, ahd is said to have been a worthy and in- | dustrious young man.—Pleasant Hill Review. Special Surgery. TO BE CONGRATULATED. Mr. Oren ‘Thompson, of Hume, Mo., whose httle son Millard, 4 years ball, not only destroying all sight, but causing intense pain, and presenting ly spectacle—pushing the eyeball out i walnut dark their am H. socket as large as a to a of The parents, in Willi sc Kimberlin Eye Kimberlin, ot the Kans: Dr. oved the eye and rem tumor | While the boy was under chloretorm. The next day little Millard was up running a Dr. Kim- berlin will insert an artificial eye to ut at his play jlook and mcve naturally, and the safety of the other eye is assured, and reigns in the household. The Rac the raid that C. on Blaine that it has become The Germans are sO mad about a rl Schurz is cal. all mass ‘Thompson making comi-— and discovered in his eloquen e the true inwardness of the Blaine idea of } w where an s is fj i the gov ent, ia t th the “Durn dose Hy. IS to dictate In ral t peon) Tmorals of people; ay Germar therefore, exclaim 15 Cob » GW Pearc Ci As H WF W Wr! unbus, TD Pay ir] Ox RP. l r Johnso New Universal Cyclopedia gre f bee fined to the libraries the professional men and the man of lies ¢ r for general info 1 themselves 5 abreviated works ot but little worth. It has been left to A. J. Johnson & ( to produce a more complete and exhaustive work than either the **American’’ or the ;*Britamea’’ at about one-third the Read of our own cost. what competent judges state say of this great work. Prof. Natlor’s opinion of the su- periority of Johnsons Cyclopedia is expressed in the tollowing testimo- nial; Butter mo., October 6, 1584. Prof. D. B. D. Smeltzer: With pleasure I state that I have carefully, Cyclopedia. Atter having compared it carefully examined Jolinson’s with Chambers, Tam compelled to state that Johnson’s is, in my opin- {ion far the superior. By its indent- ed headlines articles sought for are | much more readily found. In the | clearness and accuracy of its explana- | tions, 1t has no supperior. But its especial value over others consists in this, that it is the work of specialists competent to treat exhaustively each upon his own department, while the authors name to signature of the g each important article, enables the of the reli- ability of the intormation he is ob- to | reader always to know taining. Parents who desire place a very valuable and instruct- their chil- dren ata reasonakle price can do no better than to purchase a set of your books. I am pleased with the work to such a deg ; myself in place of the have. ive work in the hands of ee that I propose to have a set f set ot Chambers which I now Respecttully Yours, J. M. Nayox. Principal of Butler Academy- I heartily endorse the above in ev- also ery particular, and hz scribed for a set and given my Cyclo- Knowl exchange as part pay. L. B. satics, Butler Acd. dge, pedia of Universal ALLISON. Prof, of Math a, TL, Ju <¢d in our tam ers vour Family medicir Merrell edy we ever used tor coughs co: croup and all lung diseas in fact family ord to pe without Merr Family medicines. Respectfully, 44-4t M. Burton & Co., $

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