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BUTLER WEEKLY TIME EEE J. D. ALLEN Eprror. 1.D. Atrenxn & Co., Proprietors, | , TERMS OF SUPSCRIPTION: The Werxry Ties, published every Wednesday, will be sent to any duress one year, postage paid, tor $1.25. BUTLER MISSOURI. WEDNESDAY, OCT, 8., 1884. —_—_——— DEMOCRATIC TICKET: FOR PRESIDENT, GROVER CLEVELAND, York. OF NEW RESIDENT, FOR VICE THOS. A. HENDRICKS, OF INDIANA. State Ticket OR GOVERNOR, JOUN S. MARMADUKE OF sT. LOUIs. LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR, A. P. MOREHOUSE OF NODAWAY COUNTY- FOR OR SECRETARY OF STAT MICHAEL K. McGRATH OF ST, LOUIS. t TREASURER, J. M, SEIBERT SIRARDEAU COUNTY. OF CAPE FOR AUDITOR, JOHN WALKER OF HOWARD COUNTY. 3ISTER OF LANDS, ROBERT McCULLOCH COOPER COUNTY- OF FOR SUPREME GOURT JUDGE, F. M. BLACK OF JACKSON COUNTY. FOR ATTORNEY-GENERAL, B. G. BOONE OF HENRY COUNTY. For Congress Tweltth District, W. J- STONE, ot Nevada, County Ticket ¥or Representative, A. HENRY. For Treasurer, R. S. CATRON. For Sheriff, W. F. HANKS. For Prosecuting Attorney, W. O. JACKSON. For Surveyor, M. L. WOLFE. For Public Administrator, JAS. BELL. For Judge of South Dist. W. W. DENNEY. For Judge ot North Dist. W. H. DEJARNETT. For Coroner, DR. E. L. RICE. APPOINTMENTS. Hon W. J. Stone will speakat the following time and places ia Bates county: Johnstown, Saturday, Oct. 1Sth, 2 p.m. Sprague, Monday, Oct. 20, 2 pm Hume, Monday, Oct 20, 7pm Shobe (at mines) Tuesday, Oct 21,7pm Butier, Wednesday, Oc 2pm Adrian, ‘Yhursday, Oct 23, 2pm Rich Hill, Saturday, Nov 1, 7pm t22 A. Henry and W. O. Jackson will speak as follow Wednesday, Oct 15, Rich Hill Thursday, Oct 16. Pleasant Gap Saturday, Oct 18, Mulberry. The above speaking will take piace at night, except in Deepwater, which will be at 2 o’clock. The committees and clubs in the varic townships will see that all arrange- ments shall be made and that th have rousing meetin: By order of committee. R. J. Starke, 1. R. Simpsox, Secretary. —____ “Mr. Blaice is an unclean man and the people will not have him. He stands self-convicted of prosti- tutmg the high offices he has held to build up a private fortune; ot co- babiting with corruption for dishon- « money. p.—Globe Democrat. ey x President. His record would damn | | Ohio Goes Republican By Twenty | Thousand Majority. | West Virginia Rolls up a Dem- ocratie Majority of Ten Thousand. Carries Its State. | Each Party Own \ Cleveland, O., Oct. 15, 12 0’clock m.—There has been 515 precincts howing a net republican heard from sh gain of 9,886. There is 1,Sg2 precincts in the state, and at this rate ot gain the republicans would get a majority ot oyer 20,000. Wheeling, W. Va., Oct. 15, 12 m. —The Register election of Wilson, democratic Wheeling claims can- didate for Governor, by 7,000 to 15,- 000 majority. The democrats only hoped to cut the republican majority down in would Ohio and conceded the state go at least 15,000. And the carried West Virg demo- crats have by the usual majority. So neither party have gained any advantage from this election, but leaves the battle to be fought and decided in November. THE FUSION VANDIDATE- Nicholas Ford, the date tor governor of Missouri, spoke opera Nearly fusion candi- to a large audience in the house Saturday afternoon. his whole speech was made u inst th tirade of abuse ag which he aspires to be govern was nearly a fac simile of the one he at was copied by the republican papers w made Boonville and ch throughout the state, pretended comparison of her Missouri’s gress pre sister Illinois and with states, Towa. that would foul its own nest. and the kind of campaign Nick Ford and his ilks are making should be discounte loves It is indeed an unclean bird nanced by every citizen who the grand old commonwealth where the people are blessed with abund- ance, the climate and soil ot which 1s second to no state in the and whose credit 1s so zood that her six per cent bonds to-day are worth $1.32. He denounced Geo. Vest as saying that if the republicans and greenbackers didn’t hke the way democrats conducted affairs in Mis- souri they could move out. Senato Vest never said that; he did say, in referring to the resolution adopted by the republican conuention at Jet- ferson City, stigmatizing Missouri as the home of banditti and thieves, that if they believed that such was the condition of affairs in this state they should leave it. the tariff issue he said it would be unjust to Missouri to remove the duties on sugar, an article that we could not do without. That this industry in Louisiana alone realized union, In reterting to $22,000,000 last year. We would like to know who paid that $22,000,- 900 if it was not the consumers, and they paid this enormous amount to enrich the manufacturers. He de- nied the authorship of the bill pro- viding for the distribution of public lands, which he introduced into the House ot Representatives in Febru- ary, 1SS1, but said he introduced that bill by It that any sensible man, before he in— request. appears to troduced a bill in Congress, would know the full purpose of the bill and understand it thoroughly, and by ir troducing and advocating it he be- comes the author as much so as if hehad drafted it. He boasted of bemg a trading man and enumerated the various line of articles he had traded in, but signally failed to men ton the fact that he had also dabbled in the liquor traffic and that at pres- jen he is a stock holder in two large Consistency, thou art a ck Ford should acci- | brewerie. jewel. If 3 souri wouid be a fit subject for pity and her people, who put such an | 1gmoramus in the executive chair, de- serve the contempt and ndicule of €very state in the union. c| APPROXIMATED RESULTS. | S| us; dentally become governor, then Mis- | ‘The following are the appoi | ments for Hon. D, A. DeArmond, made by the St Executive com- | mittee: { | Rich Hill Mines, We < -Oct55,7°p = Butler, Saturday, Oct 15, 2 pm | Burdett, Monday, Uct 20,2 pm | Vinton, = Bes Fp in Altona, Tuesday, ‘* 21 7pm| Maysburg, Wednesda y, October Wednesday, October 7pm Rockville, T Z| Lockwood, Wednesday, ‘* 29 New Home, Thursday, ‘* 30 |} Walnut, Friday, fo 3 | ' ch Hill, Saturday, November 1 Ri Our independent tnend down in} the southeast portion of the county, the Rockville Globe, jis showing its g Stone tor independence by oppos le | Congress and raising its teeble voice r Ware ment I | } fc | lish to maintains oppose it er course democratic party. independence by continually fi and o democratic cand:dates Ve le the party whet! Stone is good enor editor of the Globe or not and w little influc that will ex will not hurt | wou the nomination it all the same with the Globe man. t bernat | John W. 2 people of Butler > ne t aturday “eveni It is the verd: at the court house. of many that it was the finest politi- de this} cal speech th at ig He reviewed the pub history of Blaine and showed him to unprinciy been campa be unscrupulous and led, using his official position for private gains, fostering and assisting mo- nopolies and otherwise degrading the high position of trust to which the people raised him. Ue handled the 2 masterly manner. | tariff question ir Allin all it was a effort great and } and mud j coe ganization, by el The editor of the Republi issue. body to ed off on a and the people > usual ked up tot cal line. Mon- ity, especially in the pol The democra day ever ast cy meton ize a Cleve and atter e! man and secretary appointed a com- mitte on by-laws and adjourned un til the S when they dent, and J. J. Brumbach secretary. After adopting by-laws for their gov- ernment, the roll was called resultin | to the pastrecord the repul but also, to the subterfuges they are trying to cover up those long lists of Some dissatis— frauds for repub rcoun- a pesition entirely t that he is holding to their There is a silver tongued plican candidate for antagonistic E BELL MARRiA Double Wedding—-A Surprise Savors ing of Romance. the bride’s Atthe residence of parents J. R. Har an, about one mile west of Butler. on last) Thurs- day evening Mr. John B. Arm- strong and Miss Mande Harnman united inthe boly bonds of matrimony Rev. Reese, of Holden officiating. About seventy-five invitations had been issued and all responded to. As th rrived they were re- c c lerson and Miss who atter t parlor, to the spacious been handsomely decorat- s and At pointed hour 7:30 o'clock p. made their young couple appearance, without attendants, and were met almost on the threshold by Rey. Reese who in a few well chosen words and in very impressive manr made the Rev. Walk- two hus yt for er, of the Pre ed up a prayer, the happiness and prosperity of these two young @ upon this (to them) the it people ente unknown voyage of hfe. After ulationr ar nany as could be one time nagnificent eas only Mrs. ladies, know how to pre- were seated to a supper, such ao of all other pare and preside over. The bride was handsomely brethren have certainly neglected, as so few of them were out to hear him at the Mt. Zion School house a short become time ago | think it has known that he 1s in the land. Business interests are still growing. The large dry goods firms of Br. & Bros., McDaniel and Sam’! Levy & Co., will compare favorably with any at the county seat. Ls I Fairview Chips. ‘Bill’? please excuse my mistake, to the word, however I shall try and not do I did net mean use wro ai! who tailed to hear him missed a treat. Unsound in statesmanhke judge- ment, unscrupulous in political meth- ods, dim-eyed in perceiving the dis— tinction between truth and_ untruth, absorbingly ambitious, but short- sighted as to the methods of gratify- ing his ambition, but with a genial social disposition and a_ brilliant rhetorical capacity Mr. Blaine raakes an alluring candidate but would make a dangerous president,—Hen- Gen. S. A. Alger, Gubernatorial candidate in Michigan. A cut of ten per cent in the wages ot the working men on all the rail- roads owned by Jay Gould has been made. Gould gave the republican corruption fund one hundred thou- sand dollars and now the poor work- ing menin his employ are paying him back. Gould gets the credit, the workingmen under him foot the bill. = Ot all thin things we ever saw or heard of, about the thinest was Nick Ford trying to dodge the land grant bill he introduced in Congress. The bill will be found in another column of this paper and if any body will tell us what he means by it we will give him a year's subscription to the Times and a chromo thrown in. ; Gen, Grant a few daysago refused to allow his name to be used elector on the republican ticket { New York. Giying as his reason ‘that he was out of politics.’”” The | General evidently has a taint idea as { to how the cat will jump in Novem- | ber. as an in { Dr. Churchell, ex-independe nt j | | candidate for Congress in this a | trict has entered the lecture field and | | will tell “what I know about poli- | at Lamar to-morrow. We | | wonder it the doctor wont take upa | collection to try and get back what | he spent on announcements. Nick Ford says he never dratteda | that land bill. We don’t blame him, any tool would deny such a pro- | , duction. But he admits he intro-/ | duced the bill in Congress. Which | ors is Oo age so again. ~ Rev Smith preached at Bethel Sun- day morning. Everybody 1s invited to attend the singing at the church Friday might. Fair View school commenced Monday morning. We hope Mr. Ford will teach us a good school this winter. Found, last Friday night about 1 o’clock, one mule hitched to Mr. Criglers gate post. For farther par- ticulars call on or address Mr. J. L., ,|ty Ward Beecher in his letter to | Bates county Mo. O. C. Brewette, William Yeates and P. M. Ford attended the grand democratic rally at Appleton City, last Friday evening. They report a good time, also that Vernon was the luckyf[county in carrying off the Ban- ner. I wish it had been our county. Fair View debating society met in regular session last Saturday eyen- ing. Igotto listen, for the first time to ‘‘Bills’’ ceaseless gush of elo- quence. Locals are scarce this week. j. Pp. Old Howard county has some he- roes within its borders. Here is & little incident which happenud at Fayette recently which proves the truth of this: Among the first to enroll was Peter Murray, an old federal soldier, who formerly belonged to the gal- lant old Mulligan regiment, captur— ed by Gen. Price at the siege ot Lexington, Mo., 1861. Uncle Peter was su seriously wounded Fan has in. in that engagement he ever since had to propel himself by a pair of crutches, and is, therefore, a gov- ernment pensioner. His enrollment as a member of the Cleveland and Hendricks club Saturday night was supplemented by a little speech in which he said he had lately been approached radical politician, who said that as he was a pensioner he ought Rot to vote the Democratic ti He replied: ‘*To hell Pension. I would r. per than sell my maz for the Pitiful sum of a pension. I am a Democrat and expect to live anddie | in the Democratic party, pension or by a to him cket. with y d rer die 2000 rayed in a dat 1 handsome beauuful reheved at the throat by holding a was exceedingly 1 and looked The g boquet, room was dressed in lovely. a plain, well-fitting plack suit and looked his handsomest. After the guests had again assem- } Rev. surprise the cious. parlor, bled in \ by announcing that he too had been Sk ated aripple ot called upon to officiate in a marriage ; ceremony, and all eyes were turned toward the door in eager expectancy when S. S. Allen, of St. Louis, ap- peared, handsome and smiling, with Miss Alice Harriman leaning upon his arm looking exceedingly Both seemed to enjoy the Rev. lovely. surprise they were creating. Walker delivered a beautiful an ceremony after which Rev. Reese led in prayer. Congratulations poured in uponthe happy couple. Mr. Allen is known to many of our citizens having been born raised on a farm a few miles of Butler. A few years moved with his parents to St. Louis, his present home. He is at present traveling for the old and well estab- lished house of Sckotten & Co., St. Louis and stands well with his, em- He has secured a lite com— north since he ployers. panion in Miss Alice, who will help | and cheer him on in his battle tor bread. “ The Times join their many triends in best wishes for the happi- ness and prosperity of both the young couples. May they live to a green old age and never regret step taken which links two lives for time unto eternity. LIS? OF BRIDAL PRESENTS- House and lot to each of father and mother Marriman. Presen s to Maude from groom, an gant gold watch and chain. Miss Fannie Armstrong, lace bed set. S.S. Allen and Alice Harriman, willow casy re Unique clock,Grandtather How.P.Hill. Beautiful chased butter dish and knite, Dr. and Mrs. Buckner, u : and aunt of the groo ot Pleas. Elegantly chased sett, Mrs. L. M. Woodman groom, Pleasant Hill. Silver and glass decoratec Miss May Weodmancy, Pi lovely berry bowl, Ww. Quaint silver pie knife, Misses Minnie Shaw and Mamie 4io: Silver fist 3 Cosy the the brides, mounted w and Mrs. Naylor, Mr | Mr. and Mrs. F. M | Beegle, % | Allison. | Silver chased and g carf re- | Mr. a | Mrs. Chas. Jo! Tho | | Decorated silver a “ a, | Mrs. G. W. Weave 3ur- | = j Gecorated velvet j fra H. C. Wyatt and Pair Damask linen towels, Miss Nellie nannon, Rich Hill. Pinkand white toilet set, Mrs.O. D. Austin. al erian church, offer- | Harriman, | ! impressive | and | Do. Handsomely bound poems,’ Dr. and Mrs. Uniqu : toilet st Doz. lit McKibben Mrs, Chas 5S. Whee Silver and nd Mrs. R. G. Large cut glass bottle, volume of Pyle. “Ideal da perfume Wood, inds, Misses I Loy DA kins, Miss Hates fe Hartwell d with ex quisite pertume, Miss Nar und Rub 1 arge linen damask table cloth, My and Mrs. James McKibben ! blue and old gold satin-covere pillow, Miss Ada Welt Beautitul chased silver a dish, Charley Burrows, W. D G. W. Weaver. Pale blue and w! p! etset, Miss Minn G. Re Handsome bouquet of Mr. Holloway. furted white countervane, hand-r by an elderly lady, mother of Mrs Edwards, by whom it was presente Handsome bouquet of tube roses, Mr F.J. Tygard. Plush-covered an¢ i satin- handkerchtet ar Large, elegantly a Satin embroideried neck b Mrs. J. McKibben, Rich Hil Beautttul point lace and pale } ide’s aunt, Mrs the brid hose, fr Orleans, from Robert Sloan, of Keokuk, Iowa. d | Blanding, Boston. Da vder 1 pu Mrs, | Cl Er sol and aunt, Mrs. Cha ot New | the brides’ uncle, Co! A surprise, generous | came to Mr, Allen by e ! inst., of a box containing a magnificent ilver tea service, « posed of an elaboes rately carved which was en. Wm. Scnotten & Co., St. Lou | Mo.,”? with six pieces ot silver ware, in cluding two tea pots, sugar bowl, cre: } pitcher, spoon holder, bowls; also a set ot solid silver tea spoons trom W. L. Al | len, brother of the groom, to the bride, General Marmaduke and the German There is no county in Missouri,al- most entirely settled by Germans, whose inhabitants had better oppor+ tunities to get acquainted with Gen- | eral, or rather the Marmaduke, than Gasconade and county seat, | Hermann, = When — Marmaduke marched on Jefferson City through | Franklin and Gasconade counties, in 1864, there were hardly any le | bodied citizens of Hermann at home most of them being in the militia or home guard. Nevertheless, some | hotspurs got hold of a cannon, and with more bravery than common sense, opened fire on the approach Tt was in vain, and ing southerners. Marmaduke’s troops occupied the |town on the night of October 3,.- | Who would have wondered if Mar- | maduke’s army, iaflamed by this senseless resistance, had ransacked | the town? But Marmaduke, on the contrary, respected this proof of pat- riotism, and did not make the people ot Hermann feel the hand of the con- He protected the property of the inhabitants of and any | queror. and the lives Hermann transgression on the part of the sol diers, and this the people of Hermann | have never torgotten. He may not be a great statesman, of Hermann, against every | | | } ; but we, the people | know him to be a man ot sound judgement, strong will and strict | honesty, and think these qualities to be sufficient guaranty that Mr. Mar- maduke’s administration will be 4 | good one. —Hermann Volksblatt. For Sale. A Cincinnati printing press large enough to print a six column paper on and one hundred pounds of bour- gots type, nearly new, and in guod CI or address this office. p for condition. ouving all the vile m use when you cured of fe , dumb ague, billions disord spepsia, as well as all disor nents of the liver, blood and by wearing one ot Prot. Guil- mette’s French Laver Pads, which i+ sure cule everv time. If your druggist does not keep the pad, send $1 50 in a erto French Pad Co., Toledo and it will be sent you by return m It is the only pad that is guaranteed re ot counterteits. Sold bs Lo 44--1m For sale. Three big two-year-old mules, one vear-old Normon horses. pair three some Kent mares icky bred saddie short-horn Polled Some young i short-horn cows, and bulls. Asusy HaMiLton. Galloway the Public. tice to ¥ > rout just cause or provic and I hereby warn all parties that I net be responsible for any debts which she may contract. H. J. BARBER.