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VOL. VI. Have They Repented? il Yet aw e should the old radical leaders in Missouri their dimi: ads in sha They have not brought forth meet for repentance. in Missouri, at least, not quite forget the scoundrelism of old regime leaders. We wonder sod . have yet tor ten the infamous treatment they the Irish priesthe pestiferous WoOTKS ne classes} yet the | it | re- ceived trom the Drakes, the Fuilleys, | | the Van Horns, the William War- ners of twenty years ago. In 1865 the republican party o Missour: framed a constitution | this constitution they prescribed an date for congre oath of loyalty to be taken by and ministers ops, priests The priests and = many refused to take the oath. F Cummings at Bowling Green. county, was indicted f a marriage and preac tried and convicted. to Ju the late repplican state convention. the supreme 1 re Wagner, cha state. that by solemn resolutions maliciously and falsely uttered libels igainst the state, delivered the opin bish- before ministers Pike | 4 willfully, | BUTLER, Outside of thist v ling « sa0.— inton sid a eae = m to be very . busy chnstow - - g f : e s fees % ,, | Preparing for corn husking; some Ld i a fa 2 fi at 4 ut F< Pa istown 1S alll talk of comme in about ten f | ept the republican party, | g F Oo + 4j Ys! days. of goods In all departments - broken up over the! ioe ° 2 partie nts it will o a w votes from is zg § re] FI 5 party, if Mr. G. W. Shelton a See : 4 ¥ 1 |B. Maupin the leading repub } ne a Hae | of Johnstown, doe ive them |, indidate tor baptism ; > ie & i 5 = re Se Sdliehs J 1 ve iO yaptis . k iS af vuch of the bloody shirt. Some real estate changing hands, — “ Saturday 1 the day appointed | W. B. Arbogast sold h Sep Se en Pape Tarai ma arr: In| for W. J. Stone pen candi-| Virginia, a short time ago, to W.| It will do you good to look throweh and save vou lots of >from this district , C. Hensley and he sold same to Mr. | : = il f. 7 | to speak, preparations were made | Hall of T oO. ‘ Id aa t z | money on ull fall and winter purchases in accordingly b silvered o’re for the grave fed with the principle (as prac the club at this place | tor oS all imbu— MISSOURI, WEI de, able has had 00; second time for that t} h side of the i | i | i they could teach, preach or solemn- | and by the club from Deep G. W. Short intends shipping two tas i i a marriage. Wm. Warner, \ o came to Johnstown as a club. | car loads of cattle and | hogs, and W. Al 1 Gy, i f man of the republican state j Soa itz p. ot | B. Arbogast, one car load of hogs a j | B : vil} ie i committee, and now run tor | march was forme Tuesday. = 5 iby bw y ye bb f ngress in the Fitth dist 1 r to th Park’s bay windows got | i e this mous constitt t| Mr. Editor, when your reporter} but they were a long time j- EN ee Tt eee TT le a. criminal to | looked upon the vast concourse of} making it arounc DSSS n ee pets | : ie Notio Troy] é j 1 i | ees naking it around. We understand | urpets, Glove Ss. get. ry .Otlons, Trunks. \ nlises. Groceries f preach a- sermon, teach a_ parish | eae e, ladies of hee age, old men | that the good work rests for another | ? | school or solemnize a marriage with: | se steps were feeble, whose eyes | season. due ensware, in fact the largest combined stock of goods in Bates f out first having taken this oath. | were dim, and whose heads were Alton Park says it is alla mistake, = : Se vrong, the words of crate as utte our | the a | able efi Hele ar » engage | could not but hep own lint ¢ nes We ~ s heart, that for the s t, for] that Mr. Pierce wants to | the sake of truth chmate on account of hi ore, that those healt bs lerans, who hav nor law suits burc | their hopes tc Dan Smi on of the court sustaining the con-| CiHtaARLFY. viction and the priest appealed to j that they shou! Bap) Saar ay an the supreme court of the United | upon the dawn of the 5th, by the . De LA OE BS E States. | welcome news that right had tri-j | Ep. Tint -Our burg still cc The court discharged him and de- | umphed once more, that Grover; tmues on Wie eck aa Hattie walls clared void the provision of the | Cleveland had been elected presi-| ness activity, which state constitution as an interference | dent and that the republican party pes Cage our Ousiiess ai eihaose eevee ater were among the things of the past, | @&" are endeavoring to keep every- there are lovers of religious liberty | #™ the young men and even the | thing th at is useful and ornamental, iesteade of Bliwousi ae would hke | ys wers imbued with the principles i or likely to be in demand. Messrs. toread this indictment against the ie pepe aa oo oe we So more than an hour, Mr. Stone bade | i? their large Drug Store, a full good father for preaching the word } of God. It was in words as tol- lows: STATE OF MissourI, } County or PikE $3 In the circuit court, March term 1866, The grand jurors for the state of | Missouri, impaaneled, sworn and charged to inquire in and for the county of Pike, on thei oaths pre- sent, that heretotore, to-wit: the 4th day of March, 1866, county atoresaid, one J. A. Cum- mings, being a priest of the Roman Cathohe persuasion and sect and de- nomination, unlawfully did preach too and teach divers persons, to the } jurors atoresaid unknown, and did | d. act as such priest afores having first taken. subscribed and filed ‘the oath of loyalty, in e clerk’s office of the county court the county, of the residence of of him, { On} at the | votes solid for | the said J. A, Cummings, against | the peace and dignity of the state. [Signed | E. P. Jounston. Indorsed: No. 93. Wm, Warner, C ley, the good Ve; Horn and. Wag- her, can step aside and wait awhile ; the fore: part of a | Was Seen running frantically up tower ; in Missoutf. They haye had pretty goed pull at the and ether federal they will soon lose tl will their condition be pitable in- ueed.—St. Joe Gazette. plunder. Mr. Hartwell was in the city day and reports that work is on as rapialy as possible on the Gult | branch. The company has purchas cey I. Fil-| | post offices , attet a doctor. But ; hastened back and was and then | the father of a bouncing boy. | parcy was from Saline cesuty to- | going ! ; i { | ho se two cups ' spe were on their way to Ch id one loud and anima Cleveland, Marma- 'l the entire ticket. | of | h jus adieu, a i shee for Democrats tho are true, i, township their a thousand yet, their posoms are one’? and on Nov. 4th, they will aescend to the polls hke “reapers of ie th’? and cast their democracy and right. large atten- Last Sunday quitea attended unday Oak Hull | school house, where we hope they well learn the good word of our Johnstown, ] ance from d 3s schoc!] at the ¥é@ would like know where from, to came it you we think will allow us a guess, ; they come trom the north. More ar ViriTas. Birth on Wheels Last Fri ay a wagon stopped in town da Atter finding one be made The and nton, Mo., and feed soon ta ze ofa > fellow was very ful to the doctor, xtd showed appreciation by ‘driving off ht and not paying his bill.-— to take cl ties FP his after nig ed the line running from Pleasant | Green Ridge Enterprise. Hill westward. This will the number of miles of railroad to reduce } i be built to reach Kansas City very: materially, as they will | about eight miles from Harrisonville ; f& | to buiidto reach this line. They will then be in direct commumeation with Kansas City, by the of F Olathe on the main line. wet Way The having } weather we have been has put the bottem in a very hac tion; in fact, has ma condi- t impossible to grade, and it will time ta dry out enoug have only | vert ‘prper, Vireinta, Mo., Oct. 20, "54. Er. Teves:—As I ama oli of, and seeing iis portion of Bates, I will try you a tew happenings. fealth is bet consequentiy ter than it was some time wgo, our doctor is not kept so busy, though he is: ot the time. s ort’s two oldest man} thank- | no news; | stock of notions and fancy ornae mental goods. On last Thursday evening a fire | broke out in the turniture store o! O. | Satterlee & Son. c onsumed rly the entire stock with the store and O. Satterlee’s residence Cause of fire unknown. Loss about $5,000, nearly all cover- and nez adjoining. fed b | through the protecting j insurance. ly watniag to provide against fire agencies of being insured, and having proper water reservoirs at hand. The political outlook is very cheer- ing to the democratic party and if a couple of months were to elapse be— tween now and election instead of a couple of weeks, many mote would get over and join cur ranks. From the amount of laber the re- | publicans alas fusionists are put- forth here, they must feel doubt- ‘Warden spoke here Thurs- dsy afternoon and Mr. Sheldon in the evening, and from the formers } remarks the humiliating position of idle of the fence with- | out knowing whether to keep the ch side to fall, was | plainly shown, While from the 1at- ter, careful observers could easly deduce the fact that they too, felt doubtful, but m_ endorsing the fu- sionists none of their timber would }be slaughtered. But last evening | was their big effort, and it may ee said that “tthe party of progress’’ fully capped the'chmax, by making the evening bideous with their hol- being roost or on wi from rumor, ‘it was their exulting yell of victory over the whiskey \plank they were wrestling with which downed some and made oth-} ers feel a greater degree of man-— hood. SEWARD A. HASELTINE, PATENT SOLICITOR & ATT'Y AT LAW, GFiInID, BERIT Associated at Weshingten, D.C) Cea eee emos luguiries aaswered free wad promos. $3-g00. It 1s another time- | lowing mterspérced with profanity | OCTOB NESDAY 29, 1884. E oR ay i ybody invited to. visit ally our S M. S. COWLE >orner Park Ave., and Gth si. MERCANTIL Hee Ra E Co. cas 3 De SOPMNSON’s Commercial College! 421N , Mo. Ford ana the Saloon Keepers. »> weeks a ‘onicle ccount of a ltotherhood, tormer! - 3 St, St-I Louis protective associition, | ‘urner hall, betore which meets county of Bates and State of Missouri, to- ee aoe | lich Ford appeared and assured the | Wit? Allof lot three (3), in the south- | Open an the Weas! | east quarter ot ction thirty-tour (34,) ; assembled members that he never | township thirty-nine (39) of range thirty- | acouraged the prohibitionists nor ae ae ds aed is : = acres oF : Allthe Branches of an English authorized any one to pledge him as | more a Sea tt eg Mathemathical und Commercial the pay- Course tanght. | ivorable to prohibition. Further- | ™* a of acertain ae omissory note, in said | = = é aced of trust fully described; and, where- | gea-Spec Te r’s Course for 2 he said positively that he did] as thea eo reraet ote | A tres ee ai if : ely : at : 4 2 » the annual interest on sat ‘note is | those alee desire ol earn and Teach pot believe in the wisdom of the } '09S past due and unpaid, a by re 7. . z : ierme of the sail deed of Uva; should] Business and Ornamental Penman novement and was not in sympathy | default be made in the payment ot the | Ship, etc. vith it, U pon these assurances he | annual interest on said no’ when the Refers to thousands ot former stu: same becomes due and payable, then the . 1 pa} dents who have completed under our received the endorsement of the whole debt becomes duc and pavab : nembers present at the meeting. | Now, therefore, at the request of the ; MStructious. pe : ere : legal holder ot said note and by virtue of Barr-A Foll C ‘ expene ad cee, Parse & ¢ eae” 2 ull Corps of Experienced ince this publication, his friends | tne authority in me vested by the terms | protescors ; : ve taken occasion to deny its | of said deed of trust, 1 will, on a < " Se ss a : eee ~ Cia Thaveday. N ka = Sy Write for Circulars, Specimens of eracity, even claiming that Ford | aursday, November 13, t: | Penmanship and Catalogue of Stu- ; sc} wee ours of ¥ |.ever attended the meeting, It is | paced ss pa | dents and ud Reeteronces. Address: d that Mr. Ford himselt, before a | joon of t i ge) . W. Johnson, | necting at Hannibal, characterized | the court Se. Ss 1s, ae PRESIDENT. = | county ot E From these | ge i northern | he account as lie. yromises, friends in the yart ot the state, especially Schuyler ford Forth as a temper- To verity the state—|{ | nents made by the Chronicle, a re-| jorter this morning Charles Schweickhart, ogee isa who was Presence eis the saloon-keepers” sounty, hold mce advocate. called upon; oraaee | Saie. 18 South} ‘Trustee’s : i john T. Henshaw and Mary instrumental | yj yy hie wife, by their certain | ot Mr. | deed of trust, bearing date August 23th, } | 1883, and duly recorded in the Recorder’ s office, of said “Bates county, Missouri, in s reterred Mr. Schweick- | Book N Ze conveyed to the ee) . undersigned trustee the following de- 1: ‘Understanding that Mr. ibed reat estate, situate, lying and be- s in the city I called togeth- | ing in the co of Bates ot Mrsso: 10 w The sou of the northeast quarter ot section seven- demec and republicans, in order | teen (17), and the west ot th | west q northeast that they might have an expression; 2); ef his views on the liquer question. | t = E conta’ Mr. Ford appeared nd were | \ sfied with his remarks.”’ *-In what respect? Did he pledge himselt to your interest ?’” tell what Whereas, i and Clothing House in America. WANAMAKER & BROWN, OAK HALL, Philadelphia. A full tine of card samptes of the great piece goods stock ill be found with ‘2 ete Pip ted, INT, Butler, Mo. tilement ining the {2 to. — at. Ford wa er a number of the brotherkood,both j | s { we } s2 ly describe interest on said note is long p; unpaid, and by the terms of sa it detault is made in the i the same be-| whole " Notice o of Fin Notics is hereby pa **] have no right to ; = ento all creditors Ea Zut £ : i yerv then the 5 ‘om what he said, ever: en t fe " ea z debt may become immediately due and ; 2nd oo interested in the estate ot republican member ot the assoc = erefore, at the request | Da: E t deceased, that I, £ é | Roberts Administrator of said estat tend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bases county Probate r ot said note ar the eatiority in me iad by the te: ms of | said deed of trust, 1 will, on i ce — = : ae 1 court, ia Bates county, State ot Missouri justified in supporting tim. Oh, Thursday, November 13, 1884, | to Adio eres Ses sisaglanieredtp omy pshaw, he’s not favorable to prohibit- | perween the hours of nine o’clock in the | November, 1834. F.W. Roberts, ion Everybody St. Joseph | forenoon and five o’clock in the after- Administrator, ome : | noon of that day, at the east front doo 7 “ knows that he is interested in the | CPt. court nouse, in the city ot Butler, Notice of Final Settlement will support him. He toid es enough tolet us know that we would be ' in | whisk iad ublic Notice is hereby given to the creditors de. | ccunty ot Bates aforesaid, sell at p otice is hereby gi ei pee ae him?” | outcry, all the land in said deed of trust | and others interested in the estate of “Why will you support him: and this notice described, or so ca James H. Hughes deceased, that 1, Amos os tof what he said in/ thereot as may be necessary to pay said] J. Hughes Administrator of said estate : ee oo : = | debt, interest and costs. C.C. Duxe, intend to make final settlement ot said }this meeting. He assured us that) Trustee. | estate at the next terte of tise Bates otis ty Probate court, to be held in Butier Bates county State Jot Missouri, on the first Monday in November 1884. Amos J. Hucues, Administrator. Fred Doro Barber he was not im the interest of prohi- | | bition.’ | VEGETABLE PILLS { | ' hw { i Secure Healthy action to the Liver ud relieveali bil- |