The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 19, 1884, Page 4

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_vennenanyinnenneey sais SIT FOR SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE. | |;HE GERMANS AND THE DEMO-| EKLY TIMES Wel aane GRATIC PARTY- cath Eee Among the first duties of the; ——~ | House when the Legislature mects 2) It ej J.D. ALLEN TI re in January is the election ota te rm >| i the 1 > A member to fill this siete ras ~ | er. j.D. Arten & Co., Proprietors; | osition must be an exemplary parli- ys amentarian, of quick perceptive fac- 1 : TEEMS OF SUFSCRIPTION> \ ulti lot sterling character and jr iby th s a bev ve, and slished every | ability—a man who knows and zduress | ynderstands the duties devolying | upon him and who has the al g ae =o ee rage to perform them fa Bie aaa BSSOUr: le onciseiv and hones ly. The EDNESDAY, NO Te lent legislature of Missouri will be ———— composed of more than ordinary the man who presides will Col. from this district is 4,082. lity and over the rulings of such 2 Stone’s majority for congress body j not only have to possess the mind to What has Beast Butler made by avorting around like a baboon? ——<—<— $< —__—_—__— ar- of ¢ nt bills | comprehend, but the for acter to command brought ir, Samuel J. Til- Il be ident Ar John Ke New York at Pres Il voted i the | this winter cffec ame ward tn re-} ple of the State, cent election. —————-————~ To-day the vivid sunlight burnish- es a lonely grease spot in the politi— make no mistake in selecting We would modestly sug- speaker. gest for the consideration of this ral lawyer, is the Missouri, a and an yurteous gentleman. That inently ¢ body, a gentleman et pease cal arena. I) isnot much ofag a : ¢. . i as e who, sa spot, but it is all that is left of Benja- | fied, one who, @ peer of man in splendid parliamentarian affable, man is Captain Antony A any nin Butler. ————————————s ‘The total prohibition vote country this year will aggregate 200,- of the Henry. of House | t! their appetite for beer seems so strong joyme very con Gert to the use former appear habit tot Ame ibeco t seem contra- ry to the venius republican institutions prohibition would pre- tthis n vail througho The democratic party, consulting ide: the reasonable of the foreign population more than those of Cte: that a xo. Four years ago it was only | Bates county. We do not press our | much « ibout 11,000. There is something | claim that this section is any more | foreigners fed and sought tt a this remarkable increase. entitled to this honor than any ot | tection Sas There was onc fellow by the | though the southwest has had a] safed to ne co uame of Billy Mahone who figured | SP& ker for years, but we ae proud | tion ot ee olitics of the | Of our eminent represent and | ratic p ull of Its conspicuously in the 4 Nothing was heard of that tl body woul e nation. him | consider in honori Henry’s ithout his kn ut honoring it:elf Poor trait- the in the recent campaign. or! He iimbo of We present Captain in this connection w has been relegated to things that are eternally for aught we know, with While he be a colleague to be desired or edge, and, damned. Fr lemocr ee would nk Hurd, the great tariff reform } c congressman from the To- out his approval. to ve feared upon the House, yet we tee! recently defeated by Rom a Te would not shirk any publican, claims to have discovered trust that might be forced upon him. fraud in the count and says he will —_—_——— ontest the election, believing that THE NEGRO VIOTIMIZED re was fairly elected. + A colored orator in Illinois the ee Shave wilittmcimucttecl pictty bad} ous Cay wusececd tat by execu tive proclamation or otherwise the after his long and bitter struggle for 1is party to have that party turn up- on him and accuse him of useing party tunds for private purposes. But thus it is with human nature; some one has got to be the goat and it had as well be Elkins as anybody else. A Bie ———— eee that republicans have worked on the It now turns out thet the reason dulity of the ignorant negro, not the republican national only in the held out a false hope to their party north, to so long was to bleed republican of- fice holders throughout the country federal officials in the south should be instructed to inform the colored people that their rights are not to be change ot ad- intelligent, intertered with by a ministration. To an reasoning reader this would a the height of folly. ear but it is a tact committee also im the their but south, believe that rights Ameri- change of will not be respected as tree can citizens under a ad- to replenish the exhausted campaign | ministration and they would be fund. But after the leaders found | thrown back into that bondage from out they would not be bled any lon- | which they so lately escaped, This ger they gave up all hopes and e- | 1s the secret of the negro so religigus- t pous I saints pro! of this st ly op- posed the The Germans ot this state are more directly —inter- and other ested, pecuniarily the opposition to prolubition y other class of peoplein the state, but they are nearly always found voting tor prohibition by casting their baliots with the the democratic party favors the prohibition, republicans. Sine Germans by fighting ast for the I against isn’t it’ ingratitude Germans to vote It our democratic nominees? Teutonic friends prejudice little this cer would only lay aside their the and exercise reason a more they would certainly see They demp- matter in sts true light. net hope that the ty of this state will fight for anenemy. Why can’t Germans consistently vote the demo- uve ys cratic p alw the = t cratic tic > We leave this ques- gan fighting among themselves. ly voting the republican ticket tor} Laat cee ae es er naaanneEEEmmemeameeea i ie 2 tion Open to them, and do not wish The waning beliet in special prov- | t2® Past twenty years. Under a]... intimidate them by threats. It is democratic administration the ne : idences is strengthened by the news that Casenave, one of the rascaliy Louisiana returning board, by whose aid the Republican party wa nonestly kept in power eight after it had honestly lost that power, will find every right they pos tact and ur and additional immunities haye been secured them. This will open their eyes and they ight of suffrage like ess in- ailed, s dis~ years evident, however, that the democrat- 1c party of Missour: cannot afford much longer to carry the burden im- posed upon it by the Germans unless them. it receives some support trom nd driven cat- asoning creatures, retofore, dumb Overa fourth ot the repubh- has just died in poverty and neglect. His rascality ruined his business, and the grand old party had no fur- ther use tor him tle. can party is composed of the negro vote; take this away trom them and the g.o. p., hanging by a slender Cleveland will resign his position as governor of New York next month and Lieutenant governor David B Hill will assume the executive duties January 1 and continue as acting governor untl the end of Cleveland’s thread of hope over the chasm of despair, waiting for the dawn ot 1888, will sink mto oblivion, to be resurrected under that bat will be merged into some other never name, term, December 31, 1885. Hill is political party. j an Elmira man and was mayor ot ————— ey i the city when elected to his present Dennis McZarthy, a re- Some republicans are loud in their position. denunciations of Steve Elkins for the pubhean, is president pro tem. ot | miserable manner in which he man- } magnetic } npaign, and some even go so tar | Stephen of appropri- ating to his own use money con- | | tributed to the republican campaign | ifund. Stephen is that he should thus be members of his own household his former the senate, and will preside at this | i aged the aggressive and winter's session. i ca as to accuse —-——. Those old hoosiers are tolerably demonstrative in their enthusiasm. itis reported that when the Indian- apolis democrats went to Mr. Hen- dricks’ house to congratulate him his plug hat was knocked off, and he was good-humoredly jostled about by the happy mob. One wild-eyed young man threw his arms about Mr. Hendricks and embraced him most affectionately. Another patted hi on the back in an exceedingly sorely distressed accused by] and|_ friends |! > but turns in vain to tor consolation he gets neither. Let the scenes of west and tell and sympa him return to exploits in the wi:d his sorrows to the nod- | ding trees and the gurel Dr. J. H. Brooks, pastor of Wash- ington Ave. Church, St. Lous, returned home after Presbyterian a sin month’s absence in Eurone He re- ported a very stormy voyage across the Atlantic. ending with a serious accident to himself which might have proyed fatal. By the surging ot the vessel he was thrown down a long flight of but escaped with a broken arm and bruses and cuts. stairs, numerous It is the sheerest nonsense, thas | talk about the election of Clevelai.d being a precurser of hard times. Re- publican orators and jouraals make unthinking, people be- lieve that the democratic party is a unreading free trade partv and that the election ot a democratic president will bring on free trade. is not a free trade party and even if | now engaged in v a democratic president could not. “i himself, enforce a free trade | policy, and all inteligent people un- }{ Those journals and orators that persist in of Cleve- claiming th mendatory manner. A third. Sees and the laughing sky. 1! land mail brin times are that the vice-president had lost his | /¢2¢ bum sympathy. either knaves tile, generously took his own low- + In an intery it ; ! crowned hat, four sizes too iY a mes recentir, Ss. of | emigrated to this = eget Setat upon Mr. Hendricks’ head ar route 1on that **t in Americ lifted it repeatedly to the crowd in response to the applause.—K. C- Times. enough Kelle j ca to ae | Good tor Stephen. : ot last year. = this year upt tember 5 201 ab republican | | the ess, circuit court et away. duke above 13,000. Vt to amendme | been adopted !majority. The other amendn detea The dresidennial nas majonty. whole vote j cast at the election and the n I8So was 39 for Hance was 19.997- deteat to the 1 Dr. A test of Missouri s was made ether day. by Maj. Genay and John Baker, of ia, on the farm of John R. urrett, just west ot the city limits, for the amount of t "by at Nevada at the} BUTLER The Grandest r Held i County—The Be ocession Over a Mile Long THE TOW? ONE BLAZE OF greates sires } “4 = « wit- ! Butler v t last twhen ¢ mocrats ds those township specially, rate the victory. All a num- to celet the houses i | business brilliantly . 1 residen ted with numt ss candles pand C rinese | i beautitully and phernalia. Bontires w | other phar | {built on each corner of the square n speakers’ st 5 erected | oo S@e - | and a speakers’ stand was erected This mill is situated on one of of the northeast corner. Long be- | principle streets near the business part d : } hth y of Butler. with a well establis of tor 1“ » “ts “ of forming the streets | ed custom and merchant business present of peop march and whe was 4 | on the ne | fore the he le presented n eclipsed by those pose of measuring na piece of ground coma x by} was formed at 7 o'clock im front of accurate measu it made by i 1 cratic headquarters, next to j county survevor, 23 1-3 acres 1¢ | the Timers offic and was in com corn hi cut 1s ked, | J. D. Allen, who was Sea E. A. Ewing,both I uke fm line thus tormed the test. the corn, | marched the d to meet put itinaw it to the] the Rich 1 delegation. At the seales, ghed the load, and then | head of the column were the Butler afterwards the wagc and then by | brass band and *Pap’’ Mills on a ealculati bushel, and countir on, allowing 75 pounds to the 1 ] found that the ye the shocks, imount to of 126 1-4 bushels to tt for fifteen vad been in pasture secutive years until this year, ‘en manured more or less native soil is Jand in the every year. But the very rich, as is all the neighborhood, and produces heavily —Ex. without manure. Senator Beck on the Next Cabinet. Senator Beck,of Kentucky,reached vy. He is tully satisfied in eveland has here to-d: his own mind that € ried New York and selected presi- dent. ‘How do you spec#late as to Cleve- land’s cabinet?” asked the Enquirer correspondent. ‘I think,’ make Thurman secretary of state. He and would grac he will said the senator. is a grand old man the office.’ ‘There is some talk, senator,’ sai your correspondent, ‘that Mr. Bay- ard will probably be giver the port- tolio.” ‘I do not think so.’ was the reply. ‘Bayard is of: more ser¥ the senate, ané inmv judgment he would prefer to stay there.’ ize in *Who do you think wif Se chosen for the other cabinet places? -Well,’ said the senator, “if my advice has any weight, oh? Joe Mc- Donald wil} be made attorney gen- - I think General McClellan will be secretary ot war. “Fhe south will have representation, and Reagan ot Texas, will make good post- master-geneval.” ‘Who will be secretry of the treasury ; ‘Thave no idea. Sel I think Cleveland will select a New York business man. He ought to. I say this freely. There has never been a secretary of the treasury under re- publican zule but one.” ‘John Sherman, of Qhio.” was his } | prompt reply The surveying corps of the Gulf The democratic party | Co., are camped near town, and are | making a survey through this place. be down Gallinipper and will through the ‘*the narrows.”” j of the Bailev i diverge from this line to the east and will cross the Osage some two hun- dred yards below ford. It will the extreme east bugh hence to happy hollow then pass th part of town to the prairie. It 1s the general un derstanding that furni gh town ‘ocation Advance. The route will | se, after which it will | aloit an bore white horse and who immense white rooster perched upon along pole. ‘The rooster of course of democratic blo was train from the When the rived, bringing a strong psi wton from Rich Hill and a number of democrats from Pierce City and trom several other places along the route, the march was again taken up and the visitors escorted into town, with the Butler band im front and the Rich Hil! band in the rear of the The was | met on the way into town, by the Butler Broum Brigade, 100 of Butler’s | The ladies | procession. procession street, composed ot over fairest ladies ot allages. look d charming as they marched up the street, the leader carrying a ban- ner on which v inscribed the motto, **A Clean SWEEP 7 and each member ot the Brigade v on her shouldez a new t her side was angling a dust The ladies, verv deserved}y, elicited rounds of applzase when they made their sppearancr on the sire and! we knew that the visitors mst have appreciated this welcome accorded | them by Butler's enthusiastic demo- As the ladies marched | i out to meet the procession they were followed by Czp. Harnah, Nick! e Ed. Czrnes and Dr. Baker, | eege Tadies. who carned a banner on whoch was drawn, in a very artistic manne, the! picture of a sick rooster, which said, “Don’t we crow,”” and the peor old bined was | so disfigured and dilapidated that it | seemed he could hardly republican roosters give even! one Httle squak. Howerer, this! showed very plamly, that these well- known republican gentlemen were taking their defeat very gracefatly. When the procession rexehed tie | square the real fun The bonfires were started ; women and children velled shouted themselves hoarse ; aud Roman candies and sky into began. men, and anvils hoomed rockets | The jscene presented as the procession | were shot the heavens. | moved round the square perhaps has j never been equalled in grandeur by! | anything ever witnessed in south | west Aft twice around the square the proces- sion drew up in tront ot the speak- d.opposite the Palace Horel. and speeches were made by Prof. | Hinton. of Rich Hall; Col. Perry, of | Ft. Scott: Maj. Prew of Nevada, | and Messrs. Jackson, Abernathy and | J. T. Smith, ot this citv. The hes were ali good and enthusi- with deaf- Missouri. r fers’ s and were recerved enin by ‘the multitude assembled crowd appeared to be too astic to listen to long speeches + the speakers scemed to he “‘too full and crowing tor Cleveland and Hendric ks | | send at once and get | tone aad energy to ' est, quality considered? marching | r utterance,’’ sot were all cut short. Miss Lee Johnson, e bnahtest and hands girls came to the tront ar de to Clevelanc recited id Hen em was de- livered in a very har me manne and elicited rounds ot applause fron e crow Che enthusiasm was kept uy ck, when ee about 12 0 spective homes, and quiet was onc re restored. FOR SALE. EMPIR« MILLS, tact during « | good reputation, in | portion of time run day and night tp fill its orders. hues compelled The building is 45xso feet, 2 storie 1 basement with commodious 0 Tic? af tache d Its machinery consists of a horse power boiler and ¢ burrs, Middlings 4 with ample cleaning chinery, wagon and other scales, it irifier, cor and boltir well arrar erything i Phis is a who desir e,and ¢ pater ar opportunity tor e in the investigation hq mil s to enga ill bear zood, and the location cannot st Mi ines prope | elled in southwe ouri Will exchange tor tarm ov cit ropery or will sell on very easy terms. with ample time and easy rate of inter Fot addre Jous A terms call on or Lyerkrr, Butler, Md Butler Academy. Will open for its elevent! SEPIEMBER, 8th, 1884. A large new brick building will be erected this summer which | will aftord tacilities far superior to anything betore enjoyed by it ‘Thore h work, by an experienced patrons “Comps of Teachers, ample ft ties in C scientific or Normal studies and | uthful loca some of ons offered ta those desiring an education. m are For particulars, addrews M, NAYLOR, Butler, Bates county, Mé ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Age you disturbed at night and broke or your rest by a sick cbiéld suff. crying with pain ot cuttimy teeth? a bottle ot Winslow's Soothing Syrup For C Teething. Its value is incalculable. i will reizeve the poor little sufferer diatesy. Depend upon i, mothers, the is no yaistake about it. It cures dyse tery and dsarrhoea, regulates the <4 tha and bowels, cures wind cohc, sottens gums, seduces inflammation, and give the whole syste Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup F Children Teething is pleasant to taste, andisthe prescription ot one the dest and best female nurses a | physicians in the United States, and i forsale by all druggists throughout # world. Price 25 cents a bottle May 28-84-19 DO YOU KNO THAT LORILLARD’S CLIMAX PL! TOBACCO with reb tin tag; Rose Leaf fine cutc ing: Navy clipping-, and black, bro and yell w snuffs are the best and che enim cease oF 5 fie for the cure of we pep tm the WERRELC’S C'S FEMALE TONIC S: and 8Txt GTH wo the UTERIxE exeitiag eaithy action. aad reatonieg thes their normal eondi ey je & cli ¥ th oach bottle. Price $1.00. JACOB S. MERRELL, St. Seid by ali braggists and Desicrs

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