The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 10, 1884, Page 4

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anne =o 18st a ee DLN NS ERP asa ne Nae ten samy Ryan Fy 4 SEMEN The aeiige cae eed People BRe— on. Samuel J. Randail. ceived the be looked tor and Henc affair see cor t poe ean: are t ae There o ideas in connection , that in the he people— ed to make the South a Poland, Mr. small band Randall, at the head o ruly patriot! his manly Randall, by That Mr. secondly s convictic ing the « Samuel ie Ran Gen. Logan on the Defeat. New ge NOU: 2 .—Gen. tth Avenue Logan is Hotel There v large numl efc s at Gen. Logan’s room th ; eq tay t is w ra cd at defeai. his recen “1 do not think Logan would teel as badly,’’ x, ‘if it were not for the aten by said atriend of his vis evenir fact that was be such an eld copperhead as Hendricks Logan said Ia Vo-night Gen. angly, ‘I hi press. We ail there is of it. For nothing to myself,’’ he added, like the yoann who stubbed his toe, and sat XQ! “IT feel a good deal on a sturnp to nis triends came aroun sympa- their respective the board, prices have John |} books; books adopt and heretotore e now cla as envoy extraordinary pleny United State Heap of Penn genera const Stauttg Farmer of Massaci ~ o Griffin 2s S G New Zeland, DeWitt L. Reilly o New Jersey consul to Athens, | George F. Underhill to | - | wall, | consul to Milan, W thize with him, plying him with all! sorts of questions about how he felt. | “ft hurts pretty bad, don’t it? asked, but the old fellow was a little too much occupied squeezing his toe | Finally he blurted out: | to answer. *The worst of itrs Iam too big to ery and the thing hurts too bad to} iaugh.’ And that,”’ said Gen. Lo- yan, “tts the way I feel." After the election Gen. Logan | went down to his farm m= Southern | illinois to recuperate. contains about 300 acres of well-cul- tivated land, and the General says that after the 4th ot March pects to become a gri est. Gen. feat of his party to the utterances ot ything else. he ex- erin earn Logan attributes the de- Surchard rather tha He says Chicago, except the always bitter ‘emocrats. had supported ony. and that he had never run for sav office m Illinois when he carry Chicago by from 6,000 to most tailed 7.000. This year the majority ran Jown to 3,000, and numbers of Lrish- men had told him that they had vot— ed against him for the first trme. He attributes all this to Burchard’s re- ks The Text Book Bus:ness. The first Monday in January next according to the statutes of the Strate ws the date which the people are called upon to decide the text books te be used in the public schools for they | Curdad, Bolivia, jr., of Pennsylvz James T. W soa ot Mice t Curtis } am ot Thnois and South American and Walter Q. circuit jud di cretary to the Centr commission, Indiana Seventh U Gresham of County Court Proceedings. Ceunty court convened on Mon- day, Dec, rst. 1884, with J. A. Lef-! | ker, Presiding Justice. A. Ritchey The place the Insh-Americans in tand A. Neptune, Associate Justices, | R. J. Starke. County Cl Me £. Wolte, Bridge Commissioner, and W. F. Hanks, Sheriff, present. The totlowing transactions were | had without re i RT Allen, asessing New Home township, S50 55 iw T Heath, constable at- tendance at election. 1 00 GA Waddle. ditto, I CO} |R & T A Ednis, printin 70 55 R Weil & Co., Sins! to i 50) s. pauper. 15 00 circuit clerk for costs 30 So ) Barnard & Co, books, 15 So Dr Renick, med tend- ance pauper, 5 00} Brown & Lefker, mere dise to pauper 2-90 | Sanders Bros, ditto, = 30 i R S Catron, qr salarv. 250 co] iN A Wade, printing, 6G S-: SONDS. i , Verfieid, o ensuing five years. Under the ting law the presic of the various school boards « respec- tive counties, meet at the county seat, on the time aboye — stated and select a list of books— which said list of books shall be used for five vears from the date ofthe convention. Patrons :n- rested in public schools should see at a selection of books be made t. the best interests ot the there will be numerous pulie, as competing fouses making have : Bonds of R.S. as Treasurer and ex-efticio Collector, filed and approved. SCHOOL LOANS. A J Satterlee secured a loan of | | $400 and gave the requisite securi- | ty. A lean ot St1o was also granted Elizabeth Griswold. DRAMSHOP LICENSE. License was zranted to Es drian, tor six having filed the and bond. necessary REDUCTION. iizens Mingo n of levy iter hear- Paunc : 429 20 S-- => ! consideration | know what their convictions were. er presidential election 1s heid there ‘ : 2 R J Hurley & ¢ J 5 € PR] Ss. € 0 a ( ; [faonaae The man who did not buy a Rockford (He got left.) MOST COMPLETE tor of W $6,998 fi Ordered thet 4) EVER warrants No. 4 Se all and —— Stock before Purchasing. wrest Side Public Lion R a Ba ee eS TT TL LRT He FIGENT DISPLAY of goods in all departments at granted to T W 1 fund t C ee ere be algne payment of same: Clark & Owens bridge, J H Hinton report to State Supt. of public schools {0 00 Eliott Pyle merchandise to | county offices. 20 S« 4 R J Starke, Co. Cle1k fees. 367 So} Mary Elledge support pau- per, 22 50 Wm Claunck to pauper. Court adjourned to 29th inst. repairing merchandise 1 Go meet on the | It will do you good to look through and save you lots a money on all fall and winter purchases i in Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Ue a Grocel Let Them Take Their Medicine. At the recent presidential election 229,800 prohibitionists stood up to dno hope of and _ this threw a They h g John P. St doub iess large proportion of the vote to | Blaine, but 129,S00 of them heid up | their hands in order to let the world | (Carpets, Gloves, Hosiery, Notions, Trunks, Valises, pd Queensware, in fact the largest combined stock of goods in Bi for Vernon counties. Ev -erybody cordially invited fo visit Fortunately for the democratic | | partv and reform, as we | st is | occasion to remark betore, these ac— |} Mammoth store, commodating gentlemen stood “ee Corner Park Ave., and 6th st. g up would do the most have had | M. S. COWLES MERCANTILE (¢ RICH HIE. their standing good, The tact is the prohibition jeaders were far-seeing men andj knew republican defeat meant the WE CARRY EVERYTHING IN disintegration of that party and the ‘ tormation onits ruins of 2 new one | of whose policy their hobby should; THE BOOT AN D SHOE LI N E. | be the chief corner-stone. The republican party is responsi} i ble for prohibition and before anoth- not be undersold on a single article. erything warranted And will FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY PARTICULAR. We'Cordialiy Invite all to call and seeand to what extent its hold Itis not en- that the burned is no telling may be strengthened. tirely out of the question aes "Oxide, ih y\ Tie, woot eosied, WHITTIE! ER Ro'sre As FATE! Dsewanox \reerican k Farr bern sh WeniingwnJ s recently man i in effigy in all the republican strong- come to the surtace in standard-pearer of the »hibition party. —K.C. holds will 1SSS as the amph N. beep Springfield, judge for themscives Respectfully, A sono Pati for sel. Sragrien a BAR RES, ye Cone Square, Butler Mo. tmcival. 508 Olive

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