The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 7, 1886, Page 4

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—— er ante aad eo wmscony iL IMBe | test vy BUTLER WEEALY J. D. ALLEN Eprtor. J.D. Artes & Co., Proprietors, TERMS OF SUISCRIPTION: TheWeekty Times Wednesday, will be se one year, postage paid, tor $1.25. BUTLEE MISSOURI. WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1886. Our choice tor Circuit Judge of the 22nd Judicial District, HON. D. A. DEARMOND. Democratic Ticket. For Representative, J. H. HINTON. For Circuit Clerk, JOHN C. HAYS. For Recorder,} R. G. WEST. For Treasurer, OSCAR REEDER. For County Clerk, T. J. HARPER. For Prosecuting Attorney, W. O. JACKSON. For Sheritt, G. G. GLAZEBROOKE. ror Probate Judge, SAM F. HAWKINS. for Presiding Judge, JOHN Hi. SULLENS. For Public Administrator, J. W. ENNIS, Yor Coroner, DR. E. L. RICE. ¥or Judge South District, A. NEPTUNE. or Judge North District T. J. BOSWELL. Wade's two-horse act has become sa ridiculous that he is the laughing stock of the district. Sr neeey judge Parkinson says that he 1s not satisfied With Wade's How 1s that, ‘*Col. ?”’ cenememmaremeneseesiney Wade sold the county to Stone for support. ® consideration and is now making a frantic and msane effort to deliver the goods pte EE eS Wade had better be attending to his official duties, as he is sworn to do, instead of running over the county electioneering for Stone. Actions speak louder than words. The Democrat is not supporting Judge Parkinson for congress in spite of The ats protestations. paper speaks for itselt. We should all have patience. *Col.”” Stone will give “Col.’”? Wade permission to call the congressional committee together in due time, we presume. Eas What did Judge Parkinson mean by saying that he held the “papes”’ over Wade and could force him to support lim (Parkinson) tor con- gress? Better apply the pressure, hadn’t you? The Democrat makes a very unjust attack upon a friend of the Times because he sees fit to use his influ- ence and solicit for this paper. That gentleman is Marshal L. Wolfe,than whom there 1s no more honorable or worthy gentieman in the county, and one whom the people have twice honored with the office he now holds. The Democrat has had a canvasser and political striker, and we might say spy, in the field tor the past month or six weeks, but the Times has never alluded to that fact. EE The Times has no cause to have other than the kindest of feelings for Judge D. A. DeArmond, nor has the Judge ot the Tims, the Demo- crat’s insinuation to the contrary notwithstanding. In fact, before DeArmon’s name was mentioned for the circuit judgestp, the editor of she Times, in all friendship, sug- gested to Judge Parkinson to run for Circuit judge, and complimented | Judge DeArmond editorially as a suitable man to fill Judge Krekel’s place. Judge Parkinson will not say different from this. s ree SETTLE YOUR TROUBLES. Ic is the province, as well as duty, of every partisan paper to en- deavor by every possible manner consistent with a dignified journal to the | advocate peace, harmony and good fellowship in the party, and to heal oyer any little differences that may | arise between neighbors and friends | as the result of a heated campaign. | With this end in view, we would most earnestly appeal to our neigh bors and friends in Summit township to bury their differences in the sea ot | oblivion; or if any have been injured | so that they cannot forget, and let the past be as though it never hap- pened, then at least temper your feelings of injury with the blessed angel of forgiveness. You have two mighty factions, each composed of the best men in the county; you are | neighbors and friefids; your wives | and daughter exchange visits, sym- pathies and consolation ; they rejoice together over one’s good fortune and weep over another’s mishap. How should all this end? Should neigh be pitted against neighbor, trend against friend, and the orderly neigh- borhood be changed into a chaos ot envy, hatred and jealousies? And for what? Fellow democrats of Summit township, have you ever stopped to consider what this all is leading to aside trom polities? and what can either faction expect to gain by it all, however the ending? Po- litically you are the laughing stock of the opposition, who rejoice ex- ceedingly to see the fuss kept up, thinking they will be the beneficiaries. You are both right and both very much wrong, You are right in seemg the same object trom different stand points and of course it appears dif a | quarrel, which should have been as ferent; wrong in allowing a polit among brothers, enter into the every day walks of lite and become so personal and bitter in its Some of you may have known ot neighborhood quarrels second or third failed to eliminate or even temper nature, where the generations have the bitter hatred which blood cannot wash out, and the start which led to all this was but a Will run the risk ot leaving to your chil- Then pause and think before it is everlastingly trifle. you dren such an heritage ? too late. What we say is purely in the mter- est of harmony. We have no other interests whateyer in the matter save the party and township good, and we sincerely hope these excellent gentlemen will cease their wrangle and ill advised newspaper contro- versy through a paper that should counsel harmony instead of furnishing the means and then secretly rejoicing im the sad havoc being wrought. The party that makes the first overtures for trendskip will not thereby be compromised in the eyes ot the world, but will be honored and re- spected therefor, and the opposition, if composed of true, braye men, will meet them halt way, and help to | abridge a chasm which threatens ‘to gtow wider and deeper eyery mo- ment. Brother democrats of Summit we beseech you to pause and consider | whither you are tending and what iof Kansas City, has disposed ot | syndicate. | from Judge Gantt Saturday. Epiror Times—Dear Sir:— | Thinking that an expression from this section of the county might be of | interest to your readers, and feeling | | that I was at least one of the compa ; | | { The bill pending betore congress tor so long to reinstate Fitz John Porter has finally passed and receiv- ed the endorsement of the Presi- dent. — — _.ny ot Allen, Walton & Co. as the The members ot the Missouri par association held their state meet- week. mocrat 1s pleased | Bates County D to style all ing at Sweet springs last : 1 igent and hor There was a large attendance and a ble Opposition to | the duplex back-action, double-in- | successtul meeting. tending schemes of the said Bates | t | County Democrat; and judging trom | the emphatic manner the recent dem- ocratic convention sat down upon |N. A. Wade its editor and mis im- | mediate strikers, Iam constrained to | remark that the firm of Allen, Wal- ;ton & Co. must be a pretty large | firm, composed evidently, of good sound democrats. Bro Wade class- \ifies said firm as a faction; in his ; arrogance, and unusual sycophancy | he overlooks the fact that it is him- <== | self that constitutes the faction, and Wade is attempting to intimidate | ;,, place of trying to **bull-doze’’ and M. L. Wolfe from working for the wheedle the ‘lemocratic voter into Times. Marshal is not made out of supporting his scheming plans, he that kind of timber, and we would Radi beter “Hantalla colts advise the p. m. to **pick ee beam | choice for office, instead of placing cut of thine own eye before discoyer- purely ancien Corrigan, the street railway man his tranchise and stock to a Boston The price realized by Corrigan was over a million dollars. The citizens of East Lynne, Cass county, were treated to a speech The Judge has few equals in this part of the state as an orator and we feel sure his hearers were highly enter- tained. support the claim upon gratitude or whatever you may call For the benefit ot Nehemiah Ana- | it. mas Wade we will say that we never, | The people in the country are not | quite as great ignoramuses as some directly or indirectly, connived at or | suppose. They know “it is not all gold that glitters,’ and they also know that all the speeches published in pamphlet form and sent out to themselves as pertectly them, and purported to have been Does the Democrat still want to keep | delivered in the halls of congress, up the fight in Summit to the party | that many of them were not deliver- y | g It looks that v at all, or that thev were ering the moat in thy brother’s.”? | abetted in any way the ‘fixing up of} any committees in the last conven-| tion.” ]. L. Shubert, Allen Wnght, | G. B. Parker and others all express | satisfied. | y. 'ed there even prepared by their supposed detriment? If Postmaster-General Vilas al- lows a single 2 republican } i IOGear j that had more brains than money. author, but some poor hanger on tor a strike to remain in the service, railway mai! clerks who Organized | inliny opmiom ions We Sione ; a ‘ | is not the choice of the democratic ae wal HAG eA CEE GES Ee | voters of Bates county no more than HENGE ACs Sos the was before his nomination two ene employes to coerce their supe- | years ago, and the Bates County riors by such means ought not to be Democrat recognizes the tact also, tolerated, and to deal leniently with - and by pushing forward the name of them. | 1 | another party who it knows has no sda | earthly chance ot receiving the nom- thus make the county these men is to Turn Republican. encourage the rascals out.—St. } imation, to There seems to be quite a conflict ; lose its vote entire. We all in this neck of the woods tive branches of our goyernrment } rec in the H Judge Gantt relative to pension legislation; andj an honest, upnyht and intelligent it all the bills introduced in congress | man—one that has done honor and in behalf of those who wish to feed | credit to the district he has so taith- tully served for so many years—in be justly proud between the legislative and execu- z j upon the bounty of the government, are as destitute of merit as some that | fact any district mig ot such a man, and we feel that the * interest of the Twelfth Congressional be sate in his hands, have been introduced by congress- man Stone in behalf of certain citi- district would and hope that the delegation trom Bates county may be instructed to vote for him as our representatiye in the next Congress. zens ot this county, we most unhesi- tatingly course of the president in the free use of the veto power.—Osceola Advance. endorse the Henry Ralph and his wite, of Berville, Mich., quarreled and sepa- rated, the mother taking a three- year- | old child with her. She tired of the | boy, and a tew days ago, in company | Vox. A Voice from Cass. Mr. Ep:ror—Occasionally prom- inent democrats echo the sentiment, **we must retorm the rank and file of the party, that tactiows and splits in the party will be its sltimate dis- with an admirer, started in a buggy to take the child to its tather. She met him on a wagon load of gravel and offeredsthe child to him. He!. . Sarr wouldn’t take it. The mother tossed retinas ee } ; the boy upon the load of gravel, The | a ee = = | obtains not so much trem the natural father threw him back i ay + a ene Gackt the use and temper of our voters as it gy. The mot abbe yhip j . her grabbed the whip trom the very questionable and began beating her husband. and | : ape Bane means used by candidgtes to put up inthe contusion the little boy tell does | delegations in their own interest. you can possibly expect to gain by keeping up this bitter feud. Jacob D. Allen triesto reflect on the honored dead, the lamented Abernathy, because he insisted that none of his enemies be placed on the congressional delegation that was selected to go and support him.—| Democrat. The editor of that paper knew he was telling an untruth when he wrote the above. We defy any one to find an article in the Times reflecting upon Hon, John W. Abernathy out ot the b f yee vheels | pepe e bias RE wheels | The that breaks faith, e loaded wagon. 7 : agon e horses | violates pledges, does not reflect a started, the wheels went over the! little head, and the question in dis- | pute was settled forever. yoman | 3 : . He b i sie ever. The woman | to rise higher thanitssource.’’ ‘The as been arrested. | aah iman who will put his paats in The brotherhood ot postal clerks | his boots before he approaches for the western division, are after!a miner, whe is an ex-contederate Postmaster General Vilas, and | among the boys that wore the gray, threaten him with a strike if he does | the man who is «anything and tnat not acceed to their whims and de-| will promise anything and everything mands. We rather think this thing | tending to his own agrandizement of about 1,000 employees of the | and selfish ends is not a patriet and candidate pure patriotism. We ought not to expect ‘the stream without garbling that article. Every reader ot the Tiwes can bear us out in this statement. However, Wade seems determined to drag Mr. Aber- nathy’s name into this canvass and for what earthly reason we cannot conjgcture, without it be for sympa- thy. | Vilas are instructed to lay their government entering into a conspir- | should not be Supported by the acy to fetch Uncle Sam to time if he | voters who love good government does not cater to their way of doing | and the democratic party. There is things will amount to just about as | such a candidate in the field for cen- much as a gnat on the back of anele- | gress. Let the ‘‘rank and fife” of phant. The committee appointed | the democrat party ot Cass and Bates by the brotherhood to interview Mr. | fit the shoe to his foot, Cc Scarce and Wante —EE————E | grievances before him as tollows:| The Troy News prints the follow- Ott for Canada, but captured on | To demand that all clerks retired | ing sensational item: ‘It isa matter the road, R. J. Lane, president of | from the service in the future be | ot some concern as to what has be- the Abington national and Rock- | Presented with a copy of the charges | come of the Hon. Dr. Goodykoontz land Savings banks, proves Htieself | leading to their removal, together | of Washington county. His name to be a defaulter to the tune ey neare | with the name of the person or per- seems to have lost its place among ly three hunared thoi a dollars, | sons making the charges. In addi- \those of the ‘Missouri Statesmen.’ and last week made a eak for/ tion to this they will now demand | Perhaps John Clark of the State Togues paradise but was ovethauled | the reinstatement of those clerks | auditor’s office, could furmsh some at Portland, by officers and returned! who have been removed on the interesting information in regard to to Boston. charges of conspiracy. | this lost star.”” I WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICE FOR ALL iz Dry and Green Hides, Sheep Pelts: Wy TALLOW, BEESWAX AND FEATHERS. LEWIS HOFFMA NORTH MAIN STREET, BUTLER, MO. PHARIS & SOi: ae Respecttully intorms the public that they are still in the field with a full STOCK OF GROCERIES Which they propose to sell as low as the lowest on the smallest margin consistent to sate business principles. We pay the highest market price for BUTTER, EGCS, CHICKENS, & We sell the Famous TEBO FLOUR. Call and see us and we will do our best to please you. PHARIS & SO Doo TS s&s \HOE — 0 Are an Article we are interested in, Buying our stock direct FROM MANUFACTURE Having been in this BUSINESS FOR YEAR WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY. Call and see us. JM. MoRIBGEE J.T. GRAVES & SON Southeast Corner Square, next to Grange stere. Continues 3 to carry one of the largest stocks of Harness & Saddlerv Good} His A 2 Farm Harness and Single and Light double harness can’t be bea’ in quality aad price. Come amd examine. A full line of Saddles for Men, Boys, Ladies, Miss We cell aw and exerebody at bottom prices. a Horse Blankets, Robes, Whips, Lashes, Curry Comp Horse bruses and similar articles as low az the lowest, as well as haltera, bridles, collars, sweat pads, ete. OUR AIM isto sell only first-elaes goods, to sell them a6 low as posell to sell only such goods as we can recommend, to please favor us; that is what we are here for and just what we pro todo. Repairing sestly done. J. T. GRAVES & S@ FRANZ BERNHARD GOLD AND 9 SILVER SILVER WATCH PLATEDW SPECTACLES OF THE BEST Manufacture, al- And a gen 4. sortment ot je eX ry at lowest Pe JEWELRY STORE Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, ® Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses. You. are cordially invited to visit his establishment and examine ; his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices, KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECU ways in stock. enn nn nner ttre NN ALL

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