The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 18, 1888, Page 4

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coc wots hacia ice i etnies mem moet WEE eb ( TIMES s ALLEN Eprror. Es OD { Af D: Con. Proprietors “SCRIPT ION BUTLER MISSOU DNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1555, Call For Committee Meeting. For the purpose of selecting a place and appointiny the time for holding a convention to nominate : democratic candidate for congress in the 12th congressional district, and for the transaction of such other business as may properly come be- fore it, the democratic executive committee of said district is hereby notified and requested to meet at the Prier house, in Appleton City, on Tuesday, May Ist, at 2 o'clock p. m. A full and prompt attendance is respectfully requested, By order of E. M. Vance, J.D. Atres, Chm. Cong’l Com. Secretary. Emperor William dy: Pneu- monia adds its horrors to the other omplicat ions. or. ng. Roscoe Conklin, who has been laying at death’s door for the past month or so, we are glad to note is improving slowly and hopes are now entertained for his recovery. has two candidates for the office of court of appeals, Kansas City Judge Phillips and Judge Gill. Kansas City is neither a hog nor stuck up, and being about the cen ter will split the difference with the north and southwest parts of the state, and furnish the third with very little coaxing. Richard A. Love, candidate for State Register lands, of Tnidepend- ence, was in the city last meeting the democratic voters of Bates. Mr. Love is, without doubt, the handsomest man in the race, he belo man Thursday s to the school of young de- an active y, has always been nnd has never be- for He is a genial, whole-souled worker in politic fore t ked recognition himself. ventle- man, sociable, clever and axecommo- dating and leaves a following every He is fully compe tent to fill the duties of the office. ———_——_ D. K. Shields, chairman of the democratic state committee has is- sued eall asking democrats in every county in the state to organize clubs for the fall campaign. This call should be heeded and the work of organization should begin at the earliest moment. There will be where he goes. a || work for the democracy tnis year and to retain the advantage we now _ have it will take unity of action and thorough drilling. Therefore, tet the democrats of Bates organize in each township in the county, healthy and vigorous clubs, who will be fully 4 i prepared and anxious to enter the | indeed, but the farmer? i | field and do gallant and heroic work || for the par! ty. The rascals were oust- ed from office four years, now let us ; iby the handsomest majority ever © igiven a candidate for the pr esidency ‘of this free country. organize! Organize boys, The St. Joseph Gazette advises the Immigration societies, as a means to render their work more ) effective, to rely on the newspapers '@ and says that this will be found _ “not only the best but the cheapest ) method.” The Gazette is pre-emi- i I rently right. If complete suecess s attained, it will not be through she columns of the hand bill. or cir- tular, but through the columns of ! he newspapers, which go into # tomes where the people area Litt! 4 veary of their folded wings dlong 0 fly to new scenes where the soil is @ ich, where the climate is salubrious 4 nd all things appear desirable for aat acme of most ambitions a home f plenty. ie The newspaper Ss the ost powerful persuader such | ® ses that the immigration eties 7 madduce and it should be made * epivotal agentifrich results are be expected. the | a- sacvaeeee re | NO DICTATORS NEEDED. 1 The « ae Steere RTT a editor of the De scrat writes snmMunication, tax-payers.” and i: ject for ad Times and a retlection on of the Hon. sumer of LST verse Town Board. In the } the y Water ihe work for proper the accou This, we 1 wesume, is that our disgruntled jrefers to. The | Times does not wish contemporary the anything from the town board but what is right. and that we expect to It would be just as consistent for the | = manager otf have. town board to ask of our hardware merchants to donate plows and) scrapers for use on the streets, or the marshal and nightwatch to give their time free, or the electric light to be given the city, as to ask the} printer to donate his time, space, | and hire extra help for the city’s | good. The manager of the Truzs, or any member of the force, with authority to act, never had an un- derstanding with the editor of the Democrat, never had a conversation with him on this sbuject, don’t know or care whether he devoted his space free or not in this matter, his state- ment of our understanding to that | 1 effect to the contrary notwithstand | ing. From the which Mr. Wade attempts to dictate to the- manner in power, but officers, elected people will have none of it. ————$—$—______. Ts. by the Robbing The Farmers. With malice prepense and afore- thought every capitalist who goes | into 2 trust plot to! combine or a | keep down prices: by simply manu- | facturing such a quantity of goods L as the demand may make necessary. | is a conspirator against the agricul- | tural classes of the country, as will | sooner or later. as most conspirators generally de | - | serve. Take for example the plow trust. it perfected the | price of plows went up 100 per cent. | This increase was mainly brought | about by the steel trust, course, in perfect harmony with the plow | trust. The combine includes all the great plow manufacturers of the | country, and it is safe to say that t | plows are at least 100 per cent high- er than they would be if the duties on them and the steel manufacturers who go with them were abolished. Now. who suffers, and sues this commingling of trusts As soon as was of | i S. alone } Who, He has to} plough his land, stand the raise, pay; the juggled advance, only made pos- sible through the war tariff, and der the Bdditional load. There is | no combine to put up the price of his wheat and corn—his sheep, horses, hogs and mules. Competi- tion is killed, and whether the plow is worth $11 or $40 he has to have it or quit agriculture. Only so many are manufactured at home. and none can come in from abroad be- | | cause the war tariff acts as an abso- lute prohibition. Plows, however, are not all that | are taxed by these tariff-protected {trusts. Not Cl the manufacturers trust. So | while before jo so very threshi long ago in 2go met a | bination, inn they were thr ness destroyed. j _ through the of having ieutire busi some of the plow manufa were. Now the two combines are levying such tribute as they upon the very life’s blood of the country. More than this: ae out of the twenty-one anufacture reapers, mowers dnd — met | agricultural states would like to assume his old time |, have such an ending | , put the same ti la trust. ailed ar repu wil strous plundering When land mor tine can t final they do 1 be ‘yelone.—K. awake the Ww visite many Times. a political Washington. April unanimous vote 14.—By a to-day the house committee on elections decided the contested election case of Nathan Frank against John M. Glover, the Ninth Missouri district, in favor of Mr. Glover, the sitting member. Two Republican members of com mittees were absent from the meet- ing. Col. Phelps and the Tariff. W. H. Phelps is out in a letter to the Sarcoxie Vindicator declining to run for congress, and says, however he wants to be counted as one of ite great democra party. In ing of the issues of to-day, he “The great before the | people is the reduction of the sur- j plus in the tre tic speak- se question which stands ury, | as 2 icenace to the prosperity of the county court and town board it (@imiiee Shea dine Gatike aie would seem that he has forgotten | RG are proposed. Oneuiomecmune that he is no longer political dictator | eed rom the necessities of life of Bates county. The people arose | Jand tie other to remove it from in their might and erushed out the | whisk oy. The democratic party fay old political ring that ruled with an | | ors th former, the republican party iron hand, and they will be slow in| the latter plan. One party Saas letting such another one come to ; wid dear whis kes the the front. No doubt Mr. Wade | og (On inc ee issue there need be no fear of the re ce sharp tie to the Pacific will see to it nerous taxes shall not be laid on food, clothing and shelter, while ey is left to bear no share of of government.”—La mar Dex t Newton, Kan.. April 12.—Jacob Sh arp. Wi fe and six children arrived at 10 o'clock to-night an’s-Land and were sent on east to their old home in Apple- | to: 1, Afo. Sharp is a raving maniae and his story as related by friends who had j him in chargeis singuiar. A few days ago, he and another man were overtaken by them at bay f a erazy man, who held ora number of hours at the point of two revolvers. threat- ening to murder them if they stirred hand or foot. The crazy man was of powerful physique and the two men were kept in their perilous po- sitions until rescued by friends. Sharp was no sooner out of danger than his reason left him and he has been a raving maniac ever since. While here it required the strength of three men to take him from one car to another, and it was only by ‘keep themiouteand! reclect (Grover struggle along the best he can un. | binding him down that he could be ; kept from doing violence to himself and others. The case is considered an extraor- | dinary one from the fact that he ex- hibits symtoms almost identical with those of the crazy man who was the cause of the derangement. Macon. Mo., April 13. i xander Hudson, editor of the Macon Times, }at noon to-day attacked Dr. T. J Norris, an editorial writer on the Macon Democrat, and struck him over the head a numbe of times iron, le covered ing a injm ous, stepping from a dc ren Norris was ies that p ord commenci The anes ce Son per war. as pronow in | The American voters from the | assing and } ALP. MOREHOUSE. } {Shetehofthe Life of the Governor of | Missouri. The fe wing sketch of the life of Governor Morehouse appeared in the St. Louis Post Dispatch of De- leertien 29, bein Maryville Griffin: Albert P. Morehouse, who becomes Governor of Missouri, was born Ju sent them by their Frank correspondent, ly 11, 1835, in the county of Dela- ware, Ohio. His father, Judge Stephen Morehouse. isa native of Newark county, Ohio. His mother, Harriet Morehouse, was born in the state of New York. Her father, Russell Wood, was one of the tirst settlers of Delaware county, Ohio. His parents are still living. The boyhood days of Albert P. were spent ona farm in Delaware county. Ohio. He receiveda Ene At the » of 18 he his lish education. taught school in native Tn 1856 with his parents he county mi ed to Missouri. He Nodaway, county. re oce resumed i] pation of school to Nodaway of law, mitted to the bar at Maryville, Mo., in L860. He prac ticed his profession in Southwestern Towa and Northwest M uri, and in Wd he was appointed First Lieu- tenant of Col. Kimball's regiment of enrolled qilitia of the union troops. This office he held six months. In 1862 he resuined the practice of law at Maryville as part of Col. Amos Graham, one of the most dis- tinguished pioneers who first settled in Nodaway coauty, and from whose wife, Mary, the beautifal city of Ma ryville takes its name. This relation conbnac| doounti! the death of Mr. Grahaiw in 1865. Morehouse relin- hed the practice of law in 1871 and formed a real estate partnership with Senator M. G. Roseberry at Maryville. They carried on an ex- tensive aud paying business until 1873, when the firm was dissolved. In 1875 he became a partuer in the real estate business with Hon. Na- thaniel Sisson at Maryville, which is still continuing. Morehouse was a delegate from Missouri to the Na- tional Democratic Convention at Bal- timore in 1872, and to the St. Louis National Democratic Convention in 1876. He was elected the Represen- tative to the Missouri State Legisla- ture from Nodaway county in 1876. While a member of that body he devoted a great deal of his atten- tion to the revenue of this state. He was an eminent and in fluential member of that body. At the general election of 1884 he was elected Lieutenant-Governor of Mis- souri on the democratic ticket the late John S. Marmad 1865 he was i Miss Mattie ton, Mo. three cl and Miss Anns into lay with unite: McFa The di ao nes . who won. | having finished fod, O., and Miss ir endance at the ¢ Joseph, Mo. | a s red lady of the ol lher grace g nature aman of fine per lous sonal appearance. being six feet tall we over 200 pounds, of dark com P slexion, well formed, with he SAVY Dressed 1 mustac he mm steel gray, he presents a striking appear- black ance in 2 crowd of distinguished men. He is calm and dignified in manner, and vey affable to all who approach him. A swallow does not make it spring, but a simple application of a good remedy will give immediate relief. There is nothing better than Wa ner’s Log C Cabin Extract for inte ernal | or external applications. Prices $1 | and 50 eents. The er ent secret of French cooking | is a knowledge of the variety of | food to be had, plenty of time to/ prepare the food and a fire. | American cooks are in so much of a! hurry that meal the slow when they prepare a! imagine what is necessary plenty of fuel and a hot tire. is roaring With meats this simply bakes or incinerates the fibr in stead of permitting the juic to perform their proper — functio And this shurry-up” system is what is slowly, perhaps, but surel mak New y dyspeptics ing us a race of York St 7 Everything which beio Ithy blood is imparted Sarsaparilla. A trial wiil you of its merit Vv Hood's convince | Order of Publication STATE OF MISSOURI, + County oF Bates ‘ In the Cireuit Court of Bates County, 3 in Vacation, April The Missouri at the relation and to the use of Osear Reeder, eX-oflicio collector of the revenue of Sates county in the State of Missouri, plain- ti, vs. Isaac Crissman, defendant Civil action for delin. Now at this day comes th her attorneys, before th the Circuit Court of Bi of Mis tot the State of Missouri id clerk in vac said defendant be notified by pu tiff has commenc this court Vheren petition Lots five and six (4&8) in block No. () in the Rich Hill Town Company ’s Firs cles ne town, now city ef h Be ante: aid ate next holden i sou s court, in the city of Butler, .on the first Monday in. or before the sixth day tnereot (if th so long continue, and of the term,) and pi 1 petiti ing to law, the same will be taken as con fesse and judgment rendered according to the of said petition, andthe above d estate sold to satisfy the same. Andit is further ordered by the clerk aforesaid that acopy her: of be published inthe Borner Weren.y Times | ly newspaper printed ana publis Bates county, Missouri, for four v successively, the last insertion to be at leas four weeks before the first day of the a xt term ofsaidcourt A true copy from the rd Witness my hand as clerk ator said with the seal of said cour! fixed. Done at office in B this the 3rd day of April. fsx JOHN HAYES, [srat] Cirenit Clerk C. A. DENTON, Att’y for PLY Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ee County oF Bares. ales In the Probate court tor the Cc ot Bates, February term, 1S8S8S Catha- cine Horn adm Horn deceased. trator of Nathan D. Order of Pu cation. j _Cat! harine Horn stratrix of | nD. Horn ed presents to | the court his pet ng for an or. der for the estate of istv the r ereot ETS! TRADE TO HM FOR 4 NEW ONE Buggies, a Wagons and Phe. | continue | of the term.) and pleadt | and judgment rendere old TOM LEGG 1, tuke our and have it all fixed up with new wheels, tires, spindles and new paint. Get a new top or the old one covered. Tom knows how and he will treat youright. Do as I tell you, have it tixed or tons on hand, made to order or fur. nished at Lowest Price Cushions, $1.00. Shafts, 0, East room, iron block. 15-tf Butler Mo. = Sa ‘YUATLNA ‘OODIRVGO LT, PUB STB BIL)D AYN] o r= mw ra ‘e) ce, ° = =a = uw S- | ye a eal = S 1odtuoo 1 4 opu JLo AY Spoor) Ao “TOHn ff Sr iVvAA O a = io) = Se = mo = bea < Orde STATE OF of Pub MISSOURI, 7 NITY OF HATE cirenit eourt of , Upon the situated in racts of lan¢ souri, to wit: Lot seven (7) fred and four (4) in the of Rich Mill, and that unless a appe: at the next exun ce holden in sixth day ther and i th ing to law, the same will fessed g tothe prayer | Of said ps described real 2 sfy th And itis fu ne clerk aforesaid that a coy shed in the Bettex Week iy pr printed and puab- issouri, for ast insertion to ay of the next term of said court y from the record, seal of said court t office in Batler on this ith day of JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk Att'y for Plaintiff? wat “Trustee's Sale. hereas Wm. HP: 4 th eir di «and Sallie J. Payne, dof tras’ and record: ‘e within and for in book No. 4, page io tothe unde astee the following d ate living and being sitnate in county of Bates aod state of Missouri, hwest quarter of secti hip fe ot rar halt of lot four n twenty-six anning thence west 1! Friday. May 4th. 1888, of Mie on a BUTLER a" | democrat 1 LO Notic eit 1 s desiring Pursuant a jemocrats are reque| house in 5th. 185 for sendi! conventic 1888. Oats 2 John | This work. Best ! America Our f plantin, Judg Warren Full shirts : 1 W. in to 5 The ought at Am Ber peas ¢ day. Go guest 4 the ¢ Ou equal Ik and whil

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