The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 28, 1890, Page 3

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BATES COUNTY #ational Bank, BUTLER, MO. E OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE ; wLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. PITAL, - - $125,000 00 WRPLUS, - - $25,000 00 },TYGARD, - - - ON. J. B. NEWBERRY (CLARK - 2 \] President. Vice-Pres, Cashier L.& S DIVISION. TRAINS RUNNING NORTH. & 404, passenger 4:47 a.m. f 312, local S330) * 2,passenger * S285. p.m. TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH - g im, gor, passenger 12:30 p.m F311, local 5:00“ : oe, passenger 9:40 “8 | Sr. L. & E. DIVISION. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. ay arrives 3:25 p.m. 3 E, K. CARNES, Agent. Vv. E. TUCKER, 4 DENTIST, pTLER, - MISSOURI. ‘Office, Southwest Corner Square, over on Hart's Store. Lawyers. NORTON. — Attorney-at-Law. ide square, over F. Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store. A. | e, North Si ‘a f \ «0. JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, tler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, er Badgley Bros-, Store. SEALVIN F, BoXLeEy, 3 Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, | ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. PparkiNsoy & GRAVES, ATTORNaYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, @own's Drug Store. over Lans- MAGE & DENTON, 4 ATTORNEYS AT LAW, } Office North Side Square, over A. L. cBride’s Store, Butler, Mo.§ Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, 4 Orricre—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 1g-ly But.er, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over P. O. All calls inswered at oflice day or night. @ Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and 44 Surgeon. Office north side square, }Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ten a specialty. J.T. WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. » Office, Southwest Corner Square, over tron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- nah street norrh ot Pine. Moissuri Pacific Ry. 2 Daily Trains 2 KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, + COLORALO SHORT LINE D Daily ‘Ns 5| PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS } i Kansas City to Denverwithout change i H. C. TOWNSEND. ST; LOUIS MO, BINDERS Reigning by right of I and by Popular Will tl alted Rulers of Sells Brother's ROMAN HIPPODROAIE, THREE RING CIRCUIS, TWO ELEVATED STAGES AND MENAGERIE. IN MIGHTY UNION WITH H, BARRETT’S Monster International worlds’ fair ZOOLOGICAL INSTITUTE, TRIPPLE CIRCMAIS, tan Museum, and Great Golden Menagerie, Will Exhibit at Butler, on Wednesday June 4th 1890 S. 2 Big Menageries, EACL= H&é*- BOTS ERIN tA ER IRAE EM I THE GATES OF WONDERLAND THROWN WIDE APART! MASTODON O *e, hy right of Me THE TOWERING FAMOUS FIVE-CONTINANT The Two Leading Shows of the Nation Now Traveling and Exhibiting as One. 2 Big Elevated Stages, 2 Big Hippodremes, 2 Big 2 Big Railway Equipages. The only Show in America having constructed, vastly improved, a canvass but a clean, well conducted, of the splendors of the Orient and the wonders of the Occident. A FLOCK OF OSTRICHES- —A Genuine— BUN YIP OR DEVIL HORSE FROM COREA A PAIR OF MIDGET SAMOAN CATTLE 4 years old, 24 inches high, and weighing but 90 pounds. Pair Full Grown Giant Living HIPPOPOTAMUSES That have gained for Sells Brothers Fame aud Fortune. THE STANDARD CIRCUS EXHIBI- TION OF THE UNIVERSE. Eminent, Costly and Unparalleled Menagerie. MOST COMPREHENSIVE ORNITHOLOGIC- AL COLLECTION TRAVELING. THE GREATEST HIPPODROME EVER CANOPIED UNDER CANVAS. Circus, Hippodrome, Menagerie, Museum, Aviary, Aquarium, Arabian Caravan, Japanese Village, Pageants and a world of startling novelties and thrilling features. THE FINEST STREET PARADE EVER GIVEN IN AMERICA. Two performances daily at 2and § P.M. Doors open one hour previous Admission to all, only 50 cts. Also Ehibits at Nevada June 3rd. Harrisonville June 5th wma, nything new to offer. ly enlarged, and bly and undisputably the great amusement boom of long-haired bullwhackers chasing lazy, filthy Indi called a Wild West, no nerve-shocking and dangerous shooting under our ; Worse than the locusts and lice of | " Mills to The Farmers, r the control of} beard of adventurers | |Egs 1 OE aOR OY HERE FNS oR DSHOWS!: by right of Saperi Amusement rity; the Reahns. METROPOLI- 2 Big Circuses, Mvseums, 2 Big Parades. Entirely re- utely, undenia- country. No 1s around the ring and bright, new and popular exhibition } 90-Romam Hippodrome Riders! | Forty Horses Reined and Ridden by One Man. ! THE HOME OF MERI? — ! ——BIRTHPLACE OF NOVELTY. A Cireus as pure in its character as the home circle, chaste, elegant an refined. 300 phenomena Performers A most remarkable display of Japanese, Arab ian and other foreign Acrobats and Athletes in a series of wonder fully thrilling acts and feats. ONLY AQUARIUM OF MONSTER MARINE MARVELS IN AMERICA. The Children’s Dream of Fairyland Sumptuously Exemplified. The Most Wonderful Exhibition of Trained Animals ever seen. Children under 9 years, 25cts. DE (Successor to K i St, L os F ansas on t oe M. W. MIZE) | INSURANCE i REAL ESTATE, AND LOAN BROKER. Renting, Collecting and Man Property for Non- residents a Specialty. : General Passenger and Ticket Ag’t 39°J. H Norton will be found at office and| will attend to the wants of customers. C. MIZE. Administrator’s Notice. s hereby given, That letters of ad- ion on the estate of Luke Gage. de- o the undersigned, on sa"), by the probate court ari. exhibit them for allow- strator within one year after the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of said estate; and be filled with democrats, and if the | government had a thousand millions | /0st faith in their capacity to govern FOWERS. j of gold and silver to lend to the| | out inflating the currency the meas- | destitute of any compens | had to sel! would be greatly increas- jedin price, so would that which he R.R. DEACON. | give them more markets anda great claims against said es- | ary to carry it into effect,could | | | | farmers without interest, and with- ure would then be full of evil and ting good. The throwing into circulation of aj thousand milli ver would re and sil- Ty greatly, and while the preducts the farmer had to buy. So that exchanges would be lifted upon a higher plane, but their relative value to each oth- er would be just the same. The relief which our farmers need is the relief for which Cleveland fonght and fell. That relief was to er demand for their products; that greater demand would raise their into their pockets thousind million of sannually, not of borrowed money, but of money that belonged to them, and which did not have to prices and put ore than a ure f I can do 2 dex h I believe to erpetuate the bl be necessary to of a free c miles away from them; if they have | themselves better than they can be governed by others;if they have ceas- ed to believe that governmentis best that governs ! Tilden expr government should not ast, or, as Samuel J. do for the and no government should do for self,” then I must give place to an- other. Iam too old to change the convictions of a life time. Tama because I believe the great sum of woes which humanity suffers comes from a disregard of democratic principles. Iam a dem- ocrat because I believe that the hap- piness and prosperity of ourselves and our children depend upon the triumph of the principles which were declared by Jefferson and supported by Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Van Buren, Polk, Pierce, Buchanan and Cleveland. Ihave given the best years of my life to my e. Ihave served her faithfully in war and in peace. I have never done an act that my convictions told me was democrat be repaid to any one. While open- ing the markets of the world to their surplus products would in- crease the value of what they had to have to buy. This policy would be- gin a redistribution of the wealth of the country; and the wealth that is now piled up in castles would be distributed in the pockets of the producers. The only way in which congress can emancipate our farmers is to reduce, greatly reduce, taxation and other zre imported and which we have to buy, and thus let in five or six hundred millions of foreign products which are now kept out. When these come in an equal amount of cotton, wheat, corn and other things would go out to pay on all manufactures things which creased demand, which would ine crease the value of the entire crop many million dollars. In 1881 we exported $730,000,000 worth of ag- ricultural products. That is the largest amount we have ever exprot- ed in any one year from the begin- ning of our government. The great- ly increased demands for foreign products made high prices. If we take the prices of corn, wheat, oats, rye, barley, buckwheat, potatoes, hay, cotton and tobacco for the year 188land apply them to the same products of the year 1889 we will see that the crop of 1889 would have been worth $1,570,000,000 more than it was. the prices of 1881? Becaus> there was not the same demand for the ex- port as in 1881. We only exported $8 per head of our people, head. But why did we not export alarger surplus in 1889 than in 1881? tries and in the last ten years they ‘have been retaliating by putting on high duties on our agricultural products. | When we reduce the duties on their goods they are ready to reduce the duties on our agricul- tural products. It was to accomplish this that Cleveland drew the dem- locratie blade in 1ISS7, and itis to | accomplish this that the democratic party is embattled to-day. It is painful to me to decline to ifsuch cla be not exhibited within two years from the date of this publication, they all be forever barred. This 12th day of May CATHARINE A. GAGE, 4t Administratrix. AUCTIONEER. The undersigned hereby offers his services to the people of Bates County and the public gen- | erally asan auctioneer, and will make the erying of country sales a pom de Call on or address me at LoneOak, Missouri. sw. M. DONE. | support any measure urged on me | by my constituents i sensible at all times of the gratitude ‘Towethem. . They have conferred upon me honors and distinctions | ported we with unswerving fidelity! wit] be decorated on Saturday, June | Tistver | through along public service, and I am deeply! detrimental to her interests. Iam tion to abandon a post of duty or prove recreant to a public trust. I! ean afford to retire to private life, but I cannot afford to share the millions of my fellow citizens. Very turly yours. R. Q. Minis. James T. Gott, Carmi, HL, Says: He paid thirty-one dollars doc- tor’s bill for his wife in one year, and one bottle of Bradfield’s Fe- male Regulator did her more good than all the medicine she had taken before. H. Dale, druggist, Carmi, Ill Write to Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., for particulars. Sold y druggists. 25 Im Here is a nut for the preachers to} crack: The lightning knocked a ho- tel to pieces at Nonet a few morre ings ago, and the only person injur- for them and that would make an in-| eq was a fellow who was praying | beside the chimney. A Hannibal man has just been sentenced to the county jail for a year for killing a barkeeper. The punishment in this case may appea® | excessive, but even barkeepers are} entitled to the protection of the law. A Safe Investment, Is one which is guaranteed to bring you satisfactory results, or in case ot fail- In this ure areturn of purchase price. ed it, “the general | stute what the state can do for itself | the citizen what he ean do for him-/| too old to be tempted by any posi-| BY USING THE GENUINE De. C. McLANE’Sam ——=CELEBRATED === EEEELIVER PILLS! PREPARED ONLY BY FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa, Ger Bowsre of Covuteeraizs made in 8, Lowa Gy Practical co operation among the workingmen is on trial in Los An- | geles, Cal. Fifty laborers have form- jeda company, and have taken a ilarge sewer contract fram the city. |The men work for fifteen cents per hour for eight hours a day. After jeXpenses are paid the profits of the jeontract will be equally divided. His Wife Suffered trom Erysipelas. Mr. John O. Rogers, of Dana, Dl- inois, writes as follows under date of March 27, 1890: “My wife was for years an invalid from a blood trouble, and suffered terribly at jtimes from Erysipelas. She tried {many remedies advertised as blood | purifiers, but received no benefit. A few bottles of Swift’s Specific (S. S. S. cured her of Erysipelas and oth- er blood troubles. From the first | her appetite increased, and her gen- eral health improved in every way. | She considers S. S. S. the best blood purifier and tonic she ever saw, and lis willing for any one suffering as i she was to be referred to her. His Blood Poisoned by Cow Itch. | 4 | About five years ago my blood was poisoned with cow itch, and every spring since then I have been trou- sellit would at the same time de-] guilt of participating in an act that | bled with the poison breaking out in crease the value of the things they] will bring distress and suffering to | large sores all ov er;my body. I tried | various remedies without receiving lany benefits. Three bottles of S. 8. |S. effected a complete and perma- {nent cure, when all other blood rem- | edies had failed. |R. L. Henderson, Live Oak, Fla. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases | mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC Co., Atlanta, Ga. There is trouble in the First | Congregational church at Lockport, N. Y, over a refusal to admit candi- dates to membership unless they promise to abstain from dancing, card-playing and theater-going. The jresult was the withdrawal of seyenty five prominent members, including a good share of the wealth of the church, and the formation of a new church. Merit Wins. We desire tosay to our citizens, that tor years we have been selling Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King’s New Lite Pills, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have giyen such universal satis- faction. We do not hesitate to guaran- sate plan you can buy from our advertised | tee them every time, and we stand ready Druggist a bottle of Dr. King’s New Dis- | to refund the purchase price, it satisfac- covery for Consumption. It is guaranteed to bring relief in every case, when used Lungs or Chest, such as Consumption, Inflamma- Asthma- lt, per- Why did we not have | tectly safe, and can always be depended > Trial bottles .tree- at all drug tor any affection of Throat, tion of Lungs, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc., etc. is pleasant and agreeable to taste, upor.. gists. 1 On the Fourth of July General $532,000,000 worth of agricultural Sherman will be at Portland, Me. products in 1889, which was about | He goes there to attend the reunion while in |of the Army of the Potomac, and 1881 we exported about $14 per wishes it known that he has accept- ed. It is recorded that a man in Spo Because we put high duties | kane Falls dropped dead on his way | on the manufactures of France,|to the postoffice to mail a letter to| what respectable citizen would not Germany, Austria and other coun-|his wife informing her that he was well. in death.” “Why don’t you run a newspaper like that?” said a grocer in a country town tothe local editor, throwing “For the same | reason that you do not advertise like | j that.” the editor replied turning to afive column advertisement of a | ive} story building. The grocer looked | attentively at the advertisement and out a Chicago daily. Chicago house showing a tw ithe picture 2 moment and then s | “I never lo \ ith. d at it in that way be-| tory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity durely on their merits. all Druggiets. To show how “down-trodden™ the negroes are in the south, at Birming- ham, Ala., the other day, during a mass meeting of the republicans, the negroes marched in, took charge of the house by force, set the chairman and secretary aside, and, with a yell that the “Negroes were on top and proposed to stay there,” proceeded to,elect delegates and transact other business. Now it is time for the re- -| publican popers to howl] and say the poor blacks are oppressed. Who or MITCHELL'S © EYE-SALVE Granuiations. - Jumors, Red sora eye oaees, The graves of the confederate | gyp ppesgeise QexR REWER ASD PERMASEST CURE. {beyond my merits. They have sup-| dead in the Springfield cemetery | Also, squalls. whes_veed In other } | G@ALVE tay be used to acvantage. cy | a Sold by all Dreesiots at 26 Cents. padi ats si Nici sit down on such actions as this.— “In the midst of life we are| Sedalia Bazoo.

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