The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 11, 1890, Page 3

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Hyon. J. 8. NEWBERRY Vice-Pres |to carry their products beyon! the| 2% = = 000 to 10,000 people at the Ker HUNNICUTT’S tfeccear = Casey jouuf the years when they ss: bel RS pape Ae eg MOWERS: inziou nectings ma tines vertow | REEUMATIC CURE | oa ee redeemed from the warehouses or| LE HAY-RAKES & TWINE. {meetings were necessary. A bi : Ringed nt. | parade of workingmen preceded th i “it i) | Catvin F, Boxtey, 4 : i fi Will practice in all the courts. - Carlisle’s Bomb. products except in such small quan- tities as he is compelled to use from time to time. The regular and le- gitimate market which the farmer | heretofore enjoyed will be in a great measure destroyed and the trade will necessarily fall principally into the hands of combinations and syn- dicates of speculators who are able, | by reason of their large capital. to {monopolize the store products and |keep the prices up for their own ex- |clusive benefit after they | chased the : not combine to k TES COUNTY ational Bank, BUTLER, MO. E OLDEST BANK ApH LARGEST AND THE KXLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. —— APITAL, ICRPLUS. .J.TYGARD, - - - ¥ from farmers. farmers ca’ prices up because, in the first the re too widely seatte in concert, 4 | they $125,000 00 $25,000 00} and in the second plac ih President. re not in a pecuniary condition TRAINS RUNNING NORTH. | 1 Yo. 304 passenger local 3215 p.m. TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH. gol, passenger 311, local B00 8 | 303, passenger g:40 ‘f Sr. L. & E. DIVISION. No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. “arrives 3:25 p.m. E. K. CARNES, Agent. iw. E. TUCKER, DENTIST, 12:30 p.m. that whate may be the \gard to other products, the cotton crop could certainly be sold during the year to our own manu- facturers and for exportation to oth- er countries, and upon this assump- tion a strong and partially successful appeal has been made to the plan to R. R. D | P L one BUTLER, MISSOURI. “Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. = the south to give their support to the so called sub-treasury plan. In my opinion our domestic manufac-|adoption, because in my opinion it turers of goods would be able to|would be another wide and danger- purchase very little, if any, raw cot-|ous departure from the principles ular class of our people, I would | still be unalterably opposed to its Lawyers. — ; ton at any time if the proposed plan | upon which our political institutions J. H. NORTON. were adopted. No one could suc-jare founded. It would be, in fact, | Attorney-at-Law. cessfully carry on the business of|the longest step yet taken in time of manufacturing cotton goods, or any|peace toward the consolidation of id 5 F. Barnhardt’ pare, North eee ena as other character of goods, under a|power in the hands of the federal W financial system which inflated the} government, and the subjectior of «0. JACKSON, currency and increased prices when | private affairs of the people to the } ATTORNEY AT LAW, he wanted to purchase his materials | supervision and control of a central 7 Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, | and tontracted the currency and re-|and irresponsible authority. You es net Stare. duced prices when he wanted to sell and I are d ts, and h prices e ell|and I are democrats, and as suc his products. Such a system would|we believe that the government close every cotton factory in the|should scrupulously abstain from all United States, because the owners| unnecessary interference with the would find it impossible to sell the | personal and domestic concerns of finished product for enough to pay |its citizens and confine itself strictly for the raw material used in its fab-|to the administration of purely pub- | rication. But even if they could|lic affairs. It is a cardinal principle | conduct their business at all with | of our political faith that the people | such enormous fluctuations of prices,|are best governed when they are common prudence would dictate the|least governed, and that they are purchase of just as little cotton as |most prosperousand contented when possible while prices were high, es-|left to the free exercise of their own AGE & DENTON, pecially when it would be positively | judgment in the managemeut of ATTORNEYS AT LAW, known that a few months would | their own business, subject only to Office North Side Square, over A. L.| bring a contraction of the currency |such reasonable regulations as may McBride‘s(Store, Butler, Mo-§ and lower prices. be necessary to preserve the peace Ae About two-thirds of your cotton|and good order of the community. Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. JDARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORNYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. | An Explanation of the Deficency in the Fon Vacians. crop is exported and sold in foreign | These are fundamental propositions, J. R. BOYD, M. D. countries and its price fixed there. I|and we cannot abandon them with- presume no one will seriously con-| out repudiating all the traditions of | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, |! P tend that prices can be increased abroad by inflating the currency at home. During the war the price of this article was very high in other countries, and it was high not be- cause we hada redundant and de- Se a ok Sale: preciated currency, but because the PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, southern crop could not reach the Office, tront room over P. O. All calls} Huropean markets. The law of sup- ee ceratiowine ote or night, — 4,,.{Dly and demand regulated the price eases. SS es then, as it will continue to regulate it hereafter, no matter how large T oe POUL WARE, se iyeician and| the volume of circulation may be at Butler, Ro Dleeaies ok woinea Sa eee particular times in this country. As ren a specialty. long as the world produces a suf- ficient supply of cotton, and the J. T, WALLS, markets of the world are open to it, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. the natural laws of trade will regu- Office, Southwest Corner Square, oyer late its price and no artificial ar- Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha-|rangements here will effect it ex- eran pret NOEL OEE ne: cept to the extent of the demand for Moissuri Pacific R'y.j2zicssmactrs mand may be destroyed altogether by such periodical inflations and con- tractions of the currency as will] Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) cured y) make the business of manufacturing | me of a blood taint that had troubled 2 Daily Trains TO KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, COLORALO SHORT LINE too hazardous to be carried on, and|me for years. I consider it without To 4) . , Daily Trains, 9 in that event unless production is|an equal. James Sherwood, Kansas City to St, Louis, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, Ig-ly Butier, Mo. and paternal despotisms. Sincerely yours, J. G. CaR.isie. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, An Atlanta Lady’s Sad Condition. “About two years ago a sore came on my nose. I called in a physician who could arrest it only for a few days, when it would appear as bad as ever. Finally it became perma- nent, and despite the constant at- tention of several physicians it con- tinued to grow worse, the discharge from the ulcer being exceedingly of- fensive. This was my condition ago, but I am now happy to say that entirely well, and my general health better than it has been in ten years. greatly diminished the foreign mar- Nashville, Ill. prices would fall even below what | mailed free. they now are. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ‘THE MEASURE VICIOUS PER SE. Atlanta, Ga. T have thus given as briefly as the nature of the subject would permit, some of the reasons why I think the proposed plan for the relief of the farmers would be injurious instead THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, of beneficial, not only to them, but | to all the other people of the coun- PULLMAN BLEFETT SLEEPING CARS os But it would be uneandid not sstinctl Maes : Kansas City to Denverywithout change to say distinctly before Sales this VNSEN communication, that even if it could} pe ie conclusively shown that this or General§Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t/ STz LOUIS MO, plentiful supply of fruit denotes a healthful summer, and that it is climate should eat fruit tense cold of the polar regions. Cesar’s Commentaries pecuniarily beneficial to any partic- and kept the commentaires dry. our party, and all the distinctions | between constitutional governments | money. when I commenced to take Swift's | Specific (S. S. S.) about one month | BIGGEST PENSION YEAR. Funds. Washington, June 4:—It is stat- | ed at the pension office that the de- {ficiency in the amount of funds in | the hands of the different pension agents, which has resulted in the an- | nouncement by the agent at Indian- apolis that a large number of pen- sioners will be compelled to wait until June 1 for the payment of their pensions, has been caused by the unusually large number of allowances made by the pension office under the present administration, and par- | ticularly since General Raum’s term began. The great amount of allow- {ances has been largely in original There have been issued al- ready 7,000 more original pensions than were issued during the last fis- eal year and the office has yeta month’s work before the end of the present fiscal year. Another drain upon the appropria- tion, it is said, was the act of March 1, 1890, which increased to $72 per month all pensions for total disabil- ity requiring the aid and attendance of another person. The number of these cases is large and involves the expenditure of a large amount of The pension office record for the present fiscal year it is stat- cases. ‘ed, will be far ahead of any fiscal year for many years. after taking four large bottles of | your wonderful medicine my nose is | The final payment by the pension agents will not be completed until avout June 20, and those who have not been paid by that time will be compelled to wait only a few days until the appropriation for the next | fiscal year becomes available, July i, FATAL RUNAWAY. Old Man Jefferson Cummings Killed This Morning Near Clinton. Clinton Democrat, June 3d. | ket would be over supplied and the/ Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases | A New York physician says that a as necessary that the people in this ;™ in the 228g ispring and summer as that the Es- quimaux should drink oil in the in- were to,and an old citizen Several years ago he resided at Nor- juiceless to suit Carlyle, who says | J y aa | yis, this county, where he was mar- anv other similar scheme would be|somewhere “Cwsar swam the river We learn from James A. Moyer of Mrs. Lucinda Rush, Atlanta, Ga. |a fatal accident that happened on ithe farm of Peter Bysor, six miles | south of Clinton this morning. An | old man by the name of Jefferson | Cummings, with his daughter, Mrs. | Ben Wilkerson were going through | Peter Bysor’s field on their way to Clinton, when the horses in jumping aditch jumped quickly, throwing ithe old man to the grvund, break- | ing his neck and crushing two ribs About two hus- ;dred yards from the ditch the the wagon, throwing out Mrs. Wilkerson, stun- her severely, and as soon she hurried to her father and found him | over his heart. horses over-turned as she came to _ herself _ dead. The deceased was 80 years of age of the county, | ried to his second wife. i ; Two Big Anti-McKinley Bill Meetings j busines men’s meeting was held at| : |the Walnut Street theater this after-! noon at which and woolen industries were largely represented. were Congressr er, | | Kentucky. dressed by the same gentlemen. purpose of McKinley bill. meeting. 2 : ee ner bottle by ing that both parties had promise yepared by : iy MEDI to amend the tariffso as to remo iT MEDICINE Co. : ITAL CA. cessary burdens and enla MANUPA Housxsrerrt’s Trmoat ; power had, on the cox ied to add to the burden and restrict ithe market by the McKinley bill; and the meeting would be satisfied EACON. TARIFF REFORM THE CRY. me aire fre dee —Mr. Cleveland's Good Words. DOTTIE PTT TTI Philadelphia, Pa. June 3.—A/ Alexander McClure presided. The tobaceo, tin plate | Among the speakers | mez Bynum and Breckenridge To-night a mass meet ng was held at Kensington and ad-| of} Both meeting were held for the | = protesting against the | There were from 7,-} { blood. It's a strictly & superb tonic and in- declar- © and diuretic. Resolutions were adopted AND @ CURE narkets; that the party now in| and Steve B. These two very fine, highbred stallions will make the season of 1890, at my stables, seven miles northwest of Rich Hill, and 14 miles east of New Home, Mo. They will be allowed to serve only a limited number of mares at $25 to insure a colt to stand and suck, money due when colt stands and sucks, mare parted with or removed from the neighborhood. Colt to stand good for service money. Care taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should any occur. PEDIGREE AND DESCRIPTION. R. S. A. and Steve B. are by the same sire, foaled in 1887; bred by R.8. Allen, Franklin county, Ken- tucky. BY PRETEND 1453, trial 2:24 (owned by Stephen Black & Son, of Frankfort, Ky.,) Steve B.’s dam was by Veto, a thoroughbred by Lexington. R.S. A’s dam was by Bay Chief, he by i Chief. i » sire of Jay Eye See, 2:10; Phallas 2:132 an irector 2:17. Ist dam Winona by Almont, sire of Westmont, (pacer) 2:1: Fann: Witherspoon 2:17, Piedment 21%b Aldine 2:19}, Early Rose 2:20}. dam Dolly, dam of Director, 2:17; y Thorndale 2:22}, Onward 2:25}, d dam 4th by Mambrino Chief. 3r Fanny by Ben Franklin. dam by Saxe Weimer, son of Sir Archy. Dictator (own brother to Dexter 2:17}), by Rysdyk’s Hamble- tonian. 1st dam Clara, dam of Al- ma, 2:28%, by Seely’s American Star. 2nd dam, McKinstry mare, dam of Shark, saddle record 2:279. Rys- dyk’s Hambletonian by Al 1st dam Chas Kent mare by Import- ed Bellfounder; 2nd dam One Eye by Bishop’s Hambletonian; 3rd dam Silvertail by Imported Messenger. Abdallah by Mambrino. Dam Ama- zonia by son of Imp. Messenger. Mambrino by Imported Messenger. Ist dam by Imported Sourcrout. 2nd dam by Imp. Whirligig. Bishop Hambletonian by Imp. Messenger. 1st dam Pheasant by Imp. Shark. 2nd dam by Imp. Medley. Almont by Alexander's Abdallah. 1st dam ay Anderson by Mambrino Chief. 2n dam Kate by Alexander Pilot Jr. 3rd dam the W. H. Pope mare, said to be thoroughbred. Alexander's Abdallah by Rysdyk’s Hambletoni- an. 1st dam Katy Darling by Bay Roman. 2nd dam by Mambrino, son of Mambnino, by Imported Messen- ger. Mambrino Chief by Mambrino Paymaster; dam the dam of Goliah. Mambrino Paymaster by Mambrino. dam by _ imported Paymaster Mambrino by Imported Messenger. dam by Imp. Sourcrout. Alexander's: Pilot Jr.. by Old Pilot, Canadian acer. eR A is a dark sorrel, three years old, 154 hands high, three white stockings, white stripe in face, weight about 1,000 pounds, fine style and action. - Steve B. is a beautiful dark chest- nut, 15} hands high, will weigh be- tween 1,000 and 1,100 pounds, hind feet white, star in forehead and white stripe on nose. Both are in- dividual pos 3 and are destined to make t lormers. wie N. ALLEN, JB. y propos with nothing short of free raw ma- terials and such general reduction of tariffs as to cheapen the necessa- ries of life and open foreign mar- kets, thus securing steadier and more comfortable living for the workingman. The announcement of a letter from ex-president Cleveland was greeted with applause. The letter was as follows: F. A. Herwaig, Esq., Secretary. New York, May 9.—My Dear Sir: I desire through you to thank the republican, formerly known as the workingman’s tariff reform associa- tion, for the courteous invitation I have received to attend a mass meet- ing on the evening of June 3. The terms in which the invitation is ex- pressed convinces me that the ques- tion of tariff reform is receving the attention it deserves from those most interested in its just and fair solution. I know with the feeling now abroad in our land and with the in- tense existence and activity of such elubs as yours the claim presump- tuously made that the people of the last election finally passed upon the subject of tariff adjustment will be emphatically denied; that our work- ingmen and our farmers will con- tinue to agitate this, and all other questions involving their welfare, with increased zeal and in the light of increased knowledge and exper- ience until they are determined fin- ally and in accordance with the American sentiment of fair play. 1 use no idle form of words when I regret my engagements and pro- fessionial occupation will not per- mitme to meet the members of your club on the occasion of their mass meeting. Hoping those who are fortunate enough to participate will find it to their profit and that the meeting will in all respecis, be a great success, I am yours truly, Grover CLEVELAND. Bogus Medicine Certificates. Have you rheumatism, blood dis- eases, skin diseases, scrofula or any ailment caused by impure blood? if so, send for our book, with a 2-cent stamp, and read the home endorse- ments of eminent physicians, mer- chants, clergymen, and others, who live here where Hunnicutt’s Rheu- matism Cure is made. Their certifi- cates tell the whole story of this wonderful medicine forthe cure of rheumatism and all blood and skin diseases. Hunnicutt Medicine Co., Atlanta, Ga. For sale by druggists at $1 per bottle: 27-im The Humbolt river and its tnbu- taries at Wells, Nev., are gorged with carcasses of cattle that perish- last winter, and the stench is un- bearable. Many railroad employees have been made sick by it- ‘WHY! YOUR LIVER IS OUT OF ORDER pdt Rape a work or Ua be @ burden to you. of Leonard’s fine jeunets, he is Fy eure breeder. and — = & TERMS: $19 toinsare colt tostand and sack & fe . After has bee qin care you, drive the POISON out ef | fr, Geer rire as conta e box and save your life. Dy be tad at any Drag Bore. Qa Bewareo! CocsTkRraiTs m32e ia 8t, Lovie "ES IVORY POLISH t=. | Penruwes THE BREATH. ASK FOR IT. ei, * ie south of the Butler and Montrose road - black. aly sr oe bands hi pee jack, mealy nose, 14 1-2 en wee sired by MeDonald’s fine mamoth ; sck, dam ex, and 3-4of wae one must be paid. Care will be accidents but will not be responsible any ocenr. Prince. same as those of jack. ince is an al] purpote horse, dark coming 6 years old sud sbout 157-4 hands weighs 1,2 pounds. He is of trotting and. running ftock, and is a fine biooded horse. You sre invited to call and see him before ~ breeding. DEWITT McDANIEL. aE G

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