The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 9, 1890, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| Stone’s Speech Continuea. | made a rather ill-natured but _perti- ;nent response to this effect: “Nor | have ITany wish tohave a circus performance, and I hope the ring- j master will not come in here with | |his whip to give these proceedings \ BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. DEERING, No Pretorian He. New Yors, July 3.—In his address to the war veterans at ;their reunion | in Brooklyn on Tuesday, Gen. Slo-! /cum said: “Since our return our country has | been very liberal with the old sol-! than they have already.” That colloquy faitly illustrates the situation. The gentleman from THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE Tilinois declared in seeret caucus IV ON TA DAN T | that he must vote for free coinage ONLY NATIONAL BANK or havea rough account to gare IN BATES COUNTY. with his constituents. others like —— +0 oe in him that caucus CAPITAL, i $125,000 00 enough of ther, acting wit! SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 | side ofthe House, to pi Sa coinage bill. Bat a majority of the} p.J.TYGARD, - - - President, | CAUcUs dete ned to bring HON. J. B. NEWBERRY Vice-Pres. bill now before the Hous J.Cc.-CLARK —- - Cashier |to be preceeded by a ru ee OM amendments. “The Time Table. sprung upon the Hou ide L. &S DIVISION. Thursday TRAINS RUNNING NORTH. * J|have the rul \e No. 304, passenger 4347 8 ™M-}low armendine i # 312, local Bolen nee ee « "302,passenger 3:15 p. m. | failing in that, v TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH. But th 21e gentleman fix No. 303) pamenget 12:30 p.m. | other free coinage Rey “ 411, loca 5:00 ee to * be ae passenper 9:40. the West, voted with th St. L, & E. DIVISION. aud forced the gag rule thr No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a. S Then the bill was befor s« "arrives 3:25 p.m. ocd * 344 E. K. CARNES; ‘Agent. House, and then they saw Speaker deliberately refuse to rec ognize any member to offer a free y {coinage amendment. Those silver Republicans, so-called, sat over there like “dumb, driven cattle” and help- ed to gag themselves. They sat by overiand sawthe Speaker commit an outrage on them and their constitu- A encies, and dared not even make a _____ mewvers. __| protest. The whip of the ring-mas- J. H. NORTON. ter has got in its work. Very well. The people of this Attorney-at-Law. country will be made to ‘understand Office, North Side square, over F. Barnhardt’s|it all. Whether it will make any Somers Stores difference with them remains to be seen. I confess I shall not be sur- prised if they go along the same old beaten path, at least for a while longer, upholding the same men and the same old politics which have brought ruin to their thresholds. The politician thinks the farmer and the industrial classes generally can be duped and deceived by cheap clap-trap and a good deal of thun- der, and our past experience rather KINSON & GRAVES, justifieshim in that belief. For years and years the industrial and ATTORN«YS AT LAW. producing classes have been warned Office West Side Square, over Lans-| against the ultimate outcome of the { down’s Drug Store. economic politics which have been ~ |dominant in this country since the war. But those of us who sounded the alarm have been laughed at. de- rided and denounced. We have now reached that pvint, however, Physicians. when men are beginning to awake J. R. BOYD, M. D. and see. The people are beginning to manifest some evidence of weari- 4 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ness at the course of public events. @ Orrice—East Side Square, over Whether they have been ridden so Max Weiner’s, far as they are willing to go, wheth AgtY er they have been galled as deeply as they are willing to stand, I do not know. For many years we have pursued two lines of economic policy, both of which are radically wrong. First, it has been our policy to constantly increase taxation; second, it has been our policy to constantly. decreease the amount of money {in actual cir- culation. The policy of taxation has been one of constant expansion. The policy of finance has been one of constant contraction. Taxes have been wantonly increased until we are collecting millions in excess W. E. TUCKER DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, Aaron Hart's Store. Wro. JACKSON, "ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros., Store. Catv F. Boxtry, Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. 4 Butler, Mo. | Will practice in all the courts. AGE & DENTON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Butier, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ten a specialty. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. ae Southwest Comes Square, ares of the public need, notwithstanding corrupt and extravigant expendi- . tures. The volume of money in MGISSUIT Pari fic Ry. circulation has been contracted un- il t|tilthe masses of the people find it * |impossible to obtain enough for use ae in effecting the ordinary exchanges ) Daily Trai Trains 2 of their neighborhoods. These pol- : - |tics ought to be reversed. ‘They TO ought never to have been begun. KANSAS CITY and OMAHA,| The enforcement of them has built COLORALO SHORT LINE |UP favored classes in the country and ‘millionaires have multiplied. é 7 But they have been hurtful to the iy s : great masses of our people. They D ally Trains, have brought shadows full of anxiety re 3 -_ {and distress and hung them over eas City to St, Louis, | ousands and thousands 0: homes = THE } throughout thecountry. The soon ; PUEBLO AND DENVER. jer these politics are reversed the ; eee : | better it will be. If much longer ul LAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS | continued, ruin, poverty, degrada- #as City to Denver,without cnange | Hou will resuli as surely as effect (will foilow cause. H. C, TOWNSEND. Buf we are not reversing either of General!Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t | these politics. On the contrary, we ST jOulg MO |are pushing them farther and farth- { any more the appearance of a circus | There were | REAPERS. HAY-RAKES & TWINE.! MOWERS IR. R. DEACON. er along the same line. “This ices has just passed a bill increasing tariff taxation beyond anything it has ever reached before. Taxation ‘is poised on a mounting wing, and its cource is upward. And now, un- | der a transparently false pretense of meeting an impaiient public demand for increased circulation, you pro- pose to dishonor silver as a moneta- ry metal and convert it from a coin into a mere commodity. Very well; go on. I suppose there will be anendto this thing some day. There will bea day of reckoning. I cling to the hope that the time is not far distant when the slow-gathering wrath of the people, long cheated, deceived, wronged, will leap like a flame over the land, sweeping your custom-houses from the face of the earth, and melting our silver mines into money for the use of the people in the liquidation of their debts and in the convenient and profitable conduct of their bus- iness- Mark mark my prediction: Before the waning of many moons, “free trade and free coinage” will be a battle cry which will startle the dull ears and appall the sorrid heart of monopoly from the beetling crags of the Pacific to the very sources of the Penobscot. Entitled to the Best. All are entitled to the best that their money will buy, so every fami- ly should have, at once, a bottle of the best family medicine, Syrup of Figs, to cleanse the system when costive or billious. For sale in 50c and $1.00 bottles by all leading druggists. 28-1m Filley, who attempts to ape in this state, ‘‘block-of-five-Dudley in Indiana, is figuring on how to beat the democrats in Missouri this fall. In talking about the congressional districts, he is quoted as saying: “The lower districts can, ef course, can be kept in line but with a demo- cratic majority of 2,000 in the mid- dle district it is hopeless unless we can split the democrats up.” “Of course” is a frequently mild way of admitting a grave doubt. To split the democrats up means to get up independent tickets—which word has gone out all along the republi- can lines. It is being tried in Bates and other counties. The republicans always attempt to seduce some sour unsucessful office seeking democrat, by offerring him a position to make | him leader of a revolt. No such { thing can be done in Henry county. No “Eavesdropping” around demo- cratic councils, or “Dreamer” of re- publican successes in Henry county, can make an impression toward car- rying out “Boss Filley’s” plans to defeat the Henry county democracy. | —Henry Co. Democrat. A Lady in South Carolinia Writes: My labor was shorter and less | painful than on two former occasions phyocnie astonished; I thank you for “Mother's Friend.” It is worth its weight in gold. Address The | Bradfield Reg. Co., Atlanta, Ga., for | particulars. Sold by all druggist. A PRIE: ST’ S NOVEL SUIT. | Father Hynes to Sue Father Healy Before Bishop Hogan for $15,000. Kansas City, June 27.—The Rev. Father Hynes of Pierce City is in the city to bring a novel suit against Father Healy also of Kansas City, for defamation of character. This suit will be brought in the ecclesias- tical court presided over by Bishop Hogan and it is the first of the kind ever instituted in this country. Six years ago Father Hynes had some difficulty with Bishop Hogan and the lutter ordered his removal to Higginsville. Hynes declined. An ejectment suit brought by the bishop against Hynes resulted in a victory for the priest. Father Hea- ly published several notices regard- ing Father Hynes and it is the con- tents of these which he regards as defamatory. The sum of $15,000 will be demanded by Father Hynes $10,000 for himself and $5,000 for his church. If Bishop Hogan re- fuses to try the case it will be tak- ento the archbishop and then to Rome. Phil Sheridan’s Widow - Mrs. Sheridan has almost utterly withdrawn from the world. Within the walis of her really beautiful home on Rhode Island avenue, she lives in quiet,unostentatious grief for her loved husband, and in beautiful motherly devotion to her four chil- dren. About the elegant apart- ments, on the walls, in the niches, ; everywhere, are reminders of the lamented soldier to whom her life was so completely given. Portraits busts, souvenirs of the gallant Phil. his equipments and relics of the war, are here in profusion, and the| your youthful-looking mother, surround- ed by children whose tender affec- tions center upon her, completes an ideal picture of a departed soldier's home. Mary, the eldest of the chil- dren, is a bright, pretty girl of 14; Louise and Irene, the twin daugh- ters, are dainty mites of 12, and lit- tle Phil isa delicate-looking lad of 9. There is throughout the house- hold a delightful air of graceful re- finement, one of the results of dili- gent care on the part of this exem- plary mother.—Philadelphia Times. Distanced in the Race. } | cines not distance all competitors in jamount of sales, as they are doing, {since they are the only medicines | sold by druggists possessed of such wonderful curative properties as to warrant their manufacturers in guar- ‘anteeing them to cure the diseases |for which they are recommended. | You get a cure or money paid for ‘them returned. The Doctor's '“Galden Medical Discovery” cures all diseases caused by derangement ' of the liver, as biliousness, indiges- tion or dyspepsia; also all blood, ; skin and scalp diseases, tetter, salt-| rheum, screfulous sores and swell-; ings aud kindred ailments. | Harvard university is 254 years| old and during that time it has | graduated 16,930. ®) Why should Dr. Pierce’s medi- Siesta aoa | diers. jsions to-day than Germany or | France pays to support its standing army. Iam surethat there is (citizen in this country who | wish to see an old soldier suffer. no fas asking ‘too much of the govern- | d jment, and I think we, as | | State a home where old soldiers can | | be received and properly cared for. | We assoldiers are in danger of being i thought to make mendicants of our- | sely es. | “It there is anything of soldier ought to be more proud than | | another, country itis of having served faithfully his| in her | having been a soldier of my country |than a millionaire otherwise. Let us take that view of it then, and ask {no more of the government.” Many | of the veterans agreed with the Gen- |eral’s sentiments, and testified to it by loud applause. The New Discoyery. You have heard your triends and neighbors talking about it. You may yourself be one of the many who know trom personal experience just how good athing itis, If you have ever tried it, you are one ot its staunch tricnds, be- cause the wonderful thing about it is, when once given atrial, Dr. King’s New Discoverv ever after holds a place in the house. It you have mever used it and should be afflicted with a cough, cold orany Throat, Lnng or Chest trouble, secure a bottle at once and give itatairtrial. It is guaranteed every time, or money retunded. Trial Bot- tles Free at ary Drugstore. Powderly on Protection. There is no good reason that his (the workingman’s) cost of living is increased 10 per cent by the pre- sent tariff, and the burden of the one now proposed would be a great- er still. Grand Master Powderly spoke the simple truth last Novem- ber when he said: “It seems to me that the policy of protection is wrong on labor. The laboring classes are not protec- ed—only the manufacturers. The rich receive the protection. The American manufacturer adds the duty to what should be the natural and fair price for his products. The burden of the tariff rests its crush- ing weight uponthe poor. The tar- iff needs reforming. It is the poor, the great mass of the people, who need protection, and they will never get it under the so-called policy of protection. WHY! YOUR LIVER IS OUT OF ORDER You will have IN THE We are paying more for pen- | would | At} | the same time there is such a thing | soldiers, are in danger of taking that attitude. | } } There is already provided in every | which a | hour of | I would rather die a pauper j } i] | i | Tle said lately: good deal of expo: owing to this fac er case of intl ‘e upon me, and last winter, I was attacked with a very mmatory rheumatism. “What I suffered from this dread disease can —=— be imagined than described. Idi erything I could to cure myself, I Means in my power and every oF worse than I was be- 2 my hand to my Bead, n if l were rid of the dia- j { 1am now on my und aman as there HUNNCUTTS RHEUMATIC CURE, Is a superb ton! ood purifier, quick! curing all diseases , skin and neys. #1 per bottle dress Hunnicutt Medicin Manufacturers of H Cure, for bronchitis, coughs, UUs Potter Bros. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. An ample supply of Buggies, Carriages, Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c. This is one of the best equipped Sta- bles in this section of the state. Fist Ciass Rigs Fusniruep. At any hour, day or night on the most reaso! terms. Farmers desiring to put up their horses when in the city will find this barn the most convenient in town. POTTER BROS. DRS. STARKEY & PALEN’S TREATMENT BY INHALATION. For Consumption, Asth: Catarrh, Hay beet e podnd Oxygen ‘Trestmen' which Drs. Starkey & Palen en have dis) during the last twenty years. = eee of the elements of inees an pe and is so condensed sn Foe poranie that tt issent fall over the world, It cures as nature cures: Gives re- vives circulation, provides somethi: Ne fs to circulate. The late T. 8. Arthur, well known through his powerful works of fiction, and the late "Prather of the House,’ Hon. ‘Wm. D. ete were strong friends of the Compound Oxygen Treatment, and alg recommended it. fn addition to them Drs tarkey & Palen | are permitted to refer to ev’ Victor L. Couard, Editor Lutheran Ob- server, Phila Rev Charles W. Cushing. D. D., Rochester, New York. Hon, Wm. Penn Nixon, Editor Ioter Ocean, Chi w. I Wouhingtom, Editor New South, Bir- mingham, Ala. Judge H. P. Vrooman, ae Kan. Mrs. Mary A. Livermore, Mel: rose, Mass. Judge R.8 Voorhees, New York City. ur. Cc. Knight, } Philedelp ain t jer, mn, ‘Will cure Faw goed Grive the the POISON = Edward CE sheen 853 Broadw: and make you a. fier eton only 25 cents a box i, Sandwich ay 2 iad at sedis Fidelis M. Lyon, Waimea, Hiawali, Sandwic! IVORY POLISH == Penrumes THE GasatTH. Asx veh, Pls FLEMING BROS., - Pittsburgh, Pas Wisconsin has a stringent law The state is said to be full of them and | history against the killing of quails. the birds have become as tame and | snd domestic as robbins. every day cases of murder | dress, or sa Be serapes occur that illus- trate how foolish it is to carry con- cealed weapons. wEaAaR SHOE CO.’S Bs » TRADE MARK i | sunt —FOEB SALE BY— J. 2 McKIBBEN, Alexander Ritchie, Inverness, Scotland. a ees V. Ortega, Fresnillo, Zacatecas, Mrs Emm Emma Cooper, Utilla, Spanish Honduras A. c. J Cobb, =the ee pees - Morocco MV Ashbroo! Bia J Moore, Sup’t Police, Bland‘ord, Dorsetshire fee land, ‘Ward, Bowral, New South Wales. wet thousands of others in every part of the nited States. Drs Starkey & eee will send, entirely free of charge, s k of 200 pages containing the of the ‘‘Compound Oxygen t- ment ’’ The book also containing the same. = to heal aby the: ‘of the Sree! been restored to 1 e use ment. It is Teading for the siek—revital- ized men and women the witnesses! evidence! STARKEY aOR No. ‘Areh 8t.. the & P. 26-6m. (Successor to M. W. MIZE) REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE’ AND LOAN BROKER Renting, Collecting and Managing | | Property for Non- residents a Specialty. 2J.H Norton will be found at office and will attend to the wants of customers. R MEN ONLY) VIGOR ¢ eA Teepe popes qa C7 = isages ademas co soe

Other pages from this issue: