The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 30, 1890, Page 3

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“BATES COUNTY | National Bank, ' THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. ——+ 0 0 BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, - - $125,000 00) SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00} J —— =- ——_—— -F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. | HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. | 1G Cc. CLARK - - Cashier | Time Table. L.&S DIVISION. TRAINS RUNNING NORTH, No. 304, passenger 4:47 a.m. “ 312, local Sogo; “ 302,passenger 3:15 P m= TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH. No. 301, passenger “ 311, local 5:00 303, passenger g:40 St. L. & E. DIVISION. + No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. “ 344 ‘* arrives 3:25 p.m E. K. CARNES, Agent. 12:30 ie “ W. E. TUCKER, DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Lawyers. J. H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. | following letter yesterday: ‘ tleman; jed condition of agricultur n.|its wonted condition of prosperity?” Office, North Side square, over F. Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store. W 20. JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros., Store. Cavin F. BoxLey, : Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. ‘Office West Side Square, over 4 down’s Drug Store. Lans- AGE & DENTON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. | McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orricr—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 1g-ly ButTLer, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMCBOPATHIC | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over P. O. All calls # answered at office day or night. Special attention given to temale dis- | tases. . T C. BOULWARE, Physician and « Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ten a specialty. Sound to the Core Mr. Mansurs’s Views Just Right. A Model Democratic Reply Made to Farmers’ Queries, Tariff Retorm, Free Silver and Cor- rection of abuses. Chillicothe, Mo., July 23.—In re-| spouse to a letter from the lead of the Farmers’ and Laborers’ union | of this district, asking him to de fine his p wv sition on various imatters | of public interest, Congicssiean | E 8 Mansir who is now home, sent the | Messrs William L. Landram, Wray, J. E. Rucker, Roi ny, Horace Ficklin, union, Randolph county. Chillicothe, Mo., July In reply to 4 the “In view of the d ic addressd to me in terms viz: fc ests of the United States, if elected, what measures will rou advocate that will give relief and restore it to I answer that I am a democrat, and as such have been nominated by the democracy of the Second congress ional district as its standard bearer in the coming election. Personally, I believe and have for long years past in the very great desirability for legislation of the character I now proceed to state: TARIFF REFORM AND FREE SILVER. First—A genvine tariff reform. Forty-seven per cent tariff taxes, to be increased by the McKinley bill to 52 per cent, has ruined the farmer. Tohave a genuine tariff reform and not a sham we must have an income tax—say with ex- emption to every one of $1,200 per annum. Solong as pensions are fastened as a charge upon tariff tax- es, it is impossible to have any great. reduction, if any at all on the tariff. The pension roll in twelve months will require $175,000,000 per annum. If the proceeds of the income tax be specially made applicable to the payment of pensions and of the re- maining war debt represented by the outstanding United States bonds then, and then only, can the tariff betruly reformed and brought down to a peace basis. Second—In spite of recent silver legislation I shali still advocate and vote when I can, if elected, for free and unlimited coinage of silver. Third—A limited supply of fract- ional currency is desirable. Fourth—A repeal of the national banking system, with provisions made by law to supply the place of the retired national bank notes as the several banks shall surrender their circulation with legal tender treasury notes commonly known as greenbacks. CORRECTION OF MANY MATTERS. Fifth—No more lands to be grant- ed to railroad or other corporations, and a forfeiture by congress of all unearned outstanding land grants to any and all railroad corporations. Sixth—Patents hereafter to run ten years only and not to be renew- ed under any circumstances. - | these Seventh— Laws, both national and state, to prevent or break up all corners or option dealing in pro- visisions, whether animal or vegeta- ble. Eighth—Laws,both state and nat- ional to break up, destroy and pre- vent all trusts, <combines and mon- opolies in all articles of comfort or necessity. Ninth—An economical administra- tion of public affairs; surplus reve- nues to be used in paying off the J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh of Pine. . 1 Moissuri Pacific By. 2 Daily Trains 2 (KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, COLORALO SHORT LINE % To : ° ag 2 Daily Trains, 5 ansas City to St, Louis, THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, ULLMAN BUPFETT SLEEPING CARS : ansas City to Denver,without change H,. C. TOWNSEND. General{Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t public debt, or providing a sink- ing fund for its early payment and extinction. Tenth—All public land hence- forth to be reserved as homesteads for actual settlers only. In my hummble opinion these things put into appropriate legisla- lation would cover the whole field cf releif, and bring back more prosperi- ty to the masses of the country asa whole than any other legislation that I can conceive of. In my opin- ion they are especially desirb'e to the agricultural interests. THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY RIGHT. If I shall be elected to the Fifty- ST LOUIS MO|second congress I shall support|Sherman. R. R. DEACON, | THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE | HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENT HOUSE IN BUTLER. | | than $500,000,000. Now 25 years j my voice and | vote upor Personally | rdvocated | t and Ij the tic upon all of silver question ty agree with uths of the repub lican party are against free and un- limited coinage. Let me say to the farmers, as a fact, that there is no me, while nit one act of legislation standing upon the federal statutes, of which they complain, that was enacted by democracy. Not one! All your: burdens of legislation come from the republican party. If relief to agricultural classes, it can only come from their co-operation with and strengthening of the democratic party. Outside of their co operation with that party there is no relief for them Respectfully, C. H. Massvr. AN ENUMERATOR ARRESTED. W. H. Gibbons, Editor of the Pythiab Knight, Charged With Padding. At 1:10 o'clock this afternoon Deputy United States Marshal Oechsli arrested W. H. Gibbons, a census enumerator, on a. warrant charging him with “wilfully and knowingly making false and fictitious returns of the nnmber of persons residing in the district which he canvassed and knowingly making a false certificate to the schedules on his returns.” Gibbens was brought before United States Commissioner L. E. Wyne and bound over for a hearing Saturday. He is now at- tempting to give bond. The district covered by the man against whom the charges were made was bounded by Thirteenth, Grand Avenue, Nineteenth and Mc- ; Ghee streets, a residence section. | The first complaint against Gib- | bens was made in a letter to Super- | intendent Porter a week ago and he| at once notified Special Agent Ol-| cott to make a thorough investiga- tion, which he did, with the result that on the information filed with Commissioner Wyne, that gentleman issued the warrant of arrest. Gib- bons made the canvass and when the second one was made it is alleged that vacant houses and unimproved lots were populated by his fertile imagination and pencil at 2} cents a name. Mr. Gibbens has for a year pub- lished the Pythian Knight, a month- ly journal devoted to that secret or- der, and is well known. He isa young man about 35 years of age.— Kansas City News. Miles’ Nerve & Liver Pills. An important discoyery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new principle. They speedily cure billiousness, bad taste, tor- pid liver, piles and eonstipation. Splen- did for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for 25 cents. Samples tree at H- L. Tuck- er‘s Drug Store. t6-1yr A Knite in His Heart- Denison, Tex., July 23.—At Potts- boro, on the line of the M. K. & T. railroad, distant from Denison nine miles, this forenoon, Judge J. H. Cummings had a dispute with Creed Porter, an ex-officer, in regard toa small witness fee. During the dis- pute Judge Cummings knocked Por- ter down. Porter sprang to his feet and plunged a knife into Cummings | one of the wounds reaching the| heart, killing him instantly. Judge Cummings was a prominent citizen of Grayson county. Porter surren-! dered and was sent to the jail at the government, and notified them Dr. Brooks Makes a Prediction. From the Louis ville Courier-Journal. ‘ Dr. Brooks was introduced by J. | W. Sawyer and he spoke for an bour. ; body of | He told a number of anecdotes and! in a talk, said: « with me in belief}; gave his reasons why both the dem-| mental agony I have suffered. xeeptas to free | ocratic and republican parties should | eannot be } j ' | cease to live. The republican party bold front, and, had it not been that | was born he said for the purpose of ! there were putting down slavery. Slavery had | , been put down; consequently the | have made my confession. ;republican party was needed no | all I could do to keep from more. He declared before the elec- i tion ca _— 7 i. | tion of Harrison that the republicans ' warrant for my arrest. would be victorious. The statement surprised, but could not muster up | was made after he made a tour of | courage to reply for some minutes. the north and east, when he was’ stumping the country for the sue- cess of the prohibition party. He presaged republican victory, and by those signs he now promises that | the democrats will elect a president | in 1892, and he hopes that it will be Grover Cleveland, whom he declar- ed by far to be the ablest democrat | in public life. He gave the demo- crats four years to hold the reins of | i that at the end of that time they | would have to yield to the prohibi- tionists. Marvelous Endurance. 1 The vast amount of labor performed by the heart in keeping all portions of the body supplied with blood is net gen- erally known. It beats 100,000 times a day, which is 3,000,e00.000 times and 5:150,880 miles in a lifetime. No won- ler there are so many Heart Fal. ures. The first symptoms are snort- ness of breath when avercissng. pain in the side or stomach, fluttering, choking in throat, oppression, then tollow weak, hungry or smethering spells, swollen ankles, etc. Dr. Franklin Miles’ New Heart Cure is the only reliable remedy- Sold by H. L. Tucker, druggist. ‘The Boycott Idea. New York, July 23.—A number | off my “mind, I rest easier. A Murderer’s Conscience. Van Wert, O., July 22.—Samuel | toadhouse, murderer of Engineer | Vanderventer, is here, and to-day, “No one can tell the It described. I put on a several men at Franklin who heard us quarrel I would not It was break- ing down when the sheriff read the I was not At night I laid awake, but pretend- ed to be asleep, hoping to hear some remark which might be drop- ped that might give me a clue how to act. Since I have put the weight God knows it was not my intention to killhim. He forced me to it. Lost Part of His Brains. Fort Dodge, Io., July 21.—Willie Eberhart, a 9-year-old boy living here, is getting along with an ounce less of brains than he had a week ago. Willie had his skull terribly jeaved in by an accident ata mud crusher a week ago. One side of his head was crushed like an egg shell, leaving the brain protruding in places. Although it was thought the boy could not live an hour, the wound was dressed and portions of the brain weighing an ounce taken out. The bones were placed back in position and knitted nicely. To- day the child is out of danger, and the surgeons say is sure to recover. A Terrible Story From Canada. Montreal, July 23.—A dispatch from Pembroke, eighty-six miles of dispatches are published in the | ®bove Ottawa, on the Upper Ottawa | New York papers this morning from | Tiver, says that two days ago some points in the Southern States on | Miscreant cut the ropes holding a the suggestion put forth by the At- raft of logs to the bank, where the lanta Constitution and endorsed by Governor Gorden of Georgia that in | case the Federal election bill becomes a law a boycott should be resorted to against northern commercial houses and northern products. The World’s Richmond special gives the following as the text of the reply of the Richmond Chamber of Com- merce to the Constitution's Inquiry: “While deprecating the passage of ber of Commerce thinks it unwise for the South to indicate in advance of any course of action.” Reports from Little Rock indicate while the passage of the bill would be very offensive tothe business of Arkansas, a boycott is not generally approved. Lieut. Gov. England and President Allis of the first Nat- ional bank are among those mention- ed as taking this view. Prominent citizens of Austin, Tex. look upon the boycott suggestion with disfavor They insist that no good would come of it, and if enfore- ed the South would suffer as much as the North. The belief there seems to be that the conservative will be able to defeat the bill. The Herald's Washington corres- pondent says such of the Southern men there as he spoke with depre- cated the boycott idea, while most of them declined to talk about it. | Senators Vance and Gorman, how- ever, freely expressed themselves as | opposed to the boycott agitation, | which they consider as “sensless.” the force bill the Richmond Cham- | twenty-two raftsmen were stopping over night. The raft, with all asleep on board, drifted out into the river and into the rapids a mile below and before those on board were awakened they were tossed about among the rocks of the rapids. Of the twenty-two on board only two gotashore. No trace of the bodies of the twenty has been found. Fated 114 Days. famous but unfortunate fasting wo- drink exactly 114 days. She has not tasted solid or liquid nourish- Robbing The Totling Milhons. Six years after the war, when Gen. Garfield, as chairman of appro- Priations, reported the pension ap- propriation of $30,000,000, he ex- cused the amount and justified the passage of the measure, because, jas he stated, that was the largest sum that could ever be called for to pay pensioners, as from ¢ the list would nt time Now, 20 years later, and pension expenditures decline. {are up to 175,000,000 with reasona- prospects of reaching the enor- mous sum of $200,000,000. When Lincoln became president the reve- nues of the government, including proceeds of public lands, were less after peace, and our national debt no longer oppressive, the expenses offthe government are over $1.000, 000 each day: they will reach to $400,000,000 or $450,000,000 next year; and a large treasury deficit is as certain at the close of the fiscal year as is the rising of the sun. What a Leading Physician Says: Dr. R. S. Gordon, a leading phy- sician of Mt. Carmel, Ill, writes the following under date of March 1, 1890: “I cheerfully recommend Swift’s Specific (S. S. 5.) as a tonic ard gen- eral health restorer, also in case of Blood Poison it always gives satis- faction.” Years of Suffering. “For years I have been troubled with a blood taint that has baffled the skill of the best physicians of Ohio and Indiana, the disease finally affected my eyes to snch an extent that I was almost blind. I was then induced to take a course of Swift's Specific (S. S.S.) and am thankful to say that after taking a few bot- tles I was entirely cured. My eye- sight is entirely restored, and my general health is better than it bas been for years, and there is no traee of the disease left. IconsiderS S. S. the best blood purifier and gener- al health tcnic to-day on the market.” Oscan Wizzs, Huntingburg, Ind. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed free. : SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlana, Ga. Another Kentuckey War. Louisville, Ky., July 19.—Anoth- er outbreak of the Smith-Messer fued is reported to day from Knox county. The battle occured Thurs- day evening at Hubberd’s Mill, on Stinking creek, one of the most lawe less sections of the state. There was a political gathering there the candidates for the various county offices being advertised as speakers. Both the Smith and Messer factions .were on hand, wearing their Win- chesters and forty-fours. It is not known just how the trouble began but about 3 o’clock the shooting began, and when the smoke cleared away four men were found to have bitten the dust, while the rest had scattered and disappeared. Eigh- teen were arrayed on one side and about 25 on the other. Those jkilled were two of the Mills boys, Allentown, Pa. July 24.—Mrs. belonging to the Messer faction, Adam Wuehter, Lehigh county's and Bob Burchet and John Howard belonging to the Smith crowd. man, has existed without food and| More trouble is expected. An Old Quarrel Ends in Death. Nashville, Tenn., July 22—News and patriotic element of Congress | ment since Good Friday. She is} has just reached here of the killing now worn down toa mere shadow,|of Charles Seay by his nephew, and has been practically unconscious | John Bridgewater, in Wilson county, since Sunday last. Her physicians|late yesterday afternoon. Seay was are looking.for her death to take|returning from mill and Bridgewa- place at any moment. Between] ter was out walking with some young long intervals of unconsciousness | ladies, when they met and renewed she occasionally rallies for short per-|the old quarrel. Bridgewater drew iods. Atsuch times she is racked |a pistol and shot Seay twice in the the gallows. Judge Frease,a broth- er uf Cyrus Frease, one of the | doomed men, has gone to Washing- j ton to lay a petition before Presi dent Harrison. It is stated to-night that Hon. D. W. Voorhees, | Bradfield’s Female Regulator Should be used by the young wo- | man, she who suffers from any peca- liar to her sex, and at change of life is a powerful tonic; benefits all who ‘use it. Write the Bradfield’s Reg. 'Co. Atlanta, Ga. for particulars. | Sold by all druggists. 36 | been retained to represent them in |the supreme court and during the | farther progress of tke case. i] i is and has raised $125,000. | of Indiana, and Col. Bob Ingersoll have } | The children of Berlin are to have |ahospital at Berlin. The empress is deeply interested in the scheme} FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pe, with spasms and convulsions. She|breast, killing him instantly. A weighs only about 55 pounds. . |cocked pistol was found in Seay’s. Ge et. Trying Hard to Save the Murderers. Paris, Tex., July 22. The friends in ee 2 of the men convicted of the murder = c Re nae ; of Sheriff Cross and party are work-| gueaprBURE, ZZVER. , ing like beavers to save them from| S™S?=PSIA. Bp 2 AREOD | @EEELIVER PILLS! Ger Bowsse of Cocurenrarts mote in St, Lous. ip ONL RT AEO RI NRA Ne nA Em

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