The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 3, 1890, Page 4

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i c DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY ELECTION, HELD AUGUST 30, 1890. BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES pererrrrrrrrsrrrrrrrrrrs s = = ~s R - F of = J. D. ALLEN Ebrror. PEIPEEGeetetie pigsty, F222 i — 7 ig s 2 ¥ 2 Sits A ee ae CUR N eS aebines cle Sess PEt eS! Sa ores DEALERS IN THE CELEBRATED __ Diets 0. eee fe i: : coy Ste 5 5 2 2 ate ani 5 e 3 5 es ee ni ta Axp Fe 2: iF: :: 2282 $ |charter Oak Cook Stoves with GR TERMS O ; N: 2 nee = — ere = ea Gauze Oven Doors. TheWrexty Times, published every | Wednesda; , will be sent to any sdaress ne gme vear, postage paid, for $1.36. va REPRESENTATIVE | E : case ioe eile! 74 | (17 1925 176 fl ps2 22 | 4 ps 1637 a Se Fi Dayerte 7222 AS 9S 5 GE PURSE Ais far fo AT foo ps (eae (oer as obs ft [fs te SP 3 St pitas } WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1890. a, cia | | j —_——<— eae = \gon'en i371 | 4 jis | 7 104 |39 oe i32 (49 1a |17 les [24 [ss {1g [22 (4on'et [S71 '36 7 lou 1680 THE STATE TICKET. Sees 2 0 13 (SP (it lienlas [se [oe (90 (st [ss ir $3) 5 |282 |so 75 fi9 fe fs 13 | 14 [15 > fizio i” RECORDEROF DEEDS. | | | | | | | | | For JupGe oF THE Supreme URT ls t ; | HAAS ala | si nilise leg A z [iu is | 26 19 he < JAMES B. GANTY, iL] ja | 4 [1h 21 85} 1] 2 | 13) 1} 615 1 z | Se 12 | 4 | 378 4 For — ScHOOLS | 1 | i os | pales it a | : Z = ne, 3 s e ‘ell tis [6 | 19 1s : (23 ais ] we ot Randolph County. \$i4 ra riz{7lai-ils 5 | suse n|4 1 1 fa} = to | 1 | 207 at - S COUNTY CLERK. i 4 | ; | | i j por loin ee ae les 42 81 [25 [15 [25 | 1{s{7/ sal (236 j18 M fe as fe | iu = i fe se A H. W. a oe ieaes Re fis (eo fs lis oid hie 13s iat 76 38 rae * 79 leo Is " ry o ard County. | \ | { | po eee gee .s 3.2 sis as iie) a} |e nig 16 97 | 7 wit fs jo fe for as he fr | a0 = MAJ. J. N- ; 2 ian fad ie | sli} | wya to ie ta} 3) 1 he Iss | sas For Concness, 12TH Disraict Ppaneiy ean eoe "5 2 6 SI iss 26 163 53 ler [es loa 40 p> (39 | 57 [56 fag [29 foo | 52 22 [83 42 [isto TR Ge ae Oo ee en BI DAVID A. as Cue PROSECUTINGAT’Y. | | | | eit | | \ | Sch uttler, St udebaker, Mitchell, Sterli a c oliCip marley sce Ma iz [top's6 frases [44 [38 {95 ‘oe [72 (so [46 61 (02s jos | 135 154 Is \6o Is [tz |e fer [zz lezaz Far sates mais ars r fa | [98 5 | arm Warous, Buggies, Spring Wagons COUNTY TICKET. || TmiNcsuvcr, | eas pe lussie Spring Wages § Rae . \ 5 7 (5 42 | \ 73 [43 Ion 6: ‘98 {53 [25 ies. ‘Os arts = 4 ta Hdd doidddd added ys pots 1S pe ie vad Carts, Wind Mills, a. q For Representative JUDGE NORTH DISTRICT. he | ise ly | i - : . : WH SUMMY. WM Dalton............0..... 49 72 | 64 ‘4s | [i230 ‘42s io 35 58 998 (On orce im § Grain [hills Sulk Ply ual For Cin ee coc JUDGE SOUTH DISTRICT. i | Raters | ’ ‘ } For Recorder of Deeds pease [Az |29 os ie} st | | is isu | Slt eee Pesiienine BS | 730 ’ z = ope Sars = = ae Bs (| Evy | ‘29 [79 joo 20 | : 2 | 1034 STEEL FENCE WIRE; AND THE LARGEST STOCK OF J ows 'L HARPER. a eae | | be sa le | =e bd sen jez 7 |33 [29 [4s tg2 | 92 |e [58 [25 HARDWALE, STOVES, QUEENSWARE, GLASSWARE, For Sherif SHELBY WM Stephene... INE He |S Ff PS (Tigo (ie igs 15/7 a ‘ie [5 wala fa fis y aie {'s lis Pes AND GROCERIES IN SOUTH WEST MISSOURI. a Prosecuting Attorney COUNTY TREASURER. | | | al | | sj F BOXLEY Sam H Fisher } las 2s 14 les [56 Isa | 7 nla 10 (551 23 | 2 | 7 | 68) 7 19 [86 | 8 | 62 i7o |61 60 j1e55 BENNETT, WHEELER & CO. Presiding judge of County Court 8 Pierce .... 1 11 13 16 }1 [2 (St | ib | 5118 (36 [sz | {4 (IL jen | 19 |14 4 (an o RD BRADEN. JA Wright.. jes (Ae (at | Ea pum ete rae fee me ee as | i ee See ee eee Butler, Missouri § Judge ot Nosthern District CORONER. | | | | i / | | | } E 5 W M DALTON. lesbet | | Judge of Southern District J T Walls. ........ -«- | 163. 47 '56 195 65 [78 sn losin ess ‘es lea leo 1154 54 [34 [56 185 | 98 !97 J65 |91 fers FREDERICK FIX. Sa dge ot Probate Court 3 Z = J S FRANCISCO, The democratic central committee | Democratic Central Committee, | Stabbed To the Heart. County rrehies FISHER forthe county met in the circuit| The following is the new demo-| Higginsville, Mo., Aug. 29.—Hig- For Coroner }T WALLS court room in this city Monday af-| cratic central committemen elected | ginsville had not calmed down from j ternoon at 2 o'clock for the purpose of casting up the vote of Saturday's primary and announieng the result. The poll book and tally sheet of each voting precinct being presented the secretary of the committee, W. H. Mead, proceeded to call the vote which was carefully recorded by W. S. Mudd andI. N. Mains, tellers. After the vote had been canvassed the secretary announced the result and D. R. Braden, chairman, decid. ed those receiving the highest num- ber of votes cast the nominees of Democratic Committee Meeting. Notice is hereby given to the new- ly elected members of the county democratic. central committee to meét atthe court house in Butler on Saturday, September 13, 1890,for the purpose of organizing and tak- ing active charge of the campaign. W. H. Mzap, D. R. Brapex, Secretary. Chairman. A GOOD TIOKET. The primary election passed off| the party. quietly throughout the county on a last Saturday, and a good strong tick- et was nominated. In fact it was im- possible to have elected other than a gaod ticket, considering the very excellent material there was to choose from. We do not believe there was a candidate before the primary but would have filled the office to which he aspired with eredit. The result of the primaries is gratifying in the very large vote polled. In spite of the fact that the leadera of the union labor party brought every influence to bear upon members of the F. & L. U. to pre- yent them from voting at the prima- ry, there was a larger vote cast than at any previous primary election ever held in Bates county. Had there een a falling off of the vote the above mentioned leaders stood ready to proclaim the result due to the U. i party. Reasoning from the same premises we have a right to affirm that the result argues well for the success of the democratic ticket this fall with the usual majority. We are also gratified to know that little or no bitterness was engender- -ed among the aspirante for place on ~the ticket, and the less fortunate ‘ones are, to a man, accepting defeat gracefully and like true democrats —__— are prepared to labor hard for the} John Sherman a has reciprocity wuceess of the whole ticket at the| amendment for the tariff bill, Cana- polls in November. a to be our joint beneficiary therein. . The democratic party in Bates| With Mr. Blaine’s ideas on this sub- ~.qounty is in splendid fighting trim, | ject grasping the sunny south land See the difference. The democrat- ic party in its state convention nome inated for railroad commissioner Mr. Hickman, president of the Farmers’ and Laborers’ Union. The republi- cane at Jefferson City last week, nominated forthe same office Mr. Merrifield a conductor on the Mo. Pacific railroad. Mr. Merrifield lives in St. Louis, has no interests with the farming community, knows nothing about farming and cares less. He hasat his back the railroad companies of the state and hq ex- pects them to elect him. The names of two or three farmers were placed before the convention, but their heads ell in the basket as soon as a vote could be reached. So far as the farming community is concerned, the railroad commission- ership is by far the most important office to be voted on ‘at the Novem- ber election, and the only way we can account for them not being rep- resented on the state republican ticket, is that Chauncey I. Filley, the republican boss of Missouri, had absolute control of the convention, and of course he managed things to the best interest of the monopo- lists and the railroads. trary. As the eve of battle approach-/| that the republican party appears to ea the stragglers are brought into/need is longitudinal movement to camp, the position is being strength-| put it equarely upon democratic ened and the line of battle presents| ground. There is great hope for an unbroken front to the enemy.|the republican party, now that it has ‘The new central committee will meet | begun to learn something of eco- - etsy gpm gam when an|nomic laws.—K. C. Times. ~— According to the new law, all be opened, which will not close until : , the polls close in November. traction engines must be stopped at least 150 yards from an approaching EEE = The republican party of the Sixth |team. The penalty for not conform- district met at Boonville last week | ing to the law is a fine of not less than and nominated E. H. Redmon, for | @5 nor more than$50. No doubt, there congress against John T. Heard, |are few, if any, threshermen in the Gemocrat. A resolution to fuse with | county who know of the existence ‘the union labor was snowed under. | of such a law. at the primaries last Saturday: Min- go, Estis Smith; Grand River, W. M, Yancey; Deer Creek, L. R. Allen; East Boone, C. N. Clark; West Boone,J E Stewart; West Point, T. P. Crawford; Elkhart, W. T. Anderson; Mound, J. K. Rosier; Shawnee, Ove Harris; Spruce, Dr. Maxey; Deepwa- ter, Jno. Harshaw; Summit, G. B. Parker; Mt. Pleasant, T. K. Lisle; Charlotte, C. W. Porter; Homer, Ze- ra Rayburn; Walnut, F. M. Trimble; New Home, Jno. Hornback; Lone Oak, C. W. Bettis; Pleasant Gap, S. L. Starr; Hudson, Jno. W. Baldwin; Rockville, H. R. Field; Prairie, Theo Wilson; Osage, Thomas Gault; How- ard, W. B. Park. The Senator sees it Surely But Slowly | . The more Senator Plumb studies the tariff question the more interest- ed he becomes. He thinks now he could talk for months upon the gross inequalities and robbery proposed by the pending bill in the senate,: and he wants to show its outrageous enormities to the people. Senator Plumb is all right; but it is rather | ing on Arkansas and the counties of singular a man soable ashe is shoud | southwest Missouri have increased not have discovered the tariff out-|in population more than any other The democratic | part of the state. They are all.dem- platform of 1876 , was plain enough | ocratic, with the exception of Taney, to be understood by everybody.— | Stone and Ozark. The following are Fages years ago. Boston Herald. The bill imposes a tax of two mills | * falling off in population: Andrew, per pound upon compound lard | Holt, Howard,Johnson, Lewis, Mer- passed the house yesterday. Com-| et Pike, Platte, St. Charles and 2 pound lard is composed of lard, cot- | St- Genevieve, Clark has gained 54, Are prepared to make Farm Losux—giving borrower THE BEST. ton-seed oil and steatine, or beef Scotland 16 and Phelps 6. fat. It has become an important ar- ticle of commerce, as it is cheaper |’ than pure lard, and is wholesome. | his cabinet are away from Washing- The division on the bill was section- | top, on a lark. When it has come al rather than political, the opposi- | to pass that the president and his|%AS. K- BRUGLER, Presivesr. tion to it coming largely from the |¢abinet can pack their grips and southern members.—Kansas City | take a vacation from the capital Star. Fred Wittrock Dying. Jefferson City, Mo., Aug. 30.— Fred Wittrock, alias “Jim Cum- mings,” the famous Pacific Express robber, is dying here in the peniten-| i, the south’s in spite of the reports sent out and| and the icicle statesman from Ohio | ti@ry. On October 26, 1886, Wittrock who is from Leavenworth, Kansas, Frank Haight. a St. Touis express mesgenger and ‘a third man from Chicago, held up Express Messen- ger Fotheringham on a Missouri | Mad people always have hasty Pacific train twenty miles west of |judgements. Anger is temporary St. Louis and robbed the’ safe of | insanity. more than $100,000. Fotheringham was arrested for complicity,and Wit- trock wrote letters tc the Pinkertons signed “Jim Cummings” defending the messenger against the charge of canspiracy. The gang was arrested ceived ten years and the others sev- en years each. the excitement created by the news of the murder at Mayview to day, when the town went wild again over the murder of A. S. Higgins of this place by W. M. Felts, also of Hig- ginsville. Early this evening W. M. Felts went to the hotel kept by A. S. Hig- gins and almost without warning stabbed him to the heart. Felts then fled. Higgins lived about 40 minutes. The murder was the result of a quarrel that took place between the two at the fair grounds here this afternoon. Higgins wasa receiver of tickets at the fair grounds and a quarrel occurred between him and Felts which resulted in the cowardly murder of the oldgentleman. Felts HAS MADE ACALL FOR 260,000 CHICKE For which I will pay the following prices: — ——to be delivered on—— S, MONDAYS, Be Cash, 6e in Trade 6c Cash, 8e in Trade 8e Cash, 4c in Trade 4c Cash, 5¢ in Trade 12 Cents FRIDAYS, S§ HENS, SPRING CHICKENS. TURKEY GOBBLERS, TURKEY HENS EGGS A*URDAY is an employee of Dooley & Son, livery stable keepers of this city. Capt. Higgins isa brother of Cof H. J. Higgins, the father of the city. He was74 years old and a well known and respected citizen. : : N. M. Nestlerode. of Virginia buys Voultry for me. PETER LANE. ge genuine, uniess branded LANE. The counties of this state border- No poultry or ez: SG’: Money 7! BATES COUNTY LOAN & LAND CO. WEST SIDE SQUARE, BUTLER, MO. Capital.,: i) i0 the counties of the state which show LOWEST RATES AND PRIVILEGE TO PAY AT ANY Also buys and aell Real Estate and deals in all kinds uf good Bates County Loan & Land Company, W. F. DUVALL, Secerrarr. H. E. PERCIVAL, reasveze. President Harrison and nearly all NEW MILLINERY Fashionable Dress-making. The Best Goods West of Chicago at the Prices Asked. THE FINEST STOCK OF MILLINER IN BUTLER, NO DISCRIMINATION, A REASONABLE PROFIT AND HONORABLE DEALING, IS OUR MOTTO! during the sitting of congress the proceedings of that body must be at a low ebb. Alabama gave 95,000 democratic majority at the recent election. This weeks ago the Globe Democrat was carrying ing Alabama like it is now car- rying Missouri, Arkansas and Ten- According to Dr. Johnson “a man has no more right to say an uncivil thing than to act one.” The Globe-Democrat. the official ly the ticket nominated at Jefferson City, Thursday by boss Fille.

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