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- SO Che Dn [ igs VOL. X11. 8 1 LE Re LORE TEER EE OO ' BATES COUNTY { National Bank, BUT mee MO. | THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND 14 ONLY NATION BANK IN BATES COU? somes CAPITAL, — - $195,000 00 HON. J MEY J.C. CLARK : u ec W. E. TUCKER, DENTIST, “JTLER, Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. MISSOURLT. Lawyers. J.H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. Office, North Side, over Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store. Wro. 1ACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros., Store. Boxtey, PROOECUTING ATTORNEY. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. pre ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orricke—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 1g-ly But.er, Mo. DR. ? M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. {his whole lif jing. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en aspecialty. J. T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street north ot pp ine. | Missouri Pacific Ry, y. 2 Daily Trains 2 KANSAS) CITY OMAHA, | COLOR ALO SHORT LINE and 5 Daily Trains, 0 Kansas City to St, Louis, | {to loc THE PUEBLO AND DENVER. PULIMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver wit H. C. TOWNSEND. G rif Passenge g | Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, Salt | Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, a I; i | home located in their midst shoul Cel ty Cimes. 307TLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 15.1890. NO. 47 LINCOLN'’S MELACHOLY. His Sympathetic Nature and His Barly | ts I au at | i | e ul j tir na | i i | Li: idler ( |} pos e-| parece q | Phot qu * | boyhood ki 1} partuer in th , Sale: “Unele’ » of Tallula, Ill, who used at night, when | the customers were Gree: Duly in Was few. to hold the grammar while Lincoln recited his | lessons. | It was to his sympathetic ear Lin colin told the story of his loye for sweet Ann Rutlidge; and he, in turn, offered what comfort he could when poor Auu died, and Liacoln’s great heurt nearly broke. “After Ann died,” says “Uncle” Billy. “on stormy nights, when the wind blew the rain against the roof, Abe would set thar in the grocery, his elbows on his knees, his face m his hands, and the tears runnin’ through his fingers. I hated to see him feel bad, an’ I'd say, “Abe don't ery; an’ he'd look up an’ say ‘I can’t help, it, Bill. the rain is fallin’ on her. There are many who can sympa- thize with this overpowering grief, as they think of a lost loved one, when “the rain’s fallin’ on her.’ What adds poignancy to the grief some times is the thought that the lost one might have been saved. Fortunate, indeed, is William {| Johnson, of Cornea, L. 1., « builder, who writes June 28, 1890: ‘Last February, on returning from church one night, my daughter complained of having a painin her ankle. The pain gradually extended until her entire limb was painful tothe touch. We called a physician, who after careful examination, pronounced it disease of the kidneys of long stand- All we could do, did not seem to benefit her until we tried War- ner’s Safe Cure; from the first she When she commenced taking it she could not turn over in bed, and could just | move her hands a little, but to-day she is as well as she ever was. I be- lieve I the recovery of my] daughter to its use.” | commenced to improve. owe Bucklen’s Arnica Saive, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts | Rhe m Fever} Tetter,Chapped Hands, C tively cures Piles, or no pay rec a ito give per The Contederate Home—Notice to In- | terested Committees. There will bea of Vice Presidents of the Ex-Couiederate as-| sociation of Missouri at rooms 45) and 47, Laclede Building, St. Louis, on the 20th of October, for the pur-} pose of considering the location of meet | the Confederate iat: Bids ‘for the location should be handed in bythe date named, or| committees who wish to have the have re presentatives at the look after their? meetin nterests. 1 commun 1 to W. 2712 Gar dr No Mo. All veraeucitp ath iM |to conference. and kept the tax on binding twine. | (as, last night R. DEACON, EXCLUSIVE WARE MPLEMENT HOUSE TH AUN D rean.”’ Ser James Ingalls of Kans ained h ° sition. He says that the McKinley bill was not a good bill, but it was a |republican bill, and because of its jbepublican he v ted for it. He : : | wishes it undrstood that if a mease} ure is republican he votes matter how bad. He draws his salary, however, as a representative of the state of Kan- sas. It has made no provision of law for paying him to vote against it simply because the measure direct- ed against it is labelled “republi- can.” He knows, for he has heard from his colleague, Senator Plumb, on the floor of the senate, that the Mc- Kinley bill increases the taxes on everything the people of Kansas have to buy. He can give no other reason for the increase than that it is “re- publican,” and he knows it is repub- lican only because the corporations of the northeast secured control of congress, put their men on the com- mittees and made “republican” a measure which antagonizes the in- terests and traverses the wishes of 999 out of every thousand republi- cans west cf the Alleghanies. He voted with Senator Plumb to break down the binding twine trust by putting binding twine on the free list; he agreed to stand by Senator Plumb «and other western republicans against this particular trust, yet wheu the trust controlled the conference committee of the two houses, he broke his agreement, and instead of voting with Senator Plumb;,that the bill might be sent back back to the bill might be he voted for the trust He knows there are at least 150 trusts, many of them worse than the | binding twine trust, all preying om the people of Kansas and all given \license under the McKinley bill to | charge higher prices. Yet he says the bill is republican—a bad bill asa bill, but good enough as a republi- | eau bill. If the people of Kansas want a senator of this kind they deserve him. That is the conclusion of the | whole matter. —Republie. At thedemocratic and resubmis- sion meeting at Garden City, Kan Ex-governor Chas. Robinson was presented to the au- | \dience by the venerable Judge L. D. Bailey, one of the first associate jus- tices on the supreme bench in Kan- sas, and a lifelong Republican. In his introductory speech Judge Bai- ‘ley paid a high tribute to Mr. Rob- inson, and declared that he would cast his vote for him for governor this fall_—K. C. Star. A Safe Investment. Is one guaranteed to “results, in or | for it, 10; S | sent back | oa AN 8>R 7 \G KB Be. as erat | 4M 4 WILL NI UNGHAUS FLOP? A Story That the St. Loms Congress man Will Become af wrat New York. Sept. 30. Mc jing Journal prints the following | special from Washington: “Congressman of t. Louis, today notified Speaker | Reed that he intended to leave the republican party. This is the Niedringhaus, man cause two years ago. Niedringhaus then spent $60,000 in carrying St. Louis. Three republican congress- men were sent from that city and as a result Reed was able tu be elected speaker. After telling what he had contributed toward the success of the party and Mr. Reed in particular Niedringhaus told how the same had ruined his business. Niedring- haus owns the largest iron stamping quantities of both tin and borax. articles under the McKinley bill, Niedringhaus will loose $50,000 a year, and it threatens to ruin him. “My business has been ruined by the McKinley bill, and I am going to join the democrats, said the St. Louis ———— at the close.” Dvn kens eee tigdor Habit—In all the World there is but one cure. Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of tea or cot- tee without the knowledge ot the person taking it, effecting a speedy and perma- nent cure, whether the patient is a mod- erate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands ot drunkards have edge, and to-day believe they quit drink- ing ot wee owntree will. 1 its administration. . Send for circular and | . Address in contidence, {G Specific Co., 185 Race Street, Cincinnati, O. 45-1y. It 1 news comes from London that the McKinley bill is likely to destroy the button trade of Bir- mingham. Many orders have been cancelled, and the employees in most of the button works have been put oa short hours. The protection or- gans will parade this intelligence | The pet theory of the high tax advocates is that whatever injures England must build up the United States. In | their fatuous devotion to protection they overlook the fact that a policy which shuts out imports from the United States is just as certain to reduce exports. In the meantime, the people who use millions of but- tons in this country may inquire how they are likely to be benefitted by a policy which puts up the price of buttons, along with the price of pretty much everything else they wear.—-K. C. Star. It is reported that the young Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandro- viteb. the Czarowitch of Rusia, will probably visit this country sometime within the e | will be of spe j fact that no ¢ works in the country, and uses large | | would not carry many ofthe western By the increased duties upon these | | fact that a majority of the farmers who saved congress to the republi- | © ‘give yourself any concern about my ‘ing he did not believe in the highest |20t in opposition to that quote Mr. been | cured who have taken the Golden Spe- | cific in their coffee without their knowl- | /enough and whether No harmful | {them have simply said we want it, | with great glee and point to it asa) vindication of the tariff policy. The | | live with me were driven out of the | republican party I beg you to take |” the tariff, whereby the state in a : Ps i | Penneylvania, New York and Ohio}... that this bill of which the Hon {are democrats, notwithstanding that ‘the farmers of Indiana—a great | manufaturing state—are democrats. Sie ca WITH ABSOLUTE SAFETY. tis pleasant te > th re taste and does the onhavineRIDD'S, Take Prepared by TSBURGEH, PA | = PLEMING phos. BS ” PIT R FROM PLUMB. that ay be nec jsary eater than they ss 2 our The Gentleman fron K to! sus Rises a 4 “My ju ent is the manufacture Declare Himescit : fers are making an issue which is a | going to be hurtful to them, asf St. Louis, Mo.. Oct. 6.—The Re. | also sincerely believe that the impo- public publishes the ter, written by | sition of the duties which they are for will be hurtful to the If this sincere belief makes 14, and says: then T 34. Do not | have never known what the republi- can party was. You quote Messrs. McKinley and Reed to me. They are eminent men, but human beings, May I following let- Senator Plumb toa Germantown, Pa. manufaeturer: It is dated August “I have yours of the askinyr country. me other than a republican, relations to the republican party. Did you never before hear of a re- publican who was such, notwithstad-| #24 Hable to be mistaken possible protective tariff and in giv- Btaine to yout May I also not quote ing to the manufacturer everything | * YoU the thousands of republicans they asked for? If all those who be- in the state of Iowa who have left the party on account of its position notice that it would not be a very stead of giving 60,000 majority as it powerful organization. It certainly did in 1880, is now in the doubtful column! states. How do you account for the The McKinley abominations bill will become a law this week by the signature of the president and it is opportune to remind western farm- of New Jersey, Deleware, Connecti- cut anda large portion of those of J. G. Blaine,the foremost man in the republican party, said in a recent s + vited? Do you think that the tariff gal rng — ae ine sean to ee market for another bushel of wheat — —* ye Ue noe CEO or another barrel of pork.” This any =e < ——— . _ means, if it means anything, that it does it happen that a majority of |. ii for still further filling the already bloated pockets of the plu tocrats of the pense of the western farmer public they livg in the shadow of the chimes neys for which extreme tariff is ing northeast, at the ex- I am myself in favor of protection, Re but I believe we have far we have gone I insist that ifa manufacturer wants more protection gone far enough or not, The republicans are doing their best to defeat “Silver Dick” Bland» he must demonstrate the necessity | put the reason they are not going to for it. {succeed is that voters in the This has not even been attempt- ed, but with an insolence which in itself calls fora rebuke, facturers and those Eleventh Missouri District cannot be fooled into accepting the Windom the manu”) bullion law as a good substitute for who represent! the “Dollar of our Daddies” whieh the Bland silver law gave them, and There has not | which Mr. Bland wants them to keep. been an argument which was worth |The Windom bullion is scheme the name offered to show that high-| making millions of dollars for sharp er protection was needed. It is rath- | money speculators in Wall street, er a poor commentary on the Ameri-| but Windom’'s $1,000 silver certifi can manufacturer that after bav-| cates are not circulating freely on and that is enough. ing been given the local field | this side ofthe Alleghany Mountains for more than th'ty years by! —Republic igh « 25, he is not only still too ne sect ss noe OU es .,.| A Brookly yan wat ts adiverce weak to stand alone, but too weak to : : 1 ian fi us boas even exist unless be gets still higher | protection than he has ever ami < ise he Bt ase thinks the ca is ehre to conviction upon tl I cannot, ypen upon everything clse, but Mrs. Rovert Lincolu, wife of the be driven, 1it hapens at the pre Au val mniniste Tmeland, is at sent time if the indications which | Mt. Pleasant, Ia, visiting ber father, multiply on every hand can be relied Judge Harlan on, that a very large majority of the) Chinamen are n ot unlike the “Mel. people of Kansas are with me. I jean man” Two Chinamen recently get letters and telegrams frou robbed a bank at The Dallas, Ore.. by the hundreds indorsi acme of $10,000 and from republicans, and I also get =e ; San ais ree Merit Wins. scores of similar letters from the, ire te : Wed say to d Middle states. ne is that for ve ars we e possible now that # | J, Rann» od republican and i Easter have been sell Discovery tor Con- new Life Pills, : mo en acc a a A a rm