The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 29, 1890, Page 1

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OL. X11. ms issourl State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. @BPITAL, - . BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 29, 1890, NO. 49 ngr yrants, but never one toa rail-/ ever i) reate a rail - «= «»« S890,000. "5: i SS oe poration lat pre-eminent Receives Deposits subject to Check. bonne Monev. Makes Collect Beal ei y ” i oe nm peer of does a General Banking Business. gress. Eines aman - fete : ete ats in congress gave the In the Real [state Loan Department. Make loans)! every township west on Real Estate on long or short time at STOCKH Lev arn Dry Morrison. C If 1 JM Stock Dealer r, Join Farmer Foreman Tink ta. KC Con. & 5” pat 1 Prof Normai Seh '|peArmond, DA Circuit Judge Evans, John Farmer gveringham, J Physician Griggs, Sm M Farmer er, Rankin, J 1 Fa BOOKER POWELL | T. C. BOULWARE president vice-president OLDERS M Farmer Radford, (has k Farmer Reisner, J W Insurance T Sullens, J L Pres Judge Co.Ct Willia lowest rates without delay. r Turner, Mra ME Capita NE Dentist J ngTucker, | &Shoes | Walle, Wm Farmer | Walton, GW Farmer .3 T Physician . NL Physician 8s, RV Farmer rmer WM. E. WALTON J. kh. JENKINS cashier asst. cashier 100 Visiting Cards —— Ano —— Engraved Copperplate, $1.50. The handsomest day present. West, will give you thousands of suggestions as to what will make a nice Anniversary, Birthday or Holi- Write us, and we will gladly send it to you OF CHAR LEADING IMPORTERS OF Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry. LOWEST PRICES. Our Illustrated Catalogue, ever issued In the 100 Visiting Cards sommon schools n every stat versities Fig mocratic party | and not anacre to Gould, } Sage, Jay Couke or Tom Scott, or | the Atlantic Pacificynow the "Frisco, | or the Union Pacific, or the Central, | or any one of the hundred others. | We have the advantage of democrat | jic benficence in our county to day jie 1 5 2 | jin a $100,000 county school fund, | T growing out of the swamp land) | grant and twice as much inthe town-! directly to ; ship school fund growing out of the| 16th section grant, and what is true of Bates county and her 24 town- ships is true of every other county! and township in all these western | and central states. , No, the precedent the democrats | set in the landgrant matter was for | the common schools and universities | of the land, and not for monster railroad corporations that with hook- ed beaks and bloody claws tear out | the vitals of un enchained people. | We admit that during the whig administration of Taylor and Fil- more Judge Douglass secured for Llinois a grant of lands which that state sold to the Illinois Central roalroad corporation for 7 per cent did ay” is trying to hdrick | for the truth or (EN. SHELBY'S REPLY siciy Cash Capital. $50,000.00 1 Labor p. SN. Tm sheriff y. Hen t ‘ibe now whether Dereon SILVER rae t hor of the in Me. “AV PsN boys to vote f si by tel DLhES CPORS. is Union Labo ever heard one word uttere vy mein favor of the Sec Siee ERAS Ror enter see ae present cand for the Dem ; varty for sheriff of this co is no wau Jiving that cau stale | Lever approached Lim directly or in in bis aid or vote in be haf of the said candidate. Let Mr. ! Carroll produce his proof, or stand = convicted as a vicious slanderer, who | bas neither regard for truth nor dis-| position to deal justly, with men who disagree with him upon the issues of the day. The venom of this man seems to CGLOS ‘owder Highest of all in Leavening Power.—U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. flow without bounds, he strikes at all who differ with Lim, without regard that decency tbat characterizes a gentlemen. One who reads his paper, will readily discover = his extremes, Messrs. Carroll and Hendrickson DON’T FORGET IT! sis cance =a = that their main object is to defeat) That J. R. Pattersons, Barber Shop a t cance? ye H ) ®/Senator Vest and plantin his stead | North Side Square, is the place to ystem oO; . atores: as hel it may be, some one who is a strong) go fora nice hair cut, shave or se peprane toevery method to pre-|¢riend of the Lodge Bill. It now! shampoo. Callandseeme. Every- judice the farmers with the banks of|jenooves every Democrat in this} thing firsteless. 3 y Bt = Sa Aa RAPS Seah of ita gross earninings for all time} our county? and where, I ask, where tocome. Illinois bas recieved al-|is there a county that can boast ef ee ee — ready two or three times the govern-| more liberal merchants and bankers) avery Democratic Lye is urged to ment price of these lands and can | than Bates county? Remove them) perform his duty by palin Mr ee \ ry BLACK-DRAUGHT tea for Dyspepela West 8:de Barber Shop! j,before the election; unless. perhaps Xthe Enterprise should delay its is u € 4 : 3 maintain her state government out this yearly income. The 5th charge is that ‘the state of Missouri loaned its credit to va- from oar midst, and the county will Summy, who stands to-day pledged soon assume the shape it presented in| +4 yote ene G. G. Vest, The com- the ’60’s. But thiseditor, who bas|pination, which Senator Vest has If you want the best shave, sham- poo, hair cut, cleaned or dreesed, call at George Haggard’s barber shop. = - - — not been here long enough to be}y, fighti : F : : : te A ing single and alote in tl 7 a GUILTY. | corporajions, but only recovered 66 rious railroads and thereby became eligible for office, seated in his cou- gee ee a a io can re iN —s Mr. Carrol in the Union of Oct. | Millions, and Soacres of this was indebted 20 million, part of which is|fortable sanctum, sends forth bis|yenefit of the producer, already have | cold baths ab alliiourel 2nd, makes seventeen charges againet democracy—published from Mr. Filley’s circular letter of Sep- tember—but gives no specifications details or proofs. Filleys second circular hadn't got around, but on the 23rd of October the “Old Man” had got far enough along with his press of campaign business to fur- nish alleged specifications and proofs for the first seven. We presume his third circular letter will get around in the Union of Oct. 30th, too late for any demo- cratic paper in the county to reply | acanceled homestead. Well, this is too bad. Really, Mr. Filley—beg | pardon—Mr. Carroll—come now and confess the truth; isn’t the real ground of your complaint—because | these collossal land pirates were | made to surrender a single acre of | their stealings? | 8rd. The 3rd charge proves that “de ole man’s hand has not lost its | cunning and that he never dips his | pen in the well of truth. In the first piace the Cleveland administration | never at any time loaned a dollar to | # national or any other kind of bank |and the intellectual capacity of the | blooming chump who thought it did | still unpaid &c.” The credit was loaned and some defaulting roads be- came the property of the state. There is, in this indebtedness, a large amount of debt created by the Gam- ble government during the war, in equipping troops for the Union army, at least one half of the indebt edness existing at the time the state took the defaulting railroad proper ty. For every dollar the state be- came liable to pay, on account of railroad indebtedness, she had five dollars worth of property. Now, who is responsible for the debt? Let Ra:lroad Tom Fletcher, gover nor of the state from 64 to 6S an- ce ite eet ce erg their minions and their money scat- 1 Co eae tones u st OUr) tered through this county to encom -| home institutions must be ignored. pass his defeat 7 He does not hesitate to resort to the]” ‘phink, Democrats! Think of G Five miles north of Butler, 4 . ’ lowest methods known to the most|(;, Vegt’s seat being filled by some | Py Bates county. From the i se and abandoned — precinct! one who may support infamous meas | 1st of September until the Ist of —— to accomplish his vicious — a _eet py en the | November, 1890. I will permit Mam- ee south! fea, Tsay it boldly, think, | pri ‘hief, jr., Pry. His object in making the statement | Confederates, think of the destinv of | vec obs et pat Haag 85 —— ae action, was to pre)-| your southern people when the U. S. | from a distance will be pastured free : ead . he § pragsd —. —" Beers Senate is filled with men imbued with | of charge for 18 days. I will not be mar ea wn Sanaa se erenaa Bes bitter prejudice against them. Aye,1 | responsible for accidents or escapes, beli fiat t 2 ee aa § ft go farther, think Republicans, think | but will use due caution to prevent helieve that he was being traded Off | hefore you would feist any such men | the same. for another. upon us, as we are now all one peo- As far as Tam concerned, my in-|pje, mingling togetherand having terest and my vote rests where it has the same Passaic Missouri. Pedigree at stable. Passaic stables, Cuas. S. Cosxcrurs, Prop'r. ea a couple of days for the laat ci couldn't furnish brain power enough swer—who always sold these rail-| for forty-two years inthis state and stake So Bygrcowtl nt : i re euler Be the “Old Man.” "Diley i | to an angleworm to burrow itself in roads to the owest bidder. He and | that is with the party that advocates rappers weeny ed ante a “fine worker” and probably we will have to gearch Austin’s Record of Saturday, Nov. Ist for the reprint ofthe Za Filley circular being the so-called proof of the remaining _ten of the “seventeen charges. ‘Now come off you two cullies, and dissolve this partnership of the dev- il and Dr. Faust, or at least take ac- ’ / : count of your miserable stock in trade before the honest voters of Bates county put you in bankruptcy next Tuesday by a ringing judge- meat of one thousand majority. against your three card monte buat- ness; viz the Record, the Union and Chauncey I. Filley. Now, what are the “Seventeen charges.” 1st. “The Mills bill was for the benefit of the rebel states, and the failure of the national democratic platform to provide relief the union labor party—that is won't divide up L the farms of the country among po- , litical looters like Carroll and Pos- "i ton and others of that class, “who M never miss a meal or pay a cent.” “Now, right here in the alleged proof the earth out of the sunshine. It is 'truethat the Cleveland administra- tion deposited from 49 to 60 millions of the surplus revenue in various | banks, as they had the right to do | i] > | under the law made many years ago, | thereby averting an impending panic | and always kept large amounts on de- | posit, as every farmer in Bates coun- | ty does when he has money on hand | for future and not immediate use | The present administration probably | prevented a panic last September by | redeeming bonds long before matur lity at 25 per cent premium. Which | is the better way, to havea surplus; | or pay premiums, so as to make the his “ring” put the price of their perfidy in their pocket. They got the value of the property-——the state got the debt saddled on it—and the jdemocratie party has the privilege of paying the debt.which it is doing, while it isalso, at the same time, reducing the state tax. “The 6th charge raises a howl about low assessment of railroad property.” The railroads return their property under oath the same as Mr. Carroll, and probably with about the same degree of truthfulness. But the trou | ble is with the facts involved in the7th charge. Every greenback, union la- bor and most of there publicans have intezest on the bonds really 8 or 9 percent! Thelatter is your plan. | You say pay out the surplus on the} | goyernment debt, that is, buy in the ‘bonds. That is just what Harrison did in September, but at 25 per cent premium—a Shylock exaction of the | bondholder, but cheaper than disas- ter, extortionate though it was. You | | denounce the Mills bill which lessen- | ed by 7 per cent the tax of the coun- voted session after session against measures to enforce the constitution of 1875 regarding these very matters and have thus far succeeded by their | votes and the boodle of railroad cor- porations to defeat euch democratic legislation. Waldo P. Johnson,Judge Norton, Bob Fyan andmen of their type made the constitution of 1875 and the people adopted it, but Culley, |Flannagan, Filley and such men i % Wool, hides, pelts, feathers, bees Syrup of Figs. | wax, rags and i North Main Produced from the laxative and nu- | street, opposite post-office. tritious juice of California Figs, J. Fisurr. combined with the medicinal quali- ties of plants known to be most ben- eficial to the human system, acts gently. on the kidney, liver and bow- els. effectually clensing the system, | dispelling colds and headaches, snd | curing habitual costiveness. 49-1m | tariff reform and state rights. The editor of the Union has labor- ed to impress upon the ex-confeder- ates that Mr. Summy was in the Union army. He believed that he could srouse all the old feelings and thereby weaken his vote, In this he will be deceived. The confederates do not desire nor wish to know where a man was during the war. What we desire is to advance men who ad- vocate measures that will benefit all classes, that will frame lawsto gov- z H ern all alike and to oppose all meas— Here we come....Mrs. C. B. ures, such as the ‘*Force Bill’’ that ' Steele left for Rolls Co. to-day.... | is aimed to destroy the south and de- | Pierce Hacket speaks at Mt. Zion | grade our people eouth of Mason and tonight....Cap Martin spoke at) Dixon’s line. Happy Hill last Saturday night, and | Right here let me ask him or his the U.L. party put Mezlassen, the | \ order, have they ever heard of Dem. | rag baby speaker up against him, | ocrats attempting to influence the ex- and Martin made him take back wa. \ confederates, (many of whom bave|ter....George Requa said if he- | connected themselves with his order) could not get a pension for rheuma- by informing them that Jesse Con- |tism he can for being blind in one eye....Late potato digging will commence soon.... The widow Car- | nell, Esq., was a soldier in Jim Lane’s and Jennison’s command and penter is erecting a barn... . Wade Bridgeman is moving his house.... | ™ that too a command that ploughed Mr. editor, you made a mistake in tem ef% Lone Oak Items. ~—) [i Are e ~~ ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts | gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- nally, dispels colds, head- _ | deep in the bowels of Missouri, with |saber in one hand and torch in the 1 O26, try and by the same amount. “th . : = : ® 5 cee the paper of the = gc tO | canting ie the ae ta have | joined together have prevented its other? No, no respectable citizen /our school teacher's name. It is) %€ hes fes cs and cures habitual Filley part of the combine, viz wool, | maednan spre Balsa McKin.| being made effective thus far. Union | will attempt to reproduce the bitter.| Howard Young... Apples are all constipa Svrup of Figs is the reduced tariff on wool in the Mills , bill, These gentlemen's teeth sre rasfull of it as are the teeth ley bill which increases tariff taxes | labor and radicalism have been unit- by 30 per cent. ed in opposition, foolishness and only ret duced, ple ceptable to t of its kind ever pro- to the taste and ac- tomach, prompt in picked in this part of the county, Rex | ness engendered by the war. By-! | gones for one side should be granted | ‘by-gones for the other. So far as { ; : «| The Union and the Record are} rascality have kissed each other and “ 4 i : c : 4 poof any sheep stealing om, in| nightily alike on this tariff and sre still in loviug embrace. \vnow, Jesse Connell ie an honorable | McEicee’s wiriz OF CARDU! for fernalediseases | It action and truly beneficial im its the land. But seriously don't’ ey Now. Bro. Carroll, this ends your, man, a citizen esteemed by bis neigh-| eS effects, prepared only from the most * the farmers of Bate county want the tariff reduced on a few hundred dol # lars worth of home raised wool, to get the 65 per cent tariff tax levied by the MeKinley bill on 40 n lion dol money businuss this campaign The! greenback and republican platforms | are not so similar in sound as these | editorials. Is it possible they are both edited from the same Gordor so-called proofs, and we will ven- ture that what this week—ioo late for reply—will be as boyish, frivolous and false as what vou have said in your frantic ever you may say! healthy and agreeable substances, ite We have failed to sell our stock of many excellent quatitics commend it made it the most bait groceries and queensware as adver- ‘” all and 1 y known. popular rer Syrup of is for sale in 50¢ \ bors. I mentiontheabove fact to Wilt Rematn in Butler. demonstrate to Mr. Carroll that ma-| | terial retaliation is at hand. Bat it is not the purpose of the, tised, in the time allotted, and have in Pemocrats to drift into the chasm of, made ar uments to continue lars worth of imported factur- —> Bay h —_ . vl ar By to maintain your fret 7 of ahh, (personal abuse) that be so de -| busines Wesliavarpur and $1 bett nt leading drug- ee a ne ‘si Hitherto what w “Austi meat | the eventeen cha Good bye, tights in. As far s y knowledge chased a of groceries and . ae who en off soas to put these Oe OD eae Carroll's poison, but now they Carroll, you offend the public nos-) of the candidates « f the Unton Labor | queensware and expect tosell che LR b will pro- the backs and in the ne pote t snly “ery for Cast ; ant | tril already. party is con d, they are all hon- jer for cash than any house in Butl cat t Se vwople g SS jan «One-l tie - . 7 ty! n oat nea: it 1S q Nn } shes tot 9 Dot acce D people at le a ba it aa of the eae Bott orable and wi citizens; itis no old customers and wishes to UF Do not pt any present cost? Sth “TI x a rs We will pay 9 + good wheat: the personal we are after hat the aeat our} oe 2nd charge. That the democratic oof the land | ; at Diamond in Butler. J. T.} measure me CALIFORWIA FIG SYRUP CO. py oe ee = : roads and set th - Sharnon & Co. Tam sa he efforts of rams & ( Lou's LE. AY. ae lion acres of land granted to railroad WE Xd YORE, WY. ae:sinsmeretseeinsnaagsnnasesiecania tenn

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