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‘ yoL. X11. Miss CAPITAL, $110,C00. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collect does a General Banking Business. In the Keal I:state Loan Department. Make Joans on keal Estate on long or short time a lowest rates without delay. vaca: uri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. L STOCKHOLDERS Smith, GL 1 lealer Sr@ith; John 7 K Ase’t Cashier Starke BD Don Bank Clerk Turner n Dry Goods & Clothing Tuck onroe Farmer N Farmer lerk Na frown, Lula BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER } I arn not all afraid that the party will flag or ment will zeal of d irage- in the least d dor or lessen its aggressivenes “The democratic party is thoroughly organized, and bas plant- ed itself on democratic principles. It will not abandon its sacred cause, but will continue the warfare until! 9} it achieves complete success | w no discour pee at ane mneatin Loos will vot falter in 1890. The «Times Porown ont Again Leivenworth, Oct. 31.—Following his pre of yesterday, Post master Ritchey again threw the mail edition of the Leavenworth Times out of the mail to day The paper ), 1890. FARMER OF BATES ‘Cash Capital. VIEWED AT THE CAPITAL. The Political Situation Democratic Portending Snecess. agton, Oct. 31.—E tm nearly every state in the Union in the hands of two congression- imittees, and there is no rea- NO. 50 S BANK COUNTY, $50,000.00 son to doubt, if the surface indica- DON. THOMPSON tions are correct, thatthe next louse : s BENNETT, will be democratic by an ample ma- bey AV eiNGuam jority. The democrats wiil not yet Pe eee allthe gerrymandered districts in Rees Ohio that they hoped for. but will ee DANS make up the difference elsewhere. ki Chairmen Flower of the « committee says that they er Company rors. r Jett, Edmund Farmer elf, Mf Farmer (arathers, G@ A Farmer Morrison, ¢ Miller, Al Tuck Tue lutely ce: =e from uumailable to-day because represel tative Physician it reprinted the list of the Catholic | out of four doubtful districts. In t Farmer ere = “ee 2 cat | : | foartney, J M Stock Dealer Wyatt, HC Lamber deaier fair rafiles, in giving an account of Towa a of oue is expected peerwester, John Farmer Walton, Wm E Cashier | the postimaster’s action yesterday. | The Standard printed the list in the |same way last night, but the post- Davis For van Tinks offi > Booker Farmer Wright, TJ Capitalist HH Bank Clerk Weiner, Max Boots & Shoes Walls, Wm Farmer 1 Walton, GW Farmer Radford, Chas R Farmer Walls, J T Physician Reisner, J W Insurance Whipple. N L Physician Sallens, J L Pres Judge Co.Ct Williams, R V Farmer Gene son. in control of the | jrepublican congressional committee, | t to check, loans money, issues drafts, and transacts a ur patronage respectfully solicited. jis making no rashclaims. Privately | | office employees found it absent in| he states that if the democrats have | | the mail edition of that paper. Law-/less than twenty five majority in the | | yer Lucien Baker, the counsel for/ house it will be a republican victory. the Times company, will probably | He bases this on the effect of the jn |e ngham, J Physician riggs, We M Farmer Highest of all in Leavening Power.—U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. president vice-president BOOKER POWELL T. C. BOULWARE cashier asst. cashier WM. E. WALTON J. . JENKINS LEADING IMPORTERS OF Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry. LOWEST PRICES. Our Ilustrated Catalogue, The handsomest ever issued In the West, will give you thousands of suggestions as to what will mal nice Anniversary, Birthday or Holl- day present. Write us, and we will gladly send it to you 100 Visiting Cards ——aAno— 100 Visiting Cards From Plate, Siver PLaTeo WARE, TABLE COTLERY, WEDDING AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS. GROVER TO THE RESCUE. | disregarded, while advantages have ‘ been accorded to a favored few, are not to be much longer deceived. They are discovering more and more clearly that the earning of the toil- some and uncomplaining laborers | Alvany, N. Y., October 31—The which should have added to their Argus will publish to-morrow the} own comfort and prosperity have following interview with ex-presi-) been diverted to the aggrandizement | dent Cleveland on the political situ- An Interview With Cleveland on! the Prospects of Democracy. make the issue in the suit against Postmaster Ritchey, that no law can} forbid an American newspaper to print the news. Postmaster General Wannamaker sustains Postmaster Ritchey, and ir reply to his telegram of inquiry simply wired “unmail- able.” This afternoon suit was filed by the Times in the district court against Postmaster Ritchey for $10,000 damages. tariff bill, in connection with the re- cent gerrymander. In this conver- sation Mr. Clarkson said bitterly of the tariff bill: “The passage of that act was a daring thing mght in the teeth of the election. Like a new harness, it was sure to gall in some places. Any tariff bill requires time to have its merits demonstrated. The republican party euacted this} The different political parties are one within a month of an important! estimating their chances in 1892and | The Laborer’s Taxes. An effective cartoon is given in the illustrated papers, making «8 splendid object lesson for the labor- ing man, by giving the article men- tioned below with the McKinley tax upon them. We cannot give the pictures, but here are the points: “The laborer rises in the morning and puts on his flannel shirt, taxed 100 per cent.; his trousers, 110: shoes, 25; he washes in a tin basin, taxed 55 per cent.; with soap, 20; uses a cotton towel, 45; puts coal (22) in the stove (45); dons his coat (110) and eats his breakfast from a plate taxed 50 per cent., with a knife and fork (40), sweatening his coffee with election. The democrats promptly | poth are making several combina- | seized upon this opportunity to} tions of states by which they could nial popular hatred of the meas- win, and in each of which New York babe Rs prominently figures. Owing to the The shoe manufacturers, one hun- | Complication of political matters as dred and thirty delegates being pres- | 2°¥ presented, it would be difficult ent, met at the Metropolitan hotel to form an estimate. The question in New York City last week and pass- of tariff reform and a reduction of ed two important resolutions. One taxation. the silver issue, the elec- was that hereafter they will issue tion bill and prohibition will play no more guarantees on their goods |® conspicuous part in the fall elec- that the purchaser shall assume all tions, and it would be absurd to en- risks of defects. The other isof ter into any calculation until after vastly more importance to the peo- that result is fully known. : If the ple. Because of the advance in Jeath- republican party persists in its pro- er, occasioned by the McKinley bill tection policy, its opposition to free they advanced prices 25 and 50 cents coinage of silver, a reduction of tax- apairon shoes. This is the tar ation and its advocacy of prohibition iff is being reduced as the republi- in the fall elections, the democracy | Reval ABSOLUTELY PURE Baking Powder DON’T FORGET IT! That J. R. Pattersons, Barber Shop North Side Square, is the place to go fora nice hair cut, shave or shampoo. Call andseeme. Every- thing firstclass. Do you know how you should | write yourself down on a hotel reg- | ister these days, Mr. Jones, when you and Mrs. Jones are away ona journey, if you don’t want the man at the desk to look at you supercil- iously and know without looking at your signature that you are from | Oshkosh of Emporia, or even Hobo- ken or Brooklyn! Well, then don't | write “John Jones and wife,” as you have won't to do—it is taken for granted, you see, that you have ner- er been guilty of writing “John Jones and lady.” If you have you ‘of others, while they have constant: | re} ation sent to it by its New York cor-| ly grown poorer. They fail to see sugar (13), and seasoning his food {cans promised the people in 1888.— ried the Porat — eae | deserve the worst that he can think uN respondent: | in the accumulation of vast fortunes | with salt (44). He puts on his over- Ex. Ee that party expects | of you. Write “Mr. and Mrs. John yp} was a public question discussed more | MYP than has been the subject of tariff | all ‘Of course it is needless for me to | express the interest I feel in the) invitations to visit different localities | and address political meetings might be construed as indicating a lack of | under such conditions auy compen- sation for their discouraging labor, bly demand the justice to all and favor to none which our institutions | promise. jusing thread (61), and scissors (45). | coat (85) and hat (65) and goes to The following dispatch don't look his ‘protected’ labor. His wife wears |very much like the McKinley high Rhoades, the only Lynn morocco When her husband comes home he | manufacturer who had not discharg- lies down on an iron bed (45), draw- \to hold its own, it must stand by the | Brown Jones.” Write all the name eastern manufacturers, trusts and | you'ye got, and borrow some of monopolies that have placed it in | your wife's if you haven't got enough elections now pending, though Ij or for their forced and pinching |a woolen dress taxed 88 per cent., | tariff bill was helping the laboring | nower or a Waterloo defeat will! of your own. For if you write the have sometimes feared that my re-| economy. They will not always be | shoes (25), stockings (35). She sews | man. aN ae iii j | old formula down he will think, this peated and enforced declination of | silent, but will naturally and inevita-}on a machine taxed 45 per cent.,| Tynn, Mass., Nov. 1—Thomas eee | man at the desk, one of two things, either that you are newly married or {that you come from a lodge in the | yast wilderness—a dilemma of which When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. sympathy with the fortunes of the excellent candidates in the demo- cratic field. there never “I am confident that we shall se- cure a majority in the next house of | | represensatives. Our success may \ not be so sweeping and decisive as) I am sure thoroughly and more intelligently | many of our sanguine friends antici. | pate, but it will ba safe and substan- ing over him a sheet and blanket. taxed 111 per cent.” Reed Will Retire. Washington, Oct. 30.—Congress- man Flower of New York, chairman ed his old help, today truned off | 168 of his employes, in accordance jwith the resolution adopted by the ;National Morocco Manufacturers’ | | Association that on November 1 all; | Knight of Labor should be dischare- jed. These men refused to sign a/ When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Castoria I met Dave DeArmond, the dem ied reform by its democratic advocates. | tial. Ican not forget how labor- jof wthe democratic congressional | paper renouncing their allegiance to | ocwatic candidate for congress in the q : : : : : - - * ] j i othe av. 7 ug) This may, perhaps, suggest thatif|iously a reform moves which must | committee, feels confident of a) the order, andat 11 a. m. were paid | Twelfth district. the other day. He the democratic position is the cor-| “tect one, there should be immediate | ‘and ready acquiescence on the part | break through selfish interests strongly entrenched and unscrupu- lously asserted, and which must z | } . . : — = ak inir arh: S95 | of the people. But the judgment! ouercome abuses long suffered and | their contributions fromthe manu- In ki 1 eastn | gripsack containing pé THATS $25 | ee : 5 } n kis annual report to the war yeari are}. of our countrymen has been so tram- | arrogantly maintained. I facturers when they urge them on to i r’ worth of wearing apparel. He had meled, and their perceptions have | that all our gains must b: sweeping vietory. Speaking of this ‘to-day he said. “You may know that | | the republicans are relying upon | then be started as a free shop. subscribe on the plea, as it appenr- has been busy speaking and will be off an told to go. Mr. Rhoades’ | elected by about 2,700 majority. In | shop will remain idle for awhile and | lia to Greenfield, Mo., and carried a department, concerning matters in| graduated at law in Iowa and had his department General Merritt rep- | gone to southwest Missouri to find 1868 DeArmond walked from Seda- | | both horns are equally painful. been so clouded by prejudice and | of hard struggle against these odds. edin republicau newspapers, that ee ie tie) SenarGeo chine peciig (immmell Ahome. “Ho chose to walk uy . = appeals to self interest, that their; It is not however possible that the the democratic congressional com-!” ree _ people| 150 miles to find it and found it. vera £rw aim a : : g in Oklahoma as bad in the extreme. | : sae Ans ONE ENJOYS aff apprehension of the true province of | complete triumph of the people's! mittee had received $30,000 from | parc isadhadbadens ad a |I don’t raally think he had ae ©=> | Boh the aetliod and results wher our government has been distorted, | cause can be muck longer delayed. | the importers. The plain mee sing - Sa . “ ania : alma _ ane ap Somer Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant nf and they have for years been led to | The effective incalculation of our of this is the manufacturer must pean fines nae Rais = wih si | pluck and soon made friends. He reshing a —— acts 7 believe that the conduct of public | home doctrine which characterizes double or treble his subscription, as : Ree toes hasan successive ly couuty attorney, gently yet promptly on the Widneys, | fee the + and ot! affairs might properly minister to| the democratic press; the thorough their profit, not by securing general | discussion going ou in every part of | prosperity founded on principle, | the country; the undisguised schemes but by giving a direct advantage to | of the republican party to secure its he did in 1888. They say to him: ‘You must put up your mouey or the people will turn us out of power. | | They know we have never received a receive assisstance from outside par- | a ‘state senator, commissioner of the ties. The crop failuare was so gen- | supreme court and circuit judge. He eral that it will be necessary to sup- | ply half of ‘the farmers with grain | wearsa white sombrero and can make an after dinner speech that Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head- , aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- i vould make Chauncey Depew envi- a ae } for seeding purposes. Most of the | ¥O% DE: I IVI- | duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- in classes. There es : in power through reck- dollar fro: ne importers or from) *O* ° = ai (Pam SET itful Iced, pleasing € taste and ac certain classes. There can be no perpetuation pe iP eck-' dollar from the importers o a" people were poor when they | ous It is extremely doul tfu if ceptable Pia ey prompt in advance iu tariff reform where these less enactments which stifle the re- any other source to corrupt the vot- | gettled in the territory, and as bee a gets bh | ite action and truly beveficial in ite prevail. sults of the people's suffrage; its ers, but they use this scare to ob- drouth destroyed everything which | ¥** 1 ee pn fell ere — 1. T-' effects, prepared ouly from the most : E ‘i Z : aa : nd kneck a fellow lawve: wh | i. au 1 os ‘ It is certainly true that in sucha! brutal methods of legislation, and tain more contributions from the | they planted there is great destitu- eae ies : ae 1 ati fee edrieteatite healthy and agreeable subs . ite : - ae ~ : as as a o complained th > ( \ aneni TAs +2 selfish operation the interests of aboye all the positive distress daily beneficiaries of the McKinley Dill tion. PaO nar ine Aineoe ean a 4 — & = af i y, “ : an es cise a a et ae) Ae OG ve made it moet, fome of the people must be neglect threatene d our people at home un- Notwithstanding all their money rup of Figs. hic ued Judge De popular remedy known. ed. Protests on the part of these | der the protection of anew and in- raised to corrupt the voter, my ad- Produced from the laxative and na see 1 ae ee Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50¢ have been stifled by the most arrant | iquitous tariff—a law which will not vice from neariy every state in the A on the floor a was being . and 81 bottles by all le : x : Dare u i i it out of the! picts ny ‘ Weception and cajolery. At last. s- nare that we are going to w ed with é gists. Pa re hofN may not have however, tl i ted ones are lorious victory the 4th of Nc may 0D v n spite of t ntation them, t Ou Is prese ous juice of Californ Figs, cure it pror LOUISVILLE, KY. HIKE YORK, Me