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BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES J. D. ALLEN Eoprror. SUBSCRIPTION TERM» OF ve Weexty Tim day, will b rostage paid, —— 4 ballot reform bill has been pass ed by the Pennsylvania legislature. /take care that it gets no soothing it won't stay This is u hard lick on Quay and the republican party. ————_——— The of ex-president Hayes is becoming so defective that he fimds it necessary when setting a hen to make a note of it in a ledger whi kK. C. Star. ————=—— William Berry, of Macon, recently Rusk at memory forwarded to Secretay Washington, the sword which Mr, Youngsters good points with all the called Catholic 3 Rusk’s grandfather, Samuel Rusk, pride of parents with their first shrines aud graves carried through the revolutionary | Mr. Berry had the sword in| war. his possessiok years Many are wondering why the alli- | ance in Missouri are so friendly | with the democratic party. That's easy. It's because the democraey are now and ever have been the true friend of the farmer and Inborer,and | of such is the alliance ef Missouri. | The Globe Democrat says: A draft | hus been made on the national treas ury for seven million, five hundred thousand dollars in payment of pen- sions due June 4th. The Globe! Democrat treats this enormous ap propriation as an insignificant mat- ter and guys the democratic party about the prophecies of a bankrupt | treasury. The Ohio farmers’ state conven tion held at Colurabus Thursday last for the purpose of considering the third party movement and put- ting out a third party state ticket this fall decided by a vote in con- vention not to form a new party,and after passing a series of resolutions onthe wants and demands of the farmers adjourned and went home. This action on the part of the Ohio farmers is a black eye te the Cincin nati convention. President Harrison's speeches will not take the place of the record of bis actions as campaign literature The spirit of love which he breath- ed in his addresses does not conceal his anxiety for the passage of a force bill. The South is not to be fouled by Mr. Harrison's pleasant words, and the West is fully acquainted with his policy which no high-sound- ing phrases can disguise.—Kansas City Star. — John Szwald, of Sacramento, Cal., has given himself up to the sheriff and confessed that he had killed two wives, one in Wayne, Neb., and onein Auoka, Minn. On examina. tion it transpires that his wives died under peculiar circumstances but he was never suspected of making -way with them. It seems his con- science has been troubling him of late. ——— The old statutory law granting | justices of the peace exclusive juris- diction in cases of fifty dollars and under and concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit court of $50 and up to $150, and exclusive jurisdiction of $150 to $250, has been amended so that now he has concurrent juris- diction in sums of $150 to $250 thus abridging the gap as in the old stat- ute. This amendment doesn't take ef- fect, however, until 90 days after its adoption, consequently it will have no effect on the cases brought at this term of court. All those farmers who believe the third party organized at Cincinnati this week will carry the country next year, should at once buy some of the Chariton county bottom over-flow land. They can get 160 acres of it for $200 at the outside. Then when they get possession of congress they can pass a law that each member of the party can borrow $1000 on each 160 acres, at two per cent interest. By this means they can get $1000 | ple’s party: for nothing. Those unable to buy some of this worthless bottom land ‘second summer NONPLUSSED BY CARLISLE, Surprise of a Delegation That Waited on the Senator From Ken- tucks. ti, O.. May 27. 1a new party 1 e already lang for nurs ng the in fant. They believe the child was a it will aot last. giant at its birth. They will feed it right off with solid food, aud they'll syrup. If it dosen't walk with league hoots before next November its nurses will be much dissappointed No infantile maladies are feared, not eyen the often fatal dangers of the The men and wo th he keeps for that purpose.— | men who, ina frenzy of enthusism. sicians, that rocked the cradle of the new-born baby until the poor thing's life was unperiled are the bragging about born. In their great delight some of jthem thought it would bea geod the person who idea to yo over the river into Ken tucky and ask Senater Carlis!e what he thought of the new baby. They did so und they met with a cordial reception. Some of the western del. egation have rather a kindly feeling for Mr. Carlisle. They believe he is au honast man and they wanted his opinion of the revolt they are lead ing. They talked with the senator about some of their pet projects aud asked of them Government ownership of railroads what he thought aad telegraphs was brought up and Mr. Carlisle turned questioner “Do you sion of these properties by coutisca tion?” he asked them. sSe5 propose to yet } “No, no that wouldn't be fair.’ y adinitted. “Then you must buy them. was the reply, must pay for them, and to pay for) them yeu must tax yourselves. Have you any idea how much it would cost? Our government debt at the close of the war was more than two thousand “and to buy them you million dollars, and we have been almost thirty years pay- | ing half of it. The railroads, tele | graph, telephones lines and steam-! boats of this country represent} about $10,000,000,000 invested cap- | ital,$4,000,000,000 is bonded indebt- | edness which must be paid Are | 1 you ready to tax yourselves to raise this money? Then, after you have | got the property, are you ready to | tax yourselves to operate it. for the| government never yet succeeded in | doing business at a progit’ Con-| sider another effect; such a plan j would add perhaps 1,200,000 men and women to the roll of government | employes. succeed in turning out of power an administration with such :esources at its command. The more corrupt it was the more difficult it would be to displace it.” | The delegates looked dubious and | perplexed, for the questions and sug- | gestions were evidently all new to} their sanguine aud enthusiastic minds “Anyhow,” broke in one of them. | changing the subject, “dont you think the money power is getting in- | to too few hands?” “Yes, I admit that is a bad sign,” replied Mr. Carlisle. ‘But how are you going to remedy it? By a revc-) lution or by an act of legislature? | De you propese to say by your legis- | ture that when a man has earned) $100 or $1,000 or $10,000 that he shall not earn any more?” Again there was no response. The visitors presented two or three more of the grievances whieh forms the basis of their revolt, and Mr. Carlisle tested them one after anoth- er with the question: “How can they be remedied by legislation?” And no practical answer was sug- gested. The fathers of the new party went away with the idea that after all the political millinium might not be aa near as they imagin- ed it to be. How would you ever Col. Wm. R. Morrison, while in} gruous, and their demands are too prepo:terousfor the party tobecome = Here are a few facts permanent. It may. however, suc Ta ceed in shaking up the old parties a somewhat. and by scaring some peo- ple. ac ood. Ikbave no fears my this new mov Where the Money Goes r our read-, ere tu fae- of hard times. rx and no money, the where all the wealth o The answer ° going i8; Inte will get bur +8 eater wi es no! Teasticad: yr Snuual expense of _ ional governme peated with emphs ty is here, and may las two Vears year To pay 1 take te hurt s¢ whole wheat The whole Christian Saence By Rey. Dr HLF. Wo Kubne tal of our nat ks is $5ov,- Continued It is fact. and aeckr the best and: s taxabon will . What is the inor- The party that hus cial old NUO000, Ons owledgei by istworthy pl trated very effective in cau the body. This be atte ithe necks of ig off Whe of the field the Republican party wishes to s dina year it is time the Virgin Mary, 2 regard to the ¢ that the Re can party be ge in the bod An ee aback seat until its embezziements was brought “iS and financial difficulties are settled contact with those objects, led the mind into a different cl : a leny that there {the Columbian expo of thinking, by the ally made. I do not ral states n isa prayer and scriptural promise Way should Missouri spend 8150,- i Kansas 850.000 or $100,000 ke displays? for the “Prayer of faith to which God blessed the ausWer QOOU AY Sicl ton The whol eau labor and remedies, but do not for- thority of the government is be get my friend, “God helps those used to belittle agriculture and ex- The organs of all the prosperity of America There is no that the faith cure cases are to be explui that help themselves ~ alt manufactories. doubt whatever. socalled) the administration measure “di wealth and upon the above mentioned princi- by the schedules which protect mill ples. viz.. “Concentrated Attention,” owners “By pocl yr Hysteria.” THE MIRACLES OF CHEIST Agricuiture and trade are mndria treated as pauper dependents on the! machinery set up in factories. Farm- It ix modo that Christ's won- ing communities are contributing ders les were not different mouey to show tall corn, plump from .te workings of Christian $ wheat berries. hard woods, fat eat- ence It needs sot much sense to tle, big horses aud fast roudsters. see the foly of sueh au assertion. Then after the exposition is under Christ healed immediat not by a way. if the republicans remain in| course of treatments. He not only power, every official and politiean in | the party will ascribe the splendor | of the exhibit The labor of the people, the; fertility of the soil, the activity of | the merchants. the general resources, | i j i healed ail manner of disenses at ounce, but restored maimed limbs and All this is beyond the reach of Christian Science. wholly to the tariff raised the dead. laws We all know that experienced doctors will overload sometimes the | intelligence and industry of the na stomach of a patient, so that if the; tien will net be The same stops taking drugs for some glory wil yo to the tariff and the time, there will bea change in the) benetit to the machinery owners mentioned. : _ : . | orgavism. This is simply uature;|wuo employ perhaps a twentieth of | Christian Science needs not tu teach} the workers whose labor has made | us that. we knew that long ago, and | the exposition.—K. C. Times. | all cms peuple cnn | President H W. Pulliam of the = : <a {Jackson county Farmers’ Alliance, Christian Science asserts that all its | ee : a |the instigator and prime mover of | It is sub-|,, : 2 1 ti ae the big meeting of Kansas and Mis- 2 y ge 1 AUK : = - te in quoting scripture, aud In 50) ouri farmers held at Kansas City doing, tries to strengthen its case,| is wr Friday, for the purpose organizing an Interstate Industrial Organiza-! Now I come back to the fact that workings were religious. and to catch the poor deluded be-| lievers the exsier. | z : /tion, in speaking of the third party Let us now have some of the : {movement had this to say: ) teachings of this Hell Fraud” which | etida moulthinietueMthird aacty | claims to be religious. It teaches: | 2 2 = : jwill figure in the coming national God is only the werd good made : ‘ si | election. It has been started solely shorter. There is no personal God, lpoithosemmhomesrdinizous) of famel but an idea. _ | ffic kers. Good is all powerful. ever: ywhere|2"4 Wy Guay Coates EON : es Ignatius Donnelly deserves mor present. Good is all wise. ‘This lat-| > vices e i 3 | credit in the new move than any othe: | ter statement will explode the igno- | Ti cavunbyie tow ae ea rance which is expressed thereby. ie ane th =; { Every true philosopher will say, | phe Hace | that no intelligence can be imagined | without personality, see Kant, Liber-; ty, Wolf, Descard, Le Comte, Sur W. | Hamilton, John Stewart Mill, etc. Now by a process of reasoning we will see the folly, Christian Science | says God is or stands simply for} good and good is “all wise.” But “all | Syaurthitg i | i 1 2 | : \ wisdom” is the high. st potency of | inteliigence, therefore there must be the highest possible developed | personality. Yet the latter is denied | by Christian Science, for the highest intelligence is all wisdom and all| wisdom presupposes a personality | of the highest psssible development which is God: What about GED) Both the method and results when Christian Science? This champion | Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant humbugery goes on to say, that sin| 22d refreshing to the taste, and acts 2 < = | gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, tis rot a reality. a fail to wee eae ieee and Bowels, cleanses the sys. aes Mena SUC ae Ee ga | tem eye dispels colds, head- | “There is no sin and no evil,” so/2 ul fevers and cures habitual | | speaks Christian Science and yet as-| pation. Syrup of Figs is the | |sests to be religious according to} anly Apres! peng eggs acl | ees na + i dd, pleasing to the ta and ac- Bible teachings. Why has this | ceptable to the stomach, prompt in “Humbug” not long before this/ its action and truly beneficial in its | ONE ENJOY given - | made on a basis of at least twenty lights with St. Paul the other day, had the fol-| been extricated with the root, by the! effects, prepared only from the most |lowing to say respecting the Peo-| arm of the law or by the arm of the) healthy = 2 aero —— ination? Thonsands of graves clamor | Many exce Sua uaieee Conmene ae : zZ to all and most The new party is compesed of | silently for vengeance, for in them ae ae als | men the most of whom are undoubt-} 5 ott Ries “erases a2 edly honest in their convictions, al- jules the poor deluded victims mur-| Syrup of Figs is for sale in 500 for a song can vote the ticketanyhew though as a matter of course, there | dered by vagabonds who boldly; and $1 bottles by all leading drug- with the expectation that after each fellow bas borrowed $1000. then| party is here; it may stay long | of thousands of lovers of the nation they can join together in voting to| enough to do some good, and, per-| and the public welfare who look on repudiate the entire debt, and so all of them will live in clover up to their | long I cannot say. ears.— Brunswick Brunswicker. are some rogues among taem. The/sneer at the impotent indignation | Sists. Any reliable druggist who cure it promptly for any one who | wishes to try it. Do not accept any with bleeding hearts seeing the out-! :ubstitute. rages comitted daily. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. i | {Conciuded next xeer. | SAM FRANCISCO, CAL, haps. to accomplish some mischief, but it will not last long. Just how The elements composing the party are too incon- LOUISE, AT. tw roak, 4.9. may not have it on hand will pro-« The New Bridge. American Pork AN Right Last Thursday af Paris, May 29.—The chamber of work was the | deputies yesterday continued the de. id bate on the tariff bill, adopting the miles 13 ¢ stroke of handsome com! ige over the Osage twe following duties recommended by Matto pork, 12 frances; beef. 2 ed pork, hams and | lt is a single the committee: yut 180 feet ects the counties In the latter maximum, 15 franes m ed beef, 30 id Vernon mum: ast winter a# sudden ri fraues maximum, 27 fraues iin M. Leeou of trichinosis was ouly a pretext tu France med 40 million kilograms of the river swept the bridge away im. when withina few days of com declared that the fear of several exclude American pork. can meat annu Ny without a ise of trichinosis ever hay n reported. nstruction will prove of uber to adhere of Sh house rejected the Schel franes i reper days ago. Thursday es were completed ued for travel Res proposal and passed the committee's tanty. last the apr and the br eet Yetroit, Mieh., May 29.—Judge Schell City News Detroit, Mich, May Jade a —————— Breckenridge of St. Louis, of the Eared yy ta committee on theological seminaries The grain elevator and agricultur | while in the midst of his speech bx al impl ut house of Porter & De, sre the Presbyterian general ass fell dead lany at Centerview, 2 town of 400 4 pepul ation, siX mil Waa - bly yesterday reusburg, was entirely consumed by fire al yesterday morn s west of afternoon with heart disease. ing. The eoutents of the buildings included 6.000 bushels of corn, 500 Men of distinction must tuke their chances for remarks The Chicago bushels of wheat, 700 bushels of | pritune says. in addition to bi ing a oats, a quantity of bailed hay and a i ee i ] A te eeckacaiall : grandfather the Prince of Wales en- dot agricultural linapiemenvts, i = i cluding seventeen, wagons. There joys the distinction of owing the Was no insurance except $200 on building. The fire is supposed to have been started by tramps. most money than any other grand- father on the face of the globe. s for Li Sirects A couple of tobaccouists from the Bids for Lighting the Streets. A i Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the council of the city of Butler forelectric street lighting. The bids to be Pacitie slope are looking up a !oca- tion for a cigar factory in Missouri. The tr g stu gy P- privelrge of more at samerate, of 2.000 candle The trouble about starting an enter Also bids on electric Mgnt and gas bined will he received. Bids to be clerk and must be in by in July, 1891, AL RADGLEY, Chairman Light Committee prise of that kind in this state is that most of the people smoke corn cob pipes Bennett, Wheeler Mercantile Go., AGENTS FO ‘PEL BUCKEYE FRAMELESS AND WOOD SINGLE APRON BINDERS, Buckeye and Champion Mowers, COATES LOCK LEVER SULKY HAY RAKES WITH POLE OR SHAFT Aultman Taylor Threshers and Engines, CARRIED IN STOCK. TWINE. HEADQUARTERS FOR BINDER JUST RECEIVED THE LARGEST LINE OF Top Buggies, Phzetons, Road CARTS AND SPRING WAGON IN THE COUNTY. THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTED STOCK OF 3 Hardware, Groceries, Stoves AND QUEENSWARE IN SOUTHWEST MO. Bennett, Wheeler Mercantile Co, EMERY BLOCK, BUTLER, MO. NEW FIRM? NEW GOODS? Grange store consisting of GROCERIES & DRY GOODS, I desire to say to my many friends that I have re- plenished the stock and fitted up the store room in shape and I would be glad to have all my old friends call and see me. PRODUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED]| I will guarantee my prices on goods to be as iow as any storelin the city. Call and see me. T. 1. PETTys. ,