The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 13, 1892, Page 4

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$e ae an BUTLER WEEKL Y TIMES J. D. ALLEN Eprror. }. D. Atten & Co., Ptoprietors. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Weexry Times, published every | Wednesday, will be sent to any address | ade year, postage paid, for $1.25. SS Moberly, Mo., has organized Hill club of fifty members. a Kansas sticks to the capital P. It was Plumb and Peffer. is Peffer and Perkins. a refused a new HW be Dr. Graves trial at Denver and his case wi taken to the supreme court was H. Martin Williams is for Dalion for governor and the Sedalia Ga- vette is against him. Hose and boss. Adjutant General Roberts wants the governor to put the troubled dis trict under old Kansas martial law Poor Congressman Bland, chairman of * ae the house committee on coinage, in | troduced a bill for the free of silver on Monday. coinige What's the matter with poor old} The Globe Democrat is not making much note of the law- less element now ruling the south west portion of that state. Kansas now? If the murders, assassinations and riots now occurring in Kansas, were in Missouri instead, ein paper in the country would be waving the bldody shirt. Mr. Breckinridge of Kentucky, iuas offered in the housea resolution declaring the retaliation section of the McKinley bill unconstitutional, and extending reciprocity to all na tions which desire it. In the year just closed Missouri reduced its bonded debt by the can cellation of $4,450,000 of 34 bonds. It did this too without increasing its tax levy, and it enters upon the new year with a cash balance in the treas- ury of $397,455.40. We have one supreme consolation iu the loss of our state institution of learning, the stuffed elephant was saved. It was a great feat to save this scientific model even at the expense of library. ——————EE John Sherman has the grip. We mean on the republican party of Ohio. In 1899, when the term for which he has just been elected closes he will have been forty-four years in national office. Mr. Sherman is now a very old man andthe probabilities are he will die in the harness. The Rev. Dr. Yeaman is out for the governorship as a “grand old Jeifersonian Democrat.” This in- formotion is important as showing the Doctor's present status. In these days of farmers’ alliances and sub-treasury schemes a Missouri politician cannot be too careful in putting himself on record.—Kansas City Star. There is a one legged ex-confed- erate down in Pulaski county, who is making an active canvass for rail- road commissioner, aud the indica- tions are that be will stump along on his crutches at alively rate. His name is Ed. G. Williams and he bas held about every office in the gift of the people of Pulaski and is at pres- ent county clerk. He is the only candidate for state office from Bland’s congressional district, and the papers from south central Missouri | are giving him a united support. Mr. Simpson of Kansas, introduc <d a resolution calling for an inves tigation of the agricultural depart ment in connection with crop reports, alleging that department was made the harbor of political employees and that crop reports were made to boards of trade and market wreck- ets and operators before they were conveyed to the knowledge of toil ing husbandmen. Kansas City is rejoicing over the! building of three mammoth elevators | this season, the work on the custom house, ig making in securing the deraocrat- ic national convention. The people | of this section of the country are proud of the great and growing city at the mouth ef the Kaw, and glory in her success. The larger Kansas | City gets the better the markets for! this section of the state. new Now it! every republi-| and the strides she} ‘Seabees Kansas is having a ; slight touch of the civilwar. Down, in Seward county last week a plot The Kansas City, Nevada & Ft. Smith | was niade to assassinate the circuit | | Judge, Botkin. The plot was ex | | posed to Judge Botkin and sheriff! Dunn and posse reconncitered the. |place where the Judge was to be! | waylaid and in the skirmish that fol- lowed the sheriff was killed and his| deputies routed. The | mediately sent malitia to the scene governor im and everything is quiet for the time being. The trouble has a political origin. Judge Botkin is 2 republi- can and those who have sworn to ‘assassinate him belong to the far- imers alliance. Sam Wood, the leader of the alliance party Hed 1 | Brennon, believed by the alliance people that Judge Botkin instigated the killing. There is doubt that Judge Botkin will sassinated if he was ki ay and it is no be ay- persists in Lis de- | hold as itis said termination to district, levery county have t: | jouth to kill him. court in th that in | Promise and Fulfilment. | “Now what we want to do is to zo| }on and prosper.” —Major McKinley | jat the banquet of the American Pro- | tective, Tariff League, New York. | April 29, 1991. “Business failures in the United) States in 1591 numbered, 12,394, or | j16 per cent. more than in 1890.°—| Bradstreet’s. January 2, 1892 | formers that the adoption of a tariff! for revenue only will usher in a political millennium yw of liself bring j steady and universal business pros- perity. would li they claim is hten the burdens of taxa- |} tion, make a fairer distribution of | those burdeus, release from taxation the materials of indi and there-| by increase the wages of labor and the opportunities of employment; and that it would merce, home and foreign, thus open ing, as well in our own as in foreign countries, stry, stimulate com- for the products of labor and especially for the disposition of that surplus that to day tinds but a pecarious and uot larger markets always a paying demand Scarcely less important is to dis- the solve the partnership between moueyed power of the country anc the goverument, with ail the demor- alization in and business that imevitably grows out of it. These accomplished, have thrown open to all of our peo ple the field thrift and enterprise polities reforms we fairest for industry, yet offered in human history, where every individ- ual can feel that he will enjoy for himself the fruits of his own labor and prudence, and that his success in business life will be ae commensurate as human laws can! make it with what he really deserves | But no laws can guarantee a coun try its individual against the manifold evils nearly or inhabitante that flow | from their own errors aud ignorance or from forces that oceasionally im- pair their prosperity, without being under the control or within the range | ef their own foresight Not so with protection. It never! hesitates to promise all the material | or other blessings that men are eager to secure, and especially to} secure them without paying the price for them, by isere operation | justified | * of statutory laws. Weare j te \2 putting their promises and per- |, formances side by side, and Major | McKinley furnishes us many oppor tunities for this. Here another: doing is | “I beg to say in passing that the | rates given on wool and woelens are assurdly protective. They will help every farmer in the country who owns sheep, and will enable manu compete with their foreign rivals.”— | His speech in the House September | 27, 1890, on the conference repo: ty upon his bill. “Manufacturers are not buying ‘heavily unless large concessions | made in their favor. The year clos ed with prices on a much lower basis | ‘than in 1890."—Bradstreet’s Jan-| iSt. Louis Republic. | Immediately after Ed. | s wards of New York refused to join the republic Senator cans in preyenting the oz ganization of the senate, republican papers announced that their party | | Was too pure to engage in filbuster- | jing tactics.—K. C. Times. eral Manager Gentry of the i City, Nevada and Ft. gave an excursion yesterday to busi- jerators of the new It is never pretended by tariff ie-|¢ | cheaper than the article that it) j Stone to head o: facturers of woolen goods to better | ti uary 2, 1892, on wool.—W. L. W. i nit COAL FIELDS OF RATES. Gives an Excursion. | President E. L. Martin and Gen-' Kansas! Smith railroad | ness two men and city officials of the Kansas Citys to the new coal fields of Bates county, Missouri, uated at Hume, the southern termi- uus ef the Martin A special train carrying the excursiouists,who | nurubered about forty, urban belt sit- road. left the sub- line depot at 9:50 in the evening. Amoug the excursionists were Mayor Hannan and several! dermen of Kansas City, Ke dermen Danbam and Muelschuster. of Kansas City, Mo. There were al- of vad cox! operators in the party. Yhe coal fields of Hume wer ally opened yesterday ticials of the Marti: the eyent by giving The mines already n., Al £6 w number railri men and e form and the of road celebrated ab eXcursiou opened at this point are situated close to the rail- A thirty inch vein of coal hac been struck within thirty an forty The op- say they road. feet of the earth's surface mines are prepared to ship 100 car loads of coal a day to Kansas City. The ' present rate on coal from the new mines tu this point is T0cts per tou re mine operators say this rate wil] nuble aking manaing them to sell coal for purposes in steam Kansas City | now costs. The Vunsas City, Nevada and Fort Smith road taps u rieh coal basin | 1 pany expect todoa linge |asiness fro: the Mure fields. | The caesionists yesterday were well} ) used with the advantages that | « the } inine pos ss fors wt ing th: stron of cheaper fuel for! Kancis C ity, und while their special | train was returning to this city they | | d | the management of the railroad for | adopt. resolutions commending | their energy in developing this source of fuel supply.—K. C. Times Jan. 12 Real Merit Is th» characteristic of Hood's Sar- | sapatiila, and it is manifested every day in the remarkable cures this medicine uccomphshes. Druggist say: When we sell a bottle of Hood's Sursaparilla tow new customer we | aresure to see him baek ina few, weeks after more—proving that the| good results from a trial warrant | continuing its use. This positive merit Hood's Sarsapariila possesses by reason of the peculiar combina- tion. Properiioa and process used | iu its preparation aud by whieb all | the remedial vz f the ingred:ents used is retuiredt Hood's “Sureup a rillais thus peculiar to itself and | absolutely unequalled in its power | asa bluod purifier, and 4 tome | for ny up the weak and weary | and herve streng ee. es Nevada is und ambitious. desirous of furnishing the candidate | ou both the repubi it w Judge Bur-| for governor b and democratic tickets ats | Tested ton the other. Colonel Stone is a jgood demverat, but Judge Burton isn't. Ou the contra heis x re-|¢, publican of such rigid procilivities | that wheu he walks ne bends slight- jly iu the back. too, which aloue is sufficient to ban- dicap lim in his race. gubernatorial candidate A republican | with such | an off colored hirsute growth | wouldn't carry Cedar county. Note how candidate for congress Lewis | fared when the farmers of the twelfth district got a chance at ers.—K C. Times. his whish- G.H, Thayer, of Bourbon, Both myselt and wife owe on cure. The Rev, Ind, says. our ae to Shilc h’s s consump Sold a by 4.5. made miserable by indiges- constipation, dizziness, loss of low skin? Shitoh's Vitaliz- er is a positive Sold by H.L. Tucker. cure, you cough when Shi ats you reliet. | , FOC and 31 1L.| Shiioh’* trh nedv—a_ positive cure tor catarrh, diptheria and canker- mo H.L. Tucker. »'’ a lasting and tragrant e@2saidsocents. Sold ker. So! A nasal injector tr: each bottle i jot Shiloh’s catarrh remedy. Price 50} cents. Sold by H. L. Tucker. as | others interested in the estate of L. F. | of February, He has red whiskers |°"" oa hand will pro-| for y one who FIG SrauP CO. ANCISCO, © NE W yor, NY. OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF THLE ‘Ss. M, Doyles eens House | OURCES discounts undoubter oe good on personal or collateral se euri 35,603 10 Low s undoubtedly fou 00 | 3 28 cash market pric Real estate at present cash market value. Furniture and fixtures, 410 30 | Due from other banks, good on sight draft Checks and other c 3B ational ah items Bank notes, legal tender States notes and gold and tes $8.3 LIABILITIES k paid in n hand ttodraft at sight by hers ect to draft at eight by ad others et to draft at given Deposits su banks and ! Deposits su ividuals sits sub: le payable iy and bills re-discounted Total -85,3y 49 STATE OF MISSOURI, / County of Bates a We M. Doyle and — two of the part- ners in or owners of said banking business, and each ot us do selemnly swear that the j above statement is true to the best of oar knowledge and belief SoM DOYLE Subscribed and sworn to before me, th day of January, A ninety-two bth D. eighteen hundred and Witness my hand and notarial seal che date last aforesaid, Com missioned and qualified for a terin expiring February 2ist, 189%. JAMES L. COUK, Notary Public. exat} -_)———— um Notice of Final Settlement Notice is hereby given to all creditors and Pierce leceased, thatI,J S Pierce administrator of aid estate intend to make final settlement hereof, at the next term of the probate court, in Bates county, souri, to be held at Butler, Me saz J.S. Bates county state of Mis- on the sth day PIERCE, Trustee Netice of Final given to all in the estate of d, thatI, J. W. Ennis gdii Settl me ty tor of said estate intend to make final se | ment thereof at the next term of the E 6 , State + onthe N-dt —GO TO—— G. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR TO— |F. BERNHARDT & CO. —FOR— ‘PURE DRUCS MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS AND NINE CIGARS,)| ARTISTS MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded | A liberal Patronage of the pablic is solicited. Do not accept any | 530 00 The Garland is . the Rest. OTHERS. PETERS It is made of the best Irv EXCELLES ALL matenial in the market; 1. it has the heaviest steel { ap jacket: it bas ae extra . heavy fire pot; it has an {in ash pap; it has cold air { fluestit has an automat t fro ic damper, it is more \ hamdsomely ornament ed than any oth r, it ¥ has the heaviest nickle f ae thimmings, it wil nig weigh more than any other of the same size, | vite t will keep fire longer, a it willtake less fuel, it bog will last longer. i Ae aheaka ts It is Guaranteed to give beticr satisfaction than any other heating stove on the market. We handle a full line of ho se\ PEORIA WOOD HEATING STOVE | And the Celebrated sa: ne \CHARTER OAK COOK STOVE, With the wouderful wire gauze oven door. Ki eh \HARDWARE, CROCERIES, TINWARE ; GLASSWARE AND QUEENSWARE. ou | e \ Qiu : ENGI, WHEEIET MEICANIIE UO | u b 53 ' BUTT IR, MO. . : a vi | re 8 i y —_——_HAs—— ti fi a at ; b Ww eh h “PO LOAN ON 7 , a th eu SLATE . wad Call and see him and take mh Advantage of his Cheap Rat vantage oF nis Cap hates. — : Cut this ont and bring it along and get his best rates. A | 1A RIV y J J. M. CATTERLIN. : De. C. MIZE, Novany Posie. G. W. CLARDY} k MIZ. ‘i & CLAIRDYDY, : Real Estat le, insurance and Loan A ents, i a | Do a general REAL ESTATE and exchange business. Represent a line of the best a | ; |FIRE & TORNADO INSURANCE COMPANIES i Are corresponiente for ¢ BEST u OAN COMPANIES in existance, & Our rat t ill rent, manage pro- s sas Ootiecsioneandecaitiees prompt- 4 | nds to almost every state in the un- i ¢ | t your property on our LiS‘f if ly to Oure you desi re eto SEL L sonabie, no sale no commission. Buyers will find our Office Headquarters for Sale of Property in Bates Co | ££ | And will take picasure in sh ing we have on our books. We can j | now be found in our new a atters | | Rooms 6 and 7 OVER FARMERS BANK, BUTLER, MO. i ; | 4 MIZE & CLARDY. i) ——= =a { ‘ F t t SOUTHWEST CORNER SQUARE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Whiskies, Wines, Liquors, & Cigars We buy our whiskies direct from Distilleries and can make prices as low by the Gallon as Kansas City JUG and KEGTR ADE A SPECIALTY | Nothing but the best brands of Whiskies, Wines, Brandeys and Gins handled. Anheuser-Busch celebrated BUDWEISER BEER in Butler and on tap. Call and see us. Opera House Saloon. | Southwest Corner Square, Butler, Mo.

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