The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 10, 1892, Page 7

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ORRECT Mirsouri Pacific Time Table Arvival and departure ot ‘passenger trains at Butler Station. | {NortH Bounp] Passenger, - - 425% a. m. | Passenger, : - 3:5¢ p.m. Passenge”, od - g:25 p.m. Local t ht - + 10:05 a.m. | SoutH Bounp | Passenger, - - 7:04 4 m. | rassenger, - - 728 pm. | Passen . - - 6 p.m, | Local Freight 9-1:37 p.m. BATES COUNTY BUTLER, MO. New Goods. HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS CUTLERY AND CUNS. | : : |Our buyers are now in the market and our Warehouses will soon be stocked with \Farm Machinery, we will have an extra good line of Plows, Cultivators, Harrows, |Corn Planters, Farm and Spring Wagens, Top Buggies, Barbwire Pumps, &c. R. R. DEACON. SONS & CO. FOR MRS. KINGSLEY National Bank, is. conn ca tenes « ts sion in the Southern Hotel Case. | | Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 2-—A F ” jcase which will certainly prove of jinterests to every hotel and board IN BATES COUNTY. >, 000 OF CAPITAL, - SURPLUS, - - $25,000 OF President. HON. J. Bb. NEWB Vic EC.CLARK - DR. -Pres. vier F. M. FULKERSON, DICONTIST, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Lawyers. rT. 8.8 AS: SILVERS & SILVERS, Attorney-at-Law. Will practice in the courts of | and adjoining countiet, the Court ot ILVERS. J vrs Appeals, Supreme Court at City and in the Federal Courts. eA,Office over Farmers Bank; door from head of vith ay. D*: ARMOND & st TH. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in Bates counties. ser Ontice over Bates Co Nat'l Bank. and & GRAVES, DARKINS( ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over down’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, , HOMOBUOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All answered atoflice day or night. Lans call: Specialattention given to temale dis- tases. AW C. BOULWARE, Surgeon. Butler, Mo. en aspecialtv. J.T, WALLS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Physician Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart's Store. Residence on Ha é vannah street norrh of Pine. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. An ample supply of Bucggies, Carriage, ' | Phaetons, Drummer &c. I —" yr bles in this section of the state. Fimstr Crass Ries when in the city will find this barn the most convenient in town. POTTER BROS. KATE FIELD’S | | TH LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK) 222" F. J. TYGARD pies Corner Square, Dr. Baes Jetterson third adjoining and Office north side square, Diseasesof women and chil- Potter Bros. This is one of the best equipped Sta- FersitHep. on the ae aE | What they determined to | tog-house proprietor was decided in division No. 2 of the court this morning by | Judge Thomas. July 29, Isvl, L. A. Kingsley registered a Southern Ho ) |was assigned a room aul after rm dix if i the payment of boa ining at the hotel two days seut sd asked 1 l that it was customiuy r the manager | was informe | for | guests to pay weekly. Sue stated that she was expecting ad it would be i | mittance, |ient to pay her bill before }ration of two weeks. ‘Lis was sat isfactory to the manager and she | J jremained. At the expiration of two j weeks notified the manager that the jremittance had not arrived, but si expected it the next dey A day | two later, still failing to pay the bill, she was excluded from the room. It appears that she was a peute and had material worth trunk, all of which were ret the hotel, and then the acreated for obtainiug board uw: false pretence and by fraud raigued in the St. Louis ¢ court, convicted jul for ten days. A construction of the constitution being cise was brought direct to preme court, and, after reviewing the evidence and passing upon the constitutionality of which the was Judge Thomas reverses tle of the St. Louis criminal discharges the that she was convicted law and the evidence. The proceedings in this case on s|the part of the hotel were based on r law enacted by the general assem- bly of 1891, and generally known as the hotel dead-beat law. — This makes it a misdemeanor to board and lodging by meaus of any tricks, by deception or false repre- sentation, with intent to cheat or de- fraud. The law create artificial presumptiens of guilt,” the court says. “It is uniform in its ap- .| plication, operating upen all alike who came within its provisions. Af- ter passing upon several points rais- ed, the court holds that the constitutional, aud then lays down some rules touching the legal mean- ing of false pretenses, fraud, ete. The court says: “Evidence of the crime of obtaining mouey or proper ty by false pretences is that the falser woman was ider aud ar \ nal the su the law under womnn convieted, finding court and prisoner, holding against the law obtain “does not act is pretence should be a past event or of a fact having a present existence and not of something to happen in the future. t must the false pretence or epresen tation be ofa past event er of an existing fact, but the board must be obtained by means of it.” Mrs. Kingsley, when seen by 2 Republic representative last | was decidedly noncommittal her intentions in view of about At any hour, day or night the most reasonable terms. Farmers | supreme court decision. was desiring t o put up their horses pleased, of course. She confessed that she had just been in censulta tion with her lawyers, Boyle. & McKeighan, and E. W. b Adams a she — a s vet med the ne yde NY WASHINGTON: cision raced 1 suit ) against the ‘ $2.00 a Year; 5 cents a Copy. i It is the brightest Weekly in A: ae - Miles’ Nerve & Liver Fiils. F Send Fifty Cents to 39 Corcoran Building, Washingtor. D. ¢ " you will get it every week f months. If you send before cember 15 you will receive i j tion a fine lithograph of ‘KATE FIELD, 25 s er‘s Drug ‘Who Own the Taxing sul : to the j ome! rer-/ 4} ae “tted to the judgment aud ver- | ti. proteeted interests by being tion of ull : é = | So made Consul to Birmingham unde | The census schedule gives not the present administration. He said: louly the nbor engaged in the sep- Vhere the workingmen are organs | and sentenced to} involved, the | There is and labor the import atic Power in has The tariff tax i mn of the product that what the he capitalist, not ilways bee: This Country. trade in son I attempted in my last paper, to like a sion to tuis important question competes wi : 3 employer, arive at something conclue = 5 not the loborer : ‘ the workingzmen, whois the direct sults therein reached are ¢ } ary € Fi is approximately corr they w = 5 Par At eeives the nple pay further study aod further at F - ae i it bestows How to get to uniold their fiat meaniug as : <i tof Lis pocket and i Mn ve e saw that. a ation of what cording to the eare‘a estig 5 & those ot Mr. Edwiird Athinsou, using the for wh oy Peenelecd census of 1580 sence of 1ore recent figures, the } of the United States ¢ y i as 17.400,90 that in their relation tu the tariff employment w -Ommmittee On ud Capital” by resident of tributed aged = in rs which in som act rte 1 200,000; nu ing our surplus product ricultural, which depend on a foreign market f ous Rivocate 1.650,000; and lastly. oe t lirect influences froin th not in L856 being sent intoCo’, | sc GO0.000. i 1, CON. | Morrisot lisivict as the emmusary This ification, let mes is of Pittsburg mouopolists Not a mere guess, nor is it reached at of that eminent tar- id that he been rew urded for his various services to pass the de‘c uuy difficult or mysterious meth- od of computation, but by processes iff reformer has industries. bat the value of the annual product in these latter, When four agricultaral export as! compared with our total agricultural heavily taxed to make product we can easily ascertain the the rate occepations and rstand that and understand what ized and unde is a tariff, they suould we know the receive, they do command proper wages!” Although the people are their wager, | workman those cannot get number of laborers employed in wages out of the pockets of the em producing that export as compared ployers, unless (1) they are organ- with the number required to pro- | iz 4d, and (2) understand that there; uch our total product. is a tariff, and (3) understand what} It thus appears that the number they should receive. Of the manu-| of laborers dependent for their sup- facturers he go.s on ty say: HUIS majority of them, where they have gu markets is one-third workmen in their employ, the tariff ithe number fully or partially or avything else will make but very | “protected” by the tariff. or in the | little difference as to the wages they proportion of 16 to 12. pay: they will pay very little above the wages paid abroad.” — Signifi-| cautly, testifies that the} steel works, among the most heavily | protected of all our industries, have | been steadily substituting foreign | labor, imported or otherwise, Hun-' garians, Poles, Ital Bohemians, | at lower wages for American unskill- | ed labor, and machinery for Ameri- | ean skilled labor. port on the sale of their product in more t Dropping now for a moment, in the interest of brevity and clearness, too, he the millions, and treating the above figures as if they were 12, 15 and 14+, respectively, it further appears that for the purpose of “protecting” 12 American laborers them wages at the current the country we impose heavy taxes upon 146 other Ameri- can laborers, and in addition seek to deprive 16 more American laborers —who are likewise heavily taxed— advocate of protection, and who has | of the only market they can have for le hi the products of their labor. made himself so serviceable to the| te th < aaa protectionists that they select him| aby way vhich 2 e ere apy way” OF sy ae 2© for their secret missions and reward | - making of good wages for 12 men Han eitlibther’ mea retan nto ices will draw after it good wages for BS : i 4 that the tariff goes di ly the others, or any device by which pockets of ne oe a acine yee 5 ais si iu ane) — ra ie Sic 1 a that his workingmen get their share | WES eS SOE ee ear enn the | of it when and as they can. And wages or otherwise inure to the ben- Mir Sarott is entirele wicket What ene of the 16 or 146? And by what he learned by his own experience as right does the man or the party that Rilahor ler necrétary obart J and securing © — market rates in Here then, is the blunt admission | of a leading workingman, whom it! is 00 injustice to call a professional | leader favors such taxation arrogate to — , : ees i . se | Walker hadal eady well stated in himself or itself the claim of protee- his report accompanying the tariff ting eecay labor Are h the bill of 1846. 16 and the 146 American laborers en- eas : A protective tariff is a questio titled to protection as wellasthe 12? i a : regarding the enhancement of ra Coming back now to the true fig- profits of capital. That is its object ures, we may addthat if proteetion : : and not to augment the wages of took from the 16,200,000 only !yabor, which would re: duce those . abor, vic duce (tnuos enough togpay to the 1,200,000 the prefits difference between their wages and the wages of the foreign laborers eng When, the efore, we try to follow up the taxes which the tanff exacts us to their direct benefici same number of red in making ike not the great mass so Ss receives them a l 0 employes 3 ‘ tected industries, but the wair To be sure fthese latter alone; not } s and ths ers ‘ egies rol por rw prote fe cie Fr = employers are I | they num i body of to com- |. ling, {and Rev. Flummer of Calhoun. cannot state with exactness. I haz- arded the guess that they might be| one-tenth the number of their em-| ployes, viz. 120,000. But Suppose 200,000 or more, we discovered the entire sAmerican workingmen™ | who own our taxing power and through the help of Major McKin-} others tax the American | their by the | ber have at last ley and efit a people fer rule of their cupidity. It as said} that on cue occasion three tailors of by resented a petition to parhiar “We, the peo ple of England They were merely | prototypes of the protect make their demand of cor lonists who gress in 1 labor. find it hard to be! the name of f we reve sO sina practically rule : ercise the prerog what shall we say wl nen r Mchintey r t they who the score thousand protected capita “serve the America’ hile we wh > sixty and vers “serve the W . in Republic Lady in Butler er day that the throat 1 as it ntly other ad no etfect whatever. and convince you of its will give you a sam- ac c and $1 stopped her ce nedies this rge size Death of Rev. if M. Kelle yat t Windsor Rey. J. M. Kelley who died at his home in Windsor on Sunday morn- was buried in Laurel Oak ceme-} yesterday afternoon. The took place at the M. E.) chureh, South, and was conducted by Rev. Hogan, assisted by Rev. | tery funeral ;Clenny, the pastor of the chureb, Rev. uly friend and had known the deecased intimately for a id had with him frequently as to Hogan was an e number of ye conversed his early life, and his very brief biography of the brief history of the struggles of pionecr Methodist preachers. The large edifice was filled with | his friends and neighbors, attestirg their high regard for the deceasi d. A large concourse followed the re} deceased largely a mains to the cemetery where they were laid to rest. He 79th year. A suitable tribute will be publishe {ed.—Clinton Democrat. The Secret hei 1. 1.2 Tucker the secret of succe Theretore he persists ink ,est line of pertu meries, to cosmetics, drugs aud cher was in his the | | that} | Bank ot Harrisonville. jtv. Twenty years experience. market. He especially sons who have palpatatio ort breath weak or hurgry spells, pain in side or shoulder, oppression, nightmar ough, smothering, diopsy or ease totry Dr. iles’ Heart Cure, betor nvites all per- it is too late. 1e largest sale of eny sin Fine book of testiron Miles HeStOTaLtve ed tor sleepl and it contains no o; Hepler’s Hanging. Lamar, Mo., Feb. nvened here y this morning Jud; his charge to the g 2.—Cireuit y, and ton court ¢£ and was an exceeding Strattou laid particular stress upon} the action of a of Barton}, county citizens in hanging the derer, Hep number mur! stiucted the: » ana i jury to spare uo pains in ferreting out the gu parties aud bringing them to justice. very, the man who killed y ar Liber- cone conclusions gave | jury. It} le one. Judge cee Pears’ Soap “Beauty is but skin- deep” was) probably meant to disparage beau- ty. Instead it tells how easy that beauty is to attain. “There is no beauty like the beauty of health Was also meant to dispar- age. Instead it encour ages beauty. Pears Soap is. the means of health to the skin, and so to beth these sorts of beauty. All sorts of it, especially all sorts of people us sev eneenececceccosrececresesnesscess: DOCTOR for Coughs, Colds and Consumption, Is beyond: question the greatest of all modern remedies. ¢ int willstopa Cough Inone night. It will chec! saColdinaday. It will prevent Croup, reliev: Asthma, and CURE Consumption If taken i Stime. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE WHOOPING COUGH may save their ! You! Ui GIST FOR IT. IT TASTES GOOD eenecceusccssconsccoscccsssescccccs: H L Tucker, Agent John Atkison’s Pension Agency. Over Dr Eyeringham’s store rooms West Side - Buter, Mo. Ww. A- ROSE, LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEER. Will do business in Bates, adjoining counties. risonyille, Mo. Reterence.—First Cass and Address me at Har- Nationa! Bank and 4 tt AUCTIONEER, I will cry sales in any part of the coun- Char asonable. Satisfaction all on or address D. V. BROWN, 52-3m But'er, Mo. POULTRY & E66S, ‘unequaied New | iake a call for all your poultry at the very highest market price in “cash. Poultry and liggs, iken in any quantity and cash paid ra same. Farmers we want your goods and are willing to pay for them. Bring on ar POULTRY & EcCcS And get the cash. He A. L. McBRIDE & Hanibal Poultry Co. JAMES SMITH. uarters at co crn en NT NT

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