The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 17, 1892, Page 6

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| Farm Implements, Western Cultivators, And the greatest Riding Plow on earth the I 1 i} A full and complete line of the best makes just received. Such as | BARLOW AND JIM DANDY i} | il CORN PLANTERS, } PLYING DUTCHMAN, Also a full line of Walking Plows and Harrows Buggies, Spring Wagons, and Road Carts, Mitchell and Turnbull Farm Wagons, Grass Seeds, &c SHIRLEY CHILDS. Call and see me. Sab-Treasury Cheep Money Plan market price of the produce, would, | Mew York Century Magazine jin nearly all cases, be appointed The sub-treasury scheme of the {through political influence, whieb is farmer's alliance is in many respects | tantamount to saying they wou! 1 | the most extreme form in which the have little expert knowledge of the | cheap money delusion in this couu- duties they were to perform. These try has manifested itself. It is so | men would have absolute power to j extreme, in fact, that many of the lecide upon the sums of which the alliance leaders have refused from government was to advance eighty | the outset to give it their approval, per cent. There are, fc and others of them whe at firet eleven full grades of cotton, and) viewed it with favor, after examina | tbout as many half grades, and there tion and discussion of its provisions “Te about thirty grades of wheat have withdrawn their approval. At The ma tirstit made great headway in the grade but the price as it is fixed in| y example, | ager must not only name the! if south, but earnest, intelligent and the markets of the world at the time. | i courageous exposure of its dange: If he were an honest man and fairly | | ous fallacies by leading politicians capable, the opportunities for serious and newspapers have so far educated blunders would be very great. [f the people upon the economic prin | He were a dishonest, or ignorant, of ciples involved that it has been los- prejudiced or malicious man, eau ing ground perceptibly during the @uy one estimate the evil aud injus | past year. A verituble campaign of tice of which he might be cipable? | education has been made in several He could overrate the produes | southern states, with this scheme ns |@f all his) politieal aud personal | the text of public discussion, and | friends, and underrate that of all his the beneficial results afford a strik- | enemies or rivals, and there would ing illustration of the high patriotic | be uo appeal from his decisions. | service of courage and conviction in| The impossibility of -having a just politics and journalism. and uniform basis for the eighty per | The sub-treasury scheme made its | cent advance in all warehouses, or appearance in the fifty-first congress even oue of them would from the when a bill embodying its principles | Outset throw fatal doubt upon the was introduced in both houses, hav- | Value both of the notes and of the ing been prepared by the national | certificates of deposit, giving them legislative committee of the farmers }at once a depricated and uncertain alliance Briefly summed up, it standard. | provided for the apprepriation by Phe farmers who are mislead into the government of $50,000,009 to favoring the scheme think they be used for the erection of ware. , Would receive at once a loan of eigh- | houses in various parts of the coun | ty per cent of the full value of their | try for the storage of cotton, wheat, crop at only one per cent interest, oats, corn and tobacco Every coun but they would pay much moze than ty which had annual production of that. The warehousing, insurance | these staples exceeling $500,000 in and other expenses for cotton, for! | gross value was to be entitled tox exw warehouse. A petition was to ba | and uit sent to the secretary of the treasury | would have to be paidto the govern: | asking tor its establishment, accom- ment, and would bring the interest | iq panied by the title of a suitable site up to nine or ten per cent. On wheat | > usualy between e per cent of its value to be given to the government. The { other produ there would 1 < whi a secretary of the treasury was to ap. be similar expenses, which would point a manager, who should give ruse the interest on deposits of bond for the faithful performance them to nearly or quite the same of his duties, aud should receive a Limits The rate of interest, there-| salary of not less than $1000 and of fore, is not low enough to be bene- not more than $2500, proportionate | ticial to farmers wuo hope by this i / | | to the business done. Any owner) means to pay off vxisis*it i H ‘ debts at of cotton, wheat, corn, oats er legal rates of interest) What a farm- baceo might take his crop to the ef W ould reeeive would be a loan for nearest warehouse, deposit it. and | one year from the government at the nt of sum receive in return eighty per cent of | rate of nine or ten per ae to four of the total its market value in treasury notes, | &moun the manager to decide what the mar- | value of his crep paid him in money ket value should be. These treas- of uncertain value. For the remain ury notes were to be specially issued | ing fifth he would receive a certifi lor this purpose by the secretary,no | cate whose value would depend en- noteto be less than $1 nor more terely upon what he got for it in than $1000, to be legal tender for! epen market. No buyer would ever all public and private debts, and | offer him the full price as fixed by good as part of the lawful reserve of | the warehouse manager, for there national banks. The manager was would be too many uncertainties to giye a recept for every deposit of | about the crop’s redemption to make produce, showing its amount, grade, the certiticate a safe investment for or quality, value at date of deposit, | anybody. They could only be ue and amount advanced upon it, with | gotiated at a heavy discount at best rate of interest one per cent per an- and in many instances would scarce num and with insurance, weighing, ly be negotiable at all. warehousing, classing and other) If warehouses were established i charges deducted. These reeeipts there would be a tendency among A] were to be negotiable by indorse all farmers seeking an immediate ment. Produce deposited might be market to put their produce into 4 redeemed at any time by a return of them. One of the advocates of the i the recept, and money advanced on schewe estimated before a commit- i interest, and the payment of all tee of the senate that the deposits i warehousing charges. The money would beso large as to require an i returned was to be destreyed vy the | addition of one thousand million dol i secretary of the treasury. If there lars to the currency in January and " were no redemption of a deposit February of each year. Tuis flood of a within twelve months, a sale was to eney. all of which was based up 4 be ordered for the reimbursement of on uncertain and varying bases of { the government. of vatuation, would be accompanied i Let us see how this would work , by another flood of certificates of i in practice. The warehouse manas| deposit. The government would t " gers, who are to decide upen the ‘turn out these notes and certificates, i i this pr sold for what it would bring. {produce upon the market at one jown folly. From the nature of the and their receivers would at once; Mr. Hall’s Note of Warning. put them ia circulation. Their value} Hubbard, Randolph C would depend entirely upon the pop- Feb. 1, 1892.—To the Members of ular estimate which should be made the Farmei’s and Laborers Union of their purchasing power. The fact of Missouri, and the Farmer's Alli- that the notes had been declared & ance of the United States: legal tender would not adda parti | Broruexs:—Be on your guard. Do cle to their value The people! not allow yourselves to be e& would make their own estimate of ted, co i the prospect fer the fulfilment of litiealy. amit- ised or entangled po- the promise upon which they ae, Ti. based, and that estimate would fix their value. meeting to be held in St Louis, Mo.. on the 22nd day of this Louth, under the so called au mise to be fully kept? If What would be the prospect for prices weut down after the deposit, the produce woul be left the very end cof the yeu nor to commit or bind us by recom- mendation cr otherwise to apy po effect of throwiug a great mass of | 3,5, attempt tod ity and violative time would be to lower still the price | of every principle of our order. and the result wou'd be a great loss I watt Fi Ss aaa ate with you fur- tothe government which must be ther after we see the result of th:t made good by taxation AS the | nectine, Yours fraternelly, farmers of the couuiry pay about U.S. Harr. half of the taxes, they would thus Papers fricudly to ul order, have to pay half the cost of their please copy. case a falling off in value would be almost inevitable, for speculators and purchasers would be mterested M ississipp: Pension ppropriation, lu Wait thu g fora forced sz certain of buying at a lower Jachson, Miss.. February 8.—The In case there general rise after deposit the chi would be that the farmers : price. jould bea 34.200 a year for pensious. is will give those .owon the rol!s present apprepii- 30,000. Phe Inll pre- need of profiting by it would not b+ 2eV #plece ua position to do so, for the poores | #Ueu is ouly | ones would have parted wath their | Veles that all indigent confederate rs. Sailors and servants, and 1 alsu -'d their deposit tickets at jbe entitled to $50 per year, unless notes 23 soon as received in pay ment of their debts, aud would have! the indigent widows of such, sl the i st opportunity. Whatever rise the nun at this vate exceeds the there wuight be, therefore, would go ny in which event the , would go| to the a fwautaye of the speculators | amount shall be pro rated between jin ce, Licates. jthem. It is estimated that the in As or che depreciated value of digent clause will put at least 5,600 the n tes issued in such volume, {02 the rolls ina few years, compar- there ¢ no doubt upon that |¢) with the 1,280 now ou it. If this poiat. it would be fiat money of a/ turns out true.the amouut that each more worthless kind than any which! Will receive will be about $12 apiec ion eommissioner, be more worthless than the Land Bank money of Rhode Isluud, be-) Croup, whooping cough and bronchi eaus+ that was based upon the jand| tis immediately retieved : }Cure Sold atif L LTucxer’s Prescrip- of the state. It would be more) tion drugstore worthless than that of John Law's! bank in France, for that was based | upou all the property of France. It, . would be more worthless than that | Will Not Medale- of the Argentine Republic, was based upon all the hinded prop | li ‘ a 3 {districting of the state. erty of the mation. In all these in 2 i stances the fiat monev was declared | ‘district said: “I shall leave every to be a legal teuder aud io be pay- | able for public and private debts. lee an lawfully belongs. T kave my views Tn wll of them it was issued for a aes ae é ou the matter, as have other men, terin Of years Bar iio ma cioua : nee at : jbut slid] neither return to Missouri deposit mouey is based up mothe | “ S tnor do anything elve to secure pare ing puthe arbi y Judgments Pies, : / | : , tienlar action by tha legislature. I jof an irrespousible body of political do pot believe i 1 : sbOestripgs or appoiute’s as tu the value of pro eosin ducts a year bence, and is io be de- a ‘ : No think that either party or publie stroyed at the end of th body would ever cousent to take it » payment of a debt erin payment for goods, and it} t its face valu |redistricting, but feel like leavirg at its ce ue Saude connned: ne . Rhode Is- | ture to dispose ef and eae ieabS land paper money Was, alisost en- MSS S terely to trumsaetions among its ! original holders. Te would enormous- ly inflate prices in the communities in which it circu i Land thus make | iis, NEGGaRED JOE See Jearer everything f g that the farmer) tion has changed the days of it would never be jhad to buy necting from May 24, 25 and 25 to j June sald have's ald have ! §pyinus. received ei here exsept at a dis eount aud cousequently effect im raisin, the price of the) yi. | products of the farmer, which Laye \to be sold in the markets of the | tg world Then, too, each period of udden and almost paralyzing cou- our state association officers forgot that the democratic national \traction, at the end of each year al! | tne 2ist day |the notes and certificates must be | destroyed. |newspaper men in this state may of June to nominate jthe next president, which maz | We have said nothing about the! prefer to attend to the state associa-| | Unconstitutional aspect of the prop-| tien. I: may be best to again change j osition for the government to go in- the date so as not to conflict with {to the business of louming mioney|that convention. Aud if they do, jand speculating in crops—a form of | not to set the date at June 6th, | paternalism the most extreme ever! the republicau national conv |proposed in this country. One of, will meet on that date —C \the advocates of the measure, when | Democrat. jasked at a hearing before a congres-| | Japan isa little disappointed iv {sioval committee why its authors | its railroads. The big island has neal not included wool, hops. rice | BOW 1,100 miles of railways, but the jand cheese with the other produce | 1"Y¢ semen have never proved to lepactied for deposit, made auswer | be profitable. that those staples were protected by ja high tariff, 75 per cent on wool ‘alone, and were not entitled to fur- \ther aid from the government. | >) | Whatever virtues may reside in the |; | protective system it 1s unfortunate ly true that to the arguments advan ced in defense of a high tariff we | owe the impression, so strong among many portions of the population, that | < it is the duty of the government to) It acts lil render assistance to all industries | ore een he Tu |and occupations whose members sre |}: is warranted to contaiz lin distress. morphine or dangerous dru as A National Event. s old will } but whether FS] Mo.,. ““Castoriais so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription H. A. Ancner, 3. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. known to me.” hows+ today passed a bill appropti- | yay the hieh Produces FIRM? NEW GOODS? Having purchased the stoek of goods NEW GRO has hitherto been issued. It would) The bill makes the auditor the pen- y Shiloh’s call and see me PORDUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED. Members of the Missouri deleg:-| I will guarantee my prices on goods to be as iow #s any tions in congress were interviewed | see a | store in tue city. Perl Menday at Washington, by a press! . : {correspondent, in regard to the re-| Congressman DeArmond of this! thine to the legislature where ‘t ew Discover y Accident [ai | monk+y wrench districts: nor do I} ) good. ever came from that sort of | \the entire matter with the legisla-/ ur letter at any Post (1 1, 22 and 23, at Excelsior The National Association | in Califormia on May 17, =: i} ) Was the cause of this change. Cer-| MUO Pot SAVIN + convention 1s to meet at Chicago on | MOD» SF ULOTZ SSOULIUT] id oq} S soagr puu “GTR OF 00 TIddVS AO ABT, UOTUAL OTGNOG “OW “Kyunop soyvg jo uour ssolIUA, 10000 £48 [[¥ JO serppug ‘£ayun09 siqy Ut opuar pur soy i" ‘soord “SD O08 PUY OLUO; qsaduoyo oy mods on “OUNE “SOUd KANVTUVAON OGLE ssouiny ATInq ors “ZF 07 OTF wos sso. -Kaoao dooy AOL for Infants and Children. Castoria cv Sour Stom Kills Wor »s Colic, Constipation, Diarrhoea, Eructation, gives sleep, and promotes di Without injurious medication, Tus Cestacr Coxpayy, 77 Murray Street, N.Y O. Welton Fancy Groceres, fur County ast Side Square. Butler, Mo- own as the Grange store consisting CEREIS & 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. Tr. ls. PHTTY Ss. © PART OF THE PERS TO INTRODUCE IT, kly desolved and permanently req with QUEEN'S ANTI. a derfall discc pounding asolution, a part w 1 tely removed. It is perfectly har: le any child can use it. Lay the hair ov: afew minutes and the hair disappears as if by magic Very ever attained such wonderful results th hair on their FACE, NECK and AKMS attest n No scientific Thousands who have If the growth be light, one application the heavy growth such ‘as the beard ne or more applications befc eugh all hair will be remoy pain or injury when applied or ever afterwarc who find an embarrassing growth of hair coming can rmless as water. Price of Q in safety mailing boxes postage paid by us, (securel is Anti-Hairine $1 Toney or stamps by letter with full fidentiai. T advertisement is honest and ¢ invite vou to deal with us and you will find ey mical Co.. 174 Race § insure its safe deliv We will pay $500. for any perches . ery bottle guaranteed, . Cincinnati, Ohio. ueen's Anti Hairine we will pre th each order.

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