The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 9, 1892, Page 6

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Farm Implements, A full and complete line of the best makes just received. Such as BARLOW AND JIM DANDY CORN PI Western Cultivators, | sANTERS And the greatest Riding Plow on earth the FLYING DUTCHMAN, Also a full line of Walking Plows and Harrows Buggies, Spring Wagons, and Road Carts, Mitchell) and Turnbull Farm Wagons, Grass Seeds, &c Call and see me. Protection Incompatible With Pure Government. There is one phase of tariff ques- tion that is seldom presented in speeches from the hustings or in de- bates in congres#, and that is its | moral effect. Usually we discuss it a3 a system of class taxation, or a5 a burden upon our industries and a stumbling block to our prosperity. We endeavor to excite | hostility against piotection because | of the dollars and cents it takes from us and the dollars and cents it prevents us from getting. This is ail right enough and always timely. For either reason we have most sub- stantial grounds of opposition and of eonstant war upon the syste. But it is well, occasionally, to in quire into the effect of such a sys- tem on the workings of our institu tions. Free government is the hardest of all governments io run. If this were not so there would be more free} A free } governments in the world. government is one that derives all its powers from the grant of the people, and exercises these powers | as the servant and trustee of all the people, never for the benetit of a part without injustice and wrong to | all the rest. Protection is a partuersbip be- tween the government and a part— when narrowly scanned, a small part | —of the people, in the use and em ployment of the power of taxation | over all the rest. It was the attempt at the begin nivg of our Union by the first sec retary of the treasury, who was a disbeliever in free government, to bring about that traditional partner ship between the government and so called money power that called at once into full and vigorous exist ence the great political party whose chief duty for a hundred years has been to oppose and prevent such partnership. ‘The theory of democracy, as ex pressed by Mr. Randolph Tucker, is the maximum of liberty, with minimum of power consistent with the preservation of our just rights. The democratic party, therefore, when true to itself, has always been grudging in the grant of pow government, and always in fav keeping government as simple in its operations and as severely fru its expenditures and is consistent with the proper discharge of the duties committed to it by the peo- ple. sto The greater the power entrusted | t» it, and the larger the purse pro- vided for it, the greater the tempta- | s it to! use the power of the purse for their | tion of those who administer own benefit, the benefit of a class, or at most of a party, instead of | using them for the common gocd alone. The doctrine of protection is in direct opposition ple, honest government. It teaches that this common serv- ant of us all, having no power and} no money except what it holds as the trustee of all, has the right and | bounties, | duty to bestow favors, bonuses, subsidies direct and indi- | rect on favored classes bly therefore, raises up powerful selfish interests which struggle to get control of the government in or- der to secure these favors, bounties and subsidies for their own enrich- ment. material | the | or of | to democratic | ideas. The system of protection | makes unrelenting war against sim- It inevita- SHIRLEY CHLDS bribery and intimidation. The im- laense sums contributed to cam- paign committees, the harsh and watchful intimidation of voters, these come directly from whose private money interest in those | party success is so much greater | taan their interest in pure govern- {ment that they entirely lost sight or regard fer the latter. We shall never be free from bri bery, corruption, block-of tive intim- | idation, and all the train of poison- lous influences that threaten suffrage, as long as men are tempted ession of the luxXibg power as a Soulce the Ito struggle for the poss of busivess prosperity and personal riches. Prof Goldwin Suuth tells us that eut to them under the protective system. The only hope for an houest bal- lot and a legislative hall unapproach- ed by the lobbyist is to drive out the selfish interests now intrenched in| our tariff, and to make their return} | forever impossible Compared with their polluting in- fluence at the fountain heads of free government, suffrage aud law-mak- | cents are truly minor wr W. L e Rev, G Stone Under the Weather Jefferson City, March 2.--The Hon. W. J. Stone, who billed to address the democratic elub in the houses to-night arrived here at noon but was tooill from la grippe He will fill the engage Mr was to speak. ment Inter. “TD highly appreciate the k error crept in which I corrected. The statement that I uow own an interest in the Nevada Dem- ocrat is wrong. years I have held no stock in the Dewocrat.” Why will you cough when Shi cure will give you Price 10c, §0c and Cucker. Denies Blaine’s Statement. New York, Marci 1.—In au inter- shown me by the Times,” said the} Hon W. J. Stone tonight, ‘in its kind mention of me to-day, but au) would hke| I bought a half in | terest in it in 1877 and after holding | it «bout a year, sold it. For fourteen | FORTY SAILURS FROZ! Newloundlanders Caucht ina Blizzard | and Stricken by Icy Death | St. Jobus, N. F.. March 2—On| j®aturday 220 men went out sealing | | lin boats from Trinity bay Sudden! y| fell came the thermometer terrifis snewstorm struggled to zero and al on. They) hard for port. but wer eT ing, their exactions in dollars and | U®* able to cope with wind and snow, jeold and angry sea. They had no extra clothing and their small boats ‘furnished no shelter. Bome were taken far out to while others f, Bea \ } were taking cle seals. u their boats. the sealers were res ts which put out from bay to their assistauc:. ese Wers fouud exhausted aud in| aypitiable plight Some of them | died before they could be broug bedies were found | had ashore. ‘Thirteen frozen in their boats which to be cut out It is men have peris esti -d that fully forty 1. Most of them were fathers « great damentation all ishores of Tr: ture along The ‘egisla- mark of uity bay. bas adjourned as a sympathy. Startling Facts. 3 people are vous ts the best remed rapibly Wrecks, coming a the rollowing s: ot Butler, + | swears t sson was -peec | as dance Dr. Miles, great trom St esturative Nersine cured him. ag was cu | : 0 to 50 convulsions the couservative governmentin Car-|view yesterday Mrs. Nevins, the | jsote so cao, Boras) ada does not hesitate on the eve of|moth-) of Mary Nevins Blaine, said | ous protration by one bo! Trial bot- 3 aia beat } an election to convene the protected | that Mr. Blaine’s statement of thej tes and! ee : : ; |tree at 1. L. Tucker, Drug Store, who manufacturers and assess them for |interview between herself and daugh-| recommends jarantees this une- funds to carry the election. Of|ter and Mr. Blaine’s treatureut ef | qualed remedy. course, these would assessment e sure of petting | back their own with usury from the | public treasury. maanufacturers not submit to: such unless uu they we | buy A party thus secures monhy to and that she id them shown from the house A vispatch from Sioux Falls, S. D. says that Mary Nevins-Blaine is ill. Jud ze Palmer, her counsil, said that » complete answer and thei was ist “brutal” can control of government by a] probably will be made, and intima | pledge of repayment, when it gets|ted that Mr. Blaine’s statement was into power, out of the treasury of the tax-payer. But not only are tainted elections |} the natural and universal fruit of \ protection, it is also a foe to pure , legislation. When the briber his | work at the polls the lobbyist takes }it up around the legislative halls Every time a tariff has been making at Washington, with the certainty has done that it was to become a Jaw, the city has been thronged with lobby ists. This was s-en when the Me Kiniey bill was before congress. It Was more notorious when the of 1583 was making. Senator Beek ly a speech on January 22, 1883, has | which | comes with peculiar foree from one | who w faithful ruptibie public servant. ‘left ou recod some testimony as ever a ind incor- Speaking of the work of the tarif¥ commission he said:*Tbe commission was select ei because each member was inter- ested int t tection and the for the monopoli ing greatest piiviieges he was chosen to advoeate; each had | the others so as to secure ain all own; to sus his | and the friends of each made up the } as to obtain all possible; | they were flung together iu a bill the | combined forces of protected wealth | aud monopoly rushed to Washing- jton have night and day besieged | senators and representatives, urging | them under all sorts of pretences—I | was about to say by promises, flat what the commission had none for them,” }and he added with another burst of indignation- “It is safe to say that |there never was such a powerful | lobby organized in the city of Wash- ington as is around the capitol now. Close the doors this morning and there will be found 500 men in the! corriders, in the lobbies, in the com- mittee-rooms, in the reception rooms, | everywhere besieging representatives to stand by and by their interests. Promises, | flattery, threats, everything is resort- ed to.” We may adopt the Australian sys- tem of secret voting, and for a while foil the idator, but, li jtery and threats—to sustain senators andj} them ke burglars, they will eventually learn the combination and are 156,963,873 watches in use, and | ™OUe¥ back. corrupt and overawe the voters in| this does not include the clocks that | tariff he highest } rp- | schedules they were interested in so | and when | briber and outwit the iutim. | rather weak in the facts. Pu AH Pittsburg’s Blue Laws. Pittsburg, Pa, Mareh 2—Law Order League Agent McClure and his assistants were busy Sunday looking for violaters of the law of 1794, and asa result seventeen suits have been brought before Alderman Rober against the ers for day. newspaper deal s on that ri will take Ming b ne Ws} yaper The to-morrow. bentin.s Up informations have in almost every was fined $25 + plac e to date ais 150 been made, the cost. defendant All the Vand March inal hear- case and cases have peen appealec { for ing before the jadges of the county 11 has been tix. tlhe courts Pronounced iepeless, jtime. I gave myself up to iy | vior, determir Wil ¢ sald not live | with iy frien on earth IT would} meet my ab: above. My jh and ed to try Dr s New Discovery for cousump- tion, coughs and colds. trial, took, i in all,eight bottles: it h ja well and hearty woman bottle free at H. L. Tucker's | store. drug-| Regular size, 50¢ and $1. Stru Against New Men. Chieago, Mareh 2.—To day nex Ty | 800 men, women and boys walked out from one of the largest shoe factories in Chicago, owned by Selz Schwab & Co. Not one of the em- | ployees were lett. A number of the | employees struck some time ago but }ed. On their return they found that seven additional men had b-en em | ployed. They asked the firm to | discharge the seven men and the \firm refused, saying the extra men were needed. So the strikers went | out Yesterday three hundred employees who syin- pathized with the strikers heida | meeting and decided to | day. again. j go out to- There is a great deal of ingon Iti time go. estimated that there} It thus introduces into = their eager pursuit of the booty held | are going on tick all the while. and; Yer From n letter writtes by) Ada E Hurd, of Groton. S D., we quote: “Was taken with a bad cold | whieh settled on my lun cough | setin and finally te ated in con sumption’ Four doctors gave me! up saying I could live but a suort I gave it a! | jcured me and thank God [ am now) Trial | they returned, matters being adjust- jno better, afternoon | A Shot Stopped the Song. Los Angeles, Cal., March 2.—A mau suppused to be Henry Avok shot and killed Narma Leighton yesterday and then put a bulkt through his own brain. ‘Lhe shoot- ing occurred in the woman's room. She was heard singing when sud- denly she shricked for help. Three pistol shots heard and the erowd on the strects saw the wo man, with blood straming from ker head, chmb out of the window aud faila distunce of twenty feet to the street. were to the house |thiee weeks ago and it is supposed He left a his parents at ish Turkey, The woman came Avok was her husband. letter asking thit Aghog Avokian, B Asia, be notified. The Youngest Confederate n City, Me.. March 2.— George Washington Riggins, a well known citizen of the capital. said to- “The Republic has manifested | considerable interest in the young lest confederate soldier and I think Tam th reely 13 -eune to Je ffer- day: man. To was se | : : |) years oldewhen Pric son City, offered his sword to Gov. | Jackson and was given command of} the State Guard. Iwent to I rice | jand persuaded him to let me go wi th| him. He attached me to his be | | guard where IT :emaived throug! | the entire wor, sharing all the ¢ jgers and ha | service fekipe of Tdow't think youngsters can beat that of tie! record ” any has patience good masy curious notion. made and a r can » mechanic who | when he takes a | | delphian has unbrella feet high, aul jstand two half which is composed of 1,600 soparate | ‘ asén and 15 kinds of wood. } Queer word. Queer people. Here are men and women by thousands | bearing all manner of pain, spending | their ail on physiciaus aud but rather worse, right at hand there's a remedy Ey | which says it can help them because| ts helped thousands them. | & | “Auother patent medicine advertise |S jment,” you say Yes—but net of | & the ordinary sort. The medic He Dr. —— ien Medical Dis | & d its different from the ord:- | & ustrums in thi | 5 It does what it claims or it costs AS }you nothing. The way is this: | pay your druggist $1 00 for a bottle. | You read the directions, and you | |follow them. You get bet or y idon't. If you do, you 1 If you don't get better ¥ yur And the queer thing is that so many people are willing to | be sick when the remedy’s so pear | at hand. buy a na get ye oth i i | | ht || unilies and there is | the} be-| and | four years’ | hinges | things | A Phila-| suffering from all sorts of diseases, | You} M.D., . Brooklyn, N. Y. Staple { . | Feed rovisions of all Kinds. omen AND & ASSWARE Clo ND TOBA: £O, 1s highest marxet price for { wy Always vay t County Produces East Side Square. Butler, Mo- NEW FIRM? NEW GOODS? Having purchased the stock of goods known as t) he Grange store consisting of GROCEREIS & 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. PORDUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED. T will guarantee my prices on goods to he as low as any store in the erty, Call und see me. TT... PETrys. errata ss (OE me: er mn eg ~~ 2 > eee New Discover by Arccident ae ANY PAR * quickly de desolved and permanently removed with QUEED NE, the new and wonderful discovery. Discovered by. apclacat while compounding @ solution. a part dentl spliled on the hand, and on washing pifterward it was ed tht he hair was completely removed. It is perfectly so simple any Lay the hair disc WwW minutes, and th dis Was ac destroyed. although all hair will be remove! at each ny) thout the slightest pain or injury when applied or ever afterward Young persons who find an embarrassing growin of also use it. Harm rice of Quee er bottle. sent in sai mailing boxes postage paid 18, (see rom ol wept Sen ney ot tar) address written Correspondence strictly confidential. This advertisement in honest straight forward 'Y word it contains, We invite you to d Yow as represented. Address Queen Chemical Co.. 174 ray full This advertisement is honest and with os aud you will find every- Race nu can register your letter at any Post Office to insure its safe delive! ie of fail reor ightest injury to any purchaser. introduce and sell am =———— | | \ i tl} | | | | } | i | ‘OW “ong

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