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tna e te a ae eee eer eeaeeceeaencemaegeatestmneenimsamanste eperay nee esp aia BUTLER WEEKLY IIMES », ALLEN Eopitor. J. D. ALLEN TERMS OF & Co., Ptoprietors. SUBSCRIPTION: The Weekry Times, publi d every sday,. will be sent to y addre one year, postage paid, tor $1.00, ~ DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Vreeident . : GROVER CLEVELAND. For Vice-President ADLAL KE. STEVENSON. 4 Wed for State Supreme Jodges, suit GEO b. McFARLAN GAVON D. RGE THOS. A, SHERWOOD, For Judge of Kansas City Court ot vACKSON LL. SMITH Appeal State Ticket. For Goyernor—WILLIAM J. STONE For Lieutenant Govenor—JOHN B. O'MEARA, For Secretary of State—A. A. 1 For Auditor—J AMES M. SELBE! For Treasurer—Lon. V. STEPHENS. For Attorney General—-FRANK WALKEK, | For Railroad Commissioner—JAMES GOW- GILL rict--D, A. DEARMOND al Dist—JAS. H. LAY For Congress vith Di For Judge 29th Jadi County Vicket. For Representative—DR. J. W. CHOATE tor Recorder—J C MARTIN For Treasurer-SAM H_ FISHER. For Sherif—D A COLYER. : For Prosecuting Atttorney—C F BOX! For Public Administrator—J W ENNIS. For Coroner—DR, W H ALLE! For Surveyor—J. B. MARCI For Presiding Judge—H C R x Judge North Dist—J S HA ‘South ‘* —FRED FI EX. “Those who bow to the cross are “ not fit for citizenship.”-Major War- ner while representing the Kansas City people in Congr From the dispatches it seems the Carnegie company ave getting the better of the strikers. If successful away goes the organization. Major Warner said more abusive things of Missouri in his speech at this place than the entire republican press of the state has Sedalia Bazoo. ever done. When Major Warner was in con- gress he signed the report the New Mexiean statehood in which was said that “those who bowed to the cross were untit for citizenship”. The republican party, as a whole, has no love for Cotholics, kut Major War- ner’s frankness on the subjectis tru- ly refreshing. Possibly the guber- natorial bee had not entered the Major's bat at that time. —_—_—— on The great big man of the Union indulges in a tirade of abuse of our humble self, and calls us all kinds 07 eadearing names from “Granny” to LET US TO WORK. We all as democrats have a pride in seeing that the majorities for our ets are made nat state tic as large as possible. It is not only a pardonable pride that we are thus enabled to add that much more to their success, but it gi and district conventions and tb increase our influnce and importance. But there is and should be a stror the We are more inter- | ; er incentive in county ticket. success of our ested because it is a home vi and the candidates and neighbors. ry, are our friends Two years ago by ja combination of maleoutents, third partyites and republicans the demo- jeratic party in Bates county was de | feated by a st jin fact, that the d mocrats feel that \if they had made a little stronger effort the ticket jsaved. This time we want no cause left for regret. A ticket has been placed in the field that is the equal jof any could have been ever nominated in | composed as it is, of competent and well qualified gentlemen, courteous, clever and xccommodating toall; men who, as citizens and neighbors, have no superiors in the state of Missou- apology to make for any man on the ticket and there is no reason why they should lose the vote of any democrat in the county. The cen tral committee has chosen au eXe ecutive committee to conduct the campaign. Much depends uy on the shoulders of these gentlemen. accepting In places on this committee they have assumed grave responsi- bilities. The success of the ticket depends to a large degree upon the Still the committee can uccomplish but little without the wid and co operation of Let us all lay aside personal animosities, if there be any, and work conduct of the camp: all good democrats. hard for the suc- cess of the whole ticket. | You will not be yoting for or against individ uals, but for or a ples. The gainst gr ub prinei success of the county ticket means an increased vote for Grover Cleveland and Col. W. J Stone. ee In the ninth congressional district last week, the convention divided after ulong and fruitless effort to make a } nomination, and one side selected Champ Clark and the other the present “Bluegrass fop.” Now “granny” = congressman Richard Z ‘ Norton. This is ary eh is a perversion of grandmother, and | *** ‘ This very unfortuna te is used to designate a very old wo-! the partyin that district aud it man. Whilea fop is a person very fond of gaining admiration by showy | dress, oradandy. A “grandmother- fop” must be a dandy, but add there- to the “blue-grass” and you have a combination that would put Josiah Allen’s wife to shame any day in the| year. Brother Carroll gets his tig- ures slightly mixed, but then he} means well, and possibly he has! heard of the advice given by a learn ed judge to a young lawyer, “when you have a bad case abuse the op- posing coupsel.” | eal and idiotic tirade against the} old council, when there is no specific | charges made or good reason as-| is to be hoped that) the jwill be adjustee shortly If no se had these gentlemen and their friends, it will be best for the themselves that differeners | tlement can be between party as well as both withdraw and idate. No Relief to the People. The republicans of the senate have pigeon-holed all the bills passed by the democratic house for the redue- tion of oppressive taxes This is the contemptuous answer of ; “chairman.” jthe agents of Triumphant Piutocra The Record joins in the nonsensi-| cy to the demand of the people for, ey peo} relief: “You are fools—you don’t know what you want—cha ge your mind!” signed for such a course. The books | —this is the republican reply to the of the city are open for inspection. Let a committee be appointed and an investigation be made, and if it is | found that any moneys have been | popular majority of 1,300,000 against the new tariff abominations. The people will have ancther | chance in November to tell the faith- misappropriated or stolen, let the|less and impudent servants what guilty party or parties be brought | they thiak of their action. to justice in a court of law. These} gentlemen court an investigation, as | democratie officials always do, but they insist on not being convicted before they are tried. This council | The issue simplified will be this: “Shall the will of the people be obeyed!”—New York World. The St. Joseph Gazette thus re- was composed of as honorable, high-| minds the republican candidates for minded gentlemen as can be found! governor of a few small items he! residences of citizens of the state in the county, a number of whom are! forgot to mention in his harsngue| in company with armed + atill in the city council, and the inti- mation that they were guilty of dis-) “Major Warner forgot to tell the on the Pinkerton plan for making | pag honorable dealings in transacting the city’s business, is a libel that these papers will be held strictly ac- countable for. The slur east by the Record at the Times in connection with this matter is an intimation that they propuse to blackmail every- body who attempts a defense of these gentlemen. The Times defies the snarling of curs who are too cowardly to attack a man with spe- cific charges, but attempts to blacken ter darkness left a record of inf his character with intimations and at that place: people of Sedalia yesterday that | during the ten years in which he and j his friends “stood up for Missouri” jthey stole nearly everything that was loose, disfranchised nearly 100,- 000 voters, saddled a mountain of debt upon the tax-payers, filled the jails with priests aud preachers, by outrageous oppression ofthe people, | provoked an era of lawlessness, and when they were kicked out into ut- amy, tion | Scoundrelism, fraud and pecu insinuations too contemptible to be | which stands unrivaled in the histo- noticed by honorable gentlemen. ! ry of human government ” ] majority, so small, | > | Bates ; county. The personnel is yery strong, | This time the party has no} “| suspend such supervisor and fil his |entire vote to Morgan let the party nominate another can-| Lite Tenure Undex the Force Bill. Under the force bill aivocated by Harrison and his supporters trol of records bearing on elections. {Section 9.} Controlling the subord rvisor, h li the inate super control of congressional elections in visors in the m the states would be putin the hands election, the of Federal ry ofticebolders, holding ing office for to “the United vassers, oF or go od behbavi make the tival s imposed uy alty of pto $5.000 and im Life tenure in any executive of- fuses to dos fice is abhorrent to all American Under section lideas. Exeept in such reconstruc-! ebief supervisor is also t tioa bills as this it has never been/er to swear in and | proposed, yet when it was proposed or f here it was assign to its as mnany supported by “special deputy shals’ |the Harrison administration and by | needed to control the electi very republican in congress whose be supported by the jvote the administration the citizens jeould control. Harrison made it ja party measure during the Reed | congy actively Lb, these armed men to United States of the state should be violent! with this trolling their electioas There cians in the United States tread this N—th aboiniable proposed in America Harrison army if satistied method of cor .and he stands for it as a party measure in this campaign. The object of giving life tenure to the chief supervisors ig clear enough. Of course no such act could ever'r pass with democrats in control, and | as it could only b2 passed by force thousands of republi- who have st Out- mexusure We have a lright to demand and we do demand bill radicals the chief supervisors |that they geta copy of it and read first chosen under it would be force! it before voting for it by voting an | bill radicals, and no matter how the/indorsement of the men who pro- peopie voted thereafter they would| posed it, who declare “that they remain in office to control congress. | will never relent thei purpose” of A change in the presidency. even if | passing it-—St. Louis Republic. it were possible under such a sys- tem to make a change of the party | \in adininistration, not effect them. They would remain in office for life, one for each congressional | district in the country, empowered | Jaltue Their pow-| Neosh., Mo., July 28 —The dem Jers under the force bill would be: | oeratic congre: To supervise elections and to reg-| the fifteenth district finished its la- julate waturalization. [Section 1.) | bors at 3 o'clock this afternoon on To “supervise and serutiniz+ and | the 333th bulot, when Chas. H. Mor- | guard * the action of state registres| gan was nominated by a vote of 36 tion officers. [Section 2.] {to 31 for W. B. Skinner. After To see that all registrations, “pre- taking 130 ballots last night the con liminary or final under state or !o-| vention adjourned until Sthis morn- eu laws,” ageous ever CHAS H. MORGAN NOMINATED. would 'The Fifteenth Congressional Cony tion Finlshes Its Labors on the 338th | to control its elections. ional convention for “are “supervised, serutiniz- |ing, when Vernon county dropped fed and guarded” into compliance | Hill and gava 64 votes each to Mor- |with the requirements ot the foree|gan and Skinner. |bill. [Section 3.] To call on the punish as contempt auy The balloting leontinned until the two hundred and Federal courts to | fiftieth ballot was reached, when the insubordi- | convention adjourned until 2:30 p. | | Ination of citizens of the states ol jin Balloting was then resumed. | |jecting to this supervision and seru-/and continued as before until the} jtiny. [Clause 3, section 3.] ithree hundred and ninth ballot was | To prepare lists of persons to act jreached when three votes from Hill's as subordinate supervisors in contro] | home county, Jasper, went to Mor of the details of the election See i gan At this time the convention tion 4 j | alse st went wild, and they thought To assign thice supervisors to{the time bad come. This gave Skire | each poll, two of them of his own | pet » Morgan and Mili 14. | polities: to transf-r from ¢ elec-! The balloting went on the same tion precinet to as bel any super notid th Tih ballot, when Veron visor who does not obey him; or to| County became weary and threw her The con | 4 | place with another who wil do what| vention hall was then a scene of | | he is told. [Section 5.] wild euthusiasin, and it was plain to Where three supervisors are as- | be sia that the time we near at ee 7 - . | hand. 2 338 allot signed to manage a poll, to appoint | On the 338th bal ot Hill and one of them (a radical) “chairman of |>*ivuer rallied their forces to the jlatter, but the former could not de- i * for the poll to suppress fany possible division among them. |hver the goods and Morgan was the The ex {Section 6.] Aud should such chair- | Choice of the convention man of supervisors prove unmanage- | CHtement run high and it was fully 5 minutes before order could Morg: for and made a tatk defeated candi: ate, supervisor: : 1 able to revok- hisappointment [see- | oi restored, when was called tion 6] remove him from the pre- aid fullowed vy the Skinner who jmade many friends by his remarks. E. C. Crow and W. W. Wharton of | Jasper made stirring talks. Charley Morgan, as he is familia:- ly known, is an old wheel horse in | Missouri politics. He is a native of |New York and 49 years old. He | went into the federal army at 18 | with the first Wisconsin and rose to |the rank of Captain He came to a 3 | Missouri in 1868 and commenced | : Zi aa Fyne jthe practice of law at Lamar and [Eee Resors | Secaber bias y mspeeh | was prosecuting attorney of Barton scrutinize and supervise such bets | ie from 1870 to 1872 ‘at any time; in being present to con-) = : 6 | trol state officers in charge of regis- jtration; in making a house to hous | ewyass anc invading the private cinet [sectio and n e another To control the supervisors in dic- tating state and city registration; in shalle challeng ig the rights of citizens to register uuder state law that the names demands citizens of the state be stricken from state regis- of \tration lists: in requiring state of- ficers to mark any uame on the reg- jistration lists for challenge; in tak- jing entire charge of state registra- | tion lists; He was a member of the legislature from | 1872 to 1874 and in 1874 defeated {Colonel Thrasher for congress in ‘the sixth district, which was 2,500 republican, by 2,300 majority; was elected again in 1876 over Havens In 1882 be was the can- | didate in the new twelfth and de- feated Captain Terrell by over 7,000 votes. Since 1854 and until recent- ly be has been engaged in cual mining and, to his credit, has never bad any labor difficulties. | will aid the natiou state and local tickets in the fittcenth district. The convention declared in favor of free and unlimited coin The | peace and harmony. pecial , |deputy marshals” specialiy chosen | Such domiciliary visits: “to prompt- ily pass on the electoral qualitiea- j tions of any person” whose vote is! jchallenged under the force bill sys- jtem; to take charge of the ballot | boxes ateach precinct on election i day at the opening of the polls; to make, certify and forward all re- His nomination | ns of ithe | state at their homes, inquiring into their age, place of birth, length of | residence,and all other circumstances | : s j bearing on the _bresumption that Cholera is spreeding in Hungary, ‘they have fraudulent intent; and to | Russia asd Germany and is killing s killing igs the state courts and take con- | the people by the hundreds. p of sil- ver. conveution Bennett-Wheeler Mercantile Co, ——DEALERS IN = TOP BUCCES, SPRING WACONS, Jump Seat Surreys and Road Carts, =o Dehuttler, Studebaker and Moline, FARM WACONS, Grain Drills, Disc Harrows and Sulky Plows, Hardware, broceries, Glass andQueensware ——THE CELEBRATED—- Chaater Oak Cook Stove, With Wire Gauze Oven Doors, ~ Bennett-Wheeler Merc. Co. BUTLER, MO. Odious Comparison t epubhiears. St. Louis Republic. The difference between Mossbac ism and Warnerism is neatly sum med up by the Jeffersou City Trib une, which says: When the power they found such men as Maj. A J mossbacks came into Warner diawing salaries of offices to which they had not been elected; the credit of the state gone; taxes out- irageously high; corrupt or ignorant county courts voting away nallions for mythical railroads: preachers and priests disfranchised orimprisoned at the demand of an of dollars intolerant spirit, and a state govern ment as corrupt as auy that cursed the south during the reign of carpet Is it not better of the ' taxes daggers to have the securities state selling a reduced to the actual expenses of the govern- ment economically istered tha a AN th esa, ly treacurr, outst on a Valaable railroad belt as seeuvity for a> tate debt disposed of i a inan vho earthly possessions consisted of a team of mules a ? ia wago Tf Warner had onty balf au vance cure. of brains for pout ue wou fully avoid cowparison of demucratic under the Missouri with M:ssouri Warnerites. ‘Dbe comparison 18 odious to sensible republenns The subscription list of the ing Peo AS vee = Tye ing Times is crawling right up to the bh boom- vater mark. Big, but bad | —the old-fashioned ;ill. Bad to take, and bad to have taken. In- efficient, too. It’s only temporary relief you can get from it. Try something better. With Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets the benefit is lasting. They eleanse and regu- late the liver, stomach and bowels. Taken in time, they prevent trouble. "a any. case, they cure it. And they cure it easily ; they’re mild and gentle, but thorough and effective. There’s no disturbance to the system, diet or occupation. One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet for a laxative—three for a cathartic, Sick and Bilious Headache, Consti- pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels are promptly relieved and permanently cured. They’re purely vegetable, per- fectly harmless, the smallest, and the easiest to take—but besides that, they're the cheapest pill you can buy, for they*re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. This is true only of Dr. Pierce’s medicines. $58.00 $58.00 You can buy a first-class ORCAN tC. SPRAGUE & CO. \ for Sis ue fully Warranted for years and of the Intest styles and latest improvements. ©, SPRAGUE & CO. Butler, Mo ee Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all others interested in th deceased, thath J W said estat creditors unis administrator of ¢, intend to make final sett thereof, at the next 1 the Bates probate ¢ state souri,t the sth Aagust, W. EN NNIs, Administrator. Trustee's Sale. Tt Davis apd Sarah EOL rdeec of trust dated October vdedon the teth day of rder’s office of Bates k No 42 for re- atpage 451 conveyed to I the tollowing described n Bates county and -tate vir, of the southeast three (25) containing st quarter of the north thirty acres quarter of du weres, and the northeast quarter, and th of the north arter of the northeast quar- terol section twenty-six (26) all in township forty (4) of range twenty-nine (29), contaim- ing in all one hand Tes, in trust to secure the payment of three certain coupon notes in said « scribed, and payable as therein stipulat And whereas, that in case defau of said coupon n of the interest said de sereither of them or either ns;orif default be ma up in the payment of taxes, as they become du: then the whole debt, at the option of the legal holder thereof, shall forthwith become due and payable, and whereas, defauit has been made in the payment of all of satd coupon notes when they became due; and ssid debt 1 interest are now past due and unpaid, | Now, therefore, public notice is hereby given that l, BU Ingram, trustee, at the request of the legal bolder of said debt by virtue of the poWers tome given in said deed of trust, will, on Wednesday, August 24, 1892, proceed to sell the property herein described at public verdue to the highest bidder for cash at the court house door in Bates county, Mo. between the hours of nine o’¢lock in the fc noon and €ix o'clock in the afternoon of asid day for the purpose of paying said debt and the accrued interest thereon together with the cost and expense of ececuting this trust 3H INGRAM, Trustee, Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, + County of Bates. | 5 58 In the cireuit court of said county, in vacatie Badgley, plaintin, ley, James A Badgley. Celia J Sarah A Ogie, Belle Badgley anit z Badgley, defendants. Now at this day comes the plaintiff! herein by her attorneys, Parkinson & Graves before the undersigned clerk of the cireuit court of Bates county, Missouri. in vac@tion, and files her petition and affic it, sileging, among | other things, that def ite, Celia J Daniels | Sarah A Ogle, Priscilla Radgiey pease not residents of the si of Mis- souri: reapon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation thatsaid defendants be notified b: publication that plaintiff has commenced it against them in this court by petition an fo fidavit the general nature and object of which is to partition and divide between the pisintff and esid defendants herein the following de- scribed real estate situate in the county of Bates and state of Missonri, to-wit The southeast quarter of the northeast quarter and the northeast quarter of the north east quarter of section twenty-nine (2,) and | the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-eight (2%) ali in township 40, range 31; orif from the multiplic! terest= said real estate cannot be div pariitioned in kind, that an order of je of id real estate may be made and the proceeds of such sale divided among said parties plain- | tiffand defendants, and that unless the said | Celia J Daniels, Sarah A Ogle, Priscilla Badg- | ley and James A Badgley be and Bppear at this court, €nextierm thereof, to be begun and holden at the court housein the city of Butler in saidcoumty on the first Mone 7 vember, 1-2, next, andon or before ) day of said term, if the term shali so ia tinue—and if not th day of eaid term—an z con- 2On or before the last er OF plead to the peti- tion in said cause, the same Will be taken as confessed, ani jadgeme: il be ren- dered according! An¢ e er or- dered that a copy hereof be pnb: accord. ingtolaw in the Butler Week y Be newepaper printed and published Bates county © , for four weeks ancce: 4 ly, the last insertion to be at least fifteen days | before the first day of the next termof the | cuit court JOHN C. HAYES, Cire A true copy of the record. es aa yitness my hand and the seal ofthe {sear} circuit court of Bates ceunty,this isth day July, isvz. INO. C. HAYES % Cirenit Clerk. ‘piacatacans