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i sete AMET emp aa ee Che Bulle VOL. XIV. BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDN ESDAY AUGUS r 24,1892 NO. 40 M uri County and State Debt. that hof the 119 counties of Missouri have to-day Lot one dollar of bonded debteduess; that only It is anintercsting fact Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. seven . CAPITAL, $110,000. Receive. Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections and | does a General Banking Business. * that only 13 \copnty «nd township indebtdeness. . . counties have 58 coun- | ties have township indebtedness and | both | phe National *t is particularly a matter of in- terest that the tot il bounded debt of | HE DID WRITE IT. Simpson's Vile Ideas Regarding His Home People. Watch Published ‘Tirade. nan | the Abusive | | Special to Kansas City Journal.) 20.—An inter-| | DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. the counties to day is only $9,825, = Au i = > : esting account of a ti etween | In the Real Estate Loan Department. Make loans = tie Darth doth ete areata 6 ee on Real Estate on long or short time at The facts nes “piatigi 2 this | Simpson at AVreiieaeneere ia many | lowest rates without delay. STOCK HOLD ERS& juncture for the special benetit o} the ptofessional Missouti” Allen, Mrs. Levina Boulware, TC, Physician Burk, Monroe Fariner Ballard, J N Farmer Brown, ‘Luiu Bartlett, Edmund Farmer Bryner, Margaret Chelf, H. B. Farmer Coleman, Sam’) L Farmer Caruthers, G_A Farmer Christy, J M Physician Clark, Robert Farmer Courtney, J MStock Dealer Deerwester, John Farmer who do their Hannah, W D medical student Slayback, Ed Farmer Hardinger, WN Farmer Smith, GL Liveryman Hickman,G B Furniture dealer Starke, LB Deputy circuit clerk Heath, DB Turner, Mrs M E Capitalist Jenkins, J R Cashier Tucker, W E Dentist Kinney, Don Ass’t Cashier ‘Tyler, W B Farmer Levy.Sam Pry Goods & Clothing Voris, Frank M Farmer Morrison. C H Farmer v aughan, JIM capital Miller, Alf Farmer Wyatt, fC Lumber dealer McCracken, A Farmer Wells, Wiley Teacher McCracken, Robt Farmer West,'R G Farmer Owen, M V Farmer Ww alton, Wm E President Pharis, John Grocery Wright, TJ Capitaliet Davis, J R Foreman T el feleds haria, C F Grocery ferchant Dutcher, C Hf Prof Normal Sch Powe Booker Farmer Farmer DeArmond, DA,MC Pigott, "HH Bank Clerk Deerwester, Frank Co sch com Rosier, JM Farmer Eyans, John Farmer Reeder, Oscar Farmer Everingham, J Physician Radford, Chas R q Freemam, Caroline and Elza Reisner, J W_ Pension Clerk Jin 1870 and 187 amount, iscurred not on account o the war orits exigencies, but inflict led by republican county Walls, T Physician i Phy | which were interested in Whipple, NU Itis a matter o ing of railrosds. Francisco. S P Lawyer Sullens, J L Banker |history that many counties were jlords of the vation und thousands | a . Ps < eure ani is poor privileze eo eloth- WM. E. WALTON president J. R. JENKINS overwhelmed by the —— denied this poor privilege go cloth ; vice-president DON KIN hier lthus incurred. and tl G Ci [ed et) Ws WO ees poorennoweU * ee Bras eae tee "Y of life. Under these conditions life : 0 EE eee oe tragedy is one of the results itn becomes a fierce and terrible strag- | will always be Stil! af, com. Wal of a Kansas Democrat. gover: | . remembered. other counties were compelled, of litigation, to tire community....We, the ‘nor, must say to the U. L. Bros we t been off | Sailing, sailing up the riser, In the Alliance ferryboat- In this boat of calemity lowlers, We must to our faneral flat. They have kicked us and hive cuffed us, Until our backs are black md blue, Still we hold on to their cof tails, Begging them to take us toe Hens ter long years fare not dead but tothe springs recruiting will say to them that it might do them good intellectually, enabling them to put out men for office who could hold down the job. Just think of it, WO Atkeson for circuit judge, and Capt Donohue for congress, isn’t this “out of sight”. Syorr and which never built anything, and i is a matter of common that prominent Republican neys became rich through demption of those s jeven at a dibeount of 50 per cent. Maybe t people of want to restore William & Co to power in this state. jthey waut to bring back the i when radicalism brought indebted | nc ss upon the people and wealth to/ the ‘As # rat-trap catches rats, So, this band of belly achers Has pulled in ue democrats, And we’re marching, marctng, Keeping time to their wild yll; Never thinking, never drearing, ‘That each whoop is our deat knell. | As e sponge absorbs the watr, | { | marching, Missour Gov. hh Mr Sackett, formerly of Butler, up from Frot Scott, Saturday, he is special agent for the Singer manufacturing company.... | those who were the beneficiaries ‘The Black Diamonds of Rich Hill |the usufruct. But the jand the Rockville boys played their are that they do not desire anything third ball game Saturday. The | of the kind. favor of Rock Under Republican rule the expen 1 | ; | Gentle reader this ie Hades. | Must we bear it with a grin? Must we stand like sheep at taughter, While these howlers rope usa: To a democrat from Dixie, Proud of birth and proud of ame; Yo a democrat from any whet, ilell and Kansas are the sam —ichita Eagle, come Kausa oO score stood $ to 9 in ei Je Jobustown and ‘wp Items. Spruce Barnett has Everything is on the gjat present | | ville. . been on ses of the State Government fron hunting for a cooler clifate...... | the sick list the past week....Rich | 1865 to 1872 were larger by s | Hill has a demoerat club of over 300 | Farmers feel encouraged y the nice | millions than they have been “standers up-for- standing during’ political season and spend the remainder of the year in sitting }down ot Missouri and Missourians. The cwnty bonded indebtedness 2 was ten times this courts the build-' | promise their indebted: uess for bonds | knowledge attor- | re- me bonds, Warner} Maybe | to be locked upon days \be ide wealth, « ce and greed it red age them and that to overcome “th s enemy there must| indications i g enti f eastern papers this morning under | display headlines. made to-day coucerning the article | Aun investigation | in question supposed to have been | written by Simpson appeared in the | National Watchman, an alliance pa-! | per of the issue of May 2 last. From | one feature of the articles describ- ping the unfortunate people the fol | | r lowing is taken: | “The poor privilege of producing wealth is graciously granted with the understanding that they surrender f|the products o” their toil to those | | Mer: sell their | their virtue, children become crimi Inals and outcasts in a land where ithe forees for producing wealth are | so enormous that if the people could t/ obtain access to this grand store house they could feed the world and have an abundance left.” | The following | rle, honor, women 3 sentence concern-; ing established order of things may lalso be of interest: “Tell the peo | \ | ple that this fee is entrenched be- jbind the law. that precedent and | the mossgrown evils that have come as right and jusi i arise in the people a spirit of self-| sacrifice and a devotion to principle.” | 3y wey of a hint for carry on this imaginary fi supplies to war the fol- | jlowing: “All must give what they | -}eantosweil the fundto bear the ex-| ) | penses for this grandest conflict that | ever human beings have been engag-| i since. ae 2 Pea ~! rain but we need more...Mrs H P | members... The republicans held | When the Democratic party came in-| a ae oie dau tly saa SS Calahan has returned tem St Joe | | their convention Saturday the 20th/ to power in 1873 it found a state |2 0ST S80 SOR Yeo cua Bone10 cee ay | some intiammatory appear- where she has been pureasing her | and selected delegates to the county | bouded indebtedness of $20,868,000 | cs =o - cor ae aE aus x i e F ic ve ) fall stock of millinery gads...... | convention next Saturday....W K | bearing interest of 6 aud 7 per cent. ‘ Ae : ‘tl aa t = a | es | ‘ i 4 > 2S. 1e 1e edi ors of 1e Master Claude Etter whihas been | Royce is building a fine brick busi- ;perannum. During the past 20 W teh = is \ chman says Simpson was re- spending the summer at jis grand | 28s house on the avenue....Dr J | ye: ws that debt has been reduced to | )°'°2™ pie ete oe facie F Cras i lw a : +a ie | quested to write an article, and in} pa’s, W J Crabtree, retarned to ay) Choat and Hon C I Bosley ad- | $6,830,000, beari g arate of but BL hel ht this j th hi a | ragsa. "I ~jtizen +0 | -_ + } response he br¢ 7 Ms in with his} his home at Archie last wek...... |4ressed the citizens of Rich Hill) per cent. It founda rate of taxation | '°°POU™' ; : s : : M. Jav ni L t oO» Po} Hill Peek AS . name to it The 2€ issue shows In company with our fridd Frank | Monday night 22....Rich Hill fair! for State purposes cqual'to 50 cents 5 , 41 f | + i + A " 4 =f 2 ja number of contributors from va | Patrick we made an overla{] trip to begins Tuesday, August 23. Grand | jon the $160 valuation of State prop- | : t f tl t eu , ime is anticipate : ‘rious parts of the country giv- Monegaw Springs. We fQnd over | time is anticipated. Jar. ler ty. Thattax has, by the opera “i I E i Sort z 8 We 3 jing the situation in their respec- 5 , han (a e 1 1.000 peo ple in camp 3 at once tion of 2 Democratic constitution, as R peop > : oe, ' ._' {tive localities. Simpson's article, } pitched our tents ans prepared to | | A mother’s mistake. 2 |now been reduced to twenty-five | hi nue | k elf athone. Itwasthe | Mothers trequently,make a mistake in | gents. jappet aring in this connection, does ey : é | neglecting the cough ota child. A Fort | a : : . | not liberate itself from the idea that | Governor's first camp experience but | Wayne, Ind, lady writes: My. little| With these material differences in | j we soon got on to’'the run things. daughter 6 years old had a severe Cough | the condue of State and county af-! but as it was nothing unusual I thought | On August 12 2thand 13th there was | nothing ot it, and allowed it to run onj firs, are there taxpayers or proper- + a picnic and oxthe 13th there was | for 5 or6 weeks, when it became so ob-| ty owners ia Missouri who believe stinate she began losing flesh. ina physician who treated 1} weeks without benefit. A neig ; sisted upon my trying Ballard’s Hore- | over 3,00) people Oa the maning of estimated to on the grou in | the 13th wf took a stro to the | pound Syrup; trelieved her trom the | “Stand up for Missouri?” fs Osage river an to our | first dose and she began ga fesh| The Dom ratie party has for 20 bluffs on : eee + . “f } rapidly, when we had used two bottles | ocr tic parey ne 3 uF, surprise {find a solid rock wall to | her cough was entirely disappeared. 1 | Years beenstanding up for this State the heigl of 300, we thea visited | would not be without it, It does not|in face of the determined opposition yy a 1 th ahold | constipate my children. Ballard’ Hore-| the famgis caves anc thera beheld | hound Syrup is tree trom Of s. It’s the woglers of nature agan, this | the most soothing throat and lung med | sour * clague. It has reduced the icine in the worl Sold t Price soc. by H. L. Tucker. and $100. be explored to thedistance alf mile. We ther started yp and on the way @me up-| grave of old Chief Monegaw. tood on the stump upon which e Younger made his speech to the detectives. You can find most any kiud of waterthere. We counted 125 tents saying nothing of those eumped in wagons. We were ver eave Ci ofo fae Stockings. j the reck by the passage of the McKinley act/tO waintain themselves. It has the tax on ordinary stockings was | MAnagedto wipe out the indebted 40 per cent. The McKinley act has | Saute tommsesiortaretland tectal | thrive, | per cent and 58.99 per cent. much pleased with Monegaw gjrings | In 1891 the people of this country | aie ‘¢@ by the or of the |b and will return next season P0S- | bought foreign stockings that cost | = ener sible. While there we notice Un-| on the other side $3,380,724 The |can tickebyill soon be elected ele Jimmie Graves and faaily of | tariff tax on them was $2.349,196,s0 | Missourit Not while the memory Butler camped on the grounds end | that for $3,380,724 worth of stock- | the people lasts —Republic. enjoying themselves. ...Ben Kenny | inzs the importers paid $5,729,920, | - ——_——_—_* goes to Eldorado springs today to sad those ewho | wore tha stockings TheB,,.1 Symptoms of Death. spend a few days....Floyd Patric vaid this enhanced price and the} Sred feelings. dull headache, ~ E z ee pains i , say. and family returned from Monegaw, protits of the wholesaler ieretatlar | © ain Baarious parts vf the bods, sinking Sat the prt of loss of petite, fever P'es OY ges, are all dblood. this week aud report a goodt The death of Mrs Alice Hank August 9 | reckoned on the whole. This done wees is which what for the the McKinley law occurred wearers of stock- | POs0: a gloom over our neighborhov World = gppicoued it it must ie I sas a kind and gentle moti ; ——— to death. Dz. Acker’s En-! Si and gentle mother, ue aa death. at. ad if RGR: iy, | Take Houd’s and only Hood's, be-| gli Blod Elixir has never failed | and loving wife and a christial ¥>:| cause Hood's Sarsaparilla curce. | : It! to ren Digte serofulous or syphaletic| possesses merit peculiar to itself. | poison. en- | Try it yourself. | | gnarant Sold under tive | loved and esteemed by a a posi family have the sympathy 0 there is anything more than spoils | in the new Republican shibboleth, t Warnerand the “Poor Old Mis- Es ouss Republic: | rt |merely nominal sum. It has stopped | legs extravagance of issuing | Under the law which was repealed | bonds for corporations amply able | ness of one. balf the counties, which | made the tax according to value, | lished suck principles « of economy as| 54.59 per cent, T0,41 per cent, 69.57 | now enable the people to live and | degpite the war tariffs foisted stomach, | \it was intended to cover his section jof the country. The explanation he | j offers that the sentence quoted by Botkin applied to New York and} Boston is scarely warranted by the} jarticle itself, as estimated, as the {name of neither city appears in the! article. Mr. St. L eonard | and his Friend's Money. | The current issue of the Clayton | |(St. Louis county) Argus contains tate and county expenditures toa ; | copies of letters passing between | Captain Joseph Lloyd, formerly a! jresident of St. Louis county, and| Mr. Leverett Leonard, who is now | Mr. William Warner in| runuing for governor of Missouri. | assisting It appears that in 1877 Captain! | Lloyd, then in charge of a Missis- | af steamer, placed in the safe of s friend Leonard $1,800 for safe- | keeping. Mr. Leonard was then a} | partner in the St. Louis firm of Wade | of | Leonard. The deposit in this pai- of j j cular safe was made because of! pee acqu aiutance with |? | Mr. Leons d bee the banks| }were closed en (Captain Liord jcame i Ss se terw: i ney in | benef jgot n \ from ay Ee enard be oes “a de | brother of 'St. Louis and see clearly the way | Mr. jor to his heir: Shortly af | tempting to evade it. evidence rd to jap pear th at debt. ev to explain these . Cap- people of the state. FARMER OF BATES Cash Capital. THOMPSON K. ROSIE A BENN KIPP ee AM VERS Receives transaects a general Banking busine e 5 Solicited. S BANK COUNTY, $50,000.00 sident Deposits subject to check, Lones Money, issues Drafts and Ss Your patronage respectfully Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Floyd Mr. Mr. saying to him: tain 1878, wrote February 6, Chas. E. Leonard. Leverett Leonard, on to “Your brother, in taking my mouey and using it without my sent, committed a breach of and when Wade & Leonard failed | he (Leverett ULeouard) came to me and promised on his honor to make | the balance of what they owed me a personal debt, and said he would | pay it if he live Captain Lloyd died iu St poor man, and it is said this money was never returned to him, although Mr. Leonard was not allowed to for con trust, Louis a retit, as his letters show. Here eatedly promised to make it good. | o April 1, 1578, he wrote Captain | Lloyd: “Lavailed myself of the terms of the bankrupt Jaw that I might work and then ire the pe Or tou age aegt }means of satisfying my creditors. Though legally freed, I still hold myself n orally bound to pay every } ‘debt and yours shall be the fi This seems to be a definite prom- but Mr. Leonard modified it very materially some three years Jat- er, When ina letter of the date of January 19, 1881, he said to Captain Lloyd: “I today owe $10,000 borrowed upon my individual credit without | any indorsement, and as I have be ise, j fore told you, until I have paid up all my debts contracted out, Iwill not attempt to pay off | those debts from which I was re- | eased by the bankrupt act.” It seems from this that after tak- ing the bankrupt act to hold off his | old creditors with a view to taking | his own time 1m dealing with them, | Leonard had a financial genius | to acquire $10,000 by new loans and that finally made up his mind that these new debts acted as a bar to the early settlement of the old. Per haps this is a very uncharitable con- struction, but on March 14, 1882, | Mr. Leonad himself wrote that his promises to pay Captain Lloyd must not be construed as positive. We understand that Mr. Leverett Leonard is now a man of means, and itis asserted that this money an |not been returned to Captain Li] If, on the cont it has been paid, we will take pleas ure in publishing the receipts as s00n as Mr. Leonard will furnish them. Mr. Leosard is a candidate for | governor as erting his own fitness | before the people of the state and; ~ asking their highest office. His fit | ness is therefore to be tested by his nm hie 4 H record. but we w count feel f letters d uot on hi 1 in taking b him slow in I ing an ordinary debt or even in at But as does the bot } It ence t — am son he letters before his connection | Mth, | and return to Oct 10, 1=92. | September 20 the Mo | not later t han Se pt. | Pac. ‘real estate security, amount of iLonely- rates yet ajj ered b in this line of bisiness: three or jive years DE uable onor best a daie- round trip iekets will and Is, limited The Mo Pac Ry Co will sell round ets to Knights of Pythias encampme sas City, Aug 28, at one tare for the round trip Tickets on sale Aug 20th to 2th good for re- turn until Aug Slst The Mo Pac Ry Co will sell tickets, one fare for the round trip, to the Triennial clave Knight Templars at Denvey Col , Aug tht nesale July 25 to Aug loch. For Annu- al Encampment Sons Veterans and Ladies Aid society at Helena, Mont. Aug sth to Hith, sale July 25 Aug iv limited to October 1éth. Asimilar route to Salt Lake, Ogden and other points im Colorado has been arral ged for, tickets will be sold July 23th to Aug 10th, ip thek tat Kan- on To those desiring to attend the Rich Hill fair Aug 22 to 2¢ the Missouri Pacific railroad will sell tickets to Rich Hill and return at the rate oy 6 cents for the round trip limited to return Aug : To all who desire to attend the National Encampment G. A R. at Washington, D.C. , Pac. R’y Co will sell tickets to Washington and return at the low rate of or the round trip While t rangements have not as yet been fully @ upon it is proralee that tickets will be placed on sale Se. ll to 1S good for going passage h and for return to anc ineluding Oct. t2th It is intended that special feature of the tickets furnished for this oecasion wil be that it will not be necessary to have them executed at destination forre- turn trip, which render them svailab for return from any point short of destinati: To those desiring to atte the 1.0.0 R’y Co. and return trip. Ticke limited for return t For dates of sale to be Mo. Agent, Butler, Mo. TERRIBLE ITCHING Used Everything Five Months. in Three Wecks not a Scar or Pimple. Cured by Cuticura. a need, which was terrible. After he would it, mi tr from the pe ehort time itspread the top of his h 5 scabs soon formed on head and face. We used everything we could hear of for nearly five months. It grew worse all the time. Ieaw your advertisement of the Cc. TicURA REMEDIES in the “Chicago Weekly.” We archased CuTICcU = EMEDIES und menced their use. to three weeks’ time there was not a sore or pimple, nct evenascar, on head or face. He ie nineteen months oid now, and has no signe of the disease. His ecalp is heal thy and he bas a beautéful bead of hair See portrait herewith.) Mus. OSCAR JAMES, Woodston, Kan My infant, eighteen months oid, wasafficted with eruptions on his bipe. Bad sores caine on er parte. All remedies failed until I procured Ccticuna. Cured a year and no return of disease. Mrs. A. M. WALKER, Careonville, Ga Cuticura Resolvent The new Blood Purifier, internally (to cleanse the blood of all impurities’ and poisonous elements), and COTICURA, the great Skin Cure, and CUTicURA P, an exquisite Skin Beautifier, externally (te 1 the #kin and sealp and restore the hair), bat of cases where the eufer ek ement terrible. uch marvello What other remedies have ures? Sold everywhere. P; eres Se.: Sear, 25c.; REsoLvent, $1. Prepared he P ND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Bost Send f oor to Cure Skin Diseases,” 64 pay * BABYS Skin and Scalp purited by Cuiiccra Soap. Absolutely por ACHING SIDES AND BACK, Hip, Kidney, and Uterine Pains en? Veaknesses relieved in one minute by the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster, the firet aod only pain-kiliing plaster. $500,000 We des re to place cuton “a got Will gio he best terms and lanes UY, ANYCHE Vote s drawn For ore: two: to loan “#2Uveit “re SOLE WOW Calland see how cheap we can iet you have money. 2 bee guess canes & = Co