The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 2, 1892, Page 1

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I Francisco, 8 P Lawyer EE ii 2 eS ns 2 wie The Butler Weekly Times. VOL. XIV. | Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, $110,000. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections and does a General Banking Business. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. In the Real Estate Loan Department. Make loans on Real Estate on long or short time at lowest rates without delay. STOCKHOLDERS Allen, Mrs. Levina Boulware, TC, Physician Burk, Monroe Farmer Ballard, J N Farmer Brown, Lulu Bartlett, Edmund Farmer Bryner, Margaret Chelf, H. B. Farmer Coleman, Sam’1 L Farmer Caruthers, G@ A Farmer Christy, J M Physician Hannah, W D medical student Slayback, Ed Farmer Hardinger, W N Farmer Smith, GL Liveryman Hickman,G B Furniture dealer Starke, L B Deputy circuit clerk Heath,D B Turner, Mrs | E Capitalist Jenkins, J R Cashier Tucker, W E Dentist Kinney. Don Ase’t Cashier ‘Tyler, W B Farmer Levy.gam Dry Goods & Clothing Voris, Frank M Farmer Morrison. C H Farmer Vaughan, J M Capitalist Miller, Alf Farmer Wyatt, H C Lumber dealer McCracken, A Farmer Wells, Wiley Teacher aes Clark, Robert Farmer McCracken, Robt Farmer West, RGF armer Courtney, JM Stock Dealer Owen, M V'Farmer Walton, Wm E President Deerwester, John Farmer Pharis, John Grocery Wright, TJ oe list Davis, J R Foreman Tres officePharis, C F Grocery Weiner, Max erchant Walls, Wm Farmer Walton, G W Farmer Walls, J T Physician Whipple, NL Physician Dutcher, C H Prof Normal Sch Powell, Booker Farmer DeArmond,D A, M C Pigott, H H Bank Clerk Deerwester, Frank Co sch com Roster, J M Farmer kyans, John Farmer Reeder, Oscar Farmer Everingham, J Physician Radford, Chas R h Freemam, Caroline and Eliza Reisner, J W_ Pension Clerk Sullens, J L Banker cashier asst. cashier J. R. JENEINS DON KINNEY president vice-president WM. E. WALTON BOOKER POWELL LUST IN THE DEEP. 7 | Is The Force Bill An Issue? The following is clipped from the The Roumania Wrecked With | National Republican,a negro Repub All on Board. | ican jounal published at Washing | ton, D.C. The paper is an aggres | sive sapporter of Mr. Harrison and 5 the republican party. Its publication Lisbon, Oct. 28.—The British | yet with the approval of the white steamer Roumania was wrecked at | 4 Ape F ve sive it i ne the mouth of the Arelho river, near | republicans and we give it in i Peniche. Of those on board 113| With the Loede national election were drowned and only nine were | law in full force in the south and the saved The Roumania had 55 pas-| various Democratic strongholds up sengers and a crew numbering 67 | North, we may confidently look fora The nine persons saved from the | different state of political affairs wreck lave been giver: shelter in a/ than now exists New York City hospital in the neighborho: dof} will then return several Republican Penicke. Congressmen than at present, w tule The Roumania’s captain and pilot | more than 20 negro Representotives are among the lost. Large quanti-| from the South will render the Re ties of wreckage are washing ashore | publican control of the future con Oyer 100 Persons Drowned Gif the Coast of Portugal. Joc rempeneraneys BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNES COL. STONE’S HOME COUNTY. lt Will Give Hm a Plurality of 1,700 oud a Majority Of 1,160, To the Evitor of the Republic. Nevada, Mo, Oct. 28.—I see it frequently stated in the Kangas City Journal, Sedalia Gazette, and the re- publican press at Springfield, Car thage, Lamar and other towns, that Col. Stone will run 500 votes behind Mr. Cleveland in Vernon county and that Warner will beat himin Nevada, No Populist Need Apply. Wareaw Times, {Republican. | It seems that Mr. Atkeson, the |people’s party candidate for judge of this 29th judicial circuit has suc- ceeded by the circulation of petitions throughout the district in securing a place on the republican ticket,not- withstanding the republican execu- tive committee of this and Mr. At- keson’s own county refused to en- dorse him. his home. Peimnit me to say through your columns to the democracy of the state that this is all *bosh”—Repub- lican lies circulated for political ef- fect. There is not a scintilla of truth in these reports. I have had my hand on the politi- ical pulse of Vernon County for the past 90 dazs and I say to the demo- crats of the state and all others that W. J. Stone will carry by a hand- some plurality every ward in the city of Nevada and every precinct in Ver- non County and will defeat Major Warer by 1,700 plurality in Vernon County and have a majority of 1,100 over all opposition in the county. There will be probably 15 democrats in Vernon County out of a total of 4 000 who will not vote for Col. Stone, but for this loss he will recieve 75 Republican votes. Have no fears for Vernon She will do her duty. Frank P. Anderson, Chairman Democratic Central Com- mittee of Vernon County. TANNER GIVES IT UP. He Says New York and Indiana Will Surely Go Democratic. Minneapolis. Minn., Oct. Democrats of this city are in great glee to day over a letter written by Corpora! Tanner to a leading Min- nesota banker who until recently was one of the stalwarts of the republi- can party. Having become a mug- wump, the banker showed the tear ful wail to some of his democratic friends, and the news is now all over town. Mr. Tanner appealed to the banker to use every means in his power to save Minnesota to the party as both New York and Ind as sure to go democratic as the sun Was 27.— uv were | to rise on the Sth of November. | Who is Mr. Atkeson, and upon what conditions does he base his claims for being entitled to the sup- port of the party whose principles he repudiated two years ago? We believe that he is a lawyer by pro fession. Mr. Atkeson says, so we are in formed, that he left the republican organization because it was corrupt —in other words he was too pure for his party—a very natural condi tion for a man to be in whoisa chronic office seeker, after the party has refused to favor him with a po sition his ability does not merit. And now for him to step forward aud ask the members of that “cor- rupt party” to help boost him into power by their votes is, in our opin- ion, the ccncentration of absurdity and cheekiness that would put the blush of shame ona government mule. As before stated, the Times has no word of approval for the blatant office seekers who are constantly be- wailing the deplorable condition of the country under its present man- agement when it is so evident that their hypocritical interest is born of au insatiable desire for the spoils of office, and are moved to tears— crocodile of course—at the impend- ing crisis that is about to burst up on the country if this “corrupt par ty is longer retained in power, and like the grocer sanding his sugar, while censuring his neighbor for watering his molasses, cries “stop thief.” And yet this modern Joseph appeels to this “corrupt party” for nely Weare free to admit that are form is need throughout the nation —not a political or financial reform but a moral, and must be inaugurat- edin the home circle, and not by DAY NOVEMBER 2 1892. FARMERS BANK OF BATES COUNTY, Cash Capital. $50,000.00 D.N. THOMPSON <aenens i J. K, ROSIER.. Vice Proigene E.A B ETT 2d Vice-President = Cashier .. Secretary Attorney T. Receives Deposits subject to check, Lones Money, issues Drafts and transacts a general Banking business. Solicited. Your patronage respectfully = = support, knowing full well that, | : Y while it does not affect them, yet its | = pane sap —— adoption will enable the cities to) ceraamacies provide for a worthy class of anit What shall : leratic candidates—C who are ever ready to risk life and | welt SE Rn I say for the demo and limb to protect other people's prop- | pps sie — racine oe erty. The amendment will not meet | 3°@@78°ua" stanc ard of fitness;both with any opposition in the cities to | have heen satisfactorily tested in the be affected, and it will only be de-{ public service, and both represent feated in the event that the people | the cherished principles of our par- do not understand its meaning and (ty in this campaign, and are entitled construe it to mean an additional in sour sulle: Ex President tax cleverly disguised —Jefferson | 2 eal te ean City Tribune. | Cleveland needs no eulogy at my Te hands His administration—digni fied, honest andfab'e—has safely Weather cool and cloudy... .Con ths’ aca siderable sickness in this “neighbor- i itatood theypopular-cntcies has hood....Farmers say the potato | Passed into history and reflected crop is very light this year... .Nellie| credit upon the country. His re- Bently has about recovered. .Some | election will not ouly be a personal [eee aaa nceen el ae a ecmiel | triumph, buat will also be the vindi- Sateen ded ieene’ sail Pear wee | cation of our prinepl:s and the tri- Mr Showalter of Rich Hill, ae | umph of the democratic party. visiting his brother last Sunday.... | Mr. Henry Nafus is some better at i ich Ttenis, all along the neighboring coast. | The Roumania was an iron screw | steamer of 3,387 tons, belonging to the Auchor Line and plying between Liverpool and Bombay. She sailed from Liverpool and Bombay on Oct. 22. Her length was 364 feet, breidth 38 feet and depth 28} feet, and she was built at Glasgow in| 1880. Pepviche, near where the Roumania is reported to have been | wrecked, is a fortified town of Por- tugal on the Atlantic Ocean about 50 miles nort of the mouth of the Tagus. Poisoned Seventeen Women. London, Oct. 27.—Dr. Neil Cream has confessed to Mr. Waters, his counsel, that from 1873 to 1881, when Cream was arrested in Chica- go he had poisoned 17 women. He used them first to allure rich men for the purposes of blackmail, then slowly killed them so that they should not bear witness to his guilt. Canada was the most profitable field of his operations. He so managed that nobody ever suspected his vic- tims had not died of natural causes. Mr. Waters said Cream described to him minutely the girls murdered and gave his devices to avoid detec- tion. He hasan immense number of letters from people who have been blackmailed. “He fairly made every hair on my | head stand on end,” szid Mr. Waters this evening. ‘His story was start. ling beyond anything I have ever | before heard.” : A medical expert who has examin ed Cream says that he suffers un- doubtedly from satyriasis. Something Like It. St. Louis, Mo, Oct. 28 —George C Smith, assistant general manager of the Missouri Pacifie railroad company. has sent $10,000 to the families of the men who were killed in the affray with the Daltous at Coffeyville, Kan. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report. | Reval ABSOLUTELY PURE grees safe and secure. Heavy taxes should be laid upon the property of the whites to devel ope and extend the public school system of these states. 5S schools for the two races 1 abolished and the plan of bringin the youth of both colors into clo 8 aud equal relation in schools and as churches giving a fair trial one of the most potent elements t down the detestable Bourbanisin | the South. The statute against the | intermarraige of the rac ld be jrepealed, and any discrimivation against the blacks in the matter of | learning trades or obtaining employ | ment should be a criminal offense— while the colored man’s rights to hold office should be sacredly pro tected and recognized. A few years of this policy will solve the problem satisfactorily. The most ingenious realities of | this life are unquestionably the off- |spring of some imaginative mind that wanders through a maze of im- practacabilities, resulting eventually in an untold blessing to humanity. A reality that is the delight anp wonder of the present age is the sewirg machine, and the degree of perfection to which it has recently been brought under the management of the Davis sewing machine com- pany, realizes the brightest dreams of the most sanguine inventors. The new vertical feed, possessed by the Davis alone, places it above all com- | petitors. | Though frequent editorial men- | tion of this machine has been made in these columns, and attention call- ed to its merits and advantages al- most weekly for months past, we doubt if yet our readers have any | adequate conception of the improve- ments possessed by this model of | jmachines. For excellence of work- | | manship, simplicity of construction, and durability it has no equal. | »jand holding the northwest in line. | chronic growlers and calamity shriekers who have joined the soap- bubble party for the “five loaves and two fishes” only, and care not a pic |ayane who sinks though they swim. The republicans would much pre- a a : jfer to support a man whom they Ex-Speaker Reed complains that upon heretofore as a nee atte neal | have looked fi nae Chee COE f fault: | foeman worthy of their steel,” as rae fade in et | Judge Lay has proved himself to be oncede it. But consider what / fo, they know where he stands and reasous the repuSlican party bas giv-! what to expect from him, rather en creo) fault finding. yy 7:, | than endorse the candidacy of » man F Under the rule of Speaker Reedit | who, in this favored land, where a legislated by fiat and unseated law | erciful God has mae el me with fully elected democratic representa- Le plenty, if we will oe work for it tives out of pure partisan wanton- | hopes ie eecnronoiee by fanning cern . ianca Peer Scot | discussions, and creating discensions opie a ears a 2 Surp'us ol lin the party whose suffrages he now $100,000,000 and mortgaged the €x-| seeks, and crying calamity, calamity. cessive reyenues for vears to come. | when there was no calamit It po It has raised the taxes on the nec: | org of a litttettoo mae on fone essaries of the people. : Since the above was put in type _it has prostituted the public ser-/| ye have received the number of the vices to scandalous partisan uses. names attached to the petition of -It has rewarded rascals and pro | yy, Atkeson which are as follows: tected rogues who helped it to 840 Bates county, 141; St. Clair, 76; power. | It has inflated the currency with | He oi, dee bertons 0. paper representatives of 65-cent | dollars, thereby robbing labor and 5 : threatening capital. 5 At the approaching election next It has menaced the country with a! month the citizens of the state will law for controlling the elections of | be called upon to vote on an amend- the people by force and fraud. And it is now seeking to retain | intended to ena ble cities having or- ower by the most unblushing bri-! 5 i see and corruption ever paacised ganized fire departments to provide arvantalechontaltiie contre | funds for the relief of disabled fire- Is it any wonder that the demo men or the helpless widows and crats find fault Can they as patriots children in case of death. The meas- do less than concentrate their pro- | test into one tremendous kick on the 8th of November?— World. He sail the party was going to try . . 23 ae | to save itself ky getting the votes of Connecticut and West Virginia} Consider the Reasons. That Constitutional Amendment. ure met with the unanimous approv- |al of the legislature and, so far as 'we know, has met with no opposition from any source, and it is evident that it will be adopted if the news- ' papers of the state will explain its meaning to the voters. The amendment does not author- ize an increase of taxation and it can President Cleveland’s pension record can be summed up in a few words. He paid out more money by 70,000,000 than had been paid out during the previous administration of Garfield and Arthur, he signed more private pension bills than all the republican presidents put to- gether from Lincoln to Arthur, aad ing an organized fire department. | | Powder aes |} the republicans when they had the or of a force vote for Leonar As watters now stand, the cities ‘have no authority to preserve funds for the relief of disabled firemen or the helpless families*of firemen who te killed in the discbarge of their Ma é power under Harrison did not dare to pass biNs which Cleveland vetoec for good aud sufficient reasons. General Sickles says: “He de for his vetoes the thanks of every honest and deserving soldier.”-—Re public. é As A vote for War t can this amend- ment be made to affect people living | ide of such cities, consequently | | the country voters can give it their | foree bill and high tariff. Vote Stone, because then you cast our vote aguinst the force bill and igh tariff —Sheldon News. ulsi {ment to the constitution which is! ‘only be made to apply to cities hav-/ ‘ cities are anx-: oresent....Be sure and attend the | = SCRATCHED 3 YEARS democratic rally at Rich Hill Thurs. | day.... William Millner, a highly | respected citizen, died at his home | seven miles southeast of Butler, on | Friday night, of pneumonia fever. | He was laid to rest in Oak Hill cem | etery..Mr Eckles is reported some | better... .Ida Padley is still very | sick. . ora Laskey is no better... | Rev West preached to a large and | appreciative audience at Double | Branch....Mr Ed Hall is making improvements on his house. ..Some of the old batchelors are talking of | buying them a farm in this neigh borhood....Miss Cora Betz of But- | on last Sunday Miss Nafus is | attending the bedside of her father, who is very sick at Nevada....The | proving...... this neighborhood a few days ago | buying stock e | return to his home in a few days... | Mr Joe Baker was out working the roads last week... .Charley Frost of | Deepwater township, was visiting at | the home of Mr Bently on last week | ....Charley Thomas of Kansas, who | is attending school at Butler, was i visiting at Cyrus Requa’s last Satur- day LITTLE JESSIE. } | | Should Maj. Warner become gov- | jernor of Missouri he would change | the mossback methods, eh? | Well, at the present time Missou- | ri bonds command a higher premium | in the market than the bonds of any } other state; we don’t want that! changed then, do we? Missouri bas a larger public schoo! | fund than any republican state in Union; we don’t want that chanced | | either do we? # | Missouri has as low a rate of tax |ation as any state in the Union;bless | ;your souls I know you don't want | | that changed, it is needless to ask | you. | | Missouri has as many (proportion | | ately to her population) and as cred jitable elemosenary institutions us jany other state in the Union, it | | Wouldn't be wise to change that, | would it? | M i and asceco istration even Maj lispute t i all, do we? No, Mr. Warner, we can't a: to hazard all these good things just because you have seen fit to call us | moss-backs.—Dade Co. Advocate. ler, and Mrs. Jas. Lane of Mt. Zion, | @ attended church at Double Branch ; = Rev Miller will | =: « Suffered, Scratched, and Bled. Doc- tors No Relief. Cured by Two Sets Cuticura Remedies. I wish to express my thanks for the benefit I have derived from using CuTICURA REMEDIES. Nothing like them was ever manufactured. For three years have I auffered with a sore head. I w break out all over my with pimples which w form @ watery matter, I would have to seratch until I would bleed. After doctoring with two doctors for three years, more or less, I finally ma mind to try your Cv Remepies with entirely eatisfactor ~ After vsing ty in given rat many friends of Mr. Utley will be| ..“ glad to know that he is slowly im. « Wm Cassity was in | « Cc. Cuticura te Bt. Chicago, 1's. Resolvent ‘The New Blood and Skin Purificr, internally, anu Ccticvna, the for Skin Cure, and Cuticurs Soap, the exquisite Skin Beautifer, externally, i stantly relieve and speedily cure every disease atl in, scalp, and blood, with lose of y to age, from »i=iples to scroful.. amor of the 6! hair, from inf Sold everywhere. Price, CuTictma, 50c.; Soar Reso.vent, $1, Prepared by the Potren Dave anv Curuicar Conporation, Boston. Bay “‘ How to Cure Skin Diseases,”’ 64 pages, 4 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. PLES, blackheads, red, rough, chapped, and PIM oily ekin cured by Cuticuna ‘cae - HOW MY BACK ACHES! Back Ache, Kidney Pains, and Weak- ahs relieved i ome minute by tat in Feliew im inute > Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. a = Whereas Wm A Lebo and Cynthia 4 his wife, by their deed of trust dated pees Ty l2th, is¥, and recorded in the reeorder’s ofice within and for Batee county, Miseeur; in book No 49 page 604 conveyed tothe umter_ signed trustee the foliowing described real es— tate lying and being situate in the county oF Bates and state of Miscouri, to- The northwest quarter of ce. nine [9] and northeast quarter ot the southwest quar- ter of section nine '9: and ten acres deseribe: as follows. inning atthe southwest oe Trustee's Sale. ner of section nine /9! running thence nort 28 2-3 rods thence east w rods thence norte * rode thence west 60 rode thence south ve described land being in section nine (¢ | in township forty-one (41 of range thirty-two (52] containing in all2io acres more oF icse which conveyance was made in trust to secare the payment of one certain note fally described in said deedof trust, and wher det has been made in eee said note and the interest thereon now past doe and unpai “t of the legal between the hours of nine o’clock in th noon and five o’elock in the of tee dey, for the interest and ¥.M. ALLEN, Trustee.

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