The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 3, 1893, Page 2

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SENATH ik MARTIN'S FINANCE. He is Opposed to the Sherman Law but Asks a Substitute. c, C. Tim : It can now be positively stated that the junior senator from Kansas i r of the repeal of the Sher man law. He will, a substitute. ask for owever, id the senator, ‘all men who have the tion of finance any thought favor of the repeal of the Sherman bill. It is an outrageous law, « fact the interpretation, in “In my opinion,” given ques are in due more to my judgment, than to the intent of its franfers. Ido not belieye that Mr. Carlisle or any other yer believes that the issued under that law are necessar redeemable in gold, but that was the Secretary Foster put upon it, and Mr. Carlisle proba- bly believes less trouble would be caused by following this construc- tion than by opposing it. good law- construction While decidedly antagonistic to! the Sherman law, however, I am not | prepared to cast my vote for its re- peal until some provision is made for the coinage of silver. I care not upon what ratio it is coined. That, in my judgment, is a matter of mi- nor importance. I simply ask that the government place gold and silver onan equal footing, declare each worth a dollar, start them off togth- er and let each take care of itself. That done I think the country will settle down to its normal condition, that confidence will be restored aud the flurry at an end. No, I do not anticipate a very Lit- ter fight. I have confidence enough in the good sense and judgment of President Cleveland to believe that he will submit in his message a plan of all opinions meet and act aimicably. I am in hearty accord with the administra- tion and do not propose to stubborn- ly refuse to vote for all measures that do not entirely suit me, if I find that I am in the minority.” on which men can Bank Depositors. Jefferson City Tribune, The people who make haste draw their money out of banks every time a financial flurry takes place go | on the theory that banks convenient institutions so they willing to extend the same. Such people never ought to be allowed to carry an account with a bank. are very long as ‘They are a detriment to any banking insti-| ©! | sions for the same purpose, tution. Just now the banks are in no posi- tion to even up with penurious and chicken-hearted depositors but there is a day coming when they can do so. The present trouble will not last long when everything quiets down the depositors who withdrew their mon- ey and contributed everything in their power to make matters worse | will be back and want to put the'r| money in a place of safety and where | it will earn something. Then the banks will have e, chance to settle up | old scores. | Every person with common sense | must know that banks are a nece ty,and moreso than any other branch Bureau of fo ssitors to show their conti tion the Thing tence in the men who have handled} peyerly F their money so carefully for William C. Whitney, ex-Secret It is to interest talked freely today upon country that the ban and its E and im ice certificates | | years, accompanied by his wife ;to a human being. jfrom the disease, to} don't want any favors and are) | sissippi and others will visit the h jin the battle. placed | from j the ago have improved to a degree al- MR May be Re-Opened Next Week | Washington, D. G, July th they WHITNEY’S VIEWS. ime very tinent of the Rear bE Missouri Nat funds out of the bz eposi tors | | Congress. City will resur should go to their bankers and as-| “Tt is scarcely necessary for me to | next week sure them that they have confi said Mr. Whitn at I) both of the in th ouesty and business s heartily indorse Mr. Cleveland's pol- | the help I « This is the way to prevent a panic. |. icy of urging the repeal of the Sher-| was more techn good word to use | + do not see how there can reasonably understand it. It certai y p cas f the Missoun ghts imagin- be How- the case of the Misso | man law as preliminary to reform. I thar A Pitiable Condition. One ofthe saddest two sides to that question. j ver small may be the actual intrinsic Depositors ought to exe pre able was wiinessed at ane depot this) Sn Stee may theactual intrinsic Depe a me BED mornine on the rival of Missouri|€fect of the silver purchase upon | dence and judgment. They frequent g Miss the currency, there can be no doubt. ly precipitate the that apprehension of such effect is! they afraid of by senseless, the first cause of the existing lack} causeless runs on the bank. Men of confidence in business circles and | should know what they are about and very Pacific train No. 6 from Kansas City Whea Willis Russel!, aged about 55 are 5) and five children, alighted to the plat- | form. the consequent wide spread business assure themselves of a bank's sta- The old gentleman is avictim of distress: Slt ithe countrys nol be: piney Before they, Ueno sun elas leancer, and such inroads has the!i™g drowned in a silver tlood, it is at/itall. But thus assured, and the | | disease made that he wears a veil |®0Y rate being scared to death by | money deposited, they should not that entirely covers his head. Hic) 0° ©2F ©! teh a deluge. Either |allow themselves to be frightened at | face looks ag a ub had bees bac 7 the result is disastrous. The) ever rumor borne about on every ed, and no longer bears semblance first thing to be done is to shut off) breeze and rush to the bauk and ask whatever flood there is, little,{and stop the scare. be no doubt that the absolute f unqualified repeal of the Sherman A Rich Man's Mad Act. law would do this. I agree with) Atchison, July 27.—Frank How- Mr. Cleveland, that simple repeal ard, au prominent wholesale notion without amendment or substitute is| dealer of this city, committed be it big or | for their money because they see There can | shadow. For sixteen years he has suffered and four years 4go and he lost his eyesight. He was a gal- lant goldier in the Confederate army, and is now enroute from Southwest City, McDonald county, to the Con- federate home in Higginsville. The wife and children, all clad, carried a basket of this time. I do not wish to be regard- | O'clock this afternoon by shooting ed considering the repeal of the | himself through the brain. The cure) cause was temporary insanity. The affairs of the deceased poorly provisions Sherman law as a permanent for our rational ills. I look upon! as a palliative, not a panacea. | jin excellent condition and he was ue currency question is not the | | doing a good business. He did not and were as attentive as they could possibly be to the husband and father. The old gentlemen and one | of his children departed for Higgins- were ville on a freight train at noon, but most vital one with which we have | owe a single bill Wax: wat: ous au the remainder of the family are to den! The poison lies deeper. | he had $8, 000 to his credit in the anxious to make Sedalia their home, No te uporary anodyne of financial | Exchange National Rank te aa and with that object in view are legisiation will eradicate it. WG) ECG soe engines ch tine | Eauls looline Hoeeuhocee nice ternoer ilver scare will not be long over be-| Says he is worth $100,000. Mr. Howard has been subject to fits of despondency for several years fore some other seare will begin, un-| To Mark a Position at Chickamanga. |less we go the bottom of the trouble Washington, D. C, July 26.— and wet the business and industry | and was r garded as eccentric. He Gen. H. V Boynton, of this city,|of the country off the artificial basis | left a wife and child. has gone to Chickamauga to meet|upon which it is being conducted a the Chickamauga Commission frcm|and upon solid ground again. The In a war against England France Texas there to-morrow, for the pur- country’s prosperity will never be! would undoubtedly be beaten. Such pose of having them locate their| permanently established while an a war would be waged almost wholly position in the historic battle, in]/annual tax of $300,000,000 or $400,-/ on the water, where Eugland is the} order that it may be suitably marke] 000,000 is laid upon its industries.) master of the world. | France could ed. Among the commission are: | No matter what disguise it may as-/not invade England, andq conse | | Senator Mills, Chairman, who was a/sume, our present tariff system is quently her imme superiority on | essentially a tax upon the producing | land, which The nation- | British than reater the 0c is participant in the battle, and Repre- sentative Buck Kilgore, who and industrial classes. dominance ou was | Adjutant General of Ector’s Brigade, Jal goverment is supported by a tax, would not avail. There is a chance, engaged in the fight. A large num- | not upon property, but upon con-! of course. that a coutliet between \ber of the Southwestern and South. |sumption those two nations might spread. In ern States have appointed commis-| ‘“‘The tariffis assessed, not upon a fight on the Siamese question Chi- what men own, but upon what they eat and drink and wear. It too largely a per capita tax. Under itit be tempted to make that long th eat- le that a poor With tho-e with a large faimly may be compell-| four nations involved the adyantage Tennessee. Mis-}€d to pay more taxes for the support | would still be on E jof the national government than Afghanistan, economical with only | tagonist on her ground, would himself to keep. An average man | be compelled, in that event, to resist the and classes, Russ and her forces, together with | making an income of a basis of clas-| the British army in India and such sification, spends could be Muscovite ad- Then, toc, might would be with England, might through na their Gover- nors, and from the middle of Sep- temver to the middle of October the commissions the States of likely their Legislatures or 1s while Russia man is easily poss ened march on India. from Missouri, Kentucky, V's side, for an which toric ground to locate their positions millionaire own lin middle lower Snatched trom the Grave- Chatanooga, Tenn., July 25.—The | Board of Health reports through the Times of this city that each of the jeleven third stage under Dr. .. city 75 per cent of help as China would give, his income for food and clothing. | relied on to check to “The average rich man can not! vance from the aorth. spend over 5 per cent of his income the triple alliance for the purpose. National) turn on France and Russ taxes being levied as they are the/ same and their general mass of the people, the pro-| would be complete.—Globe comsumptives treatment obtained Amick of Cincinnati by authorities several nations same time, weeks Demo- of commercial business. Without the banks it would be impossible to car- | ry on the business of the and why sensible men themselves country, | will permit | to be frightened into| aiding and encouraging a panic by trying to crowd the bank into mak- ing ruinous assignments isa matter that cannot be satisfactorily account- ed for. The position of nearly all! depredators can be best explained by an old story of a close-fisted Ger- man who had a considerable sura of money deposited ina bank Know- ing his miserly disposition, a practi-} told him the bank had) ~~. ae The old German hastened |“ 7" 6°" to the bank and in a very excited} eal joker failed. manner demanded his money. It was counted out to him immediate- ly- Gazing in astonishment at the large stack of bills, the German ex- pressed surprise that the bank had the money didn’t want it. | most miraculous. men claim this is the most] The only permanent remedy is) neering, Che ry and complete demonstration that con-|in a readjustment of this great bur- ee and Physics. “Sp |sumption is curable thus far made. | jthat it is the mcst important dis. and announced that since | to light. the money was certainly there he) ducing and industrial classes, and | erat. the great body of merchants, trades- men and professional men pay fitteen times as much tax in proportion to their means as the rich man. There lies the secret of national distress. The results as given to the press by Wards Island hospital, New York} while equally as sensational, were /not so comprehensive and local med- MISSOURI School Of Mines. An Institute of Technol in Mining Civil and | icine | Land Surveying Excellent Chemical I 000 Mining Labrat den of taxation and equalizing its, pressure upon all alike. Other Ttor) Boel ae a ae ez about erecting. Tuition countries do this. There’s no reason) Expenses low. Next se Tni 5 2 Ss September isth. For catalogue: why the United States can not To sdurecs, SCHOOL OF MIN such a reform the Democratic party, 25-21 Rolla: Bo. is pledged. Upon the strength of | that pledge it came into power.” } The Times says the eleven persons to administered Dr. Amicks medicines are so far improved that their appetites have returned. They sleep well at night, have no night sweats, the irritating cough has disappeared and they feel strong whom were Trustee's Sale. | Whereas A. R, Fudge and Mollie E. his wife, by theirdeed of trast d pom ,.and recorded in Minister Boyd Quite Sick. 3 : ce within and for Bates county, fnbcok Nott page 483 conveyed to the unde Springfield, Mo., July 26—Col,| | signed trustee the fol S. H. Boyd, minister to Siam, is very | ee lying and being situate 1 ates and state o: issouri, AS at his home here. Hehas not| The nort Local physicians report similar results in private practice from med- icines furnished them by Cincinnati doctors, and all apparantly agree wit | southwest quart covery medical science has brought cept members of his own family, | oh acres, Which conveyance c The anne 3 15) and the we: talked to visitors for several days | 1 of th { and the east half of the and does not see any one nOW eX- | the southesst quarter of the | of section twenty-six He feels,Mrs. Boyd says.much anxie- | iu: to secure th payment of onec 2 it id deed of ty about the state of things in Siam, | Sly, described in. said. a ad See nm 8: a Thos. R. Allen, an old railroad en- whereas, defau ment of the annual Staple sui-| the only thing to be considered at/Cide in a closet of his home at one | NMUEENSWARF AND GLASSWARE THE BOSS SADDLE, to co operate | no mean an- | at the | discomfiture } and | Fadge | Ju n thirteen | If of the | quarter | quarter of | gineer, suggests as a defense against — robbers, that locomotives be provided with hot steam jets with This is just about the logic of the depositors who are now withdrawing and has received an official commun- ication from the king’s minister of foreign affairs, the nature of which their money from the banks and also from circulation. They don't want the money themselves, and yet when the banks need it to help the busi- ness of the country from becoming paralyzed they rush in and try to make bad matters worse by demand- has not been made public. Robert M. Boyd, vice consul general and electric pipes, capable of being point- ed in any direction. His idea is to turn the steam onto a train robber | acting minister resident. and scald his eyes out before he| Bangkok since his father came home | could-do violence. Similar pipes|and keeps the family here informed | could be used to advantage on ex-/as tothe course of eyents at the press cars. Siamese court. past due and unpaid, w al | ing to the terms of said note and trust de, | renders the whole debt due and payable at jonce. Now therefore. at the request of the legal holder of said note and pursuant | 1% the conditions of said deed of trust! I will proceed to sell the above described p fisesat public vendue, to the nighest bidder) for cash, atthe esst front 4 of the court has been house in the cityof Butler, county of Bates | ae | and state of Miseouri. cn | Friday August 18, 1593, | between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore-/ noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that / dsy, for oe purposes of satisfying said debt, | interest and costs. 38 at FRANK ALLENS, Trustee. | or Soft Water this Soap works so well, that Women want NO OTHER, 2 tard A. O Welton Fancy Groceres, 1 Kinds. > 2 = w Feed and Provisions of al CIGARS AMD TOBACCO, Always pay the highest market price for County Produce» East Side Square. Butler, Mo- —WILL— Give Satisfaction IN EVERY Fink's Leather Treo Saddlo RESPECT. Better than any other Saddle For the money. Made ona Nolid Sole Leather Tree No danger of Tree breaking. Also a full linefof STEEL FORK “COW BOY” SADDLES All styles and prices. Double Wagon harness from $10 to $29. Buggy harness $7 to KR 25. Second hand harness from $3.00 to $15. Full line of Turf Goods for fast horses. Come and see ua, MeFarland Bros, R, MO. t t t THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY DROTHERS, 56 Warren St, New York. Price 59 ct i "s Emulsion Hypophos- ing in the keeps fF t will do the same for you — Scott’s on Colds. Consumptio., Scrofala ‘and ll Anacmic and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wastingin children. Al- most as palatable as milk. Get only the — Prepared by Scott 4 - , New York. Sold by

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