The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 31, 1893, Page 3

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5 re a ' Missouri Pacific Time Table Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortn Bounp Passenger, - - 4t47 a.m. Passenger, : =) 2242p. im. Passenger, - - Oils p.m. Local t reight + 11:20 a.m. SouTtH Bounp Passenger, - - rassenger, - - Passenger, - - Local Freight - UNANIMOUS FOR BOIES. Nominated for Governor by Lowa Dem ocrats. Des Moines, Ia., Aug. 23.—Th democratic state convention this af- ternoon, by a rising vote, which was entirely unanimous, and with chee many times repeated. placed Horace Boies in nomination for governor. The report last night that he would not refuse was all that was needed to secure for him the honor in the face of his letter of some two weeks ago opposing third terms and expressing a determination to retire to privite life. The silver question was adjusted before the convention met, and the resolution adopted reaffirming the Chicago platform of last year and expressing confidence in the admin tration of Grover Cleveland. The platform devotes particular attention to state issue. THE TICKET COMPLETED. Two candidates were presented for lieutenant governor. They were L. S. Bestow the present incumbent, and Gib B. McFall of Oskaloosa. McFall deyeloped strength, but Bes- tow was renominated, the vote standing Bestow 662; McFall 449. The nomination of Mr. Bestow was made unanimous. There had been but little prelim- inary skirmishing with regard to the nomination for supreme judge Six candidates were presented and on the first ballot the vote was about evenly divided. On the second the votes came to John Cliggitt cf Ma son City so fast that he was nomina- ted by acclamation before the vote was completed. State Superintendent Kuoepfler was renominated by acclamation and the ticket was completed by the nomination of Thomas Bowman of Couucil Bluffs for railroad commis sioner iu the same manner. After the vote was aunounced Governor Boies arrived in charge of the committee which had been sent after him. As the governor appear- ed and shook hands with chairman Sells, the entire audience arose to their feet aud cheered lustily. Hats and fans went into the air aud ladies frantically wayed their handkerchiefs and parasols, As soon as the chair man was able to restore order Gov- ernor Boies: “I thank you for the cordiality of this greeting. I want to express the gratitude I feel for this evidence of your renewed confidence. Having said this, you will permit me to add that when, a few weeks ago, I direct ed a letter to the chairman of the state central committee saying that I was not a candidate for renomina- tion. I expressed my honest desire in the matter. I recognize, however, that [am but one member of a great political party, every member of which is as entitled to his opinion as I am tomine. Your action comes tome as a demand [great cheering] and I accept the nomina tion and will do allin my power to make the ticket a successful one. 1 thank dence.” much you again for your confi- Elections in 1893. This will not be year for bi state much of a Only thirteen c! the forty four states hold elections’ un electiox of any kind that has any | bearing on state affairs, and in one of these, New Jersey, only a house of assembly and seven senators are/ to be chosen. The biennial legis- lative session which has been adopt- ed by a majority of the states is re- sponsible for this off year. The thirteen states that will bold elections on November 7—for they} are all November states—are Iow:, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Obio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia and Wiscon sin. Of these Iowa, Massachusetts, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin elect governors. New York elects a full state ticket except governor and a legislature, Pennsylvania a supreme | judge and state treasurer and the re- |Maining seven elect judges of legis- |latures. The new legislatures will elect United States sen in Iowa ito succeed James F. Wilson in Ken- tucky to succeed William Lindsay ‘and in Virginia to Da Hunton. Of the retiring governor - Ki of Ohio will succeed himse’f, junless his democratic opponent, | Lawrence Neal, defeats him. Horace | Boies of Iowa b deelared his AS in-j} ention to retire from polit and | the successors of Peckof Wisconsin, ' McKinney of Virginia aud Russell ,of Massechusetts have not 1 | nomivated. ;A Sound Liver Makes a Weil Man or trou- 2 Jau ste in Mou Tongue, Ds Dry Skin, Pain in back the Shoulders’ Chills and If you have any of these svm liver is out of order, and your slowly being poisoned, ‘beca liver does not act properly will c¢ any di Stomach or Bowe a Liver Medicine. trial bettles at H L | | n, Hot between your id is sour Gov. Stone’s Western T Salt Lake, Ut William J. Stone, Aug. 20-—Goyr Missouri, £ of Jefrey, of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad. Speaking of the convention of the western and southern states which he has been petitioned to call Gov. Stone said that while he had been presented with a number of petitions duriug his western tour, the most of the petitions bad been addressed to him at Jefferson City since he left home. He was, there- fore, not prepared to say just what action would be taken as to the call- ing of the proposed convention. “I would be glad to do anything I can that is essential and proper for the well-being of the south aud weat,’ said he. “Such a convention tor the consideration of questions affecting particularly these two sections, with- sult beneficially.” Gov. Stone and party will start on their return trip to Missouri to mor row evening Gov. Stone on Democracy - Liberty, Mo., Aug. 20.—Gov. Stone, writing to a local paper from Manitou Springs, Col., says: “The democratic party may get fooled sometimes, but the party is all right, and it caunot be used for undemocratic purposes. In 1894 we dispose of those democratic rep resentatives who forgot the interests of their own constituencies, who for- got their campaign pledges, who for- get they are democrats. I hope there will not be many such to deal with. Ia 1896, we, the democrats of the United States, and especially the southern and western will meet in national convention aud adopt an old-fashioned states’ rights free trade and free silver platform, States, and upon which we will place sore representative western democrat, who will stand flat footed upon every plank of it, and who will enforce it in his administration if he should be elected, and he will be elected, too, whether he receives the votes of the eastern states or not The demo Mr. Cleve land should be treated with respect- ful consideration—he is entitled to jthat, ¢ s should be treated likewise. No matter what the pres ident or congress m: cratic party is all right. not destroy the democratic party; the rank and file will have an inning pretty soon.” Little Johnny—You ought to have seen Gus de Smith and sister make lemonade. Mrs. Brown—How did they do it? Little Johnny—Sister Birdie held the lemon while Gus squeezed Birdie.—Texas Siftings. There is more Catarrh in this see- tion of the country than all other dis- eases put together, and until the last few years Was supposed to be incura- ble.” For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local }treatment pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore, requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured market. It is taken internaliy in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollarsforany ease it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, J. F. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. BB Nold by druggists, 75q ees jcompanied by his far arrived in Salt Lake to.day in a special car ten | dered the Missourian by president out reference to the east, might re-} ay do, they can-| jby F. J. Cheny & Co., Toledo, Ohio, | is the only constitutional cure on the! | DEACON BROS. & CO, | Hardware, Groceries and Farm Machinery, DEERING AND WHITELEY MOWERS _ Osborne all Steel Hay Rakes. oP BUGGIES, _ and flourish. and imitating the hand | | | | SPRING AND FARM WAGONS.) | DEACON BROS. & CO. FOR PENS N AGENT WORDS OF PURE SILVE » Late e They are Framed in Pictures of Gold. Peter B. Stratton’s head was level when he wrote the following edito rial for his paper, the Sedalia Dem oerat: Missouri Li fete Captare a te Phan Pronk ons Rich i. Ds ia, Who has 23.—Sam for years on office | arrived | the} supposed direction of the lightning The came old t | is on between Kansas and Missouri | S vator the place in here to day and has his rod Tt is a mistake for merchants and business men to talk too much about hard times. Matters of enterprise, of businesr, of trade, are largely matters of con- fidence. Destroy contidence aud you de- stroy trade Talk to your neighbor or friend until you make him believe that ruin stares everybody iu the face and if ha has any respect for your vpinious he will at once lock up his money aad buy nothing but the actual, ime mediate necessities of life. It is an equally serious mistake for business men to abandon ordina- ty business methods merely because trade is temporarily dull. Take the matter of advertising for the ageucy. for this place, and, while Martin is contident that the are that Missouri will capture it. As matters are now pending the} Kansas coterie is badly aud promisingly exntangled Martin has endorsed Cooke of Heriingtov, who | was the Democratic candidate for Congress in the Fifth District, but who withdrew just before the elec tion and allowed John Davis to beat Burton some 1,500 votes. Crouch and the stalwarts are pledged to Jack Arnold, and Colonel Thomas Moonhght has secured his recom- mendatious and support of nine out of ever ten Democratic leaders in | Sloue. : the State. Moonlight, so it is claim | Let the merchants and business ad would prove an easy winner had | ™&" withdraw their advertisements he not been under the administration | {fom the newspapers and their cus- bau. While Governor of Oregou he towers at once conclude that times disregarded some of Cleveland's in- | *T¢ hard, trade dull and the situa- Siemdlions sick | tor serious. Having concluded that disfavor. The Missouri caudidate | everyone else has quit buying the is AW. Rogers of Warrensburg. | average reader feels like following the fashion. It is the part of wisdom to use ex ‘This wondertul Liniment is known | tra exertions wheu trade is dull in most penetrating lintment in the world. | 8 agnation. It willcure rheumatism, neuraleta, cuts, When business is slack goto work sprains, bruises, wounds, old sores. burns, sciatica, sore thaoat, sore chest | and make your store or shop brighter and all inflammation, atter all others / and more attractive; do somethivg have failed. It will cure barbed wire | cuts, and heal all wounds where proud | more than usual to attract the pub flesh has setin. It is equally e nen lic eye. toranimals. Try it and you wil t be i < 4 withoutit. Price soc. Seld by H L Fix up your signs alittle more ar tistically than before. Tucker, Butier, Mo. Write out the most attractive ad- vertisement you prepare and will go to Kansas, indications upeois- is consequently in Ballard’s Suow Liviment. 3 Where he Kept his Money. ean Charlotte, N. C,, August 22.—The : s secre cet Nene send it to all the uewspapers which tight times bring out many odd have a general circulation in the ter ritory from which you expect trade. Keep at it until you convince the public that you are one business man who has confidence in himself and in your town and men will hunt you up to form your acquaintance and trace with you. Don’t get the blues! things. A banker whohad an ac- quaintauce in Alamance County went | to him to borrow money. The col- |laterals offered were of such a char- | acter that the countryman could not | resist, aud taking the banker to the jattic rolled out an old jug. The} | handle was broken off, and there was | ‘acorn cob stopper in its mouth. | Below a pile of dried apples the |ecountryman brought out $2,000 ip | bills and coins that he had hoarded | up for years past. He got 18 per cent for the loan. Negro Prodig From the Philadelphia Times. Barnwe'!l gounty, S. C., possesses a negro boy, 12 years of age, who is looked on as the owner of tke most} - remarkable memory of which the world has any record. He committed | Springfield, Mo., Aug. 23 —Last to memory the entire book of Gene- jnight in response to a telegram from | gis the other day in the space of j the authorities of Longview, Texas, | three hours, repeating every chapter | Constable Arnold of this city arrest | after reading it over once, and for- jed O. F. Lane of Gregory county, | getting only some half dozen words | Texas, charged with stealing $12,-| from the first verse to the last Sev- 000. This morning Lane was found | eral weeks ago a local politician de- dead in his cell, having committed |livered an address of nearly two | Suicide during the night by taking | hours at a country meeting, and on |morphine. Lane and his wife came | returning howe the boy was able to to this city about two weeks ago. | tell the discourse over with such ac | They wore diamonds and had plenty | curacy that the following day the| | Took Morphine. } nine cases out of ten are j band was a veteran of the War of} Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Sa! s, Sore: place in his presence, irrespective of! its length or purport. He does not | know how to read or write, but has /2 frequently given exhibitions of being! able to copy correctly copy out of any sheet of writing he ead over! once, giving every punctuation mark r Cuts ve in eum Fever writing with startling accuracy, thi letter paper. and BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK or several pages of ordinary Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot 1 the diseased portion of the ear. yisonly one way to cure deatf-} and that is by titutional remedies. Deafness is causen by an| inflammable condition of the mucous | lining of the Eustachian Tube. When} this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing | and whenit is entirely ci ness is the result, and unl flammation can be taken out ar tube restored to its normal eonditi hearing will be destroyed forev caused by ceatarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous sur- faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars forany case of deafness (caus ed by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. FP. J. Cheny, Toledo, ©. Be Sold by druggists, Te, rons) THE LARGEST AND THE SHONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. | CAPITAL, a SURPLUS. - - $125,000 00 $25,000 00 Bo jo TYGARDS 0-7 HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, [1 C.CLARK : President, Vice-Pres, Cashier Muider Will Out. | Chicago, Ii, Aug. 24.—A specie! to the Tribune from Otsego, Mich., Says: Lawyers, W . ( ). J ACKSON —ATTORNEY-AT-LAW — Considerable excitement has been ciused by the finding ofa letter ina bottle in the Kalamazoo river by H. J. Unguitsch at Pine creek, two miles west of bere. ates County Na- Iu substauce it is as follows: = ———— Reese “Kalamazoo, Mich. Aug. 22, 1893. se ARKINSON & GRAVES, A guilty conscience is what makes ATTORN2YS AT LAW. me write this letter. I am the man who killed Mr. and Mrs. Borden of New Bedford. Lizzie is innocent. LT only intended to kill Mr. Borden for revenge, but being discovered by Mrs. Borden. was compelied to kill HOMOBOPATHIC her. [Signed] Max O’Rertty.” PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, The letter is written in a bold hand | Office, tront room over P. O. All call on four sheets of tablet paper aud answered at office day or night. Z sere Specialattention given to temale dis- gives an exact description of how the | eases. murder occurred Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, aud why it wes done, words being erased and new 4h Cc. BOEE Nake? Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, jones substituted, [Sas oe etter Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- meauing. It is extremely sensation-|en a specialtv. al aud it is believed by many here as genuine. a Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 4 Mrs. Hamilton, Cambridge, Ills., says: Thad rheumatism so bad I could not raise my handto my face. Ballard’s Snow Liniment has completely cured me. Itake pleasure in intorming my neighbors and triends what 1t has done tor me. Cl Handley, clerk tor Lay ee) NLyman, Kewanee. Ills, advises us| | Watch & Clock Repairing Snow Linimeut cured him of rheuma- i tism Why nottry it? It. will surely do you good. It cures all inflamation, wounds, sores, Cuts, sprains, etc. Sold by H. L. Tucker, | On the north side of the square, ‘ Butler, - Missouri, Does his own Also Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Sil- verware at At The Age ot 104. _ ACTUAL COST AND CARRIAGE, Peekskill. N. Y., August 24.—Mrs.| 11 Annie Hyde died at the Lome of her grand nephew, John Stotsbury, on North avenue, Fishkill Landing, near kere, yesterday, aged 104 years 3 mouths and 26 days. She was a well-known centenarian aid the old- ary = est person along the Hudson River, and probably in the Empire State. Mrs. Hyde was born in Fishkill vil- lage, N. Y., April 28, 1789 preceding by two days the inaugurativu of George Washington as the first President of the United States. She was the oldest pensioner on the United States Government, drawing a monthly stipend of $12. Her bus- For the next twelve months. As a watch maker o can and will give ars experience ou satisfaction. Fine Watch Repairmg a Specialty. | ——GO TO—— G. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR TO— |F. BERNHARDT & CO. Jas. Boss | we Filled PURE DRUCS Watch Cases | MEDICINES, are cll gold as far as you can see. They look like solid cases, wear like solid cases, and are solid cases for all practical purposes—yet cost about half as much as an oxt- d gold case. Warranted to wear for 20 years; many in constant use for thirty years. Better than ever since are now fitted, at no extra cost, with bow (ring) which cannot be pulled or off the case—the TOILET ARTICLES, ey | TOBACCOS AND FINE CIGARS, | 4RTISTS jof money. He was a prominent local man who delivered it went to see {politician of Texas, and at one time |him to take a copy of it from his | jcounty «ttorney of Gregg county. mouth, having himself lost the man | | The inquest developed no explana- uscript on which it was written. | | tion for taking his life except that | This gift seems unaccompanied by | |the fear to meet the resalts of his (an unusual degree of intellect, the! | wrong doing in Texas. | boy being a day laborer in the fields | Jerre Dariisewneeatacnns Com- 82d he appears not to take in the | | pany is a solid company, and when Sense of what the camera of his mind | | they =—— = of their —— H preserves, but to repeat it after the | | for a term of five years, you can rest | man; ot. i assured that they will make them of | ae as ae oe ee =| the best material, and with the} greatest care. There is no doubt | ulty since a baby, and at the extra- the “Davis” will wear three times as | Ordinary age of one year he could long as it is warranted. cous any conversation that took /arenars OF ALL KINDS Can only bs had on the cases stamped with this trade mark. All others have the old-style puil-out which is only held to the case by fric and can be twisted off with the fing Sold only through watch dealers. see pamphlet, or send for o KeystoneWatch Case Co. PHILADELPHIA. ‘Marwtees, Slo Starving. Send $ costs {5 stam {cr perticclens 00. 6. W. F. SUTDER M'VICHER'S THEATER. Caicace. AL Prescriptions Carefully Compounde A liberal Patronage of the , public is solicited.

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