The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 19, 1894, Page 3

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IT HAS NO POLITICS. | which tremeditnes bill. | the democratic side of the commit Tnat is New York When its Own | €¢ *topped to inquire what per cent of the income tax New York would pay and how much of it would be Hartford or The eastern boards of | Interests Need Protecting. J | paid in Boston or Qreestions | Brooklyn. |trade and the eastern newspapers }and statesmen made these calcula tions. Hil’s Attitude on Tariff Demonstrates It. Washirgton, D.C. April 12, Can the tariff bill be passed in its present form? Three-fourths of the politicians on the democratic side, who one month ago boldly asserted that no Senator would dare vote against the bill, now admit in private conversations that the situation is critical, and that defeat is a possi- ways and means committee came j through Bourke Cockrau. In the house debates Cockran and Cummings forced a_ sectional issue. and drive New York into revolt xyainst bility. It all arises from the incom-} the national party Now and thes preheneible position which Hill and| representatives aud seittors have Murphy and Brice and Irby have] protested against eastern shiet o.oL assumed. Senator McPherson is| but they were forced to it opposed to the bill, but indirectly it | charges of attempted s: crion+ is reported that when the final test] isiation. Aud at thisvers tia: t ¢ comes he will vote for it. But with} is no dispositios to sit 1 sin the other senators it is different | permit these charges tu #0 .ctefes Two opinions are frequently ex jed. If a break on sections . pressed concerning Hill The one|forced the western aud sour ern most common among those who have closely studied him is that he has given up all hope of ever becom ing president and will concentrate his energies in an attempt to hold New York. His speech Monday last went along way toward strengthening this belief. .It also emphasized an other fact. When it comes to a pro- tection of its own interests, New York has no politics. The west is patriotic. Self protection is forgot tu sacrifice their record on the ‘arfi to prevent it. They will the issue, but they to surrender not fore e not inclined priueiple, and before the senate debate bas proceeded much further this sentiment will ke manifest. If the tariff bill fivally goes to the house emasculated there will be no attempt to longer stifle this pent up indignation No dem- ocratic member's of congress care to ten among the campaign orators aud | discuss this phase of ths situation largely by the voters, all of whom|for publication at this time, but in talk much of the public good andj|their private conversations have no| common welfare. But, whether it|hesitaucy in declaring what policy be Tammany democracy or the anti | they will pursue. machine democrats, the Platt repub-| This week the halls of congress licans or the anti machine republicans | have been flooded with a publication the mugwumps er what not, there|in book form containing “A Memori- is but one platform in New York jal and Petition of the business men when an issue reduces itself so as to| of New England” These memorials hazard the political or commercial |bave been common within the past supremacy of that state. Nobody|few weeks. They are of the same more thoroughly understands this|geveral tenor, but the oue in ques- than Senator Hill, and the commun | tion has attracted more than ordina- belief is that he has planted himself |ty attention, vecause of the strong squarely on the New York side of| financial institutions in Boston and the controvery and will cling to it} generally throughout New England even though it should read him out| which have signed it and the section - of the national party. His defense |alism which it seeks to engender. of the wealthy classes in New York|And this feature of the memorial is and his williugness to denounce the|all the more reprehensible because efforts of the south and west in his | of the announcement which precedes income tux efforts was not the role|its descussion of tne income tax that which an aspirant for democratic] partisanship would be avoided. “Let presidential honors would ordinarily | patriotic action be the motto of thie assume. To be a national factor Hill] congress,” say these memorialists in must be able to control New York |oue chapter, “and bury forever all He drops from the public mind the | sectional differences between all parts | moment that he loses his grasp on|of the country.” the politics of the state. From} And in order to prevent sectional Tammany hall the order has gone] discussion and turn the congression-| forth that no tariff bill is preferable|al mind to a dispassionate consider-| to any tariff bill with and income tax. | ation of the tariff bill and the aceome! On that platform stands Hill and|panying income tax the following} No one on The first of it heard in the There has been no disposition ti | representatives will not be inched | Always pays the highet | Produces i" line of A. O. Welto Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. jthe peace, ward heelers and bum | jmers, town supervisors and others | jof high and low degree, until, with | b7 ef : | S. W. S. has moved to the east sic of the square witha full and @mplete Farm Machirery,. Call and see him. Certainty of Punishment. Seffe rson City Tribune. It has long been a matter of sur prise that so great a city as New | York is able to repress its lawless- |ness and te punish its lawbreakers the states. During the past two or! |three years there have been com |plaints of corruption at elections, | fraudulent registering and voting.and p in some quarters a degree of intimi 7 NUEENSWARF AND GLASSWAE |dation not to be tolerated. Finally | CICARS AND TOBACCO, the authorities fell athwart the crim | short | |space of time had railroaded thew | into the penitentiary and the jails | They began with Johu Y. McKane | inals, and ip an incredibly market price for ountv| ious favor had tended to shield him | East Side Square Butler Mc | the wealthy ward boss, whose relig- | i | from suspicion. He was sentenced to six years. Then came justices of | in a period of less than six months, { eighteen well-known New York poli | ticians hud donned the stripes. This is the sort of courts aud peo ple that St. Louis needs—juries that wil convict, prosecuting attorneys who will prosecute, judges who will grant no favors, witnesses who can not commit perjury without being sent to the peniutentiary. The cer tainty of punishment is a better de terrent of crime than long-delayea and often evuded severity of the statutes. CHILDS © “Now good digestion wait on {tid MJurphy. The senate is politically | broad-gauged, non sectional remarks | divided as follows: Democrats, forty | are submitted: | three; republicaus, thirty-eight; pop- It isa forced measure, unealle al ulists, four. If Stewart is counted|for by auy other palliation than sec-| asa populist it reduces the republi- | tionalism. It is an attempt to escape! cans to thirty-sevea, but whether | taxation by the west aud south, and | populist or republican, Stewart is force the tax gatherer upon the east | against the bill. Without Hill and /and northeast; and thus impose the | Marphy the democrats lack a major- | burden upon the sections which have | ity over the opposition. If Alien and Kyle (populists) vote for the bill, aud the fuil democratie vote, with the exception of the New York senators,is cast for it there will be a majority of one. But what will Irby do? and how will Brice vote? MePherson and Smith cannot be de- pended upon. The situation is in deed alarming if the income tax proposition is adhered to. There is the second proposition concerning Hill which appears so absurd as to hardly deserve mention. It is of republican origin, and credits Hill with prophetic vision. He has peeped into the future, aud sees a marvelous throughout the country in favor of tariff conservatism. The combined the new south. Itis an act of in gratitude in return for every favor north and northeast. would not suffice to arouse indigna | tion, those who have sought to bring | indirection accused of attempting to| destroy the wealth of the country, | and a vigorous defense of million} south would be first to recognize it, |ists* “is not the unmitigated curse | and in this tidal wave of opposition! which some so called political re-j tariff radicalism the senior senator | formers and agitators would make | from New York would ride into the | the people believe,” and page after jeopardize the interests of the bill | white house. But only republicans who never could or never wished to of existence; and its revival is to re provided the capital to pioneer and eall memories which were better, develop the west and eall into being forgotten. Is it one of the weapons , returned from St. Louis yesterday for a war by legislation against the wealth of this coustry, which was | from the east, which has been re. at the disposal of the nation, in or- | Mrs Major was horrified to find ker ceived by the west and south, freely der that a government by the people ‘husband dead. He had died with- liberally and with the best wishes |should not perish from the earth? lout a struggle and his right arm for the prosperity apd future growth Is it a weapon wielded in order to ‘was around his wife's neck. Heart of those sections on the part of the satisfy revenge and add to the sec-| disease was the cause of bis death. ea ieieay = a , tional features of a bill created to | And for fear that this charge| give it a place upon the statute | cette, Mo, November 24, 1540. books? These are ouly a few of the ele-| abeut radical tariff reductions are by | ments calculated to arouse indigna- | ors in 1858. tion and invite sectional considera: tion of the bill. It is the weapon which has been chosen with whick aires is accordingly entered? into. | to defeat any tariff legislation what | jess than 20 years of age. In 1863 “The millionaire,” say the memorial | ever, and all because the great ma- | he opened an office in Fayette, and jority of the tariff reformers came from the west and the south west. Because they did not wish to page is devoted to their laudation. | the representatives from these sec- | represented the old Seventh Sena- appetite, And health on both ” says the great Sheakespeare, but he did no have in mind a coated tongue or torpid liver, with all the symp toms of biliousness, so common 1. this country All this, and more, can be cured by De Pierce's Golder. Medical Diecover,s purely vegetable compound which restores the ection of the liver, gives tone to the flag ging energies of the dyspeptic’ stomach, and thus enables “good di gestion to wait on appetite, and health on both” By druggists Asthma, and Hay Fever cured, by anewly discovered treatment. A dress for pamphlet, World’s Dispen- sary Medical Association, Buffalo, EE your old Bring McFARLAND BROS. Butler, Misso LIFE FOR LIFE. Montgomery, Ala., April 11.—In the city court this morning, after the jury had been out about 15 hours it brought in a verdict of guilty against Joe, Alex, and Wilson Wood ley and Jack Gabriel, four negroes, charged with the murder of Ed H. Grant about a mouth ago The first were sentenced to be hanged and the last to life imprison ment. Grant was killedas a result conspiracy between eer harness men of Bates county, Mo. They keep Laraess from $10 to $29 Saddles of all styles and pricer, 3 to 815 “COW BOY SADDLE” made in this conuuty. Double wa hand harness from $ K s owners need. of a EL FORE those negroes who made Jim Callaway marder him Jim was tenced to be hanget last week. Oliver Jackson a negro who offered to kill Grant for $10 was mobbed 10 days ago Bound for MeFarland Bros, the | A Girl Cremated Ai.ve- parently in the best of health. His wife and sop, Oak, had just Eldorado Kan., April 11.—Lena, the 20 months old daughter of Jers Jensen, living near Pontiac, seven | aftercoon. miles east of this city, met with a a + : : . eath Is “ve © 5 Upon awakening this morning, borrible death Jast eveuing. She wandered some distance from the uouse where some brush had been othes took fire and she burned to a crisp burned, her Samuel C. Major was born in Fay- Kansas City, Kas. April 12.— He | Judge Ande | was educated at Central College, held lottery euterprises uulawtul and this city, graduating with high hon |ordered that the Kansas vagraucy law.under which a lottery magnate here was arrested recently, be en- forced. R-sul officials will lottery men soun if they do uot cease busiess a, in a decision to day | In 1859 he went to Jefferson City \and read law with a brother in law. | Gen. James B. Gardenhire. In 1860 jhe was admitted to the bar, being tatern in prisoa The and quite u number of eg pe rey | : ‘MOTHER FRIEND” | has ever had the reputation of being | one of the most brilliant and talent | ed criminal lawyers in the West. 2 | He filled many offices of trust iu 3 the county with marked ability. H-| $ Locked In A Vault. Chadron, Neb., April 12—At 3:40 this afternoon, while Albert Whip- ple, cashier of the Crawford Bank- ing company of Crawford, Neb.. was alone in the bank, a stranger attired in cow boy garb entered, and shov- ing a six shooter iu Whipple's face. demanded meney. Whipple being taken unawares, could do nothing but give up all the casb on the counter, amounting to about $2,500 The robber then compelled Whipple to enter the vault and then locked him in. In about twenty winutes 2 Mr. Chase entering the bank heard Strange noises emitting from the vault and seeing no one in sight hastened tothe president, whe lei the cashier out. Two men, one of whom answers to the description given by Whipple of the robber, were riding leisuriey out of town a little before 4 o'clock. Several parties are out after the robbers and Sheriff Handy and Partlett have just lett here for swift horses. It is thought the robbers cannot escape Crawford on Dragged From ths iteme. Gatesville, Tex, April 11.--The people in this locality are terribly wrought up over the hanging of Ed Cash Monday. The crime was mest cruelly executed by the victim be ing dragged out of his home in the presence of his invalid wife, and strung up toa tree but a few yards from the house. Not satisfied with this, the mob riddled the lifeless body with bullets, while the woman prayed for]the deliverance of her hue- band. The murderers have not yet been captured, but every eftort is being made to secure them. Mrs. Cash, who was married a year ago, is momentarily expected to die What prompted the murder is un- kuowr. $100 Reward $100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh, Hall’s Catarrh Cute is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu- tional disease requires a constitutiona} treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood ano mucous surfaces of the sys tem, thereby destroving the foundation ot the disease, and giying the patient strength by building up the constitution andassisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars tor any case that tails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo O BEA.Sold by druggists. im 17- BATES-COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. °* THE OLDEST BANK THE LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. CAPITAL, - - $125,000 00 SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 ch F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. J. C. CLARK oars) Cashier Lawyers. Graves & LARK, ie ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. Silvers & Denton ATURNETS AND COUASEMRS AT LA‘, BUTLER, M9. Office over the Farmers Bank. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All gall understand the south could have so thoroughly misunderstood tariff seu- timent in that section. And ever oae may think of Hill's. state:- manship or political honesty, he; should be given credit for more po | What-) | hope. has been made in the tariff fight has|riotism in one section of the country | been found dead in bed at his home. | its comments on the income tax, with | frained from defending themselves | the following remarks supposedly |in the halls of cougress, but forbear- caleulated to convince the southern |ance has ceas2d to be a virtue. democracy of its errors: | SR Seen es It is the weapon of enemies of the | astitutions of this country, whose | Dead In Bed. Fayette, Mo., April 12.—Our city ‘Then the memorial branches off in| tions of the country have so far re- | torial District of Missouri in the! Q | State Legislature and won honor} and fame. | He had been urged to make the} ‘race for Congress from the Seventh / | Congressional District, but only | Tuesday had declined. He was an \ uncompromising Democrat. | December 20, 1866, t i ‘ é ae : he was mar | htical sense than to cherish such a; patriotism has either never had an|was greatly shocked this morn- ried to Jane A.. daughter of the late! lexistence, or is lamely recovering jing when it was learned that! Dr. John A Talbot. He leaves a} Whatever charge of sectionalism | from the effects ofan era when pat |ex State Senator Sam U. Major had | wife, three daughters and two sons. answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis eases. 3 E> To Young $3 ENS Mothers § 2 T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chii- en a specialty. WANTED--AGESTS willing totrave!. ae who will devote thei hole time to soliciting for Nursery Stock. Permanent paying positions come from the opponents of the|was sectional and not national? It|He was up until about 11 o'clock | 92¥; conducted by the Knights of tariff bill. It was never @ question| originated in this country to aid the/last night, having returned from a| in the committee on ways and means loyal north to tread the treason ovt/ social visit with friends and was and A. O. U. W. lodges of this city. The whole city mourns his loss. | His funeral will take place Sun-} for hustlers. Customers get whet they order and the best quality. Ad- dress, Mt. Hope Nurseries,“ (most complete on this continent.) Ellwang- er & Barry, Proprictors, Rochester, New York, 3-10, [2 aman Ie

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