The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 15, 1895, Page 2

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WHITE METAL MEN DOWNED |that if Mr. Whitney desires the| |nomination next year he will have| |the quiet support of the national | tinted St Administration. jbas repeatedly been | desire a fourth uominatic term, but he desires the party to | take up the strongest whet and of the Suprem one who will be of service ¢ party on lines which he can approve. Mr. Whitney is at Bar Harbor. Mr. Cleveland is at Gray Gables. Mutual friends of the two have been | at both places and have talked to Secretary of War La- mont has been one of these Cleveland thinks no man would be so strong as Whitney. Ion view of Mr. Whitney’s prob able candidacy as the legatee of Mr. Cleveland, the situation in this State becomes most Democracy of the Empire State is in a period of reorganization. Negotia- tions which have been fully detailed in the Herald are under way looking to bringing about harmony between the Hill-Murphy Democrats on one side and the Cleveland or anti snap Democrats on the other. day or two conferences will be held, both in this city and Saratoga, look- ing to a unions It is known that the influence of former Mayor Hugh J. Grant wil) be thrown in the direction of enlist- ing Mr. Whitney’s efforts to pro- cure Democratic harmony, and an advisory committee, with Mr. Whit- ney as a conspicuous member, to accomplish that harmony, may be expected very soon. What effect the Whitney Presi- dential movement will have on the aspirations of Senator Hill remains Whitney's candidacy would be regarded by many of Hill’s friends as a direct menace from the Cleveland wing. some person less desirous of har- mony than they have appeared to be fowa Democratic Convention Adopts the Sound Money Financial Plank. THE TICKET. Governor........ Judge W. Babb. Lieut. Governor... ..Ex-Lieut. Gov. | 0 Re pv. Syman B. Parshall, Marqurketa Rrilroad Commissioner— Col. George James, Du- buque, Supreme Judge— Senator Thomas G. Hooper, Des Moines. Marshalltown, Io., Aug. 7.—One of the most notable State Conven- tions in the history of the Iowa De- mocracy closed in this city this eve- ning. Since Monday there has been a bitter strife between the two op- posing elements of the party—one contending for a ticket and platform ona sound money basis, the other clamoring for free coinage, without waiting for an international agree- ment. From start to finish the white metal contingent did nearly all the talking on the street, in hotel lobbies, at various headquar- ters, in committee rooms, caucusses and finally on the floor of the Con- vention. The silver men had a fine chance to exploit their views in the Convention hall during the after- noon, owing to the fact that the resolutions committee got into a wrangle on the finarcial plank that kept them in the committee room till nearly 4 o'clock, the currency resolution being overhauled and re constructed two or three times be fore ap agreement was reached, and the majority making persistent ef- forts to ayert the introduction of the minority report. During this interval the Conven- tion did nothing but listen to free silver speeches by radical white metal champions. The sound mon- ey men preserved silence, except that Cato Sells made a short talk of a conciliatory character. The con- troversy grew warm and bitter, and when the minority report, fayoring free coinage, was introduced, an- other prolonged silver discussion was precipitated, and for a while the proceedings were tumultious. The final roll-call on the resolue tions showed the white metal crowd defeated by a vote of 6514 to 420}. Mississippi Democratic ‘Ticket. Governor.......... A. J. McLaurin Lieutenant Governor... .J. H. Jones Secretary of State...... J. L. Power Auditor of Public Ac- COONS oie cae W. D. Holder DreGsOter 2 5 55.2. 525s A. Q. May Jackson, Miss., August 7.—'lhe Democratic Convention which assem bled here today was the largest in the history of the State. R. V. Boothe, Chairman of the Democratic Committee, called the convention to order and made a speech counseling harmony and stated there was no question about the State giving the old time Democratic majority this fall, notwithstanding the fact that the Populists had nominated a full State ticket. On repeated calls Congressman Allen appeared and made a short speech, in which he said when the Democratic party adopted a free silver plank it would return to its old moorings and history. Nominations were then declared in order, Ex-Senator A. J. McLaurin -was nominated for Governor without opposition, and other candidates chosen on first ballot. Whitaey Asa Strong Presi- dentia: Possibility. New York, Aug. 7.—The Herald says: In the opinion of many promi- nent Democrats, a formidable move- ment is likely to take shape in a short time in favor of the nomina tion of William C. Whitney for the Presidency in 1896. There is more than one substantial reason in the possession of the Her-| ald why Mr. Whitney may be re- garded as a Presidential possibility of the first magnitude. Mr. Whitney and Mr. Cleveland are on terms of cordial friendship. Ever since the election of 1892 a popular delusion has been permitted to grow in the public mind that the President and Mr. Whitney were not on the basis of intimacy which characterized their intercourse of former years. "| Meade, six miles west cf this city. | \this afternoon, in the sixty third! might make Tammany Hall would be likely, I am told, to espouse the cause of Mr. is favorable to Whitney. So is Croker. Their per- sonal and business relations have been of the closest sort, and the opposition of Croker to Cleyeland |. at Chicago, when the tiger felt the power of Whitney as a genius for political leadership to a humiliating degree, never even strained their Senator Murphy, too, is friendly to Mr. Whitney. He has not forgot- ten that in 1892 and 1893. Whitney stood up for Murphy's candidacy for Senator, and displeased Cleve- land thereby. But Hill is now talk- ing Morrison of Illinois. Exports of Iron. During the first half of the present year $31,000,000 worth of Iron has been shipped from this country to Yet there has been asei- duously cultivated an idea that this country needed protection of one form or another from English com- The truth is, that this country, with fair opportunities, can made the manufacturing center of the With a tariff tax of forty ore and the same amount on coal we can now enter the field against England in her own territory. these unnatural burdens we could pleasure in pressing the button and control all the markets and prices. starting the wheels on the 18th, Yet in the face of these conditions| either from Gray Gables or wherever there are those who pretend to want | he might be on that day. As to the That) escort the President said he fully measure was responsible for the appreciated the compliment tender. distrees that has - prevailed during | ed by the military company, but his It cut off the| desire to avoid dieplay compelled revenues and increased the taxes at | him to decline the honor. the same time, and closed every in- dustrial-establishment in the country 25 that wasn’t protected by some sort Gorman visited the State Democrat- of a patent.—Kansas City Times. Released from the McKinley law restored. the last two years. |Beware of Ointments for Catarrh | Wednesday Mr. that contain Mercury. >- | as usual. Ss, as the! id tions from reputabl Gamage they wi F, J. Cheney & Co., T: no mercury, and is taken internally acting directly upon th ‘oledo O., contain buying Hall's ae@pSold by Druggists, price 75c. per JUDGE JACKSON DEAD. | i | ' preme Court I Nashville, Tenn, Aug. § Edmunds Jackson, associa court of t residen States, died at year of his age, of consumption H Judge Jackson had been in failing! health for the past four years, but | it has only been in the past eight or | nine months that the progress of | the disease began to cause his fami-| ly and friends uneasiness. Last | year he went ona lengthy trip to| the far West in search of health. Later he went to Thomasville,Tenn., where it was hoped the mild and! bracing climate would restore his! one-time vigorous constitution. The} trip did him little good, and after a time was brought home. At bis old home Judge Jackson seemed to improve slightly, until he went to Washington to sit in the second hearing of the income tax case. He stood that trip fairly well, but after his return home appeared to lose strength rapidly. Neverthe- | less, Judge Jackson never took to bed until last Wednesday week. Since that time his family and friends feared that the end was near, and his death today was not unexpected. Howell Edmunds Jackson was born in Paris, Tenn., April 8, 1832, so that he was in his 63d year at the time of his death. Justice Jackson was a classical scholar, graduating from the West Tennessee college in 1848. He studied law two years at | the University of Virginia and in} Jackson under his kinsmen, Judges A. W. O. Totten and Milton Brown. He graduated from the Labanon law school in 1856, in which year he} located in Jackson and en the practice of his profession; re- removed to Memphis in 1859, where | he continued the practice of the law; served on the Supreme bench by appointment on two occasions, and was once & prominent candidate for supreme judge before the nominat- ing convention; lucated in Jackson ed in in 1876 was elected to the State House of Representatives in 1880 on the State credit platform; was elected to the United States Sen-| ate as a Democrat in 1881 and served till April 12, 1886; was appointed United States circuit judge by President Cleveland and nominated for associate justice by President Harrison; was confirmed by the Sen- ate February 18, 1893 and entered upon the duties of the office March | 4, 1893. Will Press the Button and Let the) Wheels Go. Gov. Bullock, of Georgia, Chairman of the Committee on Ceremonials and Ceremony Days of the Cotton button here to start the wheels on September 18, and also to tender to} the President the services of the Gate City Guards, the crack Georgia military company, as an honorary escort from Washington to Atlanta and return on October 21. The President assured Governor ‘Beacdi aids. & Co Bullock thai he would take great Baltimore, Md., Aug. 7.—Senator ic headquarters and expressed his views with unusual freedom. In re- gard to the ticket nominated last Gorman - said: | “There is less objection raised than ‘oy the sense \I expected. In polities some people | must be disappointed, but the party in the end wil! Is Your Tongue Coated, your throat dry, your eyes Cure} dull and inflamed and do youteel mean be sure Feet the ecnuine. It is taken | generally when you get up in the morn- | internally and 1s made tn Toledo, Ohio. Now comes the statement from }y F. J. Cheney & Co. ial. more than one source that Mr. Cleyeland has made up his mird jing. Your liver and Kidney are not doing their work. Why don’t you taxe Parks Sure cure. If it does not make you feel better it costs you nothing— Seid by H. L. Tucker —— Ss » Wire, e oO arm Produce > NE Str O19 0 FFF AFTER AL has been said and done, most people drift around to our store when they want Hardware that is known as O. K. FOR THE HORSE TOILET we have Mane combs, Brushes, Curry Combs, &c. ONE 2ru PLUS MANY OTHERS on a élip of steel and you have a saw. Saws of all sorts, kinds and sizes to anything sawable. NAILS, from tiny little brads to spikes, with AXES, with or without handles, light ones which can be handled by boys or wom- en,—thence by easy stages up to the heaviest broad axes, hatchets, likewise in & greater Variety of shapes and sizes —we might add—adze to the above. CANS read, Fruit, Canny yon’ can can; also Last week we told ood Enough Sulky Plows made by the Moline Plow Co., were beginning to{move. Well the move is deyeloping into a rnsh, the Low prices and good quality of these plows is what makes them #0 popn- far. Don’t forget that we seil the Bain Wagon. We are constantly receiving new designs in Top Buggies and Vehicles of all sorts. DEACON BROS. & CO. Low Price Hardware and G:ocery House. for Oils, Fl Cans for an Glass fruit you that those P. S.—See the new Indania Grain Drill, Wages Still Advancing. Kansas City Times The settlement of the labor troubles between the miners and operators in the Pennsy!vania coal fields on Friday resulted im an ad- vance in wages affecting 100,000 men. As the Associated Press dis- patch stated, “the biggest victory ever made by organized Jabor” was wen at that time and place. It af- fected the wages of miners in Penn- sylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Mlinois. Tt als vides fo: i i Buzzerd’s Bay,, Mass, Aug. 7.—| It also provides for a differential of five cents a ton in favor cf operators who do not have company stores. This may be accepted as the end of | - | “ ok > i States and International Exposition, | ‘2° LUGS as eS) a ee ealled on the President yesterday to! request him to press the electric} States, which kave been the greatest enemy of workingmen. This gratifying intelligence was supplemented on Saturday by aneth- er event in the same territory. By a special dispatch from Pittsburg it is learned that President Garland of the Amalgamated Association of Tron, Steel and tin workers was that day notified by Secretary Nut ef the Western Bar Iron Manzfac turers’ asseciation that beginning with Monday, the wages of puddlers will be sdvanced from $4 to $4.25. { interests. As business improves la | panies in the State. j What’s the,Use ot Talking a |Special from Santa Mo: Jack Gordon, a *) Chinese Gordor jeame to this country with about | | $30,000, engaging in the paving} | business with a wealthy Irishman in |Sioux Falls, Io. They failed and Jack Gordon. the| Whe are there Gordoa w night of alcol dyspepsia born in London in 1844, and was/have been relieved since taking Sim- the son of Capt. Gordon, of the}/mons Liver Regulator. who was a son of the | others who have been greatly bene. \fited by its use.—James Nowland, | Carrollton, Mo. British nav famous General who, in 1887, was killed at Khartoum. Young Gor-! | } Jon, who, up to about twelve years} | i ss | = |ago, was a clerk in the Bank of En-| gland, separate] from his wife, ow: | ing, it is said, to his drinking, wa Bates County Bank, Gordon was penniless. He went to Santa Monica nine years ago. and of late had gained a livelibood by act- ing as perter in a saloon. Shot at the Church. : Baton Rouge, La., Aug. 4—A fearful tragedy occurred last night A general banking business trans- at Gideon church, where a protract- ed meeting is being held, in which 23 and 21 years, lost their lives. It is stated that bad blood had existed for soma time between AlbarkO Nelli. > and Hill Picou, they having had SMITH THURMAN. frequent misunderstandings at par- ties given in the neighborhood. Office over Bates County Natn’l Bank. Butler, Missouri. Several days ago they quarreled = There are some people who never San Francisco, Cal., Aug. 7.—A| wear dark glasses and yet they never that | see anything bright: it’s the people last! Everything is out of joint with such "| people. “I suffered many years with BUTLER, MO. Eates Co. Established in 1870. Paid up capital National Bank. F. J. TYGARD, Henry and Albert O'Neill, sons of sth J. B. NEWBERR} William O'Neill, aged respectively J. C.CLARK A. W. Tncrwan about a young woman, and it was agreed that they should meet at Antioch church and settle the difi-] ATTORNEYS AT LAW. culty. Last night, as the two O'Neill the preaching was going on, they were fired upon by the Picou party, who were armed with double barrel Hill Picou, Wallace Picou and Bar- low Edmonston were arrested and lodged in jail, charged with the RAVES & CLARK, > ffice over the Missouri State Bank boys came out of the church, while Noviielasee tare: at eae oe Silvers & Denton ed shot guns and instantly killed. ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS Al LAW BUTLER, MO. Office over the Farmers Bank. All the young men were about the same age and sons of prominent families. ATTLE AX PLUG EVER SOLD FORO CENTS gx THE LARGEST PIECE OF GOOD TOBACCO Louisville, Ky., Aug. 5.—Lizzie Saunders brought suit for divorce from her husband, John Saunders. | We have private money to loan on personal The hus- 1t May Do As Much For You. 6 Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, Ill., writes that he had a severe kidney trouble for sere many years, with severe pains in his Mr. Garland, it is added, “sent eut| back and aleo that his bladder was attect- notices to all lodges iu Pennslvania, Ohio, Indians, Illinois, Missouri and | began use of electric bitters ‘and found Alabama, notifying them cf the change.” The advance was voluntary. | er troubles and often gives almost in- While Master Workman Sovereign | *t2"t relief. of the Knights of Labor is frittering | bottle. At H. L. Tucker's drug store. away his time in organizing fruitless and siliy boycotts, the real friends of labor are proceeding with the | work of promoting the interests of both capital and labor by getting) _ | together on the basis of mutual irae becee ed. He tried many so called kidney cures but without result. About a year ago he Electric Bitters is especi- all adapted to cure of all kidney and liv- One trial will prove our Price only soc. for large Little Rock, Ark, Aug 7.—Joe Hamilton and Clarence Chapman of Lonoke County, Ark., cut each other his city with pocket se they could not agree las to which owned a bull yearling. ‘bor will get it’s share of the advan-| The fight iusted fully fifteen min | | tage, and it is a satisfaction to kuew/utes, both men standing up and! that the advance is extending west-| et together and win | ward, and will soon be felt here. On I have no fear, however, /the 10th of this month the St. Joe as to the result in November. Long/ Lead company, at Bonne Terre, ,em | before that time all real Democrats | Mo., will advance wages 15 per cent, | by | will be united for the common cause.’ | and it is believed that the example i NS EEE | will be followed by all the lead com-'t | jabbing until life as almost extinct. two ew Discov- irdren we tried Dr Ki y and at the end of two days the cough entirety Lett them, | without it hearafter, as our experience provesthat it cures where alt other remedies fait,”—Sigred F. W. Stevens, | State Com.—Why not give this great medicine a triat, as itis guaranteed and triaz bottkes are tree atyour drug store. Regutar size socand $1 not be About colds and coughs in the sum- mertime. Yo. may have a tickliug | cough or a little sold or baby may have | the croup and when it comes you ought | to know that Parks cough Syruy is the | best cure for it- Sold by H. L. Tucker. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- en aspecialtv. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over McKibbens store. All callanswered at office day or night. Specieiattention given to temale dis eases. DR. L. SHOCKEY DENTIST. (Successor to Dr, Fulkerson.) Office Southeast Corner Square, over Deacon Bors. & Cu.’s Store. BUTLER, - - - MISSOURI DR. J. G. WALKER. Physician and Surgeon Graduate of Dartsmouth Medical College and Miami Polyclinical School. Private and chronic diseases of beth sex s specialty. Seventeen years experience At Laclede hotel, Butler Missouri. REAL SSTA'TE. _ Insurance,Loans and Rentals. | We are prepared to handle farm or city prop- erty, sell exchange or rent We represent reliable insurance companies. security. Ali businese entrusted to us will On account of the age of the couple | receive prompt and carefnll attention Two and the circumstances, the case is of more than usual interest band is 16 years of age and his wife They ran away last August and were married. The girl claims that In her husband has beaten her contin- good rigs always ready. Call and see us, MILLHORN & BEESON. Poor Health means so much more than you imagine—serious and fatal diseases result from trifling ailments neglected. Don’t play with Nature’s greatest gift—health. If you are feelin, jout of sorts, weal and generally ex- hausted, nervous, have no appetite land can't work, begin at oncetak- ing the most relia- ble strengthening ron medicine.which is Brown's iron Bit. ters. few bot. ties cdre—benefit Bitters |2'2% pie It Cures Dyspepsia, Kidney ane Liver Neuralgia, Troubles, Constipation, Bad Blood Malaria, Nervous ailments Women’s compiaints. _ Get only the gewuine—it has crozsed red Hines wn the wrapper. All others ag suly. Stitutes. On receipt of two 2c. stamps will send set of Ten Beautiful Worid’; Fair Views asd book—tfree. BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, mi if

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