The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 9, 1896, Page 3

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A CLEAR HEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; a fine appetite and a ripe old age are some ofthe results of the u of Tutt’s Liver Pills. A si dose will convince yor wonderful effects ar A Known Anabsolute cure for ache, dyspepsia, malaria stomach, dizziness, cons!! bilious fever, piles, tor and all kindred di Tutt’s Liver a: zs. NAMED THE RIGHT MEN. | Personnel of the Venezuelan Commission Approved. IT HAS NO PARTISAN BIAS. Members Are to Be Absolute Masters of the Procedure. Washington, D. C., Jan. 2—The personnel of the Venezuelan com- mission was commended to day by members of House, who take partic. | press our mutual dislikes without ular interest in international matters the emasculating medium cf an ia regardless of party affiliations. The terpreter. j gentlemen selected were considered entirely competent to conduct what the President, in his message, ex- pressed a wish for—a judicial exam-|" ination of the evidence relating to the boundary. It was also pointed politics, none cau be considered a strong partisan at this time, so that concerned, they would not be likely toenter upon their work with avy party ends to serve. It is authoritatively stated in be- half of the administration that the Venezuelan commission will be ab- solute master of its own procedure, fixing the time anel place of its meet- ings, and determining for iteelf countries; what class of evidence may be taken into consideration, and how interested governments may be represented before the tri- bunal. This independence of action is deemed necessary to secure to the commissions’ findings that degree of weight and respect among other nations that can be attained only through a knowledge that the body is free from auy restraint or obliga | Message. tion to the United States govern- ment will occupy the status of an exact neutral in the proceedings. The State department will lend such assistance as may be required to facilitate the work of the com mission im procuring transpor- tation for it on a United States warship, if that is desired, and in supplying any records in its possese| & sion that may be called for. But it will not allow itself to be placed in the position of taking sides as to the merits of the controversy between Great Britain and Venezuela; it will not undertake to present the Vene- zuelan case, nor will it endeavor to offset any evidence that leans toward the British contention. Therefore the various suggestions that have been made to the department by individuals in this country as to where evidence can be secured have | been ignored. Such matter is re | garded for the consideration of the, the honor of the nation. land has set the sails aud when he leaves it, i° ors flying. twaddle about the friendly relati between this country aud E tongue but it is only Bo we can ex- relentless enemy. to marry their sovs to cur rich syco- plants. out that while several members of monareby is the atlas that holds on} the commission have participated in| its shoulders the European imperialism. A contest between democracy and monarchy is asfaras our domestic relations are | inevitable. England and some of her powerful allies? Reunited the men who fought with equal valor for north and south, would march under one flag as valore ously as when they answered to the bugle call ofa Grant or a Morgan or a Custer. whether or not it ehall visit foreign |!amity. It may be a necessity. When you deal with bullies you must meet them on common ground. manifest destiny of the United States torule this entire continent. Lord Salisbury thinks equal to any combination he can put into the geld, let him put an army into the disputed Venezuelan terri- tory. Holst’s interview on the President's T should not care to dis cuss it if Thad, but I have this to| say of the Monroe doctrine: If we do not stand by the Mon-| roe docrine ing. boring republic, most unscrupulous power of chris- tendom, then we shall the humiliation and odium we shall ward tor any case ot Catarrh that can- not J. Cheney for the last 15 business transactions | able to carry out any obligations made | by that firm, H West & Toledo, Ohio. vin, Wholesale Drugs | Such ills as SORENESS, notified his government by cable to- day of the appointment of the com- mission. The case of Venezuela is ready to be presented at any time, | although the Venezuelan authorities will take no steps toward offering | and the like, evidence until the rules governing | the commission are announced. So: Ho i] far as know Minister Andrade will present the Venezuelan case, as he has a long acquaintance with the subject, and is, moreover, a fluent | advocate in English. The British authorities nov formally recognize the commissio >| but the British side of the case will] be secured by application of Ambur- eador Bayard to the London foreign! office. will Watterson on the War Question. From an interveiw in the Chicago Inter-Occan “The Venezuela question involv.s Mr. Hs us through to the end of his t Ciere- | musi sea ita, j De | with the lamps burning and ths ¢)’-| mist “There has been a good deal of} We are nokin. We speak the same “England is America’s historic, “They tolerate Americans to gain material for their disdain or perhaps England's constitutional whole fabric of “Could we hold our own against Ours is a nation of veterans first-class goods. Lee, a War is a ca- It is the if we are un- “I have not read Professor Von . we shall stand by noth- If we do not stand by a neigh badgered by the deserve all vet.” How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- cured b. all’s at Cure. Cheney & Co., Props. Toledo, O We the undersigned, have known F. ars, and be- honorable in_his| and financially jteve him perfectly Truax, Wholesale Drugs gists, | Walding, Kinnan& Hall's Catarrh Cure s ly, acting i The Oid Year’s Bad Re STIFFNESS, A. L. MeBRIDE North side square, Butler Missouri. Harness | ST. JACOBS OIL WIPES OUT THERE RE MANY IM ITATIONS but only one genuine. MOORE'SAIR TIGHT, the best heating stove made. Superior cook stoves, both wood and coal, have no equal. ¥gjAlso a full line of HARDWARE, GROCERIES AND QUEENSWARE at prices that defy competition. Squar: dealing, low prices and Co. McFARALND BROS. nd Saddlery, South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Stock We keep everything that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. single harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand harness from $3 to $15. styles and prices, from the cheapest to the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankets, dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and soaps full line of meus and boys gloves. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade for new ones. We have the largest retail har- ness store in the Southwest and our har- ness are all made at home. ‘McFARLAND BROS. HIS SENATOR{AL BOOM. j Mr, Ingalls of Kansas, | the People. Topeka, Kan., Jan. 1.—Recent cor. ¥ |Tespondence between friends of J. |J. ingalls regarding his senatorial | campaign in Kansas bas ceme to life | With the result that is new patent in Topeka that he hopes for success by adopting a plan similar to that | made by Palmer in Illinois, feeling |that he will have no opposition from | his own party. He intends to make |a direct appeal to the people. Right jafter the republican state committee jcalle & convention to nominate can- j didates for state officers, Ingalls will jee) a manifesto, declaring that the | | People should have a voice in the | selection ofa senator He will say, | that he is willing for the people to, j settle the question, thereby practi-| Saddles of all} | slature. ; tien at the proper | body by storm. jcally taking the fight out of the leg- | He will urge the republi-| in each county to instruct their | Melegates to the st cars tate convention to | insist upon the nomination of a can | didate for senator by the convention. | it is Ingualls’s intention to be within | reach and appear before the conven- time and make} one of his characteristic speeches, with which he expects to carry the It has been arranged that certain republican papers in the east, who are friendly to Ingalls, will raise the hue and cry that the party needs Isgals back in the senate. This will be done about the time of the issuance of the manifesto. Ingalls hopes to influence the republican press of Kansas in this way. The Discevery Saved His Life. Mr. G. Caillouette, Druggist, Beaversville, Ill., says: “To Dr. King’s New Discovery I owe my hfe. Was taken with La Grippe and tried all the physicians for miles about, but of no avail and was given up and told that I could not live. Having Dr. King’s New Discovery in my store I sent for a bottle and began its use and from the first dose be ganto get better, and after using three bottles was up and about again. It is worth its weight in gold We won't keep store or house with out it.” Geta free trial at Drug Stores. 5-At. The re-counting of votes in Kan- sas City disclosed some of the most glaring frauds ever perpetrated at any election ever held in this State. The ballots cast in the Fifth precinct of the Second ward, et the general election in Kansas City, on the 6th | day of November, 1894, show that of the first 200 baliots cast, Robert T. Van Horn, Republican candidate for Congress, received all of the votes upon the ballots bearing the num bers from 73 to 200, the same being Democratic tickets with the name | John C. Tarsney,for Congress erased and Robert T. Van Horn written in. Of these tickets, thus changed, it is evident but two persons wrote Rob- ert T. Van Horn on the ballots. Mr. Tareney is a reasonably popular man in Kansas City, and it is surprising that in a strong Democratic precinct every ballot from 73 to 200 should have his name erased and Van Horn’s! written in by two individuals. The whole matter smacks of the rotten- est kind of a fraud. In Congress,the other day, Mr. Tarsney asked for an extension of ten days’ time in order to bring these additional facts be-| fore the Committee on Elections, in| |the Van Horn Tarsney contest. The ifriends of Col. Van Horn complain | jof the delay of the work of the com-| | | = : | K. C. Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arvival and departure Will Appeal to. » = expense has he passenger equipment ein the west. Travel yis the new line. JAS. DONOHT Gen’) Pa r WOULD UNITE THE CONTI- NENT. WAR Views of the Director of Venezueia’s Army and Navy. Mobile, Als., Jan. 1.—General Al- berto De Artega, director of the army aad navy of Venezuela, arrived here last night. In an interview | Ge: il De Artega stated that if the | diplomatic digpute between his Re- publie and Great Britain should not be settled peacefully and honorably, the sentiments er ated in Presi- nge would find repo every Republic South and Central America. “A war,” dent Cleveland's nee from in said he, “would obliter- late the internal diesensions existing jin my own country The question is not so much the encroachment of England upon Venezuelan territory jas the appalling result of their re- cent claims to the Western Hemis- phere. The successful prosecution of England’s contention would give to great Britain control the Orinoco river and result in the establishment of a British maritime station at its mouth that would be a constant meance to the tranquility of the Americas ™ General De Artega said further that in all of the twelve ports of the Republic preparations are going forward to strengthen the coast de fense, although most of them were in perfect order. The Republic has 50,000 men under arms and an army of 200,000 men could be enrolled at the first call of the President and Congress. The consists of six Venezuelan navy modern men-of-war, with equipment and armament equal to the the second-class battleships of the American navy, and the strength of this navy could be trippled ia a short space of time. Chiidren Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. A Reed Congress Treasury ruined the and reduced the Govern- ment to borrowing funds in a time of peace. A Reed Congress caused the issue of about $150,000,000 Treasury uotes and instructed the Government to maintain the single gold standard; while it wiped out the surplus, mortgaged the revenues aud rendered the maintenance of the gold reserve doubtful. Financial uncertainty ensued and the treasury became the helpless victim of the gold dealers. A Reed Congress has now full charge of legislation. The Republican party, if it has the po- tency of honest government, can atone for the disastrous crimes of ite insane and willful fifty first congress iby showing how Democratic solven- ley of 1854-58 can ba avoided by a party conscious of ability and recti- itude It would be courted; would commission, but is not for the state | Cbicsso Times-Heralt. Butler Missouri | mit ttee by permitting other evidence | he forced. What we now get from department. Famine, pestilence, war, murder . i jtocomeia. We rer ber v welll the two houses must be graded as It is pointed out that in this atti- and suicide seem to tleer dowa our = : = {just after the Vani the best ihe Republican party ie tude the department is consiatent |Comfidence in the advance of the yy a & BI 2 wo ok 2. | Horn was a sitting and If we get With its course in the past From | |world. Of wurders there were over ro L ~ RR D IN I _A | there waa a contest. of y pleads imbacility. the begiuning of the negotiations ! 10,000, in this country alone; Boas REAL ESTATE & LOANS | eee cones bs : with Great Britain touching the| cides ® few less than 6,000. The julated that Col. Van H Venezuelan boundary the United loss of life in battle cannot be esti-| | KNOWS it takes constant hustling to do busi-| abled to keep bis seat u opened the States government haa expressly re sd, for the wars of 1895 were ness, and this iawhat we are doing if you are |of the term—and wea ountry was estimated frained from committing itself to a prosecuted chiefly in remote parts i |fore adjournment ),000. In at $16,000,0 1890 it bad recognition of the justice of Venez-|°f the w orld, and it may be that a INTERESTED = ve “aaa ay ems |made ite report. At the ed $65,090.000,080, and in case uela’s claim, and has limited itself! Comte: ary’s estimate of 157,000 west Missouri some HEIL BCC OL WIALG Us © | the “committee” reported in favor of of 2 foreign war we should sow be ‘ stnctly to contention that this was overshoots or undershoots the mark. have the largest list Col. Wm. F. Switzler against D Pat an undivided people. Tue most re- a proper matter f r settlement by ever teil how mary men nes Dyer, but as the House was about to | markable fact ed STATE and the with these ted States ac- times as much you in prices, terms and location, | ~~’ : Bist 3 , adjourn sine die, Col. !not sworn in, satisfy arbitration. Moreover, the attitude which the departinent has assumed °"* toward the commission itself Switz'er was but received the full figures ia that the Us cumulated three iis is re- »-i @ ; HAS notbing to do with us | pay asifhe bad oceupied the seat! wealth during the thirty years end- garded as a sufficient negative to ¢ 1 oS QUESTION |during the two years. The frauds ing with 1890 as in the 250 years to the assumption in merowe thet |in Kansas City were evident! preceding 1560.—Globe. Democrat. the United States government pro- WE are| pulated in the interest of posed constituting tit not dis- — itself the arbitra- tor in this dispute, for the commi ~ AND THE PRICE OF OUR LANDS, that y bu es will be ventilat = = ie ly re- sion will b i poisoned because your liver does | tributing silver dollars, but sending the people, north and = loads of| ee es Age aa a > independent of the! pot act prop peat. ee ee 1 te ali | information about the wounderfal resources of Missouri. List with us if si reviak iver ee fsa tise .y ates overnmen disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels | g o ki St (user. ne only medicino that is * would be of o cee it, Ithas no equalas alivermedicine. Price} | jou want to sell. G Yours$for businese, ai ilies eens: Sues guarantcedto cure these diseases or no Sa ee ee eee CLARDY & BRUNER. § |[fomeieguen elicious | fay. Pare sure cure fe sold by Hi. L Minister Andrade of Venezuela| fuckers drugst re. 48 ry juart, 10c. a ee 1 —

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