The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 2, 1896, Page 2

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SS K. C. Pittsburg'& Gulf jTime Tanle. when its directors and sponsors thus Arrival and departure of trains ;at Worland. | NORTH BOUND. ‘o. 7, Freight daily except Sunday |2 No.5 a eer ee Sat . 10 pm opm m 1 Express dally 2:3 p 60UTH BOUND. . 2, Express dai », and pointe north ao ver, Ogden, San Franci: pointe weet and northwest een spared to make the passenger equipment Of this line eecond to none in the weet. Travel | via the new line. JAS. DONOHUE, Gen’| Passenger Agent, Kansas City, Mo. VEST FULL OF FIGHT. | He'd Like to Have Missonri’s Vote for | President. Washington, D. C., March 23.—| Senator George G. Vest of Missouri, who is being more and more regard- ed asa Presidential possibility on the Democratic ticket, occupies a beautiful house on P street, North- west. Itis comfortably and taste- fully furnished and bears innumer- able indications of the good taste and artistic ability of Mrs. Vest. The Senator lives quietly these days. He is just as full of fight and energy as he was twenty-five years ago, and nothing seems able to dim the luster of his eye or soften the eutting sarcasm of his tongue, but at home he rests, and is rarely seen outside his own house. Senator Vest would like to have the indorsement of Missouri Demo erats for the Presidency—not be- cause he has any hope of the nomi- nation, but because he has served his party with conspicuous ability for a quarter of a century and he would like to have his official record approved in that way. I said to him: “Senator, what do you think of the financial plank of the Ohio Re- publican platform?” “It means gold monometallism,” he answered. “It was intended to be a straddle capable of various in- terpretations, but as a matter of fact it can only bear one construc. tion. The truth is that all this talk about an international agreement as to silver is allasham and subter- fuge. The man who tells you he is a friend of silver and will do some- thing for the white metal just as soon as the Governments of the world agree to recognize silver, is a straight out gold standard advocate.” “But Gov. McKinley declares that he is a bimetallist?” “He is nothing of thekind. A A bimetallist is one who believes that gold and silver should be made of equal value and used as a double standard in the coinage and circula- tion of the money. Does McKinley believe that? No. He favors gold monometallism up to that point where all the monarchies of Europe will get together and allow him to favor silver. This is the platform of the Republican party, and upon it the campaign will be fought out.’ “Will the Obio platform be the National platform?” “It will if McKinley should be eome the nominee of his party for President. But there is nothing new or surprising about it. Our fight will be the old one of opposition to protection and a single gold stand ard, and we should win on that issue.” impeach the integrity of ite wanage- ment.” “What do you think of the move- ment in Missouri to nominate you "| for re election as United States Sen- ator by State Convention?” “In my opinion that is bad policy. } It can not accomplish anything good, and the probabilities are allin favor of harm” But they say that such a move | 1 1 : re jment would strengthen the ticket?” | “It will have no such effect. If I | should be nominated by the State | convention for Senator, the fact would at once shut out all opposi-} tion to me in the Democratic ranks. “Would you consent to go to Chi- cago as a delegate?” “If my party asks me to, yes.” R. M. Y. BEN THE ONLY MAN. The Ex-President’s Friends Urge Him to Run. McKinJey Strife. Indianapolis, Ind., March 25.— Close friends of General Harrison say that the probability of the nomi- nation of McKinley at the St. Louis convention has caused Republicans throughout the country to flood the ex-president with letters urging him to reconsider his determinaiion and consent to be a candidate for the presidential nomination. Some of the writers appeal to him from patri- otic motives, saying it is his duty to save the pacty from the McKinley nomination and the campaign bitter- ness that would surely follow, owing to the fact that he is regarded as the personification of the extreme personification of the extreme idea in protection. One of the writers declares that the McKinley nomination at St. Lou- is will array the East against the West, the manufacturer against the producer, and thus precipitate a campaign of slander and abuse. The writers agree that there is need of a conservative candidate, pronounced, but not extreme in his views on pro- tection, and one known to be unal- terably opposed to the free coinage of silver. They say to the ex-presi- dent that he is the many who would insure confidence in all parts of the country. One writer declares that the inva- sion by McKinley of states in which candidates were announced has caus- ed a strong feeling against his can- didacy, and tse feeling thus engen- dered will permeate the campaign and the Republicans will find that factional troubles must be settled before they can meet the common enemy. Another refers to the fact that McKinley's success is already being attributed to the free use of money on the part of manufacturers and say that if heis nominated it wil] lose the party thousands of votes. The tenor of all the letters is practi- cally the same. General Harrison is informed that he is the only man who can rescue the party and that it is his duty as a Republican and his duty as a citizen to do do. It is be- lieved generally that General Harri- son will not change his attitude Fear Means Internecine Is not the Democratic party ina demoralized condition?” “In some respects, perhaps, it is mot organized and cohesive as it should be. But just look at the Republican party. Is it any better eff? A Senator, who is spoken of for the Presidency, said to me the other day, as we came out of a com- mittee room, ‘Inside of a month we will be as badly torn up as your party is.’ Speaker Reed has a lot of fellows under his gavel whom he @an not control. They have got en- tirely away from him. Republican Senators are becoming bitterly per- sonal, and talking to us of the Op- position about each other. In my opinion,there will be many surprises before the campaign of this year 1s over. Look at the open attack made by Senators Quay and Chandler on the McKinley corruption fund. “They both charge directly that the protected manufacturers have been squeezed for money wherewith | confederacy ineligible for appoint-/ to secure the nomination of McKin-| ment as officers of the army or navy. | ley, and that on account of this money such able leaders as Reed, Allison and others are being con- signed to defeat. A political party can not last long or hope fer much toward the nomination. Catarrh Cannot be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat ot the dis- ease. Catarrh is a blood or constitution-|gressional districts, but it would} bad blood between the two men for al disease, and in orderto cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Deacon Bios, & Co. Heavy and Sheif Hardware. Cutlery and Guns Tinware and Stoves, Field and Garden Seeds, Buggies, Wagons, and Farm Machinery, wagon, wood-wo Steel, Natls, Salt. Barb Wire Buggy Paints, Machine ¢ Groceries and Farm Produce} ~ | GSPRING PLOWING 25 Cannot be done with anold worn out implement. Doesn’t turn up the soil right. Get a MOLINE, CANTON OR: ROCHE ISLAND They are dandy’s. Easy running and perfect working, well made. About the best plows we ever had, and we've handled a few in ourday, same with all of our farming implements, we know what a farmer wants, both as to make, quality and price and we generally hit it right, when the price isn’t right we make it so. We have Planters, Riding Cultivators, Corn Plows, Harrows, Road Plows, Jump- ers or Stump Plows, Stirring Plows, Corn Shellers, Sulky Plows, Gang Plows, Double Shovels, Disk Har- rows, Walking Cultivators, Stalk Cutters, Spading Harrows, etc. BUGGIES Big buggies and little Buggies, Top Buggies and Buggies without tops; wide Buggies and narrow Buggies. Fine top Carriages and Surreys, Road Wagons, Spring Wagons and Farm Wagons. L. L. MAY & CO’S. Nortiiern Grown Garden Seeds. We sell the two best Sulky Plows made. They are the Flying Dutch- man and Good Enough. BRING US YOUR BUTTER AND EGGS, We pay the top market price for them in exchange for goods. DEACON BROS. & CO. Low Price Hardware and G:ocery House, WAY THIS SILENCE? Cleveland {3 Waiting for a Single Voice. Washington, March 26.—If there is one county in the United States that will declare for Grover Cleve land fora third term, his letter of declination will at once be made public. This is the statement of persons near the president. They say that until some public declara tion is made the president cannot do anything. He is placed in the attitude of anxiously waiting for a public expression from anywhere if a desire to have him again the standard bearer of the Democracy. congressional district, or even of a county, would only declare for the president, say his friends, he would then have the opportunity of declar ing his intentions. Pending this, they say, the president, however embarassing it may be, will have to maintain silence. This new feature of the situation is amusing in somerespects. There are thousands of counties with Dem- If the Democratic organization of a} VOTE MORE WARSHIPS. at | Bill to Increase the Navy Passed | by the House. Authorized Expenditare of $35,000,- 000 tor New Vessels. Washington, D. C., March The naval appropriation bill was passed by the house without stantial amendment. An effort was made by the advocates cf a larger increase of the navy than was author- | ized by the bill to increase the num-! ber of battleships from four to six. | This increase was supported cn the floor by Messrs. Hanley, Cummings | and Johnson of California, and op=| posed by Messrs. Boutelle, chairman | of the committee, Hulick and Rob- | \ | | 26 sub- inson. The house, by a large ma | jerity, stood by the recommenda tion of the committee, the propositon for six battleships mustering but 32 votes against 134 Various other) amentments were offered, but all failed. The bill. as passed, carries | $31,611,034, and authorizes the con- | struction of four battleships and) fifteen torpedo boats, the total cost | of which will be in the neighbor- hood of $35,000,000. The sundry the above makes of implements in | civil appropriation bill which was re-| | ported to day, will be taken up to- morrow. It was decided to allow three} hours for general debate on the par | agraph relating to the increase of | the navy. Mr. Hanley (republican)! of Indiana, a member of the naval! committee, who favored a larger in-| crease in the navy than the majority | of the committee. argued in favor of | amendment which he gave notice he | would offer, to increase the number | of battleships from four to six. Al-| though his people lived a thousand} miles from tidewater, they were patriotic enough and proud enough to desire to see their country with a navy befitting her position as the greatest country on the globe. He thought it was time for the United States to enter upon a distinctively national policy. He referred to the aggressions of Great Britain and our foreign complications as an ar- gument for a strong navy. The re- publicans pursued a similar course. No party could afford to block the destiny of the United states and now that the republicans were clothed with power they should not hesitate to carry out the promises made when they were in the minority. “Let parents tot live rcer their children, but witn them.” The mo. ther should a!low no false modesty to stand in the way of her daughter's knowledge of herself, of her possi bilities, of her perils. For over thirty years Dr. Pierce has used his “Fav orite Prescription” as a strengthener, a purifier, a regulator. It works directly upon the delicate, distinctly teminine organs, in a naturel sooth ing way. It searches out the weak spots and builds them up. A woman who would understand herself should send 21 cents te the World’s Dis peusary, Buffalo, N. Y., for Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser, a book of 1008 pages. | Shot at His Own Door. o'clock A. J. Grant shot and serious- ly wounded Mr. Rodgers at his home four railes northeast of this city,” says the Jerico Springs Optic. “Grant went to Jerico on Monday doing business and on his road home passed by the home of Rodg ocratic organizations, and 356 con appear that not in the entire list is ers and shot him. There had been some time over a settlement, and on “Last Monday evening about six| => => SCIATICA. “Saar t The saving or gaining of health may depend on the freshness of purity of the drugs you use. Certain, positive results must be had. We offer safe, reliable drugs. The amount of business we do keeps them moving—nothing gets old. liability, and accurate sures the best of everything. Prices are always just ones—always low,quality Zeonsidered. H. L. TUCKER, Prescription Druggist. SOONER NN ON BONY THE KING CURE OVER ALL FOR Safe Drugs. OUR WINDOI The reputation we maintain for re- . &§ is [a 4 Ee prescription}work in. ‘The National Republican Commit- tee has already ran against a snag in St. Louis, and one which is well calculated to get up a serious “muss” in the ranks of the faithful. Nearly all the Southern States have their quota of the negro Delegates, and in some of the Delegations a majori- ty are negroes. When application is made for quarters for Delegates from any of the Southern States, the managers of the St. Louis hotels enquire as to whether the Delegates are white men or negroes. If they are “colored,” the hotel men say they are already crowded, but if the Delegates are black and ‘white, the hotel people say they may be able to arrange to take care of the white Delegates, and that “the question of taking care of colored delegates is in process of solution,” whatever that means. It is said that 5,000 persons can be accommodated at the negro boarding houses. and that negro Delegates can be accommo- dated at these places Itis a well known fact that without the negro vote, the Republican party could hardly carry a State in the Union. When it comes to stopping at first class hotels or the negro wants an “oftis,” he is “counted out.” The negro is simply a Republican voting machine, and that’s all there is to it. —Clinton Democrat. Austin, Tex, March 24.—It is ree ported here that Judge John H Reagan, the last survivor of the Con federate States Cabinet. is dying at his home in Palestine, where he bas been sick for some days. Is quickly absorbed Cleanses the Nasal Passages. | Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from Additional Cold, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell, It Will CureCOLD'n HEAD A particle is applied into each nostriland i agreeable Price 5c at Druggiet or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street. N Y JACKS FOR SALE. Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and|there ome which will voluntarily|the evening of the shooting, Grant acts directly on the blood and mucous surtaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun- fry tor Years and is a regu’ar prescrip- tion. It is composed ot the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly upon the mu- cous surfaces. The pertect combinatio~ ot the two ingredients is what produrce such wondertul results in curing Catarrh Send for testimonials tree. F. J. Che- house yesterday passed the bill that passed the senate some time ago | repealing the old statute that made | graduates of the military and naval academies who resigned from the! | United States army to go into the It was antagonized by only one man in the house, Boutelle of Maine. | The passage of the bill removes |from the statute books the last ves- | tige of civil war legislation as affect. | in, i ig the rights of ex confederates. place itself upon the semi official altar by declaring for Grover Cleve- land. The president's friends stoutly declare when the lone declaration for a third term comes it will be imme. diately followed by the much talked of letter of declination. Two Lives Saved. nev & Co., Paops., To So by = ceases sdow _Teledo, OQ Sold by! tvs, Phoebe Thomas, of Junction City, Ill, was told by her doctors Last Bar Remoyed. she had Consumption and that there Washington, March 25.—The | ¥88 2° hope for her, but two bottles Dr. King’s New Discovery complete- ly cured her and she says it saved her life. Mr. Thomas Eggers, 139 Florida St., San Francisco, suffered jfrom a dreadful cold, approaching Consumption, tried without result jeverything else then bought one | bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery and in two weeks was cured. He is naturally thankful. It is such re sults, of which these are samples, | that prove the wonderful efficacy of jthis medicine in coughs and colds. Free trial bottles at H. L. Tucker's Drug Store. Regular size 50e and $1. 17.4. | called Rodgers out in passing, to have a talk with him; hot words fol- lowed when it is said Rodgers called Granta liar and drew his knife. Grant drewa gun and fired two shots, the first shot just grazed the side of his head and pieced his ear, when Grant started to run. Grant fired the second shot, the ball enter ing his body just at the lower point of the shoulder blade on the left side, ranging downward, and lodg- ing in the lower part of the left lung. Rodgers sank to the ground and |said to Grant “you have shot me; |please help me into the house.” Grant was in his cart, but got out | and helped him in the house, \left and nothing is known of his | whereabouts ” | Is Your,Tongue | : Coated, your throat dry, your eyes j dull and inflamed and do you tee! mean | generally when you get up in the morn- jing. Your liver and Kidney are not doing their work. Why don’t you take | Parks Sure cure. If it does not make you feel better it costs -you nothing— Sold sy H.L Tucker? then | The undersigned has nineteen (19) Jacks for sale. They are large and large head and ears, extra length and strictly good ones and must be sold. Pedigrees furnished on application. Correspondence solicited | D. A. COLYER, | ; Butler, Bates Co, Mo | Nat { | URE’S Remepy ( ror ga / Mlanprake ( LiverPitts Liver Comptaint finely bred, black with mealy nose, | Screnck's! C unl Banh | BUTLER, MO. | \ ( Bates Co Successor;to> Bates Co. National¥Bant Established in 187(. Paid up capital $125,009 A general {banking business tram acted. F. J. TYGARD, Presiden, HON. J. B. NEWBERRY |} Vice-Pm J. C. CLARK Cushier W. R. WOODS. Real Estate and Life In surance Agent. ADRIAN MISSOURI I have a large number of farmsfe sale, ranging from 40 acres up, Thi land is located in Bates county sal is choice real estate. Call and seem before buying. RAVES & CLARK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. fs C. BOULWARE, Physician a e Surgeon. Office nortan side sq Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women en a specialty. | Seesatze8tescsess DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front room over McKibbett store. All callanswered at office day@ night. Specialattention given to temale & eases. ‘ : } | DR. J. T. HULL ‘DENTIST. Newly Fitted up Rooms, Ove” Jeter’s Jewelry Store. + Entrance, same that leads to Hagedon’s | Studio, north side square , Butler, Me. T.eJ. Sari. A. W. Teoma SMITH THURMAN. — Offi B: Cc renee ic v : tn’ e over Bates a M . ———————— C. HAGEDORN {The Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. | | Has the best equipped gallery | Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing executed in the highest style of act, and at reasonable price& | Grayon Work A Spec | All work in my line is guarante |S give satisfaction. Call and s€ | samples of work. | C. HACEDOR | i

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