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ME BOISE Daas: RUSSELL -y What do you Suppose am | It is that has brought this store its rapidly increasing tra le’ Z. Death Claims Another Ex | Governor of Muassachusetise }FOUND DEAD IN HIS TENT | NEAR LITTLE PABOS, me 2 QUEBEC. eG * | aw ZS |e WAS A CONSPICUOUS FIGURE | “a 2s AT THE CHICAGO CONVENTION. £94 Is it the tact that the needs of the community ave x a ; = : ¥ been looked after and that everything wanted in the SK Had Been a Promising Presidential line of drugs and medicines can be had bere’ Or is it Candidate. because everything furnished is invariable the best— 3S CXS) B74 St. Adelaide de Pabos, (Quebee, | 3% because you can feel ubsolutely pases ee the 5 | July 16.—Ex-Governor Wm -| S g ue to our x *% quality of everything we sell you’ Or ie it < S| Russell, of Massachusetts was found | system of fair prices and adoption of modern methods in conducting an up to-date drug store. Doubtles all these features are responsible. Prescription Druggist. ton business man. He left home ? : oes >. | shortly after his return from Chica- § Ss HHO oS ae -| go for the purpose of seeking rest. SSS He was a guest of Mr. Datton. His body is on the way home to Boston. | Ex Goy. Russel arrived here ye: dead ip his tent near here this norn | ing. Heart disease is the supposed | ° | cause of his death. : Mr. Russell was found dead in bed Taxing the Peupia Rich. The McKinley plan of allaying coatent is to increase taxes. Aj terday and pitched his tent fora few | Bates Count Bank | special from Cauton to New York|days’ fishing. He was accompanied | § | World says: by his brother and Francis Peabody. | The Major aseumes that this wave | of silverism ia not really a demand | for the use of more silver,but a pop Suscseea {ular cry for more money. He will therefore meet this impression by Bates Co. pointing out that the Government Established in 187C. They all retired early last nighi-} the governor apparently in good heath and spirits. Upon his com- panions trying to arouse him this morning they discovered that he was dead. Death must have resulted from heart disease. The position of the BUTLER, MO. National Bank. needs more revenue, and that with ample revenue the money stringency Paid up capital $125,000 | will be decreased. body and the expression on the dead A general ‘banking business trans. If there is another way for a coun-| man’s face showed thet his death i try to raise revenue than by taxing | was painless. acted. | ita own people it has never been dis | Ex Gov William Eustis Russel is F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. | covered. A dollar has neyer been|one of the notable figures in the deposited in the United States Treas-| Notional Democratic Cenvention at ury which the people do not pay,| Chicago and was one of the leaders either before or after deposit. The|of the eastern sound money forces McKinley idea, then, is that the} He had been regarded as the most more money you take from the peo | promising candidate for the presi- ple the richer you make them. To/dency in case the anti-silver men satisfy the “popular cry for more|had controlied his party. money” you have only to take away| He was twice elected Governor of more of the money now in circula | Massachusetts as a Democrat and tion. his administration greatly pleased It is an axiom in political economy | the people of the old Bay State. Mr. —|that “A rich government makes a/ Russell inherited an aptitude for | poor people.” But McKinley, being | politics from two generations. He ATTORNEYS AT LAW. 4 Napoleon, is under the necessity of | was born in Cambridge in 1857 and Giicn/ aver eli Missouri? State: Bank making precedents. He would pro {attended the pupli¢ echools there. North side square. Dees prosperity by increasing pub | He entered college at the early age HON. J. B. NEWBERRY} Vice-Pres J.C.CLARK- - . R. WOODS. Real Etate and Life In- urance Agent. ADRIAN - - MISSOURI I have a large number of farms for sale, ranging from 40 acres up. This land is located in Bates county and is choice real estate. Call and see me before buyin, RAVES & CLARK,» Cashier lic revenues. If two dollars out of]of 16. One of his college mates was DR. Bs CHRISTY, ten is paid in taxes he would double|Emmons Blaine After Russell HOMOBOPATHIU | pee : = ‘ rivet ; 377, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, revenue and prosperity by making| graduated, which was in 1877, he Office, front room over McKibbens | the tax four dollars. The resulting|entered the law school of Boston store. All callanswered at office day or | Prosperity would soon force a repe-} University and left that institution | night. i i oce i Specialattention given to temale dis tion of the doubling process, and, as | three years later at the head of his} eases. it is impossible to have too much of! class. His early public life was in a good thing, it would then be nee- {essary to wipe out, in taxes, the re- maining two dollars of the original | ten. Thenewe would have the Millen. j nium—or a Terror—Post- Dispatch. small beginnings, when he becamé a) Councilman of Cambridge. Then he became Mayor of the town and served four successive terms. In 18 88 he ran for Governor, but as he! made the campaign against great | odds no one was surprised at his | | defeat. But when the votes were! ACW. Tirstan | counted it was found that he had SMITH THURMAN. polled over 12,000 more than the| DR. J. T. HULL ‘DENTIST. Newly Fitted up Rooms, Over Jeter’s Jewelry Store. Entrance, same that leads to Hagedorn’s Studio, north side square , Butler, Mo. T. J. Smirn. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, cried for € toria, | trimmer. | party, we are told, jworth a greater number of dollars. Robt. E. Lewis, At But'er Saturday, Hon. last = _ Robert E. Lewis addressed the re- publican county convention. He /spoke chietly on the money question, and it is safe to say he stands on the St. Louis platform. He doubtless believes init. We, junderstand that Mr. Lewis is nota He left the because he did He has, democratic not believe in free trade. |probably as much courage now as | then, and if ke believed in the caus se) \of silver we have no doubt he would | | repudiate the gold standard. The [Tribune admires Mr. Lewis as aj jclean and courageous young man. But we do not admire the gold | |standard. We do not believe that | gold must of necessity be our sols} measure of values. We listened care | fully to all that Mr. Lewis had to) | say, aud while his statement of facts was reasonably accurate, we deny the conclusions drawn therefrom. | This is not a question of hew)| | much silver has been coined, nor of | how freely the two metals circulate ide by side. It deeper significance: or metals shall In gold which in that alone’ silver. We are aware that money is not wealth. Weare aware that the fiat of law cannot create wealth. But money is the measure of values. It is the standard, and the standard is fixed by law. At present, all our values are measured by the golden standard— wheat, silver, cotton, corn, cattle is a question of In what metal | values be measured! is high and scare,and Or in both gold and ‘Horror on the Fort Vayne Bridge at) Massillon, O. Massillon, O., July 16 —The dr ver of Buffalo band started with e tee overhead Ft. Wayne br at Erie street, at 11 o'clock. He miscalculated | its height ard was unable to stop | the horses All the oecupants of the bar wagon were scraped off in the pres- Depression wagon ler the + TOrce is lp ence of horror-stricken thousands. It is reported that five or six were | | killed or badly injured. Mr. Felter. | show, “Four of ot = resishae At any age, be youth, it invobpas for the press issues aps are fr ight. | fully injured, and ‘wo of them will | ening si |probably d O.hora are not se riously . They are Italians, whose names We have not yet learn-| § led. ‘ 5 The driver miscaleulutcd the Pes | height of the bridge, and the horses | It ¢ ee these ¢ were beyond his control. Mr. Cody t tones up, fatt jis with the men, who have been re } moved tothe Hotel Massillor, and t's Emulsion| the tase t all that is possible is being done for | ed fully disguise fren uimost as palat The injured are: David Keene, driver, leg broken; Phillip Reicha, crushed and bruised; John Moccia, bacs crushed; Alfred Vitelli, collar ; Wedded an Adopted Child. bone broken, cut and bruised; Gai | seppe Lauro, eheet crushed fatally; | Lafeyette, Ind., July A g Floceo Domenica, crushed about the | haired man and a girl in short dy heart, may die. | es stood before Justice Taylor ia GkknonwnDouiEn: i rotunda of the court house last aj Jackson, Mias., July 16 —The big- [es es ee gest ratification meeting ever seen | | ame was Benj. F. Loveless, Hen in Jackson was held last night. Can. | # rich farmer in Lauramie to non boomed and rockets flashed. | His bride is Clemmie Sparger, Gov. McLaurin, Delegate-at Large ‘ ghe is 14 years of age She Henry and several others spoke. | orphan and has lived with Resolutions indorsing Bryan and as ae adopted child for aegeral aud debts—all are measured by gold and gold is constantly becoming dearer, Itis the yard stick (our monometallist friends are tond of that term) and year after year as the yardstick becomes longer, the bigger the debt grows, and the greater the amount of produce it takes to|~ be equivaient to one measure of the “standard.” “Truly, gold is the highest stand ard. But let us carefully consider whether it is “best” before we take the step that makes it permanent and bindiog on our country. Suppose by the free comage of silver as well as gold that the stand- ard is lower. Suppose the dollar is really cheapened. Suppose its pur chasing power is cut into. Suppose it buys less than it buys now. Do you see any calamity in that fact? Dear reader of the Tribune, of what does your wealth consist? Does it consist of money? No; it consiste of property—the resulta of your in dustry, the accumulations of your Isbor The value of that property, jas expressed in dollars, affects you | seriously. When the dollar is cheap. | ened, you have the eame property— the same actual wealth—but itfis When she became Mi: When she had Cuik LAWYERS, Cleveland electors. In 1589 he went Office over Bates County Natn’! Bank. again to the front as caudidate for! Es ‘Miséourl. Goversor, and this time he reduced | DR. Fred R, Jones, | nee the Republican plurality from 28,-| | Dispatches from New York are to |! BOUDMIGS, io RD Ine eae Ge effect that Tammany is fully in ed over Gov. B: roomed cat _— be | streets. j ket. Sheehan is getting the braves; ¥*5 pas by many Democrats a a |in fighting trim: Senator Hill bas candidate for the Presidency. Oa |not yet committed himself, but will|the score of personal popularity be in line in afew days. Senator te an eo eee man att MageA os ; Gorman has declared for Bryan and chases. LOCKWOOD, _| Sewall and Senator Brice is also ex | 31,0 tsicd others, but like Ayer's ' pected to get in line soon Bank | post “ £ ‘and trust company managers and | : {/some administration office bol ders | are dectaring fo: McKinley,but their | | places are being filled from the | | ranks of the labor element.—Nevada » clung to Castoria, © gavethem Castoria, Physician, T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office nortas quare Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil en aspecialtv. DR. T. F. n i Meyers on East ouse North of Mc- jto the benefit derived from the use of Ayers Sarsaparilla. Disease never | Mail. erfal blood-purifier. It makes the. . | weak strong. Hanged a Woman.-Ba | a ea a Pikeville, Ky, July 16. —Mary | Marshall, Mo., July 14—Samuel The Old Reliable Snodprecs, a (while women. asst Hunter, of this city, jumped in front hanged Monday at Corburr, Va. for | a Missouri -Pacitic train to day the murder of her three weeks o! q| With suicidal intent. The train PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. was run out of town. Six months! | over him, bruising him terribly. Has the best equipped gallery in| 880 in order to get rid of her negro | Deine. rece en uceente 7 mades a baby she put it alive in the fire and | | Poor job of it. I expected the en- Southwest Missouri. bared sk Gta: | gine to cut me to pieces.” All To Attempt to Cure Styles of Photogrphing Are} bled w art, and the Sue prices, Crayon _— A Specialty. All wor 1° is give sa guarante edt ° Call and se s of work. Free trial Grugst re. | products of industry | by gold. is the statement made over | and over again by those who testify} hala greater enemy than this pow-) baby. She formerly lived here, but) | stopped after the engine had passed | On! 1. property value of the ceuntry flect how burdensome this debt bas Cheap dollars mean high priced | Think of that see that itis so. Mr. uewis will himself tell you it is true. | Mr. Lewis says that from 63 sey- |eral years that we were dciog busi- |nees under a cheap paper standard jand our values were rot measured | Tt is true. harder to make debts then than and you will But was it any | money or to Pay) now’ Do we not! benetits of hb! gher | prices. We are willing to pay more | ali share th. if we can sell for more. Persistently falling prices are| ruinou Now, the real heart of tion is this—and that standard men the ques- ery while the cheapeming of the dollar does not cheapen property, it does | not cheapen the debt. It makes it easier to pa. are not really paid inmoney. Why, there is not money enough in this country to pay one-tenth dedts They are paid in produce. | A general cheapening of prices in- creases the debts. The debts of the United States— public and private—are said to ag- gregate 75 per cent of the entire become under cheapening pricea,and of our courtry to have higher prices | er products | Mr. Lewis’ gold standar“ of val. (ues is not what we need —Rich Hill oe is why gold! “repudiation” — | in other words. Debts/| of the, Re-' how necessary it is to the prosverity | Sewall were adopted without a dis- senting voice, though the audience | Past- Loveless has been | twice, both wives being dead. & was 2,000 strong. : - ,15 60 years of age and well ki By using Hall's Hair Renewer, | and respected by his neighbors, gray, faded, or discolored hair as-| wife is the youngest woman sumes the natural color of youth, | married in this county. He and grows luxuriant and strong, 'a handsome sum of money “) ; pleasing everybody. ‘asa dowry. Pain often con- FF centrates all { its Misery in : wee ST. JACOBS OIL if you want = feel siting te centrate its healing once a cure. FURANITUREIIOF! ALL DESCRIPTI Hasfa full and handsome new‘line of sampelssof Carpets, Wall Panel Chinese and Japanese Mattings. :- THE LU-MI-NUM BICYCLE. Styles np to date and prices that cannot fail to please. Undertaking in all its branches. G. B. HICKMAN PROPRIETO “MeFARLAND | BROS. Harness and Saddler | Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle South SideiSquare | Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keap in Sey Wejkeep everything that horse owners j Double wagon harness from $10 to single $7.50 to $25; second Saddles : the cheapest steel fork cow boy and «cle leather «ress, harness from $3 to S15. styles and prices, frer seat saddles. Lap robes, horse dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and fallline .° mens and boys gloves. buggy tops new and repair old ones. your cld harness and saddles and # We have the largest retail ness store in the Southwest and oof Lew ones. ness are all made at home. McFARLAND BRO Butler Misso'