Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BIG JOR FOR M'KINLEY. Senator Jones Says Winner Will Haye a Hard Task. MUCH DEPENDS ON THE MAN- Cenfidence in His Personal Integrity Is Frankly Expressed, L VOTE FOR MKINLEY. Hlinois . Sadiana.. fowa .... Maine Mary Maso: Mich, . Minnesota New Hampshir New Jersey New York North Dakota dhio Pennsylvania - @hode Island... South Dakota Vermont West Vi Total . TOTAL VOTE FOR BRYAN Oregon . California Alabama . Arkansas Colorado Florida. 8 9 17 3 8 3 Morth Carolina’.. pose ess iM #outh Carolina... ...... -. + 9 ovenee 12 3 4 12 RONRD oe secs caeene cu 180 DOUBTFUL. Montucky .... ee. eae Wyoming ...... Chicago, Ill., Nov. 5.—After con aeding the election of McKinley tce night Senator Jones said he intended éo continue the fight for the next four years. He will continue his democratic organization, with head ‘DEACON BROS. & CO. Heavy and shelf Hardware, Cutlery and Guus Tioware and Stoves, Field and Garden seeds, Buggies, Wagons | and Ferm machinery, Wagon wood work, Iron, | Steel. Nails, Salt, Barbwire, Machine oil, Glass GROCERIES. ORIGINAL ROUND OAK Best heater in the world. KEEPS FIRE -:- -:- -:- Buggy paints, Xe. with wood or coal, TRIUMPANT over all others. Give you references from 1000 Bates County" People. The Starling with cast top and bottom. The best air tight wood “heater in America. Call and see our line of wood and coal heaters. i | This organization will be strength- Prevention ' ened and perfected during the next better than cure. Tutt’s Liver ; tour years. ‘She open traitors have Pills willnot only cure, but if | been gotten rid of. They will be taken in time will prevent ‘comp-tled to take their places in the =e republican ranks The secret trait Sick Headache, ors who have not yet disclosed them selves will be ferreted out by the hard test of disaster, and their liver and kindred diseases. places will be taken by men who TUTT’S Liver PILLS will never cease the fight for popu ABSOLUTELY CURE | lar rights until the fight is won. 3 | The battle between democracy and plutocracy will be, fought toa finish, and no quarter will be asked or given.—Post-Dispatch. dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, constipation, jaundice, torpid ‘the Battle Just Begun. The democrats lost the fight this time. President Mehinley New York Journal. The people have chosen Major _McKinley instead of Mr. Bryan to ‘pe pMesident. Nobody has a right to object. for the people's will is It isthe high privilege lof the citizens of this republie to sovereign. | decide for themselves what is good lfor them, aud when they happes to | be wrony they always have the good jeense to suffer the consequenecs | | with patience, knowing tbat at the. | ballot box they can set things! istraight again | The Journal regrets the decision jof the people. We have advocated | |the election of Mr. Bryan in the be lief that bimetallism would be bet ter for the eountry than monometal- lism, and for the reason that, in oar/ judgment—which has been altered { —tbe trusts und syndicates require | checking rather | By McKinley's election the money than encouraging. | power has been enormously strength- ened. Four years, however, consti-| tutes an insignificant space in the life of a nation, and the United States could bear up under heavier calamities than even the unrestrain-} +drule of the trusts during one presidential term. But the trusts will not be entirely unrestrained. The senate will bea check upon the incoming adminis- tration, as it has been upon Cleve- land’s whose financial policy the president-elect is pledged to con- tinue. And then Majcr McKinley, seated ia the white house and clothed with authority, may {not be so submissive to dictation as Major McKinley the candidate has been. High office frequently produces an elevating effect upon purpose ard character. William McMinley is no noyice in public life, and his ambi- tion to be worthy of his exalted po- sition may quite possibly induce him to take seriously the promise of the republican platform to strive for in- ternational bimetallism. Notwith- standing all his campaign speeches, the new president is under none of jadmittedly in The forces arrayed against Washington. Pg Wal hoa them from without, combined with Grand Old Mi i. . ppaspe tae Wall Street's illusions as to the “LAST WORDS OF JONES. | the Victory of William Me- | hintey. Bow To Ener oF Tae PropLE. | Bates Co. National Bank, ii Silvers’s Forces Respect the Mejesty of the ORice.—Cause of Silver Lives Yet. Chicago, Ill., Nov. 5.—Chairman Jone: to night: The re doubt. It ha contests that the people have been ealled on to datermine years We have claimed the election on our advices from states that were doubt, in’ which we knew th had been many frauds, there were evidences g with the returns. It seems now to be apparent that, and fron of tamper jwhile Mr. Bryan, after making the most brilliant campaign in the his tory of our country, and having car- ried most of the states claimed to be doubtful, has not carried enough to assure his success in the electoral college. Bryan electors have been chosen from all of the states south of the Potomac and Ohio, except West Virginia, and all those west of the Missouri, except California and Oregon. 2 He has 190 electoral votes, and this number may be increased by final returns from states yet in ques- tion. He has uvt obtained enough votes to carry the electoral college. Thus this remarkable campaign closes with the election of William McKinley. The result was brought about by every kind of coercion and intimida- tion on the part of the money power, including threats of lock-outs and dismissals, and impending starva- tion; the «mployment of by far the largest campaign fund ever used in in reeent | | Established in 1S7U. ‘Paid up capital | A general banking business trang, } Office over McKibben store, Residedce, M. BE, Democratic scion coneeaes ALES County Bank sued the following statement | F.J. TYGARD, - - - : {HON. J. B. NEWBERRY uit of the Presidential} election is apparently no longer in| J.C. CLARK been ove of the closest ; ——————____., Real Estate and Life Ip. A sale, ranging trom 40 acres up, This land is located in Bates county is choice real estate. Call and see me before buying. T BUTL =R, MO. ser to $125,009 acted. President, Vice-Preg, Cashier Ww. R. WOODS. surance Agent. DRIAN - ~ MIsSSOURY T have a large number of farms for Graves & CLARK, North side square. Office, tront store. Alt! callanswered at office dayor ni eases. ATTORN«AYS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri!{State Bank DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, room over McKibbeng ight. Specialattention given to temale dis Entrance, same that leads to Hagedorn’s J. Suiru, Office over Bates County Natn’! Bank, DR. Fred R, Jones, DR, J. T. HULL DENTIST. Newly Fitted up Rooms, Over Jeter’s Jewelry Store. Studio, north side square , Butler, Mo, A.W TiHonwan SMITH THURMAN. E LAWYERS, - aa. Butler, Missourl, Phy-ician, “I beliove,” said he, “that Mr. Mc Kinley will exert his efforts to bring about an international agreement. The conditions are much more favor able to that solution now.” Then be added that no political conyen ¢ion in this country would ever again declare for the gold standard. 4 great number of people in this qountry looked upon McKinley as @ man favorable to silver, and for that reason voted for him. Senator Jones believes strongly in Mr. McKinley's personal integrity, and thinks he may be able to bring about international bimetallism. He thinks that the Ohio man bas many Serious problems to face, and is of &he opinion that he find himself with his own party in very much the same condition Mr. Cleveland found himself with his party. ° In speaking of the cause of the result, Senator Jones expreesed the opinion that the coercion of em ployes on the part of corporations played the most conspicuous part. In explanation he says: “One large manufacturing con- cern here issued a notice to its 1,800 employes last Saturday that they need not return to work on Monday and Tuosday, though their pay would go on. If McKinley was elected they would return on Wed- nesday, but otherwise the shops would shut down, as orders were consequent upon McKinley's elec- tion. When these men faced their wives and children and thought of the hunger whic’s might come to them, whatelse could they do but wote for McKinley. So it many other places.” Senator Jones, like all other dem- acrats, is disappointed, but has ac- cepted the result with good humor. Democratic headquarters were closed here to mght. Mr. Moreton Frewing, the English bimetallist, eaid to-night: “I think the result a great disap. poimtment. I see Otto Arendt de clares to-day in a cable from Berlin that the German farmer regards Mr. Bryan's defeat as a disaster. What the republican party will do is now was in It is a source of great satisfaction treachery from within, were too this country, and by subordination | churen parsonage, corner Ohio & Havannal - strects. and pride to Missouri democrats that in the wavering notes heard from many states, Missouri strikes a note of unusual strength and clear. ness. In this state Democracy is not only triumphant but exultant. The victory has been achieved in the face of a partieularly persistent and pestilentia! effort to divide dem ocratic councils, and to bring defeat on the lines of division. A combin ed effort was made in which cuckeos and crumb-chewers sought to stran- gle the party. But all the efferts failed. Mis- strong to be overcome in a four months’ campaign, although for its vigor and aggressiveness that cam- paign will be furever memorable in the history of American politics. In view of the fact that the dem- ocrats entered the campaign with a disorganized national committee and with state committees that bad to be reconstructed in various states, and in view of the further fact that a campaign which was begun ata disadvantage had to be conducted without adequate means, the result, though disappointing, is not dis-| gouri democracy has vindicated itself couraging. ) most gloriously. And no true democrat doubts that! Geyernor-elect Stephens is espe victory is only postponed. The bat-' cially to be congratuled upon the tle for the great principles embod- victory he has won in the face of the ied in the Chicago platform will be} most determined opposition. The resumed to-day. They will triumph | people of Missouri are still more to in 1900. They are essential to the| pe congratulated upon their rescue safety and prosperity uf the Aumeri-/ from Lewis and Filleyism, and upon can people, and if this republic is to |the assured reelection of Senator endure, the ascendency of money | Vest.—Post-Dis over manhood cannot long be main- tained Prosperity cannot return, Risgyelous| He eulte aol > From a letter written by Rev. J. i to the country under the gold stand- | G derman of Dimondal , Mich., ard, and harsh experience will in| are permitted to make this extract: four years teach the people the les | “I have no hesitation iu recommend son which they have refused to learn | ing Dr. King’s New Discovery, as from those who faced obloquy, abuse | the results were almost marvelous in ieee ty Seer no litheease of my wife. While I was acd ostracism in cl ampioning their | pastor of the Baptist Church at cause. | Rives Junction she was brought Another fact which no true demo-! down with Pneumonia succeeding crat will challengeis that this defeat | La Grippe. Territle paroxysms of is glorious in comparison with the | coughing would last hours with lit. = i | tle interruption and it seemed as if supposed victory which the party] she could not survive them. A friend won in 1892. The most humiliating | recommended to us Dr. King’s New defeat that ever befell the democrat- | Discoyery; it was quick in its work ic party and one of the greatest ca. | and highly satisfactory in results. ’ |lamities that ever befell the Ameri-| Trial bottles free at H.L Tuckers’ can people was the election of Gro | oe — eo yer Cleveland as the iustrument of | the syndicate and Standard Oil Plu-, In view of the election of McKin- tocrats in 1892. | ley St. Louisans have begun to talk It is worth all the expenditure of | about his cabinet. time and effort during the campaign | pateb. Cabinet Guess One of the most popular estimates just closed to rid the democratic | gleaned from the McKinleyites in party of the Whitneys, the Belmonts, | the hotel corridors is as follows: the Brices aud the other reprenta- Secretary of State—Thurston of tives of plutocracy who for twenty | Nebraska. : |years have diverted it from its high | | functions as the party of the people. | of Ohio. | A far worse defeat than that which | Secretary of War—Quay of Penr. the problem. If warned by the nar-| befell it Tuesday would be amply | sylvania. Secretary of the Treasury—Hanra | beauty and holiness of the single gold standard. We have had republican assur- ances in plenty throughout the can- vass that Major McKinley’s election would be followed by a splendid outburst of confidence in the future from which would result an imme- diate restoration of national pros- perity. Let us hope that the confi- dence and prosperity will be forth- coming. Indeed, better times than we have experienced for the past three years are to be looked for, for the capitalistic and employing class has undoubtedly worked itself into the faith that McKinley's success would avert a great peril, and in its joy atthe outcome of the voting there will be a loosening of purse- strings and a disposition to fuilfil prophecy. But that the better times ean last long under our vicious mon- etary system will not be expected by those who take cognizance of other than surface causes. The gold staad ard will have four years more in which to show how it operates in practice. Ifit produces the same fruits between now aud 1900 that it has yielded hitherto, there will be an irresistible uprising against it. The Journal has no inclination to quarrel with the jury of the peop'e because of their verdict. Jf they hate condemned the democratic pro- posal to remonetize silver, it is be- cause they have not been sure of its expediency and have been made doubtful of its morality. Further time is needed to convince them that it is necessary to convince them that it is both expedient and right. The duty of a!! good citizens now 1is to acquiesce loyally and quickly in Major McKinley's election, forget the rancors and excitements of poli- ties as soon as pcossible—parting with no convictions, but remember jing that there isa time forall things ;—and settle down to businees, The country needs a rest. ofalarge portion of the American press. The President-elect and his party are under the pledge to the Ameri ean people to continue the gold standard, and by its operation to re store prosperity to this country. As chief executive, Mr. McKinley will have the cordial support of the millions of patriotic Americans who have cast their votes for William Jennings Bryan. They bow to the majesty of the office, and abide by the result with none of the mutter- ings that would have come from the moneyed powers, had it been suc- cessful. They are confident -he gold stand ard can not give the promised pros perity, but will gladly welcome it if comes. They wiil continue the great struggle for the uplifting of humaa- ity, and the maintenance of the dig- nity of our country in the establish ment of the Awerican monetary system. And the Democratic party, aided by its present allies, will still uplift the bimetallic standard and bear it on to victory. James K. Jonzs, al Committee. ‘Tite, Children Chairman of the Democratic Nation- T C. BOULWARE, Physician and « Surgeon. Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chi en a specialty., Srecet attention givne Surgery. Chronic sad both in the city and country. Calle answered at all times. side [ }. Brides cn Havana str One satisfaction in giving Scott’s Emulsion to children is they never object to it. The fact is, they soon become fond of it. Another satisfaction is because it will make them plump, and give them growth and prosperity. It should be { Ballard’s Ssow Liniment. 1 This liniment is different in compo- j sition from any other liniment on the | market. It is a scientific discovery which ! most penetrating There are num- rowness of its victory, it will work | COmPensated if nothing more were! for currency reform. accomplished than ridding it of, Good i may be near, but the Cheatin | Cleveland and Clevelandism. speeches of Mr. Reed and Geaonl | But “zuch more has been accom. | Harrison have been such as to dis-|Plished. Inthe nation and in ali} courage the friends of silver in Eng- | the states the democratic organizas| jand, France and Germany.” jon is now controlled by democrats. ; retar f the N; aes white imitation, ane reg ay, k Navy— Warner recommended because th nee oe SS = ‘ler a greater profit. Beware Secretary of the Interior—Kerens | Gemand Ballard Snow of Missouri. sitively cures rheumati Postmaster General— Grosvenor | theumatism, burns of Obio. co cted muscles, Secretary of Agriculture—Samuel | ¢- M. Yost of Virginia. — iff joints, o} re cuts, sore especially beneficial gin Sold by H. L. Tucker, given to all children who are § too thin, or too pale. It does not make them over-fat, but ‘ | | | plump. : It strengthens the digestive B organs and the nerves, and fur- nishes material for rich blood. § ' We have a book telling you more on the subject. Sent free for the asking, SCOTT & BOWNE, New York. * PHOTOCRAPHER Has the best equipped gallery is executed in the highest style of the Crayon Wa k 4 Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to y Office norta side DR. T. F. LOCKWOOD. Nervous diseases, Does a general practice Office over Joe Meyers on Rast Residence 2nd house North of Mo+ C, HAGEDORN The Old Reliable North Side Square. Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing art, and at reasonable prices, give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. Cc. HACEDORN. Butler Academy, Preparatory School. ARTICULATES WITH STATE UNIVERSITY. FALL TERM BEGINS Sptem ber 7th, 1896, | Classical, Latin Scientific, English, Commercial, Musical and Elective Courses Taition, for literary conrses,89 pet term of three months. Musle $12 per term of twenty four lessons. Commercial, $27 for the course nine months. Board, in family &t.-from $1.50 to er week. Rooms rented at from $1.56 to $2 bermonth. Send fer catalogue. Jno. W. Richardson, . PRINCIPAL, MISSOUBL BUILER, -