The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 2, 1896, Page 3

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L McBRIDE & C0. | | LABOR’S BITTEREST FOE. | Master Mark Hanne. Kanses City World | tf : | “McKinley may have shown wis- Sovereign Denounces Texas Silyer Democrats Indorse ee ee oT} tet aoe eee CENT OFF FOR THIRTY DAYS 20 PER the Missourian’s Boom. Austin, Texas, June 24.—The sil- We are not importers, but buy four *goods as cheap as anyone in the dintend to keepgnothing but MRICTLY FIRST CLASS GOODS th'our experience of twenty-five years in the grocery business and that we know the best brands of goods, also know what they are “hinthe market and at the inside price, and the inside price is what may for them. It is not necessary to advertisefprices for other parties to , but we ask you to come in with your who is now in the city, stopping at | the Centropolis, made the above em- | phatie declaration toa reporter for jthe World this morning. “has all his life been a vindictive foe to organized labor. He has destroy | the action of foreign countries. | At | 11:30 o'clock the roll was called as/ ; Greeting to all Cash Buyers of Loy Pepe ee ie Ih ex : a sewaiie nee 3 g y |dom in selecting Mark Hanna as his ie eee onvenMon sets el mT d 20 pe below! r price. = U |manager, but by so doing ke lest this morning at 9:30 ovclock, and ; t : g ke cst, A s | the support of organized labor in Ba there nintte heh OniGarnete at Shades. W } Z ae a ar pl 4 Q u rpets, Mattings, Shades i ilass ] 5 ] ® | every state in the Union, and gained oa fe it ‘ — a : a : P ture Sepa San 5 . S oe a | Ww g =| 2 . es, Hers supy &c. Fine its bitterest opposition. es ie ee gy ee : f Z a Pp Tine: + here as we have been for many years, and expect to and will give] J. R. Sovereign, grand master } a ‘ie . hi pa laa ae ie a ene Ta many (or more) goods for the same money as any other house in the | Gorkman of the Knights of Labor, jat the ratio of 16 to 1, regardless of $ les for the better grades of ,) to whether or not four or eight del- the Chi-) | legates shall be selected to & z 2 ‘ cago convention. “Hanna,” continued Mr. Soyercign| 4 3 : | Jobn Reagan also spoke, opposing any presidential instructions at all. | Dudley, cheirman of the state execu-| papiic ed unioa after union among his |). z 2 gil — Misia: Be cmploeces cmah ay tive committee, spoke in advocacy 3 Oot uployees, ah e- | > = | { F N Ny F ( § p | | Tt Tube to egal Ones sndene jof the Bland endorsement. Judge! ' } } ARON ie He has be |Bramlett introduced a resolution | stating in effect that Bland was the | Fdgar Bowmer’s Self Intleted Shot Nevada k Werk &c place » turni MOND. Ratler Missouri. 4 ‘ ; 3 ; ; 2 . ; 4 D. W. DRUM DIED FROM HIS WOUNDs. Out For Bland. Owensboro, Ky., June 24.—The Owensboro Daily the leading silver newspaper of Ken- tucky, come out strongly for Bland for President Messenger, Proves Fatal wir Jete in everything, froma > fruit were bought in Sanfran Our coffees are the best int “6 xO if a ui Be convinced, we tell the truth you will be satisfied. it to say we will duplicate any her we do a legitimate business or Very respeetf ‘North side square, Butler Migsou SWAHPED { i} Letters and Telegrams is “Silver Dick” Bland. } MB Worry of tue Campaign Beginning to Tell.—_The White Metal Champion Werked in the Field. | Iebanon, Mo., June 26.—This qiet little town ie not greatly dis- farbed over the prospect of having spresidentia! candidate. The only | ‘midenco of political interest is the display of Bland pictures in the thop windows and the increased ‘work which has devolved upon the postmaster and telegraph operator since “Silver Dick’s” boom began to | tssume formidable proportions. Letters are pouring in upon Mr. Bland by the hundred each day, and | beis finding it difficult to read them ul, to say nothing of finding time to | wswer them. He misses the serv- ices of a stonographersadly, and the work of trying to reply to all of his torrespondents by Land has proven | tuch a physical task that he is look: | . Cee Ping worn wad tired He seemed thin and pale as he drove into town eerly this morning for his mail, and he complained that behad not been feeling well for fe Guarantee everything we sell to be as Represented our horn but will leave the matter with our customers to determined A. L. McBRIDE & Co. ident organized labor f his fact!” ag ried Mr. Sovercien. Ho end hummed the ditty: y didn’t do ath e thing “All the various tions,’ he continued, have their come together as a unit when an at- igawl toa cook stove. Our line of », Shipped direct to us and are strict- he City, come and try them and you » with all our lines.” Only try them doesn’s app tically re chuckited ‘and th No, nova sg to him; mn 2? labor organiza- “while they little differences, legitimate price quoted. We do not not. Come in and be convinced, mBy: uly yours, tack 1aust be made a common foe. In the coming campaign the question of gold or silver cuts no figure. the friends of labor in power, not its enemies.’ Mr. Sovereign has just returned from a lecture tour on the Pacific He alluded to the fact as being paradoxical that the most radical free silverites were to be found in the exclusively gold camps G. A. R. POLITICAL SPLIT, on ‘ ats We want to see Bookwaltei’s View of It. John W. Bookwalter, the well known manufacturer of Springfield, O., will probably head the free silver delegation to be sent from Ohio to the Democratic national convention. Speaking of the situation in Ohio Mr. Bookwalter said: “The people are intensely in earn- est over this issue and an overwhelm- ing majority are committed to the policy of free coinage at the ratio of 16 tol. They will not ba satisfied with anything short of this in the platform at Chicago nor will they tolerate any candidate for the presi- deucy who is not in sympathy with such a declaration—no dubious plat- forms, no trimming candidates. The one must be as clean-cut, unequivo- eal and outspoken as the other. That the free silver men will be in the majority in the convention 18 almost a certainty, and they are not going to abandon their convictions. L would deplore raising a sectional issue in this nation, but the West and South, with four-fifths of the and about four fifths of the coast and the west. Executive Committee Creates Trouble 300 Old Soldiers in the County. Kansas City Times. The action of the executive coun cil of tho Veterans’ Society Political orgenization in port of the 1,200 old soldiers of to McKinley, has caused all pledging the sup Wyandotte county Morri!l and Harris kinds of trouble among the local G. A. R. It has resulted in a split in their ranks as wide as petweea the Federals and Confederates in times, and many of the members are war now not on speaking terms. It that the meeting at the Armory hall was 2 kind of a political scheme;that only asmall portion of the commit- :was present, and th outside G. A. R’s we lw . Now n wrorfiy) | belt of the ola soldiers are very in ms ts te t it none of 2Ware of area population, are in subjection to the r Fast, which baa waxed through favoring tariff laws at the expense of the other | great geographical divisions. | “It is a wrong that must be reme died, for the men of the South and | ne sb ult ALL iaus and bank | ‘'e% jsent to Morrill and Har \ y unauthorized and fall fs ‘of expressing the sentiment of G. A. R. of Wyadotte county. eacy of the ct anything that you have for sale and we will give you as much for called an sud inl canni Om, choice of the p l f Texas adi Biles: Ec ESE voupe en this TAGTETSES The market will bear, in justice to ourselves as well as you. ev s that if Me- : a aa exas avd | who shot himself at an early hour Messenger says editorially: “There Vik: aac be deemed it advisable to the interests! Tuesday morning at Schell City died ate manifesto signs of the growth of L | NE OF H A R D W A R F given ap inipo-tant crbinvet portfolio. as eh eros uo Hie BL IBLE. at 4 o'clock that afternon.not baving the Bland boom Democrats all ir eye Wa thewanl ree, | Congressman Bailey spoke in advo-! regainede neciousness. George King over the country are coming to real- resolution and stated of Schell City, was in Nevada last that he is the logie of the situa- |emphaticaily that be favored Bland. of a sand hill ‘p after much discussion, re than! Governor Hogg said the adoption) would have no more ect in the| Chicago delegation than the snutts| Will Lee the Schell City night watch At 2 o'clock | He then went home and kissed his seun. a rag : Bland was) mother and sister goodby, remark- finally instructed for almost unani-|ing if they rever saw him again he mously. Messages were sent to the| hoped they would meet him in heav- Indiana and | en. Illinois informing them Texas sends | this, conventions in Ohio, a etraight-out silver delegation to] man was Only going to take a trip. |He then went to Joe McKinney's and told him goodby. ‘utes after, McKinney heard a shot and going out found Bowmer on a} Chicago. After reviewing McKinley’s claims | to oratory the New York Post adds; this tribute to his power: “In one respect, we admit, McKinley's ora- tory is overwhelmingly and irresisti- ble. No man ever lived who was his equal in demonstrating what nobody questions, or in cramming down the throat of his adversaries the propo- sitions with which they themselves start. His unique impressiveness is best seen when heis arguing some such thesis as that a government must have a revenue. Herides down all opponents like a whirl wind. Ill betide the man who should dare to maintain, in the face of his noble wrath, that a government can pay} its bills without money, that reyenue may rain into the Treasury from the} clouda, that neither internal nor ex | ternal taxes are necessary. All such | suggestions McKinley dashes aside impetuously and with lofty scorn. | He pursues the wretched phists who assert that a government needs | sop ner where they seek a refuge from his lightnings, and drags them out ngs, jnight, tells the true story of Bow. . mer’s self destruction. chief tied around his forehead and | yote for free silver at Chicago. At | sciousness | no revenue into every hole and cor-} A man who been identitied with the silver cause, who tion. has long 18 a life-long Democrat, whose pub- lic and private life is withcut blem- ish, who isa plain man of the peo- , and whose nomination would satisfy silver men of all parties, so that there would be no possibility of equivocation with him in the White House, is demanded,and such a man is Bland.” Ohio Solid for Sitver. Columbus, O, June 24.—The democratic state convention to day declares for free silver, and adopted the unit rule, which insures a solid Bowmer borrowed a pistol from They never thought much of thinking perhaps the young A few min- small bridge with a red handker- | the revolver still gripped in his| 19 o'clock the convention was called hand. | to order by M. A. Smalley and Col- Bowmer was only 18 years of age | onel W. A. Taylor, the democratic _ and wasa very bashful boy. The | candidate for secretary of state in idea that the cause of his suicide | 1892, when Cleyeland received one was a love affair ia scouted at. He | electoral vote from Ohio, was tem- had a very hard spell of fever last! porary chairmas. In his speech, winter and for six monts he has em-/ Colonel Taylor emphatically indors- ployed most of his time hunting in | cat thalires silyer idea. the bottoms east of Schell City.! The platform instructs delegates The uncommonly accepted cause of | to vote as a unit and hinds them on his suicide is that the fever unbal- anced his mind. He shot himself squarely in the! A i; i forehead and never regained con- | Jeticrsooy Cys wslete June 25.— eatarouhin ideathe His | State Treasury Lon V. Stephens to- mother and sister are almost pros- | ey aude nous eee ae trated over the suicide of the poor Caras National Bank, an New Yoru | City, the State's fiscalagent, a check | for $446,445, $99,445 of which sum _is to pay the semi aunual interest on the outstanding bonds of the State, | Jaly 1, the reminder to retire 337 Mussouri, Hannibal and St. Joe 6 per cent bonds. Upon the payment of | the money question. Missouri Reducing Her Debt. boy. | Norman, Okla, June -The | Transeript of this city is the only paper in Oklahoma that will support McKintey and Hobart on the St. Louis platform. The State Capital, | trembling and begging reercy.” | Guthrie, the ling republican | these bonds the bonded debt will be —__—___——_——— | z A - : { i A | Ozden’s Herg- | paper in the territory, will bolt the | -equeed to $5,697,000, only $11,000 = ae A ak at are SATE 5 Ogden, Utah, June 25 ~Amia | St. Louis financial plank, but sup- of which beara 6 per cent interest, Tan) s ale gy VoK in! Me ile, i x rs eneers of 20,000 people aud tbe; POF the ticket on MeKinley’s silver the reader 34 per cent. During 4 booming of cannon Senator #. y. {Statement of 2510 Olin W. Ken- the administration of the Treasury 5 Cannon, the silver Senator of Utah, was received at his home in Ogden. A procession a mile in length was x ® tome time. a G Reena formed, with bands and drum corps : The worry of the campaign is be-| West are not in unfortunate condi | An old pages ~ ‘ asa at their head, and Senator Cannon, F Ganing to tell on him, but his wife, | tions by reason of being less intelli ieee “2 — eae anc’) following in a carriage, was hauled FB whois a woman of more than ordi-|gent or less industrious than their | °F 47° ADEE he 1,200 old}, g great line of men. He was| 4 c soldier votes Wyandotte county], ~ z 1. @ tary tact and intelligence, saves him | brethren in the East. Vicious legis jsoldier votes In Wyandotte county toten to Lester Park and into the 7 = E {this fall they are relying on a small Agreat deal of labor aud annoyance. ; lation has made the difference. The) 7° " = oR B on & Smit | pavillion. Mr. Bland is not worrying as much | West and the South to-day stand in We a ee 10) Hon. William Glassman, President however, as many would do under|the same relation to the Eastern) ah sounty, ooo Ree of the silver clubs of Utab, was . & the circumstances. states that nearly all the countries | split on local factions and on e \ t silver. The meeting at Armory hal While Texas was instructing for | bear to England, the great creditor | jon Tuesd éheers of the Lone Star democrats | fighting to maintain the single gold | him for president yesterday, and the | nation of the globe whose interest in| silver speech. ay after noon was very Gannon followed r, and was by no means a Senator \ limited a aienl ae made Chairman and made a rousing | kill, N Y says that Dr King’s New in a! He spoke feelingly of | Were ringing for him, he was - DRIVING A MOWER Bf one of-his tields and keeping a aa @ watchful eye on the men who are PB working for him in the midst of the je & baying season. Bland comes to & town twice aday for bis mail and telegrams, and he stops frequently a the way to chat with old neigh- He knows every man in the coun- been out voted in his own home. Kindest terms. He will > Fention. Heszy Morus Top. To those who a fatth or the thous Mttacks ot colds in the asure remedy m Balm has b [the L es, cold etfectiv | the head will be qu p and the severest at Wield to, and be perfec “thorough treriment. C llood disease, but an the passages of the no: slimate changes. Ness Your relieved by tarrh will | ters to watering places originated?” cured t oO me ty by name, and yet he has always | gold monometallists want 150 cents Tn spite of this there is not among is political opponents a man who Will speak of him in any but the remain on | sole standard of values.” farm until after the Chicago con- oy a is nota Zs ae a representative one.” The names of but 24 contained in the roster of the G A. | standard is too plain to need argu- | ment. Now, why should 60,000,000 lof people give way to 12,000,000? | But we are told with a sneer that} \ only the people who want to pay a} | dollar of indebtedness with 50 cents | | favor free coinage—the 16 to 1 men}; |are therefore influenced by a desire | | to repudiate their obligations. There never was a grosser slander. It | would be just as fair to say that the last y that the county. How's This! We oifer,One Hundred Doliars J. Cheney for the iast 15 years, an | lieve honorable in | for every dollar due them by reason |of the appreciation of the metal | which they wish to enthrone as the } tirm, |Wrst « TRUAX, | Toledo O. WA Wholesale Hali’s € } VIN, Removal, We take pieasure in announcing that) ° 9 veterans are | R. posts in Kansas City, Kan, and ke county clerk certilied were 385. ex soldiers in} the St. Louis convention. other speech one of the spea boomed till midnight. intu Eternity. three little childrea in the Coma | River yesterday. The mother was _|wife of Fred Boerner, and her vic i tims were aged respectively 2, 4 an atter this date Parks Sure cure will re- | move traces ot rheuma » kidney {troubles and liver complaint trom the! ‘user. It is the only medicino that is/ } ranteed to cure these diseases or,no zs | The Springfield Leader-Democra says the nomination of land Hobart fell like a wet blanke on the republicans that “I wonder where the cus-| tom of mothers taking their daugh there was no enthusiasm ofany sor was heard | He: “In the days of Abraham. Re- t) bekah got her husband at one.”—/ | | | j i en Teller with i oster crew— | | i ‘ e°ll tell you the rest ne tne xi fall. McKinley '@"Y © town. | The news of the nomination was re-|the water the thr eived with absolute silence. and! were bound to their mo -\6 years. a The bodies ,tiver in about baifan bour, and ev t | life, but without succes When the bodice -| several stockings and cor¢ jof them were dressed nic cause is known for the Several | aimed for it. were made, and whea edy so long tried and tested. Trial iene: kers referred to the | bottles free at H. L. Tucker's drug ‘store Reg i and $1. alternates who stepped into places, of Cannon and his brother bolters, | there was hooting and hisses of the; republican paper, comes out in a entire multitude. Bands played and | strong editorial against MeKinley San Autonio, Texas, June 25.—In Comal County, just north of here, a} mother drowned herself and ber! Mrs. Boerner. | ai Pre were taken from the | of Christian Bartholomew. who died ffort made to restore them to from :aren r with | not turned to ¢ and all’ completely pe No| same appearance as when placed in ‘ie andjthe grave four years before. It | nedy, editor of the Transcript, will | establish a daily edition in support | of the St. Louis platform on Sep- | tember 1. by Mr. Stephens $4,425,000 of the State debt bas been paid. Indianapolis, June 23.—The dem- ocratic state convention will open to-morrow and probably continue two days. The freesilver men have 1,500 of the 1,747 delegates anda strong frea coinage platform will be adopted. Ex-congressman Shively of South Bend will probably be the nominee for governor. The dele- gates to Chicago will be instructed for Governor Matthews and will be Senators Voorhees and Turpie, Su- preme Judge McCabe and G. V. A Household Treasure. D W Fuller of Canajoharie, N. Y., says that he always keeps Dr King’s | New Discovery in the Louse and his \family bas always found the very best results follow its use; that he | would not be without it, if procura- | ble. GA Dykeman Druggist, Cats | Discovery is undoubtedly the best cough remedy; that he has used it in his family for eight years, and it has never failed to do all that is Why not try a rem- The Rich Hill Da ders, chills and tever, &c. ¢ any of these symptoms, jyour liver ot order and your blood is slowly er does villeure ali land the gold platform of the Sth | Louis convention It does not be- lieve that there is any hope for ch or bowels j x ; S icine. Price | bimetallism through the republican sat ot s drugst re. 45 iy party this year. and says ‘we believe ‘that the money question is the most | vital and important issue. We can- Congressman Richardeon of Ten- nessee believes his state will go for democracy and free silver by 25.000 majority. He that leveland and the ity of gold money democrats will gracefally ac- cept the result of the Chicago con- vention when they have exhausted every resource in favor of their gold idol. J. W. Forrest, a leading banker of Thayer, Kansas. aud « republican of state reputation, has bolted the McKinley ticket. He says that be and many other republicans in that part of Kansas are very much dis- appointed in the McKinley ticket 1 i not therefore. support McKinley for We president of the Cnited States fer a principle to a name.” also t lieves mua Niles, Micb., June _'and was buried near Elkhart four years ago. was recently exhumed for removal to another cemetery, and t rains to light ed that the body had st, but had become d. It had the it was discov | weighed at least 400 pounds. i i

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