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BU J Lin WEEKLY 11 IMS 6 & f 4 - | 43 Wr campaign Monday. J. D. ALLEN Epiror. I. D. Atcen & Co., Ptoprietors. « TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Weekty Times, put Thursday, will be sent to any address one year, postage paid, for $1.00, DEMOCRATIC For President WILLIAM J. BRYAN, ot Nebraska. TICKE® For Vice-President ARTHUR SEW ot Maine. ntative- GEORGE Sherif? fALL, Represe B. ELLIS. E. C. MUDD. Tressurer— A. B. Prosecuting Attorne HARVEY C. CLARK. OV 4 Surveyor— ROBERT JOHNSON. Administrator— D,V. BROWN. Pablic Coroner— DR. O. F, RENICK, Jucge North Dietrict— J. M. COLEMAN. Tige South Di Ww. riet— - KEMPER. THE BUTLER TIMES has credit for the targest circulation accorded toany paper pub- lished in the 6th congressional district of Mis- sourl, which has a popniation of Il,7 the publishers of the Directory guarantee the accuracy of the rating accorded to the the frat person, who successful aasaila it.— From the Printers Ink, of April 15th ™ and American Newspaper paper by a reward of $100 to issue —_— The Columbus Buggy Co , Colum- bus, Ohio, has gone to the wall. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr, and Miss Grace Wilson were married Tuesday. The father of young Van- derbilt bitterly opposed the match and threatens to disinherit the son. Richard O. Boggess, of Kansas City, an ex confederate soldier, and one of the best known lawyers in the State, died at his home in Kan sas City Monday ot tumor of the diver. The Globe-Democrat is quick to publish the disaffection of a demo- crat, but not a line appears of the scores of republicans all over the country who are joining the Bryan ranks and clubs. A poll of the St. Louis Silver con vention, taken just before adjourn ment, showed that of the total num- ber of delegates, 528 were republi- cans, 134 democrats, 47 populists, and a few scattering. The New York Tammany hall democrats are loyal to Bryan and Sewall, and claim they will give the ticket 50,000 majority in New York City. If their promise is full filled Bryan and Sewall will carry the state. Alabama fired the first gun of the The populist f republicans had a fusion ticket, the w@nuis ie tho democrats have carried the state by from forty to fifty thou- sand majority. The election passed off quietly and a heavy vote was | polled. _—_—. "fi seems to be impossible for Mr. “McKinley to acquire the habit of candid, fair and honest speech. In his talk to the Foraker club he spoke | of the democratic party as having ‘destroyed business and confidence by a free trade policy.” Mr. McKin- | ley knows that so far from having a/ “free trade policy” in force we have a tariff averaging 42 per cent, which is 50 per cent higher than the origin- al Morrill war tariff, and quite as high in the main, as the republican tariff in operation from 1883 to 1890. A candidate for the presidency, if} he speaks at all, ought to stick to! the facts.—New York World. Quincy Herald:—There is some | thing fascinating about the silver sentiment. There is eloquence and argument in the cause, but even that is unnecessary. to the standard of the white metal by thousands and many of them do! not bother to give reasons for the hed every} People are tlocking | UALLS US ANARCHISTS.- | ATLANTIC CITY WRECK VicTins’ We direct attention of our demo-, \eratic readers to extracts taken from Forty-Seven Persons Killed and Forty - ‘the St. Louis Globe Democrat of R Three Injured by Thursday’s _E. Lewis’ speech on the occasion of | his receiving the republican nomina-| tion for governor. Collision, Atlantic City, N. J, July 31.— How do you like| Work of recovering the bodies of ‘to be called Socialists and Anarchists the dead and caring for the injured ! by this new convert to republican | yictims of last night's terrible eclli- ism; this traitor to the party whose) gion between the Reading Railroad only offense lay in giving him cffice express and the Pennsylvania Rail- \and honoring him far above his just!;oad excursion train continued deserts? Herefers flippantly to the throughout the night and during the Lost Cause, of which his father was greater portion of to-day. a brave and honored soldier, and Forty seven dead and forty-three ;goes into rhapsody of praise over injured are to night's figures on the ‘Grant, Sheriden, Logan and Gar-| gigaster on the Medows. Of these, |field He is no more devoted to the forty have been identified. Three, tlag of our country, because of his | of the unidentified are women. The} jconversion to republicanism, than) odd one consists of an arm, to which | | those brave fellows who accepted | yo body has been found | | defeat at Appomatox and have been) The body of Engineer Edward) jand are loyal citizens, though pos | | Farr, who died with his hand on the | sessing the courage of their political | \throttle, was taken out early this |convictions. We are not surprised | | morning. It was with difficulty that | that Mr. Bryan's declaration, that | |his ngid fingers were sage, “you shall not press upon the brow) |from the lever. His head and face’ of labor this crown of thorns” is | were untouched, and his eyes looked , {nightmare to candidate Lewis. The| skyward with a ghastly glare He! | thing the republicans do not want is | had boen pinned down iy the chest, to remove the crown of thorns from | ang apparently met instant death the brow of labor which republican! ajmost every bone in the bodies legislation has been pressing down | of the victims was broken when | for thirty years, and which they are/ taken from the ruins,and many were seeking to further press down with | ¢9 frightfully mangled as to be be | their single gold standard and Me-| yond recognition. | Kinley tariff. Aud this little turn- colt Lewis calls us Anarchists be- cause we stand for the common peo ple and against his robber tariffs; | because we are desirous of incresing the circulating medium by rehabili-j tating silver,which a republican Con-} o'clock. The West Jersey train w as| cursionists from Bridgeton, Salem | and »-ighboring villages in South gress aesassinated, struck down in| Jerce,. It was an excursion of the the dark when no one was looking Impr: ved Order of Red Men, and} for such a dastardiy stroke, the} five ¢); were well represented. enormity of which crime was for| Tie fist car on the Reading train years in revealing in all its hideous-| ang t}:5 second on the West Jersey | nesg. And now they talk of sacred-| were but the third car on the| ness of contracts, repudiation, ete., | latte: the full foree of the when we only seek to come into our| impact, and was literally cut in half. own. It would be better for Mr.| and cach half shivered to splinters, Lewis hereafter if he would prepare} When it is remembered that this car | his speeches and not let enthusiasm | was jammed with human freight fhe) for his newly found faith dwarf his cuugal horrer of the situation can be realiz- judgment and better nature. ed. | | | Party Lines Obitteratsd. | COL. PHELPS MAKES FIGURES | Fort Scott, Kan, Aug. 1.—Not in the history of politics in this city and Bourbon County have party He Predicts Democratic Success ia Mis- lines been so obliterated as they are | ree i eee fa a now. When it is said the free sil SE CCEEAT 8 CODA ver sentiment has almost disrupted EOI the Republican partyin this coun | Col Wm. H. Phelps, the well- known Missouri politician, has been studying the the political situation in Missouri, try, the statement can be verified by | incontrovertible facts and refer- ences, which not only alarm but dishearten the local leaders cf the|eensiblfe conclusion. In conversa-| McKinley and gold remnant |tion with a St. Louis Republic re-| At a meeting of the Bryan Free! porter Wednesday Col. Phelps said: Silver Club, 24 well-Known Repuli | “I ear the si cans subscribed their names to the/sizee the Chicago convention, and | membership role. Judge W. R./am willing to go on record with this | and comes to avery have vassed uation | Biddle, a Republican of State repu-|prediciion: Bryan will carry Mis-| tation, who has served in the Legis |souri by the largest majority ever | lature and has been high in the/given a candidate in this state 1 jeouncils of the Republican party,|sbould not be surprised if bis major-| and who was for a long time editor | ity exceed 60,000. The entire demo- | of the Fort Scott Monitor, the old: | cratic state ticket will beelected by a! est Republican daily in Southeast |!arge majority. In the congression Kansas, and who is now the prin- | ai districts the democrats will elect ciple owner of that paper. was elect- | 12 Congrezsmen out of the 15. The! ed president, and J. J. Peasley, a|Senate in my opinion will be a tie. | prominent local Republican, was | At best the majority will be very | elected secretary. ismall. The house will be Demo | Colonel J. P. Relens and Captain | 2ratie by a majority of 30 |. C. H. Haynes, lifelong Republicans} “In the Fifteenth Congressional | jand active members of the G A. R, | District alone.” continued Colonel | were among the members who join | | Phelps, “enough ‘voters will change ed. lfrom the republican to the once Judge Biddle was asked why be | cratic party to insure democratic} | would support Bryan, and he said: leuccess in thta state. Burton wen “Party fealty isan essential ele-| elected in my district two years ago} ment in a ereat repablie like ours. by 2,400 plurality. But it must always be subordinate ry a county in the district this fall | jto fealty for one’s country. Gov-) jand wili be defeated by more than! jernments are not made for parties. | 5,000 majority. They exist independent of parties. Parties are made to enhance the growth of government. There are |millions of Republicans who hon- ‘estly believe the silver plank in the | Chicago platform is right, and there will be more of them before elec- tion. They firmly believe that the issue thus made is to all races of men what the issue in 1860 was to the black race in the country— emancipation from opression and slavery. Tostrike down half of the standard money of the world they He will not car- The Globe Democrat says: It is} lawell known fact that whenever | i there is any depreciated currency in. circulation it is sure to be used in 'the payment of wages.” True enough, and that’s just why the la-| boring people and farmers are kic ing aud want a change. They want the same kind of money that the bondholder gets. They want the ollar equal in value and good for i debts public and private. is in them. It is the believe will enslave the producers yj, imed ablican. man- faith that i 2 The Bry of wealth andthe man who labors = ae the republican te glamour of the cause e Bry-' and is in fact ruinous to all classes *8F8 are raising a campaign fund of an ticket gains like an avalanche. It absorbs everything over which it te passes and rides on to victory in © spite of argument, obstacle or pro- test. The newspsper:, are all powerless to impede its way. the bolters, | the banking sentiment of the east; 000,000 as a corruption fund to dinthe states of Illinois, In- diana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Virginia and one or two other doubt- ful states. If money will corrupt the |* voter and elect Me Kinley it is pro- posed to use it except the persons who liv t and taxes. Believing thi and seeing how ruinous a policy would be to the great body of the people east, west, north and south, I this year cheer- Hy support Bryan and free sil- e on in- | ver. ( ' Cures j tion by | Then ke ‘cially arranged | It is not a cheap Cures Prove the merit of Hood's Sarsay tu pueriect Saggunanaanty Cures of se ti Cures Cures «i! Cures Cures Cures « Sarsaparilla 1. Hood & Co., Hood's Pills TAMMANY FOR BRYAN Proprietors, Lov To are t Resolutions — ef Adopted by Acclamation. | Preparations Already Under Way for | Active Work.—Warm Expressicas of Loyalty From the Leaders. New York, July 31 from Philadelphia, due here at 6:40| Without waitmg for the State con- | The executive committee | vention. the 6:30 special excursion train, ear | this afternoon passed by acclana-| rying seven coaches, filled with ex- {tion a resolution to that effect, after to postpone ac-) defeating a vote of tion cratic nominees were raised on ations begun for active work The executive committee was call- ed to order by James J. John G. Sheehan resolution indorsing the Chicago can- idates In introducing the resolu- tion he explained that at the Chicago convention the delegates from New York fought hard for what they be- lieved was sound money, but were largely in the minority He declar- ed it a good democratic rule to stand by the will of the oe when duly exprease d “Mr. Chairman,” be concluded, seems to me that there is no ae grouvud The only course left open to loyal Democrats is to stand by the Chicago ticket.” Great applause marked the the speaker's introduced his at Martin. clusion of addr resolution executive declaring that the com- mittee of a democratic organiza- [tion of nud county in New j York, in in ‘Tammany Hall accepts ¢ approves the nomina- | tion of Bryan and Sewall as the wise | determination of tonal \selves to the | daey. More jing of the res ers greeted the read- itions. Obmer followed with Register S. ;2 speech urging its adoption, and he ging was followed by Henry C. to the same eftect. left th fer act after the State con vention on September 16, and spoke in advocacy of bis motion, declaring that he reflected the sentiment of the majority of voters in his district State Senator Guy said the magses ion until demanded that Tammany hall in- dorse the ticket. He was followed} by Congressman Amos Cummings | and other leaders, who eloquently | pleaded for united action in behalf) of the ticket. A vote was taken jwith the result thatthe Martin res- | olution was defeated 71 to4. Then} | the original resolution was passed| {by a viva voce vote, the ayes that /2 ane responded causing the hail to ring. Campaign Songs. We have just received from the} music publishing house of the $.! Brainard’s Sons Co. 151 Wabash} jAve., Chicago, a copy of Be: “Red Hot Democra Campaign Song {Book™ for the campaign of 1896 ; The book cont i ed and male E campaig ious is sold for the remarkably low pr of 10 ets or Clinton, Mo.. non passed rae day en By years ago. named ‘Noffsinger , George Dixon and Ace Ellett Hoods { Indorsement | F1to 4. Immediate- ‘ly immense pictures of the Demo- the j outside of the building and prepar-! introduced the the democratic na-| convention, and pledge our- support of their candi- } Parroyo} = au James J. Martin chair to offer a motion to de-! d edition, aud BENNETT WHEELER MERC. Oo, —-—DEALERS IN—— } 3 4 2 4 g 5 § 4 > : § Stoves, 12 Road Scrapers, Road ? Queensware, r as Plows and Austin all Steel 5 Barb Wire, >) Reversible Road Graders, é Salt, and ‘ 18 Top B Carriages Wagon Woodwork, ) | ( ARAARA ARR RAR RAR AAR RAR AAA AAR RRR eet j Everything we sell is guaranteed to be as represented. Our prices willatall times be found as low as goods of same quality ean be | sold. All (BENNETT kinds of country | ~Tammany | Wisettand in a dispute growing out Tho Reading train was the 5:40 | Hall will indorse Bryan and Sewall | of levying on a team of Sbannon’ 8 | mules. Noffsinger was tried and jacquitted, but Shanvon fled all of him was lost until he volun- returned. and Mike Welley kicked {horse last Pri und so serio injured that for some time his life | was despaired of, but Dr. Robinson, | who is attending him, now thinks he j will get He was struck on the point of the chin, which was literally | jmashed in. and four teeth in a sec- tion broken out The lower part | of the jaw was broken, and the joint | dislocated, the moth and tongue ' badly lacerated, and the heed bruis Jed and cut.—Amsterdam Breez>. i] was 'Gladness Comes i Wit a better understanding of the transient nature of the many phys- ical is, which vanish before proper ef- ontle efforts—} ‘omfort ip 7 forms 0: the knowlec aekne ss are hot due to uny an of the famil, ly rer { re: medy with who ena Fist sal ie alth, effects are due to the fac! one remedy which prom: cleanliness without debi ns on which it acts. nt, in order to get its , to note have the gennine actured by th rup Co. only and sold ‘ druggists. when you pur- a | all reputabl If in the | and the sy other rem: | afflicted wi may be comme phy: one eHOuld 1 hay l-informed | Figs stands high used and gives mio n not needed, v al di led to the most sk Order of Pub! STATE OF MISSOURI) ee ot Bates 5 * { | Now at tt by her attor j ofthe cireal | of Miesourt. iF son,is a ne | Wherenpo \ ton shai sa. j gat produce antefforts— | wanted at market prices WHEELER MERC. CoO. Trustee's Sale. Whereas WJ Beale, single and M © Beale aud Mary Wilkerson and W ‘lian: Wilkerson her husband, and Sabra Threlfall and James Threlfall her husband, by their deed of trust dated July 2sth, 1800, and recorded inthe ree { corder’s office Within and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No. 2 page 41 conyeyed to the undersigned trustee ite following describ- real estate lying and being situate in the nnty of Bates and state of Missourl, to-wit The east half of the southy quarter of sec- tion twenty (20) in township forty (0 ofrange thirty (30) containing s0 acres more or which conveyance was made in trust to secure | the payment of one certain note fully deserib- edin said deed of trust and whereas default | has been made inthe payment ef said note jand the interest thereon now id Now therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust I will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue to the highest bid- der tor cash, at the east front door of the | court house in the city of Butler, county otf Bates and state of Missouri, on Monday August 31, 1896, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that | day, for the purposes of satisfying eaid debt, interest and costs. FRANK ALI Snedt Order of Publier: ic REY The State and to the nes the 7 » under $s county having heretofo ting ani other things that the above ned defendant, Missouri Ann Wills is a dent of the state of Missouri Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vaca ion that said defendant be notified by publica- tion that plaintiff has comm a suitagainst her in this court by petition the object and gen- eral mature of which is t « the lien of the 2 nent taxes of the regate to the Pata int hercin her petition s sunt of $5.65 t ion and fr ther with inter upon the folle ‘tin B: ad to said shall be vlered ac and the Atisfy the And itis furth aid that a cop: ordered by the reof be publi n Weekly newspap county, Mis clerk afore- Bat printe Order of Publice STATE OF MIS County of Bat . on the cont Monday in guuahenrsce nthe «t day of the same being the sixteenth aterm. among other, the . to-wit: J