The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 1, 1896, Page 5

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$20.00. P.. INLD (LH, OA IOS POD AGO gn OOD POPS G SOPHO POOP? O90 DOW)! DOPHOOOS acca | eooooooe:: COH30909 009 700 PRED PDL PP AAP PPI PF R ASIP Ont per re VE & ADAIR | ; se pene 3 We now show not only the largest line of 3i3tese. i LadiesCapesandJackets IN BUTLER + BEST AND MOST STYLISH , BUT THE r ODM LD PIOCO DLS AYO DAA DOD COOGEE = Line manufactured in the United States. THERE IS ONE THING ABOUT THESE GARMENTS, HOWEVER, Which.the pictures do not show, nor the description indicate, that fact is THAT THEY ARE PERFECTLY MADE And upon the making depends the whole question of -:- STYLE, FIT AND SERVICE -:- A careful inspection will satisfy tne most skeptical person in regard to Style and Prices. LANE & ADAIR. lakes a Positive Statement to That Effeet. New York, Sept 20 —Jas. Oreel- man has interviewed Mr. Arthur Sewall, the democratic nominee for Yee president, at his home in Batb, Mo. In the interview Mr. Sewall dedares his intention as before to ttay om the ticket. ‘There ie absolutely nothing in this talk about my withdrawal,” he aid to the correspondent “The thing is absurd. I shall mot tire under any circumstuaces. As fot the statement that Senator Ger- Man or any of the democratic man- | igers desire me to retire, or that the party leaders are bringing influ- (ace to bear on me for that purpose. | Itis pure falsehood. On the con- Wary, all the pressure on me has been the other way.” Mr. S-wall threw his head back | with a quick movement, and for the fmt time I saw his eyes full and fhit—clear hazel eyes, with never a | thedow of evasion—the direct, threwd glance of a hard headed basinees man, un:roubled by senti-; Met. His voice is deep and organ- like. You feel the vibration when | SWALL WILL NOT RETIRE. | am thinking more of free silver than of Sewall. A change in the ticket now is out of the question.” “Can you see any way in which your resignation would help Mr. Bryan?” | “T have already said thet it would | insure his defeat. The matter is | not even under consideration. When I wrote that letter to Mr Bryan the circumstances explained it. Mr. Bryan was considering the question whether he ought to acespt the pop- | ulist nomination, and had decided | \ unless my zame was carried with it. | He communicated with me at the | time, and I wrote hia that I did not | wieh to stand in his way orin the way of a perfect fusion.” Question of Higher Taxes The principal fight against the) | capital removal in this sec‘ion comes | on the score of higher taxes. And| much of the complaint is made by those whose taxes wouldn't be in-| creased 5 cente, even if taxation could by any possible means be in | ereased, as a matter of fact nobody's taxes will be increased. Sedalia is uader bond toerect much more mag nificent buildings than the present not to permit bis name to be used | The Straight Issue. Mr Bryan at Richmond delivered a speech which, were it in the hands of every yoter in the Uuited States, would so spread education on the financial problem as to cause the gold standard advocates to be faced everywhere by audiences competent to detect their mis-statements and to scorn their fact—obscuring rhetoric about “sound money” which is not sound, and the “national honor,” which is quite as dear to other citi- zens as to their privileged selves, says the New York Journal. Here} lis a paragraph from the Richaond speech that is worth miles of ordi \nary campaign oratory: “We apply the law of eupply and |demand to mouey. We say the value lof a dollar depends on the number Of dollars, and that you can raise the value of a dollar by making the dol lars scarce, and we charge that our opponents are in favor of making money scarce because they are con- trolled by those who want money | dear. If you are in favor of dear money you ought to vote the repub- lican ticket. It you are in favor of jmaking money the only thing which itis desirable to own and making | |property the only thing that every | Plutoeracy Illustrated. when their places were promptly In answering a correspondent the | filled with Italian laborers N. ¥ World quotes from the census | The Bryan followers in this sec of 1890 to show that 3,000 families | tion are at fever heat over this out- own over$12,000,000,000—over twelve | Tageous proceeding and excitement | ous of al dollars—of the | is runnirg high. thousand wmillien wealth of the United States. At such atime as this, the World | ciuse This action of the contractors has da large number of republi vi RRR DD RADDA AAPA RAPA RAD AL PRA FARRAR RAR AR APR RRO RAP SO = RRRARRARRRRFRAAFLS RRRRRFPFA a RRR RR RAR RRA RRR ARR AAA FRR AAS LAN - SOPODSDOGIOY OOSO DOS OD: OOS. ae read | | | 1D OSFOMELOSOOS) ! HOSOC ODORS Doe MtOS Ladies Jackets irom SB.OO to $18.00. | John J. Ingalts on Gold. | “No people, in a great emergency, ‘ever found a faithful ally in gold. It | is the most cowardly and treacher- } metals. It makes no treaty ithat it does not break; it has no i friend it does rot betray. Armies land pavies are not maintained by is not likely to be accused of assist- | ans, particularly laborers to come | gold. Jn times of panic and calamity, ing the Democratic party. So, ac | out solid for Bryan. All classes cepting its figures, let us see what pronounce it an outrageous attempt they mean. The total aseessed value of all real | \and personal property in Nebraska ; under the cenens of 1890 was $184,- | | 000 000, of Missouri, $887,000,000. | of Illinois. $809,000,000; of Kansas, |in this vieinity, was shot dead by { 1252 E 000 One: of Rentusey 20.0 {her husband, who then tried to kill | | €00,000; of Tennessee, $382,000,000; | i of Colorado, $220,000,000; of Texas, | \at coercion.—Ex. Kills His Young Wife. Ava, Mo., Sapt. 25.— Without one = moment's warning, Mrs. Al Gibson, 3 | one of the belles of country society > | himeeif. For a long time there had been a great deal of jealousy exist- $780,000,000; of Alabama, $258,000,.|. 000; of Mississippi, $16,000,000; of | morning Gibson, who is said to have | \ing in the Gibson family, and this Indiana, $856,000,000, and of Cali | been under the influence of liquor,de fornia, $1,101,000,000. | cided to put an end to his troubles. The ‘combined assessed wealth, | 5, did not kill himeelf, becaure real and personal of these twelve'.. | if d k the revolver away frow great States of the Weet and South, ( riends 00) S y jas shown by the census of 1890, talk of lynching, but it will not eal |him. His wife foots up between six and seven bil- | Must File Nominations Soon. lions, while the combined wealth of | minate in any overt — |3,000 plutocratic families foots up | over twelve biliions—nearly twiceas | Jefferson City, Mo., Sept. 23.— much. | The Secretary of State to-day re- is dead. There is | be talks. | ones, to fully complete them and to|body wants to get rid of, you want, Whst more need ve said’—Post-| ported that certitic. es of nomina- “Of course I will not retire,” he} bear all expense of removal. Until to vote the republican ticket, be-| Dispatch. ‘tion for filing were coming in very tatinued. “There could be no | this is done, and the work of Sedalia|cause the republican party proposes | Vote for Geld or Quit, islowly. The republicans filed their Miter way of waking Mr. Bryan’s $ certain and our opponents | (derstand it very well. Those who Gacues the question of my retire-| is fully approved by the governor of |to continue the present financial sys-| At Cobden, Ill., Jas. Davie, Wm. | State ticket on September 19. The Missouri and his associates on the item, the object which is to make it! walker, Thos. Smith, Chas. Fuller | democrats and populists have not commission provided for in the more profitable to hoard money and | and twelve other employees of the | yet filed theirs. The democrats have terms of the contract, there willbe!get the increase in the rise of the | contracters on the Illinois Can- | filed but five congressional nomina- Beat don't know the man they are | 20 removal, no matter how large 8 value of a dollar than to put that trai bridge between Wakanda and | tions, and the republicacs but four, Wking about. ‘There is absolnte | vete the proposition might carry. ‘dollar to work employing !abor and | Dongola, were summarily disebarg-|the populists none. The last day yin the democratic party. I} The Review is in favor of capital | developing the resources of this ed Sept. 20. They demanded an | for filing certificates of nomination in constant correspondence with | removal for the reason that it will! great country.” McCoy, | with the Secretary of State will be except to fill vacancies. he leaders, and they are in perfeet _ | explanation of their foreman, bo asaving to the people of tke! That is good sense. It is the great and were told that the only cause | October 14, : state, and beoause it will bring the issue of the campaign. If the people for their discharge that he was | Cannot Cost One Cent. ‘But, Mr. Sewall.” said I, “you | seat of government nearer the cen-' desire a continuance of the existing | aware of was that they were advo- | i i . : é i 1 d t Rust see that with fusion between | ter of the state financial jumble, which is'at the! eating free silver and the election of | The SE GETTER | democrats and populists in 80 | The state will be the gainer of! mercy of speculators, and which has of Bryan and Sewall s little teo pxpeets a Sk aah a Many states thers is a prospect that | whatever buildings Sedalia puts up. | paralyzed the business energies of s | freely. | the —— ste ried nae should Mr. Bryan be elected | And it will save in taxes, for the rea |rich new country, filled with an in | The men ‘at first thought the this a ee ae emi be enough populists in | sen that unless the seat of govern-/dustrious population, they will de eyed = nse A — they as —— mae 8 pel vi electoral coll to th | ti d, the old buildi : ed on it asa huge joke, but when | prepris' = : ice of the ernie rp in | a fre on Cit will si “i pied fant Brynn and the democratic party | they were handed their pay ehecks, | new eapital building. This effeetu- . P nt into the | at Je “3 rs ad se eae dei and elect McKinley, who represents | they saw the serious side of the sit | ayy disposes of the eilly story that 4 proved—and, \ghe eyndicates, the trusts and the uation and their indignation was the removal of the capital aill-oont Lknow it,” he answered coldly. “I | f i i ill al ; . . a y. “I |expense of improving wii most | Z unbounded, particularly as no com- ‘ Very clearly that Mr. Bryan may | equal the cost of a new building. — fleecers of the people in general.—| piaint was made about the work. the tax-payers three OF ee ‘ Sere Mail. dollars. Heleeted and I may not be. But I| Rich Hill Mining Review. This feeling was accentuated ‘ ishipwreek and disaster it becomes | the agency and minister of ruin. No ‘nation ever fought a great war by ithe aid of gold Oa the the contrary, in the crisis of the grentest peril it becomes nn enemy more potent than the foe in the Ge‘; bat when the battle bas been won and peace se- cured, gold reappears and claims ~ the fruits of victory.” , Mtssonr and Kansas Pensioners. Washington, D C, Sept. 21.— The annual report of Pension Com. missioner Murphy shows thst there are 53,382 pensioners residing * in Missouri, who are paid $7,272,320 | during the past year; 42,433 residing in Kaneas. drawing $6,321,389, and 2,499 in Iudian Territory, drawing $332,927. From the above statement it does ‘not appear that democratic admin- istration has been unkind or ungen- erous to the old soldier in Missouri. | $7,272,329 paid to pensioners in Missouri is no small item when you take into consideration the large amount goes to but 53,382 persons. Lose a War Horse, Slater, Mo, Sept 25.—W. 8. Loomis, a republican al! his life, and | identified with the success of that | party in Buchanan county for a doz- len years or more. announced he would vote for Bryan. Mr. Loomis is algo the republican party nominee for register, and his action 18 dis- | tressing to leaders of the party Mr. Loomis hae been appealed to to | change his determination. He said | bis position was reached after ma- i ture consideration. i After Bryan's Visit. | Raleigh, N. ©. Sept. 23.—The | demoeratic populist and silver par- | ties have agreed to fuse ona Bryan | electoral ticket in North Carolina,the | democrats naming five, the populist ‘five and the silver party one. This | union of sil silver forcee, it is claim- | ed insures the stste to the demo- | eratic ticket by a !arge msjority- j

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