The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 30, 1900, Page 10

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{ i i H i ee ae ! | NOTIFIED BRYAN. Ceremonies at Topeka Before Representatives of the People’s Party. Topeka, Kan., Au Jennings Bryan arriv at ll a. m. to-day, and received the his nomina- ed in Topeka official notification of tion to the presidency at the hands of the national people's party, and made his addr Large banners were suspended the buildi carriag bunting ueross the streets, street were ears and many rly decorated with and raphs smiled upon the ge Bryan lithog throng from numerous windows on every block Mr. Bryan was met at Atchison at an early hour in the morning by a ng of the most of the popu- committee, consi disti list party in Kansas, and the com- lished members mittee escorted him to the state cap- the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad. ital over the by carriages and escorted to the Na- tional Hotel, where his headquarters The party was met at depot Mr. Bryan made e march from People and filled the throughout the depot was an lir sidewalks doorways and ovation the windows the entire line of march, and most of them upparently shouted themselves hoarse us the only effective method of voicing their welcome. At the ho- tel Mr. Bryan was formally presented to members of the notification com- mittee, to the various reception com- mittees, the state officials and toa number of distinguished Topeka The place at the state hou citizens of took alter- notification ceremony » this noon in the midst ¢ assem- blage The notification speech was ered by T. M chairman of the populist national convention. In his speech Mr. Patterson said: “Mr. Bryan, we are here to-day that, as the mouthpiece of the na- tional of the People’s party, we may formally notify you of your nomination for president of the United States that tion, The convention fully unde stood when it this token of their great love and confidence that you were not a member of the Peo- ple’s party, neither would you be pledged to its platform, except so far as your convictions and the princi- ples of your own party coincide with its declarations. Patterson of Colorado, convention by conver- gave Nevertheless, sir, the People’s party nominated you With absolute unanimity and with anenthusiasm not excelled even in the convention of your own party when it nominated you for the same great office. Only extraordinary public condi- tions and extraordinary faith in you could have prevailed upon the Peo- ple’s party to go outside of it’s own nization for its presidential can- didate Mr. Patterson then took up the money question and imperialism and explained the platiorm of the Peo- ple’s party. He closed as follows: “You have a stupendous struggle that must try to the utmost of the moral, intellectual and physical qualities with which the Cre- ator has endowed you. before you—one 3ut, sir, we are assured that the just and merci- ful God that rz leader in this ¢ for preserving to t that eur power the inalienable rights of man, whatever his creed, color or nativity, will be with you and guide ed you up to be the eat national struggle and all other at within countries are broug and protect you through all perils that may beset your pathway.” BRYAN’S PITHY POINTS. On accepting populist nomination, Def sarily decide at at the polls does not neces- Ex- rience alone, settles nst a problem perience, and expe questions, ae mae | Truth notin seclusion, but} in the ope The repu now com- mitted to a necessitates ¢ Populists in arbitration lid in pposed to now as 1896, | and are as mu ment by inj as they w rovern- sub} lor eo-opers party as ti support to be 24.—William | s, the} and appeals. and taunted her with] state st would be buried in potter's fiek Food that was} } cause s | tion from it The republican party \eannot be relied upon to extinguish \the trusts so long as it draws its jeampaign contributions from their | overflowing vaults. To-day we are engaged in acontro- | | | yersy which will determine whether we are to have a republic in which }the government derives its just pow- the consent of the governed or anempire in which brute }ers fron force is | TO LIVE FOREVER, Go to M. L. Wolfe's Ranch in Montana. | Marshall Writes an Interesting Letter. { Banner, Wyo., {August 18.1900. | Editor Tur Ties: I promised to write you a few let- | ters while wandering around here. This is an arid region, hence, before | | | | }the only reeognized source of power’ | ean be | rule every wr righted and every evil remedied, but when “doctrine of self-government is rht is substituted no certainty that will be settled correctly. the | tk | impai for ri any questior | The army worm, which oceasional- ly destroys a field of wheat, is not nearly so dangerous an enemy tothe large ry field of industry farmer as a tanding army which invades ev ind exacts toll from every crop. ee * If 100,000 men are withdrawn from and placed those the ranks of the produe as a burden on the backs of remain, it rder work and greater sac- who must mean longer | hours, b rifices for those who toil * * * At tl annually upon present rate we will sper the army approxi- mately half as much as_ we spend for in the United States, education and from the taxation this immense sum is wrung taxpayers by systems of which overburden the poor man and undertasx the rich man. The Fr perial exe: im- an iglish executive The British Par ish ment is ar legislature. we are c¢omir svste the same the decree of circumstances as in that of If this be imperialism, make the most of it. itable as fate. DEATH OF AN EARLY MORMON. Noble Was the Father of the First Lat- ter Day Saint Born in Polygamy. Salt Lake City, Utah, Aug. 23.— Joseph B. Noble, father of the first polygamous child born after that tenet was introduced into the Mor- mon chureh, was buried at Bountiful this week. The funeral services were attended by 30 of his children, 84 of his grandchildren and a number of his great grandchildren. Mr. Noble had six wives, 47 children of whom 33 are living and 124 grandchildren. Mr. Noble’s career has been closely associated with Mormonism from its earliest days. He was a Massachu- setts shoemaker was working away in his shop in 1832 when he heard of a preacher had come to town. The preacher was Brigham Young and it was not long before he had added the young shoe maker to his list of converts. A few years later Mr. Noble moved to Nauvoo, Ll., and became active in that colony o' was secretl) and new who Mormons. Polygamy into the ecol- ony and Noble took to himself a sec- Marietta Hawkins. was the mother of a child named Osc Noble, who was the first born of a Mormon poly introduced ond wife, She mousunion. Os- ear was born in 1843 and is with a Two years now a home in ago Joseph vigorous old man Bountiful Noble went to live with a son in the Mormon colony at Preston, Idaho, near Montpelier, and there he died. Mocked Dying wife. Pa., Au fiendish cruelty was brought Pittsburg —A case of to the attention of the humane society here to-day, institut ind in consequence suit was nst John Coulson Bridgeville, cha Ity to his wife. coal n atter died Sunday. last Couls charged, mocked her dying moans During moments m, it is need for joy be-| he would not live much longer. there yesterday was g held Coulson started to attenc son is in ja Owentown, Ky Aug. 22.—South Trimb} eaker of the last Ken- tucky house representatives, was ared the democratic no: from the sevent! In a government where the people! once | bors, it ischarged, |i a crop is set we must know it is un-} | der the ditch and there is water for| miles of Pekin August 14 and the | jthe ditch. Then when thecrop needs assault schould begin August 15.} | moisture, instead of praying for rain}]The attack, however, commenced jand anxiously watching every little early in the morning of August 14, leloud that comes the} {chutes or head gates and flood the land with water better |than the Butler water works on the Miami. sented here. up, we open mountain sates county is well repre- Young Harrison from near Ballard, was getting $40 per month when I last saw him. The \four Power Boys are among the big freighters. Rufus Ross, near Rich Hill. has a John Bosma has ranchman here. Then there is Hite. Wm. Grah- am, the Walley boys from Amster- dam. Mr. Mrs. Hite’s father is here. Brundridge and Dick Reed, near New Home. eis state senator. Then there the first and jury in Bates county after the Squire Ab fight inct in the married daughter here. Lson, a Graham, Geo boys. Geor is Davis Foster, who sat on £ war and Woods and one aso witnessed Chaney toa Wal- judge finish at the voting pr nut township. He s rood fight a Those were reconstruction days. The fact like I Montana tell a n when vs made inst a giant. is Wyoming is getting Missouri settler in ibor in an angry called a heard a discussion he was Puke: “Take Missouri ont of Mon- tana, sir, and there not a d—n thir ft.” There are two beaver dams on my place. It trees they can cut down and the skill is wonderful to see what they display in felling them. They cut trees over a foot through. Iam told that in constructing their dams will will place their broad, flat tails to others that will put the mud on them, they will then xo and put it where needed. Much of this country away from the mountains look ert, miles and miles of thorny cactus, some mix mortar, others like a waste or des- sage brush and gorse wood, pools of red alkali water and no water at all. Horses, cattle and sheep live on the ze near the water's edge in summer and away from it in for drink. Wolves and coyotes destroy a great deal of stock and the state as well as stockmen spend large sums annually in getting rid of them. It is said a new country is heaven for men but h—l for women; not so here for they have the ballot which evens up things. I have spent the greater portion of this summer like James Henry “On the Wing”, only I did not find as many good, grand men like he did that, when they die will go straight to Heaven and sit Jeff Davis, | for they cut oats, hay, wrangle cattle, horses and anything range all the year— winter and eat snow son, with wheat, a week else, same on Sunday as on Another difference was while I day. was drinking pure mountain water, trout, and grouse, being neither too hot nor too cold, James Henry was mopping his | brow with a bandana, drinking poor | water andeating cornbread and eating rainbow venison con. After being here a while we forget about that picture in the almanac, of a man with acythe. Time to roll back on a fellow instead of forward and he thinks himself a boy seems | again. The land where claimed that their dwell Indians in the Is gods snow could be gathered in. one hand and flowers in the other. This must} have been the plac Wild flowers are plenty here as in all virgin soi I have seenit soin Bates county, | my hair was not gray. Here! it sunshine, bright sky, | pure air, beautiful ountain scenery, | flowers, t} lovely rant jfrom the virgin soil, vegetation and ‘tion meeting was held,| pines, wild fruit, wild meat, wild mittee was appointed to} honey, mour out—all the free sburg and ask Agent | gift of Prov man’s brow ; wate O'Rien ac (e™ weat topr Then listen, and you will wild bull elk whistle, the f at, the pheasant bark and the such why should} ithout growing s away? I would here than take my | nown. The great} ared from Isreal} 10 doubt. vat | AMclose His iN Mt. Sinai in | order to give hima taste of what} on ; Was in store for him beyond. | M. L. Worre. | {to the U ordor | elected by THE ALLIES’ PLAN OF ATTACK British Troops Made a Forced March of Fifteen Miles to Be on Time. London, Aug. lee, the commander of the British | forces at Pekin, has telegraphed to} the war *Pekin, Aug. 15 (Wednesday) via Che Foo, Aug. 21 (Tuesday )—At a conference | August 12 it was agreed that the al-! within five} 23.—General Gase-/} ottice as follows lies should concentrate and our troops had to make a foreed march of fifteen Tung Chow in great heat. We upon | theextreme left and attack southwest gate of the Chinese City. miles from were There was practically no oppositic n| as we were not expected at that point. The Indian down and rushed the gates and Ll en 1 I then} Pun ave troops broke | | | a tered with cavalry and guns and infantry to the temple of sent other cavalry the secure our left flank and amping | ground, and with the other corps | } | pushed on towards the legations. At} 3 o'clock got on the canal opposite} the water gate and were signaled from the wall held by the legationers. | I. with a portion of the staff and 70 rushed across dry moat and entered through Indians, the almost the water gate without loss. We found all well in the ions. MacDonald immediately showed me around the positions with the view of ft her ac tion. In the mez ntime our fie artillery jhad been brought up to bombard the central gate of the Tartar « butasortie by the Americans and Russians of the garrison along the wall anticipated the bombardment aad the gate fell into our hand Two field guns were then ition and the brou into the rest were sent back to the temple of heaven. 5 in the afternoon the At about Americans under General Chaffee en- tered the legation and then we moved on towards the central gate of the Tartar city for the night. By night- fall we had 400 men in the legation. (Here apparently some words were missing the During the evening at temple HON.J. 8B. NEWBEBRY, Vice-Pres't. a Powers > F.J. TYGARD, 3. C.CLare President. Cashier THE BATES COUNTY BANK, BoTLiLER, Mo. Successor to BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, Estas.isuxp Drc., 1370. CAPITAL, $75,000. -% Bates County Investment Co,, ISUTLER, MO.: Capital, = = 850,000. Money to loan on real estate, at low rates. Abstracts of title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choiee securities always on hand and forsale. Abstracts of title furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn.? ¥. J. Tyeaep, President. Jo. C. Hayzs, Abstractor. A General Banking Business Transactedg Hox. J. B, Newnurry, J.C. Cra Vice-President. Seo'y. & Trees, 8. F. Wanxocx, Notary, err “HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS SUCCESSFULLY.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO Lovely Women in the Lagar at the Quinto Celleiros, Portugal. wearing violinist ian with kets and short linea ge of the vat, keepu of heaven we were engaged and after inflicting heavy the souti: losses we occupied ate of the Chinese city.” Relic of the Alamo. San Antonio, Texas, August 2 The original bell of the Alamo is now in the possession of Miss Adina De Zavala, of San Antonio, president of the daughters of the republic of Texas. The bell was discovered three when offered for sale as old iron by Mose Oppenhei- The matter got in the press, and a correspond- Mr. Oppenheimer by Miss De Zavalle. The result was that the bell was delivered to Miss De Zavalla in Antonio to-day It is diameter, pounds ed on it. “San A months ago at Goliad, mer, of Victoria, Tex. ence Was at 0} with ce opened San 1S inches high, 14 inches in and weighs about 35 The date, 1722, is together with , and the Spanish rms. Theclapper is missing. Il will be placed in the Alamo. for Bry Boston. Aug. 22.—The Anti-Impe-] rialistic Les that Andrew Carnegie will shortly return engray- the words ee at oO} The t Carnegie gue announces ted States to assist in the campaign against McKinley ed that Carne take the stumpin advocacy of Bryan. He will speak under the auspices cf} It is expec listic league Inside of a fortnight there will also be a real Filipino on thestump telling the American people the story of the war in Philippines. He is Sixto the anti-imperi Lopez Ready to Bet on E Post-Dispatch 2 Pat whi ection. he has Capt 500 some rey says wishes t with to } lican that Dockery will be a plurality of 50,000, T bets at od salso wi apta halt that Bryan wil totwo an x elected A fe ee EEZ Ze | Rubber Rollers are Used for Crushing the Grapes to Make Speer’s Port, Burgundy, Claret and Other Wines, Which, asis well known, rival the world inexcellence, for invalidsand aged persons, and are made fromthe Oporto grape grown on vines im- ported from Portugal forty years ago. Thesoil of northern New ; containing iron, is just suited for them. Mr. Speer, however, uses | improved way of mashing the grapes. He employs large rollersof © rubber run by an engine which crush grapes at the rate of a barrel a minute. Speer’s Wines, especially the Port and Burgundy nowia | market, are of very old vintage, and have no superior. Physicians: far and near prescribe them for weakly females and aged persons They are blood-making, adding iron to the system, and tend to pro long life. Extensively used at parties, weddings and general family use. 29" Sotp sy Druceists anp Grocers wHo DEAL In Wines, © ‘22 r kis OF GH S TABULES COSTS 5 CENTS It holds ten Tabules and many people insist hat the contents of even one carton has done hem more good than quantities of other medicine. It is certain that in curing indigestion, constipation, ‘ousness, sour stomach and many more like evils there is aothing better than R-I-P-A-N.S. SNTED ase of b th , hie ia ES ASR oo of. t REP ae m3 ' ove Candles i | BURR eT ae STANDARD GIL Co, and soit everywhere. sy i | The Kind You Have Always Bought | } Signature of CASTORIA For Infants and Children. FARMERS) j::."e2a FRO SOO wor: i cates rennet PM A ACENTS WANTED! cosees © Bidets tae en Se ee BET ec pine Sem rm | CH. M. EVANS, Cenera’ | or address 83 OFALLON, WO. during Sale ae Bears the

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