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PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Cribune MONDAY, JULY 27, 1928 WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN IS CLAIMED IN SLEEP] ACTIVITY BRINGS SUDDEN END 18¢60—Born in Salem, Il., March 19. Senator, Edwards, New Jersey— great mind has passed.” 1881—C ated from Ill{nols Col. lege. 1884—Married Mary Blair of Perry, Il. 1887—Moved to Lincoln, Neb, 1890—Elected to congress. 1894—Defeated as candidate for Senator Copeland, New York—“No man ever had greater power over an audience,” Former Senator Atlee Pomerene of Ohio—’ Me will be regarded as one U. 8, senate by Thurston. 7 (Continued From Page One) Texas, he was called upon for a 1896—Nominated by the Demo- of the greatest political orators of P| people, and we want all arrange- | prayer. 1 . cratic national convention this generation.” ments simply mad Citizens of Dayton still were dis- and defeated by Wm. Me- MRS. BRYAN DISPLAYS cursing the prayer today, describing Kinle’ SANTA BARBARA, Calif, July fy GREAT COMPOSURE. as one of the most beautiful the 1898—Ralsed Third Nebraska Vol- 27.—(By Associated Press)}—The ca yan, though an invalid, | had ever heard and as revealing the unteers and was its colonel reer of Willtam Jennings Bryan was nfined to a chair, continued to dis-|earnestness and sincerity of Mr. during the Spanish-Amer- distinguished by his steadfast » y remarkable resolution in the un- | Bryan. prayer sought aid in the joan war. port of every moral issue. W. G expected death of her husband. She| campaign Mr. Bryan was making 1900—Again ran against McKin- McAdoo, former secretary of the gave directions for all arrangements | for ‘old time ‘eligion.” ley and mvawicataateds treasury, declared on learning of the h which have been determined upon. | ENJOYED HEARTY 1901—Started “The Commoner” famous Nebraskan’s death. n From two until five o'clock this| DINNER BEFORE NAP at Lincoln, Neb. “In the death of Mr. Bryan," he said, “‘the country lost one of outstanding figures... . He wa: outstanding progressive. . . . He de spised the crovked bosses of the afternoon, the body of Mr, Bryan After church services Mr. Bryan will le in state upon the lawn of | returned to his home, where, with the Richard Rogers home, where he | yfrs. Bryan and Mr. and Mrs. Rog- Nyed during the Scopes proceedings , he had dinner. He ate a large ; | 1904— w the defeat of Alton B. Parker for president. 1906—Made a tour of the world. 1908—Was again defeated for r and where he died unobser by }amount of food and was in one of president, this time by Wm. Democratic party anti he loathed un ; man. As a guard of honor on tt his’ most fovial ticods sifice arriving: Hi. Taft. clean and corrupt political ma j ° n, while the mountain folk | here, Before he decided to take a 1912—Secured the nomination of chines and methods in both partics The bosses hated and reviled him {n turn, but their disapproval was ip itself a badge of honor. The D. cratic party will miss him. None will be so ungenerous as not to do of eastern Tennessee pass before the | nap, he called Chattanooga over long E casket, a squad from the Fred W. | distance telephone to ask about some ; Brady post number 100, the Amert- | detail of his speech, which was being can Legion, composed of Dayton | published former service men, will be on duty] Mr, § | the Democratic party of Woodrow Wilson for prest- | | dent. 1913 to 1915—Was named as sec- retary of State in the Wil- an tdld his wife that he : at the afternoon ceremon: The | had never felt better in his life and son cabinet but disagreed him honor.’ . guard will be in uniform and with- | was ready to take his fight for fund with his chief and resigned. ‘ out arms. amentalism to the country. 1916—Was a Woodrow Wilson The children of the dead leader| He told of his trip to the Holy c have been summoned by telegraph | Land within the next several months by their mother, to join the party in | ang the writing he had planned. He Washington. The son, William Jen- | then remarked that “I am so sleepy," nings Bryan, Jr., left Los Angeles|and entered his room shortly after for the east today. Mrs. Ruth Owen | three o'clock | left Mt. Vernon, Ohio, for Dayton Mrs. Bryan told friends, while she legate at the Democratic national convention. 1920—Held a proxy as a delegate - = - . FINAL RESTING | to the Democratic national convention at San Fran- tia nisc . ade «| | This snapshot of Bryan was caughf near the end of the last Democra' cee ee ee on ues" | | convention when the Democratic chieftain was weary from arduous ses- : s ak is sions and dispirited by his losing battle, in today but will divert her course #0/was glad her husband had passed y form, - as to reach Washington before the] away peacefully and without. pair | 2 FY an PI > D als! N , 1924, \ body of her father, Mrs. Richard aha LaEratibl ttl bevaltilin Alc. ati Photograph of the Commoner taken In November, 1924. Id ba abuse of the chores ox etaccs | SPopular \eléction\of = all te¢aral argreaves, the other daughter, 15| time when he prepared such a great : ; a short distance from Salem, which | judges. with her brother traveling east. work, Tne eas only & diplomatic Bel had. been: purchased by the elder] Limitation. of the term of all fed- The decision to bury the former She referred to the campaign he Bryan when William was little more | eral judges. Democratic chieftain among the|was to make for fundamentalism, See Tae TAREL ERE REE occas ie | Chania toddler: A three-fourth jury verdict in clvll] wasHINGTON, July 27.—(Asss country’s military great in Arling-| and the writing he had plan Mr. any “kicker” appeared in the ultima. | About this time William was sent | cases. ; clated Press)—A spot high on the ton was the result of the expressed| Bryan had begun a history of his Ratan ge s, [tO Public school, After entering} The initiative and the referendum. l tum ison was one, Wilson slope of Arlington, overlooking th« wll of Mr. Bryan, his widow told | 1if c quently & e the past} , we a 26. wish of a raBe y y iat Old ife and frequ nt during the past = \then eliminated the cinfidential sec- | W hipple Academy, one of the pre: x 1896. capital and near the monument friends here. Mr. Bryan wa several months had expressed a de. (Continued From Page One) on whose ambition Bryan had/' 145, eliminated the confidential sec.|Paratory schools of Illinois college} Free silver. erected to those who @fed on the [ colonel of volunteers in the Spanish- | sire to complete it. carefully planned the campaign for] trampled at timore, had passed i ijevedq the ‘iteottaned ultimatum | at Jacksonville, he suddenly took a 1900 Maine, was tentatively selected to American war, “It seems like every time I plan| McKinley. The “free silver’ Issue|on. Woodrow Wilson, estranged, | —_ | is 1 - 4 deeper interest in his studies and Anti-Imperlalism—no colonies for | 4, the burial plac: ff Will ple tree meant war and he was against war. jay as the buflal place ot am A huge spreading map Pet oe | £0 Work on the biography,” Mr. Bry-/was held up to scorn as the fallacy |11ad death's seal already on his bowed |“ Witson {ssued a categorical denial |that seriousness of purpose which | the United States. Jennings’ Bryan. hades the spot where the files of/ an tol ewspap. porte ’ sanultac’ Bone ib ‘ . r < 6 z ; sta r FE i 2 shades the sp n told a newspaper reporter a few]of a Populism gone mad—an evil| head, What Bryan thought as he| o¢ the story of a confidential note,|J0omed so strongly in his‘ later life 1906. sritbedl ita balky wilted ledierount became manifest. If there was a Government ownership and oper- contest, whether of oratory or ath-| ation of railroads. letics, Bryan was in It, if possible. The eight-hour day. fends will look for the last time] weeks ago, “something happens to}that combined all the weaknesses | passed through the throng, no man upon the face of their beloved cham- | interfere. and, at the same time, all the dis-| knows, Br pion, In this grassy eminence} While Mr, Bryan had prepared his|tructive forces of ( nba raised, four feet above the level of | addr So did Secretary Tumulty, Bryan, and Garrison refused to talk. Lodge later issued a statement which, in ed by the tombs of many others whe served in the Spanish-America war, 145 feet above the Potomac on an an never wore his heart e and had killed more sm and|on his slee ss in the Scopes trial he ex® p, 3 was derided as a|than one fair young political boo : f 1907, fs opulls sryan was deric F a y zs al boom | arrect, said: “The P: Jent dentes,| Although not particularly fond o : ee = fly the street, Mr. Bryan was wont to pressed his pleasure of the fact that! second “Sockless Jerry" Simpson, | with his own hands. He knew that |tng “president is alw Genice’ | baseball or football, he wag a good| Government guarantee of national |@minence commanding a clear view 1 it and rest during the intervals of | he would 1 ee Ek f he President is always right. i of the Memorial Amphitheatre an‘ @ =| sit and ret Bt va wld have an opportunity to| «free Silver would close the factor-| in politics the man who Wields the | -rierefore this version 1s an errer,’|tunner and jumper, but his first | bank deposits. the ‘toinb’ of the Wanaiowar Bola! 4 the Hetecoves ths aenneee: ate peeseoe {t to the public without in-lies and the working man would | sword must also perish by the sword It is sald that the bitter feud be-| attempts at declaiming were not so| A postal savings bank. i axoue nant eat see adAncoln evolution law. Here he chatted with | terruption. starve,” was the cry of thousands of | But he made no sign. wi cessful. In the various debates 1908. y bteaae : s ,: e € 1 e zs tween Wilson and Lodge dated from | Successful. In the various de a vi one” his friends and grasped the hands} During the closing hours of the| orators and hundreds of newspapers The Break With Wilson igen Wrison and Worge dated from|and oratorical contests at Illincis| Annthilation of the trusts, Memorial, the Washington moxy of hundreds who had come from the} trial he was callled to th it “KF 7 ant hadct , is Sohd ade son regarded) _ ment and the capitol on the othe: ; ‘ he witness |+jul] dinner pail’ parades were or Although Bryan had broken years/the apparent evasion as an insult, | College in which he entered it re- 191. The mausoleum bullt for Admira ¥ Cumberland slopes or from distant | stand by the defense and‘the result| ganized by employers all over the| before with the party leaders, He believed an absolute withdrawal | Quired ‘quite a number of attempts|' Prohibition. Dewey, And in which“his! body re Jt cities to witness the noted legal con- | was a bitter clash between him and|ration, McKinley made a ont|always retained a large follow thelilenn 1 Lodge could | before he carried off a first prize. He| Publicity for campaign contribu-} ewey: Ans Avg Laeet eee sversy in the Rhea county court. | Clarence Darrow, the ci " atc. , 3 Ned se he we) prone seat. pored until its recent removal to t te troversy in the Rhec y arrow, the noted Chic lawn” campaign at Canton, Ohio, the|among the masses of his hatte cetades persisted, however, and when he | tions. Washington Cathedral, is only 75 cl STRENUOUS PROGRAM attorney, and one of forerunner of the “front porch” cam-|tho south and west, especi: Be that a# it may, the Lusitania | §@duated in 1881, Bryan was chosen} World peace by International arbl-| “750 Giatane. ’ es TOO MUCH FOR LEADER. The Commoner dec paigns of later years. McKinley was|never had been strong in the east.| | 0° that as it may, the Lusitania |i) race the valedictory address, tration. : } ‘The Commoner had been living ]in the Bible, declaring the SoMa ae ampion of conserva-| His break with Wilson forces, when | ultimatum ked the retirement of | '° (HATE te vie going to college at 1915. The burtal plot will be unshaded under a strenuous program since he | tian religion has satisfied me and I | the defender of prope |ho resigned his office as Secretary pig sony cee Ly ie Twas sent, | Jacksonville that Bryan met Miss| A referendum on war. A smal! locust tree now flourishing oc came here three weeks ago to as-| have never felt {t necessary to look | suave, dignified, {mposin ot aditalia had allenated him | ™!nUs.a antidea jal Hote, Sir alae the dauahter ot a oner |. mina won for Beyed ables tow ot | Uton, It WAL Ne: semavert to make Sit dn chee promparon” of (Jota S. upseoowcomibet Boni religion. ley looked the part. ‘The Republican | from the bulk of the new men who | rans Relea ons, chant living in Perry, Ill. Mary | these issues. Others are still issues. | Place for the tomb. At a little dis OUGH Bryan, from a lad, had four ambl- Scopes, found guilty of violating | BIBLE GOOD F tance, however, the grass reer Baird also was studying at Jackson: | Somo are dead beyond recall, , + ; press spoke of Bryan in terms com-|Ied the party for eight years under | ,, mrvan trom # ‘ 1 Tennessee's anti-evolution law. He |TO BY"—BRYAN pared with - which Chas, Evans] Wilson fona—to be a farmer, to be &. poll. | ore ate a ay at ee a eecr in ite he left Netroeke ena slope is fringed with ola oake appeared in! excellent: Health, how-| “At another point, le asserted: Hughes’ characterization of the Bol named to head the Wil. | {Hclam, to be a writer and to be a law-| ocited in marriage in 1884, and| bought a home, ir Florida, becoming | Ben G. Davis, a personal friend A ever, and was planning to launch a} = “The Bible ts good enough ¢o live| sneviks was a compliment. To the in 1913, partly because | 7° 2® realized all of them. gave Bryan a wife and a great help-|a citizen of that state and taking a| 9nd former state oft Ri great campaign this week in behalf | by and dle b tepubll orate Bryan was &/of the part that he took in Wilson's Bryan was born in Salem, Ill, of | ¢r in his political Ife all in one, | hand in its politics. celal entrusted by Mr. Bryan Himsel! ; of Aididhmnasiteliara: Mr. Bryan accused Mr. Darrow of | MonMnD Oren rer, ready to} nominatic as a gracetul recog. | March 19, 1860, and, as a boy, was al irhree years later, Bryan, called. to| Bryan's last and one of his great-|With the funeral preparations. se wt Mrs. Bryan, who has been an in- {attacking “revealed religion.” When | vvO0? 1). hited State nition on Wilson's part, but more| Strong, full-limbed, lttle ‘fellow, | Lancorm, Neb., on’ business, waa no|est calls to public attention came | lected the alte largely because of thr Pa valid a number of years, bravely ! objections to the defense's questions iciisac hpi ierden UEC) because Wilson needed the help of | Whose chiet alms in life seemed tolimpreted with the beauty of the| with the institution of the evolution |UPObstructed view across the river On both his to the Lincoln memorial. He war stood the shock of her husband's un-) were made by prosecution attorneys | 1.44 siiver killed Bryan politically, }the Bryan congressmen and sena-| be Playing and ea‘ing. city that he made plans for moving|case at Dayton, Tenn., when he pe expected death. She immediately | Mr. Bryan expressed a desire to ans-| Pine silver Ui 0" itt vine was [tors from the west and south to| father’s and his mother’s side he| there, was elected as a “defender of the| impelled, he enld, by the dead-tead w took charge of funeral arrange: | Wer. concerned, as dead as oll killed|carry his policles into legislation, sme of honest, rightillving, God- faith” to prosecute Prof, Scopes for | ¢r’* admiration for the martyre ments and received a few of the The reason T am answering Is not | CONE a some, and free trade fearing pepple, for both the Bryan Enters Public Life. teaching theories of the origin of | Civil war president. 7 hundreds of persons who called at|for the benefit of the court,” he thers. Although the 1896 campaign There never was any real friend-|and the Jennings families were sim- Bryan now entered into public life} man at variance with the statutes On a direct lie hetween the Lin ef the residence to express sympathy. |stated. ‘It is to keep these gentle-| others. Aithougls tit ts ve vade [Ship between Bryan and Wilson, | ple, sturdy, earnest people and deep- | by becoming an active worker for the | or ‘Tennessee. coln structure and the memoria! - “I am happy that my husband|™men from saying I was afraid to “s Ane free silver platform, | Both were men accustomed to giving ly religiou They never attained | Democratic organization and going to In this case he may be considered |*™phitheatre, the Bryan tomb w died without suffering and in peac' meet them and let them question me. Pe vaass of the voting public could | °ers, not to taking them, ere | reat wealth, but they alw had|the state convention as a delegate.|to have won a. victory, since he face squarely the Virginia end of 1 ghesald. T want the christian world to know vaeanibe convinced that Bryan was | W48 too much fron in both consti-/ plenty for the care and comfort of | Br: elected to congress In the | prevented the introduction of con-|the Arlington memorial bridge wis, His last words to her, as he en-| that any atheist, agnostic, unbellever, yet hale-beained theorist, whose | tutions to bend. ‘The result was fore- | thetr own. campaign of 1890. troversial evidence regarding evolu: | Which the capital soon is to be join tered the room for his nap. were:|can question mo at any time as to] DOr & MUNA fe the body [cast by friends of both men. When] Bryan's father, Silas Lillard Bry-| Bryan's activity in congress won| tion on the ground that the theories {4 to Arlington cemetery. “Tam so. eleeny” my belief In God and I will answer | Cult Was TUM had rusted to dust {the World War broke, both Wilson | an, was a man who backed up his| him a place on the ways and means | of evolution were not on trial, mere-|_,Mr- Davis is leaving final approva Before he went to sleep, Mr. Bryan | him : 2 in ‘a Cleveland cemetery, the effect | #74 Bryan were pacifists. As {t pro-| high ideals with a strong character |committes and then came another |ly the question of whether Scopes the funeral plans to Mrs. Bryan autographed two books for Judge] Despite the fact that Mr. Darrow | MP ft it amnaign of 1896 kept | 8tessed, Bryan adhered more and/and a great capacity for work. His|{mportant event in. his career as|had violated the law. His contention | Put he does not expect the burlal te John T, Raulston, who presided at |and Mr. Bryan figured in numerous |." Vig on Bryan's electvie am-|™ore to the idea that the United | ancestors are said to be Irish. A public speaker. This was his-tarift | Was sustained in rulings of the |P® accompanied by mi:itary ceremon the Scopes trial. ‘The books were, | bitter verbal exchanges during the | \\t, States should withdraw from all Eu-| certain William Bryan, a big land-| speech, delivered. March 16, 1892. court, attorneys for Scopes being |!°S: | He selected the place for the ‘The Seven Questions in Dispute” | trial they also engaged in a lke num-| 0) 00 pian was a states: | POPean Interests and not under any | owner, who lived in Culpepper coun-| He now aimed higher and after re-| compelled to incorporate such evi-|‘™> after a tour of inspection, ac condition « and “In His Image” ber of friendly conservations. Mr be dragge He wrote: ) Judge and Mrs. | Darrow was one of the first to come Now the United States to | ty into the con Wilson, | y his times, He to say that ec Virginia, more than a hundred | fusing to’be a candidate for reelec- | dence in the records only in carry. |COmpanied “by Brig. General J. B. man in advance ago, is the first one of the}tion to the house 1894 announced | ing their case to a’higher court on | Bellinger. acting quartermaster gen 7 orwan ibute td Biy« | WER aCoUe oS at the sta acific as Brya . . John ‘T. Raulston, Winchester, Tenn., | forward with a tribute to Mr. Bry. | Wil BCCUMMMON i ie had ma t the start. as pacifi Bryan, | Bryan family whose name ts known | that he would run for the senate, | Claims of unconstitutionality. eral of the army, with the good wishes of Mr. and|&n when tae news of the latter's |" Riagsheal fren silver, | found himself gravitating the other| to his descendants. This cathaien Maeve’ area This —— aia —— Nan We se ccayn, July 26, 1925." | death was received legal establishn ‘| way. Wilson and his ary of| yy, ; < ampaign ga ry DAYTON, Tenn., July By The ba y ks. ‘open wh “E have know Mr. Bryan| since | 16 to 1, unnecessary, had proved the ate were getting further and fur- | joy am Jennings’ mother was Ma. | fifst real taste of defeat, but did not Associated Press). — Mrs. . Wi One of the books was open when | 0 Tee Know eran Since | soundness of its theory: He lived |Mtate were getting further and fur | var doitzabeth Jennings, who was |dishearten him. ‘The Republican land- Pei be ne e physicians reached the ‘room and | ihe Slageemahe tae Sate to see four of his pet ideas become |) 0" ANT) Biafes . °f | born near Walnut Hill, Ills., in 1834. | slide wiped away his efforts and his Picea ana te ig neleens that ste v the ink was not dr : x [Slat wastatrnen tar one convie.|the law of the land. Prohibition The Jennings family came from Eng-]| opponent, Thurston, was elected. Wet te wns urlal of her husban r After traveling over two hundre¢ 4 woman suffrage, direct election of Differed in Lusit: lish stock. In the fall of 1894, Bryan entered . th ostentation eet Saturdas and delivering | tons. and always espoused his cause | “" : ed in Lusita 5 “We are simple people and we 4 ries ios at Winchester and Jasper, | With ability and courage. 1 differed | United States senators and direct) ‘Then came the Lusitania disaster Born a Democrat. upon newspeper work as chief of the want all afrangements simp!y t ee ee eeneeturied to Day. | With him on many questions, but al- | Primaries Just what happened will remain aj Bryan’s father was a Democrat of | editorial staff of the Omaha World- madahithe qaseteniie te: ? MPs Beye relur ay" | ways respected his sincerity Bryan was a prophet, not without | secret, unless an divulges jt in his | Democrats and soon after his mar-| Herald, giving much of his time to nde, Commo: y yesterday from Chattan pected } Incerity and de. S | may > . er” told Dayton citizens who ha4 ‘ sie re he had spent the night, | Yotion. Iam very sorry for his fam-| honor, but without elective success |memoirs—if he wre , e | riage entered into public life by ser pi Bore sant the national conyen- asked permission to pay special hon ’ af ital haa tage ine fly and for his friends who loved |in his own count: | story ¢ t in Washir t the|ing in the state ren of Mlinols | tion of 1896, ou P a ; Before Ave left Chattanooga Mx. |} Bs fh oe AEE ed | time and told by Senator Lodge on| for eight years. To this he added 12| At this time, Bryan also branched| , oe appre aces one al Bryan joined A ‘ Gaored W. a + | hin cette Biri bubi ee | the was tha ul-| years on the circuit bench and then | out as a lecturer, and in addition to (Continued From Page One) residents to form a military guard of the hotel which | charges agai peat | for hi His 1 1 t 1 t ted f but met | his speechmaking on behalf of the|things he advocated in the 0 Of Tae honde hee age a rata ry gu nnd seve hb antl-e 1 fal H Fe | w i 1 t. Returning from the | Democrati y he took up Chau-| pitt ition r are among the|men to. : ap SEAS Le a panied I Ke dae Th Fecal \ 1 he de time to his law | tauqua work. This was the real be- | ac icles of the nation Sean inhi ee body to t ng the t Dayt re | A by t DE eo andt fair ginning of his travels over the Unit Bs p athe dh rior } 1 ‘ | 8 2 & ring your white es: don expre a t 2 ie aia ric Ba Unt was ten ¥ old “W ed’ States Governor Smith of New York—"He | bring nny blac pipe rig yee ; f bad ele" U j ter « nd t le” Bryan ed und played and] ‘Then came the presidential cam-|was @ vigorous American and even | advised her children, vith whom she ed, no evidence, of bad health. Mr. | ye revealed that he had been in- | answe paign of 1896 and the Chicago Demo-| those who differed trom his ideas | talked over lotig distanee televhone ‘ sald, but, remark : vited to call at the Commoner's home s Last Flight cratic national. convention, had great regard for him.” ; F 1 suffering liabetes , n i's Last Filg before they left homes for the east ‘ last night for a talk. During the convention of 1920, w Bryan after his second defeat. for Ghortly before roon the body a7” t Gur day Mr. Bryan told Mr. Rogers that Cox of Ohio. was sele president, started “The Commoner,"| Clarence, Darrow—“He was a man I the Commoner war placed in g cael TALISM.s _| he appreciated the tribute Mr. Rap. Génccratits ‘utushara beaker, & political magazine, at Lincoln, | of strong convictions and always es-| casket of bronze In which he mit he While in Chattanooga Mr pleyea had paid him during the clos-| Bryan held a proxy and made the which with hig lectures, writing and | poused his cause with ability and |in state this afternoon rompleted arrangeme for ing moments of the tr fight for a dry plank in the national newspaper work, gave him a com-| courage, I always respected hia sin-| Three great bunches of flowers on of the speech vered during the cl fortable fortune. cerity and devotion.” The Baltimore Convention. uf, he n's | staged one of the greatest debates of During the Scopes trial {t was not | platform. With Bourke ( rally known that Mr. Brya rested against the supports of the bier. One was a token from the pr f the Scones He w had been threatened. In Chatt-|a career full of oratory. The erect | After Bryan's defeat by Taft. in Elihu Root—He was a good and | gressive Dayton Club. the second an printed for distribution | th anooga last night Captain Marion | young form that had electrified t! 1908, the presidential campaign of | Kindly man, fairly eincere at all |expression of sorrow by t+ elon the country and its ¢ Perkins, who was in chi of a] 1896 convention had ¢ oY 1912 brought Bryan into the public] times and very sincere on points |tes of the Scopes prosecutios oe mark the opening of the 1 *|squad of Chattanooga police here| what paunchy, the long, Jet-black ayerigata. where I most disagreed with him,” sel, while the third came from M against Modernism planned | q the trial, stated that many | hair of yesteryear bad begun to turn As the’ head of the Nobraska dele- —— and ‘Mrs, Richard Rogers. Me, Bry by him threats had made against Mr.|and was much thinner, But Bryan | gation, Bryan went to the Demo-| The Rev. Dr. C, F. Potter, New |an‘s hoats. blinds ce "heal though Mr. I red to | Bryan's life, Most of the threats | had the same force, the & cratic national convention with in-| York modernist—"He was a mighty] ‘The Stars and Stripes draped th he realized it was | came from northern cities, he said,|tism, the same fire, the ¢ , structions to support. "Champ" | crusader, a sincere preacher of the | lower portion of the bronas casket 1 n his and the authors were thoug | tow of thougit and language, tt Clark, but when the convention | Old school. The Scopes trial signed | Mr, Bryan's hands rested natural! tron el saga + | have been fanatice, same eloquence. Cockran, the great deadlocked: and the Tammany dele- | bis death warrant.” above his body, neither clasped nor ea mond. Wallace, . MOWAT Rais Irish or many Hall, was gates swung over from Underwood folded, ," a oga, who infortned him th Ol OFFICIALS VISIT | cool, keen d incisive. And | to Clark, Bryan, swung his forces| The Rev, Dr. John Roach, Straton, ae ad a slight «dllation o r | when it er the convention to Wilson and gained the latter's | New York—"A great man. has fallen DAYTON. Tenn a ‘aay with arrythmia (mis se | rose and cheered its old hero to t nomination. in Israel, he was a patriot of the | cia. athih = wytlacap seeataaat oe sort so sorely needed by America in this, her critical hour.” Previously on July 17 erhaps the last tir Prior to this, in 1911, Bryan had an's body will lie in state tomorrow issued a public statement in which afternoon in the Rhea county court he gave up his life's hope, saying: house yard Instead of this afternoon “I shall never be president, but| Newton D. Baker, former secre. |on the lawn of the Richard Rogers I would rather go to my grave with | tary of war—"Mr, Bryan’ has been | Tesidence, friends of Mrs. Bryan a? the consciousness that I have done | the undisputed leader. in-a great | nounced this afternoon . right, that I have done all in my | Cause tn politics and religious mov The change was made just before >| power to give to my country the | ™ments for more than a generation.” | the hour when the Commoner’s body best possible form of government, was’ to be carried into the Rogers than to be president.” Clem L, Shaver, Democratic nat. | 78P4- What Bryan Stood For, {onal chairman—'The country has|, Mrs. Bryan believed that a longer These are the things Bryan stood | lost a great citizen, the democratic |{Mterval between the announcement for year by year, during his reign: | party a commanding figure, and the |%"4 the viewing of the remains 1894, moral forces of America a powerfu! | W0U'd give a better opportunity for ties. Dr, Wallace part! rled in pars for vised against an address an | tribute to the great party } had ned for Pikeville on the ih be lad aaphen he pe tinge aturts i th yy Voted Against Bryan Mr. Bryan deliveres @ speech src Nate Against Bevan but Umited it to ten mint tell _ - nth e ing his friends that he had to con serve hin strength as he feared he turned ompany | to thelr seats and voted against | K fields | Bryan's gloquence and for his oppo: ‘ ». nent's logic and thelr own personal : fee through the Scopes | Yesterday including Beaumont Parks, a might not live through the , vico president of the Standard Oj) | Preferences, It was the party's trial company of Indiana, ‘Thomas \A, | Parting salute ton peerless but Dr. Wallace sald Mr, Bryan np’ | Dines of Denver, president of the | stricken political gladiator A party of prominent oll Officials visited the Salt Cre peared surprised to learn he Midwest Refining company, and H.| Four years later—a little less— A graduated income tax. advocate,” his friends in enntern Tennessee te heart trouble, but ¥ not worried. 1G. Naylor, traffic manager of the | Bryan attended the meeting of the Federal Meense for corporations. reach Dayton, A rain also threat terday he declined an automo: | ajjqwest Refining company. Democratic national committee at Government operation of | tele William © dtield, secretary of | 704 here this afternoon, bile from the Chat shee hotel to All three of the officials expressed | Washington and was barely noticed graphs and telephones. a thoeape ive in the Wilson cabinet— # rallrcad station, saying he pre- | conndence in the ofl induatry here, | Gone alike were his friends and foes. A double monetary standard. “His outsanding public service was r red to walk and declared that tn their opinion,| Many were dead, including the Tariff for revenue only. {n 1913 when he smoothed over the FRAMED PICTURES When he arrived here, he went im- | Casper’s industrial condition at this | brililant Cockran, his San Francisco Election of senators by popular threatened difficulty between the || Place Cards, Talleys, Priz s home and fre time is 6 ndid. All three of the | adversary Others were retired from vote. Inited States and Japan,” ern Methodist | officiats were gue yesterday at | politics 1 others had t , | The president to be Ineligible for — ZOE MARKS He sat on the|the Midwest official's residence on |lently retired by the vote was re-election, Senator Boah of ldaho—"The pur- . _ Down the Steps * ; | before the sermon 'Bixth street, Mr, Dines left this|as if Napoleon had returned to the | William Jennings Bryan, photographed with his brather, Charles Bryan, | Majority vote to over-ride a preei !ity of his purposes and the sincerity jp Marks Music & Art Ce. by Rey, B. A. Peterson of Bune, morning for Glacier National park,/ field of Waterloo, “Champ” Clark, on the occasion of the latter's candidacy for the yicepresidency, |’ dentigh veto, st his conyictious no one knows bla 298 E. 2od j e : mee. FO RD De ee a eel