Newspaper Page Text
u VICTORY THE CRY^ Republican Eat:2cat!on at Muaic Hall, New York City. M'KIHLEY'S KEYNOTE SPEECH. Protection to American Ubor. Honest Money; HtrrUon and Victory the Watchwords?Six Thousand I'eople I'nnctnate tbe Kloqnence of Ohio's Goreroer with Rlnflng Cheer*. Oa Toe*lay night last ao immense B*publkan ratification meeting wai held in New York, at which 6,000 pernr*wni ftflvarnor Mrlvin ley, who ra the cbiel speiker, spoke U follow?: "M*. PuraiDExr, OnrrttKEx or the RrrtaLic.tx Cum or the City or New Vom, aso Gettlmitx:?The Minneapolis convention recorded the conquering wlli oi lbs ilepubiican party and registered iu decree in the nomination oi Benjamin Uarrison, of Indiana [applause], a*the Republican presidential candidate and Whltelaw iteid, of New York [appiama], as the RettubIlcan candidate for Vice President. Benjamin Harriaon was chosen as tbe standard bearer of our great party because it was tbe choice of the majority of that party that ho abould be chosen, and in our political organization the cholco of tho majority is the choice of alL [Applause.J We an here to-night, citizens of Now York and representatives from every state and territory, to speak words of ratio cation of tbe splendid work of that national convention. [Applause.] A Hr:i>ublicsn national convention sever makes mistakes. [Applause.] They never have. The sober sense and judiciouib judgment aud uprifrfit conscience of'that grand party always leads them to do the sensible things in national-assembly. ci.azi.vi. the I'jitu or raoGima. "It made no mistako thirty-six years ago when it made iu first national nomination for President of tho United States. It selected John C. Krement [applause] the great Pathfinder, [applause] and from that moment the J to publican party noa beta mazing mo pith o( progresa in which mankind and civilization has walked. [Applause.] It roado no miatakc in 1860 [cheers for Lincoln] when it nominated Abraham Lincoln [applause] ior I'retident [applause] the immortal and never to be forgotten Lincoln [applause] who placed liberty and equality in the constitution of the' United .StaU.a, where it had never been before and whero under God it shall remain forever. [Applause.] It mado no mistake in ltX?, when it renominated Abraham Lincoln, and it made no mistake in '(>8 when it nominated the great hero of the war. Ulysses S. Grant [applause], wbeeloied his lips on the -word 'Victory' at the Wilderness and refused to apeak, but fought it out on ithat line until the final grand surrender .at Appomattox Court House. [Applaufce.] It made no mistake when it nominated llayes. [Applause.] No mirtake when i*. nominated Garfield. [Applause.] No mistake when it placed in nomination for the first time Ilenjninin Harrison, of Indiana [applause], who defeated the chosen Idol of the Democratic party in his own atato and routod the entire * ?' *i? ?:? r* u..? 1 UODlOCnu;; ?l uutun, And it ban made no mistake in placing jiltn in rcnomination. [Long continued opplauie.J THE BMIKMmiE*: HP ItltPUBMCAKISM. "lie ia tho embodiment of every principle of the Republican party. Tlie Republican party mnde no mistake in 1.S84 in choosing that Hplcndiil American citizen, that great statesman, for whom and to whom every heart goes out to-night in feeling sympathy for hit irreat. family bereavement. Clicatod by fraud, overtaken by a crank, or lie would have been President of the United States, as ho ought to havo been from 188) to 1888. [AppUuie.1 Wc have a right to bo thankful to-night. "When Lordfialtabury?[hisses]?has given approval to our doctrine of protection, and tho Now York Sun in its leading editorial this morning characterizes the Chicago convention as a ratilicaiion for Benjamin Harrison? [applause]?1? it any wondor wo rejoice to-night? [Crios of '.\o'.] Tlie stura even are with us for they thine in all their glory to-night above [pointing to itcid .ana fiepew in tho upper tiers], Tho Kopublican party loves all of its leaders. Every one of them. But it loves its cause and its country more than any of them. ax ito.tr.ir ctttitEKcr. "Tlie Republican party stands to-day, as it lias always stood, lor an honest currency, whothor it bo gold or sllvor or paper money, and insists that each shall be the equal of thu other for debt paying and in local tondor power. Tho Republican party is opposed to any base currency, a currency that ch cats the laborer "and tho Industrial clissoa, and insists that every dollar that is put In circulation ih*U be tho full and legal measure for onr oxcliangoi and our merchants. "The Republican party bolleves tonight, as it hat always believed, in an lionost ballot and 11 fair count. [Applause.] It wants this country to understand that it doos not pay to stoal? [applausol?whothor it is tho unirrngos of an individual or of nn ontiro stnto. it Insist) In every aoction of tho country tho conititutional guarnntce< shall be rospoctod and upheld. It insist* that all shall be omul, tbo rlchost nnd most f>otvcrful and tho poorest and-%iost nimble, and political privilogos to nono will it den)1. WIIAT PnOTlCTION MFANS. JjjTlio ltopubllcan party stands toMis it hns always stood?for a protu^M tarilF rnpplause and crlos of ".McKinley tnrifl"j in American tarifl', a toriir which shall protect the American homo, tho American firoaido, tlio American workman, thn American industrial* [applauaoj a protective tariff that shall to nlaccd on all foreign compotintr goods high enough to innko up the dllloronco in tlio wages paid in tho Unitod Suites with those paid in Kujopu. Whonover Kurope will give to lier workmen tlio eamo wage* that wo givo to onri, tlion we will remove our tariffs and meet her in the neutral tnarkulH of tho world [applauso] uud it will be tho survival ot tho flttoit. [lionowod applauael. 'Elovate your condition up to ours, wo ?ay to Kurope, 'and we will domand no protective tarifl against the goods mndo by you,' and I will toll you when wo can liavo freo trado in this country, and wo can't have it a moment sooner, la whonover tlio nation! of tho world will bring their social and labor condition up to oura, for we will never level ours down to theirs. [Prolonged choors and applause.] Those are our conditions to Jroo trade. That's wbat a protective tnriil moans. "1 am glad It la Clovolnnd, [laughter] that loeini to meet with favorablo ap-1 proTil at the audience, lor with no other candidate can Benjamin Htrriton niaka that iwae at abaqgly aa with Grorer Cleveland. [Applaiue.] He belt Lie. once on tbit qseation tad be Till beat him again [applaute and erica of 'He will'} lor rou can always troat tbs people ot the I'nited Statu to vote for tiiemielve*. tAppiaote.] Itemember that the campaign tbia year nudw Uarritoa it s eampaum ia the United (Mates tor the United futea agaiaat alt mankind. [Applanta.] , ."They jron'l bare ajjood t time ia 1SB2 at they ha?l in 1IWC Then, at the Pretident to happily expretted it to the committee whicb notified him of lilt Domination yetterdar, then it was a conflict for protection, now it it a campaign asaintt prices current; then it wit prophecy, now it it fulfilled y then it waa the campaign prevaricator, now it It Republican performance* [appbraie] and with prophecy and prevarication tbe Democracy can alwayt beat the liepublican*. 'In 1830 the new tarifi law wat bot four weeka okl, tnd it vat the infant that the Democratic party aatailed. [A pplante.J It wat then too young to tpeak for itaelf. [taoicbfer.] But it is nineteen monthi old to-night [apDltuiel and it it old enough to do lit own talking [applause] and the talking that it U doing is confusing the Democrat) and confounding the demagogues. [Applause and try of "Three cheers lor American tin!"] MIUUJ Tlx. "Tliote cheers are worthily given, for we hare got to-day twenty-eight tin plate industries In the United State), made possible by the tariff law of 1M0 [applause] and we had, none prior to that date. They laid prices would go up in ISA and they aid go up for a time, but they had to come down. [Applause.] "KvorytMog lia; come down In tills country bot labor. [Applause.] Everything has been reduced in price bnt the wages of the artiion and the American workman. 1 said everything. I make one ctception?pesrl buttons are still a little higu?[laughter]?and everything, we use which goes into the daily wants of the family, I care not what it is, is no higher tiMlsy, ana in most canes lower, than prior to tlio passage of the law of 1890. "Freo trade cheapens the products by cheapening the pioilucer, protection cheapen; the product by increasing the vast poesibilitieaof the producer under the moat generous laws that can be gives. [Applause.] Why, they said this new tariff law -would cut as out of a foreign market. Yet wo never had such a foreign trade since tho government was begun. We nover sold as inany American products to Europeans in any twelve months of our history as we have in the last twelve. They called the Klfty-flrst Congress, over which that splendid parliamentarian presided,Tom Keed?[applauso]?a billion dollar Congress. It was a two billion dollar Congress. Under the operation of ita laws our domestic trade increased a billion, and our foroign ti/ide amount* to a billion and twenty' millions of dollars. [Applause.] The like ol this was never known in American history. "More than 05 per cent of nil wo imported to this country under this now law is absolutely free?{applause]?for everything was made free which no could not uroduca in the United State* and which we needed. [Applause.] That was tho principle upon which that bill was formed. Everything tariffed which ire could, nnd there is no: a lino of (he law of 1SU0 that is not American. [Applause.] 'Every lino of it was made for you, and the difference between the Domtv cratic party and tho Republican party to-nixht is that they are for free trade and a tariff for revenue only. You must remember that in this campaign vou must haveDemo kind of a tariff, either an American British revenue turilT or an American protective tarili. "You have to raiso ?l,000,00ij every twenty-four hours to meo: the varlotft demands of trado and government. The Republican party is opposed to taxing Itself so long an it can And anybody else to tax. And they say that tho tariff it a tax. "Well, tho Democratic rovontii tariff is a tax and always will bo a tax [ap plausol and always paid by the consumer. Vow, Iet*me you why. You pay a tariff on tho foreign product the like of which wc do not produce hero, and we tax tho prlco and foreign manufacturer. Now, who pays it? Why, tho Amorican conanmor, becauao tho price is the dilforenco which tho American tux imposes. But somebody inay say wo produce fliiifnr hero. *Vo did produci one-eighth of all the sugar which wc consumed; seven-eightho coino from abroad. Wha Uxfu the price? Tiie man who controls one-eighth or the man who controls fluventfigUths oi our consumption? I nood npt toll the audience that It is tho man who controls tho snven-cighths. Thpro js not a business man in N'ew York bit who knows that from his own experience that the foreigner is ready to yield up the price aslced by the tariff t'b get Into this most advantageous market. ax indictment iron rnbk*Tiunr_ "Cardinal Manningsaid la an English magazine of froe trade two years ago: 'Kroe trado creates two tilings?tho world of wealth and tho world of want. Tho world of wealth sits ijulotly growing moro powerful, whilo the world of want grows restless anil suiters not Irnnwinv whnfc would bo brought on the morrow. Thero ii an indictmont (or troo trail*, not from a politician, not from a partisan, notfrom nRepublican, buffrom a L-rcnt Christian touchor who Imtl studioa the condition ol ?ho workini;nimi. If you want that Vote that way, It not voto for Harrison and Hold, and there will bo no danger of ybnr totting It. Tlioic pooplu lay that tariff law in prohibitory. Thoro is not nuy prohibition in it. Yea, tliorc ii prohibition in it It prohibits tho importation Into the United .States of any painting, hook, pamphlet or piece of statuary of an obscene character. [Applause.] It prohibit! tho importation of nny foreign goods into tho United States boaring an American trodo mark. It insist* that the foreign product should be sold in this country, ii at all. on Its own merits and under its own flag. [Applauso.] It nrnhililta tltn TTnltftfl ritntnl. iu it tlflftfl to do, from going abroad mid buying anything than it can buy at home. It mnat pay tbo snino duty ujion such articles as it obligos its own citizons to pay [chcors], mid tlio l'nitud States baa gone abroad very little ainco tliat time. It prohibits tbo landlngon our shore* of any foreign product mado by foreign convict labor. [Cheers.] Wa Rroteet our froo labor in our own stalo against tho prison labor ot other states. Why not protect American workingmon ngaihat tho producta ot the prison labor of Kuropo? [Choors.] "How do you like that? [A volco? 'Good.'] but, my countrymen. I am In no condition to spoak to you at length to-night. [A volco?'You're til right,' and cheers.] THE UlXXKAl-OM* COHVgNTlOH. "I will speak a word about the Minneapolis convention. "I nevor performed a ploasantcr duty In iny llfo than when my associates on this atago 'to-night?roproaentativos of every itnto and territory in tbo Union ? ?Ibao when tbe? mx* the Praiden t of the I'nited .->Ute< an official notification of hia nomination (or the pseeiifcacy, "I know he will carry that banger t? virtory in November oI tflis ytmt. The kepnblican part/ bu bees a. mighty lore* in the past It will be a mightier force in the (more. Lincoln, Urant, Garfield and other great leaders of the party inspire and animate as as much to-night aa tbey did when they were living aad among <u, I wlab the young men of New York, I wish the young men of tbia, our country, before the November election day KMuea, would read the lint great national platform made by tbe Kepnblican party in the city aI Philadelphia thirtyfix years ago. It is one of the grandest inatramaata ever penned by ha man hands. It reads to-night more like inspiration than political affirmation. tvery great principle there enunciated. every great policy there preadyated, except one, have been embodied to the public law and the public administration. Liberty, freedom, equality, free speech and tree men commenced there. [Applause.] They talk about tbe mission of the Kepublkan party baring ended. Neveowill its mission be ended until the labor 0/ this coontry is secared against the ill paid labor of the Old World, and against the criminal and favored immigration that lands on onr shores; never until the United States shall be secured against debasement and inflation and corruption; never nntil the right to vote shall be secure in every corner ol the republic, under the lav, for the law and br the lav; never antll the American ballot box shall be u ncred as the American home. [LouJ cheers.] CHAC.VCEV DEPEW AW Uti iMTturyiUt ot Itata-Xaaf Kuun About oi> Puttlna. tprrtal WipatdtUOu hMUtmtrr. Wasmixoto*, D. (X, June 2S.?Many questions of almost equal Intereit are agitating official circle* here at present. They are, who will bo appointed secretary of state, vice Mr. Blaine, resigned; who will be chairman of the Kepublican national committee, anil who will succeed to the vacancy on tbe supreme bench caused by Justice Bradley's death 7 Nothing hat come from tbo While Honso in reference to Mr. Channcey Depew and his prospective acceptance of the secretaryship of state. Mr. Depew has evidently taken more time to consider the proposition than was at first thought he wonld require. It is believed that Mr. Depew intends to consult with his associates of the Sow York Central road to determine whether some arrangement c.-tn be made whereby he -would practically take a leave of absence froui his post with the railroad company to accept the secretaryship of state until the 4th of March next. At least It Is rumored hereabouts that Vice President Webb, of the Xew York Central, who has been enjoying a vacation in Europe hai been summoned home by cablc so that bo mav participate in tbe confcrence with Mr. Do pew's buslnesa associates. Mr. Webb will sail from Liverpool to-day. In the event of Mr. Depew not being able to accept the secretaryship of state, lie will be urged by the President, it it said, to take the chairmanship of the Republican national committee. Politicians have expressed their confidence in 31.*. Harrison's ability to manage his otra campaign, but Mr. Harrison would prefer that some well known figure in Hepublicatt national politics assume the head of tho national com- i uuttee. lie is known to have spoken | In complimentary tonus of Mr. Depew's political sagacity, recently exemplified at the Minneapolis convention. An impression prevails hero that if Mr. Depew is not (he socretary of state he will be honored by a personal request from tile President to take the chairmanship of the national committee. I Another person prominently mentioned in connection with this chair- ' munship is General Land Commissioner Carter, of Montana. Mr. Carter, during his brief career at the national capital has impressed everybody with his peculiar fitness to direct a successful campaign. It la not thought, howevor, that ho can be spared from active work in Montana. lie ia a power in that state, and public men are of the opiuion that it would bo injudicious to take him from a plico where ho can do so much gooa. General Horace Porter does not want mo position- i*ur womu uu nti-ujii u were it offered him. Col. Elliott F. Bbepnrd's name hag been raentlonod In connection with n cabinet position. llnM'a Tlilftl Wo offer One Hundred Dollars reward (or any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall'* Catarrh Cure. k. J. Cjienkv a Co.. Toledo, 0. We, tho Undersigned, have known F. J. Chonov for the lest fifteen years, and bolieVo him perfectly honorable in all buainois transoctlona, and financially ablo to carry out any obligation! made , by their firm. worr <i Tin;ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Wai.dixo, Kixxax A MaIivix, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cnro Is taken intornai1y, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfacoi of the system. Testimonials sent freo. Trice 73 cents per bottio. Sold by all druggists. ( Hnlf Rntea to Cincinnati via B. M O. R. 11. For tho Prohibition National Convention nt Cincinnati. 0., June 20 and HO, the Baltimore <tc Onio railroad will sell ! the general public round trip tickets from all stations to Cincinnati at rate of olio faro for the round trip. Tickets will bo sold June 27 and 28. and will bo vilid for return journey until July 6 inclusive. Tho rnto from Wlicolinn will bo $7 00, correspondingly low rates from othor ?tnilon?. mw? A Good Buggastlou* From the Dubuqu* (Iouki) TeUyraph. Tho adjourning o( tho Impeachment court lnat Saturday, on account of (jen. Weaver's bolly-acho, oust the poople of tho commonwealth nearly SiOO. One doso of Ctinmborlaln's Colic, Cholpra and Diarrhoea Remedy would havo saved this cxpenso; and we suggest, as a matter of aconotny and humanity, that tho stato provide against future conlingonclos of tbia nature, by furnishinir each senator with a bottle oi that valuable rcmoily. 2"> and SO cant bottloslor snlu by druggists. u.tw The first Italian Methodist Episcopal church in the United Statu* woo recently dedicated otXew Orleans. It Should III In JCvarr lloum. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clny St., Sharpsbur)!, Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovory for Consum|c tion, Coughs and Colds, that it caroil . his wife who was threatened with Pneumonia after an attack of "La . Grippe," when various othor romedles and several physicians had done her 110 good. Robert Harbor, of Cookiport, Fa., claims Dr. Kind's Now Discovery, has dono him more good than anything ho ovor used for Lung Trotlblo. Nothing i like It. Try it Froo trial bottles at J Logan Dmg Co's Drug Store. Largo buttles, 60c. and $L, 6 -~= T-%-*lTT? 0*538 QQQPS SALE'Great Dress! GEO. R. 1 We beg to announce thz annual sale of our t Dress Goo< FN i j Dress Katti India Silks, Bengalines Faille Silks ' Silk Grenat Challies, Henriettas, Nun's Veilii ? .AT MARKED D0\ Will take placelhis mornii til this advertisement is u GEO. special attention is mvi of Boys' "Mother's Frien Ladies' "Derby" Waists, and Sanitary Lisle Union Vests, Boys', Misses', C Vests, Men's Balbriggan S Also a lot of Ladies' Balbr from-yjc to 2jc. We im ladies also to our superior brie and Muslin Underwej our own sales and can \vi mended. All these goods ii geo.Yt THIRD ANNUA OF Till Ohio Valley Prohib MOUNDSVIL] JUL-Y 3 ome of the tat Speakers on Ho*. JOHN P. ST. JOHN. 3 .Hon. SAMIIEI. DICKIE. I Col.. GEORGE W. BAIN. 1 Kev. ANN"A SHAW. J I". A. BUKDiCK, ol TI'E?nAY, JULY 5, will bo W. C. T. U. D?r: SA1 >?y. with I'oL I. K. LIVINGSTON, of OcoriU. anil 1 ;tnlAHtiitc Alliance L- the principal spfiakeri. PROHIBITION STATE CONVEN' <'!n?? ill Di'lwirtu (JyniwuUlc* enoh inoriil?B, condti THK BlftYKR LAKE QUARTKT will innko tho tu. jO.^TThHAW for Infanta and "tutorials so well adapted to children that Cm t recommend 11 as superior to any prescription mown to me." II. A. Archer, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brookljn, N. 7. WI The use of 'Costorla' Is so universal tad u it* merits to well known that It seems a work you of aupererogation to endorse It Few are the ao i Intelligent families who do not keep CMtorio resi within es?y teach." "T1 Late Pastor Bloocaisfdala Batormed Church. Tub Cbxtiub Com ^^WMHOODM Sf 9 M M *?n mamtce to euro ?l fS* n .Si K* *\T1 Lou of Brain Power. flandacii V . jJfL \ JjL\ ?tona. Nerroaaneaa. Laaajtude, .J \ Orssnaln elthar*?xeauae<i b A\ *fwtK niMI ?* tobacco, opium or atlmi and Inianitjr. Put up oi>n w??^Maywul,hy maliirt fnr*4. Wttb en acroaa AjtOArrucnm. or rtjund tv monty. Circular r for ult lu WuaoUnj bjr tba Wi.lX UUUO CO.. Ijj qeo. B. TAYLOR. Ms Sale! rA Y LOR it the regular semijntire stock of is, srns, I I > 0 iines, 1 W "! tigs, &c., VN PRICES, : rig and continue un'ithdrawn. G. R. TAYLOR. ted to our new lines d" and Star Waists. Ladies' Union Silk i Suits, also French Child's and Infants' shirts and Drawers. iggan Vests, reduced rite the attention of line of Ladies' Camir. made to order for ith safety be recomi Market street room. AY LOR. L MEETING 1 , '* w i? w lition Assembly' LjE. w v J 5ER3ons. ^ bl the Platform Will Assist! lira. MARY T. LATIIKOI'. Hiss VANDKI.IA VARNUM. pr Ion. M. V. B. BENNKTT, of Kansas. rOHN K. CLARK, oi Now York. E r Now York. I'ltDAY, JULY 9, will bo Fnrniora Alliance ~ Ion. H. A. IIOU.STOS, l're>l<lcut of Wwt YirTION, TUESDAY, JULY 12. r ictoil III Mlti LVD1A NKttTOMR I. eotliiffi delightful with tliolmltiffing. V Children. tori* cures Colic, Ooasttpatfoe* ir Stomach, Diarrhcra, Eructation, Is Worms, gives sleep, and promotes diifiout injurious medication. For several years 1 hare recommenced >r' Caitoria,' and shall always continue to 10 as it has invariably produced beneficial fits." Eowrw F. Paeots, It. D., /> t? Wlnthrop," 123th Street and Tth Are., \ New York City, taut, 77 Hurray Strut, New Tor*. = Si :CT(1DCn ? " Narva .o i uncu itfv'rs"-""1 c.7. a, W njjrrouf dl*?a?o?. mjch on V Memory, ?" . \V kefalnuM, I?t Manhood. Nixhtly BmU- Ml alldraln* and low of power of tua Generative pr yoverexertion, youthful errors, or rxocnnito ?r limits which noon lead to iRflnaltj, Consnmp- * i rcnlenttocarryjn vest pocket. ifl per pack* . rrrliorrter we fffwuirrm/n owirantr* fomn c'l roe. A'Wlrcii AorvoRced to., C'falcagu, lit. tb anl'Miluairjuti. ocM?aw PIVMBIKO. ETf. itoxttn. ^ eonu. CSIOH. BB I^^HI ruxuxo ' i cxi XXD i fen^Bb snuu rmisu gJKmbm^ mjjk AXD H hot Kgj WATJK flIUTlS'O. TRIMBLE & LUT2, uittai ICS itartM fo?! ?b?te. w. Vk ; r.?:; ^yiLUAji IIAKE & bos, 'neUetlPimlxfl, GulStiiiaPitun, Na 88 TWELFTH 8TRKET. All work doneprotaptlr ?t rwogabte prlan ' 1 fcOKtifc 1IIBBKRD & SOX. J UaneHon v\ Tbonjuon t HIMwrl) PRACTICAL PLUMBERS, AS i>DrT*AM PtTfKKS. HR.V" fWHIPEM UI4 >!AKKKT?E AKEUNU.VT.VA. JW'AII work proaraur don ?s max n*?hi* fe pried. * m FINANCIAL. L\M. OAKLEY & CO, BANKERS AND BROKERS, 5 Sixth St. PITTSBURG, PA. S'riraU* Vflrm to Kew York ?o<t CfcUajp. Loral SecariUvf HourbI ...I &lTfor wh mt Carried a? LIbcntl Mtfgla* Jtlono j^o Loan om C#lt ' T v|> \ ^ H> Luw. I*rc*i<JCTV" Jo?. Strnoin, Quilex. J. A. Jtifwpv, A**Uuai CiLsUlex. * ' ;1JT Sank -of Wheeling! CAP1TXL $200,000, PAID IX. WHEELING, W. VA. fH PIBELTOUS: f J- Clarke, v Jpteph F. riull. Jamt's CummtaL Henrr Biebcrtoo. liBQDibul fOf bet Jo?epb be/bold. Uibson Urab? Interest paid wj'sppulal depoiiu. ' asr CALL AND Get a Nickel-Plated Savings Bank ! ?AT THE (heeling1 Title and Trust Co,, 13)5 MARKET STREET. JAXJC OF Tim OHIO VALLEY. CAPITAL....^ ^,$176,000. iluam Ircrr -..-..^.President ill!am & tonno*., ~.VJoc President Dnfts on iiyland, Ireland, Franco and Gw W ^ UI8SCT0BS: William A. Isoit, Mnrtiroar Pollock. J. a. Millet Uilllum B. SIuiMo& V. M Atkinson. John K. Botsford. Henry Spoycr. Victor Rosenburf. . . Jnoob C. TliiMtta* tal F. P. JEPSOS. Cashier. . 7XCHAKGB BASK. JJ CAPITAL...**. $200,000. N. Va.hdk.xL~ President a. PELAPUTy......^ .-..Vigo PmideaL directors; ;. 2f. Vance. George E. Stlfe\. J. II. Brown. William Ellingbaak La Defoliate. a. w. Keiiojr. r' Johnrww. Drafts issued ou K;iffian?i. IreUnJ, ScotUui id all pointa In Europe. JUlIN J. J OX KB. Cashier. COBNfCE ANP TIN ROOFING. ( ^.ALVANIZfJD IKOK CORNICE ??AND irnsr RooFinsro-i Special attention given to all kinds of ieet Iron and Tin Wort: on Building. ALSO STEEL AND FELT ROOFING. Call And cot oricct before contracting, a* lata opart*! to givo bargain* in that lino of work. 3. P. CHL^WELL, frU Corner Main i?n?\ South Btw*w. MILL^UPPLIES. iARLOCK PACKING! For Steam Englon I] tin Bast oca Sol Cut tlm Roth. Is Steam Fi?hU X ill Lust Loiiijcr l'hau Any Otlior. JHKS. H. BERRY. 7vttr r ci rddi read No. I23Q Water Strwftt.. EDUCATIONAL. Wheeling Business College! THE OLD RELIABLE. A Uv?. ftogrealve. Tlioroujja School! luilatM, Knglhli, hhort'Ilanil, Typurrltlnj. or lx?miHful Catalogue. odd row m nhnr?? M'j HRS. M. STEVENS HART'S Ifihool for Girls. ?itroKISS HAE BELLE HARr3 chool for Yonng Children, raot>r*A lull corptot offlfllont toachori P? dlviflod Into thrw d?(>*riiue:i:<. raiuiuar and Acadowlo ol Ui*JJ M prepandfor tea Liatlf Frail**** Hie past yoar traiiuooo?fal la a b!*h ?l?r'7; nklngnoccjiiarrapwrJiiontof alar*et"fl Uie uuiuber ol pupiu.