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Welcome. rX"he Semi-Cenionninl C!elel>i*axtioii of the X^ovmclingr of Walhalla, August ii3d and ?S4Lth. Welcome. 1?OO,
. ..THE...
SEMI-CENTENNIAL
.^.^-.^
August 23 und 24-tho
dates for Wnlhnlla'B Soiui
Contonuial Celebration
wlil soon bo boro. Lot
every citizon put forth :u>
effort to make the entire
town attractive, and whoo
our visitors como lot us
all feet that ns individuals
ami ns a town wo cannot
Afford to lot a simile guest
bo anything less than de
lighted with thc old town.
TO THINK OWN SK1.H BB T1UJK AND IT MUST KOLLOW AS TUE NIGHT THE DAY, THOU CANS'T NOT TUEN IIB FALSE TO ANY MAN.
HY JA YNES, SllliLOU, BM ITH ? STECK.
WALHALLA, SOUTH UAKOLINA, JULY 25, H>0O.
NEW SEIMES, NO. 121.--VOLUME LI.-NO. SO.
EVERYTHING NI
HATS, GC
WELL A!
FROM TI
LINE RIC
NOTIFIED OF THEIR NOMINATION FORMER
RAISES FREE S1LVEM ISSUE.
NATIONALHONORM^T BE UPHELD.
Roosevelt Declares thc Country is on the
Brink of an Abyss- Prosperity thc Battle Cry.
At Canton, Ohio, on .Inly Pith,
Senator hodge in tho presence of a
vast multitud" ntlicially notiliod Pre
sident McKinloy (lint ho was tho
unanimous choie.? of the I {('publican
National Convention l'or I'resident.
Thu speech of Senator Lodge and thu
spouse of Mr. McKinley wore in
tended to bo moro limn formal ami
to a certain exlent for tn ed the basis
upon which the campaign is lo be
fought this year. Theil' utterances
were listened to with the closest at
tention itv '.he many prominent Re
publicans who were pr?sent.
HAN N A A ND I .Ol n . K A KIM V I'..
Chairman Lodge ami the members
of the notification committee, to
gether with Chairman lianna and
members of the national committee
arrived OU a special train from Cleve
land. They were met III the station
by thc citizens' committee in charge
of tho arrangement? and with a band
of music were escorted to tho home
?d' President .McKinley. Several
Hags had been hung to thc bree/.e in
the early morning and tho streets
through which the pr? ?cession moved
had some indications of a c?l?bration.
The various organizations and clubs,
as they arrived inarched lo the Pre
sident's home and wtTO crooned about
thc place within seeing und bearing
distance of the ceremonies.
CA M Kit A ll KM? S I ll Kl! K.
Some time before tho arrival ol' the
?liMention party President McKin
ley went into the ?garden and ?11
Bpeoled and approved the arrange?
mellis. A large space in tho front
yard was tilled with chairs for tho
notification parly ami distinguished
guests. Tables were also provided
for the press. Outside the roped
space, numerous photographic outfits
were set up ami trained on the point
where the speaking was to take place.
Ki ve minnies niter I o'clock ihe
booming of guns nnnouneed ibo ar
rival of the committee at Ibo station.
They immediately entered carriages
ami wit h the ( 'anton OHCorl, proceeded
to tho President's house. |Jy thc
time they had arrived :i large crowd
had collected and they were received
willi cheers.
Senators lianna rind Lodge wore
in the lend of the part y. I '.??I h en
tered the house mid ll.'ld ll few Illili
tites ?dint with thc President and then
ret urned lo the porch. A few mo
ments later thu President, willi .Mrs
MoKinley on his ann, came upon the
pondi. Their appearance was the
signal for general cheering. A num
ber of distinguished men occupied
seats on the pondi,among them being
Senator I lanna, Postmaster General
Smith, Cornelius Ni, Miss, Henry C.
Payne, .1 utlge Day, li, ('. Kerens,
I Repr?sentative Taylor. With Mrs.
McKinley were Mrs. Harber, Mrs.
Marv Saxton, Mrs. Judge Day and
M rs. t 'liarles I lawes.
Senator ll. C. Lodge immediately
mounted a small standing block and
?I? li?.oreti bis speech.
SKNATOI! I.olo,I SI'K A KS.
Senator I >odg<< -aid :
"Mr. President, this ('.om mitt CO,
representing every Stale in the Inion
and the organ i zed territories of the
Puked Stales, was duly appointed t"
announce to you formally your nomi
nation by', ?. llcpiihlicaii National
Convention, which met in Philadel
phia ?ni .1 une I'.1 last, as thc candi
date ?.f the I {?publican party for Pre
sident of the United Stales for tim
lerm beginning Mardi I, 1001,
"To be selected by the I {('publican
paity as their candidate for this groat
ellice i-. always one nt the highest
honors which can ho given t<> any
man. This nomination, however,
conies lo you, sn, umler circum
stances which give ii a higher signifi
cance and make it au even deeper
I Sell Y
3W IN MEN'S HAI
>LF OR OUTING :
S A COMPLETE I
IE MANUFACTrjR
rHT THROUGH !
expression of honor ami Irust than
usual. Von wer?1 nominale?! unaiii
\ tnously at Philadelphia. You rc- '
; eeived the vote of every del?galo, !
front every State ami from every ter
ri lory.
"Tile harmony of sentiment which
appears on thu fact of the record was
hilt the reticulion of the deeper har
mony which existed in the hearts ami
minus of tho del?gales. Without
faction, without dissent, with pro
found satisfaction and eager enthu
siasm you were nominated for tho
presidency hy the united voice of the
representatives of our great party, in
which lhere is neither sign of division
' nor shadow of turning. Such tiuani
! indy, always remarkable, is here the
none impressive, because it accom
panies a second nomination to tho
great o Hi 00 which you have heh! for
lour years. Not tho facile triumph
j of hope over experience, but tho
j sober approval of conduct and char
acter tested in many trials and tried
by heavy and extraordinary respon
sibilities.
N KW AXli MOMKNTOl'S (?l.'KKTIONS.
"With tho exception of tho period
in which Washington organized tho
nation and Inuit the slate and of those
other awful years when Lincoln led
! his people through tho agony of civil
war, ami saved from destruction tho
work of Washington, then; never has
boon a presidential term in our his
tory so crowded with great events,
so lilied with new and momentous
questions ?ts that which is now draw
ing to au end. Those declarations
which wore made in St. Louis in
I Sihi, you, sir, united with tho Repub
licans in Congress in tho platting of
tho tariff and tho establishment of
tho protective policy. Von main
tained our credit and upheld tho gobi
standard, leading tho party by your
advice to tho passage of tho groat
measure which is to-day thc groat
bulwark of both.
uVou led again tho policy which
has made Hawaii a possession of tho
I United Slates. On all other ques
tions you fullilled the hopes and jus
tified the confidence of the people
who four years ago put trust in your
promises. Hut Oil ntl these ip test ions,
also you had as guides, not only your
own principles, the well considered
results < t years of training and re
I Unction, but also the plain declara
tions of tho National Convention
which nominated yon in ISi>(>.
"Far different was it when the
Cuban question, which wo had al
ready promised to settle, brought on
war and then peace, with Spain.
Congress declared war, but you, as
commander-in-chief, had to carry it
on. Voil did so and history records
unbroken victory in the first shot of
j the Nashville to the day when tho
protocol was signed. Thc peace you
I had Co make alone, ('nba, Porto
Kio', the I 'hilippinos, you bad to
a-suiue ahme the responsibility ol
laking (bein all from Spain. Alone
and weighed with the terrible respon
sibility of the unchecked war powers
of the constitution, you were obliged
to govern these islands and to repress
rebellion ami disorder in tho Philip
pines. No party creed defined the
course you wore lo follow. Courage,
foresight, comprehnsion of Ameri
can interests, both now and in the un
chartered future, faith in the Ameri
can people ami in their fitness foi
groat tasks, wore thou your only
guides and counsellors. >
NICK I NI.KY'? (IK HA'I' I'Ol.li.'V.
"Thus, you framed and put in ope
ration this great new policy which
has made us at once masters of tho
,\nt iles and a great K?stern power,
holding lirmly our possession on both
sides of thc I 'neille.
"The new and strange ever excites
lear and the courage ami prescience
which accept them always arouse
criticism and attack. Yet a great
departure ami a new policy were
never more quickly justified than
.those undertaken by yon. On thc
? possession of thc Philippines rest the
admirable diplomacy which warned
all nations thal, American trade was
not to be shut nut from China, lt is
to Manila thal WO owe Ibo ability to j
CS-LIGHT DRIVE
HATS, WITH F Al
ANE OF STAPLE
ER. COME IN AT
C. W. Bi
send troops M ixl ships in this limo of
stress to tho defense of our minisloi'S,
our missionaries, our consuls nutt our
merchants in China, insteaii of hoing
com polled to leave our citizens lo the
casual protection of other powers, as
would have hoon unavoidable had wu
Hung thc Philippines away and with
drawn from thc Orient.
'.liest assured, sir, that the vigor
ous measure which you have thus
boon enabled lo take, and thal all
further measures in the same direc
tion which jon may take, for tho pro
tection of American lives and pro
perty will receive the hearty support
of tim people of tho United Slates,
who aro now, as always determined
that tho American citizen shall be
protected at any cost in all his rights
everywhere and at all tino s. It is io
.Manila, again, to our fled in ibo bay
and our army on laud, that we shall
owe tho power, when these scenes of
blood in Cliiua are closed, to exact i
reparation, to enforce stern justice,
ami to insist, in the lilllll settlement,
upon au open door to all thal vast
market for our fast growing com
merce.
"Kvonts moving with terrible
rapidity have been swill witnesses lo
tho wisdom of your action in the
Past. Tho Philadelphia convention i
has adopted your policy both ill the ?
Antilos and tho Philippines ami has i
made it their own and that of tho :
Republican party.
Ills (Itv OK ll A lt I) Tl M KS. I
"Your election, sir, next Xovein- 1
ber, assures to us thc continuance of
We are detenu
in order to do so, he
go for easli.
8 io 12-oenl I Mi KC ALKS at f
All Organdies,
cost. Anything in
Straw Hats Ali
Lad ie
At prices that are s
determined to sell ?
next season. We r
get what you want
Respe
thal policy abroad ami in mir new
possessions. To entrust those difli
cult ami vital questions lo oilier
hands, at once incompetent ami ?ios
til", would bo disastrous and a still
more unrelieved disaster lo our pos
terity. Your olootioil means not
only protection lo OUI" industries, but
the maintenance ?d' a sound currency
and of the gold standard, the very
corner-stones of our economic ami
financial welfare. Should these bc
shaken as they would be by ibo SUC
CCSS of our opponents, thc whole
fabric of our business confidence and
prosperity would fall into ruin. Your
defeat would be the advance of lice
trade for the anarchy of a debased
and unstable currency, for business
panic, depression and bard times and
for the reek of ?mr foreign policy.
"Your election and the triumph of
tho Republican pitty, which we be
lieve to bo as suie as the coining ol'
the day, will make certain thc steady
protection of our industries, sound
money and a vigorous intelligent for
eign policy. They will continue those
conditions of good government and
wise legislation, so essential lo the
prosperity and well being, which have
SIG HATS, DRESS
STCY BANDS, AS
HATS, DIRECT
JD INSPECT THE
XUKfMICHT.
blessed our country 111 ?noll abund
ance during thu past four year.
uThus announcing to you your
nomination as tho Republican candi
date for thc presidency wo have the
honor also to submit to you the de
claration of principles made by the
national convention, which we trust
will receive your approval. We can
assure you of the faithful and earn
est support of the Republican party
in every Slate and we beg you to be
lieve tli:it we discbarge here to-day
with feelings of the deepest personal
gratification, this honorable duty
imposed upon us by the convention."
M'KINI.KY IS ( IIKDKKI).
Tiie Senator's remarks were fro
[picutly interrupted with applause.
When Senator Lodge closed Presi
dent .McKinley mounted the stand
ami tin' vast concourse of people
cheered heartily. It was some mo
ments before thu I'resident contd pro
ceed. Ile bad a manuscript in his
bands but referred lo it only at in
tervals. When ho mentioned tho
"new people under our care" there
was a hearty burst of applause.
Mit. M'KINI.HY'S ACOKPTANCK.
"Senator Lodge and Gentlemen of
the Notification Committee:
"The message which you bring lo
me is one nf signal honor. It is also
i summons to duty. A single nomi
nal ion for the office of president by
i great party which in thirty-two
veers out of forty h" been tri nm-1
pliant at nal ional elections, is a dis
li notion which I gratefully eheerish.
To receive unanimous renomination I
ined to close out 01
ive marked them al
>'. t0 S cents. 10-CCIlt
Dimities, Figured ]
Embroidery and La
nost Given Av\
and Childre
ure to move them,
'or cash at a sacrifie
nean business, and i
while you have a g
ctfully,
by the same party is an expression
of regard and a pledge of continued
confidence for which it is difficult to
make adequate acknowledgment,
ll anything exceeds the honor of the
office <d" I'resilient of the United
Stales il is the responsibility which
attaches toil. I laving been invested
willi both, I do not under appraise
either. Any one who lias borne the
an.viol ios 'ind bulliens ol' the presi
dential office, especially in lime of
national trial, cannot, contemplate
assuming il a second lune without
profound I) real i/.'mg the severe cv
arl ii ms and the solemn obligations
which il imposes and this fooling is
accentuated byllu- momentous prob
lems which now press for settlement.
If my countrymen shall confirm I ho
action of the convention at our
national election ill November I shall,
craving divine guidance, undertake
the exalted l rusi, lo administer it for
the interest and honor of the coun
try and lin- Well-being ol' (be new
people who h ive become the objects
of our care. The declaration of
principles adopted by the conven
tion has my hearty approval. At
SOllie future date 1 will consider its
subjects in detail and will, by loller,
communicate to your chairman a
more formal acceptance of tho nomi
nation. On a like occasion four
yours ago, I said :
QUOTK8 IIIS Ol.? WOHD8.
" 'The party that Supplied by leg
islation tho vast revenues for the
conduct of our gr?aient war; that
promptly restored tho credit of tho
country at its close ; that from it?
abundant revenue repaid off a large
share of the debt incurred by tins
war, and that resumed specie pay
ments and placed mr paper cur
roney upon a sound and enduring
basis, can bo safely trusted to pro
serve both our credit and currency
With honor, stability and individu
ality. Tho American people hold
the financial honor of our govern
ment as sacred as our Hag and can
be relied on to guard it willi Ufo
same sleepless vigilance. They bold
its preservation above party fealty
and have often demonstrated that
party lies avail nothing when the
spotless credit of our country is
threatened.
" 'Tho (U)llar pai to tho farmer,
thc wage-earner and the pensioner
must continue forever equal in pur
chasing and debt-paying power
to the dollar paid lo any government
creditor.
"'Our industrial supremacy, our
productive capacity, our business
and commercial prosperity, our labor
and its rewinds, our national credit
and currency, our proud linaneial
honor and our splendid free citizen
ship, tho birthright of every Ameri
can, ar?' all involved in tho pending
campaign, and thus every homo in
the land is directly and intimately
connected with their proper settle
ment.
"'Our domestic, trade must be
won back and our idle working peo
ple employed in gainful occupations
nt American wages. Our home mar
ket must bo restored to its proud
rank of first in tho world, and our
foreign trade, so precipitately cut off
by adverso national legislation, re
opened on fair and equitable terms
for our surplus agricultural and
manufacturing products.
" 'Public confidence must bo re
ur entire stock of S
1 down to prices th
LAWNS at 7 cents.
Liawns, and all light
,ce al cost.
ray !
in's Oxford Tie
These and many ot
?e rather than carri
Lt will pay you to (
;ood stock to select
CARTER
stored and tho skill, energy and tho
capital of our country lind ample
employment at home. The govern
ment of the United Stales must raise
money enough to meet both its cur
rent expenses and increasing needs.
Its revenue should l?c so raised as to
protect tho material interests of mir
people with the slightest possible
drain upon their resources and main
taining that high standard of civiliza
tion which has distinguished our
country for more than a century of
its existence.
" 'The national credit, which bas
thus far fortunately resisted every
assault upon it, must and will bc !
upheld and strengthened. If snlli
oicnt revenues aro provided for tho
I support of the government there will
be no necessity for borrowing money
and increasing the public debt .'
K N lU.KKri CHAIN UliOK K N .
"Throe and one-half years of leg
islation and administration have
been concluded since these words
were spoken. Have those to whom
was confided the direction of tho
government kept their pledges ? Tho
record is made up. The people are
not unfamiliar with what has been
Accomplished, Tho gold standard
hus boon reaffirmed and strengthened.
Tho endless chain 1ms boen broken
and the drain upon our gold reserve
no longer frets us.
"The credit of the country bas
been advanced to thc highest place
among all nations. We arc refund
ing our bonded debt bearing three
and four and live per cent, a lower
rate than that of any other country
and already moro than $300,000,000
have been so funded with a gain to
the government of many millions of
dollars. Instead of 10 to 1, for
which our opponents contended four
years ago, legislation has been en- i
acted which, while utilizing all forms
of our money, secures ono fixed value
for every dollar, and that tho best
known to the civilized world. I
"A tariff which protects American i
labor and industry and provides I
ample revenues has been written I
in publie law. We have lower in- i
tcrcst and higher wages, more money '
and fewer mortgages. The world's 1
markets have been opened to Amen- <
can products, which go now where s
UK*}' have never gone before. !
"We have passed from a bond is- I
suing to a b >nd paying nation ;
from a nation of borrowers to a na
tion of lenders ; from a deficiency in
tho revenue to a surplus ; from fear
to confidence ; from on forced idle
ness to profitable employment. The
public failli has been upheld, public
order bas been maintained. We 1
have prosperity at homo and pres
tige abroad.
TH lt KAT li KN HW Hil.
1
"Unfortunately the throat of 1880
has just been renewed by tho allied |
parties without abatement or tnodifi- ,
cation. Thc gold bill has been' de
nounced and its repeal demanded.
The menace of 10 to 1, therefore, |
still bane; over ns with all its dire ,
consequences to credit and COU ll- ?
dence, to business and industry.
The enemies of sound currency arc
rallying their scattered forces. The
people must once more unite and
overcome the advocates of repudia
tion, anil must not relax thoir ener
gy until the battle fur public honor
and honest money shall again
triumph.
ummer Goods, and,
at will mako them
Ill-cent ?MADRAS at 7 cents.
Summer Goods at
s and Sandals
her goods we have
j them over until
3ome at once and
from.
& co.
"A Congress which will sustain
and, if need bc strengthen the pres
ent law, can prevent a financial
catastrophe which every lover of the
1 {('public is interested lo avert.
"Not satisfied with assaulting tho
currency and credit of the govern
ment, our political adversaries con
demn thc tariff law enacted nt tho
extra session of Congress in Ixit?,
known as the Dingley Act, passed in
obedience to tho will of tho pooplo
expressed at the election in thc pre
ceding November, a law which at
once stimulated our industries,
opened thc idle factories and minos
land gave to the laborer and to the
larmer l'air return for their toil and
in vest ment . Shall we go back to a
tariff which brings deficiency in our
revenues and destruction to our in
dustrial interprises? Faithful lo its
pledges in these internal affairs, how
has tho government discharged its
internal duties ?
QUOTHS PltOM IM.ATI'OUM!
"Our platform in 1880declared :
" 'The Hawaiian islands should be
controlled by the 1'nitcd States, and
no foreign power should ho permit
ted tn interfere with them.'
"This purpose haB been fully ac
complished by annexation, '?nd dele
gates from those beautiful islands
participated in tho convention for
which you speak to-day. In tho
great conference of nation? at Tho
Hague we reaffirmed before thc
world tile Monroe doctrine and our
adherence to it and- our determina
tion not to participate in tho compli
cations of Europe. We have hap
pily ended the European alliance in
Samoa, securing to ourselves one
of the most valuable harbors in tho
Pacific oc<-an, while the open door
in Cliina gives to UH fair and equal
DOinpotition in the vast trade of the
Orient. Some things have happened
which were not promised, nor oven
foreseen, ami our purposes in rela
tion to them must not bo left in
doubt. A just war has been waged
for humanity and with ' it bait come
new problems and responsibilities.
Spain has been ejected from the I
western hemisphere, and our flag
lloats over her former territory.
Oilba lias been liberated and our
"guarantee to lier people will bo
inorad ly executed. A bonof?oient
government has been prodided for
I'orto Rico.
"Thc Philippines are ours and
American authority must bo supremo
throughout tho archipelago. There
will be amnesty, broad and liberal,
jut no abatement of our rights, no
tbandonmont of our duty. There
must bo no scuttle policy. Wo will
fulfill in tho Philippines the obliga
tions imposed by tho triumphs of our
inns and by tho treaty of peace ; by
international law; by thc nation's
sonso of honor; and, more than all,
by thc rights, interests and condi
tions of the Pillipino people thom
iel ves.
"No outside, interference blocks
tho way to ponce and n atablo gov
ernment. The obstructionists aro
here, not elsewhere. They may
postpone, but they cannot defeat tho
realization of the high purpose of
this nation to restore order to the
island and to establish n just and
generous government, in which the
inhabitants shall have the largest
participation for which they aro
capable. Thc organized forces which
have been misled into rebellion have
been dispersed by our faithful sol
diers and sailors and the people of
tho island delivered from anarchy,
pillage and oppression, recognize
A met ?cnn sovereignty as tho symbol
and pledge of peace, justice, law,
religious freedom, education, the
security of lifo and property, and
Lhc welfare and prosperity of their
several communities, Wc reassert
thc early principal of tho liepubli
ran party, sustained by unbroken
judicial precedents, that the repro
ach tatt voa of tho people in Congress
assembled have full legislative power
over territory belonging to the
United States subject to thc funda
mental safeguards of liberty, justice
and personal rights, and are vested
With ample authority to act 'for tho
highest interests of our nat ion and
tho people entrused to its care'
"This doctrine, first proclaimed in
tho cause of freedom, will never be
used as a weapon for oppression. I
am glad to be assured by you that
what we have done in thc far East
has tho approval ol tho country.
"The sudden and terrible crisis in
China calla for the gravest consider
ation and you will not expect from
mc now any further expression than
to say that my best off or ts shall be
given to the immediate purpose of
protecting tho lives of our citizens
who are in peril, with the ultimate
object of thc protection and welfare
of China, tho safeguarding of all
our tronty r.ghts and thc mainte
nance of those principios of impe
rial intercourse to which thc civil
ized world is pledged.
"I cnn not conclude congratulating
my Countrymen upon tho strong
national sent iment which ti inls ex
pression in every part of our com
mon country and the increased re
spect with which tho Americanism
is ' greeted throughout tho world.
\ PM? \
book nt your tongue I If it's coated,
your stomach labnd, your liver out of
order. Ayer'? Pilla wilt clean your
tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make
your liver righi. HAGV to mke, easy
to operate. 25c. All druggists.
Winn "liiir nxMi.iu. ho or inv?n? ftTMM?UTUI**
brown ?, rich blrwk ? Then UM
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE tSM\$,?
I tO Qt. Of Or.yM.itl.JS H. P. M^L? C?. . W..W?, N. M.__
Wo have boon moving in untried
pallis, but our steps have boon guided
by honor and duty. There will bo
no turn ing aside, no wavering, no
retreat. No blow has been struok
except foi' liberty und humanity and
none will be. Wu will perform
without fear every national and in
ternational obligation. The Repub
lican parly wits dedicated to froo
dotn forty-four year? ago. It has
boen tho party of liberty and eman
cipation from that hour ; not of pro
fession, but of performance.
"It broke the shackles of four mil
lion slaves and made them free, and
to the parly of Lincoln has como an
other supreme opportunity which it
has bravely met in the liberation of
10,000,000 of thc human family from
tho yoke of imperialism.
"Ill is solution of great problems1,
in its performaces of its high duties,
il has had the support of all parties
in the past and confidently invokes
their co-operation in the futuro.
Permit mo to express, Mr. Chairman,
my most sincere appreciation of tho
complimentary terms in which you
convey the official notice of my
thanks lo tito mom ber? of tho com
mittee and to the great constituency
which they represent for this addi
tional evidence of their favor and
support."
KA I It ll A N KS Pl.Kl Hi KS INDIANA.
i Thc audience appreciated the deft
I turn which Mr. McKinley gave to
imperialism and cheered most heart
ily. When tho president olosod
there was loud calls for lianna, but
Colonel Uni nt, chairman of the lo
cal committee, introduced Senator
Fairbanks, of Indiana, who in a brief
address declared McKinley would
bc re-elected and pledged the voto
j of Indiana for McKinley. In re
sponse lo renewed calls for Hanna
lin- national chairman appeared and
said the Republican party of Ohio
and the United States expected
every man lo do his ?Inly and do it
earnestly, lianna caused a laugh
whoo he said tho 1 {('publican party
at Philadelphia had do i its duty
and ".McKinley had eoe '.hided to
I accept" and "thc party must do
the rest."
Mr. Hanna was followed by Chas.
ICmory Smith, postmaster gene
ral, who said il was evident that this
gathering was entirely satislied with
their candidate and their national
chairman. I lc went on to sa)' that
four years ago tho battle lincB wero
drawn as they were to-day. Ho
spoke sarcastically of the Kansas
City platform, charging it with being
tull of inconsistencies. Ho concluded
with a high tribute to President Mc
Kinley.
LOIHtU (il"IS KAItl'ASTIC.
Senator Lodge was recalled and
paid ti glowing tribute to President
McKinley, saying ho resented unjust
criticism of thc President during a
trying time when ho was doing Iiis
full duty. Ile referred lo Bryan as
thc nominee of "mixed tickets," and
said then: was no possibility of
I ?ryan forming a cabinet and named
tho leaden of thc several conven
tions as material from which selec
tions would have to bc made.
Col. Samuel Parker, ol Hawaii,
explained how politics was run in
the Pacific islands. Ile s?>: 1 he was
not a speaker, bul a rancher or a
cowboy. Ile supposed one reason
Roosevelt was popular was because
ho was a cow boy. This was thc
first mention of Roosevelt's name
and it. < rcated applause. He said
they had a Democratic party in
Hawaii, also an ice trust. They
were glad to bo admitted as a State.
Ile had some colleagues who wanted
to conic back hero whon the Senators
were elected. Ile said he had heard
a great deal about imperialism, but
when he came to Canton yesterday
ho was admitted without waiting.
Ho was a cabinet oflicor of tho late
QuCCI) Liliuokalani and one would
have lo wait about a week to see
her. He was glad that, kind of im
perialism was over in Hawaii. This
closed thc speech-making and thc
notification party went lo tho lunch
eon.
({nest?on Answered.
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fermentation nf undigested food, regu
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thc nervous ami organic action of the
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ol hoi aches. You only need a few doses
of 0 rCOtl's AttgllHt Flower, in liquid
fo. to make you satislied there is
nothing serious thc matter with you.
For sale hy .I. IL Darby, Druggist,
ll has boon demonstrated hy export
cm- . teat consumption can he prevented
hy tho early use Of One Minute Cough
(.'inc. This is Ilia favorite remedy for
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