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A.L COUNT* J)1BE0T0BI. .Judge aQpbond:..OIerk CJircnit Court nng Ol-rk Oour.ty Court ta&ariioh. .. .Ptm. Att'y exaudor.. Sheriff so ham Deputy Sheriff Bgerty.. ABHDHHor Lower Diitriot lidebottora " Upper " aUy?;v..V.-. , ii .. Survey01. nM^aoran.' .?? It WmrtoonTeneaon the leoond Mmwmfflm on ler?l Court bolaa two seniona in Clarksburg, oonTening in ?gain in Ootober. KB lid 7:80 p 5 a.m. 8und vor Meeting ? or. H-Bev. 8. O. Sunday 8er " 8:00 |.m. ?Hi _j Oktooh.?Bev. S^hooU I' w i -Episcopal Ohtoob?Dr. a F. Forrest, Prtybjter. edervioe on Sunday at 10:80 a a7:40 p. in. Holy Communion ?ated on tlie first Sunday each - . Bervire* every Wednesday "TOiOT?G. M. Thompsons Sunday Bervioeft?tiunday 0:80 A*m< Preaching, % and 7:80 p.m. Prayer "? 8j00 p.m., Dot lay"""T~p. sTE. E. Dovo ag,7:00 p.m., on Friday. iHE. Ohotoh?B. B. Pastor, Sunday Berviooe? vjuuw meeting, 9:80 a:m- Preaching 10:80 a-m, and 7 :OQ p.m. Bunday School, 2 p.m. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday. 8:00 p.m. Epworth - ?gue, Sunday, 0:00 p.m. s. Ziok^BiinBiOaoiioa? (OoL)?Bev. G. A. Madison's appointments.are Mas follows: Clarksburg, lstsnd8d 1:' Sabbath, at 11 a. m.. a?d 7:80 P. m.. I and7:80p. m. 4th Sabbath; adSab ' bath, .Sutton; 4th Sabbath, Gypsy A. M. E. OHDRCH?Bev. Wi H. Pride, pastor. Preaching at 11a. m, and thOOp.'m. Sunday School 8 p.m. : OtaSiAiaXiteriy Society feon v^ day8:00p.m. OlMsmeetingTues day 8:00 p. m. Prayer meeting day 8:00 p. m. Jrraj ?Wednesday 8:00 p. m. m If- you want to nave a goodj time on the Fourth, come to Clarksburg. 'There will be ^numerous interesting attractions and the &ay will not be allowed to grow monotonous. It promises . , to be Clarksburg's biggest day of the season, so far. It is managed by some of our most prominent citizens and its success is now " well assured. HjBaaa ' ? - v Teachers, do not forget the " special Peabody institute to be held here one week, commencing July 17. If you desire to en Y gage comfortable lodging, write to Prof. L. J.i Corbly, chairman of the local committee. here and , tie :will assist you. This promises to.be <>Be the most interesting tltuteswe have had here in many years. Thb powers of darkness are : ? i again generating the black vapors v that are fast hiding the sunlight sftpf our American glory. Tlie mag niflcent record of the greatest na ^ tion on earth is to be once more marred by the fiendish designs of a. political party, whose record v? for treason to out institutions 5 j-v : stands out in bold relief to stig J matize them as the enemies of oil ?': those policies and potentialities % of civilization that have made us free, independent and mighty as a nation. Is it possible that we 1 must live again the days of '57 when the Democratic party, con spicuous in history for its blund ers and ignorance, brought our blessed land to the verge of bank Orash ! Crash 1 And e sound is reverberated ftom to ocean as bank after bank quit. The big Oarl Coal Works, of Carlton, 0., has gone to smash. Only a part of this week's rec ord!' Every day the list grows larger. It now records the down fall of hundreds of similar con cerns. If any man,on the 8th of last No vember, had predicted that the in seven month'?, be forced to sell his wool at 16 and 16 cento cash, > it, he would have been put down as a fopL "If any one had predicted on the 8th of last November, when (Jrover Cleveland was elected in the actual, value of stocks and bonds sold on the New York ?t<tfk ezphange of nearly one billion dollars he would hiavei been deemed a madman. "If any one had predicted that within seven months after the election day and the return of a Democratic House, Senate and President to power for the first time since 1856, a panic would ensue which would exceed in the aggregate of losses the world-fa mous panic of 1867, when the same party obtained absolute con trol of the Government for the last time until 1892, the proph ecy would probably have excited 'derision." But, sad as it is to say it, these three calamities have come upon the! American people. The Telegram, when seven months ago it announced the re sult of the election, advised all Republicans to be of good cheer. It said "The Republican party will live because it upholds prin ciples that are immortal. Ii will continue to be the party of progress, protection and ^educa tion." It will return to power in '96 and the people, familiar with its past, its aims and its purposes; will again have confi dence in its principles. It will lead, us as it did in 1857, from darkness to light?from a great need to a towering hope. Not even the most avowed enemies of Democracy looked for such a sudden and sweeping taking away of our commercial pros perity. The appalling cost to this country of Democratic success was not comprehended and cannot yet be estimated. One Billion and a Half! Such a loss can hardly be conceived by the individual, because, the fig ures are so farbeyond any person al experience or single commer ?cial transaction. It exceeds the entire sum of actual money in the United States?gold, silver and paper, national bank notes and treasury notes! In this fact lies the secret of the colossal losses, the financial stringency and the daily long list of commercial and banking fail ures. It is want of confidence. About 93 per cent, of all the business of the country is trans acted on credit and about 7 per cent, only on the basis of cash. When credit is impaired; when confidence is lacking, more than nine-tenths of all the business in hand is affected. That is the situ ation to-day. Four years will educate the people, but 0, my countrymen, at what a fearful cost! Resolutions of Respect. At a special meeting of the Sabbath School Board at Syca more Dale, Harrison county, W. Va., held June 25th, 1893, in memory of our teacher, friend and neighbor, Mrs. Catharine L. Waters, the following resolutions were adopted. Whereas: God in his infinite wisdom has called our beloved sister and co-worker, Catharine L. Waters, from labor to reward; and Whereas: In her death the community has lost a kind and consistent member, the Sunday school an earnest worker and de voted friend and the home a dutiful wife and loving mother; and Whereas: We believe our Heavenly Father too wise to err sence. li that wl] patientlj ... tion of bis J ' Resolved, That we dear brother. the^V band, and to eai children, ourhe and pray that 1 temper the stori WmM Rev. E. D. W. $500 Reward ! WE will nay the above Ireward'for owe ofl/iver Complaint Dvsp< Sick Headache, Indigestion, Com tation or Costlveness we cannot with Weat'sVegetableLiverr" the direction* are striotly oomj cents. ; Beware of oounterfeii tatlons. .The genuine : only by the Jofin 0. West > Chicago, 111. For sale by Ool Bn*., druggists. Clarksburg,' ?OBT For the b&t $mM I tr of leather. Oak Harness, Oalf, In nnd Upper, mil on I ffl fT * II*. { H ELIZABETH Met Bridgeport, W.Va. Can fill all orders within 40 days. 25. THE WESTON RACES. ~ West tore There never has been a ?eet ing on any fair ground .1 Virginia which attracts interest than is being n in the one to take plac_ 4th of July. 1898. at West dications are that there 1 an immense crowd of people sent. The program is a ceptionaily good one, as fo! BAKES. MIXED BA0E-1J miles. |? walk firit hall, trot oivpace seooud and run thud half. ?......Pnrst, v.v. KUNNING BAOE?i mile and repeat Purse $75. 850 to first horse, 915 *" aeoond horse and 910 to third ho SWEEPSTAKES TBOT-Pur $106 to winner, $35 to seoond.ho $15 to third horse. SWEEPSTAKES PA Purse $50. First horse W and third 85. BUNKING BAOE-Mile u?u. $150. $100 to first horse, $85 to hw. horse and $15 to third horse. 1 v FOUR MINUTE TBOT-Pnrse $50. 180 to first liorse, $15 to seooud'. horse and $5 to third horse. All horses that havo never trotted in less than four minutes in publio are eligible to this race. SCBUB BAOE?$7.50 to first horse, $5 to seoond and $2.50 to third horse. All entries for races exoept lor the mixed and scrub race will be olosed July 2nd. All raoes under National - Trotting Association Bules and American Bun ning Association Bules. In the event of bad weather any or all raoes may be declared off. No entranoe fee in an; of the raoes. Pobtxb Arnold, Stokis Tusbtill, President - Secretary. There will be a Tournament of 25 Gentlemen who will partici pate. The aerial wonder, Senora Avene Mazelini, will make her blood-curdling leap of 50- feet from the top of the grand stand to the bed of the track, without any appliance to check her fall. A match game of base ball, a greased pole, greased nog, foot races, barrel races, good music and many cither attractions will entertain you. There are already a great many horses on the grounds to ensure good race?, and a gala day to be long remem bered. Trains will run to the grounds every 15 minutes. on I I JHjH troduced into the relchstag an aotl socisllst bill 10 drastic that the assem bly would not pawit sad ?n than ;;."j' * ''O'*'' ' | P' consT voir xulesuuuo, chancellor CA.FRIVl'5 PHOBABLE SUCCESSOR. mhrme (gt&Mfi: fore' dissolved. In the new reichatag he brought in another bill, more strin gent than the first, and, being con fronted with a strong opposition, pre vailed upon Prlnoe Bismarck to advlso a fresh dissolution; bat the late Em peror Frederick, who was crown prlnoe regent at thp time, refused to allow this, and fho bill had to bo passed with several mitigating amendments. As soon as it had become law the minor state of siege was proclaimed in Ber lin, and suspected socialists of all "'?ises wore expelled from the capital It was during Count von Eulenburg's administration that the anti-Semitic movement began, and the minis tor of .Wt raui tu w ItUttli UU BWp WHS pot to anti-Semitic . meetings, and when mobs of Jow baiters brolce up meetings of the liberal party the police remained inactive. I Count yon Eulenburg loft office In 1881, after a very curious parliamen tary Inoldent. Rumor said that he was too Independent to please Prince Bis marck, and one day the chancellor sub jected him to an extraordinary snub. Count von Eulenburg was speaking in tho Prussian house of lords on a bill that had been sent up from tho lower chamber when an official of the minis try of commcrce, who was seated by his side, rose and read a letter from Prince Bismarck In which vlows di ametrically opposed to those of Count von Eulenburg were expressed. The minister of tho interior at onco drove to the emperor's palace and tendored his resignation, which was accepted. Some years afterward he made his peace with Prlnco Bismarck and waa appointed presldentof the government of Besse-Kossau, at Cassol. a post which I he had retained until last year. - wuuug - in.TrTn.VM-^l Prince Bismarck saw In Count von Eu lenburg a dangerous rival; others were of opinion that the chanoellor would not have ventured to act so cavalicrly toward a statesman of really powerful caliber. When Horr Ernest Ludwlg Ilcrrfurth resigned the position of Prussian min ister of the interior in August last Count von fiulenburg was appointed to succeed him. ? SCIENTIFIC OBSERVATIONS, ' A jelly fish of ten pounds when dried weighs about ten grains. Tax occupants of a balloon a mile high oommand a radius of ninety-six Trie bones and muscles of the human body are capable of over one thousand two hundred different movements. Peof. Simmaxds, ' of Hamburg, has proved that flies can infect eatables, and especially sauces, with cholera germs. ? The Imperial health officcr of Berlin says that the juice of both the orange | and the lemon is fatal- to the cholera bacillus In a few hours. The shark manifests a distinct lik ing for certain races, and will eat an Aslatlo in preference to a negro, and a European rather than either. Is ordinary burns and scalds the only remedy required is to thoroughly exendo the air from the Injured part. Cotton batting will do this more ef fectually. OPEN TO BOTH SEXES. gWCollegiate, Normal, Business, Telegraphy, Music and Art De partments. n O ~T~ 1 ~ ?! A Competent teachers,Health D OCnOOlSin UTlfi ful Location,Cheaper rates \J 1A1 vilO. thanany other School of equal rank. SUPERIOR ADVANTAGES TO TEACHERS. Do not lose the first week, begin with AIIRIIOT Of! IQQO the classes. Fall term opens AUUUul wUj 10 JJ Address President: REV.THEO.L. GARDNER, A. M., 33-tf ^ SALEM, WEST VA. PERFECTED. The Dovelail hive, as shown above, all complete, ready for the bees $1.50. 5 styles of hives manufactured ar.d kept in stock. Send for Cata logue of everything needed in Apiaria to E. Jr SHAY, Independence, P?e*ton ? ? County, Wcm Yo.' , ? I Refrigerate l:<> ? ?JJj Because everybody now sees the We are talking about. ...... ?888 5*ft ? .<'< firtSi fcaeu vw -iPv .??. lama^dK^fyiSBSOmm And in" that connection we claim, and can prove,'that i BEST POLICY, consistent with safe insurance, issued, b mate company. The National Life Maturity Insurant Washington, D.C., gives you Plain Life; Renewable Term, Endowment-or policies at the LOWEST SAFE price and you have Gen. Fire, Life a ceident Insurance. ? p i i nm i 118 Pike St., Clarksburg, - ?: ! MAIN STREET, CLARKSBURG, W. VA. DEALER IN Medicines and Chemicals. WE HAVE BUT OWE FLAW, we aim to; give GOOD VALUE and proper service to, every customer all the time. '? ? - VICTOR BICYCLES First in Tires, First in Improvement j First in the Heartsof the Cycling Pubi ii ihw Any one desiring a strictly higli grade Bicycle cai make a better investment. Catalogue and general spe< tions furnished free. CEO. L. DUNCAN, Ag't., Clarksburg, - - West'