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V ’t l OC* *r i til? price o.' f S 1 K will J • Th^* & / .. ;n\vill be p e> «Cents. * ~ ?y" J The REGISTER J 2 will be delivered (Sun- ^ # day excepted) by car- 0 *j riers, in the city, for J £ Ten Cents a week. S 4 Daily and Sunday Fit- # \ teen Cents a week. J OT.35; WHEELING, W. VA„ SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1896. NO. 9::. v*»> o: Organized Labor, at | . Paul, Minnesota, Mr Bryan with a Silver :id Ask Him to Uso It in a Bill Providing for the Coinage of Silver—Mr. Bry . Lingly Makes the Promise. Appropriate Gift—An* : usy Day of Hard Work Ea'husiaatic Receptions iu t.i aud Minnesota — Three Meetings at St. Paul—Th. : Auditorium Packed to the with Two Ihousand More o Than It was Built to Ao amiodate. y October 10.—The B .1 y x h 1 this city a few ro ,-t-v n (.’dock vnd were r Ryan hotel for OH soldiers were included In t that gi ed them and a> large ero ' ., n me -lag ■ A evening was ; , ) . >.. \ a. Abie standing ; bor frsttiza ;Jns. r. v. i a -liver pen and an :. xpr ing the hope that i l-i signing the o.;t ... hill th.U th y fcopi l to * p ' .nz.ii in*-Aii iuui.iuuj • :n • wh-ld in the Market tj i M i’s Opera House, where v an riurn a ■ candidate was d s. L. P; r< . of this city. ' w % ■ wj-’r a great roar of. ;i:- .>- well receiv in’ -. rib r than stay and hear a • >« Vu i iaai Mr. Bryan said: ' •. C 'rrma, L.td’ and Genii te n: v s me ; gr- r: 1 al of pleasure fo I >r.ni:t» I to defe id our cans in the rt • :ic of an audience in thi-= gn at • • ai: i ij ora a«Ur« .-sing myself to V ' suture shall be af o laboring tn> n, be a h I b. >ve that the la - mm ry—aye, mcr * Ji ti of ail this d in the r v oration ' tvor the fr- *> cc-itKige of . ’ lh> who toil, hi cause, iny ■ i i .cai p uiotfopl v teacht-s ;1 '<? Cos© who ere.:ia it: its way afterward'.- to <m ftseif rests uj »n the pe pie, aad it is only n- .ss of the people up ' a; we ext' ct any < vlit:’ .tier!. There can he •a v ro a few in a ' 1 * i in y em use an 1 ’ at amount <> " try s i- nance. ■i lent fr prop- ! 11 ‘ • will be co rail : n '• MS. !ve* i- Ml : v 10 p.i. thcir ‘i u gov rnmenr ! : : .v ill b» si rr.-t silting ' x tribute from protected fri in 've;nmenr 3 will be no he govern they Live i the gov fli; when mistered ! •A -.i be no orp. vhica a - > .-’ester authority u i -ti- power c l :h ai: wh n $ ,nt fundamental ; ... t ia t!it> Declare ion of l: ; . ail men are created * cjn . t..at1 are endowed with ini! i. and that g >\ .it'-- powers fi tu tt.e principles are s.pplh l, will be wha it oit^ir. 11 i:d that there are > a govern men ; that t . mses. and. try gov rnment that wt> ■t. it is against the ad we shall not tr, -p to eradicate n l b< . i a s • t -v g.' shall s'n hr. , tv ,. aspl to e r : 'c money the paramount: .i in pa :-u. and. ye cur - *'*re ro; sot -fled to meet this sly. They hate never been i ei: he money qu stion. • of be gold standard never : a fight in r.H their lives, • hey den’L I wiil ■* explains “That n .ik>': ci wards u ience of the ad vo t'd man tells him sjiui. bu. it is the i'. ■- of the geld h;ui i • n w 111i g to fight an "*■ t. re..!lily f.<!i . why did not re tit..: the geld standard was 1 •' ihe \tneric n people ■a latain it. because it is go* 1? :io iey say it? They did not u-e to hav? declared so would contradict the testimony of - of people of every country ver had It. . •hr- Republican party is going to try to .■lire bimetallism? The Republican p’:> >ria was written by men who do no- wan: bimetallism. The Republican platform was written by men who ba - ve that this nation must have whether ; lik s it or not. whatever financial sys em -eign creditors insist on our hav ing. Therefore. I say that when they g,i f h declaring hat they want inter nan-'i' '' bimetallism, the.' ate niere\^ hald.ug hat out as a m:*«k behind • which they may work to fasten the go.a standard permanently upon the Amer ican people. . , . No party in the history o? this nation h i- v»*r declared that the gold stain '"d u - a goo i thins. If you say that the .lied National Democrats have de ! that the gold standard is a good • 1 tell you that that is not a na : party, because no national party minattd one ticket for th' ex purpose of electing another ticket. \ I’ional party was ever organized adjunc pf another party already \i<t-noe. No national party ever vied to have its birthday and its at 'h same \nc. my it evidence tbnt I tin lg •i , i- ns; that tha advocates of the gold m lard no' °r fought an onen fight is on 1 ir the fact that the m m who as» iinled at Indianapolis wrote a plat i rni which wos entirely different trom platform which the minority of the R. rocrats at Chicago tried to secure fhf> tdopf.on of in the Chicago conven tion. , . . \ Chicago the minority wanted in ternational bimetallism and were afraid that free coinage would prevent it. But v.-ufn hat minority go: into a conven-. d by Itself, it w vs so busy that tt for i t all abotit international bimetallism. \rd th n to further brand it as nothing 'U a fraud and a deception, those who ■vi'oate that independ nt D-mccratic k- employ speakers who openly tell \ ~.u they are going to vote fer the Re publican candidate an l advise you to do so. Th se things all prove that our • mnents are not making a square, op a fight. They say they a-e advo o.ues of honest money: I tell you that b n sty is not a characteristic that ap p rs occasionally and disappears in a p • :’s character. A man who is honest n thing is apt to be honest in other •hir Bur these men who prat? about . st money are the ones who deal cv. sflv with the American p> iple. min 1 me of Peter Cartwright. I ; was. Some one asked his wheth . was s,nc:iflai or not. He sail: •*Yes. in spots.*' These people.-eem to be ’ : in spots. And they want you to : : ->•.•- ’hat men who put up one ticket, v. ■ t y -xpect to vote another: men v : «ivis- you to vote for a ticket that expect to vote for: men who t :!k ;h ut sound mor.py without telling >mj wha: • is: men who prate about an dcl’ar and then worship the most d:- d^n s: dollar In the country to-day— • ’ .r ’ dollar—they want you to believe , • ; y are "he only people who can ! r ’•-• : * be entirely unselfish and iblishment of a finan cial policy. d nrh. my friends, does not deal In r -. guous phr.ses; truth does not hide i words with a double meaning. •i wl: n you find men who. instead of • : dug for the gold standard, talk about s und money, you find men who think ■ha: they can make you think what they ’ r.’t think themselves. We are willing • me : any open enemy: we are willing i :.r >• nt onr cause and trust to the coned nee and the judgment of the peo Mr. Bryan in answer -o a question ex ptt • • 1 at s^me length how silver would into circulation an ! how others than n r*- owners would benefit by free sil % r ru'naiti1, and continued: Mv friends, there are Just two great Manciples which we apply to the ques tion. and 'hey are sufficient to solve it. You etc not understand a question until vou g-asp the principles which control j, If you see a boy throwing a s'one inn the a r. and see the stone falling, jn don't understand the law of gravi tc >n. vou may guess all your life as to t... reason why that stone comes to the ground. But when you understand tha , ition .ell things like that are . ■ ;n. 1. Vnd so with the money •• ion. You grope in the dark for an un ii you find the principles which un |erj . the qu< stion. and when you un •stand them. then, ray friends, the v ie’ subject is clear to you. And here is he first principle: That when the of mon-T does not Increase as ■;y as the demand for money, then •he value of each dollar rises. T! a is a proposition tha* is true. It did rock and upon that proposition vou can build a system. We apply the Vv of supply and demand to money. \Y ties-rov half the crop of wheat • 1 >Q will . «* ■' ; \Y -av :h man who has wheat orofi s " rise, and wo say that he is glad hat wheat wont up. We apply that :a mor.y. We say. destroy half the v and the value of the other aa.f ’ r!s-, and that the man who owns :a nov on conrrnc s payable in dol wI! 1 profit by th? rise. And we . that he will b. glad that money Up. We say that hostile legisla 1 ’ - Increas'd the demand for gold <1 the purchasing power of an : We - V. rii.r lt.»s :' 1 8 vs lessened the demand for red the uric»of sih -1 ui c . ur» d by gold, and we be v ha: : u can undo by law what ’1 : d d by 1 •,w; that if you drove the • par • legislation, that you can m a- ’her again by friendly 1 - lation. : • n why we invoke the law • 'i' you •. by did you invoke ihe ‘ w ;n is?;:. You say that commerce •tent. Why did not you let • act then? Why did you come "id g-- a law liaised In the night and a dark to do what commerce could not da? t u the mints; create a demand for :!' r. and that new demand, acting v: i cl-■ demand now existing, will tat- the prict of silver; and if that de m it: I is great enough, as we believe it w 1 be. to absorb every ounce of silver ;>n - :xt€d at our mints, then, my ri> n.ls. the opening of the mints of this n; ion alone will restore the parity of gold and silver at 16 to 1. rnd make a -diver dollar equal to a gold dollar, melted or coined everywhere in the world. -p.'* hts at the Martin and Mar k halls were along the same lines as •;v -porch ? ha: preceded it. but much ;\r. the mflln Auditorium speech L ving lasted three-quarters of an hour. A u.6. crowd stood in the rain at Rice Park until the ,s\ "Meetings wore over, hoping to Ik \ "’ht of the candi date, but N physician would not alio- .pose himself to tlrt) wc-ath rS* -i had a hlird clay and no • /'oe taken, even though l he ,d condition now. j <$> .* will be a rest day. and also On Monday night Mr. Bryan ^ .K to a big meeting in the Expo biulding and probably also to , e meetings in the Flour City. MR. BRYAN IN DAKOTA. FARGO. X. D.. October 10.—W. J. Bryan encountered a few of the vicissitudes and | inconveniences incident to making a cam ! paign in the Northwest, where railroad I facilities are not what they are “Down S Hast.” He arrived In Aberdeen late last ! night on board th< special ear Tdler, and j left Aberdeen early in tin* morning, leav ! ing a commodious and comfortable for I the common, every-day or evory-night | sleeper which went ovt r road bed not con i duslve to rest or comfort even of a candl 1 date of Mr. Bryan’s sleeping qualities. There was a bad mix up at Aberdeen ow ing to somebody*s mismanagement. The train was over two hours late when it J reached there and then It was found that ; there were no switch tracks allowing the transfer of the special car from the tracks 1 of the Chicago & Northwestern, o\or ! which the party arrived, to those of the Great Northern, which road ha.l to be taken in order to allow the party to ge£ to Fargo. There was telegraphing and hur . ried consultations and ih>* result of it all was that at 1 o’clock a special train was taken from Aberdeen to this city. On the train were Senator Ro.un and members of the local committee to escort Bryan. The candidate look the car of the Fargo committee while his own private coach went on to St. 1’aul under charge of John J \v. Tomlinson, of Alabama. Mr. Bryan's ! protector from crowds and over-zealous | supporters. it was only o o oiock wticu was up again to address a nuumber of early rising enthusiasts in bear sktn coats. Thon he went back to bed and slept until S o'clock, when Fargo was reached. Mr. Bryan had breakfast hero with Senator Roach and the reception committee at the Metropole. At hul l ho went to the base ball park and delivered an address half an hour long. At the base ball grounds a great crowd 1 had obtained admission ;o the enclosure. Ou the platform placed in a conspicuous j place was the somewhat historic eagle; i belonging to the more historic Brn! Reeves, who, it will be remembered, made a canvass for Congress, mounted cn a white horse. wrapped in the Am 1 erican flag and with a stuffed eagle perched on his shoulder. Mr. Bryan I was received with as much enthusiasm i as could be expected on a day so chilly. He wa3 introduced by Hon. J. H. Mil j kr. president of the city bank, and spoke at some length, receiving great applause when he made a t lling point. At Breekenridge, Mr. Bryan spclte briery from toe rea~ pi a form oi bis car to a good sized crowd. He was in troduce by F. C. Gibbs as the next president of th United States. ST. PAUL. Minn., October 10.—A throe minute stop was made at II rman and Mr. Bryan discussed the Hfty-ecnt dollar prop osition ns he ha.; discussed it often before, ; along the same line that the opening of I the mints would create a «emand for sll ! ver, which would place the silver dollar on an equality with the gold dollar any where In the world. In conclusion he claimed that the main tenance of the gold standard meant a continuance of hard times. At Morris. Minn., the largest and most enthusiastic crowd was found since Far 1 go was left behind. Mr. Bryan spoke to the people a few minutes from the rear platform of th* car. He dented the claim of the Republicans that commerce deter mined the financial policy of this country rather than legislation. A short stop was made at Benson and Mr. Bryan spoke a few minutes, lie told the people that the dollar had been get 1 ting larger and larger all the time and j has been buying more and more of their farm products. It was a crowd of farmers that received ! Mr. Bryan from one end of the trip to the | other and at no place were they more on | thuslastlc than at Wilmar. Mr. Bryan ! told them that the American people had ' always been equal to any emergency and ' that a crisis had hoi-n reached in the hls I tory of the country. Ho said that for I years the Republicans had been working i to maintain a gold standard under cov r. j openly advocating bimetallism. The nominee told the people of Litch 1 field, where a crowd of several hundred 1 people had gathered, that :he money ques 1 tlon was not too deep for the American people, lie cited from James O. Blaine ■ to support his theory of free coinage. At Waverly. whl -h was reached late ! this afternoon, prominetnly displayed was j ,i crude banner marked “Our sons will | answer Yale November 3.” Mr. Bryan spoke briefly, confining him | self mainly to an explanation of the real meaning of free coinage and the distorted meanings put upon the term by the gold I people. ■ The last stop of the day before Minne | a polls was reached was at Delano, where Mr. Bryan spoke to a crowd of several hundred from the rear platform. He did i not discuss the money question directly but told his hearers that one of the vital points in the Issue of the campaign was one of sympathy for the struggling masses. When they came to make up their mind which way to vote, their sym- , pat hies would determine their decision. If they sympathized with the masses of the people they would vote for bimetal lism but if their sympathies were with the capitalistic classes they would vote for the gold standard. pit I Bill) THE HONORS. Joint Debate Between Hon, J. W. St.Clair and /. T. Vinson Special to the Register. Huntington. W. Va., October 10.—C,cn. T \y. St. Clair, silver Democrat, and Col. F T Vinson, gold bug. held a joint discussion in the Opera House here to night before a large audience. The de base closed with divided honors. Both support the State Democratic ticket. SECOND ROBBER 1 APTCRED. The Serond of the Murderers Overtaken Bv »» Posse In lows. Wells. Minn.. October 10—A tele gram received here states that the sec cn1 Slulburne robber tnd murder r has been Aptured by a Winnebago county posse at Thompson. Ia. This man got iiis dinner yesterday at a farm house uear Emmons, Minn. i It Occupied the Attention of Europe During the Past Week. The Feature Toward Which London Gossip Turned was the Banquet to Representatives of Old French Royalty—An Attack Upon a Papal Bull. (Copyrighted. 1S96, Associated Press.) London, October 10.—The attention of Europe inav be said to have been con centrated during the week upon the visit of the Czar and Czarina to France, and Ihe enthusiastic reception accorded them in the French capital. In this connection the feature which caused the greatest amount of gossip was the luncheon given by Che Czar on Wednes day at the Russian embassy to the rep resentatives; of the French royal family. It is true th°.<t M. Hanotaux, the French, minister for foreign affairs, Gen. de Boisdeffre, ouief of the general staff, and Admiral Gervais. attached to the person of the empress during her stay in France, were present. But the other guests included the Due d’Anraul. the Due and Duchess de Charier, the Duch ess de Magenta, the Duchess de Luynes, the Duchess de Rohan, the I)uc de Dude aville, the Due de la Rochefoucault, the Duchess de Uzes, and tne Princess Ma thilde BBonaparce, willow of the Prince de San Donatio and aunt, of Prince Na poleon Victor Bonaparte, head of the Bonaparte family. The presence of the Princess Mathilde alone saved the party from being an Orleanist demonstration. The Duchess de Luynes presented the Czarina with a bouquet from the Due d'Orleans. the pretender of the throne of France, and her majesty sent him her warmest congratulations. The whole affair was most cleverly managed, and even the fiercest radicals have not pro tested :■ gainst it. All sorts of interpretations are being placed upon tine incident but the face remains.that from the hour he landed at Cherbourg the Czar behaved in a most conservative and diplomatic manner, pleasing almost everybody while offend ing but a very few people. The Czar, previous tc leaving Balmoral Castle after his visit to Queen Victoria, gave $5,000 for distribution among the servants, and he left a packing case full of the most expensive jewelry, bracelets, rings, pins, etc., to be present ed to all above the rank of servants. A sensation was caused at the Church Congress at Shrewsbury during the week by a fierce attack made upon the pepe 3 bull referring to the Anglican orders by the archbishops of Cork, Lord Halifax, the Bishop of Salisbury, and others. T ie bull was described as a misuse >y the pope of the fairest chance man ever had since the sixteentn century for pro mo'kie unitv. and the Bishop of Salts burv suggested that the bull “sets us free to do the work which lies nearest without so much regard consequences. We are free to foUow the path opened to us by Divine Prov Hence and create an independent woild-wide communion.” The bishop suggests tnat the first step for the Angl.cans to tak is to create a union of policy with the Presbyterians. Ove r a thousand member? of the Bap •\st Union in congress at Bristol during the week held spirited meetings and WPre most cordially treated by all de n jmina'.ions, including a town recep tion bv the mayor, etc. A meeting of the International Sub marine Telegraph Company during the WCek with I^ord Selborne in the chair, it was decided to inaugurate a submarine telegraph company memorial througn out .;he civil world in order to honor three men. Cyrus W. Field, who first conceived; Sir John Pender, who risked bls'oapital, and Sir James Anderson, who captained' the Great EasDrn Lord Sel borne announced that the scheme had received the sanction and encourage ment cf the Queen. The form of tho memorial was not decided upon, but will be a scholorship and a home for engineers. The late sir jotvn .viuiais, prcsmuu of the Royal Academy, lift a fortune of $1,250,000.' The success of the Norwich Musical Festival has been completed. Mac Keime’s “Rose of Sharon drew forth enthusiastic plaudits ’rent 'he Prince of Wales, th Princess Louise and the Duchess of York, who were present in private. The officials of Scotland Yard believe that th? extradition of P. J. Tynan, the alleged dynamiter, from France, will > pend solely upon whether France de ?ires most to*conciliate the United States or (Treat Britain. I: is also explained at Scotland Yard that the failure to obtain /his extradition of Kearney and Haines was because, although it is a crime in Belgium to poss'ss explosives, it is no crime in that country to possess materia! •f -r the manufacture of explosives, which are regarded in the same light as explo sives. For this reason ‘he authorities nr^ bending every effort, to ascertain if Ivory purchased glycerine or acids. The United States State Department has ask ed Consul General Collins to report on Ivory’s case. The a >; "ir-'niem of lord Bagot a* one nf :he lords in waiting has ang red the Tory peers. He was appointed with out consulting th® Marquis of Salisbury in order to please the Princess Louise. Lord Pr.got was aide-de-camp to her husband, flu Marquis of Lome, when the latter was governor-general of Can ada. Mrs. Dc Navarro, “Our Mary Ander son.’’ and her infant son are progressing v rv favorably. It is whisper d that she adores the little nii’e and seems to vie hn: pier than she has been for many year.-. Sir Henry Irving intends to produce: at no distant day. a cne act play by George Bernard Shaw, entitled. "The Man of Des'lny." the man being Napo leon. Th® portrait drawn of the great Corsican is not in any sen*’ similar to S-ini-u's heTO in “Madame Sants Gene,” nd it i* to be expected tha- Irving will find enough in the Napoleonic traditions to completely equip two dissimilar he roes. Olga NV.hersole saled for New York t d-d ay on the American liner St. Paul. Miss Nethersole will produce three new plays during; .her American tour. Jos eph Hatton’s “When Greek Me?t Greek.” a play by M. Porte de Riche, of Paris, and an adaption from the Italian, en titled "The Wife of Scarli.” THE CZAR AT DARMSTADT. The Royal Visitors YVnrp Received By the ('7nrinn'fl Brother and the Ducal Fault ily. (Copyrighted. 1S%. Associated Press.) Darmstadt, Oc:ober 10.—The imperial Russian triin, with the Czar and Czarina and their 'mmediate suites, arrived here at 9 o’clock this morning. Their majes I ties were met by the ducal family of HtS'e, headed by Grand Duke Ernest, of Hesse, brother of the Czarina. The imperial couple were driven to the new palace, amid groat enthus.asm, through the gayly decorated streets. When their majesties reached the French, frontier station of Pagny-sur Moseile, the prefect of the department was present to do homage to the Russian travelers upon the part of French Lor raine and Nancy, where, the prefect re called, took place the memorable inter i view between the late President Carnot and the Grand Duke Constantine. The railroad station was brilliantly illumin ated and decorated with French and Russian flags, etc. Crossing into Ger i man territory, a couple of German en gines were attached to the imperial! train 1 and the journey to Darmstadt was re sumed. The Czar looked somewhat fa tigued on his arrival here, but he was in good spirits anti appeared pleasant with j his visitors. The Czarina was as smil i ingiy happy as ever, and received the greetings of her relatives with tears m her eyes. NO TK1TH IX IT. Tom. L. Johnson Not Thinking of Soiling HI* Stool Works—Know* of So One M ho Thinks of Buying. , Cleveland, October 10.—Hon. Tom L. Johnson denies absolutely that negotia tions are on foot to sell the Johnson steel works, at Lorain, to John D. Rockefeller or anybody else. , i “The truth is,” said Mr. Johnson, “there is nothing whatever in these stories that have been afloat and pub lished broadcast that Mr. Rockefeller is figuring on buying our plant at I>o rain. The matter has not even been thought of remotely. Certainly we kav$ not been thinking of selling to Mr. Rockefeller or anybody else, nor have j we been approached with a proposition to buv, by any one at all, directly or in dire' y. So far as I know, Mr. Rocke feller has not given a thought to the i subject. How the rumors took risp. I i certainly do not know." 1 THE GERMANS Naturally Take Great Interest in tiie Poings of the Czar and the French. Some of the Comments. (Copyrighted. lf'W, Associated Press.) BERLIN. October lu.—The reception of the Czar in France during the past week has engrossed public attention in Ger many to the exclusion of everything else. The views expressed on the subject differ greatly. The official press has been very cautious, but this was not the case with the inde pendent press. The Tageblatt says: "If the Zweibund pursues the aim of the revanche of the patriots of the Parisian boulevards it may easily happen that France will have to decorate other stat ues on the Place de la Concorde with mourning symbols." The Centrist Volks Zeitung remarks: "Russia, in the double game she is play ing between France and Germany, is per petuating a gigantic fraud." The Cologne Gazette says: "It is evident that the mass of French men nurse Russian friendship only in the hope that Russia will help them win Al sace-Laraine.” A resident diplomat, representing one or the Dreibund powers, in conversation with the correspondent of the Associated Press, dwelt upon tin- fact that tHe Czar carefully avoided using the word “alli ance.” But it is thought, nevertheless, that Rus sia and France will henceforth, at least for a time, go together, lie added that the element of Insecurity was in the fact that aims of the Zweibund were studious ly avoided and concealed. If they wore purely defensive, he concluded, why should Europe 1)0 kept in the dark? Emperor William has been kept fully Informed of the Czar's doings and say ings by special couriers to Hubertstock and lie is reported to have said to Prince Hohenlohe: “I have the fullest confidence in the Czar.” This confidence, however. Is not shared in official- circles. The conciliation of Emperor William and his brother. Prince Henry of Prussia. Is now effected. Th<> Prince will r.-stde during the coming winter at the royal cas tle of Kiel. Miss Amy Cowford Heacock. of Reading. Pa., It is announced, is engaged to Baron Von Knezbeck. of the Eleventh regiment of Uhlans. USED PIANO FOR SALfc. Mrs. Emma Moore Scott, who pur chased from us about a year ago a fine Krakauer Piano, returns :o In iia f ir missionary work this we* k and has de cided to sei! her piano. She has place 1 it in our hands for sale, -nd are in structed to off* r t a i vary tow prk» The piano has been bu: very 1: :!• u- l and is a rare bargain. F. \V. BAfMER CO . Wheeling. W. Va. KRAKAUER PIANO FOR SALE. Mrs. Emma Moore Scott has derided to return to India, for mi-* ionary work, this week. She has placed her fine K-flk mer Piano, use! less ban one year, m our Jand, for sale. To dispose of it nuicklv. we are allowed to make a very low Dree on it. Here is a r-re bargain, low pr.ee p w BA17MER CO.. Wheeling. W. Va. Chamberlain's is tne oest of all. Vln rent J Barkl, of Danbury. Iowa, has UPed Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy whenever in noed of a medicine for coughs and colds, for the past five years and says: "It always helps me out ANOTHER HURRICANE COMING. The Weather Department Imues a Spprlaj Warning— Will Endanger Coat* States. WASHINGTON. October 10,-Tho weath er bureau this nfternoon issued the fol lowing warning: Special Bulletin. There is a West Indian hurricane, ap parently central of the Florida coast, moving northward. This storm will cause dangerous northeasterly gales in all At lantic coast States, the wind reaching hur ricane velocities at cost stations or off the coast. Hurricane signals are displayed j for the beneiit of shipping from Florida : to Massachusetts along the coast. While ; high winds are expected In the interior it is not probable that they will be as severe j as in the vicinity as those accompanying 1 the storm of September 29. WILLIS S. MOORE, Chief of Bureau. BIG CuDB AT FARMINGTON. One Hundred and Fifty Member* — 1 wo Good Speeches J | Special to the Register. Farmington. W. Va., October 10.—A ! free silver club of 150 members was or 1 ganlzed here to-night ana many will | come in later. After the organization of the club a fine speech was made by lion. , O. S. McKinney, followed by Mr. Clar icnce Smith, of Fairmont, upon the is | sues of the campaign. Free silver was ably discussed by Mr. McKinney and The ! meeting was a successs. WEST ON WITH HtS SPEECH. Mnrdor nt n Kentucky Polltlrul Meeting, Uktnrlied the Proceeding* Only h Few Minute*. Louisville, Kv., October 10.—At Chap lain, in this county, this morning, dur ing a political speaking, Joe Prather, aged 20 years, shot and killed William Keeling, aged 45. An old quarrel was at the bottom of the trouble, the men having had a shooting scrape a year ago. ; The tragedy occurred just as Congress man John W. Lewis was mounting tho stand to speak in answer to George Ful ! ie$, The affair disturbed the meeting I for only a few moment?. Mr. Lewi's re • sumed his speech as soon as the dead body was carried away and the slayer put under arrest. A REDl'CTION DEMANDED. Ohio Coal Operators fait for a Put to 9 Cents Below the Pittsburg Kate. Columbus, Ohio, October 10.—The , Ohio coal operators will to-day post no tices at their mines that dating from Oc tober 1, the price paid per ton for min ing will be 45 cents. 9c below the Pitts burg price. The Ohio miners in conven tion yesterday in this city referred the matter of a reduction to a vote of the locals, the result to be announced Octo ber 17. WEST VIRGINIA PENSIONS. Special to the Register. Washington, October 10.—The follow ing West Virginia pensions have been granted: Reissue—Adam Moore, Mirach Hun, Monongalia county; Wm. II. Leman, laurel Dale, Mineral coun y; Al«x. Conner. Rosby’s Rock, Marshall county. Original—James 1). Cutlip. Palling Spring, Greenbrier eoilnty; Andrew .1. i Dunham. Elizabeth, Wirt county; Abra i ham Huxenbaugh. Hundred, Wetzel 1 county; John N. Thomason. Lang, Ran dolph county: Grant Parkhurst, Ccuur Point, Doddridge county. Original Widows, e:c.—Barbara E. Westbrook. Horse Neck. Pleasants county (reissue); Mary E. Hubbs, Par kersburg, Wood county: Margaret .1. , Roach. Parkersburg. Wood county: Sal lie J. D. Grubb. Bolivar, Jefferson coun ty; Martha E. Mathews. Paw-Paw, i Morgan county: Mary E .Riggs, Piea. ! ant Valiev, Marshall county; Catherine j Hammond. Wheeling; Samaria Fiddle, , Fountain Spring's, Wood couny. Restoration and Reissue—Edward J. ! Arthur. Hurricane. Putnam county. Increase—Hiram Short, Troy, Gilmer ! county. , . Mexican War Survivor, Increase—Jns. A. Bedinger, Hungry Rock, Hampshire county._ GOLD BUGS IN MICHIGAN. L \XSINO, Mich.. October 10.—G< ncrnl nnd Mrs. Palmer ami General Buckner arrived here to-day and addressed a big open nlr mass meeting in front of the State Capitol. This afternoon seven carloads of pold standard advocates. Including: work ingmen and capitalists, arrived from De troit by special train and marched to the place of meeting in front of tne State Cap itol. This and the local crowd was rein forced by several delegations from the surrounding country. CAPT. GIF,PATRICK DEAD. Cincinnati. O.. Oc ober 10.—Captain W W Gilpatrlok. United States navy, fei’l dead to-day in the light-house de i; rtment of the government building. He entered the navy in September. 1862. and has been in continuous service since. __ THOS. E. WATSON 11,1 A'lanta, Ga.. October Id. Hon. Thoe. E Watson is quite ill at his home in Thompson, suffering from his throat and lungs. the oil market. Oil CITT. Pa., i ktotx r 10.—Credit bal ances, It 16; certificates, no lads or off* re; shipments. 6.'.."® barrels; runs. 3S.*43 bar Bonnlf Thornton, w.io popularized “My Sweetheart's the Man in the Moon,” and a number of o.her of Janie* 1 horn ton's sweet songs, will be heard in a new bouquet of melodies at the Grand Open* House the last half of this week with ThorntonT| Vaudevilles. This will be Mr flr.jt appearance In this city. -o--— The Weather. Washington. October 10.—For West; Virginia—Fair; warmer; easterly winds. For Western Pennsylvania—Fair and w rmer; brisk easterly winds. For Ohio—Fair, followed by locai showers in the evening or night; fresh to brisk southeasterly winds. Mr. C. Schnepf, the Opera House druggist, made the follow.ng observa tions of the weather yesterday: . a. m.. 39; 9 a. ra.. 48; 12 m.'. Cl; 3 p. m., 64; 7 p. m., 60. Weather, fair. • ii ms am mb And Squads of Republicans, From Ail States Near to Okio, Devoted Their Leisuro Time tc Visiting the Cundidate Whom Hanna will not Allow to visit t hem. Though Not Many Came From Any Point, in the Aggregate, They Made Quite a Crowd, and Taxed the Capacity of the Little Town of Canton to Accommodate Them—The Wheeling Delegation Receives the Glad Hand, and Hoars an Address Delivered ior Its Special Benefit. Canton, Ohio, October 10.—Each flay is out-iining all records of enthusiasm and numbers in Canton. Forty special train loads of people came here jo-day. At 7 o’clock this evening more delega tions were coming. They 1 .m i ming at 4:30 this morning. They came in greater numbers than ever before. The paraphernalia of parade was outdone. Merchants, workingmen, hardware m« commercial traveling m n. bishop.’, preachers, miners, evangelists, potters, bankers, railroad men, Southern plant ers, iron operatives, moulders and many other trades and profession?, each had special parties and processions. They came from Iowa, New York, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Michigan. Indiana. Illi nois, Missouri, West Virginia. Mary land and Ohio in large delegation*. They came in small parties from a dozen other States. They crowded Canton’s wide streets for miles as they were never crowded before. They marched ami ' countered with sound and music galore. They out yelled the wonderous yell of yesterday, the famous “rebel yell” from the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, that kept the echoes homing all yesterday afternoon and evening. Th y gurget^ ' about the McKinley home and crowd! * , over porches and reviewing stands u: A / til women fainted and men paled, f»a.>*T fill of panic and the crush that kills. Ami calm and cool among all this wonder ct political demonstrations. Major McKia* lev was in the midst of it all day. To have given every caller a hand I shake would have been a physical im possibility. lie made mor. than a score of addresses and numerous short r plies besides. His fricm s who wero with him on his m> m um mipalgn of 1S94 from the lake to the gulf, and from Maine to Kansas, win n lie nu1 Je nearly five hundred speeches in four months, say the campaign then did not compare with that he is now going thruugn. lie was accessible to every one. He. only stopp d handshaking, with tlie thousands to-day to me'.tv dresses and then personally greet o h; r delegations. His voloe rang • and clear. Wherever his eyes turned to-day from early morning until late to night. ho looked into the eyes of a * of faces. His friends have wonder. ! at his endurance, dlls visitors to-day veiled at it. Congressman RoutoJQ i Maine, said nothing like to-day's iiou.B had ever been known in political his tory. Murat Halstead said the wor d had never known of mortal man ever being given such greetings. To-night at 10 o'clock the Maryland delegation I» holding a mass meeting at the Taber nacle. * The handsome new court hou and other public buildings are brilliant ly illuminated with novel elect effec The streets are filled with marcher . I’yroteehnical displays are adde I to h ; striking features of the parades through out the evening. Thousands are k< < (> Ing up the ceaseless march under il beautiful McKinley arch and up Mark street, past the famous home about which the earth is trorleu n> -rl.v as .bard as the paved streets. Itai’.r u I ,men say over four hundred crowd. 1 car loads of people have been bandied. Several delegations will not attempt to leave town until Sunduy. The Wheeling, W. Va., delegation, which arrived this afternoon, march' d io McKinley’s home, and In response to i * Mentations mnde by their spokesmen, Mi. McKinley said: Gentlemen—Republicans to I"' 1 > all sides this .year. And many l» m i arc with ns. 1 am honored by Uii of this large assemblage from the S' of West Virginia. I am glad to meet ; six footers. (Cheering from tie- HI* !• ot ers' Protection and Sound Money < ld> of Wheeling.) They ought to !••• and I at.i sure will be giants In this cont--t f<>r na tional honor. I am glad to meet th>- |M.f ters of West Virginia. 1 am e ' I *° m"'t the Iron and steel workers of the IUv. r-i ' ’ mills. I am glad to meet you .11 ulad to feel that the mission vo upon is to make Republican triumphant on the third day <>f N There Is Inborn In every hun a sentiment that moves him ' lo better his condition. . and of our I most blest, those* l*orn with le»at f<» with most unfavorable aurrou ! them aspire to better thing a right to so aspire. Th* K* free institutions ••salts ambln men want to lift them*<*lve «n<l Improve the condition a ! lies. Th** thought in every u here to-day Is. how can 1 belt. r tion? How ean I Improve t! my family? The answer with one voice, the way to *1» * teet American industry and I ' (ran labor. Ig*t us do our mu here In the United States. I • our own Iron and steel, our our own Ktasa; and when w we will employ every HI* p United State and brlnic hop* m*! to every American hone 1 that policy of protection to 1 fries and to the energb “f A pie. I do not believe anyth!*** to the American people th •' •’ ness upon a single Am* What you want Is work you led;* ve fr* •• 11 .«• I ■ you believe protective tarift- 'v ’ ' (••Yea. yea; every time.”* Ti.-.i vote hat way. Protection never cl • : ' can factory: protection * • r " ’ American min.*; pro** ’ n . American labor out on tie ,r'"' . muc» w ,„ch u, we h»v„ ,xi.rlnc.J in t"« '•*« three and a half years , % '.hUra* will In 1W6 repeat the verdict «f - giving the Republican party a k’rand and glorious triumph. y idl— t!*en. PO aid you? I*o