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tSfal.fr''''' Will Mftet with Mro. Cole. >1! MMMMmgWymf r f a v ? i>nri8t r Ro'cloek at the geaMence or Mrs. tfjrtjf; ji ^HHjjl^ndMra. Scott C. Lowe return- t night fipu? San ii Ch an * I ^ y^ ^ hor of J ie,l&de'8 parents, Mr- arid Mrs. Chas. (oxwell. Robinson Is a son of Mr. Char;e ; aoblnson, formerly of the-First rard, and Is a grandson of Mr. and IrsF-Harry Robinson, Sr., of Market treet, A number of relatives from rib city will attend the wedding. ____? Mannlngton Couple Married Here. Mr. W. F. Ombb and MIsb Wllla Dais; two well known young people of iannlngton, were united In marriage 1 this city on Sunday afternoon at wo ri'clock. The ceremony was permned lrithe Marietta Hotel parlors, lev. G. D. Smith being the officiating ilnlster. Mr. and Mrs. Grubb return1 to Mannlngton last evening. Those ? -ho accompanied the young people to ( he city were, Mr. and Mrs. ^B. F. avis, Mr. and Mrs. Cbas. Atha, Mr. nd Mrs. J.. C. Grubb, Misses Ocle , lgyton, Tessje Holbert and Mr. Les- ' e Hall, r Series of Cooking Lessons. The Woman's Club of Fairmont lias rranged for a series of cooking lesmis and lectures to be given by Miss 'anhie Merrltt Farmer, of the Boson Cooking School. Alias Merrltt will rrlve here the latter part of the week nd will form two classes of eight jemhers each, for dally cooking leaonts, the tuition fee for lessons being G.CO .for the term. Allss Farmer will Iso deliver two lectures In Willarrl fall, the date to be announced later, (linisslon to the members of the club rlt.be 50 cents and general admission. 5 cents. Those who wish to become lembers of the class will apply to Irs. E. F. Hartley for further"'information. Death at Clarksburg. Word was received here tills mornig of the death of Air. Harry Hursey, f Clarksburg, which occurred there ist evening, Mr. Hursey has been a ? estdent of Clarksburg for many years * nd has been connected with the Os- \ orne Undertaking Company. He laves a'daiighter, his wife having prceded him to the grave. Funeral serines will be held on Tuesday mom- VI lg. Mr. R. L. Cunningham will go to llnrlmhtire In the morning to attend lie services. re With j cord s< i furniture is like dyeing tc ool anybody but yourself, andle is always above the T ools us in quality once, c< 01 II S< ti ;he past speaks for itself, tare, honest dealiog will * tinue as one of our vital iciples. si (] m in T1 h us Portiere, beautiful ,H momous colorings and deis at very leasonable see A few samules in our dow. "Beautiful things not for the few any more t)( u t ducation is for the few er M rugs. Yes, we pay a litmore money for our rugs of sell them at the same in :e as others sell similar <? 3, but we're satisfied we wl e the quality. 1111 re rade of furniture and car- ce > for people who want the thing at a mod crate price bi th a ross s ORS OF \ONT i TU^E J X\\- '> 7; J. KL HAETLEY & SON. ' v f schedule for football I At a meeting of the represen the football schedule was comph school was represented by a sti Sliinnston and Mannington High leaving the teams representing J , and Fairmont to battle for the i School Ijeagtto of West Virginia, hoy8 will play the Alumni. .N'e.v will be here (or a game which v The game will be rast from Blar off and the crowd will have to s one an equal opportunity to see hard un^ler the direction and co. good football who come to the ; there will he no qunreling or wn lor. The lineup will be imnoun the season Is as follows: Clarksburg?At Grafton, Octi 'town November 9. At Falrmoi Grafton?At Clarksburg Octi her 2. At Fairmont October 5, J Morgantown?At Clarksburg her 20. At Fairmont October Falrmopt?At Clarksburg Oc 9. At Morgantown October 12. I ? V Soing to School Are the Doctors fILL HAVE CLASS IN SCIENCE ROOM AT NORMAL SCHOOL EVERY FRIDAY. The Marion county Medical Absoation is starting out In earnest in 10 pursuit of the post graduate course hlch is recommended and outlined y the American Medical Association, he meetings of the association will i held weekly on Friday afternoons hen the lessons outlined will he releweil and discussed. The science room in the Normal ihool has been secured as a place i conduct class exercises. The flrst class meeting will he held e.\t Friday aflernoon at four o'clock, he work at this meeting^will he the mslderation of the anatomy, hiatol0', anil physiology of the eplthetlal ssue. . Dr. J. W. McDonahl has been, dected ns teacher for the presentson of these subjects. The discussion of Epithelial tissue 111 cover the origin, structure, cells til stoma. Varieties: simple and compound, tape, arrangements and distribution. ) pavements;'(2) cubical. (3) columir. (4) ciliated. Describe Ciliary otlons and causes, ransitiori epithelium: Arrangement, strlbution and location. Stratified epithelium: Shape arngements and distribution. Nutrition of epithelium. Chemistry of epithelium. At the next meeting the conBlderain of connective tissue "will be lalti up. The teachers for October are, Drs. cDonald, Carr, lVaddell and Sands. Increasing Price of Papers. The movement to increase the price weekly papers appears to Co gaing headway rapidly. The Farinlngton ilch.) Enterprise announces that It III charge $1.50 per year instead of beginning January 1, 1908. Tho ihllsher of the Enterprise gives his per has increased about fifty per nsons for this step that-the price of nt. withlfl the past year. Fred Hughes, left this afternoon for irnesville, Ohio, where he will attend e wedding of his brother, Perry aghes. Mr. Hughes was employed 1 the Fairmont Coal Company. He is resigned bis position and will enge in other work. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Losch, who have ent the summer in Philadelphia and rsey Shore, Pa., Veturned to this [y to-day. Miss Nellie Gerstell, of Keyser who d been the guest of Mrs. Duncan nclair returned home thiB afteron. XV] J. M, HABTLEY & SON. ?+ ? GAME , ] 1 'OR HIGH SCHOOL LEAGUE. j 1 I f tatives of the High School League ted for the season, '07. Each ident uml liieiuber of the faculty, schools dropped out of thl League. | torgantown, Grafton, Clarksburg 1 hainplonshlp of the Central High : On Thanksgiving day the local ; t Saturday the strong Grafton team | rill, be played at South Side- Park. | t to finish. The field \vil be roped ! ray on the side lines giving every- j the game. Our boys are working I xchlng of C'apt. Bell. All lovers of ;a me will not be disappointed as mgllng so disgusting to a spectased on Friday. The schedule for ober 12, November 23. At .Morganit November 2. ober 19. At Morgantown Novemloverber 10. ; ?$#vember 16. At Grafton Octo- | 19- ' ' i tober 20. At Grafton November | 7o veuiber 23. j ?1 : nmanf frtT nf o I! JLYJL VJ1JU UJl V* AAl* I*\J i^UVV | Wm. McKinley (Continued from Page One.) beautiful and touching- family life, a: i life very healthy for this nation to see In its foremost citizen; and now the ' woman who walked in the shadow ever after his death, the wife to whom his loss was a calamity more crushing than It could he to any other human being, lies beside him here in the same sepiilcher. There Is a singular appropriateness 1 in the inscription on Ills monument. 1 Mr. Cortelyou, whose relations with lilni were of such close intimacy, gives j me the following information about It: On the President's trip to the i Pacific slope in the spring of 1901 Pres ' ident Wheeler, of the University of California, conferred the degree of LL. D. apon him in words so well I chosen that they struck the fastidious I taste of John Hay, then Secretary of i State, who wrote; and asked for a copy I of them from President Wheeler. On i U1C ICi;ui|il Ul LUia VW|I,> uc Obui, I.UVI following letter to President MeKinley, a letter which now seems filled with aj strange anil unconscious prescience: j Dear Mr, President: President Wheeler sent me the in-( closed at my request. You will have, the words In more pernmnent shape. J They seem to me> remarkably well cho-' sen. and stately and dignified enough to serve?long hence, please God?as your epitaph. lours, faithfully, JOHN HAY.' "University of California, "Office of the President. "By authority vested In ino by the regents of the University of California, I confer the degree of Doctor of Laws upon William MeKinley, President of the United States, a statesman singularly gifted to unite the discordant forces of the government and mold the diverse purposes of men toward progressive and salutary action, a magistrate whose poise of judgment tan Vtoon tnstosl nnrl vindinntArl In a succession of national emergencies; : good citizen, brave soldier, vise executive, helper and leader of men, ex-' emplar to hlB people of the virtues that build and conserve the State, society, and the home. "Berkeley, May . 16, 1601." It would he hard to Imagine an epitaph which ^a good citizen would be more anxloiu ot deserve or one which would more happily describe the qualities of that great and good citizen whose life we hero commemorate; He possessed to-a very extraordinary degree the girt of uniting discordant forces and securing from them a harmonious action whfch told for good government Prom purposes not merely diverse, but. bitterly, conflicting, he was able to secqre healthful action II ANNU^L^PE TOrDA\ J. M. HARTLEY & BON. ill men with the root of tr e greatness n them he grew to steadily largor nature under the stress ot, heavy re? iponslbllitles. He was a good citizen mil a brave soldier, a Chief Execu;ive whose wisdom entitled him to the :rust which he received throughout the intlnn tin inno tint nnlv a Inoilnr nf utiuii. iiw naa uuv uui; a ivwuvt men but pre-eminently a helper of men; tor one of his most marked raits was the Intensely hu'foan quality >f his wide and deep sympathy. Flinlly, he not merely preached, ho was, ;hat most valuable of all citizens In i democracy like ours, a man who in he highest placed serred as an unconscious example to his people of the k'lrtues that build and conserve alike )ur public fife and the foundation of ill public life, the intimate life of the ronie; Many lessons are taught us by his :areer, but none more valuable than the lesson of broad human sympathy lor and among all of our citizens of ull ilasses and creeds. No other Presllent ham ever more deserved to have his life work characterized In Linloin's words is being carried on "with malice toward none, with charity .toward all." As a Boy he worked hard with his hands; he entered the armyis a private soldier; ho knew poverty; he earned his own livelihood; and by his own exertions he finally rose to the position of a man of moderate means. Not merely was he In personil touch with farmer and town dweller, with capitalist and wageworlcer but he felt an Intimate understanding of each, and- therefore an intimate sympathy with each; and his consist eijt effort was to try to judge all by the same standard and td treat all with the same jnstlco. Arrogance toward the weak, and envious hatred ol llioso jvell off, were equally abhorrent to his just and gentle soul. Surely tills attitude or his should be the attitude of all our people to-day, it would be a cruel disaster to this country to permit ourselves to adopt an attitude ofc hatred and envy toward success worthily won, toward wealth honestly acquired. Let us lit this respect profit by the example ol Ihe republics of this Western Hemisphere to the south of us. Some ol these republics have prospered greatly but there are certain ones that have !* u'* v 4* *1* *2* *1* *1*" 'VynWHHHHI ***+1 +*?* 444.* 444.4* +++4* 1- IT 444** \ i *2* *$**{* *2* i* 11 44** 44*4* 44|* 444.4* tut C|f|4c USi MIIIS, +*** 444.4. T| 444* 4> 44*4 4. 444 4* 44* * C 4.4.* * *$tt 444.4. Everybody ?2a iTa >^a |f| 4.4-4.4* Greatest :Openini 44*4- i 44* a able to make i 444* ^ AAA V a 1. ?*?l . Open I 444* 4*| 444* 4*1 444* +J 444*4.1 ?J? ?J. ^ flOS3HB18BIW8y^f ^5^3 n J. M. HARTLEY & SON. ?-i,. J In a condition of material poverty, of social and political unrest and confusion, Without exception tile repub lies'"of the former class are those In which honest Industry has'boen anscr-j eil of reward arid protection; those where a cordial welcome has been ex-' tended to the kind of enterprise' which benefits the whole country,' while incidentally, as is right and proper, giving substantial rewards to those who manifest it. On the other' hand, the poor and backward repub-| lies, the republics in which the lot of the averago citizen Is least desirable, and the lot of the laboring man worst of all, are precisely' those republics In which Industry has been killed becausey wealth exposed its owner to' spoliation. To these communities foreign capital now rarely comes, because It haB been found that as soon as capital Is employed so ss to give Buh-I stantlal remuneration to those supply-1 Ing It, it excites. ignorant envy and hostility,' which result lfy such oppressive action, within or without the law, as^sooner or later to work a virtual confiscation. Every manifestation' of. reeling o[ tills kind in our civilization should be grushed at the outset by the! .weight of a sensible public opinion. ] From the standpoint of our material' prosperity mere is uiiij uue uwci ! thins as Important as the dlacotirage' ment or a spirit of envy and hostility, ' toward honest business men, toward honest men of means; this Is the die couragement of dishonest business men, the war upon the chicanery and ' wrongdoing which are peculiarly repulsive, peculiarly noxiouB, when ex1 hiblted by men who have no excuse 1 of want, or poverty, of Ignorance, for ' their crimes, Men of njeans, and above all men of great wealth, caff exist fn safety under the peaceful proi tectton of the State, only In orderly , societies, where liberty manifests lt-j > self through and under the law. It is . these men who, more than any others,! should. In the interests of the class to which they belong, In the Interests of their children and theirs children's children, seek in every way, but especially In tlie conduct of their lives, I to Insist upon and to build up respect for the law. 11 may not be true from i the standpoint of some particular in *? !??! ,j? U- >*? -|--J** m m a J??j? ?J? V Y T *t * * .V T't T f T V* stewpleT nual'm Coats, Mil "UESDA1 >ci 1,190 * is cordially invited to a' or, and see the advanced 8 n Ladies' Suite, Odajs . and iies^Wn&W announces the blrtl 'ft 9'10 V:?; !f/.''dSii & * * * 4 *' 4 ''TOMftv' -' ' F" ? . ? , J .' ' JfflB