Newspaper Page Text
• -7^r' U hrrtA'2 r f mr n u If "You shall not cruci fy mankind upon a cross j of gold.—W. J. Bryan. i Chicago. July 9 ,'q6. "You shall not press down upon the brow of Labor, this crown of thorns.—W. J. Bryan. 4 IMA 'S yà>T' ^7 ft ( CHZ6TTE. HND LHURE Entered at the Postofflce as Second-Class Matter. THE ORGAN OF INDEPENDENT DEMOCRACY. Subscription Price One Dollar Per Year. NUMBER 43. LAUREL. DELAWARE. SATURDAY MORNING. OCT. 24. 1890. VOLUME XIII. T~ VOLUME XIII. Help It needed by poor, tired mothers, over 3 worked and hardened with c tated and , debili down because of poor, thin and impoverished blood. Help is needed by the nevvous Sufferer, the women tortured with rheumatism, ralgia, dyspepsia, scrofula, catarrh. Help Gomes Quickly When Hood's Sarsaparilla begins to en rich, purify and vitalize the blood, and sends it in a healing, nourishing, invig orating stream to the nerves, muscles and of the body. Hood's Sarsaparilla up the weak and broken down »ya rn cures all blood diseases, because builds tem, Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. -, -. -, are the only pills to take ITOOU S HlIIS with Hood's Sarsaparilla. LAUREL LODGE DIRECTORY. Rohsakatum Tribe No. 15 Improve! Order Red Men, meets every Friday sleep in Red Men's Wigwam over Sussex Counllan olfice. _ H.O. Klggin C of R. Vigilant Council, No. 19., Jr. American Mechanics in Odd Fellows Hall. rder United lesday night Pau?T wliley, K. 8 . Laurel Conclave, No. 808. lmpd. Order Hepta Ilrst and third Monday night of Sussex Recorder. Counllan Office. I h Red Men's Hall o C. A. HastiiI Friendly Circle No. 2. Brotherhood of ...„ Union, meets every Monday night in Odd Fel lows Hall. W. Me. Hearn, II S. K. Laurel Lodge. No. 11. Ancien- Order United Workman ineelseveiy Wednesday night In Odd Fellows Hall O. A. Hastings, Recorder Charity Lodge, No. 27 lmpd. Order Odd Fel severy Thursday night ln» Odd Fel S.T. Smith, Beo'y. lows' liall. Hope Lodge, No. 4 Ancient Free ed Masons, mi nights of each d Accept ets the firct and third T month In Masonic Hall. H.C. ADAM«, 8 eety. Jay 9 Stimulate the stomacli, ■ ■ ■ rouse the liver, cure bilious- .IB ^ headache, dizziness, | | | Prl clriigglRtfl. irsapurilia. ly THE LAUREL HOUSE, LAUREL, DELAWARE. »HI 1 , I JAUKS K I»*' d Ihroughom for use of tra ounected.The first-class and house has b commodiu ▼eling salesmen and good livery table, bar service rates always reasonable. THE ST. ELMO HOTEL, 817-319 ARCH ST. PHILADELPHIA. AAKON AVNE, Proprietor I. HI is pleasantly and oouyeniently loea door make all This h< d stations and^oim^abouts the city easily 8sible. id electric i* .%,i LL Pr??,.ifta[li mil jin fWmato JAMES E. MARVEL, 1 AURK.L, DELAWARE 'ump work a specialty. WELLS DRIVEN AND GUARANTEED. receive prompt and J K Marvel, Laurel. d «»r. Buildin moved ' '..I ! Communlcai ons will ■ ' attention. Address DR. H. F. PORTER, DBNÏ T ST, Ecsider.ee and Office. Soaford, Del. Countian Block where ho noun Monday until |> in. Mont modern appliance« Lsnrel office Tuesday each week and terms ve LAUREL LIVERY STABLES Opposite M. E. Church LAUREL HEGORA M. HOLT FiflrtCla*» Single or Double Teams, Horse* Boarded, Ratos Always Reasonable. Try Us THE PINKHAM CURES. Attracting Great Attention Among Thinking Women MUST BE SOMETHING BEHIND IT ALL Miss Van Horn of Philadelphia Adds her Testimonial and Relates Her Experiences —She is Only One of Thousands Who Have Received Like Benefit During Last Few Months, and Whose Letters Are On File. When Lydia E. jPinkham's remedies were first introduced skeptics all over the country frowned upon their cura tive elaims, hut as year after year lias gone by, and the little group of women who have been cured by the new dis covery has grown into a vast army of hundreds of thou sunds, ism have doubts andskeptie been swept away ^ mighty flood, un à the great good • Pinkham's re me doing among female population is attract ing the at- Bp y tentiou of gXypj many of ynff» ourleading scientists l | and think- \ I ing people. The fol- y lowin; let- a UT i ical 7 " i'V til to-day dies Ü of file in many thousands which the Piukliam office, a: d go to 4»royo j beyond question that Lydia TE. Phil-j ham's Vegetable Compound must he an article jof great merit; otherwise it could not produce the results which 1 not a mere claim: u positive fact, " Dear Mça. Pinkham:—I write to • thank yon for the good y Compound and Sanative Wash have done ine. Before taking y had with backache, liver and kidney trouble that 1 thought I would Vegetable I GOLD VERSUS SILVER. A CONVERSATION BETWEEN A FREE SILVER MAN AND A GOLD BUG. Gold Bug—You don't wish to pay ■ off debts contracted at par with gold in fitty-ceiit dollars, do you? Free Silver—You do not pause to think tlifit the demonetization of sil ver has put silver down to fifty cents and made the purchasing power of gold 200. You don't stop to remember that the debtor's debts were thereby doubled and the power to pay made one-half less, and tlie debts due twice as hard to pay as under the regime of silver at its old time unit of value.' The hardship you speak of is the ordeal though which the debtor class has groaned for twenty-three years, until values had s(Trunk to ruinous prices. Gold Bug—Yes, but do you not very well know that we cannot un dertake to bring silver back to its old time unit ot value by ourselves when tlie nations of the eartli are arrayed against us. We cannot do this of ourselves, it is out of the question. Free Silver—All! sir, any man of ordinary comprehension can very well understand whatyqji.are drift ing to, and the deep laid scheme of robbery you are plotting. You Gold Bugs want to change tlie ratio of silver. You want some new ratio of value for the silver coin, and by that means you would throw out of circulation every dollar of silver now in circulation, and it would take fully ten years to regain the present volume of coin now iji the hands of the people. Gold Bug—But if you do as you propose what will become of our securities abroad, and they are all redeemable in gold. Where will we find gold to meet our obligations abroud? Free Silver—You ought to have thought of that long ago. You had no business to have any securities abroad. If you had paid tlie war debt in fiat greenback money you would not have had any use for bonds. We have paid out for in terest cn those bonds since tlie war twenty-three hundred of millions of dollars. Besides this eating moth you took the money from the chan nels of trade and locked it up in bonds in pigeon holes in safe deposit companies, thereby creating a set of nobles who toil not, neither do they spin, but cut off their coupons, walk around, a government pam n^jed^jireh^Ted^ÿs^ÿ^dr^ theit revenue and do not'pay any taxes. You tiave only six hundred millions of gold in the United States, which is a small sum with which to pay many billions. You can never do it and it is high time to stop at tempting the impossible. The re cent sale of several hundreds of millions of bonds did not pay one dollar of debt, but it put an incubus on the United States to the amount of the face of the indebtedness merely to keep up a gold reserve, and which can be depleted at any time-at the will of the millionaires who keep a vulture eye on |the treasury and run it in their own interests to fill their coffers at the expense of the people The Presi dent lias no recourse but to c'eal witli tlie law as lie finds it made to never find relief. At the time of struation, I suffered hardly stand, hut I had to go to work and stand in misery all day. My blood was in an awful state. 1 suffered with that I c'oul.l headache and local discharges. I sick all c long lime, tried three different doctors, hut good. I did not get • remedies. . I doctored for they did any help until I tried y After taking several bottles of y Vegetable Compound and using five packages of your Sanative Wash, I completely cured und have thank for it but you. Sloping some other suffering woman may take ing in time, I remain, yours truly, Miss Celia Van liorn, 1Ü1Î5 Sharswood Öt., Phi la.. Pa.*' to STANDING INVITATION. ■Women suffering f rom nny form of fe male weakness are invited to promptly ninjeate with Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass. All lotto o x nod. read received, u answered by we:ac only. private ill been established the eternal confl A Jon freely IX ' a woman; tliv.3 Las ; I j between Mrs. Piukliam u rhieh has d the women en. Out of tho vast volume of ex perience Which she lias to draw from it is more than possible that she lias gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She asks nothing in return except y adviuo has relieved thousands. Surely any woman, rich ish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. of A brolc good will, and her poor, is very fool hand by those who love mamnoi more than the prosperity of the people. This "endless chain" must be broken, else we will sell the United .States for a song which Wall street sings whilst the notes are set to song hy the Gold Bugs of Burope, a pretty state of things for men claiming to ?e statesmen. How will it compare with the Signers of of the Declaration of Independ ence who risked their all to set us free, whilst the present traitorous conspirators are selling us into serf dom for a mess of pottage? Gold Bug—I have no sympathy with your revolutionary visionary schemes. Free Silver—No, nor have you any sympathy with the rights and constitutional privileges of the peo ple. We seek the prosperity of the country and the happiness of the people. We claim nothing that is not lawfully our own. Gold Bug—But you have not an swered my question; do you pro pose to pay off debts with fifty-cent dollars ? Free silber—No! But we pro pose to restore silver to where it by right belongs, under the Consti tution, then it will be what it al ways should have been and what it would be now bad it not been de monetized. We are recovering sto len property. We are simply re claiming what is justly our own. Gold Bug.—Free Silver means that Europe will flood this country 'with silver and draw our gold away. Free Silver—We are paying more bonus in bonds to keep up the gold standard than all the gold we own amounts to. We are issuing bonds to create debt, but which pays no debt. The broker brings you gold in at one door and his agent goes in at the other door and takes it out to create a necessity for a new loan. It is folly to say we will be the dumping ground for free silver by remonetization. There is but eight billions of gold and silver in the world. When we make the value of silver what the Constitution calls for, it will be worth that every where and no one will part with it for less than it is worth, and they cannot bring it to us without being short themselves. Gold Bug—What will become of our gold? Free Silver—Who ever sees gold but brokers? We have not had a gold piece in hand for years. It is only stored to buy bonds. We issue more 1 bonds to buy more gold to make more indebtedness to furnish the wealth Vt'jjh securities to invest K J The debt, to jn m bonds ar they paid? ut what debt have BRYAN A SURE WINNER. The Washington Post, the lead ing independent journal of the coun try, yesterday, estimated that in the states whose vote was now certain to go for Bryan or McKinley, the figures stand: Bryan . McKinley These are given as the doubtful states: Illinois. Maryland . . . Delaware . . . West Virginia . Minnesota . . . Michigan . . . Kentucky . . . Total .... Bryan still has iq votes to get from the doubtful states, but Mc Kinley has 59. If Bryan can carry Kentucky and West Virginia, he will, with the other states assigned him, be elected. If he can carry Illinois or Michigan and Maryland, he will be elected. The young man from Nebraska is dangerously near the goal. 205 A 16; a of of a in . . 24 (> . . 14 • * H 77 Hard to Swallbw. Verily, ill fortune has pursued our bolting brethren. They nomi nated for President an old gentle man who had been a Republican, then a Democrat, and finally elected to the Senate by Populist votes on an "understanding." They later found out that in the matter of per mitting United States troops to quell a riot lie, while Governor of Illinois, had done much worse than Gover nor Aitgeld. Still later, they found that the old gentleman, while Fed eral Military Governor of Kentucky, had issued an order disfranchising all Kentucky Confederate soldiers. And now, to crown it all,comes the report that he hung a regular Con federate on the charge that lie was a guerilla. When a "sound money" bolter reflects that he will have to swallow this man in order to elect his real candidate, William McKin ley, and that the real candidate him self on the 5th of November, 1877, voted for unlimited free-silver coin age of silver at 16 to i, and that two months thereafter he voted that to pay the United States bonds, principle and interest, in silver dol lars, would not be in violation of the public faith nor in derogation of the rights of the public creditor, lie must begin to wonder where his bolting escapade is carrying him. To relieve the perpiexity we would suggest that with free railroad trans portation, another "convention" might he Held and this very obnox ious old gentleman taken down.— Richmond Dispatch. Mure Curative Power Is contained mu'buttle of Hood's Sarsaparilla than i,i any other simi lar preparation. It costs the pro prietor and manufacturer more. It costs the jobber more and it is worth more to the consumer. It has a record of cures unknown to any other preparation. It is the best to buy because it is the One True Blood Purifier. Hood's Pills are the best family ca thartic and liver medicine. Gentle, reliable, sure. T~ ANOTHER object lesson. IA 60 R| US E " r»-c| _ •r U-M-C jpwir. FPjrr (sheriff ' SALE twmi « m p in ou ;■ V Of prpffl GOODS it x £ ' 'Mi!Hi m i: £// U| j tr I Wm 1 (r ' ' 6 V* A, ■li - /y mm -- 1 * t I 7 — > 7 -j— f i _ j _ É // / ü / a land of £>lE Nry OV T OF WoR K No /AON EY. v/aRehovse full T HE CrpLP JTAMMKè V/MAT &okl BUG SHERIFF A, ll El KER BA OF Pi 1B ' r & warehouse AMD FAC TORY. \ CLOSER. ill Tn-TT-r \XT 7 -cn c on J ui ili\' m li r " ! 0 1 s rfi % s*y IBS« ! 1 L JW f RI 0 0 8 8 ft r L,' 0 Wm ■Jim /a: I » i il JW n 4 my T — 1 . J V r*~Z PL EN tYofmome y Illustration of Silver Prosperity. Cut out this Picture and Fold it the Lines to get __J_ an MARK HANNA THE SHYLOCK. A DiNlion.Ni If r and an t Labor. ^ ' Our farmers and workingmen generally, have here a life-like picture of the man who is to-day the bigbossof the Republican party; the man who will run the govern ment if McKinley is elected Presi dent. The press dispatches say and the workingmen of Cleveland vouch for the truth of it that labor does not hold a meeting at Cleve land or near any of Hanna's inter ests which his detectives do not attend. They take the name of every Hanna employee that comes. Off goes his head with the moment of their report. When the Vestibule street car act was being agitated in Ohio, a measure meant to force such a con struction of street cars as might serve to shield the motormen from piercing cold, Hanna opposed it. His men who signed petitions fa voring the act were dismissd. When it passed in spite of Hanna, instead of vestibuling his cars, lié stretched a screen ot canvass. It was no protection; moreover^ it was a violation in the sense of an eva sion of the law. Yet if one of his men complained he was discharged. The Hanna slaves could in the biting winter gnaw their tongues over their work and freeze in slow silence. Or they might quit and starve. Such has been the friendship of Mark Hanna to labor. Here is some of this red oppres sor's labor history in brief, it is he who holds $118,000 of McKinley's notes and aims to putthiscandidate who thus lies as helpless, in the hollow of Hanna's hand, as ever lay one of his laborers, into the White House as President. He bought the Cleveted Herald, turned out the union printers and "ratted" the office. Hehuilt houses and refused work to every carpen ter, bricklayer, plasterer and artisan of any kind who belonged to a labor union. He fought labor unionism off his boats, off his cars, out of his coal holes. He has drowned it in tlie lakes, bayonetted it about his works, starved it along his railroads choked it to death in his mines. And now he would "talk" with Witt, and other labor leaders, to show them the lamb's wool softness of his sympathetic interest for the laboring man. In Hanna's Globe shipyards the men are paid $1,15 a day. A brave figure, truly! The other day they struck for $1.25. Parkhurst, the manager, called the strikers to gether, made them a protection speech, told them that $1.25, while a ruinous price for Hanna to pay for a day's work—a man who spends a million dollars a year to merely live—would be given to all who would agree to vote for McKin -1 ley. This was only the other day in Cleveland. Hanna never ran for office be cause scarce one man beyond him self in Northern Ohio would vote J It imed. Hanna uttered disre the ticket were it is in such torn and pute with tlie peoplt all about iiim e to hold an to do so with andidate, buy fice, and then man. that his only chan office, is attempting McKinley—buy a the candidate an own the office by o|vning tlie Here is a specimen of Hanna's swift talent for business. He put every man he could get into his mines one day. He worked them night and day. He stored 2,000, 000 tons of coal on barges in the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Then he cut wages to the bone and forced a strike. He extended the strike until he chpked off/qbal production in every field between the Mississ ippi and the seaboaijA. In two weeks Hsiiina ran up tlie price of coal $2 per ton. He unloaded his barges at a prolit of $4,000,000. Then he called off fhe strike. His aim had beeiv atiained. The miners had lost four week's work; a public had lost 144,000,000, and Hanna, with pooketi full of spoil and his heart aglow witlji the black glory of it all, was relidy for anotiier swoop at the first game that tlew his way. J REW/ kRD. ;nty-five dollars me who will give 1 which will lead f any person who A reward of tw will be paid to any me the informatior to the conviction 0 shall give, offer or promise, any money, goods, c îattels, or other things or matter, c|r release or offer to release any de hi? or obligation by by way of bribe, drift, benefit or re ward for the purfjlose or witli the object of influencing any elector in giving his vote or iln refusing to vote, or in absenting lliimself from the polls at the appro: idling election. such offer is etent witness to ind any party to nsaction is a com > prove it, and if 11 give evidence party upon trial, itifying shall not rat offence. And ty so testifying er party and 1 WO HUNDRED ■half to be for the rty suing, and the use of the State. 1 call upon all jLl;ood citizens of the State without re; ;ard to party affili ations, or politic,' I creed, to assist in detecting all si luch crimes against the State, and to me, to the ei and her citizer the odium and the permission 0 Jj committed withBI upon them. Anyone to wl made is a comp prove the fact, i such prhiblted tra petent witness tf such party sha against the other the person so te be indicted for t ] further, the pai j may sue *the oth | cover the sum of j DOLLARS, one ; the use of the pa j other half for the i om re reporting the same id Unit our.State s may be spared humiliation which f sucli crimes to be out rebuke brings . C. WHITE, Atty. General !.. Oct. 15 , ' 96 . ROB Georgetown, D Practical hors , e shoeing at lowest cash prices. A I l-round only 80 cts. and satisfaction : guaranteed. 1 j. D. Parsons, at Riggin & ,Kng jwles' shop, Laurel. 1 _ The alleged attack of the Demo cratic platform on the Supreme court has been persistency harped upon as establishing the charge of | is anarchy against the Democracy. It is claimed that the Supreme I Court's decisions are final and irre- 1 vocable. They are of course the law until they are changed, and must be respected and obeyed as such But it is neither revolution nor anarchy to criticise the judg ment or the action of the Court, or to seek tor its reversal either by the Court itself or by the lawmak ine Dower The Court is the judicial inter prefer of the meaning of the laws, but the judgment ot the men who compose it is not infallible, nor are the Judges free from those weak nesses and prejudices to which all mankind is liable. Their decisions are often made, as in the case of the income tax, by a bare majority, and that not always a majority free from the suspicion of being secured by what in charity may be called conversion. The language ot Jefferson, quoted Saturday night by Governor Alt eeld well supports this doctrine, But in case Jefferson should not be accepted by some ultra Republicans good authority, let them recall the speech of Roscoe Conkling in the House of Representatives in i860, in the debate on President Buchanan's last message touching the assumption of the Supreme Court to interpret the Constitution and to bind the lawmaking depart ment of the Government to that interpretation. In the Dred Scott decision the Supreme Court had in effect held that every acre of the Territories was subject to the rights of the slave owner, and the Presi dent had declared that neither Con gress nor a Territorial Legislature, er any human power, had authority to annul or impair that vested right, Mr. Conkling contended that the dictum of the Supreme Court had such binding and irreversible authority as President Buchanan claimed for it, and in tlie course of his argument said: If the construction now for the first time contended for by the party calling itself Democratic be true, the apostles of limited Govern ment, in their earliest ministrations, installed a power practically as irre vocable and irresponsible as an arti ficial power could be, and more sweeping and absolute in its supre macy than any judicial tribunal mentioned in history. Not the imperial chamber of Maximilian, not the courts whose records have been kept by the headsman at the block, certainly no tribunal which has escaped the execrations of humanity ever wield ed such unmeasured power. Why, sir, the infallibility ascribed to tlie Supreme Court makes the Constitution, the institutions of the country, nothing hut wax in the' hands of the judges; it amounts to a running power of amendment. The Supreme Court. no I But, without allowing myself to dwell upon the enormity of such a power, let me speak of the anomaly of its existence, The Federal policy of this country | is nothing more than three "g^cies !—the legislative, the executive and I the judicial, all alike constituted by 1 the people to do particular acts, However disguised by titles or deified hy ascriptions, these several departments are mere agents of one principal, servants ot one master, «ting and being under one appoint ment, namely the Constitution of the United States, Now, by what dislocation of the settled notions of centuries should one of three agents, coeval and identical in origin, be suffered to determine for himself, as against all the world powers, hut the rights and powers of his co-agents, the construction and effect of the common warrant and the powers, remedies and rights of the common ***.'! without escape and wthoitt appeal. 1 he tender regard of the Repubh cans for the Supreme Court newly developed sentiment. no existence when the Court was reconstructed and packed for the unconcealed purpose of obtaining a decision desired by the Republican party. It did not burst forth in indignation at the uncontradicted in charge that a Republican President in had made an appointment to that high tribunal in accordance with a pledge given to one of the most per mcious millionaire stock gamblers and railroad wreckers in existence who made a contribution of one hundred thousand dollars to the Republica n cam paign fund, in . «W An examination of the books of the Countian shows that there is a large amountdue us from our pa trons for subscription alone. This amount collected would aid us great ly just at present, as we are under heavy expense incidental to the the campaign, and necessary improve ments in the office. We dislike to "dun but would respectfully urge our friends to make a note ot of this hint and act at once. Send us a check, an order or call at once. the the be of the the the the the' a to 20 all not merely his own is a It had Slate of Ohio, City of Toledo f gg Lucas County. j Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm F. J. Cheney & Co. doing business f Toledo, County and in the City State aforesaid, and that Raid firm will pay the sum Dollars for each I Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Untarih (Juso. ( One Hundred I every case of k J. Cheney. Sworn t-o .before me and subscrib- ed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. - seal. ■ Fr A. W. (Jlcason. Notary Public, Hall's Catarrh Cure in taken inter nally amt acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sytsem. Send for testimonials, liee. F. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, Vo y ■ ( Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking Powder i&ggsfs ABSOLUTELY PURE McKinley For Free Silver. Major McKinley is to he pitied as much as condemned. The follow ing letter agrees exactly with all his speeches made while in Con gress. But since Mark Hanna .bought up $i 80,000 of his debts, and holds these notes over his head. He is compelled to take his stand with tlie gold-bugs in opposition to his honest sentiments. During the meeting addressed by Senator-elect Teller at Akron, O., on Monday, a sensation was caused by a letter read by General E. B. Finley, of Bucyrus, which had been written by Major McKinley to E. S. Perkins, of Weimouth, Medina County, in the fall of 1890. Mr. Perkins was at that time a representative in the Ohio Legisla ture. McKinley regarding his position on the silver question. The Major's letter in reply was as follows: Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives. Washington, Sept. 27, 1890. Hon. E. S. Perkins, Weimouth, O., Dear Sir:—I have been so busy for the past three weeks that it has been impossible for me to give any attention to matters in tlie Dis trict, which fact, l believe, my friends will appreciate. I have been waiting for a moment's time that I might answer two or three letters heretofore received from gentlemen in Medina County in relation to my position on the silver and olher questions. 1 have always beeh in favor of the free and unlimited coinage of the silver product of the United States and have so voted on at least two occasions during the time I have been in public life. I was not willing to extend this coinage to the silver of the world and open our mints to foreign countries without charge, as proposed by gentlemen ou the floor of the House. My purpose was to secure immediately legislation that would credit and dignify our'si.lvei; coin. 1 believe thie law which we en acted thisVKssion will accomplish that He had written to Major rflt. It utilizes every dollar's f til i ates, and even more. The value ofTthe legislation has already been api^arent in the enhanced value given to silver. You imw remember, as indicating my position* on this subject, that I voted to pass the silver bill in the Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth Con the vote of President William McKinley, Jr. United gress over Hayes. Major McKinley was asked to ex He refused plain the above letter, to say anything on the subject. Mrs. Julia Phillips has just re ceived a lovely line of ladies' and The prices are from 20 to 40 per cent, lower than they were last season and the styles were never so pretty. misses' coats. Variai. * liHiupiou Hh ; "Myself and Miss Annie Oakley wn eftbo Bu»llo Bill Wild W«.i f!.i mnny have giv to shake iuUTthe shoes, a Allen's Foot-Ease, the |n»w lost, tlinr* j/li irial, aod it Hoes all if not urn claim." Il instantly !akes tl than y. n! Corns nod Bunions. Allen's Sold hy cure f«> ur feet, e Btoies, 25 c. Sum Font-Ease is a eertuii hot, aching or sweat! all Diumrisi.*. .1 FREE. Address A'len ti. Oinis d -li pie «1, LeRoy, N. Y FREE AN ELEGANT BUTTON FREE with each package of it/ Mi 0! .'X o U£>i\ V . I : I jf SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES AN OPPORTUNITY TO MAKE A COLLECTION OF BUTTONS WITHOUT COST. ADVERTISING RATES. Hhhig Ö . with reasonable d»count* for udveriiidmc ordered for 8 , mlvi'rtiimitf that Count 12 nonpareil. All inttMent <h „ -1 cuple» larue i-t-ace. | line, m the men, pmr ou pareil li . per 12 mi hu. LAUREL CHURCH DIRECTORY r.-ixth street ami Cen M. smith, i'arlsb ery Sunday at 7.30 Sunday School at e announced from st Philips: Rev Cl id Hector Service# • and 10 30 h m., and 7.30, p n 2.00. p in Other services will week to week under head of St. Philip'B Kotes. I'.>, Christ's Methodist near Sixth Sumlaj services:-preaehinx im.hu a. ui. Sunday .School 2.00 p. m. Weekly prayer r Ji>K* at 7 30 p. in., on Tuesday». Cluikliaii deavor meetings mu Thursday evenings at ' Klein pastor. , F Ref. IV >ntenar> Methodist Episcopal:—Corner of d Pop' Watt, pastor. .Sunday verv: am OO, am, preaching 10. Sunday School 2.oO, p. m. Weekly pray lugs at 7.30 p in., Wednesday». Kpworih meetings 7.30 p. m., Thursdays. », Rev. Robert Class meeting .. 7 I ueaguc Laurel; going north, 1.21 and 8.10 8 and 3,50 p. m. going south, 2.88 - —*. 1.36 and7.09 p. m. 11 25 Laurel Post Orricx; for the north, 8.00 a. ra, and 2.20 p. m. for the south, 11.10 a. m. No south mall on evening train. Mails close Advertising Ratls will be furnished upon quaiterly, semi application. Special yearly and yoarly advertisers. be Communications for publication of the writer, acornpAiiled by the full <M| m j from UJS. Journal of XkNcfné ■ ^ X A Prof. W. H. Peeke, w IhITC hhjs,. jfl *■ B ed more cases than any H B fl m living Physician; hia JL JL We have heard of cases of ao years' standing him. Ha Cured» '""'large bot tle of hia absolute cure, free to any sufferers who may send their P. O. and Express address. We advise a ny on e wishing a cure to address Prof.W. H. PEEKS, Tt. 4 Cedar St., Hew York ho ' — ALTIMORK AND OHIO RAILROAD CO. _ Schedule lu effect July IS*. 18SK5. TRAINS LEAVE DELAWARE AVENUE DH PUT, W1IAHNQTON. UASTHOUND. press trains ms illuminated with Plntseb Light. NEW YORK, week days. 83 08. s7 ' 82, S7 89,811 p . o. 48. al 1 25 a m ; S3 28, s 6 82, PHILADELPHIA, ClffesUint St. , 6 55. 6 40, b7 16, s7 30. M» B All 48,-slO 85, Sundays, .; »12 21, »2 29, ■8 6 -I. . 2 50. 4 65, s532, 6 30,87 89, 8 25,10. all p m. SuudayB. s3 08, 7 SO, 8 50. s9 48. all 26 a. m.; 12 23 2 60, s3 28,4 55, s5 32. 6 80, 87 39, 8 25, 10. 1 11 p. m. PHILADELPHIA. Reading Terminal. S3 08, »7 15, f 9 81 a. . m.-.sll p. m. •ek, days. 88 08. 5 55, 0 40, s7 SK«i Stb? sj 8 « -if. To, su ATLANTIC CITY, week d »2 29 p.m. Huudays, 7 30 a. CAPE MAY week da vs. Sundays7 30 am BALTIMORE AN 2 40, . ru.; si 2 21 . 2», week p. m. Sundays, day .... CHESTER, 16, «715 a. m.; 812 24, m 3 28 p. 15 a. WEST-BOUND. , *11 6 13, fM, 8,121 ASHINGTON. week . m ; >12 55. » . . 84 58, » 8 , 9 15 p. m. 8 , 82 07, 2 64, 11. TIM »««,». 89 BALTIMORE AND WAY STATIONS, dUlr. 12 a. m .2 54 p m. NEWARK, Del. . 7 02, 08, »4 68 , 7 05, » 8 . ),• 7 02 , rfisani, . Huudays, daily, »4 58 p ra. CINCINNATI AND HT. LOUIS, daily, »12 56 ""NEW ORLEANS AND MEMPHIS via Bristol Chattauuuga, »6 13 pin, weekdays, »4 58 p •umlav». Hi rough sleepers Washington to Meuiuhi RING Kill . week tlnys. .1! :a, : : Sunday» »3 48, »11 M 1 . 1 , 111*2 p ,12 M>, 2 M,A4 58,7 Où PITTSBURG, week ÎÆ M id N OMMODATION. week day». iiclayH, 7 07am, ACCOMMODATION, week . 2 64,4 53 p ni. Bundajs, 10 MARKET STREET STATION, we. k day«, a« 60 & m , week days. «K >0 a m, 12 p ui. .7' 2 64 4DENBERG 7 02, 10 27 a ■ da i LEA \ rHILADELP P BALTIMORE, week day«, f. 50 a in, 2 50 p m LANDsNbtUG and WAY »STATIONS, week day« (i 50, 10 20. a id a 50. 5 20 p m Sunday*, 9 5 j a, LKAv£"PHILADELPHIA, CHESTNUT ST STATION, FOR WILMINGTON, week days, »340, 10 , rS 16. 9 30, «10 33. 11 30 a ID, »12 20, —. 6 , 6 80, *8 40.6, J-816 1 30, 6 . »7 25. READING TERMINAL Sundays 10 SO. «5 S3 30 1 86 p li , Bt Ji. 25. 9. 40, to 10. ll PHILADEL ■M: si 20, t-7 ( Rate* any other line. <\ o. SCULL. Ge W. M. GREENE, Geiieml Manager. Western point* lower than via •al Ptt8R**n»fer AffenL