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|prr <J|? idlntjd son\nnl published on Friday morning of each week at Rising Sun, Cecil Co., Maryland —BY— E. E. EWING & SONS. Independent in politics and all other subjects. *I.OO A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Friday, Jnly 13, 1900. If silver is such a bad egg why are the Republicans so worried over it being put in the Kansas City platform ? They ought to rejoice. The chagrined Hannaites chew their finger nails and say, “Bryan the dic tator.” There was a convention held a few weeks ago, at which one Hanna, a noted trust agent, was dictator. Bryan voiced the will aud wish of the plain people; Hanna voiced the will and wish of trusts and money bags. Bryan speaks for the people and their liberties; Hanna for the { aristocracy. Rooseyelt’s friends have been sorely grieved at the prospect of Teddy being shut out from a brilliant career by con* signing him to the oblivion of the Vice- President. There need be no fear of that. The people will not allow him to be so buried. Platt has euchred him out of being Governor a second term and the people will save the Rough Rider from the oblivion of the Vice-Presidency. Teddy will be neither Governor of New York, nor Vice-President of the United States next year. He will be free with ' his great career before him. > u ■ . n . The great production of gold through . the world in the last three years and new process for extracting it from low grade ores, has suddenly added very consider ably to the volume of the world’s money Notwithstanding this sudden increase in the money supply, and slight advance in general prices, the relief which the peo ple would ordinarily derive from it has been taken from them by combinations to reduce the price of raw material and labor while advancing the price of its products, so the condition which should have made prosperity general has chiefly inured to the benefit of trusts and not of the people generally. According to Frick’s testimony Car nagie’s income last year was {26,000,000. Now it is plain enough to every person that Caruagie didn't make or earn that amount of mouey. But he got it, and in a lawful manner too. In lact he didn’t earn anything in the sense that laboring men earn. But the wealth had to be created which represented that vast in come of one man. Suppose the hat was passed around and a collection taken up for Carnagie. Let us figure up how much each man, woman and child in the United States would have to chip in to make up {26,000.000. There are about 75,000,000 population in the Untted States, so if all'contributed to make up that income, each person would put into the contribution box say, in round num bers 35 cents. By dividing the popula tion into families of five persons each, the head of each family would pay to the fund {1.75. The people who create the wealth out of which the great single incomes are extracted are doing this very thing, hut they will laugh at the idea of contribut ing of their earnings for such a purpose. Out of the interest, the rents and stock dividends distributed by the “captains of industry” these great Carnagie incomes are created, and in that way every creator of wealth virtually chipped in his portion to make up the Carnagie income. Aud they did it not alone for Carnagie but for all his class, and they bulldozed the Supreme Court of the United States into declaring it unconstitutional to tax those absorptions or the people's substance ! Are you, honest working man, farmer, mechanic, clerk, everybody who earns a living by honest work, if favor of an in come tax on the great incomes which you contribute to? If you are vote for Bryan. He favors an income tax. McKinley is agaiust it. Prosperity! In reference to this intangible and much talked of something (?) Bryan says : “Well, if we can secure the votes of all who have not had their share of this prosperity we are willing to give the Re publicans the votes of all those who have received their share. Properity is some *biug that each voter has to judge for himself, and I am perfectly willing to risk the election on that issue.” The Two Commands. The command of Bankers, Syndicates, Trusts, Monopolies, the Imperialists, the , Millionaires demanded the nomination of McKinley. The plain people’s voice was , not heard in the demand. Millionaire , delegates were in the Philadelphia con- , vention whose aggregated wealth was , {150.000,000, 1 The voice of the plain people aloue , demanded the nomination of Bryan, and , not a single millionaire was in the Kansas City convention. One of the conventions ; represented Money the other Manhood. Choose ye this day which ye will follow. ‘ ( Can’t Be Trusted. The Republican party cannot be relied , upon to deal with the trust question. The , sympathies of those who control the £ policies of the Republican party are entirely with organized wealth in its , contest against the masses An evideuce of this is to be found in the fact that the t trusts have grown more rapidly under | the present administration than in all the , previous history of the country. This remarkable growth shows that at this a time the trust magnates neither fear the < enforcement of present laws nor the c enactment of new aud more stringent 1 ’ Jaws. —Bryan. , WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN and ADLAI EWING STEVENSON. When the news came over the wire that 16 to 1 was plainly written in the platform and no dodging, the Gormanites with elongated faces and tearful eyes greeted their friends with heavy heart and a sad sigh, aud the prophetic news that Bryan cau’t be elected. Why not, was asked. Because—wiping away more tears—Bryan would not stand on a Gorman platform, which meant auything or everything, but mostly nothing. And the Gorman mourners really believe that the Amer ican people are in a humor to be longer deceived by dodging platforms or dodger candidates! The sovereign remedy prescribed by the dodgers was to reaffirm the Chicago platform money plank but not write it in the platform. Here is what the Chicago platform says: “We demand the free and unlimited coinage of both silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1 without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation.” Of course everybody would have hunted up the old platform to see what the bug aboo was that Bryan and the whole party were trying to dodge. Every Republican and goldbug paper would have published the wonderful Chicago platform plank of “16 to 1” and rung the changes on it, that Bryan had weakened, had gone back on silver, that he was a dodger and . thought to fool the gold Democrats by such a shallow trick. There would have been no end to this kind of comment and caffitig to confuse and mislead. But Bryan said no, with a big N. If you make a dodging platform you will have to get a dodging candidate. Bryan proposed to let the people know exactly what he stood for, so there could be no chance to mislead. He was in favor of the remonetization of silver and its free coinage, the same as gold in every respect, aud insisted that the platform should de clare the fact beyond all doubt or equivo cation, and the following plank was in serted in the platform : “We reiteMte the demand of the plat form of 1896 for an American financial system made by the American people for themselves which shall restore and main tain a bimetallic price level; and as part of such system the immediate restoration of free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 16 1 without waiting for the aid or consent . of any other nation.” Bryan was determined that the people should not be fooled by any possible mis representation, that they should have a square vote on the subject of restoring silver to the money of the world as a primary money, and if they rejected it they must do it with their eyes open. For two years every Republican paper and every gold Democrat paper, which is only a Republican echo on the money question, have kept up a din, advising Bryan and the party to drop silver if they expected to win. Day after day they have harped on this one theme. You can never, no never, win if yon do not drop 16 to 1. This clamor of the Repub lican daily press had a scaring influence on a great many people who were inclined to accept this Republican advice, backed up as it was, by that corporation banking class whose occupation is to loan mouey and increase the value of the obligations they hold against their neighbors’ prop erty, and who call themselves “gold Democrats.” These innocent souls, who were the ' dupes of this hypocritical advice of the 1 gold and bank paper trust, were persuad ed to believe that the little deceit of merely reaffirming the Chicago platform would catch great “slews” of Eastern goldites. A more silly conclusion was never reached. Such a shallow attempt to deceive would have disgusted tens of thousands, where not tens could have been won. Would Republican papers and gold Democrats be likely to advise any policy that they believed would increase Bryan’s vote ? Of course not, and how simple souls could be deceived by such advice is difficult to understand. If the Democratic party abandon silver as one of the main factors in its financial policy, what will or would its financial policy be? Those timid or ignorant people who seem to think 16 to 1 is old fashioned and would like some new style of money, like a new styie in dress, have never suggested any “style” they would like in place of silver, or any other ratioithan'the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, which simply is that the value of 16 ounces, or pounds, or tons, if you please, of silver when converted into coined money shall be of the same value of one of gold. That is the ratio of all the silver dollars and silver certificates in the United States, while the silver coins of European nations are to 1, which makes their silver coins measured by gold coin worth about three cents on the dollar more than our silver dollars. It is estimated by money statisticiaus that there are about four billious of silver coin in the world aud it is measured or compared with the gold coiu at these ratios. Suppose the United States should open its mints and commence coining silver at some other ratio. What would be the result? If the ratio was increased, that is a less amount of silver put into the dollar, the present coins—l 6 to I—would1 —would go to a premium. If more silver was put into the new coins, our present dollars and every silver certificate would fall to a discount equal to the increase of silver in : the new coins, and there isn’t a bank in 1 the country that would not discount every 1 dollar deposited, thus upsetting and j demoralizing business to a certain extent, , aud every one who had silver certificates 1 —and there is little else in circulation— 1 would suffer the loss. 1 The cry against 16 to lis a mere decep J tion. Those among them who are intel- 1 ligent enough on the financial question { 1 to have an opinion except atsecoud hand 1 8 are opposed in toto to the remonetization , of silver. They have no other ratio to 1 offer. None is needed. None is possible, I and Bryan and all honest, sensible people were right in insisting that the plain, 1 mi-Ei jotte-lta-Ij : ifir.id-a.'y-, juri/sr 13,1900. undisguised truth should be placed before the public so that a fair deal could be bad. There is a great outcry against trusts and imperialism, and being new questions they catch the public ear They are dangerous as anything can be to repub lican government, while the government is in the hands of a moneyed oligarchy, with a weak, vacillating President as it now has. But these innovations are a natural result of the money power, which is the tap root of imperialism aud trusts, 1 of militarism which the aristocracy of | ’ mouey is endeavoring to build up; a barrier against the people when they . protest against wholesale robbery by . special laws for a favored class. The financial question is the real divid , ing question between the great parties i and has been the fundamental question for the third of a century. The money ( I class has resorted to every means that | could be devised to keep it in the back I ground, aud they have succeeded wonder . fully well. The tariff has been a prolific : subject. Negro domination, party prejudice and the war echoes, have lasted through a generation. But these party giants have grown decrepid with age, and the moneyed oligarcny have seized upon 1 ( imperialism aud trusts, as the only material at hand to divert the eyes of the r people from their great brigand, the 1 bank paper money trust and gold standard. | Ignatius Donnelly expresses the situa tion in the following graphic language: • “Regret it as we may, plutocracv is as I much of a sectional question today as slavery was in 1856. It is the battle of r the money-lending region against the I money-borrowing region; the section | where the dollar is bigger than the man II against the section where the man is r •infinitely bigger than the dollar. It is , | Threadneedle street against the spirit of -; 1776. Its roots reach down to the issue 1 1 of monarchy versus republic; nay, they : go even deeper. It is the forward move ment of God for the blessing of His children against tne troglodyte in his cavern, cracking the leg bones of his victim, to extract marrow for his canni • balistic feast.” ■ Women the Natural Enemy of Trusts. Take the Standard Oil Company, for ■ instance. The profits of this concern for ; the current year are estimated at {92,000,- . 000. Would not Mr. Rockefeller smile il > your son set out to establish a business -, that would snatch the power to fix prices | out of Mr. Rockefeller’s hands ? Pre :, cisely there is where trusts have mothers ’ i by the heartstrings. It is not so bad 1 , about prices—we may struggle and meet • .this— but trusts impose upon our sons a 1 future of serfdom. The individual enter- I prise that is possible under a reign of | trusts is a resort to the eeouomic condi ‘ ( lions of the barbarian. The alternative ' | is serfdom—a clerkship, if you will, a managerial position at a handsome salary ’ i" the trust concern, perhaps, but he is ’! the minion of the sugar king, the coal ’ j baron—the trust that employs him. He is 1 , a creature of the trust, with no hope, no • j future in which he may be master of I himself. This is woman’s cause for hating •! trusts, for fearing monopolistic tendencies lof every sort. Her boy, yours, and yours I I are defrauded of their American birth bright—liberty and independence— while I trusts operate to create a royal descent of 1 1 money kings to rule the “common” I people. Woman’s enmity against trusts I is not on economic grounds. It stands on I the American principle of liberty and 1 ( equal rights, and the strength of it is the force of a mother’s pride in her son.— Harper's Bazar. Is It Right For an Editor to Recom mend Patent Medicines ? From Sylvan Valley News, Brevrad, N. C. It may be a question whether the editor of a newspaper has the right to publicly recommend any of the various proprietary medicines which flood the market, yet as a preventive of suffering we feel it a duty to say a good word for Chatnberlaiu’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea I- emedy. We have known and used this medicine ill our family for twenty years and have always found it reliable. In many cases a dose of this remedy would save hours of suffering while a physician is awaited. We do not believe in depending implic itly on any medicine for a cure, but we do believe that if a bottle of Chamber lain’s Diarrhoea Remedy were kept 011 1 hand and administered at the inception : of an attack much suffering might be ! avoided and in very niauy cases the pres- , ence of a physician would not be required. At aleast this has been our experience during the past twenty years. For sale by E. T. Reynolds, druggist. A Chance Acquaintance. The most beautiful piece of color which Maud Humphrey has at- 1 tempted has been secured by the 1 great Philadelphia Sunday Press, ; and copies will be given free to ! every reader of the issue of next 1 Sunday, July 15. This picture, < which is entitled “A Chance Ac- 1 quaintance,” is without an equal I among water colors. There is oer- ■ lain to be a great demand for it; ! hence you had better order your , copy of next Sunday’s Press in , advance. E Chautauqua. Last Low-Rate Excursion via Pennsyl- * J - vania Railroad. On July 37 (Ha Pennsylvania Railroad Compauy will run the laat aptolal excursion from Philadel phia. Baltimore, Washington. Beading. Altoona. Bellefor te, Lock Haven, ghamokln, Wilkesbarre, Sunbury aud Williamsport, and principal inter mediate itatlona, and atattone on the Delaware Dlel.lon, Philadelphia. Wilmington and Balti more Ballroad. and on the Cumberland Valley Railroad, to Chautauqua. N, V. Speoial train will “tart trom Harrisburg at 11:BS a. m. Connection trains will leave Philadelphia 8:10 a. m.. Washing, ton 7,49 a.m. Baltimore 8:53 am., Altoona 7.1 s a. m . Wilkcsbarre 7:30 a. m.. I.ock Haven 11.33 a m. Round-trip tickets, good to return on regular trains not later than August 35, will be sold at rate of tlO CO from Philadelphia. Baltimore and Washington, and at proportionate rate from othor stations. Passengers from Atlantic City, Bridgeton. Vine, land, Clayton. N. J , aud statloua on the Delaware Division will use trains to Philadelphia on day preceding date of excursion. For specillo rates and time of connecting trams apply to nearest ticket agent. PERSONAL AND LITERARY. Muskegon, Mich., has recently been presented) with bronze statues of Lin coln, Grant, Sherman and Farragnt— the gift of Charles 11. Hackley. The gold medal of the British Lin naean society has this year been awarded to Prof. Alfred Newton in recognition of his important contribu tions to zoological science. Dr. Roswell Park, professor of surgery at the University of Buffalo and at the head of the Buffalo gen | eral hospital, has been appointed med ical director of the pan-t American ex position. When George B. M. Harvey, the ed itor of the North American Review, was a reporter on a New York daily, his declaration that he would some time edit a large magazine was a joke among his companions. A complete set of “The Snob” and “The Gownsman,’’ with all of Thack eray’s contributions, was sold for $660 in London lately. "The Orphan of Pimlico” brought $77, “The Corsair” (New York) SS2 and l “Vanity Fair,” 1848, s6l. The Cafe Procope, in Paris, founded by an Italian of that name in the mid dle of the eighteenth century, has just been closed. Voltaire, Rosseau, Marat, Danton and Gambctta were among its frequenters. It was closed about 20 years ago, but was reopened in 1893. Now it vanishes permanently. The trustees of Indiana state uni versity have acceded to the unani mous request of the students and fac ulty that their new athletic field be called Jordan field, after President David Starr Jordan, of Leland Stan ford, Jr., university, who was for several years president of Indiana university. A heavy burden of poetic ancestors weighs on the little son born to lion. Neville Lytton, heir presumptive to the earldom of Lytton. Through his father he is grandson of Owen Mere dith and great-grandson of Bulwer Lytton and through his mother great grandson of Lord Byron and grandson of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. DECIDE ANYTHING BY CHANCE. Some Instances of the Gambling: Spirit That Is Prevalent In Artsona. The gambling spirit seems to per vade a large share of the population down here in the southwest. It goes from the sublime to the ridiculous. Cards and dice sit as judges on many questions that affect the future wel fare of people. Recently two young fellows were arrested on the charge of burglary, given a preliminary hear ing, held to the grand jury, and were subsequently indicted. In the district court later, says a special to the Chi cago Inter Ocean, one of them pleaded guilty to the charge of breaking into a house and stealing clothing and other articles, and was sentenced to two years and u half in the territorial penitentiary at Yuma. After the trial was finished and the prisoner sent to the penitentiary it became known that the mode of de fense had been previously agreed upon by the two men by a game of seven up, played in the county jail with the other prisoners gathered round as witnesses to the transaction. They had agreed that the one beaten in the game of cards should plead guilty to the charge, exonerate his accomplice, and take whatever punislyneut was meted out by the presiding judge. The younger of the two won the game by one point, and his opponent abided strictly by the terms of the agree ment, and pleaded guilty, accepted the sentence without 4 murmur, and is now in durance vile, while his part ner, equally guilty, is free and un hampered by chains or conscience, Another bet that turned out badly for one of the principals happened a short time after. A young fellow who hnd been arrested on some charge of a not very serious nature, made n wager with a fellow prisoner that he would break jail and ride put pf tpwn with the sheriff’s own private saddle horse. He had in some manner se- : creted a pick in his cell and the fol lowing night succeeded in digging his 1 way out through the stone wall and made his escape from the Jail. He 1 failed, however, to properly locate the j sheriff’s barn and got into one be longing to a neighbor. He stole the , horse and rode put fit town all right, j but vyus captured at the rlnj of the 1 Grand C'nnyon, 70 miles away, while : asleep at a camp, the next night, and 1 is now In jail again with riveted irons on his Jogs awaiting trial for a seri ous crime for his folly. Phases of lluuges, The kinds of hunger are described, wo are told, by Drs. Mathieu and , Benuehunt, and have been named j "pninful hunger” and “agonizing huu- t gcr.” The need of tukiug food goner- I ally produces secretion of the gastrio <1 juice, and with some persons the ex- f eess of acid in this fluid pauses pain, which may be allayed by taking no * alkali to neutralize it. The variety * of hunger referred to above ns “agon izing hunger" is characterized by painful anxiety of mind. Those who suffer fron; it fear that some terrible accident is about to happen to them; they break out into perspiration, tremble, and sometimes -ose their reason. If food is taken, all these symptoms disappear.—London Lancet. Anil That's So. Little Jlobby—Pop, what's a sanitar ium? Mr. Hadaliver —It's a place where, ufter you've been there a week, you wish you were deud; and after you've been there n month, you think j'ou never were alive before.—Puck. Restaarant and Green Grocery. The undersigned having purchased tlie Restaurant aud Green Grocery from Wm. T. McClure, desire to announce that they are prepared to serve the public with ICE CREAM IN ANY QUANTITY. I By the plate, quart or gallon, in all the popular flavors. Special attention given to orders for parties and festivals. Fruits, Confeflionery, Canned Goods, Tobacco and Cigars. Prompt delivery of all goods ordered. I TOWN HALL BUILDING. MORRISON & WHITE. nilitarism. If an imperial policy is endorsed by the people a large standing artnv will always be necessary. The same influences that led to a war of conquest in the Philip pines will lead to wars of conquest elsewhere, and an immense military estab'ishment will not only become a per manent burden upon the people but will prove a menace to the republic.—Bryan. State of Ohio. City of Toledo, ) Lucas County, j **• Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one HUNDRED dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6tli day of December, A. D. 1886. J -^7 1 A - W. Gleason, ( ) Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. RISING SUN MARKET. Butter, per lb 12 Eggs 44 doz 12 Chickens u lb 08 Chickens, young 14 Lard, 07 Tallow, 03 PHILADELPHIA PRICES. Wheat, No. 2 red So Wheat, No. 2, steamer 78 )ats, No. 2 white 31 Corn, No. 2 yellow 50 Corn, No. 2 steamer 48^ Hay, No. 1 tim 1500 Hay, No. 2 14 00 Hay, mixed 1400 Wheat Straw 9 00 )atß Straw 9 50 Niagara Falls Excursions. Low-Rate Vacation Trips via Pennsyl vania Railroad. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has select ed the following dates for its popular ten-day 'excursions to Niagara Falls from Philadelphia. Baltimore and Washington : July 26, Aug. 9and 23 September 6 and 20, and October 4 and 18. On theso dates the special train will leave Wash ington at 8:00 a. m., Baltimore 9:05 a. ui. This year the excursions from Philadelphia will be run by two routes. Those on July 26, Aug. 9. Sept. 6, Oct. 4 and 18; goiug via Harrisburg aud the picturesque valley of the Susquehanna as heretofore, special train leaving Philadelphia at 8:10 a. m.; excursions of Ang. 23 and Sept. 20 run ning via Trenton, Manuuka Chunk, and the Delaware Valley, leaving Philadelphia on special at 9:00 a. m. Excursion tickets, good fjr return passage on any regular train, exclusive of limited express trains, within ten days, will be sold at S IO.OO from idiiladelphia, Baltimore, Washington and points >n tho Delaware Division; $1125 from Atlantic 'ity; $9 60 from Lancaster; $8.50 lrom Altoona and Harrisburg; $0.90 from Snnbury and Wilkes barre; $5 75 from Williamsport, and at propor tionate rates from other points, including Trenton, Mt. Holly, Palmyra, New Brunswick and principal intermediate statious. A stop over will he allowed at Bulfalo, Rochester, Canandaigua and Watkins within the limit returning, ou the excursions of July 26, August 9, September 6, October 1 and 18. For the excursions of August 23 and September 20. stop-over will be allowed at Buffalo on return trip within limit of ticket. The special trains of Pullman parlor cars and day coaches will be run with each excursion run ning through to Niagara Falls. An extra charge will be made for parlor car seats. An experienced tourist agent and chaperon will accompany each excursion. For descriptive pamphlet, time of connect ing truius, aud lurther information apply to nearest ticket agent, or address Geo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Station. Philadelphia. Summer Tours to the North. Two Tours to Canada via Pennsylvania Railroad. For tho Summer of 1900 the Pennsylvania Rail road Company has arrauged to run two personally* conducted tours to Canada aud Noitliern New York. These tours will leave July 21 aud Auuust 11, including Niagara Falls, Thousand Islands, Rapids of the St Lawrence, Quebec. Tho Saguenay, Montreal, An Sable Chasm, Lakes ChAinplain and George, aud Saratoga, occupying fifteen days; round-trip rate, $125. Each tour will be in chargo of quo of the Com pany's tourist agents, assisted by an experienced lady as chaperon, whose especial chargo will be unescorted ladies. The rate covers railway and boat fare for the entire round trip, seats, meals en route, hotel entertainment, transfer charges aud carriage hire. For detailed itinerary, tickets, or any additional information,address Tourist Agent, Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 1196 Broadway. New York; 860 Fulton Btreet, Brooklyn; 789 Broad Street,Newark N. J., or Goo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Broad Stroet Statiou, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Chautauqua. Reduced Rates to >tt. Gretna via Penn sylvania Railroad. For the Pennsylvania Chautauqua, to be held at Mt Gretna, Pa.,iJnly 2 to August 8, 1900, the • Pennsylvania Railroad Compauy will sell special excursion tickets to Mt. Gretna from New York, Washington. Baltimore, Frederick, Md., Canan daigua, and intermediate points, including all stations ou its lino in the State of Pennsylvania. Tickets will be sold Juno 25 to August 8, iuclu sive, aud will bo good to return until August 13, inclusive. JU3-2t Is Baby Thin this summer? Then add a little soorrs EMULSION to his milk three times a day. It is astonishing how fast he will improve. If he nurses, let the mother take the Emulsion, soc. and J 1.00; all druggists. BUFFINGTONS^ I ' r i i i Is This of Any Interest to You? i - The Annual Clearing Sale of Misses’ and ► i Children’s Shoes now going on. $1.50 and $1.25 Shoes go at 75c; 75c and SI.OO Shoes > go at 50c. 150 pairs in this lot. ! Truly, I E. R. BUFFINGTON & SONS. T~\ O J. ~l _ has been heavily drawn upon I 111 I xllli 1/ during the past week; yet Grain Cradles, Cradle Fin gers, Scythes, Wood Hand Rakes, Forks, Pulleys, Rope, Mower Sections, Grindstones, Knife Grinders, Lawn Mowers, and Binder Twine still on hand. We wish to call your attention to the “Rochester Sprayer” or Insect Gun—a good thing, and sells for COc. Also the “Favorite Potato Bug Exterminator,” price, 75c. Fi.y Killer Oil and Sprayhrs— keeps Hies off cattle in hot weather. Highest grade of Paris Green —kills potato bugs every time. I’HRESHERMEN’S SUPPLIES. Rubber Packing, Sheet Gum, Harness Beather, Lace Leather, Spirit Levels, Wrenches, Chisels, Punches, Ham mers,. Rivets, Hooks, Bolts, Glass Water Gauges, Special Lubricating Oils; Threshing Machine Teeth procured. NO EXORBITANT PROFITS EXACTED HERE. H-iAIISriES & EIBE, RISING SUN, MD. To the People: We sell Groceries, Provisions, Salt Meats, Lard, Bologna Sausage, Teas, Coffees (when you want a good strong coffee try Scull’s Fancy Rio, or when in need of a mild coffee, try Scull’s Fancy Santos), Syrup in barrels or cans. A superb N. O. Molasses on tap now. William Bros.’ Pickles, loose and in bottles. Dried Fruits, Peaches, Apples and Apricots. Canned Goods. Salt by the 200-lb. sack, Worcester brand Fine Salt in small sacks and by the barrel loose. We use this salt in our butchering business and wo know of its quality. Of the different grades of Flour we handle, “Pillsbury’s Best” leads the world. We sell it. Agateware, Wooden and Willow Ware, Wash Boilers, &c. Very respectfully yours, Cor. Queen & Cherry Sts., __ _ 4-13-lauo Rising Sun, Md. ZE3- 13.I 3 . NICHOLS. Grocery and Provision Dealer. BST - Eastern Shore Hams, 2c per tb. Other Meats, our own curing—low, must sell. City cured meats. ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiffliiiiiiiiiiiimiiiniiiniiimiiniimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)imiimiiiiiiiiiiiimwiinHiiiiiiiiiiwiiimw (The Lamp of Steady Habits The lamp that doesn’t flare up or smoke, or cause £ = you to use bad language J the lamp that looks good = /sVUaAkdh when you get it and stays good; the lamp that you = /t*Ty never willingly part with, once you have it; that’s Clk new Rochester. Q j Other lamps may be offered you as u just as good ** A —they may be, in some respects, but for all around goodness, there’s only one. To make sure the lamp offered you is genuine, look for the name on it; every _Bjisrw New Rochester lamp has it. = T<aZw . We make oil stoves too, just as good as the lamps; 'SSjjSStj \ Vp' gflffr m fact, anything in oil or gas fixtures. \ The Rochester Lamp Co., Vjfml 1 38 Park Place and 33 Barclay St, Near York. j ailllllllimUllllUlllUlllllUllUlllllllllllilUUmillllllllllllliilliiiiiliuiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiuuiimiiiiiiiiiimiiuuiuiiuiiiuiuuuii ® J. S. Chapman, Practical Watchmaker and Having bad 25 yearrexiwrit-mt- in repairing ofvvtr) dnrripUt o of I Watches, Clocks, Jewely, Spectacles, ITX 3LAS3E3, MUSIC BOXES, Ac. and , k'‘ orl£ tf UII H * >eci ‘‘’* t ttntion given to Chronofrapb N *' u door ,0 Office. RISING SUN, MD.