Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1896 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOUKNAL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, ,1890.

that we know of the laws of finance. The truth about it Is it Is absurd, ridiculous, and it is strange, that men still entertain that belief, that hy some port of hocus pocus (laughter) they can convert a substance of trifling value into something of greater value merely by the operation of law. "My purpose to-night has been rather io prepare the way for others. I now introduce General Buckner. the Democratic candidate for Vice President."

General Darkner' Address. The. audience arose and received General liickrer with great enthusiasm. He said, In part: "Mr. Chairman, Indies end Gentlemen I cannot express to you my gratitude for the kindness with which you have welcomed me her this evening. It has been tffiid already this evening that our friend who met in this city some months ago to lepresent the Democratic party do not appreciate the principles which actuate us in this movement. It was very natural that they should not. Personal advancement has been the sole object of the movement held in this city in July last, whilst the movement which culminated at Indianapolis was based entirely upon principles. .No man who selected the delegates askt'd anything for himself, but everything for his country. "We see now a gentleman passing from cne section cf this countiy to another who proclaims unblushingly that in doing so he passes into an enemy's country. I have been with my distinguished leader in various parts of this Union, and wherever we have been we found, as every Democrat will find in any nook within this great country, the homes of friends, and not of enemies." Referring to the financial question the speaker continued: "We hear a good deal about what, they call free silver. Some call it frcft coinage, but generally our Popullstlc filend3 caii it free silver. They are not agreed on the term, but it simply means that the owners of silver bullion, if that act becomes a law, shall, by taking it to the mint, have it coined free of expense to them, but at the expense of the people of the United States, and for every 53 cents' worth of that silver receive one legal-tender silver dollar. Now, that is for the benefit of the holder of silver and those who hold the silver the miners and the wealthy who can buy. "They say that everything that occurred since 1873 in financial matters is due to the crime of '73, as they call it the repeal of that portion of the act which coined the silver dollar. There was not dollar of specie, either of silver or of goH. then in circulation. There was very HUle in the country anywhere. There was a good deal of paper money in circulation, but not at par. It was at a large discount. At one period it took 285 cents in paper to buy one dollar, either in stiver or in gold, and that is the period which our friends insist shall be brought back by the legislation of Congress when the Populists obtain control of the government. There were at that time in the country altogether, including the paper, only a. little over $700,000,000. What have we to-day? They say half Is stricken down; we have more than double that amount to-day. We had not, at that time, a single silver dollar in circulation in this country. "We have tried this question of paper money both in the North and in the South. We tried it on the other side. We issued more paper money than you (had in the North I think abut a thousand millions of paper money was printed. It was a flood the very thing desired by our Populist friends thesre was plenty of money. It was so abundant that It occasioned a great rise in prices. I want to aiologlze to any Pooulist friend who is here ought to say that that money depreciated in value that is not their theory. Their theory is that products and merchandise rose in value, the money remaining the same. Of course, they Insist that the value of the money remained the same never depreciated at a,ll and will say that the price of things that you people have to buy will go up amazingly. There will be no change In the value of money at all. but everything else will go up enormously in price that is their theory, He says.too, that if you coin free silver, have unlimited free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1, that whilst the dollar now at the beginning of the coinage perhaps would not be worth more than about half a dollar, yet it creates an unlimited demand, and therefore the price will go up to the value of the gold dollar. Well, that dollar is now equal to a gold dollar, if that is what he is after. Is he going to be any better off after this experiment, even if it succeeds is he going to be any better off than you are now? If the object is to raise it to that value you have it there now, and we run the risk of the destruction of eve'-y interest in the country to attain what you have today." In conclusion. General Buckner said: "I wish to say to the people of Chicago and this meeting that I bring them good news from my State of Kentucky. This ticket is gaining in stren-rth constantly. We will get a very respectable vote in the State of Kentucky, as we will, I believe, in Illinois. There are men there who believe with my distinguished leader and myself that the preservation of the life and integrity of the Democratic partv is the one thing essential to the perpeutity of our institutions, and whatever else may happen that we should maintain its existence and show even to or.r enemies that its principles have such vitality that the party refuses to die. even at the behest of those who pretend to be its friends." Col. John P. Irish, the eloquent Calif orl1'?8 the, next speaker. He attacked the Chicago platform, plank by plank, and discussed the financial question at great length. & GOLD DEMOCRATS. Connecticut Convention Addressed by Ex-Governor T. M. AVnller. HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 8. There were about five hundred delegates to the National Democratic gold standard State convention here to-day when the call to order was sounded by William J. Mills, of New Haven, a former member of the State central committee, but who resigned at the New Haven convention. Mr. Mills introduced ex-Governor Thomas M. Waller as temporary chairman. The appearance of Mr. Waller was the signal for long continued applause. His remarks' elicited cheers. In the course of his speech Mr. Waller, alluding to the Democratic national convention of last July said: "I take pleasure in reporting that all the members of the delegation of which I was the chairman were as earnestly opposed as I was to the socialism, the Populism, the trampism, the Tillmanism and the 16 to 1-ism of the Chicago platform, though one or two of them, who have Mince their return been 'lost, strayed or stolen, were not quite so intense. 1 am," Mr Waller added, "for the defeat of the Chicago usurpers and their Populist allies, first of all. by somebody, sure. By National Democrats under the blue and the gray and the leadership of Palmer and Buckner, men we reverence and honor, if it can be done: If not, by national patriots from whatever party they come or whatever banner they bear if it is not red and has not upon it the 111 to 1 hieroglyphic, nor the faces of either Altgeld or Tillman. This Is not an ordinary political contest In which we are enlisted and in which the laws of party discipline prevail. It is a sectional, socialistic warfare in which every man must do what his conscience dictates is best for the good of his country and his party, too, with respect, but without regard to what others do." Mr. Waller devoted a portion of his speech to State questions. He said: "Connecticut is, I think, to-day. the only State In the Union where a candidate, who gets the most votes, may not get the office; or, to put it another way, where a candidate who gets the least votes mav get the office. This oeems paradoxical, but it is not; it is only Republican." He advocated reform of the ballot, saying that "the improper use of moiiey in our elections is a scandal that cannot be denied and that ought to be stopped, for it Is the poisoning of the mountain streams of our government from which, wherever we are, we all have to drink." At the conclusion of Mr. Waller's address the report of the committee on resolutions was submitted and adopted. The platform reaffirms the declaration of the convention held on June 10 of this year and on the currency question says: "While we favor the most liberal use of silver consistent with the enforcement of a gold standard, we are unalterably opposed to the free, coinage of silver, deeming it a device for the debasement of our currency and the compulsory purchase of silver by the government. ' Under existing circumstances to pay public dfbts In silver coin i repudiation; to pay private debts in the fame coin is to rob the wage earner; and to provide for the free coinage of silver moan.1 the destruction of legitimate business and great suffering among the laboring classes. We believe the safety of our national finances requires a system of found banking, by which a bank note curi rency ample to supply the needs of the whole country shall be created, safely secured and always and everywhere redeemable in gold." - The convention placed in nomination . presidential electors and a full State ticket and also indorsed the nominees for Congress, State Senators and Judge of probate selected by the several caucuses. The State ticket Is as follows: For Governor, Joi A. Sparry: Lieutenant Governor, William Waldo Hyde; Secretary of State, Judge William Belcher; Stnte Treasurer, George H. Hovt; Controller. Hobert Curtis. The following vvpre nominated for Congress: First district. K. Henry Hyde: Second. H. Molton Wood; Third. Henry W. llammon; Fourth, Morris Y. Seymour.

VISIT TO VERSAILLES

buildixgs asd gardens viewed bv the czar asd czarixa. Drniiiniic Entertainment fit "Which Ilernhnrdt Was One of the Stars Ilosebery's Rekignntion, PARIS. Oct. 8. President Faure arrived at the Russian embassy shortly before 1:30 a. m., in an open carriage and the Czar and Czarina, who had been expecting him. Immediately entered the vehicle, and, escorted by a strong detachment of Cuirasiers, proceeded to the Louvre. Entering the Louvre the Czar and Czarina received an ovation from enormous crowds of people. The building was superbly decorated. The imperial visitors were received by the Minister of Instruction, M. Itamband, who introduced M. Puvis de Chavannes, president of the Salon du Champ de Mars, and M. Detaille, the celebrated painter of battle pictures. The Czar shook hands with both the artists and exchanged a few cordial words of greeting with them. Their Majesties returned to the Russian embassy at 11:43 and at nocn lunched with sixty members of the emabssy and the suites. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon the Czar and Czarina started for Versailles, via the Bols de Boulogne, and the Sevres porcelain factory. During the short sfay which they made at the porcelain factory they lit a fire In one of the furnaces and afterwards inspected the museum. The Grand Duchess Olga, infant daughter of the Czar and Czarina, was taken to Versailles in an open landau, sitting in the lap of her nurse, who made the baby wave her hand and throw kisses to the crowd, which responded with cheers. The imperial party arrived at Versailles at 4:30 p. m., amid the usual scenes of enthusiasm. Their Majesties visited the gardens and the park, the grounds being beautifully prepared for them, fountains playing and everything in the neatest of order. The Russian imperial standard was hoisted over the center of the Palace of Versailles and floated there throughout the stay of their Majesties. After having made a tour of the gardens the Czar and Czarina entered the court of honor, where a magnificent tent of red velvet trimmed with gold fringe, had been erected. The imperial party was met by the Minister of Fine Arts, the director of the National Museums and the curator of the palace, and were conducted up the Queen's staircase, at the top of which they were met by Mme. and Mile. Faure, whom their Majesties graciously greeted. The visitor then proceeded to inspect Marie Antoinette's and other small rooms. Thence they were escorted to the Salle des olaces, and when they emerged upon the balcony they were most enthusiastically cheered by the crowd, numbering about 15.000 people, assembled before the palace. Just before dusk the grounds were brilliantly illuminated, all the trees being hung with fairy lamps. , The Czar has given 100,000 francs for distribution among the poor of Paris. The horses belonging to the carriage of M. Cochery. the Minister of Finance, became frightened by the music while in the courtyard at Versailles and plunged down the steps into the crowd. Injuring eight people, three of them seriously. A banquet was spread in the Galerle des Batailler, to which the guests sat down at 7:30 o'clock. 'The Czar, placed between Mesdames Faure and Loubet, .sat opposite President Faure, who was placed between the Czarina and Mme. Brison. A musical and dramatic entertainment fcllowed the banquet, Mesdames Bernhardt and Delna and Mme. Fugere Delauney and Cocquellne being among the artists. The Czar was in evening dress, the Czarina being robed in a white dress and wearing a diadem upon her head and a necklace of diamonds and pearls on her neck. The Czar and Czarina having entered the imperial train after the performance, it started at 11:15 for Chalons, where the military review takes place to-morrow, and it was followed at 11:30 o'clock by the presidential train conveying M. Faure. In spite of the precautions of the police to prevent demonstrations by Anarchists during the visit of their Majesties, the Czar and Czarina, two bombs have been exploded. T-e police deny that anything resembling i l outbreak has occurred, but the newspapers refute the assertions of the police. Yesterday, while a few people were on the Place de la Concorde, a man carrying a basket was noticed loitering near the statue of the city of Lyons. Soon afterwards, it is claimed, there was an explosion with a report like that of a fog signal, and a number 'of nails and pieces of iron were scattered over the statue., which was injured. The Journal says another explosion, injuring one person, occurred on the Rue St. Florentin. and that one arrest was made. The Gaulois asserts that a number of Anarchists have been arrested. ROSEBERY'S RESIGNATION. What the Pre. Says Abont the Liberal Leader's Fall. LONDON, Oct. 8. The resignation of 'Lord Rosebery from the leadership of the Liberal party is the sensation of the newspapers to-day. Their comment is given color according to the political complexion of each journal. Lord Rosebery's decision was a complete surprise even to Sir William Harcourt. A meeting cf the Liberal party will be convened In London before Parliament assembles. The St. James Gaaette this afternoon, in the course of a long leading editorial, suggests a way out of the difficulty by Mr. Gladstone accepting the premiership with a peerage which the Queen has repeatedly offered him, pointing out that he will thus be spared the worry of the House of Commons, where Sir William Harcourt would assume the leadership. The Westminster Gazette urges that there should be no undue haste in choosing Lord Rosebery's successor, adding that there will ix? no occasion to select a Liberal Premier for years, and asserting that in the meantime Sir William Harcourt is already the leader :'n the House of Commons. Continuing, the Westminster Gazette says: "Whether Lord Rosebery is Premier or not. it is highly probable that in the next few months he will find himself in a position of greater strength and influence than he ever occupied." The Pall Mali Gazette remarks: "The national uprising has done its work, but in the excitement of the moment they managed to depose the wrong gentleman Lord Rosebery instead of the Sultan." The Star remarks: "Lord Rosebery's fall was dramatic and tragic. The hand which rained him up pulled him down. One result of Lord Rosebery's reign is that it may be predicted that the Liberals will never again be led by a peer." T. P. O'Connor, in the Sun. says: "The truth Is that Ixrd Rosebery never had a chance. He made many mistakes, and his language on the Irish question was especially open to grave disapproval. But. all the same, he did not get a chance. The situation is grave. If Mr. Gladstone's return is impossible, if popular opinion will not form for Lord Rosebery to return, the choice must lie between Harcourt and Morley. My preference is for Morley, as he is more intimately associated with homo rule." Among the Dillonltes there is general resentment at the fact that Lord Rosebery has resigned the leadership of th Liberal party without consulting them. The Dublin Independent says that he did so "without a thought for home rule," and adds: "If Sir William Harcourt succeeds him the condition of Irish affairs will be worse than ever. Harcourt can never be trusted by any Irishman." Drfrkinridgc Nominated. LEXINGTON. Ky.. Oct. 8. The congressional committee of the National Democracy met here to-day and nominated Colonel W. C. P. Breckinridge for Congress In the Ashland (Seventh) district. The Leader, edited by Sam J. Roberts, chairman of the Republican State campaign committee, t"-nignt in an editorial indorsed the nomination of Breckinridge. Silver Democrats will nominate a candidate tomorrow at Frankfort. SIss Van llotke Wants $ 10,000. BRUSSELS, Oct. 8.-Miss Van Hocke, a young lady of this city, has brought suit for breach of promise to marry, claiming $10,000 damages against Captain Lothaire. the Belgian officer who was recently acquitted of the charge of murder in hanging the Britisa trader Stokes in the Congo Free State. More Trouble ut Zanzibar. LONDON. Oct. 8. The flagship of the British South African squadron, the flrstclass cruiser St. George, Hying the flag of Hear Admiral Rawson. haa been ordered

back to Zanzibar from Cape Town. The first-class cruiser Gibraltar, now attached to the Mediterranean fleet, hr.s also been ordered to Zanzibar. It is understood that the dispatch of reinforcements to Rear Admiral Rawson wm in connection with the removal of the former ruler of Zanzibar on a German war vessel.

Loss nt Guayaquil Is $ 34, 100,000. LIMA, Peru. Oct. 8. The great fire at Guayaquil, Ecuador, is believed to have been of incendiary origin. Some arrests have been made. Many people lost their lives during the conflagration, and the losses are now estimated at 8O.0fHl.00d sacres 54.400,000.) The populace is furious and is demanding the prompt punishment of the guilty. Ilotnrn of the Conyuerors. . DONGOLA, Oct. 8. Gen. Sir Herbert Kitchener, commander of the British Egyptian expedition: Slatin Pasha, of the Intelligence Department, and other leading officers of the expedition, have returned to Cairo. A FOOLISH DOCTRINE. (Concluded from First Paige.) lot to continue the equaiity of citizenship, of privilege, of opportunity, or possibility which has been the boast of our citizenship and is the very cornerstone upon whicn our free institutions rest. No young man will want weights upon his shoulders or raise the barriers to his own progress which hitherto have never impeded the progress of the industrious, honest, clean, ambitious young man. "Away with caste and classes when such doctrine is un-American and unworthy to be taught to a free people. He who would Inculcate that spirit among our free people is not the friend, but the enemy of the poor, but honest, young man, whose soul is fired with a worthy ambition for himself. How would Lincoln, Grant, Garfield and Logan have stood If in their time they had accepted the doctrine, which some now teach, that because they were poor and in humble surroundings, they must get off by themselves and shut the door of opportunity to the best impulses of their souls and the noble aspirations of their minds. "The ballot of the young man. as well as that of the old man, the ballot of the first voter, as well as that of all voters, should always express the voice of truth and conscience. It should represent the calm and unbiased judgment of the voter. It should embody the highest welfare of himself, his home, his community and his country. It should never be false to his convictions, or opposed to justice and honor, either in public or private concerns. It should express on Its fase his best hopes and highest aspirations as an individual citizen and always represent the greatest good to his fellow-countrymen. "May your votes, young gentlemen, be always given to preserve our unity, our honor, our flag, our currency and our country and to save your blessed inheritance always from lawlessness, dishonesty and violence. May jrour votes always be given for a policy that shall give to us the widest development in our unmatched resources; the widest incentive to the invention, the skill and genius of our citizens: .the largest rewards to American labor and. the highest welfare of the people and promote the best ideas in American citizenship. "I thank you for this call and bid you good afternoon." TRUSTS IV THE PEOPLE. McKinley Does Not Believe They Can Be Deluded Always. Major McKinley's response to Judge John W. Reed, who spoke for delegations from Jefferson, Clearfield, Clarion and Armstrong counties, Pennsylvania, follows: "My Fellow-citizens It gives me great pleasure to meet the citizens of Jefferson, Clearfield, Armstrong and Clarion counties, Pennsylvania. From what your spokesman has said, that Clearfield county, which has hitherto been Democratic, is to come into the Republican column, and from what has been said to me from time to time in behalf of other delegations from your State, it occurs to me that Pennsylvania is about ready to move 'to make it unanimous.' I bid you welcome to my home and congratulate you on the bright outlook for a return of that business confidence which will give to this country increased industrial activity and greater prosperity. I have no sympathy with the sentiment sometimes expressed by good people of 'Doubt about the future of the United States.' Nobody need be troubled about that. The United Stales will take care of itself, and in its own good time and prosperous way, through constitutional forms, restore this country to its former greatness, glory and prosperity. "The United States, with its wealth of resources of the skill, energy and enterprise of its people, cannot be long checked in its onward march. There, are some citizens in all the States who seem to be seriously concerned, but I, for one, do not share in their apprehensions. The great body of the people is safe; they are steady; they are not moved by wild impulses. Dismal forebodings of what might happen will not Oe realized. "Demagogues there are In the country who try to Inculcate the doctrines of distrust and dismay among the unemployed, and in great part the men who are Inculcating that doctrine are the men who advocated a policy that first created idleness in the United States, Exoomists there are who talk glibly about the war of the classes against the masses, heedless of the effects of the logical outcome of their false and pernicious, their degrading and dangerous doctrines. Foolish men these are who innocently disseminate every sort and variety of misinformation, and thus do the bidding of the better posted but more designing men, whose dupes they are. "Still, there need be no alarm; there need be no excitement; there need be no abuse or exaggeration, for all' these false doctrines and unworthy influences will not again prevail with the free, the independent and the intelligent citizens of the United States. The great majority of our people are religiously devoted to law and order, the public peace and public tranquillity. They love their homes, and their wives, and their famil'es too well to stand by any policy that will lead to public disorder and disregard of law. They are :n favor of respecting the right of property, the right of contract, the inviolability of public faith, and the sacredness of our tmcorrupted and incorruptible courts of justice. They are flocking to the standard of the countrv. not from one party alone, but from all parties, with an earnestness and unanimity creditable to our patriotism and a splendid testimonial tc the strength and glory of our free institutions. "Mv fellow-citizens. I have always believed In the people, but I am stronger today in my faith in the American people than I ever have been before. They have been true in every crisis of the past, they have been uniformly on the right side in every emergency and never failed to sustain their country and those public policies which insured its peace and highest welfare. The great heart of American people is moved bv the simple consideration of what is best and wisest and most benelicial to the Nation. "In the discharge of every public trust to which I have been called, whether as a Representative in Congress or Governor of Ohio, 1 have always found that an honest and open, just and frank appeal to the people never failed to receive a warm and favorable response. It is a mistake to imagine that the great body of our people are not the conservative force of the country. They are not caught with the suggestions of dishonesty, either in our public or private transactions. They believe in the old maxim that honesty is always the best policy in government, as well as in Individual life, and those who think otherwise underestimate both the intelligence and patriotism of the American people. "There is to-day as ardent and abiding a patriotism as ever mustered men under the glorious stars and striies. Whether they be native born or were bom under another flag and have pitched their tents with us to become a part of our splendid citizenship, the average man of all these nationalities is interested in what will do most good for himself and wife and family and exalt the honor and name of his adopted country. The detriment, the damage, the distress which has been felt by the people and which was visited upon the country by both the policy already executed and the policy now threatened, has Injured not only the men who toil, but has injured the men who employ labor. We have discovered that we cannot strike down the owner of the factory or the owner of the mines without striking down the labor that is employed with him. "Pennsylvania is a. State where manufacturing and mining occupy first rank. Yours is the second manufacturing State in this great Union. Every interest you have is linked with the restoration of the protective iolicy. You have not a single interest which is or could be benefited by free trade. You have not a single interest that is not benefited by a protective tariff. You prospered most from 1S70 to 1S02. and we were then tinder a splendid American protective policy and on the bedrock of sound finance. You have shared since that time 'in the general loss which has fallen on the country. Your hills and mountains are yet filled with con I. your forests have yet some of the best of timber. Your hills are covered or used to be with flocks of sheep. Your iron mills, steel mills, potteries and glass factories, your every variety of manufactories scattered all over your State, are only awaiting the return of that confidence in business which will make a demand for your products. That Is all you want. When that demand comes there will be a demand

for your labor, and with the employment of your labor there will be created a market, not only for the products of your manufacture, but in the highest degree for tinproducts of agriculture. Pennsylvania gave solemn expression of her judgment upon the industrial policy of the Democratic party two years ago. She gave a majority greater than she had ever given in her history. Men of your counties represented here. I ask you if you desire to" register a different verdict on the 3d of November next?

M'KIXLEV REGISTERS. The Republican Nominee Drives to the Polls and Complies with the Law. CANTON, O.. Oct. 8. "No. 38. William McKinley. age fifty-three. No. 723 North Market street, born in Ohio, moved to present house January. 18-96, but has voted in this precinct for five years." This was the entry clerks McRoberts and Plunkard mad on the registration record of precinct B, First ward, early this morning. Major McKinley drove to the polls in the onehorse family carriage with Mrs. McKinley, at an early hour. He took the first opportunity to get away from his house before to-day's delegations began to arrive. His step was elastic aid his face glowed with good health as he hastily stepped into the precinct headquarters and pleasantly awaited his turn to register after several workingmen and clerks. He wrote his name. "William McKinley." in full, as required on the registration books, instead of at breviadng "William," as usual. When Major McKinley returned to his home from his drive to the registering place he found Lieutenant Governor Halllc, of Masachusetts, among his callers. Mrs. J. Ellon Foster and daughter, of Iowa, came shortly afterwards from Chicago and took lunch at the McKinley home. A telegram received this evening announces that among the numerous delegations of Saturday will be one of fifty ministers and delegates to the A. M. E. Z. Conference, which is now in session in New York city. Virginians Bound for Canton. HARRISONBURG, Va., Oct. 8. Twenty carloads of people left here about 5 o'clock this evening. They are a party of excursionists en route to Camton and consist mainly of ex-Confederate veterans. The train from Staunton had the famous Stonewall Jackson brigade band on board, and it, with several others, accompanied the excursion. A great many people at points between here and Harper's Ferry joined the crowd. Tho Excursion oomplete consist of about 1,700 persons, about one thousand being ex-Confederate soldiers, and about seven hundred people are from this county and the remainder from adjacent counties. The excursionists are expected to arrive in Canton to-morrow morning about 8 o'clock. They meet Governor McKinley at noon and returning leave for Pittsburg Friday night, where the G. A. R. will have a demonstration in their honor. They return here late Saturday evening. BAD WEATHER RT SEA. Lives of Mariners and Vo aers Periled by n. Furious Gale. LONDON, Oct. 8. A gale which began on Monday continues to-day with Increased fury. All the buoys in Queenstown harbor have been shifted, some of them being driven a quarter of a mile from their positions. The Daunts Rock light ship, having on board a crew of eight men, is broken adrift and is believed to have been foundered, while the Roche's Point light ship is not visible to-day. The Majestic, which left Liverpool yesterday for New York, arrived at Queenstown late to-day and sailed again for New York at 6 p. m. The Majestic took twenty Instead of ten hours to run from Liverpool to Queenstown. She encountered terrific weather and reports that she saw nothing of the missing Daunts Rock light ship. The Belgian steamer Pennland, which sailed from Liverpool yesterday for Philadelphia, has also failed to report at Queenstown. Both vessels experienced the full force of the gale. There are five hundred passengers at Queenstown awaiting steamers on which to embark for New York and elsewhere. The storm has caused considerable damage at all points along the English, Irish and Welsh coasts. A number of casualties have already been reported and numerous vessels have been sighted flying signals ot distress, at Ufraoombe, Devonshire, the sea has washed away a hundred feet of the wall fronting the Ilfracombe Hotel. The lower part of the town was flooded, a number of houses being swamped. At Porthcawl the seas were sixty feet high and have been washing over the breakwater. Floods are also reported In various parts of Wales. The Rhonda & Swansea Bay railroad, in many parts, is under six feet of water or washed awaj. An unknown schooner has been lost off Holyhead and her crew of fifty men were drowned. The boatswain of the steamer Germanic, from New York, Sept.. 30, was washed over and drowned off the Irish coast. Captain and Nine Men Lost. HALIFAX, N. S.. Oct. 8 The Norwegian bark Ariadne, Captain Paulsen, from Grenoek in ballast for Bayverte, ran ashore between Green Cove, five miles east of Ingomish, yesterday morning during the easterly gale and went to pieces Immediately. The captain and nine of the crew were drowned. Christian Johnsen, the second mate, and a youth named Johnnie Ravenburg are the only survivors of the crew of twelve. The first mate's body was found to-day. Ten Sailors Drowned. HULL, Oct. 8. In a collision this morning on the Humber, between the steamers Alexander and Emden. the former sank, drowning ten of her crew. Movements of Steamers. BREMERHAVEN, Oct. 8. Arrived: Lahn. from New York, via Southampton; Munchen, from New York. NEW YORK, Oct. 8. Sailed: Augusta Victoria, for Hamburg; Zaandam, for Amsterdam. LIVERPOOL. Oct. 8. Arrived: Aurania, from New York; Belgenland, from Philadelphia. PLYMOUTH. Oct. 8. Arrived: Normannia. from New York, for Cherbourg. QUEENSTOWN. Oct. 8. Sailed: Majestic, from Liverpool, for New York. BOULOGNE. Oct. 8. Sailed: Obdam, from Rotterdam, for New York. HAMBURG, Oct. 8. Arrived: Prussia, from New Y'ork. LONDON. Oct. 8. Sailed: Massachusetts, for New York. FRAUDS IN GEORGIA. (Concluded from First Pagp,) National Democratic party on the ground that the law prohibits the use of the same or substantially tho same nam by two political parties or factions of parties, and that the names "the National Democratic party" mid "the Democratic party" are substantially the same, was given a hearing by Secretary cf State PaJmer to-day. Co!. Asa Bird Gardiner, of New York, who represented the Democratic State committee, contended that the name being ued was substantially the same as that of the Democratic party, and was intended to deceive voters. Counsel for the National Democratic party made the claim that the party had been in existence in this State for the last two years as the Democratic reform organization, and that it had only exercised its right in changing Its name at the Brooklyn convention last month." The Secretary of State promised an early decision. Salt Lake Republicans for Silver. SALT LAKE, Utah, Oct. 8. The Salt Lake county Republican convention has nominated a county ticket and candidates for the Legislature. This county furnishes nearly one-third of the members of the Legislature and the action may have an important bearing on the choice of the next United States Senator. The resolutions adopted are. in part, as follows: "We maintain that the free coinage of silver at the ratio of Ifi to 1 independent of the sanction of any foreign nation is a political issue paramount to all others, and second only to this issue is the protection of home industry, coupled with reciprocity with foreign nations. We pledge our legislative candidates to strictly maintain these principle, to vote for a candidate for United States Senator only who will declare himself In full accord with these principles." Silver Democrat Ilesisn. WASHINGTON, Oct. S. Henry Clay Smith, United Statei Consul to Santos, Brazil, who is at present in Washington, has resigned his office because cf the rule forbidding officeholders to take an active part in polities. In his letter to the President tendering his' resignation Smith says; "Conceiving it to be my plain duty to take

a part In the present political contest.

where so much, as I understand It. is at stake, no other course which my con scierce can approve is left open to me but io resign the very important omce you have had the kindness to give me. to take effect at the end of my leave, notwithstanding the pleasure and profit I receive by holding the same. My duty forces me to join with my State and its representative men in Alabama in the support of Bryan and Sewall for President and Vice president. WILL SOON RESUME WORK. Owners of Lendvllle Mines Have Ereeed Defensive Works. LEADVILLE, Col., Oct. S. From present indications every mine that was in operation before the strike will have been started again within thirty days. Barricades, blockades and sentry bor.es have been erected about the Little Johnny, Bison, Last Chip, Emmett, Marion and Mahala and other leading mines and the Resurrection has begun similar defensive works. More me' are coming from outside and with those here who are doily apply ing for work will give the mines full forces as far as they are wanted. James R. Amburn, who has been missing since the riots, has been replaced as president of the miners' union by Peter B. Turnbull, formerly vice president. There has been no change in the policy of the union, and the mine operators are not now disposed to agree to any compromise. AWARDED TO GREENE. Tom Tracey Bested by '"Young Corbett" in Ten Rounds. SAN FANCISCO, Oct, 8. George Greene (Young Corbett), of San Francisco, and Thomas Tracey, of Australia, met in a tenround contest to-night before the Occidental Club. Greene was given the decision by referee "Young Mitcieil," the retired lightweight champion. The fight was the best seen in San Francisco in a long time. Greene assumed the aggressive at the call of time and made the pace in nearly every round. In the fourth he knocked Tracey down twice, having him almost out, Tracey displayed the better ring generalship and saved himself several times by hanging on Greeno when almost out. His methods were not , as clean as Greene's. He persisted in striking Greene when in a clinch, though warned by the referee several times. Greene showed to much better advantage than in any previous contest. His tactics were clean and his cleverness of a high order. Tracey was the fresher at the finish and had the contest lasted two rounds more the result might have been different. A Jaw-Smashing 'Mill. LEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 8. Johnny Lavack, 122 pounds, of Cleveland, and Australian Billy Murphy, 114 pounds, fought twenty rounds to a draw here to-night before the Navarre Athletic Club. The fighting was heavy throughout. Murphy broke his hand in the sixteenth round, and Lavack's jaw was broken in the fourteenth. In the preliminaries Otto Jones, of Lexington. 105 pounds, got the decision over Chic Brooker, of Cincinnati, 95 pounds, in a ten-round "go." TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Sir Charles Tupper, ex-Premier of the Canadian Dominion, celebrated his golden wedding at Ottawa yesterday. He received many valuable presents. The Governor General of Canada and Lady Aberdeen have started from Ottawa for a pleasure trip to British Columbia, where they will remain for about two months. The Erie railroad authorities have been notified by Julius Cosol, a prominent merchant of Youngstown, O., that he was roboed of $2,250 in the Erie station at Jersey City Tuesday. nightMr. Harlan's Experience. Newport Hoosier State. Four years next month, when the news flashed over the wire that Ben Harrison was defeated and Grover Cleveland had been elected President of the United States, no one rejoiced more over the result than Eldridge Harlan, a thrifty and prosperous farmer of this township. He had attended the rallies during the campaign that fall and had heard the Democratic orators proclaim from every platform that if Grover Cleveland was elected the McKinley robber tariff would be repealed and the markets of the world would be opened up to the old farmers for their products, and that instead of having to sell their wheat at 85 cents and corn at 35 cents they would get 1.25 per bushel for wheat and 50 cents for their corn. Mr. Harlan, like thousands of other Democrats, honestly believed that farm products would advance In price as soon as Democracy got control of the government machinery. At that time he had 1,100 bushels of wheat on hand, but was not willing to dispose of it at 85 cents per bushel. He told his neighbors that he was going to hold it until after Grover was inaugurated and then he would get $1.25 per bushel for his wheat. He held his wheat until after Grover was installed in office, but the longer he held it the less he could get for It. Immediately after the election everything commenced dropping in price and is still dropoing. Along late in the spring Mr. Harlan realized that the ascendancy of Democracy to power was not going to help the price of farm products, and he hauled his wheat to town and sold it to the Newport Milling Company for 51 cents per bushe, which was then 2 cents better price than ne could have got for it in the market, but the mill at that time had a big order for flour, and in order to get wheat was paying 2 cents above the market price. If Mr. Harlan is in favor of continuing the present hard times four years more, he should vote the Popocratic ticket this fall and we assure him that if Mr. Bryan should happen to be elected he will not be disappointed. Officers Fleeted by Drumglst. PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 8Delegates to the National Wholesale Druggists' Association convention to-day elected the following officers for the ensuing year- President. John B. Purcell, Richmond. Va.first vice president, John A. Gllman, Boston: second vice president, N. Ashley Lloyd. Cincinnati; third vice president George K. Hopkins. St. Louis; fourth vice president, William P. Rodington. San Francisco; fifth vice president, H. W. Evans. Kansas City. Mo.; secretary, A. B. Merriam. Minneapolis, Minn.; treasurer E L Strong, Cleveland. O. Richmond, Va.. was chosen as the place and the second week in November, 1S97. as the time for the next annual convention. Bishop Keane Retires. WASHINGTON. Oct. S.-Carroll Institute was filled to the doors to-night with a representative audience which had gathered to express regret at the retirement of Pilshop Keane from the Catholic University. Justice Morris of the District Court of Appeals, presided, and a number of educators and divines and others occupied seats on the platform. Brief remarks were made by Rev. Dr. Franklin Rankin, of the Howard University; President J Haven Richards, of Georgetown University; Rev. B. L. Whitman, President of Columbia University; Gen. A. W. Greely. of the army; Commissioner Truesdall and Commissioner Stafford. Clara Barton Welcomed Home. WASHINGTON. Oct. 8. Miss Clara Barton, the head of the Red Cross Societ'-", was given a welcome on her return io Washington from her trip to Turkey by a reception in her honor at the Shoreham Hotel to-night. It was an informal affair, and a number of her friends turned out to greet her. Assisting her in receiving the guests were Mrs. John A. Logan, Mr. George Pullman, her secretary, and others. Following the public reception there was a banquet, at which a number of speeches were made. Temple Houston Shoots J. II. Jenkins. WOODWARD. O. T., Oct. 8. Temple Houston, a prominent politician, who was a delegate to the Chicago convention, today shot and fatally wounded J. B. Jenkins. The trouble arose over the action of Jenkins in spitting in the face of Houston's son a few days ago. Houston Is under arrest. One year ago-4o-duy Houston shot and killed J. B. Jennings in a saloon fight in this city. Houston escaped punishment on a plea of self-defense. A Drunken Laborer's Awful Deed. NEWARK, N. J.. Oct. 8. Edward Warga, a laborer, who had been drinking for some time, came to his- home intoxicated this afternoon, anl. seizing his eight-mortlis-old child by the feet dashed It to t'oath on the floor. His wife was absent at the time, and a neighbor who had been caring for the infant had left ;t temporarily. After committing the murder Warga seized his sixj ear-old son and fled. Pretieher Drops Dead. CORNING, N. Y., Oct. 8.-Rev. Andrew J. Purdy, pastor of the Asbury M. E. Church, In Buffalo, dropped dead on the street h'-re to-day. He was about fifty years old.

AIMS OF SILVER MINERS

FREE COINAGE NOT EXPECTED TO RAISE THE BI LLION VALVE. Loss of Purchasing- Power of Money Now In I se Would Require Further Issue of Cheap Dollars. Chicago Letter in New York Mail and Express. The Republican campaign orators are out all over the West telling the people why the silver men want free silver and what profit It means to the mine owners and the "blind pool" behind them. This new turn In the campaign has bewildered the Popocrats, for they have been taken unaware. Mr. Bryan will be obliged to go on the defensive when he comes out here again, and will have to explain the figures and facts now being given to the people by the Republican and sound-msney orators. One of the most effective of the speakers on the sound-money side is J. A. Fraser, jr., the well-known writer on and student of finance. He has devoted his life to the subject of silver, and In a talk with me has has unfolded entirely new and original views on "Why mine owners clamor for free silver," and shows the profits they will make if Bryan is elected and secures free-silver coinage. The interview should be read by all who wish to know tho true cause of this movement. Mr. Fraser says: "How do the silver miners expect to profit by the free and unlimited coinage of silver? Through a rise In the value of their product to $1.29 per ounce? Oh, no; they are perfectly well aware that no such thing can happen. They don't want it to happen. If it did it would absolutely defeat the object they have in view, for it would make the real, or bullion, value of our sliver dollar 100 cents, instead of 50 or 53 cents, and it would retain in circulation our gold coins concurrently with our silver and paper money on a parity of actual value, instead of an artificial parity consisting of part value and part credit, as at present. Regardless of national and Individual honor, they are deliberately working for national and individual repudiation and robbery by means of a debased and depreciated dollat-, for in such a dollar alone do tney see an enormous profit for themselves. "Their cry for an increased circulation Is a false cry. No one knows better than these men that we now have a volume of money amply sufficient for the needs of legitimate business and larger than that of any leading commercial nation on earth, excepting only that of France. What they do want Is to cut the purchasing power of two-thirds of our money in two, and to exile the other third, by bringing silver down to its bullion value, which would necessiate the use of double the number of do.llars to do the same amount of work, "Nobody knows better than they that neither our Congress, the Chamber of Deputies of France, the Reichstag of Germany, nor the Parliament of England, can, by a simple act of legislation, create out of absolutely nothing, except the words in which the statute Is expressed, a value equivalent to more than $6,000,000,000. Yet this is precisely the miracle Mr. Bryan would have to perform If they attempted, quoting Mr. Bryan, 'to raise the value of every ounce of silver, both here and everywhere, to $1.29.' Why do they know this to be impossible? "Because this same statement was made In Congress prior to the passage of the Sherman act in 1890. But what. are the facts? Speculation forced the price of silver up from 93 cents to $1.19, but before the year was out it had fallen back so far that the average for the year was only $1.04. "Silver production Increased In the United States alone from 50,000.000 ounces in 1889 to 54,500,000 ounces in ISttO, an Increase of 4,500,000 ounces. In 1891 the world's production of silver increased 11,075,847 ounces over that or 1S90, and the price fell to an average of 98 cents for the year. In 1892 the world's production increased 15,980,843 ounces over that of 1891, and the average price for the year fell to 87 cents. In 1893 the production again advanced by 12,940,285 ounces, while the average price was only 78 cents, the treasury purchasing its last quota at 63 cents. It must not be forgotten that during this period, 1890-93, India took 129,920,875 ounces of silver for coinage alone, thus aiding enormously in sustaining the market, and, in spite of this unprecedented demand for coinage, a total of 10,736 tons of silver in less than four years, the vrlce after touching $1.19, dropped like lead to 63 cents. CANNOT RAISE THE PRICE. "After such an experience as this It Is evident that the silver miners cannot anticipate any considerable rise in the value of their product, for they know that the offerings of silver to the treasury were largely in excess of the quantity the Secretary was authorized to purchase every month during which the Sherman act was In operation. Although Mr. Bryan does not seem to have heard about It, the mints of India have been closed i to silver ever since 1833, and that vast maTket is now barred and barricaded against the mine owners.it is quite evident, then, that a risi in the price of their product Is not the object they have In view. Then, what is it? There is a woodchuch in the hole. Let us see if we can smoke him out. In the Anaconda copper mine at Butte. Mont., and in other localities, they find large quantities of silver mingled with the cepper ore. As the eppper alone pays handsomely to mine, every ounce of silver they get costs practically nothing and Is so much clear gain. At Little Cottonwood, in Utah, where the celebrated Emma mine Is located, at Leadville, Col., at Eureka, in Nevada and in many other localities lead ore is mined mingled with silver. It pays handsomely to mine the lead and again the silver is practically a by-product and all clear gain. In every mine In which gold is found in a quartz formation the gold is mingled with silver, which must be extracted before the gold is commercially available. In this case, again, rtlver is the by-product of another industry. The census of 1S90 shows that the total number of men engaged in the silver-mining business was less than 33,n00. and that more than 16,000 of these obtained the silver from the ores of other metals, as the byproduct of some other mining industry. That census report alw shows that the total commercial value of the silver pro duced, $57,225,000. was less than one-half the value of the product of the patriotic, hard-workir.g American hen. You will therefore s?e that our miners produce vast quantities of silver every year which would pay them well if sold at 10 cents an ounce. "But this is not all. In other mines. such as the Granite Mountain, Molly Gib son, ijast cnance. Big Bonanza of the Comstock Lode, which has made Senator John P. Jorcs. the real leader of the silver party, a millionaire twenty-five times over. and in many more of the greatest producers, the cot of mining silver is so low that their proprietors hug jealously the secrets of their balance sheets. But It Is well known that from lSf0 to lSt'3 millions of ounces of sliver were offered to the gov ernment which cost the miners not to ex ceed from 10 to 25 cents per ounce delivered at the treasury in Washington. Even when sliver was down In the nelghoornood or hj cents there was a wild scramble to sell. and the output continued to Increase - WANTED, A MARKET. "It is obvious, then, that it Is the market for. and not the price of, their product that worries Senator Jones, with his $25,000, 000; Senator Stewart, with his $40,000,000; John Mackay, with his $40,000,000; W. A. Clark, with his $10,000,000; David Moffat, with his $0.000,000. and the oth. r members of the silver trust, whose aggregate wealth Is estimated at $547,000,000. It is to obtain a market that these 'patriots' have for twenty years maintained the most expensive lobby ever sent to Washington by any special interest; which lobby, headed by General A. J. Warner, has kept up a continual knocking on the doors of Congress, alternately threatening and demanding or begging and entreating for the resumption of free and unlimited coinage. "How do they propose to make a market for their product? "First, by driving out of circulation $600.OtO.000 of gold coin. That would necessit-ite the issue of 1.20j,0(0.000 half-price silver dollars to fill up the gap In the circulation and restore an equivalent In purchasing power. By this means they would market 9U7.OiW.W0 ounces of their product. "Next, they want to bring our $025. 621. 000 of sliver, or paper representing the to.!?! of silver bullion now lying In the treasury vaults, down to Its bullion value and thus reduce its purchasing power one-half. This wnulfl hav itrppiulv t Vi . uomo , f fY, f nn thn purchasing power of our $;i7.5s;su'0 of other i paper money redeemable In com, and which would have to bo redeemed In silver dollars at their bullion value. One-half of this circulation would thus be practically wiped out and annihilated. The people. In whose pockets, tills or banks that tlnif.nno now L$, would find themselves robbed of $621.C0l.-

500 of their money, for which they ha5 toiled and sweated, by act of Connrg In a single nltsht. For whose benefit? For the benefit of the needy patriots, who. with only $547.000.00 among them, are making a desperate struggle to keep the wolf from the eloor. "It Is thus that Mr. Bryan loves the common people. "This additional losirof purchasing power would have to be replaced by an Issue of 1.243.2i9.000 half-price silver dollars, either In coin or paper, and would enable th miners to market nn additional 1.065,927.000 ounces of their output. The total loss to our circulation, including the loss of our gold coin, would amount to over $W per capita, and in the ruin which would follow so awful and so sudden a contraction of our currency the bonanza millionaires alone would reek with riches, for in restoring to their dearly beloved common people the equivalent in free coinage sliver of the money of which thev htl been robbed they would market 1,972.927.000 ounces of silver. Estimating their profit at only 50 per cent., and. as I have shown, it would be very much more, a free-coinage law would put into the coffers of the silver kings a profit of $986,464,000. a profit unparalleled In the history of human greed and av&rlce." BRYAN AT THE CAPITAL.

Shrewd Guess at the Ilenson "Whlcbj Made Him Go There. Correspondence Philadelphia Record. To understand candidate Bryan at all you must always remember that he Is young and that he Is dramatic, and theea two tacts do explain many of the thViRa that he says and does that would otherwise le unexplainable. But, although candidate Bryan would not appear as George Washington reading the farewell address on the east front of the Capitol, which Washington never saw, he tlid want to make one of his speeches In Washington. Perhaps one thing thai Influenced him to accept the ' invitation- which the 'rank and file of the Democrats here pressed upon him so earnestly was the feell.ig which many men who have been in Congress have had, that they would like to create a sensation right here In Washington. It is almost Invariably a great disappointment to a Senator or a Representative to find out that he is not of as murlj, account here as he was at home. There are a few Representatives from great cities who are perhaps of more account here than they are at home, but as a lule the Senator or the Representative who was a great man at home finds that here he is only one f many great men in town which has had all the great men of the country for a century living in it nt one time or another, and which, if it Is not surfeited with great men. is at least extremely critical and extremely cautious in paying out its admiration to men who claim to be great. There are ninety Senators now, or will be. If Delaware ever succeeds in electing another Senator, and there are 356 Representatives, sometimes called, without warrant of law or sense, "members of Congress." A man has to be a really great man to stand out' so prominently from this large body of men as to impress this rather cynical town. Year after year the procession of Senators. Representatives and other prominent public men marches without stop across the Washington stage, the ranks steadily recruited behind the scenes, so that to the Washington audience, although the Individuals change, the procession always looks very much tho same, and nothing less than genius will suffice to distinguish a man so that all Washington will want to look at him. . The number of men who. by the most persistent advertising in the newspapers, can pack the gallery of either House, neither holding two thousand persons, with Washlngtonians alone, leaving out the tourists, can easily be reckoned on the fingers of one hand: and it would take those same men to fill any of the larger halls with any kind of a lecture or address. while I cannot think of one. unless it be Speaker Reed, who would draw an audience of Washlngtonians that would fill Convention Hall, which is the largest of all. Great men are so common here that even when half a dozen. of them are advertised to speak at some free meeting. It Is difficult to get half the audience together that could be got for any one of them In his home town, and they walk the streets of Washington almost unnoticed, and without thought of attracting a crowd. Washlngtonians are always amused to see the fuss that Is made at national conventions or at gatherings of any sort, away from here, over Senators and Representatives who would attract little or no attention of such a kind at any public meeting here, and still more amused at the way tn which such men are Interviewed by newspapers in other cities, especially those In New York, where such Ignorance seems to exist as to the relative values of our public men, to say nothing of their titles and opinions. Men who never get Interviews Into Washington papers or into WasMngton correspondence except by sending In their velwa in good typewritten "copy." and not always then, seem to be seized upon with avidity in other cities as most desirable subjects by the interviewer, even though it may be necessary to.make a Senator out of a Representative or invent some other high-sounding title for the man In order to add to the interest of his remarks. Now Mr. Bryan has shared the common experience of men In Congress and desires to have the uncommon experience of drawing a great crowd to hear him make a speech here Just as he has done elsewhere. He came to Washington very young, very ambitious, and it is not unkind to say very self-confident if not conceited, and with the consciousness that in his own town and in his own State he was already reckoned a remarkable man. He also seems to have had the consciousness that he was going to be President of the United Slates some day. although we did not know that then. This, however would sharpen the disappointment he must have felt at finding himself only one of many great men and. like the rest, unable to greatly impress Washington. His remarkable oratorical gifts gave him a hearing and an audience which filled the galleries of the House whenever he was announced to spet. nut even they did not suffice to make him the talk of all Washington and the observed of all observers In the streets. Indeed, if he had not afterwards been nominated for the presidency he would have soon been forgotten here. for. unlike other men of less oratorical power, he made really very little impression on the life of the city. Some of the leaders In Congress like Speaker Reed and Mr. Hltt and Senator Lodge and Senator Wolcott, make a figure in Washington society, and others, like Senator Sherman and Representative Dingley, stand high in the estimation of its bankers and business men. while others still are active tn Its churches: but Mr. Brvan was neither a society man nor a business man In Washington and, while he regularly attended President Lincoln's church, the New York-avenue Presbyterian, with his wife, sometimes leading in his half-blind father-in-law, he did not connect himself with it. He and his wife never kept house here, but boarded with a small real-estate dealer on Cnpitol Hill, who is to be bis host while he Ptays In Washington. He divided his time betwen his modest suite of rooms and the Capitol, except when he was doing errands for his constituents, like his colleagues, at the White Houso and tho departments, where doubtless, like other Representatives, ho often had to "cool his heels" in tho anterooms while Senators, who have the precedence on such occasions, were in the Inner chambers. In Lincoln. Nob., he was "the Congressman." the only one, but in Washington. D. C, he was "a Congressman." one of many, and this tells the whole story of a disappointment tht must have sometimes been mortification if not humiliation. Sound-Money Democrats Parade. An address to the sound-money Democrats will be delivered in the Cyclorama building Monday evening by Dr. William Everett, of Massachusetts. Dr. Everett Is the brilliant orator who fired enthusiasm to wild applause during thr sound-money convention In Tomllnson Hall, and who has eloquently championed tho cause In his own State. The address Monday night will bo directly centered upon the money question. There will he a purade of sound-money Democrats that evening. NATIONAL Tube Works Wrought-Iron Pipe for Gas, Steam and Water. ' ..f ; , PniW TuU-. Cast ami Malleable Iron I-mint (Mat ami KaivmiizKl), YalvH. St up i'ockx. Hngine mniininK', Steam fliitivrca, 1Mm Ton, I'll i'ntura. Vlws, Screw l'lHt-(t anil plrti, WrotH hmi, Mram Tniim, !'iiiiim. hitchfn Muks. l). HeltiiiK. llablilr Mct.il Si.LI.-r Wlilla ami i:Ur-l W liilnif VVtt, &U utllrT Mllililll-H U.Hfil uihI in roi'lieriloii with ia. steam ami Watrr. Natural lieatinir A;arattm for l'ulin- iiiiiuunts. Mor-nHini4, M Ills, Mniui. tu'tmr. I ann-tlrlt-s, l.uiiil-tr Dry-lUueii, He. Cut ami Tlir"at to riIt iuiv nlire WroiiKlit-lron rtjie. finn , Itu-U to 1J i I" 1K- tnuiiutrr. KHIGHT & JILLSON, T5an17J S. PENNSYLVANIA St.

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