THE WILSON ADVANCE: JUNE 25, 1896. ... am- nr rni; service in .!k1v anri .sfn.ro nw. - ... ' . J : -r ; . - ' llU,wrea ouz or tno service m July and state are 'opposed. A ccciaration is rem2 " " - ! Imule ln fnvor of arbitration between em ofiSi-rroIVla lwntheshidy ployes and employers, bat no specific le- ". i V:i is:T 'w.-is adinuveilto the car, ; lslntion is deniiimlei. . i - E practice ia.w-"""; uepmntuon is made in favbr of liberal vi el toa prosecu ting attorney, pensions and the present administration is J8" ; in the tli strict r which made it for the upbuilding of the merchant' cBu In the,iono-Mng iau ne was lsiavored. mot' is i ff;1! '' . r vt. vu-ujjjjiu- irora th rolls nf.ul .The- district for fourteen without examination ctawrrttii ois,. W boarcn' in 1890, owing to .a ' - The restoration of dUminLw,, J marina iovcrnor 'uf .Ohio, and two years A phink favoring liberal reciprocity is re-elected by a large majority. incorporated and the repeal of the reciproc-'.Jst-r"'. vaiur McKinley' r.mrried -Miss . ity agreements is 'condemn I Tn 1 '.NiXt-"1- ,;,;.,n. anil a- rsv has long neon an mya- i-r of his constant atten- tr. Af.-Tv'i'ik'V is ,5 feet S inches in t pcunas.-is oi cuirivcom- i.irick hair tinned with" tremely- temperate,-' but. ihere are planks favoring the extension of civil service reform; a j declaration against the use of monw for. The i;; 4. H - Pii : fortune is estimated iit2ft,---i his-wife ?14C!00.' -Thb'-I' h.jve no ii :nr- .- lieu.- or vice president, .unrrett , !,(r?i in Lio'ng Bratihi.N.' ! ci-aduated from liutgers' ' purposes; m" favor of labor for libriil pensions, and thp. 0 vuiiax txi united orates government. iarbitration ; building of IIAXXA' ELECTED CHAIK3IAX. Kepublican r? V C'j vo;;rs old. Ha !).r in 1&V, and wi was ad- f r,t:,...i" oi I'citersou in lo71. The fol fl(.u. wa:; fnSp(inted counsel to the euu tion- ,:f chr,.-cn lreoio.iaers,. ana at (!f his term .declined a rcnomina- vr.i-: elote l assemblyman, and 1 L - . 1 - J. 1 T . nvoiKl term no was eieoi-oa speaicer f the avinbly. In 1S7. ho declined a lamination, and in 1S7Z Passaic county Hie Oiuoan Will Control the rretddential CampaLffn. St. Louis, June 20. The national Re publican committee yesterday elected M. A. Hanna, who managed ISIcEinley's can vass for the nomination, chairman of the committee, and he will talde the active direction of the Republican campaign. His headquarters' probably, will be in New York city. From an authoritative source it is learned that Chairman Hanna has flecided upon the secretary and treasurer ofhis executive committee, both of which positions he has power to iill. Thevstory is! that Majpr Charles L.' Dick, of Akron j will get the le,i4atar m " nen he was the presi- j Cleveland, will be made treasurer, dent of the senate. I With' this comes an- interesting. story; It is that Hanna ' wanted Dick! for national committeeman, but Foraker and Bush nell insisted so strongly upon Kurtz that cne nexi president or :ne unitea'ntaies. but they are not less hearty and sincere. I ' will gladly do all I can to secure your tri umphant election. Give to'2ars. McKinlev : m7 good wishes, in which Mrs. Sherman ' joins.' . , Senator Cushman K. Davis, of Minne- I sota, was another of his correspondents. i Chairman Banna's Welcome Home. ! Cleveland, June 22. Hon. M. A. ! Hanna arrived home from St. Louis at 2 ; o'clock Saturday afternoon, accompanied j . by a part of the Cleveland convention con- : tingent. He was met l)y COO uniformed I employes of the street railway company of j which he is president, the Tippecanoe club, j Mayor McKisson. President Cowles, of the Chamber of Commerce, and ot her yjromi- nent Republicans. Escorted by the club, ' .the street railroad, men and two brass ! bands, the party proceeded to the Tippe- j canoe club rooms, being priven an ovation i along the line of march. At the club 1 rooms Mayor McKisson made a f-peech of j congratulation, and was replied to by Mr. Hanna.. Sj)C3ches -were made also bv Hon. ! S. T. "Everett, Myron T. Herrie, Andrew I Squire, Major C. . . Dick and Judge F. 1 E. Dellenbaugh. An informal"' 'reception t was held by Mr. Hanna, Among his guests I yesterday were H. C. Evans, of Tonne -ee, I and Colonel Fred Gram, This niorninr he went to Canton to see Major McKinlev. WATCH th:. state', senate. In lS7i) he renoi . him to ' j'r0lelccted. -and closed his career as a Vr jloiwrr v:i iiKium;ciu vixuuns nomn01' United States senator in 1834 jjJea John McPherson.tDem.) was elected. After serving one year as a Republican :t!ite ' committeeman, Mr. Hobart was elcetci'chairinafi in lbSO and continued-sis ckiini-an of . the' committee for eleven vau-s, re--iffi-i.ng in 1SD1. He was New -Jer-Wr'smemler of the Republican national coininiiTee ' fn l'.l, and was elected vice chxrlrmii n. ". , Kotert was 'receiver of the .'New Jersey Hklianu ir.invay, me . aoutciair raiiroaa and the-.Tersoy City and Albany lniCj and 'of tte First X:.iioaal, bank of Newark. He "c;is managed the' East Jersey Water com mnv. is pvtvident of the Passaic Water coia'puy,' Morris. County Railroad com ranvaud I le s Gas company, director of fcveral ha n'ks ;:;nd maiiy railroads, and i largely interested in industrial " enter? rises. N- ' xuumu, uau to yieiu, ana noy ne nas given Dick," or will give him "something equally as good," to use a Missouri political phrase. It is also understood that ei-Committeeman Hahn,. of Ohio, will bej'placed upon the executive committee by 'Mr.' Hanna. ; ai'KINL-KVS- SUXDAY. Somewhat THE KEITULICAN I'LATFOKH. and a It D?clarcs f;r a Gold Standard latum to Protection. Pastor Euiunds Tn aclie.s a . Personal Sermon. Ca:sTO, O., June .53. Sunday brought temporary peace' and quiet .to the citizens of .Canton. Aside from the profuse decor- arions mat greet ine eye on every nana, n there has been no sicrn cS the stirring A Totl:Ii rifih Story. "I was very ircch interested in a case, that sliotvs fish can reason, " said A. P. Bucharmon of Nashville. trout. No one has ever caught any of the fish, as I have heen trying to increase 'their number, the pond be ing hut three years old.' My daugh ter has always fed them and -whenever she goes along the banks the fish follow her and will eat out of her hand. One day a-fish .appeared, evidently about to jlie, with some kind of swelling on his head. : She caught him arid. concluded" .to trv to cure him, lancing the gathering. The next day he came for his food,' evi- dentlv feeling as w ell as ever. Afew rricrnings after that her friends in the pond made considerable stir 'as scenes of the past week. It vfasdight and tbey swam after ! food; ' TheV were beautiful -waen Groxrnor McKinley and ' , . ' ' , .Mrs.' "General R-vssell Hayings, accom- Pushing a companion ahead of them The platform, ."which was prepared by a sub-conuaittee headed by Dx-Governor Foraker, of Ohio, was the great bone of contention in the convention. The prin cipal points are as fellows: We renew and emphasize our allegiance to the poliey of protection as the bulweirk of American industrial indejMindence and the foundation of American development and prosperity. This true American . pol icy tasss foreign products and encourages home industry ; it puts the burden of reve nue cn foreign goods ;.it secures the Amer ican market for the American producers ; it upholds the American' standard of j wages for the American workinginan ; it t puts the factory by the side of the farm , and makas. the American farmer less do- j pendent on f oreign demand and pries ; it j diffuses general thrift and founds the , strength of all on. the strength of each.. In its reasonable application it is just, : fair and impartial, equally opposed to foreign control and domestic monopoly, to sec tional discrimination and individual fa voritism.'.: . y: : We condemn, the present administra tion for not keeping faithvvith the sugar producers of this country, j Th3 Republi can party favor such protection as will lead to the production on American soil onill the sugar which the Americans use, and. for. which they pay. to other countries more than l,0xi,0,JO annually. Tte Republican party is unreservedly for sound money. It caused the enactment of the hiw providing for the resumption of specie payments in 1879. . Since then every dollar has been as good as gold. '-'". We are nTi;iltir;i.lslv nnnnsfid to every measure calculated to debase our cur- ,rency or impair the credit of our country. e are, therefore, opposed to the free com agef silver except by international agree ment with the leading commercial nations fit the world, and until such agreement wnb'e obtained wb believe the existing .'?cld standard must be preserved..' All our s'lver and paper currency must be main lined at parity with gold, and we favor al measures designed to maintain in liable the obligations of all our money, aether, coin or paper, at the present stan dard the standard of the most enlight .e&l nations of the earth. . "om the hour of achieving their own dependence the people ' of the United states have resarded with sympathy the uggie ct other American peoples to tree iwiiiselvcs from European domination. e watch with deep and abiding interest heroic battle of the Cuban patriots gainst cruelty and oppression, and our -. weir determined contest, for liberty. Ane government of Spain, having lost control of Cuba, and being unable to pro th.e'pronertvor livA nf rosident Amer ican citizens or to comnlv with its treaty gations, we. believe that the govern . .fnt -of the United States should actively its influence and good offices to restore Peace and give independence to the island. 1 he Peace and security of the republic a thy' 'maintenance of its rightful influ- among the nations of the earth de and a naval power, commensurate with forPfSitiou and ponsiVility. We. there e' favor the continued enlargement of ane nav.v and a complete system of harbor "M-sea coast defenses. ' ; : or the protection of the quality of our nnimcan citizenship and of the wages of . ar Workingincn against the fatal compe ,,n of 1 ,w iirifo:il.-vloT- wo demand that panied by Captain Hei stand, the major's right hand ma a, drove to thb First M. K church, a handsome structure two blocks from the public '-quae Governor Me Kink caugnt ia"e. j ley thirtj years ag ejo was superintendent of the Sunday school of that had in some way got and torn. a fin nearly 'oil; crippling him so badly that he could not swim. His friends were taking him to my daughter to cure him as she had'the this church, while his wif was Sunday others. After looking at the injured the force- migration laws be. thoroughly en- 'd. and . nTanA'nA a s- r WP.lltdO from aiK-e to the United States those who .'ither read nor write. evV1Vil "vice reform is approved and the ti? iTi0U of th'a Principle wherever prac t The use of-public money for sec- Children Cry tor school teacher in the First! Presbyterian church, two blocks west, in which they were married twenty-five years ago. The church was crowded, and povernor Mc Kinley's fellow church members gave him. a warm greeting. Fifty newspaper re porters were present. Thei pastor, E. P. Edmunds, chose for his texi: "Make your calling and election sure, for if ye do these things ye shall never fail." )Dr. Edmunds made his sermon personally applicable, and he referred in,a happy; manner to the result of the St. Louis convention early last week. In his sermon were these thoughts: "AVe have just 'passed through a week ?whose significance none are disposed to underestimate. The highest attainment of free government was illustrated, and the sacred privilege of Amierican citizen ship exercised in the choice of men arid measures representing a vast number of our fellow citizens. j ' "As one of the first conditions of having a .sure election we must announce our can didacy. No man would be! credited with political Scigacity who hopes ror tne sui- f rages of his fellow citizens in attaining ofnee; yet allows no announcement beyond the unexpressed desire of his heart "A second requirement of a sure election . is to have a platform, and tdien stand upon it. ' It is your; privilege, it is your neces sity to be absolutely fearless in this world of everything stive the disfavor of God. Tiue courage comes from 'fight being and right doinar. Two other conditions oi suo cessf nl Christian candidacy I group under one head. They are caution and enthu siasm. .. ? 'Owing to his position jas a candidate there rests upon him a responsibility of carefulness which he is in duty bound to regard. Men put forward as standard bearers by all political parties recognize this obligation, and with studied care guard word and act that their cause may not suffer. What oh the pirt of other men would be -inconsequential,' from . him would be startling, ami disastrous. You have yet in mind a party which attributes its presidential Waterloo to three words, untimely . spoken." But the doctor did notutter the words "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion." ! At the conclusion of the services Gov ernor McKinley gave his arm to his aged mother, who at 87 is a regular churchgoer, and escorted her to her modest carriage at the church door. His wife's health does not permit her attendance at church. Yes trdav. however, she listened to the ser- w 1 vices by telephone. In the afternoon Governor McKinley and wif e, accompanied by General and Mrs. Hastings, took a short drive. They just escaped a terrific (wind and Tain storm, which destroyed nany handsome decorations, blew down trees and burned out trolley motors ' Postmaster Monnot has had a large drawer, as' large as several ordinary com partments, set apart.f or j the presidential nominee's mail. Yesterday when .Fred, the colored attendant at he Market street home, went for the mail he found more than ho could carry, and had to hire, a 1- A 1 " T carriage to come nome in. as ne under took to gather the tightly tied bundles of letters in his arms and step from the car riage to the stone curb Ms strength failed him. A 'thousand or more of the letters tc-ptiV tn the bavement, and he had to make two trips to carry them into the house. ! When they were sorted, tiuu. iub Kueruur opened them, among tieni was this one from Senator John Sherman, dated Mans- . field, O : I ' "I have not hurried in sending you my congratulations for ,your nomination as fish she went to the house, and, pro curing a needle and thread, returned to the pond and took three or four stitches in the fish as a surgeon would with a man, and then put it back into the pond. He recovered, since which time 'none of them has been sick, but if they become so I expect them to call on the doctor 1 his bpa ' " : Ni - - ' : ".: ;-' : ' - '-- ' ' v. i; .. . ' ' I.-'-" - ce I ! V i again. -Washington Star. The expression; "a grass widow" has several fanciful explanations, but is most probably a corruption of .the Fronch expression, veuve de grace, a widow by grace or courte sy that is, a woman who has left her husband or has been deserted by him. ! Tho oldest X3iecb of linen paper in existence, s3 far as known, is a man uscript containing a treaty between the kings of Aragon and Castile. It is dated 1177 and is still in a fair state of preservation, retaining ink very well, 1 ' i' . : AI, ,i - s Ml Pitcher's Castoria. "vVhyls one woman" attractive and an- ' other not? It isn't ' entirely a question of age or features or intellect, xne most admirable and attractive about an attractiv woman is her wo manliness. Every body admires a womanly woman. Everybody doesnt realize just what it is that makes her' womanly. She must; have health,,1 of course, because without it she would lose the brightness of her eyes, the fullness of her cheeks and her vivacity. Health brings all these things but health means more than most pec pie think" of. Real health must mean that a woman is really a woman. . That she is strong and perfect in a sexual way, as weh. as in every other. That she is' capable of performing perfectly the duties of matern ity. Upon her strength m this way depends to a larg-e extent her general health, her good looks and her attractiveness. Some women are born stronger than others. Some are born with what is called con: stitutional weakness." It is easier for some women to retain health and strength than it is for others. Some seem able to do any thing they like, whenever they like, with out serious results. Still, there is no rea son why women should: not enioy perfect health. Those who do not, need only take the proper precautions and the proper rem edy to become perfectly: well and stromr. Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription will cure any derangement of the distinctly feminine organism. It is absolutely certain. There are some who have neglected themselves so lon? that a complete (jure is next to im possible but even these will find comfort and improved health, in the use of the Fa vorite Prescription. "It has cured hundreds of women who haverreceived no relief what ever from years of treatment with good physicians. It is absolutely unique in the history of medicine." Such a remedy can be discovered only once. There is nothing in the world like it, nor has there ever been. Hundreds bf things that every woman ought to knoware contained in Dr. Pierce's Med ical Adviser, which will be sent absolutely free, on receipt of 2t one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only. - World's Dis pensary Medical Association Buffalo, N. Y, I wish to inform my friends and patrons that I have changed my place of business to the new store on the "Best Corner - across the street from my old stand. Since , moving I have added very largely to riy stock of goods and am better prepared in every way to wait on the trade. :s thing In addition to my time trade I am now pre- active' .,! J !",-. . . L . .i . i . ' rr parea to oner Bargains to llic Cash Trade. I can please you in Dry ' O :. IN: Goods, Groceries, fc, k. Can supply your wants in ITU.RE. 7 Ladie's trimmed. Hats, trimmed M. T. Young's. and un- O O ' o o o o o -,o o o o We carry the following standard brands': Orinoco, Farmers Bone, Cotton Seed Meal, Eclipse, Acid Phosphate, Kainit. Give me a call at my new stand. M i J G I Iculky

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