if : BIIII Multitudes of Enthusiastic Silverites Meet Him at Every Point. A GLOWING TRIBUTE TO YANCE. Said There Were Personal as Well as Political Rea sons for His Visiting North Carolina. TAR HEELS CAUSED Asheville made great preparation for receiving William Jennings Bryan, ' Tuesday evening, and night the clans ! began to gather from the highlands. From every available camping-ground in the environs of the beautiful hill .city, camp-fires could be seen glowing cheerfully in the crisp September air, the .sound of the enthusing banjo was heard, while the merry mountaineers were gathered around it, talking Bryan and free silver at 16-to 1 and jubilat ing over the good times coming, after the inauguration of the Nebradkan on the 4th of March next. "-" hen... the Bryan special reached Asheville at 2:35 p. m., it was met by the enthusiastic escort provided bythe energetic Buncombe county' 'Demo cratic "executive committee. The Bryan party were ushered into carriages, and the procession formed. A mounted escort of ladies and gentlemen, the la dies under the lead of Mrs. Col.; Rum bough, led the way. ; The Bryan car riages cutne next, containing besides Mr. Bryan, Chairman Clement Manly, of tijie Democratic State executive corn- William Jennings Bryan, Democratic Candidate for President. mittee; Chairman Hal W.! Ayefe oi the- Populist State committee; Chairman Frank Carter, of 4be Buncombe coimty Democratic executive committee. The rest of the carriages came next and the mounted escort of one thousand horse men after these. Five hundred of these horsemen came all the way from Greene county, in east Tennessee, bringing three days' rations. The line of procession from the Southern Passenger station was up Depot 6treet to Patton avenue and thence direct to the Battery Park. The streets-were lined all along the way with men, women and children, eager to the distinguished .Nebraskan. Flags flying from windows and porches and the people who viewed the procession from, house-tops and those who packed the available standing-places along the route kept the candidate constantly bowing his head. The stand from which Bryan spoke was erected in a curve of Southside avenue as the street bends around Mc Dowell: HilL The side of the hill had been a corn field, and the people brought newspapers by the thousands spread them upon the corn hills and sat upon them comfortably. The erowd for Died an exceedingly pietuesque sight, a gVoup of color the women in their holliday attire relieving the denser blackness of the crowds of men The acoustic- properties pot were faultless. which trended no vara, ourveu. itf ipeakerj w jv m m . . .. raves str'1 F aboB Bl ou- tal Wvr.er tb fifl Bonn a all was ORTH CAROLINA HIS i OMINATION. nary tones of conversation at the bot- torn of the bill. In this place 13,000 people were gathered. Some esti mates placed the number as high as 15,000 The immense throng remind ed one of the pictures of the multi tude on the Oriental hillsides, which were fed with the loaves and fishes in the olden time. On the stand besides the members of the Bryan party were: Col. A. T. Davidson, Maj. W. A. Guthrie, C. B. Watson, Locke Craig, K; U. Garret, W. W. West, J. S. Ad ams, Prof Eggleston, J. P. Sawyer indeed nearly all the prominent De Hi eratic citizens of Asheville, as well as many ladies. As the Bryan cavaloade came in sight down the avenue, the crowd rose to its feet and cheered. As the speaker mounted the stand, as high above the people's heads as an old-fashioned pul pit, the crowd again rose to its feet, cheering wildly, the ovation lasting several minutes, and the demonstra tion was repeated with intensified vigor after the candidate's introduction by Locke Craig, Esq. an elegant intro-' Auction, by the way, eloquent, grace- fully delivered and just of the right length. After the prolonged outburst of wel come had subsided, the speaker be gan: He said: brtan's spee oh I have a . reason for coming to North Carolina which is 'personal, aside from my interest in the electoral vote of this State. It was the State of Carolina which at Chicago before Decame a oanaiaete, ueiore my own State had taken any formal part in pre senting my name it was the State of North Carolina, which, by resolution, decided to give me unanimous vote of the North Carolina delegation in that national convention. (Great, cheer ing.) I appreciate the honor which tney have been willing to do me and therefore it gives me great pleasure to come among these people whom they repr saented, and what assistance I can, if any assistance be neeeded, to secure the electoral vote of this State for the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1. (Cheers.) 1 am glad the canvas of this State opens in this county, which was the home of one of the grandest public given to this nation not alone by North Carolina, but the entire country Senior Vance. (Great ap plause.) He whom I d 1 .H K, " value of the other half which is in their hands. The money-changers are pol luting the temple of our liberties. To your tents, oh Iareal I" (Applause.) He foresaw the struggle in which we are now engaged. He realized its magnitude when many others did not. Those words came from him as wjrds of command. To your tents, O, Is rael.' And the command was heeded by the Democratic party, and they en gaged first in a warfare within the party to rescue that party and the party name from the hands of those who were using it to advance the interest not of Democracy, but of plutocracy. (Applause.) It was a great contest. I venture the assertion that never before in the history of this country did any party have such a contest within its ranks as that which ended at Chicago. I venture the assertion that never be fore in the history of this country have the voters themselves had so much to do with a conten tion as did the voters of the Democratic party with the conven tion at Chicago. This, question was submitted to the voters. The Demo- ooratic idea has been that the party is but the instrument of those who .com pose it, and derives its power from the will of the voters who number them selves members of that party. Yet it is often the case that the party machin ery or bosses have more to do with shaping the policy and making the nomination than the voters themselves l am proud to De trie nominee ot a convention whioh represented no machine, no bosses, but the unpur chased suffrage of the voters of this country (Great Applause.) A few months ago the most sanguine Demo crat did not believe that success this fall was more than possible. The most sanguine Democrat felt that four years of gold standard administration had destroyed almost the possibility of suc cess. But the voters of the Democratic party determined to make one final fight and determined that if die the party must, it should at least maintain the honor of those who believed in the right of the people to govern them selves. (Applause.) The result is just what it always is if people lay aside expendiency and seek to do their duty and accept consequences. In trying to right the Democratic party won a possibility of suooess whioh it never could have hoped for if it had consult ed expedience. (Applause. ) I, for one, said, whenever our oppo nents would bring a pledge that the gold standard Democrats would take, it would be time enough to ask free silver Democrats ke pledges. I stated in answer Yl fca'" that I would net suppoji resident a man who womd in the Presidential chair continue the present financial policy and mortgage the United States to English bondholders. (Applause.) "I said it because I meant it. I may be wrong in my judgment, because none of as are infallible, but my judg ment is the only judgment that can control my conduct. (Applause.) Now when the Secretary of the Treasury de nounced me as a Populist and said I said I wouldn't support the nominee. 1 replied that I did not expect him to support the nominee if he were a free silver man. The time came when he was put to the test, and the only dif ference between him and me was that was candid enough to tell the people I would follow my conscience, and he tried to control a convention and then bolted when he failed to do it . (Great applause.) I have sent him no letter begging his support. (Great laughter. ) The highest compliment he c&n pay is to oppose me, because then the world will know the secretary of the .treas urer whom I appoint, if I am -elected, will be as different from him as I can find. (Great applause.) "I do not dispute the right of any Democrat to vote against the Chicago ticket, if he thinks its success will im peril the country, bnt what I ask is that these men who have been pretend ing to be Demoorats shall now, when the Democratic party has been rescued from the people's spoilers, leave the name and not attempt to take that name with them into disgrace. (Cries of "right ) They call themselves true Democrats. No true Demoorat ever nominated one ticket for the pur pose of voting for another. (Great applause.) The speaker continued in a sarcastic vein to poke fun at the Indianapolis crowd, calling them "assistant Repub licans." He made his previous argu ment that the Republican party was really in favor of silver and bi-metal-lism because it had declared for inter national bi-metallism. "Then yon will hear that under free coinage we would be flooded with sil ver until money would be so cheap we would not have any use for it, and when you have been frightened as bad ly as you can be that way, they will tell you this cheap money will run the dear money out and it will take fifteen years, with our mints running at full capacity, to make money enough to take the place of gold, and that will make money so scarce that a silver dol lar will be harder to get than a gold dollar. (Laughter). You can't have too little and too much all at once . An opponent once put that proposition to me in a debate down in Alabama. There I was 1,500 miles from home muwug Bnuugfrts. naa to answer m n n T" 1 1 . on the spur of the moment date was almost w jrn out, the crowd was so persistent at the depot that they clambered into the car windows and insisted on making Mr. Bry an's hand. As the train pulled out the candidate, waving his handker chief, received another ovation. BRYAN HONORS VAN OK. At the special request of Mr. Bryan the train stopped at Black Mountain, because it had been the home of Vance. Mr. Bryan spoke to the people assem bled there and t! en asked to have Gombroom the Vanoe home place pointed out to him. At Old Fort there was a large crowd. At Marion bonfires and tar barrels weis burning, and 500 people were spoken to by the candi date from the rear platform. At Mor ganton there were 1,500 people pres ent, many of them being ladies. Hickory's Demonstration. ,; It remained to little Hickory to sur pass any demonstration in the State po far in proportion to the size of the town. At least 10.000 people from all over Alexander, Burke and Caldwell heard Mr. Bryan fpeak from a stand erected in the que frangle near the ho tel. The enthusiasm was great end Mr. Bryan spoke for nearly an hout. At Statesville Mr. Bryan spoke to 2,500 people. The speaker's stand was a hundred yards from the train and was decorated gailj in red, white and blue, and two immense bouquete of flowers were on cither Bide of the speaker. The introduction was . done in a neat speech of about ten words by W. D. Turner, Esq. The speaker was so hoarse here that utterance seemed reallv painful. Mooresville had a thousand people and bonfl.es. The speaker was so tired and voiceless that he could only show himself to the disappointment of all. THE BUT AN. ESCORT. On board the Bryan special were Col. J. S. Carr, Clement Manly, Hal W. Ayer, Chas. D. Mclver, Geo. S Powell, T. J. Allison, Evangelist W P. Fife, Maj. E. J. Hale, Marshal O J. Carroll, P. M. Pear sail, Lee S. Overman, B. L. Durham, Capt. S. B Alexander, R. L. Cooper, Theo. F Kluttz, Walter B. Henry, E. L. Shu ford. Congressman A. C. Shuford, Jo sephus Daniels, F. M. Simmons, Judge A. C. Avery, Heriot Clarkson, Locke Craig, W. D. Turner. Dr. F. E. An dersou, R. N. Hackett, W. E. Chris tian, O. T. Smith, Biblical Recorder, A. Boshamer, M. O. Sherrill, W. B. Gaither, D. M. Boyd, J. N. Long, Spier Whitaker. Mai. Guthrie, came "ram ...ir. mo -n tt Hickory. At Statesville, W. O. Dowd, H. Baruch, T. R. Robertson, Wil Kobertson, L)t. l. W. r aison got on board, and at Mooresville ex-Senator Jarvi's joined the procession. Bryan at Charlotte. Charlotte has had her Bryan day. He arrived in the "Queen City' last Wednesdav nisrht. and was greeted at the Southern passenger station by an immense crowd of admirers. The pro gram was not carried out as scheduled by the committee, owing to Mr. Bryan s request that there should not be any demonstration on bis arrival. In spite of his request thousands flocked to the station to see the next President, but the Pullman palace sleeper was side tracked on the outskirts of the city, where it remained "over" night. Early Thursday morning an engine brought the car into the station and the inevi table crowd was there. As Mr. Bryan appeared under personal escort of Col. H. C. Jones, a shout arose that was heard up town. He and his party were escorted to the Buford Hotel, where an elaborate breakfast was served. At 8:40 the escort cf honor, the Uni form Rank Knights of Pythias, and the Secofid Regiment band had been drawn up in line in front of the hotel, while the carriages waited at the Fourth street entrance. A mighty cheer from that side of the building announced the coming of Mr. Bryan. The band struck up a lively; air, the, corps of mounted marshals oleared the Way and the march to the ierk was begun. In the handsomely fccorated carriage.Jtotop falling prices drawn by four black-horses, were seat-1 nines. I mbst close as ed Mr. Bryan anT Gov. Elias Carr, Mayor J. us Weddington and Col. Julian S. Carr. On arriving at the postoffloe corner, Mr. Bryan and escort alighted from the carriage and in sin gle tile made their w ay slowly through the narrow lane that had been opened to the speaker's Stand. Promptly at 9 o'clock Wm. J. Bryan stepped upon the platform, escorted by Maj. Robertson and officers of the Uniform Rank Knights- of Pythias. After Mr. Bryan had shaken hands with all who were on the platform, among whom weie Gov. Elias Cara. Col. Jule Carr, W. It. Henry, and rep resentative citizens of Charlotte and the State, ands-.veral ladies. Major Robertson stepped ro the railing fac ing Mint Street and in a few words in troduced Gov. Carr. Governor Carr speke briefly, as the crowd was clamoring for Bryan. He said : I have the ideasure of intro- duciug to you today tlilliam Jennings Bryan, the next Democratic Presi- dent," The crowd itere interrupted ud. ext President." hi rds by saying: xt President, be- re a majority oi i). I will not this . is Bryan s Hp took bis amid pro- iration of Independence, and I ffibat here in this cottnty it will be lL'Jj 1 V recogniV uecause ui your uaviug made a L-declaration of your own. I may nkid in other places those who want to accejt a financial policy made by foreign; powers; nut tne people oi Mecklenburg c unty believe that the United States caa make a financial pol- icvof itsown. J (Cheers.) Pointing to the hornets' nest;i which was suspended near him, he said: "Here the enemy will find a veritable hornets' nest. I am not speak jog against any for- w I 11 . . 1 1 eigner. liwould cT'espise any jngnsn man, Gernjan, or a.y other foreigner, who would! submit tee the United States dictating a policy governing them in their domestic relation."- Tim Rerbblican plattnn sets forth a policy never openly setwortn oeiore. Thev do not advocate theV8oId stand ard, but have pledged themlselves for a double standard as soon as the for- eign powers will neip tnemi- ji mey came out boldly for a single standard . i ... .... ti ii. we could meet them but ttfey do not An art The goltl standard advocates never made an open fight in their') lives, but do their work after night. (Cheers.) Thro is a great deal of) talk about the two yard-sticks. I dti not mean that it is mentioned in the Republican platform biit it is beiog vised iu the campaign. I A yard-stick measures length and! cannot change, but, a dol lar measures value, and uiay change. You all know that a piecef iron is shorter when it is at zero thalu wheb it is red hot. So, if you had a yaru stick that would be twice as Id ug when it was red hot as it. was when bjt zero, you would go to the store anil want the merchant to measure your goode with your ted hot yard-stick, bfit he would step to his refrigerator andtake out his zero yard-stick and meanure your goodsl So, as it is necessary ft have a yard-stick of uniform length, it is necessary to have the dollar uni form. At this point there were calls from the crowds on be south side of the stand and Mr. Bryan stepped to the railing and repeated in a measure whet he had just said, and added this: You can iniike a dollar purchase a great de d more by making them scarce and nu the other hand make the purchasing power less by making them plentiful. It Gannot be disputed that the money must keep pace with the population and industries, i Mr. Bryan produced some typewrit ten manuscript aud read some extracts from a speech of Senator Sherman, made on June 5, 1890, in which he ad-vocatcrd-riQcavasing the circulation as the population increased, but now he had foreakeb that policy and was the leader of tie Republican party and that portion" of the Democratic party who aut to elect a Republican presi dent. (Cheers.) , "Senator; iShermau favored increas ing circulation- at the rate of 854, 000.000 per auuuru and according to his policy wje should not have 250,- 000,000 more mouey in circulation than we have now. The circulation the 30th of June, .1894, was $1,660, 000,000 and has decreased each year since until we now have $1,506,000,000, notwithstanding Sherman said it should increase. I am not surprised to find Republi cans on this; platform with me today who have changed and are going to vote the Detnoi'ratic ticket. They want an increased circulation. "In North Carolina the Republicans have made more capital by denouncing this administration before this last platform was made than out of any thing else, but now tby are standing sponsors for the same idministration. Henry Clay is the on!) candidate for the Presidency who ever came to your State and spoke prior toWy visit. In a apeesh on Jan. 20th, V40, ho said that a dimlnuation of the currency would make hard times, md people could not pay their debts. Have you ever had this condition in rour life tiiae? Cries of yes, yes ! Clay said that a diminishel currency made purchases scarce, an that in turn caused! falling in prices and fall1 ing prices make hard times. Yon to mak good there hay be need of Bneches iu other placea. He . .1 i IT " here paid the late senator v ance a glowing tribute which was greeted by prolonged cheers. He spoke of the last speech Vance made in which he favored free coinage and said: t know the people will be true to his memory. We appeal to the masses to support the ticket and we know they will do it. He closed with a few words as the iine was up and although the feople cried for more, he was quickly escort ed from the stand to catch the trin. 25,000 t Greensboro. At Greenfsboro the largest etowd that has met Bryan was at Greens oro. There were bout 25,000 people t iere. The streets were jammed Thn t ot four bands ere there and hundreds were on horsebackr H S At Concord. ( At Cone 3rd fully 2,500 people met Bryan. He! was escorted to the and ana maue a viia jiicd. . i . t . . ,1 ...q i At Salisbury. At Sahaburv a crowd of 5,00i 4o- i .knnt !thir welcome to in pio cuuu.v.a - and applauded his speech. - At fcexington. At Lexington Bryan wasi l 000 mople and made an adfl gaily decorated piatiorm i j m ...... 1 d mi a At Burlington. At Burlington 1,500 people greeted the candidate, who spoke .from the platform about twenty feet from the depot Lit was one of the neatest short speeches, yet "made? He created a laugh at the outset by saying . that it was the general custom in presiden tial campaigns to send 'the audiences to the candidate, but the Dehroeratio party, nnder these hard times brought on by the gold standarj, had adopted the policy of sending the candidates to the people. .i At Hillsboro At Hillsboro 409 people were briefly addressed -from the rear platform by Bryan. A spectacled, smart Aleck by the name of Brown, a book-seller there, rode a horse caparisoned in yellow paper in front of the. car. A Bryan escort man slipped up and snatched all the McKinley, tapestry off the horse, leaving the gold-bug foam ina with race. At Durham. A crowd of about 4,000 greeted the speaker at Durham. Mr. Bryan, after his rest at Col. Carr's, was introduced by R. B. Boone, and soon bad his audience cheering 'wildly nnder the spell of his oratory. Demonstration at Kalelgh. The demonstration at Raleigh, which was reached at 7d0, was mag nificent. The Bryan party reached from the depot to the stand in Nash square through a long line of torch lights, led by the band. The crowd was hard to estimate in the darkness, but it was immense and the sea 'of faces, viewed from the platform-seemed endless, as it stretched away iu the darkness. It must have been over 10,600. Floods of. light made the platform as fight as dayv Mt3ryauwas greeted with a splendid ovation. He said his North Carolina trip had been so well man aged that he'f el t better than when , ha first entered the State. His mention of Vance's name was wildly cheered. His rebuke of the Republican party's i attempt to array ministers of the Gob pel against the cause of free silver was i scorching and eloqueutly severe. Re leigh's demonstration was altogether worthy of the capital city. ... Bryan was gi v n an elegant supper at the Park Hotel after he spoke. Many ladies lined the stairways to see him as he entered. Hal Ayer made the speech of introduction, and a good one. At Selma. Bryan snike to 4 WW people at this point, where bonfire were burning.' J. T. Ellington introduced him. At Goldsboro The Bryan speciaj rolled - into this city -on 1 hursday night amid the boom of an anvil salute, and a blaze of elec tric lights. The candidate barely showed hiniiielf ami then retired to rest. At 10..0 o'clock Friday morn ing the speech was made -frfem a high stand on East and West Centre street A solitary soldier othe Goldsboro Ri fles stood watch'nenr-Mp. Bryan as he spoke. With bayonetted gun at par aderest, he stood motionless through" out the intense and soul-stirring bursts ! of oratorv- as nseles".. aa ornamental and as patriotic a factor as the sentinel who perished in the freshet of ashes at Pompeii But he did his duty. Mr. i Bryan was so completely rested here that his voice had r aiued much of tne cnurcn Dell strength aud sweetness with which it rang through the utter most galleries of the Culisseum at Chi cago. Gathered around the stand was between five aud six thousand people. At y iUori At this beautiful din .-haded city-he briefly addressed 2,500 people who in tensely absorbed in the brds of the speaker. Farewell at Rocky Mount. Mr Brvan and bis nartv reached Rocky Mount, the last place at which speaking was to be held in North Car- ! oliua, at 12:45 p. m. last Friday. He met with a royal reception feature that characterized 1 in demonstration the rjrocPWnjal was employed there. Tr?rozen carnages and 500 horsemenescorted the candi- n where he HpoKu tromTrpinorm,oiuii.. . - tra-k iiiJ?eo' stantl, directly facing the grand stand, the latter being packed witb 1,500 white-clad, fan-fluttering la dies. Some 6,000 or 7,000 enthusias tic Tar Heels heard the speech. The representatives of thte press went to MrVBrva'n shortly before reaching Rocky Mouu.tnd asked him if he had auy ltst message for the people of North Carolina. Mr. Bryan, reclining as usual, 'smiled and replied with alacrity, "Yes, teli them this: I have bad a very pleasant time iu yojur State and while I have spoken at a numbet of places, the trip has been so nicely arranged that I could rest between times and am not at all fatigued. 1 have not only enjoyed the trip but also my association with the silver men whom I beve met from time to time. "I go out of the State feeling confi dent that those who believe in free'sil er will Una some way ol consolidate ing the vote so that we will prest-nt a solid front to the gold forces iu the coming election." . ,-. The Virginia Brvan t-pjeciul was in waiting at the above point, audits soon as he finished his speech the special steamed out for Richmond, where he addressed a large assemblage of Old Dominion free ttilverites. L t;rd.ittAls t. Th rr.a.rnirlcnt cm nes EmiHiror which Li ared to Pn-s'ulntCiev placed on exnibitioa SILTKR NUGGETS. There is no yellow streak in Mr. f Bryan's white metal speeches.. America is about old enough and Tig enough . and strong enough to standalone. ' A good many gold newspapers seem to think they can fool their readers with 53 -cents facts. The term "sound money" is the most dangerous and wi that the prolific brain of speculators ever promulgated. The indictment brouirht against Mn oryan is. that he does not consider millionaire any better thaVsdoth American citizen. If, as the goldbugs sayjihe fight for sound money is in the interest of the wage workers when were thair employ ers aciacd itK : y, dden desire to saenfioe another slice of their profile to their employes? Bryan is in favor of coining silver without the consent of England- Mc Kinley will coin silver if England will allow it. Which is the American patriot? Work for America and let England attend to her own business. Abundant currency made up of gold, silver and good .paper, means activity in every department ' of trade and manufactures, employment for all, living wages for the artisan, and good prices xor tne farmer. i Let all friends of bimetallism call a halt to internecine strife 'and' Stand shoulder to shoulder against the com I mon foe that threatens destruction to lmerican liberty, American pros perity, American institutions! Senator John Sherman savs that the ; free ooinage of silver would raise I prices of farm products, but' what good would the money do when it would 1 require so much more of m to pur ! chase anything? Why it would do much good. every way, if there' was. ' more to pay to buy something there would be more to pay it with and as I' so many are in debt it would be their very salvation. If free coinage would enable the savings bank to pay off their $1,350, 000,000 of deposits in 53-cent dollars and thereby make a profit of $634,, -500,000, why is it tAt the heads of those banks, who ate in the business io make money, &re so bittarly op posed to free coinage? Don't they want to make all that profit? . W. J. Bryan stands for this princi ple : America first, the world after wards. Wm. McKinley stands for a principle that is just the opposite. It is this : England's grip on this coun try, even though obtained by unfair and secret means, must be perpetua ted if it takes the last shingle oft the roof of your house. Every attempt to restore silver, every appeal pointing out the awful effects whioh have followed its de monetization, ;iias been met and .fought bask. TlTO old ery has been time and time again raised : "If you try it, all the gold will drift away; if you try it, there will be a panic," whioh is precisely as though some people had a man in an air chamber, and had exhausted nearly all the air and stood with; one hand hold of the pump handle, saying to him: -'If you dare to kick, we will give you two or three strokes and take away what air you have." Japan's Business Boom. In 1873, in Japan, an once of gold bought 15$ ounces of silver. In 1893 -half an ounce of gold buysil5$ ounces of silver. Prices in goltt standard countries are calculated infold, value The Japanese manufacturer- "irT fore, make goods mJsSrSry, send them to tVr'- ''Itates, sell them The sanj's1! the gold prjipe of 1873, get I witb that 'old as much silver as he did in 1873, take that silver to Japan and with it purchase as much of everything as he ever did and pay as much debts and taxes as he ever did. Aa gold rides still higher tv value, compared with silver, the Japanese can afford to make still lower and low er gold prices for his goods, and as the same goods,, must sell for the s&me price in the aam,e market the Ameri can manufacturer must come down in his price, although his debts and taxes do not come down. This is the secret of the recent importations of Japanese goods at prices that have alarmed our manufacturers. Cumberland (Md.) Times. "Labor Crucified. " ' ' TheNLondon Times has the follow ing, which laboring men, producers, and business men should read care fully : i - 'It the single gold standard can be " fdrtsed upon South America and Asia, as.' jt has been since 1873 forced on Srth America and Europe, gold must inevitably appreciate to at least four times its present absurd value, or to put it otherwise, commodities must decline .to one fourth of the present r price.and labor all the world over, be craoifiwl as it was never crucified be- days of mediaeval serfdom slavery, ouch is the ie money lords can force q upon the wiioJe world, succeed in establishing the gigantic moneyed aristocracy 'be rien, and thek worst system serfdom amohs the masaea 1 . r - oxjM battel Bar eurted thfi hapless som s I I 1 1 . - - SB : - 1 4 i 4 mr - - - H i M. 23d. meat L.iDrary. 3ix feet miu embr m m . um n