Lebanon Express. H. Y. KIRKPATRICK, anfl - Proprietor Editor THE WORLD TO MCKINLEY The New York World, a gold standard paper, opposing Bryan, addressed the following to Mo- Kinley: 1. You know perfectly well that when Mr. Harrison came into oflice Mr. Cleveland turned over to him a treasury full to repletion, with a surplus of more thau hundred millions of dollars, and witii revenue laws producing vast ly more money than the govern ment needed, 2. You know that at the end of Mr. Harrison's term the surplus was exhausted and that there would have been a deficiency op parent but for the juggling of ac counts in the treasury department and (he wrongful conversion of a trust fund to illegitimate uses. 3. You know that this result was brought about in part by the reduction of receipts created by your own tariff billunder which, in the name of protection, the customs revenues were cut down from 1229,000,000 in 1890 to $177,- 000,000 m 1892 and $131,000,000 in 1894. 4. You know that it was in other part produced by the reck less squandering of a republican congress of which in the house you were the chosen leader. That ' body not only swelled expendi tures to a .billion dollars but fastened so many unjust perman ent ebarges upon the treasury as to make it impossible for succeed ing congresses to reduce this ex traordinary and extravagant total. 5. You know that whatever deficiency there has since been in thereveuue, whatever embarrass ment to business and whatever prostration to industry are in large part the fruits of recklessness for which the republican much more thin the democratic party is re sponsible, and in which you your self bore a commanding part. Why not tell the truth about these things? Are honesty, can' dor, fair dealing and truth telling less imperative obligations to a candidate for president than to ordinary men? Whht is the matter with Ar kansas? There is nothing small about Arkansas except the repuh lican vote. The Express predicts that Bryan will carry old Linn county by 1000 majority. If this country belongs to the people' let the people rule it. If it belongs to Hanna and his million aires, let them have Hanna for king and be done with it. - Senator Mitchell is now being complimented by the Oregonian for his good work in behalf of Mc Kinley. The people have all ways thought very well of Senator Mitchell, but it will now be in order for them to look a little out, as the great Oregonian never com' pliments a true friend of the people. Thebanksare mating a small charge for cashing Eastern drafts This fact is being used by some gold bugs as an argument against free silver one of the evils that Bryan's magnificent canvass is bringing upon the people. School boys used to stick pins in their fellow students and then point to some innocent youth as the guilty party. So the banks will continue to pinch the people and charge it up to Bryan. It is amusing to hear the re publican gold press and politicians saying such nice things about Palmer and Buckner, and especi ally about . Buckner, who was a Confederate brigadier. The ez pected help that this ticket will give to McKinley is the reason for all these nice expressions. The radical portion of the republican press must be very hard up when they turn to an old Confederate soldier for help. THE DIFFERENCE. The republican papers are try ing to make an unfavorable com parison between Bryan and Mc Kinley, from the fact that Bryan travels over the country to speak to the people, while McKinley stays at home and has the people brought to him.: Upon reflection there is a strong argument in favor of Bryan in this very circum stance. McKinley, representing the money aristocracy of the country, is not permitted, by his managers, to mingle among the common people. He stands for the wealth of the millionaires, and must mingle only with these high-toned personages. He stands upon the door-step of his palatial home, and, like a king, receives the homage of his visitors. This is too much like the crowned heads af Europe to suit the citi zens of a free republic. On the other hand, Bryan, the champion of the common people, goes forth to meet and talk with his fellow citizens, not as a petted child of aristocracy, but as a plain Ameri can citizen. This incident of the campaign is the whole thing in a nut shell. The one, the pet and champion of millionHires. The other, the favorite and defender of the people. A vote for McKinley is a vote for Wall street with its net-work of combines. A vote for Bryan is a vote for the people with all they hold dear. The democrats may have learned a few things from the populists, as the republicans charge, but the republicans hate certainly learned one very bad habit from the pope. They ire now doing all the calamity howling, as they see strong hopes in Bryan's election, and the populists have quit howl ing, while the republicans pretend to see only the day of judgment coming. By the way, it will be a day of judgment for many of the gold bug republican monopolists. The workingman who votes for Bryan volunteers to turn half his wages over to millionaire mine- owners and speculators in silver bullion. Oregonian. Yes, and the workingman who votes for Bryan is now being hounded to death by his employ ers, whose ready tool Hanna is. His wages are being pinched by "voluntary contributions" to the McKinley campaign fund, and his family is being threatened with starvation. Oh! yes, Hanna is the friend of the laborer, just as the card shark is the friend of his green victim. pennoyer;s points. (Continued from fourth page.) If the gold bugj keep on con tracting the currency, there will not be enough to pay the millions in pensions due every month, and then you will see a large in crease in the free silver shoutere. Bryan it gUjnfl stronger every Bryan is a firm friend and be liever in the people. For this reason, it is hinted that Bryan's election would encourage domestic disorders, strikes, riots and the like. Such a charge is ridiculous. The people would know that the president was their friend and that the rights guaranteed to them by the constitution and the laws would be given them. Their con fidence in Bryan would teach them patience, while with McKinley as president, they would strongly suspect that the corporations that elected the candidate would con trol the president, and their des pair and their desperate condition of poverty and oppression would likely end in riot. W strongly favor peace and order, and we be lieve that Bryan's election would do more to inspire the confidence in the people than anything that could happen. A man may be a friend of the people and still be a bitter enemy to riots. The people never had a bitter friend thun Lincoln, and none was ever closer to the very heart of the na tion, yet be was no triend to riots and strikes. var nalntain it at par. It will ta, wkea treated like gold, be juit w good aa gold, The niononietaliais deny thai the bestewment of legal tender qnalttiw will affect lis Tlue, and jet they takr verj good care that gold ahull be a full legal tender and endeavor, in order to enhance ita value, to have it the only legal tender money. Their actions com, pletely belie their assertions. , THl VANDALISM Of GOLD, The most atrocious persecutions and bloody butcheries of the Christians by the barbarous Turks in Armenia tor the last year or two have been more than sufficient to enlist the sympathies of the civilised world, and to demand the prompt and effective interposition of the Christian nations of Europe. And yet that interposition has been with held and those butcheries have been allowed to proceed without the Inter vention of European governments, for the sole reason that such intervention might interfere with the value of Otto man securities. The power of Roth childs' gold has outweighed all human sympathies, and Christian blood has freely flowed in order to nrevent a fall In Turkish bonds. And right near onr own shone, the gallant sons of Cuba have for about two years maintained a moat heroic struggle for freedom against tne cruel despotism of Spain, fully equalling ia self-sacrifice and valor the achievement of onr forefathers while straggling for oolonial independence, and yet at the domination of the gold owner of the, world, fearful of disturbing tin single gold standard, the President of our gnat republic turns a deaf ear to the appeal of the heroic Cubans, the demand of a patriotic Congress, and the outspoken expressions of universal Am erican sympathy and serenely bobs tor oaaa. Gold is the great vandal of the nine teenth century. Through its power, it has nfused among the leading nations of the earth the recognition of silver, its equal yoke-fellow of the oenturies, as full redemption money, narrowing for its own enrichment the legal tender money or the world, and in just that same proportion dwarfing the ener gies and checking the growth and progress of the nations. A writer in a recent number of the Fortnightly Review gives a graphic picture of the result of the single gold standard in hug-land when he says, "Farms are abandoned, the green fields of former days, peopled aa they wen with thriving flocks and handsome herds, converted by the rude processes of nature into a dismal, unproductive waste, from which even the cottager has fled as if from a plague; country mansions closed or occupied by caretakers, their owners no longer able to sustain the charges which an establishment entails, while rural laborers, flocking into towns swell the already swollen ranks of the un employed." The same results are wit nessed to some extent in our own country. That the value of gold may be en hanced, its devotees apparently reck not the ruin the fatal policy biingn upon the country. Professing opposition to sil ver aa standard money, they have already really placed the country on a silver basis, as their continued forced loans of gold to maintain the treasury reserve incontestibly demonstrates. Pro fessing to favor sound money, thoy have prevented the coinage of silver, thus leaving the country in a pitiable uliirht. without gold unless borrowed, and with out silver, It not being coined, and with its currency of bank notes and clearing house certificates spasmodically issued. Professing abhorrence of repudiation, they have forced upon the country a pol loy which has already absolntely com pelled the debtor to yield up his prop erty to the creditor, who then finds half his claim repudiated, without hope of redress. F: ofessuig to give the laborer good money, they deprive him of any money by enforcing idleness npon him, compelling his sons to tramp for work anl his 'aughtera to seek a life of shame for bread. The crusade for the roslom tion of silver money is one in the inter est of humanity, morality ami civiliza tion, and one on the result of which hangs the destiny of seventy million of people, CONCLU8IOH. Three years ago I wrote a Christmas letter to President Cleveland, in which I truthfully stated that two-thirds of the people of Oregon were out of re mnuerative employment. If I were to write him a letter to-day, upon my con science I would be compelled to increa the proportion. To stand where I hnvi stood as Mayor of Portland for more than two months and listen to the an- peals of stroug. able bodied men, with tears in their eyes, for a chance to earn bread for their wives and children, almost enough to melt a heart of iron. hands of receivers." t he Cleveland administration haa fol lowed exactly the financial policy of the previous Republioaa administration, an as a result the country has been gradually and aunly sinking in the treacherous quicksands of mono metalism and now, while our gold standard friends, sunk to the armpits, are vainly struggling to g' mt of their dilemma they refuse the aiu of our solid plank for the restoration of silver as standard money, insanely outlining that this plank of relief is the sole cause of their trouble. There is a story of a spell which a fairy once placed upon a castlo and its Inmates, suspending life entirely until a certain prince should come and kiss the lips of the sleeping beauty. At length tlie prince came, put a loving litis upon her rosy lips, and the spell was ttten broken, and arrested life toot up its tnreaus and moved on as If nothing strange had Happened. That is a urettv fairy stay, but now comes a hatifnl real story, 'ihe hideous ofrre of mono metallism has placed a spell upon our country, almost completely paralysing ita industries, but with a iitudi.iiuers utiparalle'ed it has not suspended tin- ani mation of our people, thus compelling countless thousands to shiver for lavk of clothing and hunger for lack of food. But thank heaven, that hateful spell is soon to be broken, 'iuo youiig prince of standard silver money will soon kiss onr fair Columbia's brow, now sleeping uncier tne speu of monometallism, and then life will be restored to our indus tries and hope and prosperity to our people. Way tiod speed that welcome day. Read, Peacock A Co. Is the plaoe to find the new and pretty style lielt. We Are Not Candidates For Statwop Ohio, City or TolidoJ ss. Lucas Couhty. ( Funic J Chihby makes oath that he l the senior parnter of the firm of F. J. CnntiY & Co., doing business in City of Toledo, County and Mate aforesaid, ami that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED D0LLAKS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of IIallr Oatahbh CnKi, FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before ine and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1896. seal. A WOLEA80N, Notary Public. Halls Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. 1? A Saf , Ml I t LA V J it M'KINLEY Protection and Prosperity. BRYAN Free Silver, no Prosperity. President. Notice of Appointment or Administratis Notice is herebv Riven that the under' signed has been duly appointed adminis trator ot tne estate oi J. 1, Mcuailister, deceased, late of Lion county, Oregon. All persons huving claims against the said estate are hereby notified to present them, with the proper vouchers, wttnin six months from the date of this notice, to the under signed, at Albany. Oregon. Listed, this 1st day of August, 1898. 11. M. Payki. Eucins Si Cannon, Administrator. Attys. for Adinr. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION, Land Office at Oregon Oltv, Or.,1 August. 1806.' f Notice is hereby given that the following- named settler has Hied notice of his Inten tion to make final proof in support of his claim, and that si. Id proof will be made before the county clerk of Linn county, Ore gon, at Albany, Oregon, on Oct. 12. 1880, viz: John E. Carlton, H. . No. 10741, for the W, H 8. E. S. W. N. E M & S E N. W. Ji of Sec. 21, Tp. 10, S. K. 0 E. He names the following witnesses to prove his contiauous residence upon and cultiva tion of, said land, viz: Win. Kriesel, R. C. Kriesel, Thomas Klley, Simpson Pear-: son, all of Detroit, Marion Co., Oregon. Roam A. Millrb, Hegisler. The great campaign is now on. Mc'Kinley is sure to win, he wears the Douglas shoe and Baker sells the Douglas shoe. Lebanon, Oregon " A child will weep a bramble's smart, A maid tosee bar sparrows part, But wuo awaits a country wliun It seas the tears of bearded rum!' The friends of McKinley assert thai au this evil has some npon the country since the election of Cleveland. This is a great mistake. Four years ago last May, in a speech which I made at Al- btaa, I then truthfully stated that " the entire Lndustnes of a great nation are ruthlessly sacrificed in order that the value of gold may be enhanced," and in the Oregonianof January 15th, 1893, be fore 01vland'sinnguration, tbere was published the following from (be Rail way Agei " Dnring the year Vt;i thjtro were sold under foreclosure 28 railways, having an aggregate mileage of 1922 miles, and hi apparent papitalujation, bonds and stocks of SJ,87S,ooi), iiqch mora alarming than the record of fore closure is that of railroad liuwlvenoies in the past year, for it wonld seem tliat in 1898 a new era of bankruptcy, more disastrous than that recorded for sev eral roars previous, had been inaugu rated. In twelve wnf't, no less than thirty-six companies, having 10,003 miles of road and representing the prodigious NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land Oflico at Oregon Citv, Or.,1 Aui. 4. m. t Notice is hereby given that the (bllowing- named settler has tiled notice of tils inten- lion to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the countr Clerk of Linn county (Ore gon, at Albany, Oregon, on Oct. 12, 1898, v: Thomas Klley, H. E. No. 10740, for the W. 8. W. X, Sec. 23 and V. ,N WK.Sec. 26, Tp. 10. S. It. 0 11, W. II. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of, said land, viz: J E Carlton, KO Kriesel, Vt'm Kriesel, S Pearson, ollof Detroit, Marlon Co., Oregon. Robkht A. M11.1.IB, Register NOTICE FOR PUL1CATION. Land Oflice at Oreaon Cltv, Or.,1 Aug. 22, WW. f Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has llled notice of his in tention to make final proof in support of bis claim, and that said prool will be made before the County Clerk of Linn County at Albany, Ogn., on Oct, l?th, 1808, vis: Colbert 0, Patterson; II. E. 8S:2 for the lots 1,2 and 3, Sec. 6, Tp. 12 S H. 1, W. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion ot, said land, viz: Ezra Gather, Jason D. Breed, George Smith, Chas, Orlsham, all of Lebanon, Or. Hobekt A. MlLLsa, Register. NOTICE FOR' PUBLICATION. Land Office at Oregon City, Or.,1 Aug. 22, 18U6. ( Notice is berby given tliat the following named settler has filed notice of his Intent ion to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said "proof will be made be fore tlie County Clerk of Linn County at Albany, Or,, on Oct. 17th. 1898, viz 1 Jason D. Breed: H. E. 8781! for the 8. K ofS. of Sec. 6, Tp. 12 8., K. 1 . He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous jesldenceuponand cultivation of said lend, viz; Jacob Fltswaterand J, M. Lindley, of Lituonip, Oregon , Eire Cather, Colbert (J, TASTELESS 0 HI i EaiLi TONIC II JUST A8 OOOQ FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 60 ots. Gautu, lus,, Nov. M, ISO. FarUUedlehMCo., 8t.Lrala.alo. Usntlmea:-We sold last rear, 800 boulas of GBOVH'8 TABTBLKsa CHILL TONIC and ban oouf oi um groat atraaar una rear, loan oar si Thos. F. Oakes.pienry C. l'eyne, Henry C Rouse, Receivers. II ORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. U N Pullman Elegant Tourist Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Cars MlniiaaimlU Daluth rra;o parlaiKa of U yaara, In lae drug btulonM, bare , trn Asiiar, Oaaa 600. Km sold an artlota tbat save suoa ool renal aaua xoura innr. affUea as your Teolc For sale by N. W. SMITH. You can get lbs of good rlee and 40 lbs of beans at Feebler' for 91 00; and 100 lbs of the best dry granulated sugar for 95 06 spot cash, I Fire Insurance. Insure Your Property with GEORGE RICE -IN- IJurtf'orU, k ' Phoenix, Hamburir.Breinen, Fireman' Fund. w emorn, Reliable old line cmnpuiiles he renreeeuts. All hualiiMA placed with him will be at tended to promptly. On oe on Main til., LEBANON, IT. lice 9) CI rand forks (Irwukaiiia Wlnnlpag Helena and THROUGH TICKETS-p Chleago Washington Philadelphia Hew York Uostonjind all I'nlnta Bast and Hontta For Information, time cards, niape and tickets, call on or write f. C. PETERSON, Agent, ". LEBANON, - - OREGON. ob ID. CHARLTOH, Asst. Genl. Pass. igt. Portland. Oregon. M. RALSTON. BBOKEB, MivHtun lilook., Albany, Or, Money to loan on farm security, also small loans made on personal security. City, county and school warrants bought. Collections made on favorable terma, , yjf2. Fire insurance written In three of; th6 gioJblir'i and pt Jh? pound of musnisi la lbs world, II lb WW