{ title: 'The Niagara sun. volume (Lockport, N.Y.) 1896-19??, November 10, 1896, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057632/1896-11-10/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057632/1896-11-10/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057632/1896-11-10/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057632/1896-11-10/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: New York State Library
L£O0kING ~ fl i im Cheering Words from the Leader of Bimetallism. THE CAUSE IS STRONG. 'O 1900 WTIUE RENEWED CONFIDENCE THH FIGHT MADE UNDER ODDS WAS CREDILLABLE KO TIB VANQUISHED, Lincoln, Neb. Nov, G.-Mr. Bryan to- day gave out the following: \Xo. the Bimetallists of the Country : \Consclous that millions of loyal hearts aro saddened by temporary de- feat, I bog to offer v word of hope and excouragement, No cause over had - gupportors more brive, earnest and de- . todinns of Nattonat honor voted thin thoso who have espoused tho cause of bimeatallism,. 'They have fought from convietion,and have fought «wvith all the zeal which conviction in- #pfeos,. vonts will provo whether they wre right or wrong, Having done their duty as thoy saw It, they have nothing to rogrot, \Cho Ropublican candidate has been horalded as the advance agent of pros- pority,. If his policies bring real pros- porlty to the Anicrlcan: people, those who opposed him will share in that progpority. -If, on the other hand, his policies prove an Injury to the people gencrally, those of his supporters who do not belong to the office-holding class or to the privlloged classoy will suffer in common with those who opposed him. \\The friends of blmetallism have not beon vanquished; they have simply boon overcome, 'Thoy believe that the gold standard is an conspiracy of the money changors against the welfare of the tuman race anid until convinced of thely orror thoy will continue the war- fare against It, \Who contest hns been waged this your tndor groat embarraggments and against groat odds. For the first time f dur{rg thig genoration public attention | his boon centered upon the money ques- tion us the privrmount issue and this . hits been done in spite of all attempts upon the part of our opponents to pre- vont It, The Republican convention hold out the dolusive hope of internat- ional bimotallistm, while Republican loadors labored secretly for gold mono- motaillsm, _ Gold standard Democrats have publicly advocated tho election of the Indianapolis ticket while they la- hoved socretly for the election of the Ktopublicttn ticket. 'The trusts and cor- porations have tried to excite a fear of | Inwlogsnoss, while they havo been de- | fying the lnuw, and American financiers haye boasted that they were the cus- | while they wore sopratly bartering away the na- tion's fAnancial indtopendence, . SILYHR CAUSE NOT DBAD. |; \Butk in spito of tho efforts of the Ad- minlatration and Its supporters; in spite of the threats of money loaners at home and abroad; in spite of the coorcion | practiced by corporations and eaploy-' org: In spite of trusts and syndicates; in splto of un enormous Republican cam- piigo and In spite of the {aduence of a, hoatlle daily press, bimetallisn has almogt triumphed in its first great tig nt. The loss of a fow States, and that too, .by a vory small plurality, aag deteated { bimatailism: for tho present, bus bime- tallignm omerges from toe contost stronger than, it was tour montlis igo. | \I desire to commendthe work of the \* three national committees which have Joined in the management of this cam- - piign. Co-operation between the mem- bors of distinct political organization is always difficult, but is has been less go this your than usual, Interest in a com- mon «mise of great Importance has re- | duced friction to a minimum,. I hereby expross my personal gratitude to the in- dividual mombers as well as to the exec-: officors of the Nationak Committee of the Dowocratlc, Populist and silver parties for their officlent, untiring and unselfish Iaborg,' They have laid the foundation. tor future success and will' be remembered as ploneers when a vic- ' tory is at last secured. l DEFIAT NO PERSONAL LOSS. \No personal or political friend need gviovo because of my defeat, My ambi- | toh has been to secure Immediate legis- ! dation rather thin. to enjoy the honors of office. (Wherefore, defeat brings to me no feollug of personal loss, Speaking for tho wife, who has shared my labors, ag woll as for myself, I desire to say - that wo have been amply repald for all that we hays done,. \In the love of millions of our fellow citizons, so kindly expressed in knowl- adgo gained by personal contact with . the people mid in. broadened sympathies wo fnd full compensation for whatever efforts we have put forth. Our hearts linve been touched by the devotion of friends und our livew shall prove our appreciiition of the affection which we prize as the richest reward which this campalgn has brought. LWT THB HIGHT KEBP UP. ' \Tr the face of an enemy réfjolcing in its vietory, lot the roll be called for the ougiigomont and urge all friends of bi- motallisn: to renew their alleglance to the cause. If we aro right, as I believe, wa are, wae shall yet trlumph. Until con- } vinced of hig envror, let Cach advocate of bimetallism: continue the work. Let all ) gllver clubs notain their organization, hold regulm meetings and circulate lit- oraturo. Our opponents have succeeded In this cuinpaign and must now put their theorles to the test. Instead of talk- ing mysterlously about 'sound money' nud 'an honest dollar,\ they must now and defend a financial system. Ivory stop tikem by them should be! publicly considered by the silver clubs. im cthugso has prospered most where tho money question has been longest discussed among the people. During tho noxt four years it will be studied all | over this nation oven more than it has boon studied in tho past. 1900 NOU FAR AWAY. '\\Che yoru 1000 Is not far away. Be- foro that your avrlves, international bi- metailigm will couse to deceive; before that your avrlves those who have called thorasolvos gold standard Domocrats will become bimatallists and be with us gammy will become Republicans and | thus 0 Kives trusts will have convinced still i n enemies: bofore that year ar- more people that a trust is a menace to privato welfare and to public safety; | y+ before that year arrives he evils of a gold standard will be even more evident than they are now, and the people will then be ready to demand an American financial policy for the American peqple mud will join with us in the immediate restoration of the free and unlimited colnage of gold and silvor at the pre- sont legal ratio of 16 to 1, without wait- Ing for the aid or consent of any other nation,. * (Signed) \Ww. J. BRYAN.\ KNIGHTS OF LABOR. GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO | BB HELD IN ROCHESTER NOY. 10TH. I Rochester, N. X., Nov. 7.-The general executive board of the Knights of Labor of the United States and Canada met in the New Osborne house this morning in!» 10 o'clock. The board' consists of General Sovereign, Secretary-Treasurer, John W, Hayes, T. B. McGuire, C. A. French, J. M. Kenny and H. B. Martin. They are perfecting arrangements for holding the general assembly in this city Nov. 10th, which will remain in session ten or twelve days. Among some of the questions to be discussed during the session will be the election of organizers to thoroughly cover the sections of the country not now under the Influence of the Knights of Labor. One of the main points will be to try and discover how the country can be thoroughly organized without so much expense as has rccompanied the efforts of former years. 'The general assembly will number between 40 and 60 mem- bers, representing about a hundred thousand workingmen. General Secre- tary-'Preagurer Hayes says the order is in a prosperous condition and despite the hard times had added 167 new as- sembly districts during the last year, besides establishing a national organ- ization in New Zealand. Among the prominent Knights <now present are Thos. J. O'Reilly of District No. 220, Brooklyn, H. J. Park, New York city, J. N. Parson, New York; J. H. Robin- son, of Kansas, Sarsfield Fitzpatrick, of Montreal, Canada, J. H. Mansion, Al- bany, J. D. Chamberlain, Puebla, Col.; N. J. Bishop, Boston, . b A Mining Compamy Assigns. Missouri, Mont., Nov. 7.-The Golden Sceptre Mining Co., at Quigley, has assigned, with $285,000 liabilities. The assets are estimated at $500,000, con- sisting of the company's mines and its vast, Incompleted mills, electric power works, railroad, etc. 'The company 'has spent this year nearly $400,000 in opening its mines aud building Its works, and the failure is alleged to be on recount of inability to get enough money to finish the works. Kentucky Probaly for McKinley. Loulsville, Ky., Nov. 6. -The most careful compilation of tho returns from the State except three precinets of Per- ry County and five of Leslie County, and estimating these on the basis of the vote for Governor last year Kentucky: gives McKinley 530 plurality. Killed by the Cars. Binghamotn, N. Y., Nov. 6.-A special to the Lender from Susquehanna, Pa., says: William Black, aged 60 years, of Brandts, Pa., was struck by an Erie freight engine at the Lanesboro cross- , ing this morning and instantly killed. He was married and had a family. Fire Caused by a Gas Explosion Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 7.-The dry- goods establishment of Lawrie & Rob- bison was destroyed by fire this morn- ing. The fire originated, it is supposed from a gas explosion. Loss over $100,- 000; insured. [Expectations Only. Madrid, Nov. 7.-The latest advices yeceived from Manila say that General Blanco, the Governor of the Philippine Islands, expects to stimp out the re- bellion in his territory within three weeks. Heavy Failure in Little Falls. Little Falls, N. Y., Nov. 6.-The re- ports of the assignees on the affairs of Freeman Ives & Co., who recently falled, show | liabilities of $131,409.60 and actual assets $40,253.55. In the West Indies twothirds are ne- groes, and of the remaining third by no means all are English, In the Straits Sottlments and Hong Kong only a sixth are whites, but these are mostly of British descent. In Honduras and British Guiana the proportion is even smaller; in fact, in the latter colony there are only 9,000 Englishmen out of a population of 200,000 people-coolies, negroes and Europeans. For the 875 vacancies in the corps of Paris street sweepers there are 21,562 enndidates, 6,047 persons are waiting their turn for the 115 vacancies in the kindergarten schools, and 1,955 quali: fied applcants have applied for 72 | places In the primary schools. Nila lae he ue\ an Eczema and Skin Irritations. Use Salya-cea (rrapm-mars), the new curative lubricant. It's for every pain, irrita- tion, or inflammation, that an external remedy can reach. Whatever saive or wash or healing compound you've been using may be very good. But this is better yet. Quicker, more effective. Twosizes, ag and 5o cents per box, At d;uggists’f or by mp5]. For such troubles as Rheumatism of the Joints, deep-seated faint etc., use the con- centrated breparation \ Salva-cen Extra Strong.\ Sold intins at 16 cents each. Tite Branpretit Co., 274 Canar St., N. Y. Master Workman James R.! to be suggestive if, one or two hundred TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10 HARMONY. tn the Boginning God Created All Things Perfect. R ___. Discord Was Produced by Sin, and in Order to Restore Harmony Our i Lives Must be Attuned by j the Gospel Harp. The theme chosen by Dr. Talmage for his most recent sermon at Wash- | Ington was \The Chant of the Stars,\ * and he chose as his text Job 88: 6, 7: , \'Who laid the corner-stone thereof, when the morning stars sang togeth- er?l, We have all seen the ceremony at the laying of the corner-stone of church, fisylum, or Masonic temple. hollow of the stone were placed scrolls pf history and important documents, years after, the building should be de- stroyed by fire or torn down. We re- member the silver trowel or iron ham- mer that smote the square piece of granite into sancity. We remember gome venerable man who presided wielding the trowel or hammer. We remember also the music as the choir stood on the scattered stones and tim- ber of the building about to be con- ftructed. The leaves of the note book Buttered in the wind and were turned over with a great rustling, and we re- member how the baritone, bass, tenor; contralto and soprano voices com- mingled. They had for many days been rehearsing the special programme; that it might be worthy of the corner- stone laying. In my text the poet of Uz calls us ta n greater ceremony -the laying of the foundation of this great temple of n world. The corner-stone was a block pf light, and the trowel was of celestial orystal. Alliabout and on the embank- ments of clouds stood the angelic chor- {sters, unrolling their librettos of over- ture, and other worlds clapped shining bymbals while the ceremony went on, nnd God. the architect, by stroke of light after stroke of light, dedicated this great cathedral of a world, with mountains for pillars, and sky for fres- coed ceiling, and flowering fields for a floor, and sunlight and midnight au- rora for upholstery. \Who laid the corner-stone th@reof, when the stars sang together?\ The fact is that the whole universe was a complete cadence, an unbroken dithyramb, a musical portfolio. The great sheets of immensity had been out, and written on it were the ptars, the smaller of them minims, the larger of them sustained notes. The meteors marked the staccato passages, the whole heavens a gamut with all sounds, intonations, modulations, the pace between the worlds a musical in- terval, trembling of a steller light a quaver, the thunder of a bass clef, the wind among-trees a treble clef, That is the way God made all things a per- fect haromy. But one day a harp string snapped in the great orchestra. One day a voice sounded out of tune. One day a dis pord, harsh and terrific, grated upon the glorious antiphon. It was sin that made the dissonance, and that harsh Aiscord has been sounding through the centuries. All the work of Christians, and philanthropists, and reformers of all ages is to stop that discord and to get all things back into the perfect har- mony which was heard at thelaying of the corner-stone when the morning stars sang together. Before I get through, if I am divinely helped, I will make it plain that sin is discord and righteousness barmony. 'That, in gen- eral, things are out of tune is as plain as to a musician's ear is the unhappy clash of clarionet and bassoon in an orchestral rendering. The world's health out of tune; weak lungs and the atmosphere in collision, disordered oye and noonday light in quarrel, rheumatic limb and damp weather in struggle, neuraigias and pneumonias and consumptions and epi epsies in flocks sweep upon neighbor- hoods and cities, Where you find one erson with sound throat and keen eye- bight, and alert ear and easy respira. tion, and regular pulsation and supple limb, and prime digestion and steady nerres, you find a hundred who have to be very careful because this or tha or the other physical function is disor dered. The human intellect out of tune; the fudgment wrongly swerved or the mem ory leaky or the will weak or the tem- per infamm.ble, the well-balanced mind exceptional. Domestic life out of tune; only here and there a conjugal outbreak of incom- patibility of temper through the divorce courts, or a filial outbreak about a father's will through the surrogate's gourt, or a case of wife-beating or hus band-poisoning through the criminal courts, but thousands of families witk June outside and January within. Society out of tune; labor and capital, their hands on each other's throats. Spirit of caste keeping those down in the social scale who are struggling to get up, and putting those who are up in anxiety lest they have to come down. No wonder the old pianoforte of society is all out of tune, when hypocrisy and lying, and subterfuge, and double dealing, and sycophancy, and charla tanism, and revenge have for giz thou sand years been banging away at the keys and stam the pedals. On all sides . is a shipwreck of harmonies. Nu..oss in discord with out realizing it; so wrong is the feeling of nation for nation tbat symbol: chosen are fierce and destructive. Ir this country, where our skies are full o. robins, doves and morning larks, we have our national | symbol, the fierce and filthy eagle, as crue & bird as can be found it all the ornithological catalogues. In Great Britain, where they have lambi and fallow deer, their symbol is the merciless lion. In Russia, where from between her frozen north and bloom: ing south all kindly beasts dwell, they chose thg growling bear; and in the world's heraldry a favorite figure it the dragon, the fable winged serpent, ferocious and dreadful And so fons is the world of contention that we climb out through the heavens anc Into the. + baptize one of the other planets with the spirit of battle and call its Mars, after the god of war, and we give to the eighth sign of the zodiac the name of the scorpion, a creature which is chiefly celebrated for its deadly sting. But, after all, these symbols are ex- pressive of the way nation feels to- ward nation.> Discord wide as the con- tinent and bridging the seas. I suppose you have noticed how warmly in love dry goods stores are with other dry goods stores, and how highly grocerymen think of the sugars of the grocerymen on the same street. And in what a eulogistic way allopathic and homeopathic doctors speak of each other, and how ministers will some- times put ministers on that beautiful cooking instrument which the English call a spit, an iron roller with spikes on it, and turned by a crank before a hot fire, and then if the minister being roasted cries out against it, the men 'who are turning him say: \Hush my brother, we are turning this spit for 'the glory of God and the good of your soul, and you must be quiet, while we close the service with: Blest be the tie that binds Our hearts in Christian leve.\ The earth is diametered and cireum- ferenced with discord, and the music that was rendered at the laying of the 'world's corner-stone, when the morn- ing stars sang together, is not heard now; and though here and there, from 'this and that part of society, and from 'this and that part of the earth, there comes up a thrilling solo of love, or a warble of worship, or a sweet duct of patience, they are drowned out by a 'discord that shakes the earth. Paul says: \The whole creation groaneth,\ and while the nightingale, and the woodlark, and the canary, and the plover sometimes sing so sweetly that their notes have been written out in musical notation, and it is found 'that the cuckoo sings in the key of D, 'and that the cormorant is a basso in the winged choir, yet sportsman's gun and the autumnal blast often leave them ruffled and bleeding or dead in meadow or forest. Paul was right, for ithe groan in nature drowns out the + F prima donnas of the sky. , But if in this world things in gen- eral gre out of tune to our frail ear, how much more so to beings angelic and deific! It takes a skilled artist to fully appreciate disagreement of sound. Many have no capactity to detect a de- fect of musical execution, and though there were in one bar as many offenses, 'against harmony as could crowd in be- tween the lower F of the bass and the 'higher G of the soprano, it would give them no discomfort, while on the fore- head of the educated artist beads of perspiration would stand out as a re- sult of the harrowing dissonance. But the worst of a¥l discord is moral discord. If society and the world ave painfully discordant to imperfect man, what must they be to a perfect God! People try to define what sin is It seems to me that sin isf getting out of harmony. with God, a disagreement with His holiness, with His purity, with His love, with His commands, our will clashing with His will, the finite dash- ing against the infinite, the frail against the puissant, the created against the Creator. If a thousand musicians, with flute and cornet-a-pis- ton, and trumpet, and violoncello, the 'hautboy, and trombone, and all the wind and stringed instruments that ever gathered in a Musseldorf jubilee should resolve that they would play out of tune, and put concord to the rack, and make the place wild with shrieking and grating and rasping sounds, they could not make such a pandemonium as that which rages in a sinful soul when God listens to the play of its thoughts, passions, and emo- tion-discord, lifelong discord, mad- dening discord. N But I have to tell you that the song that the morning stars sang together at the laying of the world's corner- stone is to resound again. Mozart's greatest overtute was composed one might when he was several times over- powered with sleep, and artists say they can tell the places in the music where he was falling asleep, and the places where he awakened. So the overture of the morning stars, spoken of in my text, has also been asleep, but it will awaken and be more grandly rendered by the evening stars of the world's existence than by the morning stars, and the vespers will be sweeter than the matins. The work of all good men and women and of all good churches and all reform associations help to bring the race back to the orig- inal harmony. The rebellious heart to be attuned, social life to be attuned, commercial ethics to be attuned, inter- nationality to be attuned, hemispheres to be attuned. Now, our world can never be at- tuned by an imperfect instrument. Even a Cremona would rot do. Heaven has ordained the only instrument, and it is made out of the wood of the cross, and the voices that accompany it are imported voices, cantatrices of the first Christian night, when Heaven sere- naded the earth with \Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will to men.\ «Lest we start too -far off, and get lost in generalities, we had better begin with ourselves, get our own hearts and lives in harmony with the eternal Christ. Oh, for his Al- mighty Spirit to attune us, to chord our will with his will, to modulate our life with his life, and bring us into unison with all that is pure, and self- sacrificing, and Heavenly! 'The strings of our nature are all broken and twist- ed, and the bow is so slack it cannot evoke anything mellifluous The in- strument made for Heaven to play on has been roughly twanged and struck by influences worldly and demoniae. O master hand of Christ, restore this split, and fractured, and despoiled, and unstrung nature, until first it shall wail out for our sin and then thrill with divine pardon! The whole world must also be attuned by the same power. I was in the Fair banks weighing scale manufactory, of Vermont. Six hundred hands, and they had never had a strike. Complete har- mony between labor and capital, the operatives of scores of years in their beautiful homes near by the mansions of the manufacturers. whose invention against the heavens, and Christian behavior made the gréat f entérprise. So, all the world over, la- bor and capital will be brought into by Verdi, a tune played by hammers great and small, now with mighty stroke, and now with heavy stroke. beating a great iron anvil That is what the world has got to come to- anvil chorus, yard-stick chorus, shut- tle chorus, trowel chorus, crowbar chorus, pickax chorus, gold chorus, rail track chorus, locomotive chorus, It can be done, and it will be done. So all social life will be attuned by the gospel harp. ' There will be as many classes in so- ciety as now, but the classes will not be regulated by birth, or wealth, or accident, but by the seale of virtue and benevolence, and people will be assigned to their places as good, or very good, or most excellent.. So, also, commercial life will be attuned, and , there will be 12 in every dozen, and 16 ounces in every pound, and apples at { 'the bottom of the barrel will be as sound as those on the top, and silk goods will not be cotton, and sellers will not have to charge honest people more than the right price because others will not pay, and goods will come to you corresponding with the sample by which you purchased them, and coffee will not be chicoried, and sugar will not be sanded, and milk will not be chalked, and adulteration of food will be a state prison offense. Aye, all things shall be attuned. Elections in England and the United States will no more be a grand carnival of defama- tion and seurrility, but the elevation of righteous men in a righteous way. In the sixteenth century the singers called the Fischer brothers reached the lowest bass ever recorded, and the highest noté ever trilled was by La Bastardelia, and Catalini's voice had a compass of three and a half octaves; but Christianity is more wonderful, for it runs all up and down the great- est heights and the deepest depths of the world's necessity, and it will com- pass everything and bring it in accord 'with the song which the morning stars sang at the laying of the world's corners stone. All the sacred music in homes, and concert halls, and churches tends toward their consummation. more and more hearty. Sing in your families, sing in your places of busi- ness. If we with proper spirit use these faculties, we are rehearsing for the skies. Heaven is to have a new song, an en- tirely new song, but I should not won- derif, as sometimes on earth a tune is fashioned out of many tunes, or it is one tune with the variations, so some of the songs of the redeemed may have playing through them the songs of earth;:and how thrilling, as coming through the great anthem of the saved, accompanied by harpers with their harps, and trumpeters with their trum- pets, if we should hear some of the strains of Antioch, and Mount Pisgah, ; and Coronation, and Lenox, and St. : Martin's, and Fountain, and Ariel, and Old Hundred! How they would bring to mind the praying circles, and com- munion days, and the Christmas festi- vals, and the church worship in which on earth we mingled! I have no idea that when we bid farewell to earth weare to bid farewell to all these grand old gospel hymns, which melted and raptured our souls for so many years. Now, if sin is discord, and righteous: ness is harmony, let us get out of the one and enter the other. dreadful civil war was over, in the summer of 1865, a great national peace jubilee was held in Boston, and as an elder of my church had been honored by the selection of some of his music to be rendered on that occasion, I ac- companied him to the jubilee. Forty thousand people sat and stood in the great Coliseum erected for that pur- pose. Thousands of wind and stringed instruments. Twelve thousa~d trained voices. The masterpieces of all ages rendered, Mour after hour, and day after day-Hangdel's \Judas Macca- baeus,\ Spohr's \Last Judgment,\ Bee- thoven's \Mount of Olives,\ Hayda's \Creation Mendelssohn's \Elijabn Meyerbeer's \Coronation March,\ roll- 'ing on and up in surges that billowed The mighty cadences within were accompanied on the outside by the ringing of. the bells of the city and cannon on the com- mons, discharged by electricity, in ex- act time with the music, thundering their awful bars of a harmony that as- tonished all nations. Sometimes I bowed my head and wept. Sometimes I stood up in the enchantment, and some- times the effect was so overpowering I felt I could not endure it, especially when all the voices were in full chorus, and all the batons were in full wave, and all the orchestra in full triumph, and 100 anvils under mighty hammers were in full clang, and all the towers of the city rolled in their majestic sweetness, and the whole building quaked with the boom of 30 cannon. Parepa Rosa, with a voice that will never again be equaled on earth until the archangelic voice proclaims thit time shall be no longer, rose above all other sounds in her rendering of our national air, \The Star-Spangled Ban- ner.\ It was too much for a mortal, quite enough for an immortal, to hear, and, while some fainted, one womanly spirit, released under its power, sped away to be with God. O Lord, our God, quickly usher in the whole world's peace jubilee, and all islands of the sea join in the five continents, and all the voices and all the musical instruments of all nations combine, and all the organs that ever sounded requiem of sorrow sound only a grand march of joy, and all the bells that tolled for burial ring for resurrection, and all the cannon that - ever - hurled - death - meross the nation sound forth - eternal victory, and over all the acclaim of earth and minstrelsy of Heaven there will be heard one voice sweeter and mightier than any human or an- gelic voice, a voice once full of tears, but now full of triumph, the voice of Christ, saying, \IL am Alpha and Ome- a, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.\ Then, as the lay- ing of the top-stone of the world's his- tory, the same voice shall be heard as when, at the laying of the world's cor- ner-stone, \the morning stars sang to- gether.\ Malse it After our: R { | t I I | i mine | \ AMERICA'S CREATEST RAILROAD: NEW YORK euphony. You may have heard what | ~ is called the \Anvil Chorus,\ composed ! ENTRAL > & HUDSON RIVER R. h THE FOUR-TRAGK TRUNK LINE IN EFFECT JUNE 14th 1896. + EASTWARD.. 6:00 a. m.: New train arrive Rochester 88, m., New York 6 p. m., Boston 9:15 p. m. 7:25 a. m., New York Express® Arrivesat Roch ester at 9:20 a. m., New York 9:10 p. m, Lockport Accomodation leaves Niagara Falls 8 &. m., arrives Lockport 8:50 a. m.> Don't: run east of Lockport. £00 12:00 m., New York Expressconnects at Roch» ester with Emipive State Express arriving in New York 16:00 p. m,. 2:80 p. m., New York State Express, arrives at Roc’hester 4 10 p. m., New 1 ork 6:80 a. m. 5:50 p. m., uns from Buffalo to Albion, ' Leaves: Buffalo 5:00 p. m. 8:50 p. m.; Cincinatti Express* arrives at Roches» ter 9:00 p. m., New York 7:30 s. m. WESTWARD. - West bound Suspension Bridge Accomodiation} Lenves Lockport8:05 a. m., arrives Sus pension Bridge #3458. m, Niagara Falle 8:50 a, m. 10:05 a.m., New York and Niagara Falls Express,\ Arrives at Buspension Bridge 10:45 &. m., .. Niagara Falls 10:50 a. m. p. m., Pacific Express. Arrives Suspension Briige 1:00 p. m., Niagara Falls 1:10 p. m. 425 p.m....ccommodation, arrives at Suspension Bridge 5:05 p. m., Niagara Falls 5:10 p. m., Connects at Suspension Bridge with M. O. R. R. fast express train arriving in. Detroit 10:40 p. m., Chicago 7:50 a, m 7:40 p.m., Day Express®, Arrives at Suspension. Eddie 8:10 p.m., Niagara Falls 8:20 p. m. 12:00 m. Chicago Express. Arrives Suspension Bridge 12:85 a. m., Niagara Falls 12:40 a. m, LOCKPORT AND BUFFALO BRANCH. Leaves Buflalo 6:25 a. m., 11:00 8s. ., 1:30 p. m. 6:00 p. m., 5:50. Arrives Lockport 7:20 &a. m., 11:56 a. m., 2:25 p. m., 5:50 p. m., 6:45. Leaves Lockport 8:00 a. m., 10:10 a. m., 12:80 p. m., 4.20 p. m., 7:5 p. m. > Arrives Buffalo 8:55 a. m., 11:00 &a. m., 1:15 p. m., 6:15 p. m., 8:45 p. m. f SUNDAY TRAINS BETWEEN LOCKPORT 4ND BUFFALO. . . Leavegggufi‘alo 9:00 a. m. Arrives at Lockport :b5 m. m. Leaves Buflalo 5:50 p. m. Arrives Lockport +45 p. m. ’ f Leaves Lockport 10:10 a. m, Arrives Buffalo 11:00 a. m. \ Leaves Lockport 7:45 p. m. 8:45 p. m. All trains stop at West Lockport. Trains marked with a * run Sundays. M. 8. JUDGE, Ticket Agent. EDISON J. WEEKS, General Agent. GEORGE H. DANIELS, Gen' Pas'r Agent. Arrives Buffalo 5g IL | UI E - \ TRUNK LINE i OF AMERICA Direct to Buffalo, Elmifii, © Bingham ton, New York, Philadeplhis, Washing- - ton, and all Points South. Also to Chau- taugua Lake and the West coaches on through traing. | SCHEDULE BETWEEN LOCKPORY- \_ * AND BUFFALO,: ~ Leave Lockport 7:80 a. m., 9.00 a,. m., 1:00 p. m., 6:40 p. m. ' bn - Arrived at Buffalo-8:30 a. m. and 9:55 a. m., 1:55 p. m., 7:85 p. m. Sunday Trains leave Lockport 9:45 &. m., and 6:40 p. m. © ~ SCHEDULE BETWEEN: BUFFALG: LOCKPORT. ; Leave Buffalo-9:00 a. m., 1:20 p. m., 5:15 p. m., 8:15 p. m. > ho ty a Arrive at Lockport-10:00 a. m., 2:28} p. m., 6:10 p. m., 9:10 p. m. * - Sunday Trains leave Buffalo 10:00 &. | m., and 6:40 p. m. - 'The 6:40 p. m. for Buffalo and 7:80. m., train connects at Buffalo with Fast Train for New York, and Night Ex- ° press.. for. Jamestown, - Chautaugua Lake, Chicago, Cincinnati, Clevelan« and St. Louis. ( b Further jnformation from Erie Ag- ents, or ad \ H. T. JAB@ER, General Agent, But- falo, N. Y. ~ D. I. ROBERTS, Gen'l Pase'r Agt. $215 TO DAILY LINE BETWEEN >_ ~- Via C. & B. LINE.\ - Steamers \ City of Buffalo,\ (new) \ tate of Ohio\ and \ State of New York DAILY TIME TABLE. SUNDAY INCLUDED AFTER MAY 80. Lv. Buffalo, 8:30 p. x. Lv. Cleveland, 8:30 P. a Ar. Cleveland.8:80 a.x. | Ar. Buffalo, 8:80 a. 1 EASTERN STANDARD TIME. > Take the \-O. & B. Line,' steamers and enjoy is refreshing night's rest wfi“ enroute to lanc, Veledo, Columbus, Cinciznatt, In- dian»polte, Deroit, (Northeru Lake, Re- sorts, or any Ohio, Indians, or southwestern Poslgmu cents postage for tourist pamphlet. For further information. ask your nearest Coupon Ticket Agent, or address \ w. ¢. AERUAN, T. F NEWMAN, Gen'l Pass, Agt. Gen'l Manager. Oleveland O. EDUCATE - FrOR--- A\ PROFIT i 3 Fall Term Begins September 1, '906 Information. .. - @ D..G, CLARK, _ ' Priming HODGE orErRa LOCKPORT, N. Y. HOUSE | ~> . - . *