Boone County Recorder . meu to the Democratic party. Many young business men,raised in Republican families, areforsaking that party on account ofits tariff principles, he said, and aredaily augmenting the strength ofthe Democratic party in the WestSenator Faulkner says the McKin-ley bill is against the interest ofthat section of the country, andbusiness men, whatever may havebeen their previous party feelings,are in^opposition to the measureand the party that enacted there is a division on thesilver question in the West, theSenator says he found the peopleof one mind on the tariff que


Boone County Recorder . meu to the Democratic party. Many young business men,raised in Republican families, areforsaking that party on account ofits tariff principles, he said, and aredaily augmenting the strength ofthe Democratic party in the WestSenator Faulkner says the McKin-ley bill is against the interest ofthat section of the country, andbusiness men, whatever may havebeen their previous party feelings,are in^opposition to the measureand the party that enacted there is a division on thesilver question in the West, theSenator says he found the peopleof one mind on the tariff thinks the Democrats will carrytwo of the new States in 1892 andgradually become the dominantpa% in that section. The footsteps ot the Governmentofficial who hails,rfrom Ohio areturned toward his native names of those who have al-ready participated, or will partici-pate-in the Btumpfpeaking iu that8t*t* begins, of course, with theof Secretary Foster. lich is seeking »crij tionplftj ,: the : ic la d. Ohio em-partments, the Hni ?MM To Miriam Everetts friends she wasthe personification ol loveliness—asecond Cleopatra, without the sin spot*staining; her frarmente; and to hor ene-mies, perhaps, ehe was exactly the re-verse. Haughty, proud,-arrogant, thesewere the terms applied to her by thoseinto whose faces she had never smiled. Steven Wolmore thought her divinity,because he was in love with her and be-cause she had smiled upon him—twomost excellent reasons for his opinlonlStern, reserved man as he was, thiswoman had found the way into his mostinner heart—into the very holy of holiesof his soul—and t*^Was ~os~CompletelyttnfoT~fiwr~inffaenoB b* rlher charmedbird is under tho serpents who begnilesit Whether ho had also found tho wayto her hoart was quite another question,and one which ho dared not ask as much hung In the balance, finally,to risk It eithor way, so ho oontentedhimself by hovering about tier continu-ally and haunting Tho Cedars morni


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