Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 October 1894 — Page 3
Fair Tuesday.
Did You See
That l..mg Dress Overcoat on the street, cut in the very ia'.est style, silk velvet collar, a perfect litter?
If you did you saw a fair sample of our overcoats, They are ail made well, fit well, and our line is complete. Why nut call and see them?
Did You See
That boy wi the new suit and cap to match? If you did you can appreciate the value of our combination suits. They include coat, two pair of pants and cap. To buy without seeing them is to make a mistake.
Do You Hear
The expressions of satisfaction from our many customers. It is because we keep the goods at satisfactory prices.
Lee S.Warner,
The One-Price
Clothier, T.'iilor, Hatter .and
Furnisher.
Eph Joel's Old Stand.
Fighting* Over a Good Thing
Is folly. Von will fail to tiud fault with our Fall Furniture. Our Tallies are able to stand hard knocks and kicks without falling in pioess. We sell yon an elegant eye pleaser, JO foot for
an elegant eye pleaser
$10.
Our chairs are charming' for comfort ami I)live a characteristic style. They plav no pranky tricks from weak joints or backs by letting-the would be sitters suddenly upon the floor, We'll sell you an elegant Parlor Chair for
$4.00
or six elegant dining chairs /or
$7.00.
A solid oak Secretary SI.SI. Carpets and Kugs, all new and endless variety. We take pleasure in showing you through our stock. Respt. Yours
Zack Mahorney & Sons.
O. W. R0UNTREE,
FIRE INSURANCE
KeprcHCUt* Old Keilaoio losur&nco Com pantos. Office with Indiana and Ohio Llvo Stock Tnsuranco Companies. Patron ture solicited.
IIA VI NO PUBOHAHKD A
MOSLER FIRE-PROOF SAFE
Of tliu latest patlorn parties need not hesitate to leavo their Watches, .lewdry, silverware and Spectacles for repair as they will bo well taken care of.
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry for pale nt the lowest cash prices at 1*23 south (Ji een Street, opposite Mule Hall.
Eugene Wilson, sf
C. M. SCOTT. HARVEY 8TUnB3
SCOTT &STUBBS
General lninranee Agents.
Fire, Lite and Acciden
INSURANCE,
Legal Documents, such us Deeds, MortKntjes, Contracts, Lenses, ctc., executed. Lokuh on
Farms and
Clt.y Property Negotiated on most
favorable tormB. COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. OlHco,'-• Kloor, No. J05M S. ^'^slilngnon St.
CrawfordBvillc, Iod.
Don't Forget
that when you buy Scott's limul sion you are not getting a secret mixture containing worthless or harmful drugs.
Scott's Emulsion cannot be secret for an analysis reveals all there is in it. Consequently the endorsement of the medical world means something.
Emulsion
overcomes Wasting, promotes the making of Solid Flesh, and gives Vital Strength. It has no equal as a cure for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Emaciation, and Wasting Diseases of Children. Scott&Bowne, N. Y. All Druggisti. 60c. and$1.
THE DAILY JOURNAL
TCstauusiiko IN 1887.
MONDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1894.
REPUBLICAN SPEAKING.
Hon. Albert 1. (o Ho Monday
llerr
Next
Hon. Albert J. lieveridge. one of the most eloquent speakers in Indiana, will address the people -of Crawfordsville and vicinity at the court house next Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Mr. Keveridge is well known to our people through his speech which delivered here in 1S92. The words from his eloquent lip? roll out as waters roll down from Niagara, Don't fail to hear him.
Airs. I'.HUtcr on Art.
Mrs. Frank Coss is entertaining Mrs. rancis M. Itaxter, of Lima, 0., a lady well known in the art world. She has ust concluded a visit with Mrs. M. V. McGilliard, at Indianapolis, where she gave an art talk and she expects to give similar talks at many other Indiana cities. Mrs. Baxter has kindly conseuted te give one of her talks on Wednesday afternoon of this week at o'clock at the home of Mrs. Coss. All interested in art work are cordially nvitcd to be present. The I ndiamipois Journal says:
Mrs. Francis M. liaxter. of Lima. ()., was the special guest of the Misses "Clizabeth and Mary Nicholson last vening, and they invited a number of friends to meet her and to listen to her paper on "Modert Art." Mrs. liaxter considered the art and artists of llolaud. She reviewed the art and the art workers, and gave interesting bits of information about their personalities, their characteristics, their special department of reproduction and many other points about which the general public knows but little. She opened a field of which many are ignorant. One particular part of the paper was to describe pictures of these artists which were, shown at the world's fair. The friends were much pleased with the manner in which Mrs. Baxter treated the subject. To-day Mrs Baxter will go to Crawfordsville for two weeks, and wlien she returns she will give a series of art papers before one of the art organizations and their friends and the lovers of art in this city. Til hostesses served tea and fruit after the formal talk following the paper. Mr Baxter is indorsed by Professor Taft. of Chicago, and the Chicago School of line Arts.
Morton Club Mooting To-Morrow Kvening The Morton Club will meet to-mor-row evening at its club rooms in the oldooperu house to-morrow evening*. The meeting.promises to be an interesting- one as several short addresses will be made, among them one by a Democrat who has never voted anything' but a Democratic ticket, but now proposes to vote the Republican ticket, He will give his reasons for changing his politics. Let the rooms be crowd to-morrow night.
A Hired trl lVanlftl!
"Not by me! Since using /oa-Phora cau do my own work, it is Woman's •Yiend. indeed.*' So say scores of women to-day. Sold by Nye «fc. Booc and MolTett \*. Morgan.
**Koyal Huby*' Hyc Whisky
"a Rye as is a Rye." naturally rip ened and free from all foreign flavor and adulterants, guaranteed pure and over eleven years of age, recommended to the connoisseur as a meritorious article worthy of the confidence of invalids, convalescents and the aged. gl.^5 per quart bottle. Sold by Nye & liooe, druggists.
A Household Treasure.
D. W. Fuller, of Conajoharie, N. V., says that he always keeps Dr. King's New Discovery in the house and his family has always found the very best results follow its use that he would not be without it. if procurable. (». A. Dykeman. druggist, Catskill. N. V.. says that Dr. King's New Discovery is undoubtedly the best Cough remedy: that he has used it in his family for eight years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Win* not try a remedy so long tried and tested. Trial bottles free at Cotton & Kife's drug store. Regular size f»0e, and 00.
She ts tire IJnt'Cii
Among remedies for complaints* peculiar to women, nothing equals 5£oaI'liora. .Sold by MoJVett .V .Morganand Nye .t Hooe.
Uisciiok's silk sale will be largely attended and with good results. The best time ever mtVered to buy a silk frock.
They Clve.Thtiir Hcilvnis.
Perhaps some of our readers would like to know in what respect Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is better than any other. We will tell you. When this Remedy is taken its soon as a cold lias been contracted, and before it has become settled iu the system, it will counteract the effect of the cold and greatly lessen its severity, anil it is the only remedy that will do this. It, acts ill perfect harmony with nature and aids nature in relieving the lungs, opening the secretions, liquefying the mucus and causing its expulsion from the air cells of the lungs and resoring the system to astrongand healthy condition. No other remedy in t!ie market possesses these remarkable properties No other will cure a cold so quickly.
Kor sale by Nye & llooe. 111 N. Washington St., opposite court house.
1
OUR SHAGGY BOYS.
T)i»*y Came Iimile From OroencrtHllo With LLU) Chrysanthemum !S'hI]ih of Their Bitterest lilval*.
Saturday was a red letter day in the football history of Wabash College. And "well it might be. Her eleven, backed by nearly two hundred enthusiastic rooters, visited Clreencastle and there on Del'auw's own dung hill won victory which caused the oldest granddad in that classic town to cackle leliriously his disappointment and threw the youngest babies in violent spasms of colic. As for the students and able bodied townsfolk they died right there—Unit is if appearances go for anything, for not one was seen after the ball. The *-'00 from Crawfordsville reached Ureencastle at 2:30 on a special train and the great body marched at once marched to the field uttering the college yells with the ardor of 1 'ine Ridge Indians at a baby barbecue. The cohorts of DePauw were already there yelling, blowing horns and cavorting around like the .imates of a burning insane asylum. The crimson of Wabash and the yellow streamers and banners of DePauw waved on all sides. Yell drowned yell and a confused pandemonium reigned during the work of preparation. The elite of Ureencastle and the college were out in handsome turnouts, and the bright eyed houri of the university rolled their eyes in ecstasy as they ogled the chosen sons of DePauw when they trotted on the field. They were followed soon by the Wabash team and in the great cleared space stood the twenty-two young men upon whose brawn the two colleges had staked their shekels and their hopes. To the experienced eye these young men were perfect and altogether lovely.
To unaccustomed eyes they looked like dangerous tramps. They were swathed in garments which had lost their original colors from sweat and dirt and arnica. Their joints werestulVed with pads. Each head was topped with a drooping mass of hair more like unto a soiled kitchen mo.p than fitting cover for a dome of thought. Their shins were in splints and their heads in pro teetive bandages, several limped and all chewed gum. There they were in all their glory and perfection and the hundreds yelled and whooped with delirious joy and anticipation. DePauw was cock sure and her players bowed and smiled and licked their chops as though they were cannibals preparing to eat the eleven young men opposite them. The DePauw team was a much heavier one than that of Wabash and the few opening plays seemed to con firm the judgmentof its backers. The teams lined up as follows:
DoPuuu*. Position. Wabash Terrell Center Huehauuu Milol it'll Ui^ht jnianl.-: Kern llohlaiMl Lett Kiiiird Kurrell SeOirewicrk KitrlH tackle Ashman Kim'vo Lnt'i tackle driest Scuuen ., Hi#.*lit. in] Lime MeVoy Let'i end DowtUll Mallard .t.Misirt.er back. Mutrer Dunn Klfjht. hsilf Wynekoop Dec (captain) Left-half Fry leapt*
DePauw got twenty yards on the kick-ofT, carried the ball up the field and were given five yards on a foul, placing the ball within ten feet of goal. Scotten lost on a fumble. Wabash, by fine playing by Wynekoop. Pry and Stott. made their first touchdown in twenty-six minutes. Fry made the kick. Score—AVabash 0, DePauw 0.
DePauw got tweuty yards on the kick-oft' again and gained fifteen yards. At this point Captain Pry, for Wabash, made thirty-live yards on a kick from the field, when Wabash again secured the ball. Fry and Wynekoop made fifteen 3 arils each around right and left ends'.-- .-•-.The half closed with the ball on Del'auw's fifteen-yard line.
In the second half Wabash got twen ty yards ou the kick-oft'. Wynekoop and Fry made good gains, with splendid interference by Stott. Wynekoop went around Del'auw's left end. making the touchdown in six minutes,with the ball within six feet of the side lines. Captain Fry punted for a goal position to center of the field, making the same, but in the goal kick DePauw blocked the ball. Score—Wabash 10, DePauw 0.
DePauw got sixteen yards on the kick-ofT. Little made twenty-five yards around left end, losing on downs. DePauw here tried the little wedge live times, making large gains. A big wedge carried Kuykendall over in sixteen minutes. Dunn failed on the kick. Score—Wabash 10, DePauw 4.
P.ushnell took the place of Kern for Wabash as right guard. Wabash got thirty yards on the luck-oil'. The ball was juiekly lost by DePauw, and nothing could stay Wynekoop, Fry aud Stott's interference. Wynekoop went through the center for WabaslPs third and last touchdown. Fry made goal. Score—Wabash 10. DePauw 4.
Time was soon called with the ball in Wabash hands.
NUTICS,
Kern will not play any more until tiie Purdue game. Delegations from lirazil and lfloomington were on the ground and cairied off all kinds of Greeueastle money.
ICaeh Wabash man won laurels .Saturday ami one cannot be praised without injustice to the others. .Sutliee it to say that every man did his duty.
The Wabash players have at last learned to get down. .Saturday they got down pretty near to China and could see the peacock feather of Li Hung Chang waving iu the zephyrs of victory.
Manager Church distinguished him self by pasting coaclier Randall over the head with a club when Randall stepped over the wires to see a wounded man. Randall stated that as Church was a brother Sig the pain of the great welt was much reduced.
Some low bred dastards, no one believes they were DePauw students, stoned the train as it left at night. A number of windows in each car were broken and several were badly cut and and bruised by Hying stones and glass. The railroad proposes to push the matter and discover the perpetrators of the vicious deed. The acts of such a hoodlum element should never be credited against a college? although it is frequently done.
GEN. HARRISON.
(t'ontlmieii From Sccund I'mje.)
and in which Europe could not compete with us at all. They threw them all away. Is that sincere desire to enlarge our foreign markets?
A Product of Dickering.
Now, how was this Democratic bill passed through congress? Senator Jones of Arkansas frankly told tlio country how it was done. Ho took the bill around aud said to each Democratic senator, "What is there in the bill yon don't like, and what will you take— what changed rates to voto for it?" "How shall I modify this bill in order to get your vote?" was tho question. Well, a Democratic senator who lived in a town whero collars and cuffs are made said he must have a high protective duty 011 collars and cuffs, and so it went all tho way arouiid tho Democratic side of the .sonata chamber. That was their method of dealing with tho greatest question that congress is ever called upon to deal with, with tho question that most strongly affects the business interests of the whole country. Fortythree votes were obtained. One Democratic senator—Mr. Hill of New York— voted "110," and in consideration of that voto they have nominated him for governor of New York, and look for him to lead a forlorn hope in that Democratic state.
What principle runs through this tariff bill? I ask my Democratic friends if they can toll mo what principle it was formed upon. A tariff bill ought to bo the outcome of some principle, Uniformly applied from the beginning to the end of the bill. This bill is not so formed. It has some clauses highly protective it has placed some other articles as much entitled to protection on the free list. They have brought forth the tariff hig-gledy-piggledy. That is not my judgment. alone, because that might not count for much—it is Mr. Cleveland's judgment. He said the bill was so false to Democratic promises, was so inconsistent aiid incongruous that ho would not sign it and if the newspaper reports are true he would hardly stay in the room whore it was. Mr. Wilson not only said it was bad, but intimated that unpleasant and scandalous influences had to do with its construction. Mr. Cleveland even alluded to such influences in his letter.
Are we to elect a now Democratic congress to succeed this one? Are we to say that we like this condition of uncertainty and unrest? If you chose a Democratic congress, I should think that is what you like. But if you would put an end to it, ym should say: "Gentlemen, you have failed, and at a great cost to the country." If you feol that way, you will elect a Republican congress in November that will make the end of the bad business, that will bring to an end this raid upon American industries. A Republican house of representatives can not do much, as there will bo a Demo (•ratio senate and a Democratic president. They will not bo able to pass a new tariff bill, but the country will uu derstand that this war is not to bo renewed. I should think that many a Democrat might fall into that, way of thi.iking now, and say: "I will see about it two years from now, when tho great campaign is ou, but for the present I am willing there should bo a Republican house of representatives in order that there shall be an end to this fearful business apprehension and uncertainty."
These issues are in your hands they are worthy of your calmest, fullest and most intelligent thought. Every man who hoars me and believes those tilings should bestir himself to bring about a result this fall that will be notico to ali that the people mean to resume business iu this country.
HARRISON'S
Fallacy of
EVANSVILLE ADDRESS.
the Democratic Doctrine Cloarly Shown.
In his rec :nt Evansville speech tho ex-presidont dealt with the tariff issue iu partus follows:
I want now to turn for a little while to the consideration of tho methods which our Democratic friends have used in dealing with the public business. Their cry was tariff reform, and there were tliree reasons why tliey wanted the tariff reformed. One was that there was an excess of revenue and that it was injurious and unwholesome to have such a surplus another was that tho tariff was a tax. They told us that the people were oppressed by this taxation. The other was that the tariff was a fence, hedging us iu anil preventing us from entering into a successful competition with other nations in the commerce of the world. Theso were tho three reasons our Democratic friends urged for reforming tho tariff. You all know that the taxation, as they called it, resulting from the tariff, was so little felt that the groat m.vjoritv of the people did not know that they wore taxed at all, and never would have found it out if some of the Democratic stump-speakers had not explained it to them.
Incompetent to Legislate*
How did thov enter upon the work of tariff reform? Why, my frii^ids, iu August last, one year ago, the Democratic congress was organized. The committee ou ways and means was constituted aud was set to work to prepare a tariff bill which we wore given to understand would bo promptly presented and would bo at ouce rushed through and become a law. In spite of that proclamation a whole year went by from the organization of that committee until any result was reached in the way of tariff legislation. What course did it take? The old Democratic doctrine used to be—the doctrino I have heard Mr. Hendricks and Mr. McDonald aud that class of leaders of the Democratic party in Indiana talk about—was a tariff that should raise revenue enough to maintain the government and pay its ordinary expenses, and that the duties should be so levied as to give incidental protection to our American manufacturers and our American workingmon. That was the old Democratic doctnuo.
What was tho result? They passed in the house of representatives a tariff bill that would have croated a deficiency in the government revenues of $75,000,000 the first year, and probably permanently $40,000,000 or $1)0,000,000 a yoar. They put sugar up to No. 16 ou the free list and then put in an income tax, abandoning the idea of giving tho workingman and our manufacturer the natural benefit of such duties as were necessary to raise a revenue. They revived an old war tax that every Democratic orator in Indiana, when it was imposed in order to help sustain tho government in war times, denounced as inquisitorial and offensive. Even with the help of that war tax aud with tho help of an increased duty ou spirits they still were unwilling to give American industries the benefit of duties that would raise enough revenue to pay tho expenses of the government wad left a deficiency of $50,000,000 a year.
Not a lliMlnvt» Proposition. I want to ask you business men if any board of directors of any financial institution had lirnutrht about a result like
Catarrh
In Its Worst Form
Life Almost a Burden A Glorious Change Due Solely to Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Mrs. O. King Geneva, Ohio.
Catarrh Is a constitutional disease, and ther»fore it can only be cured tiy a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla. Read what It did for Mrs. King, concisely expressd In her own voluntary words: 0.1. Hood
Si
Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"Gentlemen: —From a grateful heart I write what your grand medicine, Hood'» Sarsaparilla, has don# for me. Five bottles cured ma of catarrh In its worst form. I think it was only
settlement.
a
matter of time, when It would have ended In
Bronchial Consumption.
I can scarcely realize wherein a few months ago lLte was almost a burden, sick and discouraged, now I am Well and Vlnppy, gaining fleib and a new beiug.<p></p>Hood's
And all owing to IIooU'i Bar-
3yCures
saparllla. I will never be without It. Yours gratefully. Mus. ClaukIvina, Geneva, Ohio.
Hood's Pills
euro liver Ills, Jaundice, bil
iousness, sick headache and constipation. (So.
that, whether they would not at the first stockholders' meeting have put them out of ofliee but that is not all, the senate itself was about to adopt free sugar, which would have brought about the result I have spoken of, and was apparently only saved from it by the appeal of the secretary of the treasury, Mr. Carlisle, in a letter read in the senate by Mr. Harris, in which he warned them if they did this an appalling deficiency would result. Yet we are told that at the next session of congress this free sugar bill is to pass. If this deficiency is created, how is it to be made up? Are we to have the old internal revenue taxes of the war revived in order to gratify those gentlemen, who seem to be bent on destroying American industries and unwilling to lay upon the foreigner who brings goods into our markets such duties as will pay the expenses of our government.
We are told again—told by Mr. Cleveland—that a tax on sugar is a Democratic principle, that it is in line with Democratic thought, because it is a fair subject of revenue taxation. I do not know what the senate may do about free sugar next winter. I do not know whether they will continue this duty which Mr. Cleveland thinks is iu line of Democratic policy' or put sugar on the free list. If it is iu the line of the revenue policy which our opponents intend to put in force to tax sugar, is it not also in line to put a duty on tea and coffee? Will somebody tell me why tea should not be taxed if sugar, why coffee should not be taxed if sugar? If it is a principle of the Democratic party, that revenue shall be raised from such subjects, why shall not these also be added to the taxed sugar which they have given to the people iu place o£ free sugar they enjoyed before?
RtHgiutUou anl Paralysis.
Again, my friends, the Democratic party owed it to this* country to settle the question of the tariff just as speedily as possible and to settle it upon a basis that that party would accept as a permanent
Every business man
who hears me knows that the most powerful influence in bringing about that state of business stagnation and paralysis which has existed for more than a year was the uncertainty that attended our tariff legislation. Men will not make goods and put them in a warehouse for
sale
when they do not know
whether an element affecting their salable value in the nature of tariff duties may not be imposed before they are marketed. The Democratic party owed it to the country to agree on some bill that they would accept themselves and to pass it as speedily as they could in order to relieve the people of tho depression which always attends uncertainty. What have they done? They have passed a bill that no Democrat approves. I have heard some Democrats say that it was better than something else, but I have never heard one suy that it was good. Everyone—its apologists who are now talking to the people, the lenders who framed it in the house aud senate—are all saying that it needs changing.
Wilson** London f)oaftt.
There is one particular which I want to call your attention to. Tho reciprocity feature of the McKinley bill has been destroyed by the Gormau-Brico-Wilson bill. In responding to tho courtesies extended to him in London by tho London chamber of commerce, Mr. Wilson, chairman of the ways and moans committee of tho house, said that the Democratic party hod set about destroying the fences iu this country. He told his British brethren that wo wore not. going to bo content anj' longer with tho pent up markets we have enjoyed, but were going to enter into competition with England for the markets of the world. He warned his British lioarors that they would have a smart competitor when we entered that field. Tho report I saw said: "At this point applause and laughter.'' Those English gentlemen were not slow in getting tho point of a joke.
You remember Chauncoy Depew tells a story of dining once with a company of English gentleman and telling one of his amusing stories. There was some laughter, but a rather disappointing amount: of it. The next morning one of the gentlemen of the company came into tlie room of Mr. Dejiew at his hotel and said: "Why, Mr. Depow, that was a splendid story yon told last night. I did not get on to it till I got home." Mr. Depow said: "Ah, I see you came in on the freight train." "No," said he, "I did not, I came in on the express train this morning." Tho next day ho called again to say to Mr. Depow that he had seen the point of tho joke about tho freight train. But our British friends who dined with Mr. Wilson were not so slow they came in ou the express train to his joke.
True I'oe of Fences*
This tiling of breaking down fences is a country figure of speech. Fences are for two uses. One is to keip things out and the other to keep things in. We have fences to koop the cattle out of onr cornfields and fences to keep our own cattle in the pasture. Mr. Wilson's idea is that our pasture is too narrow and too bare, that, we ouirht to break down this
Cloaks! Cloaks! Cloaks! Cloaks!
Cloaks! Cloaks!
Fiom two to ten dollarF s-ved by buying your
Clonks of us.
Everything in Millinery Curtis from the cheapest to the finest, :it
ABE LEVINSON'S. This Is The Way We Sell Sugar
23 lbs. Ilxtra 0 1.00 22 llu I\i(lgcwo( (1 A $1.00 21 lbs. Granulated 11.00
COFFEE
All Package Coffee
Lookout for out list of prices next week. You
will see that we will oive you more goods
for $1.00 than any house in
Crawfortlsvillc.
Barnhill,Hornaday& Pickett
rush out on to the range, a great many cattle oil the
fence and There are range now. It is generally admitted, 1 think, that our cattle inside the fence aro iu better condition than any that are out ou the range—sleeker and fatter. It may be that tho grass is not always knoehigh in our fields, but wo know that there is often no grass at all on tho range. To drop that figure for a moment, we know that our people behind this tariff barrier that ho calls a fence have maintained and enjoyed a higher state of living, with more comforts in the home, a bettor chance for the people, more hope in tho hearts of tho working man than in any other country in tho world. Perhaps iu pluco of tearing ilio fences down aud making our fields common, we had bettor use a gate or two to get out, aud to let in what we want, to lot in.
The Iti'clproclly Trmticfl.
Under the new tariff law all the reciprocity agreements have been stricken down wiped out and yet these gentlemen toll us they are seeking tho commerce of the world. What is the result? Spain entered into a reciprocity agreement with us for Cuba by which she was to admit American flour, breadstuffs, provisions and many articles of manufacture either free of duty or at favored rates in return for the admission of her sugar froo of duty. Iu tho 10 years, up to 1801, our animal sales to Cubu averaged $11,7!Ki,(X0. In 1801 they wore $12,000,000 in l&'JJ they were $18,000,000, nnil in 16!i:j they wero ijB-l,000,-000. 1 saw the other day iu ono of our papers this dispgtch from Logansport, dated Oct. 8: "Tho Uhls of this city, extensive millers, have received notico that 1(1, 000 barrols of flour consigned to Cuba have been refused at Now York on account of tho abrogation of the reciprocity treat}- and the consequent restoration of prohibitive import duties. Tho members of the firm aro all Democrats and tho news has somewhat dampened Democratic enthusiasm iu this vicinity."
I read also this dispatch from Minneapolis "The local flour millers have been notified that tho trade in Cuba tliey have worked up under tho reciprocity treaty is probably at an end. Under that treaty the duty on flour was $ 1 per barrel, but since tho passage of the Gorman-Wilson bill tho duty lnvs boon ignored. (Not ignored wo killed it Spain did not repudiate it we did.) Tho duty has been raised to ^L.'jO a barrel. Ono local concern has been notified by its Philadelphia agent that largo consignment of flour destined for Cuba must, be held bocause of tho changed conditions."
Good Thing Thrown Away We had here a good thing and a sure thing but wo have thrown it away to follow tho swamp lights of free trade theorists in the pursuit of their visionary "markets of the world." Germany complains because the new bill puts an increased duty on (Jerman sugar, by reason of the fact that that government pays an export duty to encourage the production of boot sugar. She cannot well say to lis that our pork is now unsanitary and unwholesome, because we have levied this duty on sugar that would bo nousequiter but she is irritated by this summary abrogation of our reciprocity treaty and this special discrimination agaiust her, and I venture tho prediction that if wo continue this policy Germany will find trichina in American pork within tho next six months, and that great market for ono of our great products so hardly gained will be lost to us as a result of the chimerical attempt to seize a part iu tho markets of the world by the surrender of great markets wliioh wo had permanently secured for ourselves "Now. mv frionds. we have all a stake
21
liere, little or large, [f it is small. It i: the more import ant to us. and we ought, I think, to come to the consideration of these groat business quest ions with calm minds anil with hearts set upon one purpose, to do that which will most generally diffuse prosperity aud happiness in our country and which will keep poverty and want away from our American homes.
Wilson lias Ncrv«»#
Free Trailer Wilson appealing to the miners of his district for support in this campaign ileni instrates that, while his Ileal*h may be bad in some particulars, there is nething the matter with his nerve force. Pittsburg Dispatch.
1'uUlir ShIo.
1 will sell tit auction on Wednesday, the'Mill of October at the residence of the late .lane.v Jones, on east, Market street, a lot of household ami kitchen furniture consisting* of two base burner stoves, bedsteads and bejriinjr. dishes, elmirs and lounges, hat racks and everything that usually belongs to a household. dlO-'-'IJ KAMUKIj SmVTIIK,
Hiirkh'tTH Arnica SrW«.
The best salve in the world for Cuts Kruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin lOrtijv tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price ^5 cents per box. For sale by Cotton & Kife's, the Progress 1'harm acy.
A «n»»1 Hut tie
Is continually going on in the human system. The demon of impure blood strives to gain victory over the constitution. to ruin health, to drag victims to the *grave. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the wecjwn with which to dufciid one's self, drive the desperate enemy from the lie
Id. and restore bodily health for mrny years.
Hood's Tills cure nausea, sieluiess. Indigestion and biliousness. 25c.
An Old Soldier Hatk llnp|iy.
"During my term of service in the army I contracted chronic diarrluea," says A. E. 1 tending, of llalsey, Oregon. "Since then I have used a great amount of medicine, but when 1 found any that would give me relief they would injure my stomach, until Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrlnea Kemedy was brought to my notices. 1 used it and will say it is the only remedy that gave me permanent relief and no bad results follow.'' For sale by Nye it liooe, 111 north Washington street, opposite court house.
Dyspepsia seldom causes death, but permits its victims to live on in misery. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures dyspepsia and all stomach troubles.
It pays to trade at the L!ig Store.
Mrs. Mary A. Tupper lias been released, at Wilton, Me.,from the custody of extreme Fern a !c Weakness, which kept her a prisoner in bed unable to walk, l.tjdia E. Vinkhum's VegetalileC'onipoiuid made
-^fAXUPP^
the change. She ail vises all sick women to take this valuable medicine, and be thankful for llicir lives, as she is for hers. II. costs only a dollar at any druggists, and the result is worth millions.
