Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 4 March 1892 — Page 4

y t , ' I-FRfOE'S rteaWJsking

L- Used in Millions of Homes— 40 Years the Standaro 1

®hc democrat Jf. RLAOKtIVRN, Proprirtof. FBID IT. MAKCH4, 1592. Notice of Primary Election. qk,the IX'tnocfats off Adams county, Indiana, Notice ; s hereby given that there will be a primary election held Sat ' uriiav; April 2, rS<>j. for the purpose of selecting .candidates for .the Democratic . ticket for county < dices to be voted for at the up ’--I < lei tiop'this fall. Thepri- ’ -marv election will he held under the Aristrail an system This being the first time- • Kind for it to be.held ar.der the Australian sys teni it s' i 1 give all participants a chance to in the new way of voting. N. Blackburn, G. Christen, Chairman, iniid no . • Secretary. Democratic Conventions. JVD IC lAI. CU NV EN TION. , , Tec IMfenW of Jay and Adams counties are hereby nutiti d that a Democratic conven ion will be held m Portland, T> on TsiUSda; (April yth, i&)2, for the I"'. puipuse of nominal! g a candidate lor y, 1 fur the a(>tb of theatate ot Ind ana. :Z ■ , W 11 HARKINS.) Cem re «.iv .' -C. J, Litz, • f j-,..,..- ». ltu REPRESENTIATtVE CON VYNTJONr G _ The Dim crats. of Adams, Blackford and Jay counties are hereby notified tha* '■< Dem.ciat c convention will be held in I’di'liu d, Ind. 011 Tuesday, Apiil jib, I' 1 .. r.u’liSpa, lot the purpose of noTn hating a can- ■ ‘ didakd for Representative fot'KiM countics. W: S Fleming. I r William Harley,) . il’j- -«Hj I : “ .REPRESENTATIVE CONVENTION. The pereoeqits of .Adams and Jay counties are hereby notified that a. Demo c a'ic convention will be held io P 'tla-^' 1 , I t >'■ <'l on Tuesday, April yth, itSc,., ... ..... ' ;, <j,utpose of ndfninatiiig a Jo'ht Repressncounties. ■ :i » . . ■ ■ W-Ji Male.- Com. G. 11. Adair ) f P’H I ’•'• ' • r ‘ ’ ; 2| '' *'** 11 .so- ■ ■Wha't an interesting compilation tt. no foritisbory Blaine’s' letter?, 'first and .fi-.oj? JabV, woiild 7 make.' Jssac P. Gray, of for the head ot tire Democratic ticket net ■ ■. ■ year and victory is spre. Ex-President Cleveland was as,'! -’ an ovation over seven of the Detroit Democracy last Wednesday. ail-.-; -i TfiE Chicago Alail remarks that Die salary of the president should not be reduced but a man worth the n ! *fu’o,6od a ybar should be elected, .C* The constitutionality of the new law in Michigan by which the presidential electors are elected will be tested in the United States court. The Republicans again show their fears to-trust an honest election. It begins to Idcik as if the New York Herald was right when it said six months ago the Democrats must 1 ’“ find their presidential candidate outside of New i ork. New York Democrats are themselves making the Herald’s statement right. ' Jll 11,; 'IInN. J. B. White, ex congirhss- ’ man from the 12th district, always has bis Harrison club ready, not to knock down those who oppose , . •“Benny 1 ’ but those who sing his praises. There is a sore spot that ; the balm has not been applied to 5 ■ A yet. , ' I,! It is not at all certain that the * l booming which the Enquirer is givW ing Mr. Hill is intended to nominate him for president. But it is Very ji... ' ' certain that lhe Enquirer will not do anything special for Mr. Cleven. land. TliaV'waß'. settled early in 1885, and is a personal matter. Some eastern newspapers are havbi.-: ing a time because the writers in ;; •>■••• magazines who describe the pro- ; e J “ :i gt CBB o f the world’s fair always close, with a Iwom for the city ofE -Thrr-nrtftT'opoliß of the si !l! ri West planks dow n the big money e i! “ for advertising, and is getting valH ue received. || ' — — 10-jv i A nisi’ATi h to the Philadelphia | 9,1! Star‘declares for a certainty that Harrispn and Quay have made up $ ; iiiiTi ®nd the anti-Harrisonians are on A 3u ‘ P’HHi and needles of anxiety. It can ' possible—the good Mr. Har■Eg- rUnn And 1 he. bud Mfey,-. then, the exigencies of the situation | ♦I. owe great.

Democratic' primary election Saturday, March 2nd. I. "T* We uotice in the speech made at the Republican convention at Portland last week, they were like our Republican friends here that forgot that the chief executive officer of the government is a Republican. What is the matter with the ones that shouted themselves hoarse four years ago? ' Senrtor Tvni’iK should arid to his bill for the election of H nited States Senators by the people the election of the president anj vicejbresidents, but such an amendment to the Constitution ol the United States would be the death knell of the Republican party, and of course they will resist it to the last. The Massachusetts State Board of Health reports having examined twenty different alleged cures for drunkenness and the opium habit afid found them all frauds. Two New Epgland medical societies have also failed to find curative virtue even in'the bichloride treatment, Is this a’case, of “regular” frowning upou irregular professional Enterprise? When the exporting states have lhe right’ to buy what they please with their exported surplus of wheat, corn, cotton and provisions, the exchange value of, wheat, corn, cotton and provisions will rise as much as the difference between the prices of manufactured goods in Europe and the prices charged for them by our tariff-protected trusts. Cut this out and paste it on your ballot in November. The Republican party ih this state will make the fight this ,campaign on the new tax law, and like the last election, when they attacked the finances of the state, they will be unable to face the question in a fair argument, for they w-ell know that the same is in the interest of the one who heretofore has borne the burden of‘taxation. With the Republican party it is anything to help corporations at the expense of the Ones that earn thbir living by labor. The time has come when New York in her dictatorial power should be set down on by the Democracy-. The scramble to see which faction of the party shall lead should be settled by the party in general by leaving them out of the question as who the Presidential-nominee shall be. The facts are that the candidate should be. a western man, one that is in touch with the Democracy In general. Let .a western man. While there is uo doubt of success, it will be easier with a western man. - 1... Governor M.'Kinley.. m his speech at Detroit, Mich,, February 23, among other things said,, »the tariff is a blessing.” If that-be true, why not make it higher and increase the Messing? But the governor well knows that he. is a falsifier when he utters these sentiments, but being in the “boodle gang” for for the purpose of robbing the people, he must attempfto defend the greatest steal on earth, thaUwhich. robs more people than any other robber or set of robbers in this .counter' The petition for gravel roads that is to .Start in the center of Kirkland township, wij] _be presented to the Board ot Comiiiinsionej-s next week. While there will be some opposition to it, so much that it may go te the circuit court, yet there is no..qii-tej^.teu^M l Mtewiil.be built, and that this summer, lhe money the rcmonstratorsspehd in lighting the same will easily pay all they will-be required to pay to construct blie road. But without Such lawyers and- officers could not live, so let them divide up if they want to. I in: AV aco Day figures it out that if the McKinley tariff keens on depressing the price of cotton the production of that staple will eventtraily lie contmed to the alluvial j land of the Southwest, where it can be made cheaper and where negm

labor can be. used to best advantage. This would drain, the n4gro population, from all the uplands of the Ohl south and compel those regions to go still more actively into com petition with New England in all sorts ot manufacturing industries. Thus does protection eventually cut the throats of its fi lends. The dignified senate really indulged in a liVle tariff debate -yesterday. Mr. Vest made his Republican friends wince, by quoting their own words on tariff reform and giving some trade statjisties.' The little episode in the senate finance committee room when Mr. Blaine banged his silk tile into a, ruinous heap. Daring liis emphatic denotniciations of the McKinleiy bill, was rehearsed to the evident relish of one side of the housb and .the. discomfiture of the other. A high protective tariff brgan has a taken-on a,bopt women in Munchen, who (undbr the sweating systenQ receive only five cents a day for embroidery work. Sad enough to be sure, but within a few hours’ railway rule ot the Bee office are American women who make men’s overalls for four cents a pair, living, all winter in ijoomp without a spark of five. And the eight, twelve dr sixteen cents, more O - -- —- ■ ------ — or lbss, they ate able to earn, wifi buy little more than the fife* cents of the German woman. Not‘very much difference between the pro l tertion of labor in deepotic Germany and the free United States.— Toledo Two thousand tons of flour collected by the “Northwestern Miller,” a Minneapolis newspaper, is scored in New York to be transported direct to the nearest Russian port byway of the steamer Mis* iSQuri, furnished by the Atlantic transport company. The ship will carry 3,000 tons and will await the remainder of its cargo and sail March 12th. The American steamer Indiana ot the Inman line sailed Saturday of last week with 4,000 tons for the same pqrt, Liban, on the Baltic. Railroads have generously transported the gift pf food. I MrEdgar, of the Northwestern MJller, will accompany i the cargo cml the Missouri and attend to its proper distribution. Many eastern drug stores have adopted the precautionary measure of having two persons attend the preparation bf any prescription containing poisonous drugs, The Medical Record palls attention to the Harris murder trial in New York as an illustration of the importance of this check, because, “if a single clerk received the prescription, prepared the capsuTs and delivered them, it might .readily have been claimed by the;defense that a mistake had been made by the druggist. As it was, the druggist was able to go on t'be stknd and testify that an assistant‘hiid also read the prescription and seefa the amount of morphine whj.ch it called for properly weighed and dispensed.” y ■” ia '“Aj"..Governor •■McKinley, of Ohio, is said to have made an eloquent appeal for the Russians, such a one as touches the hearts of the cheerful givers. but not one word for the sufferers of this country, who by 1 reason of the iniquitious tans law that be is the father of are starved and robbed of, their hard-earned pitance, and wlieu they dare raise thpir voice against the manner in which they are treated, and ask for more bread, they are told to go to work and if they do not, at the command bf some of the favored na bobs, the Pinkerton thugs are called in and the man asking for bread for his wife and children is fchot down. Would it not be more consistent for the governor to commence neat hopie, with some ol the slaves of this country jpStead of shipping the necessaries of life to some foreign country. While we believe in a generous donation te ail mpics when needed, we . believe In aiding lhe people of this ebwrtry-fixst ... Gov. McKinley said at the Afichigan club banquet, “you can’t pave foes wool from the sheep’s pack and * tariffed; wool when it comes to your o’Um backs/' W hat Moes Gov. McKinley mean? There can be but one conclusion—that “tariffed” stands for “taxed,” in contradistinction to the “free” in the first pars of the sentence. What is the matter wool, if the tariff (according to ■ Kinley doctrine) makes the cost 1 cheaper? He talks about free sugar; a bonus from the treasury is paid

op’ every pound nLWufnctured and the refiners *rs quieted by a 'tariff clause for thpir benefit, You potice m the repot of his address how he rtroppcdth'e subject ot protection for pearl button piapufacturers. He made one line about it and switched oft into generalization again. * He was uncomfortably, near the pearl button factory, whoso owners and .manager aro,iy)der arrest fpr.eqi ploying the foArigfi pauper labor the governor was keeping out theoretically with his tax measure. (And the paupers imported in defiance of the Contract labor law, struck for the pay promised them and so gave away their employers). The Governor didn’t daily with particulars; He is the greatest orator on the 1 continent foV slinging the proverbial glittering and casting his roundcd'pielriods right into the teeth of tho cohimonest [facts. In an address in dbfeinse of his crazy law, he is the most illogical, unreliable, pobriy’ 'informed, reckless shouter that ever mounted a stump. He pays no attention whatever to pibven truths or unexpected evolve* meats. turns the old bash over in the bowl and whacks away iffth same old knife in the same old fashion. A scrap book of his efforts needs to contain but one speech ami' it iiLitters not wliicli one. CQ-.VJA7AATIO.V MN OMY. ' The combination which brings 73 per cent, of the coal mining and carrying trade of Pensylvania under direct control of the Reading railroad is defended by the Philadelphia Ledger on the ground that it is economical.'.. A material saving, it says, will be,made by dispensing with numerous sales agents and others to whom, ■ large percentages of gross protitß-have been paid heretofore. It argues, therefore, that competition is not the life of the coal trade. The census of 1880 shows that in Missouri and several other states there were fewer manufacturing establishments than in 1870. The “trust” movement was only beginning then, and, doubtless the census of -1-800. can. hardly fail to show a still heavier reduction in the dumber of establishments. This centralizing movement is accompanied by a proportionate’decrease of the total number. 1 After reviewing the splendid campaigns for reform made by Mr. Cleveland, Governor Boies m his Omaha speech of Tuesday thus states the demand of the Mississippi Valley: The contest is on. The end will see their industry put upon an equality before the law with all others, or it will see it borne 1 down by bur dens imposed in the interest of oth era. , ■■ Which shall it be? Let no one dispair. It is no spasmodic revival of theip .business brought on by storms and droughts in sister states or famine in foreign lauds that should satisfy these men. Emancipate their calling. Take off lhe taxes imposed upon them for the benppt.of others, or prove that their business is the most profitable, and can, therefore, rightfully be taxed to help others. The latter cannot be done. The former can only be accomplished by opening the markets of the world to the products of tlmir labor, permitting them to buy in the markets where they are compelled to sell. This is their due. Deny it. and they will strangle the party that commits the *rong. When Western meh talk thus, the West can no longer doubt that it has found leaders who Can force success where before there was nobbing but failure. Bralnes, conviction and the courage of convic-' tion will count for a majoity bn the side whichever the right side determinates to make them count. TLANINU EOJI THE PA/ITY,The public proceedings of The convention which has been injsession in St. Louis last week iriadc jts purposes plain, eyen if there wefo no further evidence ini the shape of proceedings not formerly made public. From atari to finish it was part oi the “Third Party movement.” Its plsif&im •is m Jimi wHh that adopted in Qinlcinhatl, h.u<jl the purpose }«'. |a) prevent lhe Democrats who have become members of outmde. political hocieties from voting the Democratic; libkcL The Tlfnpipipßi ponyention with ~jts open declaraimn jq favor of q Third Party , tailed to Cohort any wide influence on such Democrats. The convention of last week was a> continuation of tfaq prpceMi d? Jug them? It is not a bard matter to get pepplp to vote for resolutions or to sign petiuohg., JJjp B a j or 3 of people are so careless about such 6 \ ' -c-

mattera that it lias bebn said that it would be possible ts get 700 men out of a given tljoiisaiid U sign their named to a oanefullyMrawn preamble and resolutions denouncing their ow;i grandmothors. But it is very much harder to induce men to bolt a party than it is to get them to assent to resolutions.radically opposed to its principles. The managers of the Third Party’ movement have Worked with these facta in view. The Democratic party is the party of individual liberty and local self-government. So they have worked to commit as many Democrats as possible to the opposing principles of a centralized paternal despotism. “We will make (»ur demands on both parties,” they have said to Democrats; “thep 'we can give our help to the party which adopts our platform.” Aqd shyjng tbis they have carefully drawb a, platform which they' know ifhe Demboratio party ootiid net |ioesibly adopt; a platform which, if defied out, would change th? constitutional union of states to, such imperial despotism as that of Germany. They do uot expect this platform to be adopted by either but do hope to hold.out th? Democrats in the different, political societies the leaders of which have planned the Third Party movement. But as far as can now be seen, planning will have very little to do with next November’s results The forces at work are too great to be controlled by political “fire works.” The prospect is that the lines Will be drawn hard between the Democratic party and the Republican party, on the issues the Republican party has forced daring Harrison’s administration. The only way tn which it seems possible that this could be changed would be by a Democratic split at Chicago r i and nothing of the kind is in prospect. The next President will be nominated at Chicago, and when the Electoral votes are reckoned up, it will be found that lhe Third Party will not have one in the college. - 1 - 1 ' ■

A . r. r . •* ' l /’ 1 ■■ ■ .. t .»•Tjt.'j'X) rF/ M• • »'Z' ■:■ fir ■ ~ ir „- ni r Ml: '.’l-' : CRASH IN ? -’.yj-cj:: •j’-’-fn.. ✓ • ; /pi CRASH. i ‘ ■ 1 -i •. :7k-» ■ | , ■' - —j. _i J ‘ J . " • 1 t. v j I . ■' :: 8 ■ 4 We have just secured a limited amount of . i■ ■ , Ihle ■ CRASH ‘ Ji’- ' i ' " ' ' . . <•: ■ - ■■■’ A.■- ■ ■' ■ t - ■ •■::.•! ■ .. - • •.•.■J ' Which we will place on sale at the following low prices: All Linen.Cfash at 6c 16 inch linen Crash at 8c; 20 inch Linen Crash-at IOC. Fancy Plaid Toweling at ioc. , [ GuirTine of all kinds qf toweling. Don’t fail , to see our line.: Boston Store 1 J_l — •r*T I 0. 0. E. Blosk. Dw«W. ■■— Kuebler <fc Molu.

Kfflsmiw 1 k' ■ 'Tk Ik’ ■’ * A M . r * ■ Is a man that attends to his own business. .’f Z7./■ Jii'Alh'O / I,; i -r; »,<1*.1...',-; T :' , : — . ; .■' , ' ' ?' ten -te I A.- ■ *'• W ' . '.-I hu.M ; „i, ■' j ci•’■’flirt'”' c •■>!’ /"in-i ! > ‘iilOmii ; . 1..,.,, ~ , ..... . -,.b yd b‘>’S ... . , ,■■ I fA.-i.ri,-■*.; •--.lit O illllL*’'''"'"’ br> l ;„ ■ .■• I ; V >;> .bu’f .<■> H > i f'i ■•■■‘l.ll’ll • 1!l : ' Our 1 BusinessJs tq Sell ( .r: • ’ dliw (’ te( ’.r;ite •’ 'I tn»-.»• f-D' r I-Jn; '■■•’’ " J ... .. . . | Ml i,.r; ■ ou 1 .!«• * L'te lA’L’.ril'JWl “7X *.. • .f, .. , . ! iT " t>W-..1.< I’ T)b TZZZZ. *■■J?'/.1.; It 'i ■ Clothing ana Furnishing Goods! I ,| I >(■'• ■ f 0.,, .ii. > nn? ; rili.ttjl--v-riMM * .-j ~;,. j -..1l i’liHli nw-W l l-.n«v>wq > ■ And our Study is to Buy Good Goods and Sell tlnm at the Low est Price! „ • hn. ~l2'tHN-. •■>.■■ i <h:i’ ■■■i)'<AOfb.- -mt 'i* >1 ‘‘ ' I" "• " " " ,W ' 111 : ; 4 ■' ’ - i.l | 'J'' ”-. •' » .-.'.l”'/ 1 MV We have for the Season the Best and the Finest Line ol Goofls evei Shown in the City. - ■ '-i t [■ . .1 • . I • . ..i r'* lb i! LM IU, 'Mt nJ ■■.•• l: t:.x • ■■• <'ll ■ .. f. i. j ; ... -1: ■ 1.,,.... ■ lit 1: . i ,n:-xifi > ' • ■: .-■X'l' .‘H te; M n- i>l TL J > T •. !-..0f .’/■••■lrJ ■ .. . j mnrtterti; < '..;<■ ■>■ rcZi -••■iii ■/ . • i.iV-n Come in and see us. Everybody treated alike., Oi|e Price to all. B / ' . , / •■■ •.■ -Z: I.;S / ' .*■ L/riv-.i r'ittetei-,. ■■■''.’ Li-‘rt l/’i • ‘ -'lli Z-' : '' i •mh'.-jl: rtMII / ■ / „/ .. ' •' “'■'• ''■ '• ilw 1 *’ / ' / Yours RespgctfaUo , |T ZZ .. .. vi- >, . Ji.ir. isi .f*r. ' V ’Z Z" n- ,, la ,(n3 d* Uy // H ,i . ....J,-,...,- .te;; i( Z.’ iDyi/Ab)/'; u) cAiZ i -‘j/l / , . ... ..,!• .- jtei -.-m Zte .{■: / ■/',• ■; |] 5-rle/uq / i,. ■,: >!■<// Jun'j '••/! V /..teikte L .--n c’W ‘■ ,r, v ,.4M.;te V r'' ’.■.’fVWi.X.., T Mi ■ Pete Holthouse, the One-Price Clothier, I ...i ■ / ■ ■' ■ir “•’ "7 I ■.. ... . -»t!L ' / y i i ts)isd H Here is an Honest Advertisement Written for You to Read I I ■ ■J. <«». Clolsii ; .// XjA.HC3rEI»TOO.OaBE:O» , A Mti®, Will Piptr, Egirs, Pals, i, Wk. I ARE YOU We bare a large trade oo opr stationery and keep the stock up in good style. and ■ writing paper ot all kinds at lowest jirlccs. ■ Our Prescription Depart uient la known all over tfre'oouityAs the most 'accurately and ■ carefully supervised. . .... I ■ We have abettefwiy of‘buyinkoOr stqckof wail paper than most dealers and qan save ■ ■youmoney in thisHnp of K<xids. f ' 1 7 : ' “ ■ Our toilet soapsand pcrlpmos are very flnearticlpß And sell fast • r’ ■t <' i ♦,*■».#«« ■ We know the people likethebcst palnts.ondotys, and aowc keep tkena-pohoedat t4)tlmea. ■ Our Idea about drugs an<i patent medlplnes Is toipeep the purest drugsjind. themqst rell* I able medicines. Thlep(pn is approved by war patrofiS. ■ a .n ■ When you F»ot,a .thoroughly good burning oft,-or, a, trice safe Idtnp, nrluutp-talags, we H hope yon will (fall oti us. ’ , , , .-i ««l-Jotr>M’ I We respectfully ask you to call agd see us In regal'd to your'irade. We can offer you many I Inducements la barottinß. I. i’ ..i ;• a.' voa ■ >->l— j. .r Respectfully, lii, 3 .1 !.<• ■..; I .niiiua I People's. Druggists, J. F. lAcHOT & CO J Berne, I \ _ 1 . ■ - . - ’ '.HT'"" “ ■■;■, III, III! JIILUUa— . .... . il Vi, a/.i.’-y.lll fWI 1 I "J'.,,...} ,1;...- 1 JjA ,!■; .i-.tnco I'Pil 31.1 I it 11 iiiiiiim I j I ' i /■ ■ • ..:t!I,’•• .’■'J I •» •'H • Il A. 1- < "■ r’ ' .J ;• :■ 711111. . ■ ■ '-• "CMtorU is to well adapted to qwldrfn that I Castor!* cures Colic, OqMtlpaUqn, 1 recommend It as superior to any presdibtlop I Sdtrt’StdmakiHi DiarniWa, Eriictanon. ■ ■ taswßtomfe.'H- ’H. AsAteßip.D;, 1 give, sleep, «• I. i ilUSa.O*ftadflL. Hngilrlyn.H y J Wjthpiit Iwjnrlnns wwHreHnli .at tiW I ThbCkhtlob Coin>*«YAS'?Htarttty; -treat, 1 W. V. iy it .-ri-l.7~;~u ud Lluuls jipnT . v.oiii t f—— llllll—lll li' 7.17.'.'.. • i.! 1... 1,.'- -z-.-r-.T 0 ilw liti’l (.• b qa 'Vwt'AIXTEiALIE DISEASES’. -1 SOME DF THE SYM PTOMS: Great mmiwm 14 region of ovnrles, Bladder digc ß )tn FrequeotiuriMitionfclLsuoeiTluSß.'mMn> <ff Barer remove rwtKite-yeakneM. TLeremiwt be reibdlea appUM right to the parte, and then th«*4> wmeat Allot obtffinW. . I!-. I T>:bTb I ;tevoiF ■ • _ L, EVBrtY LADYCAN O. B. Pile Remedy!. I !l.0()-for,ohe ninth's’treatment, l’ O. B, Stomach Powd.M O. a Catarrh Cure, , I ... , — pkepabkd bt— ■ i ; .,y )• 'Oi B.'Kldney Obfiss. g J. A. McCILL, M.D., & CO., 4 panorama place, CHICAGO, iti. trOTt S-A-Xth Holthousc&Bjackburn.Doiiatur, Ask'forDßSOi’iptiveCii'dulare.’'’ _ «MeMB ■ svaafe ' fl Oltt V. B. SXJMLOOEtEI,— r-! r!<: r ...n -..-o ' ''r •• i pi-.j te’iMi- X,-r,. ... r j '.--a' vcf .1 tin :iri.l • ■ :.rtf’ THE MONROE DRUGGIST, Keeps a fiuUJinei of Drugs, PiUent Medicines, Fancy Artides.Tdb&tcoi, Cigars, Aty, JriweriptiOns carefully compoumled. Sole Agent (or Silverware aud Jewelry of all kinds. Call aud\sce Van when in Monroe. ' . 4 ■ A J