Decatur Democrat, Volume 41, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 17 June 1897 — Page 6

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MANHOOD RESTORED®"™? ■ W « tlon of a famous French physician, will quickly cure you of all ihtMIS. "v> Fl ■/* ' UI ,X T vous or diseases of the generative organs, such ns Lost Manhood. ■ \S ' Insomnia, I’alnsln theßack,Seminal Emissions, Nervous Debility, ■ 1 I Idßljy Pimples, Unfitness to Marry, Exhausting Drains, Varicocele ami LJr ih V '®7 Constipation. It stops all losses by day or night. Prevents quickM x, / J nrssof discharge, which if notcheeked leads toSpermatorrhcea and IB . rrrn all the horrors ot Impotency. <’Ul»l»F.SEcleuuseßthellver, the ■ BEFORE ANO AHLn kidneysand theurinaryorgansof all impurities. ® (TPIBESE strengthens and restores small weak organs. The reason sufferers ar6 not cured bv Doctors is because ninety per cent are troubled with Pro.Ktilh “ciA' DEXEisOii-onivknßwnremAly to enrewithoutan operation. 5000testImoni--5 .written eqiirantee given Ind monev returned it six boxes does not effect a permanent cure. 11.00a box, six for $5.0 >, by mail. Send for FBEHcircular and testimonials. Address DA VOL. MEDICINE CO., P. O. Box 2076, San Francisco, Cal. 1 For Sale 6v W. 11. NACIITKIEB, OritffUlM, Ilecattir, Ind.

JAMES K. NIBLICK, THE. GROGER. Can supply you with all kinds of Staple and Fancy Groceries, and the prices can’t be discounted any place at any time. Goods delivered promptly to all parts of the city. Call and see us and permit us to place you upon our list of regular customers. James K. Niblick. Donovan & Bremerkamp’s Old Stand. We are Slaughtering Prices A *’ Our stock of Dry Goods, Carp ets, Queensware, etc., must be reduced and closed out to make room for NEW GOODS. All goods marked down. We can interest you. Come and see us. JACOB FULLENKAMP. M. Bremerkamp’s old stand.

Complexion Preserved i DR. HEBRA'S VIOLA CREAM Removes Freckles, Pimples, f Liver-Moles, Blackheads, Sunburn and Tan, and re- \ stores the skin to its origi- I nal freshness, producing a , clear and healthy com ssjSj< plexion. Superior to all preparations and perfectly harmless. At all -1“ druggists, ormailed for sOcts. Send for circular. 1 VIOLA SKIN SOAP is simply incomparable aa a skin purifying Soap, uncqualed for the toilet, and without s rival for th'-nursery. Absolutely pure and delicately medicated; At druggists. Price 25 Cents. TheG. C. BITTNER CO., Toledo, O. Says so. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the age. pleasant and ref resiling to the taste, art gently and positively on kidney:-:, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, I cure headache, fever, habitual constipation | and biliousness. Please buy ;»d try a box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, 25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. Lake Erie & Western R. R. ..ALL RAIL .. Niagara Falls EXCURSION. WAIT FOR THE OLD RELIABLE .. Lake Erie & Western .. PERSONALLO CO*DUCTED NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION Thursday, August 5. 1897. .... ALSO .... SANDUSKY, PUT-IN-BAY, CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO, WITH SIDE TRIPS TO Lewton, Toronto, Thousand Islands. For tickets, rate, time and pamphlet containing general information, call On any ticket agent of the above route, or address C. F. DALY, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, INDIANAPOLIS. IND.

Will you buy a bicycle now when prices are so low. An excellent wheel for and remembi r this, these wheels are fully guaranteed, and any defective parts will be replaced free of cost. Many or the very cheap wheels offered, you take chances on paying for all repairs and soon pav out the cost of a high priced wheel and still have a poor machine. Full line of sundries and repairs and a repair-man at your service to give you guaranteed work. Same place. First class WHEELS TO RENT. Some second-hand wheels, gootj, for $25.00 or less. Or you have a piano or organ, if so, see my line and get prices then you will be convinced this is the cheapest place to buy. The 10c sheet music will be closed out m ten copy lots for 5c per copy. 2,000 or more to select, from. Come early and get the best. New music every month. Banjos, Violins,Guitars, Autoharpsand Mandolins, dirt cheap. M , DAN ERWIN, Monroe Street.

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EXPORT BOUNTIES. SENATOR CANNON INTRODUCES LUBIN’S SCHEME TO HELP FARMERS. He Makes a Hot Speech and Floors All Opponents—Present Protection Is One Sided and Robs the Farmer—He Now Sells In a Cheap and Buys In a Dear Market—Can Be Protected Only by Export Bounties oa Farm Products— If He Cannot Get These Ho Wants Absolute Free Trade. Senator Cannon of Utah introduced on May 25 an amendment to the tariff bill which is likely to make trouble for the Republican leaders and which may break down the whole protective system. The amendment favors the Lubin scheme, of paying export bounties on farm products. This scheme is now being pushed vigorously, not only by its author, David Lubin, but also by the granges of many states and by trades unions and ministers. It makes its fight inside the ranks of protection and has already opened more farmers’ eyes to the. folly of the system than all of the tariff reform work that has been done. Senator Cannon told some plain truths when introducing this amendment. He spoke in part as follows: It was with great surprise, upon an examination of the measure, that I found that the great class of our population who have from the Beginning not only supported the protective tariff party by their votes, but have supported the protective tariff principle by their industry from the beginning of its operation, were in a large degree excluded from any of its benefits. It is, I say,-to supply a very patent omission from the measure as it now stands that the amendment is proposed and will be advocated here until a vote shall be had thereon.

The bill as it is offered today affords no protection to agricultural staples. There is remaining, I presume, no advocate of the protective tariff system who will contend that in this bill, with these import duties, there is afforded any protection or benefit of increased price arising from import duties upon any of those commodities of which we export our surplus, nor are there remaining at the present time in the school of protection very many men who will contend and none who will prove that the indirect protection afford ed to the farmer by the tariff on manufactured goods is sufficient compensation to for the vast cost entailed upon him in carrying the protective tariff system upon manufactured goods. It has become apparent to all thoughtful observers, and certainly it is known to all who have any direct connection with the agricultural industry of the United States, that the farmer cannot, and the man who reads him well knows that the farmer will not, much longer bear this burden. There arp three remedies possible. The second remedy, and one Which I, as a believer in protection, would be ready to accept rather than to hold to and vote for an inequitable bill, would be absolute free trade, by which the farmer might buy as cheaply as he is compelled to sell, and that remedy this congress will not seek to enforce. There remains, then, but the third—the application of an export bounty which shall in a measure give restitution to the farmer for the higher prices which he is compelled to pay in protected markets. No proposition based upon the declaration of equal protection to all the. industries of the United States is complete,- nor .can there be successfully made a contention that it is just, unless it gives to the exporter of agricultural staples from the United Statesan equivalent benefit to that given to the manufacturer by the imposition of an import duty. A duty of 25 cents a bushel upon wheat is a delusion and a snare. The farmer of the United States gets no benefit from it. The imposition of duty upon cotton, if that were attempted, would be of no value to the cotton producer. The imposition of a duty on rye is of no value to the farmer of the United States. Every other protected industry has a direct benefit from this tariff, because where we do not produce in the United States sufficient for our own consumption and a quantity considerable in extent for export the import duty serves as a means whereby the local producer can enhance the price to the local consumer. The immediate behefit to the farmer derived 'frqm the treasury of the United States would not be all. For this comparatively small expenditure to him he would receive for these staples more than $225,000,000 in higher prices than ho now receives. It is true that this would increase the price of breadstuffs to the consumers in the cities, but under the declaration made here today that with higher prices the people wHI be more able to buy we will have a larger consumption of wheat and wheat flour and other agricultural staples in the cities of the country than we have now at the low prices. Mr. Butler—Mr. President, the senator, from Utah said ho was in favor of about $13,000,000 export duty on wheat at 10 cents a bushel. If we pay an export bounty of 10 cents a bushel, that will raise the price of every bushel of wheat, whether exported or consumed at home, that much, will it not? Mr. Cannon —Certainly it will. Mr. Butler—Then, for an investment of $13,000,000, which the government would payout in the shape of an export bounty, the wheat farmers of the country would get their protection of $60,000,000 or $70,000,000, would they not? Mr. Cannon —They would, if there be any truth in the protective principle. Mr. Butler —That would be a very good investment. Mr. Cannon —It would be a very good investment if it were to be made in behalf of any manufacturing industry or any trust in the United States, but anything in behalf of the farmer is looked

upon with scorn and is considered a doubtful investment by the legislature of the United States. In addition, Mr. President, it is a very poor argument, when you have been lolming some man tor years and ho asks you tor justice, to say that you propose to continue to rob him of more and say that you do not know where you are going to get the money with which to restore that which you have unrighteously taken. It js the very first duty of the congress of the United States to provide a bill which shall not only bo honest in its present application, but which shall pay back some portion Os that which has been taken from the pockets of the toilers of this land. I have talked with the farmers in 20 states of the Union since last full, and 1 firmly believe that this tariff will no longer enduro than until the farmers of the United States can have a chance to revise it at the polls, if you do not give to them some portion of its benefits. The farmer is bending beneath a burden which he cannot carry longer. He has been the backbone of the integrity of the United States, but there comes in the place of the free and independent farmer of ‘this country a race of tenantry to reap servilely where- he sowed nobly, men who receive their opinions from others instead of giving their own independent voice at the polls and in all their declarations to their follow men.

The senate of the United States can afford to be absolutely just. 1 believe the amendment should'bo adopted. Mr. (’handler —Alay 1 ask the senator from Utah a question? Mr. (lannon —Certainly. Mr. Chandler —I heard the senator speak of rubbery a little while ago with reference to the tariff. Does the senator mean that the farmer has been robbed all these years by the tariff? Is that the senator’-s argument? Mr. Cannon —Yes, sir, decidedly. Mr. Chandler —When did the senator first think that the American tariff system was a robbery of the farmer? S* Mr. Cannon —Just so soon as the sen--ator gave sufficient attention to the subject to understand the truth of it. I advocated Republican tariffs as earnestly and as faithfully in my humble way as the senator from New Hampshire, anil I believed exactly what I taff&ht. But I am not disposed any longer to advocate a system by which one portion of the population is taxed for the benefit of another portion of the population. 1 think that it t is unfair to cherish onl one class, and that the class which has already the most power of self protection. If the senator from New Hampshire will go across the plains of Kansas, as I have gone, and across the plains of Nebraska, I believe in him sufficiently to think he will come back and say that this bill is robbery of the American farmer. I have stated that I am in favor of a protective tariff system. I stated that in the guilelessness of my soul, being a Republican, I went out and advocated the Republican, idea of a protective tariff. I never was brought quite so close to responsibility concerning it before as I am today. Heretofore I have discussed it on the stump, advocating it in general terms, but as soon as 1 am confronts with responsibility which obliges me to look more closely into its application to all the people I am simply discharging my duty when I seek to amend this measure so that it shall be honest to all.

The Monkey and the Cats. I l iPt 1 [HI I The monkey could pull its own sugar out of the fire, but prefers to use the pawfl of the cats. Poor cats, how it must hurt them! Yes, it does hurt thpm a little, but they can stand it for the sake of their good friend the monkey. Perhaps they will get a share of the sugar, or if not that something else which they like better. Perhaps! It is certain that they have long been fast friends of the monkey and that they like him for his sly and cunning tricks. Republican Criticism of Taxed Hides. According to the protective theory the Imposition of a tax on noncompeting articles adds to their cost to the consumer. This theory would be aptly exemplified in the proposed duties on hides, as the people would be compelled to pay more for their footwear. It is estimated that the increased cost of boots and shoes for one year under the proposed duty would amount to $20,000,000. With free hides our manufacturers of leather goods have been able to build up a great export trade in footwear. As Mr. Blaine said when it was proposed to put a duty on hides in the law of 1890, “It will yield a profit to the butcher only—the last man that needs it. ’’ The interests of the tanners and shoe manufacturers are vastly more important than the interests of butchers and western ranchmen.—Chicago Times-Herald, Republican. Os No Consequence. The brewers are good campaign contributors. Therefore they are to be excused from their proper share of taxes. The wearers of clothes are of no particular account to the Mark Hannas of our time. Why shouldn’t they and the consumers of sugar and shoes be made to bear the whole burden?—World.

A Life Saved. A FOND DAUGHTER WAS NIGH TO DEATH. Frank B. Trout Tells a Reporter of How His Daughter’s Life Was Saved. All Parents Should be Interested in This Narrative. From the Evening News, Detroit, Mich.

Using as a nucleus for his investigation the rumor that the life of the daughter of Frank B. Trout, well known in Detroit, Mich., real estate circles, had been saved, a reporter tailed on Mr. Trout at his office, 103 Griswold Avenue. Mr. Trout showed some hesitancy in giving his opinion for but finally said: “Circumstances amt a father’s love for his child forced me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People,‘but not until tin' whole medical profession had exhausted their skill. At the age of fourteen we had to take our daughter from school owing to her health. Before this she had been in the best of health, happy and in the best of spirits. She began to fall away and became pale and languid. She was so weak that she would fall down in a faint every time she tried to walk unsupported. The best of physicians attended her, but she continued to grow weaker and seemed to be gradually fading away. “ When she was fifteen she weighed only ninety pounds, ami the doctors said it was anamiia. Several physicians said she might outgrow it, but that it would no doubt terminate in consumption No doctor we had could help her, amt we concluded ourselves, we must lose our child, as she was growing weaker every day. “ We had tried all the well-known remedies, and finally about a year ago I bought a box of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and tinik them home. That day I had read of a ease about the same as my daughter’s, and decided to give them a trial, though I must confess 1 did not have much faith. Before v she had taken all of the first box we noticed a change for the better. She, however, gained strength daily

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tint! looked brighter. Every one notio the change, and I bought two more boxei for her. “ When she bail taken two boxes she was strong enough to leave her bed, it nd in less than six months wits something like herself. To-day she is entirely cured, anti is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing 130 pounds, anti bus never bad a sick day since. “1 do not think she uses them now, though I always keep them in the house. My wife and I have recommended them to our neighbors, and sent a few to another young girl who seems to be in the stinio eondition as my daughter. Hail not Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills saved my daughter’s life, 1 would not recommend them to any one. I know they do all and more than is claimed for them, ami 1 itoi glad to recommend them to the world. I know Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People saved my daughter’s life, and that is enough for me.” F. B. Trout. Subscribed and sworn to before me this fourth day of March, 1897. Robert E. ID i t., Jr., Notary I’oh/ic, Wayne County, Michigan. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People contain, in n condensed form, all the eleincuts necessary to give new life ami richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also n specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities ami all forms of weakness. In men they elh'ct a radical cure in all cnses arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are soltl in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, anti may bi? had of all druggists, or ilireet by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.