Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 February 1884 — Page 1
VOLUME VIII.
THE DEMOCRATIC SENTINEL. A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, —BY Jas. W. McEwen. - RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One year Six month* 75 tree month* 50 ' A.dvertisin.g JR,a.tes. One uoiuma, one year,, sße 00 Half column, “ in m &th er - Z 30 00 Eighth ■ 10 (,0 eea V ad d e( T to foregoing price if jpyertisements we set to occupy more than -ffngle column width. Fractional parts of a year at equitable rates Business cards not exceeding 1 inch space, “AZ ear IS3 for six months; $ a for three ü ß s* aoti(, Bs and advertisements at es*a®lished statute price. , Beading notices, first publication 10 eents ; each publication thereafter s cents a S Yearly advertisements may be changed (arterly (once in three months) at the op*r tJ* advertiser, free of extra charge, advertisements for persons not residents y Jasper eonnty, mnst be paid for in advance of first pnblic '•tion, when less than ©ae-quarter column in size; aud quarterly * advance when larger. .
MORDECAI F. CHILCOTE. Attorney -at-Laxr HnNSSBLABB. .... Iy DIANA Practices |in tho Courts of Jasper and adoinlng counties. Makes collections a specialty. Officeion north side of Washington gveet, opposite Court House- vlnf, X.B.DWIOOIN" ZIMBT DWIOGIM* R. S. & Z. DWIGGINS. Attorneys-at-Law, ftixssEiAUß - “ ■ - Indiana Practice in the Courts of Jasper and ad J®! 1 !!, 118 c ® u ° tl *8, make collections, etc. t« Office west corner Novels’ Block. y_, nl » . . . - . I KMONP. THOMPSON, DAVID J. THOM PSOX Attorney-at- Law. Notary Public. THOMPSON & BROTHER, Rsnsrklaer, . _ Indiana Practice in all the Courts. MARION E. SPITLER, Collector and Abstractor. We pay, xrtioular attention to paying tax- . sollint and leasing lands. v 2 n*B FRANK W. U .COCK. Attorney at Law And Real Estate Broker. Practices in all Courts of Jasper, Newtor Mid Benton counties. Lands examined Abstracts of Title prepared: Taxes paid. Coll»ctio».« a Specialty. JAMES W. DOUTHIT, and notary public, Maieever ’ 8 new Attorney nt Ihaw Remington, Indiana. COLLECTIONS A BPEOIALTY. IRA W. YEOMAN, Attorney at Law, NOTARY PUBLIC, Real Estate and Collecting Agent. Will practice in all the Courts of Newton Beaton and Jasper counties. Office;—Up-stairs, over Murray’s Cit’ Jrug Store, Goodland, Indiana. DD. DALE, - • ATTOKNEY-AT LAW MONTICELLO, - * INDIANA. Bank building, up stairs. ■ ..I ■ gg!"_- j 1.1 * 7* H. LOUGHRIDGE. F. P, BITTERS LOUGHRIDGE & BITTERS. Physicians and Surgeons. Washington street, below Austin's hotel. , Ten per cent, interest will be added to all accounts running unsettled longer than three months. vlnt DR. I. B. WASHBURN, Physician & Surgeon, Rensselaer Ind. Galls promptly attended. Will give special at.tet lion to the treatment of Chronic , ~ R. S. Dwiggins, Zlmri Dwiggins, JVexWenl. Citizens 9 Hank, RENSSELAER. IND., Tl oes a general Banking business; gives speeir-l attennon to collections; remitmade on day of r;i ,nu’nt nt current rate of exchange; hit- ■ > ■ v.ul <„> 1.. certificates bearing fnuiest issued; exchange bought andfcold. This Bank owns the flu-glar Safe, which TO 1 a™? 1 he Cincago Exposition in 1878. This Safe is protected by one of Horrent s Time Locks. Ths bunk vault used t« as good ae can be built. It will he seen from thn foregoing that this Bank furnishes us good sacurtj to depositors as can be. ALFRED M COY, THOMAS THOMPSON. Banking House AF a. McCoy &T.THOMPSON,successors V to A, McCoy & A. Thompson, flankers, Rensselaer, Ind. Does general flanking business Buy and gfel! exchaoge. Collections made sn all available points. Money loaned Interest paid on specified time deposits, &c Offioe same place as old firm of A. McCoy * Thempson. aprU.'gl
The Democratic Sentinel.
THOMAS J. FARDEN. Bools, Shoes, Hats, Caps,
ffiiiJWW V>~SHOES Wevery pair warrant'd FO/? BF THOMAS J.FARDEN, 3 Doors East of P. O. Rensselaer, Ind. A complete line ot light and heavy shoes for men and boys, women and misses, always in stock at bottom prices. Increase of trade more an object than large profits. See our goods before buying.
Gents’ Furnishing Goods! - . . - . . , . , - , ... - N WARNER & SONS . DEALERS IN Hardware, Tinwarr ; SSi’fco "ves ■ Side Washington Street, RBIWSSEIiAER, - - INDIAN
BEDFORD & MEB, Dealers Ixi G roceries, Hardware, Tinware, Wooden ware, Farm Machinery, BBICK . & TILE. Our Groceries are pure, and will be sold as low as else where. Ln 6ur Hardware, Tinware and Woodenware Dep-111 ment, jvill be found everything called for. Our Farm Machinery, m great variety, of the most approved styles. Brick amt lile, manufactured by us, and kept constantly on hand. We respectfully solicit your patronage. , . BEDFORD &WA RNER.
1 C O Vl2 2EB. ■gygl —B Mono© STOMACHBITTERS WILL POSITIVELY CUM WHIR K *WD is l-nequaled as a Dyspepsia, Chills and Blond Fever, Kidney Disease, Liter Complaint, ItOWllk rU Title I*. $ 000 REWARD FOR ANY OF THE ABOVE CASES THAT THIS MEDICINE WILL NOT CURE OR HELP. M T U r PWL**.'’ BW ! Rt produce s he.lthy and laxative effect, and .2 JU 1 ?! 1 ! s f .£ ts u n . B< l °" ,cnl a '«* to uiider-nifne the natural vigor of the bodv. Their object is u> the v,t “J strength and energy while removing causes of disease, and opera-timr as
RENSSELAER, JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY FEBRUARY 22, 1884.
Tariff Reform
Talks with Masufacturers aud Merchants—Some Remarkable Statements by as Irou on tin WagejQtiestior —A Merchant’s The-ury-of Ibe R. lation oi a ProtSktiye Tariff to Bucket Shop Gambling— Carp'ts for the Laborer. flndiauaj <lis News.] Pursuing his investigations as to the opinionsjof merchants and manufacturers in Indianapolis on the tariff quesj tion, the reporter called at the office of the Indiana Bolt works and interviewed Mr. O. R. Olsen, who is the superintendent of this important establishment. His statements are a little the most direct to a given point and defiant of the protective theory, that the reporter has listened to for some time.*
Mr. Olsen said: “I promised to commit my thoughts to paper for yo , because I write the American language more clearly than I speak it, but I left the manuscript in my buggy this morning, and it has got lost. I will say as part of what
I had written, and I want you to reproduce my ideas in the ulainest and strongest words that you can, for I should like to see somebody that has nerve to controvert them; indeed they are not idea®, they are facts. I am going to speak about the tariff on iron only, for I have worked all my lire in iron, and I understand very little about anything else. If the tariff were absolutely stricken from iron in every shape, raw ore, iron plates, steel blooms, and everything into the composition of which enters the iron, trade of America would be in a vastly more prosperous condition The demand for ore would be greater, because the consumption of manufactured iron would be greater, and it would be greater because the markets of the whole world would be open to the trade. The workman wo’d be benefitted because he co’d buy more goods with his wages and his wages would not be lowered by the abolition of the protective tariff; it is probable that they would be increased. I have worked in the largest establishments of England, and I remember when such few articles of American machinery or agricultural imp lements as were offered for sale on the English market were contemptuously spoken of as “Yankee goods ” All that is changed now. They are respectfully spoken of as “American manufactures.” That is simply because we make better articles for farm use, and better engines and saws than the English can do. The feature of “specialty” is peculiarly American. For example, the average hoe of the English maker, is a coarse and clumsy weapon for breaking clods; the American hoe is made for some special purpose, light for a garden, heavy for a corn row —medium for a muscular wo-, man or feeble man in a tobacco patch. It is so with everything we make—it is not a bvnglmg, general purpose article? it is a thing made with a special adaptation to a special purpose. And neatness is j ust as distinctive a feature of American work. Our engines
and reapers are not only good, they are tasteful and elegant Right here protectionists tell me that all this is owing to the fact that the wages of the American workman have been so liberal that'he has grown into a higher degree of intelligence than the English workman, and has consequently made better articles, and that his wages are high because he has been protected from the competition of his lower paid brother in England. The wages are higher, and the high wages may have'had the beneficial effect attributed.’ to them, but they are not high because the inferior work of the lower paid Englishman is excluded from the American market by the operation of 1 he
. tariff. The English goods of which I speak can not, and do not compete with American manufactures even ■in England itself, where the wages were lower and the manufacturer has no duty to pay on for eign ore. Listen, When it comes to the finest goods of iron make, we make them cheaper than England does, so that high skilled labor in America can not be affected by competition with the cheap English labor, for the products of that labor do not hold their own on their own ground, far less can they cross the ocean and compete with us. As an example, I will say that the iron planes and lathes which we use in our shops would cost far more in England, with its cheap labor and free trade, than they cost here withfour dearer labor and high tariff. These high class articles can be shipped to England and sold below English prices Why? Fromf two reasons - • The first is that the American workman does vastly more work in a day than the European one. I have had experience in the matter, and I say, that a foreman of a shop in America gets as much work, and of a be tter quality, out of ten American workmen as is got by a foreman in England out of fifteen. So that if the pay of the American workingman is $3 a day aganst the Englishman’s $2, it also follows that he has do e just three dollars’ worth of work to the other’s, two dollars’ worth. We can make engines cheaper here than they can in England. In fact, whenever highly skilled labor is needed, we can undersell the English. Nothing proves more clearly the fallacy of the statement that the ~tariff protects labor. The high grade of labor and the extra amount of it de manded by foremen are the things that makel American labor high. The duty on iron ore makes the cost of plate iron $23,00 a ton, when it ought to be sl2, and this in turn so enhances the price of machinery as to limit the market for it, and thus the number of articles made is limited, and of course the demand for la-
bor coorrespondingly lowered. It ts on low grades of tools, and on articles in which unskilled labor is used, that the English can compete with us, and this merely results in the employment by American manufacturers of the labor of boys and unskilled men at low rates, to the detriment of the skilled laborer. “In the_ rolling mills and puddling furnaces where muscular strength is needed rather than skilled labor, the tariff may, perhaps, have some effect in raising the workman’s wages. Not much, thongh, for if the foreman pays 40 per cent, per diem more for the work he gets 50 per cent, per diem more in labor than his English rival ■ does.” Such are the views of Mr. Olsen on tariff and labor. The reporter next journeyed to the packing house of kingan & co. Two of the pa tn era were in- , terviewed, but Mr. Sinclair
was the chief spokesman. He said: “Our firm is not a political factor; the members, are maiixly British subjects doing business in America, and such views as are held on the tariff are such as are the result of reading and observation in the science of political economy, or of the operation of the tariff on our busines-\ JJhe on 1 y arß- • which wo n s«e which is sunju-.K to a duty is
salt. We use the English salt because it is the best, we sho’d use it if it were dearer than American salt. By a peculiar provision of thetariff law it is both dearer and of the same price as the native article The duty on imported salt is twelve cents on each one hundred pounds. When we use it on meat that is to be exported to Europe the duty is refund-
NUMBER 4.
ecl to us by way of rebate, but when we use it on meat that is to be sold to the American Citizen we are charged the full duty if r it. Thus prime cured American meat can be sold cheaper to an English purchaser than to an American one. Ihe amount of salt used is about one pound by weight to ev jry six of meat. The Amer ican laborer is protected by haying to pay a duty on the salt m his meat, while the American government permits it to be furnished duty free to the English or German labor ers. 1 here is no other way in which the tariff affects our business, and, as meat is a prime necessity, we should not be benentted as a firm by change in the tariff. Speaking of the Question of protection philosophically it may be said that protection is good for “infant industries,” as it is good for infants of the human race, and just as you will have a puny man from a too long protected infant, so you will have a dwar fe d and contracted trade from a too long protected industry. The question is: Are American industries in an infantile condition?” If so, protect them, but if they have lassed the infantile period the protection will be injurious. tis a fact that out f the sev-enty-three writers on political economy whose works, gathered from all nationaare deemed worthy a place in the libra’, ry of the British museum, six-ty-nme are in advocacy of free trade.” <
Another member of the firm, speaking of the absence in the British market of those violent fluctuations in the prices of grain and provisions which characterize operations in Chicigo and New York, said that perhaps the American surplus capital which now floats in the stock and produce exchanges might be profitably diverted into manufactures were the markets of the world thrown open and the periodical de pressions caused by our production for a mere home market prevented. MR. OTTO STKCHHAN, Whose large factory fronts on Alabama street and Ft. w ayne avenue was next visited. He said, “So far as I am opposed to the present tariff system, I am opposed to it on general principles. My own business would not be greatly increased, at least not d’recti y, by tariff reduction,though it wo’d of course, feel the general impulse of improvement which would follow the increased purchasing power of money. In the manufacture of lounges and chairs the tariff raises the price to the purchaser, because wherever a carpet covering is used a tariff tax. of not less than 33 per cent, is paid. Fine carpeting is generally used on lounges, very seldom is the cost less than $3. Now, if $1 of this be duty the purchaser necessarily pays it—the manufacturer of the lounge, of course, puts that $1 in the bill. And carpet manufacturing in this country is not exactly an
infant industry; it is a flourishing monopoly. The whole American carpet trade is in hands of seven men. who are protected against foreign competition by the government, which levies a to riff tax; and who protect themselves against home competition by the formation of a pool or league by which prices can be cut so low for a while as to
break down the effort of any new adventurer in the trade. Of course, w ion the ’.ival is killed off by process, es bankruptcy the prices are raised. — A carpet factory must be better, property than a gold mine. It is the consumer who pays the? bill, as I have said before; and the laborer would have more and better carpt ts ip his house if the tariff were modified. Hie general effects of the present tariff can not but
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