Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 July 1886 — Page 3

RANDALL RIDDLED.

The Pennsylvania Protectionisms Tariff Bill Scored by Col. Morrison. A Measure Which Defrauds People and Government to Enrich Monopolists. Bounties Averaging Forty-Seven Per Cent. Now Donated to “Infant Industries.” Proposed Extortion of Ten Million Dollars from the Consumers of Tin Plate. The following is Colonel Morrison’s report to the House on the Randall tariff bill: The bill proposes to remove all internal taxes on tobacco, snuff, and cigars, amounting, on the basis of last year's receipts, to $28,000,000 ;*on apple, peach, and grape Drandy to 81,410,000; on spirits for use in the arts, variously estimated at from 87,000,030 to 815,000,000, and believed to be at least $10,000,003, making in the aggregate of internal revenue taxes to be removed $39,400,000. In the appendix of estimates, submitted with the bill as part of it, the reduction of revenue from customs on tariff taxes to be effected by it is estimated at $8,570,576, making the aggregate of proposed reduction 848,000,000. The bill to so reduce excessive revenues, and the statement that there were no excessive revenues to be reduced, were submitted to the House by the same member in the same half month. If the statement that the revenues will not exceed appropriations and the estimates with the bill, including loss of receipts from brandy and from spirits for use in the arts, may be credited, the enactment of the bill into a law will leave the Government 848,000,000 short of the sum necessary to the administration of the government and requirements of the public debt authorized by law, iucluding debts incurred by payment of pensions already allowed, the validity of which we may not question and the payment of which is enjoined upon us in the oath we have taken to support the Constitution. Your committee, unwilling to credit a purpose so lacking in patriotism, so forgetful of the public faith, must believe these and other provisions of the bill to be the result of fiscal distemper hindering a just comprehension and intelligent treatment of the subject. In view of its effect and purpose, so far as it has a purpose affecting the revenue of the Government, the bill might well be left to that neglect which, no doubt, it was expected to receive. But in the hope that even so unwiße a measure may open the way for the majority of the House to redeem its pledges by the removal and reduction of unnecessary, and therefore unjust, taxes, your committee report the bill back with the recommendation that it do no t pass. The hill changes the duty or rate of tax on articles yielding less than one-tenth ($17,000,000) out of the $161,000,000 received from customs in 1885. It increases those which yielded $11,690,000 and decreases hr removes those which yield $5,000,000 on the basis of imports for 1885. It does not reduce the revenue from customs $8,570,576, nor at all, but does increase it $5,510,000. Besides the articles added to the free-list, the duty or import tax is reduced on castor-beans, . castor-oil, starch, Iron and steel rails, beams, girders, lead, and other articles, yielding $3,300,000 of revenue, and the revenue is estimated on the bill to fall off in prodortion to the reduced rate of taxation recommended. The tax on all clothing, whether of silk, linen, cotton, or woolen, and other woolen goods, of tin plates, cotton-ties, and other articles yielding, as already stated, $11,600,003, is increased, and the revenue is estimated to fall off in still greater proportion than on articles upon which the weight of tax is reduced. Apparently the bill was presented in the belief that a necessity existed for a reduction, not of taxes, hut of revenues, and that the desired end Is reached both through higher and lower taxes. The estimates, with the bill, are made on this arbitrary assumption, and are entitled to no respect whatever. So much of the bill as relates to the administration of tile customs laws, known as Mr. Hewitt’s bill, has received the approval of this committee, and is part of the bill heretofore reported. Except “bristles," the articles placed on the free list are so placed with others in the bill already reported to the House. Animals for breeding purposes, free in all our tariffs in which they have been specially named, are added to the taxable list. The few and unimportant proposed reductions in the dutiable list, aggregating less than $1,000,000, may well be made whenever the condition of the treasury will justify it. They are for the most part proposed in a bill introduced by the chairman of your committee and not reported. The committee believe reported more urgent and their amount as large as the demands upon the Government in view of its receipts would justify. Under the Morrill protective tariff, and before any war taxes were added to it, the highest tax on manufactures of wool was 12 cents a pound and 25 per cent, on the value. The average tax on all woolen clothing and other woolen goods was not more than S3O on the SIOO worth. As the tariff now is, all the lower-priced woolen goods of foreign make, and such as are used among “the coinmen people,” are so highly taxed as to be excluded from our markets, because “a high protective tariff leads to monopoly and class legislation.” The average rate of tax on such high-priced woolen goods as are imported is $67.16 on the SIOO worth, and the highest rate is 45 cents a pound and 40 per cent, on the valuemuch more than double the Morrill tariff rate. This bill increases pound rates to 50 cents which are now 10, 12,18, and 24 cents, and again so largely Increases the tax on woolen cloths and goods as to furtlfer prevent importaiion from abroad and to add to the cost of woolen clothing at tome, while estimating a reduction of $1,294,259 in the income to the Treasury as the result of a higher tax on the people. Cotton is only produced in a few Southern States, and is the one field, mill, or shop product with which protectionists do not make a pretense of sharing the benefit of taxes imposed for their profit. Two-thirds of the cotton grown here must still find a market abroad. Cotton ties, which are a considerable item of expense, and indispensable to the sale of cotton abroad, when taken in exchange for cotton or otherwise may be imported for $35 on the SIOO worth. This said $35 is to be increased tos69.3o—doubled —by the bill, which by the estimate results in a loss of four-fifths of the revenue as a consequence of doubling the taxes. The receipts at the present rates are $162,744, and if doubled, with double taxes, would be 8322,371. The estimate of the bill is 862,000. Tin plate, an article essential in every house, and especially so among those who work in shops, mills, and in mines and are large consumers of canned food, is now taxed 1 cent per pound, and yields $5,055,590 to the treasury. This is to be increased 125 per cent., or cents per pound, amounting to $11,375,079; but the increased tax is estimated to reduce the revenue to $1,000,000, or one-fifth of the tax before the increase, while the other four-fifths and all the increase, or $10,375,079, is to lie taxed into the pockets of the platemakers. These statements of the estimated and intended effect of the bill are believed to make plain the methods by which taxation on the basis of imports and revenue receipts in 1835 would yield $14,000,000 of revenues and be made to divert that Bum from public purposes to private gain. The introduction of this V! would be considered the first avowed attempt in our legislative history to empty the treasury by the use of the taxing power—the first confessed effort for “protection for protection’s sake"—but for the following declaration from the same sourco as the bill; I do not believe there is in tho Constitution of the United States an authority to levy import duties for protection for protection’s sake. In other words, I can find nothing which gives authority to the'Congress of the United States to raise taxes on import duties for protection per se. * * * A high protective tariff leads to monopoly and to class legislation. If this measure may be supposed to have any purpose relating to a system of finance, it points to direct taxation, for when internal-revenue taxes are taken off and custom-house taxes are laid on so high that the people get the burden, the monopolists the benefit, and the treasury nothing, now sources o t supply will be inevitable. The measure is not supposed to foreshadow any such system or to do more than to

indicate a mind unlearned in methods and unmindful of results. In reporting the bill to reduce tariff taxes and to provide for the better collection thereof, this committee, in April last, estimated the receipts for the year ending June 30, 1886, at $335,000,000, and the annual surplus as exceeding $30,000,000, after meeting all money obligations of the Government. This favorable estimate has been exceeded by the actual facts. The receipts for the fiscal year ending July 30, 1886, were $336,144,290, or $12,144,290 more than the previous year. The expenditures for 1886 were $290,166,788, or $15,664,132 less that the previous year, leaving the annual surplus $45.973,502. We may, therefore, safely count on a surplus of $30,000,000 for the current year, allowing $15,000,000 for the increased pensions to widows, and additions to the rate or number of pensions. Attempts to remove the tobacco and other internal taxes are usually just.fied by asserting them to be war taxes, and in apparent forgetfulness of the fact that, so far as relates to its money obligations, the war is not half over, and will not be over until, we have paid $4,000,000,000 yet to be collected in taxes from the people. At best, taxes are a most grievous burden upon the industry, thrift, and comfort of the people. They should be so laid as to cause the least hindrance to these industries and comforts, the least interference with freely-chosen pursuits, and, as far as possible, on articles the use of which and the payment of tax thereon would be largely voluntary. When, in 1866, internal war taxes were highest, spirits, tobacco, and malt liquor paid less than 2u per cent, on S2O of every SIOO collected. The spirit tax was then $2 per gallon, or more than double the present rate. Tobacco, in different forms, paid different rates, anu the average was 35 cents per pound, or more than four times the present rate. It is, therefore, apparent that more than 90 per cent, of internal war taxes have been repealed, and less than 10 remain, with half the war debt yet to be paid. In 1866 more than two hundred articles were on the inter-nal-revenue taxable list. Of these, spirits, malt liquors, and tobacco in its various forms are all that remain. The tax on all manufactures, carriages,watches, diamonds, firearms, lotteries, brokers, express, insurance, railroad, and telegraph companies, brokers, banks, bankers, and incomes, with more than half the liquor and tobacco tax, have been removed. The burden of all taxation now rests on the liquor and tobacco tax so reduced, and on the clothing, food, and shelter of the people, and other articles indispensible to industrial pursuits, without which no taxes could be paid. While internal-revenue war taxes have been reduced to eighteen per cent., war tariff taxes continue to burden the people and hinder their progress. Sugar, whiqji under the Morrill tariff at the commencement of the war paid threefourths of a cent per pound, now pays nearly two cents. Rice paid one cent per pound, and now pays two and one-fourth. Woolen goods have already been shown to pay double as much now as then, and while tariff taxes have been removed from a comparatively few articles in taxing which pnotectionists found no profit, they have not failed to continue their average—forty-seven per cent.—to their own great advantage and the greater disadvantage of the mass of their fellow-men who pay it. The liquor and tobacco industries are fairly prosperous. Our people use yearly 11,500,000 more gallons of spirits, 10,503,000 barrels or double as much beer, 83,000,000 pounds or three-quarters as much more of tobacco, 1,600,000,000 more or double as many cigars, and fifteen times as many cigarettes as they used to ten years ago, and the friends of these "industries” may well be satisfied with the progress they are making. A tax on these is largely a tax on indulgence and excess, and its payment largely voluntary. Taxes not paid on these must be paid on necessaries of life. This tax should not be removed. The official or census statistics show that before 1860, in the two hundred years of their territorial and national existence, our people accumulated and had, including their lands, property valued at $14,000,000,000. In the twenty years since tlie war they have paid in national, State, and local taxes, the greater part of it national taxes, a sum greater than all their savings in the previous 250 years. With the enormity of this draft upon the earnings of tho people the wealth was counted in the census of 1830 at $22,009,001,000 in lands, and in movable property as much more. How much of this wealth has been diverted or transferred by unequal and excessive taxation by “a high protective tariff which leans to monopoly” from those who labor to those who employ labor is largely a matter of conjecture. This we do know—that of the 28,030,000 people who do something, some work or engaged in gainful pursuits—lß,ooo,ooo of these earn, on the average, not much more than S3OO a year, which is necessarily consumed in means of subsistence, while substantially the savings go to tho other one-tenth. And now we are overtaken by and are in the midst of industrial paralysis. A million of workmen are idle for want of work to do, and capital in *till greater proportion than unemployed labor lies dead or unproductive. Our hills and mountains are full of mineral wealth. Millions of acres of productive lands wait for the plow. Homes for homeless millions are to be had for the taking. Favored with plentiful harvests, blest with health, the only plague which afflicts us is idleness. What we need is profitable employment. There is an apparent puny effort in the bill, through an increase of taxation, to shut out goods from abroad that they may be made at home. If tbis effort was so successful as to prevent the importation of all manufactures we would have direct taxation and three-quarters of a million men yet unemployed. Their profitable employment amounts to nearly the difference between what is popularly known as good and hard times. The removal of the tobacco tax will furnish no new employment. Neither its smoke nor its juices will turn a wheel, shaft, or sp ndle. Wood, wool, hemp, salt, cheap food for toiling men lie at the foundation of great and successful industries. To free these from taxes will cheapen production without lowering the price of labor, and our idle men may thus be enabled to make something which may be sold profitably abroad, and with which we are overstocked at home. The last census estimates show increased national wealth of 830,C0J,009,000 for tho previous twenty years Marvelous as this growth from 1860 to 1880 may appear, it shows a yearly saving of only 837. 50 to every person of our tnen average of forty millions. Whatever number of persons saved double the average yearly saving, or $75, an equal number saved nothing. For as niany as acquired $112.50, three times the annual saving, that manv fell the average yearly saving of $37.50 short of the necessities of comfortable existence. Facts as plain as these show how dangerously near the great mass of men always are to want and suffering. To those not blind to the wants of their less fortunate fellow-men facts like these show why all men should have a right to work and enjoy the fruits of their earnings, burdened with* only such taxes as are indispensable to the public safety. It may be said that any real reduction in the rate of taxation will cripple or destroy our inanvfacturing industries, all of which have come to rely on taxation for their support. This assumption is made with every attempt to relieve the people from unnecessary taxes. It is sometimes made with the assurance of apparent belief in the truth of what always was arid still is untrue. The Morrill tariff, approved by Mr. Buchanan, did not exceod sixty per cent, of tho present rate, and was declared by its author, always a protectionist, to be fully up to the “level of fair competition.” We can not reach thatnow comparatively low level. The financial needs of the Government forbid it, and will long continue to forbid it, Next, before its adoption we had a still lower tariff, and yet the period of its existence was the most prosperous period of .like duration in our history. Of the growth and progress of manufactures in that lower-tariff period, Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, when a member of the House, said: “The census, in 1850, of manufacturers was imperfect and underst itad, and that of 1860 will show a prodigious increase, true now, but not comparatively true. In this prosperity the rebel States have shared to some extent. The whole amount of woolen goods produced in 1850 was $43,542,288. The increase has been 55 per cent, in the loyal States alone, or the amount now for these States is $65,928,486: and New England produces almost as much as the whole country did ten years ago, or $38,509,680. The increase in cotton goods in the Eastern States has been 8) per cent., in tho Middle 55 percent., and in the Southern States over 63 per cent. Tho total amount of agricultural Implements produced in the whole Union in 1853 was $6,842,611. In twenty of the loyal Stat. s it is now $15,075,838. The whole value of boots and shoes made in the United States in 1850 was $53,967,408, and the aggregate in nine States is now $74,668,577. The whole amount of manufactures in 1850 was $1,013,320,463, and is now in the loyal States alone $1,761,000,000. Such Tacts should make every man with an American heart in his bosom glow with pride. —Congressional Olobe, March 12, 186 ?. * The growth of agriculture was still more prodigious than the increase of manufactures,-

and those who refuse to be encouraged by prosperity not built upon taxation may still take comfort in that pnblic necessity which requires at least a revenue of $160,000,000 to be derived from custom-house tolls.

MINNESOTA BLAZING THE WAY.

The First Republican State to Favor Tariff Reform. [From the St. Paul Pioneer Press.] There can no longer be any question of the fact that the State of Minnesota is committed to the cause of tariff reform. The Democratic party will declare, as a matter of form, for lower duties on imports. Minnesota Republicans are now as unequivocally in favor of a reduction of taxation. The members of the lower House who voted for the Morrison bill of two years ago were indorsed by conventions in their districts, and every one of them returned to Congress. In such local conventions as have been held thus far it will be observed that the action of the four Minnesota members who this year declared for tariff l eduction is as emphatically commended. The Pioneer-Press is heartily gratified at this recognition of the righteousness of that cause for which it has been fighting many a year against tremendous odds. There is now one State, reliably Republican, which can be depended upon to work for the interest of the burdened consumer against the manufacturer who has grown great upon profits extorted by the power of the Government. The time is coming when a majority of States will be ranged with Minnesota against the perpetration of a tariff whose enormities no reasonable theory of prolection to native interests can justify or palliate. It is not chiefly the mere fact that the people sustain a vote for tariff reform that is cheering, but the more significant fact that they are able to base their action upon sound reason and immutable principle. This, from the resolutions of the Grant County Convention, is final proof that the blind have been made to see: “We hold that the doctrine that protection protects the laboring classes of America is a delusion and a snare; that the laboring man of this country necessarily competes with the pauper iabor of the whole world, while the manufacturer is protected and made rich at the expense of all.” This is the home thrust before which the historic lie that supports our whole system of exorbitant duties must finally go down. The protective system was first designed to build up j’oung industries. The notion that it could raise or in any way affect the wages of labor was a clear afterthought, introduced when industries were no longer young or feeble, but when their conductors would not relinquish the profits wrung from labor by high tariffs. It is because of that falsehood that the protective system has stood by the votes of the workingmen. They have learned much. At last they are coining at the truth. The competition of labor with labor, especially where immigration is unrestricted and invited, is universal. Wages are higher in the United States than in Europe for the same reason that they are higher in St. Paul than in New York; for the same reason that capital which brings a return of 3 per cent, at the East brings 8 per cent, at the West. The tariff affects either about as much as the laws of Solon. Let the people once see this simplest of truths clearly. Let them understand that, whatever the claims of a high protective policy on other grounds, it does absolutely nothing to raise the wages of labor, while it does raise the cost of every manufactured article consumed by the family. Then, when this much is done, we shall be quite content to leave it to the people to say what shall be done with the tariff. The people of Minnesota are to be congratulated, in that they are among the first to shake off the delusion that has levied heavy tribute on labor and amassed vast fortunes out of the little earnings of the poor, through year after year of legislation for the few as against the many. The cause of tariff reform is marching on.

Bad Times Under Protection.

In searching for the cause of business depression it is a plain indicate of common sense to seek for it an existent condition of things rather than to attribute it to causes that do not exist. We know that since 1870 there have been ten years of bad times to about five years of prosperity. We know that protective tariffs are enacted solely with reference to business. They have been recommended as a sure means to promote prosperity. We know that this country has a higher tariff than any other civilized country on the globe. We also know that business is not prosperous. The tariff has failed to even maintain good times. There has been nothing that even approximated free trade. Protection has been in full force all these unprosperous years. As an efficient cause of good or evil to business it is in complete operation to-day. The people are taxed on an average $47 on every SIOO worth of dutiable goods to promote business prosperity, and yet are having.had years two-thirds of the time. From these undeniable facts what deductions can he fairly drawn with respect to the effect of tariffs on business? As a reward for heavy taxation are good times realized? What have we experienced? Beginning in 1873, we had about six years of unexampled business depression and bankruptcy. These were followed by less than three years of activity. Again, in the spring of 1882 the present period of exhaustion began. Early in that year the labor strikes in the Chicago steel works commenced. They were a protest against reduced wages. About nine out of the past twelve years have been years of stagnation, and all of them have been protective tariff years. Work has not been plenty, and wages have decl ned. After 1873 the country was filled with tramps, and crima increased. A few months since 1,000,000 idle workingmen were officially reported. If these facts prove anything they prove that protective taxation as an agency to promote prosperity is a failure. Under a high tariff we are having glutted maikets, depressed trade, discontented labor, and bad times. Fiee trade Uas not caused these things. Trade has not been and is not free. The country has had nothing but a tariff-restricted trade. Enormous penalties are exacted to prevent trade between onr people and the people of other countries. Monstrous taxes are required on articles entering our seaports. By such means—miscalled protection—we have driven business from our shores. This policy is an adequate cause for business depression and bad times. Under it, at least, such are the results. No wonder that intelligent workingmen, as is evidenced by the recent demand of

the 40,000 workers in the textile industries of Philadelphia for tariff reform, are questioning the alleged benefits of protection. Labor, they realize, is free the world over, but trade in the products of labor is restricted by the tariff. The restricted markets are quickly supplied, and then come the evils of overproduction, stagnation, and idleness. These are clearly the results of the trade-restricting tariff, aud the hardships fall c’ iefly upon the textile workers. And is not this a legitimate—an inevitable —consequence of the tariff? Its object is the restriction of trade in the products of labor. It prevents a world-wide buying and selling. It is, therefore, the relentless enemy of labor. It limits the sale of the products of laber, increases the cost of living by taxing articles of consumption, makes employment and wages unstable and uncertain, and causes business depression and bad times. —Jacksoti (Mich.) Patriot.

Effect of Taxing Carpet Wool.

With all the encouragement that is given by protective taxation, which makes every yard of qprpeting sold in the United Staten cost a great deal more than it otherwise would, and yet benefits neither the woolgrower nor the manufacturer, nlmost no carpet wools are raised in this country, and, except in Russia, but a small quantity is produced in Europe. Our manufacturers are obliged to buy wool for carpets abroad, or else close their mills. Hence we read that two weeks ago one or two Philadelphia carpet mills placed orders in foreign markets for upwards of 60(1,000 pounds of wool. When this wool reaches the port of Philadelphia, one-quarter, as near as may be, will be added to its cost by the tariff in the name of “protection,” and yet it is not procurable in this country, and none but the ignorant pretend that any amount of encouragement by taxation will cause carpet wools to be grown in this country. This is. a sample of tho burdens imposed by our tariff upon manufacturers aud consumers, placing them at a disadvantage with manufacturers and consumers of other countries, aud benefiting no other class, against which the 40,0(10 workers in the textile industries of Philadelphia protest, and demand, in the interest of labor, a reform. Adding one-quarter to the cost of carpet wools, dirt and all, as soon ns they reach our shores, is at last seen to be a serious injury to both the workers in the factories and the purchasers of carpets, and but for the wide prevalence of the economical superstition, that prosperity can be increased by taxation, it would have been seen long ago. It is, indeed, nothing but a superstition that the mass of the people who earn a living by brain and muscle labor can be benefited by having their earnings transferred to the pockets of a privileged few by taxation. The assumption that a high tariff is essential to prosperity is tantamount to the statement that high taxes are a blessing and not a burden, —Jackson (Mich.) Patriot.

The Lion’s Share.

Under its system of free imports Britain has for years past been increasingly securing to itself the lion’s share of the commerce of the world. According to the official returns of 1884, as digested in a Nineteenth Century article, exports and imports of the four great commercial rivals stood as follows; Imports and Per lioad of exports. population. Great Britain £685,935,000 £19.00.0 France 303,040,000 7.13.0 Germany 323.285,000 6.17.6 United States 290,138,000 5.3.3 In spite of the heavy protective tariff of the United States, Great Britain in 1881 sold in the United States’ markets goods to the value of £32,570,000, while France and Germany between them sold little more than £27,000,000. In the German markets, also highly protected, Great Britain in the same year sold goods to the value of £25,365,000, while France and the United States combined sold only a little over £18,000,000. Now, when we come to the French maikets, we find that while Britain sold goods to the value of £24,652,000, the United States, in spite of its large rich territory and the heavy protection which we are told enables it to produce cheaply, sold only to the extent of £11,180,000. Then under free trade how have Britain’s exports prospered? Thus: In the five years 1836-40 they averaged ’ £50,000,000 In the five years 1841-45 they averaged 54,000,000 In the five years 1846-50 (first of free trade) 61,000,CC0 In the five years 1851-55 69,000,000 In the five years 1856-60 124,000,000 In the five years 1881-85 232,000,000 In 1830 Great Britain and Ireland had a commerce of £88,000,000. In 1878 this had risen to £601,000,000. The British Colonies had one of £21,000,000 in 1830, and in 1878 it stood at £322,000,000. In trade it is very evident that “Britons hold their own,” and are likely to continue to do so. —Toronto Globe.

$21,000,000 for Revenue, $85,000,000 for Monopoly.

According to a late report of the Bureau of Statistics, our production of iron and steel and articles manufactured from them constituted about four-fifths of what we consumed during the year 1881; or, in other words, we had to import 20 per cent, of our consumption. The amount imported cost our merchants on board ship in our ports $51,454,575, but before they landed it they had to pay a 44 per cent, protective duty, amounting to $21,462,534, which was added to the purchase cost and charged up to consumers. On shore was a domestic product, which, at the value of the foreign product on shipboard, amounted to $255,000,000, but as soon as 44 per cent, was added to the foreign article, advancing it from $51,454,575 to $72,917,510, our manufacturers added the same per cent, to their products, which raised them to $340,850,136, thus patting over eighty-six millions into their pockets, while the Government received but twentyone millions for revenue. This $86,000,000 was taken from the people for no purpose but to enrich a few iron and steel monopolies, who are much better able to live without bounties aud begging than the fanners who are taxed to pay them. —Chicago Express. “I wonder,” said a *young hopeful of seven, who had been to a grand wedding in a stylish church, “I wonder why the organ played ‘Lo-he-grins?’ ” “How very stupid, Freddie.” was the prompt reply of his young sister. “It wasn’t ‘Lo-he-grins;’ it was ‘Lo-he’s-green.’ ” Mamma —“Well, Johnny, I shall forgive you this time; and it’s very pretty of you to write a letter to say you’re sorry.” Johnny —“Yes, ma; don’t tear it. up, please.” Momma —“Why not?” Johnny—“ Because it will do for the next time.” k

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

—Reports from various portions of Wabash County, indicate that the severe storm of wind, rain, and hail, which prevailed in that section recently proved far more disasterons than was at first stated. The track of the gale was originally from northeast to southwest, and when it reached Wabash city, it suddenly veered to the northwest. The track of the 6torm was about fonr or five miles in width, and within this scope fences were blown down, growing corn ruined, vegetables destroyed, fine timber prostrated, and fowls killed. Several barns and corn-cribs were unroofed, the detached portions being carried a long distance. The estimates of the damage in the county vary from SIO,OOO to $20,000, the former sum probably approximating the loss. The hailstones which fell were of prodigious size, and farmers neait La Fontaine repoit finding drifts of bail in fence-corners nearly two feet In depth. Stock exposed to the storm suffered severely, nnd travelers who failed to find shelter were badly cut and bruised. —The corner-stone of the new St. Mary’s Catholic Church, at Jefferson and Lafayette streets, Fort Waynej was laiol July 11 with the usual ceremonies. Bishop DweDger delivered an address in English, and Father Meißner, of l’eru, spoke in German. The crowd was immense, and the parade of fraternities and sodalities very imposing. The church, which is to replace the one shattered by an explosion last November, will be the finest in the diocos. It will be fully ns largo as the Cafbedral, and will not cost less thnn SBO,OOO. The aggregate cost of the three edifices now being erected in that city, St. Paul’s nnd St. Mary’s churches, and the orphan asylum, with the furniture, frescoing, pictures, statuary, etc., will reach $250,000. —A few weeks ago a long tunnel on the narrow-guage railway, a few miles from Koleen, caved in from the top, nnd since that time a force of men on the mountain have beOn employed in bauling dirt from the tunnel across a hight trestle work. The work-train was being used for this, and was returning for a load to the tunnel, when four men, who were sitting on a board that crossed the corner of a fiat-car, were thrown from their seats and fell headlong through the trestle down on the rocks forty feet below, a lot of lumber following them. They were all more or less injured, two of them fatally. —A very odd-looking animal, half fish and half frog, has been found in Lamotte Creek, south of Palestine. The head and body are those of a frog, but the mouth resembles that of a buffalo fish, the tail is that of a catfish; on one side of its body are three perfect frog legs, all in one cluster, and on the other side of the body there is but one leg. It is about three inches long from head to tail, and is as well proportioned as a fish. When found it was lying on a log, deud. —Sam Archer, the last of the notorious band of desperadoes, was executed recently in the presence of about 600 peace officers, at Shoals. His deportment on the gallows was the source of much remark. He spent his last night almost as usual, receiving friends and visitors until a late hour. A most touching scene was the parting between him and his heart-broken mother, sisters, and brother. —About a year ago the town of Corydon issued bonds to the amount of $4,000, which were sold to parties in Ohio, and the town Board of Trustees failed to levy sufficient tax to pay the interest on bonds, which soon became due. The town treasury is depleted, and as tho corporation isheavily in debt no funds can be secured to pay the accumulating interest. —Recently, while an inspection was being made by several members of the Fire Department at Kokomd, it was discovered that some scoundrel had cut the hose of both hose companies. The hose was new and first-class, having just been purchased by the City Council, and is damaged to the amount of S3OO. —A St. Joseph County rattlesnake, though cut in three pieces by a mower, had enough vitality left in its business end to bite a German woman who was raking hay. The jaws of the reptile had to be torn apart to remove the fangs, and the woman had a close call for life. —A young lady at Raglesville, while handling a revolver, accidentally shot her mother. The ball entered midway between the ear and eye, on the left side of the woman’s face, passing through the cheek-bone, and lodging, it is supposed, at the side of the nose. —Soldiers’ reunions will take place in Northern Indiana as follows: Warsaw, August 13 to 16; Kendallville, August 12 ! to 14; Michigan City, August 16 to 18, Fort Wayne, August 19 to 23; Lafayette, July 26 to August 2; Hartford City, August 11 t 0,13. —Evansville has forty churches, alI lotted as follows: Baptist, 10; Methodist, 9, Presbyterian, 5; Roman Catholic, 5; German Evangelical; 3r Lutheran, 2; Jewish, 2; Protestant Episcopal, 2; Christian, 1, and Unitarian, 1. —The Mississinewa Valley Christian Conference will hold its nineteenth annual session with the Shiloh Church at | Swayzee, in Grant County, Ind., commencing August 18. —A blue racer got into the kitchen of I a Warsaw lady and knocked down pans 1 and dishes at a lively rate. It .was finally killed, and was found to he five feet in length. j —St. Mary’s Catholic Church, at Huntinghurg, was dedicated a short time ago. Bishop Chutard assisted in the ceremonies*