Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 June 1891 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

BUOKLEN’S ARNICA. SALVE. The Best Salve in the world for Cult , Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fev. r Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns and all Skiu Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required! j( is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. B. MHYeb. MY ■ ENTIRE LINE -OF—DRYGOODS Will be sold without REGARD TO GOST! Until further disposition is made. LUDD HOPKINS. Horace Peacock is filling up his new shop on Washington street, opposite the Nowals House, with a large stock of harness, bridles, halters, etc., eto., of his own manufacture, and made from the best material in the market. Prioes reasonable. Those in want of goods in his line are respectfully invited to give him a oall. He solioits an inspection of his work before going elsewhere. Advertised letters — Mr. John Heferlin, Mr. J. R. Woods. Persons calling, for letters in the above list will please say they are advertised. Ed. Rhoades. Drunkenness, or the Diauor Habit, positively Cured by administering- Dr Haines’ G-olden Specific. It i» manufactured a« a pswder, which cna be given lu a gI&HH of beer, a cud of coffee ortea.sr In food, without the knowledge of th« patient It |h abeolntelj harmless, -and will effect a permanent <-tire, whether the patient Is a moaerite dri Ken or an alcoholic!? It has been gtved in thousands of cases, and in every instance a per. feet cr.ro has followed It nkvbh paii.s. The system once impregnated with the Specific, it comes an utter impossibility for toe liquor appetite to exist . Cures guaranteed. 48 | page hook of oartlcnlarg free. Address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Hace Ht„ Cincinnati, O. vlfclUKiy

more McKinley blessings

The MeKinlfiy tariff has driven four large smeltibg establishments to Mexico, begun to divert Mexican ere from the United States to Germany, driven an iron foundry from Maine to Novia Scotia, reduced tho wages in the rolling mill in New Haven, and caused or permitted the reduction of wages in a couple of hundred other induatriea or individual establishments. Among its other effects has beeh the announcement that the American Screw Company would remove a considerable part of its machinery to Englar d to make screws for the foroign trade because our duties on raw material render it impossible to make screws for the foreign trade here, and the drawback clauses of the McKinley law have been found impracticable. While the new tariff has not yet established the manufacture of tin-plau in this cc untry it has driveu a dinner pail factory over into Canada. These two latest achievements of the masterpiece of protectionism deserves to be looked at a little mere in detail. The officers of the screw company hove stated, according to the Providence Journal, that if they could get their raw material here free of duty th' y could manufacture screws for the foreign trade. They pay higher wages here than are paid in Europe, but the superior character of the labor aud the larger use of machinery under the American system more than offset this, so that the company could send screws to Europo and sell them there largely. The tax on the raw material prevents this, and though the new tariff promises to return 99 per oent. of the duties imposed when the goods are exported the cond tions are so onerous that the screw company finds it impossible to comply with them. The company will establish a factory in England with American machinery anh American workmen in charge of the different branches of the work. The Buffalo Courier has investigated the manufacture of the Nestable dinner pail by F. G. 0. Ehl# & Co., in Buffalo, with interesting results. Mr. Eble said he was just starting a factory in Canada to make the pails for the foreign trade because the MoKinley bill wouldn’t let him make the goods in Buffalo. The duty on tin was such that he could turn out manufactured goods in Canada for about what the tin cost in the United States.— He was asked if he were buying Amerioan tin plate. “I have tried to, but bo far have failed, * said Mr. Ehle, smiling. “The concerns which claim to be manufacturing now in this country have not even classified their goods. I tried to order some home-made tin not long ago, andlcouldn’t got it. Tin plate can be imported from England to Canada at a basis of $3,62 per box. The same thing delivered here costs $6. The duty of 22 10 cents a pound does it. It has ruined our export trade. How can we pay higher wages?" “Did you export any before the McKinley law was passed?” “A little, but the old duty of one oent a pound hampered us. We can manufacture these pails in Canada and import them into -this country with the duty of 50 per cent, on the manufactured product, and still save 15 per cent, over the cost of manufacturing here. Why, the duty on the waste we make here would pay our rent three times over.” “But haven’t you forgotten the rebate of 99 per cent, of the duties patd on ail goods you export?" no, we haven’t forgotten that.— But bur oi ders from abroad are smaller than our home orders, and when we figure on the labor and expense of collecting the rebate, we find it does not pay to try for it.” “Are any other coueerns moving into Canada for manufacturing purposes?*