Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 October 1892 — Page 7

yWOBTH ^ C-JIVBA A BOX.”

Sleepy. |

^L'^r-^[r l iti . Li Cheap lustraments That Cannot

" E© Relied Unon.

LYING THERMOMETERS.

la Uio Ja7 lime J ulu.’ a g o o J i n i g a t • a sleep,« ’.Lure’s Iniliges- j

c •'.* 1..:. -,Ld a.OUiiLCu ^

ip I a 3 '■ I 't *• k/" av ^ / 1.

The Average Xlnnsehold Apparatna Will N*»L Accurately Indicate the State of the Teml»erat are.

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[! I. tv ii .'iir» ill llli.mi' ri!v ! \rr ii. ,i .■ ri..r«. ^i.d will iii'iirlil)' nli... .Iltudui'he. I Covered with a Tasteloiv anJSalujIe Cratinq lot all dru • ■ Vs. rrl -e '.R cenw a Lux

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Tiventy-aeven thermometers, bip and little, lump on a wall in a New York optieian’s shop on a swelterinp afternoon. and a Sun reporter idly asked a younp man behind the counter if the instruments were in commission, lie cheerfully responded that they were upon r. -tive duty, and the next moment repented of v. hat he had said, for the customer went to the wall and examined the thermometers. They were those spiral fellows that look like little dark red worms carefully coiled. Scarcely any two of them apreed in the record oi temperature. They marked all the way from eiphty-threc and a half deprees to a shade above ninety-two deprees. The reporter called the young man’s attention to the disagreement, and he said they were not very high-priced thermometers, only about two dollars and seventy-five cents apiece, and besides, they had been on a strain for five days and were overworked. They were good enough in ordinary weather, but for a spell like the one just on a person should use a first-rate high-priced thermometer warranted not to flag in any stress of

weather.

The reporter accepted the young man’s explanation in good faith and started out, but paused to look at about two score thermometers on the opposite wall. Many of these were a great deal bigger than any in the congregation of thermometric liars on the other side, and some of them were manifestly of expensive quality, but they were as variable in their opinions ns the others. One fell as low as eighty-six de grees, and one recorded ninety-four de. grees, a good two degrees higher than an}’ other record in the shop. As all

‘lathe bans of no many lives thut horolnwhei* ; hung within a space of a yard square, WhcrfldTBot^ 1 boa “ t ' ° U * piU “ 0Ur *“ W “*! there was nothing in their position to Carter’s Littlo Liver Pills »ro very small and | account for the variation, though the vrry easy to take. Ouo or two pills makoa doso. | man l„>hind the counter had They are strictly vepetsble ami do not gnpo or }oung man oimno in. i um. i nan jiurgo, but by their Kcntlo action pleaso all wha ! weakly suggested in a ♦ of those on the

lek Headache and relieve ell thotronblea incf* teiit to a bilioua Bt.ito of tho aystom, Buoh an Bzziness, Nausea, Erowsinesfl, Distress after at mg. ruin in tho hi 1 •, ko. While their meet rkable oucceoo lina b :tn shown in cutAbjj

Seadache, yot Cort r ?’* Llttlo Liver PlUl ’tra iqually valuable in Y n tli Lti n. curing ami pro* fenting thisannoyir.gcoiiiplaint.’.vhiio they also correct allUibtird r ; < i t ":i6etomach,8tinniln.to the Lver and regulate the bowelj. Even ix' they only

Buxed

—Cbfithey would bo almo8tpricole5?sto those who Buffer from this distressing complaint; butfortupately t heirgoodnoes docs notend hero,and those irho once try thorn will find these litd pills valit« able in bo many ways that they will not bo wilBg to do without them. But after alleick hoaij

Use them. In vials at 25 cents ; live for $1. iiold by druggitta everywhere, or Bent by mail. CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York. f SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICt © O 5""©”"©"© © © © © ^Tho ke’ '"r ' ”.U in I’m World I ^ ® Why tio you suffer ^©frori Dv '"O’.'Hka ;:nd S«eU-II« > a«la< , ho, ■rreu . when til©'NR remedy is r.t yo*:r hand ? ^

Returning From Its Grand Australian Trriumph To Exhibit in All Its Millionaire Perfection, at THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6. Sells brothers' BiC SHOW OFTHE WOBLD

Which, once lor all,is not 'lividt ii, never was, anil never will b “, hut everywhere, at all times mil places, impartially ex hibits. precisely af- advertised, its complete, incomparable O11I3 Slii|ien«loiifi Living AiiMirnlliin Exhihll iioyal Roman IlipiMMlrome, iTfonuler MeiiHgcrte. <Mil) (.iniii lliitiHtpofaiiil, Trio of Mouf Tri uieiKlniiH Tigcrw, Only Scliool of Trainnl UociMterNea Lions mill Nenls. BJggcsM ireii.cn oii Earth. Only Tribe of Wild licdoiilii Warrior iftilcICN, Only Darkest Afri-i-a Aqiiariniii, Antipodean Aviary, The Olympian Mage ol Old. Only Loyal Japanese I r« 11 pe. Mid-Air Ciy iniiaMiiim. t’hildren'N 1 airy land Erolies, (sroleNque t avnlvai, Arabian Viglir* Kamanees, Npeelaeiilar Fi'grimage lo M« ei a, Superhest Er«‘© ISotidiiy l>iNpiayN.

I Under the circumstances it is asking a little to much to expect the registered Celestials to “look pleasant” while those photograph*

are being taken.

THE TIN PLATE SUPERSTITION. Congressman limiting Examine* the I’res-

ident’s Statistics.

President Harrison in his letter of ac- Joseph Ruby, of Columbia. Pa., suffered : ceptance reiterates the exploded argu- from birth with scrofula humor, till he was mentis of his party in defense of the tin perfectly cured by Moods Sarsaparilla.

‘ plate industrv, so called, which has been

i , .• 1 The man w'ho sits down on a pie at a picnic

born under the midwifery of hjs adimn- ls h „ own wortt enemv .

, istration.

No one knows better than Mr. Hnrri- Ha'l’* 'lair Renewer cares cianilrua and : son the utter hollowness of the tin plate 8Cal i> affections; also all , uses of twldnew pretense up to date, and it seems increil- where lhe * lan ' 18 whicl1 , ' eo,i the root8 of th ®

ible that he should so far presume upon hair are not closed up.

the ignorance of the people as to bring The report as to the formation of a paint forward the antiquated subterfuge of trust is not a highly colored rumor after alL reasoning so often exploded in defense A rniver^ Beautitior -.IIarmlcs.. effective of the infant. and agreeable, Ayer's Hair Vigor has taken “Once or twice, says Mr. Harrison, high rank among toilet articles. This prepar“in our history the production of till ation causes thin, weak hair to become abunplates had been attempted, and the price ( i an t, strong, and healthy, and restores gray

obtained by the Welsh makers would h air to its original color,

have enabled our makers to produfe it

at a profit. But the Welsh makers at As a rule a man who has a mustache he can ' once cut prices to a point that drove the twist or whiskers he can Stroke is three times American beginners out of business, and as long making up his mind as one who hasn’t when this was accomplished again made . , ...» their own prices.” Mr. Harrison is in- A Rrest many V.ho try to act the prod,*, excusable m thus revamping this logic s<m " nd ,0 ° late ,hat thev ac,ed the calf ,n -

of Cronemeyer after it had been so tlior- 8lt * u<1, ouijhl}’ disproved in congressional de- ! : bates and had come to be so thoroughly

discredited by the people,

j The history of the price of imported tin plates for the past twenty-five years has been ganged strictly by the world's market price of iron and pig tin, which ingredients constitute the entire bulk of tin plates and 00 per cent, of their cost. Market reports show that in 1^72 pig tin was quoted at £T59 per ton. They I dropped to i'.VJ in lb'*. Philadelphia i pig iron in 1*7'.’ was $53 per ton, and I dropped to $13.50 per ton in 1*7*. The j corresponding prices of tin plates were , 2(is. per box in 1*7” and 12s. 1 l-2d. in 1*7*. a less per eentage decline than ! noted in the case of either iron or pigtin.

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ttincinnaii-1 ^ LouisviSie:

wall, such as hung highest ought to I show the highest readings, which, as a

' matter of fact, they did not.

j The young man, seeing the report- ! er's new discovery, made it convenient I to have business in another part of the | shop, and as for the customer, he was not mean enough to hit a man so mani1 festly down. As a matter of fact, the j young man had told the truth without 1 intending to do so. Nearly all the I thermometers in sight were too cheap to be good, as are most thermometers in domestic use. Nearly everybody by this time knows how thermometers arc made, but few realize how ditHcult : it is to make an accurate thermometer. I The domestic thermometer is a chronic | liar, because the tendency to untruth I is. as the doctors say, congenital. When . one does tell the truth within reasonable bounds the result is only a happy accident, but such a thermometer should be cherished. Nobody who seeks to know the temperature of anything with s.’icntific accuracy would use a domestic thermometer. Only the most carefully made scientific thermometers , really come near accuracy. The makers • ! of .urgeons’pocket thermometers, little things that cost four or five dollars, give up the question of accuracy in advance and (ell with each thermometer a sort of ed idavit as to the degree of its error. The be .t d ’mestie thermometer ought to co; within less than half a degree of the truth, but few people buy the ! best. The spirit thermometers, used in I the arctic regions, where mercury I freezes solid and gives up the task at

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Store Profit and Pleasnre for theMoney,and the One Cheap Price of Admission than Any Other Has Ever Even Dreamed of Daring to Ofl'er, and of which The Great Australian Dailies Thus Strongly Testify:

Yet this is the very period when, as the parties of high b. .unties assert, the Welsh makers put down the price of their plates in order to run American makers out. In a business sense the 1 Welsh manufacturers were making better profits in selling at 12s. 1 l-2d. in 1*7* than they «ere in selling for 23s. in 1*72, owing to the difference in the price

of raw material.

In ISS'i there was an advance in the , price of plates for the very reason of the enhanced cost of pig tin and iron. Pig iron had advanced to £41 in February, 1**3, while pig tin had advanced to £105 per ton. This increase in the raw ma-; terial sent up the price of tin plates

about 3s.

Since 1**0 the price of tin plates has gradually declined, until the increased duty was assured in duly. 1*90, when there was an advance of nearly $1 a box, caused by the rush of American buyers. If it was the policy of the Welsh makers to put down prices whenever there was an attempt on the part of Americans to start the business, why did they not lower the price during the first six months of 1*91, when, if newspaper reports could be lielieved, tin plate milP were starting up by the hundreds? Yet it was during this very period, owing to

n speculative demand for ’ -

the price was run up over $1 per box. If Mr. Harrison were a plain business man, would he pretend that tin- fluctuations in tin plates for the two periods mentioned above, and to which he refers in his letter of acceptance, were not the direct result of Huctuatious in the raw material of which they wore made? It lacks only a few days of two years since the McKinley law was enacted. The reports quoted by Mr. Harrison show that 18,346,719 pounds of tin ami terne plates have been produced. Of

this amount 9,107,129 pounds simply rooffing iron with a

No one doubts that Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy really cures Catarrh, whether the disease be recent or of long standing, because the makers of it clinch their faith in it w ith a i.iOO guarantee, which isn't a mere newspaper guarantee, but “on ca!!’’ in a moment. That moment is when you prove that its makers can't cure you. The reason for their faith is this; Dr. Sage's remedy ha proved itself the right cure for ninetp-niue out of one hundred cases of Catarrh in the Head, and the World's Dispensary Medical A-so- utioncan afford to take the risk of you being the one hundredth. The only question is are you willing te make the test, if the makers are willing to take the risk'? If so, the rest is easy. You pay yourdruggist SOcentsaud the trial begins. If you're wanting the $500 you’ll get some-

thing hotter—a cure.

, , , . ,1 1 Americnn reiiutation and the extensive p'romI an early stage of the pro; ceilings, an | j ses w qh which it came upon Australia. 3yd7r'!- | so delicate that they must be read with ncy Daily Telegraph,

eyeglass

It- : S-RSi’IMsIj-**' O'

'

r.ww i-a..!.J-;...,—:— , eyeglass from a distance lest the

PULLMAN SLEEPING C V-;i warn ’h created by the near approach

ELEGANT PARLOR C .\2\*S I <,f a lining being urge the alcohol up-

n J TR aiftio L’ V '•'jnfO’D' Ii - M • V ward. Even these, however, arc not to AL i n&iv.d Klll'i ' Voytfn uilltL’ | b - intrusted implicitly in their lowest Tickets Sold Ba The only absolule, y accu *

CheckPt <•«? '■ “‘■ir-tfit;’'JD I

The cream of the circus talent of the world.

Sydney Daily Star.

Undoubtealy the Sells Brothers have kept faith with the public. Sydney Daily Echo. It is a distinct pleasure to find in Sell United Shows an exhibition manifestly worthy its

jF"Get •tiair »»*» tiix . * 1-you war. -i j®. taor; fully ir ? iii*ri—nl! . Agents atOour'JY

navo cuem—*>r huu.om}.

NO PRAISE FROM MANAGERS.

Twenty shows in one, and each show a circus in itself, is too much of a revelation. Mel-

bourne Dally Standard.

If Messrs. Sells Brother’s mammoth circus is merely regarded as a stupendous advertisement for America, from which enterprising land they hail, or whether it is reparded as ; startling revelation in this class of entertain incut, in either case it must be pronounced i brilliant success. Melbourne Daily Age.

Ackno>\!e(|ocd

A Bridge of

(J reatest Empires!

\Y( nders

Pacific!

r:ite measurer of heat is the air therI m nv.-t r, ami by it all really good thorj mometers arc tested before they are sold

to a eonfiding public.

E 'Jhme.s^lxrksr, O. P. A. • 0h ! i-»s.>

Do yOU Know . Actors say It Is an l tuvrittou I.aw-Tho

That more ills result from an otl >« ,r

Unhealthy Liver than any! A writer in the New York Recorder ii. „,,G T»-irIirroctir>n Pnnqti 1 says: A pretty little actress said to me Other cause I ^ • * ■ ■ yesterday that she had made a great pation, I Icaaache, Biliousness,' ui , . (>ss a p, irt ]. ist season, with and Malaria usually attend it. j wlilch her predecessor hud <!i nc little Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator | or nothing. I asked her if her manager

is a veo-etable specific for Liver ! hadn’t congratulated her.

Disorders and their accompany - a( !' th:lt l 8nrt ot thing.” I in- i and nowhere e’lHe exhibited. Ever act ing evils. It Clires tnousancis u j r(>a w hy jas pictured, ever attraction as dewhy not be one of them ? Take I -Well, I 'suppose it’s because they are ! scribed, ever anticipation realized,

Dr.-Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. | afraid that we wm get great^Idea Of our own importance, and ask for | New ^ ce8 a f ar rare and costly more salary next season. 1 know that: fore ig n novelties, greet deeds of modit is an unwritten law among them noti ern times and ancient days, original to praise the artists at their faces. They | anc ] aatounding revelatio ns, heroes

iln it outside at times, but we; an( j h ero j ne8 0 f the arena find

As our new cruiser Columbia is a “terror of the seas,” it is to be expected that her adversaries will be seized with terror.

Electric Bitters.

] This remedy is becoming so well known and so popular as to need no special mention, j All whojhave used Electric Bitters sing the I same song of praise.—A purer medicine does I not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is ! claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and other utfect- ! ions caused by impure blood.—Will drive ; Malaria from the system and prevent as well ' as cure all Malarial fevers.—For^cure of Headache, Constipation and Indigestion try Electric Bitters—Entire satisfaction guaranteed | or money refunded.—Price 50 cts. and fl.00 per bottle at the drug stores of Albert Allen

and W. D. Tompkins, of Bainbridge.

I It makes no difference how ambitious a man | may be to excel; at this season he can endure

i being “thrown into the shade.”

| Rheumatism cured in a day.—“Mystic Cure” ' for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically ' cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the sysi tern is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease im-

plates, that mediately disappears. The first dose greatly

benefits, 75 cents. Sold by Albert Allen, druggist Greencastle, Ind. 3m20.

v 8 Oftey * u Limit.

Private hi mis in loan on long time in mim* to suit Lo\v» ht rale of intorest TVrins rciNinable. Xo delay

W ,s C<>x, Southard's block, 501 f Greencastle. Carriages, Carts, Phaetons.

A complete line of Surreys, Carriage^. Pluu-tons, Carts. Spring Wagwen* °ds, Farm Wagons, Harness, Whips,

mixture of 1 etc., of all varieties and qualities, and

lead and tin in tin* coating. During tin* time the American consumption of tin plates, according to the returns of the government, were something over 1,300.-

000,000.

j at all prices, can be found in my 'stock, and prices will be found as low as the lowest. Call and see, at north east corner of the public square, i 3ml3 ‘ John gawlby*

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. WTien she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.

in Two Great

Spanning the

So it appears that an indnstn which j High pul price paid for bides, pelts its pioinotoiv- promised wouM snppl\ alK j tallow l>v Viiuelt'iivv A Son. lltf

onr whole requirements within nine months has supplied less than 1 per' cent, of such requirements. Up to the 1 31st of March last it was shown that tin I plates bad been advanced to consumers, | through increased price of plates and duty paid thereon, $20,730,808.80. Add to this duty paid on importation for the last (iiianer of the fiscal year ending 1892, over $4,000,000, and we have a to- i tal outlay of nearly $25,000,000. The I only thing to be credited against this j enormous expenditure is the wages paid , to imported Welshmen for tinning this 13,646,719 pounds, which at twelve cents , per box, the established price, would j amount to $16,876.04 less than emht' , cents received to every $130 paid out. | Would Mr. Harrison, as manager of a business corporation not backed by a government bounty and organized under j the expectation and assurance that the | industry would be self-supporting in less i than nine months, felicitate himself in | realizing that after two years the indus- | try of which lie is the respimsibie head had ; cost the company $25,000,000, and that i

labor account of

Children Cry lor Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

A Thousand Allied and Exclusive Marvels, strange creatures, phenomenal performances, never seen before

Your Druggist will supply you. H u Fh KEYS’

Hr. Humph rev *’ Spoeillrs are scientifically mid urefully prepare 1 llcniedh**, used for years In

hi

.cmetl

and for ovei re swot s«.

t thirty yean Every single

Dy the I Specific I

5.

Every i

Mai cure for tne disease named,

y cun without druKKin^nurging or reducing ! • i- . 1 • ‘ I deed the Bo\erelf n

’ ©wefully !»reii private practice people wit i eiitii

a Hpecial cure for tlie UrTnev cun wltliout tii ...

t'lheByhleiniduliirM in fact mi

Men 1 V» « 1

HsrorrMi ;|*ai. sos. ennr;:na •«. Hi^ifevorSf Congestions, InfianmiatJ ms.* *110 ■ j \ : 3- Teelhiiiiii uollc, crying, Wakefulness .‘iS 4- l)i«» , r;iv , a* of Children or Adults .*25 7 Umiaks. < i>i . Ln iichitis .*2A g-Nenr iltfln, 'iootiiaelH*. Faceache .'2!i lleud lelics* Sick Headache, Vertigo., .'ib 10— Dyspep' i.t* I’iliousi.esH, (’oiistipatlou .‘25 11— Suppre^seil <>r Painful Periods .‘25 1*2 a i: ■ . eiiodl • dlo 13— Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness . .*25 14— Salt Ithetini* l'r}*pipc]as, Eruptions .‘25 15— HHeutiintism* Rheumatie Pains .‘25 10 -MnInrin, rhills. Fever and Ague. .*25 Ift-Cal nrrh. Influenza, Cold in the Head. .‘25 ‘in \\ hooping Cough . .*25 27—Kidney DlaenMrs .‘25 ©8 Nervous Dciiiiit) .100 30—I rinary Wenkness, Wetting Be<l .*25 IIOM’HHKVS* WITCH HAZEL OIL, ^ The IMIc Ointment.—Trini M/« 25 Cm.

Hold by Druggist*, or *cnt itosipnlil on receipt of price. I>r. Homphskys* Manual <144 pngM,) mailku mKK. ItllPHIt KYH'IED. CO., lIlAlUPIlUam Kt., HKWYORK.

SPECIFICS.

J. R. LEATHERMAN, PHVSHI4V mill SURD LON. OIBc. over Alisa’s Drug Store, Wrshington ffcroot.

may dn it musuic at times, mu \vc; anf ] heroines of the arena and race seldom hear of it if they do. 1 think j course, imperial and programme of they make a mistake, too, for to most; most thrilling races, every hippodro-

of us praise is like the breath of life in I matic. equestrian, aerial and athletic

our nostrils." I display possible to genius, daring and ••It is true to a certain extent," a physical perfection. The beauty, manager said, when asked about it, 1 grace and skill of every nation, pre‘•and we have full justification for it. i eminent lady chariotees and jockeys. This whole profession is made up of The most grotesque fun makers, seething ambitions, and the ambitions; beasts that do everything but talk ® . . .. , every living thing, feat, teature and all point in one direction-starring W e p ro< fu ction worthy ofassociation with have to keep them down, or we wouldn t .jjp g rea tcss of shows. Grandest amhave a stock player left. ' phitheatre ever erected, all wonder“We may like an artist over so much, j a | )( j under canvas, no room to spare

but if we oven hint it to him or her— i j, or common brutes and trashy fill-ups, only great tilings shown, more than with accent on the her—up go their a ]if e 0 f travel could reveal, lessons to benefit and charm the young, rare ideas and their salaries, and they are of knowledge made attractive to the child, Innocent Hilarity for the little no use to us. And don’t you worry ones, years of recreation in a day, profit and pleasure for all. The wise and about actors and actresses pining in good its strongest advocates, everywhere endorsed by Clergy, Press and ignorance of their own merits. If they people. More than could be told of in a volume. Whose one price is

make a ’hit’ they know it quicker than within the reach of all.

anybody else.’

Everybody Should See Its

Hi-nth Is Welcome.

‘•There was great pathos," says a missionary in Honolulu, “in a story I heard

from “a f visit' to Molokai. Tie suddenVv j G lOHOUS FITC M 01*111 llg H ()! 1 (1 U) 7 l *11 Yi\ < 10.

heard the joyous strains of a band | strike up in the leper settlement. I

‘What is It for?’ he asked. The answer Two Performances Daily, at 2 and 8 p. m. Doors Open One Hour

l °P er8 have J ust < ^ ec * * n ; Lowest Excursion Hates on all Railroads,

hospital. .

Notice

<>1 of i'ropertj.

1‘crNomil

the only asset was a

ceni'liad^paid^ut ^lOO^fn^eve^f * sixty e^cutor^oVufe'fas'jw?!! of^hfliHinV.^urtx! CPlltP received?— Congressman T. L. deceased, will oiler for - He at public outcry.

at the late residence of the testator, in Floyd

Bunting in The National Provisoner.

p

township, Putnam county. Indiana, on TUESDAY. OCTOBER 11th, 1892 All the personal property of said decedent not taken by the widow, consisting of household and kitchen furniture, beds and bedding, farming implements, horses, four two-year steers and other cattle, hogs, one buggy, hay in mow and stack, corn in the field, wheat in bin, and various other articles.

TE RMS.

Sums of five dollars and under, cash; over five dollars, a credit of ten months, the purchaser giving note with approved surety, waiving relief from valuation and appraisement laws, and drawing interest at six per cent, per annum after maturity. SaU t<> begin at 10 oVUu k a. in. NORMANDA KURTZ A* Sept. 14,1892. CORNELIUS 8. KURTZ, Mathias A: Hays, Attys. 8t22 Executors.

J. S. ROBERTS.

M. E. CHASTAIN.

Tin Manufacturer:—“Yousee if this extra tariff is put on we can give employment to 24,000 people in this country ui one year.” Uncle Sam:—“Yes, that is all very well, but you will have to import the labor to make this tin, and furthermore, this tariff that you want put on will increase the price of tin to the people so that it would be cheaper for me to pay each one of the 24,000 people $500 apiece —the entire country would save $3,000,000 by the operation.”

Heberts £ Chastain, Undertakers and H mbalmers COATSVILLE, IND.

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