Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1896 — Page 2

THE .INDIANAPOLIS' JOURNAL, jSUITD AY, HOVEI.IDEH 1, ISCO.

lilrhway or upon a railway. That Is the very b&ss upon which all things rest, and 3 venture to say here, in spite of the noisy declaration of thoso who advocate these doctrines, that no peoole in all this country aru no deeply interested in the preservation of the law and its duo and Arm exercise as the worklngmcn of this country. (Applause.) MAJESTY OF THE LAW. "See the state of these farmers living out hero in the country. policemen patrol the road in front of their houses; no watchmen eland guard while their families sleep. "What Is it that shields them? What is it that protects them and keeps the tramp, the vagabond and the thief away from them? It is the invisible, and awful, an 1 avenging presence, of the law. The sheriff is not with you. but he is here, and the courthouse is here with its Judge; the jail iu hero for criminal offenders, and the man who invades your country home, seizes your property or insults or outrages your family soon has the law on his track. In that fact your security rests. Can you afford to follow in the footstep of those who Kay that riot and incendiarism is anybody's right in this country? Can you afford in any degree to relax the law or make its enforcement slack? No, that flag tneans that every man is free to pursue his own course In life In search of happiness and prosperity, but he must not lay his hand upon another man In violence; he must not seize any man's property; he must exercise his rights in subordination to the rights of others. "What is the Chicago declaration? It rrows out of the sreat strike which took place in Chicago. Men have a right to quit work when they please and they have the right to work when they please, but no man has a right to compel any man to work and no man has a right to beat another man because1 he wants to work. Applaue.) At Chicago, following this strike and taking advantage of It the hoodlums find thr.gs and Anarchists of Chicago tore Up railroad tracks, burned cars, stoned trains that were passing In and out of the city, burned railroad stations, interrupted communication between State and State. ttoppd th mall of the United States. Mr. Cleveland, as President of the United States, had a sworn duty to see that the mall routes were not interrupted. "It may 1k that there run from Auburn a two-wheeled gig. with a little peny in It, to tarry th mall to some country neighborhood. The man who drives that K'n' carrying the mail sack of the United Htatea j$ under the protection of that Hag. 2So man can Interrupt him. If he does it Is a law of the United States that is broken. It l the federal courts that takes held upon him. and not the State courts. fc"o our great railways are all made post roads, and whoever stops the mail on a railroad train or stops the train in which the mall l usually carried, violates the Jaws cf the United States, not the laws of that particular mrt of the State. So the United State have exclusive control Cf commerce between the States. If Ohi: vculd tax the whpat of Indiana as it passes through. la j-any burden upon it, you would be shut out from tidewater. Therefore, v.'hen thl commerce is interrupted it is the Vnited States law that is broken, not a tState lav. This was done, as I have said, at Chicago, and Mr. Cleveland, exercising 1.1 plain constitutional duty with just as little show of fore as possible, with as much humanity u. possible, used th force of the United States to push these obstructs ns out of the way of the mail trains and out of the way of interstate commerce, and all loyal and law-abiding people of this country approval it. "Farmeis of DMva'b coipt can you PfXnnl tn say that mobs shall control and that the President fliall not enforce the lav..' The action of the lresldent was apTrovd by Democrats and Ilenublicans and y tiie leading newspapers of the country of all politics and by the Senate and House of Representatives at Washington. Senator John W. Daniel, who presided over the Chicago convention, introduced a resolution commending what Mr. Cleveland bad done, find no man. no Populist, no Democrat, no 2iepublican. not even Pfeffer, of Kansas, dared to vote 'no' on that resolution. (Applause.) "Hut times changed. Governor Altgeld, of Illinois, who had denounced Mr. Cleveland's action as an impertinent and violent Interference with the rights of Illinois Governor Altgeld and his followers got hold of what" they called the Democratic convention at Chicago, wrested it from the control of those old Democratic leaders you have trusted, denounced your Democratic President and proclaimed that the President cf the United States had no right to execute the laws of the United States: that he must come and ask Governor Altgeld's consent. - NOT A QUESTION OF POLITICS. "It Is not a question of politics; It is not a question of varlffs or free silver; it is not one of those questions that have divided the parties; it is a question that rallies the patriotic thought and interest of every man, whether he is a Democrat or Republican. (Applause.) In 1561. when this issue was made before, all over this State, all over the North, the loyal Democrats put aside their politics to keep until the war

was over. Hons that raised, all (Applause.) There are mdlcanow, when this issue is again, through the States Democrats are laying politics by to reassert the docthe 'resident of the United trine that mates can enforce the laws without ask ing anybody's consent. The veterans who marched under the lead of Jackson and Lee asd Longstreet, and the Governors of Hovdhern States, like Virginia and MissisFlx il, declared when this Incident at Chioaro occurred: Let the United States enforce its laws; the South stands with you.' 11 through the South gallant Confederates have arrayed themselves against Mr. Itryan end Mr. Altgeld and their dangerous Chicago proposition. (Applause.) Jf that flag Is so meaningless, if the government for which it stands is so powerless that it may rot execute is own laws without bending i . suppliant knee to th Governor or a State, then let us have no flag days, for we have surrendered what they typify. (Applause.) "The. Democratic campaign I call it so locause the Chicago convention, while un- . democratic, has stolen the label seems to proceed upon the theory that the farmers of this country are all anxious to pay their honest debts in iiO-cent dollars, and so they tire always paying that whll in the cities nnd towns the business men this year are with the Republicans, that out on tho farms we will find the farmers are the other way. That undervalues the American farmer. He Is a, reading man. a thinking men, and he is an honest man. lApplause.) You forget these things which you talk in this way to him. my Democratic friends. He knows that times are evil and that he is not getting adequate prices for his wheat ami corn, but he Knows that the government of the United States cannot fix the price at which he nells his wheat and corn. He knows that Just now the appreciation in the value of wheat comes from a. natural cause. He knows that a cheap and fluctuating dollar Is his enemy. We know that right well In Indiana because we have had a good deal of experience with that kind of money. 2tfany of my older friends here recall the Tree bank times in Indiana when we had dollar bills that varied in value from 10 cents to a dollar very few of them worth a. dollar and that fluctuated from day to clay. The man who sold something on his farm either had to hitch up his buggy at once and use a fast trotter to get into town with his money and put it in bank or run the risk, if he kept it until next day. of having It go down on his hands. The merchants In Indianapolis aDolutely deposited Jn the bank three or four times a day for Tear their money would go down in an hour. SHOUT LEG AND NO CRUTCH. "The Democrats suid In their platform of IK that a deprecia:ed dollar was destructive to the interest of business, and that It was especially destructlvo to the interest of tho worklngrnan and the faimer. You know that is true, ray Democratic friends, because you said so in your platform, and you cheered that doctrine four years ago. We are to have a 16-to-l dollar, and that dollar is to be left to itself. Nobody is to give It a helping hand. It will be a short leg and it will not be allowed to have .a. cane or use a crutch. The government is holding up tho silver dollars we 'navo now, but Mr. Bryan and his friend3 ;ay that support must bo knocked from - under the dollar; it must go alone; and when it goes it alone it will be worth what tho bullion In It is -worth. How much Is that? A little less than 1U cents the othor day; it may be a little more to-morrow. It is a dollar that will bo going up and down. "How are you to be helped by it. my farmer friends? Suppose you appear to be getting, instead of W cents a bushel for wheat I1.G0. paid in these CO-cent dollars. When you come in here to the store to buy something for your family, you will find that the storekeeper has marked up his goods, so that your $2 won't buy one cuncc moro or one Inch more than your fl did. What is to follow this change? Some of the wisest of the double-standard men have admitted, end if they did not admit it. we would luiow it was so, that the first effect of free coinage of silver at IS to 1 would be a f anlc that would sweep this country with he destructive force of a Kansas cj-clone. Just stop to think of it. Can you change the condition of your money? Can you reduce evtry pension, every promissory note. vry bond to one-half its present value? Can you chanso the whole basis of comn:rco cnl trada from a c&li tasia to a

silver basis? Can you do all this without bringing, at least for a time, a financial convulsion that will wreck everything? "My farmer friends, you have got to have somebody working in the shop to eat your wheat. ou cannot sell it to the farmer that is next to you; he does not want It. These factories consume it; these merchants In town consume it, and if you Induce a panic you close these factories and you throw these men out of work; you destroy their capacity to buy your breadstuff. If Rryan should be elected next Tuesday, if such a calamity should happen, every man who owes a debt that is due could expect a complaint to be tiled in tbe courthouse and a summons sent out next day. Men will say. I will collect this money before Mr. Rryan can put his free-silver dollars out; I will squeeze my debtor and make him pay it.' "As we maintained the authority and dignity of this flag in tho enforcement of national laws, may I not appeal to you, men cf all parties. In an fpsue like this, to preserve unsullied the financial honor of this country, and the flag we iove." A run of a few minutes brought tho train to Waterloo, five miles further on, where a crowd of 2,500 f aimers' had gathered, and General Harrison has had no more enthusiastic audience than this one. He was taken to a stand about a square from the station and was given a wildly enthusiastic ovation upon his appearance. He was introduced by R. M. Lockhart, and spoke about fifteen minutes, giving his attention to the best method of recovering the prosperity the people had lost four years ago. IX .ODLF. dOtX TV.

Talks to Goodly Crowds at Kendallville and Llsonler. Another brief run brought the party to Kendallville, where a dense crowd of about live thousand had packed themselves about a stand erected a few yards from the station. The Republicans of Noble county had prepared for an all-day rally and had Just finished with a parade something over a mile long. In the crowd was a big soundmoney club of Lake Shore employes with a number of original transparencies. Gen. Harrison was escorted to the stand by the reception committee, who had boarded the train at Waterloo, and was received with prolonged cheering. He was introduced by A. J. Graves and spoke as follows: "My Fe.lew-cltlzens We are near the close of this great campaign, and it looks as If we were going to have Republican weather very ciear and sunshiny, but a itt. snappy. We have had a great deal of talk, a great deal of reading, a great deal of thinking. We have had some very crooked talk and some very crooked thinking. Rut. my friends, these Issues are not hard; you may be drawn off Into remote speculations, but tho proposition of the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 is sirnpy a proposition to make half dollars dollars that Is, to call them dollars rather than to make them dollars; because calling things don't make them so. That Is the trouble with our -ilver friends. When you write in the law that 1G ounces of silver is equal to one ounce of gold, it does not make It so. The value of things is always regulated in tho market. If you want to know what wheat is worth you go to the man who is buying it; you look at the market quotations; you don't go to the revised statutes. If the revised statutes said that wheat was worth a dollar a bushel you would not put any faith in It. It is precisely so with silver and gold; they are commodities and the marnet deals in them. Silver is sold as bullion; gold Is sold as bullion; and what an ounce of either Is worth depends upon what a man will glvo for it. I do not deny that when a government gives a legal-tender quality to anything It gives It a value; that it gives it tome more value than ft had before; but it can't give it a fixed value or any particular value. So that after all the Intrinsic value of a thing, the market value of It, is the only thing you can depend upon when you want to know what anything is worth. "Mr. Bryan says it is unpatriotic to talk about asking a co-operation of other nations in the coinage of silver; he says 'We whipped the British at Yorktown and we adopted a Declaration of Independence,' and, having done that, wants to know why we can't do the other thing. We can give a legal-tender quality to money, but we ean't give it a lixed value. If Ungland should give sliver a legal-tender qualltv it would help some and if the nations of Europe were to give it a legal-tender quality It would tend to keep it up. I do not know whether all combined we ?ould keep it up, but certainly the more that tried to keep it up the more likely we would be to succeed. This government can say that a silver dollar of 412: grains is a legal tender, but It cannot say how much the storekeeper shall give you for it in tho way of goods. What wo all want Is a dollar that will buy just as much at the store ; s the law says it ought to 100 cents' worth that will be the same thing all the year around; that will not go up and go down. If you have a dollar that is see-sawing up and down somebody gets caught with it every time It is passed. We contend, therefore, that we had better keep our present system of using a very large amount of silver, about four hundred millions, supported by the government's pledge to keep it as good as gold; and. In connection with it, six hundred millions of go'.d. That is better than to adopt free silver and drive the gold out of use and have free silver that is worth about half as much as the dollar we have now. What would be the effect? You would have to readjust the business of the country; every storekeeper would have to change the marks on his goods; evry manufacturer would have to do the same; everybody would have to put himself on a new business basis. "If Mr. Bryan were elected on Tuesday and the country believed that wo might have free coinage of silver, every creditor to whom a debt was due would insist upon the payment of It before v.e got these cheap dollars: and If the debt were not paid he woul 1 go to the courthouse ami send the sheriff. And If the man who owed the debt attempted to borrow from the bank he would be refused. The banker would say: I can't afford to let vou have good money and take the risk of getting cheap money in return.' The whole commercial credit of the country would be gone. Business would stand Jn anxious expectation and dtead. There would be a universal panic throughout this country. Tho man who Is running a factory would shut down; the man who is in business would curtail his business; the man who has money would lock it up. Will you accept tho Invitation to put this Nation upon a plane of dishonor: to sav that sh hall pay her bonds, which are held by people who have honestly invested in them and paid for them in good money, in fifty-cent dollars? "But whatever you may think of th silver question. I arpeal to my Republican friends; I appeal to my patriotic friends, can you afford to elect a man who btands upon a platform declaring that if another Chicago riot interrupts your communication with that city and subjects you and your family as you attempt to enter It to the risk of having the train thrown from the track, that he would leave the management of that affair to Governor Altgeld? Can you afford to elect a man who. if the mails were obstructed, would not think it was his business to open a way for them and who would say that It was a State affair? My friends, that old doctrine was put to sleep forever when Leo surrendered to Grant. I do not believe that our Democratic friends aro going to stand It." Speech at Llsonler. At LIgonler, the next stop, tho arrival of tho train was greeted with loud cheering from tho crowd of about four thousand people packed about the station. A decorated stand had been erected to tho leeward of the depot, and thither General Harrison was conducted by the reception committee which had boarded his car at Kendallville, and was introduced by Mr. Huffman, lie was received with enthusiastic cheering and talked about fifteen minutes, declaring that tho victory was already won. Tho Bryan people were basing their hopes of success, ho said, upon two propositions, one that the farmers were fooled with the notion that free silver would help them to get something for nothing and the other that the worklngmen intended to go to the booth and vote directly against what they have been declaring they intended to do. His speech. In part, follows: "My Friends It is pretty near over, and it is all right. Applause.) There are three States In tho Kast that the Democrats have always fought for and almost always won in national campaigns that are Just as certain to go for William McKinley and Garret A. Hobart next Tuesday as Massachusetts. They have practically abandoned the campaljrn there. They seem to think that the Yankees are too smart to be fooled by their cheap-money tricks, and so they have withdrawn their agents and are centering their efforts on tho West, where they think we aro not quite so smart. But they will know us better after next Tuesday. "They are making tho campaign upon the proposition that tho farmers of this country are a class that can be fooled; that they are a class of men who are somewhat In debt, and that want to pt.y their debts in cheap dollars. That -is one rf their propositions, and tho basis of ono of their expressed hopes. The other is that th wcrlnjman b ccirj to pretend to t3

for McKinley until be goes Into tho voting booth, and then he is going to vote for Bryan. These arc the two stones on which they build their structure of success. They will be deceived. The American farmer is an intelligent man. He reads and thinks, and he is an honest man. He wants to pay his debts in full. He wants to be known as an honest man. and not as a cheat. The worklngrnan is a man, and nobody can pin a false button on his breast. (Applause.) "The truth is. they arc using this talk of coeroion much as the bad boy of the playground sometimes plays upon the conscience of his little playfellow. He wants hlra to do something wrong, and the llttlo fellow says no. and the smart bad boy says: You don't dare to. You are afraid of your mother.' Sometimes the honest little boy that has the fear and honor of his mother in his heart is betrayed from the right by this sort of coercion. That is the kind of coercion Mr. Bryan is telling him: 'You have to vote that way; you are coerced.' He gives him strange advice to come from a man who wants to succeed the hero of the little hatchet and tho cherry tree, to wear a He and walk a lie through the campaign and then vote for Bryan. "Now, my friends. I do not wish to speak with disrespect of any man that any party names for tho presidency, but I cannot refrain from saying that such advico is dishonoring to the men to whom it is given, and is not calculated to reflect honor on or increase our confidence in the man who gives it. We fear such a man because we are afraid that he may act upon his own teachings." THRONG OF PEOPLE.

Greatest Demonstration Goshen Has Ever Known-Gen. Harrison's Speech. Goshen was reached at 1 o'clock, and here a crowd of fully 20,000 was encountered. Great prepara. ms had been made for the event by the Republican managers, and when the train arrived they were Just fin ishing a parade with something over 6.000 men in line. A banner had been offered for the largest township delegation, and thus a careful count had been kept. The proces sion contained a representation from every factory in Goshen, a big delegation rrom every township in the county and the usual long lines of cavalry, decorated floats filled with girls, uniformed clubs and bands. An elaborately decorated stand had been erected at the courthouse square, and thl the-- General Harrison and party were taken in carriages, escorted by a section of the parade through the streets crowded with cheering multitudes. The Ex-Presi dent was given a great ovation when ho appeared upon the stand, and was intro duced by W. II. A. Davis. People of Oof hen declare that it was the greatest political demonstration the city had ever seen. They made their comparisons with the visit of Blaine in 1SS4, and said that the Harrison demonstration was far larger. The decorations were so elaborate and so tasteful as to attract attention trom tne members of the party who have become very much accustomed to elaborate decor ations during these journeys. mo resi dences and business blocks seemed covered with bunting in the national colors, and for three or four blocks along tho main street bunting had been stretched across . the street from the trolley poles at the sides, and these streamers, together with the Hags, made it look as though the whole street were festooned. General Harrison spoke as follows: "My Fellow-citizens I fear It will be impossible for me to make myself heard b any considerable part of this great audience; speaking here in the wind without anv adequate shelter from it, my voice cannot be of great power. It has already been overtaxed, but I will give you what is left of It for a few minutes. (Cheers.) "It has done my soul good to see upon this trip the magnificent Interest and enthusiasm of the Republicans of northern Indiana. I have never permitted myself to doubt, since the Chicago convention issued its platform and named its candidate?, that tho intelligence, patriotism and Integrity of our people would reject tho platform and reject tho candidates. (Cries 'You bet we will.') I have seen in the East, during some weeks' sojourn there, almost the entire body of leading Democrats, men who had conducted the campaigns of the party, who had been its advisers, turning away from the Chicago platform and Its candidates, and declaring that the platform did not .nnnniiitik lipmneratlc nrinclnles and that the candidates vcre not well avouched Democrats. 1 saw the entire great newspaper press of the East Democratic newspapers like Charles Dana's New York Sun. and the New York World and the Times, and all the great leating Democratic newspapers of the East turning their backs on the platform and on the candidates, and declaring that their success would be hostile to the best interests of the country. I saw the great Democratic States of the East practiealy abandened by the Democracy, for New York, Connecticut and New Jersey will just as certainly vote for McKinley as Massachusetts (cries of 'So will Indiana!') and by majorities that have never been known in the history of those States. I found that after two attempts on the part of Mr. Bryan to call the Democracy to his support in New York, that only Tammany and Tammany only in partseemed to be left to rally about him. They seemed to have concluded that the fo'ks in the East are too smart to be caught, and they have since been putting out traps in the West, apparently thinking that our people could be' caught by these heresies which were so properly rejected by Democrats in the East. INDIANA'S FUSION TICKET. "I have great sympathy for an Indiana Democrat. I always respected a Democrat who he'.d his convictions and his party allegiance strongly and yet kindly. I always had a measure of respect for a Democrat who wanted to take things straight his politics and other tilings (laughter and cheers); and I am sadly distressed for him this year in Indiana, because, whllo ho can tako tho other things straight, ho cannot take his politics straight. (Laughter and applause.) No Democrat in Indiana can vote a straight Democratic ticket the stralghtest one I know of is Palmer and Buckncr but tho other one how have your trading managers arranged that? You met in Democratic convention and you nominated fifteen Democratic electors to support Bryan and Sewall. Your totate committee, without the authority of any convention, without your consent, has pulled off five Democratic electors and put ou five Populists; so that if you vote that ticket this fall your vote is five-fifteenths Populist and ten-fifteenth- Democratic; that is a mixed drink (laughter and applause); and there are a great many straight old Democrats in Indiana that don't like it and won't drink it. (Applause.) They are not Populists; they are not fivefifteenths Popoullst: they are not Popoullsts at all; they are Democrats and will vote the party ticket when the party gives them a party ticket but this one Is mixed. Why. five of those electors, if they are chosen, will vote for Bryan and Watson, and ten of them will vote for Bryan and Sewall in tho Electoral College. And if they get enough votes, by trading with you Democrats, in the Electoral College, to hold the balance of power, they will compel you to choose Tom Watson, of Georgia, for your Vice President: and I don't believe there is a real Democrat in Indiana that wants Tom Watson for Ice President (Cries of 'No! Never!') not one. I am only expressing my compassion, my sympathy. I will nt undertake to give you advice further than to say that if you like straight goods vote the Republican ticket. (Applause.) I don't think the Chicago platform will be approved by the peoplo of Indiana. (Cries of 'Never!') "Four years ago thj Democrats were preaching a gospel of cheapness; they said you ought to have a cheaper hat and a cheaper coat, and that the Republican policy was taxing you by keeping up prices. I think you were tolerably prosperous at that time. I think you would like to swap back. (Cries of You bet!') I think you would like to have the Republican policies in force, for I beg to fay now, responding to what your presiding officer has said, that it was not Harrison, but It was the good wholesome policies of the Republican party that brought prosperity (cheers): and you would like to get them back; at least you would like to get back where you were, recauso times are evil. (Cries of V.e aro going back!') And. as I have said very often and I say it again, because it puts the thing as well as I know how to put it that if you have lost something and you want it very much, and you Know where you lost It, I think you nad better go back to where you lost it, for you will be apt to find it there. (Applause.) Mr. Bryan says: No;' he says, 'our policy of cheapness worked too thoroughly; we did get the farmer a cheap coat, but there came with It the cheapest wheat he ever sold, and he didn't like It (Applause) we did get the worklngrnan a cheap coat and hat when he didn't have any work to do; and now we want to adopt another remedy His advice Is. Instead of going back where you lost your prosperity to find it. he says, never mind about that. I think I know where some of Captain Kld'i treasures are buried over in the woods; let us go look for them.' (Laughter and applause.) His plan to make high prices Is to cut the dollar In two; so if you are now worth thousand

dollars, by calling a half dollar a dollar you will bo worth two thousand. You will get rich very fast that way. . A FALSE POLICY. "I do not like that policy, for several reasons: First, because I do not like anything or anybody that pretends to be what it is not. J like a dollar to be a dollar and a man to be what he pretends to be to wear the button that his heart approves, and not a 'also button. (Cries of 'Good! 'Good!' and cheers.) I don't like it because a fluctuating dollar, what they call a cheap dellar. Is a cheat. It Is not what it pretends to be. but it cheats the men that handle it and the men to whom it is paid lor wages or for produce. That is why I don't like it. Four years ago, my Democratic friends, you aid the same thing In ycur Chicago platform the dollars must be kept equal, must be real dollars as well as pretended dollars, dollars that have value in them. You know that Congtess can't 11 tho price cf anything. Which one of you farmers would ever think of going to Congress and asking them to pass a law to put wheat at a dollar and a quarter? You would say that is foolish. The law can't put it up; It Is the demand for it that puts it up; it is more people to eat Jt; it Is the failure of crops somewhere that puts it up. but the law cannot put it up. If you want to know what wheat is worth you don't go to your lawyer's office to inquire, you go down to the elevator and ask what it is worth. You find it in tho market reports and not in the law books. And just so if we are fixing the relative value of silver and gold; the government cannot make silver worth so much. If it uses a double standard it must use silver for what it is worth in the market and gold for what it Is worth. "Now, I do not deny that the legal-tender quality gives a certain value to the thing that is made legal tender. During the war greenbacks were a legal tender, but they went down below forty cents on the dollar. You could pey debts with them at a dollar, but if you went to the store to buy they brought just as much as forty cents' worth of gold would buy, and no more. You can make it a legal tender, but you can't givs it a fixed value. It goes up and down, and It is very apt to go down while the farmer has it. Not only that, but it is not honest for us to do it. What will it bring about? I ask you to think of this. "Suppose Bryan were electe l next Tuesday and this country were told we were going to have silver coined freely at the ratio of 16 to 1. My friend here has loaned his neighbor a thousand dollars, and Jt is past due. but he has not been wanting tho money, and he has been waiting on his friend and taking the Interest; what will he do? He will say: 'I had better call that money in while I can get as good money as I loaned; if I let that lay over I might have to take fifty-cent dollars for it.' And he says to the m?n that owes him, 'Pay what thou owest;' and he says. 'I can't.' 'Very well, I will send the sheriff after you pnd I will take vour farm.' But you say, 'Wait, I will go to the Goshen bank there and borrow $1,000;' and you come to the banker and he sajs, No; these are good dollars I have got; the probability is we are going to have fifty-cent dollars, and I .won't lend good dollars to be paid back in fifty-cent dollars' and no man will lend you any money. Money will be hoarded: put away in the vaults; gold will be put there and everything will stand on the tiptoe of dread awaiting to see what comes out of this thing. Business will be paralyzed; merchants who have borrowed money can borrow it no more; the sheriff will tako their stock; and panic, universal and allpervading, will go through this land before you can get free si'ver. That is to be the effect of It, and I warn you. my countrymen, as one having no possible interest in this thing except tho interest of an American who loves his country's honor and his country's flag I warn you. whether Democrats or Republicans, not to step over this fearful precipice. (Cheers.) ALTGLD'S DOCTRINE. "And then they say at Chicago that the President cannot enforce the laws of the United States without asking the consent of the Governors. (Laughter.) There was a great riot there; incendiaries, thugs, men of violence, tore up tracks, burned cars, stopped interstate commerce, stoned the passenger trains upon which women and children were journeying from State to State it wa3 interstato commerce the Constitution puts that in the care of the general government; the mails were stopped that is in the care of the general government, and because Mr. Cleveland used the powers of the general government to enforce the laws of the general government Governor Altgeld. of Illinois, whose sympathy with Anarchists has been so much charged and suspected protested that the President of: the United States was violating the State rights of Illinois when he did it. "No. my countrymen. Democrat and Republican, my comrado in war, my patriotic Indiana friends who arrayed themselves in the great part this State had in establishing Lincoln's doctrine, that the laws of the United States were to be enforced by the President in every State, not only without asking tho consent, but over the opposition of a Governor (cries of 'That Is right: that is what we fought for!' and cheers) wo cannot submit to it. Everv workingman, and especially every railroad man, is interested that 'the government's control of this interstate commerce should bo asserted and maintained. This beneficent legislation, which I used my utmost power as President to procure, that has put the safety appliances on your . freight trains, the air-brake and the automatic coupler to save, the lives and limbs of these brave fellows who operate the trains how would that have been possible If the United States had not had Jurisdiction over these trains? You would have had to go to the legislatures of forty-live States to accomplish that. This control shou'.d be kindly and yet forceful In exercise so you may safely go on a Journey from one State to another; so you may safely send your property without danger of tribute or interruption from here to the seaboard. "My eountrymen. Indfananians. Repub

licans, Democrats, will you consent that good old Andrew Jackson, who said the Union should be preserved, and threatened South Carolina nulllficators with the halter; and Abraham Lincoln who, supported by the boys in blue, put down once and forever the doctrine of state's rights when these doctrines crossed the national authoritywill you consent that a man shall be your president who professes that In such a case he would bend his kneo to Governoi Altgeld, instead of exercising his own conFtltutlonal power?" (Cries of "No! N'ol" and cheers.) "WAR31TH AT WARSAW. Republican off Kosciusko Extend a Hearty Welcome to llarrinon. "Wasaw, county seat of Kosciusko, famous for its big Republican majorities, was reached half an hour late, and here another big demonstration was encountered, with a crowd of 13,000 people. In the morning they had a big parade three miles long, which required forty-five minutes to pass tho Times office. Thcro were 2,500 in line, with nine bands, five marching clubs, two companies of cavalry and fifty-five floats filled with pretty girls. The beautiful little city was never so handsomely decorated, and the Bryan pictures, if there ever were any in this Republican stronghold, had been retired for the day. General Harrison was driven to the courthouse, where ho was given a tremendous ovation upon his arrival. Ho was introduced by. II. S. Rlggs, and spoke foi twenty minutes. 11c said in part: "My Fellow-citizens Tho campaign of debate is about over. It has been a thor ough campaign. Perhaps never before in our campaigns have tne people been so abundantly supplied with tne opportunity of informing tnemselves upon puudc questions. Our Democratic irienas are in a good deal of trouble. As I have said be lore, they have a habit of taking things straight, and they are in great difficulty this year to know how to do it. They have two tickets in the field, each of which claims to be pure and to be true Simon pure Democracy. The Chicago convention assembled under the call of the national committee of the party: and in thi3 State the Democratic State convention assembled under the call of your State committee. At Chicago you nominated Bryan ana bewail. Again at St. Ixuis a Populist convention nominated Rryan and Watson. At Indian apolis the sound-money Democrats nominated Palmer and Buckncr. So that there was a good deal of contusion; but that did not end It. After your Democratic State convention had put ia nomination fifteen Democrats as electors for the .state of Jn dlana to vote in the1 Electoral College for Bryan and Sewall. your State central com mittee, without any authority, pulled off ive or those Democratic electors ana put nn five Populists; so that the ticket that Is presented to you for your cnoice nej Tuesday Is not a Democratic ticket. "The other day. I listened to a good old Democrat, who always voted straight, and he said: 'I want to vote straight this time, and'I wish somebody would tell me how I can do It. I am not a .populist; i am a Democrat, and I don't want to vote for Populists. They have mixed this ticket so thu if I stamp the square up by the rooster I shall be voting fon five Populists, and I am not going to do it. They have a right to ask cj to vote the straight Demccratlc ticket, but they have no light to nk me to take a mixture like tnat. tin the other hand, we1 Republicans have no trouble; ihicj are etraisht trttii ca. wo

have fifteen RepulO'can electors and we have only one can ,ate for Vice President. 1 take it that there is not a Democrat in Indiana who wants to vote for Tom Watson for Vie President. Think of it! Think of putting Watson in a position where he might become President of the Lulled States! . , "Rut not only Is your ticket mixed as to candidates. You have adopted mixed Democratic and Populist doctrines in your platform. I want to know if these good old. patriotic Democrats who stood by the country in 1S01, who laid their politics aside to keep till the war was over, arc going to .1,1., tlmo try f:l llllifl.l te WllO 111-

i.ic litis inuc v - V At dorses a platform that declares that the President of the United States must a.-k the consent of Governor Altgeld. of Illinois, before he opene the way for the mall trains of the United States? Many Democrats have spoken out upon that question in Indiana. Thev have said, 'It is not Democratic doctrine: It was not the doctrine or Andrew Jackson, who threatened with the v . i... u.. in -viitli Carolina who re sisted the laws of the United States: it is not good, patriotic doctrine, unu ve wm t n with this vounc man from Nebraska who is pledged, if he is elected President, to numoie me nauuuai authority before the State powers before he executes his duty as President to enforce the laws of the United States. . . .rr i - i nr o T-i Viia H1 11 tl fill Mil fl ner that we have enshrined in our hearts floats to-day over every patriotic uuuic. t nnmahinir' it mo.-intt th Ktinrem11 UiciUis suiucuiiii&i - r acy of tho national government in all national arrairs. isy me giunuus wcuwj . v. v.nr.- nhnnt It Vv the ciorious ViCtories for truth and popular rights which have been acnievea unuer it u (n.H,iv that no man who does not believe in the powers of the na- . a. i it 1 I In. tional government snan ever u.v.ccu ccln." IX DE3IOCRATIC WHITLEY. Jam off 12,000 People at Columbia City and a Btsr Parade. A swift run of a mile a minute brought the nartv to Columbia City, and It a tre mendous crowd, unbounded enthusiasm and such other rurface indications as an ab sence of Bryan badges count for anything the Republicans are likely to make good their claim that they will carry this Dem ocratic stronghold, even though it be a purely agricultural county. There were about 12,000 people there, three times the population of the town, and they had a procession in the morning that went ahead of anything they had ever seen before in Whitley county. It was much like the other agricultural parades, with plenty of cavalry troops and floats and martial music enough to last a year. General Harrison was driven from the station to the courthouse square, where hi3 carriage was caught in the dense jam of people and extricated with much difficulty. He waS given a rousing welcome upon his appearance, and his speech was warmly cheered. Ho said: "JIv Fellow-citizens I will address some of you, a few of you, for it is quite impossi ble with my voice broken by some twenty speeches since I left home yesterday morning, to reach tho outskirts of this vast meeting ono or the very greatest tnat i. have seen on this trip. "We hear a great deal of talk about mon ey. The most important tiling is tnat you should have confidence in your money ana that your money should have confidence in you. A great deal has been said about gold being cowardly money. Everything that Is worth anything is a little scary. It Is the wife and baby that you look after when the house is on fire; not the cookstove. Gold is scary when it is proposed to put in use with it anotner money tnat is not so good. You will never get a money that is not scary till you get a money that is not good for anything. I said that it was necessary that money should have confidence In you. If it has not nobody will lend it to you. The man who has it must have confidence that he will get it back and that he will get back just as good money as ho loaned. If he has not he will noi lend ou any; he will lock it up till better times come. "What Is it that has caused financial, panic? Mr. Bryan has been calling attention to the fact that within the last few days money on call in New York has been J'0 per cent. Who was it that was paying 100 per cent, for money? It was not tho merchant; he was getting accommodations in bank at 6 or 7 per cent. Mr. Bryan's sympathy has been excited in behalf of the very men ho has been generally denouncing. It was the stock broker in Wall street who had bouerht stocks on margins and whose stocks had gone down, and who had to put up margins for a few days till the market turned; and he had to pay what anybody demanded for money. Why was it that mnjiey was not easy? Because of a lack of confidence; because of Mr. Bryan's campaign: because of the Chicago platform; because people who have good money fear that if these theories are carried out, if the put their money out now, it will be paid back to them in cheaper money. That is what makes the trouble. I put it to any man who hears me, if he has accumulated by industry and care a little money, whether he Is going to lend It and take the risk of being paid back in fifty-cent dollars? We mujt let everybody know that we do not Intend to depreciate and degrade the currency of our country, and then everybody will be grlad to put his money to work and to put it out at fair rates of Interest. THE 16 TO 1 FRAUD. "They want to coin silver freely at the ratio of 16 to 1; and why 1G to 1? If the government can make the 16 ounces that are now worth about half an ounce of gold worth a full ounce of gold, why can it not make ten ounces of silver worth an ounce of gold? Why waste six ounces? But the government cannot fix this value; It must take its value as it finds it in the market; and if it expects two dollars to circulate freely with each other, one must bo worth as much as the other. If it is not one will get scare-d; It always has. When we had greenbacks that were worth 40 cents on the dollar, gold and silver both got scared and nobody saw anything of them. Wo had the cheup money and nothing els: and so it will be if we coin shver and gold freely at a wrong tatlo. We will have silver, but no gold. Wc will not. until people are ready to pay a dollar for a thing that they can get for 60 cents. The truth is that money has its rode of morals. A good money will not associate with bad money; it never has. "What will be the flrt effect of free coinage? I want my thoughtful friends here to-day to think of this and see if I am not right in saying that it will require all the business of this country to be put upon a new basis. The storekeeper would have to change the mark on his gcods to correspond with the dollars that he is going to be paid in. Every manufacturer would take it into account. Nobody would know Jtiit what was going to happen. Making silver a legal tender would add some value to it. but no man could tell hew much it would add; so that no man would know what to do. If you wero trading you would say: I will stop; I will wait till this thing shows itself, until I see what is going to happen. The manufacturer would sav: 'I will shut down my factory.' The storekeeper would say: 'I will not buy much of anything.' Every man would stop and wait to see how this experiment that Mr. Bryan suggests was going to turn out. Every man who had money coming to him would press his debtor for payment. "If you had money out and you were afraid of a change that would give you back depreciated money, wouldn't you try to get it in as quick as you could? Suppose the man who i3 pressed for money says i will go to the banker and sec if l can get it.' The banker woild say, No. sir, these are hundred-cent dollars I have and it looks as if there was going to be a change and I won't lend you my monev till I find out what is going to happen.' You say, 'I will promise to pay you back tho same kind of money.' He will say. Your Democratic platform sayp. you uro gDlng to pass a law that will make such f. promise illegal and it cannot be enforced; they say they wen't allow anybody to make a contract to pay back as good money as he got.' Tho result of this would be that this country would be rocked from center to circumference by a great commercial panic that would bring to distress every man in It, except the banker, who had his money locked up. "Mr. Frewen, of England, one of the leading free-silver men, whlie urging us to adopt that iolicy. in an Interview in New York recently, admitted that the first effect of free coinage, would be an all-pcrvad-ing panic. Take that home with you: that if you are to have free silver, you are to have it at the cost of a great panic, at the cost of utter stagnation in business, while everybody awaits to see what this fatal experiment in finance may bring about. No. my countrymen, the good old honest dollar of Jackson and of JeflJerson. the gocxl old hundred-cent dollar, is the only dollar for the poor man and the farmer, the only dollar for honest men who want to pay their debts honestly and want to be paid honestly. I do not like the declaration of the Chicago platform that when Anarchists and thugs seite upon our great railroads, tear up tracks and stone railway trains, that the President of the United States, sworn to enforce the Constitution and laws, shall not enforce those laws until he has asked Governor Altgeld's consent. That was not Lincoln's thousht. Lincoln said when Governors not only refused censsnt, tut rrhtn th:y crctcrtei end rtircd zsvzJLzz to rcrlit.

'I have sworn to execute nil the laws cf the United States.' And he mustered the prMt army in blue and triumphantly established the principle that United States law covers every, square foot of the United States. (Applause.) "Democratic comrades, loyal men who Ftcod by the country anJ by Lincoln, who helped to defeat lee and Jackson, who brought home the starry banner of honor, are vou willing to have a President who savs he v.IU first 1kw a cringing knee tu the fjovemor of lllllnols before be enfcices the laws of the United States? No. my countrymen. Indiana, a State that had so glorious a part In the war to maintain the Union and the Just powers of the government will not surrender what they wrested from the armies of I-ee to a mob of Chicago Anarchists." (Applause.) TO CITIZKV- Ol WABASH. Great Demonstration Mnde In One of the Republican St roncliold. Hot Republican territory was again entered after leaving Columbia City and at North Manchester, the next stop, four thousand people were found packed about the station. They cheered lustily as tho train pulled In, cheered again upon Harrison's appearance, cheered at every point he made In his speech of ten minutes and gave three rousing "cheers for Harrison" when he clcsed. Wabash county seemed to be gathered at Wabash, where the arrival was greeted by cheers from an immense concourse of people. The Republicans were out for their closing rally of the campaign, and about fifteen thousand were on streets to see General Harrison. In the morning they had had a parade three miles long, with six bands, any number of floats, marching clubs and troops of male and female cavalry. It was by far the greatest demonstration of strength the Republicans of this county, which has never elected a Democratic officer, have ever made. The great quadrangle of the new Big Four shops had been transformed Into an enormous amphitheater and here speaking had been going on all afternoon with Hiram Brownlee, Warren G. Sayre and others as the orators. General Harrison's car was stopped in tho rear of the shops and he was led through them to the stand, thus avoiding the exhausting experience of being jostled through a jam of people he had undergone so many times during the day. He was given a tremendous ovation when he appeared in view of the multitude and was introduced by L. L. Carpenter. In tho course of his speech he said: "Fellow-citizens of Wabash This is a magnificent demonstration. It is another eviaence of the great interest which our people feel in this campaign, now so soon to close. I am bure that we have never had a campaign since the war in which there was such a general interest as in this. Every man and every woman in the land has come to feel an intense personal interest in tho result of it; and J. think it Is because we feel that the issues involved are not only as great as those involved when the maintenance of our constitutional union was at stake, but that we are called upon again to fight issues that rve supposed had been forever put at rest, and which the people of the United States have determined they will this time put forever at rest. (Applause.) Wo thought, when Lee gave up his sword to Grant, that it had been settled settled by four years of bloody and costly war that the laws of the United States might be executed by the President of the United States and by the courts of the United States without asking the consent of the Governor of any State. But that issue has been revived again. Governor Altgeld. of Illinois, who has been more than suspected of sympathy with the Anarchists and destruction ists, raised the i5ue with Mr. Cleveland- whether the President had a right by ti.e power tho Constitution puts into his hands to enforce the laws of the United States without the Governors consent; and he had sufficient inlluence to put Into the Chicago platform a declaration against this power of the President. "My countrymen, we are a law-abiding people: we believe in every man having all his rights; but we do not believe that it is any man's right to tear up railroad tracks and burn railroad cars and stone railroad trains carrying innocent men and women. The Constitution puts the control of the post routes of the county into the hands pf the United States; Interstate commerce is a matter that can only be regulated by the national power; offenses against interstate commerce and postal laws are offenses against United States laws, and not against the statutes of the States; therefore we hold that it Is not only the right, but it is the duty of tho President when any mob stops mail trains, when any mob interferes with interstate commerce and obstructs the progress of the produce of one State In its journay to a marketthat it is his sworn duty to use the powers of the United States to open those post routes and interstate-commerce routes so that those trains may go freely to their destination. (Applause.) "Mr. Bryan, by his adhesion to the Chicago platform, is pledged that if he should be President of the United States and such conditions should arise, he will quletlv possess himself at Washington and address a humble request to the Governor of Illinois to please keep the road open. No. my countrymen. Lincoln will never have a successor who does not ho'd to Lincoln's view of the Constitution. (Applause.) We may differ alout tariffs; we may differ about silver, but as a great people. Democrats and Republicans, we must stand by the proposition that the powers of the national government shall not be degraded nor diminished. Let us stand by the old flag. This is flag day: enshrine it in our hearts. Tell aerain the glorious history that It has had. Tell again of the heroism of the men who died for it. Tell opaln of Lincoln and Grant, who maintained the lust powers of the government, not only without the consent of Governors, but over their armed resistance. (Great applause.) Let us stand by Integrity in our public finance and honesty in our individual finance. Let us resume protection and recinroclty. Let us elect McKinley, and wc will bo prosperous again." IX THE GAS BELT.

Great Demonstration liy the Workin; men of Marlon. At Marlon, where General Harrison arrived shortly before 6 o'clock, a magnificent demonstration was made by the worklngmen of this, one of the most thriving cities of tho gas belt. It has always been very heavily Republican, but this year the feeling for sound money and protection Is running very high among the glass workers and other skilled laborers, who make up the great bulk of tho population. General Harrison was escorted by a flambeau club from tho station through packed streets to the courthouse square, where ho spoke from tho carriage. The streets conversing upon the square and the Miuare itself were simply jammed with people cheering like mad, and the sea of faces was lighted up by the lurid glare of thousands of flambeaux in the hands of marchers who wcro ready to participate in the big closing parade of the campaign, which was to form immediately upon the departure of Harrison. When he could get a fair degree of quiet General Harrljon addressed the section of the multitude in the vicinity of the carriage. He tald in part: "My Fellow-citizens In this night air it will not be possiblo for me to speak very lone, but what is the use of talking? These ereat demonstrations that I have seen uverwherc in jnuia.ua. in wn; uum unu in me north, are the most cdoquent and conclusive evidences that the battle is won. 1 do not doubt. I never liavo doubted, since the Chicago platform was nublished and the Chicago nominations made, that this coun try would reject the platform and reject the nominees. ( Applause.) The people of this country believe in a national govern ment. We believe in the flag and we love It. We believe in the just powers of tho President: in the just oowers of the fed cral courts, anu we nave maac up our minds that what the Confederate armies under Lee and Jackson could not do a Chicago mob of Anarchists shall not do. (Great applause.) under the influence of Governor Altgeld, of I Illinois, they got in the Democratic platform a declaration which means that it is not proper for the President to enforce the laws of the United States without asking the consent of a Governor. We will never vote for that doc trine. (Applause.) These gallant boys from Indiana, come of whom, in their old age and decrepituuc. are housed by the generosny oi mis government nere near Marlon, these patriotic oeople In Indiana, who followed Morton and Lincoln, will never allow the doctrine to be established that the Presldeut of the United States must ask anybody' consent before he enforces tho laws of tho United States. (Great applause.) "Comrades, we do not mean patriotic fellow-citixcns. you do not mean that tho soldier who fought for 111 a month to maintain the integrity of this government tr.d is now cettlni a ,Mttla pension shall ba la Ocent d" liars. Tub v.cri-j r?c-:l3 cl U:d Vzllzl C:-t-. C12 n:n r.cr H

your factories, have made up their mi that they do net want to excbai.e good dollar, they are getting fcr t!"r wi-s for a ."(G-cf nt dollar. (Applau-o.) v mean to maintain the national authority mean to maintain the InUKr.tv of tii Rcv-emmcntal powers; wo mean t maintain honest finance; we iman that the n,.tn that works hal! have an l;om;t doifaP when ho Is iuld. (Applause.) "This question Is .settled now. I Fh , . many weeks In the 1.K this summer Ti. have given up the Yank-e. Mr. H:yaj, concluded, alter two visits to Nw Vu k that the jeopic In the U.asj are too snirt to le caught. (Laughter. Rut I.e. tMk, that he may set his trui ut West ., t catch the Hooslers. iCries of 'No. Mr: h no.') No. my countrymen, we ar; jut jmart and wc are Just as honest, and have just as much int-ret in !;,,.vt money as the people in New Vr.rk and we are going to have it. This s;uf heresy Is dead now; it is not a ju-tiori o killing it; it in a question of burying it , voice: W will bury it deep.') Yes. i",lir. it deep: that is what wc will do. Wc wiii glvo such majorities that will burv n -0 deep that no resurrectionist will evY think of trying to dig down to where it yi:,.n we have done that business eonlid- nco ujji be restored: the money that ia tmhoarded will come out; the factories wm start up: business will le improved and w will all bo iiappy again." I.V MADISON i:OL.TT.

Ovations at SnmmltvlIIe, Alexandria and Pendleton. At Summit ville, whero it was suppoi.d a few hundred peoplo wculd be encountered, a dense crowd of three or tour thousand was found lacked about the a a. ticn, cheering tho train as it pulled in. "There he is! That's our Uen!" were .ora of the cries that greeted General Harrison as he appeared, and then there as a cheer that almost lifted the car. The voice tint had been so far-reaching a few hours before had been almost used up In the effort to talk to the vast crowds of the d.iy. and but a brief speech was made, assuring tho people that the time lor debate was closed, and, tho speaker believed, tl.. award would be a magnificent victory for McKinley, honest money and protection. It was but ten minutes after the train left Summitvillo when the booming of i;jmnon announced the approach to Alexandria. Here, under the glare of the fi.iinbeaux. six or seven thousand people had gath'rvd and it was about the most enthusiastic and responsive crowd that had been found during the day, seizing upon every point muUe for cht-ering and applause. General Harrison was introduced by ex-Senator lhirlan, and talked for about ten minutes, admonishing laboring men that their pro parity was at stake, lie declared that Mr. Bryan had failed, though often requested, to show in what way the condition of labor would bo improved by free eoinajze. Though ho had talked possibly more than any othe-r candidate for the prtidency, the election was to be held without l;b answer to this question. Pendleton had not been schetluled for a stop, but about 2,500 people took chairby waiting at tho station and firing a eannon as the train approached. General ll.trrison talked very briefly, but aked th crowd a fw questions, and the resion.-vs came quick and sharp. Neither was Fortvillc on the schedule, but from 1.500 to 2.000 peop'e w re on tl. tracks there, and stayed there un.i. the Uny.x stopped and General Harrison taid a tVw words to them. It required but a few minute.-? more to run to Indianapolis, and the great day wan ended. General Harrison left the train at Massachusetts avenue and drove directly home. Though his voice uas almost used up, and he was considerably fatigued with his big day's work, he was in excellent spirits and happy in the belief that the victory is already won In Indiana. PROGRESSIVE HORSE STEfl LI KG. George Herrmann, a Voane linn, rrenteil n n ruftltUr. About a month ago a young man rented a bicycle from Wolf & Walker, on Massachusetts avenue, and failed to return with it- Detectives found the wre-.k of the bicycle at Carter's livery Mabl m West Maryland street. The tires had b a taken off the wheel and they were to'.md at a West Washington-strrt store, when the joung man had sold them. He had broken the wheel and hired a horse and buggy and left the bicycle at the 'tdahl. The young man was traced to Nob!esvllle, where it was learned he had let t ihn horse and buggy rented here in a livcry stable. and had rented another. The bus;:rented at NoblesvWe he sold at heriu:m and then rode tho horse to Lebanon an I sold It. Yesterday morning a message was received from Martinsville, Baying 4Iiat a, young man had rented a buggy ind hors. there Friday and failed to return with it. It was supjosed he had come to Indianapolis. Yesterday detectives Stout a:l Kaehn arrested George Herrmann and was slated as a fugitive and alr.o charged with grand larceny. Herrmann i eishtoc;: years old and tho son of George Herrmann, undertaker. For Cruelty to Children. Humane officer Orlopp yesterday arrested W. F. Christian, who lives at the corner of Vermont street and Massachusetts avenue, on a charge of cruelty to children. The ar rest was made on a warrant procured at TU - 1 . a . ... instance oi several neighbois. It is claimed that Christian has repeatedly whipped and kicked Ins sixtecn-year-cld son. Officer Orlonn nln arpsiwi i.'tiir Sal omon, who lives at 14 Massachusetts avenue, on the same sort of chaige. She accused of inhuman treatment of her t-uy-daughter, aged twelve years. Just Had to Talk Loud. Henry Warnsman, a blacksmith ilvlng t 671 South East j.trcct, was arrested yrsurday while arguing silver near tin Arr..u If Watt Kltrwl nu lilni ilrnnlr Ilr u. decorated with Bryan buttons nd mii!1 nags. lie explained at tne police station that he w;is "onlv talkinrr Inm! " "I tr do it," he said, "to hold up my nd of ti e m .. argument, r-verynouy else was Howling as loud as they could." Many a men would defend hii raouey with his life, and many f- ft I very thiug without 3 -fi r knowing it. mere are thousands of imen who decline Ito defend their lives with their money. They are so intent on wnnr v.rrttinP that they forget their health. The health cannot be trifled with. The body resents neglect. Little disorders become big ones if they are allowed to run on. The man whose digestion is poor, pretty scon finds that he is losing flesh. He doesn't weigh s. much as he did. He doesn't realize that he is losing vitality; that he is losing ttrergth; that he is losing capacity for work; and that even his brain must of necessity become weaker, if it is net nourished. Loss of fiesb means that the whole body is goin-j to wreck. It is fatally easy to run downhill. A man keeps going faster and faster as he ?oc down. When health begin to leak out. it leaks very fast. The time to stop it is ripht away. The way to stop it is by taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is the greatest tonic and invigoratcr that was ever prepared. It is the discovery of a practicing physician, eminent and successful ia his profession, the head of one of the greatest medical institutions in the world, The Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. It is an almost infallible cure for consumption, and for all the miner troubles that lead to consumption, chief among these are emaciation and general, bodily debility. The Discovery " purifies and enriches the blood, invigorates the nerves, stimulates digestion, brings back a healthy appetite, healthy sleep, and a healthy, natural action of all the organs cf the body. Druggists sell it. Eveiyman,t7omanand child in the United States ought to have access to a copy of Dr. Pierce's great work, the " People's Ccmnioa Sense Medical Adviser." The book conJ' Pj icoS p3ges, and is a complete medical library in one volume. Every one may f LaZe a ?Py Paper-covered, absolutely f re t If he will send 21 one-cent stamps, to pay 'ct the cost of mailing only, to the worll' Dispensary Iledical Association. EnfSJo, I v U. ba---.t. durable French cloth tindirj d:::rt. trr i t;n cdiiuonii

I I f 'j r