Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1888 — Page 8

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, 'WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1883.

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BEN HARRISON'S MISTAKES.

HI3 HOSTILITY TO WORKINGMEN, And Ills Great Love For Corporation! and. Bondholders A Powerful Analyats of His Character aod Review of J1U Becord b y Maurice Thompson. 1 thb Editoe Sir: Wehear it said that Mr. Harrison is a great man and that he has made no mistakes, but wo must not forget that his greatness M been a very recent discovery. As a rule, true voluma of character is not generated in a fortnight. We all remember tho undignified and, indeed, hysterical remark which Mr. Harrison made when he characterized the greenbackers of Indiana as "idiots" who ought to be confined in an asylum. That wa?, to make the best of it, a very weak thing and a badge of narrowness and illtemper. At present there is an i33tie between Mr. Harrison and tho workin;rmen of Indiana. This cannot be denied. The Issue is not confined to tho question whother or not Mr. Harrison said that a "dollar a day was enough tor any workingman" to receive. It goes deeper. The question is one of fact, of personal attitude. Was Mr. Harrison for or against the laboring man in the day when the laboring man needed a friend? Thi3 is the question. The atfidavit of a laboring man may or may not be conclusive ; but the attitude oi Mr Harrison is an c6toppel. It is not impossible that he may have uttered, when excited, dome phrase equivalent to sayingthat a dollar a clay i3 enough for a workmgman. Lawyers do such things for their clients, and Mr. Harrison was at that time a corporation lawyer; he had jut been doing military duty in behalf of those who were grinding laboring men between the upper an l the nether mill-stone. What are the probabilities as to the truth of this matter? It would be f;tir to suspect that the maa who, posing as a r-tatestnan, would call a whole class of his fellow-citizens idiots, would, when in the attitude ot a railroad lawyer and commander-in-chief of a militia organized to fight workinmen, say some ill-considered things about the men he was opposing. Just whatMr. Harrison didsay is a matter of memory, so far as the wage question is concerned ; but that be did use the badtempered and rather Anna DickinaopLsh remark about the "creenbaekers"' is a matter of record. It is a htriking fact (and oue that must have its weight with fetudents of human nature) that the honest workinmen w ho took a deep interest in the ftri ke have troai that day to this borne la their 1. farts a very unfavorable impression of 31 r. Harrison's character. Hot that they deem hi:n bad in the sense of Leiug without moral Handing or a pood measure of worth as a citizen: but they remember him as a cold, calculating, unyielding enemy of the workingmen in the verv Lour when they most needed him as a friend. The homely proverb "A friend In need is a friend" indeed" is worth more to workingmen than it is to the rich. Workirgrr.eti need strong friends sometime.0, and there is a man, here and there, who (as did Allen G. Thurman) proves to be euch a friend in the trying hour. Gov. Porter w,as such a friend; but Mr. Harrison was not. Thisisa matter which finks deep into the hearts of many a humble household in the city where Mr. Harrison lives. Men and women, and even children, reeolleci clearly the attitude of Mr. Harrison when the question of wsces was a deadly an 1 terrible' issue, when bayonets glittered in the verv streets where now Mr. Harrison Js making emooth speeches ia flattery of labor. It is all well enonqh for the partisan friends of Mr. Harrison to cry out "slander, lie, libel," but the massive and immovable fact remains a very burden of absolute knowledge in the hearts of workingmen. This was a raietake made by Mr. Harrison and it was a mistake of precisely the ßame character as thut regarding the citizens of Indiana who believed in the "greenback" theory of finance. These mistakes are not casual, not mere accidents; theypcarch the man's nature ; they are powcrluily significant of his bias of character ; they are badges of the form and fiber of his sympathies. It has become generally known that he is a cold man; bat this mirht mean nothing more than manner, if his most studied attitudes, at moment of intensest self-consciousness, were not so often conclusive of constitutional aversion to a broad human sympathy. He has fifty-five years of personal history behind him and no citizen of Indiana, I trust, would wish to question his purity in all the private wa'ks of life; but it is honorable and fair to test his public manners, acts and attitudes. He should desire this himself, singularly enough we find Liswhole past life agreeing perfectly with the common public impression, lie has been the companion, friend, adviser and counsellor of corporations; a cold, dilligent, self-concentrated agent working for himself through the powerful syndicates, trusts and combinations of capital. He fought labor because it was a matter of cold dollars and cents to him. It matters little w hat were his words and phrases; his attitude was unmistakable and clramcteristic of the man. He placed himself like a stranded iceberg between earnest, warm-hearted, sincere laboring men on the one hand and Boullesi corporations on the other, and everything ho 6aid and did was for the corporations and against the workingmen. This is the obdurate and refractory fact which no affidavit can strengthen, no circumlocution evade. The position of Mr. Harrison as a presidential candidate making carefully worded addresses to delegations of his political partisans is different from that when he was lighting for a corporation. He is very warm and obsequious to everybody now;" Belf-intcrest forces him to be; but even now, when called upon to take an attitnde oa a question with capital on one aide and the masses of the people on the other, he cannot resist the old habit; he deliberately ranges himself on the side of the capitalist's, as bo did during the strike. Here is a single entence from Iiis letter of acceptance: "The surplus now in tho treasury should be used in the purchase of bonds." How characteristic! No other public man in Indiana would have framed that cold, heartless, sardonic bid for the support of the bondholder?, without any regard whatever for the effect of such a poller upon the people at large. He knew when he penned that sentence that a .New York syndicate stood ready to "corner" the bonds and run them up to a fabulous price. He knew that the syndicate could succeed easily, because most of the bonds cannot be forcibly called in before 1907, a point nineteen years in the future. Those controlling the bonds could dictate their terms of sale. Behind such a proposition is a transaction beside which the Fan Domingo job, the star route swindle and the credit mobilier conspiracy appear insignificant. There is a black Friday but half hidden in its suggestion. But tor a moment let us consider this utterance in the liht of Mr. Harrison's other mistakes ; let ns see how it reflects back upon these and agrees with them in color, fiber and texture. The man who deliberately made himself the champion of the capitalists against the workingmen if just the man to maka himself the fig

ure-head of a scheme for filling the pockets of the bondholders out of the treasury ot the government. . Bonds maturing in 1907 are nominally, quoted now at from 30 per cent to an indefinite figure higher; what would they be quoted at if Mr. Harrison were president and could carry out this one sentence? "The surplus now in the treasury should be used in the purchase of bonds!" The result in part would be as follows : Surplus in treasury, $130,000,000. To buy bonds at $1.50 would be putting about one-third of the treasury surplus into a syndicate's pocket with no return for it whatever. But Mr. Harrison is constituted by nature to sympathize with bondholders. He does not ior one moment consider the fact that the masses of the people have an interest that ought to be sacredly guarded. It will be noted that Mr. Harrison's policy is a great gain to the bond syndicate, but of no avail to the people: it would not put the money into general circulation, but it would have a tremendous e'Ject upon our circulating money in another way; for the banks would 6ee their opportunity to retire their unprofitable circulation and to sell tho securities the bonds at the highest price. This would suddenly and enormously ' contract our circulating medium and bring about just what the money Bharks always delight in, a panic, hard times, the foreclosure of mortgages, Inch rates of interest ami the lowest possible wages. It all comes back to this one thought: Low wages. Mr. Harrison has never uttered a carefully weighed sentence which does not mean low wages, a scarcity of money, a high price for all the necessities of life and a low price for the luxuries. Bonds are luxuries, he would enhance their value; whisky and tobacco are injurious luxuries; he would make them cheap in preference to making clothes cheap. Behind all this is tho man in his most characteristic attitude, the aristocrat in the very narrowest sense of the word, the man who bows to nothing but wealth, who warms to nothing common and simply human, whose every thought is a cold cryrtal of selfish policy. Is it any wonder that there can be no bond of sympathy between hira and the working people of Indiana? When he asked the people of Indiana to make him their governor his appeal was in vain. His candidacy was likea political frost ; itmade icicles in the hearts of men. An old farmer, blunt and honest, captured the public confidence at once. It was a difference of nature, of quality, of inherent character. It was one of the cold aristocratic few againt one of the warm democratic many. So it is to-day. It is the bondholder's man, the syndicate's man, the corporation's man against the man of the people. In vain mav Mr. Harrison stand on the threshold of his elegant and aristocratic mansion in Indianapolis utteriug delicately turned phrases of flattery to workingmen now ; these sincere and warmhearted men of toil are not to bo captured by cunnine literary art; their learning may bo short, but their memories are long and they love justice; they love an open, manly way of dealing. They remember both words and acts; they consider the significance of attitudes and suggestions and snoers; they contrast the acts of public men. Is there a workingman in Indiana who does not know what Thurman did for the workingmen of Ohio? Is there one who does not know what Harrison did against them here in Indianapolis when a terrible stress of need was racking the hearts and homes of as honest, noble-hearted and true workingmen as ever lived? Where was all this nice phraseology then? The memory of workingmen must answer. It does answer. The issue is made, the line is drawn and no amount of flexible and elastic promises can wipe it out. Alone the very lines which Mr. Harrison marked out for his assault upon aggrieved workingmen, even down the verv streets once held by his bayonets leveled aeainst workingmen, will theso same workingmon inarch to the polls to deposit their rebukes more terrible than bullets. Money docs rot talk ; mere speech is meaningless ; acts cud attitudes make the record. Maurice Thompson. Crawfordsville, Ind., Oct. 3. How near can you come to guetsing Cleveland and Thunian's plurality in Indiana f POOR MAN'S FRIEND HOVEY.

Prosecuting; Poor People For Trespassing ou Land II Would Not Use Himself. Mt. Vernox, Oct 5. Special. Posey county, notwithstanding the "hooppole" stories which have gone abroad, is one of the best counties in the state and produced a larger per centaire of wheat and corn during the last two years than any other county ia the Ute. Every township but one is fully cultivated by thrifty farmers. That ona exception is Point township, located in the peninsula formed by the meandering and confluence of the Ohio and Wabash rivers. Hero a semi-primeval wilderness stands as a contrast to the comfortable dwellings, ml barns and school-houses of the more favored townships. Favored, not by nature, for there ia no d inference in soil and timber of I'oint and the other townships. But the holding of lauds in large tracts by few men has cursed this township the same way that landlordism curses Ireland. Any one looking over the county map will see that the name of one A. F. Ilovey appears over an extensive tract of laud, extending from the west meandering of the Wabash, six miles due north of the "Forks" to the Ohio, two miles above the Uniontown (Ky.) ferry. This tract embraces parts of sees. 27, 2 SO and most of sees. , 31. 32, 33, 34 and 35 of U 7 ., r. 14 w. Also most of sec. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 13, 14. 2.'!, 24 aud parts of sees. 11, 15, 25 and 27 of t. X s., r. 14 w. This A. I Ilovey is the same Gen. Ilovey who is being exhibited over the state by the g. o. p. as the "poor man's friend." Gen. llovey purchased this land from the canal company, ami has held it for more than twenty-nv years. He will not sell or lease any part of it on reasonable terms to people who would clear and cultivate it. Thousands of acres remain uncultivated and unproductive where more than a hundred families could live comfortably if the "poor mau's friend" allowed it to be redeemed from the wild cats. An examination of the county mop will show that Hover's domain extends from northwest to southeast, seven miles, and is five miles wide at one point, forming the shape of a cross and a heavy cross it is to the Foor people of that township. Adjoining IoVey s wild lands are a number of poor people owning from twenty to forty acres, all willing to increase their small holdings, but the "poor mau's friend" will not sell. The stock law is enforced in this county, and no stock is allowed to run at large. Ilovey'a land is not fenced in. Cows could do no damage in pasturing it. But Gen. Hover, true to his record as a poor man's friend," will not allow even a hen to cross his lines, ne has repeatedly prosecuted these poor people for trespassing, or for letting cows eat his wild grass. A poor, old soldier's widow has the misfortune to have her little log-hut adjoining Hover's land. The poor widow, whose name is Lorenze, having no land of her own, pastured her solitary cow in Hovey'a wood. Iicing threatened with pronecntion she offered to pay for the use of a few acres, but the general, as a "soldier's friend," wonld not permit her to do so, and the poor old soldier's widow had to stake her cow to save Ilorey's oak and sycamore trees from her ravage. He has prosecuted people for cutting logs to tnild miserable huts, and for cutting a few sticks of wood to burn fn their fireplaces in winter, llovey lake is within his domain. He will not allow the boys to fish in it, but sells the fishing privilege for $700 a year. lately Gen. Hovey has sold the railroad-tie timber of ö.f acres for $12,000. The timber men have filled the roads with tree-tops, making the roads impassable for llovey's "poor friends." No doubt this sale would not have taken place if Huston's demand for boodle was not so urgent. John W. Jenkins says that for twelve years he guarded llovey's timber and was to receive a deed for forty acres. John has not received a dollar or an acre of land fro a the "poor man's friend."

LEW WALLACE ON THE G. 0. P.

SPEECH BY HARRISON'S BIOGRAPHER. The Republican Party Denounced as i Know Nothing Organization A Violent od Profan Pro-SIaTery Ilarancnt By th Author of "Ba-Uar," Crawfordsville, Oct, 2. Special. Next Saturday the republicans of this county will give what they declare will be the "grandest rally of the season in this section." They call it "veterans' day" and propose to have a couple of thousand Chicago men to help swell the procession. They are working every imaginable scheme to get every soldier ia the county to turn out, and will hare as attractions llovey, James T. Johnston and Corporal Tanner, and everything will be done that can be thought of to incite the feelings of sectional hate in the bosoms of the honest soldier element. They have failed on the tariff issue and have fallen back on dead issues twenty-five years buried. They have prevailed on Lew Wallace to come forth from his retirement and ride a white horse at the head of the procession. They hope to inspire the old "boys" with animation and zeal for the success of the republican party by seeing Gen. Wallace in regimentals and sidearms at the head of the caravan. Hy the way, the reappearance of this retired disciple of the republican party calls to mind the fact that he was not always one of the suowwhite followers of the g. o. p., and probably the following extract from a speech made by Gen. Wallace in this city in 18.K5, on the occasion of the presentation of a silver pitcher to the Hon. D. W. Voorhees, may prove interesting reading co-incident with his reappearance in the arena as a leader, and ;mav cause the question to be asked why the author of the greatest religions book extant la now training with such a party as he fays the republican party was in its infancy. We quote: "If it has not already occurred to yon, it mar hereafter, sir, that in thii presentation I hare not used as yet that word that vou and I so love and honor the word DfcMOCUACY. Id 1S."2 this district was democratic. In fact, sir, if the party had gone down everywhere else, such were the conditions of politics here that we were Justified in regarding our district as a kind of democratic Malta, with plenty of stout knighta to defend it forever from the Moor and infidel. We made Mace our grand master and he became our Jiidaa a veritable political Wandering Je ir, only it was the deril said to him: Tarry till I come.' In with his own hands he opened the gates of our citadel to a prowling band of thugs. Our grand master became their grand master. Suffice it to say, sir, we were overthrown. In l&üö everything was in doubt, except that the district was against us by at least 2,500. Sir, the fair A'eoeccawaa in the hands of her enemy; there were the lists; yonder the stake. Was there not one chivalrous enough to become her champion? You responded, you struck the sounding shield of the challenger; lance at rest you rode against him ; you were dismounted in the shock, but your enemy Ahl sir, LoU Gilbert, the base-hearted, lies dead in his armor and dishonored by his very victory! "In New York there is a man, long-nosed, long-headed, roady-tongued, skillful with the pen, with a brain full of knowledge and experience, and a heart pulseless as au iceberg a cold, calculating human devil. At this moment, whether waking or sleeping, sitting or mo vine, on laud or water, at home or abroad, in church or ou the street, that man is brooding orcr an idea of power, and counting the steps already taken, and those yet to be taken by him toward the presidency. This is no fancy William II. Seward is himself no fancy. He is a living fact; a radiant serpent, an eloquent lie, a smiling devil; a political consumption. "There is another man in New York scarce less noted a brond-faeed, white-haired, white eyed, white-hatted, white-coated, white-livered, whited scpulcher: but withal a man truly wonderful, in whose hand the commonest quill in the wing of the commonest goose in a Jersey Dutch woman's hern yard would become an engine. I had almost said an engine as mighty as any that lifts the arms of our proudest Atlantic steamer. Daily at his word a hundred thousand Tribunes scatter through the Union. Napoleon is absolute in France. Horace Greeley's power over all theanti-democraticisms in America is almost as absolute. The republicans told us they were not knownothings; but did they not fuse with that party? .Was not their candidate for president a know-nothing? They told us they were exclusively a Protestant party, with relieion for a test; but did they not juggle forcatholic votes? Did Fremont dare deny his own Catholicism? They told us they were the party of freedom ; but did they not obstinately deny the people of the territories the right and liberty to regulate their own domestic institutions? They agonized over the repeal of the compromise of 1S20; did they demand its restoration? They told us they were a national party; did you ever hear of a republican mass-meeting south of the Ohio river? They told us they were not abolitionists; but -at I'biladelphia did they not vote for abolitionists? Did not an abolitionist report their platform and another help to make it? Did not Hale, Uiddings and Wilson stand godfathers to their mulattoborn anomaly? They told ns that they were lovers of the Union; but did they not ask a repeal of the fugitive 6lare law, upon the faithful execution ot which Henry Clay said the Union depended? Was not their whole effort to build up a northern party hostile to the South? In their Philadelphia convention did they not threaten the South with fire and sword? Consider again what a motley crew of a?t nts and emissaries they put to work. Moral men were not enough they enlisted the gamblers; temperance men were not enough they subsidized the grocery saloon keepers; white men were not enough they called out the nearroes. Negroes hurrahed for Fremont; negroes took to the pen and stump for him; 6.0OJ negroes voted for him in New York. Men were not enough they called out the women. A Mins Filkins (Miss Anna Dickinson is the 'Miss Filkins' to whom Wallace referred, yet he listened to her in this city on the 25th of (September, and applanded as heartily as even Anna could desire; went gvpsying over the country, screaming Fremont at the cross-roads and in the villages. A Mrs. Robinson published a lying history of the troubles in Kansas. A Mrs. Childs wrote a serio-comic blood-and-thunder story of a family of Yankees in Kansas. Beecher Stowe issued her second negro story, two ponderous volumes long. Profane men were not enough they called out the preachers. In many pulpits Fremont became more popular than God. Congregations were made to believe that voting against Fremont was as wicked as crucifying Christ, Hera on election day the preachers linger about the folls, shivering in a keen north wind, and recke's of a driving snowstorm, distributing tickets, winking at f rands, and" 'serving the Savior,' by seeing that none of the godly flock voted for Buchanan; finally Kansas was flooded with ghastly eooundrtls; ome in the name of heaven, leading fighting men, others 'for Christ's sake, hunting 'ruffians' with a wolfish hunger for blood, others trafficking with Greeley, and the manner of their commerce was, 'so many lies for so many dlolars.' I am astonished at their weakness and their folly. The democratic party is all that preserves the land at this time from a furious religious war. Why, sir, strike down this party, merge it in republicanism, sink it in knownothingum, and such is the exasperation of the sects that the catholics could not take the holy sacrament in safety. Let the clergy beware how they hawk at democracy! Mirabeau saitl of the last of the Gracchi, that as he was dying he threw a handful of dust toward heaven, from which sprang Marius. From the sacred dust of the dead democracy there might spring a religious scourge and America yet have its Charles and St. Bartholomew, or its Cromwell and Irelsnd." All this, and much more, is the opinion of the republican party held by Lew Wallace during the struggles from 1854 te 1861. What he has seen in the republican party's career since then to cause him to expend his wealth of affection upon it, is hard to see. It is as rile now as when it was cradled in the Philadelphia convention by Garrison, Crreeley, Giddings, Phillips, Loveyoy and Anna Dickinson. There is nothing in its history since to inspire a feeling of respect. As one of the curiosities of politics this document deserves a permanent embalming in the columns of Tub Skxtixel where unborn generations can see and know bow even the most desperate opponents may at last stoop to kins the hand of power and pick up the scraps from the table of the wicked ruler. The republican party is surely no better now than when Wallace drew the abore portrait of it, yet he now drills under the banner of this same party, with additional sins to answer for. He, after denouncing it for its desperate sectionalism, is to mount a white horse, and, under the shadow of the bloody shirt, appeal to sectionalism, and urge a continuance of it ia power. "Verily the ox

knoweth his master's crib" is the only interpretation we can put on the coining forth of the retired member of the company of "visiting statesmen" to Louisana in 1?76. What will Cleveland and Thurman's plurality be in Indiana? Send The Sentinel your prediction, and take your chance in the ?100 prize contest See announcement elsewhere, THE WAR TARIFF.

A Former Republican Shows Why It Ought To Ite Kedooed. Ex-Senator J. TL Doolittle of Wisconsin has written a strong and trenchant letter in which, after stating that professional engagements will not permit of his accepting the democratic nomination for congress in his district, he says: ftie measures proposed by the president in his message of December, 1687, and by the bill which has passed the house, called the "Mills bill," and which were substantially approved by the democratic plationn of 18S8, stand upon the same solid ground where Madisou so wisely placed it more than fifty years ago. So far from being a measure to de.'troy the incidental protective system und.?r a tariff for revenue, it propose to leave the average duties upon goods manufactured abroad, whieh come into competition with goods manufactured at home, at 40 per cent., an amount sufficient beyond all question, to cover the ditlerence in the price of labor and rates of interest on capital invested in favor of the foreign manufacturer. At the same time it gives to our manufacturers free raw material; among others, to our woolen manufacturers, free wool. With these proposed advantages, one of the voolen manufacturers of New England, Mr. liobert Bleakie of Hyde Park, Mass., in a recent letter, sneaking of the Mills bill, says that it is the ''best bill that has been framed to protect the interest of the woolen manufactures and the laboring population employed in woolen mills. We get free wool and a protection of 40 per cent., which is equal ia amount to double the whole labor cost of making woolen goods. If European manufacturers were to get their labor for nothing, under this bill we would still have the advantage of them." He further adds with great force, "It seems a pity that this question of tariff cannot be viewed by each man from a practical buines standpoint, and not, as it now is, from a political one. I believe if it were so viewed and calmly and carefully considered, the people of New England would hasten to instruct their representatives to further, by everv me;irs in their power, the making of the Mills bill a law at once." My dear sir, allow me to say, it seems to me that not only all democrats, but all intelligent and conscientious republicans also, in this district, should be of the same opinion. When I call to mind the fact that the pressent high tariff taxation of 1861 and lsttfwas imposed as a war measure, and, as I know of my own knowledge, for I voted for that measure, that it was urged as a war necessity, with a distinct understanding by all parties that the high rates would be reduced when the necessity had panged; when I call to mind that President Lincoln, the martyr president, had said to the great American people, 'Mhe taxes will be reduced as soon as the tremendous expenditures of the war will admit of if," when 1 call to mind that no platform of the present republican party ever declared in favor of bizh protective tariff for nearly twenty-eight years afritwas organiied, from 18rA to 1884, and even then pledged itself to "correct the idequalities of th tarid and to reduce the surplus:" andt on the other hand, when I call to mind ihat in 1SÜ8, three years after the war was over, its national platform declared, "it is due to the lalor of the nation that taxation should be equalized and reduced as rapidlv as the national faith will permit;" when I call to mind that Gea. Grant, who was elected on that platform and re-elected in 1872, in seven out of eight of his aunual messages, earnestly recommended congress to redeem that pledge; when I remember that, in his second message in 1870, only five years after the war was over he said: "With a tax upon liouors of ail sorts and tobacco in all its forms, and by a wife adjustment of the tariif which wiil put a tax only on those articles which we could dispense with, known as luxuries, and those which we use more of than we produce, revenue enough may be raised, after a few years of peace and consequent reduction of indebtedness, to fulfill all our obligations.' "He venue reform, if it mean this, has my hearty support," all 01 which is just what President Cleveland now says j when I call to mini that ia his third message, ne recommended a careful estiinateof the existing surplus, and that in readjusting the tarilf the surplus be reduced "so as to aiford the freutest relief to the greatest number," which could have no other meaning tliau to reduce the war tariff of duties on the necessaries of life which go into the consumption of the common people; while in his fourth message he refers to these high war taxes as "a vexatious burden on any people;" while in his fifth mesie he urged "a revision and codification of the tariff 1 iws;" and in his sixth and seventh messages he recouimeuded for the free list: dyes, chemicals and "those articles which cuter into manufactures of all sorts," saying: "All duty paid upon such articles ros directly to the cost of the article when manufactured here and must be paid by the consumer" when I call to mind that President Arthur, in his message of 1884. recommended "an enlargement of the free list, so as to include wiihin it the numerous articles which yield inconsiderable revenue, a simplification of the complex and inconsistent schedule of duties upon certain mauuiactures. particularly those of cotton, iron and steel, and a substantial reduction of the duties upon those ai tides, and upon sugar, molasses, wool and woolen goods, and, when I remember that nearly every secretary of the treasury under every republican administration since the war was over, haa repeatedly and persistently urged upon congress the same measure of tariff reform; and, above all, when I call to mind that in 1S81, seven years ago, a republican president appointed a republican commission, who were confirmed by a republican senate, to take testimony and report to congress what measures of tariff reform should be adopted, and that that co n mission, alter taking a large amount of testimony in all parts of the country, reported a scheme' of tariff duties, ia which a substantial reduction was the distinguishing feature, and that that reduction should be not less than 20 per cent.; I rexeat, sir, when I call to mind all these facta and consider that the Mills bill makes an average reduction of less than 10 per cent., I confess my surprise and amazement that any man in his right mind can be made to believe that the passage of the Mills bill, or one substantially like it, can in any manner endanger the manufacturing industries of the United States, or reduce the wages of labor of those employed in them. While, ou the other hand, by lessening the burdens on the necessaries of life, which go into the consumption of the common people, the measure of taxation to support the federal governmeut, which is not laid upon properly, nor apportioned among our people according to their ability to bear it, but is apportioned according to the number of mouths we feed and the backs we clothe, will be somewhat lightened, and more ease and more comfort brought into every household in the land. Surely I can see no good reason why the conscientious and intelligent republicans in this district, as well as democrats, may not join in electing a member (t congress pledged to pass this great measure of tariff reform. What will Cleveland and Thurman's plurality be in Indiana? Send The SEXTINEL your prediction, and take your chance in the $100 prize contest See announcement elsewhere. James Ktder'a Horse Shoe. In Dayton, 0., there is an old blacksmith a veteran horse-thoer an Irishman by birth, who in 1884 voted for James O. Blaine for the presidency. Being an extensive traveler, he gathered a rusty nail from each state of the Union and, being a skilled workman, he made a horse-shoe of American steel and ornamented it-wiih the nails gathered. It was his intention to have Gov. Foraker present the shoe to Gen. Harrison with great demonstration, but when the shoe was completed, the old workman changed his mind and sent the handsome piece of workmanship to the president with the following letter: "Daytox, O., 1SS3. "President Grover Gsvchnd: "I have taken the pleasure In presenting yon with a horse-shoe made by an old Irishman out of American steel and ornamented with horse-shoe nails gathered by me in every state in the Union. I am an Irishman, a Comiaught Banger, who voted for James G. Bkiue in 1884. but have come to the conclusion that you are the true friend of the Irishman and workingman, end I shall vote for you. if God spares me, in 1?8. May good luck follow you all through life. Is the wish of an honest, hardworking Irühman. Yours respectfully, "James Bider." How near can pou come to gxuuing Cleveland and Thurman't plurality in Indiana f

THE TARIFF IN MINIATURE.

NEARLY EVERYTHING IN USE TAXED. Tea Per Cent, on Diamonds and Five Times That Amount on Articles cessary for the Home Why Trices Ar llikti in America. Chicago Herald. Customs duties are levied oa more than 4,000 articles. The following abridgment gives a correct idea of the tax on various great classifications: Animals-For breeding purposes. '"VSS1" Animals Otherwise 20 per cent Ala, porter aud beer, la bottLs. 30 jr cent Ale, porter and beer, ia cxks......... 20 per cent liooks, charw, new 20 per cent linoks, charts, for colleges, libraries, or prints! mora than twenty years, or in use abroad more tbn one rear, aud not for sale - tree. Boots, shoes, leatLer 8 ) per cent. Itroaze, manufactures of 45 pr cent. Utrnela Aubusn in.Axminster, and I 4 jo per j. yd. all woven hole tor room Carets brusjcls taietrr, printed on the warp, cr otherwise sud 30ier ct. . per !- yd. and 60 per ct. Carneu Krusaels. wrouaht by the f 44c per sq. yd, Jacquard machine -.. atdittperet. Carpets saiony, Wilton & lour-( d quard luachine and 30 per c. Carpets Treble ingrain, three-ply, 12c per sq. yd. and 35ir"ct. 25c per sp yd. and 30 per ct. .... Jtö per cent and worsted t'hiua Venetian .... Carpets Velvet, patenter tapestry, prioteJ on the warp or otherwise, (.jtrrlaes China Porcelain and I'criau ware, plain . Clilua Gilde I, ornamenUrd or decorated Clears, clieroots aod cigarettes, S-.0 per lb. and Cloaks aud parU of .- Clot hin, wholly or in part of wool, .V per lb and Gothlng, linen - Clothing, silt component Clothing, all other descriptions............. Coal, bituminous ............. Cutlery, tal lo, etc Cutlery, pea, jack and pocket knives.... IHniuou.ls, uonet Kilects, personal, old....... Korsvins r'uruiture Furs, manufactured Out and iated wird, etc. ........... ............ Kj is I a ii re. .. ...... ...... (ilo' fH, ki L Co;d and silver ware, etc (uns, rides, muskets, Ftrting LI its aud bonnets of all kiuds, except 63 per cent 60 per cent 25 per cent SJ per cent 83 per cent per ceut 6) per cent 85 per cent 7."c per ton f5 per cent 6 xsr cent 10 per ceut fre on oath 23 per cent 8.1 per cent TO per cent 85 per ceut 45 jx?r ceut M p,r cent 4.i per ceut per ceut wool... - - - 80 per cent Hav J'-' per ton Household elTtcts in uso abroad one year year and not lor sale Instruments, professional, in use Iron, pi and scrap .. Iron, manufactures of . Jewoli-y, gold, ilrer or Imitation Jewelry, Jet and imitations of.. ........ ...... Xacs, sil k ...... ...... ... ...... ...... ...... ...... I-ac's, ii!c and cotton Laces, thread . ..... Leather, manufacturers of - Linen, ULle, towel n f, etc Machinery, brass or iron....................... Machinery, copper or ßteel ....... M usieal InUrumeuts.. . ...-.......... Oils, animal ............................. Oi Ik, castor. Oils, olive... ....... .............. ............ Paintings I aintiiigs, if work oi an American artist l'aintius, frames for ditto I'hoto a h . ripes .ueerschauui, wood and of all otlier material except comruon clay 15 per oem) Prints or euacravings Rubber b"Ms, shoes au 1 othes articles whoLy f rubber (not fabrics) ... Rubber braces, SJpenders, webLhiz, etc., unless iu putt silk Rubber iilk, cotton, worsted or leather Sidllcs and harness ............... rhawls ilk ..... Shawls Camel's hair or otter wool....... Silk Dress and piico fek 1 ds, dresed. . . . ...... ... .............. .... ......... btuo iters' articles........... buu . boap, castile 8o.tp, fauc7, perfumed, toilet and WindS.atuary, marble Stcreoscopio views, on glass or paper.-... Spirits Brandy, whisky, tfa, ctc.... free, free. a ton 5 per ceut 25 per cent 'Hi pr cent W per cent 50 per cent 8-5 per cent 8'J per cent 8ö per cent 45 per cent 45 percent 25 per cent 25 per cent 8V; per gal 25 per cent 8) per cent free 30 per cent 25 per ceut TO per cent 25 per cent 23 per ceut SO per cent 60 per cent S5 per ceut 7 1 pr cent Söc lb and 4' percent 5o per nt 20 per cent TO per ceat 6ic per lb Xoa per lb ISo per lb 30 per cent 4 J and 23 per ceut $2 per proof pal 30 per cent flit per cent CO per ceut 40 per cent 5 per cent To r s ...... .................. ..... . .. ..m.. ...... Umbrellas, silk or alpaoa. ...... ............... Velvet silk Velet, cotton or mostly cotton. Watches. - - Wiues All still wines, such as sherry, claret or hock, in casks 60c per gal Ditto, in lottles of 1 pint and less.. SI. GO per case. LMtto, in bottles ot over 1 pint and less t!ian 1 oiart 1.60 per case. All champagnes and sparkling wines lu bottles of x pint or less 1.75 per do. Ditto, in bottles of over pint and not more than 1 pint - 3.53 per dor. Ditto, in bottl.'s of over 1 pint and not more than 1 quart . 7.00 per dos. Ditto, in bottles of over 1 quart (extra) 2.25 per gal. "What will Cleveland and Thurman's plurality be in Indiana? Send Tue Sentinel your prediction, and take your chance in the $100 prize contest. See announcement elsewhere. Who Pays the Duty? Kansas City Times. A Brussels carpet worth f 1 a square yard in England costs the American consumer, besides transportation charpes and dealers' profits fl.o). Of course, if Harrison is riht, the English manufacturer pays the GO cents and sells his 1 a yard carpeta for 40 cents, P.ut any American who has mind enough to count ten knows that such a proposition is extremely ridiculous. An I'tfly Question. X. Y. Times. The republican orators and organs have been working hard to show him that the tariff enatdes his employers to jrive Li.t:h waires; the workingman has met the statement with the very natural question: "Why, then, do they not give high wages?" That is an ugly question. We hope to reach a million subscribers before the end of the year, and this is how and why. The price of two car-fares pays for September, October, November, December. Send ten cents in silver or stamps. The Ladies' Home Journal and Practical Housekeeper never was published before a so good magazine for wives and daughters for anything like the money. It. is the coming million that does it. We have passed the half-million indeed we passed it once before we trust we have passed it now for good. 400,000 are permanent yearly subscriptions. The rest are only ten-cent subscriptions. No matter ! What we want is 10 let all families know what a club of a million can get for half-a-dollar a year ! The October number is on the news-stands six cents. La dies' Homs Journal. Philadelphia. RED HOT Democratic Campiign Song Books; words with Music, all complete. ONLY 20c I (2c. ftanips taken.) Excellent reading, whether vou ping or not. Sent post-pai-.J. Address "W. B. JONLS, Tub., Lockport, N. C A neat bad; sent free with each song-book.

THE WHITE CHAPEL MURDERS.

A Man Reported to Uave It en SI ordered ( A Theory Exploded. London, Oct. 4. The excitement caused by the recent murders of a number of women in the eastern section of London increased thii morning on the announcement that a watchman had been killed in Shadwell by a man who was in company with a woman and who was being shadowed by the watchman. It appears that last night the watchman saw the man and woman go bthind a board fence erected in front of a building in course of construction. Becoming suspicious of the man's actions, the watchman followed the couple, and finally called a policeman. The man then turned on the watchman and stabbed him to death. The mnrderer waj arrested after a desperate stmgsle. An inquest on the body of the woman found murdered in Mitre-squarc Sunday morning was held to-day. The testimony of the surgeons who made the examination of the body proved that the uterus and one kidney were missing. The British Medical Journal, referring to the White Chapel murders, says the coroner's theory that the assassin's work was carried out under the impulse of a pseudo-scientific mania, has been exploded by the first attempt at serious investitration. It is true that a foreign ffhysician inquired a year airo as to the possiility of securing certain part of the body for the purpose of scientific investigation, but no large sum was oSered, and the physician in question is of the highest respectability, and came exceedingly well accredited. The police authorities this Afternoon deny the report circulated this nwrning that a watchman was murdered in Sha4well last night by bei ns stabbed by a man who was in company Ith a woman, and whose movements were being observed ty the watchman. A Letter to Hovey Law rex cebcrg, Oct. 5. Special. J. IL Barton wishes the following letter sent to Gen. Ilovey, in reply to one of his lyiag circular! sent to him : Laweekcebcko, Ind., Oct 4, lSSS. Gen. AMn P. Ilovey: Sir Tours of Oct. 1 has hen reeeired. Ton tall as though you had uo regard for the trvth. My advice to you is to rote for Ciete land and Thurman, and also for a democrat to represent you in congre;s. Every tru soldier shnuM vote for the liberal policy of tbe (reseat administration towarl the aol'lier. Kesjectfully, J. It. Basics. What will Cleveland and Tlv.rman's plurality be in Indiana? Send Tue Sexttxei. your prediction, aud take your chaDce in the $100 prize contest See announcement elsewhere. One Otiten Harrison's "Lunatics. Lojansport Fharos. Hiram Zacbnriah Leonard, one of the men for whose benefit Ben Harrison said lunatic asylums hould be built, has been induced through much persuasion to work hisjawgin the interest of high tarilT taxation. Hiram Zachariah can make as tearful an appeal in behalf of a tax wool fleece as any one wiihin the sphere of our acquaintance. We are glad that llirani Zachariah bas defined his political status. For several years he has occupied the humble and obscure place of a dealer in margins. As the lightning flashes, his name Hits across the political neavens and then all is dark and cloomy as the inner preoiuts of a "bueket-shon." The nun who wantA.l an nhscure greenback four years asro i now ouly satisfied with $23 worth of "fried fat" for eacn speech he makes in favor of high tariiF taxation.If the old. deeeived and deserted greenback could speak it would say: "Hiram Zachariah, thou art a Judas." H.rrrd. to Gm. Lew Wdll&c. TO THE EDITOR Sir: Yon will please state in your next paper how many times Anna Dickinson has been on earth. Is this the third 1. . . ur i on rill lime r WOSSTAST llEADEJL Indianapolis, Sept 3. Special Harvest Exenrnion, The Northern Faci5o railroad announces a series of five special harvest excursions from St. Paal, Minneapolis, Duluth and Ashlaud to principal points in Minnesota, Dakota and Montana during StDtember and October. Parties contemplating a trip for pleasure, business, or with a view of selecting a new home can avail themselves of rates lower than ever before announced to visit tüe wonderful country tributary of the Northern FacLSo railroad. Tickets will be on sale at St Paul, Minneapolis, Dulth and Ashland on Sept 11 nnd 25, and Oct 9 and 23, limited to thirty days from date of sale, and good for stop-over on going passage. These rates to Montana points are about one cent per mile each way, and in some cases about half of the one way fare for the round trip. Connecting lir.es east and south of St Faul, Minneapolis and Duluth will sell tickets iu connection with these excursions at one fare for the round trip. The dates named will be a very opportune time to visit the wheat fields of Minnesota and north Dakota; also to see the cattle rangen of Montana. Everybody should beur in mind that the Northern Pacific railroad is the short and direct line to principal points in Montana, and the only line running either dining cars, Pullman sleeping cars, or colonist sleeping cars to Fargo, (irand Forks, Fergus Falls, Wahpeton, Jamestown, Helena, and principal points in northern Minnesota, north Dakota and Montana, For rates and other information apply to Charles b. Fee, general passenger ana ticket agent, St Taul, Mino, or nearest ticket egect CMHdrcn Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. Standard Business College, BLACKFORD BLOCK, Cor. Washington and Meridian Sts. Unexcelled facilities for Business, Short-hand, Penmanship and English training. A larger per cent, of oar ntndenU hold pa.rin tuatlons than those of suy other aehool In the fctate. Commercial Bureau in connection. Situations secured for student, bend for cataWne. MIDliLLTuN 4 DAVIS, Proprietor. PLAYS tfIoirnM, TaMannx, Fpelrrp. for Bch'Hil.Club' Parlor. fVt out. Catalogue Crate. I. J. iJJUuaoK.Cliioago JU. ovrj-s metno elixir .-. Um mm K.U Hmm M t. m .... T.. mh ' i. mt. Kim. an. 1 . iHtliln mm l M !'k( mmt Tim, baUia Btg. i. ralalia, lui. CtfiO ft WO.VTZr. AornttTTtintti. 90 best sell. X ."i 1 1 lua articles In iha world. 1 snmpie hrre. V V V Addrese JA 1' UliUXSoX.lMrviKAlicK. ' mwmn 'frsr-B-srsr !"- B hihi Imiut. jot notjod Xn OJ 'liisiuiq pucia a ltiq vjBuop m i m.A ci jrvd MJ"3 p3 Ptl OJ" siQ'hij -puq D euioa suojjq esai(X suounjaAsais.siuafl iaa i jurtaXa !JT MID aowiy rewK) pa J ;! ttu ail aaiu l-te'll WJOJ 1 on ma 'aemihi DMiurt em ui Baiit 14.U aow ui spoojeq.m)tAaaj jum eq um qaiqaa Aja!(,8f asnni jnoi 01 rantrrd jadsd 10 ssDOid

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Afi jiio ; o-io jtji aima I a.ir.-Tt ami vpioiutusi Äjvianio jsiswmiso 'ofist Tt H 1inou mn pa.i i'i!j.prr'vA nt wrprjcp V -OAe.iS' ui 01 eui p.f j 11-14 ihm ptti' M7nop oa p.-j a"iu uho eir AtU VJ mw jTij.iaptio.tv ji'aojU tvxt -g S U jrixi-nj '-oj H.ÜJUS "urr larr 8 s airnrj 7oirni otri rr " i mJ A-a'ix vde!!s 1 vi? jsjoj s'l nj ,ni'M. pnu, SJVjjC jui'j py 'Aoq puWiji p,2v 'Hyj Uli iH-O "TikHA Trxinoj "o tuna i.-xTja1 pajoja trpp';fltt ijiAvg JOSSpt'N aj t 'llJ.iu Xn Jnorrjivi Uu"I'J tTO'ij jo rwAJiu 01 asputls J;jy Hav ILli la "'XUO.iLii in-: 71 T7TOTJ rtv jo fpeat em m:ipv.i A"-J"ro4oo.i vrj Saauijifajj jco;jmi nm joj ji-npnaul u.'ojduiJiitaai iqftnos ij V:i inacai 'l-'i:;i tr u;ivnnj'U jo .'n UM tii 0 pj;uuj eiwq j- 'huüiits ijjD wi t 'jssjit nia -jx 11 onnj. Ui jj'n.a o.Ajjr; ATrrt-tj ..jp.bu tiattjidiuu pus t:;.:4 7) ei 'üii huj fjiu n; pus'vp iu.n7 ua ojiini nuojjiij) jCm no r':. pa ':) 0 xt Vin a' 1 ir!!Aj iq j 04qi3rg 19int!iq Ol Ul I 1 p'l lüO kB A4 J M!l)iA X! tn-n .mi j pu 'iq(4 m )noi t Jadn i p;n.o hä ijm ui ji-iniu! (AI itaj 1 n -d.. uri-JJJ pu viu 1-M.ib pea, 'Xp iuu q 11 a,a lj na '-g 's "R H p-Jns s.mio r I ..Ja;r;ion : o o Hn euptpaui qi Jo 00 1 t 15 -nm 'ijnj a oinjBjJ li 1 ! MB pus OQtods a.UIMg noi J.uop va :TiCl p 'uottll'Uno irtpH tza iju poTtTTxiiuiA's r.q pujii apnil juio nrviKA pnw t'.uaimn'siuwtl 3( wa j"j U- 1.iaimrij.'T iko'M eqj ia -J.jjne j iijv tu iiiiüi aAijp im put ozi-i Rinnui J-ii(i diqnop ui oj uom ft ta nr f t it .vu kMj-i jo 01 ui pBi ViaifctrKuuiin rl 'U rl I iwn S-U V utMiij! an pnv a-Mui a'ui ill fUii pui'upnj.m QHJ pJi.ivm a'iinni mrmm I STi-"i:'i w.l'iJ 'uJ tfMM ; D(qy 1 -li'H'L 1Fcr ts year at 37 Court Place, now at 322HarketStreet, T Vv Bet. Third and Fourth. L JlÜÖ I iilUiiiJ A rrafTtr 4ucsu-I soi IrsU! qaht4 phjatofu od tbs Cr.ros nil iorias rf PRIVATE, CHRONIC; and SLXUAL DISEASES. Sperinntorrlieri and Impotency. at U mult of ef-iIm la voaUi. ttnal un la tXtmir tnti. orottivr c&um. Bui pnyftvitf ud f xiie fuW few-.DC r?ct: Nrruii?M. txruitial F-iBtMnat. (elf vroia atiiu br arTO). Din;i-. of hitt, befe.'a Ufatry Phr allrT. rVM iltaoA AvrrHoo teiccmr f Fnri.. Oufuiioa of I4ea, !ac. of tul Povor. .. roaltrlmf aiarnfcfe imroir or onho- or xtn-vth'.r prrtta mil; wrrt. SY PiilXj TS P,IU"'J " o4a JU''1 fr .'"; Goncrracsi, UXjLiXja, Ftrlciiir, ixmj. BrrsiA, ir i-j P.I 101 .Huer pHtom iwtwi lulrlii enrod. It i lf-vvilefit th.t a i-toy Ha a ho ijt trrlml t'tecd?a to a OtrtaiD 6!M f li.oet aiii! Irrot'ibf liiootmada BAB, all. . dintB rmt uill. thftU."f ki''L ü.u tn eftr roooix. ji-itl irwmi ui fit car. Wbto it I liioooTrnkf at la Tint th. eilr for tmunrtit. BrfldTM nab Boat pmtM aa4 mMt Or m.il or x mi oB.wbor. Cnrcs Gaaranteed in all Cases undertaken. tcn.u.tAUont 1- .i!1 or hr IrVit Trut aa4 (o!tf. CkArjB nuGut4 mod fTwptmdwoo stncuj t- nf ii-tma4 PRIVATE COTJXSELOR OflMp, BM!ttirT 1-1ti, arl ortlrd. fr ti)"Tr OOt entB. Rli.xiH mi br A.L i.Mrras b. One hours frMB B A. M. to P. U. BwaAra. I to 4 P. 1 I GENTS WASTED Perfection e!eTa(ln clottiea V V bracket. Kenn b fafened enreiy to tha wall, can be lowered to nl.-ut four fft from the floor, nd after putting on tho clotlies cn be raisi nearly t-i the ce'lini?. tVhn cot in ue can l-e ctosed tt the wall and will take up no room. The moat durable brai ki-t erer invented. F. M. Mc Carty, (feneral sp'iit tate of In li.ina. Alwirenl for the elf-heating Acme nuxithin? iron with of without flufr attachments. Adiresa, F. M. iiocarty, renn , lnd. Peml-montMy nne-war Kxcurt.-r. A eheap tri to 'li l'aci!"c C -H't. t'-r firtirularn anplv to A. 11111.1.1 V .V . ! nulh 1 Ixrk Nlri-rl, Chicago, III.,or?U ah:nun lBoton.Mta. ArTonewhowantstobc' "r en send as tbeit iaiJrss srd we will mail i.-iaitt!e pr P"" b. TAi- l' L:tOS.. lUxaester. at. . ft" k ii L AGENTS ARE SURPRISED At the great demand for ROSE Jcllr. People come is them for mile around lor it. It ia the only thing thai makes the aeent welcome to call. Peop!e wänt it. Nolo tag sella like it. or give o great aat afaction. We pro tect agents, and jr' ve them over 100 er cent, on larpi or amall or-ler. We dwiver all r'M'' prepaid, ana tve all our Hg'-nts a Cum rt-ent worth from J1.Ö0 t fl(X Particulars fret-, or sample and 100 lefereaces foi a io stamp, or a dozen trial Arjples ror 2ÖC. Ru4 N Midway, Fn-di-rick Co., Md. It p,-7nrp r t:a evdiX Jlndettiiniop .itiu 'BfJt Pl&O PU"S ABU Umaii ii-3 r.i rn --Iii t- " - iA einJ iTi g zum dmrpujt4j iujs poft -uro nauiuaui uhviii ci.tiKja astni.i ; J tUlopri'W pluinM iwäjä jniojini 01 l.'ii' -v U( W(.M JJ t.N. iapun U.iB BrtOMUl pi n pntt (i.ie an 1 in tpok3 iiioj euJ J- l' in S'jn p'i Si ma 'cpoos J tr OAal pus B JH js SUJ. 'MX i"i(l luajaj eta en in, -a j.a nja rxx.n i prtin;aj Aimi '"S q Ol a-0iasmiir.'4 'sruii' soma Q1CQ CI109 Perls, 1073. bora, S03, 404, 6W' ina xavome AtumiDQrs, o. 351, 170, and Lis other ttyles, Sold throughout tho World,

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