Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 10, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 November 1890 — Page 6

XMXUSXH CITIZENSHIP.

Dsattverad by Bx-PrMiMt Grove CHsysesmd At tk Maaqwat ttt MhwInh, ,, hi rstk- evtMtt-eett sMrHislag AnntrtMsary -f Alien 41. TkWTNMMI. Coiuwaus, 0., Nov. 14,Fid.ewiag ia MMrwi, ta tall, of I Urn. Gm Cleveland, delivered at the Tkumtnn banquet last night in response to the totuu "American Citisenahln." MiL rNKlillilC.Vr AXU UKXT1.EMN.X- I fallow tke prutuptiiiK of h heart full or devotle and.vs-Heratlen, a I tiWr from Mm IWMMr rmey wf tlw great state of Xw York, kr tribute of ugectlon for the man whom we honor to.nlirlit, I am caHnnlaoloned to claim f r my Male herfull share ut the xkrr wkltlt ha hU uji.iH thu AMrteiiH name an elmrmHor, Uy one wbaee eurrnna example ean nt be )rtveitipiti and who- rHiiwn van not be limited In ownership tat the nelsu borsaud friend of any local I ly. We eon tt every exdu-ave pretension to his fame and (crs-alno. beeanae IwliH naiKhbor to all the people of th land; beeause he m the irieaa of al who hive their eonnuy: ha cause Ills earner splendidly Illustrates th uet and ftroHKHt eletHrnfcs of our National character; and lnoaii-t hU example belongs loan nis countrymen. It m attlnx that those who have faith In our deatlay as a nation, who ba!lva that there ar noble things which belong die tinem-ely to our ettai-neter as a people and Mhowlxa at l tm worth pure American cltlenM)i, should titer here tu-ulicht. It I given us to contemplate the highest statesmanship, the most unyieldlRK and dlshtts-rerird devotion to the Interest of the people, and tha wmi valuable aehleruwent in tha cause of our eonntry's wel .fare, all of which have been stimulated and aoeoutplisned through the larlueiiee and Impulse of tme, unpervurtrd, sturdy Ai!irl caatxm. We rejoice In tha example afforded it this occasion of genuine American eltl a&ensalp. rttreated U ns ati a safe and In .fallible Interpreter of duty In all tha enter getieUs of a Ion and honorable pubtle career, and as an unfailing guide to useful ness and fain. In thin ir ; net and la the atmosphere of tiiee rxNvcttonei, we sltould not ml the I.'3ii tluy eoiii!i)id to un. nor fail to re new our tionreclittioit of the value of this citizenship, and revive our apprehension of cbtHintiiitintrf and eonditlon In whleh It Jin-, lu r!.o and xmwth, And ttrxt of all we should be profoundly grateful that the elements whieh make up iuMireiigtn ana vigor of American eltlcen ship are so naturally related toorltua tlon, ami are so simple. The lntclj,fi of monarchy which taint the Individual char acter of the sublet; the splendor whleh daxxicH the popular eye and distracts the attention from kIjusc ami ktilteH dlteontent; the schemes of conquest and selfish aggrandizement which make a selfish people, have no legitimate plaee In our national life, litre the plain people of the land are the ruler Their investiture of power It only accom panied with the conditions that they should lore their country, that they should jealous jy guard and protect In lntrtts and fair fame, and that all the Intelligence with w hich they are endowed should be devoted to an .nnderatanding of Us needs and the promotion of Its welfare. These are the elements of American cltl SfiMldp, and these are the oonditlous upon which our free Institutions were Intrusted to our people, In full reliance, at the begin, nlng and for all time to come, ucon Amer ican manhood, eonseerated by the highest .ami pore-ti patriotism. A country broad and new, to be subdued to the purpoae of man's existence, and promising vast and Independent resources. and a people Intelligently nndcrttandlng tnc vaiweei a tree nation and hold Ins; fait to aa inlene affection for Its history and Its heroee, have had much to do with mold i iik our American character and giving It 1.. til f .... .. . .. . . Jtaruinttuu ami vigor, if u. it should never be forgotten that the iiitliienee which, more than all other things, has made our people ante depositories of governmental power, and which haa furnished the surest guar amy of the strength and perpetuity of the JtepuMI?. haa Its souree in the Amerle m borne. IUr our patriotism J born and ntwlnet Itself with the growth of filial love, and here our children are taught the story of our freedom and Independ ne. Hut above all, here In the bracing and wholesome atmosphere of nneom plaining frugality and economy, the mental jmd moral attributes of our people have been firmly knit and Invigorated Xever could It besal l of any other country s truly nsototirs. th.it the permaaeney of Its tnsti (titlomi depend npon Its homes. I havn spoken of frugality and economy at important factors In American life. I find no fault with the accumulstron of wealth, and am glad to see energy and enterprise receive tbelr fafr reward. Hut I believe that onr Government In Its natural Integrity, I exactly suited to a frng.il and eeonomfeui people; aHd I believe It w safet't In the hands of thine wito hnve been miule strong and self-reliant In theircltlEHBihip, by self denial and by the surrounding) of an nnforeed ewnomv. Thnft and earrfnl watchfulneM ut expend Iture among the people teHd to enre a thrifty government; and cheap and cnrefttl livlnit on the part of Individuals ought to enforce eeonomy In the publle expend! turus. When, therefore, men in high ptaew of trut, chargd with the responsibility of making and executing onr l;tws, not only condemn but flippantly deride eheapne)s and economy within the ho run of our p'o pl,and whuu the expenditure of the Gov rnment are reklei and wasteful, we may lnj snre that NomethinK U wrong with iw, aiul that a condition txiit4 which eills for n vigorous and rfsentttil defence of Airleiiiiii.ii, by every man wortuy to be culled n American eltlz ju. UM,n the qnestion of eheapnM and oeon ntny, whether it relate to Individu-ris w lo the operations of theU overnioent.tlie Democratic party tme to It-j creed and Its traditions, will unalterably ruiii.iln attache 1 to our plain and frugal pcupl. Thev re espw clnlly entitled to the wathehful eare and protection of their Government; and when they are borne down with burdens greater than they can bear.and are n.tde the objects of scorn by hard taskmasters, we will not leave their side. A the grent German reformer, instating upon his religious convictions, In the presence of his neeue exclnlmed: "I enn do nought else. 11 ore I utanil. GihI help we," an, however much otttets may moek and deride cheapneaa and the pwir and frugal men mid women of our laud, w will stand forth In defense of Uu-lr simple Americnnhm defiantly exclaiming; "We can do nought el-ve. Here we stand." Thus when the novation Is raised whether mr peo le hnll Uavi the neeciMarks of life at a cheaper rate, we are not ashamed to -coufes (.urclvos "In full ayinpathy with theil(jiHin! for eheaper cnatn;" and wo ate not tthturbed liv thu hint that this seem -necessarily to Involve a cheaper man or wdiiihii nnder tbu ooats." When tlie promoter of a party measure whlth invades every home In tlio nd with higher prlcei ilceiires that "cheap and nauty jio together, and this wnole syHtetu of cheap thaws ii it badge of poverty; for eheap mei-. rhniith-Hj means eheup men and cheap ntitu inuana cheap country," we Indignuntlv re. pud isle eh an Interpretation of Amtrie.ia tcntlim-nt. And When another one, high In party councils, lio has hi'e mt nototlone as the advocate of a contrivance to jverpetratu paititan .upritnii.cy by outrageous Inter fer unco with the nuttVuge. annonnt es that "the cry tor nvPHv hi nn-Arnenean," we swirnlntly teply thiit his sneeen dees not In dh-Hie tins Mightest (.ont-eption of true Awe Hcanl.iHi, 1 will nut rerer to oih-r utt rncr of tike J port frcw similar jurwes. I oo.iieii t uty .

M vita recall lag lb prowiaaat aa iffalfleant Toe Vouster Is that the thing were addressed by Aasernmas to AmerbNins. What was the ussaiian of tbasnt astndetnaatioua of ebpes and what had honest American men and women done, or what were the likely to to that they s4mhI4 be tarratoned with the epithets "cheap." "nasty" and "on-Amrtsanr It la ksrd to apeak patiently aa we answer these queetioae. atep by sp a vast num. berof war people bad been led on, toUuw lag blindly in Mm pn4ajw party. They had been filled with hate and seetional preps dlee; they had been capped with taUrepre eatattoas and false HMtusUes: thev had

been csrmpted With Mswuey and by aPinmla j to their aelfishneM. All tbeee thlns led up ! isi meir anal betray! to antlsfy the demands of those whs bad supplied the fund fur their corruption. This Wtrayal was palpable; and H wae lmMMible tu deny wr eonceal the fact that the pretended relief tendered to the people In fulfilment of a promtee to lighten the burden of their life, made by the party entrusted with the Government, wn bat a acfteme to pay the deba Incurred by the purchnn of party Mteestss. while It farther increased tha ImpoTerishinent of the The people were at last aroused and demanded an explanation. They had been taught for one hundred years that In the distribution of benefit their Government should be administered with eouahtv and justice. Thry had learned that wealtn wa nut Indispensable to respectability and that It did Mt entitle Its possessor to s)eelal governmental favors. Humble men with scanty incomes had been encouraged by tha InNnenee nad tne iplrlt of our Institution,' to prsctioe economy and fr' galHy to the end that they might enloy to tbeurniost the rewards of their toll. Tire Inilueuee of the A'nerican home was still about them. In their simplicity they knew nothing of a new dispensation which made eheapneM disreputable, and thev still loved tue cheap ooata of Lincoln and Garfield, and hundreds of their countrymen whom they held in veneration. And tnus these un sophisticated Amer ictus, uneonselous of tbelr wrong doing, demanded the redemption of party pledge and clamored for eheapness, In order that they might provide ineneeessaries and comfort of life for them selves and their families at the lowest poa sible coat. The leaders of the party, which wascauieht In the act of robbery and which was arraigned hy the people for a violation of its trust, were forced by tlivirsad predicament to a desperate expedient. To attempt to reverse the current of true Amerleanlsm and discredit the most honorable sent!. hibbU betongiiiK tu American manhood, were the disgraceful tasks of those who in suited our people hy the announcement of the doctrine that to desire cheapness was to love nastlnsss, and to practice economy and frugality waa un-Anierlctn. Tims do we plainly see that when the path pointed out by patriotism and American citizen hip Is forsaken by a party In power, for schemes of lflstiHe-s and for unscrupulous conspiracies for partisan nuceess. Its course Inevitably leads to un just favoritism, neglect of the Interests or the mass,., entire perversion , of the mission of republican Institutions, and. In some form, to the most Impudent and outrageous Insult to true American sentiment. Itrau not be denied that political events In the past have gone far toward encouraging arrogant party assumption. Kvery thoughtful and patriotic m.tn has at times been disappointed and depressed by the apparent indiftcrenee and demoralization of the people. '' But. such reflections have no nlaee In the fellcltatlonsof to-nlght. This isa tlmewken Mlth in our countrymen should be fullv re. established. The noise of a recent political revolution Is still heard throughout the land; the jreople hive just demonstrated that there Is a point beyond which they can notbe lml by blind partisanship, and that they are quite competent to examine and correctly dee Ida political q ii estSons concern ing tneir rights and their welfare. They have unmercifully resented every attack unoti true American manhood, and have tan-rut party leaders that, though slow to anger, they take terrib.e revenges when betrayed. They permit us to ferglve our honored guest for all the cheap coats he haa ever worn, for they have declared them tu be In f.ishktn. They have also decreed that the Deealogue hu a plaee In our nulltlas. for thev have enforced the eommand: "Thou shnlt net teal," and hxve rendered an emnhatie vr. diet against thoae who have borne falle wit. n ess. Nothing could so welt aeeomninv tlu. honors we pay onr distinguished truest aa thi celebration on his blrthdav of the Victory which Mas Just been achieved n vindication of American eitizensnln for In him we honor the man who has best llIHtratil tme American manhood, rw ranking aad his are Increased, as we also celebrate to-night the triumph of a Demo cratic principle for whieh he taught and fell out two years ngo; and to eomnlete our i iv and his we are permitted to indulge In true ueitiucratic entUMshtsm over the stea Ifust. hw and devotion to its ereed exhibited by onr party, which knowing no fiiseonrage ient, has fought to victory In the people's mine. Who can now doubt onr countrrmrn's an. precis 1 1 n . f th.it trait, so wett Illustrated In the character nf Allen . Thnrman, which prompted htm throughout his lona career nt all time and under nil circumstance, and wi.hout repcard to personal conseMences, to do the thin whieh his conscience and JudKMient approved, and which Hsfemi tl to him to be In the Interests of his country ami la neeordnnce with his le . eratic faith? Who can now doubt t hat t onse!tHe :ind conr.ige point out the w,y to Ii hoi c uu.y. If we ntertln more solemn thouirhts On this (k-chsIoh, let them le oonccrnliiit the rttsimnsiblUty vhlch awulis us a onr fellow eon. i try men ptttee in our keeping tUHr hopes and their trust. We shall fall In onr oIjIIkuIIom to them It we it I He eonfcclene-' nnddniyby Ignoble imrtlsanship; but wo shall n-eet every patriotic expectation If, In all we do we follow the KHtd.mce of ti'lK and Itonest Democracy, iilu-nlned by the light of genuine American cittstinsttlp. A GerntHH Ti-aeber's I'ate. A schoolmaster, sixty-eight years old. was pennioned from a Meehlenlmrg estate about atwelve years aro. afu.r having taught there twenty-seven years. ins pension consisted of a cow, a sbakv little cottage, a small parcel ef ground on which to raise a few bushels of pota toes anil a lew small moasnres of rve. The old man received nothing, however, toward defraying his dailv expemlltures for food, heat and light, ami so it cam ii about that he was obliged to go out on the highway as a laborer for conw a day. In the hratof sum mer ami the raw, wet days of fall he has for years worked patlontlv and un complnlnlngly among rough mim who were formerly his scholars, endurlnir without a word the taunts and i. proa.ch;s ornn unfriendly inspector .On the wcoml ami fourth Saturday of every month he Htood In line with' the other lalwrers, his wage book in hand, and awalbsd his turn to receive the paltry sum due him. Twelve vcir of th .i.i man's life have tm-hed thn. if. i. Just passed hit eightieth year, and is without a proaoet-t 4f SL tMftt.tantf faltatta-rft I he name of this old hero is llandm-f Iterlln Letter. South west of .Sue a party ef Frsnab surveyor havn dioeovered the Ul ,r ancient canal running for mil i. tu direction f thn Ued Sea, whieh it seems to nave eennecied with the kswia ef the Mediterranean- ,i

WRECKED ON THE ROCKC

rtftr WMwna, ttoeisnj mm rM Fiasssta. resist ttaly Vfcrs Owt mi tj Mp's Complain -at Knew e npea-Ths WelMmrSen Wereaebs. Lakpov, Hov. U liar Maatya aMp fcWpaat waa wracksMl ynsnUy mkmh r milt mrHi vt Catm Flalatoam Taw hM4r4 aasl faryHMifa Man aVwid. Only three eacapesi. The iMirpant want on tha rocks tac rare storm en the opaNUh eoaat. A haavy mist pravaitod at tha tiwa. It m latpaaeibki to obtain aasUUiseo frow tha shore, ami tha vaaaol retnalissMl ia War halplaaa poititm until brokaa to pieces by tha tompoatuoua aoas whieh set up over her. The crew were waahad overboard In group hy thn re 1 Huraalea waves, and drowned riahesl ! to death amid the rocka. " i nio ueaH-r wne eotsi veyed to Corunaa. a distance of sixty tailei, aver mountain roada, and when a relief oorpa waa orjeauitod aad seat to the wreck it waa too late to he ef any avail. The Serpent's eraw freeer eonsUted of 179 men. The remaining vietims were bains; conveyed to other Kritish man-of-war or the Atriaan u Won. 4 THK LOST VKaeKI. Io.viniy, Nov. 18. Her Majenty's ship Serpent, which was wrecked or the Spanish coast Monday night with a loes of Ready two hundred and fifty lives, was a cruiser of the third clasa. She was built at Davenport," In 1389, at a out of SW5,000. The Admiralty ofHe I a Is maintain silence and decline to ba intervlewod on the subject or the disaster. They potsees no orjcanlxatioR through whieh news of such occurrences would bo transmitted to them in advance of press reports, if the officers of the ill-fated vessel did not survive. Though the report of almost total an nihilation of the Serpent' complement were at first regarded as too terrible for belief, thu impression haa now become general that the storv is trun. t The news spread throughout Eneland like wild-fire, causing lamentation ia hundreds of homes, ALL HUT TliKKK WKKK PHOW.NKP. Maokid, Nov. 1 a Three sailors who succeeded in swimming ashore from I the wrecked llritish cruiser Serpent I have arrived at Camarinas. They express the belief that all the others oh I board were drowned. i THE WEM.IKuTON' RARRAfKA mtuvivn , Losoo.v. Xov. 13. The Guards'! Wellington llarracks are burning. The fire originated under the stair-case ia the quarters of the married men. All a the adult inmates were rescued by mean of ladders amid great excite- ( ment. A number of children suffering , with measels were wfapped in blankeU t and taken to places of shelter, but fwo 1 of tha little patients are miseing, and it is feared they were overlooked in the coafusion and have perished in the flames. When the fire waa discovered, j and the signal for "fire parade" waa sounded oa the bugle, the troops aasen bled promptly, with splendid discipline, and worked eagerly and effectively according to the manual. The ' officers were delighted with the intelligence aad willingness displayed under the emergency, aad cheered the men oa in their heroic effort to gain control el the flame. Loxdox. Nov. 18. The barracks were i almost entirely destroyed before the flames were brought andercontrol. The children who were thought to have perished have been found alive aad unhurt. A VITAL QUESTION. What Shall be Dene with Lepers KoshmI Within the United MHHte-Ibbitla Xeeessary. Washi.vton, Nov, 18. Da Fori, the president of the Philadelphia Hoard of Health, recently wrote to Surgeon-General Hamilton, of the Marine Hospital service, asking what could be done by by the Government in the matter of the segregation of lepers found from time to time in this country. Dr, Hamilton replied as follows: I quite agree with yea as to the propriety of the segregating of a plaee for lepers, and no advocated In mr address as chnirman of the neetlon on State last May. There Is great diversity of opinion among our own people as to what should Ins done. Consequently such an Ir-titmlon would have to be fertile vnlmtinry treatment of atich lepers as were cent fnin ?i:ites not hnving laws pro vidln-i fort li ir segregation, and IrivoL untary of them from those that have apecifle laws under the N'atlonal law to prevent the spread or eontnglous diseases from one State toaHothar. I suppose a regulation ean be framed to prevent the lepers from traveling, but grent expense wont I be entailed, and there Is now no law that would entitle me to restrain them from their personal liberty except at the quarantine, stations. W enn prevent lepers from coming Into the United States, a we understand the regulation, but we ean take no aetlon In regard to those already here, except In the general manner Indicated, except In easeef aliens. I have no doubt that It the boards ef health so desire, Congress ean be lad need to pass a law providing for an Institution wherein the unfortunate eases enn be treat, ed and hHmanety eared for, but It wilt require legislation to enable any thing to be done In this regard. A D-hIhI. Loxpo.v, Nov. 1. The a u th or led to deny the (Jaaettes statement that negotiations I are proceeding for a statement of the ' -ewiounuiand fishery question on the mn of a surrender of the French shorn to Great Itritaln, the cession of African territory to France, and the repeal of the Newfoundland Halt law, The Amerlrsn MoeMy ot linglnerrs. KfCHMovti, Va., Nov. IS, The Amer ican ifoeiety of Mechanical Kngineera yesterday decided to establish head- j quarters in Chicago during tho World's Fair and to have an International congross there lasting six days. A paper on "An Engineering Problem at Richmond" was explained by W. II. Adams, ef New York. It proposed to construe! a large Inland basin in the Chesterfield fiats opposite this eity. After tha reading of ether papers the society ad learned and took a trip down tha Jams river, returnia to the elty about lv a Sjle-slc, i

MUELLER AND MEYER.

(Mee rteaestta-M la bjej A Cssslaas re la Jarry-a -ralr ttesO.4 Uaola Jerry It ask la atiil paranlaf ala arlll-o tbawian "protaettoii fur farmer. M Ilia latstat aff ualoa aitoera that ha haa fotlaa iown to tha root oC mattar in oaa respaat at Wast ha faela that tha faraser la aatlUaa to aa asach "woteet tioa aa aaybody alaa. Hat la what he aayet s4 prateetioa as tea ether failewa. If they don't get It. It not a fair deal, that all we're eettlag pretty Me4 ef rocatiagthe eradle for aewe of tbeea six foot. whlker d infanta, while rur infants stoat get aay rocking at all Unless our Infant dose net the same amount ef reeking, w.-'re got ax to get rieht up in onr wratn an I not oulr Mek the sIx-iimKit nut of the cradle but smash the rockers, don't you understand. We aunt all be protected alike to the aaato tent All very true. Uncle Jerry; but how you ffotng to give the farmers this "proteotlon?" Tha duties whieh MeKtnley haa put Into hia "fanners' tariff" will never do any farmer ia this whole broad land a penny's worth of good. If even a few farmers along the northern border should be enabled to sell a few more doaens of eggs, a few more bushels of wheat, or a ftiw wore nigs, there ia absolutely so guarantee that they will get one cent more for them than at present; for the quantities imported are so tnsigninccnt that to debar them from entrance by means of high duties can not possible affect tha prices with us. ne now Import one bushel of wheat to every 8,000 that we raise; shut out that oao bushel and how much will that raise the price of the 8,006 bushels? Absolutely none at alL The same thing is much more true of corn. We imported only l.ftM bushels last year, nearly every bushel of whieh oame across from Mexico at El Paso, n a . . xexaa. .weasniey naa. however, oome to the rescue of the farmer by putting up the duty on corn in order to shut out that pitiable sum of l.oia bushels. Will any farmer be better off now? ( liut the protected manufacturers buy , from the farmer? ' i es; they do and at the lowest free trade market price. How long will our farmers continue to be humbugged hy uus noma marKet" nonsense. The home market for farm products is sim ply and only a small part of the world's market, in whieh the prices of the ' world's market for farm products are going to prevail, however high MoKialey may pile his duties oa those commodities. This call for "protection for farmers" ia one of the greatest humbugs of the age aad that for the simple reason that there is absolutely no way to "protect' tne lanuer. , loucannurt aim by pro tecting other people: but you can't help him by "protecting" him. That is all poppy-cock. But Uncle Jerry is right ia saying that the farmer is "entitled to the same measure of pro tec tioa aa the other fel lows!" Of course; nothing could be more just But let us suppose that such a scheme, in which all could be "protected alike to the same extent, "could be put into operation. Now, then, how would "fair deal" work? Uncle Jerry's protection means higher prices for one's produce or one's manufactures or els it means nothing at all. If the manufacturers are to he benefited to the extent of 91.000.0M hy protection they esvn get their extra P01 onlJ bT charging higher prices to their consumers, who are largely the farmers. Now, then, let ue square the account by making the "fair deal." It ia clear that the farmers must be benefited $1,000,904 to counterbalance their loss. Where is that t l.ODO.OOO to come from? It ought to come from the manufacturers who are benefited, else the "deal" is not fair. Grant that It does come from them and where are you? Any thing gained? Have you gone oa Inch further up the hill? Here is the account of the manufacturer: Jain si.',aM lMW. 1,14 04 Net gain,..,..........,..., And the farmer's aecount: Cat AftM eaka-t sVSefl twin.... 1 1 mjM Lo- , j.nai,?) .V"t train , ...t,oM And there you are! That is the way German students give irenents to each other. Mueller and Meyer each wants a walking eane. tluellnr buys one for Meyer and has an nscriptSon put on it: : TO MY FKlKN'f) MKYKR, j raoM his kvkk faithful f : MUKLLKaV : -e Meyor then buys a cane of precisely he same kind, and costing the same to i penny, and he ceremoniously presents t to Mueller with this inscription on It: TO Mr FKIRND MUKr.T.RR, raoM mm evek faithful MKYKR .Let our protectionists imitate Mueller and Meyer, and then we shall have Uitoie Jerry's protection "alike to the same extent" Otherwise the former will go or Nocking the cradle for some of these s xfoot- whiskered infants.

Standard is' while their infants don't get any rockSt. James ! talL"

The rows comes from Rome that the committee to take steps for the representation of Italy at the Ch Cairo World's Fair has dissolved because tbfey found that, in view of our new Tariff la-v, few manufacturers or others were willing to send exhibits here. Manufacturers show their goods in order to sell them; where a tariff makes sales impossible a "world's" fair is an absurdity. Ve shall have a bit, Un itrd States Fair The President said at Galeaburg, 111., that "restrain is should be reserved for the turbulent and disorderly." That was only a week after be bad signed the McKlnley bill, which lays restraiata upon people who are neither turbulent nor disorderly, but whose only ffeaee hi that they want to buy and sell la oartaiamsKhehv re U is "to law tbe

ONE.SIOKO PROSPERITY.

Fm eld safe View T awaiawsa MselBUss Mewlstteas WMt WbM FroaisWat Harriaoa waa at Tarn alv (Mi vsfti sestw-L eMV lsUsMai ItVeVs ts 'aC -fl about prosperity. Bat tho that tho Free Idea t (erred to tba waa a oa-i4 pros parity. Ha couat4 prosperity much aa Csar Bead ruaa tha House of Bepre. atatlvea to aa oaly whoa it serve hi aarpoaa beat aad ignore the other aid aliogstb'. It wa the proeperlty of the maaafaeturers that the Presideat apok et He said: "I was told as I apawoaoaed your ally that there waa not aa tola wheel in Terr Uaute." Precisely so; but the President waa. very wide the mark whoa ha drew from this that everybody else was gs-ttiag oa equally well. "It ia very peaaeat la know." be said, "that thi prosperity ia so generally shared by all our people. " Do the farmers think they are sharing in it, too? Is aot the contrary a notori ous faet? Onr high protectionist Super intendent of the Cmtsua, Robert P. Por ter, has said on this subject that "the American farmer ia just now passing through the gloomy valley of hard t met;" and yet Porter juggles with hi figure and proves to hia own aa Us faction that "the direct benefit he (the farmer) receives from the present tariff are far in excess of the benefit received by any other class!" 1 his talk about the farmer's prosper ity in the home market, aa the result of protection, is, however, breaking dowa all along the line, from East to West The failure of the protected home market to bring prosper ty to him was first felt in the East. It began ia the decline of New England farming village and in the desertion of New England hill farms. Kight ia the midst of the greatest manufacturing com muni tie thi decline of farming has, gone on. The census just taken shows that tba townships adjoining the prinospl manu facturing cities of Connecticut havo lost about 10 per cent, of their popula tion in ten years. In the State of New York the farmers have failed to share in the general prosperity that the President boasts of. Already in 1S87 Mr. J. K. Dodge, tba high protectionist statistician of tba Department of Agriculture, reported a follows: "2icw York farmers are mora ia debt than thsy were ten years ago. The average depreciation of farming lands is fully one-third in tea veer. Probably one-third of the farm In t a State would not sell for mora than tba costof the building and other improve ments. Thirty per cent of the farm are mortgaged for two-thirds of their estimated value." The protectionist always make tba e answer to those facts It is Weekem competition, they say. Hut hoa- doe the matter stand further West? Take Ohio, for laetaaoe. A correspondent of that high tariff organ. the w lork Tribune, writes a letter to break the force of the recently published facta as to the decline of tba farming population of Ohio, but he baa to make admissions which damage hi ease fatally. He bad to admit that tba farm value of Wayne County had fallea off six per cent in tea years, aad teat the loss of population Is still greater. Kvery county ia the We torn Reserve, be aay. shows a loos of populattoa ia ta agricultural districts. Ia view of tba fact the Tribune's eorraspoadeat make this sorrowful admiasioa: "No oae denies that there ha been a depreciation of tbe farm land of the State is the last decade." Then oome tbe cut-aad-dried explanation, "tba attractioa ' of the cheap lands of the West" Apparently we are not yet far enough West. Let us try Iowa. The Commis sioner of Labor Statistics ia tbat Stat j has just made public some faat of a ' startling character. Ha haa received ." answers to his inquiries from 710 farmers "recommended to him as reliable persona" He finds that "seventy-six per os-at of the farmers of the State are prevented by pressure of their debt from holding their grain and other products for the best market prices. Eight per cent have lost their farms hy mortgage fore closure since 1880." Thirty-eight per cent, of farmers' children are kept out of school fifty-eight days each school year to do farm work; ASS of these farmers report that since 1885 farm products have been sold below tbe cost of production. But perhaps our cheerful protectionist President looks still further West to final that "this prosperity is so general iy shared in by all." Kansas and Nebraska are stilt further West Does he find tha paradise of home market prosperity for farmers in these two States? Is it not here that the mortgage companies are rapidly acquiring possession of farms and estab.ishing a system resembling Irish landlordism? Is it not here that the Farmers' Alliance has gained it greatest strength as the direct outgrowth of the hard times whioli bear so heavily upon the farmers? Where, then, will the President find that protection is dispensing blessings upon the farmers. Eche answers, Where? In 197 the corn crop of the United States, raised oa 9S,SS0.M acres, amounted to 74Hf.mo.009 bushel, of a tdUl value of 9nlM,948,39. Tha next year protection began to do it work for the farmer. During all tbe intervening years the farmer ban had the benefit of the full protection tor whieh he voted. Yet twenty years later, ia 1887, the acreage had increased to 7.73,7ft aeses and tha erop to l,87,79,0o bushels, while lb aggregate value waa only 9s77,Mi,&M. Another instance af tha benefit whieh do not come to tbe farm, er through protection. Chicago Globe. In 117 tin. area devoted to wheat was 18.S1!1,M1 acres and the crop amounted to ill2,s4l,4o bushels, valued at$421,78i,). During the next twenty years the farmer enjoyed the unalloyed blessings of protection and basked in the sunshine with this result: In 1887 tba aereege wa S7.tMt.78 aores, tba erop bad mora than doubted, bat It wa only valued at HlW.Mi,uSJ, or not a much by $m,i,-m aa lees than half tbaf aambor ef bushel ware worth t waa kg katsaaBsm a t- ..Jli WfWWs'lsrWIWaVrTnP

A rMtijMtim MUltasMirct This seems a paradox, but it k ex. Itlaistod by one of New York's richest shstsu - x uun count my wesuUt ia dollars," be said. "What are all my MesJoos to ma, sine I am a victim of consumption ? My doctor teUs me that I nave but a few month to live, for tbe disease is incurable. I am poorer than tbat begjrar yonsJer." "feat," in tempted the friend to whom be apok, "consumption c be cured. If taken In time, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical I)jove.7 eradicate every vestige f tbe disease from your system." "Fll try itVaakl the millionaire, m1 be rKd; and to-day there is not a healthier,' rtrumn - ,1om -wywbera! Tbe "Discovery'' strike at tbe jf of tba complaint. Consumptioa is a disease of tbo blood is nothing mora nor less than lung-scrofuU and it ma ad yield to this wonderful remedy. "Golden Medical Discovery" k not f0 "a ackiwwledged remedy for tbat terribly fatal malady, when taken ia time and given a fair trial, but also for H forms of Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Dmcascs as White Swellings, Feveriwr. Hip-joint Djarase, Sal U ,, Tetter, Eezema. Boils. Carbuncles. Erysipelas and kindred aUineut P URIFY YOUR BLOOD. smt it Ml n tba sysstss, and rain Km dlssjsjhsj i. if. rifbbisWBms3os, is aad saw ray. aad ail Hs last letisH sssj tPSlaM8, Ha sjav M Mm assas ef IhfeUyAsfa Uttsrsl aad w MS 18 imlilsj tar Mat UN,tfrlaS UVft, fsr lbs KIDNtTl smTlsr Mm CTMACM. Tbt miss's lsssjfaawii ssssWI fovtfsMy kMsyW vf ft! wfco Immni iim4 H ssat srssjstant a t its morns ar i bant, aad If albert ama rsaafrs 8 18 ft sn system wmM klfrsHal IfaA kaBftMaa aasf bbbbTI BBsBBetsltna taBBBBuaU IbsBj sjsAsbsbbs w ivSMfW nWIt 8a8efVfy rPaWI bfv WtlsRB MM asTllRt. Mk ysar sirnftW ffr K nRCsUT Mil MllttlS ST. UHJsav, scorn Of PureOod Liver Oil and of Lime and Soda Is .endorsed aa Hrstte4 bf tesatmf fh7lctana beesuee bosk the CM fcwr CM and Jfyespasayawie are tbe reeogatsed ageawin the care et CewssoweWsn. It Is at JI!sSf8flS8P8 sTf e dl PfMtj8nifJ Jr MMr MwHt Mv-r. KteSAe AsSctorBtnu'sXmulsloa and takeaeetaer. Lattst Stywi -a1.' Art De La Mod. T CSIMU rLATBS. sat, fa itrawT rsam i wr orssf n rt wmd aa mil far fair, I VASE1LINE1Cm ONE DOLLAR seat us by Matt, w wttl Aetirer. free of ail caarges, to any ssrsaats UnlV-d States, all the following- srtMes serefellr packed l a aeat box: One twe sane bottle ef Pare Valines, Met. Oe twe osnce bottle Taseline PoasSe. 1 " Oee Jar ef TaseHee Col CrtHM It " On ease of VascPas Casseher Ice. M M Oae ease nf Yascune Soap, arncenltS... N " One sake Of YaeoMne Sees. seenK-d. ...... St " Oee two oeees settle of Wbrte VsaeUne " N.M tvferosSmHanrstasaHHnesttbo priee. If ysm bxre eceaslo to use VseeUae sa aay form be careful to accept only utaatae gooea pet up by us ia otigtoal pckss. A great say drufgists are trying to persuade burem to take VAKLINK put up by them. Xersr yield to such Hrsnska, as tne articM iaaa I tnl tat Ion without value, and will not rive jreu the result you expect. A bottle of Uitte 5eJ Vaseline is sold by all dru?Uts at tea eeets. CUsittirassh XT, fe., Sf Mate Ht., Mew TstS. TMIS rsrSBmrf e-M ) MRiimail SSI ptiojjig

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