Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 September 1891 — Page 7
WEEKLY COURT
ha btjenn I hum
C
LI There are " amis.
I "Bend ysar five selamn to the neucer UtermpUl Um i.th r furlons-
are
.fOUTUMC m a TA-oue.
M every I
osr lerawteatesua, A MMlt. T a tWf. Orbm; Imam Mitt . Ms realty had beStert jastermkKssahinaasefe, As4tteeywutsem;--' nt he was vet? esess and Am wonM sot smite act.
Absence be IMS a Ta leak beta sees sad
ywrber MMtor wri
Mad k sttrsmsif nee.
Utoseataoachhel
r
rhaabsm
cuwiakUw her
Wna juste racturel a4 aauwamc hk abrupt
jts w4 s m mass wain.
bssutlfsUr
S
AihtvlNlMMtMM.
TMUamsneaess
XM't e-Ta'll s Jr , Yimr fortsse autehty nW"i 1 think 7mi have slreaar Tae rtwUt eC jeer teasblsi. There's wMtw very ataea, Sbt looked as; bet be M HwMBtaK M UUt Tba empty tea ens hi fcr bsed, 8airtt qi?-H4; Tula farr . OCt bfe At alt wbesaosseetedl J wis Xkaeat ti hue so, Me' awfstly eeaadsa. Too lets I vatee east I"va lest; No all ny paces ta tea."
the
A little lrtwWMii by. He aultS IWMt that h bad MM
To look serene aaa aoarefsL He MifWl: T" te set tee Urtse I want. Mi UiM Is yen; 1 S te lea ves saw ."' see sadled Weii. snu i r m. wr -VWrii.Xli(.itOMi Week.
BERNARD
BKKGEOIS
was startled.
He jumped vkiWy, nod near
ly dropped
handful of
type he was
taking, from
saky to the
form on the im
posing; tM.
ft was incompatible with 'Ae dignity
.of the foreman of the mechanical department o BriggavlUe Bugte to
lose hi sell control m wt way, ami wi
looked around uneasily a a nunj
haired girl at a ease new hy sniggered
end made awhtepere remark to aai ether compositor; then they looked a
am and laughed.
What made the foreman jump was a
Lwhktk from the upeakfaf -kibe not far
f ft ota his ear. He did not mawdiateiy
the sMMKor.s, aad anotherwtiiatle
pmc proaoaneetl and kmirer thaa the rt made him Kiaehkt moath to the
ttthe and Iwwl Wk: "Ilelior 'Come iato my room at oaee. tkmtt jom anderstand? yir. liernsnl IterxeoiK thoafcHhe b4ertood, and. taking off hk apron, he
went Into the hallway .From n adjoin
J IF. MX : turn whHhvr there
joneof yoa irteU oat of her x
iAVi- , iHia1 I wy oMee boy!"
I Xow, the om hor, who, by
way, w-m aaaaed Cox, bat who
knows to Mk intimate friend
with theordeea he had
the worthy forema. He weat dowa
iato the lower omee aad aat m an easy chair, wKa hht feet on the desk in front
f him. aad wawbed Um other
ioyea flle oat with a lordly air.
"Hop yo hare a very
time," he hU, polttoly, to the fmffy
haired eompoeltor, "We eaa raa this dee alone Utb afternoon, w can. 1 write the eddy torkUa aad aeta them aa. The old am he'a wrHinf importaat lefters aad can't be dUtarhed. Geed afternoon." Cox made himeelf eomfortahle in the eaiileot chair he could and, aad am need hiawelf by looking; over a pile of aa
ehaniraa on a deak at hand. Presently this hefaa to bore hhr, aad he befraa
mmmafriag' abont the room. It was seldom that he waa in the lower ofiee
aloae, aad he amaiwi hiatself by eHmbiag up on hhjh tool, aad taking
a pea aad ink ami acriubnaf on some of the ofRee paper.
I ean do this when I'm one of the
eddytorK." he ehaekled to himself.
J net then he heard some one eomiaff
an the xtair slowly and tarn ia at the"1
door of the ofRee. lie raised his head
and looked oer the desk aad saw a
woman steadier there. She had a
Tery pale faee, but wasTery haadaome. She looked at the boy wearily.
"Ia the editor ia? she asked. "Well, that dependx," said Swiweeey,
still serihbliag rkforoasly aad lookinf
np between uahs at the white paper be-
fore him. "Which one do you want to see?"
The woman sirhed wearily aad thea
sshl, with aa effort: "Mr. Oriswold.H
"I am very sorry," befaa the boy.
hHchiag his stoal a IKtle forward aad
rrabbinff his cap off aal laying it care
fully down before him, "but he is Tery
busy Tery busy indeed ami rare or
der that he wsk not to be disturbed.
If there k anything eaa do and he
paused expectantly.
"Nothing-," she replied, ana sat
down ia a chair near the wiadow.
Will yon please tell him a lady ia
waiting to see him whea he is at libertyy . .
Now, the omee Wy seareely knew what to do. He did not exaetly eare to go upstairs on aa errand like that; it would mm lik dignity, aftr theremarks he had already made. Besides, the editor was ia a naety temper aad might throw an iak bottle at him, or something;, if disturbed. Th- speaking tube there was hU aalratioa! We jamped from the high stool aad yelled
the measasre tip. There was no repiy. but it answered every purpose, aad he turned to the lady sad said: "Very good; he wilt see you when he is not busy, but you may have to wait."
This was the arat time tnaiawipesey
had seen Uts lady face to face, aad he fttarted a little aad looked at her again. Thea he put hk hands behind him aad
stared at the floor for a moment, "l know who you are." he said, present-
Ir. "Von are hs wife.
The woman looked up quickly aad
raised one of her hands to her lore-
head. She seemed a bit daxed. aad uked in a way that convinced
by askiaer. "Is
advise me to eaT"
"CeHaialy." amwered the tuy, witk-
heaitotiea. Thats waat l woam
advise you to do." "Uut aaa-joae b waats m same
halt war? Buamme, anar
all. he doesn't want me toatajrf That-s all rWyht 111 ia that. I eaa laaaage it He'a bee waHmff; far yoa foraJongtiwa, I guees. bat he'a toe proem totollyoetoeoanebaek tohim. He's ay ataira sow, writiag letter, aad here Kwipesey looked at her brightly--"I think His he you. aomstimsi he
ha started letters, which I have foaad ia the wmto bee het torn or partly barasd, begiaaiag: 'Xy Oeareet wife,' bat I doa't tadak be has ever seat them. Uoweree, that k acme el my bnslams. Bat to-day what ee yoa think he did? He seat everybody home ia order to be aloae that be might write. It was aothiag connected with the pan sr. Ikaow, for the eoajr k all
km. I tatok be k wriUng to you up-
ataks to come back, aad he dossat
kaow you are here akwedy.
"If be will only say be was wrong
and ask my forgiveaeas.
mattered, look-ins' out of the window
at the natterlar rain. Thea she started
up, seemingly unaware of the boy's
areseaee. "Bat 1 musat ask too much.
I was in the wroag as mask aa he.
"Xow I teU yoa what to ao," said
Swineaer. with eearernes. "If yoa
putthk into my haads, we'll fix if up all right." Hk eyes shone, aad he took a few steps forward, with hk small
together aad hk faee
aads olsnpsd
"On. yea,
ear exaort trash) to
five per eea. af
weaavaMmin
eoaotry, to
the tariff apoa Oermaa katt goods ae I was hkek aa to smam them from the I
a market, taw
Yon may say that, solar as we expors
Anserieaa kuHtla: maehtoes m
lraed. We have been ia
lteT, maaaf aetartnc maeataes, sosa m
boskry aad for
looping msehlnee aad maehioea for
malciag aaiea salts.' tmrs are o
tiaetively head laboravinf; machines. Oar factory, la the aggregate, k MS
feet long, forty feet wide aad three stories high. We have adequate water
mouths ta tee year; em
ploy iag steam power for the remainder of that period; giving labor to MO men.
We have sold It msehlnee a year m go
Germany. We aaU none now ia that direction. You may say 'The latest tariff legislation has destroyed that part of oar businees.' M
An ounce of Xaet ia worm imn
theory. A Haw England protectionist
maaufaetorer gives the wasmiae; in
controvertible testimony to the r
effect of the MeKlaiey tariff
imate American industry.
"XKK SHE IS, Sra.
in nwmi lu, ha ! tbflliekinirrf a trne-
wri?er, at intervals with a steady Swipesey that she scarcely knew what , . . . i .i :t- i... . I .u 'Mlnw did rim know?"
sU.n$ of silence. He hesitated before knowing- at the closed door; for when Xhv "U man' used hk machine that v.itv ,t was an omee maxim that he wi. .n a. bad temner.
I Ami the "old mas'' was In a bad tern-
py when .Mr. Iteraanl itorgeow mastereVl up eaoarh eon rare to faee him.
Hi Aces rleimed throurh a pah- of
gold-bWed spectacles, and hk hair, which whys turning gray, was rumpled
over his forehead. He gave the tardy foreman a reprimand for hk slowness.
and then made a remark that quite ap-
et Mr. Bernard Berreok. "Send
ercrrltodr home." he said.
"I don't think 1 ulte understand.
sir. faltered the foreman. "It k but
a little after four o'clock."
"That makes ao difference. Can't
youhesxr Sead every one away from
"rim ark Hta wirx."
here except my omee boy. That's plain
enough, isn't it?
Krerr now and then the "eM man
wonld alseatfy strike a key with hk tinker, and then look up aad jerk emt a
few words. "Ihit there are Hre eolamns to began the bewildered foreman.
"Coota earlier ia tbe morning, thea.
I don't want anybody around avow,
liovv can a nun wiite with those presses out there making such an everlasting noise, and you people in the composing
room triryltae ami makinc seen a
racket? Whr doa't you hare better
discipline out there?"
Mr. Ilemard llergeok had io answer
ready. He was quite nonptusseiL
Aerer before in me eonrse of hk
fessional career had he reeeived seek
an order a thk, "Sea tTerybody
bomer Was the "oW man goieg i
idte saitl: "How did yon know?
I knew! I guessed! 1 It two and
two together, and I know more about tht- oid man than the rett of the people; aad do von know, if yon will kt me sar It, f think yon haven't treated him
right."
The woman tnsbed, aad looked at
the boy angrily.
Ihm't ret mad about it," he aartsea a .
her, in a fatherly wsy. "l mtna my ovh busiaess. What you two people
want to do k to make up aad stop aU thk." He paused, with a judical air.
How did yon kaow thk?" the
woman aneu. "twee -ir. urwnww nmke a eonndant of an omee boy?"
Swipesey was all dignity then, "lou
are mktakea there. He never sahl a
word to we abont tt I don t kaow
Terymuek abont it only I have put two and two together. I remember
about six months ago, when he bought
the paper, that one day some one was
in the omee aad askea mm aoout yaw-
He all to once became very cool, aaa
said, in aa aneasy way, that yoa were in Calif orny for your health. A ad one
lav I was cleaning up his ues, aeu
found a picture there your picture. I
nut it back where 1 found It; awl one . . a v a a. a
night, whea l aaa w eotne oftlce with some copy to leave for the compositors to begin on in the mora
ine;, 1 found him m tne outk av am
.iv attitt thre ami crrinr. with
-r . . .. .....
the picture in his bane, lie mu l
know I saw him. Mt i ki just i same. And that's why I'm sorry for
him; I had never seen a man err ne-fon-. Ami when he'n cross and hard with a people aboat the oMee, I know he ain't really that way, but that the
pain drives him to it, and he is trying; to forget about everything."
The otne bov tow nu mis in a xmvu
manner, ana n (jwnw imoresev! Itself on the woman in his . f .1 w.ll.iHitf aal
favor, lor sue "wiwji
allowed him to goon-
'Sometimes I woshl see in tne oiner a a I S uLrvLJ anvil's tfn
papers taat -rs. v,r,
Editor unswoKi, w
Hugte, k in St Mrwr lwr "'r health,' and then yon would be ia Tamrul all sorts of plsces: l nt he
never spoke of yea m his paper, aau
HWt Mint. 1 Ml, anno
"" : ,
inn. m a uwhtci j" "
of course, I have-have surmised that something; was wrong. I don t know a-u.t cAtMirsted tou. or why yoa left
him. or he yu, aad It ka't any of my
hnsines; bat now yon bare come hack
vti. T hone rou will star witn ni-t.
The woman leaked at Swipesey's
t.iit..t frkld faee. and saw the
. ., 7L ar Us aeaalL rrar eyes.
jwMimpreaeed with hk red hair
raked hopefully toward the woman. "Yon let me go upstairs aad sort of prepare him. r, I'U not say who wants to see him, but III juetgivehim a hint. And thea yon go up and surprise him; aad if you look at him aad smile, and if yon tell him you are sorry, I doa't think he would send yoa away; now, do yon?" The woman looked down at the lad.
and smiled sedlv at him. She eeeJd
not help being; amused at hk eagerness
to help her aad the lonely man up
stairs. He seemed to divine what
thinking of, for he said: Oh, you mustn't think I am dipping my finger into something that ain't my business, for I should like to hear him
laugh as he did a long time ago; ana, besides, it ain't right for two people to be apart the way you and him are." The woman laughed nervously. "I don't think yoa had bettor meddle, after all," she said. 'You may lie a very bright boy, bet it might make kirn angry to think that I had allowed-" "I never set up to be bright," saitl Swipesey, in aa injured tone. "If I was an entire stranger he might not like it; but being on the staff, why it's
entirely different seer' The woman laughed again, aad thea asked: "What do yon propose to dor "Well, von sit right dowa ia that
chair again, and I'll ran upstairs. I'll not be goae bat a minute, aad then I'll come back for you." Before she could say a word to atop him, be had whkked out of the room, aad she heard hkn goiag- np the stairs two steps at a time. She sighed again, sad looked dowa and watched the peohetTswi pesey was back with a eerdkl encouraging: "Come along. I've fixed it. He'll see yen. And they went up the stairs-np into the omee, which had become quite dark now. aad was but a eheerkes
place at beet Swipesey threw open the door, sayiur: "Here she k. sir."
The old man was seribUing; Me
had laid aside the typewriter for the
mm. and he kent on for a moment.
Then he looked ap in a bewildered
war. threw dowa hk pen, rubbed hk eyes; sprang np, and with a bound was across the room. "Grace!" was all he
THE WOOL HUMBUG.
USX ANO ABUSC O HAMILTON. ( abliysd to
l i?' """TLf JXJT C72. - emnJaymeat
nhsiltitrtrrltit ti1 me I'linsnnn r tujre ! MeKlnky tariff toZZ?i0Hmmr. IseateUr. the Wlwa oar nroteotkmkts af the ptea-. porter aa follows:
ant dav refer to Aisissner Uamiltoa as
the "father of protection" asm qaeto that a novel Uae af
Wm k aaneert o our atraragant and I ihlee factory
MeKinkyUm. they de net mm to knew oa what dangerona
th-y are trending. Hamilton
by nc menaa a protectionist of the
McKtaky stripe, Be held vkwa which
utterly iiimi to the pet nemoaa
of McKinky A On.
For example, the protection wntoa
Hamilton defsaded averaged lees
per east, all around; white
MaKtoky tariff average.
aad runs above ten
and SM per eeat. oasoeM articles. With hk little eirat per eeat tariff, toe.
Hamilton was satkikd. Ia hk report
ttfaeteres, ksued in lTtl, be
"It need aeareely be ohasrvsd the duties ea the great mass of
articles have reached a point which it
would not be expected to exeeed." And yet our MeKlnleyites a century later give us M per eeat aad denounce aa "aapatriotk" the wteked democrats who several years ago were abont to give us 44 per eeat Oar MeKtokyites, too, make it one of the fundamental points of their creed that "the foreigner pays the duty;" and even now the great XcKialey himself k defiaiae; protect km aa "taxing somebody else's property rather thaa oa own." But Hamilton was a man of honest mlad who wonld practice no cheap deceptions upon him
self. Hamilton admitted that it waa
true, as a general rate, that the eon anmer pays the duty."
At another Tery important point
Hamilton stood at variance with our
latter-day proteencninss. These iaekt that domestic manufacturers do not eharge mom for their goods by reason
of the dutv on the forebra article. Bat
not so Hamilton. He, simple-minded
aad honest man, could not see bow
there could be any such thing as pro
tection at all, if the manufacturer did not get higher prices. Here k the way
be pot it down in plain black and white:
"Duties evidently amount to a virtual
bounty; since, by enhancing the charges on foreign articles, they ' enabk our neaaufaeturers to undersell foreign
competitors.
Here k another good, square admission ef the same thing: "Aaa duty upon a foreign article makes an addition
to its price, it causes an extra expense
to th3 community for the benefit of the
domestic manufacturer; a bounty does
no more."
Hamilton mane no attempt to "whip
the devil around the stump
tMM I
1 .11)11? 1 wmehae.
gunskmrabttteg I -ZT.n rmm-rteeamr
SLufwhe ESTisil Ihriagr Tnesvsanef mm lessen teak asses seswrier. nssesMr ea me lissan atBianig
Qsrmnns wiU I nZttnll mm aaneuH toesra. t, "ht
tteuatswmtae nentshment of eeamseetteakr nki aum: ef scene blinds sss awn
P" I u saual net he the ssalshnsst ler me
businees nan I mmm sea sis. Tucref im, was It la sssss
fuisTT et Ms pMsate sta a. 'Itamt aem
man- I HU r Ma usmata. R
tonfdng mataless. I TLT.-t m. thai ihev never had esee
,,-, nl iutts ulillslsisi srTt-
as any works am sno to tt mDdlyt to happily.
a favoraate.
able to keepn par sjat nf ewaaen nt umek ma totally sdffaren tela, which
"Want ta the eanee ef tadaaeat laU-
ag off from your ejrport tracer"
The riasoa m
me
Pea. aCJena
WHITE LEAD.
Mrled
mkL And Swipesey fed sort of way,
kft them alone.
smiled kt a self-mtk-and dosing the door. And when the editor
downstairs into the lower omee a
half hour Inter, with a shining, happy
uuic lu hk eves, he found Swipesey
sitting in the ehnhr, with hk feet high
up on the desk ami nis na uiteu on hic back of hk head, burled deep mthe folds of a newspaper.
Come upstairs with me, ,tox.' ne
said, joyously. "I. want to tntroanee yon to my wife. I want everybody on " . s e
the paper to Know iter.
I suppose so, nam tne eey, aiwm-
tentedly. Bat then he added, ia nia imputkat way: "You needn't iaterduee me to her. She and me known each ether already.' -Wlllkm K. Bald
win, In Harper's Weekly.
A workman who had drank too
much fell asleep on a bench in the tav
ern. n awakenmff he a-nten tne landlord what there was to pay. 'riv
pints," was the reply. "intposMwe;
yon must be joking. I know :e ea-
pacity ot my stonmeu; Lore than fonr ntek. "That's just
if Mu the landlord; "the ftfth ha
gone mto your
kgro. -JmUw k the reddens of
kn't she?" asked Btmkkm. "Xo; what
seek a anentknr "We
knlwarsjiunpiiin to be rannVngthe
" an . n a .
Ylewa f n ffhi st rr4tteaht Trade
reper-Naw Wee! Trlees Navs Ace Btva 0MSr MefCtMCjr's MMrher trnttea What Keet Vm TerrMrr Wels.
The American Wool Reporter, of Boa-
ton, a protect ion kt trade paper la favor
ef free wool, contained an editorial re
cently on the prices of wool, which everr wool-rrower should read. The
Reporter says:
The wool hidustvr m sevi rsl AepaHmesta
show greater deprrson to-day than before
th m m oc tne xeamier ant. weet-n
hosiery baa been somewhat bsnemed, K
eUlmt I. and trM eooJa manufiietaren
note same Improvement, due Ureiy, howrver. to the liet. a statd s wk aim, thwt fanhion has ma to (abrles which urn epteisily whhiH tin- ability t nar doiMMIe mills to produce, aad watch w Hid h:ve ben tun mm rvi n at the oid dutie. Hut Knersli7 the maRiirxplurcr of woolra xo"d eannnt bf s iM to bare bees materially b :sent s 5ftty(hhKh term Mmtsnre. In plt of the lare c,Hompt!on o( komU due to a seaMHiabl'! winter, men's wear woolens are
hi an unsettled eoattt:on, with manHfaetur.
era tiouiKiui wnttnr to Mint aown tnnr
mills ilurln the summer o' to plte up eoodt
Ih antlelpatloH of a demand whose eiierae
cr may be wholly die tppot'ttin?.
The priee oc domeMIe Seeet s Is from s to
root per pound tower than before the
pasiMet of tht MeKinl-y bill, sad the Imports nt elolhlnic weds during the eleven months end-d May.,M of the fiscal year, which eloied June . 1-C1. Have been Sfl.ia,.
SM pounds agilatt ltSN,l pounds durin
the rorrespvnetu elevee mentas ruee Mar 31. l0- The kind of dtm-tle wooto
fK- whlen tha hleh tang, it wm Nppoee,
weald do the most seed, have be -a th very
cues that hare Hcllad the mot ftaee the
page of the bill. The enlv urd-a which have renllv held an to th ir termer level
have been tsrrHorr wools, due largely
fact that they have been la aacii iSreedsmsnd for mtxine w th Aetrs!lnn wools.
and. l:bonh they nt e tee e in sym
nathr with the reCaf the market, they are
likely to hH comsriMvely firm, ss there hi every Indication th.it daring the remainder ef th- yesr Australian wools, will be seueht
for and It they ere. territory wool willb
Isdemnmlto be used nt connection with
them. A to Importations ef lore las wool.
there I-t nn Indieathm of a cessation. Amer
fenii wool havers have takes M.M bales st the revest London sate-i. as they reasonably
hetlt ve that that amount will be wanted. As a measure, therefore, for eheektn I fa
p rut Ion of ferehnt wools, and for enabling
the wert-rs wool grower to seettrs h
priee lor his weet, ae.l for Improvlne the
condltkHi of the roods market ss a whole,
the MeKlnlev t If thu- far has sot bees a
sseeess. And we cannot tmv that with the larxe Importations of forelen wool, whk-k
are snre to eenttaee, there Is evidence of
anv substsHtlal Improvement for the do
mestlc erower. stthoeeh naturally there
wiv be some reaction from the present de-
esses level et vaines, wt as. inere ia m
the Stock market when prices have had a
sharp br.-ak. nut the "promised laud" Into
which the dometts wool r rower wmto be
lrt br hli Mnes. whom h so trnstlnxly fm
low- d. has not ansesred, and It seems as far
elf as ever. It Is net te be wondsre I st that
we hear rambllnes of discontent from the
Ohio. Michigan aad Pennsylvania wool
grower. ,
rretssHsu so Wtrnt Silent
"WhwlltmmtlB ltoljMlnrjrDuring the debate on the McKinky
bill the supporters of the measure vehemently dented that the tracts aad
Mentions protected by It were sell
ing; their goods at kwer prices abroad
i at home. Those who elalmec tna
such was the ease were invariably called "liars," traitors' and "haters mi American industry."
After the bill was passed, however, the MeKinteyitee began one by one to admit the truth of these assertions.
Thus the Chicago Inter Ocean, a
MeKinky organ, said of the
combine: "Four concerns, protested
by a stiff tariff s gainst foreign competition, combine and crash oat aad buy cut all competitor ia thk country, and thus compel every Anwrknn consumer to pay 45 per eeat more far goods thaa a Canuck has to pay for the same goods, or a. Greaser in Mexico. Thk k protection with a vengeance--protection to what might easily he styled wholesale robbery." Bet there are other combines which do the same thing. Thus the white lead trust, with Ik eepiteliantten of &M,447,0. controls the whole trade ia
white lead in the United States and
charges American consumers all that the duty of three cents' per pound will
allow. How it does thk k shown by
the following from Hardware, a paper published in Toronto: "The United Steles white lead trust has a price for
the Canadian market that k aa firmly held down below the cost of profitable production as the home market priee of the same trust is firmly held above it
United States white lead k ouoted to be
laid down here ia carloads, minus the Canadian duty, at .7i per haadred pounds spot cash. The Canadka government justly requires that the duty of i per cent be calculated, not oa the
price quoted here, but cpon that quoted
to the united trade that is, upon 9s. M
which makes the total cost laid down
here 4.MH "
Is net thk "protection with a mamace; protection to what aekjut be
styled wholesale robbery?''
HOW IS THIS?
head:" L'Uoneo Al-
THE EFFECT.
the Me
an American Industry Mulued My etsewF)J 'neene'euW
Krery effort imaginahk k put forth br the McKinky organs to show that seme new SnmftnVsirj auManm aMrnm Wren4n eeunnlM4 here aa a result of the McKinky tariff Thus, for lactones, they claim that the plush industry k one of these, but every one knows that Ions; before the MeKinky bill waa evea thought of there ware several eeteblkhmsnte making plush kt New York, Penney lvaek aad Coaasetleut Bat for every eetablkhment which has been helped by the bill a dosea could be named which hare been iejwred by K. 'Jl1wK JnuWa'ti eiiWMi emV ft enPnfJT As
voted to tna ssenufaetere ef knitting; msahlnm. the owner of which k a pre-
tectinnkt AsarssuH mt the MeKk-
1 1T IsVnfMa! anTmnV' WMiSffm aVaMnrfl let
Janamha'tdfcjr J tMM4MavveMI tsMr anrt-T 9 maknanBni
trnV aYaerw4P4 weB 4eenaPeePrnnNWm Tsmwe aMft Latter Me dues the Waeee of Wovamsu. The high tariff Xew York Tribune
baa reported a recent reduction of It
per cent, in the wages of the workmen
kt the glucose factories at Buffalo, N.Y.
Howk thk? Did not MeKlnlev in-
crease the duty on glucose for the spe
cial benefit of American lsbor? And al
ready labor k getting left
The tariff duty on glucose under the
old law was 90 per eeat, and la the Me
Kinky ,1a w waa increased to three-auer-ters of a eent per pound. Thk speerie duty, which may have been substituted
for the old ad valorem rate in order that the increase might escape notice, k equivalent to a little more than SO per eeat. The excuse for thk Increase of duty has never been made public There k serteinly no excuse to be found ia aay large Importations, only xz.soo worth of glucose haying eotne in last year. Perhaps the increase wai made in ant id nation of the glucose trust, which was formed several weeks age, m order to give it a lift It seems as if erf! apirite bad entered into our protected Industries mace MeKinky increased their protective du
ties, leading them to form track
combinations at a rate that the
try has never beard of before. Let
them beware lest, under the spell of
these evil spirits, they "r ash Tiokntly down a steep place iato the sea" of
popular iadlrnation, and Iocs the last
vesthre of special prirUege whkh a toe
indukrent aauoa accords
ef state fencrsl, but yea eanee mwaja
aweeskteaserneuier am sw w Oa mount nf trsuati
Oed:" Bis works ef Jove, goodness, sstvatfea; taetthsssmlswlhs shown In e unm'sssdrHal good aad tans also he r avosltd to stews. 4 "Walls K M day:" watts as sepsrtuahr testa. . "I am the tteat of tee werht :" whetever darkaessto in the wetM, ef taatCrkt k
tne sswsspsaemg lteat. wuotner esrhamt of sorrow, or eOauoreace, eref espravHy w ssnttuel d s. m used some mesas te awakes the man's lewa and test hk ohsetsase, t "ioni ssht, Thk athet" "me eeceteg of the eyes wenht actnratlr thssgt me waste eosnteanaee. u we MCttnuy eaaaeod by arses, ear trleaes an u.w wUl Msaark the dUNfims te us,
it min " a scot arobsbtr sooth ef
tessste assent, m "Oset htm cat:
maa dhha. Si. "Who aormm Jssus hefere this, bat eatr
nus. at "WsrshlpsdWhar ml
sws sees this word. LBssox ooMMsarn.
JnSxa fcolk of the miractea of the
mr ehiefly for the sake of their apit Heal
u,IiIl We must bear wa m
aa we stndr thk Gospel. Thk k
with record to the story of to-day.
That which eliaraceeriaaaam i
sdscwe all others k the peraktent i
sionof the Wind man to one experi-
aaental fact To aU obtecttens
suenrestions of the Pnariscea, be 1
one final answer, and that k:
aa I was blind, now I see. Jfo
ment oonld make him abandon thk po-
sitkm. In eneos
thk man was pitted i
atauaof hkdar. Hk)
amckm for soch an encoantor waaef the poorest kind. They could have asked him a thoueaavl questions to
which be could have grvea no rapty.
They could have perplexed him fctia mumIbm and i ssaktrins
he coukl not have rebutted. But there' was one point on which aUtnewargn- . a e a. a
menU were vain, However taey usurus.
balk, tber oonld never beat him
thk eae noattton. that oaee be
Mind, and now be could sec Them wruat immsrnabk xUumrhmce of
nowerof Jesna
which there was no poaalbUHy of
eeotloo. To the question: "How do
von reconcik Divine sovereignty
human free will?" he eould have fit
no answer. Had they asked him i
the "origin of evil," he wonld have been powerless to reply. The question of the perseverance of the saints wouhl have been a conundrum to him. But
when the question turned on hk own experience, be at once replied eeundcntly: "One thing I know. Where aa I was blmd, now I sec" Thk k moat instructive Fee there
many ia our times who are ia the
position with this man. Juat
imagine Jerry Macaatey, or Bsnaisje the priac fighter , called np before suck sea aa TyndaU or Darwin or Huxley, and questioned about their theotogkei speculations I bear TyndaU my? "Jerry, bow can yon reconcik prayer
with natural law?" I'oor
would nave to reply: "I cannot i
cite it." "Well," says Darwia, "bow eaa yon explain Genesk in theHghtef naodera aekacer Again Jerry would be at hk wH's end. "Cons now," saya
r, "tell ns what yoa know abont
aJrnHeme;
A western trader goiae; recently to
one of the Indian agencka to bay easins was asked fil.Ti for them. A
khel at the price besahfi "Why,
they were only tLSfi lest year and I Cftftflftt' eVeMl4 vWWnt $ aan4nWSs 1 BanWsv'Vlt anaMvm deer are growing sesrse, but why ask so much? I wMl pay a hrnfe mere but
not LTa."
iruu witt.
Jesus." Sow Jerry's lips open. "I
was once a river thief, and a drunker, and a fighter, but now I am an honest, aober man, changed in character from the erown of my head to the soles of my feet Joans wrought thk change km me, in answer to prayer." "Well, Bendigo," says Huxley, "what have yon to aay abont thk metier?" "I have much the same testimony aa Maeaaky. I was a prise fighter, and had fought twenty-four regular battles. I was in jail at one time, and thea by God's power I waa made a new man, and have been so ever since I now hate the things that I once loved, aad lore
those that I oaee hated." finch testimony as thk k of far mora ralee than the ability to answer all the purely theological problems that were ever propounded. Rev. A. F. sohauffter, D.D. rRACTKJAJL IVMMTIem. 1. The Mladnecs ef the body, ef sen.
of isjaoranec, of sorrow; Ueht k absent
S. The lkrht signifies aU that i
ns see God, truth, goodness, culture, parity; all that brings brigiitnsss and peace into the soul; all that takes away sin, sorrow, ignorance X. Jesus k Urn light of the worid. 4. Our Prt D) VYe should receive she lhrht (t) We should refiect it to
all people. ( We should wee all
means God has provided. (4) We:
do Mud dutT in its time ( Wei
expect that the outlnKof the light will miln oommotkm in the darkness. i. Tlte eansast (1) In gsasral it k the fruH of sin. But no one can infer great sia from great calamity. (Lane lml.a.1 The beet of ncoote are often
,
(t) Uod permits turn
by
M. He amhea K
andter. Hemebeat
aavPe4( ennmSj
nne? Did We not know that te-merrew
was pahUmUen da' hkanahnaet. Ana
