Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 August 1894 — Page 7

DEMOCRATS NOT

why

IN

POWER.

lOt IlH!Il

party stands iinreclooinotl. Ulms bv jmvvvrlt'Rs to f Ulli it pluiltfes. The wt

the Tariff Kefurtn ITai

ISrouulit About,

The tloinocratiu party in not in power nt tho national capital. I ';ttinL control legislation in conrt'Ps It is lit'lplens to pass tin important, and vital measure, which wan promised in tliu democratic platform of ISOS, and which bv an enormous majarity t'm puoplu demanded at the ballot box.

The oliirhtt'd faltli of tho IMiocratlc

been I

otic

wliieli it was appointed to do which

declared should be donehas not been done. One year and four months ago a democratic president was sworn Into olliee, and the term of a national congress beran with a nominal democratic majority in both the senate ami the house. There was no such majority. Kijjht or nine senators elected sis democrats have aeted in alliance with the republicans. They have not cast a democratic voto on thetariir bill, 'i hey have voted just as McKinley would have voted had he been in the senate. It iu an error to say that the democrats are in power while a faction of senators classed as such enough in number to destroy the democratic majority in the senate are casting republican votes, conspiring with republican leaders to defeat lite democratic tariff bill and are in open insurrection against the democratic sentiment of the country. The president and the liouw o representatives arc united in adetennlration that, the detnoeiatie pledges of lhW shall be kept in good faith with the people. They have presented a tariff bill which was tlu best that

the necessities of the ease would au

people, are entitled to cheap coal. That a tax upon it is necessary for increasing the wages of coal miners is a pretense that sto man can curiously urge. There will be a tnarhet for every bushel of coal mined, with or without a protective tax, and at prices that will justify reawmable wages to tho miner!.. The recent coal str.hc disclosed tlia fact thai the existing duty in coal war, totally ifnorc l in Uxing wages of ni".uer.i, whoso wa-fct had been needlessly cut to less than the ft.? imposed professedly for their beneÜU It has been our boas that we can produce iron cheaper than any country in the world. We do not yet know how far we can go in reducing the cost of it A Ilirtuinjrhaiti Ursa has recently turned out iron at six dollar:-, and lifty cents a ton, and throughout the south and the northwest there are advantages in the location of bods of iron ore that no other country in the world possesses. The proposed taxes on refined sugar, iron ore and coal are bounties pure iuid simple Yet the seriate proposes to vote them or to mal: the country put up with the McKinley bill. Louisville Courier-Journal.

JTKE SUCAR TAX. V.'Iiy ttiP lU'pubtlrnnt SttcU So Closrlj o Iii JN-ttlaley mil. It is obvious that the alluring shibboleth, "a free brca!; fast table," is the ir.Iluencing cause of much of the opposition to the sugar tr.:c :n the pending

tariff hill. There 1-, a fascination in tho idea that the essential elements of the poor man's matutinal meal shall bo exempt iroia all elements that might add to its cost, ami there is a more or

I i i . 1 r .1 .1 1 1...

e of practica! re,- "er p.eui. w

a measure

in advance

form. The senate refused to accept this measure. I'nder republican control-

by a majority composed of the regular !

corrupt rcpuiuican iorcc.?nnu a guerrilla contingent of bogur. demo'-rats the democratic tariff bill appears destined to defeat If anything shall be saved, it will be merely what the house and the president can extort from a hostile, undemocratic senate. The coal senator:;, the iron ore senatcts, the sugar senators and the collars and euffo senator have repudiated democracy, repudiated the platform of f-'J-J. repudiated the popular instructions adopted at the ballot box. and are determined to force on the country a tariff dictated by trust deed, by

the monopoly combine and by and by

ugar iu free from

taxation. Ihit. a a matter of efact. it

is ta::cd to an extent without parallel. Tho two cents a pound bounty to tue growers of. raw sugar and tho livetenths f a cent tariff on all the products of tho ugar trust combine tc create an enormous levy, and, tliotii it is collected on the clothing :-nd bla:il:ot'i of the people, and is presented bodily to the betitlleiaries, does not in the least degree alter the facts in the eae. It is a tax just the same, und a tax that is criminal because it is uii unconstitutional robbery. Tho plain truth of the matter te that because of republican profligacy and 4 lie inufuciency of the McKinley bill as a revenue law. the country is confronted by an impending treasury deficiency. To avoid such a calamity it

the republicans, or thev will prevent I is necessary to discover new sources of

revenue, n nil tnat utea in view, uie

pending bill provides for withdrawing

They arc republicans, i the unconstitutional gratuity to tho also name and carrying sugar growers and the sugar trust and

divert an equal amount ci me money

the passage ot any tanu oin. inese recalcitrants and renegades are not

democrats.

bearing a fal

false colors. These senators misrepresented their itates, the democratic conttituncics of the country and the body of the people. They are a bushwhacking detachment of the party of trusts, monopoly, protection and organized fraud. They have betrayed the country. They have been false to tho dut which they wereinstructed to perform. It these false democrats shall be successful now in defeating reform tariff legislation the result will not be chargeable to the democratic party of the nation. It will be simply another republican victory a victory of the party of trusts, monopolies, class legislation, of corporate greed and extortion, reenforccd by a group of sordid mid faithles.-, politicians who have violated party allegiance and forfeited

the name of democrats. I This will be a calamity. Hut it will be no reason for giving up the fight j

ill be a reason for fighting .he fu-

It wi

that is taken from the pockets of the people into the treasury. The bounty to the sugar grower, will amount this year to about S-.'.OOD.OOO. The "protection" to the trust is C-'O.OOO.OOO, making a total of iI,030,00'J of taxation on sugar, comparatively little of which goes into the treasury. The pending bill will draw about an equal amount from the people, but every cent of it except that which goes for expenses of collection will go into tho treasury and be available for the ordinary expenses of the government, relieving the people of taxes on other necessaries to that amount. We would be glad If it were possible to secure this reform in the rcvenuo system without affording protection to the sugar trust, but the democratic majority in the senate is so meager that the defection of a single vote

would put the whole measure in jeopardy. The sugar trust, like all o'.her

ture battles of reform with mere

vigor, courage and zeal.

The people have been betrayed. Hut the cause is not lost The contest will be continued. The faithless, the cowardly, tho trimmers and the traitors will be driven to the rear. This reverse will be retrieved. Hotter men will be clothed with the trust to which these recreants were untrue, and it will be discharged in the spirit of the instructions given by the voters to their representatives. Chicago Herald. THE CAUSE OF CONTENTION.

v.- a i v - -- " - - ? ased trusts, is obnoxious to the demo , A 1...

FARM MP GARDEN. THE PEAR MIDGE. Damttgo Hour If T.'iU lVit ami How ts Ilili it I Chirk. The pear midge is one of the insects which has been introduced into the 1'iiited States within recent years nml ts causing a good deal of injury in the enstesn states, so that Hulletin No. W of the New Jersey station should be of much assistance to fruit-growers in that section, as well as iu other localities wdiere pear .'rowing is extensively carried on. The adult insect or fly is described as pinch ifKoiiilitiiig a diminutive mosquito. It makes its appearance very raly "in the season, before the pear IdosMims open. The female deposits ier eggs in tlu latter by piercing tne petals or the calyx. The tuitlge lame, jive on the substance of the pear tissue, destroying the seed and cheeking the growth of the fruit, which decays and drops in early summer. Our illustration shows a sound young p?ar and one deformed by the pear midge la r vie. The great difficulty encountered in fighting this insect lies in the fact that there is no period at which it ia within reach of ordinary insecticides. The eggs are laid in the bud before it opens and the young larvae get itito

:ic

j party, and any legislation that w .mid destroy it would bu welcome to tho I democratic people. Hut according to j the best information attainable it ia not possible to accomplish this result ! One or two senators who hold title ta their reals through democratic suf

frage declare their intentions to bolt unless the odious concessions are made to them. The consequence would bo the continuance of the McKinley bill, which is what the sugar trust and the republican party desires. The late Gov. Moses once said, by way of encouragement to his carpet-bag associates in the south: "There are a couple of years good ntcaliug in the south yet" It is an analogous sentiment that influences the rcpublcans to adhere to the McKinley bill with such marvelous tenacity. Kansas City Times. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS.

What tlio lie publicum unit AMlptmt Itoiublle:in Are strlvln l or. "If the senate bill be not passed, the McKinley law will remain on the statute book," declared .Senator Vest, defiantly, speaking not for himself aloue, but for many of his colleagues. And what are the special provisions of the teimto bill whoso acceptance the senate demands under threat of McKinleyism as the only alternative? All the differences between the house and senate were found eusy of adjustment by tho conference committee except an to sugar, coal and iron ore. The senate is prepared to defeat nil tariff legislation unless it can get a differential duty on rellned sugar, which will benefit the sugar trust, and a tax on coal and iron, which certain senators demand as the price of their votes for tho bill. The president of tho sugar trust is quoted freely and without contradic

tion as having declared, as long agor.s j lS, that sugar can be refined in the ; t'nitcd States at a cheaper labor cost j than in lhiglantl, Franco or Germany. ; The common republican defense of a

protective duty, adopted by the Gorman party in the senate, is that it must be enough to make up the difference between cheaper foreign labor nnd American labor. There Is no such difference in this case. The foreigner has already the best of it. The proposed tax is not for the nurnose of holding

up American wages, but of swelling j Tunes. the profits of tho greatest trust that ' President Cleveland's manly and nourishes under our laws i trust that straightforward letter to Congressman l'ays enormous dividends and fears Wilson was made public at just tho publicity so much that it is engaged in I right nruncnt The democraej of the desperately resisting the effort- of the i nation is with honest drover In this state of Massachusetts to force it to I matter N. Y. Morning Journal.,

Mr. Cleveland's recommendations appear to uscminently wise and proper in the present emergency. Hoston Herald. -McKinley is the Eugene V. Debs of American polities. He is the inaa wdio tied up the business of the country.Kansas City Times. Debs' strike Is the last misfortune of the republican panic of 1833. We arc on the eve of an era of democatic prosperity. Ht. Louis Ucpublic. -Chairman Wilson's health is still feeble, but it is gratifying to knowthat his weakness is not located in the vicinity of his backbone. Hoston Herald. President Cleveland's letter to Chairman Wilson is manly ami straightforward. The preitdant say.i what ho means and means what he says. Huf falo Enquirer. People shouldn't lose sight of the fact that the national treasury was about ready to go into the hands of a receiver at the close of Henjamin Harris oil's udniinititratiou. Kansas City

comply with lite law and make abatement of its financial condition. Coal is an article whose price not nly plnys an important part in estimating the cost of living in every notiBchold. hut figures largely in the ost of manufactured products. The

There Is no doubt that Mr. Cleveland represents the sentiment of his party ami the general tcntitnent of the country in his desire that the instruc tlons upon which this congress was elected shall be faithfully carried out Philadelphia Tima-

Bouxn axu dihkabed i'kaiis. the heart of the fruit before it is fully formed. Tlie adult fly does not feed and is hence "beyond our reach. It is only after, the injury is' done that the insect goes underground and within reach of destructive agencies. As a preventive measure it is recommended that the trees be examined as soon as the pears are well set, and that every invested or suspected pear be picked off and completely destroyed, while if an orchard is generally iufested the following practice ia

recommended. Cultivate as usual or, if the orchard i in grass or clover, plow under after June 15 as soou as may be. Top-dress with kainit 1,000 pounds to tho acre, to benefit trees as well as to kill tho insects. As soon as proper, say early in August, tow crimson clover. This will use up the potash not required by the fruit trees, and will store nitrogen a well as occupy the ground. Early f.he following spring turn their sod under as deeply as may bo proper. It should be done before the pear buds are developed in order to head off and destroy any midges then in the pupa state near the surface of the soil. This practice is, at the .same time, the best for the benefit of the orchard.

A KALEIDOSCOPE Or FREAKS. DcriANcn, 0., has a living skeleton f.o scant of flesh that when he walks his iKUies rattle. IIickouv li. at?, Simpson county, Ky.. leasts the largest twin brother? in the I'nitod States. Their eomldnec weight is five hundred and forty-two jMiunds. DuKaui. Kan., has one woman who hasn't r.poken to her next neighbor for ton years; also a charivari band of "young ladies." A ma:; in Piller. Neb., gazed down the muzzle of his gun to reo if it was

clean. The gen went off, and so did the tip cf hit; nose. A sia:; named Hutton, of Fort Scott, Kan., has named his daughter Pearl, r.nd a Mr. White, of the same state, has named his daughter Snow. Foi: eighteen years James T. Hightower, of Warsaw. 111., has been unable to sleep. He stretches himself on a bed, as other men do, but never closes his eyes in slumber, and will instantly answer any questions put to him. CERTIFIED CONCERNING CITIES.

Liverpool has tho largest local debt of any city in Europe. At Capetown houses rent at the rate of five dollars per month per room. Ix 1S01 the population of Glasgow, Scotland, was S7.n?r,. The present population is estimated at Wt.lxJS. Titr. largest bronze statue ia existence is in St Pet r.sburg. It represents Peter the Great, and weighs 1,100 t-mc. Cunvi:xxn. Wyo Is fi.033 fe?t above the sea. is 1.ÖI miles from New York. 1,31$ from San Francisco ami 1.J."j2 from Galveston. London contains anout twenty-five per cent, of all the paupers and furn-' Wies the same per cent nf all the criminals hi England and Wales. Xkw Vor.?t ir. the eldest city in the

i United States with a continuous muni

cipal history, interrupted only ly the vicissitudes of the revolutionary war

Highest of all in leavening strength. IititO.S.Cf. YUUfttl.

AC&GI&JTEEY PURE Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWOCR CO., IG WAtL ST., SEW YCC

REASON AND UNREASON.

Anyhow, women do sit straight on bicycles. As soon as a man discovers that he cannot reform himself he begins on the world. YofNG married people always have a hammock hanging up in their yard which they never use. A Ji an never grows more eloquent about hard times than when he talks about them to his wife.

Always On Time ami Ahead of the Timm Becuis to be tho motto of the John A.

Isalzer Seed Co., of La Crosse, Wis., whoso general manager, Mr. Henry A. Saber, is bow seouriug tho celebrated farm districts of liussia. Kraute, Kurland. Germany, Uohemia, Belgium. Italy, etc., in search of new and raro varieties of farm seeds as also vegetable and llowersc-d novelties. Mr. Salzer Is thoroughly acquainted with tho wants of the American farmer antt pardener. aud he will be sure to obtain the verv vest that Europe has to o2ci. 'lue John A. Salzer Seed Co. makes a specialty of seeds for the farm aad garden, and is tho introducer of more new varieties of wheat oats, potatoes, vegetable and forage plants than all western secdmea com-

Tr-3Ii ot Vatorc. Col. Yergcr (who is bald-headed)

Isn't it a little singular that all the

Plumbottle children have red Jieaüs, when both their father and mother have dark hair? .Mrs. Yergcr That's only a freak of nature that occurs in almost every family. Hasn't our toy Percy got a head oi thick, curly hair, while you haven't got any hair at all on your head. Texas Sittings.

Want! a l'altrrn. A lady took her little daughter out to tea, aud was much shocked to see her try to put a thin piece of bread and butter in her pocket. Mcther Whatever arc you doing? Litth lirl 5) I thought I would take this home to nun; for a pattern. Tit-Hits.

Were You KTrr Fonth In Scrrinjrr ? It is no hottf r ia Tonne ce, Alabama, or Georjrla than hotv. and is jtositivelv delightful on tho Gulf Otwit of bsissippi and West Florida. If youarel-x-k-ing fur a kwation in the South üt-vrs now and tee fir yourself. The Louis vi'Se A: Nashville ILiümad and connections ivill fe.. tickets to all joint9 South for trams of August 7th atone faro round trin. Ask youtickctcpent about it, and if lie cannot scK vouercsrsitmickctswritotoO- P. Atmore, tJcneral Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky.

UrsTREETE "Do you talw anv stock ia the faying that money talks" Ircntew --I've known it to er liave sonicthiac to do with calls to pivaeu." lluSalo Courier.

ADVICE FOR HAYMAKERS. The hay loader is a great saver of labor, yet on many of the smaller farms it may not be good policy to purchase one. If the hay is to be shocked, rake it in large windrows, and avoid twisting as much as possible in handling. Treated this way it is easier to load and there ia less trouble in making a good stack. It is best to start the mower in the morning after the dew is gone. II the hay is cut while still wet, especially if dew is very heavy, the effect will be somewhat like that of a light alio wer. Wiikiu: there is considerable clover mixed with hay it will pny to use a tedder, especially during rainy weather where it is desirable to get it into the barn or stack as quickly us possible after cutting. As a general rule timothy hay cut when ubout half through blooming is most desirable for all purposes. The leaves and stalks then contain the most digestible matter, seed does not shatter, and there is little waste in feeding. Afti:k the hay is partially dried, put It into small shocks and let it there dry out completely. Cured in this way it returns a green color and is much more readily eaten. The object is to cure with the least possible exposure to the sun. Orange Judd Farmer.

Lire jn Pizen Creek. Barber "Somehow m v razor doesn't seem to cut well this morning." Col. Whlpsaw iof the Kattlesnako Kanch "Use my Bowie, podner; You'll fin- that all O. K. I tried the edge on mil Chaparejo lat night when hesaid 1 was er liar r'-Tesas Sifüngs.

Tho LadlM.

The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladies may use tho California liquid In.ntM... y-Miii At Vins ttnir. nit fYinriii

makes it their favorite remedy. To get tho true and genuine article, look for the nan-.o of the California FigSyrap Co., printed near

mc ooiicci oi iuu paciüigu. "Mt darling." whispered the Chicago man. "My life," she murmured. "You are the only wife I ever loved." Detroit Tribune.'

rrovUIInc Food for l'lant. There is perhaps no part of the farmer's work so deeply shrouded in mystery, and therefore so little understood, as that which relates to the selection and application of manures. Yet it is generally acknowledged that iu point of importance the question involved iu this connection is unsttrpassiuh .Manuring land is simply another term for providing food for the plants that may be sown thereon. The principle is the same as that observed iu the feeding of animals; the difference is merely in detail. Animals w feed direct, plants we furnish through the re lining agency of the soil. llu. in both cases we have first of all tt ascertain the chief requirements of the "consumer," or what is practically the tame thing, the special class of article it favors and responds to most liberally. The feeding of animals, however, complicated as it is, is even a simpler mutter than is the feeding of crop. -''olman's llural Yorld. Metln of llcrkerprr. The call has been issued for the quarter centennial convention oi North American lleckcepcrs, to be held at St, Joseph, Ma, October I. ' aud 18.

r.xnlfli Care, But do it consistently, wisely, and not with alcoholic stimulants, but by the reinforeeinent of energy, the renewal of atietite and tho ability to digest, which Hosteller's Stomach Bitters, loremost among tonics, produces. .Malaria, rheumatism, kidney complaints, constipation and nervousness are conquered by this victor over many ailments. He "Your friend, I hear, paints faces

beauuiuiiv." She "Uaiy one." Syracuse Post Sea air roughens the skin. L'se Glenn's Bulphur Soap. Uili's Hair aid Whisker Dye, JO cents.

love Katra to it. 1'anl. On account of tho Annual Convention of tho Catholic Total Abstinence Uai. a of America, the North-Westcra Line wLl sc.! excursion tickets to St. lauL Minn., and return thalf rateone fare ferttiO rucd

tnp; tickets on sale July A) and 31, irfx-U forf'turn iwssagc until Aupist it. 1SW. lncludve. For ticket and full informatics apply to Agents Chicago i Xorta-Westcra Kail way.

"I've got a cold or somethiag la my 'cad," was what th simple little chappie said. Tbe summer pirl. with roguihnt-s demure, replied: Oh' it must be a cold, I'm sure." Boston Journal.

"Yocno Mrs. Eaton seems to take a grca interest ia all the current events." Mrs. Grasplv '-Great goodness, why noil She took the price last year for both the jelly and pie." " 4 There goes Black; he owes me an apologv. too." "Well, you don't deserve any sympathy, for you oucbt to know better than to loan him anytki&g." Cvttxt: Tnnrrr "That young Dnmicigh has got more money than sense." Dulham Bluntly "'I didn't know be wa rich." Cutlan Thrust "He isn't." Puck.

The most eipcnsirc shoes cost two dolkxrs a pair. Peek. Mall's Catarrh Cor Is a Constitutional Cure. Prke 73c.

Wheezvtr there is love there will be trust

Clerk "Are you croisg to discharge rae, then!" Druggist "Yes; I think wc can dispense without you." Harvard Lampoon.

"Usetcx IXrOHMATlOX" Is the title f s pamphlet just received from the Prickly Ash Bitters Co., of St. Louis, .Mo. Anexasiieatioe will show it to be all its name implies. It is full of "Useful Information." The chapters on "What to Do in Case of ArcideaLs." Antidotes for Poisons," "Health Hints." etc., are most valaaale and are written in a plain English, common-sense manner, avoiding medical terms as much as iossiblc It also rontains "Useful Information for Farmers, Housewives," etc. It is a book that should be in every hou ia the land. Write the firm above named for a copy, and when vou get it read it attentively and keep it where it can easily be found in time of need.

It is not strange that stove manufacturers should bo fired by ardor lor the grate cause.

DIFFERENT T11IES bring different methods. Ibe big, balkypills such c3 oar grandfatbers had to pet up with -BtMt do to-day. Medical eckace ham pono bevond thisi. It has given cs sometbhis better Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Feüete; tiny as zncäard seeds, bat nacre effecüv baa anvtaing yoa can take. That's baC3US3 their iaetbods are more naiitraL Tbcy have a peculiar strengthening or tocio effect on tbo lining mcnibrancscf tho intestines, which gives a permanent cere. They prevent, rdrve, and pat an end to Büioasncss, Constipation, Jaundice. Dizsae, Soar Sfcmtch, Sick or Bttioes Headaches, Indi gestion, aad every liia disorder. "iBCErabio" cases cf Catarrh are carets perfectly sad pcrrwneBtly, by Dr. Gageir Catarrh Remedy. Taa maferrs of this Baäücina 0Kflrrenfae it to btntBt or care, C money rafesdsd. By all ifilw i ia moOr

The Genuine De Long Pat. Hook and Eve has on the face and back of every card the words:

See that

V

hump?

& I Lrce Bro.,

THE TUB THAT STANDS ON ITS OWN BOTTOM

THE MARKETS.

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SOLD EYERYWHERIS vnHEH.K.FAiRBMCOMFANy.ST.Loui5

THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO QOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.

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