Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 47, Number 28, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 March 1905 — Page 3

After Twenty Years By AGNES LOUISE PROVOST

RETROGRESSION OF TARIFF

Not

Much Don by Republicans MM with the McKinley Idea.

try mHgnate that evening, but bad I lot bu ilia' a certain soinebudy wouid - th'i and exuee ting bun, he wouij luv ftfMti lo his foolUh iiiK-aslti. a atid stated at borne Yet bat wai Hier tu (aar, In tbu lair ii'ini r ald at leant? Hi uiihi be atchiul üben they ri-turm-d to th city "It Is lti honor of M Munton's nleee, you kuow. Hoi i.'m- le-anliit? forward and lanm nie ISgaiB lightly IW all father's urm, v. bile Ins fan- Hushed what should ou say if noma day I thottld brittt u u t'aui'htiT? ' ' (iii' that i it .' inte rn .(..at ed Clicv

nan. dryly, but M ai(?bed a little, too I Tie on vsaa all h bail, and It was bard

itiat um all IMM years 01 comraae- i manufacturers could tdilp a putty fac t' should w in him away I ri.reiga trade despite

in a lew short we. U. fetill it fenä lure. Hoy, boy'." be arulled ruefully. "I had almost forgotten that you could grow Into a man. Ii . t be careful Tin-on, be careful!" He knew how absurdly use-leu war ' the warning and he sriiile.1 grimly tc himself, but the M hardened to

Fkii.M the old Daulii r boiB-. wbn b Victor Chmm had run il fortho ..miner, the gray toWOM of Chateau l f t.ltty roue like a dim BtchiSf b" fond the maaaed shadow a of the woods Victor ( ln-vn au spent unit Ii tunc lookB ortr at IM Kray tow Hi-. mtgBbOft, as nelKhbilrs will, had txorclactl themselves to a considerable , ;,t to determine hi' n"'l what h . Ottt tlie result was not aUgtyiBg He and his BOB bad taken the rambling oli' -mne bouse for rest and qvtot alter j P . i r-of constant travel, but the coun li houses aroui d tin in had small use or suih modest retirement. Two men. i .'.iil- alone with no women folk but a

few servants an. I w ith seemingly a stir sneer as h- turned and stared again fl. leiicv of worldly store, are sure to be the may tOVtTI of the ehat.au. loom

ObJOCtl of inquiring interest, and alMKitv the atroBS limbed old man with

the leonine head and yas 'hat saw all I day." thincs had figured in a scire of fear

ful OM IgSltl m ihe fert lie brains of the I inmunlty. and had been attributed to bewildortag Baaabar of satioaalltiea 'I heon. the son. was very different He was young Rinl pood looking, with Bo notion of being a recluse, and was aoofl a familiar figure in the society of the locality. The years of travel had made him the most interesting of BOS r i' ' I ol it ans, and hi gentle courtesy wit h Wotnai and good humored frankne with men had won hlni the readiest w el cine. BelOW the old Daubler house a rlto road wound and wandered and lost

THE TARIFF IS SHUNNED. Some Facta Which Ate Becoming Foiced Home Uon the People.

Ing shadowy in the After Ju years!

dusk. And this Is

a (004

The road fr .in B past the old Ii i', au, is very beautiful. Strangers traveling through the country take the drive and exi laim at the fairness of open field and massive wood, but then is one spot where silence comes in voluntarily, a long, shadowed stretch where the forest rises darkly on both and twilight reigns at high noon Hon the w ood to the right extends bu a few rods, ending abruptly in the high etifl that follows the road for milea, and far below, in the silence of the for eat. comes the subdued rush and murmur of the deep river, swirling againal

p-. lf In the deep won. Is 'hnmgh which 1 the rocks in its bed

11 mUSl pa-s on Its way to IBS town of B Uate in the afternoon a horseman Um and erect galloped alone here and diaappcarad la tha daap shades, nur aetahbor, M D'Arblay," re-' mai l ed The. n. asual iy . wat hing the eqtieatrtaa from sight. "He rides to The elder Chevreau made no reply but presently he leaned forward ar.. r il his massive hin firmly in bis hand Th.iin. watching him saw that Um lines of his face were deep and hard You are not well to-day. mon pcre?" ha asked, quickly, for between father I id son w as the taadarBOH "f women. You forget the day," answered Chevreau. staring blackly dow n the yellow road "It is Just M years. Theon. ! Alnce we left Pflll 1 'anion me! " The young man's face flushed sensitively, but the father laid a heavy hand on his knee and continued the subject so rarely mentioned between th'm "Twenty yars. Theon. since they dis graced me before my country ThSJ took my sword from me my rank my honor, and marrhed me like a criminal through the files Of my regiment. And I was their colonel My God!" His nostrils quivered with repressed excitement, for after N yearn the old

AND 1 IIAVK K "M HIM ggOBf still burnt hot and strong. i hat was brad asoagn, Thsoa, that

wa- hard, but they sentenced me to M yi.iis of exile, away from France or any Kreuch possession Tin y gave me BO BBSS to start again, to prove the lie to them! And your mother you have her eyes. Theon she broke under th- horror of it all, and die 1 "You never tortured me with cruel BjttBiUQMi even as a boy. but little by little you understood why It was we had left our honorable name behind us in : raJMM it was honorable once, boy and that we stayed but a short time In a place because some orr niluh: re. agnize us. when we wanted UM world to rorgwl Hut 1 couldn't wait the M :tr I had to slip bak six months 0OBI i to search for him And I have found him." Mon paral And he knows it"- ques ti Red 1 be son, startled. "He knows it. It is 20 years since ho saw me disgraced to hide his own i iBg, He wns clever then and I was

kel pleas, Mut I hav e found him now." 'I Si son leaned forward, his dark OJ . his mother's eyes, intently search big his father s face. 'Moa pore, proaiBM me! We hav e al nys iieen gKd comrades. For my Bakt, if not for yours, you will do him no hniir.''" for a moment they looked nt each ot; r, Ul lather wondering struggling ar t tlosi the answer cntur. grlmlv ion may trust my di n tion. THOOS t sbnll do nothing of whbh I shall ro 1" ' it is sedi I bad buslnes tbls t poMiiig." answered UM son. apOtOgtb iaattjr, "And rsvsaga lasts so short a time before It strike , back." In the cool of the evening he sat on lis BStat bidding a"leu to Iiis father lie a nv-tad at llM house of s ouutv

In the day It is beautiful but at nigh'

it is awesome and none travel past them but those whose way leads then th re of necessity. (in the night that Juie IVArblay rod to rj , the e"eep forest lay quiet and still, know-ins that the one sound thai would awaken its echoes would be the galtofl of a returning horse. Julei D'Arblajr always returned late and alone He was later than usual to Dlghl for he war. making arrangements (0 leave Indefinitely. As a rule he en Joyed spending his summers In the fln Old chateau, but this summer he pre (artsd bl leave. The trees rose high and met In thirl an hes over the road, shutting out th light of the stars. The trees and th ion-, ,uhs ere the only things ol

the forest not asleep In the vastneaw Of the night, and they stirred and whispered nodding wisely to one anothei and shivering awesomely in the silence Iown the hard road came the whole some reality of steady hoof beats, snc the quivering bushes held themselves U ll.-ten as horse and rider came, noarei through the black shadows At on side the low gras rustled, and two rest leas eyes gleamed at the dark outlin approaching The slim, straig" t shadow sat fearlessly erect and unconscious o! danger. From out of the roadside somethini rose and struck viciously at the hea-4 of the rider hissing angrily. "After 20 i sua. Iain PArMay!" something fell heavilv. without a cry. and thet

the leaves rustled as the startled horswas backed through the blackness by a commanding hand, still back, tow-arc the steep cliff, for a riderless horse Is a hetraval and if a drunken man rides

over a cliff In returning from town U is no one's fault but his own The alt quivered with the human scream of terrified beast, and the dep river splashed solemnly as it received Its bur den The timid bushes shivered and cow ered again bonding fearsomely to on; side as the man returned, and a still warm thing was carried heavily through them. Its nerveless limbs limply brushing them In Its progress The wind stopped to hear his heavy breathing as the bearer of the burden strode on Then It fled up swiftly affrighted, to tell the tree tops what it had seen, and the good old trees tossed their long arms in sorrow over thtreachery of man to man. and let th stars peep wonderingly through, so that .hnir clear light shone fair and steadily

on the still face.

As one who does so against his will ihe one who BOW him ßlanced down In

stern aversion at the dead man. Tno limp thing half slipped from his loosened grasp, the distant stars quivered and shrank, as a great cry rang out and up to them, lingering and sobbing in tho tree .tOpS like the wail of a stricken woman "Oh. my God' My Cod!" The little bushes rustled pitifully, and throtich the parted arms of the solemn trees the stars shone tenderly, even on

this one who knelt shivering on

ground staring dumbly 1 of the dead

When the m-i rotary of t tr.-a.-nr ltddsd that it was within th- up" of bis authority to allow a drawback uu foreign wheat to be made luto Hour la Ihlfl country and then MpOtl ed. and mon- particularly when the corn-elm of his action was affirmed 'jy ihe authoritative opinion of the attorney general, there was very geu eral saUsfacUoa that a way had bean found whereby the great Hour

maintain that the short top,

ami there was no particular regret

that a precedent iiU 1 ben c.-iaLlisheu and a rub- adopted whereby manufacturers in othar fields might id. tain the advantage of this liberal mterpre'ation if the draw back law. Hut the nate has IntsrVBBSd. Mr Han-.). rough offered an amendment to the agri ulturai appropriation bill torhiddlag UM application of UM draw

back provision of the Dingley law u Ihe mamifaff antra of wheat, and th moite passed It. The hoUM has still to act but au enumeration of the republican members from agricultural districts coupled with the number who are op-poM-d to any change of tariff c onditions, ei'her by legislative enactment oral nlBlstratlve order, will leave no doubt ts to Um results So far as congress is concerned our foreign trade may be all lost and nothing would be done to pre-

VBBl it. if the sac redness of the tariff were to suffer. This curtailment of the drawback law w ill mean the loss of not less than ". per cent, of cut export trs-'e in flour, and he manufac-t urers from t heir know ledge of market conditions abroad and the extensive arrangements that have been nade in England and Germany to import wheat Instead of flour think that once

the trade lost they wiil never get it back The action of the senate shows how the tariff theory has changed since Hlaine Mc Kinley and Iingb y all of whom were most con-,plc nous advocates f protec tion, formulated and ratified in speech and message the thest? of reciprocity and pronounced the belief that i tariff and the development of f' reign trade were not only not IscOBSisti nt but.

Appanuily there is to be no esrlj tarll reviajon by congress. The "ataiiil-pattei V are having tlnir owa way They have .-vidently o impelled the president to acquit se M He ir tfcrSB, and it hi now announced that an extra session of congress if tailed to assemble next October, will consider only theena- t mint of a railroad freight rate bill. The necessity for a rearrangement of the tariff sc hedules is nolo- ih SSI imperative, says the Washington i'.t. Object lessons continue to be placed BSfOfS the American people Here, for instance, is the consul at Port Hi mon, Costa Itica, informing us that a Hoiton eorimration erbte controls the banana plantations and output in Costa Rica is buying an American product abroad, because it can save money thereby. "It has happened." writes iha cousul, "that American rails ba. asaS bought at a lower figure on the Knt;lish market than in the I nited States."

1 lu re is no question as to the accuracy 1 of this statement. Kvidence to thu same effect has been presented in almost innumerable instances. It means that the manufacturers of steel rails, protected by a high tariff wall, are

compelling our own people to payhigher prices than foreign purchasers. It is a remarkable state of affairs when an American corporation goes abroad to buy an Amen an product bec ause that article is offer.-d abroad at a lower pri'-e than it an I p in has d at home How long will the American p-ople stand this imposition? The men who enjoy the leneflts of extreme protection may think that they can indeunitely continue to add to their fort SSM by this method, but they will meet with a sad awake ning. The time will

come when the tariff burden, grown oo heavy to be endured, will be sud- ' denly throw n aside. The stand pati ters" and even the advocates of moderate revision will find themselves in : a minority The people, who have a

habit in this country of occasionally going to extremes, will cause the tariff

' pendulum to swing far in the atrecj Hon of free trade. It would be wise

for the extreme orot-ct lonlsu to reail

WOMEN NOT TRUTHFUL This Statement Has Been Unjustly Made, Because Modest Women Evade Questions Asked By Male Physicians.

rightly regarded import dutie could be hm the haniwriting on the wall.

made to increase our foreign commerce enormously. Since that USM we MOmtO

have retrogressed. The n lprocity the- j ry. declared by Ulaine. the reciprocity ; programme established by McKinley and legally formulated by bingley and made in apparently inseparable part of the law. which hears his name, have ail been nullified by senatorial action orinaeticn Treaties have been smothere.l or amended info innocuousness. and no effort has be-n spared to make the tariff law now in force a forceful embodiment of false pretenses that in the application if not In the adoption was nothing; more than a creation to deceive and mislead In his speech at Buffalo Just before his death. Mr Mc Kinley said: "The period of exolusiveness is past. The expansion of our trade and commerce is the pressing problem Commercial wars are unprofitable. A policy Of good will and friendly trade relations will prevent reprisals Reciprocitytreaties arc in harmony with the spirit of the times BMasoraa I f retaliation are not.

If perc hance soni" of our tariffs are no longer needed for revenue or to encourage and protect our industrier. at home why should they not be employed to extend and promote our markets abroad"

Whsa it was throttling the reciprocity treaty with Newfoundland lately, the senate majority apparently forgot that it belonged to the party of McKinley. Ulaine and Dingley OPINIONS OF THE PRESS Standard Oil possibly feels that it

The tanti is not. as some people se.-ni to think, a safe and sac red thing The people will take the matter in hand if the republican majority fails to appreciate the situation. They will send representatives to congress who will handle the tariff with ungloved hands This Is almost certain to be the case if the next congress is characterized by Inaction. The republican leaders ought to revise the tariff while they possess the power lo control public affairs.

An eminent physician says that : Women are not truthful; they will lie to their physician." This statement should be qualifie d; women do tell the truth, but not the whole truth, to a male physician, but this is only in regard to those painful and troublesome disorders peculiar to their sex. There can be no more terrible ordeal to a delicate, sensitive, refined woman than to be obliged to answer certain qttestions when those questions are asked, even by her family physician. This is especially the case with unmarried women. Is it any wonder, then, that women continuo to suffer and that doctors fail to cure female disease when they cannot get the proper information to work on? This is the reason why thousands and thousands of women are now corresponding with Mrs. l'inkham. To her they can and do give every symptom, so that she reallv knows more about the true condition of her patients, through her correspondence with them than the physician who personally questions them. If yousnffcr from any form of trouble peculiar to women, write at once to Mrs. l'inkham. I.;, on. Ma-, and si.. artU advise you free of eharga. The fact that this prcat loon. which is extended freely- to iroaMS by Mrs. HukbsaL Is appreciated, the thousands of letters received by her prove.

Manv such grateful letters as the fal

lowing are constantly pouring in

Mrs.Ella Lee.Frankford, Ind., writes: TVar Mrs Pirikhani: ' I want to thank you for what your medicine has done for me. " Türe years ago I had inflammation of the ovaries and ulcers on my womb. I wai under the doctor's care for about three months, and the only time I was nt in pain was when aadsr tL- laSaeaoe of morphine. The doctor finally said 1 n v. r would be better, and would beau invalid the rest of my life. I had given up in despair, but one evening I came ;, f '. .1 h ' '. - HI. ! 1 ii t. write you for advice. I did so and coml, i.'ti. -1 to take Lydia E. l'inkham s Vegetable nii'ind- I b-gan to improve at ottos, ami to-day I am a well woman, and I kcow it is all due to your advice and medicine Mrs. J H. Farmer of 2809 Elliott Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: I ca:iti"t thank vou enough for what root

adve e nt.d i m- have done for me. They save doae me more g.od than all the doctors I ever hail. per the lat eight years I hare suffered

with female troubles; was very weak; had nervous prostration, and eosta not do my

wsrk; but 1 am liappy losav i.v tia t I inKham's Vegetable C'mpound has made a

different woman or me. 1 am in perfect

health and have gained in weight from 98 pounds to IH pounds." No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has 6uch a record for actual cures of female ills as has Lydia E. l'inkham V ,-etable Compound. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for adriee. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lvnn, Mass.

Mrs. Pinkham's Advice A Woman Best tnderstaods A Woman's

THE TARIFF WALL BETWEEN It Is Only from That Shelter That Republican Trusts Can Operate. In a raoMt lecture oo "Business

Morality" before the Schcxd of Commerce, Accounts and Finance of tho New York university, George Hav on Putnam had this to say about trusts: "Capitalists, working through the medium of shareholding association j. uot infrequently bring their orgSSiaStions to profitable development by operations carried on with absolute disregard of the rights, the interests, the possibilities of livelihood of thoir competitors. Their actions are cr.ruinal. and they escape the penalties of crime only through the clever guidance of lawyers selected because they know ; how to evade the law. ThaM OOasaTBJ control state legislatures, sometimes i by direct bribery, sometimes by aliow- ! ing legislators a share in their nefarious profits. Not content with this.

YowShoeMonet

Will go farther and last longer if you Insist upon having the Right kind of Shoes. Your dealer will sei: you the "ALWAYS JUST CORRECT"

CL0IR BRAND SHOES

If you ask h.m for them: if he they re worth waiting for un

hasn't got them, il he rets them.

The RIGHT SHOES for ALL SORTS of WEAR You can pay as little or as mu:h as you want to. For the most for your money, buy "Rigeur.

ought to le able to stand investigation if j tUey wring undue inlluence to bear

upon the national government and undertake to shape its policy so as to work for their own enrichment, in place of strengthening the interests of the community as a whole "It Is tru. of course, that by far the larc. r number of trusts wauh hnve undertaken to stamp out competition and fix final pries could not have maintained themselves if they did not work behind the tiriff wall. The removal of the tariff would compel them

the world

the beef trust i an - w asnington htar. Mr. Garfield may wonder where the supreme court got that data about thS beef trust Washington Post. The Panama spade is in clanger of grow ing rusty because of too prolonged swinging of the big stick The Commoner. "What was the verdict airrdnst the Hast?' "As near as I c an make out it w as. 'Guilty, but aesf on doing It ' "

Kassas City World

LARGEST FINE SHOE ST. LOUIS. U.

EXCLUSIVISTS

S. A

the

th

face

On the following day 8 passing traveler found two bodies In the wood by the cliff voung Theon Chevreau Matched carefully out on the tender crass with his cloak wrapped smoothly about hin. nnd the strange old man

bic father with a bullet In his temple

Ivlng face (KJWBWMU as mm mmm .n-.

hi head on his sons breast joth Literature

fops Communicate by Kite. m g JftSSaeSS recent ly Ilcw a larse klt lata th. RasalaS Hues The kite wat Bovsrad with photograph! showing tb traatiaasl Sf BaalSSS prisoners In Ja pan It was evidently Inteoled to at tract the Russian so'dlers

Thoroughly Subdued, Is he henpecked?" "ft, frj0fSagU thSl he .peaks to hi. w tfa as politely as he dues to histtBiS raphcr. - Town Topica

If pr.-id. iit U. o v.-It does not to meet the prices or wie worm iuur-

let up on the trusts, the next republican ket. Other combinations, however, nominee will have a bar 1 tune pitting have grown u; outside the tariff Su a

funds -Atlanta Journal ; are those Wiuwuai i-

ami sale of petroleum ami neei. m i

. smpaiga

Btsa the National Republican Kd Itorial association has dropped "the hand maiden of pro' . tion" from Its repertoire of N solutions. Washington Post Robert B Roosevelt, the president's uncle, thinks Theodore Roosevelt might again be a candidate if be were nominated by loth parties. But will the republicans indorse him if the democrats nominate blm? N. Y. World. Mr Shaw predicts a deficit of about IMXK I and Senator Hemenway propose s to turn it into a surplus of alM1, jv The difference is that astator Heme n way is talking now like

Mr Shaw did during the campaign. fvsahtafjtoa Past. Those who have begun to boom Vice President Fairbat.ks for president in IftM seem to be acting on the belief that politics! lightning sometimes bits tw ice in the same place -Chicago post. Mr. Rose veil is greatly concerned about the possibilities" "f the I'nlted Stat. - und. r the Monroe doctrine He m ms to be very little 0SB0M 1 i about paragraph 11 of section of nrtll 1 of the constitution of the I'nitcd Stat.s which provides that coiigrcssnot th. pr.s I. nt shall have power "to

declare war . urat t lenersoi imit" "" reprisal, and i.iake rules concerning captures on land and water."

ai tu IM munity.

sa.iuial for the whole eum-

It is pointed out that the ac tual result, so far. of the anti trust campaign, carried forward with such wealth of clamor, has been s modification of the Sherman act lessening the degree of punishment for con lotsd trust officials. Philadelphia Ke ord. . Several republican organs that rejoice over the alleged fact that the supreme court's beef trust decision cuts the ground from under government by injunction, are the same organs that denounc ed as anarchistic the democrat

ic demand for a cessation of jvernment by injunction. There are those who are wondering If the Ka'tbanks boom will be able to stand the wear and tear of continuous service during the n. t three years. Waghamtaa H, v. Leader. , i io trusts that are now suffering frvm the president's "pernicious" activity would like to believe that a man's usefulness is over at 4ö, but they can't -Baltimore American Wb.le ihe pack Is running after the railroads and Standard Oil. old fox tariff has s chance to cstch his second wind You don't ISppOM any of the hunters thought ol that, do you7 Albany argua

We Guarantee 8

The nnderMcnH .iffrr llnjl!d rumbwOCÄillrS at pr. en ln--.K. ii ' . " 'S' 1" ' I" r m't7'ü ttIKl (Jkf.lv M'll.l nc a.. I wr; ' ("Tr'Ä r . . . TSS? .i oilirr'rmhtriK woudu; 0

4 ..mpin profltei r ho. muni. vi ills, f

n-. eje lr cant.

BBS I

5 Dividend April 1. 1905

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lateraatiooal Lumber ft DeTelopraent Ce. 751 Drrirl llolldlaii. rhll.. .

SOUTHERN CONDITIONS IND POSSIBILITIES.

Iu n part f ihr VwDtmi State h there bee

ai i

Afft lriiUurml t.reei.-jmrni

Vatlrv RAiIroa.1 10 tue mj " i " 7V--MiwtMippi il L""i'n. wiihin IVit juM ten Vr CiOe-n t town hnvfd . Me IthMr .r VH.O ..I hi.lndi.1 buvnr I . k li.v ratted. Finn Uneb ! " tn .UwtUfd In Tiliir Humlrc.1 of uidi,".r. h.- hern

, , 1 ai.d ru:t IBerr an nprw drilled eleinand for Day Labortrs, Skillad Workman, and especially Farm Tenants. Paine with mall espatat. ene opportttnilT to vircha a farm home; larine- bo MSri rr'" o rent tT a cantf of Tar et re iii.bi'n; and day laborer 1.1 fieUler u dorre ihi.uliv a.:dia a rotal caid t-i Mr. j r. Merrr Sat. General ri'fnrr AkiiI Iutn,"e. Iowa, who will fT'ty "'' rnntf ccncertnni the temlory aboee oeaciltn, ad gm t-.eouc rcplUa tv all BaBMHeS

THE COMING COUNTRY

If yon are tonkins r a better o e lo et m ir and rtcr

your laUi - lc In In-lian T mote ssce an reas of uniu Ihe ci'iaof openincrt in '

mm. iklahotTS ard Tetaa

rr.' s

dee by teteie n

catien

of our la:

l il-

BS

Ttat Comtn Countnr.' Auureaa

GEORGE MORTON. General enBr " Tickst Agent,

BOX SO. ST. LOOIS.rSO.