Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 5, Petersburg, Pike County, 14 June 1895 — Page 6
FRIENDS OF WHITE METAL. M*«tlnr of the Illinois Democratic Sllvet Convention nt Hprin*flcldT-Keeolotlone Adopted on Itecommendntlon of the Committee oo Platform. Springfield, 111., June 6.—Thin morning's trains visibly augmented the number of delegates to tbe democratic silver convention, and the prospects of It being a success were correspondingly increased. At one time it looked as if the country was holding back, and that the representation out* side of the city districts would be so small as to seriously affect the standing of silver in the State of Illinois, bat all fear of this was at an end when the delegates assembled in the commodious* hall of representatives in the capitol on noon. The capacity qf the hall, from which all the desks had been removed and chairs substituted, was taxed. There were many on the- floor besides (the delegates. A number of the delegates brought their v ives, sisters, cousins and aunts with them, as the gallery was one big blur of puffy sleeves, gaily-colored bonnets and fluttering fans. JSvery delegate who valued his standing with his fellows wore on his coat a badge shaped like an inverted triangle, the apex of which was a small gold nugget, and the remainder sixteen lumps of silver. /Secretary qf State Hinrichsen, by -virtue of his office, as chairman of the ' Deraocratict state central committee, called the meeting to order. The com-, mittee on temporary organization reported the following recommendations, which were adopted: Chairman, Monroe C. Crawford, of Union county; secretary, Arthur C. Bentley, of Pike; assistants. Win. J. Cochran, of Cook; W. P. McDowell, of Vermilion: John D. Breckinridge, of Fulton; Robert I. Hunt, of Macon: Win. Stoeffel, of McHenry, and H. T. Eberiein; sergeant/ at-arms, T. J. Sparks, of McDonough. Temporary Oiairinan Crawford said he would not delay the proceedings of the convention by making a speech. He would, however, say that the eyes of the whole country were on this convention. Let Its action be no uncertain one. Let it not beat about the busli, or mince matters, but declare 'either unconditionally for gold or the free and unlimited coi|iaj?e of silver at 16 to 1. When ‘the convention reassembled the report of the committee on credentials was received and adopted. The committee on |>ermanent organization elicited vigorous applause by naming as permanent chairman, Judge S. B. McConnell, of Chicago. A. committee, consisting of Free P. Morris, H. P. Worthington and Judge Steil, was appointed and escorted Judge MeCohncll to the chair. Judge McConnell made a vigorous ap^pch, which wfs enthusiastically applauded. The committee on resolutions reported the following, which were
The convention then adjourned until ^ o'clock to allow the various commit* tees to prepare their reports. Whereas, Silver and {fold have beeD 4 the principal money metals of the world for thousands of years, and silver money has beeu recognized and used as honest money between nations, notwithstanding' the various ratios between sflver and gold; and, Whereas, The demonetization of 6ilver has deprived the people of the free use and benefits of an invaluable and original money metal, and has increased the debts and added to the burdens of the people by lowering the value of labor products; and, Whereas, The constitution of the United States prohibits the use of anything but gold and silver coin as legal tender for the payment of debts, thereby reeogniziug that coin composed of silver and gold is honest money and fit to be used as a legal tender; therfore, by the democracy of Illinois in convention assembled, be it Resolved, That we are in favor of the use of both gold and silver as the standard money of the United States, and demand the free and unlimited coinage of both metals at the ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the action of any other nation, and that such coins shall be a legal tender for all debts both public and private, and that all contracts hereafter executed for the payment of money, whether in gold, silver or coin, may be discharged y any money which is by law a legal tender. “We hereby indorse the action of the democratic state central committee in calling this convention, apd we instruct the committee to carry out the wish of tlie convention as expressed in its platform by inaugurating and carrying on a campaign of education? in this state, and to thoroughly organize the democracy of the state on the lines laid down in the platform of this convention. Resolved, That we request the democratic national committee to call a democratic national convention to consider the money question not later ' than August, 1895. If the said national committee refuses to call such a convention then we invite the democratic Cbminittees of the other states to take „ concurrent action with the democratic state committee of this stake in calling such convention. Resolved, That the .democratic members of congress and members of the senate from this state be and they are hereby instructed to use every honorable means to carry out the principle above enunciated. Resolutions indorsing the acts and administration of Gov. Altgeld were reported by the committee, and after nearly disrupting the convention, were, on request of Secretary of State Hinrichsen, unanimously stricken out. MILES SELLS. Death of the Well-Known St. Lonto Commission Merchant. St. Louis, June 6.—Miles Sells, of the commission firm of Sells & Co.,died in this city, Tuesday, from a complication of diseases. He became ill last February and had been slowly sinking ever since. The end was peaceful. Miles Sells was one of the bestkntwn commission men in this city. He was particularly ^ well known throuffhoutAhe south, where his firm has tiiarge trade. He was born in Co iambus, 0., July 18, 1823.
CABINET CHANGES. attorn«jr~G«n«r *1 Olatjr Chow* tm Grwham-JacItM Harmon to taoonod OIary—Briof Sk etch off «hc Ufa and Char* actor off tho Now Attoraoy-Ooooral, Who Is a Boaidoat off Cincinnati. Washington, June a—At 5 o’clock yesterday afternoon the following1 appointments were annonnoed at the White House: Secretary of State—Richard Olney. of Massachusetts. Attorney-General—Judson Harmon, of Ohio. ■Indfe Jndwin Haraou. Cincinnati, June a —Judge Judson Harmon, yesterday chosen attorney general, is the senior member of the firm of Harmon, Colston. Goldsmith A Hoadley, who probably have the most lucrative law practice in Cincinnati. He is one of the “young men” of the city, though born February 3, 184& He is about 6 feet 2 inches high, athletic in appearance and well preserved though bis hair is slightly tinged with gray. In any assembly he would attract attention. He is regarded by the bench and bar of Hamilton county as an able, broad and learned man, whose appointment is taken by all as a compliment to the state and bar, as well as being a fit recognition of the worth of one of the soundest lawyers in the state. Personally Judge Harmon is a charming man. Democratic to the core, he has never had the slightest patience with anything or anybody in the smallest degree tainted with “foppery.” Judge Harmon attended the schools of Hamilton county and city, then went to Dennison university, a Baptist school, at Granville, 0. In 1866 he was graduated from there and three years later was graduated f^om the Cincinnati law school. He immediately formed a partnership with R. T. Durrell and practiced law till 1876, when he was elected judge of the common pleas court. He served on the bench for four months, when he was unseated in favor of Judge Cox by the Ohio senate, before which a contest was made. He returned to his practice, forming a partnership with Judge S. N. Maxwell. - In 1878 he was elected a judge of the superior court of Cincinnati, and in 1883 was re-elected. In March, 1887, he resigned, when ex-Gov. Hoadley and Judge Edgar M. Johnson went to New York and formed the firm of Harmon, Colston, Goldsmith & Hoadley, as successors to Hoadley, Johnson A Colston. In June, 1870, he was married to Miss Olive Seoby, daughter of Dr. W. II. Scoby, of Hamilton county. He has two children. Judge Harmon is a consistent civilservice reformer and has successfully avoided entangling political alliances. He is a close friend of ex-Gov. Campbell, but is likewise a friend of those who heretofore have fought Campbell. Prior to 1872 he was not a democrat, but entered the party as a supporter of Greelt?y.
rUn I Mt rUoLlvJ UUUU. rhe Post O flics Department to Assist tn UlMemln»tlo( Weather Forecasts. Washington, June 8.—PostmasterGeneral Wilson and postmasters throughout the country will co-oper-ate with Secretary of Agriculture Morton anil the weather bureau in giving the public the fullest possible advantages to be derived from the daily weather forecasts. Secretary Morton submitted a plan to Postmaster-General Wjlson by which a much wider dissemination of the weather indications will be had with the assistance of the post office department. It is proposed to telegraph daily postmasters at distributing offices the weather forecasts, to be bulletined in their offices for the benefit of the public, and also to be mailed to outlying offices which can be reached in time to make the predictions of value. A simple device by which the for * casts can bs easily duplicated ana stamped upon postal cards will be furnished postmasters by the weather bureau, as well as the necessary postal cards for use in this connection. Postmaster-General Wilson has requested postmasters to lend their efforts to this service. SUNK AT HER MOORINGS. A Large New Passenger Steamer Goes Down In the Cuyahoga River. Cleveland, 0., June 8.—The large new passenger steamer St. Magnus sank in the Cuyahoga river, just off the customhouse docks, a 5 o’clock yesterday afternoon. The steamer St. Magnus was partly loaded with pig iron and had to tie up for coal. When the lines were loosened she listed to starboard and gradually sank, settling in thirty feet of water and leaving only the tops of her masts above water. The St. Magnus was about to make her first trip, her destination being Hamilton, Ont. No passengers were on board, and the crew were easily rescued. The cause of the accident is said to have been overloading, while another view is that her cargo shifted. The steamer was owned in Canada. Her value is unknown. She can probably be raised, but the damage done, if not total, will reach at least S10,000. The sunken boat lies in the river just south of the Lake Shore bridge, and completely blocks the river passage of the lake vessels. A DANGEROUS CRANK Thought to Have Designs Against the Queen’s Family. Aberdeen, June 8.—An unknowi man was arraigned in court here yesterday charged by the sheriff with having fired a revolver on the Ha Hater road near Balmoral. The hearing of the prisoner was adjourned pending inquiry for additional evidence. The man is suspected of being a crank and of having loitered about Balmoral watching his ehance to make an attack upon some member of the rpyal family
DUN'S COMMERCIAL REVIEW. The Tide of BhImm Rtsla* with Aitw. UhlBf Rapidity—Each Advance b Well huhlMd. Proving the Fear* of the Mora Conservative that the lakprovement Mar Not he Peraaaaeat to be GrotadlirM—The Upward Movement. ° N*w York, Jane a—R. G. Dan A Ca’s weekly review of trade, issued today, says: 1 The tide of business is rising, even ns it was falling just two years ago, with surprising rapidity. The gain has gone so far and so fast in some branches, that the more conservative fear it may not be maintained. But the period of dullness which comes in each market after < an unusual rise brings as yet nothing like a corresponding decline. Industries gain much, halt, fall back a little, and then gain once »-“■©. The demand for consumption steadily increases as the employment and wages of the people increase. Demand for mone/expands, one bank reporting 29 per cent, larger discounts for the country, and another 23 per- cent, morecommercial loans than a year ago, and all but two report some gain. One serious question remains, whether the crops will be full enough to sustain a large business. But the worst reports to-day are better by far than the estimates recently current. Wheat rose 2 cents, fell back 2 with realizing, and has again risen 3, with a western estimate of a crop 80,000,000 bushels smaller than last year. It is pertinent to remember that official and most of the unofficial imports, down to a late period last fall,! put the yield about 30,000,000 bushels lower than it is now known to have been. Western receipts were 264,000 more than last year and for five weeks have been 7,671,031 bushels, against 6,991,650 last year, while Atlantic exports, flour included, 670,000 bushels smaller for the week, have been in five weeks 7,738,723 bushels, against 11,945,478 last year. There is neither holding back by farmers, nor anxious haste in the purchasing by foreigners, to support belief in scarcity. Cotton declined an eighth, with better weather at the south, but excitement and prices rose again with the report of 11.6 per cent.decrease in acreage. Much greater decrease has been called certain; but condition is reported less favorable than last year. With a tenth smaller yield per acre, an acreage 11.6 per cent, less than last year, the yield would still exceed 7,700,i300 bales, which, with heavy stocks curried over, would forbid the idea of famine. But a late crop is the more exposed to injury. June began with 9,553,393 bales already in sight, and 3,302,350 American remaining in commercial stocks, while European spinners held May 1 over 1,000,000 bales, according to Ellison. Cotton mills are doing well with very satisfactory orders already for prominent lines, and the market is strong with occasional further advances.
Iron pusnes upward line tue great buildings into which so much of it goes, and the advance in finished prodacts has become general. Of structural steel, 12,600 tons were turned out in May by the Homestead works, breaking the record, and prices rose to 1.3 cents for beams and 1.2 for angles. Tin is weaker with a rise in the world’s visible supply to 25,671 tons— about five months’ consumption; but copper is stronger at 10 % cents for lake, and lead higher at 3.3 cents. Shipments of boots and shoes are still larger than in any previous year, and in most grades recent advances are paid in large orders, but there is some slackening in boots and women’s grain and buff shoes. Hides are higher at 9% cents for western, and tanners hesitate; but leather is stiff. In exchange the gain over last year is 27 per cent., though the decrease, compared with 1892—the latest year of full business after May—is 9.7. Railroad earnings for May are 7.4 per cent, larger than last year, a better gain than in any previous month, but the decrease from 1893 is 13.9 per cent., and on substantially the same roads was 12.6 for April, 12.9 for March and 18.3 for January, a curiously uniform decrease. Activity in stocks can *\ot be expected with crops in doubt and the average of prices closed 87 cents per share lower for railroad, and 4 per cent, for trust Stocks of the great grain-carrying roads have not changed 50 cents per share in the average for four weeks, notwithstanding reports of serious injury. The flow of money hither from the interior has not ceased, but has much lessened, and banks report general increase in discounts for the south, and in commercial loans here, mainly in manufacturing paper. Foreign exchange is higher, exports showing 17 per cent, decrease for five weeks, while imports show 14 per cent, increase. London has sold about 35,000 shares of stock more than it has bought for the week, but still bids largely for bonds. Failures in four weeks of May show liabilities of $9,339,181, of which $3.401,875 were of manufacturing and $5,345,206 of trading concerns. Last year the total was $9,787,921, of which $4,- ' 061,603 was of manufacturing and $4,281,886 of trading concerns. Failures for the week have been 195 in the United States, against 216 last year; and 25 in Canada, against 40 last year. REINFORCEMENTS FOR CUBA Said to Have Left Key West, Fla., on ike Schooner Mary Jane. Jacksonville, Fla., June §.—A cablegram to the Times-Union from Key West, Fla., says: Unusual excitement has been noticed among the Cuban population for the j>ast day or two, and it is now positively known that an expedition of two or three hundred well-equipped men, Cubans and Americans, has left this city since Wednesday, commanded by Zerafin Sanches. It is rumored that the expedition will sail from one of the Bahama islands.
PROTECTION DECLINING. Germany Will Follow Mew Zealand. Anatrar llaw Canada and Other Cooolrtc* la Abol. lata las “Prolwtlon." Protectionism seems to be losing1 ground in alleivilixed countries. New Zealand dropped it and took up direct taxes in 1891 and has ever since been prosperous. The other Australasian colonies stuck to protection and have since experienced the worst panic and depression that ever affected a nation. Several of these colonies are now discarding protection and all will probably do so within a few years. The United States last year removed the worst features of protection, and prosperity is rapidly returning. Canada will almost certainly lower her protective duties within a yea'r. Many Other smaller and less important countries are offering more favorable terms to trade and exchange. Even the protection wall of China is soon to have gateways of trade through it. The one country to which our protectionists have pointed with pride has been Germany. “See Germany,” they would say; “look what protection has done for it! Bismarck, the greatest statesman living, except McKinley, knew what was good for Germany when he gave her protection. The Germans are one of the most enlightened peoples on earth; they stick to protection Of course they don’t have as high wages as free trade England, but wages are higher there than when protection was first adopted.” But Germany is just now turning away from both Bismarck and protection. The farmers are the only class that can be protected in Germany, just as the manufacturers are the only class that can be protected in this country. The farmers there have been enjoying very high protection but, like our manufacturers, they are never satisfied and they have been striking their government for higher and higher duties on foreign grains. Of course it is hard on the masses in Germany to have to pay monopoly prices for their bread and other food. Thus,because of “protection,” refined beet sugar sells for over 6 cents per pound in Germany, although the same shgar is exported to England and sold for 2}4 cents per pound. The masses in Germany are getting tired of this sort of protection; in fact, they have stood it about as long as possible. Hence it is that, a few days ago, both the council of the empire and the German parliament rejected what is known as the Kanitz plan to give the agrarians a government monopoly in foreign grain trade and the right to “maintain prices for grain at a level profitable for the German producers.” This form of statement sounds natural to us. It is used by protection spiders wherever they exist and whenever they ask innocent flies to walk into protected parlors.
Germany has rejected the Kamtz plan of protection because she has several persons asking for cheap food to every one asking for dearer food. Her industrial classes outnumber her agricultural classes. As tbe.New York Times says, “it is the manufacturer and the trader and not the land owner by whom the policy of the empire is for the future to be shaped. There had *been other evidences of. the same tendency in the . commercial treaty with Russia—which is producing an extension of German exports, especially of metals and machinery, far beyond the most that had been hoped—and in other features of the late Chancellor Caprivi's policy. And it was largely because of these that the agrarians made their fight on Caprivi. They saw in his dismissal encouragement for a more decisive struggle. They have made it and have utterly failed.” The days of protection are numbered. When the civilized nations of the earth have once freed themselves from this robber of the poor and benefactor of the rich, it will be as impossible for them to return to the accursed system as it is for England to reverse her free trade policy. t “REPUBLICAN INDUSTRY."* Congressman Qnlcg Admits That the Re. pnbllcan Party Thinks Only of Oar Man. ufacturing Industries. Many democrats and tariff reformers have always held that the republican party was owned, body and soul, by the manufacturers of this country and that without the manufacturers there would be no^ “party of protection, of American wages,” etc. Only occasionally does some republican inadvertently admit this truth. One of the latest of these slips, suggests a correspondent is contained in the New York Press, of April 28, edited by Congressman Lemuel Eli Quigg. Eli has somehow got it into his head that the democrats don’t want the republicans to tinker with the present tariff law. Of course he is mistaken in this particular for the democrats are everywhere saying “we just dare you to tinker with the present tariff and to replace it by another McKinley bill.” But Quigg wouldn’t be himself if he didn’t always insist upon misunderstanding conditions. He knows very well that it is the republicans who are crying “don’t tinker with the tariff and make fools of yourselves and the party as you did in 1890.” He also knows that it will be next to impossible to get the republicans in the next congress to do more than tb “cast a few bluffs” just as he is now doing. He heads his editorial “Tariff Tinkering and Murder” and proceeds calmly to compare democrats who ask republicans not to tinker with the tariff with murderers who wish to abolish capital punishment. After glibly talking about the “reddest handed of the would-be murderers of American industries,” he casts the following big patriotic bluff: “We are not forecasting republican tariff legislation here. Nobody has to forecast republican tariff legislation. It has proceeded always upon one simple, practical plan—benefits to this country, protection to our industries where it is needed against foreign competition, favors to our people. The rule is as simple as ABC, and we suppose that republican tariff legisla- j Uon will depend entirely upon the n*p
tare and Dumber of the aorta received bj American industries in the recent w upon them, brought by Cock burn Cleveland and Pfekenham Wilson. “No, we are thinking amusedly ot what the murderers justly dread and why they want capital punishment abolished.” -I This sounds well and there would be no fault to find with it, except that it is not true, if Quigg did not proceed to explain what he means by the “simple, practical plan” of republican tariff legislation and by “protection to oar industries.” Continuing he says: “If the republican party should follow their precedent it would simply hunt all democratic industries and assassinate them in broad daylight, simply because they were democratic. It would treat every importer of foreign goods as an outlaw and put a price on| his head. This was precisely the action taken toward the manufacturers by the democratic party, hea.ded by Mr. Cleveland, • from ! 1887 to 1893. When the country’s prosi perity was at its highest: when there was not a whisper of a demand from any class or any individual in the country for a change in the industrial conditions by a tariff, it set to work to make a St. Bartholomew's day for the manufacturing class." This is virtually admitting that the republican party thinks only of the manufacturers and does not think that there are other industries worth consideration. If the manufacturers are taken care of (as they were by McKinley) it matters not what happens to the greater industry of farming, “Benefits to this country” means simply benefits to the manufacturers who, by contributions to the republican party, have paid for protective tariff legislation. The republican party is the manufacturers’ party; it must work in the interests of its master or cease to exist. A FREE TRADE NOVEL. A Dreary Picture of What Might Happen Under Millionaire Monopoly. “Uncle Sam’s Cabins” is t*re title of a decidedly interesting novel that was put before the public a few weeks ago. It is “a story of American life looking forward a century,” by Benjamin R. Davenport The author has drawn a most horrible picture of American life, especially farm life, after our “protective” tariff system has continued one hum.-ed years longer. He continues the concentration of wealth (which began with the introduction of “protection” in 1S63 and had given us 5,000 millionaires’* and* multi-millionaires in 1890 and millions of tramps, paupers and tenant farmers) until, in 1994, a very few persons own the whole country. Public schools were abolished long before 1994 and but few farmers could read or write. States have disappeared,
except that m some cases old state lines mark the boundaries or districts belonging to single proprietors, as. for example, one proprietor owns the “district of Ohio.” The farmers live in hovels and in greater poverty and more miserable conditions than was ever the lot of the Irish peasantry. In all districts or stptes but* Ohio the farmers have already signed “bonds of servitude” which makes them slaves to the proprietors, and the Ohio farmers are compelled to sign-away their remaining freedom soon after the opening oi the story. Because of the impoverishment of the farmers and their inability to purchase goods of any kind, manufacturing and other industries have declined until they are nearly extinct. A military despotism has taken the place of a once glorious republic. The imagination of the greatest pessimist living could scarcely conceive of such poverty, degradation and hopelessness as are here pictured as the result of 130 years of “protection.” Undoubtedly most readers will say that the picture is overdrawn. Probably it was purposely overdrawn. -But one thing is certain, the rapid concentration of wealth that has been going on since 1862 cannot continue forever without impoverishing the masses and practically enslaving them—unless, as is probable, they revolt and destroy titles to property before they become slaves. Since 1860 eighty per cent, of our wealth has changed from the posI session of eighty per cent, of our popu- | lation to ten per cent, of ihjLThis process continued a few decades longer will wreck our republic. Something must stop it. A republic is safe only when wealth is comparatively evenly distributed and when labor receives its just reward. Protective tariffs, special privileges, monopolies, trusts, millionaires, billionaires, mortgaged farmersv tenant farmers, paupers, tramps, slaves—all of these are but mile stones on the road to ruin. Even if Mr. Davenport is mistaken as to the cause of the disease and remedy for it—as is probable—he has written a book that will arouse earnest thought in the minds of all patriotic citizens s2l to the future of this nation. Perhaps, however, the majority of the readers of “Uhcle Sam's Cabins” will take less interest in the discussions 6f social problems than in the story of love and marriage with the usual accompaniments of villainy, murder, selfishness, heroism and cowardice. Tariff n. Currency. Possibly the tariff question may ha re to take a back seat for a year. No one, however, who knows anything about the question and the extent to which public sentiment has been aroused will make the mistake of thinking that it can always be kept on a back seat. Tens of thousands of intelligent men have seen the iniquity of the whole tariff system and are waging a war upon it that cannot but be successful. In public and private debate, in homes, in labor unio&s, in granges, and even in church and society gatherings debate will go on until congress will be compelled to settle the question in the only way possible—by abolishing the obnoxious, unjust aid corrupting system of tariff taxation. Thousands of our best Citizens consider the tariff question to be of far greater importance than the currency question, and it is by no means certain that the tariff question can be set aside fur even a year.
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