Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 21 June 1895 — Page 3
THEORIES VS. FACTS. TteWac* Record of M*y 1898 Comprni with That of May 1806. Wages advanced, new mills opened, old mills enlarged and greater demands for labor and materials are the evidences of prosperity pouring in from all directions. The list of wage advances is getting too long for publication in an ordinary newspaper. Advances have been reported since April in over 200 different mills, factories and mines. Orer 150,000 laborers are getting better pay than - they were getting two months ago. All of this has occurred under a tariff law that was guaranteed by McKinley to ruin American industries and to pauperize American labor. His prophecy in regard to lower duties seems to have been as far astray as was his prophecy in regard to higher duties. His bill was to 1>enefit all industries and to uplift American labor. It did both with a vengeance. During the whole McKinley period wages were declining in all industries. Practically no advances were reported. The short list of twenty-three purported wage « advances, collected at great cost and effort by the Protective Tariff league, was soon dispelled by the Reform club. More wage reductions were found at the places uamed than of wage advances. , Somehow actual conditions do not adjust themselves to the McKinley theory. His bill, which was t° open mills and to give employment to millions of laborers at increased wages, had the very opposite effect, and now, as if to mock him and to show him that his theory does not work either way, reduced duties are doing exactly what
ne saia increased auues wouiu uu. j. uw banner McKinlejr year, according1 to all protections, was 1892. To contrast the effects of low and high duties the following records are given of wage reductions for two weeks of McKinleyism, and the advance of wages during two weeks of tariff reform. The record of news items giving reductions for two weeks—May 1 to May 14, 1892—under the McKinlew law, follows: Wages "of 2,500 employes of Black Diamond Steel works at Pittsburgh, “Pa., reduced. One hundred employes of Andrew Carnegie at his Lower Union mills in Pittsburgh, submitted to a 20 per cent reduction in wages. . Fifty molders in Iron City foundry, \ Pittsburgh, accept a 20 per cent, reduction of wages. s^Two Chenango valley furnaces bank down to restrict production. Twenty men and bo\*s employed in the spring factory of Wolf «fc Co., New York city, strike against a 10 to 25 per cent, reduction of wages. Weavers in Delaware woolen mills at Newcastle, have wages reduced 5 cents per cut—from 75 to 70 cents. Brickinakers in Philadelphia have wages reduced from . $3.25 to §2.50 per dav. S^der-raakers in Thompson-llouston Electric Co.’s factories, Lvnn, Mass., strike against a 20 pc«- cent reduction of wages. Two large iron furnaces at Sharpesville. Pa., close down indefinitely. Boonton (N. J.) rooling mill shuts down owing to refusal of employes to accept a reduction of wages. Reading foundry at Reading, Pa., shuts down because employes refuse to accept lower wages. Molders in employ^of Cassidy & Adler, in New York city, reduced 25 per cent Keating hosiery mills, at Galena, I1L, suspend operations. Pioneer Chair Co., at North Paris, Mo., shut down indefinitely. | Haverhill, Mass., iron works close. Carpet mills at Palmer, Mass., shut down. Cap makers of Harris & Co., New York city, strike against 25 per cent wage reduction. Ivatahdin iron works move from Maine to Nova Seotia. Ptiddlers in Hooven’s rolling mill, at Norristown, Pa., have wages reduced from $4.00 to $3.50 per ton. Mahoning & Shonango Valleys iron manufacturers agree upon a scale of wages which umkos “a material reduction in the price of puddling.” Wages of mule spinners at Narragansett reduced. One hundred and seventy employes in Union Silk mill, at Catasqua, Pa., thrown, out of work by strike of fifty weavers. Contrast the foresroing doleful exhibit with the following for two weeks of prosperity—May 1 to 14, 1895—under tariff reform legislation and draw your own conclusions:
i. 4i v vu^uoauu cmpiu v C5 ux uic no* tional tube works and rolling mills, McKeesport, Pa., have wages increased 10 per cent. Over 2,200 employes of Riverside Iron Co., Wheeling, W. Va., have wages increased 10 per cent. About 3,800 employes of Wheeling Steel & Iron Co., Wheeling, W. Va., have wages adva nced 10 per cent. Employe^ of Peabody mills. Newburyport, Mass., informed of 10 per cent, increase of wages. . Tanners in Sheboygan, Wis., get an increase amounting to one-half of reduction in 1892. J. Over 560 employes in Carrie furnaces, near Braddock, Pa., get a 10 per cent.increase of wages. Four thousand coatmakers in Baltimore get aa increase of from 20 to 30 per cent Fifteen hundred men in iron works at Sharon, Sharpesville and West Middlesex, Pa., get an increase of wages. Puddlers in employ of Spang, Chalfant A Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., have their wages increased to $4.00 per ton. Five thousand garment workers in Philadelphia, employed in fifty^ight establishments, have wages increased. Over 125 men in Phoenix iron works at Meadville, Pa., get a 10 per cent advance. I Nearly 15,000 men employed by the iBarnegie Steel Co., limited, in PittsHurgh. Pa., have had their wages volHntarily increased 10 per cent. The flotice inforuxing them of this advance States that i£ js made because “the ■resent business outlook will justify
higher wages.” The unexpected food news has, caused much rejoicing amongst the employes. Employes in Nut & Washer Mann* factoring Co., Milwaukee, Wis., have their wages advanced 10 per cent. Puddlers in employ of Moorehcad Bros., Pittsburgh, Pa., have wages ad* .vanced 4p cents per ton. Puddlers in employ of Sligc iron works, Pittsburgh, Pa., have wages advanced 40 cents per ton. Employes of Denison & Co., knit goods, Stillwater, N. Y.t get a 5 pea cent increase. Employes in Ashland mills, Jewett City, Conn., get a 10 per cent increase. Employes in Springvale cotton mills, Springvale, Me., get a 6${ per cent increase. , Five hundred molders in foundries in Cleveland, 0., have wages advanced 10 per cent. Employes of D, Cummings JbCo.,shoe manufacturers,* South Barwick, Me., get a 10 per cent advance. Employes in Woodstock woolen mills, Norristown, Pa., are offered an increase of 10 per cent They are on a strike for 20 per cent Two-hundred employes of Norwich Mills Co. (wooAens), Norwich, Conn., have the old scale restored. The Iron Manufacturers’association, of the Mahoning and Shenango val-^ le3Ts, decide “to increase "voluntarily the wages of blast furnace laborers to the rates prevailing in 1893., The advance amounts to about 10 per cent Notice of an advance of from 15 to 20 cents a day was posted at all the furv naces in the Mahoning and Shenango valleys on May 3. Several thousand men are affected.
polices oi wage auvances were posieu in the Berkshire cotton mills. Adams, Mass. Weavers in Stafford mills,Fall River, Mass., have gained concessions from their employers. Employes of /Thomas Furnace -Co., Niles, O., get a 15 per cent, increase. Six hundred men in iron' furnaces in the vicinity of Newcastle, Pa., have their wages restored. “The total reductions have aggregated 30 per cent. ” Puddlers in Oliver Iron <fc Steel Co.’a works, Pittsburgh, Pa., have their wages advanced to $4.00 per ton. Two hundred employes in Waltham bleaehery, Waltham,Mass., have wages advanced 10 per cent. Employes in Cleveland hematite, iron mine, Michigan, who got the 10 per cent, advance some weeks ago, are on a strike for 10 per cent. more. Large increases of wages in all branches of the oil industry in Pennsylvania are reported. In the vicinity of Pittsburgh alone over 10,000 workmen received an advance in wages during the last week.— Pittsburgh Dispatch to N. Y. Tribune. Two hundred men in Delaware iron works, Wilmington, were surprised by a 10 per cent, increase in wages in their envelopes. Color mixers and printers employed in the wall paper factories controled by the National Wall Paper Co., have won concessions from the company and the strike is declared off. The “Home Market” Fallacy. Almost the only argument on which the trade restrictionists have relied to catch the farmers’ votes, has been the pretense that high tariff taxation would create “home markets” which would make the farmer prosperous. And in spite of the fact that the prices of farm products are fixed in the foreign markets, farmers have been found foolish enough to believe that sometime, far off, protection would give them a home market for all their produce. At the same time that they have been crediting high taxation with the development of this country, the protectionist press has been steadily harping on the alleged decline of agriculture in Great Britain, under a low tariff. “It is true,” they say, “that by abolishing restrictions on commerce, England has vastly benefited her manufacturers and workingmen. But look at the farmers. Within forty miles of London there are thousands of idle acres, and foreign competition in all kinds of food stuffs has greatly reduced the rents of Londoners throughout Great Britain.” Admitting that the farmers in the neighborhood of London are not prosperous, the natural question is: What is the matter with their “home market”? With a city of over four milions of people almost at their doors, why are they not rich? Come, Messrs.. High Tariffites, explain how it happens that with enormously increased population in the cities, the British farmer has not received the benefits which are so glowingly promised, but never bestowed on the Amer ican farmer.
A Great American Game. We were seated round a table in a room back of the office of a country hotel playing a rather dull game of “pemfy ante”, when a Swedish friend of the proprietor came in. “Ah! and for what you call that game?” he asked: “Oh this is Mississippi eucher”, replied one of the players, “the game at which every hotly wins.” “Efer* pody wins? and how can that pe? If somepody wins dond somepody loses! But in America I find many stranch things. And. this too, is stranch, a game in wha t eferpody makes some* things.” We explained that the game was modeled after the bunco game in which everybody got rich by taxing themselves and neighbors, popularly known as McKinleyism. “Ah, and thal Maginley Bill, he too must be a great man. Eferpody gets rich and nopody loses what they pays for taxes. Yea, Ameriga is a great people.” Comforting' Facta. The Carnegie Steel Co. declares “that the present business outlook will justify higher rates of wages.” This declaration is comforting. More com forting is the 10 per cent, unasked and unexpected advance in wages which accompanies and accentuates the dec* laration of improved business, pros* pects. One such piece of ijews blows into smithereens whole columns ol doleful dumps that are printed from day to day by our esteemed but sorrowful protectionist contemoorariea —Philadelphia Record.
THE GUNMAKES OF ILION Jefferson M. Clough Refuses m Tempting Offer from the Chinese Government. ' t~~ Bis H«lth Was Too Poor to Permit Attention to Boston— A Great Sufferer tor Many Tears. Bat Has Now Recovered. (Prom Ms Springfield, Mate , Union.) There isn’t a gun manufacturer in the United States who does not know Jefferson M. Clough, and why! Because he has been intimately associated all his life wiih the development of the two best American rifles, the Remiagtoh and Winchester. For years he was superintendent of the EL Remington & Sons' great factory at llion, N. Y. A*ter leaving there he refused a tempting offer of the Chinese Government to go to China to superintend their government factories—and accepted instead the superintendencv of the Winchester-Arms Co., at New Haven, at a salary of #7,510 a year. It was arter this long term of active labor as a business man that lie found himself incapacitated for further service by the embargo which rheumatism had laid upon him and resigned his position more than two years ago, and returned to Belchertown, Mass., where he now lives and owns the Phelps farm, a retired spot where he has five hundred acres of land. Being a man of means he did not spare the cost and was treated by leading physicians and by baths at celebrated springs without receiving any benefit worth notice. During the summer of l«*i aud the winter of 1894 Mr. Cloug^i was confined to his house in Belchertown, being unable to rise from his bed without assistance, and suffering oontinually with acute pains and with no taste or desire for food, nor was he able to obtain sufficient sleep.
Karly in the year i?sh Mr. cuougu nearu of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. He began takia| these pills about the llrst of March 1894 and continued to do so until the first part of September following. The first effect noticed was a better appetite and he began to note more ability to help himself off the bed and to be better generally. Last August (1894) he was able to go alone to his summer residence and farm of 163 acres on Grenadier Island, among the Thousand Islands, in the river St Lawrence, where from the highest land of his farm he commands a view for 13 miles down the river, and 60 of the Thousand Islands can be seen. , , w Instead of being confined to his bed Mr. Clough is now anu has been for some time able to be about the farm to direct the men employed there and he is thankful for what Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have done f6r him. These pills are manufactured by the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, E.Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for R.50, and are never sold in bulk. They may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company. Too Tate. The house had been aroused by a burglar. Mr. Jones saw a man with a mask going through the pockets of his pantaloons, and, quick as thought, he shot at him, the intruder making good his escape. “Why,” asked Mrs. Jones, thoroughly awake, “what did you scare me for?” “I saw a man robbing my pockets and fired at him." “Well, he didn’t get anything,” said she, complacently. “How do you know?” “O, I tried ’em myself before we went to bed.”—Adams Freeman. An Unpleasant Meeting. Patrick Ragan had a face on him that, as he had once remarked himself, was an “offince to the landscape.” Next to his homeliness his poverty was the most conspicuous part of him. An Irish neighbor met him recently, when the following colloquy ensued: “An’ how are ye, Pat?” “Moighty bad, intoircly. It’s shtarvation that’s shtarin’ me in the face.” “Is that so? Sure, an’ it can’t be very pleasant for aytherof ye*.”—Richmond Dispatch. Not TUI Then? When the buttons on my vest Tear themselves away. And the spots upon my coat Proclaim they've come to stay. When my socks all run toholes And everything’s agee. Then, dear wife, so far away, 1 fondly think of thee. —N. Y. World HE ACCOUNTED FOR IT. r i
"Are you the man of the house?” "Yes, sir.” "Where’s your wife?” "Dead, sir. “I thought so.”— St. Louis Republic Why Sh# Wa* Jabllaat There was a vivacious smile on her face which was most winsome. "Oh, dear me,” she murmured, happily, “I’ve just gotten such a bargain,” “How, dear?” inquired her friend. “I sent a telegram—only a quarter for ten words, and at least six of them were words of more than three syllables!”—Washington Star. Cautious. Doctor—Take a stated amount of exercise daily. Patient—Will it be enough if I walk twice around my wife’s theater hat every day? Doctor—You’d better not risk overexerting yourself at first. Begin with once and increase the laps as yon fee’ able.—Life K»ther Not. "Draw!” shouted the knight, glaring fiercely at his opponent. The other paladin gaxed steadily at the gentleman addressing him. “If it be all the same to you,” he said, "I prefer tostand pat." And the deal went on.—Indianapolil Journal
ODDS AND ENDS. A grocer in Sandusky, O., sella eggw by the peck. A Two-Tirors axd stare farm near the Delaware water gap is devoted entirely to the cultivation of celery. Ox C road leading to a Chicago cemetery there is a saloon which displays a sign with these words: “Funeral Parties a Specialty.” Some oil drillers in Sheridan, Ind., thought for a few moments they had struck an immense flow of oil. Suddenly a volume of fluid sported one hundred and fifty feet high, but it proved to be only water. Ix 1770, when the town of Berkeley Springs, W. Va.. was laid out, three elms were planted by Gen. Washington. One of them still flourishes, on the same spot, which is now a part of Washington street. A youxo painter of Cassel recently washed the bronze jnonument of Spohr with hydrochloric acid. He was horrified to find that it turned the statue green, but the people vote the color a great artistic success. This is the terse and pointed valedictory of the editor of the Western Kansas Voice, published a few days ago on his abandoning the pen for the plow: “The editor is going to quit preaching irrigation And go to practising it.” Fort Myers, Fla., is seeking to prove that the region roundabout is the safest place in the state to grow oranges, because sub-tropical vegetation there alone did not seriously suffer from the frosts that desolated gardens and orchards in nearly all parts of the Flop ida peninsula.
SQUIBS. The Poet—“Have you read my last poem?*’ She—“No. Only your*first.” —Life. First American—“So you got a divorce from the duke! Any alimony?” Second American — “No; rebate.”— Puck. Butcher—“Will you have a round steak, miss?” Young Housekeeper— “O, I don’t care what shape it is'sci it’s tender.”—Detroit Free Press. Burglar (just acquitted, to his counsel)—“I will shortly call and see yo :t at your office, sir.” “Very good; but in the daytime, please.”—Tit-Bits. She Had Studied French.—“Have you any bon-vivant this morning?” Butcher—“Boned what, mum?” “Bonvivant. Why, that's French for ‘good liver!’”—Life. A Useful Precaution.—A.—“Why ao you always prefix the word ‘dictated’ to your letters? I see you don’t keep a correspondent.” B.—“No, but I am rather deficient in spelling.”—Fei trabend. ART ETCHINGS. Sir John Millais’ picture, “Speak, speak,” at this year’s Royal academy exhibition, has been bought by the nation, out of the Chantrey fund, for $10,000. Out of the 1,000 artists not academicians or architects exhibiting at the Royal academy this year, 187, over a sixth, are women, including 37 married women. At Athens, with the fragments lately discovered on the Acropolis, the German school has put together a part of the pediment of the Parthenon of Pisistratus and some of the frieze of the Erechtheion. A mezzotint engraving by Ward of Hoppner’s “Daughters of Sir T. Frankland” brought $1,000 in London recently. Dickinson’s engraving of Sir Joshua Reynolds’ “Lady Cro&bie” was sold for $755, and of his “Mrs. Pelham Feeding Chickens,” for $575. MUCH IN LITTLE. Every man is exceptional.—Emerson. Patch grief with proverbs.—Shaken peare. It is easy to see, hard to foresee.— Franklin. * . He had a face like a benediction.— Cervantes. You may imitate, but never counterfeit.—Balzac. All habits gather by unseen degrees. —Dryden. O majestic night! nature's great ancestor. —Y oung. The wronged side is always the safest.—Dr. Sibbes. Who so escapes a duty avoids a gain. —Theodore Parker.
THE MARKETS. New York, June 17,1895. CATTLE—Natl re Steers ....... 4 60 ©# 5 TO COTTON—Middling. 7* FLOUR—Winter Wheat.. #50 © 4 45 WHEAT-No. 8 Red. 80 © 819i CORN—No. 2.. 54*© 5=>X OATS—No. 2.. 32*0 3#X PORK—New Hess. . 13 75 © 14 1)0 ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling. .... © BEEVES—Fancy Steers. 5 00 © Medium.. 3 75 © HOGS—Fair to Select. 4 25 © SHEEP—Fair to Choioe.- t 50 © FLOUR—Patents. 4 10 © Fancy to Extra do.. 3 60 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... 82*© CORN—No. 2 Mixed. © OATS—No.2 . .... © RYE—No.2. CO © TOBACCO—Lugs.... 300 © Leal* Burley....... 4 50 © H A Y-^lear Timothy. 14 00 4»X© 12 30 © BUTTER—ChoiceDalry...... H © EGGS-Fresh .. 7*f PORK—Standard Mess........ 13 08' BACON-Ctear Rib . «X' LA RO—Prime Steam. © CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping. 4 25 © HOGS—Fair to Choice. 4 30 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice.. 2 75 © FLOUR—Winter Patents..... 3 90 © Spring Patents...... 4 no © WHEAT—No. 2 Spring.. 77*© No 2 Rad.... 77 © CORN—Na t. OATS—No.2... PORK—Mess (new). KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers_ 4 50 HOGS-All Grades. 4 30 WHEAT—No.2 Red. OATS—Na*... .... .... CORN—Na 2. =• NEW ORLEANS FLOUR-HighGrade . 4 20 © CORN—Na 2.‘.. © OATS—Western.. © HAY-Choice. 18 00 © PORK—New Mess. © BACON—Sides... © COTTON—Middling.. © LOUISVILLE WHEAT—Na2Ked. . 87 © CORN—Na 2 Mixed. “ “ OATS—Na 2'Mixed. PORK—New Mess.. BACON—Clear Rib. 7 COTTON—Middling .... «X 5 80 5 00 4 65 4 00 4 25 4 00 82* 47 29 05 8 .00 _ 12 09 © 17 0 13 8 12 rs 7 #* * 00 4 ^r7* 4 75 4 20 4 40 80 78 49* 89* 12 49 53 © 13 00 © M 4 45 10 ?4* 20 Cli 13 CO 7* - 7 84 33* 13 73 l* T*
Absolutely Puri
—How much moisture has to do with the preservation of vegetable life is shown in the case of a pum tree eight inches in diameter that was cut down some weeks ago and left lying in a; swampy spot. That tree has since put forth leaves, and they are still green and apparently growing. Furthermore, a short piece of the trunk, severed from the remainder and lying flat on the ground, has put forth a healthylooking shoot —The cross-bill, an odd-looking bird by reason of the peculiarity that gives him name, is a most familiar fellow in the Adirondack wilderness. The birds come in considerable numbers about the rough camps of hunters, and are soon so tame as almost to eat from the hands of the strangers. - —New York city has 190,000 Irish people and 210,000 Germans. Only the largest cities in Ireland and Germany have a greater population of their own people than is to be found in our commercial metropolis. T» Cleans* the 8ystas» Effectually, yet gently, when costive or bilious or when the blood is impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or levers, use Syrup of Figs. “There are too many bills introduced in our legislatures,'* said the lawyer. ‘“Quite right,’’ reolied the banker. “And the character of the legislation frequently indicates that some of the bills are*of high denominar tions.”—Chicago Evening Post. Hall's Catarrh Cor* Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c. Atheism is rather in the life than in the heart of man.—Bacon.
Foul breath is a discourager of affection. It is always an indication of poor health — , bad digestion. To bad digestion is . traceable almost all 'human ills. It is ’the starting point of many very serious maladies. Upon the healthy action of the diges
blood depends for^its richness and purity. If digestion stops, poisonous matter accumulates and is forced into the blood —there is no place else for it to go. The bad breath is a danger signal. Look out for it! If you have it, or any other symptom of indigestion, take a bottle or two of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It will straighten out the trouble, make your blood pure and healthy and full of nutriment for the tissues.
A Natcral Res Barber 'insinust* » ingly)—“Your hair is getting very thii^ \ sir.” Grirashaw—“ Yes *1 treated it for tree weeks with anti-fat, under the impression it was hair restorer.”—Puek. Sheriff's advice to a merchant—Don't advertise, and I'll do the rest.—Christian Advocate. Piso's Ccrb for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine.—F. M. Abbott, 3t9 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May V, 18SM. TRomt.Es spring from idleness, and grievous toils from needless ease.—FrankFresuvess and purity are imparted to the complexion by Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hills Hair and Whisker Dye, SOc. The Poet—“Have you read my last jHjem?” She—“No. Only your first.”— s HEALS RUNNING SORES S CURES THE SERPENT’S STING S CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON ulcers yield to its healing powers. It removes the poison and builds up the nmiva ^ __„_ system Valuable mttuc on the diteiK and It* treatment matted ha SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. Atlanta. Ga. BEST IN THE WOULD. JOS, V^otitows<\& Wx. A\v\s v\xi\m \s \ru\u
THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH ia cakes for fentnl blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick •Iter-dinner shine, applied*, and polished with a cloth, i
Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Hass., U.S.A.! Treated frit. ttau wttt fqtUM, Ktnttdln, Hiyf eurad ltm ib«r iu'l euti )>» aauncad h,p«l»<v rm firttdvM itnrptom* :api*l.» dttapfaatt ■ad ia lea «1»t« at l<»,t t«*-tkinU •' aU • •■plow ar« renwrtS. BOOK of tntia«oi,ii of anraralaa, com mt FKCK, TEN BAYS TREATMENT FURNISHED FREE * DR. H. It. CR KF.N * SONS. Attests, fis, sruiuniirtntiMitsijania
t Follow the directions, and you'll get the best work from Pearline, Not that there’s any harm to be feared from it, no matter how you use it cr how much you use. ' But to make your washing and cleaning easiest, to save the most rubbing, the most wear and tear, the most time and money—keep to the directions given on every packs age of Pearline. If you’ll do that with your flannels, for instance (it’s perfectly simple and easy,) they’ll keep beautifully soft, and without shrinking. kb C
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