Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 14, Petersburg, Pike County, 16 August 1895 — Page 6

DUN’S COMMERCIAL REVIEW. RqiIrni Contlnori Unusually A«ll»« for NhUumnitr. with No YtaibU »»««• of IU•etiou- Sn CliMiice In Crop l‘ro*p»»t»— Probable Effect or the Concerted With. holding «r Whmt-Th« Industrie* tHUl Hukiitg Prof res*—TUe Failure*. Kew Yokk. Au*f- 10- —R- Dun A Da. In their weekly review of trade. Issued today, say: Business continues unusually active for midsummer, and though there is perceptible relaxation there are no signs of reaction. The one change of great importance which the past week lias brought is eminently helpful— the amicable settlement between coal miners and employers throughout •restern Pennsylvania, Ohio and In* rliuua. It is said that about 100,000 men will have their wages increased after October 1 by this adjustment. While the enlargement of purchasing power is of consquence, it seems even more important that a chronic eause of controversy has been removed by the new agreement as to company stores. There is no important changes in crop prospects, and at this time no news is eminently good news. Taken altogether the crops of the year promise so much better than was expected a month ago that the effect is highly encouraging. The outgo of gold continues, aud excites some comment, because it is felt that the bond syndicate could arrest the movement at once if it pleased by reducing the rate of exchange. Speculation has been more successful in cotton than in any other product during the past week, and lias lifted the price an eighth, although it cannot be said that the prospect as to yield has definitely changed. Some - injury has evidently been sustained from excessive rains and the government report commands a little more attention. Wheat has declined a fraction with very scant transactions, the extremely small ivestern recepts influencing jthe market for the present more than the restricted exports. The concerted withholding of wheat by western farmers, if continued, would doubtless affect the price in the end, but it has already stopped Atlantic exports almost entirely, the amount, flour included, having been only 753,330 bushels for the past week, against 2,086,436 bushels for the same week last year; and when foreign markets have supplied their needs from other quarters the western farmers may find reason to regret that they did not ship their wheat at the ordinary time. Corn tends to lower prices, with more encouraging prospects, and the expectation of a heavy corn crop affects prices of provisions, as might be expected. The industries continue to make progress, and higher prices for iron and steel products prove that the supply has not yet outrdn the demand. Bessemer iron is a shade weaker, but gray forge has advanced about 60 cents, and finished products are remarkably firm with further advance In steel beams to 1.6 and in angles to 1.5 cents and in bar iron to 1.3 cents. The Carnegie w’orks at Uomestead broke the record by turning out in July 43,000 tons of steel, of which 17,150 were of beams.

, a tXv auiui ovt vc uiai ivvv ao wur pletely demoralized, and prices have again yielded a little to about the lowest ever known. Sales of wool are not as much inflated by speculation as they were during the first half of July, but they still - considerably exceed the actual consumption in the manufacture, amounting', at the three chief markets, to 6,259,300 pounds, against 9,271,700 pounds for the corresponding week of 1892. Prices art* very firm, holders who bought enormous quantities a month ago in expectation of a rise appear to be looking for a further advance. llut wooleu goods show signs !>f weakening, and there is much complaint of foreign competition and undervaluations, especially' in medium and lower qualities, while in worsteds the tendency of prices is upward. Some staple cotton goods have again advanced in price, and the market is unusually strong ior the season. The shipments of boots and shoes continue larger than in any previous rear, but there is very little new business; and most of the manufacturers sre getting near the end of their orders, while many have discharged part of their hands. Prices are firmly maintained, and there isno yielding in leather, though it is reported that in hides prices at the west show a little weakness. The failures in July show liabilities amounting to $11,78$,510, of which 52,549,075 were of manufacturing, and 58,283,173 of trading concerns. Failures for the week were 225 in the Dnited States, against 264 last year, and 43 in Canada, against 54 last year. The British Steamer Orient In Flames. Londox, Aug. 9.—A dispatch from Melbourne says the British steamer Orient, which sailed from London June 23, for Sydney, N. S. W., is burning fiercely in port there. The fire started in her coal bunkers. The city fire brigade had been playing upon the steamer for seven hours when the dispatch was sent. There is only nineteen feet .of water where the vessel lies, and a depth of twenty-eight feet is’“necessary to sink her sufficiently deep to extinguish the flames, and little progress is being made in the work of quenching the fire. Much of the cargo of tea is greatly damaged. FOUGHT LIKE A TIGER To Protect His Prisoner from Lynching by a Mob. Cleveland. O., Aug. 10.—-An angry mob of men wanted -to lynch Mike Tragoesser, of 86 Lussenden street, on Woodland avenue yesterday, because ;be was accused of attempting to criminally assault 9-year-old Dora Ilolzeman, with whose parents he had been boarding. The constable who had the prise' \ in charge was compelle** \ like a tiger to save Tra* jolence at the bands of \ - - ■ . \

JUSTICE JACKSON, >f the Sapitsw Coart of th* Cnltod male*, to Deoil-A Vlnrlm of ItthlNt Oouaoioptloia, After Forty Years Dented to thi* Practice aid Administration of the Law-tie Was Urautly 11ateemed by Hto Aaaodatoii Nasmvillk. Tenn., Aug1. 10.—Hon. Howell Edmunds Jackson, associate Justice of the supreme court of the United States, died at his residence at West Meade, ® miles west of this cifcv, Thursday afternoon, in %he sixtyfourth rear of his acre, of consumDtion.

HOWEI.L EDMUNDS JACKSON. Judge Jackson had been in failing health for the past four years, but it has been only wi thin the past eight or nine months that the progress of the disease began to cause his family and friends uneasiness. Last year he went on a lengthy trip to the far west in search of health. Later he went to Thomasville, Ua.. where it was hoped the mild and yet bracing climate would restore, his one-time vigorous constitu-' tion. The trip did him little good, and, after a time he was brought home. At his old home Judge Jackson seemed to, improve slightly until he went to Washington to sit in the second hearing of the income tax cases. He stood that trying trip only taily well, and after his return home appeared to lose strength rapidly. Nevertheless, Judge Jackson never took to his bed until last week. Since that time his family and friends saw that the end was near, and his death was not unexpected. I Howell Edmunds Jackson was born in Paris. Tenn.. April 8. 1832. so that he was in his sixty-fourth year at the time of his death. Justice Jackson was a classical scholar, graduating from the West Tennessee collegean 18W. He studied law two years at the University of Virginia, and in Jackson, under his kinsmen, Judges A. W. Totten and Milton Brown. He graduated from the Lebanon law school in 1856. in which >'ear he located in Jackson and engaged in the practice of his profession: removed to Memphis in 1859, where be continued thy practice of the law; served on the supreme bench by appointment on two occasions, and was once a prominent candidate for supreme judge before the nominating convention: located In Jackson in 1876: was elected to the state house of representatives in 1880 on the state credit platform: was elected to the United States senate as a democrat in 1881. and served till April 12. 1886; was appointed United States circuit judge by President Cleveland, and nominated for associate justice by President Harrisbn: was confirmed by the senate February 18, 1893, aud entered upon the duties of the office March 4, 1893;. The last time Justice Jackson was in Washington was on the occasion of the rehearing in the income tax cases last May. He had been absent from the city and from the bench since the preceding fall, when, soon after the convening of the October term*, of-the court, he was competed to go south on account of his rapidly declining health. During his absence there had been contradictory reports as to his physical condition, but the prevailing opinion among his colleagues on the bench was that he would never again be able to resume his seat. As senator and justice of the supreme court Mr. Jackson had resided in Washington about eight ycal’s. His associates there were confined largely to his < olleagueson the bench and in the senate chamber. By them he was universally esteemed as a man of high moral worth and rich intellectual attainments, as was e videnced in nothing so much as his appointment to the supreme bench by President Harrison and his confirmation by a republican senate. notwithstanding he was a democrat.]

Kxt«atir* Condolence*. Bl'zzArds’ Bay, Mass., Aug. 10l — The following telegram was sent by the president: Buzzards" Bat, Mass., Aug. 9, 1895. To Mrs. Howell E. Jackson. Nashville. Tens.—I deeply sympathize with you in your terrible bereavement, while 1 mourn the death of a devoted friend and the nation's loss of a wise and upright judge, a useful citizen and an honest man. (Signed.] Grover Cleveland. POLITICAL PROBABILITIES. Looking to the Elevation of Secretary Carlisle to the Presidency. Frankfort, Ky., Aug. 10.—Some extraordinary speculation is being indulged m by politicians on the probable action of President Cleveland in appointing a successor to tlie late Justice Howell Jackson, and, if Mr. Cleveland does as many of .those in a position to know say he will, Kentucky will have the most sensational campaign this fail in the history of the south. 0 It is generally accepted as a fact in this state that Secre tary Carlisle is the administration’s candidate for the democratic* presidential nomination, and Mr. Cleveland has in more than one way shown that his choice was Mr. Carlisle. Politicians here believe that the president will appoint Senator William Lindsay, of this city, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Justice Jackson. Then the scheme is to run Secretary Carlisle for the senior senatoi*ship which will be vacated by Judge Lindsay, If in the face of the manifest free silver sentiment in Kentucky, Mr. Cadlisle is elected senator on a sound money, or single gold standard basis, then, of course, the prestige he gains in this way will boost him along the lime for the presidential nomination. THE BRITISH MINISTRY. Lord Salisbury’s Intentions Regarding China Approved—The tjjueen’s Speech. London, Aug. 10. —Lord Salisbury presided at a meeting, at the cabinet office, of all the members of his cabinet. The cabinet approved of all of Lord Salisbury’s intentions respecting China, which he explained to the ministers. The queen’s speech, to be delivered at the opening of parliament, was submitted to the council and \vas approved. The speech will be submitted to thp queen at Osborne house, the of Wight.

THE HORROR GROWS As the Xesaber of the Missing Constantly Inerensee—Searching the Hulas for the Den A Who Perished bjr the Collaitae of nn Klght-Story Building in New YorkSeven (todies f ound and Many Yet to ha Accounted for. New York, Aug. 9.—The horrors Attending the collapse of the eight-story structure at the corner of West Broadway and West Third street yesterday were not lessened, but intensified, today by the finding of three mora bodies, making six dead as far as known. And to add to the calamity, not all the missing hare been accounted for. As a result, many anxious friends and relatives hover near, the scene, with just a grain of hope to relieve them of the dreadful suspense. The ordeal is a terrible one, and not a few stout hearts trembled in the face of so much distress and misery. The work of removing the debris is necessarily slow, owing to the heavy weight of iron beams, braces, brick ceilings and mortar. The workmen have not yet reached the spot where most of- the bodies are supposed to be lying. The workmen who lo6t their lives are believed to have been in or near the center of the building when the crash came, and most of the bodies are expected to be found near the center of the pile of debris. That there are many bodies beneath the ruins there is no doubt. Hut one of the meu thought to have been lost has reported himself alive, and itis believed that there are at least nine bodies which will be discovered before the ruins have been turned over by the workmen. The work will continue without a moment's intermission until it is completed. There will be a day gang and a night gang. It is thought that several of the bodies will be found before nightfall. The coroner's inquest, at which an endeavor will be made to fix the blame for the disaster, will be held on the 15th inst. The jury will be composed of civil engineers and business men. At noon to-day it was learned that Michael Farrell, of Rutherford, N. J., who was supposed to be among the missing, had reported all right. He escaped from the building as it fell. The l.int of the Minalng Continues to New York, Aug. 10.— All night, under the flaming light of gasoline lamps, the gangs of meu who were clearing away the ruins worked in the shattered building. The list of 4116 missing has grown, so that, although seven bodies have been recovered, eight more are still missing. The seventh body taken from the ruins was uncovered by the workmen shortly after 11 o’clock last night. It was that of Augustus Phillips, the truck driver, whose horse and truck had been found in the street outside the building after the crash, and who was believed to have perished.

DEATH OF BARNEY ROLLO, The Young Italian Whose lloldinfUp Caused the Sprloc Valley Riots. Princeton, 111., Aug. 9. — Barney Hollo, the Italian who was held up on the public highway about 1 o’clock last Sunday morning, and, after being robbed, was shot three times, and which affair was alleged to be the cause of the murderous assaults on the colored settlement about noon of the same day, died to-night at 8:17 o’clock. The word spread very rapidly through the city, and the Italians seem to be much affected over the death of the young man, who was popular among them. Early this morning ten colored men and forty-five whites were placed on the police force as specials, and under these circumstances the Spring Valley Coal Co. resumed operations, and the colored men and their families, most of whom had taken refuge at Seatonville, six miles distant, returned to their homes in Spring Valley. Up to 10 o’clock to-night no firearms had been distributed among the business men. The ten colored men who were appointed have armed themselves mostly with large horse pistols, and they are considered sufficient to protect the colbred settlement, provided they are kept together, as the Italians of Spring Valley have never been known to attempt an attack on any well-armed body of men, either large or small. The whistles sounded to-night lor work to-morrow and unless some commotion is caused by the news of the death of Mr. Bello, about 1,000 men will go to work in the mines. Nothing has been done as yet in the way of making arrests. COUNTERFEITERS BOUND OVER And Placed In ‘Jail at Little Rock to Await Trial. Litter Rock, Ark., Aug. 10. —Deputy Marshal Sappington yesterday brought up from Arkadelphia two negroes. Mack and Craig Hinkle, who were arrested there Wednesday for making and passing counterfeit money. Mack Hinkle is an old hand at the trade, and has served two previous sentences for infringing on Uncle Sam's prerogatives, and Capt Vick says that he is one of the most expert men in the state in the art of, raising bills. His finest work was in making a §20 bill out of a §1 bill. Both were bound over in the srim of §1,000, and are now in the penitentiary awaiting trial. THE LEAVEN IS WORKING, And the Celestial Governnieat In Responding to Outside Pressure. London, Aug. 10.—An official telegram received here states that imperative orders have been issued from Vekin to the viceroy of Fukien, directing him to instantly despatch troops to Ku-Cheng to protect the remaining missionary buildings. He was also instructed to inquire into the origin of the outrages there and to arraign the guilty persons as quickly as possible. The viceroy obeyed the,order as soon ms it was received.

FARMERS NOT BENEFITED. Tariff* of Unto or No Value to Acrirultarml laduttriM. Realising that th« old “home market” cry will not af'tin fool the farmer into voting for a restoration of McK n* ley ism. the protectionist organs are now trying to derise a scheme for a high tariff on farm products. In spite of the fact that our agricultural ind ustries hare been established from one hundred to two hundred and fifty I years, the professional “friends of the ! farmer” are working the same old “in- | fant industry” dodge which they used i eighty years ago in regard to manu- I factures. According to those protectionists we hare been reading our histories all wrong. Instead of the generally accepted theory that agriculture was the first industry of the eountry, it appears that the reverse is the case. • When the first settlers landed on our j shores they found here a number of j kind capitalists with factories all ready , for operation. • Being truly benerolent, as all manufacturers are, these capitalists took pity on the settlers and gave them work. After awhile some of the settlers heard that land had been invented in England, so they sent over for a few ship loads, and spreading it out, proceeded to grow crops on it. The crops grew so well that they decided to make some land for themselves, and being naturally ingenious succeeded in a short time in manufacturing a large quantity. In the meantime the number of factories having increased, there was a demand for some more land to put them on, and to grow food on to feed the operatives. In this way the farming industry has been gradually built up, so that it is believed that a protective tariff on wheat, cotton, corn and beef would lead to the importation and production of large areas of land. As America already exports great quantities of all these staple products, it may,at first sight seem doubtful where the benefit to the farmers will come in. Skeptical free traders, who believe that thirty years of protection nearly ruined our farmers, will very likely sneer and say that to talk of helping agriculture by high tari ffs is all humbug. Thej’ will claim that in the long run the prosperity of any country depends on the condition of its farmers, and that to attempt to protect an industry which sells its surplus products in foreign markets is the silliest kind of nonsense. And they will also assert that it was the great agricultural industry of this country, established without any government pap, which was the foundation for all Our prosperity. But there is no use in arguing with these theoretical free traders. The facts are all on t^eir side, and, any? way, they never could be brought to see the wisdom of making everybody rich by taxing everybody. Let the good, unselfish protectionists stick to their doctrine that the way to help the farmers is by killing foreign trade, and in the course of time they will be regarded as merely innocent victims of a harmful superstition.

A CALAMITY. Work for the New England Home Market Club—Let It Be Vigilant. According1 to the Textile Manufacturer’s Review a great misfortune to the cotton industry of this country is impending. This is an invention just completed by Draper & Sons, of Hopedale, Mass., which will nearly double the number of looms that each operative can attend. This improvement' in weaving machinery consists of a device which supplies the loom automatically with from fourteen to twenty shuttles at a time, so that whenever the weft breaks a new bobbin is supplied and the thread is connected without stopping the loom. This does away with the necessity for stopping and starting of looms through the breaking of weft or exhaustion of the bobbin, and it is estimated that with the new contrivance weavers can attend to sixteen looms as easily as they can now attend to eight. The result will be that for weaving the same amount of cloth now produced by our cotton mills only one-half as many weavers will be required. Strange to say, this new machine is' the.production of a protectionist firm, which, of course, like all high tariff concerns, is firmly opposed to free trade cheapness. But what will be the effect of its general adoption? The price of cotton elothes will fall, and American women will be able to bny clothes cheaper than they do now. Not only that, but thousands of weavers will be thrown out of work. And all through this diabolical device of some Yankee machinist. But it must not be. If such a machine has really been invented it should be at once destroyed by the good protectionists of the Boston Home Market club. That organization has for years been warning the country, and especially New England, against cheap goods. It has also been claiming that protection is a good thing because it makes more work. Yet, here is an invention which makes things cheaper and with less work. Smash it, kind protectionists, by all means, lest it convert our people to the evil doctrine of getting goods of all kinds, as well as cotton cloth, as cheaply as possibly, and with the least pos-, sible work. What the country needs is to have things scarce and dear. Then we can all work fifteen hours a day, and not get as much far our labor as we do now. Down with this invention of the evil one.—Cor. In a Protected Industry. Under the heading “Women Toiling ia»Iron,” the New York Press publishes a detailed account of the employment by the Monongahela Tin Plate Co. of a number of women to assist in making tin plate. Had this been in Wales, or England, we should have had from the Press denunciations of the terrible effects of free trade in driving women into such disagreeable occupations. But as it is in Pittsburgh, the chief manufacturing city of Pennsylvania, and as the industry is a pet one of the protectionists, we suppose it is all right. How do American yvorking men like the idea of their wives «r daughters “toiling in iron?*

GOOD RESULTS SEEN The Punt* of th* Wilton BUI Rot Kroneht a Voluntary laeroato of MacroAttention was called by Urn paper recently to ltradstreet's report that more than 1,000,000 industrial workers have received voluntary advances in wages, averaging 10 per cent., within a couple of months. A republican organ correctly sat*s that “nothing lika this has ever before been known.” It waa not known during the fobr years the McKinley law was in force. Wages were not generally advanced soon after that law took effect, nor at any time before its repeat Such a thing as a voluntary increase of wages on a large scale was unheard of under that law. Seductions were made in every part of the country, but no advances at all of consequence except a few resulting from strikes. The Wilson bill was passed last August Sections of it went into effect soon afterwards and other sections later, some not until the beginning of 1895. It is worthy of note that the upward movement of wages had its beginning in September and has been growing ever since. It began in the woolen mills, one of the results of the placing of w6ol on the free list. It spread toother textile industries and then became general. As soon as the winter was over reports of advances in wages were received daily. The list for April includes 6? in which the increase was as ’ much as 5 per cent In all but six cases the increase was 10 per cent, or over. In 10 it was 15 and in several others from 13 to 20 per cent. In the case of the Cincinnati cloakmakers, where 4;000 persons were, employed, an advance of 25 per cent, was given. The wages of 10,000 brick manufacturers on the Hudson river were increased from 10 j to 25 per cent. One report for April j shows a 10 per cent, increase in the wages of 25.000 employes and another a similar advance in the pay of 24.0001 These were all mill hands in Massachusetts. One of the 15 per cent, advances that month affected 10,04)0 men in Youngstown, O. None of these employes are included in the 1,000,000 covered by l.radstreet's report, which goes back only a couple of months. The total number whose wages have increased since the Wilson i bill took effect is probably not far ■ from 2,000,000. And a conservative j estimate places the average advance j at 10 per cent. For every dollar received by these 2.000,000 wage-earners under the McKinley bill, SI. 10 is received under the Wilson law. If their aggregate monthly earnings amounted then to $100,000,000 a mouth—an aver- j age of S50 per man—they amount now | to $110,000,000—a clear gain of $10,000,000 j a month or 8120,000,000 a year to tha ! wage earners of the country. If the reduction of the tariff under the Wilson bill has not been a leading factor in this wage-advancing movement, why is it that the advances have been confined in the most part to our protected industries? Will some hightariff -republican answer the question? —St. Louis Republic. The Tariff and tha Coal Industry. In spite of the fact that this country exports large quantities of bituminous coal the democratic proposition to put coal on the free list, so as to give New England industries the advantage of getting their coal from near-by mines of Nova Scotia has been vigorously opposed by the protectionists. It was claimed that without the duty of 75 cents per ton the coal industry of this country would be ruined by foreign competition, and that to remove or reduce the tariff would close mines and reduce the wages of miners. The Wilson bill, as finally passed, cut down the duty on coal nearly 50 per cent. Was the result what the proteetionists had predicted? On the contrary the output of coal has been increasing during the past six months, and the industry is on a better footing than it has been for years. Under the high tariff wages of coal miners were frequently reduced all over the country during 1891, 1893 and 1893, and numerous mines were shut down, throwing the employes out of work. Now under a tariff which has stimulated manufacturing the increased demand for coal in the iron and other industries has raised wages and given more men employment. Thus have the facts contradicted another pet theory of the high tarifiites.

fgT The South Still Apiiiut Protection. Encouraged by the demand of the sugar growers of Louisiana for either a protective duty or a bounty on their product, the high tariff organs have been claiming that the southern states were becoming converted to protectionist notions. There is absolutely no ground for the claim. Here and there a few men may be found who are willing to sacrifice their principles and the good of the whole country to their selfish interests. But the great mass of the people of the south are still firm^ free traders, knowing as they well do that they have everything to lose and nothing to gain under a high tariff. The main industries of the south need no protection and the few exotics which cannot exist without public support, ought to be allowed to die. Hatred of paternalism in all its forms is too deep rooted in the south to allow a change at this enlightened day, and there need be no fear that the southern people will ever be found voting for McKinleyism and all its evils. ___ An Example. New Zealand is evidently in earnest in changing her fiscal system to free trade, as it is understood and worked out in England. A bill cutting down the customs duties to five articles, wine, beer, spirits, tobacco and opium —has passed the house. The revenue from these articles will be supplemented by an income tax and a land tax. The new plan reduces taxation, in appearance, to nearly the least possible degree of simplicity. New Zealand will, of course, largely increase her external trade. The success or failure of the experiment will be watched with interest; the effect of it will not be unfelt in other colonies, especially in those existing under condition! similar to those under which New Zea* land is found.—Monetary Times. f ’ ■

GRASS IS KIXGt 6 TOJW PE* ACHE. Sow Grass, that is tha foundation of all successful fanning. Sow this fail! Did you erer hear of six tons per a*;rof Salzer's seeds produce such yield*; Wheat 60 to 80 bushels! Eye 60 bushels! Cut this out and send for free sample Winter Wheat and Grass and Fall cataldgue to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. [a] Mbs. Jacksox—“Do you' call this sponge cake I Why, it’s as hard as stone.” Cook— “Yes, mum. that's the way a sponge is before it is wet. Soak it inyour tea.”—Truth. Makes the Weak Strong Hood's Sarsaparilla tones and strengthen* the digestive organs, creates an appetite, and gives refreshing sleep Remciube* Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the one True Blood Purifier. V Hfwi’c Pi I Ic 'he after-ilinner pi ft and nuuu d * 11 family cathartic. SSc POSITIVE CURE -FORand Insainnias

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