People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 November 1893 — Page 4

The People’s Pilot. —PUBLISHED BY Tte Pilot Pablisl?lr?g Co. (Limited.) OF Worth Western Indiana., Luther L. Ponsler .. President. J. A. McFarland. . .Vice Pres. I .ee B. Glazebkook .. Secretary Marton £ Adams... Treasurer. L. E. CLAZEBROOK.i Associate J. A. MCFARLAND, f Editors. C. B. HARROLD, The People’s Pilot is the official organ of t he Jasper and Newton Count y Alliances, and ;s published every Friday at OXE DOLLAR PER ANNUM KATES OF ADVERTISING. )isplaved Advertisements 10c inch. Local Notices 5c line. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Rensselaer. Ind. RENSSELAER, FRIDAY, NOV. 10 1893.

Sherman says more bonds, lie holds the key to the situation, the bonds will come. Lucy Stone, oneof the grand, good women of this country, long known as an earnest progressive friend of woman and an advocate of woman-suffrage, always a stalwart opponent of slavery, passed on to the busy and beautiful world beyond, from her home in Dorchester, Mass., the night of October 18. She was one of the sweetest, gentlestand most thoughtful of women, and her influence went forth and into the homes of the people, and into the hearts of millions.

Our friend over the way, of the Democratic Sentinel, has been running a continued story under the head of “Spe.ech of Hon. D. W. Voorhees.” It must be said that the "tall sycamere of the Wabash.” is a splendid example of what might have been. A man that can follow the teachings as set down by Voorhees must have a very elastic, India rubber brain. Its case of the Irishman's flea; put your finger down on him and Dan isn’t there.

The result of the call for a special session of Congress leads us> to believe that it will now be in order for the President, the Secretary of the Treasury and th« Senate and the Congress and the rest of the combine charged with steering this country through the panic they have steered us into, to hire a barn or a big hay mow and all get into it and snore, each with his own snorer, for the next eighty days. This will offset eighty days of snorting, and between snoring and snorting there is not much difference, when the people nay for both.

Say. good people, how many years more of miserable politics , and beastly administration of Government allairs will be necessary to convince you that hogs do not produce sweet flavors till after they are killed and made into bacon? Year after year, you wait for better times that will never come, till you arise and go right out. and with your votes bring them in. Have you no incentive to independent political action, after looking at your tax receipts and then looking al the debts you owe. and our Government refusing to ere-, ate enough legal-tender money t > easily and safely conduct the the business of this county? And what care we for any other country whose people are our i n.Gurr.l enemies. and take no interest in anything, except what interest they can take from us?

I” Daniel W. Voorhees would only turn his ears with their .points toward Indiana he might hear his name damned in tens of thousands of homes and by many times ten thousand men and women Who in the past have given him their friendship and t heir votes. Any man, who will deliberately sell his constituency out as he has done should be hoisted higher than ever went a horse thief, who steals but one horse, while to go with the JewCleveland usury gang is to seal the earnings and savings of tens of thousands of most deserving

people. Thomas A. Hendricks would have died in poverty ere he would have done what Voorhees has done and is doing.—Advance Thought.

The Republican has another spell of “them there confounded fits.” The state Alliance met last week in Inianapolis, and as usual every movement of this order sets Marshall to bellowing and throwing dirt like a bobtailed Jersey, when a red rag is waved before him. He says the order is dead because it took three of its eight or nine officers from this county. Now, there has never been a time when there were not three of its officers from this county, so this can be no sign of death. He says he told the alliance if it went into politics it would die, and it went in “all the same” and died just as he said it would. How about the politics it went into Bro. did it die? No sir, you are sorrowfully aware that the political principles the alliance advocates are not dead, you know that the party, the alliance teachings have helped to bring into existence is the liveliest, strongest political four year old this county ever saw. The Republican knows the ablest men of its party are going into the party, this dead Alliance, helped to born, it knows that this party, the Alliance, went into and died, has within four years gone into the U. S. congress and held its own with the powers that have there ruled for nigh a hundred years. Perhaps, Bro. the Alliance has not died, but has just merely taken another name or form, lets wait and see.

Democrats, Read This.

Senator Morgan (Dem. Al.) commenting on Senator Gorman’s (Dem. Md.) speech in which he (Gorman) said: “We were compelled to take the terms offered by the senator from Ohio (Sherman). He held the key to the situation. You have dictated terms to us.” Morgan said: “I thank Almighty God that the senator from Ohio has never had the power to dictate terms to me, as a Democrat. He may have dictated them to the President, to the committee, to the minority of the Democrats on this side but he cannot dictate them to me. He is laying down conditions to Democracy, what is the ■ Democratic party worth to itself, to the country or to posterity, when the senator from Ohio has the key to the situation and can lay down conditions to it? What is your majority here worth (addressing the Democratic senators) thus trilled with, thus deceived, thus overrun and finally handed over to the tender mercies of the senator from Ohio?” These inquiries are in the minds of many good Democrats “here abouts.” They say what care I for either the party John Sherman leads, or the one he drives.

Senator Teller, (Rep. Col.) a cabinet officer during Arthur’s administration, turning to the Republican side of the senate • said: *-We, of Colorado, are the children of New England. We went into the American desert and builded a great state. We took with us our New England i habits and customs. When you, of the east said you wanted help for your industries we brought the mountain states to your aid; year after year we held them there in support of a high tariff, when it was against our own interests. We wanted to help you. But now, when our industries are to be struck down and we turn to you for aid, we find I you our most persistent enemies. When the other side would have granted a compromise you defeated it without sympathy and without regret,” What is the Republican party to Teller and to the great interests he repre-; sents? What is that party to anybody or any interests that run at all counter to the inter-; ests of the money lenders of the '

east. Teller and his people will have to find a political home with some other party hereafter. Mr. Wm. M. Terry, who has been in the drug business at Elkton, Ky., for the past twelve years, says: “Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy gives better satisfaction than any other cough medicine I have ever sold.” There is good reason for this. No other will cure a cold so quickly; no other is so certain a preventative and cure for croup: no other affords so much relief in cases of whooping cough. For sale by F. B. Meyer, the druggist.

Washington Letter.

From our regular co-respondent. Washington, Nov. 3, 1893. President Cleveland has had the long sought pleasure of signing the bill for the unconditional repeal of the law authorizing the purchase of silver, and the Voorhees bill is now a law of the land. Mr. Cleveland would be glad if congress would let the financial question alone for a year or so and give him and Secretary Carlisle a chance. But will congress do it? If present indications count for anything it will not. Representative Bland, chairman of the house coinage committee, and the recognized leader of the silver men in the house, has already intimated that his committee would early in the regular session report a bill intended to carry out the declaratory portion of the Voorhees act. Of course everybody knows that reporting a bill and passing it are very different things; still, it’s being reported would not be fancied by the administration. The question of a bond issued may also be sprung at any time, with or without the consent of the administration, the Republicans in both houses being practically unanimous in the belief that a bond issue will have to be authorized by this congress.

The decision as to whether there shall be further financial legislation rests really with the conservative men in congress, and their action is likely to be decided by the result of the Voorhees act upon the commercial world. If it be good the disposition to “let well enough alone” will probably prevent further financial legislation. If it be bad there will certainly. be more silver legislation before the flowers bloom in the spring, whether it be acceptable to the president or not.

Senators and representatives are nearly all glad of the opportunity to go and talk over what has been done at the extra session with the home folks, and not a few of them are a little dubious about the sort of reception they will receive from their constituents, particularly those who know that they have not acted in accordance with their opinions.

It is safe to predict that Congressman Bailey, of Texas, will receive few social invitations from the members of what are locally known as the army and navy set and the judiciary set during the coming season. The reason for this display of the cold shoulder towards the young Texan is easily located. lie has introduced two bills in the house that would, if enacted into laws, go far towards breaking up numerous households in the circles named. One of them repeals all laws providing for the retirement cm pay of army and navy officers, and stops the payment of salaries to those now on the retired list; the other repeals all laws providing for the retirement on pay of U. S. judges and stops the pay of those now on the retired list. It is not probable that such a radical change as that proposed by Mr. Bailey will be made, but that there is room for reform in this retirement business will become plain to anyone who will take the trouble to investigate it. Hundreds of retired army and navy officers receiving pay from the government are engaged in private duties far more wearing than those pertaining to their rank in the service. Clearly this is not right. No officer should be retired on pay so long as he is able to perform his duties. The evil arises largely from the existence of an arbitrary age limit, at which retirement is forced upon officers whether they wish it or not, and it is aggravated by the friends of young officers who wish retirements to be numerous, as every retirement means a promotion in every grade below that held by the retiring officer.

The family of ex-President Harrison seems to have a hank ering after the official loaves and fishes. It will be remembered that Mr. Harrison's Republican brother was made U. 8. marshal of one of the Tenneesee districts early in the last administration. Now that the tables have been turned the ex-president’s Democratic brother has come to Washington as an applicant for one of the federal offices at his home. Kansas City, Mo. The family has not yet made arrangements for a “pull" on a populist president.

The country may wake up some tine morning and find itself with a war on its hands. That may be a startling assertion, but it is strictly true. Several European powers are understood to be covertly aiding the insurgents in Brazil with an understanding that if the republic is overthrown a monarchy is to be established which is to give Europeans a monopoly of the foreign trade of Brazil, a large portion of which is, now controlled by Americans. If this understanding be correct—the state department has full information. but will not at present make it public—there are two reasons why the administration is virtually bound to interfere. One to uphold the Monroe doctrine and the other to protect the commercial interests of American citizens in Brazil. And this interference may lead to war with one or more of these nations. It is believed that the administration has, this week, taken some decisive steps, but it has succeeded in keeping them secret.

Dairying.

To the patrons of the Rensselaer creamery and the members of the milk church, greeting: I have been watching with great care and anxiety, and am glad to know that a good many of them have proven their faith by their works, viz: Theodore Kiper, J. B. Meinbrock, Henry Eiglesbach, John Martindale, Ponsler and Strong. Wm. Lowman, Bruce Porter, Fritz Zard, Edward Parkinson and others, and should your name not be mentioned do not feel slighted. I will say that I think Bruce Porter stands at the head of the class in the perfection of dairying. He has the best lot of twenty cows I have seen anywhere. They are the average in flesh of the cattle killed by our butchers. He is up to snuff and has learned and practices his knowledge, that a cow is a. machine to transform feed into milk. I am glad to state we have the best creamery in the state. Took Ist premium at the World’s Fair, over all exhibits from this state. The patrons have made more money than any other class of farmers. The skim milk and butter milk this season has been worth 44 cents per hundred for pig feed, owing to the high price of swine, and as the creamery company has paid for Sept. $1 per hundred, that would equal §1.49 which is 20 per cent, more than the shippers to Chicago have realized. 1 hope every patron will increase his cows and that the milk church may have a revival, that will astonish the natives. We live in a natural adapted dairying country and milk is worth as much or more than in dairying districts, where land sells for §SO to §75 per acre, and by developing the dairy interest'here will double the selling price of our lands and give every member of the milk church cash every 30 days and make them independent, prosperous, happy people. \*

List of Patents.

Granted, to Indiana inventors this week. Reported by C. A. Snow & Co., solicitors of American and foreign patents, opposite U. S. Patent Office, Washington, D. C. J. Farlow, Greencastle, wash-ing-machine; J. F. Greive, Clay, hill-plow; F. E. Herdmen, Indianapolis, elevator; P. G. Kirsch, Decatur, washing-machine; H. K. Knox, Vevay, car-coupling; A. Lee, Evansville, hinge-setting machine; T. D. Oakley,. Vevay, type-case; J. Seitz, Haysville, apparatus for forming leaders in blast-holes; H. F. Smith, Elkhart process of and machine for making cell-cases; P. N. Staff, Terre Haute, holder’ for opera-glasses.

The Seventh Daughter.

Of the seventh daughter is said to be lucky, but her luck does not compare with the lucky number seven of Humphrey’s Specifics, an infallible cure for coughs and colds. Try it.

2W Subscribe for tne Pilot.

Clreuit Court Note.

After an adjournment of one week, the circuit court of Jasper county again convened to transact die remaining business of the present session. In the damage case of Thos. and Eleanor Florence vs. Peter Johnson, the decision was in favor of the defendent. The litigants in this suit live near Virgie and the plaintiff’s asked pay for damage done during recent prairie fires. W. H. Kelly vs. George E. \ incent, account. Decision in favor of plaintiff for §585.81. William B. Russell vs. Isabella Russell, divorce. Decision by court in favor of plaintiff, and was given the custody of three children. Ferdinand Seigle, et al vs. Leopold, et al, account. Decision verses defendant for §139.55. State bank of Thornton vs. Simon Leopold, on note. Judgment against defendant for §4BB and all costs. Cordelia Monnett. administrator estate of Thos. Monnett, deceased, petition for partition, deed of land given to Cordelia, Elmira and Lucinda Monnett was set aside, and the plaintiff ordered to sell the land to pay the debts of the deceased. John Makeever and Williams vs. James Maloy et al, note and mortgage. Judgement versus defendant for §1,235.50 and costs. Samuel C. Curtis vs. Nathan Fendig, account. Judgment against defendant for §204.49 and costs.

Sarah Shaffer vs. Wm. Shaffer et al. This suit was for the construction of the will of the latter’s father, deceased, and it was decided by the court that the remaining funds, amounting to §124.28 belonged to plaintiff. In the matter of Gifford ditch case, which has been appealed from the commissioners’ court, is being taken under advisement by the judge. The decision is withheld until the January term. John Reed was appointed guardian for Mary Casey who was lately adjudged insane.

Are your, children subject to croup? If so, you should never be without a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It is a certain cure for croup, and has never been known to fail. If given freely as soon, as the croupy cough appears it will prevent the attack. It is the sole reliance with thousands of mothers who have croupy children, and never disappoints them. There is no danger in giving this Remedy in large and fre quent doses, as it contains nothing injurious. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. B. Meyer, the druggist.

The Best Plaster.—Dampen a piece of flannel with Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and bind it on over the seat of pain. It is better than any plaster. When the lungs are sote such an application on the chest and another on the back, between the shoulder blades, will often prevent pneu monia. There is nothing so good for a lame back or a pain in the side. A sore throat can nearly always be cured in one night by applying a flannel bandage dampened with 'Pain Balm. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. B. Meyer, the druggist.

STRENGTH AND HEALTH.

If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. If “LaGrippe” has left you weak and weary, use Electric Bitters. This remedy acts directly on liver. stomach and kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perforin their functions. If you are afficted With sick headache, you will find speedy and permanent relief by taking Electric Bitters. Tne trial will convince you that this is the remedy you need. Large bottles only 50 cents, at F. B. Meyer’s drug store.

How’s This?

We will club the Pilot with the Cosmopolitan Magazine for $2.35 per year; McClure’s Magazine, $2.25; Harper’s Monthly. $4.25; Harper’s Weekly $4.50; Housekeeper, $1.75; Burlington Hawkeye, $1;85; Detroit Free Press, $1.85; Cincinnati Gazette, $1.85; American Agriculturist, $2.25; American Breeder $1.95; American Tribune, $1.90; Arena, $5.00; Art Amateur. $4,60; Arthur’s Home Magazine $1.90; Atlantic Monthly, $4.50; Ballou’s Magazine, $2.10; Toledo Blade, $1.95; Laramie Boomerang, $2.60; Century Magazine, $4.75; Dairy World, $1.75; Cincinnati Enquirer, $1.95; North American Review, $5.50. Smoke the Mendoza cigar.

THETM II6HT RUKHIHGNW <■> J WOODWORK jKST THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST. Sand T“N cents to 28 Union Sq., N. Y., for cur prize game, “Blind Luck,” and win a Hew Home Sewing Machine. The New Home Sewing Machine Co, ORANGE, MASS. 23 UNION SQUARE, ILL. CAL. FOR SALE BY ‘’auas.ti’J. v. . vVIucaAMS.

HUMPHREYS’ Dr. Humphreys’ Specifics are scientifically and carefully prepared Bemedtes, used for years in private practice and for over thirty years by the people with entire success. Every single Specific a special cure for the disease named. They cure without drugging, purging or reducing the system and are in fact and deed the Sovereign Remedies of the World. »o. ctmu. rmexs. 1— Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations.. .25 2 Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic 25 3 Teething | Colic, Crying, Wakefulness ,25 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 25 7 Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis 25 8— Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceache 25 9 Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo.. .25 10— Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation. .25 11— Suppressed or Painful Periods. .. .25 12— Whites, Too Profuse Periods 25 13— Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness 25 14— Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Eruptions . .25 15— Rheumatism, Bheumatie Pains 25 16— Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague .25 19— Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In the Head. .25 20— Whooping Cough • .25 27 Kidney Diseases .25 28— Nervous Debility 1.00 30—Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed.. .25 HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OIL, “The Pile Ointment.”-Trlal Size. 25 Cts. Sold by Druggists, or sent post-paid on receipt of price. Dr. Humphrkyb’ Manual (144 pages,) mailed free. HUMPHREYS’MKD. CO., 11l Jb 118 William St., NEW YORK. S PE C I Fl OS.

■ lILSOirS 11 4/ SEWING MACHINES POPULAR? BECAUSE LADIES BUY trim like THEM AND TELL FRUENDS. Many ladies have used our machines twenty to thirty years in their family work, and are still using the original machines we furnished them a generation ago. Many of our machines have run more than twenty years without repairs, other than needles. With proper care they never wear out, and seldom need repair. We have built sewing machines for more than forty years and have constantly improved them. We build our machines on honor, and they are recognized everywhere as the most accurately fitted and finely finished sewing machines in the world. Our latest, the “No. 9,” is the result of our long experience. In competition with the leading machines of the world, it received the Grand Prize at the Paris Exposition of 1889, as the best, other machines receiving only complimentary medals of gold, silver and bronze. The Grand Prize was what all sought for, and our machine was awarded it.

Send for our illustrated catalogue. We want dealers in all unoccupied territory, WHEELER & WILSON MFG. CO. 185 & 187 Wabash Ave., Chicago. cWmffiHs KSPPens of all kinds repaired CROWN PEN Co., Chicago, 111.

Wanted-Eight or ten men to represent our well known house in this state. Our large and compiots stock and various lines, such as nursery stock, plants, bulbs, fancy seed potatoes, fertilizers, etc., enable us to pay handsome salaries to even ordinary salesmen, Wages run from $75 to $125 per month and expenses—according to material in the man. Apply quick, stating age. L. L. May & Co., St. Paul, Minn. (This house is responsible.) BUCKLIN’S ARNICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. B. Meyer,