Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 February 1894 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

r, cjqmanin Oi rsf rwsmnr: ——\ eel embarrassed jjy this vast audience; 1 arrasse.d that I may not b! able to Ini 1,1 the expectation of mv friends when rec flertake, in the period allowed by the wit 9of the House, to answer and make the ■ actions of the errors In the arguments ter /hich we have just listoned. I assume anc t the cause of protection has no more fori i advocate, and that the arguments for wri tectlon cato be put In no more forcible Mn n than that to which yon have listened thl lay. and I shall ask yon dispassion- foil ly to examine with mo that argument the then ask the judgment of the House det o whether the cause attempted to be her ained cau ho established consistently ilor h iright anr justice to the peoplo of ern United States. y fter his opehing Introductory remarks. Crisp declared that an exatn’n itlon of all protective system would show that le tt was hr lit up for the ostensible T 1 3fit of labor. It was In truth constructed 11 the heneji; of the manufacturing ses. He no nted out that the wages Mr. he laborers In protected industries t down and thorn in unprotected inirios went up. as a result of the Me- A jey act. 'This was shown by thosta- (t fin cs gtthored by the Senate committoe , . Inance. The speaker referred to the 01 licial conditions created by protection. Lea t»ok men, He said, fn m their natural frig ends, and diverted them to unnatural chu ends. The samo was true in the di- „ jt ion fnado in tho channels of trade. 11 , action was a Chinese wall which not nec shut out tho world, but shut in the the ted States. C at< r. Crisp was greeted with applause neo n he said that the th’pty years of proon was tho period of unrest during THI :h the masses of the people had contly rebelled against thohdivy burdens xation. The people had always been A id at the polls by tho i Republican nli< , lines to reduce the tariff, but once tT essfnl atthi polls, tho Republican tt,e lators surrendered themselves body has soul to the manufacturing classes. nics r. Crisp supported the Income tax In aMI roust terms. He said that $30,009 003 „ xop accumulated wealth was hut a ne v 1 tribute In return for the benefits re- nece id. Mr. Crisp closed with an elo- tion it appeal to his Democratic associates aive minor objections nnd to look at E

Croup Has Lost its Terrors. That dread morstor, croup, has lose its terrors for us since we began using Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It never faih to give speedy relief in the most severe cases and we always keep a bottle in the house, and recommend its use to our friends whose little ones are so liable to be attacked with croup durir.g the winter months." John H. Cullom, Editor of the News, Garland, Texas. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Meyers the druggist.