St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 5, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 18 August 1894 — Page 4
£l)c 3nDcpcntscnL i w IMtUm'OX. INDIANA. AUG. j ß> 18! > 4 W. A. ENDLEY, Editor. (heat is the American Sugar Trust. Congress has passed the tariff bill with its boomerang Sugar Trust attai'hment. Governor Altgeld is redeeming himself. He has been saying and doing some sensible things lately. Let the good work go on. ’Pho New York World issues 400,000 copies daily. This, it is said, is the largest circulation of any paper printed in the English language. It is reported that a new oil field of great, promise has been struck four miles south of Portland, Ind. The find has created some excitement. Marshall Field, the Chicago merchant, prince, says: “The value, of advertising is a hard thing to learn, but I learned it and owe all I have to it.” Starke county wants Hon. George W. Beeman, of Knox, to run for congress if Mr. Conn does not accept. Alicbigan City Dispatch. Beeman, then, will probably not be I nominated. Valparaiso, Elkhart and a few other towns are after the state headquarters ' of the Knights of Maccabees. The matter will he settled at the state convention to be held at Fort Wayne Sept. 4. Conn perhaps has some faults, like everybody else, but he shows an independence of character that is worth) of admiration. He does not dance to the party lash, by a jugful. Give him due credit for this. Cal Sinninger, formerly of the Bremen Enquirer, has bought and as Burned control of the Warren Independent. Warren is a lively gas town of about 2,000 inhabitants, ami as Cal i has the only paper in the town he ought to make a splendid financial 1 sucess of it. The cause of labor has been steadi ly improving for centuries and it will continue to improve in the future. The, highest and best forces are grad ually solving the problem of labor. Beason, ♦•ducal ion and morality are । among the forces enlisted in its behalf i and are its most potent friends. ' Force and anarchy are evils to Lu shunned by labor. Major General Jas. R. Carnahan, of the uniform rank Knights of Fylbias, has written to the committee on ar rangements at Washington that accommodations will be required for about 100,000 knights at the encamp meat, which is to be held during the last week of August at Washington. He has already received applications for 11,500 men, 10,000 from Illinois and 1,500 from Indiana. Italy is preparing to deal in a very emphatic manner with anarchists ami assassins. Two thousand of this ilk are to be forced from that country. Os course America will be the land that this horde of dangerous characters will seek for refuge. This country always has been, and will continue, to be, the dumping ground for the offals of foreign countries, until more decided .and positive action is taken on this question. Senator Allen has introduced an anti-lobbying bill in the United States senate. It is a measure having for its purpose the abolishment of the great evil of lobbying, which has long j been a potent influence for evil in legislative halls. The bill imposes a ■ penalty of not less than SI,OOO nor! more than $5,000 and imprisonment, in jail for not less than one year nor more than five. Senator Allen is on ' the right track, and his measure, or I something substantially like it, should become a law as a protection to the i common people. The democratic state convention ' was held in Indianapolis Wednesday,! Aug. 15. The meeting was called to order by State Chairman Tagffart, and Governor Matthews was chosen chairman and S. M. Briscoe secretary. The ' following ticket was selected: Sucre- i tary of State, William It. Myers; for; 'Treasurer, Morgan Chandler; for audi- i tor, Joseph T. Fanning; for Attorney General, Francis M. Griffith; for; Superintendent Public Instruction, 1 Charles Thomas; for State Slat Ki ican, Alex Fulton; for Judges Supreme ; Court, George F. Reinhard, Joseph F. ■ Dailey; for Clerk Supreme Court, C. t A- We!man; for State Geologist, E. T. 1 11. Jordan. jp
1 jesideut Cleveland has acknowledged the existence of the Hawaiian republic. 1 he striking employes of the Barker ear works, by a vote among themselves, decided to return to work, and ail departments of the factory are now in operation. . An anonymous writer truthfully says: “Whether you fight or work don’t make too much fuss about it. The hen cackles after she has laid her egg. The noise and sizzle of the locomotive are not force. All force is silent. The bee hawing of the mule may start,le you—but it, is not near so dangerous as his hind legs. Bear in mind that it is the empty wagon that rattles most when in motion. The noise of the drum is due to the fact that there is nothing in it. Keep in mind that you can’t startle the world by jumping up ami hollowing ‘boo.’ Thought is the great motive power, and don’t you fall into the mistake of believing otherwise.” The Winnepeg Free Press claims to have clipped the following from a recent, number of the London Chimes: “General Coxey, the gcntipmnn who rim for president in opposition to the | lute Chauncey Depew, is leading 1 an [army of discontented hoboes on Washington. Hobo is the political pseudonym used to designate the members of the independent democratic party. General Coxey is a native of Yuba Dam, capital of the state of Baltimore, and a journalist of some distinction, having edited The Congressional Record, an influential paper published in the Mormon interests of Boston, N. Y. His army lias captured the Deleware and Lackawanna railroad, which as ford transportation through the Rocky mountains to Fargo, where the troops will embark in gondolas and sail down the Susquehanna to Washington. As the president, Cornelius Vanderbilt, is absent in Kentucky on a buffalo hunt, attended by the regular army ns a guard of honor, grave apprehensions are felt at Washington as to the pog sible consequences of Coxey’s invasion of that territory. If the Kiekapoo Indians should join him, serious con sequences may ensue.” Waited for Her Husband 21 Years. A strange story of the fidelity of one woman emnes up from Valpaniiso I According to the Star, pnblihed nt I that place, Sam Ensign, an engineei ; left there in 1573, to assume the duties lof engineer on an ocean steamer. I the. vicinity of the West Indies, troublesome times were met with. Sam was imprisoned, in which position he remained for twelve years, as ter which ho was liberated us a slave. ; lie finally escaped, and the other day returned to Valparaiso, where he found his faithful wife still waiting tor him. This latter fact is truly re ; markable, inasmuch us but one woman out of n great many would thus remained true to her troth, through such discouraging and unpiomisitig possi ' bililies of a husband’s return. Bargains in Real Estate Abstracts of title, deeds and mortgages. Marsh or other lands for sale or rent. H. Early. Lav's Hotel, LuFurte, Ind. T. O. Box 221. You can't afford to risk your letter going estray when you can get envelopes neatly printed with your name and address at 50 cents for a single hundred, al the Independent office. Don't delay giving us your order. Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn., says; “Shiloh’s Vitalize! - ‘SAVED MY LIFE.’ I consider it the best remedy for debilitated system I ever used.” For dyspepsia, liver or kidney trouble it excels. Price 75cts. For sale by Bellinger & Williams. i||caveaiS,Tß,WE Marks iS *8? COPYRIGHTS. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? Fora promnt answer and nn honest opinion, write tc nil NN&co.,who have hao nearly fifty years’ experience in the patent business. Communications strictly confidential. A Handbook of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special noticein the Scientific American, and tlius are brought widely before the public without cost to the inventor, 'lhis splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific work in the I world. S 3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single 1 copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau- I tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new | houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the 1 latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., New*' ><k, 361 Biwadwat. | Agents Wanted. YW 7 j VITAL QUESTIONS j OF THE ’g3 and ’cj. Bat H-s for Bread. COXES ISM, Sti ikv u, l:.-. Eu rmplcy'''!. OKI XT LABOR ISSUES the pre-- mt and the future. Tariff Legu. lation. The Siivr Q icstion. XV ..t PROTECTION do-.- f < t : : - A! i-: !- -’n Workman. What EREE TRADE does for him. A book for the hour. Every’,<>dy wants it. Price only ^.£.50. Sells at sight. Most liberal ter -to a.; -nts Send for circu!;i' s <>r send 20 cent • for ag ■ t’s outfit nt -me P. XV ZIEGLER S: CO., 72J Chestnut ct. ThiJ, Th phia, Ph.
Ruskin on Rich and Poor. For indeed the fact is, that there are idle poor, and idle rich; and there are busy poor, and busy rich. Many a beggar is as lazy as if he had ten thons and a year; and many a man of fortune is busier than his errand boy’, and never would think of stopping in the street to play marbles. So that, in a large view, the distinction between workers and idlers, as between knaves and honest men, runs through the very heart and innermost, nature of men of nil ranks and in all positions. I here is a working class—strong and happy —among both rich and poor; there is an idle class—weak, wicked and miserable—among b >th rich and poor. Ami the worst of the misunder standings arising between the two orders come of (he unlucky fact that the wise of one class [how little wise in this] habitually contemplate the fool ish of the other. It the busy rich people watched and [ rebuked the idle rich people, all would ba right among them; and if the busy poor people watched and relinked the idle poor people, all would be right among them. But each look for the faults of the other. A Lntrd working man of property is particularly offend m1 by nu idle beggar; ami UU widgetbut p.or Worlttuan at. nFty oraut of the licentious luxury of th6 rich. And wbat is severe judgment in the minds of the just men of either class becomes fierce enmity in the tin- i just but amomg (he unjust only. None but the dissolute among the; poor look upon the rich us their natuia! enemies, or desire to pillage their houses and divide their property. None but the dissolute among the rich speak in opprobrious terms of the vices and follies of the poor. SGABDOHO BEACH, Sca.-boro, Mo. THE KIRKWOOD,’ C. □. DFESf.ER, Propr. Bear t. V. hI. on< t fn. ,» np the NsW EuKtm-l < vl >r. ■: as it <1...-*. aa ' UIP r \ ’r. L - *• er I v > p. . a. I t H r . ’ : *« vs Ikui. ' r. • !*’. mus a inj ” uu X^YER’^X Admitted at the! j ^■ORLD’S;^! / \CHICAGO 7M / 1893'77/ Why Was It that Aycr'a Sarsaparilla, out of the great nuinl or of similar pieparations manufactured throughout the world, was the only medicine of the kind admitted at the World - ., Fair. U' . i. ■ > And why was 11 that, in spite of the united efforts of the i manufacturers of other preparations, the j d' - ' ;w»n of the W iriti s Fair Directors **s not reversed? BECAUSE According to lit tH 15 — “Articles that uro in any way dangerous or o: offensive, also patent medicines, OS nostrums, mid empirical preparations, whose ingredients are con- c: cealed, will not be admitted to the O: Exposition,” and, therefore— Beeaune Ayer s Sarsaparilla is not a O* patent ineili ene. not a nostrum, and not ®: a secret preparation. q| Biciuk’ its proprietors had nothing to conceal when questioned as to the for- o| mula from win h it is compounded. °t it is all that it is claimed to he o: —a Compound Concentrated Extract of OS Bnrsaparilla, and in every sense, worthy ?! the indorsenn nt of this most important o? committee, ealh d together for passing 05 upon the manufactured products of the entire world. 3 Ayer’s S Sarsaparilla il Admitted for Exhibition AT THE WORLD’S FAIR®! opoeoooooctiJ
General Hardware. I GASOt^jE STOVES, Barfteil Swift We Poultry Netting-, Hay Tools, Plows, kAWM j MOWERS; Paints and Oils. builders) bl Before buying an, ghmy in this line call and th t our prices. ROSS, JARRELL & 00.
Did you ever see one of the famous waterproof Interlined Collars or Cuffs? It’s very easy to tell, for they are all marked this way They are the only Interlined Collars and Cuffs, and are made of linen, covered with waterproof “ Celluloid.” They’ll stand right by you day in and day out^aud they are all mark cd this way *EL^IO The first cost is the only cost, for they keep clean a long time, and when soiled you can clean them in a minute by simply wiping off with a wet cloth —that is the kind marked this way XI TRADC These collars and cuffs will outlast six linen ones. The wearer escapes laundry trials and laundry bills—no Chafed neck and no wilting down if you get a collar marked this way Mark- w Ask your dealer first, and take nothing that has not abov« trade mark, if _ you desire perfect satisfaction. AU others are imitations absolutely. If you can’t find collars or cuffs marked this way, we will send you a sample postpaid on receipt of price. Collars, 25 cts. each. Cuffs 50 cts. pair. Give your size and say whether standup or turned-down collar is wanted. THE CELLULOID COMPANY, 427-29 Broadway, NEW lOkK. WE WANT YOU to call ami see us when you want any thing in (he line of FRESH, SALT Oli SMOKED M eats: as w.» can ।!• as, yon We deni in atrictly first elaas meats. We pat Light st cash priet h for Live Stock, littioH. Pelta, Tallow, etc. Wo also handle the Celebrated RETSOF LUMP SALI for stock. It is far superior to the common barrel salt. D. W. BEALL & CO. | Slop Thief! | Any one whose Watch has a I. Ibow (ring),will never have oc- | casiontousethistime-honored I cry. It is the only bow that | cannot be twisted off the case, E and is found only on Jas. I Boss Filled and other watch j cases stamped with I this trade mark. i A watch case opener, which will save your E m finger nails, sent free on request. Q | Keystone Watch Case Co., | PHILADELPHIA.
I WISH TO CALL YOUR ATTENTION to the Fact that I will this summer handle FRUITS, VEGETABLES, ill On a Larger Scale than ever before, ami shall aim to keep a full and complete line at THE RIGHT PRICES! for the Quality of Goods. Call am] seo, and give us a trial. Money refunded on anything not satisfactory. M- SgEfBEKS-FilY-DOIGIIF.nTY BLOCK. THE GbOBE KEfi’SlS BOYS’ CLOTHING! All Sizes, Styles and Prices. Our Stock of sn Mini JR I- ■ - IS COMPLETE, ft, /pM and cur Line of Gents I&WI jRmTI Furnishing Goods WT never been excelled wMIm 4 AAen's •/ Shoes! ■ i/e have a good line, and _ cilcap! AIJW. a See our Stock of । SPRING IU NDE R W EAR J! e have the latest Spring Styles in W MEN'S HATS! Call and let (Prices talk for them*’ selves. SAMUEL KOONTZ, JK. J. F. STR AN A DEALER IN : Dowagiac roller drills, shoe drills, the Farmers’ ; Friend hoe drills, spring tooth harrows and hay rakes. Also Singer and Ideal sewing machines Pianos and Organs. PRICES ALWAYS RIGHT. THE STAR BAKERY! Is the Best Place in Town to get A Good Square Meal. OInPLu'GT £5 CEINTT^. -yFesjlT .SL'aEtci IDaily. also Fies. cais.es Etncl buns- Ice cream, and frnits in season. GEORGE KERN, - - - Proprietor-
