.Democrat VOL 2 liOOXE, WATAUGA COUXTY. N. O, THUHSDAW MAY. 8, 1800. NO. 4& WASHINGTON LETTER. Tt ttr Efttlu Corrtfptnda&L For the Democtat: The injustieennd absurdity of the McKinley tariff bill ex cited such general dissatisfac tion that the republicans are obliged to abandon it. It in conceded that the bill can never become a law, but the republican majority in the House has so thoroughly committed itself that the bill is expected U pais the House by a strict party vote. In the meantime the republicans of the Senate finance commit tee are at work on another bill as a substitute for the McKinley bill. They expect to report it to the Senate vey soon after the McKinley bill passes the House. This shows the importance of Mr. McKinley's specious oratory, that captivates a careless crowd, to convince the business interests of the country of the propriety of a single idea he entertains on the subject of the tariff. The republican joint cau cus committee of the House and Senate have agreed up on the basis for the prepara- tion of a silver bill. It directs the Secretary of the Treasu ry to purchase 4,500,000 ounces of free silver per month at the market price, not to exceed $1 for 371,25 giains of pure silver, and is sue treasury notes in pay meat of the bullion. These notes shall be payable on de mand in lawful money of the United Slates, and are re ceivable for all public dues No greater or less amount of such notes shall be out standing at any time than the cost of the silver bullion then held in the Treasury, purchased by such notes. Upon demand of the holder of any such Treasury notes, the Secretary of the Treasu ry may, at his discretion, pay off such notes with silver bullion at its market price. The Secretary is also permit ted to coin this bullion, should it be necessary, for the redemption of these pro posed Treasury notes. $78, 000.000 held to redeem the circulation of banks will be restored to general circula tion. The investigating commit tee on inter-state com mere charged with inquiry into the relations of rail-roads of the United States and Canada, has concluded its labors. Chairman Cullom has com pleted a report which, with sundry remedial recommend ations, awaits the approval of the committee. The report states the good effects of the inter-state commerce law are partially nullified by the com petition of the Canada lines. Unjust discrimination is made by Canada against U. S. vessls in Welland canal tolls, in violation of the trea ty of Washington. The Ca nadian railroads control lines operating over a large part of New England and Northern States. Conada owns a svstem of canals that cost 154,000,000. The inter-colonial railway has cost 147,000.000. To the Cana dian Pacifiic railroad, which wan begun as a government line. Canada ha f 215,000, 000, but the road cost only $167,000,000. The report states that it has been the in concealed purpose of the Ca nadian governmentto secure a railroad across th conti nent of commnndiog influ ence which, in connection with subsidized steamer lines, would be able to dominate the .trans-continental comj metre of the United States - - deflt Irom -American. railroads. vessels and sea ports a large share of our commerce with counties in Aia, Australia and New Zea land. In this endeavor it has met with marked success and is progressing. Canada subsi dized two lines of steamers from Vancouver, the western terminus of the Canadian R. 11., with 1425,000; and one line from St. John, N. B., its eastern terminus, receives a a sibsidy of $800,000. The report refers to a confer ence of the commercial and in dustrial bodies of the Pacific const, held at San Francisco, July 1890. The report of the conference declares that with such special advantages the Caaadian Pacific could afford to quote rates that must drive the American steamer lines out of the China trade, to the almost irreparable in jury of San Francisco, and predicts .general destruction for the larger part of the A- merican steamer trafic on the Pacific ocean, unless some vigorous measures be adopted by the U. S. govern ment. A bill to make a territory of Oklahoma has passed the Senate; 50 yeas 5' nays. Whenever the Indian inter est in surrounding territory shall be extinguished it will be annexed to Oklahoma. The laws of Nebraska are ex tended over the new territo ry. Washington, Apr. 28. Don't expect an advertise ment to bear fruit in one night. You can't eat enough in a week to last you a year, and the Building Advocate doesn't believe you can ad vertise on that plan either. People who advertise only once in three months forget that most folks can not re member anything longer than about seven days. If you can arouse curiosity by an advertisement it is a great point gained. The fair sex don't hold nil the curiosity in the world. Quitting ad vertising in dull times is like tearing out a dam because the water is low. Building Advocate. President Harrison has turned out40,000 democrats since he got into office, and put out about 160,000 re publicans who didn't get the office they expected. Wil mington Star. The Lee Statue Arrived. New York, April 20.-The Wilson Line steamer Othello, from Londou a.id Havre, which arrived here to-day, brings the equestrian statue of General Robert L. Lee, which is to beset at Rich mond. Va. It is consigned to til Governor of Virginia. fen 4 Drt Ue, if Itll 014. The following is the opin ion of a successful farmer If we would be prosperous, con tended and happy we must raise our own supplies. There are scores upon scores of farmers who scarcely have a home-made article about them, and right here I would include all classes to a cer tain extent. Visit their homes and we would find thej musthaveyankeechairs yankee bed-steads, yankee shovel and tongs and yankee centre-table piled up with stacks of agricultural journ als published in Louisville Ky. or Springfield 0. Go to the kitchen and you will find a yankee stove, bucket, dip per, towel, soap and a great many other articles. You scarcely see a home-made ar ticles unless a few sweet po tatoes. Go to the smoke house brother farmers, and find a piece ot white Chicago meat, a piece of a barrel of Minnesota flour, a small quantity of Irish potatoes from Maine, a can of Chicago lard, a keg of so-called Cuba molassos, and a jug of vine gar from New Jersey. Go to the barn and there you will find his Kentucky mule or mules, fed on ship-stuffs from Baltimore, mixed with hiy from Illinois, cut with a knife from New York, his wagon is from Michigan, his harnefes from Massachusetts his plow is from Michigan, his buggy from Ohio, and even his old guano sacks a- bout have on them Rhode Is land I have not named an article but could be raised in N. C It will pay no farmer to raise eotton and buy his supplies. For the sake of coming gen erations and the love vvecher ish for our comon country, let us encourage home indus try and try to plaster our State over with spare-ribs, bask bones, and sausages, in stead of mortgages. It has not been long since a mercantile gentleman told me that some farmers, so-called, would come to the town and give mortgages to the amount of forty or fifty dollars and trade out every cent of it before they left town. Let us practice econ omy and stop this universal and inexcusable waste. The more you have to buy the more chances you give the high war tariff and the heartless speculator to rob you. Until thes incubuses can be struck from our body politic (and may God grant that the day is near at hand) is it wisdom for us to live like the oyster, in his shell, and "unto himseif alone." In short, we can Loycott them by raising our home sup plies. Clintou Caucasian. Imperfect digestion and assim ilation produce disordered condi tions 'ol the system which grow mid flivpnnflrniwibv netrlect. Dr. J. II. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier, by its tonic properties, cures mdtges tion and gives li me to tho stom ache. f 1 per bottle. The State Treasurer's re port shows that North Caro lina received last year $4, 119,84 fron marriage licens. The Federal elction bill, in troduced iu the Senate by Mr. Hoar, is by all odds the most extraordinary measure of the sort yet produced. It propo ses, in brief, to put the con trol of congressional elec tionsntirely into the hands of canvassing boards and su pervUors appointed by Fed eral judges, the State being wholly ignored. These judg es are nearly all republicans They ore to appoint election officers,' 5h6 are to prepare the lists of voters, supervise the elections, with dictatori al powers, count the ballots and certify the result. Their certificates are to be the on ly credentials of members of Congress. Neither the Gov ernor of a State nor the Leg islature is to have any part or lot in the holding of con gressional elections or certi fying results. It is to be a Federal affair, under control of underlings pledged to ad vance the interests of a par ticular party. The Federal Legislature is to be the crea ture of appointees of parti san judges, who are the ap pointees of a partisan Presi dent. A more revolutionary and offensive bill has not been presented at Washing ton since the reconstruction era, of odious memory. It is uot relieved by a pretense of instituting better methods of voting. The Australian bal lot is not prescribed. It is simply a device to enable un scrupulous Federal judges in the South to send republican Representatives to Congress instead of democrats. News and Observer DOWN ON DUDES. Mr. Jones said someyoung men in Durham got mad with him and said they were going to whip him. "I just said come ahead. I'll spit on you, and drownyou." When ever you spit on one of these little ball-room bucks, if he cant swim he dont stand much chance. I'ts no harm to kill a dude. Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being. Little ball-room dude, walking around with a pis tol in his hip pocket. I'ts a wonder the thing dont go off and blow his brainlets out. The Phiadelphia Times wisely and earnesty opposes the Radical Force bill. It sees in It only revolutionary elec tion methods. It says : "Not a single Southern State would be won by such methods, and four-fifths of the Northern States would re volt and end the history of the"bffending party in infa my. President Grant once said that the best way to cure the evils of a bad law was to enforce it, and the bese way to cure the evils of the force-bill elections would be to have a trial of such a law and enforce it in every section of the country." The trouble is. that it will only be tried n the South. The North will have none of it. The wicked framers only design it for "Southern con sumption." -Aessenger. lulamt ta CfTrm. There is a strong determina tion on the part of the House committee on rules, which is the steering committee of the House, to harry through on ly such measures as are es sential at this time and po liticnl measures, and to se cure an adjournment as soon as possible. Both parties are preparing for the campaign this fall, which will determine the com plexion of the next House, art (frit is not the purpose of the republicans to be handi capped by along session drag ging through the summer months, with the attending responsibility for a great mass of legislation. A resolution has been drawn np at. the suggestion of Mr. Reed to bj offered in 1 he re publican caucus to-night, pro viding that the tariff bill, the silver bill, the Morrill limited service pension bill and the federal election scheme shall be disposed of during the ses sion. It is expected that there will be a strong opposition to the Lodge election bill, and possibly to any other that may be presented. Washington Star. HOME FOLKS. Senator Ransom introduc ed a petition in the United States Senate from citizens ot this town asking for the passage of a law stopping mails, trains, etc., on Sun day. We understand that all mails and trains in England are suspended from Saturday night to Monday morning, and that the interests of the people do not suffer from this arrangement. But ore the running of trains any worse than riding about in buggies and other vehicles on the Lord's day? If we are not mistaken a great many chuch people go on pleasure rides on that day. Messenger. Tnat man of God, the Rev erend Sam P. Jones, is in Charlotte at this time, just ifying the ways of God to men. Up tolast evening he had called the people of thatdevo ted city hounds, lousy calves, dirty dogs, fools and con temptible puppies, and had said of the best people of the city (who are as good people as dwell on earth) that they would not be allowed to sweep out the kitchens of the bon-ton of Baltimore If he talked that way on the street instead of in a "tabernacle" he would get both eyes black ed and then be sent to the rock-pile. La ndnmrk. Another Northern mill has shut down. It is one of the argestin Ohio the Tifnin woolen Mills. Superinten dent Waugh says that the sole cause is the tariff. He says: 'I have been a life long Re publican, but I tell you thou sands 0 woolen mill opera tives in Ibis country, myself a mong the number, are hav ing their eyes opened on this tariff question" Let the funeral proceed Messenger. President Davis's mansion in Richmond, Va. is, to be con verted into a Confederate Museum. Wlimr Xor TriU. A gentleman who is proml nnt in the Y. M. C. A. learn ed not long ago that a warm fritnd of his early davs was nearing the curbstone through strongdrink. and he was told that the poor fel low's only rescue was through u confinement in the Wash ingtonlan Home. The phi lanthropist resolved to res cue him at first sight, and he met him down town one Sat urday afternoon. Takinghim into his buggy be talked pleasantly with him android lie would give him a ride. They stopped at the Wash ingtonian Home and the pht lanthropist asked his unfor tunate friend to accompany him up stairs to call on an old chum. He went. The two were ushered into a parlor. The superintendent entered. Up jumped the unfortunate, whispered a few hurried words in his ear, and started to leave. His kind friend start ed after him. "Oh no," said the superintendent, "you will stay with us." The philan thropist was dumbfounded. In vain did he protest that he was the wrong man. He was removed to a room and dosed on beef tea and bromide. They kept him until Monday before they allowed him to send a note to his family. He was rescued at once. The "poor unfortu nate" had sold his horse and buggy and left for parts un known. Now theY. M. C. A man does not go around sa ving fallen friends. Chicago Herald. ' Citorp suffocation, nieht cousrhs and all the common affections oi the throat and lanes quickly re lieved by Dr. J. IL McLean's Tar wine lung bal in. Senator Quay i.j represent ed as being in a sad plight. The developments made by papers that have pried into his past life have disarrang ed hissocial attitude to the other Senators who are not so cordial toward him as for merly ; and it is stated that President Harrison has even asked him to resign the posi tion of chairman of the re publican committee. Under all these circumstances he re mains quiet, and bears the slings of fortune with a meek ness and humility that would bespeak Christian fortitude in a matter of another char acter. Observer. the hmiHphnld which cause burns cuts, sprains and bruises ,for use in such cases Dr. J. II. Mcian a Volcanic Oil Liniment has for ma n v years been the constant favor ite family remedy A voung preacher pi ketl up Bishop Pierce's hat and put it on his own head, and it was exactly a fit. "Why, Bishop," said he, "yourhead and mine are exactly the same size." "Yes," replied the Bishop, "on the outside.' If vmir kidnevs are inactive. you will feel and look wretched, even in the most cheerful society, meloncholy on the jolliest occa sions Dr.'j. HeLean's Liver and Kidney Balm will set you right again. 1.00 per bottle. The difference between a shrewd, successful politician and a diligent, unconditional Tiar is frequently hard to detect.-Oil City Blizzard.