has double the cir culation of any other weekly, pub lished! in tho city. ' Mratisirs te! -r -: - - 1 r,,F.-,u4:H SERIES. SALISBURY. N C, THURSDAY JIARCH, 1 1894. 1 4 .-!-'-' I i a '9.1--. ..-'..',- i . c v m - t ar w t m 1 ' i w sa. a a a . a am a. am- - a m a a . st . 4 : . -. sa. - & i mtrn m m .... - - NO. 4 ia is Dr. Samuel Pitcher! prescription for Infants .ff? Cbildrcn It contains neither Oium, Morphine nor !Ther Narcotic substance. It , is a harmless substitato ' L. TronK. SoaHiincr Stxuds. and Castor Oil. -for ri"7Tv - 7- " i u Pieasant. Its cuaranteo itf illion of Mothers. Castoria is the Mother's Friend. " Castona. ! riitew weU adapts tocWldren that fS"' 11- A. AacHM. D.. . ' 111- m T OaorU' U ao unlrenal aad wtU icnowa th&t it efa a work -UJ 1 . 1 V"" YorkCUy. j Thb Cestai; OoiOAirr, T7 Mcmlit BxaiKT, jnuasoM'B ' y MAGNETIC OIL! ' Instant Killed vfPaia. ' " Internal anil External. Core. KIli:UMATI8M, NKURAL GIA,"Lme Beet Bpraias, Bruiser. KwoiUnen. Stiff Josuta. OOUOand - StCKA MPS inutoirtiy. Cbolerm Mor- lus, Croop.Uiptnena, nore xbivhi UKApACHE, aa U toy sucie. MSE BRAND. Kui)e 8Trew. r - niui Pmrt ratine I Alias itf or Man JjiaailMeoo. Large 11 HaT&&,tQfc siiesOc jOHKSOM'S ORIENTAL 0AP, ..ibsttdaixIToUe The Great Skin Cur and idbBaautiftor. Ladies wlU find it e snort !SeM od Mh perfumad ToUet Boap 011 fiSStit. ltubUitl pur. Makee the aloft tad relvety and restores the lort corn-1 ""oil InxwT r Bh r ,nfa"5?l Cs ltckiDc, ctounsea the ecalp and premmcl tpwtaolhJr. Price.ase. JPorealehy EDWIN CUTHEELL, rr - I Salisbury, N SUDDEN DEATH! Ths Community Shocked if Last Teniae, just-after tea, while Mr. Jitmu Hrtman, a prominent aod faigblr- laoactedxitiieivappareiitl in the beet of sails ud spirits, was reauing a newspaper, 3t sbeeC sudden! t fell U the ' floor ; lie lucei otis knd orer his heart. Espedt and aU bsek in his chair, evidently unoon 10W 'i'lkr lamilj were stricken with oon- idmtioa,: aod immeaiateljr summoned .a phtucUUL f nut tl was too. late. The o.Hl putata'was dead. -4'lijsu-ians gare heart Um u the c.ie."UoibrooJe Uanld. Zurj dar the paners contain statements ilvU) ike above. ' Even youth u no de- r4i iftiiist luart disease, and the awful nsiditf with which it is claiming victims fcreei upon all a couTiction of its ore valence. Kekier, if tou hare a 'symptom of this Ind aisesse do not hesitate a moment in Ooiinc to it. Delay! is always dangerous, as. ji heart disease too often fatal. Some naptOBH of heart dbease are shortness of kwsia, flutterinr. or Inalnitation. nain or Manesrin left side, shoulder, or arm, ir- nrwir o(e, smothering, weak or hungry 2. faintipg spells, dropsy, etc Clsnei ktven. York, pa., wrltesl "I-Jiiffered M tuft Aimu tt v.ara FrannantlT mv' Mt weskl team to Jump into my mouth, and my Mdltlon mtAe me-vwy melancholy. Physicians rn ae ao lellef. I became to much worse thst rweotespwneit to liye, but was induced a a iMort to ne Dr. Milef Sew Heart Cure. The wa dir I Mi greatly relieved, aad at the end wa leys i iit like a kfna. My araUtude U too rpreiKtlon." . j y Ml . ; Vk Bock well. TTnfnntAwn' Pa.. rA HI art For four years previous to befin-i with hesrt diease in a very severe form. f.-V4"'1" ",1i e. "a H beneBt " p in. Miles- remedy, on bottle of which mn riniu, ia.a un ia i't- SVtiaanJ Itnm.ak hM.VU k . EL Nsw Heart Cnre and Kerve and liver if." "ltof iheir use I am well." Heart Cure la sold by aTldme- S!.'t,P,-tiT fnsrantee, or sent by the lr. Keiieel ro., Kkhart. Ind 1 iveeript of LT 'i' ". ' bottles for f5. express pre " poeirtrely .free frew all opiates or "Ju draira.-Dr. UHea (Serve and Jlver rin eenls ner hn m Itnvaa. II 00. If allad rmbookatdrufista.erbyBULU. , For Rale by all Druggists. ii A. Tpiittuc I olicy in 'the FnuiiaLlc .Ue4-the.ln-! m. tK-canse Jfis alsolutelv . .? r.u -i Tiiatcs ou voUr 6w a officiary 'f .vou live, and' protects your family ,f The follow:!, gjf'a.joe I0licy Holder sarva , -1 uitablei Life ?fy reived his oVn life insurance, "nbthi-hkiiitf over. X Cox J K mm yf ManaEer ""l n h .1 r ! 'L. ' . 1 hv Kforc m a statement of tne . - - vu vm. ,f.. . i 1 . v . .... " cce,fiT ' Vw f-'-J fn- penl reason. SL''" h 1 U p to MJ that the ' Vours truly j1 MiL f - ' JAS.C..CfBSON. rite for particulars to-day. Ask all we questions you wish, ! The more yS4ln0"t the Tontiue lie better wm appreciHte it ! .J.R0pDEY,Miuii2ert apartment of the CaroUnas, s-a 2- koc KILL, S.C. Wdrcn Cry for Pitched Ctorla ' saaBBBBamBBaBaaaasaBMBaaBasttSlSi 5a - - - , is thirty years use hy the Children's Panacea JDastoria. - Castorla eorM Colic, ConAipatkei, Sour Stoaaaeh, Diarrhoea, Eruc-ailoa, Hills Wonas, -c leer, tud roaotea gestion. . - ' I Without Injurious meiicatioa. . i i i : "For ererol years I have recommeadec your ' Cantor U,' and, shall always cObtinnb t do so as ltfbas invariabty produned benctda rsulU.n - 1 Kows T". Parss, .ilj 125th Street -and 7th .v; 2z4 York Ctty New Yobx Crrr lfi kJtST A.9 IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT I EVER MADE. There are elnrb $ t-'l dues which seU 2, ; .' .s c4 ? -a net prolit tt $,2je,c:i a y j ir. '.V ; but we sell a great r-.dry pairv the c our ladies', misset' aU children"' f-!ix ten eoBtii a puir, u'td oh o.r ricno' mid I IS cents a pair. 'A a pir.'l. rtaMi-'i -eaeUuf llie fi'iy t. .. f ' ?''- ' they sell oa'y ; 1 ' .' earn 'i?V. irm y. ,.r -. ... ... yearly diridvrd i i '.Z-. ash.-.r-, t-. . a vcaron th i:iv;ti:iei.t. We et ! t':'-' f a share. The pric-tnutt l:icv'.tnl.ly e than $t a shar-. 1 i 0 k h r ' leasthaa this prise; '.. .. ficmascesjitl. ircoc: -- . .. We have OTcrl."'.v r ' . r.v c is iDcreaitlns dail" holders arc : V. s. ' N. .V. Kcwl. Jr.. C'tlri Kv ioufli, Litt!-! It Tmtiht. l'hila.5 J'. I k. A. ;-: f.-rao-kMifh.: F. ?-.li;i:'.itt.-.,Vr-a AV'rite for ii-prDp'CtiH'r:;iJu;:i!j fiti-.'it our stocshoIdr rip., 1 r . Orders Uken f . r occ or n a xhare. OEXTEB SHOE CO., k) DEXfER 8H0B CO., ip. faplUl, $.,000,000. BEST 81.fiO SHOK IN THE WOUtD, dollar trtetd it a dollar eamtd.n This Tjullca' Sol I.I French I)onela Kid "But ton .Boot delivered free anywhere in the U.S., en ; receipt of Caah, kloney Order, or l'vsul , Note for $1.50. aua!s every war the boots L sold ia all retail stores for 3rJ 2.50. We make this boot ourselves, therefore we ttattr afiea the Ji', ttyU and vrar, and if any one is pot satisfied we win rctiina tne money or aend rother pair. Optra 's&V. Toe -or Common Sent", widths C, D, K, fc Kv . 1 tn tL. m,.A It. 5S?V' ies. Srn d vo nr uill fii .. icy . Dexter Shoe Co 43 FEDERAL ST.. BOSTON. Spccfal ttrmt to jMntz-r. Caveata, aad Trade-Marks ohtainad, and all Pat ent.bosinees conducted for Moocratc Fees. Owa OrrtceisOetoaivc U.S. saTtwrOfficc and we can secure patent iu less time than those remote from Washington. Seod model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Oar foe not dae till patent to seen red. A Pamphlct. 14 How to Obtain Pateata," with names of acroal clients ia your State, 00 auty or town, sent free. Address, c.A.srjow&co. Qrr. Patent Orricc. Wash'.bstom. D. C i!a$.yioasTAO 460LDEB CAPSULES' j Are Safe and Always Kellable better thaav Tansy or Feanyroyal Pills and all similar medicines. Unexcelled for IrregularV -ties, Ac. SooceasruUy used la thousands of cases. las aare remedy,. Kuaranteed, never falls. Price fl. A, mecjoalledsaieffnard. XJkKESlUSS SPSCIFlf ' 1 Market St, Ckicaftte, IU. Sated the life that is fighting against Consump tion. - Only ao promptly. rut u on, ana ' -3.r .- nothing can avs - -- -ti you. But, if tak- X en m time. air. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will cer tainly cure. ' :; . . It must bs done through the blood and the "Discovery" is the most potent blood cleanser, strength-restorer, ana fiesh-builder that's known to medical adenca, Tho scrof ulous affection of- the lungs that's called Consumption, and every form of Scrofula aad blood-taints, all yield to it For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Bronchitis, Asth ma, and all severe, lingering coughs. It's an unequaled remedy. Its the only one that avaranteed. If it doesnt benefit or cure, in every case, you have your money back. Can anything else, at any price, be really as cheap f . You pay only for value received. 'V Something else, that, pays the dealer bet ter, may be offered as "just as rood. Per haps it is, for kin, put it cant be, for you. ITPHYS 11,. llAf a y T- share fTriw. S, I4i I . Vr..r E.AI WEEK INI CONGRESS- Promises of the presont Week in tho Senate. isd what; of THE DEADLOCK? Xh 8lrlorax Matter pucoawxl By I - rr tHm Weak la Both BraacbM X 1 f Conffr 1 rTTABUCTOTdx. Febniary 26. -The pre- eat wek in the aemte promises to be barren in lecri&la.tian but fertile ! tion looking1 to the'shftpiafr of the poli- cjf in power on I the tariff qrtpstion, i Three very important matters wiAprob ; fcbly 7 transpire f thhi j-week the . pre- 1 1 sentation of the taHff bill to the repub lican members of the; a nance commit- -j te4the4eiocra4uCus with the" ' same bill asfs -basis! f or discussion ?tn "which dissatisiietl-, Ueedocrats are -expected to bemofctrictire and the report of the committee on foreign affairs on the ilawaiian investigation. It ia not unlikely that in pjesentiuj? this! report, Mr. Morgan maymke a! lonjr jspeech. f Mhml of itef Deadlock? j ' For .two weeks j jr. Bland has un STailingly striven to? brin a majority f the house of f representatives to the support of Ms biU tO coin the seignior age of the silver bullion in the treasury or at least to induce a majority to vote on the question of , closing- debate on the measure and' thus bring it before the house for disposition. Bland says that! the struggles will be kept up until the 1 bill shall have been voted upon, if it takes all summer. A prominent member, ' who has taken no active part in the controversy over the bill, but who bas voted to consider it, said Sunday night: "I very much doubt that thebill will - be passed, even if a quorum be secured to act upon it.? f -1 j Tb republican program 'seems to be fll ibaster against f the f" measure even after the presence ;of a; quorum shall have bee l secured. .' . j. The committee on rules expected to be called upon, then for an order to limit debate an t tke a vote. Butunti the quorum does appear, the members o " the committee say that the orders of . the caucus of last Monday to ke p the eig torage bill before the house will be carried out. Whienev -r the billhall be disposed of, the election cases of O'Neill va. Joy from the 11th ! M ssouri district and of English vs. Ililbor from the fourth Color .do district in both of which the committee has reported avor of ous4 iug th seated THE GOLD FIND TR The Nev-Or:eBi llt VcrlOes the R- Sajj AxTOXto, fret., February 20. The report of ai-r;ich gold discovery in G iiiespic oaaty near Frcderieksburgh, has becUfully verified. The j find was made inr the' mountains on the ranch of ,DrjKnri4 Althaiisi, who is a inincrajo- i&t of j considerable reputation. A ! sample erf the ore; tvas-sent to the New i Orleans. mint forhexaniination and the : followlntr was the result of the assay: ; Chesiieal Lalwratory and Assay Office, j Joseph Albreeht, M.,D., 'kv Oiti ea. Sa February 10th. IS04. Certificate of assay Of ore f ram Chris tal Al.haas, t.Fredericksbnrgh, Tex. Description of ore, quartz, gold per ton 15.0G6 ounces, silver per (ton eighty, ounees, $30.4 j ft i ,, This certiacate was accompanied by a letter cozigratulating Dr. Althaas on his lucky find. and stating that the mine would undoubtedly prove of im mense richness.'1 J. .- CAPTURE OF GEN. FERNANDEZ. Inaarceat Fearei Defeated la Saa Golbi-ial f Major Tear tro Killed. New prolix fj February 26. - Special from Rio cohfinfns the sinking of the rebel, transport Mercurio and adds: The insurgent force " under , General Piani were defeftted in San Gelbriel by the Casttihistas according ton dispatch just received here, i - Major) Penetrd, of the insurgents, was killed, j l f - ! It is now reported that General Isi dore Fernandez 'is' still alive, though rumors of hi' ath have been persis tently circulated. The latest reports state that he: is a prisoner and is ae companying the rebel army.' f " ' ' Two Stat e Conveatioaa. Nashville Tenn., February 26. The democr tic state executive com mittee met here ; Saturday with a full attend anc of : members. Secretary Pearcy having been j appointed consul to Colon, John II. Bullock was elected disensaion.' ft waa . decided to bold twa' conventions, and April tth was agreed on as the date for : the convention to nominate candidates for the supreme bench, j The committee also decided not to have the! gubnatorial . convention nn? 2r the ei5ti2a " Au; T .. . vvnen ue soniaiiKe -wn awew, waica will be on April ljth. ! Steele Hackay la JJead. Dcstfim; February 26. Steele Mac- kay died this! morning at Timpus, Colo. a sjnal statfon near the new Mexican jine, apoard a Santa Fe train on his way to! San Francisco. " r . ' J j ; , s. . 1 - 1 ; . The CuUiy Caahlrr Ends Hla Life. VwXA,February 6. Cashier Ferles, who embezitled 102,000 florins from the department; of the public debt and fled during the bflicial inspection,; has com mitted sui(de. TennwiM't CWriatlaa Kndea NasnviLiB, February 26. The Ten nessee! Christian Endeavor union ad journed last night after the largest meeting ever held in the south by thia organization. .i i:3i ; i Eaniuoas Cheaea Fool ball Captatn. CAMnRipOK, Mass., February 21. -R. W. Emmons has fbeen elected captain of the Ifarjyard; football team for the year. 5 Eipmons jpiayed left end last tWL i I: itfeaeral Allew Dyhss;. S.3T PnXscisco, Febrairy SC. Oen- eral Jauies M. Allen, a veteran from the Mexican war, and an ex-Confederate brUrier, Is dying in this city. fhildrW Cry ibr Pitches rcria. in y memoers, lDtsrmcerr rroetedias; at Catoversv lie v T iBrttlgstted by MepaWleaa iisvuo- faetareea. - ,- ;? W . freed the bodies of our black slaves thirty years " ago. We have not, however, freed either their labor or the labor of our more numerous white slaves. We will not nave done so until we have change4 the conditions which tnake them, both as producers and con sumers, subjects and creatures of mo nopoly. One of the ' chains ' that bind them is tha protective' tariff. This chain was forged and is held in place by protected manufacturers ' The elections of 1890 and 181 loosened i their hold, but they am now becoming desperate and refuse to slacken their, monopoly grip. The reform club, of New York, has been holding meetings in various east ern cities where so-called democratic representatives have refused to d the bi.idng of their eoostituents and hare sold out to the manufacturers of thelr-f districta In Paterson. X. X, in Provi dence, R. I., and iu Amsterdam. Troy and Cohoea, N. Y. these meetings have been most successful in winning back to tariff reform those -workintrmea who have wavered when their wajjes have , been re'ducel because of the shadow of 'the Wilson bill, as they were told. In only one ense did the workiegmen fail to respond to true democratic principles. This was at Gloversville, N. Y., and here are the circumstances: An audience of over s,000 had crowd ed into the opera house at O4oversvil!e to hear Mr. Thomai U. Shearman. As in other meetings three-fourths attend ed to listen to tar ill reform arguments. They might be skeptical, but they were open to conviction. In the gallery, however, there were about 5 )0 men and boys, including a well organized gang of 200 men who had been primed with liquor. The republicans who pr'.med them gave them to understand that they were to make it unpleasant for the Epeaker afJ, if possible, to break up the meeting. It has since been assert ed in the local p ipers that a liberal supply of stale eggs was on! hand for expected U3e, No polie-; were the e as the mayor was opposed to the meeting. Kepublican papers had for several days been slyly preparing the way for what followed. Gloversville i has 15,000 inhabitants and is the center of the glove industry in this country Nine-tenth of the gloves made need no protection an l ia facMthemanufacturers would tiirive . betterwithout any; but that does not concern us. - As often happens in pro- cte.l indastries. nearly alt of the best r mill nrnrlrrs nro tm tmrtn ffirnlcrnpr-i. Glove cutters are practictlly all for eTr.rnfrs. Many of the reent imnort t tions are Huns anJ Italians, it was these who were relied upon to disturb the meeting. ."IJefore I had talke 1 for fifteen min utes," said Mr. Sherman, ''the opposi tion to me developed. I announced that at the closo of my talk I would answer any questions that any one present might want to ask. A' .man who was sitting in the bxiy of the house arose and asked me a question. When I started to answer it he con tinued to talk. This was a signal for his friends in the gallery. They booted, hissed and stamped. They shou ed all r 6irts of questions that were wi le of the subject. This man on the floor lei thein The chairman of the meeting told me that he was a low kind of fel low, and he really was a low kind of fellow and very vulgar. Some of the remarks were obscene." Mr. Shearman tried to quiet the au dience and go on with his speech, but the mob in the gallory di l -t want a free trade speech. They jeered every remark he; made. They commented on his personal appearance Mr. Shear man is a small m m physically and then they began a steady stamping of their feet that was veryj annoying to the speaker. "I did not fear personal violence, said Mr. Shearman, "for the men in a mob are always cowards. I called their attention to the fact that Garrison, Lovejoy and Phillips had been hooted and jeered in the same way when they advocated abolition of the black slaves, and I was willing to stand it in the cause of advocating abolition of the white slaves. The respectable part of the audience wanted to listen to what I had to say. I kepi on my feet for i two hours I- wasn't able to say much ! that could be .heard. Then I took a chair and sat down, telling these row dies that thoy couldn't tire me out. They swarmed down from the gallery, and as there were no seats in the body of the house they stood in a gang around the front of the stage, thveat- entng to do me injury. But when I had them right under my eyes, where I could talk to them, they subsided a : littl. One man told me I was a rebel : mud a traitor. I said to him: Two of my brothers went to the front during. ! the fight for the union, and I wanted i to tro. but ther wouldn't take me. X ! , . .w. have spent $2&,000 supporting the fam ilies of men who were killed in that war. Now. sir, what have you done? Did you go to the front? Did you spend any money for the families of those who did? That turned the laugh on him." At the end of two hours and a half of effort to talk free trade, Mr. Shear man declared that the present hard times were not due to fear of tariff changes, and that uader the influence of the new tariff bill times would again become prosperous. This so angered the mob that they broke out afresh. They called Mr. Shearman names, they hooted, and when their throats got tired thev made all the; noise they cpuld with theSr feet. It was very dis tressing. Logic is a very good thing in its way. MK Shearman thinks that his free trade logic is irresistible, but it doesn't count against a mob of un employed wajre-earners such as attend ed the Gloversville meeting. By this time the chief of police had reached the scene of the agitation with all the available night force of police. The curtain was ru .g down and the meeting was adjourned. Mr. Shearman and the officers of the meet ing stnrted for the hotel There were enough police to aUtkm one on each aioe 01 Air. otiMriuan. who -wIicmI in front, followed by the officers Of the meeting', who were protected in the same war. Tho locai paper described it as a cordon of police, j This proces sion was followed by an angry mob. who would haver been even more rude if tneyhar not feared the police. At the L hotel Mr. Shearman turned sarcastic ally and thanked every! one for bis kindness and courtesy, f ,j j J , BEWARE OF TRICKS. CamhtnatlMs Acmistat thm fa some fax ' Sboald lt WaicbL j j' The direct attack on the income tax has been defeated. The vote! in the, l house on annexing It to the tariff bill showed an unexpectedly large major! ! ity in Its favor, and its! strength in the; senate Is a surprise to those who have! fondly imagined that a wise law could be beaten by heaping epithets upon it It is now admitted that a number of f western republican senators will tote nd ntor IlaleJ ot. Maine, an eastern, man aad a republican, has frankly declared that the' tax Is popu lar iu hi state. - while this is encouraging, friends of the measure must be vigilant, j Failure in the direct attack is liable to be con verted into vic'ory by indirection. The sugar trust has joined hands with the opponents of the income tax There is groUnd for the suspicion that the primary object of restoring sugar,- coal and Iron to the "dutiable list is to make it easier to eliminate the income tax from the MIL Ostensibly the motive of restoring these taxes is to provide revenue,! but the internal revenue schedule of! the Wilson bill more than compensates for any deficiency likely to be caused by the free list or tho reduction of cus toms duties. When the needed revenue' is thus provided for in the : customs schedules the argument will then be sprung that the income tax is superflu- J ous, as the revenue it would yield is not necessary. f This is one of the tricks to be guard ed against. Another is the proposition .to sever the income tax from! the rest of the bill and offer it as a separate measure. The argument urged in favor of this is that the income rax would be stronger by itself, because of republican votes. But , behind this argument ia the hope (probably a vain one) that as a separate bill the income tax would be killed by an executive veto, which could not reach it when in corporated with the tariff bill i If it were true that the income tax handicaps in any degree the more vitally important tariff bill the World would not hesitate to demand ! their separation. But those best! qualified to judge are of the opinion that the tariff bill is strontrer with the income tax feature than it would be without it Let the Wilson bill stand. ! The sen ate cannot do more wisely than pass it, as it came from the house. N. Y. World. ECONOMIC POINTS. Some Pa tMfrraphs by Henry UeorM That A re Worthy of Consideration. Economically, what difference is there between restricting the importa tion oi iron to benefit iron producers and restricting sanitary improvements to benefit undertakers. To attempt to make a nation pros perous by preventing it from buying from other nations is as absurd as it would be to attempt to make a man prosperous by preventing him from buying from other men. If not true already, it will not under present conditions; be many years be fore the English aristocracy will draw far larger incomes from their American estates than from their home estates incomes to supply wnicn we must ex port without any return in imports. .Now, against what country is It that American protectionists must demand protection? If we could have! a pro tective tariff against only one country in the whole world what country is it that American protectionists would se lect to be protected against? Unques tionably it is Great Britain, instead of being the country of lowest wages, is, next to the United States and the Brit ish colonies, the .country' of highest wages. "It is a poor rule that will not work both ways" If we require a protective tariff because of Our high wages, then countries of low; wages ; require iree trade or. at the yery least, have noth ing to fear from free trade. How is it. then, that we find protectionists of Germany, France and other low wage countries protesting that their indus tries will be ruited by the free compel tition of the higher wage- industries of Great Britain and the ; United States, . just as vehemently as our protection- 1 its protest that our Industries would be ruined if exposed to free competition with the products of the "pauper labor" of Europe? j me Ct of llaV, We hope that before the end of March the bill will have leen passed through the senate, will have gone through the ordeal of a icommittee on conference whose report will be accept able to "both branches of congress and that the president will have signed it. In placing the date for this final act six weeks ahead we may be charged with entertaining an unduly sanguine opinion, but even this delay prooaoiy means the loss I to the people of the United States of not less than fci00.000,. 000 of what would otherwise have been created wealth. I We wish it were pos sible to impress upon the minds of sen ators a due appreciation of the value to the country of every minute of tinny so that they would conscientiously avoid saying a rties word; bat, judging by the experience in the sliver debate, we fear that such an ainout of self-restraint is something not to be expected. Boston Herald. v A People's flaht. The fight for income tax is emphat ically a struggle of the masses against the privileged classes, and the people are as thoroughly iu earnest in support of it as they are for tariff reform or for anir other mode of release from indus trial servitude It would not be wise for the senate to attempt to deny their ri.mand. The "rich men's club" is not in ovmd odor now. and it will not take much more to make the demand for its abolition emphatic and universal. iO- dianapulis SfcnlineL : - r , - - 'i . . - - S !. . 1 - i v . . 1 . I vjw,'-- 1 1 r - ia veaiaK Powers FUNNY MR. HOAR muslas; Ant Irs of the Maaaehaatt ft 1 y' j at.r Ills "War Oat- Senator Hoar staked his reputation and political salvation, in his Llncoin ian address ia Jeraev Otv. On t Via sertkm that there was only one way to- ,w . " wneets 01 the factories'' a&4 bring back -'prosperity and comfort to ue nomea of the wurkiagmwo. ' .1DU way was: Let six men. whom vm am 1.1 couaq name, m the United States un. 1 ... - i ' : ate; let one man, whom you or I eouki! 1 name, in me executive chair, declare i to-morrow morning that they or ha) ! will not permit for the next three yearrf any change in the tariff policy of thiai country. We have listened In vain foC any such declaration this morning, aa4 yet, to our. surprise, we find in the Tribune news of "many mills starting up.- Still more surprising it is to find that this news comes from Rnfc Hoar's own home. Worcester. Mas xne aispatcn ststes that "every eoft. ton mm in. tne county is running, and two-thirds of the sets of woollen ma chinery. Doubtless there !s some mis take about thia The mills may have started up on the" mistaken idea that they or he" bad made the necessary declaration, but as soon as Mr. Hoar gets back to Washington; he will tele graph to have the mills closed at once. Otherwisei he may be called upon to fulfill his awful threat! of becoming a "free trader and a democrat for the rest of my natural life?" Such amusing antics by comlo old gentlemen like Senator Hoar serve only to indicate how completely the terror izing tactics of the republican party on the tariff have come to naught The now tariff is certain to become law and business is certain to revive. Business would revive under any law absolute free trade or the McKinley doubled or quadrupled. It would revive, to ebtnt extent at least, simply because con-, sumption is now treading 01 the heels of production, and the mills must start up becausj orders are coming in. Already we begin to see the republic ans making a shift to explain now we can enjoy such blessings without as cribing all the praise and glory of-them to McKinley. If they Had co.ne under his law they would have bean exclu sively due to it It will never do to ad mit that they arc a consequence of the Wilson bllL snd so we expect to see glowing tributes to the recuperative power of our industries and the con tinue! 1 goodness of providence. The logical formula is much like that by whieh a Bushman explains his devotion to his fetich: All disasters that occur are due, to the superior power or cun ning of the devil, temporarily getting the upper hand; but success in raids and robbery is due solely to the inter vention of the fetich. N. Y. Evening Post THE ALTERNATIVE Should Sagar or Lare;- Iin-omoe Be Smk Jet to raztlo.i? Shall largo incomes be taxed, or shall sugar be retaxed to meet the de ficiency in the revenues? A ax of one cent a pound on raw sugar would yield, on the basis of last year's importations, $37,00.). 000. This is a little more th:in the committee esti mate will be produced by the proposed tax on individual and corporate in comes. A duty on sugar is a proper revenue tax. It goes straight to the treasury. It would never have been repealed by the republicans except for their desire to prevent reductio s in other sched ules in which as a party they were far more deeply interested. But when the present alternative is presented the question is, as strongly put by Mr. Mc.Millin in the house, "whether it is better to tax surar, of which everyone c-msumes about the same quantity, or accumulated wealth, which nyw goes practically untaxed, for government purposes. Shall we tax a man on what he has or on what he eats?" ' What is the natural answer of the democratic party the party of the masses in distinction from the classes to such a question as this? Consump tion already pays 83 per cent of the cost of the federal government Shall it continue to bear substantially the whole? A mechtn'c with a wife and five children,, living on an income of 91.000, consumes about as much sugar as a family of the same size having ao in come of flO.OK) or SiO.OO'J. Is it equal, is it jnst, to tax them both the same amount? An alternative is sometimes the strongest argument It' is so in this case." N. Y. World. i The Knights of loor ol the United States are about to start upon a cam paign having for its object the removal of the negroes from the - United Mates and their colonization in tlie Congo basin. Lib ria, or s trie other part of Africa. The Confederate solttkrs" and sailors" monument, at Richmond, will be un veiled on May ?.0th net- The monu ment is situated on Lib'o.v hill, and is a tall granite pil'ar. surmounted by a bronze figure of a private soldier. .Inrtfre Sar. of tr-e United States ci - cult court has refuse ! to reduce the sentence of Frank Porterti -Id, ex-cashier of efunet Commercial National bank nt Nashville. '.' ern., to five years. Porte rfield ws taken to the prison at Brooklyn e.sterdi:y. James V halen, a foremnn employed bw the Cons-oliclated i ml road on the four-tracking operations at Noroton, Conn., and James II esly were struck and almost instantly killed by a tram near Uowarton yesterday morning, Whalen's home wa in New York ami Healy's in Boston. Ghndreo Cry fcr Pitcher's Castor - Litest U. S. Gov't Report - 11 REED'S RECKLESS STATEMENTS . ' i ! Uls Bafereaoea to Easilsas Cera UviAie , . j -7 MlaUadiag-. ' !; By a singular fatuity, common to the Instinct of the party, republican edit prs have seised thst part of Mr. Reed's speeoh in which he dealt with the period of the English corn law repeal . as the moat brilliant and .successful ef- fortT not onlv Of hia iruwh Knt rf tVia. debate. It haooens that that is inat the portion of Mr. Reed's argument in which, he was either entirely ignorant of the facta or in which he most will fully suppressed them. Z Let us stato his position in all frank ness, in his own words: "According to the usual story that ia told, England had been engaged in a tong and vain struggle with the demon of protection, and had been year after year sinking- further into the depths. Nntil at a moment when she la her deepest distress and saddest pibjbt. 1 lur rA a vi a 1 . yuwira nuu ais insnas pro via en tially appeared, and after a hard struggle established a principle for all time and for all the world, and straight way England enjoyed the sum of human happiness. Hence all good na tions should do as England has done, and all would be welL . " ! . "This fairy tale has not the slightest resemblance to history. "Was that crusade the same as is waged here to-day? Are the gsatle xnen of the ways and means committee legitimate successors of Bright and Cobden and the Anti-Corn Law league? Not the least in the world.! That was : a fight by the manufacturers. This is a fight against the manufacturers." Now . what were the facts? The declaration of the league, which di rected the repeal agitation, expressly laid down the principle that all duties were to be abolished. Its organizers selected the duty on corn only as the most odious and the most successful to appeal to the country on, for It touched every man's stomach (mostly then em pty, by virtue of its operation), but the battle was continued against every other form of protection duty until the number of articles liable to duties has been reduced from the host, which no man could number, to a total of lesa than twenty. Mr. Reed put in the forefront tha battle for corn-tax repeal a repeal he justifies, curiously enough, on exactly the arguments we democrats use against him "because it was an odious law enacted to enhance the price of breadynot for the benefit of the farmer, but of the aristocratic owner of the land;" just as we say odious laws here "enhance the price." not for the bene fit of him who makes, but of the aristo cratic combiner. Having got so far honestly, however, he drops the his tory of the repeals . of protective cus toms duties whieh followed corn, and then pauses, points the moral to his admiring and unenlightened satellite!, and says: "Thank God we are not like those wicked English tories who enhanced the price of daily bread. We do no such abomination, and, there fore, gentlemen, the democratic allu sion to the free trade campaign in England is a f airy tale.' " We will continue the history, in short, where Mr. Reed blindly or will fully left it So multitudinous were the articles subject to Import duty no man could number them; they were like the sands of the sea. No man liv ing at the time when, in August, 1ML Peel became prime minister and , chan cellor of the exchequer, with an empty treasury, which higher and higher pro- , tection only starved more and mere ef fectually, could be found to tell the committee on import duties how many articles were really subject to duty. AU the most experienced secretary ot tha board of trade could say wss that there were L150 articles specifically mentioned, each having a fixed specific duty charged thereon, but that every thing which was missed by tne speeina duty was covered by. three other est valorem duties of SO and. 5 and-SO per cents., respectively. Anyway, the cua- - toms for the year ended J snaary 5, 140, amounted to 1113,000,00a In the three years succeeding 1M1 the duties on 500 articles were entirely repealed, and on 700 mora tha duties were reduced, In 1843 6S0 more artielea were placed on the free list at one blow. Nearly all customs taxes on raw material were released, the only exception being tim ber and tallow, which survived yet a few more years. Where Peel left the ax In 1S4S Glad, stone took it up in 1853, and before 1860 he had reduced rates on 310 articles and repealed 110 duties. . r- In 1860 be reduced rates on 56 arti cles and repealed 250 duties. In 1861 he brought the total of articles leviable to 127; in 1866 to 1001 in 1867 to 64, and in 1886 to 47. And yet Mr. Reed would 1 have tha American voter believe the movement was merely one began' and concluded against an odious corn tax and not for the freedom of manufacture and raw materiaL Not so. The corn law was the strongest point of attack. The principle admitted 00 that repeal car ried the logical sequence the ultimate freedom of alL American Industries. (Then Baby was rick, we favn bar Ue. Whesi she waa a Child, she cried f or Caatorla Then she becajoe Wee, she ehine; to Caacoria k she had Children, she a Ujtm Oetor - 1. 1 ; j 1 1 1 k 1 r 1 r '" t ! til Ty- j if V ' f 1 V u 1 i - r 2. Mi 1 - J? I-";!v - y " ! ! 1 : t . 1 ki-y r"-. i-... 1 '.I X: