if '

4 THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1890.

THE DAILYJOURNAE would have given space to the words of it would not increase the pre ono cent, to object. In tho Fifth it is reported memoirs aro less such than a work directed ories will employ thousands of workmen, the President under any circumstances, because our own shoo factories not only Mr. Cooper is having more of against King Milan. She has got the better and keep at home the SlO.000,000 to 621.000,000 that a in the contest with tier husband in so far we pay the British trust every j ear for tin SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1690. but as it was, it welcomed, nay, fairly make enough to ciowd tho market and fight than he relishes, and tho indi- as sho is at Belgrade, and intends to remain plate. there. WAaULN'tiTON mu doted on them, and only regretted that create the sharpest competition, but cations are that farmer Dunbar will end OFFICE 513 FourtcenUi most distinguished PRESIDENT HARRISON. P. 8. IIbjltii. Correspondent there were no more of the same kind. they can make them at as small cost as the career of that ambitious would-b- o Gustav Freytag, the of German , novelists, lives in the pretty For some reason the Democratic ed- they can be made in the world. If the statesman. In the Thirteenth district and Dignified Man Says Calls. town of Wiesbaden, where he occupies a A Cultivated .Who Telephone free-trad- er itorial mind fails to take this view of Anglomaniac could once Mr. Wilson will defeat Mr. Shively if broad-shoulder- ed tho KIcht Things at the Right Time. Dullness Office 238 1 Editorial Rooms...... 242 handsome villa. Ho is a tall, President Harrison's addresses. realize that the prices of all the leading all tho signs do not fail. There is, there- man of fiftv-cigh- t, with a fresh, Brooklyn Eagle (I)em.) TEIU1S OF SUBSCRIPTION. staples, like shoes, are not made in Eng- fore, a reasonable prospect that three of healthy color and fair hair. President Harrison, on his visit to tho DAILY BT 31A.IL. William Abraham, member of Parlia- West, is being received with the cordiality THE KEEP OF A CHANGE. land, and that the duty does not affect the Democrats who have been filibuster- characteristic of the American people. Tho One year, without Sundaj flioo ment for Limerick, who is coming to Amer- cn are One year, with Sunday 14 00 In no State was a change In tho legis- the prico a particle, they would learn a ing in the present House will be left at honors paid to him route suggestive ft lx Mouth a, without 6.00 ica with the Irish delegation, is said to bo not only of tho esteem entertained by his Cora-mou- s. fin montbs, with Sunday 7.00 lative branch of tho government ever valuable lesson and possibly become home nnd Republicans elected in their the handsomest man in the Houso of fellow-citize- ns for their chief magistrate Three months, without Sunday. 2.00 more better Americans than they now are. places. This seems, most too good to Ho comes of a Quaker family who but of their respect for him as a man. It Three incnths, with Sunday ; 3.50 needed than it is now in Indiana. are of remote Hebrew descent. more aggressive One month, without Sunday 1.00 They will insist duty on wheat be believed, point has been customary for his One month, with bunday U The creatures of an outrage upon the that the but all the indications Miss Caldwell, the American lady who critics to underrate the ability of the na- 25 per Delivered by carrier In city, cents week. theory of representative government, does not increase tho prico because wo that way. It can be done easily if the has a job lot of crested underwear on hand, tional executive and to allege complete loss WEIKLY. surplus, Republicans of his former popularity. While General Per year -.- .?L0O tho Democratic legislatures have ob- raise a full supply and a but will go to tho polls and vote. is in under tho vigilant care of chaperon. Harrison is not what is called a "magnetic Reduced Kates to Clubs. sequiously done the bidding of tho co-tcr- ic they will not extend the same reason- a maid and She is about thirty man," he is certainlv a cultivated, digni- agents, or Sentinel years of age, imposing in appearance, Eufcscribe with any of our numerous who devised tho gerrymander. A ing to shoes, cotton goods, nails, etc., The notes that there has rather fied and personally agreeable gentle- end subscriptions to the been no reference to partisan politics in severe in manner, and her feet are her man. Moreover, he possesses tho fac- COMPANY, change is needed in order to let the sun- with which our manufacturers crowd vanity. They are not much larger than a ulty of saying right thing at JOURNAL, NEWSPAPER ten-year-o- the President Harrison's speeches, and con- ld girl's and faultlessly shod. IjiD ixaxrolis, ixd. light of publicity into the mysterious the market. the right time. His responses to the cludes that there is nothing in the tour Lord Wolseley has written more books, greetings of his old neighbors, as he trav- Persons sending the Journal through the malls la ways of the managers of some of our were elaht-pajr- e KING magazine public ersed the State of Indiana, singularly United states should put on an paper RULE IH DEMOCRATIC COUNTIES. to justify the spaco some papers aro giv- articles and letters in his ef- the alxteen-tag-e public institutions. There is abundant felicitous. They recall his timely and SONK-CXX- T postage stamp; cn a twelve r day than any other officer of the British two-CX-n- ing it. The is thus given to to visiting delegations in paper a t postage stamp, lorelgn evidence of extravagant expenditure, Some of the State papers are doing a President fective remarks postage la usually double these rates. understand his only hope of getting army, and writes with great facility. Yet the last presidential campaign. General not for the maintenance of some of good work for the cause of political re- that it took him thirty-thre- e years to write a Harrison's candidacy, on individual All communications intended forpublication in his speeches into tho Sentinel is to give short letter giving credit to Sir Frederick-Robert- s grounds, partv. to receive attention, be ac these institutions, the luxurious form in pointing out the extravagance proved helpful to his thispaper must, in order but for ot fiag ' them a red-h- partisan color; but there for the Lncknow incident, While enlightened Democrats differ wholly tompunicd by the name and address of the writer. living of those who aro in charge of of Democratic local government in their which all histories or the Sepoy mutiny is reason to suff- rhe from his political and public viuws they them. the bills elegant furnish- respective localities. We say extrava- believe that ho is not had wrongfully attributed to "England's have no sympathy with the cheap and THE INDIANAPOLIS .JOURNAL If for iciently com- only general." nasty Ev-ansvi- anxious for the privilege to carping spirit which.seriously assails ings for the additional hospital at lle gance, but corruption would bo nearer grand- Can be found at the following places: mit such an impropriety. Lady Granby, one of the acknowledged him becausehe.isthe grandson of his 26 Boulevard should bo placed before the truth. father and the" ancestor of Baby McKee. PARIS American Exchange in Paris. beauties of London and the future Duchess Benjamin . des Capucmea. tax-payer- s, aston- Cass county is a Democratic strong- The elder Harrison was a patriot the they would Considering the manner in which the of Rutland, is described by a recent Lon- who coun- NEW YORK Gilsey House and Windsor TIoteL hold, rendered valiant service to his ish them. Carpets, Cairo squares, and has been under ring rule for Democratic ignored don letter-write- r as "this tall and willowy-shape- d try. Ilia descendant was also a brave and A. pT Kemble, 37 Lancaster State convention PHILADELPHIA high-pric- ed figure, Greek patriotic soldier, is now conscien- Smyrna rugs, reception tables, years past. Believing thai the people old soldiers, posses- with the head of a and a tho a, arenas. it indicates the terra-cott- the eyes of a startled fawn, tious and upright, even though sometimes s, there being CIIICAOO Palmer nouse. easy-chair- luxurious and costly were plundered by exces- sion of a tolerably hardened cheek on and the complexion of a tea rose, who misguided, public servant. It is well that couches, pleasure-carriage- s, etc., figure sive taxation, the Logansport Journal moves forward with a touch of disdain on the country should exhibt proper respect CINCINNATI-- J. P. nawley A Co., 154 Vine stmt the part of Candidato Gall to ask tho well-cu- conspicuously furnishing wrote to the auditor of every county in her t lips and a hanghty turn of for the occupant of its .highest adminis- LOUISVILLE C. T. Deerlng. northwest corner in the bills for votes of veterans on the ground that he the slim, statuesque throat." trative office and that partisanship should Third and j efferson streets. and maintenance. The people who pay the State for information as to tho is the Democratic son who alongside be laid aside in honor of the chief repre- of a man The wife of Speaker Reed, of sentative of the Republic. BT. LOUIS "Union News Company, Union Depot the taxes have no idea now what is be- county tax levy. As the replies have served in the Union army. The opinion her big husband, looks like a little girL and Southern Hotel. Chapter Gl of 1885, come in the rates have been published Like her she How He Emphasizes Patriotism. , D. C. Riggs House and Ebbitt hind of the laws may be safely ventured that ho wasted husband, is well endowed with -- News (InL Dem.) House. which sets apart for expenditure by tho from day to day. Up to date sixty four type-writer- 's valu-abl- o mental qualities. Mrs. Reed's maiden name his time and a lot of was Before Benjamin was $2,000 ap- counties have been heard from., Tho Susan Merrill, and she was born in Harrison President superintendent a month of tho stationery in getting up those let- Centre Harbor, Me. Her father, Rov. S. H. he was soldier and patriot. The rennion of Democratic Plan of Taxation. propriation for the Insane Hospital, for rate of taxation outside of Cass county ters. Merrill, was an eloquent minister of the General Harrison's brigade would have Editorial in Indianapo- Democratic Tlatform.. been event even 14, the use of which he shall present vouch- ranges from 23 cents to 70 cents on each Congregational Church in that section of a patriotic if its former lis Sentinel of Sept. We demand the adop- in New England. Previous to her marriage commander were the humblest American 1890. tion of a system of ers to the trustees, which these officials $100, the average being about 40 Soldiers' reunions Indiana have sho of being President of the the appraise- taught school for several terms. The citizen instead The tax on personal equalizing do filo cents. The rate in Cass county is been unusually well attended this year, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Reed is Cathe- United States. All such reunions do more property ought to be ment of real and per- not with the Stato Auditor, but merely keep wholly repealed. gonal property In this 82 12 cents. The Logansport and great interest and enthusiasm have rine, a girl of fifteen. The Reeds have one than alive recollections of the they have a right to know about them. Journal deep-root- ed The prospect is that the State, to the end that an been manifested; but, although is of the handsomest houses in Portland, and war. They are occasions when the pysteui or private prop- equal and proper uni- Now that their attention has been called says that Cass county has the highest there at Washington they live at the Snorebam. and exbaustless patriotism of the erty In land will remain formity In such assess- suspicious Legislature tax levy of any county in the State, and nothing to prohibit expression of polit- Marshal MacMaiion is on his estate, American people finds spontaneous expres- as it is. forborne irenera- - ments ahall be secured, to that act of the sion. They are oases in the rush of com- ical gath- much-discusse- d tlons, at Ieat,but that all for the reason that un- "of 1885 was enacted that, while .many counties have free j sentiment at these regimental La Forest, completing his mercial advancement when patriotic regulations they suspect that it the taxes at least for state der existing gravel court-hous- es erings, careful attention to tho echoes memoirs. The memoirs begin with the spirit, which is ever smoldering, is kindled (ex- com- to conceal transactions which would roads and fine to and local purposes many counties are it to eye. They object-lesso- ns de- fails to disclose single ono siege of Algiers, and include records of the afresh the public are cept such as may be pelled to pay an unjust tax-paye- rs gen- show for their taxes, Cass county has that a of salo of proportion of the State's not do for tho and the author's experiences in the Crimean war, to the host of American youth, rived from the : , them was of Democratic proclivities. franchises) will, In the erenses, which others eral public to see. There is imperative only a Democratic ring. . the Italian war, the war of 1670 and in the which is daily preparing to take up near luture, be laid up- as unjustly escape. The Columbus Republican publishes residential chair. A few ot Marshal Mac-laho- u's the role of defenders of the Republic when long probe bo-cau- se, on land. need for the use of a that TnE New York Sun is alarmed ? most intimate friends have en- the active present generation shall have facte from official records td show7 relinquished isj sin- shall touch the bottom of all these trans- the on the first day of registration, joyed the privilege of listening to his read- it. It an occasion of the rapid increase in expense local" ing of many of the latest pages of his book. cere congratulation that President Harri- It begins to look like the Republican actions of boards composed largely of the of the heavy Democratic wards show a fall- - son in his various Galesburgaddresses took government Democratic', rule," For the rest of the curious world tho Mar- year of 1888. men who have no fitness for the discharge under 1,700 shal made no provision. Only occasion t6 emphasize this patriotic senti- ring off of compared with last year. has six well-time- The county, taxes increased froiri $27,- - copies of the memoirs will be printed one ment. His words to the students were d of tho duties of the positions which up-tow- All over the country tho Republican while the Republican and n wards each for his four children, one for himself and admirably appreciative of the 838 in 1888 to $33,078 in . 1889, and to $45,- - J they have obtained by persistent wire- show gain 6,000. Everything indi- one wife. significance of the occasion. The hope of party is Bhowinjr its old vitality. in-- a of and for his anti-Democra- tic 405 in 1890. township taxes country lies in inculcation of a Legis- The ! full-blow- this the pulling? If an cates a n Republican year. Andrew Carnegie is reported to be the from $73,482 1887 broad and enlightened patriotism in the Harrison still appears to bo all right, lature should bo elected, these mysteri- creased in to $5,446 in richest Scotchman in the world, with an in- minds of the young. The bulwark of Amer- and Kansas is evidently in the same ous matters could be investigated. If 1888, to $84,524 in 1889, and to $107,917 in ' Having 6hown that the duties on come bigger than that of any of his aristo- ica'! greatness is her schools and colleges. ' 1890. The rate of taxation shows Thf;S3 latter must necessarily breathe the condition. not, they will, not only continue to be crockery are tho same under the present cratic countrymen, who, while enjoying spim of an exalted patriotism so long as mysterious, but, emboldened by the as- steady increase in every township from v as in the old tariil', and that they are 5 the domainsand palaces that come to them th j present generation adheres with fidel- Democratic gerrymanderers in by inheritance, are apt to be hard uo at ity co The surance a second gerrymander will year to year. Tho rate of taxation ,per cent, lower now than under tho old times. Mr. Carnegie freely of the its manifest duty in preserving for Ohio begin to realize mistake they that talks all time an American education to coming; the insure Democratic legislatures for a in the city of Columbus, fcor alio law, what fresh falsehood will tho Brit- - days of his poverty in Scotland and in this generations. mado last winter. It is a Republican purposes, country, and tells how happy he was when trusteeships bo increased from $lil on , ish organs hereabout present to deceive -- year. decade longer, these will nble to earn as high wages as The President's Speeches. tax-eater- 1888 1890, Globe-Democr- at crowded s. Furthermore, each $100 in to $2.17 itf the people? gl a week in Fittsburg. He recounts Bt. Louis with his struggles first day's registration in the city the whole system of the management of The county taxes levied by the Board 'oV from that time till he The Country will not fail to appreciate The Button, button, who's got the but became wealthy. He is not afraid to scarify the good taste and good sense of President of Brooklyn was 52,000, against 80,000 the penal and charitable institutions of Commissioners for tho city of Columbus those of his fellow-millionari- es who are Not free-trad- o editors, Harrinon in avoiding the discussion of for the last three years aro as followss ton? the cer mean with their money, and a short .time holiday speeches. last year, indicating that it is a Repub- the State needs revision. There are too ago went so as to say print party questions in his 1888. $12,250.11; 1889, $15,399.91; 1890' tainly. To judge by their lamentations, far in "that the lican year. many boards made up of small men who there isn't a button belonging to tho lot, man who dies rich dies disgraced." Louisville CommerciaL re- $22,000.50. In view of this alarming in?, William K. and Cornelius Vanderbilt are The President's speeches yesterday have no adequate appreciation of the and no money, to buy one. And all on President Harrison has not lost his knack sponsibilities of tho positions they oc- crease in taxation the Republican 'puts it ; both slim, tall and athletic men. Their of makiug appropriate and pointed littlo still demonstrated the ' account of the McKinley bill. speeches. He knows how to say right further fact that cupy. should replaced by ono squarely to tho people if a changerjs not faces are ruddy with the hue of health, their the ho is without a superior in saying the These be things well and how to leave out tho county fortune-in-the-old-count- eyes are clear, and they are quick and rath- or two boards made up of men of both desirable. Bartholomew is a The absurdity of the usual ry wrong and untimely things as well as any right thing at tho right time.' er nervous in their movements. Both look public man of our day. parties, selected for their high character Democratic stronghold. ..'i: story was aptly illustrated like Englishmen, and no one seems to know and business capacity, the appointment Another Democratic stronghold is yesterday by a press dispatch from Tren- exactly their ages. Probably neither of Mnrat Halstead, in Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. The Republican candidates in this forty-fiv- e. Johnson county, and peoplo ton. N. J., about certain heirs of a Mr. them 's beyond Cornelius has of President Harrison county are doing good service. As ex- of which should be vested in the execu- the .thoro two fads which he pursues with indefati- The tour has been ring-ridde- a surprise to Democracy. They had n James Wood who died in England "worth Sunday-scho- ol the ef- of government, as is are as as they are in Cass or gable ardor. One is work, cellent nominees they deserve the tive .branch the it '$80,000,000." ricked up the notion that the President well-regulat- This is the first ever heard of and the other is dancing. hen the head in every other ed State. Bartholomew. The Franklin Republicap acked all the elements of popularity. It fective assistance of every. Republican. JVIr. James Wood, in country, his of the house of tho Vanderbilts dances he Again," legislative ' prints a transcript from the olficlal feq-- this but goes keeps. nothing seems that the country is quite alive to a change in tho "name is not contained in a fairly authentio in for There is of the the fact that General Harrison is an able, Every tax-pay- er and every man who branch of Indiana is needed in order that ords, showing that in four years the late languorous, lazy and sullen movements of dignified and energetic chief magistrate list of Englishmen worth $15,000,009 and Carinencifa in his gyrations, but the vigor and a gentleman even if be cannot please earns a living in Indiana, if he consults Democratic county auditor collected school-bo- y. the State may have a new system over. The Duke of Westminster, far and and activity of. a romping all the great Senators and gloomy Repre- his own interests as he does in business of taxation suited to the changed con- from the county of legitimate salary and away the richest Englishman living, is only William K. loves the single glass and polo. sentatives with bis appointments. fees handsome sura of $9,701j2d; If the truth must be told he is a very bad matters, will vote for the Republican ditions. The present system belongs to the of worth between 8T5.0CO,000 and $80,000,000. polo player, and has been for two years, candidates to the Legislature. , the period before the advent of railroads, illegal salary and fees, the sumj of, lie is a trifle too heavy for an ideal polo True to Its Tradition, $6,028.14, Indianapolis congratulates Terro Haute player, and he began late in life. Kansas Cltv FUr. and when the farmer used the grain-crad- le and doubtful or extortionate Ex-Preside- Major opened nt Hayes denies that, in $2,92(173. over the distinction it has won through the McKinley the campaign in sickle. All progressive fees and charges, the sum of his congressional yesterday atMill-ersbur- g, or States breaking of the records on its race-trac- k; FOR A SECOND district an interview or elsewhere, he has con- TERM. Mili-ersbn- rg have made radical changes in their In addition to this grand tola O. Holmes county, of which and the congratulations are not the less is the county-sea- t, became distin- demned tho new tariff law as the worst raising revenue, they $19,250.07 he collected thousands of Repub- methods of but sincere that they are accompanied by the An Eastern Paper Says President Harrison guished during the war by organizing a thing for the country and the rep- dollars of cash fees from individuals miniature rebellion to resist the draft. The have had Republican legislatures, regret that Indianapolis enterprise let its Will Be a Candidate for Renomination. lican party that could be devised. and townships. This man held thcofficg" slip time was when it was not a very healthy resenting the progressive spirit of the opportunity to secure for itself the place for Republican stump-speake- r. Of two single-ta- times. Under tho superannuated sys- of auditor terms. ProbablyuXsideii track on which those great races were run. course that is all changed now, but the TnE editor of Henry George's x Washington Special to Philadelphia Inquirer. "beastly" Democratic majority running in debt, of office he could not make $2,00 a year A story special which it organ, tho .Standard, has been nom- tem the State is and We note with pain and regret the admis-sion-of printed as a to a Philadel- always rolls up shows no signs of disinte- With the people to pluck and plunder hov inated for Congress by the County De- successive Democratic legislatures have the word "pants," meaning trousers, phia paper has been repeated by journals gration, jfi pockets a clean $5,000 a year. Yet a1 equally on na- mocracy in one of the Now York city confessed their inability to cope with to the editorial columns of the Evening in arrears the situation in femocratlo Consistency. the end of his second term a Democratico' tional politics. John Elam, formerly of In- districts. Tho Sentinel may take cour- the question by letting things drift from News. Can it be that much dallying with Journal. bad to worse., If they have any policy board of County Commissioners AilOp tied the sednctive and profitable, but not ele- dianapolis, and now of Tacoma, Wash., is always thus. The Democratic orator age. (18S3-S- It also formerly S) of iron-heele- d it is to further burden tho real estate of resolutions declaring that he lmcl.Vdisj gant, clothing-stor- e "ad" is injuring the the law firm of will tell you that every time an now look out from style! Benjamin Harrison, William Henry Harri- government places a tariff on any American And for a wail the the State by imposing a higher valua- charged his duties with .fidelity, tjio editor's literary product, it adds that much to the price that pearl-butto- son Miller John B. Elam, is quoted n politicians over tho out- public and satisfaction to thebonra," and as the poor consumer has to pay for the goods. tion, and thus drifting to a tax imposed Nothing can be more delightful than authority tor tho statement tho Presi- rage upon the American workingman of and expressing the hope that "iibivhat-eve- r that But when the producer is a farmer, then chiefly or wholly upon farms and homes. autumn in tho country, and nothing can dent will not be a candidate for renomina- the 6ame csza of orators will immediately imposing; a tariff on dead frogs. Mr. path his may cast, ho may i It is an urgent necessity that this con- future be be more distressing than autumn in the tion. This piece of information, from a inform you that the tariff adds nothing "William McKinley really ought to have bo successful, happy and prosperbu$." people permitted whatever to the price of anything. They imbecility Democratic legis- city where are to burn s, fessed of source over four thousand miles distant, uto a fnnny set of doublo-actin-g jaw-smith- been more considerate. latures be ended by tho election of a It is safe to say that he will ncvqraitf leaves and poison the atmosphere with and fully twelve months behind the times, those Democratic tariff' orators. Republican Legislature, which will un- be as successful, happy and prosperous stifling smoke at their own sweet will. may be satisfactory and fully up to the de- The Democratic row which Governor "Fellow-Democrats- ." tho as he was while pulling $5,000 a year out gree of enterprise and information of the Should Have Said Campbell has stirred up in Ohio is tho dertake to meet the demands of Stories about Rube Burrows are in order. journal referred to, but the Inquirer stated Chicago MaiL of the people of Johnson county. ... . most stupendous thing of the kind that times by adopting a modern system of The latest is to his credit. It is said that a week before on better authority, direct Governor Campbell, of Ohio, has been taxation, such as other progressive Theso exposures are samples of what ho had a chance to become a lawyer, but from the executiue mansion, that tho upon the stump continually for several vras ever seen in this country. What- ' President will be a candidate for nomina- enjoy, thoy is going on throughout tho State, and refused. weeks. The other day he was requested to ever is the outcome, it will help the Re- States and through which tion and that Secretary Blaine will have deliver a short address to the prisoners iu now out of debt and aro able to re- the half is not told. The people ofjn newest little girl's doll is In the shape charge of his campaigu, with a residuary Columbus penitentiary tho regu- publicans in the pending campaign; are The of interest in the convention. The announce- the after of taxation. ' The pres- diana aro being bled at every pore to a Little Lord Fauntleroy PhUadelphia Times. lar church services, and astonished the duce their rate ment was made to Major McKinley, and large audience by prefacing his remarks Newest girls no use He-tmblic- sustain Democratic ring rule. They little have for dolls. was subject among au If tho State authorities in various ent inadequate system, if it can be called a of conference the with the stereotyped "Fellow-citizen- s, I have been for years past. leaders of the House, including am very glad to see bo many of you to- parts of the country would only enforce such, is sinking the State deeper and Then and Now. Speaker Reed, Joe Cannon and others. here I day." tho penal statutes existing in almost deeper in debt every year. There must action of the Democratic! Stato Watts It was Ben Franklin, wasn't it, who The politicians here, before the red every The wished he could be sealed up for a hundred mile distant press au- WBgei StiU Going Up. State against lotteries with half be a change some time to avoid disaster. 1 committee in indorsing tho resolution of years and then revived I thority was consulted, had fully discussed . the zeal the federal officials show, There can be no better time to make it the subject. came appointment Commercial Bulletin. that the Indiana Service Pension Association Potts B'lieve it was. I'm sure It was no mod- Then the An important item from the Iron district, there would be a sudden cud to Nov. 4, 1890. of Collector Dow, against the personal re- the bus than is too ridiculous to deceive any one. ern statesman. 'If one of them were shut up for quest of Speaker Reed, and the veto of sever- this week, is to the etlect that the wages of iness. one hundred hours he'd bo beyond reviving. in Speaker was interested, the 1,500 employes in Carnegie, Phipps fc When the Democratic State convention al bills which the Co.'s big Homestead mill, Pittsburg, THE DUPLICITY OFPRJE-TBAD- E ORGANS. upon the iQluence of Secretary Blaine act- at If the Democratic managers in this met the service pension project was as A Lone Look Ahead. ing in support of Senators Hale and Frye. have been advanced 5.13 per cent. This Tho Indianapolis News, which appears Wickars I've got a scrap-boo- k here that will vigorous advance, coming so soon after the passage State could bo mado to realize that the much before the public as it was a week This coincidence of events and the McKinley signifi- to undertaken to mislead the pub- be worth big money ten years from now. expression of opinion by Speaker Reed upon of the bill, is certainly Union veteran is not a fool, they would have later, when tho Republican convention President's course in congratulating cant, and shows that the tariff has some- lic in regard to the new tariil law, prints Vicirars What's in it! Biographical sketches? the thing to do with the wages after all. ceaso their ridiculous attempts to make met and approved it. The Democratic Wickars No; census jokes. I'll bo the first him upon his indorsement before the people tho following, with other gossip calcu- on resolutions consumed much and turning him down on the eve of his re- him believe that a Democratic Congress, committee man in the market in 1900. turn to his constituents in reference "to the "Would Create a Sensation. tes, lated to deceive the people regarding space in presenting controlled by would time and the views Over a Rocky Road. wishes of his personal enemy." which was Albany Journal. over pass any the new law: of the party. It took up the subject of also first announced in tho . Inquirer and It has leaked out that the Hon. Grover sort of a liberal pension Jimsley It must be awfully aggravating to which tho Speaker would not deny even at Charley Mordougb says that the leading pensions, took care not to some thought you Cleveland is contemplating a trip to the bill. stores ofChicago have increased tho cost but indorse you to have can't express. the personal request of the said journals, West. It appears that he is to visit the of their goods, and cites, as an instance, the service pension idea. The com -- Stammering Simsley I expressed a served to convince the inside manipulators Ottumwa Coal Palace in the wake of Presi- It is possible that Governor Boies, of that Marshall Field & Co. added 50 cents did not intend to do so, and tho thought in m-in-m- y life. The b-b-est I can do is ot political movements that hot only were dent Harrison, and a strong effort will be mitteo roported by Major McKinley, free-trad- , in his speech welcoming Presi- to the cost of heavy shoes that aro bought to nd 'em by freight. tho facts made to induce him to make a few e the convention did not indorse any such John B. Elam, of Tacoma, Wash., in the re- hoped dent, gave away whole in large numbers by workingmen. Shoes speeches. It is that he will the calamity that sold for 81 were marked up to $1.50. project. Now, the Democratic party of C.no Good Feature. mote northwestern angle of the national also unburden his mind of a few thoughts side-show- contrary notwithstanding, campaign when ho declared that his consulting "Did you take in the !" domain, to the on the silver question, in which his party Without the law to note Indiana has not made Mr. Jcwett chair- fully sustained, but that from this time is so actively interested. State is prosperous. And President Har- changes regarding "Yep. It was a fraud. Except the tattooed forth it will be a race between Harrison, tho in the tariff man of the State committee to revise its man. He was a marked success." rison, lest it might be forgotten, called and Blaine, and Reed, and McKinley for tho American Tin. leather and shoes, the News prints the platform, and consequently his bungling highest prize in the gift of the Republican attention to this remark of the Demo- above, which will lead its readers to as- approval of the resolution of the Service convention in ISttt. Nebraska Journal. ABOUT PEOPLE AND THINGS. statement Black Hills cratic Governor. sume that the duty on shoes has been Pension Association is not a part of the It is universally conceded that General As to the that the promieed Harrison has made an excellent President tin is not of a good quality some eminent Mr. Gladstone has to dilate on first-cla- ss The Atlanta Constitution is tho first greatly increased. That the extent of party platform. But, more than all, and a administration. He has scientists who have tested it say that it is offending in may man who can the labor question when he visits West the support of tho people, and with careful as good as any produced on the globe. And newspaper of any influence in tho South- tho News's this matter there is not a make any Calder in Scotland. tho scientists and the Democratio intelligence management in the next eighteen months between ern iron region to come out against tho bo understood, tho text of the old and pretense to who does not The friends of Mr. Alfred Wilkinson he may gather about him a formidable body editors it is not bard to decide, when there of ardent supporters. One of the politicians is a question of veracity involved. protective policy. Though all of them tho new provisions of tho tariff relative know that the controlling element of the deny the reports that his engagement with and shoes are given: party in Congress is Miss Winnie Davis is broken. named, when the lirst tidings of the Pres- support tho free-trad- e idea.by support- to boots Democratic bitterly idents willingness to accept a renomination Tltia la Net. of 1883: All manufactures of !c ither, legislation. Frank Stockton, the novelist, lives in a re- Boston Herald. ing the Democratic party, it is tho first Act hostilo to any liberal pension was communicated to the House leaders, or of which leather shall bo a component Do not assume that all the people of roomy house . at Madison, N. J. He is a marked: "The President will have two dif- Senator Vonrhees opened the Democratio to declare flatly against tho new-bor- n part. SO per cent, ad valorem. methodical man in, his literary work, de- ficulties to overcome; first, the antagonisms campaign with a speech at Indianapolis ': e Southern industries. Act of 1890: Boots and shoes made of Indiana are fools. voting the early part of each day to his which the support of Mr. Blaiue will Monday night. We thought wo heard leather, 35 per cent, ad valorem. writing. arouse, and the opposition of disgruntled from that direction at the time. That is, the duty under tho new law is There is no doubt that tho Demo- The Emperor, of Austria has subscribed politicians." The authoritative announce- If the penalty for lying should bo the ment in the Inquirer was a surprise to the Inference. 5 per cent, less than under the law which cratic managers in tho First, Second, upward of $500,000 toward tho various The Natural same as Ananias and his wife suffered, leaders. Since then the friends of the Presi- Philadelphia Prt . been in force fduco 1883. This is a Fourth, Fifth, Eighth and Thirteenth funds which have been raised for the relief dent have not disguised their purposes. body of tho Democrats a very large grave-yar- d would be needed has by floods in Asasmall of South of the suil'erers the late his The present outing among tho veterans nnd call themselves "straight-out- " free-trad- sample of tho .misrepresentation of the congressional districts are very much $400,-(0- 0. Carolina it for those o and independent dominions. His brothers have given volunteers, and people of the West, will bo is to be inferred that the bulk of the party editors who are lying new News and other free-trad- e papers which frightened at the outlook. In all of followed by other trips, notably a visit to in that State is crooked. about the M. the Pacific coast in the spring. law, young have set out to discredit tho present theso districts, except tho Eighth, tho Clemenceau, the French Radical tariff and the men whose leader, has cleared himself of the suspicion A Chance for Hook Agents. They to bo candidatoiJ 'confronted Tin-Pla- duty it should bo to carry them out tariff. eeeni determined to Democratic by te Question In a Nutshell. people of sympathy with Bonlanger. He is a Philadelphia Press. would find the undertaking business deceive the by printing misrepre- contestants who have received the nomi- cousin of the ' General, but saw through Toledo Blade. Now is the chance for enterprising book sentations. It may be true that the Chi- nations of tho Republicans and Farmers' hira earl3T in his career. The McKinley bill raises the duty on tin-pla- te agents who have encyclopedias to selL Ex-Presid- ent mighty lively. 2i-Y1- 1 0 Cleveland is on CO from cent a pound to going West cago dealers have marked up . shoes Alliance, and in the Eighth ic is quite Baron Hirscii, the latest favorite of the cents a pound, but the now duty on this speaking tour. Democratic organs are not printing per cent., but if thoy have, it is not duo generally conceded that Mr. Mount;" the Prince of Wales, is a Bavarian Jew. The one article does not go into etlect until President Harrison's speeches. to tho tarifl, as will be seen by the abovo Republican candidate, will defeat Mr. French, who rather liked him, and have July 1,1801. And the law contains also a Would ltenefit Editors Greatly. Their always thought him an Austrian, will provision that, on and after Oct. 1. 1S97, Waahinctoa T out. course in tho matter dill era from that of quotations from tho old and new tariff Iirookshire. In the First district Mr. withdraw their good will when they liud tin-pla- te shall be admitted free of duty if tieuator Plumb's idea of providing inter- Republican papers when President laws. Hides have advanced of late, but Parrctt did not receive a plurality ho is a German. wo aro not by that time producing at preters for the now tariff law was not such least one-thir- d of the amount of tin we im- a bad one alter all. fellow-citizen- s. Queen isengagod in writing I Cleveland addressed his hides are now on the free list, as they of tho actual votes in 18S8. If five Natalie her port. This gives six years in which to es- The Journal, for instance, invariably have been for years. And it may bo hundred farmers in the Fourth dis- memoirs, which are nearly completed. As tablish a new industry: and thoe who are Synonym for Jtlght. she is only thirty years of age, her personal in a position to know, declare that it will Hartford Courant. printed that gentleman's speeches in added that if the duty on common shoes trict vote for their nominee, Mr. experiences do not reach very far back, and be long established before that time. The Wt.at's the matter with Idaho? She's ail fulL Tho Journal is a newspaper, and chould bo mado 100 per cent, ad valorem Holniaa will not bo in tho next House it will most likely be found. that her result will be that tho tin mines and fact- - Repcblic&u.