McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Jul 1891, p. 3

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TO CORRESPONDENTS. W i lor thia papM rtiorid b« mw ikvUwaoMo< UM •nhor;B«taMMfflrta , bat h as MtdaoM af food Mth ontho fact WrtU cmljr on on* aid* o# tte p*p«c- Bo r --tt-rtnr niin irifi *~ *"~ tfc* Mstan and fi«wM plain tad dMinat. „ 'Jk MAS will trait ten year* t-> got even; ' 1 woman will forget tliat you offended . tor in tea minutes. , You will justify any man in his opinion that you haven't much sense if you refuse to take bU advice. "WOMEN are very forgiving. When the meanest man in the world dies, his wife will have it said on his tombstone that he was "a loving husband." A MAN regrets more on a hot day that his ancestors sinned, than at any other tiixie. An apparel of fig leaves would make life so'much more endurable. • DR. HIXCKLE, of Americas. Ga., Ins piece of chinaware 782 years old. The date, 1109, is plainly stamped on the bottom, and itaonly flaw is a broken «handle.g£ WITHIN three days forty Bponge ves- ids arrived at Key West with large Catches of fine sponges, but there was not a buyer in the market. Their oar- were valued at $80,000. difficulty. Large bodies of hud-work­ ing men who rely on the false prestige of one professional agitator for en­ couragement in a strike do not get much satisfaction thereby. When professional agitators are made to work for their giving there will be fewer strikes. Wax is it assumed on all hands that the proposition to make young ladies ohurch ushers necessarily carries with it the idea that the young ladies designated to act in that capacity shall be pretty ones ? Is the plain church-go­ ing girl to be discriminated against? It is not fair. Some of the homeliest men on earth are acting as ushers in churohes and are fillingthe position with entire acceptance. Let no girl be passed over or neglected because she may not be as handsome as some others. Suoh discrimination would be contrary to the spirit of the age and the principles of the Declaration of Independence, not to mention the Civil Bights Bill MA the Inter-State Commerce Law. A WOMAN was recently summoned as • Juror in St. Louis. She took the •matter philosophically and attended •court, only to receive the apologies of all concerned in the blunder. WHEN a woman raises a family of children and her mind becomes weak from the trouble they give her, the children pronounce her crazy, and hurry her off to the insane asylum. ' THERE is more true human Bignifi- <cacce in the wedding of Elaine Good- ale, cultured Anglo-Saxon, and Charles Alexander Eastman, cultured Sioux, than in the unjpn of any couple cf the elect YOUR friends may think lots of you, <t>nt unless the bill for burying you is presented while they are still crying, they will refuse to pay it. Undertak­ ers' bills are said to be the hardest bills on earth to collect. "No, SIR," said the man with the <lyed whiskers, "I never go beat-riding Sunday. If I want any Sunday amuse­ ment I g$ to the parks. One may be just bad as the other, but if the Lord wants to punish me for Satbbath breaking he can't get at me half as easy on land as he can if I'm in a sail-boat." MANY a young girl will weep over the imaginary trials of a heroine in a novel, who is too utterly unacquainted 'With the human nature and life ex­ periences of those around heV to ob­ serve that many a romance more strange than fiction is being enacted in the lives of her nearest and dearest friends. IT IS NOT A ROBBER. THE ASSERTION TRADERS 18 OF FRB?- FALSE. AFTER a man has passed 40, ha be- .gins to "break" somewhere. If his health has been perfect before, at that *$£e some little trouble will develop that •will cause him trouble the rest of his life. You will seldom see-anaan who 9tas reached 50 without having received warning In what shape his i death will •come. . c , SEVERAL Italian peanat men P Phila­ delphia run their roasters with elec­ tricity and may therefore be held tpAje <he most enterprising citizens of Penn­ sylvania's Sleeping Hollow. Perhaps tor the sake of the life they impart to the old town Philadelphia might do the Vest of the country a favor as well as iterself by absorbing the present tide of Italian immigration. BY a recent Colorado law a man who is caught carrying concealed weapons *nvwhere in the State is liable to be iflned fifty dollars or to be jailed for thirty days, and what is more, if an officer, when notified, fails to search a person carrying such forbidden arms, the officer is liable to be fined <two hun­ dred and fifty dollars, one-half of which shall go to the informant, and one-half to the school f and of the district. THE good and brilliant Dr. Talmage is a severe critio of modern religion. In a sermon he said: "I must eonfess that a great deal of the religion of this day is utterly insipid. Who wants a reli­ gion woven out of the shadows of the night? We want more cinnamon and less gristle. Why go growling on your •way to the celestial enthronement? Come out of that cave and sit down in the warm light of the sun of righteous­ ness." ' , THE two bicyclers who exhibited the red lights op their machines before a fast express train on the Bound Brook road, as a practical joke, richly deserve A sound whipping on the bared back. "There are many men in the world who •have no wit, no readiness of speech, no •culture, and endeavor to supply the place of all these by the stupid and in­ sulting practical joke, but it is not often that they go to such extremes as did these persons. , WALT WHITMAN gets even in a droll •way with various American publishers who do not always think him the poet he may really be. In his forthcoming -volume, entitled "Good-bye, My Fancy," (he mentioned certain pieces that were rejected. For instance, "Eidolons" was «ent back by Doctor Holland of Scrib- iner's Magazine, with "a lengthy, very insulting, and contemptuous letter." "To the Sunset Breeze" was rejected by Harper's as being an "improvisation" only, and "On Ye Jocund Twain" was returned by the Century as "personal merely." IT is gratifying to hear of one man in this money-getting world who is so sat­ isfied with his accumulations that he is about to retire permanently from busi­ ness. Men are given to saying that when they acquire a specified amount of wealth they will give up the pursuit of money and devote themselves to the enjoyment of what they possess. As a matter of fact, when they do attain the limit of their early desires, the limit is commonly found to have enlarged; they want more, and are only contented in the effort to make more. It will be in­ teresting to note what millionaire Bloom, of Chicago, undertakes to do with his leisure and his surplus. Un­ less he is unlike most men of great wealth he has not cultivated a liking for occupations apart from business, and time may hang so heavy on his hands that he will return to his broker's office in self-defense. , Such things have been known. POLICE MAGISTRATE ORIPP, of Pitts­ burgh, recently had % wife-beater before him and was so moved by the testimony against the brute that he declared a whipping-post should be at once estab­ lished for all wife-beaters. V Police. Magistrate Gripp was right ahd his suggestion will meet with the general sympathy of all decent men. There is nothing that would appeal more power­ fully and effectively to these sooundrelly wretches than punishment in kind, and nothing that would be more likely to save defenseless women from their cruelty than the ,prospect of a sound flogging. This method of punishment also has the advantage of being ade­ quate, for either fine or imprisonment tends to deprive the wife and children of support The whipping-post is used in Maryland and Delaware for this class of brutes and it has been found to work admirably as a deterreut of wife-beating. The infliction of the flogging is left at the discretion of the judges, who do not usually order it for a first offense unless the cases are very barbarous. The mere promise of the lash is sufficient to prevent a repetition of it, THERE are signs that our oonntry is awakening to a sense of its position among the manufacturing nations as first in activity, wealth, and population. It is beginniog to recognize that the 1,300,000,000 people outside its own boundaries represent a vast potential commerce, and that 1,000,000,000 of them live in non-manufacturing coun­ tries. The nations of Europe have been struggling for this trade, fully aware of the enormous value of the commerce which has built up the wealth of England, but they have been handi­ capped and unable to make a winning fight against that powerful and astute adversary. There are many evidencs that we are about to enter this field of peaceful combat. What are the ele­ ments of strength that make victory probable? The vividly energetic char­ acter of the people, educated in activity by a commerce unobstructed over a continental area, gives promise of a momentum hard to resist. The Ameri­ can celerity of thought and tendency to prompt action, the spontaneous ingenu­ ity in adapting means to ends, in seiz­ ing every new discovery and elaborating it for the uses of man with bewildering swiftness, all make for continuous and rapid progress. The recent expansion of the uses of electricity is a striking example of thifc Potentially every American is an inventor, always search­ ing for a better way. THE London busmen, immediately after going on a strike, rent for John j given three sons Burns, the notorious agitator, to head their movement. Burns proved any­ thing but a Moses. He could give them no help financial or otherwise, and managed to get himself arrested by the police as the easiest way oat of the ••Unci* Sam." Here is a sketch of the origin of the term "Uncle Sam" as applied to our government ? Farmer's "Americanisms, Old and New," and Bartlett's "Dictionary of Americanisms" give this origin of the term, crediting it to Frost's "Naval History of the United States:" Just after the last declaration of war with England, Elbert Anderson, a con­ tractor At New York, went to Troy, where provisions, beef, pork, eta, were concentrated. He purchased a quantity. The inspectors of these articles were Ebenezer and Samuel Wilson, the latter known as "Uncle Sam." They em­ ployed a number of workmen, and one of them marked the cask of goods bought by Anderson, "E. A.--U. S." When asked what it meant, he replied he did not know unless it stood for "Elbert Anderson and Uncle Sam," re­ ferring to Wilson. The letters U. S. for United States were at that time al­ most unknown to them. The joke took, and later when some of these same workmen went to the frontier to meet the enemy and get some of the provisions they he«>ed store, it followed them and was soon recognized in every part of the country. Origin of the Bedoutna. The following legend accounts for the origin of the Bedouins: To Adam were a farmer, a hunter, and a Badawi. To the latter, for his livelihood, Adam gave a camel. The Badawi came to Adam and said: "My camel is dead. ^ hat shall I do nov for a living?" To whom Adam said: I "Go thv way. and live off what thou i canst filch from thy brethren." How tli* Tariff Bansflti lha Fiurmor--Bo- pabUcMU Should Cot to Work--Waco* la tha United States--Short Political Goaalp--Tar.fl Pictures. The free traders and revenue reform­ ers assert that ihe tariff is a "robbery." Can it be a "robbery" of any one to seure to the people of this country the opportunity to supply our national wants by the hands of our own countrymt-n? That is ail that the highest conceivable tariff can secure. In times of armed conflict our citizens are retired to leave their homes and families to take up arms, and at the risk of their lives defend the country against armed invasion. Why should not the country in time of peace protect the la­ bor of those men from an industrial invasion no les« destructive? If the tariff be a "robbery," it is first to be observed that ail classes of the people, the rebbed as we.l as the rob­ bing. are better fed, better clothed and better housed than the people of any other country in the wor'd. That is the crucial test of economical politics. It is undeniabie that the most perfect suiting of occupations to the various aptitudes of all the members of the com­ munity will be produced by the carrying on of the largest variety of industries. Is it not then the duty o* a < ountry to maintain such in iustrial policy as will secure the greatest possible extent and variety of production, leaving to the natural competition between individuals the function of preventing undue profits on the part of any? There are -J3,000,000 of active workers in this country. Among that larga number the contests and tompetition of those engaged in the same business may be relied on to adjust prices so that none can ma ice a profit greater than the average profits of the community. But let us see who her there is any robbery effected by a tariff. As to such portion of the money col­ lected as is paid to the Government, that goes into the public Treasury and aids in defraying the expenses of the nation. Inasmuch as all the people share in it9 benefits, that portion cannot be con­ sidered "robbery." It will hardly do to assert that the foreign manufacturer is "robbed" by our requiring him to deposit in our Treasury a sum of money In the nature of a license fee for the privilege of selling his wares in this country. The "rob" therefore must consist of the difference between a reasonable price and the price now charged by the manufacturer. If such difference exists, it must constitute a margin so ample as to bocome a strong incentive to the i eo- ple of any section claiming to be robbed by it to organize for themselves compet­ ing establishments, and thus wholly pro­ tect theinsolves against the exact on of the robber. The tariff protects them against the foreigner, and all that is needed to protect them against the na­ tive robber is for themselves to do the work--to produco the article. Why do they not produce it? If they have not the skill they can employ it. Thero is ample skill in thia country ready to go wherever sufficient inducement is of­ fered. \fa(tl in the United States. There is no reason whatever why every man in the United States should not be willing to pav such rates of wages and such prices of commodities as shall naturally result from the free and unre­ stricted competition of all our own people. When trade between a people is per­ fectly free, as In this country, there cannot, on the average and in the long run, be higher wages paid to those em­ ployed in one Industry than to those in another. Wherever any one industry gives indication that the compensation paid to those engaged in it is on tho average greater than the compensation paid in other occupations, the industry paying the higher compensation is in­ vaded by men from the occupations paying less, and tnus wages constantly tend to an equalization. This invasion may continue to a point at which, by the overstocking of the labor market in the favored industry, wages may finally de­ cline to a point lower than the average rates prevailing in other industries. Under the Democratic policy, if wages fall in Europe our industries stand in danger of destruction. On the other hand, while professing to be the special friend of the workin?man, the Demo­ cratic party would set on foot a policy which would render impossible any in­ crease in tho wages of our own people. It is sometimes charged as a reproach against the protective policy that iu Some special protected industry wages tend to a minimum. Where this occurs it is an unerring indication of the vicious distribution of industries, and one of the most distressing consequences of thoir maladjustment. The remedy indicated is, not a reduction of the tariff, but a wider diversification and distribution of industries, so that all persons who want employment may not be compelled to seek it in the same o cupation. It is obvious that if industries be relatively few, with large numbers of men seeking employment, those men must distribute themselves as best they may, and without intelligent adjust­ ment, among the few industries in oper­ ation. If a larger number enter into any special pursuit than aro needed to meet the demands of production in that pursuit, wages will inevitably decline. The function of a protective tariff, car­ ried to its farthest limit, is to obviate the necessity tor this. Its tendoncy is to encourage the establishment of a variety of industries and so to increase opportunities for employment, not in one or two but in a great diversity of occupations. the fact of assisted passaee as a matter of course. The tickets to the United States are given out with the soup, shoes, and clothes, and the paupers are sent over here to be dumped on our shores, to throng the ranks of peddlers that are already a suHcient nuisance, and sometimes a positive peril in our streets, and to help to bring down the' wages of American workmen.--Msw York Press. Iowa Rei>nblle«ns and Reciprocity. When Attorney General Stone, of Iowa, was addressing the Republican ], £tate convention, of which he was chair­ man, the remark* which were followed by continued and general applause were these: "There is but one reciprocity, and James G. Blaine is its prophet. | Tre­ mendous applause. | When he first an­ nounced this gospel the Democratic party, under the spur of the moment, thought it saw free trade standing in a moro dazzling light than over before But when the spoil was broken reciproci­ ty was in a Kepublican camp and James IT. liiaine was its chief high priest" I Here the convention again became wild­ ly enthusiastic. J Tho farmers of Iowa have sense enough to know a good thing when tbev see it, even though some of their old leaders may have to'.d them it was worth nothing to them. The farmers see that Blaine s reciprocity scheme is opening valuable new markets for their surplus wheat and corn products and hogs, and tho warm feeling they long felt for him is intensified by tho lact that he has benefited financially every one of them by adding to the selling value of his crops swine and cattle. It is becauso the Iowa farmers have been able to perceive the beneficial workings of reciprocity that they have not wan­ dered off after false gods, like the Alli­ ance meu of Kansas and some other States. They have not asked for "ukase" money and Government ware­ houses in which to run a corner and cre­ ate a famine In foodstuffs, because they felt tha* relief in Increasing measure was coming to them from legitimate quarters. * * * * The Democrats did uot'montiou reciprocity Jn their plat­ form. They suppressed it, and they do not allege, as they aro doing regarding local option, that it was left out "by tho mistake of a lady typewriter." They simply ignore it, f.>r they dare not op­ pose it openly, because of its popularity with tho massos, and they cannot in­ dorse it, bccause they cannot reconcile it with their free-trade "tariff for revenue only" principles and their wish to throw ouen American ports to competitive in- cutting goods of t heap-labor Europe, while reciprocity only lets In non com­ petitive products which help and not harm trade. The Republican speakers must point out to their audiences what reciprocity can bo made to do for them, and then point to the cowardly and treacherous Democratic attitude <^this important question. The Kit of the Bine-Nosed Hen. There is much amusement in watching your average flee-trade editor struggling with the statistics of Imports and ex­ ports and their bearing on the McKinley bill. As a rule, the f. t e. lets tho facts and figures severely alone; they havo suclx a way of suggesting "absurd and uneconomic protectionist" conclusions. But once in a while ho has to wrestle with them for appearance's sake, if only to keep himself from being laughed out of court He is still in a state of mtfid over the figures presented at the recent convention of t anadiau egg-dealers at Montreal, which appointed a committee to ask the Dominion Government to put a retaliatory duty on Amorican eggs, of which it appears that we exported to Canada 0?5,lt>8 dozen, or £89,444 worth, during the last fiscal year. The funny thing Is that the free-trado organs do not see that the significance of this sort of thing is that the McKin­ ley duty on eggs is doing its work very effectively indeed, and giving tho Ameri­ can egg market to tho American farmer and poulterer. Hero is a sample of the way it has worked during tho nearly five months between the ftth of October and tho 31st of March. The customs district of Vermont received 2,101,543 do^en of Canadian eggs during the fiscal year end­ ing June 30, 18s0, valued at 8273,881. From tho day when the McKinley bill took effect to the 31.-tof March the same district received only 850 dozen of Cana­ dian ezgs, worth S137. In other words, the whole Canadian egg product is prac­ tically oxcluded from the United States, and tho market transferred to the home product Instead. But tho free trade editor cares for foreiguers rather than for American producers, and his econ­ omic vision is so razzle-dazzled that he thinks tiie market for 62.5,168 dozen of eggs more important than the market for L:*,000,000 dozen, the total of our an­ nual importations before the McKinley biil was passed--Xtw York Prctt. Increased Form Export*. One of the things that free traders have been industriously insisting upon is that the McKinley law restricts the farmers' markets. They have claimed this so often and so petelstently that many people have come to believe it is true. As a matter of fact, nothing is farther from the truth. The exports of farm products have not decreased under the McKinley law. They have increas­ ed instead, and not by a few thousand dollars' worth, but by mill ons, as the following table shows: Total exports of boef, hog and dairy products for month ending April 3J (under Ihe now law! #9.'33.0.30 For same month last year 9,319,7 6 hands. Already a great deal of It had been irretrievably lost to her, and If she is to retain what remains she must do something to keep herself from being forced from the profitable markets that Mr. Blaine has opened up to States. --bri$h irorfd. " TarlS Pictures. v NO. L Cotton printing cloths of ths grade 64 byM •old at 3.8S cents yard in 1889. st' The prioe^ar yard on May S.91 crnts. No. a. mowers and reapers, made by high­ ly paid protected tpechanics, are the best. The foreign demand for them Is increasing. In March, 1890, we exported them to the value of •353,000. Qttr Hareh «xpocta of vere these article this year 9437,115. The McKinley tariff has not hlndeitd the ex. portation of mowers and reapers. NO. 3. : Galvanised iron sheets sold at 7 3-4 crnts i pound in 18S), and in 1833 they sold as low as 4 1-14 cents a poo&d. Date thP larger production iuducvd by protection. As tin plate is only sheet iron dipped iu tin, isn't it likely that similar protec­ tion, beginning the first of July, will produce similar results? NO. 4. A "high tariff Democrat" Made til wtgd of a firm of large manufacturers of flannels at La Porte, IntL. whose business has been so stimu­ lated by th9 passage of the McKinley bill that the cost of manufacture has been reduced. They are now able to offer, and are offering, flannels which they sold at ee cent* a yard last year, at 47 cents r ynr«l this year. -JflW To** Press. \ Iheir Frtt - They came Into the street car to­ gether Sunday afternoon, a little bit of a young mother--still pale with tho delicate pallor the cheeks of young mothers often wear. Behind her there came a great, tall, awkward young fel­ low with the baby in his arms. He had all the awkwardness and the clumsiness of tho average young father who goes abroad for the first time with a baby of hrs own on his arms. He held It up to his broad, full chest so gently and so tenderly in the hollow of one of his big red hands, a frail, helpless lltt e bundle of humanity, for whioh that great giaut would lay down his life. "Shan't I take him now?" asked the baby's mother when she sat down. "No, no; I'll hold him," he said, as he gathered up the baby's fong ruffled and tucked white skirts to keep them from touching the car floor after he had sat down. "When you get tired holding him I'll take him," she said. "Oh, ho won't tire me any. He Isn't any heavier than a bird," was the reply. And thero the, thing and ever; baby! It* < o beginning . tiny presence so much larger than it was before. ,t oblivious to every the baby, their them the id its Canadians Mast Pair ttie Duties. At a general meeting of tho business men of Montreal, Canada, President Donald Smith, referring to the effects of the McKinley tariff law of the United States, said "the outcome of business throughout the country has not been good, but therj aro indications that Canada will find other markets and go on progressing." That's all right Let them "go on progressing" on the merits and results of theii own form of gov­ ernment. They have b»*en having a good market in the Uniti-d States for many years past for their surplus prod­ ucts in competition with the farmers of this nation, but the faruiors have called tin turn on the Dominion and all other foreign countries. They demand that there shall be no reciprocity with other countries on products that compete with American farmers and laborers, aud that is to be the law of the and. That Is the reason why the Canadians are huffy and are going off to hunt new markets, They average fairly well as a people, but they cannot be permitted to rule the United States or to mouopo ize our Eastern ?eab. ard and Northern boundary matkets. The farmers of Iowa and other States are thus daily given evidence that the McKinley law is working stoadily in their interest -- Des Moines Register. Gain under McKinley law $ 150,833 Total exports of beef, hog and dairy products for four months ending April 30 (nuder new law) ....W4.3!6,910 For same period last year 42,16 ,t94 Assisted Emigrants. Dispatches from Berlin to the London papers make no concealment of the fact that large numbers of the Jews exiled from Russia in a condition of pauperism ara given free tickets direct from the German sijg of the frontier to the United States. The correspondents mention Gain under McKinley law. $ '2,198,2C6 This splendid showing has been made during months when the reciprocity feature of the law was not yet enforced. With the reciprocity treaties that have been negotiated and that are still to be negotiated, the exports of farm products will be enormously Increased The Mc- Kinlcy law is widening tho foreign mar­ ket for farm products and is increasing the home consumption of all the products of the farm--It is doing ex actly what the Republicans claimed it would do.--Des Moines RcyMer. England Startled. That Mr. Blaine's reciprocity policy is causing a good di>al of uneasiness in England is shown by the strong pressure that is being brought to t bear on Lord Salisbury to take some steps to offset the injurious effects that it is having on En­ glish trade, present and prospective. Several members of Parliament have been urging the Prime Minister to offset Mr. Blaine's effective method of extend­ ing American trade. They suggest that a beginning at reciprocity could be made with English colonies, and it is reported that communications with Canada, Aus­ tralia, and New Zealand have been pri­ vately going on for some timo past for tho formation of an Imperial Zollvereln. It is said that some of the Colonial Min­ isters are in favor of such an arrange­ ment which would discriminate against foreign products in favor of the articles produced in Gr^at Britain and the colo­ nies. But here free trade steps in and asserts Its claim. To discriminate against the manufactures of countries not belonging to tho proposed Zollvereln would be a declaration that free trade is a failure. The rulers of England are not prepared to do this. Nevertheless, something must be done if England Is i.ot to see her trade slipping out of her Should Oct to Wort Hon. J. S. Clarkson has written" ter acknow edging congratulations his e option to the Presidency of tho Republican National l.eaguo, in which be says: w*lhe country Is evenly balanced be­ tween political parties just now. Whichever party Is tho most vigilant and most clearly educates the people in the truth of public affairs and public in­ terest will win. Tho Democrats have Leon smar.'er than the Republicans in later years in effecting cio?o organiza­ tion, ih circulating dire( tly to the homes of the land campaign literature, in stim­ ulating the circulating of their news­ papers and in enlisting the activities of young men." Of courso this is calcuated to encour­ age Democrats, but it(ought to set Re­ publicans not merely to thinking but to working. Cther things are so nearly equal that the chances aro the party which begins soonest, and does'tho most and best work on the lines above indi­ cated, will carry tho country Jn 1892. : Ten Dollar Bills for Curl Paper. •Put a nice curl in my mustache, will you?" said a well-dressed man Wednesday morning a* he leaned hack in a chair in a Fourtb btreet barber shop. " Ye«, sir,* said the barber as he tucked % towel under the man's chin. Til put a curl in it that will stay a week," he added a minute later as he pulled a couple of bills out of his pocket and smoothed them on the customer's shoulder. Then he twisted up one side of the mustache and deftly fastened it with1 one of the bills. The same was done with the other. The man was surprised, evidently, at seeing money used for curl papers, and more sur­ prised as he saw a big X 14 front of each eye. The barber applied the lather, hut the man grew nervous. "Is that money you have twisted in my mustache?" he asked. "Yes, sir, I always prefer good Amer­ ican scrip to common paper or tin foil. And then," he added, after a pause, "it gives tone to the business." "Well, I've l:al money in all parts of my olothes, in my shoes and hat band, even in my undershirt, but--well, I never had it in my mustache before. And they look like two saw- bucks; are they?" "Yes: each is a ten. I have used two fifties bet that's when money was a little more plentiful." The barber shaved away, and the customer evidently kept up thinking. The chair was near the door, aud the faucet some feet back in the shop. When the barl»er walked back to wet the towel, after going over the man's face once, the Utter suddenly raised up, sprang from the chair aud bolted out oi the door. "Hold on there you--fool 1" yelled the barber, as he ran to the door; but the man didn't hold. He ran up an alley in the same block. Then the barber sat down and roared, while the others in the shop joined in with him. HI thought he was going to do that all the time. Well, I've got the best of the bargain anyway." He has got the shave and the Confederate ten dollar bills, and I've got his hat. St. Faul Pioneer Press. How Caviare Is Martet - The Allgemeine Sport Zeiftmrf, In an article on caviare, says: "This deli­ cacy has only become generally known in the last bixty or eighty years, but during that time it has acquired a dis­ tinguished place in the estimation of every gourmet Every one is aware that caviare is the salted roe of the sturgeon, a fish which is caught in great ntunbers off the south coast of Kuasia. The large grained caviare, made from the roe of the largest species of that fish, is considered the best. "Some of the sturgeons weigh much as 3,000 pounds, measure from 18 to 27 feet m length and j ield a roe weighing 800 pouuds. The fish should be caught some months before spawn ing time, while the roe is hard and light gray in color. As it gets softer aud darker it becomes less and less suitable t or preparing caviare; and when it is completely useless for 'he process is a simple 4 into large pieces, or metal sieve. AFFAIRS IN I] ITEMS GATHERED PROM VARI- • ' ' • OUS SOURCES. A«r-f What Oar Hslgfcbsi s Are IMag- of Owaral and Loeat laterws* -- HacaiaaA Deatlw-AwWaai* asJftltHW -- Personal Pointer*. THE mangled body of a stranger, upon whose person was found a memoranda* hook bearing the name of J. H. Kelly* No. 3321 Laurel street.C'hicago.wasfou»di on the Rock Island tra *ks:n DesMoinea* • \ - J Iowa.*' THE weekly r*T passed'by tb| 'J late Legislature ha-created a great con* , ,-"x motion in the State. Pretty generally, ^ 1 large manufacturers are complying witil "' '»* IU but not Without grumbling. Some, ,Jf • ' f however, flatly refuse, and propose to , 1* J carry the matter to the courts to test the constitutionality cf the act. TH# reason given by some of these latter is^ . * - 'fj not that they object to the payment off « ^ i • Political Pltb. Tn.vxKS to the . McKinley bill, tho trado of California merchants with the Sandwich Islands is on a boom.--Pitts­ burg Times. THE Democratic party is under no obligation whatever to Mr. Cleveland; but even If It were it should not be asked to sacrifice Itself for the gratification of his personal ambition.--Albany Times (Derrv). THIC most significant and encouraging fact in the present political situation is that the Republicans in all of the States where elections are to be held are thor­ oughly united, confident and aggressive. --St. Louis Olobe-Democrat. A BIM.IOS-DOLI.AK Congress will only be an effoctive issue when the Democrats show that the money was not wisely ex­ pended. What Item shall be cut off-- pensions, ships for the navy, coast forti­ fications, mail payments or what?--San &*rancisco Call. TIIE Republican party needs only two things to make its success in 1892 abso­ lutely certain, to wit, the election of Mills to the Speakership and the nomi­ nation of Cleveland for the Presidency.-- St LouU Qlobe-DemocraU THE New York Sun tries to Impress upon the Democracy that now, as in the past, the only hope of the party is in carrying New York, and gives the fig­ ures to prove its assertion. At the same time it Intimates that Mr. Cleveland is an impossibiiity. MESSRS. FKKE TRADEKS, would you be glad or sorry to see tin-plate manufac­ tured in the United States on a scale that would put in the pockets of our own producers and wage earners the millions of dollars that have been going to Eng­ land and Wales?--Rochester Democrat anil Chronicle. regulated by • ' is then it it uite ripe, it is e purpose. e. The TO put into a he cobie?" the coarsen rubbed care! fails out as unii the skiu attached sieve. "The finer sort of eaviai into an empty dish; it is th _ with dry, finely powdered sal1 . whole mass is then well stirred wft' wooden fork and immediately put up in little wooden barrels, ready for ex­ ports. The inferior sorts are rubbed through the t-ieve into strong brine, where they are allowed to remain un­ touched until thoroughly salted through; the brine is then pressed out and the caviare packed tighlty in eases. The fresher -and more lightly salted caviare is the better. In 162ti caviare to the worth of £21,000 was exported from the Caspian Sea; since then thf amount annually exported, and e» pecially its value (for the priee is now much higher than it used to be,) have greatly increased." Imposing, Not Jolly. After the marriage of Napoleon and Maria Louisa the city of Paris gave them a splendid banquet, which Capt. Coig- net describe* iu his "Narrative." He was on duty at the Hotel deYille, where the banquet was served* with a squad of twenty grenadiers. The table was horseshoe-shaped, and around it were placed arm-chairs. The dishes were of solid gold. When the master of ceremonies announced "The Emperor," Bonaparte entered, followed by his wife and five kings. Having seated himself at the table,the Emperor made a sign to the guests to take their places. As soon as all were seated the table was cleared, -ts is usual at great dinners, and every dish was carried into an ad- adjoining room where the carvers did their work. Behind each king there were three footmen about a i-tep from one another. Other footmen "com­ municated with carvers, and passed the plates without turniug more than half­ way round to get them. When a plate came within reach of a king, the head footman presented it to him, and if he shook his head the plate was withdrawn and another brought immediately. If the head did not move the footman placed the plate in front of his master. Not a word was Bpoken. Each napkin, as soon as once used, disappeared, the footman slipping in another. When the banqnet was over, a pile of napkins lay behind each chair. No one was permitted to speak ex­ cept when the him. btinaitag," i'2x32, containing two rooms." AT the People's convention In Iowa Can be used for dwelling or shop. Pos- rmer from Lyon County was calleigeggioQ given at once. Apply to ion for his opinion of the outlook an< Wesj^ey T^nt» farmer upon gave it as follows: "Crops are lookinj pretty well up our way, and I don't se» much need of a new party. " The speed is a short one, but it contains volumes o Ringwood, April 20,1891. Julia A. Story's , ,, ,, . , Ask for "washing-powder compound." meaning. IndUituipoiis Joui-nal. The cheapest and bent. Try it. Many A WATEKTOWS (S. D.) paper adve%re using it and have used it for years. Useei the McKinley bill andla.local1 stor LT Bowkor-8 plant food ^ t it t as follows: That the McKinley bi^ui:aA storv's helps the farmer is preven by the fa<r ' that the Watertown store is givin Get one of "Raymes'Catarrh Inhalers" twenty pounds of granulated sugar foW>d avoid an attack of hay fever. Com- nine dozen eggs. Last year it took foutflete or separate at Juha A. Story's. teen dozen eggs to get twelve pounds. When in need of Paris green don't for- TT Z .. and call at J. A. Story's where you A TWO-LEGGED goat has beftnagitatj^JJ a pure AR^CJE ing Cordele, Ga. -lames Barnhfll is th " r possessor of this freak of nature, and ® f.yOUM I? is exhibiting him at ten cents a looi^1^ ^an Houtons Cocoa . It makes with a slight reduction when you loo* healthy and delicious druik, and several times- He is of the "billy" gerfasy make. INeeds no boiling. When der, walks upright like & chicken, sit?uy romeniwir J, A. Story keeps it. down like a dog, is a very intelligen Just received a nice line of plant iars, little creature and is, indeed, acuriositjnilk crocks and hanging baskets. Will It is a great pet, and children and iadi^ie sold cheap at Julia A. Story's. go wild with delight over "billy." Select your bath sponges from our flue _ j , .. ..assortment and be pleased. LIKE a good general the cow alwa\ \ * _ fights flies successfully by many flan Ju,!a A- stol7 Jbe Gold-dust mnvBinants. washing powder for sale; also other soaps _ including laundry toilet and medicated. A number of new designs in paper nap- ins, also latest styles of writing paper eti*,. at Julia A. Stars'*. '"V ^ I make a practice of getting drank after * each pay-day, and are unfit for work fof -5 several days afterward. They argua that this practice is a serious menace to their business w th monthly pay-days, and that a weekly payment would iu* create it to such an extent that they would have to quit business. It would seem that the only remedy lies in kiriojc ; temperate men. THE wheat crop in Montgomery |» turning out better than expected. Henry lJremer and Glenn Bros, had ninety acres of wheat near Hilisboro, which made forty-flve bushels to the acre by measure and sixty-four pounds to tha bushel by weight. Most of the wheat averages twenty-five bushels to the acre and tests sixty-two pounds. AI.KKRT ItAKF.it, 35 yean of age, arrestcd at Washington charged witk having set fire to his mother's house Sno is absent on a visit and had tha : house heavily insurod. While the fiisa. wa* in progress *ome one cut the hose. All tho valuables of the house weavt found concealed in the barn. JUSTICE GURXSON, of Chicago, finat thirty-six gamblers a total of $10,00()L THE Richland County Hoard of Stipes visors n<et for regular business and to* receive the report of the expert to ex­ amine the books of the count/ officer* from .Tan. 1, 1880, to date. The expert "jnade a verbal report, stating that his, figures showed discrepancies in tha books of ex-county Treasurer P. P,| Gillespie of S!>,_00 for tho years I880J 18S1, and 1882. The beard took noae-. tlon on this report. P. 1*. Gillespie, the ex-Treasurer, Is a first < ousin of James G. Blaine. Ho was appointed lostmas-: ter of Olney in ls89. Mr. Gil cspie does not believe the results arrived at by tha expert to be correct, or that he is short, one cent, a belief which is concurred ha by his many friends. IT will to well for Illinois merchant*, to take knowledge of the fact that a law passed by the recont Legislature, which Went into effect July 1, inflicts heavy, penalties for participating in trusts aad combinations, and provides punishment for purchasers as well as sellers of arti­ cles whose price is controlled by agree­ ments. Very many of the articles dealt in by grocers are so controlled, the wholesalers contracting with the mans*- fac-turers not to sell below the caid. rates. BURGLARS robbed thi postoffice at Curlyle of a small amount TIIE lltt'e son of Plem Beck, of BaS> say, was thrown from a horse and killed. . A PECUI-IAK disease is affecting the cattle in the vfein.ty of Barclay, in San­ gamon County.. At first tho nostrils of animal are found to be swollen and tho whole frame is In axontinnal The mouth is alsg so sore that ati'iji cannot ea 'proved ii»ML and a are now ^jef iousJ] ny the trouble is att water, as in tho vicinity' and in some places the creeks and small streams have stopped running. AT Kock Island, a pan:c occurred at % performance of Forcpaugh's cireoa. There were t%000 jorsons in attendance^ when a Hon in some manner got out of , Its cage and tho immense crowd rushed for the street. Fortunately no one waa killed in the wild break to escape, but several were seriously injured. The lion did not set very far away from his cage, as tho employes easily drove h m under his wagon, where he was caught and recaged. ADVICES from Jersey County stats that better prospects never wero known for a big corn crop than at present. Rain has fallen regularly and ever? in­ dication of prosperity prevails. ONE day in Chicago: Whi.'e boating, on a lake in Columbia Park. John Neff and Miss Lucy Kaiser wers drowned. Hundreds witnessed the acci­ dent, and other rowers were so startled' that they rendered futilo assistance.---- In Calumet Lake, near Pullman, Henry Campbell MHd Leslie Young were drowned while bathing. They were aged 9 and 10.----August Maraysta, 1? years old, was drowned while swimming in a clay ho e which had filled from sur­ face drainage. John Murphy, a sap- posed pickpocket, was fatally shot after jumping from an excursion train, by John P. Ditman, a constable of the town of Maine. Ditmau is arrested, it being claimed he had no right to make the arrest. AT Carmi, a drug store, a grocery* » butcher shop, dressmaking establish* merit, a stable, dental office and 00s dwelling were destroyed by fire. Losa» 510,000; iusured. POSTMASTER T. HENNINGKB, of Cof­ fee n, fell from a cherry tree and was fatally hurt. WM. IIANXA, of Clinton, who was as­ saulted some time ago by Sam Woods, is suffering from internal injuries which may prove fatal. AT Olmstead, Daniel Welch, co oped, shot and killed two colored men--Eddls Davis and Columbus--and a white boy, 17 years old, named Harry Odle. Welch is evidently insane, and says he was commanded by the Lord to drive out all devils. THE gentlemen's cafe at the Welling­ ton Hotel, Chicago, was crowded the other afternoon, when a monstrous hog escaped from an express wagon and bolted into the room. With the advent of tho four-legged "critter* the othera instautiy acknowledged them.-elve3 outr classed and abandoned the field. THE first votes cast by women h» Fay­ ette County were cast in Kamsey Town- fhip, on the proposition to borrow money to erect a schoolhouse. FARMERS in the vicinity of Hilisboro report that chinch-bugs are damaging the corn. AT FOX River trestle, near Olney, Mrs. Rebecca Amien and her seven- year-old son Arno d were crossing r ex River, when they heard the t). «!fc M. train coming. Arno d tried to jump Off the trestle, but fell between the ties, and while hi< mother was endeavoring to extricate ;him the train ran on is them, killing both instantly. AT Sterling, Henry Horning. pen ter, was kil 'ed by ^bkdestroyed half a blcck of basteea*i? houses at S-'cranton including ll&mtuet t Louder"? livery stable. Kcck s ma­ chine shop, Newforth's wagon factaw..^ and Schuster's ct nfeotionery and b<wrh«| - .hop. Loss, S<s00l; insurance, S4,ma. •"** ^4 \ * *1"^4 -f* Oil a cap from ft A.

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