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H.K NOTED I>.VINK*S SUNDAY
nKrnitmr '
Subject; “Easter Jubilee.”
Text: “Death Is swallowed up in vic¬
tory.”—I Corinthians xv., 54.
About 1861 Easter mornings have waksned
the earth. In France for three centuries the
almanacs made the year begin at Easter un¬
til Charles IX made the year begin at Jan. 1.
In the Tower of London there is a royal pay
roil of eighteen of Edward I, on which there Is an ontrjr
pence for 400 colored and pic¬
tured Easter eggs, With which the people
sported. In Russia slaves Were fed and alms
were distributed on Easter.
Ecclesiastical councils met at Pontus, at
ticular Gaul, at day, Rome, and at Aohaia, to.decido the par¬
after a controversy more
animated than gracious decided it, and now
through all Christendom in some which way the
first Sunday after tho full moon hap¬
pens upon or next after March 21 is filled
with Easter rejoicing. Tho royal court of
the Sabbaths is made up of fifty-two, Fifty
one are princes in the royal household, but
Easter is queen. She wears a richer diadem
and sways a more jeweled scepteri and in
her smile nations are irradiated. IVe wel¬
come right this queenly day, holding high Up in
her hand the wrenched off bolt of
Christ’s hand sepulcher and all bolding high Up in in
her left the key to the cemeteries
Christendom,
of My halleluiahs. text is an Paul ejaculation. right It is spun in out his
wrote on
argument about the resurrection aud ob¬
served all the laws of logic, but when ho
came to write the words of the text his
fingers and his pen and the parchment on
which he wrote took Are, and he cried out,
“Death is swallowed up in victory!” It is a
dreadful flight to see an army routed and
flying. track. They Unwheeled scatter everything artillery. valuable Hoot on
the wounded" or
horse on breast of and dying
man. Yon have read or the French falling
back from Sedan, or Napoleon's track of
90,000 corpses five kings in the tumbling snowbanks of Russia, rocks or ot
of the over the
Bstkoran with their armies, while the hail¬
storms of heaven and the swords of Joshua’s
hosts struck them with their fury.
But in my text is a worse discomfiture. It
seems that a black giant proposed to con¬
quer the earth. He gathered for his host all
the aches and pains and maladies and dis¬
tempers and epidemics of the ages. He
marched them down, drilling them in the
northeast wind, amid the slush of temp est*.
He tinew up barricades of giave mound. He
pitched tent of charnel house. Some ot the
troops marched with slow tread, commanded
hv cnnati motions* some in dmihle nuick
by commanded long besiegoment by pneumonias. of evil habit Some he took
and some
by With one bony stroke of he the pounded battleax of casualty.
hand at the doors of
hospitals and sickrooms battlefields and won all the all vie
tones in all the great of the
five continents. Forward, march! the con
queror of conquerors, and all the generals
and commanders-in-chief, and all dbp presidents
and kings and sultana and czars under
the feet of lus warchargor.
But one Christmas night his antagonist was
born. As most of the plaguoB and sicknesses
and despotisms came out of the east it was
coKfe° P oTt te 1 W q er : 0 powe?
come out of o the sanie same ouart quarter, l ower is is
given Him to awaken all the fallen of all the
centuries and of all lands and marshal them
against the black giant Fields have already
been won. but the last day will see the de
eisive battle. When Christ shall lead forth
His two brigades, the brigade of the risen
dead and the brigade of the celestial host, the
black giant will fall back, and the brigade
from the riven sepulchers will take him from
beneath, and the brigade of descending im
mortals wiH take him from above, and
*MeallmhqU Up ttw'illowed un in vtotnrv ”
The old braggart that threatened the con
quest and demolition of the planet has lost
hts throne, has lost his soepter, has lost his
palace, has lost his prestige, and the one
rnd and caT^mb^and’‘necrono catacomu anil necropolis, D °of on ‘^enotanh tenoiapn
and sarcophagus, on the lonely cairn of the
Arctic explorer and on the catafalque of
STcada w*Uten wrmen 11 of‘grea^asgeraWages; “in ' 1 “cadence*
written in tlie doxedogy .eulnforoil door of the fnmilv
written Oil on tne sculptured door of tlie family
vault, is “Victory. Coronal word, einban
tiered nerea word, word nnnealvntie apocalyptic word, word emet chief word word of or
tne Atnenian 8 drove oatk mo Meaes, at
Foictiei-s, where Charles Martel broke the
janks Mtilfq of ot thfl the Knmr.pnq.nt baraceas, at waiamis, ^Rlnmia wI.pi-p wiiete
Themistocles in the great soa fight confound
ed ea tlie tn«c Persians Persians, and ana at at the tne dnnr aoor nf oi the t no eu east M t
era cavern of chiseled rock, where Christ
pnme came nut out thrmiDl. turougu a a reee«« recess and ana thrnttied tnrotUecl the t ie
king of terrors and put him back in the
niphe frnm em^geL whinh the AhaTwhen eelectial ermrmernr jS
had just the
the eastorn mausoleum took down the black
giant, “death was swallowed up m victory!
antagonist is d.iven oack mto mythology
with all the loro about Stygian ferry and
fhn-nn Lha.on xvith with oar ,.„Kan,i and heat boat. We IV e snail .hoii heee hare
no more to do with death than we have with
° a a*siich e ™oakro < r
levce levee, We we RtoD stop at suen cloakroom o m and amUeave leave
overshoes Zteimpe^inthob^firntroun7of”hc ou outw^aVpare.Tha” we’iZ
drawing room. Well, my friends when we
at the door of the tomk - leave the leak
of flesh and the wrappings with which we
meet the storms of the world. At the close
of our earthly reception, under the brush and
broom of the porter, the coat or hat may be
handed to us better than when we resigned
lt, and the cloak of humanity will finally be
' 1 S oSrifl°ed e<1 Toll ‘andnot
trifled purified and and bodies glorified. You aud I do not
wan. our returned to us as they are
Uguef'andthdr ne«s mTSh t h°e{? sIowness|of su^tibiUuS' ?not tTte-
100 1 on.
They will be put through a chemistry of soil
and heat and cold and changing seasons out
of which God will reconstruct them as much
better than they are novv as the body of the
rosiest and healthiest child that bounds over
the lawn is better than the sickest patient in
the hospital.
But as to our souh we will cross right over
not waiting for obsequies, independent of
obituary, into a state in every way better,
With wider room and velocities beyond com
putation; the dullest of us into* companion
ship with the very best spirits in their very
best moods, in the very best room of the uni
verse, the four wa! glorified s furnished and paneled
and pictured that the and God with all all thesplen- been
dors infinite in ages has
able to invent. Victory!
This view of course makes it of but little
t report a iK-e whether we are cremated or
sepulture,J. If the latter is dust to dust, the
former is ashes to ashes. If any prefer in
eineration, let them have it without eariop
Ibat'crematbm well mav*he general ^n*'^-e^an’y ad«^t" Many 1
by law as as by consent.
of the mightiest and best of earth have gone
list singers, cremated by accident at Ashta
hula bridge; John Rogers cremated by perse
mtssst Alexander, physician, aszz?s£.i and their comrades, a
a
cremated at the order of Marcus A’lreiiu*.
At least a hundred thou-and of Christ - dis
ejples cremated, and there can be no doubt
about there*- rre.-tion of their bodP-s. ifthe
world lasts as much longer as it has already
been built, there perhaps «wy he no r>*
ol room yet. and the rsv ^ need not }.a-s that
bridge of fire uutil it *tm**Ui It. Th« imwl
di.mteira*‘n
. .. .... ....... - . ,-. v »:ii -
transcendent, called magnificent, inexplicable body struc
ture the-resurrecetion you will
have it, I wilt have it. I sav to you to-day
Should raise the dead?”
flies, tar dp cloud, higher than the haxvlc
higher than the eagle flies, what is it
made of? Props ot water from the Hudson,
other from drops from pool the East ltiver, Newark other drops flats.
a stagnant out ou
Up yonder there, embodied in a cloud, and
the sun kindles it. If God can make such a
lustrous cloud out of water drops, many of
them soiled and impure and fetched from
miles away, can He not transport the frag
graswKS telescope
manufacturer of telescopes drops a
on the floor, and it breaks, can he not meml
it again so you can see through it? And if
mriHfe orig\unlTv'f'illiione! tf "au He
not restore it'? Aye, the manufacturer of
the telescope, by a change of the glass and a
Change of focus, can make a better glass than
actually SSSSKrWhS^ imrwove°r do^ou ,Ve not Think .rTe'Ils The
may im
slght and njultlply the natural eye by the
ron« S n «.% d n< lJltl ° na f ° rCeS ° f * >e rC8Ur
“Why should it he thought with you an in
d credible thing that God should raise the
mold’ll r i f t Resulted. “> T
Therafflaut earth. Besurreeted.
from? The loathsome butterfly, caterptllHi. where did it That come al
whereVldh cTmeTrimr^ ReTs^Theft
Near Bergerac, France, found in a Celtic tomb, un
der a block, were flower seeds that had
been lmrlml JOOO years. The explorer took
the flower seed and planted it, and it came
up. It blomed iu bluebell and heliotrope.
Twothousand ,, , years ago burled yet resur
reeled A traveler says he found in a mum
my pit in Egypt garden pea. that had been
themouLaudonJuuTT 1844, ho planfed
n Biiried e T’s a ? 3°00 n d nn n years thll ' tv yet , days resurrected, ^ H 8prang U P'
■\\liy should it be thought n thing in
eredlblo dead?’ vjdth Where you did that all this God silk should come raiso from- th ,
the silk that adorns your persons ami your
homes? la the hollow of a staff a (.reek
The suppV fhe silk markets bannered of many hosts Nations ami the
pageantry of
i!LTon^nl^.hi blazing out from the silk sMk'ToTma! worms! °Tnd And wiT who
ol , llIuy , uo uu ,- uuu ,i» uuw,u m,uauummua
worthy worthy of of the the oomintr coming eternities? eternities? Put Put silver silver
into into diluted diluted annum niter, niter tuiur, and and nmi lt It dissolve.. dissolve*. Is Is the the
silver « gono forever? No. Put In some [one pieces
of of ?or copper, copper 3 olves.^her"ofee^eorganixes. and audtlm the silver si Ive r reappears. reappears If one
force dissolves. ss
“Wliv "Why should should lt lt be he thought thought a a thing thing in- bl¬
credible with you that God should raise the
dea(tr Tha insects flow and the worms
( . rawled lft8t autumn feebler aud feebler and
*» ien wardnoAe. fi f 0 nned Thov have taken no food;
they scnljido They lie dormant and in
but soou trumpoR’anil the south wind will blow
the resurrection *K„„i Uio aRand the
Barth wi ii i , 0 f,,ii 0 » i) (> VO n not think
Umt Oodffaa do ns ranch forour bodiesas He
does for tho wasos meaning aud the so dors past’l and the
. nai |.v -phis at half o’clock
« resurrection Out of the night,
the day. In a few weeks there will be a res
surre etion in all our gardens. Why not some
Kvf,r dav anfanou a resurrection tt amid t^taiices all tho graves?
re arc of men
au d women entranced fo'ilowed
A trance Is death, by resurrection
"ower after a fmv voluntary ilnvs—total acS. sn.nenslon " of WUlfam mental
and Rev.
Tennent a greatevanaelist of the last gen
eration, fa^ of whom Dr. Archibald Alexander, a
man from being sentimental, wrote In
mn ni08 qi t PiiiAo-iciif. eulogistic terms fp P ms ne\. Rev William yviuiuui Ten- x m
da^anSd^“Hels&df havl 1 demoted Peonl^'cam^ ln S ?laTafter
he is dead/’ Rut
the soul returned mid William Tennent lived
p, wdle out of xvlml he h«l seen
whil «Wasoul was gone It may be found
some time wliat is called suspended animn
Hcnnr soul'an i*nmiiliw« state is brief death l -1 vine
the excureiou into the next world,
^TnSS'lSff.™ ! ron i whicb Jt “ ' 8
" 5 Do * 0 n not It must this waking return. of from trance
up men
and an l this wnlHmr Wftliing nr, up nf ol erains grams buried iiuric.i 8000 sooo
years ago make it easier for you to boiiovo
physiologists toll us that, whilo the most of
( 0,1 >ur r hodius OOUJeSH) are 0 built Dlllll with WUU hwdIi wonderful wwuuwiiii
economy that we can spare nothing, and the
loss :° S ' of ot h H hnger IS is jl a hindrance Hindrance, and aim the i e in- in
jury {.hva of . a toe joint makes us lame, still wo
two lW0 or °A three tn a annarentlv PP«- r ^ n, ’ l X useless puvHi- nhvsi*
c al , apparati. and , no anatomist or ph.yslolog
has ever °VCr been OCC 11 able aiUft to TO tell H.U what WBIU they IUW are »rw
'b'X*worth nothhig to
„ s in this rta ie. to he lndispenmbly valuable
in (he next state Tlio Jewish rabbis aonear
they said that in the human frame there was
B a small sm.ll l.one hone which which wn. was to to he lie the me basis uasifl of onuo the
resurrection body. Hint may have boon a
delusion. But this thiiigiscertain. the Chris
}{«« scientists of our day have found out
that there are two or three superfluities gloriously oi
^ytUat ^elnel Ttov are something sug.
* WendY, Sll house Zx one upVlth summer
day I founiHhe yard ruh
^ '“he^oofwasTTng ’Tifttd Tc?X
A ll the pictures were gone, . and the paper
hangers doing their work. All the modern
improvements were being introduced into
that dwelling. There was not a room in the
house fit to live in at that time, although a
month before, when 1 visited that house,
,jVer y tllin 8 was so beautiful 1 could not have
suggested an Improvement. My friend bad
gone with his family to the Holy Land, ex
' t0 bac k at the end of six months,
returned hW^hen and the at the old
end of six months he
house was enlarged and improved and glo
rifled! That is your body! It loooks well
UO w. All the rooms filled with health, and
W e could hardly make a suggestion. But
after awhile your soul will go to (he Holy
Land, and while you are gone tlie old house
„f your tabernacle will be entirely recon
st ructed from celiar to attic, every nerve,
muscle aud bone and tissue and artery
; mu!d hauled over, and the <)1<l
t structure will he burnished and adorned
and raise ,| and coupol.md and enlarged,
and ad the improvements of heaven intro
, duced. and you will move Into it on resurrec
: ti0 „ day. “For we know that, if our earthly
house of this tabernacle were dissolved. w*>
have a building of God, a bouse not made
with hands eternal In the heaven”.” Oil,
| what a d;iv when body aud soul meet again!
They are very fond of rvli other. Did
| your t >ot iy ever have a pain ami
soul not re-echo it? Or, changing the
i | Uh 4 r “tble“'Md* your body nZ ryZUbl'I,
it, growing war, and weak u.,d-r
j t |,e depressing influence? Or did your
1 "'P 1 ‘' v ‘ :r hav '“, a >,1,t y ' ,r
* ■ , a
such good friends to 1 « very long sejiarated.
And so wlien the world’s last Easter morning
asjrsr % “V/here
a^-end. saying. is my soul?’’ And
the Lord of the resu-reetlon will bring them
together. »t,d it will be a perfect perfect sou Christ I in a
perfect into body, Introduced Victory! by a
a perfect heaven.
Beef and Fetraleum irearer.
'
Ie ,. rj '
-
IL. , a ii debt nr* smoVot* to H,-
300.000
HI LL AIIP’S LETTER.
TH5S HEADING OF COIN’S EAST
niumsTBiivsuiarnFnrUTV BOOK STRAINS HIS OREDUliITY.
Tariff for Revenue Only, tilth
dentals,” Claims His Attention.
£«,*.*vuatr e
fj^?heir dan ■eHsGmt'tho masseVwili liL
wmng» and.
Sampson, pull down the temple and cruali all
,liko ' When lie shows up the lneqnaliti.9 ftS? or
!^*VpoH wU,°TJ^^55Me ho' certitVat/of tto
g$£ i( ,2“or tia 8 gives pub»o^^a“s a David "he
of for
* u,f of Olinois, which shows that all that the
ofTlm* SAtUSrS e^nty ssseTed —'Tldi
m
for agrimiUiiraltoois and implements. Think
Tu'TaaTTKdTir^rG.TSllT.TTnTirTn'rHO- .'
ld , iaof all the bunks Ami ankers Tr.liamomls ami
■ au snd
» i^nXt'single Stall?™
, um ju vaIlle . Thu „, 0TOV 0 f these banks
Z^nimiK^^ iont™nhe !asscMors Zl ZmCto
J J, J f to
th c? If it ifl 80 wJ y dooim . t Eli For
kins say so. I see that he has taken the fl.Id
against Coin, but I can’t tell exactly from
. last ; whethor lie is lying 'a,.or or j iking,
jt l)V J ^ ” (hat he had shown
| Coin , lis erro „ ftl (1 fallacies Coin gay* it up
and q, e q, arH rolled down his cheeks and lie
111 any’tf andlmnnless.‘ IkKSh T So
any that is funny I use,I
t0 like to vend Baron Munchausen, and 1
like to read Eli now. I confess that it strains
m y credulity to believe what Goiu writes about
Chicago bankers' tax. but there is the cei
tin . at0 of the state auditor. Surely Ihore is
gome explanation of all this. We know wliat
' . men “ft ^ bad. We poor folks whose in
! ,. 0 m 0 was under the mark, 1« lioved that to tax
lar f i " co H,0,) w “,. tb 6 l ^ l,t “‘‘"K 10 '>“•
seems ;;7im’o.u«o’ii;rm: that . wo can t do . it. Vearo taxed all
K
the tariff -a a'lin" tariff for roi revenue rovonueiiiii.v only with v.nn inoi
, protection. It is the incidental iliat
gets us. An American sewing machine ora
| j , | " ow « r “£5 ® r rea P er ^iTth be bought Tnc*dom" in
i ie C( J UUM l u u 10 mo,aen r a .v 11
, , , Livat . .
| i [no profi ihh!? tlmt'Mr^N ^m or Mr
j ” McComl ckoH.i rforlcs.thaie'w navliefrciult s’lU
I d \\ ‘1* or J l,,RU ", " n ,
j Si^TthiB n ‘ °\, r ,, countrjffo^uTcentJ 7 ,™ „ 1 ’ !m?Holls c ils e R 1 1 l 1
{Z'u'Xl ^!i , J" * tZTrlltk * ,
1 fiVac.i , V , 11 , "V y Rl!lls r ” ! or , R “' i K
uiiaooppei. Aim just so it is wuu nuuarcus
iq/i’Tinciden’tal i is not* Mldmual" hut wT«']omJ
B
%ov. , ..
Boys, let's let» f llgni- No «o. i I don’t non r. mean "lean tnat that ex- ox
’ r, ' a0 ' U '“" m
in s uo someiiiing.
m D K 7™ " 'ueyian I stop an nils rum
Kl'C ? t 0 P [*• , tornado, . .X'’ I i wasn’t nasn t. ‘taking taKing m«c touch
"J ‘ rI lia ' 1 r<iB ' 1
“.Ih* on both Bides that it
L 1 mv head ,,on ^ swim 2*' and J so ,vl.cn ! -! ‘
friend . , sent me Coin . . h first * book , . T r look , it up
'“'h i ivjmlice against it for I supposed
y , !■ , f rei’d / S', • "r . I". t,ia , >, ,
for tinps'aiid'lrtgge,s, i biit I didn f'flud ’
; ! 1111(1 , , 1 , lomiil. ... , »<> nmen lfih iiitoiitiation i nat was
^'"ncUiSiVmid 1 tUc'concU^o^that
I w»H Vmy smaTmanori ! oamu to “
Coin was rciy
V?*' Ir ltcr U ,f ttlHM 'T 111 ' "r fu T st, llllll “Tr if !!“ IllCSO I “, two t b 0 < ! little k J*
| ) 0 ok, m ‘V m '!> , „)■ oi f isiiau u j]aci<*M « Jim tlie koiuuiigs cold lines
, |, tt d bdtcr , get somebody elso bosidcs Ell to ox
.. r.-| f ()r t 0 i H f u) , finance—
ii. Hone ^vwa'tsfs.'as Havvov thf^e
! m 1 ]• wiui
books i Oil linaiiU'O, bulOllgH to OUT Hide, find
. ? oni . 1(1 . ra raiHCl ; ge( i i 1,1 n V p a l f,. l am ? m oouutv not fa.r Iar
f rom ] , ier own home; that v his father reHldes in
Hiintimrfn„ r ,ing n, and w«m H h <x>ure <y»nfeflcnitf* ? Hnhlicr- H ner
that Jus elder , i brother, rm Thoinns, wan the dumo- ,
i ! < j,ndidH,'e liisf vcbi f, for conure^H K e H J but
w « 8 defeated beeailSO Of i the blundci’H , , of
-■““'.mlvution; that he, too, wa, ... tho
^|e°family*™ i»“«J »'« domoevats^nd’soutl.erncrs 10,11 v
, , , , ■ , ,
'»» > bees „„„ aim ,., u i t > nitm-wait Kt (m cwaii .lack-on taoKsoii. Him m >
we who know the Harveys are proud ot
„,, r'hh d oKiieeiallv hjt ft of William Hum* ’ the author
^Tuie. it will. me. That kind of a
ean’l be bou"lit xvholIre. or bribe 4 and he believes
wrHes. U 1 . so or no,
«f «-«'»'*'>'» P-Pf-U °f the
^^n'lhn,,^ ‘^ 11 * n
«?’““we ’ ntV
d So , Bt> lr „ the Bilv „ r a „ aill „
had it in 1873. Neithertlie Dresidchtiinr coii
Krc88 cuu realize the situation. No tuau can
w|)n j„ drawjl , K a Hilary wilii of *5,000 aud is dai v
d ; a j n ,, alld w j|,iiig tlie rich. It is only
the ,j poor who pray ) in earliest and gav “Give
nH dll day olu daj | v |„ f . ad .’* | fiaw acrowd ot
„tiorig men ymlcrdiy could "not who ucro going to the Rome
to eer- i f I iiev get work on new
( ,,u 0 ., fact ,ry that some Lowell men are imlld
V ^«ed
|, e never had to beg his tobacco before. The
liread w ; nu ,. rB %vaut t 0 w .. r k but can’t fln*l
W(jrk to d „. V vha> dor* Mr. Cleveland know
al)OIlt thM wliat can he know? Now I like
old 0rover especially and j the havecontemptforhUslsn- but I old
derers, preaclierH, nothing but am
..„ 0 „ K h to know that lie is a man,
and so am I, We are influenced bv the com
, )a))V we keep and his company is mainly the
baiikern and millionaires and magnates of the
nation—the very men who control tbe debts of
,| K . government and the railroads and the
,.j tle g #ud lmm u ,| the people. Of course
.|„, y „ a „ t t | iea „ debts paid in gold. That is
IMltllr< and scripture, p^,,| ; to.,, driven but w * can’t wall do they it,
>w , wlien t)je B r e to the
wi ll tight fl-ht " not with the Pullet bn* with
t |, e ballot'
A weapon Hint comes down as soli
As snowflakes fall upon the sod,
But executes a freeman’s will
A* lightning does the will of God !”
' J ',‘ ,i8 8 !! T * r ?’?'»*"“ P ‘ ‘•"'•sjion is f**t AtuHta
mnnhm K .jL *rv d. v Mr 1 owrv ^on
tpl . ja prommuce.l one side is
Mr. In man. the millionaire, is on the other.
**«„ faVnewspsper All honor m bmi for it
it israrittsSs's«sss« was liardlv to be i xpe.te.i from a man whe
' r'n'cvi wrexn* bivor'rd IniAarTii
l>e- ml.titntio.,.
Atlanta t
Cholera Cholera In in Bopk Kfvvl
Cholera is spreading rapidly in the
quarantine lazaretto at Zsmeron, on
ueatns ™ among 8 ‘“’ the Mecca ^ pilgrim*
landed by the steamers Mohammed
”od .lube,la. The filth in the lazstetto
1 . regarded a* the main efttK” «« the
FIRE INSURANCE!
Rates
And prompt settlement in
case of loss by lire.
Apply at this Office.
VOL. XXIV. NO. 17.
Georgia’s rriiferlivl Sheep Have EleecM
ot 535 Pounds Each !
They have wonderful sheep in
Cteorgia. The protection editor of
the Atlanta Constitution is great oa
statigtieg He had a long article in
the Constitution of March 31, on what
Georgia wool growers have lost by free
wool. Ho tells us that the McKinley
tariff put a duty ou “all wools and
lwir” of from eleven to thirteen cents
a pound. “This, ” he says, “had tho
effect of raising tho price by that
amount, which weut directly into the
pockets of the wool growers of tho
COUutrv ' Ulu,ov th,s operation at the
present prices for wool the Georgia
wool growers alone would get $13,-
297,218 (!) representing the duties,
«d $10,023,792 (!) representing the
market price abroad, making the total
protected price $30,221,950. (!) The
(Georgia 2* farmer hns lost that $13,297,-
218. the question is who hare bene
flteil by it ?’*
The Atlanta Journal, of April 2, has
80WU f ““ " ltU ,bc9 ° 8t( “ i8tic8 ’ lt
says: wool
“According to our neighbor's
8t “ lisfc ioiau tho annual clip of the 402,
946 . ih Georgia-ereu under
cruel Democratic tanfl, which admits
wool frae-ia worth $18,923,732. With
wool at fourteen cents a pound, the
% u | e B‘vcu by the Constitution, this
would make ovory Georgia shoop grow
tlio neat little amount of 535 pounds
of ,7°°} ft y® ft V,
“l’his puts Georgia . clearly . , ill . tho ..
lead in tho wool business, anil as soou
the wonderful effect of our climate
»ud soil ou sheep is fully known the
wool growing industry Will bo traus
ferred bodily to this State.”
Thus UlU9 ’ with With wool wool at at fourteen fourteen ceuts ceuts
per pound, the Cleoigia wool growor
gots$42n year on an investment of
* ua Batatm h ?, is uot0,1 r ; 1
' vant f “proteetion that , wil enable
him to get $75 annually for the wool
ot each sheep. Protection is a great
institution nud can accomplish won¬
ders; but even it oanuot satisfy every¬
body.
American Wares in Foreign Countries.
Wo confess that we do not, under¬
stand the attitude taken by some of
our Amorioan newspapers in belittling
and sneering at tho evidence that is
coming in that American goods are
finding a market in foroigu countries.
If Amcricau made carpets and Ameri¬
can made worsted and woolen fabrics
are Hoouriug a sale for themselvos in
England and on tho continent of
Europe, entering in this way, into
direct competition with similar com¬
modities of foreign production, oven
though tlie sales lor the time being
may not bo extensive—for a beginning
has to bo made in every trado—it is
certainly rather a subject tor congratulation hold
than tho revorso. Wo
that ho is tho true Amorioan who has
that faith and confidence in his fellow
countrymen to boiiovo that it is pos¬
sible for them to do tilings better,
and because of labor-saving devices,
cheaper, than any other men on the
face of the earth. One groat objec¬
tion that we lnivo hud against the
system of protection, especially that
defined in the McKinley law, was
that it assumed tho industrial in¬
feriority of our country, ft implied
from first to last that in almost every
industry other people wore our
superiors, and hence it was neces¬
sary, in order to carry ou any
enterprise in this country, to pro¬
hibit tho entrance of the products
of those superior producers. Wo linve
always hold that this was a libel upon
American enterprise ; that given equal
opportunities, our genius for produc¬
tion was such that we could outdo and
undersell tho world, not by bringing
ourselves down to the level of more
barbarous brute force, but by utili/.iug
our brain power, and thus allowing
onr heads to save both our hands and
our feet. We have never hud the least
doubt Hint but for the Civil War
wo should now bo practically without
a customs tariff, having tho largest
ocean commerce, occupying, as regards
the other Nations, the position of the
woikshopof tho world, while paying
to every one who could come within
the classification of a skilled worker
wxges higher than were paid anywhere
else, or than iiave ever yet been paid
here. No doubt this is our ultimate
destiny under any circumstances, un¬
less social discontent, due to tho un¬
equal distribution of wealth which the
artificial laws of tho last thirty year*
have brought about, puts a chock upon
our progress. But in the meantime
the way to advance is to broaden out
our markets, and to make it evident
that in industrial competition it is in¬
telligence, sobriety and industry that
tell.—Boston Herald.
CA It ACCOUNTANTS.
Meet In San Franclseo and ___ Officer*
Klected.
.... I lie oar accountants, . at their annual ,„„„.i
meeting at Hari f’ranciaoo, have chosen
t “ | J4 , following 1 “f''ot", officers • President, carierviee Janie*
°»' i„ )orDe superintendent Bnfll of f car service
.
of tho Canadian Pacific, Montreal;
vice president, * Wm. McKay, car ac
coiiutant . of . the Southern u laclficUo., r. n„ ■
secretary, O. B. B. C. AN.;
treasurer, W. J. Barnunj, Fitchburg
railway, Boston. Frank M. Luca was
elected to a vacancy on the executiva
committee.
The next annual session willbe held
June. 1896 1 he awiociation was born
in Cleveland twenty years ago,and will
•**»“ '■* ^
Heavy f-hiladelpliia AaalRnmeut. 7~ , ,
Hevill Hchofield A Sons, woolen
manufacturers, ft . of , t M.n.vnnt Manayunk, Pa l a.,
have assigned. lhe assets and iiabili
ties and cause of the failure are not yet
the number of 600, out ol /**• a total “^j % ol
9,000 went out on a strike last Tnes
dav afu , r demanding an increase in
,
wage, of iu per cent, wbieh request
wa. dfijikii,
Bituminous Coal Markets,
The Wheeling Register says: “It
is not the competition of Nova Scotia,
that the Pennsylvania operator has to
fear. The product of that bleak,
country on the far eastern edge of the
continent could never, tinder tha
most favorable conditions, penetrate
the United States to a serious extent''
and were this Canadian coal admitted
free it would open a market in Canada
for ten times as much of our own
product. The homo competition is
what the Pennsylvania operators have
to fear. Every coal rise sees the coal
of the Kanawha Valley supplying the
Pennsylvania article, which it is al¬
ways in advance of ou the rpad to tho
Southern markets; and the steady de¬
velopment of the Kanawha Held means
a steady growing loss to the Pittsburg
district. Also, the Western States, as
well os the South are constantly
opening new mines and increasing
their output of coal, and time is not
far distaut when Pennsylvania will
have to seek a market in Canada for
its surplus production. It may not
he long, indeed, uutil all tho North¬
ern Central States will have to seek
their cutsido markets across the
Northern border. If the coal trade
between the United States and tho
Dominion should ho freed from the
restrictions that now limit it the
Pennsylvania operators would find
compensation in tlio groat Canadian
market for the loss that is Vicing in¬
dicted upon them by competition of
tlio Southern imnos."
SASH AND DOOR TRUST.
The Old Combine Revived,, anil an
Advance In Prices Announced.
A Chicago dispatch says: The old
sash, door aud blind trust lias been
revived and began business Thursday
with a membership of thirty-nine firms
representing capital of $20,000,091).
A secret meeting of those interested
IV IIH held, and was not adjourned until
long after midnight. The trust, made
arrangements for tho control of both
prices and output, and began opera¬
tions with a vim by ordering an ad¬
vance in prices of ten per cent, and a
reduction in output of twenty Each per
cent, to take cflect immediately.
of the firms paid into the treasury
$2,000 as a guarantee of good faith,
the money to be forfeited if any of tho
concern’s rules arc broken. Tlio rules
provide that the secretary of the trust
shall be permitted to examine the va¬
rious firms at any time, refusal to per¬
mit such an examination resu'ting in
a forfeiture of tho guarantee fund.
Henry Paine, of Oshkosh, Wis., was
made permanent chairmau of the trust
aud tho following board of directors
was olected: Ilonry Paine, H. Alien
Hmilli, Minneapolis, and L. lb Hub¬
erts, Chicago. Headquarters will bo
established in Chicago.
THKBIANIGINO MATCH AGO.
Fitzsimmons Put. Up HI. Money.
Wliat Corbett Says.
Champion James Corbett has re¬
ceived the following telegram from Ids
manager, William A. Brady
"Fitzsimmons will put his money lip
Monday next, sure, aud it’s a go.
Take care of yourself.” lust,” said Cor¬
“That settles it at
bett, and I know for tho first time that
tho match is a go. I shall close my
theatrical dates at Bt. Louis, three
weeks earlier than I expected, and
after a rest of two weeks, will
go into active training at An¬
bury Park. 1 am certainly glad that
the match is closed, for I have been
anxious to show tlio world tho merits
of the two men. 1 expect to win, as l
think I outclass Fitzsimmons, who is a
clover man, and who will go into the
ring in better condition than ever be¬
fore. I think.f know every blow and
every move in boxing and I am sure I
shall never be put out except by a
chance blow, which is something that
might happen to any man.”
THE TREATY SIGNED.
The Mikado Ratifies tlio Term. Agreed
to l>y tho Commission.
A dispatch from Hiroshima, Japan,
to the Central Nr.wn says that the
mikado ratified the Chino-Japanese
treaty Saturday afternoon. that
Advices from Berlin state
Tlie Chineso government lias con¬
cluded a loan of 30,000,000 marks at
6 per cent interest with a syndicate Iner
composed of the national bank,
Deutschland, Heydt & Co., aud Jicdi
reus & Hons, of Hamburg.
RUSSIA NOT SATISKtEI).
A semi-official note has been issued
to the newspapers at .Bt. Petersburg
to the effect that the Russian govern¬
ment is in no wise satisfied with the
Chino-Japanese treaty, especially tlm
clause providing for the cession of
Lioa-Tong. Russia, the note says, will
act in concert with other powers in
protecting the interests of Europe,
even supposing one of the great powers
does not share in such action.
Tliey Voted to Remain Out.
The cotton mule spiuuers’ union at
Blackstone, Mass., iiave voted to re¬
main out of the Blackstone Cotton
Company’s mill. They called upon
the superintendent and asked to re¬
main out Friday as the day was Pa¬
triots' Day. Their request was refus
etl. Hence the action of the union,
which was in accordance with the ac¬
tion taken at a meeting of the Now
England mule spinners’ union, iu Bos¬
ton, several weeks ago, which voted to
have the members of the union stay
out of the mill on Patriots’ Day.
Will Adxance Wage* Five Per Cent.
General E. B. Boss, resident agent
of the Williamantic (Conn.) Linen
Company, has received instructions
from General Barbour, treasurer of
the company, that commencing Mon¬
day, April 15th, a general advance of
9 per cent in the wage* of employ**
Weald «*k« plM*.