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THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18. 1893
WILL PROTEST
TILL THEY DROP.'
Senator Pugh Says the Anti-Repeal
Men Will Not Stop Short of
Physical Exhaustion
HILL FALLS ON ‘TOTHER SIDE.
Protests Against Stewart’s Resolution to
Investigate Private Affair* of Sen
ators—Teller Will Continue
at Some Future Day.
■Washington. Sept. 11.—The senior
senator from New York broke off to
day from hi? imputed alliance with the
extrsme wing of the silver senators.
Senator Stewart of Nevada offered
a resolution fir nn vmuilrV into the
fact of senators being stockholders in
national banks. Senator Hill oppos.d
th*? resolution in a strong speech, as
being unnecessary and unprecedented,
and a gross reflection on the aena-te.
The resolution went over until tonuc-r-
row. when It will corpe up in the regu-
lsr morning business.
The bill for the repeal of the pur
chasing clause of the Sherman bill was
taken up by Senator Pugh, a minority
membiT of The* flnamce commitb-ie, who
nmde a two and a half hour speech
against it. declaring at tne close unit it
was the <loti rinined and uiHaitenab'.c
purpose of tthc opponents of repeal to
oppose it until tne-fr physical strength
was exhausted and th?lr power of
speech gone.
The remainder of the session was oc
cupied in a continuation of Senator Tel
ler's speech against the bill. He did
not conclude, but said he would take up
another phase of ths question on some
other day—not tomorrow.
When the senate proceedings opened
them were just ten Democratic sena
tors, including Voorhees, in their scat*,
while on the Republican side of the
chamber there were sixteen in their
seats.
In presenting some petitions in favor
of the free coinage of silver Senator
Peffer said he noticed that there was a
general impression in the newspaper
press of the country that’ when a sena
tor or repres€m*tiatlve introduced a bill
by request hs was personally held re
sponsible for iu contents. His atten
tion had iwn called to that fact re
cently by critVclsms of the press, which
ttia found In Uu? •newspapers, because
he introduced last wreck, at the request
of the author, a bill proposing the es
tablishment of a univ rsity in th® Dis
trict of Columbia. He did not think
such criticism.? were fair. \
• STEWART'S RESOLUTION.
When Senator Stewart Introduced his
r«*olutA*n for th-e appotntmetir of
oomfnuM®^ of five senators to inquire
whether any renator Is or has been a
stockholder, or directly or indirectly
interested in any national bank,
said h® was led to offer It because Wall
street tod Lombard street organs hud
b:on claiming that senators from me
silver states >h<»uld not vote on ques
tion* in which they were peraogttKy Irv*
tcrested. At the wnv• time h* dlu-
clatmcd having any i«rsonal iirtenist
»«n silver iniqlujf or had he had foe .the
Wift -Attain' years. His wife had worn*
year* ago Invested some motley In.sil
ver ml-ndng In Mexico, but that mine,
after .having. hJUl the waiter pump id out
a year ago, was again closed on accwutu
of prioo of sliver and would nev
er be open d. again until the repeal bill
became a law.
„ Senator Hill opposed tlie resolutl a
ns scmothi'ng unprecedented and un
heard of and which would not nerve
any good purpose. He admitted that U
hud its excuse In 4he sug^..stloiis made
that senators from the silver state**
were actuated in their coarse by r.atoa
of their own financial or industrial in
ter sts. Wihu& precedent, he asked,
would ba ea!Uoll>hed by the adoption
of the resolution? Wben th« senate
came to consider the tariff question
was H «o have an Invest teat ins com-
fuitt’e to irvtuvrv what .senator* were
Interested in manufacture* or import-
. Ins? When the senate came to kgl*>
lute on commercial tmtora was k to
Inquire whac senators were pecuniarily
Interested In tlift groat qu oltoo of com
merce? Senators lad a right to be Inter
e#t«d in the question of commerce.
A RIGHT TO BE INTERESTED.
Senators had & right to be interested,
both directly and Indirectly. In matters
of flame \ and their vote* could not be
affected thereby. He could not resist
the conclusion that the offering of that
resolution was to some extent a reflec
tion on the senate. He had sustained
th® other day the senator from Nevada
in offering a resolution calling for in
formation Os to the finance* of t he
country. Ho had thought that that
resolution ought not to be referred to
the finance commfttoe.
PUGH AGAINST REPEAL.
* When the sliver MU came up at 1 p. im
the floor belonged to Senator Teller, bif!
he offered to yield It to Senator Pugh.
The latter embraced the opportunity
and addreK***d the senate in .opposition
to tho bill. He had rend«n<l re-read, he
said, tho message of the president con
vening congress and found It to be an
explicit declaration in favor of the main
tenance of the gold Ktandard in the
currency of ifce ITnheil states until
changed to blm rallUm by international
agreement, and that would afford the
only remedy that could mitigate the
present danger, threatening the future.
It was the first time that congress had
been convened in extraordinary session
for the sole purpose of repealing any
Uw. And that law was one which no
senator stated or believed to be the
cause of tho existing financial derange
ment. What necessity was there, he
• asked, for the extraordinary session, or
' the pressure and clamor for imme
diate action, which would bo ajnockcry
iuist :ifc;ibl« charge i^’ the prialdeflt that
the failure of the Hhermnu law to In
crease tho price of silver was the origi
nal evil. The message presented, he
said, tho square Issue whether the
United States should come to the gold
standard or should cling to tho use of
the constitutional union of gold and
silver as a standard of values. If t! «•
Sherman law were repealed In order to
restore confidence among money lend
er*, tho lion of discontent among the
toiling millions would be wakened up.
whose roar would shake the cotinent.
Referring to the national bunks. Sen
ator Pugh accused them of arraign
ing themselves in open hostility to sli
ver and silver certificates and of doing
everything in their power to discredit
both In disregard for the law and the
declared public policy ut the United
States. Whenever laws had been jmssed
by congress to promote the circulation
of silver and of silver certificates the
national banks of the East, and espe
cially those of New York city, imme
diately called a meeting, sat in judg
ment on the legislation of congress,
publicly condemned It ar.d declared
their purpose not to obey the law, but
to nullify it. Their claim of supervision
over the financial legislation of con
gress and the execution of the law by
the executive; department of the gov
ernment had been recognized and tol
erated until It had grown into nn es-
tabTishd practice, and today no other
authority was consulted in the formu
lation of remedial legislation. Senator
Pugh recalled President Cleveland’s
hostility to the coinage of silver under
the Bland-Allison law. The disastrous
consequence of adding $2,000,000 per
month of 73 cent dollars had been
strongly and earnestly presented by
the president and Secretary Manning;
and the arguments then urged against
It were the same, substantially, ns
those contained In the last message of
the president against the further ex
istence and operation of the Sherman
law. If a friend of the free coinage
of sliver had been In the presidential
ofllc-e at the time of the Sherman law,
a bill for the free coinage of silver at
the existing ratio would bo the law at-
this hour, and with no danger of its
EVOLUTION
IN CLOTHING.
Interesting Sights to Be Witnessed in
Two Big Exhibits at the
Chicago Fair.
FROM GRASS TO FINEST SILK.
One Can be Seen in the Dahomey Village
and tho Ollier In Machinery Hall
—Ilow the ieetl For Clothes
Has Been Developed,
known to be willing to approve n bill
for the free .coinage of silver on mme
reasonable ratio such a bill would be
come a law nt the present session.
NO UNCONDITIONAL REPEAL.
An unconditional repeal of the Sher
man law would necessarily remand sil
ver back where it was under the act
of 1873, and Where it was In all gold-
using countries. That act had been no
"makeshift.” It had made a clean
sweep of silver as money. Such a re
peal would not bo n "cowardly make
shift,” but an unconditional surrender
to the goldites. He woatd us soon trust
young chickens tn a hawk’s nest to be
cared for as to leave silver where It
would be 1 fthe Sherman law were
repealed unconditionally. He should
never vote for the unconditional re
peal of the Sherman law. An uncon
ditional repeal of nny law, without
substituting other remedial legislation,
was an unqualified admission that no
such legislation Is necessary, and the
chances of securing the new remedy
In a separate bill were diminished. In
conclusion. Senator Pugh said:
“It Is the determined and unaltera
ble purpose of the opponents of repeal
to etand upon their <x>nvlctlons of pub
lic duty and (IrVe'.lty to their pledges
to the people whom they represent, and
who have honored them with their con
fidence on this vital question, until phy
sical strength Is exhausted nnd the
power of speech la left to no senator
to prevent the success of Hie ennspt-
racy denounced by John G. Carlisle as
equal In Its consequence to war, pesti
lence and famine.”
Senator Pugh finished his speech at
3:30, having spoken f.ir exactly two
houra and a half. Senator Teller re-
sumed the floor with his "to be con
tinued speeches. Shortly before S
o’chick, while ho was making an argu
ment to show that the proceedings tn
the New York stock exchange had
much to do with creating good and bad
times. Senator Teller made n long
pause, which Senator Voorhees rightly
Interpreted as a signal tha.hn wished
to stop; and so Senator Voorhees pro
posed a session for executive business.
Before yielding for that motion, how
ever. Senator Teller said that he would
not have an opportunity of going on
tomorrow; that two other senator* had
given notice of an Intention to address
the senate, and that he had reached
point where he could quit for the pres
ent. Ho would take up nnother point
In the case acme other day. The sen
ate, at 6:05, after a short executive
session, adjourned until tomorrow.
THE HOUSE SESSION.
There were lea* than 100 members
present when the house was called to
order at noon today. In his prayer the
chaplain prayed for the child which
had been added to the nation and the
home and the heart of the Chief magis
trate of the country. Ho invoked the
divine protection on lioth mother nnd
child: he prayed that the little one
would grew up with every grace and
womanly virtue.
Mr. Murray of South Carolina, In
view of the cyclones which have re
cently devastated tho South Carolina
coast, asked for the Immediate con
sideration of a Joint renolution appro
priating 1200.004 to enable the secretary
of war to purchase ration* and medi
cines and distribute them among the
sufferers from the August cyclone
along the South Atlantic const. Mr.
Kilgore objected, nnd the readutton
was referred to the committee on ap
propriation.
Mr. Richardson, from the committee
on prtnttng. reported back a resolution
providing that all documents and !►>><
Ordered by the Fifty-sc-ond congress
amt remaining undistributed at this
time shall bo distributed among the
members of the Fifty-third congress.
Mr. Richardson said that unless the
resolution wus adopted the documents
which were published before the first
Monday In December, would be dis
tributed to members who had retired
on the4th of March, and not o the sit
ting members. Tho resolution
adopted.
The speakers called the committee*
for reports, but the only one that fell
Into the house was one nulhorlxlng the
secretary of the treasury to settle he
accounts between the United State,
and Florida. It was made from th
committee on claims and placid ursei
the private caled.tr. The house then.
— motion of Mr. Catchlngs, at 12:4th
World’s Fair, Sept. 9.—(Special Cor
respondence.) -Evolution Is the key
word of today’s philosophy, and here
Is the place to study It. Here we see
how one invention which filled a long-
felt want straightway created two more
wants and set many more Inventors to
work. Thus the pressure of newly cre
ated wants is ever forcing man along,
and yet at auy point in his progress
there Is a tendency to slip and recede.
And how easily they do slip. When I
was In Arizona I often remarked that
while It took forty years to civilize an
Indian, a well disposed white mall could
go wild in six months. Since my five
weeks here I beg leave to udtl that
while, according to Darwin, it took
20.000 generations for the monkey to
make a man of himself, a man' can
make a monkey of himself in twenty
minutes on three fingers of Chicago
whisky, ii i» so much easier to elide
than to climb.
In tho Live stock pavillion yesterday I
heard a very animated discussion between
some Illinois grangers on the question,
“Do hogs pay?” In this vicinity they
don’t. It is tho rest of us who pay the
hogs and If things get much higher I
shan’t bo able to stay. Down town they
have been having whafr the Oregon In
dians call a "hyas time” over the suffer
ings of the unemployed, and Henry
George, Dr. McGlynn, Bishop Fallows,
and many other eminent men and several
talented women have told the sufferers
why they suffer. Now If these landlords
and other builders have paid for two years
past any such wages as they swear to,
then with any sort of economy no laborer
ought to suffer in three or four months of
idleness. I had got exasperated over va
rious petty swindles and determined to
Interview ono landlord and get my re
venge by reporting him with unscrupul
ous accuracy. So I fired at him these
conundrum^:
“Why Is the cost of living so much
higher In Chicago than In New York, Cin
cinnati, St. Louis or Indianapolis! Why
Is the prion of bread ns high ns it was In
1864 when flour Is only one-third as high!
Why does the farmer have to sell 1ns stuff
for one-half whnt he did a few years ago
and then pay n third more for what he
eats of It when he comes to the city, and
why does this keep on getting inore sol
And finally, why is it that with all these
gains yon fellows are all hard Rm and
about every third one of you In the aher-
getner as fancy or necessity dictated. Of
cuur-f tl.”-t* .‘-trails were twisted finer
and finer as man progressed and were put
together by the syitem of over-and-under
replication, and bo spinning and weaving
came into existence And here aro shown
some of those extremely primitive looms,
such as are still used by the hill people of
India, the Navajo women and others—
nothing in such a louu apparently but a
beam fastened in th* branches of a low
tree, another beam staked fast to the
ground and to each a loose beam attached
at the ends with cords, the strands of wool
running over these last. How very rude
and primitive they look. Yet on such a
loom I have seen a Navajo woman weave
with wonderful skill, producing red and
yellow flowers with colored yarns, making
a blanket of snch firm texture that water
could be carried in it.
Much more rapid was tho advance in
making linen, for nations of finer taste
took it up and tho advance in silk was
probably more rapid still as taste stimu
lated invention. Hence the “Babylonish
garment” and all the wonderful stuffs of
Tyre and India. But silk was not pro
duced in Europe till some 500 years after
Christ, when two missionaries smuggled
the silkworm eggs out of China in tho hol
low of a bamboo cane. And now let us go
into tho Machinery building and see what
marvels the Aryan has wrought with the
stolen art of Series and his own flax, wool
and cotton. First in array aro tho exhibits
of t.ii« f /iwpii Machine shop? 1 , the Knowles
Loom works and the Cromptons. The
feathery cotton and the snowy wool take
the form and color of textile fabrics before
our eyes and in the deft manipulation by
the women in charge wo see proof of the
statement that with these automatic
looms one woman can produce plain cloth
ing enough for 600 people.
It is but little that the woman has to do,
for th^ loom itself seems gifted with in
telligence to give notice if anything goes
wrong, even of so small a matter as the
breaking of a thread. The line of evolu
tion ran thus: First, hand power only,
next wind and water power and finally
steam. And Is It soon to be electricity? It
Thoroughly Sooted
The Woman who t jDU
once tried Pear line is s
ed. It suits millions
women who are
using
and millions more
following suit. Itwatj
easily, to save y 0
clothes and your strenm
it cleans thoroughly
save your time and your temp
Do you know that with ~Pe t
inc there is little or no
bin-? Itistlieruh.ii;’
bing that wears out your cl’otl
and.wears off your paint. \
KJ} will like Pcarlinc, because i
sure; there is nothing like it, because it is safe.
T) Feddl.rs and some unscrupulousi poets -will tdl
I lP\A/ Cl FP 15 “,S ood “ or thc 5am = as Fcarline.” it-c
-I—vr CL A Vv Pearlme is never peddled, and if your grocer sends VO
thing in place of Fcarline, do the honest thing—umt it back. JAMES Pyle X° U
TC
r Ser
Hold
ENTY
** Cas to rI a la so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any proscription
known to me,*’ H. A Archer, M. D.,
ill So. Oxford ou, Brooklyn, ft. t.
Castorla cure* Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrheas, Eructation,
Kills Worms, giro* Bleep, and promote
gestlon.
Without injurious medication.
“ Tne use or • castorla is so universal and
its merits so well known that It seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castorla
within easy reach.”
Carlos Marttx, D. D„
New York City.
“For several yearn I have recommend
your ‘Castorla,’ and shall always continue
do so as it has Invariably produced benefid
results.”
Edwin F. Pardee, ZL D.,
125th Street and 7th Ave., New York at
Van Winkle Gin & Machinery C
I of yi
Ufa hands!” pointing as I spoke to a pile
of furniture on the sldetvalk a square
sway, the last seizure of the over-active
‘ llffs.
bai:
"It’s as simple as failin’ off a log,” re
plied mine hoot, who Is an Indiana man.
“It coats as much to get out a loaf of
bread aa it did In 1601 and It costs a good
deal more to run a hotel. It all goes in
rent, taxes and wages. I pay as much
rent for this ramshackle concern of wood
and plaster as they used to pay qn Hunt’s
hotel in Cincinnati. And then tho insur
ance—0, Jerusalem! They never can get
it high enough to suit’em. But you see
yourself that if 11 ro over starts about here
the whole block goes. The other day—
you saw it in the papers—a little girl
started a fire in the backyard and burnt
. twenty-five acres of buildings in South
Chicago. Five dollars a week is the very
least yon can get the poorest kind of n girl
for and what they pay for good ones I don’t
know, for I can’t get any. Tho bakers
make next to nothing on bread for the
same reasons. All Inst year and this
spring common labor was 40 cents an
hoar—paid It right on this street for
ahovelln’dirt. Carpenters got twice that
nnd so on. Now the buildings ure fin
ished and right away there Is sufferin’.
Well, we’d he the next ones to suffer If we
PAFEH-MAKISO MACHINE.
Is to be hoped, for there aro still gravo dis
advantages in using steam nnd when elec
tricity con be transmitted to great dls-
tances from tha waterfalls which generate
It there will no longer be any economy in
concentrating the textile manufacturer
in a few cities. Each village can then
have the weaving dono for Its own popula
tion at minimum cost. The power for
this building Is supplied from an annex
running along the whole south side of the
building. In it aro forty-three engines
with nn aggregate of 20,000 horse power,
which also operates 127 dynamos and thus
produce the electrio light and power for
all the other buildings.
It Is on the silk looms, however, that tho
finest work Is done; but I shall refrain
from explaining them for reasons into
which I trust the reader will not too cu
riously Inquire. Of Americans the Phoe
nix Manufacturing company, of Philadel
phia, hns looms In full operation, and J. J.
Munition, of Pittsburg, and John Best Sc
Co., of Patterson, N. J„ run sets of Jac
quard looms. On these are woven silk
handkerchiefs of almost gossamer deli
cacy, with figures showing pictures of the
World’s fair buildings and portraits of ’
prominent men. These are sold on thu
spot by a so-called “concession;” but all
manufacturers who have not secured that
must remove their products every night..
Cutler the general subject of clothing
would come tho long array of sowing ma
chines, cloth catting anti knitting ma
chines nnd machines for making thread,
buttons, hooks and eyes, etc.; bat It is not
necessary to describe such common things.
It Is a fnr cry from the Navajo woman
tolling at her rnde loom and the Navajo
girl twisting wool on the rudo lmnd-
splndle a* she watches her sheep, to the
automatic loom and spinning jenny,
bnt It Is all Illustrated hero and far more-
ffectlvcly than could be dono by a volume
of such writing ns this.
didn't charge yon fellows to corresp<
Now here’s a state of affaire. Talented
adjourned.
ann an Insult to n,e common sense and
intelligence of the people? There was
not a word or sentence In the message
expressing any favor or friendshln for
bimetallism, or that 1 the
addition of one more silver dollar to
the currency. Tho message r|e<irly
meant that l-» government had '
charged it* *' .,tt funihbin, :
cient anur.i : \ '*.i: l.:ul r ,j
in the quail:;.* ami soundness of th.lr
circulation. The president dectand Umt
the country was In "*n unfortunate
financial plight.” that values supposed
to be fixed were fast becoming conject
ured and that failure had Invaded in
every branch of business. What, asked
Senator Pugh, did the president think
was the enure of these unprecedented
•ntl disastrous conditions? The presi
dent thought that those things w ,f re
prinrlpaiiy chargeable to congress, to the
imrchase, ,nd not the purchase alone,
of silver by the g -tier.t! government,
and specifi- , the Bherman law.
THE HUiUK PRESENTED.
Hugh held there was an un-
llos k Till, I
W* offer One Iftmdm! Dollars Re-
wanl for any case of t’jtarrti that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. (11 EX BY & co„
Prop*., Toledo, O.
We. th* nndersigned. have known F.
J. Cheney for the last fifteen years,
and believe him perfectly honorable
In all business trans.ictions and ilnan-
o t’Uy able to carry oat any obligation
m ule by ih?!r firm.
West & Truax. Wholesale Druggist,.
Toledo, O. Wiilillng, Klnnan & Mar
vin. Wholesale Druggist*. Toledo, O.
Hall's Ciuirrh Cure is taken tnter-
n*lly, atring directly upon the Idood
and mucous surface* of the system.
Price. 73 cent* per bottle, gold by all
Druggists. Tesr.tn mb's free.
women at the lake front meetings tell how
the poor girls are driven to evil by want,
and 60,000 families complain thattbeycau-
not get domestic help at any price. Wages
are so high that landlords can't make any
money and laborers aro In such straits
that we hare already had two riots. The
fanners complain of falling prices for
their staff and in the city It is so high that
In lien of satisfying oar appetites we bate
to tighten onr belts ss we aid In the army.
Surely somebody Is lying. Or I am a boil
economist! At any rate the problem is too
much for me. I feel It—and right where I
live-bat the philosophy of it eludes me.
After these preliminary remarks, tin
application of which I trust the reader to
find, let us go to the Machinery building
and instead of wsarisom* walks and talks
let us trace the evolution of just ..iiy arti*
cle through all the ages of man. Let us
take clothing because It is so beautifully
illustrated and the machiotry Is compare
lively simple. Ths looms run like light
ning and turn out fabrics at a surprl
speed, still a common man can bee
they run, even It ha has no wheels It
bead. Bnt to trace a suit of clothes from
the very start we must go over and begin
tn the Anthropological department. There
it is clearly shown that the first clothes
were made of leaves, grass, bark and roots
or rushes. Of course primeval man liv
in quadrnmanotu Innocence aa tlie ni
malsdo, but with ths growth of d-jm-
order cams a dawning sente of shame
to the sources of life and so a gni--n
other vegetable suit about the size of yo
two hands was invented for modest
COTTON SEED
OIL,
MILL MACHIN
ERY.
COMPLETE.
FERTILIZER
MACHINERY
COMPLETE.
CYPRESS
TANKS.
ATLANTA* GEORGIA.
MANUFACTURERS. '
WIND MILLS,
PUMPS, ]
COTTON OIN!
FEEDE
CONDENSER*
AND
PRE
The best ayatem for elevating cotton and distributing same direct i
Many gold medal* have been awarded to us. Writo for catalogue
what you WANT. We can save you money.
VANWINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY COMPANY,
ATLANTA,
ORDERED TO RIO JANEIRO.
Wnnhinf’oti. II.—Th* turjr d*-
l*artrn**m liwlay **rd**r*<1 lh«* commai)d#>r
of th** cfui«*T Detroit to nail for Kfo
Janeiro without. *WUy to protect tb*
American interest* there during the
revolution.
A* refinement increased the suitKr.vl
Uftlljr extended toward* the h*td and the
feet, even in hot countries nnd In Kunn^r,
white in cold countries the skins ofani-
mnl* were used a* soon nn man learned
how to get them. All this In beautifully
<IIa*t rated in carvings, pictures t id 1 other*
wise in the Antbropolcgicnl exhibit, and
down in the ptnUnnce one still .-••« tho
Dahomey dud# in Ws cool nnd airy sum*
meriaitofgmm* Thntdotting beffm in
tU sentiment mentioned Ufurther yn.v. *1
hy the fact thnt nmon^ the nuler r»v s»
children still go nuked till ths scssssf
shame develops In them.
The cont of skins wss n rather elaborate
*®** r »«* the relics show, end there *m
one suit made of thick berk, pounded till
* became flexible, which was
Moving eastward from tlie looms one
soon enters nn area where he is almost
deafened by the din—the tremendous car
moving on tho beams overhead, the great
Hoo press, only turning out SM.000 printed
copies per hour of The Columbian during
two hours of each dAy though capable of
doing much more, tho great puper-making
hint} which I study long but canxfot
comprehend, nnd tho long, long lines of
ponderous machines for cutting, boring,
notching, trimming or otherwise fashion
ing iron, steel, wood nnd atone. In it aU
we bee a prophecy thnt by and by only the
rudo and uncultured nations will do bard
work. Our sort of folks will just stand
around and watch the machines do it and
set* that they do not. rrbel.
Hlesaed slaves! With no bodies to kick
and no souls to be damned, they yield us
tho equivalent of 80,000,000 of man*power.
Taking his bland upon tho shore of in
finite possibility tho inventor has in fifty
years evoked from the boundless ocean of
natural dyuamics, and presented to us,
the labor of 80,000 000 sUves. If the Amer
icans of 1840 had been told that by this
time the supernni powers would have sent
to the Unled States 80,000,000 of the most
intelligent and stalwart beings from the
most highly developed planet (for it
aiiKiunu U» that)and that all their labor
should lie ours without need of lash or
fear of insurrection, with what gladne
would they havo cried: “Vanish want!
Away forever with discontent, and talk no
more of slavery in the south or misery in
the cities! For how can there be want or
discontent when an intelligent and indus-
Itsfout people h&vtssdt eures in number
four times their own working forcef”
The slavse have come. Four times i__
many a* the000 human producer*.
Slates of light nnd fire,soulless,bloodless,
nerveless, tesding oolv on tho condensed
sunddne of the carboniferous age and
wearing out in our service without ,
groan or a wound to any man’s conscience.
And yet thi rds want and there are riots
and there are said to be 500.000 people suf-
faring (or lack of work. wKvf
J. B. Paukk.
Dizziness, Nausea. Pro win—, Distress af t. r
eatinjr. Pain la the Side. Ac. WhUs their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
Headachy yet Catrca's Ijttu Liver Pills
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this ar.nojinjr complaint, while
they also correct all duordsn o(the stomach,
cumulate the liver —1 regular the boweU
Even If they only cured
1AU
b«nd!-c*nt»Unip.Yotxrt«pci«® oc ‘ ^
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this dlrir—Ins complaint:
but fortunately their goodn— doss not enc
here, and those who once try them wlii find
they trill not be willing to do wit
But after < U sick head
we make our (Treat
white * _
Guru's Pius are wry im ill
in-! wry may w Os. or two rlU.n t.tc
s fins.. Thf-v are itrirtlr vrrvul.lsssd rift
nit crips cr par**, bat b, ttolr trotl. sgta
nlfsv, all who tiro them. Is VlsU St B r
3vs lor II. Sold CT.rysh.rv, or sent b7
c.stii tananiirv t=i.
T'f S’ ’ii?
>*!$ KVKIl PRISTKD.
SH Ml Im
ll.
preujr. From wsszistg.sAssd AW
wearing tbs wool only wu
sa»y sup, and thsjr fin*
There Is a 3-Inch display advert
roent 5n this paper this week whirl
as two wonts alike except on
won!. The wune is trae of each net
one appearing each week, from the I
Harter liedlf*ne Company. TW* hon
place* a "irwent” cm everything tin
make and poMlah. Icook for It, »t
the muse of tbs word, nod they ■
return yon a book, beantirul litho
graph* or a*tuple* free.
EPILEPSY OR FITS.
a this disease be cared? Mott phyitclsna sty
No—/aay,Yss; all forms and the worst cut t. Af
ter II j—sated/and esperiueat I have found the
remedy.—Eptkf*/ Is cared by it; ewrei, not sob-
deedhyopUim-the old,trearhrreus, f—k tzeat-
smbI. Do net topolr. Forget past t vpaeitfeea ee
yeer pens, pest outragse ee yo.rr T l Vner, p*i
failures, took forward,eat tetkwvl M/frxsd/
is of tedtjL Tstesble wofk oe ths aafcjsct, and
large bottte sf ths remedy east free for trial.
If settee Fset-Oaco and Lxprrss address.
• 1‘tvf. W. XL PEEKE,f.P.,4 Ct&it M.,Ncw York.
Clift
I have a poo>. ;ixamdyftelheals*s4in* »
:r« thetuhnde of clms of the watte ***
UNUMWIsmi
t . hot I will **o l two s-mu*
TvauuSib tbeatbp ou
tenrwheedUmd nsthsw tore* * n 1 y -
T. A. riorum, M. C\. t - * 1 ** _
PARTNER WANTE
Hi 1)1
fines* man w** pr
»»■
A
knowledge of machim*?
money can *ectire a hall iDWt - * 1
less, in the Ferry
irlnJ M»*
0,11 on
1 (He for roanufaetur n;
or address me *»
Ordinary's Office, e-
Hcpt. Z 1SB.—Whereas
esadmintatrttorofjttsto*^ fur
oald county, deceased,
to Vll all the reel tfUtsbeto**^
deceased: Notice *• .nn
>flr*t Mondvy tn Octou*
lenl reason be shosii
Witness «nv hand sme