Newspaper Page Text
farmer Thinks.
;,D.C.O0t, 23 , 1891.
allow toe to ask some
aadcom manta little upon
ic topic 3 of the day?
h' e icano® admitted tlwulwgov
S neraby go ilty o! class ieg
Ljjeat bss been that fact
LiOD. anl that owing to
f the people, whom we
ltl0U n A have
ne! P° designat d by be letter,
Ui nriched, w por .
>eo# ill designate by tne
L who® we ffi impoverisUed.
b been
liter B U jjave " g0V
Sha '
to A, I have done a
usaeDt sri A must not
kit deal for y°°» ’ )0
do any more. I am go
ned to tial hereafter
lobe “ strict-ly impar
I •
B bis beea m
inf to such an extent
F. f'; 'ulukeallof voa
Li, bis Property
.«**»> labor f° r all «»*
y pg i will see to it that
.
,p3y ne iJe debt. I will be
i Ltl, shall pay bere
impartial between you
L HcsUatl pay you every to cenl B
owes Tiien shall it tuin
it I know that I have been un¬
say, that injus
It to you and owing to
in a fearfully bad fix.
|e you are all
debt to A must consume
jar because
kt you have, yea, more,
[interest you must pay him in
faster than your profits. It
iases will hereafter
ail m y fault, but I
seto interfere between you. I
1 make you pay him what }T>u
3 him, just as I would make any¬
wise pay you if they owed you
[tiling. You say it is hard. Y es
m it but if I should interfere in
way it would be class legisla
ior paternal and j’ou know a
eminent nau9t not be paternal,
it would be wrong,
ou say it was wrong in me to act.
I have done between you. So it
I grant, but two wrongs won’t
b a right. Hereafter I shall be
letly impartial. All the labor of
Ir life must go. Yes, I am sorry
[you, but it can’t be helped. Your
c ami children! Old age! Yes
Ibad! There are the unsettled
lemment lands out there, you can
no them, yes. All fit to make
pcs upon. It is, as you say, true,
ive given to the railroads, schools,
. but there is a great deal more,
can at least go out and make
Ives upon them. I can’t do any
Ig else for you. It would be pa¬
pal, I do you know, and therefore wrong
nothing to counteract its
r is the simply tariff reformers
lid have it do.
Jme take the ground that the
Jnnnent must do nothing for the
es or people that they can do for
^selves, and restrict the power of
government to protect them from
f>h enemies, domestic strife (but
totting of domestic robbery), reg b
, 0 , administer , . . .
ante, justice, .
Ea '’ ‘ lja i tk e government has
l !ower to manufacture money.
“ I'‘ ease tell us where money
P from! It was not bon, and did
^ ?|>w. na ^ States tt Haes and individuals
e not the Con
don especially say to “coin
mon
«iU its values?” It there is
a
lJ 06 pari, there must be
N and if mouey
money is coilecfced^to
• tie money pocket, must come out "of
Is is frequently sta,
JC «w said “the
mt ed States government
does not manu
lt c °iLcts it from the
irom what portion of the
,llect the §346,000.000
ir ri Ire- now s Lted by the Sec
‘ ur y to be in Qircu—
m whose pockets
did ii
Jo,000,000 of various
m circulation in 1S06,
P rod «cts is the great
“ e cir culation been
re
0eiD g funded,
,
-.f.i.iig cr bonds i
50 ] i'"i coat ot it
was
lie farmers’ prod
the government
e Q i ^sue of
& f-j !s products, “green
to he re
^atcota farmers' n- odi p^k 1 •
ii e out Of the
I 0ar «las a Or,
if n should
make another issue of “green backs
upon farmers’ land, as the the colony
of Pennsylvania did in 1723, and it
should be remeemed by the holders
of those lands, as it was in said colo¬
ny, how that come out of the pockets
of H, Y, L and B? As it could make
such a loan to the Pacific railroads, I
don't see why it may not make it to
farmers. Railroads are important,
but so-are farmers. Oat of whose
pockets come the certificates of issue
pon silver and goid bullion stored
x
n the treasury? Now suppose a land
mortgage were stored right along by
the side of this bullion and ceetifi
cates issued against it, out of whose
pockets would those certificates come?
Suppese the government were to
charge 2 percent on the certificate
issued on that mortgage, into whose
pockets would that interest go?
Should the government receive 2 per
cent on all the land that is mortga»
ged it would need no other raven ue,
and tne owners of that mortgaged
land would be saved from two to five
times as much as the government
would get. I do not say there would
be no objections to the government
holding mortgages upon so much
land; but which would be the better
for the people, that a sympathetic
grvernment within their control hold
the mortgages in their interest, or for
a combination of private capitolists to
hold them for their own private inter¬
ests, and then to get possession of the
government also, of which there
would always be a danger, and which
when they had once gotton, would
on^ be taken from them by a revo¬
lution a la Prance? For whose benefit
should the government be run, for
that of the people or for that of the
capitalists? Ah! but in whose benefit
is it being run? Consider, fellow citi¬
zens, and rouse you from your lethar
SJ- Niue millions of mortgages, and
they pay the federal government
nothing, when they might support it
entirely, and save the people at the
same time untold millions in money,
besides evils and dangers undesirable
and innumerable. B B Turner,
Broad Run Station, Va.
i Ready for Business.
A certain doctor who was noted for a
keen eye to business was driving along
the street of a country town when iiis
horse took fright and ran away. He
was thrown violently out of his trap
and -rendered senseless. Presently he
recovered a little from his unconscious¬
ness, and noticing the crowd which had
gathered about him, asked: “What’s
the matter, gentlemen? Anybody hurt?
I am l)r. B ■. Can I be of any ser
vice?”—San Francisco Argonaut.
Why Women Won’t Marry.
Mr. Andrew Lang has written a
charming essay upon the text, “Don’t
Marry Literary Men.” The advice
seems wholly unnecessary. Women do
not marry; they are married. Men do
the “prying.; The misuse of that
word “marry is very common, yet we
are surprised to find so careful a writer
as Mr. Lang committing the atrocity.
“Wed” is a much better word than
“marry”—Chicago N<j,ws.
A Timid Man’s Expedient.
A timid man, living alone in the out¬
skirts of Hartford, has hit upon a de¬
vice for searing away burglars. Each
night upon retiring ha places a huge
pair of boots outside of every bedroom
door in the house to convey the im¬
pression that every chamber is occu¬
pied by an ablebodied man. A bur¬
glar who happened in would think he
had-struck a hotel.—Philadelphia Led¬
ger.
Lord Sandwich, who was a great
lover of music, and frequently had ora¬
torios performed at Hinchinbrook, was
so enamored of the thunder of the
drum that lie had one side of his music
room strained with parchment, which,
upon being suddenly struck, so alarmed
the company as to throw many into
fits.
It is remarked of the Chesapeake
and all American oysters that they bear
long carriage with less harm than any
! that grow on other shores. Our close
j season, as everybody knows, is the
j series of months which are spelled with
out the R.
In Glasgow, Scotland, a company
pays for tlie privilege of collecting the
! smoke from a number of blast furnaces.
' Tiie smoke is passed tlyough several
* miles of wrought iron tubing, and yields
! a pr ° fitab!e pr '' >,<,r ' r <>f oi!
Children Crj for Pitcher’s Castoria.
ISiimI Insects Act as if They Harl Sight.
So far as insects of the caves are con¬
cerned the loss of sight which they
gradually undergo is sufficiently well
understood. The first step Is a decrease
in the number of the facets which
make up the compound eyes, with a
corresponding dirmnishment of the
lenses and retime. After four or five
generations the eyes become useless.
It would be most interesting to breed
these or other blind creatures of the
caves in the fight, so as to find out if
they would get their sight back. In
all animals, including man, it is found
that nature tries to compensate for loss
of vision by increasing the power of the
sense of touch. Thus the atennae of
cave insects grow remarkably long.
It is very curious to find that nothing
in their behavior suggests the fact that
they are blind. They walk, run, stop,
explore the ground and try to escape
from the grasp of the bug hunter just
as if they really saw. The light of a
candle startles them as much as if they
perceived it visually. It is a remarka¬
ble fact, proving that the ancestors of
these creatures could see, that in the
embryo stage of their existence they
have eyes well developed.—Wasliing
ton Star.
Y/Jfu s
■e.
®T»HtS is the machine that
“ is used in the Glace,
Court-room, and for reporting
lectures and sermons.
Y/kih it3 speed :3 rreater thaa cny
other l:R 2 '~'n method, it is so simple
that r.r.y LLeiliresifc person ccn pain a
speed of ioo or mors words per min¬
ute, in five cr zhi weeks?, without the
aid cf m iastrustcr. Circulars end
testimrn’a’s rent to £.11 who mention
till 3 paper.
r t r-"’prr rpT-rc ptin
L,a i i l . mUU l.< J to 4 J . Lk. ii k kuj kl.f Jj
Go! 1 Ajcnt for IJ. G. and Canada.
OF INTEREST TO GINNERS
So much has been said about the
use of Scales at the gin house that
we call particular attention to a new
book entitled ‘‘Facts about, Scales”
published by “JONES OF BING¬
HAMTON” in Binghamton, N. Y.
It contains lull inf irmation regard¬
ing cos' s, patents and should
be read by every intelligent gintter
A postal will get it.
mm
11 m m
wm
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat
e»t business conducted for Moderate Fees.
Our Office is Opposite U, S Patent Office,
and we can secure patent in less time than those
remote model, from Washington. drawing photo., with descrip¬
Send or free of
tion. . We advise, if patentable till patent or not, fs secured.
charge. Our fee not, due
A Pamphlet, “How to Obtain Patents,” with
names of actual clients in yourState, county, or
town, sent free. Address,
e,A,sfts©w&co.
Opposite Patent Office, Washington, 0. C.
a ycr.r is bt ing nandelfy Jo^in 7L
Goo ltvin,Tn»y.N.Y make M at work for us. Ktiufar,
1 you in»y not as n;ui h, i«it we cun
§£& * pSI (10 leach a'tiuy y.;u v' 4 ui< l lb** k!y fluff, bow a to ltd earn niurc from as $S fro to l
ft yon
on. Both sexes, nil apes. In ;inv part of
liS>W AniPiica, you can commence at home, giv¬
ing nil your lime,or spare moment#? only uv
the work. All is uv\K . Great pay til If K for
ftM every worker. dYe start you, famlfibmc
everything. KASII.Y, Si’Kf.J/lU - learnccf.
rAIU’K'M.AHri FRICIv. Address at otieo,
SilASON y - kfiiKTIiAM),. *LUAb.
TBS
MEW e SAFETY
Qj
r •'%//: \ z^SkiotT.
■
■ —
riY-V
The PERFECTION of SFMPUC5TY
and ECONOMY of POY. E"
rvo CHAINS. NO GEARS,
VARIABLE STROKE, only two sets
of Revolving gearings.
Best Hill Climb r, ' rnd 3.
Safety made.
C^A'I’-A-X.O G-AJ
H. B. SMITH K&SKS C:
SMITHViLLE, ;
W. J.
»
Ji & nd whemwm or* .feu t
S35JT OF
mi WB 11 WF If m u 3 i f
I mSm 1 : B M*.
1 Wmk fT ilii CT iii)
jmm
jf§
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Icr-v IV' JrMikUe,' flwv <r»r, <»nuk*l W«*»Mtor, «»««.!
turn .« -it O. S ori or.-h iiAUK, awntI k, chtrgvmfn, etc n
<*'jwu 1 *» the. '___
AKKXVS. . 1,11 _ **$-„ Y-rii-tWeih' , , *»on* .
to Krf'Ufi's. ir**v.ltlt»’ <»'■ t 'V. riW!r< , [ , (•.. i.nl fef.(X‘S, IcrfililtTV, ,
farm ims'imr-tt*: i.i r.t:^in•:. . : i»g th** tt-entment <«f •
S:is ,“ f ./t „»>»-»'* p > :.»A bow >»nd!t
—!ol »»id wrin'*.; -. h-,'. kc-pltidairv^ l.imjintr, eic. Tho
tteaiw’i” ■*( •- t < c iiipifH- .{Ltd «*\ii«iisUve. nu«I
K'H L r+eins wou k <d /:*"•- nvitcirtoi>e t** farmers* ami eutckntvo.
IZORTtCXT.TTftE. ««eful M».»
t., r:•*,.r-,id ktu l- of Teg«:tah!<“» a u<\ fruits, an gatliurcd
l-,u» ib.- tG Afictiiv .of ilse tijoat »u.;.:e*slul houicultnriaw.
A 550 IT VI KOT8TKE. nestgneaml^lanefor v^iuaUe houses, snggealioua cottages, ^
I am* i Mther «atV ulKlings, with to
tho-««atwiw? j
frir.l , , #»4 _ tc*tcl . . r»cipe» , i
Ir'»r«K!KH I*, "t III" *•'..!( IrreftfcfftsC. Alnnrr hiiJ
| >c l’tit' Si r f'tc tea. ,
('itHfui'l; 1> •"« j-tviiimi'ueTiiMe r , nh m, rc hints*, !'*?» |j«sj*s "<•’* -tw.h* nmt nf j
iHKlfe It mig
< h* h«u*-k*i-p~r«; design •»<«»,/! »Hgge*tUm8 fhr making
ota;:v v- titih-.i thti’.g't for the adnrm.tent < f home, in iif.-dle- !
[‘,v„{ ierv, eve.; hitiiaou tSoricnliure. telling liowto he j
•{,- ni'H *li the/.a.'h>wi-f.Jp».’.*y; f«ik*f hlut-s tHHing how
Fli p‘J<’vs«- i-tt awrt int»uuTy tiwi cwnydexiott, > U«mds, (cetU, luif. j \
7Janv '.InRnro !?» doctors’ fillla irfll 1«? narefi j
r t * ,illy. ti,. 0.^1 1 >I.- •■•aim,I.w
s<> " . br M.u|t c •
vajafric in . *-\.*rv li.u-ehoM, ’. w»*rv - i ;
’ hi ... V I . , , on.mp a j
«.f winch , lu u..y borne cat. ;
!
l \ T D Tf j ‘‘rovF.r.v. Bcn\«rkr»VA.y iritCT
io of :'vi-MT riVCMtion-.. it. •’.tirisn^ rf.c m i
rim i»»t !’• * s- Ki'.i'fr.*; l ight, I
the l y ,a‘ W.ifcr, the Yvjhs
7
YVttV.i r-<. C-:i|i:-ii* 4o:<crfpt!«*‘r.
■ v • «m«? J'nrl ip
iri-:, V*:suv.f'* ( Ycahsc.
MS.'inth Cave, Nn.Uirt.1
iitatiiP, vie. ,*:
T-12 • if;- c -:y illw«trnte<t. of the life.
» * - . rifts ceremonies «f feLc
v r»f cortfptifs Fome i ‘e .■ v.H*t » rrmark' b’vl^l’r .ss-it'. »>• t. «>
r_ 4.HI A i ro y l><‘: y**t Hat a fVacfso 1 t*t F*irL « Jl-M X . .£»*■
U a r AH! f-ior^lifwseof u ^*ful *n«l **•»*?cvrr kn<»vrt
“.'f !#* works * x* r i»nl>}i h*ol i. any land or Im tma'rr N .» • M ?
very nay mill irerard vanomi pwplf7.irj |r ! r.n<!
;; , ii; • farm, r anil hous#*wifc in. tUtiir &a pucMtri d
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CONTAINING
2,17© Pages
AND
6J0 Bsantifkl lilEsliatitii!!
•a >i
zxxgxz? - •-«-**-«■*-*
CbUs*f*. .I*twtnr«\ the of 7;«Lt, Africa., "n-vy.r*
. brim,!. Borneo, P.nwimli, tins &'iv\
Kaftv-arin, Tr.ttnrt . nod Funis, r-.
T-tr, *, Wcs:cat«s.t«ti»lt S. tnencHt,*. A m<vtc*u !■«'■ »«*•*•. *• c-H»
*•. A*<• ssvhuji.", Norwoginw-s Fimi.o/p
Hn- huuih, hibr*ri»»»\ Afgbnn«. iV-ratcau’e,
l4«#Urtne, Aas’rnlino*. Jtulgwiatn-, 'sialliui*, ,<rte,
M \ N V : l" A<*T l' fi?f« H»:»* great. w«rV i* al-o i'v*
and iV.Mstr.tied ttie aris and »pro<vnw*«>f lithography, \ Tmiin*. I*L*a
tubdvhi/idiii?, v*K)<\ eiicraVifig, r
vriniing, piM** n.Hkiug, makiriit, .« .he
EiamjfVcinre of «ilk. »r«.n. aiwl, pln^.vluna. t-rTnoiery, »n
h'ltfher,*ture!». wail pv.pcr. intine po.-t 1 card*, j ‘
etnmn*. Ciiv«-W»j*ee, fietis pcnetl#* nci-dle*,, numt *•
rtilov«, nil of t»hich a iii be fouit'l |'cculij»Cy iuterertur;
j a ,. lrtM ., iT<1> ■
5■ iMilufG'N I Y.-VEVTL , J. Ii'tore* - , lur . cri’d . , , ■ < •.«<
tra» I, ui the e«Uurv tu.-l pr«i#i.tation fot t»titcket<-f t*• >, « <
choct.Jate, cotmn. frax. Iicnqs Fugar, hwt.rr,tov*t,
ginger, eiunamon. , tijtt
»*•»*, prunes, dntes, raisins, fit*, olive«, indi S-jtVjU
P«.^. c«k, «" *w etc.
NATl-RAfi HISTCIU . Interesting amS
deuoffprlons, a^omputtud hy H!u^r«tf«OK,
birds, ^ tishes and i»|j«*cta, wun much cunuus -rv&xnk
fj * lf |ifc ail4 babit8 .
LAV. Tit-4 MAuwnnitaUMi « U . t'* n , hv
book, tolling every tinm bow he n»av «<i uis u l<
wm , tfni „- fllU a „u wtn of the lit
RM ^ or the He’. eTHintatca Via!I imittMes
mi.j^ttoiuigKtio,,, witUuumcr«iubr*M«tfe8**H,
31 fSJNfi, I>e*cr/ption!t*nl IHuatratJen* of the »if? osp r.f
geld, silver diamonds, coal, salt, copper, leaol, tioc, Ut i «3k&
quicksilver
^V<|\“|$E553 THI2 f-F.A. Herein tr-e
\ ih« rumv w«>n*l‘ rful and heau'ti'ni ihitj;^« fmui *x tim
ieciumtof the ocean, the piartts, flower*, KiteUs, babes, <s;... i ij.hldr
wiwi pearl dlvir.g, coral fishing, etc.,etc.
sTATIXTICAf. AS* 31 l«CKIXAXR©rW iairrosflnv' ■
5sejvcM*v»K| * of uwhti *|»4
Mimeof t , which , ; - , •. , Vl _ . p nritiwn of America;', th
of c „nl»«K'».t«. of nod Tl* tin.ri 1.
f>rJt »< |,,*| countrie* of the w-t HI. 1 m.ii of The
rive rs, PrtvLte'jfixl vote for yenr*, fi
*reJf »D<I depth *«4 htig'.t, v? '.tv.’
lnc<>luoiioT> . r mtinu'l* «u*l veUiHiy « f Ik^I ’***. 1’^tv 1 . ' *
m«'itin. tow cr < *;rt;ctiir» *. (Ust atvctc* froitt r>
fri-wi New York. iniport *nt jKjini C»TAU«*|t»C of :
every »u<l pr . f-optilnr
C,if !'•’*. OTC. c—li Mimnat 1 l error*, tn . r.
,
>• utiC wl ten n n* Wo.ll Sir* rt feJ rT im
•tf rh- w. r!d, fnci.v n nvhiraf Wstup*.?.
I'Uiftmlt*. cripi) r.
u-ork'*, papula
fur
: