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HILL HITS HARD.
THE NEW YORK SENATOR’S MASTERLY
ADDRESS AT BUFFALO—DENOUNC¬
ING PROTECTION AND THE FORCE
BILL.
Senator David B. Hill spoke as fol¬
lows to an immense assemblage at Buf¬
falo, N. Y.
i I am here to-night to aid ic tire pro¬
motion of Democratic principle* and to
advocate the election of Grover Cleve¬
land and Adlai E. Stevenson.
No apology or explanation is needed
for my course. For over ten years it has
been my custom at each annual election
to appear before my fcllow-citisnns and
contribute my share towards the discus¬
sion of tiie political questions of the hour.
You did not believe that this campaign
would prove an exception to the usual
rule and you are not disappointed.
Among honorable men the loyal dis¬
charge of political duty outweighs all
minor considerations; and in this crisis
of our country’s history and in this great
emergency in our party’s affairs individ¬
ual disappointments or even alleged per¬
sonal injustice should be subordinated in
the faithful performance of political ob
ligations, not as a mere matter of ex¬
pediency but from a high and stern sense
of duty.
'Permit me to suggest that tve 'nave all
of us now a mission to fulfil. Petty jeai
ousiea must be dismissed; regular organi¬
zations must lie respectedi party disci¬
pline must be enforced; dissensions must
be healed and apathy must give way to
enthusiasm, in order that tho grand okl
party to which we are proud to belong
may secure the triumph of right princb
pies and work out the noble destiny
which ought surely to await it.
Tho control of this Government for
many years to come by one or the other
of the two great political parties is the
prize at hazard in the pending contest,
in which all other considerations should
sink into insignificance.
I 'These are not merely formal words, in¬
tended to arouse the lethargy or to soothe
tho wounded feelings of earnest friends,
but are a tit supplement to the senti¬
ments which I had the honor of expres¬
sing before the Democratic State Con¬
vention at Albany in February last, im¬
mediately uftec rts action unanimously
instructing the delegates from my native
State to present my name ns its first
choice to the approaching National Con¬
ventton. I then said:
| “And now you must pardon nie
while 1 run counter to your leelinga to
say that the choice of your next stand¬
ard bearer is a matter of the very least
importance, being strictly subordinate to
that supreme object—a Democratic Na¬
tional victory next November.”
I meant what 1 said on that occasion
and 1 reiterate it now. The test of truo
Democracy is the support of regular
tions party nominations, irrespective of ques¬
of personal pride, one’s own am¬
bition or individual preferences,
FEDERAL TAXATION.
The two great political parties of the
country are divided upon tho all-iin
portant subject of Federal taxation. Uu
just taxation is the essence of tyranny.
It unnov* tho rich, it robs the poor, it
interrupt* business uctivlty and fosters
public discontent. The American Revo¬
lution wus largely produced by a little
tax upon tea which our forefathers re¬
fused to pay. They incurred the perils
of rebellion and tho pains of outlawry
rather tlinu submit to unreasonable tax¬
ation. The best thought of tho Ameri¬
can people may well be engaged in de¬
vising the most equitable and compre¬
hensive scheme for the proper distribu¬
tion of tho burdens of government. Tho
subject becomes yearly more important
as tho expenses of administration an¬
nually increase.
How shall the enormous expenditures
of tho Government be provided for!
How shall its necessary revenue* bo
raisedf it is conceded by both parties
that tho best and easiest method ol real¬
izing the needed revenue is by taxation
upon foreign imports. It is also ad¬
mitted that a few internal taxes should
be permitted to exist, but that the main
and principal revenues should be de¬
rived from the imposition of tariff
duties. Upon this point there is no
substantial division of seutiment. It is
truo ttiat there aro some extreme mou,
uow ostensibly acting with the Demo¬
cratic 1’arty, hut who do not control its
couucils or policy, who aro opposed to
uli tariff taxation and favor direct tax¬
ation as the best means of meetiug our
National expenditures, in substantially
tho same manner that our State taxes
are raised.
f There can be no reasonable doubt that
tariff taxation will continue to be the
permanent policy of the Government,
notwithstanding the opinions of these
sincere but impracticable theorists who
advise its abandonment.
t THE PRECISE ISSUE.
The dispute between the two parties
arises over the exteut, effect aud objects
of our taxation. Shall tariff taxation be
imposed for revenue only or shall it be
used for the purpose of tostering private
industries?
This is stating the questiou as nearly
as 1 am capable of doing it. The propo-
with such industries. The Republicans
believe that the question of revenue
should be a minor consideration in the
forming of a tariff bill, and that the fost¬
ering of some industries should be the
primary one. They shut their eyes to
the fact thattbej are unnecessarily inter¬
fering with th( natural laws of trade.
They ign or* ihe value of foreign trade or
assume to believe that foreign countries
will tradr with us although we purchase
nothing from them. They for,et that
reciprocity cannot be one sided. They
appeal to the selfishness of the people
and to their natural jealousies Of aud
animosities against foreign Countries.
The arguments of the Republicans in
support of this system are inconsistent
with each other, they in one breath alleg¬
ing that a high protective ta :e;
prices and in another breath
duces them. “You pay your money and
take your choice.” Our opponents ire
as versatile aud accommodating in their
argument in this respect as was
tho ignorant village schoolmaster
who had made application to teach
a country school and when exam¬
ined by tlie local committee as to his
qualifications was asked the question
“whether the world was round or flat?”
replied that it made no difference to him
—that he would tsaeli “that the world
was round or flat just as the committee
preferred.” do that American
i not believe our
manufacturers require the protection
which the Republican Party seems to be
so anxious to foist upon them, especially
if they were provided with free raw ma¬
terials as the Democratic Party proposes
to do. We are already underselling for¬
eign manufacturers in most or many of
the markets of the world, aud if we can
compete with them abroad, especially in
their own markets, there would seem to
he no real necessity of taxing our people
longer in order to enable our own ma ,u
facturers to compete with foreign ones
at our very doors.
All that America needs is a free field
and a fair fight in the race of life and
she will prove invincible in nearly every
department of human activity. It is a
narrow aud contracted view, however,
that seeks to keep our country from con¬
tact with the commerce of the world.
The Republican orator who boastingly
asserts that the United States can raise
and manufacture everything we need,
that foreign commerce should not be
sought after or foreign markets consid¬
ered, and that our American farmers
should be content with homo markets
anti home prices, and that we can and
should be independent of nil the rest of
the world, may gratify tho selfish and
false pride of his hearers, but he only ex¬
hibits his ignorance of history and his
lack of comprehension of the true
sources of genuine prosperity.
THE DAVENPORT FORCE lULL.
The last step which the Republican
Party took in the direction of central¬
ized government was in the attempted
enactment ot I he oneusive ana iniquitous
measure now known as the Davenport
Force bill. Wlieu this bill was pending
in Congress iu the summer of 181)0 I had
the honor of speaking in reference to its
provisions as follows:
“If tiie people aro thoroughly aroused
to the nature and iniquities of the bill,
tho party which has conceived it and is
now.-hastening to enact it will be buried
under an avalanche of remonstrauce at
the next election.”
The election of ttiat fall showed that
tho people were intensely aroused aud
that the bill was most emphatically cou
deinued by an indignant people. Yet
immediately after that election tlio Re¬
publicans attempted to pass the bill, but
thanks to the bold stand of our Demo¬
cratic Senators in Congress, aided by a
few independent and fearless Republi¬
cans, its enactment was prevented and
the country was saved from its disgrace.
I have read in detail tho prolix and
preposterous provisions of the Davenport
bill, and I speak not as a partisan, hut as
an American citizen, jealous of the lib¬
erty which my countiy’s institutions
secure for me, aud devoted to the preser¬
vation ot the simplicity of her govern¬
mental system,when I denounce this meas¬
ure as a dangerous exercise of constitu¬
tional authority, a menace to our theory ol
government and an insult to the people ol
the States. It is an arbitary uct of despot¬
ism, justified by no precedent, made
necessary by no political conditions, but
put forward solely to insure Republican
control of Congress.
Like many ocher partisan conspiracies
tiie Davenport bill is proposed in the
name of reform, and its defenders pre¬
tend to tiud warrant for it in that pro¬
vision of the Constitution which de¬
clares:
“The times,places and manner of hold¬
ing elections for Senators and Repre-'en
tatives shall be prescribed in each State
by the Legislature thereof; but the Con¬
gress may at any time by law make or
alter such regulations, except as to the
places of choosing Senators.”
For a hundred years this provision
has remained iu our organic law, aud no
Congress lias bceu bold enough to exer¬
cise the undoubted right which its terms
give under certain extraordinary circum¬
stances to annul State election laws and
place virtually the entire control of elec¬
tions of Representatives iu the hands of
Federal supervisors. No Congress has
yet been bold enough to exercise it be¬
cause no great emergency for which- it
who does not bebeve such a bill as this
to bn a hostile blow at our form and
theory of government, and I pity the
partisan prejudices which prevents pa¬
triotic men front joining in the denun¬
ciation which they must feel for such an
uncalled-for usurpation of power; but I
am surprised at the hypocrisy of states¬
men who urge and defend it upon the
ground of pure elections, and I am
amazed at the audacity of politicians
who have devised it as a scheme of party
policy-.
REPUBLICAN CORRUPTION.
The country has not forgotten the
scandalous corruption of four years ago.
by which the Republican Party came
into power. It has not forgotten the
enormous sums collected from manufac¬
turers doubtful for the bribery of voters in the
States. It ha3 not forgotten
those two epistolary incidents of the
campaign—the Foster “fat-frying” cir¬
cular and Dudley's “blocks-of-five”
letter,
And it is yet not ready to believe that
the chief participants in those outrageous
performances and the principal benefi¬
ciaries of this wholesale corruption are
other than hypocrites and betrayers of
the country’s welfare.
The Davenport bill, instead of being
in the interest of pure elections, is a
direGt thrust at them. To prevent such
scenes as characterized the election
1888 several States have recently F'*-
reform laws which, it is believed, will
make bribery and intimidation almost
impossible. New York has such a law. In
Indiana there is one. Connecticut and
New Jersey each have one. Numerous
other States now have them. But the
Davenport bill, if enforced, would
practically render those laws useless,
although its provisions are carefully
worded to produce an opposite impres¬
sion.
1 will not charge that the framers of
that bill deliberately intended to prevent
the operation of those laws in Federal
elections, but when we now know that
a notoriously versatile supervisor of elec¬
tions in New Y T ork is the author of this
bill, and when I hear men who sit in
high places by virtue of corrupted suf
frages talk loudest in their advocacy of
this measure, I feel justified in the sus- !
picion that the party which debased
thousands of voters in 1888 is not averse
to removing the obstacles to a similar I |
carnival of corruption in future elee
tions. I
the country understands the plot#
The features of this iniquitous bill I
need not describe to you. The mero
recital of them is sufficient to make them
execrable.
Under their enforcement there would
he danger of riot at every poll. The
inquisitoral and arbitray powers con¬
ferred upon the supervisors of election
would not ho tolerated at times of po¬
litical excitement. The country would
practically bo paying for a house-to
liouse canvass iu every election district
for the information and advantage of the
Republican Party. The sacred right of
representation would depend upon the
iutegrity of a few partisan officers. The
conflict between the State and Federal
authority would be radical and violent.
Respect for law would be broken down
among the ignorant. Free expression
of the popular will would be gagged by
a horde cf unscrupulous partisans.
Race prejudice would be engendered at
the South—fierce party feeling, if not
open rebellion, everywhere, Govern
ment would be a sham; it would be
government by an oligarchy of office¬
holders.
If the Republicans should carry the
coming election there is no moral doubt
that this measure will be pressed again.
The party which lias so firmly in¬
trenched itself in power; the party
which set at defiance the will of the
people by arbitrarily overturning popu¬
lar majorities in the last Congress;
which has obtained the means of pro¬
fuse expenditure by legislative favorit¬
ism; which has created States to in¬
crease its political strength and which
proposed in the Davenport Force bill to
make itself the arbiter of every Fed¬
eral election—that party will not hesi¬
tate to revive this bill at the very first
opportunity, if a Republican President
and a Republican Congress shall be the
result of this election.
We must diligently exert ourselves to
oppose this great issue of centralization
which certainly confronts us. It pre¬
sents a more serious problem than any
commercial, industrial or financial ques¬
tion, more vital to our country’s future
welfare, more essential to tin preserva¬
tion of our institutions.
THE CASHIER WAS SHOT
Because He Refused to Throw Up His
Hands as Ordered.
Great excitement was caused in Erie,
Penn., Monday fc 7 a daring attempt to
rob the Krastone national bank. It was
about 12:30 o’clock in the afternoon
and no customers were in the bank.
Assistant Cashier Kepler and Clerk
Chicles Li 'bel were busy balancin'; th ir
b >oks and counting money and checks,
when suddenly a quartette of t ugh look¬
ing strangers burst into the room, revolv¬
ers in hand. The strangers took posi¬
tions a' each of the windows around the
desks within, and pointing their revol-
tub harvest of the sea.
The deep sea lies dreaming by the shore,
And up the nigged grassy steep
The flsher-folk bring home once more
Their harvest gathered from the deep.
Like ripened plains at summer-tide,
Their oornfields are the waters wide.
For wife and home and nestling child,
They travail on the trackless sea.
The smile that is at parting smiled
May be a life’s last memory—
The accents of the fare well word
May ba the latest ever heard.
When on the sea of life I sail,
With weary longings and regret,
It all my countless efforts fai',
I must not fail to cast my net;
Waiting till One perchance comes nigh
To show mo where the fishes lie.
—Arthur L. Salmon, in Good Words.
A Fie&t With. Dahomeyans.
S far back as 1858
Captain Frank C. Bon¬
neau, now of Charles¬
ton, S. C-, having
completed a cruise in
t- the United States
Navy as secretary to
Commodore Ingraham,
and being desirous of
, ,________ some active work, ob
C^ii§§S5|£8S- tamed °f handsome the command brig,
3
“'■"v' the Jehosse of Charles
ton, S. 0., and under instructions from
the brig’s owner made a run for the
African coast. Bontteau’s account of his
experience on the Dahomeyan 'to coast is
best given as told by him the New
York ^Times’s correspondent.
.“It was in 1858,” said Bonneau,
“while Castle,’that lyino- with, the Jehosse at Cape
Coast 1 formed the idea of
running down for a look at the south
west coast, as that part of Africa known
as Dahomey is styled. I was worried
about approaching Porto Novo, the place
the French have just bombarded, be
eause of the warlike tribes that infested
the whole country iu and around that
p 0rt _ j was told that establish repeated efforts'
had been made to a palm oil
station at Porto Novo, but that Iuaco
q had’ us t he head tribesman of the country,
prohibited all nations from even
making a landing. wa^the This Iuaco Dua, I
was informed, most bloodthirsty
aavage on the coast. It had long been
his practice annually to celebrate his
“Yam Feast” bv an inauguration of the
most horrible and bloody tragedies in
honor of the occasion. His throne was
built upon the skulls of hundreds of pris
oners, all murdered in his presence, and
dispatched in a cruel and fiendish man
ner known so well to the brute.
“Despite the stories I heard of the
Dahomeyans I determined to run down
their coast, and so on one hot morning
at about 10 o'clock I was standing in on
the starboard tack with Porto Novo close
aboard. The coast in the vicinity was
rough and high, broken here aud there
by deep ravines and marked along its
entire stretch by high crags. In the in¬
terior high mountain ranges could be
seen stretching far away to the south¬
ward and eastward. The wind at the
time I was standing in was extremely
light. I made a grave mistake’ in ap¬
proaching a suspicious coast have under such j
conditions. It would been wiser
had I waited for the strong sea breeze
which regulutjy sprang up later in the
day, coming always from the south¬
west.
“As I continued to head in on the
starboard tack I shortly made out ahead
three canoes putting out from the laud,
each canoe containing twelve or thirteen
men. Fearing nothing from these few
craft, I allowed them to approach the
brig’s side and began to question them
about the country. I had an interpreter
aboard whom I secured before making
the present cruise.
“While engaged in questioning the
canoes alongside, my attention was
called by my people to several larger
canoes seen to be approaching from the
shore, each containing no less than
twenty-five men, and in one boat in par¬
ticular appeared to be some officer of
rank.
“The first boats that had approached
made no signs of a desire to board the
brig, the fellows in the cauoes apparent¬
ly contented to keep close up to me for
a look only. _But now on the approach
of the larger canoes just observed the
boats near by pulled right alongside,
aud without further ado every roan that,
could climbed up over my rail and
jumped on deck. The manner in which
these fellows landed themselves looked
suspicious. I did not fancy it at all. No
sooner had they planted ttieir teet upon
deck than they began asking as to what
we had to sell and what we wished to
buy, and then soon followed up their in¬
quiries by demands for rum, and this
they did without auy attempt • at asking
for it.
“The sudden, suspicious actions of
these fellows caused me quietly to pass a
word among my crew, aud at the same
time I saw to it that each man had his i
pistol and cutlass ready at hand. I at
once ordered the brig’s wheel put down,
aud passed the word to take stations for
tacking ship. To my great relief t ^ e
former light breeze was now freshening.
No sooner, though, had I given the order
to tack then there was a uecuiiar move-
knocked in than I saw that pandemo¬
nium was about to reign supreme. Im¬
mediately they went at the rum, pouring
it down their throats like water, and, in
some instances, one man pouring the en¬
tire contents of a demijohn down the
throat of one of his felloW3. Once they
got hold of rum they refused to talk
trade of any kind, and their game be
came apparent if it had not been before.
• ‘At this stage one of my crew came
aft with the word that the boats coming
up were loaded with spears, and that it
looked as if the spears were about to be
passed on board-. Without further ado,
I myself took the wheel, telling the
steward, who was close by, to stand by
to relieve me, .and gave the word to my
men to fill away the head yards, The
crowd on deck was by this time too much
engrossed in getting drunk to notice my
movement. In a twinkle I had the head
stalls drawing. In another moment the
brig was keel'ng over under her canvas
to the tune of an eight-knot breeze, and
the boats alongside were at the same
time cut adrift. I ordered every man in
the crew to be prepared to jump in with
his pistol and cutlass. For by this time
the veils of the inmates of the canoes we
" behind had attracted the
were leaving deck, and the latter
attention of those on
were just beginning to realize their situ¬
ation.
“I now turned the wheel over to the
steward in order to have my hands free,
for, as they felt and saw the brig fairly
skimming over the water, fear and anger
w T as at once depicted on their faces,
Seme drew knives, others vaguely
looked about for the arms they expected,
ah of which latter had been capsized by
the brig as she bore down on the canoe
containing them. t had
“I saw that the time to ac come,
and, giving the word, one of the men
forward turned loose the bulldog. With
one leap Bull seized the nearest native,
who, as he felt the dogs teetu, gave
one of the most urearthly, piercing yells
! had ever heard, ‘Go in, mem I
shouted to the crew, aud my brave fel
lows, a mere handful, flung themselves,
cutlass and pistol in hand, into the native
mass. The yells of the man first seized
by the dog started the entire cro wd, and,
as native after native went down before
the cutlass strokes of ray me n, the yells,
the slashing, the terrible blood-curdling
scene was something horrible,
“At almost the first assault of the
crew the natives made a rush for me as
I stood alt. As they came along I filed
into the mass, and then cleared myself
lor the use of the blade. As I did so
the frenzy of the brutes seemed to reach
its height, for man after man ot them
who was unhurt sprang upon the rail
and leaped into the sea. In the distance
far behind could be seen the outlines of
the canoes still pulling toward the brig,
and toward these canoes those who
sprang overboard struck out. "With the
bulldog in the lead, we never stopped
the work of the blade until the last
brute had leaped over the side, and then
we cleaned up the decks by helping
what remained of the affair with a sea
toss over the side.
“A3 the iast remnants of our visitors
were cleared off the decks I let the brig
come up into the wind, iust to see what
they proposed doing now that we had
shown fight, but there had evidently
been too much scare—too much drown¬
ing and too many missing—to give them
an appetite for further fight, for as the
big cstnoes approached the scene, with
the evident intention of picking up
whom they could, the canoemen gave a
great shout, and then, holding up for a
moment their paddles and crossing them
in pairs in a figure X shape, they let fall
and slanted in for the beach.
“On the brig’s deck everybody, in¬
cluding the dog, was ready for a further
tussel, the latter, in particular, being by
no means satisfied by the punishment he
had inflicted. I think, though, that as
we began to cool down, all hands were
glad of the end. We doubtless failed
to afford thoseDahomeyans the feast they
had fully expected in having off us that
day, for, as I was afterward told by an
English Captain at Widdah, when relat¬
ing to him our experience, we had a
most lucky escape. As it was, a good
dog , a fine crew, and a stiff breeze alone
saved a smart American brig on that oc¬
casion from being lost.”
Escorted by a Friendly Puma.
“I once ha 1 an adventure in New
Mexico that made a terrible draft on my
nervous system,” said Walter Phelps.
“Tliad set out to walk from the station
to the ranch oi an old friend, some four
miles out, and when I had covered about
half the distance a gigantic mountain
Hon came sidling up to me. I had not
even a pocket knife. When a few feet
distant he stopped and looked me over,
and I thought he was trying to make up
iiis mind what portion he preferred for
breakfast. I had heard much of tho
power of the human eye, and I proceeded
to put on my most tragic frown and to
stare at him fixedly. This so overcame
him that he sat down on his haunches
:md , hatted , his . eyes lazily. I continued .
to st:ue atld tr ow n aad be came slowly
U P t0 mu ’ nlbbed , , hl ! bead , a S amst m Y
trembh “S knees * and mad ® a P urrln S
sound that resembled , a giant coffee mill
la mot ‘ 03 - He was evidently not hun
» r I'. b 'tal ked s.owly along in the di
rectlon tn ® ranch, and that powerful
cat continued to rub against my legs
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management of children, besides wk“ 3
able prescriptions, recipes, eta. Ill-‘1“?
:nd a full complement of facts in
rn. media: that everyone shot!Id ““0““
Thu well-regulatore most indis usable adj‘m." to
every household ml} be
msilpd, goat-paid, to any addre‘s on
menu 0 price. sum ems. “are“
"1““ PUBLISHING HOUSE- G"
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THE
ONLY PERFECT {ffieinJ
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Is That Se
WELL, READ THIS,
Don’t waste your money J
cheap sewing machine. M
buy, get one that is reliableJ
will do first-class work, andn
with ordinary care, will last t
time. Therefore, in buying i
WHITE SEIIM HASH
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you will save money, time
patience; and that is a good
when you pause to think of it.
Live dealers wanted where wel
not represented.
WHITE SEWifsG MACHINE
Cleveland, Ohio, Alnwadf j
For S ile by H P & I) M
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ImxSei ; -■ Broad*#!. j
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