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j.iiu yjcukjlllldl if cllolijlidll salisbury h c march 9 1882 yol xiil t <-- c series no 21 ■s rmmpuia mow ju _■■the carolina watchman established n the 1832 sale r m by , rdeed executi 1 by john i i connor to luk day of vpril is ercd in the office i register of d coun tv in book no 18 | • 170 c and upon lif i □ made ! will expose to salt %%] ' '' ■'■■"•''■the courthouse ,;,.(': ■of .-!: ibury on the 6th day of march l882 a1 11 o'clock a.m the followi tate"to wil ! a ' ono-fiftj '.:•■" [" lds of vleck m l ll"is btibjecf to : ■■■• 1 ■' fludson vlso one sixth part of i n ian - owned by john i keid dee'd adjoining the lands of peter vv main ton jain craij •[-,.,.. i tted ai salisbury this 1st day of i : "'■i7:4t i :.:. rl vcmer,trustee er 80 bags shot in a c * j ; fus r r crawford & co : x4ujm ui4£jjn iu iums»5 jg \ efiso great reduction in the pr marho monumer ': *'■;•" vc-^tons of iblic generally to in ii pection of my stock and v oik i fee in ifit d in aw ft ing that my past ■,. oi i liicu in all the newest and modern styles and that the workmanship is equal to any ol the besi in the couui iv i do not ;-;;;, t!i:m my v i i ■' rs j am reasonable will not exaggerate in or der in accompli h i sale my end avor is to please and g'r ■• . ,■er 1 he val ue of i ■( n d liar they leave w it h me peices 35 to 50 per cent cheapee than ever offered in this town before call nt once or send for juice list and de signs satisfaction guaraut'd or nochiirgo the creel ion of mai bl is th last work of respect w ich ■■■pay to the memory of dopai ted frit nds . . -.-■•■; salisbury n u nov !, i -■i bi fson a.ttorneys counselors and solicitors salisbury n.c januaysl i 8/9—tt a c j a week iu odd ot re run every till . many ure . . and bi j . ., pa . readi r ,• r parlii uli li li > .■'■.. • . n ■• ii n rt tj r he e ii co cc > schedules * i th j . • _-. p m ; . •: ■; a m , .. ■. • .. ' ... is ■■■i'm ■■■■: ; : .".. por ': ■■■i to perfect the sunday scliool work tho state sunday school convention which met in raleigh last week after i considering various plans for advancing ' and perfecting the sunday school work in the state unanimously adopted the ! following report of a committee appoin ted to submit some method to accomplish : the end desired : that the state be divided into districts ■of about iive counties each and that the l executive committee add to their number a person in each district who shall hare as his work the organizing of the com mittees of his district and who shall ap point a secretary in each county where no organization has yet taken place that the executive committee be direc ted to make a thorough statistical eau va ; s of the slate and be directed to cor !(■pond with the secretary of the inter national sunday school convention that the executive committee call for collec tions during the month of may from each | sunday school in the state for the use of the executive committee the the execu tive committee appoint pastors of tho various denominations to present through the press the natur and advantages of ! this organization that the action of the last convention held at salem in doaig . the rev dr pritchard rev l w crawford and rev jethro rumple to present the cause to the various re . inations is hereby approved ed that the recommendation of the london sunday school union of .,! days of prayer for sunday schools be carried out in tlm state kss a promise fulfilled — it seems like a matter of course now to learn that the is finished to paint rock we have , ed ( ach *!<■■> taken in its const ruc ■: n i ■■: mile made fit for travel until it looks like an easy thing to be done ■■■•■the lale was made to best who ibtedly had ai first strong backing the republican party raised the cry of riving away the state's property and that the road would never be i lie road is built nobody care i t or the richmond and 1 an people have built it so it was built the republican party squandered on liltlencld and swepsou enough money to have completed the road ten yearn ago . but they did nothing towards4t but it is nom finished and the glory of the build longs all to the democratic party massachusetts a republican state as we mentioned many months ago lias re i n debt contracted with the troy i railway company the repu diation ;• certain and the depravity of tho transaction unmistakable tlio st paul r press has this to say of the transaction : the i'act that the state resorted to the desperate expedient of pleading its sov ereignty in bar of judicial process is a confession that it had no adequate defense upon the merits of the question if it had not then its confiscation of the property individuals who had trusted to its geod faith and its refusal to provide any measure of relief or redress is rank dis honesty l is worth while to note these things ! xo state is more prone !<> throw stones ' at if neighbors than massachusetts — wilmington star onr newton friends seem to be in a j general rejoicing way at the completion of the railroad by that place as we learn from the newton enterprise they have good reason for the rejoic ing as this will add materially to the future prosperity of the town when tha narrow guage is completed to that place which will he sometime during the present year it will move on with gigan tic strides to success — then there will be a general jollification ! — mercury the stalwart senators with the aid of the confederate brigadiers carried through the proposition to place general grant on the retired list of the army with a general's rank and pay this is an absolutely unjustifiable measure and it is probable that very few of tho sena tors really approved it but it is eary to understand the considerations that se cured its passage phil times ind so lord roscoe is to be associate jus tice of the supreme court of the united ( 3 in place of judge hunt displaced every one of the206 notiu the penitentia ry will share sooner or la or i;i tho lot tery of assassination as judge edmunds phrased it iudiscretely and maliciously roscoe will make an imposing looking ce although not one of tho most learned next wil star th re arc getting to be so many mills ami itlier machinery run by steam thai this county will soon 1 be foggy with smoke and steam like pittsburg pa catawba county is now far in advance of any other in the state iu agriculture lie will soon lead in manufacturing she has a bright future ahead and we say keep her moving — ca ta icha mercury ■" or h remembering that nobody en ifin bad health people about ! rave when a bottle of tonic « ould do ! in m more n the doctors and medicines uvcr tried 8 i adv i ii ; novltf murders ifcr babes and then dies washington d c feb 27 a nor 1 folk special says the bodies of a white i woman named rosa stark and her two ! infants were found in the woods near pleasant hill northampton county north carolina day before yesterday the coroner's inquest developed tlio following facts on the night of monday the 20th inst the woman gave birtli to an infant which she killed at once on tuesday morning aho went to the woods to bury it and while there gave birth to another child this also she killed and prostrated by exposure died herself the horrible affair has caused great excitement no one has been implica ted nave tho wotnaii whose object appears to have beeu to conceal her shame old bucks in catawfoa this section of the western hemisphere ia better supplied with old widowers that can jump a forty rail fence any frosty morning before breakfast than any other country this tide of sodom and gomor rah and if any of our many pretty yoaug ladies would prefer being an old man's darling rather than a young man's slave for them j ti.st ts say so and we will guarantee ono vein's subscription to the hrcnr>i that they will soon be made ten degrees happier than old adam ever vras in the garden of paradise — catawba mercury l3r altogether 282 business firms vrero burned out by the haverhill conflagra tion among these were 108 shoe manu facturers 2(5 sole leatln r onus 8 shoe trimming firms three banks and nearly 100 firms ausilliary to the shoe maunfac ■taring establishments and dependent on them the physicians who attended the late i i sidenl should be satified with amounts awarded by the auditing committee they are given a follows i>'i - 000 aguew and lamilton 15.0(10 each reyburn boy u ton ii i • < i sii.--,;;i edsou 85,000 each and crump nurse 3,0 0 - wil star mini i how clieaplj one can live bread after all is 1 1 ; o cheapest diet one can live on and also the best a story is told just how cheap a man can live when he gels down to mush figuratively speaking col fitzgibboiij was many years ago col onial agent it london for tlio cana dian government and was wholly de pendent upon remittances from can ada for a support on one occasion these remittances failed to arrive and as there was no cable in those dny.s lie was compelled to write to his can adian friends to know the reason of the delay meanwhile he had just one sovereign to live upon he found that he could jive upon six pence per day or about 12j cents of our money — four pennyworth of bread one pen nywortlj of milk and one pennyworth of sugar which served for breakfast dinner and supper the milk being reserved for the last meal when his remittance arrived about a month af terward he had five shillings remain ing of his sovereign and he liked his frugal diet so well that he kept it up for two years possibly longer twelve cents a day is certainly a small amount to expend for food : but a man in minnesota about three years ago worried through a whole year on ten dollars lie lived on johnny cake we know of a theological student in an ohio college who sustained by grace rice and corn-bread lived thir teen weeks on ten dollars but there was several good apple orchards near the college and the farmers kept no dogs it is not the necessities of life that cost much but the luxuries and it is wilh the major part of mankind as it is with the frenchman who said if he had the luxuries of life he could dispense with the necessities mere living is cheap but as the hymnolo gisj says it is not all of life to live — arm r lean miller gen grant worth his millions is pensioned by congress at 13,000 a i year mrs garfield with he 1 half million of dollars is given in con gi*ess 50,000 and a yearly pen i u of 5,000 mrs lincoln with 65 000 in bonds is given 15,000 and 5,000 a year the widow of gen custer whose husband by his dash and bravery covered the federal arms ! with glory and gave his li|e to his country on the battle field is living in straightened circumstances on a j pension of 360 a year radical ! justice to him who hath more shall be given — winston sentinel i the washington posl which claims | to be the boss democratic papsr of the country is willing to swallow blaine ami support him for the presidency 1884 we took grccly in ' ourn once and that is enough for one i life time we believe as sturdy old i rjcre black says : the democratic ! party czn only win in 1884 with a i man who has always been a demo crat true and consistent — one in whom the business interests of the country have confidence — winston senti nel »«&-. . judge seymour's successor — as we have heretofore intimated would be the case his excellency governor jrfrvis has formerly tender ed the appoitment of superior court ] ,) udge of the second judicial district t i major henr/'augustus gilliam and judge gil liain has signified his ac i ceptance — neivs observer another short peach chop ] sufficient is already known tecon j vince the peach growers along the i hudson that nearly every peach ! bud is dead and that there will be ! a short crop again the coming sea j son death ot bishoplvxch right rev i p n lynch the roman catholic bish op of charleston s c died iii that city niday i speech i if hon zebnlou b fance in i\ir united state sei ntc february 14 lv anoihei favorite i rgumeni forthisplnn ' ■of the n ' d it protects aud i fosters onr infant ' in mufactures that i withoui them a nation can never be strong and i ..--,-. mr president ■ii . an is better aw are of the importance to th ; : ; /,:;, of the ;■■ople of luanu . ■■, '....; am [. ijui 1 know loo that v lit ;: d maiuh d by public necessity they ai v ,;_• s . pring up without forcing as ev en other industry i\iii ; and i know fur ther thai they are of no value as factors i in the acrjni ition of wealth unless iit>y an so demanded bui granting that they uecd help in starting 1 vi.--ii to ask the .- enator from \ ennont aa its guardian liow old is that infant anyhow ; aud vi licther like r ! ony sumpkins lie thinks it will ever arrive at years of discretion ? it is act ordiug to my researches well n to a hundred years old and still ii can'i walk or < veu stand alone [ laughter i proiuis ; fair to become the deathless rival of the wandering jew jndgiug bj k prolong d youth only it can't wander and therefore stick fast by new england and pennsylvania he is the most re , niarkable boy i ever heard of except the old buy whom he much resembles in many respects j remarkable as well for whaj he can do as for what he cannot lie umj be properly called the m 5 ;;! american infant his inability to stand i in the inverse tafjo to the ajnounl of protection he receives to tielp him stand laughter yli(;ii lie was born the wet nurses by his bed whose hearts vn melted by his piteous cries for help against the paupers who sought his life v-(i him with with i tariff ranging from "> to 15 per cent the infant liked it and began to thrive from time to time like yonug oliver twist he called for more until now at the age of nearly one hun dred years his daily protection ranges from 10 per cent on rags thai most ie serving of all young american industries and diamonds that most essential one id i ; : per cent on other articles and yet be can't stand on his legs the more he consumes the feebler lie gets ; the bigger he grows the weaker lie becomes con tinued laughter at this rate it will bo come a serious question with us soon as to whether if hegetrnvuch stronger it won't take all wo have to protect him and then can't do it lly opinion is that he never will stand wlwle the public will hold him up that :-(. long as we feed him ho will lie on his back hold on by the grass aud devour fcho food given him by the american peo ple evidently it not naturally his in u'unities and his appetites increase with age his food don't seem to have tlicde bireil effect but assuming an abnormal characliter he has to all intents and pur poses become a vast politico-economical tape-worm in the public anatomy fit only to consume food provided by others graet laughter sometimes indeed ho puts oil an rir of most aggressive vigor and boasts loudly of his prowess one of the speakers at the recent tariff con volition said that one of the largest man ufacture of saws iu the united states — iihs a place of business in the city of london we are expoi ting from the unit ed states into cfcjmda and ihe provinces of great 13ritnin and we have been ena bled by the skill aud genius of american mechanics to place upon che market an article with which we cau compete with them righl in th ir own marker and the senator from vermont v i iag boastful as he recounted tin 1 achiev ments of manufactures forgot for a mo ment the feeble character of the great american infant aud exclaimed with much pride : many american productions sustain the charcter they have won by being the best iu the world our carpenters and joiners could uot be hired to handle any than*american tools and there are uo foreign agricultural implements from a spade to a reaper that an american farmer would accept aa a gift there is no saddlery hard ivare nor house furnish ia in quality aud style to am ri cau wat'.'iies and jewelry and the electric gold and silver plated ware of american workmanship as to quality have the foremost place in the marts of the v ■! ; i the superiority ol om staple ottoi ■!>;->- iudisputfiblp '"■is p 10 ' ven by the tribute of frequent connter . feits displaced abroad the city of phil adelphia alone makes many better car pets and more in quantity than the whole of groat britain these are 110 we achievements 1 they are indeed ; but there is one oth er and very simple achievement which this great infant cannot perform ho can not btaud on his own legs of all the things he has ever done the grateful mil j lions who have had to hold him up at such vast expense would most delight to see this for notwithstanding he can compete according to the confession of his friends with british pauper labor in their own markets and can beat tho world according to the senatar in bo many things yet no sooner does he hear the proposition to let him btaud on his own feet than he is seized with a tremb ling in all his joints and at the very sight of a pauper he falls down in a tit like old despair of doubting castle ; or like scotty briggs when the parson hit out with iiis l«ft he huuts grass pro longed laughter truly lie is a terrible infant i would have said iu parisian terms an enfant terrible bat 1 scorn to use the language of a foreign pauper ! there is another peculiarity about this infant lie seems to effect a cold climate and go rigidly deny to others any por tion of the protection which he enjoys ho is jealous of a new baby in the fami ly desiring to participate in the pro tection of this tariff the people of the south are endeavoring with small capi tal and limited experience to begin man ufacturing many in our owu fetate are attempting it time and time again have they petitioned for leave to bring in machinery for this purpose duty free but the pennsylvania infant refused when , then was your policy of foster ing infant manufactures home people took a notion that cheap sugar could be mauufacturered from beets grown on the rich plains of the northwest and there was much speculation thereupon im mediately congress passed an act remov ing the tariff from machinery brought in for that purpose the infant was not even yt-i born ; but being as he was sup posed of northern conception they has ten to pptect him en venire m mere the north carolina child is still strug gling against both foreign panpers and massachusetts now will the senator from vermont give thismuch help to the cotton mauufac tures oi the south ? considering our pov erty that wo were scourged l war,"pes til uce that walketh in darkness and by reconstruction that destruction that wasl - ed us atnoonday,will he uot let us ha ■onr machinery for a space of time exempt from the pennsylvania astintion a well known protectionist whose name has long been connected with that of infan tile ferruginous swine announced his ar dent compassion for the people of the south to the tariff convention in new york recently and declared his readiness to remove the tax on their apple whis key nay he went further and declared it unconstitutional ; aud with a boldness that did honor to his conscience added that as we did not any longer need the <■■venue we might now properly obey the constitution will not the senator be as liberal as that 1 free machinery would be of more servi s to us than free apple-whiskey 1 though i coufess that we would gladly pay almost any price except an increased tariff to get rid of that rapacious horde who pause awhile now aud then from their political cam paigns to collect the tax on that myste rious beverage the interest • of ship building and its fate is still more remarkable though by no means an infant t was absolutely de stroyed by protection it died under a high tariff but pnrsniug the practice of dr sangrado bleeding and hot water they determined to bring it to life by more protection and so discriminating duties are levied in favor of american ships the navigation laws forbid the purchase of any other and all material for the building and repairing of american ships is admitted free of duty and still the pa tient languishes and gets no strength before dismissing this plea of nonage i would like to ask of any one compete to answer this question : if american manufacturers particularly of iron steel and cotton can transport their good half way round the world and compete with the pauper labor of europe iu those dis tant markets in a trade which is constant ly increasing why cannot they so com pete here at homo that they find a prof it in this is fairly presumed since they do it if so would there not bo si ill a great er profit iu saving tho cost of transmitting their goods so far by selling them at home or suppose they take the advice of the senator from vermont and manu facture no more than they can sell at home why o they want a foreign mar ket if it is uot good for farmers ? a continuation of the present tariff they say is necessary to raise revenue and many ways are suggested of spending that revenue when raised arrears of pen sions calls for one hundred millions im mediately and many hundreds of millions in the near future we are also much alarmed about the defenseles condition of our coast which requires at once to be fortified iu the com pie test manner aud we need a new navy above all things — here many hundreds of millions can be sunk very comfortably with all due re spect to everybody i venture to say that this newborn zeal for the public safety simply covers the desire to continue this tariff which public opinion is so loudly condemning or to increase it if they were in earnest to raise revenue they would agree to lower it it is ap to all that by judicious reduction revei tie could be raised sutticient for all proper purposes i\u>l to permit the wiping away of the iuternal revenue system at tho k.iino time a consummation devoutly !•> be wished heaven know 1 addition !•.> its being the most annoying and vex ations system the american people ever groaned under it has at the same time been executed a r least in the south with a few bouorable exceptions wirh more oi harshness and official iusofence than fr e inen can well endure u.s officers agents and spies from tho commissioner down constitute the chief organization and ai : ive working force t'ilif j republican par ty in the southern state and not scrupled to pervert their official pow ers and the laws to the basest party pm poses when occasion demanded i lie doing decency and :;<>(.:! go ven nicnt t '' service to blot out the whole concern b -»=-*— j-jj-j j+-lt.k um1h1 jjx j_l 1 i j 1.1 lj-mxa l^h s 1 ginning at jerusalem let u tax spirits j and tobacco in some oilier way the public de!>r too must be paid and while the senator from vermont does not i want it paid too suddenly he yet wants ! enough of taxation left to how that our debt-paying policy i deep rooted and unalterable in the lighl oi recent events i admit that some assurance of that sort ■ia a i^essity we li.ivt seen a revenue jofiu^jfin virginia butayearor two since j thjiuwitenfd with instant dismissal from i ollifce on the suspicion that he favored re p»4mtion fj,iy last fall we saw the in i di-nant anttor of that linear the chief of the internal revenue bureau take the stump in favor oi the ticket which he sus pected his subordinates of favoring ami it is said levy large contributions for the campaign on federal office-holders in vi olation of law and we saw tlio whole power of the administration its influence aud patronage exerted in behalf of the eliminators of the public debt of that state and we saw also a brave and competent union soldier with the scars of honorable battle on his bed summa rily ejected from oflice though a repub lican in lii.s politics to make room lor one whose debt-paying policy was uot so deep rooted and unalterable !" now mir president sueli things are well calculated to make public creditors feel uneasy and require fresh assurances the repudia tiou of state debts ia bo close oi kin to the repudiation of national debts that when the chief officials of the j;ov ernment start in to help on the one for the sake of a small party advantage a timid creditor may well be excused for believing that they would as readily help on the other if the same temptation was presented the principle in ing surren dered the question of expediency b coi ics t o creature oi occasion that lies in wait for it the senator from vermont does well to sound the alarm i will gladlj aid him iu raising this revenue by lower ing the tavifl to a constitutional point ■■■•■'■thus givi i the i .■le v orld an as surance that our d : >; :..• ■deep rooted and unalterable 1 ' lc all com •- to this ■pinen in stead anxiously for tl d hsome taxation to meel the ( con . of the : --. . rmueut are astnto n discover ne new rac«i tiding ;: c.ney in order to get the protection of d taxation th qm . . ! : ■>• hall v 1 raia mom ; to s ipport the imeni . bu liow shall we 1 ;■■■■more taxes to enrii li the manufacturers 1 he manufacturers bottom of this 3 movement no longer able to ] sist the cl and iniq ;.; : - s of a tai ifl levied for war purposes they seel to resist the curtail uienl ol these enormous proii pos ible a commission giv 1 th m two years at least i shoal 1 \ . te against it if for no <■!!:•■: reasou tlian the impudence of the protectionists in whose behalf it is offered they openly avow their purpo c and desire to withdraw their interests iron the control of the national legisla - tare on the ground that congressmen cannot understand these questions or if they understood them they arc^not to be trusted with interests sodelicate as theirs u their address to congress the iron and steel association say after deprecathi any change whatever : we subicit w ith yreat respect that such revision of tin ; u -; con ditions may suggest or demand can besi be effected through a commission to be composed of prominent representatives t>t thu leading industries of the country em powered to make a thorongh iuvestiga tion of the subjects submitted to them nnd required to report their conclusions to congress for approval ir happens to l necessary that con gress should approve in order t comply with tiie constitution in no other sense is liit interposition i that incompetent b dy ;:■:.< d or di-sii cd an orator in i he recent tariil . :, . tion said : it is far better that thai modification should be controlled a:i<i managed b ;'];■:: who uuderstaud th ir business ami who have the interest <>:' labor and capi tal at lieai f . rat bur than i have u control led by men who care about nothing but how :<• get a few more votes 1 ' ii anoi her ona said : we ;■< _:■; ' i xccetlingly u;.<'ii congress convenes the hock-master i just us un easy and as dutch alarmed is bo is when lie learns the wolves are after iris flocks he might have incresased t!u force of his figure by adding and a thief is not more alarmed at the approach ot a po liceman !" still another ono said : one word with regard to michigan and its kindred industries we do not xr.int any legislative body to pass upon our in dustries * * * * si must be doue by a body of experts selected from the industries to be repre sented it can be done in no other way applause and many move to tho same effect it will be noticed that all of them arc on willing to be tried as all other classesof society arc by the legislative branch of the government and insist on having the plunder they are to levy on the people measured by themselves how tli.it commission is to be formed it may be well enough for senators on this side of the chamber to know and the information is furnished by yet another orator of that grand conclave oi pampered public pau pers thus said he for instance ag riculture mining ships and commerce iron wild steel wool and woolen g cotton silk and other textile -. tery & c ilr ig and ■liemica's & c might each claim i - \" that is to say agri ire which . about for r rnillii ma of people and three fo oj the natioual wealth shall have a voice iu that ; • :■■the ').'»' • peoph '■d by potteiy or glass or silk ! what could be fairer than that .' but ! ■• ler : ii i.i ill b ■that ' ! loosely called il be represented on the com mis ■. id ali • bo '■■>" '■■polil icsil [>;\ r that tin it inents wo . !■; a uepublic:i 1 i'n sit that the republican i»arty is in mitti •! i . : '- '■: pi"ot home ii istry il would obvio u ly :■: • of the 1 ■. -. ■. ■■• h it ki id ;:. tv ■::■■;.■; - ■• a - too 1 ilx i ill the ,,,.;,■•;, cai y :'■;■: 11 s ling s : !•.; in ... . ; usity wen so lal . : ■. i.u _ t l 1 ,,.^ organ the .' mei ica i pi • : lishing i is 9jj ■■•• ■., it contains n bin which we feel compelled to i | dissent mr vvharton .. ' making up the commission well t concede ipju free-traders but we think on n • • •,. . ton will agree with ns iii 11 i liic tariff commission si . i be governed bv rules which wo i i mil admit ; of the iutrodnction i enemies ini i the immij of american industi \ ." i bia assumes first tl il ( conn try are either free tradai ■tectionists and that no oni raiting any rotenuc for ami secondly that hat i ectof the coramissiou is not to change the tariff 11 1 : or li>\\n endlong or overthwart but simply to distribute the plunder the | commission is in fact u >..,'-. 1 only to arbitrate wtvuvn the nanufacti leaving the public treasury and the people out of th ease entirely i'in.s commit . . > ~. will make some additions to the free list m»s . .., foreign ami tropical mat : !-. " ••.;.! vance the tai iii in some in • • •» i u an industry or establis one i-vc tvc with a coiuuiission tin s]co tuted of avowed protectionists and re publicans representing the factories themselves in control t i with i repre tentative of the democratic party and what the chemists would call n trace of free-ti-adera possibly this gentleman magnanimously concludes it is safe to say that the industries will prove in the high court to which thei com mit their cause that th«ir mi d rate de mands a ejnst and thai their interest id the interest of the nation 1 i 1 a ing i hnsi and constituted thejary wit majoi iryof theirow u ; the famous jury tl : all !.;■.'! ;•. piece ■were ugly submit tin to ''.' tribun il w ■. n eu .' an ■. inch tlie rioi a redi • ; ,| of 11 9 to ■cotti i l'lu'd tll ■i ; and . h y i i the m : ' . \ -: as ary as air . woolen goods at li 1 ; ■oil 1 iigs and i i tho same t>n that {';••'• ii-t ! should lovo much to . i t!i poor i ianio '. stones of all kinds are ti being onlywu per cei poarl id free cocoauut id ivei 1 , olives palm leaf fans diamonds nnrut i'ruit plauts tropical and g<mtii fash - ion plates fur skius v r micclli sandalwood raw - ik '■.■. and lii are all free and more •-. like n it i o bo added : but uwthin ; for nothing for the great niasa of lali men women and childrcu wiiom daily toil bupporta their own and the untiou'a life l'liey now throng the lobbies f this congress and importuue its committees and there is newspaper talk that th<\v will demand the formation i a st;iuili;i committee of experts to whom ..' ; ques tions hi;v"-;i their intei ■'"• i fcrred prom the iicant fi eding upou the ; , . have advanced to the di^uin ■! i'oggiug on back ;:- in soutli america i ; i the beggar in ( il islas i ■live in fused ( dun thing of at ' into t heir mendicancy separating it ■;. degree from highway .• . where ai e their victims the farmu . ; lantei 3 laborers in every d'i'.ii d tho great mass of consumer n iy cou stit uting niue-teuths of tbe [»( ; '■of tho united states .' who is to ion intere rj ? what « i spci ts will determine ectiug them t who will rp i in behalf of the public ! 1 1 asurj . are plunder il lie si tlsoo wlio plunder perfect organization and ample means verily ir would eeeuis so from il that appaara here there is indeed asinglerayol sunshine amid all this darkness thee i ■oi tli poor h:\rc found some hearing and nl last the tender sympathi - of thu i ; • department ni the < o ei re gen erously agreed tha i hecks and matches m . ved ! this will cai ry joj to t i the poor svh • have money laid i in bank to hotel proprietors and saloon keepers but to thu poor farmer who keeps his little hoard in i , r and envois tiji liis fire at night il ' 95 per cent on blauki m i cent on salt ycb there ia still ano in th cloud the tax o i pat they tell us maj bo removed jo to the world ! bull's i i !• si"j i"»d v;i "> ready !.'■let the earth rejoice ! 1 hie ;■or are to ha u \\ ">'• i ( l cherry and ■i il are tions ameri i i ■to ■. i real plo from : he i . . i . i then too ■:. ■ins ■tinned i iner tiiition | •' ■i nit y . ■' . .
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1882-03-09 |
Month | 03 |
Day | 09 |
Year | 1882 |
Volume | 13 |
Issue | 21 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. Bruner] |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The March 9, 1882 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601559523 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1882-03-09 |
Month | 03 |
Day | 09 |
Year | 1882 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5643489 Bytes |
FileName | sacw14_18820309-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 9:50:20 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText |
j.iiu yjcukjlllldl if cllolijlidll salisbury h c march 9 1882 yol xiil t <-- c series no 21 ■s rmmpuia mow ju _■■the carolina watchman established n the 1832 sale r m by , rdeed executi 1 by john i i connor to luk day of vpril is ercd in the office i register of d coun tv in book no 18 | • 170 c and upon lif i □ made ! will expose to salt %%] ' '' ■'■■"•''■the courthouse ,;,.(': ■of .-!: ibury on the 6th day of march l882 a1 11 o'clock a.m the followi tate"to wil ! a ' ono-fiftj '.:•■" [" lds of vleck m l ll"is btibjecf to : ■■■• 1 ■' fludson vlso one sixth part of i n ian - owned by john i keid dee'd adjoining the lands of peter vv main ton jain craij •[-,.,.. i tted ai salisbury this 1st day of i : "'■i7:4t i :.:. rl vcmer,trustee er 80 bags shot in a c * j ; fus r r crawford & co : x4ujm ui4£jjn iu iums»5 jg \ efiso great reduction in the pr marho monumer ': *'■;•" vc-^tons of iblic generally to in ii pection of my stock and v oik i fee in ifit d in aw ft ing that my past ■,. oi i liicu in all the newest and modern styles and that the workmanship is equal to any ol the besi in the couui iv i do not ;-;;;, t!i:m my v i i ■' rs j am reasonable will not exaggerate in or der in accompli h i sale my end avor is to please and g'r ■• . ,■er 1 he val ue of i ■( n d liar they leave w it h me peices 35 to 50 per cent cheapee than ever offered in this town before call nt once or send for juice list and de signs satisfaction guaraut'd or nochiirgo the creel ion of mai bl is th last work of respect w ich ■■■pay to the memory of dopai ted frit nds . . -.-■•■; salisbury n u nov !, i -■i bi fson a.ttorneys counselors and solicitors salisbury n.c januaysl i 8/9—tt a c j a week iu odd ot re run every till . many ure . . and bi j . ., pa . readi r ,• r parlii uli li li > .■'■.. • . n ■• ii n rt tj r he e ii co cc > schedules * i th j . • _-. p m ; . •: ■; a m , .. ■. • .. ' ... is ■■■i'm ■■■■: ; : .".. por ': ■■■i to perfect the sunday scliool work tho state sunday school convention which met in raleigh last week after i considering various plans for advancing ' and perfecting the sunday school work in the state unanimously adopted the ! following report of a committee appoin ted to submit some method to accomplish : the end desired : that the state be divided into districts ■of about iive counties each and that the l executive committee add to their number a person in each district who shall hare as his work the organizing of the com mittees of his district and who shall ap point a secretary in each county where no organization has yet taken place that the executive committee be direc ted to make a thorough statistical eau va ; s of the slate and be directed to cor !(■pond with the secretary of the inter national sunday school convention that the executive committee call for collec tions during the month of may from each | sunday school in the state for the use of the executive committee the the execu tive committee appoint pastors of tho various denominations to present through the press the natur and advantages of ! this organization that the action of the last convention held at salem in doaig . the rev dr pritchard rev l w crawford and rev jethro rumple to present the cause to the various re . inations is hereby approved ed that the recommendation of the london sunday school union of .,! days of prayer for sunday schools be carried out in tlm state kss a promise fulfilled — it seems like a matter of course now to learn that the is finished to paint rock we have , ed ( ach *!<■■> taken in its const ruc ■: n i ■■: mile made fit for travel until it looks like an easy thing to be done ■■■•■the lale was made to best who ibtedly had ai first strong backing the republican party raised the cry of riving away the state's property and that the road would never be i lie road is built nobody care i t or the richmond and 1 an people have built it so it was built the republican party squandered on liltlencld and swepsou enough money to have completed the road ten yearn ago . but they did nothing towards4t but it is nom finished and the glory of the build longs all to the democratic party massachusetts a republican state as we mentioned many months ago lias re i n debt contracted with the troy i railway company the repu diation ;• certain and the depravity of tho transaction unmistakable tlio st paul r press has this to say of the transaction : the i'act that the state resorted to the desperate expedient of pleading its sov ereignty in bar of judicial process is a confession that it had no adequate defense upon the merits of the question if it had not then its confiscation of the property individuals who had trusted to its geod faith and its refusal to provide any measure of relief or redress is rank dis honesty l is worth while to note these things ! xo state is more prone !<> throw stones ' at if neighbors than massachusetts — wilmington star onr newton friends seem to be in a j general rejoicing way at the completion of the railroad by that place as we learn from the newton enterprise they have good reason for the rejoic ing as this will add materially to the future prosperity of the town when tha narrow guage is completed to that place which will he sometime during the present year it will move on with gigan tic strides to success — then there will be a general jollification ! — mercury the stalwart senators with the aid of the confederate brigadiers carried through the proposition to place general grant on the retired list of the army with a general's rank and pay this is an absolutely unjustifiable measure and it is probable that very few of tho sena tors really approved it but it is eary to understand the considerations that se cured its passage phil times ind so lord roscoe is to be associate jus tice of the supreme court of the united ( 3 in place of judge hunt displaced every one of the206 notiu the penitentia ry will share sooner or la or i;i tho lot tery of assassination as judge edmunds phrased it iudiscretely and maliciously roscoe will make an imposing looking ce although not one of tho most learned next wil star th re arc getting to be so many mills ami itlier machinery run by steam thai this county will soon 1 be foggy with smoke and steam like pittsburg pa catawba county is now far in advance of any other in the state iu agriculture lie will soon lead in manufacturing she has a bright future ahead and we say keep her moving — ca ta icha mercury ■" or h remembering that nobody en ifin bad health people about ! rave when a bottle of tonic « ould do ! in m more n the doctors and medicines uvcr tried 8 i adv i ii ; novltf murders ifcr babes and then dies washington d c feb 27 a nor 1 folk special says the bodies of a white i woman named rosa stark and her two ! infants were found in the woods near pleasant hill northampton county north carolina day before yesterday the coroner's inquest developed tlio following facts on the night of monday the 20th inst the woman gave birtli to an infant which she killed at once on tuesday morning aho went to the woods to bury it and while there gave birth to another child this also she killed and prostrated by exposure died herself the horrible affair has caused great excitement no one has been implica ted nave tho wotnaii whose object appears to have beeu to conceal her shame old bucks in catawfoa this section of the western hemisphere ia better supplied with old widowers that can jump a forty rail fence any frosty morning before breakfast than any other country this tide of sodom and gomor rah and if any of our many pretty yoaug ladies would prefer being an old man's darling rather than a young man's slave for them j ti.st ts say so and we will guarantee ono vein's subscription to the hrcnr>i that they will soon be made ten degrees happier than old adam ever vras in the garden of paradise — catawba mercury l3r altogether 282 business firms vrero burned out by the haverhill conflagra tion among these were 108 shoe manu facturers 2(5 sole leatln r onus 8 shoe trimming firms three banks and nearly 100 firms ausilliary to the shoe maunfac ■taring establishments and dependent on them the physicians who attended the late i i sidenl should be satified with amounts awarded by the auditing committee they are given a follows i>'i - 000 aguew and lamilton 15.0(10 each reyburn boy u ton ii i • < i sii.--,;;i edsou 85,000 each and crump nurse 3,0 0 - wil star mini i how clieaplj one can live bread after all is 1 1 ; o cheapest diet one can live on and also the best a story is told just how cheap a man can live when he gels down to mush figuratively speaking col fitzgibboiij was many years ago col onial agent it london for tlio cana dian government and was wholly de pendent upon remittances from can ada for a support on one occasion these remittances failed to arrive and as there was no cable in those dny.s lie was compelled to write to his can adian friends to know the reason of the delay meanwhile he had just one sovereign to live upon he found that he could jive upon six pence per day or about 12j cents of our money — four pennyworth of bread one pen nywortlj of milk and one pennyworth of sugar which served for breakfast dinner and supper the milk being reserved for the last meal when his remittance arrived about a month af terward he had five shillings remain ing of his sovereign and he liked his frugal diet so well that he kept it up for two years possibly longer twelve cents a day is certainly a small amount to expend for food : but a man in minnesota about three years ago worried through a whole year on ten dollars lie lived on johnny cake we know of a theological student in an ohio college who sustained by grace rice and corn-bread lived thir teen weeks on ten dollars but there was several good apple orchards near the college and the farmers kept no dogs it is not the necessities of life that cost much but the luxuries and it is wilh the major part of mankind as it is with the frenchman who said if he had the luxuries of life he could dispense with the necessities mere living is cheap but as the hymnolo gisj says it is not all of life to live — arm r lean miller gen grant worth his millions is pensioned by congress at 13,000 a i year mrs garfield with he 1 half million of dollars is given in con gi*ess 50,000 and a yearly pen i u of 5,000 mrs lincoln with 65 000 in bonds is given 15,000 and 5,000 a year the widow of gen custer whose husband by his dash and bravery covered the federal arms ! with glory and gave his li|e to his country on the battle field is living in straightened circumstances on a j pension of 360 a year radical ! justice to him who hath more shall be given — winston sentinel i the washington posl which claims | to be the boss democratic papsr of the country is willing to swallow blaine ami support him for the presidency 1884 we took grccly in ' ourn once and that is enough for one i life time we believe as sturdy old i rjcre black says : the democratic ! party czn only win in 1884 with a i man who has always been a demo crat true and consistent — one in whom the business interests of the country have confidence — winston senti nel »«&-. . judge seymour's successor — as we have heretofore intimated would be the case his excellency governor jrfrvis has formerly tender ed the appoitment of superior court ] ,) udge of the second judicial district t i major henr/'augustus gilliam and judge gil liain has signified his ac i ceptance — neivs observer another short peach chop ] sufficient is already known tecon j vince the peach growers along the i hudson that nearly every peach ! bud is dead and that there will be ! a short crop again the coming sea j son death ot bishoplvxch right rev i p n lynch the roman catholic bish op of charleston s c died iii that city niday i speech i if hon zebnlou b fance in i\ir united state sei ntc february 14 lv anoihei favorite i rgumeni forthisplnn ' ■of the n ' d it protects aud i fosters onr infant ' in mufactures that i withoui them a nation can never be strong and i ..--,-. mr president ■ii . an is better aw are of the importance to th ; : ; /,:;, of the ;■■ople of luanu . ■■, '....; am [. ijui 1 know loo that v lit ;: d maiuh d by public necessity they ai v ,;_• s . pring up without forcing as ev en other industry i\iii ; and i know fur ther thai they are of no value as factors i in the acrjni ition of wealth unless iit>y an so demanded bui granting that they uecd help in starting 1 vi.--ii to ask the .- enator from \ ennont aa its guardian liow old is that infant anyhow ; aud vi licther like r ! ony sumpkins lie thinks it will ever arrive at years of discretion ? it is act ordiug to my researches well n to a hundred years old and still ii can'i walk or < veu stand alone [ laughter i proiuis ; fair to become the deathless rival of the wandering jew jndgiug bj k prolong d youth only it can't wander and therefore stick fast by new england and pennsylvania he is the most re , niarkable boy i ever heard of except the old buy whom he much resembles in many respects j remarkable as well for whaj he can do as for what he cannot lie umj be properly called the m 5 ;;! american infant his inability to stand i in the inverse tafjo to the ajnounl of protection he receives to tielp him stand laughter yli(;ii lie was born the wet nurses by his bed whose hearts vn melted by his piteous cries for help against the paupers who sought his life v-(i him with with i tariff ranging from "> to 15 per cent the infant liked it and began to thrive from time to time like yonug oliver twist he called for more until now at the age of nearly one hun dred years his daily protection ranges from 10 per cent on rags thai most ie serving of all young american industries and diamonds that most essential one id i ; : per cent on other articles and yet be can't stand on his legs the more he consumes the feebler lie gets ; the bigger he grows the weaker lie becomes con tinued laughter at this rate it will bo come a serious question with us soon as to whether if hegetrnvuch stronger it won't take all wo have to protect him and then can't do it lly opinion is that he never will stand wlwle the public will hold him up that :-(. long as we feed him ho will lie on his back hold on by the grass aud devour fcho food given him by the american peo ple evidently it not naturally his in u'unities and his appetites increase with age his food don't seem to have tlicde bireil effect but assuming an abnormal characliter he has to all intents and pur poses become a vast politico-economical tape-worm in the public anatomy fit only to consume food provided by others graet laughter sometimes indeed ho puts oil an rir of most aggressive vigor and boasts loudly of his prowess one of the speakers at the recent tariff con volition said that one of the largest man ufacture of saws iu the united states — iihs a place of business in the city of london we are expoi ting from the unit ed states into cfcjmda and ihe provinces of great 13ritnin and we have been ena bled by the skill aud genius of american mechanics to place upon che market an article with which we cau compete with them righl in th ir own marker and the senator from vermont v i iag boastful as he recounted tin 1 achiev ments of manufactures forgot for a mo ment the feeble character of the great american infant aud exclaimed with much pride : many american productions sustain the charcter they have won by being the best iu the world our carpenters and joiners could uot be hired to handle any than*american tools and there are uo foreign agricultural implements from a spade to a reaper that an american farmer would accept aa a gift there is no saddlery hard ivare nor house furnish ia in quality aud style to am ri cau wat'.'iies and jewelry and the electric gold and silver plated ware of american workmanship as to quality have the foremost place in the marts of the v ■! ; i the superiority ol om staple ottoi ■!>;->- iudisputfiblp '"■is p 10 ' ven by the tribute of frequent connter . feits displaced abroad the city of phil adelphia alone makes many better car pets and more in quantity than the whole of groat britain these are 110 we achievements 1 they are indeed ; but there is one oth er and very simple achievement which this great infant cannot perform ho can not btaud on his own legs of all the things he has ever done the grateful mil j lions who have had to hold him up at such vast expense would most delight to see this for notwithstanding he can compete according to the confession of his friends with british pauper labor in their own markets and can beat tho world according to the senatar in bo many things yet no sooner does he hear the proposition to let him btaud on his own feet than he is seized with a tremb ling in all his joints and at the very sight of a pauper he falls down in a tit like old despair of doubting castle ; or like scotty briggs when the parson hit out with iiis l«ft he huuts grass pro longed laughter truly lie is a terrible infant i would have said iu parisian terms an enfant terrible bat 1 scorn to use the language of a foreign pauper ! there is another peculiarity about this infant lie seems to effect a cold climate and go rigidly deny to others any por tion of the protection which he enjoys ho is jealous of a new baby in the fami ly desiring to participate in the pro tection of this tariff the people of the south are endeavoring with small capi tal and limited experience to begin man ufacturing many in our owu fetate are attempting it time and time again have they petitioned for leave to bring in machinery for this purpose duty free but the pennsylvania infant refused when , then was your policy of foster ing infant manufactures home people took a notion that cheap sugar could be mauufacturered from beets grown on the rich plains of the northwest and there was much speculation thereupon im mediately congress passed an act remov ing the tariff from machinery brought in for that purpose the infant was not even yt-i born ; but being as he was sup posed of northern conception they has ten to pptect him en venire m mere the north carolina child is still strug gling against both foreign panpers and massachusetts now will the senator from vermont give thismuch help to the cotton mauufac tures oi the south ? considering our pov erty that wo were scourged l war,"pes til uce that walketh in darkness and by reconstruction that destruction that wasl - ed us atnoonday,will he uot let us ha ■onr machinery for a space of time exempt from the pennsylvania astintion a well known protectionist whose name has long been connected with that of infan tile ferruginous swine announced his ar dent compassion for the people of the south to the tariff convention in new york recently and declared his readiness to remove the tax on their apple whis key nay he went further and declared it unconstitutional ; aud with a boldness that did honor to his conscience added that as we did not any longer need the <■■venue we might now properly obey the constitution will not the senator be as liberal as that 1 free machinery would be of more servi s to us than free apple-whiskey 1 though i coufess that we would gladly pay almost any price except an increased tariff to get rid of that rapacious horde who pause awhile now aud then from their political cam paigns to collect the tax on that myste rious beverage the interest • of ship building and its fate is still more remarkable though by no means an infant t was absolutely de stroyed by protection it died under a high tariff but pnrsniug the practice of dr sangrado bleeding and hot water they determined to bring it to life by more protection and so discriminating duties are levied in favor of american ships the navigation laws forbid the purchase of any other and all material for the building and repairing of american ships is admitted free of duty and still the pa tient languishes and gets no strength before dismissing this plea of nonage i would like to ask of any one compete to answer this question : if american manufacturers particularly of iron steel and cotton can transport their good half way round the world and compete with the pauper labor of europe iu those dis tant markets in a trade which is constant ly increasing why cannot they so com pete here at homo that they find a prof it in this is fairly presumed since they do it if so would there not bo si ill a great er profit iu saving tho cost of transmitting their goods so far by selling them at home or suppose they take the advice of the senator from vermont and manu facture no more than they can sell at home why o they want a foreign mar ket if it is uot good for farmers ? a continuation of the present tariff they say is necessary to raise revenue and many ways are suggested of spending that revenue when raised arrears of pen sions calls for one hundred millions im mediately and many hundreds of millions in the near future we are also much alarmed about the defenseles condition of our coast which requires at once to be fortified iu the com pie test manner aud we need a new navy above all things — here many hundreds of millions can be sunk very comfortably with all due re spect to everybody i venture to say that this newborn zeal for the public safety simply covers the desire to continue this tariff which public opinion is so loudly condemning or to increase it if they were in earnest to raise revenue they would agree to lower it it is ap to all that by judicious reduction revei tie could be raised sutticient for all proper purposes i\u>l to permit the wiping away of the iuternal revenue system at tho k.iino time a consummation devoutly !•> be wished heaven know 1 addition !•.> its being the most annoying and vex ations system the american people ever groaned under it has at the same time been executed a r least in the south with a few bouorable exceptions wirh more oi harshness and official iusofence than fr e inen can well endure u.s officers agents and spies from tho commissioner down constitute the chief organization and ai : ive working force t'ilif j republican par ty in the southern state and not scrupled to pervert their official pow ers and the laws to the basest party pm poses when occasion demanded i lie doing decency and :;<>(.:! go ven nicnt t '' service to blot out the whole concern b -»=-*— j-jj-j j+-lt.k um1h1 jjx j_l 1 i j 1.1 lj-mxa l^h s 1 ginning at jerusalem let u tax spirits j and tobacco in some oilier way the public de!>r too must be paid and while the senator from vermont does not i want it paid too suddenly he yet wants ! enough of taxation left to how that our debt-paying policy i deep rooted and unalterable in the lighl oi recent events i admit that some assurance of that sort ■ia a i^essity we li.ivt seen a revenue jofiu^jfin virginia butayearor two since j thjiuwitenfd with instant dismissal from i ollifce on the suspicion that he favored re p»4mtion fj,iy last fall we saw the in i di-nant anttor of that linear the chief of the internal revenue bureau take the stump in favor oi the ticket which he sus pected his subordinates of favoring ami it is said levy large contributions for the campaign on federal office-holders in vi olation of law and we saw tlio whole power of the administration its influence aud patronage exerted in behalf of the eliminators of the public debt of that state and we saw also a brave and competent union soldier with the scars of honorable battle on his bed summa rily ejected from oflice though a repub lican in lii.s politics to make room lor one whose debt-paying policy was uot so deep rooted and unalterable !" now mir president sueli things are well calculated to make public creditors feel uneasy and require fresh assurances the repudia tiou of state debts ia bo close oi kin to the repudiation of national debts that when the chief officials of the j;ov ernment start in to help on the one for the sake of a small party advantage a timid creditor may well be excused for believing that they would as readily help on the other if the same temptation was presented the principle in ing surren dered the question of expediency b coi ics t o creature oi occasion that lies in wait for it the senator from vermont does well to sound the alarm i will gladlj aid him iu raising this revenue by lower ing the tavifl to a constitutional point ■■■•■'■thus givi i the i .■le v orld an as surance that our d : >; :..• ■deep rooted and unalterable 1 ' lc all com •- to this ■pinen in stead anxiously for tl d hsome taxation to meel the ( con . of the : --. . rmueut are astnto n discover ne new rac«i tiding ;: c.ney in order to get the protection of d taxation th qm . . ! : ■>• hall v 1 raia mom ; to s ipport the imeni . bu liow shall we 1 ;■■■■more taxes to enrii li the manufacturers 1 he manufacturers bottom of this 3 movement no longer able to ] sist the cl and iniq ;.; : - s of a tai ifl levied for war purposes they seel to resist the curtail uienl ol these enormous proii pos ible a commission giv 1 th m two years at least i shoal 1 \ . te against it if for no <■!!:•■: reasou tlian the impudence of the protectionists in whose behalf it is offered they openly avow their purpo c and desire to withdraw their interests iron the control of the national legisla - tare on the ground that congressmen cannot understand these questions or if they understood them they arc^not to be trusted with interests sodelicate as theirs u their address to congress the iron and steel association say after deprecathi any change whatever : we subicit w ith yreat respect that such revision of tin ; u -; con ditions may suggest or demand can besi be effected through a commission to be composed of prominent representatives t>t thu leading industries of the country em powered to make a thorongh iuvestiga tion of the subjects submitted to them nnd required to report their conclusions to congress for approval ir happens to l necessary that con gress should approve in order t comply with tiie constitution in no other sense is liit interposition i that incompetent b dy ;:■:.< d or di-sii cd an orator in i he recent tariil . :, . tion said : it is far better that thai modification should be controlled a:i:' labor and capi tal at lieai f . rat bur than i have u control led by men who care about nothing but how :<• get a few more votes 1 ' ii anoi her ona said : we ;■< _:■; ' i xccetlingly u;.<'ii congress convenes the hock-master i just us un easy and as dutch alarmed is bo is when lie learns the wolves are after iris flocks he might have incresased t!u force of his figure by adding and a thief is not more alarmed at the approach ot a po liceman !" still another ono said : one word with regard to michigan and its kindred industries we do not xr.int any legislative body to pass upon our in dustries * * * * si must be doue by a body of experts selected from the industries to be repre sented it can be done in no other way applause and many move to tho same effect it will be noticed that all of them arc on willing to be tried as all other classesof society arc by the legislative branch of the government and insist on having the plunder they are to levy on the people measured by themselves how tli.it commission is to be formed it may be well enough for senators on this side of the chamber to know and the information is furnished by yet another orator of that grand conclave oi pampered public pau pers thus said he for instance ag riculture mining ships and commerce iron wild steel wool and woolen g cotton silk and other textile -. tery & c ilr ig and ■liemica's & c might each claim i - \" that is to say agri ire which . about for r rnillii ma of people and three fo oj the natioual wealth shall have a voice iu that ; • :■■the ').'»' • peoph '■d by potteiy or glass or silk ! what could be fairer than that .' but ! ■• ler : ii i.i ill b ■that ' ! loosely called il be represented on the com mis ■. id ali • bo '■■>" '■■polil icsil [>;\ r that tin it inents wo . !■; a uepublic:i 1 i'n sit that the republican i»arty is in mitti •! i . : '- '■: pi"ot home ii istry il would obvio u ly :■: • of the 1 ■. -. ■. ■■• h it ki id ;:. tv ■::■■;.■; - ■• a - too 1 ilx i ill the ,,,.;,■•;, cai y :'■;■: 11 s ling s : !•.; in ... . ; usity wen so lal . : ■. i.u _ t l 1 ,,.^ organ the .' mei ica i pi • : lishing i is 9jj ■■•• ■., it contains n bin which we feel compelled to i | dissent mr vvharton .. ' making up the commission well t concede ipju free-traders but we think on n • • •,. . ton will agree with ns iii 11 i liic tariff commission si . i be governed bv rules which wo i i mil admit ; of the iutrodnction i enemies ini i the immij of american industi \ ." i bia assumes first tl il ( conn try are either free tradai ■tectionists and that no oni raiting any rotenuc for ami secondly that hat i ectof the coramissiou is not to change the tariff 11 1 : or li>\\n endlong or overthwart but simply to distribute the plunder the | commission is in fact u >..,'-. 1 only to arbitrate wtvuvn the nanufacti leaving the public treasury and the people out of th ease entirely i'in.s commit . . > ~. will make some additions to the free list m»s . .., foreign ami tropical mat : !-. " ••.;.! vance the tai iii in some in • • •» i u an industry or establis one i-vc tvc with a coiuuiission tin s]co tuted of avowed protectionists and re publicans representing the factories themselves in control t i with i repre tentative of the democratic party and what the chemists would call n trace of free-ti-adera possibly this gentleman magnanimously concludes it is safe to say that the industries will prove in the high court to which thei com mit their cause that th«ir mi d rate de mands a ejnst and thai their interest id the interest of the nation 1 i 1 a ing i hnsi and constituted thejary wit majoi iryof theirow u ; the famous jury tl : all !.;■.'! ;•. piece ■were ugly submit tin to ''.' tribun il w ■. n eu .' an ■. inch tlie rioi a redi • ; ,| of 11 9 to ■cotti i l'lu'd tll ■i ; and . h y i i the m : ' . \ -: as ary as air . woolen goods at li 1 ; ■oil 1 iigs and i i tho same t>n that {';••'• ii-t ! should lovo much to . i t!i poor i ianio '. stones of all kinds are ti being onlywu per cei poarl id free cocoauut id ivei 1 , olives palm leaf fans diamonds nnrut i'ruit plauts tropical and g |