{ title: 'The people's journal. (Greenwich, N.Y.) 1868-1896, October 31, 1895, Page 10, Image 10', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031217/1895-10-31/ed-1/seq-10/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031217/1895-10-31/ed-1/seq-10.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031217/1895-10-31/ed-1/seq-10/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031217/1895-10-31/ed-1/seq-10/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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I I '\' ... ·'lilinl11h'I.P 1 U:.:._;,J>OI!h'v' .. i~ E~cee<l Olll'li:spo*o l'labl 8~-;,::--~t,~f--;;::~~~ ~U....: : l!'rom this tlme forwnrd tnttil tb~ !OD't Gl~ CompltDlentat')' Vole•· to A..,. · utd Enatand Prollt• at Our ~·\\\' ••• D001l Not l\e'l'iYe. polls olose peopl~ in the oonntry will be boll:r on an Oppnlltloa Ballot.· jO\ll\nlll has reooi ved .purchase .American while selling to at higher prices. figures Qf the nine show a big advance otlter hlllid, we have less for .Americnu h8Ins, cheese, tal- mentiou only thoije the contraction ia is chee,>fnl read- The Financial needless to go beyond tJ:ade rlj,tums to 'find a. good deal of the the United States.\ there has been n adverse· to the United OCO,QCQ. The News, · saying that every the . .American bonds ·~as been got haok iD the a:xports of V/Cia'SI~t~ds' • alone, t-o say pnrcbases by the articles. In the trade re- 9*lll::!ltl\ies. Le Revue du of Pairls; in an Rr· With the United \by the. modifloa· ~~:~~~~ · cnstcms tari1f,\ \\ · enbrmonsly. In lnoo:eased her exports 1lO,C)(l(),OCO francs, ns the corresponding pr~~oee1d.iog year, while she francs less of our and olber foreign -~;:~~~i:~~~·~ to say tlmt their -; \·gained\ im· u::pe~lBe by rea~~on of the and they Jlrove That will Increase un- things instead of -by thODI. It Is N.o one u~eptiDil, , ~~:•l::~f~or~:tbe new \tnrlft' • to· say that u ~~~=~~!ll~ udverse balance of ~ IUJ.ything else thun ,~~~-~~illcu,a:&&~ she Is receiving. !' of dollars from which do not flg- ret;nrna, nod she has, G l11ilsto.ne, at leMt ~!!()(!() b:JVIll!ted abroad,refllrns in trade stutis- that an ad- prod-oots would \\<~ c:i~:nmiBtltnoea have to be I)Qlllndttile '(t!J.!I1 eve!'Y most eueonraging char~ter. They indicate that many of the )'Vorkiiigmen who oame over to the Republican party last year came over to etny, IU!d that they are still witl! us, and tbis explains and confirms the anx:· iaty 1vhlch was manifested by mWly of the Democratic leaders lllBt year-that the loss to the Democratic party by t,b.e withbnwal of their support by these worki:ngn:J'n is due to the faot that they have finally fully realized that proteo· tion means wages. Th& reports to the state committee come ftom every county. The registra- tion Is rega~ded ns favorable to the pnbli=s, the cnndidates for the legisla- ture u:re receiving earnest support, and the county committees ~re aotively at work While all this is true, it should serve solely ns an ard~nt incentive- to more earnest and thorough e1fort iu every electhu district in the entire state. The prosJlect is that Republicans will win. That prospect mnst be made a certaiuty. The people of the state sntrered for a doZGn y~ars from the mle of the Dem- ()Ol\at!c: party, at;~d they are still suffering from t:he effects of Demoorutio waste- fulliess, extravagance and rascality dnr- U!g that period. It required a herculean effort to turn these rnacnla oat, and it will r-equire the utmost vig1lllnce • to :keep t.hem ont. They are hungry and desptJrate, they are after the state offices, and they wish to use them ns n stepping stone to retain the federal ofilcee by pavin~~: tbe way to n Demooratlo viotory next year. They have everything to gain and very little to lose, and n foe In their condition is not nn easy foe to conquer. No sane mali oan fail to do his biJst to bent them. Ther-e ia little time left till elect.! on day, ned every hour of that time must be im}:ll\oved This is not an off year by any lllElllllB. It is by far the l;IJOSt Im- portant one in recent political history, for on the results of the election on Nov. 5 depOEld a fTnited States senator, the nomination of a New York Republican for thP presidency, and the good name at tho Empire State umong the Repub- lioans ~f the nation. A full vote of ths registered Repnbliaallll Is an tlmt is neo- essnrJ to make the Republican victory so awcepln,g that all doubt about next year's CJontest will be set at rest. C~NFIDENCB IN REPUBLICANS. ~e might ~-~ 1.1 Wb:f the Coontr::r I• Quiet anol Baa • ber far- !lo Jl'ear of the Comm~ Cool(l\OSI. iq ~a,f ilothilJg of the T.bo <eountry seems not to be anxious cai:r;fiilg trade. Bnt beco.nse ccmgresa will aBBem ble in the ::is a debtor, not a cred- -of a few weeks with 11 decidedly Un..,-·,,n~ ~lllfttea4 cif lni:'ge rotnmii 1 _B,.ue•p••n·QUbi:ican ll011Be. If there were 11. Re- trzlae ollloial estimates publio11111 8Bllate and president bnsine!!B -~''·~·~I;L Ill paying 42CO,OOO,- WQuld :revive rapidly, instood of slowly, torelgn shipowners. beco.nse the people now understand that exports, it kept up a Repcblicnn government from top to ~ ~~::~::~=:·;~ mstancea bottom would Improve the conditions. It would chanse the nd valorem tariff to ano having speciflo duties, thereby gettU!~ a larger revenue from a much s:mallor importation of goods, and It would at once provide revenues ~rnfll cient to moot current es:penses and pro- tect the raferve. ' Whoe-ver cares to lafow why 'business Jllatthew M~~sball, the eminent llnan- Vote tbe stralghfRepublicaii ticket. 1 d ,.. assailed with fake reports of the sitna· I BPI 1 haltH, wby times are l!tj]] hnr , cial writer for the :New York ~nn, and tis the easiest tbing to do. Ge~ yollr · why men wjtb money hesitntl) to under- one of the highest .authorities QD eco- tion in tbe metropolis. The tide of false• ballot from the ele.otjon ~:~t\t\P.er t\!i~he take new enterprises, why' working· no:mio snbjects in thecountry.bas this to bood is now nearing the flood, and for booth; unfold yodr•ball&ti 'mnke·lin· X men's wages are still far too low, and several days it will continue to rise. A mark In the oirole under the Republic(lll why thousands of men are still idle, oan say 00 the troubles the Democratic ad- emblem in the first colnmn on the bal· find the ready expl.lnation in the fol· ministration bas brought upon the gov· favorite pastime of the Democratic fakir lot; refold your bailot just as you re· lowing facts: For the nine months of ernm!lllt and the people: is to announce sta.rtling _bets nt remnr.k- calved ~t from the election officer; ·then the calendar year ending Sept. SO, 1896, • 'T]!e financial e-vil from which the able odds in favor of Tammany Hall, ill return the folded ballot to the inepector our total shipments Qf\ :merchandise to coon try is most snffedng and that which hope that weak ·and irresolute souls of election, nud•yonr wor-lt is done. foreign countries were valued at t;557,- mostpressiuglycalls for a speedy remedy might be soar~ into voting the Dem- The straight Republican ticket is the 930,846 against $576,618,276 for the istche insufficiency <Jf the oovernment best ticket and deserves your support:. d . · d f D . o ocratio ticket. Tba~ is one purpose of '\'· d\d t f t t ... h oorrespon mg pe1·1o o 1894. urrng reVll!lues to meet its expenses. This it is, ..,...e can 1 11 es or s a e owcers ave the two months. of July and August last nne not the redeeming of the legal ten- the newspape.r,campaign )inr. .Another been tried, and they have discharged t1!e our exports o!, wheat fell off 5,567,535 ders, which has led to the last intent of the Tammany gang is to foster duties of their offices fnithfully,.honest-Lr bushels ns compared with the exports of the belief in the heads of corporations ly and conscientiously. They are all rep- · ' the two months in the year preceding. bond issues and wbich threatens to com- ntable men, standing well with their Our eiports of tlonr in the snme time pel a fourth, keeping the money market and other people who have been nnw,ill- neighbors at howe, lll.ld noted for their fell off 641,1?2 barrels. in n constant stat~ ~f uncertainty and ing contributors to Dllmocratio e!Aotion straightforward, cleanly private lives, In the eight mouths eQding .Aug. 81, perpetually menacing the stability of funds in tba past that there may b~ The candidate for judge of the court cf Englisb exports of woolen goods invest:g:Jents. The deficiency sinee the some chllDce of the rascals coming intQ appeals is n profonnd lawyer, with long to the United States reached an aggre- begiuning of thia mouth is '11,000,000, power again, and it would be well to experience on the bench, filled with. tl!e gate value of £4,476,844 against £949,· and since the beg 1 ·nni'og of the o~rent 1 true temper, and a man whose 367 f tb · h th f th p acate the rascals in advance by mb· . k II E or e eJg t mon s o e year flse:nl year, July 1 , ~ 21 ,000,0QO, It ill 1s uown ton men. a preceding-an increase ct more tbnn stnntial hlaokmnil offerings. the snperior of his fourfold-of a total value of £3,527,- be somewhat reduced during the re- Honest men everywhere in thA ooou- tio opponent in &very qnalifica- •77 0 t f t't d E 1 d mao.inder of the mont.b, the heaviest dis- · 1 th h\ h d bl t ,. . u o common gt•nJ u e ng liD tJ:y onn afl'ord to let all these lyinf essentla to e 1g an no e pos ml .ght have been expected to make bursements for OCtober havinnt~.lready 1 f h' h h h b 1 d · 1 \ vioes pass. There is nothing in .t em. ort _w JC e llB een P ace lD nom • lnrger pnrcllases from ns. Our free trad- been made, and the statistician of tl!e nn ton. ers have insisted that she would surely treasury department calculates that by The election laws will be rigidly en- The nominations for the stmate and do so. Bnt hns she done it? As n mat- the end of the fisoal year it will disap- forced in New York oily. 'Repeating and for the assembly deserve especial con- ter of fact, England is buying fewer pear entirely. false counting will be prevented nt any slderntion. It is an open secret that the goods from us than sht> wa.s a year ago. ''His opinion is notcc..IJfirmed by Qther cost. The boast of the Tammany leaders Democrats are engaged in a still hunt to Thnt count~'s imports from the United experts, and, at all events, measures . . capture every seat in the senate and ev- Stnteli actlUllly shriiDk from a value of ought to be taken na soon as congress that the lll staired town wtll glve 50,- ery seat in the assembly that they can £36,207,552 in the first eight months of moets to remove all doubt upon the snb- 000 Democratic majori~y is a pure blnff possibly seize. They care not bing for 1894 ton vnln~ of £88,158,561 in the feet. nnd can never under any circumstances their state ticket. It was pnt up to be eight months ending with last AuguBt, ''Whether or not this will be done Is be made good. trad~d for whatever they could get in a total loss to us of £8,048,991. not HO certain. The executive 11! Demo- The Republican's in the city nre well the way of assemblymen and senators. A year ago, the nine mootlls ending ora tio, the new house of rE~presentatives Don't trade. Vote the straight Repub- with September showed a balance of is Republican and what the senate Is orgnnized this yenr and thoroughly nnit· Jicnn ticket. ~ade in our favor of f7S,028,2S4. The nobody knows. If the secretary of the ed They do not consider this nn off This is not a year for complimentary corresponding nine mouths of the pres- treasury were a statesmllD and an expert year, and they IJrojlose to poll every Re- votes for Democrats. Don't be wheedled flllt year show a balance of '43,062,276 financier, he might devise means far in- publican vote. Their brethren in the into giving n 'ompllment on your ballot against ns. creasing the revenue which woljld com- to IWY one on an opposition tioket. Soma That is what our experiment in \tru:- mll.lld the approval of all parties, bot rnr11.l diatr:io!B may depend npon them, other year may be u good yaar for that iff reform\ has done. That is wh:K. m- m1fort;uuntely he Is neither, bnt only a for they will give a good report of them- sort of thing, but this year ie a very bad other bond fssne is i):llpending. That is pcUtician. The SJ:leooh he made in Boa· selves on eleotion day. year to indulge in oompllmenta. Thla is _. why Senator HiU is distorting the facts toll a week ago last Saturday proves this. a year for earnest work and thoughtful about the tax rate and striving to con- ''InordertofreenDemocrutiondmin- ALL AT ~A. acts. Complimeutthecandidateaofyont oenJ the troth that the low \n 1-!!91 istrnt!an from the blame of selling bends -- own party and yon oompllmen_l your- was due to the refnndi the state of nt IJigh rates of inter€8t in order to pro- 1 Beua.tor She~ on Dewoc:-tlo IDoap...,_ I self and honor tho cause whiob 600,()00 over f2,000,000 of ar taxes by the oure money, he told his heru:ers that it I 1 ~>\ to Maoace tho Nation a Fmancea. other Republicans in New York hold general governme . I WRB done in order to m!Untain the re- 1 regret to say, In reference to our dear. That is why tf!e Dem~atio newspa- det:llption in sold ol t.he legal toodnr natiooal onrrency' and e:'Peoial.ly to our : CHURCH AND ADMINI.STRATIQN pars are blatl!onug about tssnes that do not.es, suppressing entirely the fact that : United States notes, President Cleveland , · not exist and have no part in the con-J of tbe notes thus redeemed many mil- ; and Secretary Carllsle seem to be all at 'Gra-.e Cllarp• Broulht by Dl•tiJJJrulahed tes~ They dare ~ot face the aetna! con- 1 liODs bad been used in paying current sea, and botb allko demand the retire- I ClerJUmeo. dlt1ons, nod thetr only purpose is to expenses and that thus indireetly tbe meut of these notes. For 14 years we. p \d t Cl 1 1 , stu ld d keep away from the truth. bocds w~re sold to ma..ke up thodnflciency have been able to maintain in full nnd 1 iri~ 1 enf 1 eve~-' f3 1 P ant In the revenue \ . active circulation t;S45,000,0QO of tl1ese sp kf.'SB or~~ f~cyi oon mues 0 THE PEOI-'LE' .S BUROE:'<. Mr Marshnil ie a Democro.t and his notas nt par with gold by mumtnlning a provto fre n gotlo en v so:ous rofesentht- . ' i th f • co OOO 000 men om 1e representatives 8 8304 87806!& b th uncontradicted stntem6Ilts are en tined reserve n ° treasury 0 .,I • • t Pr t t t A · .. 1 Hu Been Increa.aed DtJmocrata Do:rtnc btration.. ' ' J' •' . of old Tbus wilh the loss of the in- grea o es an mPrlcan .,.•nom na- ()levoland'a A.Woln- to the greatest wetgbl. He charges the g · • • tlons whose Important mission interests Demoq;ratio eecretary of the treaHUry terost on th1s gold, we have 88ved the . f i 1 de h b 1 • wit.h misrepreaeutution and he proves interest on '346,000, 00() of the publio 1D -~: ': h': ~-v! C~ .~rove Y tm- hiu charge. ' debt, and bosidos IJt!lvo scoured to om re;: the ~onor s;n ~eo;: 11 :W~~ ~rO: '['b•s straight Dec!ocrnt and writer people the bellt for~ of paper money it of th t\ W g h .• 1 j for tbe greatest Drrnooratio newspaper ever devised of universal credit in the n Yt d e nn flon.th e nve al T 1 6 ~ 1 f . OODlllleroial world quo e some o e severe or t CIBJD 1 sees no hope or the nation save m the . . · . which was paBBed upoa the president ., aotlon of a Repnblicall C()Dgress. 1 Why IS Jt the mamtonance ut pnr of d th rl 'I'h h d · .____ h 'ch th f all this money h•e boen consta.ntly an e state apartment during the e ar times, uu.m w I 8 arm- . meeting of the American board of com- ers the working wen and the business tlrroatened during the present adm1u1s- . 1 f t . . . m~ of New York bnvo suffered for tnltion? The only llDBWer to thia is the :ls~nera Tho-r orolgn. 1';' 1 1 sSJcms in three weary years nnrl from which they powtll\B that be llave used the gold speoif- / 0 t' ynd . erath were Blm~ ar dofemonth· me still suffering' have been brought on ioally pledged for the redemption of ;,:.bytJODe . nrlllg de r~OC~eimngs e aml continue ba::mmso of \the fusuf· United Stutes notes to make good the kabenl an sync 0 brla t. oreth. A re 1 • defl · of d b h w - 1 mar e utterance, nsmg e rea fiolency of the government revenues to o;,ency Bre~en-ote ~n;'~ YTth~ 1 1 · responsibility for the \policy of ill· m~t Its expenses.\ This is tho whole BOJ\\\'ormo.n- nee nnu .ww. Js s o •~ \ - h•b t th -ft'd t \' ' d pal bl - '·t· of 1 d .... my ng \ orne o o P•~ en sum- ato 1 n ten words. gr<lBS an pa e nom ton aw nn If d b th R Dr T 8 But one remedy is open to tho voters ol the cJeareat pnblio pclioy. Wben the : • ~na mn e J the Che~:__ ... of. ·th· of t.he Empire State and that remedy Is rev annes of the government fen below C::Vm m, t pastor f th 8 oat d ~':\ ish 8 1 to v-ote the Republican ticket, and to the expenditures, the defloit sbonld have 1 ennn • onofe 0 W s.helnm tstmgn e! · b 1 b b · o erRymen n gtou. lilllld Mr. kec~ on votwg. the Republican tlnkot . een prompt~ met y orrowmg mone_y, Bnmlio. . nut~! the party 18 established firmly in 1Dstead of nstng that which wus apeoif- ''Th 1 1 • Jj h · \cell 1 d d r th 1 ere a n grnera ,ee ng t nt om power m every department of the gov- 1 Y P e ge or ono er purpose. f . fil 1 1 ern:moot in WRBhington. : When Clovel=d was elected presi- . ormgn ° ce s not qu te_ ~ert enough /J.. d th' - 11 '-- . 1 b gh dEmt with the avowed purpose of re- lD regard to protecting cJtlzenM of the 0 18 Wl \\more oaSI Y ron t ' . United Stotes In pngiiD lands. This l1Da abo~! by voting tho -whole Rennblican ducins the tanff, both houses of con- be h .zed . ind fr k: • . .. ·11' t th · th . en emp am m my m om the tic·et m this state at the November 8re8SWerew1 IIlg oau or1ze etssue f b I b. Wash' ele~tion. A great victory this yoar will ·of S per cent bonds to meet the nntlci- act 1 •t • ellll! a mgton pnator, nk N y k af 1 th R bli patrd deficiency, 8lld these could read- have been called upon to protestngninst m e ew or 8 e or e epu can . . such Jack of alertness, and when I b v n01ninee for the presidency next year lly hav., been sold ot par. I mtroduoed h t 1 th a e ' b · 11 f th t b · ~oug t o ny e matter before the at-ate ~d . tbat very certaiJJty will go far to af 1 d bor th nd plurpot~e, ofntb ttht wCols de- department I have found it exceedlng- / If a decidedly DemO(Irlltio hOUEe hnd been ol.eoted s year ago would th61\1l be tho smne confidence and the same grad- I oal ilmprovement )n business! What 1 U.'.::I~.IJUU!HXP 1Dspue that confidence among business ante Y e ec ar .. lOU o eve- 1y difll 1 -L th Ian 1 d Carl· 1 tl t •t · on t to rl'n= nt depafl:ment moe now so couspicnously absent Bild eo ' nnTh I '\t e m l was unndeoes- IU!d more difllcnlt to reocb President would wah a house mtm? 'Lllt\ns look at ' it. .A <lllllVIlBS of the incoming house I IZ!i9.000.()Q()' shows Gb,at tlrree-fonrtha of the Dem- oomts are in favor of free coinage of Hil- ver. r:t the entire delegation from lll- dlnna ltlld the prepondernoce from D- linoia, ()hio and Missouri were ns Deni- 1 _.~.,aiO:t&J BepubU01m Becmo.tt. New York oorre- Pblladelphia PrMs, if~~!:~~~:! member ol the :ill of governors as been a Demo- ,~~:~~ .a Democrat now, but ~ to me that t.be He- nearly represented L~¥-~:~b:fr~~~ doctrine than !)i ilsolt. and therefore I 3: thinlt the Repu bliciiD ralthful and careful in o:f' sttlte rights than the IJeyer waa a great- state rights, nt least · ei~eptlpg secession, tteila);iliiCI by Democrats lllld COJqgr.ess when they passed see Democrats in 1s:.e~:~~~:t~~ to commit ~~ money policy. lor the most }lal\t are ;1n.-d so was old fashion- Demoomtio· 'legislation ala1'1nii,lgly to decrease tint is a charge that at tJJe door at the Repub- mntll tllllll& things aril Etand with a party &PJ•ese:llts my views. I havQ )Yithm:~t a single word liD)'\ of my friends in the it looola! to me now that party is the Repnb· thlr.t is so 1 mlll!t vote ooratic ns in the last hOUEe, there is good renson to believe that a free silver coin- I age bill might be pass~d, thus keepins that q!W!tion before the country as a distorbjn~ element. The incoming house has ne~nly three to one in favor of aOII.Ild mon£Y becaose it is more than two- thirds &publican. Aftol:\ the election last November the people <>f this country knew thatr there wonld be uo further Cleveland-Wilson legislnt.ion to demoralize home industry. BEER TO BE TAXED. Tho De~:nocratlc Plan to aeu ...... the Treu- nry. It is evident that the president, in his forthcoming message, and the secretary of tba treasury, in his annual report, will rec:ommend a tax of e1 a barrel on beer. This tax would do something to· Watd n:tlleving the necessities of tbe ~ernr:nellt and snpply in some degree tbb deli'(Jiency in the revenue. Bot it is a ·blo-w at the poor man. Beer iu the poor man's beverage. Ee is not snfil. oiezitly hlltal!seif by a Democratic ad- ministr:ataon already, nnd so the Dem- ocrats propose to increase his hutdllDB. It wruil st one time propqsedto tiD: tea lllld coffee, bnt our rulers hesitate at this; tboQt1gh it·wo~~d not be snrp'rlsing to ~4~1!!1! _ptbP,~iti()U lil'ought forward a httle later ou. Tile administration do something, and as it has never be1trli:voo a qisposition to tnx the rich, notoriously protected every ~~:~~~~~f~~~~~ I 1 !X!IIDOJXII:y, nnd as it has done evl;lTYthing e · pi>Wer t'IYtlt.Hlf6' \thd lnlweS a.nd save the classes, we may look to the l!llg~~stion of snch a poli07 ill the not dfst.Wt fntnre. $ 2.85 000 000 OM JULY.I. 1895. There are that the Cleveland ad- m.Jnlstratfo11 baa begun Ita usual tactlco of rof'naing to paf t.be eovernment\a honest debts u &hey ran due. in cmler to make. &how of reduotnE' oxpendlturea. for effect on tbe Nov«:~mber eleet;lona. But with all th1A eft'ort the debt atW pllea up and the people's bnrdeu &rows. The apendltnre~~ Of the &OTerD.meu.t COD&ta.ntlJ' ~~moeed ita re~enuea. Tho BVtmlC9 aD.Dt1Al deoreue Of tbe debt du.rtna twtmt;\•te\Yen yeara of RepubUcan pTernm.ent ..... aas.ooo,ooo. THE LO.SS TO WOR.~ERS. The Dioiliooratlo 'l\UIJ! Baa :Robbed Them of ~5,000,000 In Niue .Mootha. During the first nine months of this year onr imports of dt:ftiable goods were t110,468,966 sreatsr thnn during the correspo.nding months of 1894. Tbe bulk of tbesti goods was Btlch as can be made in our o*n fMtories. Instead they were made in foreign factories. Work that should hnv~ been done by Amerioan ·Ia· bor was done by foreign labor. WRIWJl that should hnve been paid to .Ameri- cans were paid to fQI'eigners. ABBnmin~ thatonly half the value of these goods represents their labor cost, then .Ameri- 'Cn:b labor h&S lost upward of f55,QOO,- ooo In nine months of thid ye!ll'. .. P'euty of O~~JUpalp .~tol'IJII, Tl)p d,~Jlcit in tJJ11 ,t\eVe»ll~.~jlS thlj tarj.ft lib~ biggest po)jtical ~~~at p.Tes~ ~t, b~t. g ~qat were out, of .tPII wa1,, t4~ m-.Amer19an fclreign poll<;~jtl:it'Clb~al.81lt1 wbUld W · enbugh £. beat Deiiilllita6)+ 11eii yeat<: · · ll:. ~ ili¥ra essl!lltml to IIDY business rev1Vlll . sary. e llB congress was rea y to Cl 1 d . d ., I pllBS snch n bi11. bu.t they oppoeed i.t and eve liD m_ rel!'nr to anch matters. TRUTH ABOUT TAXES. resorted to the gold reserve, llDd tbns JA:· Hai?hn JS not forgetful of tho -- crented a doubt whether we could main- oonsJdernt~on due ~o Mr. ClevelllDd 'a The State Caru Aot, Whlob Adda &2.Goo,- . tnin our notes at pu wlth gold. This high pos1t~on •. He 18 not abrupt or dis- t1!»0 u. the Taxe., \Wu Paue<l by Lbo fatnl policy of ttnlawfnlly diverting the courteous m his lnugn~ge. But his 80• J>ew...,.,.te. , I gold in the treas to the n meut of cusntiop ~at Mr. Cleveland Is neglect- 'l'beDemoorntJonewspapers nrc freely' t d ft . nryl th p Y d b fnl of the mtPreRtsoi.Americon citizens . curran e cJencea s e cause, an t e stol1ng that the tax rate is \the highest sole cause, of the pl.\t!l!ent financial dis- ~athers nil tbe more force from tbat. It known in many years,\ nod they h&ve tnrbance. 1 11 a charge whiob has not been and rei!Eroted this falsehood until they ap- And now the remudy proposed by could tnhot bAe tru~hfulJy mnldde nsainst C I . 1 · t h t E t any o er mer10nn pres ent since penr to bol ieve it. Tl!e troth is the tax ar Js e m a_ NJCen speeo a os on, B cb - B J _, rate Wll.S higher in CleveLmd 's fl.mt year as f!lOVernor, and it -was prnctically aB higb in 1885 and 18~6. There waa no esao.ntlal difference. ..A contrast is made witb the tax rate In 1891. This 1~ the yeor when tlle Repu bliC1lll congress re- tnroed to the state more than *2, 200,000 of war taxes, which rightfully should have been apportioned !UIIOng tho difl'er- eut counties, bnt which the DeiDocratio oflle:ials turned into tl:!e state treasury. 'l'be state care aot, which added fll,- 600.000 to the ·tax roll, was passed by the Democrfltic legiskltnre of 1893 nnd siw-ed by Roswell P. Flower, the Dem- apparently With the approval of Cleve- , u nnan. oston oum.u. ~nd, is to retire tHe greenbacks by the I ~THE FARrlEI{5 AND PRICES. lSstJe of bonds, and tbns Sllddle the gov- emroent with interest on $S46,000,00Q Etrem of th~ Wlloon muon Far= Prod• of bonds. This is not the worst of it;. I nets. The mass of silver certificates and treas- Farmers who are getting 20 to 21 ury 11otes can then oo redeemed only in cents n bushel for their pototoea tRis Hilver dollars, and tb.is means the silver · fall mny thiiDk the Democratic patty standard alone. The only way they pro- I for the rate. It is ruinous, to be sure, pose to prevent this is by the sale of but Canada had to be considered, and more bonds to redeem these notes and I the duty on foreign potatoes was there- certiflcnt.as, thus converting all our cnr-1 fore reduced by the Wilson bill from 25 renoy into intersst bearing bonds and 1 cents per bushel l,!} 15 cents per bushel· leaving us no paper money except na- The necessities of'onr own farmers wm' tiona! bank notes. heedlessly whistled down the wihd. · So rodical a change in our financial Cabbages nnd oats and barley are all system cnn only result in a great loss to down in price for the samereas()ll. The· the government In the large increase of tobacco raisers of Chemullg, Stenb~g'it,' · the Interest bearins debt nnd in wild Onondaga nnd the entire tobncoo districo distorbRDce of tbe industries 1md oom- of southern and central New York feel meroe of our country. the e1feotS\of the reduction in the dnties .. . ' . ·;, . ' ' 'I I . I oorO<tio governor. It Is a Democratic melt.Btlre, and tit~ people of the state are taxed to pay n Demoo:rntio debt. Repub· licnllls are in no way responsible for it. PoUtlca at Home. The boys ~hollld be made good Repub- licans before they come of age, and it is the home influence which mill bring this about. As a rule the fathers do not care vary much about the politics of n boy until be has n vote to cast. The vote is the unit of importance in man's econ- omy, but women arensed to sowing seed in young minds. that it may later bear fruition, and so on the mothers partigu- lnrly devolves tbe duty of impliUlting in ibe eh.ilu ·e xril.'d ~bo !l)itit of patriotism, to pre-empt tbe soil of obildhood. for honesty, for law, for good governm~nt, for the st-'11:8 and stripoo, and when that shall have l!een dona there ]s ·no fear but tho first vcite '\'/ill be· cast for the Bepobliclll! party.-Beleo Vnrick• •Eos- well. on foreign tobacco, 50 cents n pound which the Wilson bill hilS e1feoted ' '~: . The duty on hops has been rednced 7 Tltere is no comfort; for Demooratlt in an exaot statement of the facts. Tbe Slun\ V\b Alen. Yes, it is th., same Van Alan who put t5o. 000 in the slot and pulled out a com- .miasion as United States minister to ltol:y. .And the Cleveland who signed that commission, in c<>nsirleration of ibe tM.OOO contltibntion 'to bi8 campaign fnnd, ie the same Cle-volBIId who pUsh· ed back his halo and raised his ooose- crntcd voice against-the '•debasing tend- encies of tile use of monet :in eleo- titlllB. \--<JI~il and' ~l.'e.Bft •. cents a pound. Every one in the hop districts of Madison, Otsego, Chenango Franklin nod the other hop countie~ knows how thi§ a-qt has afl'ected the poakets of the hvp gJ:owers.~dth!.\,proa- perr. ty of ali Pl11 Pfl_ o. plti of' ·tb~Ef',n;f!· • tilllf. '!'be ~~y U.~s ' ~ ··· \'\k ~.f.laS~.. It' j~ )\tjd a., ~. · : ... J?ll tlllmlet\Pl'. the, al]1\ lii~J'ho vot~.'tl!~ _Del:il~at1!' ti~e~- ci'is\lf:~ote agamst ma· own lll'temsts: ' ' I~- \