D A.ILY. JUST WH T YOU a mm: i.iiuiAitv. I'ntroiiK nf tin- Dully or Soml-Weckly KAST OltlUlONIAN run freely mnko una iiftlm i:ASI' Oltl'.OOMAN llhriiiy when-v-vr they ' drslri1. Tim public1 nre cnr illiilly Itullrd In llt I lie iilllto whenover no tiicllitrd. ... n..,.-Lln money omtumpi, will V iie Sr,..l-V.cUI.V I3AHT DllUtlON- now ,lnllnrn,iil llflv rrnli, will imy PENDLETON, UMATLLLA. CO., OREGON, TIIUKSDVY, MAY 10,1888. NO. 59. I I xnj i m.vy . a. - -sk -v -w -V - Has been taken oil' both omen ajiu vulluii vjtuuus ot by Congress, but by OTH CHILD & BEAfJ Viul they now oiler their Largo and Complete Stock of DVMAM fT ATM MY! Jfm HI UvvyuiViivimiivjii wj -A'r- . A Tfc-m fT T "N TT1 CN .. "N A CITTf Ftaniine their goods, get their prices, am! convince yourself lJ' . j j; .. !... il ...Ml ..K . .1 ..I. ii tn twir ftifiT'fi iiuunri iiiiiu 11111. iiiiii I riiiv will niiiih :u I ill: ui.m f ' ...i...f tlw.v nliiiin rlicii-s tci nnf im "itiimir. Ijulimti-v. . .1 l...ir ilicinvlml 'I'ntniihvn lJfir ntwl will trnnlv CILIUl 11VJ ' v ...t,.i;tinii frnm nil miiirtprfl. Ihov enrrv il OlMUi lfiui unuiiuiuu uivuu " r Consisting of T7ninwTiitT Annrla ATon'a Pnw'n nnrl nuiUA 'a ninthino1 H'livmBhino1 I nnn a Mens Ladies and Children's Shoes Straw and Felt Hats, Crockery and Glassware, Groceries, Hardware, Etc. KM PUROHASJ2RS CAN SECURE BARGAINS AT THE- L&llliLlllll Ulllll nuii VUIIU VlllUk LI1ULLIUI1 UUUI miu UIIUL. UIUIIU I will HcU'for tlio noxt !!0 tlityH ut u Discount of 10 per ent. for Gash! My ax$fl Stock of Saddles, Whips. Hits ami Spurs. GIVK ME A CALL AND K CONVINCKI). II goods marked in plain figures. ' JAS. WHEELAN. T T7 ATVT Qn WTJ V V M5 Tf. Rr f III W I N 13 AN !" SPIRIT1 MERO HANTS, FRONT STREET. - - PORTLAND, OREGON. . F AGRSTrt m OBLE BOURBON AND Kit WtlliMts; jus. aunui i Bitcwinu CO. (Milwaukee, Wis. EXPORT PILSNER BOTTLED BEEN AHUA DIAN SPRING MINERAL WATER. (Waukensaw. Wis.) VEURE CLIQUOT PONSARDIN CHAMPAGNE, (Yellow t-abel.) mriioiuwam mm . v b amm wm m m vui IIUUIl IVIUIIU ilrect unit ponulur line In connection roKul'u HiiilMlnueupotU Iklran. ..... ..... ..... . itM iin i'.al. TtNLLoulHUiul IhcNouth. To IIfm .1oIiiih, LenvnuM-nrtli' AtrlliHUll mill If UI1MU4 tllt' be Onlv 1 .5iin Connecting with the CbVii iV . V10 'Xi-uOMM.Mi t Lino vritor ' Levenwortli und Kmmu'j Hlt'AlillAKn Al,f, I'OINTM KANT i(ce Vinhlfl t'tltW J?Pni ll tliroush Exprew Trnlnt 'Ai'l0' !? by all connectlne rnllwni cgnnwtloDii mada In unlou ili-not. For full Information roi'imiit... hu. ...nL. X bp . vuuiHiii iiKeiiiiK iiihwju Ticket AKHit.o. It. 4 N. jo-, Pendleton, Oregon! 'uhlnjton St., - . l'ortlan.l.pre. T. una V, At". r a s . llfy. jiii nea omh Jim 'Jw-,, wiapi,ctotUn4nut j'tJ'v',''K " Ctua, w.il l,nJit MM MCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN ! rii-y ilo liapucu ovury Uy, ami when one 7 luiprenii to you. you will wlh that i you wnro Insurcil In Ilia i TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMP'Y. rim Tuwklkhs' rt-hourceii tire milllolenl to tv Ml nnro lilt) IllOkl eiioiiiioiia miv in Im'Iiiih tlmt oven Bf' railroad and moani; ..... haaI.Iai.Iu n.ii lirlmr ill..n It. I'llV 111! IWI- VVK.'..a vi'.l. Kim. H " ll.ilt.iu .irlllii.iit illunmtlil lltimnilllltnlV tltMin weliit'of .faclory proofM. Non KorMlure rovMioim in un io poiii'icK, Ten Millions of Assets. Two Millions of Surplus. I'AID I'OMGY HOLDKnS, 511,00000, Glopton & Jackson, Resident Agents, Knot Oregonlan building, emtteon, Or. Notary and Corporation Seals, In Pendleton, FOR ONLY FIVE DOLLARS EACH, Tlio usual price for seaU made by other pnrtlc, In Portland or the Kust, U from $b.(0 oS7.0, wltln-.xprcm tiarge added. V you net d a sf al, mud your ordor to u, und save from 2.0to $f0 Iboieby. TO-DAY'S TELEGRAMS, Tin: hack ooNi-Mor. CONOICKSH. HeTltlon y u Dying Nrgro of Orcil'" tlout of Nrgrnoi Who uia Ptntllng Wliutrmle .Sliuif htrr of Wlilto People. MoNT(ioMi:itv, Ai,a., May 10. Htncr noil Shojiard, tho nogro who was fatally Hhot lit u light with a Hhtiritf'H k)hho last Thursilay, boforo tlyitiK rovealutl ait al loguil plot of tho luudorH in thu LowniUm county riot. Ho tdatetl that Ftiday last wuh thu tlino upiiointod to nuiHHiicro ilio whiten. McotinifH were held by lodgo to rabo inonov to imrcliasu aiiitiitinltlon and kill tho wIiIIuh if thuy attempted to urrt'Ht thu ncgroori. Tho iiiiiclal noi'o vtiKacd in Iho plot was Hob 1'utorrion, munidunt of tho inectitiLr. iNell .Mauzutn. Kccrotary und trouHttrorof tho IoiIc.IhuIho dcoply Itntilioatud. Thoy clulin to have largo HoeiotloH tlirougliotit tlio Ltiltcu Slutori, who aru roxolvod to uvotnio tholr fallen onoH, and protect tholr color in fit tttro, at all haxardH. Thu negro ulaitned that lownileri. CruiiNhaw. and ltiitlur countloH havo tho luriVHt eluhn. They uro fully eonipotont to do duty. Thoy Htuto thoy havo endured tho tnlxtrout niont of whlteH loni; enough, and propono to put un end to it, mid thote will ho bloodshed. All nioinbum of the lodges aro notified by tho leadens that if they failed to bo jiroHont at thu mooting Fri day and do duty in tho protioi-ed nuusKa ere" of tho whlteH, thuy would bo put to death. Forty-eight of tho negrucH en gaged in tho i lot havo been arretted und jailed. A hliorllPH ikjhho und Statu trootiH feu in to liuvo put an end to tho trouble for thu present, but unothor out btvak Ih liable to cotno Hoon. I Contliiuatlnn nf tlir Tariff l)lcui.lon i Voorlive A paloglxi Not f lutre.t to ' the .NortliTrot. 1 Htoekdalc, of MIsnlKslppl. H.tld tho cot-1 James H. Howard has been appointed in ton planter had teeelved httlo ediifUler HII.Vi:UTON KI.KCTION Prohibition!.!, wrrc) n l'artlnl Victory but did not lit I.gul lUUoL. Sti.vi:uTs, On., May 10. Thorn woh a lloreu contoHt horn yoidorday in tho city election between tho citizens.' ticket and prohibitionists', l'ivo counciltnen were to bo elected. Out of ten candidates ono received forty votes und live thirty-eight votes each. iiinoiiL' tho latter live lolni! two prohibitionists. Two out of tho Ilvo would havo been cotntiellcd to draw lots for tho olllco, but it was ascertained that tho prohibition tickets were printed on tinted pucr and woru therefore illegal. Tho consequence it that thu entire citi- 7.onn' ticket luis been legally declared elected. Thu prohibitionists aro badly discoinlHtcd at tho outcome. HOW TIIK HT1CAMKK AVAH HUNK. East Oregonlan Pub, Co, nihil dtf PendletonOreyon. Kx-(lornor l'rkln (! lilt Version of tlio Cam- of the Dlta.ter. San FitANcihCo, May 10. Kx-Govornor Perkins, of Goodal Perkins and Nornuid, on an oxainluation of tho tiucen of tho Tactile tho morning after hIio Hank, and after closely iiuestloulng tho olllcers and cror, have decided that thu vessel sank solely from water which had passed through thu ten-Inch deadlight. Gov ernor PorkitiH Mild thu company wuh wit Isllcd thu deadlight wuh opened by hopio mallclotiHly dlstMised person, not with tho intention to sink thu ship, but to cause troublu to Captain Alexander, owing to u dllllcttlty thu Captain had with the sailors soinu time ago. AVKNdlil) HIS OAUdllTKIl'S ItUIN. A Dylnr flrl In.tiucti Her Father to Kill Her Heducr, ami he did so, AbiiANV, N. Y. .May 10. Aihoh II, Ty ler, of llath, shot and fatally wounded Dr. Uilioy this morning. Tylor went to Gllroy's house, und tijion tho latter'n up iwaranco liegan shooting nt him. Tho balln entered (illtoy'H Inxly. Tylor was arrcHtcd, and claimed that Gllroy Is tho father of un Illegitimate child of his 17-year-old daughter. Thu daughter, on what will bo her dying ld, told him to Bhoot Gllroy, and he did ho. Gllroy Is a Hocicty man, and his wifu is highly con nected. A Hoy Drowned. Santa Ana. Muv 10. An olght-year- old son of Thomas Hrury, of Lugiimi, wuh .t-..ifwwl Vi.ufnnltiv1 u'lllllt 111 llfllt llln flltll. or wuro searching for smelt on tho beach. Thoro was a heavy iea at tho time, and u . 1 1 i .i ...i largo wuvo roueii over iiieiu unit mm! were carrfeil out. ino lamer nom mo lioy, but tho waves woro too llorco, ami tho bov was finally torn from him and .l-lfl.if mi, Drllrv wuh liaillv lirlllhi'tl about tho arms by being dashed on tho rocks. Tlio body nas not been recovered. Another California Murder. Boca. Cai... May 10. Win. Koyes and John Peyton luHt ovoning hud a few- words, when Koyes struck Peyton witn a pistol. Tho men then clinched and Kovcs fired a bullet, which entered I'oy ton's breast and passed through tho left lung. Ho is dying, and Koyes is under arrest. A Wife' Crime. Los ANQKI.KS, May 10. Patrick Waters who was shot by his wife u low days ago, died last evening, in a u.hiik uwiuiwwu Waters declared that ho hud no quarrel with his wifu Iho day of tho tragedy, and did not attack her as ho claims. Tho woman has Wen arrested. i The 1'iirfi-lliire Hill I'ai.ee. I Washington, May 10. Tho land grant forfeiture bill has passed tho Senate-. IIeluna, Mo.sr., May 10. Trains will I Iw running through thu Julian tunnel by tho middlo of next week. W j Of tho f "o.1,oxw,jjo worth ol oxiwts 1 last voar, $").a,tX)u,0J0 weru jiroilucts ol; tholarrn. This sh.s that our larinors la.-t year sold o.:i,iJ(W,ooo of their crops under absolute free trade 1 , good record, and Is ono of thu best known men in the city. , NOItTIIWKST NOTTS. Uov. N. Green, postmaster at Chefter. Lano county, Or., hus been removed and utiuu in legislation of tho past. Thu cotton Industiy was tho fuvorito of the colored man. In tho nuuiu of jiistlce and humanity ho appealed for relief fur thu coluicd people, that they should no longer bo held in servitude to (hi! gigantic pro tected Industries from which they do rived no benefit, and to wliieh they aro under no obligations. Hopkins of Illinois opposed tho bill. his place. Kmrlck postolllco. in Henton county, Or., will bo known hcrcaftor as lllodgett. Jumes S. Campbell has been appointed postmaster at Pocatello, lllnghatn county, I. T., in place of James 11. Bible-, who has been removed. A patent has been granted to l-Vank W. UultcB, Portland, for a receiving tablo for cylinder printing presses. iV (tension lias been granted to win. :i tit.i. i i Ho said that Iho fact could not bo kent L. llrk'L's. Illckluton. W. T from tho 'peoplo in tho coming campaign A postotlico inspector will bo dotailcd that thu liomucratic party stood commit- to examine the line of tho proposed now led unequivocally and irrevocably to tho mall route. A number of petitions havu doctrlnu of frcu tradu. Thu party hud boon presented, asking tho establishment coiuu into power by practicing a system of this route in Nevada, beginning at of false pretenses upon the American pco- Wlnncmucca and passing through Camas plu unparalleled in thu history of political 1 Springs, Quinn lllver crossing. Dubois parties. , station, Wild Horse. Alvord ami Juniper .Muusar oi .Missouri deiivcru un ox- i.iiko to urowscy, in uregon. inopost huustlblo lecturu in support of tho bill, master-general says that tho service will to report a resolution providing for an evening session of tho Hoitsu on .Monday, to consider the bill organizing tho Terri tory of Oskaloosa. 'Iho passage of thin bill in considered somewhat doubtful ut this time. A DciiKxTiitie caucus of members of thu llonso will probably bo hold next week, to dccldo upon u lino of policy to govern tho neccptanco of amundinents to the tariir bill. . . Hvldentlv tho Republicans of thu Sen ate would' like- to sou tho Houso in another deadlock. Tho direct tax bill, which was the cause of thu recent trou ble, has boon hitched on as an amend ment to tho sundrv civil appropriation bill, which will probably pass tho Senate. I'AHMKUS AND TAXATION. bo put on If tho lnsiector thought It was needed. Tho Senate bill was favorably reported to tho House to-day increasing thu jon eion for total disability to (70 per mouth. Tho commissioner of Indian all'airs has awarded Kllj.ih Crudon, of Douglas county, Or., $983 lor damages sustained by Cow Creek Indians in 1H&5. rABIIINtl CON I.KTTKH. und contended that tho internal revenue system should bo continued lor tho pay ment of pensions und tho remainder of war debt. J. D. Tuvlor of Onto denounced frco Initio as a fiagment of tubelllon, und as being as dangerous to thu country In 1888 as secession had been In 1801. ltlidinrilMon nf Ti'iiiiMM'n Mimtuirh'il (hit bill, und refened to tho antagonism of tlio i Republicans to every clfort to which tho 1 Democratic party hud made to lulllll its pledges of tariff icduetlon. McAdoo of New Jersev said ho spoko .. tf l-.l .1... as n wemocrai. nu cuuiuuiiea uiai uiu best way In which tho surplus could bo reduced was by thu ubolltlon of tho Inter nal revenue system. Morrow of California argued that no hotter couiso could tw pursued with refer enco to tho surplus than to apply it to tho purchase of United States bonds. .Stone, ol Missouri, laid down tlio prop ositions that any urticlo on which tarlll' duty wus levied, was necessarily increased In cost to the extent of thu duty; that n high tariir, by accumulating a surplus, contracted tho circulation; that the American manufacturer had nothing to fear from foreign coniiwtltion on tho UBiial terms ; that tho turilT has nothing to do with maintaining tho ruto ol wages; that the protectlvu system tended to con centrate wealth in u low hands, und that tho increase of national wealth during tho last thirty yours wus in no possible sense duu to protection. Chapman, of Michigan, denied that tho Mills bill was u free Undo bill. He did not pledge himself in advance to vote for it, un ho hud homo amendments to pro pose. Martin contested tho rcsticctivo status ol the two sides ol tho House on tho tar lll' question, declaring that tho Democrats wero boldly struggling lor tho Interests ol tho country, while tho Republicans re sisted all clforts nt tarlll' revision. In conclusion ho said: "Wo havu u cam paign before us that Is to Imi conducted by thu Democratic party on thu Issue of re duction of taxes. We shall havu hoisted ut tho masthead thu name of Clovelund, und In lighting thu battle of tho people wu wiil go to Kansas, Iowa und Mich igan, und all the other Western Stute.-i, und curry them against protection. Wo will carry this great nation for G rover Cleveland, President of tho United Stutcs, TOOUIICKH A!'0!.oaiKS, At tho conclusion of the morning busi ness Senator Voorhees arose, und after stating that ho hud been ill for almost a week, suld: "Referring to a discussion in which I participated lust week, I desire to say to the Senate that however revere tho provocutlon which wus given, yet I made use of luuguupo ut that timu con- . ... .1 .. .1.1 . .....It tho SenVe. I regret having used mich ?' liwrtanU 'res de. tiu I gn wit languag. und tomlur a projie tho Sen-io of tho United Stnt so. My In 'h resiiect for this body, oi w hich I have so long been a member, us well us my self-iesiiect, in duce me to make this statement.'' The Senate spent some time in discus sion of tho railroad laud forfeiture bill. llAYAIIb's LETT tilt TO KltAM'C. Concerning tho enforced military duty required by Franco of naturalized Ameri can citizens, Secretary liayard has In structed Minister Mcl-auo to Inform M. l'lourens that thu government of the United States holds that u decree ol nat uralization grunted by it to a French citi zen is not open to imiieachmnt by tho French irovernmont, either In oxecutlvo or Judicial brancn, aim ii it is alleged to ! from our ltreiilnrCnrriliondtnt. Wasiiimiton, May 4, 1888. President Clovclaud has tho happy faculty of making good upiMiiutmcnts. His latest popular hit in this lino was tho nomination of Mr. Melville Fuller, tiiu eminent Chicago lawyer, fur Chief Justice of tho United States. The ajr polntment is universally conceded to bo an excellent ono; oven thu llunubllcans join' in praising Mr. Cloveland for thu good judgment shown In making thu se lection, ilo will Imi promptly continued by tho Senate and it is probable that the votu will be unanimous. Air. Fuller has ulwuys lieon a consist ent Democrat. Ho was a delegate to tho Democratic National Couventlunsof 1801, 1872, 1870, and 18S0. Tho President has ticcn anxious to give him an olllco ever since tho beginning of his Administra tion, and bus ofl'ered him successively tiiu positions of Solicitor General, now filled by Mr. Jonks; tho Civil Service Cominlsslonorshlp. which Mr. Utterly accepted; the Pacillc Railroad Cominls slonorshlp, to which Mr. Littler was af terward appointed, and thu Inter-State Commerce Commlsslouership, which Hon. W. It. Morrison uftervard received. Ho declined all of them, but the last und greatest he has accepted.. Had u foreigner stopped into tho Senate Chamber on Tuesday last ho would doubtless have ttccn of tho opinion that tho civil war was in full blast. The oc casion wus tho delivery of a sjioech by Senator Ingulls ol Kuiikuh, in reply to one by Senator Voorheos ol Indiana mude last week. Mr. lugalls reiterated his attack ol some weeks ugo on Gen. Hancock and McCkilan, pitched into thu South In u much more reckless manner than ho did when thu war was actually going on ; and dually made a vicious per sonal attack on Senator Voorhees, mak ing all sorts ol unfounded charges against that gentleman's conduct during thu war. Tho unfortunate part of the allalr was that Mr. Voorhees became so maddened by these attacks that ho allowed himself to Imj goaded into using language unsuit able to tho Chamber of tho United States Senate. Thu provocation was gruat, but all good Democrats would havu piefuried that .Mr. vooriieus mid remained imper turbable. If Mr. lugalls ami thu Hepub- . "!r n.Wv to thoso old and exploded arguiuentH of a ntea for iFnlni? quarter of a century ugo, thu Democrats Hio illnnlu- I ol not object. Ah for the latter, thoy i ?- ? SI;?.. . Propose making tho fight on thu Issues ,.f to-uuy: ruvonuu reform and an econom ical administration of tho Government. Tho wur is over und u nuw genurutlon of voters have been bom and have grown up. It Is to these that thu Democratic party upieulH for suport, Tho Senate committee on foreign rela tions lum nmduii favorable report on thu Chinese treaty recontly negotiated by Mr. Cloveland. It will probably bo ratified bv tho Senate In u snort time. Another triumph for tho Democratic udiuiutstru- Spcakor Carlisle will, it Is understood, inako tlio closing secch on tho Demo cratic side In thu eunorul debate on tho have been luiprovldently issued, the rem-1 Mills tariir bill, w hich has some ten days edy is by uppllcutlon to tho Department to run yet. ofStuto. "Von will lurther say," writoHl Tlio President bus lcon comisdled, In tho Secretary, "that II the subjection to tho Interest ol thu public, to put his veto forced military service of tho citizens i upon quite u number ol small bills of whose cases you report is based tqion an lute. assumption that they aro not citizens of i It is thought that the ISIalr 1 'ducat lonal tho United States, this Department J 1,111 is dead, so far as tlio present session asks lor their immediate release, of Congress is concerned, und for proier compensation for The Senate Committee on Interstate tho losses which thoy have received Commerce have decided to ruport an en by such detention. It cannot Imj admitted ' tlrely nuw bill, to take thu place of tho that American citizens not charged with 1 present Interstate Commerce law-, uny crime should bo detained under ur-i A bill has lcen Introduced in the Sen rest for oven a single diy after tholr ate to increase tho pensions of soldiers and sailors wIid contracted heart illsoa.o in the service, und one in thu House, giv ing a iionsiou lo all soldiom or sailors w m served lid days and over, at Iho rule of ono cent ior month for e.u h day of actual service. .Should tliU last bill Imc imu a law, it is esthn ilcd that It wiiuld require l,j0) extra iiuiKi lor onuyu.irioiu.iKe i wlilrli would be U"Ho- proofs of citizenship have luen presented In cases hko tins tlio united Mates can never admit tho propriety of submitting to thu ordinary delays of judicial uctlon." It is tiuduistood that Gen. Joseph W. Kwing, disbursing clerk of thu depart ment of Justice, has been found short in ids accounts to the oxteut ol JH.OJd ortO.- 0JJ. Jvur (o.ooii ol tho money said tobe I up the rolls, etr unaccounted lor belongs to tlio accounts lutely nece-isary. lor I si- ls.i3 and IS-t-I. The Houso iiinmilteo on Terrl'oiieH Gun. Kwing was u Unbn soldier ol are trying t-j get thu committee m rules Savoyard In Louisville Courier Journal. "I havu no hesitation In declaring that tho income from customs must bu reduced. It must be t educed at the huzuid of injury to some branches of manufacturing in dustry; because this, In my opinion, would be a less evil than that extraordi nary and dangerous state of things in whfch the United States should bo found laving und collecting taxes for tho pur pose of distributing them." Daniel Web ster. Fifty years ugo the United Slates had n surplus 'in tho Treasury, and thu tariir question was beforu Congicss then, iih It Is now, and then it wus that the great ex iKiumier of thu Constitution delivered himself of thu above. Ilo did not belluvu that a surplus was a mutter for congratu lation rather than alarm. He had un old-fashioned notion that the lighter the tuxes the better for the tuxpayeis, whilo our latiludlnutian statesmen, like John Sherman, lliluk tlio higher thu ratu ol taxes, csieclally If based upon consumi tlou, thu better for the people, tho Gov ernment and nil concerned. Did I men tion John Sherman? A change has been wiought In his Iuwh on this subject since tho war. Twenty years ago ho had this to say in u teport to Congress: "l'vory uilvunce toward a freo ex change of coinmodllles Is an advance In civilization; every obstruction to free exchange Ih born of tho same narrow, de sist! Ic spirit which planted castles upon the Rhine to plunder peaceful commerce; every obstruction to commerce Is a tax ujion consumption; every facility to u free exchange of commodities Incrcusen trade and pushictlon, mid promotes civ ilization. Nothing is worse than sec tionalism within a nation, and nothing In ltetter for the eace of nations than unre stricted freedom of commerco and Inter course with each other." That is llul fieu trade. Frank llurd never said anything In advance of It, und certainly there Is nothing In Mr. Cluvu laud's message that goes further, nothing in the .Mills bill that gism ho fur. When Sherman solemnly announced thoso views to Congress there was no surplus In thuTieasury, the debt was about dou ble what it is now, and thu annual appro priations for thu supjHtit of thu govern ment woiu greatly in excess of what Con gress now appropriates. Sheriuan even goes so far as to Insinuate that whatever restricts trade and nothing but wur ru stiicts trade llku u protective tarlll is Istrn of thu "same marrow, dessitlu sblilt which planted castles upon thu Rhino to plunder peaceful commerce." His own words. Twenty years ugo ho wus denouncing the tin ill rings us rubber barons, und to-day ho Is as this with that ring as llrindle with Cherry, and lit h himself to the monoMly llku "nun's 'lip to friar's mouth." Hut let us look at some of Sam Ran dall's "Incongruities" on tho tarlll'. We llnd potatoes protected to the amount of lit cents a bushel, or till (sir cent. Ono would think at a glance that thu tarlll' on iKttatites is a great thing for thu farmers, out thu piimury object was to protect tho truck-patch gardeuerH of thu L'ast from the paujior gardeners of Canada. If o tatocH am protected, why should not calt lugo bu given the same protection V A cabbage Is just as respectable a vegetable ax it iHilato, yet sauerkraut Is Ireo ol duty. Can It bo that the consumers of jsttutoes were to 1st taxed because thu Irltii voted the Doinocralle ticket, while the con sumers if kraut were to bo lewarded lie cause thu Dutch voted the Hepublicau ticket? It would be dilllcult to llnd any other reason for the "incongruity." 1 havo been writing ulsiut this tariir question for more than two years, und have often protested that I am no great shakes of a political economist. It Is not strange, then, that 1 have found myself in a single error. That is keeping in tho middle of thu big road veiy considerably for one who does not profess t" bu an ex pert at the business. A Michigan gentle man has dliected attention to an error of mine In lelatlon to tin. I stated that the duty on tin was so gieat that none wus imS)ited. This I llnd upon rigid exami nation is an erior, but it is an error for which theiu is home excuse. Take thu volume of Dill pages issued by the Government, containing the tables of importations, dutiable and fiee, and nine men out of ten will hunt for the iuioi luthms of tin under thu head of Iron and stuel and there I llnd that my Michigan friend is right when ho savs that in 1M7 we linHiled moio than o7d.0)0,0iHl Hiumls of tiu plate and It paid a levenue of above W HJ.tm ). This (iiuttdflcitiun is what iipliipisi me. 1 ihank my Mi liigan fiiund lor iiiling out thu error und will try within m depth in futiiio wlwn Hading among the ocean ol figuiuM contained in this United Status Lock. Man Montiii.i nt'lo ar-sick und ily in.', not Hi.- li ! i i n 'i ii, i'l,t ti be pm-uih nl.t ,is .it nr-t ii ! I