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About The Coast mail. (Marshfield, Or.) 187?-1902 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1884)
7TT" f - rUDLIOHSD COAST MAIL. or am. iiKMimiTiqN? .. 1 Vl v' BY- :-i rjiMff'JW AT THIN (HTK'i: JOHN CHURCH; ' t. ! Subscription Rates. , . One ycnr , .jPS Six monthi , .rtsftl u ' tjgl Three months. ,,.. ...ti ico WITH MBATNKIH ANI DIM'ATOII AT SAN FRANCISCO PRICES. VOL. VI. MAHSHFIELD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1884. NO, 43 fjwnfW i Miscellaneous DOS MY . MarshfLeld, lenry Sengstacken, - - - Proprietor, ' - ItVll 111 tit IlKAI.KU )rugs Medicines, Chemicals. Paints, Oils, Candlei, Tobacco nml Clgnr, Stationery f " 'nml Liquors fur TPtrrIptlQii nkilifiilly coiiiikuihiimi. N. B, Tho Eiupfro City I)rug Slum iiiil ownership m liorotoioro. . r uruer Mention. i NEW DTEl Tito umlcriigiicil having bought 1S1IELD Wont Street, ftlnrnbfinlil, Oregon, Kolfcll.i n continuance of tlio liberal piitronngo extended in IIiq pn,t. Largo iniprdVolnonU mo Mug tnmlii nml tlio stock heavily increniod. l'nrt) Drug, Chonilonhj, I'lilont Medicine. lVrfiiiiiorii'i, Trusses, Spongec, CoinU, JJ(vtr, I 'Li In unit Knncy Cimlln, Nollom nml 1 nticy (ili of nil liliiili. The tmt AtMiilmrtit i)f Picture Intoin In tlio county, all slici nntl at all mlccs. Lent In tlock or nude to onler nt ulrdit ntnli e. I ull ami complete hue ul 1'nluti, Oil. Vnrnltlin, GUtt and Putty of the purest quality. I'jntrr anil AitUlt nuterUlt of erety ilrKrlnllon ronttanllir on lum! Am tumnclni: to Import lhreuc,li Nw Orleans, illrett (rum I iilii, the limit lirunits of Hamuli f Ijjari nncl loUtcco. j)iif urqiMlnlitucc Hh leAilliu; tolinccoium In New Orlc.ins will rntlilo me to mine )ha finest givxli at the lourtt tillers, 'II w iiiciil Irndo will lie iiiiliut nt litxrnl rates. .V! roods at wholesale nt-m-J at retail. CorreKnIcncr from neighboring country solicited, l A. UOI.m:, I'roprWiloi-. N. U. Prescriptions and Family Recipe carefully compounded. ini GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES AT THE XMT CASH STORE -ON ACCOUNT OF IDisff pPfrcttS-QM. off oiD2LS!lxi lull LL7 AW sis Wo nro wiling CLOTHING ATS J1 'I ,. i ; i " I u i . 1 And wn iinvo nlxo dotormiupd lone itnl lu in our llifo at tlio LtTWKST TIUCKS. i( TttjmoitiVer, vu S'EVKU FAIL to lm 'pontlnnaHy addlhjj'tb'otiV" iilock nnil that un ltavo put i , , ' -.i " Z0T IMHOKS DOWN TO TIIK LOVESf NOTCH, . k , JuhI drop in ttnil try to comprohontl our prieen, nml you will nollco that uti nctlvo trnilo In nlwuyn roudncted on tlio ninull-protliii plan. IIuoOkyIolu,qtM imuMMiM ock of t)llY OOOD.S, CLOTHING, I.ADgii!WKMN'8UnN?81IINa OQODS. JJOOTS nnd 8IIOKS, HATH, iqid, CAl'H, OIL CLOTHING bikIUJUIKU; GPOIW, a full Mirtraruti of Idliui' unttChllUrtm'a'OLCrAKfi nml DOLMANS, GnoCHTlIKH', PKOVAilONS, T011ACG0..CI(lAt8f.v WINS ond. UCIUOUH,. CHOOK.KHY, GLASSWAUli.iWNTS anil OILS, ami other nrtlcloK too ttutmtrnuH to mention, the unlvcrH.il exclamutlou in, What a jHjrfeel loro and what clieap goilHl J. LANDO & SON, Proprietors. BAY VIEW BREWERY jiA-SKCFIEIjID, OB., Clemmeiiseii & Eyusiofi; PBOPBIBTORS, Kcjepu cffHt4itly oW luiml nnl oflerri for Hiifo it Hiipcrior nrtiolo of LAGER BEER, ALE AND PORTER, ' WHOLESALE AK UETAIL. Mv it a n is supplied with run vuoiokst uiunds of WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. I oci8 TbvflSSakmSMSM&BSSU $ XV fOX JHbHiBBBBr l I .1 . . E. A, ANDERSON, MAHSHFIELD, OltF.GONv UUGClY" TBAMti to H u( n)l hours. HAULING G dopo nt t)i (thorlost no tico and nt v nr ." ,. .... , il, UOAI.- adVWOOU'aiwaTB''WMMianur"" i- , ,, , . and delivered Drod nt'tUO 16wciB rtttes. ""' Advertisements. DIG I Oregon IK nntl l'tiiiry Toilet Articles, I'uro Wines .Medicinal use. Agent for Wolls. Largo Oo s Lx press. will rontliitiu under tho snmo management ion ni I'tiner storo win receive prompt Iir.NltV ttENUHTAOKK.V. ARTVltl! from I)U. C. 1). GOLDEN' tlio 11 STOR itl FOlt YOUU8IvJ,l;tl., GICEATLY KEDUCEU UATKS. hcII nnvllihn: tlnit tlio ihjoiiio need J X.,L3SrC'yS'' ' ,H VERY STABLE jif. t nsprrnp: on no MV ,l TJX, nsFjg, et at al'm Pyujts. Hat ling dono ut short notice. WOOD nnd COAL idwayB.JiUJnnd,, vvf.irti, will bo delivered niiyftliinnivtho - ' f ' Wn?ijli V.17"'! . : 71 1V '" A, LANO, ' ,w!H' ""7; m JOAQUIN MILLER On Wall Street-fiic Poet of the Si erras on the Money Kings of Gotham -A Plea for the Annihilation of the Stock Jobbers and Financial Sharks of the Metropolis -The Danltcs of New York and Their Terrible Work. Cormpomlcnccof the riill.nlelpM.i Pie,J Nkw Yoiik, Bopt, 20, In tlio SlerrnH, inoro tlinn a tpinrlcr of a century ngo, when wo woio ncctiMtoiuetl to And noma one dead who Imd tnVcn part in tlio luurdor of the no-called prophet, Joseph Huiltli, we knew it wait tho work of Die Danlten of tho Mormon church. Hut wo wero poworlcnH to revenge mid ioko wilii renpeet of tho (crriblo J)atiitc8, for no iiiiin knew but bin nearewt neighbor wnH itlno a Mormon Danlto, Hworn to Hccreey and to vengeance. When Jlrlg linm Young wn nrrcMcd for complicity in thoHo murder" in the Hummer of 1872, I Wum oent to Utah. There and then I tirgi'd In the .London Timen that tho on- Jy way (o put an end to thcuo inurdcrH woh to ileHlroy tho D.iuUch tucniselvcfl. John 1). Lee, the leader of tho DanitcB, wait arretted, tried and Hhot, nnd n final end wuh tunile of the DanitcH of tho SlerraM. IJut tlio Danites of Now York aro far more formidable. They nro quite nB reckloKH, mid 1cTng without any religion, they have no restraint or limit to their terrible work. Yet, n with tho reltgiouu fanuth'H of fsnlt Lake, the can bo roach ed nnd utterly annihilated by public opinion. And to thm end, to tho end that tho owln hIuiII roont in Wall Ktrcct, along with Itceclier nnd Talmago and othcrx, I dovoto my Htrcngth. Tito great, bravo nnd generous heart of Am erica will rcxtiond. Tho end will bo reached in time, no fear of that; nil tho icoplo wnul !h to know tho clean, cold, froen truth. A RtntlHtlcian CHllmatcH that of the thoiutand fallttrcH n month, nltie-teutlis aro from Wall ntrecL Let thia plead my exeUHo for roctition on thin dull uubjeCt. How many homes, then, nro each year inado deHohito by thcuo mya teriotiH nnd invlnlblo DauiteH of New Xurkwho Hit lH.'hliid , their bcnjicd-up inlllioiiH nnd munitgo Wall direct? TeiiH of thotiH.indH; yvx, twenties of Uiouh aiuln. On tho batikn of tho Nile, near Cairo, Lwcd to wnieh two great mimy mon- HterH lying with uplifted jawo. Their ojoh werocltwk'd. Thoy naw nothing. Thpy Boomed to Imj dcatl. Tho Egyptian llieH, gnntM, nil norts of IiIhccIh, filled thoir months, llaugl Tho great jaw falls. Tho inonatorH rlhlo back into the Hllmo tlmy oamo from. Theso two monHtorn hero nro junt n deadly, jat us certain of thoir proy. now tiikv hecurb tiittiR vnky. You w lull to know tho procostf ? It is simple. Somo rallroSd Is watered be yond nil possibility of redemption, ns Erie, for cxnmplo, raised uimply by tho dictates of tho Dnnitos, from 11 000,000 to $78,000, 000, Tbeso murderers, tho DanitcH, liold tills "watered stock. Now Is this railroad praised, praised, praised, by tlio Bh.irpQ.ns, to tho tikios. Lies, lies, Ilea nro told for days, weeks, months. Tho stock goes up, up, up for exam ple, till Jcmcy Central, that started ut 0, is boompd, boomed, lioomed till it touchcH nearly 200 1 A confidential jwint is put out by a man who obeys Gould nnd Ynndcrbilt that it is going to va a 10 per cent Htock and will stand at 200. It reaches pari par 101 par 201 Tho spiders lt back in thoir wob and watch. The, Danitos' Btoalthy stop is at tho old banker's heartliHtono. Tho honest old guardians ull over tho laud aro losing sleep in lamenUtiona-bcaMso they did not buy tho Htock wbon it first etnrtod on its upward course. Tho honest old banker in bis dotngo, fnr away lu (bo country vlllago, nt last enters tho list. From all juris of tho country ho co'uioo. Tlio cashier, nil, hnvo Hiieh a chnnco to innko n fortuno, and no ono shall over know. Ho, too, will have- bouses, horses, n homo worthy of his wife nnd babes, Ho biyl A .thousand such men buyl Tho stock which tho Danltes, bought at 0 is sold to tho honest, ayo, tho honest bunk presi dent nnd cashier and guardian, for par, par 10, par 201 and then I it falls to nothing in ti idngle night! Ten thousand homed nro desolate, A pistol Hliot, n plungo Jn Iho waler( ar'oxor qeross tho tlutlat, u raving manlaoi But what of all that? Tlio Dunlto, Jay Gould, whoso partuei1 was driven to BJHicIdg, , Jifts. mudu n'milllbn dollars. TUB COMMb'HljRjJ'AOJpJ A.... Although I 'may not own blocks of brown-stohb houses in Now -"York-,1 "yot my Intorest iiv thltt town as a cltlren, as n lovor of tho great and good, an a. lovor xi my fellowmon, us a patriot, Is very grdat Indeed, or tblg s ft xsry.UPl'H tint i.i-mitDMt in iiu wnriii. viut tun I interest of qvory uiiflolilsh citizen in tlio fuUiro of this, our commercial capital, is Very great, This is tlio commercial heart of our land. As tho heart Is so will lw tho body. If Now York is un- I Jivitlthy at heart, whether it bo dovour- oil y parasites or la in porn oi meso PallpH, tbq utoek jiUjinblorH, with thoir blood-staluod millions, still is our Inter out in (ho heart of our land's henrt tho saino, earnest and slnooro for 1(8 good. Wb'Sn tho ivy IpRiQwlng up tho colossal columns of our completed republic, then, will wo' Bit down io rest, to moditato, to philosophize, to talk as tho old Greeks talked and taught when Plato nnd BocrnlCH and thoir immortal followcro uttered their mighty thoughts, which no man can a (lord to bo unfamiliar with. Hut will our groat templo to liberty, our city of rofugo net upon a hill, bo completed if wo tnko on a Hellish eon coin lu Its growth nnd fashioning? if wo surrender our chief city to tho absoluto possession of money kings, if wo give it over to them as a gmnbling-houso in which to allure tho bank presidents, the enshicrH, tho men all over the land who hold money In trust, will wo Iks able to carry tho work forward to a glorious completion? i fear not. My fellow-toiler, your interest nnd my interest In this city, I repeat, is great, greater than that of Vnndcrbllt or Gould or any man's with bis tons or his hundreds of millions. Kor his interest is only a money interest. Yours Is a moral inter est, an art interest, a social interest, a human Interest. Do you answer that thoy too have a human interest? I say no. No man can havo any hu man interests in this world who locks up a hundred million dollars and lies down to sleep in n city where a hun dred thousand people nro hungry, rng gcd, wretched, with a thousand little babicH dying at their mothers' breast for want of nourishment and comfort. No, that man has no interest in the great city outside of tho very low and vulgar money interest which ho has pushed to tho verge of madness. WITH OltANT'B YOUTHFUL TAnTNEB. Let ns como down to cold facts nnd detail. Jtst week I'sat in Ludlow street jail with Ward, tho partner of General Grant in tho Marino bank, which failed for $17,000,000. Looking into tho mild, blue eyes of that boy, for his face is al most girlish in its youth and frankness, I asked him how it all happened. I got tho truth from that man in jail. That pae, pitilul boy thcro, with tho great, nctlvo brain, is not a bad man. He is not a man to bo asbmed of. But, on the contrary, under fair akics, under favor able trcatmont, whoro men deal fairly with their fellow men in trado and ex change, ho had been an honor to tho land. What was tho matter? you ask. Matter enough. Tlio Danitcs of New York, Ho was bold, original, honest; aye, lonest! and defiant of tho groat money kings. This defiance was a crime. Ho had tho friendship and confidence of General Grant. For this thoy hated him. Here was a now man a mero boy, w ho was cultured, capa ble ; ho had everything ; they had noth ing but money. Nothing in this world bu money. How miserably toor thoy wero. Thoy hated him. Ho must dio, These Danitcs, in tho dark, secretly, silently, u us u sported fl just ns tho Dan itcs of tho Sierras tightened their coils about their victim, and then down from his higbt to tho 'dungeon of Ludlow street jail. I went to that jail prepared to publish hard truths about General Grant. This man, whom all tho bravo Btatcs of tho south could not vanquish, I had denoun ced, and was ready to denounce again, bad 1 found facts (o justify it. The man who had said to Lee, Bitting there under tho nnnlo trees wbcro tho last battle was fought, tho last shot fired by brother into brother's breast, tho man who had refused to bucklo on his own sword for tho occasion, or accopt that of the fallen hero, tho man who had said to General Leo, "No, gonoralf keep your hOrsos, your mon will need them to plow with whon thoy get homo," wns now a dofnultor. I Bpcnt tho day thoro, digging to tho bottom for tlio truth. And I found thnt Gonoral Grant was as blameless ns a child. ' Tho boy whom I found thoro in Lud low street Jail, palo and feverish, bond ing over his groat balance sheets, ox plained to mo how Giant trusted him entirely ns ho had trusted Leo when ho took his word of honor for his battered leglonR as ho trusts overybody. But ho foil before tho Danitcs. Out of tho dark, from behind tbeso millions, thoro reached it mysterious hand thnt led him on, on, on, on, templed his bank (o bor row, borrow, borrow, nnd thon nil sud denly tho mysterious hand wns with drawn, leaving no Blgn, no shadow of oyjdpnco that.it had over boon In -his. Tho hand waB withdrawn, nnd wns thrust; oddly enough nnd for n briof thno, doop down into tho mighty mill ionaire's own pocket. THE DEAD BANK VUKStbEKT. Last week tho Now Brunswick bank fatl6d for $o00,000, and tho cashier and presklbni lay dead. I was sont to boo why and how it happondd. Tho cash ier, Hill, hu'd had a friend, I learned, wjio know mill could gel "pojnts" in speculation front tho mighty DanitoH of Now York. W6uld thoy not botray him? Thoy had betrayed others, would thoy not then botray him? Wo do not fool that way when nily Ono ofl'ora ub nn ndvnntngo. Wo may know that this syren or (hat Danlto has bptrnyod oth ers, but our prldo, our vanity, our boH lnipoitanco'innko us fool tbntw'o ilro not tlio ono to bo botrayed, whatoVdr may havo fallen to tho lot of others'. Tho cashier put In a fow thousand dollars, tho man "won, lost, lost, won; ho likod tho excitements it miulo his blood glorious 'interest to thrill; life had !fl him now. Let us lusto on. Thrco hundred thousand dollars of tho bank's money swallowed up. Tlii cashier throw himself on the bed that night; tho fumes of (ras filled tlio room; dead I consternation in tho city. Tho old nnd honored nnd honest president went into a little back room, laid hitf watch on tho window-sill, took bis knife, cut his throat hero, cut it there, turned up bis sleovc, severed this vein, that vein, then sat down to look nt tho minute- hand of his watch and tlio. Tlio prido of bis heart came, trailing her rich Bilks in tho blood of her murdered father. Murdered 1 Yes, murdered by tho Dan itcs of Now York. IX THE STATi: PKISON OF NEW JEKSEV. I Bpcnt last Ktinday in the state prison of Trenton. I was sent there to see how many men left honor, home, heart, all things behind them, and entered tho gloomy, brown walls becauso of tbeso decoys in Wall street under tho allure ments of these Danitcs. Beginning with Baldwin, tho president of tho Newark bank, who had been induced by them to steal mora than two millions of money intrusted to him, nnd ending with the state Bcnator who had been brought back from Canada and sentenc ed to tho Btato prison, I found firet and last more than twenty of these men who bad appropriated tho money of others to swell tho millions of thoso Now York Danitcs; tbeso monsters who havo desolated ten thousand homes; tiicsc men who have reveled in luxury, but never bo much as grown a blade of grass or given ono grain of wheat to tlio world. From tho grim windows of the Btato prison you can sec the aaylum for tho insano. And how many have thoy, tbeso Danitcs, driven to this homo of pity 7 Wo nover can know. And tho men who havo been dri-cn into exile in Canada and Franco nnd nil over thd world, tho men who have been tempted to ruin, aro hiding their heads in shame, while we not only protect, but ecn glorify, chronicle in th6 press, and give respectful mention to the blood-stained Danitcs who brought suclq ruin upon them nnd such shame to the land. HOW TO EBCAr-E THE tiANITEB. You ask tho remedy? rublie Benti- ment. Tho American people aro a power and a law that nothing can resist. A sentiment with ub is a religion. When tho peoplo como to see clearly that these millions aro a rock on which tho ship of Btato may go to pieces ; when these Danitcs sec that tho mob may riso up and tnko these stolen millions back again, wo will ccaso to defy them and thoy will ceaso to dcly tho law. JOAQUI.V MlLLEIt. Novel Experience of Two Disabled Vessels. New Yobk, Oct. 7. Tba bark Fried rick Scalla Bailed from Stottin, Ger many, on tho 7th of July, for this port with a cargo of salt. Capt. Hoffscbled was hi command. On tho 10th of Sep tember a severe storm disabled tiio bark, carried away masts and rudder nnd left her a helpless and sinking wreck. For nine days tho crew kept her afloat with tho pumps, when a queer-acting brig was sighted. Tho vessels drew to wards each other, and it was Been that no ono was on tho brig but two negroes and a white man. Tho crow of the bark yelled that thoy woro sinking and must soon go down. Tho men on tho brig asked for assistanco to navigato tlveir vessel. Tho bark didn't havo a boat left. Tho men on the brig said they wero too woak to lower thoir boat, but at length thoy did so, nnd soon the en tire crow of tho bark wero on board tho brig. Ono of tho negroes, tho steward, explained that tho bark had been to tho coast of Africa, whoro they lost two of their crow. On tho way liomo tho cap tain and mato died, nnd tho others woro ill, Otliors died, until but four woro left, ono ill in his bunk below. Nono know howtojinviuato. Tho captain of tho Gorman bark nt onco took com mand. Ho found tho brig lackod pro visions. Ho had plenty on tho bark. Ho doctored tho sick sailor ami cured him aiid drove tho bnc homoward, ar riving horo to-ilay with all hands in good condition. . Tho captain BayB this oxporienco of two disabled vessels mooting in mid ocoan and ono crow saving tiio other, is lwyond his previous oxporienco. Tlio brig was tho F. I. Morryman, owned in this city. Tho captain was named Nickorman, a nativd of Capo Coil. Ho leaves a wifo' and family in Chatham, Mass. ' ' An important movo of a number of ,lron men in eastern Pennsylvania has been mndo at Bonding. A pool has boon formed, with a capital of $100,000, for tho purpoao of testing tho now HondorBou process of making carbon slcol. If it ia fonnil natlsfactorv. oulto a number of Iron plants will bo transformed Into Btoel mills nt onco. Tho iron mon seem to think that tho tlmo has como whon iron mills generally will bo supplanted by stool mills. ' ' Boston Horald: Wo must mako tlio most of BonButlor. "'Wo no'er thalUeo liia liko. When he waa cast, tho mold I spontaneously "budtod.'" ( ' The Tariff and the Farmer. There is no class of peoplo so deeply commisscratod by the frco traders as tlio farmers, and no class upon which more argument is used to prove they aro out raged and burdened by tho tariff. Tho tiolicy of tho frco tradors is to tocrco tho farmcra into tho belief that thoy arc tho victims of n systematized scheme Jf rob bery, as they term the tariff, and that giving constantly in rcsiKinse to the do mand for more, tho farmer receives no adequate return for his support of tho government. There is, however, no truth in tho ar gument used to doludo tho farmer into tho belief that ho is misused, outraged and burdened. The American farmer is prosperous beyond any other engag ed in tho samo pursuit in any part of the world. Ho enjoys tho advantage of good markets in which to sell, and cheap markets in which to buy. Illustrative of tho prosperity of the American farmer, it can bo said that tho value of farms increased from $0, 000,000 in 18C0 to over 110,000,000,000 in 1880, with annual products averaging $.T,000,000,000 during the same period. This is an array of figures, official sta tistics, that set forth tho condition of tho American farmer in a very comfort able and encouraging manner, while refuting tho declaration that bo is cram ped and burdened under our system of protecting American industries. As a further illustration, or presenting a con trast, it can be cited from authority, that during the same period agriculture in England, free trade England, has fall en off in every respect. Free trade was instituted in England for the avowed purpose of benefiting agriculture, but instead it has caused its decay. There are fewer farmers to-day in England than when free trade first opened En glish porta 7 there arc 1,000,000 acres Ichs of wheat sowed, and tho official figures show thai of recent years the average loss annually of English farm ers, has been over $1,000,000,000. It may be maintained that this con trast is attributable to other conditions than thoso obtaining under a protective policy and free trade. But it is these policies that the free trader contends affect the posperity of tho farmer. Ac cepting tho free trado theory as it maintained, and regarding the differ- enco in tho condition of tho farmer un der the policy of free trado and that of protection, wo will do well to account for tho difference. Tho greater pros perity of tho American farmer is found in the simple fact that be has a largo home trado, a tiomo market for his pro ducts greater than tho demand of the foreign trade. Wo havo a manufactur ing, buying and selling, exchange of commodities among ourselves which constantly engages otir capital and la bor, and adds to our wealth, rendering us independent of foreign trade, to which free trade alono tends. Our internal commerce makes our foreign trado insignificant when compar ed with it, and wo could better afford to lose our entire foreign trade than loso a titho of our homo trado by suppressing any of our diversified industries by per mitting unrestricted foreign competition witli them. Our homo trado or internal commerce is tho result of a protective policy, which, by keeping out tho cheaper pro ducts of other countries, has encouraged manufacturing in this country, and built up now branches of industry. Free trado will havo tho effect of con centrating enterprise in tho fewest chan nols. and is opposed in fact to a diver sity of industries, for tho frco trado the orists contend that an industry that can not withstand tho competition of tlio great capital and cheap labor of Eng land, should go to tho wall. Tho -effect of frco trado in this country would bo to croato a monopoly of manufacturing, as Woll as to build up our foreign com morco at the, expouso of pur homo jniar ke(8, tbs leaving tho Amorican farmor to look for his market control wholly abroad, nnaffectcd by tho prico horo. It is difficult to understand tlio patri otism or statesmanship that would com mit our country to such a policy as this a policy thnt would curtnll enterprise in tho direction of manufactures and mako tlio people dependent, as agriculturists, ujwn foreign markets. Tho resources of our country aro of such a charactor, so great and so varied, that tho true policy of tho government is to encourage the development of a diversity of industries and enterprises that will foster our internal commerce to tho greatest extont. Factories among tho farms, or mines developed and open ed on what havo" beorf "agricultural lauds, enhanco tho value of all contigu ous farms, nnd aflbrd a ready homo markot for tlio farmer. It is tho dovelopmont of these resour ces, tho building up of ono section of tho country to supply tlio needs of anothor, that protection alms to accomplish, and lias accomplished accomplished to tlio benefit of tho farmor as woll aB all thp industrial classes, ns any compari son between his condition and that of his competitors in other countries, will show, . In Ohio Hendricks stubbod nnd hurt his Boro too against nil immovable re yulillcan 'majority;-';. ;' A . DYING ABOVE THE CLOUDS.1 Miss Welton's Fatal Ascent of Loop's Peak in Colorado. PhlUdelphU Press.) Miss Carrie J. Wclton, a wealthy young lady of New York city, was frozen to death while making tho ascent of Long's peak on Tuesday night. Long's peak has an altitude of 14,430 feet, and is ono of tho highest mountains in Colo rado and ono of tho most difficult of as cent. Miss Wclton has been summering in Colorado, and two weeks ago took np her residence in Estcs park, stopping at ono of the principal IiotelB, her friends, ntnong them Mrs. Warren of New York, remaining at Colorado Springs, where tlio wbolo party had spent several weeks previous. Miss Wclton Bjient much of her time in.horso bnck riding and visiting tho surround ing points of interest in the mountains. She resolved on making tho ascent of Long's peak, which stood as a huge sen tinel at tho head of tho park, and for tills purpose set out on Monday last on horseback. Seven miles away, at tho foot of the peak, was a cabin occupied by n ranchman named Lamb and bis wife and son. Hero Miss "Wclton re mained for tho night, first having en gaged the services of Carlislo Lamb, tho son, aged 19, to act as her escort and guide to tho peak, ho bavin? acted in that capacity to tourists on several occa sions. They mado the ascent successfully but while on tlio summit wero overtak en by a heavy snow storm. On making the retreat she became overcome wilii the cold. The guide carried her two thirds of a mile and then abandoned his burdon. nnd started alono for aid. At 4 o'clock in tho morning, when ho re-. turned, Miss Wclton was found stretch ed in tho snow dead. Tho guide is charged with cowardico and with, hav ing abandoned Miss Welton in tho ovep ing. , 4 The body of Jliss Welton was badly bruised alxmt tho limbs nnd faqo, which would look as though sho Bad tried to mako her way down tho trail after be ing abondoned by the guide, andjjliad, J repeatedly fallen against v J&e twkir MiB8 Welton woro a Jfik"BWc deki9-r- mass, wnicn prevciwea iwBriariJ ruuius uom cu"lnS "er ic, I,wiiwim was covered with bruiSCH. ThHr ma was ono sho woro whenever out riding, to prevent tho sun and wind from tan ning her face. She was warmly clad in. a black alpaca dress and' black broad cloth riding pants, a heavy black alpaca sacque, an elegant black silk dolman, trmUlleil -i Mkulian f"-i-rn-li4Ra-V3t,cash mere shall and a ladies' waterproof. On her person wa3 A flVe-shot Smith & Wesson revolver, with two charges remaining. An elegant gold watch, was fastened to tho dress with black, sill; cord, and in hbr bosom was a chamois skin bag containing thrco costly rings, ono a dimond, valued at $1000. COMPARATIVE PRIfjES. Necessaries in this Couatry as4 EBrepe. WA8iiisaTo, Oft. 7. Tho rppubb'can national committee has had printed for general distribution a small pamphlet containing comparative retail prices in tho United States and Europe, showing that whilo wnges hero aro much higher than in England, France and Germany, tho cost of subsistence is quite as low hero as in thoso countries, taking ono thing with another. Tho following are somo of tho prices given: u Coal in England, $2 65 to $4 10 per ton ; in this country, $3 to $5 25. Boast ing beef thero, 22 centB per po'uiul ; here, 12 to 10 cents. Coffee tliero,'28 to t3Q cents; hero, 20 to SO cents. Fresh pork there. 10 to 16 cents : bore. 8 to 12 cents. , . ... ., 7 T Bacon there, 12 to 1G cents ; here, 8 to 14, cents. Mutton, fore quarter, there, 10 to 17 cents; here, 0 to 10 cents, and so on. Tho wages comparison shows a higher rango horo by 25 to 50 per cent, Tho statistics aro compared by tho following deduction: Tho republican tariff pro tects tho Amorican workman agajnsttho cheap labor of Europe, and gives him cheaper food and higher wages than aro obtained any whoro olso in the world. Tho democratic party, tlio political nlly of freo-trade England, proposes to abol ish tlio tariff laws which protect tho Amorican workman, and proposes to in troduce tho British wages in tho United States. This pamphlet has caused decided irritation among tho democrats, and in structions havq been isud at head quarters to the democratic literary bu reau to preparo an answer to it without delay. The public may theccforo look for tho issuance of a pamphlet filled with figures mndo by the workers"! thftUt orary bureau to break down tho prjee given by tho republican pamphlet, and which were taken from ottklal source and from daily quoUUoas aa givea ia trudo and commercial publication. A Parisian onco remarked to Loapfc low that thoro was ono American wd that he novor could understand, or iwl in any dictionary. "WHat Is It?" la quired tho poet. "ThateJdo." was Um reply. "I nayer heard of Mm word," said Longfellow. FrMlyM fvit catno in td repletfk Uw pm. AM putting on a nine raw ia & lliaitvu iu .... . nn oxclaimed tho Ft .illicit mo vyiwmsnswMm, Mm word whkH lMW.taft44 Wi 7? very fim . rai. j 4,ij i . i