Southern Oregon mail. (Medford, Or.) 1892-1893, October 28, 1892, Page 1, Image 1

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    SOUTHEM
OpGPl
MIL
. THE MAIL
: IS THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF
THE FARMERS' ALLIANCE
AND PEOPLE'S PARTY OF
SOUTHERN OREGON.-
ADVERTISERS
Do yon study roar but Inter
ests snd patronize this paper. It
will be appreciated by all the beat
farmers, (nm whom yon get trade,
A Paper Of, By and For tJie .People!
VOL. IV.
MEDFORD: OREGON, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1892.
NO 43.
V.
i
I
f
n
a
V-1
SOCIETIES OF MEDFORD.
K. of P. Talisman lodge No. SI, meets Mon
day evening at 8 p. m. . Visiting brothers al
ways welcome. M. W. Skksx, C C.
' J. A. Whitman, K. of R. & S,
A. O. U. W. Lodge No. J8, meets every sec
ond and fourth Tuesday in the month at 8 p. m.
in their hall in the opera block. Visiting
" .Brothers invited to attend.
J. A WimsiDt, W. M.
G. F. MERKIHAX, Recorder.
I. O. O. P. Lodge No. 83, meets In L O. O. F,
"hall every Saturday at at 8 p.m. Visiting
' brothers always Welcome.
D. S. YOTJHGS, N. G.
A. c Nicholson. Ree. Sec
, LO.O.F. Rogue River Encampment, Lodge
.No. 30, meets in I. O. O. F. hall the second and
- -ourth Wednesdays of each month at 8 p. m.
W. L V AWT Kit, C. P.
B. S. Wm, Scribe.
Olive Rebefcah Lodge No. 38, meets in L O.
O. F. hall first and third Tuesdays of each
month. Visiting sisters invited to attend.
MBS. D. S. YOCNGS, N.G.
' A. c Nicholson, sec
A. F. A A M. Meets first Friday on or be
fore full moon at 8p. m., in A O. tj. W. hall.
N. L. Nabreqas, W. M.
J. S. Howard, Sec
' G. A. R. Chester A. Arthur Post Nc 47,
meets in Q. A. R. hall every second and fourth
Thursdays in each month at 7 -.30 p. M.
fcl. C Noma, Com.
' J. H. FARTS, Adjt.
T. A. & L TJ. I. L. Polk lodge Nc StS, meets
arrery Tuesday at a p. m.
G. K Bbiggs, Pres.
Ep worth Loague meets each Sunday even
ing at 60.-D. T. Lavton, president, Julia
nude, secratarv. .
- ' Young People's Reading Circle Tuesday even
ing t each week," under the auspices of ths
Kpwerth League.
W. C. T. TJ. Meets at Christian church every
Jionday evening at I p. m.
Mas. A. A.-EIIXOGG, Pres.
Mrs. E. P. HAmoND, Sec y.
Y. M. C. A. Meets every Sunday at 3 p. m.
at M. E. church. w. a. iully, r-res.
M. E. Right Sec
rr
Seeretariesof above lodges will please attend
to corrections. Any society wishing to have a
place in this directory will please hand in nec
essary aaia.
CHURCHES OF BEDFORD.
Methodist Episcopal Church E. K. Phipps.
-naatnr- Services everv Sabbath: morning.
II a. m.. evening. 70 p. m Prayer meeting at
70 p. m. Thursday. Honda; acnoot eaen tun
day at 10 a. m. E. A. Johnson, superintend
ent. Enworth Reading- Circle 7K p. m
TuesdaTS. Class meetings every Sunday at
lose of morning service -
Christian Church Xo pastor at present.
Preaching first and third Sundays in month,
' vwnnins? and evening. Worshin everv Sunday
- morning. Sunday school at 10 a.m. Prayer
meeting every Tnursaay evening.
- Presbyterian Churen F. J. Edmunds, pas
tor. Preaching at II a. m. and 70 p. m. Hun-
day school at 10 a. m. . Y. P. S. C. K S:15 p. m.
Baptist Church T. K. Stephens! pastor.
Preaching at 11 a. b. and 3B p. m.
Prayer meeting every Wednesday even
ing. Sunday acbool at 10 a. m -V
V The pastors of the different churches are re
quested to attrad to corrections. - .
PROFESSIONAL MS.
E.
B. PICKEL,
Physician and Surgeon
- ;. Medford, Oregon. .;.
- Office : Rooms 23. 1.0. O.F. Bldg
J;
B. WAIT,
Physician and Surgeon.
4 Medford, Oregon.
Office: , In Childers' Block.
P. GEARY,
Physician and Surgeon.
Medford, Oregon.
Office: Cor. C and 7th sts,
f.
& JONES,
Physician and Surgeon.
Medford, Oregon.
Office: Hamlin block, up stairs.
F. DEMOREST,
Resident Dentist.
Makes a specialty of first-class
work at reasonable rates.
- Office in opera house, Medford, Or
- TIOBT. A. MIIXER.
aAtt'y and Counsbllor-at-law.
: Jacksonville, Oregon.
: Will practice in all courts of the
State.
J.
H. WHITMAN,
Abstractor and Attorney-
- At-Law.
" ' '"' Medford, Oregon.
'" Office in bank building. Have the
most complete and reliable ab-
etracts of title in Jackson . county
mlLLARD CRAWFORD.
If Attorney and Counsellor-
-At-Law.
Medford. Oregon.
Office: In Opera block.
I USTIN & HAMMOND,
il
Attorney-At-Iaw.
Medford, Oregon. -I.O.O.F:
Building.
Office:
Davis & Pottenger,
-o Dealers Sn o-
GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,
Claware , Wooden & Willoware.
GOOD GOODS AND LOW PRICES.
GIVE US A. TRIAL
Free Delivery to Any Part of the City.
FIRST DOOR WEST
BR0PHY &
O DEALERS LN 0 -.
FRESH AND CORED MEATS.
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL
Constantly on hand. - Sausages a Specialty.
EDFORD.
(RUSTS' IRTEeiSCPOL BOOKS,
- -
Call and examine our new stock of Artists Material.
DRUGGISTS OF MEDFORD.
Night Bell on Door . Prescriptions Compounded.
STATIONERYPERFUMERYDRUGS.
s:
ONS &
-SUCCESSORS TO
AT3KINS & "WEBB,
. Dealers in '
SHELF AND HEAVY HARVARE.
Stoves, Tin & Willow Ware. CYCONE and HOOSIER PUMPS, Etc
Every -article
ITHE
Clarendo
HOTEL.
Ul. G. COOPER, Ppop.,
Medford, - Oregon.
First-class Board ly ilie Bay, Ml or M
Centrally Xocated, West
THE
DFORD
G. W. PRIDDY, PROP. :
140.000 Brick or Hand. First
Orders Promptly Filled.
Brick mtovk
. incited With Satisfaction." Give Me a Call '
OF POSTOFFICE.
MATHES,
OREGON
OATHCAKT,
bears a guarantee.
Side of the S. P. R. R. Depot.
- YARDS,
Class Quality- Lara and Sma
f Ril linds
Bffl
A. C.TAYLER,
SHOEMAKER,
ALSO THE
LATEST STYLES
Of Eastern Shoes.
REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONe.
OPPOSITE PO6TOFFICK.
W. GREEN.
Suits
to
to
Order, $24 and Up.
Order, $6 and Up.
Pants
Corner of 7th and C St&.
MEDFORD, - - - OREGON.
S. ROSENTTTAT
THE
GREAT CLOTHIER,
OF
MEDFORD, ORE.,
Has jtist received a large stock of
fine CLOTHING and GENT'S
FURNISHING GOODS
also a finestock of
BOOTS and SHOES
Which he will sell as low as can
be sold. Small profit and quick
sales will be hii motto.
Call and
see for yourself.
UNIVERSAL
Combination Fence.
S. CHILDERS
flavin? bought out Frank Galloway
is now prepared to fill all orders
promptly.
The Cheapest and Best Picket Fence
made. Correspondence Solicited. Ad
dress all order to
S. CHILDERS,
Medford, - Oregon.
1-2 Mila East ofModferd.
Fruit Trees, Grape Vines
Small Fruit.
and
Choic Stock.
Reasonable Rates
CHUTE & CAMPBELL,
PRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS,
Kedford,
Oregon.
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Specta
cles Repaired.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
t3r Give us a call.
To All Shippers of Produce :
M. E. Ballard & Go
' 3449 Cottage Groi Avenue,
Chicago, Ills.
General prodaee, eommtiulon merchants aad
snipper.
WANTS Batter, cheese. Egg, Potatoes,
AnDltis. Onions. Cubbase. Dried Fruits. Beans.
Poultry. Game, Veal, Beef, Mutton, Pork, furs
Hides, Pelts, Tallow, Honey, Beeswax. Broom
Corn, Feathers, Glnseiig Boot, Cider Vinegar,
Flour, Buckwheat, etc.
fW Send tor our dally bulletin.
ROOFING
GUM ELASTIC ROOFING FELT oosts
only tBM per 100 square feet. Makes a good I
roof for years, and anyone can put It on. Send
stamp tor sample ana run particulars.
' Gum Elastic Rooriao Co.,
. 3D 41 Wrst Bkoaiiway. Naw Yoax.
' LOCAL AGKNTS WANTKD. .
THE
TAILOR
11 D
DFORD
NOR
SERY
BENATOA DOLPB'B SPEECH.
And a Criticism Thereon by Prefessor
Jamea O. Clark.
Had Mr. Dolph's sense of humor
been equal to that of an owl, he would
have laughed to himself at the ab
surdity of 6ome of the points pre
sented last week at the opera house
in his speech to the people of Grants
l'ASS.
His first departure from dreary
and ponderous platitude was taken
when he attacked the people s par
ty, and denied its right to an ex
istence on the ground that "there
is no room for a third party in this
country." While I. regret that we
did not think to ask the Senator for
the "right of way," I would remind
him that there, is always "room"
for human progress, and that when
old "established" and decaying
systems or even senators begin
to ignore new-born and living issues
and attempt to crowd them off the
sidewalk and into the ditch, the
time has come for the old ones to
go.
I remember when the old Whies
and Democrats were talking in the
same way about the young Republi
can party in 1856, But they chang
ed their minds fonr years later
when tha Whig partv stepped aside
and gave the road to the party of
Lincoln and of freedom.
Another tunny thin? was perpe
trated by the unconscious humorist
of the eenate when he condemned
Mrs. Emery's "Seven Financial
Conspiracies," as all ''false," while
admitting that he had Neither read
nor seen the book.". When he
passtd this profound judgement he
was not aware that the little book
is simply a condensed compilation
and record of National financial
legislation in which Dolph himself
took a hand.
Xo wonder he thought it "false,"
for the facts do not look well grouped
in a small ten-cent publication. But
that is not Mrs. Emery's fault.
John Sherman who is the central
figure of the Cork, unlike his col
league, thought it of sufficient im
portance to read and even answer,
does not deny the lady's facts but
merely apologizes for them by say
ing that the seven congressional acts
that she condemned as "Seven Fi
nancial Conspiracies" were at the
time "regarded by the best finan
ciers of the country as the best that
could be done under the circum
stances."
Dolph's statement that "free sil
ver coinage means that a man can
take Co cents in silver bullion into
the office of the mint and carry
away a silver dollar was anomer
of his transparent jokes.
lie mnst know that gold, as a
money valne. rises infinitely above
its intrinsic value, that, as the su
perintendent of the U. S. mint late
ly declared in the r orum, its long
continued use as a money has given
it a value out of all proportion to
its natural value as a commodity."
Demonetize gold today and the
price of gold bullion would drop
at once at least 75 or 100 per cent.
Sliver was degraded in the house
of its best friends when it was de
monetized in 1873. Hence, it de
preciated. Free coinage means
remonitization. Remonitization
means appreciation and restoration
to dignity and public confidence,
and necessarily great advancs in
the price of bullion.
I-don t oner this as a suggestion
to Mr. Dolph who already knows
it to be true, but to the people he is
endeavoring to fool and mislead
back into the party fold.
His tariff talk was the same old
story indulged in by all the politi
cal dodgers when they attribute all
the prosperity characterizing a new
and vigorous country, full of cheap
lands and rich, undeveloped resour
ces, to "protection." and contrast
its young and 'booming" vitality
with that of worn-out, decaying
monarchies. He did not know that
his hearers were too well informed
to "be deceived by such trash, and
that he was tiring them out with it
as much as he would have done had
he compared an old played out
mining camp on one side of a river
to a new and flourishing one on the
other side, and then declared in
unctious voice and with solemn
senatorial dignity that the "differ
ence in wages and prosperity was
all due to protection."
He knows that the rush of hu
manity from the Old World to the
New is not as a rule, a scramble for
"jobs ' at the hands of protected
cornorations. but a hunt for new
and cheap farms and homes, out of
whose developement prosperity
Hows and increases as a natural ne
cessity.
But when he quoted an English lord
to prove that the "tariff ' and net sla
very was the cause of the civil war.
he reached the supernal heights of
absurdity, if not insanity. Of course
some Confederate ambassador might
have urged this pretext to an ; En
glish minister in , order to placate
the professional abhorence of sla
very by denying that slavery was
as Alexander H. Stevens officially
declared, "the corner stone of the
new Confederacy. -
A solitary Southern emissary
might say this, and possibly, be
guilty of lying for a special purpose.
But how a man sufficiently intelli
gent to represent the great state of
Oregon in the United States senate,
can, merely for the purpose or con
vcting men to the tariff idea, repeat
it in the verv face of millions of
facts' to the contrarv, is a conun
drum whose seal will never be bro
ken.
Some months ago there appeared
in the Youth's Companion an arti
cle by Senator Geo. F Hoar on the
awful discretion of the United
States Senate as touching its "con
stitutional power to impeach even
the supreme court." I am glad
that it has this awful discretion, as
it begins to look as though some
time, when the forty -nuHionaire
senators' are retired, we may be
obliged to take advantage of it.
But in the meantime wont some
other U. S. senator write an essay
on the awiui indiscretion oi a
senate that Bends out men like
Dolph to air their emptiness among
well informed country people?
James G. Clark, in Rogue River
Courier.
COMPARE THEIR RECORDS.
Waarar at Patriot awl tatraaaaa-
of Uwrnn mm CtevalnaW
Every fair minded citizen of the coon-
try, regardless of party affiliations, has
been shocked by the cowardly and
brotal treatment Ueneral Wearer re
ceived at the hands of the hoodlums em
ployed by the plutocratic politicians of
Georgia, and considerable interest is
shown everywhere anent the charges
made against the record Weaver, the
soldier,' made at Pulaski. It is refresh
ing in the midst of all the lies told by
the enemies of the people to read the
following from The Progressive Farmer,
the official organ of the Farmers Alli
ance of North Carolina:
Some of oar mooeycratlc exchanges ara es
bllailns a great deal of enterprise by publish
Ins; tha facsimile of orders bsued by General
Wearer at Pulaski. Tcnn in ISO. General
Wearer as only acolood. and if be did any.
tbinc objectionable to the citizens there il waa
raerelr rarrrinc oat orders of superior officers,
it Is erident that the cltixeos of Pulaaki. who
are aa ready to avear to things, are fair
samples of the partisan hotheads found in
rartoos parts of the eoantry. It la a botbed of
partisan and sectional copperheads, who striae
like tbe blind adder.
If Ueneral Wearer was a military tyrant,
erby Is it that something is not beard from
htm at other pulntar lie was in tbe war from
first to last. After he left Pulaski be tan rams
a general promoted for brarery. It looks tike
be would bare been more tyrannioal than than
wben a subordinate officer. Ha mast has
been on southern soil at least a year of the
war. Wby didnt he exhibit bis -tyranny
otbcrpolnbr If he waa a tyrant, why does it
not crop oat in bis nrirats Ufa? Inst earl of
that yoa always find him on tbe eMa of tha
weak against tbe oppression of tha strong.
General Wearer waa a tboroogh Union man.
He opposed eonthern wlrin. Be left his
boaieeaa. bis fireside, and fooght aa like a man
fonr long years. Erea after they whipped osjr
boys General Wearer may bare said some
bard things aboat us. Be does not deny M.
When two men fall oat It generally takes tbe
best of them more than a few minutaa to get
orer tbe quarrel. General Wearer bad been
mad roar year. He bad ten bis family: ex
posed his life: encountered all kinds of hard
ships. It would be too much to expect of a
mere human to go home after all that aad say:
"Ob. It's ail right. J fought them four yean.
but 1 was wrong: they were right. I'll hire
somebody to kick mo." Be didnt feel that
way. Ko other northern man did. o south
ern man did.
It waa not the best people of the south that
caused General Wearer to say hard things
about us In a political speech. It waa tbe
porinm of the skunks who didnt go to the i
but who began to fight just as soon aa the sur
render waa announced and bare kept It up
erer since. Doubtless he read their anarch-
brio threat and read of their bttllrtosing
aad bitter expressions. It was tbey wno
perated htm aad made Dim use language that
now sounds so harsh.
Let us contrast records. Ex -Confederate sol
diers, your attention, please. When compared
to the records of Harrison and Clereland,
either as soldiers or citizens. Wearer's record
shines like a diamond placed beside a sand
atone. We see Wearer lea re his happy borne
at tha first sound of tha tocsin of war; he
pots on his uniform and steps la ths front
ranks to fight for the preserratioa of ths
Union. Be felt that It was his duty. Ket until
the last man surrendered did ha return home.
Where waa Cleveland! Skulking in New Yorl
Call after call was made, but no Clereland
rolunteered. Finally there b a crisis. Clare
land docs not answer the country's call, but ha
dees hire a measly, lousy foreigner and sands
him as a substitute to shoot Into tha ranks of
our bra Ye southern hoys.
After his election to the presidency be waa
so cool toward the south aa to deserra tha
charges that he waa only president of New
England. It waa only because tha south
thought he could be elected the second time
that they voted for him. Ills third nomination
was forced on the south. Contrast hia finan
cial views with those of General Wearer. Do
you suppose that General Wearer will declare
that we have the best financial system in ths
world." and threaten to veto "any bill te
change It" it he is elected president (and he
will bel? Uasnt ha acted Just the opposite at
all times?
President Harrison has soma kind of a war
record. He was made a general because he
was a grandson of President Harrison. But
you rarely see anything about bis "brave de
fense of his country.' But ainoe ha has been
president be has tried to get up a war with
three different foreign nationa. Ba la a
"fighter from away back" now. .During bis
administration the country has been tha scene
of much internal strife. Within tha past
three months there has been civil war at
Bameetead, Buffalo, in Idaho and in Team
Both he and Cleveland have taken sides with
Ibo plutocrats. What did General Wearer do?
When ke first heard of the trouble at Home
stead he expressed his sympathy tor the out
raged workmen, and said he regretted tha
state of affairs that is plunging this country
into a rebellion of tha manes against tha plu
tocrat io ciassea.
Fellow citizens. General Wearer Is first, a
gentleman; second, a statesman: third, a sol
dier. He Is human, therefore not Infallible,
but unless you wish to perpetuate the reign of
plutocracy you will not toug hesitate when
casting your ballot for president. Weaver Is
a patriot. Cleveland and Harrison are tha
loaders of plutocracy. Under Weaver's ad
ministration we wilt see better days. Tha ad
ministration of either of tha others wUl rush
ns on to the fate of Greece and France. If
dont see it as wa do we are sorry for you.
. The insult offered Weaver was an in
sult to the three millions of workingsaen
at Hia back; It was the same town orowd
that has been insulting the Alliance aad
all labor organizations for the past four
years. AUisnre Farmer (Atlanta.)
A HIGH -AUTHORITY.
mot That tbe Pretended Tariff Contest
Between the Old Parties Is n Stsaaa. "
In proof of the charge made by Peo
ple's party orators and writers, that the
supposed difference between the two old
parties on the tariff question is sham,
the following from the New York Son.
a leading Democratic paper, is offered:
For historical purposes we now place
side by side tbe Republican declaration
of 1892 concerning the tariff and the
resolution reported at Chicago by the
platform committee:
- SxrOBUCAK. , ' DEMOCRATIC
. We beUere that all When custom house
articles which cannot taxation ' is - levied
be produced in the upon articles of Any
United States, except kind produced in this
luxuries, should be ad- country tbe differsnee
mitted free of duty, between tbe coat of
and that on all imports labor here and abroad,
coming into eompeti- wben sack- difference
tion with the products exists, fully measures
of American la bar any possible benefit
there should be duties to labor. In awhtas;
levied equal to the dif- nddctiane io taaeait
ferenca between wages is not piuposed to lo
st home and abroad- Jure any domestic an
v dnstrics. but rather U
siuanmslhsai healthy
growth.
The Republican plank and the pro
posed Democratic plank, it will be ob
served, amount to about the same thing.
The principle of protection is recognized
and affirmed in both. For tbe Demo
cratic resolution recognizing and affirm
ing protection the convention substi
tuted - another resolution denouncing
"Republican protection" as a fraud and
a robbery and declaring that the fed-'
era! government has no constitutional
power to enforce and collect tariff du
ties "except for the purpose of revenue
only."
' Nevertheless 853 members of the coo
Tendon voted for tbe tariff plank a
originally presented by the committee
on resolutions, with the approval of ilr.
Cleveland's managers, and, it .is said.
with the approval of Mr. Cleveland him
self. The proposition to substitute for
the resolution looking toward protection
a resolution denouncing protection and
declaring for a revenue tariff only waa.
rodsted by the. solid vote of Arksnrmi;
California, Connecticut, Kansas, Minne
sota, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, Vermont and Wisconsin. - Tbe
solid vote of every one of these statcsv
was afterward cast for Mr. Cleveland'
nomination. r e
Will anybody but a free trade- "Mug
wump- pretend that the Democrats of
New Jersey and Connecticnt, for. exam
ple, are not Democrats because Iber re
fused to denounce protection aad to de
clare for free trade? -' s
. Week eT the) Mississippi -
A glance over the whose field Is full .
of encouragement to every well wisbsr
of the People's party. , J
The tzansnussissippi states are mov
ing with the tread of disciplined veter
a. Kansas proposes to keep her well-
earned reputation of being tbe advance-
guard of this great, movement. In all
the districts and in every school noose
the people are pushing abend.
- Tbe- Nebraska campaign is . pushed
with vigor. Tbe Demicrats are practi
cally disorganized, la Minnesota- the-
Alliance forces are aa now pulling in
harmony and the chances are Terystrong
for carrying the state. The silver states
are moving ltka an avalanche. The ac
tion of Senator Stewart, of Kevada. in.
coming out for the People's party has
removed tbe last prop, and they are all
coming. It is safe to repeat the assertion
that Mr. Harrison will not get vote
west of the Mississippi unless ' It be in
lowsv Noncxaaformisu '
Xatlaaust PwtlUca Mixed.
Senator Peffer, while passing through:
Kansas City, in an interview said;;" We
shall carry all the silver and many of
the southern states. Our majority is
Kansas will be anywhere from 23,000 &
40,000. I think there is no doubt of
Jerry Simpson's election. The present
state of national politics is mixed. It
may be Cleveland, and may be Weaver.
Harrison has very little prospect of re
election. If settled outside of the house,
Mr. Cleveland will be the man; but if
decided in the house, the -great popular
uprising in favor of Weaver may change
the mind of many southern Democrats
already elected and make them fear to
thwart the will of the people by voting
for Cleveland." ..
Tha Pongma Party."'
la Colorado adherents of tbe People's
party are called "Populists." , Some of
the old party papers, realizing that the
new movement will make a clean sweep
in that state this year, try to get- np a
sickly smile' by speaking of it as'the
popgun party."
A gentleman who was a Republican
until this year was twitted by a gold
bug officeholder with belonging to "the
popgun party.' He quietly replied that
be preferred "the popgun party -to the
Winchester party.
Trades unionists who have suffered
from Pinkertonism should Stick a pin
here. : " ';:
A Fine Italian Hand. n
John E. MilboUand, one; of the Re
publican machine's understrappers, tried
to capture the People's party organiza
tion of New York city by some slick, un
derhanded methods, but his game was
discovered and defeated. Milholland's
was the "fine Italian hand'" which engi- .
neered the deal to pose Whitelaw Reid
before the worlrinjnnen of this country
as a repentant foe to organized labor.
He failed in that as well as in hia' latest
scheme to pack and undermine the Peo
ple's party. ' L : ! U
- Weaver City. ' '
A new town has been started near
Creeds called Weaver City. Nobody is
given a deed to a lot In the town with
out a clause in it holding the parchaatt
to a pledge to vote' for Weaver and sil
ver. The town is already qnHe an im
posing one, and the whole of (Xtlorado is
thinking of locating there. Denver
Road. , ' V
Mr. Blaine says, "The tariff on im
ports is the first issue.'. ' Well; if age is
any cans for priority it certaiady is:
Iowa Tribune.
t- 1
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