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.THBaTT.

TUESDAY.«1ULY 10, 1894.

The Presidenta Position.PraaMeat Ctavelaad is in trying circum-

stsnees. He la «ailed anea te fat»* a con¬

dition of thing» which no other President »in.·» erar had to encounter. Never¬

theless not«, iy dosata that he is th« Hunt

man In thi» right place.Tne paaast ?«mi ansia fas] a confidence

In Mr. Revejan·] Whlea cannot b" shaken

BS» Ma opponents nor anybody but hlm-

'. Bad a*· might my that t»> saca

? man a halting, hesitating course Is

?????anfibie sad «therefore we miKht «ay

that seen the Preekteal hinisetf cannot

cauy»· ti¡«- people to tose confidence in him.

Hi· is <"'d, calm, and »i-lili-rat»·.not ob-

¡tinate-but firm. Indeed, he exenapUflesthe difference bitween tirmness and ob»

sttaacy. The former is asnreseed by the

phi 1 will;" the latter by th«; phi"1 won't."

i Bder such a condition of things o3

he· obtained si Chiesa» during the last

wees, ii does not asesa to ua thut it is

well to hold out the Has to the publicthat th.· President is confined to th«? duty

«>f protecttsp Interstate ensena rt <·¦ il is*

ii « || |o trarli that doctrine; for Just; certatBly as th·· Uaftei states mails

an h ti rfered wi'h In any way the Presi¬dent will see '·· H that the) are protectedeven II lis sre laterfered with in the

» on tacar way from the

sul· ··. th»> pntM ral peat«O0CS«,ua t·» the President it is

u Bouree "f profound aatisfaetloa la snch

a ci aa I now up":i us to feel and

? ,· ? .w.Di Andrew Jackson oc-

the White House .

The Now Tariff Bill.

The of. the Bouse of Bep-ntetl«ree os Thursday Indicate, as we

Interpret ir.»m, that though tl·.· tarili? ¡i s« Bt te that body front the .«-"·

may be objectionable t.» a good many

Demócrata lo the forner body, yet Ib

Um «-ni ittaned sentlemen willat It I that could

bt obtained The sei itora fro» Urals·lana finally »ot d si lei proteet fur the

bill aa ll area mi to the Houee, el·Huai; ? its provtsloaa were by th<«m re¬

tard I as unjust to tbe sugar tab

oí the country, and of that .stau* par«la»;>·. Mr. Smith, a New JerSey

senator, eleo recordé«! bla vote ta favorMU.not because be was

friendly t.» th« Income-tax, i»iu because? .. ai» mocrat, und a ? bui h felti' im ?»ß his iluty t»> stand with his

Democratic brethres ta Bupport of what·flnanclal poll« y they as ¦ body might

adopt as the policy of that party. Mr.

Hill, we will -tai·· once more, was theonl nator who voted ai'.n

tbe i.· against the bill.Mr. T'trr-r. of Georgia, one of the

most Influential men In that stai»·, and

oenl candidate for United Htat.s

made a ah« ri explanatory sp» ichin th.· Houi of Rapt, tentatives oa Thure«

in which ? ¦ 1.1 thai h<· had be» ?

tact repoi ted as bavin· declaredi.i his recent Atlanta spa that the

Senats bill waa practically lue nudo aatl··· Wilson MIL li· had, be added,

ted Just the opposite." Bat the rend t

ii not infer from thai explanation thatsir. Turn» r Will VOt· .,gainst the Senate»

Mil win ? it comes up lor tinai action."\ half loaf is better than no In sail.**snd In his Atlanta speech al»ove referred

to, Mr. Turner, though he did not cume

for the .«-'»nate bill, mad« a remark

ooucemlns It whlcb we understand as

ooesatltttag him to its support when he

iimls thai a majority of his Democratic¦ sollates In the House of Representa-ives bave agreed to make It a partymeasure. Thla speech v. as made Saturdayweek, and contained the remark that

not since 1S5Ì have the American peopleever had pCOpoeafl to them such a Htnrt

in the direction of free and unfetteredcommerce as the Democrats would givethem. Mr. Turner, In the same speech,mentitine·! the fonate bill as containing

some material amendments "made for the

purpose of peace and unity In the Sen¬

ate." These aro his own words, and

signify that hi* will tiot make factious

opposition to the «Senate bill.Nevertheless, the tariff flsht Is not yet

ended. Efforts will be mal·« In the Hou.«e

of Representatives to strlk«» out the In¬

come-tax feature of the Senate bill, Lut

the«» will assuredly fail, tenta· that tho

Income-tax grows dally In popularity.Similar efforts will be made to put coal.Iron-ore. and other articles on the free

list. The» sugar duties will also bo made

an object of attack. Indeed, there is no

doubt that the Republicans in both the

Senate and t.ic Hornee will make a

desperate attempt to kill the Senate bill

and perpetuato the existence of the Mc«Kinley law. But the Democratic majorityIn the House of Representatives Is so

larg« that there ought to be no difficultyunder the House rules in passing theSenate bill on any day that may be

agreed upon for Its final disposition. The

vote will be closer In the Senate.What we have written Is based upon

the assumption that the Senate and the

House will art together In this mat¬

ter, and be backed up by the President.If, as tho Washington Poet Intimates

rather than states, the President has de¬

clared that he Is opposed to the Senate

bill end will favor a return to the Wilson

bill then the situation will be differentHut, we repeat, as we understand it,the Président and Secretary Carlisle have

expressed their willingness to accept theSenate Nil.In fact, as the matter presents Itself to

u«. the Senate bill or a new Mil must,at every risk, be made the law of theland. Ths Dmocrats of the House ofRepresentatives dare not go before thepeople with empty banda They must gocarrylBg a new measure of tariff reformfor the people to pass upon. They muathave something to show for the Um- andmoney expanded during the current Con¬gress. They must not be afraid to trustthe voters to Judge them fairly and im-pe*le«y. The country is rips for »Oemoitraüe harvest. Kothtag .tends inthe way of a Démocratie triumph ta No-

vember but a possible failure on the partof Congress to do its duty In the premise«.The Hmate tariff bill snd a bill providingfor a new International bimetalli«! con¬

ference ought by oil means to becomelaws, if we have these to «how for our

work, we need not fear the oppoeltlonof Republicana Populists, or Anarchists.

The Btrlke-Pederel Authority.It Is hardly worth while to examine

the Pederal Constitution to aacerUInwhether that Inatrument doee or doe«not confer upon the Prealdrnt of theI'nlled States the power to put downsuch riot« as those which have lor day«made Chicago the centre towards whichall eye« and all hearts wer·» turne·!.The Chief Executive« of all great coun¬

tries have alway« Iteen found and willalway« be found to \m men who likeJulius Caesar are ready to make a wayIf they c&nnit find u way of protectingth<-lr countries from anarchy, misrule,tumult«, and Internecine trouble« of allkind«. The welfare Of the people In the

supreme law everywhere.saluB popullsuprema c"t lex.President Cleveland declined to dl«cu«t

constitutional ipiestlons with OovernorAltgeld, as Mr. Lincoln declined to

discus« tuch Qucttlon« with OovernorLetcher or any other Oovernor whoeecmed dltposed to deny the power ofthe Federal Oovernment to put down"Insurrection" or "rebellion."The Xew York Journal of Commerce,

like many other pap.-rs, find« the powerto regúlate commerce among the severalState« to be the foundation upon whichnre based all the powers which thePresident needed to exercise In orderto put down the Chicago rioter«. That

papOO »ay« that the public Interests out¬

grew the theory that In the abnence of

OCBgraaatonal action the several Stateswere free to do what they liked withcommerce that crossed their borders.88 B n· w theory was substitut··! for

It, in- order that there might be a corn¬

inoti policy, a common responsibility,and a common rule of conduct. Thenew theory may be styled Judge-madelaw, but It Is, nevertheless, the law ofth, laid. We have no doubt, however,that la the absence of the constitutionalprovision expressly authorizing Ostati ss

to regulate commerce among the severalBtOtee, the right to exercise th powerswhich th·· President has been exercUIngduring th·· Chicago troubles aronld bavaBOOB found elsewhere In the »'.nstito-tloii. There are so many powers en-

| trusted to what has become the strongmm of Pelerai power that the Presi¬di nt BOad not stai ? h far nor long be¬

fore be finds authority for making thatstrong arm felt from Mali.· t., Canfor¬ata.

ver, as the Journal of Commerce

pays, CoBgroOB took uctlon that threw¦pon th·· Pederal Oovernment the dutyof protecting the agent»* of limisi n- com¬

mi rei from locai int. of alleons. And so If there wen· no othernary piovkted for th» President to act in

SU» h nn t niergency sai he found him.-· If

In last v.i'k, ho might re.y upon IBPUBIhn or futir words of illimitable Importwhich read thai Congreso aban bare? a to "regulate commerce among thes···.·( ral Blatta."

»t. would I·· interesting to notice some

of the provisions of Ina Federal Consti¬tution which may bs made to bear ujionthe Pns dent's ritht to exerc.se the

I iwera wllili he has found it BOO BTJto extielea in the Chicago cius«·.

The gì ?· ral-wlfare cluuse can be

eric*"! ¡? defence of almost any exarclaoof the Inderai power. And a.· <

la empowered to caB forth the minti.«

"io exécuta the tana of the Union," andtue m'l'l'a of one State may be sent Intoanother State, it would seem thai an am¬

bitious President need not tack for au¬

thority :o execute his own BWSSl will.

Congress is empowered to aataJMtahBtesa and post-roads, and to do nu-

., ·;!.' r thin, :. Lut we ne· ? aot

quote ti ii page of the constitutionwhich confers power aft.-r power upon

Congreoa Th·* whole an..y I- embraced¡? the following prot Iston;

mi -. >ha!l have power) to make alllaws which eluill ?» necessary and properfor ? m-yiiig into execution the foregoing

and all other powers rooted bythi. Constitution In the government of the

? sited States or lu any deportment or of¬fici r thenlu st.ort, when the time comes when

the roderei Constitution must hav· a

new slots put upon It, that insti uunnt

\. ill r.ot be found to stau' in th- way

Of the accompli· hmeiit ..f that objectIti the word«· of the Journal of ? mm.? o.

"it would be prtpooterouo .f mona coni.?

be ji.'iiioltcd tO do that WBtefa tl

pi mo Court haa declarad that State Leg¬

islatures may not do."

Compressed Air ve. the Trolley.A correspondent of tho Baltimore Bun,

writing from Wastftei 1, Mass., «ay« that

the Fourth of July was a gala day there.li waa the occasion on which the Ila·karaki ComprOaOOd Air Motor Company'scars were put to the te«t of practicabilityand profltableneon, We quote:"Three cars made each fourteen trips,

or fifty-six mil· s, and carried dui ing thoday l.S'HJ People. Tl,·· ear·, OTO ea.dly cii-

tn lied, nnd In dOOQtndlng grade thereIs little or no consumption Of nlr. Theycan be run at n rute of «peed equallingtwonty-flvo mltaa par hour, and ara capa¬si of sutfii lent storage capacity to run

two round trips (eight mile») wl'hout re¬

charging. The trial was the most ? .mi-

píete und the test the BBOOt severe towhich the system has as yet b".*n sub-j.vtd."Every' such experiment lead« toward«

more and more rapid transit, and stimu¬

lates Investors to Improve upon our pres¬ent systems of getting from place to

place. We have great faith, however. Inelectricity. Its possibilities are Incalcu¬lable.

Taxing Greenback»,.The bill Just passed by the House of

liepresentatlves permitting or authorisinggreenbacks (treasury notes) to l»e taxedwas called for by a condition of thingswhich on Thursday a member explainedas follows:"The scheme worked in Ohio, and I pre¬

sume In other State» as well, Is this:

Money on d«po»!t In the bank Is taxableunder the law. On the day perhaps pr»*-vlou« to the taxing day. which Is the se¬

cond Monday In April In our State, a per¬son wishing to avoid taxation goea to a

bank and by his check, on a previouslyagreed arrangement draws out theamount to hi« credit in givenbaeks andcarries it away. He then makes oaththat he has no money or credit taxableunder the law."

When Chicago get« through with her

present anarchistic exposition «he willhave a pretty bill of damage« to pay-Hut, alas, the mulcting will fall princi¬pally on people who have In no wise of¬fended. It will be the tax-payers whowill have to suffer, and we guess thatnot many tax-payers have been engagedIn the werk of tearing up railroad track«,burning cars, and assaulting men whotook the placea abandoned by strikers.

The only fault that we have to findwith the Presidents proclamation isthat it la put forth from Washingtonexclusively In tho Kngllsh language.Not one half of the Chicago mob willbe able to understand It until It Ib trans¬

lated Into foreign tungu.s, and that willtake some time. There are newspapersIn Chicago which will do this work, buttheir versions will not be official andmay not be correct.

The late Carter Harrison may havebeen somewhat erratic, but he was s gen¬uine American, and If he were alive andmayor of Chicago to-day he would besure to sit down hard on Altgeldlam..Washington Post.The Poet is right. The people of Chi¬

cago tost a true man and a faithful andinvaluable officer when they loot CarterHarrison.

Is Debs fieno fThe New York World asks IP Debs may

not be Insane, and bring· out the fact

that Debs la a "graduate" of a whiskey-cure establishment, and that a year ago

he preside»! In Chicago at a "meeting of

the graduates," and made s speech, whl. h

was printed In the newspapers. It further

says that s few months ago Debs was In

New York under treatment by Dr. T. 8.

Robertson for alcoholism, and that that

physician on Thursday telegraphed ??to etop this strike business or the conse¬

quent..·» would be fatal to him (Deh*)

The Doctor thinks that a continuance of

the present excitement will be the death

of Debs, who le, or waa, suffering from

neurasthenia, a debility supposed to he

due to the Impairment of the spinal coni,When under great excitement the D«>c«or

aays Debs Is Irresponsible for his own

actions.Dr. Robertson believes that Debs Is an

Alsatian bj birth. He cam- to New York

with a letter from Colonel Ingersoll, oí

whom he Is a great admirer.We ar» not yet prepared to say that

Debs Is Insane. If eo, he hae a good, analof meth'il in his madness. He haa

not allowed himself to be caught burn¬

ing cars. He has not Joined the rioters-

ranks. IsfjHl. he has let very little evi-

di nre get «>ut which could be used againsthim on a trial. The tact is, we feel sure,

that he has not yet been arrested Btasptfbecause It Is difficult to fasten upon him

the "mes which the public feel satani d

that he Is guilty of.

Sticking in ths Bark.There Is too much 'sticking In the

hark'· In the matter of the Chicago rtot*.As we one· heard a United States sena¬

tor say of another matter, "we wouldetretch the law a'llttle." an«l "not dividaa hair 'twlxt south and ssnthwest side."

We think the Petersburg bates -A» llBO·· to the root of the matter. It lays:"If then» were any doubt of Presiden!

?. v.-land's right to order United State·troop· to Cñl«B>B»o ¦ and are do aot believethat there Is.th» r» can be n»i questionthat th»· occurrences of the past two dayshave amply Justified his course. Altgeld,Addling like Nero whll»· Rome was burn¬ing, argU' s theories of States' right· whilethe torch is being applied in Chicago; andthe u'."l·. ». lining Insolence in pro]as It is gives tolerance, may yel haveChicago under Its h»el while the Gnor is bowling for Iocs! self.governmentand practically abdicating all the func¬tions of that sort of government t,, a.

motley band of foreigner·, the creel»f the slums and the representatti ·:

the criminal »! ih "

Just so. The sticklers for States' rightsturn over their local government to amotley band of rioters. Inter armi ail nt

The raw ra of the world have si·u ted upon that theory. Law must

set alienee when th«- law's agents are

unable to betp them.-· ivee.

A Military Despotism.Pi lent D -. "f the Am trican R ui-

waj Union, and J. it. Sovereign, QMi-tir Workmen, are out In SBOtblletter to the President of the Ualte 11Tnej aay:

..jty your acts, la ;,> far aa you baveBupplanted civil and state sutlthe yedsral military power, the spirit ofunrest and distrust has BO far 1" · ? BUg-iM· nted I il .1 di spa ate Ifasi ?». :, j.· lient that thla govern¬ment is boob to be decían a militarydespotism."stach more of the same sort la con¬

tained in the attdreea ? la deploi iblabeyon 1 expresasen if as th-»se neu -

the poor, Innocent strikers have been mlS·led into the belief that our government insoon to b·» declar»«d a milita;if they really credit that star)-, they maybe .»poetad to befieve any «t ry, how¬ever prsposterona which Debs sn 1 ? ?-

erclgn may tell them. "The mon-'i the

Pity."Rut If we are soon to have a mllltnry

despotism, why persist in the only coursewhich win bring that nort of govern·nient opon list

Wust Londoners Think.-Ome of the English papers thing that

th·· l'nlted Stat'-s ar·· in proseas of dis.solution, and accordingly lament Our un¬

happy fate.These London editors are no better In¬

formed as to our affairs than many ofour editors are as to English affair«.Most of b.ith lots Imagina that they

sung tho.-e things which they hopefor.Communism and Anarchy are stronger

In Chicago than anywhere else In our

country, but even there they cannot 11v.Altgeld see· this, un»l is comtag t»> bea law-and-order man. Mayor II »pklna¦sea It though he shut his aye· to thefact for a long while.rhifagt) will be ?.?-ifle.l and Amerlean-

laed in good tlm·», and the bill of damages«hat It has Incurrid tor the present frolicwill be a standing warning to Its peonianot b> let the next mob get such a ? v. 1-

fal swing before they compel the oAicersof the law to act.

The "Innocent ¡spectator" Is still gettingIn the way of bassets, It has always

? SO. The law-breaker knows when t«»

get out of the way, but the Innocent apt ¦-

tator is nut so wary, and, therefore, hewould better stay at home, or el- '

on.· of >l«-rr Manti, iin's bullet-proof coats.

Ry the way, It Is said that thc~e coats

are so heavy that a man wearing themcan hardly wall;, consupM.uUy there Isdouble security In them.the wearer

BSn't get far from home, and if struckIs not injured.

We gandía to call fi..· attention of Co¬lumbia Post, (1. A. It., of Chicago, to thefact that peace, law, and order reign.throughout the ex-Southern Confederacy,'while we are told that "old glory" Ishooted at In Chicago, and the authorityof Uncle Sam Is contemptously spit uponthere. Now, what we desire to know la:Does Columbia poet approve of these do¬ings In the Windy City; If not, whatIs It doing to aid the officers of the law?

The Irat Shots fared by"

th» UnitedStates regulars during the present strike-

troubles were ttred Sunday near Ham¬mond, Ind. The troops ware en route

from Chicago to Hammond when at¬

tacked, and their Arlng was donn fromthe windows of a coach on a moving rail¬road train. Rut for this circumstance Itis quite likely that the number of killedand wounde«! would have been far greaterthan It was.

If Colonel H. W. Fuller,, of the Chesa¬peake and Ohio Railroad Company, couldsue all the nice things said about himby the newspapers since hla recent acci¬dent, his grief that his legs are frac¬tured would be lessened eome little. Norailroad man ever had kinder things saidabout him; none better deserves them.May he soon be "on his feet again," Isthe hope of us all.

Governor Matthews, of Indiana, showaa clear comprehension of the situationwhen he declares that the fight of thelaw officers st Chicago Is not being wagedagainst labor, but against lawlessness,violence. and Anarchy. It Is a pitythat Illinois hasn't such a Governor.

The Buchanan Banner has been en-

Urged and greatly improved. It la a

good paper. It claims to be the best everpublished st Buchanan, and we are In¬clined to think that It Is. It Is carefullyedited and newey, and so well printed thatit Is a pleasure to read it

It Is rather sn arbitrary arbitrationthat a man yields to to save his factoryfrom being burnt and his employees frombeing slaughtered. It U about the samething as acting voluntarily under com¬

pulsion.In Sunday's Dispatch, referring to the

Progressive South, we announced thatthat monthly bad recently purchased and

amalgamated the Perm Journal. The

paper mentioned io not the Southern

Planter, edited by sir. Jackson, and

published In this city. The Planter, now

In the fifty-fifth year of publication, la

still vigorous, and has a larger circulationthat ever before In Its long life.

Colonel Breeklnrldge has been forgot¬ten «Ine* Deba came to the front. Hreck-

Inridge ought to be grateful to Deb«.

A literary Katl.net* of the Let« Colonel II.Cheater Persona.

(Ernest Newton Bragg, in Literary Week¬ly. July 7th.)

There wa« published not long ago in

New York city a modeet-looklng volume

of poem«, the title of the flr»t, "The

Ucaper." being given to the collection,which contained line« of more than ordi¬

nary muele and power."I eay nothing to the public," said the

touching preface, "for this little book

will not be offered for tale; but to you,

my friend«, 1 would explain thai these

line« were written because the writing

reated me. Let no one think that I am

«elf-deceived or deluded into new pathsfrom the dally work which satisfies my

need and my ambition. Perhaps in the

warmth of your fireside the'e page« may

glow with a light that Is half their own.

und circle draw closer and tho hour pass

pleasantly; perhaps one who reads alone

may lind something here written that

will turn his thoughts tenderly to the Vir¬

ginia mountains, o- give him a clearer

failh or a braver heart. Then I shall be

glad."Friday. Jun* 29th, near his beautiful

home at Natural Bridge, Va. died the

author of these poeme, Colonel Henry

Chester Parsons, a busy, active railroad

projector and a man of large affairs,whom many of his acquaintances little

M.spi-oti lessing or evincing th-

poetic temperament. A gentler spirit, a

truer friend to the State of his adoption,which he loved quite aa earnestly as h**

did the green mountains of his native

eoli a nere home-loving, loyal, and pa¬

triotic cttlr.-n never lived within the

bordara of Ina Otd DosnlBtoa. ilia homelif- was th·· ni"st beautiful ?···'??? Of any

of lib. poetic thoughts. He gave his best

powers and hours to the devoted wife and

lifted daughters, to whom he has

mon· than once paid th-· tribute of an

Inspired pen. Ho was gneorotia to a

fault ani did more than any other north¬ern man for the uplifting of Virginiafn m tie- dopreaatea cause«! by the civilwir il·· revived her nagging Industriesi.v building the BJehmond and Alleghenyrailroad on the tow-path of the 1

» Rivi G .-mil H·· i'-" d :*treii«:ttiand vi. snd pen unsparingly in the

cause of Republicanism as ni it and i"-st

ultimately for southern interests an·!

prognoa,ret srlth all his vati··! tpheres of aae·

fuln.ss. with his military, political, nndlegal activity, BO found time to loikBteadlly Into th" tenbr eyea and loving

:" Natine and put Into true music

what ).·· saw and h.ard. "Th Brown,Blue and t.i.iv" and "Th·* l'rnyr for

ar»· the ni"«t famous of hispoema, both having been widely copi ?

int·· j i[·. ri throughout the country.

Lendini ? bave publlaned som«

charming lugitiv s which Bed fir ¡·?·1wile tin. ughout th··· Journalistic world.

JolotH I Pol *Bk a youngman who hid been acquitted of murder,"How does ¡t feel to be free?" ani the

? pul into th·· following stanato,"Ti a l'rí-' ni r Releai

1 could Btnad and look at the stirs allnight.

Where tides rua in wreathe to the riversand riils;

Where the sea brees s ? lay with thearlad from the alita.

Whir·· by I.nil "r by BOB man can goO le r·· he wills:

I'm a fr a man again, and a free man ofright!

I OOUld stand Hnd look at th·· «tirs allnight;

For months that were reara thev haveprison« d my «tar*-:

My BUver-VeUed Venus nnd red-hoodedMan

v. fretted ani framed by the hit·t*ars

That sha led their glory Of -hivercd their

lightI will st.ind and took at the stars all

t.U-ht;I will wait In the shadow and lee of the

tower.Till morning shall come with his magi¬

cal powi r:p rhapa m th·· Same "f that wonderful

hour,Tbe prison shall tri-mh'o and pass from

my sightIn the prim.· and (lower of a life of

radien] usefulness and grool mental ac¬

tivity, he haa suddenly taken his depart¬ure to the Other Sute, to use his ownwords In »h·.· beautiful poem on "ThetHadoo*fl Search for Truth":Wh· re nil th·· riven are aliiiht, where all

tin· sands ira I 1 I.The groves of Hod eternal stand, ani

there the truth la told!

home BigottaThOt CBatfOl Can't Claim.To th·· Bhtttor of the Dhrpatch:in discussing the tr· ubi·* that exists be¬

tween capital an 1 labor there is ciiatant-it···! Uto el.lim that a man can do

as in· chonora with his w-uith, providedhe does no injury t·» any other person.out of this oaaerttea ^rows much of

th·· mlsapprehi nal n and misrepresenta¬tion BOW clouding the questions present¬ing themselves for setti· m ¡at by our ?

pie. bet us examine Into the matter ands···· If a man can do lawfully what hemay ChOOOO with his wealth, «.yen If heshould not Infringe on th- right of anyon··. Would one of the men, whooo wealth,.say. is $·''."".'·«>, be permitted to turn allot his properly Into bank-notes, and then,after 1,::.' ling ? vault to contain thein li. say 1 do not wish to makeany mor..· money; neither do I wish toini i¡.y capital ·? Internat but wtU drawout dally what I need for living ex-

an I lei others do the best th'-ycan? Would not the question, present It¬self: Has this ama the right to takethe currency, issued by the governmentOT th·· banks for the common use of thearbola country, and by hiding It awaylessen th·· amount of money m daily u.*.»-'If one man coul 1 do so could not tenin· ? do the same? Ani there are tenmen la the Cnlted State« whose wealthIs «o great that the whole currency, innotes, could be absorbed by then» andtaken out of circulation. Would it not beheld by those who thought rightly on thesubject that this wealth had been madefrom the community, and ly Uie lal*orand .-kill of the employees of thosewealthy ones, and they In morals andIn law owed something to the wantsand needs of that community and those. mployeea?

If that be so, dOOO It not seem veryhard and cruel when we see a man, tayMr. Pullman, making in a very «hotttime $W,ijo0,0oi) or $.W,'».«J,0uO, and when pro¬fits become light, or cease altogether, ifyou will, shutting down hit workt. orwhat is about the «ame thing, reducingwages to a point that compel« those whohelped him to make his fortune to quitwork?There Is little difference In the two

eases. Pullman« UO.OOO.OOO la In some tan¬gible form, and he virtually say«: "I willemploy no more men. I will not carry onbusiness any longer. I have had to makecontracts at a loss." What of It? Wouldnot that loss be but a email part of anaccumulation which ought never to havebeen made In one lifetime? Nor would Ithave been made except for excessive pro¬fits, profits mailo great by legislation. Itis time we consider these things-fortune«of ??,???,??? in one «hort life; fortunesmade by government help, fabulous, un¬heard of In any former time; but let thetlmea change for the worse and thenthese parvenuea tightly grasp what theylightly made and declare they owe no ob¬ligations, either to the community fromwhom they made their mllllone of moneyor to the employee« through whose skilland knowledge wealth was gotten. Byexpressing these opinions I do not wishto add to any acrimony between wealthand poverty, but to call attention to aBentlment which will surely lead to trou¬ble, because It hoe done so In the pastin other lando. LIBBT HILL.

.- OB-Ae to Colonel Olbeon.

(Richmond letter Index-Appeal.)The report that Colonel J. Catleu Olb-

oon, of Culpeper, will run as an Independ¬ent candidate for Congreso In the EighthDistrict Is not credited here. Colonel Olb¬eon wsa In tho city Prtdoy. but he didnot mention the subject. He has alwaysbeen one of the moot pronounced partymen In the State. Lagt winter, however,he generally sided with the reform ele¬ment.that la thooe who desired to effectcertain changea la the election law» andto give Norfolk a now electoral board.Colonel Qtbaou contended that the Ander-vwm-McCi.inick taw wae one of the fair¬est the State ever bod, but he on severaloccasions IndWaeted that he did not thinkit waa being properly admbustered tn

vevet al perls of the Stats, and he savehi« support to Judge Buford's amend¬ments. He made a bitter fight sgelnst the

Walton bill and predicted thet It wouldcause the Democratic party much trou-

h:c. Dui Ing the debate on the bill MajorBaker P. / ee, ta a burst of eaonueniT·,plctuied the bill aa a bed of lovely llowcrs

In which was colled a poisonous serpent,and many persons will remember how

Colonel Gibson applauded that sentiment.aa* -.-

A tard Fran* Judge Bnrka.To the Bdltor of the Dtepatch:In my letter to Hon. M. I«. Walton,

copied Into to-«lay's Dispatch from the

Buckingham Register, please make men¬

tion of the following typographical er¬

rors;. · · "in the particular expressions

drawn In the queetlon," Ac, (third para¬

graph) "the" before "question" should

be omitted.In the n^t line · · · -'the effect of It

Is " &*· "effect" should be effort.

'Hastily. K. 0. IKHKS.

Governor «»'Ferrali.(Charlottesvllle Progress.)

It Is a pleasure to the friends of O'Ker-rall to notice his ability as (Governor andhla Increasing popularity with the peopleof our State. It Is a characteristic of

the Governor that he Is a growing man.

Put him in an honorable i»osltlon, an 1 h·

does not rest content with simply beingthere; he neither stands still, nor withersand dries up, aa the name of eome is, buthe develops and grows.

Too Hot for It.(Atlanta cronstltutlon.)

The weather wilts, Hti' walls, an" squirms,An' no man has his wish.

This ain't no tune for diggln' worms.

Nor yet for ketchln' Mil

There ain't no use to talk aboutThe weather-wild as sin.

It's Jest too hot for goln' out.An' same for comln' In!

OOD'SSarssparllla is carefullrprepare»! by experiencedpharmacists fro:» Sarsa-

parilla, Dandelion, Man-

,drake. Dock.I'inelssewa,Juniper Berries, and other well known

vegetable remedies. The Combination, Pro¬

portion and Process arc Peculiar to Hood's.«.»«.r-sparill.i, giving; it strength snd curativo

power Peculiar to Itself, not pov»essed by other medicines. Hood'·

arsaparillaCures Scrofula, Bah Kheuni. Sores. Roils,PljDples ami all other atTe.tloni esfisatl byImpure blood; Dyspepsia, IliUotumeie, SickBenanche, 1:; ua*eet4on, Debility, Catarrh,liheu:uati*in, Kidney and I.iver Com·

plaints. It is Not Wlistwe Say, but what M>'»'.'«)

» Sarsaparille ?»»».·*, thatTells the Story. Hood'»SansparUla

URE5Hood's Pills *Gß ß*'·1·*· mil«! and etteetiva

tt$mA CONFLAGRATION AM< >V.

THh: PRICE-MARKS. these are

sale-days that heaploss on all sides.We- know how to lose and know itwith ? hand so liberal that thequick melting array of those pilesof merchandise is profit to us afterall.More than So dozen Ladies' Shirt¬

waists are on sale. They aro the

prettiest offered in all the land.Here are the quick prices. We'llsell these to merchants m quanti¬ties.all that are over alter to-day.India Silk fhirt-Walsts, lined all th»

>\u.y through, with turn-ovsrand (aboi front, ? r« 12.49, now $!..'>.

indu Silk Waists, navy an·; black.solid ..r with i.olka-dotH. csl

.\-s, lliie.1 all through, were II,BOW $2,

Black in li-i Silk, trimmed with?··??? · Le e, ruffled tt"i.collar astra '»now 12.50.

in.lia Silk Shirt-Waists, plaited frontand back, plaited itaatilng collar, fullRuffled Berth,?, were ?·'·.·¦'». now ti.%.These prices stand for all the ??

Silk Shirt-Waists sorts.Who would have thought that

these most desirable ot all Shirt-Waists would go at a give-awayprice ? We begged the maker to

hurry them ; so did hundreds othermerchants. They came too late.these beautiful WHITE WAISTSarter the most dainty European de·signs.White India l.lijen, box plotted bachand front, tuawd-over collar, withkn.f·· piattina*, large eleevee, withBsndnan, cuffs, «for asc.

India Linen, iu|k<«d front nn«l beck:large bertha, edged wiili ime Ham¬burg, turned-beck uffa, «rere Bold as? argem ¿it tv. now ess.

BwlSS usarne.«-*7 bs duster t;;.-ks backand front. Isrge tailor collarm ith fin* Hamburg, turnsd-bnek cuffsto match, were $1.7.'». now tl.

Whit- Linea da Dacca, entire front andb.e.k of tine tucks, puff and tucked.leeVBS, Jabot and collar of tin·Kronen BBlneook embroider]»', wereHit), tvw H.20.

l'ine India. Linen Ifclrt-Walet,with Baa nainsook embroidery, finsclusfr tucks bn»k and front, ruffledshoulders and collar «if BBtaSOOk em-broidery.a must superior Waist at«tee now $1.13.Go up or down the scale, among

all kinds, and the same value isvisible.The Bathing Suits are going.for

ladies, men, and children. You'llpay for the making almost theprice that we charge for a suit.$1.25 to $5.40.How is it done ? An entire La¬

dy's Blazer Suit, that would costmore either in the making or thematerial than what we charge.One of the most stylish " Tuxe¬

do " Duck Suits of the season-

price $1.65.The failure of the Richmond Chi¬

na Company has given us manyadvantages. You now reap thebenefit of our purchase.Cabinet Photograph Frame», wholesaleprice 12.50 a dosen, our price 5c each.

Real Bristle Floor brooms, with longhandl«is. wholesale price SJ, each, ourprie*» »0.

French China Bouillon Cups, with cov¬

erà, lllchmond China Company'amarked price 12.25 each, our price aSO,

Real Kote-mUn Vases, 12 inches high,value price 12 50 each, our price $1 each.

Silicon Art Vase, 10 lnchea high, valueprice $1 ¿0 each, our price 50c.

Real China Cuapadore», full slue, valueprie·» 75c. each, our price 29c.

Real China Decorated Umbrella Stand»,value $2.50, for tl.

Nlckle-Plated Butter Dishes, withdrainer, manufacturers' cost tl each,for tSc.

Little Jewel Lamps for reading or sew¬

ing, nlckle or brass, complete, withcentre-draft burner, 50c. each; valueprice tl.2¿.

THE COHEN CO.Tired ",weW **· enea* Celery

«-'ocapound. It will make

Weak ·"*> »ell sad strong. Weera always «lad to sell u for

Women UOoaswbstleciBlmrtfort..owras a minor dkuo company,

1007 ssst Msia sires«.

riys)

ELIXIR BABEK.r*."?^ 2"e for *u MAURIAt diseases, sock as

£*«*. fsrsr sad Ages, Loss of Appelli·, Bit..Meassa and DyapspUe Disorders Pains to mm

¦¿ed. Basa, Side, er Uaabs. eie. At «trägst·«*,anal sty*

BREAKING OF RECORDS.What Bcleaee Can De in Thia Llee When

-he Tries Hard.

Steamship ciptatas, horse-owners, bicy¬cle-rider«, and a lot of other people, are

making BMBBUOBB and untiring effort« te"bi.ak the record." The great publiclook» on at the game with good-naturedIntere«!.Once in a while «ober science doee a

little record-mnuahlng on her own ac¬

count, one of her late«t and Kreatachievement« I« the dl«covery and appli¬cation of a pric-ss for urllflclnlly-dlg·-«· '

food, «o that It 1« absorbed Immediatelyby the «y«t· m. without imposing theleast labor on a weak stomach This foodI« called Poskota. it restores the debtjl·tapi, «ni ??- M fat to th»· thin becau-v*It la starchy (»illy starch· » add real.«olid, laating fie«h to the body. Oil« andfais don't, a ?·? nev«r will. ,,

Mr. ll <» Ifahood. of iimietiton. ve-mniKi) county. Pa., aaya "Iwm an wmkand run-dimn that I thouaht 1 »"«·

have to give up my bualnea«. 1 pOOH?not eat nor aleen. After one bottle or

Paekola I be an to gain at OBCO. BBd ?

have gained 'ver fifteen pounds l« *·*¦than three w eks, and I now feel like a

BOW man."NO. wonder. ,

Mis S «'. Slouch, of Wellington and

Dauphin Streets, Philadelphia, write«:ha..· been ii'k nearly thr··»· year«, ai

times suffi m ; t-rrlbl» burning pain« m

mv back and then cold In the lower panof the bowels. Som-time« I thought ?

Fhould die. ill thi« tlm·· I wa« «."1'-iiated Whei. 1 first l»egan taking Pas-

kola I wa.» tempted to glv It "''· ,M,

Ing It would do irle no good, bhad taken so much in» Heine I reel ? as-

kola beginn in to do m- good, and to-dayI took a longer walk than I have beeaaid- to take ? three years. 1'\m.,murnF«trong-r I Bin taking my fifth bottle or

PaakoU, end it sinnst everything now.

1 am G* year« old, and was always actlv«.having work» I hard."Paekola ma·, be ttought ot any reputa¬

ble druggist. An interesting pamphl· ?

food and digetion «in be matted free, or,

application to the pre-Diaested Pood I om-

pany JO Re* I« street New York_¦_«.»a«.-.¦..¦..«..«.."«-"-¦¦

THETOWER,corner Second ana Broad,

NOS. 201 AND 203.

E ? * tm ? eC R B

m i! f · «J

- =2 >= ?a .

aX

S

72» a

.r. *

iz > rri ?

f - ?. -

?H >· ? ?. HIB: ·« et «a m

? n

8 ?! ?[ ! e ' 5 ! c

? fT. ¦'

E

E > -? % ? ?

C rM -

3 ?

î \y

Julios Stole ï Son,Nos. 201 and 203 east Broad.

¡jy IO]

M, LDlf'Eli.DOWN SALE.

DRY GOODS, NOTIONS,HOSIERY, GLOVES,

MATIINtiS,I NDERWRAR,

PARASOLS,UMBRELLAS,

? ··., ?«·., gaCt?G? ENTIRE STOCK MUST

p?: SOLDIALL conns MUCH BELOW

PANIC PRICES!'., marked duwi

·· »V. ., G

ed down I · :

Percadew n from v '. ;, ??, u·..Bhantong Pongees at 6c., marked down

from i-'·.···.down from s i-:>,

m irked dot» from \a: 85cLarge Pial Sheer India Lini ? at (

marked d"iv p ·??? 15c.Ourei Solid

and Pancy 6 Ika marked down : on« half!

Barker 1:1 n. l-l. .it? l-l Bli a. h»·

Bleached und l nid. ach. I Sheeting« mmark-downour entire itock of Notions al one half

th>* former prices.

MITTELDORFER'S.l!l 7 ettBl Broavd Btreet«

Id G?.

LADIES' RIBBED VESTS, 5C.spesseol_BKLDJ in -

MEBBIMACKSHIBTINOPRIN S_:[»*··. a ,«rl, at BILD e, CO.'S,

MOÜRNINO ('RALLIES, BUI BAH»«¡Ai.N. I«·, a yard, at BBLB 8 ici.'v

If* FINK LAR-iK-SIZE GLOEIA-1 tl CLOTB ? MMitLLA!·,aaoortedbaod =·.rJ!»c. apiece, ai 11KI.U4I o.*».

COLIO BLACK PACIFIC LAWNS,? » Be.erora.et BBLDBC0.1»,

LADIES' SHIRT-WAISTS. RE¬DI KL» to 'Joe. at I1KI.I) A «'U.'S.

»>/\ PIECES FIGURED LAWNS,ae Vf regular In .luaiity, now only ;ve. a yard,

atË8WAGO -

ONE LOT EXTRA-FINE QUALITYSII ? ?? 1 ? IH ? LINON, tn reronanfa down

to &_o_ya_i.*t_BELI) « CO.'B.

1PIGEREI) DIMITIES, TBE USUALl'.'Vno. ., niity, now half prie«*, dl,··, e

yard,at BILD A CftO,

FIGURED't'REl'E CLOTHS, NEW-? ? and tietter, and much prettier trau

Challl, Be. a y.»rd, at HELD A CO.8.

NAVY-BLUE PERSIAN MULLS,rery abeer and extrvfloe iiailtr, worth

ldtée.. bul ihm lot te in remnant«, heneo tbepnce. 7c. a y*:«l only.jtt_IlKl.n ? ? <· **.

MEN'S FINE-gUALTTl JEANSUhAW UK», ì'Oc. a -.air. at

._UBLD A l(l.*-.

LADIES' DÜNGGLA ? U ? G ? ?Mliih>, -iitee JV, to 7, »He. a pair, at

_IlKlUtio.*.

EXTRA - ? KA Y Y LAWN TEN ? IS_?ß??8, -¿.V*. a pair, al_ BgLD ti'u «s

pHiLDRr.NS AND MISSES' TAN\J BUTTON 8H08B, SWV. a peir. at

_HELD A CO.J8,BOYS' BASE-BALL SHOES, 49C. Â

pair ; Ludiee' Toe Slipper·, 3:)c. a pairlot Odd» and Kode Wea't ttboee. lìHc a pair, at

BELO A Oat, '.M4 Hroact «treei.Next Door coiner Beound aUeet,

Jy l-Su.Tu* fa

STANDARD DAIRY CHOPte a properly eian.-ed rattua. oompoeed ol cot-tooteeO meal. Ilnteed meal, mill feed, 8a.intied to tooti proportion as to tnture Uie beetreealu at tke tmallatt cotu Price 9? coats per100 pouovla.

Moirraosa, Bwaico cotnrrr, ? a.Meeara Thonas 8, Wlna A Co. ?

Oeotiemaa, -We hare beea feeding to cardairy oowt yoar - ritardarti Dairy it »p^· f,>r mepast atontb, »od Und It to be a inoe onoiulcelend eaturact.iiy feed, aad efteertu».f reootu·mead It. Beepecttoilr,

(8igaeeV> B8NN1E A LOJtU**T.

Vor sate by TBOMA8B. W1NB BCOu_v ._,

Ma »Wm earn Moixkad atreet,'Paone 588. Attuteae

TEMPLE. PEMBERTON,CORDES & CO.

Onr matonvi"* ar«· sc¡ r ,» .

fart that we sr* making sfctSj ·

the hslsnro of our taMssagf at«, »g,Th«»«"ntir«» stork Bjont be ·¦· I to ?

room for ?»· »Ja (»>r tli« eoffeiDg

Outing Cloths.Choice of a v»rv ggsnj I.?

Outing Cloth·, .*,.· (.· r

Berkshire Lawns,|irint«d in · variely <»f g. »» ,!,..colors, on ahito end tiiii·

p«»r yard.

Mattings.II ¦»·. BSfJsjgS. 1 t

.17«jC. r«*«!u.· rj I trad

1-?·. ri'ilnce-l lol:'»o. re« I u«··· It. ·.

?11 the vfiy l est ·> i|snd at gejgen .¡ajotad ?«, ? t:. ig t

oí iru¡>ort.itiuii.

Torelu? ? Laces.W· sr«· oflerin* il bare

in Torchon an.I M» Iedv''« an», insert:!.?«1, .? ».

inch to 5 inch«*») w:.l«·.

3«j-inch Wool Suiting, r

value, i>t tb·· ? al] Hita f .

Remnants. .f :i!l kitnla Lin »ne, Ot indiesSilke. Oal ? ·

<¡iiik- an»I all ·» IQgnaUtaas t fige fr «a 1 t.» 8 j ?

All the 17c. Col· ?» ! '..

1'2¡i». ?« r «Btd, III ]. »

Engbsb Naiii« \to H »Mir.· th« I» -t an :

Bopsrb lias »I COI »RI |?(ìouD.s. i ii ?? la« lioieent of tin* %· ?-

? ir .· variety of »!· lijU«'«·. pet yard. · I

10 i:.· h ¦ !· LAIN WAlMiON III SI IN.12JC. p«.r yarJ.

Socks.Ositi ?. r I:

Boeks m browns, I u ·. a

Hüll lu I

Chi???)? rìs H! ?: !

black, only U ·«¦ ? r pair,

in th«; «ity, oott D SO i

Ladies' Wrappt rs.

Th 1 si tea of IWrapp r-. ii black sad aIi. ¡it cxnoriogs, ¦'·:.tonal e

In fita!s' Dresses.Do not fori

tii»· balases ?? » ir at··.·«.«'.»??»G···1 1 'resaca at jas·]sil the «? Ireo - L'oderà? t -.»« re, sad \· ?

CHILDRI S" \>\:\\\a good article ol bleachedper piiir.

CHILDRI v« U \i :

good basaohad «* »tti/u. ì

Pillow-ClìSi 8.('».tt..-? ? Ulos I

lOe. a;

sum's. I'll.I.boi>it.r-casi.s, silfor use at ths prias that th«

? bs tii.· yard.

PALAIS ROY117 satt aftas

??.

i:.<bar ? uaaea «tu' ?

Tu»· is.

wu«-t»· I«L-r I

«,r ?

Bit I AND Ml.».-? ? \ .·

ALLtVOOL HI ? -

ty. .·"..«»u i'i teanoo -

and rae. »ilrioita in Mae »mithin-·???t··« in a» rears. ?·?:?· » I

>., u W|.asses« »»? »

and n«;..,! start ti·-*·

Bom.

rape, ?? sir-Fis·, I ·.

.j.).)-»·)--Kay Kam. ?· II» ¦

Tetlow'· «*»*s«vJ »wa. M·*itb p*rt in·«, toe.

TsreiisTiüBs Ifiasii. mu M. ">.·.

· «

:ren's B'S'.'k ?···.«,···.

caiidreua Tee - -·

? "»«·.Chlldreus^tiitS.«··», >

1 ').·.lend <·· ess antera M

?ß?????. wvu mi IBs abaie tae sat).· «

a* we u»-v«»r ii-t .r -·. « ?«.vntl'iuallr reesl» a« n··· t

Larjje tine it IK. .«.?·». G ·

BURNETT LEWII*y leTu.ItiA-»

G0!OUR LAST OFFER!

rae Columbian Exposition Sceioonttua» am»

BEAUTULl.LY BOLNP.

??

UUlt iWsMOMBKBllAt cot'XTsB r«»ti

1 ···.·»*Mailed to soy address, 9~-

THE DISPATCH C

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