mmsm mm itelTQUEER RACE. I^ORT or A BTRANGE PEOPLE. ’fe £$■>* J\r WILLIAM WEST ALL. CHArTF.lt II.—CONTlNIIUn. | t fes'YJi' gnve me a cordial greeting, and nf • -*^pr inquiring, with much seeming interest, ; . , * Hki my own health nml that of my moth % f er, lie asked how the Oriental and Occi .(dental wns getting on. *1 "A-8 web as cun be expected for a new jtJ\S (tor. ipany,” I answered, cautiously and Is;. *»H ttely. 4*v 11 You find the 'Niobc’ papers all In order, ' IlF.ipe?” &;,« ’-A "Oh, yes; the paper*"—emphasis on Si “papers”—"appear to he quite in order.” "That is all right, then. When shall we , *end round for our check! It is a large ■amount to be out of. Wulkers settled yes Srlii tafday, and the othercompanies will settle ®8j .do-day, I belieYC. All the same, there is .‘no hurry, and if it would be more conven ient next week—” "You can send round for the check when •ever you like, Mr. Brandyman, but,”—here I paused a moment—"I am by no means «ure thut you will get it.” “What for, I should like to know?”—tir ing up. "Look at this, and yon will seo what for!” And with that I whipped out the sketch and laid it before him. He looked at it curiously, but when its meaning dawned on his mind (os It did "Very quickly) his countenance changed ns if he hnd seen a (lorgon’s head. His high ■color gave place to a death-like pallor, tho j paper dropped from Ids trembling hand, ‘ •and there was a hoarse gurgle in Ids throat ‘ ■which mado me fear that ho was going to have a tit, | "You seem faint, Mr. Ilrandyman; drink this, and you will feel better,” I said, till- i ing a tumbler of water from a carafe that , stood on the table. , “Thnnk you!” ho gasped. "’Tlsa sud- , don faintness. It must be the heat of tho . room, I think. A—a curious sketch tldsl ‘Where—where did you get it?” “I drew it, Mr. Drandymun—from in- 1 formation / reedveil." "Heally!”—looking nt it again; "I did * not think you were so clever, Mr. Erie, * and—and—whatcun I do for yon, Mr. Erie?” f "Nothing at all. Ouly, with yonr per- J mission, I should just like to give you a 11 Jvint.” t "Of course—certainly—I am sure—yes— * what is it?” returned Mr. Brandyman, a * little incoherently. f “Well, if I were you, I would not send * round for that check. We are a young * company, and don’t want litigation; but—” 1 "1 will think about it, Mr. Erie. I will speak to my partner, and think about it. 1 .V_, -And this sketch—you cun perhaps leave it * with me. I should not like—I mean I • should like to keep it, if you will let me. * It is so very curious.” < "By all means. Keep it as amementoof f ■our interview, Mr. Brandyman—and of the * ‘Nlobe.’ ” i And then I bade him good-bye, and re- I turned to the office in the full assurance 1 that the twenty thousand pound check * would never be sent for. True, I had no 1 •evidence of the barratry worth mentioning < —from a legal point of view—but con- 1 .science makes cowards of us all. Mr. * Brandyman gauged our knowledge of the facts by his own fears. He believed, too, * though I had not said so, that we should * resist payment of the claim; and as I could 1 well see, he dreaded the scandal of a law- 1 suit, involving a criminal charge, as much 1 •as we dreaded litigation and heavy law ex penses. i The Board fully approved of whnt I had 1 •done, and I received many compliments on 1 jj my smartness. I had saved the Oriental ' mud Occidental from actions danger, and 1 , given it a new chance of life; which is an- 1 other way of saying that 1 had saved the directors a good deal of money, for as all were shareholders, the failure of the oom- ' pony would have brought them both loss and discredit. i A few days later Tom Bolsover called at ' ■the office to tell me (what 1 knew already) that the "Diana” had arrived in the Mersey ■and to remind me of my promise. , This was quite a work of supererogation ■on his part. I was not likely to forget either his services or my promise, and I Tenewed my offer of a handsome reward; but he would accept nothing more valuable than a pound of cavendish tobacco and a box of Havana cigars. i P Shortly afterward I saw Captain Peyton - and asked him, as a favor to me, to grant JBolsover’s request if he possibly could. ■"Well,” he said, smiling, “I’ll do my •best. Crazy Tom is a thorough seaman; and, yes—1 dare say 1 can.” “Crazy Tom!” I exclaimed, in surprise. “Why crazy? I never met a saner man In • my life.” “Oh, he is sane enough except on one i point, and what is more, he’s honest. A good many folks call him ‘Honest Tom.’ lit was ouly on my ship they called him ■crazy. 1 expect that is why he left me; and he may be thinks that it I make him boat swain he will escape being chaffed.” ■“But why on earth did your people call the poor fellow crazy, and what did they chaff him about?” “Well, he has a fad; tells a yarn about a tost galleon, with a lot of treasure on board, and not only swears it is true, but believes the galleon is still afloat, and that one day or another he’ll find her.” “And why*shouldn’t she be still afloat?” “Well, seeing that, from his account, it’s ■more than a century since she disappeared, ■it is not very likely, I think! The Idea is ■perfectly ridiculous and absurd—crazy, in fact,” said Captain Peyton, who was a bluff, matter-of-fact north-countryman. “‘But all this Is second-hand. Tom never •poke to me about it in his life, and he has been so unmercifully chaffed that I fancy be does not like to speak about it. 1 dare •ay, though, he would tell you the yarn if you have any curiosity on tho subject.” "Well, I rather think I should like to bear the story of tho lost galleon; for if not •brae, it is pretty sure to be interesting, -snd that’s the main point in a story, after •alt Se non e vero, e ben trovato, yon However, I dirt not hear Tom’s yarn just ‘than, nor until several things had hap -pened which I little expected. Captain IPeyton got fresh sailing orders sooner than ihe anticipated, and made Bolsover happy iby engaging him as boatswain; and the latter was so much occupied that he had barely time to call and say “good-bye” the day before the “Diana” was towed out to sea. I did not see him again for several months, in circumstances which I shall ^presently relate. CHAPTER Uh—NIL DESPKBAXDUM. And now I think it is time I told how It •came to pass that, at an age when most young men of m.v years have only just left college or begun business, I was a profes sional underwriter, and virtually the man ager of the Oriental and Occidental Insur ance Company. My father was a merchant, and for mnny ' yeam a partner In the house of Waterhouse, Watkins, Erie & Co., who traded prlncl pally with the West Indies and South America, though being .very catholic in their commercial Ideas, they would have shipped coals to Newcastle, or warming pans to Madagascar, If they had been sure about their reimbursement, and could have seen a trifling prolit on the venture. My father, who was tho traveling mem ber of the firm, went about a good deal ■‘drumming’' for fresh business, and atone period of his life spent several years at Maracaibo, in Venezuela—a fact which ac counts for my having been born there. Now, anybody who goes to Maracaibo as surely gets a touch of yellow fever as any body who stays a winter in London gets a taste of yellow fog. It is a matter of course, and new-comers make their ar rangements accordingly. My parents un derwent the ordeal the year before I came into the world, which circumstance was supposed to confer on me a complete im munity from this terrible pest of the trop ics. I was acclimatized by the mere fact I cannot Ray that I esteemed the privilege very highly, for I had not the most remote Intention of returning to Maracaibo, which from all accounts is u pestiferous, mosqui to-haunted pandemonium. My poor father used to say that whatever pise he might leave me, lie should at least leave me fhoo from ail fear of Yellow Jack. As It turned out, ho left me little else. After his return from foreign climes he icttled down In Liverpool, took a big house n Abercrombie Square, entertained Inrge y, and lived expensively. When I was , ibout sixteen, and u pupil at Uppingham , School, my father (who had been a free ■ iver) died suddenly of apoplexy, and an i nvestigntion of his a (lairs resulted In the ininful discovery that, after payment of ils liabilities, the residue of his estate ' rould only provide my mother and myself ! vith an lncomo of something less than two lundred a year. So we had to give up our 1 Ino house in Abercrombie Square and go 1 ato lodgings, and I loft Uppingham and ■ egan to earn my own living—literally, for ; ftor I was seventeen I did not cost my ' mother a penny. i The calling 1 took up was not of my Own hoosing. Had my father lived a little onger, or left us better off, X should have 1 one into the army. 1 did subsequently oln the volunteers, and after serving for while In the urtillery, became first lieu- j enant and then captain in a ride regiment, n the circumstances, however, I was glad 1 o accept the offer of Mr. Comble, of the ' rm of Comble, Nelson & Co., ship and usuranco brokers, to take me Into his of Ice and push me forward, “if I showed 1 oyself smart,” as he was sure I would. ' I justified his confidence, and he kept his 1 rord. • Although I would much rather 1 iave been a soldier, I had sense enough to, , ;ive my mind to tho insurance business, .nd in a comparatively short time I be ame familiar with all the intricacies of 1 ;ennral average and particular average, | 1 he draughting of policies, and the rest; ; nd If I did not, as Captain Peyton had ' , old Torn Bolsover, know ‘Lloyd’s U?gis- ! : er’ off by heart, there was not n sea-going ; hip belonging to the port of Liverpool ' those age, classification, and character which meant, In many Instances, the char icter of her owners) I could not tell with- ' mt referring to the book. The partners often consulted me os to be-premlums they ought to charge, and he risks which it was prudent for them to ake; they gavo me a salary which made i ny mother and myself very comfortable, ! md had I been patient and waited a few , rears, I should doubtless have become a nember of the firm. Hut I was ambitious; I md when the newly constituted Oriental I md Occidental Marine Insurance Company | nvlted roe to become their underwriter, I 1 iccepted the offer without either hesitation >r misgiving. I But cautious Mr. Comble shook his head. “It's a very fine thing," he said, “for a roung man of two-and-twepty to get tho vritership of a company, and, though I tay it that should not say it—to our firm. Hut you are taking a great responsibility >n yourself, and you will need to be very , prudent. Fifty thousand pounds is not too much capital for an Insurance company, and this Is a time of Inflation, and the shareholders will expect you to earn them big dividends. Between you and me, I have no great confidence in these new con cerns. They are going up like rockets, and some of them, I fear, will como down like sticks. But you are young, and if the Oriental and Occidental does not answer your expectations, you will still have the world before you, and I have always said that you are one of those chaps who will either make a spoon or spoil a horn.’’ The senior meant kindly, and I thanked him warmly; but I was too much elated by my advancement to give due attention to his warnings, although I had good reason to remember them afterward. My elation did not, however, arise solely, or even ’ chiefly, from professional pride and grati fied ambition. The fact is, I had lost my heart to Amy Mainwaring, a charming girl of eighteen, with peach-like cheeks, soft brown eyes, and golden hair; and be ing as impetuous in love us I was diligent In business, and Amy loving me as much as I loved her, 1 had made up my mind to marry at tho earliest possible moment— that is to say, as soon as the father gave his consent and I could afford to keep a wife. I thought the salary which I was now beginning to earn would enable me to do this easily. But Mr. Mainwaring did not quite see the matter in the same light. ! He said we were both absurdly young, and however well off 1 might be, wo should bo all the better for waiting awhile. More over, like Mr. Combie, he had not absolute confidence in the stability of the Oriental and Occidental. To my pressing entreaties he answered— “Let us see what a couple of years bring forth. You will be quite young enough then, and the delay will give you a chance of laying something by for a rainy day.” Two years! To Amy and me this seemed an eternity; but as neither of us wanted to defy her father, and he was quite deaf to re n, there was nothing for it but to sigh and submit, and wait with such pa tience as we might for the fruition of our Tints went on, and long before tbe per iod of probation expired I hud to acknowl edge that Mr. Muinwaring’s caution had morn warrant than my confidence. After , doing a brilliant business during the first 1 six months of our career, the tide turned, j and in a very short time we lost nearly all I we had made. For this result—though we had really very ifl-luek—1 fear that I was in part responsible. 1 was too keen and sanguine; I did not like to turn money away. I had not Mr. Combie and Mr. Nelsou to consult with, and I underwrote I risks that I ought to have refused. I had not always the choice, however; for our paid-up capital being small, llrst-chiss in' surers fought shy of us, fine business went elsewhere, and I had to take my pick ; among tbe residue and remainder. Till* was the state of tilings eighteen months after I Joined the Orlentnl and Oc cidental; and had I not got over the diffi culty nbont tho "Nlobe,” It Is extremely probable that the company would have ammOied or I should huve been dismissed. In either event I should have lost my occu pation, and in either event Mr. Malnwnr lug would, 1 felt sure, have insisted on the rupture of my engagement with ills daugh ter. Hence my prospects, whether business or matrimonial, were not of the brightest, and Amy anil I were often in horribly low spirits. We had thought two years a ter rible time, and now I began to fear that I might have to wait for her as long as Jacob had to wait for Kacliel. I am bound to say, however, that our gloom was relieved by rather frequeut gleums of guyety and happiness. One does not duspair at thn aud-twenty. CHAPTER IV.—CUAZT TOM’S YARN. After my memorable Interview with Mr. Brandyman, things took a more favorable wr™ wlth the Oriental and Occidental. We had better luck, and I took more care, preferring rather to do a small business than run great risks. Our spirits rose with the shares of the company—mine and Amy's as woll os tho directors'—and we l)egan to think wo wero on the highway to prosperity, when a misfortune befell which mattered our hopes to the winds. The ’Jreat Northern Hank (like our own, a Hin ted liability concern of recent creation) mspended at n time when we had a heavy balance to credit, and the very day aftor ve had paid away several largo checks in icttlement of claims. Tho checks, of iour.se, canid back to us, and ns wo had no neatis of taking them up, we too laid to luspond. I lost my place, of courso—a defunct lompany bus no need of an underwriter; tnd worse—I had taken n part of my salary n shares, and on those shares there was m unpaid liability which absorbed all my nvings. The collapse of the company left ne as poor as when I entered Combio & kelson's office seven years before; nnd by vay of tilling up my cup of bitterness to ho brim, Mr. Mainwaring informed mo in a letter otherwise very kind nnd sym inthetic) that my engagement with Amy mist bo considered at an end. He did not orbid me to visit his bouse, but he said ilainly that the seldomer I came the better le should bo pleased. I thought ho was hard, but I felt he was ’ight. What was the use of a man being mgaged to bo married who had no present neans of keeping himself, much less a vifef All tho same, Amy and P swore iternal constancy, and we vowed that, lome weal, come woe, neither of us would iver mnt;ry anybody else; and I thought :he really meant it—I am sure I did. This conclusion, however satisfactory so 'ar ns it went, did not afford much help award a solution of tho pressing question if the moment: Wlmt. should I do?—how ivoid becoming a burden on my mother? ; had asked Mr. Combio to take me back; mt my place was tilled up, and as a severe Inancinl crisis had just set in there was ittlo chance of my finding a place else where. Firms and banks were falling like linepins, nnd men of business looked and alked as if the world were coming to an md. A word to any of them about finding ne a situation would have been regarded is an insult to his understanding. While I was revolving these things in Tiy mind, and wondering wlint on earth I should do, I recotved a call from Captain Peyton, svlio had lately returned from ono voyage and was about to start on another, lie condoled with me over the failure, nnd nquired whatI“thonglitof doing,” where upon, as he was an old friend, I told him if my difficulties, and asked his advice. “What do I think you should do?” he ex claimed, cheerily. “Why, what can you lo better than come with me to Monte video? I mean, of course, as my guest, make the ronnd trip; you will be back in dx months, and by that time business will be better, and you will get as many bertha ss yon want. Young men of your capacity and energy are not too plentiful. What do you say?” TO BE CONTINUED. No Need Tor Eye Stones. On a pleasant day recently a re porter was standing on Broadway in the neighborhood of the big dry-goods stores with a well-known oculist. The man to whom the mystery of sight is nu open book und the handling of the delicate optic nerves a mutter of every day occurrence gazed with pleasure at the scene. Perhaps lie appreciated the fact that but for his profession many mortals would not be able to enjoy it. The curious gaze of the reporter and the business eye of the doctor dis covered at about the same instant a sympathetic movement on the part of two ladies on the opposite side of the street. One of them had evidently got a cinder or something else in tier eye. Another lady was trying with the aid of a handkerchief to extract tho ex asperating mote, but with no great success. The oculist watched the scene for a moment uud then philos ophized timsly: “There are two ladies, intelligent looking, and evi dently informed on a variety of sub jects, yet they are ignorant on as sim ple a matter ns tile removal of a for eign particle from the eye. "The simplest and quickest way to dislodge anything that lias bocome fixed in the eye is to catch up the oyc lid by the skin and pull it away from the eyeball gently aud repeatedly. I have'often tried 'the method myself, and have never knowu it to fail. It instantly relieves the sensitive member from pain and shifts the particle so that it can be easily dislodged. I learned the method myself from a railroad hrakenmu. His class are es pecially liable to annoyance from Hy ing cinders, aud nearly nil of them use the treatment I have described.”—N. 1’. Mail and Express. Ornithological. A New Ilnrou man placed a pigeoc on n uest of eggs a short time ago. A week later a hen flew into the nest, drove the pigeon away, ami, after de stroying tlie eggs, laid’oue of her own. j The pigeon returned and kept the | hen’s egg warm for twenty-four days, and a day or two ago a "little while chicken was found in'the nest. As the pigeon found some trouble in feeding the chicken it was placed iu a brooder, * and now the chicken is heartbroken. | The house in which Columbus, died, at Valladoid is falling into decay, and ' tho Spanish government is much re | broached for allowing it to go to ruin.: The Italians talk of purchasing it by > I national subscription. J THESE FIGjURES TELL IN FAVOR OF THE WAGE* WORKERS’ TARIFF. W«I«l Con»t»utlj on the Increase While tho NMmarln of Life Continue to So Down—Enfllali Influence* In South America—'Tariff Picture*. Messrs. Cleveland and Mills assert that the home manufacturer of pro tected goods adds the duty to the price of his product and pockets an extra profit A correspondent, agreeing with them, writes to say that "the benefit of all tariffs, low or high, stops in the pockets of employers. It need go no further, and never docs.” Do the following figures show that those assertions are true as regards the highly protected glass industry? By the census of 1880 the total value of the window glass made ii. the United States was #5,047,313. The average rate of duty collected on the imports of that kind of glass in 1888 was 109 per cent. Applying the beautiful Mills-Cleveland rule, the manufactur ers of the window glass made in 1880 would, but for the tariff protection, have asked for it only #2,415,000. The wages paid the workmen in that census year were #2,139,000. According to the free-trade Democrats those wages would not have been reduced had their been no protection. According to the correspondent, the tariff had nothing to do with making them what they were. Deducting the wages from what Messrs. Mills and Cleveland say the glass should have been sold for there remains #270,000 with which to pur chase the raw materials of the glass. According to the census those cost #1,849,530. Some of the articles used paid a duty, but the great bulk did not. Had all the chemicals used been duty free the cost of the raw materials would not have fallen below #1,500,000. Therefore the manufacturers ought to have sold the glass they made in the census year for #1,234,000 less than it cost them, says the Chicago Tribune. It does not take a strong intellect to see that under those circumstances there would be no glass made here. In that case what would the workmen in the glass factories do? If they turned to some other mdpstry they would find no demand for labor there. They would be unable to retain their old po sitions except by consenting to a cut of wages of 60 per cent or more. That would bring them down toward the Belgian basis and would give the American manufacturer some prospect of coming out even. The American glassworker gets bet ter pay than his Belgian competitor. He also lives much better. He is bet ter housed, clothed, and fed. He and his family are more comfortable, have more conveniences and luxuries. The correspondent and his Democratic au thorities say that he has these things not because of the tariff, but because of some reason which they never explain satisfactorily. Sometimes they say that the American workman produces more to the hour than his foreign com petitor. But the workman who leaves Belgium and comes here does not have to double his productivity to get the American wages. He gets them at once. If his pay was governed by his output he would stay in Belgium, double his output, and get increased wages there. But he never does. Breadstuff Exports. Those ardent free traders who pre dicted that the McKinley law would cut down and cripple the export trade of the United states get Bmall comfort in the statistics of breadstuffs exported in 1890—91 and 1891-92. For the ten months ending on April 30, 1892, the ’value of breadstuffs exported was #253, 065,000, as compared with #97,'126,000 for the ten months ending on April ’1, 1891—an increase nearly trebling the record of the previous year. With the increasing movement of breadstuffs abroad it is not improbable that the exports for the year ending on June 30, 1892, will be quite three times that for the year ending June 30, 1891.— New York Tribune. Increasing Doubt. j Every day brings new indications of the increasing doubt felt by English men as to the advisability of adhering to their free trade policy. “English free traders have gone too far,” sa^d Lord Salisbury in a recent speech. “Jt is time to refuse nutions who Injure lx assess to our markets. The wonderful progress of the United States under j protection, simultaneously with the retrogression of Great Britain under free trade, has done much to convert j the English. They are commencing to see that “free trade may be noble,” os 1 Lord Salisbury says, “but it is not j business.” Tariff Pictures. New York Press: A high tariff de stroys trade, say the free traders. As ! usual the facts tell another story. For 1 the three years ending March 31, 1889, the average balance of trade iu favor of the United States.was 39,661,459. For the three years ending March 31, 1893, the average balance o> trade in our favor was 893,733,456. Domestic Tin riate. Not only lias tho tin-plate duty re sulted in the establishment of a domes tic tin-plate industry, but it has created a market for the prod ucts of another in dustry—that of manufacturing t£p plate machinery. Already we have seen the advertisements of two firms prepared to furnish machinery for tin plate works. There is a chance her* for some energetic tin-plate liar. Free Coinage Democracy. ' It is beyond question that the Demo cratic purpose is tt' wive the country free silver coinage. ®»e hopes of the : Democrats in Congress hare bee* clashed, and their evasive policy has been brought about by their knowl edge that President Harrison would veto any free coinage measure. It therefore becomes absolutely certain that the only safety of the country against the deluge of debased coin is to keep a Republican on guard in the presidential office and to elect a Re publican Congress to sustain him. WAGES IN ENGLAND, Free Trad* ImporerUhiujj Eniillili Work* Ingnisn. No one could be better qualified to study the condition of English work ingmen under free trade or to compare it with that of Americans under pro tection than Mr. John Jarrctt, United States Consul at Birmingham, who has just arrived on a visit to his home in Pittsburg. Mr. Jarrett was a free trader when he came to this country in 1860, but experience soon made him an earnest advocate of protection. Speaking of the condition of wages in England Mr. Jarrett says that skilled labor is paid less in England now than formerly. “In I860," he adds, “skilled laborers in the Staffordshire district, where the highest prices are paid, were then given twelve shillings per ton for puddling, and now, over thirty years afterward, they receive only eight shillings. I expect the prices per ton will soon be six shillings and sixpence. In juxtaposition, look at our country. In I860 we paid pud dlers S3.50 per ton, or about fourteen shillings, and now they receive 85.50 per ton. Protection raised the wages in this country, and free trade lowered them in England.” Mr. Jarrett slates that “the recent j election in Rhode Island was a great disappointment to the free traders in | England, and now many of them doubt j whether the Democrats will be able to ; elect a President next fall. Material j aid will no doubt be given the Demo ■ crats in the coming campaign.” [ All the material aid that English free traders can give to the Democratic party in the coming campaign will be much more than offset by the knowl edge on the part of American working men of the material aid which protec tion has brought to their homes and their firesides. Revenue Tariff Countries. In Germany, France, Belgium and Switzerland wages are not one-tliird ol what they are in the United States. England pays a higher average of wages than either of the countries named; but even then she does not pay quite half as much as we pay. Wages in Italy are not one-fourth our rates. Germany, France and Italy have adopt ed a tariff system, but the rate is not high enough to be protective, except upon a very few articles. Wages, how ever, are steadily increasing. Last year cheap foreign labor was imported into the United States in the shape of manu factured goods to the value of 8692, 319,768. This was a great wrong to American labor. In the immense amount of imports permitted by our insufficient and defective tariff, the labor of women employed in the Manchester, Eng., cotton milis, whoso wages do not average 860 a year, came into competition with the higher-priced labor of Southern and Northern cotton spinners. Munich is a gallery and a center of art. German women, with as many as six children, saw wood in its streets for 15 cents a day. May a merciful God sink the United States ten thou sand feet under, the sea before that hideous spectacle shall become an in cident of our civilization.—George W. Atkinson of West Virginia. A Cheerful Indication. The fact that the Democrats in Con gress have already begun to abuse John I. Davenport is infallible evidence that they see tokens of party defeat in the handwriting on the wall. Whenever the Democrats see disaster ahead they begin to denounce Davenport; when they realize that their disho nesty and incapacity are about to result in their overthrow at the polls they try to lay the blame on Davenport. They parade him as the author of their misfortunes, the designer of their defeat and the evil genius of their lives. It is a good sign that they have begun to abuse Davenport thus early in the season.— N. Y. Recorder. A Photograph of Free Trod*. Glasgow, in Scotland, is the largest steamship factory of the world; and its blast-furnace owners ana iron roll ers howl for free trade day and night, flf the families in that manufacturing Sodom, 41,060 out of )00,000 live in one room; and half cf the men and women in the city are out of work. That one room for a family of father, mother, daughters and sons tells what wages are in Scotland, and how they drag humanity down into bestiality and misery.—American Economist. Tariff Pictures. Nothing’ shows the industrial devel opment of a country more surely than the amount of raw material consumed in its manufactures. From 1877 to 1890 the consumption of raw cotton in creased in free trade England 85 per cent. In the United States, under pro tection, during the same period, it in creased 85 per cent. Uty We Are the lleet Buyers. Our party stands for the doctrine that the American market shall be preserved for our American producers. * * * Our <>0,000,000 of people are the best buyers in the world, and they are such because our working classes re ceive the best wages in the world.— Ben Harrison at Indianapolis. Julu 31 1888. A Democratic Wall. “A boom for the subsidy principle" is the comment of the Boston Globe on the bill admitting the Inman steamships to American registry. The Globe is at least honest. Most of the “reformers” have been hailing this £11 as 9 step to waft tree shin* Sv^up-rfic ONE ENJOYS Both the method end results whea Bjrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Svrup of Figs.is tha only remedy of its Kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o nnd $1 bottles bv all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. UHIISHUE. Kt.NEW YORK. N.t. “German Syrup” I simply state thatl am Druggist and Postmaster here and am there fore in a position to judge. I have tried many Cough Syrups but for ten years past have found nothing equal to Boschee’s German Syrup. I have given it to my baby for Croup with the most satisfactory results. Every mother should have it. J. H. Hobbs, Druggist and Postmaster, Moffat, Texas. We present facts, living facts, of to-day Boschee’s German Syrup gives strength to the body. Take no substitute. © OMAHA BUSINESS MOSES, SPRINGFIELD ENGINES. SEPARATORS and HORSE POWERS. For Special Prices address T. G. NOBIHWALL. Omaha. Nebraska flMAHA BASKET MFG. CO/l’f ^ ™ U KltlftT PACKAGES. Send for Price List. FI FCTRIfi Llarht Supplier Door Bells, An nun |l1i,h¥ ■ tors, Kte. Send for prices. WO] al ELECTRIC CO.. 1614 Capitol Avenue, Omaha. SEWER PIPE DRAIN TILE. For draining farm lands, casing ' ^ wells, house drainage, sewers, culverts, etc. Doubts strength vitrified pipe. Write to OMAHA COAL, COKE £ LIME CO.. _ O.UAH.l, NEB. , EDVCAritnuL. nES MOINES COLLEGE SfeK, U with CHICAGO UNIVERSITY.) Cor. ninth nnd Washington Sts. College and Pre paratory Courses. Students admitted at any tin].. For catalogue address Prof. A B. PRICK, Dig Moines, Iowa. LITTLE LIVER PILLS DO HOT GRIPE HOB 8ICKXB Bure cure for SICK HEAD* ACHK, impaired digestion, consti pation, torpid glands. They arouse vital organs, remove nausea, dls. tost ICUJOTV II.UIU., Ul| alncss. Magical effect on Kid ievs and bladder. Conquer bilious nervous dis orders. Establish nat ural Daily action. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. Porsly Vegetable. The dose is nicely adjusted to suit ease, as one pill a oo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in v never betooc__ . _____ pocket, like lead pencil. Business man's great convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Bold every where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent" Send 3-cent stamp. Ton get 82 page book wtthMUaifta. OR. HASTES MEDICINE CO.. SI. Lonla. HA Th is WUl Appear but 100 Young Parrots! WARRANTED TO TALK, ONLT $5.00 Each all this Week Parrot Cages $3.50. Birds shipped by Expre ■ 2'> cents extra. Order at onoe, before all are gone. GEISLER’S BIRD STORE, OMAHA, - NEBRASKA. I EWIS’ 98 % LYE I fOWMEXfi AND mmSD (PATENTED) The strongest and purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a tine powder and packed in a can |wlth removable lid, the contents urn i nura pua.lv .... »n.i are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in'JO minutes without boiling. It la the beat for cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinki. closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT M’F’G CO, Gen. A gent a, Phlla., Pa. Witt’s Little | % E»rlyKier«r r’araous Little PllIs for Const!nation.Sick Head* iche, Dyapepaltt.N’o Naunea.No Pain. Very Small "ARLY I Re Witt's Little PENS WFA,* Wir-: ESTERBROOK’S Mow York. 1 ststiuiier for FLAGS Altanaerstgllk orBnntln* AMERICAN FLAUMlklco* Easton, Pa, Send Xor price*. ** IA SMTI p«y» for an Aluminum Lord’s p»ft. W Houremr Charm and sample copy of ou7iZl£ aagaaine. T. J. UILSOm, 901 Olive SI, St.J^uia IX afflicted with •ore eyes. Thompson’s Eyt Wstsr. V