1 [AMPEBIXG- TARIFF K COMMERCIAL RESULTS OF * THE OINLLCV LAW. Zm wRfrE 53T Tor* It a ■'**-» LUBpercC ; at «#«•* » '* • tan* i« *tr.k;«*T gp* r*>t • ie Mt' «4< -• >^orti tor **• MMfc'E of Fet-ruarjr, :*>• Not «®ly tbt c«rorf at ***«.t* lor the , * ' -«»* ;■:■ s.'Wt FF-'Waary 4H*t tfce :**sp rt* rts* * *ca fc* »*Ui. ‘aero**# f tbe *'• *r»*» of FeE* r : rf &.]».; < far tl- ps-*t t^at )>•« It (A»ul4 b# aoted :tu*t tb« z a^urst :» tar u» bo.-; fam of ■emit- •**’ tfpp-- , of a** tnidt* to sjt i**e»» .a amt mtmr: or :n* laS uam** * T l>a4 « S Ea» Ukta food core tb* tOBjiKmtf :E tae reeuit LLo* mea' cf Sr 1*. jr*s atao-a: of latr. u-« it>r«£td $S. '*’###» for e.er* day :a the •obtli, and tb- total rtforti nrere #’ >Tt.. or s^t than iiH per coat .aiwaier ‘Ytaa that of any prec din* February Sot on!? »:♦ the export* a: f> r ’Baa :bo*e f *sr pre »d:ns f * : ri»r» bat tte ex.e** of export* ter imp-ori* a **• ma•*5 a ties. « :* sta'-u that tne aver -re l-Vomarp export* dtir.ns tbe last e* y-xtn me'e fTC.teijMM per month. -Jt.#e tii* total exports cf February. ia alrea • _ ? Tfi, 'v2 bn tte otter sand. tte average 1 etruoty import* of tte pmeed.op Oec .«ae »ere t*l .«eO,tel. mal-n* tbe a**r . *e rVbnsni* ext*** of exports over aaporfs d tr tf ;bat ti*a« f li •*v*".01m, *hJe tbat of February !Ste. 1* ffit. * -i. It-:* «rab» - *h* total exportx Turn for rte eight month* ending with l>"bruar; aboaiST' r**-. *#4* *:enter tten eat. of ’be • orreapondix f months of te fie. al ye*r 1*3#, and mike* It ap -nt that ojt to-*I exports m tbe Si*: year end-ng J-in P »ill exceed • bo e of any pr> rd:ay year by proba %V0- •#* we* aal carry tbe total omaaeree of die y« *r cunidenblr be yond tbe tso-laUtoa dollar line. T• •• fo.,ovmx table *h ms tbe itn |wn* * • export. *f r.r>f the month of February dnrmg x term of yea;*, the* y»..&4C opporcamt) to trace tteir rela tive groatb. Impart*. f> broary * Uoilar* :««a --:• rjr^g smm __ >P5 . hSjliJWI IMd ..CS.CI.1lt l ■•If* apJCIjm l*m . SS«:«.<€f - - - - - ih,:ci * 7.4 lid Exports. ir.I.ars SbJClbM 6i 17S.S31 S: >82.731 77.7t 1>04 7> (C’.uh*. >4.417.4 S3 • * *' 11 >.» €k.- ..«C2 Tbe 1 lovac ta fbosr# the im • , rt> xrsC «x|m " cwras the first elgh.. t- - ’bs tf ta b t «i year far a urn. *♦ ? as 1. mat c ny lift ,, !*•« UK .. ja» .. me .. i*i# ... stei *. tbs Jk IV 1 tt parts, k Hollars. hS7 v72>:> . CNiXttl VU.JSZ.*\€ S41.IMJB1 .<32.hSS.JCd .3K.«9I.I7> tf7.ao.jaii . — .d 17 Export*. DoUan. 8CSJ71JC0 C38J2C.SS1 is;jtt.cc* Cf3.Cd4.f7: fl — Til si3j»«.i)Cy *43.433 JC» biS.C3.VK UNLIMITED. N» leat**lta« Tk«l IIm Yrt Hick Wat** Mark A *>:<•.» ne-tat o*U ai of a Trunk hoe •". "»Tlf Mid tbit Jm- dl »* um of the prettat urn*, prosper t» ?~aa*r srta lorfc a rush after the ! • a» fi at of the I Kapiry law that it o-rt* natty of the® «f not all, unpre pared to bairdl# the taorsxna t ra® of ] the aMfitsgr. la aaasj cases ousiaess j »» tMmt or Jess embarrassed by the <• ® wltjr riper reared hy the railroad* la usadltag rre;jht. la aery many j o-Urr **e. —aafartartap piaata were r*a4, upped hy their iaaLllity to pet < ta stfBrieat quart it lev to meet tVir Oewcaada The m*.:roods hare ***** ana.np all haate to iar reaae * tW:f e^a.paNMt. For autr Month* ] p m the aewspapera have beea fall •f new. -.mi. let: ap of the hundred* of < an ad all k'ada—horn can, robe j eara. dmt ran ' "•* can. poadoia can sad cars of every other k tad-which had beea or dered or which were la process of toJdiap for the dlffeteot roads. To eat who did not realize thr. prrjsperfty whVb the future held for the country i.ndcr our prefect wise industrial pol icy it might have looked as though the railroad offl als mere overshooting the market. Bnt events prove the con trary, and the railroads, with their gristly increased equipment, are still put to their .beat efforts in order to nandle the business of the country. More new equipment" will still serve -or many a headline in the future as •>!! as in the past The limits of the prosperity which a consistent and sei *nr;|lc prcte.-t!ve tariff law can give to the .ountrj have by no means been yet reached. AS A MONEY MAKER. RrtUteat XarrMi of tbo Dla(l«f TorltT lo (fee Matter of Becreaoe Prodacttoo. Trio>~ prophets of disaster who de nounced the Dingley tariff because in the early months of its operation It failed 10 arromp'.ish the impossible as a re venue producer preserve a discreet s >ace on this subject nowadays. Dur ing the t.me when the country was overstocked w.th foreign goods rushed .n under the !oa- duty rates of the Wil son free trade tariff the enemies of protection could not restrain their ju alien o\er the diminished volume of stom* receipts. They could not see. <»r mroaij not see. that revenue from source mast necessarily suffer un .. h t are as the country could con or the immense bulk of com mod i t:*s brought here from abroad in anti pat :on of the higher rates of duty < rtsin to be imposed by a Republican ldtn aistration They wilfully ignored the piesence of abnormal conditions took mneb satisfaction in assert | mg that the Dingley law was a dead ‘a.lure In the matter of revenue pro i tit; rtion. Th* facte snow that the framers of e D:ng!ey tariff were right in en ng that law as "an act to provide v< r. ;e for the government and to en ou'age the industries of the United States." During the eight months of •he present fls -a! year the receipts of ;he treasury department have exceed ed the expenditures by about 135.000. O^.1. wh: *h is considerably in excess of ;tie amount that any tariff bill was ex ted to jield The customs revenue law is producing almost as much m,a*-y today as ;s the internal revenue system, even with the war taxes added. The follow.ng table shows the income of th» government during the past j eight months: 1«33. .... Orwfcw ... Novemb* r Decew.fcar 15*0. Cu«:nni re.-eipti*. fic.sn.iM t? 34- ABC . .. !*■ o't.VB* .. vm Total receipt* e* sis.173 43 23t.:« At *a 5»v:> 3tc ♦y ivl Total Expendi tures. rM.ssi.oso 45.5K.311 K.5T1».3:j 44, STi.iCiS 40.7fiS.J*4T 3?.H5,S5‘j l*«brm x. ;.tC4 J340.C79.77: As a money-maker for government and people the Dingley tariff is a mon ni- ntal success :n economic legisla r.-m. Nothing like it was ever known f in the history of the world. HER NEW EASTER HAT. ■«»*■ Nob-Protected Tran:*. Trusts seem to be thriving quite WH ■ A i-tria. a country which mam :-:ns no Protective Tariff exempt on a very few commodities, such as gars, tobacco aad canned and bottled 1 ud art cles. According to a report from Consul Frank W. Mahin, at Hi:« benberg. the Austrian hatmakers . eve organ.red to promote their in t*-. < the paper factories have form < • a union; makers of sugar and sac charine products fcave a dose organi oc. and have but recently diacuss ♦ d t.ie pra< ;i«ability of increasing prices; the shoe manufacturers have a reaps *. un.on. and one central corpo ra'-.oa at Budapest is acquiring all the gat plants throughout Austria. 1c the absence of a general scheme of Protection, su, fc as that which ob tains in the United £ tates. how is it por - ole for Austro-Hungary to en gag*- so exi-ns.vely in the formation of trust*? Isn't there a screw loose :n the th> >ry that t: ids flourish only under a Protective Tariff. Nb HrttUb Satellite*. A writer in the Atlantic Monthly for March, J. W. Hoot, presents figures 1 showing that England does not subsi- ; .ze its steamer ! nes. only pays a low price for the carriage of mail matter. And we all know figures do not lie. Unaccountably the Mail and Express uates that a subsidy of S194.660. to be pad annually for ten years, has just •*en given to Elder. Demster & Co. by : sh government for a fortnight ly steamship service between Jamaica and (.Ireat Britain. The Mail and Ex pr< which evidently has not seen the Atlantic Monthly, does not seem to mention this laud British subsidy as a notable incident, but is outraged at the proposition to make Americans who have invested in banana lands on the island of Jamaica pay one-half the sub sidy. although they are supporting a direct line to the United Slates. This s to be done by imposing an increased tax oa banana lands. Han by Prosperity. Bryan bad nothing to say about dfty cent wheat and the connection be tween the price of wheat and the price of silver. Prosperity has knocked out a large part of his stock in trade.— Jersey City - .a,*. 1^-. “And the ... , . clung: nobly to their n .eh J i" Tlu‘y him in prison in spit,' ,',f fT' ,;l,ul Visiu*d is a noble and charmi^ U came even from GaliW «•’, r . They air was fu„ of *‘u‘r* very ings of Jesus, ami ‘ s . v ?Uular disciples with tie wittaTT" i"’ Jesus w»s indeed the . „5X" shows that the hra\ ,tr„ Mtsy?ah and martvr was in t> v- T f)IO,'*lcl great doubt. U‘* "haJ,JW ** * 1*. -Calling unto him two of hi« disci ples sent them to Jesus. x.vini, ,.U he that should com, • The \i" • -r prophet® had foreto.d “5n tSu ,hl whom John had j, . -h'4 Messiah? ’ *ho lhe a. “And in that same hour.’* Before the eyes of John's di« ,« ...» ‘ . *r--inv •» Vc , o»es. He cured ?merely t« show this proof to John, but because they needed curing HT- kff.r*** ^,rk ties. Diseases. “plague- s.rokts ^°UrpP; h",! 'r- Snized in medical writings as teute " as «hc eases" were the chronic ca^-s “Evil 5g«'5H A* •«'“••• ««££ Blind he gave sigh; More is ex pressed by this verb then simple giving. He gave as a free, gracious, joy-giving gift."-Vincent. 5 S *** 1- ~Thc lame walk, etc Note the preat varietv uf cures the many form* of disease relieved. There w.i* nothing too hard for his power. E.i< h disease was typical of some corresponding moral heal ing from the diseases >r sin Ail of them were expressions of his goodness and love. “To the poor the g-.spel is preach ed.” “The language embraces the poor in heart life, all who suffer heart hun ger. the meek, the broken-hearted, the captives, the bound. '—Abbott. 23. "And blessed is he. whosoever shall not be offended in me.” Shall find no oc casion of stumbling in me. shall s~e how my work and method *>f founding the kingdom, however differing from ■ recan - oeived opinions, is the true way >r the Messiah, the only one in which .« mis sion could be fulfilled, and the dy one fi retold by the prophets. Many, indeed, did stumble at the wav Jesus r- present ed the Messiahshlp. Note how J sus re lieved his despondent \. and wil. relieve ours. 24. “When the messengers of John were departed.” Jesus spoke his eui »gy. not in the presence of John's dls< r.des. b it after they were gone, for the good ot the people. He did not praise to his fagt and condemn behind his back "He be gan to speak unto the pe »ple." in an swer to their thoughts and >• rt qaes tlonings. They might imago e ' from John's message that the flaptist wavered In his faith, and that his impr -onment had shaken his constancy. On laird, therefore, reminds them of whit John was. “What went ye out ir.to the wil derness." where John had preached. "A reed shaken with the wind." The reed of Egypt and Palestine is a very tall cane, growing twelve feet high, with a magnificent panicle of blossom at the top. and so slender and yielding that it will lie perfectly flat under a gust of wind, and immediately resume its upright position.—Tristram. Did >ou go to sen a fickle, undecided man. ths sport of every influence that blew upon him?—Morison. “So far from, being a reed, shaken by the wind of popular opinion, John was a lock, which stood unmoved though beat en by storms of suffering.'—Wordsworth. This is one of the common aspersions which men are apt to cast on those who become popular, that they bold to the popular breeze, and it is one- of their dangers. 25. “A man clothed in soft raiment.” 1.usurious or gorgeous clothing—a sign of an effeminate and voluptuous, or a sycophant, who would flatter for the hope of gain. Contrast this with the rigorous fare and sim; le garb of John ns described in Matt 2: 4. £.• the next accusation of the reformer, and his next danger, is that “he is making friends of the rich, and feathering his own nest." "Behold.” etc. No such man as this was the wilderness prer>et. if you wish ed to find such men. you would go to the palace of Herod, where they are gor geously appareled. 26. “A prophet? Yea. . . . and much more than a prophet. <1 * Because himself the object of prophecy; be cause he pointed out th> Messiah, whom others only foretold, and saw him whom kings and prophets desired to see: and t3> chiefest of all. because his position was nearest the thresh *.:i »if th- king dom and, m°re than they all, helped to usher it in. 27 “This is ho. of whom it is writ ten.” tin Mai 3; 11 "Behold. 1 send my messenger before thy face. etc. An al lusion to one who went before an East ern monarch to remove all eb*tac«es ou of his way. (Sec Less en 111 Hrs* Qaar tcr.) . . “There is not a greater prophet than John the Baptis: in character, in werk. in nearness to tb*l. »n position, in privilege, in success "He ih.it «s leas, in the kingdom of Ood is greater a he." The least of the greatest is grat er than the greatest of the least. Ma - donatus. It does not mean greater in personal character, nor in eternal con dition. but in present privilcjbr. preroga tive, station, as the le. st ch ' - ‘ ., . than the highest servant —■ ** ' belongs to a higher dispensation. «>»th larger influences of large beyond the compreher.s previous disi«ensa:ion The least seed revious , n-wn above ground is rrsitt-r • • the sol!. So we greatest still b<-ne.ith Ov ’ in-dav has moro mav snv that the . ■ - 11 ' stands farther in ad ographv. history. ;aces of the past, who is and intellect. knowledge, and vance, in ebemHtrj c than the greatest had far more gcri Mo»t Drowning Men KccxU D»bU? Little Sniff kins (who has been near j drowned!—"It was simply marvel us. As I sank far the third time all tie incidents of my past came vividly efore me.” Robertson (brutally)— I say. old char did -vou remember tiat fiver I lent you last year?’ —Syd ey Town and Country Journal. Tut HI* Foot in It Fisher—1 really don t think I ake part again in theatricals. I ; feel as though I were making of mvself. PUkins (who always he wrong thing>-0, everybody that.—Harlem Life. In the Tall. ■‘jjjp leaves are leaiinS- remarked young Mr. Beechwood to Miss Home wood. “but the trees remain." True.” added the maiden. "I notice that :he trees are not packing their trunks. The Lot of Woman. •'You certainly can t cali the eel skirt very sensible.” "No. it seems to be decreed that a woman may not show good lines and good sense at the S3me time. Detroit Journal. Circa m*taoc«a. Parson Meekins (to convict) My friend, remember we are here today and gone tomorrow. Convict (calmly)—You might be. but I ain’t.—Baltimore Jewish Comment,