DEMOCRATIC TIMES HIT THE THEATRICAL PROFES SION VERY HARO. ri‘° Hox-Ofllee Kecetpt* a Fair Indica tion of tlic I'roipority that Followed the Flection of Cleveland and Hi* 1’arty. It is time to givo particular atten tion to the condition of the theatrical profession in the United States this vear as compared with 1S92 and 1893, .tod show the large number of unem ployed actors who have been the re cipients of charity from a fund es pecially collected for that purpose. ACT I. 1892. In order to investigate'this condition more fully a number of the leading theaters in different states in the country have been asked to furnish a comparative statement of their re ceipts during the first three months of isV:: and 1894. Taking 100 to represent their receipts from January to March. 1893, the figures in the second and third columns represent the receipts during the corresponding three months of the two years, as follows: Number Keceipts, January of thea- lo March, hosi Slates. ters. 1893. 1894. 1895. Alabama. 2 210 143 57 Georgia. 3 301 201 100 Illinois. 5 501 301 199 Indiana. 3 200 141 59 Iowa. 1 100 81 19 Kan-as. 2 200 150 50 Kentucky. 1 100 90 10 Maiylend. 1 100 93 7 Massachusetts. 5 500 432 98 Michigan. 2 200 179 21 Minnesota_ 1 100 60 40 Mississippi. .. 1 ICO 100 New H'pshire.. 2 200 141 59 New Jersey... 3 300 171 129 New York_ 3 300 238 62 Ohio. 2 200 109 91 Pennsylvania. 5 500 41S 82 Tenn-.sse. 1 100 77 23 Texas. 1 100 67 13 West Virginia. 1 100 52 48 Washington... 1 100 60 40 Wisconsin. 2 200 135 65 Total. 47 4,700 3,408 1,292 Average loss, 27 per cent. The forgoing shows reports from forty-seven of the leading theaters of the I'nited States For every §4,700 received by these theaters during the first three months of 1893 their re ceipts amounted to only §5,408 during the first three months of the present year, the loss being §1,292, or 27 per cent for the whole country. While the actor is not directly protected by a tariff, it is very evident that the prosperity of the country under a pro tective tariff affords larger receipts to those engaged in the theatrical pro fession than the disturbed condition of the country will permit under the 4.CT II. 1S94. mere threat of free trade. When peo ple are not earning money at all, or are not earning good wages, it is im possible for them to spend money upon amusements. Protection to American industries means prosperity to the theatrical business. Some Facts About Wool. If American manufacturers are to supply themselves with foreign wool, it would be only because it would be cheaper to them than American wool. Who, then, will be left ter bnv the American clip, and wbat is to become of it? If American wool falls to the foreign price under free trade, the American sheep will be fattened and sent to the butcher, and woolgrowing in America will cease to be an industry except in limited cases where the farm ers can produce the coarser wool sheep for the meat as they now pro duce cattle for that purpose. They ■would then have to consider the wool a by-product, as bullocks hides are now considered. If the duty be soon removed or even reduced at a time when the govern ment needs more rather than less rev enue, the only way to procure even the same revenue that is now collected is to double onr imports. If we double our imports we obtain our sup plies from abroad instead of at home. We cripple our manufacturers and lessen our market for our wool. We give a great industrial impulse to for eign mills, and to this extent take employment from our American mills, *nd for what? Simply in order to *aise as much revenue under reduced luties for revenue only as we now collect under duties that are jrotee tive. Why, therefore, should we de stroy a well-established industry that pays taxes to our government and in stead promote a foreign industry that pays nothing toward the support of our government. Wail From a Miner. Lots of us don't like it; but you know its three more years of Drover, and then the clover will be on top of us I think. We have over 29,000 min ers idle in Illinois, and fourteen com panies of the state militia in different places in the state at present That’s democracy sure enough. We had to work before, so you see we can do without it now and get the soldiers to watch us, as they do over in the old country. We must be English, they say. Don’t you think it’s pretty like it? Twenty cents p8r ton of a reduc tion will help to bring us nearer to it And many of our republicans here said it was better over there than here. They did not expect it to come so soon. All I hope is that they will smother that bill in cougress so dead that it will never live again, and all the bourbons and copperheads with it forever. The monster, the southern confederacy, would like to show its slimy head again—that’s my honest opinion. A man's bread is his life, and when they bargain for my bread I must kick. Rout. I!o\vik. Itraidwood, 111., May 29, 1»94. The Pottery Strike. In the settlement of the pottery strike the wage scale hangs on the de gree ef protection accorded the indus try in the democratic tariff bill. This is a practical illustration of the point which republicans have made and democrats denied, and there can be no wriggling out of it. The democrats will have to take their medicine. The democratic poli ticians can no longer throw dust in the eyes of the men who earn their living in American potteries. They have learned, if they did not know be fore, that the tariff has something to do with wages. Some of them understood this thor oughly and did not wait for the dem ocratic party and sad experience to teach them the lesson.—The Intelli gencer, Wheeling, W. Ya. The SmTH S3 Shop* SPY Wt S-Uv $UL J DcSsJVe "rf c. i lA.Pti0gf1