_—— i ~ dislike you. Bellefonte, Pa., April 25, 1890. . THE COUNTRY WOMAN. Before the blacksmith shop she waits, In her high country wagon sitting, ‘While the good smith with friendly haste Her horse’s clumsy shoe is fitting. He pares and measures, stirs his fire; Saar blows ring out with shrillness Into the August afternoon, Steeped in its dreamy twilight stillness. With anxious eyes she watches him Her busy thoughts are homeward straying, Shadows grow long o’er field and road, And weary farmers leave their haying. High in the elm tree o’er the way, On sunlit boughs the birds are singing Their cradle songs above their nest, Within the whispering sweetness swinging. She knows at home the patient cows Stand lowing at the bars to greet her, And anxious goodman scans the road And sends the children out to;meet her. She knows the supper fire is lit, : The hearth swept clean, the kettle singing, The kitchen table cleared to hold ; The things from town that she is bringing. And smiles in honest, rustic pride, : At shrewd, hard bargains she’s been making Of snowy eggs and creamy cheese, For cloth,and shoes, and “things for bakin’. The setting sun lights up her face, Turning its harshness into beauty— Picture ti peace and pride, Of homely happiness and duty. — Boston Transcript. I————————s ROSINE’S ROMANCE. When Miss Magnolia carefully with" drew the dress from the great cedar trunk, unpinned the old damask table- cloth which enveloped it and spread out its shining folds for the admiration of her niece, Rosine, that young lady clasped her pretty hands and quoted Keats: “A thing of beauty is a joy forever!” she said. Miss Magnolia nodded and smiled. She was small and round and brown as a maiden lady of decidedly certain age could be, But her heart, which had been full of sentiment once, was a warm and sensitive organ still, And she took a deal of interest in Rosine’s romance. “Yes, my dear, it is a thing of beau. ty! And to think I never wore it but twice. Dear, dear” “You had a lover then, auntie?” asked Rosine. “Yes, yes. That was one of the dresses I got for my marriage. But he went away—on business, he said. And he never came back. It is just the gown for your fancy dress ball,” hur- ried on Miss Magnolia. “A trifle short, of course, but there is quite a piece turned in at the top that you could let down. You shall go as a lady of long ago.’ “Not so very long ago,” protested Rosine, with a laugh. “But] really, auntie, I don’t like to take it. It is too lovely I” “Not for a raiment of war! Remem- ber, you are going to conquer the dra- nl” “That is so. And the master should have written, ‘Thrice is she armed who wears a pretty dress!” The foe against whom Miss Rosine Wilde purposed arraying herself was the obdurate uncie of her handsome lover. Most promply and perversely had he opposed the marriage of his nephew. The young fellow would have ignored the refusal of his relative, were it not that the old gentleman had al- ways been kind and good to him ; had indeed taken the place of his dead father to him. So he decided that Re- sine should meet his uncle and put his prejudice to rout. “He is coming to visit an old friend of his,” Cyril had said—“Judge Char- treau. .Yon know the Chartreau fam- ily. 'Of course you have heard they are going to give a fancy dress ball next month in honor of the coming out of their daughter, Lissette. You will re- ceive a card. You will attend. You will meet Uncle Albert. And you will take his heart by storm.” Hopefully had he planned his scheme ; enthusiastically had he ex- plained it. But Rosine protested. It was to bea grand ball, and she had nothing to wear. Besides, she did not like the idea of plotting to make a per- son like her. And— “Bless you,” cried Cyrill, “he doesn’t I don’t believe he even knows your name. His resentment is general, not particular. As soon as I told him I was in love with a southern girl he—he (I have to drop into slang, osine)—he sat squarely down on me. It sezms a southern girl jilted him when he was young, and he is bound to save me from a like awful fate. But when once he sees you he is bound to capitulate Heis a regular o'd brick —Uncle Albert.” “But I have nothing to wear. And what 1s more, I can’t buy a dress for the Chartreau ball. We—Aunt Mag- nolia and I—are as poor as the prover- bial church mice.” But just then Miss Magnolia came to Rosine’s relief like a regular little fairy godmother. “The very thing!” she cried—“my primrose satin I”? Rosine regarded her dubiously, de- lightedly. Jealously, she knew, had her aunt always guarded her trunkful of treas- ures, her jewels, her laces, her rich, stiff, glistening old brocades. “Do you mean it, auntie ?"’ Miss Magnolia's bright old winked very rapidly indeed. “I do, my dear! IT was young once myself.” ‘ And that was how Rosine Wilde came to be the belle of Madame Chartreau’s fancy dress ball. The proposed festivi- ty had been the talk of New Orleans for several weeks, The night long antici- pated was cool, crisp, sweet and pearly. Brilliantly lighted was the broad balco- nied old residence on St. Charles street. Many a carriage rolled upand rolled off. When Rosine descended from the ba- rouche of her chaperon she felt a little | nervous, a little elated and conscious that she was looking uncommonly well eyes ——., a —as indeed she was. Quite a picture was the pretty young figure, in the clinging gown of pale yellowish satin, pieturesquely pufted and quaintly fash- ioned. The corsage, cut roundly, re- vealed the firm. full throat. Dainty mouse skin swathed the arms, which, if slender, were also exquisitely round- ed. And the small, oltve tinted face was lit toloveliness by pansy black eyes. A flash of adoration succeeded the se- rene nonchalance of Cyrill Rodney’s countenance as he caught sight of her. He made his way to her side. “Queen Rosine” he murmared. “I wonder if you know that you're by far the prettiest girl here to-night! Poor Uncle Albert! How complete will be his surrender !”’ ’ She swept him a mocking courtesy. “Ah,” said she, smilingly, “if that conviction were but mine”’— Tbe sentence ended in a long, soft sigh. “Si te pas gagne’’—he began. “Can- found it, I never can get my tongue around your creclism! The saying is, however, that if there was no sighing in the worid the world would stifle. Now, prepare to face the music!” And off’ he went. He soon returned. By his side was a sturdy old gentleman. Rosine’s heart beat more rapidly. “The dragon !"’ she said. Silver hair had the dragon. A dark mustache had the dragon. A florid complexion had the dragon. And a manner that was grave, dignified, courteous. “Uncle Albert,” explained Cyril, with boyish eagerness, ‘this is Miss Rosine Wilde.” \ “Wilde!” The old gentleman started perceptibly. He looked at the blush- ing girl—at the yellowish gown. He bowed. %And,” avowed young Rodney, send- ing his sweetheart a swift smile of en- couragement, ‘“‘and—the young lady of whom I spoke to you.” “Oh 1” exclaimed Albert Ellsworth. Theninterrogatively : “Wilde? Was your father’s name Clayton Wilde ?’¢ Rosine assented. “And your mocher’s maiden name was Magnolia Kingsley ? “Oh, dear, no! Aunt Magnolia was never married. My mother's name was Madelina Kingsley. “Th ?” cried the dragon. The florid color had faded from his cheeks. He was tugging nervously at his dark mustache, He looked agita- ted, perplexed. “My mother died ten years ago,” said Rosine, * and since then I have lived with Aunt Magnolia.” Mer. Ellsworth regarded her grimly. “Is that,” he asked abruptly, “your aunt’s gown you haye on ?”’ : The soft rose fire in the girl’s cheek deepened. “How in the world did you know ?"” she counter questioned. A queer, wavering smile was hisonly reply. A constrained silence unsued. Cyril gave his uncle an-astonished glance. “So Magnolia is an old maid?” said Mr. Ellsworth, abruptly. “If she is,” cried Rosine, stung to de- femse by a remark she chanced to con- sider rude, “it is because she was true to a lover who proved unworthy of her!” “Eh!” ejaculated Mr. Ellsworth, more sharply than before. And sud- denly he turned and walked away. The following day tie insisted on ac- companying his nephew to the gaunt, ramshackle, once aristocratic old home in the French quarter, where dwelt Ro- sine. As they were passing the vault- ed entrance to the little flagged court- yard, Albert Ellsworth caught sight of a familiar figure moving among the potted palms and boxes of blooms, “Goon, lad!” he had said to Cyril. He had paused, and was looking through the brief avenue of gloom to the brightness beyond. Cyril was about to question this new vagary, when the thought of a peculiar poss bility made him catch his breath and do as bidden. He knocked at the barred back door, and was admitted to Rosine’s radiant presence. And mean- while his uncle went into the court yard. The little old lady standing by the banana tree looked up at the sound of the step on the stones. “Magnolia I" he cried. Miss Magnolia gazed at him in a -dazed, half frightened kind of way. Did ghosts ever appear in the daytime? Stouter than he whom she had known, and with hair grown gray. But the same. Around her, in a fantastic dance, the broken fountain, the long leaved banana tree and the giant oleanders went whirling. She didn’t faint, but she came nearer to it than she ever had come in her life, “Did you think I had deserted you, Magnolia? When I left you to go north on business I helieved in you as I've never believed in any one since. And while away I heard and read that you bad married that young Wilde I used to be so jealous of. So I went to Europe. And I stayed there.” “But Clayton Wilde married Made- fins, I always told you he came to see er,’ “Yes, I know that—now. I was a fool to have been so easily convinced of your falsity. You haven't changed a bit. I knew you the moment I saw you,” - Miss Magnolia smiled delightedly. She did not know he had expected to sec her. “I never forgot the dress you wore the last time I saw vou,” declared Mr. Ellsworth, waxing fervent. “I recog- nized it on your niece last night.” “Last night! Are you—surely you are not the dragon !”’ “What-at?” “The—the dragon!” faltered Miss Magnolia. Mr. Ellsworth looked blank. “That,” murmured the little lady, feeling she was in for it, and might as well make a clean breast, “was what | Rosine and I called Cyril's uncle. And Rosine was going to conquer him.” He burst out laughing. “Well, she did. The boy shall mar- ry Madeline's pretty daughter. And you, Magnolia—you’ll marry me!” wid a... “Oh, dear, no! I'm too old.” “Not a day.” “And ugly—now |” “Loveliest woman in the world to me,” insisted the dragon, loyally. “Bless you, my children!” cried a voice from above. The pair in the coutyard glanced up. On one of the inner balconies stood Rosine and Cyril. “Vanish, you scamps!” roared the dragon. “I shan’t allow you to marry a south- era girl, sir!” shouted back Cyril, as he and Rosine beat a brisk retreat. Laughing and breathless they faced each other in the old drawing room. “Everything is lovely, sweetheart!” cried Cyril, in an ecstasy. Relief for the Farmer, So much is being said through the press and otherwise of the depressed con- dition of agriculture and its causes that one can scarcely take up a paper with- out finding something on the subject ; but itis nearly always the same wail with a partisan reason. It was the same under the Cleveland administration that we find under the Harrison regime. ‘With these partisan papers it is all tar- iff to the exclusion of other non-partisan reasons, so that it is hard to reach the farmer and direct his attention to other causes. I will not dispute for a moment thatan import duty gives the opportu- nity for higher prices for that which is for sale in our country and so does free trade lower the prices; if this were not so the business industries would not con- cern themselves as to what would be the policy of the Government on this ques- tion. The farming industry is alike 1n- terested because of fluctuations. If our Government puts woolen manufactures on the free list prices will go down, as these goods can be bought cheaper in foreign markets ; just so if wool is put on the free list it will be lower in price, as it can be bought cheaper abroad. But the Government needs revenues, There is now over $160,000,000 collect- ed on import duties. If we abolish these duties then we must collect this amount by a direct internal revenue tax the same as we now do upon the tobacco growers. There are good people on both sides of this ques- tion, and we will have tariff and free trade discussion for the next hundred years; but in all justice, what is done for other industries should be done for farmers, and I sincerely believe will be done if they unitedly ask and use their influence as other classes do, But let us look beyond th tariff and see what else can be done to better the condition of the farmer. Recently in company with a number of gentlemen of public influence the conversation turned upon this subject, and I was asked to outline what in my judgment would relieve and better the present condition of the agricultural class, as IT had no doubt given the sub- ject much thought and from my posi- tion must be familiar with the condi- tion and feelings of farmers. 1. Isaid in reply(and what I believe to be true)that the present depressed condition of agriculture is not owing to any one cause—nor would any one course help them out—but a c¢qombina- tion of causes and circumstances. I said revise the tax laws of our State as proposed by the State Grange and you will save upwards of $5,000,000 to the farmers of Pennsylvania annually and over $9,000,000 to all real estate owners in town and country. Distribute these $5,000,000 annually among farmers and it will help them to the extent of their school tax each. 2. Prevent the wholesale importa- tion of diseased meats and adulterated lards from the corn bins and slaughter houses of the West and require all cattle shipped from without the State to be in- spected on hoof beforeslaugthering here, and let the State in every way encour- age the growing and feeding of cattle on small farms by removing all taxes and other burdens, so as to enable small farmers to supply the local markets. If you cannot prevent the importation of “embalmed meat’’ put a high license on the parties selling it. This is a contest of our mh people with a great cattle syn- dicate West that robs the farmer there to uadersell our farmers here in the wholesale market, while the retail prices remain the same to the consumer. 3. Make the coinage of silver free, then the people that get it coined will be required to take it the same as gold. This would advance the price of silver to the gold standard in the markets of the world, and place our export agricul- tural products on an equality with those of other countries. Asit is now, gold being the standard of value, making exchanges with foreign countries com- pels the sale of our products in competi- tion with the silver standard nations of the world, thus placing Russian and In- dia wheat into European markets lower than we can, England making over 33 cents per bushel in making herexchange with India as the difference between gold and silver. Before silver was de- monetized, from 1792 to 1873, the val- ues were almost uniformly alike. Dur- ing the war silver was even a trifle higher. 4, Let Congress fix the volume of currency per capita. In 1865 we had $56 per capita., in 1839 we had only $17. Perhaps $56 per capita was more than the best interests of the country re- quired ; but $17 per capita, which is worse, is as much too low (Iam now speaking from a farmer’s standpoint. The best times the farmers ever had an when they made the most money was when we had $56 currency per capita, and I am sure other industries were the most prosperous, as everybody consumed more by living better. Let Congress fix the volume at not less than $40 per capita, and set the mines anl mints to work and the farmers will take the money and pay their mortgages by the increused price they will realize for their progues and keep the mills at work by uying farm machinery, cotton, wool- en and silk fabrics ; should there not be enough gold and silver to raise the vol- ume of currency to $40 per capita, re- fund interest bearing bonds for non-in- terest bearing demand notes. To get them out let the Government loan them at one per cent. to the farmer on mort- gaged security, the same as it now loans bank currency to national banks. The farmers can stand Senator Stanford’s idea. They had better make him Secre- tary of the Treasury and the farmers Sou DL pass his bill. Don’t be afraid that we can’t get the money out. 5. Put the tariff down on what the farmer buys and put it up on what he raises (be selfish enough for self-preserva- tion),that will make our wool, our hides, our beans, our potatoes, our barley higher, and put the duty up so high on the beer that it can’t come here; we don’t need foreign beer. ’ Now I have outlined to you far- mers, as I did to those public gentlemen, what would help farmers. I did not take into consideration how it would affect political parties, ‘Well, parties are after all what we make them. If farmers have clean cut ideas on public questions and go into their political conventions and offer their resolutions they will go into the party platform and commit the party ; then put men in nomination that will | carry out your ideas. You have compe- tent farmers enough to send to the Leg- islature and to Congress to secure what legislation you need. Don’t be afraid of the man in your community that has built up the Grange; being true to the the Grange he will be true to your interests, no matter how often you elect him if he is the man to serve you best. Cities and corporations keep men that serve them best in the Legislature and in Congress a lifetime. Patrons must stand united in the in- terests of their class if they wish to bring about the same honorsand remu- nerations that other classes acquire through associated efforts. To be suc- cesssul we must carry out our motto, “In essentials, unity, and in non-essen- tials, liberty.” Therefore, for the sake of unity, we must give up detailed dif- ferences so as to bring about general re- sults in the interests of the agricultural people. Fraternally, LroNARD RHONE. A Square Deal for Everybody. To enable home and land-seekers to visit the farming sections of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Mon- tana, the Great Northern Railway Line will sell excursion tickets, with stop over privileges, good for thirty days, at One Fare for the Round trip, on April 22d, May 20th, September 20th, and Octo- ber 14th, from St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth and West Superior. This will enable purchasers to see the famous Park Region of Minnesota, the wonderful Red Valley, Devil's Lake, the Turtle Mountain, and the Mouse River Regions of North Dakota; the rich valleys of the Big Sioux and James in South Dakota, and the vast fertile districts watered by the Missouri, Milk, Teton and Marias Rivers, in the great Reservation of Montana; no land grant restrictions or extra costs there in secur- ing homesteads. The Great Northein Railway runs three lines through the Red River Valley, is the only line to the Turtle Mountains, has three lines in South Dakota. and runs the only solid through trains of Palace, Dinning and Sleeping Cars, Modern Day Coaches and Free Colonist Sleepers to Fergus Falls, Moorhead, Fargo, Grand Forks, Crook- stone, Devil’s Lake, Minot, Glasgow, Chinook, Benton, Great Falls, Helena, and Butte, Montana. It is the only railway in the west owning and operat- Ing its entire superior equipment, and with solid roadway, 75-pound steel track, insures satety, comfort and speed. Your home agent can sell you excur- sion tickets to over 500 points on the Great Northern Railway Line. Maps, guide books or information concerning travel or settlement along this line, cheerfully furnished by any agent of the Company, or F. I. Whitney, Gen. Pass. Syne Agent, G. N. R’y, St. Paul, inn. Human Happiness. It is Secured When Physical and Mental Labor are Judiciously. Mingled. Work, either of the muscles or the brain, is one of the condition ¢f human happiness. Without it there can be no wholesome enjoyment. The idle man either seeks a substitute for the healthy excitements of labor in vicious indul- gence, or degenerates into a being only a few degrees above the lower animals. The truest life—that most accordant with our nature—is one in which phys- ical and mental labor are judiciously mingled, alternating with such recrea- tion as tends to refresh and renovate both. Neither constant bodily toil nor incessant study is advisable. When the muscles are tired give them a recess and do a little head-work. When both head and hand are weary, try amuse- ment—light reading of a wholesome kind, a romp with your children, if you have any, a social evening with a friend—any thing, in fact, that may properly be termed innocent relaxation. This is rational life. TItis a sort of life that may be warranted to wear well, and it will not be clouded with fits of the blues He who lives it will be younger in feeling at three score than the man whose career has been a gallop after ex- citement, at thirty-five. Ifyou belong to the working world, and eat your bread in the sweat of your brow, do not fancy that you have. there- fore, no opportunity to enrich your mind. Labor, thank Heaven, is not so ill-paid in this country that the toiler can not afford to throw down his tools. now and then, and cultivate his intellect. Two-thirds, at least of our distinguished men have been farm laborers and handicraftsmen. Very few of them were “college bred.”” Our com. mon schools impart all the instruction necessary to enable their pupils, in after life, to educate themselves thoroughly in the higher brancher of knowledge. ‘With the foundation thus laid, what is there that a persevering and ambitious American can not teach himself ? : Nothing, we believe, that the human | mind is capable of mastering. Let it | never be forgotten that our greatest statesmen, discoverers, invertors, schol- ars and artists have sprung from the ranks of labor, not from the silk-stock- ing cl asses. ——Mrs. Wickwire—¢Of course I have my faults and failings, but you should be the last man to find them out.” Mr. Wickwire—"“Well, I sup- pose I am but itis too late for the knowl- edge to be of any use to me.” Farm Slaves oi he United States. Senator Voorhees Tells How the Tar- iff Doesn't Prdect the Farmers, and How Their Lands are Slip- ping Away. Senator Vorhees some time since in the United States Senate, delivered an address on the tariff, which should be placed in the hands of every farmer in the Union. The following are among the strongest position taken by the In- diana sage : “Experience is teaching a harsh and severe lesson to tke American farmer, and the time will come, at no distant day, when he will look upon the propo- sition to tax him, his wife, and his zhil- dren, for the protection and benefit of other people besides himself and his own, as he would look upon a law of Congress establishing the arny worm, the weevil, and the midga in 1is wheat, legalizing locusts, lice, grasshoppers, and infecting his cattle with nurrain and his hogs with cholera. It is not possible that the fraudulent and monstrous policy of taxing the farmer into poverty in order to make another class of people nabobs and millionaires csn much longer de- lude and mislead any one fit to manage his own affairs and have the care of a family. From year to yeer the farmer has been assured, and in certain quarters he is now again being reminded, that protec- tion is extended to the products of his labor against the competition of similar products imported from abroad for sale in our markets. The protectionist who advances this argument is either himself a fool or an audacious knave, who as- sumes that the farmers to whom it is ad- dressed are fools. Do the home markets of the United States invite the great staples of agriculture from foreign lands ? Does the price’of wheat, of corn, of cotton, of pork and of beet in our markets excite the cupidity of the grain growers and stock raisers of Hurope, Canada, Mexico, or South America ? ‘What need is there of a tariff duty to keep the products of foreign farms away from our shores,” when’ in point of fact prices in American markets for agricul- tural productions pay the American farmer but little more than neighbor- hood transportation, and nothing at all for his labor. The farmers of the United States sell abroad and feed the world. Every pre- tense of protection for their home mar- kets is a fraud ; every duty laid on such articles as wheat, corn, cattle, horses, eggs, poultry, and other like produc- tions of farm life and farm labor is a cheat and a sham, and is so intended. Under cover of a deceptive and pretend- ed protection, which affords ro protec- tion at all for anything he has to sell, the farmer has been for years, and is now compelled to pay taxes on the necessaries of life after the following average rates: On woolon goods, an average of 70 per cent. ; knit cotton goods, 89 per cent. ; cotton clotking, 85 per cent. ; cotton bagging, 44 per cent.; cotton ties, 35 per cent.; tin plate for roofing, milk pails and kitchen utensils, 40 per cent. ; earthen and stone ware, 58 per cent.; chains, 44 per cent.; window glass, 78 per cent.; and sugar, 70 per cent. To convince the farmer that he is pro- tected and benefited by such an abomin- able system as this, would seem to a ra- tional mind utterly impossible, and yet in some instamces it has been done. I recall one instance at this time, and I will venture to describe it to senators as I have once before done to a popular as- semblage. 1888, in one of our beautiful Indiana towns, and in a very fertile belt of coun- try, I witnessed a republican proces- sion. Tt bad in it many industrial ex- hibits, claiming to show the power and the glory of a tariff laid for protection. As I scanned the long line of moving vehicles I caught sicht of one that rivet- ed my gaze and gave me much food for reflection on the power to mislead and deceive which was abroad in the land. It was a wagon driven by a farmer and loaded with the productions of his field. There were specimens of corn, wheat, rye, hay and oats; of potatoes, pumkins, watermelons and canteloupes; of cab- bages, beans, onions, pie-plant and to- matoes ; of apples, peaches, pears, grapes and cultivated blackberries, and on each side of the wagon in hig staring letters I read the following: “These are the fruits of protection.” My first thought was that such a man would certainly become the victim of a bunco steerer or a confidence swindler before he got out town, but in a moment I reflected that he had been listening to the eloquent ad- vocates of the monopolists, and had been persuaded that tariff protection had done more for him than the sun, the dews, the rains and a rich and boun- tiful soil, with all his own labor thrown in. The stupendous extent of this unfor- tunate man’s delusion can only be esti- mated when you turn away from a poli- tical parade and look at him while at work on his farm. You there behold the poor, blind dupe breaking up his grounds, preparing them for crops, and then planting and drilling in his coin, wheat, oats and rye with plows, harrows, planters and dmlls on which he has paid out of his own pocket from 75 to 100 per cent., nearly double their real value, as a tariff tax laid for the protec- tion and enrichment of the manufactur- ers of such implements in this country. You behold this enslaved end deluded victirn of the money power cutting his grain and hay with a reaper and a mower for which he has paid twice what they would cost him but for a pro- tective tariff. He used a double priced hoe in his cabbage patch and a double-priced pitchfork at his hay mow and wheat stack, in order to enable the manufac- turers of hoes and pitehforks to avoid for- eign competition and thus get rich. He then puts a set of harness on his horses, taxed from the bridle bits to the breech bands and on every buckle, link and chain, hitches them to a wagon taxed 85 per cent., at least, on every bolt, spike and tire that holds it together, and then with « suit of clothes on his back taxed at about the same rate, and with his wife by his side, also covered with rai- ment at two fold protected prices, he starts to town shouting for the Republi- can party, and the side-boards of his wagon proclaiming that the productions of his farm are the fruits of protection. The fruits of protection! They were During the campaign of | planted, nurtured and gathered in spite of protection, and aha double expense because of such a ¢urse in the statute books of the government. Itis a noto- rious and self-evident truth that the tar- iff; as it now stands, increases the far- mer’s expense account from 35 to over 100 per cent, on every implement of hus- bandry with which he toils from ore: year’s end to another. The Mills bill attempted to place all fibers, such as hemp, jute, flax goods, and manilla, used in the manufacture of: twine on the free list. That just and moderate bill was defeated by ghe mon- opolists ; and now, with a tariff of $20 a ton and 40 per cent. advalorem on twine, and also a twine trust, creating a close monopoly in its manufacture, thousands of farmers during last summer’s harvest were not able to pay the increased price of binder’s twine. They have been forced back to the machinery of their nak- ed hand, and with bloody fingers and thumbs they have reflected upon the price of binding twine, enbanced to 18 cents a pound by tariff and by trust. It is true that party prejudices are stub- born and hard to remove, but surely it is not too much to suppose that between these same sore fingers and thumbs a Republican ticket will not be found this year. The very house in which the farm- er lives is a monument to unnecessary, unjust, vicious, wickel and criminal taxation. His barn is the same. There is not an inch of lumber, or a shingle nail, or a pane of glass in either of them which has net cost the farm- er an average tax of more than 50 per cent., paid, not to the government, but as a naked subsidy to the manu- facturers of lumber, iron and glass. His table, spread with his dishes and with his daily food, is an altar reared to taxation, on which he sacrifices three times a day to the unholy god of mam- mon now controlling the councils of the nation and devouring the enforced offerings of unpaid labor. His bed is not a place of untroubled rest; it is lined and stitched and quilted with dishonest taxes, which he is compelled to pay before he can draw his blanket over his weary frame and sinks down to sleep. But in discussing the effects of .a high protective tariff on the farmer, and on his struggles for a prosperous home, there remains for consideration another page of startling statistics and agricul- tural disasters. In high-sounding phrase and with the swelling note of a bugle proclaiming victory in advance, the ad- vocates, the orators and the essayists of protection are constantly boasting of the growth and development of the country, and citing its wealth as an evidence that their policy is sound and just. But is it true that there has been a healthy development of the true in- terests of the American people, and an honest, beneficial accumulation of wealth in this country under our pres- ent financial policy, and more especially by virtue of the present system of tariff taxation ? The prosperity of huge corporations, the accumulation of vast fortunes in the hands of the few, the swollen bank accounts of trusts, syndi- cates and protected manufacturers, are no more evidences of a people’s whole- some growth and greatness than were the riches of Dives when he refused a crumb of bread to Lazarus, nor the ill- gotten possessions of the Scribes and Pharisees who devoured widow's houses and made long prayers in the days of our blessed Savior on earth. The only genuine strength, progress and glory of a nation must arise from the increas- ing value of its agricultural lands, and inthe yearly incomes and substantial gains of its laboring people, thereby, as a consequence, securing their content- ment and their happiness.” Wild Fowl in Norton Sound, From the Sitka Alaskan. Until the acquisition of Alaska by the United States it was a matter of wonder where certain wild fowl went when they migrated from temperate climes on the approach of summer, as well as snow birds and othersmall spe- cies of the feathered tribe. It was after- ward found that their habitat in sum- mer was the waters of Alaska, the Yu- kon River, and the lakes of that hyper- borean region. A reporter recently in- terviewed C. J. Green, of Norton Sound, western Alaska, and he confirms the statement of Dall and others. “People wonder where the wild fowl come from,” said he. ‘They see the sandhill crane, wild goose, heron, and other wild fowl every spring and fall pursue their unwearied way,but,like the wind, they do not know whence they come or whither they go. Up on Galo- vin Bay, on the north shore of Norton: Sound, is the breeding place of these- fowl. All the birds in creation, seem-- ingly, go to that country to breed.. Geese, ducks, swans, and thousands up-- on thousands of sand hill cranes are- swarming there all the time. They lay their eggs in the bine-stem grass in the: lowlands, and if you go up the river a little way from the bay the noise of the wild fowl is almost deafening. Mymniads of swallows and robins are there, as well as millions of magnificent grouse, wearing red combs and feathered moccasins. The grouse turns white as snow in win- ter. You can kill dozens of juiey teal ducks or grouse as fat as butter balls in a few moments. The wild fowl and bears live on salmon berries, with which all the hills are literally covered.” A Possible Chance for the Corn Burners. Philadelphia Record. The brewers of England are using large quantities of American corn as a substitute for barley in making beer. The consequent falling off in the de- mand for barley has brought about a reduction in price. Even the prohibi- tionist farmers of Kansas, who are burn- ing their corn for fuel, will not be sorry to profit indirectly in supplying the hated British free traders with an indif- ferent quality of beer. Since the constitutionality of the electrical execution Jaw, Kemmler, the murderer, has been resentenced to die by electricity at Auburn prison within the week beginning April 28. Joseph Wood, a colored laborer cinvicted of’ murder, has been sentenced in the New York General Sessions Court to die by electricity in the week May 12. beginning: