RECIPROCITY A SHAM. H rrrlrii'lnn Mountain IIIrIii It Af rnm pllnlxn rut M Mulct IIIIU. In hi bright and somewhat effect) vo campaign speech In Springfield, 111., Whitelaw lieid enrno finally to consider Republican reciprocity ntil inquired dramatically: "Ask tho people if they want to throw awny policy that in tho first few month brings such results because the Democratic convention chooses to cnll it a sham." Reciprocity is not denounced .is n sham because of the favorable trade results which it produces, and of these there nre nndonbtetlly tome, bnt it is denounced as a sham beennso It pretends to cstali lish reciprocal trade relations for tiio purpose of extending the commerce of tho nation and furnishing a market for its surplus agricultural products, when, as a matter of fact, it has lieen so de ligned as to apply only to the petty na tions of Bonth America who make little or no demand for our agricultural prod nrts, while the great nations of the Old World, which would readily become ont customers if MoKinleyism did not for bid, Bre compelled to seek elsewhere as fur as possible to exchange their gools for the breadstuff and provisions which America can so readily supply. The pretensions of reciprocity are mountain high; its accomplishment resemble the wole hill. If there be any virtue in tho iilea of reciprocity it is the virtue which tariff reformer preach in their agitation for lower tariffs, so that trade may be freed from the shackles which now bind it to tho detriment of the importing n well a exporting countries. Reciprocity as now in voguo is a sham because it does not apply to countries with which it would be effective to stim ulate trade. Reciprocity is a sham because it is rkillfully designed as chiefly to promote the sale of tariff enriched manufacturers. Reciprocity is a sham leeanso it is the sugar coating around the protection pill which tho fanners of the west are asked to swallow.. . . . . . Reciprocity is a sham because while designed to leneflt the manufacturers nf tho east, who seek markets in South America, it pretends to be designed for tho fannersof the west, who really need, however, reciprocity or tariff reform that Will enable them to sell their provis ions and breadstuffs in the great mark ets of the manufacturing centers of the Old World. Omaha World-Herald. WISCONSIN SAFELY DEMOCRATIC. Siouuer Will lie Whipped Agulu and Prck Will Remain Governor. Until two ycurs ago Wisconsin was classed us almott invincibly Republican. The magnificent Democratic victory of 1890 placed the state in tho doubtful column.' It may now be removed from that column and classed as safely Demo cratic. :..! . . .. : By placing John C. Spoouer at the head of their state ticket, Wisconsin Re publicans 'have shut themselves ont from any hope of reprieve from the sen tence of popular condemnation passed opoa them- two years ago. They have enrolled themselves Under the banner of a professional lobbyist, corporation agent and itching politician. Overwhelmingly repudiated by his state two years ago, when a Democratic legislature was elected to choose his successor in the United States senate, John C. Spooner is ntted only to lead his party in Wis consin to fresh defeat and humiliation as its gubernatorial candidate. The man of whom his own party organ, the Milwaukee Sentinel, confessed that he had been known "for many years past as the chief of the corporation lobbyist in Madison," , is not the .Moses to lead Wisconsin Republicans ont of the wil derness. On the tariff and the school issues Hoard and Spooner were defeated in Wisconsin two years ago, and on these same Issues Harrison and Spooner will be defeated In Wisconsin next Novem ber. The national Democracy is now enlisted with Wisconsin Democrats in the battle for "parental rights and rights of conscience in tho education of children," in behalf of which, as an "es sential to civil and religious liberty," the Chicago platform makes a ringing declaration. . ? .;,. Governor Peck will be his own suc cessor, and the electoral vote of Wis consin will be cast for the Democ ratio presidential ticket St. Paul Globe. . Uemucratlo Tariff Law. We denounce Republican protection as a fraud, taxing the labor of tho great majority of the people for the benefit of the few. We declare it to be a funda mental principle of tho Democratic party that the federal government has no pow er to impose and collect tariff duties ex cept for tho purposes of revenue only, and we demand that the collection of such taxes shall ba limited to the neces sities of tho government when honestly and economically adminibtered. Na tional Democratic Platform. Another issue of great moment in tho pending contest is the force bill. Tho magnitude of this issue cannot bo over stated. It may meau tho control of tho election of representatives in congress by the bayonet. Tho Republican party, by its acta in the Fifty-first congress and by its platform in its late national con vention, stands pledged to the passage f tho force bill. Adlai E. Stevenson. ire M ill Hook Them. Many of the Republican subsidized press gleefully state that Mr. Cleveland's usual fishing excursions have boeu in turrnpted. Not a bit of it; the popular candiduto for tho presidency is fishing for votes, and his bait will hook them with bonds of steel. Syracuse News. A Bshoolboy's Speech. It is reported that Governor McKinley will tako a few weeks off and prepare a. ew tariff speech. It is not iu the ma jor. His 6peech was bom in a crossroad school house mid will last him until he flies or is placed on the retired list, De troit free Press. ; nmcco. I'oj'iil.ition of Cliicnjo III. jn j)c.. Men- 1840.4479 iSso-ayy6H86o. o.jjco .,.s;o ,op0os lJW(J 49,si6.g) -i20M,f,9 The census since taken or St.ln.oi purposes twin the rin al most 1500 000. New York was quite 1 "wuiuiionary times ti6 years aKo. It will )e but avervfew ears until tho latter place will be se :on.l in sue on this continent.whereas 11 about 50 years Chicago is about Sew York's size. What is known as -niilowood on the-lu'll. em.il tlOn Of the Lit V. and tsMrli. r the Worlds lair grounds, being about 00 it. aDove the level of Lake Michi gan is a favorite locality. The riv is growing more rapidly in that diiec tion now than elsewhere. Property in this portion of the city has doubled in value in the past year and in manv cases thribled. Money is often in vested in extreme western tovns, where everything is boomed far be yond its value. Monev one of these uncertain places often ami in laci in most cases, prove to be a dead investment and irenpraiiu th town goes down entirely and the in- vcait-r is out me wnoic amount invest ed. Not so with Chicago invest ment if judiciously made. It has had a growth unequalled by any city on this continent, and is coino riM along. Englewood on-the-hill offers superior au vantages to investors. It is Ih'kIi land, bcine bv actual survcv 10 feet above the level of the lake and 11 feet liicher than Halted street Double tracked street car line on 6nth street run through this section and a great business street "Western Avenue" me longest sucet in Chicago, (which is 15 miles in length) run through r.ngiewoou-on-uie-iiill. lake water mains run to this sub division. Mil ton Runyon of Rohrsburg, Pa., spent several weeks lookinir Chicago over and having looked the city generally over, decided to invest in the south west portion of the citv. about due west from the World's Fair grounds on what is known as hnglewood on-the-hill, as more desirable than any locali ty elsewhere. Mr. Runyon has asso ciated himself with two of Chicago's Real Estate Firms : one beintr the old- i ' o ' est in Chicago. Thousands have made Jortunes by investing 111 Chi cirri real est.'itf Wliil nr. r.ne v-r lost by so doing, it is centrally located tor the trade ot the United States. and is not built or located on a hill or over a morass, but on one vast exten sive plain of level land. Lots in the city limits and in this favorite locality as low as $375.00 per lot, until Nov. 1st, 1892, when an advance will be made. 1 State of Ohio, Citv of Toledo,) Lucas County. i $8 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. T. Cheney fc Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use oi Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK. T. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of De cember, A. D. 1886. f A. W. GLEASON. : 1 f Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. T. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O 8"Sold by Druggists, 75c 8-26-4t. The Great Review at Washington- HALF RATES BY THE PENNSYLVANIA . RAILROAD. T"Ii. nirinnal pnramnment of the Grand Army of the Republic will be held at Washington September 19th to 24th, 1892. lne occasion win un lr.i.hidtv attract the lareest number of veterans ever assembled on a simi lar occasion, and the review will be the most imposing demonstration ever witnnessed in this country since uie Msinric review of the army in i86;. It will be the event of a lifetime, as never again will there be so large a gathering of old soldiers in any city of the land. In order that every one may wit ness the grand spectacle the Pennsyl vania Railroad Company will sell . ex cursion tickets to Washington from all principal ticket stations on its system, September 13th to 20th, valid for re turn until October 1 1 oth, ,1892, jit a single fare for tlm round trip. Am ple facilities will be afforded for the prompt movement of all visitors. I was troubled with catarrh for seven years previous to commencing the use of Ely's Cream Halm. It has done for me what other so-called cures have failed to do cured me. The effect of the Balm seemed magical Clarence L. Huff, Iliddeford, Me. After trying many remedies for ca tarrh during past twelve years, 1 tried Ely's Cream Halm with complete suc cess. It is over one year since I stop ped using it and have had no return of catarrh. I recommend it to all my friends.--Milton T. Palm, Reading, Pa. 9 ! Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. It is not 11natur.1l that the people of New York and New Jersey should regard with dislike tlu Rcad.iu Railroad consolidation, or that tliev should welcome with exultation the injunction granted by Chancellor McGill, of New Icrsev. utxm lease of the Central Railroad of New Jersey. New York City has long had the great advantage of active railroad competition, toge her with the larger advantage of free use of the Erie Canal. Philadelphia, meantime, has been practically in bondage to a sin gle railroa.l company which possessed a monopoly under which the com merce of the city could make no headway. Itoth New York and New Jersey for many years have been per mitted to buy coal taken from the mines of Pennsylvania at less price than were required of Philadelphians, who live nearer to the coal mines and who have a riuht to enjoy the benefit of their position. That New York City and the State of New Jersey should be averse to surrendering the advantages they have had in these particulars cannot be complained of, but it is equally unreasonable to complain that Philadelphians should try to obtain justice for themselves, and should rejoice when the instru ment for obtaining it had been fash ioned. It is safe to sav that no event that has happened for many years gave more solid satisfaction to the com mercial interests of this city than the extension of the power and the area of control of the Reading Railroad Company. That great enterprise presented itself to Philadelphia, not as a combination for purpose of op pression and extortion, but as a pro ject which would at once relieve the business of the city from the tryanny and hurt inflicted by the great cor poration wr.ich hitherto had held Philadelphia trade at its mercy. This relief, in fact came at once. It appeared in the substitution, by rail way officials, of courteous solicitation of freights, for insolent indifference in the quick settlement ot long de layed claims: in the offer of increased facilities for shipment and immediate enlargement of certain kinds of com mercial operations. No Philadelphia man "not directly interested in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company would be willing to return to the former condition of things. The practically universal feeling is that the city has had a great deliverance, and that now, for the first time for many years, through the instrumentality of the Reading combination, the commercial forces of Philadelphia have a positive assurance that they may operate un der conditions of fair play. Thus Fhiladtlphians do not wel come Chancellor McGill's decision and they do regard with feelings of satisfaction the assurance that .the power to break a lease does not in volve the ability to forbid co-op erative action, which will attain all the purpose for which the lease was arranged. They, are not indifferent that the price of coal shall go up or go down; but they are much more deeply interested in having made permanent a system which will sup ply them with fuel at prices lower than those that must be naid bv con sumers at a greater distance from the coal mines. The Philadelphia manufacturer cannot be expected to mourn because his competitor in Jersey City or New York must pay more for fuel than he pays. Nor can any citizen of this State find reason for regretting that provisions have been made for stopping the practice of mining Pennsylvania coal at a loss. There is no reason, in morals or in revealed religion why we shouid disembowel the State of its mineral treasures for the purpose of supplying to citizens of New York the best fuel in the world for less than its real value. These are some of the con- Fiderations which reconcile the peo pic hereabouts to a consolidation of railroads that has appeared very grievous to some other persons. The I'hiladeljmia Manufacturer, Sept. 3. They Are Largo Size. From tlie Detroit Free l'ross. Snoonper. "When a Texas girl cries she weeps more copiously than a person in any other State. Swayback. "Nonsense," Snoonper. "Well, she sheds Texas steers. Would vou rather bttv lamrv. chimneys, one a week the year round, or one that lasts till some accident breaks it ? Common glass may break or not the minute you light your lamp; if not, the first draft may break it ; if not, it may break from a mere whim. Tough glass chimneys, Mac beth s " roarl-top or "l'earl irlass," almost never break from heat, not one in a hundred. Where can you get it? and what does it cost? Your dealer knows where and how much. It costs more than common glass; and may be, he thinks tough glass isn't good for his business. ritUburifh.ro. Gro. i. Macbeth CO., Children Cryfoi Pitcher's Castor, a. Tf 1 n A'FlOfnl-O 'i'o r.void CI,cstnut Street 1L lp Cl ifJl)OLcllVU to get low prices for Cloth- VIZZnzI We do not ask "Chestnut Street high prices for our goods. Wc give you better clothes and lower prices thin is asked in the stores on other streets. Vou need not take our word for it. A ten minute look will cjnvinc-'j you that wc are right Browning, King & Co. Lead nj American CIoiIiLts, 910 and 912 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. Waurkx A. Rlksi. Opposite lost Office. I f IV.BR 1 SLJ) 1 PIUS, -a Pick iieailftchowa toller alt th troubles tool, iiont to liillou ttof tho tjntoni, noh lM riiilnw", Nauw. Drowslnowi, Dlutrow ft catl.iR. tlu la th Bldo, ko. Wbila tlilr moat jetiwSir.Uo nuccoM baB neon rhown Ui cudsg , s XTeiAMlis. yet CkiW Llttlo Ltrer Pint rO nunlljr valuablo In Constitution, enr'ngnnd pi cntlug tblBnnn5'ln(?coiaplntnt,wlillntli''yr.l liTor nd icgulute tlio bowela. vuu U Utc? oul J Acl'thoywotildbohnotpricnto!totlioewli Bufiur from tUiBdwtnmlng complaint; lmt forft tatoly their (-oo(lnop(lf''fln',ton(lhTfl.Ri'ttho Wiiocucetry tueinwlll find tueaotiul? jillv iiu r.' lulnpoi .any w:,vi i lia,t ll:.?y r,-i!l :i -t l.i bil ling todo without them. But after allilck hoa.1 'is the bane of no many Ure that hnre in wher vouiako our great boast. OurpilUeureitwMla others do not. . 1 Cartcr-a Little Llvor Pills are vnrf gmall and Tory eay to tako. One or two TH1 inakoa d.w. Xhoy are strictly veueUble aud do not gripe or riir'". but by Uiolr gontle action ploanoall J-no anthem. InrialaatlScente; fWef:ir$l. Bod by dcugbUU every wlwio, or euit by luaiL CARTER WCDICINI CO., New York. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALLPRItS U5 A KT.S1K " (rtvps Instant rel.c-1 uud Is un llilulUDlo ('urnf-nr I'llM. Prlcoftl. IIV DruL'ulxtnornuill. HamnlcH fm. Adlmw"ANAKKSlS" Box S4l,ew7 HOW WJ, M'KiLLip Bro's. Photographers. Only the best work done. Fin est effects in light, and shade; negatives re touched 1 and modeled lor sup erior finish. Copyin 1 or view ing and life size crayons. Over If, . Clark & Son's store. BLOOMSBURG. FIFTY DOLLARS for LIFE SCHOLARSHIP. No ntiipr Hrhnol can do um ' . much f"r Young Men , and Wuumu u ! PALMS BUSINESS . COLLEGE, . 1 4 usi jncstnui fMrcer, llil lUlAlnliin. Vou uuv us K.I. I. W educate tTf nnl HHte yon to a ' GOOD SITUATION. 7 "TV. if you intuit thin pitpi-r. SPRING TONIC l'l-oven II oi-il. with tlit) Ili'.st, bottle It In Pnpulnr a Tonlr, I'opiiliir uh a HIim.i1 I'urlller, Popular to tukn as It Is UK'if(':iblci to ull ; Popu lar tor I'lillilivu, us It m is ivudlly and liuivcs no bail ivsultH ; Popular In prli'fx, as It, Is wil li I11 Mioivurli of all. Manners' Doublo Kxtniet warsannrllla tsforsalo by all Drnlsts. only nui' u uui IK. r Ltd dm t .- 5e And Blood Purifier SI I II will be paid for a recipe enabling us to make Wolff's Acme Black ing at such a price that the retailer can profitably sell it at 10c. a bottle. At present the retail price is 20c. This effer I open Mill January tit., ttgj. For particular! addrcsa the undersigned. Acmr Blacking is made of pure alcohol, ol'icr liquid dressing ore made of water. Water costt nothing. Alcohol Is dear. Who can show ut how to make it without alcohol so that we can make Acmb Blacking as cheap cs water dressing, or put it ill fancy pack ages like many of the water dressings, and then charge for the outside appearance ln s'.cad of charging for the contents of the bottle? VTOLFP & RANDOLPH. Philadelphia. PIK-RON ij the name of a paint of which a 25c. bottle U enough to make six scratched and dulled cherry chairs look like newly finished ma. hnnnip. Tt will do many other remarkable things which no other paint can do. All retailers sell it. Iht Chalnol evidence in now complete that DR. HEBRA'S VIOLA CREAM is the only nroDanitlon that coal- tiwlv dtrt'H all that ia elalmtd for It. It remove Vrpoklpn. I,lvoriMolcs. lllack hcal. PimtilA!.. Tan. and all Imperfeetlone of the akfu, wlthoat Injnnr. A few applications will render a rough, or red nklii suit, smooth Hnd white. It Is not a cosmetic tocovcrdcfoi'M, but neuro, and (,'uarantoed to Klve MtlKfaction. PrioefiUc. AtdruKgiHtsj or scut by mull, Ecsd for tcatlmoniuls, i. C. BITTNtH t CO., TOLEDO, CHIO. READ THIS. 3 DOLLARS OFF. When you want a suit of clothes, a new hat, gloves, neckwear and $e?its' fun 'Ashing goods, you should looh for the ylace where you can get iust what yon want, in the latest styles, at reas onable prices. A few dol lars off is always an ob ject, and lam now mak ing up spring and sum mer suits from a large assortment op goods, lo suit all customers, at prices as low as are con sistent with good worh. Good Jits guaranteed. The latest Hung in straw h als are now here. Light as a feather. A beauti ful line of neckwear, and summer shirts- Ac curate measures taken for silk hats. Next door to First Na tional Bank, liei'tsch, Tlie Tailor, Bloomsburg, Pa. (iHATEl'l'L J f'OMFOKTINU, S3-J ELTS'S COCOA BREAKFAST.) "Hy a t i.irouKh knowledge ot the nut urnl laws wlili'h novum 1 Ho operations of dlessllon and niiirlt lun, and by a careful application of li.'i lint) properties of woll-selcetetl I ocoa. .Mr. Kpps has provided our breakfast tables with a dell. CttU-ly flavored bevurini which may save u many heavy duel ors' bills, ii Is by tlio Jndlcli.ua UKBOf such nrllelesof diet. that, a constitution may be. gradually built up until strong' enough to resist, every tendency to disease. TlunUiedn of subtle maladies are float llni; around us ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. Ve may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping cur. selves well fortlried with pure blood and a prop, erly nourished frame." Civil crcli Uaiotte, Made simply with bolliut; water or milk. Sold only In halt pound tins, by (frocers, labelled thus t MNKHKPPS & CO., Homoeopathic ClieiuUts, London, KiiyluiKL THE TWO SIDES. Alnerlrao niani.fHcti.rrrs 8cll floods C'I.eupor Abroad Tliiin nt Home. Whoro tlicy nro ul.le to act nntaxpd raw material our untnufacturfrs enn rx-rxn-t gootU lit 11 proiit, Wo have a pood 1 export business in loather imd loather rooxIh, and a connider:i1)le export trade In agricultural implement. In thi lat ter branch homo and foroign trade lints show that our manufacturers givo their foreign customers a heavy discount from their American wholesale prices. This of course they r.ro obliged to do to get tho trade, as foreigners are not obliged by law to pay McKinley prices. When European plows are offered in South America at 40 per cent, under McKinley prices, our exporting manu facturers must cut 41 per cent, or lose the trade. This ia bo plain that it is self evident; yet some manufacturers havo been inconsiderate enongh to deny it. Mr. A. P. Farqnhar, the heod of th" Pennsylvania Agricultural works, i more candid, however. He sells largely both at home and abroad, and he makes no pretense that he tries to keep np Mc Kinley prices when outside the lines of the McKinley tariff. lie declares that he is ready to meet competition on the merits of his goods. "The farmer is being destroyed," ho says. "We are killing the goose that lays the golden eggs; and I honestly be lieve now that it is to the interest of the manufacturers to eliminate the protec tive feature from our tariff laws. Cer tainly if our manufactures are sold much lower abroad we could only need protection to get better prices from our customers at home. We do manufac ture and sell in Canada, South America and Europe many agricultural imple ments and machines, and could we have freo raw material and the commercial advantages which free trade would give us, America would become the great manufacturing emporium of the world, and tho farmer of course would share the prosperity, "since he would have less to pay for everything and get better prices for all ho sold." This is common sens", but so long ns a manufacturer behoves in artificial Mc Kiuley prices and shrinks from com petition on tho merits of hin goods, it is idle to expect him to show common sense. But it is even more idlo for Mc Kinley manufacturers to deny that they sell cheaper abroad than they do at homo, if they sell abroad at all. If they did not, on what grounds would they ask tho American people to go on pay ing McKinley taxes to protect them at homo from the competition they meet as soon as they get beyond the lines of McKinley custom houses. St. Louis Republic. Will H llelieve That Story Again J 1 From Chicago Herald. We see the farmer listening to a de lusive story that fills his mind with vis ions of advantage while his pocket Is berog robbed by the stealthy hand of high protection. Orover Cleveland, July 20. . Proctor's "Hljh" Wat-ea. ' ' Mr. Proctor points with pride to the high wages paid in his Vermont factory, which are the lowest market rate, for, in the event that his workmen kick, he knows perfectly that under our blessed tariff ho can telegraph and in a few weeks fill their places with the pauper marble cutters of Europe, for whose coming our thoughtful tariff makers havo left wide open the gates of Castle Garden. Taxes on all the American workingman usos and plenty, liberal taxes bnt free trade in all foreign pau per labor, savo the Chinaman, have been the making of Redfield Proctor, Andrew Carnegie and 200,000 other tariff pets, who, in the name of American high wages, have absorbed into their pocket books about 70 per cent, of all the wealth of the United States. Goshen (N. Y.) Republican. The Tool of the Monopolists. Republican success this fall would mean Tom Reed's election as speaker of tho Fifty-third congress, and quorums counted against every measure of relief for the people proposed by either the Democracy or the People's party. Reed is tho monopolists' tool, as bus boon proved, and under him 110 measure not sanctioned by the protection bosses would havo tho ghost of a chance of passing in the house. Savannah Kevs. The tariff is tho all important issue of tho campaign upon which wo have now entered. Shall there be a revision t.f our tariff laws, mid as a consequence of such legislation a reduction of taxation, or shall it become the policy of our gov ernment to maintain permanently high protection? Tlie position of the two leading political parties upon that ques tion cannot be misunderstood. Adlai E. Stevenson. Tho Hoot of the Kvll. The root of the evil must be sought in the system which fosters one industry at tlie expense of another, aud which has enabled tho manufacturers to fatten upon the planters. Pcnsncola (Flu.) News. 1 To the toiler the McKinley bill tan J 1 "kept the word of promise to the ear,' bnt broken it to the hope.." Adlai F. fctevenson, -. ...... J