Bloomfield Democrat (Newspaper) - September 7, 1888, Bloomfield, Indiana o d i ii i 25, home to as it lor yc for li il iu iUe lo fit this cm tho as Mie suii una 1v-1 iui 111 liui nuni Opens Ihc Mion if l fSars ill a short and on his laco and which Hood's an at -i u lie 1 sun ill i 1'. ivi V 1 s 1 noti hoanl lod to tlie lhal ail i luU 1! as on part u Hood Ilio First ( f that witli every totake Ja aay look and after a timo tiie more bo had wc rf of kaow ask y. u lo C. I. A t C. W. Fire 1" i for IG years slu disorder and i. when as u M fios 111", tl liy It l to x 1 i cmu p. ail I of I a civil ill my I In it as long as I d j say thai some people h. Mi a lo or they see tilo and can't it. and think uf it for ona Wo told that a high a country .IS if it wero to a is n a and of tho lax as ut tLu ur Lho bo paid liy tue uf lho and be tn 1 of thc 1' o' and it is by c ll it Were not if f. nf tu tlie to U iiiii lio and lao tilo 1 1 L- on tho 111.1 aii uar Ijo Ji cau not ta that tlie duties 1 of ai o iiy tho foi ur aud n man to malte such thoy thi pay any more uro aro ji not did uro thoso look 1. as if It woro j richer by oppressively its ' of tbc complex and that a to make a man rich to of duties upon certain nilt Of as to bet Why is there nn a of To Jal mon from being imp nom aal to Why is a for t hosp and all extensive and worthy if a 1 tuo No oan oven to what tho is true about all of everybody else who is in that kind of business nro tor tho loin for it does solvo thu problem I not iu tho way i I in j if they nere and therefore thoy have to resort to other j to get those wages which tho employers are i w Illing to But while I am on this I of the l it mo thay that the tan if does not tho 1 1. J If it doesn't the I would like of that pay no I why tho or so aro in of it i Do they want in order to the what said Arthuri Ho was In his annual to c- of it the an inconsiderable f. T ill 111. a 1' snie laihe l ( iiM - Demon e practic was the of Ivore waving and Im und iu 1. 1- al to VAN New Court AT Will iu Gromo ami a Now W wero resplendent iu bunt boats in every direction turned lo isii their and Port Huron ano was an to make any was a mass of old and for ail they were Oil local Democratic clubs tharo in white hats and with the of a big procession and tastefully decorated the sceno Will you allow me to ke iny cap on of 0 1,11,11, U 1..3 your into his pocket ami take out h you find there? and that without any reason whatever for doing so. Ain't a anybody rieh And that is precisely the plan folks they tell us that the is to by of i the audacity to say that this tariff Is not by tho of tho articles are if the of taxed do pay I like to who would Do orators pay i; Do the j ay s it if who tao articles that are Cau auy man liat ja to the Ju ' by the 1 of a He looked at it a aiji afraid are some high iu for a Indy sends me this noto to read to A has just and she thinks it is who has lallen th it will be 11.1 d made to re before lie leaves Fort wita Uis speech too my 11 is if you will for a moment you s. o it is ill all tho ( Deputy I in thi Statt in before of the of will E. AT to Shaw A Will law in county or m any court may We Uie i of our and will a of s to real 0.. over S. Calls promptly attended or promptly Ind. ' teil over S. AND side of U. U. on KasI Cavins 111'- All attended t* day or i room for fewl and sale is hereby given to the people of Wright I will be at Jasonville on of pach my term of and at my at my residence on in the lo of Buid and no be only od as provided bv is givon lo tho pef pie of Stock ton thai I will transact the ot said township at my la on any day the Sunday is hereby people of ( that I will be at mv office at my e on of week during my of to t le business of said and no will be only on as by s is Greene that I be at my one mile southeast of Newberry Mondays and Tuesdays ot each week to the of said and no will be only ou those by D MOO is hereby gwc nto the of Grant that 1 transact the Ol said township at my milos south of tho is to col that 1 will transHot tlie of sald township at oa day in the weck to the cf that I will bp at mv office at my Saturday ach iny of to transact tho and no will be transacted only on those by J. lain afraid that north wind do me soma if I went and although I am perfectly to uncover my head before the I don't waut to break down at the of tho of keep it and My this is the first time iu luy life that I have had the honor of in St I have boon invited aud but 1 have never boeti able to accept any invitation before I it a very great privilege to be able to you because I know wh it an and intellig population Michigan and I know that people are taking tho ia tha questions that are the brief time that I shall I shall occupy myself mainly with one of those I shall do so it is that in which so much now being taken and upon so much is being said by by writers and through the public It is not for mo before I proceed to that to of tho president of the United States and his administration than a very few I any who has any regard for tho truth to say that Cleveland has not made a pood president of tho United A be has Lad a an upright a Four years ago he was In the that preceded his opponents predicted all manner of evils iu case be should He did aud pray what Income of thiss I ter and Where is the ruin was to follow the election of Grover where is the that was to his On the contrary the has been more more peaceable and prosperous than it has been for many years that have gone I know the I know him and 1 tell ray that a more and wise man I do not dwells within tho limits of the United And he has a noble of around and not tho least among is citizen of your own Mr. Clevel fid knows not only how to govern himself within the limits of the but he knows full well how to choose good said this much about tho let me to that question to which I alluded in which is commonly called the tariff I presume there is not a person wit hin the sound of my voice who does not kuow what is meant by the and yet it may aid us to-day if I give a clear and precise definition of what a tariff is. my is nothing in the world but a tax levied by the general government upon every article of commerce that comes into tlie United States and that is intended for sale within our which instantly raises the price of the and therefore becomes a tax or a burden upon every article of d' Stic manufacture of a like nature with those which pay the tariff Now we have at this moment according to the last advices I have about in the National treasury called surplus that taxes collected from the people beyond the necessities of the are lying partly idle in the Vaults of tho treasury of the United of no service to any human drawing no but takon tho pockets of the people to whom it and if they Were now thousands and tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands of people the States would put to and im- prove their e party th i this is a ' condition of ought not to like the of ths mm are told of in the Scj who it in the that this is a very usa to make of the money of the aad the Democratic say that surplus revenue which is produced in main by this tax ought to be the tax should be so that will not to oti tho say it is better to let surplus it is bott a-to money from tbo pn of our is better to pile it up in the case by the ' and of all d of a uro ill in the Unite 1 It is a euri aul one of the worst about lilis that the from the domestic it is bost that never goes into tho at does this A man called an importer brings goods into the United States to b - 1. Ko a yard or a pound ho pays this tariff Ho pays then sells it to the Of course get this tax back in for what he he would lose His break up at bo puts on original cost of aud that price with the cost of transportation and his reasonable he the goods to tho the to tiie retail of this tax the price continues in tho and to it is added the profit of the Then the retail merchant sells to and of course lio must got in for other wise he sell for less than ho gave for the and no would consent to do tho tax is when ths for is sold to anil iu tiie price you this you also pay the of this t the the wholesale merchant's profits the retail merchant's beside tbo interest upon their is as plain as two and two arj If I was a schoolmaster and a of ten years not understand that after ten teaching I would give him up as hopelessly an That is the fact in respect to this branch of the how much do you The of particularly those Of iron ard and u substantial reduction of the upon those and upon wool and woolen that Is what the Democrats to That is precisely ' what the Mills as it is attempts to and yet these gentlemen who are around about the of and tho ruin that the Democrats are bringing on the you that this thing President Arthur recommended only so lately is nothing in the world but I froe Republicans aro more afraid of free j trade than they aro of j and They are terribly j alarmed lest they should bo bitten by free I so i far from this being free tho most I striking thing about the Mills is that it is tlic most moderate reduction of tariff ties that has ever boon attempted in this I The average duty levied said Jud i iuad under ' Mills the bo only about I per a reduction of only 1 per cent. I upon all commodities taken Of there are some things upon Which tho duty was reduced tho duty is taken from a j number of articles called j which aro used by manufacturers in their ' in tho fabrication of their And as they receive this great of raw materials treo or with a small tho wisely provides that the articles manufactured by them when brought into tho country shall pay a lower rate of duty than they did But that is nothing more than a compensation for taking off the from raw Garfield said iu the house of representatives on March 10, 1871: was surprised at a remark of the distinguished gentleman from Michigan do not kuow who that distinguished gentleman but ho was a He asserted that there is no idea in the whole tariff that can bo taken iu a lump in order to That coal must salt by the hand and must take something else by the and thus all interests unite with all forces before they make a stand before the If this remark be true it strikes a blow at the tariff a blow I am not willing to I am unwilling to admit that bad taxes must be tied to good and thus kept I think it is unwise to this duty on and I then in favor of i's Michigander came from a lumber I and hd in favor of on the largest kind of That the man who wanted on one article should logroll v ith the man who wanted protection on and by all combining together and making one grand or force measure through the congress of the United But James A. Garfield this remark bo it strikes a blow at the whole tariff and a blow I am not willing to 1 am unwilling to admit that bad taxes must be tied to good ones and thus kept my is another thing to which I wish to call your They say all at say all at for it is a very late advocates of are all at once seized with wonderful solicitude for the laboring man of the and they waut a high not to bone fit tho not to benefit the not to benefit the according to their but to benefit the laboring He is the man thoy seek to And how are going to protect say that a high protective tariff will better his give him more I would like to kuow how that can I would like know how taxing a laboring man on everything from tho of his head to the sole of his feet is going to enrich and Yet this is exactly what It taxes him ou the hat he on that cap I put on my head to keep it warm and it taxes on his ou his on his on his on his on his on his on his on It raises tho price and taxes him until the poor man can hardly make enough even if he gets a few cents more wages in the taxes him until he can hardly make enough money to support himself aud his many of I Thore are in stances in which uas lowered prices for special and but a-s a general as I have already you by I read Mr. from i- and also from the increases tiie If it doesn't price you may be sure that an 1 capitalists would not want and if doesn't increase tho pray is where does that come They are afraid of our getting things cheaper in this country they cm bo manufactured as thoy by reason of pauper as they call of if the is not to increase tha of articles which wo buy and which are manufacture 1 where is tho protection to American if tho price is not can they pay better wages to tho laborer i But there is of my that I to call your attention to There is one class of laborers in this country who have according to the claims of Abolitionists in tiie and of tbo their especial under guardianship and for interests they feel the most peculiar and earnest g and thoso are tho tho result of tho war was to free four millions of und I am very glad they were and they have increased now to about six millions or seven for the negro is aud how do these make their livingf a many of them go to town and pursue any kind if handicraft that they blacking shaving faces things of that Eut in the country the negro makes what ho gets by cultivating the earth throughout the whole How does he cultivate ho either lias bought some some of them havo bought a good he rents the Whether he cultivates his own land or whether ho rents KOTARY the treasury although it does goods imported Into tbo United States in was tn value 514.50,000,000 in round The duties collected on those the were and a in that single year a tax levied ovi the people of the United States by the operation of this tariff law of and a which went into the Federal But that as I have told you was least of tho the do of the sama kind of amounted to year to uad as the of those was raised by the tariff in or equal to the of the goods were the amount which the people paid by reason of these high prices of they to or had to use amounted td one that Is live times as much as the tax received by the government for the use of other words too whole community was taxed about dollars for the of a small of the and that Ls said to bo That is said to bo fair that is be for tho benefit of Why don't they carry it out When they find in Port Huron a speak kindly of because I am lawyer the proceeds of who e profession do not afford him and his family comfortable don't thoy tax you all for his so as to protect When they find a doctor whoso income Is not for and why don't they tax all the of Port in order to add to the wealth of that and so ou everybody why they do they know perfectly vvell that the people would not stand it. And yet thoy do tax a man or did tax him and do pretty sometimes on the medicine ho is to remember that one of tho most votes I gave in the senate was to the tax on so that a man with tha fever and might his the judge a blast on his historic and laughed as they a good but bad It dot been fty mgh protective I could have bought there aw the consumer doesn't pay the said that that is a most and I tried to show you that must necessarily pay the But if want upon fot refer to some men wiio ha upon and whose words will hardly be J will go back to John and I dare say there plenty of Republicans and some Abolitionists ip this crowd who have great Veneration fof that man's I know him I served iu the - that he gets from it are the remuneration he receives for his that crop in the main consists of some corn and some little but mainly all bow can protective tariff benefit that negro who raises cotton and has for nis share of the crop three or four or five bales of each there is no tariff at all on It comes in free as the The of is not as they or lessened by this tariff and yet is all that negro has for Ho can't get a cent more for his by reason of any high protective and he don't a cent He has to sell his cotton and to soli it at the price that is made by the foreign tho price in Liverpool or in to which cotton is exported from tho United It is there that the price of bis cotton is aud for that price he has to soil tariff or no how is it on the The colored although he is living in a warm climate in some still wants to be and wants to be and wants his wife and children to be and they do need clothing as well as other but upon every single thing that he buys to clothe to clothe his to clothe bis little to get a to get a to get a tool or of any kind he is taxed by this high protective tariff and he is to pay a higher price than be otherwise so so far as he is there can be no pretense whatsoever that the tariff Is any thing but an unmitigated injustice to lie has nothing to sell which he benefitted he performs no by any kind of argument can be siid to be benefitted by it. He sells it at a fixed by 4 foreign because sell for any other and upon everything that he than they aro In But if you the power of as must wages aro as in 1 as are in I do not but thoy thoy are as high in as they iu in order to ascertain how a man is obtaining by his and how bis earnings teud to and his you into what it costs for him to if it a man more to live in onu than it does in get wages in tho first named place iu tho he may not lay ap one singlo cent more of Now I am how to as a general labor is paid higher wages in America tlian it is in any other lint what are tha for In tho it is more effective in this laborer malees more in the same ail authorities admit All of them agree that his superior his superior his superior diligence enable liim to mora in the same time than does laborer in any other country in the It more effective here than anywhere and consequently can bo better paid American laborers are better more intelligent than tho laborers can better take care of their own is a reason why they are better paid in this country than I am not going to say whether labor unions and Knights of and all are a benefit or That is a large upon which it is not necessary for ma to speak but this I do that the unions and Knights of Labor have douo more to secure reasonable wages for tho laboring men than all the tariff laws that ever were in the is another reason why laborers receive more and that is the immense area Of uncultivated territory in tho the of which is to free laborers from that dependence that may exist in other countries where land is very that dependence upon the manufacturing In this country a man can get land to labor upon to support himself and family by simply asking for it from the general and settling upon it and remaining settled upon it a given length of T ie consequence is that with those no man need be dependent upon tho good will of any monopolist in the and that gives our man an which is not elsewhere upon tho there to and he d somewhat higher wages than they receive there is the effect of our free there is tha of the that every in this be he laboring man or feels in the that he is an American citizen that he to govern this country and that he makes people govern it as far as possible for his there is another thing that is con elusive on this and that is to show that a high tariff does not the wages of the laboring It is conclusively shown by tho fact that laborers in unprotected industries are as well paid aa in the so called protected how many laborers are there in what are cilled the protected That is to who are engaged in manufacturing articles when they are brought froni abroad are charged with a and how many laborers are there in tho country engaged in industries which aro in no wise protected by sucU tariff and cannot in the nature of things be protected by any such thing? my has been estimated some think the highest I seen placed upon the laborers in these industries is at between eight and nine hundred thousand women and I will put it at a say that there aro a million of while there aro eight times as many laborers and occupations are in no pro by tho if pro is for the benefit of the laboring men the wages of this million of men engaged iu the protected ought to be higher than the wages of men employed iu unprotected and yet such is not thi In round the in un protected receive as high wages those ill protected do kaow what the wagas of owing to this great surplus that you would be There scarcely anything that somebody won't ask for they tho government has money which is lying idlo in the and you might p well give it to us for 3ur little as to have it lying ind so every scheme of everything in the world by which the people can be bled and high taxes kept Up is advocated by men and grows ip a great of this fact of a surplus the judge gave up apd Congressman read an abstract from a speech made by in bis voice was raised against the ip a chom m the Pacific I know myself there ig no wap on top 3f fa is earth who has the laboring man or the nJan Of condition than I have and whatever I could do to condition t would And it is I do not believe for otie that high protective which is so much and which is insisted upon by political is for the benefit of the laboring That is one of the why 1 am opposed to such onerous have shown that under this high protective tariff the agricultural interests of the country have fallen off that value of have increased during the decade from 18V0 to at the rate of only 9 per as compared 100 per a period when was a low if you will look at the commerce of she you will find something even more striking than that The day and not very long when there were two countries that did of the that carried tho of the They were Great Britain and tho United and wo woro gaining so fast upon Great Britain that between 70 and per if my per per my friend behind the carrying of tho whereas now we if my memory is not at only about li per cent. why is I had occasion a few years ago to visit an I felt I found that in the Atlantic and recrossing and in ports of I never but once saw tho American Aug on the mast of a ship iiut and that was a ship that was engaged in carrying and the of Great Britain was on the end of her aud the American flag on tho the friends of high protective tariff say it tends to diversify labor and that diversified labor is good for the you may admit tha general When I was a boy we used to have for old-fashioned Fourth of July dinners a toast to Manufacture and ' These are diversified all ought to prosper in a free country like Manufacturers to a great prospered Agriculture has terribly and with foreign nations has nearly I think that is time we had diversified in which all our our sailors and as well as our and the laboring men as well as the capitalists should thrive and will conclude what I havo to to You have been very for which I thank I hope what I nave said may give you some for reflection and may lead you to support that grand party which formed by by and has under Gro ver the of our little city is to latch strings will hang troni tlie homes are open to yon and have a warm place in our hearts May you stay here be may it be ami may you have God's be the C. H. down with abscess ot and f l and physicians pronounced me an incurable Began taking Dr. King's for consumption; am now on my third bottle and able lo oversee the work on my It is the finest ever 8ay8:~"ITad it not been for Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption I would have have died of lung troubles Was given up by A m now in bess of Try it. hot lies free at S. drug at his residence west of Scotland on the 19th day of Samuel aged about sixty-three his estimable wife came to Greene thirty years have since that time citizens of this men may have been more extensively known but none more favorably Be became a Christian at the age of and since that time has been a model sobriety and The funeral services took place from the family the writer A concourse of friends the remains to Its resting The bereaved family have the sympathy of a circle ot Greene county never lost a better H. Won't Bake other Sarsaparilla will not do Its tell plainly what it submit proofs from sources of unquestioned reliability and ask yon frankly if you are suffering from any disease or affection caused or promoted by impure blood or low state of the to try Hood's The experience of others is assurance that you will not be the the wl rather does groat is bettor to do that than to touch the tai 1I I know of town for fc isi for and Individual for expensive ill time Attractive hold lucrative A strictly business Open all Enter Write to of the We say on the he that the way to relieve the and outspoken be In the people is to reduce the that he chairmen of the to treat a people fairly aud said in a is to take no more out of by him in that 'The et than ' - ' and e up between It is high on the one hand and 'The duty constitutes a part of the on the It is between the whole mass of the articles of of the people out of their It is paid upon if yot they this is for the benefit Of the My that is a very statement if there ever was one iq the But there is another thing about it. How ia he to get these high he is to get them because his the capitalist or will make more can afford to pay hia employes or hirel men higher wages than he paid them I agree that he I agree that it increases his t agiee that he having these pay his laboring men more than they were paid But ha do That is the aud cries of Tho tariff has been raised again and again and it was raised by the law of or 1803, I forgot which of those years it It was raised in a few years and it has been raised again and in all that time I never have been able to find tho manufacturer or capitalist upon the of tho has increased the price paid to his If there was such a it has escaped tho attention of even of these diligent newspaper who up all the and sometimes a great deal that is no news at all But they havo boon able to find that manufacturing man who increased the price paid his laborers because tho tariff was my we havo had now for twenty-seven years nearly the tariff that this country ever on an average twice as as It was tho We have had that high tariff all this if that high tariff is so much for the of tho laboring why have not tho laboring men in these years grown I should like to know i Havo of If thoy are very unreasonable for not a yc ar over our heads that we do not hear of of the more and thoy can not live on A u aro 0:11 everything that ho purchases for his 3onsumption, Le has to pay an Increased price and is thereby I do think that our Abolition to take this under their most serious They sny that they treed the negro from I am willing to grant all they in that although there might be something said about who did it. Perhaps two millions of Democratic in the army had something to do with it. giving them all thoy do they after having given him to make him a slave by compelling him to pay higher taxes upon everything that is a noces sity to not for his own but for the benefit of somebody Is it not enough that they make him a slave by requiring him to vote for them and swear not to vote for a Is that ] Must they also take all his little earnings by compelling him to pay for every thing that he and every thing his wife and children ir oro than they ought to be required to 1 ap my whilo I am on this subject of tho laboring Ijt me speak of American labor as compa od with labor in It is truo that in America laboring men generally iu money than do in but not by any manner of means to the extent that you may support from so much talk about lot mo give you the following According to the Great Britain had a of 411 to the and the average wages were 97 2 cents per is in Now England has a of 210 1 aJ to the and the paid were per four cents more thin In Ohio has a population of eighty to the and wages average R a Colorado Sunday From OF 1>. are here in In my o state they are about a day for and you see that in of according to fhj return of our own are in these manufac turing So that there is practic ally no difference whatever worth talking about between the wages that one receives and the wages that the other are both substantially the If you tuka comforts and cost of living and all that into the agricultural hand in tho state of Ohio receives quite as good wages as the laborers in tho protected industries of the historical review of the tariff was that under a low tariff the value of farm from to 1800, per cent. from to 1870, under high protective the value of the farm in the country 40 per cont. from 1^70 to 1KS0, under tho highest tariff we over the Increase was 0 per cent. In Michigan for tho named increase had been 211, MS UO 1-3 piir A similar showing wss mado iu regard to must draw my ro n tries a It is timo I was to who are to follow in to giva a fair to I to call your to one I b iva this surplus revenue that in tho of the Now I to road to you what only lato as 5th day of last iu u before tho chambor of iu As he for four -' of the tn nobody v. ill j a 1 am quite and will charge him with but hero is woaM to talk to u of 011 tb ' well once each year we cease our usual convene t in that we lake a ict 1 of the past and gain it whatever our has us has been conclusive of iu tbat we may troni ho aro in the work that from each other which can be by of eh one the eveu tenor of his way is by the of others who are in a like binner 1 Mil by those alike his is fa of li o. hold and wn whom he soMier on ilio of baule Hees tho ol left but let d at ins side lie cai v. c o not for by taat IVO 1 i hen in those ho shared u ii mii tdat r i aud lo the ami Ilio jo V. Id r an mol her e aud Willi Without u Wil iv and 1 hc 1 1 ilio a. 111".', 1 surplus ot in the United Taat you I Tho of the 1 's has this surplus It as somu trying to rid 01 it. I do not to to man of sansa that Lho not any moro is to carry the with dose this year to some modo to this as I it is to bave than a I agree with that that to not tbn and the District of four to thy i wages are fact lisui Does it not that moro tlie the among wage and too i and the of ] the less tho competition wa the higher tho No 0,111 1 that who has any for iiio my you a said about tho Ka especially our f 1 from Great i-l ia ii And yeV yan in prosperous state of i 1 1 est in L the average waires are only abour than is necessary to carry an and everybody does know that this which is now ill tbo and is fraia year to is ii great injury the country nobody any It 1 its of the ity of tho It has a very corrupting of onco said in his forcible speaking when ho was you might as well try to a in hell as to havo nn in lieu with a surplus in tho by applause aud that was a pretty strong tho but it was not after ill if you would just uver the schemes for plundering the is but one period of the year and but one place that a person can see such a mixed of the of every class of ind that is at the Annual Other meetings call together but a part but at the lair the student of nature and human and of the civilization that is developed from the soil and climate of can see and study and but admire the The various church associations enable the student to study the official church the business associations enable him to study the business the political r as they do some of the noblest men in the and some of the most designing aad him to the political but aud that enables him to the whole life of the The politician is there and may be at once by the shrewd observer the business man is there with liii aud direct ways is easy the preacher there finds it one of the best to human the are some intent on forming their ideal ur carrying in their mind's eye their stock at home and comparing ilu y see with they others grains and grasses and bent ou sightseeing and taking a day or two of well earned rest aud Ilia good wife is there lis she ought lo for who is more worthy oJ the opportunity for rest atui Her sharpened eyes seeing many things her husband sons are and if with the clear open uf by or many things the father cannot see or will and that when they come to fur tlun selves the scrub must go or if not they lire well feasting their eyes with I he in the animal fill in tlie ur in the or and all together a day at the fair id a vision worth seeing a Heat lo be and ith farmers the fair is rt giving tin to breakaway from the dull lu see their ami who live at a ill a good every year an im who whilst not combine 1; regard the a liia at sch in they cau and by I his and th 8 Willi in each 1 lo tli nil ideal type which they to ill own ami on lines ul breeding and that will enable tlu in to realize This \i one of the thousand to be ( arneil at a The fair is a great and college in to the man to and to go to the fair and profit hy the that yon in Loc Cabin Kkm k 11 IKS r s a p u 1.' h and i V e r I 1-," r 1, 11 for like Warner's the ive dies of the old bs 1 uis at this for any newspaper or magazine at their