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OL. ; GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1(). 1804, NO. 41. • Iiw. * IT LAW | -. r- L 1. 1 .11. INCENSE. ■ '. that II.IT ■' ' ■ ty, §1 wing, owinjr; * [rill . ifl mil lifts, ind il r . astir ■ ■ IV« tri.-irrnii.lv ni'-t, 1 I are. ■ ■ ■ ' ' ■ . ■ ■ - ' ■ Nothing in Protection for Aineiican Farmers. 875.50 for tariff duties. Returning convince them that it i^ not the to hie home he calls his friends to-' consumer who pays the tax upon gether and explain* to them liie all goods imported into this conn-situation, telling them this amount try. and that the American ir.ai.u-nf tariff duty was levied upon the facturer has ni heen able to ln-la* ltlimP oratory has been articles purchased by them by the crease the price of his pr Republican party in 1890 when the operation of this Relation." Vote the Ticket all the time the screw? of protec-tion have been put down harder, and the farmer have been made to Nothing more during n: the way pay no* only higher prices for man-hear l ufactured articles than they could in a long time than Mr. McKinley'a ■ assertion in his Findlay B ■ i . i *■ ' . B, t ■ 1 1 c LT, Wr i i. till day, I - - I : !! liHT- 1'.: r. ?ROTECTIOH. . i ■( i ion . Carolina to t.u wh people i Btu| im] irtanee. li really. ana witboai exaggeration, would i--: :: I 80DJI the unwise and reck] and inc ipal le ' h ve united, throwing all semblance of prin- I 1H« i I Ullg, t . •■ r. II : .r DIN . IWERS . atween tie McKinley and Present Tariil Act. I fteprei utatives , . 14, Hon. F. A. Sforl I larolina, in a the tai m ition made ■ comparisons between the McKinley Law and the present ,:i Tli ■■ contrasts were made ■ t he simplest can easily tent the tariff is a lid '■i r. Spi aker, that the pun all goods imported into th crs, and that the j rice <>i all goods imported tsed by I he amount of the luty, and the further fact that the manufacturers of this ry have been enabled to in-se the price of all their prod-] ly of the manufacturers here; but amount of duty levied j they know if we import Roods we products, ought I must pay tariff duties; so they will i • idmil of discus- Bell to ua at the prieeof the article . i- been gravely urg-' in Europe with the tariil duty ad- Republicans that the lied.' And in this way it will b is paid by tin foreign manu- seen that the American manufac-they enacted the McKinley law. Discussing the situation ami con- K hat was 1 est to be ited tl at they reship the ad i 'id ri i ■ . m merchant to sell them there, thinking it better to pa) return freight than to pay the nous sum demanded by the im bouse. A nd believing they could buy these goods cheaper in this country it was suggested thai if iheir number go to Will tou, wnich is considered one of the cheapest markets in the State, and ascertain there the price of the same class of goods. "One of their number, as request goes to \\ ilmington, examines the market price of these gi and comparing them with the goods purchased in England finds that the goods purchased iu England for $3,500 cannot be bought in Wilmington for i<ss man the sum of $5,375.50. He a6ks ono ol his merchant friends to explain the reason of this condition. The mer-chant replies, 'Your transaction is a fair illustration of the operation of the tariil law and a full anewei to your question; that under iiie McKinley law all parties buying goods iii Europe for shipment to - country have to pay the tariil tax demanded of you by the custom house here. So as the Wilmington merchant buys goods in Europe he has to pay the same tariil duty, and this, of course, is added to the Belling price. Thus the selling price to the consumer is increased liv the amount of the duty on every article imported into this coun-try.' "The farmer asks. 'Why do you not buv your goods of the manu-facturer" in this country?' The merchant replies, 'We do buv large- ■»««""" J™ preference- and judg-nient. Hut do not throw them aside. '!,it tue republican party " in all its legislation for one third of i is never overlooked a • ml i .. interest.' Thi - ...i- said by way of smiling ui ■ n the defection of the sugar planter? of Louisiana from the democratic party, with which, as many i approarl ing . lution If by the after a little reflection already per- . lily ••• I blind) ess of the peo- c< re, all their intertsts arc al . I pie voting that th" control of pub- i which alone thev lie ••.'..' ild bi hope for their real en rage party that has iavi The republican partj has at State and gi v< rn d in wisd • rarious times declared its desir righte in I handed ov - to to do many things in and ;'..r this section of the country, but it has abstained until now from claiming thai it-- tariff policy was proof, as iple to tin ir the pur-1McKinley now puts it, "of devo-the sole purpose of getting tion to all the material interests ■ oflice, of Bccurii ... and he ■'■• I - I ition of -; oils, ! t wi uld tin South." The ablest exponents of the protective system have in-not he a revolution of blood, but .i revolu ion radical wide, deep, broad that would amount to a cataclysm of ruin and n bi ery. in hinking, sensible, hineet, well meanii g people of North I aro lina who ■ ■ ;: bring upon the have been at great pains to show. State a condition ••' .-older, of I were essentially agricultural, ant! discontent ■ f extravagance, wi best prompted by lower tariffs i. ' incompetency, must ...nte an<: ami iini commerce. Tliat view of vote together— ' foi the no: i- . the matter is one that does not pre-of the party. As Senatoi nt the whole trutb, which require* Ransom said in his speech hero lit to bo added that lower tariffs throw away prejudici and prefer and enlarged foreign trade are not i: . and personal dislis and burn only favorable to the South but to them on the altar ol your i motry. the interests of every other section It is of the greatest importance and of lite whole nation. Still it that the party nominees should I contains a half truth to say, as the be voted for by every man calling I foremost republican leaders have himself a Democrat, and by every have quite generally been in the nan who wishes well to his people I habit of saying, that tiio inaterinl mid himself. i interests of the South are opposed, This is ,.n nine for splitting naturally and of necessity, to high tickets and dropping names. Vou ti riffs and the commercial conges-may find names on the ticket this tion that thev must produce. yi ar that are offensive to you, Where does Mr. McKinley lind any evidence that the South has beer, benefited by protection? The This JB census of 1890, compiled by repub-lican officials, completely refutes have bought them for in the open markets that fixed the value of their own products, but higher prices thin the monopolist manu-a theit ex-pense, rffing for those same artii li :' rein-ncrs in market ; see fi sand miles disl A New Y'l.-:: commercial paper of hority has lately called attention lin to the fact that spades and shovels, sold tor $9.80 a dozen to j American farm rs, are bought by farmers for $8.38 a dozen. saws, for which the Amer-ican "home market price is (30, ire Bold abroad for •-, 25.50. Wheel cultivators, that cost .fll here, are sold for $8.40 in South America. Hey rakes, that arc charged to the Southern or Western farmer at if 15, cost hit foreign rival only $14.21. A two-horse plow thai the- Ameri-can farmer pays $5.60 for is sold Loco motor Ataxia, Epilepsy . . , N ■ SPINAL CORD riEDULLlNE, ~hL rTHECX, I ■ ■' .,". ind Dr. K '■'.. - HOND, V ■ Colin hemi '■ ■ i.e. deed usually dwelt with emphasis ;., his European rival for $5.04. on what tbey assumed to be tla selfish interest of the manufactur-ing sections of the country to stann gether and resist •• the solid South." whose i.iii . i -: ■, as i!ic\ r, and that the cost of goods - of tiii country 11 acri led by the op-eration of the tariff. 1 will give, Mr. Speaker, a plain and simple ition of the practical opera-tion of the tariff, which conclu-demonstratea that the con-iiid not the foreign nianu-r dec- pay the tariff duties, and that the prieeof all manufac-turers are enabled t • cor.trol prices in this country, and exact fr th consumers the enormous profits given them by this tariil system. The farmer returns home and re-ports the result of his trip. "This leads to a discussion as to the best course to pursue. Some one says, 'The Democrats have promised to reduce these tariff : i - : the lull is now pending in Is is increased to the Congress and suppose we wait and ties, And this]see if there is a reduction.' On [ration will ale conclusively of the number, who was a Populist, ict that the pending says, -We have nothing to an in In ;'.' people of many burdens of the - I ■ . MrK inley law. "Li I „■ note its practical opera-f North < :. is to the in -i 11 - in i he pur-ton is sold thi commission ■ D : tl nd the far-igent them, md< d, a i asks the ci Hi eti the delav; the Democratic party has not kept anj of it« promis the people. My paper says the Senate bill is no better than t!.e McKinley Bill ; thai the Democrats had alwaj - been by promises to reduce the tariff taxes, and that nothing will be done, and I am i'i favor of raising money to pay the tariff tax. i be others did .. 'tee with this and told their friend thiy »ould wait and -• if this bill passed and if the promises and : li dgeB i f the Democratic par-ty wi re cai ri t this bill lene from the far- ; 161 ■•The farmi r, alter the passagi :- law, returns to Wilminj I to pay whatever duties should be Vote the ticket, -ary not! llniOSt beyond any other year because of the truly In-iraej afoot to ruin North Carolina. Put the Radicals again in power, and . iu will invite the blood of i>; extra! - to in again n ith all of its trui tive, oppressive power. By failing t • vole for a Demo-ci il you in fact to i ttent help to put in the vile combination oi ingrj e •■■ ■ kers ■• ho drop all pretense of principles ■ fasten clul thi. upon the \ itals North Carolina. Duty to yourself, duty to your family, duty to your State Ci npel you to maintain your princip ■. \ it I he tid ■ be Democratic tl ig. \\ e repi at, the ■ leel ion i i !. - F tin to the future weal of North Caro-lina. Your Legislature, two Sena tors, nine Representative, tbeJudi-ind i • i I a t a nd low taxi B and , ari ,:i! ut eta I the tick Wilmington lesi Solicitor's Election. isc and will ■ ' until the payment I Ino of the Wilmington and Tin custom-l cannot nti '■ '■ asks, 'Whi nt i nired? ■land. I have a i ■ ihant : the : i and 1 do not ■i >M the Dee , ty make luctions in the tariff taxes? : ,ui.,- to the schedules and undi implements and machinery he says to the farmei I t befon the pas sage of thii act you would have I ad top .yon $1,000 worth of plows, . lines, cultivators, gins, etc.. $450, and under tin- I ill tariff duty has been removed from these arti-cles and you are saved $450. <>n the $200 worth of woolen shawls, v make this de- on which, under the McKinley law, mand you would have paid $300, you now t. ,x.c. 'ENTIVE . • . r, iHTS. ■ Alia ,< Co ■ -■■rn in li, . . . •* (tic VI'H.V. The ■ llici r says in reply. 'In .\ passed is l be McKinley law and . ■ upon all goods •lit into this country the pur-certain tariff $1,000 worth i ' j vels. hoes, B, cultivators, cotton-gins and other ral implements bought by you you must pay to me - ci nt. of their value, which amounts to $ 150. On the $200 worth of woolen -: an s you must pay me 150 per ■ '•'On the .filOO worth of woolen must pay me 80 per '•'On the $100 worth of wool hats - per cent., or ■ m thi wi th of woolen must pay me 85 ' "i. 0 worth of cotton cloth you must pay me 35 per cent.. or ■! ■ 100 worth of bagging v me -'; per cent., or " On the $200 worth of cotton pay me 103 per cent.. - 100 of pocket-knives, ind forks you must I cent., or $46. on worth of crockery, irthenware you must pay • cent., or $56.' WOO worth of salt you iv me|$35.' ■ :.! for the farmi r to .■ i . & I from thi custom- ':••"' 1 '.' ":; "ul!' Of *1>- pay $70, saving upon this item $230. ■>:'■ the $300 worth of blanki te you would have paid $210: under the Democrat! • law you pay $11 5, laving $135. On tin $100 worth of wool hats yon would have paid $86; under the present law you pay $35, saving $57. On tin $300 worth of cotton cloth, you would have paid $105; under the present law you pay $75, Saving $30. On the $300 worth of bag-ging you would have paid $97.50; under the present law bagging 1 put on the free list, and you do not pay any duty on the bagging pur-chased. * * * * '•'(.In the $200 worth of cotton ties you would have paid $206; under the present law ties are put on the free list. So you pay no duty and save !f20G. "'On the *100 worth of knives and forks you would have paid $10; you now pay f "•And on the $100 worth of crockery you would have paid $-'i"i: you now pay $30.' •After paying these duties the farmer returns home, calls his friends together and returns to them $1,235.50, which was saved to them by the enactment of the bill we are now considering. "And these farmers then under-stood how burdensome to them has been the tariil taxation of the Re-publican party, and fully realize that the Democratic party has re deemed its pledge to relieve them o* these burdens, having saved, by the passage of the pending bill, upon the purchase of only $3,500 worth of goods the sum of $1,235.- 50. It would be a difficult task to Why sh.mid not Capt. E. S 1'ai ker be re-eleeti A Sol r ol this Judicial district? Has he not die irged - . . for the pasi years, faithfully, diligently and ii | BI I —) r Who can ; to a Bingle c ise in wh.cn ..- :. is : to do his duty? Who dan - to accuse him i I .'. i • ii ■ bi ei partisan in anj case? Has he not reated '. i.. • i i . egan their politics: Ibis he not tly •• non partisan" in the discbarge of hi I iee? Thei why not re-elect him? ■ i'..; .. i- ■ Bug lesti d ■ by he should I t be elected i-trade has been made between the I blican and popu . it li ai i I v which he republican, i ■ r-iteied to \ote for .-:...-. i for Con-n -- and hi populist 8 an lei I . .. ■ ir Mr. W. P. Kynuni for Solicitor, he having b< en nominati d by the republicans for that . i v.- while i In leaders, b ISSI -. may i;a\ - mail Bueh a • •• i I i r. order their followers to carry it out, j • annot think that the publicans | .' -ts ... Chatham can be no easily order-ed. Nor are they likeso many cat-tle, to be traded off by t..' Beeking leaders'. It may be a very nice trade for Bynum and Strowd, but will it be ratilied by honest men at the sacri ti f their polical principli -' — (hatham Record. .... Iation of wealth from 1880 to lN'.IO was steadily greater in the mat icturing States than in the gricultural States. Take four il Northwestern States, Ne-braska, fowa, Il.inois and Indiana, and five typical Southern Mate.-. Louisiana, .Mississippi. Alabama, i and North Carolina, and we find that, with fifty-eight times an much land, they bad among them, in 1SS0, twice as much capi-tal and seven times as much popu-lation as Massachusetts. Yet the census testifies that from 1880 to 1 190 th isi nino state- increased their assessed valuation by $559, 341,974, while the one state of ". ■ ichusetts increased its assess-ed valuation by $569,377,824. And yet Mr. McKinley can keep a btraight face while he tells the peo of Ohio that republican tariffs ... frai II I in a spirit of i >tion t" all the mad rial in-nf the south.'" i; i- true of tariffs as that ' by their fruits we shall know farmers i f the i niti d • ■ owned $5,< ,000,000 of tin ■ o i 00 000 which « I the total led valuation of the i oul " in 1850 In 1 i ' > Ol .:■'■-' ' ■ ; -.. ica then il total t ...ition. and '■!' tl at fifteen billii i- tl ey really owned only nint billions, !' i" I he ri -: was eovi ri d .-. : tgagi s. Those ■ - 'thi ry "f the reductio i ..i alili of the • ' alf : nut one ■ | u- whole ralu itioi tnder tariff in a...:.ing wl ich, ace ir ling ! ■ McKinley. !.i-- part." " never over- , . ingle Southern inten Bt. i knives that cost $16 per gross in the "home ^market" are sold at $12 per gross in the far-off markets of Europe. These are but a few instance-' of a general sys-tematic extortion practiced upon the fanning population by the man-ufacturing monopolies that have been created by protection. And against it wdiat has the Mc- Kinley or any of its preceding high tariil' laws done for the Southern or Western farmers:- It has simply-mocked them by putting protective duties on wheat, corn, oates, rye ml other products, not one of which is a subject of importation to any extent, and as to all of which the American farmers are exporters in enormous quantities. The republican party migh as well propose a high duty on cotton to help the South as on wheat or corn. The South and the \S'est never can be helped in that way. But if Mr. McKinley and his party, with their devotion to all the material inter-ests of the South," will stand out f our light ami let democratic policj i'f free raw materials, lower iuties, freer interchange of com-modities with other nations, to-wards which the recently-passed tariff I ill ;i first step, have a fair trial, the census of 1900 will tell a f 1 stter timi a for the South and West, but for the entire American people.—Itnltimorr Sun. A Rockingbam Man Honored. WAS two .-on BUOK The I atoii & Burnett < BUStH C( Baltimore, Md., ti. Washington, D. C. < T| % * , . turners I ■. i : t I , _j Arc prcpan I I Bt Of Ol , I ■ : i | in all ii. rdci !-■ experience . .--fit. Ituiune** M. nn I I v\, ■ • ■ Siiotib .i . eelled. I»:iv F.T fan \ ■-. .'«•: Ball on L. H. DUELING B-131 mi ...... It Cure- Dyspepsia, IN /Constipation, Bad rtiood • ... hments ■ Ji \ ' • ■ i V- i . y- ; f " ■ A fact tiiat augurs a sweeping Democratic victory in November is the attention given to county mat-ters this year. Too often has this glected in former campaigns nd the general I ickel has been re-n to pull through the minor cai did it.is. i »ur gi neral candidates arc all thai could be desired, and they will not bo handicapped by weak local tickets. our neighbor, Guilford county. bli ticket last lav, :■•.'- ' . . ; Kinj vas re-nomi- '. for the Senate and Mr. Hern Davidson and Gen. James D. Glenn :.. use. Thi n iminees for offices are likewise stronfr men. to • Glenn's host of friends in ;, ickingham county will rejoici in ,nor 1 an to bim in Hen resi nted th - county in the-House several before ri moving to 11 ei ne- In order to mak • room for our fall stoc : and bi li i y goo Is, s •• 'il for the next 30 days sell FCRHITUBE, CHINA, CROCKBBY, and GI* SWARI at greatly reduced prices. Should you want a Chamber, Parloi or li Room Suit, a Plush or Wieker Bocki r Ball, Parloi Dinner Set. or anything at all in the Furniture or ( roekerj 111 . your opporluti itv to buy ir cheap. l!i stiectf-iilv. McDTJFFXE. GUILFORD and itas a | romment Southern Corn in The "Wont. The indications are that the tlow of bread-stuffs from tin .Northwest South will 80i .. I.e a thing of the l . . Every year then - an inci seed aci i ige oi grain in the South, and this year thi orn crop - fine Indei I, n is now being sold in Alabama for i msumption in Illinois, Last week, at Decatur, Ala., 60,000 bushels i corn raised in that State w i sol for shipment to Illinois, the price being 15 cents per bushel. Com-inentinsr on thie, the 3: Commercial says N \ •,":.: thirty y< are of such "de-votion to all the i • South" and they would be wiped out altogether—killed by re- 1 M an kindni - - Thi South and West are the vic-tims, nol the beni ficiaries, of pro- . m. 'I he tariffs of the past hirti ; ars have made the farmi r-an I planters pay prici a to 100 per cent, higher for thing, their tools, their li .liner;, and their manufactured of all kinds, and have not added one dollar to the pricei | lid to them for their cotton, tobacco, wheat, breadstuffe, pork and the other products of their unprotected capital arid labor. History fur nishes no worse example of the robbery oi the foundation-produc-ing classes of a country for the enrichment of a comparatively small fraction of favored capital-ists. Since the days when Pharoab, in the hardness of his heart, si t tasl masters over the Children of j ; ' md demanded that they should make bricks without straw, ,. , re has been no more mercili - . than the protective Bysl candi- -: iker in 1885. He if in .',-a. touch with the fanner-, and thi demand for Ins mi ninati Saturday e ime from thai source. lie will make a useful mi n ei an I will Btand in the front ranks of the I gislutre, which promises to I ablest that has met in Ral-eigh in many years. Gen. Glenn is a patriotic citizen and one of the cleverest of gentle-men. He has served thie State well in the pasl and gives pron is I greater usefulness in the future. We congratulate the Guilford Democracy upon las! Saturday's work.—Webster Weekly. Returned to Democracy. - ' ■ b isbed by I tunng „] .:■.. racy for wringing tl e very I las) dollar that special legislati could extort from the farming and ■ - industry of the South and West. , ,-eartbat : is p issed i . , protection has seen the profits of ««ptai increased and the 11 l ' •" ■ . . . „i__ .i;_;..;,i„» Mr. Wm. it. Hutchinson, one of . -■ prominent third party men in Richmond county, Ga., has seen the error of his way and returned lemocratic ranks. II-version is attributable to the speeches of Speaker < risp and Sen-ator Walsh. "Having heard the speeches of these gentleman.' says Mr. Hutchinson is a published card, ••the s-nles have dropped from my eyes, and I see that if this country is ever to get relief from a political party it will be through the medium ,,f the old democratic party. The . , • ories that the leaders of the third party have advocated have become dissipated in the sunlight ! of truth.' Vid ie Storm. i II i .-..-. . Iil.-nl-: I • ■ I So,-., instri Wr-. i ' l llol lls I MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VI! . :: . '• I ■ i . A THI.EE YEAi-::- ' V . DE. CHI Greensboro Roller N0i"^A . «• WATSON, PROPRIETORS. rot.: Key Wee saysl latfiftydead odiee, v: -I:-;- •' the wrecks i ■• PURITY' A HIGH GRADE FATtSI. STAR: A PUB PHIL! FLOOB CHAR10F CREEISBOBO: THE PO I These brands h. Driven univers I jounced excellent I of C [ormUyinead ' ..... | . XN OETE & "W^-TSOJlNl", iV ilkei '■ ( . i- :. fasiilv in the South raise two bogs, dollars will bi Baved to our people." curringon the rei - I iring the Ci nt Btorm, have I i ■■ lv:,-: , The dead ,.;- ,..;,, Wi irs fi m the ves-a, alt :'-::- has elapsed since the '"•' '"'- Ami all kinil.i = DON'T BUY A DOLLAR'S WORTH . stroyed When catarrh attacks a person of 8ci fulous diathesie, thi diseasi is al -" - ire : be. , . ehronic The onh is Ayi - saparilla, which expels scroful i from the system ■... : tatai soon foil iws suit. L ical tn al i- onlv a waste of time. f farming diminished. Pretend.- 0f time which provide a home market for gt0rm has rendered the bodies and this average will suppy all theMng^ i^ hj ,, tarilfs have identiflable through decompoeil llona °' forced the farmer? to send their T;i, pl - in that many surplus crops in constantly incr»as- mor( „f tbes. istly fidences ["Quantities to be sold in the lhe hurricane's fury will be brought Markets of Europe. The pa-' .,, ;;_,:.; jn a few days, years f | rot* -tion have •i:.- pri 1.47 t 50 cent- a bushel, i ei ■ ■- '■ ' I, and other staple products ■:: iiiiurein liki measure. But 0± Doors, Sasli or Blinds IM.II)IIX\((>i .M-i.\i iI iB.iR.1I.A11l ifor the pi a. In- nevi r ; ■' <■' (five the ':- lh. ' l'i. ors. Sash " '■ Blii ds, wi n | - ■ /■'■■• i ,,i BUPI n this •K! ISSKH i on , . . -either ttary ■ caused 1, - --' ie,menlai exhaue- ' : IVOII ' r - -,.., .,... ... . .. .i N ' •' . . nghats and in Sto T ., Guilford Lumber Co., Greensboro, i>.t. irer will prevent it.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [October 10, 1894] |
Date | 1894-10-10 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The October 10, 1894, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by W.M. Barber & Co.. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : W.M. Barber & Co. |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | UNCG University Libraries |
Newspaper name | The Greensboro Patriot |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | patriot-1894-10-10 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, PO Box 26170, Greensboro NC 27402-6170, 336.334.5304 |
Digitized by | Creekside Media |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871563781 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
OL. ; GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1(). 1804, NO. 41.
•
Iiw. *
IT LAW |
-. r-
L
1. 1 .11.
INCENSE.
■ '. that II.IT ■' ' ■ ty,
§1 wing,
owinjr; *
[rill .
ifl mil lifts,
ind il r
. astir
■ ■ IV« tri.-irrnii.lv ni'-t,
1 I
are.
■
■
■
' ' ■ . ■ ■
-
' ■
Nothing in Protection for Aineiican
Farmers.
875.50 for tariff duties. Returning convince them that it i^ not the
to hie home he calls his friends to-' consumer who pays the tax upon
gether and explain* to them liie all goods imported into this conn-situation,
telling them this amount try. and that the American ir.ai.u-nf
tariff duty was levied upon the facturer has ni heen able to ln-la* ltlimP oratory has been
articles purchased by them by the crease the price of his pr
Republican party in 1890 when the operation of this Relation."
Vote the Ticket
all the time the screw? of protec-tion
have been put down harder,
and the farmer have been made to
Nothing more during n: the way pay no* only higher prices for man-hear
l ufactured articles than they could
in a long time than Mr. McKinley'a ■
assertion in his Findlay B
■
i
.
i *■
'
. B,
t
■ 1 1
c LT,
Wr i
i.
till
day,
I -
-
I :
!! liHT- 1'.: r.
?ROTECTIOH.
. i ■( i ion .
Carolina to t.u wh people i
Btu| im] irtanee. li really.
ana witboai exaggeration, would
i--: :: I 80DJI
the unwise and reck]
and inc ipal le ' h ve united,
throwing all semblance of prin-
I
1H«
i
I Ullg,
t . •■ r.
II
:
.r
DIN
. IWERS
. atween tie McKinley and
Present Tariil Act.
I fteprei utatives
, . 14, Hon. F. A.
Sforl I larolina, in a
the tai m ition made
■ comparisons between the
McKinley Law and the present
,:i Tli ■■ contrasts were made
■ t he simplest can easily
tent the tariff is a
lid
'■i r. Spi aker, that the
pun all goods
imported into th
crs, and that the
j rice <>i all goods imported
tsed by I he amount of the
luty, and the further fact
that the manufacturers of this
ry have been enabled to in-se
the price of all their prod-] ly of the manufacturers here; but
amount of duty levied j they know if we import Roods we
products, ought I must pay tariff duties; so they will
i • idmil of discus- Bell to ua at the prieeof the article
. i- been gravely urg-' in Europe with the tariil duty ad-
Republicans that the lied.' And in this way it will b
is paid by tin foreign manu- seen that the American manufac-they
enacted the McKinley law.
Discussing the situation ami con-
K hat was 1 est to be
ited tl at they reship the
ad i 'id ri i ■
. m merchant to sell them
there, thinking it better to pa)
return freight than to pay the
nous sum demanded by the
im bouse. A nd believing they
could buy these goods cheaper in
this country it was suggested thai
if iheir number go to Will
tou, wnich is considered one of the
cheapest markets in the State, and
ascertain there the price of the
same class of goods.
"One of their number, as request
goes to \\ ilmington, examines
the market price of these gi
and comparing them with the goods
purchased in England finds that
the goods purchased iu England
for $3,500 cannot be bought in
Wilmington for i |