HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-12-19, Page 70AT9LB KING AND 13Q •
OOTTIN fie
Who gassed UM l t~;vet cheat tori.
Mr, P, D,eAranour reoone(dorsd late de.
tcrminetior4 to Ignore Sonatr Veet'e com-
mittee and appeared is Washington some
tuna since with hie attorneys and. clerks.
Hie testimony .le entirely to long for our
oolitroes, being for 'the moat part an essay',
on oattlo production, drawn up by hie actors
net's. He denies being a member of aur
opmbinetion to deereaeo prises, and main,
Woo that the daoreaee ie the resuit o£ over.
they being for the ye—that hisa xofits 1888 oar, nob
4181O4 -
Y B y y$418,104,-
40
�
40 or 01,24 per h‘nd on the number of eabtie,
killed.
At bhe conclusion of the reading of this
paper the following oolloeuy occurred ;
"There le thea," Senator Vest asked,
"no oombinetion between yourself and the
other pardon except one to prevent ruinous
loss f'
",Yee, that is all. Wo have eaoh an
auangement with some of our neighbors."
"Whom do you moan by your neighbors
-Lathan Motels, Swift and Hs nmond r
"ldo, Hammond ie not in it, Not all of
the basil men of the country are puttee to
Ile arrangement."
"Well, who are in it l"
"I do not think, Senator,' you ore to
bullet upon my answering that queatien."
"Then you never were in a oombinetion
with anemia else in buying %Attie, or in
selling beef or bogs V
"No, ale
"What, did you not have a sort of pool
of hogs in 188$1"
"There was e,n arrangement in 1886 aa to
hogs, bub it did not kill prions. Where
were eighteeu men in the the deal; and eaoh
one paid itt twenty-five for eaoh hog killed.
That was a11." •
" Have you any - arrangement now with
your competitors as to prices in certain
- (I/striate of the country ?"
"Absolutely none."
"More you any oontraobsor agreement
with other • dressed meat men as to division
of territory.? '
"Senator, 1 have made a very frank state-
ment to this committee. As, to this ques-
tion, I beg to be excused,"
"Is it not a feat that you, Swift : and
Morrie have an , arrangement by which
contracts to supply Government institu-
tions --for fnetanoe, the National leans
Asylum, of • this oity—are filled by one of
you 'one week, by another the second, and
the last the third week 1"
" Not to my knowledge. I will say that 1
know hub little about anah deteile as that:
We have an agent in this olty, and he
might make anoh a deal as that and 1 never
know it. Ent ibis notlike the principles of
the house, and, I am sure the parent hone
would not indoree such cohdaan on the part
of its agent."
"Have you any agreement with other
houses of any so.,b 2"
"Not to meeknowledge."
"Ras your house ever taken an' steps to
force butchers to buy your beef 2"
"Never."'
"Never put down the prices in. order to
crowd out a' rival 2"
"Only once at Akron, Ohio."
"Moat at Pittsburg,, or Freeland, Penn-
sylvania 2'
- "No, air."
""1 will abate to you, Mr.. Armour, that ib
has been testified` before Chia committee that
yon sent a certain telegram to Freeland, in
whioou declared a certain man `should be
line ddo as you wished. I will read the
dispel .,
CxIOAGO$ December 18sb.— H. P. Lade,
FnznLAxD, Pzz esrLvealLA: Cannotallow
Schwab to kill live cattle. If he won't
Dome to our terms, make prices; to bring him
around. ARMOUR & Co.
"1 never sent that dispatch," said witness,
"I do it 'endorse its sentiment', and es.
pedal!, bjecb to its phraseology. - Though
come of J tr s.gente da kill oattle, we do not
o
as a rule, to have them da are Oar
position is that cannot well serve no
bothProtabi as about to be-
y Soh ab was
come an agent of curs, or had been an agent.
He is not now."
"Have you ever reprimanded the man
who sent that: dispatch 2 la he still in your
employ ?"
"Same of the best men I have fall by bhe
wayside; once la a while, play poker, or
something like bhab, and 1 do not die.
-rge for it"
Here Senator Plumb took the witness in
and' and brought out the fact that oatble
'from a large notion of the oeunbry.'are
taken to Chicago for sale.. He asked :
"Is the competition of sellers at Chicago
met there by a similar competition of bay -
ere?"
"lee, there are probably from fifty to one
hundred buyers in that market. and the
compotibion between them is fair and keen.'.
"Do your buyers' compete with those of
Swifb. and Nein Morris 2'
"Certainly. They go in and bid on a lot
of cbble after Swift's buyer or Morrie'
buyerer
has made a bide'
I will
ra
that all
'' " thecattlemen who havevxn before no say
this is not so. They declare the competition
of buyers is nob a fair compebition
Do, yea make dummy bids, taking care not
to outbid one another and then divide the
cattle pnrobaeed ata lower price 2"
le "1 state positively," eaid Mx. Armour,
" that there never was such a thing asthe
high man pulling out, leaving the cattle to
go to the lowed bidder with a division of
Apollo afterward among the parties bo the
bargain. There is just as much competition
"ftisee to the buying of dabble as there is in
tl e gelling of beef and pork. 1 buy at cheap
e es I can and cell egdear as I can, and
my understanding is that bhab le- what
make. commerce the world over."
"Do y ow that the cattlemen of the
country here le nob fair competition in
buying at Chicago yards 2"
"I not! tuey continue to send their
oettle to us, juat the same. Catblemen talk
Ito much about the terrible 'big four' that
they make themselves believe anything
withoiib knowing the facto, bub I do net
think a mujority of the cattlemen believe
this charge..'
Senator Plumb amid he had talked wIbh
�e hundred cattlemen and only one had
failed to declare hie belief in the unfair
1tebhoda of the Chicago buyers.
, M a subsequent meeting of the Commie -
lou the ahargo that the combine intimidated'
ileal butchers dram bidding on (401,474rnitent
`oettaota Wart taker' up with the following
noel% which we give from the press die.
patehee
Bc. Chetlee i3, Parelb, etirgeon•in.chief of
the ,greenewee Hospital, was the firab „wit.
test examined. Re makes oontraobs for sup
Hiles,
Thie year Armour & Co. have the
antral, teat year, lie said, presumehth.
rmeur & Cu, had the aentract Alen. 1311.4
et made he the ,name of Soannel. tries
WWI delivered to the hospital in wagon
different firma in terms of about
Hoover ettldeci th>tt he is; a
707
butcher in Weehiegteu, and has been mase
1872. He earl tbfrt Mr. U. Carroll told him.
last epilog 1t would not be yiye for 11p to
bid On government gontraote, for •it•tho
wibnse or any of his frionde got any part of
those contracts the °bingo beef mon would
uot sell the witneae any meat, anal would
drive him ont of the merlesb. Witness,
however, did bid, and enured soma smell
eentraote, whereupon the threate outlined
b' Mr, Carroll were carried into ef16ot..
None of the agents of the tlhioago Armee.-
rhimour &fJo„ Swift & Co., and. Nelson
Morris --would sell witness meat, nor any
of his triode who tried to purchase for hint,
Clon;cillalnb was made to the ()Weep house
direob by witneae bioggb an attorney;
Arra Hie & Oo. and Nelson Morrie answered,
saying that they did nobcountenance any
such irrgoeeding. In order to test 'the
gel:Mam 9aae of these Chicago Arnie, baa
they o ul... not do so et the market ratee.
They asked him two or three times the
regular rater, and they have never since
aold him any meat,
Geo. M. Omohrundro, Washington aalee.
matt for Nelson Morrie, was called to the
etand,
"You have heard Mr. Hoover's state
menb 2'' asked Senator Veat. "Saes, sir."
"la it tree 2" "Yes, sir,"
"Did you have instruotione to sell to him
at prieea two or three cants shove the market
rates' For whab reason ?'
"No reason was given."
"Are these instructions now in force r
"No, sir."
Witness said be furniahed meat to the
Hampton Institute, Virginia, and. to the
various goverement inabitutione in this city
at regular Intervale. Re did not kook who
had the oentracte ; had boon told his eon
player had one, but had never aeon it
John N. Hoover, brother of W. H, Hoo•
ver, confirmed the abetment of the latter as
to the refund of the representatives of the
Chidago dealers to sell him (witness) meat
because he had bought for his brother. This
boycott lasted a month or six weeks. It
was lifted while the committee was in the
West pursuing its inveatiggatien.
"Any of them will sell to me now," he
said.
Santos Aubh, a hatcher of twenty-five
years' experience, accompanied Mr. W. H.
Hoover in his round to the Chicago dressed
beef agents and confirmed the latter's teabi
moray of the refusal of the agents to sell them
meet at all at first and afterwards only at
prices largely above market rates.
If the Senate committee it in earnest in
probing to the bottom of this business, they
will develop some interesting testimony.
Notwithstanding Mr. Armout'q insolence
and the manifest unwillingneaa of many of
the great dealers` to publish the fiesta, the
people will find out the truth, or know the
reason why. The Western Senator who
weakens on the bhorougbneaa of this exam-
ination will find Jordan a hard road to
gravel the next blraeihe comes before We eon-
etituents.-(Give Stook and Western Farm
Journal,
Getting Aoquainted.
"This," said the man who was travelling
on the oars, as he opened his wiliest and took
out a bottle, "is amixture called Dr. Jenkia-
Ban's Indispensable. I never travel without
ft, Ib is the beet and moat agreeable tonic
now on the market, by all odds."
"I am not so sure about that," replied the
man who was occupying the seat with him.
"I have hero"—and he opened his own valise.
andtookout a bottle—"a tonic called' Dr,
Ryboid's Extract, whtah I have used for
several years+, and consider' Ib the very best
perparatlon made. No man ought ever
to
"I have no doubt it is a fairly good: medi-
cine in its way," broke in the other, "but if
you had ever tasted Dr. Jenkineon's India•
pensable you would throw that stuff of yours
away,"
"I know all about Dr. Jenkinson'° nos
tram . ir. I know exactly what it's made
of."
"You do, hey 2"
"Yea, sir ; and 1 know Dr,>Rybold's Ex-
tract
tract is made fronf precisely the same for-
muta, only from pure materials, :instead of
the vile and adulterated ingredients old Jen-
kinaon uses."
"It's made from the same formula,is h 1".
"Exactly the same."
"You lying old ignoramus, how do you
know whab it's made of 2"
"How do i .know, you insulting old
scoundrel ? I'm Dr. Behold, sir 1"
"I am glad I have found you oat, you in.
fermi villain. I am De. Jenkinson," (Ohl
Dago Tribune.
The " why" for not disturbing milk while
the oroam is rising is a veryatmple one.
The cooling of the milk nausea currents in
the fluid, the end of which is to deposit fats
ab the surface. When these are disturbed,.
by dipping or otherwise, these currents are
broken and the pertioles of fat go floating
aimlessly about, and some of them' never
reach the top.
Charles Stewart Parnell when at home
a tol n dress. His
comfort= lona style le t
breeches are tied at the knee with ribbon
vividly green in hue. Stoub brown worsted
stotkinge, a libble the worse for wear, Dover
his shapely limbs, ,ending in a pair of
brogues that have not recently been sub
matted to the blacking brush.' A waistcoat
left unbuttoned displays a blue cotton shirt,
a high oollar ouch as blr. Gladstone wears
in holiday time is loosely tied with t ker
chief, green but not so deoldedly patriotic
intoneas the ribbons that knot the breeches
at the knee. A high hat with exceedingly
email brim is rakishly en on one side of hie
head, and you do not fail to notice bhe
"'middy" stuck in the rusty band that eon•
fines the base of the crown, and has braved
many storms in the lovely Wicklow moven,
tains,
Lord Wolseley in the course of a lecture
the otter evening bold a tale which will,
sage the London" Figaro,'" bear the toot of
print. When he was stationed in Canada,
Lord Wolseley (he was nob Lord Wolseley
thea, but that doesn't matter) spent a holt•
dayin the interior, where he and hie abtend
ant builb a wigwam and enjoyed the peace-
fuI solitude of nature. Re bad not hien
oecu an Indian chief, and his knowledge of
the individual was derived ohiefiy from the
perusal of the works of Fenimore Cooper.
He had a desire to seer the real article, and
some friends of hie living twenty miles away
promised to , send along the first Indian
(thief they met, One morning Lord Wolse-
ley war infotmed that a nobleman of the
West, had arrived. With hie mini full
of the oonvettionalpicture of the high bowled,
noble -minded rad feign lie Went nut and
found a gentleman elobhed in an bat•of•
datearose suit and waiatcoab, abo,hiving
had a greab dealt() do with the Rudeen Bay
traders, knew a emabtering ;of French and
of Eogl(eh. • He talked inoestanbly for
upwards of au hour unci' ab the expiration
of that time our only General beaatn bored,
X'eellug hi hie pocket for a ooln, he pro,
duced a bwo•tthilling piece, and with some
fear that he wee grossly innutttnx hie guest
offered ib to him. The nobie Indian looked
eb it carefully, felt the edges, and said,
C eft you melte it half-crown 2_
"BUA'sIi'
N0)1011,B !"
A Pathetic Itieldent 01. are in at Creat
City-ll'.0443k'Voice heron Eenylue
Help gate,
The inoidenb here related le an actual o0
outrenoe whioh happenedouly a few' dada
ago In the outskirts of a pity net five bran:
dred miles from " Toronto the Good". The
names of the persons figuring h. the 'story
are with -hold because their publication could
be of no possible eervloe.
It was tact web, dismal day whioh wae.
eueoeeded by a eight of chilling freest, The
straggling housee along the muddy street
looked hardly leas bleak and forbidding than
did the patches of open Prairie between,
Bat within many of the housee there were
signs of the approach of a holiday where
plenty is present and mirth overflows
Toward one of these houses a boy made hie
way along the path diagonally aorosa the
vacant lot next to ib. The boy's feet were
thrust into aboe2 which were much too big
and much too old for hien. His oiothinv
was tattered and f nsumotent. Hie face wee.
ashy pale and hie eyes had the half -.battled
look.of one who has had a glance at the path
which leads to another world, The poor
little fiends were tbrueb into pooleets which
had aides but no bottoms. His drawn and
dirty face was partly protected by the un
kempt looks of hair whioh might have been
curly and pretty it properly oared for, and
by a bat with a hole burned into the orown,
whioh was pulled down over his brow. 9
poor, ineignifioant, shuffling, alined die•
reputable-Iooking oisjeob the boy Was as he
plowed through the mud and made hie way
up to the door, bedraggled and forlorn.
In answer to his snook a well-preserved
woman, when appearance denoted comfort
able circumstances, and three children,
whose °hubby faces and Iaughing eyee did
nob belle their mother'. looks, appeared at
the door.
"Please, ma'am, give me something to
eat?"
"Why should I give you your victuals!
Why don't yon go home and get your
amide?"
"1 an'b gob no home, ma'am."
"That's what you alt say. Who_taught
you that 2"
"Please, gta'am, nobody."
The little fellow glanced longingly into
the bright interior, where heaps at goodies
on a table were in preparation for the Christ
mas feast.: Then, with a clutching of bis
Little fists and a choking of his throat, he
turned to go down the sopa and off again
into the ooid and wet.
"Wait a minute 1" cried the woman after.'
him, "Flossie, get the boy some bread r nd
butter,"
"An' one of 'e' tookies, mamma," pleaded
the smallest one of the group in the door.
"Yea, and one of the cookies, Flossie." ,
Taey gave him a °hair just Weide the door.
His feet jest barely touched bhe floor as he
lab there munabing upon the white bread
and butter and the cookies which the little
maiden brought to him. And when hehad
huddled and washed down the repast with'a
cup of milk he •reached down; beside the
chafr for his old hat, which he had thrown
to the floor as he came in, 130 it was hard.
for him to slip out of the chair, Ib seemed
as if all hie troubles might find an end in
that cosy little room. Why was it that he
had to go out into the rain and tramp on,
always . tramp on ? And his head wee so
heavy, too.
" Please, ma'am, won't you let me go out
in the barn and lie down? Please do, ma'am.
Please give me something to cowerme up
with and let me go out there to sleep."
,r Boy, Ib'e getting near' night. . You must
go home."
"Bab I an't got no home.'
" V! .11. we can' o have you hanging around
here, We have given you a square meat,
and now you are warm, and 1 guess you
batter go."
The boy slid out of the chair and opened
6he door. He turned just before going out,
in hie ere was a hunger which bad not
been satisfied. He looked up in the wo
man's face and in his dry, broken voice,
more pitiful beoause the tears in ib had long
before been exhausted, said
" Why is it that 1 can always get ;some•
thing to eat but never any place vo sleep 2
Why do they always tell me to go on 2 And
I am so tired--1ani as sleepy. All I want
is a place to lay down and rest."
That he " moved on" out into the wet
and gathering datknefs, out into the cold,
And next morning the policeman on that
beat found his little body, cold and stiff_
" reefing,' on a pile of leaves beside the
fence in the vacant lot,
Reader, this fs no story written to narrow
your heart+ in this holiday season. It la true,
and the woman who turned that boy away;
from her door is now suffering more than if
she had loot one of her own dear little
ones. There are places where such boys may
be taken care of, Think twine 'before, you
deny help once.
The Druniotiok.
B hold m rotund wealth of meat
With all its j aloes, ch and sweet 1
Sow firm, how solid, are my parts,,
And how 1 go straight to the hearts
Of children, with distended jaws,
In wait to hide me in their maws.
Ah ! how I love to lie in state
Upon' the table, while you wait
With eager eyes and teeth that burn,
Until it comes to be your turn.
How crisp my akin, oh ! how brown,
And how I tickle going down ;
And, then, my bone, oh 1 what delighb, .
To pick It till it's oleos and white.
How would you like, on Chr febtnas day,
To tramp tili noon and then, we'Il say,
To come back home, well almost starved,
And find me waiting, nicely carved ?
Between your finger and your thumb
You hold meup, thus—_yum, yam, yum I
1 tickle every nerve, I thrill
Your stomachs, and I fill the bill,
And with all men 1 nothing lack--,
In faet,,I have the Wilde traok 1
Downing a Lies
Eilbor'e Wife, --"Pretty condition for you
to come home in—staggering through the
streets itt broad daylight.",
Dilapidated Spouse--" Couldn't help it,
m dear; been accused of (tic) bribery.
" Bribery 1"
"Yee mi'dear; people said I was (hit)
bribed bo oppose taro bicron. Ha to show
folks 1'polled ro'bition mown "oral,"•�
Now 'York Weekly.
fr()maso Salvini, the .greet actor, Ilse a
luxurious town house in ,Florence, and a
country villa on a high hill a -few miles from
the city, from which there are glorious
Views of the valley of tics Arno and the
Apennlnee. When in town he is very
hospitable, and gives fine dinners :to his
male Mende, and when in the country he
leads a patriarchal life among hie ehiidren
and grandohildron. tic le paetionatelyt fond
of music, and is a geed singer, while hie
atrongtlr tinct athletic skill: ate proverbial.
JOHN LA AT' 'S
lie and XXX nroivn Stout
liighert lzwaris ani ilsduis fo Parity flog I,xcel,
fence at Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia)
187(1;„Canada, 1876; Australia, 1877; and
}
Paris, ,France, 1872,
TESTIIVOz IAles SELZOT D
Frei, H 1I Croft, Public Analyst, toronto, says;—"I find it
to be perfectly sound ,co/Itnit,Fzrguo impurities or atlulter-
utiot.s, a 1d can strongly rraitinru end it as perfectly (cut's and
a very superior malt liquor:,
• Jolla 13 it(Maros,'Pxc,feeFcr of Chemistry, AFontreai, says:
pu
X rendthexn,%utamilctotlbit reuzarkably eouaii aloe, brewed (rent
1Zev. P: 1. y a, Rage.1'rorees4r of Chemistry, Leval ife.vor
elty,'ucbec, says .-•-•',i have aualyzed Ahelndin,n 1'n ie'Ale
mattu(actut or7 b y Tolin (,abwbt, r,.Ondon, Ontaz io, ant; have
foetid it alight ale, oontainfug but fttla nloolao# et a,'Iuth-
onus. flavor, and of a ver) agreeable taste and .sirparlor
quality, and compares with the best imported ales. I la•tve
also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of the same brewery,
which is ofmacellent quality' its flavor is very agreesh/e ;
little rictoher ie 11, alcohol, andeette , be the oo piired' advantage-
ously
wvtth any iseported ertlok,o,
Akif '
ICOUll GROCER FOR IT.
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THE
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In spite opf adulterated imitations which miss the
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Pte: A, LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Avieaael N.Y.
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Sent under seat, in a plain envelope, to' any ad
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tm1(Iitanoday-d.Warrapta8.'Prtenfo1etdt 1atraatmtlnt el
ARTI.CORj,.EDGE Iii .LS) wbos,N9 -nbon.
ppoint i9 a mattekdituge'ivllathar baoanaeit 1e,�1:nt, n.farEatyloof iitulits... ifA'r-.SaLTCa Hain A.d '6R -
it tI&aNeia "'1 a1To ,Rton rata, a flan, r whey ta ice
fjn�yya tiial"ne treatment. t a6Yitain ud p0ls 1 stye Hover tt I e4ab fol` ane
ilch s trv2e or three months Medicate. Pi
CO 449AIVYNANStt
d0� WAFERS. AaaP o,
;1u coli, tab tarfati bvc180 E - 4) 01 . T , at ail(b , s for 05,
til, 11 ,, Var antdd. Piled $J a hon or ail( tiaYas for ;itr
Il t[ixl,. t3fi,ki Gtlt3 tl' klk<i 1VTilllvt,
'ig Wont Wont Tt rbfltor ltt,
s,' off` �a3 yti� �t os,t-
ococ) ••• e .
t't °S,e ti.1�.:
't 1 0
to Gw �.,
ie �`�e c ti tom.
ie aeC
4¢O N.
0t
o1e.n>
4y°ttic�setiy`ma
et o
ee'' tie,,1
titi y
te 45e se,
u ° \°�• e o4'e "�°
ane°'
sr 4
.0. est
G.0''i'0) tib o`� b9”
t• e cP4s. e�
m"‘g 3 �g '90
a �e ,14 heti` �tise
$ eo wv V~e� gee .,p d'
b!anufaetured onlyby7homa, olloway, 78 New Oxford Street,
late 533, Oxford treat, %on ion.
ter Purchasers should look to the Label an the )acres and Pots
If the address is not 538, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious;
:xeterLtm.er
Tho Undersigned wishes to inforrahe public in general that he keeps
—constantly itt stook --
ll Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL.
DRESSED OR UNDRESSED.
A Iarge stock of Elemloclk always oh hand at mill prices. i"+looring
dr seed--inch,D
inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch, Sash Siding
Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, ,Sac. Doors,
SHINGLES A SPECL:IL`eY',---tealnpetition challenged. The best and the
largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1.
All dressed 'umber thoroughly seesone:l, and ready for use. No shrinkage
assured. A call will bear out bhe above.
THE OLD EePABLTefxgD ti a.. Willis, d'
t Ll�r 3
G. Tia `A■L1l
mow.
If
AG NT
Hay Tawlashi
Y � Farmers'Muir.
tical Fire Insurance Co.
A PUattar FARIISRS' COIuCPAN4'.
Live .$took also insured, when in the felda,-
or en the road in ehar,to et owner, or servants
atsomanufaetwt t of the tunpro,ed Sdrprlsel
Washer ander'ritteer lfaohines. Agent for
Tomb Stones and the Watson t,nplono oats,
ift;dertaking bromply attendees W.
0. HOLTZMAN.
Xtt^ieh.
liA:11t XP17i 7411)Na1.118/ECl6[3i4.e1I& , Permanent pls1•
n i+7tloneguaranteed. 19akftlerW4ti.E*pelilbeb PAW. iecu•
tint neve;,;al;es ea ueg.nners. Stoat complete, with faatrsetlli*g speck*lues.
O1TTNI'a'=,it7mt0. :ire tut what 4001Itvcrf(36. WMta 1fl )WN'.
rtxcers., ,lureorvleo, °cheats*", N., 7t, (TWA hoose is reliable.)