Bloomington Progress, Volume 15, Number 42, Bloomington, Monroe County, 1 February 1882 — Page 1

"wv.unp ja58u

iMULItlMUtta

UHnan Ufa wfcafivor I

(nOHL

Et all of W happfauaa iqiittlijt)I, .?

H looudhave taowa,ni .jbewaiiasHaw. TUa ba ttaa a wquib eoooa to know: " OracaalaaMlaassaBS, &fortafiliJewlBoraa.nai lltti bridal waa aad ifestaataaet to gained the ow o of . .

tiedU ttaaaad ?i!rtfi? By c r children, lying aalasp to taair ,

Am eoau ure. in mj iyij

INK! ASA ITEMS.

mast

I

licistt

....... i -; iV- "' ..... t ! .. i :

A. RTublioaaa Japep 3Devoed to' the -A.danvcemeixt of the Local Interests of Monroe County.

Iks w etfttnlr i

Tl laaMWal

Cm. WreaHiHbcinmy UdBBaVSBa I would cbooaeoba avpaataaMla, i -feduBV.ta0)$wqU ... M wiklnotiakaUKptti5aa trad ' UmMiatintiLnmilndAMa1lt lor etaLge my oonne tat braaata of a hale, . : Ml Way ortaat Wf, taotilali SMS t ' Wvpaatbimaa,andItateaan; . Hit lmainna !t folly. If yo P1"" Say, evan my alaa, a yoa -. o , llay have bmv hehja, w Mf' "If laa-tadiDoafr fresattwSainw ' ' Brearcae that onoa I aad Prone 1 fcaT, Or tcpt mytoll from 4Maalv ain . . ity Ua-a kwa, 70a will m In Mat; wbattIiaffrdBuala. , ' IMt r I atnMd for a. nttls tLox.

If Uc imartlco. woman ma-back from 4114 Oieats af sis 4fcUaja.ftoa Wn knoam tta riaa By wO

What atnaail nay P tor Nt"ai And aow temptation: ia ovarecana, Bb)earaadwhotefettttpoaBr

AndwhotoowawoaithtaataaaojT

Why, loot Wia,tnom from waro,al ayall

"oVMmypaattand.iaataltaiaaj And Ibt aw BOW, aa I vaxr, grow old; I am wtat lam, and aay Ufa lor aaa

la tka feam-oc ttkadnot Ma, 1 aom,"

CSO BH CE.11

WUMT

And irStet fcj

UAAa IU tW

usC'D the awMir waae

WWit Erw paaacii (vakttMia

Wt old Tn c(MeUr JnKroi,woy"oldiJ Tarry a vnila, I pray. if twiftu-jttt paaiaficolaWi ' ; TJiroOffbont qt;.1 Biumwradaart" f , Andtiwn rith wii g ontiproad, ' 1 AatnontBAy meant to fly, wnjng tatw jitnlnna oattbeaa, Zaeyniatdttaietotaeaky. Triendf! .Frituda! Oh. valtaar 10701" . Why thin onacei'ily race t , Uy love,-she caanot. actt ya,' Jbepvpvitltwiclia.paeB, 7 IkmEroa, ta'siD roan, r Said: "Suelourm3almJ, -t Erer I thick tSr f ood With Ttata I flyaway."

IR5ST HEWAfiCEl, , . . f Mattie's storr -waa snnrie mrvA.

Tfin orphan girl o lcn&a- nervsnt in

wealUij family, Marae had anarea toe ksMKUi And th Tjlav of thfl von now

Uaghtef of the horoa, until a timecama

vaeit it was eonrenii&io torn t tie tumble eompanioa adrift to work for hoaelt itmayiawltptyailhcl(.hi neighbors ascribed fc Drew, . thai it ationldJSaTabeai to., Lis farm that the Kireame hedp to'Mi siatfer, or it may baV5"been a piew of his good nature that made him agree to iake ncdec,bia roof tliis pretty hen, untrained for servioe, and ednoated far alxjve her atatioa. Drew's widowed faster, Mrs, Bankea, - who lived with him, ani whose child it was Maitie had oome to norae, among other duties too numerous to mewtiiM, for there waa bat one Berraat kept, exclaimed ia despair-, when the farmer brought home the young, Jady-bke, 'deticaJookhig girl :

Established A. D., 18J5fT r ' - . it. .aS.

. ..

she should do, and only paused now and

then to look after ite two men as loii aa Oiftw iflnoaiiaed in AiohL It was nE-

aral that she souH feel a little liraiif Jon

of thisonknown lady, Adam' xncthsrffi

but tnat tear was tas only saadow on Mattie's path, it was an idyl, a poem, as true a krire story as the world has seen, that had written itself here inljt$is utthe-way spot b the lonely SoBsez Downs. t . - On the third day tbey might look for Adam to Mtarn, but tnat day passed, and many another, until the days wei weeks, and the weeks months, and he neither oame nor wrote. Mattie remembered how, when she turned to look book for the last time upon that home'

ward walk, she had scan his figure distinct against the sky tor an instant, aad, in the next, lost it entirely as he passed sbof sight over tho swelling lutes, of

VUk Jost so, she seemed to havslliiarf' eyli

"We want aston lunl-werkxikf lass I Tms one does not know hear righs hand from her left She is aa good aw a lady, or as bad, and lias never milked . cow in her Hie! What were you thinking of to bring her here T "Ah I that's just my luck; -well, we aaust do the beet we ean with her. 31 tbe steward had never mentioned her to me, now but tben he did mention her, and here she ia." There she was( and there she stayed, (S)t to learn; willing to be taught, gratefcl for the real kindness she met with. Mattie was soon the best band at milkfag for miles around, and soon devoted to the baby. Hirte years passed qniet-1t,-and then came the romance of Hatfie'slife.

fSsf was3 20 that

graTe

aoeSstwsm

waaatiiK war uaxumm

4aUUI

mrm Arew-naxi

aaanx, ajinx HIQW

we smaller ninidnur

tBur-ended

ism

Buianonse

abef' of the woftfremwned

diacoTeret lie exoedi-

brain by .

ue jiome ooua-

Wf

at the

it nad been

llhahir

on the old land AviWSwaMaafi, ffwHwaaw

- : BlllBlBla ivuiau

oe pure an tne uownagood for lean. Hema&iaends 1 wrthjthefamttr. To Mattie it .wk. delightful to mecione more , some one with all the took and

of tfcai mora refined aooetr

which, her yowh had been Little Harry followed this new

1 wherever he went: Hairr's mother

called him rightdown pleaaaat gentiumansthe farmer lfed him a good

tint, in one instant, oat of her life. And

tk she nerer lost faith and trust in him, -tem ceased to watch tor nis oomibg1

aganw. Drew, after a time, either goaded to the step by his sister's loud- voiced arguments, or prompted to it by his own sense of what was due to Mattio, not only took pains to ascertain that the marriage was real enough, but the further pains of searching for and find' ini? the address of Adam ArmitaKe in

IjODdon. It was strange how this gtrf

ana ner sexmer master potn trustsd Adam, in the face ox his ' inexplicable silence; in the faoe of even a more omiTy oua discoverr made br Drewwhenfn

townthe discovery that he had never

menaonen Juue i name to xus mother,

or alluded to Mattie at all As for

Adam, Mrs, Armitage had declared tHftt

he was not with her then, and that sue

codW not trrve an address that would

fad him, an assertion that confirmad

Mattie m the idea be had sooltenspolwn of to her. Aa autumn pawed, and the evenings grew chill with the breath of the coming winter, Mattie's health seemed to fail. The deeD melaneholT that orroisssed her

tnreatened to break tne springs of me. In order to escape Mrs. Bankes the girl took to lonely wanderings over uie

Downs, that eoded always at Stonedene: until, with the instinct of a wounded animal thai seeks to bear its pain alone, or from the ever-present recollection of the last words of Adam, when he said it was by the way of Stonedene that lie would return,, she besought the farmer to send away the woman in charge of 9m house and allow her to take her plaoe. i Drew yielded to the wish of the wife whose heart was breaking with the pain Of absence and the mystery of silence, and Mattie on this foggy 3ay had already lived months at Stonedene, on the watch always for the coming of Adanr. The foar increased instead of dimto-

iahed with the approach of evening Drew ooold not see his own house uutal he was close to it; as he had remarked, tie mystery of Mattie's affairs was not more impenetrable than the veil hiding

al natural objects jnst then. When lte had put up tlie horse and cone in to tea.

MRCBahnes, as she bustled about pre

paring the meal which Mattie's deft trtle fingers had been wont to set with a much quiiitneaa as well, as celerity, did not fail togreet him with the question, "Well, bow is she?"

one bac. come to mean Mattie in.

tjjevxioabniaryof the fanner and hit

About aa usual in health." Drew

rsplied, hftingthe now-fj-year-old Haxry. to his .knee, "but troubled in mind, though, to be sure, that is as usual, too;" . "She is out of her mind." exclaimed

Km. Bankes, irritably:

isvery one oat yourself Knows tnst ; if you do not know it it is only be-

OBUue yon axe as mad as she is or aayi

oaemwnt tmojcao zrem tne way . you am mil"

BLOOMlT0K iNl)IANi, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 18S2.

itew Serie8.V0L. XV.-iSfa 42.

"This evening, and in this mitit. and

i yoUjjpf, looking far from weH,' began 2baBankes. ' " Mame has wai ted so

One nicht one hour more than I

can help will make all the difference between willful wrong, and a. misfortune that ima faUeniOU all ahke." said Adim, He would not be clissnaded from netting oat at once, and j'n another minute the two -ntiiB. iwee. pjutng ttfeu': way through the driving mist, Adam talking Bhjoy-iwenh.-f 't After parting from' Mattie" ft had token a train to London, where, arrjvin due course, he'arove lri pab' to 'hte mother's 'house" in Qrosvehor s treet, within a few yards of which Ilia cab overturned, and Adam was thrown oat, falling heavily upon his head. After a

long interval, however,, he-opened his

'oonscionsnewn, aad,-

close to the road.

mannei among PBesed.

fneat

They all unseed hffn when he went way, Mattie most of all; bat the following summer saw him themajmin. a

weksome old friend this and no

. Drw, ft teen cabsarverta that went a around him, was not so much taken by anrnrae as bis sister vm mktm oua

day toward the end of this attcofvdvant

liiiysttciouatutA" riutntrw

tas mida hedfkmmAiit,udtm, niohA

61ie-wa the bearer of a note from Mat-

. eoMegsms; that the and Mr. Arari- . tuge were married, and hoping theser- , ' 'nantJiea BMiJrr'hW'plice, so that none wotiM be mconvemenoed Deew might shake his head and look thoughtful' but Mr. Armitage was ins own master, awl u was not the flrtt time - a gentkiiaap hlmarrii a country laaa. Beside, the deed' was done and psst re-' ' caaJhhtd gra quietly to one dt w!tencethesouiidof bluSioated tip to toilging or ht bride, and there they l9Gd biie brieVhright weCk of hsppv nes,then ens nKmnn walked qnietly bauk together, Vattui blushing and Moiling, and looking so lovely and ladylike in a ahnfls dress that she used to - wear before- she came to the farm that tley har dly kfw her., t , s, . , 4 Adamrexptalafllt that. Jmien to leave his wite for two day-no more in the care of her old friend ; at the end of that time he would return aad 'fetch wtforertolwSelp about, ta Msri immedialely. It would

sau witnout mm now. out tt bel bim to do bia bimt tbt hia nleea

. Mas weuaUMiMmnpoe. xnerewas 'also his mother to see, ssd prepaia for vfncavinr MattiB.

'-. Jjfattie walked s little way with her loHband and the farmer, along the breeey upland, and then Adam sent her back and hastened bis own ateps in the . directum o? the little atatioa at the foot efthoDowna, When became aain, he awid, laughing, that it would be from B station, and that he would drive in fly through the Stmasdene gate and ' along the track, and only approach to a eareiagMid loading to the wrm. Milift went ..way smiling, as ho Tnit

" Nay, nay," said Drew, genily, as Hie utter dish wits-set uoon the table with

a vehemence that made the' teacups rat-

ue. " xnere are no signs of madness.

about Mattte--rnless you call her trait in hex husband by so harsh a name." - 7 "Husband I a pretty husband jndeod! Fve no patience with him nor you iither. As if it were not a common tale enough t It would be better to persuade he girl to come home and get to work again than to encourage her in her fanfs, while you pay another servant here --and times so hard as they sro."

., "I was thinking to-day,' the farmer'

went on tossy, softly passing his broad palm over the blonde bead of the child upon his knee, "I was thinking as I

icaineakmgof how it stands written :

:He that kmtth not his brother whom he hath seas, how- ean he love Qod whomhehatlinot seenrAt that moment tho shadowy form of some one going to the front doorpassod th. window, .wainst, whtoh-the fog pressed cloeery.' Drew set little Harry oh hia feet and rose slowly, listening; with intentnew and a surprised look that' made his Bistor ask what ailed him. !BeTer-th dog -does not bark ( who by the asesoy of -.heaven, it is the man hhaseltl " eried Drew as the door

opened-with -. suddenness thatcausobVl:

Jura, jjfenkea to drop the plates upon the brick aVnr. : For Adan Annitage stood upon the threshold Adam, pale and worn, shadow Of his former self , but himself unm istakably. - Adam Jtaokcd around the room . as though aeekine some one. smiled in hia

old fashion at Harry, gave a half curious,-

jutu inouierexts Kiance 10 jsiia wnnn

end he turned to the farmer. . '

"llrew, "hosaul simply, a" where is my wife I" .. ;. " Mrs. Armitage is wsrtiag for you t tStonedene, sir. - There is some talk of your fanning hack that way. " WaHmy?" Adam threw up hia hands with apaawjoctate gesture. "What can ah hanm fluwaM4

as he did bo slowly at first, bnt after a

.-more full-Miw astouuduig :diaPvery was made thht his memory' was entirely gone. However, this state was one from which, bo said his friends, science coull at will recall him, and the- operation necessary tol restore Adaa to Idmseif was deferred only until his health per-

lfted of its being attended by :. min-

U1M1U1 nHK. .' . ! It was while.dasi was ' in "this s,tata abtve desoribadt Xtn& t Drew had seen ISra. ArmitageV -A -'proud womnn; she was ill pleased to hear that he had mar-

wu$ fuylAMVf Uk ay amvi VI aVOTf 19 fVOUtT gyrica upon Mattie's superior education and refined manners, alone stared her in the faoe. r "BiuiSSiy resolving that there was no need to embitter her own life bv all attempt to reoall to her Son this ill-fated marriage, she did not hesitate to deceive the unwelcome visitor. Change of Ecene had been ordered for the patiei t, and, before Draw called at the house in O-roevenor street for the seoond time, Adam and - his mother were gone. It was in Paris, months after that, that the operations were finally and successfully performed, and the first word ol Adam was Mattie's name. The first effort of his newly-recovered powers was to relate to his mother the history of his mar riage, and to write to his wife. " God grant the suspense has neither killed nor driven her mad!" he exclaimed. It was to his mother's hand that the letter was confided, and with that exclamation ringing in her ears Mrs. Armitage stood beJide the brazier filled with charcoal and burning in. the anteroom of their apartment in the Champs Elysees. She was not a bad woman, but the .temptation w8 too strong,, to allow tffia'aBair to untnvet itself? and what would turn up. If the girl were dead,

why norhftrm lias been done, and this terrible mistake of her qon's was rectified

at once. If the other alternatives were

to prove trao, and Mattie had lost her

senses, Adam would bo equally free from her, or measures covdd be taken to in

sure so desirable a resuit Mrs. Armitage

tore the letter into pieces, and waited by the brazier until the fragmenia were charred. Adam asked no awkward question, and was- not even surprised at receiving no answer to his epistle, since in it he had announced his cominir. The

first day his health admitted of it l.e set out alone-for England. Sfloh was the sfcwy. When Drew had told of his1 efforts to seek Adorn, and had mentioned that no letter had reached Muttie, Adam wasut .a losato. under

stand ther. part his. mother played, But

ne never apose 01 it men or at any future 3nho; ; ;..

The house door at Stonedens stood

ajor: evening had closed. in now, and the MIy'f0B.was still abroad, but tho figure at the gate was dimly discesmbhi.

.aam nastenea us steps. "For heaven's sake. sir. be careful :

the suddenness of it'might turn her brain," cried Drew, lavins a detaiuuur.

hand upon, the arm of his companion.

Adam gently shook mm on. '8udienness:"jhe repeated. ""Drew.

it is sudden to von and to Mik Bankes:

bu for-me and - for Mattie. w hose thoughts are day and night, nfe;ht and Jn.. JbiTl''.! - .1,-1 wlli.i ..-t. 1.

Drew stood still and Adam went on

alone until his footsteps became Audible and Mattie turned her head to B3e him standing at her side. Adam bad been, right ; no foar was here for Jtiofs brsjn. All esajitcient, all surprise and: wonder came afterward;

ai me nrut supreme moment, and with a

m as of a child who lias trot

roljS'anty-Democracy. y Therf 'astime,-not long go, wheti paryjjuidolygamy "weri wnt to be 'tWferredto as " twin relics of 'barbarism." Slavery is dead, bnt polygamy, it seems, must have a yokefellow, and how could it be better mated than with Democracy that kind of Democracy which learns nothing and forgets -nothingf . But the polygamists should reflect whether they can afford, the union proposed by the DemifcatiQ party, That pary. is a sort of upas-tree which spreads a deadly malaria throughout; the; radius of its .Oialign inlluehee. The pathway traced by the Demoriratio party in its hunt for the hist ditch is strewn with the wrecks of measures mid . systems of administration noon

which jt has, lavished its -' poisonous af-

leonon. xne emoraces oi ine jjemo,oratic party are like thpea of the bear Hearty but fiHal. ; 'As -over tKc'eatrance to his hell Dante inscribed this awful warning, "All hope abandon,-tTO who trnter Kcre,'' S'tf history writes bver the portals of the temple of modern Amorito 'Denioctaify. "Alliances with this

imlitical' harlot are signs of impending

i ,srr.rTrr.

sigh as of a child who lias got

to, JSlattw bold ent liaranns to

wifli one wordi- " '

"HnsliandJ." As Adam drew her to him'itwiw not

only the mist or the darkening evening

uuu uunaea irew so mat ior a moment or two hit nam neither of them.

People say Drawls luck has-turned

from that dap Stonedene found a ten-

sank ?. It is newly dose up and. prettily fnrnished now : Sir. and Mrs. Armitasre

fceme'down- here once or twice a "year

with .their children for a breath of jKesh

airandto"viMt oltVfrienda.(

ff.i'i

the have thoiitTht?

"She has thought you were gone, nfter all, upon that voyage and that your fetters miscarried. Sometimes she. has thought yon were dead, Mr. Armitage, but never' Drew broke off and held out his band. "We knew you could explain what has happened, sir," he coneluded. " Adam drew Jtds hand across his eyes in the way' a man might do who has lately been loused from a bad dreun and has some trouble to collect his thoughts. .

ffithad - not tpie myself, wand Meome a part of my own experience, I should find it difficult to belMvn -noaai.

M. A strange thing has happened" hew the old nmlle they nmemberedao

wea broke like light over his lace "aud yt a tiling not more strange, as the world gees, than that you I say nothmaj of Mattibut that you should have trusted me throughout I detected no distrust in your voice, no doubt in your eyes, net even when they first met mine just now. They call mine a rsxe caao,riend; theymight say the same of your belief fame. Bnt Stonedene, did you say r Walk with te there and Itear my tS as po."

'Prove t by Atothflr. '

While drivinR. lonsr the street ona

day lest winter in my sleigh, a little

boy, sue or seven years old, asked me the usual question, " Please, may I ride?" ' .1 answered .him, "Xes. if yon, are a goodtby." ' ' -r ;--t Be climbed info the sleigh ; and when I againtasked, "Are you a4 good boy?" be looked np pleasantly and said, V Yes, . " Can you prove it ?" ' "Yes, sir.'f "By whom?" "Why, by my mother,: .' said he promptly. I thought to myself, here is a lesson for boys and girls. When a child feels and knows that mother not only loves, bnt has confidence in him or her, and ean prove their obedience, truthfulness and honesty by mother, they are pretty safe. That boy will be a joy to hi mother while she lives. She cm trust him out of her sight, feeling that he will not run into evil. I do not think he will bo to the saloon, tho nrize-fiirl.t. or

the gambling-house. Children who I to whose prayerful have praying mothers, and motuent who 1 commend the frank

have children they can trnst, aro blessed indeed. Boys and girls, can you " prove by mother" that yon are good? Try and deserve tho confidence of your parents and every one else. Pbof, PiaEMfl thus raps the crying clergyman: Tears are " sometimes nothing but a nervous luxury. In a public speaker tears are an infirmity to be got d of, never a gift to be vain of." His advice to weeping clergymun is excellent: "Use tonics; study mathematics; take the fresh air; take the saddle." A TERBiBUi tornado in Minnesota was the cause of six oases of insanity, the result of shook.

ruin."

Slavery was intrenched behind the constitution iaid might long have de-

d the Abol itionists. Bnt. recklessly

throwing itself into thff outstretched

arms of the Democratic party, it quickly perished, a . The .lmMiratia nartv coaxed the.

'Southern people into a "solid" allegi

ance with it ntter the peace of Appomattox, and for fifteen years all enter-

prisesst theouthr-langnlshBdafecayed

ana dieu, while tne solid Hepuoucan North pl'ospeWi .But at the first sigh of revolt in Virginia the sound of reviving industry : beard throughout-the length and breadth of the late Confederacy. The Democratic, party took Greeley, and Trumbull, and Doolittle, and a host of Republican nialcontents.to its bosom, breathed upon them, and they are politically dead .and long since buried out of sight Uncle Sammy Tilden took his State reform measures into the Democratic camp, declaring that reform was "necessary," and tho Democratic party shouted the refrain hoarsely, and marshaled their truncheon flounahers, and, notwithstanding his school-district system of campaigmni?, carried the hero of Cipher alley in funeral procession to his grave, burying him with his promised reforms. But there is no objection to an alliance between the Democratic party and the polygamists, at least on the part of those who want to see the abomination of Mormonism wiped from the face of

the earth. Hie alliance was to be expected in the natural order of events. The struggle with the monster of polygamy has been long, but father languid than arduous. The abuse still flourishes in an "oasis in tho desert" situated in tho heart of the continent Its isolation has thus far protected it from the sturdy blows ol 'the reformer. Bnt civilization approaches it on every side. In the, stronger light cast upon it its hideousness is more clearly revealed. Its increasing prominence renders the affront of its continued existence the more palpable, tho more shameful. It travesties law, insults decency, menaces pnblio virtus. At this point, tho House of Bupresentativcs feels keenly the disgrace of assoointion with a polygamist delegate sitting in its hall. A .Republican member moves a resolution against the admission of polygamists as delegates, and asks its consideration as a privileged question on the ground that the House is in bad odor with the public because of its seating individuals living in the practice of that crime. And the Democrats voted that it should notbe ooasiderd.- Another Itepublioan member presented a bill embodying the same provisions, which required unanimous consent for consideration, and a Democratic leader Springer, of Illinois jumped promptly to his feet with " I object I" At last, then, there ia an issue be tween two great parties of the country represented in the lower house of Congress, and, strangely enough, it is on the subject of poly gamy. The Democratic party takes tho hoary old abuse to its bosom, hugs it, and hotly "objects" to its being disturbed. Springer might well have repeated of polygamy what Douglas said of slavery in the Territories : " I don t care whether it is voted Hp br dowri." But the alliance between

.Democracy, and polygamy is to be re-

joicea' at rawer man aepioreo. xne alliance seals the doom of polygamy. The union of the two renders each of the contracting parties more hideous; and there is poetic justice in the fact that polyga- j my is destined to meet its death in the arms of the political party monster in whose foul embrace slavery found its grave. Chicago Tribune,

Past Praying For. Congress man Ellis, of Louisiafc.,. is another Southern Democrat who is preparing to attend the funeral of the Democratic party. Ha says : " The Democratic party is dying nationally of timidity and inanition. It is without men or measures. It is not agreed on any policy. In the States of the South it is losing ground. Virginia is gone. There are grave fears for other States. It is disrupted and broken into divisions and factions in nearly every Southern State. It is past praying for, and if the South breaks up the Democratic party ia a thing of the past In this State and city Louisiana and Xew Orleans for six or eight years past anybody, without morals, brains or principles, could be elected, provided he could trick himself into a Democratic nomination, and all because of a tyrannical public opinion that aln ost ostracised a man who avowed himself a Republican." Mr. Ellis thinks both parties arc destined to break up and new ones be formed which will divide on principle

i rather thau prejudice. That may hap

pen, but it looks now aa if all the breaking would be confined to the Democracy,

ouuouierauuu wa utterances of Mr.

Ellis.

Why

Pendleton Favors Clvll-Scrvlce Beform.

Senator Pendleton admits very frankly the real cause of his zeal for his scheme of civil-service reform. He said to a reporter, of the Cincinnati Enquirer: "As

I a partisan Democrat I am strongly in

favor of my bill, I believe it will aid us greatly in getting iuto power. If my bill should pass it would paralyze the efforts of 100,000 Republican incumbents fighting to retain 100,000,000. This of itself, in an election as close as that of 1876 or 1880. would decide the contest is our favor." But what would.

become of tho reform after Mr. l'endleton's party got into power? Docs be suppose for a moment that the Demo crate would consent to have the- powef of the 100,000 oilioeholders pemuinently "paralyzed?" Not by A jugful. The Democrats would not lie in power a week before Mr, Gentleman George would move for the repeal of his little reform bill in order to give thi spoilsmen of his party an unobstructed rush at. the swill-trough. Fits John Porter A letter from (Jen. WarflcUI. Ex-Go. Jacob D. Cox, of Ohio, has furnished the following letter from the late Gen, Garfield for publication i HotSBOF ReI'HESEN'TATIVF-S, 1 Washikotoh, D. C, Fub. 18, 1880. f. ,1Tt Deab Cox : Iu our tweuty-livo year ut aaqaaintance and friendship, jtdu hare ncrer dons a greater sarvice to tho truth, or given mu to valuable a help as iu your letter o the l-t'.h iuet., which I have Just received. I hftve been so rtnnp by ihe doctann of the Bthofield Board that it la very hard to trust my cam mind to speak Of it As it appeared to mo, I hive made a strong effort to separate, myswlf from the case and to look at it intelleotuaUv, e though it related only to the piecoK and chessboard, and nut to living men or men who hid ever lived, and all my best efforts have brotiKht me out precisely to the conclusions of your otter. Still 1 had not yet made, iu tho ii.tbt of the testimony, a careful, strategic study of the field and maps as you have done ; bnt how canon H is 4bat what you say now, with tho now maps before yon, U the exact picture of tho Asia, ami Porter'n eondtiet Upon wl-ioh glowed in strong colors npop my mind and tho court martial uevontoen years ago. And now, my dear friend, I neeft your help still furiiier. and need it more l&ab ever before in our aoqnaintahce, ovrwhelmned as I am with the current daily work of the House. It is almost impossible for us to get the time- to go miautely through all the mps ot this new evidence, as I ought to do. Witt kindest regards. I aw, as vsr, yoiity it A. GUnriEiin, .

The Portrait of Queen Marguerite. Formerly the pencils of list our, the paint-brushes of Largilliere and. of Wat tean, took the responsibility of leaving to posterity -a-charming imago of the Princesses of their time. To-day it i the pens of literary gentlemen; who, remaining inactive in a political point of view, exorcise themselves in tracing delicate sketches and paint with art'the most royal of beauties, to wit : the Queen ,of Italy. In times gone by, not very long agoshe was then her Royal Highness sha would appear fresh and blonde as a tea rose, dressed in white, her delicate ihoulders bent by the weight of pearls, a fringe of diamonds in her hair, uparkling with yonth, brilliancy, candor, and wit, happy to be admired and still happier to do good. The crown was only husking. As tho artist hesitated to give the last

touch to his masterpiece, xertune seemed to wait before' placing the emblem of royalty on this young brow. She was the Marguerite ot Marguerites, to-day oho is Queen Marguerite in all the bloom of her beauty ; her form hafl become more round without losing any of its elegance; her hand is always delicate; her feet still plays with, the same facility in the small shoe ; there is as much suavity in her blue eyes, but it is bathed in more depth. The rose tint of her eyelids shows that grief has consecrated this ideal of a sovereign. Ths Queen has wept What is a Queen who knows not tears? They owe them to their people, as the Kings do thenheart's blood, and who knows if they have not the same weight in the Councils of Providence ? Never was a Queen Marguerite mors worthy ot the name of a flower and ot a precious stone. She continues the illustrious and radiant neoklaoeof pearls begun by Marguerite da Provence and continued to shine with' special luster in Marguerite de Navare : " Cette bolls ame srhardte Qui pleura tint aprea ravin." When the Queen travels by sea, ths whole crew, from the Commanding Admiral to the smallest sailor boy, wean the Marguerite boutonniere, n humble homage which profoundly touches her. " I love to see my name said she one day, "written on the hearts of so many of my good peoples Naples, her favorite oity, the beautiful city of the Vesuvius, whose name has been to the Prince, is one immense bouquet of Marguerites when ulie makes her appearance there; thousands of those stars with white petals cover the streets, ornament the windows. When the Prince of Naples was bom the ojty wished to offer the cradle to the mother. It was all engraved in rose coral, and the Queen received this jewel filled with a imowof marguerites. Transl atedrn n tho JParU Figaro.

At the beginning of hid theatrical career, Mr. W. J. Florence, the popular comedian, played "general titinty" at the Lyceum Theatre, New York, then under the management, of Mr, John Brougham. Among the new pieces produced by that gentleman was one that created no little sensation at its first representation. It was called "A Bow at the Lyceum Theaia-e, or Greenroom Sewu-eta." Each member of the company appeared on the stage as himself or herself, wearing every-day costume, and the scene was the green-room of the theatre. The performance was exceedingly realistic, aad went off capitally, until the entrance of Miss Buggins, a debutante, who s previously, arranged after looking over the part allotted to her, objected to tho "business,'' and insisted on having something more tragic, While she was makin.5 matters disagreeable on the stage, astout middleaged man, dressed in Quaker garb, rose in the centre! the stalls, and uxolaimed: "That woman looks for all the world like Clementina! Her voice is very like, the form is the same." After a pttuse, he added, "It ia my wife!" ai.d rushed toward the footlights, shouting, "Come off the Btage, you miserable woman!" Tho audience, at first amuped, grew aaitry. and cries of "Put him out!" "Sit

down!" "Polioo!" rang through the !

uuunc. up ill lUU KUirt UCT, VUtlUlD tu all, was a red-shirted fireman, who loudly threatened he wovld give "Old Broadbrim" a sound thrashing if he attempted to lay a hand on the young weman, and was presently seen rushing down t:nirs to carry his threat into execution. The house was in an uproar; ladies tried to escape from the theatre, while gentlemen vainly endeavored to restore order. At hist the irate husband clarabored over the orchestra, the fireman clone behind him, to bo seized by a couple of policeofficers, and drtggod upon the stage. When there, the were made to face ;he house, and immediately the regulation semi-circle was formed, the rhymed "tag" spoken, and the curtain dropped, almost before the bewildered audience had time to recognize in the indignant husband, Mr. Brougham hiuisall; in tho recovered wife, Mrs. Brougham; in the red-shirted defender of the young woman, Mr. W. J. Florence; and to realize tho fact that the whole scene had been previously rehearsed, and that they had been very cleverjy hoaxed.

II1ST0EICA1 Mms. PoajjPADOUit was the originator of liighheels. The Egyptian physicians ci old were paid by the state. Vlvsy says that four-wheeled carriages we?e invented by the Phyrgians. The main facts of blood circulatkn have only been known S250 years. Embalming was in use among the Egyptians at least 3000 years ago. Six hundred lions' wero killed at one show, given by the Roman Pompey. Tan Assyrians and Greeks had trimonthly festivals, besides annual revels. Queen Elizabeth granted the first' royal patent conceded to players iu 1576. Wbek, the architeot of St. Paul's, de. signed more than forty publio buildings in London. Gibbon began to write his "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" in London, in 1772. Sahah, Duchess of Marlborough, used to say she was born before nerves came into fashion. The four passions of John of France were said to be novel-reading, music, chess and backgammon. The carriage of magazines and other books by mail was introduced at the same time as postage stamps, by Sir Rowland Hill. 77 1 : ' Thb first' foundling hospital established by Royal Charter in London, don, 1789, was instituted through the exertions of Capt Coram, whose portrait was painted for the hospital by Kogarth. Extravagance was at ono time so notorious in the mutter of monuments, among the Greeks, that Leon forbade the erection of any mausoleum which could not be erected by ten men in throe days. The first successful attempt at proserving in'eat, by packing in air-tight jars, was made by M. Appart, in France, in 1811, For his discovery the emperor rewarded him with a gift of liflOOO francs. The Hebrews wore sandals made of linen and wood, though those of the soldiery were made of brass and iron. The Spartans went barefoot, and Homer describes them as going into battle unshod. When Richard went to the Holy Land one of the laws' he made for his troops was that if any one should be convicted of theft, boiling pitoh should be poured over his head and a pillow full of feathers shaken over it On Eabter Monday, 1208, the whole of England was laid under an. interdict by the Pope. All the churches were closed and no services allowed, save confession, absolution, baptism and administration of the riitticum at the point .of

death. No marriages were to bo celebrated, bodies were buried without honor. The king retaliated by seizing property and lands of the church. The interdict remained for six years. History of -the Tichborne Trial The Tiohborae ease reads- like a

highly-colored work of fiction and may be briefly Riven as follows: Roser

Charles Tichboi.-ne was born January 5, 1820, and was, after his father, heir to the title and large estates of his uncle, Sir Edward. Roger was educated in France and at the Roman Catholic College of Stonyhiirst, and when 20 years of age, entered the army. In the year 1852, Roger wooed the daughter of Sir Edward,, his cousin Kate, but her parents were opposed to the match, and the young man resigned his commission in the army and went to sea. . On June 19, 1853, he arrived at Valparaiso, and on April 20, 18!4, sailed from Bio de Janeiro for New York in the ship Bella, a vessel that waa lost In March of the year 1853, Sir BJward died; and was succeeded by bis brother James, the father of Bogeir ; and Sir James died Juno 11, 1862, and, as it .was believed Roger had been lost at lea, was succeeded by Alfred his second son, and brother of Roger. Alfred died in February, 1866, and was succeeded by a posthumous son, bom in May, 1866. Lady Tichborne, in the meantime, was not on' " good terms " with the rest of the family, and in her peculiar and pronounced way manifested her feeling. In 1865 she beean to advertise in the Eng

lish and AuBtrailian newspapers for

Roger, who, it trill be remembered, nau been absent, t e., dead, nearly twelve years.' In the year following a butcher of' Wagga Wagga, Australia, supposed to be Arthux Oiton, but called himself Thomas Castro , announced that he was Roger Charles Tichborne, and' that he had been saved from the wreck of the

ship Bella. This person after some cor

respondence wish .usdy 'i-jonDorae, set sail for Enirland. reaching London on

Christmas, 1866, and in the month of January, ot tho next rear met Lady Tichborne at I'aris, and was accepted

by her as her son, and tiirnisned witn funds. Lady Tiohborae was almost the only member of the family who recognized him, all the others repudiating him as an impostor. For some months ho went about England collecting evidence, securing witnestes, and obtaining such information in reference . to the real Roger as would be valuable. In March the first action was commenced by the " claimant" filing a bill in chancery, the real issue of which was to enable bim to prove himself l be the veritable Roger, and the rightful owner of the title and estates. The case did not come to trial for nearly four years, because of commissions being ssnt to South America and Austrailia: and in the interval Lady. .Tiohborne died. The trial began May 11. 1871, and, with two adjournments, f ; continued 103 days, (ill March 6, 1872, when the jury interposed, declaring themselves satisfied that the

" claimant wa-i not xioger xiouuoroo, and he was non-suited. He was at once ordered into cur.toay to be tried for perjury, bnt was later released on bad. The perjury trial wiw commenced April 23, 1874, when he was found guilty and sentenced to fourteen year of penal servitude ; he was sent to Millbank, and later transferred to Dartmoor prison. The estates of the Tichborne were valued at 24,000 a year. The first trial won before the Court of Common Pleas, and the perjury trial was before the court of the Queen's Bench. It was settled beyond reasonable doubt that the " claimant" was Arthur Orion, who emigrated from London, his native place, to Australia, and because of evil-doing changed his name to Castro. There are, however, many in England who believe, and still olainn, that Orton is Roger Charles Tichborne. Tins Northwest. Throughout Illinois tho climate has altered for the better with tho development of the soil. Even tho roads, which arc notoriously bad in Illinois, are growing bettor. As to tho capacity of tbo ground to produce wheat, corn, etc., nobody can begin to say when it will stop. The great State of the futurofor

I wheat is going to be Dakota, That TerI ritory will become i. great State. The ; power of the Northwest to produce a I highly-energized pe(ple ia probably not ! equaled on tho .glebe. .The lerttenls I that are filling it up are IiitU, Germans I and Scandinaviaps. They5 fain com-.

pound into a magiiificwif race, and the peculiarity of the ciimats is- thntf it gives them active brains and .budios The cold of tho winter and, tho irr.cing air of the summers bring' oUtTifl human

power in a man. you see Hia rftce.grow-

mg in swe almost uwisr your .e;res.,-fr Oath.. . ': Jledeirn If rar er?. ' A writer in -"Blackwood's Magazine believes that the invention of long range fighting has brought into the world, a typo of fortitude which 3:afi been hitherto totally Unknown, (exerting; in oecanmnal isolated cases,) which is just as much a product of our century- an railways or electric .telegraph, and which, is as distinguishable from-the aztimal courage required for sword-woik as is prophecy for fortuno-tHlling. Ii stcaUd , - dashing at the eneety in iiarce excitement,, instead of the hot emotion gf savage struggle, instead of furious niuscuiar

exasperation, instead ot the utensesb

development of combative facilities, our soldiers have now to exhibit their : intrepidity by. remaining placid, mo'lkmless, undisturbed amidst a hail of dentil and wounis,' They have to stay quint under, constant fire, 'to let themselves be, knocked to pieces', without the chance or even the possibility of doing any hing to defend themselves in an i.wger", t mcient, satisfactory form; the ono solution open to thorn is to treat the other people, in the same fashion, aud to pelt im personal missiles at them from afar. Not a man on either side has the f.hsasuro iif identifying .the particular opponent who slaughters him. There is scori.' aly any of that mdiyiduqjity of carnage which ia so contenting in a hand-to-hand fight And, worse than all, there is none of toe output of effort, Of the bitter strain, which necessarily accompanies the exhibition of brute hardihood, Th e bravery of to-day is a nervomi, contiiEiplatiye process; there is no action, re movement, no tug about iu It principally consists in waiting oledience until yon, are "hit by a stray shot Troops do not like it They are always wanting to get out of it, - to rush ahead, to strike, to do something violent and comforting on their own behalf. They feel that it in absolutely uioiatiirsl to stand still to be killed, that it is total

ly anomalous to rest unaggressive under

a tempest ot ambient peru, that it is contrary to all the tendenoite of humanity to make no vigorous attempt to vrard ofit destruction and yet that ifi precisely what they have learned to do. They may use shelter, if they ism find it ( it .is no longer cowardly to Slide) but they may not use action. Incno of Ba'Teta caricatures, a regiment in halted in the middle of the river, with the w.itei- up to the men's necks. Thb colonel says to them: "My children, I forbid you to smoke, but 1 permit you to sit down;" and that is very much t'be situation in which European soldiers are placed in battle now; it is permitted them to be

lulled, but it is forbidden them to fight In Asia, it is true, there is b'M a ohance of getting to close qnarte -s, and of using the right armiu a good inaiiy Englishmen who have been hi Afghanistan con testify. But in modern rlghtiug on' the continent, the rule is that the foe is so far off that no fighting can reach him. The consequence is that cur now shape of courage is. based upon the suppression of direct efforo. It has becoite a passive procesS, in whi:h we 5nduM, instead of acting. Tho oM sword -dariag was impetuous, emotional, and intuitive. The new gun courage is deliberate, logical and subjective. The one mas material and substantial; the other ia abstract and theoretical. They are as different from each ptht r as ciedulity vmd faith, as astrology and astronomy, as dreams and thought.

Hw Appearances Deceive ' A Michigan temperano t advocate recently stated in a speech 1 hat he watched the doors of a saloon iu-a cettaia village for an hour one-day and now thirty-one men go and come. He therefore assumed that thirty-cne dr.oka had traded owners, arid that the town in full of tipplers. Never was a man more grievouslymistaken. Nothing isaiore deceptive than the saloon bus ness. Of the thirtyone men he saw enter perhaps not over five took a drink. When yon see a fat man collini? ii to it saloon on a hot day your fltst thought is that he will fling his hah on tn J floor, fall into a chair and call lor claw with ice in it, and you wrong-It ho. He simply enters tho saloon to see ;i. coal will ho any higher if he tvaits .wiothcir month before buying. The saloon-keeper al ways knows Whether coal .will be up or down, and is always willing to tell. You see a couple of lawyers enter saloon and your impression is thst they are going to shake dice .for the drinks. Nothmg could be moroerroneoda They are simply going in to consult a State map to decide a bet that I'lshkjll is ia Bass County. Having toeured the information thoy walk right out withor.t even stopping to reflect on tho awftd suction nature must liave- giveai man to pull a whole glass of lenjoaade through a straw six inches long. An insurance agent is encountered s he comes out of a stdoon wiping bis mouth on the back of hii hand. The publio at onoe jump to t.fee oonolusioa that he has been strui?gliug with a brandy smash. That's rl iei th publio wrong him. He holds a policy on the safoon, and he accidentally dropped in to see if the stock was beiag kept up to given figures. A fly bit :iim on t ae chin, and he instinctively wfplhis mouth. A young man in this oily lost his situatien in a bank booaus he was seen coming out of a saloon aud was heard to eay: "Ah! that oools m-i off!" Instead of dying of a broken heart, as some bank clerks would, tliis young man ptoduced proofs that he went to tbo snlooii to buy some old beer tumblers fee his wife to put up jelly in, and that im he c una out the cool breeze struck htxi and caused him to remark as abovo. He was at once reinstated, and now he can go to the saloon to auk the wtight of ton of bricks, the name of the .onittest xivor in the world; or what the "serge" in George Washington's"amo stood for, and no one a'lspeots oir Bialigtjs him. Out of a hundred men who enter a saloon only a very small ;ptir cent quaff tho goblet of destruction. The rest go to find out th exaot slvn-tage on the wheat croD, the fluctuatiii.nn in English bank stocks, the news from tho Panama canal, uid various other things; aud if they happen to wipe t isir mt uths ns they come out, it is sunply an invokui: tary movement! for which they eatc no more bo- held respontctde for than a young babe, Detroit I't'ee Press. Don't despise the lowly; th underjaw does all tlie work.

A woca JfouBtwentytwo children. ' Tan Indiana State Beiird gricultiah'Mxkix hand ftllMi., ' Baip!S S. TiioitsoN, one of ' the most -9xtensite mlllsrs iii IttdUana, died at IWe Hiwite.'" .Tan number of dogs in the State of

Indiana, .ae shown by the areports filed

u tho Auutor it State's oinoe,w nearly iso.ooa Tan Semcmtic Central Committee . oC - iUielby. ou'ity-inet last week and deoided to holfLtlM Qouny jDofiffution as ctu-ly as April 15. A wildcat was killed near Hngerstown last week, the first that has been found in Wiiyns comity for ytavrs; but the hunters are confident there ake more of them in tlio voods. A Qebman vita throe daughters, aged 17, 10 and 7, has arrived at Elkhatt, 1 laving walked il the way from. Arkaaiias. His wife, wiiostarted with tbwn.difid on the road. .... A pkbttt romance was about to be enacted in Fort Wayne, An 18-yoar-old boy mode an attempt to ohipe with a 14V

tterfored. " M bs. Cos rot, ot Jefferonvilte, moth

er of Sister Ass imptia, killed,. by a railroacl collision iit Indianapblis Jan. 2, will sue the railroad oompanias tor f 10,000 damages. fy John Beom' distillery; in Shelby county, pays, a revenue tax of 4Hl.tO0 a day. It is said to make 8 larger yield of whisky to toe bushel than any other distillery in th United States, .. The contracts for the erdargcinent of the Indiana c tton-mill at- Oanaelton, the flint and hrgestisjthe State, have ten let ' The enlargement--an additional machineiy will cost $250,000. "X r.dtatE S re sidniS jaear lyia, Raa-

l- dolph coiinb', ieoeived from Cincinnati

fioLiir quafsuu ok vwo smau-poxKiaDS. It was jieitiier dated nor signed, bnt gave the advice to go home and die. The children of tlie Tate Gen, Benjamin J, Spooner have; brought'.suit at Jndianapolis 'agAinst the Phoenix Mutual -life Int. ar ace Company) of Hasrtfoni,' for $10,0Cp,i tlie .full .value of the insurance. ' ' '. Trrs wife all '3harleS 0. Earl, wellknowncitiEowt f Indiaapoba-hsa filed a bill f or-divort a, Tltey were severed by tlio courts in 1878, and remarried;in 1877. Kbw sho' ccimplains of cruelty and abandonment; ' At Erie, La urence 'county, a clergymnn'a daughter had her watch stolen while kneelmg With penitent sinner at tlie altar. A young man' who, mas sua pected wasiie:cc day caught in the act of digging up the timepiece in a pasture arab. CJoortt AW died in the County Asylum at Indianapolis, where she had resided for thirty-five years. She bad of late taken daily ninety grains of opium, more e? less morphine, and a pint of whisky. She has been known to consume 200 gi-ains of opium ia a day. Thb homos in Jennings county aro rapidly dying off, and a number ot farmera from that section report that their cattle are dyizg from the same disease, or something similar. The strange feature of the cttcle plague, or whatever it ii, is that it is only the good cattle, or those fed for market, that so far have been the victims. Fanners are alarmed. At a district school in Hendricks townsliip, Shelby oimnty, two boys at recess' secured a bow and arrow for the purpose of having somo sport In the play a son of John Hill, was struck in the ejn with aa arrow, completely knocking. the eyj out i The development of the stone-quar

rying interest- in lncnana is proceeding so rapidly that there are now employed in the Stato eleven steam channelers, U which eight aro in Lawrence, county . and three in - Monroe counljy. Tan new pi m for running faro in New Albany is said to be as follows : All persons visiting the faro-bankare'to become

memtiers of a club and to take an oath

not to rovenl the names ol persons they

may mst in the room nor any of the proceeding. ' " ".

The Louisville. New Albany and Cbi-

ctigo rdiid hai adopted - the- name of Mouon JRou ," from the niimo of their new,' Bts.tian, formerly Bradford Junction. The name is of lhclian origin, and

is said to mean "fast runniag, henoe

its signinowee.

Lttks Fkanoes, a prominent firmer of Laporte ceun'iy, has met with a remarkable series of affictions wilhiri a few montlis, He ell last spring and broke his arm. Later, lightning struck his burn, consumed it and over $2,000 vKrthi of property. Then rb.mmatijm laid hint up for -a time. To cap the olinutx, a few

mornings ago he -fell on bis doorstep, and broke both bia arms' and ono leg. A 4-YSAnca.i boy a!i the Surirical Institute, lodixnaiolLs,; is Tinderpoing treatment to: spinal troulki, whteh have undoubtedly boon bronght about by ipuch smoking of cigars aud cigarettes. The father of the child, n respectable gentleman from Clay City, states that liia son has been a heavy smoker for a yea-and a. half, and that cigars vmxe given to him from bis infancy to keop him quiet The littt fellow vail smoke twenty stoga cigars in a day, utid still cry f ir more. . a O. Showxks, a proininctit citisen of Blocmiugton, met with a hoirible deatij at tlie depot if tbeLonisviUd, New Albany aud Chicago rood mGreencastie. He was. woasing, the track of the former just in advance of the south-hound pacsetngar train, aud, having his hand up to shield his face from tho storm, failed to see the toiin, whifph struck bim and eturried him :ibout fiftieeb feel when his foots went crushing into a frog and he feU. "Em Iwm were both out off below tlto knee, his hip and side horribly m&nglsd, and his head horribly brnised. Ee (lt in alwut twenty mimttos. afAaBS BurxJtiTB,' of Putnam county, went to Greoiicastle aud became intoxieated. In thiswmditicoiheboa.'rdodthe evocing train for home. He waa jostled off tho front end of the rear ooaeh unobsmvctd and iistantly killed He lay in the track the whole night, and at feast a dozen trahumust-.have passed over his body. Whei. found his remains wero C Battered everywhere, his. head having i . .m. a n . , j! t L J

men out on ana iwbb lour ice uws the track, iw d the foabttea of the faoe nrn Id with difflmiltrr be . ItacocmiaeiZ.

T!arei of Sublette's brothers hav jireviouely met tooir deaths on the tame road, A rtANBsoira woman," the wifeof "a merchant naiaed Kirk, at Madison, told . hr husband that a'- clock-mender, wio had called at the house that dnyf wanted to come again next day and talk with her. She told him she atliought it wouldn't be proper-but would ask her husband about it That gentleman told her it was Absurd, and that the nam mustn't oome. But he iiud oome ; come several times, and, being a handsome man, made, her madly infatuated with him He elt the neighborhood very suddenly, which threw Mrs. Kiitt into a melancholy, ending inso'violenta mania - that she wan :Kht to the insane .asylum. The popular notion is that the clock mail administered some drag which gave him his powtrover her, and the people wor ld oinamjmt a tree with, bun could lav lian a An lliw.

WIOJ J '-.1 " Vi.. .......

.N iavBH propowa k nuuro maehlie gdur vheels of raw bufialo hidsby cementing- and preaiing toqjothesr' aa mauy layers as are i-equiredf ''for the . breadth of tie wheel. The'blanks thus ' piefiared are out to fttrta tho teeth in the usual maaiaw with aoitable tools, Tha advantis olaimed are. smooth and noiaeleu aetion t veryhigh snaew aad greater -lurabuity withwt .Ita tien.

Wt tl 4r1'