Bloomington Progress, Volume 16, Number 29, Bloomington, Monroe County, 1 November 1882 — Page 4
- TVS EAST. Thk robber mMiufactuTers, in con vention at New Yotfe, protested against the pf pan tic npecUStin in that article, and resolved ie 5e their manufactories the boot xmi hoe interest after Deo, 28, and nukc,f other arrives after Not. t until uch time as the price of erode robber shall warvans them in re?uminir operations.... Marie Prescott, tha aiitressl brought suit in New York against the President of the American News Company for circulating a dramatic paper contalnrnyr libels upon her reputation, and was awarded 12,500 damage The thefts perpetrated by Ellis P Phipps in the Philadelphia almshouse are now stated to have been. SGffflOOO, and to have eowinned for nine years. He kept fifteen fniailk supplied, and in 1S7B paid out 311000 for cigars to scatter in eleetioneer-ing-At Auburn, He., two bricklayers, Matthew Connor and Patrick O'CouneU, engage! in a fight upon a staging fifty feet above the eTOund, ani fell clasped in each other's acm, both Items' instantly kilted, Both nten leave large families in poverty. Mrs. Lasgtry, the English professional bounty, arrived at New York Oct 23. She is accompanied by Mr. Labourchere, the wife of the famous London editor. She will appear on the stage in the principal cities of the c.untgy under the management of Hoht Abbey, or Sew York. Her repertoire comprises only four ji ava "As yon like It," "the Honerinoon." -She Stoops to Conquer, and "An Unequal Hatch."
Actuated bj jealousy, John N. Nape, i
of PorUandville, K. 1., shot his wife at the breakfast table, then his hired man, and, beside shroting himself, cut his throat. Mm, Nape and the hired man will recover. At an auction sale of seats for Mrs, Langtry's opening performance in New York, Char) es Wyndham M oS the lower proscenium box Tor 330; "diner boxes brought 45 and 50, and orchestra chairs went at IVT.50, toe average price being 11,
ties of the Arm are estimated at 1,000,000. w. Christine Nilaaoa landed at New York, after an abseuoe of eight yean, to remain until the end of April. poLrncAi. Ohio Democrats celebrated their victory by a great meeting at Colninbu. ExSenator Thnrman presided, and Senator Pendleton was one of the orators. .. .The Oregon Legislature elected Joseph N. Dolph rutted States Senator for six years, On the forty-first ballot At a meeting of Mormons held at
Ogden, Utah, ex-Delegate and Apostle George Q. Cannon denounced the men whom he sa'd
PENN, THE QUAKER. The Bi-Centennial of His Landing Celebrated at Philadelphia. Tha Exercises Witnessed by Over fcb6,000 People.
Charleston, 2.1 and 60.7. Covington presents striking figures in opposition, viz. : 23.'2 par cent, gain in population, i and 1.2 in church membcrshipi Figures i for Northern ciliea have not been com-
piled in this matter.
REPUBLICANISM.
THE OHIO ELECTION;
Rousing Speech by Congressman Julius C. Burrows at Detroit
The bi-centenninlof the lundm'gof William Penn in Pennsylvania w&s celebrated by the people of Philadelphia in nn imposing mnn-
iiMiwunuNniMniucuiiiiumarwu , ... . . . . - . I TnYv T.hrt feRr.lviT.l0a mmi niT t.livm.irl, nnflt.lv
were attempting to deprivo the tSnlnta or i . ' ' "t -j their constitutional right With nino'i 6. ! m tire week, and being witnessed by thusiasm the assembled Mormons adopted a ! hundreds of thousands of strangers from rote of confidence in Mr. Cannon. j abroad The ccrcmones opened at f'hos-
J.HF. oracuut crttint 01 the Dallots cast i ter, a suburb of the Quaker Oltv. on Hun.
in the Ohio election shows that Newman Democrat), for Secretary of State, beat iownsend (Republican) by 19,115 vote
day, Oct 22, when the Society of Quakers assembled in large numbers. A letter from X U. Whittier was road, iuolosing n po -m "which he wrote sixty years ago. Addresses were delivered by A f itsel H. Ime, President of the Pennsylvania Peace Society, nml John M. Broomall, of Medina, Ohio. On
League has adopted an address to the Irian j at ch.tcr, of the landing of WiilimnlVnu people in sut stance as follows: "The land- ! and his parlr, which m witnessed hv
The
FORKIOX. committee of the
National
Official BfetnnU from. All out One County. Official returns of the Into election In Ohio hnVe been received and are priuted below.
The comparisons nro for President in i 18S0, Governor in 1881, and Secretory oi ; State in 18SJ:
Why the Republican Party Should Bo Continued in Power.
Republican.... Democratic.... Prohibition.... Greenback....
1SSH. ..375,l ,.:mii,8-'1 .. 2,64i .. MM
11. :il-2,731 10,5117 2,915
lKHi 2S7.7B9 :ir,S74 12,20-i 8,3 8
I 2.0,0(0 people. The landing Wns mnde lit the oxset spot where, J(Xi years before, the 1 great Quaker first put his foot upon Amerl- '., can so L Thousands of human throats, numerous church bel s, and an aggregation of steam whistles, greeted hit advent, and the ! enthusiasm was unbounded. 'later a moni stcr nieotinur was held, at which 2,- ik ohil- ' dren sang '-,JCy Countrv. 'tts of Thee," raid rpcehR w-re iWllve'ieil by Oov. Hoyt : amlJ hn M Urnomnli, who sketchel IV mi's : career in a masterly hand A gseat parade : in the afternoon and a I r lliant displuy of : fireworks in the evening bronght ill-? day's i celebration to a close. On I'uoniay, (heiMlh, the festivit e opined in Phlladeli-hin, and lasted until Friday evenih-r. First enmo the i Inml nr m Pen vh..li wns ui1-nnuaoH J.v u.
f'eath. . ..The Egrptitta Ministry has permit- , ast tlir ng m iiu:tte.l at over 5 0.0 0 people, ted Arabi Pa-ha. to be defended by renreisri A ili-put.h fioui .hat citv sav: "As carlv its coun el, and 1 Broadley, Eve andHapier wiU . midnlaht Jiwu tugi.t. peoile' liestan totnlie be his de.eudcra. - I available spnie In J;i.e ,ni!r.ib'orhood, and THE followiug will constitute the 1 hundroas r.;mHind out nl Bigl.tsoas to lte j. ... . ... . ... . . on ha-d I h:s mnr it:-w'ten ihe ran broke )KOJt,oif1i?n0niaintAr'lb.1 t'ronh the rn n th eat. niug c louds Uie Pasha: 1. That, in violation of the lights ot ; gtreelawere blocked for several fquaies. nations, he hoisted a white fl-ig In Alexan- ! So dense was ihe throng that men and
lords have combined with the puroo le ' ot breaking the spirit of the tenanta. The dismay wh ch the present scale of tudicial rents has c;e ited among the applicants to the land courts rentlc. s ft moi e necesiarv now than ever that the tenantry should b- reunited in a vigilant and lawful association for the purpose of protecting themselves from injustice Tne inspiration of our struggles is to transfer all local power and patronage from privileged strangers to the hands of tbe people, and so fortify tha people for the work of self-government. Oyebdask, the Austrian who was captured in the act of manufacturing tomb, has been tried at Trieste, an.l sentenced to
Hoo cholera of a new and virulent type t as broken out near Iowa City, where Jacob Seller has lost over 400 head. The afflicted animals seem almost rotten from cancerous acres. Mbs. Lee. It. Se.vtos, of Dos Moines, Iowa, who brought actions against several saloon-keepers in that city for &0G0 damages each lor seniug her hnsband whisky, has won her first suit Ax organization, known as "The Mao cabeea has been stazted in Cincinnati, the purpose of which 6 to enoonrage and assist In tha promotion of igricnlture among the Israelite The plan is to enroll in sections all Israelites over 13 veirs of age, who shall pay annual dues of 4 teach: the sections in the Stats to constitr.te a division, and the rerirr sentatives of divisions to constitute a gram! uivMon. Johx M. Doifit, the new Senator from Oregon, is a man of vast wealth, 51 year of age. He fe State Senator, tlrand Master of Masons, and Vice President of the Transcontinental railwar.... Charley Ford, one of the slayers of Jesse James, has been arrested on a charge of robbery committed last year. A dispatch fron: Grand Forks, Dak., ays that Chirles Thurber, the negro who aragedMrs. Birrbank and a Norwegian girt
named Norton, in thtt Tenitory, was taken
The Sheriff, Chief of iPolice and otherofli.:ers fou.ht the mob with dubs, and fought ha:d, but were overpowered. A large number of the mob were badlv hurt by clabs, and all. the officer, were injured, some severely, with kn ves. bricks, stones, etc. Hon. John Hanna, one of the leading attorneys and politicians of Indiana and a former meml r of Congress, died at Plainfield, after an illness extending over a year. He was a member of the first Legia store of Kansas, and introduced an rot to abolish slavery in that Territory.'.... The planing-mOl of A. Backus & Sons, in Detroit, said to have been one of the best eq iipped in the United State, which was valued at 130,000, was destroyeti. by firo. THK SOUTH. The short-horn lierd of F. X Megibben, of Cynthjana, Ky, was sold at auction for fri6,0l0, an averageof 3uOeach. Five negroes, including one woman, were hanged atEastman, Ga. , for complicity in a terrible rio ; winch occurred at a camp-meeting at. that place in August last. The outbreak had ori-.in in the arrest by tbe Citv Marshal of a negro gambler, who, upon resisting and attempting to escape, was shot and killed. This inflamed the negroes to a furious pitch, and they wreaked their vengeance in the most horrible manner jpott a young man named Harvard, whom they ki.ied and mutflatefL In an encounter which followed be'W. ea tint wh te citizen!? and the riotous teg o s thrse of the latter were killed. The colored -jeople of the region regarded the nanisbirlenti as out of all proportion its the: crime committed, aud there were apprehensions of trouble at the execution, but lone eccithTd,3atid the fivenegroes were hiingt d w.thout any :itt. mpt j.t rescue. Tub Bight BeV. Robert Paine, senior Bishop of the M. E. Church South, died, at Aberdeen, Miss.
dria. and. under cover thereof, retired with
his troops and gave up the city to flic and pillage. 2. That he excited the Epypttans to arms against the Khedive, a Tha; he continued the war despite news of
peace. 4. With having incited civil war,
women wore trampled on find nearly
orushed to death, and a dozen or more people were pu-hi d off th" doek, in the fielaw re and got a thorough ducking. All of them wer.- re c.ied. howeve . While
the dense mas? awaited the landing the river
dt-vastatton. massacre and nU aje In E-'Viv I nrecent. d a be .utiful ai.no.irnnea Kverv
tian territory.... Baker Paiha, now engaged Aip for m'les along ih river front was in reorganizing the Egyptian army, recom- dicked out in holiday attire. Tubs and mends that the field t iflccrj be eoua'ly di- , steamers darted ubout," loiuled down t the Tided between British and Egyptians. ; watur's -dse. Thov met tne Welcome ev-
and the minor officers, from C.ip- ! eral mues below the citv. and the procession tain downward, be selected from Egyp- : of tugs and steamers up to the w;.arf made tians, Albanians and others who . a striking and pretty picture. As the i.ro-
are at nresent in the Khedive's service. .
Gold lodes have been discovered at Huehuekenango, Ouatemala, which the owner declare to be richer than any ever found in California There is much excitement in the region. Xktet, the Swiss who caiupaignel with Arabi Pasha, says he can prove that the
evacuation of Alexandria and the defense of
cession u.nr.e in sight the I'nited States men-of-war hn'ohftd forth a welcome, and Feon s of whistles added to the clamor. Tin; Welcome lire' up to the whaif, and Penu and hi par'y of Dutch and Quakers, in ancient costumes, stepped ashore. They shook hands with more lmtch and Quakers and then the Hula proet;sion fought us way throucfh the crowd to the historical Blue
Anchor Inn. and was subsequently eneortnd
the country were ordered by the Ministry ; to Broad street, mid givenaplaeelntbegreat
procession which started at U:3U antth':tt
trie mrcets tor nearly nvc nours. t ne pro
cession moved from Uroau to i nostnut,
to
Third, up Third to Market out Market to Broad and out Broad to Columbia avenue, where it wa dismissed Never was such a
For five hours hor-wcars
and sanctioned by the Khedive;
Is the cathedral at Belgrade, the capi- ' ta! Of Servia, a woman fired twice at King Milan, who escaped injury. His assailant M wIjIa. n flnlAal unto ahn t
for treason four years ago, and the crowd scene witneMea
maae an auem lie fainted in tl
2vu tu wans; lMiawiuwi uuuuuoviu un wiiw i . . . , . , . . ' ' . ... tion....What was left after the terrible high walls of bnntiiig and gay rtass. while soourgeof cholera In Manila had died away ! j;mdoviaiirt roof-tops and stagings wore has been well-nigh swept out of existence by ; Th iusands of peop:e poured into the a fearful tri'hooE, something resembUng one ! city from all over the 8tutc, and all along Of our Western ovc ones. The big Wow oc- ! theroute t iey Were packed ke sordines in curredOet SO, and wrought vast destrue ! abo- It ls esttaiated t atf0,000 iwople tton to buildings and shipping. ... .The cor- i rrom outide the city limits wltnessMl the re-pondence between Arabi and the Sultan I parude. in which S.i,(.0i) men took part lo-
has been seized by the Egyptian authoritiea i aay va lne rac Pnraae, anu, wren sue ex
Mempt to lynch her. Queen Nata- blockc-J, and all streets ex-ept those . in the cathedral, and was con- i along tho hue of march were deserted. The he nalaceinan unconscious oondi- i coljm moved along Chestnut Ixitween two
Jt is highly compumentary.
TheIuII extent of the calamily suffered by thepeople of the Philippine islands from the recent terrible typhoon is just beginning to be made known. All tbe wooden and thatched houses, the barracks, hospital, factories and Government offices were destroyed, and 60,(.i fanii-ies are rendered homeless. Reports from the other islands will swell the catastrophe to fearful proportions .... At the opening of the autumn session of the Britfch Parliament Lord Randolph Churchill attacked the Government for unconstitutionally convening that body, and moved adjournment as a rebuke to the Ministry, Gladstone replied to Churchill, and the adjournment movement was defeated 309 to Hi Excitement and disturbances prevail In Afghanistan because the Ameer deposed the Governor of Herat, and appointed bis (the Ameer's) son to the po-itton. Tbe inhabitants of the Cabnl region have revolted und murdered their Governor,.,. A terrible hnr-ricaus-prevailed in England Oct 4, causing grvat damiu. ea By a collision during the gale in the Channel nine persons were drowned . . . .Many places in the West Indian islands were shaken by earthquakes during the second week of October.
AOimiOSAL SEWS.
A. B. Mullett, at one time Supervising Architect of the Treasury, but whose connection with that department has not been recognized since 1877, formally tendered his resignation a few days ajo as Huf.erinte:ident of Construe-ioh for public
ftUiioings la St. Louis, Chicago, Jiew York, j Philadelphia and Cincinnati This action is regarded as a pre'iminarv stop in the asser
tion of a cl'iim for compensation from 1S77
ception of the marines, no troops took part T he police and firemen and letter-carriers were followed by officials in carriages. 8,5 0 members of tho Improved Order of lied Men, hosts of firemen from other c tics, with their machines, 1,SC0 butcher", mounted and in wagons, and the Total Abstinence and other societies. The head of the process on was dismissed long before the tail end had begun to move, it was a siuht worth witnessing." In the evening there wei-e fireworks and pyiotechnic d.f plays of a brilliant character. On Wednesday, the S5th, there was a dlsp'ay of the trades of Philadelphia and surrounding cities all the largest machine ohojis, factories, etc., accompanied by wagons, on which was excnnVined tbe workings of tlm various trade-.. Thursday, the 20i b, witnes-ed a musical representation of the Welch singers in West Philadelphia The German s-ijignrs and fraternities of various nation tiities appeared with appro) rinte emblem-. The Knights Templar turned out 10,000 ong. In the afternoon the school children to the number of 8.01)0 to 4, 00 appeared. Friday, the STth, was marked by a Srand army and navy parade with the ational Guard of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and vRting troops ironi the neighboring States to the number of 12,01 men.
THE SATjOSALWEATHhR BUItKAU. Report r the Chief Signal Officer. The Ch'ef SIsnal Officer of the Army, in Irs annua! report, says eleven new stations have b-en added, and special reports ere made for tho cotton and tobacco-growing regions of the country, and the moans for givng warnings to cattle-raisers of Texas against the approach of "northers" have been improved. ErpT'mo.nts have been made with a view of increasing 'he value of the farmers' bu'letin by the addition of a weather chart of the United States, and It is believed tha' in a short time these charts may be suecessfullv renrodneed on the farmers'
the j orch. The parties were ordered by the ; The Second Assistant Postmaster General is ! bulletin. With eaeh year the popular know-ofli--rs not to move but started to go into j now sending oat advertisements inviting ; ledge of the ues of this bulletin enables the house, wten the uosse fired, killing old proposals ior star-route service upon 2,3ui those Interested In agriculture to judge of the
ju .ii rcucjre ami one so t ana ra auy wouna- f rouefs xn uunois, uwa, jiuonigiui ana wis- , eur rcubiienn ui iurecuii, nnu wnn liio mi. invr a r'U; man who happened to be pros- consln. . d tion of tbe proposed weather-mnp nt on o vlsi'. - ' w ' -pn TTrvT. nf Tin mtl ind'vidaals will be able to make eorreet prei pa., i- it Hcotia, reap- ; dletionsof the weather for localities which it a. i-EXHCACOLt dispatch says that tears in print in connection with the Hall-i Is impossible to provide for in the brief scndurinj the yellow-fever epidemic there i fax award. He writes to Secretary Frellng- ! tenoe which expresses the prevailing weathbave been 1.97J ca and m deaths On tMWn that subord nates at Washington ! SSiPS&S Sundav there werefi tf-fo new cas and ; d O.tawa man,pnlated statistics madTup , tSSA?, In?.
onencam. AOlmmutlon is noticed ia tte I ior use oy mecommi-sion....tnere nus Been . , r: Tarff; ii,. nf inotriimenta i.mmk.,.1 k.i. jh....; ji.... ' tr ihia Ji.tvorinn. nr. .rww.,,nfcnf k mn.i.r "net instructions tot the use oi lnstrumeuts
Neat. Mineral Snrines. Howard coun
ty. Art , officer. from Texas, with a requisi- ' tQe date of his formal resignation ... .The t, ; . j Actin? brewry of the Interior has reversed lion fnr tin arrest of two men named tt3 praoti e iu the Pension Bureau by a deGeorge, went to the houe of the father of ei-ion that seven years' absence may bs ac
me iugii ves ana louna toe men sttttag on i cepcea a-"iiroo; or tne aeatn or asoiaier.
rontribiufoiu, while &e destitution, distress
ana expenditures tor relief are increasing."
bid
few mth-s from Greensboro, X. C. The weapons usel were horsewhips. The fight lasted tour hours and wai witnessed by over fifty spectators. Ed Johnson, one of the
uuMms, was so cut that his skin hung in
w.lniiiii wuia wsnnar . whlnh W..f tr h rnrnlhd for lo-al
or rooaamonir tne natives or tne isianasm h "T- --' iZZ. S rT ,
proven of great value the past year. The
-stem or rrost warnings ior tne oenenc oi
vat on . .All the dead bodies washed un at- r ."""2"",,V'S.
ter the A-ia disaster, near Owen sound. Can- I "? ,f i.11' h ada, have been robbed by Indans,aud in ! lL, 5i J5..wSL Someinst inccaU the closing stolen. j "fh JZZ
An earthquake shock was felt at New-! tions. It is proposed to establish a system
A Trpi. r, j.t . the Aret.e reg on north of Alaska. In one. teeejble dtie! was fought near the pIaee hweie ouni decomposed d battle-field of Guilford Court House, a ! bodies of WO native- who had diedol star-, fi ... fl . A . m,. i r... 111 lu dMfl hiulluji mahail nn af W
strips. Charlov Will ams, the other man, bern X. C. and neighboring towns one day ot frost warning for the benefit of tho towns nlsn hstllv iim.wl Thn k.im. tJin ... . . . - . . h&eeo-Drrnwinfr InterAnt of the nmmtre also
was also badlv ininred The cause of the
duel was a young w mao, upon whom both the men had c altered thear a!Ie:t:ona A i-arty of Mexican customs officers were riding along the Sonora river in search of smugglers, and came noon a Mmi of Htockmn in tbe dark In the fl?ht which ensued one man was kii.ed and two taken prteoaei before the misfaike was developed. WASHIXONKf. A WASnrxoTOJl dispatch says that Dr. Himllton, of New York, has forwarded to the Garfield auditing committee a 1)31 for t$ii0 tor professional services. The PostofBee Department after Jan. 1, 1683, will reduce the price of stamped en. velopes 10 per cent. Upon orders of 500 or mon: ii will' also print, free of charge If so desired, the special-return request notices. AcTCtG SgCBETABT OF THE TBZAS0BT Fsxsch decided that a Chinaman having a through ticket from Sew York to any place
in the United States, having passed through
last week. Houses were violently shaken,
and a loud, rumbling noise was heard. The negroes, terror-stricken, lied to the open fields and prayed for hours. . . .The business portion of Hopkinsville, Kv., was la d m shes by incendiary fires, five blocks were consumed, entailing a loss estimated at 300,000. The inquiry into the Alexandria massacre reveals the fact that Arabi Pasha ordered tbe bloody proceedings to be begun. Last Jnly Arabi offered Earl Granville to di-band the -leaders of the Egyptian army, and, as for himielf, he would quit the Country; but Granville demanded nothing less than complete submission. Hhnmeful treatment is daily inflicted upon tho relatives of the political prisoners, and AraM's fami y is compelled to keep moving from place to place to avoid violence. . . . The French Minister oi Justice states that the Government have in their bands clews to a vast revolutionary orsraniz tion. in accordance with which France ib divided into local federations, directed by a committee having its headquarters in Geneva. . . . A quar
rel as Bnangn.i nseen sauors oi jtriusn
Canada on the Grand Tnmk rsilwnv and German men-of-war resumed in the sc.
titled to admission into anv of the United ! 5 T wounding of ;ix Englishmen.... Miss States without farther evidence of his right f-'J G'Yln, of Chicago, a taiented eloou-
tnansucn ticKet. . . .At the request of tbe u,ou oi iuui ubww,.
Garfield Auditing Committee, Dr. Boynton
nueuons ins api-ucauon recent y sent to him. asking only 4,5U0 for his services at the bedside ot the dead Pic-adenf. OBilKKAX. Hox. Johx D. DekbRKS died at Berkeley Springs, W. Va, after a long an-J painful lllnesa Mr. Defrees was chiefly known to the people of the United States through his extended service as Public Printer, a position
The whole of Egyi t south it K.'mrtouin ls overrun by tbe sol-iiet y of tbe Fa.se Prophet The Kewjnae Bank robbers were sentenced at Cambridge, It, Pratt, Welh and DuaUe tJ tlx, years euch, and Dr. ft ott to four yoirs. The citizens of Kewanee th;-k that Dunk e's punishment was too severe or Pratt's too small.
bacco-growing Interest of the countrv. also
similar service for the benefit of the orangegrowers of Florida A system of reports for the benefit of the cotton interests wns thoroughly organized and successfully operated since September, 1881. At the solicitation of those interested in the cultivation of wheat and other grains in the Northwest it is contemplated to establish a service similar to that now in operation for the benefit of tbe cotton Interests, which will enable this office to publish in the journals of the Northwest the dally rainfall and temperature, as determined from a large number of stations. The cost to the Government of the men who do the signal-service work is less than 450,010 a year. The cost of salaries alone for the same numbor of civilian clerks would amount to more than 600,000.
SS Wdr&mchbe 7a displaced i e contract it was agreed that the time
oy uen. Urant m lata and tc which he was : unlivery was in uie option i a. again appointed hv President Hayes m 18JT, In an action upon certain promisHory resigning the office in April last..Mexieai notes, given in thn transaction by 11 to PUTtLn, A. (h-eW vs. Wattowa, the ifen.se the hitter were killed and four taken prts- 'waM 8ftt nP 'hat the contract was for a ooers. Their goods were American prints, gambling; transaction, and therefore which were confiscated. ; that no recovery could be had. The
The Hallway Postal Service covers : rSnureinp Cimi t of Iowa
78,741,438 miles anauaUy, seaufetog the serv. lees of 3,570 employee, at salaries aggregatl lag 3.4W,77u The railway postal clerks
The Cradle or the Beot-Black. New York lays chum to be the place where the street boot-black first appeared, but Bdston sny.-i tho professional boot black is essentially an institution of the "Hub." Tho Traveller of the hitter city says at first the business was associated with window-washing, chimney-sweeping, clothes-cleaning and waiting and tending. In time, however, it became a distinct branch, and many of the boot-blacks of that day acquired a handsome independence, and became real-estate holders. The custom then was to call at the homos of the gentry, take the boots and shoes, string them on long polos and carry them to their respective places of bwiness, polish and return them at an early
i . i - & j mi. KAlAfl J
Ooom were sold to A by B, and in
a novel siglit to seo the boot-blacks
Totlls. 72t,C0T V.tl,CK. 602,180 ' Itepnbllean plurality In lsso..... 34,227 , Republican majority in IH.H0 ....23,109 j Republican plurality iu UMt 24,300 Republican majority iu Hi 4,797 Heniocratie plurality in KW2 19, IS.' Democratic majority in 1882 7,TMS Decrease in 1882 vote from lsfW 8,(i27 , Increase in l vote troni issi 5,977 I lecreasc in lss2 Democratic vote from lssn. .23,7T Decrease in issa lWpulillcan vntvlro-n Ism. .77,357 Irioi ease in 1S85 Democratic vote from 1881 . .2H.718 ! Decrease in 188 . Republican vote Irom lm . . ls.oii ; The vote for members of Congress at tho recent election was as follows: i riusT msTPicT. ;
Bntterworth,B.. 19,731 IFollett, D.. Demooratic majority SKCOSD DISXWQT. Smitht B. . . ., U.108 I Jordan, D . , Democratic majority ,, THinn iustiiiit. 8hulU,S..-. .lMS8 Murray, V. Deinocratio niftjoritv ,.. FOURTH DISTINCT. Conkting, n 9,7ia I Le Fevre, D Democratic majority FIFTH DI8TKICT. Harris, R 11,"00 Seney, D.... Democratic majority SIXTH DISTRICT. Brhrham, R 15,0 Hill, D Democratic majority SEVESTH IlISTltllT. Moroy, R tMM I Campbell, D ltepululcau majority , KIOHTII DISTRICT. Keller, R H.OT Youub, .... Republican major t y KISJTH 1IISTMCT. Robinson, R ir.,801 1 Powell, D... Republican majority TENTH DISTRICT. King, R 13,430 I Hurd, D Democratic majority , ELKVEXTH DISTKK1T. McCormlck, R....1 ,227 1 Leedom, I). . Republican m ijority TWELFTH DI8THICT Hart, R W,898 I Neal, D , Republican majori y THUITEENTII DIHTIUCT. Drinkle.R 14,092 1 Couvcrse, D. Democratic majority . . I OUIITEENTH DISTUIOT. Horr, R 12,tii7 1 tSeddes, D... Democratic majority FIFTEENTH DISTBICT. Dawes, R i:t,iU8 Warner, D... Democratic majority SIXTEENTH IllKTBICT. Clark, R M.4JJ I Wilkius, D.. Democratic majority , SEVENTEENTH UlSTllICT.
T?ideKran, 11 U,UI Alexander.
Republican majority . EK1HTEENTH HISTMIT. McKinley, It. 111,9001 Wallace, I'. Republican majority NINETEENTH DIHTIUCT. Taylor, R .13,739 1 Rockwell, D Republican majority TWENTIETH DISTRICT. McClure, R ls,!80 Pie, D... Democratic majority ,
TWKNTy-FIHST HISTI1ICT. Everett, R ,11,408 1 Foran, D. 15,910 Democratic majority l,zsi
D.
..14,540 .. 819 ! ..i5,9ai ... 1,817 : ..16.100 i .. 280 , ..KVXM ,. 0,353 1 :ifi,619 1 .. 5,61.1 . ..1E.1C4 .. 755 ; ..11,41(1 .. U ) . .13,171 .. 1,220 ..15,45 .. 4im . , .14,531 . .. 1,101 , ,,13,037 .. 2,190 ( ..16,888 M .7,"66 .. 3,474 ..14,187 ' . . l,5fl .13,712 .. m ..19,743 .. 5,324 .13,265 ' .. 900 . ..lfi,H68 '
7,648 8,0111
.14,090 . lfcl
INDIAN BUlltAU.
Report ot iM Commissioner of Affairs.
Ittdlan
Oommissioner Price, of the Indian Bureau, in his annual report to the Secretory of the Interior for the fiscal year ended June 30, IStS, says: "Land has been opened to cultivation, houses for Indian residences built, schools opened and operated, and in many cases and in various ways the cause of civilization generally advanced. The dllnoulty of procuring Agents of the right stamp is regarded as one of the most import nt causes which operate to retard the improvement of the Int ians." The co-operation of the relfcrious po -feties is re. garded by the Commissioner as a very important auxiliary in tbe civufrittion of the Indians, and he points to the benefits derived from their work during the past few years. The present appropriations are regarded as entirely too email to compass ends to be obtained within a reasonable time. The Commissioner snys:If $l,0tt'000for educational purTHiKesirlven now will save several millions
! in future, it is wise economy to give that ! million at once, and not dole it out in small
sums that do but little good The evils of cash annuities are commented upon, and on instance given where, after a cosh payment to the Utes, 2,0(0 were spent for firearms, ammunition and whisky in Salt Lake City, and in a short time nine-tenths of the payment went in the same direction. The fundB appropriated by Congress in the regular appropriation bill for the support of the Indians proved entirely Insufficient, mainly owing to the high price of b ef and flour. The total number of Indians in the United States exclusive of Alaska is 202,806. The Commissioner comments in severe terms upon the iniquity ot tbe liquor traffic among the Indians, aud quotes many instances of trouble arising from it. He recommends greater stringency in tbe laws on the subject, and says those sections of the statutes which allow army officers to introduce liquor into the Indian country should be repealed. The report declares there is urgent necessity for additional legislation to prevent intrusion upon Indian lands. Exclusive of the five civilized tr bes, the who e number of Indian pupils attending school tbe ptst year has been 8,50R Of thce 40$ were in attendance at the Carlisle, Hampton and Forest Grove training-schools. Of the remander, 4,510 attended reservation boar.'ing-t.ehools and 3.997 reservation day-schools. The average attendance lor tho year was 5,249. Industrial training is carried on at agency boarding-schools, and is receiving more and more attention each year. In conniioiiou with fifty-seven" rehoo s, 1.4V8 acres are under cultivation. Riacksmltliiug, tailoring and harnesvuiakiiur are taught at four schools. Seven b ach shoemuliing, ten carpentering, amlnfte. n r.i sing and cure of sto k. Training in tM'sc bra i' hi'Kis urcatly stimulated by the eucce-s of experim-nts at t!arlisle, Ili mpton nnd Forest rove. An eppropiiaticn of not lcs t;mn S."iti,i.i. should be mado by CongrcRB at its next session to properly equip the existing agency schools for industrial work. Tho whole number of schoo:s in operation is 101, or five less than last year.
Fl
passing to and fro.
handled in the past fiscal year 3,4VS,390,4
puces or orutnarr mail matter, besl Je 14,m0 registered packages and 571),45 registered pouches. Adam Hon: & Co., iron merchants of
Hamilton, Ontario, hare followed their Mon-
hrto baukrnr. toy. The HahiU-
Keliglon in the South. The growth of religion in tho Southern States during the lost census decade refutes the common plaint that Chris-
throuah Jtidc-c Pvotliroek- df. i.le.1 that ! pie. Statistics furnished oy lorty-two
the contract was n valid one, as there 1 ot the South show an increase of was nothing to show that the goods158-2 l161 cent, in population, mid fe2 were not to be delivered. Optional I P6r wnt- church membership. In t ontiacts v.I:ich nvc void arc such as do ""n cities tlie church was far m excess not oonlemplaSc tho actual (hl;v-v of , tllf! 8ftin in population. Mobile, for the commodity purcliased, but rather instance, returned a population gain f conti-mpl ite that the subject of the , 2i per cent., and of church membership contract is not iutouded to bo deliv- i 30.8 per cent. ; Savannah, .6 and 35.1, ered, respectively; Pallas, 107.1 and 240;
Rfnortthe Ctniimisi'iioiicr of I'n'.t'iits. Commissioner Marble, of the Patent Oflicc, ha.i sulnnlt'c I bis annual report to the 8scre'.ary of the lute: ior. During 1 he past fiscal year, 3 ,t01 applications forpatonto, registration of trado-marks, lalie's, and reinr.ne jiatents ere re-'oived. Of these 17,713 patents were granted and 1.TO9 trade-marks' regwtered. The total receipts of the office ( from all sourcei w-ro iiK0,Naf, and tho expenditures 051 ,71ft, leavng n surphis o i $ 79.144. The Commissioner eails attention to the section of the Revised Statutes which Jirovides that "every patent grunted for an 1 nvtutlnn which has Iwen previou.-dy pat- I en ted In aforeicn country sftall'lie so limited I as to expire at t!ie same time with the foreign , Eatent, and to the fact that uncertainty ox- 1 its as to the term of foreign patents, be- ,' cause of the conditions on whloh they are issued. Tho report says: "Ir. my opinion ; tbe terms ot pateuis issued by thU 1 office should uot bo rendered nn- ! certain bv the operation ot tho ' laws of any foreign country nor by tho failure of "the patentees or their iissign- , ees to do what such law requires. Iu viow ' of the fact that the terms (oi which pat- ' ents may be granted in foreign oountriosure shorter than for which they may bo originally granted in this country, 1 think that . twelve years would be n proper term for patents where tho invention has first been patented or patent applied for In a foreign country, and that the applicant should file ' his application within two yours after the ' issuance of such patent or application lhrofor. Attention is also directed to a deolsion of the Supreme Court of the ; District that the Oommissioner of ' Patents has no discretion in the registration of labels, but if an applicant comes with a trade-mark, calls it a label, aivl asks : for its registration and pays the D'os required by Taw for the registration of a label, it ls the duty of the Oommissioner to cause It to bo registered. Tho Commissioner says, if tbe decision of the court is to lie followed. Ii;-.1 Hat-on ahould Ue had whloh will removo every i question Of doubt in relation to such registration. - Deacon Samuel Waldo, of Perry; Village Wmminir eoimtv. New York.
I who has attained the ago of 80 years, : . - , m . ' Jt t 11. . I
lias lately married a neiguuor 111 me 1 noTf nn ni Miss Harriet Hammond, aged i
76 years. The bride, who ii the deacon's sixth wife, was an early teacher of President Arthur. A HAitVA'tD student always wears gloves. Some people never wash their hands.
Dangers of Democratic Ascendency The Ut'Coril of 11 ('rent Wrong:. Mil. t'li.viiiMns and Fellow Citizens of Detuoit: In 1K54 Kinsley 8. Bingham was elected Hovirnor of this coinmonwealtl: He was the firs: liepuidican Kxe utive chose 11 to adminis or the oivil affairs of this State. From t. t time ti l the p esiMit hour, a period of tw.-uty -eight years the Hepuh'iean party is responsible air thu admluisti atiou o the same organization. And if w but turn tl c page of history back wo will be suip wed it, fie marv lous di'velopm nt of the St it under llepublli-an ru'a Then our population numlierod but !i:)7,521 -conic; to- my, by it-j cei bus of 1 (WO, your popitlatio has vrown 10 be l.ti'MUtii; and it is estimated to-day that the population of this commonwealth is mor than t.KAO.OOO of the bravest and friost people in the States. Tne xsessed valuat on of your propirty. which theu nmounte I vo SI-,V '. bos iinTeas -d to more th;in .sh ,- 000,000. whllet -e estimated valucof your real and iiefso al cs'ato aggregates more than SI,,- O.ooil.tKKi. Your :i4.000 f.rms h.ve iirreosed to more than 154,000, ftalu-as-ing tie fail est acreage under fc -e sun. Your manufacturing e-'tnhlishmeui then numliering less than 2,CKM, have grown to be more than 20,000 gi . ing emp ovnu-nt to .nlior an 1 invctment of c ipita . ' Tne pro lucts of your lai ins md mines, forests and lases. y'old an annual revenue of 111 ire t'mn 5;W,(l ll, 00, while M ' bijan shores w.th lint 0110 pow-ron t te face of the g ob ) t h : honor of beimr t ie greate-.t oppor-pioduiiilg c muiry 111 10 world Your herds, th u but few and kc fc. tcring, have gro.vn to b nior thm 4,500.100 head, graztn ' upon your luxuriant Ams. Your char table and educition-ii init tut ons ar - uns .rKiss.-d, the pride of t e iiat iui and tlie rmnli'i m of the Stiles. Your pub -o
cieiii, nil e:i ineu nuriiui 1:11' s.im or no llv l-'.0'.Hi.iKHi. hi.s b on fully disci-urged, a id to-lav tin- llemil-'le-in nary ires ni, vou a oimn.i wealth 1 ra t c illy out of debt. I ts ou tan i g ol.li.i ions am-iui t to oily 140 St, v.l.i e ou have in the treasury t liqiii lute til s in le ted mi, nlw not d ie, $l.-.'l-.',0 O, whirh is sutlK-i. nt to i-charge th' entir.' indebted ss of the St it' 11 ud l- avi' 11 your re surv mor. Ihau ?:itV 1.0)1. Your taii-s, n-hic in lsi amount -I to SI 14J.O00. are 14 cents upon ever.- 100 of tux utile pr.ljii rty. THE COST OF THE WAU. Dut while we hav.i thus met the obligations of the S at:i fiovemmcnt itmusti ot be forgotten tha the Itepubl can par y was called up.m to m -et extraonlinary demar ds upon the resources of that people. A civil war over 00k the nation, and Mi- h gan 1 ut into tho aimy mo e t ian V0 of asbrfve men as ever foil wed the s; ai's of our f ag into ihe night of battle. Tbir een houBa-. d of these lai 1 down their lives f.r the sovreian y if the nation an i th- honor of ihe State! I'll doing this work we paid out of the Srite treasury $3,7i1,4flS. There w..re p .id hv the counties of this commonweal' h sa.oiri.om. and there was naid by th ci ies.
towns and wards of this commouwe.lth for all war nr rpvs SS, ir ,(MW, whi'e there :ia
a-l tor tlie roll-1 01 soldiers famines liv
1m ;: of theiK-onle of th s State S.1..VJ1.HKI.
winch aggregate tne enormous sum, 111 a uti n 1 1 the running exneuse.s of the Government, of $lti,Wl,o6a What I have sa d of the State mbrht apro riately be said of tlie nation under Republican rule. To recount the history of the Republican party aud its administration of national affairs would be to recount ih history of t'ie republic i self. And now at t his iunc ure of publ e aff rirs, iu the year of our jord )$.', the proposition is made to t urn th vast interests of th's eommouwealth ind the interests of the nation over to a combination without a history and without a name. Mav I lie pardoned the sujigcs.ion, without a future! - WHAT IS IT? Mv fellow-cit zen-i, what reason is assigaed for reversing the de ision of tho people made two ye -is ago. What has o curred since then to induce the good people of these Doited Sates to rcversi their verdict? Toen, after full debate, tbe Republican partv was intrusted with pow -r. and Ja nes A Garfield 1 lecte l President, of th- Vn ed States. What has tho Kepub i 111 parly done vine then to forfi-it publi'J regtrd? Why, we are W1, an i is tha onl .' r son I liav he rd ac-ii-'HO 1 that we t-honid g out of power after one session of the nat onal legisat re, because we have in -rease.l the expend lures of this p.'O- le bv more than S70 0t0,WKI, that til D;inocfacv impropriated for the List fiscii year only SlOa.'H 0.000, I st- te it in ruin I nu-i.bcrs, and that his Congre-s has appropriated ior theiiresenS year fori lie stipi orl of the sam-Govnrn-iue. t S.'fi.',lllXi,O00, nn increase of several millions, an i because of this increase we should b j d -posed. Is such an opinion hasty? Does it not depend largely upju what this increased oxpen liture ha tieen for? D -es it fol.ow that because the cx-pon-c-oi vour lms,ness were greater this year than iast that, therefore, you are 1. bad lmsin.-s man? Does it not deiiend sumeth ug upsn the question whether you have eniirgr d vour busine-s? Let us inquire, what th 70,00o,00J o'. increase was , or. F.rst, rJ4, 00,000 of it was made ne -nssnry to square the lioo::s au i pay up the indfbt 'dness of the Democratic pirty. It is proper, when it apjiears that 1 10",(00,000 was not sufficient to supnort the Government for the year into 824,00 ,OU0, t tat we sh iuld add t ie $'4,i 00,0011 tj the Silicon i00tit-ier.-by ascerta ning exactU wnat it di I cost to run tho Government ia-t jvar Adding th it to the actual expenses an.l we have :l0,O00,C00. Deduct that from 9-iKt,Uun,(iOO mid it leav w an hu-reiise of 340,(XH,ooo hut what is that for? Thatr font 111 ilious of it w.is iippropriut' d :op'.' the pufi mis of tli" Kold'e.s ami w.dnws ai d 0 -jili .ns of th.s rejiuiilic. What pii.so,n o ijec'ts to that? We appropriated it ovt of thi public treasury, and now it is one of t'i- lega- esof the De;nocraiicii!tv, tids ver,- ye.r SIO ,tKm.iXKI to pay h i d fe:.ders uf the lc ii.bltc. What nioie of th f iueiease? The c aims of soldicis have lmen lying in the d-parUiieul at Wadiingt jii, not o e 1 ear, nor five rears, nor ten yean, but lift en years, unadjusted beo-iussthe kelp of these d i)ni! tiiients bus 1 eon cut lown. The It ipub icau party was biate mioutrh to a-'i r priate Sl.T4!j,4:iO to employ ,aK elllcieiit men to p it iu tho de artinc.it and h .u-iy up the settlement of tln si cla ins. Win ol.jeots t-f that? Then we approp lat d l.l!t,li(i made necessary for tho lucre ied pi.s al serv ee of th- onutry.. To tlidt add the n roasein the River and Harbor iillof S7.:i;i?,f.?f. aud you have te aggregate of S15,rHKi,(i0O .ii oounted lor. Every tinglu d il-l.-ir ot this increase. Who objects to thoe item-? The only t ritiuisui I have honr l addncitl upon nny' port on of this iuoiease is the enlarg eincit of the appropriation for the liiver aud Harbor Iji 1, and our opponents In Sumo piace-i have had th-i ill-grooo todonounco 0 as a steal Last Tear tHoifl wore appropriated 411,451.0HO. this vear S1,7:W,0 0, an inere.-.' of over 7,000,iKW What is it for? Iiu uning through the vory center of the might' West is a great iiaturaj highway, which, if it can be controlled and kept within its luniks, will make for itself a channel deep euou ili and broad enough to Boat the commerce of the world. A lew years hIuoo a commissiou was einploj-4-d for the purpose of considering some plan for tho improvement of the Mississippi river. That commission rciierted that $5,10 ',000 could bo used at tho begin
ning of the work upon this great Rtream. Oiiutoss in this bill, and I am now specifying the items of this iuurcaxe of S7,lK',tM Coiigwss I i t his bill appropriated S.VK 500 for the improvement of the Miss ssippi river and its tributaries. Is that to be denounced as a steal? As a matter of economy, it is wie, for nn1 of the public treasury tuk very vear we appropriated Iflil lkKi to save the lives of men, women and children whose farms wtr 3 wopt uway by the Hoods ot the Mississippi. Atrither item of Increase is 4Wt(100 for flISi.ig up the Pot iiiine ibtx Right under the shadow of the While House lav these flats, s-posi-il In the sun twice In tventyfou: Imuis lv ill" operation of the llil s. and so iifii nwe hnvc tieu- lieeoiii -that the dom-s and w.n.emv of ihe Wliit i Uoum are compelled to b i V-.-l. an I ii i nwwarv t rouiove your living Pr.-pdeut that li s life might btpioloiire.l. If not raved. Who ob-ji-c.K t-i the appvopii'iti in of S4tKi,000 for fillliirtip tliosoitit' and making the dwaliingpliioo of the I'rt-Mdoii' of this groat republie inli.-ih table? Then wo huvo appro)-riated '.'li,v 11 lor f ni ui-i survev, which tmee .terns ag rejr.u liieret'ian 0,0, 0.IM0,- bnving but S!,(-ii,Kv' to bo ne.-oim'ed for wntoTi was appr priatcd f-r cbjcitsof a national charact r. tluewoi'.l about ill's Ml', audi Ictvo it IIow warf It fmni'-il? T't'l-N-u of as good hones! men n I see before nv to-night sot In -oiinni-toiioi oneday or one w. e' or one nmii'li, Iml six lui'r in iii'lis, eicti'iiinini every item 0 aiijiroprrit'on And let m i HUi'e 'hi' Iii'-Is: i ii 't, there i mv an ilmn iu tbls River and Harbor b'll t'11: ni 1 nt roe-eiimen le-.l by Gov rmueii'. engliuwrs; seoondly, there is no item of apiiropiiatlon
in that bill In excess of what wa declared td bo iicecssary for tho work; cud, tllirdlv, the sum total (if tile bill Is not one-half the ulirouiit reconlmonded bv Government ctl-
; irneersas necessary to -carry ott the work j during the pioseiit year, j , Michigan, of all States, should b the last ; to comji ainof a Itlveran I liar loriiill; Mich. I jgau h s taken out ot Uie public trea-urv for j the improvement of her harboni and rivers ; (i,txm,0. 0 1 f money. These appropriation : are necessary. France expended in one year I r.).000,onn for the same purposo, and En. gbiiid. vviih but 1 Wimiies of coast line, less , bv :H) than tho S ate o' Michigan, alone expen o I in IS74 l.-. (100,000. Tne good pt pie ' of this Ht'ito, without (liKtinctinn or party, ' sh mid support a policy which has ior its 06I jcot the opening of our great nation d hi diways, which give tho people tho cheapest I muuiiH for irunsponiiig the surplus tu-the
J Ml llOUJIl. This is the only reason I ha-, o heard as-
sh: nod why cli" lleouliliciu paityshoudgo out of power 3Tay 1 be piudoivit or assigiv. lug sont... reasons why the Forty-; ig'ith Can s r ss should lis Republic.) u and the ll-pub-llean par y reman iu' power? It should bo
continued in p iwcr, flrKt, for the purpose oi! ; setti.ug the question of polyg.my in tilill i country. Tile llemneratie par.y and the lie- ' publicri i party eamiol. agree ujiiiu th itques. , tion During tJic war and immediately a:'tor- ; tile war t his great crime wns sulfore t to take j roo iu I tali, and has grown and nourished ' Until i lias not only cursod the soil of itil : territory, but. Is spreading i s baleful in Iliieneo' over the adjao. lit country. Tho i Furl v-f ouri h ( 'ongreSR. tho Forty fifth an the Fortv sixth weie Under the ctilltrol of thn ' llomoeiacy. Du-ing those years bu one ' measure was introduced unoii the question
of iiiivgainv, and that in tlie House nt Ileprosentatives. It Was immediately rSfeiTi'd to a committee, where 15 : i-lopt the leen .1' de.itl. D-irlmr a'l th's time Georse Q. Ciiinm, a confessed ' p ilygamist. trampling upon tlio laws 01 tin) ; United States, insulting tho .nt Jbgentjp and th.i oivdization of th s pe.ip'e. Held a seat ill ! the hi-h councils of thib natnn. When th j ltepuuhc n party resumed control of tin I lower Louse thi iiaiuc re,.reseat:itive of this , eiivriuoiis crime demended hn seat, backed I bv is, 00 matortv of tho peop e of Utah. The liepuliliean party put to uiin the qi.ost ' ion whether he was sjui ty o( thai crime, and ' he aiiBuvn d over Ils own signntute that hi j was t-.o hunband 01 four woiii'in with whuiu ' he lived as his wivos, and d D'Ctl that W-) 1 had the r gilt to inquire into h s religious pi in -.pics nn icr t he con -t'tution. (lurl)emoorat c fiicods agieel with him thatund -r : t. ec.ns.'i tition a man hud a il lit to wo. -: slim God ace. riling to his own judgment, ana it t i:t was a m, th. tl of o snip it was j f-rh'in to deode. The R publi an party, j i-t il.in. a blow nt this crime, paid to this ! r pr.-sentative ot th s ai omination, yo t eliill n r, cross over tho threshold of the Ho sent i.'e .re euiatives, aud disjrioje . th American prop e bv vour presence t!i re' Tim Kdiuuuils bill nasned the S -rata It emu ; to the II use. To ay It upon the tube- or to icft r It to a coininil.tee was to kill it. To I; ike it r. ni tin table and pass it was to 111 .k it a taw. We hot. d, as It publican', : to lake the hi 1 irom t to Sp aters table and 1 but it oti its passaio, aud ii stmt y Sir. Con- ! er e.of Ohio a Democrat, mc vr.l to refi r :t 1 to the C nun t ee on the .ludleiary. whore t ; wnul l die and every s ngle Democrat n the It .use of Heiir. s ntativis but one voted to s r. fer it I uivor. thorefere, tlie contlnun- : t oil of t:ie I! pub.ic.iu party in powir.nnd assure you that it will uot ale ip until the : abominable blotch upon the face of our Teirt tor vh in wiped out forever, i There is another reason why we should , continue iu power, and that is with refeir- ' euee to the question of taxation. During the war. vou will remember, tla : liepublican party taxed everything They taxed a man s income and his outgo; what i ho had nnd what he had not You coab' not ' make a note without stamping it. You could not sell a piece of ground without stamping ' tlie deed, nor mortgage a piece without! stamping the mortgage. The lawyer wiu4 ; taxed upon his practice, aud so we taxed everything to raise money to save the notion, and uoliody complained. Hut, when the war was over, we began relieving tt.e t people of the burden of taxation. One by one these burd-ns were lifted until at tbe opening of tlie present scsslou of Congress ! tne only taxes remaining were the tax upon banks,' ibe tax upon checks, tax upon I matches and proprietary medloines, tax upon ; whisky and tax upon tobacco. The Rai ubllcan party declared tbat they would lift a ! port on of these taxes from the people, and so we introduced in the House of ltspro ' sontatives, and pawd, a bill relieving the people from SIO.OOO.tKK) to 30,I.10,()UI of taxation; but we passed it t.i oppnsit on to . our friends upon tlie other strt". 11 cause ' bv the rules of our House we may bring uicmbcrs to a vote t.pou tho question It ' v. nt to the flenato. it did not become a law. These additional bdftle'ns are stIU I upon the people, and they arc there because our frii-nds rcsiKtod the passage of the b IL j They entered in a pr weeding In the Senate : which is familiarly known at, ''talking a bi 1 to dea h," for a Stnator has the gloiioua ; privilege of talking if he desires for six : y -urs. iliebugth of bis tern:. Ho they en- ! tared npon a process of talking a bill to ' death, and talked us into tho middle of Au- ' fiust. and nt. t'ni .ted In that bid t i int rf re j vith the tariff. For the purjvose of doing it, an by k.i doing, they d d d f at action upou 1 I , and left an unjust burden upon this p -; l ie of from 10,(),UOO to SiOOil.OOtl. Is Is : 11 cessary to coutinu' th ' liepublican paily i that tils' measure of justice may be enacted I into law. There is another reason, and a great reuI son, w-;y -ho liepublican party should be j kept- in lower. The tariff question s again 1 agitatinj' tlie public mind and becom ng a (lUtiuoilvo pany issue. Tim proper steps tow .id a ifviMon of tne tariff have alreic.y 1 been :aca, but the end lias not yet been I 1 cached. F.ir hevernl years the no' ion bus ; been naming around that by reason of certain inc mgruit'.es and inconsistencies which ; have crop", into our laritf cwle during I twenty years of Its op"r-tion, a g neral ti- ' vision'is demand d b. considora iouof pub- ! lie policv. The sentiment beixuning so w-oil-' nigh universal, at the last 's ss on of Congress ' all p rues were in substantial accord In doi mantling a r -a-'justment of duties on ! imporis. Tho only question about which J there seemed to lie any serious contrarlei-y , of om'n on was :,h t the maier ot revision.
' Our D mocrutic trends insisted that tbe i work should bo entered upon then and 1 bete, ' without deliberation or metiiod, and striiing ut random, Klaughtering this industay ' mi I crippling that, prosecnti ig nn hi-eguMr warlare upon our unsuspecting and hi. herui I- f.H'rl iu tUHtr.e-, until partisan zealsliould 1 be suiiii ed or apj.alled by the dcsolatii n, and the work should be abou- , (Uiiutl. The Hepublican parcj" Insisted that : u matter invoiviiu so many .and such diverfili'1 1 iu rests demanded thf fullest invest i- ' friilion : nd tha most considerate judgment, ! nnd teat ... tor.i the work was undertaken Oongre.-s -hould take occasii n to poss.'ss it1 n-.ti fall needed data to make the revision ' bo h comprehensive and complete. We. held ; tbat o.t t naif laws were so i iuervv..vmi wiiJi a- the indus riesof thisi eo, lethat to touch one would be like touchiiwa single thron-l of : a spidor's web, the vvliolt fabric would t rombl-1. The antagonism between the p r- : lies re-ail'ed in the appointment- cf acoin1 mi sion clinrgcd wi h th 1 divsy of iuvestlgati ing our national Industries, so far as tluiy ' might be aif.ieiBi bv our revenue law, ar d i pre-e.i t ing t!io results of t.unh investigation tot'oagicss as a help and guide to an lutclligent rev sion. The dtacu slon of the bill for 1 the (.mat ion of this eommssion s rved "u
bring out lb" v.owb of the Iism.icratic pai1:y ontiieiaii i question generally, ami to o nliiuitli dell', thu 1 he Democratic iariy
i Wiis f u! - v and nnrvs-.'rvedly ivainmitted 1 o the ' doetriu.i of :re trade or its counterpart, a 1 l.a: 1IT for 1 evenue only. In my j ulgment the ! epproaohlng se-8ion of Congress will be too ' bit -f to cuablo us to complete the work of r vision, and that work wu; go over to the I Furtv-elghth Cougress. to to performed bv lit. If the Forty-eighth Congiess be Ilcniaj cratic. I lie revision of the tariff will he on tha j b in s and tint theory oi freo trade; If nepulilie :n upn.i the theory of pro tection, which ' of these two th ori s d-i you desiro to adopt us a uati 11 I pelict ? The issue is upou us i end i mu t and will lie met.
blothed both houses df Congress with the Hght to inquire iritO the qualifications and election of their own members. At the opening of the Forty-se-lrenth I 'ongresH twenty-two men took their seotsin the nat onid Housnof Hepresuntatives of whoni.it was said that they were no more entitled to legislate for the people of . Michigan and the people of. other Stati-n, no mm e entitled to a scat, in that body, than they had toil place iu the liritlsh Commons or tbe Assembly of Franca Their cases were rofnrre 1 to the Committee m Elections. They were investigated end imported uijon and then name the tug of wir.
I F.very time the oonimitti-e reported that a fitting Demoorntwas entitled to remaiu'tn ; luHKeatevcrvDemoonttiuihenationtl House i of Representatives veto 1 aye. Hut wlien- ; t ver the. ropon came th t a i-ittiiig Democrat ; wa- note.iititl.il 1 1 liisse t flat he was not 1 fleeted, eveiy i'nui r t remained tutmt . Hid dec iiie I .0 vot '. I' had been iiven out : from the Southern Staff- that unless the Deuinoraiio party of the North stood by the iaen fcenb from the Sou .11, and forced upon this p- ople Kepros. nl ijHvi-B who were not e icuil, right or wio ig, tu far n U o fsiut .em Democracy won d be concerned, thev woum abandon nil effort to oarry those h a' es by fraud or trl k -ry. Ho the Not thtin Democracy planted itself upon ihts
(jrouu 1, as 1 shad bor .10 j, that tlie nia.i.iri tv o. the House of Uc;i !.-eiitativ s should i-otexere'se its Mnt tu' oua! picrojatvc; ib tinerig itof th.iH use to md-jeoi the rietio iof .ts members s on d be mmled oiul denlel. and 1 hat without debate w th1 ul disouHSlon, with, ut p.ulcy, tne3- sbeuld .reve it us f. am oxer injj tnat 1 igh con tiuiUoaul i-rvli ge. I reniemlie wli. u th c si tu JI ckey against O'tVtnnor, the iccoul of vvh th I hoi 1 n my hand, was pro-
jjented, aid Mr. flaUiis. of Indiana, fold: ' "Mr Speaker. limp 0; ar d to take up for j consideration tbe conti stcd-clectlnn case of I Jlaekoy vs. O'Connor' or Muelcey aga nsfc 1 liblilo as it had become by the death of i O'Connor. Mr, Samuel J. Itandall, the cxI Speaker of tho House of Representatives
nnd an aspirant for the Dmocratte nonrntu t on ti th;-1 residency, lasted Into the posl1 1011 by tne hand of tho South, rose in his rlace'nnd raid: "Mr. Smaker. I raise tlie
I question of consideration." This compelled tae Speal er 01 the House to put the qi es I tion. "YVi.l ohe House consider, this cane?"
And having put the question the yeas and l avs wort' demanded by Mr. ltaiidali. Tho roll is called, and whenever tlie name 1 : i a
! lpubllc.n is reached in; votes aye. When- ' , 1 . -n t, . 1 . ..1....; ..
CVI.r lite uailie 111 i A'eiiin;i al, ir. iruuivu uq keeps still. We said to thoin, "Are you going to voce?" They said "So, sir." "Hut," v.-e say, "the rn'es j.rovioe that you shall Vote."' Their answer was, "You may lead a horse to water but you cannot moke lum drink." Hi they declined to vote. When tho roll call was completed, it diseloseil 1:111 nresent. and we bod to iiidire
ty the roll call who was present, and alI though tin Democrats mt therr.- silent and ! were present, they wero to all appearances ' absent, and Mr. Randall lose in his place and ! said "Xo quorum." llo.ng without a quorum we 00 Id not pn cecsl with the considerat'on of this case. So the Democratic I jarty, violatieg the nUeD of tlie House I rules of their own making sat dumb as the j 1 lailile that shadowed tin in. day after lay, ; and night after night, and competed the ', ninoriry to 'nd for their absentees, tatting ' them from their business and from their aicltI tdsto bring them to the House that we might discharge our high constitutional ob1 ligations. When the roll call disclosed 1ST i present, Republican members, making I t. quorum and the consideration of the j case was ubout to lie entered upon, Mr. Samuel J. Randall 10.10 l.i his place aud said ; ! ; move that this Hous- do now adjourn, and ! on that I call the ayes and ines." Then Mr. i fipriuger, of Illinois, aaother Democrat, . moved ' that when this House adjourn, it ad- '. iourn to meet dav alter to-morrow." Then j ilr Blackburn, of Ki-tuck Interposed I 11 motion that tbls House do now ; take a reccu lp"ii 'iioh of these ' motions the aves and noe were called; and ! when the three hours neoessai, to conumi j mate thl work have passed Mr. Randall I again rises nnd moves f'that this Hons 3 do I now adjourn;' and Mr. Springer repeats his motion and Mr. Blackburn his. And these i'i.nl. imti.n nitnouncrsl thnr. thov nrfmnscd to
jro through with thi farc-3 until tho end of
i.ongress, to prevent tne niajonty naira protTCdiutr, to irnvent the poaple of this csuntryfrom determtnieg th.? question whi ther tliev are represented by men who are elected or men who are not We were driven a1; tills iunelure to say, "We iniuit amend the rules
I or r-no riouse 01 ueprcHe:n.auvee 111 mmi w , try this question " Ho we proposed this rule,
t n :t when 1 lie right oc n ineiuner 10 a si an is under consideration n dilatory motion ike a motion to adjourn oc take a recess rhai not be in order. The Chairman of tho Committee on littles reported that; as an amendment, .-aid instantly Mr. Itandall arose and moved 'that this House do now adjourn." Anc. Mr. Blackburn moved "that when tlds House, adjourn It adjourn to taeet day after to-mor-iow. " And Sfr. ttprinffcr tnovod " that tbi House do now tnk" are-K-ss " We an'-ted
them it thev propose l to try iha same tactics o-i the rules than the? h d on the case, sua 1 they said that they did Then it was t hat the llnpuoHean pariy, a-ways brave, al1 ways hemic, sold to the Sp laker of tho J House of Bepresentaclv s, It cannot be pos-
faoie tlutc a ino ion 10 noi luru or 10 nse a i-eeess or any dilatory motion is in crd r when a preposition is iioro' the hotly to amend thn nil s to ennb'e it to do business. Then tt was that the Speaker so d cided, and the ru e was adopted Then it was ior the first time, when ihey had exhausted all tha tactics known to par inmontary law, th .t wo w re a le to proceed with the isons deratten of this case. Iu no single in- tan e was a Democrat from a Southern State nn cated by Northern Dem -orotic votes, but in every Instance every member of the Democratic. )i: rty rematn ed silent and shiededaud delended the men who ha l stolen the seats. Xovv what kind ot, a c-i-'e was this first; one that was called up? Bet u see what the Democratic party propose 1 to dete-.d ir. this country. I will not weai y yon witli a rtici ai of the case at lengtli, but I will give you an account of what transpired at one nt-Hiug place onlv. At Iloie Engme po ling-house. In the c-.tv of Oh .rlestoji, the poll listand
I t her keep list 1 of vo eis titers as we do I Itep't by the Deinoerntlc mmagors ol the 1 I'lec'ions, t ie list kept by fc'iu Denioc ratio I United Stotes Supervisor aud the list kept by
t e Itcpubnenn liiuttii ates uixrvisor liulv-tnntiollv agreed. ( me of them said that 1,'JIH men find voted. The after two said that 1 ,21 4 had voted. This was the only dift'oreneo between them. Taking tho narai of eveiy votor as he epwrited his ballot, tho list onlv differed four luuaes. Kit ier 1,214
I or 1.21S men had voted. Sow, after every I vote nad ten cut vo l w u:d n I n that i lioxeHharl'.Uorl.vlHi.iloti; B.ttatsun. : down, when tho ii-o ii.una.ion w is made that the poll wai closed, the box wan. ! imen. d the ballots 1 lit upon the tabl
and ount d. and the- w.-re found 1 1
outrage. I will ndt enWrgt Uporl thiise casec Let me say 1)1 i-ogard to tblii ease (hat thent vepi cast 1;'R 'rr.d-alerit. iofit Ho long would the people of Det"tt, liqw long Would the people of this distriirt submit to have their will stolep at liiglH ', to. have man foisted upon then, whom they never
elect"d? .Suppose., when you east your bal
lots tor mi minor or uongrens in wis a'strict, tliat he h is a majority as he v. tll, t)f 2,i)0t 8111 po It should be counted f ar the other ni n and yon knew it, would tbat ho your government? Would that bo a government ot j our creation? Yet that is what is dona throughout the South to-duy, and in n a:
miking laws for you who luwo no busi
ness to ex ;rcifJ3 mat nurn nreroi'i
tive. Xow, my f cllow-clt zens, here
lbs the danger to this republic.
want to say to yon that if you pat 'he D mocraticpaity in tho Forty-eighth Conen si the men who are do bed with certiicatcof election wil. hold t1 cir no.-n 1 ami leglaie for you i.nd me, I care out by what method it' .k done. I remember a ciseliefme the last D 'm-cratlo tkinpre-t that of liisln iigainw: Hu 1, a -ase exiiiuined bv a Denveratio committee; they declared that their man was not e.ected; that the Democrat bad n busimiss to be th si'e, yet they refused to report upon the esse tilii the expiring nours of Congrew, keeping h'm in his ilace t vote upon u.easur - for you and lor me, and then fina"y occUred unantmr.uR.y ibnl lei was not entitled to his p-ace. 3Iv feliow.oitiie-is, I repeat tMwt hero lej the danger to this repubha The Republican party is determined 10 fight t!i. com est as it fought lor tne libirtv of a race until every man In this republic, rici'- r poor, black or white, shall hive cast one honest ball, it ard that linllot honesty cou ite I. I'litil tnat is done the foundations of this republic are not stvure. Vou may assassittate din head of the nation, but the country will endure. Twice our Executive has. la .en ut the hands of the assassin. Abraham Lincoln fell liefore the war of the Rebellion was scarce
. over, when chaos was upon every hand, and as we met in the streets, ahing each other by tbe hand we thought Kho Governj ment wouid certainly go to j4oct; out so I wisely had the machinery icon adjust id that 'it moved grandly on. Garfidii wan I stricken down in the cap tat of tlie nation, and yet tins great republic moved steadily forward But when you astaisc note the power that luok- s President you kid the I republic U iltcnti mat the Jr-t reward of ; Ids crime; lint that, man who slea's up to the bailut-ln x where repose the fr.hst-bom ! offspring ),' a nations will uie. ta.ies its life j Is an nssas In wh- .se crime cannot be expi- ! a ted. And tlie party that approves or Vtc1 fends tho practice is purlin p ,rmiKU. ! Then let me appeal to tbe Republicans of ! tbls city, let me appeal to thn iUpubiicana 1 of Michigan, without distincton of party, to rally again around the i-tan iard of llepubllcanis'm. If there is a young man here to- . night, who ls to cast hh first. vo-;e le me : plead with you to ponder well which cf these I jiarees shall receive your sup tort As a I young man votes in tbe bczlnuiug he is ape i to vote all hs life uncs tiere be some ; mighty upheaval of partv or he is dlap- ! pointed in his aspiration) l or ofSce. Those j two tlftngt. will uuscttie hi-aL Hti, it is well 1 to ponjor airefudy with aviilch you will be ident.tt,t Whichever party you adhere to you muft take upt on yourself the h's:ory of tbat party nnd i as you look at the history or i'.h se two I great orgpniitationswh c'icominfndsi t elf to 1 your judgment and to your lie in? As we . stand to-iiigbt upon the he :h!, sa or twenty ' years of Itepublioan rale, let uOoik b.icx1 ward for i momer t over lie lo. jr line o our . march, dei-cribetl by bivouac, b .ttle field j and camp fire's gleam. See how gi an I . ave I been the t chievements of thic grtnt Itcp ibj lican par?. I rcmemlier when it Hoke camp In 1 56 that it was in nhe interest of j free soil; nnd the first ruan h It mule and the first victory it won, it gave to the re- ! public a domain forever const r.tcd to Ciee ,' speech, fiee homes and f Ce men It saw ', tbe bond of national unity brokon in pieces. ! It resolenmizcid the imp t la s o f nation .1 unl- , ty, b'ghtel by the torch of vmr, and made j the effort of unv State to be diver.; if the.eI 'froin as bnpossitile as it is nlq dtous. tt lifted Rnthe falnmand insulted banner oft
! therepub tc, and, carrying it ii.W! the very van of marching1 empire, o nrpc led its enei mies, forilgn and domestic, t uncover in.
tne majeFiy ot its presence, itinia us n- na upon the fa.terin?, waverin-r puolic it alit, and to-dny it stands erect in the conscious- . ness of it strength, peerless among the nations of the world Then let mv ra'ty again and let tbe command be " Fonvard," and let there be no wavering or faltering iu the l ive until we plant our standards on the enemies' breastworks and anfurl our bar aers in the sunli-l't ol viotory.
: On- 'h nr more rind I am dona Tho Ibv pu' Ilea 1 p rty imihtbe kept in power lo ; sive Hie (iov. rem -nt Vuloss taeiu Is a i e'lini.r in the prae-':ces of 11 o:tIon of the ijMiople ih day is uot far distant when the :r put i'c fa! a. 'Von anil I may n.l!iv to ; 11 it, ii I n s ake th s'gns of th 1 tinieii if our rliildriii do i ot live to witness ; hed.avvn1 In : of t iat s.ul .lav. .M: aham I. neolu never I iittei-.l a .ruer wntinu-nt than when h until, '-'1 !.i is a iMiveitiuieiit of tint peop e, by tin) ! 1'ieoplo and for the people," We have no j King and no i;nv re'gns under our ting, 0 -I eep. th Kim's nnd Siivoroigns I see about ' me to-iilght Kvery man iu the I'nlt' d j Sta csisaiiug. This Government lielon. s you, an I .f it fa:b it is because of vour t .n -'k o. intcnut or your lack of wntohf :U n i s over its rditilnist ration. There n but j 1 ue wa-.- prwvidi.d under oui con titutlou tor I the ji npln of this country to make their will hiioun. and that is through the b dlot'ox. I ejitroy it and the will of this people ' cannot I o made effective. When the too j eonies in this country that the ballots ycu idojo-it in the ballot-box at sundown are 1 t.tii'lA rt i-tirl unmot-.htnrlr i.Iaa !. e,ivlu
when the w.U of the people us expressed i l the bidlot-lwx to-day l perverted io-iuorro f and the Government you Intended to flow therefrom does not result .1 say, when that hour comes, if the aboiniu ition cannot le corrected, not only aic tho days of the rpublto numtiored, but it is your dutQ' and my
Idutvto overthrow such a government "t ! co .ses to be a government : t U10 pcoplo and ; becomes a government of thieves, i To-d iv, in ouo half of Ibis republic thoio I Is not a" government of the people. ICveiy ! meinherof Oomrrcas at thi) 01 iftn ing of tte
Rossion pre cuts to that body his oertifi ' ite of election, it' it is in nun f. 1-111 and for upon its - ace it ent't es h m prima facie to a a ut in that body. But the constitution has
' l)e just 3,980 vote. It wu not much of aday I'oi voting cither. Just 171 m mi votes In : iihe box than there were vote sal told. Tho :Democratie partv of this nation declared, "Vou shall net oxeicb'O vour right to inautro , into that practice" An itlier peculiar thing" about tliecount or al.ioni-the hallotswasth ts: : That of the votes in the box I.On'I were I Htraigln Deiaocr.tic ljnllols. This was 465 j :moro lleinoeratlo votes in the ballot Imx than ; 'there were voters at 1 he polling place. Yet tha ' Democratic partv said: Von shall notinquira ! !.nto this mutter." How was this aecom- ; uHshed? Tho prooess Is the Amplest in thu : wor d. Here are the ballots they cast (hold- ! ing up specimens of tho ballots used). I i idiow vou tho Democratic ticket and tlie Bfl- : publican tlckot. Each is plainly to be seen ' ;ind plainly to be disti "guisbed Von will j notice however one peculiarity about the ; Demoorntie ballot', that one is wider than ! the other aud thov always travel In pairs in ' that countrv. Tlio process was i-Uhp-y to ! fold up the wide ticket until there was ! a single fold and then told a narrow
ticket, or a doion of thein, if you please, insido of the first oue, nnd drop iho'e into tho ballot box. There you nave ronr elective franohlo f illv satisfied By
: that in, c iss they put int- tho box those j fraudulent votes Dut." w.u s-iy te- roe, M d thev count the whole a Sr!0" O, no. T at won d bo too bdd They said We j will not do that, v,-o w 11 do th la'r thing and wo will draw out the excess to fho .v tha j poopln that wo take no unfair advanti jros. " ! ) they blindtoMe 1 a Dumrxnat and told him 1 todr.w That was net 1 air. Wiiat o ht to : have lieen done hi. ih case was to p n-dyie i t- e Dotnoorat ro lie could not feet B it to ! make a show of honesty they olindro!do I 1 him tiiv.l then allowed hi a to draw oat the Jbalo'lt Was it, any wonder that he d.-eiw 1 the lt'ipublican ballots! Whmi pui oft the gland he tes-ificd that liu dr. w out every ! llepuhlio'in ballot exwpt '.wo. They miKet 1 him why he did not d n w t lose out, an 1 he
sa'd ho could not. Und ttiom. rot for the first time iu the hist.iry Of this country the national Demooveta: pirty de.I.ire; ' Vou slialt uot iuquiri into such a nsi , you chali not consider It." At aiioth w pj'I ng fi'O.-c this tr ek was played: Tneru witj put nto the 1 ox jusi lor.v ix Democratic vt 8 for It was a black district and 1,037 Itapublicuii vote-. T ic poi.-lht taUU-d with the votes I i the box. There was no mistake about that. The po is were closed ani the box shut It was i ed up and seated with
Is adngwax Then it was siven luto the
cunrao or a ueiuoerat to iiiKe to tne countv scat to n Domiiirttt'o Canvaislag Board. When those ballots were canvassed oa the day for the Canvassing Board to dlso'tnrce its dntv, to tho surpris't of everybody there wero found to be just fot t,y-slx Republican vo;on and 1,037 Ilemocriitlo. The peculla'i'y about the Doinoerntle vote was that they were ail clean an-1 fresh, an 1 had never been voted. E animation dls-ilosod the fact that thi I'-ox had been t'vioe so iled, once with red wax a id once with gr-en 80 the fraud was dls ovorod. When the will of the people h d been wade known at that palling pi no. and had linen declared in favor cf 1.1'e lleiml ll.'i.n party. In fie d u-ktiess of ulg'it it mi-i 1 uthless.y a' sassinatnt Aud the la morratio party of this cooutry stands by that
Urojf the discovery of an cmbeiKioment the injure. persin may maite a prompt settlement of his loss with the criminal without subjecting Mniself to the ollouse of compounding a crime, in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Alabama, in Moog vs. Strorg, tWided at the present term. The court said: It did not matter how reprehensible the motives of tho offender und liis principal were, the court could not inquire into them unless there ii a dear agreement that the eoiisidc;.atjoii cf the settlement was that there should be no prosecution for tiie crime committed. Is a Cambridge horse-car: "Kow I don't believe in speaking against a man behind Ir.s hack. It does not do any Rood and frequently injures an innocent partv." "It is an excellent plan
j to follow," returned tlwi..other. "I've 1 always done so," continued the .first, I "and' found it worked well; but there ia i-Col. So-and-So, he is a sampla of the ! other kind. Hei will backbite and aia- ; lign his neighbors, will get a man into his confidence and then give lum away-, and do all sorts of such laean, etm-
i tenuv-ible tricks that I would be ashoiaed 1 .. 7 . L 1.. 1....JbI
Cit. - iiiiGtw jffwy jwsfTi , .1 S. GlT.MJV.HAM, Of St. Tlicmni, CH ada, left for England.th' atL-er day. in ponm-ction witli an improvement in the telephoue he lias invested, mad v.liich he thinks can bs utilizeel for cable pur
jjoses. no nas uee;u ui eoniii.iiiie ieu ! for some months with certain cai'itnltts -I of Lontlon, nnd has now taktsa the in1 ventton over wish him fc tho irif;pcctii)n I of tleso gontleimcn. 5Ir. Oilhngham '. was for many years a fdlow-workmu-I with Boll, the father of tho tolophonei system, at Bradford, and claimed to j have broached tlio crntle ideas wluojt j Bell .eventually made public. : j Miss CrKUTBrnF. Upsnrs, who wa ' married to Xm. H. Hunt, Jr., son of J the cx-Secretai-y of the Navy, is the f great-grcat-graiuhlaug-htet of Martlia
Wsslungton. TUB MABKCtS.
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