Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 22, Bloomington, Monroe County, 1 August 1883 — Page 4

PWS CONDENSED.

Thirty Waits, covering damages of

SoCQ.OOS, have been begun against the Tras-

earn Brooklyn bridgv, for the sarfcM tecidanta oa Decoration day. Flames nearly extmg-iahed the town

of Cp-ataa, Fa. The haa Is es-iiutwd-t

-oo-tWOCMao (hna, Curtis & Cot, raWcantile and laMprtaftet tttRMtoVslUas, have failed. TIsHtMsa, tMOWfe assets, 75,00a X. VP. Holbrook & Co., dry-goods ' -aa-taotnrers, Kew Vara, have made an aagi I Their MHtiea am about S,OW, wit tmrfate-coa of 67,00X i Dispatch from Portland, Me., state tat W K Phimwy, the head of a totataapt torn of mcic-ants in theGonaa torn-,- over 100,000 of Joins saoaey ami ee-ritiMta upecnUtiom. The HafaUWee of she Insolvents an S347.O0O. I A Pittsburgh dispatch chronicles; the Mtan at the Manchester Iron and Steel . Co-spany for nearly 11,000,000. ;, "William B. Aator, of New York, haa signed a contract for a steel yacht 293 fast soog ad capable ot na-tn; foazteea knots aar steadily, to oos 3S0,00a ; fin upper floors of the building of Oeoree Hum-, dime-novel publisher, New York, were completely gutted By lira. Several Snansa had narrow escapes. The loss ta (900,01)0. : A fire at little Falls, N. destroyed the factory ot West Go. and the floor and feed store of W. H. Waters, caosinr a loaa of 50,008. The planiny iniH of Barber Henderson, at Montgomery, Fa,, worth 98&,00Q, was burned. - The ticket office in the Baltimore & Qjrfo depot at PUtahurghvm robbed of tt,COa, the thieves entering- by luting oat the

. While repairing a blast furnace at BnuMMe K eight wutXiuen w ete tit ushed to death by an immense weight of brick aatdaMwtax, wkieh fell npon them. The Hon. Ornery TwicheD, ex-Con-tiiinisii, and a prominent railroad man, died at BrookHne, Maes . aged 73 years Prof, Marsh, of Yale College, has

la member of the Munich

When eleven rounds of a prise-fight atl trtHtn aHnll at Tiliiitifinirrt Pa .aVrnTril

of wosaen armed with knives ai

ferokeinto the tag and stopped the mia

Oklahoma Payne has applied to Jodge McCrary, at Keokuk, for an tn- , jaeom iiatialnliig Gen, Pope from interfering with the settlement of Indian Tar. The Tillage of Onondaga, Mich., suffered great damage by a cyclone. Hear Teens a Mrs. Hartley was kffled, limbs of trees were carried ten miles. Hear Eaton Bapkk the house of Eugene Henry was i -town swn, three children heme; ftwnd ead tarty rods away, and the father bstng.3ata yin tore , The .Boston Theater Company is debar an earoelleat hvih waa at McTicker Theater, C-dcag- The great apestaealar draama of The World, which gives wide scope for good acting to the talented people 1 oeaspoahig the ooinpoy, was played last weak, and wit . be couUauad Imother week. A recent telegram from Denver says of the cesmsy-seat war in tend county; msmslliw has been received here ttatf. X Den,Coty Clerk, whowaswonnded 3a the late fight between masked men and the eaVera of Gnad county, m dead. TWs makes a total of five Byes that have gone est ot the dreadfal Hod. Commissioners Webber, Sana, end Day were killed in the straggle, andlXepaty Sheriff Bedmo-d Sheriff Beyer . ommitted suicide, presnmably bec-ose of f tn-MHtrft einnrnliriiirt llin as aniiiiii ami the advene wrici ot the proa, and Depwty Sheriff Bedmond, one of tee masked tanrdemta, Is snppoaed to have beenmortsQr wounded. It is MtSt feared that the Mst of tte dead la not eonraiete. There

rentnjns aMttar feeling between the factions

r for poUtieal snnremacr in the

, and despite the accented annoint-

tot Comadsaioaers by Gov. Grant, the

Mndtof their introduction to oflcial duties

The exciting hunt for the Polk ootmty (lew) murderers ended in alynehing after aB. A recent dietch from Harlao, Shelby eoantr.asys that "between land 3 o'clock a. m.abodyof men esthnabsdan tbeway from thirty to 100 in number, went to BarIan from the sontheast and quietly tied then: teams on the bank of the river Tee men were led by some one of ndtttary spedaaoe, as could really be seen bjrthehtormalBon and the predaton with wmok everything was done. Marching directly to the jail, and in the. nieantbne posting ontgnarda, they eaBed apon Deputy Watkins for the keys. He made aome objections, when they eatsed Mm, secured the keys and prooeeded to the eeB where Hardy was seenred,

wnaoot trouble. He met Ms

oaltaly at the door, not a muscle

Showing that he had the least fear. . A rope was qwlckly placed aroond his neck, aadMshandtt tied behind. The cell doors -wean, then nnloehed and the men quickly farmed ta Hue, without disturbance, the psesmer being placed under a strong guard. The are-alarm soon woke the whole town, and at fbe same time rang out WSikon Hardy's daath warrant. Volley after volley of shots were heardin thedirection of Chatwin's mlE, and the crowd which followed the lynchers, alter some search, found the dead body of the victim In the riser, jnstpelowthebridge, riddled with bullets, and the mmks of a rope npon his neck. The gupposttton is that he was thrown from the1 bridge end at thesame time shot," Officers of the St. Panl road report the grain orop along ita lines west of the Mlmaailppt in excellent condition, with the exception ot some narrow belts in Dakota, where fcjdl beat down the stalks. Seven passengers in a mixed train on fee the Wabash railway were kfiled near Iewwm,Mo. The passenger ear ran off ahe raflfl and turned eompletely ovee' It then broke into pieoes, crushing e persons, waen the rnlas wer e removed no less than

dead bodies - were found Several psssengent were seriously injured.

OneBigney.a "hard-man-from-Bitter -ereek" ant of avfeHow, was treated to a fatal dose of lienm at Miles City, Montana.

they were English tourists, and were struck by lightning at least a year ago; Ex-Gov. Thomas Swaan, of MstylandViadead, A fire on Shelby streets Memphis, Tenn, among grocery and feommisston. houses, destroyed about 200,000 Vorth of property Eigh colored persons were drowned at Claremont, V., While attempting to cross the Pastes river to attend a prayer-meeting. Miss Walker and eight other yonng ladies of HnntsviUe, Ala. , ohaUfenged a male nine to a game of base-ball and beat them by 20 toil. WASHINGTON. A. G. Bell is deohtred hy the Patent Office to have been tfce origrlWU InTontor of the telephone, as against all others of the many dlstingutshed electricians whose name have since become familiar to the ptthtu through the greatest discovery of the deeade. Consular officers at London and Liverpool have been ordered by Secretary Folger to appoint sanitary inspectors to examine all vessels leaving for the United States and cable information of the discovery of any disease on board. The Secretary of the Treasury received a draft for 4,400 drawn by the Exchange National Bank of Atchison, Kan.,, on the) First National Bank of Ctfoago, with the following request: "Please place the amount of the inclosed draft to the credit ot the United States for (he benefit of the same. Umctowk Debtor." It was credited tothe'eooscience fond M. A. Dauphin, of the Louisiana lottery Company, has entered suit in the' District of Columbia courts, through his attorneys, against Walter Q. Grecham, Postmaster General, for 100,000 damages, sustained by bis order forbidding the use e( t r-ft lweHft n thm The distillers who have not been able to emape the payment of tax by the exportation of diBtilled spirits axe understood to be Mfrhig another formidable combination to endeavor to induce the next

Congress to enact a law extending the bond

ed period.

- The receipts from internal revenue

for the fiscal year just closed were 1144,553,369. The oustoms duties aggregated 214,401,14a POLITlCAlfe - Th majority report on public charities made to the Legislators of Xassa

ohusetts pronounces the charges made by Gov. Butler against the management at

TewksburyAlnuhouaa groundless and cruel L. G. Kinne, Democratic candidate for Governor ot lows, opened the campaign at CarrOIl, where he proclaimed the right of every man to take a drink if he hkes. Gen. Butler's Presidential bcom Jse

gins in Maine, and is started m a paper

owned and edited by exG0v. Plaisted. Senator Sabin, of Minnesota, is out for Akttmr and Harrison as a Presidential tmket Kew Tork and Indiana appear to have the attention of both parties. The Governor of Missouri, before leaving for Utah, wrote to the Louis Police Board that the Sunday provision of the HighJosnse law most be enforced to the letter. While in the East recently, Gov. Poster, of Ohio, was interviewed ta the effect that Judge Hoadley's nomination for Governor had cost him 50,000, and on this subject quite a correspondence has since been carried on. Judge Hoadley addressed a note to Gov-. Foster, asking him to give his authority for the statement, foster replied that he said it was alleged that Hoadley bad so admitted, half the sum being paid during the convention. Foster

added that the delegates from Cincinnati

opemy sold their votes, and it would be well for Hoadley to state what the nomination cost him. Hoadley then telegraphed to

Foster: 1 repeat the statement is false in all its parts. Now produce your informant

and let me confrout him. "

lOSCEIXAirEOTJS. : Gen, Ord died of yellow fever at Havana seen after his removal from a steamer to the hospital.' He was bom in Maryland,

graduated at West Point, was in. the campaign against the Seminoles and was a corps

commander in the Bebellion, participating

m the capture of Iee's army.

The physician of Chief Justice Waite

finds Stat he broke a rib in his fall in Montana. He haa gone to Lyme, Ct, to spend the sammcr. .

The Grand Army reunion at Denver

'Was largely attended and the veterans had

an enjoyable time Beports showed that the

'organisation had gained 55,786 members,

embracing 971 posts, during the last year

The SoJdiers' and Sailors' reunion at Colum

bus, Ohio, attracted over 30,000 strangers to

the city. Speeches were made by B. B. Hayes, Charles Foster, Gen. Noyes, and Judges Hoadley and Foraker. Over 20,000 were present at a public reception in front of the Capitol building. Several hun

dred of John Morgan's Confederate raiders

held a reunion on the estate of Henry Clay,

new Lexington, Ky., in tents furnished by the War Department. Morgan's daughter

is present. Gens. Preston and Duke de

livered addresses

The situation of the great telegraph

operators' strike was about as follows on the 26th of July: The American Bapid Tel

egraph Company agreed with the Brother

hood of Telegraphers to advance salaries 10

per cent, make eight hours in the daytime or Beren hours at night a day's

work, and pay extra for Sunday service. The Board of Directors of the Merchants' Exchange of St Louis passed resoiutiona requesting the telegraph companies to provide better facilities for the transaction of business. Emlle Hertz, of

London, brought suit in Chicago against the

Western Union Company, claiming 10,003

damages for a refusal ' to accept

a cable message without conditions as to delay. The . strikers at Boston reserved to ask the' Executive Committee to order out the operators employed by the

Associated Press. At Philadelphia, a E,

Fuller began five civil suits against the Western Union Telegraph Company for reflating to transmit messages for him under the ordinary printed conditions, Similar

suite were brought in several cities against the same company. The new national bank of Mexico reports profits of 10 per cent in the past seven niontha

The Louisiana State Board of Health has passed a resolution denouncing Dr. J. " H. Baoch,of the IBinota Board,as a meddler, aadmvitinghimto stay at home and attend to his own affairs. The Lonmua State Board of Health recommend that the G-jveraor byproclamatico dose the waters of the State against all points infected with contagion! diseases Bichard Diver, a planter near Kew Albany, Miss., and Sylvia Limbert, his

keeper, are in jail for an attempt to i Mrs. Diver by cooking the head of a

i snake in her coffee. The wronged

wife discovered the plot before it was put

FOREIGN.

George Kane, Harry Sqffer and Wextfcmgton McCuIlough, while rowing on tfglwtemaeat CnmberUnd, Md, capsized ataw boat and were aB drowned. CoL J. If. King sold a mammoth link aoni flee Aidsalo, Texas, to an assotil-

i for Hooo.ooa

It fc.rtjejed that nndey a large tree in

resmaVyfoend. a

The- international rifle-match at Wimbledon, England, resulted in the defeat of the American team sent over from New York. . The grand total was 1,051 for the British team and 1,906 for the Americana The Lord Mayor of London entertained the visitors. The shoot was finished in a pouring rain. The Irish riflemen were victorious in the shoot for the Elcho shield, defeating their English and Scotch competitors. There ja great distress among the Irish laborers in London. Many of them are refuted employment at the wharves and docks There is a dead-set made against men of Irish nationality at the east end of London, where the Irsh have hitherto been preferred. Mow English, Scotch, andforejgnexe are chosen, except where necessity compels employers to engage the Irish. Tins is supposed to be from the dread of dynamite, with which the extreme men have threatened to destroy English ship-

The Hon. James M. Priest, Associate

jTaaHpi of the Supreme Court of Liberia, is

dead Be waft a native of kentucky.and we&t to Liberft in 1835, and had many re ttxmsible and Important positions in that republic. The London, Thies saye that the area of wheat planted tnth'e United Kingdom is less Won that of last year, and the yield will he below the average. Becent heavy rains have checked the progress of aereaH A Cairo dispatch Says the Sanitary Comnussron there will establish three additional hospitals and organize an ambulance corps. The Khedive and his Ministers have gone to the infected region. EMjht hundred inhabitants of BulaK are in tents, surrounded by a cordon, and dying ot famine, oetleatin among the British troops is repb'rtcd Misfortunes are showering npon poor Egypt, It is now reported that leprosy has appeared a few miles to the southward of Damietta, and is spreading rapidly. Binderpest has also appeared among tin cattle herds, and is playing havoo among the bovines. The English Government has dispatched twelve physicians, who are experts in cholera, to Egypt. A serious outbreak of cholera ts reported at Bombay, m India Several cases of the disnsse are reported by correspondents Of Now TOrK papers to have occurred in London, and the presence of the po tilence is being suppressed by the British authorities. In tho House of Commns,.Gladstone annbu'need h would not ask Parliament at this session to sanction the Suez canal agreement made with DeLesseps. The members of the opposition cheered the announcement Cetewayo, the chief of the Zulus, wan killed in a reoent battle. M. Fattve, the tfrehfch scientist, ex p rases tlt Opinion that tho cholera In Egypt will tmd in dx weeks.

ItAXER NEWS ITXMS. Secretary f olger has called in tho

remainder of the o per-cent bonds, the

amount being about 11,000,0'JO. lntcres, will cease Nov. 1 next

A Boston dispatch says the Massachusetts Senate accepted the majority re port of the Tewkabufy Alm-hsonse Investigating Committee, and refused to admit the House bill to regulate the disposal of bodies ot paupers. This ends the Tewksbury business as far as the Legislature is concerned. Additional advices from Zululand relative to the death of King Oalewayo at the hands of the Insurgents, Svr that all his wives and many ot his chiefs were also killed. At Bridgeport, Ct., the works of the Howe Sewing-Machine Company Were destroyed by fire, with a loss Of $350,000. At the boftt-ratte at Fulton, N. Y., Raman won easily, with Hosmerlseeond and Lee third. Daniel B. Phillips, a well-known evangelist, of Boston, committed suicide by hanging. The first frost of the season is reported from the White mountains of Kew Hampshire. In & collision gome years ago between the Pennsylvania Bailroad Company ferryboat and the Kew York Transportation Company steamer, John H. Martin received injuries causing insanity. He has just obtained a verdict at New York against both companies for 20,000. Patrick Kelly, a seaman of. the brig Julia Blake, died of yellow fever at the Philadelphia quarantine hospital, to which place he had been removed from the vessel. The brig was detained at quarantine and thoroughly fumigated. Harrington, Irish member of Parliament, whose brother, an editor, was recently sent to prison for his opinions, is hard at work reviving the spirit of organization which in the old Land League did so much in a beneficial way for the farmers of Ireland Branches of the new league will soon exist in every hamlet of the Old Sod. Cholera is reported at Rostov, Bussia, and several deaths have occurred To the surprise of people at home and abroad, the jury trying Polk, the defaulting State Treasurer of Tennesse, found him guilty and gave him the heaviest possible penalty a term of twenty years in the penitentiary and a fine equivalent to the known extent of his theft viz. : 386,540.10. Polk took his sentence as coolly as he took the State's money last Kew Year's. The bank of LeadviUe, Col., has made an assignment The failure has been anticipated for some time, and will not, it is said, affect other Colorado banks. Elisha Ward, doing business as the Ward Iron Company with large works at Kiles and Kew Philadelphia, Ohio, has made an assignment The liabilities are about 350,0.-0.

A Bog as a Deadhead, Capt. Briggs, of Russellville, Ky., has a beautiful thoroughbred pointer that does a great deal of traveling on his own account. He is at the depot to meet nearly all the trains, and whenever he sees an opportunity to elude the vigilance of the conductor, he jumps on and rides until they put him off or until he gets to his destination. The train men have become tired of giving him free rides, and ' generally find him and put him off before the train starts, but sometimes he eludes their vigilance and goes anyhow. His latest excursion was to Erie, Tenn., where he went to see some old friends, stayed a day or two, jumped on tho train and came home. He has made many trips to Louisville and other places on the Louisville and Nashville road. THE "MARKET. NEW "YORK. Beeves 4.so 6 fco HOOS 6.25 jjj 6.? Ptooa Suiierlins 3.0J tj 8.1 Wheat No. l White ii l.ia No. 3 Red I.I4?; 1.14 'j Cons So. 2 WlA& .ai Oath No. s 41 i m Pork M m is.76 io.io.oi Labd 1) en . 8!b CHICAGO. Beeves Good to Fancv Steers.. C10 s 6.28 Cows and Heifers 4.7i t Medium to Fair .5 , s.75 Hons 3.fio ; o-iia riooii Fai-oy White Wliit r Ex. S5' P.7ii Ojod to Choice Spi-yKx. S.'JI a5u Wheat No. 4 Siring i.oiMe No. 3 lloJ Winter: l.OSlim l.6 Con:; No. 3 mia . Oats No. iH33 .a4. IlTE NO. 2 50'4 .Wi Barley No. v K) iff .15 DuxTEn Choice Creamery,,...,, .ill 6 .20 EaM Flash Ui.rf, .l.i

Pobk Moss .-. 13.15 tj;i.2'

liARD , MILWAUKEE. WHEAT-No. 3 Corn N. z Oats So. 3 Rye No. 3 Naxuct No. 3 Pobk Mess Labd. ST. LOUIS. Wheat No. 3 Bed Corn Mixed Oats No. s

rye..

9 at . h

1.0 LOWs .54 MS .MK .53 .Kl 13.7S gKlSUW . eta .9 1.06X& lM'fi .40 (St . .87 I!!) .87!. A61M .47

Pork Mess U.m ci 14.75

LAUD VAa . aii CINCINNATI. Wheat No. 3 Rxl.... 1.07 ! 1.08 03UH Si 9 .51 he Oats ;., 3!,& .30 Rye mufi .66 P0.1K Mew 15.80 110.00 Lard lm . 8k TOLEDO. Wbeat No. 3 Bed l.mm l.u COMI .V-V .695e Oats No. 3 .8 .88 DETROIT. FLOOD M $ 4.60 Wheat o. I Whito 1.12 fi l.H Corn No, a & M Oats Mxed s .40 l'OBK Mcs 30.80 aLO0 INDIAMAPOLIS. Wheat -No. 3 Boa LOS COBK No. 2 '. .4,9 OATS-MUtea 82T(iS .38 EAST LIBERTY, PA. Cattle Best . fl.65 S 8.8 Fair : MS '. 5.5) Common 4.70 & 5.00 Hoos Mi g60 cSB5?iiit fiT,MIt?Tiiif "',' i$ 550

CRUSHES TO DEATH.

Terrible Accident in a Blast Furnace Near Syracuse, H. Y.

Eight Men Butted tinder a Hnndrcd Tons of Brick and Mortar.

Disnatch from Byraouse, N. ?. A terrible accident oeourrea at the Onondaga Iron, Company's blast furnace a mile west bit this city, in Ckddca For several weeks the furnace has been unused. It being out of repair. Joseph Dawson, with a gang of men, has been engaged for several days in removing: tho inner and fire-bricks from the aroh, leaving only the outer coarse standing; The foreman considered tills course Rntirely secure. Without the slightest warning the Arch Caved m, burying- this workmen beneath It in a mass of bricks, mortar, soot and ashes.. Ai nkrni was at ohoe glWb, arift the mort at the mill Mt it work with i will to rentovn the yictlins. Jil less than an hour eight Bodies were taken fVoni the rttiw Several hundred t)foplo wora m the coeno. Sons, aauehtors, and wjlvW went franUcaUy as the bodies were removed, People gathered in knots iA tho village o Geddes or hurried to the scene o'f the casualty. - Business was almost entirely suspjehdeO in .the village, and the place looked ns.if.atrlc&ep. by a panic, It was fuyy flv filiiiutes after the collapse before too dust cleared away sufflctenQ so that the debris oould be viewed. The weight ot the falling bricks was so great that they were forced out of the openings in the f urnaco and crowded several feet into the space around it, The gang of eight men were lifting ih iri; side of the furnace, which Is biktedi feet 10

luKmeccr ana sixty reel mgjj., 4,smicaiv

mm was cross ran. jurijaOT: at lilgllB eight feet frottte bound. , jit was ad Mr, GeWj, manhger of the comoanv. that

wss khown tha.the lining of the upper part was in a dangerous condilion, and that he warned the men before they went in The fellow-workmen of the dead men said that it was not known that the lining was in a dangerous state. Without Warning the lining of the upper part gave way, and sixty tons of brick fell upon the men. The sound

or tne tailing mass wa? mumea uy me iron walls and there was no crash. A great Cloud of dust blew out from the doors of the fuf- : naoe, oiling the factor . i Men knew their fellows were ibide that Iron tomb, but their eyes were biihded by the CloudB of dust, ahd it was several mitt- , utes before they c'ohld grope their way in. j ride the furnace. With hoes and shovels they began work, and after digging near half an hour and throwing out a mass ot bricks about four feet deep, they found the j bodies. They were crushed and broken: Their faces were covered with dust, which had settled Into the cu ts and wdnnd. mad8 . by the falling bricks, and their hair arid 1 beards were filled with the yellow powder. ; While the men wer6 busy throwing- out the uebris they were frequently Importuned by their friends to leave the place at ones, is they were working in imminent danger every minute. They paid no heed, but worked on with a will. More bricks were liable to fall at any moment The fall of one brick from such a height would kill a man riutrglit. I The news of the tragedy spread from the blast furnace to the homes of the men who were killed Women and children wailing and crying hastened to th furnace. The limp, shattered bodies were carried out bV men whose faces were d tern And Met anil laid on the bare ground. Bobs filled the air a i like Bo tdany sicks, thb bcklieS were lifted . into wagons and driven through the village. At the littlC cottages women stood with I hprbhs to their, eves, and even the little -fiildren stopped playing. Tho excitement among the employes and many outside laboring men was intense The loudest and most open threats were heard to shoot both Manager Gere and the general foreman, who were Doth present, The impression prevailed among these excited men that they were criminally negligent in allowing the 'men to go into .the furnace to work in the condition in which it was. The police were oalled in to quell any disturbance, i

GOSSIP FOB THE JjAIUES, Cupid In Custody. "Cupid, little criminal! "What have you bcea aolhg?" 'Voth'iig 'iong, oh, nothing wrong; Just a 1 ttle wooing." "You've been stealing hearts, I fear. Stealing hearts by dozens." "No, I haven't, no, I haven t They wars all nty eohsltlst 'Come along, yon little fraud; You will hve to i airy In a prison, till you learn Wooing means to many." "V ry well, here's Bonnybollol She nhall be the winner." Ho nylK-tlesAiU: "Ottper, Ffoe th6 little shrBef''

"Oh. I'll marryVBonnvbells

H.-ri ii coid 6r, Vslentitte: '

no n no my security.

Mary A: Jttarr, in the.CdntVAmV. Mutt U&ks Her Owii Stiiiidari This is tile bpinibn (of Mirs; D. H; fe. Ooodalqin'an hi;ticlein"!(it:(ftOJi;" oh "Mothers ite . EWi&? "If God ami man made w'omejj uiilike, for different work and tliis wo believe then no man can teach t woman what she most needs to knw. In the.field.pf life there is a groat realm of commqn riches, common pursuits', wiich may be shared or divided in a thousand varying proportions to mutual advantage and delight; but for her most specific and individual work she can take her orders from that power alone whioh rules all, She must, See clearer, deterr mfllo jl'6e,lrmly, act more ehtjiusiastically and devoutly oa ,hejc . own tnio lines, than man can do or can suggest. She mnst make her own standards, her own methods." What Wives Do. This is the way Fannie Field in the Prairie Farmer answers the question, "Are wives supported?" "Who has cooked your meais, made, washed and monded your clothes all thesCyearS? Who niade the butter and cheese that y.ou sold aiid pocketed toe money for ? Who took cire of vbur bhHdtejn, nursed you when -jrod were sick, and bore with your outrageous fault-finding when things didn't go to suit you? Who patched, and darned, and contrived, and saved, and made every dollar do the work of three? And whkt has she had to pay her for all this? Just her board and clothes it's, she went along, and if yott were tb die to-mqrroft- all that she feould claim of Uio propSrty

that she worked so bard to Help you

save, would be the use of one-third of

the real estate; and in nine cases out of

ten that is h'erally worse tbat nothing. If it had not been for your wife's help, would you have been worth so much ti-dav as you are now? If you had

boen obliged to hire a woman to do the work that your wife haa done .for her b.ard and clothes, do yod imaginb thit

y m could have done much more man n ake both bnds meet?"

MOBBING A CONVICT B088.

A Steamer Pirad Upon, and an Ulinoisan's Cruel Harder Avenged. Teleirram from Arkansas City, Ark. A mob of several hundred men fired oa the steamer Ida Dairagh, near llurnett'S Landing, wounded ah obnoxious convict boss fatally, and killed a negro convict Two weeks ago a yonng machinist from Clinton, 111. came to this section hunting odd jobs. He secured work repairing ginhouses on a farm near Bed Forks While living there he boarded with a Mrs. King. Be fell behind in his board, and told the woman that he would send her the sum as soon as he could raise it, I 'Just as he was preparing to leave for the North he was arrested, taken before a magis trate, and sentenced to work in the hold-) for attempting to defraud his landlady. Not working to suit Werner, the man who had charge of the convicts, tho young man was whipped by three negro convicts at the bOEB orders. He died from the effects of the beating. The Sheriff of Desha county arrested Werner and the three negroes, and was taking tbem to Arkansas City when the mob fired upon them. One of the negroes lumped into the river and was killed by the mob as he was swimming for the chore. Werner fell on the deck with a bullet in his chest A perfect f usiiade was kept up by the men, who followed the steamer down the river for some distance. The lives of tho passengers and crew were In great danger. The Sheriff, with the wounded man Werner and two of the negroes,.were finally placed aboard the Anchor

iiine steamer vuy ot new uu auu brought here.

LITTLE PEOPLE.

Bora Tom Thumb and his wife profecsed to be firm believers in Spiritualism. Hais County, Ala, has a colored dwarf, a girl about 30 years old, who is only three feet and three inches in height. "Tom Thumb" weighed nine pounds at his birth, and his sister, who weighed nine and a half pounds, grew to weigh more than Che-JIah, the imported midget, twentyeight inches high, weighs twenty-two pounds, and is paid a salary of 150 a week, Dakhi Bub.it, of Big Creek Gap, East Tennessee, t aid to be 1ft years old. weighs only thirty pounds, and is only eighteen inoues high Several years ago Tom Thumb erected an imposing shaft, mounted by a life size statue of himself, in the Mountain Grove cemetery at Bridgeport, Ct., where he is buried. Thb death and funeral of Tom Thumb probably attracted more attention than the obsequies of the mightiest potentate in the unjvexHe might have dona A correspondent at Middleboro, Mass., savs: Mils married life was truly a hannv life. The dwarf

couple had more pleasant conjugal relations than the average of grown-up people. His

wile anew now to nanaie nun: sne naa tact, and evorvthlmr went smoothly. He was-a

perfect man physically and had more strength than the average full-grown man, but his muscles were flabby because he wouldn't exercise. He would at first sis or ride when at leisure, but the riding he didn't like, because wherever he went crowds of boys followed him. And he couldn't walk much; it was difficult for him to keep np to an ordinary man, and then there was some usual interfering crowd pointing stand sometimes jibing hrm. So he sat down, smoked, playoo billiards, ate, and grew fat He was always healthy and pleasant This sort of an

cxu jCnce cruia nave dud one eno.-

POIKTS FOR THE CUBI0US. ; A veritable vamnire has been canirht in

Santa Barbara, CuL It has the head of a

kitten, body of a gopher and the wings of s bat

While cleaning a oublio well at Brown-

wood, Texas, the remains of a prisoner, who

naa mysteriously aisappcarea fix years ago, were found. Shortly after he disappeared the water of the well began to taste badly, and some hair and rlerh was found in it, but the erase was credited to a pet goat which was mhssi ng at the time An Ohio man, aroused out of his slumbers by a burglar, purhued the fellow with a shotgun, but did not succeed in shooting him. Soon the burglar came to a river and plunged In, but, not being a swimmer, he cank and was drowned. And now the Grand Jury has indicted the household for murder in the first degree for not going to the assistance of the drowning man. This is strange, in view of the fact that had he previously shot the burglar nothing would have been done to him. Bessi- Colbt, 3 years old, a lineal descendant of It-abel, sister of Gen. John Stark, of the Bevolution, living in fryeburg. Ma, encountered near the bouse a poisonous adder four feet long, Seizing the snake in her hands she carried it alive to the house, where her step-mother killed it though so frightened that she nearly fainted, and was 111 for two days afterward Several persons in that vicinity are said to have died from the bite of this species of serpent and why this mammoth specimen did not bite the child is a mjstery. Bessie says, "When he tried to bite I tuck a tick In his mout"

The Etlquettoof Marri-g-o. According to Honore de Balzac, only

t'vo kinds of women are permitted to make advances to men to take that

"arst step" which, after all, costs very

little. The women specially excepted from the general rule are Queens and actresses; and, with all dtia respeet for tao throne and for the stage) it must be admitted that members if theso two

privileged classes have, in many cases, profited largely by the permission ac

corded to them, Queens (ind actresses

meaning, in the latter case, queens of the theater, and not the whole crowd of

women and girls who have entered upon the dramatfo career are surrounded by

homage; to that what on thb part of

other women would be active selection

is but passive selection on theirs; They

are in Ho way exposed to tho ignominy of a rebuK A QueOn, moreover, is strictly forbidden by etiquette to re

ceive an unbidden declaration of love, or a spontaneous invitation of any kind.

From a dancing partner to a partner for life she must sitmify her choice. As

much cannot bo said of the prima donna

or tho great tragto or oc-nuc actress.

But, whether it should be so or not, the queens of the stage, while exposed to at least as fierce a light as that which

"beats upon a throne, stand equally

with the enthroned ones above the

reach of conventional etiquette. What a Woman Beads.

Woman, in readinR a newspaper, has

a distinct method of her own. She

takes it up hurriedly and scans it over

rapidly, as though she was hunting

some particular thing, but she is not,

She is merely takir in the obscure paragraphs, which ho bolioves were nut in out-of-the-way places for tho

sake of keeping her from seeing them

Marriages and death are always interesting reding to her, and the

I advertisements are exciting and stimu

lating. She cares but litile for printed jokes, unless they reflect ridicule upon men, and then she delights in them and

never forgets them. She pays particular attention to any

thine inclosed in quotations, and con

siders it rather better than anything

first handed.

The column in which the editor airs his opinions, in leaded hifalutin, she

rarely reads. Views are of no import

unce in her estimation, but facts are

evervthinsr. She doesn t car? for it,

but makes a practice of reading it

because she thinks she ought to do so.

She reads stories and sketches and paragraphs indiscriminately, and believes every word of them. After she 'has read all she wants she lays the paper down with an air of disappointment as she observes that "lliero is

nothing in it." The Woman Who Wears the Breeches.

The woman who always answers when her husband is spoken to, and considers

herself tho "better three-quarters'' of

the household arrangement. The woman who buys all the provis

ions and clothing, even her husband's clothes, and buys them always at a bar

gain. She never thinks him of any consequence in tho family, buK regards him as a boarder who eats a great deal and pays nothing, while the family is supported by her own shoulders and foresight, including the "bargains" she is constantly securing. The woman who always pins on her husband's collar and cravat, washes his neck and ears, trims his hair and pulls it too, if he is at all rofraotory who contradicts him before their children, not allowing him to express an opinion without inunediatelv volunteering ono in an opposite direction. The woman who always demands the money on "pay day," and if her husband ventures to ask for a dollar looks at him sharply and asks wliat he wants it for: says "there is no need for a man to have money whan his wife needs it all to clothe and feed her family." The woman who wears tho "breeches" is almost sure to lay by something for a "rainy day," as she never allows her husband a day of recreation, although on holidays she usually takes him out with the other children for a little enjoyment. Her husband always has a quiet, subdued air, and speaks in ft very nervous, hasty manner, and lookii around quietly from under his eyebrows, as if expecting to hear some voice in contradiction. He has the habit of smoothing the top of his head gently and soothingly, as if his hair had been recently pulled. The woman who wears the breeches is usually called "small" by tho men, and a "tyrant" by the women. She speaks of the homesteacl as "my place," or "my farm," and conwders her hus

band, of no account in the buying or

seiiing-.ot cattle. r. She-knows jpsthoWj much the pigs weigh, and tho market value of everything the farm produces for sale. She is oIobc at a bargain, and has been knOwn to go no far as to drive the team V a - . . i-.t. 4

and help to lorn tile wood, a tie always manages the children, and if one

of them should turn out poorly, she

says : "That child ia more like his father than all the rest."

Nobodv haa much love for her. and

as she has proved eminently ablo to take core of nersalf by taking care of the Whole family, ho One Cares much fbriier. . . The' wOinan wh8 wears the breeches always puis hei1 husband t6 bed first, that he may wrirni tho front aide; and t.h'on rolls him Over to tlifl wall when

die get, in, .and would iuake him get

upjanti: Kimiiu tiieure-u. uwiuuiij, only she thinks he docs not know

enougli: ... , t

.,83 he understands politics, ani;er husband votes .for - tha . man she tells

him to vote for. ?osfo Trantcript.

.. . Fo'rccJ Labpr In Egypt! The conditions of forced labor do not

seem to differ much in the different parts

of the country. Nowhero do the laborers receive any pay or food or shelter,

while their treatment by their taskmasters would seem to be simply brutal. Mr. Stuard describes, the, ays,? tern as ..ho saw it in operation in. the province of KenehJ in Upper Egypt. A out of about eighteen feet in depth had to be made through a conglomerate of sand and gravel ; this was flanked right and left by high embankments con

structed of tho material taken from the trench, and along the bottom and on the slopes "mell swarmed thickly, like bees on a honeycomb) for, a distance of about a thiie in length;1 The entire strength bf the impreBsablelabpr Jri the' province; amounting to about 40,(K)0 kieii; Was concentrated Bn this work, 'Vhli mnn fnilA1 ftnm HimriRA cn Rim-

set, with the thermometer at 82 degrees

in tho shade, having only a brief interval at midday for a meal of bread

soaked in unfiltered Nile water: This!

with a similar,.. meal .before peginhjng anil after leavine off., cbnstititted the

day's dietary. ThS laborers provided

tneir own pasxets lor carrying tne .ex eavated soil, and their own tools; when they used any, but most employed their fingers. Overseers walked about among then! armed with sticks, with which they struck the men while they were carrying loads upon their heads, often without any apparent reason. At night they slept upon the ground almost without clothing, and quite without shelter, though thb air was often very cold. Mr: Stuart has often seen negro slaves at work in the cotton plantations of Cuba,. and the convicts at Portland, and both were to be en

vied, iu his opinion, by the side of these fellahs. London Globe. A Mean Trick. A man who probably hailed from Buffalo played' a powerful-mean trick on a Detroit bridal couple at Niagara Falls. They went to a Hotel ahd r'egis teredj had supper, and then started (tut for a night view of the Mighty Boater. They had hot gone far when a than called to them and said ! "Have you just been married? " We h-have?'' answered the groom. "Going to stay here a day or two?" "Yes." "Having registered at my hotel ytra probably intciid to remain there?" "Yes, sir:a "Well, I want to say a Word to yoth I don't want any ducky-deary nonsense around my house? I want no popsywopsy business on the verandas, 1 want no squeeaing bands on the balconies', or feeding each other at the table." ' The groom let his arm fall front his bride's waist in a slow and painful manner, and the stranger continued: "The first time you call her peaches and cream, or she calls you her darling, out you go!" "Y-yes, sir." "She's no sweeter than 10,000 other girls, and you are no more of a darling than I am, and I won't stand love-sick nonsense." He walked away with that, and people at the falls who knew the bridal couple were amazed to hear them address each other as Mr. and Mrs., and to see what precautions they took to prevent touching hands or betraying any symptoms of love. They put in two wretched days, and it was only as they were upon the point of leaving that they discovered how a base villain had duped them. Detroit Free Frees. Twenty-Four O'Ctock. The Railway Jteiiorter says that the Cleveland, Akron and Columbus Bailroad Company have recently is3ued a new time-card, based on the twenty-f ourhour system that of numbering the hours of the day from one to twentyfour, instead of making two divisions of twelve hours each, designated or distinguished as ante-meridian and postmeridian a. m. and p. ilk At present still another designation is used, that of m. when 12 midnight ia to be distinguished from 12 p. m. The Reporter says that this company is tho first to employ this continuous system, but in reality tho method is a very old one, coeval with the history of clocks, and is still in use in some parts of Southeastern Europe. The Reporter adds that "tho day begining at midnight, as under the common system, but there is no possibility of confusion between forenoon and afternoon hours. The greatest advantage of this scheme in a railway time table will be seen at once 7 a. m. and p. in. are frequently misprinted and misunderstood, while no one mil confound 7 o'clock with 19 o'clock. Any watch or clock can be

adapted to the system by simply putting the extension of the hours m a circle just inside of those already on the face. The exterior numbers will then be consulted up to 12 o'clock (noon), and the interior ones for the remainder of the day. Scieniigc American, Took the Bisk. When Urigham Young was alive he

collected his tenth of the farmer with a

persistency that balked at nothing. On one occasion he called before him a subject who has since removed to litis State, and said : "Brother Blank, yon have not broutrlitin niv wheat tuis year."

"I didn't raise a single bushel," was

the reply. "Then I'll tako it in cats." "I have none." "Well, hay will do." "I have no hay." "Then bring in potatoes or corn." "Both crops were a failure, oh, wise Prophet. All I have off my farm arc ten bushels of onions, and of cou: se tho Lord doesn't eat onions." "Maybe not," growled the old man. "but you bring me in a bushel and we'll take the risk of it." Mr. Blank said it was that bushel of onions which convinced him that there was something suspicions about old

Brigham's inspirations. It ws too

strong a religion. Haw street Hews.

Subpmse has often been expressed at

the fact ttiat no new species of animal seems to have appeared since the glacial

age. Mr. Donald Mackintosh, writing

in the Geological Magazine, advances, in explanation of this, the new theory, which appears to be growing, that only a few thousand years had elapsed since the gbvojal beds wer laid down.

Democratic Plundering in New York T i sit ... , Through dissatisfaction wtyh the result of Arthur State Convention 100,-: 000 Republicans voted with the democrats in Now York last fall On a platform of "economy and reform, H thereby electing that tioket by an overwhelming majority, including Governor, State officers, and a majority of both branches of the Legislature. For the first time since the war thyse professed reformers had control of all branches Of the State Government and hid abundant opportunity td put their tilatfdrni jJrdfessions df r'etr'enchntet and reform tntd practice". They promised freely and frequently and foHdlv what the wtfuld dtfc Orie huhdred thousand Republicans voted for their tlcet on thfe strength of theSe,. Vociferous profession,. The Democrats have ttpw bh in. possession nine, months, and their Legilature,af ter asi-months' session! has adjourned,' an.. what have ihey done to redeem their pledges? Havo they acted on their promises? Have they cut dowh .pxpenditures : abolished useless braces? Have they retrenched? Have they acted in the spirit of economy and reform? , They have not. On tho contrary, they have acted in a spirit of extravar gance, waste and robbery in direct contradiction to their loud-mouthed prom-, jsesv TheJ; have cheated new, offices to provide for .election "workers? ana

strikers at public expense; tney nave increased salaries instead of reducing them; multiplied expenses instead of cutting them down. They have acted in strict accordance with Tammany notions. They have plucked the taxpayers for tho benefit of the taxeaters. To maintain a State Tammany they have despoiled the State. The following table showing the fate bf taxation tot various purposes in 1882 and 188. will indicate the increase:

For general fund, . For schools:.....:. Canal

::::::::l

.1883. Hills.

::..mm

07

lStML Mills. 1:16 M

Total tfx for 188?..

, incrot.

.....a.i3for iaal. 3 45

iie of 1883 over 1W2..S0, or 8-10 of -mill.

Tile Valuation bf the State is fi,783,672,587: The increase in the amoiini raised by taxation this year over 1882 is therefdre $2,226,946 (two and a quarter millions). This is the result Of nine months bf Democratic "oebnomy, retrenchment, arid reform" in the Empire State. It is curions to note that only on the single item of free schools has there been a reduction of appropriations. How the $2,226,000 have been spent majr he gathered from the following, which indicates some of the increases made by the Tammany Legislature in the expenses 8f the State: The additions to the salary-list arS: Board of Claims, $J0,80.I (three Comtnisi loners at (5,000, 3 15, OX); three Commi loners' expenses a', 500, l,tOJ; cl.rk, i.0; stengrapher, 81,50.); messenger, 8SU3); Emigration Commission, 913.5C0 (Commissioner, 3(1,000; nrit deputy, 14,000; second deputy, t!i,5001: Captain of the Port of New Vorfc, ,,ri00; eleven Harbormaster! at ',5Jt,1 SU?V)00; Bureau of Labor Bcetisttos, i.'0fl (Commissioner, S,500; clerk, l,a.U); ietf Capitol Coiflmiiisioii, 113,500 (Commissioner, 7jS0O; Governor's expert, estimated. i,W,0; Treasurer s clerks,- 1,000); Public Buildings Superintendent, a&SOO; Court of Appeal clerks, l,tXM Total. Certain appropriations not in this list will make the amount about $100,000, This is but a specimen of the extrav

agance which has led to the people of the State being plucked to the tune of $'2,226,000 : or having been so foolish as to believe Democratic professions of

economy and reform. The Democratic "thieves and rascals" who have broken into the New York

State offices and made off with this 92,-

226,000 of publio money, are of tho same breed and variety as the "thieves and rascals" Who are trying to break into the national offices. The are now preaching economy and reform and retrenchment with the same fraudulent purpose. But once they get a chance they will do with the nation as they have been doing with New York. They have plaved the part of wolves in that State. They will play the part of wolves with the nation if they, obtain possession of it. The honest sort of people should guard well and prevent them from breaking into the National fold and preying on the tax-paying sheep. The "thieves and rascals' should be kept out at all hazards. It is in their very nature to prey. They live by plunder. It has been their record. In every city where they have control extravagance and corrnption have been the rale. Keep them out. Kick them out, when the opportunity offers.Chicago Tribune. The Bepnblkan Party. Judge Foraker, the Republican Candidate for Governor in Ohio, recently made a speech at Cincinnati, from which we make the following abstract: The first and greatest achievement of the Republican party was when, in spite of Democratic hostility, obstruction and opposition, it is established as a fundamental proposition that, in the sight Of our constitution and laWu, personal liberty was the right of every man, and that equality of rights was the common heritage of American citizens everywhere. And in view of such declarations, it is eminently ilt and proper that we should remind our Democratic friends that the Republican party not only abolished slavery and gave personal liberty and equality of rights to all citizens, but alio that it was the Republican party that suppressed the rebellion, maintained the Union, preserved and perfected the constitution, and made the flag of our country symbolical the world over, not only of nationality and power, but also in an absolute sense of those great principles and truths that are embodied in the Declaration of Independence. This tariff question ia one of the gravest import It is what may be fittingly termed one of theever-preseut questions. It is part and parcel of the everyday life of the Government! You , .4 - , J.i - .1

cannot move ana ro zorwara w uu u-

products within its

also .sought ,o bring of .occupation and e

:.,., it,;. !.

IHflUVIU' VtvHHW .IIWHI ,

jican farty attested by: the ; WWampled proeperitr all .that, tinWto been In power. The' political -grpwti

of the country has been neampieduring the adrninistration of tfee:JPV publican party. . . i ' A Beastly VMtrin. . It is clear that the Deniocratio leaders are involving themselves ia mora

dangerous meshes by their advocacy of the saloon interest thrOTgho at'

Unite States than thy did bjr.OliB advocacy and quad-defetw of aei7 itt 1860, Which 'laraned them -Wit efecttfally for twenty years, ThFre--idential election tor 1884 ts apprft-tfi-ing, and, thinking that tUeJ ve 4 good chance bf success, soma of tu

rnout eminent leaders Of the'

are advocating doctrines wl

sotutely beastly. , , S: S: Cox; of New TpAj brdminens in the Hotise of .

tiveslect that hia partisans gat

ing hihi for the Spteramp,'other Democratic pbUticiansV in th mfiVluskr

saloon party in4$8i will tM-S&i

pie. ot t!ie..,Unitd at.,Cog

aer to renacr nnnseu 901

mrainst restrictions on t"

traffic, has written . .Tndc Hoadley: thb

candidate for Governor of

who is canvassing the State

Knf. T. rui 1V 20O ffr

ulnnna nnrl S10O for bMr-aalOO-B, t

tli.t WW lm declares fa!fVer)0

"elemental personal liberty." WhatMLi-

nieotts by this doctrine he more clearly explains' by saying: "Np statute

make, or cure, or regulate a No look at UiO fdUbt

thin d trine. if a Man mtr

lirfink-- tfjttera -lonir the street

raises a r8w by bis inebriety M, ''W&gl

he is arrested, aecfttffog tOfWiiaM' doctrine" bis arwavfa- fvAmAA "elemental personal fi&ajrlpyjf '.

oiviuuai eommra acta 01 ucevomaxmrn?

or lust bn the' street, however

rim

vtl

Hob re -

ttcuiosenip ,

kw ...

DenioWatjs1

cm

affainst UM .v;;

lJay-

aad

w'AJ

flTlfl ..A if ftrTAHt Tli-drf ft -feti-OB WMr'

-..a..! iw w.k1 .. ik, 1 1 i i ' ''-''

violation, of "elemental rersonal Wm

erty"; if a profligate man ooiiiPf rape, and is arrested there, -Ut.ii violat'.cm of ''elemental ' prsoM liberty"; for this great mb of flaf Democracy openly declares that J.aipjf. ;

violation of "elei lilmrtv " and is at

Democtae'aoctrieHtf'-

tinff, ...v,; Political Sates, . "T feol m office tinder whom' ;

star-route thieves strew fat."'

Mr. Dana says Judge Key

Key was and is a JJemocrat is i

Dana rather hard on his . brethren? At the Flatbnsh Lunatic

Visitor pointing at a sad-eyeoV ated mniafe; "Victim of re excitement. I suppose r ;

somaniac?" "No."" Failed in 1

"No." "W.'iat then?" "A,

Brooklyn Eagle. .. VHgp

iF omy K-Vigi

oranc party naa maoo ii

ouarter Of a century has been

cat draed across a carpet by i

It may be that it is about ttars'l

dart the other way, like a flash . . i.. .i ... au fcm

thintrs to suppose that it wflK 1

does tha progress will be too ra be of any use. -This is the way John; Kelly's

the New York Star, deflim in

on the tariff: "No tax on , nrodncta. and no duties oa f

nnrtn save anch as are reduiredl

.nnnrt f tha fknranilt, lVl':'i

as to en 00 dr age Americaa Mni

Mr. Hendneks wmiMtve tooesar, self in order to equal this kind of p ..1 t MM ' V.

Km-tnn-r-ma nrioht not iWnt'1riBat'

.. . ., ..... :. .., .:(-

it is tneir part w w.?b?-W'

the Gover-mest m weu oxa ornrht to be content on thoae;!

which give them the; beat tftofct "eireus' That is the war fe w

But, above all bge, tAwoSht S

plaints that their frieda have " share of tho spoila. Ne ror8g ;

old, Ttwxt foot iii that thft

motion will not lie aftainst w 1

lioan party in the minds of -1

arc at all famfltr witb-'l

matters. It ia the donjinant 1

which- rascals endeavor

themselves, and in. thai mav succeed. It ' tl

with whioh the party 1 nun thus muiaea itsvi

fraud ia fatal to iembiaWi man. St. Louis (fobDmfcm

, 1 i'l.S?'

XU UBUpiW u v. J-v th.. t.k hretr of th naCTvJtiW ?

is qnita as good as it wonld ba i t, . If 11 iMa MM llllllWl Jt

natnTfi; i

bo if tha BepubBoww "wan

and Democrats n , in iha election will center 'nw

cinles and a. policy, : wot wofeii

They demand a redsc-Of. ta economy in expenditures, a.r unjust tariff disrin uma, in administrative .methoda,-''

and better legislation and pHXttt

tii:s,to8ion Herafa. ..-:-f Thb RepnbHon ayoatar ' '1

rrT5'Sj

m nis race ior oYoru ,yi ""Hgw?

the Cincinnati JSnqutrer, we

Bourbon organ of the State.

doctor of that jowto ( llir wrif-en hv Hoadlv ttt

Judge says that flt he had boon in Senate he would have voted fn

Pendleton Oivfl Sarvk bill, rail and wormwood to" the' 1

and it is not making any isbri'- lav

ceal the fact from toe Judge.-'

Tnbune.

Thb Kentucky BeanUioaiM

mbtration of national a for a

rr;Tr State Central )ommteolMi:

question of the most Vital importance aaoross to I every kind of .business and to every iSSt

kind of employe- laoo. m h untry . ,7 fTiTtoiaiSo-, !Sm

n4 the d-UeaSMa-- '

prehension. Tha ,BopllWoao'la-Mt

do not weaken snow . i

boasting that tiwy Witt m Slv. Thev do expect, $oweyw, towaf&m.w

rednoe the Democratic majority,

inn nnuim - ' - , , - ;-'.

claim. " " r.- ,. -.tteiw-

Every arfaaan, every mechanic, every

merchant, every business man 13 interested in it. It affects the development of our resources, it affects all the industries and enterprises of this great country. It is a question of suoh vital importance that both parties ought to have well-defined positions with respect to it. The Republican party has. Nobody needs to be told what that position is. It has been defined by all the years of experience that the Republican party has had while it has been in power. The Republican party has acted upon the idea that American balor ought to be protected. The Republican party has acted upon the idea that the laborer ought to have a fair day's wages for a fair day's work that he ought to be able, not only to proouro for himself and his family the necessaries of life, but to procuro means to educate them and to advance in the social scale and make better citizens out of themselves. The Republican party has had the idea, nod has acted upon it, that the laboring men of this country ought not to bo required 3 work in competition with the workmen of other countries, who are ground down by bad government and get only from 27 to 37 cents a day. ft is the idea of the Republican party that this o;uo try ought tbdpedat U

aWdfc

mm

Prsriag a $kriptr-l Assetlfcafc' ' ' Not long ago a bright litlB;'gM

the Snnday-ficflooi, woo jm reeflpsarji

the bottom laots ox tne wyatax-; sno

ation of man out of tlie atu

earth came tanninff hone

mother, overfull of oofinoa

Scripture theory and Iter owb rel

ive conclusions, and exolaanoaSv,;? "Oh. moth at. I know it's iStl'M

what the eatecbism -aid WMmmm':

mi -t Af Um Bt ar ah- ;

oarth-I know it tai

"Why?" "Because I saw Aunt W

Gracie, and I sawloa P

iter, a anow 1 w w. Little Grade had bo

the ashes.--EmcMmg

AaUK

30,000 tisMH,

11 rin mni n

1, . .-r,. 4 szm