Bloomington Progress, Volume 19, Number 17, Bloomington, Monroe County, 24 June 1885 — Page 1
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BEFDBLICAH PROGRESS.
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ESTABLISHED A. D. 1835. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JUNK 24, 1885. NKW SERIESVOL. XIX, -NO. 17.
BEPHBLICAH A VALUABLE A0VERT1SIK8 MEDIUtf.
dmlatet kmmg the Dart FOTMf li Inne Owity,
And is Read by Every Member ol Each Family.
TUBUS, In A&vmUM OKI, 91.HO
WOMAN tJOSSlP. It Was Her twe And His Ring. There it- lid on the ground where she threw It, W lien she save back my rim and my love. How n tfcriuint shed be if she knew itknew I'd found ana was keeping her glove. Tii a fwnt 1 ' Su?de, very long-wristed, r.el t::e 'cast true b.t worse for war. (B:v vou not! ed how mnch Intertwisted -Li.tb" and "glove" are to rhyme everywhere?)
It still kecrs ito return to our muttons) Tii.' r ia! e of br fair slender band. Aid I notice that one or the buttons i gone Irom. thai ull shlnlns hand. Here's s si ght rl-i. in one of the ftazers, V Iiieh w is caused by a ring, I snspect. And I own thl my fondest touch lingers OverUti! most decided defect. Was it bit ring which caused the frail stteho To part in so sl.aracful a way? M v rinir. n .ant for itfe-wear, bnt wtucn as Returned to the River to-day? 'It was ..11 a mistake." she asserted. As sh pave ra. the trinket aeain. Vt rhapi so. Mr taste is perverted, 1 or I love a mistake now and then. Bo "Us over. I won't b dejected . r.d rave sgain-.v woman and lore; If I i-nu't l ave tne hand it protected. At leas: i time-stolen l:er glove. hviaie i kaud.er, ia Demorest's ilomlhm. V.lry limy W t Fcaea. "How many wives has he!" "Two." 'Ar.d lo they Hire together?" queried tho Utah tour.sr, in astonishment. "Yes, ma'atfl." "And don't thev ever quarrel? .... ... . T 1 " (B
JXOS mat i Know oiwi,.n Tlioir antTKkllv lira ttwather
in the same house and don't quarrel?" eselaimtd the inquisitor. "Why, -where is the man?" she added, in breathless haste. "He's dead," meekly answered the little girl. . Jealousy and Flattery. More women are won by judicious flattery shan by any other means, for . everv woman "is more or less -vain, and ' she is naturally fond of the man who finds her weakness and handles it with skill. Let a woman once imagine that she has pretty eras, and if a man will tell her constantly and artfully, she is certain to have a weakness for him, which rnav he easily fanned into a flame of love, and ardent love at that That is merely an example. All women profess to hate men who are jealous, hut in this they be)ie themselves extravagantly. No woman ever loved a man" violently whom she was unable to infect with a sting of the green-eyed monster. It is true that some women are foad of complacent, easy-goiiig, a-sd impassioned men, but, as a rule, snch fellows can never inspire the cenuine emotion. It is yonr hotheaded, passionate, and impulsive man who can dr. "e a woman to destruction, an rmmc-. nrA more or less senti
mental, 'iod so are all good men, for that matter. Sentiment has nothing to do with complacency. Therefore you cat -understand the drift of my argument. A man must be mom or less hot-
liaool ha nrasfc ha mnrft or less ieal-
ous, and more or less passionate to inspire a woman with the love that horns. The man who wouldn't kiss a woman when she tells with her eyes 4w K- Ktvs Ara vMTiiinflr is an idiot.
I.don'tmeanby this that kissing is at
all necessary, or even proper, uu a j certa inly a part and parcel of the art of love-mnking. I believe in the rough old verse that dear little Lotta used to sing about kissing: Xebidv :s above it; j ' The old nvsMs love it. And widows have a finger infne fie; Sosj people are so hanchty T.iat thty say its very naognty. Untyon bot voki- Hiethey do t oavtne sly. Louisville Commercial.
chest. "We walked around them and went into the library. My desk was buried under a mountain of similar trash. "Plase, snr,' said the hired girl, pointing to the hillock in the vestibule, 'thim's what's come to-day. If I'd knowed yez was comin' home so airly I'd have lngged 'em out'en tho way nfnr mr, came. There's ben a reer'lar
percession av men an' byes a pokin'W
under the aoor au any. W nf t-.lio thincs
before I pitched them into the grate.
mere were iweure cawuogues wui pi-ivu lists from furniture dealers, seven dry
goods and millinery advertisements
addressed, to my wire, oaTas iroui uu
wuacao, v n j " ing burglar alarms, one illustrated cat-
alogue of baby coacnes, xonr aununis published by insurance companies, and
a ciremar announcing mai. ia ic n uj Mr. Somebody would call with a copy of The Housewife's Friend,' a compilation of choice receipts, together with a thousand and one domestic hints invaluable to the inexperienced house"Yon may laugh, but I even found a lawyer's card, inscribed : 'Legal business attended to promptly and without anblicity. Do you suppose the scoundrel thought Td want a divorce before the end of the honeymoon? Bnt that isn't alL We were swindled out of our
I ..n.;v rian'4: imajTme how
they found out we'd reaohed home, but
three oolite insurance agents caneu,
one after another, before 10 ocjock. rp. tlmm urava lifo insnrance men
and each tried to picture to me what a ...... -i i.i r i
norriDie tmug a wouia oe iur mv u uw An A loavA n urifa unA TtArriftTtS :1 child
PUU IW"CW frw- muv 1 i unprovided for and how likely I was
to die instantly, xne mira wu mo i-nan-nnM mn.n wlm lvnnted to take a
risk on everything in ';he house before
we naa time to sieep. ii r he pictured the horrors of a fire you might have thought we were living in a powder mill. I got mad finally and told him to go to the devil. Well, six mare bores called on Saturday. Then
I broke down ana 10-aay x came to bb -"!. x 4- n-nrav frnm thom. TlllrA TT1V
UUV W gBI " J advice, bovs, and when you get married don't put it in the paper." Philadelphia Times.
ffamea of To-day and Yesterday. The women of yesterday and the wouiei: of to-dar what a vast difference between them! What would onr greal-fjraiulrcothers, or even grand- ' mothers, say if they could see the womet of the present ? Their feelings would most assuredly receive a great shock. Thoy would think the world had turned upside down, and would t.-ifch A'mnnzt th announcement
that women were no longer going to sit at home idle, but were going to be up and doing either working for their own living or for the good of others, as circumstances indicated. Our grandmothevs thought it was a woman's place to marry and most assiduonsly look after her ho se, husband, and children, We of tho present period agree most cordially with this sentiment, bnt with the addendum that, if she has more than sufficient time in which to practice the above virtues (and she generally has), she should help in some work outside her own home, in preference to always giving that time to reading novels or gossip. Bnt, whatever our grandmothers may have wished and planned for oft, it is quite certain that all women cannot marry. What, then, are they to do, shorn as they are, poor things, of all domestic duties beyond ordering their own mutton chop? Are they to sit idle at home, with their hands before them, or merely playing n.-:!. n iiffr ! T!ui1aK tatttmr or lcnittinir.
lec lin e it is not decorous for them to bestir themselves, even if it is for their own benefit or for the good of their f ellow creatures. Happily they have decided otherwise, and now on all sides women are taking an active part in work of every kind. They see a wide field before them, which "is crying out to be plowed np and sown with good seed, and n nnv are marching bravely toward it, wiiii plowshare in hand. The fact, then, must be accepted that the majority of single women have no intention of remaining idle, and they are to be . congratulated, for they will be saved a .jm-ie -il le life; for many and many old maid-', c f the past led wretched lives, and were always considered as a crabby, ...... ti. . i-ni-.nn! arwl diafiTmmntArl nlnns.
tuun. ...... - "j- 1 t or else as a race of busybodiea, whose-
gossm irom nonse 10 noose uia nraou 1. . tint fliAtr ltArl iinf.limy aIaa in
luum. p ' do. and could not be blamed, although such a state of things brought home to many the old rhyme, "Satan finds some
mischief stiu tor iaie nanus 10 ao." A Young Husband's Was.
CI A -nralmma linmA? Wftll VCMi.
X 'i WVuw 1 J I rather," said a newly married man who was receiving the congratulations of his ba rltelor comrades at one of the fashionable clubs. "Yes," he continued in a .roatemplative tone, "a warmer wel--.om than I anticioated. I never knew
W- wkit n. mrrind man had to en
dure. Do yoa know that when a fellow gets nmrried he becomes the victim of an aimy oS agents, canvassers and all such cueekv cattle end they new let up
toil t y. :onemoor. is over r eFt:inv arid I cot bnfk from the Wed
dine tour Friday nicht. We drove
straiu it home, coiintingonaqaietevenin i'.gother. for tli cards, yen know, don'1 announce us at home until Mon-dt-. As I entered fa" vfistibuk I
6ti;ri.Lied er & pii j pimphlets, ds
BisneU's Views of Women. Cnnnntina triva thpir blflSSOmS tO
their lovers and their thorns to their
husbands. witAn a wnman lina lnat one battle.
she rarely wins another against the
same foe.
A blush often announces tne departure as well as the arrival of shame. Why do the Germans make the moon .mmiIihaS Snrnlv wa ara uiRtified in
IUA3I.IUMVI v.- J - - regarding her as feminine, since she is
essentially cnangeaoie. Men are people who make rules; women are people who make exceptions. It is recorded that God said, "Let ns make man in Our image, after Our likeness." It would, perhaps, have been impolitic in Moses to hint more directly that woman was made in a very different mold. The conclusion, however, is obvious. ifkami -ia nft TnAniAjrA in heaven:
neither is there any heaven in mar
riage. A liAantv wifiinTlf MIT Wlf. KPP.T11S tO
me to resemble a bait without any hook iA
VI A. T tialra-a Hlima 1 WllTlfl VOlTlRn Who
wear petticoats simply lest they should
be mistaken tor men. There is this difference between passion and love the one breeds headaches, the other breeds heartaches; but neither would be dangerous if there were no fools in the world. Love certainly increases the population of the world, but I doubt whether it adds mnch to that of heaven. Of all the women whom I have known I chiefly remember those who forgot themselves. It is quite possible for a man to respect a woman so much that she will despise him. It a man ilnoa Tint. f.ftlrA hlfl Wife to
VUUAVU1 WJ later he will be obliged to follow her
tnitner. l.Um In ParAfliRA trtiiftt hftVA slertt
very peacefully until he had the mis
fortune to lose nis no. A woman is flattered by the love even
of a beggar in rags.
Marriage is much like a spacious bird-cage set in a garden on a winter
day. The ins would be out and tbo
outs would be in. Love, like a fire, is liable to be extinguished by over-much stirring. A good woman wearies a man ; a bad
one worries nun. -v
JLH AO Vtkvll " " v. ....... sheistooold to be loved by man that-, she seeks to be loved by God. , The wcrd "curious" means qiiuiut as well as inquisitive, "foman, in both senses of the word, is a curious animal. Man is a substantive; woman is an adjective. Addition is the bounden duty of a
bachelor. When he has mastered it, multiplication will follow as a matter ot course.
The two most difficult things are to
paint a pictnre on running water and
to convince a woman wno does not wisn to be convinced.
Man sometimes calls a woman a goddess, but he would not love her if, she were one. This fact, doubtless, accounts for the partiality which was shown by the sons of God tor the daughters of men in tho antediluvian
period. The daughters of God must
nave been a littlo too etuereai. It does not speak well for the fairer sex that, as a rule, he best succeeds
among women tnat nas tne lowest opinion of them. It is perhaps extraordinary that mora marriages do not turn out unhappily, n f .u wrtman frftnp.rnllv marrtAn tn
B1UW vtJ ......... o get into the world, while the man gen-
erany marrKn w gen vuv am. nil... -a ciT-irTiniAnt ninst tlift Hrl
J. AID AJW O O mission of women to public positions is her inability to be punctual.
A woman may not naveareugiou, yet. . 1 1 ..... .... ti.ia a m' v
Most women feel flattered when they are charged with little weaknesses of ai. m .mh lyniltv Tiorhana bo-
cause they know that her faults aie so often a woman's chief charm. A man will return rather to her who has deceived him than to her whom he has deceived. It 4s -urall tn romAllllinr that A WOmBn S
eyes and ears are not all at the same side of the head. If women were by nature what she tries to make herself by art she would
be dreaatuuy discontented.
JRepnMloaiis IHust Wo. It is related of Appointment Clerk
IJiggins that his favorite amusement is,
to walk about the departments, drawing his lingo? across his threat to signify decapitation, ad muttering "Keptibli-
cans must go." This statement looks
as though it may have been made m a figurative sense, but it corresponds with another state mont which comes from
an independent source and has a very
real appearance. me newuui Mtu-
mcnt is conveyed in the following nsuington dispatch to an administration newspaper : 'ihe l umoeiats throughout this olty were very much praiitlcrt over tho report given !. r'cna.or V oorln'08 of an interview that ho bad with ttie Pres'dcnt. Senator Voorhees eajs that Mr. cicvchu.d told him that he inttudcJ to ronio e every liopublican olflcpholdero.' anv prominence at tho very earliest ros iblo nionicnt. "Tbo rrosident," fnld tin-S -ns.tor, ' as mod mo that not one of thi-m would l e leis. Tbo only delay now woni 1 s mv'.v bo Ibat which was absolii'oly URCCSur to f-eoure nod uion to put in t'-oir 1'lace:." Ami lh:s ;b coiil ra:atory ol what lias boon c air..e.l. 'Xhfrc is t: bo a general ihani'O, and tlte bulk of tbeso chanties will
come very soon alior the tosmnins of tne flsoa' year. Whether or not Higgius perambnlates the departmr-nts giving the sign of decapitation thero is no reason to doubt the Voorhees story. The President is becoming more and more convinced every day that he was elected foi the purpose of r d:stribnting the ollices, and that he must do this work to siiit the Democratic politicians who put him ITia siirrpndp.r to the Iowa
politicians iri the case of the Marshal-
ship for toe woutiieru uisinot oi mm St.de is plainly indicative of the course he will pursue, and we have no doubt that the report made by Mr. Voorhees will ho fiillv verified, excent as to the
appointment of "good men."
At was snnpiy aosnro to e.peuv u Cleveland that he would be a non-partisan President and a consistent civilservice reformer. Such a result would imply that he was stronger than lvis party. There has been nothing in his career to warrant such a conclusion. It may be that he owes his election to the mugwump vole of JSow l'ork, but ho was elected, nevertheless, as a straight Democratic candidate, and not as a mugwump ov Independent, He has called about him a set of Bourbon advisers Manning, Bayard, Garland, Gorman, and so on. He is accountable primarily to tho Democratic party, which has struggled for twenty-four years to get possession of the ollices. As a prominent Democrat in Washington put the case some time ago, "The lantnlinTd lift i-n wmi ft rrliirinns victory.
AVU1U11IIIO .... v.. f3 - - and we do not propose to feed the ene
my on our rations. ioiiniili.-fiiia mtiat. rrn. Cleve
land could not. prevent it if he wanted
to. for be con ft not stand up acamsi
th universal demand of his party and
the combined a-i-ault of Congress But
he does not derive to make any light for the retention of Republicans in office. He is in tho hands of shrewd advisers, and he has boen "going slow" as a matter of policy. By a pretense of oonservalism in tho early days of his r.dmiivistraiion ho can make a favorable impression upon the people, and a first impression will withstand a good deal
01 subsequent Violence. y uwuyurg appointments somewhat he also gives the factions ant! contestants an opportunity to wear themselves out in the struggle, and he and his associates have time to determine what appointments will create least antagonism. Uiis catchword,MorTensive partisan," is made broad enough to include every man who did not vote tho Democratic ticket, and, as Mr. Voorhees reports him "noggne of them will be left." The ofceial ax is working pretty well now. It is being lubricated every day, and will work faster and faster as the date for the convening of Congress approaches. All tho Democrats who want offieo will not be accommodated, for there are not offices enough to go around; but they will get all the ollices there are, Chicayo Tribune.
PUBLIC MEN OF INDIANA.
Cut!.'- Talks Briefly of IIoo-
sier Governors and Other
l'romiiu-iii Men.
I filter In Cincinnati Enauircr.l
Mr. Oconto W. Julian, of Indiana, consul
ors Harrison's nomination to h ive been a po
litical mistake, and says that his election in.
volvcd no principle whatever; that ho not nnv sniio-ht tn intn diKC flaverr into the
West, but took sides with it at tho admission
ot Missouri in 18S0i was opposed to theni M of nAtillon nn th subieci of Slavery nd bad
declared that "only an incoherent devil could look with arpiobation upon tho schemes of
Ihn AhnlbJnbis.
The battle of Tippecanoe, fought on Indi
ana soil, killed and wounded nearly sua wuuos nmt fiiinnf: iliA Kama nnmbcr of Indians.
Among tbo killed was Ool. Jo Daviess, the brother-in-law or Chief Justice Marshall, and also tho district atlorncy who had prosecuted Aaron Burr, in Kentucky. Burr visited Vin-
conncs wbllo Ilnrrlson Was Governor, and ob ;A.i Bn.-i .. life wiliititiiRr-; there.
The Governor pucccedlug Harrison, John n:i.?s... tin. niiii'-ip nfiit-o4 of the Ter-
ritory to (.'orj'don, a town hardly twenty miles west of Louisville, in Kentucky. It was this nffieni- who. ns Socrctarv. saved tho life Of
Thi. 1h lit! 'lerruoriai UOVC.HOr. juviiiao
t HAn (ha Imnlia ttT the PolOmaC,
and had been a Revolutionary nnd Indian olflecr, and for a while Senator from Viiginia. 1 1 .. .ii.. Fwim Iia .iannani innirlnntill tO & rCSi-
.1 , ...... : .h.r naw iwiinirv. nr fill iiuvaiivcu
age. In one of his messages to the Legislature at Corydon bo wrote: "Tho settling
stats of my health will not admit of my
nnni mtniinfi nt una nmrv i mm I V-
St If badly situate! on account of the want of rAi,.nl .il. 1. ,m. nlii-Klofnn i t Louisville.
1U1UH.UI li.-J , mj J - - - and I have taken all tho lnccucine brought
witn mo.' . 1 1 riftwiriTi wflc bftld tbo rnnvcntion Walcn
.i..a.i ilat eVinatituftnn Indiana. In
181B tho Slate entered the Federal Union, with
Jonathan Jennings as mu "rot uV
nu.i.hi..tini. iTaiiQmi the . AniAnnnL ut uru
VUl lOlVJIill T 1 . i . . .i .' .. . .... or, and William Hendricks Representative in
This Mr. Hendricks was anativo of Oonerai c -inirie Cnnnir in Pinnsi lvania. and sot-
tied in Cincinnati. His home in Indiana was
at Madison, a id nlthouph ho had only been two years in the State, his behavior in the cona'ltntiAnnl rfwinvdiitlnn eiirriod bim to C'On-
irrnBs and to the Governor's office. He had
three terms in Congress ns the Territorial d 1egate, and became tho second Governor of tho c Aio a..ft n-TlAi a.-rvinn two term?, he laid
down office forever. He brought into 1 r.diana
aprlmint; press and puwisnea ino sexjnu newepaperin the Sinte. His nephew is tho -I7;a T.u.ciilAii f llin TTi,itlfJ J5fnt.!ip. mid tWO
of bis sens were killed on the federal side in
the late civil war. no was a mciuouisi, uuu thero is stid to be no picture extant of bim. Heaceun-ulated a considerable e3tato, chielly ha nlnnmna vmiHD. iHv ft? MndiSOll.
Governor Jennings, above referred to, was a -Dnnelivi-ii.1iiii mlniHtpl,a from Jei'SeV.
nud his lino handwriting made him clerk of
the Indiana 'l'erruonat .Legislature, av nuo the first determined opponent in Ind.aiiaof
Slavery tinting root upon tue t-m, mm -!-rt..Tci,nArni nf th.4 Tei'Wtnrv. Thomas Ran-
do ph, was ctjua'.ly ardent to encouragt tho
institution. , i .. .1 Bn. IfiniAnt nf Trtrlinnn. tho Vlr
juwcvnii; in,. - - ' -- glnia-.'csc ended peop'e, who held most ol tue ouicial places, wanted slavery, while the Now Jersey and rennsylvani.i people, who finally got control of tho State after it ceased to be a Territory, wanted the principle of the Artii... r r .f...li-.,it(.ii ii eland. SljlVi'rv -ir-
uin ui vi-u'i .v . . ... -. tually cxis;cd here for years, and slaves were bought and sold in the public market contrary to law. A late reviewer of ibo State says that "public sentiment at Vincounes was as
pro-slavery as it was at Ilichn ond." -ri... i i.l.t 1- CtatA man ix-ni-o n-nrmlv second
od In their hostility to slavery by the Carolina Quakers, who came not only from North, but s,.ii i-niviiinn nnd Keitlod in the eastern
portion of the State. Q'hcso supported Mr. Jennings almost (o a man, and ho defeated Hancolpb by a plurality, each getting Utile r Kn.. .nn ..r- UnH lYitnitnlnh imtip tn
luuro mini ii'i' ii.. ic. ...... o . - Congress he would have sot to work there t-
imvA ino nr'.niiiirorv ciausu reoeuivu. v v
nt it.. nAiti:ni itiffoa .i mm tbo South
nm...l Atwliivnrfid tn nrnvoke Ge.ver-
nor Jennings into a duel. Tho pro-slarcry
candidate set up against him, Mr. .roaey, got nearly 1,800 votes less. Tho first nic-ssas: of ihto PAnnnvlviinin seion said: I recommend
n nim nnnBidpration the Kronriety of
providing by law to prevent iuui-c fiffeotuallv anv unlawful attempts to seize
.i i 1. .. ,1 .... . nni-QiinJ nl' o.
culai' and catf'gufts as high as a tea deur.
How FBEgrESTtr does the human heart stjmggle with its better feelings, and laugh in public at that which has
made it bleed in private.
Calmesh of will is a sign of gran
Soma Kcw DefluiUons. The Democratic Administration is rapidly adding new definitions to the phraseology of politics. Here are a few of the most prominent of the hour: O.Tensivo Partisan Any Bepuldican officeholder. Inoffensive Partisan Any Democratic of-flce-seckor.
National ilonrning imiou nags ai Ainumast when rebel Incendiaries die. Iiisabilities Kemoval.lt A rob. ' sdldier wounded in Ughtinsr trie Pnkm. Disabilities Irremovable a Federal soldier who lost log or arm in lighting for tho Union. t'ivii-Sevvice Hofoxm Displacing faithful cxreiience for blatant inexperience. lndeponucnt Mugwump A disgruntled Hopubiican who aceepts t lieso doiiiiitlons as tho l l: .. t.ntlnn nf f1! tr'A Vi.ltlnn Iffirni-Tll.
i3iUHie.1l ll.ll-l- mivii ji -V.1H. .......
Tl:o Kaval Service ivaron AinorreuuBuu builders. 'lreasury Hoform Pilisbury piled on Hig-
Bi?f- . . . . . . . ,A,.-n
4MtnliitCr to tingtunu Lawyer ot mk ivmum
nine. Minister to Bttssia Lawyov inM tl by the
Court of Appeals.
M nister to Rome The rope s avenger oi Italian unity mow obsolete). Denartn.ent Of Iftatr A domestic mnohino
for punishing the oiipononts ol Cueraber Buyuid by rewardln r Ills friends. Tho PoBtofflce '1 ho So ret Serviee Departn cat of Congressional detectives. "
'1 ho Treasury Appies ot gon iu imuii of silver.
'I ho Int .irior Popart mi nt 4 no .lossnouse tho Grand Lama of Jen Davis mid bis
Cabinet-
ThewbJle House J ring oi mo ou-cua vherc t;'.ov eland "sen bis foot down." Tbo Solid ! ontli Tlie rinirmustcr nwhoin
be doesn't sot it. Who York Wf.iw'.
An Unexampled Outrage. Where and when was active ami
open rebellion against a government not considered a bar to political advancement under that government and
a damning crime t wnore autt wnou was tho princ- of leaders of a consiiiAtiiml TdtrAlnfioTi. n. ftimnreasftd re-
b Uion, dubbed an able 'statesman, a
loyal, patriotic citizen by those highest
in an', honty m the government f rias it not rather been the rule that the sins of tho father in this respect tainted tho children at least oi the first and second
generation? yet under a uemooranc administration the loyal people of the nation are daily outraged by the appointment to the most honorable positions in the gift of the Government of the rankest and most unrepentant traitors tho Government hits ever known. It is imoxamplcd. Kokomo Triiiime. Still Cilorying in "Their Shame. It was the increase in the Southern vote by enfranchising tho negro which elected Cleveland President of the Un ted States. The measures which the Democrats denounced give to the South thirty additional Representatives iu Congress and the same increased number in the Electoral College. Strike that number of votes from tho Electoral C'ollogo in the Southern States, and it will i.e seen that Blaine and Logan would have becc rdei ted ;n Xovaittbji- last, ;nwad o' Cleveland 1 and HeDdrictoii-iy'fu.'ftv Appeal.
-.opw- tn.n hmidrtGA nm'snns of color leirai
y entltl'.vl to their fiwedora." Ktdnapinfi-
pestered rndlana dowa to tho very Urirdc ol
JI HUH ""1
..A .; rmmletiAnf.re in hiV Hilt Indifl!)H130
unu ii io vvuia'v-- -.- -
li j Mn innnn inn iiiiium l rt;iiLi; tuiu vmuvu
to Congress, relapsed into too convivial hab
its there ana snorioncu i mc. Mr. Handolph, nhovo referred to, was a n TAi... Trn.irtrt.nli nf Tin mnke- and
had married a daughter of Sir John Skip-
worm, ana mter k' uuuuhwbuw m n -: - in :. IA1 tnAnn Tn tllA HAllt.
u.ifn,jJof Tnritenn iiffhiii wftra not, uncom
mon, and Randolph was once stabbed with a
drk, and he out nia aaveraary m wv iw with a pxfeet -knife. KaJidolph and his teligcrent friend Tayltr, abOTe referred to, were
As sooii as Indiana entered the Ifalon, a
university was created by law 8t Viixjetiues. t . i .... . iTAiitiinVifln tiv l.tpth.
,iuiu? in i - ii i... t ' - who suocceded William Hendricks a Governor, was a peculiar Individits.'. who always registered his name on steamboats a id t.t hotels with the title added, in bis old ago the tinro wniiirt sea him s'.oiiDiiuT .-in the streets
.. j i.i.... in iim Htif with hls.ane.
nuu imiiue iivi..a - - --- a. idiin nt tl-ft hnnLinir of some
white nersons for murdering Iudians, o ioof
these was pardoned on t bo scaffold, and the iinif ..mm. mtin in the n-nUows. where the
......nn. nmn n-iiii ennten nn his coffin. "Stand
un." said tho Governor to tbe aston.'Shed
prisoner. "Do you know in whose pro! enca j-ou sta' df Tbo unfortunate man shook bis ... n'rhurn Am imf-. tvn nowers known to
HiaTik" irrnvelv snid the Governor, "that
... 1 TS . . 11M.I
can save you li-om uuu'ii.ih mj vviv ...... wi .-Ami linn ta tlie crreAt God Of tile
.,i, ,.o the mi nr la T Ttrnwn Rttv.Governor
of tho State of Indiana. The latter stands be
fore you. Here he handed tt.o young man a
writton paruoe.j i ou are paruuueu.
'ha iriiii-rn iii.i:nii!i i-riivii 111,1. iiuai: iiuuiv.
was a Virginian, at whoso funeral, in 181, Bov. Heiirv Word Beecher. then aoi izenof
Ttn..n nnffnpilll ll ClllTll. nf TllA B.iri-iCCS.
fHl. .1.1 (3rt,...r.nll. it' i 111. Ktn'i-i. TlAVld Wal
lace, a V nnsy vaulan, jiut :.n nomination for
tho Presidency o:i the Held ot Tippecanoe, ui isas. RnnrrHl ITarr:son. and William Boss
-v.illi..ii i.iiiil ii iinfin.
mm imn firtiTiiirifir S))mii.l BiffSOr.
wai of the first trop of Westernl;iin men. a native of Ohio, and tdUi
catcd at one of her early college
the Slate, and years after went as repro3euta tivc or tho United Suites to the republic of
Tcxns. He took tho fever there and died at note ton, tb:i capitol or Texas, In 1811, at the early ase of 47. In Tennesse'' ho was one f
Andrew Jackson's pti sii'enti il eicc.ors. in ludinnn, where he settled to practice Inw, he
oceanic james nncomo d ptiruiur. huh muj niii-to Ihii filvnnir.Hlt le-nl Arm ill 1 he StGtO.
Und f bi law partners laterin ife was Joseph A. Wrigh , an eminent Governor of Indiana
and li.reisn mini ter. aiaeral .'ack-on mauo Howard e.b Indian Ooiuns-iSloiH'r and District Attorney, ami he was only prevented fiom reaching tlie Govcrnmsttip in ItilO by the populirity of General Harrison, who was
running lir President.
xnete w; if iv loice m u ni-ji-viiii nn j h iaiia.hj honesty about Tilghinan Howard which left a
itiii-i impression on tne y. unit w ihuuhui tin' Stat?. In one of his letters bo wrote:
'Never wi ite to nnv but mi n of dis inc Intl.
In aiv ther: "I have considered thomatterof a public cinner. It is not Democratic." He w as iinally beaten for the United Sta'os Senate by Edward A. Hannegnn, and it is said
mat wiieit an aitenipe win muua i. own imw to Gen. Htwaid ho replied that he scorned the nroffcr. a d refused to continue any loi ger
in tho corilesf. Ho was not u college man.
but wiis full of knowledge. On one occasion, ..mi ml-im. (i mililli. Ciiiiioli hi. retld nl.'lllti II
newspaper urlielc charging him with ndisieputalile . Having read tbe article through
al.udbo threw tuo paper uctim wttnout a word and proceeded ni h his speech. The Legislature of Indiaun some years after his death passed au ac: to remove his remains
11.1111 riviic in inn Mtnti nr niR eiti7.nnsniii.
James Whitcomb. his partner, was a Ver
mont boy, who came in childhood to Ohio, and
went to college ac ixxuigioii, ni'iiiucKy, A 1 l.Mn.l- l. ,n.i.,l.lnn. In viinntlflll
UiaiUiaillluia miAio.ii "J iv,iiittiii-. ' w.... ....... Ito admitted tn the bar nx T.'lii urtoi). ana
then settled at UloominBtoii. Ihdiara, the
a.at nf mm nr ihn ninnt fliirlshinir ehnfila.
uovorneir teayi Irani j.emueHy, mreuuy ic c .' ... .. .1 i. i ... ,. 11 .. . .-. i ... . 1 1 .1 1. A.l-ni.
XUrreU lii lAJiinimii 11 Him n i i-oi vuiiiib
ney. Ho entered the state le gislature at mo
time (he passion lor internal improvement was general and resisted it, and hence, upon the collapse, he obtained tho support of the
poor toitpnyers. Besides, resisting internal
improvements greatly recommenaeu nun io President Jackson, who bad antagonized Henry Clay oif that point. Jackson made him Commissioner eif the Uenoral L-.nd Office at Washington, aid ho held I hat pace for oig.it years. It is a tradit on that ho learned the French and Spanish languages iu order to comprehend the land grant. In course of time Thomas A. Hendrlc'ts also took his cilice, there being an Indiana precedent for held ng It. Whitcomb, after bis long
tenure at Washington, returnea to nnuima aged 48, nnd opened a law office at Terre Haute. Ills piotiec became large, land ca?es being notable ' hen, and in two yeatsbewas
nominated for Governcr. lie was ciec eu, beating Jctopt. G. Marshall by nearly 4.000 rniov Thin man MftrKlia.il. bv tbo way. was a
most reumi kabio character. A aativeof Ken
tucky and n Presbyterian preaoners son, ne wi nt to the same co lege with Whitcomb, and partly at the same time, and also ecmo to Indiana and te tiled at the flourishintr business town of Madison,
which bos produced sucn oanx.ng houses as Lanier & Co's. Marshall became a Whig, was a judge, ai:d, after being beaten by Whitcomb for Govei nor, be tried in vain to et ter tbe United S a'es Senate. His opponent at that time was Jes-o D. Bright, who re
fused to 101 '.ne JwcmocraiKlnili.uiueuiee-iiwu. Bright as Lioutoniint Governor gave the casting vote igalnst this election. The next year Bright assent to the Senate, instead of Marshall, by a small mnjrrity. These two uion, living in 51:!lso:i, hated each other with bi--tcrfuiy. Marshall would have beea sent to the Senate in 1854 but for the Domoorats re
fusing to go into an election. Marshall was .. 1...1.1,- it. nKinc! Vfli in Tn.tiiinti ever llfiil.
nud sotno think the able-t m m the State ever had. Ho was the Tom Corwin of Indiana,
with more tcaa: ity of purpose. Although a Kentuekian he took an earnest anti-slavery n..c;i;in nnil .-ti.fi.iirlirl Ahnlitinriisfs n- d lh.)n
who broke Hi fugitive-slave law. Bright and
Miirsnatt wereauoui. 10 uuw uuuei i xeui, and Marshall lay for Bright with a bowieknif" on the streets of Mndbion. General McKce Dunn, who is still alivein Washing.on,
was one of pie seconds oi itarsnan wuen no n-ne nKi.iit tn iihr. sienntor ilrlitht. John Do-
frees ccilled Marshall "the Webster of In
diana." . . .
To return toGov. Whitcomb. no eamo into unn 1 i. . . C..l,..r--. . Inn. HP i ill rl - -1 .t
H11VI nucu ic -in. .ei.-.iM. ...n .. . - and paying nc interest, and in ins administra
tion resurapt.on oereme icasiKie. no ii onoof tbo authors oi the philanthropic State in.t-1'nf -.-ma a -id lie enlled nut the soldiers for
the Mexican war. five regiments. Beinir sent
to the unlteu billies i-enau, un una miwuiiviA
with gravel and died in kow leiru nmo yuara . . . . i. Ua ni.ia a nAi.aimniilnii4 m 1T1
OeiUlC I HI- TCC1A. un imo m i'.... ...... ... w as opposed to proteotive tariff, and was a
Meinouut ciass-:euuer, no ui i -.m-denl of the American Bible Society, and gave
THE EESULT OF WAB.
A Few Statistics Concerning the Deaths
of Union Soldiers Dunng the bate Unpleasantness. rWashinatun special.! Twenty years have passed since th-' close of the civil war, and now, at last, a careful official record of the number of deaths that ocourred in the Union has been made. A little more than tw elve 3b. .' aao, on i ho .-d of .Tune isil. Gen. Drum 0i Mr. J. W. Kirklev, an experienced stKnui. a of the Adjufcint General u office, to bgin i jempilatiou of this record, with the aid of tel. erKs. A minute ar.d exhaust cxploi attfiii of all attalnab'e otilcial doctu.-iibts has neiw i.rodr.ced a table of statistic whien far MiirpatseM in ct.inidetenesti anything on the subject hitherto existing. To state the cnmil result at the outst t, tho table shows a t-tal of 9,s."i:i eleaths of commissioned officers and at-V-Utl deaths of enlisted men. making nn segregate of :i.vj,1'.iii teathamong the Vnion fo ces. The period inclndeii in the reco d in, for tho regular tr ay: the in-tci-val between April 15, lir.i, and Aueust 1. 1885; tor a portion of the volunteers it is prolonged beyond the latter date until the muster oat of eaeh oraani?ation. It will bo remembered that the tionbles in Mexico aud other . .. . : .. . . , 1. . .1 .... rt. ..1 annm i ..1,111..
CHiiMen ucettiuumi mu imiiiiiv" , . . . tcers in the servioo after the downfall of the
Confedcracv. Indeed, as Mr. Kirkley aote, the last white volunteer organization was disi i i x-....... ..1..... ,1 ioit-7 anil Ihn Innt. on!.
UiiUUVU .1 U l lll.li 1 1.-, ig..,, - ored reaiment Decmibcr U0, 1RG7, while the last officer of tbe voluutecr general staff was not mustered out until July 1, 119 . Yet, careful as the examination of tho records has been, one lack renders it still far from complete. The death resistors of some of the burg- . . . il... u t-l. r.aiI fiii. t tin (-nn tl HO-
ini jiiouiin hi wiin .111 ii via wivuii .w. - . - ment of Union soldiers, are missing, t or the prisons at Amerieus, Atlanta, Augusta, CLarlestov . Lynchbnrg, Maccn, Marietta. Mobile, Montun..nU CU.m.nnnpt null Tvler. t.llA
tjiUlIlClAl ."IHUIIAIH nun.,v,..i ..... j rcaistei s have not been secured at all, and the
Imvjortnnce or tnese prisons m wen kouwu. mm partial records were had from the prison'" n . ii.n...lin riliiinlilii Tnnr(iTi.ii H I' . Mil.
UV UAU.Illlli v.l ..... .J .... . ., ... len, and f-'alishurv. There have been ways, It is true, of partly working up these deficiencies; but, on the other hand, ao Qtiarter- .. ..1 i if.i... mi..I1.Vp 1,'ii.lrlnv (inn
masver eieiiein -uciko, v-iviiu wj .m. .,..-.i shown, in many Southern prisons three or four corpses of UnlOJ prisoners were sometimes
burtea in uie same irencn, anu ; wiv iaui wa v. graves only imporfectly indicates the number of dead. Even in this most imperfect record the number ot Uni n soldiers known to have tiled in captivity was close upon 30,00" in exact fis:nres, 2.,498. The late investigation, we may add, has increased by about nue-slxr.h the records of deaths anionit Union prisoners. Taking Mr. Kirklev s tables, we derive from .1. iu. fAlliiwIniT Mlumil i.l.clllt.4.
IrlllWU WKilviwiliuA UV"... iv - Enlisted
flffleurd
Killed or died of wounds .,36S Died of disease. 2,73 Drowned 10" Other accidental deaths 142
THE DIPLOMATIC SEBFICB.
Col, Charles Denby, tlie Hew Minister to
China. rtnl iThnrlAR Tlnnhv. who eoes as min
ister to China to succeed Mr. John BtiRseill
Young, is fifty-four years or age. ho wits born in Botetonrt County, Virginia. He was educated at (ieorgetown College, where h-? took throe me dals more than luH ever before heeu received by any one boy. His eiincatie.il was completed at the Virginia Military Institute. In 1851 Col. Denby removed loEvnnsville. Iud., where, with the esceiiiiiin of three years eVtring tho war, he ' . - . , -. , -. . i i ii..
has Kinee reSitictt anil nracnoen inw. xu-
Uati nine-: u niiuu uii'A pitvviii," ii ing tho rebellion ho was Lieutenant Colonel
INDIANA INTtffcESTS.
News GaUiered fro All Part
of the State Ity the Use of
the Telegraph,
Kr. Baton Ooosnr Agsla.
as
Aggns-
men. gate.
loa.OTS no.ttis 221,791 224,61! 4.83S 4,M4 3,974 4,114 4H7 0.4 S 100 Ms an 207 207 fit) U :m 313 1,''74 2,034 12,01 12,121
Murdered 37 Killed after capture 14 Committed suicide 20 Executed Executed by enemy -4
Died from inutroke. . Other known causes.. Causes not stated
Totals 9,684 :9,912 859,496 Tlie official tables, as published from a man-a-soript copy in the .trait and Aaru Journal, further distribute all these classes oi dcatu among the Union troops by States, it being esplaincd that thu phrase "other known causes includes deaths resulting from quarr-sls not arnouutfug to murder, from Items shot by sentries or by the provost guard, and mlstellaneons causes. Without going into minor details, if we select the three leading causes of death, and then include both these and all others io a column of agsregates, we shall reach this result in a classification by States :
nf the l,ni.v-eeinul Tntlinntt Repiuieut .He
nma tivi,.o il-i ,1 1 ii le,l H him been a mem
ber of the Indiana State Iiegislature. CoL Denby was requested to accept the nomination to Congress from tho First Indiana ConereBsional District, but declined and has dt-voled his time almost exclusively to the legil profession. He was indorsed by ihe entire Indiana delegation and by prominent me:i outgitle of that State. Col. Denby has been for years a close student r t Oriental affairs, and has besides a thortif gh knowledge of French sad Spanish, which will be of mesttmable advantagu to him in his new capacity. Wnlkcr Foam, Minister to Greece. Walker Fcarn, the new Minister to Greece. Servia, and Roumania, is a native nf Alnhnmn liavinu been lioni at Hunts-
ville, in that State in 1832. He graduated at Yale College in 1851 . He showed a for.elness for literary studies, and at an early age i i i; a. HT- t.
became an accompusnea unguiH. oi.".died la".v under the tuition of Judge John A. Campbell, and was admitted to practice in Mobue Li 1853. The next year he wont abroad, ind filled the post of Secretary of
the American Legation at .Brussels. jTim
XOOU Vi XOOO lie W ll l i villii.I wi haw ...... ..
SUtM.
i KUlisl Died of EMod of !
iin action wounds. ! disease.
!o.; it. o.
4i W. 41 114. 'oij'ittsij' ..... .
18 189" 11
M. joa.i
II
zr Is bif
2!....
"s si
3 5.
I"
39) jsii' sal 'iesf "i6' 111.'
M.
1242 33. 1171
243" 626 4! 34! 75,
'13
1C3S
sa
i
4-a
ma (73
63H
WiSi is; ess sso MIS' 2' 915
15' 15
"! -"MS s 1719 vr, stssi
241 4028! 1511 27SS 201 12I 2SIM. I k! co a lldi l:K19i
1.1- in . .. . V. . . AeUlniHu TTttfimpalti,
uiawmvy iu mi .loiui.... - Joseph A.Wright, whom I knew personally, having met him in Berlin when he wn minis
ter there during tne war ueiween aum
X rUtiSia Ui aOUU, Wiio I'liu w mv Aiiiiiiviiilinks befwben the old Democi-a'.ie party and
the present xtepuouean puny, nu emue iium the sam town in Pennsylvania where James G. BbUne was educated. Little Wash
ington. At Bloomiogton coiiego ne
made fires and rang rjeus to gee ms schoolirjii. and did a little brick-work and ma-
sonery also. Ho went to Brookville to prac
tice law, aul was sent lomemuiu uujjismiu.ro in 1833, to the State Senate on the great Harrison boom of 1840. next to 0 ingress, ana having been once defeated leir Governor, ho
wag elected .in lbttif ana nw nrm -wwiur t ration sent him to Piussla. After Joate D. Britrht mis expelled from the United States
Senate, Governor Morton saw a ehauco to
reconci e one wingpf the democracy, ami no appointed Wright, and soon alter Mr. Lincoln sent bliu back to Geimany, and there he died in 1807. , . Wrislit was a stpange combination of the self-made demagogue and the experienced public man. He was in favor of the
compromise measures anu a niuuwer of Crittenden, and was hhrtuy thought of by the conservatives iu Kentucky. The politicians thoroughly hated h m, while tin ' . ... ... 1 . 1. ttw
Iieopie louowcu mm. unit, lucn-iviv, ii..!
Bright Seat mm, out mine enn inpnurwi Bright. Governor Morton thought it was poii...tinA tn nut- WVUrlit in Rr cht's seat.
Wright also was a prominent Methodist. In Prussia bo spent most of Bis time extricating .,..tiipaiivnii Americans from their own fOlll-'S
.i . , i.. .. n A,, Tl i i- ,1, ', ,-i.Ir
or me jierw-TuuuiiD wi ihm.ikv...
W bilo I am tnus louowing oumi u . .i t. ... I... tiiiwiinK i-eil tli.t the
l,UVeillUl3 1 A- li' . ...... ..... . -. Senate of the United States coutrollei even the guberna orlal nominations in many en-as, ond that Jesse D. Brifrht was probably tho
ablest general poetician in inain.iu mm. u ver P. Morton got on top.
began the practice of lav, at Liberty, Ind., where General Uurns'.do's father was clerk of
tho court, and where Bnrn'ido himself was born of parents descendee! from Sou lb Carolina p. ople. Burnside it may be said in passing wes the most conspicuous eifiioov Indiana produci-d in tho war; ho was sont to West Peiim '.i rough tho friendship of Caleb Ii. Smith, who?o coat, it is said, Burnside bad mended wucii ho was a tailor's apprentice in the little town oi Libeity. Ilurusido was born In n Ino ce.Viin in Indiana. His father. Edgf-
hill Burnt ido. a native of fioutu i nroiioa, oocaiao a judge. Alter ho l.nd led bi-t promi-
Laws that Need Ucatljmstment
For forging an order for $1 a poor
fellow has been sentenced to
the Rhode island State pris
on for five years, although on Uis lirst ...tol flu. ilnfttcin nt insiinitv was SO
.i.Ap.A. flinf tlim li-iw pli'stiinFmnd. Yfit
the theft of millions by stock-watering 1 . JI 3 1 P
operations, or by fratids and breaobes oi
trust more vjCKea ana aangerouu tuu iaiva.vit mrrtoa nn rniTVllTll 4flHfi bv the
conrfe and almost without legal mter-
tiouon. xne vtmtt is ma. moit ol our A.;ni-.al law v'a a mtvrln fni ft MnvnlfiF
state of society and human activity than
prevails at present, anil, wnuo uunriy all of our legislators are lawyers, the eonseirvatism of the profession is arrayed like a wall of rock against a more logical adjustment of our code to the
iJl, iiOH
nent career in the army G neral Burnsido . ' t . tl itneL builta railroad in Indiana, though ho had be- requirements of the tinwn, a nill-mi, nPl.liirlA ltilflil IVheiT. he WBS I POSZ-lJ tHWtl IClL
IIUU lie I, HUH I Mill UUtlU tillAlAVAiviA .J.w.v . I A nicrrv!TiTAtFirTi A mar-lean elOCtOr
ii i ii . i j x ,.-iiji...... . ....
Governor Bigger, from the same- town or tRt peope who take greatest care Liberty, was beaten by the Methodist. hutch . fiimf,i1B Rare tn h tvc dvsfor ie-le.cti.n, ho havingsaid. It wtt believed, of thou stomachs ar suie W ll.tve when logi hition wo reimirei for Asi.ury pepsin. He mairftains that H a man 11n!....J!t.. in Tn.11i.nU .flilt. fllA MefhniltSt ..ll ntlf ItllllHI 1,11 ia lllinirf-.' anfl ftt flnV
churcl: di-I no! need an 'educated clergy an foofj that temiits his appotito he may
ieno aiiteier.ywastiettorsui eaio ir. uiuoi. i, . . , .,r R.lrB,T escawe
Am s emarketl on this: "It was tuo amen- '''" o"'"' . .,, . i . .i"
corner tlui- defeated Bigger, and 1 h(id a baud 1.. l. ...m l. 1
at.. .!....,. n..rVnri.il tHn mniat nnlnliln DemO-
e-rat imba.ia poHKessed prie r to tho war except
jeptie u. xi igu . xiut. tvwo xiiAiiiAiiiiii .-.-ard. Mr. Bii;er was in tur.i elefe-ated by T. IIFillnn,,,!, ni, tl n illtU 11 A Vl tl, llllWltltl
lIHLUl'H "i-l Winn, ,. ... - in Democratic pi.puluity among tho State
i-it,--n! -lots, notviiru wtis tt imuvu ha w-m"
ra ollui!, though probably- of Maryland an teeHle:;t: lie hither was a revolutionary sol
ier and a liup l.t prea t. r. uiu "na patsi-rt inihe eeuntv e.f Buniesnbt', which he has th? credit of havintv introdur d to.te world. He ioW a stsry in on't ol bis sp erhes ba a re; re rentiit;v io the Kei-h farolina Lc-.-i.-.'ittujo iron) Eunoeiab Cemcty, when i ,;t;l m idnrlytho Kp.-akei for ui tconfini is :ini'f l U the qneM im atis-uc.rp' '): My s' Ii not le-r 'he L-gislu u e; it it at: ro.'lfr. "' nit e." Mr. l--.ward r rooved to Tear.e-.se.'- a'd tud; ! awwiih Hu.h L Won'. Tho.e he bR.-utn? a triend of Bam Houston, Governor of
dyspepsia. This will turn the pet the
ories or professional meiisia topnv'
turvy.
"flu. Mister." anid an old ladv. after
n liinvnta lintl ltiiaiii-lil Lor. "itiat nOW I
seed ft wagon-vtheol rnniu' away with
a man. Von kin ueltevo :.l or not. i
wouldn't if I hadn't seed il- myself
l?rtoei.' mm hn ,llf. iifVlvn bv forCO.
but a well-disposed child, inclined to love and sympathy, has little to oppose . a tl i ill
to scorn ana ui-wui,
WnrN vou reciilvo a nene fie.ai vour a3
love.au-i li '? i: Js, cf conn-".
n.ci d to .Jo , 'via.- i. It Uk - ibo uiti.ti.ir.
llecatiao it i:- the i.i:; ynu-i tisf.
What is that u.ih must pliy Ut-'-oro Itcau
work? A lire-oi)
lMtii "491
119 24l
"wrisoo1 ...I
4 125
115 im
'j3j"44 'SIS '3457
1( 2643
111 373
12M. ICO 139; ?: 1811 27. m 1
Mil 121.
li
8) 3
Ul! .10. 3fil in'
iij, 21741
118 1478.
J.
101 ....I. 1'
29:
9! K0
I 114 1550
S
209! 26. 12.... s' . 1
lots tl 9s:....
", s
!
71W inaoi
l 111774 S29 IB 4S STEP. 006.
t.ll 14lVTfil
1477; ISSlf 1H1 8194 18294 124SI 1459' 11753
1631 '.:m . mi wit S61 "81 oiani ittxft .
SM iim
H4:i
8SW. SilR
.0263; teil 151 5198! 641; 1143
n-wi
16!
74b 37 2S
237!.. St 3s;
64'.
iitu:
S3t,
mi t'tO
0383'.
277! 271
Alal"MH Prine.. prisoners. . California,.. . Colorado Prisoners. . Connecticut. Prisjonero. . Dakota iielaware.... PrtstinoTs, . IKv.uf Col.. Prisonon. . 1 torMa
t, eorgia ! Lliaote f Prisoners. . ; iadiana Prisoners. . Inn
Prtsonens.-; Kansas. 1 Prisoners. . Kentucky ... J Prisoner,.. I IrfmUi&na... Prisoners. . Jlalne
PriBonere. . , Maryland.... Prisoners. . I
Mansacn W.-i Prisoners..! Michigan. ..j Prisoners.. Minnesota . .
PiiBoners. . Missitttinpi. . Missoun ....
Nebraska.... Prisoners.. Nevada
is. Ii tups'e..
ituhjuoib. . New Jersey. Prttiinnr. .
New Mexico.
New York... Prisoners. . N. Curolinu... Prisoners.. Ohio
Prisoners. . Oregon
rennsyiva... Pvta.mAnt.1
It. Island... .
ionnetmie.. Prisoners. 1'af
l'riiHjners. . Vermont.... PritkinttM. -
Virsinia
Prisoners. . W. Virginia. Prisoners. . Virtf.i.sin
frtttnnnral
Wash. Tor...
Iml. Nations.
Prisoners.
't.Vor(U.6i'....
'nlKg.iS.S. l.liiniirii. .
Vol. Infantry Gen S.Otf. PrianMAN
OtVd troops.
rrisoners. . Mis'laneous.
I'TisoneiS
T?Air nrntv
1'risouem. .
Total 14142! 2124 WiSSgJ
1'fjtu.nArii ' w i;i c " I
- - " , . , , ll,a nl
This aaar' gate ot nearly TiidiVn soldi, rs must bo supnlementetl by a like
record of Confederate soldiers, n order to naa
the real number oi vicunui m i m ni armiesV Then the naval deatlta mus til) be ScerUined and added Many a soldier and sailor met a fate more dreaded than Wl m belns crippled for life or made the prey of lingering disease contracted in the service.
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US
States Lecatiou iu ftlexico. Having bad
A.nAmnnA in riir.l-mfifTV hfl WAS
DUUU '2 .v ivaaI'V ..JT
selected, by the Confederate tiovernmen
entered actively into the military service of
the Coiireaeitwy, ana rose w wj
rleolnred ha re-
JL ICBlllU, A.A.VA i i. i.. i...... ,i,Tiiiit nit Ti-.itei.iee. of lfiW.
Hiuueit uto eiJo . i' lT , , , '
and male ins nonie iu ntsw uiibub,
. .. i-" ....iii. i rtmofi I'minKiiui i,i
WUS WHUBCllUCUWl .... w . - Spanish ana Italian in the University of
Louisiana.
Boyd Winchester, Minister to Swltierland.
D.iAa,, r'lAvalnnrl a finnmntee as aun-
ister to Switzerland was bom in Ascension ti . -i-v Ti,ui,. in tmo. His irent8
XHilDJA, juviut'iiuiiii, " . removed to Kentncky when he was quite . . . i i . .. 1-.. ..1 A linn
young ana no was seni, w soaom viUe. Ho was graduated in the law course .a tl... ii.: a,'I. nf T.nniRvillc in 18ti7.
nu iuii vui.u.uiij " - , The name year, after hauug been admitted ' . , . 1 .... it. A7 A.Ai.lm
to tbo bar, ne was eiccieu w mo awaavavj
TjrBvottn anenial: A (Teat hubbab M
creatsd on Main street, In this city, When Kr.
Helen M. Gaugar, meeting uoionei m winiania m ha nam a ont of tbe koteL at
temped to belabor bim with her parasol. Tnet
first blow was warded ott oy nuuam, succeeded in rrabbing the paraaol, but Ioatn bis hold on that he drew hia cane and struck Mrs. Cougar two sharp blowi, the one on tbe head, tbe other on tbe ahouider, dlTanaJWK
Her nat ana raising a goon Kxoa naurm" knowledge-box. Tbe Colonel repaired o th hotel and Mrs. Cougar to a doctor, but her -juries were not sufficient to break theaeai. Tbe causes bellie was an article In the StndM Timet, Williams' paper. In which the ladiea of the Christian Union were spoken of as bavin met at aqucstionable plana, they harinr met ax Gpugar'a. Williams returned from Wablnton Saturday, and Mrs. Gonaar attributod tbo article to bim, though h- says be knew noting whatever about it, hia son beitta: the ej tor. Mrs. Gougar will be remembered aa tba plaintiff in tbe celebrated slander suit again Harry Handler, Chief of Polloe, two years ago, the Chief having asserted that be saw ber coming from a lawyer's office atnudnbAtv After fifteen weeks' trial tbe Jory av Mr. Oougar Judgment for VsOOO. Delaware ConntT Stock-Braadera. The Delaware County Stock-Breeders' Asscoiaiion met in Muncle, and was attenled by
a large number of the leading farmer asad .a
stock raisers of the county. Tbo object at .; this association is to encourage and ptxmotm the raising of thoroughbred stock of aUkindB,
and as sucn tt is aoing mucu gow mm ". ; continue to do so. Bxcnllent paper were, read by Lewis Meiore, on "The Breeding sad a . . m , i .in l. w 9 VtmmA nn
l.nre Oi o.nir.-iimiin, vj ... - - "Poultry Raislnr, Best Breeds, etc.;' by 8. J. Williams, "The Most Profitable Breed of Sheep for Ihe Farmer." The e paperi were followed
by very fpmiea aiscusaiDaAh tion will do good in a serial point of view, tor . -.., nm n.lalla- in aifn tn hold .
Pll 1 11 1 1R1- 1111- 'I ' O I-'.' f picnic at the Buckles farm, near Muneie, oa
tne r t una ui .uu. Amu ww "--- farmers and their famine together, and win no doubt prove a very pleasant affair. TV) association is row oompoacdof about seventy nu rubers and is in good working order, and its membership grows in nnmtera it growa m interest and can but promo te the object aimed at by its organization.
Righting a SUter'i
fiimA innntha an . vtUnfir
Lincoln Gregg appeared in the nt lghborbood of HItlsboro, end soon after hia looatloa waa admitted into the best society. He mod ootv ihkIba a mal.intnn lal Minlrafit witb a VTJBBat
a . i-. 1 . rm. M.MMtlnni 4Vmp tlM
llauy OA bUM uinnr. iiw I'.f - 1 nuptials were all made, wben a atop was pot
to tne proceeuingts uy uaiaimb.amw "rscene of a determined Icokicg yoanglady, .nMHnMii .iiB hmo. hail mingNi bar
11 U11 OHlll'UULlM - . sister at ber homo In Ohio, and that cte bad
come to taite mm unci, aw "jmi.ii " w
make reparation. Persuaded tnot tne yomai t .i .. hiuinAu ha, mnaiirlv Ahevad. and.
late intelligence bas been received that aunaa . . '. . . 1.11 Mimm..
Dean maae rigni uy a wciaiahais "uu,j'
Three Children Polaoned.
At Stlneavllle. a few miles north of
in..'nn Him. of John Frill's children '
poisoned. Frill went to Dr. Dunn, of Stinec- ... . . . , . 1 ..A. 11
viile, and asked mm tor maaiciire w v..dren. Dunn, it is said, gavo Mm sanlontae. The father took It home and gave it to the children. In a abort time tbe younsjet rw
violently sick. A pnyawmn waa oaaam, n . .. . iu. -aj.a 1 . a, mAmmtf Sttvnaa rTmrt BaatfcAI
ID CDI1U UIUU I Bjawaa. vsawi TT" children were taken danrerou8lr HI, and reported that ore bus died. Frill, dajns Je
Wa6 not ioiq raw (tw aiiw wh bhmrvh. la a section hand, and te very ignorant
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LOUIS RIEIi,
Bl Counsel Will Try to Provu tltat Be Ii
mi American vinsen. Ottawa (Canada) speoial The Crown counsel who are to conduct 11.. ..,, ti,,.. ,m liehnlf nf the Govern-
IUV ItAVtlHTA-'lllv. mont in the Kiel trial are here receiving in
structions, and up to tno present muiueii. jl. a..'... nit iim tvinl litiH not. liaon iixetl. It
1 lie 1.1.1 11- i'i- ' .' ...... .,, , is understood that the defense will flreteu-
deavor to piove Kiel's Ameriean citizen
ship. This fact estubiisueei, tus couusei will point out that he can only bo tried fot wa"ing a war against a foroigu country. The trial would then have to bs undoi court-martial, but as martial law was not proclaimed in the Dominion the trial could not l e conducted in this way, and would have to bo abandoned. If tried as a Canadian citizen it must bo for high treason and as three of the Rix jurors are to be ualfbreods it is bolieved the jury would disagree. This would involve a uew trial, when the same difficulty would undoubtedly be encountered. Horrible Attempt at Suicide. Patrick Kelly, a middle-aged man living with his family at the corner of Stone avenue and Aberdeen street, attempted to commit suioide by fawiug often his abdomen with tbe rough edge of a broken teacup. He was attended by several physicians who said it was doubtful if he lived. He is supposed to have been temporarily deranged, Chicago Tribune. Tom JONES, an' old lysgro. living at Macon, Ga., is eaid to be turning white. He says freedom has come, and the Lord intends to t arn all negroes white. ANTHOSV Fkoude will visit Harvard and Yale while in thii countiy.
Senate. In 18(58 he was a district ele4or on fee Seymour and Blair Presidential ticket The following year (1869) he was electe i a Hcpresentative in the FdHy-lirst Co'p.iess from the Louisville district, and re-elsated to the Poity-seeond Congress, serving freim December. 1870, to March, 1874 When young Winchester removed from Louisiana to Kentucky, he spoke Fnmch better than his mother tongue. OJ courso, he is still proficient in the court taEgUiigo of Europe, and it will serve Mm to good advantage at Berne, where tno Gallic ehment prevails.
A Lesson In Finance. Some years ago there lived in a village, which is now included within the lhiiW ot Boston, a blacksmith. He was . 1 i. .H.I-11Y1 waa
II mister worn man, uia vui la' ge, nii.l the eiwnors of line horses for null around were in the habit of taking them to men's to be shod. One day a now customer, but not a stranger to the old gentleman, drove up. Hm ntwno was Blodgett, but he had passed a season abroad and had returned eonsuletablv Pitfiiehilied, as well as AngU...1 ":.i .miiin lintl been trans
fn.Mim.1 into Bloixee. He wanted ashoe
set, and, after the job had been complete 1 in tho usual oxoellent maimer, ho inquired: . "Aw, how much is the chawge, Mr. Green?" I'to reply oame short and shirp, "Holf a dollar." x-CnntF ,1 etnllarl hawf a dollar! WhT.
'i-ealiv. I've been out of the country ao
i,.n.v tlevt T rlon't know what, hawf
doll ov is, don't you know," iinswored -sr.. IMa li ri 1. ,1 in nr rival' n ilnllar bill.
IVU. AAI0VV'' """'"-J . The blacksmith stood a moraenli in than thruBtins
SJICiUiuob mVMiwi( - the bill into one pocket, he brought i....ti- a nnovtii,- fmm another, and.
handing it over to Blogee with iho remarl. ; "I thought every darned fool knew a half-dollar was 75 cents, " marched back to hia forge, J?Oiitew
jteeora. ...
Salcldeof John J. Johnaoa. Tn'm T jnhnann. denutv Bococder of Del
aware County, committed suicide by shooting t
himsrdf at Muncie. Be waa on ox vmtm highly respected and intelligent young mania the city. For tbe past few week be baa beea in rather poor health, and is supposed that this was the cause of his act. He had Ma trunk packed preparatory to starting to too n . il i. ....... .. Ik. aanalaii
er of John Marsh, ca'hier of the CWaeoa National Bank.
A Singular Accident, Dick Black ord, a resident of the town of
o ..i ..At a-ith a fwaiitfiil aocideut. He
had started from GreenCold, Hancock Comity,
with a wagon load 01 maewnery, aw w-ro
about elgnt muoa norm wi, j-.a-nifia -"- n. ihn wamin aiinlr dAWH into A dceO IXtUdhOtC
throwing Blackford out on tho around and
pltcnmg tnemaoni- wj vimha Itomach, Inflicting fatal 1 juries.
Minor Kewa ItoaM. .m.n ii..in whaoi that liaa hApn left i
-All. lit..... nwH. " - fc 8 luthern Indiana is now being chewed up by
me worms. -Dr. N. Young, a leading ctttaen f Vk eennes, was accidentally shot dead oy Garret Hobcrtson, while hunting.
Capi. Godman, Chief or ronco aawjw ettc, haa served notice upon ail the ganibltng houses to close up and quit. , t Levi Byrne, of Byrnevllle, toMt Ctunty, was runover and killed by twiligatning express on the Air Line. -Joseph McWilUams and James Pendleton, have been arrested, eharged wftn tolling stolen hams at Kingstown. A terrible wind-storm Pt.q.fo.'a! and unroofed C M. Horner" mw brick btock, bfsiics moving iveral bouaea from tnotr ....l.Hnnfl
John Chamber, of Hew Albany, an W.
ploye ot the Air-Una i0"'4 SSzS iiTS ankles badly crnsho l. at Huntlngburg, whilo coupling cars, '
A-Piitrkit a loan name", taaxpavav Oscar JkSwiokto Urn l-ck i
money. Bostw w f-"" " more is at large. Near New Carlisle BraktHnan Jtacke tt waa struck and badly Injured whileatandinitonan wire which crossed tho track wett4f town.
.Thu Judge of the circuit pn twarr-
don h s called a spocui aeamon m wrj jury to investigate tho recent mob tbM vb ited Corydon. and bring such member ottt aa arc known to Justice. i The artesian well in the Oourt-bouteyaid, at Bloomington, le down ,40O ft Jorly half n mile; they are going down 8,0M tW they do not nnd water Sow earlier. At present they advance two feet daily. D. Phillips, of Terre Coupoe, goM Ida wool at South Bend for 918. He then wtot outaod
took innumerable drink wKb two aw-iviDwra iui Aa rf ..Ink Kai maata. Oil ' dlVOVOrv
that he ha I been robbed of nearly SUM.
At New Albany, a5-ycar-o-aon 01 -mnl. la 1 WAtla np.i.ninnn til. f athaa-'a loaded IWVOl-
ver and went out to play with a nOBiberof
eniiuren budu. hm www. shots Into tho crowd or children. IroriMiiately neither of tht m took effect on tbe nttlo ouea. , .
At an o'.d-fashicned farm of Henry Bl sslcg, Ave mile lVoa lWrt
Wayne, tbe umoers, ww ..TTa feet, fell and cvoahed thr inoti. Ba
liOiJ. single, and raw mmrma, mmmmt, -5-
single, received a compound fracturo o
leg.
MaxandJoa saairer, two iwinpra nvintr reirBogerton, Delaware atray;.tev aitoared. Ihero I some talk of funtllMr.
The e areWiOWln debts roaaaiwwrjwmi-
Tho debts range in amount irora mmm. alio each, and were doe neighbor. Twarte . 1 jaIi.m ia nim 11. antwanl nm aa-
HI11WIVA iaww.. - Taj -iZii.
CUSeu oy laaa uwitf oy hkv mmvmm
1 --fit
. niu ney aiuiaiiaia, ha . ein ww. 1 mi Grant County, w aerioualy Mg't!' fatally stabbed. It ia thcugkt BtuainoB(t
nmlen. William Doyie, wr rra4njad. otb
li n-i. In .ail ..a.' .ill. 18111 1
ing irom a oasaei, aouquaiiaaia
ing Iky:o aomo. aaan g---:iAAiM-aiii A singular character of Saffivial
Hsndley, wno tor moro tan , tu ...... wnrtHna 11MIB thav, nintlba
motion. Ho aseerte that S mipji i Wit
ready to start la row , mt mv man ban i will ey r h W to Man it, -The tteymoui Jkit'timllim Um th newapapsa- tcU. , '.'v:w
