Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 34, Bloomington, Monroe County, 20 October 1886 — Page 1

1

RepMican Progress.

ESTABU9KKD A. . MSB.

fZJBLISHED EVERT WEDNESDAY

BliOOMlNGTON, IND.

tM (Mr; Mrmensi

ntf OaBeye Amtm.

REPUBLICAN PAPER DEVOTED TO THE ABTANCEMENT OF THE LOCAL INTERESTS OF MONROE COUNTY.

ESTABLISHED A. D. 1835.

BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1886. NEW SERIES VOL. XX -NO. 34.

' TsSc

M Grculatu - - nd is

Tern, u

A.THltt

DAISIES ON THE FARM.

With a rapt, artistic air.

ftoe were them to ber bodies, And in bar wren hair. She thought farm lit IdyUia, And said its greatest charm Was lent it by the rtslsisii.

"Do yon not lore the daisies?' To the farmer's son the sarin; Bat aU the praise bs attend Was underneath Ms lunatli. S SOOBdSBt CIMSfStiBa Bnt shefeltaimgne stem That me did not lave Wis ilslsaM.

A pastoral complete; He seemed unsympathetic. Though bar votes waa vety sweat, WHb same mpresstd smotlem His face grew dark and warm, to its burden was the d Wis,

ThadarsaMoa tbe farm, Soon the ebarmtng summer aosaaaw To her day home xetiiiissoV Sara soal of higher kngiaa;

3er esthetic natnre yasrnenj.

Asdtnerarraer'sBenndaaatad, With bis scythe npon his an, Wt to bettle with tbe daisies.

The daisies on 1

Siriitcs.

THE MARBLE BEAUTY. BY THOMAS COIiQUKT.

Lomia Calvert -as a chemist. Is the Wile Southern seaside village ha was a physician and surgeon the only, one in the town greatly esteemed f or h inedical skill, bnt the simple people of the place were secretly afraid of him, though they could not have told why. Dr. Calvert had married in hi early youth, bnt his wife a- died killed br his cruelty, aril

tongues whispered and be had lived alone until a few weeks before nay itory opens. The doctor married again. He was now about fifty years of age.

Tall, well-formed, and well-preserved, with fair skin, blue eyes, and a dark, silky

beard, the doctor was really a

inaA.despitethatdread, uncanny look about prf whiehno one could explain. The Tillage gossips were all agape to see and know hi wife, and exeat was their surprise and

tmitifroaiinn when thev learned he had

hromi-ht from they knew not where, a

child. A fair, dander, rosy-eheeked girl of perhaps seventeen, was the Doctor's -new wife." She was a quiet, eelfpeaaessed little tody, however, and the gosaips aoon learned to leave her alone. They ooold only team that aba was an orphan, aaehool teacher, and had married Cal--heBrforalrTkntorainatncton-fidknoe,witha tantaliving smile, "aiinply because she loved him." Bntlhey imagined ttej knew better. It was a lonely life to the young wife. The Doctor, apart from his professional visits, rarely mixed with his fellow-towns-ntea. He was veritable recluse. A elose student, he had always confined himself closely in his study, and even now he left bw bride alone many hours during the cine. had it first sometimeo asked perypfonWwt to cq with him and sit in his labo-

t-zt T. ,v AV. faJ Mia

f ' ' 1- - . . 1 - .-.. j kirn Via Mmlv SM Brt

H-'$6 eort, but so great was hor loneliness, and "ff lWi V ' a oppressed was she with 3 vague, name.&sy& leas, hauniins fear, site went even at the

risk of bests? anwelcoBe. Bnt aba went

cariyafew trmea. It was an inside bw and dark. Heavy enrtaine of

eolon divided the room into many apart-

'tne-ta. lVarntst bained here , even at said

: day, throwiog eanioin and ghostly shadows in the -nook and corners, and reflecting atanoa, chasOy-olored reflection from

the different curtains. Books and papers littered the floor and tables. numerous

''511

, tabes, and letorta, erncibles, fdters,

onaratus wave visible,

la ananna ooor anion overpower,

noventaradthe roam for tto firat time.

There was, how ever, soroethinr stranger

a plaee. It vot the

tUiotalvnyscanw npon one that

. a h Ban preneneo was near, though the

vrsitormiditknow be w as alone. Itwai

nioro terrible stul. It was the awful feel ing that comes over end when watching atone tbrrngrrtbe night with tlie dead. TheDoetor'swife grewnervous and fever

aad tismble,and glance feaztuBy

i aba satin ailenoe watehing her

bwaband, who waa bnrirf m aome deep exrafanent. Then ahe would stroll softly

aboat the loaaa, paraung often before

marble statue which stood jast acroas from ft Doctor's work-table, where he ooold al

ways rest his eyea upon it when he ralaed

his head. It was a magnificent female

If I were versed in the technical

of the aeutotor's shop, I

Bright daanriha the marble beaaty at length. A woman, talt and weU-vounded, with a glorioua wealtn of hair about her ffjHMaw-, alnnd with parted lips and fanghing eyes and extended an aa, aa if saying to ' her lover, "oemeP

The marble was in all respects terribly

life-like. It never failed to thrill one at

the first glanee. The position was so atataral, the tint of the cheeks, it appeared to Uary Cahrest, as she covertly studied

the image, rivalled her own. Most wonder.

fulof all and most inexplicable of all, that

awful feeling always grew stronger upon

her as she stood near this strange statue.

' Often the Doctor would pause in his work.

quickly raise his head as if called, and

bowing toward the image, say, with a queer, aadaxoile, "Nay. nay, I cannot come yet;'

bat his homs'-strickea wife knew he was

boried in thought and was not conscious

of whathewae

Sbe soon gave up he? visits to the

hafmttff chamber, and never

it but once again when

to gase upon that

' toriWe nMttWe beauty, to learn its horrible

secret, and to rain kisses in heart-broken

aneiah riprm the erueUy beautiful face of

. nerbnsband,eoWinoeaui.

The vBIa gossips who know almost all family secrets: who go behind closed

abutters. ctutains, and locked

' doors on their evil ways, soon came to lrnowtBe Tonnt;wife'atrottble. They, too.

bad beard strange stories of tbirt mysterious mrMrtment. One of their number had

bodlT made her way into its most secret re-

eeeaea. Sbe bad beard the Doctor's heavy

voiee blended with the soft

tone of a wrmian b aba bad eeasotb-

imc.

-Denand on it, my dear," said thia cruel

aad meUeaa viBaa ta-tate, "tliere'o some one-io there wttb hhn; tbafa want make wowrfeMevwhiWyoa these. She's

MdimraswatcbingMaL

ThtywaamW-ahW 6h

loved terlrmdmnd and beBeved helovsd

be)'wtea be was out of that dread prae-

siBe. Infbeb? own sltUnf-room he waa

arid sjreoMonate U

kaa-aa.IlM saasble beaalr.'bi ha

tory, that he failed to answer her with a smite or a kind word. Is it not so with all of us? Do we not have haunted rooms in our hearts, in which we retire for anguished hours, and neglect those who are dearest to us now and love tts best, while we and memory converse with the dead? Bnt Calvert was not always alone with the dead. It is an awful thing to have our love die in our arm J. One moment we clasp her crowned with the richest, deepest t measures ZZ OUT devotion. She is the light of our

life. Her beauty delights and charms us,

her laughter is to us the sweetest music

The next moment she lies dead in our

heart, and our arms still clasp her. itot in

death's pale, cold insensibility, but aeaa nevertheless. Dead with a smile on her lips; dead with the heavenly light in her eyes which, now seems bnt a reflection of a baleful plare from Hades; dead with all the blush end bloom npon her cheeks. A colder, crneler death, this, than the grave

has ever known, for the grave covers np all

faults, and memory cherishes only kind-

and lovable traits. L.oyb never ues

in the grave, but in every heart a love lies

buried and now our love lies dead, uenu in our hearts where her pale ghost must ever haunt and torture us while her fair, white arms cling about us. Her warm heart, throbbing as you so fondly and foolishly

imagined for you alone, still beats agamst your own, bnt she is dead to yon. The past yon two have spent together suddenly becomes in memory a lonely graveyard through which in the future will ever flit ghosts of the joys and pleasures of the vanished days when love and trust- vain love, betrayed trust, now you know made life so sweet and lore so fair. All this you know while you hold in your arms the love just dead. Aa the Indian bows blindly before a hideous image of bis own rreatiou

while worshiping a fair goddess lodged

in his brain, so you, all these yean, have seen with the eyea of blinded adoration an angel in vour weak, unworthy love, who is

now dead in your heart, bnt who must ever come between you and the noble ideal her

untruth has destroyed. So it was with Louis Calvert

The first young wife of long ago had been given all the real, pure, true love his heart bad ever known, and she had prized

it not. Weak and vara, and easily mnu-

eneed. another had caused her to break her

marriage vows, and her husband had slain

her. Just as the marble beauty stood with

extended arms, smiling lips, and laugh

ing eyea, that first young wife had stood on

a long-gone morning, before her lover,

but not her husband, saying: "Come."

The young Doctor's vengeance had been

terrible. The man who had robbed him

had met death mysteriously only the Doc

tor ever knew how. 'The young wife had

faded away silently from the earth. Bnt ..... . . . , .

every day tae Jjoetor sioou oeiore the petrified image, in that darkened,

studio, and his re-

continued. And when all alone

he annointed those marble limbs with a strange elixir, and the blood again coursed swiftly through the false wife's veins, the smiling lips parted in perfect speech, the bright eyea sparkled; and the extended

aims eagerly beckoned htm to Come."

But he would never allow them to clasp

Never for a long time. But the heart is

not always stone; revenge is satiated at

last, and one morning the Doctor, forget

ting his later love, forgetting all save the

memory of his first boyish passion, rushed into the marble beauty's embrace, and the soft, fair anas closed upon him, the smiling Hps caressed hie own, and the laughing eyes beamed in love upon him. Age dropped from him; he was again the young

and ardent lover as when be had last ten

those arms around him. Then the power

of the life-restoring elixir faded, and the marble beauty became marble again.

So his wifa and the village gossip found him many hoars later, tightly clasped in

those marble arms, crushed and lifeless.

but with a smile upon bis lips.

FOBDKX'S WAS STRAIOBT OX. A young professor in an Illinois uni

versity was engaged to be married to the daughter of a wealthy farmer living in one of the Eastern counties of this

State. On the day of the wedding the lrridegroom waa driving in a buggy

through a country road in the direction

of his prospective father-in-law's house.

Not being familiar with the neighbor

hood he stopped in front of a dilapidated log cabin and inquired of a lank man who was leaning against the rail fence:

"Is tins the way to Mr. Fodder's?"

The lank man hitched np his trous

ers and said:

"Be -von gain' to. rodder's ?" "Yes.

"That's where the doin's is to-night

His darter'a gout to be hitched."

"Yes." ""Who's she goin' to get?"

"A man named Thompkins," said the

blushing bridegroom.

"Is he any good?" "Pretty poor stick, I've been told." "Has he got any style?" "Not much."

"Wen," said the man, with a sigh of

relief, "I'm glad he's such a poor shoat,

for my gals has got an invite to the

weddin , an' 1 heard nobody could go that couldn't eat with their forks. My

gals can't eat with their forks, bnt I reekon 111 let 'em go. Fodder's is two

mile straight ahead. " Chicago New.

arAKHOws ra. boys.

The Fall River Globe relates that a

crowd of boys attempted to anrane

themselves by tb wing green apples at

the nests of some English sparrowsbut

got into a very lively fight wrthr these

unemacions little creatures. The trees

were filled with hundreds of birds,

which stood the fun until it became

monotonous, and then organized and

made a dash upon their tormentors.

They flew straight for the face, and it

began to look serious for the urchins.

Some of the latter ran to a safe distance

and looked on, but the more adventurous waged the batlle. Two boys were

pecked at until then faces and hands

were covered with blood, and they were

obliged to defend themselves with clubs in order to save their eyes. They tired before the sparrows, however, and at

last were obliged to retreat A Tbtjk philosopher is one who can smile at his own misfortunes, and pity and relieve those of others. True prudence is to see from the commencemetitof an aflav what will be the end of

THE NEWS. Intelligence by Wire from All the World

rOKEI&N. M. Kochefort announcos that he has finished tlio play "Irlandais." It is founded u'.ion a fanciful version of the invasion of Canada. tlio profaning of the Mohammedan raosqne at Delhi by the tying of a squealing pig within the aored edifioo led to an assault upon tlio Hindoos, in which several persons were killed. A new Spanish Cabinet has been formed fnllnva, Prasidont of tlio Council, Sonor

Sagasta; Mmistor of Foreign Affairs, Senor Morot; Minister of Justice, Senor JIartinoz; Minister of the Interior, Leon Castillo; Minister of Public Works; Senor Rodrigo ; Minister of War, General Castillo; Minister of Marino, Admiral Adrias; Minister of Colonies,

Senor Balaguor.

Father Galoote, Who murdered mgr. isqui-

wir, nklum of Madrid, hiui ueen eorvicieu

and sentenced' to death.

The Xbnvcau Monde of Paris publishes a

sensational letter from Oon. Diaz, now President of Mexico, to the effect that during the

late attompt to establish an empire in Moxico Marshal Dazaine, through a third party, offered to place in his hands the towns occupied by the French, ind to surrender MaximiliaD, Miramon, and others, if he accepted a certain proposal, which Diaz refused because ho deemed it dishonorable.

A number of sandwich men have been ar

rested in Paris for displaying caricatures of Bismarck. Tho sreat race in England for the Cesaro-

vitch stakes was won by K. C. Tyner's Stone Clink, a 50 to 1 chance. Eighteen horses

started.

The editor of a Posen newspaper has boon

.nh.nivd n rmnrisonment for two years for

libeline Prince Bismarck.

It is rumored at Constantinople that France, Bussia, and Turkey are on the eve of

coming to an understanding, ana nai mraey will send an ultimatum to England demanding

the immediate evacuation of Egypt

England wants Sweden to allow her ' to establish a coaling station on the Island of

Go tt land.

The Prussian harvests are very satisfac

tory.

Germany has decided to supply her whole

army with repeating rifles. pebsohalT

Austin F. Pike, United States Senator from

New Hampshire, died suddenly at his homo

near Franklin Falls. He was born October 10,

1819, and after serving several terms in the

Legislature was elected a Representative to tbe Forty-th'rd Congress, serving from December

1, 1873, to March 3, 1675. He was elected to the United Statos Senate to succeed E. H. Rollins, and took his seat December 3, 1693, His

term would have expired March 3, 1889,

Da Lessens will attend the dedication of

Bartholdi's statue at New York.

Minister Jackson, on leaving the City of

Mexico, was presented by the American colony

with a handsome oi. painting of the valley of

Mexico.

It is announced that Secretary Lamar will

be married some time between Nov. 7 and the

convening of Con-gross.

Jesse L. Williams, who died at Fort

Wayne, Ind., recently, was the father of tho canal system in Ohio and Indiana, tho sur

veyor of the Fort Wayne Road, and a Govern

ment Director of the Union Faouio. His

tate is valued at 41,000,000.

Recent deaths: James A Grinstead,

famous turfman of Lexington, Ky. ; ex-Sena.

tor David L. Yulee. of Florida; Sate Wint-

ringer, the best-known steamboat captain be-

tween Pittsburgh and New Orleans.

-The remains of the late Chief Justice Sal

mon P. Cliaae were exhumed at Washington,

and placed in a new casket, preparatory to

their removal and final intormenl at Cincin nati. Tho body was well preserved, the fea

tnres being recognizabla

Dr. Abbott, a dentist, the oldest member

of the American colony at Berlin, is dead.

Bear Admiral Edward T. Nichols died at

Pomfret, Conn.

A London dispatch states that Mr. Glad

stone is suffering from fever, and his condi

tion is believed to be worse than is publicly admitted.

General C. P. Stone has been selected as

grand marshal of the coming parade in New York at the dedication of the Barthoidi statue, Oct, 28. The attendance is requested of military or civic organizations from every State and Territory.

Fathnr Sherman, of New York, who some

months ago shocked his parishoners by mar

rying, hai sent his wife to her parents and entered a monastery.

The Rjv. Augustus Stopford Brooke, the

eminent Unitarian preacher, the cable dispatches report, has become crazy and has

been confined in an insane -lylum.

Eighth Massachusetts, Cnarlos Hallor, Itepub. licm; Second Connecticut, Carter French, Democrat: Eighteenth Pennsylvania, LmisE.

Atkinson, Republican; Ninth Missouri, Nathan

Frank, Republican; Second Louisiana, Rich

ard Sims, Republican: Third KontuoKy, w. G. Hunter, Republican; Sixth Massacl.usetts, Henry Cabot Lodge, Republican; Eleventh New York, Jamos a Ketchum, Bopvbhcan; Utah, John T. Cainc.

FINANCIAL AND INDUSTRY AL. Tlio employes of tha pork-packing estab

lishments at the Stock Yards, near Chicago,

wont out on a strike against the reauription of

the ton-hour system.

Tlio Comptroller of tho Currency lias

called for a statement of the conauioB or

national banks at tho close of business on Thusday, Oct 7.

The business failuws in the Unitoed Mates

and Canada for tho week numbered 1W,

against 1SS tho provioiw week. Tho bulk of

tho week's casualties uro reported from uie

Southern and Western States and Canada.

N. M. Neeld of tho packing firm of J. a

Foreuson & Co., Chicago, has fled to Canida,

having wasted in unsuccessful Bpoculttion

about $350,000, borrowo J from various Chicago

and Eastern banks on fraudulent warehouse receipts. Neeld was a director of tho Board of

Trade, and stood high in business circles.

The price of standi .rd granulated sugar is

lower now than ever uiforo in tho history of

the trade. The direct cause of this Is over

production.

-Tho visible supply of wheat and corn is,

resnoctively, 52,787,435 ind 13,577,643 bnshels.

Since last report wheat increased 1567,183

bushels, and corn has been augmented iai,ou bushels.

The iron and steel industry iu Germany u.

improving.

-The Governor of DaKota estimates uie

railway construction in that Territory for the yoar at eight hundred miles, and reports the population at 500,000 The assesiiment ol

property is ai80,000,004

Tho switchmen's strike at junnoapous lor

an increase of B to 810 per month has become a sorious matter, as every road seems to be involved.

The Western Unioa Telegraph Company

reports a material reduction in the cable and commercial news earnings, and a surplus of

S4,&59,833 at the end of June. Auf tmCorbln is one of the new directors. Frank Work and Hugh J. Jewett retire.

President Clevela-Jd, in a proclamation,

has revoked the suspension of tho discrimi

nating customs duties levied in Uie ports ot

the United States on the products or wioa ana

Porto Bico, as Spain fiiiled to keep her agreement.

named "the Killer," on account of his penchant

for slaying men, was takon from the jail at

Mnntroae, Col., by vigilantes and hanged to a

gate-beam.

Lynri Graves, John Goodrioh and Johu White, of Chicago, went out shooting on

Wood Ls,ko, Indiana. Toward ovening Whit.i

was round wading around in the lake about

100 yards from tho shore. When he got to

land ho said tlint his companions had beeu

drowned The bodios of Graves and Good

rich havo boon recovered, and the Coroner has made discoveries which have led him to ad rise

the apprehension of White.

A bullet wan fired through a window in the To'lish church at Pittsburgh, with the evi

dent intention of killing Father Miskewitz.

James Blount, a former member of tho

James and Younger gang in Missouri, was ehot dead at Leadville by a Frenchman whom

he intended to murder.

George Swartz, aged 75, of Amity, Pa., a woalthy live stock dealer, went out driving with two strangors who pretended to be cattle buyers. When somo distance from town

Hwortz, at the muzzle of a gun, was eoropoHou

to bign a chock for S5.000 on the Third

National Bank, of Washington, Pa., after

which he was ejected from the buggy and

compelled to walk home. Payment ot tho

check was stopiied.

CAMPAIGN ISSUES.

Speech of Senator John A. Logan, of

Illinois, Delivered at Pitta, burgh, Fa.

The

Democracy's Broken PromlsesOur Prosperity Under Pro-lection.

fn Penniiylvanla the number of nianulacturing establishments in 18110 was ia,iS; jn 13?. 81 a S CE.pit.a invost. d In 1800, 81J0.056.SKM ; in

S174,4l9,uaj. H&nas cropioyea in iwj.

38, ii.". wageB pain in w".

1881, :H:!4,o;,;VHM. Value ot

1880.

ilJ.m; in 1880,

$M,3e9,lC:i; in

XSEB AND THf-THi

All thmioht nml nrtlnn follow certain linos

train trainino. and after a timo these linos be

come eot and are only changed with great difficulty. Whoro no ch&ngo is attempted, wo hw just to follow tlio lino of tho past to discover tho direction that w ill be pursued iu tuo f uturo. So

w n tno mstorv oi parties ; wnere sueir ym forma remain the name, wo can onlv iud&O Of

their future usoful wsa by what they havo accomplished in the past. Tho party now in

power tn tins iaui nas written ita msivrjr. After nearly twenty-five years of supremacy, that rarty was rcllovod In 1801, and to-day but ono measure enacted lb accord with its finan

cial policy ronioma on the statute oooas, to tt, tho independent treasury system. Ifcs financial dogmas maintained then and advocated now, havo all been abandoned by tlio country. The pet doctrine of thia Dcniocrntio party, which it still fanatically clings to-Stoto sovereignty went i on in a war waged by tho boutheru half of the party, backed by tho sympathy and assistance of their Northern allies.

At tno close or tnis oisasirous ruie. wuou Republican party camo to tho rescue of onr government, thoy found that tho financial and tarill policy of their defeated opponents had

urougut tne country to its lowetn. levwi, ,Mivu credit at homo or abroad. Certainly there la

naught in this roeord of Democratic control uj

JOHN ARENSD0RF,

POLITICAL,

i..- . , a - n n- m. ns sasnsiasf sra i

General John M. Corse, the hero of Alla-

toona, has been appointed Postmaster at Bos

ton.

Congressional nominations: Fourth In

diana District, T. G. Lucas, Democrat; Twenty-third New York, J. L Spriggs, Demo

crat; Twenty-second New York, A X Parker, Republican; Twelfth Massachusetts, F. W. Rookwoll, Republican; Ninth Massachusetts, F. D. TSXy, Republican; Fourth Connecticut,

F. W. Niles, Republican; Twenty-sixth Penn

sylvania. W. B. Roberts, Republican;

Tenth Pennsylvania, W. H. Snow-

den, Democrat; Twenty-second New

York, A Corbin, J., Democrat; First Connecticut, R. 3. Vance, Democrat; Sixth Massa

chusetts, H. B. Lovering, Democrat; Fifth

South Carolina, John J. Hemphill, Demo

crat; Seventh Massachusetts, Walter Spalding, Prohibitionist; Second Nebraska, Thomas

McKeighan, Democrat; Eighth Missouri, G. W. Davidson, Labor; Tenth Missouri,

Michael Ratchford, Labor; Third Massachu

setts, A. A Itainoy, Republican; Twenty

fourth New York, David Wilbor, Republican;

Fourth New Jersey, Lewis van Blarcom, Re

publican; Fifth Alabama, P. A Wood, Inda-

pendnt; Fourth Wisconsin, Thomas H.

-Brwn, Republican; Tenth Ohio, Jacob Ro-

meis, Republican; Fifth Kentucky, A G. Car ruth, Democrat

Congressional nominations: Fifth Massachusetts District, E. D. Hay don, Republican; Seventh Massachusetts, .Tamo J H. French, Democrat; Seventh Massachusetts, Rev. W. Spauldiag, Fusion; Seventh Now Jersey, Edwin J. Kerr, Democrat a bolt from the renomination of Congressman McAdoo. At Pittsburgh, at a meeting of Republican iron manufacturers and business men. Chairman Jones, of the National Republican Committee, declined to act as chairman of tho committee that was to receive the Hon. James G. Blaine upon his visit to Pittsburgh, alleging that such step might lead people to think that Mr. Blaine was being boomed for tho Presidential nomination. Congressional nominations: Third Maryland District, H. W. Busk, Democrat, for short and long terms; Thirty-first Now York,

J. G. Sawyer, Republican; Fourth Maryland, Isadora Raynor, Democrat; Seventh Now Jersey, Siegfriod Hamracrsciliag, Republican; Second Connecticut, E. C. Lowis, Republican; Fifteenth Now York, Henry Bacon, Democrat; Twontioth Now York, George West, Republican; Thirty-third New

JCork, James Jackson, Jr., Democrat; Second

Maaaachusstts, Bvishrod Moras, pemecrat;

GENERAL. The Japanese Fish Commissioner has ar

rived in Washington, where he will gather

data from the Fish (lommission there, after

which he will visit tho different Htf.tos.

A boa-constriotor twenty-seven feet long

got loose near the CJW Hall in New York, and

there was considerable eicitemont oerore it

was captured.

The Chicago Baso-Ball Club lias won tho

League championship, having 90 victories to

its credit and 34 defeat, wuilo tlio Detroit Club, Its nearest rival, won 87 ga mes and lost 36. The games won during the s-aon by tho several clubs are as follows: Chiiiago 90, De

troit 87. New York 75, Philadelphia 71, Bos

ton 58, St Louis 43, Kansas City 39, and Wash-

ineton 25. A series of six cam 38 has been

arranged with the St Louis Drowns, oliaiunions of the American Association, for the

championship of the world.

The ocean stcanw r Anchoria arrived safe

ly at St Johns, N. P., having bsen overdue twelve davs. Her machinery had broken

down when three cays out from Liverpool,

and the remainder of the route was made un

der sail The passengers were welL Two births and two deaths occurred during tbe voyage; and for sobm time, owinjr to lack of provisions, the passengers and crew had been

put upon an aUowance of two meals a day.

An armed crow from the Canadian cruiser Terror boarded tho American schioncr Marion

Grime, held at Sherburne, N. &, for violation

of tho custom laws, and compelled the Cap

tain to haul down the Amenoan nag, which

was waving from the masthead.

-At Detroit Judi.e Brown, cf the United

States Circuit Court, decided that the law

against importing labor is coustit utionaL The

offense was committed by ono Jo tin Craig, who

imported ship carpenters from Canada.

At tbe quadrennial session of tbe Ameri

can Christian Conference, iu session at New Bedford. Mass., it wis resolved to transfer the

publifihing-house of the oonfereroe from Day

ton, Ohio, to Chicago.

Dr. W. G. Gardiner, of Tolsdo, has been

held in $1,000 for disinterring tt.e body of one

Stickney for the medical collegu Tho doctor had indiscreetly made remarks which lod to

his arrest.

The sea-wall protecting Bids' jetties, at

the mouth of the Mississippi, was badly damaged during the recent stoim. Concrete

blocks woighmz toveral torn, were washed

away or torn from thoir foundaaons.

CASUALTIES,

Prairie firos in Mcintosh County, D. T.,

have destroyed barns, houses, lay and grain, in some instances rendering families destitute.

The county is reported to be a b.aokoned waste

for miles in all directions.

Latest reports uro that the section about

Ninety-six, & C, has been regularly shaken

by underground explosions mace January,

1885, and that the noises sometimes resemble

thunder or the howling of a severe storm.

Sciontists are lod to believe that tho noises are

volcanic.

The most serious -gale t-inee tho war,

prevailed on the Gulf coast o i tho 12th mat.

At Galveston heavy damage resulted, stroeta

being inundated, tricks torn up by tho waves,

and steamers and other oraft injured by being

pounded against tbe wharves. In Lower Lou

isiana people wore driven from their homes,

levees were demilished, and the rice and othor crops ruined. The water in the town of Pointo a la Hache van several loot daep. Iu tho vicinity of the Mississippi quarantine station

the inmsbing waters have lef : the people des

titute, and at points on tbe Alabama coast

severe losses hivo also been inflicted. Tho

lake and shell raids at Now Orleans wore iu

undated.

An open switch on the Cloroland and Pittsburgh Railroad, ai. East Liverpool, wrecked a freight train Two employes were killed and several wounded. During a hurricane at Sabino Psb, Toxas, tho Porter House, whloli sheltered a number of persons, was wrockod and washed away, and a boat was capsized ind its occupants drowned. A seboanor was driven across tho railroad, and land id high and dry upon the prairie. Sixty-five persons are known to have perished. orimeb'andoriminals. Wright Woldcn, colored, wi hanged at Edgefield, S. ft, f jr tho murder of John W. Lagraue, a planter, in November, 1874. The father of Wallace, recently lynched at Steelvillc, Mo., for tho murdor of tho Logan family, refused to care for the body, which was buried on a hill by tho roadside, whoro tho remains of a colored murderesB, who had boon executed aciordiug to law, wore interred years ago. John Dillard and .1 and killed during a ant, Texas. John F,

A SEVERE wind storm passed over Mich

igan, Northern Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois

on Thurday last. Trees were uprooted,

houses blown down, telegraph wires pros

trated, and a great many lives lost.

A special from Sheboygan, Wis., gays:

Tho steambarge Selnh Chamberlain, of

Cleveland, collided with the steamer John l'ridgeon, Jr., when about three miles uortheast of this place, raid sunk in fortytwo feet of water. Five men are missing

and are supposed to have gone down with the Chamberlain. Cant. Greenley, of the

lost steamba::ce Selah Chamberlain, re

fuses to be interviewed concerning the dis

aster, and also has forbidden the surviving

numbers of the crew from talking about it. He says he does nut know the names of

the men who lost their lives. The un

fortunates were the second engineer, a fireman, and three deck hands. The

Chamberlain was struck on the port bow,

and was cut down to below the water-line.

She immediately began to sink, and (.apt.

Greenley ordered the boats lowered. The five men who were lost jumped into one of the boats, when tho davits broke, and they were dumped into into tho lake and drowned. The Chamberlain lis about

three miles east of bheboygan Point.

Kev. Benjamin stauktox was con

victed by tho Brooklyn Presbytery of con

duct unbecoming a minister. Counsel for

each side made lone speeches. Dr. lal-

mage read a speech, in which he burlesqued the whole trial, stamping the charges as trivial and the testimony as scattcrinfr and

not conclusive. Tlio Presbytery remained out about three hours. Only one vote wa

taken, whicii was divided as follows: ror nenmttiil. six: to convict, thirteen. The

convicted pastor received the news quietly

nm miLEiiiBtii'BU iiu suimiw;. hiukv.

upon which Mr. Staunton was convicteu were, first, that he struck his wife in the face and choked her so that she bore tho

marks for a number of days; second, that ho harbored in his house a woman to whom

he naid such attentions, and from whom he

receivea susn nuemious as iu ki " cause- to Kusuect his faithfulness as a

husband.

OpficiaJj journals of Vienna warn Bul-

onrift nfraiust eleetmc a prince until the

D - powers have agreed upon the most suita-

ble nersou to select. I hey also counsel

her tn abstain from provoking Bussia.

Tiiuinmnte Iwlifivtt flint Russia Las selected

Prince Alexander, of Oldenburg, as her

candidate for the Bulgarian throne.

A speci At. fiorn Ottawa, Out., says:

"A Cabinet Council confirmed the 4w

fine against tbe American schooner,

Marion Grimes, but removed the extra 100 fine that had been imposed. Letters

f verv stroncr censure will ue sent to

Capt. Quifley, of tho schooner, lerror, ior

his action in hauling down the American flat?. Tha Council agreed that there was

ii . . . i

no precedent ior sueu an uci, iu demned it in unmeasured terms.

The Northwestern Ohio Natural Gas

Comnany, which hn the right to supply

Toledo, has completed tho purchase of the great Simouds well, near Buirdstowu, the largest well in Ohio, and has concluded

leases lor iu,uuu acres oi gas iwntuij

the vicinity of Bavcdstown aua iiuway,

New wells are being put down. Ihc pipe line will encircle the entire city, the supply

nii-u enmin in like the snoltesoi awneei,

so as to ecmalize tbe pressure. Contracts

for pipe have been let, and gas will reach

tne cilv m January nei.i.

At a. meeting of tho Knights or xoor oi

nhiiMue. it was decided to oraer out au

emuloves of Armour & Oo's. beef depart

ment This will add several thousand men

in ti,r,i:o nlreadv out. and will waue uie

trike treneral. Mr. Barry, sent Dy tne

Tiiohmnnd Convention to seme tne siriae,

says the packers ore merely playing for time. He broadly intimates his mission in

Richmond will be to lusinuie, ir pussiiue,

a boycott against Armour.

Mas. Leach, a . widow, reaming two

miles from Dyersuurg, 'lenn., was rnpea

bv a nemo named Matt Washington, who

was shortly afterward captured and lodged

in jail. A crowd of 0 unmasKca men ov.t,,nArl i he iiiil. took forcible nosses-

VU.VS.M . ' w t einn rtf t'M ravisher and mine him. tie

confessed,

inspire the hope that its present course in tho

lanagement or tne government win lmiiruvo. TheKepubUcan party was defeated in the last

THE MARKETS.

NEW YORK. DSEVEB

noeB Wheat No. 1 White

ko. ca Cons -No. 2. OATB--Vhite PoliK New Mesa CHICAGO. DBBVE8 Choioo to Prime Steers Good Shipping Common Hogs Shipping tirades Floi'k Kiitra Spring. Wheat Ho. a ltcd Coitx - No. 2 Oats -No. 2

BOTTEll -Obo It Cheese T- -

4.00 a 6.0 4.25 S 4.75

.84 & .8t .8316 .tt!4if .5.j

.83 V! .3

tyiu.OJ

eauiory. "iieddar.. aw

Eoas-l'OT-Po- .

Bvi.

Politt

i bu..

10.00 5.00 4.C5 9.23 8.IS 4.00 .70

.33 .23

,' (41 .18 .134t

.iu 40 8.75

l!S 5.50 ' 4.73 3.75 (i 4.50 Hi 4.50 .71

election for tho reason that the Democratic party had for twenty years persistently made unfounded charges of delinquency in the attminiEtration of the affairs of the Government, until tho ciy was raised by a great many people for a change, iov the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsity of the charge. The

Democratic party entered upon tuoir sonrca with an earnest zeal, inspired by jealous malice and a longing desire to fasten upon tho Republican part the some character of corruption in the admir-istratiou of the Government as had marked thoir regime. After a most minute and

pamstaKing examination m every irauoueiuuu

of the Ciovornniotit for tho last twenty-nvo

voars, tbe old Democratic party, aisappoinwa and disheartened, snaringly admit that tho record of tho Republican party for purity ond official integrity is tho marvel of tbe world. Controlling this Government during a time when the most stupendous collections and disburi3ement8 of money were made of any time a,,Wn Ita Itlaforv. nn miui can nolnt to a single

case where tbe Government was dc f rauded that

the defaulter was not pursued, ana tne eases r Mt,,ai lnna tn thn novernment oro so rare

that they cun be enumerated on the lingers of

any nana, mo jiorceniage ui iusquuiuih uj Republican administration will defy comparison with the history of any Government on earth. When tho Republican party assumed control of tho Government;, we established a system of .npntnnv thut n.vniflrot nil the evilS CXUeriOnced

under tho Dcmocratio theory, ine national bunkiritf svfitera. the child of tho Keimbltcan

party, Is constantly threatened liy Democratic onnoRitfnn. and should bo roatored to tho care of

the party of its invention. Tlio lmmenso eapilal invested In tbe banks and the vast amount

of thoir loans and assets would rennera rauiuai change in the system inimical to tho consorvativn luminefiA interests of the whole country.

We find the Democratic party ready at an sunon

to soize upon any quack system of nnauoo ior

tho payment of tno puuuo aeoi. vuav jnwmirea destruction to our credit and our honor in tho

future. At the samo time, umeny upiiunen every advanced step taken by our party, and when iii mode cur currency enual to coin we

had to overcome thoir bitter oupoBition. Ko

their miT.imit.inn extended to all the creat meas

ures proposed by She Republican party. They have ever opposed our tariff system, and I desire to discuss this tariff to plain, common

sense, ana ousiueas-iiau uimiuw. i,,,, w advance no theories, but simply to recall to your minds historical facta, and leave them to justify my tariff convictions. I am a tariff man from principle, and what led to my convictions I pro-

1HJ8U uiu-uy fcu umtuM. Tm,mtAivnr-,.rtitfl formation of our pres

ent Government, and as the second act of tho

f ederal congress a tartu oiu was iHwmju, uu signed by Oeorge Washington, which declared

essary for tuo -dtsouargooi moaramiu United States, an.l the oucouragemont and pro-4-..nfIr. ...anxln.tllfAS " Ttv H. fitud Of WO

eommerciol historv of our country, I find this

political measure followed oy an uuuouai uuness activity, and a rapid increase In the numlutv ni miv ,,un,Flt.,raH

Prior to the Revolution, you will remember, it

had been tbe policy of ttngiana u crusu iu tog industries of the Colonies, and that this was

one or tne jeaaiug causes u w

iramei's of our C&nstitutlou and organizers of our fcovernment readily porceived the necessity for fostering our manufactures and protecting our labor in older to make tho oountry self-sus-

t.ininrr Tills nvnteni worEod so well wuw m mo

next Congress tbj law was extended. Tho prosperity of the people oontinuod, and in 1812 thoy were enabled to sustuin themselves In tho war waged with Kugliuid and win the victory. Inline-

OiatelV following una w m x-.ubou tm, .t'.'A i,v a eoneerted ulon. to ulut tho Amer

ican market with manufactured goods and force tuc Q,w.i.,nBnn oJ our manufactures, oven at a

temporary loss to themselves, that their horvost might be tho riclior when their compet tion in this eountry had oeeu brokon down. The scheme failed, owing to tho prompt action of Congress

IU CROCUUg V gum low w ,,....

tne basis ot our nineneau nyaieiu ui tw

Acain. referring to our comiueiuii" widw.j, i - . ... i ... . 1 I l.n ,K Inn rta.lbl IlIYM

nnu mis penou iuuhcu uj w r---. Mfii nl t.h .ineiilA. This was followed Pi 182

and inn uy laws exii-nums .wu tariff acts already on the statute books.

Bt.t now come a aivision m tne iuwun mosi unanimous senthnent of the country in rof erouco to protection.

Tho South, fostering slavery, baa aevotoa ail

her .snoraies to making that trauio prontaoie, and had not kept pace with the North in advancing her manufactures. She saw with jealous eve tho iulependent position attained Tfy tho North throush In r varied industries, and instead of discerning the real reason for their sluggard pace, tho leaders of tho South seized upon too tariff as the cause of their condition. Sueh tt clamor come from tho South for free trade that the tariff

men consented to a compromise anu yannm, act of 18J2, which moditlod tho existing law. This action was secured by the craft of the

Bouthorn leaders in consouua.ms iuou wui'i"

npon tho two doctrines of State risnis auu free trade. But, as all compromises have ever proven, this one was a failure, and whilo it gave

tho North, was not satisfactory to tho Southerners, who open'.y rebelled in South Carolina. But President Jackson soon quelled this dis

turbance, and tho free trade aavocaseu ciuuueu

to be atisttea wian tno cia.y cojiiiurom 1S33, which was a square backdown from the advanced poait.on occupied by the tariff men, and proved a costly blunder. Our industries were from that time on the wano, and tho commercial distros) of 1817 is traceable to this compromise, Tho advocates of free trado, having secured full power, through tho aid of the kindred doctrines of Stato rights and slavery, In 18iti passed the free trade act ot that year, and then followed uoh financial panic and businoss depression this oooutry had never cxporK-ncod. Tlo furnaces of Pennsylvania ceased to burn, tho rich mountains wore no longer mined, and th ) crowing manufactures of the State woroparttlvzed.Iufaut industry.that required the watchful core of a protecting Government, was rutlileHslv dcBtroyed by the adoption of this freotrude heresy; But In 1881 tbe Republican party couio into power, bearing upon its victorious i . ,,ln innm-lntiou Of the BtorionS

Mnit.i- "iTnitv freedom aud nrotoction." With

fi.inrv hod the victory of 1830 been won, and

I..... -i,i rti.i H1.1 mirtv urocced to impress

these doetr nos upon tho poflov of the Govern-

products inltsi,iSiJ,ii,.')e;in icn, ii,,wh Numbor of acres tn farms and values in MKSO, i;,0I2,H0 acres, valued ut SKj2,0.,H),707 ; in 1880, 20,i0,-lS". acres, valued at $975,889,410. Ia connection with the discussion of the interests of your Stati, I dosiro also to show what the protective tariff haB done for my old State of Illinois. Wo have ten manufacturing counties which prixluco S340,00fl,0;iu, and ninety-two nonmanufacturint; counties which produco (74,000,000 The avorago value of land In tho manufacturing counties Is SI3.W per ecre, and tn tlin non-nianufaotiLrinf! counties. 320,89.

I Thoso figures are only produced to show 1 the Increase in the valuo of farm lauds near manufacturing towns, whoro a borne market is furnished tho farmer lor his I l .. ..... I'.iiIa, nnr av, Inm nf nmf.nl.inn fAITII

! products are t nday higher, while manufactured

' goods are lower mnu iu i'3tv. iuu w(,ub w . iu,. m i"r.-n.a,! whfl.4 the cost e,f manu-

e,l articles is diminished, and our annual

j accumulations amount to .'i.-. per ce it. of the protits of tho whole world, and our people are In ' tho best possiblo condition. Contrmt this ro-

Bult of tho tw nty-four years of Uepumican stewardship with the miserable recaid of tho Democratic party up to 1K0, when the Treasury was nearly bankrupt and tho coromoroial inton sts of the country wore at tho lowest ebb. The liovei ument was forced to borrow nionoy at a. -vrhii At. f.tt-e cf interest, and dietress pre

vailed evcrvwhore. What benefits have accrued

to the wlolo country are realized only by tbe contemplation of those figures.

m Irti l tne capital invested in manuiucfcu in tho United States did not amount to one-third of what is at present invested. The advance of wages fn m 1 00 to 1880 is 150 per cent ; increase in Lumber of hands employed, 108 per cont. The excess in the amount of wages paid

at present above tho amount they would receive at tho rate paid In 1800 it over S160,00 )l000. The valuo of property accumulated In the United States upto!8iii), including slaves, was S14.000,-

000,000. In 18tu the agijregatod value of prop

erty was 844,000.000,000, being an increase oi $3tl,0.0,0.'0,0( 0 in twenty years. In twenty years of Republican rule these great developments have been brought about under the HopublicanAmerici n policy, in contradistinction to the Deniooratlc-Knglish free trade, or "tariff for

revenue only.' vnetner we can m this vast growth, accumulation, and development Is altocother attributable to 1a Tfot.nTil Man lYirtv or ttOt. it

Is evident that tbeir system of finance and their

Charged with Killing Bev. George C Haddock,

Held hi Bonds of Ttrenty-iye sand Dollars.

Sioux City telegram. John Arensdorf. wlu Is charged by H, IV .

tjaavitt with being the man. who taaea. aw,,

Brown's court on two charges conspiracy and murder and held in bonds of f2S,006, whteh ware furnished with very little delay. Tfat bondsmen are James Junk, C. F. Hoyt, t, Ti. Slew, B. Seizor, E. J. Kessegleu, and Ii, P. Drvunm,

tariff policy gave encour.igement to tbe people

aDroaa ior invoasiaem,, auu I

t homn and

ereiso cf their greatest energies, out of which grew an inspiration that lod the people with gigantio strides to tho attainment of the greatness, power, w.ltb, anil glory of this, great Bepublic. If the peoplo are going to enter npon tho Democratic-English policy hoieaftor, as

bettor man tne itepuouoan-Ameneim iy"".". would it not be well for them to rofleot and ask

themselves the question wbotnor under icmocratio rulo this country has ever advanced on any line whatever, either In wealth, intelligence, or individual or national power, as compared with these conditions under Itepublican

administration? At tho end oi uepuoncan rule wo found everything in this land pooco, happiness, and prosperity, and shall we abandon a policy that has biought this at out? Will

tne farmers aemono teat uuiuiiuiw.wd shutdown, and their home market destroyed? win thn rmorntlv. at this countrv be so blind

to their c wn interests as by thoir v tos to help

retain in power a party that attempt! to aesiiuy tho business of their employers? With the histories and accomplishments ot these two pnrtieB contrasted, why hesitate In deciding which shall control cur State on! National Government? What Is there in tho men or methods of the Democratic party to inspire con-

ndenco? Who believes xuac a uuKieaaivjiin session will ever clone without nn attempt being made by the Domocratlo party to destroy our tariff system? And shall the three thousand millions of 'dollars invested in monu-rn,...,-tt n,,,i UtAtmn mid thrcn-auartcrs mill

ions ot operatives, bo loft to the tnoroy of the

tanH-iinucrs ot me uemueiuwu i". Tf- ), ul limn, fmnnnntlv nBflfirtod bv the DfHUO-

cratle party that our commerce suffered under

Uepubllcau rule, inat nas ueuu p and over again to bs absolutely untrue. Our exports sireo 1881 have amounted to over Sia,000,0.10,(00, or one-third more under twen-four voars ot Republican rule than the exports bad hitherto ocmeaatod.

mi. !. ha,,n SAarhed for men to

represent us cbroad whose einiy oojocs a jw

ears ago waa to uestroy wis u,o, ......... - iavo been harrassed with petty quarrels with

foreign nations, and tho admintatrawon aum

.:.i..a i.,,anw ,.it.fntis. This constitutes

tho record of tho present administration, and tt is a fair average of Deniocratlo statesmanship and ability. Is there anytb'ng in this showing Hint tends t j couvinco the mind of the wisfjom

of continuing this party in iiovrer?

few bills that wore passed to relieve the poor

soldiers who were unaoio to mt . .l hv ihA ntiArtnianil. as manvox

HUJI miutm J 1- . - , them are not, but who have received injuries, aevore and troublosomo: injuries sad dihens e contracted in tho array. Yet because the

proof did not conio up to um ruwiMo-. ministration says he cannot allow charity to stop iu tho way of duty. This Is a vory .trarige position for the administration to take. no su-h thing as ohorlty In a government? Is the i old rulo to be applied to every aunian being who is mifortuuato and cannot mtike the exact o-.iden-o required by tho statutes, or Is It a foot that tho Government should roach -ant the hand of charity and assist tbe poor unfortunate men who preserved it as A nation? ' Will tho administration say that charity did not step in tho way ot duty when thousands o dollars wore appropriated for tho relief of the ""ii":" ; Vf. fiui. nf th MiasissiDni aud

Ohio rivers? Was there any law making it-

ineumbent on tho Government to do this? was it not act of charity I Will be say ahneho extended oharity to a person who tailed to perform, his duty in tho service of his country, and 1,-. !;,( . hf.Htbla consixuetion upon

this aot. will be say he can not do that whena, poor unfortunate soldier asks thy same favor extoudedtohim? Is this the pel yy of this ad-

aiiiiiatration? Widoiy aoos it amor hi

ntiments of sir. uncoin, wuou jj i'." m noble thouuht. "With malice toward .none;

fw " Tho etanritv that tnis aa-

mlnistrat ou seems to extend is "tended to : those who were tho enemies of th country, ana not to thcuo who were its friends. What will Pennsylvania do? Will she elect her Stato ticket, or will she do as onct 'before, let this largo Uopublloan majority bo frittered

awivy to notutng? "-",;., " " ..J j,j.,.fn.nmArnnr. is nn able man. a

your cu.iiuiug.h2 w ..-, , t . , - . . centlemtu;, and an honost man, and certainly it IjlHwr i"-, -. !, ne . ItnLVA Olid

,a n,,r m nil fiiauiuuix v.h.b - - r-rz

Cknression of thn Han Who Sana StaJbS Kvidcuc. Harry L. Leavttt is my stage name, and the .

name 1 commonly go by, but Herman iievy ; ..'

my real name. My home is In Ke w Yo rk Cttyi;: butlhaveboena resident of Sioux CityTitaee January. 1886. openinn tbe Standard Theater In

February, 1686, as proprietor and manager. !

am 33 years old, aad I havo long been eoaneetfl" with theaters. I arrived in Stoux City from visit East with my wife the Friday eveatoij tiefore the killing of George C. Haddock, Gtty : Monday morning I bod no conversation WitJl anyone in regard to the injunction iirooeedings.but that morning I went to the Iefr, office to see about putting an adverttrciuent ha tue paper about opening tbe theater, and I tav dered an advertisement. Tn conversation With Mr. Kelly and Mr. Hill I told them It was my . intention of opening tho place and running i without selling liquor, and I said' to th. an tbat I. believed I could make it pay. I bad Jeo Marks and Walter Strange come in and look at the place, and bad about tbe same kind of talk with them, and told them I would not sell lienor, m the afternoon of Monday, Aug. i, I was approacbed on the street by Mr. Slmortlow, abd

asaea to jom tne DfuuonAeejjcin aswwmwu, , He told me that tbe organization was for the - nnmua nf mtAtfi' ttl aalnAnltMMlMra mBfl "

employing a lawy er, and myself and Hoc Dar- is3

imeion anu vvx aionarty went h wa mow . vr I ing in Holdenreid's hall that night about 8 30, i i and joined the association. My name f.as writ- -, jf i ten on the list by Fred Munehxath. I told him , t J '-I

that as soon as it was necessary to ute ruofoey ,

to pay lawyers that 1 would pay wo iJ tof.

and that I could not pay until after .1 sliouia open my place. Adelsheim then said he on ' not know why Simonson had callet tkds rnaet ing unless it was for the purpose at making Leavitt a member, and aa this wa accom

plished he moved to adjourn. Jbouls souser sec-

onded the motion, and the meeting-al.journd.

On going out rrca siuncnrotn ana euumaeB -said to me wait a minute, until the crowd (joes down-stairs, as we have some more to talk ova and we don't want to do so While people are around who do not belong to the saloonkeepers.

Ho urea wnncnratn, ueorge xreioer, an

Louis Platb, and another man, whose name I- ,i'

have forgotten, but whom I can taeutiry, -runs a hotel in Sioux City, and I were the osttsf who remained after the meeting had aillaninea.t - . Georae Treiber had whispered BMs ttilrig about

holding the meeting around to the members of . the comraittoe, sa he said he had Homo m& tors to tell whieh were private and not ft out- ;

aiders. Georse Treiber sua ne nsu two nien '

who would do anything to wainr umm?f, got money tor it Some one then ss.1d: tftaac i.

id. -We will rive S1U0 to have Walk r licked

Bood." It was then ajrreed that Trei-:r sbouht. ' ,

get the men and go to tbe eourt boufK next day, . and when Walker came out of tike lt-rOOtt

they would whip him. I then said, "If vtw eant

get tuese men k win aK mwhihj w -. ,-- - forSlOO." We then left the place. Iiihotsrhtno-. f. '

more ot it till tne next morning, wnn wuw - a rath come to me and said Treiber cot) Id not .KJ the two men, that they were too drank w '?

tbenwent aown xo sue uepu ? ttee wwf,vii, and he refused to have anything to uto With T nnnnaad thia waa the end Of it Ontil !t nd &

Munchrath and George Treiber canw mas court bouse where I was standlB at tH . tain with Maior McDonald. Tbev cailea me -

aside, and said Matt Cossmen had t'imeniat were going to leave town, and he would e ; i i .v. TTVh iu tn sine r jd an ami -' .

bring the men up." Treiber told the, tdlowa. s A when they got there that it waa all 4xed Mfifed.HS

down In front of Wescott's stabisv tfg Jlr9 Tappan of the Lone Star BMtvgw&WmK&ijS v..S Walker and Wood came down the sts;& . these two men followed behind. X'u.p. SJi

to keep is secret, wu auu uuvbiij i"inv?'- Sk! going to be Ucked, then Walker m$ii&&mi, 'SttSi ed on down toward the Hubbard House. , -A&igH

Wood and Walker pasted them I steppevtup jo? ,i ,5 J

I aaid. "That's him," and walked acres; th;,5 KiSaS

ArmntBTis 'meiuav nicnt. &ue. e.-is-m:iam vt:a .

the Siottx National Bank. I met Fie . , Jk rth neome Treiber. fxiuis MfslfcWIaasMap

keeper whose name I can no lwcilt.a those , two Dutchmen whom Trolber al wire the''

men be baa to ao up waiaor. xney wwre w .xms

i.oou

ing together and

sou

out Haddock ut Turner '

SuTatso135roop hi. limbs while tTdo SMM

leading tho l'onusyivam wj v j days and no one has been hurt ysy.-

against those who "wore trying to destroy the Governmont. Ho now inarches forth on two

crutches. Is that to no aespiseu. or is " "

gratitude in the breasts of the American people-.' 1 believe then. is. and that the 6titudo k VJl" Chief

SaWoof'tblsVoati

sens, ixGncioi mmvui.

.31

.88)4

Wheat- . Cons No. Oats No. Si.

.20

.1854 .ViU .17)4

t3l . & 9.00

.09 (3 .70

83 j .34

.saw

.i .'2 .. ' 9.00

h'! i

Pre Catti.h Hogs

HlIEKl' Wheat Michigan Boo . t ons - No. 2 Oats No 1 White. ...... ..

Wheat Ko. 2.

Corn MKcd Oats- Mined .....

IW--NOWMOSS

Wheat Ho. 3 Bed

Cobn- No. a. Oats No. 2

Pons; Mess, Lire Hogs BUFFALO. Wukat-No. 1 Hard Cons No. a Gattlk.. INDIANAPOLIS. BSBF OATH.B Hoos WaisAT-Na 2 Mixed Cowl Ne. 2 W " vviw v "Jkhtv.

.75 .37 .27 9.03 4.00

($ 4.75

.60 (St .80 4.00 & 4-75

3.25 4.1X1 300 .79 .84 .84 4.7S 400 8.50 78

& 4.T5 W 4.50 & 4.00 & .73 & MH & .25 5.2S & 4.75 & 4.35 & 6.00 9 4,60

rnout. By the genius of tuo Kcpuoiican puny

the tarill not oi lout impj, , iuc energies wore at onco aroused, and tho di

versified industries of tho country wero ouuo ni,ari.l,n I nnd fnaterad.

.i,.,t .. .....(...cKlu mir condition nrosontto

that of the Confederacy during tho four and a I half years of struggle In opiwsiticm to jol-

ley oi protect. on, me wniw'w vV-..-.. declared, in Koetlnn 8; "Congr.ms shall havo power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imports and excises fer revenue nccossarv to pay tho

debts, provide lor tuo common u.,;'i .. ,. tfi,, invr,rnment of the Coufodorato Mates,

but no bounty shall bo grouted from tho treasury nor shall unyduty or tax on importations from foreign nations bo laid to promote or fnater anv branch of industry." Smeo thon

- ., . . . i. .. .... . .. ...i

I i,,Ar,t Tin niiLiruiiiiB ua,u luii.'.iw..

tlieorv end almost in words tho Oenfederato

constitution em this subject. By this policy, .i.,i. e,.v vnnid have forced upon Goveni-

uont, thoy wero loft in a perfectly dependent ulition, so far as manufactured orticlos wore orued, and thoy had absolutely no manu-

"S until the blockade was ostaiuieHou. ,.U.1.-1 ar-r.-ctl the UllHSO of U

. , -v tiiiiil. and forced the energies of tho

. . .r.,1,, tr hn Averted in thn direction

uring. On tho other hand, iho v . ., i., .. howar, aud tho wholo country ... . !....- wise policy of tho Anu rieau ., .,, has made rapid strides along . prosperity in tho direction ot peaco i j. Aud in spite of tho v ast di'struc- . .amMTtv and abriukaco in values conse-

. uwn a grout war, our accumulations In 4 country havo more than trobled sinoo 1'60, ben tho aggregation of woaith from tho timo tho Pilgrims Orst lauded was f 14,00 ),(RiO,0a0 Surely wo must look for somo cause tor this ai inamnsn over Ami bovond the natural

growth of tho country. Will 'any one say that

prior to 1860 eiur people wero not a inci iugonii, uanntnii innmtlc m now? Certainly not.

But the gonitis and energy ot tho Ainoric.-.n people needed to oo directed; tuoir old-tiiuo feeble

affrtrtti rnnnlrnil nrott otiou. and the stateuu an

ship of tho Itepublican party ga vo that .lireol,.,, n.l ,t.,tin And tn-flav VOtU llort-l IIIUV

be closed to '.he world, and you uiav be denied communication with all mankind, and yet tho American people call live in comfort, c ,s. and elegance. It may bo oll for your people ti inquire as ti the benoftti thoy havo received under tho protiotinK care of fbo tartlf sinoo IBM.

,ij :irt-n tnH, nim,nrilla RAtlBtl. 9bfMber

said: "Lotus take a hack and see what thejt': -yi are Koine to do." Muncnrstth. aa&i! tK,

take a ride and go down to Greeuvute a-fpj

what thev are going to do." A )sprIwit7..j right, 1 don't core." We went over tn fiKaj of .

tbe Hubbard House, ana Henry jnwasw. , Treiber, Platband myself got into tbe baokt right under the electric light. I asked Adsma. the driver of tho back, to W tte?

windows down, wnicu ne aia, aua uwj" -, to the Green villo. Henry got out S front erf the Greenville House ; went in and lMj there had beeu a buggy over that 'way wiUam. the last hour. Thev said no. He pit to aad We came right beck to town. At Jnnk'it satott ? stopped. On tno outside were the two DUton- -,i. wan. hinvlbv Treiber to whin walker. ..

John Arensdorf came out of the sal)u Witt us.

and these two Dutchmen said to bl.m, ut Km -

enough for us all to hear : "The buggy na.

see." We tnat is, juenaewrr, um., irium Plath T4fnrv mvnulf SUA' the tWO

Dutchmen started to fMtowat4tbSiWte., X

dropped beblna . 1 met Harry ormiamw w

Times Have Clmngetl.

''Times are chanced, anS we are chanced

...l4l, tl.Am n anno- tho old Latin poet. His

words are quite ns true to-day, aa the political history of this country for the last twenty-five years sufficiently attests. A

great reueiuou - ho put it down wore at the time honored as the awiors of the nation. Tho men who tried to dustioy the Government wore held in utter execration and contempt.

p. . timn the nation showed us Bruuw-uo

to the men who saved it, but as years passed it forgot Us debt of obligation, and strnueelv enough transforretl its honors

and rewards to me men wuv w

A-- . i .,,1- rt

lUt one generation uiw uvow ioh" w see such ft transformation through a 6eries of political accidents, as has been witin nn ntlmr countrv in the world.

Th.. mnn who were caliect loyat iu aooa i

nt aside now to innke room tor the men

- -. i 1 11 fTL.

who were branded ensioyai men. Government itself is in the hands of the .i,n thn iiied to destroy it, and the

men who rescued it at the cost of millions of treasuro and hundreds) of thousands of

lives are rejected iw uuwortay or tuo invors irds nf tuitiiotisili.

: : 1 , , , , n

Tho old soldier wno (inieuaea tne nug a vnrt Sumter finds now that liis medal of

i-.,vt.,-v. is not n badce of honor witu a

' - - , . IflL. . 1

lif.nifiorntic. nitmiiiisiruiiou. iiw uiu ici-

ernn whose maitnetl and disabled body has reduced him to poverty finds that his .iin,li enrrv no mute but eloquent mes-

iiia to Uciuocratio hearts. Times have

ehaiiRfd siuoe h." lost his limbs and nearly his life iu iho service of his country. A reA,,t .lisnmi-h snvs thftl ft ilaushter of tho

rebel who shot the gallant Ellsworth at

AWamlrin iu 111 has iiu-t been given a

nlnee in the Patent Oflico ut Washington.

She is remembered and rewnreloil, and is it not fair to rrotmmo, for the service hor father performed to tho Southern wing of the partv that is now iu control of the Government? Times have chftnpod and to some Bvfnnt tho ncoiilo havo choused with them.

Hut wo verv much mnrvel if, after four

Honrs1 nvnerieiico under the present ad-

rainistintion. tbe people sholl not by an bnminc maioritv declare that times

bull ehnnrrn ntaiii. but chnn'.e baok to the

better slut.) of loyalty, patriotism, and hib-miuded r. gurd for tli public service

nud the publio good. wa Motnca licg-

isler.

'f HE latly who woars roint lace is not

pcoiod td Know how w pietiose it,

tima WA nnn if ciih liiiiCMioi tMi'iv

ing, uid Munchrath said : "U you K)fWgs; t n.,1- nMnxir tail him not to naneht.

too hi.rd, but hit him in the face otice . Jffe ; and give him a black eye ; that wUtt elon't want to go any farther than aiWS3 borsall; -That is right we only waWteWMse

ono of them a whipping.; LIljSf? fcS

In that conversation bww -faiVlrWI

Arensdorf, Henry, tbe dnveroi tne orowwnrw-vs "SA I

livery wokod, xwi& : - - - ' .

flt I - J - ,. -, J . n-,.i,m,H wnnia nundB am nn syioWSMBli , -?s

..... .w. - . . i w,-, r,J

me, but the same men Treiber OajPeftKg' Walker, aud a salooukosper in .Bttopt&mi

WIIOIU 1 cau lueuvuj. " STT ijiiiai-"-

across Water speet worn uie w"S!S3La i:

NO one uaia a woro. vim I'SZTsTttSFM .w,-i

ward Haddock ana came up in i"" ,'.7S5 dock and looked him iu the fae, il4 '3E 39fVs hia tt.n i in front of Haddocks fane. Badaooa f -tj'

pulled something from his rit ana.afggttg jjfr Arensdorf. I then saw Arousdorf draw "JfaWKS

and saw him shoot Haddock, ; saw noioifiajp -fiS,-fS

more of Arensdorf. Henry, tne arivw.wjMj .'k toward Arensdorf before the shot waatod.; W

The morning after the murder J0nnj.gg

nnvt Anmn rn me wniiex wn wnw w-.

of warliob s saloon ana m iu?1, ,

yon feel r isaui, -ww oo ywu ie r w jssei not answer, and said, "John, t think you jpej

Snoi, ; Klliu, im Wfl . u.. . . . i . 7. . 7 .-, 1 .

bow many had seen it

all seen it He says, Can 1 depjino. on yeaiSKg I replied. "Certainly." During ifco .lay IJpmf ;, J

Warlioh and Junk who abot HiiiteiTOW -wy .

said the less said about it tne uetwriu wiu w t -c Afterwards I camo on to Chicago aneVnjfi(4..

- Hii.l.y.i Ifnotwiiaslsl .A iTlMltl U QM

cess Theatre, Mobile, Ala, "'"jltv

made ao concealment of my whemabonte, tgd -vc i rod wbUlnii to maka -

,. .. .... ,.1 a.tu

the proper party a full and cewweto aiaowifUT-,

of all my acts conneowa wl" JT.L ur-iiTl.

murder ana tne croijawj STXaSSSH; whenever I could do so without 'Xla4"y injury aud gJ8&&iti

more is uiiowior mefcw.v. 7'"M7-. . , -..

wagon, Knows Hit ow "" c7 . r T , i. . I-i . , ...i i., him over Into Nelirali(ta.vWs; hi ai

homo." t said you ha4 -jK3fiSHl

rleht here, yon can't toll now tun .. ii out, and1! wo.i t have it 3Sfl ! the court-room Saturday, J?l?JJ&8g -and Tuesday aftonwonS .at m ijF&S?Muuohrath said that be had jusl b toiik

ana cot tne money uuw - -r'.rs.T?'.'rzL '

aaid this in the presence 6g.SaaS"..VjS1' -i . .i ,t., it. uul wo Heuamted. MattCn. . v .

rath afterward gave me a note to Jesrajf

get S5). I borrowed it.

AU ROrts.

Thekb are only twenly.aiK no

in Idaho. j ' J

Pet turtles ore becoming ie fashion

New York Uity. . v

David Hicks, aged 93 yeitrp, WgmF?;,: n, Hf. H.. amuses Skamtt -'J0gK$t ",

deer, partridges, and quail.

virev e Baicehy" is inn

legend over tns doowy !

tablishment in xresa, ijs.

A THKBE AND THBE-.qjl V

iiamond wasrocenily dtWWii naman ttoai BlltikkV' lgli'V

WU'4. ipf

lea Bra, wsn-.jKic