Bloomington Progress, Volume 22, Number 5, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 March 1888 — Page 1
IMIMMN 1MB !i; :fc.: Republican Propss. A YALUABLU iDVEETIS!SG MEDRTIL .u.ii .i .1..... " ., A. 9I.1S3S. Cs're'jfeips tJw Best Joratrf j Jltorw Cnujitg, ff Famtte. nntLmnip skksy wsnsssiur : , .1 REPUBLICAN PAPER DEVOTED TO THE ADTAHCEMEKT4)P THE LOCAL INTERESTS OF MONROE CCllTHTY. ESTABLISHED A. D. 1835. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1888. NEW SERIES. YOL. XXIINC4M & M-fl ocr, fir Jt$t
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ITS PATB81S MA uixciuitiPfltUHAK SLEEPING CAR9 ELESAMT PAQUHt CARS VMkaim Sold mm! Cheeked to Destination. . o. McCormlofc. e. VkM,jke I'M. DIUCAUU. ORCHARD HOUSE ! SL IX Orchard ft Soa PROPRIETORS. Resident Dentist. Dr. J. W. CRASH. Office in the New Block, up-stalrs, tmt Cole's Book Stow. aYU work warrants ' ii4ly Murray. He was bora in 1745, at Swetara, Fa., the eldest of the twelve- children of a ospeiooa Quaker, who was at once a jiiller, a ship own?r. and s merchant j-trlj in life IitntUey developed a wild j-ad unmanageable temperament, and , -urban liable mure than au infant ciaai-' tared out on the roof and refused to return until guaranteed against pnnishi aeit. At scliooi lie wih uniart en 1 inte'.ligeut rather then tlitirent nd i t--astrions. He bad no disclioation -;o "tudj- in itself, but tbe ae jnlsitkm of knowledge interfered with amusement, ml be oftjn iilayol truant. Boy-lika, ie bad fondness for teasing' animals, i bogt without tcy craelntrotioo, and v bm propensity remained' vritji bin n.iil in matured years, lie was enred of .1 by tins following ocenrrenee : Bein g : n London in 1771, he went to see aonte -Jepbaats kept in tbe royal afcbles t 8nckin$bnm rabc;s and -while tbete managed to abstrac some of tbe food ilacetl before one of tbenu; some vee! ::tfter be paid a. second visit, having; forgotten nil abont the matter; - int . the elephant1 pernor wi more retentive, a ad be aimed with bis trunk a fnrions blow at the fn:ni'e lAmmarian. which the latter with - o;reat Iiff alt avoided. . Tfli aoanired n beanttfnl bouse on the Hudson, a few miles from the city, and was looking forward to a future of happy ease) close to big friends, freed from business anxieties, and fnrnuhed witb occupation and amusement by his' ' gun, bis sarden, and bis boat. Snob dreams, however, he was never permitted to Tealize; His health began i o decline and bis limbs to lose their power. The air at bin riverskle "paradise" did not agree with him; rcedic vl spring: and country resorts provna eqnalrr inefficacious, and finally bis doctors declared that his best prospect of beaitb lay in rastdeaoe in England, recommending the air of Yorkshire a thi most snitle to-bis t-onstitri-tion. viceonlingly, in the year 1784 be left America, and after some time Sent in looking, out for snttble honse lie finally fixed himself at Holdgate, within ainileof York, from which be never afterward remove. His bodily heailh Vas fairly good, but his f ower of motion grew weaker an 1 weaker, and before long entirely fsd!ed. Confined thus to the bouse, principally to a angle room, be naturally turned to stud r, and at length to authorship at a lesonree, andfin 1787 he pro Jnced I is finest book, this, was a series of sketches intended to show the pew r of religion over tbe mind, especially in time of misfortune or at the approaith of death, and was illustrated by example ranging from Socrates, Confaci w and S. Paul to Ri helien, Gsesar, Br rP and Dr. Doddrulge, This be pnblinhed anonymonsly and distributed it gratuitously among his neighbors; but the book thus inod -stly introduced I crame very popular, aad eventnaily r in through eighteen editions. For bis grammar, abridgement, exercises and key be obtained 800; for his reader, intr Mloctioo and soqu-il, 750: for bis French books. 700. and for his spell ing-book and primer, 500. I Ie at one time contemplated a kind of expurgated edition of be poets; but. hi ppily, perhaps, for his reputation, ne er attempted to oarry it into effect. KL means being sufficiont for his simde mode of life, and having so. family, he devoted all Its bterary income to charitable nd benevolent objects. He furnisbed a brief autobiographical sketch ia a series of letter , which comprise tbe history of his life down to 1809, and this forms tbe basis of tbe volume of memoirs published after bis death. AU lite TtarBou.nO. Five Thoasaad Books a Year. What is to become of us with book pouring one of the press at the rate of 5,000 a year, besides reprints and monographs and pamphlets? No man can keep paee witb literature. It is qt ationable if, on she whole, the effect is not to demoralize popular taste in reading matter. A ' few first-rate books would be worth more than "a flood of all sorts, because now each volume gts its small quota of readers, while :v really admirable votume can get t n attention it deserves. Globe-Demo-craL But one person in Boekdale County, Georgia, is permitted to sell liquor. He is appointed by the grand jury, c in sell for medicinal purposes only, a ul cannot keep on band tbau ton gallon at tpiHtft
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NWS BUDGET. Fresh Intelligence from Every Part of ihe Civilized World. Foreign md Domestic If em, Political Events, Perianal Points, Labor ' '-' Kates, Etc. latest dispatches. ITS ABIOSBaT, ' Th Pendeattan ef the State Twaiatw of Keatvahy-Aaaoanjtat. 800,000. -A special from Frankfort, Ky., says: Auditor Hewitt states that be has found as a result of an investigation, that on March 17, 1887, just a year ago Saturday Traaaxrer Tate bad in bnnk'money to meet every Toucher, end could have sqnared acconnta with the State on that day to a cent, but the Auditor does net think all this shortage occurred since that, time, although the money most have been drawn since then. He thinks the leakage has been going on for yean, and that Tate has been bridging it over from time to time, and up to a year ago was able to place in bank at counting a sucunent amount to maae ms oootcn square. Among the missing Treasurer's use's are said to be $75,10 due bills from friends for money loaned, most of which is geod: 600 barrels of old whisky in Louisville, whose value is estimated- at l 850.000, and $25,000 in tbe bans at Frank' 1 . . rrv . l i. i . ion. Ann iwer m ma wkowu, ion the due bills are locked up in the State Hnse. Late this afternoon a certificate of deposit representing 719,500 was duw covered "'among Tate's private papers, It will reduce the defalcation that much. .Auditor Hewitt says that the amount short 14 f"nju,uuv. lmmift-ranlo Maimed. An emigrant train going west on the Grand Trunk road collided, with the reIrolia train going east oqe mile east of Wvomine. Ont, The engineer of the em. igrant train was badly injured about the head, and a breakman on the same train had a tea broken. Of the passengers eight or ten have broken limbs and are more seribusty hurt, but no person was killed ontrisht. The bajixage'master of the Petrolia train bad both legs broken, besides sustaining other injuries. The fireman s hand! and face were injured, but others on the train escaped with slight bruises. The immigrants are mostly Danes and . Germans, and are bound for Illinois and points farther west. JUbattt the Strike. Chicago special: There were no new tevelopments in the "Q. strike Wednes day so far as could be learned. The com' nany declares Itself salUfiad with the situation, and says that bntfor the daily visits ef reporters it would not knew that any strike exittedV The brotherhood, on tbe other hand, isHkrad in -its protestations con&IeBce that victory will perch on the shoulders of the strikers, a little more time only being needed. Xbe (rnevunce Committees of nnmerou-i roads are still in session, though for just what purpose tho Chairman of the Press Committee was un able to say. Minor Tc! effrnins. 'Wedsesdat daring a heavy thunder storm lightning struck the Senate wing ef the Capitol building, but apparently did no other damage than to frighten tbe occupants and destroy telegraphio and telephonic communication between the building and the ontside world. In the chamber itself proceedings were continued without more than a momentary interrno tioo. In the lobby of the press gallery it appeared as if a trait of fire dropped from eacn cnanaeiier to tbe coor. A stout demolished the Baptist and Methodist eburehes, and destroyed several bouses and unroofed every house in Calhoun, Ga. No loss of life is reported, bnt fear or five persona were wounded by falling timbers. A heavy Dayton, Fort Wayne and Chicago freight train, running twenty -five mites an hour, dashed into a wagon in which wete riding Henry Weiffeubaeh. John Jennie, and Joseph Frank, at Tales Hill, Ohio, tearing the horse from the vehicle, carried it a quarter of a mile and dropped it dead by the side of the track. Neither of tbe three men were hart, bnt the wagon was shattered to flinders. The National Zrilung, of Berlin, de nies the report that an operation for tbe removal of the dead cartilage in Junperoi Frederick's throat is contemplated. Thk report of the Board ef Emigration shows that the total number of passengers who landed at the port of New York daring the past year was 4-541,745. Fi.iskds of the Cleveland, O., Y. Jl. C. A. have been soliciting for funds to erect a new building and S'Jt'.tXH) was pledged, when John D. Boekafeller, President of the Standard Oil company, wrote from New Yejtk that he would subscribe $25,000 if tbe pledges to date were doubled- The after was accepted. The President has nominated Strother M. Stocktlager of Indiana, to be Commis. sioner ef the General Land Office, and Thomas J. Anderson, of Iowa, to be assistant Commissioner of the General Land office; also Thomas H. B. Joneaof Dakota, lobe agent for the Indiana of (he Fort Bertheld agency in Dakota, - The friends est Gen. Hancock raised sufficient money to purchsss' a house in Washington for kfrsHancock. The house is a large three-story brown white stone structure, near Twenty-first and B streets, northeast. Among the members of the committee who had charge cf the matter were Stillson Hutcbins, Gen. H. G. Wright, Gen. Albert Ordway, and A. W, Wilson. F1MAHCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL Judge Dundy's decision, at Omaha, ia the njauetion case brought by the Burlington against the Union Pacific and its engineers, declares mat while the engineers can quit work when they please, they hare not the rizht to enter into a conn piracy and by concerted action leave the Union Pacific witboat engineers in order to prevent handling Burlington freight Engineers have not the right io refuse to haul Burlington care, and such refusal would subject them to Imprisonment Tbe strike on the Santa Fe system ended on Bandar, and the enginoerg and. firemen eturned to their posts. Tills more was made in accordance with a notice issued by Mr. Conroe, Chairman of the General Grievance Commitbe at Kansas City, to the effect that be was advised by Chief Arthur to request the men to resume work, and for htmself to proceed to Chicago to adjust alt miannderslaadings. The notion was promptly obeyed The Commercial National Bank of Dubuque has closed its doora The resent failure of the Church A Craves Manufacturing Company, of Minneapolis, developed tho fact mat the bank held tho paper of that firm to the imouot or 10,W0. The loss will be about 60,000 to the stockholders, but it ia thought dapositoti will be yild. The last Metassat showta that tbf mom vtn
newly tHti. and wo liabilities a IKfleover 70,0t0. Hnith of its pwer proro! worthless sad the resole was fa 'a.
THE OLD WORLD. . The funeral of Emperor Williiitook place on the lHtli inst, Ihe weathor was ektrtnely cold, and the troops, wra) wore rngd fottr deop si ng one route Uieu'ity the funeral cortege, woro hoary cloaks. All the -hoases on Ucter den TJuJan ware covered with loonrniui aitrteiiiibitecl flags witb black drapery, say alioriin diapatali. Attlw street aionslugs mmjlvii iitllar.i lrai)il ytUU LI ek and nrmomitil by t'lussiau eagles Had Oven ere: tod. The liuiut-iioHU ware cover! with cruix, aiid at every tlity )ia;es timro were cauuviiurrus Doariutf liaiuiuK i;r..pa. 'the route of tho (uueral jirocosslon iircaonted a tuut liniiesiug asiHict entirely Ul teeidug with tlta deey soiTow and rover.uoe ot the people. The neuter of the road was stiewu with gravel ami Mr brunches, unit ou tho houae fronts large onije ioitooii8 eutivined with laurl were h'lug. The f unsnd services tooS place in the eatheunl i" accordance wttU the jiroginuimo. mpe.'ijr 1 r.rter.ck was not prtucut tlit weather teiug too sovcru to ponuM. ot opoimg hhn soit. iir hoegvl deiivtrsd tuo senituu. atandiug beside the eomn, Tlie caUicdrel ceremony cloaed with tbe singing of "Holy, lloiy Ii the LotM," The proefssTOn :o escort tbe Kaiser's remains t-J the um solcim was itlfib itifcd. I'linee Witlian a tot In -.1 s middle i f tho na behind the imperial staudarl. Aloudside oi him was tho King of BftiOny, tli K:,ng oi Belgiant, and the King of Klu nauia. (.lose Dy a.ojd the Grand Duke of Daden, Triiioes Alnr.cn' and Henry, and other priuoee of the loyal house of 1'iussia ; the Prince imperial of Aiutiriit, the Prinoo in iwii.il of Kurisia, the Grand lluke Michael and Nicholas of Kuasia. the l'rinec of Wales, tho Crown Prince cf Italy, tne crown rrmoj n jKnnian, and tn urowa Prince of Grc co, all in tho aniform o( their re. spoetivc countries. The procostioti was hi very way worthy of the occasion The milltary display waa magnificent, though somber. I he sight of tan chiet mourner, the heir to the throne, aecanipaniei by throe kluj ot U-eruiaa blood, followed by tbe most illustrious representatives of every European country, whose nreaonce nave evidence of the universal venera tion in whioh the deceased was held, and by a ions line ot statesmen, all cwnumofi to aire tbe scene an hnmesaiveness that was reflected in the demeanor of the dens throng watehtna'the. cortese. The remains were re ceived at the mausoleum by the pastor of Chsrlottwburg, and Chaplain Koegel tlwn read the grayer, "Blessed Is the Man Who Kesisteth Temptation," and the Lord's prayer, atembere of the imperial family and other mournorn then withdrew, the Generals taking farewell oi their dead matter by placing their hands, as if ia salute, upon bis eoMn. A salvo ot artillery announced that the ceremony was over, Ou:aiU.- of Berlin tho funeral of the Emperor was observed in all the lotcung capitals of the world. Homorial services wre held in Washington in the Concordia Lutheran Church, and were attended by tbe President and members of his cabinet and officials connected vim the foreign location! . In London the Qneon attendel private service in W.ndsor Castle private chapel, and similar marks of honor wore exhibited by the Cur and Czarina at SL Petersburg, and by tho Austrian Emperor and trchdukos at Vienna. A Paris diepatoh says the Initiative Committee of the Chamber ot Deputies, by a vote of 8 to 5, has agreed to consider apropoial to authorize the Panama Canal Company to laiuo a lottery loan of 34),000,OJO fr-wii).. Late China papers received at San Francisco confirm the reports of the dua-trou earthquake in . the province J of Yunnan and byechucn, but give few additional dotails Several cities woro destroyo.l, and about 9,-0-0 Uvea lost. Latest reports from llii scone of tho Yellow Rivor flooils place lite anmbji of lives lost at 103,090, and tho total number of sufferers from the innnndabon will roach between 1,5X1, 090 and 2,030,001 Tbe participants in the decoration scandal in connection with which It Wilain, ex-Pres ident Gravy's son-in-law, was recently tried and convicted, are gradually bsing brought to account Ibae. Iiimeuain, the chief ptkmiofe of the scheme to realize money by the sale of decorations, bos been sentenced to six months imprisonment, and Oen. Caffarol is fined 3,10) francs as her accomplice. POUTiCALJPbljiTS. The Bepnblican, Democratic, and Prohibition committees of Tonnesse liar i issued calls for State conventions. The Democratic Convention will meet May 0, and the Iiepnblicanand Prohibition conventions one wojk later. The Indiana Prohibitionists are early in tbe field witb their State ticket anil candidates for Presidential Electors- At Indianapolis, on ihe 15th inst, they adopted a platform advocating strict prohibition sad female suffrage, and for Governor nominated Dev. J. S Hughes, who was their candidate tor fx-oretary of State two years ago. Four ladies oonnegteil with the Woman's Christian Tompcrauoe' Union were appointed members of the State Central Committee. The Democratic Stats Central Committee of Arkansas have called a convention for the nomination of State officers in liliXa Soak, May 81 " , The Republican State Convention oi Bhodo Island met at Providenoe and unanimously nominated tbe following ticket: For Governor, Boyal 0. Taft; Lieutenant Governor, Eaos lapbam; Secretary of Slats, Samuel M. Gross; Attorney General, Horatio Rogers; General Treasurer, Samuel Clark. Ihe Bbode Island Democratic State Convention, in session at Providenoe, rnadj thoo nominations to-day: For Governor, John W. Davis; for Liientenont Governor, Howard Smith of Newport; for Secretary or State, Edward HoGinnes of Providence; for Attorney General, Ziba 0. Slocumof Providence; for Treasurer, John G Perry of South Kingstown. FIRES ANDACCIDENT3. The Elberon flats, at tho corner of Eightysixth street and Uadison avenue, New York, were burned, and many pooplo jumped ou of the windows. One of them Mrs. Frances Westloke, a widow was kiilo b A boiler explosion on tbo Armonia estate, in Cuba,' killed a number and eerioujly woundo 1 others. One of the most dreadful railroad accidents of ihe year occurred on thn -Savannah, F.orida and Western Bo&d, atBlackehoar, Ga, on Fatnrday, say a Savannah telegram. The rnban fast mail from New i'ork Jor Florida fell through a trestle a hnudrod nuls south of bavaimah on Saturday. Tho entiio tiaiu exeept ihi engine was demolished Tweutynve iw pio are known to have boon kilitd, and betwee i thirlv and forty injured, teucf wh.im aro ex-ix-cted t . die. Tbo private cor of President W ur, nf tho I-e)itgl) Vnlley Uuad, with Mr. Wiiour and George Uonld and nile iiLd others in it, win ono oi tbe train. Presidt-nt Wilbnr was seriously injured. Gonrije Kunld mid Mrs. (ionld received slight itijntien The ncjdent was caused by a broken rail under the bagcag oar. The l-ajwe-cor got oil t o track about a qnortor or a utile bolore it isacbed the bridge at Jli.iricuue liiver. Tbe i'Hi!gHse-rar mounted tho trsitk. tut u train paired iiafoiy over tbe liridge. Imuiudi. ately -in tbe otiier eido of the '.'ridge there is a trestle soveral hnndrod feet in loustu. When tho baggage-car struck the tmstle-.irl; it gave way. and the cuitiro train, with tho oeemiflu of the engine, dropped throvpb, and all the enrs lait one were completely vrocked. nun i.ra)ii vuiiiimieu 01 a couioiuauou cur, turce bacgago-cars, a smoking-car, one anaeu, two I'ulluians, and a private car of the Iililgli Valley. This private -ar was oosuplrd by President Wilbur, ol ti e Lebigb lloud, his fmuilv. and friends, and survived tbe shock. Tho second engine ran at one to Black Blwttr, a mils distant, for axaistanoe. roou all the l-hysi-sinus in tbe place wore present, icsides mauy who were ready to render ussistauco In getting oit the dead and rcsotiing tho wounded. The Superintendent ot tbohuvannaii, florid and W astern Haiiroad, Ur Horning, es soon as be heard of it, loft Kavsnnah for tbo scene of tie accident with pbyuieians and nurses. THE CRIMINAL RECORD. A murder and suicido under romarkablo circumstance', oronrred at Benton, Haiue. Darius M. Warrou had bwn ..r rested for caus ing tho death of his wifu, and upon asking to see his two daughters, ago! eight slid three years respectively, ho was led into their chamber by t o officer bav.ns bun in charge. Before tbo of) jeer could intorfom Warren drew t revolver an I shot the older girl through the orehoftl, tho youugor thronsh tho batik, aud ilrolftbrou(;h tbo heart. All m dead ps9P, tho yattajpit hUd, Mi tho Wiri 41i
Tho Chiojgo fiifrf 0,-eau of Wodueeday aysi "Xlierois littli doubt t aat Wdtiatn B. Tatcott, the youth charged with the murder of Amos J. Snail, Is in Chicago. H-i was seen on North Clark street last night, and reoognized by (Wo PUltit.r Housd beiU jioy who lcnow Tcott perfectly well, Th6if etory is that at abottt 10:81 O'clock thby wera walking on tho west side of Clark street, between Hitrou and Superior sire eta, when they came faco to face with Taioott He was heading north. Hx was dressod in the same clothing he wore when last seen st Ihe Palmer House two days after (lie murder. His hmds vera planted teeply in tbo pockets of his light ororooi.t, as if his fingers were clasped around the handles of the two revolvers he was so fond ot showing. Under his silk hat his ttoll-kuown features wore plainly visible, but h was' very pale, SB though he littd been in close cqnfiuoinnnt tot a while. Tho police are flow isareliing tho oity for tho mllohi'nisiiiu? murderer. . J.niioi W. Tute, popularly known at "bot e it old Dick Tato," who has been Treas nrer of tho S ato Of Kentucky Since 188Y, baa fted, leaving a sUottage of jnvor 3p,C00. .Hi bond of 9300,0 0 is said io bo well covered. A tmirorsal favorite, and wiloly known, the downfall ot Tate causos a tremendous sensation. A rsJoiu'Ybu bas been presented to the Legislature offering a reward of 5, 003 for hi-i arrest. MISCEUME0U8ll0TE8. By the decision of (lie Illinois Sumeme Court relative to the Hyde Park annexation question the city Of Chicago finds itself hi a municipal and fiscal complioatioa tint promses to be extremity awkward. The court decides the set of tho legislature to ba unconstitutional uu lor which the attempt was mads to annex Hy.lo Park J to Chicago, and remand tbe caso takoo up on appeal back to the lower court Under this ruling Hyde Park is relocated back to its former stains as a village, and all the proceeding's taken by the municipality o Clitcag-J on tlta supposition tbattUs annexation wai valid arj rendered unlawful and Inoperative. Complication and embarrassments almost without end will arise in consequence o, this decision. AU that has been done as regards tbe redistrictiug of the oity and tbe addition of new wards goes for nothing, and the registrator! for the spring elections is completely nullified, as tho v'otori have registered in wards and precincts which have no legal existemn A large tmmbor of horae aro dying in New York from a peculiar disoase brought on by the enforced idlonass of the past week. In many instanoja it has attacked work horses which hate been iitab'.nd on account of the storm. Tho great event at the national oapital on Monday was the decision by tho Supremo
Court of the telephone oases, which has been so long in coming and Bas been the source of much anktety, controversy, and speculation. The number of p-iople directly interested In tbis decision, including tbe stockholders in the various corporations InvolvUil, savs a Washington speoial, was prnbSbly greater than In aay case tbat has boei. Oecidod for many years, a the value -ot tho entire telepbuno interest, reaching almost every twuof si.:o in th world, was affotted. 'fhe ilell pnteuts were sustained, however, as was expected by almost everj body but the attorneys and stockholders in the rival eonpauiea. in ft or, it was a ticht of alt tbo othur companies combined against the Ball. The crowd in tbe court room was uuusually lr(f., and the opinion, writtou and read bv Jus tico Blatcbfcrd, altnoagh the longest that has been presented to tbe court for years, and occupying nearly an Itnur and three-quarters in the reading, was HHtoncd to with the greatest atteution. 'J'his liecia on ivtties the entire controversy. White it does hot prove, as -I notice Ulatehtord ttniC, that Ilell was the original discoverer of the fact that 'articulate somidi may be transmitted ocr a wire, it cstablluftos tbo fact that he was tbe- first to adapt th? discovery to the wants of b:s fellow-tuen, and is entitled to tho full value of tbo invention. One hundred and twvnfy-nne of the liest lawyers .in tbe United states have neon engasod in this litlgat on, including t-ena-tor dtnunds. o-8t.i.ator Conkling, Postmaster ciouoral Dickinson, Kobert (I. Iugeraoll, aud many othei-H almott as famous, and it is estimate 1 tt at several million dollars have been expended in counsel fees aud othor court oxpeases. The Bell monopoly v-ttl now have its own way, aad the stock of that cumpany, whioli has fluctuated widely on accouut of the constant litigation, will bsvo a f xed value until the e i ration of the patent, iukUoo Cray did not ett n the case for tbo ;eason that dig'orcnt msucbers ot his f aiully hold a large iut r st in tbo Hell Compsnv, and Justice l.atnar bocauso ha did not bear ihe argument Tho dtclsion was pronarra by ('Anal Justice Wait, but was road by Justice lilatchfcrd, owing to the I onner's indisposition. Ihe Ciitcd Slato Supremo Court- ha rendered a decision- in the case of Bowman Bros. vs. Ihe Chicago and Northwestera lUilroad Company, which iuvolvos tho validity of a statuto of Iowa forbidding a railroad company to brinr intoxicating liquor into the State, uult-us snob company has been furnixhod with a certificate from tho County Auditor of tho comity lo which the liquor is to be transported, showing th.it the consignee is legally authorized lo sell it Tho court holds that the power to rognlate orforbid tho sale of a commodity after it liai boon brought int) tbo State does not carry witb it Ujo right and po rer lo prevent its introduction by transportation from mother State Tho section of tho Iowa statute ot April 5, 188C, which prohibits railroad companies from bringng liquor into tlu Ktato, is thorcfore deolarod to bo invalid, and the judgment of tho United States Circuit -Vurt for tbo Northern District of Illinois is reversed, tho Chief Juatic, Justices Gray and Harlan dissenting. A Dos Haines dispatch says that Prohibit iouisti at the Iowa Sta's capital think tho decision will hurt their eauso bntlittio, while tbe liquor dealers are highly olatod, and claim that it breaks down Prohibition. LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. WAV VlltV Cattle $ .go 6.00 'k s.ao (SB o.oo siikkp a.oo & 7.00 Whbat No. i Fpiieg M !i .90 No. 2 Rod .iKJ!4 ,114 Cons No 0. 9 .l'o OfM. vhtA mi it. ,r. PoBKKswMtss.. H.7S Jia50 I'HICAOO. OATt.B Choice to Prime Steers 5.00 & S.50 tiood 4,!!S t" .7S lyuinmoii w x-air...... is.jj & 4.4, -,--.t, - WW,. ......... AU, P. ... l.t b'HKKP.... 5.50 a 6.H WiiiiAT Na '2 Hod 81 .ii ri,ti,v 1-.A it Oats -No' 2. .'.".".' ".'.'.'.'.'." .'.'.'.'.'.' i:i0 ',10V, nam.i-v No. ?. ,ki ti .81 lU'rTEU Choice f"r amery 23 ,3a i in I 'airy ,ao Cukkse Kuil ( ream Kat U'i". ,Hi Iwa Fr sb 11 J .IS P-il'AToE hnlcft. nor lin n ,l ihi l'oiiK lieis vi.it, aii-i.; TOJ,EDO. tVflviTI'.ah on., rt. ,.. ................ .. .CV1 ,o Cm- ( ash ...'. Ji t .sii OATS- May. 4, e .-in; Cixivua BEisp 3,75 a,8j " KASSAB CITY, Cattle 4.50 5.03 ... . . ... , , -,.(- e. .-v WUKAT-NO. a 78 i ,70vi t uns-O !! i a M Oats -no. a an & sni4 CATTUB '.. 4,50 a S.45 lions 1.7! 5.30 W iiKAT Ho. il lted HI A .H.1 vdtuv -o. a seiiow ,.-,! Oats No. 2 White MHjt .31 M1UWAUKKK. WHKAT f?ASh lil.: t 171. Oa-i-b Tlo, !t :Whte'.'.' '".'."." .'.".'.'.' .S8-4l .'w KVR-NO. 1 67 (. ,8.1 liAm.y-No, 2 70 &! it l'OKK Mess 13.50 lt.00 sr. r.ouiB. fiIIM Ali.nfl ' tn Oats Cash u .9 .:)! KVK .Oil, . .ljlA 1'OUK MOSS M.00 11.5J m'WAitO. fliwr.w a ui Hons I.... o!oo st si'3 BUBltP ; 6.7 t 6.S0 Will, .-i- V 1 U..1 ,( f r... ,...n, ..... . , ii. ..,.,...,,,.. . 1 ,1, Cons No. Yollnw 37 ...74 HAHT l.HIKltTV. CTTWt I'rline .-.no v'5 '"ir ..-ii ('mitmnt .... -if. .1 Jin Hoot.... . S.KS m niii Hutzr ..,.,,. o.JO o.ixj
UtNmiMuviiuiMtoiii. KiUtl m .og f
A DAMAGED YEST.
Tho ivwr Muisoflri Scitator Comes il C-onUct with the Senior The Httilt Aiytking but Satisfactory to , tte Ei-Coiifederatf and His' Friedas. The Southern Ilrigadier3 in Fartionlw aal'tbo DomDoratio Party iu flea eral JBouiidly Boasteo. full tft r iSenntor infdilfi' ftfeat mI ou Uifi Doitcndeni ren ; '- sion Bill lEkora the Congressional BeeordLl Mr. rrcaidctit, oonsiderations ot deconun and propriety, exsessive, nerbans, aud sometime overstrained, have deterr.d me from participation tn do JHto thns far tbis session of the Senate, my impression being that tierbaps order coula bo more impartially mnintalued and the rules of the Senate better enforced by abstinence oa tbe part of tbe presiding officer It mi the controvfTiies of the floor. I was surpria-Hl, therefore, ons day last weak, upon returning to tbe chamber after . brief ab sense, to 1 m tbat tho Senator from Missouri IMf. VeSlj had tabiiu Occttiiou When I was hot prbsent to allu Ie to ine in terms the reverse; lo say the least, ol complimentary in a discusslou in which I had taken no part; ibid Inelud ing in his combined and concentrated aud coagulated oyrdiisai not ms only, but tbo inhabitants of the District of Columbia also, and all the eomradeiol tho Grand Army of the Bepublic ; intluiutlig that thoae were incapable of disinterested mtrtotiem, and that tbo surviving veterans i the t'uion- armies were a mob of sordid mercenaries organized for plunder, and foi sale tt-the highest political bidder. Personal allnsiois to myself I will pais by with but On 8 ingln ibser ration, abd that is, that the nomination Out election ol Orovor Cleveland baTbiuad4f '4epretett8iMns0f SoyAmeriCan c(tizeu to tile PrUidBncy respeetable. There is no man In this couutxy wboee igtiotanca is to prolound, whose obscurity is So iuilionetrabiei and whose entecedems an so degrailed that be may not justifiably aspire to a Presidential nominationby the Democratic party. lApplause and laughter in the galleries. I regret, Ur. President that the Senator from Missouri is not present to-day. He is a courteous and a courageous antagonist. I have waited for his return. The day Mlluwing this debate the discussion turned raajcr upon tho inlirinities of tbe tariff than upm the infirmities of age. snereaiter me ngnata adjourns over, ana this is the first oouvement opportunity tbat I uave qui id atturosa mjseu to consideration. To irhatuverdajTee the Beiiaior frfkil M iasofirt kw fit to criticise with Indignity and to asperse with personal allusion a colleague upbn the flcbr who was not present, I shall net imitate that bad example, but confine myself, as far as he ia concerned, m what bos seen disclosed in his autobiography. The Senator from Missouri was bora in a State that did not secede from tue Union tbo State of Kentucky. His autobiography abowe that he representor! iu tbo Confederate Bonso ot hepresou tative i tor two yean, and in the RSnateof ibo ConfOdorate KtatcB (of one year, the State of iiiSMniri. The titate Of Uissi tiri did not ifeo doj Ur; President,nril ltilo I have bo doubt Ui tt tUo ( bhfodorate liouso of HeproSButftti voa end thi Conf edbruto Senate vrti-j tbe judges of It e ol- tioii, tho quallticationt, and thb returns of th-tr own luenibers. It would be a special gratiflcation to the historian to know upon what conditions and by what methods a inerabdr of the Confederate Houie of itopresentaUves or of the Confederate Senate rould have been adutitwd from tbe State of Missouri that nover seceded from tlta Union. I do not propose, however, to push my investigation into the subject of bin right to represent tbat State In tbo Confederate Beiiato an lor as to movo to refer tils credentials to the Committee on Privileges and Elections. It is a matter of ancient history. Nor, sir; do I allude to this matter In any dlspaxMshieut to tee Senator from Missouri any inure than I do to tho same fact in the' history of th ' Senator from Kentucky (Mr, lilackburn; who tits now before me. and who with a great deal of profusion of sjioecli rose and denounced tbe ' suporloyalty" of tbe Grand Army of tho Republic, criticising tbem as a horde of begfurs thrusting their dcuiaLtts into the ouate. do i .ot spook in derogation either of th-; honor or the eourago or tbe integrity of that tienaCr. t allude to it an a matter of history only, aud for tbe purpose of showing, so far Hs 1 may, that iu their duvotiou to the South and to the Bcutherr. Confederacy tbo Senator from Kentucky aad the Senator from Missouri can not be s aspeotod of insincerity. No llag of State oLegtance summoned them to cast their fortunes with the Ponth. No phantom if btate sovereignty allured tbom, as It did so mauy others. Into that terrible catastrophe. So, sir; they went becauiio tboy wanted to go. They went because tiley belidved tltat slavery was better thnn liberty ; becanse tbey behoved that secession was better than union ; bocauso Uiey believed the stnrs and bars were moro worthy of a patriot's allegiance then the stcrs and stripes; b-dcauso they belioved tbat Jefferson Davis was more entitled to respect nnd confldei.ee than Abraham I.iuooln. They went South, they allied their fortunes with the Confederacy because tney preferred to do so, and their sincerity can not be suspected. It is a little singular, however, that for some subtle and incomprehensible reason tbe Confederates from Union states are a little more Eronouuced, a little more aggressive, and a ttle more violent In their denunciations of the N rtb, of the Union armies, of the veterans of the Grand Army of the liepublic, than those who had the excuse to which I have referred, of following their 6tatos into tbe vortex of secession. So it is tbat upon every occasion whoa dobate affords tne opportunity tbe Senaterfrom M issouri, born in a I'nlon State, a citizen of a Union State by adoption, rises here and eulogizes the exploits of tbe Confederate armies, extols their artieveinenta, aud by irresistible inferenco degrades, belittles, and sueers at tho Ihiiou armies an 1 tboir friends and allies. bo, in the debate on Wednesday last tho Senator from Missouri rises aud says : "When General Leo surrendered at Appomattax tbore woro tut oight thou uid muskets " It the Senator had been there there would have beer, eight thousand and one.' iLawhtor.) "When General Lee surroudered at Appomattox there were but eight thousand muskets left of that splendid arm y whieh had fought the world in arms and had been batter a and beaten back by ever whelming numbers for four long years. Uu ; of roiupan es that went into tbat terrible strifo ot one hundred and twentyfive and one hundred and eighty men bnt ten or twelve returned back to their kindred and homes. 1 be Hoii.h to-dar is filled witb maimed and crippled ao:diers, who, amid shot and shell and vulier-stroko. fought ior their honest convictions as men liaveteeldoiu f aight before. They ask no pensions," Snoeringly said the Roimtor from Missouri. Tbe Federal eoMiors are asking for jioiisious, bt:t the gallant sun Ivors of tbe Confederate armies hat e asked for no pensions t "Go t bo thankod" Said tbe Senator from Missouri, growing devout "Ood be thanked, tboy would not tako tbeuu Tboy are not in idmsliouses, and no .-nan has ever te n one of them l.'ejighir? f"v broal " Tnoiohiputati-Juof tbo Senator from Missouri m uss certainly lave loen made with bis lauoy. It dizzies tbe ritmiH-tic of Ibo imai.in-ition to understand uj-on what volumo of i-titiidics bo founded bis aini-ing aud iucrw'dildj statement thattbefe were but i,0u0 survivors oi tie Con-fedora'-io armies at tbe sum-ndor nt Appomattox. If tiiat Sciintor would pluott a fo-iv o( the plumes from the d-i vlini; tail of bis iinagliiation and stick tboi n into tlio wings of bis pt-ig-ineut, he would fly a bolder, a more direct, aud accurate flight. The otftcial reports show that from tbo ith day of March, ltu-'i, to Ajml ! of tbat year there wore captnred of Gcnora! Leo's army 1 is.i xnen in arms, and that cm that fatal dnv for tho Confcdoraey, when God failed to bless tli-dr cause, as the Senator from Missouri suid be hoped Ilo woub. have done, there weio tskon, in addition to tliojo who bud been prei iotisly oaptured antl paroled, -if.tin men in arms, making a total, -instead of H,tl o men wi b musKcts who wore in thi final crash ami collision botweon tbo avenging and triuniphunt for o.i ut the North end the broken and shattcroil rc-m-aauts of the Confederacy, of 73, 'II men in arms. Yet tho Senator fr.un Missouri, in his eagerness, his avidity to belittle, uiidlguify, and huniiliato tbe North, and. to eiUl and praise and exaggerate: tbo aeliiovoinonts aud the uumbers of tho South, diminishes tbat number of 7H.MU to loss tbon f.UJJ, IJls mathematics are cortaiuly giddy. Tbero is tmt one parallel to tho extraordinary inaccuracy of tbis statement, aud tun Is tho other allegation iu bis speech tbat cut of the ?,! 0,000 balm snliliors mere than one-lmlf bad applied for ponsions a statoiuont that would iiato been refuted by the eiitiidest iu81 ection of tbo latent return of tlie C'ommissiouor of Pi nsions. As "I said, Mr. President, I do not attompt nor do I intend to cast tbe slightest pcrsfiual asiterston, tbo atlghtost imputation by tbe remotest inference upon tho l:onor and patriotism of oithor tbo Senator from Keut-ieky or the Senator from Missouri who does not holier us with ais presence. 1 mention tmo tilings for the purposo of sayiut: ti at I have no cioultt they fully aud tl orougbly represent tho c-.uviutions, tbo feelings, the purposo. and tlio tut- utions of their constituencies. Thoy know wl at smtlu.eitts will awaken an answering rctrpons. iu tlio South, 'i'noy know what it is ipv lar to eay at homo, Wben the Senator from Missouri alludes to tbe efforts which are i-eiug mado by tl.o t-epub-licans in this txulv to ulTonl -oosions to tbo doponueht. indigeut, out JU'Toiinii -.urvitoi-s ut the t'uion ttruiios mnv nr-ito-l in t!io tlrand Army of tli Hopubtic as ntfeinp: ty canlidutes for the 1'iesidcin y lt l-ld for tue soldier vote, the renator from hvntuekv i I piid-m trie when 1 sav tbat I have u j doubt t oecbua Hk tbis whieh bo iidvU, an4 wbioh tht nv.u.
atnr from Missrmrj renaatett. were intended to
ma for too uoafiHiertc votii; a-. a tney win an it a vet v time, it is acsnut snot, appeals nae Vlmt ttriaa the bttll's-dyO and ring the bell. ft.nfTl,tMr Miil MtRtbmAie thA trallerleai I have nove;- lisird, ilr. l'roddent int ing tbo llfteo-.i eara Unit I bavo been in this body, any repudiate of sentiments like those i.vowed by tbe Seuator from Missouri aud tho Sonataf from Kentucky from Mil buartcrlu the jlemodraii.- potty. Time Had tlmo again have I heard those Same stntp-hie-ms rcltoratoii and repented here. If tliej fbro thitioxious to Say aritittent of ahH c'(futifT eru States, wbf sriodld vo not bdve Heard some disavowal oi tbohi ' Why arO theyr. lieated hero iteun ifsrvmtu, d n.-tusiam, unrtil the heart ot thrj patriotic North rises In fu . digoation. and ul jj a wo rd of protest spoken by any Doniocra i. f (icjator, North or South. No, Mr. President, tbey k low tbo sontiments,; they know tbe '.'onrli-tions they know '.he emo- -tionsof tho )cipie behind, them, and tbat is, tbe reason for their uttersnce. Why -vas it tuat when tbe lost appointed As. fiocloie Jtisticb oi tbe Stlprome Court of the United States, who by one Ot the strange caprices of history no-v sits in (udgmerit upon those great constitutional amendments that were ii.ioptjd . aad agreed to against his protest and his. e(forts. roSe) In this rbanilser and said that he vould f eatrat art a porsoml.. affront any imputation " uob the honor, the i itegrity, or the patriotism ef JStfersou Davisfl u persona!, thsult to bimsoU why was it that rhen he had eaid be had ho doubt tout Jolforoori lid vis wdoitd occupy . iiiche in history by ttle side ot John Hatnpdon and a.eori;o Washington, no toeiuoerjttto Senator, North or Soutu, ius to' repudiate and disavow it? Vet the uionvint that any lttpubHoan Senator, or any editor if any Northern newspaper, or any organ o. thn Grand Army of the ltepubllc talks about the Union army, the grandeur of its achievements, the obligations and duties of the nation toward its members, we are charged witb waving the ensanguined undergarment, raking up the ashes o! sectional strife and appealing to pirtina.il hatred and wrong and malice. It is time that the twenty.four Confederates Who constitute tbe twenty-four thirty-Sevenths of the Dciuncrutic hiomcers of the Senate should understand how the people of the North foel about tbei.a matters. The South do not liko Union soldiers. Tho Democratic party do Hot like thorn ; they never did. So it is now, after ttle animosities of the war should have died away, and on every conceivable occasion when we attempt to enlarge the pou6ion system or liberalize its provisions Senators ri here one after the other and peevishly complain that it is going to cost too niuohMr. Morgan If tbe Senator will allow me just a moment I will say tbit tho Democratic party jilted tieneral Bansoss very well, and voted for Mr. ingaf!BTh8y did, a they art going to tots' for again, (Jrovor Cleveland, under compulsion. They thought they could fool the Northern peSple by voting for a Union soldier, but they did not. Wo understood Very well wnat tbe voting for General Harloock meant It was just tho same ai voting for Honed Greeley. You have been engaged hi illicit intercourse witb all the degraded elements of the North tor tbo last tver ty-Are years. Horace Greeley I Tiie Democnitlo party attempting to delude "die North by nominating and voting for Horace Greeley to show tbat tbey were reconstructed, tlitt they would fain nil their bellies witb the tusks tbat tho swine did not eat) and tboy could not ; and tihen tba Senator from Alabama rises and assures ns with a suMiisidri oi patriotic loyalty that they voted lot Hancock. Why, Mr. I'rasidbrt, wd understand ivby. tbey voted for Hancock. We know tthy Baricook was nominated. We kndw why that other ally of tbe Confederacy, George B. McClellan, was nominated, who bad just declared tbat the war was a failure, slier ho bad been trying for years to make it so. No, Mr, President, these pretensions ore altogether ton diaphanous. Tbey require to have the drapery rsnwved for au instant. But I am not quite through with this aspect of the question yet In IttM, on. ta-J first day f t May of that yeaf ; leas thau two years ago, hero was ia tbscity of AfiiautdiiU Georgia, n grbat historic occasion. A statue to one of our former associates in this body was to bs uuveiled, a man whom I honored, and whom we all respected. Upon tbat occasion the venerable ex-President of tho Confederacy was invited to bo presbat. It was a dav ithat nover wilt be forgotten in tbe annals of the South. Tbey flocked to that city as men go to a banquet, or as doves nock to their winde ws. Tbey "Came as tho winds some, when Forests are reuded ; Came as tho waves corns, wiaeu Navlos are stranded." The oity was decorated with the Confederate embleitt brodght out to make a Confederate holiday, and on orator was seledted to git e voice to the aontlnieuis of tba. inhabitants of tbo Irjst Confederacy, riot Id 18 -ft, but iu 10, twenty years of ;er the surrerfdor at Appomattox, and twenty veais after we bail been told tbat tlio South had in good fait.lt accepted the results of tne war nnd denircd to conio In uu Jor tbe old flag an 1 obtain the n jcessory appropriations. Il.aujli'er. j I have the oratiou delivered by tho sneaker upon tbat occasion, not a garbled and mutilated extract print -d uu a Northern paper, but the ccrroptcd eonv p'rln'ad iu tbe po.ner that the orator himself cllita, I belieVe: Therefore .It is ontitlb-i to credence ; It is authentic and authoritative. It may be, perhaps. Instructive and entertaining, in view ot what v o hear about tbe reconstruction of tbe trouth, their repentance, their desire to co-operate with the North iu accomplishing tbe great results of our destiny under tbe Constitution of the Union, to hear what he says ; and at tbe r sk of trespassing upon your patience, I will, with as little abbreviation as I can, repeat the oratiou an delivered on that occasion, .a I said, It was to unveil a monument to Benjamin Harvey Hill, The oratir said "Had the great man whose memory Is perpetuated in this mnrblo rhosun of all mon one witness to his constancy and his coin age, he would have cbeiieu tbo honorable statesman whose presence honors this platform to-day. Had tbe people of Uorrgla e.liosen of all men ono man to-day to aid iu this snored duty, aud, by the memories tbat invest him about, to give deeper sanctity to tnelr work, thoy would have chosen Jefferson Davis first and lost President ot tho Confederate States." I do not blame him for that, Mr. President, I can understand it; in a certain sense I hi.nor it, because he spoke what I L-elieve were the bonest, truthful, and courageous sentiments of bis heart, as I believe tbo Senator from Kentucky and the Senator from Missouri hate done in this debate. "It is g-wd, air," he continued turning to Mr. Davis, for y, n to be here. Other leaders have bad tbelr triumphs. Conquerors have won crowns, and honors have been piled on thJ victors of earth's groat battles out never yet, sir, came in ui to more loving people. Novor caiiuuerur wore prouder diadem than the deatble 's love that crowns your gray hatrs today. Never king inhabited mo o splendid palace tbon the nitliUas of brave hearts in .which your door name aud fame lire forever enBbrinod. Slieaklng to you, sir. as tho son of a Confederate soldier who sealod his devotion with bis life-holding kinship through the pricele heritage of bis blood j you and yours stand iu? midway between the thinning rauks of his old comrades, whose faltering footsteps aio turned toward the grave, and the new generation titroogiug oagoriy to take the work tbi.t falls uiiftnishod from their bands heiv in tl e auspicious present, across which tho histor.c pastsatittoi a glorious future, let mo pledto you that tho lovo we Isoar yon shall Ira transmitted t our ehitdroii and our children's children, and that goner itiuns yet nnboru shall in this fair fund hold your memory sacred ai d jioint withprido to your lofty :tnd stainl-jss iiro. "My ooiintrtmeii," he continued, turniu.; to tho crowd, "let us teach tbo lesson ia tbis old man's life, that di oat bath iw glories nolens than victory. Let us declare that this outcast from the priviloges ol this grout (iovornmont is tho uncrowned king of our peopie, and thet uo Southern num. bit;U or huml-lo, asks greater glory than to hear with him, heart to heart tbe tdit ue und tlio burden of the cause for which ito stands ni.pat-doiH'd. In dignity and honor be mot tin rr-sjionsildlities of our common cause. Witb dauntless coinage he faced its charges In obscurity and jsivtrty ho has lor twenty years U.rue tho reproach of our enemies aud the obloquy of defeat," Aud ns if tbis wore not enough, as if eulogy bad nor i-een exbaus'od, bo rises to the height of tho occasion; and coming nearer, I think, tbe frontier of aucritoge, tbo boundary line of blasphemy, thau ovur man came before, he said : "This moineut in this blesst d Raster woek that, witnessing tbe resurrection of these inemor.es, that for twenty years have boon buried in our hearts, hai given us tho best Easter wo have seen since f'lirlit was risen from tho dead. This moment liuUa Its riobostj reward in tbo foot that wo can light with uu? hbluo tbo shortening end of a path that has long boon dark and dreary, Gooi-aiuuo, countrymen, soldiers, aud sons of soldiers, and bravo women, th- lici t and soul aud crown of our clvilii'tttiou. riso and give your hearts voice us wo tell -lolforsoil Davis that -be is at home umoug his people." 1 do not propose to rehearso what that distinguished roprasont itive who had just been eulogized said iu bl reply, except in one single setitouoo. I will quote one paragraph iu which be refers to tho services roudored him by tbat illustrious man whose statue was that day eiue; unveiled iu a M-mewhat mouiorabie debute that occumd in Congress ' He said; lfe had notli ng to ask, but bo bod i-iucb t i give, and wben f vas trio Inst from the louth who co.ild xuifo any expectation of benefit, tt was Hill w hose x-lce rase triumphant in the Sen'tto and uiasbed tbe iniurleus Yankee down." Holm-rim;, I suppose to our frioud who is now In Fl- irenee. Yet, Mr. President, boforo tho lilies of that Kastor wore fudod "Tbn funeral bttkod metis Did coldly f urnisb forth the marriage tableH in New York or Brooklyn, and iu this same year of ur Lord WW this sumo orator, who declared that Jeifoi'Son Davis was the uncrowned kiug of tbo SoutlK'in people, and th t no moro glorious l-iastr hud arisen since Cllri-t dietl on t'.tlvnrv than that win. h -tave them tlteoiq ortunity of renowiiig tbelr tievotion to him and ttto idcaB tbst lio represented, made a pilgrimago to tho North, und at the Now England dinner in the oi'.y of New York pourod out his treacle. co!d croam, honey, and maplo sirup all oior tlio Norib, do.-lnrmg that tbe Houth-bad boon auu-d.-ring in a fur country, that tboy were ttuxlcis to rot ir-i tt the home tit tliea atllers, nnd tlio v. h-p I,merati'' party r.w an I Irll on !,i oh -I,, i d .- ,t shoei -in hi' o -t. and h ring ou his tin .er, und said, "Lo, tills ms son ilrvt was lost t f -taiid." but toiuo pfotcetod, iu Hie Uutguon of tbe
.Tcrtptare, as tbo olflor non wno had net Wowed his subatanMi iv.tb nartits conmlained that lire
father had Utile i. tho fl itted oalf, although "Ti en never gavest bui a kid tilttt I mlsjbt make me rry witliniyfiieislfi-" , iX Wben was Unit outer sincere, Mr. President f When did ho f r cult thn tieutiinonts, the I oeUti t, and conviction i of the Southern people, whon ho delivered that oration on the 1st da;, of May, 181, In J. ianta, in the presence of vplilaudlug thoilli nds, k when he went up to be NSW Kualand ii tuner. In December ot the bo no vsaf, and spilled oil td wine all over tie Aiitsricon iwnplnr; . , -at If our IHdtnli. ho are oppostac this tUpe Ideat nensldh liii: jmalno that I entertain t ur feelings tit ill-u'll bt ianl6voleileo toward tb m for the course It ey purime, tbey ore) laital in, Tdo not very well uadsrstand bow they sail ,tet in any other tit ', I luive sometimes thoti :ht with curious I'ctieetioii what my emotion wa ild have been btl tie result ef the conllict h en reversed -if Uu aimiosofthe Contederaoy bad dictated tcniui of peace in this cipitul, if 6 Goorgia states can bad fulfilled hf loscl iCC inoboee to oil tbe roll of his slaves. In the shadow cf BuuUor Hii , aud If the flog that t 5W boats above us iiad boon a disbonoiwd aikl a tlegisded rallt if tide chamber had men spoliated and tasked I A you tried to spoliate and sack is-, if ttii country had been destroyed ami overthrown as you trieJtl tool irtihrow it, if tbe. Constitution ot the United States bod iMKumo i autlqaated relic nnd Amorlcsa clU.Kiuhlp ii forgotten attribute, It etavery had tee l -lei-;e -od to bo lk'bt and ibort.wwrong, 11 ill if tbe libeorits of Calliotm nnd of Sefferson Ua' Is hail Peon declared be the true measurii of lateipteiationot the t ertstil-u-tion. . s. . Mr, Prosldnitt, such calamities were immi" nout often curing the war. From the pl.ie where we nov s: t tbo oliallauge of the lontinel upon tbe hUls f Yifglnla could almost have burn heard, and tho re vorboi atiou of yrnr guns timndered boariely along tne volte el tbe Potomac. Untie oltmi roflsctedbow Isbttild nave felt If bese rosnlts hod beerstic ;cupliabed; had aiy political sips boon iorglvm; bad I come lnu and mid, - Uomove my political disabilities; allow me to enter yor i legtilerdvo body and dr iw my aoluxy pnnotr.ally and with dispntcil!." Had 1 seen tha, Confedioiits heroes in bronze mounting their granite pidsstola in tills capital, Lee instead Of Gra it, Hi. ns instead of Garrt dd, StoaeWAl.l Jackson instcmd of MoPborsen,! do not l-elieve that I should bl ve had any consolutton la voting pension a to Confederate sold iius myutdf. I doubt whether I sboul I ever bv4 cWUKwi to be a conspirator ; I doubt whether in some hidden and socle clad receptacle, as cast ia the sabotuary of iny soul, I had not kept tbo start and atfltiei onshrined, and hliied that the day mlf bt aiptiu dawn when it should be the symbol of the glory and the emblem of the power of a uni'od country 1 doubt whether 1 ever shculd l.nve believed that slavery was better tbon liberty. Bat, Mr, President, I should have regarded It as tho elimax of eflrontery, as tbe vary Iex and irunmit ot aardiaood and audacity, I 'I'lll not say pusillanimity aud dishonor, whua I bad accepted a pardon, bad my disarilltiSil fe moved, and taken tbe oath of allegiance to the etlcceasfnl Boutbern Confedei'ocy, if I bad appeared day after day ujion every ocjoulou wben opportunity offored to denounoa the efforts made by my conquerors to reward their own soldiers, and to hagg: about tho price than the victors snould see fit to i. sstow upon the it eh by whoui I waa ranquisbsd. Therefore, Sir. President, I say again, without personal imjiututiim or inference, to ttne wbo aro, under ono pretext and an iiber, attempting to etin rince thi North that they can safely and phtiioticailf vobi the iNHnooratio ticket and elsot liemooratiu Presidents, although 133 voces in the eleotirol colbige are in those States sltlirated wlthtsiese sentimenbL I do not think that the North h- at all delude 1 by such pretensions. It is a little singular, Mr. President, taut fa all the years which ha ve olapsed since tbe war there never lias some from one of the Staises tbat were in rebellion t Single Unionist, so frr as I know, eleotel by iemoa:atic votes, to either House of Congress, not even bj an aco.dout They never hovo blundorea into siuding hero a man who was not In the Confederate service in some capacity or otber; nor, so far as I know, has any Governor of any one oi the Ooajedonrte States suae the war s .er been a Unionist The supreme test tbsis applied is the test of servieo to the Confudei acy. When I So A over the roll ol this bedyand over the roll of tbe other bouati of Om; gross and rolieot how few of those who Be:vtd In tbe t'uion armies are found in tbe oomulls ot tho notion, 1 am not Mirprieod that we have witnessed thS demcR itrathms that we lmv heard und seen upon this bill and every similar bill that is presented for action eiaher b. lihe Senate or House of Representatives. Tbe Senator from Jtitsouri, in the corrrs i of tbo dobate last Woduesday, as an illustriitlon of tho magnaniaiity cf tbe South, ansurac. us tbat ef the $ee3,uuii,ooi of pensions that tod been pnid tJi,wa.ooo had been eontrtbuted by tbo Souths antl the Senator Irom South tareUna 'Mr. Kampeonl, who evidoiitly la a laarsi aconrato arithmetlciui, arose and said, :atf S2l ,O0O,'.XW but Sis -.OUP.tOO. I wish that senator, as he Is now present, would toll tn by -nhtt methed of oomEutatlon bo heis reached the ocitcluslon tbat oat of 583 ',000, 00 paid forptnsions tbo South has paid ti ki,i);;0.0j0. Mr. President that is a glittering generality. I doubt if tboy have paid SiW.OeO, instead of ?z9,ooj10 ii. I should like if soma emlnunt arithmotioian w ould ijat out his table of I050ritbun, which is the- usual practice, ou thuaa oacasloua, and tU us how it aiipean, that 'ihe South lias paid i?290,0d too 1 (luce the isor closed out of tba isSiaOiOOJ that have bein paid as tbe Bum total evidencing the nation'1' gratitude to its surviving soldiers. ' Even if thoy have paid ?SW,0M(Uil3, I have one single remark to make about tiiat They are very fortunate that they did n-it have to pay the whole of it, aad, instead of gram Dling and complaining that they have paid fcSr'.OUO,OOi, thev ought to be tli-iukful they d.d not have to foot tbo entire bill, asGermanf mode Fiance foot tho oxponsos of the Fmnoo-Pmissie.n war, aud as every other vanquished and rebellious province has been eonirJelletl to sub out exaction and ransom, "ret aftor-the w tt bar brag since closed ws have the jallsrs and murderers of Andorsonville, Del e Isle, and l ibbyl riiion sitting here beneat'a t be ling that they endeavored to dishonor, lordslatiug for the co wtry that thoy attempted t itosta-oy, and trying to pinch, belittle, and uiiuimi.ie tbe amottn'; tiiat wo aball pay to tbe mat lated and disabled survivors of the hell of tbat incarceration. Tbe Bena'-or from Missouri rises lit a burst of indignant impatience, and wants to know wben all this is going to end. Ho says ai has tone thus fur, but be shall go no farther; tiat .0 was coerced by tho nocossltios cf his position becausohe was a Confederate, of wlich I do not see the logic. II says tbat he was coorcod by the iogie of bis position to vote, as we are bound to assume, for dishonest aad tl ijustiflable pensions because ho was a Coafjdemte, but that God helping him, ho is going no further. He is going to resist the claims of thsso organised robbiu-a and plunderers, who h-tve banded togothor for the imrpose of depleting tbe Treasury, and thoy shall have no single farthing mora. I will toil tbat Senator and every other Democratic Senator, whether they like it or not, what we bttoud to do. I Wi ll tell the Seuator from Missouri and the rest oi his associates just where it Is to stop. It is going to stop when the arrears ot pensions arc ptdd, whan Ihe limitation Is removed. Mid every fintdter upou tbe rolls, 01 ivbo hereafter get:, upon tbo rolls, is paid from the day ol hi disauili ty. 01 his survivors from tbe day of bui asatli. end when every surviving soldier from the Uitioa armies is put upon tin rolls lor lervics only. That Is when it is gobig to stop lapplause in the galleries) ; and if yon do not like it. snake the most of it When I s f t going to ond f And on every or castor, tsetwoek as this w c.k tbo old, BlsflSi.Biuuiiiics aboat tho arroars-o -pniiaioti act ate roJ mated. Mr. President, I was ( halrman'ol' the lonmltteo on Tensions wiwu that bill was reporter, and passed. It was an sot of groat national justice I consented to tll insei iloti of tho c inipromisc dntoof July t, 1S:1 because I could not get tbe nrinciple establialied in any othr way, aud I gave notice then and made a pledge, which I have K deemed at every iiojulon ot Congress since, tbt.t I would never desist Iroiu my efforta to rooia.o thi't limitation and to pay every no . I, or placed upon tbat roll f r tin the diite of disiiUility or dlsehi jtbo, so that i bis stigma should bo wiped out edd the h ma: of thouutt -n rede med. And yet tbo Senator train Kentucky farthsst fru me I Mr 21eck, in Us, speech upon tiie inhrmitles of the tarllf on a iieusion bill, said that wa woretdd when that bill passed in Pi7t) tiiat It would tale st out oigl-toen or twsnty millions, not over thirty at the n.itsldo, to aiako it operative, nnd tiiat i uudreds ot millions hud since been speat. Mr. President, tbat statement has been refuted so often that it duos nor, deserve another word in reply. No suet statf-raont waa made ; uesaeb statmneut ouuld ha- e neon mode. Tbo only atatsmont waa that to apply that priucipie to tiioae viho wore already upou tbe roll would not 1 010.1 ire at the outsido over l-'f.-0 o.ood and mi-ut uot 00 it more tbj.11 S1H.0K1.0X). How could an y ono iiay what would bo tte expense that would be due under tho act tbtU'oafter? It world deyoud entirely uiion tho muuiior of applications under it And yet, witb a dising snuou-fliess that baa no parade!, upon overy ocotsion trial offers the Senators who oppose ihis bill antral tbat tbe nation was duped into tto adoption ot tbat tuaas iro by false statements as to the amount it would cost, Aro wo at last, savs the Senator from Missouri, to have t. servico-uension liUl't Nothing, no said, wilt contea. tbo aoNller.i and their allies but- a survlce lie islon bill, and are wo to havo thatv Yob, Mr I'rosident, yeu nro to have tbatl X ioro is uot to-day a surviving soldioror tbo widow or depoudeu: rotative of any surtivlng soldier iu any of tbe antecedent wa'ra of the ropublio who is not on tbo roll for a service pension- ust ouo. I voted for the Mexican sorvtm pousion bill, not beoanse 1 boli.ive 1 it was wholly juetlibtiila, bnt for the pnrpo ie of rem-iving tho inst obstacle in the putt. way of gii ing a service pension to eo'ery sut'i ivtiig soldior of the I'nion armies. The Mexican wur was waged in tbo interest of tho Domocratie airty, for tbo extension of tho area of bti nun f l u-ory. A very largo propoll 101 1 of thoso wl u loiigbt wore from tho Sm, born Ktiit 0 an I n very largo part of tlavio whe havo t-ueu b- 01. to I by it. I believed thau and I know ih,-a-, l.od c-rved in tbe (kmfido,-ato army Wlindn .eon s ipposo was tlio t'l'st man uhr rocoiv.'d a pens on 1: ldii ttiu Me.-tioaii Iten iiou bill:' Who wus tbe Hrst benofteiory of litis ikt-vice-P' nsiou bill? Was itsouiedisalicd. mutilated, iud gent voiomn, wbo, as the H ni.tor 1 10111 Abili.11111 bos assured mo, fought nrder Ihe Anteri' uu liu-i in that g eat war, ai d acq tiled thi.titiioriiiiMianroaaf wlucltUie 1 tate Of - nlinhc an' one 1 i ar ' It s-eina t iii'i that I an liuagtno that veilortf Ie. deoi-.-pit and nijo l intvivor of tile Ie.ioai. wur iinmiitti!! up to General -'olitt'1 Dlaok, th physiogl wwit!t who a goVfWli till WMtlh
as a totally dlsi.td- si Union soldier, to ask hint-' tbat the beneiloonco of K a month lakhflis Vlolod out tc him for tbo Bevvies' be VAtiMrlld In tl at XTaxlaiun War WhO
stands prtaifi2''-foriv on tbadroilof &c4s4b.- -ebinWc and lllilfft -iBuc, as an illnatratioa if ' -, nation snvtltnle John B- Waiiants, e.-trSsuer tor from IContu. ilre . a oca I who 'ironloj rcaeist a, a tiers jnul imitstton any avirment of aay description wLule fer that be was not aa aSy 1 lutely orind,hti.s otrng, aud eompelteat qmssw'-; We recolleet the t row 11 tresses Iwt wavsdevaW the brow (if ti nt vetontu, the appeorubr of yontb and vlgiir, of almost bcrisb jUviDUry tbat was wont tonccmpenyMai; axaaawUv . vas oit itsntra it for an ippoiiitment ox the Interstate Com id isloii, wbo wwted to Ms, eilaetsd. tothls botiy; man in: gan arorty ,. inspected of lie: ag in the sn oyionirt of ai ample fortune ; a: 1 applicant f r the post !n J Mutator to Meici; . man who rendered, as f . am tpl J, distin 511 ,nhd service as a KentockV. Oonfcrfiivae in lii annloaibai -ifeo marshaled sRniEjt tjjo Anur ci Union I And ie't Mr. PiesUent, thecal pe we ai itaaft :, to the tenor twiib a tlm isand iTiiabiea soldleTb aad Indigent vsiteiinn of tbe Onion army .who) are now the cbjicta of chari ;y some rsUtnf shall be grauted. we are ttid that it is an tfK jiriouii (iitonsloi: of ihe nation's liberality. . 't'bon mi 11 matt ir 3f fact every ett knows that the bene! action 1 Hid dour.tions of tbe Mxbn: ssrvicv bfll were indefl j!toly irider and mew expansive than snytbiAg that baa been af posed by the bill 1 bat is now pesidiug before tar as pro xnsd e col i a lev, amandiesi by the Bestaaos' ' fcomliiwa ' Mr. I "resident, a I the comrade I ei the jGain Arrny .W the Bcsu 'dti have boon frtRtds'fai- s this iMbuteaa t jOnd ot .x.rdil laCTeroojrkasy f ortitniiied. for lb. puriioso of iiInnde;BM public Treasury, iud. like the legions of Kccaw. ready Dltaer to M bid for or to bt bidden t golfaiv for the control of t he empire, Ivrill readnpajr; agraiih or two left s-e I close trori the journal at : th twimiy-firr a run at session -if thsNsKdlMi , Etlcaniimieut beli at Ht nxiui on the 98tl, 3ih . and 80th of Rcjitenber last, that orgahtiaftcw which tbo Snatoi frjm Mlssouii says tlimsira itsofficsiri bad uifolsntly aspeved the Caw Maglstnde of t ie tteirablio and Uireatened Ura. with personal iud gnity if he att-emptad prists tbe eit r ot Ht i.-ot is at the time when. that; an- 1 oampaiiin t was bsing: held. In t ie naros ratbii OTga-jl:tntlon, s fir as I enn speak for tt, I ii ncdlAt.) and dam that aaaertion. No tkVa - 1 of diiiCoartesy, no innnocss of violence, no 1 i tlta arltktiam sral l-ndwlvod airainat- the Gl Maniatrate br -uia Of ttail Armv ia the Kenas fie could havo g ns to St. Lotiis with entire satety . jae alter utaxneaia no nwsmweu of that organiiiati in, and be felt ttw stiiiga.of . that conscience a 'hi oh "maizes eowoice etlt Sll." 'the Comma adoar of th liraua Arrav of Ole Efljitlbilc iayi : r ' . "I heartily con) raculatc all who hspre tba; pleasure to attend this grand nunioa of oidi oomrodea wbtHie frlrndsmp wss welded in thv hot flame of buttln, in tbe camp, on the march. ' and cemontoi. by Uie lore which all bore and still maintain for th Union. In OWernlty, ebaiity, and It vnliy we stand, proud of ttoalae thai t hsre It nut n rw nor baa the re ever been any ' bitter reeling of bate for tboss of our teUoiay citbteas who, one la arms against ns, but now being loyal, have long ago taken their oW-time places In on heurta, never, wo devoutly tayv to be removed t lerefrcm. W havo not near, nor have we lit mj time i-nee tbe war closd,: had any disposition to open again tbe bloody chasm whieh ons unhappily divided trustee . 81 e. We not omr wili not ourselves renewslatdruadful byt. but we will, with tho idyai people North and South, protest against ell, as?1, terapts which otiiers mav make to do so, , W -holding up li-r ipcll honor aad distiuetteni anything thai pertains to or in any wisnraer, glorifies the etiuse i f disunion. . , : "With the pwpls ot tie Soutti we only afksw efmtiuue the friendly rivalry long ago enteroV. upon in the effort to mak one beloved, hM gnat and prospe -ons, and its paojde intelligent, happy, smd ditoous. . : fJ . We will rival tl Ism in exalting alt tba tains to and bono t thin great union and i cocdesnuiug iveiythin? that tends to luajltr a hoitiio ae.itin eut libereto. W will rirol them in earnest endeavor to Tneuleate in the minds of all tbe 1 lUzes of this country, aad osneelallv nf ii ir ililldran. a heartfelt lord -resr the United Btntcs of America, to the. end tMW present and coming generations aneiV' resent and coming in n vrr nart vif the and, bIrvo fa. aS mitint.lii ItrnA Allefffaneo thereto, bautflcl' upon a para: not tat respect for and fidsjaTT mi its Coaetitntloii anil laws,' which will leadtbton to 'diseountenr.Boe wbatsrer tends to wiaktslcyolty. incite to) lssurreetlon. treaaoa, rcbelUon or in an r manner icipairs the elcienoy and purniAnency of our tree awtftutions,' and will impel tbem to enavursif tin Spread of nnlversU Uborty. equal right, and iustice to all mm.' and to defend tbeswsansl; incuts, Which ere quoted from the fundamearta -law of oar order, with their live if need, bm, and to the f uiths- and tbat tbey shall so rcrVere; tbe embUms o( t ia Union bx. andx -iro -cdr-ciuntfmce aui be cannled with thepl v tws, amo honorai lo t-irmi the syin,oi wf a aanat? ment whioh ia u agonistic to its iierpwtoity'. Th contemplation of the grand picture of long ago ptwEorvod Union, a mighty psqpaw' prospering an n people on earth eves bwaew prospered, with a future far beyond that whieat opens to any other nation, a laud, comrade, which to ail it) eitisons ia worth living for, and a country and government worth dying for, constitutes tte 1 re at est reward of those who have suflered an I bled and striven that Saab, a spectacle rnigl tie possible." j An orgoaiiatioti tba entertains those- :UP menta and tbat is animated by such piirpoeo is stigmatised ho: tali gang of swdtd 'tijroanaries, organised for plunder 1 Mr. 1 !, thoy were orgatized for etarUy. Tho total swAt -ran-.. A Awtiaanelswl -in CiaaVriLIf fnXBaai LMorcb 81, KW), to March SI. 1831, was a5i,93L; Cos nanintr ot person wns . 17.S0V of these sere members of the orcyir; cor the families of sn ih, and 8,I90 wore stthev exoldiers. not more ber , or thaw? dependant upon them. It is to sit .ple.-nent this ohority that the Grand Army bin asUd tbe 1 on grass of thai United States tha 1 Ibis bill may P. W )iropoa in thi bedj to pass it Imitatttw tbat language that hat been used by its dveCTjiBV I hopo that it will past the other house el Coyvgre, and If it e ceo, let tb President of United State votiit at his periL CMaaiteataVti.on of applause. I - i San Slfns f Et4, i -: Dream of figars, sign of money. i Dream of auakes, sign of onemios. . If you sing before brsalciast TWjO cry before supper. Dreaming t?i mntitly ornishing wtieir brings tronble. ' Finding a horse-shoe or ft foor-fciavw clover brings good luck. If ron cut your hails of snuese da Saturday you do it "for viL She who takes tne leal stitch at quilting will be the first to marry. . If you &nnt niaku up a haudsonis bed your liuslMMid will iia-ro a horaejy nose. ..' If yon spill the salt sorae one will be "mad" with yu unless tou put ome in the lire, Stuborg; right too, ;fou are going where you are wanted; yonr left, urhewe yon nre not witnted. If the rooster crows on the fuaoe, the weatUer will lie fair; if 00 tUeioorstep, he will bring ?oiniiany. Ii the first Eundar in the month unpleasant, tb are will bobutone ploaaant Sunday during the month. If by any d ance a mourning hat ox bonnet is plooed upon your head you will need one of your own soon. If your right ear burns, aonte one is praisicg you; if your lelt, your frienda are raking you over the ooala. - . . - Bcturnin'g t tbe house for a moment after having oace started out will bring . bad luck unless you sit down. When, in dropping a fork, it strikes the floor and stands upright, jt will bring a gentleman visitor; if a knife, t lady. While at the washboard, if the suds splash and wit your clothe you are wearing, you 'rill have u drunken htUbaud. If you drop your -diah cloth, you will havo company also if you sweep a black mark; or if two cltaira stand acordentally back to back. If a baby sties his faos ir, the glass it will be the datth of him. If his nails are cut he wil 1 be a thief. If he tumbles out of bed it -vill save his lieing a foot, Break a iui.tov, is a sif;n of death. Dtjath is also foretold by a dog howling uuder the window; bearing a mourning dove, a strange dove hovering about, or dreaniinrr cf a white horse. If you at o the new mcon through the glass you will have sorrow as long as it lasts. If you see it fair in the face you'll havo a ialL Over' the left shoulder bad luols over tbe right good lack. ' ."Do you km i w th (1 gen tleman ?M oakot . a "San Francis 30 lady of her little girt in Toferetloti to the minister k who watt making a pas toral call "Of course V. do," said the little dear; "he doe thii hollering at our cbiHwlu Fran, ' Cisco Alia. Uk cautions. ISTever ask a plumber .- "Is this cold eciongh for your" Iii ohatgei $5 feu answering smok ft. 'lUtstj i tion,!-sft ivr Mvqw
