Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 January 1886 — Page 2
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All trains arn ve end depart from \Jnior Depot, Chestnut and Tenth streets, ex °Usr Trains marked thus (B) denote BleepW lng Oars attached dally. Trains marked thus (H) denote Hotel Cars attwhed.
Trains mar&ed thus (BJ denote Buflet p. Cars attached. Trains marked thus run dally. All other trains run dally
Hundays excepted. VANi)ALIA LINE. .. T. E. I. DIVX8IOH. Ar. from East-Fast Mall •(S):....:.l4a8 am fv«
•(8) 1
Pacific Ex *(o) 1.30 a m. Mall Train l£iaan
a EaasKccais
|»i A,, from w«t.»51
:Ar
Cln ALoulsv.fast 12,40 Fast Msil*(S) Lao a
L'vejor East^-DayEx »(H). Fast Ex Lol a xo Hall and Ace......... 7.16 a
Cln A LiOUisv, fast 1&6S Fast Mail»(8) .1.80 am T, H. A In DiyiflXOK.
Ar. from N'th-afcvil T^n............U.SOp Accommodation- 7.85 fl I/ve for N'th-Mail Train.......- .. 6.00 a a
Accommodation- 8.45 n)
.EVANsJVI'LLE ATEBRE HAUTE. WABHVn.tK LOTK. Ar. from S.'th—Nash OEx*(iS&B)4.55« a
Ev A TH Ex. .10:00am Ev & IndEx Ohl A lad Bat *(SJ».Kfc25
JL've for B'th—Chi A tf Bx *(S)_. 5-Bant Ev 4 a Ex '..•..Jtl.M a Ev & IndEx «(P),. 8.20. W
C. &N..Bx*(a&B.. 9.20
f. H. S. B. DI^ISlpN.
Ar. from S'th-Mall and Exr..,l.,lL00a Accommodation... 8.15 aDa I/ve for S'th-Mall and Ex....— 3-00
Acoom modation.... 0 00 a so
CHICAGO A EABTERN ILLINOIS. DAKVTI.I.K MOT. Ar. from N'th-T. H, Acojn.J»..~..X0LW am
Ch
T- H-
EX ..X. 8.15 no
C. A Nash Ex «(8).. 4.15
a
~xfl3«B) 9.15 Ex......l6.05aiD
N. A O. Ex,
L've for N'th—T. H. A Oh. Watseka Ac.....,,.. 2.27 Nash. 4 O. Ex»(S)
JLOO is
If. A C. Ex.»(S4B). 5.0f) a m,
ILLINOIS MIDLAND.
Ar. from N WVMail A Aco'n. 6.05 m, Xi've for N W*Mall and Aco'n..... 6.20 am
BEE LINE ROUTE. IlrtHANAPOLIH A'ST. LOUIS.
Dspot Corner Bixih and Tippeeanqe Btreettj Ar.from East—Day Ex »(8). 10.06 am Limited «KS).'.....'.i. 2.00 pnq '•v I Mattoon Aoc'n„,.7,43p
N Yds St LEx 1.08 a tri
i,'v« for West—Day Exriress »(B)..10.C8 a ni Limited *(S) 2.05 pm .... Mattoon Aco'n... 7.«6
NYftStL Ex *(8)1.06 an
Ar from West-N Express*®...'£85 a Indianapolis Ex. 7:18 a N Limited •(§). 1.28 11 ..8.45pil j.. 1.27 a 11
Day Express
I/ve'for East-NY Expresses
Indianapolis Ex.. 7. 20 a 11 N [limited *(8). 1.80 11 8.47 11
Day Express"
OMAHA:
Famous for Wonderfully
Quick and Uniform
'Baking.
FOB SALS,
oS'l
Wholesale and Retail,
512 AND 514 MAIN STREET
SAMUEL
.. Oina iian a.-bl,, o.
."••• I ... fl..7 Being engaged on Terre Haul", is prepared to "Work' lh this- vioisity.
on ney court house, to aive attention Address home ..^nfleld, superin«
Office direct,, or
7
...teoiient pf ^fw,oourt house, Terre Haute, Indiana.
MB.JAMES BAGLET, Bectlon fotemso 6. AM. R. R., Wuikle, Ohio, li*dnotslept
for over a year.'hls Btf'fferitte from N«M»lgi« w»e»o great. Three dOBea of ATHLOPHOXOS «t(red^him. Neuralgia, though one ot the most common and' most painful of diseases, has baffled all medical ffii^otATHLOPHOROSTdS almost, if' hot 'quite incurable. Athlophoroa bdbklt and qtnoKi-T rar«B it Thl» aUtomfint, though strong,, is warranted by the fMts. Thousands have tested, its value amd reoiwhrnendlt' as! thn only remedy f&at brings Mlitif. For ladies subject to neuralgia or mervoua hoadflchea It is indispensable. Athlophoroeoomtain»nooplum. jnferphlne, or other dangerons Ingredient. It is absolutely harmless una univtrMily tuoae^ful In the prompt cure of this painful disease.
Ask «rar draggist for Athlophoroa#
W yea
cannot get it of him we will send express paidon roceint of regular prfee-*I .OO per botUe. We prefer that you boy it from yonr druggist, but tf he hasn't it. do not be persuaded to try eomwthing elae, but order at onoe from ug as directed. ATHL0PH0R0S CO., 112 WALL ST., HEW YORK.
E. M. SMITH,
945 Main Streetj
Continues to sell at the following prices: „B ,, Brasll Block, well forked,"So tffcf bushel.
Brazil Nut, double screened, 7c per bushel. Brazil Slack. 4c per bushel.
Shelburn Lump, best for grate, 7}£c pet bushel. Hard Coal, Chestnut and Store, 7 per
ton
%. Bituminous tump, well forked, fl^c per
Delivered to Any Part of the
City.
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Terms casli. TelephoneiXSTi
J. B. RHODES
Manufacturer of Plain and Ffcnojrl
Flower
DRAIN TUiE. BIO.
1822 East Main St.
'Write for list.
DAILY EXPRESS.
Gibo. M. Allen,
Proprietor.
UBUCATION OFFICE
4 South Fifth St., Printing House Squar*
centered a» SecmOrOtau Matter the Fo*. office at Terre Haute) Jnotona»
terms of subscription. jy it six months
I ten weeks
\Sia
TERMS FOB THE WEEKLY. bne oopi- one year, paid in advance..#1 25 une copy, six'rtfdntliB.'..".... I Vor clubs of five there will be a cash jLioountof 10 percent, from the above Rites, or if preferred instead of the cash, I copy of the Weekly Express will he sent icree'for the time-that the clubs pays for, jiot less than six months. ..
For clubs of ten the same rate ot dis^count, and In addition the Weekly Express free for the time that the club pays f'or not less than six months.
Forclubsof twenty five the same rate I discount, and lik addition the Daily Ex,fess for the" time that the club .pays for, jot less than six months.
Postage ore paid in all cases when sent oy man. Subscriptions payable in ad' ran^e.
Where the Express is on File.-Joadon-On file at' American Exchange ,n Europe, 449 strand..
Paris—On file at American Exchange in Paris, 85 Boulevard d6s Capuclne.,
FEIDAY, 3 A.HUAEY 29,1886.
There ehould bs a. large, attehdance of republicans at the county convention court house on Saturday.1.
Religious revivals are being heI3 throughout this state and in many parts •of Illinois, and all report? agree as to the unusual interest manifested at the meet-1
ing8
Prince Bismarck yesterday told the landtag why the government is expelling the Poles'from Germay. He said, they were disloyal and haVihg bought the lands pf, the .Polish nobles German colonists would be placed on thems
The Lawrence-Townley heirs are again meeting,' this' time at Detroit. The recent publication of an official report from the United States minister at London, showing-the humbug natuie of the many alleged estates in England, does not seem to have had any effect' on the misguided "heirs."
Gr^nefal Hazen has been out of hot, Water nearly three months, and findings that life is not worth living unlfiB»- ib quarreling with some other government official, he has engaged in a controversy with the controller of the treasury, who finds that there is a looseness- in the expenditure of the appropriation for the weather bureau.
The Evansville Courier rises to object to the plan by which the democratic press of the state is to b^ pledged to the support of the Hon Joseph. IS. McDonald for United States senator when the assqeiation meets at Indianapolis on the 22d proximo. The Courier thinks McDonald has enjoyed all the honors in the gift of the party which, he has'earned? ind reminds the party that "there area number of other men whose names have been connected with the senatorship who are equally dear to the democratic heart, arid' yet Whrf have not iiad' a tithe of the favors that have' been" shoWered on Mr.1 McDonald."' Of 'ctfflrse all this taatter-of-fact diseusaiqn of the (JueStiOn of succession being assuredlydemocratic is based on the belief that the outrageous gerrjrmindeif of the state has m. tie certain the election, oi a democratic legislature. ... t».j
Even the spoils organB ate" beginning to complain x^the bad character of men the ltdtainibtfatiriti iB-puttiiig in office. The Indianapolis Sentiflel says:
With due respect "We would auggeet to the fMWeiS at "WaAhingtoni 'tad 'all others cob-1 earned' 'tKerbuf,' th^t tJib time has-folly oome when haltshoold be calledrin the.business dif «rppolntmcun'worth^£ha^iflt9^e 'tp office in thia state.
In our opinion, the Beeming attempt to riy&l the r^pablican party in making and. maintain-. ing bad appointments to office is an unworthy ambition, and the sooner it is alianddried the better. ..• "Tte ^9PMt democratic n^asses of' the state' hare already been sufficiently humiliated—the gnfhd Old party of the people damaged quit? enough, sutel|jr, fcr a halt.
With becoming modesty, we,venture to sngge^tto the ferces inspiring and oontrollng appoiiitiheintA here that thert' is no ihdt cf hohest, competent 'democrats in our state 'In'1 jtew *f this faot we confess to our inability to Qiake out any snffioient reason for the selection and appointment of thieves', Highwaymen, tjiibere/deadt^iaitfl and'tlie like Give honest, compfet^nt democrats S Chance.
Tfhe.^oye ifurnishOd 'the"Evansville Courier a gloj^QPs^ 9Eport^nity to remark "I1told yoflf so," which., our Evansville coht'eitipbrary hastens to take advantage of. The Cbtirfeif
It is not many years since Governor Baker •W88 ridioulcd forreooim»endiDg,tb^t the etato house dome should be, gijded. Now th^tit has been done, itis BejripnBljr proposed to deetroy a .large block of buildings and to appropriate a valuable lot of land in' order (fofr'bne reason) that patosngers by the northern tzains ttifly get abettor view of the gilded dome. a •—u*.: i..
Plea in Xx ten nation, ^i.i
^t. Lonis( ^lobe-Democlrat. If it be but trtie, a3 (^arged, that 8ecrt*&ry MftTin^ng permitted convict labor tttiw based on the federal buildihg at Peoria, 111., he deeervee
ssssris«- *"**»&
I'mi racciiig, roaring Sociplist' I'm a menace to human lite I've a hairy ofeetJt-amLalioniy.fiflt,.
And I ri- tin coming strife: I've got the c^Milent on my lwt, 5 And, at home. I lick my wife, -S Or I would, you see,
If she didn't lick me—
She excels a little in strength of wrist.
We're, a.dreadful band, and a flag we've got As red as the blood we'll let, And we make fierce calls, in a vacant lot,
On the sons of toil, you bet I We promise to make it exceedingly hot For the idle rich,.and yet, I For ourselves, we shirk-
15
3
IS
50
I issued every morning except Monday, And delivered by carriers.
All kinds of work—
We are suited with things as they are, to a dot!
I'm a'gkewsome thing I'm a man to fear I'm as folLas a ttok of tight I've a strident voice-and a fiendish leer,
And my talk is of dynamite. We'll barn the city—but not this year We're not yet reedy, quite,
For we couldn't think .v
Of burning the drink 1
1
1'tHlbks
the
shameless abuse of power in making federal appointment? in,.te state under Cleveland is worsft,th.W^^7i^g ^one by the republicans^ wliich is a vety strong expression, when, it is remembered that the Courier believes everything republicans do to be bad." In despair the Courier, adds that the Sentinel's cry of halt comes too latft=tQ(accomplish any good.. id Boston Advertiser. .,.
that the work was
performed by democrats,'at any sate V* I mm A Study in Political BoonomybiiOTgo ttrilione:
•*•.**
.•»!/
D%P. Morgan, aman^rft'^bW 999 i^e" qf 1,060 hev& heard, died in IWw lork yesterday.
He was a speculator & WU1 street,,and left $20,000,000. The 'simple annpnncement by tdegraph Is a subJSct for atadjr policial eqoMmy. tot tfieag tiate withrheamatism in both my legs. I began taking Athlophoros, soon had relief, and in a very wiort time was entirely well. I have not been troubled sfnee. Jacob Manns, S526 south Halsted SU, Chicago, IU.
r-
And we're harmless as long as we get our beer. —[ChioagoTribune.
A farmer in ^Jew Hampshire has been fined for cruelty in net providing shelter jfor his cattle during the. late^ cold Weather. He was the richest man in the neighborhood.
A milkman slipped and fell in New London_the other day in such aWay that he went head foremost into a can from which he had removed the cover, and, as it was a tight Jt,. a. tinsmith's were required to extricate him.
A Massachusetts farmer writes that he has found it of advantage to transform a large three-apartment stone and cement silo into a refrigerator for the, preservation of fruits Cold storage for fruit is very, profitable near large towns.
A military Poo-Bah is ssid to be on duty atr Fort Brown, Texas, where a United Staates army lieutenant acts as post adjutant, post treasurer, post range officer, acting signal officer, recruiting officer, and superintendent of the post schools.
The canoeists of New England have agreed upon a general "meet" at Galla Shasta Grove, on the Connecticut river, in Massachusetts, about. June J. It will laist three days, and includes a large number and- variety of races and appropriate amusements,
A petition has been presented to the Connecticut general assembly asking that reparation be made to Mrs., Prudence Phillee (nee Prudence Crandell^ who .now lives in poverty), for injuries inflicted upon her in 1883 by citizens of Canterbury, because she persisted in teaching a free school fo» negro, girls.
Autograph huntets are said to deluge Mr. Harris, of the Atlanta Constitution, with requests for his signature. A friend of his says he always drops such letters in the waste-basket, but that when he goes to dinner the..jelefc&tor boy amuses him-••elf-of fitting out the blank cards and placing them in the return envelopes addressed "Joel Chandler Harris, Atlanta, Georgia."
Amesh.ury, Mass., is the home of the poet. Whittier Salisbury, its seashore neighborhood, is the home of "Salisbury Point dory." The towns propose to unite, but fail to agree as to which name shall stand, the Salisbury fishermen fearing injury to the trade in their "Point" boats if that name is given up, and the Amesbury farmers holding that, even if this happens, to become fellow townsmen of the poet and people of old Amesbury is compensation enough.
According to the British Medical Journal the jinost flagrant dietetic errors on the part of poor people arise from ignorance of the nutritive value of foods. When they cannot buy meats, whose importance they recognize, they do not put proper articles in the place Of it. They do not correctly estimate the high value of milk •and eggs and when obliged to use_ a largely vegetable diet they make no distinction between unnutritious vegetables and-those which, like peas and beans, are rich in-nitrogen and well calculated to -supply the-place of animal foods,
Nearly three years have elapsed since Gamljetta's remains were consigned to the grave at Nice, bat nothing has yet been done to give even a decent appearance to his -last resting place. An old friend of the departed statesman, who visited, the. cemetery on the anniversary of his death, in order to strew flowers on "hls tdmb, gives a melancholy account of this state of' neglect into which, it hats been allowed to fall.,. He says it is only •«. temporary scaffolding, a pyramid of wood covered, with wreaths and offering?. •The Jbarrier which gurroupd's
:it
is half
rotten. The great tribune, apparently, is •forgotten already. The New Yorker, says ..a foreign journal", ik neiver sO happy as when giving 4iwer to spm^ distinguished -foreigneiv who has met .him in a business way or had brought him" letters of introduction.' He leatis back placidly in his chair, a portly, well-dressed gentleman, with 'smooth-shaven- chin and a heavy moustache, his
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good-humored .face
beaming with- content as he *lopks ardund his handsomely furnished-table, with ite brand new silver, its brilliant £lass, its dainty viands and lovely fidgets
Loveliest of all to, him is the
fair hostess at the^head, .of,, the fable, delighting her guests with her art and' charm, and- ever and anon sending him a bright smile, .inducing, him, to talk, or appear to do so. •The .other evening at Birmingham, England, in the absence. of the protecting shield df any of her, accompanying knights, the Etrl of Lonsdale, Sir George Chetwyndi or Mr. Frederick Gebhardt, an ambitious youth scaled the dome of Mr?. L^n^trj's^dri^sing room, "and, like ther elders of5 the inspired Volume, strove to get a peep at the chaste Susannah as she was undressing and dressing for the play. He was caught by a vigilant policeman an4 severely punished^ Mrs. Langtry enjoyed the consolation so •dear to the dramatic breast of a gOOd, gratuitous advertisement. After each attempted interView the houses Were teveral nights «&ow<ted. "Several of the ladies wept."
Saccharin, a species of combined, benaoic aeid discovered by. ^ahlbei^ in 1882,. is a substance many times sweeter than 'ciine sugar, and, when: mixed with grape sugar, possesses the flavor pf the cane product in a marked degree. Itr iigh price has hitherto prevented its acquiring commercial importance, but the Rundschau Leitmeritz now states' that several costly steps in its. production have b&ii eliminated, and it is likely to become very useful .to.confectfoners. One part of saccharin added to 2,000 parts of glucose is said to give that substance a sweetness equal .to cane sugar. The same authority states that saccharin is harmless to the hiunan organism, and does not, like, cane sugar, become decomposed in the system. ... ,g G. A- R. installation and Inspection.
The following are the officers for the ensuing year of Leslie Post, N6. 410, df MviQn Grange Hall ., j?. C-—h. H. Dickeraon. a,\. C.—B.B.Bipley. -t
T. v. C.—Patrick M. O'CohndL Q. M.—Joseph N. Sfehofield. (ma ,hi^u •^'-mfgeofr-rStenuelGheric. Jjm,,' nhnplnin—Allen N. Carter.
O. O.—Abealum Gray. 8. M.—Silas N. Compton. Q. M. 8.—Moody C. Ripley. Adjutant—N. C. Dickeraon. Captain B. Davis, mustering officer*
and Wm. Tonalinaon,- inspector, both of Morton Post No. 1, were present at the I installation and*inspection.
INDIANA STOCKT
Elcetion ol Offlcerg Ot tlie Swine BreedBreeders' Association—Xhe Wool Growers in Sesrion.
Indianapolis News. An the opening session -of the State Swine Breeders' association yesterday afternoon President Thomas, of Rushville, said in his annual address, that- the swine-breeders were making less complaint of hard times.than any othgr class of citizens. They are now learning the importance of improved breeds, and are realizing that when-times are hard, and prices low they- need to handle stock that can be grown and. .marketed at the least expense. Disease has entailed greater loss among swine breeders than anything else, for generally-,-doetoring is a failure* .The speaker denied that in breeding, or the feeding of corn, wsa calculated to bring on the cholera. James Mustard, of Broaa Ripple, read a paper^on "Winter Management of Breeding Swine," and T.'M. Reveal discussed the nlatter of awards at co'uhty fairs, urging that a standard should be used for judging swine, just as for poultry or cattle. Jjaat ijight tBer© was a general and.informal discussion of the management of hogs.
At this morning's meeting ctf the association, Thomas Mints, of Mount Comfort, read a paper on. "What Are the Quaifications for a. Successful Swine Breeder?'' ..The following resolution, offered by President Thomps, was adopted:
Whereas, .Certain, foreign Countries have made damaging charg&s that Ameri&ir pork products are unwholesome, and that said charges interfere with the exportation of said products and
Wherfeas,' That said, countries have failed to sustain said charges, and yet let th??U remain a standing menace to our industry—
Beeolredy EPhat-wacaU uppfl-cgngrees to inquire into the treaty obligation with those countries, and if the same have been violated in letter or spirit, in this respect, we -demand an abrogation of the treaties.
These resolutions were, adopted,, requesting the state board of agricHlture to further the interests of'the swine breeders: First, by''providing exlpeit judges 'for swine iat the next state fair Poland China to be judged by the central record scale'of ^Oirits, and other breeds by. theij recognized standards? Second•, to make two heiad premiums for a boar and four sows over and under one year old. Third, to make threte premiums on all-classes of swine, the'third to be'a diploma.
Messrs. T. C. Reveal and James Mustard were appointed a committee to ask for' uniform: and fair rates, and.no discrimination' for' SWine breeders from the various express companies.'
The following officers were elected: President, D. L. Thomas, Bushrille} vioe president, N. Barker, Thorntown seoretary, W. E 'Jackson, Knightstown treasurer, Andrew S. Gilmore, Greenebafg. Executive committee: X. C. Bevefd, James Mustard and W. C. Williams.
Governor Oray made brier ad dress to the association and adjournment followed.
The Indiana wool-growers' associotipn began its session' this afternoon, with Thomas Nelson, of Bloomingdale, president I. J. Fajquar, of Treinton, as secretary, and about twenty-five members in attendance- The president made a brief address, reviewing the work of the association and the encouraging^ prospects for the future, his subject being: "The present outlook for sheep husbandry, and can it be made profitable at present prices Of Wool and mutton to farmers in Indiana?" Daring the session other addresses will be delivered by Charles Howland and A. C„ Remy of this county: Mortimer Levering, Lafayette J. L.Thompson, Arcana, and J. R. Tomlinson. •,
The Indiana trotting anJ pacuig-horse breedeis' association, of which J. F. Busby, of Lebanon, is president, and Nelson Randall, of this city, secretaryj is in session at the supreme conrt room this afternoon, with but a limited,attendance. The businessis. not Of, general interest. The probabilities are that the racing meeting will be held at Cambridge City as it was last year.. —.
'•'M: RAILROAD jNlOf ^S..'
The 0. & M. Shops at W»8h,lngftpn, Ind. —The Vandalla!s. Freight Bus,lness The O. & E. has received anew locomotive fromPittabutg.
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J)uring 1885 the Yandalia hauled 10, 770,450 bushels of cOal into Sti Louis. Large quantities of ^grain/shipped from Terre Haute now finds Its wiy to Baltimore.-
The new parlor cars, 25 and 26, built in the~Yand,alia sbopsx, will, make their first trip tp-morrow.
The ,coai.. trade pQp^ue^' qiiite actiye. Considerable blocfc. .is shipped to ..the northeast as far as Dakota.
The*Pacifici Express, lias .completed the retrieval of its-office in the C. & E. I. and E. & T. B. office, and is ree(Jy..for busineqs.
It is announcell tkat' a ih|Ljofity* of the first mortgage bonds of the Louisville, Evansville & Si. Loiiis having been de--piteited'With the'InteinationaLTrust coinpany, the success of, the plan of reorganization is assured,: ...!• 1. 'The Mickey syndicate control^1282 toiles of road The E: & T. H. 109 iniles the E. & L, 138 miles^ and th»Fk-Branch line, thirty-five miles. This, does not include the Evansville Belt road, and the first street line to Spring Hill ,in this city.
The extension «f, the Lpigwigpprt division, of the to Benton Harbor will give them an outlet on the, Jake whicn will greatly'' fecTestse1 "their coal, shipmeirts north and their lumber shipr ments south. It would be a. good move for the tt»d:
The gravel pit on the Yandalia north of. Cpawfordsville' will be opened as eoon as the weather periiiitB. Tt is the bast deposit on the Logaisport! division, and an immense amount' pf grttve^ will be token, oiit th js summer and used in improving a a
Th&aitizens pf Wfishington, Daviess county, are, jubilant over the prospects of securing the 0. & M. shdps. The railroad asks an appropriatiorr oi '$78,000, ,and sixty acres. The county -compiissioners haveivoted $5.0,000,, ^tnd ,a citi^ns^ com.mittee has undertaken the task of securing the remaining $25,000.
During, 1885 ^0 Yandalia received. 76L944 tons of freight atiSt. Louis.:,$86,r 469 in 1884 745,404 in 1^8?, and 739,081 in 1882. The I. & St. L. received in 1885, 394,969.tons ,373,484 in lSffiL 376^28 in 1883, .and i346,857 in 1881 Jn 1885 the S°d:l,a tons-for the three preceding yearei In 1885 the I- St. L. carried, out 246,118 tons, and 317:460, $47 fifty and tons for tlie three preceding'years.
The BatUoad Struggle in New Jemy. Tbkfton, Nv J., January 28.—The riparian rights bdi&mlttee of' Uie h'odse of representafiyes yesterday report^., a substitute for the joint resolution asking congress not to authorise the build4/VTnrn
ing of a bridge across th#1Atthur Ball by the Baltimort & Ohio railroad, by means of whidh it i£ proposed that that roadbhalt kfectfi^ «btrance to New York harbor. As subsequently aanocfed, this substitute'holds' that the right to permit the construction of tHe bri(f|W reete exclffsively1 with the'States of Ifew Jersey and NtewiYorfc) 'that the government 9^ not, in advance of ite *qnptrnQt^n, dfeslginate it as a mail route, and that It can only prescribe regulations as to how the structure shall be built, as it is intended to span navigable water. The resolution was finally passed by a vote of 42 .to 15
The Tragic Sltoation Wh'ch..^C«nfroat« England—Past Crimes. TalE about" Greek mgedyt—Wheref-
about Greek
will you find a more tragic situation, exclaims the Pall'Mall Gazette, than that which confronts us in Ireland? The -slowfooted deity that dogs the steps of the evil-doer has almost overtaken us, and the repentant criminal finds his very pentinenqe contributes to his doom. We use the word criminals, "and we use the word advisedly. We hate been guilty of many crimes in Ireland which are now bearing like fruitage in other crimes, and there are many who regard the crop that, has sprung from our own sowing as sufficient reason for continuing to scatter the same evil "seed. When We speak of crimes, we do riot mean centuTy-old brutalities. "The Da868acre of Drogheda and
Wexford weigh lightly oii ottr. soul. Even, .to the atrocities that marked the struggle of '98 we arfe comparatively indifferent The crimes of which we havo been guilty, and for which we are suffering wrong, are lew sensational but more subtle. They did not scatter the. brains:.of. j»n Jndiyidual, they weakened the brains of the race. They did not sack a city, they merely rackrented an estate. Broadly speaking,' thp Ifish difficulty has two phases. One is that of the "incurable difihohestv'' of the Iribhpeasant on the question of land the other the ^hopeless impracticability" of the Irish people in dealing with problems of gbvernipjent.. In both cases the disease is of our, own making. There ia not an adult in Ireland to day but, was born in the days when the state, the law, the judge and'the'constable instilled, into every Irish' heart the great doctrine that the commandment, "Thou shalt not steal," di^. not apply to land. On the'coptrary, English law' enforqed with &11 the machinery of the state the right of the landlord to steal his .tenants' property. The right of the landlord to evict and confiscate the improvements of his tenant was, outside Ulster, as unlimited as his, ri/jht to levy exorbitant rent upon the capital which the tenant had invested in nis holding Our, parliament knew that this'was the cape ever since 1845, wjien the report of the Devon commission recommended the .simple remedy of. honest dealing as the true solution of the, }and qufestion. But he M^puld not hearken. Lords and commons, ministers and people turned a deaf ear to the cries of the, plundered tenant Not 1 until last parliament was any real protection given to the sayings of the peasant.. Hence there has been bred in the peasant mind an absolute negation of the moral law, in relation to landed property. Our law hasten the schoolmaster,who has brought him to Mr. Parnell. As the landlord plundered while he was strong, so shall he be plundered now that he is weak. As for honesty,. the Ten Commandments, the moral' law, and all the rest of it—where were they when the present generation went to sohool in our law courts to learn that /the... measure of a landlord's right, to. the savings of his tenant was limited only by the extent of these savings?. H^nce the agrarian difficulty, with, its. almost insoluble problem. Every addition to the power, of the Irish people, It iq said, is an addition to the force in fayor of robbing the landlord. It is true, and the reason is-that .wa have, taught the Irish people for generations that theft is no robbery when the .property stolen is connected with land.
But that is not the only, grip which Nemesis has on oar throats. .Men stand aghast when they hear the leaders of the Irish-people babbling like babies as sootr as they attempt to unfold their programme for governing their country. One orator-is going to make his. country rich by making everything dear that his. countrymen buy. Another,, intends to restore her ..credit By sponging the slate.. ,Y.et these people in the man* agemant of their private affairs are acute and,-shrewd* ua. Mtier .men. It is .only when they deal with public arid general business that they clamor for the moOn anddns&u upon, rpafitingtpptatoes in snowdrift. And why is this .strange contrast? Because we for our.. .own interests have refused tq. allow the frish that reasonable exercise in self-governinent Which' albne c%n
:steady
men With a sense of-their responsibilities and- familiarize them.with,the P?sJBession,, of powej*. And, haying hainstrung. the face, we curse' them ior not being able to ruii having forbidden them ever to wet their feet, we declare that tHey are constitutionally 'inCapable^of swammiiig.'
Acting limbs anf teeth' are relieved' by rubbing with St. acobs Oil.' Fifty cents,
The FttBft Disappears.'
.Chicago'tebiineV
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thfrrdw, Wisemen"'sayj will beoorne general! At this distanee it looke. ae if. littls Gr$$ce ebould 'bear, in mind .what usually becomes of a fuse. noxious riaxcdticl" Red Star Cough Cure purely vegetable. Pritie 25 'cents.'
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6,
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