Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 November 1889 — Page 2

ess. IRISH CONSTABULARY.

A Police Organization of Over 12,OOO Well-Armed Men.

trict inspectors. J60 head constables,

some y,40U sergeants and actinar ser* geants, and som« 9,GOO constables. Of the non-commissioned oflieors and constables 2tK are mounted. 'Jhe recruits are chielly taken from the farmer class, though, of course, the eities and towns provide their proportion. Very great care is exeivioed in their selection. The candidate must bo over 18 years of age, not. less than feet 8 inches in height, and 36 inches round the chest.

The Irishman has a natural instinct for drill, and the recruits at the depot pick it up very rapidly and well, 'ihe recruit on joining his country station has, like the young officer, to put into practice all he has learned in theory at the depot. This is by no means as easy as it might seem, and it is a year or two with him also before he is worth much as a policeman. IIi3 average patrolling work is some six hours in the twenty-four. This may seem little in comparison to the eight ho irs1 beat duty usually performed by the metropolitan policeman, but then the l-oyal Irish constable is never out of uniform when off duty. He is liable to be called on at any moment. He can not go far or remain long away from iiis station, and sometimes on detachment duty, in disturbed places, he is working for twelve or fifteen hours daily for wcj'.cs together.

A p..trol never consists of less than two men. in iho day time the senior of the-:e is armed with a revolver, the jurio:* earrviivjr a baton only, in disturbed districts by day, and everywhere night, the patrol is fully armed, the }onir will) a revolver, the others with carbines. The du -ation o( a patrol vari.-s from three to six hours, of which a portion is always spent in ambush. And on a cold, wiid winter's night an ambush in a wet ditch is no pleasant la-,k.

A recruit under six months' service is paid £:0 per annum. A constable of over six months1 and under four years' service, £54 12s over twenty years, £70 -is.

The allowances, etc., of the noncommissioned officers and constables are as follows: Boot allowance, 2s 2d monthly per man arms and straw allowance, for keeping the arms in repair and filling the palliasses with straw. 9d per man monthly lodging allowance for married men over ten years' service, 4s -Id per month. On the other hand, there is a deduction from the single men of 4s 4d per man monthly for barrack accommodation For every night that a- head constable is absent from his station on duty he gets is extra pay, and a sergeant or constable similarly absent gets ls Gd. Ahead roifefcible is allowed Is!)d when absent from his station for t.m consecutive hours, except on the ordinary duties or his district, and Is 3d for "eight hours' absence. A sergeant or constable is similarly all owe.I Is fid and Is respectively. A head constable receives Is .h! marching money for every eiirht miles marched on the same dav union the place inarched to is outside hits own subdistrict. and a sergeant or constable Is under like circumstances. Each man receives an allowance for making up clothing sufficient to cover the expose of having his uniform de by the tailor. There is also a fuel and light allowance granted to e:eh station, which covers the expenses incurred in this respect.

Officers and men in the force become entitled to pensions on a scale laid down by acts of parliament, after a certain number of years' service. Under the 1 test acts dealing with this subject the pensions are not so good, proportionately to the pay, they used to" be. Of late years the tendency has been to increase the pay and allowances and lessen the pension of members of the force, but on the whole no complaint can be made.

Speaking generally, the uniform of both officers and men resemble that of a rifle regiment, except that the officer's trol jacket has five tags on it instead of braid.

The Prosperous Dutch.

These people, and indeed all Dutch people, aro beyond doubt contented and comfortable. The have the happiest of temperaments and no anxieties. They are the wealthiest nation in Europe. They have the best of food and wines and music and education their climate is healthy their history is honorable and stirring they smoke cigars at one cent apiece th It would be dear in New York at twenty t'mes lhat .sum. Their homes are beautiful to look at and delightful to live in. Their country is a miracle. The men who made New York and have stamped therns'ilve* a'l over ihe United States inmn fron this little land, whose total population scarcely equals lhat of LonJon. ff I were not an American I would be a Dutchman. No other iti'in of Europe c.:nes into competition with them.—Julian Hawthorne.

Savins a Watch.

'•If you ever drop your watch in the water," said the jeweler to the delegate, "hasten to throw it into a cup of alcohol or whisky. That will prevent the works from rusting. Jphn Church and Mr. Mill one of his business associates. were down south fishing and by some mishap their boat was upset and they were thrown into the water. Both had fine watches and both were forever ruined because th^y did not know what to do to prevent the movements from rusting. Just bear this in mind."— Cincinnati Times-Star.

Ammonia and alum taken in food, Iworks great injury to 1he human system, and this especially in the case:of delicate women and frail children. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder is free from ail such noxious substances. It ia pure, healthful and economical.

CURRENT COMMET.

Chicago is the best representation .of "American progress." New York

The ro,yal Irish constabulary is com- has grown by virtue of its situation, posed of the inspector-general, the Chicago by virtue of its energy. Chid^uty inspector-general, three assist- cago ought to have the W orii's Fair. ant inspector-generals, thirty-six county inspectors, a doctor and barrack' A recent attempt to

master, ninety first-class district in-! £rave Ralph Waldo Emerson cails spec-tors, ninety second-class district teuton,, iorty-flvo third-class dis.|th

desecrate the

forth the most indignant and righteous condemnation, The only cause

hast iid dastardl deed 9eems

b'eea the eumity

aroused by

to have the activity of Edward Emerson ferreting out and bringing to punish ment local law-breakers. It would seem that of all men the gentle sage of Concord, who during his life taught nothing but peace and love to his fel-low-man, might be permitted to rest quietly in his grave but local rancor and petty greed know no limits, and the only comfort is that the soul of the philosopher is out of reach of the base attacks to which his body is still liable.

CniNA appears to have been in earnest when it threatened to expel every American residing in the Celestial Empire as a retaliation for our Chinese oxclusion policy. Tho threat has been repeated with somewhat of a warning attached to it. If carried out, China will gain nothing by being spiteful, but will certainly lose a great deal. There are few if any American-born laborers in C*iina, but there are several American merchants and agents on the coast, and these buy very freely from native houses and factories. 1o expel them would involve the loss of an enormous quantity of very profitable trade.

Recently »n energetic freebooter held up tho mayor of Litchfield, ill., and relieved liim of his valuables. Lut the mayor—crafty man—had foreseen the occurrence and was merely baiting the highwayman, and as soon as he had tho crime fastened upon him summoned five policemen, including the chief of police, who surrounded ihe robber. A general melee ensued in which the highwayman did up the entire crowd, together with the mayor, and escaped unhurt with the latter's valuables, leaving that crafty gentleman wondering wlio the horse was on. But this daring free lance has at last met his m«itch in the person of a humble sheriff, who fought him for ten minutes all over the jail corridor, down two llights of stairs, and desisted only when the robber fainted. All through the fight the sheriff had a revolver in his ha.nd, which he refused to fire, holding that it was unnecessary to use a weapon upon an unarmed man. Would for the sake of law and order that there were more sheriffs who would dare a long and almost mortal combat, sooner than shoot where tliey thought they were not justified.

Tali en Unawares.

Unsuspected causes for ilnria rx'st everyiviico. a sunken lot partly title 1 wi water in lhc vioin ly of you ataxic, anew location upon jii.il ill, but formerly oveillnweU or tiiatliv, and causes far more occult ih.in ttusj, pnutii. the atmospheric mi siunta which ooii--titme the germ's tli.t, if nibaluil, li.eu into .ever and a^iuc and coiijicuit tl is nl =1 ies. A pe soil taken unawares with a malaru,. eonii:n i-hould, as on as it declares it.-eli, seek id from liie uife, non-disappointing, cordial ne icine, Hosteller's Stomacii Bitters, which lins for over a third of a century, and in evtix quarter of the globe, relieved the nifthma_ stricken, unci neutralize mi' sma in mr and water. The Hitter- impart activity to the stoiu h, bowels and liver, repel incipitnt rneumusni. and remedies inaction of the ki 'in ysanu nijidder. Ai petit and sleep are improved, and the infirrnit es of age rnit.gated by its u.e.

Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr Sage's Catarrh Remedy. 50 cents.

A Curious Map.

Writer in Washington Capital. I saw a map in the library of the War Department which 1 have often wished to see again. It was Mr. Cameron's idea of what the map of the l/nited States ought to look like after the suppression of the rebellion. In it the names of the revolted States were obliterated. None of the Southern State lines were retained. Even the border State lines were rectified. Delaware was absorbed by Pennsylvania and Marland. Maryland also took in the eastern shore of Virginia Virginia was divided and the ancient name disappeared natural lines were adopted to form new States, and Louisiana west of tho Mississippi was thrown with Texas to make four new States, but none to come into the Union until 1880. Florida was obliterated, States taking the place of Mississippi, Georgia and Alabama getting a coastline at her expense. I hope this map has not been destroyed. It would be of great interest to the future historian, as showing what a politician would have done with the United States if he had had the power. From all that I obsorved in those early days of the war I am convinced that the revolution did not go deep enough for Simon Cameron, and that it went deeper than was anticipated at its beginning by Air. Lincoln.

OVER THEIR GRAVES.

Over their graves rang once the bugle's call, The serchi-g shrapnel,and the crashing ball The shriek, the shock of battle, and the nei^h

Of horse the criea of aaguiso and dismay And the loud caunou's thunders that appall. .Vow through Uio years the browri pine-need.'es full, The vin?s rut. riot by the old stone wall,

By hedge, by meadow streamlet, far away, Over their graves! We love our dead where'er so held in thrall Than they no Greek more bravely died, nor

Gnul—

A love that's deathlessl but they look to-day With no rcproachcs on us when we say, "Come! .'et us clasp jour hands, we're brothers ail,"

Over their graves!

—Henry Jerome Stockard in The Century,'

An Unhealthful Locality-

Time. Now Missionary (to perishing heathen)—How long do missionaries usually lost in this climateP

Perishing Heathen—'Bout two meals.

Josh Billings' Philosophy,

New York Weekly. Thare iz nothing we are more apt to parade before others than our kares and sorrows, and thare iz nothing the world kares so little about.

If you hav enny doubt about the vast amount ov virtue that the last generashun possest, go and studdy the epitaffs in the grave-yards.

Take affability, good sense, honesty for and good breeding, mix them together, and shake them well, and you hav the ingredients for agent eman.

in

The good things a man duz are hard to remember, the easy things are dredful easy.

The world seems to be governed bi example thare iz hardly enny one so low down the skale but what he haz hiz imitators.

Truth kan stand alone, but a lie haz to lean on sumthing, generally another lie.

Thare iz nothing that grows so fast, and reaches maturity so quick, and begins to dekay so soon, az a mushroom. It would be well for sum phoiki to think ov this.

Don't Waste Your Time

and money experimenting with doubtful remedies, when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is so positively certain in its curative action as to warraut its manufacturers in supplying it to the public, as they are doing through druggists, under a duly executed certificate of guarantee that it will accomplish all it is recommended to do, or money paid for it will be promptly returned. It cures toi'pid liver, or biliousness, indigestion, or dyspepsia, all humors, or blood taints, from whatever cause arising, skin and scalp diseases, scrolulous affections. (not excepting consumption, or lung scrofula), if taken in time and given a fair trial. ___

The proposed pugilistic mill frequently turns out to be a wind mill.

M. THOMPSON CO., Druggists, Con^ers-pc-rt, I'ii.. s:iy flail's C-tarrii Cure is the st Mid sum* care for catarrh tbey ever sold. Jjrugeisis suil it. 7.x:.

The bric-a-brac gatherer -never thinks that he is the worst for ware.

A Sensible IVlan

Would use Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, it is curing more cases of (Joughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup, and all Throat and Lung troubles,than any other medicine. Tne proprietor has authorized any druggist to give you a Sample Bottle Free to convince you of the merit of this great remedy. Large Bottle- 50 cents and $1.

The courtship should always be steered for the port of matrimony.

How to Gain Flesh and Strength. Use after each meal Scott's Emulsion it is as palatable as milk. Delicate people improve rapidly upon its use. For Consumption,Throat affections and Bronchitis it is unequalled. Dr. Thomas Prim, Ala., says "Iused Scott's Fiinulsion on a child eight months old he gained four pounds in a month.'' init is easier to live within your come than to live without one.

Why rub, and toil, and wear out yourself and your clothes on washday, when, ever sincc IStj-l, Dobbins' Electric Soap has been offered on purpose to lighten your labor and save your clothes. Isow try it. Your grocer has it.

The ballet girl doesn't kick at what she is paid, but for it.

Oregon, tlu Puradise uf farmers. Jfild, equable eliina e, crtain and abundant jrops. 3 st fruit, grain, grags »nd stock country :ii the world. Full iniorsuati free. Address the Oregon Immigration Board. Portland, Ore.

No Opium in Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures_wliere other remedies fail. 25c,

A pocket match safe free to smokers of "Tansill's Punch" 5c. Cigar.

'The world's fair"their hearts.

-The ladies, bless

Catarrh

Is a complaint which affects nearly everybody, more or less. It originates in a cold, or succession of colds, combined with impure blood. Dis agreeable flow from the nose, tickling in the throat, offensive breath, pain over and between the eves ringing and bursting noises in the ears, lire the more common symptoms. Catarrh is urod by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which strikes directly at its cauie by removing all impurities from the blood, building up the diseased tissues and giving healthy tone to the who.e system.

Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 s'x for 85. Prepared only by O. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass.

IOO Doses One Dollar.

Ely's Cream Balm Is sure to cure

TIFFIN. OHIO.

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THE

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You work in all weather. You want an "allweather" coat. In fact, the best waterproof coat in the worid. No frail rubber affair that will rip before the week is out. Rubber costs niore, ana lasts bnt a *h"rt tvne. Four teamsters out of five wear the Fish brand" waterproof clothing. Thcv are the only teamsters' waterproof coats that are light, stionp, durable, and cheap. 'Ihey cost very little, and last a long time. They never get sticky or peel off. The buttons are wire-fastened, and never come off. They are absolutely waterproof and wind-proof. Until you own one you will never know the comfort of a rainy day. 15eware of worth'ess imitations, every garment stamped with the "Fish Brand" Trade Mark. Don't accept any inferior coat when you can have the ish Brand Slicker delivered without extra cost. Particulars and illustrated catalogue free.

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SCIENCE

TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE.

A National Family Paper—Two Millions of Readers.

The volume of The Companion for 1890 will he unsurpassed by any previous year in the variety of entertaining and instructive articles. The full Announcement of Authors and Articles will be sent on application.

Ten Serial Stories

fully illustrated, and among the most attractive ever published.

ISO Short StorSes—Thrilling Adventures Sketches of Travel —Health ancJ Kyglcno Biographical Sketches —1,000 Short Articles—Popular Scionco Natural History—Outdoor Sports—Anecdotos

Etiquette—Wit and Humor—Poetry.

Illustrated Weekly Supplements

Were given with nearly every issue during the last year, and will be continued. They give an increase oi nearly one-half in tho matter and illustrations, without any increase iu the price of the paper.

Eminent Contributors. Articles of great value and interest w^l he given in the volume for 1890 by

Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Hon. James C. Blaine, Justin McCarthy, EV1. P., General Lord-Wolseley, Senator Geo. F. Hoar, Hon. John G. Carlisle, Sir Wlorel! Mackenzie, Prof. John Tyndall, Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, Eugene Schuyler, C. A. Stephens, Lt. Fred Schwatka,

And Ono Hundred other well-known and favorite writers.-

Four Donbls Holiday

Are in preparation, anil will he exceedingly attractive, filled (lie writers, asid profusely illustrated. Tliey aro puliii

Thanksgiyina:— Christmas Mew Yoai

Those Souvenir Numbers art sc nt to Each Subscriber.

$5,000 Prise Stories.

Nearly Six Thousand Stories have been examined. The titles and authors of those which will receiro Prizes cannot yet be announced, but the successful Stories wiil be published during the coming year.

The Editorials give comprehensive views of important current events at home and abroad. Tho Children's Page contains charming Stories, Pictures, Anecdotes, Rhymes and Puzzles, adapted to the youngest readers.

Household Articles will be published frequently, giving useful information in Art Work, Fancy Work, Embroidery, Decoration of Rooms, Cooking, and Hints on Housekeeping.

Yootc's

Into a Carver.

CHARMING® WEEKLY C«™^s|llPPIipTS|

AND

NATURAL HISTORY

PAGE

Jr—

"PT "K *i TH. wci

special wor!: of onr £iY0.rife liedat

Easter.

The Backward Boy, And How to Develop his Powers. A pcrit'3 of articles by the Presidents of three leading Universi-

ties which will interest boys and their parents.

FHEE TO JHft. 1, 1!

To any New Snbspribor Trim will cnt out and spihI lis fhi! slip, with name and I'ost Offlco oddr?sn nnfl SSt.75 for a year's siiliwriptiori, we will s«*iul The Youth's Companion FTtTCF. to .Tn*i. 1, anl for a foil year from tliaf. d'lto. This o!V includes thP FOUR DOUBT.R ftOUDAY xrirf*.K7?S, the TI.I.UST71ATF.D WKEHX1T SUPPI/EMENTS, ami the ANNUAL PKEWfUM T/ifiT, with SOO illustrations.

Send money by Post-Office Money Orrler, Oheolc, or Tl"Kistfrod better. 39

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A S A Pop

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