Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 October 1892 — Page 3
STAR-PR]■ SS. tiik glory] faa1k,iica IvSSffSfiS
tiPr ||c;i'.tli'. llld., ()<M. EXTRA. PAGES 9 AND 10. FOl'KTEI'N DliOVVNED.
WRECK OF AN UNSEAWORTHY VESSEL.
•an wc-d -rriNi f'l - D ORATORS , |L VER -TONO^ LAND.
Two KilUM in a 4'olliHlon Imliana'M iHlrutiu!: l aw iuvalh! Tuttle Oeutl —KhkI.iikI ^xelucles tHttle Hccause of Infeeti mi KotliFM-hllirM ( reillt.
<lre«lth \imi\<TNary <>ruml Import of fill
tiuu World.
Work to I lie C'lirla-
bld ft wrt’rorw ver ISh oometh irtH. All na-
Aw Ther Ameri-
can. loving no country except hi own but loving all mankind as his brother, bids you 'mter and fear not; bids you partake with us of these
ti ait s of! of a ' i. i ■ i if 1 " . f\
development and behold these trophies of 10© years of American independence and freedom! At this moment in every part of the American l uion the children are taking up the won-
drous tale of the discovery. See— "Our young barbarians all at play."
for better thui these we have nothing to exhibit. They, indeed, are our crown jewels— the truest though the Inevitable offsprings of our civilization and development; the repre-
* i .. [Nut's Speech.
The \ lee-PreuHl
■wr. i, . , ♦ -\r lOIl accepted the ««*I u*ti»4auviwii «uw urvuiupmcui, me ropre-
, nHlt-
dedlcated the mreat ting, well-choeen wojW
n, i
Ho said:
must be the sorPreshlent of the
[ihe central figure in ng fmm t hese huh
Lost ut
The bunking sohoonor E. li. Phillips, Bwnod by Gtorgo More, Hearts Continent, Newfoundland, In supposed to have sunk in the gale of August last at anchor at Newfoundland banks. Captain Howell, of a vessel belonging to the same •Irui, has reported having picked up gear belonging to the Phillips, evidence that the schooner bad met her end. Her crew numbered fourteen. The rhillips was an American vessel about Be years old and hail been reported in an unlit « on lition for bunk lishing. Ifnlti (lie I.iw ( iicoiiHtltutioiiui. The Indiana Sup r “mo Court rendered a decision declaring iiueoustituLionul the registration law. The ease was ap■pnaled from Hendricks County and the decision o the lower court was afllrmed. Tito registration features of tiie law were made to apply chiefly to commercial travelers and residents of the State absent in the employ ol the government. The grounds on which the law is hold to he a violation of the Constitution is that it is class legislation. <'renpo’s <ij»v«»rmii**iit t <> IJc Krcogni/ed. Thp. State Department is in receipt of a cable message li'.nn Minister Scruggs reporting that arrangements for the recognition of the new Government of Yenozue’a under Cion. Crespo by the United States were concluded Oct. lx, ami that the formal ceremonies of recognition took place Sunday, the ‘Jtid. I !*«-iglit :in I l.r.ivi'l Train* ('<»lli<l«*. A ^ r.M-ijorn i> gravol train on tlin Wontrose division of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad collided with an east-bound freight train at Palatine, twenty-six miles from Chicago. Monday evening. Two men were killed, but others escaped by jumping. BREVITIES. ' T =y«AsKA Democrats have decided to ^ '''•e Weaver electors. A-owsifts; Swift,aged Hi, tried to commit suicide in the Bordentown, N. .1.,
churchyard.
Gen. .Tamks W. Tftti.t, of Iowa, the hero of Fort bonelson, died at -'isii Grande, Ari., of paralysis. * hi* v every city in \Yestern. .Piuvftr o.utn'oi Menna. The disease is supposed to have treen introdu •e<i from
Buda Pesth.
H. J. Wilson, of San Francisco, supposed to he a wealthy man and about 40 years, of age, was asphyxiated in his room in the Manhattan Hotel, Atlantic
City, N. .1.
I The Rothschilds lave .-.eeured 411,500,000 worth of l.ullion in London for Russia without applying to the Hank ot England. A strong demand for gob]
still exists.
Hi'.vity Oveiuieck, a farmer near Beatrice, Neb., was probably fatally injured during a quarrel with Williau Meyer ami August Kehlessinger over the ownership of a piece of land. { John Fokd, aged 50 years, n keeper at the Zoological Garden, Philadelphia, had an encounter with an infuriated
Rooky Mountain elk
Air. Pn-Nident: Heefi'h. row which prohibits tit]
tnlted States from h' ‘'Uttie from tlifs<-smnp-thescoercmonljJs. U«iiTO,., lt „f detdtrn. the tnous Hiirroundlnir. tiie |l tlll vustm-ss of reaileauacyof . xccutIon « L. how ardently he suits, we may w. ll lmj t, d personally oonhas aspired linked to the
id wf
Ihalf of i.ll the . all hall to the
and to the preset fald have spoken ot what eloquent words he f radiant future of the heroh itchlevem.nU e profoundly his beloved country, ui^, earthly alteranKUinheu in In^ moHt WdpUvnr full dp in tio„ he would not have A wt i.n only offer these dcdicaton -•fHees tJ rofo , llld Hmi ua |.
to support his coaragt by r
versal Hvinpathy. ie country and of rhe attention of onr wbi,* d ln |n du ,trial all peoples elsewhere coMf|] ie ,.j t , G f progress Ik to-.lav flxi*l upfl,, UlP ,,| a „ cago. 1 his i» due not onl* epoch, but to the r.xposltion which marks IL V u f t |, 0 Hecon< i marvelous growth and entl,,. | ^ not ,, pr( . conitqyrcial city of the itr rv „ f t | llH ,. ltV h to recount the wonderful #1 are known of'all rise iiml lolvnneeim in IJthe (...vemment
rn'-n. I am In i** in behalf vr of the I’nited States, inlp people, to hid all hail to t
ColiimMiiii Exposition. Vrt' Look upon
>\ hat a spectacle have we CO nslder their
these magnificent erectmi They seem lieHUty and rapldlt y of real, V h of A i a( i d | I19 to be evoked at a wizard s V P. record tho lamp. Thev (ire worthy hS«1 ^jiolurnbus achlevemciitsot t in-two 5 «r,.,'. # lr . u ldeas
is not now in chums, nor ar ^ M
in fetters. ^^^"Jracter and
We may not anticipate ttf H ,If, er ma - w „
valno of onr n.'itiopftl exhibiff w j|^ j )0 anticipate that a eonservat^ nation made bv the world’s erittcispJ^» future We eagerly listening to t he l.eg l. 1 t| come from can •iifiily predict those wno<> 0 ^ha ex?yrr y r ,t¥ io " T un ' r H r .i 1 ants of the hibit. Tliey will he the dei A g * 0 f many of sturdy and venerable immigrl t ' h ,.| r Jnat .k m
flu* men of his time who inn)
history. ijf another oenMo are near the beginninri poe,,^ ln our tury. and If no serious chanriL, the . ifettme present grow th in the year Pdftngli- li-speak-of many now in manhood, fhofuui iber more
uhlicnns of A lerica wis
and inspired by liberty and education. God bless the children and their mothers! God bless our COUDtry'8 tiau! And God in* with us now and ever. God in the roof-tree s shade and
I0T
Ing republicans of £ jer
than mo.ooo.ouu.
"ff* . j* obaraeter of I ho transcendent featare in fJ UM , a lned him
Columbus was his faith. Thk > ||} finally irave in days of trial and dark■ ■ ■ -
him the srreat discoveic have faith in our future.
^ the Govern-
ment of the Vnited S .ten I jj ten
these buildings and heir apt : !n | t ,. d states
for"/he nseoVtUToX^Co^ b1 *'' U
I
Mr. President, in the nam»‘[
HF.NRV WATTEUSON.
God on the highway, God in the wind* and
waves, and God in all our hearts! Chauncey I>«*|>«*\v’h Addres.*.
This day belongs not to America, lint to the world. The results of the event It commemorate* are the heritage of the people of every race and ollme. We celebrate the emancipation of man. The preparation was the work of almost countless centuries, the realization was the revelation of one. The cross on Calvary was hope; the cross raised on San Salvador w as opportunity- But for the first. Columbus would never have sMled^but for the second, there would have been !£fi)lat‘c for the planting. tho nurture and thewtpansion of civil and religious liberty. Ancient history is a dreary record of unstable civilizations. Each reached its zenith of material splendor and perished. The Assyrian, Persian. Egyptian. Grecian and Kouhiu I rUipires were proofs of the possibilities and limitation* of men for conquest and intellectual development. Their destruction in-
late prcvfrnrtion irrtft* colonies. TTVs men who wrote in the cabin «*f the Mayflowe? the first charter of freedom, a government of just and equal law*, were a little band of proteetants against every form ef injustice and tyranny. The leaven of their principles made possible the Declaration of Independence, liberated the slaves, and founded the free commonwealths which form t he Iteuublic of the United States. The scope anil limitations of this idea of freedom have neither been misinterpreted nor misunderstood. The laws of nature in their application to the rive and recognition of men according to their mental, moral, spiritual and physical endowments are left undisturbed. The sum of human happiness has been infinitely increased by the millions from the old world who have improved theli conditions in the new, and the returning tide of lesson and experience lias incalculably enriched the Fatherlands. The divine right of kings has taken Its place with the instruments of mediaeval torture among the curiosities of the antiquary. Only the shadow of kingly authority stands between the Government of themselves, by themselves, and the people of Norway and Sweden. The union in one empire of states of Germany is the symbol of Teutonic power and the hope of German llbeialism. The petty despotisms of Italy have been merged into a nationality which has centralized its authority In its ancient capitol on the hills of Homo. France was rudely roused from the sullen submission of centuries to intolerable tyranny by her soldiers returning from service in the American revolution. The wild orgies of the reign of terror were the revenges and excesses of a people who had discovered their power, but were not prepared for its beneficent use. She tied from herself into the arms of Napoleon, lie, too. was a product of the American experiment. He played with kings as with toys, anil educated France for liberty. In the processes of her evolution from darkness to light, she tried Bourbon, and Orleanist, ami the third Napoleon, ami cast them aside. Now in the fullness of time, ami through the training in the school of hardest experience, the French people have reared and enjoy a permanent republic. England of the Mayflower and of .lames II., England of George III. and of Lord North, has enlarged suffrage and is to-day animated and governed by the democratic spirit. She has her throne, admirably occupied by one of the wisest of sovereigns and best of women, but it would not survive one dissolute and unworthy successor. Hie has her hereditary peers, but the House of Lords will be brushed aside the moment it resists the will of
the people.
The time has arrived for both a closer union ... , v - >ov a
and greater distance betwei n the Old \Vorld qn u
and the New. The former imiiecrlmlnate wel-4 ’ aiinri.
come to our prairies, ami the present invitation to these palaces of art and industry, mark t li«* passing period, in watched and unhealthy immigration can no longer be permitted to our shores. We must have a national quarantine against disease, pauperism and crime. We do not want candidates for our hospitals, our poor houses, or our jails. We cannot admit those who come to undermine our institutions and subvert our laws. But we will gladly throw wide our gates for, and receive with open arms, those who by intelligence and virtue, by thrift and loyajty, are worthy of receiving the equal advantages of
WHAT OF THE WEATHER
FOSTER’S FORECASTS TELL
THE STORY.
A Ssvsrs Sli,rin Accoiliptxill*-(l by I ^Irl-<-hI ilisturlimirys Will Cross tlit- 'I..six Yttll.-y .Ylmut October 31 — I.or**Or
Weather Will Follow.
Cool WsMthi't- Comliijp. My last Bulletin ^ave forecasts of the Btorni waves to cross the continent from 'J4th to 28th, ami the next will reach tho Pacific coast about the 2*.Uh, cross the W estern mountains by the close of the 30th, the great central valleys from October 31*t to November 2U, and tho Eastern States about November 3d. This will be a severe storrn, and at its greatest force while crossing tho Mississippi Valley. An ele trie storm will probably accompany this disturbance, causing many dinieultics in tiie telegraphic service. This electric storm will probably be at its greatest force about No /. 4 or 5. The co d wave will cross the Western mountains about Nov. 1, tiie great Central \ alloys about the 3d, and the Eastern States about the 5th. I.orul Forecast*. Weather changes move from west to east, across the continent, and earti local forecast is made for within 250 miles east and west of the magnetic meridian mentioned, and for ail tho country between 25 and 50 degrees of north latitude. These local weather changes will occur within twenty-four hours before or after sunset of tiie dates given: SANTA FE, DENVER ANl> BLACK HILLS
MEKIPIAN. (litotier—
LIES ASLEEP IN DEATH..
MRS.
HARRISON PEACEFULLY PASSES AWAY.
rbw FimI Whs Fnllllrs. Ilirideiil. of tbs lluuie l.lfs of t be First I.Hrly of the I.hikI —An Iticul W ite mill Mother.
Itest at I.H.t.
Mrs. Harrison is no more. At 1:40 n. m., Tuesday, came tho end. For tho second time in the tdstory of the Whito House a President's wife lias died within its walls. Mis. Harrison met death with the patience and resignation of a devout Christian, and her last days were comparatively free from pain. It oould hardly be said that the patient was unconscious during the evening hours, for she betrayed some signs of understanding tile attempts made to relieve her last moments by partially opening her [pur bed lips to receive the stimulating iluid applied to them from time to time. But not a drop could she swallow, and tiie power of speech hud apparently left her frumo forever. In addition tiie physician's experienced eye note 1 us the evening wore on an increase in tho tliflieulty of breathing, which was regarded as an ominous sign. At last tiie end came, and surrounding tho bedside of tho loved one were all the members of the family, hi Washington. For a few momonte the silent watchers were overwhelmed with grief. When they emerged from the room, the President retired to his own chamber, and was alone with his great bereavement. .Mr*. li;trrl*on'* Horn#* Lift*. Incidents innumerable are told of Mrs. Han isui's home life. Mrs. Harrison directed her own household after the most approved housewifely ex-
The npirit and object of this exhibition are
peace and kinship.
Three millions of Germans, who are among the “best citizens of the vepnbllc, send greeting. to the Fatherland their pride in its gloiiofis history, its ripe literature. Its traditions and associations. Irish, equal fh number to t t^»se who still remain upon the Emerald Isle, who have illustrated their devotion to their adopted country on many a battle-field fight*
VICK PRFSIDEIfT MOK
tion to the world’s progress in a in agriculture and in manufactur
I dedicate them to humanity.
God save the United States of .^.j.
Henry \Vatter*on’s Oruth
Among the wonders of creative pf'Uctlve genin* in course of prepn Hits festival 01 the nations, whose f« official inauguration has brought us will presently be witnessed upon tn of the interocean which gives to t and beautiful city the character a’’ maritime metropolis, a spectator the Columbian epic will be told > effects surpassing the most splen press!vc achievements of the mod traces the strange adventures of seer from the royal camp of Hant very moment that beholds us he freemen, equal shareholders in th American civilization and deve’
among ns who does n.
and received in- Maker that he has lived to join in
\ dence,
l conon for
and ther. rgin
noble ! t of a /herein nil stic Id imge. D noese o the izens, cle of « Is k his liver-
volved a sum of misery and relapse which made ] j*lft^ of American citizenship,
their creation rather a curse than a blessing, j God always has In training some commanding genius tor the control of gn at crises in the affairs of nations and peoples. The number of these leaders are less than the centuries, but their lives are the history of human progress. Though Ciesar and Charlemagne, and Hildebrand, and Luther, and William the Conqueror, and Oliver Cromwell, and all the epoch makers prepared Europe for the event, and contributed to the result, the lights which Illumine our firmauent to-day are Columbus the discoverer. Washington the founder and Lincoln the ftavior. O Neither realism nor romancr furff^P^ more striking and picturesque figure t tlm of Chrtfttopher Columbus The mystery about hlsfOrigin h- ightens the charm of his story. That he came from among the toilers of his time is in harmony with the struggles of our period. Forty-four authentic portraits of him have descended to us, and no two of them are the counterfeits of the same person. Each represents a character as distinct as its canvas. Strength ami weakness, intellectuality and stupidity, high moral purpose and brutal feroottv. uiirltv^ .\. ummmia . xne perils of the sea in bis youth upon the rich arirostea of Genoa, or In the servire of the licensed rovers who made them their prey, had developed a skillful navigator and Intrepid mariner. They had given him a glimpse of the possibilities of the unknown, beyond the highways of travel, which roused an unquenchable thirst for adventure and research. The study of the narratives of previous explorers, and diligent questionings of the daring spirits who had ventured far toward the tallied West, gradually evolved a theory, which became in his mind so fixed a fact that lie could inspire others with tils own passionate beliefs. The words,''tliat is a lie, written by him on the inar^lu of nearly evetv page of a volume of the travels of Marco I’olo. which is still to he found in a Genoese library, illustrate the
Juries which resulted in his death. FrEhident Diaz, of Mexico, has ajipointed Antonio Mier, General Mona, and Joaquin Casasus us delegates tc the Brussels monetary conference. The .first two named are already in Europe. The nia’hine shops of the Indiana
Bicycle Company at
burned. Loss,
school building at Ridgcville, Ind., was also burned, l.oss, $15,000, with no
insurance.
Dl ltlNti a L'nnic of hall at Perry Center, N. Y., a lad ajjed 18, named Thomas Buell, hutted a foul ball which flew amom: the spectators and struck David Allen, aged 18, over the heart, killing him instantly. Messrs. James and Benton, members of Parliament, and Mr. Long, an ex-member of Parliament, have been
■on
h
ugh the
sal celebration, the jubilee of man We look before and after and we the half-drawn folds of time as t solemn arvliwaya of some grand cn long procession puss, as silent and dream; the caravels tossing upo billows, have their sails retilled fro.,
and hear away to the west; the land is «. .. and fulfilled Is the vision whose actij””, are to he gathered by other hands than I J 1 j*’ 1 * 1 ] planned the voyage and steered the '^ rK OI
I n liimiipolis welc discovery. -mrth • •|M,„ We look again and we see in the fa*i “Y 1 ■ • hi public east t he old woi Id struggle between k 1 '
and English transfeired to the new, the tragedy upon the heights above
we see the -tnrily puritans In bell^_ hats and sable garments assail In unefffRl
,10]
al the 1 as a
pant la ‘ e east fcohed.
dV
\ Efl# ‘fc:
tie the Hftvage ami the element*, oven
both to
see
line the
mig
da tin
ing
foe; we
cavalier* to tiie .southward join liL , with tiie roundhead* in holy rebellion. •
against
gay but
tier
16M ud*
ip! down from the green walled hilN oO’ %%
i: 1 iv "f t Ik* l'ari); i: . iaH '
come faintly to tiie ear. like far-away
England, out of tiie swamns of the Caro come faintly to tiie ear. like far-away 1 leaves stirred to music by autumn wind drum-tups of the revolution; tin* trar minute men, Israel i'utnam riding hi
the the the the
Darkest iingland ' fund. I ground, stand A vr.UDicT for $10,000 damages for "The old continental*,
breach of promise of marriage was returned in tho United States District
skepticism of hi* beginning and the first vision of the New World the fulfillment of his
faith.
To secure the meim* to test tiie truth of Ills speculations, this poor aud unknown (Ire mer, must win the support of kings and overcome tho hostility of tiie church. He never doubted his ability to do both, though he knew of no man living who was so great in power, or lineage. or learning that lie could accomplish either. Unaided and alone he succeeded in arousing the jealous!-* of sovereigns, and dividing the councils of the ecclesiastics. "I will command your fleet and discover for yen new realm*, but only on condition that you confer on me hereditary nobility, the Admiralty of the Ocean, and tiie Vice Key ally and one-tenth tiie revenues of tiie New Worid," were his haughty terms to King John of Portugal. After ten years of disappointment and poverly, subsisting most of the time upon the charity of the enlightened monk of the Convent of Hibida, who was his unfaltering friend, he stood before the throne of Ferdinand and Isabella, and rising to imperial dignity in his rags, embodied the .same royal conditions in his petition. The capture of Granada, the expulsion of Islam from Europe, and the triumph of the Cross, aroused the admiration and devotion of Christendom. But this proud beggar, holding in his grasp the potential promise and dominion vif Eldorada and Cathay. divided with the Moslem surrender, the attention of sovereigns and bishops. France and England indicated a desire to hear his theories, and see his maps, while he was still a suppliant at the gates of the camp of Castile and Aragon, the sport of its courtiers, and the scoff of its confessors. Ills unshakeahle faith, that Christopher Columbus was commissioned from Heaven, both by his name and by divine command to carry "Christ across the sea" to new continents arid pagan people, lifted him so far above the discouragements of an empty purse and a contemptuous court that he was proof against the rebuffs of fortune or of friends To conquer the prejudices of the clergy, to win the approval and financial support of the state, to venture upon that unknown ocean which, according to tho
belief of the age, was peopled with demons and savage beasts of frightful shape, and from
Court at Graham. Texas, in favor of Miss M iry Etta IValc, of Cincinnati, against Hr. G. A. Cristlor, of Texas. Weii-iTF.k Flannii.w, Collector of Customs, and oilier federal officials at El Bush, Tex., have been indicted on the charge of allowing Chinese to enter the United Ktates for a consideration, and for issuing ) asses allowing Celestials to cross the boundary us they
pleased,
A tir.lM tation from Deptford waited
urged him to repeal the
ngainst tho importation of live cattle.
hoof-heats ot Sinuter's horse Kolioplng tul 1 ., front; the thunder of Siark’e guns in •pi,** battle; the irleam of .Marlon's watch-flnT _, ghostly btrouao; and there, there In aer‘ lea ’
uuInl.lOrA -ntilru .... S'nt.ia'u nAMwilUg- wllicll till'rOWa* HO pOSKlhility Of Tl'Mim, TP-
quired the teal of Peter the Hermit, the ohivalriu couraite of the (Td. and t he IniHitinat inn of Dante, ('oltimbus belimited to that high order of cranks who oontideutly walk where angels fear to tread,* and often become the benefac-
tors of their country or their kind
It was a happy omen of. the position which women was to hold in America, that the only person who comprehended the majestic scope of his plans, and the invincible qualities of his genius, was the able and gracious Queen of Castile. Isabella, alnue of all the dignitaries of that age. shares with Columbus the honors of his great achievement, she arrayed her kingdom and Imr privat" fortune behind the enthusiasm of tills mystic mariner, and posterity pays homage to her wisdom and faith. The rulers of the old world began with partitioning the new. The northern continent was divided between England, France and Spain, and the southern between Spain and i Portugal. France, wanting the capacity for colonization, which still characterizes her,
omr^dMi
<To(i,' oiVrT)ie"s's'c(i I n ion . ' NSTthThcse survPril^t
c h »e n h
In their ragged regimental*, Yielding not,” 1
as. amid the singing of angels in heaven,Ur 1 ® scene i* shut out from our mortal vLai if proud and happy tear*. I . We see the rise of the young republic; P , the gentlemen In the knee-br >oohea * , powdered wigs who signed the declaration the gentlemen in knee-breeclies and powihw u wigs who made the Constituti a. We seel '' little nation menaced from without. We ■' ® the riflemen in hunting-shirt and bucks*" 1 swarm from the cabin in the wilderness to w i ‘j rescue of country and home; and our swell to a second and final decree of iudepenT
upon Herbert Gardner, President of tho ments of freedom
..... . 1.X-.4 ocssa lil.
enee won by the prowess and valor of Ame
can arms upon the laud and sea.
And then, and then since there is no life nations or of men without its shadow and I sorrow—there conies a day w hen the spirits the fathers no longer walk upon thebattl.
31—Storm wave on this meridian.
November—
iVind changing.
2^Cooler and clearing.
3— Fair and cool. 4— Moderating.
5— Warmer.
GALVESTON, KANSAS CITY AND MINNE-
APOLIS MERIDIAN.
October—
30— Moderating.
31— Warmer.
November— , 1—Storm wave on this meridian. 3—Wind changing. 3— Cooler and clearing. 4— Fair and cool.
5— Moderating.
ATLANTA, CINCINNATI AND LANSING
MERIDIAN. October-
30— Fair and cool. 31— Moderating. November—
1— Warmer.
2— Storm wave on this meridian. 3— Wind changing. .
4— Cooler anil clearing. i... . . . .. UJp u Fair and cool. an were Urau,ftJ, r i, > ov „ jironlotlon to Mrs. Harrison in
is t K-' r n nthnnj
/rent plants street
CUACJNCE.' M. PE PEW.
ing for the Union and its perpetuity, have rather intensified than diminished their love for the land of the shamrock, and their sympathy with the aspirations of their brethren at home. The Italian, the Knaniard. and the Frenchman, the Norwegian, the Swede, and the Pane, the English, the Scotch, and the Welsh, are none the less loyal and devoted Americans because, in this congress of their kin. the tendrils of affection draw them closer to the hills and valleys, the legends and the loves associ-
ated with their youth.
Edmund Burke, speaking in the British Parliament with prophetic voice, said: "A great -'i 1 ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘
not by chopping and changi
revolution has happened- a revolution made, of the existing Stages, but by the appearance
; of power In any
of a new State, of a new species, in a new part of the globe. It has made as great a change in all the relations and balances and gravitations of power as the appearance of a new planet would in the system of the solar world." Thus was the humiliation of our successful revolt tempered to the motherland by pride in the state created by her children. If we claim heritage in Bacon, Shakspeare. and Milton, we also acknowledge that it was for liberties guaranteed Englishmen by sacred charters our fathers triumphantly fought. While wisely rejecting throne and caste and privilege and an Established Church in their new-born state, they adopted the substance of English liberty and the body of English law . Closer relations than with other lands, and a common language rendering easy interchanges of criticlsms and epithet, sometimes irritate and offend, but the heart of republican America beats with responsive pulsations to the hopes and aspirations of the people of Great Britain. The grandeur and beauty of this spectacle are the eloquent witnesses of peace and progress. The Parthenon and the cathedral exhausted the genius of the ancient and the skill of the mediteval architects in housing the statue or spirit of Deity. In their ruins or their antiquity they are mute protests against the merciless enmity of nations, which forced art to flee to the altar for protection. The United States welcomed tho sister republios of the southern and northern continents, and the nations and people of Europe and Asia, of Africa and Australia, with the products of their lands, of their skill and of their industry to this city of yesterday, yet clothed with royalsplendor as the Queen of the Great Lake*. The artists and architect* of the country have been hidden
. T ,-TT'-Lf-
to de*igii and erect the buildings which shall
illi pee
of the world permits and protects their efforts
lustrate the height of our civilization and the breadth of our hospitality. The peace
fitly
(i I
in utilizing their powers for man's temporal
welfare. The result is
English Hoard of Agriculture, and s®om* lost, save
urged I
Sflk'l Dirtierrepliril that through the op- S'o7 ^S l ™nown'UaslS U rae l n.lX.l *“ ,h <,f llle of ..ration of the prohibition Kntfland was X * * mind t„ preconf . this tiTrllon; that^ov. ; rn..»>nt . ! f people.
olty snatched from the aalips to rise Ta'splei'r d ' u ' to the wi, ' loni and ™“r»izc. the
almost the only Kuropoan country that Truly, out of trial comes the ntreucth of is froc from foot and mouth .lisoase, "“j, 0 " 1 of dl ' , “ tcr co,,,e * tb,? *i°ryof th.> and he was, therefore, compelled tore- We are met this day to honor the memory oil mao to grant their request. ! Christopher Columbus, to celebrate the ftootu ° annual return of the year of his tiun*cend-| Nineteen buildlnga were destroyed ent achievement, and, with fitting rites, toi . , .. , ,,, . .I. m dedicate to America and the universe a eon by the fire ut fete. Anno do Beaupro. ihe rVete exposition of the world’s progress be-
#>• rvYstiia on.nntiin.rv iin I fthrinowM.BHfl.ved. tween 1492 and 1892.
for the people anti by the people was inaugurated, and has become a triumphant success. The Puritan settled in New England and the Cavalier in the South. They represent the op-
famotiB sanctuary and shrine was saved. Hf.ven men were killed and six fatally and five seriously hurt by tho collapse of the false work of the new bridge near
Seattle, Wash.
tween 14W2 and 1892.
No twenty centuries can be compared witlC those four oentu ries either in importance or in interest, as no previous ceremonial can be compared with this in it* wide Hignificance and reach; because, since the advent of the Bon of God. no event has had ho great an in- . fluence upon human affair* a* the discovery
William H. Irvine hus boon noquit- the western hemisphere. , Our republic represents the letter and spirit
toil <»f tho murder of t E. Montgomery e l the snhllme declaration. The fetters that ..i T lunnln Noli l h jund her to the earth are burst asunder. The at Liincuiu, I'M. . : ri _, that degraded her beauty are ooat aside. Twenty-one countlea in Arkansas llle the enclisnted princess in the leqend, olad
voloti against tho salo of liquor, rule will Blond Rood for two years.
p..sites of spiritual and temporal life and opiniona. The processes of liberty liberalized the one and elevated the other. (Yashlnifton
Tho •P 0 * 1 ' 1 *® raiment and wearing a orownof t|,e product of commercial spirit of Great
and Adams were the new types. Their union In a common cause irave the world a republic both stable and free. It possessed conserve tlsm without bigotry, and liberty without license. It founded Institutions Htrongenough to resist revolution, and elastic enouah for Indefinite extension to meet the requirements ,n government of ever enlarging areas of population, aud the needs of progress and
growth.®
The Mayflower, with the Pilgrims, and a (Dutch ship laden with AfrP an slaves were cm She ocean at tli.' sa:ii'' time, the nne sailing for I UssachasettH ami the other for Virginia. Kta company of aatnts. and tlrsi cargo ol '.laves, represented the forces which were to f^Tl and rescue free government. The slaver
living light, she steps In the (perfection of her .■ | zcodurlty upon the scene of this th* latest and [r
rltatu and the greed of the times to stlmu-
thls I’sik of Palaces.
The originality and boldness of their conceptions, and the magnitude and harmony of their creations arc the contributions of America to the oldest of the arts and the cordial bidding of America to the peoples of the earth to come and bring the fruitage of tbelr age to the boundless opportunities of this unparalleled
exhibition.
If interest In the affairs of this world are vouchsafed to those who have gone before, the spirit of Columbus hovers over us to-day. Only by celestial Intelligence ran It grasp the full significance of this spectacle and cere-
monial.
From the first century to the fifteenth counts
for little in the history of progress, but in the period between tho fifteenth and twentieth Is crowded the romance and reality of human development. Life lias been prolonged, and Its enjoyment Intensified. The powers of the air and water, the resistless forces of the elements, which in the ttA.e of the discoverer were the visible terrors of the wrath of God, have been subdued to the service of man. Art and luxuries which could he possessed and enjoyed only by the rich and noble, the woiksof genius which were read and understood by the learned few. domestic comforts and surroundings beyond the reach of lord or bishop, now adorn and illumine t he homes of our citizens. Nerts are sovereigns and the people are kings. The trophies and splendors of their reign are commonwealths, rich In every attribute of great states, and united in s republic whose power and prosperity, and liberty and enligntmcnt are the
wonder and admiration of the world. All hall, Columbna, discoverer, dreamer, hero,
and apostle. We here, of every race and country, recognize the horizon which bounded his vision and tho infinite scope of his genius. ti,„ -ratltude and praise "MlJijijTI
Copyrighted last;* Lw-JN WuY'i
•| hr 'Pfeslilent lias pardoned eleven
convicted polygamists.
VICE ADMIltVLf'TEINHAHD, stationed at Wilholmshuven, died of paralysis. Botes City, Idaho, will be supplied with hot water from a natural Reyser. William Lincoln, a bank teller, died of hydrophobia in Now York City. Seriocs floods are reported in Italy, The lower part of Genoa is Inundated. W. II. Johnston, a printer, injured in Hie street-car accident at Cincinnati,
is dead.
The Omaha Road has inauguarated a dally through train between Duluth and
Chicago.
Tw elve THorSAND quail wore killed in Bartholomew County, Indiana, on
Saturday.
The business portion of Johnstown, Licking County, Ky., was almost de-
stroyed by lire.
The Dominion government will maintain separate Catholic schools at tho ex-
pense of tho State.
Roscoe Marble, colored, was hanged at Lafayette, Ga., for killing Rev. Nehemiah Witt. Homeseekers are crowding into the Crow reservation, which ha- been thrown open to settlers. John Evans, a convict at the Lincoln (Neb.) penitentiary, was fatally shot while attempting to escupc. Four hcndbed bales of cotton in the hold <>f the steamer Springwell, at New Orleans, were damaged by tire. The ship was uninjured. Heinrich Daniels, supposed to bo a resident of Toronto, Out., committed suicide on a railroad train near Ringhamton, N. V., by shooting himself. The Briggs heresy prosecution lias resulted in the Union Theological Seminary withdrawing from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. Gen. F. T. Dent, brother-in-law of Gen. Grant, who has been ill at Fort Logan, has improved sufficiently to be removed to his homo in Denver, Col. Trustees Younohusband and Fontaine, of the Iron Hall, were overlooked in the recent prosecutions, and ttie’.r cases will be taken up when the Grand
Jury meets again.
Robert P. Wilson, one of Buffalo's distinguished lawyers, died after an illness extending over several weeks which baffled the skill of expert physi-
cians. He was 52 years old.
Prof. E. B. Andrews, of Brown University, Providence, H. I., has been appointed delegate to tiie International Monetary Conference, vice F. A. Wal-
ker, who was compelled to resign.
A PREMATURE explosion of fireworks at n Democratic rally In St. Louis, Mo., fatally injured Michael Batchfonl, a candidate for tiie legislature, and Fritz Marquart. Others were painfully hurt. A wall fell on a gang of men at the Gleason A Bailey mill, Seneca Falls, N. killing George Ziegfried, aged 57, Michael Mansell, aged 55; Michael Conroy, aged 52; Fatrick Martin and Patrick Conroy. All five of tiie men who
were killed leave large families.
Cai*t. Andrews, in his Ifi-foot dory, In which lie crossed the Atlantic from Atlantic City, N. J., to Lisbon, has arrived at Palos, where ho received an
a practical sense, as she never before had a house with so few bed chambers in it as has tho Executive Mansion. The Empress of Germany has the minutest details of her imperial housekeeping at her royal fingers’ ends; so hail Mrs. Harrison all the domestic affairH of the President’s house within her knowing. She was the hea 1 of the housekeeping and she managed it witli all the care and discretion that she ever exorcised in her own house. Housemaids, housekeeper, and steward were all under Mrs. Harrison's supervising direction, whose first care was for tho comfort of her husband. Mrs. Harrison w.ts a model hostess, with a long experience in entertaining, both in Indianapoiis and in Washington, In both of which places her name is a synonym socially for all that is graceful and agreeable. When in Washington during the Senatorial terms of her husband she never assumed tho cares of a house of Iter own. but her quiet receptions onco or twice each week, held in her parlors, were frequented by the best people of tho city. Artistically she had what was almost a hobby for painting on china, in which she long indulged, and was very proficient. Delicate, fragile bits of china, plaques, and vases paintet by her bear traces of an al ost professional touch. This work, the result of tin original taste, coupled with constant practice,
is really charming.
In making her designs Mrs. Harrison was accustomed to gather buds aud blossoms fresh from tho flower boos, and make her studies directly from nature. Mrs. Harrison was also fond of artistic needlework and embroidery. As a needlewoman she marked with her monogram each piece of linen In the house at Indianapolis from bed-
clothing to napkins.
Among the social graces for which Mrs. Harrison was known, and hil^ fully tested in the White House, vafas her practice of seeing ea h visitor \qiio called. Bhe was never known to ^no irr.tation or annoyance, and it must b a flagrant cu e indeed when she refuse^
to receive tv caller.
She was probably one of the most industrious mistresses tho White House has ever had. Her own method of life was so simple that it gave her more time than ordinarily comes to persons in high places to, devote to things she liked best. She was a constant reader of the best literature and devoted to her brush. She had been a diligent pupil for several years in tiie study of china painting, and her talent was often displayed In the gifts she made her
friends at the holiday period.
In carrying out, the hospitality of the White House she has never been excelled. Kho presided with easy dignity and grace upon all occasions, and omitted no detail that would add to tiie pleasure of tliose attending them. Mio carried out to the letter the written and unwritten laws of the house, and did us much more as it was possible to do,
within tho limits of each season.
Jaoson says the man who can't take a joke always seems to be the editor of the paper he sends his to.—
Elmira Gazette.
ho I
itrat liich
have liecn hIidwci#1 lip.,!! Is uttered tn every tongue.
The voice of
blessings
mankind by his adventure Is limited to no fan-
gOMM, but It
Neither marble nor, brass ean fitly form Ills statue. Continents are his monuments, and unnumbered millions, past, present, and to come, who enjoy In tbelr liberties and their happiness tho fruits of this faith, will reverently guard and preserve, from century to
century, his name and fame.
The Enterprise made the first Steam voyage, England to India, 1825.
herokeo Commission has con-
cluded a deal for the Kiowa and Comanche country, Oklahoma, or tho surplus portion of the same, after the Indians have been allowed their allotments. A sum of $2,500,(100 Is guaranteed to the Indians, from which they are to receive annually (i per cent, until (he principal Is paid. The deal will throw open to settlement 2,276,804 acres
after April, 1894.
Miss Wallui* has been appointed a school teacher in a Kansas town. Her pupils should be made to understand that she will maintain tho credit of her/name even though the punishu>' , room sounds with anguished tjUTis. _ _ _ Music hath charms: Jones—“I heard a song last night that took me back to my mother’s knee.” Adams—• “What was it?” "Tho Patter of the Shingle?’*
