Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1880 — Page 2
Carpets, CPETADTS, DRAPERIES, WaU Paper. \liilfo'
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BOTflUce ia ttoeTe-bDUou jut arrived. Don’t tagat, bovever, tA eool netted underwear for Waiwii—^ Id East WaaHnfU—treat.
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HaiiflBooi of Polittcs,
MERRILL, HUBBARD & OO., mo. 5 k. wMsanoroa n. Books and Stationery.
Ihatolh—HHi Daw > imSiaSa* ew/ afterat dka oAoa, No. M Mart Priee—Two eeata a copy. Served bj canien in ■n/ ptftot the dtty, tan eeata airaak; hytaatl, taataMmdd, fifty eeata a month; «8 a year. fits Weakly New* to published every WadnaaAajr. ntealQoaBtBayear* poatagepald. JydTaattaaaaaata, find pace, tea eaata a Una te saah inawllnn Diaplay adrerttaamaato vary la Nh adawdiannaata taaartad ai adtfarial <r new taaffw. Bpatlmw nnmbmt aant fraa on application. Miy te advenoe. i ahogid be ad trim il to Joaar HL Hollixut, proptlater.
THE DAILY NEWS. FBIDAT. AUGUciT *7, 18S0.
) The organ of the Indiana democracy kaa not yet announced that '‘Beast” Butler, the “spoon thief,” will speak in this state for Hancock and English. Tk Mr. Landers has any ability as a “glass-blower” he had better begin training. The glassworks down at New Albany seem to hare gone oyer to Porter, body and boots. It is afsct that the party in this state that killed the amendment to the constitution, which would have been a barrier to the importation ef yotes, is the first to accuse its opponent of engaging in that practice. The largest corn crop ever known in the northwest ia reported in prospect. That ia ah argument against “a change’ that is difficult to dodge. It would be (something new in politics for a people to turn a party out of power becausj thing were too prosperous.
The democratic disaffection in the southern part of the state seems to be undeniable. Conversions to the republican party are reported constantly and in considerable numbers. Still we should advise the republicans not to count on that sort of recruit* to carry the state. ‘ Juixje Robinson, of the Morgan circuit court, would hardly do for a democratic supreme judge. It takes him a whole year to incubate an opinion, and it isn’t hatched out yet. A democratic supreme jodge most be capable of giving an opinion, as the major’s daughters in tb e ** Pirates of Penzance,” wanted to be mar- • ried“with celerity.” The whole of the Sherman-Hancock correspondence is now before the public, and we hope the superserviceable quidnuncs are satisfied. The series of letters amount to nothing whatever as political capital, and show only what we are sure all people will rejoice in, that Generals Sherman and Hancock were brave, l<>yal men, who had clear idete of what their duty Was and were ready to obey orders. The Sentinel is piping away that The News does not answer its aspersions of Mr. Porter’s dead father. The Sentinel might find an explanation in the story told of a noted infidel who boasted to a believer that he bad often defied God and given notice that he wanted none of his mercy. To that the believer responded that he must remember that the Almighty was capable of infinite contempt as well as infinite mercy. The workingman who has had employ* ment and good wages, knows that it wa* the policy of the republican party, John Sherman executor, that drove away distrust and induced confidence; that unlocked the money vaults and set the wheals a turning. He is not going to endanger this condition of afafrfi by putting a party ia power whose professions have been for inflated currency and unsettled values, and whose stock in trade was commercial disaster and individual hardehip. The French newspaper which denounce! Pr. Tanner as an impost^ is, as the children say, “too smart.” Dr. Tanner’s breath, near the end of his fasting, had the peculiar odor of advanced starvation, and an analysis of blood taken from him just before bo broke bis fast showed a chsnge in the corpuscles which indicated that he could not have lived more than Shree days longer. If is a curious thing that while England blamed us for our suspicions of tbe performance, and the reluctant assent we yielded to its genuine* nesa,the French are now blaming us for our credulity. The New York Herald is getting disgusted at the management of the democratic campaign thus far and looks for
defeat unless there is some improvement It is a very fins thing t* sit i&an open window on the fifth floor of a building and quaff the breezes from the bay and theorise about the conduct of a campaign. But just let the Herald take hold once and find what an awful load to carry the democratic record is, and the kind of material democracy has to Work with and it will coafeaa perhaps,that the famous “mule buyer” is “doing as well as could be expected” > TZ-i-. laaewmii in ■Iiann.1 umm Teen South Carolina census staffers are weakening. One enumerator wants to be allowed to amend bis returns. There are two bandied more naaees there than be wants to account lor. General Walker refuses. He proposes to do tbe oet root Lag himself. He will doubtless not only cor. reel the enumeration, but correct the enumerators. Every man who has attempted this crime should be punished to the full extent of the lew. No greater one was aver attempted against free government. It is worse than that fraudulent election in Alabama, and the fraudulent elections ajl ever the soqth. \ fraudulent alectian is. s .crime whose elects reach only' Yo the nexvelectioa, but this crime of cenpua stuffing would effect its purpose for ten years and enfold, the whole country in its grasp. Government by the people isn’t worth a bawbee if these things go unpunished. A recent article in the New York Ion says there are about 15,000 Italians in that state, 10,000 of them in the city. The majority of them, though poor and ignorant, are honest and sober, but so ■iny of them are bad that the whole clasa is under a social ban. Criminals, men too lazy to work, idiots-belonging to the lowest, filthiest, and most ignorant class—these, saya the Sun, are in great proportion the specimens of Italian civilization that North America possesses. Tbe propertion of men to women among them is about four to one. To quote again: “Their movement to this country is not effected with a mind of settling, but only with the object of making the best of their bodily energies while they are in their prime in a country where labor is better remunerated, and then hastening back to sunny Italy as soon as tbe accumulated savings are sufficient to improve their condition at home.” In this particular they are like the Chinese. The average stay of each individual of these two peoples here is about seven years. But the Chinese are far thriftier than the Sun’s account represents the Italians to be. The query is pertinent, why is there not a cry that “the Italians must go?” Will some demagogue please tell us? Hampton Again. It ia not Wade Hampton who has lied It is the Washington Post and New York World. He never wrote the letter denying his Staunton, Va., speech, and complaining that his record of ten years was being “frittered away by the forgeries of an obscure newspaper writer.” He has written to the Staunton, Va., paper in response to a letter Irom its editor, declaring hat he never made such denials. Jle says further, he does not remember using the language attributed to *him, about these being “the principles for which Lee and Jackson fought,” etc. His whole letter is so manly that we quote a part: I appealed to the Virginian? present to con eider before they voted how Lee and Jackson would vote were they alive, and I aeked if any one present could for a moment suppose that those devoted Virginians could have done anything which would create dissensions in the state they loved so well. My sole object at Staunton was to appeal to the democrats of Virginia to forget their local differences, and to unite for toe success of tbe democratic party. The principle involved in the war was the claim made by the sooth of tbe right of peacsable secession. This right was denied by the north, democrats as well as republicans j lining in tbe denial. On this line battle was joined. Tbe north triumphed, and tbe remits of her success were embodied in the amendments to the constitution, Settling beyond all question and for ever the right of pee stable secession, by the adverse decision of the highest earthly tribunal recognized among mankind. The war had nothing to do with the principles of the-na-tional democratic party, and I was peculiarly unfortunate If any expression of mine in Staunton could be so misconstrued as to give the impression that I supposed the principles HjVoIved in the preeidential contest were those for which we fought for four years. 1 have made no charge against yonr paper, or any other of willful misrepresentation, but I must disclaim emphatically thecoostruction placed upon my speech as w#U as the language attributed to m« in the few last leniences cf your report. It is a pleasant thing to find that amid a storm of passion one has refused to place the worst construction upon appearances, and has judged kindly and charitably. It is profitable to cite such cases and eur friends, we trust, will in this sense reread what we said the other day in speaking of thia utterance. We gave it as our opinion that Hampton did say in effect what was attributed to him, but we declared: Common resse and common decency will not consent to accuse him as meaning that the principles ef the democracy to-day are to enslave the negro, and set up a separate government. ret these are the principles Lee and Jackson fought for, and no others. Tbe sentence is susceptible la our opinion that Lee and Jackson held their state first, and that the Virginians noi EplitUrgon tbe debt question are aband« the principles, which made tbe state ‘ * as the chief thing. It was a sectional plea made in the rhodomoMade of the stnmp, aid the tioif’er sense some republican papers are regarding i- in. we thh k, should not stand in the light of Hampton’s whole course since toe war This language, it will be noticed, ia almost the language of Hampton’s letter, and if we may be pardoned for saying it, is the language of common sense. We utterly repudiated the “bloody skirt” meaning the organs gave it, and we quoted it long before they theaght of using It, as an example of a sectional plea, to show that sectionalism was preached by the southern democracy. Therein ene other phase of this business,* and that is the narrowminded interpretation given this episode by the democratic press, and the shocking way in whick they set about to lie it away. Tbe Washington Post and the World involuted bald-faced lies. The New York Suq taking tbe lie for the truth said “If Hampton had said it, it would have cost Hancock thousands of votes in the nerth.” The small fry of the democratic
1HE INDIANArULlo NiliWo: rKIDAi; - , VMM !
V
press rtved and blustered, protesting that Hamptondid not aay it. Now hesayu he may have said it, and a nice mess the democratic papers have made of it. If they had at once have opposed tbe malignance of the stalwarts who went to waving U for a bloody shirt, by taking the broad, manly stand Hampton has and appealed to common souse and common charity as wUnessOf that it was nothing bat the language of the stnmp to rouse unity of action among the divided democracy 4 Virfigia^that would have ended,! t. But they have tried to lie it away. They have thus confessed to all the stalwarts have charged and while Hampton goes free and has the regards of fair minded men overywhere, the democratic press have hurt their cause woefully and all because they forgot that “honesty is the beet policy.”
il
CURRENT COMMENT. Fluff b’d B«n ButkrvlUmakesomtspeachM for H.ntock la ItdiMO*—;Log»n»port Phare*. L osed to be old “Beast” and “Spoony”
Butler,
The floor of the vestibule—a large room la ItmsW- at the White Rouse, has been torn up. A ioondet'ou Is bow being 1*M upon irhleh will be pwt a beautiful design of Bngliah tiling. Thia will take tbe place of tae wooden floor aad carpet. The tLcs will be kid by a New York Area, aad are Imported from Stoke-on-Trent—[Ex. Why can American tile not be uted? Why does not the factory in this city let its existence be known in Washington ? “The soldier has done his work; the schoolmaster must do his.”—[President Hayes at Columbus. * One of the transparencies at tk* Lander’s meeting at Eransville, read.
“Vote for The hero of
GITTYSBURG
and
ANTIETOM.” New York has about 1,200 street letter boxes, About fifty additional boxes are put in use e&eh year, and. about two hundred boxes that have been destroyed are replaced. The boxes are comparatively fragile, but it is seldom they are broken by design. Their destruction is generally caused by accident, such as by collision with heavy vehicles. A curious feature of the street letter box system in this country is that the boxes are invariably hung to lamp posts. In most European cities they are attached to walls of houses and the shop nearest which they are, generally sells postage stamps- In Ans* tria and Italy they are so arranged that the collector cannot touch a letter in emptying tbe box, and thus baa no control over the mail matter whatever. Tbe long houre of service in many comrne'dal establishments, ia again becoming a subject of discussion in New York, and an effort will be male to curtail them. It is commendable. There is too much work and too little play in this country, The yank and reb live side by side, good neighbors, as in good old times. The ballot is safe and free to all. In two years the republican party in Arkansas wilt be heard from, for with a large immigration and the spread of intelligence and prosperity, republican principles must and will prevail.—[Fort Smith, Ark, New Era. There are currents and coanter currents in Maine politics that it is hard for outside 4bsei vers to understand. The spectacle of honest men supporting the unfumigated furloa and the unpunished conspirators of last year’s larcenous attempt upon the s‘ate government ia one thatwe do not think could be paralleled' in any other New Eogland state, it is possible, as this is evidently to be a viar of political surprises, that the sileut votes against home frauds will be found to be more numerous than the attitude of the dtnoeraiic party leads people to expect — [Boston Herald. Tbe democratic canvass is egregiousl v mismanaged when the joint public oplniou of tbe party at large and the influence of the dtmocmic national committee have failed to re-establish harmony ia a state whose vote will control the election. The New York fend may yet be healed, but it would hire been worth thousands of votes to close it immediately after General Hancock’s nomination. It is not yet certain that it will be healed at all, and if it remains open Mr. Garfield will be the next president.—[Se w York □erald. STATE flEITB. The Jefferson county fair, at Madison, is fl fine success. Tbe display in all departments is very large. Mies Mattie Lee, of Salem, has got a verdict against'Androw Knight, of $1,000 for calliog her foul names. The republicans of Switzerland and Ohio counties have nominated Hon. S. H. Stewart, of Rising Sun, for the legislature. Pr. Haymond W. Clark, one of Hamilton county’s old pioneers, died of apoplexy at hU residence in Koblesviile, on Tuesday. Andy Dean, a farmer living near Bornsvilla, Bartholomew county, was thrown fn.m bis buggy by a runaway and fatally injured. J. C. Hirsch’s livery stable, at Winchester, occupied by Charles Keeper, was bnrned yesterday. Loss, $2,000; insurance, $600; cause, accidental. Alex Slmpeon,proprietor of the only saloon in Ridgeville, left for parts unknown, to escape indictments filed against him for selling iiqnor without license. John Locbner, a dissipated old German of Aurora, believing that his wife bad deserted him, placed the mnzzle of a shot gun in his month and blew tbe top of his head off. A novel feature of a Conneraville Sunday school picnic, was a long train of wagons filled with children, drawn by a locomotive threshing engine, from the city to the picnic gr&nnd. Mrs. Thomas Davis and her daughter, of Sbtlbyville, were thrown from their carriage by a frightened horse and seriously hurt. Mrs. Davis’s collar bon* was broken and bar face gashed. > Secretary Thompson and family left Terre Haute yesterday for Washington. Mr. Thompson will vi it New York in a few dajs. and wilt return to Indiana on the 15th of next month, to attend the meeting of the republican clnbs in tbe state, to be held in A number of the striking moulder] have retrrntd to their places at the Ohio Fall car a oiks at Jeffersonville, at thair old prices. Others will follow. All bat five of iboee who struck and still remain in the city, will resume work. This nractically settles tbe strike. John F. Stephenson picked up a target rifle in Fred Lobman’s shooting gallery aud bowling alley, at Richmond, and while the proprietor wai aettiag np the pins in the lower part of the alley, be took aim and fir*d. The bail lodged near Lohnsan’s Scalp, and plowed a groove across his bead, bdt did not penetrate the skull Stephenson is a bad character, and confesses to a' burglary of Paul Hoachland’s saloon a few days ago, and directed tba officers to tbo place where the stoleo goods wert secreted. A somewhat remarkable wedding oceured at Attica on Wednesday. Dr. A J. Richardson, of Stone Binff. was married to Mi« Jetnie C'ark. This is tbe d ctor’s fourth wife, he being sixty-seven years old and the father of twentj-six children, twenty of wuorn ere living. The bride is twenty-three jtars old, » tall, graceful and very attractive joupe woman. They have been neighbors abd friends for many years, and the lady, be. it g possibly a little eccentric and independent, herself made the proposition foC mar-, riage, it is said.
A l J U U ol ^*s J-OOL/# mraw'—t
,5rys,v; k* of sleek or
She h*.
Cntaark.-
Br wrote of __ Or abaflow taogtbsiiteg toe way. Ia tbe !u ! l »oon and perfect flay,
Ja safety's very ettadsl,
Tbe bappy boors b .vs sped, tasv* run; Deo at tba thought aud Bonder* not.
, halt here.
Smiles at tba
Ws bar* been jrat a year alone;
A year whose calendar D sigh*,
And doll, perpetual wDhfaioeaa
And wtarilol Btfftnirn to ffUMi Tbe seers* of toe bldtag aUasT Tbs salt, Inexorable bios.
With stiisaStofftlote of glory so wa,
And heaven behind, jost shining through.
Es awset. so sad, as swift, so alow, So foil of eager growth and tight, 8o fall of patn which blindly grows; > So foil of thwaghts wterti Stater way
Have paand aad ersassi and touched each day,
To os ■ than*, to bar a rose;
Tbo year so black, tbs xpnrro white. Lias rivers twain their course bare run: Tbs earthly stream we trace and know, Bat who shall pdfit the heavenly oae? ▲ year! We gather np oar powers,
" * * * | AHd
Openalfw i fldowTtoTbe day And welcome every bektarofy
sir.
We will roroe forward aad will bear, Having this word to ebser the way. Abo, storm-tamed once, Is rots With Him, Headed, comforted, consent, forgiven, And while wo ooant these heavy boars Has been a year,» year te bee too I
‘ _ —[Satan Goolldge.
SCBAPS.
It’s a poor fate too! won’t work both ways. Hartford has a ooW titat is afraid of
women.
An aatograph letter of Barns, in wh’oh he quotes “Scots wha hae,” was iat dy sold by
auction for $400.
Judge Poland, of Vermont, has at last laid aside his beloved bine coat and braes buttons of toe Daniel Webster pattern. Hancock's father wanted him to learn the printer’s trade. Had he done so, instead of being a West Pointer he might hare been a
setter..-* ■ if-'*.-,/
W. F. DeHase, the ertist, died at Fayal Julv 16, aged fifty. He was a native of Rotterdam, and for twenty-six yean a resident
of New York.
After all the other varieties of fish were created natnre had two quarts of bones left, and in order to make use of them she built the shad and told him to go it—[Ex. Deaf lady: “What’s his name?” “YouSg lady: “Augustus Tyler.” The deaf lady: “Blew me, what i-taitne! ‘fust his Biler!’ Eliza, you most be making fun of me.” A woman near Cairo dressed np as s man to see how much bluff her old husband would take from a stranger. She got fortysix bird shot in various parts of her body. A lady who break'tots in white satin is one of the sights at Saratoga. It is believed her father was a hackman during the Kaights Templar conclave in this city.—
[Chicago Tribune.
Rev. Cyrus Hamlin, D. D , LL. D . formerly president of Roberta college, at G jqstantinrple, Turkey, has been elected to and has accepted the temporary presidency of
Mlddlebury college.
A Chinaman will bend all day aver a hot iron in a little close room ironing his clothes on a hot day and never think of being warsn: and yet be could not fly a kite in mid-winter
without fanning himself.
A recent issue of a Russian newspaper contained nothing but advertisements and toe following: “Through a cause not oar own, the original articles prepared for this issue can not be pnblisbed. therefore we publish
only advertisements.”
Cyrus W. Field, of New York, has laid out and is ornamenting a public park in toe town of Stockbridge, Conn., which he Will present to that town. The park is a tract of ten acres, which includes the grounds of an old church whick Wpa demolished in 1825, “Probably few persons, says tbe Londbu Truth, have so many proposals of marriage as Lady Burdett-Coutt*. I was talking a day or two ago with an eminent widower. •I myself,’ he said, ‘have proposed to her, far 1 regard this as a duty that every man owes
to his family.’”
De Leaseps was invited to a breakfast with tbe king of tbe Belgians the other day, and the royal host sent three court carriages to the station to meat the viscount and his suite. Tbe suite consisted of one of Ds^essepi’s girls whom he had in one hand, and his luggage of a gripsack, which he had in the
other.
The Rev. 8. F. Smith, who wrote “My Country, ’Tie of Thee,” is still living in Newton, Mass. He says he wrote the verses on a waste scrap of paper one dismal day ia February, 1832, while at Andover seminary, and “had no intention nor ambition to create anything that should have a national repu-
tation.”
William A. Buckingham, a Milford, Conn, boy, saw a mail bag fall from a train near that place, and laboriously carried tbe bag to the depot. Postmaster General Key has written an autograph letter of CQtnmendatiQS to him, and directed his third assistant to forward to him a set of a copy of government stamps as a memento of regard. The stamps
are worth $265,05.
The soldiers’ monument of Allegheny City Penn., now presents the appearance of having undergone a siege daring which brickbats and boulders nave been used. Oo three sides the female figures which adorn the first panels have been shockingly defaced. Large pieces of stone bare been knocked out, aud in consequence the monument wears a scarred and battle-worn aspect. Same person has also thrown mud on it on the different sides, and altogether it presents a dilapidated apnesrauce. Pieces of stone as large as four or six inches In diameter have been knocked off, and one of tbe female figures ha; lost a foot, which some vandal had displaced by
throwing stones at it.
A remarkable instance of the presence of an impresaion, unquickened by repetition through more than forty years, is that of a gentleman living in New lork. On December 16, 1835, occurred tbe great fire which swept the first ward east of Broadway aud below Wall street, and destroyed property worth about $18 000,000. At that time the auardians of the city’s peace were not poitoemeo.clad in oniform,but constables dressed like common citizens and distinguished from them only by carrying long staves .with which to admonish disorderly characters. Tbe subject of the story, then a bry ten years of age, was present at the fire. and there saw a young, black haired constable strike with a staff a man who was raising a disturbance. A few days ago, while crowing the river ia a ferryboat, toe gentleman sew a grsj-haired old policeman, and it instantly occurred to him that this was the officer whom be bad seen strike the man forty five } ears ago. He spoke to him on the subject, and found tost his recollection was entirely cornet, the Officer having been at the: fire and remembering toe occurrence perfectly: be gave, moreover, details which showed that there was no mistake of identity in the matter. The case U remarkable enough to find its way into the text looks, as tbe account is perfectly authentic*—[New York
World.
BI1NNKS<M|A
M'W
[Correspondence i
ITBD. »ratton —H »w Old 3etttar.-~
The iadtanapolia Neva.] St. Paul. August, ISM.
The first thing that strikes the pilgrim returned to. ^ Minnesota after an absence of — twenty years is not so much the *1 immense growth, of the villages and cities, the improved fa ditties for travel, nor yet the great advance ia nnaalectures and manufacturing establishments. Tbe astonishing thing i« tbe almost total char ge in the appearance of toe country by reason of its rapid progress in agriculture. Along the line of to* railroads the oak openinga, toe brash prairie and to* open prairie are note for the most part undistmguiihable in wheat fields. Where this is not the case, what used to ba bashes and smaller trees, being protected by cultivated lands from the ravages ef the pnsris fires, have become yoaqg fan Seen from the Misrissippi, toe Mails repaln; hot for the reason above stafe& tA* verdure : that covers their sides ia of a denser and la*ger growth than formerly, and their beads are crowned with a golden crown of wheat. Along to* river v* many ones promising towns that have the appearance of the quie* that cornea to age when toe youthful hopes of greatness have passed away. The steamerrl ore few and slow, and the graat river seems to rralize that, altoeagb he may still be the father of waters, he is no longer the master of commerce. He is too slow for the requirements of the times. Back ia the conn, try the towns that are springing op along toe lines of the railroads, and toe tell elevators that stand like lighthouses in the midst of the billowy ocean of grain, show that life is not stagnated, but has been divertedinto new and more rapid currents. But aven hare, a] far up as Minneapolis and above, the reatlees energy that has mad! the country what it is, is seeking new prairies to cocqter. leaving those already sabdaed to others who are satisfied with quiet and ccm*petence. On the cars, at the Uotela.iu stores aad wareboueea, oae bears marvekras stories of the Red river country, of its wonderful fertility, of the terrible “blizzards” which are Texas northers intensified sixty degrees in coldness with the advantage of coantless leagues of level country In which to gain momentum, but which seem to delight rather than terrify ths enthusiastic constitutional emigrant; of the beauties of a summer and winter residence even so far north as Manitoba, (accent the last syllable or betray your alienage,) where wheat grows and ripens with only a foot or so of aoil between its roots and perpetually frozen ground. Tbe enthusiastic emigrant will tell you that it will grow all toe better for being kept damp and cool by its slowly-thawing underpin-
ning of ice.
As the Misissippi haa ceased to be the monarch of commerce, so has lumber, the former king, been discrowned, and wheat reigns in bis stead; and he demands rapid transit. Beside, the treeless country to the north, now that the railroads have made its transportation possible, demands a large part of the lumber that was heretofore fluatea down the water courses, and the mills at Minneapolis and on the St. Croix and other rivers are able to manufacture most of the timber floated down from the pineries, and one sees no long rafts of logs and few of boards floating down to the lower country. The old order is reversed and now wheat goes out of the country by the million bushels and the 1m.
A DavU’s Day la Semis Bsnd. [BagUtor.l * The devil was abroad in the city yesterday and made a criminal record never equalled by that of any other day ia toe history of the city. Whisky was his Satanic majesty’s most freqnent form, and none more ooteat for evil oould have been assumed. The list of crime for the day includes a murder, aa attempted suicide, several thefte, fights aad more drunks than have been seen in several weeks before. Trouble tor the French. ! Tbe Algcrinee are as disloyal to French rule as ate toe Irish to English rule, sod a wide-spread revolt is being organize J by them. They have aa organ, which is published io Sicily, and which breathes the fiercest bate of everything French, counseling tbe Algerines to revolt. Arms have been meetly shipped into the country In large quantiuea. A Utarnry T*»* Worm. The late W. H. G. Kingston was the author of 125 books of adventure for boys.
her is largely retained.
No one who has not seen St. Paul and Minneapolis in their infancy can appreciate their wonderful growth and that of the country immediately surrounding. At a time so recent as to be within easy remembrance I have stood on what is now a principal street of St. Paul and seen the smoke of the “tepees” of the “terrible Sioux” arising from his own domainon the opposite aide of the river. Then the main tell of St. Anthony was entirely unobstructed by mill or dam. Minneapolis, on tbe west side of the river, which has since absorbed St. Anthony oo the east, was yet unnamed, and was a prairie as wild and uncultivated as any ia Dakota, rave that one little house, by grace of the military authorities, clung to the back above the falls, a little stone, government mill sat upon the bank below, with its feet in the water, and a rambling and inconstant road straggled off toward wild Minnehaha and Fort Snelling perched upon its crag and looking southward up the qaiet valley of the St. Peter (now Minnesota) river, and down upon the broader sweep of the MiteisMppi below, dotted with verdant if lands, and forming as fair a picture as ever lay beneath the sun. Then Minnetonka was as unknown as was Baugweolo, End savage warriors formed a ring around and flaunted tlW Rory scalp pf tu* nareuts
the little Ojibway captive in
..Umet
i to bore you with ask how many
i/
tSk r®K
he enMMcfeain running fr m vtog wagons into the upper niHf Aroufil earry in an h mr ow many 4a cars the double railroad running on an elevated
..ght through toe center of the building would carry away, but toe process went on incessantly like toe stringing of beads, while the con which came in loaded with a heat.deparied loaded with flour Down below, as if in token of subnrdina'ion, nearer the crest ofitoe old telte are the lumber mille, where tbe gangs cf saws rip the huge logs rate ribbons of boards and “dimensions.” There is something fiendish te the merciless wmj In which those savage raws tsar tbe captive log* to pieces, catebiog their breath between bites in a way that tuggestg the pealing of wild animals, while the tremendous roar of water goes on beneath aad ebakes tbe foundations, and the strident voice of the buzx-saw shrieks with varied inflections as its teeth tear through sop and knot, and convert into lath, shinglebolts or stove wood toe debris of the "gangs.” Endives chains in almost constant motion drag toe too unwilling logs up the oosy ‘ slip” with inexorable deliberation, and a hundred teams qf large, well-kept horses, and sleek oxea wearing reversed horse c »l*k ^ t:._» ■ .. fll aCSU _ ^.WR. M •&...—*» W .1 » 1 -
ixul and
-5 — T ,-, j,™—. End night, th. ^ uo lo4 jealous of St. Paul's general commercial supremacy. Whatever there is of rivalry or jealousy must soon disappear. Tbe two cities are gradually approaching each other with es tended arms, and the time cannot long be delayed when tbe two names will only designate to* sections of one great metropolis. With the mention of these cities ahd Stillwater, eighteen miles distant on lake Si. Croix and near the border of WiaoonsiD, and a few smaller towns dotted at intervals along down toe Misslarippi, comparison as to growth between what was a generation ago and what now is ceaxs. All that is, is growth. TBAKSn,ANTED H00SIS19. Until quite recently no northern state contributed to little to toe population of Minnesota as Indiana. It was an extremely rare thing to meet a citizen of Indiana ia Minnetota before tbe war. Rer. Mr. Creefly, formerly of the First Baptist chnrch of Indianapolis, was abont tbe only Indlanian of prominence I knew until Governor Gorman was sent Up rule over the territory. Now, however, not a few leading business and professional men hail from thia state. In toe way of newspaper men Indianapolis famishes quite a number of lepresentatives. Mr. F. A. Carle now has the laboring oar on the Pioneer-Press, and is forwarding toe work so ably carried on heretofore by Mr. Wheelock, who haa been compelled by ill-health cauaed by overwork to relinquish the more onerous daties of bis position for a time at least. Mr. Oarle is proving himself to be one of the most able, alert and progrewiTe journalists in the west Joe Bingham, formerly of the Sentinel, is doing city work on the same journal, and it is reported that other trained men from this locality may aoon find employment on that or other papers. At Lake City, Mrtsrs. Jameron and Northiop own and edit the Leader, acknowledged to be one of the best weekliee in the state. The town is one of the handsomest places to be found anywhere, and is noted for its wealth and cultivated society. George Hardiag’s paper at Lanes boro haa not proved the success he was led to expect, and it is raid he will tot confine himself to it exclusively, but will seek a wider field where his acknowledged talents will be better appreciated and remunerated. ______ D L P.
Haw Strength
Is infused Into the debilitated system by the roveceign vitallser and tonic, Hostetler's Stems oh Bitten. Digestion and asstssilstioa, functions the interruption or feeble performance of which mitei telly Impairs vitality, are regulated and eeoour*g» d by the Bitters, and the mental despondency which usually affects the dyspeptic and nervous invalids, gin* place to cheerfjneaa when this geaial invlgerant and corrective is need. It stables the stemseh to perform its daties, Insures complete nutrition and banishes every symptom' of dyipepela. Tie restoration of a regular hsbit of body la another ard more important result of taking it. It qnieta as weB aa Invigorates the neivous system, promotes appetite and sound ro-
be relied on for
pose, and may
for purity as well as
eflaativeneea. Moreover it has ne pear aa a rbro-
. and pi
feua nm Meet*.
edy for, and preventive of fever an/agtte sad bil-
tn o-w.f.m
* sufferer who is patiently enduring
varoreroi «svvaA| ——- . ... v** to suffering
48 Tears Before the I’ublle.
THE rsNUIME
Dr, C. RLcJjANE’S TTinR’T? PTTTG liivlhJl JtJLIaL!? are not recommended asa remedy “for ail the ills that Besh ia heir to,” but ia affections o r the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand wiUutet a rival.
AGUE AND FEVER.
No better cathartic can be used prepara, tery to, or after taking quinine. • i Asa simple purgative thay aret^'qualed.
BEWARF OF IMITITHMS. The geutmie are never sugar-coated.
Each box has a red-wax seal on th* \i Jwith tbe ivnpresaion, McLANF’S LIVKR FILL. Each wrapper bears cna •igtofcsril* of Gv McLawe and Fleming Bros, t* * j 19*Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. McLANE’S LIVKR HLLS -reared by [FLEEING BEGS., 1’iUsburfA, Pm., the market Deicw tell of imitations of the name JMeXro**^, -relied differently but
satoe pronunciation.
i SCHOOLS ASB COLLEGES! IcdianapoliB €1 magical School* AM mCOarORATEP aCHOOL FOE BOYB.
-i-f
President, A. W.
£. Fletcher, Esq : Kb. Sharp* Hyda, DJ).; Napoieon B. Tay
Bord, £aq; Bar Myron W. Reed, ] BarttettTT). D.; Tbeophlloa Baryta, M. D.; a.
B. Fletcher j Baq
“ - ~ V; Hap
• Rev Myron W
_ d. ; Tbeophlloa , __ _ ^ Prepares boys thoroughly for Harvard, lals and all athsr OollegSb Mi Scientific Schsqlfc** Classical course, Bngliah course, French and German. Primary Department fof Boya, Irom six to twelve; large sad wall furnished Gymnasium. Regular fnatruertooa In gymnastfea by Prof.
Fmtuch. Fifth y*
logur.
reu lurmsiMu iryxnnai in gymnastfea by Prof.
r opeas Septan bar S. Send for eataT. L. 8XWALL, A. B., Fxtedpal.
J0TBE DAUB JBITiRSItT,
Nvar ►oath Mend, Ina
First-class Bearding r cbdel fSr Boys and Toung
Men. emict discipline. Military tactfas Uwgat. Thiee depart moot*, entirely independent of each other: Senior Dep’t, for young men from 17 lot •; Junior Uep't, for boya fr*m 12 to 17; Mini'm Dep’t, tor boys from < to IS. Ihe university affords every fadtlty for acquiring a thorough knowledge of Ctarolcs, Mathematics. tMence, Law, Medicine, Theology, Music. To such as wish to devote themselves to commercial puraulta, Notre Dame givea a complete ba stores training For catalogue, apply to the President, Very Bev. W. Corby, C. 8. d, Notre Dame P. 0 , Ind. For information, call on Prof. Edwards, at Circle Park
Hotel, IS Circle street. Friday, betweei and 10, or Saturday, from 8 a. m. to IL
6 p m.
tout
-ST"
ProUbUnt Episcopal Boarfllag fttd
J Day SehP'l f>r Girl*, 477 North Penney!rante Street,
Will comm*noe its 'third year September Uth. at 9 a. m. So bstamlal and properly ventilated sc ho >t t'ulldirgs have Sees erected sod will he opened at the next ssarton. The “House” haa bean enlarged, Mias M. Louise Bright, an experienced aad successful teacher Lom Lextogtoo.Ky., has been added to the corpeef teachers, a Primary Department
habbeen •‘tablisbed.
For Register, address the Blahopof the Disease, or ths Rector of ths school, 477 North Pennsylvaaia street. w ue BUTLER UNIVERSITY. Tbs twenty-sixth session of this wall-known
! win open—Medical ~
Department, t courses of lns£
n »*P-
.. next, in both
spoils. For catalogues of Literary Department, address CHAUNCEY BOTLKB, Secretary, or O. A. BURGESS, President, Irvington, Ind.
GiLANVfU-B, O., reWALB OOLLBGB AND CONSEBTAVOBT OF KUfltO. Established ?n 1883. Bltuatrd to a meat beautiful and healthy rrgioo. otters unsurpassed advantages. Eltgsnt.ommnodfous and newlyfurnltotd apartments, Cheated by aieam. Teachers o» arknowieaged Ability. Those desiring to #-aay Mu tic as a profession, will find hers tbe advantages d>f Eastern Center' stories. Pupils are surrounded with refined Christiaoinfluencm and guarded with pwrvBtal e-re For circulars, etc., address W. P. KERB, Principal. (aluo ts
tnfe/ace ol ihelittle Oifl _ . _ | the street* of the priucipal city’. Now toe
bottom land opposite St. Paul is covered by a Email city, and toe bluff* b vond are dotted with elegant residences, ('ie falls of St. Anthony are utterly obliterated, and tos waters that ui*d to eaase toe earth to tremble, and whose noise oould be heard for many miles, are diverted to narrow channel* and made to turn the machinery of the finest mill* in tbe world. The wild prairie is a busy bustling city, with its great workshops and warehouses, it* elegant mansions and well-shaded streets, the railroad has taken toe place of toe straggling prairie path, and numerous bridge* span the river. Minnehaha is no longer the 1 Indian maiden, bnt the modern belle wit! tbe fashionable adornments and with of flatlet era and admirer*. Fort Snelling sleeps anon bis crag while the locomo ire shritks around its base and thunders beneath its walls. Manufactories and homes of workmen and merchants are to be seen up the valley ol the Minnesota and down the Mississippi, the smoke of St. Paul forms a cloud iu the east and the roar of its streets can almost be heard. Minnetonka is the resort of thousands, mammoth hotels stand upon it* banks aud long trains bring tbeir loads of health-seekers and pleasure-seeker* almost hourly. Occassiooly a squaw may be seen, as in almost any other city, east or west, aelliag her btadtd work, but the days whan Hole-in-the-day, Little - Six, and other braves of tbe Ojibway and Sioux tribts, with their clouted and blanketed followers, were .o be seen in the streets, have forever passed. St. Paul, which was then perched upon an almost inaccessible bluff, with a swamp encircling it ia the rear, flanked by a still higher bluff, is now as level, dry and easy of approach as Cincinnati, with buiidiogs that would be considered model* of enbetantial beauty in any city in the land, io many cases built of atone quarried from the streets in process of grading. • The citizens of St. Paul have always bad indomitable pluck and unbounded faith in her destiny. While her sister at toe falls rested secure in her ureat natural advantages, with toe whole Mtodaripoi river waiting to be harnessed to the car of her n-oeperity, without the power or even a well settled disposition to throw off the chains of a giant monopoly which, whHe it devoured itself in litigation, held all progress in abeyance, St P*ul,alnooet inaccesblble from the river, with great ledges of limestone blocking what were to b* her thoroughfares, half her present area a quagmire imperfectly drained through gorgfs fifty fact deep, declared to all the world and told nature to her rugged face, that ebe was ef all places ea the oonttneut the beet fitted for a groat city, aad itumediirtdy went to work to prove it by making it ro. Though in later years wisei and more liberal men came into power at the teUa aad began to develop the great resources of Minntspolia, ebicb has now become the most populous city in Minnesota, 8t Paul still retaiDS that undaunted nerve and sublime !‘“.y dtow'h. l “ c, “ »° N ioneapolis, however, hai no cause to com plain. With not a tithe of her water tower utilised, her immense flouring and lumber mill* are tbe woeder of all vlntor*. Toe new W Mhburae A. mill r* beyond all question •te finest in (he world, and a number of otters within a atones’ throw are but little
New Dry Goods. A. DICKSON * CO. HAYI JW 0PIN1D
New OaMcoee,
P-rk Work and Choice Styles. New Canton Ginghams, New Madras Ginghams, New Roman Ginghams, All in the latest and £«t Styles. Also, lOO PIECE A Are.-WOOL. Black French Cashmere, Which have a real value superior to any make
cflared in thia city.
WHITE MARSEILLES QUILTS, (lightly soiled, at a groat reduction from former price*.
HAMBURG BDOIKGR, gnatly reduced prices.
slightly roiled, at
9St Frcntills dflte we befU opening KEW FALL GOODS.
—
A. Dickson & Co. OLD TRA&R FALACI 8T0RI, 20 and 28 W. Washington St.
ONE’S EXTRACT, the Groat Vegetable Fata Deriroyer and Specific fee Inflammations, H e m or r h a gea, Wounds, Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Bpreios, ■te , etc. Stopping tbe Mo* Ofblood, relieving »t on<* the pain, rabdaliR tbe Infisrosiartea, hastening Ue healing sad curingth* dteesse so rapidly aito excite wonder,admiration aiidgretitade
HYBIOIAMB Indorse, recommend end prescribe it. It will cure Rbeumroime, Catarrh, sag; .tftsriu, *s^iSgrsi*pEgi Boils sad flares. Piles, sad step aft hemorrhages from ihe Noee,Stomach oc
Plttiburoh Femtle Cellsoe. Dfstti ct Schools or Liberal Arts. Masts, Drawing and Painting, Elocution, (Mart Modern languages, TWEKTF-WOUR TEAOKKM9. 100 full Music Leseona for $18 N in the Omuervstory of Mssieconnected with ths College. Charge* let* than any schorl eflardiag equal advantages and accommcdationa. 86th Tear open* EepL 7th, 1880. Pend to R*v. I. c PKB8HING, D. 6., Pittsburgh, Pa., for s catalogue. [*|uo ta The^ndiinapolii female Seminary, 848 and 845 North Peuuyhrania street, Indianapolis, Ind. Tbe next session of this boarding and day tins Wednesinvtruetion is _ drawing, painting and the languages are made object*cf especial attention, for catalogue and for any Inlorma- *'«- u—tbarr, please address ths pSggy rod H: St*? apolis Female Seminary, Indianapolis, lad. |a]v ts MRS. PRICE’S SCHOOL >OR BIBU AMO HOY,. The e’evsnth year of this woll-known School wiil be»io September 8th It appeal* to its peat locoeea fails guarantee to tbe pubDc for the future. Prof., Ja diet wp coaduct ihe French Departaroat. krotatloa. Pleas* addrem Mrs. E J. Principal. Residence School, 487 North Iff. note street. tout PjSJi^vasIs Military Acadsny, CH ten ER, PA. opens Septem&er 8th. Thorough For circular* patron of tbo Ac
FOSTER SCHOOL! A CADEBIt OOlLISiaR', -kv 11CTOBBB /l Gymnastics. Administered with sssctel n* ierepce to Ue health of young tadiss and the for.* »»tfon of comet habits of study aadTlfe Ad* drew the REV/DR. GEORGE LOOMIS. HANOVER COLLEGE, D i 0 £i£ to ffir t !e5ht Q h year. Begins Wednesday, Sept. 1st. Two full courses, classical and scientific, with pstairatory department. Open to both sexas Tuition fro*. Ho mleone. Board low. Loestfen beautiful sod haatthfuL On the ohis, near Madison. For
JklM DMsTRDTKDI—It win roiiev* Immofltetsiy sain ta a&ypiaro where it “a be applied intern*Uy er externally. Fqr cots, bruise#, sprains, ole., ills ths vary bs*i rented y known: htonro, rsdml
T\ ZSyKWl&rSASffs
CoUfffB of PMyakiBM aM aorgMEg. The regular session la this College will begin October 4, 1880 Preliminary Term. September S, ,
ssTTtsafti&ffjrsi
wars street, Icdianspetis, Ind. [*]• *■ — - - — CHEGARAT INSTITUTE, UH. 1U» BproM ■».<>. r»n—«—'.M-.
ass ftsasiifr pr-d-u
Cleciasatl OoltogUts School,
CTartMiU. o. f.Juot.
Students »
daring vswttsn. For fal * J. C. McCURDY A CO.. 8
Cincinnati, O.
ISO Elm i
[ajaota
Central law School, Indianapolis, Isdiass. Tsrm begins Oc
Oet 1,1888.
~ ta
GRAND HOTEL.
