Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 63, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1885 — Page 4

THE INDIA NA iOLlS DAILY SENTINEL WEDNESDAY MORNING- MARCH I 1885.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH I. OFFICKi 71 and 73 West Market Btreet. IUTL'S OF SUHhCUIPriON. Indlanapolla Beatlcel for IXK3-Ually, Han. day and Weekly Edition. DAILY. Deiirered by carrier, per wee 1 25 I :ii!y, including Sunday, per wick 33 jMljr, per annum, by mall 10 00 Daily, per annura,by nil!, Including Hun dy, by mall 12 00 1 iJAlly, delivered by carrier. per annum 12 CO lu'.ly, delivered ty carrier, per annum, Including Sunday .... 11 00 Juily, to newadealer, percopr I SUNDAY. ur.ay elltton of ctehtrfour colnron S 2 CO Hn;i(ay Bcntlacl, by carrier 2 M) To newsdealers per copy aj WK.KKt.V. '.Ve.-kly, per annum ! 1 00 The pestago on aubecrlptioui by mail li prepaid Pr tbe publisher. Newsdealer supplied at throe cents psr copy. lotdaze or other charge prepaid. Entered a iccond cUm matter at the rostortieo t Jn-ilantpo'la. Ind. Rr.Ai..i:eays he won't go .to the ball this evening S'mether evening. jurtR n spirited contest reported from little D-Iaware as to who shall step into Mr. Rsyard's Senator' .11 shoes. Ex Govi:iiNor. li Ma' Oi i in, of Kentucky, will be buried to-day. He was bom in April, lir,, and died February 2-f. l :.. Tnsjoyofthe RUine organs would hobhie afresh If roina one coull be hired to unlarla Rebel in Washington City today. Tun Journal eeems to forget, while Shedding crocodile tear over the Grant bill, that the opposition was largely led by Mr. Hoar a: d other Republicans. Tell the truth," r.iijhbor. Wio 1$ yonng Greshaw ? Sni say he is the nephew cf the Judge, and others eay he bears the latter no re lationship. The young fe l ows seed to be doing all the fighting in Waihington this reaion. Don Cameron his returned from his Southern trip. He rays bis reported illness was "a blind ' merely to pet rid of ctfice-seekers. lion keeps np bis reputation for slyness, lie was considerably of an office-seeker him-r-elf a few short months aeo. Whitney's name, says a Washington correspondent, has been eoa'chtd oQ the Ute, if it was ever on. No one will regret it more than the Republican bos or editor who anticipated immense possibilities la the iir.e t f denouncing h' r Cleveland for t iking two New Yorkers into his Cabinet. The New York Tribune works off the following for a joke. It aays the opening sentanco of Mr. Cleveland's Inaogaral will be: Fellow-countrymen: In 'imlne the exalted I odi ton to which I have been called by your u'Irazcs, I dcslro fl'St of all to assure you that tt i my matured and clarified judgment that the oll remain lu 1H p'ace. It should have added Ucghter or sensation Tiik Republican boses, who are already doing a dial of lying through Washington comspoudents with an eye to its effect four years Lence, have probably forgotten to hire parties In Washington to .give the "rebel yell" or "holler for Jell Rav.V It might be arranged yet. We suggest it to the Republican State Committee. The Northern heart might be firod" and "the fruits of the war" gathered once again In Ks Tiik colored population turned out I, ODO strong in Washington City Monday night to see the Tammany men, ho had arrivel from New York. They bal formed their ideas from Republican papers, aid were expecting to s?e something in the shape of half horse and ba'f alligator, or as a correspondent rays, men dressed as Indian?, with tomahawk and feathers, 'They were agreeably surprised to see 'l ,000 gentlemen well dressed and wearing ell!: hats. Tnii is a sample ot the crowded state of "Washington. A tpeciai says: "Turning nobody away yet," was the reply of the hotelkeepers In response to a reporter'! Inqulrle, Ore would scarcely believe U, lor every nook and cranny in tlLt is tilled chock full. There is u .'urging mob in the corridors of and entrances leadlrg to every hotel. A perfect bedlam cf sound en abates from each one of them. The greatest mob seems to be at the Wlllard and the Fbb.tt. These are headquarters for the ??ueral and promiscuous crowds. At 10 o'clock this evening it xeqnlrcd elbowing to get Into these hostelTies, and crowds stood about 4he desks of the clerks and around registers to that it was next to an Impossibility to see them. Of courte there is a jam about the National, and Southerners aro there in force. That is he ralllng ground, too, for the far Western people." THOSE HLY HEFUltLXCANS. On yesterday a motion to rail up the appropriation bill in the Hoopf met defeat by the unanimous vote of the Republican Representatives. Considering that the Republican papers ar.d praters have been accusing the Democrats of the Legislature with aiming at an extra tension, this, party move of the virtuous accusers is a refreshing or e. It the tactici mean anything, it s the retarding of action oa the appropriation bills, necessitating., an extra session. At the outside, there are only five more daysifor work, every one of which migut be devoted with advantage to considericg the appropriations. And yet we find the Repubheans voting solidly against taking up the bill, which, with the aid of a few Democrats, defeated the motion. What are the Republicans air ling at? Have they decided in favor of an extra session? If eo, for what purpose? Of course, the question suggests the ans erU is a reach for

ptrty advantage. Rat the device has such long ears we ihoold think any Intelligent Eepibliran would shrink from acknowledging any chanco part in its paternity. If it should succeed, the result will be another cate of ' hoist by his own petard."

A RED LETTER DAY. Nev r tdnce the day on which the independence of the I'niied States was conceded by Great Rritain his there been another so abounding in hope and promise as this 1th day of March of the year of our Lord l.ss.". The calendar tmphastzes many days celebrating events pregnant with Importance to the Nation. That on which emancipation of African slavery in Amenc&'was proclaimed was a momentous one, but it was in the midst of a heartrending war. Tnat which announced the termination of the war between the States tent a thrill of rejoicing throughout the Union Into every home wltnlu it; but the land wore a badge of mourning as wide as between the oceans, there were so many vacant cha'rs about the firesides of the country, and so many newly made graves and so many broad bands of charcoal and asltes that hope was in a pall. Tnere was turmoil and cbaos in politics; confusion and uncertainty in the commercial world. Rut this is cur Nation's perfect day. Her dogs of war though long sleeping in their kannels show no signs of waking. Upon the neighboring teas no falcons are (lying, but only white-winged carrier doves of peaceful commerce. Military bauack, arsenal and rendezvous are offered tor sale for the uses ot peaceful industry or education. The fortresa cf twenty yiars ago his been 'e'led, the trench filled, the stockade thrown down and the soldiery on either side in that strife have long been' gathering at the tame board, quailing good cheer to one another their fortunes been blended, their children intermarried. Our Nation's perft-ct day! The cloud of human slavery ,which m.vje Imperfect nearly all the days of the first century, has been rolled back from our horizon. Th3 descendants of naked savages of African wilds re being led by the handmaidens of liberty and learning up to intelligent citizenship. Ileeardless of l ice, color or previous condition, fill the States of the South have enacted, what all the States of the North will soon enact, tqual civil rights to their citizens. This, cur Nation's perfect day, evidences by its notable occurrences that political intolerance, sectional hate and narrow browed prejudice have been triumphed over by a National desire for peace, prospeilty and fraternity. Patriotism rather than partisanship wove the figurative wreath which today will be placed upon the brow of the new Chief Magistrate. Two citizens were ict up for the eutlragts of the people one an adept In political legerdemain, the other a nonprofessional. The first constructed a portable stago with shifting ecenes, calcium lights and tinsel trappiegs, with which he sought to dazzle and capture the judgment of the people as he Ultted the country over. The other preserved the ruodety of deportment and dignity of word and action characterizing the man and patriot. The voting element of the 53,000,010 people cf the Republic looked on. The voters slid: One man will be President for a party, the other President of the people. The voters selected the latter, and he it is who will to day be Inaugurated President of the United States. Our Nation's perfect day! We are at peace within our borders and with overy Nation of the earth. Our population was never so great, our civilization never so ad vanced, inter communication never so convenient, edncation never so universal, liberty protected by law never so complete, commerce, mattufactures ard agriculture never so extensiv, human clarity never eo abou'ullrg. There is not an inter state issue to brew internal discord in the Republic. Thtra is not a threatening cloud, even the size of a man's hand, over our political tky. We ses fttranien of the North and the South once more (a'led together around the Cabinet table t token that the asperities ot war are removed. If there it legislation needing amending in tho interest of the masses, the etlnment of the country Is demanding the reform, and our incoming administration will see that the demand is printed. The depression which for some time has been upon our Industries is already lifting, commercial confidence is gaining strength. Our National star is again in tho ascendant, and trout today we expect to date a healthful growth of prosperity and contentment agrinderglcry than the Natten has ever known. TUE RETIHINO PRESIDENT. That Chester A. Arthur wilt resign the Presidential chair enjoying a larger measure ot public esteem than when he assumed it no fair minded citizen will gainsay. That oy comparison with his predecessors since 1M55 he has proven a deserving Chief Mai,lträte will not be denied. , When Mr. Arthur was nominated on tho Republican ticket with Mr. Garfield the country knew of him as something of a local political toa in New York, but his name was most familiar in connection with his summary dismissal from the New York Custom-house by John Sherman and Rutherford R Hayes. When poor Garfield fell a victim to an assassin's bullet it must have appeared to John Sherman, chronic candidate for the Presidency, like the irony of fate that the man whom be had kicked out of place with denunciations had come to rule over the White House. Certain it is that with the tidings of Garfield's daDger, the country contemplated with apprehension the successorship of Arthur. His very becoming deportment during Mr. tiarCe'd's long illness did much to temper public sentiment in his favor. It was not long after he had assumed the Presidency before the Republican politicians who had expected him to be plastic in their bands found that he was not without brain or tackbone. A statesman in no sense.

be did display, however, decency and comparative fairness. If he erred at times be at least rcss superior to the narrow partisanship which bad been so long characterizing the Presidency. If he prescribe! no reforms be frowned upon many abuses which haddirgriced previous Republican administrations. The refusal of President Arthur to become a party to irregular resignations and reappointments with a view to handicapping the administration to succeed his own, white nothing more than right, is certainly something more than some other of his party would have done la his plac, judging from the character of their "claim all" partisanship before and after the election. All things considered Mr. Arthur deserves tho good will of the country in retiring from olllce, and Democrats will join with Republicans in wishing him a long and prosperous life.

AFTER THE WEATHER WIZK&KD. One Republicon official at least will recall with no amiability the tat full day of liepublican administration. General Hazen has been made by President Arthur the subject of a General Court Martial, to convene on 11th Inst., on charges of conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline, in having ollicially and publicly criticised the action of the Secretary of War. The charges are founded on the corrfpondf nee and controversy relative to the Oreely relif expedition.. This action of Presides t Arthur will not bo received graciously by the Rlaine faction. G nral Hizn is a son in law of Wash und brother In-law of John McLean. It Is well brown that warm personal intimacy exists between ll'ain and the elder McLean, and it was asserted during the campaign that the leaning of the Cincinnati Jluqulrer to Elaine was in the Interest of Hazen in the event of Elaine's election. However deserving Hazen may be of the arraignment, the Rlalneites will look upon it as a final stab of President Arthur before surrendering office. CURRENT .NOTE AM) COJIMKNT. "Did you ever eee a woman play whist?" r.ska the BoUon Pest. No, but we've seen a good many ot them try. Sonierville Journal. Tiik red slandard of your uncle Thurman waves once more above the ramparts of the Cabinet. It Is a danger signal to all the malarial sta'esmen in Ohio. Philadelphia Prese. Mr. Clsvki.am should beware of Din Lockwood, Dan Lumont and Dan Manning. Dan is a bad name for luck. John Rail has just had a terrible lot of trouble with Soudan. Chicago Tribune. We rf gret to eee our distinguished young friert, Colonel Watter?on, standing on the bnis cf the Ohio shouting to Mr. Cleveland: "You have not tent for me and I have not come." Louisville Commercial. Occasions like the dedication I the Washington Monument, held in the middle of winter, are, like the tnnerala of old citl.ens, chiefly remarkable for the nnmber ot other old citizens whom they kill off. Detroit Times. To nav, therefore, that the present condition Of American industry is gloomily bad is to go beyond the limits of truth as to that; and to say that its prospects are worse by reason of Mr. Cleveland's elec tion to the Presidency is simply a pieca ot partisan absurdity which need not be made the occasion for any alarm whatever. Minneapolis Journal. It is suggested that the Senate will scan President CIcvolaid's appointments very clobely and refute to confirm tome of them. The Wh'gs did the same thing for Andrew Jackson when tie nominated Martin Van Iluren for the English mission. They lived long enough, owever, to see the stono which the builders rejected become the head , of the corner. Martin Van Daren succeeded Jsckson In the Presidency, and the Republican Senate may profit by recalling these facts. Louisville Times Ik we could reach the ears of our legislators from this mud curbed, blocked-up, no-way-out of county sent, we would urge again the supreme necessity ol better roads. Good roads would le worth more to the State tlmn a hundred industrial .schools, and the man who can pilot us through all this mud and show us a better way to our i hurches, and mills, and markets, and railroads would do more for his country than the combined effuxtsof all Legislatures that have met In the State for thn last ten years Ashboro (N, C.) Cornier. PRRSONVIS. Tu k Rothschilds never employ a nan who has the reputation for Ill-luck. Gror.or. Pjcaiodn'h birthday Is no longer publicly observed in the town In which he Mas born and which now bears hie name. A ticTrr.n of Abraham Linteln worth S-V-CObas stood boxed np lu a dark and dingy corner of the Capitol at Albany for over four years. In the war ot the Rtbslllon, Oomnor Hartranft's regiment was number Fifty one, nd Governor Hoyt'a, who succeeded him in the Gubernatorial chair, was number Flftytwo. A Mxtuopist minister residing near Eoston had as guests two fellow preachers who were deaf. On asking one of them to lead in prayer at family worship, each supposed he was the one invited, and so both kneeled down and communed. Roth being deaf, tbe host had no little diiliculty in stopping one and explaining the precise state of the esse. : Mr Bi t.nanp, the editor of London Punch, I Is the father of eleven daughters, and, what lis still more remarkable, they are all mari ried. If Mrs. Rurnand would tell the world ! how she managed it her memory would ba I forever held blessed by many parents oppressed with a superabundance of daughters whose matrimonial prospects appear dim and remote. Mrs. Rurnand ought not to miss

srjch an opportunity of savin maoy gray heads from premature graves. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island, who Is now filling out the unexpired term of Congressman Chase, is the third cf the name who has served in Congress from that State. His grandfather, Nathan Fellows Dixon, was a member of the Senate from December. till his death, which occurrel in Hi:, In December, is;3, the father of the present Congressman, Nathan Fellows Dixon, entered the House, and served from the same district now represented by his son till 171. Mus. Lowell's -,-rave in Kensal Green Cemetery is very near the grave of the late John Lothrop Motley, who was one of Mr. Lowell's prcdeceeeors as United States Minister to Eng'and. Oao of the most beautiful of the Moral otlerings tent to Mr. Lowell as a token of sympathy came from Lady Harcourt, wife of Sir William Vernon Harccurt aud daughter of the late Mr. Motley. Wimthes were alto sent by Lady Bramey, Lady Alwyne Corapton, and scoras of othr persons. Mhs R S. Miiis editor ot the, Hawley (Da.) Star, has re3lgutd her position. During the six months the has furnished all the news that made, the Star shino she proved up on a pre eruption, planted five acres of trees on a claim, built a sawmill, raised tbe largest fquah and the roundest squash in Hyde Counts'. She now proposes to red awhile and reside on hf r homestead. When Miss Mills prove up on thi 6he will have 10 acres of land, and prjbably as ma iy offers of marri.H'je. Tiik wife rf JaniM M. Hidden, the exl'ahier'f the de fund First National Rank of Newark. vlio is now pprviru' a even years' sentence in the State Prison for forgery, died at her home In R!oon:fUM. N. J., last week. She returned with a heavy cold from Washington week before last, where she had been endeavoring to secure President Arthur's signature to her husband's pardon, for which a largely-signed petition had been forwarded to the President. The cold rapidly developed into pneumonia. She leaves three children.

A Colorml Mitu'n lew. To the Editor of theScntlacl: Sik Wbllfc all intelligent colored men will accord to Dr. Townsend ability and sagacity in his able management and defense of his Civil Rights bill hefore the Hcus3 yesterday, yet no intelligent colored n an can indcree the uncalled for slurs and insinuations against Hon. Mr. Hendricks. It would be well for colored men to learn nothing can be made by allowing the uneasy Eepubl ean leaders to induce them to speak or a:t In a spirit of unfriendliness to the Democratic leaders. Tney most remember tho Democratic party is in power, "and curs?d the that kicks acatnst the pricks." More flies can be caught with molasses than with vir gar. Friendly acts and kind words will win, when rash, inconsiderate wrrls ur deeds tend to enrage aud prejudice our cans. We can not plac i a row Ives la the aitltudcof the ancient god?, "whoai they won!d destroy they first made mad." It is bad policy to fir?t , insult those from whom we ask n favor, or to goad tin lion while yoor head is In his mouth; if you do he will ciDih you. Mr. Hendricks is the honorable representative of this Nation, and the beloved leader of the Democratic party, and there is no more reason to remember against, taunt and h'pult him and his friend witri the sins of his ant bellum days, when the whole Ncrth, without recard to party, five to one felt and acted as he did, any more than to remember the worsw sins of a worse manJack Logan who said more did nre, ami went further egalnst the colored people than the true manly dignity of Mr Hendricks would allow him to descend to. and to day Mr. Hendricks conducts himself with the manly dignity that becomes a Christian statesman and a jrentlemati, without any of the hragidocio, domineering spirit cf his tale rival for the Vice Presidency of tho United Slates who received the hnlloo and vote of all colored, as well h white Republicans. Lt us learn to be jtut, ar.d honor him to whom honor is due, without regard to party alhliatlon. A Co i.i i: mi Dkmim ku Match lysi5. I -.J!.'. - ' .1 Ilm World' i; poult Ion. Nmv Ori i an", March .:, Idaho Day and tbe formal opening of tho women's departnunt were the ovents at tho exposition which Attracted a large number of visitors. The ceremonies In the Idaho Department 1 ran at 2 p. m. by an addrer.s of welcome by ti e Itlsho I'ommlssiner, Colonel Shoup, to ebcut !,( o invited guests. Colonel Donau fol owed as orator of the day. Addrc&res were then made by Commissioner tisneral Moiehead. Colonel AnJiews, of California, and Jctle Price. Alimkpd llurglitra, Damov, 0, March :; Thren masked men entered William Harris' residence, two miles from Dayton, last night, Injure I the old man, boned and gagged him, and threat- ! er ed him wit!) death uulcn he revealed the hiding place of JJ (j"o. He declared he had elven them all he hail, V-MO. Thereupon H ey ißnsackfd the hom, tcn the Led ling in hiela and ripped up the rarppts. Finding nothing more, tht-v departed, leaving Harris S'Ctuely titd. I'riends released him ihn n.ornlng. Auotber Allnrik' Milk I'mbtthl. Pitts m r., March li Tbe coal miners of the Pittsburg district at the representative convention, held lure today, refused to accept the Trades Tribunal rate of two and a half cents per bushel, offered by Umpire We ekt, and after denouncing the utuplra for the decision, resolved ti strike next Monday for three cents per bushel. Theop?ra tcrs assert they will not pay the advance de UHcdedby tbe convention, and If insisted uj on will cloe down their minei. The strike or locxoot will throw out of employment , 4,100 n ea. I hhot uu h TfMlu. Ch a I; i o tt v 1 1 i.k, Va , March 3 Perry Carrlngton, shot by Joseph Martin in a Virginia Midland passenger train this morning, diftd from his wounds to-night. Tno shootirg grew ont of a dispute over a seat in the railroad ccach. Carrinjjton received four hot, one in the neck, one ia the groin and cue in tbe thigh. tleneral Oram' Coiulttluu Unchanged. Nan- York, March 3. General Grant gave one hour to his memoirs to-day. To night his condition is reported uncnanged.

8ENT1KEL SPECIALS. Discharged by the Court. Special to tbe Sentinel. Vsrnon, Ind., Marth ?. John Rowe, Henry Schräder, John Fkes and Jesse Sampson, who have been in jail since the 1st of January, on a charge of being accessories to a horse theft, mention ot which was made at the time in the Sentinel, were to day tried by the court and discharged as not guilty. These are the parties that live in Indianapolis. Perry Smith, the prosecuting wstnesj, went back: on his Statement as regarding their having a hand in the theft, claiming that he was drugged at the time and didn't know what he was tayirg. Death of Another Centenarian, Special to the Sentinel. Vi.nci.sni , Ind., March 3 Mrs. Mahr.da Fvans, a centenarian, died in the poor house here a day or two ago. She was 10fJ years of age, and had no living relatives so far as known. Pfc, had evidently outlived three generations', for none of her children coald tie traced up. She deserves a tombstone of prominence to mark her last resting place, as the oldest inhabitant ot Indiana.

Suicide. Special to tbo öcntlael. Eati-yii.le, Ind., March :;. Samuel H. McCoy, at one time a County Commissioner of the county and man of considerable prominence, committed suicide by hanging hlm.elf to a beam in his barn about noon today. Family troubles appear to have been the cause ot the act. Accidentally t-!it Special to the eutlncl. Vincrnm", Ind., March 3. William Youug, a well-known colored man, was accidentally shot in the furehead to day by Rus -ell Clark. Yor.ng was holding a tub for Clark to ebcot nt, with a twenty-four caliber target gnn, when the ballet glanced, miking a dangerous wonnd. Conslrts EMitpu From the .Michigan l'en. Itentlur jr. J At k on, Mich., March .1, Ju.it before o'clocK to night one of the guards at the prison saw tlx convicts running off from the rorth wall and began firing his gun, but wltbont eilect. Tue escapes are George Murray, of Sbiawa?:-ee County, December, 11, seven veara fr burglary; George Wileon, letroit, murder in the second degre?, life. I-Vbruary, lsl; Fr-k Descon, Lewanert County, ten years for robbery, April, 1'M; James Lawsjn, Detroit, fifteen yeirs fur htirplary and assault, May, sj; "joln A. Ryan. Detroit, titten years fo' burglar?, November, 17;, and Rlcliard Ta h jt. Mnctefan, fifteen ycr.ri for manslaughter. Mav. 1M. The latter weizbs about JJ, aud could n't run fa;t, and climbed in a "ftr of ft freight train which t:i3 paBain'4 slowly. lie was teeu ay the train men, and the train was stopped and he was taken back. One of tbe febots ot the guard had clipped the top of his ear. The others scattered north and west. Immediately on the alarm belüg given all the keepers and guards that could be pparcd were started in pnrsuit, to the number of about twenty. A man cams in abjut 8:30 and reported seeing three or four convicts about a mile nort'j of town. The Warden took a gun and started In that direction. The through which they escape i was slarted the lloor of an obi, disused blacksmith shop, and from what was aid by a convict to-night, they must have been at work at it six or seven months. Thev were employed 8" roustabiuts on the Vebter contract, end had access to the old shop. The tunnel is ubjut forty feet loug, and two feet in diameter, and where the3 put the dirt is a mvftr ry, Murray is wanted in New York for th murder cf a policeman, which crime was confess d to by a convict named Ssymour, vvho ditd hero a short time nzo. His onfession taid Murrav did the killing. Thentandlug reward of 0 will be increased in the morning. A Mate Auditor Ntmpended. Dr. Moini , March 3. Governor 3herman this afternoon served notice on Auditor Rrown, suspending him fron the office and appointing J. W. Cottell, formerly Auditor of State, Auditor pro teiu. Tho notice statt s the suspension is mad because of Rrown'a failure and refua! to account f jr certain moneys and property of the State intrusted to him Auditor. Cottell, who had filed his herd, accompanied the olficer serving tho notice, ready to take possessit n ot the olhce, but Rrown red s?d to surrender tho olline t the boaks and I h per. It is understood tho Covernor had thecliictof the Auditor examined by the Commissioners, and that the C.immts iloners reported the state of the facts which ni! it mandatory on the Governor to suspend tho Auditor. The matters of alleged delinquency on the Auditor's pari, on which the Uuvemor has acted has nothing to do lth the complaints made against Drown lu connection with the examination of the insurance companies. The Commission did not Inquire into that lURtter, but only detailed the management of his office and nets. r.rrwn tats the complaints agatuwt hit office aro unfounded; that tbo Governor his not poster to suspend htm, and that he will resist in the courts, and has employed coin,ncl to this er.d. It is said tb Governor will arrest him in the morning If he attempts to take charge of the cilice. Hnnd)-Hi hool Huptrluteiideiit Calhoun. Kansas. City, Mo .March 3 TheSheriil of Marion County, Kanat, p-issed through the city to-day, en route to Leavenworth, with R. Calhoun, forty years of age, of Marion Center, Kat., who is under abentenceof forty yeais' Imprisonment. Calhoun, who wm a Superintendent of a Sunday school ar.d a member of the church choir, vas Indicted for the debauchery of fonrteen girls, og-1 ten to fourteen respectively, members of the Sunday school. He pleaded gntlty to the first two indictment, and was tentenced for twenty one yeiraln earh. He was guarded bv forty armed men to tbe evening train and brought here today. His inhnman practices commenced abont a year a?o, and caused intense excitement in the community when it berime knovin. He is supposed to hare a wife in Indiata. The Strike mi the lex Frtcllic Road, G w.wstcn, March 3. The News' Marhill special eays: The striking employes of the Texas Pacific shops carried out the resolution adopted at the mestlng. by stopping all the pasing freight trains. Eleven trains are now sdanding in the yard, several cars loaded with perishable goods. The strikers this afternoon notified the cilicers of the read that within twenty-four boars all passenger trains will be stopped, but an engine with a mail car can be carrie 1 through. It the company refuses to send a

conductor the strikers will detail oneof their number to take the mailt to the Pacific coast. Good order prevails. No attempts have been male to destroy property. The city aithorities are watching every movement of the strikers, but as yet have found no cacse to interfere. A committee from the Marshall shops visited Lorgview, the junction of the Texts Pacific and International Great Northern Read, to induce the round house employe! to join the strike. The Loogview strikers azreed to allow no coache. except the mall, to be taken out after midnight to night. This plan, if carried out, will lerloufly interfere with the traveling public. A special from Palestine, on the International Great Northern, ays the strikers parted the streeta to day, and aro determined to hold out against the cut. lSaUiuiore Alive Ytt!i Teople. Rai timoim, Md , March 3 There wasmort life here lo day than for a long lime. Trains from the East and West began to arrive early, and by noon the city was thronged with tran-erson their way to Washington. The railroads are all taxed to their full t apacity, and trains will be running all night to accommodate the vast throng. Roth roals from Raltimcre, Md., to Washington are double-tracked, and trains will be run at full speed and far enough apart to avoi i accident. To-ni?ht, as the train conveying the New York County Democracy emerged frohe weft end of the Union tunnel, a shot was fired at it from the wall. The ball pasted through the window of a car, and through tbe hat of one of tbe passenger. The police weie at hand, but the assailant jumped d jirn nearly twenty feet, into the cametery grcniids, and escaped. Late trains brought considerable numbers of voyagers tack from Washington, win were unable to get acconuaodat ous tlure for the night. Murdrrer Arrted. Lot Hvui r, March ."..The Courier-Journal's Owensboro special says James S. McFadden was arrested here, to day, charged with tbe murder cf William Homines, in Owen County. Kentucky, in is ;:. He wn a fugitive from justice for eighteen years, lie is said to have killed three men since killin; Rom in es. Snlvutlou Ami' InUen Charge or. Ci.kyei.am, March 3. At Ail.ance, 0., last night, drunken rowdies took charge cf the Salvation Army nieetin. They palled the whiskers of the soldiers, beat them, and a jrieral iljht ensued. The women fainted, end there was a grand disturbance g?ni rally. ' (ONRLXSKD TLI.FUR.UIS. Hoiiteic. Tb n. embers of the County Ramocnry end Irvii ;r Hall left for Washington ttl mot hing, 1 . -00 strong. l.itt night George Rarnard, of Findlay, O., highly respected citizen, suicided with ari:le. Poverty was the cause. In San Francisco the Supreme Court yesterday decided that Chinese children must be admitted to the public schools. In accordance with the nsaal custom the member of the Cabinet placed their resignations in the hands of President Arthur. The trotting mare Louise N. was eoM by J. R. Newland, of Stillwater. N. Y., to a New York party for MO.OO ). Record, -J : JO ;. Daring tho two sessions of the Fortyeighth Consres there lias been introduced In the Hou?e s.iN. bills and 31' joint resolutions. The proposed canal treaty between tbo United States and Nicaragua was unanimously passed bv the Nicaraguau Senate Saturday. Owing to the absence ol the, attorney for Mackin, a motion for a new trial In the Chicago election fraud cases was postponed until March FJ. The cable steamer Mackey-Rennett arrived at Halifax from England. No appearance of the Hanoverian, from ineenstowu, with Canadian voyageurs. Dr. James Gardner, of Wsst Erooklield, 0 was arrested to-day on an allldavit of tbo connty Infirmary directors, of having the body of a female pauper unlawfully. Mr. and Mrs. Rubrac.h Roth, of Cleveland, removed to Akron, ()., yesterday. Roth it forty five and his wife twenty-live. While he had his back turned sho eloped with au unknown stranger. At Athens, ()., early yesterday morning, (ieorge Rradley shot Matt Rennett thronet the lung, intlli ting a fatal wound. Un?iett boarded with Rradley, and it is charged that he iecame intimate with Mrs. Rradlov. At Spring held, III.. In the joint Convention yesterday, forty-four Senators and l.'J Representative weie preterit. On rll call there was no responses except by Haines, who voted for Morrison. The conveatiou then adjourned. All entrances leading to tho Parliament landings at Ottawa were closed with tho exception of the main entrance tn the building. No publlo reason is awi'gned for this, but the Government thought it a 1 visahlu take every precaution against dynamiters. . Foreign. Gladstone paired a good nuht au 1 a'.tended to business yesterday. The recruiting report khows that the Urit ish army now numbers H1,mo men. The French Heft which hns b?ca b)nibtrd log Shanghai has i turned after doln rauch damage. An explosion in the Government powdV manufactory at Grenada, Spain, killed two and injured six pertons. Lord Wolseley telegraphs from Korti that F.rackenbury's force arrived at Rlrtl, Sunday, on the return man h to Mt-rawi. The excitement occasioned by the strained relations between Rusla and Ensiand stilt ronllnnes. Consols have fallen .'-J in tonsequence. A telegram from Tien Ts:n states that in consequence of tbe t rench action againit rice as a contraband of war ths price hs riten HO per test, in China. General ßrlere ie Lisle telegraphs that General Negrier, .- Saturday, attacked an 1 diverted the Chinese in th vicinity of Lacgson ana captured many guns. The CommuniAt leaders have announ d their intention to marcn through the struts of Paris on the anniversary cf the Commune with red tlags tlying. The police fear 82ri ous riots. Harcourt, the British Horns Secretary, ia answer to a telegram asking if it wa3 true the resignation of the ministry was imminent because of discord in the Cabinet, eent an answer denying there was anr discord ia the Cabinet, and naying the Cabinet was net going to resigu.

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