Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1885 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL TUESDAY MORNING MARCH 17 i885.
SENATE rnOCEEI)IX(i8.
An Inttrf itlos; DUcunlon on Senator Van Wjck'a Iiolotlon on tUm Onrkbon Gift of Public LftUtll. Washikotoic, March 1;. Mr. Blair ofTared a resolution authorizing the continuance of the Inteatlgatlon of the difterencea between capital and labor. He stid the Investigation "waj practically concluded, tnd an extension "vraa desired for the purpose ol making a re 5ort Under objection of Mr. Cockrell Its conaid cration waa postponed until to-morrow. Mr. Van Wjck'a Backbone resolution was laid before the Eenate, and Kastis made a speech upon It. lie laid a great wrong had been done the people of Loalaiana, and he wished to enter his protest against Its conaammatlon. The title to the lands was illegal and fraudulent, and eet up to drefraud the aettlera of their rghts. This very title had been denounced r y tb New Orleans and 1'aclfic Company in locnments which had been preaenttO in CorjRiees und the Interior Department as utterly baseless and illegal. Kve rybody was perfectly agreed that the Backbone Cami any was a nuisance and a disgrace; it ne-r lived for any corporate purpose whatever. l ut ws mere skeleton of a derelict association. Yt. in 1SSI, by one of the most extraordinary proceedings on record, thh defnect corurany made nn assignment to the New Orleans Pacific Company, and it was up m anch a title that the latter based its clala a. The transfer was radically vicious and ab aolute'y void. The consideration for it was the enormous sum of fi. One-third of the stockholders denounced the act before the Interior Department as a shame and a fraud. lie was glad to know that the Beer 3 try of the Interior was KOing to investigate this matter, and he hoped that in the future there would be an administration which would be In the interest of the people, an 1 protect them from the rapacity of rich railiod corporations. Mr. Teller defended his course, and said tut a po'nt had been made by the Senator from Louisiana (EustiM which bad not been passed npon by the Attorney General and by tho Judiciary Committee of the Home. It bad been the unbroken rule of the department for sixteen years to issue these patants whenever the parties had complied with the conditions subsequent without reference to time, and that had been done, in nine casts out of ten, without anv inquiry whatever. When he was Secretary of the Interior he had issued papers in ths came identical manner, which was now called In question, and that, too, without having taken Into consideration the opinions of the committee of Congress or the opinion, of the House, when, by a majority oi fortytwo, it bad declared this grant should not be vol a. If the administration is to commence to undo what the late administration had done, it should be done in accordance with the forms ot law and in a manner comporting with the dignity ot a great administration presiding over the interests of 50,000,000 of people. Could it be done by a resolution of the Senate or speech addressed to the public? Nay, it should be done by its court. Mr. VanWyck, referring to Mr. Teller's speech of last week, said "the Sonator from Colorado regretted that every person who has spoken on this subject was not a lawyer, meaning probably a Uwyer of railroad proclivities, so that there might be a full record of such lawyers as during most of the last sixteen years had been at the nead of the Departments of Jostice and of the Interior, making precedents , which the Secretary boasted he had followed. It was usual for corporation attorneys to stigmatize a settler as an interloper and speculator. The ex Secretary, he said, had listened so long to this dialect in the Department that it was natural he should repeat it in his speeeb, and sneer at such men. Almost in the language of Tveed he asked "What are you going to do about it?'' Inferring to Oklahoma, Mr. Van Wyck end the Federal bayonets were pressed agair.st the breasts of hardy pioneers who were impatient to enter the Indian Territory, bat there were no bayonet) to drive out the cattle syndicates already in the Oklahomas, or te destroy the fences illegally inclosing millions of acres of public doma'n. Coming to the subject of the present discussion, Mr. Van "Wjck asked why the late Seoretary of the Intericr was in such hot histe to issue tbese patente. Why was not the question left to the dellbeoation ot his successor, who could have determined what portion did not properly belong to the road? Even on the admiss.ocs last administration, the depart menthad given the land to the Backbone Company an if the entire I ne had been constructed after the assignment in 1831. The l&t Secretary of the Interior, in the exuber ance of his sympathy for Gould and Huntington, urged or consented to a free gift of Jand for ICO miles of graded road. For a faithful public servant it required no corporation lawyer, nor any other lawyer, to understand this performance. There was another remarkable feature in the transaction. The ex-Secretary, from many years' practice as attorney for the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and his long experience in the department, knew that the railrcais, to escipe State acd local taxation, declined to take patent except as they marketed their lands. Did not this action suggest a strong suspicion that the motive must be fear of the next Congress, or that the incoming administration might not be completely subject to railroad corporations' control? Mr. Teller denied that any utterance of his justified the statement that he regarded settlers as interlopers. Gould and Huntington were great bugbears, but if they had made anything wrongfully out of the public by by conso.idation, whose duty was it to interfere? The dereliction lay at the honorable Senator's own door. The Senator had been a member of the Committee on Public Lands four years, and had never raised his hand to remedy the wrongs of which he complained until the Texas Pacific bill came oyer from tke House no thanks to him. Mr. VanWyck defended himself against the charge of inaction. When the Texas Pacific bill waa reported he had secured a piece for it among the special orders, and twice had the Senate buried it in the bodyof the calendar. After on executive session the Senate adjourned. A CnURCll QUARREL. Continuation of the Episcopal Church Trouble at Qutncy, Illinois. tjuiscY, 111., March 1C The constantly varyiDg trouble in the Episcopal Church here between the Bishop and the Dean took another turn Saturday. Dean Irvine, acting under the published notice that he ignored the entire proceedings against him and would continue his ministry, gave notice to the press Saturday night that he would hold regular cervices at the Cathedral yesterday. This notice was followed by one from Bishop Barge that there would be neither eivice nor Sunday-school. This was again followed by notice from the Dean that there would be service. Yesterday morning early a written notice was tacHed en the Cathedral door, announces ÜWTiC? bj b Jbil
was soon replaced by written notice from the Bishop of no tervic. Thus the matter itocd at 1U:;0, tbs time for service, when a pcod number bad gathered at the front door. Indignation wns manifest among them, and they were not to be disappointed, ßome one got into the Cathedral and opened tha door, and the Dean held regular service, a congregation of 2C0 teing present. Many were attracted by curiosity to aee an expected row. The Dean said the canona required services to be held dally during Lent. It wis his duty as Dean to aee that they were held. If ths Bishop did not tee to it, and he intended to do h's duty if In his power. What the Biihop will do for this violation of his ordM and the breaking into the church is not known. Humor lavs he will swear oat war rants against the Dean and others fir trev rsss. There is no prospect of aic:d to the fight. DEECIIEK ON LOUSE RACING Sentat'.onnl i:paole Durlug Buntf' Services t Plymouth Church,
Brooklyn, N. Y March 10 There was a rather sensational ep'sode 'n Plymouth Church Sunday morning;, indirectly caud, perhaps, by the strong feeling growing out of the vigorous war which to being waged upon Coney Ialand pool aellers by the authorities of this city. Mr. Beecher aas expounding the text, Romans xlv., "2: "Happy is he that condeiurieth not himself in that thing which he alloweth." In dwelling upon his well-known liberal views as to what amusements are prorer for Christian Indi viduals or communities, Mr. Beecher touched npon bone racing. He eald that there wni no more barm in running one horse against another than In running one boyagitnst another. But when an attempt was made to separate the races from gambling those interested In the counes cried outvthat It would ruin racing altogether. He pointed out the ivils resulting from pool selling, and remarked that he did not think we could atl'ord to fcd horses on men; to improve the breed of horses by deteriorating a generation ot young men. Some one in the visitors' gallery hereupon shouted out: "It is not Ute." "What is not true?" indignantly responded Mr. Beecher as quickly as he could recover from his surprise at the interruption. "H you mean what I said, I say it is true," and in a thundering emphasis. Applause. 'I have sympathy with everything that enlarges a man, his liberty and his sphere. I have taught that lurgeness and eelf-control in the soperior sphere of liberty is that which Christianity ought to produce among men, but while I have preached this I have insisted that that liberty should be to administered that it should not tempt the ignorant to error, but to inspire and lift them ud; anl that doctrine I shall teach. Applause. That will do," said the preacher, deprecat injsly. "When Christ was coming into Jerusalem they tried to make him atop the shouts of the people , and he said: "If yon atop the people the very Btones will cry out.' Now and then there is an occasion when I thick a demonstration in religions assemblies is a good thing, and if it ever was a good thing I think it is to day, and on that particular subject." The courue cf the sermon was then resumed. Before the service Mr. Beecher said he should probably preach next Sunday in Atlanta. "Times have changed," he added laconically. EATING ON A WAER. Over l'onr Ponnds ot Liver Padding, Reside Other Things. , Reading, Pa., March 10. For some time past considerable rivalry has existed between Henry Smith and Joseph Marquette, recognized as Heading's champion eaters. Each claimed that he could outdo the other in the eating line, and finally their friends made arrangements lor them to engage in an eating match at Steigerwald's Hotel, on the outskirts of the city. The contest was to have been for a purse of $J0 at a late hour Satur day night. Some of their friends tell wonderful stories of their powers, and a large crowd gathered to witness the contest. The diet selected was liver pudding, a greasy dish, which is a great favorite among the Germans. A piece ot bread with a small bit of this pudding is sufficient to appease the appetite of the mcst hungry man of ordinary eating capacity. "When the 'hour arrived Smith's backer announced that Lis man had outdone himself; that in order to test his powers for this match he had overtaxed himself and felt ill from the eilects of eating a thirteen-pound turkey. Then Marquette, a skinny man of ordinary height, went at it alone for the purse which was raised for him. A pile of the pudding, which was exceedingly rich and fatty, was placed before him and he went at it. He bad fasted for several days, and was overloading an apparently weak stomach. "Time" was called and he commenced, while tbe hall In which he was eating was crowded to its utmost capacity. He was furnished with bread and liquid refreshments, and ate steadily for twenty minutes, when he took a walk around the square for the food to settle down. He continued eating for an hour, when he had consumed four and one half pounds of the pudding, which, if put together like sausges, would extend three yards, besides a loaf of bread, ten schooners of beer, five of water, three glasies of whisky and two quarts of pear cider. His friends then rolled him on a barrel, after which he went home to bed. He is new as fro3h as a daisy. His best record is eating two quarts of ice cream at one sitting. He ones ate a young p!g, rcasted entire, and weighing twenty pounds, in one and one-half hours. Iled. Botes on Pale Cheeks. Thin blood means poor health. Many girls and women look as If they never had enjoyed a hearty meal or a brisk walk of a'mile. Languor and debility possess these sorrowing persons. (Jive them Brown's Iron Bitters. Then their blood will be pure and rich and they will enjoy health. Mrs. Jennie Johnson, Cullman, Ala., says she took Brown's Iron Bitters for general debility and was cured. A Family Ficht Arrested for Alleged Stealing. Special to the Sentinel. Winchester, Ind., March 16. Richard and Seth Connoroe, brothers, and Charles Gollier, their nephew, engaged in a light here yesterday, in which all were pretty well done op. Richard Connoroe received a fearful wound in the left breast. Marshal Fletcher arrested and brought the parties before Justice Canada this morning, who held the trio in '00 bonds to await the result of the wo tin de i man. Anna Thompson, colored, was arrested by Marshal Fletcher yesterday and placed in jail on a charge of stealing an overcoat from Cah Bensen, also colored. The coat was found in her possession. Death or a 1'romWiug Young Man. Special to the Sentinel. Mljcie, Ind., Maren 16. The sad news of the deati ot Profetsor J. A. Lambert, which took pisce on the train south of Cincinnati this morning, resched hi3 friends here today. He was a former resident of this county bn pr Jb rasj )b;ee y??.;? fcas, bea
one of the prlnclral of the Campbell University, at Holten, Kan. His healtü failing, lost November be went South to annd tbe winter, hoping that the mild climate of that section might prove bene icsl to him. but to the contrary, he decline! rapidly. Ills father has been wlta him a few dDjsftt Citro'Jflte Ala., where he has b?en tcr.pl ng for the past two month, and they were on their way home when it te?nn death overtook him while yet aboard the homeward bound train. He was twenty-eight years of age, was hlphly educated and was one of the nicst promising young mea of tbe West. Sentenced for Two Year. epccial to the Pcnttacl. Andkrso.v, Ind., March 1'. In the Circuit Court to-day Lewis Kuhn was sentenced to the penitentiary for two years for assault with intent to kill a colored man cf thin city three years ago. After the shooting Kuhn eicai ed from jail and has elnded the vigilance of otticers until last week, when he was ( apturcd, tried and sentenced. Do not for a moment let your confidence betray you into snppotlng yourself in capable of mistake. It h indcnl a serious blunder to refuse to take Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup when you even suspect you have taken cold. Drowned. Jacksonville, March 1. Captain Fay Wi der, o! Cincinnati, wss drowned le.st Monday In Indian Itlver, near City Point, by the capslziLC of his boat. A Voire From Italy liev. W.C. Van Meter, Superintendent of the Italian Bible and Sunday-School Mission, at Korae. Italy, writes under date SenUmber 1, ISS I: "Tbe Dalianscall Pond's Extract "Aqua di DIo," Water of God. We ceo It for every acne and pain; it is Indispensable ih oar medical department. I knew it was good Lefore, but now I can not find wordsto express my praire of its excellence." Invaluable for cuts, burns, bruises, ca'.arrh, neuralgia, etc. Mr. A. J. Hendiy, ol Gtorgia, gives tbe following 89 his method of curing hog cholera, which he states has been very successful: Pour one pint of spirits turpentine in a quart of inolncses, and givo a gill of the mixture to each animal.
THE GREAT CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, .Backache, Headache, Toothache; Sore Tliroat. Swelllngr". Kprnlm, Uraltes, Ilurii. ftr.iltf. Frot Itite. iD ALL UTUER ISOMLY PAI AM AC1IE4. Colli Druk'.U n.l Iler evrjrwjifro. KiHy C-juU tW.'.e. THE CIl.lltLE A. VOIiKLI'It CO., (Iwhiwih A. ruUUIK CO.) BaltiBorr, i., V. S. A. S3 1? C2 1 CURES (I LIVER R' KID HEYS STOMACH AND BOWELS. ALL DRUGGISTSf II I Will IWJ , fRiClCCUAR.l !DyspeptA, General Debility Jaundice, Habitual Constipation, liivov Complaint Sic ?Jdic!iD, Diseased KM nay? Uto., tc. Ititthlas ou thi Pu; ttt Ira$s, txrty, which oav 'jo en .-j aerated AS2 BiJs .tlT3 BiIu3. 'tllZ1LZZt 2)t It clear.?.- V. cyfto;n throujpbly, at i WiHWJLllOV THE f!fjOOi la Uaoqaaleil It ; C a; utoXirat.L . t, .'3i It X CS-i 1 U -".Vi. '.v Vöp...; o.'J: VUXCXL7 L,ll DITTOS CO oif rropru-tcra. The OTLT COESKT mae that can be return-! tr it! iirc).?r ftr thrt-e v" !" Mr. If rat fottua v DCDCCrTI V RATIfJPAftTOBV In Tf-v r..nvit. mi its rrit" el anu.-dliT l.cr. STaJ :: In vftrttty of itjlei nJ prior. Soli by nr?t-U d&lers eTrrwnf r. n -wxr or vrortrue irrutAiioa. ka:i. tr-nuin unlfM It h'll 1 ßixe on ths lo. CHiCACO COHLtT CO., CMiCSfiO CU
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