Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 24, Number 51, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1875 — Page 4

XHEJNJi AUGUST 12 1875

TUUHSlA, AUG. JO.

Don Carlos has written to bia cousin, Don Alfonso, the present king of Spain, persuad-1 leg him that he baa no rhjht to the throne, and that be should yield up the cares cf state tohis rela'lve, caf-ually remarking that he "intends to have them at any rate. The Ken.tiiici m generally content to allow the ?vp:: -c-ional rr volutions in Spain to run their course without commert, as they are as little worthy ol remark as the shitting of ckuds in a windy - aky. But sometimes the impudence of the?e pretenders to European thrones forces . t.i laima Ttrwin a n1nf-liit attention and uv&ft . " f ' " - provokes an indignant protest. If it w::? not for tha intricnes ol these Spanish " Bourbons, who imagine that the Lord, withvnf .ninins(hiim with nv mental Tecullarity aave pride, created them ' to rule over millions of their fellow men, Spain . . 1 ...s.vass A vV V.I t n might D8 a happy auu propriuua icanui. But these royal adventurers, with their adherents, sit watching th progress of tboir country, and at every m'ovemeut JsFcraMe for sedition, they excite a taction ready to sacrifice the public good for party triumph. Sometimes tbey move in the n3me of reiijjlon; sometimes as the representative ol divine right; sometimes as the advocates of a constitution, but always sparred on by ambitioi and selfish grasping alter power. And the Lope of office and honors gathers a set of desperate cVarvrters about them. What is Don Carlos or Don Alionao, either, that they should be worrying Spain like a couple of brutal bull dogs quarreling over a bone? The people of the country should realize the fact that once a king has been kicked out for misconduct, neither be nor his descendents Bhould be considered as haviBg any greater claim upon the nation than the poorest peasant in it. It may .be that D n Carlos is the representative of certain ideas and theories of government, and that be is accepted b auch by hia followers, but he himself puts faith, not in his mission, but simply in his personality. lie epeaks of himself as the heaven appointed ruler of the nation. Addressing Alfonso, he ask.3 that prince to con sider "the families brutally driven from their homes," "the mothers with bloodstained feet following their sons over the mountains," "old men, children and invalids asking for bread," with all the other horrors of civil war, and yet he keer on dehberdtely in the .'aaatical strife. Such fellows seem to think it perfectly natural that they should have their feet upon the necks of ethers, auicne can hardly sympathize with the 'hounds who appear to imagine thatth-y 1 . l . I . 3 J T--,. J WUiB uorn U ue mus wouutu uu, . nauto ia no less persecuted by her various dethroned kings than Spain, and when it is remembered how she is torn with contending parties of Orleanists, Bourbon i.ts,and Bcnapsrtista, each striving to get control of the fair and noble land merely for a division of her spoils, ot;e w tempted to wba tiat tLe guillotine had made clean work ol Louis Cipet and all hia relativer, direct and collateral, and that Napoleon and all his seed, breed and generation had been sei cn St. Helena, and tnat the volcanic island had gone down with them into the tea whence it Arose. There is a terrible longevity about the claims of a dethroned rojal family. Their title descends from sire to son, and neither lailuro cor disaster can extinguish it. It is a blessing for England that the Stuarts have died ont, for if they bad remained it is doubtful If even that steady going land would have escaped its periodical revolutioo. So long as there remained a Pretender to ro-ase the bblands, there was a rebellion iu Scotland every lew years. It would be natural to suppose that the descendants of a man whom a nation had entrusted with its rulereblp, would remain content and thankful in whatever position the cation aligned to them, but these sons ot kinirs and f mptrurt r.rpe ar to imaglte tfct tbey were net croartd for the good cf the ration, but the nation for the good of them. These pestilent conspirators lor crowns ought to be outlawed and hunted out ol Kmrq.eas enemies of the public peace. 2cw thtt the storm are over anJ tLe deso'altau of wealth which a shor; tima ago seamed to be secure lies suggestive ou all Bides, the thoughtful farmer may learn a useful lesson. A painlul demonstration is presented to many that care in saving is quite as important as labor and industry in producing. There are .doubtless many instances where no exertion, nor skillful management could have averted th9 consequences of bad weather. But it will by and by come to be the leading idea oi the agriculturist to solve the problem of overcoming adverse contingencies of the seasons. The true farmer will ir quire earnestly bow he msy counteract the evil effects of drought in a dry ieaoij, and also rsie a good crop in spite of excessive raits. No trifling progress uas wen malo in this direction already, at:d much greater achievements remain to be accomplished.' The ta&kol man set before himlstheoonquesl.cf all hostile elements, the utilization of bis natural enemlt.-, and themas ery of nature's forces. TLe single device of tile drainage has made a sip towards victory over drought and excessive moisture In the soil. Strangely enough jt is a potent remedy fur both. A proper preparation of oil, the creatioa of a vigorous plant growth is a general insurance against a dozen ills tcrops, including tardy maturity, tree's, ard especially insect ravages. About tü best protection to ins 2ct foes is a thiifth csh oj growth which ttey can not grappl wi'b. DsIIitj in th rlntt as ln the ani:il .vatem, i an i.ivit-tion to every d fctr and rVry fo. B'i'- tbo tivuVr tsoV U. ik -I'dsl ord'r t o-u-feider now i the cure of the crop at tiarvet time. In California where no raircnle appreh-nr!td in tLe summer (tbougu this year was an excep?ioD) the wheat i tut,

piled.up where they lie under dry skies f ir weeks in perfect safety. Ilere the farmer oi!if,i Jo differently. Ytt long eoUblished usage teemed to have stereotyped tbe uotion that when wheat is put up In the shock i: may then be left to take care cf itioli until it suits the convenience of the

iu the field. It is true that the custom ol ircimnliate threshing and saving has ma;k er at progress in late years. . But there are 5 000 farmers in Indiana to-day hzneotlag their folly 1n neglecting wheat shocks whirh adorned the the grand rolling tides which lately shipped tie unthreshed grain to New Orleans. It was stated by one paper in. Tip pec no county that Barnom's show cost the county J 100,000. On that day, which was lair, the fvheat might and should have been saved, but t; e entire farming population preferred to take the chances of the weather for their bread, and eo to the show, leaving it exposed. The result was that the golden opportunity was lost, and tbey paid for their day's fun with their year's work. There isn't much good seuse in taking such risks, which it 1 ettsy enough now to see. The haymaker in Vermont, where sweet timothy and clover i saved in good order are worth almost as much as tea, provides canvashay caps to cot er all the hay cccks and keep off both dew and rain. Here wheat is not always well shocked aud stacked, to say nothing of effective shelter for it. Any amount of wb.eat haa been ruined by roor stackinz. which a little extra care x would have obviated, and the work would have been a good Investment. Mr. Orth, writing from Austria, says that Americans are far ahead of that people in farm imple ments, and ahead of them in slovenly farming too. Daniel O'Cvnnell. A hundred years ago to day Daniel O'Connell wa3 born, and it is in every way fitting that his countrymen should celebrate with due reverence, as tbey have deter mined to do, the centennial of his birth, for in a century fruitful ol great and good men his character stands out in grand and pecu liar proportions. The task allotted to him. an unknown and obscure lawyer, was the uplifting oi an impoverished, disheartenad and enslaved people into a self-reliant natiou wita jut the sheduicgef a drop of blood, and the wondrous transformation was effected 3 by the touch of an enchautec's wand. Persistent and courageous genius was the mas$ioian. To understand something of O'Connell's labor ii is necessary to kaow something oi th9 condition of the Catholics of Ireland at tho time of his birth, and a simple synopsis of the penal code under which four fifths ot the people of tho island suffered will serve to indicate In some degree their misery and degradation. The Sentinel follows Leckj in Its condensation. Catholics were excluded from parliament, from corporations, from the magistracy, from the bench, from the bar. They could not vote " at aay elections. " Tbey could not aet a con9tobles, sheriffs or jurymen, or sarve in the army or navy or hold tho position of gamekeepers or watchmen. Thej were deprived of all means oi education, shut out from the University, and prohibited from acting as schoolmasters, ushers or private tutors. It was a crime to send their children abroad tor instruction denied to t?iem at home. If they married a Prctefctant the marriage was annulled and the priest who officiated might be hung. They could not btsy land, or receive it as a gift or inherit it from Protectants, or hold life annuities, or leases frr more than thirty-one years. If any Catholic householder was industrious and skillful enough to make the profits of ths land m ore tha one-third of the rent any Protestant who lodged information of the fact could take possession of his farm. If any Catholic secretly purchased land, the Protestant who discovered the lact, might claim the estate. The sons of Catholic parents Inherited their property in equal shares, but if the e!dst turned Protestant he became sole heir. The wife or a Catholic was freed from her bus band's control and received a share of his property on changing her religion. Any Catholic child professing itself a Protestant was at once taken from under Its father's cootrol and received whatever portion of the parent's property the chancellor, might see fit. No Catholic could be guardian cither to his own children or those of a friend. Apostate priests received aa annuity of from twenty to . forty pounds. To convert any one to Catholicity was an offence punishable with death. A Catholic tradesman could hot have more than two apprentices, 'and- no Catholic of anv station 'could own a horse worth more than five pounds, and any orthodox Christian offering five pounds might take the horse. In time of war Catholics had to pay for the damage inflicted by tha privateers of Catholic powers. In fact, every ingenious contrivance for harrassing, disturbing and degrading the x majority of the pe pie was put in operation. Catholic wor ship, and all the insignia ned in its service were" prohibited, and all monks, friars, bishODS, deacons and other dJgoltariMof the church were binished. soda refurn from exile inciirrol the psnalty of dath. A niwly graduated system of rewards was iu operatiou to encourage the detection of all lurking eccleslast!c, and by a curious coincidence thy price vA upon the hoad of a fxUr was the same a that given for the head of a wolf. Any comment upon such a pystetn of laws would be superfluous. It has boen pronounced by the groits:-t of poitt ical philosopher, liarko and Mc:r:!fqu;tu, the wor3tcode bver adopted.' It was not ho much a direct and anguinary assault u-.ou the Catholic faith as a system devi.-d to dr-baseacdd-irrade ti -r -'r o t! at religion. The result of ftU 1 'g slat a is hriPflv aid boldiv summed up in LckyH t ssay on Henry Crotta: : ThpTa' holies, excluded U to :verv i-o-sMvlity ot euilueure. deprived o their i.aiutul leader, aad consigned by the legislature to utter )t;noivuce.fcoou Miukluto the condition of broken and dependent helots. A total alMuce cf ihe industrial virtues, a cowering and abject i.eference to authority, a reekle-fncsa about the rf.,. a inve ol wcret llleiral coKit-.na-

11, tu y learned to regard law n erely as the x lrrtuu t i it:, and 11 moral we ;tht w uuerly dttryed For the greater pait of a eiturv the main object of the legislature was to extirpate a religion by the encouragement n' ome of the worst and the punishment of some of the best qualities of otir nature.

It was with this material that O'Connei was called upon to work. At hi biYth the worst features ol the code ha 1 been relaxed, so that he attended tho first Catho lie school opened ln the conntiy, and afterwards, as all higher edu.a tion was still impossible at Sijiiim he was 6ent to the Jesuit College at S: Omer's, ln Frence. When he returno;!. a a farther modification had taken plce which allowed him to enter at the bar wiiiio shotting him off from the highest honors of his profession. But tbo penal code had left the Catholic people of Ireland ignorant, d'i organized, spiritless. The peasantry bad been goaded to madnass, and attempted a rebellion which had baeu a disastrous tail nre. The gentry, long accustomed to fawn and cringe, were grown too timid to assert their rights. The priests were not vet so used to tolerance as to dream ot privilege. The spirit of ' ha:ionality among tae Irish Protestant patriots had re ceived its death blow by the abolition of the Irish parliament and the legislative union with Great Britain. To breathe a soul into these masses was O'Connell's mission. Ue aimed at two great obIdc.s the emancipation of the Catholics ol Ireland from all disabilities, and the repeal ot the union which had just been consummated. The first prize he won after years of labor; the second, project is In the hands of the Ilome Rule party ol to-day, and is destined to slow but certain accomplish mcnts. The peculiarity about his plauol action was that he aimed at revolution simply ' by means of moral force, and, first among men, rightly cenceived and es-ti mated the power of organized public opinion in the work of reform. Ue knew that his country, ' disarmed, Impoverished and discouraged, had no hope save ln the persistent statement of her case before the enlightened Judgment of mankind; and he had first to rouse the people to a sense of ihe!rown rights, and then to force their oppressors to do justice. With his great mission in view he be gan public lifo at the beginning of the present C3ntury and only tbo fctubboru perseverance of ttenlus u stained him in the slow and laborious rcress onward. The man who, in aiter years, gathered the people in tuas&es Iiko the -sorablicg cf vest armies ecu Id nut at tue first two tiK'6tiiis of the Catholic Associa tion muster a quorum of ten members, auu only completed the requisite number by call ing in a couple of passing students. But he breathed his own courage and enthusiasm into the cation, so that finally, in 1829, the measure oS emancipation which GratVan, Ourran and Pitt had lailed to procure was carried bv sheer moral force, the Iron Dux of Wellington bowin to tha organized and determined demand of hl3 coantrymeo. Frou this success O'Connell weu5 forward in his agitation for a re peal of the union, educating controlling and guiding the sentiment ef bis country. No man ever beeatne no idolized in Ireland, or so thoroughly bated in England, and yet throughout all the great struggle he transgressed no law, tuGiuraged no crime-, tolerated no violence. His novel method of revolution bellhd enemies who had fouod it an easy taok to dispose of Emmet, a ad only laughed at Smith O'Brien. Ill power and its results art well expressed ia the words of au im partial critic; Over all this vast movement O Council, at this time reigned supreme. There was no rival to his supremacy; there was no restriction tohis authority lie ptayea wuikine nerce eniowiiMMii htt had aroused with the negligent ease of a master. Lie governed the complicated organization lie had created with a bagaolty that never laueu. tie naa matte mmseu tne focus of other lands aud the center arouna wiiich the ii log intellect ot bis own revolved. lie had transjormed the whole social system of ol lietand; a. moat reversed the relative posi tions of Cathodes and rroiesianis; remoaae:ea by tili intiutne the eccleaiastlcal, tbe representative, the educational mtstilutlcua and created a public opinion that surpassed the wl;deai dreams or bis p reo ect Soors, uan ue wundtr at the proud eutita'Jou with which be exclaimed "Uraltan stood by tbe ciadle ol ids couutiy, and lohowed. her hearse; t was l;l for me to sound the resurrection trumpet, and to show that she was not dead, but sleeping." To attempt to analyze v.ithin the space ol a newspaper article the qualities of the unu who by sheer force cf intellect accomplished so much, would bo- a 1 utile task. It is enough to say that he was pure iu public and privat life: that bi moral courage ainoii tJioi to udacliy; that his inuusiry juu tenacity ot purpose would have won bun that eminence in his jtfoieäsiou which lib genius commanded; and that the broad and liberal principles lor which he fought in Ireland he applied U all men writhing; under oppression, lie wa3 a soldier in every good causo. If be was at times fierce, aggressive, and unscrupulous in his wartare, much cau bo largiveu in consideration of the opposition which he encountered aud the. noble put poses whhh he had iu view. II his moial character was grand, hi; intellect was colossal. Iu originality, iu wit, humor, pathos, force, he wasa!uiot without a rival. His wisdom In design and cunning in detail were mar vdllou... ills knowloJgo ol men est c.ally of Irish;jueu was like a master's cootrol of his' instrument. ' Asa Uwyer, he tloud at the head ol his proiession. As a deU:n;r in parliament, he wa rcidy, logical ui.d eloquent. But iu addres-ing masse ot men it is supposed that no ou e, parh.tp', the greatest ot j ncient r:itnri cproi-hed huu. It as thi. ftran: e n)Wf'r to sway crowds at his will that was the teeret of his success, and this has'y sketch may aptly close with Bulwer'8 noblu description of tbe liberator beford oue of the mounter meeting Into which hj gathered his countrymen: Once to inv slzht the giat ttirs was given, Walled by wide air and rooted oy ooutuu-s hc.iVflii : Keuetitu his teet the hu;ni.ti ocein lay, .nd wnveou wuve flowed inta sjMice awav. Melli.n ilit no clarion iouM bavessni l: i-ouud r'en t J t'i centtr of the hosts around ; And, a I thousOt, rose the sonorous swell. ff m Kjme church tower ewlnss tho silvery bell Alo.a and clear from airy tide to tide It glided easy, aa a bird may glide, To the last verge of that vast audience sent. It clayed with each wild passion as it went; ow stirred tha uproar now the murmur stilled J s?' of lauster answered, as itwuiea,

Then did 1 luow what uptUs cf lona.'l-J chott To roueoriull has the swiei human voice, n hen did I learn to seize the edden clue To tbepr .ml troublous life antique lo view Under the rocS stand of Deniontheuees, . Unstable Athens he-tve her rWlnz tea.s.

The Chicago Inter-Owan has so fir fortotten its usual reverence lor ail persons In authority as to describe Mather Pratt, the fa. wcrmn of Brentford, la the folio wiug style: Commissioner Pratt, like nil other larve bodies move.s slowly. His perceptive faculties are' not a quick am tuoe of Home people: nor Does he seizri up m aa Ilea with, tne mental agility that is displayed by some of his compeers. He is slow at forming conclusions, and it take his memory, ax w-U au Uta reasoning power, more than the ordinary Jeugtn of Uiae to get Into action. MIXING COLORS. A LONG D SENSATION. A WHITE QlRl, ENTICED FßOM HER HOME AXD SKDCCEDBY TH K COLORED COACHMAS BXCUtMEST OF THB rEOPLK AN ATTEMPT TO LASSOO AND LTNCH TUB MAN. The New York rime tslls she roliowing: The Town Hall at Btbyion, Loug Island, was densely crowded yesterday at the examination id the ciseoftLe negro Chauncy Brewster, who is charged with seducing Llewella Conklin, the a-lop'.ed daughter of Mrs. Dora Bcser, a widow lady residing in leer Park at that village A singular interest attaches to the case," owing to the weslthy position of the young la3y and tue superstition manifested by the negro and his friends. The particulars, wh'.ch wore briefly uarrated Iu the Times yesterday, ahow that Brewster bad ither obtained an astonishing amount of loilcence over Miss Conklin, or bad resorted todruK to effect his purpose. A popular superstition exists among the negro s ot Babylcm that the possessor of a cr rtaln "love charm" may, by itu-e, obtain the endurii g flection of toe other sex. The charm consists in a four ounce bottle, which contains ten needles and nine plus, and is re-filled with water 6very month. Brewster carried one of these bottles with him, and claims to have " charmed" Miss Conklin by its influence. Mrs. Balcher adopted Llewella sev eral years ago, and has alwavs treated her with the greatest kindness and consideration. About two months since she manifested HER AFFECTIOS FOR LLEWELLA by making a will by which the latter would come into the possession of $30,000 at the death of her adopted mother, aud of which ihy had been apprized. Although Mrs. Balcher had always permitted her daughter to go into society, she tad been, perhaps. unduly careful in tbe selection of her associat's, and had not permitted her to mingle frequently in the society of youog men. LlewelU h;d developed a taste for music, and to prratiry ber wishes Mrs. Bal cher engaged as her teacher a popular proiessor oitbis city, irom wnom she received lessons twice a week. She had otherwise received a good education and possessed many accomplishments. The colored coach man, who was the author of the terrible dispracH to the family, as well as the rnin of L'ewelia, is a tall mulatto about twenty-one yars o: age. fie had the faculty ot maxtn himself decidedly areeabl?,and was implicuelv trusted and respected by Mrs. BiiJcber. Llewella was frequently thrown tfi negro's society, hut no suspicion as !a''-v If "ETI Detween them had ever entered the mind of Mrs. Belcher, who repudiated the assertions oJ a carpenter a month since, who averred that hn bscf seen Llewella bestow several kis.5s upon the nearo. to which the latter warmly re-ponded. This scene occurred in the kitcben vhen tbe parties believed themselves to be unobserved. List Saturday a fitol ecoaomy seized Mrs. B-Scher and the uetrrv coachman was disccargM. On the following evening Llewella left home, haviue previ3usly autKiuncr-d her intcniin f attending eburch. By PIU;VluL'S APPO!XTME'T she met Brewstev near tbe milage drug store, wher she held a lorg conversation with him, and then mysteriously diss?part d. At a late hour, and lug aer all religious services were concluded as Lie well a did not return, Mrs. Balcher became greatly 1 armed, and messengers were sent to her several acquaintances in tbe village for tbe purpose ot ascertaining her whereabout. All efforts provad fruitless, and as she bad lat-t been seen in the compauyol Brewsier, as previously stated, suspicious were entertained that bo bad been instrumental in her sudden disappearance. Accordingly a warrant for his arrest was obtained and placed in the hands of Constable Voeks, who instituted a thorough search Icr Brewster, bat no clue to his wh. reabou-ts was obtained until the following Tuesday alternoou, when tbe officer's attention was directed to a olored family by tbo natn& of Jackson. Here tbe object of bi3 search was found with his victim. They were in bed together in one ot the sleepins apartments. Brewster made no resistance, and aa a matter of form Miss Conkli was arnsted also. It was ascertained that the pair nad walked irotn Babylon to Amity vilie during the siorm ou iSunday night, where tbe parents ot Brews; er lived, to whcin be applietLior shelter, but was reiuned admittance. Tbey next walked to Jackoia hr.usc, a distance of t o uiiu-n. Here Brewst-t represented that Miss C:.klt:t wax hi wife, tnd from ihat time mud tboir ariwt th-y lived together umt and will. Di constable arraigned bin prisoners before Juv.ioe Uooper on Tuesday eveuimr, afui au oxamination was ordered tr take p!nw nn toe following morning. The counsel Jr tbo prosecution averred that the tirl bad been BNTICUD FROM HER HOKi), where she whs surrounded by every luxury, for the purpose of prostitution, tie penalty for which is five years' imprisonment in tk pouiteuLury.. The defense claimed that the ßlrl accompanied the prisoner of hor own free will aud accord. A larg? number of witnesses were oxatruned, aud the examination was adjourned until yesterday morning. The rMili of the examlnatiou'decided Justice Copper to hold tbe pyitoner in, 800 hnil to await the action of the grand jury. Brewster, accompanied by the constable, immediately proceeded to Auiityvilleswhere he hopttd to obtain the necessary sureties 'Ve mo-t Uaetis feeling was manifested in the case by tho people present, but a special police forca prfcvented the recurreneo of the scenes in tbe court last Wednesday, when a piav.'l wat levttlle J at the he-td ot tbe prisoner by one of tbe spectators- A negro nam d William Henry Wood wa, however, ba ily baaten yesterday, by tbe infuriated audience, tor Innklng "di9parsg!jifj remarks shout whita women. An attempt was also made to lynch the prisoner by the crowd outftid.- ot the court room, which was only fru-.!rv..-d by his changioc; his position. Adjoirüm the court room is a building with a siopircg roof. Tbe prisoner wa at oue time KoatMl i.tar a window whiih overlook this roof. Some individual cenceived tbo idea of laö.Aoriin the prisoner while in this position, aad for i bat purpose a long ropo had bocn prepared, with a noose atone end, and tbe other extending along the ground for several yards. It had evidently been intended to throw tha lasso over the head of the prisoner after which the crowd was expected to seize the rope and pull him cut of tho window, causing pu summary executioni

1HOMAS A. HENDRICKS

IN THK HANDS OF TUB INTER VIEWER. OATU H.H A (,'HiJCB AT HIM A FAKALL7L I5LTWK2X Monro A-I.MOKRIs!EY HK.1 muCKS ON ÜOKTON. ath writes to the Cincinnati Commercial T . . . x saiv at ice. rtre course to-da? Sanford E. Church and Thos. A. Eendr:cks tilting together, looking at tbe horse race, while the Harney colt, said to be President Grar.t's property, came in second best. Hendricks nas a very placid, moral expression ct eoun tecaace in repoee. When belanSns tbe fine uiurai oomposnre aissppears, aud bo Io..K a nuie coarser and more familiar. Ue has a white skin. and. I think. frvk1 i if, with reddtnb hair soft to tba eve. and no I - if 1. . ... . . r ' iwaru. uns eyCT are renective and administrative; his nose is rather strong, yet exprefesive of more sense than spirit. He has a good mouth and Komewbat mobile lower late.. Altogether he looks tbe prudent and 33iiev.iaoiocj-.iZ6n, wnn ine brutal and aggressive prt ol leadership In abeyance. I can well understand how Morton grows incensed to seo this mild and equal Hendricks keep abreast of him in the governorship and the senate, with half the pains, and now lead fcim for a presidential nomination Tne organ of t'other side up at Indianapolis says Hendricks Is a anoalr Vr well; that's the only alternative in nnlitin ot beinjr a buliv. To a rourh iniwiiina nature any man who eoes th ranch u smoothly is a sneak. That was the kind of man Madison was to some of hia rivalDouglas and Seward thought Lincoln bad a little ot that gait. Tbe organ also intimated that I did not report Morrissey correctly. I always thought there was some lValousy in that quarter of Morrissey two retired prize flehten, yon know-. a MeetiDK Oov. Hendricks last night, at th9 Grand Uuiou Hotel, I introduced myself, and was INVlTtDTOHWROOM, where we had a pleasant tete-a tete, until his friend and business acquaintance, Henderson, came in. Hendricks spoke with mingled courtesy and freedom, being rather the negative spirit ot the talk. He spoke ofTburman and tbe Ohio campaign, and said he thought, from recent advices, that Allen would be elected. He said, Indeed, that it was hardly to ba doubted, it what he had heard within a week was true. I told Mr. Hendricks that it Allen was elected, alter the back-set tbe plattorm gave Ailen at the start, the renown would be Thurman's, and would help him lor the presidential race, because be (Tburman), bad given tne coalition of rags and thj veteran a chance. Hendricks seemed to hear thia with interest, and faid that Tburman was a man of fine surprise and bad beoq roughly handled by some ol the party organs in Ohio In the course of remarks be said that public men in a atate encountered a new difficulty in our times: the precipitation of their party's presses to make the issues and the candidate. He said be bad not seen Blaine since became to Sratogf, though both have ben here several days. JTe bad Mnn Governor TildenT however, a ('W bourn before wo conversed. And I kefcw bwa- with Judge Ciiurch in tby morning. I j.ckrd-toveru'r Hendricks If he regarded a democratic success as probable in 1S7Ö: He saidi I do The yarty fcas plckn1 up wouderlolly ail over the country. We have ÖAIJTED ABOUT 10,000 VOTE evory election in Indiana since ISiST, when Morton got 20,000 majority. They ned against ue the Humect of tbe Sons of lib erty ando' her epoliatiws to tjx:it tb' pua lie. I do 01 d uirt tha'. thers wks a .Sons 1 Liberty orisnizinou, but itMtiy mm jond it lor protection, and jj t. to aid a rvthi'irn ary orguimtion. Jn ISotiibey tell to 15 000 majorry- Iney ns"d t.vopa as iewa ers shamefully botti in 1S-J7 and 1S;. In- ISot; I was eUeted iovernor, but tbey co nitpd oie out. A telegram wsssntover ihe'-iatet r-p!-riiih th frauds of Indianapolis: Can't you do aoinnhinsj.' in 187-we niitdtaer rilic ompaigo, and the wb le vottnj; popu Jatit'n of Inoiana was brought out,cnt o only eleven hundred and voteft. 1 waa elected bv Heven hundred and . We felt that Greeiey was gone, and xurted our selves to s ve tlie state and our oran5nUon. Lstyear w had f een thoard aiajcr ity. Ho in ten yesrs we hxve wipd out twenty thousand majori', and pui litteen thousand Demooraivf majority In its place. This look like growth."' I kiquired of the governor about his personal relations with Morton,, and the recent squabble of the organs. He said: "Senator Norton and myself have generally maintained personal relations.. Soaie-imes it becomes disagreeable; but he- feas no stomach for a persoual contest, no have I any tas'.o lar it. He will, however, 5k AS VNDEKHAND THING,, it he thinks he can not be found ot. An open erchauga of compliments h is very averse to, on the stump or in tbe party presses."" Here he related the rewnt excharge of cries between the rival papers ol Indianapol'jj about us fellows. I. want it understood that all euch conver.-atioLi as tho present are related from my memory, and I am quite indifferent who tbey sumo, or what they provoke. If John Morrbev straiDsa point in favor of his seli-iinport anc and misstates a positionv I put it down, Tbe talk with Morrissey tbe Commercial containetl was read by him luily, and in no point disputed, and be sent for uie u interview him tor tbe New "Xbrk Herald urwanl, on his troubles with Tammany Hall.. He told tee representative of the Brooklyn Eagle, who aame up a week afierwardtbat the interview ln th Herald was almost verbatim his speech au't spirit. Knowing no mncb, that extra ir u rat van-dalite-published an editorial,, saying it was Morricsey's interview ot me. I derive these lacts from an owner of tbe Brooklyn Eazle, Mr. Van Anders. He heard Morrissey tell the reporter of the paper tLot every point I reported was has own. So the Brooklyn Eagle bad better get under the tall tower of the bridge and scratch the iuseots of tergiversation irom its rather suspected anatomy. Mr. Hendricks said that tbe former editor of the Indioaapolte Journal (I conceive here a 3ean and hungry being) had writ. ten a letter to tbe New York Times, C0MPABJNO HENDBICXS WITH MORTON as tit for tbe presidency. The leiber pro voked the Sentinel to attack Morton, Hondricks himself having no knowledge of the matter, and, I think, not being present. To this tho Journal (is there such an organ?) replied by an excoriation of Hendri. ks, very svere and countryried. Hendricks said: 'That artiele did not sound like the ntyle of any writer for the Journal. Morton's carriage had been bofesre the door of the establixDment, and he had been cloeetpd there quite a while the day be lore. It looked like ach an article a3 be inspired, if he did uot dictate it. Morton, continued Hendricks, "thought be had me killed eff in 1S72. 1 think he is piqued at any prominence that I have retained. Otherwise1 I don't see why I should be attacked personally in time of prolouud quiet. Tbero is very little polit!cs or political iecliug in Indiana iust now. Do you Lear Morton much mettioned lor tbe presidency ?? I gald he was mentioned, but uui amongst the very prominent candidates. "He can get the republican delegation cf Indiana, or course," aaid Hendricks. "He might get Illinois and some of the South. I don't see where he could touch the East."

Of Blaine, Hendricks said: "lie Is a bright and interesting mant IV seem to

he ought to be prominent amongst the republican ca0didaes. Tho ,tovmor tI. pressed the belief that Holman lud a gxl chance to be his tcvkdi:. He hald: I did no'. wnt ite oific and anr lueligiMc .'or it anot.:rr ir.. I t au no; y that I ever f.,k ary . f5 with uui'-u eeh'-. Thiiw it norff to uij I king. it,re ja .ccniatlo?. r r rt mnd a ir. Nct fi ' y jil-

isvery hard and tLe n?cn!t.iJity gr. at. Tbgviyt-rror.t Indiana oB .on, f, h manual U:.r I Lh- -ov, n rm ..i ri i. .-. -. 8:tid that t Le pi "ul' oj ii.riU,.a we'rt. j-i trrcnnd'llon nptola-t Myrhar i..v.-t bn tor yar-. Tr 11 ,o.) r'vr Ccc Z, lheiraif.:rs: "ivTit." id ii -..u w... . . i. . . - -t -v. j . i mv,n w;n the gransaoppfr plague w sif.ly n4lft. by travedrK so'.iciU.r- tnn n,hp, Ot D:u Vrrhes te V)Vhees ti yniu; he is a afbo!4r ly man. and quile au fhoriiy amonirs-. us." The governor .Li!i1.u. liiVfBiltfAiion be ever toflVed i5bf Ul oGice, as iis commissioner fir iirov, on a matt r of six hnntlrf d dollarsr employing a legislative cierk to do some executive fopying, Hecdricks rrlated that he w-s born io Ohio, of mixed Hollnd-2utrn and Scotch-irbb ancestry, on both eidw at.tjque Pennsylvania!,. He wa iatn to Indiana when a year and a hall old, in-Ä Iiis uncle wju covernorof thnkt.t. three years onlv in th l!i,wu. rr. elected to Congress lor bis leadership in s-jp-p-miuga state banltit.K. asa2üit..st a pomiscuous bankinz svstem. and i.A.in k. ttiO know nothings after to terms. Putlio lite haa written no wrinkle on Hendrik azure brow. He takes trouble aud greatitao m ii ay UlUru I II J. TUE G0VKRS0R AT SARATOGA. A CA Ri. KCL. STUDY HR KM.tma vr.t. WHAT H LT In ABOUT. The Evening Telegram, evening edition of th New York Herald, aays editorially:: Tbs governor of Indiana has ccme Est. To a proposition that he should speak in Ohio be made such a rebound as landed him in Saratoga. By a curious- coincidence. Boss Kelly, Wash McLean. .Samuel J. Tilden, and John T. Hoffman, a reminiscence, are also luerw. i ne eovernor has been interrogated by tbe reporters, but bis answers have been framed wi'b a discretion of statement r.H avoidance which have shown Eastern inquisitors that Western politicians have dis covered a nne substitute for silenc commonphices. It i just as well to give Thomas A. Ueadricks a caretul siudy. He may not be tbe com in a: man. but be "is n.t nnn.hcr. ing bimsell among the "goinsj men." TwoiQirusoi inestatemen io tbU country have put themselves "at outs" with -ith-r th in-fl-itiouists or the bard money men. Goveror Anon ana ir. i'enuietou nave kot the astern magnates d'wn cn them. Caution capital) may have to jtet down on its marrow bones in this latitude e: for tbe reeut. bowever.it U cji.k of the walk, and tcarei2liy avoids such agitator a AlUn Pendleton, Carey and Ewinz. On tbe coorarv, te Jsoutbern aud Western ronle. who want some money snd do not much care what nind it i, do not take io Tilden, Parker, Bedle, Gaston and Churcn, who !hv made haste to declare thnr 'nard money or co money" position. The republican politicians have bt-en equally successful in th fiscal ma ter in estranging one Ui t oa in their financially spni ontaniztoa. In any contingency which bupooses thai THE MONEY QUKSTION will entsr into politics next yeir tbee statesmen who, aa politicians',, have been Buceostfiw in estranging one-bIf of their followers are "going men" or "goners." Uss'lhomasA. Hendricks done anvtbing of that kiad? Observe bow carefully he bas arranged bis career during tneae troublous times. Dkl be 'm uh" to i he hlituic' snd swallowirgof Mr. Greley? to the stfub ihea' ion ot hi own record? to tbat cometfv of errors, tho liberal democratic n-fcof; "ot all. He held back so long tha: his adhesion was doubted and tnen solicited. Wnen he "came down" be was able to be one accepting wuli!, for tbe issue of wbich others were responsible. He went into She liberal campaign without prrcipitancT,.asJ he survived i with dignity. Then, Instead of making again for the Senate, where respon--ibiiity would have to bs assumed every dy, he let Morton take tbat office, and slipped into tbe easj and promintnt position of executive f Indiana, a good office for "preseuce ao gravity," and onA in which be did not bate to rUk or nurse bm "record." Iu this trusi be has eo borne himself tbat the state baa beeu swung into democratic line, and the governor bas trot tha credit for it. He pushed Mr. McDonald forward to the Senate whea the next vacancy belel, and be retained ;.la chair of ease in the täte bouse, makiegfaw speeches and no mistakes. At this time OHIO BK'KONS HIM butbis-balth requires tho spring1, and he is quietly taking the measure ol Eastern men tind t hing, iri vine every man his ear and few his tongue. Tbonoa A. Hendricks is a very, wise man, cr at least a. very shrewd one. He has no vices, and yet ia not a puritan.. He is learned, jet rxit musty or pedan . tic. 21e can make the raot judicial spsoch, in it seeminc, and the most partisau in its eflects of any man in the. Ws;. He does not fellowship withi r-'y yet be does not advertise his virtue by antaeonizicg tbem a Governor Tilda. do.-. II ia vhe pink ot- poprletv, yet h. is- a cordial, unaffected man. He Is entirely sell p ssesed, yet be can simulate aii ihs e-iynessof a freshman or nil the tbundm or a tragedian. He never gets on tbe wrcng sll of vital issues, yet he never warhitrwelf on petty ones. He is no ßourbm. yet be does not ofend ths who are. Ha is bo "advanced thinker, yet he will be- found . claimed, by those who are. Tltere Is rot " a ßaw in, has record. Any speech of bis would- agree with any c4her, and he has succeeded iu indentlfylng himpelf wi:h a large part of our earnest rha,ory So the pat fitteen yeass, and haa marie a reputation for safety and power (a rare union) unlike, 'if not superior, to thai of any other public dim. He will bear observation in Saratoga, foi he knows exactly vth.it he ia about and nobody else fully does. BIBLES AND BULLETS WANTON MUBDER AT KENTiAKD. The Logaa8port Star of yesterlay has th following statement ol a etraage murdei: Abut 8 o'clock last night, Mrs. Tlicks, a Bible agent, shot and fatally wounded Mose Kinnev- Keitlaad. Yourv Kumey was intoxicated, and was passing her boose quietly when she shot im. As ye4 no cause r the shooting h been WrncJ. It is resorted tbat Mrs. Uka shct a voung mn named Sutton in tb leg f-r mi as imaginary -ause three -weks nyo. PnMc sentiment is strona'.v against the woman. Klnr.ey, the victim -f hr furv, ! spoken ot at an inoffensive a-d piiet person. The Georgia Chronicle pays c-r.teujto-rary the following round cr.inp'.imeut: " iVe will do tbe Chi .ig Iutt-r-Oooai. tLe jasiice taythf- it publishes tto mo-t iii'.piiiScsnt lies which ever appeared in a newspiper. It never shilly-shallies or beats about th bush iu matters oi mendacicity; when it tells a lie It tells a good and complete one. Some people and papers find It convenient to uuiia a no upon a foundation of truth.

(The Inter Ocean is above such bucgljnc ' shil-lizn't

thfMhef, pui into sacks, and tha ecjf x i uou