Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 29, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1881 — Page 2

2

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22,1831.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2:.

RAT OF KUIISCRIPTION. Daily delivered by carriers, per week... JO 25 Imny, delivered oy carrier, including tun 1ay Sentinel, y-er week Daiijr to newsdealers, per copy . 30 Indianapolis Sentinel for 18H1 Dally, Sun day mna weekly reunions. DAILY. Delivered by carrier, per week ......$ 25 Daiiy, Including Sunday, per wtek ...... 30 Ia:i" per annum, by mai i . 10 00 Datlr. per annum, by mail, including Sua da", by maiL ............................ 12 00 Paily, delivered by carrier, jer annum -12 00 LiaiiT. delivered by carrier, per annum, in cluding Sunday. -..... 11 00 6CXDAY. Sunday edition of seventy columns, t 2 00 WEEKLY. Weekly, per annum 8 1 50 The postage on subscriptions by mail is prepaid cy tne publisher. Newsdealers supplied at three cents per copy, postage or other charges prepaid. Ilusois has 7,500,000 acres in corn. Will some one please inform Koscoe Cockling that I kicked him the other day. K. B. II. Tne Burlington Hawkeye estimates that the loss to Iowa farmers from Door seed this year will amount to $2,000,000. General Longstreet, the man who fought bo gallantly against Hancock at Gettysburg, has been commissioned by Garfield to organ ize the publican party in Georgia. The grandson of Lafayette is coming to America to be present and take part in the ceremonies of the Yorktown celebration. A movement is on foot in New York to give biin a grand reception. Tie "Texas Si f tings" notes that sheep are doing well in that State, and adds, by way of explanation, that the reason why they do well in Texas is because they have not got brains enough to edit a paper. "When Dorsey proposed to S. 1. Conner, in the rooms of the Republican Central Com iuir.ee, to import votes from Illinois to carry Imiianafor Porterand Garfield, he did not remark, "This is way down deep in the weil." The school authorities of Esex, Mass., have dismissed Miss Mary 11 Ileardon from the position of teacher for the reason that she belonged to the Catholic Church. Such exhibitions of fanatical stupidity do not help those who practice or approve thrm. Mk. Marshal Dudley was appointed Commissioner of Pensions yesterday. As Dudley helped Dorsey to "save" Indiana, this appointment was perhaps well earned. Now, Conner and Jo Gray should have something by all means, although it is said that the Conner confessions have been plugged by giving Conner's brother a State appointment. If Jo Gray would "confess," perhaps he might receive something before the dojr-days make life outside of fat offices very burdensome. The Utica Observer refers to the Albany Senatorial exchange by saying: "'Market firi:: and prices ruling high.' is the essence f the news from Albany. If there is an cltction by the present Legislature, cither of Stalwart or half-breed, it nu?t he bought and paid for. The ballots prove this." Such is Republicanism about as bad as it has been in Indiana, when Dorsey occupied the rooms of the Republican Central Committee and furnished funds to import votes frvnii Illinois t. carry the State for Porter ar.t! Garfield. Ior Piatt has studied Republicanism airtfully. He understands the origin of the f.it now going on. The Republican party is essentially a patronage party. Don says: The use of patronage to hold a party togethe moms Its distribution iman? the leaders. The FresMent has his personal following, the leaders each have theirs, and each has to be respected or the machine fails and the party Talis to pieces. The Senators .ire to the President what the Barons of England were to the King. The retainers of the rarons made up the Army of the Kingdom, and unless each Baron was awarded his share of the plnnder the Army disintegrated. The only issue presented is involved in the iutvion as to whether the system of use- or abuse of patronage shall be sustained. II sustained the country is gone. If not sustained the Republican party goes to pieces. The people are beginning to realize that it will not do to sustain a purely swag party; and the days of the Republican party are nam be red. The correspondent of the Toronto Globe, writing from Buffalo about the Presbyterian General Assembly, lately 'n session there, presents the following list of unpleasant fa'.ts. He says: Of 5 044 ministers in this Church, 447 are marked "W. C "without charge" amd 1,369 figure as S. S. "'stated supply" the remainder being pat tors and Professors. There are 1,304 vacant congregations. That U to say, there are 1,816 ministers who, presumably, want to enter upon the pastoral relation, and 1,034 congregations that presumably want pastors, and yet the pastoral relation is not formed. Even the most straight laced Presbyterian must admit that, so far as the United states are concerned, this part of the Presbyterian polity Is a dead failure. Everybody here admits the difficulty, and a Committee was appointed at last Assembly to inquire into its causes. Their report Utes that these three causes are at work: (l) Want of adequate support for the ministry (2) Lack of consecration on the part of the ministry, some of whom refuse to go into the pnorer and feebler fields, because they are poorer and feebler. Such a record is suggestive of the lrajtortance of further investigation. Thejioor and feeble Churches ought to be supplied, and the Presbyterians might learn something of value by noticing how the Method ist manage such things. Atter all, Cannon, the Utah Delegate to Congress, has been declared by Mr. Clerk A 'lams, of the House of Representatives, entitled to the seat in Congress instead of Campbell, the man who obtained the certificate of election. Mr. Campbell will now have to contest Cannon's right to represent Utah in Congress. This action of Adams places the oUaginous Murray in a very ridiculous position. He arbitrarily gave the certificate of election to Campbell upon a question which he had no right to consider; and now, Clerk Adams has upset his calculations and the fat is all in the fire. The Supreme Court of Utah certified that Cannon received a maioritv of 8.000 votes Over

Campbell, and that certificate is what laid

the fat Governor to the land. Mormonism

is bad enough, bui Murray's methods of electing Delegate to Congress are far worse, Campbell, with an illegal certificate of elec tion in his pocket, contending for a seat in Congress upon the strength of a deliberate fraud, is in all regards a more objectionable spectacle than Cannon presents with his four polygamous wives. It is quite likely that Governor Murray will be less auto cratic in future. EDUCATED FARMERS. The season has arrived when the schools and Colleges are sending forth to the worl hundreds of young men, who, having com pleted their studies and having received their diplomas, are prepared, in so far as the schools can prepare them, for the battle of life. It would be interesting to know the choice of life work these educated young Americans have made, where they will be found a dozen years hence, and to note the success that has been won. It would be in teresting to know how many of them have chosen law, how many medicine, bow many theology, how many mercantile pursuits. how many the profession of teacher, and how many agriculture. We hazard the opinion that not one in a hundred of them all will be found in the ranks of the farmers of America. During their entire College course we doubt if they have ever been told a half doen times by their teachers that agriculture is a respectable calling, requiring as much learning as law, medicine or the ology. Here and there an Agricultural Col lege devotes some attention to agricultural matters, but if those who take an interest in such statistics desire to have the facts, they will ascertain that even graduates from such institutions, have learned to dislike agricul ture farming as a profession, and would much prefer those professions where white neckties and kid glove3 are the recognized passports to what is called "good society." As a consequence, law, medicine and the ology, indeed, almost anything is preferred to agriculture by young men wno have received a collegiate education. The Indiana State of Board of Agriculture might, with eminent propriety, inquire into the subject for the purpose of ascertaining how many thoroughly educated farmers there are in Indiana how many graduates of Indiana Colleges go from the College to the farm. V predict that the number wwuld be found so small as to create very general surpri:e. It is barely possible that a new era is dawning upon the country, and that in the near future agriculture is to be ranked among the learned professions. A writer in the Social Science Monthly gives the readers of that valuable publication an nteresting sketch of Jtlics Adolph Stockhahut, who, "for nearly lorty years, nas been engaged by researches, by lectures, by writing and by the publishing of journals n promoting and popularizing the science of chemistry, especially in its applica tions to the culture of the soil. In carrving science to the people, and in presenting n such ways that the most learned can not criticise, nor the most ignorant fail to un derstand, that everyone who reads or istens shall wish to read or listen more, and that the facts when comprehended may be successfully and profitably applied to prac tice, few living men are his peers." J rues Apolph Stock ha rot is a thoroughly eduated agriculturalist. His attainments are of the highest order, giving him a position with LiEiut;, the father of agricultural chemistry; with Wolff, IIenxebeim, Ksor Xor.r.E Stohmanx. Kaiix and others in Jermany, with I5orssiRiACLT in France, nd Lawes and Gilisert in England. I 1S4 1 Stockhauht began a course of lectures on agriculture, and "to those lectures may be traced the beginning of the movement which, eight years later, resulted in the es tablishment at Möckern, Saxony, of the first of the agri tnru experiment stations, of which there are now over 100 in Europe and several in the United States, and from whose work, it may he said without exaggeration, has emanated a great part perhapr the greater part of our accurate knowledge of the principles of chemistry and physioloy that underlie the right prac tice of agriculture." It is to such men, as Jclics Adoliti Stockhardt that the world must look for an advance in agricultural science to dignify ing agriculture as a profession and to the educational elevation of the farming class. Stockhardt is the author of a text-book on chemistry, in the preface of which he says: Experiments must be the foundation of theory. With them the beeinner should learn to observe, reflect and judge: from them he should himself unfold the general chemical relations and truths; he should himself discover, and In this way by his own efforts, along with manual dexterity, acquire an Intellectual possesion also. Every experiment and every fact observed therein will thus be to him a conquest, and will incite to new exertion. "This book," says the writer in the Social Science Monthly, "abounds with simple experiments to be made with apparatus which any student may get and handle, and is yet sufficient to illustrate, enforce, and impress the truths that are taught, and, what is better, to enable the learner to find the highest inspiration in working out the truths himself. i..;w useful this system of instruction, as thu t forth by Stockhardt has proved, may be inferred from the wide circulation of the book as mentioned above, and the facta that sets of apparatus put up to go with it were sent to all parts of Germany, to England and to Russia, and that a depot for their sale was established in ew York." In the United States, comparatively little is known of agricultural chemistry, and even that little is seldom if ever applied to practice as a result as lands wear out new farms are sought for. If a farmer is able to give his son a collegiate education, that son seldom returns to the farm. II is College ed ucation has completely unfiltted him for farming, and the grandest profession f this or any other age is looked upon with a de grco of contempt,' as suitable only for ig norant boors. In this regard the education of the period is sadly defective, and the United States needs a Jclics Adolph Stock hardt to teach young men and old men the magnitude of the mistake they are making, Im a letter on "Bimetallism" to the London Times II. Ilcnrl CernuschI contests the theory that the English people , refer gold to silver England, he f rgues, "possesses 30,000.000 of gold sovei-etsns lying permanently In the banks and 30,(X0,000 in the hands of the public, together with 20,000,000 of debased silver coin. When In te'natloral bimetallism is adopted by England

there will be In the Bank of England, aide by took him till 7 that night to march five miles In side, gold bars and silver bars, the latter to be the .the di"tion of the battle, though the cannonadnr.temployedforpaylngallforeigncountrie.ex. WM heard at iUe, a hundred mile.

cept Scandinavia and Iortugal. But no change wui oe imposed on people's habits. The bime tallic reform will not even be visible to the naked eye." POINTERS. Senator Fair once was a constable in Sonoma County, California. E.X-&ECRETABY tVARTs will make a tour of Scotland this month. Grxeral William II. Pat.he Is talked of as the Democratic candidate for Governor of Virginia. Qveex Victoria gets rid of the greater portion of her public duties on the ground of poor health. General Robert Toombs, speaking of the Bible revision, said: "They have killed the devil and knocked the bottom out of hell." secretary 11 cut doesn't like being consideredas "junketing" at Government expense, so hepay.hU personal expense, when on tripsin the Government service. APmiilriPniin.n... ftni ti-i .. . A PHILADELPHIA man Was fined 127 in that CitT ior Kissing a gin on tne street. Ia this city he'd have had to pay 500. We believe in mäkln 'em trh.i.hin. n . pay what a thing is worth.-Boston Post Pun-vriv m nvi.rt . v " " '"C ."v "i iuuuu men Ol New York, combining both mental aoanirement and social graces which distinguish him in every circle. Rochester Democrat. Massachusetts newspapers are commenting on the provision of the New York Constitution which allows the Governor to veto separate Items of an appropriation bill, and think that Massa chusetts should adopt a similar provision. The Albany Express takes this melancholy view of Conkling'. fall: "Yes, he is down. He is not a Senator of the United States now. If he should express a desire to have any particular thing done, his wish would be disregarded for er t"t 't nis wisn. It was the Duke de Moray, the half-brother of the Emperor, who created the tato for a French Derby, and ever since he founded the prize there is one Sunday in the vear the "Grand Prix." a it is universally known when Paris and the provincial cities fairly outdo the "day" over the Channel. As soon as General Longstreet h fairly warm in the Georgia Marshal's office." say. the Bait I more Sun'. Washington correspondent, "it la un derstood that he is to proceed to work in the mat ter of organizing a new party, to be composed of auuuuuius buu Liic xiuuviBiiV iuucpcuucisol Cndtrtrl Thvbv u .in ih. .nt. I- .v. " " ' "-v.cuu, iu i iic tuaiwwtw r. luai snouia repei itepun - lican votes, mere are many reasons why thev bhould be attracted to him, Fifteen years ago he left political life to engage in private business. If he now returns to politics, the public service will receive a man of large integrity, as well as of undoubted ability. He is a cultured scholar, a rmlfKhpri nralnr anrl a u-nrth tmn Tfniiha.ta. rumnnrat wiuyviui, A sriT nl mnro than nnllmrv lutonu U rlal - j . v. .... before Judge Williamson in Chicago. $23.000 being sougnt unuer tne "Lram-snop act. ' Tne com plalnant is Mrs. Lucy A. Elkins, the wife of the landscape painter, Henry A. Elkins. Since Octo ber, 187G, Mr. Elkins has been an habitual drunk ard, and owing, Mrs. Elkins says, to the pern! cious influence exercised over him by a liquor seller. His art yielded him an income of 810,000 a year, all of which he squandered. Mr. Elkins' most celebrated picture is "Mount Shasta. The Raleigh, X. C, News and Observer (Dem.), commenting upon Jefferson Davis' book, says: While it appears that he hoped, after the sur render of General Lee, to protract tho struggle aud obtain bettr terms than an unconditional surrender, yet we were glad to see that his last words are: 'The Union may it be perpetual.' Now, considering the proved facts in the his tories of Messrs. f ;arneld and Blaine as weighed gainst the spotless career of Mr. Conkling, it seems to us far easier to believe that the Admin lstration men have simply been caught In one more corrupt money transaction, not dissimilar to others in their history, than that the other side as now for the first time abandoned upright po litical methods for ways of atrocious trickery and villaiuy.-N. Y. Herald. THE CREAM OF THE SPECIALS. The Star Iluute Kascallty. A Washington telegram of the 15th to the InterOoean says : It is probable that the Government will not he prepared to lay its case in the matter of the proseinion oi me &uir uoute tnieres oerore tne urand ury until about the first of next month. All the i-ii-.ieies necessary to secure au indictment will bebrousbt here before the prosecution opens. nere nas been considerable comment regarding the se'ection of two members of the Grand Jury 11. Schütter and Andrew Langdon. The former was a fresco painter at the Department, and was receutly investigated by a Commission appointed by the Postmaster General. While all the facta adduce! by the investigation have not been made pubi c, it is known that Mr. Schutter . innocence of certain questionable practices was not vindi rated by the inquiry. Mr. Lanpdon is the Presi dent of A. t lioone . Co operative Wall Trans portation Company, which has suffered considerably in consequence of General James' reforms. Neither Mr. Langdon nor Mr. Schütter, it is believed, will be iufluenced iu their action as Grand urors by their relations with the former authori ties iu the Department. One of the oruciais who is enetneerlmr the lnestiga Jon said to-day that no indictments would bo asked where the Government is not sure of securing convictions. lie also said that a great number of people could be indicied, but he did not thiuk they would prosecute them all. They would only select the most prominent of the list He sain tney wouia oegin nrst witn probably Dorsey, and make an exarap, lhe indictment against Brady will contain a number of counts alleging the receipt of bribes from contractors for expediting and letting Eroti table routes to the ring contractors. It is in ted that the evidence of this has been obtained by the disclosures of some members of the ring who have become frightened and have taken this way to save themselves from prosecutlou, as was the case in the whisky ring trials in 1976. Death from Starvation. A Detroit special of the 15th to the Commercial says: Some time since these dispatches stated that an old man named Peier Lemonde. living in this city, was believed to have a live lizard in his stomach. He at once became a local celebrity. and received letters from all parts of the country from persons wno naa read of his case. To day the ol a man died, and the post mortem examination, made by a score of doctor, revealed a tumor of dense fibrous substance of what is known as the second atomach. The diseased mass included about live inches of the Intestine, and almost completely closed the passag from the stomach downward, preventing digeMiun. It was a comletecae of stomach blockade. Lemonde sn tiered i tile from pain, and death was the direct result of stu vation. Originally he weighed a pounds, but had been reduced to sixty pounds at the time of his death. The lizard theory was started by a number of botanic and "snide" doctors whom the oi 1 man consulted. The tumor felt hard and was movable, and needed but liitle exaggeration to say that the lizard could be heard to cry out when squeezed. Leinoudc was nearly seventy years of age. Low Wallavce Says Grant Lien. The Washington correspondent of the Euquirer says: I went into the room of Assistant Secretary Ilitt. at the state Department, and met General WhIIxce coming out. While waiting to laic with Mr. Ilitt I picked up friim a table the first volume of liadeau's Life of tirant. Turning over the leaves I found, on page 44. the following paragraph marked: "The assault was renewed upon Lewis Wallace with great vigor, and he, too, was compelled to fall back, though slowly and lighting hard." On the margin, opposite the paragraph, was this Inscription In the handwriting of General Wallace: "This is a lie. I never fell back an inch.' "Lew Wallack." Turning on pages eighty and eighty-one I found the following paragrapn marked : r "Lewis Wallace, one of Grant's own division commanders, was equally remiss; but he, who had been a montn on tne ground, excused Himself by statiHsr that he had taken the wronir road. marching toward Purdy instead of Pittsburg: yet his troops had helped to bui'd he bridge over Snake Creek for just such emergencies as had now occurred, lie was, however, set right by Captain (afterward Lieutenant Colonel) How ley and Colonel (afterward Major General) McPherson, both at the time on General Grant's staff. They put him In the right direction at 1 o'clock, and it

away

On the bottom of the margin of page eighty one General Wallace had made the f jliowlng in scription : "There are more willful falsehoods in the fore going paragraph than In any other of the same length in tngilih literature. LEW WALLACE. Sale of Fine Cattle. A Philadelphia special of the 15th says The largest and in some respects the best herd of imported Jersey and Guernsey herd-book cattle ever brought to this city from the Channel Islands have for a week past chewed their cuds wun bovine complacency in iiarkness Bazar. Ninth and San so m streets, and to-day eighty-one cows, neuen, bulls and calves were sold at public auction, the amrrecate receipts of the sales bei eg F22.311. Of late Philadelphia has become a great center ior mannet island cattle, and, as there has been an nnusual demand for those breeds, the enterprising speculators w ho have Imported Jerseys and Gneruseys by the wholesale have reaped a nice harvest, and if the craze for cows with pedigrees continues milchers with perfect escutchI Wi1,1' ln few J8 hecome as plentiful as barwa. crowded wilh buVe and stockalsers from all sections of the country, and the prices were excellent. Only the Jerseys were sold, the I Gueravn holno- n-wrvl fr tvmnrmw Th. nignest price reached was 1.450. given by W. 11. M:.H?W' .f Bristol. R. I., for a six-year old cow leaned itecina rourth. An agent of Samuel J Tilden paid tl.300 for BettinT Fourth. aired f. I years; f 1,300 for Madaline. aged four years: f 1.200 I f.-r (liiun Ik. V-.V. . ilkl. mm I ior me tnree-TPftr-nlrt ull Dliln The tnatnrttv f I t -e animals sold were ralvea. bat thev brought ""J. and he Jo "c'Ia tu one of the beautiful little fawn-colored babies for lew than IJO0 considered himself fortunate. That Hayes Interview. Te New York World has a special from Colui jus, O., as follows Last nicht a World corresrtondont. rot from Cleveland, met General keunedr. of Loean County, and other prominent Republicans and State ofticials. Reference was made durinir the trip to the recently published interview. In u hl h ex-President Hayes letlected severely on Senator Conkling. General Kenuedv denounced it as 51 ,n1 aded ht the most important point i General Kennedr sat.l the tntPrvlcw i,-m 5 hls n?" and in h! Pres00- IIe F ht 1 manner and 1 KS torhST I hut he also said that Conkling represented the I People of New York, and it was due to his official trusteeship that he should have been consulted on mailers anectlng his Deoi.le. Mr. Hayes further said, with great emphasis. continued General Kennedy, that Mr. Blaine is even more arrogant than Conkling, and infinitely more self-lraponaut. He anirrilv declared that in every species ot trickery in legislation, and that in an the rings unearthed in Washington for years past, Mr. uiaine has been found at the bot torn. He said that if Mr. Blaine was not fminrf connected with the Sur Route frauds some of his I mistaken. I " hpn VPf t h(r a tili f m n d it H'lchlnirlnn M1( nof. me uiaine men may be looked for In it in ntm ahana nr aiwtthor TMo 1 part oi nis statement Mr. Hayes particularly em ,IUU,lza General Kennedy says it has been carefully omitted from the previous reports of the inter view, uenerai Kennedy is one ot the most prom lu" 1 Republicans in the state, .J Si for diSJloJ Ä re arrocance repeated of Mr. Blaine. He is equally arroeant. andenuallv deurous to ooiain exclusive control, lie has the sense of self importance developed to the same I nMrrpp and hla mslhri hira mnro rf Ihn anifina I than t On It line 8. . Tkl i. , . u.V. I. i .1 v... chlr 0? t'Two menrd it redound, to the credit of Mr. Conkling. No man ever has accused him of jobbery, or charted upon him a dishonest political act. But there have been few instances oi political trickery or cotruption in which Biaine nas not been chanted with implication. His rail road jobs have become a constant basis of assault RRatnst him. It would not surprise me if the Sur Route exposures would involve him or some irlend In the frauds. "I have read a great deal about this beinsr a fitrht betweeu Garfield and Ccnklimr. It is noth ing of the kind. The contest Is between Blaine and Conkling. ami it was arranged that Conklinir should be crushed at the very beginning of the administration. 1 am convinced of this fact." The aNve is that portion of General Kennedy' remarks that purported to give the complete statements made by the ex-Proident. He was overheard by four or five prominent gentlemen, and the affair created a preemptible stir. He then continued for some time to advance his own views, wnich favored ObnkliDg. After lladeau. A Washington telegram of the 12th to the Tri bune says: As a knowledee of the eontont of T!jiiWnn'a Uf of ti rant spreads among military men h -re the inuignauou increases over lis unworthy attacks upon many prominent officers. The criticisms upon leading Generals in the Army of the Potomac are likely to soon receive elaborate exposure, as two oificers who held high stair positions la that army ars now engaged in critical reviews of liadeau's numerous and glaring errors. Againt his attacks upon General Meade the friends of the latter are quoting the follow ing Ftrong indorsement of Meade written by General Grant, in whose interest lla deau attempts to belittle General Meade; HEADQTARTKttS 4 Armies ok the United States, City Point, Va.. Dec. 23, ls&i. Hon. E. B. Washburne: Dear sir I see some obiections are made to Meade's confirmation as Major General in the Regular Army. I am very sorry this should be so. General Meade Is one of our truest men and ablest oflieers. He has been constantly with that army. confronting the strongest, best appointed aud most confident army iu the South. He therefore has not had the same opportunity of winning laurels as distinctly marked rs have fallen to the lot of other Generals, but I defy any one to name a commander who could do more than he has done with the same chances. I am satLstied with a knowledge of the man, what he has done, and the circumstances attending all his military acts. all objection would be removed. Yours truly, U. 8. GRANT, Lieutenant General. Schurs on Arthur. A New York special to the Chicago Tribune, dated June 13, say. : Carl Schurz, in the Post to-night, reads Vice President Arthur a pretty savage lessou on his duties as the second otficer of the Nation, and says : "A private citizen in this country has the

SL), B inalienable right to follow his own notions of proiV7v tU priety, and even to make himself contemptible i . nd ridiculous, if that suits bis taste, provided he

remains within law. But, when the ice-President of the United States by his conduct degrades the high office to which the people have elected him, it is a matter of public concern, and the people feel and resent it Differences of opinion, and even conflicting ambitions, between Presidents and Vice-Presidents of the United Stales have now and then occurred iu our history. Although such disagreements may have been regretted. they gave no public olTense as long as they did not degenerate Into OPEN DEMONSTRATIONS OF EANCOR and systematic hostility. But now we see for the first time the Vice President openly arraying himself against the Chief Magistrate of the country iu a quarrel about a Custom House a quarrel in which the constitutional powers of the Executive are attacked. We find him au active partisan on the side of a faction which has been and is now availing the President w ith the most venomous personalities, and threatens to pursue h m to the end of his oflitial life with bitter opposition; and, more man tnat. in tins 'tlgnt' ice 1'resident Ar thur has. without disguise and apparently with out testation, lowered himself to the rank of Mr. Conkling s 'Lieutenant As such be is spoken of by every newspaper in the country, and as such he is under the ordern of Mh Chief, and that Chief not the President, but the President's bitterest eucmy. doing w hat Mr. Conkling him self called "the dirty work of a Ward politician.' 1 here are things which. In a public life not nevoid of all decency, should be ImposiDle, and this is one of them. An unfortunate accident may put the Vice President at the head of the Government, and we may assure Mr. Arthur that the people are contemnbitine with shame and dismsv the pos sibility of Mr. Couklitig'a errand boy becoming Prestdent oi tne i nitca states. He should under stand that, even if the causa he serves were better than it i, there is one pla( where at present he ran not be seen without disgracing himself, and mat is Aioany Wholesale Drowning at Cincinnati. Cincinnati, June 10. Eight cases drowning occurred here to-day. Six Of Of them happened at once in the Ohio lliver in the western part of the city. The men were at work at Fleming's Coal Landing, and were coming ashore in a skiff. Eight had gone into the skiff, when two more iumied in and threw the whole party into the water. Robert Dudley (colored), Robert Kuthfur (colored), Henry Austerman, Cramer, Maitland and Pitmer were drowned. The latter two were emigrants who onlj arrived day Deiore yesterday. George Kilkopf, nine years old. of Louis ville, here on a visit, wai drowned while bathing in Mill Creek. Felix Devine, ten years old, was drowned w nue oaining in me unio laver near i ea oieton.

THE CROCS.

Report of the Yield as Shown by the Cenusof 1879 A Large Increase In the North Deficit In the South. Washisgtox, June 1C The Census Office KMiay issued the report of J. R. Podge, a sr.r-il o. .,1. r r -e" ui lue i-uiicmuu aiouauw oi agriculture, giving the result of the first count or the area, and product of cereals of m n l c. . . , ... ' .cii ouiies ana lerritones. Loage says: "It is the census taken in 1880 of the crops of 1879, and acreage, on which they were grown. It is given in compai Ison with the o? oll., in th. c,sM of 18(0. Supplementary and corrected relumü maVK hohl v of inner tlioeo immmtM in final publication. The most strikim; - -: r. J. " --et-h'v. suEjresuon oi these turures Is tne unnrecedented advance in the production during tne last aecaae, amounting to nearly ltw per cent, for all kinds taken together, while the increaseof the ten yet rs preceding was but 12 per cent, ihis wide dinerence is largely .cm. a ii is tue uiiicreiice is largely real from obvious causes, thoueh in narl only apparent by reason of the partial now for the first time e given by the census, , prevent a mislead ng d of excessive producwill, in the future. effect of vprv low im tion in census years. corn lhe apparent increase in corn is 1M . rr . ijo renu .mere are uiree great com crowin StlIli;;, T,.- - 1 n i : . o- . - ......v.o. iwna aim misniiri nrmlnmnv mnn V. .U .: country in 'U9. The advance in Illinois, from 129.921,395 to 327.79G.89Ö uu-uci, is in creai pan tne result of extension pf area, but largely due to the iaci mat tue crop ot ü-J was a partial failure by reason of drought The fine food increased in Kansas is caused by heavy immi.1. ' o. i v.w V. . . . . ' owwa mere was Den oi low yield irom uraugui anu grassaoppers. The cotton States shows a gain of about 40 per cent since '70. A low ratio between the hguresof area and product in several of these btates is partially explained by the general prevalence of draught The Pacific .a . Coast region is not especially well euited to tniS CrOD. ine exhibits shows a rrpHit. ble increase in fair proportion to the advances in population. As was expected there is a small extension of maize cultivation in the Territories which is impracticable, if not impossible, on all but tne lowest elevations. Wheat shows a comparatively steady and rapid Increase. The wheat growing is shown bv a comparison .with former enumeration: thA main ruiinrr 7'? ruf nant in lac ,..i and m and GO respectively in those immedÜ mvij piei-truiiiK. an curies anu ierntones, except Florida and Wyoming, include wheat in their report beveral btates on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts show a diminished urmiuciion. ocven-ienius oi ine enrire crop is produced in nine States, in the following order 01 precedence: Illinois, In diana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, California. Missouri. Wisconsin. There has been for several years an increasng interest in wheat culture in all the Southern States, especially in the Piedmont regions ot the Carolinas and Georgia, and in the northern and central Counties of Texas, and there has been a disposition to experiment in more Southern portions of the cotton belt, even in Louisiana and Florida, being confined in the former State to the i. t ,i .t. i i , . iiuiiuciu imusiira un nie uuianua oeiween vvacnua ana tne uea Kiver. . . ... - , . ... - .Li. ii .1 rri nn p in i inr rpmn i iia b vdm f?a via m w r;.: &k. "K-r.i " "S-JLY, 'a:a States " i nnt, Ti. .it i. u . vaio xuc muuuviiuii ui uiiia nas uecu ritended mai.i'v in the Wst ml Squill. .v. V .V ; ,. . . ', I t otir-tcnths or the atp nt ihn rmn u-iti, I i.Yri .. , V - atitudes, being extremely liable to blight until the introduction of "rust proof varieties and practice of fall sowins for winter asture. liarley California and New York still produce nearly half of this crop. Wiscon sin, Iowa and .Minnesota have made the heaviest increase, and now produce a larger part of the remaining half. It is making no appreciable advance in the South. M'e lhe increase of rye has been only 1 per cent, showing a decline in the produc tion in proportion to the population. Pennsylvania. Illinois and New York: still proauce aoout nan tne crop. - i i 1 iHicKwneai-ine increased production oi this minor cereal has not been m proportion to the advance in population. As in 1870, it is scarcely grown in the South, and very little in the West, two-thirds of the crop being the product of New York and Pennrjnaina. In California, Oregon. ashington Terntory and Alaska the number of persons en-1 gaged in the hsning business during 1SS0 aggregated 16,745, employing 5.547 vessels and boats valued at ?ow,145. The capital in-1 vested in vessels, boats, apparatus and out-1 lits and buildings and apparatus of manufacture, $2,743.383. The total value of the pro- 1 duct was $9,548,277. An Arkansas Judge's Doings. Little Rock, June 16. Thomas Orr is County Judge of Miller County, in this Mate, and resides at lexarkana. He is a Republican, and for several years past one of the most influential citizens nt his Coun ty, having represented it two terni3 in the State Legislature. At present a petition is in circulation in Miller county befng signed by both Democrats and Re publicans, asking Judge Orr to step down and out They made no charge against his public record, but go for his private acts and his family matters with avengeance. The Inter-State, published at Texarkana, after a few preliminary remarks, shewing now ne i married a second time within a very few weeks after obtaining a divorce from his first wife, says: "He is also censured for accusing Iiis former wife of infidelity, and afterward marrying the man with whom she was accused to Ins daughter about thirteen years old. The fact of his keeping this man in his family nearly two years after he accused him and his wife of being too inti mate, and then marrying him to ins daughter, goes far toward exonerating them, and rendering his story scarcely plausible." Darius Stage Kobbers. Little Rock, Ark, June 1C. A Gazette's Alma, Ark., social says, At 11 o'clock last night the north and south bound stages running between Fayetteville and Alma were stopped by two armed inet and the mail and passengers robbed, lhe north bound stage, when about twenty miles from Alma and in one of the loneliest places on the road, was comruinded to halt The driver on looking ahead discovered two armed men on cither side of the road, about ten feet ahead, with drawn pistols. After the stage stopped tho robbers commanded the passengen and driverto get down on the ground. They then made the driver turn his back to them while they tied and blindfolded tlte passengers. Thev then tied and blindfolded the driver and placed hi tu in front of the team, telling him if he moved hand or foot he was a dead man. After this they took all the money the passengers had, amounting to abont $.'J0. The driver asked them to please loosen the strap on his wrists, as it was hurting him; one of the robbers replied he would as soon as they had robbed the south-bound stage, which was then heard approaching. As soon as it arrived the-driver was ordered to halt, and the passengers to come on the ground. Thev were treated in a similar

laiiureoiiie corn crop ot'0Uand the were the lareest ever known, fr th J

agricultural growth, was 43 per cent, as re- Pa.vrQC,1ts never swelled in the aggregate to I1 disease, through long days and lone portel by the census. The acreage of cron3i higher figures. exceDt the first VMv. nt tw OWÄ 111111 sraUtnde?'-Jiedlcal Ue-

(,..uuu .im vumji auu iciiiiu jauus; ana a i iuc nicgsic uutsiue oi ew l oric I i, w in oi me ttony, nmple. and !?iLh 5 l? ß "lJ If .-CeL.V nd .hM rarely dDirote

tau?, i9 nuicu in eurasKa. lei in earn i ccucu. anew iura me

J'yu 1 ' iUB wu"u llJ atme cerresponaing date. The iongconnÄ ,eVduet-t0 unsuitable soil or tinued decline in lfvsO culminated in June, to unfavorable climatic condition, but the aTli wheat. corn, oats, rve, pork and lard sei practice of using wheat fields for winter pas- at higher prices now than a year ago. Cotture, considerations often deemed more i a- ton is lower at 11 Cc now inst -to, ;n ÄMolT,l,n8,,PW,?,,lf iu"" and'pet'roleunf ceiificates season cf IS. y was also exceptionally favor- r.nw hrinr nniv s-v .,-net m ,..

iicany nan ui us pruuuci, is louna in rour crc fn-exchanpes,- though an insignificant StatesIlhnois, Iowa. New- ork and Penn- increase compared with the great expansion, aylvania. Heretofore it has been an un- Gf which returns bear witness in quantities promising and unpopular crop in southern as well as in value. The volume of business

manner as the Pakensers on the "first stae

t v J ""7 c iaeiiger .Mr liray, of tayettville.from whom thev look $.5 in A "u WiU wauu ana chain. They fVilr f no moil t . J IIUUJ cuttingoien i-.: ,ri' I"!" tne registered i 1 1" l if rsi nnn sifair-tAK.i i t ' . T,e 1:? mJ?B , .m7 . vv ul tue iiassen-. i ucio, itrmng Olm 11 lie lUOVed Until theV told mm ,Tcy would kill him. They took to the They took to the SS effort to release " v ' UH,s n easterly rill CWn T (?o fo arAul a 1 1. 1 I r '--vjbtiij cwyni in tue rona I ten minmM ff, n.. being shot if they made an ef themsel ves. By this time the driver of the , nd takln,,.? k W,Cd h'.'. hand &ÄÄrofeÄ untied the hands of the other passeneers I When al I ml ahn.r.1 .1, ... ." i ' ceeded on their iournev - o.!,, kjL lJJC bui rv 3 suu uroTHE COMMEÄCUL OUTLOOK. A Greater Yolnme of Kusine. Than Ever ltefore. i . okk, Jane 15From the Public: Kxchanges last week outside of New York cemer, 1SS0, aad January; May and June 1tio, rp. ,' ... ' , June, l1' ToUls outslde ot New York for ,h nrst tw weeks of June are the largest ever I known for two 9nmii vuii-c t I ' 11 win1 t.n-Wn.ia iu j; . I ' wiicipuuuihe weK oi last I .... I year Hie inCTea.se IS remarkably lurw in lia I aggregate at many of the cities. At Tittsb"rg it is nearly, and at San Francisco, over lr renu ai ioston and I'biladelnh ia it ia over CO per cent, and at Louisville, New uneans ana liartford over 50 per cent No city reports any decrease, an.l onlv n '"crease of less than 10 per cent The incom nan son i I l t. ui- i- . . ... . uuiuie, umy oc cause operations in I w were very mucn larger last year. Hie "ncrease,- after deducting double market vue of stock sold each years, is 48.3 per cent The followine shows the amount of I m . exchanges for the weeks ending at San Fran-d cisco J un 4, and all other cities June 11: New York 97S.1S0.R5 notion 87,60S,5o8 Philadelphia 62,5?.,(is.t Chicago Cincinnati.-... lb.Jo.'JO St. Louis 16.O09 Msa Baltimore Sau Krancisco New Orleans..., vrl 7 n ' A 7,d, o9 T-miUviifo I Milwaukee.. I'rovidence. 6.404, Iii 4.0ir2,l(i0 2,174.200 Kansas City aeveKl!?.; 1,926,W9 1,774,6-SO 1.M6.400 i Hartford..... j New Haveu 1,1S7,17 weii.... b"racue521, ÜUl 378,183 I Tfi Outside New Beyond continues unprecedented for the season, but this is to some extent because a portion of the ordinary tratlic of winter and spring ill i . .. O was pusuea aiong ov me exceptional severity of the weather into the present month. Large returns of railroads should be inter preted in the light of this fact Some of them are only in print, recovering in June their losses through the suspension of business in winter. Another fact which should not be overlooked is. we have now i " i ror.i, .. . .i.:u -r I i.tn i a l-Ji ii, ai, v llllll 1,1 nr. I 1 i lnnv ri,ii nr iw tK.n i, ." r"."" J i i i ii i j - iron sens at aDoui me same price as in June. 1SSO, and surar is higher, I""'. " .'"SC k", 1 I I I I u 111! I i- SI 1 irm'OI" I HA to ll r m-9 y m aaa nethptr nf wt crunf pnmmerpii movomonlo Is., .1 . ...Z5.,. ... .. .' me wnoie, a lime miner man in , , .. . 0 . june, iow. anu I nis accounts lor sonic 111is now greater than ever before. A GKKKXUACIi MANIFESTO. What Is to Occur Politically in the Future. Washington, I). C. June 14. The Secre tary of the National Greenback Committee snj-s the Greenback members of the next Congress will' stand solidly together on all questions. He says nine members of the next House are pledged to meet in a Greenhack caucus, and determine upon and carrv Greenback politics. These nine members countcd u n UJ(1 and M h , r t. 1 r Maine, Lrannn and Mosgrove, of Pennsylvania; Rife. Hazeltine. Bur roughs and Ford, of Missouri, and Jones, of Texas. The intention is to get these memucu in louvus huuo new ui,.cuiuruiuiig in part, at least, the organization of the next House. J. Hyatt Smith, of Brooklyn, will vote witn tne nepublicans. That is posi tive. It is more than probable that me Keaajuster meraoers from Virgmia will also vote with the Republicans. Oreenbackers are sending documents to Maine in the effort to carry rye's District, but it can be set down as conclusive that the Republicans will organ ize the next House. Attempts to combine in posi tion will not get members enough to defeat the Republican organization. There is considerable talk here abont General Grant's interview in which he criticises the President Grant's outspoken condemnation of the Admniisfrun uas auueu iorce to ine wnisperings here, that a Stalwart member of Congress will, after Congress meets, antagonize the Administration. Hitherto but lit tle attention has been, paid .to this talk, as it seemed to come mainly from disappointed applicants for oince, but General Grant s open opposition . " v w luiivu some that the Stalwarts will undertake to assert their power in the next Congress. A prominent follower of Conkling said to-day that the purpose of Grant. Conkling and their friends will be to drive lilame from the Cabinet; that both Houses ot Congress are very close, and the Stalwarts can easily control the balance of power in the Senate and House; that the demand of the Stalwarts will be Blaine's retirement. This talk is not counted as of much value in Administration circles. Friends of the President say that if Conk ins: was powerless in his opiosition to the I Administration when in the Senate, he will be tti 11 weaker when out of office entirely, The Administration is confident that not only are inkling and Piatt beaten, but that . . . A .1 : . o : 1 1 VA nltAlAll I mu äuiuiiii3uuuii otimiuni nm uecicucu. - I a iti t i. ii i vi., Chicago, June 1G. Fire this evening destroyed the great furniture factory of A. P. Johnson, 231 to 2X Green street, throwing 150 hands out of emplovment and causing a trtt a 1 1 . w u e . f ; ,n IN U 1 t f ti , ncuMnfia nf .1,1 1 1 I v.. v-.,v.. ...oi.i.... v. i ?l7,tiis.. it originated in tue cnute wnere shavings are blown to the furnace. The most important feature of the fire was the unusual number of accidents. Lieutenant Klingen, of Engine Company No. 1, fell from a heap of lumber and sustained severe injuries. Willie Johnson was buried under a lumber pile, and had his leg broken. An ton 15. ßorgmeier, a brother of one of the E artners, was caught on the fifth floor and adly, possibly fatallv. burned before he could be rescued by the firemen. Ole An derson, a chair maker, was caught on the third floorand badly burned. Isaac Larsen. a laborer, fell from the third story and sustained painful injuries. Frank J. Leverne had a knee crushed by falling timbers. Several deaths may be the result.

ork -7.370,92 u",7 4Xmjnon reeoenizod fart by all parties.

question the volume of business toTÄ i"!:

HEALTH IS WEALTH.

iftaiq. of Body is Wealth of Min. p r - r oufsapanlnan Hesolvent I -. -l v - n hlf ma and flesh, strong bone and KÄÄiÄTJBS SäHSs Wf1? fair, nae Eadway. Karsaparfii.n KeA GRATEFUL RECOGNITION. 'To tot a chronic or lans-gtandlM dimM ii P that dearty discern, defect ind .nllfAiafS f"1?: restore, .tep b .tep-br deireilr i iruiv Yinnrr in thAAAainM . . me ooay wnicn has been slnarl ti.w.L I weakened by ainio r!iynld mn?i"rItsPe1 bu ieerves our rnatinde. ' 7J iuiuu.ui.il manaina with tht vranderful rrniodT R h FALSE AND TRUE. We extract from Dr. TUiwa-r'a r.tiu m. i ease and Itt Cure" as foilowi: LIST Ot DISEASES CTRXD BT KadWaV S Sarsaparillian "RftlrPTlt .v v.aremesmins9aiM.rariM nf o.. J? Blood, Serofulou. Disease, Bad or Fever rV 'xr1,1 ,na v,nerei vTJwL. V.,? ' t leers. Salt Rhenm. Affections, Cankers, Glandula Sweffls Node rvinmm.,. . . iu wui I vimvei ana (calculous Denorit. an I vancues oi the above complaint, to which anmZ 1 "-re piven speciou nnmes. I . e Bas?.rt Uut "r i no known remedv thit that waV? CSLeJ.w.t' r VF dise,cs t . ,.7,111" JurnV,h- It cures step t&e injured parts to their soundiüonTrhe wastes of the body are stopped and healthy blocd . . .f. U1VIT. ä IIII III imi T f kt ftLnM aKl terial Is formed. TiV is supplied to the system. ii rom which new xaa tenai is formed. Thu ia th ' r of Rad ..wa r'V n t I If those who I however ilnir m . w k - . . , V . ..KJKl a ."J,Y"re' lcT oeiier- ana - aviajx Wit 1 1 aisn tnai tne cure is roaressine. Ia me patient either get. betwr or wTelhe Iirn of 0,6 diw is not Inactive: 1 not arrested and driven fmm th. wVt i.?J 3read and conünne to undermine the constita. on. As soon as the Rar-vt-nat-im... .v.patient "feel better," every hr on wüllroV better, and increase In health, treutth and f!h OVAUIAN TÜ3IOR8. The removal of thfc inmnn v. t. Resolvent is now so certainly esihHaKi h. published in onr Almanac f- ikto- .iJ. a Si ibbl,na 1x1 1118 present edlüoii of onr One bottle contains f- w . Nedicinea than any ether preparation. 2 Äken I? Teaspoonful doses, while others Trequhe five or six time, as much. One Donar Ter Bottle. R. R. r; DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS. FKVZS AJST AGUi 1 CUBED AND FBEVKNTB9 BT Radway's Ready Relie RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, DIPHTHERIA, INFLTJZXZA SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING, K1XIKVXO IN A FEW M IN CT Eg BY EADWAYS BEADY BELIEF. BOWEL COMPLAINT!?, Iioo-eness. Diarrhea. Cholera Morbus or nalnful discharges from the bowels are stopped in fifteen or twenty minutes by taking Radway's Reaäy Relief. No congestion or inflammation ; no weakness or lassitude will follow the use of the R. R. Bellet A. CUES AND PAJN8. For Headache, whether slrx or nervosa, ervoru ness and Sleeplessness; rheumaUsra, lumbago, pains and weakness in the back, snlne or kidneT - pains around the liver, pleurisy, swelling of th joints, pain in the bowels, heartburn and painsoj au ainas, Kadway's Ready Relief will afford im mediate ease, and its continued use for a few day effect a permanent cure. Price. Fifty Cents. RADWAY'S JRegriilatingr Fills. Perfect Par.atlves, ScotMnj Aperients Act Wllhout Pain, Always Reliabieod Nttiral la Their Operation. ' A Vegetable Substitute for CalomeL Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with rwe t (rum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and Strengthen. Sadwaya ru; lur the cure ot all dis orders oi tne Btomacii, liver, ooweu, tianejr, bladder, nervous diseases, headache, constinaÜOD. fP inH.mm.tinn n.t th, rTr.Mi.Md aii.-... rangements of the Internal viscera. Warranted to eucxit a cure, rureiy vepeianie, containing n mem dfiÄ dlSSS ffim' .i . i i . .1! AviAAt. uonsupauon, inwaru purs, luuuess oi uiouu iu the head, acidity of tbe stomach, nausea, heart burn, dismist of food, fiillness or weight in tht I , a a ami AfnitatiAriB cinhiniT At flu tiarina vf the heart chokine or sufieriiix i:uatioti when li lalTing posture, dimness of vision, dot or webs re the lever ana auu painm weneao. .i.kVkJ V '"k"? li I. .' T . , . . . . i 1 . aen nusnesoi neai, uuruuig iu vne ncsu. iIm in 1 A few doses of Radway's Pills will free the sys tem from all the above name d disorders. Price. 25 cents per Box. Bold by Druggist. Read "FALSE AND TRUE." Send a letter stamp to RADWAY A Co., No. Warren, corner Church street ew l ML Information worth thousands will be sonurj TO THE PUBLIC : There can be no better trurantee of the virtue of Dr. Ryl way's old established R. K. Remedies than the base and worthless imitations of them, as they are False Resolvents, Relief and Pills. Be sure and ask for Radway's, and sea tat the name.' Rad way" Is on what you buy.

a