Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1883 — Page 2
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY JULY 4. 188:i
WEDNESDAY. JULY 4. A conspicuous sign in many New York Stores now ia: "Ko trade dollars received here." The Board of Health of Michigan say that the Public School children of that Statestudy too hard, and that they are kept in health-destroying rooms. A Boston geni as or crank has spent nineteen years trying to make a perpetual motion machine. lie has recently announced his success, but will not show it to anybody. John Bright, the great English statesman, declares that "high protection" is a curse to every European nation that indulges it He might have added that it was a curse to America as well. A Los doit special cable rays that the English Government is lending countenance to the deportation of paupers and criminals to the United States umler the guise of "assisted emigrants," no matter what official declarators are made to the contrary. The Prohibition Republican member of the last Legislature who was on a very high lonesome in this city during the latter part of the past week, and which finally led to his arrest, was finally released Saturday evening on condition that he would go home. But, gracious hevings, to think of a Republican drinking whisky! How did it happen? "Millions for revenue but not one cent for monopoly is the sentiment of the Democratic party of Indiana." said Hon. Bayliss Hanna in his speecn before the Democratic editors of Indiana, assembled at Logansport, Thursday night. It is true, and will be admirable for one of the battle cries of the militant Eemocracy next year. The Democratic platform, "Tum out the Republic a a rascals," Is a Tery good one so far as it goes. It should, however, be supplemented with another plat k, "I'm (rood men in their places." .New York tost. a "We accept the amendment. Now let us put in a good piece of timber on the tariff question and go to the country. Our word for it, the Democracy will sweep the country like a cyclone. A Missouri Democrat made a good point the other day when asked about Tilden'a health. He said: "Don't ask me; but if he runs he will sweep the country like a whirlwind. People say he is feeble, but I notice that he has outlived many of those who helped to cheat him out of the Presidency, like Zach Chandler, Edwin SI. S tough ton, Eliza Pinkston and others I can't at once recall." Senator Bayakd captivated some of the Yale students during his recent visit. One says of him: "Above the common height, of faultless proportions, neither too spare nor too rotund, erect aDd lithe, with brown hair just tinged with gray, close shaven, fair and ruddy in complexion, a genial, speaking eye, and mobile mouth, his expression animated and winning, and his address simple, natural and graceful." The Republican party Is settling down as the party of the two Ps 1'roMbition and Protection. New York World. That is about the size of it as a general proiosition, but along about election time the great "moral" Moguls of the party are seen approaching the ballot-boxes, a3 Judge Gooding said in a speech last campaign, with a saloon-keeper on one arm and a preacher on the other, lying to both to secure votes for the "grand old party." Rev. De. Iresaeus Prime, the veteran edilor of the New York Observer, has been enjoying himself recently as a guest at the old Henry Clay mansion, at Ashland, Ky. He says that the fashionable families of Lexington and vicinity, in full evening dress, were assembled for a social party; the hails, libraries and salons of the manor house were tnrown open, and the guests circulated freely and pleasantly. Tea was served, with "abundant refreshment besides;" music enlivened the scene, the young people enjoyed themselves greatly, and "it is very rare indeed, in any city or ia any country, that so much beauty, gracefulness, ease of manner, with refinement and courtesy, are to be seen." The caterpillar has not proven himself much of a nuisance hereabouts for several years past. The indications are, however, that this year will be an exception. This is because the parasites which destroy the worms are less abundant than nsual. The practice of binding trees with cotton or other substance, as a barrier to the caterpillars. Dr. Lintner, the otlicial entomologist of New York State, regards as worse than useless. The worms do not crawl up the trees. They are hatched in the branches, and the cotton belt prevents the grown worm from getting down, even if he desired so to do. The only effective way to get rid of caterpillars, according to the State entomologist, is to destroy the eggs in the trees wherever they may be suspected to exist. This can be done by burning the nest clusters, and close watchfulness is required to do it effectually. The Indianapolis Sentinel does not dance up to the question: "How much money did the Star Koute gar g contribute to the Democratic Treasuiy for Haccock and English In 180?" There Is a barp point to that question. Perhaps it penetrate.-Commercial Gazette. "We "dance" right up to the question, and aay we never heard of a dollar of the Star Bouts money going to anybody but the Republicans to elect Mr. Porter here in 1880, and for this we have the highest Republican authority. Hon. W. . P. Fishback, an officer in the United States District Court, has publicly stated in a He publican paper of this city that $400,000 were used here in 1S30 to carry Indiana for Governor Porter. We trust that the Commercial Gazette will give this answer to its question a place in its columns. Are you listening to -us, Mr. Commercial Gazette? Mr. Conner, another Republican, and the Chairman of the Republican County Committee of Newton County, Indiana, published over his own signature, in the Indianapolis Journal, the astounding information that Dorsey demanded of his County in 1330 double its nsual majority.and when answered that it was impossible Dorsey told him that the County was on the Illinois line and that the rotes must be brought from over that line. Mr. Conner also stated that tvmj Conn) i In'iifi.ia receirtJ fr'jm 3.000 to $5,000 each
from the Dorsey gang's headquarters at the Denison House in this city. Mr. Conner, the Chairman of the Newton County, Indiana.. Republicans, also stated that in Dorsey'a rooms he was taught the trick of roti.tj dolh ticket. Mr. Commercial Gazette, are ycu listening to us? There are ninety-six Counties in Indiana. If each County received, as Mr. Conner says from $3,000 to $0,000, it is an easy matter to sea what went with the $ IC0.C00 which Mr. Fishback gives as the amount of the Dorsey Star Route Republican corruption fund. Do you hear us, Mr. Commercial Gazette? Do we not "dance" right up to ycur question? Now you do some "darting," and give our reply a place in your columns. Lew Wallace will get us into trouble with Turkey before many moons at the gait he is now going. The fact is that "Wallace should confine himself to writin? novels, or he might run down to Jerusalem occasionally and impress the town authorities with his importance. They will send up a rocket or send off a bunch or two of firecrackers, and that should satisfy the sort of ambition that Wallace is made of. Has not Lew Wallace been paid enough for his services, anyhow? He was one of the visiting statesmen to Florida, and, although we heard of him doing nothing beyond warming himself in the warm tropical sun or winking at an alligator, Mr. Hayes gave him the Governorship of New Mexico for standing by and seeing Tilden and Hendricks swindled out of the Presidency. Without knowing very much about this Turkish question, the chances are as ten to one that Lew Wallace is wrong. "We understand that if the Sultan wishes to put an end to the commercial treaty that exists with this country, he may do so by giving one year's notice of his intention to do so within a year of the expiration of the treaty. He gave notice a little more than a year in advance ol the expiration. Wallace sees a case of tweedledum and tweedledee and.intenda to kick up a little bobbery about it. If he continues his foolery we do hope and trust that President Arthur will call him home. He can Continue business at the old stand in Craw-fordsville.
(Jilmas Mars ro, who has been getting a pretty fair vote for United States Senator in the New Hampshire Legislature, was a school teacher in this city forty-five years ago. He and Mrs. Richmond, mother of N. P. ltichmond, of Kokomo, opened the "Indianapolis High School" in the fall of '37, in the upper story of a frame building east of the "Tavern," on the site above where the Sentinel office stood from l:v7 to 1 .. The following spring a frame building, erected lor the purpose, on the site of Mr. I'.aglish'a residence, and called the "Franklin Institute," was occupied by the firm, and here for a year or two went some of our now well-known citizens. William and Lewis Wallace, Ignatius Brown, William Morrison, the civil engineer, B. R. Sulgrove, and later Robert Browning and others. Mr. Marston left in the spring of '39, and Orlando Chester took the "institute." Shortly before the War the "Yankee School Teacher" of Indianapolis was a member of Congress from New Hampshire. During the early part of the War he was a Brigadier General, and lost a hand at the battle of "Ball s Bluff." In a few years he was made Governor of one of the new Rocky Mountain Territories, Wyoming probably, where he remained for a number of years. He would make a better Senator than some of his Republican rivals, no doubt. COME OUT FROM THEM. The Republican press are endeavoring to make party capital out of the fact that Judge Hoadly was at one time a Republican, a portion by facetious innuendo or open joke and another portion by a semblance of heavy argument. What is the expected gain? Where is the gain to come from? An honest Republican, when he hears the Judge give bis reasons for shaking the dust of radicalism and corruption from his feet, will bs very apt to gather Jup his skirts and follow after. A Democrat, who stands by the old landmarks and loves his country becauss he loves his party, welcomes such men as Judge Hoadly to the Democratic ranks. Just where, then, any capital is to be made that will inure to the benefit of the Republican party is not so easily to determine. Occasionally an organ remarks that the Democratic party has been a very wicked party, bad in principle and worse in practice; that Hoadly knew it better than any one else, and said so; proclaimed it from a hundred stumps, etc., etc. Like Saul of Tarsus toward the early Church, he persecuted it, hunted it down and run it to cover. A step farther in this direction might give the key to the entire position. Like Saul the Jndge was suddenly converted. A great light shone upon him one day. A wonderful revelation was made to him. None was so quick to see it and comprehended its length, breadth, height and depth so quickly as the accomplished Democratic nominee for the next GovernorshiD of Ohio. The rascalities and corruptions of Republicanism opened the Judge's eyes. He was converted as thoroughly and promptly as Saul. As soon as the War closed nearly every officeholder in the Republican party set about gathering in "the fruits of the War." Every fellow was "on the make," until the results of this keen scented gentry mounted into the most gigantic rascalities of the century, beginning with the whisky rings and other revenue embezzling schemes, until they have finally culminated, at least tor the present, in the colossal swindling operations of the Star Route gang. And now decent Republican papers are wondering why such men as Jndge Hoadlj leave the Repuolican and cast their fortunes with the Democratic party. The Republican party must go -that is, it must be torn up root and branch; its old clothes burned up, and the places of Its habitation fumigated, smoked out, medicated and purified. Ia it any wonder that papers like the New York Times and Harper's Weekly, brainy Republican teachers, are going up and down through the modern Ninevebs of Radicalism, calling upon their inhabitants to repent? The latter paper does not hesitate to state that "the Republican party is smirched with the whisky ring swindles, and the Star Route swindles, and the Belknap swindles, and the salary grab, and the third term plot, and a myriad of other similar jobs and thifts and crimes. The argument will be that no reform is possible until auch a party is turned out, and that it can be turned out only by
putting ia the Democratic party. That auch a pian is shrewd and promiaiog is undeniable." Is it any wonder why such men aa Judge Hoadly eagerly look for a way of escape from auch miserable company? The great wonder ia why more b not follow him. One reason, however, is that promises of reform are made from time to time. During the canvass of 187G the cry of Republicanism was "Don't put the wicked Democracy in power; let us have reform within the party." During Hayes Administration, Dorsey, Brady it Co. arranged the programme for the gigantic Star Route villainy and carried it out while4that cider and doughnut Buckeye blockhead ran the Government on a sort of pretentious, goodish Sunday-school plane. Then came the cry of "civil service reform" to put more of the old party to sleep and to quiet others, and what is it? An able Democratic authority remarked recently concerning it that the worst feature of the civil service sham is that in the name of reform tit seeks to perpetuate the corrupt system which long possession of power has riveted upon every branch of the Government. The creatures of Secor Robeson, of Belknap, of Babcock, of Landaulet Williams, of Delano, of Shepherd, and of all the rings that flourished under Grant, are now holding places of trust in the Departments. They possess the knowledge of important financial, diplomatic and political screts; they are the private agents of great corporations and speculators in Wall street; they hold the keys, or duplicates of them, to the great safes and vaults of the Government; they know the side paths to the Treasury, and they can cater for the tastes and vices of superiors. The only salvation for the country is to turn out the party in power. It has been tried time and time again. Let the watchword be "The Republican party must go."
DOCTOR HATHAWAY. The great city of Philadelphia has 'produced an ogre of infamous proportions, a child murderer of colossal wickedness, a demoralized specimen of humanity of indescribable hideousness. His name is Hathaway. He has. it is believed, in his day murdered hundreds of infants. He has brought them into the world dead, or just quickening and quivering into life and thrown them into the furnace, or fed them to ferocious bounds, kept for the purpose. Scores cf little skeletons, polished by the teeth and tongues of his Cannibal hounds, have been found; and the wife and son of the monster testify that the work cf murdering infants has been going on for years at the rate of about ten a day. Now, then, it is in order to read up the history of civilization and savagery. If need be, go back to the day, when, according to Darwin, man was a monkey, .for the special purpose of ascertaining if there are any records that a monster, like Dr. Hathaway, ever lived upon the face cf the earth. There have been abortionists before the Philadelphia miscreant lived and nourished, but for cyclopean atrociousnes, Hathaway stands alone. We are told that someof the people of Philadelphia want to take the wretch from the hands of the authorities and dispatch him forthwith. It is not surprising. He has managed to give Philadelphia terrible notoriety. The testimony of Hathaway's wife is that he averaged ten cases a day 3,G50 cases a year. In .the great city of Philadelphia, with all of its refining influences, 3.G50 women annually went to the slaughter-pen of Hathaway and left their infants to be buried, burned or fed to dogs. Is it probable? Is it possible? Is it conceivable? Hathaway, we say justly, is infamous beyond expression. What of the women who sought his services? What of society where such thirjgsare possible? Hathaway we readily dispose of. He is a monster deserving of death a hundred times a day for a century. But, after all, what words can convey to the rrind any just conception of a condition of Ecciety'when women by scores and hundrads ecek the service of such hell deaeryin? wretches as llalhaway? Whose graphic pea shall paint a truthful picture of Philadelphia society? It is in testimony that elegan. equipages were daily seen at Hathaway's den. Fashionably dressed women went in, remained awhile, and then drove away. No one knew why. No questions were asked. Now comes the horrible revelations. The sickening details overwhelm the mind with emotions such as are born of dreams when goblins damned march in procession before the affrighted fancies. What is it that makes a Hathaway and his infant devouring hounds a possibility in Philadelphia or elsewhere? Did Sodom hold any den of deformity worse than the Philadelphia abortion hell? What influences are in operation in Philadelphia that make the existence of such ilac2) a possibility and give to them an overwhelming patronage? But Philadelphia is not nlone in her disgrace, however exceptional she may be in her prominence. It is safe to say the police of Philadelphia knew of the existence of Hathaway's orgie parlors and cellars. It is not to be admitted at once that a man could, on an average, murder ten infants a day for a year without exciting suspicion and talk. And yet, we know now that the wretch plied his vocation unmolested for years fifteen years, it is said burned infants, fed them to hounds and buried them in hia cellars. Philadelphia women supplied the infant immortals, and that fact is the most haggard of all. Now it is in order for city governments to look into the subject with a little more care. The den of an abortionist ia worse than a gambling den or any other den. A child murderer! Gods! At the mere mention of the wickedness, the heart stands still and the blood freezes. What can be dons? The query is worthy the attention of law-makers. Let abortionists be whipped and then hung, and those who patronize them be sent to the Penitentiary. Let the Church fulminate its anathemas, and let the police be instructed to place men who are suspected of child murder under the severest surveillance indeed. Let all things be done that humanity can suggest to rid the world of such monsters as Hathaway, the Philadelphia abortionist, and save every woman from being a party to a crime for which, seemingly, there can be no forgiveness in this world. The grief of some people is very profound, in others it is not so profound. Here is a sample of the latter, which we find in the Arkansas Traveler: "The boat has turned over and drowned-your k d," bald a man appioaching a Pahing party, anl addressing an old gentleman, "txveat goodness!" exclaimed the old man, bursting into tears. "He wis my hope in this life. He was the best boy on the p'ace: and besides that, be bad the bait cop wllh him."
SENATOR V00BHBE3 AND TARIFF REFORM. Recent utterencea of Senator Yoorhees are caught up by the Republican press of the country and published with auch comments as are thought to be best calculated to divide and defeat the Democratic party in 1S81. The New York Tribune in a recent issue says: Mr. Yoorhees makes some estimates of what free trade would do for the country which are not likely to be published as a Democratic campaign document. He says: "Free trade would do awav with the Custom Houses, abolish the datiei on imports, and levy a direct tax upon the people for the support of the Government. In other words, it would increase general taxes S200.0C0.C00. ana people would have less to nay taxes with than they have now, lor labor would be cheapened and industry d:s couraged." lie declares that the great material prosperity of the country has been secured by protection, and savs the want of the present and future is a "tariff system for revenue laid with the idea of protecting home industry and advancing us to the higher planes of wealth and prosperity." These, be It remembered, are the utterances of a former free trade Democrat. We do not quote them K?auge we have the slightest idea that Mr. Yoorhees is sincere In making them. lie is anxious for Democratic success, and he sees that the only way to win it is to profess a devotion to protection. He, like all other Democrats, W0 uld shout for free trade the minute the party got possession of the Government. Hia utterances are valuable aa showing the faith of an overwhelming ms jority of the people in protective principles, and their determination to tmst no party which is hostile to those principle. Yoorhees is merely tryirg to steal the strongest Republican issue for the temporary use of the Democratic party. The Tribune overshoots the mark. Mr. Voorhees prudently estimates the consequences that would follow the adoption of a free trade policy, but the Democratic party ia not a free trade party. It never advocated doing away with Custom Houses or the abolishment of duties on imports, or the levying of a direct tax for the support of the Government. Nothing of the kind can be found in the records. Hence, whatever Mr. Yoorhees may cay against free trade does not apply to the Democratic party. If there are individuals scattered here and . there who advocate free trade Mr. Werheea' declarations apply to them. At any rate, spearing for Indiana, it is not conceivable that Mr. Yoorhees intended that the remarks with which he is credited by the Tribune should apply to the Democratic party of this State. The Democracy of Indiana is not in favor of doing away with Custom Houses, nor would it abolish Custom duties, nor would it frame a tariff for the avowed purpose of taxing one class of citizens to make another class rich. The Cincinnati NewsJournal savs: The democratic party will have an eye to the preservation and growth of American industry: but it will hare au explanation as to where and bow bounties preserve or uphold American industry in these occupations where continual fluctuations are the rule, where flush times and large profits for capital alternate with periods of depression, strikes and lowering of wages, and turning out of laboring men from their living. The public demands a candid examination into these mattere. Democracy proposes to deal conservatively and cautiously with even existing evil. It is foolish policy to pluck up an ulcer by the roots, killiDg the patient with the remedy. Democracy proposes to disturb no existing good in any system where it Is a public good. It opposes bounties for monopolies and duties which oppress libor and the public under the specious guise of protection. Perhaps the News-Journal puts the matter in a light that those who read may understand the position of the Democratic party,
but extreme caution of epeech is not required. Outspoken denunciation of a tariff which creates and fosters monopolies is in order. A spool of thread which in Canada costs three cents, in the United States costs five cents. Under the monopoly tariff the thread manufacturers are able to make enor mous profits. The Democratic party does not favor such piracy. It would give the thread monopolists less protection and the people cheaper thread; and thread may be taken as an illustration of the Democratic policy throughout. Mr. Yoorhees is on record as eaying that the Republican tariff which has cursed the country for years is a "burden of iniquities." That will do. The purpose of the Democratic party is to extract the iniquities, and if required throw the burden ef iniquities to the winds -and construct a tariff that shall do equal justice to all the people. Mr. Yoorhees, as the Tribune charges, was never a free trade Democrat. He has been distinguished as the champion of the interests of the people and the foe ot monopoly. A tariff laid for revenue will afford incidental protection and all that is required. Mr. Yoorhees is not in the habit of stealing Re publican issues to advance the interests of the Democratic party, nor is he likely to do it now or in the future. The policy of the Democratic party on the tariff was sharply dt ned in the discussions of tariff questions in the Fcrty-seve nth Congress, and there will be iio departure from it in the fu:ura. JUDGE HOADLY. The Democratic press comments on the nomination of Judge Hoadly for Governor of Ohio, and without an exception, so fir as our observation extends, iu the highest de gree flattering, Judge Hoadly is a strong man, a safe man, and the right man. In saying this no other man is disparaged. The Democratic party of Ohio has a largs number of eminently and preeminently qualified men for Governor, only one of whom could be named as a candidate in 1SS3. To assume, as does the Republican press, that the naming of one is to drive the others from aheartyand enthusiastic support of the ticket is superlative bosh. Judge Hoadly will poll every Democratic vote in Ohio. More and better still, he will receive the support of thousands of Republicans, who have hitherto affiliated with the Republican party. We notice now and then it is insinuated that Judge Hoadly has at some period in hia life been a Republican. Let the charge be made openly and severely analyzed, dissected through and - through, and then what of it? This : There is a Republican of brains and convictions, a patriot, a statesman, devoted to his country and qualified to serve the people and advance their interests. He listens to Democratic arguments, he investigates Democratic principles, he analyzes Democratic policy and is convinced that the Democratic party is right. He, therefore, breaks his Republican fetters, emancipates himself from Republican errors, and, massing his manhood and giving his honest convictions full p?ay, boldly enters the Democratic camp, and with a heroism born of integrity, fights under the Democratic, banner. Such recruit)
are coming to the Democratic ranks from the . Republican party by thousands and tens of thousands. The Democratic party welcomes them and honors them after with high trusts. Why not? Democrata labor to achieve auch results. Democratic facts, logic, policy and history are all brought into action to achieve euch victories. The more of them the better for the country. Judge lloadly is a vastly superior man to Judge Foraker, the Republican candidate for Governor of Ohio. Hcadly has great intellectual resources and can command them. He has a National reputation. His character is pure, his manners captivating and his ratory superb, and it is admitted that he is'by far the ablest man that has been a candidate for Governor since Salmon P. Chase and Henry It. Tayne were arraigned against each other in the no.able campaign of 1S57; and those who have a right to speak do not place Jndge Hoadly's majority at less than 15,000, and it may be much larger. The outlook in Ohio is cheering and the Democratic party is a unit.
J udge Hoadly, the gallant standard-bearer of the Ohio Democracy, was serenaded Saturday night in Cincinnati. He responded aa follows I thank you heartily for the warmth with which you have greeted my baptism as your Candidus for Governor and my christening as the youngest member ot the Duckworth Club. The baptism was. as it were, by fire, but it has left me, I hope, un scorched aud without either the right or the disposition toccmplaln. Bat for the ardent and flattering rupport 1 received from members of the Club I could not have been nominated. But you were not unanimous in ycur support, borne of you preferred that grand old hero, Durbin Ward, and tome, doubilets, wished for the nomination of that learned and popular - statesman, Judce Geddes. Such preferences, gentlemen, are a matter of right amon?. Dsmof"ats, and. while I most warmly thank my friends for the support they extended me, and without which my nomlnaüon could not have been made, I also thank the friends of my able rival for the manly and open and generous nature Ol their antagonism. "Faithful are the wounds of a friend," and such, I am sure,' are the only wounds left bv the late Convention, I am christened the youngest member of the Duckworth Club. I am proud to belong to this organization. Its same symbolizes its character. A young, active, intelligent, thriving buiiiness man gives it its name, and you represent the business element of the Democratic parly, the active, driving, intelligent busiuesaelemeu, which conquers victory, and is resistless in front of obstacles until Tictory is conquered. (..e: t eroen, jcu are welcome to Precinct A of the first Ward of Cincinnati, and to the hospialilles of my home. Friends and neighbors who na ve joired the Duckworth Clnb ia this serenade, I thank jou for the warmth -with which you now, as alwajs, jou have received me. I hold that this I'rtCitici holds about as many happy to the number of its ptnple S8 any place ia the world, w e are growing, and may hereafter change In this respect, out we nave betm and tull are a model people, even though I say it, who, as one ot the number, pertaps ought nut. Ana the reason is because we eah and all "mind our own business." We ate of diS'erent nationalities, religions and colors, but oar rule of life is for each to oo his own work in his own way, enjoy his lutppiness according to hia b?st judgment, and iaterlere with nobody else. "Live and let live" is the motto ef the neighborhood. We have first rate school?, five Churches, good, light water, and when it stops raining we shall have prettv fair )cada and best of all, the p lice have very little occasion to dUtuil us, and we never disturb them. Twenty-two years.' residence entitles me to speak with knowledge rf this Pncinct. Besides. Precinct A. First Ward, is the' home of the next Governor of Ohio. "And what's his name'.' Wfcere'shis home'.' October'll surely tell." Gentlemen of the Duckworth Club. Friends and Neighbors: I have thought it best to follow Judge Foraker's example on a similar occasion, anl not ineke a political speech to nicht. Therefore, thanking yon el! most warmly for this crm plim?nt, I can only add that Mrs. lloadly aud 1 era very glad to tee you, and that there are some refreshments on the tawn. and that our home is open. Will you kindly enter'.' Hod. Frank Hurd, in a talk about the recent Ohio Democratic Convention, Bays: A big Convention, an enthusiastic assemblage, is no iuie criterion of what follows. The largest, grandest, most glorious Convention we ever had in Ohio was in 1,S6;1, when Clememt L. VaUandigham was nominated for Governor. Our standard -bearer had been banished. We thn had the courage to protest against the tyranny of the military jower, the absolute disregard for individual civil right?. The Constitution had been rlagrantly violated. We had the courage to protest against It in the face cf all the terrorism, the bayonets of the soldiery aud anincecsed partv. It was at that Convention that I formed my love and devotion for the Democratic party. I saw it stand up for the rights of citizens when it was dangerous to do it. I still remember how George E. Pugh was carried up over the heads of the people in the vast multitude, and made the most brilliant etl'ort of his life in accepting tbe nomination for Lieutenant Governcr. We had then several times the number of people here that are in the city now. Tbiy came from every corner of the State, in wagons and on cars. It was a Mare Convention. No hall juM hold a fractional part of ttiem, and the Ccuveition was held iu the spacious grounds of the Capitol. Thst large terrace on the east side was the platform, atd all available spice was taken up. 1 never law finch a crowd, such e-ifhu-siam ; but we were beaten that lall by over 100 (00. I ny. therefore, that it requires cool deliberation and no scheming to lay the foundation for success. We must not be deceived by this multituda of people and this overflow of soul, but expect to go cut and work to win. The Ohio Republicans simply bat dei terously and overwhelmingly ana rascally stuffed the ballot-box that year. Mr. Hurd should state a more diilicult problem. A youk Congressman '"yanked" a $12,000 check very handsomely out of Mr. Hayes during the time he was filling Mr. Tilden's piece in the White House. A Washington 1 ster to the Philadelphia Record, says: A year or two before he arrived at the White Hcusd Mr. Haves was a silent par.mr in the grain commission house cf Le Due it Co , whose headquarters were a? some town with a seventeenth century name n the heart cf tbe wheat couutr la the great Son west, "i be head of the firm was that oily old Bardwtll Mote. Le Due, whom Hayes ms-le Commi-kioner of Agriculture waen he wai. out of a job. By hook and by crook the firm of I.e Due A: Co. gathered in a large constituency of wheat-growera and a large quantity cf wheat The growers had the firm's notes Ünebtight morning the house of L9 Due A Co. closed its doors, and its constituency has bee.t whifctlirü ever since fjr tbe touch of Its vanished grain. But a lew were smart enough to give their notes to a sharp young lawyer ofthat County, who came In Congress about the time that Haye came to Washington to be inaugurated. He had $12,000 worth of Le Due's promises. He went up to the White House one day and asked Hayes what he was going to do about it, Mr. Hayes attempted a futile dalliance, which resulted in a suggestion from the plucky young Congressman tnat the tory would not look well in print. That evening tbe young Congressman got a check for f 12.00J from Mr. Hayes. The New York Times nails a lie very neatly as follows: The old saying that liars should have long memories Unas new exemplification in the circulation cf a Dcatj little "Lincoln story" which tirst appeared in a Boston paper and is now traveling on Its mendacious mission. The tale is that "a reliable gentleman" called on President Lincoln just after Jeff Davis had baen captured," and asked what would be doue with the Rebel President. To this, says tbe narrator, Lincoln replied with a story about a 'coon which a boy had captured and which he could not sell, or kill, or keep at home. Tbe only weak point about this historical anecdote is that Lincoln died April 15. lStö. and that Je Hereon Davis was not captured until May 11 of that year. Otherwise the intense realism of the tale might deceive the verv elect. The Times nails lies so neatly we wonder that it did not nail the one it published on Senator McDonald recently, vizr.thathe was in favor of the old Know Nothing doctrine. As soon as the Times made the charge we sent a representative of this paper to him, to whom the ex-Senator emphatically denied the Times' charge. The denial was published in the Sentinel, together with the editorial charge of the Times. A correspondent of tbe New York Sun writes to that paper as follows: . I am glad to see the San proposing Judge Willism 8. Holman. of Indiana, as a Presidential candidate. I have known him long for one of the purest and bravest men who ever sat in Congress; f jjd be has that very rare quaUtication for a President, thorough knowledge of the details of the Federal Government. When he errs. It is on the aide of economy, which is the safe side. Though he can not be made Governor of Indiana this year, be can be made Speaker of the House of Repree&teUres, and he should be. Statik Islan i.
PERSONALS.
Mis Genevieve Wiid ia to make a tour around the woild, to include India and Australia. p- John W. Garrett has presented a flneiea lion, weighing half a ton, to Druid HIU I "ark. .Baltimore. E.t-Pkesident Hayes ia announced to speak at Woodstock, Conn., July 4. oa "National Aid to Education." General Fremont's wife is now in New York ia quett of a bust of her father, Thomas H. Benton, which was sold as rubbish some years ao. PaismrsT Arthcr has not only cut hU whiskers off abort, but it la rumored u losing hia hair to rapidly ihat he is in danger of becoming bald. Senator Lafayette, of Fraice, the last of his line, is broken In health. He Is poor and lives In a thiid floor ordinary Hat. The Americia publi;, tneKewVoik Grap hic thinks, ought to get up a puree for Mm. It Is rumored in London that the Queen will be called upon to welcome another grandchild before many months have passed, whereof the mother will be the fair atd gentle PiinceEs of Wales. Prince Krai-otkine. the Socialist and Nihilist, Instructs his fellow prisoners In cosmography, gjcmetryand algebra. Those sciences will be of great afsistance to them ia swallowing Trisoa haid tack. Colonel John McClure, of Little Rock, said to a St. Louia leporter: "Yea, Powell Clayton always would back a hand in poker with all he had, and I won a house from him that I sold for J14.CC0 half an hour afterward. Gesfral Sherman's idea of Washington reclli one of Horace Greeley's letters. "There is so nnch villainy going on ia this place," he wrote in ls53, "that 1 am almost afraid to lk In thj glass lost 6hall see the fece of a rogue." Me. Richard;Merrick, tbe counsel for the G3Vernmentinthe Star Route trial, is tin father of teven daughters and one con, all uud3r uiteiu years of age. Ee and his t ife and family a fe w days sgo removed to their country place la Maryland. Miss Celeste Wis ass the daughter of nss Wlcans, is engaged, as Baltimore, gossip runs, t) Mr. Hutton, a wealthy young man of the North of Ireland. The young people met in Ru;sia a few years ago and at a tccond meeting at Moscow, during the coronation ceremonies, they became ngaged. Russeii. Sa'.e Is said to be the neaaes; uua la New York. He has a fortucee tlmited at be'.weei f20,OOO,0uOacdaP,00?.'00. yet i so mhc lf tht he waln rather ihan piy carfare. a:d cits free luathes raiber thin py for h'n di mer. B'it then a good many nun do thai wh a:e not w ma a ceit, und no one thicks of cilliu 5 them mean. Mrs. Mack ay is pgin denying to the Paris correspoDdtut the reported engagement of her dai gtter to a royal i'.lucet-f i.e of ihs effete manarchiesf Eiuop?. "I mean." sha says, "to give my Javhter to tu tone a man." lt&eemta lit le tlDgulsr tha Mrs. Mackay dos not mike a tour of Nevtdt ajd tee what tee cu ind Iu the m'aes. Caitais Ki;::xei:zes ;Iok;as. of Cretan. Cria., notloDgago sulfccribed fc'ytO'lto be used for s curirg a genuine translation of the Bible f rom a Iiap'iM standpoint. Now he has bought t'ae trjaslator's library, which the Raptbvacf this erratry had collected aiier five years' effjrt at the cxpeadm re of 4 1 000, paying only 1 5.000, aad he will present it to Madisau University, at Him.Uju, N. V. State Sesatoi: Hekely, of Chicago, lost his waleh In the iaid-t of the bustle occasioned by tbe adjournment of the Illinois Legislature. He afterward read that State Senator B:idges had tetn presented by admirers with a fine gold watch, tut thought little of the matter. Happenicg to meet Mr. Bridges the other day, Mr. Hercly dücovered hit !ott vatch tne Btatet-men of Springfield having stolen it from one man and presented it to another. M es. Levi P. Morton's recant ball in Paris is raid by London Truth to be the finest given at a United States Legation iu that city for fifteen years. She brought together at it such antagonistic social elements as Marshal and Marechale MacMahon, the Due de Broglie, M. Challemel-Lacour, the Due and Duchesse de Eisaccia, Rolland Bonaparte and bis sister .leannie. General and Generale Chareite, M. and Mme. Jnles Ferry, the Due de Morney and M. Xirard. At Holwood, near Bromley, England, sUudg a venerable oak tree with a huge gnarled root, prolectiEg on one side Into the shape of a rude settee. It was while seated upon that root that William Titt and William Wilberforc9 held together that memorable conversation, as a result of which the latter, May 12, 1TS9, brought the nuestion of the abolition of the slave trade before the House ef Commons In what Burke termed "a manner the most masterly. Impressive and eloquent." The tree is still known aa "Wilberforce's ak," and is caiefully guarded from injury. The Moniteur in 1815, then the organ cf Louis XVI II., thus from day to day recorded the progress of the first Napoleon from Elba to Paris: "The authrcpophagist has escaped." "The Corsicaa ogre has landed." "The tiger Is coming." "The monster has slept at Grenoble." "The tyrant has arrived at Lyons," "The usurper has baen seen la the environs of Paris." "Bonaparte advances forward, but will never enter, the capital." "Napoleon will be under our ramparts to-morrow." "His Imperial Majesty entered the Tuilleries the 21st cf March, in the midst of his faitbfal subjects." London Society. A shirt time ago the Emporor Franz Joeeph aad tbe King of Saxony weie out shooting t gether. Uight came on, and the royal sportsmen, finding themselves at a considerable distance from the Residenz, hailed a rm.ig wagon drive i by a Stolid-looking peant. and got ia. When they came to their journey's end tbe Emperor slipjied a few florins into the peasant's hand and said, emiliDg: "Do you know whom you have been driving?" "No." "You have been driving the mieror of Austria acd the King of Saxony." The The peasant, who was convinced that he was being hoaxed, replied with a chuckle: "And do you know who I am?" "No." "Well, I am the Shah of Persia." And he whipped up his horses aad departed. James Pays, the novelist, Uvea in oneofthe most attractive bouses in Maida Vale, London, and spends most of his time there, except, of course, when at bis office. He says that in his boyhood he never took part in any games or sports, and to this dav doesn't know anything about cricket, tent is, croquet, rowing, yachting, horse-' back riding, or anything of the sort. Hedoesn't take any recreation now; not even walking or going to the Theater. Leaving his house in the morning he goes to the nearest cab-stand ab ut twenty steps from his door and rides to his oflice. From 10 to 1 o'clock he writes fiction, and then walks one block to the Reform Club and take lunch with his old friend, William Black. Then he goes back to his offio and reads MS5, and proofs until 4 o'clock, when he returns to the Clnb and plays whists for an hourandahalL Then be rides borne, dines, dozes in his chair, goes to bed and sleeps ten hours, gets up and takes breakfast, and starts off again on the same routine, which he repeats day 'after day, with no variation nor shadow Of turning. He smokes forty or fifty pipes of tobacco a day; in fact, be smokes constantly. He writes an execrable hand, and has his daughter copy all hia MSS. with a type writer to send to the printer. A Good Investment. One of onr prominent business men said to us the other day: "In the spring my wife got all ran down, and could not eat any thing. Passing your store I saw a pile of Hood's Sarsaparilla in the window, and I got a bottle. After aha had taken it a week ehe had a rousing appetite, and did everything. She took three bottles, and it was the best $3 I ever invested." C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.
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R.
RELIEF
