Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 25, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 June 1877 — Page 7
WEEKLYJDOURIER 0, B0A1TX, FaUlak. JASPER - - - INDIANA. irimi oi iNTiwirr. I'vniHHHl hh I.ltrirjr. A new work of Charliw Darwin , about to appear, discusses "Tho Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of tho Same Species " Jefferson DavUf is now residing at Heauvoir, on the Gulf count of Mississippi between Mobile and Now Orleans, iml preparing bis memoirs, Ho Ls in exclientbealtb,Hnd looks younger tban w did a few years ago. Mr. Krastus Hrooks, wlio baa retired from tho New York Express, after a service of 11 years, is, with tho oxoopt',on of Mr. Bryant, tho oldest journalist in the city. lie says in his farewell that lio daily nuwspapors havo started and failed in New York City since bo began. ' The late W. H. C. HosmorVs poetry, like Alfred IL Street's, is identified with the life, character and traditions of tbu Indians. "The Fall of Tceumseh,1'
acinus oi me oeuiH;, .. . . u .
W arriors oi t no licmssee, were ins uiiiut
4 i? I. ....... .. iMurc uini iii V'liirulii riUHt.ll awii
im 11 ' MM" , ment of Science.
ami mo flui umwv.
Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton, well known for her stories and poems and literary correspondence, is now in London, where she is engaged as a regular contributor to the Taller, a new weekly somewhat in the 18th century stylo. Sho also writes frequently for other papers and magazines; ami it is likely that sho will romain abroad a year or two longer. Hub Hurdetle, tho llawk-cyc man, H to publish a book and have it sold by iirvnts. lei. unuouuieuiv umi whio liurdette has been chased clear into tho I : r .. i...r..i. .....i ,oun "lu i . ' "IS? ZT?u""i n
I mill t s I n his na e to a book i creosote. Besides" doubling the dumSibrA timber, it protects it from man came around with tho five-dollar lp worms. Ixsik, he had to go out and borrow fifty i A method of burning petroleum uticctits of the foreman, ten cents -of all j dcr steam boilers has been succossfully
tlm conmosdtors. five cenLs of tho devil, V -'Christian Reid," the author of J "Valerie Aylmer," and several other luuil-u if SiuriuiSfior merit. U thus do- i ciui Uv u Liirriwiiittwlniit nf tlm Tincinnati Uominerdiat mcrdial: " S no is Miss ! Fisher, of North Carolina, and spends : i., ...:.......-:.. n..n:. ...itl. Imp um ' her winters in Haltimoro, with lier aunt and uncle, Judge and Mrs. Hairstono. Miss Fisher is poor, and aids in every way lier father's family, which is largo. Indeed, I understand she Is their mainay. Jhe is about 22, of medium height, with a slight, graceful figure, which 'sho dresses with exquisite tasto. Her small, shapely head is covered by a profusion of wavy, rippling brown hair, done up after a carelessly artistic fashion. Her features are regular, small and very pretty. Her eyes are large, lustrous, and of a very uncertain color. Sho is gentle, eremely graceful , and very shy ; can not bear the Toast reference to her writings, on which subject she is painfully sensitive. Her voice is low-toned and musical. She talks well, and, when warmed up to lier .subject, grows post lively eloquent, bhe makes but little irora her books. 1 hero is quite a c e-, niaiui for them, but a friend told me the i.i.o i.jiis uuiigiit out uib wjij rigm yi earn lor a low iigure, and that was the end of it. bhe spends her summers at home, and her winters with her uncle and aunt, who arc devoted to her, and ' very proud of her genius." f School hhiI Church. A Sundav-school Assemblv to be' hold in tho Voscmite Valley. California. in 1879 is announced. Dr. J. H. Vincent assumes the responsibility of its organization. The llev. A. .Turarer, tho converted Jew, who was for. some time a teacher 1 of Hebrew in tho Southern Uantist i Theological Seminary, has joined tho 1 Kiiiscopalians. ! The will of Charlotte Harris, of Charlcstown, gives $80,000 to Parkin's Institution for the Blind: S10.000 to tho tiiariestown Library, and f ,000 to other institutions. The rest of her fortune, after deducting private legacies. tit I. on !..(!.. at...... MM... ....... t... goes to tho Massachusetts General Hospital. -Prof. M. W. Harrington, of Michigan University, wlio is now in Europe, has been offered by tho Chinese Government College, at Pekin, tho Chair of Astronomy in that institution, at a salary of $4,000 a year, with the perquisites amounting to $1,000 mora. The Sabbath-school lessons for 1878, as decided upon by the International Committee, will be, for tho first six months "Studies about tho Kingdom of Judah," from IL Chronicle and Daniel, and for tho last half of the jear " Studies in the Gospel' according to Luke." A Sunday-school Assemblv Is to bo icld at Lako BlulV, HO miles" north of Chicago, from .July 17 to 28. Key. .7. IL Vincent, of Now York, will bo tho Superintendent. The course of instruction will be the Chautauqua series, eonMtingof the first Ul lessons thereof. Tim total results of the long struggle between the German Empire and tho Human Catholic Church may bo epitomized as follows : The Archbishops of "nosen-Poson and Cologne, tho Bishops of Breslau, Paderborn, and Minister, and the auxiliary Bishops of Posen, six hi number, havo been deposed. Tho of Treves and Fttlda have become vacant by death, and no attempt is mad
anu asK mu euuor 10 huvhuuu mo ic- , ii , i...i ,f i.:a ..ni.iiiii: ciin- : which, linbif incombustible, serves to ine.iap
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. ' -u i ci...ior .Auim iiw.nil1in,inutii i kado. was lateiv
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lo All thm. About 600 members of different orders and oongragatioHS hava lxM)iixpoll(Hl from the diooose of Cologne, among them -120 prints. In tha diocese of Cologne, there are 94 parishes without pruwU; in I'aderlwrn, SM); in Monster. fiO: in Troves, 160: in Lim-
burg. 17: in Jlraslau, fit : and in Hilde sheim, 1 1 . None of the Bishops will tliitaut vnounmotf. lmCHUSO the I'ODO W not permit them to conform to tho new .. m . ...... f ecclesiastical Jaws oi mo empire, 8elMe mhiI iHtliMtrjr, Tho municipal clocks of Vienna are moved in accord, by means of pneumat ic tubes, with a central ciook. iv-vory mmutu a wave of compressed air Is sent through the tubos, causing tho hands to ve. Onlv 1ft voars aco China hold the monopoly of tea production ; now India is proving a formidable rival. From 1,800,000 pounds in 1861, the export from Calcutta advanced to 25,000,000 pounds in 187C. A Scottish correspondent traveling in Texas quotofl an intelligent Texan as saying to him that "tho stock of cattle in Texas will not last more than two or three years if Texas lias to supply the British as well as tne Amentum mar barometer maker to tho ation for tho Advance has devised a baromc ter for warning miners when tho atmos 1 s i, ...,.-.:.... .,),),.. nliiM-ic nroMsuro t unddrL'oiiiir a sudden imwiiim. so that tbev mav cruard Iiumiist in liAiiiuoiuuDi i One of tho New York obituary writI crs says mat mo iiarper periodicals bring in an annual profit of half a million, while the whole manufacturing business amounts to $5,000,000 yearly, 1 one-third of which is profit. , At I'ascagoula, La., there are extensive works for creosoting timber, which j is done by first expelling the sap by steam, ami then dviiifr the wood a bath "one steam, and 1 in "dead oil." stronsrlv impregnated with tried in itaiy. it consists wiupiy m . ... i. I I... .1... !.. 11,0 urnac wuru uou mjuiuu .v .u m wnso neat. A committee of tho scientific socio ties of Franco has decided that, in fu tore, miuruiHiiuu various coal mines ti smlilnn nr tpi any sudden or pherio iiressuri ' cut meteorological thought, thatsuclu ' inlluenco on gases in mines A substitute for minnowder. invent cd in England, is called " powder pa- , per." It is paper impregnated with a mixture of potassic' chlorate, nitrate, i nrussiato and clirdmate, powdered wood . charcoal, and a little starch. It leaves no srreasv residue on the trim, produces lass smoke and less recoil, and is less impaired by humidity, and it is 5-lCths stronger than gunpowder. The cork tree has been domesticat ed, or acclimated, or at tho very least CUIllVHICU HI OUUUII1R, VIUUIIll. l. resident of that place lias .succeeded in mnvmir iivo trees which aro now zo to v i.r.;ri,t. andfrnm iotoi5inohSn djamotof in tho trunk. One coat of cork one iin,i 0nc-lttUf inch thick, has be(jn st riimcd olL The seeds wero brotielit from Spain 20 voars ago. hhp nHi Mihp. William Connor, a painter, fell fvom a scaffolding a distance of 60 feet land was instantly killed, at watenoo, Neb. Near Cuvahosra Falls, Ohio, a young I girl named Newton was fatally burned (by the explosion of coal oil which she wns nounnsr into tho stove to nsrht a liy tho prematura dischargu oi a blast in a stone quany near iietmonem, lies Walton was instantly killed l'a... lames and Abraham Fry fatally injured. Goo. Sanderson, residing on 1 Creek. sAW 15 miles north of Memphis, sought shelter from the htorm under a tree, and was struck by Hsrhtninsr and instantly killed. I ... . . . ii ... i om l eierson,a wen Known .shioou l-iiniint tt 1liit1tiGrf mi Inu!l. (1lnntl(U dead in ids own saloon from an overdose of laudanum, which lie was taking I.vif w -- - " i- ron a physician's prescription to recover from tho etlocts ot a spree. . .twlil!! Uiu-n a Hull, linv 7 vnara nlil. was sitting in a wagon at Monroe, Wis., when tho horses became frightened and dashed off. throwing tho boy to the ground so violently as to tear oft ono side of his head, and scattering his brains along the street. Mr. O. Vreecslaar, a wealthy farm er, living three miles east of Ut lev, Iowa, stennod into the yard among his cattle, when he was attacked by a large bull mid gored in a fearful manner. One horn penetrated his side in tho vicinity of tho heart, causing almost instant death. Curiosities of suicide: J. P. Lallenmnd. of Memphis, an upholsterer, throw himself from the balcony of tho jail to the Hags, some JJ0 feet below, causing death instantly. Ho Juul been threatening suicide for somo,nionths,and was arrested to nrevent him from de stroying himself. Ho leaves a wife and Iivo chiTdron.Edward Leo, a convict in tho Minnesota State-prison, recently sentenced for !J0 years for rape, hung himself in his cell with his bed-clothes. Ho loft a letter in the cell with mossagos for his sister and mother saving he did not commit the crimes charged upon
uhull lw cmil t lllf I 11IKUU mi" J , flr' ouiiiiwir lU in-ill illlll H5-uil.iilm;n. t..yvt-J-.... Mntlll U13 IU I , ...!. ,.t I ..,,. nniump Irimnn mnltv as mi 1 ...
of that country of pnM!u com t uiu u . JJ'r'lS.,: Af Its fall "i-n veira ago a 1 1 has been of lato proposed W raise it. fall of thn atmos-hhe royal family being wedded toa, U bv public subscription onough to ena-
u?as recorded in the difier- Christian, uruoru were sentior ms mi-1 Uie of -p,,, wh(, Hve , the dty of ; bje iIr Exans t0 holtl tho Oflico o Soc-
observation. It is mcuiatu rcuuu, uumu j - YorK. it nau conquered, or or iueu, ir ; rotarv 0f state without damage to ms lenressionshavoirrcat mediate wedding. ,He then wrote that, nattered a.ul won a 0nQ Sf the best fe-
i 7 i i ..... BKHHfi ,iiii id su uu'uinn ir m iiii iiihi-i ii uiiiii'mi I'll hi lie inri iinuiuuiiu
him; warning homalww young man caiMl women and dissipation, and aakr.T.TT. i.i.. :,.!. i.A l. !..
Lake St. Croix to serve out there his 80 years' wiitnce.-rGeorge D, Unler, a rtired ami weaniiy iirooxiyn ciowiiig - merchant, shot himself through the 1ihh(1 for some reason unknown. lie wtw
fill 66yoHrsold, leavaw;ifoandfourchn- 0iu of the oily and many other distill dren. Charloa Axt, a baker, age(l 85, tinguisbed gentlemen were present. w committed mile de at -W keebarre, Ph., The following speeches were made by
bv hanging himself with a bod-cord. Cause, despondency and inability to procure employment. Tho Kev. Dr. Morion, of London, Ontario, shot hinfcelf in the public street and foil . . . i .1 ... .. down deau. jjeceaseu wa uruwscu in h fine dross-coat, whlto kid gloves, and fRnc vclvet xmt jiaving gotten himself Jn tlQ mml j)rWH,ntabfe style. Ho ' htui 0f late been canvassing for a church, but unsuccessfully, and it is also said ho iwas laiciy uisappoimvu in iuvu. un Ins person were lounu many ocnpiurni texts, written apparently to justly tne i deed. rureiKH itfieif. ... " . ... .11! The Queen of Holland, recently do--eased, was a special natron of Motloy, I tho historian, whoso (loath preceded onlv a few davs. The Queen's marri her marriage relations were not very happy, and sho lived in a palace a little out of The Hague, a mile or two from that inhabitecf by lier husband, King William III. , "J i i.. t . ' A peculiar newspaper n.wt just p- , peared in Paris under tho title of t li Autre Monuc. it is primeo m ucrj' t red tvne. on black paper, and is adornwitli numirit!i.'? (iidilinm i)f death. . ...v.. - .... rior. Tlic leading arueios, news items, letters from correspondents, and adver-1 tisements all refer to the dead. Previous to the departure of Queen Victoria for Scotland, a few days ago, a rentlciuan of middle stature, rather in clined that as he had not sent notice of his i L'oniitiir. thev were not rcadv. and ho ! was requested to take a seat. A doctor , was sent for, who pronounced inm to bo insane, and lie was consigned to tne Windsor Union. anesc Prince, Kita Schiwa near relative of the ALimarried. in a (Jcrman riK in thn HnrnnnM tip. 1 rosfiau. a "v w .v - , ... . .... studies. On asking permission of the reply. If the Mikado should refuse to sanction the union, me rnnce win niaKc Germany his home. -A clerical mauifosto has been issued in favor of opening English museums and picture galleries on Sunday afternoons. Among the signers are Dean Stanley. Canon Duckworth, and the vi cars of several prominent parishes.some of whom are Broad Churchmen, while others aro Ritualists. They took the ground that this would bring within the . r , .... . rcHOU oi ine woraing uiscs means of intellectual improvement, and even of Christian influence ; that it would relievo the church from an injurious tnisconceotion which alienates many people from religion ; that it would di rectly counteract, oy me competiuon oi an innocent recreation, the manifold temptations to drunkenness and other vices; and that it would indirectly promote the moral and religious welfare of the people. By a royal warrant f mm Queen ictoria the decorations styieu the Allien medal, first and second class, arc to be extended to cases of gallantly in saving hfc on land. Hitherto they have been conferred in cases of bravery at sea. Tho medals arc to bn awarded on the recommendation of the First Lord of the Treasury "to those who, m saving or endeavoring to save tne lives oi omers from accidents in mines, on railways or at fires, or other peril within our do minions others than penis oi me sea, have endangered their lives." The mi'dsil of the first class is to be a gold oval-shaned badge enameled in enmson, with a monogram composed of the iniinrs V. hiiiI A. iii wold, surrounded by I.. ........ ! 1. ...... t T.i0r.41iiii1 iti wiieml n IMI IL'I 111 lilUIIAU. in,-i-i ... ... ...... jotters of gold, " For gallantry in say :,1!r iif0 on land," surmounted by a rep reseutation of the Prince Consort crown, ,,d susnended from a crimson nbbou in four white longitudinal stripes. Tho medal of the second class will be of bronze. Tho heroic rescuers of the miners Imprisoned by t ip recent colliery lllUIIUHlIUII t J HJUIM I HIV , "1111 receive those medals. A Traveling Tree. Engine 118. M ke Conn, engineer, on Second Atlantic Express on the Hudson Itiver Kit road, conductor nop nor, which missed here at 4:40 yesterday morning, carried in front of tho smokestack a pino tree which left San Francisco May 18, on its way around the world. It has been carried in front of every locomotive from San Francisco to New York, via tho Central Pacific, Union Pacific. Chicago. Burlington and Quincy, Michigan Central, Great Wosti urn, and .Now lork uowrat aim mmson Ilivcr Uailroads. and will tako its place on the prow of tbu first steamer leaving New York for Liverpool. A tag attached to it contains tne rouie, am i renucsts to see that it goes through al r cht. Ilvtho hue it gets uackio aan Francisco, across the Pacific, it. will cer tainly bo tho most traveled tree in tho I worl'd." rottgkkrt)sk (tf. 10 Mirfo
to stoutness, anu oi irosn com-:
p ex on, arrived at Windsor Castle, and,, n voivesuieiunuameniu rigms m mepco.,,...t,.cr fh.it Im xv Kino- nf Vmr 1 1 e. It Involves the elective principle. It announcing that he was Jvmg ot fcng-1 . ,v the wholt! nystem of popular govland, desired to be sliown to his apart- ( (.n,nU!,lt. The people must signally conments in the Palace. He was informed , denm tlie ereat wromr which lias been done
1 IIP VV M k& UIMI ll'll. Illlll n llll II An Allium miiIv,-,vv- - -
i w ' -' - -t : cr i
tujden ami Hr,niiKiu. M Their KeerittlMH fey th MmnIihMmh
ana vi,i.iTioHt ! jure. Nkw Yokk 1l0 u.Mmm. Tilden aml iifllllirleka were tendered a m:ention this evening by the Afanlmtun Club, uf u'liiuli iuui-Ii ull (tin li.uiltiiu- I limit). .Messrs. Tilden and Hendricks. Mr. TllleH' (ipeaeh. (J KN'TI.KM kn : Every bwly knows tlmt af t er the recent election men who wore elected "by the people President and Vlee-l'resldent of the United tttate were wnintwl out, and men who were not elected were counted in and heated. I discla L l' Z drtld or det I dlnemlm any thought or ieroiveu in HUH iratiKiiciioii. oru or mine Hlmll that be dwarfed or degraded Into ai)er)iml grievance, wlileli ls in trutn tne wrong which Iimm greatest ,,,,,..,, .vv.ru HT.MNKI OUK i To every man of four and a quarter mil- , lions wno ih ueirauueu oi me inuw oi ins .Iuji, vtx t rutiriYiltia If lu utf 1fTtat iL lf f.. tJHJSPtul ik in lu iuci aim uu icn i i inn.. . . .... ..i.t . .. 11 IH IU lilt;, I1U liU mummy win iih unuuaic wjiicquniiue vx,ed. jjvlls In government grow by Kiicce and by Impunity. They do not arrest their own progress; they can never e iimueu except by external forces. If men In pos- , K-Hnion of the Government can m one incan in one Instance maintain themselves in power ajralnst .... ,i..nM,iA..uinn ..InMl.mi. Eiwli yn nv. ample will be condoned. Temptation exists always. Devices to give color of law, and false pretenses on which to ground frauduent crcoistf oiik, will not be Wautlng. Tho wrong will grow Into practice if once connoneu. in me wonu-s msiui caii$.s u ncc:s.iou oi govcjuiuuiun n,u usunt ocen ine ItKHt'LT OK KltAUD OK V0KCK. It bus been our faith and ourprido that we had estabnshed a mode of peaceful change to be worked out by the agency of the ballotbox. The question now is whether our elective system, In Its substance as well asits form, i-i to be maintained. This the question of questions, and until it h llnally settled tlieru can be no politics founded on inferior questions of administrative policy. It ereat wromr to them. They must strip the example of evcrv thfnsr thatean attract mutators. Tiiey "Viot all. must refuse a prosperous immunity. 'Ibis t Thc people will not be able to tnist authors or beneficiaries ;of wroinr to de vise remedies: but when those who condemn j the wrong shall have power, they must devise measures wiiicn snail rcnuer a repetition of tho wroiiK forever Imwssible. If ray voice could reach throughout our country
voice coniu reacn turougiioui our count n-, anij iugt policy will auue, anu almost equaiaiid be heard In Its remotest liamlet, I would iyt promote the prosperity of each, If your
say, hk ok noon ciikkr: ( cr(.igty of the people shall be rescued from invincible, A year or two later Its members were In Dcnitentlarles or in exile. History abounds in similar examples. W must be lieve in the riKht and hi tho future. A preat and noble nation will not sever its political from its moral life. Mr. IfpHilrloks'ii Speech. but more as a declaration and assurance of your support of the principles and politics of which, in honorable association with your or vou snow me me more iiistmy hiwhum: i vour devotion to tho political principles "which experience has shown to bo essential t lliu iiii;;t iiuivH v.. p."..- - rj-v .1... .......r'..ll1 iT irrwul 91111 I1"(P irnVI'niment, and t he prosperity or tne people. ery SnteJK the restoration oflocalself-KoveriimentlnalltheStateswhcre I .,.,,1 lli mvi.iuiHIVnr tlin lWnl)ll. ITV it nau ocen ueinea. niey h kimoi .vi'"" ZX. nnr vol liv Illilll.MnilS. 011I IIV II1HII) iiniiiuiin .":":. ... ..-.- iiti..., ......iii- 'rii,.r.. M-iuhivi.lvi-ii!iUoa ereat ret. duetlon" of the vast army of olHce-holders and the substitution of UONKSTFOltI)ISH0.VKSTAlMlNISTR.lTI0K. Contending for t results so notably right and honorable, their cause was grand and their victorv jclorious. I will not disturb the pleasure of this occasion by undertaking to recount the means whereby the will and recount the means whereby the will s Judgment of the people were defeated. J result, as deelareil In Louisiana and In H Ida ami at Washington, Is not, and can lornot be made satisfactory to the country, for the ni.vimw i-MMnii iiiat It was not true. A great and sincere people win rcsi tneir nnai jmijs ment only U fraud, success utwiiilil Hki l'r
y upon truth, and never upon . , j nd an(1 reduced the farm to 125 ccpssful throngli technicality. Kvett L! is s extensive as his in,o President and his Cabinet adopt icr, w ic s as
a ,uirt. in- whiiln nf oolitlcs and purposes for wiiich the Democratic party has been con -tending for many years, and which became so distinctly denned last year, even that can not remove or quiet ptiouo discontent, uw Democrats will make no tactions opposition, 1,-ni fiinv noW in i'inlwrrHs the aefneto Admlntstratfoii, but will sustain it In what U rlv it liocanse It is riKltt, aim tor uie fare of the country, and not at all bemuse of any fealty to tho mr y that rtamU. de featiil mid eondeintied DV l no people, i ou itheir Chief UK WHO IS KI.KCTKD rilKSIIlKXT MUST ni IXAl'tlUBATKH Until thl s is settled and made sure no Dcm - i bo seduced from his devotion and ocrat t!an allegiance ' In y y-mt bya '"S"1S"t? oillce, nor even "?ho" TM of ides and dangerous policies, on of better doctrlnesand lust ,,,n.rt will not nlrust thell iiUamlonmeiit ..i..t..nu iv.iinln1ia and thti adoption of better litktrines and hist ineasuies. Democrats will not intrust their iuvnsiui:n. ....-Y" . : , ,.,i most cherished prlnc p cs to lie kce lug a power wnicu . . . . 4 Is attained in vn.iuiin They will, therefore, conlimn, iiieir faith iii tlie right of the majority to rule, in accordance .with vonstltutionai tj l t w - Z . . . II... fill. I., tlm imil frn Its lllid IIIUSI 10IIOW. niyi that capItafwIUbe ;nde Bwitw hi wff tKimontcuanii j a " will revive, ami burdens or government and publh! corruption will bo lifted Killers of Ur. ami t mt ltiorease anu ihiius huoiiiw
MwUiiKto to iiocome a iiunic oi cimutu m ui i tuov wore to no Kent, u
sliarp practice. The fraud first triumphant , ni,iV,wi" to lecture on Sundays as w
InAiiicrieanh storj-imi wceU.dKVS to make a I n
proper piace V'1 . 1 ?V?".V- ViVdV". ' wiw.n h oost.s lfi to winter a chick.-n
59LT "n? " : t ' u . a mod income. The sv
IHIIIJ "in iin.vi .... , i
Morton, it had btmmi Inevitable. Go4 $v ernmeHt In the HUtS was
XOT A PKKK-WIM. OKKKRIXCi oh the altars or the country. For years tke lJeiaH;rath had contended in CoagreMi aad lefore the country for free republican States throughout the South, and liually Jt beoaate inevitable, leotuiM! right and truth were too htrong to be longer Hiipprewmd. In thU the Democrat And a reason to ttUml more Nrmly with their party out of power, with no MttroHNge to iIIkikiimj and no, money to trlbute; but animated by the npirft of our ittitutlonM,and iiiKplrcdby ascntiHieat that the right of local Kelf-goveeiiinent Id inherent In the people, 'llie DemM3ratIc party during the past ten years has restored one State after another until now the tread of the soldier Is heard In no legislative hall,but in the .State the pop!e are governed by lawn of their own enacting and by officers of their own chootdng. My iellow-eltizetiH.my home U in the West, and iny assoclatiow have been with the people of that section, Among 1 J'011 1 a,n' PrNonally, almoxt a Htranger; yet i am received y you wun open arms anu i cordial xreetlngw. Need I say that I am J than a personal hlgnmcanee. Does it not i proclaim that we entertain ' N0 SKCTIOXAI. POMTICAL SKNTIMK.VT, OK gi'fi'invil IKir l('V w..w.vw... w...w. . Some may think we should have an Eastern policy, others that it hould be Western; but It seems to me that a New Yorker and Indlanlau should understand it better , " . ,vr?":""? .?"t than that, and that our legislative and ad- ' "" ?. . f " 1 coiiniriiensi e as i hb iimusines anu uaue mrehensivi and commerce which It may affect. Does the trade of the great cities of the Atlantic stop with the mountains? Does it not reach beyond the Mississippi and across the Missouri' Kvcrj' new home that is built upon ' that rcccdifig border, every new farm that Is made far In the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, and every additional bale of cot- , ton that is produced In Louisiana and Texas adds something to the greatness and wealth of New York and lio-ton and Philadelphia and Baltimore. Is there a New Yorker who, . as lie walks up and down this great Broadway, hears and feels only the throbbing of a local commerce? Let such a man break over the narrow bounds and habits of his life, and visit the great cotton and grain-growing sections; nor let him stop until he hoars the waves of the Pacific dashing against the golden shores of California, arid he will bo able better to understand and appreciate the magnitude and complicated relations of Ini terests which are affected by the financial . and commercial policy of the country. Sttc1 fulfill f ntcrnrlse anu development In re mote parts of the country are as certainly and I almost as directly connected with the prosparity of this city as are the permanent and valuable Improvemcats upon your more distant streets. I have said thU under the Int lluencc of the sentiment that in respect to production and trade the Kast and West and 1 South are one, and that- a wise. IllilimtOttlU Cltfilllfl 1 1 M Xftl III 1 1 In MFIIftll tr Mlft I tlm iniliiKni-f" nf vfMir oommerce. and as far ; reaching as the distant line of your trade. Seme (JeatleweH Farmers. turos in anv such measure abolish his Vermont farm, which is said to exhaust the best part of his income. He has 70 head of cattle, 200shuop, 16 t horsM and 25 swine. The extent of i ianu is oou acres. jjHujofw ! hay were cut, costing the proprietor not , r ""r " Yt 7 I cents a pound, and therefore ought to bo of good quality. His pork is ostimm cnicKas he has to Mr. Evarts i rr . .! , will not be able to serve tho nation as , Secretary of State without a liberal sub- . . i SCriOLIOIl. I ... i B . . . d bout 15 000 J They cost him $150 a bushel, according to estimate, and as tho market in this i P tv was 1 anv one can sec now mucn ' be made, Beeeher can send beef to the i xr-',,.i-niai-L-nt ut ..mi r-mii'; a nunnu i nun vm. ' I , !.. a aa a mart 1 nml rnn raissfl oats at as low a as j jo a bushel. His butter is reckoned at , o; nound and his eggs at 75 cents 1 TT(, n1(ari.d 40.000 bv leCj . wintcr and if he maintains such an income lie will be able to continue farming. Gougli lectures five timoa a week, his fee being $200. He has a farm at Worcester, which at one time contained 1 'o acres. cxnonsos are very heavy, anu to urinj, T T I..... k it It I fl ftin 1 11 1 T iftra in a untie shane he sold a part 1 at a ratlinr roaSOliablO CXpense, for tne omuignaw uiu u moro than $75 a pair. Tlie Cocldn nii!ii worn n little cheaper, and ban- - . .-.1 nul , y t d t fr()lu $25 to $40. n " coiuu oo "'-""6 i-- . , , . . , t , birds, Gough, as it is sau , found hat if in? nuuiu ell ng. a lem : iwas, therefore, changed; tho fowl wore abolished, and regular crops were tried ,wjtjx decided success. As long as ' m-.. dw not cost moro than $o t C;; CnVhef. and other crop are kept at 'an equally reduced rate, his pntm: ; omo wni enable luni to live in a on ,i cent manner. There is liotlnng like "L"V V.. ....... .i.rt l,t- ninntv !1 IHrilUlllf UIU mi iiiuii niiw i f JT, SL Hotter Democrat. " H.--..V.J. A llrt(.-.uii,uti and modest resident Zui-otl a drv-goods Store which new patterns oi uitles arc displayed, atirt at nick it on a Shoulder, sayng,;; Wei LoiiU mj,owan5i,.tiP';iMv1irX,Ut: ' 11 1 ,,. the l mil n. ,l iu1 hoi only nJoncu tut netl around, atul I J severed his question, but v JJWJ oAnforma'tion Ik olunlew!a(a besides.
