Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 22, Number 23, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 May 1880 — Page 6

WHO, MX MX 4IAEMHU

Cf.AXtX OOMM ASW saWS".--Wt WU with Sod ad to?;rtae then Wt atol 0oo RrsssOu pint tk, toaaot yeast; mlxittbia; wtaht add twelve oaaoes of browa auger, two

of butter, foweggs, '

to make i wrw; wae agate, uwW ami

t Olam Smikt Bosom. Take two

ewMMH of powdered gum araHe, pour it a ntut or wore of watov. aad then, itiMAnMl it. tot it staad all night

Ik tiM monttef pour it earehdly f row ti iMj,. tou x cteaa bottle, eork ami

keep H for use; add a teaspooaful of tok jOM water to a plat of starch made to to usual war. i

nrmiimNt Wooutx Srori". Take

ae ptat of hot wator, ami shoe into H w omn of shaving soap. Add to it f M aHMiW soirfes of ammonia, and

mm toaspooaful of powdered saltpeter. Put tato a bottle ami shake until thar - -n---t-J To use it. poor i

ftttototo a saucer, dip to a sponge, ami

nil the materiel vigorously.

Ipomi Cask. Foot eggs, one cup aMMr. Mm ran flour. one-naif toa-

aLfal takinr nowder. oae teaspoon

tol extreet of orange; beat the yelks and

Hear togeuier tea minuw, aw m aW wttk rowder sifted in. ami the ax

ttaet k; add the eggs (whites) beatoa tot a frotk; bake in a well-buttered

tta to a steady oven, thirty minutes.

Tip-Top Cakb. One one tame

spoonful of butter, a smahcup of sweet title, oae- ami a half oupfute of iour, oae teooooful ami a half of baking

vewder, oae teasppoafnl of lomea ex

tract; beat the erg, butter and ngar .teceber till libt; add the milk; sift

toe tior ami powder together aad add to, the. rest; tost, put to your exBtMMLKB Shab. Split ami wash the shad, aad afterwarde dry to a eteth; seaeoa htUi salt aad pepper; Wave rdr a bed of clear, bright coals;

grease the gridiron well, ami as soon . it fc hot toy s4 HPOH Jt5 hrvil MMurter ot a bow or more, accord tag to the thtokae; butter well aad sead totoMe; it caa be aerred with toeHed buwor. Tea BttCUiT. Oae half cup of butter, two enps sugar, two pinto flour, two teaopeoafute of baktag powder, oae teammobIuI extract Biitms. Sift the 4owr, ujgar aad powder together; rub to the butter eold aad add enough g'weet mlk to make a soft dough add the extract hut; roll out half aa iaeh thtok aad oat out with a biscuit cutter;

over with silk ami bake tweutj

bttecMMaale. "hk wth twe bacTaeraae the awuih from frost to

baek. ao ptoeed that the horse oauaot

Uke hoW of aaythtog wtU M toata 10 erib oa ami yet may be able to take hte toed. If the horse stiffen from iwdigeatkmrive daily lathe food two teaMttottfubi of salt, one of prepared ehar-

ooai, ami oae 01 powuenmgwaw

IHjstixo-Caw. These eape lor jrotootiag the hair says a toly ormpoml-

eat, are muea es common v wu m they should be. They are prettier wkea made of shining cambric and gay rib

bons. I have lately make oae lor real use, ami chose plain, dark oalSoo, using an oval piece twenty-two inches long ami

eighteen inches wwe; mm w uuunu with scray idakl, aad another strip half

an iaeh wtue was put on the edge. Under this last I ran rubber eord, ami ftnished with a knot of ribbon

to iroau x wear 11 wuue uoig xu m moraiar work, for it not only protects my hair from every particle of dust.

but BMtes its semi-rosgnnvM uvm u early and inopportune callers. Besides

this, it is very easuy urawa with ooi my temple while standing in a sudden draught of air, lor I have learned that

neuralgic serve are very sensitive.

Mew Mkhiga Fights Careulto. Thskk is bo fruit of our Northern States more delicious than the plum, bom more scarce, none more profitable to raise. Yet the ourouliohas nearly baaished plum evil t ure from our country. Notwithstanding the ravages of the " Little Turk," however, several Michiraa orchard iets secure -this croo annual-

W. with scarce a failure. A tew

iLlliLAli L'Ol.M.

since

Senator Locuw ,sayH Grant " is in the hand of his f rieuds, aad they will aot withdraw him until he te beaten." This corroborate the assertions so freely made, that Grant is aot a candidate. It is "hi friend" who are pushing him. Detroit frm Prm. When Judge Mercur, of Pennsylvania, told Judge lllsck that he ought to be a Republican, the latter replied that there was only one thing in the way. If," said he, there was no hereafter, L would join the Republican party at once. Nothing deters me but the fear of hell," M$tm 1W. ' The third-termers are actually

hanging out signal of distress, limy propose that the Chicago ticket shall be Grant and Sherman which is an anneal to the Secretary's friends to ac

cept the Viee-rreshleacy. Three weeks aco thev ottered the same bait to

Blaine, but he declined to bite at it. If ! Sherman declines, they may offer it to

Edmunds. The third-termers find that

they need allies.. Zshm JiqwbticaH

Yonnif Stephen A. Douglas, who

is evidently not altogether the son of

his father, recontlv delivered a Grant

speech in Chicago m which, according to Forney's Progress, he made each point

he wished to present as eneouveiy as the "Little Giant" in his palmiest days.

The following is an extract: "Now, gen

tlemen. Indiana is one ot tnose ouues

that is always just going to be a Repub

lican State, anil nisi am t." ,ow, wm the distinguished orator tell its why this

am sofJJomn i (m

Senator Bruce, of Mississippi, is

vears

.1 r 1 I m m 1 A? II. A

oae ot onr aiumni, nuraeumiBiy presented tor tne consiuorauon 01 um

1, engaged to labor for Chicago Convention in making up its

upon grmluation

Max Salad. Take jour, fragment of eaM hoitod ham left after slicing, re-

me all dark ami dry portions, afes all tW tot; miece evenly and Ane; take anafh rtoh, sweet eream to set the mhnii, a saitopoon of strong grouml wwstonl. the same af ftae sugar and a wod pinch of eayenae pepper; mix flMMoaghly with the, ham; garnish with j? parstojr, and yon have a nice

Chcllkks. One cup of white sugar, tare-thirds of a esp of sweet milk, two tafeiespooBfufe snelted butter, one egg, I toree smell toaspoonfuls of baking pewdor; season with nutmeg. Have the eakes alt rolled out before you begin frying; have the lard very hot and ptoMty of It Turn them over almest eeniXaaUr while cooking, and you ean- - not fail to have eakes ligbt, leader and fee a f rem grease. Xwmato Sow. Six tomatoes peeled

ami attend; pour ovarthem one quart of hotttog water, half teaspoonf ul of soda; when it stops foaming add one pint of sweet milk and season as for oysters, wish butter, pepper, salt and a IHtle relied cracker. Serve as soon as it boils. Canned tomatoes caa be used tot m well. This is very delicate aad niee for a person who is just getting ahto to eat after a fit of sickness. Sn Gbjss. Mix together any kind ml mM meat fehnnoed tine) wHh an

esmal qaaatRy of bread crumbs; use pepper, sate, a bit of butter and a little Btitfc; ftl some buttered gem-pans with the mixture, then carefully break an npgen the top of each; season with pepper and salt, and sprinkle some very sm eraeker crumbs on top; bake eight nstnntec; a little gratod cheese saay be added to the cracker, if desired. Ckck rrrnoLBtix is an excellent preservative of pine shingles, causing them to become of the character of edar or cypress. But the petroleum wfiliavorthe water that runs from a roof so prepared for morn than a year. Tn steep the shingles in ttsae water ranstow the Tegeinbto albnmen htontohle, Mtd se makes them more durante. The

Bsb water is aoom washed out, and after that the water m unchanged. PnnMRVKU STRAwannaiBg. ?or CYery pound of berries use one pound of white sugar and half a pint of water; ptok carefully over the berries; boil sakgar and water until it thick em, and then pour on the strawberries verr gently, and tot them boil slowly for fifteen minutes and no more; put it all away now m the preterringpnn, and let ft get cool; when cokl. strain off strap, avoiding handling the berries; tot the airua new to boil alone, skim-

nstogit perfectly; when in a good boil put in the strawberries, and let the fruit be in not more than Ave minutes; then renters and put fat pots or Jars when perfectly eold. Cut aniae hi sometimes a trick learned by opportunity, ami is sometimes brought on by uneasiness, resulting irem indigestion, or by irritation of the teeth rmm. In the one ease it must W9 nvnWPnw imwl snJsl IW WWSW snmmw w

Te prersnt K, pre sure a erhV

ib orchanlist of Northern Ohio. Some

ftne plum trees attracted his attention. He asked if they raised plums. "Oh, nn?" was the resDoase. "The trees

bloom full every year, but the plums all drop off." lie gained consent to tight the curculio, aad also gained a large and profitable crop of this delicious fruit. The curculio hibernates, and if confined will live for years when properly fed and cared for. It is nocturnal, ami early in the season hides under chips, boards, etc., by day, but later remains in the trees in the day time, as well as after mghtfall. It stings 'the

plume ironi ine unte muv sei uu oneiric are ripe. In stinging, it makes a crescent-shaped cat about the puncture where the esnr is nut. Upon hatching

the larva eats into the fruit, causing it to fall prematurely. It also attacks cherries, peaches, pears and apples, but none of these last fall from the tree as the result of attack. Early in the season, if there are no weeds, grass or rubbish beneath the plum, peach or berry trees (the damage to apples aad pears will hardly warrant effort to rid them of this enemy).

it will pay to lay pieces of board or bark or chips beneath the trees. The beetles will hide beneath these traps by day, aad can be easily gathered up aad destroyed. Mr. A- S. Dyckman, of South Haven, Mich., whose plum or

chard has been immensely profitable, states that this method saves him three hundred dollars annually over the old method of exclusive jarring. Mr. Dyckman uses oak bark, places two small pieces beneath each tne, on opposite sides near the trunk, with smooth surface down. He employs boys to gather

the insects, aad pays them according to the number they find. This insures cloe examination. The ouroulios are placed in an open bottle, closed by the thumb of the one who is gathering them. , Often the character of the orchard precludes this method, and even when practiced it needs to be supplemented,

tote in the season, by the jarring or sheet process. This is not expensive, and often brings a tremendous profit. Te practice this we have only to put a sheet a white sheet is best beneath

the tree and give the limbs a sudden jar. The little beetles, looking like dried buds, fall to the sheet, when they can be caught and killed. For a few trees the sheets can be tacked or sewed to a cheap rectangular frame, with n narrow slit on one side, so that the trunk of the tree can be brought to the sen tor of the sheets surface. With but a few trees, two persons can carry this sheeted frame from tree to tree. In large orchards it can be placed on one or two wheels, where one person caa easily manipulate it. The mallet should, be of rubber, or else clothwound, so that in striking the branches thev mav not be injured. A sudden

tor is what is needed to fell the insects. From several years experience, 1 know

that with caul Km no uamage neea oe done. The trees should be jarred very early in the morning, or just before dark, when the weevils are mostly in the trees. The jarring should begin as soon as the fruit sets, and continue as long as the insects are caught. The frequency of jarring, whether once or twice daily, or less, will be indicated by the success in catching the beetles. Let all remember that these little Weevils are very small, and when .they ourl up. to fall, look like dried buds, so that the inexperienced eye hardly them. Look very carefully, or you will he deceived in thinking that yon are free from the pest, when, indeed, your trees are fairly everrua. A brother of

mine commenced n few years ago to raise pliwns exclusively for the curculio. Not thinking this profitable, he began three years ago to use the sheet, and now he has plums "to sell aad to keep." Praf. A. J. Cbs, Mickim Jfrimitrl Coikf, m X. Y. Tribune.

ticket Bruce is the colored Senator

from Mississippi whom Hoar and Hamlin are so fond of and so glad to sou

making, and so the judgment was immediately itassed UK Judge Pearson's sentenee, that it was extra-Constitu

tional and all that. As a eonsennenoe,

these convicted criminals walk the earth free men once mure, with only their Unas and political disabilities standing against them. The State will

be made to pay tits former, sooner or

ater, in one way or another, ami tne atter will be removed as soon as an

other Republican Legiaiature cornea together. Thus, instead of punishing the

men oonviuteii of ma nemou crime 01 bribery, the Judge who gave it its due

weight in the oatnloguo of public evils

lias ueen promptly aim, uy implication, peremptorily rebuked for daring to obey the laws rather than observe the lax ami

fatallv dcmoralixiin; custom so lonir in

" ...... l7 . 1 '

vogue, ami still to ue ooservuu, aocoru' in-' to tho rutins: of the Hoard of Par

dons. Justice lias been cheated in liur

own mme, and she will be spurned and

insulted as long as a soulless anil aon sciuncolosH Republican rinsr rules l'cnn

svlvania. and needs the services of bold

. . .1

and unscrupulous men 10 Kuan us mum

bars in nower. Tho conviction and

sentence of theso men was a surprise, Their pardon was cxpectod anil pro

ilietml. JimoH rm.

anvwheru excent in their own society.

The Senator's friends labor under the hallucination that the Republicans are

in earnest in their pretense ot lonunK8 for the nero. and that they wil

ae giao to snow 11 uy givwjt iuo awwim place on" the tioket to one of that race. Ktehange. We notice that some of tho radical organs are whining sorrowfully because tho Democrats are disposed to Uke advantage of tho dissensions in the radical ranks and secure control of the Government by electing their ticket. It is a new doctrine that men cannot take advantage of a personal light among a band ot robbers to ikh8cs9 themselves of their own property. Hni no amount of audacity Is surpris

ing in a party that boldly anil in the most sliameless manner stole the Presidency four years ago, and have used it ever since to advance their own interests. PartUiml (.Ve.) Argus. General John McDonald, tho cx-whisky-ring magnate, promises to furnish, a large quantity of entertaining Democratic campaign literature if

Grant is nominated. He informed a

representative of the Times in St. Lou-

is, the otuer aay, mat. ne uae Kepi. u

the letters he has received for many

veara. and that in this way he has in

hi nosseasion a very close and clear

bktorvof Grant's Administration. He

walked into court at St. Louis with the

atmosphere of the President's blue-room in hi olothins-. but he need not have

srone farther than that alone. He 1m

nliaa that he went to prison to save

Grant, aad suffered for eighteen months rs a malefactor in order to save the Repulriic the deejveat disgrace which could

betau iu ue is not sure wib mo vr pmto Convention will nominate Grant,

but if it does, he will show by documents in his oossession tiiat he should

not be elected. Chicago Timet.

RepHblicaH llarmsny.

The Republicans of tho United States

have gotten themselves into an inharmonious position. The discussions of their journals have if wo take them all in all, disbarred all of tho Republican cnudidatos for the Presidential nomination. The people of tho country only need to go so far as tho perusal of tho Republican journals of the country to loarn that neither of the llepublicau

candidates ouffht to be nominated or

ousrhtto bo elected after nomination.

There is plenty of Republican testi

niony to show that Blainonnd Sherman are bad men and corrupt men. There

is. to those srentlemen, an uncomforta

bio amount of evidence as to both of

those noints. If wo may bcliovo Re

publicans no Republican candidate for

tho r resiliency mat lias vol ueen nxmeu

ought to be nominated for tho Prosi-

dencv uv tne iilitcago uonveniion, or

Pardon, Gentle Sirs.

v t

elected b the people afterward. Each

of tho Rcnublican journals of the coun

trv srives excellent reasons wny me

other Republican candidate for

the Presidency ought not to bo

nominated or elected. The Republican expressions of the Republican

sentiment concerning the Republican

candidacy for the Presidency arc not suggestive of Republican harmony. Mr. Sherman is bitterly opposed by Repub-

licans. tie is antagonized uv nupuuncans in Ohio where he should have no

Republican opposition. All Republi

cans, reaiiv, seem 10 nave Kiueu an

Republican possibilities of electing a Republican President. The Republican attacks made uion Mr, Blaine in Ohio, and elsewhere, ought to Iks sufficient to convince the American people that Mr.

Blaine ought not to be eiecteu to tne Presidency. If we mav believe Repub-

licans, Mr. Jilaino should not 00 maue

President; and if we may believe Jtepublicans, Grant should not be made President; and if we may believe Republicans, John Sherman should not be made President. From the Republican

uress of the country the evidence, much

of which is before us, indicates that no

Republican candidate for the nomination at Chicago for the Presidency

should lie nominated or elected. We

might print this Republican testimony

in volumes, tint we lorncar. 11 is sig

nificant that in Democratic ranks there is'no similar advertisement in advance that no Democratic candidate tot tho

Presidency onsrht to be nominated or

elected. dntinmUi Enquirer.

X Remthlicaa Lie.

The statement going the rounds that

SL'a.OOOwas appropriated w raeetuie

Ike Jtetaruintf'iteard fenuM. 1 n lal ftJukafjajtoWtoV Asf ftJmet UlliAfl IhslsVasFA

the American people, the frauds ot the Southern Kewblioa Ketu rit ing-Hoards must not be forgotten. These fraud, in

volving the laismoatton of the results of

the Presidential eieetton of 1876, win

remain an indelible stigma upon the

men who conducted tho campaign on the Republican side and every oae of

the "visiting statesmen" wno eup-

iressed the truth, suggested lies and ntiuenced scoundrels like Madison

Wells and Casanave to certify to known

falsehoods. This same impudent game

was played successfully in South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana; but all was

not lost until Congress fell into the snare of the ,4 Electoral Commission." Undoubtedly that measure was tiro-'

motetl by some excellent men; ami, as

certainly, it was very difficult to fore

see that a i;ommisaioii so oonsiiiuiuu could fail to make a righteous judicial

letermination of what seemed a plain

judicial question. When, by a bare

majority the commission oeing tnvided by strict party linesit was de

cided that its members count not in

quire into tho nature of returns alleged

and proved to be fraudulent, but was

concluded by the paltriest technicali

ties to accept as undeniably true, waat the whole world perceived to be glaringly false, a feeling of profound indignation was spread through tho mluds of all tliinkitig men. But it was at least an open question whether the passage of the bill for the Electoral Commission and the action of that body, however monstrous, had not deprived the Democratic party of all, except revoliitloaary, means of further contest. Such was the opinion of a majority; and Mr. Hayes, incontestably not the recipient of a majority of the Electoral votjs, was declared bv both houses of Congress to have been duly elected, and was quietly inaugurated. It became known during the first three months of the year 177 that in tho interval between November C and December 6, 1876, numerous diejHitehcw iu cipher had been seut by both Democrats and Republicans to the members of the Returning Boards of South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana. All, or nearly all, of those that hail been sent bv Republicans, with the answers to them, were seized upon by the Re

publican members of a committee of the Senate and destroyed. Some of those alleged to have been sent by Democrats were also destroyed, bit a selection from these, made by these same

Republicans, was preserved. It wa'

claimed by the Republicans, at a later da', that the object of the senders of ..1 -I-.. .I! ...t... ...... t... ... tn lisvl.

IIICSH3 uinpaiUitca wo ine hiihb hi win cases, viz.: that of the Republicans being to induce the different Returning

isoarus 10 inane meir reuinw in ir

of the Republicans, and that ot the

Democrats to induce them to make them in favor of the Democrats,

ami that corrupt solicitations were

used to induce the one or the other of these returns.

Admitting, for the sake of the argu

ment, that this suspicion was correct,

and that each party diil really attempt

to bribe the Keturning uoanis to weenie for itself, it would follow from the notorious fact that U of the Returning

Boards decided for the Republican par

ty, that this party outbid tne itomoc-

racy in this uisgraceiui contest, uui.

when we advert to tne iunner isct. mat.

no bid whatever for any such false re

turn has ever been brought home to

any jierson authorized to speak for the

Democratic party, or lor w" acts that party is at all answerable, and that

every nrawr 01 i ivtHurnm

Hoards lias been rewarueu, eimer uy a

It seems impossible for Pennsylvania,

under its present political management, expenses of the Exodu3 Committee, ami

At a tote sate in Paris, a hook'hy a

modern himtor, TrMta-leuaonnet, a master of the art of intayhif. sent for

tS,900, of which athntotfS,MQwapaid taaBtuuK fltaT taLA aHSmjanp

to even so much as assume ppiiticai virtue very loar at a time. Recently

the country, as well as the five culprits themselves, was very much surprised at the santance nronoiinced bv Judsre

Pearson against W. H. Kemble, Charles

It. .Salter, l-.niu J. retroa, tjesee iv.

Crawford and W. F. Rumberger, ar

raigned and convicted upon a charge of bribery, a crime too common and too open in Pennsylvania politics. But the general astonishment felt was tempered with the liveliest pleasure and approval.

Ti.art, waa a. m-omise in this risrorous

decision of an upright magistrate that the demands of justice would be satis-

lied and that the solid front of corrup

tion would be broken. Fines and impris

onment, with some solitary confinement and a healthful allowance of hardJabor

for the benefit of the State against whose interests the public careers of

l,ua nuta luul been uninterruptedly

hostile, was the prescription made out

lor mis spreading HwriM uwcaac. xuu nri-oners miened their eves very wide

at that. Whv. everybody did iust what

they had been doing. All their .party aMciates were in the habit of Mending

money to accomplish their ends, mat

was the easiest and perhaps the cheap

est method of dealing with legislators

and subordinate noHticinns. In other

words, about their only defense was,

that their moral sense hail been so deadened bv habitual crime that they

could not see any justice in holding

them accountable lor their misuecus. The plea was not made in that form,

but that was its significance

The tender-hearted Board of Pardons,

in less than a week after the sentence

was passed, appeared to regard this HtMMtiou from the standpoint of the

prisoners rather than from that of the .fwdire. It could have waited for a de

cision by the Supreme Ootrt; but that might not have been: attainable before the reritlamaalv bribers had blistered

their palms at stone-breaking or, shoe

that it is all expended, is

There has never been a

totally false.

dollar appro

nriated for that purpose. Tho resolu

tion raising the Exodus Committee providedithat the expenses should be paid out of the miscellaneous fund of the

Senate. The expenses of several other

Committees, such as the Committee in

vestis-atlne Kelloicjr and Spofford, the

Committee on the IacaUs case, the

Committee on the Cheyenne Indians,

the Teller Committee, and others, have

all been paid out of that fund, besides the usual expenses of the Senate

chars-eable to that account. How much

of this fund has been spent in the exodus

investigation has not been ascertained,

but whatever the amount may be the

Republican Senators are as much re

snonsible as the Democratic Senators,

- aa 1 - f.

lor thev all voted to raise 111c isomniit-

t . At tirit. these Republican Senators

thomrht that thev could make the most

7 . a m

out of the investisration. ami were tor

its failiner tn do so, the organs of the

party are now anxious to make out that !. . .! - 1l

tne invesiiirauuii was mi niuux, "

are willing to lie like devils to show

that no good has been accomplished.

Whatever the cost has been, it has been

monev well expended. The investiga

tion has developed a deep-laid, infa

rnoiw Republican salterns to gam a part

isan triumph, uepubiican conspirators

have gone bouth ana gathered up tne

most miserable class of negroes and

shinned them to Indiana to vote the

. n 1. ii . At.

llepubiican ticnec. 10 uo tins tiiey have subjected the ignorant pauper

neirrocs to sickness, Hunger, coin,

starvation and death,' and owr"when

their damnable schemes have been un

earthed, and their true charaoter and

oussedueM hays been sxtosed, they cry

out: Monev. expense." etc. But

the facts, in spite of false wearing on the part of some of the kidnapers, have lieen brought to light, and will le still further forced upon the attention of the people. imftofto Stalt Sentinel.

plain sum of money or by office of more

or less emolument by Mr. Hayes' Ad

ministration; moreover, that every one of the visiting statesmen" who visited

Louisiana and Florida for the almost

avowed purpose of suppressing all in

quiry into the irauus 01 tne ueiuraiug Boards has received office at the hands of Mr. Hayes the audacity of attempt-

ing to impute to their political anersaries the sin of -which they stand con

victed, stands unrivaled in the annals

of effrontery. St. LmmUepmcm.

The Harvest Heaped by Mayes. Mr. Hayes had no sooner vetoed the

Deficiency Appropriation bill than the 'mit of Ids rastine began to appear. The United States District Court at ew

York has been compelled to susjieBil

proceedings because there is no money to pay jurors, witnesses and officers of

the unit t. bometning very simuar taken place in St. Louis, where the

United States jurors summoned to appear before the Court have been not i-

niMl not to come Because mere is m money to pay them. The bill vetoed by Mr. Hayes made appropriations for these very purposes, and had it become a law no such suspension of the

public business would have taken place. Mr. Hayes rests his veto on the rround that there waa legislation in the hill changing the method of apjiointiiig deputy Marshals for elections; but thn does not relieve him from the responsibility for the present derangement of business in the Courts. He w to blame for it. Congress has a right to pass tho appropriation bills in the form most acceptable to itself. It legislate for the country, not for Mr. Hayes. The case as it stands is a very plain ose: Congress passed the Appropriation bill and Mr. Haves vetoed it, not on account of anything objectionable in it, but because he did not like the shap of it; and therefore the Court are, withrmt mqney to pay their expenses. Kt

tmngt.

This Is an awfully healthful vest for Presidential candidates. bstrokes are nowhere, anil w paralysis is not so much talked about as it used to be.