Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 22, Number 24, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 June 1880 — Page 6

MChXE, FA KM ANH (UKUKX. Oat straw, a a rule, i nupwier to wheat straw a 4oek food, iimmmek a it eoutahw a larger per eeut. of fatforming aad ktiridiftcl ktjfdienti. . To xr.Kr bugs of melon aad tuah vine, plant totualo plan-tin each. Mil. By doiug tW tb bft$ did t bntber them lr me: whih aeeo lis fKV, where there were o towa-toes they were all kilkd fey the bugs, Cr. A'xcXari'jc. Few realise the ecr4ty of manurti- h:ln!- Whew onCe'nlaated. the

trees are to mwdii in the same soil thirty or forty vears. at least. Thev in I a few years exhaust the food in the soil that thev art; most fond of, ami then they will ceae to be productive and thrifty unites properly fed. No Chinese farmer ever sows a seed of any kind of grain bkwv it has been caked in liquid manure diluted with water. aud has begun togerauuaie; aad exrricace h& taught him that this operation not onlv tends to promote the growth and development of tke plant, but also to protect the seed frora the InsecK hidden in tke ground. Frag kaxce ash Color. Plants with white bio otu have a Iatgerproportioa of fragrant specie than any others; next comes red, then yellow "and bine, and lastly orange and brown. The flowers of spring are white aad highly fragrant; those of summer are red aad yellow, and less fragrant; those of autumn and winter are much darker. aad with less perfume. SroxGE Cake. Take St fresh egs, their weight in pulveriaed sugar; tke weight of three in lkcur. Beat yelks and sugar to a creamy paste, whip whites to a stiff froth, and add to yelks and sugar. Sift in the flour gradually; add a teaspoon ful of flavoring extract. aad stir only just enough to mix well, I pour imtnediately into pane: lined with J battered paper. Sprinkle orer a little pulverized sugar, andw bake in a quick oven for twenty-live or thirty minuter. Good Wueatek Bkeup Take ax gtd-sh-ed potatoes, jieel and boil in two quarts of water; when doue put a pint o Hour iuto a suitable vessel, and pour the waer off the potatoes oa the flour to s&ld it. Then rub th potatoes through a eolanuersBU audio the flour. Add cold vratr ofe to wot wt.it t oreau you want 10 oaKe at one lime: when eool. add a pint of srood veast and a handfsl of salt: let it rise" over night. In the morning mix stiff in the bread tray and let it rise again. Yhn light, put" into tins aad let it rise again. Eikke in a moderate oven one hour. Stsawberkt Shoi-t-cake. Make a crust sufficient to cover the bottom of two pie-dishes, roiled this, of the ingredients which would make raised biscuits; bake both at once; have two boxes or two ouaris of strawberries thorough1) cleansed, and well sweatesedc as soon a the paste is baked, while hot, spread with good butter, cover with half of the berries, s'H-iukling more sugar on top; cover with the other baked bhcnit. butter as before, add the other half of the berries, with wore sugar, and wrap well with a eleaa to wel, aad cover with a blanket, to reciaia to steam until cold. A whiter in the Fankri" JonrwU. in seiking of ducks, pronounces the : Aylesbury ami 1'ekin the best varieties, tiie former being noted for its urge while eggs and delicately-tmvored flesh, andlhe latter for the richness of its eggs, good coMtitntion and rapid fattening. The Iloueu is pronounced only slightly inferior m flavor aiwl in t-na!ity of eggs to ihe.above, matures earlier anl is hardier. The Aylesbury and Peidn conmence laying m February, aud continue for five months, with two or three brwrf intennissious. When the duck wants to sit she should have from twelve l fifteen eggs, and should sit a separate divkiou of the duckhouse kept for this purpose. The door should always be opeu during the day, and sh should have sufficient water near by to bathe in. The time of incubation is twenty-eight days. After the ducklings are "all hatched they should not be disturbed for twenty-four hours, when they are ready for food, which should consist of hard-boiled eggs well mixed with oatmeal. When three or four days old they mav have oatmeal mia-ed vrh milk and a filth gram. The ducklings should not hare aeees to water, except to drink, until they receive their feathers, when they can swim without injury. Use f the Marraw. We are inclined to attach far greater importace to the harro v and tig particular olice in farm practice than is Wiually given k. No farmer should regard his set of implements a at all approaching completeness unless he has at least three, four would be better, harrows, cultivators, horse hoes, or similar itutdements of securing fine tillage: and no fanner should be content with a single or eves wkh two harrowing previous to putting seed of any kind into the ground. Time spent in hamm ing Is well employed, as it U irapossiVe that soil can be too finely or well prepared as a seed bed. As to the implements themselves, it is curious to observe the improvement!-, modisca-! tion and adaptations to ues which the

narrow m Hrgoe irom the tmys o i ot time sJhmiW alnavs be those from the ohl A shaped and square harrow of young hens, or If two years ohl. only twenty years ago, to the pulrerixing, from those in perfect health. If this coulter and smoothmg harrows of the rule hi ckwely observwl bv fhe breeders present. The only objection we have . who export eggs for hatching, from one to them is that which obtains in refer- locality to another, there will be better eee to many els of on r farm itupk- satisfaction given. It k of much iramew: that m mauv istnes they portaaou that the ecrs have perfect have bee mukiptied beyond the actual sheik, and a hen not m perfeot heulth iMcssitks rd the cae, hi that freq-it- may drop her eggs regularly, yet the ly faniwrs Ware rwlly inore i -n- hell may vomvm imperfee'thma that of one kmd than they actually need, or - render them unit eithec for keeping or are mneerHy bewildered ht tiwir hatoh'mg.-OiM--Wry Oenikmrn.

choice wha Making pt rebate;-. Hut it k m true new as k was in the time of Lord Kan, that no oe harrow, whatever Hs eontruc tivm may he, ean be suitable for every sort of soil, or adapted for tilting the laud foe. or Waving it aftr every Kind of crop. There must he different im-pta-tcats of after-culture (we mean thoe whkh follow the plow) for the various crops and uses, and for this reason a number of harrows are needed on every farm of considerable siae, There must be heavy harrows for breaking aad pulverizing: medium ones for preparation of the soil, for covering manure ami grass seed, and lighter harrows for finishing off the surface, or as in cae of some, for actually weeding the crop, This but operation was formerly performed with the primitive " httoh harrow' made in half an hour from a head piece and a half-dozen small white birch bushes a verv com

mon kind of smoothing harrow vears weetimg growing corn, or dressing a fallow, there is no implement so well tilted for the work as this; anil so far as ' we can learn from those who have used it, even vear confirms the good opinion expressed in its behalf when first introduced. X. E. Farmer. TnHds. Fkexch industry and sagaeiry take the lead of the world in little things, if nothing tnore. Toad culture is a regular business there with economic people ami the ilemand for toads is great ad increasing. Th useful little animak are employed as insect destroyers, not only in. the jrarriens of tliat country, but thousands of them are packed down in baskets of damp moss, and sent to the othr countries to be sold, to gardeners. The most observing horticultures and floriculturists have long been aware of their value as insect destroyers, and have utilized them to a greater or tess extent- Ami it is not much to the credit of Ameri can gardeners and fanners that thev !ia.vc, w r recraizt,1 lhl wrices of f n-pnii-. Mature conducts her operation by reciprocal means, and if she gives us the the hurtful insects to eat up our crops, she aiso gives us the birds, toad-, etc. to eat up the insects. The farmer should keep a close eye on nature, aad seek to ma'se her manifold ojferations helpful, instead of casting hindrance in in the war destroying her agents. The successful farmer has great need to be good economic naturalist. Many thiugs. a loathsome looking as the toad, a're the farmer s friend. Rural .kscngcr. Water fer Ows in Pasture. Fok milch cows it hi very necessary that the water for them k pure, otherwise it taints the milk, and from this neither good butter nor cheese can be made. here there is not abundance of clear, rnnnmg water m yard or pature, it should be supplied from wells or cisterns. If drunk from standing pools or small ponds, the water is always more or le-s foul, or so stagnant as to be unpalatable, and at times even unheakhfal. In order to obtain a full flow of milk cows m;?t have all the water they will naturally drink at morning, noon ami night," otherwise they will not give full messes of milk, nor will it be of so good a quality. Ikit a running stream, more esjMicially when r.t itagtHre, where thev can go and drink at pleasure, is still better than tti'M drawn from wens for them three times per day, at regular intervals. Necessity, however, often compels the latter course. Some dairymen, in ortler to increase the flow of" milk, stimulate their eows to drink an extra quantity of water, by extra srlting their food or stirring a 5 mall quantity of bran or meal in it. Bt this is objectionable, inasmuch as it tends to lessen the richness of the milk. Thte also tills up the stomach so much a to dilute the gastric juice od thus injure digestion, and more or lew of the food is conseooently vonled wboe. If there be a gain in milk, then a lo-s in food follows r by siimulat-ng to an excess of drink. r(if A'ck? Yorker. FreductiM anil Keening ef T.xxs. Oftentimes it is a matter of importance to keep eggs for a time. When ( prices rule low, they may he preserved t m comptKsuvc iresnness ior several weeks, even in July and August, if care oe taicen to place tnem on end a4 skxhi I Ine not as brought m from the nest. One arctHtoffted to handling and care of egg can form no idea of the shortness of time required for the yelk of an egg to settle on one side, where it adheres to the shell and quickly smils in warm weather. Always place the egg on tho big end. I have tried both ends, and Lave decided in favor of the former position. Eggs should be gathered from the nst every day. and where there every are many hens kept, twice a day. It t matters not for what purpose we desire rrwr f n bona tkaf m-ruliLHA the hens that hi always be young and healthy. Eegs that are to lie kept for any length

aN but now almost entirelv sursetl- LT-hJ"' .;, 3 i,t i n ed by some form of leveling, smoothing w 5uS 2 J m S. , i Tr

luvtotlgMllMt Still In Order.

e.iiHlititrtvt f nvtM thi MMIUte CoHIttiiftHIt iUm m. wL.iTvrT' mimthmtintt of tfe tu H K MMMM-t tH HMMilmr W trip I V iif- ? JL wiric iNVvcHtiriMkm, wltiesi imiHuM t lie rare mi.m or terjury m whkh th vrtwm mm ShimIut Inwtilfo, which cein to h.uo fallen to thi-KroMnl, M. Mr l4i"C.Hwlttee iht Trvatiry iMxikkri'itiiMr. whh h fHt twuvfrn In H vln :ifurt tu Mib-tHiukte varlulu ..if..rt .,i.,i. ... . mi xensiiuonal fhves u.mleiy iitui lit -niwe xxh, .- cut. The t ommittcu to In. retntoatui tt innt ut' h the Ktaxle Islaml cMtu-tiMtct, otlH-rwHi Whoh'h ttt tin ("VMinltlvH rvie mul Kelrvnchiut'tit In Kho.te ItaMl, H ahK(M i-xactly the Mine fUrti. It kMtr)mr kt thn tK whk truth 10 te tteAt t'tMfh of th!ii itttiHlik was whotly unmx-.r-. m that ttw wntwt'v jwiit iijx.h th"H ( Mttcrlv wttl. Xtw Yorit Tniwue. i i3nee tne uomnmtees referred to wero necessarj- to unearth Ket.. .1 . ... jmumnn mectuiiies. as 10 ine r.xoiius Committee, more Henublicans than Democrats were orovided with tti-eans maue me trip, poeKeteu the means. and did not swear at all. He went again, and we presume pocketed the "means" a second time. During the period the Committee was engaged in the investigation, numerous Republicans asked to be called to Washington, just to make the trip, for they admitted that they were not in possession of important imfonuation. The Kxodas Committee has been of great , service to the State of Indiana, ' ami to the country, for it has b-'en froven that the leaders of the Kepub-1 ican party in Indiana and elsewhere ' -.vent into'it deliberately to inqwrt pau- , per negroes tor the purpose ot voting the Itepubl-can f.cket. In the Kellogg case it has been shown that he owes his place in the Senate to frauds and perjuries as infamous as those which seated Have;. The Davis Committee has demonstrated that the most astounding frauds have liccn perpetrated in the Treasury Department, to cover up which, erasures, alterations and mutilations were resorted to. One item of 10,000,000 cannot Iks accounted for. In the Ingalls case, it was a Republican light throughout. He was charged with bribery. It wai shown that he owed his place in the Sewate t bribery, but technically it was not shown that the money came through his hands, ami so the Kansas man escaped by the skin of his teeth. That ho was guilty, a large per cent, of his constituents believe. To raise investigating committees to unearth Republican scoundrelism has been in order for a number of vears, and a good many villains have been compelled to tae back seats. And still another investigating committee is demanded to overhaul the crookeducsit of anntiw-t dUitivnihriI

1 k m

T t.t- ti . - . Times with the villainv r of being directly interested ma fraud of 100,000 upon the Government. A Chattanooga dis patch of a late date says: The T mi of ihi city will to-morrowr Morning c&arxc upon documentary atul other -woof, thatSec-vtarj- .Mi"nrv twid ilOO.OJJ oh a friMUtuIvRt e la I in of one Wllltams h forwvr contntctor ttmlr th Wr IKfarttncHt, o Mufl Skoals Canal. The chaws ure siVeiHe that the &m!Tamry pal' I thi money HIo-t tho VrotM of the ettziiwur in cSaree, atti.T tho . Calf f of Engineer jM'ldlajriiViil the claim. a-Klthat hoxtli It tii a trmnH-l-oi n')rt tf tkm; emc-ws, who were virtMutlv dirccttil bMt."r-ir"""lrovethe claim. TbeTfm oif era to make encs ami alt of thee alltyat Hm (tool liefowa competent committee or ConjrrM. and dctrtwttM mhm of the wftntsses ml kcmnent It vrfh to bat e examined. He furtlHT alleges a leliertkit Mct'iury vtm s ih ib mw anil waica wurxeu in5 claim thnwirh the Icpaftmelit. Tbet has twen a verrdecu and iteridfdlr 1o!IIc(m. reclirwrhfrvaml allakmx the river on this subject, lnt elreiimtuncis hav so f ar combineil to keep thj matter quiet. The occasion of th.'initl.il entll.uinn novc a W-h-liurtoH tet-ram In the CirK-lnri;itl piiMTif tae fth. which adialiti that thu claim and it-t payment were part of oao ani! the Mime Job, and chirycs the onm i f the theft on the Kiwlnevr's Departmvat. which Is purely slandeniM. Just what it will cost to investigate this charge of rascality it would be difficult to name, but the investigation ought to be had, and if McCrarv is guiltv, as he doubtless is, he should be punished to the exjent of having his judicial e nnine strinjHid from him. 1 is still in order to investigate llcpubl bo relieved of the burden. they mil keep rascally Republicans out of office iHuiawi nine ncmiTtei. Lenisiana vs. Kcllesg. Senate has thrown additional light on it and imparted new interest to it. The question hat been regarded as involvingsimply Kellogg' s right to the seat which the Senate' three years ago admitted him to; but the speeches of Senators Vest and Hill bring another element into the (-ase-the right of the State of Louisiana to be represented in the Senate by two Senators fairly chosen by its Legislature. Mr. Carpenter and . all the Republican Senators with him . take the ground that the question was adjudicated antl settled thiee years ago ' I... . I ? ! . r a I . a it may re-open the question of any Senatori right to his seat, which would place it in the power of a partisan majority in the Senate to go hack and readjudicate the admission of any memtier of the opposite side. "Vested wrongs arc as sacred as vested rights," says Senator Carpenter: the Kellogg ' cjtse is settled forever, even though it ; was settle wrong. " When a Senator h? been electeil he has a irsonsl right i

xvt.-puu-H-3-i oinciai. -.ins nme u is uepuuucans were snrewii,anu managed ; ;, the late Secretary of War MeCrary, very skillfullv to cover up their traekj?. te parlor instead of the kitchen of tho who left the Cabinet of the Presidential In an evil moment for them, however, f w,"lu "mn w H' ,1C ,! h,s L''ll ifraud to take upon himself the honors thev called to the witness stand General ' twl-gcntaj and m wealth. Poverty i.i and responsibilities of a Jndge. He is 1 Thomas V. Conwav. This Conwav is I m,t 1,10 I";",0' wlth, nor ignoranco fa now chargetl bv the Chattanooea not an unknown individual. His leeds I t,m ri intelligence; but when tho

a4imi-.uug iciHgg, aau inai it uau- em- wun uie UlgllltV 01 UiOCIiiet i"Iagisnot be re-opened now, any more than a trate of the country to engage in ciigidecided cawi in a court of law; that if i neering political schemes such as this I the Senate may re-oien the Kellogg case which the Senate Exodus Oomnntt..., .

(there Is nny public iuterc-4 that ovcrride hU private right if his private

neitt Ui clearly made out? 1 Httt ohunot Iks itiniiitMitied for h inoiuout. We arts tryiiisf Itere the J ford and the tight of MJCUPy te ft,'nml tl Air. Ivullotfir to that i.s h rielit to ' JHiriorm tt.i duties anil to reumvo !loHl rielit til that 8 the right ot A It to bo (tuvumor of st " viivimi m n w'imi.i.m iw "Oiu a lartn, or a picro of num. ' bonator vest's reply to tins singular argument is: "According to the position of the Senator from Wisconsin the State of Louisiana lias nothing to do with it, and the other States have nothing to do with it; it is a question, simply whether Mr. Siwirt'unl or Mr. K'plliwnr bhM llniW thw for six .,caw Senator from Louisiana." -wt --r--r-"-T" w - m w w i as The Wleousin Senator's nrgumont assumes that, no matter how or bv whom a person inav bo (iliosen Senator, no matter how glaringly tlisqtmlilied ho may be. if he is oneu ait milted to asuat tho matt or is settled forever and can never bo reopened. But Senator Hill shows that this aliMird iloctriue makes tho Senate alono the supreme and final judge of what is a Stato. There- can be nothing more dangerous," says he, 'than to "say tlurt the Senate o'r any power but "the Stato can determine what Is a Legislature. If tho iSeimto can go into a State and decree that any mob is its Legislature, what would become of that Stato? Mr. Webster has well said that the State alone can deoide this .question, and when she de cides it .site decides H for all tho worm." It is impossible to deny the force and I virtue of this reasoning; and though there aro several eminent Democrats 1 in the Senate who aro conseientiouslv , 0 vpoml to ,msc,atul,, Kellogg at this ,HV0 , 5twould .em thftlQ ..:).,,. 1 .,a . '....n vuiiuv w-k 4uuini'A ao.I 1.1:11 1 In V-;t stiii! IfilL murlit tn nut viirh tu i ' J 7 - "r - - - . v. .. -.IV fraudulent personal cl aim of tho diroputable adventurer who protends to represent her. St. Louis Heimblican. Cohwmv's Story. At last the labors of the Senate Exodus Committee have been crowned with success. It sought lung mid faithfully to discover why the colored emigrants from the South suddenly turn oil nide from the beaten path which led

unvan s xvansts una .urecieu uie.r sis . hUq1 Jt A Vice-l'resi.lential nominatowanls Indmna. Senator oorhees Uon in lho IliUltI ;s worth two 1'rosidencurA tnnl. tin, iifiu nirimtinti ulni,li t.5 , .... ... . . ...

j-.. ...... ...w ,.v vv ,,..v. the exodus had Uikenw:us not suggwtcd ami ativisuu uy uie co.orea people, lie saw in mis movement a ueep-iaiti scheme to change the political complex ion of his State and he determined to expose it. It must be admitted that L , .. , , , ! while a resident of this Stnte have given him a reputation that an honest mini wmmi inn caru iu nvc. ill aua ; exodus business ho has been a very prominent ligure. It must not be supposed, however, that his interest in it grew out of any desire to assist the colored people, lie wsus after money, and. no doubt, his failure to get as much as he thought he ought to have is the real reason whv he n roved to bo so good a witness for the Democrats, and so poor a one for the Republicans. In fact, Conway gave the whole scheme completely away. He told tho Coin- ' mitteo how "President Hayes ami the late Zach Chandler arranged to colonize the colored people in Indiana I in sufficient numbers to make it a Republican State. Conway was the airent employed to carry out the scheme. He went to Indiana and nxed lm Tinffrft-fit with the leading Republican politicians

his etlortsat tirst were not verv promts-1 cmi.u ing. Indeed, until the Committee was I (,f. :l nowspaijer for colored readers, about to close it work very little that ! prmted at 1'hilatlelphia, said in the u- iintu.t-t .Mt wrna ii.m-.i...i 'pt,.. i course of a speecli : ' lho negro will

there. When everything was ready for ahility of tlve sugi:estioii that tho memputting the scheme in operation, Con- ''' referred to have but one Spinal way -nationed his agents along the i'dumn to their collective backs or the route which the colored people took to , physical impossibility of the cat-liko reach Kansas, and they, by lies of one curvature." If the Southern members kiml or another, persuaded the emi- wuro to - nnything like that, men grants to change their destination to metaphorically, it would be very bad. Indiana. One of the lies told by these the trouble seems to be they don't.

le were Conwav. the colored neonle were forced to go to Indiana. Conway explains his -I..TL.. ? ... i ... r .. . . , i muim in iiiu uusiiiess uy saying mat no .thought it was for the good of tho ...... Kepubncan party should remain in power because that party was in a higher state of civilization than tho Democratic. There is no reason to doubt Conways story. It is hardly probable, however, "that he would have told it if ho had been paid to keen silent. It seems that ho claims that there are still due him S700 for his services in thh exodus bushiest. The refusal of the Republicans to satis- . . 1. ! . .t.. ! -. 1 . i iy whs ciaim is, pcrnnps, uie reason why he deserted his friends in their time of need, It is hardly creditable to the President to bo mixed up in suel a disreputable affair, It is not consist- ... . . . , The Republicans nro getting no more harmonious Very fast. If only one-half of what the Shennnu papers say of Maine, and tho IHaine papers sav of Grant, a Maine and ami uie urant miiers say of Shorman is Ht all true. aH those distinguished Republicans should b candidates for at least throe term apiece in tho penal institutions of the

airents was that the Ivansa! neon

it determined that no more colored peo- the reference to "rebels in arms" is i- pie should come into their State, and concerned. There is scarcely a Repub-

u mat i ney worn irepn nrr tunm nut with ucan in v.oiii:ress wuouares to trtisi nis

st shot-sruns. This is how. aecordinr to standing in the party for more than

i

I t a v M. I

nas exiMiseu.iV. u. Tmm.

I

POLITICAL rOI.VTS.

The St. Louis OltthC'IktHocnti, which, it ih needless to na Is h (Jrant paper, roinarks: "If Zaldi Chaiyller wore alivo now, liltlu CjoiiIb Haiti would tako thu precaution to put iron plates in his pantaloons before talking against Grant. Tho old man wouldn't sland any nonsense," Tho Republican Convention of Florida, thermic body that sent a solid Grant dulogatinn, has distinguished itHilt by nominating ex-Senator Conovor for Governor by acclamation. Conover's career as a Senator, ami its disgraceful ending. Is still fresh in thu memory of the public, and to our esteemed Republican contemporaries, is left the delightful task of eulogizing him. Elmira (A'. '.) UazeUe. Thoaetion of tho House of Representative.-?, under Democratic control, in refusing; to unseat Yocu in, prompts tho Washington correspondent of the Now York JlcrttlU to say that tho Democrats aro not as unscrupulous as tho Republicans used to be when they had tho majority, ami when tho rule was laid down by the late Thaddeus Stevens, who, bchig'nikt'd on ono occasion how ho was going to vote, replied: Which is our rascal? I'll vote to seat him, of course," Detroit Free Vc. When a few weeks ago, in some of tho Southern States, Republican Conventions wero marked by brawls and by other disgraceful proceedings, tho general tone of the press and of the country was apologetic. Hut when the tactics and conduct of tho ignorant colored men of tho South were transferred to Chicago, and tho Cook County Republican Convention was conducted in a manner that indicated a mixture of ignorance, boorishness, childish folly and domineering doL'inati.-in. there was nothing to relieve the atl'air and its itroceedinsrs from bald disgrace, or the participants therein troni the charge of outrageous folly. Mr. IMaiiio declines the second place on the Grant tiuket, even in advance of any oiler of it to him. We aro sorry for the gifted boomer of Maine, but since the indications in the Western States that Sherman and Grant aro eo ubining against him we have feared that he might takesomo such discouraging view of the prospects of his party, And iuai nommations in tiie dusii; and n is , mut.i, jHtUjr (o lm bcatcn on l Vk0. ; Prudential than on a Projitlcutial nomination. .V, J". World. At tho conference of tho colored Methodist t mif In eit lutitul t,!l lm ic iMiMtful mtri l"mr ",i:in f.roWH n.eh a",,f 1 10 Wnanmt man inteuigent. tiien all harriers to social equality on account of color should give way, and social equality bo established between those in wealth and intelligence enual." Dr. Turner's remarks won loudly applauded. The IlciHblicAR (irievaiuc Tho Republican grievance against tho ; Southerner, as we ;athcr fiom an exchange of that faith, is that he will not sit still atul let the Republicans call him hard nam e.s. "If a Republican even refers to the Southern people of sixteen or eighteen yearn ago as rebels in !rms, say. tlii' tdiecrful commentator with moru force than grammaticalor even physiological - accuracy, "the spinal coin inn of theo Soiitliern mem ber- lly ui in a cat-like curvature." will not stop to discus the improblnu statement is a true ono so far as forty-eight hours at a time without ! so,nu suc' reference. And what vexes i !!, in il... t tl, .!..! i.. "' mv i.'uuuuim rfunai iituiuu retains as : rule its normal position and c.muoiis no cutvaiurc, "eat-iiKO" or tllirkii'ic. Tit t.S.. vf f.k... .1... f...t.l. ltcans have found the Southorn spinal column altogether too free from curvature to suit their fancy, or their hope of continuance in power. i It would not be strange if tho Sonthj ern members were to take more notice I of the perpetual nagging and niunecalling to wliieh they are subjected, by partrsaii. who can in no other way show themselves useful to their oartv. Of course it is undeniable that there wore "rebols in amis" f-i.xteen or eighteen years ngo; but oven of so tuuloiiiable a I:oh one beconny partially wearied when it has been iterated and reiterated for sixteen or eighteen years, for no othur purpose than to stir up strife and rcsontment. Undoubtedly the Southorn members have wearied of it; and it is greatly to their credit that instead of resenting it, as tho Republicans would like to have thein, they have thu wisdom and the solf-rcstraint to refrain. Thereby they show that they believe in that reconstruction ami restoration of the Union which the Republican party bonst? of as its work, nvotl If If nt-iiirilf rnn mnttil-irtra t9 Pim. gross d. uot believe hi it. Detroit Fret

hpisconal Church m St.

It . i ttih, . .

sv. ua ii. ins vninsu uiav ctiuniiy. . I, n 0r, J i nss.