Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 25, Number 24, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 May 1883 — Page 2

William P. Kelktt take Ms

iadictuient at Wsshiagma at paiawanl MurwHutk ami a am at af Nee to aratitude oa the part of the aatalnJetraBoa. He claims mat ha mred tas Hepubltcan party la lot by issuing awrancatcs a (ioreraorof Louisiana for adht elector, all of whom kadaaam defeated by large raaku-ities. In an "Interview on this subject, reported In the Btoa MtmM, Kellogg assert that Chandler telegraphed him that unlet Louisiana could be held all H lost. Thereupon ha exerted his official power to prevent the impending catastrophe, ana with morass The ooasriratort dreaded the presence of Mr. Tilden In the White House. It wat aure to result in aa exposure of the corruption In the departments. They had poaeeatloa of the Government, and were determined to kaep it, even to the extremity of provoking civil war. The eohemeof simttas: viatung etatesmea, aa they were called, to Louisiana, South Carolina and Florida wm inventad as a convenient over for the raiquitout detJfat of the conspirator. That plan insured a dlrided report, by which Annht mls-Hl ha nalaad in the nubile mind and the partisan spirit enlisted oa the jsejpubUean Hide. Behind the author and managers of thU fool work stood Grant's Administration, threatening to meet remonstrance with force, and menacing' the people's represantaUvea with arrest and Imprisonment lor defending an honest election. General Sherman summoned picked troops to Washington from frontier posts 3.000 miles distant; and the Capital was garrisoned aa if in preparation against a foreign enemy. John Sherman, Garfield. Stanley Matthews, and other Republican chiefs went "to Louisiana to organise the fraud for stealing1 that State, which had given Tilden a clear, fair and positive majority of about eight thousand rote. Their acts have become a part of the political history of the times, and are familiar to the country. Despite the rank perjury, the forgeries, the frauds and the aeetraotkra of returns, Wells, Anderson and their associates in the Returning Board, found the task of ore rooming the large and lawful majority for Tlldea dUBcnlt and dangerous. They deterainad to aeize the opportunity for a great speculation, ana to sell the votes of the State to the high ft bidder. An overture to thsfs offset was made -to Don Cameron, then Beeietag of "War, with a modest demand for a million of dollars. He ileelmed the offer. Mr. Hewitt, then Chairman of the National Democratic C a inmates, was next approached by an agent of Wells with a store moderate offer, but he refused, abaolutely to entertslss the proposttioti, upon any terms whatever. After long and unsooceaifol huckstering, the time drew near for a final action. On the eve of the return, Wells proposed to Duncan F. Meaner, recently a member of the Tariff Ootamiasiofi, to give Tilden the vote that belonged to him for two hundred thoHeaari dollars eavivmss a(ee(at eSaasaaJml JsJJasfcaa1aa0(l failed, and Ketktgg, as Governor, certified eight Republican Blaotoa from .Louisiana, every one of whom had been heatcn by a majority of thousands. TV act of March 1, 17OT, provides hat The Xtocton thall make and stat thrw rttBeatmof all tan vet jrtvte si -.mr. of whieS oerUSmtes aasa eontssn l.o liauact 1U. nor of the vsSss for Pree.t'rtrt stwitteotswef ttie votes far tce-PresMeat, awl naall aaeex to eat of tat oertiasaSMOM of tee IMa of the Bkmsors whiofc aU have Wb furntaftfd to tfeeai ar aWeetton or o Xxecutlve of the AttUe. 'TtoKkraaaaUaantfcafesefM so snatto tor Uwm, and ct-rttfjr Mgw escfc tarn the Uau of all tne vote of ansa amu. glvan for 7tetMt, and of all the rotes sivaa far Tin.rvwssvnt, "Tn rannunMi minmThese certificate are disposed of as follows: One et i given in charge to a special mesengcr who fa thia ease was Anderson of toe Returning Board to tie delivered to the President at the Senate, before the first Wednesday ia January then next ensuing; the second set, with the content saevracribed on the envelope, is addressed tn the President of the Senate by mail; and the third set is delivered to the Judge of the Hatrk-t ia which the Klootors ahall assemble. The aama act declare mat Cougrw sdmll be in session oa the aeoood Wedaesdey in Febrnar aaooaodiag every meeting of the Bleotors, and that the cert Has tea, or so many of them as have been received. BkmUmen be sfwaaf, and the votes counted. It is thus seen that the oertificaUas are aealed when delivered to the President of the Senate before the tret Wednesday ia January, and they cannot be legally 'Opened before the second Wednesday In lehramry. Thomas W. Ferry at that -time was President pre liwyirc of the Senate. Anderson dvared the Louisaana oertificates to bhm. Rrtemally may were oo-nt in ibm. Bat it was amen dsseoverv t that a serious trror, iairaidsting the cettiflcaies, had bam committed. That error oould not have ham dotectad without hnsklaf the seal. tosttag tne law, aaa poruaii siiag a shhmy. The cerdflcess waa la thaaosaamton of Perry oakaaftyaa the oasto--dian nominated for thai obiset hy the "vend which the certificates oould aot be in wasnmama, Aaaersoa hack to New Oris mi to get a certificate. Three of tha bogus not ha reached. Their were forged to the substituted paper, as was proved before the Potter uttes, ana aona paermsa cava offices subsequeutiy to shut their ax Kalian's artvase secretarr a charged wltfToompttetfar iu gottlag mp toe forged oertmcaaa. BUUogg ahasail ooubueat known waa m rapojnelMe

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Tmt ttata Wfrlu Within leas than twenty years the Hepubboaa party , by its varied prooassai of elam hfdatioa, haa begotten la tha Uaited Sutes every social dlnorder and those extraordinary didetvnees in the conditioni of classes of society whieh obtain la the oldest monarchical or feudalised svstems of Europe, htonarehy and aristucraomtte forms la Kngland; revolutioas in France; conquest, consolidation and obliteration of Statehood in Germany; absolutism in Russia, and fanaticism in Turkey, have failed through three centuries to beget wore social and economic results than the "party of great moral ideas" has achieved within tweotr years in tha United States. Prior to 130 the masses of American people were in the blessed condition approved by the patriot Eropbet of old who besought leaven: "Give me neither poverty nor riches." There were no beggars; there were" no great lords of looms, or mills, or banks, or rails, or of bonds. There were no mighty land monopolists, no iron-crowned masters of States. But how thoroughly changed are our systems, social and political 1 Wa have two widely separated, dearly defined classes of society. Their protracted existence, as now related to one another, is neither possibls or desirable, and therefore the absolute necessity for radical changes in theoriesof legislation and Internal policy and conduct of the Federal Government. Men die, charters efpire, corporations become bankrupt and are dissolved, land is forfeited or its sale may be made almost compulsory, land grants unearned may be declared forfeited, and tariff reformed that monopolies may be destroyed. Democracy in power contemplstes no violence and no violation of law; but proposes to invert every operative process and theory of "Republican" class legislation. Democracy will legislate for the many, even as Republicanism has legislated exclusively for the few. Democracy will slowly and surely destroy, by every lawful means, the omnipotence of every class of oligarcbists and monopolists. Democracy will lawfully undo every possible wrong that begets the beggary of the many and aggrandises the few. It will give the country that genuine instead ot apparent prosperity which distinguishes it to-day, discovering its splendors and charms In those of a whited sepulchre, beautiful without but full of rottenness within; even as we discover gilded palaces and regal equipages and gorgeous trappings of fabulous riches in great cities, whose countless beggared multitudes, like those of the country, are driven by absolute destitution into penitentiaries and other abodes of crime or wretched

To undo class legislation, to substitute r. revenue for a protective tariff, to exterminate or strip of dangerous powers and of imperial domain the soulless lawless corporations, and give the coontry a currency with which corporations cannot tamper, expandingsnd contracting it at will, that the people may be robbed, and banks enriched these am of the purposes of the Democracy. In ftlaia words, it would restore the perect unity of the Union, the integrity of the States, the equality of the people. Tat Inalsns Phut The Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, the Commissioner of Pensions and the Postmaster-General all beimr from Indiana, the Republican party mar intend to try to carry that State with a somewhat leas outlay of money than it cost them in 1880. Mr, Flshback of Indianapolis, who belonged once to one end of the OUbe-Jkmcrat of this city, says in a recent publication that there are signr of a policy for the future similar to that pursued in the last Presidential campaign, and thst " mea like Dorsey will come to Indiana again as they came ia 1880 and disburse $400,000 in the Denison House parlors, to be used in buving votes, hiring repeaters, bribing ejection officers to stuff ballot-boxes and falsify election returns." lie asserts that " there are men high in office because they connived at such crimes, end it is no secret that other men honored by the party am so honored mainly because they aided the escape of arrested felons who were hired to come from other States to violate the Election laws of Indiana.11 It has been often charged by Democrat that the Presidency Id 1S90 was hoiurht, and that the , beneficianes of the purchase, from high to low, including the nominees for President and Tioa-Presidcnt, scquiesced and approved the purchase, but it has not before been so openly confessed and stigmatiaed by any prominent Republican. It is true General Arthur Intimated la a post-prandial speech at Del monico's some months after the consummation of the corrupt scheme, that he knew bow it was managed and declared that ha aad his compatriots wen deeply indebted to ex-Senator Dorsey for hw splendid services, but the tone of bis remarks aa that occasion was that of entire approval and admiration and aot of iepfehensien like that of the language smotad above. But times have obaaged and mea have changed with theas. Dorsey is struggling against the bitterest adversity aad with but indifferent chances of escaping the penitentiary, his offenae being thenseof money lliched from the; Government to eavs the Republican cause in Indiana. His bitterness against Mr. Arthur can be nothing km than the extremest But Mr. Arthur bad to break with hb friends or prostitute his high office. He an questionably oboes the wiser aad mors oWaaaihle part how desnieabls soever be may appear to thorn whom he ahaav dnamrf ta thair fats JO tndi Jasasie wFsf sw aeissjjen essFaas: wwe asFwrw assvrr

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satfaooa a yauag lady. a wok of waoeeaee nana bar aaaeeetmamJaSafca aaftmMPaaal JassCa eaM4aJjSjJa ten ana glsnwng arounn from one to eaotber of tha many mea assembled there, as U seacehiag for some particular person, walked up to one of the clerks aad timidly asked for a detectiee. "Any particular oner"' asked the clerk. "No, sir," was the reply, given in s half whisper. "Pray be seated." said the clerk, offering the lady a chair; "as soon as one couies in I expect one every moment I will present him to you." In a few moments one of the detective force, who is noted among his brother officers as earing more for hi business than for style and flue clothe, cams in and was introduced to the young lady in waiting, and at his request she acoompanied him into an adjoining office. Before stating her business, or even taking a seat which the officer offered her, she looked at him from head to foot for a few moment. and then asked, "Are you really a detectireP" This question brought a blush to the officer's face aad for a second he semed st aggened aad at a W for an answer, buthe soon recovered his composure, assured the lady that he was a detective, aad inquired why she had asked that question. "To be frank with you," said the lady, after some hesitation, "I never hare had anything to do with policemen and detectives. I never saw but one detective in my life, and he was pointed out to me by a friend as he wm passing by us on the street. He was dsessed in the most fashionable of clothes, wore a huge diamond scarf pin, a double chain with locket pendant, and a big diamond ring on his finger. I supposed that all the detectives dressed like that, and therefore when I saw you and failed to observe all this finery of dress and diamonds, I thought you were only a plain policeman." The officer smiled, and proceeded to take notes of the the lady had to lay before him. San trancuco Com. Breaking Steers, The mode of breakimr steers nraetioed in Kentucky is thus described: Where the e.-ia'dishment 1 a large one, and there aru some to be broken in every year, the fixture and practice here recommended would seem to be eligible and judicious! "Get a strong post, eight feet long by two thick, plant it three and a half feet in the ground, well rammed; round or level the top of the post and lesvn a pin to it, or make a mortice and Insert a strung two-inch pin of tough wood in it, perpendicularly at the top, six or eight inches long. Then got a tough sapling twenty-five feet long; measure ofr at the small end of it the usual length of a yoke, and bore the holes "for your bows. Then bore three holes, or more if yon choose, four, eight and twelve feet from the other end of the sapling, of the sine of the pin in the top of the post, giving the shortest lever first, draw your steers up, let them be young or old, gentle or wild, it makes no difference: yoke them to the end of the pole; but instead of tying their tails together, if you wish to avoid bob-tail oxen, tie their loins together with a good rope, wrap up their bead halters, clear the front, and let them go; round and round they will go with a rush; drunk drunker, still they grow, until groaning, down thev drop. For a while they lie panting and looking wild; then leap as if suddenly frightened, rush round and round again, Sow drunk and drop again. Leave em, they will repeat the experiment, until, reefing, they will stop or stand, In a few hours you may lead them around by their halters, Uncouple them from the pole, or yoke them, to yonr cart, and drive them where you please with safety. Toledo Blade. An Aeearste Tisac-Iece, While on the stibfeat of Waltbam watches, we may mention that 1 mka taaaaviA laan sa 1a IxiH favkaa f Waa afVaBSiiL ' raander of the Gordon Cattle (Castle e i, lia v xj mxsM. t avaaaTs na aaav wiline of, Steam rackets), who was fortunate enough to save life at sea, and who for his gallant conduct was presented in September last with a Gold Keyless Wahham Watch by the President of the United States, on beratf of the London Local Marine Board. Referring to this Presentation Watch, he says: "When I left London the watch was six seconds fast, and on my arrival at Singapore it was only three seconds slow, a most extraordinary performance for a watch, as I carried it on my person the whole time. I compared it every day wkh my chronometers on the passsge out, and it seldom or ever differed one second from themi la fact, I found it alnsest, if not as good as my chronometers, which is a great deal to say for a watch carried about aad subject to all kinds of jolts." XsNsfoN, JPnjjosxf, 3t Matoawtaasr, . I,,, jM W, . I jr naf SMt MWlSISIPlllt SV CP, aSSPSFS, The so-called Oould Koads are the Wsbash, Manhattan Elevated, Missouri Pacific, Missouri, Kansas A Texas, Texas 4 Faciac, Hannibal A f. Joseph, International A Great Northern. St. Lonfai eV Iron Mountain, St. Louis San Franoiaoo. The VaaderbUt Beads are New York Central, New York A Harlem, Lake Shore, New York. Chicago A 8t Louis, Michigan Central. Caaada Southern, tThicago A Northwestern, Chicago, St. Paul, Mianeapolis A Omaha, Philadelphia A Reading, Ctevelaad, Oolambaav Cincinnati A SmnaaoUa, and Cat rasmfteoi tat ueatrei flaw Jataey.

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If yarn make a sardea It pay la eav link the ground Uberatiy. AH the mhbaga tribe leoahe a good degree of moisture aad cool weather to induce them to head welL JT. Y. -- Plant all the fruit trees that you may find room for, and raise all the fruit that you can ooax your trees to bear. A practical farmer recommends the growing of two crops of buckwheat in succession, as a means of exterminating wire-worms. They will not eat buckwheat, aad are starved to death. -As to fertilisers, there is nothing equal to wood ashes, says Hiram Sibley, and thev should be sown broadcast immediately after planting corn, or applied liberally about the plants as soon as they are up. Corn is a potash plant, but requires the phosphates. FertilLaers should be sought whieh contain both, and, when sown broadcast, they may be used unsparingly with profit. Rye Cakes: Rye tea cakes or breakfast cakes are made of one pint of sweet milk, two eggs, one tahlespoiinful of brown sugar, half a teaspooaful of salt; stir in this enough flour to make a batter about like griddle-cake batter (rye dour sifted is to be used). Bake in wellbuttered gem-pans for half aa hour. If the cook prefers to do so, she can use part rye and part wheat flour. ToUde Blade. a Steamed com bread is particularly wholesome when made with buttermilk. If this cannot be procured, use lobbered milk. To two cups of Indian meal allow one cup of white flour, two tabWpoonfuls of white sugar, two and a half cups of milk, one teaspooaful of soda, one of salt, one tablespoonful and a half of melted butter; steam for two hours in a well-buttered tin. and dry oft in the oven. Chicngo Journml. Corn which is hilled will blow down more readily than that which has level culture. This can be accounted for by the fact that corn-nwts run very near the surface, and when hills are made they are con lined to the small space covered by the hill, while in level culture the roots run from one row to the other, thus enabling the corn to stand strong; as nature intended, and in no way liable to be blown down except by winds of unusual violence. lrairie Farmer, Iit-Treeiatent sf Merset, Tear in and year out horses am kept in ill-ventilated aad dark, damp apartment, and yet, are expected to keep In health. It may never have occurred to the avrage mind that of all animal which serve useful purposes the hore i mot alucd. But it if true. If this animal did not have a constitution "like a horse," three-quarters of our hordes would be killed every day. We are careful of our cow, of our bogs, of our sheep, sod of our chickens, bat the poor horse must suffer Perhaps he is improperly fed and improperly watered; from the beginning of winter until spring he may lie compelled to eat one kind of food, when common humanity ought to be enough to suggest an occasional feed of root, lie, it often strained beyond all reason, and nothing thought of the cruelty. He. is driven on cold days until he. becomes heated, aad then compelled to stand without covering nntil thoroughly chilled. But it is a horse, and so nothing is thought of it. The stable is filthy aad badly ventilated, and every inspiration which the animal takes while in it is so inhalation of disease and death-breeding impurities. The horse is a strong animal, but the physical system will not stand everything. If properly taken care of, a horse m seldom k:k. Common humanity ought to be enough to send for a graduated veterinary surgeon to treat their sick anitnsls, aud not for a home-made quack to pour down their horse all the poisonous stuff thev can get into him, which is enough to fclll any hor. in a healthy condition; then where 5s the chance for the sick borsw to ewipe? We have nowadays so many quacks who profess to be veterinarv surgeons and never saw a hospital in their life-time. Such men are a ruination to ear land. They kill many a valuable animal through their ignorance and foolishness. If farmers would not employ such quack they could save many a valuable aaimal. Oor, Ohio Fmrmtr. maBBBBaaWamwmm1 smafasM Ylnsaaa 'WimlfsayB s7mmmsgapp(Hm srstmsasfi m sama mmmrva sasjnsaf During a Western trip of eesofXaw ? I one 's rMimati sings, maae mm year, it became known wrangh the passenger coaches that his arrvsle ear was attached to tha trsia aadasmeoaaaaetor entered one of the coaches a maa from Northern Indiana kackoaad to kiaa aad asked: Is Mr. Gould's car with this taafor "Yes; sir." "He is. "Can I go ia and see hhaf "If you can get law" "WelL Til try," said the laaa, as ha rose up. "Tv aiwdel her of me smartest, cutest aad baft wsmluf-ma-aheen ever myea4as, aad If Mr. OoaW will drop his rallrseds and take hold of this wkh me. Til warrant hint a atna&y income, after the first year, af forty dollars a week." He didn't succeed in entering the ear, and that may be the reason why Mr. fiould m still in the railroad bosineas. WM Mrect AVsss. A Boston letter aaserta that Mlat Aleett hat no opiadaa af traaaaasdmaaal ijfeBissalMWJarik eaaa)(si, fcaTsfaaaa?(Nsi tfcWf aasv4l alwavs nass 'tha am' tha saw mm eaafvajyraF wawae am agar irSisa wwTw pjsj mw aaaa, jkj sa SpaaaaBWaam amaTTPaV

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