Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 25, Number 37, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 August 1883 — Page 2
fh hVaaiHraa fartyS
With the UmoIi Administration the TsVpablWaa party fin aooaired promtn,ao sad aoaw. and by awanblnallon of mrcaasstaaees It was allied upon to 4o Its best work ai the beginning of lie career. To It wore attached many able nes and aianjdfanen liliiimn who fnatr or lateTtost their iaaaenee with the party sad became detoched from ito
U a fm rivnlnrsat fmat thaLwith the
fjnayl excptkm of on whose absence
Vl lOgsjasiril ana woo wn in rsw mn erior.every member of Lincoln' original CtfMiift became antagonistic to ana left the party. Greeley, limner. Feessendesyrnmkttn, Adams, awl that class af men wart denuneed, and a totally dinVreet elaai of bmb cams to the frost d aamsnon1 ooatrol. From that thaw forward, white sdveaenrout politicians have km rashieg to aittuaultht tettw elsaneal of the
TVMN TMM MJ8CAL8 OUT,
A sftstfMs ssjr. m MlM jajarrajaaiHagiawtgi iwfeia2 IV M Vapw ennnammnT eBTamsT emanmsmmmen ltaaasawTracawnanret;. . It hpmhm She sevr ww nww ItsoMta pMpte'iricte tar pay. Us Wktsfcj mnasats as Mar Bswsoia
HP
Tiiii nf Ha foal e sense
late taamw a ooum mm wiu.
AmI twist w alums the at tUppOoa.
ttuv-4 Ham who nn it
asHistendiasvebe leaving i tGive to Bepmblican party credit for all the good it may bra aeoomplishcd asm1 still then follows a kmg nceountability, such, for instance as The Boat Shepherd Ring frauds in the Dbrtriet of CohnabU. The aafa herniary iniquity The wbJslcy frauds, reaching to the White How, The Frcedmaa' Bask swindle. The Belknap impeachment. The Robeson naval frauds. The IndiiB Bureau franda. The Pension Bureau frauds. The Black Friday rascality. The theft of the FresMttey in 1876 The Indiana bribery in '880.
And the Star-route frauds, not to
anentkm a long list of other offenses, amy sue of which ought to and would ejsvithrow any other political party that ever existed in this country. These who acted with it from the start, and held out with H as long as . smU-respset would allow them to do so. admit and assert that it hna been false to all its lint principle, and become a party of pretense and hypoerwy. Intrenched in power as it ban been so long, with all the office and emolurents in it possession; with unlimited rteourcee ami an army of willing sery aats at its command; with innumerable dependents tenaciooa of their places and ready to do anything required to keep the partT hi the ascendancy, it is no -oasy matter for the sorjreign people treer to overthrow this huge monopoly Recent events indicate pretty clearly that the people hare taken these things to heart and intend to act accordingly. The Republican leaders will, of course, blind the eyes of the pnople as much as
A.mA mat a ii a m
lifa.sewannra
taxes.
Tlw isnw new. beyoa4 a leaM. U that m avaaaee be SbataS: Vnea I tSe nmne hepvlXo root Aad alt the banded tlitav mnied nn,
AaiMiMte
Jr. r.
I audearonng m the stats of
iHurtT to onestions
f policy upon which they suppose peo- . ak may differ. The people, however. , are m earaeat, and what they want is fcmawty m elections, eeonomy te public axpeoditurea. and a thorough reform in all the affairs of Government: and this they well know can not be effected unless there is a change of the men who i administer the Government. ! The influence of names is no longer Jelt; the catch-words of party can nwKber rally, nor do thnr alarm the -votaa they once did. The honest Renmhffism who means reform does not Vnttato to set with the honest Democrat -who votes lor it. The independent! 'voter takes the rwponsibility and casts hds baBot where he thinks it will do threat good. We have seem this m the last eJuctions in the different States; and this movement wBl continue, and the whole country will again rejoice In aa honest adminirtratioa of Government mnder new men and a new order of things. ParUmd (He.) RegitUr. k Oeaalaf Oat k EsseathU.
The areai and not a lew public men
at the eoontry have bees heard from reeoecting the Star-route trials aci the aeMnttni of the dejsredston on the pub-! lie Treasury. Though acquittal was snawthmg of a snrprise, conviction wn ! hardly expected. The minds of reflect-. Ing men, therefore, turn to the offenses ana to the eonsklexaUon of a service In which sneh abuses aceposeibls, ltmay, M taken m absolutely certain that all mportsnme permitted by the Govern- i nstopetmlate on and defraud the!
Ittliy mwrovea oy ui wmcww bw" vUlie and fattens by what it thus gains. The only method, therefore, protecting the public interests Is to put the Kxecutive department in the mm tmnsMe of transactinr
meat enough to refuse to
at aav and all efforts to get
wUWmh Wmums Mm. Bneh
are the ramification of fraudulent agenems hi ms BepuMican party, and the
IMtMieaaers, awnuni mm m w4ti thm tiantraotors and
i mat a pure public service under
party is practically oat of the quesft is imnoawble. Wnatever mar
he the nrofessions of the thkU-and-thiu
Mrtisam and the attempts of the wounded leaders to parry the blow which has fallen upon them, thecoochv ahm Is plain that the way to better things h through a ehaiwe a total, ehsolatt change in the fixeeattve as well at the LefWattve department of Tfha Owwament. Put men m who are in am way whatever coaneoted with or smier any obRgation, evmt the least, to the eJam who have so long lived by -wehtts) patronage and from advantages whrnm actual or supposed services Ihava smlwldsned them to claim There
mmmhtanew deal all
eaa he hp
fahsTmeemmlmm at which the
Dorsey. the great unconvicted, has written a letter in reply to one received fMn CmmmI Ifardn. sb successor in
the office of Secretary of the Republican National Committee, statins: that he has no records of the Committee to tarn over, and exclaiming that no record of the transactions of the Committee, either under his own or nay former Secretaryship, was kept. He says with excusable bitterness that the only records of the financial doings of the Committee he bat are paid checks of his own contributions (amounting to something over 18.000). and unfortunately a bank book bowing charges of his own folly."
Mr. Dorsey quite severs on we Comnvttee of which he was the Secretary. He declares that he was appointed at the request of General Garfield, and that he accepted the place
at the earnest solicitation of General Arthur, representing the Grant side of the House, and of Hon. W. E. Chandler, representing the Blaine side. Speaking of his paid checks, which he retains as evidences of his contributions to the Committee, he says: l .regret more than I can tell that I made it possible that sneh record should be la my hands, bat they are here, nad I think best to keep them as a reminder of the splendid gratitude of dishonest p.wer. I do not owe the Republican National Committee a cent of money or a grain of thankfulness. In the midst of th storm brought about by the effort I had nt forth nndss- its liirvctioBS and in its
behalf, a brutal aasaolt was made upon j me at the last meeting of the Committee i when I was not present to defend my1 self. Not one among the forty members present had the courage or manhood to reseat the miserable cowardice of the ambition hypocrite." It wfll be observed thai Mr. Dorsr st- ' tributes the Star-route storm" to his efforts to camr the last Presidential ejection under the ' directions of the Committee. This Is a direct charge 1 that the members of the Committee were cognisant of his relations to the Star ' im imtnM aiwI thai tbose contracts
were laid under tribute for the benefit of the Committee's exchequer. The language of Donry is not susceptible T nW mMninsr. The "storm.
however, wss not much of a gam after all. and Dorsey sbottld not be so aerlmonkms aboert it. It was merely a steady blowing wind generated by the
lungs at toe itorernnwo mwjvn $i0 a day. Perhaps when the next Congress meets the whole Star-route easiness, ineltidmg iu relations to the rWdential canvass of 18). will become a subject of inquiry in thst body. Senators and Representatives in Congress served on the National RspnbUcan Committee when Mr. Dorsey acted as Secretary. The latter would make an iuteresting witness em the subject of the vtorm" of which he writes with so much feeling and etoqnencn gerrfs. burg (P)hriU.
erected In flreat Britain
and on the continent of Kurope by the
mformattoa that ever os auaarea per. sons are dying daUyfrom cholera in Imssietta. Brntt, asm ths wobahm
prsad of the disease to other Eastern I . . T. ... ... m .knMU
oouainea nan mas p wvp-. warn the Government of this country to loss bo time in taking measures to pre
vent Its aavent to our anoiw.
daimsra to be anwnsheadsu ars real. rr.im m Kvat. and Alexandria, are
hath ahtrmed, hut the authorities in both places are engaged in a disrepute ble quarrel over the best means of prevention. Only a short time .ago the steamer St. Bernard, from Bombay, with ehotora on board, arrived at Havre,' bat. thanks to the vigilance of French officers, she was not permitted to land. Asmtic or epidemic cholera has been known in India for many centuries, and has several times devastated the country. In 1764 it destroyed 80,000 lives in tipper Uindostaa. In 1817, in the delta of the Ganges about one hundred miles north of Calcutta, originated the great epidsnue of cholera which traversed almost the entire world. For centuries the disease was epidemic in the marshy region of the Ganges, but in that year ft left its usual confines and raged at Calcutta for several mouths. Thence it extended northward to
vm.nl ami anuthwanl to Madras, t'ev-
Ion and Malacca. In 1319 it reached
the Burmese Empire and the conumes to the east, and in 1820 it arrived at Bombay, where 150,000 persons died from it ravages. From Bombay it passed to Madagascar and the east coat of Africa to Borneo, Celebar, China tk. VMIinnin 1 Miami. In 1821 it
advanced to the northwest, pursuing the !
course 01 rivers ana irmrriru www i Persia, Arahia aud Aaia Minor. Here for a time it seemed to have met with a check, but in 1828 it reappeared and devastated Central Asia, In 181 it ap. peared in Southern Russia, and at Moscow in 1830. In 1831 it spread over Central Europe, and appeared at Sundcriand. England, in October. In January, 1832, it hadyfound its way to Edinburgh, and reached London in Frbniary. In March it was In Paris, and spread rapidly alt over France. On the 8th of June, iHSS, it made its first appearance on this continent at QueW, and two davs after crard in Montreal.
Only eleven days later It suddenly appeared in New York, and from thence spread to Philadelphia, Albany and Rochester in July, and in August had found lodgment in Boston, Baltimore and Washington. By October It had spread from Cincinnati to New Orleans. It agnin visited this country in 1884, and eince that time, though it has aj-
peared at different times in certain iucslities. it has not reigned as au epidemic. , Englii statistics show that of those attacked bv cholera, 88.5 per cent. de. In Great Britain there died fmm tli disease 2BO00, of whom 6,000 died in London. In Paris the mortOity wss 18.H00. about 49 per cent.; and in Russia it was per cent. Enough has btett s id to show the terrible ravages n1 rmrM vtndun of this DlaiTue. ami
the great necessity for prompt action of those to whom the management of tnee important matters are committed. Let us hope that nothing will be left undone bv the constituted authorities, and let it he shown that modern science and sanitarv hygiene can, when properlv applied, accomplish a great deal in limitlag the spread of disease. Aortormi s-
pavnCflst.
ffOW THEY DIFFER,
CMmamlsltaaM.
1 1 hats tntoearmsSsss h It siaeonss mjt aosa a a hitsam aur aaa
uVSJfaatf MsM sum the hours,
dVPts) wO mmmW
And ahstavsr 1 go I aast earry a tea.-
Tae nta I munsj as
AntrMs uasaaaesaoa
.AVamgew. Ss Nsrasr r. s
luouaeruar.
A PEEABFUI. AYCTTP1B. (Her twenty-five years ago, in a small r..n.n. iii.m. wKich wss sitnated on
tho banks of a pleasant stream, stood an . m k . I t... WbWa aril I sanaa
old, rea-oncK scnoot-oww. ,.tw is stttl there. It has not yet grown into city ways, and probably never will. The river, too. is there, and is still the same pleasant, high-banked stream ft was twettty-ive years ago. But the dear, old red-brick school-house has given place to a more pretentious modern structure, and the little hoys and girls who romped upon the gchool-house play-groood then are all men and women now, with little hoys and girls of their own. . . , Children have grand events m their m rIt m older neoule. Wonder
fully exciting incidents ow-ur to inem.
uarrow escapes anu aiariung suvcuiures which thev remember all their lives. It is one of these narrow escapes, one of these startling adventures of child-life, tuet 1 am about to tell to the little bovs and glris of to-day, and the story Is "no "make believe;' it is true terribly true it seemed to six little girls who attended school at the old red-brick
tared t dmner-imil. Iron the dspot, which was quite near, and ths floor waa scrubbed with an old cast-away broom, until, as Susie rentarked. 'twas plenty ejean enough to eat off from. 'And. oh ray! Just the cutet lltOs shelf for CAirdishesr' sehf Dot. as she idaced them oarofullr ht s row on a loam which exteaded arrossthe sad of the house. "It's the nicest hanse I ever did sea, exclaimed Bailie, drawing in a long. de
Tlv this time the household goods hast all been coaveyed to the new house, and lay la alkof mmfusiouon theftoor. Now, Je work spry, children!" said the busy mother, brushing about excitedly. " We etasf get things mraightened sefore the school-bell ring. There
it sue,' she cried, in dismay. "Oh. - " . . . f . .l T
oear me: u s him as i vspocimi. i know that Mr. Imahl hasn't given ua ludf an hour's noontag tosy "
The mean ota wing: cneu neum, indignantly. At that instant, without a moment s warning, the two great doors on either side of the bouse slid to with a bang, that brought six wildly , palpitatiag hearts into six throbbing little throats, as the terror-strickett children stood fat the awful darkness of their prisonThey were too frightened and astonished to speak or move for a moment, and duriuir that abort space of sibace
the- heard a great, rough voice, just outimie, sayr "I can get a good big price for em out West, where then- ain't no little girls. I'll couple tbU 'ere night-car right on to the engine, an' take 'em off afore ther're misseil." And thVn the "new home" bepan to move along th track, slowly at lirst, but iraining rapidity at every turn of
the wheels, ami a wail of angoiaa,
w '""S SV I Me wueeis, anu a wu m
Just back of the sctiooi-nouse was me , which was simulv terrtne, wni upirum plsy-ffround. and just back othe play- j we .ntire family within, ground, with only a high board fence ,t and vilie danced right up and betweesi. was the railroad track, where i dowU( ana reamed at the ton of their trains thundered past at all hours of the j voices, tossing their chubby hands
oar. . , anout in mt iww . .
The fence between us was hign. anu , ju. Ba y nftl up t!n r
the most agile boy in the play-giound
could not climb to its top, nut iney coum. and did, beat down the boards with miniature battering-rams, constructed for this purpose, Tbeeo opening would sometime escape the notice of the teacher for day, even week, at a time and the children
Why We're
Bet Weather.
WTO ht lajere flat Party,
The Republican leaders f toning Jf m askoastb,vrfmHane HhStwomrh U tbe aeoaittal of the SSar-route ring- WSPjLi ii
if -the aeoaittal of the 8Sasrote nng-
sters will not injure the party." It is none of our famines te iatrudh npon the sflicted party m tins hoar of trmible, hat we csmt JffJ the question. We think it wUL Dorsey was and is a Republican. He was a v.M.kiiMB Mm.' Senator from
Arkansas. Kellojqc, indicted and awaiting trial for complicity in the Star-route frauds, was the same. Brady, too, is a Republican. In fact, all the members of the Star route rin Iwethenaembera of its predecessors, ths Whisky ring, were distinguished members of that grand old party.
aaotiier iss; m ww. was acquitted he was waited misd serenaded by a ltopelwaa Cnh at Washington City. 8tiU another fact: Tkttmj wae SeereUry of the Republican Watkmai Comi. isan dmdl Is kkrh favor.
He says he wmarpointel Sseretary "at
MHtaii tts alaee at the earnest solfc
itation of demsral Arthur, reprinting
the tirani stoe ot use imw, mw "-"
K. Chnttdler rspreaeattag we maine .iu. it onlv remaias to be added
thst fmm the hesHaainar H has been
A that the Govwrnment aevrr
ber of the Star-routs rlasd sv
tiMHftwOeMa TBMW'wl'ei WMN ths Aemiaistranoa Mjl ths prosscatlea,--A F.
"As a rule," said Dr. J. A. Oldshne, yesterday, "the American lunch is responsible for American dyspepsia. The prevailing custom of perching on high stools where elbow room ia at a premium, and shoveling down hot disiies is barbaric and only fit for Hottentots. Most of the ranch-rooms in the lower part of the otty are fixed up in thU way. Tbe American breakfast, with its steak, potatoes, hot coffee and Ice
water, taken at an early hour in e morning. Is hard enough on the anrestjre functions; but the repetition of this thins: at noon or one o'clock is even worse, swsJkmed as it is with preclpitatkm and want of care. Miia hnW bs a smalL cooitnr.
saaaM not ne nearv
stomach, but lust
stav the oravinea until
the heavier meal in the evening.
In this weather lunch sboum oe a
cold meal. Nothing is better than a tj nnld mnritut lamb with mint
sauce and salad dressed in tbe French style. A leg or a wing of coht green goose, or a bit of cold, broiled gosling.
Is dainty anu paiaiaow. xmm
meats, such as oeet anu Tea. ohv w be avoided. They overburden the
ttomach, and render a man practically unfit for the afternoon work.
If ftnv hot dish is eaten lor ratten ii
bonld be at tbe most a slice of h.
Nothing is more delicious man a inece of eoWsahnon or Hue-fish, with either mayonaa se or plain sslad dressitlg.,'-
PWtorp m.) crasene. 9tlam eaaramt saajtrW WtMWY Hflf WttmWI wMl
to the credulity of the Amer.cu public,
mys the Sen rnmctaeo rem,
recent stage roooery m editor whl was a passenger was robbed of $1.50, and bad t00 that was not token. The inside fact are that he tad the $1.50 in the toe of his sock and tbe $800 in nil mind.
voice
in a dismal wr.il of anguish. L t l Minnie dropped "n her knee, nmi lean to sav: Now I lav m," gett ug it adly mixed with "Oh, I want m mamma! While Mary threatened hr captor with every conceivable manner f vengeance if he did not release her at once;
even woea. ai a umo, w i but ner ternDie inresw wnxwould crowd their round, bright faces , n tw uniu-d voicen of hersobbing rliil- . . .t ... ut.ink k. talni ir., ilia. 1 l'
At first they remained within the In- ..Qh, what shall we d-? A hut shall closure, and only glanced through at w. pvcr t0yt critd Nellie, in dcpair. the forbidden grounds beyond, hut they ,. j sp,H. he's goin' to sell ui to the finally grew bolder, and ventured into ! people who eat up fat little girlt- and tbe tall grass which grew on either aide ; what will our mamma do then?' obbcd ft the track. j JJM. The bovs converted the newly-ac- Then followed another burst of nninircd tefritrv into a ball ground, j controllable grM and lamentation, loudwhile the girls "began to search for a er nQ, longer than the tirst. in the midst witable ltitation for a play-houie. tf( wfaich the giant's heart must have reThere were iix little girls who be toted, for one rf the great door slid jcaged to one plsy-family, rernpeseata- , .oddeQlj open, letting in a fkod of snntives of six different real families fn tbe . iwht letting out six sorrowful little village. Minnie Wells, the minister's 1 Jrfs, with tnmlded clothes and tearlittle daughter, was only six years old; 4inc4 tmCm, Dot Wtiiisms belonged to the village . fhev did cot wait to find the step.
Fay Ferris represented the aristocracy. M they fell upon each otlier in a hern French mertmi sad high-heek-d boots, wiukrmf heap of br gJit-cokrei dresswhile MaUie McConald came from the ; w from wbk h rmtriided six pairs of lower ranks of sceiety. nnall shoes straggling to extricate tlu-ir These little girls were all about seven ow, from thelamving naass jThis years of age; but tbe mother of this In- WM tinallv aeccMnplhmed. and just ss tervsUng family. Mary Washburn, was 1 the woiid reading class were taking aider and was also the cause of the u-r-; th,.lr pi on the recitation seat, six ror and humiliaUon which came to forion, Httlc objects filed Into the schooitbem one suiuma day. j room. Tt wss durimr the nooa intermission . u ut. ..u.. wm nat at an end.
that Mary joined her family, with eye T mn thy had lost all of their agtow with excitement, exclaiming: j bmMrhoi(i kIs; had htJand Iheia-
"Uii. my: i guess iummi , kItm dreadfully ia ttoetr fast ms r ns now a really, truly houseand m nd torn their iieslM,
we eaa have a bed-room, and a kltrnen.
and a parlor, and everything we want, and we won't let a single boy into it
Ua, where a nr awsssiHwwwr vfncea, sxcitedly. . .
"Tost just JoUow me, amt see wnat I've found." Mary answered, as she led ths way. with grew imnmrtance. And, sure enough, there it stood, a "really, truly" house, as Mary had asid, with roof, and fioor, and great nee doors oa either side just tbe lamUsst nlav-honse in the world.
so that an txplk it e'frTkw .m.JUmmA mi ixtMit hat the most tertiMe
i py JESfliKJS
allied tms wnen aiw wv 7stand In a line, and awatt Mr. iHjsmhTs verdict. Tiembling with aprebims forebodings they stood there, whim the coptens tears flowed af eh At length they hea'd his step la ths hall, the step which thev time, but which wmnodlike a knell ot doom as they awaited hit , He entered the room, heard theirpW;
ml story, and then usstr
iL. - " ' 11MI11III in IHT wv- 1 .
dsnmI to move ia and take poisesaion at t EfT' u the oldest, wm pmced
"Bat there ain't aav steps to It, and
how'll ws ever get inf' asked Fay. doiefolly, as she glatieed up at the great, open door, so far above. "We'll make us some steps,' answered Mary, who wmeoaalto almost any emergency.
A large oox my nw Htiu. miA, mmt to work to roll It to the
side of the new hosste, under the door, regardless of white aprons and clean hands; and then, wRhshrrnkscf dolljtht, they olambered 1st and explored the lrtfhefsmllT that inoved out wasn't the leastest bH neat,'' said Nellie, riewing the fioor ia diemny. w.'ll 1,. m. tAonmoh house-olean-
" said Man, energetically. "How,
children," she added, "I want you to
ail go to the oU Mnjr-aouss, ana mure theluraltore and dlskes to oar new
Jsdsm Bator or the minister's
hoaid call sad find la
There are thirteen thousand oabIrivew in Hew York. ndH imeaks well or their honesty that daring the naet -ear awlynmefefm tkwsaad nrtfc eft la their vehfaJesweta tonmd over o the safe keeping of ths polios. -JV. Y.
ii iw k. Wow hard thev md
work, those six MtOe girls! Pleotl of carpets, bits of bvoke crockery, odds Mdeads of almost everything, which
the leal mothers m ww.fj ttiMstiMl to the ol at -house ai otfierent
foremost mef the rest directly behind
her, in a one. , . "Forward, march! said tfawins. ht a voice of stern oomtttnad; and te melancholy Hneadraaced. Mr. Donald stood at the door, hmdiag into the hall, and ai they passed him hs He then
lew ears lurnro iu" j ua marched solemnly la eZ2ZlZ them no the stairs into the augJresence ofths young ladaad Wpmen of the school, after which he his station at tbe door, admiatotered a box of equal severity en m JheelUtle culprits them took their nests, with hot cheeks and hotter ears as reminders of tlwir ofiease. For days afterward they took n la- . , ... m MSMi DW4
wouki go away by themselves nfJ
overtneirureaoiui .rvrvfa imes.
tri bated to the piay-oonee s iMae. times, were bfoujrhtbv armfnls to the j rmmm.
A man has died J"JIt apple. It Is fair to"tj!Z hi ate the ptoeitpile forty-atnajfesrs ago, when las waa a boy.--Cf
new house, and tW of PWfptra-
imler the ege t orewa, a a.. t J al 1 mm
sl.. mA.A Jsas4 nl
IJf 9U IPMrlTU eSf seeamaw wew - - - 5 mimmtt tafc-.ttiw-Uto
a mora ilaaasiOhi
aa,ilHWeiImiala
