Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 29, Number 18, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 January 1887 — Page 2

tquaoc at mna ma.

Ctoa P

i,ar

Pax ruAXcieeo, Jea. !T.-luIowmttua 1mm hast been received neee toat toe MiMMMT Parallel. Which Miled taMU here M Friday for Aatorm. 0l. wdha Mnirn1 mift. kM bee driven ashore uc7 the Point LoM ! atottoeat the (fehia (Mm. and mi uauncMe t"tttr of giant powder intocnro TIM report J that th OK HoU and sml other MUding wwi destroyed bp SMmntoaton. The vessel hud bowtbHM tec itaataet adretM winds and wm carried auto reck by email tido. The euptota and orew took to tM boat and Mm uunhie to mane a madia ia toe Mary K tx W tM Mtrauoe to to Harbor. The U4uiria MM WMftt to assist Mm

aoMoasr, but tndlnr her abandoned, most

of thw left fw UMiir station aooui om 4vHk- Boaa afterward m torribhi e

Cden occurred, caused no doubt by tbe Iter of. tM vessel upon toe rook. The aetlr amount of pottads of Hnt-j exnloded. InrrtMur

k tM vicinity wm wrecked. TW life-

SUVtof StotiOU WM Shattered. TM Signal station was eomidetoly demolished. TM nide of Uo CUf House nearest tM twmI vMlm to piece aad the wMlebulldiiMf wm bdry wrecked, ecepne He elevated Mtuattou o M TM aumerous b thins d l ceacert pavUhm on toe beach were damaed aad their window wore all broken. ThefiM conservator of Adolph Huttro 0 tM MSght WM tT.taed. It MOBMd V fall to pieces, AU Uie windows in Mr. atotUVs hoes were fcrokeu. Tare of the ttfe-seriag crew, who were left to camp on tM beach near the wrecked vessel, were blown into tM air and severer injured by tM concussion and tM faU. One ef them, Horsr Sm'th, has nearly every fetatln ais limbe dislocated. He enters rreatlv, out It i theoght that M wUl recover. TM others, Charle Rogers and JeM WiteM, wore lew severely Mrt Captain Hayslip of tM llfe-savina; station suys a great ware followed tM expieaioa, rolling ttp the beacn like a MMlware. TM aaok of tM exploaion wm like aa earthquake. TM waole eMff Mek. TM who Md pone to bed in tM station were thrown TiolenOy out Kpo tM floor. TM Cllf Howe will Mre to M entirely rebuilt. DCATH OF GENERAL HAZEN.

NffiAf HERO

TM CMeC tM Sigml Service Mf"

m4 a Rfftt8fTN OeW-ACatmMMl

itfiiHi VtMisAwx. Jan. 17. General W. B.

MMen, ehlef alsnat ofttoer, died bore of

dtabetle eoM at eigat o ciock mm eren ief.' Qeneral Haaea bad suffered front dlabotee for seme years; Mt of laie, bnvkt bnproved in health and strength, hope were entertained of hk eemplet recovery. At tM reception to tM diplonutk corps (riven by tM Preeident tawt Thursday might, M took a Mrere cold, causing him to keep bk bed on Friday. On Mtttrdnr M wm up and reported himself much better, seying he would go to hie oflice on Monday. Yesterday morniag hU phystokM, Dr. 7. r. Harvey. U. 8. A., was summni to Me him soon after daylight He at once repaired to his room andfenndari atormMg ehange in his eoodition, snegeMiBg a poisoning of tM blood freat hie oonsUtntioeal disease. Dr. KarTey at onee adopted aeaaares to overcome Me eonditton and reetore streagth. A eenenltotlon wm also at once sought with TW Tl T. KuatiartAB. of tM SHST. wM

agreed in tM main with the attending y - j. a . . a .

pnyMOMM. iMcaewMeeniettio w tretne gravity that hi relattves in this eity were iaf orated, and tMy at onee gathered aboat hint and spared no effort to bring bin relief. Rome Improvement reenHed front tM treatment, but toward evening kls symptoms became aggravated. ai at tka irmt nMiueat of tM famllr

Tr. Lincoln wm also called maad met

Drs, Harvey and Huntington to coesntta tien. Brery nteMHre tMt skill or scienoe ceehi anggest failed to rally tM sinking eofeer, and be breathed bk last at eight deck. Hie in el illneM wm ot aooontIMMMd with safferinf. and hht death we entan and without a struggle. General Haaea wm born at Weet Hartford. Vt., on tM 27t of Mftomber, 19M. In Hit, he wm appointed a endet in the mftttary academy at Weet Point and grftdMted in 186. In Heptomber, mi, he took eommand of the Porty-flrat Ohio regIment and served with distinction to the eiese of the war. when he wm in oomeond of toe Fifteenth Army Corps. Oen. erei Hnaen wm appointed chief 4gl elieer in Deeeamber Wn, anoeeedinf QmeralMyer. Mrs. Haaea and her only son are now la Parle, where they hare Men for several

TM

mt Mmt Vneera

ww- Me WW Mtaiatntod

Xnw Yonau Jan. IT. Convicted 'need

ier" Arthnr McQaade wm toton from tM

Temha a few minutoa after om e'etook by

two depattos, who accompanied huav Ut a coach to tMOrand Ontral dpet, where tM patty touk the tenia for Mnf Wag prison. Mr. McQuade'a brother nmey,

wm om of tM party, ittuu! &fsr 1m a'eiAok tM under-

sheriff Mtered the Tombs and with the

aid of toe sMriT fopreientntivM mmcuffed McQMdo and then fare the folia wring receipt to Warden Walah: Off v Pnwotr, Jan. 17. miatrri fvem TM. vTabm, vmfden, the aeay of tea fntiowmg named prinaar M be eMvayed M tM StaM prison: Arthn J. McQnade bribery leveayeaf. ttignril Jno. M. SAXcoa, Uader sheriff. MoQnade wm eutokly hurried into a carriage and driven rapidly to the Grand Central depot. I bad leaked out that

MeQuade would go m tM iwo o train, and there wm a large crowd of people waiting at tM depot McQaadc,

who wm hand -case to arny m the one side and under SMriff Bartoa on the otoer, stepped lightly from the carriage on arriving at the., station, and

tM mo, making tnetr way laronga vm crowd, took neat in the smoking car oi

tM train. TM train arrive ai o at p. m., and wm met by a big crowd at tM station.

MeQuade wm at onee driven to tM riua nd vu MmMved there bv Warden

Amah, Keeper Jim CoaMtightoa and State

Detocuve Jadcaon. tm uwier rooeivcw tM eommitment from under Sheriff Sax-

ton and handed it over to Chter UJer Baleock. who immediately led tM way to

the chaplain's omoe.

XcQtiftde. on entering tM omee was directed to fold his arms and f noe tM wall.

After being in thia position for a lew minutes, he wm ordered to tarn around and wm asked m to his former Mbit ot life, whether he could read and write, what hie sentence was, and whether M nr mninvMl at tM time of his ar

rest, lie wm told that he could receive a package every two months, a visit once In

two months, write a tetter onee a

im receive as many m were u -McQuadewMtbea onntioned m to bis behavior while in prison. He wa then marched to the State shop where M wm tfraved and dre.hd in prison garb. Dr. Barker, the prison physician, then examined him. and M wm taken to his cell, which is No. 997, on toe nfth gallery, and almost directly over JMonc. He wm not pot to work today, Mt tomorrow M will be given a position in tM laundry and a oMuee to Warn how to

starch shirt.

In

fjmnm lammtol

PtTTsncMen. Pa., Jam, 11 TM report sent out from thm city tMt Mr. John Arthur and her parenU, Mr. a? Mrs. Clarke, were serkmnly prMtmted and Mw ttl 'am ifttwit nf tM rful of Mbw

Xinn Vm Sandt their graad-daughler, of

inteago, TO tKi' on nor murnngw vnmvmeat with Augustus gpiee, are gtvnUy exaggerated. Reporters were refused admittance to the palatini resweBce of Mrs. Arthur and Mr. Clarke, but an intimute f rtond of tM family stated htat night tMt althouirh tM fmmilr wre rroatlv annoyed

THE NEW SOUTH.

WaysM Jtonety Cinimnm Vvm It.

The new South km liHtntl h atrlkinjC anil aittlftenitt exprUii in th apparMC of Mr. Ttvuholtn, ol South CaroUtt, the Cuatytroller of the Currency, aud Mr. Grnrh", uf Girjfi. this editor of the AtlanU CW'lnto, a fZWt at the annual dinner of the New EttgtaiMl Society, in lHil4ei)hltt ami New York rcUvely. The at rain of remark nt (Jbr wnetl djnjter i alwny jmtriotie, and the aieechra watnfnlly town with flowing nn4 tondw Units to the civil war aiul the Union oJ-

and chagrined, they were in their Mual t Jt rf $ tinrfore,

from that young lady, in which sM any: ; tuvngeat w usmav I am determined to marry the condemned the ntitlat of such a Xttrttarn oomnnny

Anarchist if I have to do it on the near. ! m uther at theee dinners, ami by their

KLONOS TO RAILROAD.

fold." SM said that she understood that society in PitUburgh and elsewhere was greatly shocked at what it called ' her disgraceful action." 'W ould you call it dlsrmoefulinvour bv-toM days," she said.

Hf you learned that a girl wM worabip- . t . I.V.I

ed true ueroiem, m x no, nan nwiwi

KoMUtk or Oaribaldil August nptoa is their Mstl in ererv particular, and loved

liberty just a greatly m tMy, but, like them, he Me to suffer from the ppreeeor.

Did you think Koeri ntmei a ennaw because he died on the scaffold! Some

did. So it is with August Kpk at pres

ent. He i called a murderer ant a as

iMitnid iH-arinr no leai than by the

fruiitne8 ami elonttencc of their

siweche lMnkl show to the mmt ke-

tieal what worthy torn they ittwt wsen, and what sincere f Heinle they nre. To these dtetinrutehetl ointors who

in the two great cities apoke for the new South mttat be wWed Mr. Jam ritelan, of Tennessee, who is just elected to Congress in the Memphis

district, and who in hi own district

ami among h own Southern fellow-

eni. neoMJ mrww """' ' , : sain. but one day he will be looked on citizen nrovcHl itiiuelf to be, with Mr.

Ma martyr." Trenholm and Mr. Grady, a man of

KM says that Th broad comprehension and sagacious tSSSJSA h?.. 8SL ; view,. AlArf tte ntlanten, it .t r-M.i tA K.hurr am who was j be understood, sneak as men who,

looked down umb in his own country, i without renunciation of their local feel-

came to this land and Mid high positions. , nf their State nrida or of their"

It mw the same with Spie. Mlsa aa jloHor aml affecUon ot the men with

wS wa 1 -h- tbey Stood fast for what they hi .nuit wtuatrr's martvr. but air , held to be a true cause, own without

Mr. aad Mrs. F. T. Lust, of Oakland, also near relatives of Miss Van Zaadt, say IMv Mver thought tM lady capable of committing sueh aa outrageously foolish act and now disclaim all relationship to

..r.. tin,, ;ta rtafaat nil tllM nnilM.

. invltAVIt'lt w twwn. - ' queut toUl change of conditions in the life around them. Thus Mr. Thelan . savs:

I "Hitter to my taste m were tM results of tM

Mr. Miss Vm Zaadt's grandpnrento. Mr. ! etvU war. day alter day has reoeneiled e to .' . . 1 tium. aiwlMwvliteedmeeftkewisdomoreheer-

aad Mrs. Clarke, are both over eighty years of age, and feel what they term "tM

disgrace" very iceeaiv.

NOT RESPONSIBLE.

j Secretary Bnyard

Party Is Nt Keep

Mys

mlfalc

Wash t xerox, Jsa. 17. "Hon- 8.8. Cox is

a very sick man," said hie private secretory to a reporter of the United Pre test aigbt; "and I wish you would make K known to the country, m his matt matter is accumulating dally, and his phystoiMS wilt not allow him to transect anyhnsinss waatooever. TM Congreeswan ht a great deal wone off tbaa many of his friends Mre supposed, and M may net be able to get about for several week. Dr. Bliss heps to hare hhu out within ton days, but he m far from sure of K. Youwouedbe iitind to ms tM iaBMM amount of, moil that fat daily received sddrsssid tohhm. People all over the country are wiWsg to aim about matters cowa acted wtti toe admin IsUation or the Soverastent. I believe there are fewer letters reserved by him from his owa district in Kew York them from My other section. TM letters pour ia from tM Motto, South, Mast and Went, and of course tony will Mve to remain uMMwered until toe CongreseuMM recovers." About four 'dock yesterday sftorn Mr. Cex wm attacked with quite a severe hemorrhage, which hM caused bis friend j u Then to understood

to M indkaUons of nMumonia, and H is

wis that the doctors are ftghMr to prevent. Mr. Cos says M contracted a sevom eohl shortlv after the holidays by

sieotuM in hi room at tM hotel before It

had been properly heated, and thai bis

present 111mm is tM result.

GENERAL HAZCN'S FUNERAL. DfaMtM mt tM KHMhM renHK the

Hctnrn of Mr. KnseufromKwrepe-Ht Ieth s Parprbie to Many. Washington", Jan. 18. The rematas oi General Hasen,wM died here Monda night, were token yesterday from Xo. 1897 F street, wMre he had lived ia apartments since the departure of Mrs. Haaea for Europe, to the residence of Mr. Wsh ington McLean, oa Lafayette square, jiere tM body Mm in a cloth-covered casket, dressed in his full army uniform. A cablegram wm received from Mrs. Haaen yesterday asking for full particulars concern-

Ibg Mr ihmm s seatu, &oob vice about returning to this country. General Hasan will be buried with military honors on Wednesday, at twelve o'clock, from St. John's Churea. His remains will be temporarily interred at Oak Hill or Rock Creek Cemetery. The tnnl intermemt will be made after Mrs. Huen's return from Europe, probably at Hiram, O., his old home. The pall bearers wiU he Adjutant-General Drummond, PaymasterGeneral Rochester, Quartermaster-General Helablrd, General DuaM, Chief of

Engineers and Surgeon ueeerat oore. General Sherktoa has cMrgeof tM military arrangement for the funeral. TM signal office wm draped in mourning yesterday In memory of General

Hum. His death was a surprise to many ia the bureau, who had Mt beard of this serious illness on Saturday or Sunday, aad who first learned of his death ia tM asoralag journal yesterday, or were apprised of it whoa tMy reported for duty ia toe morning. IN FO"a FIGHT. FMl Aranow Inaucar n Wm m M Ktckt-Kmr System. Chicago, Jm. 17. Mr. P. D. Amour, after vanquishing the Knights of Labor in tMir battle over the eight-hour day, hM vu-u AMmm tM muntlet to the Brick-

htyers' Union, and m interesting struggle

M SOW going On in cousequoace. m

mm over Mr. Armours action ia

regard to the bricklayers on some of his

stock-yara weric Alter engaging Garry, a member of tM union, m his fore-

m, by toe year, r. Armour mmteu w

tM men working ton hours, oarry eadearored to enforee toe order, when tM

rest of tM frrtcKjayers swses. rrj

case came tofore tM union m once.

aad he wm fined fJW, wntca m

Ms refused to pay. TM or tea layers

were then called off all tM buildings in

whose construction Mr. Armour wm intereeted, eMopt the Armour Mission,

whkh tM mien excepted on account oi

Its character. 84 nee then a numMr oi

bricklayers-just Mw many is la question-have been imported from the country and put to work at tea hours. These

m are mat soeiuoaa. um nu

tM unkm to reach them to call them off

the jobs Mve failed.

"Armours action means simpiy inai, ne hi beginning tM Sgat against tM eight hours to help the contractors, who dare not do it themselves," said a member of

the union yesterday. "He is going h ina I , .t. i

sort enough men acre oa an wi e give

tM contractors a foroe with which to start toe war upon toe union ngain, and a . t. i ... ea

try W Mat us out oi our etgat soars.

lw9 IBaWuHlt far the Kxees-

tve PisMrle Award.

Washixston, Jan. IS. TM Baltimore Hhh today pubUshes tM followiag: "Secretory Bavard, ia answer to an inquiry on tM subject, said M did not see how any disclosures affecting the excessive fishery award which we paid to Great Britain could bring any of tM money back into tM treasury. We had accepted the decision of tM arbitrators, paid the money, and. so far m tMt wm concerned, that wm toe end of it. He said this administration, of eourse, had ao sMre or lot ia that transaction. It wm conducted entirely under a Republican administration, "aad there wm bo Democratic responsibility for it whatever. He had thought at the time, as many others did. and he thought now tMt tM damages awarded and paid were very far in excess - U B At -

of what Canada wm xainy ana justly entitled to bat, m he had said, there wm m remedy for that. The negotiations concerning tM exclusion of American fishermen from Canadian waters were still pending, and the department was certalsly doing its utmost for the upholding and protection of American rights, but at tM present stage he wm not at liberty to make aay statement m to tM condition of tM negotiations. Concerning tM communication of Secretary Manning to Coarree. M saidH would not be becoming for

him to express My opinion either in toe way of oommondatton or eoademaatioa." " ANOTHER FORFEITURE.

tnent, and convinced me of the wisdom of cheerful submission to the will of Him rho brought them about. TM union of these States hM been preserved and deelsred indissoluble. A great and disturbing eetsUtuUenal question ms been nnslly aad forever settled, and slavery has been forevrr abolished; it m longer taratshestMfaff fame of a street and free Kepub-

He. BecMte it was involved in tM question of eeasUtutloaal right I foufht four years in its defense. I tell you now, upon tM honor of my manhood, that I would Hnht eixht Jr, though ' my hairs are white, against any attempt to rehMtate it in any portion of this ooutineat." I Mr. Grady's speech was one of the most striking that have been delivered by any ciUxen of a Southern State stHce Mw war. It was very eloquent- His , tribute to Abraham Lincoln was very impressive, and the effect of his address delivered to that Jfew England company will be most serviceable to the country: "Greet types, like valuable plant, are stew " to flower and fruit, Mt from the union of those colonies came M who stand as toe first typical American, the first wM comprehended wfthln himself all the strength and greatnes, all tM majesty and grace, of this Republic Abraham

UBCOin. He wm me sum oi rnin ana ctHer, ur in his ardent nature were fused tM virtue ot both, and in the depths of hi great soul tM faults of both were lost; Mt he was greater than Puritan, greater taan Cavalier, Is that he was American, and la that ia his homely form were first gathered the vast and ster- , nag forces of this Republic, charging it with such ' tremendous meaning and so clerattag h above hunmn suffering that martyrdom, though Jta- , famously aimed, eawe m a ntuhr crown to a life eoaseerated from the cradle to human liberty." Mr. Grady said also: j " TM relations of tM Southern people with ' tbe negro are close and cordial. We remember with what adelity he guarded our defeaeeies ' women and children, whose suehMds and fataj ers were ngettog against his freedom. To hi i eternal credit be It said that wMnever M

struck a Mew for his own liberty he fought in open hetCe, and when at last he raised hie Mack and humble hands that tM shackles I might M it rack off. those hands were innocent

Mil " lSiekv

Thm IS mewiasm mmrm itii wmm .... . , mmnlila,- Aj iMt la toe Mails of Congres. Kow and then the estoenMsd Mffiakr gel to Im an extremely itretig orfan. Thia id more apt to be the case when it strike at somebody Um'x )Mtrty antl hit iU own. It does eo in the following wlitodnl, which we y unlirc, except tlie hadiM. and which bftrar in a atrikiiiar wav the KeiHih-

-sr w liean iwtrty'u ovei'Wt'euing lve for the hliet. llae retnentlwr, in rewling it, that the KannbHeuns Have a major ity in tlie Unltwl State Senate, ami hnve had nmtvly all the time sin we the

war: Tit Iowa Mm MtM well Mrs: " Colossi D. li. Henderson, of Iowa, is tM heir to John A. lagan's fame m invtneible ehnmphm of the ttokher' iMlrt in Washington. TM auntie falls on worthy shoulders, and will be wore by a mm wMt heart Is m true m stoat." This I well saw. Ueneral Hawley will soon M the only Union General left in the SeMte, if General Harrison Is net re-elected, and Cokmel Henderon will stand llret Is tbe mw Congress a the stronger and most devoted champion of tit iiaiaa uridlers. lie has toe streneth of

heart and ability for the trust. The South keeps Its great rebel Generals In Congress. Let it be hoped that the people of toe North, in their election of United State Senators this winter, will reinforce the strength of tMtlslen soldiers In Congress. Not even om of the States of toe great West has n Unkm soldier in toe Senate mw-ot will not hnve after General Harrison retiree. In this keeping tM faith of the Went with the halt million of Its mkm who went into the Union army? Is this the color of union blue to he retired from Congress, when the color of tM rebel gray m constantly being Increased there! Will not some Western Bute, this winter, send a Union soldier to stand in toe United States iSenate for the Unloa side! Think of it. Forty Keptiblicans in the United States Senate and only two of them Union soldiers. And these two from States that go Democratic, in Presidential elections. Oh, how the dear old party does love the dear soldier. Soon there will be only one soldier Senator out of thirty-eijfht It.MmhlieHiH. All. wlmt devotetl affec

tion this is. The soldiers do the votiny, but the railroads get tho Senators. And it hh just dawned on our estec'ntod contemnornrv. How deeply

interested in the soldier's welfara it

must be not to have noticed so striking a fa ft, loll"" h).

We are glad to halp our esteemed

rniitnutrkrrv to nlaee itfll HHU US

party on record. It offers "no excuse

for its twrtv's nettled of the soldier.

It sinmlv states the fact. We quoted

all it word. Not even one of the

n-eat Western Stated ha a Union

soldier in the Srnate. The Senate is recognised by th Republican party as bclongiiig to the railroads, not to

the soldiers. JMs Motut jAiaaer.

The Partisan's Answr.

The am DMisrisK FevfeKed tM Unearned

I anils arantea tnsw uvieao. mw Kongo Vioasburg KaHwny Paosed by tlw9 SuumVw

WashisotoX, Jan. .-TM bill MClar- , JcZ bltakei Tin lovinTarMn to every ingtM forfeiture of toe lands granted to ! hyto 1 t?M fonRuT.

Lna Mir ir leans, naion ivoure et n.s

kHrvRiiivarnAniisiir. which wns nassed

by tM Senate yesterday, declares forfeited toe lands granted to the railroad company by the act of March 8, 1371. m to v.t urt nf tM mat situated on tM Mst

side of tM Mississippi river, and also as to that part oa the west side of tM Mississippi which Is opposite to and cotormiaous with the oart of the New Or-

Imim Facile Railway Company which

mm Mve maltreated him. raseats have misted him. Mth'.s treatment lathe South to-day is an honorable protest against injustice to this simple and sincere people. Faith kM been kept with him m spite of eniumnious aerUoM

to tM contrary by tnose wm assume to peK for us or by frank oppeMnU. Faith will be kept with him in the future If toe South boW bar reason and iaterritv. Tbe mw .South is

Mamored of her mw work. Her soul is stirred with the breath of mw life. As she stands,

Br, XetMnm

Yv Ynr. Jaa. 1T Tk hsliamt at

At, Stophea's Churea wm crowded last

svtntng by a mass mewing ot pnrmnwnU.IU 4a thai which wan Mid Hater.

eayaltornooa. Dr. Carey prMidod, Psrmiieioa wm obtained from Asoittaat PrieeiCurraa by a eemmittoe to bold a imlr tAjataht. Joha M. Kaarv

mawte a spirttod tddreet pvotostinf igiiiii t sS tetemi hJT ftaaadlaa 'aAnMamaaAV aaaam HI rMMTM OT IMtT MWTuPai MlVrf MMI a . ii a a . a a i a a at.

ameasrme; tarn we oanrca ismms sa ne

esaaMaumoa. ur, uaeer, in a a ' " Am 1W UTAIwm

JJ Jm maPl(l(rtj eHs wemaV IB4aunnla( aaHf

ch 1 7J,r..r,:r-,

vunnttad aa JanuarV 5. 1981. It ' -tl. IvmIUmOu, air iul lnntriav nut

relinquishes ana oonnrms to im .ew urleans Padic Railway Company (a the

WH1 Ceiebrato H. fatrkk's My. Bostox. Jm. 17. The St. Patrick's day parade, which ha been abandoned during Use mat two or three years, wm last night voted to be held this year by the meeting a toe Irish societies here, musMei fiamt An lag Manse. 'kw Tone, Jm. 17. Xiehaei B. Davitt, tM Irish ngHator, who arrived last night

from Philadelphia, ia an interview to-day sVsied that t wm his intention to remain la tots eity until his departure for Ireland on the HU test "I have been ia this country," Mid he, "for six months, and 1 feel that It is my duty to baetoa heme. I am m receipt of atony totters urging ray speedy return, pi situation in Ireland is extremely critical, aad I shall enter body and toul htto the JhrbtM He did not believe toe Torn weuht be suceeseful ht obtoiniag the paenga e eseretve mensUef toat heme rule would be osModedl Xrehtou wMbhi torsive montas

Mslgaee of tbe Xew Orleans, Baton Rouge VicksMrg) tM lands not so declared forfeitod-such lands to be located in accordance with the map Mled by the Hmmr Arlaaa Paciftfl CSUSMIT in the De-

MTjmt at tM Interior October. 1MI and

Xovember, 19W, Indicating the definite location of tbe river route; provided, that all tM lands occupied by settlers aad still remaining in their possessloa, shall be doomed exempt from such grant. (This proviso is part of Mr. Gibson's amendment ! Mast Keep friend WHfc the Heathen

trU4JWWSe Ottawa, Ont, Jan. 18. Advice from British Columbia state that omcial aetiftcutioa hM just been received by tM Provincial Government of that province

from toe Britten uoverameni w van eneci that tM Chinese must be allowed to enjoy tM same unrestricted liberties a other

people ia the province, and must not he interfered with. Unless these wishes are

carried out a threat is made that tbe Im

perial Government will not grant a man subsidy to the Canadian PaciBe railroad. The communication further state toat it the desire of Lord Balisburv to keep en the best possi

ble terms with China, m in tM event of war wRh Russia it would be of the highest importance sot to disturb tM friendly feeling now existing between China and rirt Mritaln. The same intimation was

upon toe limitless boo ion, she understands that Mr emancipation earn heeMse, In the inseru table wisdom of God. her honest purpose wm ersssed and her brave armies beaten. TM is sakl la m spirit of tone-serving and apology. I should be unfctst to the South if I did not make this ptotn in thia presenee."

His closing appeal to ew Liiglaml whether site will " permit the prejudice of th s war to remain in the heart of the connnerors when it has died in

the hearts of the conquered " was most touching ami impnwive. New England certainly would be recreant to iier own best impulse if 9 the appeal were not answered in the same wanly awl friendly spirit ia which it is made. llarnr's Weekly. i Instead of an injury to reform), the repeal of the Tenure-of-MRce law is a signal service. It goes far to place the resnongibilitY for nominations

where it belongs npon the President. But it does not accomplish that result entirely so long as "Senatorial courtesy" gives the practical power of confirmation in each State to one or two Senators, whose ascendancy in deter

mining nominations becomes consequently very great The repeal of the law should ' lie followed by otwn ses

sions to consider Executive nomlna-

given to the Dominion Government at the , tions and by it statement of reasons i . . t. ika CJiluu Tw juration i t ..aw.1 wl.tM, tnuat Xtm a vilun.

time they put the Chinese Immigration

bill through Parliament. m s m A Ofeuutte Waiev Supply Scheme. Kew Yosk, Jan. 18.-TM Legislature will be ashed within a lew days to grMt a eMrtortoaeompanyto be knewnss the w.wVArtr ad.Hadon River Acnueduot

CompMy. TM com pwy propose Vs bring water to Bew York and Brooklyn from the Adirondack, a die tone ef mltos, bymeaM of a oaaal eighteen feet deep, running along the Hudson, with a capacity of m,WQ,(m galkme a day. The cKtot along tM Hudson will be welt supplied. ThVsVtlmatod cost m ,,. The only water werka that compare ht nafttMle wua thia ara thnsa that BUMlv Tien ML

The Thmaa siausaaot m SM mtk lea

uMNNHswA tamt JTuvrnwuTS Wa 9uP a(Mrtaru

tor removal, which hi tMt lie a volun

tary Kxecntive act, ami then some of the

worst evils of the spoils system wowki be swept away. Httrjm'i Wkly.

It ie not strange that Mr. Blaine ' auMrinar from the nervons shock ex-

nerkmeed when the "Boston Burehard" i.at JP

tleclared, in ms presenee, ax ute w England dinner, that "the Boston of Winthron and the FnrHnni was not the . . . au as mm

Boston of CelliM and u Brten." xna ibis ahoaM come inetM Mr. Biainahad

pertoctod new plans for aptoring the Irtoh veto will he looked upon by the MnfrwhMM m a seoftftd interpeatttamef fmhkM.-if. r. rferH.

"What answer has New England to this meiwage?" asked Henry W. Grmly in hie "New South" address. "Will she permit the prejudice of war to remain in the heart of the conqueror when it has died in the heart of the conquered? Will site withold save in strained courtesy the hand which straight from his 'soldier's heart Grant offered to Lee at Appomattox?" We a a a a

do not know what Aew r.itgianu s answer will be ; but we are inclined to Iwlieve that it will mt permit the prejudice of war to remain in the hearts ot the conqueror when it ha died in the heart of tht uonntiered, That tmrthin

of New England that fought in tiie war certainly will not ; and the same is true of the soldier clement everywhere. It is the non-combatant?, the Trihnntf of New York and of this city, tho jwtty partisans here and elsewhere which prefer to keep up the prejudice. It is they that meet the frank, free, full surrender of prejudice in men like Grady and the representatives of the "New South" with sneers like this: "If it if really to be a 'New South' the Republicans of the country will sdng the londMt halleluiah. The dinres for the

Old South' will be gladly put away when the new era is fully dawned. But it must dawn it must lm something more than mere moonshine." IMreit Free Vrm. NEWSPAPER DRIFT. Civil-Service reform commends itself to the appointing officers, as well as to the uninterested reformer. It secure better service. But that is oHly tlie smallest art of the reform.. The only men now who denounce CivilSerVioe reform are those who want to

make something out of politics, and

fear the test of merit. ifoHm JJerM. Senator John Sherman may not Iks indulging Ids well-known antipathy to the South in recommending an appropriation of 1100,000,000 for coast defense which lie proposes to restrict to the Northern cities of New York, Boston and San Francisco, but the people of that section have excellent reason to construe it in that way. Mujfnh Times. A Republican organ says: "Mr. Cleveland could not have a better opportunity to show his vaunted qualities as a reformer than in dealing with the 1'acifin mads " This orraii's candi

date for Mr. Cleveland's dwte ht a man named Blaine, who voted against the Thurman bills and, while in Congress, did every thing in hl power to prevent the Government from bringing the Pacific roods to book. ChtMg l"imc. The Republicans of Minnesota think tliey know how H earne about that their candidate for Governor ran about seven thousand behind the candidate for Lientonant-Governor. They think that Mr. Charles A. Oilman, who was a candidate lor the Gubernatorial nomination and failed to get it, not only sulked in hk tent but sent out

word to his friends to oppose the beam of the ticket. This belief is strengthened by Um fact that in those eountfM . a . a a

where Crilman wm expected t m j strongest Mr. McCHll gut the smaUet veto. CMccce Jfe, 1

SCHOOL AMD OHUHOH. Two hundred aainkders of flinufaw, Scotland, of different denominations, have united ia nu effort to reatsh the aOH-ehwrch going elassc. Mr. Henry Martin, of the Reformed Prwbyteriu Church of CinoiMnati, has ntal(ed twenty-live thousand Hoilars to Dr. Hapjwr'a ChrlaUan Collegw in China. The average salary of sohool toaehers in St Louia is too.70. Only twenty-six receive 9,000. Of 1,101 toncher 1,004 receive leas thau900 per year. St. Lmit W. , For manv years there has lieea a

custom kit up in the Grass Valley (Cal.) schools of setting apart one day . m ia.e a

n each year lor contriButious in am

of the immm. Kvery impil attending

school is exiHrclwl to contribute sonutliinir a itotato, stick of Hrewotnl or

something of that kind.

JihIsHiu? front tbe war in which

moHHV U miiiiiiv ito th bnevokiit

a ------ - f-j treasuries of the various denominations

it looks as though a good many people a " f.t r

were sielling missions wnn an u o-mis-wons. By and by, if things go on in thin way, it will be oh-mhmions! It is a bad spell. Chicago Advance.

In China, as in all Eastern coun

tries, the blind are numcroiin; and hitherto, as far as personal reading has m . t v a

been concerneo, tnti iiime nm not been for them. Moved by a de-ire to supply this want. Rev. David Smith, if Gimsby, EngUnd, is engag ed in bringing out an embossed Bible for the

Cliinttsc blind. The solution of the problem of city evangelization is to Imj found in (hid one word visit. To tlte standing qiicjtion: "How fdiall we reach the niafiei?' the answer is, visit them. The question generally means: How shall we get tiie mssee to go to church? The real problem is ltow to induce the church to go to the masscfs. Interior. A recent collection in two Swedish churches in Minnesota, in respond to an appeal for a missionary chinch tltcrc, resulted in forty dollars, all in coin, fifteen hundred pieces being winies, and only six coins were as large as a twenty-five cent piece. Almost every one of the two thousand ier.ons present gave something. Chicayii SUimlartl. Beacon Church is the name o a people's enterprise in Philadelphia,

a'hose tine budding' has just been tlwiieuted. The idea underlying the movement is the concentration atoHe toint. not only of religions interests and tho ordinary church activities, but of social and inteliewtual life as well. It is n church of the people and for the people, in which the administration of the Gospel, with its missions ami its charities together with tlie privileges attaching to other departments of the whole plan, is to Imj at tlie minimum cost free to all, burdensome to none. -PhiUnMphia Pre.

CARL DUNDER.

TM CMd

Gentleman Cheerfallr fy

eease mn a Canine. "I like to ask you if dare vhas some license to keep a dog?" inquired Mr. Dumler,as ho carefully tip-teed into the presence of Sergeant Bendall yesterday. "Yes, sir, there is." "Who geti him?" "You have to go up-ttairs to the oflice of the city clrk." "I)oan' sonuqKxly come te we after him?" "No sir." "Vhell, dot 7hns curious. Last week Shake goes omit mit Mt- Glemens to l.5 aunt, und he whizs homes dor.

Me keep him tied oop mit der iwk yard, und he vhas home only one day when a man walks into my place ami savs vhas I Carl Dunder? Ivhas. All right. He likes to get dot license money on Shake's dog. Der regular price vhas one dollar, but he make it seex shillings peeattse it vhas hardt times." "And yon paid?" "Vhcll, I doan' like tohafdotdog kihlt, you see? Eafery pody says he

vhassoochatlogashsnmeiis some uajri or lion two miles avhay. Next day a stranger comes in mit shmall pook in his hand tind a pencil oafer his onr. Vlias I Carl Dunder? I vhas. All right. He likes to get dot Hcciim; on KlmWn dow. If I tmid him to jMHite-

lKHly else dot vhas nothings mit him. He vhas a frendt to Shake, Iwwufcr, und he makes it fcefty cents." "And you paid that?" Vhell, Sergeant, dot vhas a good dog. If some lntrglnrs vitas a mile avhav lie howls und wakes u wi " saves us two tousand dfdlar. lw morning a stranger comes in. He bat some ldg on. Vhas 1 Carl Dunder. I vhas. All right. He like to get dot license for Shake's dg. M I W someiMMlv else I vhns a tool. ',1MV can collect dot llecnse nlss he haf dot badge on. Being ash I rhas shwindletl he make it twenty-nve cents.' Ami you were fd ontnigh to iay? Vhell, Sergeant, I iys taxes in turn

wards, und I rhas headnmr w MiiiiMlm clubs. I dog vhas great

on coons und elephants. Vha it some

shwindle o nsu? Certainly it wast Yen ght to be scat to an asyluml" , Sergeant, look at my eye, JW doan' you forgot hint! I vhas going home. SotaeiHHly vhill com in. yhs I Carl Dwader? I vha. All right. Sergeant, I shall shuenp ot dot pr like n sparrow on an elephant. I vhi uraak Mm in two Mad drag "im ttbaaghheajltmKd Noor until der coroner Unda only one ear and a shirt-bnttoa to hojd jn hv qaastout Geotl-pye! Aftot; I yhsi't

NU coma asm mm ",T."7 , ..J vha an honest man who haf to dc my fwnlly." Mr Tru trm