Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 29, Number 42, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 July 1887 — Page 2
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mqmmpL piiiqJiim pcaiwul mmjomom. fHQttrrrs oiuiwc, as onwurr a kvs. . faopsiiajir of in magmto ejaao o aa w maps f WmMit ainiaahafa. the In U I sea a si, Jfaaao- PinO i fm w ii f in i iwmiiih fc mif mm im tmm uw rMvM) atom f mhonuf itfMiii raa, wl lniiillliliinn T""1,T!1 aimamlid aea UHjf ll laaUlHind ate ah MaM leS-A ! A hoUUm! pertar. wit IhWMT ad
tapebtodUewHac .?, oatoriav, m MMM.7. 1 rtw jaet e4d SR1Tr,to, fM.MC.1W duria the preeediac mr, TIM total debt new, lea OMk MM tlMrT, aurtmta M .m.Mr. TIm total net cash aeteal sarnie ia the treasury la mm., whtmareoraf, it eatoeatod to 9K,nH.. IK, Om year afo, at the begiaalaffoc the laea tmt lt ool. h toeaaurv net void feed was H,mW and w ' kakfu4 mwmiI ttM.l9S.OTl M la- , mh ef ,,; the net HvWuad w mmjm aad w it i , a ef about IKtMMe deriag MM d-d silver dsltara vf stoattr. watto4fu(, wm4. tfca trMaar?- aw 1mM M4I.4(t,M af tmto aoU. or arlr K,M.Warn ihaa a Jaly 1, Taara ara imw K,Maa aUw4ar ailrar oaltora la arMlatfe fm aWat M,M,Md m ywrtfa Ta ihrar carlilUMtoa aaw ovteUwifex mtfrara K4t.lM.M7, aftiMt W t. m J4f 1, WK-aa laeraaaa of M41w9,M drto Um aat Jtoeal yaar. Caatoaaa caiaUff Jnae ajaaaatoa to Mja.Mt.fM. a ad latoraal nrtaw raeipto to Mt,tM,m Tb total raeeipta for tbc roar froai all aoareoa wera t97l,MiM; gatoa mt,m,m tor tke prdia aal roar. CaUaw rorofato for Um jroar Jaat ckMMd wor17,4nt.Mt; intoraal rerroewata wara l 15, 13, 447. aad recotaU from Mtarollaaeoaa aonreoa aaioaatod to tM.OH.0tt. Tals aaows aa taoroaaa, ooatird wita xkm praooaiag -roar of tMM,M ia evstoms racoipU, tt.M1.Sll latormal reveaae roeoiats aad M.1U.MC to roeeiata f roat Htoeanaaooaa Goraraatoat oxaaaditom for the paat aeal tost affffrftoa tM4.SIt.ltt, agit MK.4H,lti duriac tft nracediag yaar, aa tMTNM of MS,C,i Ortiinary expaoa far UMyoarjaatclosod wara 117,31, or, to rand auaibrs. m.Ml,m mors tlwa tk araeoding jaar, aad taa peasioa eawrca for the Tear just dosed waa I7S.tM,7, or 9lm.0M aaore than too aroeadtoff Tir. wklte tka iatoraat karf wm, HT,74!9. or t3,S00, toac tkaa avriaff ta praeodtor yr. WHk total roeoiota aaiosnUag to ta71,M9,SMl aad total oxaoadltaroa iacladiaic iS,000,akiktag foad, asosatiac to M1S.SK.. IM, tka aaria reraaa of tko aaat fiacml joar will agcrofato a Wat Mt,w9,&M, acatoat t,3t,tM sarplaa for tka flaoal yoar aadod Jaly MM. IN FORGIVING MOOD. Aatdh CaaartarfaHorsaa Othw CrJoalaato Tr hf Um PrealeUat. WisnxaToy, Jaly L Tke Freaideat has graated laardoas aad eammatod soateaeee as follows: Fraak Waits, convicted la tke Seatk era district of Xew York, of pa lag eoaatoroJaK eoias. aad seatoaoed Jaly 3, 3 MS, to f oar yoars imprtooaaseat, having aeeoaie oaiireiy etiaa. is paravwrv w express eoaditioa that ke skall retara to kas koaae to Africa. Oa aoooaat of kad health tke seateaee of A. J. Warree, eaarietod of keepiag an nUett diatltlery, aad seatoaeed April 5, MoT, to aerea mwmtks ia tka eoaaty jail at AUaato, 6a., ka aeea oemnsHtol to imprtoaamoat for eae taadred day. Tkeseoitoaee of Aadrew Simmons, of Irgtota, eearictod to Xovember, l of aotttog tta.aer witkoat a ltoeaae, kas keea aaspoadad. Joke W. Tamkesley, eearictod ia KaaVaky of Titatia tke intoraal rer ease laws aadl soatoaesd ia Oetoker, JMf, to eae year's imprisonment aad -to pay a lae ef MM, to pardor.ed, ?m ia atoe E. Backeriag, eearictod ia tkeUaMed Htates Coart for tke Middle diotriet ef Teaaeseee, ef paseiag counterfeit money, aadl seateaee postfeaed until Jaly t, MoT. Tke totter pardon ia based aoa a reeemnaendattoe from tke district attorney wko says tke moaey came Into tke eoarteto peaaositea in course of busi aeea, aael that ke paid K eat aot knowing its spurious okaraetor. Ia tke eaee of Jobs C Deter, osaTietod ef vteiataar iaternal rereaue laws, aad aaatoaeed Xarek S, 137;-to fear meatks toaprtoeaxmeat la jail in Faltea County, GM aadl to pay a Aae ef eae ksadred dot tars, tke President kaa commuted to tke eat already serredl aad pay. ;et MMiae. Oft. MGLYNN. ap eel FUest Bhhm1 KtwYoac July 1 Despite tke exces rit keaC latornattoaal Halt was peeked last nierkt with former parishioners of Dr. MeO-ayaa. Tkeexpeeted exeommua eatloa ef the prieat waa dwelt upon by all the afMekera. Joka J. Feeay prosiJM -aad Henry 6orfe, Jr., apke for a few mtoetea. Jsme J. Srakam, editor of the Oemslfc Jftrmtd, was the principal speaker, la reemarks were eatlluslastioaUy apptoaded. He said that tkaa sands of Cathahoa were willing to be excemmaalatodaaaaif a belief ia the toad for the people warranted exoemmuaieatiOB. The xeeaimantoaUea paper, he aaid. would net be worth the paper it waa written oa. These who were at present ope ratine toe eeetoetaetieal maekiae kaew s mack about hew to use it aa aa i rrtoior kaews about playing "St. ratotok'a Oar to toe hlerniaa:." If theeeetoataatioal amchiae trod lto charge, be -aaM taejr weuhl atoad as General Jack' aea dM. iatrechsd behind true Amsrieaa otttoeaehipv a barricade through which sen socio otastloal bullet eoukt aeaetrato. to A Tetotfe, IIL, July 1. Glorious rains this arteries hare ended the great draught aad eera la aew expected to renew Ha growth aad pastor to rerire. The wheat harvest to eaded and the grata la safe from taiury ky rata. "OeaatTAie, IIL, July 1 The toag prewaihae; aad Mtghttog drought waa broken ay fee rams erer thto seetfen yesterday. It to a remarkable faet that net a drop ef rem toil here daring tke aneeth ef Jaae. Cera was an injured. Caraaee, July 1 At the dosing sesslec. yeetsfdar ef the eoareatica ef the Amer toe BMpptojr aad Industrial League, resAaAdW ataM aaAaMBnJi uavauaal nam sm,annam ftnntVBfHrfl rrvlv BejMmran, WrBjl W9 Bj BJMnmVi faf gtesa the adeyttoa ef proper measures for t revfral aad extoastoei of the mer cheat aaertoe, aad also the need for tav medmee prerielon for the Improvement of the harbors and rhrers of the lake aad Ulsitoalppi valley and tke eeaneetlag of toe tokos with tke MieebMlppi rtrer. ta aupaert ef the metuttoas I lajir BajMdmfmBm' ammJakl ft avf 'laTlM ' mrW asunjgmjanaru; 0ajan uyi, Jtln ireJT1 tat Oengraesmoa Ouabaea aad Adam aadamt ammmmaaaaaV Bf amrTaammaa taaakaammeul asHuBt,Mtaat.smJB eW mj mmaaaaaamyaj, aj ataawmmmj aBamamaaaam Brra BBi aBV'VrK jbv Ab BAuaaAaaMV ahaMaaJaBmna aMaMa aaJaaaml al aaa Bnj BBBBmmmammmmmmaanar sVVBBBTnBBB) ra VrB mremmaj aaj mm
Betxaviujt. IIL, Jut? 1 A. terrible a eideet eeeertea yeetordejr atoralur m John Berth, about three mNm mUMMt ef Maeeeatoh, IIL Am eaftae f a threehkMr machine eaatsdee watte a a urn bar of usee were areead K, with awful effeet. TIM tellewtef is a Mst ef tba victims Mm Web, ktUed. win wb, both wtka Itmu Lsliwirr, arm blew set Peter Dumond, slightly injured. ltd ward g-hutler. le broken.
TIm water wm allow to get too lew u toa batter and more wm tot in wall u TV iUL Lka aoalor waa kot. Taa axatoatoa zol tawed, it waa akortly aftor als a'etook waoa rotor Dwaioad aad Joka Flab ar rlvad at tka Bartk fam wftk tka tkraak-tof-aiaeklM. Damoad owaod tka ma eklae aad kaa kaoa dotag Moarlr U tka tkraakla for faraaara to tka Ytolalty of Maaooutak. Taatordar waa tka tin aat for kia rialt to tka Bartk farm, aad wkaa ka arrlred with tka aaoktoo all tka farm kaads war at tka nato to moat klm. Damoad kad oafagad Joka Flak, a youag man twaatr yoars of ago, aa eagtaeer, aad tke latter raiaed steam. Wkoa tke awcklae kad koea ptwd ia aoaiUoa oa tke farm, Damead dimkod up oa tke machine, aad remarked to Flab: "Jekaafe, yo kare get more ateam oa tkaa yea ought to kara." -All right." said Flak, "I will remedy Flak aUemptM to pat to some more water. Ike terriWe explosloa followed. Tke maekiae was ktown up ia tke air and lodged on tke tkresker about tea feet distant. Flak was carried seventy. Ave feet la tke air aad instantly killed. Both hie legs were klewa oft, and oae 1 them waa found nearly a Week from tke seer a of tke aoddeat. A younger brother, wko waa standing aear tke maekiae, kad botk his legs broken. Peter Dumond, Herman Leakemerer aad Bdward Sckatler were arrange tag tke tkresker at tke instant of tke explosion, aad wkea tke engine atraok tke tkresker Dumond and Sckaetler were knocked to tke gronad aad Leakemeyer was knocked down aad imprisoned between the engine aad tke separator. Oae of Kchuetler's legs waa broken, bat Dumond was only sligktiy injured. Lonkameyer's position was perilous aad ke would probably have beea bamed to death kad not other farm hands, wko were la a safe position wken the explosion occurred, eame qukkly to his rescue. When taken eat of the burning tkresker one of his arms was found to hare beea tons off, aad was afterward amputated. Two fine horses which had been left standing near tke eagiae were instantly killed. When the engine lodged on tke tkresker tke latter immediately took fire, aad la about tea minutes aftor the explosion was reduced to askes, together with two farm wagons which were to close proximity. Tke seise ef tke explosloa was heard a mile or more distant, aad to less tkan Iftoea minutes aftor it kad occurred tkere were hundreds of people at tke soaae. Physicians were brouebt from Maeeotttab aad every thing possible was done to alleviate the sufferiags ef the injured. The condition of the youngest Flab is verv crkus and be may die. Joka Flab, tke young man killed, was twenty years of ace, aad was an IntelHgent young farmer, bul kad Terr little experieaee with machinery. He probably kad no idea kow low the water to the boiler of tke eagiae was or he woukl not have attempted to put more in while tke boiler was so kot. Wkea picked up kls body was unrecognizable. Botk legs ksd been blown off close to the body and his faee was awfully blackened aad scarred. Dumond, tke ewser of tke machine, who escaped without any serious injury, is well-known all over the country, be haying for years dene all the threshing for farmers around Xaseoutah. He was fairly well-to-do. A sad feature in connection with the accident was that the father of the Flak boy, who is oonf nod In the county jail on a peace warrant, had the news broken to him in hkt celL He waa nearly heartbroken wita grief, aad the fct that he could aot go to them made his anguish all tke more keea. MORE DYNAMITE. An Attempt. Whtoh LnakMy Failed, to tow Up the Chtoaga Crtm4Ml Ceart wKh a BjrnaanHe mak. Cmc a so, July S. A dynamite bmb, fullr ebarred. aad with the fuse buraed to withla a ejiartor of aa iaoh of thnahell waa found under Judge Baker's desk in tke Criminal Court last Tuesday evening. Court omeials and all tke authorities about tke court building are bewildered at the thought of what dtoholieal villainy was contemplated by the man who placed the murderous machine where it waa found. The matter 'has been kept a.utot for purposes ef iaTesMgattoa. Judge Baker presides ta the room where the -arektoto were tried aad condemned. He said to a reporter yesterday: "I waa swinging around ia my ekah wkea, all at once, I saw at tke earner of my desk what I thought was a base-balL Aftor giving it a ktok, and seeing it roll about in aa odd fashion, I picked it up. At eaee I saw I was mistaken and that It waa not a base-ball. I banded it to Ball if Rye, and, aftor one look at it, he exclaimed, 'Heavens, that's a bomb.'" Judge Barker declared that he had no Idea where tke bomb eame from, nor ceaM he divine any reason why it iheuld have been placed under his desk. I know it wasn't intended forme," ke said, It couldn't kare been." The bomb to made of block tin and glass aad resembles a fraa aew base-ball, but to mueh lighter. Oi cue side ef it there to a stout rubber bead whieh pretooto an epeniar, out of whieh project a small piece of fuse. It contained a substance resembling damp gray sand, whlok is unouestioaakly dynamite. It hi the same kind of missile tbat waa used at the May market riot, hut to muck lighter than the lead bombs Ltogg manufactured. The court eMoiato believe it was intend ed to destroy by dynamite the mala eeurt room aad these wko happened to be ia It at the time. M PaftanKLrHtA, July L The race between Wilkes aad Gossip, Jr., postponed from tost Thursday on account of unfavorable weather, was decide at Feint Ire esc eeurae tkto afternoon n favor ef Wftke. There were about three thousand spectators. The match wee for an announced purse of tt,M9, with tMW added provide! Wilkes record of z:l"4i waa broken. Only twe beat were run. Goeelp, Jr., retiring at teeeaaer te seoona. Both were by Harry Wilkes with ease to verv time. It was said that Gossip, Jr., was to if iw to' sharastartoia as aim pi abto
Vpm Mm
GnrmauMO, Fa., July 5. J aat aa the clock la the tower of the ooualy eeurt. houee buaeay night sounded the frit stroke at t waive, the mlduiffht stillness waa broken by the strains from a bugle ef ''Way Down Upon the BwattO River." Moaroalyhad lto aetos died away whoa the membera of the Philadelphia brigade and Pickett' a di via ion began tke celebration ef taegl erioua Fourth with tke boom of ecunoa on Best Cemetery hill, and tke rear of Irecrakera ia the town. Paade. eaium reigned for an keur aad a kalf. No such noise kaa disturbed tkto little village tore tke three memorable days of 'M. Yesterday morale it seven o'clock the members of Pickett's division' proceeded to tke court-house aad were called to order by Colonel Ay test. Some oae proposed that every member of the dlvtoloa present shouki give twenty-live cents toward paying the expense wktoh Mrs. Pickett Incurred en tkla visit. Tke proposition waa accepted with cheers, and the way the moaey rattled en the secretary's desk waa a suMoieat proof of the esteem m which Mrs. Pickett in keM by tke division. Resolutions were then adopted, thinking the Philadelphia brigade fer the hospitable manner in which they had treated them, the town authorities for the way they had received them, the town ofRoials for the trouble and time tkey had gives to bringing about this re-union and all soldiers for their fraternal greeting;. The meeting then adjourned, aad out side the building thev joined la procession with the Philadelphia brigade. JCach Fkkett maa linkiag arma with a Philsdolphins, the line prooende.l to the Bazle hotel, where the party took carriages and started over the battle-Held. In the irst carriage were Mrs. General Pickett and her sen George; Mrs. Charles Banes, wife of the commander of tke Philadelphia brigade, and Colonel Backelder. Fully one hundred carriages were In the lise which wended its wag through the dust of the Emmittsburg road to the Spangler lane. Into this they turned and preceded past the farm house to tke rising ground beyond. Hare all alighted and then tke word went round that Mrs. Pickett waa going tokolda reception on the very ground over which ker kusband's command had charged, and within a few yards of the woods under whose cover he, twenty years Before, had formed his division. The Pickett men were irst formed in line and one by one advanced and were introduced to the wife of their old commander by CotoBel Clopton, of Richmond, Va., by name, stating their regiment and rank. She had a word for all and all bad a word for her. The Philadelphia brigade waa next presented. Her son, George Pickett, stood at her skle aad when she dropped f hand it was at once grabbed br him. j. ne people vnen movea 10 me nignesi ground and Colonel Bachelder formed tke survivors of Kemper's. Bur sett's and Armistead's brigade of Pickett's division in the order they had been when the charge began, and asked the commander of each regiment to stop forward aad point oat the position of his command, i When this was done the party once more resumed their ride and took the following route; Out the Emmittsburg road, along Sickles' line to tke peach orchard, thence across the bloody wheat leld to tke Devil's Den Inn," tkrougk the "Valley of Death," along the base o! Round Top, thence by the battlefteki avenue along the Union line post, the umbrella copse of trees at which Hancock fell wounded, by "Bloody Angle," the "high-water mark ef the rebellion" past Meade's quarters, through the beautiful Xationitl cemetery, and entered the town by the Baltimore pike, over which the Union troops retreated after the bloody struggle of the irst day. Mrs. Pickett was the center of attraction on the 9id. She had gathered some dais tea sad a number of the brigade asked her for a few. She gave them with a smile, and one by one they were given away to be treasured as mementoes. Her autograph was also eagerly sought, and she refused no one. Geo. Pickett showed the Associated Press correspondent the watck his father carried during tke charge. It is a me Humsized gold one, with the stars and stripes m i the stars and bars crossed en the lid; on the aside are the names of the battles to which he participated la the Mexican war. To say that Pickett's men are pleasel would be putting It lightly. They are delighted witk every tking and everybody. In tke words of a Confederate soldier: We are pleased all to pieces, but Cowan tkto time kas captured us body and soaL" While the band was playing a medley of Confederate and Union war songs as the veterans were starting on their ride over the aeid, it struck up "Yankee Doodle." Instantly a rebel yelt and a Union cheer showed that the war song ef their fathers above all ethers had touched a sympathetic chord to the breasts of botk. Last evening a religious service was held. Ia the aksenoe ef the chaplain, Rsv. J. K. Dsmerest was asked to speak before a gathering of Pickett's m-in, mainly at the court-house. He spoke to them oa the subject ef tke day. How much the liberty aad brotherly feeffag eharactoriatle of our toad should endear It to all citizens. Last evening Mrs. Pickett held a reeentfon at tke Pickett division headquarters, and for aa hour shook the hand of every oae presented to ker. Immediately after the reception she waa serenaded by the Grand Army of the Kepub'ta band. The Pickett men tken adjourned to the garden of the house where the Sixty -ninth Penn sylvania men were holding forth. Speechmaking aad toast offerings were then the order till late in the night. Cowan'a battery aad the Wheeler Riles departed at nine o'clock, and aome of the Philadelphia brigade alee left fer their home. The Pickett divtoton left at four o'clock this morning, aad the remain lag Philadelphlaas will leave about nine o'clock. The citizens feet highly elated at the success of their efforts In bringing about thto reunion, believing that aueh gatherings, mere than any thing else, will tend te wipe away the animosities sageadsred by the war. Of jtt CHj IMlal JtmWt Ml vMtfNhwemHaW MttwAVKUR, Wis., July 5. Dr. MeGlyaa was shown the cable els patch from Home instructing Archbishop Corrigan te ex eemmuntoate him witheutdelay last night. When asked If ho had expected the news he said no; he had kept himself always peeatre in the matter and the views of hto puMtobed by newspapers were net hto ewa. When questioned as to what he what he weuktdo now, the doctor said he could net do any thto g hut take It with the quietest resignation. 'l will wtUy ta at liurlx r If I they should reaetme alive. My ease to pretty near toe same a that ef GaHlee, butl wftlaet litre un mr Meat.'
A pciittoai
priwiipto at He gdtu, appeem at lto in the mownmt of uuiaai. ne wly tend to purify k from the arose Which aeMtlatoa arottmd it after a Umg term of power aae! triumph, lite leaJeri of uet a party, instead of being disheartened by Non-sueee at the polls, renew their eflorta witk greater energy to put their party in better shape lor the next coatee t, and their followers are insured by a eet.cioitonesi of the righteousness of their eause. Keform becomes their rallying err, and they endeavor, in every way, to show that tkey are simeere in their profeeaioM of reform. Ik this manner the Democratic party constantly increased its strength, won the admiration of eren ita opponents, ami bore itself with dignity and reapeet during the long saturnalia of Republican rule. Thus it built iteelf up after each defeat, and at kiig-Jt triumphed over what were oon&dcMtd insuperable obstacles. The people grew tired of the corruption of the dominant party and its lawleas methods to pevpetuate its power, and in 1331 they rote up in their might and overthrew the corruptions and their mighty ediftce of fraud, deception and tyrannical partisanship. They turned towards tle party which had riven such indubitable tokens of its' ajnoerity to the cause of reform and placed it in charge of their interest. How that trust has been fulfilled the history of the prevent Administration for two years and a qsartersufticiently testifies. The judgment of the people hat been amply sustained; corruption has disappeared from the Federal offices; economy has succeeded extravagance, and honasUr has been substituted for thieving; the growing power of monopoly has been checked and the rights of labor have been recog nised; the sunshine of business pros perity is beaming nverthe land, and on all sides is manifested a feeling of confidence and content. The Republican party has been out of power for two years and a quarter, long enough to judge of its capability to sustain adverse. How has it borne adversity? Has it endeavored to purify itself and win back the confidence of the people bv endeavoring to assimilate itself to their interests? On the contrarv, it has, strange to say, made every effort to alienate still further the minds of the people from it. In this State it has delivered itself into the power of a petty boss, who has not svea ability to back his pretensions. It has shown its contempt for the constitution, its servility towards the corporations, its hostility toward Union veterans, Knights of Labor, Grangers and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, its disregard for the canal and commercial interests of the State, its blind, unreasoning partisanship. and its advocacy of indefensible jbbs and schemes of plunder, it is no longer the Republican party that Sew ard, Conkling. Feuton and Arthur re garded with pride; it has become the party of riatt, the party of the rag ring, the party of the "combine and of "scrambling about the corridors." Republicanism has been transformed into Flattism. Over in New Hampshire the Repub lican party is on the (mint of changing' its name to that of the party of Chandler. The hero of the Tallapoosa, the last wrecker of Unele Sam's navy, the maker of worthless contracts, which cost the taxpayers a pretty penny, has been sent to the United States Senate to represent the Granite State. One would suppose that the Republican party had suffered enough in the past f rem the taint of Chandlerism, and that little experience woukl have taught it to let slippery Bill" alone for the future. But experience seems to have been lost on it, if the confluence ex pressed by Senator Blair, that he hopes to have "Bill Chandler as a colleague. be well founded. We may next expect to see "Secor " Robeson rising up m Jfew Jersey and entrusted with the task of patching the badly shattered Republican machine in that State. Another appropriate resurrection in company with Chandler and Robeson would be that of Keifer in Ohio Such is the spirit shown by the Re publican party ia adversity. Experi ence has been lost upon it, or, rather. has made it, it possible, more intolerant and corrupt. It clings to every morsel of patronage with more eagerthan it did when the Nation's coffers were in its custody and boldly proclaim its intention, should the peo ple ever give it the chance, which they will not, to boycott Democrats with more- virulence than it did before, and make up for its exclusion from power bv snueezinar the taxpayers. A coterie of rich men control its action and die tate its policy and it is as devoid of patriotic aspirations and principles as when it was driven out of tha offices it Is it any wonder, then, that the tide of Democracy is rising highet each year and sweeps away, in its resistless power, Kcpablican strongholds which were considered impregnable? Even Rhode Island, "iron-clad and rock-ribbed Republican Rhode Island,' as Governor Hill termed it, has parsed out of Republican hands, in spH of the party advantage main tained by actually disfranchising every foreigu'ltorn citisen unless he is afree-hoVd-er. Signs of the final breaking up of the once proud party are manifested in other New kngland States and i the Korthwest, where it was most strongly entrenohed. The change easily accounted fer. The Democratic party is giving the people bettor jtov eniaMtfi than that whtok ekarae tori tod
JhmesMteael Tm mma M ml inuuup e jum ami equal Isvum fc ml The Meeuk-
fe parly to rtttl wdde4 to Use Hole that caused itowverthrow In 184 aa has shown im adrareity a mere, ittalk. Hsnt aad raekltos spirit than ia pre. perity. It eaa met aeudnailaU) itself with 'the cause ef the poopto, for it m) the creature sd teei of isaMuoly-. ts intolerance alone to sHlTiaiant to keep it unpopular, and when ita innate) tondeney to eorrtipttow and extravagance Wadded, nothing more is needed to snow that it is entitled to aa indefinite period ef exclusion from tke government of tke' people. AHumjf (N. Y.)Argtu. THE NEGRO VOTE, why the BawahHwaa rarer Is U lat UMtiHMH im imsfM mva. In a recent speech on woman suffrage Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, said: "I have no hesitancy in saying that granting the right of suffrage to the colored people has proven an ab solute and unqualified failure." Sen ator Ingalls is a Republican, nnd one of the acknowledged leaders of his party. It would be fair to presume that he speaks for a large portion of his party on tho question of negro suffrage. But we are not left to inference or conjecture on this point. From other Republican leaders and from various Republican newspapers have come expressions similar to those ol Senator Ingalls in his recent speech. It is & common thing to hear Re publicans in Congress declare that the negro is a laimre as a voter unlit to exercise the privilege and is of the? ballot. What is die logical result of suck reasoning? If Senator Ingalls and his brother Republicans believe that the negro is unlit to vote, they are driven to one of two courses. They must cither perpetuate what they denounce as an absolute and unqualified, failure, or they must disfranchise the nogro. The colored voter will thus that, in any event, he has little to expect from the Republican party. If he is to vote at all, it is over their protest. It is easy to understand the position of Senator Ingalls and the other Republican leaders on the question of negro suffrage. hen the negro became a voter the representation of the South and its relative influence in Congress were greatly increased. The Republicans supposed that they could alwHys control the negro vote, by arraying it in opposition to the bulk of tlic white vote of the South. This miserable policy has failed. The white man and the black man in the South are naturally friendly. They understand eachnthet and trust each other. It is true that a few years after the war the mass ol negro voters blindly followed the lead . of the carpet-baggers, who found it easy to deceive this simplehearted race. But gradually the eye of the negro were opened. He saw that he was a mere too in the hands of designing men whe wed him for their own advancement. He was robbed of his hard-earned sav bv his new friends. They fat tened on public and private plnndei while the negro d-d tiie work and the The result was inei-itnblc. The negro i found that after sll his truest and most . reliable friends were the white me with whom he ha.l lieen reared. They were readiest to come to his help when he got into trouble. They did not lie to him, and they never stole his money. These facts have been impressing th neeroes of the South more and more forcibly during ths past ten years. Th election of President Cleveland, and his wise and kind policy toward the j negro, have donrf muck to remove j whatever of political prejudice mighl have remained in his mind. Now that he can not longer be count cd as a political slave of the Republio an party, but is becoming an incte pendent, intelligent voter, the Republican leaders deckre that he is titterlj unworthy of the ballot. If these met should attempt to carry their views oc negro suffrage to their logical result, the Democratic party will stand by th negro and see that every right he hat under the constitutes and the laws ol his country shall be preserved. ta ComMuUm. FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. Yoh'U and, if you look into it closely, that the fellow who now wavee the bloody shirt tke fiercest is the same chap who was dying with consumption twenty-five years ago and couldn't go to war. Cimin nl i Telegram. Bill Chandler's resurrection in New Hampshire pleases many Republican organs, but the truly happy are Secor Robeson, Bos Keifer, l'owell Clayton and Steve Dorsey. Chioaga Ikrald. Charles Sumner was one of the first men to propose the destruction ol battle flags and other emblems of the late war, and tkere was certainly no reason to believe that he had any partisan purpose ia doing so. Af. JT. Graphic It comes In had taste for John Sherman to complain of the rebel brig, adiers being put In tke saddle to-day, wken twenty years ago his party et the example by putting Mosby, Long, street and Key in the saddle to the ex elusion of wounded Union veteran. Governor Si. J&kn. Hon. Bill Chandler, one of the leading conspirators in the Hayw theft of the Presidency, Secretary of the Navy under the Arthur Administration, card-writor-Iiichief against the Cleve land Administration, general machine politician of the G. 0. P., and a Mick citiaen at large, i elected Senator from New Hampshire to tuceeed the Into , senator Pike. M lewis Jtauwiiwoii.
oow. Mr. Dolling, a resident of Sioux Falls, wko lives a Twelfth sir est, bought a mw sow the other day. Ha antioipatedl aomto trouble in milking bar, but was happily disappointed, as she stood still, and ia too words of Mrs. l)ol linger, who peeped tkrougk a eraek in tke barn during the operation, only wagged ker tail once or twice. The next morning ke took tke uow out on some vacant blocks near Ms house witk the intention of picketing her out witk a long rope, one end of which he had tied around her horns, so she could get some grass. -The cow was evidently hungry, for she grew very enthusiastie when they got out to the grass and rushed along and stepped on Mr. Dollinger's foot. You old fool, you, don't yon know nothing!" yelled Mr. Dollinger, regardganllees of grammar. "Take that!" and lie kicked at the patient cow, missed her and came down on his beck. He started to get up and tke meek and injured cow went off at rapid rate. He was about half up when ke became conscious that his legs were hopele&dy tangled in the picket ropo and though the cow was forty feet away and the rope drawn tight, that she was still going. Mr. Dollinger groaned. He wasn't hurt yet, but he anticipated trouble. He regretted kicking at thu peaceable cow both iHtuause she had lieen tiie cause of his failing down and also from 1 the reaMm that he was afraid she had taken it in the wrong spirit. "So, bossy! so, bossy!" called Mr. Dollinger. But the cow acted as if she was afraid to "so." By this time she was on a lively trot and Mr. Dollinger was being towed along behind. Head her off, somebody! Head her off!" howled Mr. Dollinger, but there didn't apiear to be anybody to head her off and she kept going. She struck into a gallop and put her head up in the air as if she was checked up, and went straight away from the barn and off across the street and over towards the railroad track. There never was a cow that ran so easily before. And' it didn't seem as if there ever was a man who d rigged quite so readily. About this time a hungry-looking dog appeared on the scene. The dog was hunting for another dog to fight, but he thought the cow would do almost as well. You ought to have seen the way that dog went for that cow! But he couldn't quite catch her. She hadn't been running before, but now she struck out to show them what she could do when she tried. She kicked sideways at the dog and tried to run a horn through him. And ever time she tried it she jerked Mr. Dollinger up into the air about font feet! And she bellowed out of'the corner of iier mouth and the dog barked ami every time Mr. Dollinger could get enough breath saved up ahead he yelled. And from the way she ran and jerked her head around you neve t would for a moment have supiwwd that he knew Mr. Dollinger was any where around. And so they tore along across those vacant lots and Mr. Dollinger tearing up the surface of the earth and yelling for help and no help in sight. At last they got to the railroad track and the cow stumbled as she went aero the rails and rol'ed over in the ditch bovond and left Mr. Dollinger in tlic other ditch, and the dog couldn t get J any more satisfaction out of her so he came back and got hold of the half ol Mr. Bellinger's coat-tail that wasn't already torn off and stood and pulled back as if he was trying t ''"' out from under a barn. And while Mr. Dollinger waa trying to get up a train came along and cut off the rojie and the passengers looked out at him and a few of them said the poor mar; had been hurt, but most of them offered to let any amount that he was a tramp and was tee drunk to stand. Dttket Bell. Statue ef Ex-President Arthur. A movement is on foot to build monument to the memory of ex-President Chester A. Arthur. The idea first started among a few of the ex-President's friends, and they only intend to erect a monument over his tomb in Rural Cemetery, near Albany; but more than flO.OOO was raised than was necessary, and then these gentlemen concluded to not only erect the monument in the cemetery but also a large statue in New York. The New York Chamber of Commerce took hold of the matter, and a committee was appointed to take charge of the funds and raise more subscriptions. Mr. Cornelius M. Bliss is chairman of the committee, and he has issued a circular stating that tho stntue should be erected by contributions made by people through' out the United States. The statue will be a large one made of bronze. The artist who will design it has not yet been selected. Ikm&reM's MHtMy. Wife (three a. m.)-"It is very unkind of you, John, to disturb me at this unseemly hour when yon know I have been making calls all day and must be very tired." Husband (just , in; "Well, I've (hie) lieen mnkln' 'ohM all night, an' I'm (hie) hired, too. Life. A wedding ring, first worn in 184t, eame into tka ioseshm of the granddaughter of the original pHeHr; a Rochester, Pa., girl, and she lost it. Now, after six years, tt has been found in a garden whioh had been regularly worked even tear.
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