Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 31, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 August 1889 — Page 6
ENGLAND AND GERMANY. -Am Arr &iM Im HatcvStoea Kxrh HHmw Kmptrwr H'liUtM it tr4 Mlhn rj Kltkh W T-wtM ! t Truly r AtltM In C- l CMtl mojt-rrw l a IV wot. INnov, Awe. It Aeaerdiar to tke Hat Ml X:tianr af Jtertia, wisfcth cLahu e have positive information on the sstb;Jeet. lite ttmawt rdcW at the recent
-eoafer-ssce betweea Emperor Wittiaw j mad Lead Silkbery, to U MNm aad j lHtrp, twxMM to as alliaaee betweea Uermmay m1 X-ilaad. AtthMtch a j trml treAty w eoaclaled. a mesne- f raajam was drawn up eovrrias: the 1 peteu unaa which am Baderstaadlarwa reached; k U certain th this masts -randans provi Jes for the coaiyr-reney of . a war is which either natn mirht he- 1 iavolvedL aai denaes the ubtia- I assumed, ta sacs aa eveat, hr Um The &eraia wrei ha be suite generally areed that so mech has been accosplisheJ. asl sonaa we:!-ut-.farmed newspapers even km .so far I ejr that a treaty k ia cessrse of. argptra- " ties. Tim, bowerer. t probabljiacor- ' reet 1 k atM believe! here that IkI iVrT woaW uedcrtai; t coasaaar rahMTtf Gortrazas&t of Katasi : th yrantstaM ra:liad ia h aa azredaat, aail a tbe arraayemeat will Irara fcr f'irce of a treaty o loaar as be hol i tshe rcia of pour- tfertaiar mill bs .U&il witboal a formal treaty. Jfke Frecck jia4 i ia a y-arfe: farwt vr tbw whole bs!. aai tha OjpM:tsoa paper are char.a; the starraHieat wi:k baviat Jriv-a Xaclio l int h araw of Genaaar br br, foolua Mt o irritattcut hr. aotabljr ia ta r--to auioa th-E arptiaroarMiva schrata. aa which Eaiaad had sat her heart. aa the refveatesl pr.ii.jit3 araint Kociis'a occupatioa ia Crypt, ab at whick Kracc ael sat emrm a kwaia. JKaa so raaaarraifrd aa wrraa a Li Fr&scev while ophrtlJia? th refa-a! M. Hllr, the FariB Jftabter,, ta maetiaa tha coKTersioa, ti!I ca!mo tha pttr iwJicr "f irritati-wa t which th ,jCwasB3tres rteilrs it treatawfatof Bofttaad. aad exar-.ad th fear that a policy way ytt driaa Ka)(Iaal iato ha triple alliance. THE PRIZE RING. rXtie Rattle Ur thr Kt f OhmikHhpiU i; PtaVawe Thrif im FriXT la the Cirewtt Cmtrt at I'arrK. Ml. ' The rrrMwlMrin. Teams. MtaC Aaj. Kt-Ther n a llarca row.d prat ta cri yeterlay naaraiasr haa th- ariae-Sjhtan' ,eiaa amataai. Jaiax Terrttt mee-4 VL galiivaa aaal all tha acued ware poNH-ist x apt lt I)jCy. whaat the dUtnct attorney hal aecideacaily failed t aHfy, aal Ceaeral Saperinteal-at Orrjll of the railway. Th forraxaa S tht craal cry At T. R. White, a aull owaar ait atrchant of Poptarrille, who wai at ta fight ad a iajared by the falligz of oa of p4atform. The jary it aa iatelliscat xatheriaic of avea. After referrif to the preraletice o( JN Heit lisor tralic in th coaa--ty. the ja lee tooi up th pciie icht diM: "Ihe priacipal aa 1 all'acoMri before aad aftr the act ar gailtf t a hish afiffltfaaesapr. The lailste weat oa to ay that asy fEht. evea wtthoa: staie or prize, wm a serioa criaaaalr th law. .Thea aeed a4 he aaajerc iU-wtll betweea Jha.prt!e ia 'rder ta auke tha &jffct a caiaM. 'Tha eharze oeeapaed ahat ifte-a ausate. It eaa met be pr'Krd kw efa tha jrraad jarynil! make their rep.t. Ooe the arraaxt jary u hoadt ataa tor t taa MrcaieiL THEY DON'T COME IN. T1r w Stale. Ilxf I)ikM. .t .Wjujicroy. Aa. 13 Ia Coairms paasel a bill prorhlia; for aHcadtaral experimental xtitioa foe tha aeeeral Stata, hat failed ta mi't aa apyrepriatiaa. At tha lat seeaiHi of CoaSreM aa approprkthm af KM.WI wjm aae. The qaetfca eaaae ap aadar 'Caaapiroaar Drbaat a t whether the Territories were iacfadad ia the orhjriaal btlL The aat of the 8tata wai aactHaary ta the plaa for the eitahHhaieat of 'he Matiav, aaal Dkota harixr aete&t3t4. Jaic Daravaai deci'ie:! that ihi ara eaHitled ta coaae ia. The 'i8Haia?e teat ia hy the De--atartateat were for Sh50)i for eca mt the thirtr-eikt States aad IVcta, aad a aiaaiiar aaaa for a ttioa ia eoarnictka with the D jpartateat at Wm. ilactaa. , The qaeatioa hait heoa rahd before Coaaptr4er Xatthaws whether the .t States ar aap of the Terrkari (exsept Iefct) were eaitled to aay of the - amaaey. Yeter4y he decided that, tae mtiaeproridtaarforoaly thirty -eixkl SS4ie, tha lifwactaiiat aad Dkofa. noae of the aew Staaaa eoald eiaiat aay af tha GUINEA-PIG JUtCE. "V.wtetlwmM Mk Ik- 5.tatlrt Kllxir f IMf" at th M4tea-Chrarcial MmytMt hi rhHaaVtahia. TtHLjamaJtUA. A9$. IX The "ehxTr f IWeH waa tried yaaterday at the MeHceJhkrirVeal flMpatat hy Or. Heary C. aloeaaiac hi the preteaea af aaeatkers of the faeotty f the eoftt aad ether 'pkytkhva. IaeeUo of the liqaU were tatade iato the anaa of eizht different tyeeat-.' The iaaaaaakt raeatta were net waiferau Two of the ami, who had feared swarthy aratt for the iajeitio. gaatpiataed af eaf dttataeti adfnlae4 la tke head. Ooe af thoee naerated apoa i slichtly ao.aeated Oa the others f9Htech were apparent at the tenataa kkw af a half hoar. The patieok ware then dkmkted. - There will he another trial at Uh hastHhtl to-day at .ia. whea M Heapeeted - " . u Ihat tave operate aa will renort whatever asTects, if any, they shall have felt. 'Other will be operated apoa at the same time. ABtacthte lojeetetl were three reporters and a paysitiaa of Treatea. who eolaatecred to W ssbjects far expcltaeat. "Brnr-tT. Anar. IS Emperor Francis JotepVs trata arrirad at yesserdsy afteraooa, at whkh ferr WillUni, rriace Heary Misatarc'c were at the Ktattoa ' iiiau He was sErett ' tkr. aad at once driven to the cvt tie. by the Tkierpariea aad Hater en i Linden. The roate to the castle was: irae-1 with trcHatp aad th bnlltltajf wtra .lecorated with A-xzt. Immense cnsril iuroel oat to -.itch a grUtspw of the Imvisitor, an t everywhere the aptesrance of his carrfaje was the slacnal "r loud aad enthusiastic cheers. Hat ites ware Ired hy the artillery stath atd OJtdaleraat poiaU along the oata.
RAGING RIVERS.
t.-ram. wa Um KWffi OaaetC .Mh UtrwKhm t( rtrtjrA IMm f t t'Mr t Ml 1hmatd al lr4 lrtoM frMn TUr HlHHM. U scoot, lee- AUjL IS. TUa most dUtaw .Slat has rajwieeeI for ten ysars uiMrTtik, The Xeataba rtw. the Mm the fct and dosan of smalter stream are war their banks aai tha Xeh atttfMHf ka Vaaa aartyi a4 Mm aaaaaw t raUraaaV U gret. Tita IwUnim Jt Miaaari. hatrfR MacU MM Ateiilsott, U haotr waMAl out. Tb Lfcanfa Jt orthwtarm. awar tbi cU". ia aaJar wator and tha trwrkf ar $a. Th Uaiaa PacMe M ia a preearit tti c-:i-Th water hrw rfcta aaS'xlh tret i thiarlrr. awl ahat iaa hnn4rU piltf hava baaat 4riva traai thatr mo5. Tha watar axtasaW war taa hattoiM laaJ ta tha salt bata. hvt m4 it rU- traral faat aaorw wiM aaaae to sn'ca aauMtat ot tlaaaaca. Tha taoyla who hara haaa ' driTea oat mt thahr haajaw ar aaift; cmrd for br tha Quiy tw mt af tea failr.a wera toaally blocketl totiar,' bnt all will hava eria tuble ardk.iblr Iwfore niaroin?. At Midaiaht the water i till rlia?. Xaator came ia of lm e life ia on r two places, bst it U impossible to rerify tlat. WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Ki4tciw-ei"-" Sfrti Kwirt t K h K i. to tlic Kxhwrtntinx 't IHHlrl tho rrMftkevt," hi IWftrctlj- , Uritl .MiMMrr. CaK".ao. An?. It. A Tribnae jwcial from Birmiashatas. Ata says: Saturday , laat thre? yoaa? negro mra, driven to reiiaiatt f rvaijr by th exhortation uf au oM aero named Tobia Jaciox who c!aist-8 J t be Daaiel the Prophet, were persuaded . ta heliere that th-y were reireeatativof Shadrach. Jtehaeh and Abeilaego. th three I-rajIit wno watered the fi-ry faraace of Xebachadiezzar of old. Usder the in&aeno of their new prophet. th aesroe. Din KilliasH, Peter Bnrtramp and Bill Verdier, dsliberat?!y eat'rad the srate of th cspola of the .Scllo Furuace and rnhel iato the white heat of aeltine iron. "Vhea ; Uy faaed ta eo?a t Jaekoa, the prophet, proclaimed that he iaw thera rfi ia the air with the smoke of the t farnace. attecdetl hy asflt aad aid that they w.sld revisit the earth ataia next Saaday. Tae nerm? propose to aseet at church aext Saadty. and wtf! oatiae ia prayer ait day, and will await the deeaat of tha three children of IraL IMPERIAL SLARNEY. ! tUfh Hh with LHtTI l..rtt.M rTaar rerThalrft-I,Mill.l UUj. JacaUT, As. It. At the baaqset whifU wa fciTea at the ca4ile ytenlir in honor of the K-aperor Fraaci JiHpb, Eaiperor Wilitaat. in his tot to U s iiaaerial xaaat, saids "Yon laarncl fro at 1 tke jarfai reeeptioa with which yo t w-re welcoand by aac people that they are !led with a warm aad lively coaciOH'aes of the friendship which ha existed between yoar people and xaiae for a cen-; tary Before all U UU eaeione-M awnlfeeJ by the avy. a portion of wbfeh yon saw ta-day, proad at bein ptratitfad to appear he for yonr keen oldkrly eye. aiy aaapk. like the araty, will knM tratlr aad faith - 1 fatty ta the alliaaea we eoae!adL The anay kaow that for the ataiataciasre of , peaaa it will kavw to Jia wiah the irallant I araty of Asatria aad, if Fravidtaee o wttfci, to zht shoahiar h shaalJer with k.M The AaKrka Emperor thanked kl ' hoat far tha brilliaat receptioa aceonVel hiat, and toatted hU friead aad ally. , Two took rallaat arati m Uma af Geraaaay aad Aatruv. he sa&J, iaeraaead tha ! saaraatae yi peace. MADAME DE STRUVE. Bth mt a KWw LjitJr Cowpejoa In ( WahrHn Soehd Ctrete Itartac th Arthar .ilmnntrm. Waai!aTOX, Aar. II. A tehnrraai front Bar lie-rhor, seat by Baron Koen, Charre d'Aftalres of the Raoiaa LefaUea ia thk city, was received hy 3L Deroatkowky, the technical attache, aaaoaaeiac the death, oa Tharsday laf, of Madase de Strare. wife of tha Raafiaa Xiakter to the Unitsd States, at their eoaatry raaideaee. Ktelatarky, near Bt. Peterharnv partienlars further thaa the ahere have beea raeeired at the legation. Madaate de Stntre at the tiaM of her death wm forty-five year of ae. Ska hod f Te children, foar daa;herx aad one tlie aldoct a danehter twelve yean of ace. Iteriag the Arrksr Adaiahtratioa there " wa no atore coapicaas soeial fttare thaa Madaaae Ia Strata. Dariae the far years that ka was the hetee at the Jtaeeiaa L-rHoa, the eatertaiaateat wereaatoa the aaot hrilliaat aad eajeyable jriven ia WaehkMttoa. They ware aaateroot, eoetly.aad always large1 AttMMarlNaLr Mtstarleal to he l'reserve CanTJt. t WAsarsa-rwr, Aac 11. Satiaeer-in-ChkfXaltvilie oC tbeaavy, oae of the aarvirars of the DeIHT relief expedition and of the Joaaaette party, k in wrrMao4enee wkh Albert OaertL the art ist, ia rerard to two bktorkal ptctarrs of seeaes m which Cote mod ore 3fellvilie waa aa aetor, and wkkh Operti propoee to paiat. One will be called "The I-st I tvt H T ranmxah rtofMkir. Malt.. a ... a a. . L a. m il j vle, Catpp er mwnoeya DeLoe expedition aboat ta take dier- , eat directions ia the hope of beiac rw-. The ather gm w ill rprM- , "V! Vt -.t TheKavy rpartawnt hasreceiveJ a te!eTaphk; dk patch statist that the ( t craker Chieaco was taken from the dry dock at Brooklyn yesterday mornla. and that the Beets will be pat ta at tkvea o'clock thk atorataz. , The' rarsH tin.-I .Tar, I.-rtHr. renvtw; Mlss Aa?. ll.i-JHdee Terrall triad the grand jary Into court yestwuta mk taey -www nutr owa u s"ijt ' every thins: sectet, aad were tastlctabt-j I for aay thine that leaked oat by their fanlt. They were ender oath to amk-t, prjentmeat of th mat er cttia be fore them. These matters coaM nH te transferred to a jnMfe of the eare except by eoB'ttrretce of ths conrl. He wdatd not consent ta It, and if they should ar they were coastdetinsaeh a tales; be would summon a new grand irr.
mwv - . i t f mavciaaad their eostrereaeai wtva ) i.
ttsse k- t .v.A hm t,,, ,-,t cat comoittees yesterday, aad ascreed
aaI rrinee I . ... ..f uth,n rttturt whleh arAvUas f.w taw dii.
to receue . . . . .. l.f.,. I i .'( ir .if 11 tisait to mil nt th rtt,t
rtUkliy ly ail . , ' ,k i m ratnd he tha Iwtard of laaalrr. Tha
. J Pl. . M ... CW V n a H.UEl UH1B .IV T-M-WT r--- j - -
VHd WESTERN FLOODS.
Y'tir KrrHlUir Walrrt at IJrM4i. S., Unrrl'lwr Crml wtlk Mjtn TM ItwkM r M4 iMwaaa aal UiMhim lvrvtx XfU Aac. Th watar 1 Salt erttk bottom ttc4iM rapt Itr 1 veslerday. Of the 1 0 homes ub.Trsrd Wpth o fwm U lo lhe;. Kvery 1 ' rriaat.; mwa un i arsunr.. er atr(It4 Ih r(hm 4itrtrt la IhmUa TaaAiir nifht to prraat loot! ax. 0u uiasi w fotiitii w4ii; aeck ilarp trvm hB .atlrti with l!ap.i!er. H ra aaatarcifollr 4ack.l aa4 tWa lrtfV A rtrlr ' Htt4 boj was bora at twit aclc ywteriJay mmlnf in th-i cmb; t which i hi- parent h 1 1 been tlriroa. Thwtr hi riea lo wUhia thri fet f Si raotherN tmrary h!. Klsui akfhbor3 Iai their !ervfcn and hHk ar mw ia? Bio.-!?-. Th VTomaaN Relief C.rp asi M!ir orzaaizattoa ar miuilrin t' th vauU llm HSerer. Maay taercliant hare baadal together to brias snit aaintt the ChfeSro, arlia to Sc Quiacy Kattroad Coj;aMy, rlaitains that the sraue ! of the town ha. rained the natural tlrainase 'aad caue.l the daw-! ace. Keporis from Beatrice shor thl ta i be the hardest il vo l erer kaowa in the OKatry. Two wornea aw the foot , coatinx at Bentric and warned the Jet- i pljt in ticiv Thoe who oi:M not ' Acape from th- town to-' rfn?j their honsetope. aad -aw every thia? t'jal would iloat. lire-;)cti) aa;l portable proivrtr, m wbi-Iiar pit. The daersae can not be Kiatod at present. Jhonh " ia the ag5re,'3te it itiuit ba Terr lar. t SMOKELESS POWDER. Th i:jM-rtmrMt. -with Snl..tr l'rrft Ih nrf' lt-uis Vtrhrl with tf-i' ImTft hy Military Mi HttihI hj- . Tub Kmprror st SVtitliM. Lomviv, Aiit- 1 Mtlitarr men are watchia; with kee"n isterest the experiments oa the Coatineat with the new aokele pwder. S far nothinz. except its hisher cost, ha beea bronght forward azaiat it to countrbalancj the very evident Advaanse which will result f rota its ue. At the Spandtn asmenvera Wednedav both Emperors watched with creat interest the -hootia from the side in? this wokele jowder.and noted with ntnek aif wetioa that , oa that side tl-e tnovemnts of the troops, net beinr hampered by the deaee voliinae of woke wnich ban; over the ppiac ! army, were characters: si by wch greater ( prerisioa and freedom of aciios. It it . not strictly corre: tj sp?.tk of thit new ' powder n i2kele. for there cerlaialy is some smoke, but it is very l:--ht. aad at Spandaa. after fie Briar had con- ' tinned for an hour or more, at a dit.i nc-s ot three hundred yanls front the troopn ; uiux this powder, no ioxe whatever ; could be trca. althonk a nearer an- ; proach dic!oscil a 1 sht. team-liVe valor. W"h?kt wa jerhaps nite as uotire- i able a feature wa the abeace to a treat t extent of the deafening noice to which w are acenstorapd frota the extd ioa of , Sre-artas. It was cal-nlat-J that the re- ; port sf a sivea volawe of moSels piwder k ja-H half as ionil as with tba ' iae oltuie of ordinary powder. ! ... NAGLE'S RHCOR D. III Itrimtnthtn thut rt f thr Nr- ( rt aNt Mn.t ! Hn n tho ra tM kIihih Kt Mn Ilvr X ' I.irfRn t.- Trttk- with Man Kxert titH. tho Ir p mi Him. j ! Sax Fbaxci.-'CO. Aksc. 15. Deprtty man who hnt Terry, i notel oa tki i coast for hi nerve ami skill in tae nse i revolver. He was bred in California, ; bnt ia tke when Tmbtoae nrstcam iato proatiaence, he went there aadatade . money in taininr coatracts. The town j was overraa with a tsa;k Ran, hat after sereral hatl jumped m Xatrfe ' and had lieea f hot, they yava kirn a wide berth. He weat to ' Paaamiat. Xev., whea the adahur boom I i broke out, and contrihstal several men ' 1 ta the rrave-yarn. lie rernrne to Tamostone ia 1-) aad was elected marshal. He estb'.Uled his reputation by killiaar a Jfexieaa deapado ia one of the Uvelknst j ncnts taai town aver saw. tie nrorw sn- i f.urhs oat, bat several of them got killed ( in tae process, it was iiwrww j no maa ever gt the drop on 'atef t aad he never shot except to kilL "t Xacle came here ah-wt fire years aaa, and xrt several pesittoas ia the pakdic serrice: lately he wa appointed depnty United States marsh. aad when Marshal Franks cot a taJefram Irom Attor ney-Oeneral MIW te appaiht. a uard forTieldhchoe2Jtl btmaia af his rao4na aad great ! w4ta a revolver. The Califwaia code ileSnes XajrV act as jnstiaaWe bomieide, as be was aetiatc F.ekl'rf serraatatthe tine of a malt. SARAH ALTHCA'S POP. What Mr Trry tVril ftK to the Cat From the Utikrmp iCsl )IMsb- K-m Tr Jt MeTora Her Hashain w Kl. t Latkhoi. CsL, Aac. !.. Mr. Stack pole, oae of the proprietors of the depot hotel , where yesterday's traerwty took jdace. ia , the conree of a coa versa tioa on the enb- j jeot said Unit he observed Mr. Terry? leave the diniax room and also took note of the tbreatealur look which he cast upon Jndre Field. He walked down address raic him. asked why his wife had bft the table, ohservinr that Jades Field , 1 waa preseat and hoplar Mrs. Terry would , nof he so indiscreet as to cause trouble. Jades Terry replied that he did not . ' know, but there might be tranhle.H Thk alarmed Mr. StackMle, aad he walked back to the door determined to watch Mrs. Terry when she returaed. 29 aoooer had Mr. Statkjle left Jndte Terry thaa the traced occarre l as heretofare related. As the first shot was hred Mrs. Terry bad reaasteared ia tha dkOrwar. earrrin?
a hand tr-tvelln? ha?. Mr. Stack pole in- remedy here is braiaa. The) average tereepted her, aad. with Ihe ltd j,wf others. ' human must get brains aot such took away 4a hac. Cmw enamhMtioa. braias aa he hae always had, but botaftcrwardthe h,e was foaat to coatatn a mAmi.
' r ,, 1 1 Wi MtrthHtN af CmOs' at JttkiHlnn. J ' """""'"V" Z " I Jow". AnaK-The snb-, CMnmWae of tt ad relief coniiaitta fir-st three ctse ar t hi tvaid in fell, ' rpertively. tl,9)9. im and $m eicli, while Ike others are lo"g-M thirty, twentytwo and ftfleea per rest.ef their lasees. , If, after a readjatietit, the calculation j of th coifitulttee hoi Is there wilt yet J remain fCW.OW to distribute, which will require another lwriaatoa. nakess tt should be tlelermlue l to jr. re th amonat U the eastern cuaatias that suffer sd. 1
SOtENCC OF ROSSEWYt
Aar parMM la tha Uaitod &tl who hpa to hara la hw poaiMi IS4.A1 bjM what wouM kav baea hU shavra of tha money rf thaowwntry had k hara dirbtod aqoallr aaaoajc Um MChXiXU paopw ia Um eooati? la Um aaana jaar im Call tku tha ch raJua of Um iadiridttal ia thb ouatrj. la Fraaoa thw raloatk awro 54.47; ia Um XoUMrlaaal U ia 37.S- ia Grwat Rritaia, fH-LQi, aaa! ia Ganuaajr. $Ia.90. This 4 aot raprcat Um wmlUt of aar of thaaa eovetrtia. Monty it not wealth. A eitiaea of t Tailed Stateo with air 34.31 bmj he la comtortabltf cireumt. hat if h were MMideiilr et dowa ia aa uaiaaab.tl couatrj with a Uuad Uave that aatcntat hi eirvuaktaaa would ha verr aaevatfortahla iaaWMi. Th weaih of a owiatrf oa$Wtn its sup ply of lb Rwrearta of life-, aad the nuatberof peopto ia tha eouatry determine whvtlver thk supply U proprtioaatelr larjre or aa!i. If tha nunbar of p-jpk iawreaes (aetcr than the -apply of Btfggmrka of life, th coucitrr sfrowt poorer. If the supply ircrae faster thaa the numlwr of peop!o. the country jrrow richer. The ana who ha in hU pocket his eaeh value a aa American, or tha so at of $31.. "il. U not "worth" aa mueh in eaab. as a Frenchaaan whoaa eaoh valuo i foLST, hut h i worth twlco ma atueh if ha can exchange- his $31.51 for twice the ralaa of article of need as the Frenchman eaa his fa-i.57. This is dtermuid solely hy the quantity of articles of need in reach. The money itself Is a mere token. Tata is so .-iutple that it roomii unnecessary to stato it. but until it is fully understood by a controlling ntajorily of the American people. a it i aot now. tha atajority of tho Aatorkan pooplo will he poor aad opproMoi hy tho who do understand it. In the ceam year 1S50 the cash value of a food t of atucie ia the United States wu $l,300, or thereabout?. This mt of atnoelot waa called a Slav. lteeah tbIwo was an affair for its owner. It had noth ing- to do with owner. It wa xipplied with the necessaries of life without money. Two decades later when the cash value of thaee t of muaclos was rested ia themselves and not in their former owse-s. k had sank from to f.H.51. Whether thk was an actual or only apparent shrinkage i determined by whtrther or aot 54 il will hay a much of the neoafrjorioa of lite now a rl.t) would in im. If Uf then the eaeh value of free macle is that much, leee than that of ! the cas-h value of which wa ia artificially increased by the art'ifcial ?yteia of actual proprktoiShip of Uie human labormi.ehiao. We hare stated theae facU Uto minutely ia order to lead up to the statement of anther of the highest importance. It is this: Whoever control the snpfdj of Um noeearic$ of life ia a eountrr eontrois ia that country all who have need of them. If this control I vested la the Government, then all people under Government whose influence does aot ictwally control it ia It actual workin are slaves of Goveraaaont aad hare only ueh a eah vzJtae aa Um Government seta oa them. This xvorira cash value in ltdO w have alraJtjj stnied $34.41 , t. i. - U oxchaaceahM for worth, the Govrnmeat. which soaks to control the money-worth of tho avras; human ander it, must one trot both Use money and tho supply of what money will buy. The-Gorernmeat of Um Uatted (Hates does thk. IU control of the averace human who liroa under its laws is absolute and it oppresses hint, by reason of hi ignorance aad Um selSslinoss of thoa who hare more brains thaa he. It t eay lor brains to escape the operation of laws, which work iadirecUy fcr Um oppression of the averatre human. The more indirect the law, the wera Um oppression, for the harder it Is for the average human to understand; and the more easily evaded it i by those who do understand it; who. the act of evading it. use It as an instrument for tTe opproseion of the nsiatelligeaL Ihe averace batman in the United iUwa oppreeed. lie to the of a hard master, and that maeter m the Govern meet which shuts hira ia ib slave pea of custom homes aad stiate bta ia the supply 4 thiars necessary to the full nerclopmeat of body aad miad. These are Tard truths. They may revolt eome. but they are true and uaexajrgerated. They oonstitute a frightfal wrong agaiaet weakness, but there k no wrong without a remedy aad the always been oppressed in pile of it. Neman who has not uncommon sene enough to tinders tend the science of robbery aad oppression as, well aa Mr- Andrew Carnegie does is It to be a ritisea of a country freo eaoagh to allow thinking Kttei te ooprc? tboee who can not or will sot think. St. IhiIs Kepublie. DEMOCRATS AWAKE. TheSt ActKMjr av Tmra ta the ltariwii' MewnSSiam. Shta of 11m untiring vigilance of Democrats ki causing uacafaeM among our Repnbthraa frieado, For iasteace. take this paragraph from Um Chiotre later Ooeao;
amam.!
I4tf gyggufa eaasnjhhalMaaa-jHM aw ePma) a snsmaj mn. sjsmamama tatiy una af taa thnaaeeaue aarty, Tbay aaa't teat V kaaw now, aaa yet the palate Sktea Stvea taaas a arVaU aaaortaaity. No, Um peoplo do not expect tha Democratic party to root. At Um laat election a majority of 100,000 declared in favor of Democratic principles, and Um people expect Um party to proclaim them aad uphold them without renting, without boating. Kara day makes plainer the evil tondendea of the Administration of Mr. Ilarrioon. Kvery pledge eonoaming the civil service ha bona violated. Kvery promise made in behalf of the tariff baa oome to naught The urpine la Um Treasury U being squandered recklessly by every department, white Um conduct of Um Pension Office baa reached the proportions of a National kcandaL The teaching a well aa the practice, of Um Republican party are uneVrmining free institution, That party w striving to etabtth a centralized idnttwrary tm the ruins of popular med local government. We are to he daztled by the splendor of international diplomacy, and kept quiet by liberal expenditures for every imaginable obj.'ct. Under the plea of hiding tlM Stale cltooU they are to be mad dependent on Federal bounty. Taxes eollvc.c-d fria the joople in 151 are to be returaei'to Um States after Um lobtyiet9 have btraeted their eommiion. Tha army if to be increased, millions are to be spent ia s tenia-hip subsidies, the tn!p:ilo:t tariff will be maintained to supply funds for a mythical nary aad for building ca-ceaat defenes from Alaska to Florida. Ia view of such a policy of extravagance and corruption, it k not -strange the Detaoerati are on tha alert and eager for Um coming conttct. They are to see that no harm cornea to the Kepubiicr hence their untiring aetir ity will iuereae unlit the Republic ans are driven irom vitle Courier Journal. power. Louis NOTES AND COMMENTS. Secretary Xefctehae appointed a committee to investigate the re-rating of pen-ioos. Thk action. In itj-e!f. a rebuke to CommWioaer Tanner. Huffalo Expres (Kep.). The tariff diWion has ik ups aad dowB but ever continue in good work of educating the people" hi the truth of.tbe statement that the tariff k a tax. Cleveland Plain Dealer. j While the relation betweea Seeresarr Nobte and Commise toner i Tanner are strained. Um latter k ufag ht oskke as a -trainer for Um money la Um Treasury. Albany (X. Y.) Argw. Thomas Jefferson said: "The public wul never be made to believe that Uie appoint me. "a. of a relative h made oa the ground of merit alone, unini uenced by family view:; nor can they ever ee with approbation oltees. j the dsfpoml of which they intrsst to their Presidento for public purpoeos. divided out as family property." Every Republican :n Grooaville, Pa., Uiottg'at that William Ilenry liarrkoa Dusnars would jret the pt-ooe. but it went to Mrs. Keck, a cousin of Senator Quay's wife. Thk proves that blood retatioa ships, no matter how slight, count for more with the preeeat Administration than heiag named for ik dktiauished grandfather. Chicago Herald. Of Aaektant Fot master-General Ckrkson. who removes Democratic poet maa tors and appoink JUpubllcaa successors at the rate of one every three minutes, "aot knowing Uie facta.' aa he frankly ooafeaees. the Ohio State Journal (Kep.) say' "There k no maa la Um public service who k doing more work thk year than M. Clarkon. He k a public servant worthy of the name." A terse statement of the .policy of the Administration k quoted by the Indiana pel ta Sentinel as having beea made by a gentieman of that city who had voted for Mr. Harrison in order to get a better etvil-scrviee reform than he thought he could get from Mr. Cleveland. "What do I think about Harrison's civil-service policy? Well. I feel about It as Uie fellow felt about the ei reiki. It's so bad that it's really goot.M As to the keue of tariff reform, nobody who adopted It during' the campaign, even among those who adopted it reluctantly, has shewn the slightest dipohkm to drop it or to evade the consemwcMses of fto adoption. The personal enemies of Mr. Cleveland, in the pro and elsewhere, and the legislative agents of the manufacturers who profit by Um abuses of the tariff, necessarily attempt to make capital out of the defeat of Um party on a platform of tariff reform, but they eostspicoously fall to ma.: either eapital or eoaverk. X 1- Ti Nepotism in Federal Office. Mr. Robert Peel Porter should not forget to devote a special ehapter of Um onaessa te nopotkm in the Federal oflees. The Ikt. so fnr, k Baby McKW father. Grandpa Scott, the President's brother, the President's sou's father-in-law. the Piw Meat's wife's cousin, the President's wife nephew, thk President's wife's niece's huebnnd. the President's brother-in-law, the President nephews provided with a place ia nehingtoa ierritory aad ia CincinnaU. the private seoret tary broUier-ia-law, the Secretary f State's son. Um Secretary of State's brother. Um Pension Commit toiler's two daughters, the Indian Commitstoaer wife, the Indian School Superintendent's wife and a hundred others dktaatly related to Um family -J hnaf- (X ".) Argus.
FACTS ABOUT FANS.
WcMMtertat XtwWTxwUiHH'il l4 HIv ItH-j ur KhUltM ht Mhhwwi. In his entertaining prelaoa to tho tsttnloguo of the fau-maker' vxhlbU turn nt Drupem' Halt in 187& Mr. Iborgo Augustus Sala says: "It a, Utoru was Ute rt needle no doubt a paint leaf was Um ttrat fan;' Hnd aneioat man u wen U show us that suuh natural objects as tke paint leaf and the bird's wing were originally adaplod tothk use. To the present day at shops dealing in Eastern produce may be purchased palm.leaf fnas exiuitly similar to those we see figured on monuments dated from long before tho Chrktiaa era. Frescoes on tho letup', of MeJbtwt-liahan at 'not repre..wt KameiMw III. (whoso re'i?n began C.) nccamtwtliled by Prittfes bearinir scrceoHihnpeti fan. Those inns were emi.-ircular in shite. painted tn brtlllant colors, with loti' handles twisted or lautl-etskifod. Tfcey served Ms standards, and warn borne only by royal Prkioes, or men of high rank and upprovvd bravery, liana-screen fans made of leaved nd of ostrich feathers were ao in general ue. In the British Milium may be seen ppeeitnen with half yard-lung wooden hnndhjM. In India the earliest fans were of palm leave. Ia Persia and among the Arabs ostriub-feather fatts were in use early in the Curkttan t;ra. Scruen fans are mentioned n.s betnjr in use in China nboitt the mime dnto that Katnest-s III. was reigning in Ivgypt, and. as in I$rypt, tbey wore cnrrletl as standard iu war. The earliest kinds, made of feathers, were t oyal or imperial Kilts. letter on white and embroidered silk was apparently used, for we find its application to this purpose .forbidden in tUi A. I). Ivory had Wn employed at an anterior dnto, and in the early part of the Christian era a Chine-e workman whose name is banded down as Chi-ki-ton. was renowned for creen-shnped band fans, which he made by beating out n h ot of gold to excessive thinness. "Ho then painted them with gods, with extraordinary birds and with rare ani mats; vamihcd them . and covered them with tnussparent sheets of mica." The fan is mentioned by Euripides. Virgil, Ovid, etc , and it is frequently to be found figured on Etruscan vares. Koettis;er states that the earliest Greek screen fans were shaped like the planetree leaf, lint ia the fifth century IJ. C the fashion of peacock-feather fan waui introduced from Asia Minor, and was readi.y adopted by the Greek women. A fresco nt Hereiilaneum depicts an ostrich-feather fan. The "tabelite" mentioned by Ovid and Propertlti! were hand .-ereeas of thin wood; at times these were trimmed with feather. Hut none of these srroea fans, lnr;;o o; niall, whether made of feathers, of leaveri of ivory or of gold, whether M?oii-circular or tail-shaped, cottld be folded. They were either attached to long handle-, like the Chinese and Egyptian war fan.", or to small handle for Ute convenience of persoital usa. a With the last of the C;csars tho screen fan disappears from Europe, not to reapper until the time of the Crusades, when the nng-hnped fan. probably of Saracenic origin, was introduced, and continued in uee in Vunios. Naples and Padua. In the meantime Christianity had transmitted Uie fan into an instrument of devotion. SL Jerome had named it ' as the emblem of chastity, and henceforth It took its place in the sanctuary, where at the altar it served to keep flies frem the ehalice aad the sun's rays from the celebrant. The "flabellttm" thus used has conio down to us in actual specimens such as the liabelltim of the Abbey of Tournus. figured in M. du Soinmerimi's work. The flabelitim Is also mentioned in many inventories, notably one of silk at Salisbury, A 1- 12 t: 1" peacocks' feathers at St. Paul's Cathedral. 129S. Tttey continued in general ttso until the end of the thirteenth century, and still form one of the most marked features in alt grand papal ceremonies. Cloiely related in shape to tbo nabellum wern the earliest fans of peacocks' feathers worn by ladies. Such a fan is held by Maria Luisa do Taseis In her portrait by Van Dyck. These fans are known to have beets of considerable value, worth 10 or more. The handles were of ivory or f gold, worked and jeweled. Tha feathers wore ostrich, peacock or soma other brfht plumage, and the Ian hung by a slender chain from tha heavier girdle then worn round tho waist. This mode of hanging the fa eentintted fashionable to the seventeenth eentnry. In illuminated manuscripts of the thirteenth and fourteenth 'centurion may be seen ling fans similar in form to that in use in Tunis to this day, and in ah Inventory of Charles the Fifth of France, dated 13). we read for the first time of "un mjhokcAxV vond qui se playe. en Qtiolre, rux arms da France ot de Navarre, a ntanchu d'ybenus." Folding screens of this shape were Used until tho reign of trancis the Hrst, when they gare way to folding fan mure or less of tho .shape we now use. Louisa Parr, in Harper's Magazine. mum Giston Calmette says that Millet, the painter of "The Angchts." wan big and corpulent, wl'.h wooden shoe, hair brushed back front a frank brow and dear blue eyes, the neck and .hotVder.s of a bull nd strong hands, like those of a peasant.'' it, Cnl incite contends that the story about Millet dying in comparative poverty is a myth, which the family of the itrtist hava attlek to disprove.
