Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 32, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 18 October 1889 — Page 3

O. SOA1HD, XHtltUefcer.

TASmt IK DIANA. HER ANSWER. ' Tmn Vas proposed to mm last nW I "Youea' iMMthMr "Jadeoa, U'aWtw; kAikad m ti be hi w fe, ouirit." NMIIHUHII, MOM I Wht(IMrMMr r boy! He loilWI m ImMUmm. XotL "Handaewc! A stork mi weekly mj ik JMU lIMUy M4 M iMltel Hut WU m wkat be dr te aar." rell tlrst; be lovsU ." '"Oh. that wart i0( cour! What ;' "Awl that he thought wai the sort of atri whose heart WOUM atVftf lt Itself bO tOMtfU. I iiJ ton was mm that X WAV ItUt a WOBIM : ! M In joutta, health, brain w lUxni, aad why, Yuu'd think he sever dreamed f so fat he wm poor ased ) no bar-" "wen: what an attitude touke!'' kr Love wewld prove tko guiding star iu jamo un xoriune, lor my sake I then h? tnisnea Mr heart xntl hMd." tSueh InputUnett who'd vwkucmT rae you muia tiiw umleriUwid .. plater "I did I toUhim 'Yw!'" -MalllR 8. Bridges, is Puek. BACK-YAKD STUDIES. Lunt M at lid a' Observations from Her Back Window. mi uon Aunt wauiua cuius to visil anil inaied on bavin? a back we were greatly disappointed f our precious vacation timo in max ng all aorta of pretty nothings to At JL. - 1 . r t..i a : A atllda for ten years. la that time luttie and I had grown from little eniMm nf 1.1 in htff-h school. The incipul things I could remember limit Aunt Ta1llilo. war a iav llfatfl' ray curls and gold-rimmed glasses, ;nd that when she visited us I always (bad on a fresh, white pinafore, and she would say to me: "Come here, my dear, and let me -wipe my glasses on your clean apron.'' Very proudly would I comply with .her request, for we considered it a great honor to wear any thing clean enough to come in contact with her polished gold spectacles. Then when , she had used one corner of the pinaore so eareiuuy as not to leave a rust ic she would pass Iter plump, warm and nvni' mv aurla and wiv: "What a tall girl you are growing, ftitv. niv Ghiid. l none you are a UUU Kirl M buuuui anu unaj-i wiuii your voavuur. And I would answer: "Yea. ma'ana," very timidly and go back to my seat on a hifrh. hair-covered chair, where I ould make a desperate effort to sit trattrht and lren frnn alidiuv off. Father had moved West away out to Colorado and. as 1 said, we had not seen Aunt Matilda for tea years when we reeeived the welcome news that she was oomiiig- to pay us a visit, and we all resolved not to let her go away from us again if we could help ft Paxtmna f Vi !a urmji tk reiMB w .had taken such extra pains with the : guest chamber. I know, when it was all finished, Mattie and I surreyed it with what we hoped was pardonable pride. We had coaxed from papa a new bedroom suit of polished oak which, with its broad mirror of - plate glass, shone grandly ia the sunlight which streamed in through the curtains o( the yellow ehina silk. The was resplendent in draperies of handpainted silk, while the wicker chairs .displayed their flne linen and satin ribbons, and even the ottoman was Une in silk embroidery. As for the bdwell, it was simply lovely! Shams were not out of date then, and ours were marvels of line lace and the Chinese laundry art and the pret tiest yellow satin bows in a corner of each! The lace spread over a quilt of yellow silesla, and the scarf of crazy work in silk and velvet completed the ravishing picture, When Aunt Matilda came Mattie and I had the honor of escorting: her to this chamber of state and, you may be sure, ws watched furtively to see how it impressed her. Perhaps we were the more anxious because we knew she had opposed father's coming West, aad ws wanted -to imtiress her with the financial sue eets of the move, aad to show her that -truly aesthetic taste dwelt even as far -west as Colorado. "LM, ms take off your wraps, auntie," aid Mattie, setting her little hand-bag vn the floor by the dresser, and going tip to Aunt Matilda, who stood looking .about in a hesitating manner. Walt a minute, my dear-let me -tell you something you won't mind If vnur old auntie is frank with you, I . know. I've lived over sixty year, my XAslm J IV. found that in tha end it always pays to be Iran wiui your best friends. No v, I know you want me to feel perfectly at home here, and this room is very beautiful yes, very beautiful Indeed-but U is too large and fine for a simple old lady like me. Don't you aes I onlda't really sit against any of these handsome r draperies it would he edre to muss them and well. I shouldn't feel the .least bit at home here. I've lived a wy plain, quiet life), you knew. Now, girls, if yoa're a little eoay back room somewhere, with Just plain furniture, . in? any tfc liter. I should enjoy It so sauch." In vain we proieeted that nothing "was too nice tor a-er w nee, aaa tea re had no other room good oufh lor her. She sUsassd as wim a grass

lad, glrliest wave of the nana, shaking the gray eurU said:

Mow, my dears, you can aei fool me that way, If I am aa old wotean. I am Mrt-rate at a game of ktd-aud-eek and I shall just tad a room for myself. Jn this large house I know there is a corner for me somewhere." And sure enough she stepped hriskly across the hall, and paused he fore the door of a haek chamber. "Does any one occupy this?" Mattie shook her head, and east a despairing glanoe at me, as she said: "Hut it will never do at all, auntie. It is just a little box of a room, furnished up with odds and ends. We put Mias Beits in there when she oomes te sew for us, and sometimes Hetty and I sleep there when we have extra company and have to give up our room." Aunt Matilda opened tha door, however, and stepped in. The very thing," she orled, delightedly." "A rag carpet, tool So homelike! And thlaaiea splint-rocker! I tell you, girls, for real comfort there's nothing like a spllnt-rockor." She stepped to the one window in the room and put back the plain white muslin curtain, "Hitter aad better!" she cried, clapping Iter hands in almost childish grie. "Such a row of nice back yards! You see, girls, I'm an inquisi tive old lady, and I dearly love to watch people's baok yards. I get acqsjainled with them so. lou caji go In at people's front doors for yoars and not know a single thing about them; but you can get a good idea of what they are ia a week from the rear." 3 So Aunt Matilda had her way. "There's just one thing I would like from the front room, girls," she said. "and that is the vase of yellow mari golds I saw on the mantel. They smell so like home." Muttle fetched them, and having done what we could to make the room convenient for her, we loft her to the enjoyment of her splint-rocker, her rag carpet and marigolds, and went down-stairs to confide our disappoint ment to mother. The baok yards, which interested our aunt so much, belonged to a row of tenement cottages just across the alley from our houie. Tha latter being built in the middle of the lot and running back a good way, was quite olode to the alley, so that a good ohanoe was afforded Aunt Matilda to pursue her back-door studies, for which she professed such a penchant Our town was an invalid resort, and the population ia consequence a very fluctuating one. ve had, therefore, fallen into the habit of pay lag little or no attention to tho families who came and went in the Kow. But now we wera destined to learn many things from Aunt Matilda about our backdoor neighbors. What impressed us more than any thing else was the kind liness of the comments she made upon her unknown friends. Considering that she onealv avowed herself "a bit of a gossip," this seemed to us all the more remarkable, as all the gossips we had known showed a remarkable penetration ia discovering the weakand sins of the subjects which they dissected. "There is a new family moving into the red house this morning," an nounced Aunt "Matilda at dinner one day. "The woman in a nice, tidy little body, aad looks lull oi energy but you can see she is not well. She has a bad eough and looks so worn and tired that I feel sorry for her. Her husband Is a tall, manly-looking fel low, but he, too, has a discouraged look, and the little boy there seems to be but one child, about ten years old. I should judge looks as though life had been any thing but a joy to him. I shall like to find out what their trouble is." Father held up his hands with wellfeigned horror. "Matilda," he said. "vou are without doubt the most in quisitive person .tllve. You embody all the necessary qualifications or a whole detective force." 'Never mind," replted the little lady, laughing, "so long as 1 injure no one by it you ought not to grudge a lonely old woman her only dissipa tion." I should think," said mamma, that if the lady is such an invalid consumptive, of course, if she coughs so bad you might tee ia that sufficient cause for the family unnappiaess. rerhane, after all, they are only tired from a long journey aaa not reauy unhappy." Aunt Matilda shook her head. "No, Martha, temporary weariness does not mark such lines in the face. Neither Is the Illness of one member sufBoient to permanently destroy the family peace. Why, some of the hapmeet families I know have inmates who are hopeless invalids, and all the other members seem to make a point oi ue Ine bright and cheery for their sake. No, there Is something more than this trouble over there. Never mind, shall find out by and by." A few days later she palled to me as I was passing through the hall. 'Come hare, ffiv dear. Lome anu look But of my window." "I ant on the right track now. told you I should find out Do you "I do not understand you, auntie," I said. "Why, just took at the clothes on the line, baok of the red house. See that peUiooat It has yards and yards of knitted thread-lace on it actually t.irf.knttted. child. Just think Of it rtiteh of the nilllioas of them rMulrlnr four motions of the hand More than that, see that knitted soua terpae.

"It St lovely, auaUc," I could not help saying. Lovely! Yes, if one did not think of the woman's life-blood that went into it, aad of the child's happlasM that went late it, of 'us widower and orphan soon to be made by it Why, think, Hetty, what a eoeUy quilt it 1st Likely they had to break up a eoty home at the Kast, aad sacrifice property and business interest there to come here for her health. And you oaa buy a beautiful Marseilles quilt for ten dollars! Yes, a very good one for five. Five paltry dollars aad think what went into that! I walked past the front of the house yesterday, and there were fine hand-knitted curtains at the windows. Why, even those check gingham kitchen aprons hanging there have cross-stitch embroidery three or four inches deep. And the rugs (hat she hangs out on the line every day all hand work! One has little cloth circles button-hole stitched to a foundation pyramids, of them thousands of embroidery stitches on a two-feet-by-three rug! A yard of Moquette or Wilton carpet could be bought for two dollars or less, and you know yourself, Hetty, that it is twice as pretty and durable forartfg." , "Perhaps sho does not do all tls work hersoir. It may be given to Iter, - , . . .

vv smw umy ouy it or poor invaiius who can do nothing else" "No, child, she does It herself. I see her sit by her kitchen window every day knitting and crocheting, oh! so steadily! It is a north window, too. The sitting-room fronts south, and she can not sit there beoause the sunlight would fade her carpets. The shades are nearly always close down. And the poor child wanders about the ard looking so homesick and lonely that my heart aches 'for him.- His clothes are nice and fit beautifully, and his linen is starched and polished and fresh every day. She does her own roning. I her bending for hours over the ironing-board, and stopping every little while to cough. Look at that line now, Hetty, and seo what she las before her this week. There are 6ix white shirt-waists for the boy, plaited every one, and to be done with tho pollshlng-iron; then there is that skirt I first showed you, and a pair of ruffled and tucked and embroidered pillow-shams, aad well, all the rest t makes me sick at heart to see it and think of that poor, starved little boy. le has no mother, don't you see? Ouly a nurse and laundress. She won't let him run the street and get with bad boys. She thinks she is very careful about him, but she Btarves his very soul. She has no time to an swer questions for hint and help hint plan amusements, and eym iMthize with him, and he oan't play in the uirt Because ne win son bis olotbee. Of course the husband has the same treatment He has to be very careful about throwing his papers about or making a litter in the house: and when be oomes home at night his wife is too tired to talk ana coughs a great deal. The eough worries him, and he feels that he ought to do something more for her but he has done all he can, poor man! The doctor has told him to bring her to Colorado, and he has done so but she doesn't seem to get much better, aad she never will. Hetty, till she stops that everlasting knitting aad fancy work and gets into the sunshine, and takes aa interest in something outside of her house-keep-iasr. I am eolnr to call on her to morrow. She is a new neighbor, you know, aad 1 will tell you beforehand just what I shall find, I shall ring the bell, and wait a long time, men i shall hear doors open and shut, aad fin all v th key turned in the front door, and I shall be let In. The sittingroom will be dark and have a elose, shut-up smell if it were anywhere but in Colorado it would be musty, 'lhe lady will raise a shade aad let in a ittle light, taking care to shut out as much sunlight as she can by drawinr the knitted curtains olose. The room will be literally crowded wiui r ... . ... hand-made fanoy work, and every thing will1 be painfully neat and un used. I shall scarcely have Introduced myself until she begins to bemoan her lot on account of this dusty country. She will tell me that it is simply impossible to keep things clean, and that she wears herself all out trying. The call was made, and Aunt Ma tllda came home more indignant than ever. "I tell you that woman is dying by laches of fanoy work and lack or sun shine and mire air. She tells me that her disease is not hereditary, but she was always a delicate child, aad it was brourht on by a hard cold. A hard cold, indeedl Hew could any one keep nv limps end sit all (lav by a north window crouched over those nenaisn, shining needles?" Aunt Matilda's usually mud orown vm flashed indignantly and then tilled with sudden tears. "Da. mv dears, the TtitV of it! And to think that she is only one of many. I saw a whole stack of Home Journals and Journals of Fancy Work, and fashion max seines, but not one single mwiful book or uaper ia the house. Talk about the sunnreejion of lm iimner literature. I sometimes think louraals of fancy work and fashion .ut in Ha iNflluded in the list, for thev sural v do tempt weak-minded worn ea to their ruin. I meant to go home next month, but you will have to keep mm a Knell lonsrer. Martha. I've Lt. nail tn mUwioaar labor in the cd house over there, I must have the phaeton at least two or three hours sverv day fer she won' I be aWe to walk far at first aad you must hell me html up all the inter children yea iMu.r II aka tttVK sear sae seat

make plain garments for Umm. Bat I ckm'tmoaa te let her a needle for a nutth if I eaa help it How will I manage it? You'll see. Where there's a will thaj A wily.n And In Aunt Matilda's ease we knew this to be true. Kila Beoeher GlUings, la Chicago Advance.

OENTCRBOARO STEAMER. A . LmO Mmm's rtea te ChmWm The problem of providing method by which ocean-going cargo ships may reach the river eitles has been taken up by Andrew H. Lucas, of St Louis. He hat invented a twin-hull adjustabie-keel ship, whieh can be made serviceable for the navigation of the ocean and of rivers of ordinary depth. The inventor is at present In this city for the purpose of consulting with Naval Architect Waif red Sylvan in reference to the plans of the vessel, which is to be built by Cramp A Sons, of Philadelphia. K "The Mississippi river," he said recently, "is too shallow to accommodate, ocean steamers of ordinary construction, and it is the purpose of the adjustable-keel vessel to overcome this difficulty. To this end a craft has been devised combining a river atesmboat and an ocean steamship. The ship has two hulls, united at their forward end by a solid bulklead, and having an open space be tween them toward the stern. These lulls are Intended as 'holds for the cargo, and will also afford space for the accommodation of part of the machinery used in propelling the ; vessel. Each will have a stationary : keel. Between these hulls will 1e an adjustable keel, which can be owored and raised at pleasure. In short, this adjustable keel is the old principle of the centerboard adapted to sea-going ships of considerable tonnage. The false keel can be lowered by proper machinery in the space between the hulls to twice the ordinary immer sion of tne loaded ship. That is to say. suppose the ordinary draught of a one thousand-ton loaded ship should be seven feet under which conditions she could run up a river like the Missis sippi as far as St Louis at nearly all ordinary stages of water, when she shou'.d be called upon to go to sea her false keel could be lowered to fourteen feet below the line of her normal draught, giving her a total practical immersion of twenty-one feet with corresponding resistance to storm or wind pressure above. "When in use the upper part of the drop keol is firmly held in place by stout steel braces constructed along tbe entire length of the inner sides of the two hulls. The mechanism for raising and lowering it will be mount ed ia connection with the engine shaft of the vessel, irout the bow to a point over the forward end of this keel the ship is to be built solid, with water-tight oompartmenta. Her en gines are to be of the triple-expansion type, and her motive power the twin screw. If our new system of propulsion should be found practicable an extraordinary rate of speed is assured. aa the construction of the sh'p affords admirable facilities for the use of auxiliary twin screws placed near the stern of each hull, lhe experiment ship is to be called the St Louis. It ill be built of steel and ia the beet possible manner. It will be built to make twenty -five miles aa hour on the ocean, aad can not be sunk or burned." N. Y. Times. CENTRAL ASIAN HEAT. It is stated in the official report that 702 persons died between the 14th aad 17th of August at Bokhara of heat. aad the figures, it is expressly added, do not include children. If this amaz ing calamity be not due to any atmospheric violence, as a Bad-i-slmoon, for example, it to' probably unequaled in authentic records. But when we think of the agony, the horrible wretched ness in which the whole population must have been living, it may well seem that those who found escape in death are not to be pitied. The hor ror of heat is, unknown to us, or, in deed, to any part of Europe, though Naples aad Athens are desperately trvlne sometimes. But to the native of Soinde, Central Asia, the shores of the Persian Gulf, the sun of Greece is but a trifle. The utter helplessaeee of man under this infliction adds horror to his sufferings. There is no hope and no resource when the red-hot air penetrates to those underground chambers In whieh the summer is .passed in Central Asia. Tits inhabitants," we learn, "are shutting themselves up to escape" probably closing all the apertures or their subterranean abodes, exoept those absolutely necessary for ventila tion. The air dowa below, under such circumstances, can notb Imagined by one who has not had a touch of experiww . 1 1 - 1 1 .1 t once, nouses oi goou cims i buihuj constructed under ground,' with chambers and doors and corridors, but the mass of tho people inhabit big holes, roofed over, with no kind of permanent convenience. Kvery winter the frost and snow aad rain play mischief with these rough pile, aad the damage Is not always nor often repaired by the following summer. Fancy thousands of Mongols In these dens, pursuing their filthy habUa in semi-darkness, suffering the awful torment of heat, children wailing, adults raving, always In want of water and generally of food, In aa atmosphere beyond eonoelvlng. That to the picture which these few lines of telegram suggest to readers who kew. Leaden ttterd

A tTRttCIIMi OOMTRAST.

The meet striking illustretLsa we f has been furnished bv Uaa progress f Republican Urn aad Democracy tines tbe former triumphed at the polls last November. Anyone who chooses to see and oojuprehend eaa not eseape a full conviction of the dlfsreaee between principle and prejudice, between reason aad passion, between the have of eouatry aad the tore of profit Democracy Is indestructible. It has the livtog spark, aad the ideas it teaches muet grow aad strengthen in tbe mlads of the people. Its eoefesskra of faith made at the St Louis convention and interpreted by the President has, in the face of aa electoral, though not a popular defeat been indorsed by every Democratic convention called together since that time. There has been no thought of discouragement no sign of weakaees ia the raaks of the men who are waging a peaceful battle for the principles they consider right and to the best interests of the country. All are united, courageous and eager to try the mettle of the foe again. - The Democrats have a war-cry aad a banner to fight beneath; the Republicans are without either. A few months of power have sufficed to disorganize and divide them, aad, as robbers invariably quarrel over lhe spoils, they are lacerating each other in the effort to get a share of the plunder, the prospect of whose attainment alone held them together. Without a great principle to unite them, with no other guide than personal Interest, It will be strange if the factions succeed in combining foroee again. Other causes than disunion are weakening the Republican' party. Some of the old appeals to prejudice and passion, often, so effective with people who did not take the trouble to learn the falsehood and folly of it all, can be made no more. The solid South was long the bogy of the Northera voter. It was preached from every platform, and sometimes from the pulpit, tec, that the South was making no progress under Democratic rule, and these speakers pointed' with pride to the increase of wealth aad ether material advantages in States of the North, where Republican Governors and Republican Legislatures held the reins of power. Opposed by recent facte, suoh statements can have no weight and return to plague those who utter them. The advance of the South, where Democratic principles are universal, is now more rapid than that of tha North, aad multiplied evit denoes on every hand attest her prosperity, the exact proof of comparative figures being one of them. Again does practice ally Itself with Democratic theory. The second appeal was not to preju dice but to profit it was said that a Democratic reduction of the tariff meant a business panic, the breaking of banks, tbe destruction of manufact uring establish meeta, the depression of trade aad general ruin, while ite Republican perpetuation foretold boundless wealth aad prosperity. Republicanism succeeded, and the worst period the manufacturers have had for ten years has been since the election of Mr. Harrison. All the protected industries have been made gloomy by a long lane of failures, while a powerful and Increasing faction of the Republican party to calling for a reduction of the tariff. Thus the only article of confederation which it could dignify with the name of a principle to about to be swept away. Aad again does practice ally itself with Democratic theory. We oaa not restrala a shade of torrow for our Republican brethren who have made so much capital of the alleged oppression of the negro in the South, and rolled under their tongues with delight tales of discrimination against him at tbe hotel, Ia the railroad oar, and wherever else social forms hold place. A colored man aad a white man might quarrel, and immediately it was la the Northern mind a race war of threaten lag proportions, and no one will ever know the frightful exaggerations whieh have been made concerning such events. This would not occur under Republican, rule, they said, though they never gave a reason for such a belief. But the news has just come of a real race war in the good Republican State of Illinois, where man oaa do no wrong, so long as he elects Republ loan offioe-hoklers. White men have kitted black men. Republioaa patriots, armed with revolvers, are seeking the lives of their dark-skinned brethren who voted solidly for Mr. Harrison, and are now receiving their reward in Illinois. Time teMs the truth, and one by one the illusions flung over the people by the Republioaa party disappear, for common sense must prevail, and falsehood can not always bold its own against right When all tbe arts of deceit are exhausted; when malice no longer finds a weapon; when projudice has no soil for its rooto, those who have lived by such methods must dinappear, and the King shall oome te his own again. Louisville Courier-Jour nal. A CRACKED KEYSTONE, gases Tan Mrt ttw Purmmet iwH HmmM em OeVja aVJsaJsfiaeak4Sa1BsreLk sssjnysa mn jsnpWifWasjsrewww sae AleedinsT nreteetton Journal dad ares that "the wool duty to the keystone ef the tariff," aad says: "Free wool means free goods of all arnia ajtd ha Moaaiimi tor Aweriesva labor." tkUl tt fa. atjatsajl Lftl ' thai ISR tsbftaUbSl 4sSiShS tllfcel Ja n MB tr aw WPrffflal Irml flues lial anpwTWWi ensraw sw t tevrtf to the reewlt ei a tog

JBSjeeBWl

fls? whieh ia any d bastion lug tbe retaliation of a i oa meat of high duties as a jmatobt for yieuttag at any point. the woolen manufacturers, wbe see ruin to their industry as the veeeit et earrylag alone the handicap of taxed raw material in with the mills of more countries. They are moriatg for wool ia a masmer whieh premises te crack the "keystone of the tariff. H President Grant stated tbe true economic view of this ojassttoa to has aaaual message for 1874 tot sarin "The totredueUba free of emtr of such wools as ws do act are dues would stimulate the manufacture of goods requiring the use of those we do produce, and therefore would be a benefit to home production." And again in his meesage for 1875: "These duties on raw materials not only seme frim Uu eewiwmars at Acme, but act as a- proieeUon le rsin mm unetnrer of the earns oomnlotsa articles ia our own and dtstaat markets." There to not a more absurd, bar barous aad hurtful tax laid la this country than the tariff on wool. It hurts the farmers, it haadioaas the manufacturers aad it makes olotbiag . dear. N, Y. World. CORPORAL TANNER. The Ks-0maatMfwr WrMa i Lattar to rrivato DalsaH. In a confidential letter written te Private Dalxell. of Caldwell, O., e Commissioner Tanner says: I waat te car te yo taat the PreaMeat aersc asM oa wont to mm ahoet yoe. I eaa at as s set mad say that pMMy; yo meat set eaoM It; feat it M Hod's tr. While Cemaalaiteasr I lstuad tw orJttr which I taoeght aad' UM tatak, ware mlahtr food t: Tut, that the Sft,eoe ssoa on tha pension roll at leas than Ha aseeth shouM ati, unless thojr aa aaa a aaoaieei examination wltala a year, be ate are a for exaaataatloat before thatr bom boar, wtth a riw to putting tha at at least M par aaenth paaaton or 4rppta theaa off the rolla; fer M wm my opfa'oa that lor a asaa who M worthy of aay pernio at all a dollar a week Is em sat enough. My ooad ocdor was that tharaalsar, lathe settleaaoet of ft psftaiea etfttm, the steer of a private. If he was a aaaa of seed aharaatar aad stftadiac. aeowld aatosmt to aa mean fca the aetileaaoat of his claim aa tha weed of ft aaan who had psrbapi wora the shoaidor streps of a issoad Haetoaaat. The AattayOamaalsalanat revoked both et those order, bat, m he hi s niaa who dare not say Ma soul is his ewe, he did It uador the leetraette of Maali or Basasy. How aider beevea's aaase aes lb)- xotej( to sake the boys beueTe that there la to be ao eaaage ia tha polieyf SaaHh alee iesaod a ordor stopptag alt matins.. Ke dM aot etJot to It uatU altar I had rarattS Mat aed pet h'm up to for the ieae of hie arm aad lag, thereby patUag M SOS ia hi aaekol I hold he waa eaUtled to It; bat ts It at oaatoaaptlMe that a man who bad that deee far him should now be so proneeeeed agate at the raraUag of year dav.la who suffer twtoo as aiuca ae a aaaa does froaa aaapatatlaat I have set the slightest doubt bat that X woetd bars boon removed it I had aot raslgaa 1 : m faat 1 kaow It. If the boyi, aed parUeelarly those m Ohio, aoaelosoe, why. It te safe te say that Taaaor wot, be loft where h la le tha eeeo. 'Aaaoag the praaaeileea aaaouaasd m tha Feesfea Offlee la that of Harrtsoa I Braoa, et fjotorado, te he ft member et the Board at Paaaioa Appeals te the Becretary's eetoa at aSMftyear. He had boom dttatlod for ay te the Seoretary's otaee far soma aaeatha, aad was appelated by tbe Baerstary ape of the aomaakwioa whieh MTeathjatad the Feeetee Don't yoa thiak it woeld have la ah ad s little hotter if they had wited at ftftac I had paeaad eat of emehU emoted blast tereeeeti and aawsrd. I have DM't g-tve ate aay tease te tearet n ay saytag aar thaasr fthawt that litter, rim te yeasotaiy. i drift or ommoml The present admlakttratlea wl outllvelthe surplus City Tribune. The Republicans seared la this neck ec Cindaaati Enquirer. Rvsa Jale5sVITaamJaS JPsValL JaV fHJ OjSwKei price for the soldier vote last autumn. Polities, however, to a queer fame. It to all right when you hunt tbe bear, but when the bear turns and hunts you that to another matter. X. Y. Herald. taiPe foemSSUHftflSEaM vsvMmrS) eB SBaVtaMs1 deelga tor a new What's the matter with a out of American eagle dressed ia fitting suit of store clothes with the mottot "I bought 'em at W'aaMmaker'sr' CftioafO Herald. The sugar ring has deeaoastratsd Ha grip upon tbe National AdmiatotraUon by compelling Secretary Whtiom to restore men dismisssd by Fairchild for Mu-ticipatioa in and tobaeoo frauds. Bill Cbaaalsr has demonstrated bis grip by ehtolakeg a aMResa SO eT'O JpaVeMaB tsVw I4fwOfHaaaiSB)e Albany Argus. Private DalaeU, m a totter te tbe New York Herald, baa cursed a ourss which, if it strikes anywhere near Its aim, tollable to blister the peintef tbe new AdmUtotration. Private te usually a mild mannered not unnecessarily profane, but bis tot ter shows that he has not forgotten has asiai JemelsJf Selslsaajjjj aSlSSsa aJsWawt eelfcavee wiJfirfc occasion arises he eaa curse just as able-bodied a curse as aay body. Chicago Mai!. mmm r roteewejiwBes aaaNWy sacawaew In a recent circular tbe Amsriean Protective Tariff League eeyst Yoa ae deeht reelfse ear maierity M Jority by whieh aaaey free-traders make ae secret of thatr l te make the sght more are already at work kt that aireeWee. set their efforts thw doable its labors, aad set oaty cheek the 1 ease of Its opponents at every SBWasaj eMa aSaT' eerry the war mte Africa. The protectionists are badly seared; no doubt about it. Holding Congress by a narrow margin, aad with a war on hand between tbe New Segtostd manufacturers on tbe one tnde, and the Pennsylvania coal and Iroa nopollets aad thObto woel-gre .i on the other, the sftsmttou to certainty very serious for the hlgh-ttoisra-TAsueltaamhabll aftataaatSBmaMuL i smaVJBmmjBmamaBsjBSSSj' SS'amjramjamBfam

wftteee yea went sweet

it