Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 7, Number 168, 15 July 1882 — Page 2
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Entered M beeem4-:iaa. Matter at U rostafflee HttihirH In ill nr.. SATURDAY. JULY 15. 1888. A nVKMTIRKIMa T ctrcalsttea . IIelJm iMir) vfMkir. let r uim tkM Mr ter paper pbHKFtHI.ICA TICKET. Tea Congress OEH. THOMAS) C BKOWSB. (State Senator.: WILLIAM ZiUWLEX tOCI.KF.. Representetl wi, VCVkOkUJ O. KEESON. XjPTHKr H. SLtiilMi. Owner Coronslssioiier., FAST-TOI Iu--THOMAS HOST. mwL! Iuiriv t.r.OlKfS U. hlSDMAX, Vr jurm iiT, J OiLN BOWMAN. rrotenVxtg Attorney, rrnki.KH i,. fcHlViXKT. 'COTory Clerk, WILLIAM H. KCULATEtt. THADDfcL'U W. O. biiAFFETT. County Treeanier, raa.JUjr. juiui. ' KLetiff. AT-PTtAKLiKH OOH3 AN. Keor1er, .JAiCEb W. WILSON. Coroner, . t.- JAKKH U. 1AXLOK. starveyoT." ALDIBOM IL BTTOT. Thb destruction of life in the Paragon saloon at Texarkana i greater than at first reported. . Already twenty-eight bodiea have been taken from the ruins and more are known to be still unrecovered. Thb report in circulation that the Sultan of Turky has presented onr Minister, General Lew Wallace, a beautiful young girl, from the Sultan's own household, is misleading if it is not explained, by adding, it is simply a painting. Gen. Wallace no doubt prizes the present yery highly, but he cannot accept it without the tonsent of Congress. Thb strike among the Iron men at Pittsburg is quietly but stubbornly maintained on both sides. The operatives solemnly affirm their intention net to resume work until the scale is signed by the manufacturers, and the latter as solemnly declare they will not sign it Thus the matter stands with little prospect of an early compromise. Skhator VooBiTEEU is not alone among the Democrats of the Senate who favor a tariff for protection. He says he is more nr laaa n.t.In.l tn Ma rniti nn rT Sena tors Groome and Gorman, of Maryland; Davis and Camden, of West Virginia; Brown, of Georgia; Harris, of Tennessee; Morgan, of Alabama, and one or two others. This would imply a serious break in. the DeootI ranks which marched under the banner of "a tarta.for revenue only" during the last campaign. ALKXAKDRiAthe Egyptian city bombarded by the English fleet, and plundered and naarly destroyed by the Bedouin rabble, is situated at the mouth ot the Nile, and was one of the most famous cities of antiquity. It was formcled by Alexander the Great 332 years before the birth of Christ, and soon become the center of a vast trade and a great seat of learning. In size, magnificence and population it rivalled, in its better days, imperial Rome, and in some things even excelled that magnificent metropolis. It was more coemopoliton than any other ot the ancient cities, for here were gathered not only the Egyptian, but Greek and Roman and Jew, wi?L their philosophies, their mysticisms and their commerce. It was at this city the scriptures were first given to the heathen in their Septuagint version, ana nere cansuann j uj and strongly established amid the followers of Brama, and the disciples of 'Zoroaster.' About half a ceutury before the Christian era, a Roman attack on the city, led by Julias Cwsm, caused great destruction to its noble edifices, and a few years later it wss conquered and be came subject to Roman rule. W nn ttieir canal rapacity the Romans despoiled the city, carrying many of its most precious works to Rome; but not until tha seat of empire was established at Constantinople did its greatness seriously decline. The establishment of Cairo as the cap italof Ejrypt in 0C9 greatly lessened the T Importances of Alexandria, aid after 1 iqt )ui tl track of com merce to India and the Saat tuned by the way ol tha Cape of Gool Hope, its decline became" rapid and complete, and it has now long been a mass of ruins, with little left to recall its ancient greatness. Pompey's pillar and Cleopatra's needles were, long its remaining ornaments, but even these have not been respected by the rulers of this ancient city. Ona of the needles was presented to the British, Museum, and the other now graces Central Park, New York. It is, then, bat a mass 'of rnins, with no remains of its former magnificence, that the British fleet fired upon the' other day, and the hoodlums and ednvicts consigned to the flames. What England will do with this conquest can not well be conjectured. It is probable it will prove as bad as the proverbial elephant, and be a worthless but expensive sion. Thb English papers insist that Arabi Bey is a rebel and that in destroying one of the chief cities of Egypt to rout him oat and defeat him, the English are not making wax on the Egyptian government. But, If Arabi is a rebel, it most be that be is in rebellion against the -Ejrvotian eoTernment and not the Ecff lieh. Then why should England chastise
himl Well, the truth is about this. The late Khedive, Ismail, was a prtfligate, who sto!e all the money he could wring from the jwasantry of his country by enormous taxation, aod when this was gone borrowed recklessly and at ruinously usurious rates from the capitalists of England and Fiance, pledging the reyennes of Lis country for payment. Ibe English and French capitalists took the risks for the large pre fits premised. But Ismail had undertaken more than he could accomplish. lie had already impoverished his country, and he could not even pay the interest on his debts. The Bhvlocks who had supplied j him with their moneys appealed to their governments, and these responded very readily. They intervened and deposed Ismail and set up the present Khedive under an arrangement that the taxes col lected in Egypt should be paid into English and French hands, for the benefit of Ismail's creditors. In all this ar rangement the Egyptian people were not consulted and had no voice. Their Khedive had sold them into slavery to the British and French money-lenders. and their new masters were strong enough to enforce the contract and com pel the submission of the chattels mori gaged to them. Against this Arabi and the Egyptian people are in rebellion. It mar be that Arab! and his followers are a gang of rascals, whose rights neither their Khedive nor the English . govern ment should respect But they are no worse than IsmtU, who mortgaged them to the Shylocks of England, nor the money lenders who could trade on the very lives of an oppressed and suffering people. The shame is that the fingusn rnmrnmiiTit rnnhi share the odium of hWT " such a transaction by seeking to enforce it, PERSONAL AJfD UOEKAL. Michael Davitt recently contributed twentr fiv dollars toward the relief of the striking freight handlers. "Vox populi, vox Dei." If this sayin n ia true, the voice of God has been crueL bloodthirsty and foolish. A bow that is always bended loses its spring and vigor. Too much concentrated thought has a similar effect on the mind. Mr una Mra. John D. Dcfrees were made full members of the First Congre gational church of Washington City on June 11th. The Inter Ocean says: If business keeps up, there is no reason why the Coroner of Cook county should not be the richest man in America. Misa Mind Howe, daughter of Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, the celebrated an thoress, denies the report fthat aha ia to Oirar Wililo. "" v- v - . I ua 'l1wmm-W . t j IMmu s,,y. a new paper, carries iuc peculiarly Western motto, "Vim, vinegar, vitriol and victory. Mrs. Scoville has gone to the trouble of denying that the bouquet she sent her brother was poisoned. This was useless. No reasonable jwrson ever supposed it was. Mies Vmey Clokcy, a daughter of a wealthy white citizen of the District of Columbia, has married a negro hotel porter. He has thrown himself away on a fooL The Soldiers' Home, at Dayton, has an appropriation of t325,459 to consume, this year. A large portion of it will be taken for the salaries of overpaid officials. " - W. W. Astor is a very rugged capitalist A few daja since he stepped into a Broadway carpet store and bought four rugs that cost him a thousand dollars, each. Evangelist Barnes is fifty-live years old. He has dark chestnut hair, a fierce looking mustache and a brow that crowds down over lis eyes, suggesting great force-c character. It seems that the great transportation companies will be compelled to accede to the demands of the striking freight-handlers in New York. Their new hands join the strikers before they have been at the business long enough to learn it Baltimore American: A New York paper says that "Congress will broil in Washington until August" The funny past of it H however, that Congress do&nt Irotl at alL.-It leafs in the gressional saloon and drinks juleps. About a year ago a dove entered the window of Thurlow Weed's sitting room and flew to his side. Since that time it has never shown any dirposition to quit the presence of the blind and venerable journalist, although always free to do so. It ia claimed that England has a controling influence in the Snez Can alia a total of 400.000 shares England has only 176,003 purchased of the Khedive. How does the ownership of a minority of shares in a joint stock company carry the control! In 1860, England, Germany, Austria aad Italy favored the neutralization of the Sues CanaL while France and Russia opposed it, and Turkey insisted that the Khedive's negotiations, in that direction, were treasonable. The present war bids fair to open op this important question again. - England has involved herself in a war with the Mohommedan Arabs and, unless all appearances are deceitful, she must have a conflict with one or more of the jealous powers of Europe. Her arroirance. selfishness and cruelty will yet rebound to her infinite amazement and sorrow. There never was a bally bat met his match, if be boated for bim long enough.
Biahop Levi Scett. BishoD Livi Scott senior Bishrp of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died at his home near Odessa, JJeL, mursaay. no had been failing for some montns. The deceased was a native of Delaware, and waa born October 11. 1302 He entered the ministry without a regular collegiate education, but had so well improved his opportunities for study that when nomi nated. in 1840. for the position of Prin cipal of the Dickitsin Grammar School, at Cai liale, Fs., be was prepared to mi n with credit toth to himself and tne in sti ntitn. In this position be remamea three years, when he returned to the active work of the ministry. He was for several years a Presiding Eider, and met with a marked succtss in the pulpit and as an executive. At the general conference of 1848, at Pittsburg, of which he was a member, be was elected agent of the New York Book Concern The ability with which he filled his position added to bis fame, and the conference of 1852, held at Bcston. honored him by an election to the Episcopacy, giving him the highest vote of the four bishops then chosen. In the fall of 1852 he visited the Methodist mission in Af rica. returning the next spring. The Af rican climate seriouslv affected his health and for years he was not only prevented from rendering full service, but it was feared he would not recover. In his prime Bishop Scott was a good. though never a brilliant preacher. His sermons were distinguished for their strong thoughts and chaste languageHe was a deeply pious man, and was held in affectionate regard by the ministry throughout the church, hundreds of whom he ordained to their work. In cerson he was of medium sizs with strongly marked features, a placid coun tenance. Hps expresiive of firmness and benignity, and hair thinned and whitened with age, neatly combed back from his face and falling over his neck. His voice was sweet and clear in his prime. but not strong; but he was able to fill with it the largest church. He was made Master of Arts by Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut and Doctor of Divinity by Delaware College. Indian ldeaa Exprewcd by the Prau. Knightstown Burner: The people of a town or neighborhood cusnt to be united in sentiment upon the subject of speaking well of their locality. 1 nere is nothing gained by speaking ill of your neigh borhood. It only provokes retaliation and lll-wilL Stand by your friends and they will stand by you. Lagrange Standard: Cannot the dailies be induced to stop printing the Scoville productions! Kendallville Standard: If it is true that a vast volume of illiteracy has been injected into southern constituencies within the last score of yearc, to the serious embarrassment of statesmanship of that section. Madison Star: Some fellah is likely to get hurt in Asia before this cruel war is over. Lafayette Courier: Even the promise tiaa tlie magical ifTsc of jgt'.lng in motion currents of tibde, and causing the country to anticipate its wants. Ft Wayne JViw: Great Britain or any of the larger European maritine powers, could capture every sea-board city and fortress in America without practical op position. New Castle Mercury: When an attor ney knowing his client to be guilty of violating the laws, attempts bv all the far reachine sharp practice that pettifog insr chicanerv can invent, to pull him through the meshes of the law, then he is to all intents and purposes meaner than the culprit and ought to be so held. nr. Vooiben' Protection Speech, Washihgtoit. July 13. Mr. Morrison of Illinois heard a part of Senator Voorhees' speech in the Senate, it did not convert him. however. He said that if the issue waa ever fairly prtsented to the country, the people would be found on the side of free trade. He claimed that it was sprung upon them the last time. and the manufacturers who were Demo crats went over to the protection side and voted the Republican ticket Senator Morrill said Voorhees made o-ood Republican speech, and he would find that the country would indorse most of it Senator Harrison compli mented Vocrhees. and Senator Hawlev ex pressed his pleasure at the Senator's out spoken conversion upon mat great economic question of the day. Ex Sena tor McDonald, of Indiana, did not in dorse the speech, and took the views of the Republicans on the subject He said the speech was not what he expected Voorhees to make. He did not agiee with the sentiments of bis colleague on this 8npjoct,and in the course of his comments uttered one of the maxims ot his fossilized party. He said, "I rarely change mv opinions. -Indiana statesmen say that there is a contest brevnasr over the leadership of the Democratic party in the State, and the issue will be whether the faithful will swear allegiance to Voorhees or McDonald. It is generally the opinion that true to its traditions the party will desert Voorhees and fail back to McDonald. A disturbance in the ranks is expected be fore the issue is settled. The ItWa Delay. Indiana Farmer. This phrase generally refers to the tedl ous delay in getting a case through the courts, bat it has another meaning, as will appear from this item from one of our dailies of the 8th: "The Revised Statutes are being shipped to the County Clerks of Indiana, direct from Albany, N. Y , where the printing was done." Here it is nearly a year and a half from the time the laws were enacted before they are ready for use by oar justices and lawyers, and having no type or presses in Indiana, suitable for snch work, they must be printed a thousand miles away, and the money for the job sent oat of the State, and a large additional sum paid for sending the books to ua. It is probably wise and prudent management, tat it is beyond oar comprehension. CP rtBM ! CMIIf. later Ocean. The time is coming, and in the near future, when something must be done to protect society. The slowness of the conrta, the eccentricities of Juries and power of money combine to make punishismt uncertain and the probabilities of sjscapa fairly rood.
Geo. Longford, of Wabash. Ind lost
his res deuce, by fire, yester day morning. JXKS, souu. S M. Stockslager was nominated for Congress by the Democrats of the Third District, yesterday. Oscar Goodwin, formerlv cashier of the Logansport Bank, and who disappeared bo mysteriously a month ago, is at Hot Springs, Arkansas. Mis Bailie Voorhees. daughter of Hon. D. W. Voorhees. sailed for Europe on Wednesday in company with Gov. Voorhees and family of New Orleans. The residence of Meredith Simpson, situated a short distance from Vincennes, was totally destroyed by fire on Thursday morning. The orgia of the fue has not been ascertained. Insurance cn the house. $2,000; contents. t300. which fully cov ers the loss. Jerry Collins, a noted character of Muncie, is incarcerated in the city prison of that town for robbing J. Ii Delaney, boiler maker. Collins has figured largely in the police courts and is regard ed as a desperate character. He will more than likely be sent to the penitentiary. A young man named John Hetler, who has since the 4th of July, been in the employ of Thomas Daugherty, a farmer living south of Wabash, waa arrested on Thursday by an officer from Michigan. Hetler ia charged with the murder of his mother at Grand Haven, and has admitted his guilt. Sheriff Stepp, acting under authority from the Board of County Commissioneis of Vigo county, has offered a reward ot $100 for the capture of .Andrew Fuqua, the farmer who shot Alexander Bandy on Tuesday, on account of the alleged intimacv between Brady and Fuqua's wife. There is no hope of Bradj's re covery. The Eighty-fourth regiment Indiana Volunteer Infantry will hold their an nual reunion at the fair grounds near Knightstown on the 19th and 20th of September. It is expected that the Fiftyseventh and Thirty sixth infantry regi ments and the Nineteenth battery will join them. This will make the affair one of great interest An old man named O'Conner, residing in Indianapolis sold his bouse and lot on Thursday and received $900 for it of whifh $500 was paid in cash, while a mortgage on the property was given for the rest In the evening O'Conner invited some of his friends to his house and treated them very liberally, exhibiting the money, and the next morning when he awoke it was missing. At a picnic given by the Presbyterian church of Greenfield, a vei y novel ana original undertaking was consummated It consisted in the conveying of the peo ple to the grounds by steam. Warren Comstock. with a traction engine, pulled a train of wagons, containing the Sun day school, four miles. No horses were hitched to the engine, and it was a novel sight to see a train of cars running along the turnpike. The line of march was lined with people. Clarence ShoobLaged twenty two years, whose home iai New York city, was ia.ay niaht H';i Hartford. Crawford civ. rv .....r-na, i . i oy of theTjrirn, . . ana, wuwo :n r ' ; i , V J "'vuo AM lUKo wiuynuv. tie over '. ur Tattle iia..z r . top of the bridg5hi7 urhrer, fell from the distance of abouVWventy feet He ling ered in great agony until Wednesday night, when he djed.. - Carl Baker, a Qier, 65 years of ego, living three and a iiSlf miles northwest of Russia ville, waa strack and instantly killed by lightning,. an Thursday afternoon. He was in a field-plowing corn when a storm came np,Ad he took shelter under a tree. The lightning struck the tree about thirty feetrom the ground, passing down until about even with Baker's head, when it jfssed to him, striking him just back ofthe left ear and passing down the left svic, completely stripping the clothing frost that side. Baker was a German, and csme from Frankfort Ind , a little more than two years ago. This hilarios British guns on a city seems a sarcasm on 'British claim that the stoppage of di .naive works was necessary to self d' has left upon the hands of Engl; a great city in rums and depopula A J . i. She has effected a of the means of paying British creditor" )f Egypt But she can go no furthu She must now await what the powej say. It is far from cer tain that whafthey direct will not be humiliating titEngland. It is improbable that it wdtjttmprove her situation in Egypt It isflmost certain that the out come will behnore costly to the British people than have let the Khedive's debt go, or fc-fhave taken the chances on the Khedive ipayiag in part In fact in parjra'ik that ia justice he ought to pv,ftir jjwa shaved by every hand Etur"""" rtion of the loans, and was l" ' France in the Suez Canal 'ftl&re Lock. - ' AsCJrV comec-' hard hw miles fa. have reael rows clear that he had very f he bad proceeded thirty along the coast he wou'd a settlement and assured the safety t alL If there had betn a shotgun in e party for bird-shooting. life could 1 (ve been sustained, and one was left on Jhe ice. The starving party passed neeiA hut with twenty carcases of reindeer jT The tracks of the poor fel lows wers ieen by some natives, who were frighUfced and fled. DeLong stuck desperately to his records, and so overburdened hfe men. They made but a mile a day after N'mderm an left them. SnpertorttT ef A Item eon jrewapnpera. offalo Commercial. Very aptly illustrating the truth of the statement that the afternoon papers get the first mention of an important piece of news, the Tjtica Oossrasr says that "it was the afternoon papers that announced the news of Congressman Garfidd's nomination at Chicago; the news of President Gai field's nomination of Robertson to be Collector; the news of the resignation of New Yolk's two Senators; the news of the asaassaaation of the President at the Baltimore and Potomac depot; the news of the sewScce of the assassin, and the news of tbs assassin's execution " Of not one memorable event in the history of the past twelve months did the morning papers saake the first mention.
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wayne tjouniy. Cor. Main and ! Umcp an a rfcaancl Xnncl, Fan Man Gazette. It is announced that the engineer who severed the Suez Ithmus is to be taken next week to see the boring by which it is hoped to create an underground isthmus connecting England with France. The visit of M. de Lesseps to Sir E. Watkin will no doubt provoke many refections as to the absurdity of the fears excited by the Suez canal in order to point a moral nearer home. But is it not possible to draw a moral the other way! No doubt the Suez cansl is a great conven lence. but ust at present we hardly need to be reminded how enormously it has increased the perplexities and difficulties of English policy in the East Material advantages in the shape of rapid communication are sometimes apt to entail very serious political dangers, bet that of course, does not prove that Lord Palm erst on was right in opposing the canaL Waakiagua Orerdrawa. Oath'. Carre.pondesee. "I think," continued the gentleman, "that a great error is done the American public by the newspaper press sending to Washington very fresh young men to de scribe public life and character. These young fellows go down there expecting to find a race of demigods, and when they find plain human beings they are disappointed, and begin to advise the country tbat Washington is all rotten " RAILROADS. PAN HANDLE ROUTE. Plttsborgn, Cincinnati and St. Louis Ry Time Table of Through and Local Trains. Corrected to June 4, 1882. IT. OOLUKBCS TIMS. P. M. r.M. 6-21 S-.6S Lts TrullanapoU... Axr Greenllald ,, " KnlKlitatcnrn Lowl.Tlilo. Dublin. Cambridge City fUMravwif " nrenTiUo... BradtwdJoneUon. " OoTlnirton ... . . Fiona. Rt. lari til r.M 19:94 S:1S S.-41I S7 ia:i sau 6:40 S:46 6:4S l Si 1X1 6:4bj 7:1 ar7.S5 SOS 1 )l AJK. ITS : 10 S:ll 8:4 BIO 8:45 0:13 10 S4 S28I 6:18 4Mt 8381 61 6.07 4M7 Urbana... turn S:3U 7 JO Too Millard Centre OolnmbTiSi , 116 602 10 -Jbk r.M. AM. ait Pittebn S3U! 5:10 7:45 :I6 10 11:15 Philadelphia Hew York 6 SO! a.M. r.u. Boston 60 630) Gox.mai7 Tim a. Xlm. I Fut Eap. ,Iilne. Exp. Aeev rjt. P.SL Lve Oolnrabng , Ait Mttford Centre ' Urbana S:S 7:12 11K6 4:491 6:12 T.-0U 7:46 11:05 6321 TJt. Bt. Paris.. lass 198 7:98 8 i Piqna... SOS CoTinjrton .. lUSi Bradford JnootionJ 8Si 1361 6 36iar8 as Qreanvllle. pttiTwt4 Cambridge City.. 9:06 a. m. lUSt 1:08 726 maw 10:411 Brfl 8:4& 76 81 6 as 6:41 03 - usDun.. S7 4. -08 LewiaTCla.. Knitffctatoirn Cfreentleld , , , Indianapolis Bt. Loafs 11 :1 4J 93 1:01, 971 11:4a r.u. r.u. 1S30( 10.60 10 dO an 8: 7:30 'Dally. t Dally eioept Sunday. Tralo. lea Bradlom Junction tor LAgaaaport, Cbleacoaad IntermaJiate point, at r8X6 a. ox, 1.90 p. m. aod ttiob p. m. Trains leava Ktehmond for Chieaoo and intar madiate points at 41065 a. m ; and lO90 p. m. j lor Andenon aod iotermadiata point, at 44,00 p. m. ; tor Daytou at 7JS a. ox, fllo p. m,and t7io p. m. Drawing room, slaeping and hotel ears through to Pittsburgh, Harrlabnrg, Pbiladelpbia and New York without ehanga. Only one change of oars to Baltimore, Washington City aod Boaton. 'JAMES MoCKEA, E. A. FORD, afanager. Gen. Pan. A Ticket Afft. Columbus, o. I'lnauuaaM, Fa. The Nation, Bioee 1U eonsolidatkm with the New York Evening Poat, ha. inereaaed ita facilitie. in every department, enlarged its lin to twenty lour pagea, and added many able witters to its preriona hat. It la now pronoaoeed by many of it. readers to be better t an erer before. EatabUched in 188S, the Nation was a pioneer in tola eonntry aa a weekly Journal of literary and politkml eritieiim of the highest order, conducted bee from the control of party or Interest of any sort. Despite a precarious support daring the flnt few years. It fau held to ita original aim, and has long been a recognised aathority at borne and abroad. Its editorial managem ant baa been unchanged from the first, and ita projectors intend that, with their present facilities, the Nattos shall become more than erer before the medium of the ablest thought of the tame. Th. form and stylo of the paper are chosen with a view to the moat suitable shape for bind tog, and a set of tba NAnox preserved, bound, and indexed, makes thomoet somplate and readable record of emient events of importance In the political and literacy world available for the American public The subscription price has been Reoucea to y?3 per Annum. Specimen ropisa sect on request. Address the Publisher, 9LQ Broadway, New Tork. SlLJiaSCIatlllBIE FOB THE ONLY - $1.00 Per Year. TVV E L V E PAG EC.
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