Bloomington Courier, Volume 14, Number 4, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 November 1887 — Page 2
. THE COURIER.
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BY H. J. FELTTS
BLOOMIKGTON.
It is estimated that between 80,000 and 70,000 type writers are In use.
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Rkfkrrixg to f e w York a Republican, and to Ohio a Democrat, wouidw much prefer to talk about the weather.
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Cc. Hxnkt R, Fellows, for district attorney of New York City, ran behind his ticket 45,000 votes. It came near being the other fellow. ,.' , JPrtncb Waldemak, of Denmark, came near shooting the Czar at a recent hunting party in the Nyrnp forest. He mistooa him in the dusk for a stag, and had a sure aim at h im and his finger on the r trigger before he was undeceived.
Thb Democratic gain of a straightout Democratic United States 8enator in Virginia to succeed Riddleberger is offset by the loss of Senator McPherson, f New Jersey, a warm supporter of President Cleveland from the start.
Governor Wattermak, of California, upon assuming his'seat, recently, bad all the money in the State Treasury counted; insisting upon every seal of every bag being broken. The money, $1,100,00, was all there, and- the Governor gave an elaborate dinner to all who had a hand in the count.
Gen Miles, the old xlndian fighter, was presented with a sword by Tucson, Aria., last week, and the occasion was made a gala day. Ail the civic organizations joined in a parade and .the city was in holiday garb. Gen. Miles deserves much of the people of the West, and we are pleased to note their 'evident appreciation of his services.
A hovel plan to promote marriage among the settlers in the Northwest Territory has just been adopted by the Canadian Pacific-railroad. When a'settler wants to go to Ontario for his girl, he buys a matrimqnial ticket at the usual rates; but on presenting the ticket a few weeks later at an Ontario station, together with a. marriage certddcate, he wilt be-entitled to free transportation lot his bride.
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RIOTING-IN IiONDON. 9a or Thousand Poltcmen in Combat wHh Handled ThonsaW Antagonist. The scene at Trafalgar square, London, Sunday, has not been equalled since 186ft, when the people in attesting their right to public meeting, destroyed the railings; of Hyde- Park. Early in the day four thousand policemen took possession of the square and its approaches, prepared to hold it and prevent the advertised meeting. Soon the different clubs, ass ociatf onsetc, began to arrive, after haying marched through' the various districts in which they' belonged headed by bands of music and flyine flags.
banners, streamers, etc The deX detachments were composed of Socialists, Radicals, Irish societies, and a few trades associations, and as fast - as they a came to the square they were attacked : and dispersed by the police, only to reassemble and press forward later. r. As the crowds became more dense, firerce fights were started between the police and the mob in Northumberland- avenue, Pall Mall and other adjacent '. streets, in which the police' were uniformly the victors. One detachment, preceded by a banducceeded in getting into the square, and a bloody - fight ensued, which ended finally rfin the repulse of the intruders and the injury of
many persons. With this detachment was Mr. JK. C. Graham, Liberal member of Parliament for Northwest Lanarksahire, who wasi seriously hurt and subsequently arrested on a charge of assaulUng the police. At 4:30 p. m.- the- crowds . numbered nearly 100,000, and it became so perfectly manifest that the police were powerless to disperse themi that the military was summoned. In resnonse y this call a force of cavalry and infantry came - upon the ground, but- they refrained from charging upon the multitude, because the people, awed by the presence of the troops, Tiad begun to disperse,and
by dusk comparatively few remained? Two hundred citizens and forty of the police were injured in the succession of melees that took place, and about fitty of the disturbers were- arrestsd, inclading Bans, the Socialist leader. Some of those injured were well enough to leave the hospitals after their wounds had been dressed, while- others are so badly hur that they cannot fully recover for weeks. One patient in the Chaxing Cross Hospital is terribly burned with vitriol, whicn was squirted on bim from a
syringe, and another man, who is severely cut in the thigh and other places, declares that lie received his wounde from two policemen,one of whom thrust s bayonet through his thigh while the other stabbed him with a knife or knives. Several of the injured policemen are suffering from Jmifewounds ' . " It was noticeable that the crowd, while hooting, jeering and execrating the police, cheered the military. The infantry was posted in the middle of the square, so that the mob should not take posses aion of the square in ease they succeed ed in breaking through the police line, and it is perhaps fortunate that they were prevented, as it is believed that instructiohs had been given that the riot act should be read and the infantry fire upon the crowd the moment the latter should break through the police
Mistakes ThT Make in the Training pi Youth. Tyrmnny or Too etres t Xcnienoy. Sfaonld Bo Arolded Firmness Keoeasary . . in ...Proper DiaoipHao Physical aad Moral TIopmeut Both Needed. , Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at the Brooklyn Tabernacle last Sunday. Subject, Parental Blunders. Text, L Samuel, iv., 18: "He fell from off the
seat backward hy the Bide of the gate,
and his neck brake, and he died; for he was an old' man and heavy." Dr. Talmage said: This is the end . of a long story of parental neglect. Judge Eli was a good man. but he let his t wo boys, Hophni and Phinehas, do as they ptaasd, and through over-indulgence they went to ruin, ,The blind old Judge, ninetyeight years of age, is seated at the prate waiting for the news of an important
battle in which his two sons were at the front. An express is coming with tidings from the battle. This blind nonagenarian puts his hand behind hip ear and listens, and cries: "What meaneth the noise of this tumult?" An ex cited messenger, all out of breath witn the soeed, said to him: "Our army is defeated. The sacred chest, called the ark, is captured, and your sons are dead on the field.'.. Wo . wonder the father fainted and expired. The domestic tragedy in wnicti these two sons were the. tragedians bad finished its fifth .and last act. "He fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate, and his neck brake, and he died; for he was an old man and heavy. . Oh, the ten thousand mistakes,. in rearing children mistakes . of parents, mistakes or teachers in day schools and Sabbath ciasses, mistakes which wo all mskei Will it not be useful to consider them? .. .,, . This country 5s going to be .captured by a great army, compared with which that of Baldwin the First and Xerxes and Alexander and Grant and Lee, dl put together, were in numbers insignificant. They will capture all our pulpits, storehouses, factories and halls of legislation, aH our shipping, all our wealth and all 'our honors. They will take possession of our authority, from the United States Presidency down to the humblest constabularyof everything between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. They, are on The march now, and they halt neither day nor night. They,, wili soon be here, and all the present active population of this country must surrender and give way. I refer to the great army of children. "Whether they shall take possession of everything for good or for bad depends' upon the style ol preparation through which ihey pass on their way from the cradle to the throne. If a parent, you will remember "when you were aroused to these great responsibilities, and when you found that you had not done all required after you hid admired the tiny hands, and the glossy hair, and the bright eyes that lav in the cradle. You suddenly remembered
that tharh and would yet be raised to
bless the world with its benediction or
to smite it with a curse. In Ariosto's
great poem there, is a character called
Kunrero, who has a shield of , ineutfrra
ble splendor, but it is kept veiled save on certain occasions, and when uncov
ered it startled and overwhelmed i:s
oenoiaerrwno Deiore .naa no suspicion
of its brightness. My hope to-day is to
uncover xne aesxanv or vour cniia or
student, about which vou may have no
especial appreciation, and flash upon ii , i -i . . 1
you iue spienaors oi its immortal na
ture. Behold the shield and the sword
of its con flic tl
I propdse in this discourse to set forth
what I consider to be some of the errors
prevalent m the training ot children.
.-first, i remara that many err m too great severity or too srreat leniency of family government. Between parental tyranny and ruinous laxativeness oi discipline there is a medium. Some
times the father errs on one side and
the mother on the other side. Good family government is all important. An-
is the f0rerunnerof anarchy and misrule
iu iuo outitj. nnat a repulsive spec tacle is a home without, order or discipline, disobedience and anger and falsehood lifting their horrid front in the place which should be consecrated to all that is holy,; and peaceful, and beauti ful. In .the attempt to avoid all this, and bring the children under proper laws and regulations. . o&rents hnvA
the praiiie by fighting fire with fire, but you can not with the lire of your own disposition, put out the tiro of a child's disposition. Yet we may rush to the other extreme and rale, children by too great leniency. The surgeon is not unkind, because, notwithstanding , the resistance of his patient.he goes straight on with firm hand and unfaulterins:
heart to take ofi' the ss.njrreno. Nor Is'
the parent less affectionate and faithful because, notwithstanding all Violent remonstrances on the part of the child he with .the., firmest discipline advances to the cutting off of its evil ..inclinations The Bible says: "Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let not thy soul spare for his crying." Childish range unchecked will, after a while, become a hurricane. Chidish petulance will grow up into misanthropy. Childish rebellion will develop into the lawlessness of riot and sedition. If you. would ruin the child, dance to his every caprice and stuff him with onfectionery. Before you are awaro oi it that boy of six, years will go down the street, a cigar, in his mouth and ready on .any cor ner with his comrades, to compare pugilistic attainments. The parent who allows the child to grow np without ever having learned the great duty ot obedience and submission has prepared a cup of . burning gall for his own lips and appalling destruction for his descendant. Remember Eli and his two soils, Hophni and Phinehas. A second error prevalent in the train
mg ot cuiiaren is a-laving out oi a
theory and following it without arrang
ing it to varieties of dispositions. ; In every family you will, find striking difference oi temperament. This child is
too timid, and that too bold, this too inactive, and that loo boisterous. Now, the farmer who should plant corn and
wheat and turnips the same way, then
put them through the hopper and grind them in the same mill, would not be so
much of a Xool as the parents who
should attempt to discipline and edu
cate all their. children 'in the same niau
ner. It needs a skillful hand to adjust
tnese cnecks ana balances. The rigidity of government which is necessary to
hold in this impetuous nature would utterly crush that flexible disposition, while the gentle reproof that would
suihee for the latter would, when used on the former, be like attempting to hold a champign Bucephalus with. reins of gossamer, God gives us in the disposition of each child a.hint as to how we ought to train him. as God in the mental structure of our children indicates what mode of training is the . bestHe also iudicates .in the disposition their future occupation, " Do not write down that child as dull because it may not be as briliant as your other children or as those of your neighbor. Some of the mightiest men and women'of the centuries had a stupid childhood, Thomas Aquinas was called at school 'the dumb ox," but afterward demonstrated his sanctified genius, and was caller "iho angel or! the schools" and, the eagle of Brittany." Kindness and patience with a child will conquer almost anything, and they are virtues so
uhnst-iike that tbfiy are inspiring to
look at, John Wesley's kiss ot a child
and sing and laugh, and go with a rush and a hurrah. Inthiswnv thev gather
up a surplus of energy for future life.
Jbor the child that walks around with a
scowl, dragging his feet as though they
were weignts, ana sitting down ay tne hoitr in moping and grumbling. I
prophesy a life of utter inanition and discontent. Sooner hush the robins in the air till they are silent as a bat, and lecture the frisking lambs on the hillside until they walk like old sheep', rather than put exhilarant childhood in the stocks. The fifth error in the trainixmof childhood is the postponement of its moral culture until too late. Multitudes of children because of their precocity have been urged into depths of study where they ought not to go, and their intellects have been overburdened and overstrained and battered 1 3 pieces against Latin grammers and algebras, and coming forth into practical life they will hardly riee to mediocrity, and there is now a stuffing and cramming system of education in the schools of our couutry that is deathful to the teachers who have toeuforce it, and destructive to the children who mupt submit to the process. You find children at nine and ten years of age with school lessons only appropriate for children of fifteen. If children are kept in school and studying from nine to three o'clock, no homo study except music ought to be required oi them. Six hours of study is enough for any child. The rest of the day ought to be devoted to recreation and pure fun. But you can not beirin too early the moral culture of a child, or on too", complete a scale. You can look back upon your own life and remember what mighty impressions were made upon you at five or six years of age. Oh, that child does
not sit so silent during vour conversa
tion to bo influenced by ill You say he
does not understand. Althongh much
of your phraseology is beyond hisgrap,
he is gathering up from your talk influ
ences which, will affect., his immortal
destiny. From, the question tie asks
you long afterward you find he under F-tood all about what you were saving.
You think the child does not appreciate
that beautiful cloud, but its most delicate lines are reflected into the very
depths of the youthful nature, and a
score of years from now you will see the
shadow ot that cloud in the tastes and
refinements developed. The song with which you sing that child to sleep will echo through all its life, and ring back from the very arches of heaven. I think that often the first seven years of a child's life decides whether it shall be irascible, waspish, rude,falae, hypocritical or gentle, truthful, frank, obedient, honest and Christian. The present generations of men will pass off very much as they are now. Although the Gospel is offered them, the general rule is that drunkards die drunkards, thieves die thieves, libertines die libertines. Therefore, to the. youth we tarn. Before they sow wild oats get them to sow wheat and barley. You fill the bushel measure with good corn, and there Will be no
room for husks. For all who are trying to do their duty as parents I quote the tremendous passage: " Train no a child in the wa in
sometimes carried themselves with great rigor. John Howard, who was mercilul to the prisoners and lazarettos, was merciless in the treatment of his children. John Milton knew everything but how to .train, his family Severe and unreasonable was he in his carriage toward them. He made them read to him in four or five languages, but would not allow them to learn any of them, for "he said that one tongue, was enough for a woman. Their reading was mechanical drudgery, when, if they had understood the languages they read the- emnlov
ment or reading might have been a lux
ury. JSo wonder bis children despised him and stealthily sold his booJis, and hoped for his death. In all ages there
wcT3xi 4xccu ui a auuitv ior tne prevention of cruelrv to children. WU
Barbara was put to death by her father because she had countermanded his or der and had three windows put in a room instead of two, this cruel paren t was a type of many who have acted the Nero and the Robespierre in the home circle.
goon discipline and prayer s,nd godly example you are acting upon ivhat child
you have the right to expect him to grow up virtuous! And how many tears of joy you wfl' shed when you see your child honorable and just and truthful and Christian and succeasiul a holy man amid a world of dishonesty, a godly woman in a world of frivolous pretension, When you come to die they will gather to bless your last hours. They will push back the white locks on your cold forehead and say: "What a goocl father he always was to me!" Thej' will fold yoiiir hands peacefully and say "Dear mother! She is ione. Her troubles are all over. Doesn't she look beautiful?" Commercial Proverbs. Men who have company must hav6 money. Some men carry too much sail, some too little. Men trade on borrowed reputation, as they trade on borrowed capital. Good intentions will not help a man on his way if he takes the wrong road. The history of trade shows that failure is the rul3 and success the exception. Money moves the crops that make the great west the granary ot the world.
3 man is overnice and becomes : another is careless and loses his
trade. The same great lesson of failure is taught in the professions that is taught in trade. One man ruins his business because he is a sloven; another ruins it because he is a fop. Men neither win nor lose in the same
way, une laus and is smart: another
wins and is dull.
i a
cordon.
It May Come to Tbls.
Boris TauKript.
Applicant for work T)o you want to employ any more help, - irf?2
ProprietorYes, I believe we are
little short-nanded. Are you sure, you
-r. onaerfltand'the business?" V Applicant I ought to. Pve worked
' at it for twenty years and I eanc bring
you a recommenaation from every man I ever worked for. .""""
f -Proprietor- Oan?t you come in again?
r "e omce-boy is out just now, and the I porter andlthe private watchman are : folding a.labormeeting. I'll state your i JMe to iern when they are disengaged, v and if they are willing I shall be glad to hire;you. BufrlOl tell you frankly that, ; though I may be able to get the consent of the private watchmen and the ;; porter, I'msomewhat in doubt about the 4 offiee-boy? He's awfully particular.
roevar, idhawn to call again, j
3i,
; The heart sickens at what yon .sometimes see, even in families that, pretend to be Christiansperpetual scolding, and hair-pulling, and ear-boxing, and thump mg, and stamping, and fault-finding,and teasing, until the children are vexed beyond bounds and ?rowl in the sleeve.
and pout; and rebel, and vow withih themselves that in after, days they will retaliate for the cruelties nracticed. Many a home has become as full of disputes as was the home of John O'Groat, Who built a home in the most northerly part of Great Britain. And tradition says that the house had eight windows, and eight doors, and a table of eight sides, because he had efgTTt children,and the only way to-keep them out of bitter quarrel was to have a se'perate appant ment for each one of them. That child's nature is too delicate to be worked upon by sledge-hammer, and gouge, and pile-driver. 8uch fierce lash
ing... instead, of -breaking, the. high mettle to bit and trace, will make it dash of! the more uncontrollable. Many seem to think that children are dax not fit for use until they have been, hatcheled and swingled. Some one, talking to a child, said: "I wonder what makes that tree out there so crooeked?" The child replied: "I suppose it was trod on while it was voune." In some famihW
all the discipline is concentrated upon
wio uuu n xiciiu. . anvining is aone wrong the sunnosition 'is that Gpow
did it. He broke the latnh: he lAft
the gate; he hacked the balusters: ho
whittled sticks on the carnets. And
George shall be the scapegoat for all
uyuwBiw miBunaersranaings and suspicions. If things get wrong in the culinary department, in comes the mother and says u prily: "Where is George?" If business matters are per plexing at the store in comes the father at night and says, angrily: "Where is George?" in many a house--hold there issuch a one singled out for suspicion and castigation. All the sweet
flowers of his soul blasted under this perpetual north-east storm, he curses tne-day in which he was born . Safer the Child In an ark of bulrushes on the Nile, among crocodiles, than in an. edegaiit mansion, amid such domestic gorgona. Children are apt to be echoes of their parents fiafer in a Bethlehem manger among cattle and camels, with gentle Mercy to. watch the little innocent. than
the most .extravagant nurserv ever
which God's star of peace never stood.
The trapper extinguishes the flames on 1
All t'l-ic, iinlir nlni cm i . . 1 HI" 4-4. 1 I
foyce iroma proffl.gatto a; flaming tSSSSJ
' O" - - ' 1 .: .. The third error prevalent in the train
ing of children m the one sided develop
ment ot either tne physical, intellectual
or moral nature at the expense of the
others. Those, for instance, greatly
mietake who, while they are faithful 'id
the intellectual and moral culture of
children,forget the physical. The bright
eyes ha?f quenched by night study, the cramped chest that comes from too
much bending over school desks, the
weak side resulting from sedentariness of habit, pale cheeks ami the gaunt
Domes ot .multitudes, of children attes
that physical development does not al-
rwaysgo along with intellectual and moral.
Mow do y ou suppose all those treasures
ot Knowledge the child gets win look in
shattered caoaet? And now how much
will yon give for tne wealthiest cargo when it is put into a leaky ship? How
can that bright sharp, blade of a child's
attainments be wielded without any
nanaier wnet are brains worth with j 1 I-J . . . . . n utri .
out suouiuoiy io carry, tnemr vvnat
a child th magnificent mind but an 1 . m - T" , .
exaansrea t-oay. jsetrer mat a oung
man in iwenty-one go forth into the
world without knowing A from 2 if he
hav. health of body and energy, to pus-.h
uw way i-urousn tne wcria man .at
twei:ty one to enter upon active life, his
naau stuaeu with. JSocrates, and Herodotu", and Bacon, and La Place, i but no
phftical force to sustain him in.tho
suoc of earthly connics. . From this
infinite blunder of parents how many
have come out in life with a genius that
could have piled Ussa on Pehon and
and mounted ' upon them I to scak
the ' heavens, and have lard down
panting with physical eishaustio
belore a mole-hill. They who
might have thrilled Senates and mar
shaled armies and startled the world
with the shock of'their scientific batter
ies, have passed t-aeir lives in picking
up jjjvscrmtions for. indigestion. Thev
earned all the thunderbolts of Jupiier,
ViU'Couldmotget out of their;, rocking -
cnairsto use tnem. ueorge Washing-ton
in eany ale was a poor speller, and spelled hat "h a tiouhle t, and a ream
ot paper he spelled "iheam." but he
knew enough to spell out the independ
ence oi. this country from foreign oppression. , The knowledge of theschoola
is .. im nor taut, hut there- are othaY
things just as important.
Just aj great is the wrong done w hen
tne mind 13 cultivated and the heart
neglected. - The youth of this' day are
seldom demedany scholarly attainments. f.m. 1- a ?..
wiu ouooi unci seminaries I are ever
growing in emciency, and the; students are conducted through all the 'realms of
pmiosopnv, and art,, and language,. and mathematics. The most here'ditarv ob-
tuseness. gives way before the onslaught
or aoroit instructors, jbuc there is a
development of infinite importance
wnicn mauiematicagand the dead Ian-
gua s can not a0ect. The more men-
tat power the more capacity1 for' evil
unless coupled with religious restraint. You discover that terrible power for evil unsanetified genius possesses when you see Sea linger with his scathing denunciations assaulting the best men of his time, and Blount and b'pjnoza and Bolingbroke leading their hosts of followers into the all-consuming tires of skepticism and infidelity. ! Whether know eage is a mighty good or an unmitigated evil depends entirely upon which course it takes. The rher rolling on between round banks makes all the valley laugh with golden wheat and rank gross, and catching hold thp
wheel of mill and factory, whirls it with irreat industries. But, breaking away from restraints and dashing over banks
in red wrath, it washes awav harvests from their- moerings and makes the valley shrink with the catastrophe. Fire in the -furnace heals the house or drives the steamer; but, uncontrolled, warehouses go dcwn in awful crash before it, and in a few hours half a city will lie in black ruin, walls and towers and churches and monuments. You nmst accompany the education of the intellect with the education of the heart, or you are rising up within your child an energy which will be blasting and terrific. Better a wicked dunce
than a wicked pniosopher. The fourth error often committed in the training of children is the supprestion of childish spprtfulness. Don't put religion on vour child as a straight
jacket. Parents; after having for a good
many years beon jostled about in the
rough world often loose their vivacity, and arc astonished to see how their
children can act so thoughtlessly of the earnest world all about them. This is a cruel parent who quenches any of the light in a child's soul. Instead of arresting its flport.f nines, go forth and help him trundle the hoop, and fly the kite, and build the snow castle. Those shoulders are too little to carry a burden, that brow ia too young to bo
wrinkled, these feet are too sprightly to
... A Quaint Bill.
An itemised bill of the Twefth cen
tury is old enough, in all conscience.
but this one from the records of Win
chester cathedral, dated 1182, may be
news to some people:.
S. Dm
tor wort done m soldering aud repair
ing St. Josepli o
Cleaning and ornamenting the Holj
Ghost ; 0
Repairing the Virgin Mary before ana
behind, and making new child 4
Screwing-a nose in the devil, putting in
the hair, in bis head and placing a new joint in his tail 6
The total bill amounted to 11 shillings
and 4 pence, and it is to be presumed
that the workman got his pay, though
the records are silent on that poin.
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Bound for the V&t. London fathers and mothers are
troubled about their bovs. who have
been converted by Buffalo Bill and are
anxious to be off to ''the ereat West"
A London paper asserts that' "the exo
dus of boys bound for the far West is
such that a special staff of detectives is
employed on the landing stage at Liver
pool to look out for runaway youths and
restore them to their parents. The boys stopped have from four to sixteen load
ed revolvers concealed about them and
lariats galore packed away in their
trunks."
JjUiXSG AND mSLlkirVG,
go; long at a funeral pace. God bless their y tiling hearts! Now is the time for them to be sportful. Let them romp
Yen who know the reason, tell me, How it is that initinets still lrorapts the heart to like or like aot At its own eapricio as will ? Tell me by what hidden magic Our impressions first are led Into liking or disliking, Oft before a word be said? Why should smiles sometimes repal us? Bright eyes turn our feelings oold? Whut Is that which oomes to tell ns All that glitters is not gold? O, no feature, plain or striking, But a power we can not shun, Prompts our liking or disliking Ere acquaintance hath beguu. Is it instinct or some spirit Which protects us and controls Every impulse we inherit By some sympathy of souls? It it instinct, is it nature, Ot some freak or fault of ehauee, Which our liking or disliking Limits to a single gianee? Like pTwentiment of danger Though the sky no shadow flings? Or thut inner sense still stronger, Of unseen, unuttered things? Is it O, can no one tell me. No one show sufficient cause, Why our iikinR and disliking, L Have their own instinctive laws? -kittell's Living Age.
ForakeraSs plurality is 24,95. Last year the B. & O. railroad earned $6,500,000 net. The National fanner's congress met at Chicago, Thursday The agricultural bureau estimates the corn crop at 1,453,000 bushels.
FieJdeii and Schwab were taken to the penitentiary at Joltet, Saturday. United States Marshal Dyer has been appointed receiver of the Mormon church property. General Morgan adds his denial to that of General Gordon that he was kigeed by the latter. The Philadelphia shoe manufacturers, Monday, opened their shops to all employes irrespective of their lahor affiliations. Dr. Ames, mayor of Minneapolis, is the latest candidate for the place of Vice President on the Democratic ticket. The twelve women who voted at Kattleville, near Binghamton, N. Y., last we?k, will bo arrested and prosecuted or illegal votings Harry. Garfield, son of the late Presi
dent Garncli, is atteiidiug lectures on law and political science at Oxford Uaiversity, Euglani. Numerous complaints against the railroads for unjust disenmination continue to be made to the interstate commerce commissions A freight train Monday ran into and demolished the house of John Murphy, of Weilsburg, W. Va., fatally injuring Murphy and two children. Rev, 0. H, Pentecost, of Newark, N. J., preached at sermon Sunday warmly eulogizing the executed anarchists and denouncing their execution. The Marine hospital service, last year, cost $461,336; for the prevention of epidemic diseases 1486,490 were spent. There were 43,314 sailors treated.
It is said that indictments for murder
still stands in the Chicago courts against about seventy-five anarchists, and at; the first break they will be executed. A co tf on-shed owned by Brooks,Neely & Co., in Memphis, burned, Friday, together with i,300 bales of cotton. The loss is $8f 5,000, with $300,000 insurance. Cashier Ciecellius, of the Fifth National bank, St. Louis, falsified accounts ior five years so us to -carry four or five concerns in which he was interested and which finally broke the bank. t ' A Charleston (W, Va.) paper says it is reported that the forest fires have caused such an unnatural heat in Boone county that trees are budding, and leaves and blossoms are coining out. A mob'assaulted the houso of Mary Duff, Fifteenth and Pine streets, St Louis, because she displayed emblems of grief at the death of the anarchists. The mourning signs were torn down, W. H. Carter, a practical jeweler, of
Steubenville, O., was nrrested,Thursday? and confessed to having complicity in the robbing of a jewelry store at Uhrichsvire, O., recently, and implicating three others. Offices Bray shot and killed George Grant, colored, in Kansas City, Wednesday, for ret using to halt when ordered. In 1882 Grant killed officer Pat Jones, but another negro was caught and ynched for the crime. The Methodist Episcopal bishops Thursday fixed the missionary appropriation for the ensuing year at $1,150, 000; the amount last year was $1,044,195. Of next year's appropriations, $621,945 ill go to foreign missions. The richest strike ever made in Arizona Territory was discovered in the Santa. Preata mountains near Prescott, last week. The two men who discovered the ledge took out $15,000 Kin three days by means of a mortar. An American flag displayed at hal fmast from the roofol Herman hall, German resort, at North Adams, Mass., caused an angry crowd of all nationalities to assemble Friday, and in order to save his building from being demolished the flag was lowered. The fire record for October shows the losses in the United Statees and Canada
to be 59,769,825, against a loss of $12,000,000 in October, 1886. and $5,750,900 in October, 1885. The total for the first ten months of the current year foot up $102,953,326 against $95,400,000 for the corresponding period of 1886.
Mayor Latrobe, of Baltimore, to receive a statue of Chief
6,000 men, who were engaged in repairing embankments, were overwhelmed by the flood aid 4,000 drownerf. Another terrible inundation hta occurred in SiKe-Ohuen. Advices from Badashan say that Turkomans stopped the work oi Russians making a railway froffi Chardoni toKilef. War haS openly broken out among the medical nien ovef the case of the Crown Prince, aind wfiile lie survives it is never likely to cease. A recurrence of the crowri prince's throat trouble haa appeared and Dr. Mackemie says s. very difficult operation will be necessary to relieve him. Six thousand Jews have been , expelled :(rom Tiflis by the Rnssian Government, and. the expulsion, in accordance with the official programme, Will shortly extend to the Whole of Caucasus. Wilii.i'n O'BiitfVs c'otiiirj'wai re moved while ha was sleeping, and a ri:tof S:tr)'s3 miteitut-d, l:lo refused
INDIANA STATE -JEWS,
ure facte
on A Tin- 3iHiffr?
i rs h.v b?jn iiard bbor.
hMi:l ftatigfual
aemed to ut uio'ath'a
leagur-
hv, ki:kotion3.
;kw yorx. There w?rt e&y. ti tickets in the field in iihU State, Bopublican, Democratic, Pronibitioxi, Tfnioji Labor, United Labor, Progressive Labor andjjrteenback. Fred B. Q-rant headed the Republican ticket, ter Secretary of State, Frederick Cook thut of the Democrats and Henry Gteorge the trotted Labor. T'he campaign by these three parties has be en red hot. In 1883 the Republicans elected their Soc:retary of State by 18,000 pluralty, while the Democrats carried the rest ol! the State ticket by a plurality nearly as large. Boy., Hill was elected in ?S5 -oy a pluralty of 11,000, while last year the Democratic judge of appeals received a pluralty of 7,000. The contest in We w York City over the
Diistrist Attorneyship overshadowed
everything else. YV R, Fellows was nominated by the Democrats, and DeLmcy Nicholls, also a Democrat, prominent in the prosecution of the boodlere, was nominated by the Republicans and in the dependent Democrats headed by the New York World, The State goes Democratic by about sixteen thousand majority. The Democrats have a majority of" about 65,000 in New York and Brooklyn. Hieho'lls, d., for district attorney; supported by the Republicans, Irving Hall and independents, was defeated for district attorney by 20,896 votes by John R. B'ello ws, regular Democrat. At Chenan() Bridge, eleven women offered their votes, which wore accepted
and deposited in the boxes. They voted the straight Prohibition ticket. The Legisla-ture is Republican in boh branches. The George vote throughout the entire Sta te is less than in New York City alone last year. Ohapin, d., is elected Mayor of Brooklyii by ,a plurality of 11,060. The Republicans explain their local defeat by aaying that the Republioins who went for George last year have stayed by him, while the Democrats have gone baxjk to their party. Gov. Hill telegraphed the Sun that the victory is a glorious one, and all fcrue Democrats should rejoice over it. It fc the keynote for i8." . Henry George, in a speech Tuesday nigh tt Baid that the election was the Labor party's Bull Run. (3oing iorwfird nthont the weak ones he predicted ' a speedy triumph, the Tribune says: . The result in ctetait showi sorae i a t resting features. The Prohibition vote has increased considerably. thaa!;s to their energetic and p ractical speeoh-niakin canvass throughout the State. The Lab5r vote in this city lias fallen to nearly
one-half' of George's vote last year, as it was ox-
pectedtodo. That the Democrat! should have been able, in pjtite of all this, to eirry the State, is due, In part, to the combined opposition of the Prohibitionists and the liquor dealers; -in part, to the fact that a larger proportion ot tfie Labor vote secros to have eotne frim the Repub lican party OaTecially in th eouutry than was expected; and in part, perhaps, to Republiean discontent with the heaaof t;heirSlate ticket and with the Democrats of their city ticket. We see no reason for Kepublican dismay n this result : The World says. "The result of the election in this State settle three points as thoroughly as any political event can be settled in advance.
President Cleveland wiU be renominated by his
artv; Mr. Blame wui not borenoininateii oy the
epublicans; Mr. George will not control the
election next year. New York in the pivotal
State. Mr. Cleveland's triends hard had a complete triumph. They are ectitled to the fruits oi the victory, drover Cleveland is indeed a lucky man; and James o. Blaine may be aid to be a dead cock in t ie pit. It seems that the German Republicaa v te very largely came over to the Demoeratic si: e. and with the increased prohi
bition vote miich more than made up the disaflec-.,
The Sun says: "Due credit fo? the eoheelon and confidence that brought about: the glorious result of yesterday should bo given to Grover
Taney, presented by W. T. Walters, ? Umely as it xna wise." fvrtm thn iin1o! 2 To vi A wn0-1 The Herald Slays: "The elections are a "comirom tUD minds ot t). ieakle Wallace, ; piete triumph for the admiuibtratioa. The Yiy
because of the latter's critioism of hif ' tory is along t lie whole Une. The National, tate
refused Justice
ocial conduct during ti)e recent campaign. Consequently the statue was unveiled, Saturday, without ceremony. One of the largest single business
deals probably ever consummated in
.the world, was ratified at Chicago Sat-
n VI lav wlipn f li A ontlTO TrArayfxr o r A
1 ;v-r r.rWyj b .tphilaolrv Fh olamtm a AumniTrM RhfirlfT find
tranuuises oi Lne tae onicaeo vv est ui- eontroiier by 5,ooo and lo.otio nuiontA' reipeo-
renayivania onw j'vao
and municipnl admiuistraUons wore alike on trial, and the 'erdict. as rcgnrds President Cleveland, Governo r EJU and Mayor Hewitt, is 'Well done, good anil Taithful tervantf.- Wo can not overestimate t ie signitieanoa of tlic verdict in its effect upon National politics. Whatever the fault of the Democrats in thii past, they.havefulr won back pablio eonfidortci?.
Mr. Randall sent the following tele
gram to Governor Hill:
tattle and hogs are dying by the hun-
dred in Uho Southwestern section of Indiana and Kentucky from the effects ot :he loh? drought. In one section of Gibson and Pifee the water to be had h&i produced niilk sickness,- being the principal cause of the death of cattle, . Home four or nve'montha ago Williaxn McOJintic, a wealthy farmer of Bar. thtdomeiv county, was robbed of $6,000 by some sharpers, who male good their escape. Last week a atranger called' at
th horn . of Mr. McCHn tic, saying he
was a Cincinnati detective, and that if
Mr. McClintic could produce enough money tt once to Kive hini a stait he eoc Id capture the thieyi.. Mr. Mc Oliniic, however, refuaedrco bite a teconci time. -4. . It now transpires from the death of Michael Savage, a street-peddler of Crawiosdsyiile, fihatsom oi the saloonkeepers of the city are ia t;he habit of tak ing the very clothea oft dru nken oustonters for a drink of ginv 8 ivsge shiyerei to death for lack of coat and vest, which had been pawned for drink. A second-hand atan says he gets a large pot tion of his clothing (rov.'.i saloon-keepers, who strip their victims of wearing appaTe!.. " . ";; ' . ' In digging a ditch in Mootgoroery county, in tbe gection oi (tack creek, a discovery has bean made by the work mtntbflt may prove vilaibh hi the
future. In that section the Ian I is v&ry marshy, and when a depth . of ahotit ten feet was reached a white sub' stance was fonnd which seeme to have no bottom. WhettH ia ftrst dug up a white., watery, substance - ocwes but After it has been exposed to thg air ior about two days it beeomCiS very blacfe and burns readily, making a 'bright, wt trm fire. I t is suppose A ,to be . coal in the first formation. - State itatistacian Peelle has, received re pores from fifty-eight counties, showing the extent and character of the iitiga tion turin the last year... The figures are: Civil cases begun, 13,890; criminal cases. 4,52; indictments returned, 857f ; convictions, 1,21 executions Issued, 8.1178; foreclosure decfeee, 1,513, Knox, Boone, Randolph, Caas, Tigo and Oiintoa (tounties, each of which constituten a judicial circuit, have failed to report. . Patents have been issued to Charles 9. Anderson, Laporte, fence machine; Samuel E. Harsh; Wabash; flhaft Aagy Xliomas. C. Fisher, Anderson; grain cradle attachment; Alfred W. Hughey, Arcadia, car coupling; Jacob-A. Parker; Terre Haute, car wheel; David Senior and H. Fetton, Madison, carding machine; Robert B. Short, Union Mills, railway switch; Oswald Smith, Tell Gity, assignor of one-half to W. T. Pyne,
LcuisviHe, Ky., feed regulator for roller
mi Us.. ;v j-' - .v.. " On the 4th of October Josiah W. Staler, who resides five miles north of Mungw7 forged a note on two pTOtainent faiiuers for $180. At the recent essibn of the grand jury a true bill was found against Shafer for committing a felony. The warrant was placed in the hands of th&oftcerg, who failed ito find his whereabouts.bnt Tuesday he voluntarily came into court and pleaded guilty of the charge, whereupon Judge Lota, without ceremony, sentenced Mm to two; years in the penitentiary. A fire broke put in the Odd Fellows' building at Svansville, Thursday morning, and before it was gotten under control had' destroy ed over $300,000 worth of property. The wholesale stores of Haas, Runge A Co., Chas. -L Vaca, R. Manhheimer A Co., Urso & M irsicano, S. Kahn & 8on, H. L. Babcoik, the warehouse of F. P. Carson, three residences and several smaller buildings were . totally destroyed The lor s was increased from the fact tKat th 5 stores were packed with the Jfeill stick of the firms. .-
Ron. Day id ff. Cole rick, one of the oh iest and most famous lawyers of Indian.!, died, Monday, at Fort , Wayne, at tho age of -eightyfom. Mr. Colerick carne to Fort Wayne, on horseback, in 1SS8; and had resided - there .continuous
ly: even ' since. He - was engaged for twenty, five, years in the most important litigation i n the State,' but of late years haft been an invalid. In power before a jury Mr. Colerick ha?l few equals. He served hm distnet in the sIegi8lature, and filled many other places of honor and trust He was thi lather of a rermarkoblo family ot lawyers. One of his
some local to Indiana ; ijs gathered
prepared bf tfe staistician. The
lowing, he says, are lire estimates or "i
average yield and conditio of the crojpj?
ol the. Slate: Whent A.f :fm per acre, stated in bufhels, 15.5; Jtrerage
quality, 100 representing high medium1 grade, 96V Rye --Avieauge yield per' fris' in bushels, 13.9; average: quality,4 10(: ; representing high inedinm grade, tBg Oats Average yieid eracrela bushels 26; average quality, 100 represeHtfiig high medinhi grade, J 95. BtrleyAverage yield per acre 4ti bushels, 18 average quality, 100 representing highi medium grade, 9C Baokwheajt-Aveirr age condition ; . 75, ' ; Corn-r51, Whtte
Potetoes--43. Sweet Potatpes-70; Sdr-
ghum66. ' . ": ; :
The report of the Commissioner 6T"::
Si
Internal Revenue for'- ihe- y ear endinglast June shows the aggregate eollee-' tions in Indiana disf.rlcts to be as t o lows: Sixth disc Wmi D; aHnter,?
collectoi, 880,305; seventh
Henderton, collector 61,796. Dannlp
the year there were reported from
three ludiaix.t diatriftts 49$ ciear .makeia? I
Ror.nnnts. ahowinc -that 984.432 nonndrn : 3.
of tobacco were mimnf actared. making- ,
42.701.500 ciffara. -' Uh&ie are fifteen cisar: 4 .1
fftp.t)ria 'in Indiana, and last Vear the-r Mm.
consumed 49,238 penndsof leaitobaeoo 11,471 pound of scraps; 1,156 pounds oj licorice, 1,3 61 ponn ds . of :Sfsisn38):
pounds of other materials in all, 0Z,4f$
pounds. ; The account of tobacco 'tttttt
factured in Indiana, is ss follows: Pjiag'y
I snu5i2S,422 ponndt5;total,51i385 pounds
jtnere were.3,i3U licenses issuea ror.yf
Honor aeaiers ciunuif te year, r-.ivs-
low8 Rectiilers,10; retail Hquor dealetSil ft! ! hrnwere. 6S: rcttail dealers, in naalt i
Hnnora. 172: whcHiMfelg: dealew m mait
liquors, 102; Indiana ha; 12 .gadifcm tiUeries rogisteredj but mlf 9 -were-'of' erated. She alspas 53 frnitiistiUerie8 registered, of which alt but i pot oj erated. These retifieo77$,m gaUoni
ot spirits. "':.-.,-;: . , ... .-
.in an
Mans spneranaee oau, ,y-
Secontradictoiryr-A. biaMlsii!6et 5
The greatest ant. on earth-an elephanWr
The labor pistaonaaft caroeater?
table ---X
A ' vacant lofe4nfrl?etooit
Aingm. gathers gpo4fieaX p
A wattm tnat -won rnjaaoeani? aoeo; g anv chain. .. .'J .Vf. Si mi
The lait Train Roche, of phicago;
Tne Baltimore Democrats will online
UV mCmJ V" V ' . - -. e. . . 7l
tl A t.hrPA nnmTArt tihf 'i n that .t
is fonght with flalrironji S ;. :
bodv else do aft the work. f. J
Mr. Garrett might sell Mr. Ooald bSd' i
10 OftO ..Kaf.li.tnW t wnfprr etru'V iniW
History of the Indian war-f-ote. Brute. ' m
-. - ' V; -m ,4"-. it.a
snoot, scooc-uicago inter ucean. ,,; -.y -m
fthosuH snftfirn afc .Ktrafcford-on-Avmi &:Jm
7-.. Tire Z: .. ,- .T. . -j . TT s-Tiiiaesa
KJliC JLC ISO V Kt v MVUU IV UOWb
The wav of this transeressor
hurri hnt'if. iR fftftv Tifns?n to pat into: i' .2
AS! :i
'r 'A rook runnlne for offiee will finduhafc
11C Will UiQl9'MW.flUiJ.:um,wvW'-;pj
A band of bac cb eteerers call
selves a isalvatidlfi axy. -because
prey on t;he streets, -
tfiemiv-i
An exchange; annonng the close
the Medical Congress: at
heads the ariacleThe ppcto
Eoded.n take. .
TK : 1. - 1Z t-m .ava mil. ivsH
Devil .Fisn. Flentj.
fttUf PoWnlellIgdneif; ' - V ' ' 5i X ' Tnere are a good many v deyil-feh iijv,
t ho hav -ami Avartf tnv rtavft. flnmn Of .-, I,:;
them. ' Emanuel Thomas, the man who caught; the big shark
last, says he has caught- as; devU-neh'this season., v
"The biceat devil fish, or octonndL SO
some call them, that I have caught ,jiiT35S
this hay," said Mr. Thomaa - yesterday
Hnndftv ,v.
maay
when its arms were strehmedi
out: fourteen acjfoss that w its anaB??
were seven f eel; ions;, men1- i Jiav
caught a good nuauy smaller ones . on my
lines; They wrerer? ;", ugly thing' txi; handle," and when I take t hem oqt v of!
the watir;! am not for a motoat veii;'
living sons is Hon. WaJ pole G. Colerick, I careless how
vision Street Railway company passed
into tne hands of new purchasers the
Philadelphia Street Oar Com pany. The
price agreed upon was $13,000,000.
Secretary Lamar has sent a letter to
Commissioner Sparks sharply replying
to a communication fromhim relative
to the adjustment of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis ife Omaha land grants,
and saying that either he or the Secretary must retire from the department. Secretary Lamar addressed a letter to
President Cleveland, Friday evening,
inclosing a copy of his letter to tfee Commissioner. He asks the President
to decide which of tte&Wo oflicials shall
leave the department-,
Saturday was a gala day for the New
York fire department. At 2 p. m. all
the fire companies of the city assembled at "Park Cottage,11 where a gold medal was presented to Captain Daniel Law-
ler for havincr maintained . .the highest i i jsJ.i..2 i ' . "' i'
ruuru iur uiscipaue auu emciency in his company; and another to Fireman Michael Brady for displaying the highest degree of personal valor in the line of duty. Afterward ten very handsome flags were presented to the fire commissioners by Mayor Hewitt. These
flags are emblems of honor, and the ceremony of their presentation will recall the fact that Mrs. Cleveland had been inviterTno present them. The proceedings of the day closed with a parade, in which ail the firemen and a detachment
of mounted police and a Jorce ot't foot
took part.
...
O'Brien complains of being slowly toji ture.1 to death in Tuliamore jail.
Terrible floods have devastated nor-
China. Hundreds f
the inhabitants of the
tively.
majority, as
42.UQU niaioritp.
state, city and Brooklyn.
reimbutan
estimate at prtseat. i-Astyear
We rJo:ice owr New York
li; settles iid nature."
EiBEWBlRfl. '
Ohio reelected Foraker and the Ke
publican ticket by S4.383 plurality. The
Legislature is Republican by an increased majority.. Cincinnati gave an average Republican majority of 11,000. X Fennsylvania elected the Republican candidate for Treasurer by 33,000 plurality. ;-; Governor Ames was reelected Govern or of Massachusetts by J,7,6ll, an increased plurality. i; . .: ; Maryland gave a Democratic majority, of aoout 11000. The Republican ticket was elected in Chicago by a large majority.
Virginia elected a Jemocratic Iegis-,
lature and will elect a straight- Democrat to succeed Riddleberger. ; New Jersey elected a Republican
Legislature andwill elect & Republican
Senator to micceed McPherson. Detroit went Democratic. '
ex congressman ana ex judge ot tne Superior Court A.no(.hei is Hon. Henry Colerick, city clerk; a lawyer, speaker $,nd poliUcran of unusual attainments. ; . n the docket of ;th federal court tho conspiracy cases are marked as Vunassigned," aud no steps" tiave been taken
loosing toward a new -trial of them. District -Attorney Sellers says he has sorae -new evidence in his possession which will be especially damaging to some of the defendants, who were heretofore only regardedr as technically guilty. Among the Jederai court oft ci lis there is understood to be a variety of opinions regarding these cases. Sortie of them regard- it useless to try them again; believhig there is ho .nope 6f a cooviefcion, and others are 'inclined to push them. . Judge Woods is understood to be anxious that they shall be finally disposed of in some way.
??hey have airea'dy cojit the; fro;ernment
about 26,000.
The coal strike in E vansville has been I
again precipitated." After remaining Out four weeks under a strike for higher wages, the men returned to work last week. Xn the interval the operators have run up the price- to nine and ten
cents, which figures were maintained
when the men returned at the old waW
scale, hut the return to
k ....
; & ia
have-a mootfi jcint lkaj&pa?ri
located jist under ttv s uioif
The lung arms e6vTn: niif S.
oer siue mux vauv3 ancKere, wmcjs.v ?m
exert1 extraordioar pawen Whea
tney get nola or anjtnmg 0m rata
instance whe:nvf;hey:ron
They aie cunning, too, ior when -ib&XijM (aafnn rltaiw vn aAnn'il t - )-. aw 1 :"o2i
as.
vpfrr tlifiiynrmn hii is in trtthti nninte r&fi&hi
into his nostrils If they dVa:
goner. They cin or ash the life out of fJSf
man or en aniraal m a moment, . When, they; are -attacked- tbey; throw out; a 'I
black sacre.tiox) , which clouds theater
and both confutes their antagonist " ana
enables tnem to escapes Wney are 7rt;J
hardy They ? ill live for three-6)r hmX Till
(lays after being takt n out the ii?ater I am going to try an. take the next jJs.rS
one I catch to the East.
transported winhout much tea
work made .no . ... .
difference, and prices have not been re
duced, and the men now demand that if the operators receive four cents more on the bushel for their product than when they previously worked at present wages, the laborers are entitled to a eommeusurate increase. Consequently t wiVoI the 'mines shu t down Wednesday inoriuag, and the men at Ingles's, the lftm wt mine in the vicinity, went out in tfc o 'temoon, .The operators refuse
therein and. It i& likely to implicate
nbolH-fifteen hundred, men oi oi i uration. " .. X'X.
Tt e agricultural department, notwithBtandiag: occasional criticisms contin
ues to 'sue its statistical information with persistant regularity. tt is i nfoi rnation, too, tha ; seems to be readily devoured; a fact, perhaps, strange when, its dryness is considered, and the
tions of Bon
thousands of province ard
About PostafretStamps. The Writer. ' - Another good way of inclosing a stamp in a better is to cut two parallel slits near one corner of your letter
sheet, and ihen slip the stamp under the narrow ribbou oKpaper be "ween the slits. If you aregoinj: to send a number of stamps, enclose them in a small envelope, or wrap them in paper tt is a good idea, if you fold the sheet o stomps, to put layers of thin papers-
tracing paper, it you nave it between the folds. Never inclose stamps in ale' rer still damp from the copying-press. Never gum a corner of an ejaclosed
stamp to the letter jsheet, under any
circumstances. Never fail to inclose a
stamp when you write about a matter
destitute. In one place that eonoerasyou mainly altogether
made dorink --8SB
. Tha Piililln Pvititlnar nMnA.'
There ia little doubt now,; says a
; Washington dispatch of Thursday , that
an investigation will be
a special committee of the JSenate ox House, into: tlie managemnj tlie;
trovernment rjrmuag umce. xne ooia
manner in wibieh contnbi
made mr theew York campaign daring the past iendays haa: 1;. ,.tofj-Bei'g publicans to itermine on aa tirth. ft was - threatened during thit lant -l- r--SM
session, but :jgrttta?$ii
where .
terfedthem trein? action.
ot her branch of the
Ao much discre lion is left" tx .a
55 '.-.ti
arc aauuany e3penea upon ine jwqiii-.s-
and be.one
sivion, or at the free will of the Printer, for pa per, -ink, presses
V. .-WW
maiemis 01 an -xmus, as weu as ?iaooj-
and there has been no inJr4lbi!'J
rv N J A. Foolish Quettoeu' : , '
Yiplent nunHBtornfe
t'Ar hjiTiriaomfi ladv and centiAtt) iui.'em -r
platform: (xentleman (to those inside) j
T-uan you suewe a, iaay m tnefer
officials of the department stand, ready Chorus of MaUoicesYeai; neihily
to wHger a oag qi seea uat tne ngures y iflyigp
s
tmi .
mmm
