Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 12 September 1893 — Page 2

THE TELEPHONE.

Br Walter B&ajfut&

their original straightness; they will cut a feather pillow or a bar of irou or steel; and yet analysis shows nothing but wrought iron.

BLOOMINGTON

j A vast amount of adverse critiINDIANA j (.jsm atuj sneering censure has been - ! indulged in with reference to ludi- , ana s Sate Building at Jackson determined to park. The Legislature has been

it-

Pgoplr who are

find fault can always find something ; ro.indlv abused and the buildinc

to kick about.

"Seats in the New York Stock Exchange come high, but men will have them. The "par value" of the holdings in that body is placed at $20,000, and no sale has been made at less than that for many years. There a great many people in this part of the country who would have to stand up a long time before they could pay $20,000 for a "seat1 and the majority of our readers would hardly care to invest $20,000, were they so fortunate as to possess such a sum, iu a t:seat" in that maelstrom of the financial sea.

"Owing to the stringency of the money market" two belligerent citizens of Goshen failed to come to blows. One of the parties to the controversey stated that, although he hungered for gore, he really' could not raise the money to pay the tine that he knew would be imposed upon him in case he began hostilities, so he dared "the other fellow" to "jump his frame17 so that he could fight in self-defense. kiThe other fellow" felt that way himself, so the light was declared "off" until the purse-strings of the world shall be relaxed.

! self condemned in unmeasured ! terms as being totally unfit as a repj resentation of the wealth and enter- ! prise of the great Hoosier State. As j a matter of fact the building i; typical of Indiana in its homelike at- ; tractions and lack of ostentation, as j well as for the fact that the oommisj sinners having it in charge have adt ministered their trust iu a manner worthy of all praise, iu that the building has been erected and all ex

penses paid, while the appropriation will not be exhausted. While the building and Indiana's exhibit at the Fair are not up to the standard of some other States, yet no citizen of the Hoosier common wealth need blush for his State because of a supposed failure on the part of those in authority to make a proper use of their opportunities. Indiana's building is ';ail right." and is a daily haven of rest for thousands of wearv pilgrims who seek its sheltering walls with grateful hearts to those who have provided a place so "home like'' for their benefit.

This is an "off1 year in politics. Ohio, Iowa and Massachusetts elect governors. Iu Ohio, Gov. McKinley has been re-nominated. Gov. McKinley was elected two years ago

Indiana has many laws that are ignored and are practically a dead letter. Notably the statutes forbidding prize fighting and for the protection of wild game. Pugilists can batter each other with impunity without endangering the perpetuity of the human race. The harm they do is confined largely to their own persons and to the morals

by a plurality of 21,000 in a total of spectators, with probably a reflex vote of 817,000. In Iowa. Gov. . action upon the community at large Boies, Democrat, has been re-nomi- j that is the reverse of beneficial. But uated. He carried the State four i transgressors of our game laws are years ago over Wheeler, Republican, j not only offenders against the code

by a plurality of 8?21r. In 1892 the of our day and despoilers of the

Republicans elected their State ticket by 22,000 plurality. In Massachusets two years ago Russell was elected by the Democrats, by a plurality of 2.534. These three common wealths casting over 1,600, -000 votes will be the principal battlefields this year, and the result of their elections will bs awaited with interest.

The strange decrees or Fate have in all ages attracted the wonder of mankind. Why two babes lying side by side in a cradle, with apparently equal advantages and equal chances for success in life should live through totally different careers and die at lass, one weal thy honored and respected, the ether an outcast, poor, miserable, depraved and shunned by all the world, presents a problem that philosopheis have never been able to solve. A striking illustration of this very common truth is afforded by two brothers of the Hoosier capital. One is the proprietor of u hotel, and his brother, who had equal chances for success, is his bartender.

People of a statistical turn of mind will be interested with the information that there is a Welsh population of 10,000 in Chicago, and that there are as many Welshmen in the United States as there are in Waie3. The Welsh are generally progressive and are good citizens. The majority of the Welsh in Chicago are identified with some Protestant denomination, the most of these being Presbyterians. There will be 50,000 Welshmen in attendance at the Eisteddfod (whatever that is) to be held at Chicago in September, and the the reporters of that city are already looking around for interpreters. They have not been able to master the jaw-breaking qualities of the language, and when the Welsh begin to talk of discussing billingualism in the language of Cymry at the coming Eisteddfod, black despair throttles their imagination, and they long for a commission to write up a lake-front riot. Welshmen arc very proud of William Williams, their countryman, who was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

present generation, but their acts, if unchecked, will rob posterit' of a heritage to which it is entitled, and one which no human power can or is likely to endeavor to restore to it. Illegal shipping of game is constantly carried on from various points in the Kankakee district, and it is st a ' ed on good authority that a market hunter at Kouts, Porter county, has a cold storage warehouse, shoots ail the game he can in his vicinity as soon as it is largo enough to sell, and has constantly on hand a supply of almost all kinds of small game. It is known that he shipped eight barrels of prairie chickens in one week to Chicago last year out of season. Our hunters who delight in sport owe it to themselves and to posterity to organize a Game Protective Association that will deal firmly and harshly with all such offeuders, before it is too late. The Kankakee region is likely to remain a natural hunting ground, probably for all time, and it is the common right of all citizens to enjoy its treasures. No one should be permitted to monopolize them in defiance of law.

A Des AIoixes man. and his name is Dawson, claims to have discovered the lost art of making Damascus steel. Modern science has long struggled with the problem of producing blades similar to those made toy the ancient Asiatic races. Dy Mr. Dawson's "process'' they arc now readily made; and it is alleged at half the cost of old methods. The "process" is simple but will not be patented. The new steel is made from common refined wrought iron, fused in a crucible, to which is added certain chemicals, that are the secret of the discovery. The metal is not rolled, but is poured, or cast,

into moulds of sword blades, knife'

blades, or whatever article is desired. Mr. Dawson's blades can be bent double and will spring back to

The man who is too poor to take the papers" continues to bite at hooks without bait, and is taken in by the boldest and most transparent schemes for catching gudgeons. With the rapid spread of intelligence and the vast number of hapless victims of the past who have contributed their dollars to the exchequer of the most unconscionable scoundrels, and their dearly bought experience as a free will offering to the sum of human knowledge, it does seem the strangest of all strange things in this world of unexpected happenings, that paoplcv-honest and industrious citizens will continue to follow in the verdant footsteps of their unfledged predecessors, whose memory is ever 'green" in almost every community in the land. The country press from time to time has brought us details of the most laughable success of sundrv fakirs who have successfully 4 worked" the rural population by means of benevolent schemes wherein they propose giving to every purchaser of a twentyfive cent watch chain or bottle of liniment, sums ranging from a silver dollar to a S-0 gold piece,leaving their victims loaded down with bogus jewelry and bottles of sweetened water. But the most successful swindler of this class recently is one Dunbar, of Washington City, who has boon catering to the vanity and absorbing $ Ui each from a number of Hoosier Knights Templar and politicians of prominence, promising that lie would publish sketches and portraits of his victims in a book about to be issued. Washington dispatches of August 2i)lh state that Dunbar has at last come to grief on a charge of using the mails for fraudulent purposes, and has given a bond of $2,000 to appear in court in October to answer to the same.

FOR PROTECTIO

Talmage Favore a High Tariff on the Annoyances of Lite.

tUlljrtou m Week Da Matter rung to to JUght at all Timet Or, Taluiaye' Sorinoa, Rev. Dr. Tairr.age preached at Brooklyn, last Sunday. Subject: "Week-dav Religion." Txt: Prcv. iii, 6 In all thy ways.aekuawiedgu him." He said; There has been a teiuloivy in lands and ages to set apart certain days, places and occasions for special religious service, and to think that they formed the realm iu which religion was chiefly to act. Now while holy days and holy places have

tneir use, tney can never oo a substitue for continuous exercise of faith and prayer. In other words a man cannot be so good a Christian on the Sabbath that he can afford to be a worldling all the week. If a steamer start for Southampton and sail one day in that direction and the other six days sail in other directions, how long before the steamer will get to Southampton? Just as soon as a man will get to heaven who sails on the Sabbath day toward that which is good, and the other six days of the week sails toward the world, the flesh and the devil. You cannot eat o much at the Sabbath banquet that you can afford religious abstinence all the rest of the week. Genuine religion is not spasmodic, does not go by fits and starts, is not an attack of chilli and fever now cold until vour teeth chatter, now

hot until your bones ache. Genuine religion marches on steadily, up steep hills and along dangerous declivities, its eye on the everlasting hills crowned with the castles of the blessed. I propose, so far as God may help ne, to show you how we may bring our religion into our ordinary life,

ana practice it in common things--yesterday, to-day, to-morrow. And in the first place, I remark, ought to bring religion into our ordinary conversation. A dam breaks and two or three villages are submerged, a South American earthquake swallows a city and people begin to talk about the uncertainties of human life, and in that conversation think they are engaging in religious service, when there may be no religion at all. I have noticed that in proportion as Christian exferience is shallow, men talk about unerals and death-beds and tombstones and epitaphs. If a man has the religion of the Gospel in its full ppwer in his soul, he will talk chiefly about this world and the eternal world, and very little comparatively about the insignificant pass between this and that. Yet how seldom is it that the religion of Christ is a welcome theme? If a man full of the fospel of Jesus Christ goes into a religious circle and begins to talk shout sacred things all the conversation is hushed and things become exceedingly awkward. As ou a summer day, the forests full of song and chirp and carol, mighty chorus of bird harmonies, ft very bran ch an orch es tra if a hawk appears in the sky. all the voices are hushed, so I have sometimes seen a social circle that professed to be christian silenced by the appearance of the graat theme of Grod and religion. Now my friends if we have the religion of Christ in our soul, wo will talk about it in an exhilarant mood. It is more refreshing than the waters, it is brighter than the sunshine, it gives a man joy here, and prepares him for everlasting happiness before the throne of God. But I remark again: We ought to bring the religion of Jesus Christ Into our ordinary employments. "Oh!" you say, ' that's a very good theory for a man who manages a large business, who has great traffic, who holds a great estate; it is a grand thing for bankers and for shippers, but in my thread and needle store, in my trimming establishment, in my insiginiiicant work of life, you cannot apply those grand Gospel principles. Who told you that? Do you not know thai; a faded leaf on a brook's surface attracts God's attention as certainly as the path of a blazing sun, and that the moss that creeps up the side of the rock attracts God's attention as certainly as the waving tops of Oregon pine and Lebanon cedar, and that the crackling of an elder under a cow's hoof sounds as leud in God's ear as the snap of a world's conflagration, and that the most insignificant thing in your life is of enough importance to attract the attention of the Lord God Almighty. "Oh!" says some one. "If I had a great sphere I would do that; if I could have lived in the time of Martin Luther, if I could have been Paul's traveling companion, if I had some great and resounding work to do then I should put into application all that you say." I must admit that the romance and knight errantry have gone out of life. There is but very little of it left in the world. Our national government doss not think it belittling to put a tax on pins, and a tax on buckles, and a tax on shoes. The individual taxes do not amount to much, but in the aggregate to millious and millions of dollars. And I would have you, O christain man, put a high tariff on every annoyance and vexation that comes through your soul. Suppose a soldier should say)

Tnis is oniy a skirmish, and there are only a few enemies I wont load my gun; wait until I can get into some great general battle." That man is a coward and would be a coward in any sphere. If a man does not serve his country in a skirmish, he will not in a Waterloo; and if 3'ou are not fath'id going out against the single-handed misfortunes of this li'e, you would not be faithful when great disasters, with their thundering artillery, camo rolling down over the soul. This brings ms to another point.

I We ought to bring the religion of

jesus wnrisi into au our T-nais. u we have a bereavement, if we lose our fortune, if some great trouble blast like the tempest, then wo go to God for comfort: sut vesterdav in the little annovances of vour

j store, or ottuo. or shop, or factory, or baninug-housc, did you go to

God for comfort? You did not. Not by one great stroke, but by ten thousand little strokes of misfortune are men fitted for heaven. You know that large fortunes can soon be scattered by being paid out in small sums of money, and the largest estate of Christian character is sometimes entirely lost by these small depletions. We must bring the religion of Jesus Christ to help us in these little annoyances. Do not say that anything is too insignificant to affect your character. Rats may sink a ship. One lucifer match may destroy a temple. A Queen got her death by smelling of a poisoned rose. The scratch of a six-penny nail may give you the lock-jaw. Columbus by asking for a piece of

bread and a drink of water at a Franciscan convent came to the discovery of a new world. Plato had a fable which I have now nearly forgotten, but it ran something like this: He said spirits of the other world came back to this world to find a body and find a sphere of work. One spirit came and took the body of a King, and did his work. Another spirit came and took the body of a poet, and did bib work. After awhile Ulysses came and he said, "Why, all the fine bodies are taken, and all the grand work is taken. There is nothing left for me." And some one replied, i;Ah! the best one has been left for you." Ulysses said. "What is that?" And the reply was, "The body of a common man, doing a common work., and for a common reward." A good fable for the world and just as good a fable for the Church. But I remark again: We ought to bring the religion of Jesus Christ into our ordinary blessings. Every autumn the President of the United States and the Governors make proclamation, and we are called together in our churches to give thanks to God for his goodness. But every day ought to be a thanksgiving day. We take most of the blessings of life as a matter of course. Oh! these common mercies, these common blessing, how little we appreciate them and how soon we forget them! Like the ox grazing, with the clover up to its eyes; like the bird picking the worm out of the furrow never thinking to thank God who makes the grass grow, and who gives life to earry living thing, from the animalculae in the sod to the seraph on the throne. Thanksgiving on the 27th of November, in the autumn of the year; but blessings, hour by hour and day by day, and no thanks at all. I compared our indiJference to the brute; but perhaps I wronged the brute. I do not know but that among its other instincts it may have an instinct by which it recognizes the Divine Hand that feeds it. I do not know but that God is, through it, holding communication with what we call "irrational creation." The cow that stands under the willow by the water-course chewing its cud looks very thankful; and who can tell how much a bird means by its song? The aroma of the flowers smells like incense, and the mist arising from the river looks like the smoke of a morning sacrifice. Oh, that we were as responsible! If you were thirsty and asked me for a drink, and I gave you this glass of water, your common instinct would reply, 'Thank you." A;i:l yet, how many chalices of mercy wi get hour by hour from the hand of the Lord, our Father and our King, and we do not even think to say 'Thank you." More just to men than we are just to God. I convict myself and I convict everyone of you while I say these things, that we are unappreciative of the common mercies of life. And yet, if they were withdrawn, the heavens would withhold their rain and the earth would crack open under our feet and famine and desolation-and sickness and woe would staik across the earth, and the whole earth would become a place of skulls. Oh, my friends I let us wake up to an appreciation of the common mercies of life. Let every day be a Sabbath, every meal a sacrament, every room a holy of hoiies. We all have burdens to bear; let us courageously fight them.

One of the best ways to destroy weeds in the pasture is to keep sheep. If this is not done the mower will have to be used, so as to cut down the weeds and prevent them from going to seed. Sheep require shade and will do but little grazing in the heat of day. If there are no trees in the pasture a temporary arrangement for shade may bo wait with a fa poles and brush

TflE NEWS OF THE WEEK

President Cleveland delivered a shor;

address at the- oenlnc; of tho 'Pan-American Medical iVnirrcaa at Washington.

Tuesday. ; Thu Ohio Woirl Cr (Wits' Association ! met at Ojhmihus, I riday. .and adopted j resolution denonnclui; The trade pr.Ifey of ! the present admir.tration. Senator lusulU has decided to re-rnter politic-, and it is announced that ho will j

be ;v candidate for rovernnr hoi ore the Kansa ii-'publu-a.; S'ate convention next

yrur.

opponents of repeal insist on this it ma. ! interfere materially with the settlement of j the question. Substantially the entire day 1 was consumed hv Mr. Stewart, who op1 posed repeal of the Sherman law. The I Sea a to voted to consider executive busiI ness yeas. 3T: nay, VS. This vote was ; considered a set back by the friends of rej peal. Voorhees voted nay; Turpie, yea,

on the roil call. No proceedings of importance Jn th House. Tuesday. The committee on banking and currency met and adjourned for one week. The louse ways and means committee

held a session. Tuesday, for the purpose

i urce de:-peradnes held Up the St. I.oe.is ; , , . , , , , A.

ne

se-

Irowi

t and San l'Yaneisro passenger train Mound Vailey, Kan., Sunday. Ti.i cured $."0O av.'l about fortv watches

the passengers. , U. S. Sunn-visor of Elections .1. I. Uaven port was summarily ejected mm tin oih'ces lonjr heid by him in the Federal huildinp at New York, Saturday, by Postmaster Dayton, acting under order- from the Treasury Department. Dr. T. Thatcher Graves, once convicted of the murder of Mrs. Harnaby. at Denver, subsequently released, afterwards arrested on techniculities and held for a new trial, committed suicide in Ins cell at the jail in Denver. Saturday night, lie left a letter protesting his innocence, asking thai, no autopsy be. held, and asserting that he had been persecuted to death, and could not (isrht his enemies any longer. 2 Sunday evening an electric car on the Avondale & Cincinnati street raih ay line, while going down the Hunt street hill, became unmanageble on account of the brakes failing to work. It finally dasheJ into a telegraph pole on Broadway which split the car length wise. The pole was broken like a broomstick. One person was instantly killed, six fataliy injured and nine dangerously injured There was about fifty persons on board and but very few escaped injury. Eight thousand dollars in cash was taken from Uie counting room of the Pabst JErewing Company's supply house at Chicago, Thursday night. The money was in charge of Uobert IJ. Gruschow.the cashier, and was all in currency. Mr. Urusch;w was counting the money alone in the oflice when a loud knock at the door attracted his attention, lie opened it and was immediately knocked lnsensihlo by one of two men who stood in the doorway. When he recovered men and money were gone. FOREIGN. Sir Henry Normank, the present gov

ernor of Queensland, has been appointed!

viceroy of India. Advices from the district around Sutton, Nohamingshire, say that the strikers are becoming very unruly. The Russian (Jovernmcnt has decided to postpone until June next the final expulsion of Jews from Russia. Prince Wilhelm, the elder brother of King Christian of Denmark and a held marshal in the service of Austria, died at Frodeusborg.

dustries iu favor of retaining the present ar ! . , . , . riM . A ...

tuny on inoirprtKiucis. j ho i;wiuichjiers of cement, and of silk goods, wer ! heard. I lathe Senate, Wednesday, Mr. Voor-

hee? pursued parliamentary tactics that worried the silver men. Mr. Stewart having the 1loor occupied all the time given to the discussien of the repeal bill in a speech against repeal, but was inter -upted by .Mr. Teller, who raised the ques-

lion that no utiorum was present. The

roll call developed the presence of a quoj rum. and Mr. Teller tried to explain that I he had not raised the question for the j purpose of delaying the business of the j Senate, Mr. Stewart then proceeded with ! his speech. j The I ouse. as usual. Wednesday, dej voted its attention to the discussion of I rules. A lively tilt occurred between Mr.

Bynnm and Mr. Reed. ' In the Senate, Friday, bad feeling developed. Tarty lines will be Ignored in future in the silver debate. Senator Faulkner announced his intention to vote for repeal, but declared his intention to bring in an amendment to the present bill providing for the coinage of $3,0(!0,t00 of silver per month, until the aggregate circulation of the country shall reach ISf.O.OOJ.C0). Senator Turpie 'followed, stating that as lit Jo as he thought of the gold r ese r v e h e was loth to h a v o i t. 1 oo ted by the gold trust. "The issue." said Mr. Turpie, was not whether the United States should further coin and use silver as money, but the precise question was, whether the purchase of silver for coinage purposes should he continued. It was necessary to undo many another act besides that embraced in the repeat act The laborer Jn the United States was paid in unsound, dishonest money, degraded by law. It was coined below

standard; it purported to be money, but

DEATH TO HOME RULE.

A Large Majority Against the

Bill.

lilt House of Lord Votrn 419 to Keep the IrUh Down,

U to

In the House of Lords, Friday, the home rule bill reported from the Commons was voted down, 410 to 41. Lord Salisbury was long and loudly cheered when hi; stood up to make the closing speech, and it was some time before he was allowed to proceed. No reason has yet hern ffiven by the froveri.ment' aid he during the course of U is remarks, "for introducing the hill. ICvery speaker on. t ho government side has displayed the greatest ingenuity in avoiding a discussion of the merits of the bill. The proposed retention of the Irish members in the House of Commons is an Kit rage so enormous and grotesque that I o.m surprised that any responsible gov--rnment has dared To suggest it. (Cheers). Ml the arguments of the government -bowed that their policy was one of desnair. They had no right to take a step which endangered the existence, happiness and prosperity of the majority of the Irish people. (Cheers.) The nn'ti who would govern Ireland, should the bill pass, are those who have been found guilty of criminal conspiracy. Should we not be in an infinitely worse position than at present if wc entrusted Ireland to such men, in the event of trouble with the United States or any other foreign power? (Loud Cheers.) If yon allowed this atrocious, treacherous 'hill to pass you would be untrue to the dut-v which has descended to you from a splendid ancestry." (Prolonged cheer-

lug.

-U(fcli4Cl4a IV illl lV. . lit tss 111 VklVJ wv it was not. It was not even legal tender.

"Wo are about to approach An era of commercial liberty unknown to us for a generation: an era in which commerce with all nations (save for the necessary imports laid upon it for revenue) will be as free as the ocean which bears it; a time when an open market shall greet the export of all our great staples; when the immeasurable increment of our sales shall assuredly bring us in return gold, silver hills sterling. We are drawing nigh to another epoch of unexampled grandeur and magnificence. The restoration of the silver dollar, the remonetization of silver would be great reforms, but how shall these compare with the restitution of freedom of the ballot? The dvnasty of fraud and force is now entering the valley of death's shadow. It Is soon to be dethroned. The free baliot is worth more than free coinage. The people will, as far as public law may serve, decree liberty in all things, to all men within the hounds of the republic." Mr. Jones followed Senator Turpie in & speech against repeal. Mr. Voorhees and Mr. Hale became involved in animated controversy of a personal nature. In tho House, Thursday. Mr. Bynum re-introduced his bill of the last session appropriating $l.?;o,000 for a new public building at Indianapolis. citizeTTtraIn's message. Citizen George Francis Tran sends the following from Chicago to a friend at New York: "Fair immense success. Have saved iL Loud cheers from entire world. Five thousand eh i hire n under Mayor Bom is, Omaha. Will lend 1.400,(03 under SCO C0! teachers with first battalion in two weeks. Colossal victory, Will have 2.,0.)'J,03') admissions iirst day. Everybody will get back money, and Chicago and world cn riehed. Held seven public mass-mcetinrs Hoyd's Opera House, Omaha, Mayor Hem is in chair."

SMALLPOX AT MUNC1E. The State Hoard of Health met, Thursday morning, in consultation with tho Governor. The object of the mee.tsng was to consider the situation at Mnncic, where t ho smallpox has assumed the proportions of an epidemic. It was sho wn by reports that the smallpox has been present in Muncio ever since last May, although tho fact was not Known until August, It was shown that Muneie has doi e everything

! in its power to quarantine the disease. It was decided that the State Hoard would visit Muncio to view the situation, and, if

g.) ! possible, to prevent the disease trom ucingr

I he Karl of Kimberly spoue lor the bin ( brought to Indianapolis. on behalf of the government. The divis- j ion was then taken, the proceeding taking : While hunting near Holton. Ind., Monhalf an hour, and resulted in a vote of 410 i day, .lames Lambert, the son of a farmer, against the bill to 41 in favor of it A spe- met Samuel Hannah, a neighbor. Beftn1 nnlipo foivo was thoiiffht neeessarv to ! tweon the fainlies an old grudge exists re-

i -

protect the peers from violence on leaving the Parliament house. THE EXTRA SESSION. In the Senate, Monday, three set speeches were delivered on the repeal hill. Mr. Hutler, of South Carolina, submitted an amendment to the repeal bill, renewing the tax on State bank circulation, Mr.

j garding a Iwie fence. The dispute was ! renewed, when Hannah attacked Lam

bert with a club, hacking him into a barbed-wire fence. Lamber; turned upon Hannah with his shotgun and li red both barrels, killing him inatant y. Lambert surrendered to the authorities Tuesday morning at Helton, asking for prelection

israinst the Hannah faction.

who, he

claims, have hunted him all night to kill him. He was tacn to tho countv iail at

Allen, the Populist member from Nebraska, j ersailles. offered a resolution. that Congress take! The Conturv hus just come in cognizance of labor organizations. Mr. ; 1JOSSeSsion of ono 0f the most uuique Voorhees objected that tins was no time imporUint historical documents foi -such irrelevant measures, lie was an ! f h U is a record of tho ardent friend of labor organizations, hut; , . .p . x- , -held that the proper business before the of apo eon Bonaparte on Senate was tho repeal hill. On a vote the board the English ship which bore Senate refund to consider Mr. Allen's hull into captivity at St. Helena, as resolution-yeas, 8; nays, 41. Mr. Allen contained m tho hitherto unpublished then introduced a resolution making in- j journal of the secretary of the adquiries as to whether the Secretary of the I miral in charge. The reports of Treasury had carried out the specilica- j many conversations hold by the actions of the. Sherman law properly. Ke- ; miral with the deposed Emperor, referred. Mr. Kylft introduced a free coin- ! trarding his important campaigns age amendment. Mr. Coke, of Texas, oh- are given with great fullness, and tained the iloor and spoke against repeal, j there is much about the bearing and A motion to adjourn by Mr. Jones, of i the personal habits of Bonaparte dur-

ievada, was iosi on a vote yeas, nays, 31. Mr. Poller read a letter from Senator Gorman written to the Alliance expressing sympathy with and approval of their doctrines, and proceeded to comment on it, but his remarks were cut short by the adjournment of the Senate. In the Senate, Tuesday, the silver men sprung a surprise on the repeal forces, in the declaration of Mr, Stewurt that hereafter a quorum must be present wheu ScnEiors tpoke ou tho silver question. If

mg the voyage. The Memoirs oJ; lias Cases contain the story of th hhnperor s deportation as told by c, Frenchman and a follower; this diary is an lingiish gentleman's view of lhe same memorable journey, and f t he impressions made by dialy ouiact 'with the man who had ;.ii Huropo at his feet. The dairy will be published in early numbers of the Century,