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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • 2

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MORNING NEWS-WILMINGTON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, MZDICAL. for its use, is of so considerable public im-j THE MORNING NEWS victed, persons from the impertinent inspection of the public, and wonld also spare the public from seeing what must be an unpleasant and degrading sight to every right-thinking member of the community. Dl. A YO's BODY BATTERY PRICE S2. is rr.unrr uiim uhou f.A4.

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A grain trade centre will gradually grow into a centre for all kinds of trade. It is in every way encouraging that experienced railroad men look upon Delaware as a good field for larger railroad operations. It only remains for the Stale to remember that the railroad is a great industrial and commercial force, which when once put in operation can never be taken away, and to welcome and utilize all these projects to its own advantage. It is siid that the late Prince Charles of Prussia was always unpopular ia lierlin fcerai he insisted on retaining the service of a cofrirvd valet. Lords Wolseley and Alceater have len preeented with swords of honor ty the Egyptian people.

The weapons have fine Vmawrvm blades and bilto studded with jewel, and rot each. Director Burchard of the United States Mint sees very clearly that if we go oo anatxtg silver ad infinitum we be exposed to tbe danger of having orir jroM drawn off to pay foreign balances, while the poorer currency re- Mr. Paul Dana will be in editorial charge of the New York Sun daring his father's trip to the Pacific oet. The Wakhinfttoa Vapifnt tmy "Paul Dana is a tall and muscular young Btaa with black eyes, a rather banWine fare and easy manners. He graduated at Ilarrard." I'r.

II. A. Schumacher, who has just len made German Minister to Fens, after serving for eight years as Consul General in New York city, wan given a farewell banquet by bin fellow- countrymen in that city Sunday night. There were about 2hO present, and Carl (Minn pre sided. Mr.

Isaac Lowe of Athens, has several gold coins that have beeo In his family for over a century or more. Ills grand mother married the Governor of Florida when that State was a Spaoish provinre, and from her these coius descended, being given to Her tJ tw-r Castiiian husband. The St. Paul (Minn.) Pioiurr-lYra doe not give a very high estimate of toe statesrnaa- sbip of Mr. Sabin, the recently -elected Senator.

It says that be mixes boaioeas with politics in a way which promotes business but degeneratea politics; and it declares that Mr. Wimlom was defeated because he refused to use money to pur chase votes. The New York Tribune announces by authority that the autobiography of Tbnrinw Weed will shortly be published, and that it wlU be supplemented by a memotr of Mr. The autobiography is being edited by his daughter, Miss Harriet A. Weed, and the memoir written by bin grandson, Mr.

Thurlow Weed Barnes. The publishers are Houghton, Miff! in Co. M. du Pasquier of Fi'jnro describes the wife of Prince Krapotkine as follow: "The Princess is 23, short, dark and ba rather a worn- looking face. She hai nothing of tle Slav type, but bears a close reetiill.ince to the Tartar rar.

Her features are angular, her eyelid thin, iW forehead is low, her mouth flit and her crnriJes-lon yellow. There is something furtive atxmt her look." rince ritsmarck neuraigi.t. so no re cently told an intimate frtvnL, ban aroowd much sympathy among English people, as every day be receives from England a quantity of prearrip- tions and various medicaments, me of which. indeed, have done him temporary gnod. Tbe pain is worst in the morning, and ta netina so violent that the Prince obliged to stop short in the middle of a sentetwe.

After a full tnJ tbe neuralgia subsided Alexander Stephens lately wrote to an applicant for bis autograph that be could not understand the craze which seemed to pm collectors; but he added: "Nor ran I im wby any mm should refuse to grant alight a favor as the giving of his signature to nothing. 1 aspect that the refusal is nearly always an atTeet tion. I have known men who were sitting Idly at their detiks, and to whom a letter asking fi an autograph waa tickle for tbe vanity, who would airily throw the ntive into a wat basket Sumner used to not only giT hie autograph whenever asked but usually all the notes from known men thai happened to lie on bis desk. Henry Tamixrhk. the tenor, l.o has just died, was Ci years ol II made bi Urt as a tenor in "I CapulrttT at tbe Teetro del Fondo at Naples, in 141.

singing afterwards at the Sen Carlo. In I'M Tambertik arrepted an engagement at Lisbon, where bis soW un-We- went a change from tenor serfo to sfogattx From Portugal and Hpain be went to England. appearing at Covent Garden in "William "Robert le Piable," "Tbe Hugan.4V aoJ otbe operas, and. going tbence to Rusaia. was for many years the darling of Kt.

Petervbnrg. He was not less socvessful in Smith Anterii-a, sad when in 1V3 be appeared at tbe I liens ia Paris his famous sf (It trine made him a svasatinw and a favorite LKTTnm rm vmm mmrmm. Some Told-Bloowew ('miarsl. To the Eilitor of The Morning AVirs St In point of excellence Irof. liamm's rraad r-cert was a grand failure.

"JVhubert Serea." UW core were tbe only reiteeming featnrw. Tbe "great duet," "M.ionlight on the Rhine." by VI 1 IT vwnnju Mr. iiauuu, was msapprent-ment. Mian Cannon was bandtrappeil. Mr.

Hamm's voice In pmas was miserably out ot tune. The "won.1erfur juUIee snog was over, powered by too strong piano armmfantment. as vur. 1 1 ill l.i -II ik. tuw ui rendered, except that accompanied by Mr.

MrtNut- im. i rvi. iunim very sennosiy at fault In his sinennff n. 1 Atim nwhl i iK art iiJ 1 mm anipa mwm incompatible. In ending a how aionrd to M.lvMnn.

)1- 1. 1 1 uu. iijij m- iiiiiueoii in a nervous. iuiniia-v uMnucr, ant to snort Mw Ante in true stacroto style, without any rrfwreorw whatever to tho fltrr tk.nm. If.

professors singing that elicited apptaow, or PlMt have been given more prominenrw. The programme permitted her to sing on sfcx Tb audience called for ber: she repnodeH. and A herself credit, as she always d.w "In the Starlight." by Mb Tat lor and ismith. we the iwt rfwtMVMil Af ik. solo "Oh, How Mm Iraper bd not do herself justice.

She wa frightened ihey first appearance before an awlienori. ber voire dropped a half tone below tbe ptano, and then. too. sho Ihonu1 with Ik. ,11 LJ pamment Th Piufore rtocOoa wm oot- it PlYkf Hmm La Ktei ekmfvULra a.I- WL.

dom in ftfrtkntnn the ThwYaOTtwicwksm Tvi k. secret of the whole troabh. Tim. iJover, DL. Febroary 7.

13. NOTE THE TIME AS IT FLIES! ELEGiHTI00sDIVITCHES OF AMERICaX A5D FOREIGX XAJtCFACTfRE. Warranted at Sterling Silverware, t-'lne IMaimI W.m. French Cb k. Kroner.

Au. C. F. RUDOLPH. 231 MARKET STREET, 231 J.

s. mint CATALOGUE City Property FOR SALE nr GREGG FIERCE, REAL ESTATE AGENTS COXYEYAXCKKS, GU1I0H EQOSE BIIIL01KS, MIL. ivit in siKkirr lm'm4 r. 4mymm exl tmiH fM felt, mtm mvm ex C. S'-'t mmfmrnm tmmmmm, 1Ui 0kfmm.

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4 WiifHa A SL bsjnvo. A REPUBLICAN JOURNAL; Airo ths Only Moturrso Newspaper ts ths State PUBLISHED DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED) THE MORNING NEWS BUILDING No. 511 Market Wilmington, BT THE NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. THE MORXINO NEWS fa connected with the Tele phone Exchange. Advertisements, orders for the paper by mail and otherwise, news, or any mior- irntnnn nr hiiKfmiM ran tw iinT ruv rvr nurht.

mvt THE MORMN'O NEWS office Is connected by its own special wire with the Western Union Telegraph lines, and controls its telegraphic service at all hours by means of a special operator in its own THE MORJTINO NEWS is regularly for sale at the Union News Stand fn the Broad street station of the Pennsylvania -Railroad Company in Philadelphia, and on all railroad trains going from or pass ing through umington in the morning. THE MORNING NEV8 will be mailed to subscribers postage paid) for Five Dollars a Year, or Firry Cents a mostb. parable in advance, and delivered by carriers in this city and principal towns in the ntate at res ENT3 a eek. Entered at the Post Office as second-class matter. Notice to Advertisers.

A DTKR-nsKRS who desire any considerable space in The Horntno News are requested to bring in their ravors Dy 7 ciock in tne evening. Till KSDAY, FEBRUARY 1883. The annual presentment of the Grand Jury of New Castle county for the year ending with the present term of the Court of Gen eral Sessions was made by Foreman Herbert yesterday morning, and it is a model of briefness and perspicuity. For a clear, brief yet full statement of facts commend us to the good sense of an active business man or an intelligent farmer. lie tells his story directly and that is the end of it.

This annual presentment shows that only 81 bills of indictment have been found during the current year against 130 last year. This encouraging decrease in crime in this city and county is mainly made up of the differ ence between the number of indictments for violations of the liquor law for the cur rent legal year and that of the year before. The law, granting license for the sale of intoxicating liquors to the "house" instead of to the "person," has evidently produced results gratifying beyond the fondest expectations of its originators. It has operated directly in placing the sale of strong drink in more responsible hands. The stringency of its provisions in holding the house, the real estate, liable for any damage that may be done to individuals by the liquor sold in that house has also tended to make the retailers very careful.

Alto gether the present license law is no doubt the best this State has ever had, and it is doubtful if any better one prevails any where. For some unaccountable reason the Grand Jury went out of their way to give the ex-bailiff under thislaw a "vindi cation." Those who have had the best opportunity for observing that person's official conduct are unanimous in the opinion mas ne was aooui as mucn use to the law as the fifth wheel would be to a wagon. That part of the presentment which refers to the conduct of constables and police officers is evidently overdrawn. Its criticisms are unnecessarily harsh, and they do not by any means represent the unanimous judgment of the Grand Jury, If they were intended as a lift to the police commission project which is now being pressed by the Democratic "roosters" of this city" before the Legislature, their severity is readily understood; but if they were intended as a deliberate official de scription of a fact, as they ought to have been, their pertinence is not at all apparent. To say the least it seems to be absurdly inconsistent for the present ment to congratulate the community and the county on the great decrease in the prevalence of crime in one sentence, and in the next to make such sweeping stric tures on the conduct of the men who are entrusted with the preservation of good order.

This much of the presentment was partly partisan and might a great deal bet tor, as far as the credit of the Grand Jury is concerned, have been left unsaid. The constantly increasing demand for a nouse ot reiuge or correction for the im prisonment and training of youthful otienders is again presented to the commu nity, as it ought to be. The evil of sendins juveniles to the common prison to keep company with old and hardened criminals lias been so often commented upon by The Morning ews that it seems almost un necessary to add anything to the presentment on this point. The same question was agitated by the Grand Jury one year ago, and yet it seems to be as far from a solution now as it was then. The common judgment is that neither the county, nor even the State, would lie justified, in view of the small number of such criminals, to go to the expense of building a house of correction.

This ODin- ion is strengthened by the fact that the Mate could easily secure the advantages of such an institution by applying to any one of the neighboring States. It would be much less expensive to pay a fair, stated sum annually for the care and training of our incorrigible boys at some house of correction in another State than to build and sustain one of our own. Our blind and deaf children are taken care of in this manner now, and the present General Assembly couiu readily extend similar provisions over our depraved children. This is a work that ought to commend itself at once to the attention of the Legislature. The Republican is entirely welcome to me measure of relief that we were able to extend to it when its fourth-page form fell in pieces.

We should have been glad to do more. It is an almost daily occurrence during the sessions of the court that prisoners are carried to and fro between the Court House in'this city and the jail at New Castle. These transfers are generally viewed by more or less of a gaping crowd to the utter humiliation of the prisoners and the moral debasement of the lookers-on. As the Levy Court is in session, would it not be a wise and humane thing for that body to provide the Sheriff with a close conveyance in which ti carry prisoners? This would exclude these unfortunate and often uncon Know That nROoVS I KOX iJmTM win cure the wont cixs cf dyspepsia. Will insure a hearty and increased dgcVtioo.

Cures general debility, an 1 gives a new lease of Lie. Dispels nervous depression and low sjwrits. Restores an exhausted nursing mother to full strength and gives abundant sustenance for her J. Strcc gthens the muscles and the blood. Overcomes weaV-nes, lack of energy Keeps off all chills, fevers, and other malarial poison.

Will infuse with new Uc the weakest invalid. JJ Wtlke fafeee tW. my a ttmm I r-tmt eeew ws HBmm. 1 im, iiiimollm 4iAMmt tMmt I wn4 i is tn Sf mrmt mli, tmt. Imam Sr- 4 CM ew eM, tvm toaexs tae iw Umcm m4 wiS TnM lees' wpwe Brown's Ir.oN Bittejls will hase a better tonic effect upon any one who needs bracing up," than any mciLciac maJe.

uanEiilers, Vires, Mm. disco i nrrtjtrt CATHOLICON. For the lU-H-t mni Cmrm ell Oasnnlalw. 6-mtMTf ttmlm' Mto MfannMw aMuili I'SJ. A Ht It lei I JtTll' m4 evrm, TVm tnir mrt tm Imtamlm mrtm mt tim m4 I Ii n' fn imm amw twini lm he iMMf mm rar wmmivmx Foe mUm m.

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tm FRENCH STEAU DTEBiSCOURES kZ ki ef eVOOae CUaes mtmt brm. nujcs. vnvm rvw axii lact HTsrsi fmw)im ii kf ae leevevt aewtoSM T. UULU tX BOX cxotkiuml a fswB MPewek w''ferfce4 Ml mm mm ex 1. Hel We to a mfm3 mm rnrnf mi-ir-m mm rwrxrS ml mrmmmmm tmmmm, tm eijoe la Ue eWwl The Levy Court of New Caule county is a level-headed body of men.

On Tuesday by a unanimous resolution they put the brake upon the action of the General Assembly in relation to the unwarranted and extravagant request of the Board of Trustees of the Poor of this county. Yesterday they passed ar.other sensible resolution in which they ask the General Assembly to place the title of the old Court House at New Castle in the same hands that now hold the title of the new Court House in this city. Both the old and the new court buildings are equally the property of New Castle county, and there is absolutely no reason why they should be entrusted to separate sets of trustees. The members of the Levy Court evidently know their business, and they are attending to it right along. A disingenuous attempt has been made to showUhat Miss Kruse.the new principal of the Howard School, has been treated fairly.

It is said that she is getting the full pay of a principal of a 6chool of the secondary grade. But the Howard School ranks both as a grammar and a secondary school including within itself, in. short, all the public school facilities provided for the colored children of this city. No change has been made in its grammar school rank, and it is to be presumed that the qualifications required in its principal are those needed in the conduct of a grammar department. Hitherto, for about ten years, this school has been under the control of Miss Miller, at a stated salary.

It may have been too much or too little, but that is not the question. She was paid as the head of a grammar school, although the school included within itself secondary grade functions. The new teacher takes this identical position, with all its duties and responsibilties unchanged, with its rank as a grammar school unchanged, without a change of any substantial or technical sort. The skin of the new teacher is a shade or two darker than the skin of her predecessor, and the colored teacher is paid $123 a year less than the white teacher for doing precisely the same work. To answer to this that the new teacher is paid the full rate for principals of secondary schools, or that the Howard School ranks low as a grammar school, is not frank, and if any member of the Board of Education has made this answer it was probably an inadvertence.

The boys ought to notice that Mr. Harlan of the Harlan and Hollingsworth Company, who has just died, did not find the streets necessary to his 'comfort in the evening. He did "odd jobs" then. A few odd jobs, such "as the young man Harlan found to do, or with a book, would help a good many of our boys. Nobody in this world ever came to much by standing around.

Adam had to work the garden of Eden, you know; and Wilmington is not Eden yet. LET TEEM COME AND WELCOME. Our Dover correspondent in his yesterday morning's review of Legislative mat ters gave a great deal or space to some new railroad projects. It is noticeable that most of these projects are in the way of enlargement and growth. It is true that the Baltimore and Ohio line is not vet ti in operation through our State, but it will be at work very soon; and this is so certain that all legislative action should recognize it as such.

The Pennsylvania line is one of the venerable institutions of the State, and its growth and prosperity should be an im mediate and constant care to our legis lators. It is always safe to assume that railroad men will be careful enough of their own money and of their reputation as sagacious business men not to engage in the construction and equipment of new lines or branches for the mere fun of dointr so, When they ask for the legal privileges required in order to construct or enlaree a railroad it simply means that they see an opportunity to make a public improvement that has money in it. If there was no money in it of course they would have no notion of going into it, since it is only fools and their money that are parted, and railroad men are not commonly rated a3 fools. But there is this peculiarity about a rail road, that if there is any money in it for tne men who run it there is likewise money in it for the communities through which it runs. In other words, as railroads increase existing business grows and new business comes in, so that while the railroad men are putting into their pockets a fair profit on their investment and labor, all the citizens along the line are also putting into their pockets a proportionate profit according to tne measure of their own skill and industry.

Our Dover correspondent speaks of the possibility of the friends of these measures becoming engaged in a contention before tne legislature in respect to this side getting what it wants and preventing that side from securing what it wants. This would be a rational, or at any rate, inevitable proceeding, if both 6ides should want the same thing. But so far as we can see this is not the case: and we are nnit mir that it is not wise policy for the Legislature to permit any artificial quarrels of this sort to arise. Our public policy should be. under proper restrictions, of course, as to the rights of private property, the prompt and efficient use of the privileges granted and so on, to encourage railroad building, so far as private capital wishes to engage in it, just as much as possible.

Delaware is too small a State to be made the theatre of a legislative railroad war, but she is big enough to satisfy the rail marl building appetite for a good many years to come; ana our public tjoIicv in thi matter should be frank and friendly rather than suspicious and hostile. So far as we know the railroad bills hetnr a the Legislature are worthy schemes. Some measure of advantage for the corporations concerned lies, of course, in each one of them; but if this was not so the schemes would not be in existence. No presumption is raised on this account against the measures, for a degree of prospective advantage is the condition under which such schemes come into beiug. The project of a grain elevator on the Delaware, for example, with adequate railroad facilities UCTRICITY! tl UssAsrss-eal f.Mil tiff flat KMft 4 4 iissss MeS'k IrtVaat 444 1t4ts 4M It aSt Sff 4S- sVsessM.

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