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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 2

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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2
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THE EVENING NEWS J0H3 tt. HOLUDAT, FaorAAATOa, Colorado. TZ3XT. AOL" 37, lTi. dat iraatooK, at toe o'clock, at the cCca, toutlinMt irrmtTTf wrHm sn1 TTrrlit sfrarts EUXCC2IPHQ33: -Two served by carriers la any part ef the atty at Tea Cents per wnt ubecrtbenV served tor bulU, cm copy 'Ons copy toe1 three tnnrttns m.

IS Choopy lor one rear 100 tux wrauTmn la asadsome elas-eolamn folio, published every Wednesday. 00 per two. sedmsa eopfes sent frea eo eppHcetiosv. tni. BLMOtlAfH MMWB.

-Canada House. AT- (The outstanding legal tenders 1382,000,000. T. W. Anglin iu elected Speaker of the The New Jersey Senate baa paaaed the compulsory education bill.

A million dollars of gold was awarded yea terday at from 112 S7-K0 to 113 67-100. The President has nominated Moses Hallet for Cbief Justice, of tbe 8upreme Court -of The Illinois House yesterday passed th Senate bill prohibiting; tbe licensing of bouses of ill fame. The old Wellhoefer brewery, near Sbeboy ran. Wiaconri n. was destroyed by fire last Bight: Loss insured.

Biahon Wilber. of New Orleans, will pre tent a petition to Judge Woods to-day for tbe telease of Grant Parish prisoners. Judge Moore yesterday sustained tbe mo tion to quash the second inaiciment ior pert Jury against rage oi vuicago. Tbe President has signed the joint reaola tlon makinr an aoDTODriation for tbe exDen ses of the, District of Columbia investigation. Tbe Customs receipts for the week ending March ZL, were as follows: xew York Boston.

Baltimore, Philadelphia, $176,159. -Tbe Congregational Council met at lyn yesterday, and After listening to a 1 Brook lengthy barrangue by Dr. Storrs, went into secret session, which will continue to-day. A apecial despatch to the Standard from Berlin, aays that the reports in regard to 'Prince Bismarck illness are discouraging. Tbe patient is in a state of great prostration.

The financial crisis still continues. Every -hour there is an tncresing premium on gold ana in exenange, goia is quotea at zoo. The banks refuse to discount commercial pa per, Joseph F. Franklin, the agent arrested in Kew York a week ago, charged with, being connected in the great railroad bond forge lies of last August, haa been released on 000 bail. Tbe directors of tbe Atlantic and Lake Erie Railroad met at Cincinnati yesterday and elected V.

B. Ilorton President! They also contracted tbe road from New Lexington to Banna and uoxonaia. The remains of Dr. Livingstone left Aden on tbe 23d Inst, on the mail steamer: Malwk for England. They are encased in a lead coffin and preserved in salt.

The body was xuuy recognised at zanstoar. At Vicksburg, yesterday, Thomas Calkins, an ex-policeman, (attacked J. W. Saving local editor of the -Yicksburger, cutting him In tbe neck with a knife. Savins then shot Calkins twice, killing him instantly.

At Lexington, Kentucky, yesterday, Mike Collins shot twice at Frank iiiggins, one ball taking effect, entering the abdomen, and lodging in the bladder. Both persons were! Irish milkmen, who quarreling about business. Great excitement prevails at Depere, Wis? cons In, in consequence of tbe manufacturers paying their workmen-with scrip. There was a demonstration on tbe streets Wednes-t day afternoon and a meeting in the Some fears of violence are entertained, A Jackson, Mississippi special aays that Colonel Iiobert J. M.

Miller, a prominent lawyer of Vicksburg, was abot and fatally wounded there by yv. B. Spears, also a law-yer. A woman was. at the bottom of it They were heretofore couriered friends.

I The second Joint bailor of the Massachu- sett Legislature lor united states senator, at noon yesterday, resulted as follows: Dawes, 92; Hoar. 82; Curtis. 74: Adams, 14 Banks. Sanford. Washburn, Whittier and Senator Verry received each one vote.

third ballot was had with no material changes in the result, The Colli ma, which baa not been spoken! since leaving Masatlan, reached that port on the 12th four davs from Acapulco, with troops for Masatlan. There is no truth in the 'report that her screw broke, as telegraphed before. The screw shortened, and the steamer waa thereby rendered unable to make more 11 wan iw mnes per uay. The little steamer Economy, hence for tbe Bt Francis river with a miscellaneous cargo, valued at $3,000, struck a draw of the rail road bridge at Madison, Arkansas; Monday night and The boat and- cargo were a total loss, one was owned at Mem- phis by Matt Fremmel. and was valued at $3,000 with no insurance.

No lives were lost I The California bribery investigation com mittee ox tne benate has reported that no improper influences were used to secure the election ol tiootn and uager, but that-im proper advances bad been made to lerisla tors by certain persona who acted wholly on their own authority, and with no other responsibility. The report acquits Boruck. who made the charges, of malice in the matter. A dispatch from Portland, Oregon, says thit the. temperance women have commenced a regular siege of that city, dividing i i i it into para, ana visiiea most oi saioons, mopg them the lowest dens In town.

One saloon refused them admission, and Another, bearing that other saloons were makin? a good paying business out of it, sent an invi tation i or uem- to visit it, which they did. No converts among the saloon keepers have pee a caaue jw In the Senate yesterday the House bill appropriating $30,000 for improving the mouth of the Mississippi was passed. The discussion of the currency bill was then returned. The amendment of Mr. Schurs to make the limit of United States notes ASiAA AAA AAA ft 000,000 instead or.

i.uAj,wu, was lost oj a rou of 18 to 4a In the House McCrary's bill for the reguiauon ox nuiroaa commerce betweenahe States was taken up and passed bv a vote of 121 to-116. and some discussion was bad on the bill to provide for free bank- A desperate engagement took place on Wednesday before Bilboa, The Republican army underlarshal Serrano, at six clock in tbe morning attacked the Carlista. who offer ed a stubborn resistance. The-battle lasted ail day, ceasing only with night-fall, the Re- wrested from the Carlista. The loss of the republicans in killed were 470.

General Lorua commanded the center, and General PriraoDeEiTa the right. It ia probable the battle waa renewed yesterday. Yesterday afternoon W. Sinclair, ship, ring clerk of Youngtree, Sinclair Randall, Cincinnati. atruck Conrad Shulte, a discharged porter, on tbe head with a dray pin, from tbe effects of which be died last Sinclair, ai L-re4 is! re- .1 leued on tea thousand dodra ball, aari that bauite came dxunx to the business house, and hunted him up with a knife.

Shulte left the place after being struck, and it was two hours afterward when he waa found, lying on-the street In a dying eoaiitloa, ttLan Li wandered and' fallen. A Snaqnabanaa Depot, PennsylranlA dispatch states that nine hundred workmen left the Erie machine shops there yesterday to compel, by a strike, the payment of their wages lor rebruary. une oi vnesupuiauons at the settlement of the strike a- month ago was, that they would be paid on or before the fifteenth of each month. A regular march from the shops waa made, amid the ringing of bells and screaming of whistles. The turning tables bare been crippled, the engines, by taking out pins.

As fast as trains arrive they are "fixed." Only mail trains can leave, and stock trains go only east to Deposit, where the feeding yard is located. By order of the men the saloons are closed. Tsi Sex the greent seems determined to make ck issue four hundred millions. Ma. PaWes leads In the race for the Senatorship.

but still lacks a large number of votes. That orth Carolina yolcanois not doing the fair tl ing. The ground keeps quaking and irroaainflr. but the volcano will nt erupt IIavasI has a little monetary panic cpn sequent ubon inflation. Gold is worth $20, a pretty months.

in liquors. perity of cood raise for less than three Thz Republican managers having decided to hold conventions in several of the wards to-'morrow, it behooves all. members that party who desire see the Council coniposedjof first class material, to attenjl and see that the right kind ot a man is nominated. Some of the internal revenue officers think it would be a good thing for the govern ment if thp temperance movement shoulo wipe out' the "revenue derived from taxep They contend that the pros the country on account of tht- abolition of the traffic in spirits would susi- the imposition of this tax on some other articue, and without burden. Thx infatuation of avarice is abominaj ble.

The infatuation of ambition is re spectable. The infatuation of love is natural. But the infatuation of self-con ceit is ridiculous. This last proposition illustrated by the following extract from Washington dispatch this morning: "It 1 "thought that when the people uhderstan "that by the abolishment of the frankin "pnvuege, they nave Deen aepnvea "books, speeches and documents which the "have formerly received, that there will something of a reaction, and a second "mahd will come from them for a restora "tlon of the privilege, so far as printed ma ier is concerned." Some few of th "books and distributed unde the "frank? were worth publishing and worth reading, but most of them were not, and such as were, hot one in ten thousand of the people ever saw. But the pain of the abolition of tRe privilege, the milk in the cocoa nut, the fly in the ointment, i the shadow on the wall, is the.

Suppression of the free distri bution of "speeches." And the inflation of self-conceit was never more ludicrously exhibited than in the belief that the loss of these "speeches" would bring the peo1 pie to their senses and re-introduce the "frank." Tlhey may learn without teach ers, be educated without schools, get infor mation without newspapers, enjoy religion without churches, quarrel without lawyers; live without labor, and die without doc tors, but they can't do without "speeches. What lean an American do without a speech?" "What is an American but an embodied ''speech 7" therefore the Americans (must have "speeches" they go without everything else that can be carried by the mails. And Congressional "speeches at that! i They will restore the "frank" to get the "speeches.) "If the Americans of whom we know anything were allowed to decide the matter it would be speedily settled. They would not give a cent for MUton'shell full of "speeches," and they would be dear at that Tni Women's Temperance Union of this city in endeavoring to secure the en forcement of the law, has done ft good work. 1 A continuation of the present course will result in permanent value, for it is a coarse that most meet with the ap proval of every law abiding citizen.

But if the plan of visiting saloons and praying in them, which some of the ladies seem de termined upon, is adopted, it will produce harm. It is another illustration of the fact that Americans always want to do too much at once, and are always anxious to see accomplished results before the means have bid time to work them out. The present course is doing: much good, and in ft few months, or weeks, may be, it will be fully apparent. Some evidences are al: ready seen. But the adoption of a pkn which will drive away many who are now friendly and" whose attention how di rected to this evil, perhaps for the first time, is certainly unwise in the highest de gree.

Other influences can be used by the ladies of this city which will count far more in putting down the great evil, in- gain the ear of -the Honor dealer any more readily by invading nU place of business, than you can by appealing to the countless social influences, which are the main spring In moulding Remember first and always that men who sell liquor an not th elpasl on in the demoralization of Intemperance. Th real culprits are those who encourage the incessant habit at home and in the daily walks of life. The true touchstone of temperance is the fireside. Begin there. If you have lore and loyalty to your kind, shower it upon those that providence has put in your keeping over whose destinies you are called to preside.

Yoa are not called upon to take scrip and staff and go in the highways and byways until the home or the temple refuse an ear, and if they do riot refuse, depend upon it, youbannot shake the sin of Publicanism, or Pharisee ism from your own. garments. Keep on in the way you have been going, but go no further: There is ja law of prudence which may not be passed in It is everything to keep the Sympathy of the moderate and hopeful, andjpure of mind with you, and this can only be done by adhering to that innate instinct of womanliness which teaches all true that the public street is not the place for her ministration. If you fervently desire to make your mission as permanent a it ay be beneficent, withdraw the young feet that are just tripping over the portals of sin, withhold the young men from pastimes that are not profitable, from practices which leaa ta'the end of intemperance. Draw a line of kindliness about the erring encourage themto relinquish a cup that kills, but in return give them a rational alternative.

Men do not suddenly turn anchorites and ascetics, the usual doos to demoralization is closed. Make it a social law that certam practices are de grading, and depend on it there will be little ueeu ui nuiricuve laws or pronioiiory siav- Let the chap who reels! around the room at a private party with. maudlin brain understand that racial ostracism is the pen alty! and those who are not to be dissuaded otherwise are Apt to consider; The real en couragement of the vices of the time is in the indifference of fathers and mothers. Society is alwavs infested bv men whose ways are not ways of purity, arid whose sins and excesses are perfectly understood by the men as tbe9e from the society of brothers. sons and daughters and you.

may depend on it, sin of all sorts will be apt to lose some of its allurements. Fireside reform is what this day and generation needs and you. may iepend on it, mothers who weep and sisters -ho mourn if you let th victim pass from under the root tree, you are not ukely to re iamhim out ot tne gutter, THE MOB; Wbat WMblntlon Nobility Rests Tpon (Washington Correspondence Chicago Times. Washington society is all by the ears in re gard to the story recently commenced in 'Old and New," written, conjointly by Miss Wise and Mr. severance, she a'crand-daueh ter'of Edward' Everett, be a iclerk in the treasury.

This Tom Ilaliibut and his first season in Washington is a. severe but perfect travestie of the swell, shoddy, carpet-bag oligarchy-that has grown up -like other mushrooms here in Washington with the Republican party. The story Is unmiti- atedly slangy in. style, but grimly true to nature, and the. official situation.

Among a lot of severe things; lit character izes the officials here as 1 the mob," which is uncomfortably true, and as the truth plainly told generally makes us squirm, why, they are all squirming here like a bundle of eels. Not very long since a party of the mob met at a sewing-circie at tbe bouse of lien. Beal, when the story was discussed with not a little acrimony and feeline. Mr. Severance being present Miss Kichardson, daughter of the Secretary of the Treasury, goes up to Mr.

severance ana says: i "Mr. Severance, I belong to 'the "Oh, no, Miss Richardson I "Certainly, sir," interrupted Miss Richard son, "you have called the officials 'the As a daughter of one of them l.belontr to it: but if I do belong to 'the mobjV I wish you to understand, sir, that none of my relations keen a liverv stable." i I After delivering herself? of this kind, gra- 1 1 I T-A 1 cious, anu most lauy-iiae opeeuu, iuiss xucn-ardspn smoothed her 'ruffled feathers, looking about her with! a triumphant air as though challenging the admiration of the party for her masterly annihilation of the enemy sat and jwe have no doubt felt better and more amicable toward the rest of the world for having Informed the assembled crowd that this young man, whose father kept a livery stable, had dared to raise his eyes and call the ponderous-brained officials "the mob." This shot at early" antecedents quite a sensation, and made not afewof the marine, army, and navy legs retire into their inner closet and pray that no youthful, malicious, and ill-bred member of "the mob'' might find out that they Were born in a garret, in a kitchen, and stable-bred, or root out fact that they, in other days, were the shin' ing light in a way-side inn, or had drawn in intellectual status at a miscegenation college A IJqaor Dealer' Base, From the New York Herald.l There was a crowd of about 2,000 men, wo man anu uujrs gaijjcjrcu iu iossau aireeu near Fulton, last-night-1 Tbey were led there by an advertising dodge of a bill-poster, who is part owner of a gin-mill at No 9 Nas sau street, and who adopted the ruse in or der to collect a crowd at nisi place, and have, in the theatrical! phrase, a little with posters, setting forth that the lady cru saders would hold a temperance prayer- meeting at nis piace, ana tue uoage naa jus the effect he desired. Not" only was the lit- Itle seven-by-nioe place packed by the gulli- le, but there were a couple of tnousand on he sidewalk and in the street, pushing and 1 bowing each otner. and straining tneir tu tn see what was troine on. There were two bar-tenders behind the bar, dealing out the whisky, and raking in the money as fast as posstbe.

uccasionaiiy an inquiry woma be made by some person about the temper ance meeting, wnen one or tne oar-ienaers Would smile pleasantly, and say that he re gretted to state that they bad received a dis patch from tne ladies, saying mat tney naa concluded to postpone their prayer-meeting until the next Wednesday mgnt. An old lady who was attracted by tne ad vertisement, really thinking a meeting was be held, elbowed her way tnrougntne crowd at 8 o'clock and marched into the back room, where, she was erected by a roar 01 laughter from tbe roughs who naa garnered to enioy the joke. Shortly after 8 o'clock two middle-aged women also entered tne saloon and were movine towards the back room, when one-of the crowd sung out rsold!" The women hastily left the place and disappeared. The crowd became so great that Roundsman Pbelan and several policemen were obliged to clear the street." Asi Ieitaiierate Dooilmle. "Rev.

Dr. Bartol of Boston of the nro- temperancev In this connection we can- I hibitory law in a sermon on Sunday, that it not Terrain trom copvinz tne louowinir from -rr." tense mat uie wine ne arans: witn nis aisci- tne. oenunel: I niM the lant iinrwr haA Tin itimnlm in it You have done and are doinsf a beneficent I It would overthrow the communion tables of mw a a I LI. woxK. xon cave airectea ail minds to theiait unnsienuom oy aboiismng tne emoiem dreadful and encroaching evil of the time, of that Master's blood on the plea that its xou-nave auied the ranks of decency and I provocauon to inebriety outweighed the pes morality an unmistakable sentiment of re- lent of its sacramental use.

It instituted a sistence to the fatal tide of intemrjerance. I new erder of Pharisees, and suborned lego- which has beset our vonn rninU Vnn I la tors who oersonally hroke the law thev-ef- bave aroused thought where there wm nn I fciallv -enacted. It raised abstinence as the thought before. Yon bare inspired strength I chief virtue into a false eminen'ee to atone where there was oniy weakness before. You I for many a vice.

But it was the law and haa The Answer. TCaru-waa the sua of the summer. Fragrant the breath of the flowers, Shall sweet things be bat the Icrouaaec, Of woes in this world of oars? The wanath, of our plaanrse lait, -Are all things and all Like red leaves to faO, 'In glory and then, ohl the mantle and fall of white snow! flake and icicle pure I Well, well, doth the eye. seeing, know Your speech as you lodge at the door var oeans reaa we story ax woe. And oar brains round the knowledge we east.

Ax tu uungs ana au LUe red leaves to fall. Iatlory the blast? i -I i- The answer we read in the stars God's jewels and man's keen delight Q'tT earth's grand commotions and want Still shines His lnffable light. We Qoat In our hopes on trait spars, i 'iu, muuniut aaren at last, i Know aH tnlngs and all Liks red leaves must fall Bat never xaore, on earth, the blast! From the Aldlne for April. Shallow devices Soup plates. Sugar is fifty cents a pound in Havana.

Buffalo Bill has bought a house in Rochester. i i i The first Chickering piano is fifty years bid. I j--- Egg nog is called man's milk" in Scotland. jJ In Charleston $2 bill buys a quart of strawberries. I i -l i I i An exchange irreverently calls the crusade "the gab test" "j- What will Butler's wife say about his being so sweeten Jayne Cincinnati Times.

The last days of Santa' Anna are to be terribly, embittered, They have prohibited cock-fighting in Mexico. The "Tich borne" claimant is to be removed from Newgate to PentonvilS-Prison- a much pleasanter situation. i i Father Druon, a Roman Catholic priest, at St Albans, Yt, is a competitor for the prize for steam canal navigation, Ipswich, Massachusetts promises to elect a colored lady on the School Committee, at the annual town meeting, next week. i i ii Walworth is said to have epileptic fits. His mother spends a great deal of time at a hotel in.

Auburn, so as to be near! him. The Cincinnati Times complains that the peach crop has caught cpld again. How else can the peach crop prepare for consumption next fall? Boston Globe. Is it the dawning of the millennium? In Baltimore 'on St Patrick's Day two negro companies paraded, and in Memphis an Ital ian society was in the processionj A bloodless amputation, by the newmeth od of bandaging the limb with rubber webbing, was successfully performed by Dr. Tewksbury, 'of Portland, a few dvys since.

i I Dr. Bartol thinks that Dr. Lewis starting out from bis Turkish bath on Beacon street and leading a hand of women forth to scour the land.points a moral and certainly adorns a tale. i -i The Chicago-correspondent of the Toronto Globe says: "Perhaps, next to Ben Butler, tbe highest development of American civilisation may be said to be the Sunday news paper" vi A gentleman friend has two and has named themj and Wilson." His reason fori these appellations is that neither of Traveler. The driver and conductor of a horse-car in Boston were both discharged, the other day, because one asked the other for a piece of tobacco when a director of the company was in the car.

1 j. Two Detroit girls have been arrested for getting on a locomotive, opening the throt tle Valve, and starting the machine. They then Jumped off, but the engine ran through a freight doing $700 damage. law1 prohibiting the catching of trout less than three inches in length. When anglers feel a bite, will they have to wade in and measure the trout before they land him? The most atrocious of all libels is that in the Chicago Times which mentions a rumor that Anna Dickinson is engaged to "Eli Perkins," nnless indeed she has been engaged by somebody to kill him.

Rochester Dem. and Chron. A band of 'distinguished "scalpers" from the frontier have astonished the Keokuk people. They were on their way to "the benefit of his own. He placarded the city Great Father" in Washington, and probably want the latest Improved rifle given to their young warriors.

'My love," said a romantic Brooklyn youth, bending tenderly over a fair-haired girl, "ify love, can; you 'articulate' your hopes with the sweet duties of wifehood?" "No," she bashfully replied, "but our doctor Is a bully "If," advertises a philosophical victim, "the person who took a fancy to my overcoat was influenced by the weather, then all is serene; but, if be did so from commercial considerations, I am ready to enter into financial negotiations for its return," The Postmaster-General's dignity must have suffered, the other dsy, when he re ceived a letter from Delta, Iowa, saying. "If you doan't git some one to run this "ere poast offus purty soon it'll be throwd in the river, for I'm going off on a bear hunt and can't fool any moar." Young Spinks came home from a ball one night last week, with a look of despair on his manly countenance. "What's the mat asked his father. gasped the young man, "she ate a strawberry ice and she wore a scarlet ribbon! What! taste in colors 1 My heart is broken!" A few years ago Hangman Foots offered a reward of 110,000 for the scalp of an Aboli tionist. One night last week this ferocious individual went to a colored man's restaur- Tuesday morning while building a fire, threw into the i0ve a- lot of shavings la which a quantity of revolver cartridges had been packed, and handful or so went into the sve.

aj aoenss ue wa-wau a.wui2 ti became th merchant's fiitt duty to hunt a bombproof retreat behind the safe until thf fusilade was orer. county, Iowa, has 432 more mala than female inhabitants. The Davenport Gazette attributes this state of affairs to the supposition that Mr. Grundy, in honor of whom' the county was named, had a. trouble some time with Mrs.

while on this earth, and by his Interposition females of her class are excluded from the sacred soil of the coun ty. That would account for it, and It looks altogether JfJS. QBEBLMY'M SOX. A PremlalBff IJltle By Wht m4. New York Tribune Renew of "A Bummer la Every friend of Mr.

Oreeley remembers the traditions of the wonderful boy in whom his heart was so tenderly bound up, and whose early death cast a shadow that never passed away over the wnoie ot nis subsequent lite. The following account, which affords some new details of the early training of this rare young being, that has never before been printed, will be read with great interest: vo leu us, luamma, iuarguente, "about Pickie's childhood. I have-always heard that he was brought up in a remarkable way, but beyond the fact of Aunt Mary's great devotion to him, I know very little concerning him." I "Your Aunt Mary." mamma ireplied, "looked upon Pickie's birth as much in the light of a miracle, as if no other child bad ever before been born. He was heaven-sent to her, and she sacrificed herself completely for the better development of Pickle individuality, or, to use the language of, the reformers of those days, in 'illustrating the in dependence of the child's self-hood. Noth ing could nave Deen more oounaiess tnan her study to guard his health, and to watch and cherish his opening intellect i No child-Prince could have been more tenderly and daintily nurtured than he was; and his father often said, 'Pickle is a dear boy in every sense of the word for nothing was too rare or too costly for him.

i 'You have beard, of the brilliancy of his complexion; this was owing, in part, to his mother's watchful care of his diet and to his bathing. An hour was allowed to his! daily bath, and for brushing out his luxuriant silken This was one of my duties, and it was no doubt it was that scrupulous care that gave it so rare a shade. I "As for his food, it was quite peculiar. He never ate baker's bread; nor, indeed, any bread prepared by other bands than bis mothers or mine, and he was not given meat or cake with the exception of oatmeal while candies, or indeed sugar in any form. butter and salt were rigidly excluded from bis diet, but white grapes, and every choice fruit that tms or foreign markets afforded, he was allowed to eat in abundance, and the result of this system was a sturdy constitu tion and a complexion unparalleled for beauty.

1 i "I said that he never ate butter; but cream and milk were given mm i "What sort of toys did be have, mamma?" I inquired. "I can never imagine him playing with dolls, like an ordinary "child," "He never did," replied mamma; "His toys, like his meals, were of the largest rooms iu the. house was chosen for his nursery, and, as his mother 1 would, not have a carpet upon the floor, it was scrubbed daily. Here his playthings were kept a singular assortment one would think them, but your aunt seldom gave him what would simply amuse him for the moment, but sought rather to surround him by effects, that would suggest ideas to his mind on a plan somewhat like that of the Kindergarten system, but more poetic, and entirely original with herself. He bad lovely pictures and a real violin, while tbe shops were constantly searched for whatever was curious, instructive, or beautiful.

jj. "Pirlri' mind undmnvproiitmn vara them is a Boston nniike those of the children even of our best families, for be never bad children for playfellows, and those friends whom his mother permitted to be near him were the most cultivated and noble character. His language, consequently, was as choice as that of the minds which surrounded him, and very quaint it sounded from a child's lips, At this time Margaret Fuller was with us, and Pickle lived in most intimate relations with this pure, high-minded woman- i "In hercare to prevent Pickie from1 knowing of the existence of wickedness and cruelty in this world, your Ahnt Mary would rarely permit him to converse lone with anv i 1 i save tne cnosen iew tnac i nave mentioned. The Massachusetts Legislature talks of a I lest the innocence of his child-mind should be shocked by hearing of war, or murder, of cruelty to animals, while she was everguard-ing him lest bis eyes might rest upon some painful or disagreeable object" BX3TA.XOKIAI. And Prenldeail ti Prospeet.

Wash. Cor. Chlcngo Times. 1 Morton is a doomed man so far as i Presi dential honors are concerned, since his attack on the German element In his undignified ana stncuy personal reply to echurs the other day, he, in allowing his spleen to run away with his discretion, has turned his presidential aspiration cake into yery soggy dough. jj Senatorial dignity and decorum baa had its superanuated old frame terribly shaken by having a circular entitled, "To the lovers of purity everywhere," thrust beneath their high-toned noses, purporting" to emanate from the Woman's club at Washington.

It is a mild form of Woodhullism, and goes In for a cleaning of the Augean stables of Washington morality, and placing women on what it considers a clean basis in her' maternal relations, i giving her the right to select I sound fathers for her children. Addessed to the present Senate, one can readily see tbe joke. It seems as if the lame, the bait, and the blind, all the superanuatea old fossils in the country had managed by hook or crook or both to hoist themselves' into the soft spots of the United. States Senate. Men without any legs, to speak of, like Morton, Ferry, v.v nnuvui wciciuii com nil.

ment of arms, like Clayton; with only a solitary eye, like Butler; short in torso, like Schurx; or with plenty of body and Bhort in the legs, like Conkling; or with a full set of limbs, eyes, etc, supplemented by several millions of dollars, but no head, like Stewart; or who, having a good physique, are the victims of a tongue, like Sargent The moral and physical weakness, lame ness, and crudeness of that august body would make it a total wreck were it not for the presence of a few healthy members. a r. Ul i. resiaine in Aiiuuieneia. I nn -n-j- t.

lowa, hearing his dog barkin- alofflo Ohio, undertook to have a littla fan few nights ago, got up to see what the mat-1 few nights ago by imitating a dog. So he hid in the corner of a fence, and when, pres -r? exef W0Qia "WAT ter was, and opening the door he was nounc ter "was, and ODeninz the door tti iii iivi tuu ami iiwuuou iiuvw wnM urn mn(r wukl in ni nMn no mn in ticil air there was despair; you have incited courage, prove. The only obedience to an nnjust oPn by alarge wddcat which tore and determination and success where there have statute should be passive; submission In hit his bead frightfully. The. animal then been before indifference, delusion and in- court and jail, not obedience' in doiag a took shelter behind some barrels where it ornuiy oi Dunxs.

av jtuwuiuuB acn wroni set or Mcnncice a. rjersonai neat nr V. thm K- Km." .11 .1." thm Kilieu. 1 I I A I at of public diaosjtrationsv. You can ngt world, ant in Washington, and dined with WendeU Phillips; sind Phillips retired from the sitting with what little hair he has intact earawart xnercnant at Anamosa, jowa, Such men as Ohio, whose worst vice is snumng; Carpenter, of Missouri, wno, in spite of all that is said, is a hard-working, painstaking Senator, who shares with Thnr-man the credit of being the best' debaters on the floor; Robertson, of South Carolina, whose lips, nanus, and life are aoove reproacn, ana a few others are the leaven of the whole lump.

They shine with double lustre when compared with the senile Oglesby, and no- and the balance of the mass of incompetency rolling, starring, and blundering on the floor of the United States Senate. ently, anotaer young man named Mullen came by on his way to the Post-office, he crawled out on all fours, barking and growling as much like a dog as possible. His imitation was so perfect as to deceive Mullen wno -drew a revolver end shot tnt too successtoi nucuc ce4 on the spot, NEW YORK STORE suit. I Banrains ATI on or. Extra ijarffainsj.

LADIES KID GX.OTES. 80c. ILM. SX Full Stock Of HDrinj colors in hIS makes. COSSETS.

COC. 73d. $L2i US. 11.75, Easi fitung goods la this city. 1 HATS! HATS! HATS! -1.

Ladle Hats, Hisses' Hats, CM1- dren's Hats, 50 DIFFERENT STYLES, ALL NET7 Pettis, Dickson Co. geo; mm kkmey, THE CTLOTELIERS, AU DAILT fiSCZITIXa Stylea 4 fchantTalloringGoods1, READY-MADE CL0TH1NQ, FINE WIIITH2 SIZIZtXO. T33 fsslliiitcii Street SjNG GER VAIS, REAL ESTATE BROKERS, Ko. a Clayrxkol Blk, Corwr Ililaels WmSU(Ib atrela, TSDLLSATOIA LXDLLSA. rOB BKXT.

Good bfflce rooms, second floor front: lane hall. superior for lodge or club if TOB TXADJS. FASM of 160 acres, milts from eorporalou line. eat. Will take a vood county town property, some Utile caab.

and baunce on long tune. bteam Flour Mill. Bartholomew County, follows: Mill property, four acres of ground, mill house, 10x60, stories and hUh attic; first story tone, balance exira neary umoer; eocioe ana boiler loom 20x60, one story, brick stack 60 feet high, boiler 44 Inches in -diamets, (28 feet long,) 2 Sues 15 Inches diameter, engine 12x24, only one year old, 2 runs 3)4 foot old quarry wbeat stones, 1 ran 3 foot corn stone capacity tb bushels wbeat and 80 bushels corn per hour. Independent boiler feeder Independent merchant and custom bolts clothed two years ago with bent Dufour anchor cloths, and can run either or both bolt at pleasure. Cleaning and elevating machinery aU in complete and good order, fctdrage roost for 10,000 bushels wheat and 5,000 busheiscorn.

One 4-ton Fairbanks scale Fairbanks hopper and Blatfo-m scales. Taggmrt packer, new. bwitchto i doot; brand ot flour Al at Louisville, Madlano. Cincinnati, etc. Warehouse, 24x60; power corn, sheller and cleaning rig, with capacity of 100 bush els per hour; fuel abundant; wood XI per cord la JTlc iio.uuo.

win take nnencumoerta property wortn aoout caan, Daianc to 1 In residences, mills, farms, sad aU kinds oi nreoertv FOR BaLE Vacant corner lot on street, 12DxW. 6 feet above grade. fsamnera Epf tapb. Tennessee) inside city iota at u. WANTtD-Wslnut Umber for cash.

Give fall description of locafon a well as price, quantity, ad nisei Near stream pie ferred. I Bargain In a house, about $3,500. Hona for ivuu Kental property for unencumbered lota aad money. I Tbe following enitaDB on CharlM Rnmn. was composed by Charles Sennott, an attor ney or reboot street and Disced no on the casket: Translation.

Humanity and Justice Mourn and win Mourn Thee. Sumner, Mot Renowned Forrectec i vi Eunice, Justice, on Account of Thy Most Pa Life Among the Base. Humanity, la That She Was tit ver a Stranger to Thou Bejoicest in the End of Labors and the Se Kiamng- I Of Immortality. Hamv. Blessed, and Fortnnat Ona In Each a heath That None Like Thee Betnalnr.

Han. A Pluefcy Wenw' Captor. New York 8un.J Yesterday afternoon Mrs. Kate SchJumner, of 177 East Houston street saw wo young men enter the side door that leads to the tenements above her meat store, and heard them going up stairs. Armihg herself with a followed.

And saw that her bedroom had been entered by a window from the halh Sha opened the door and confronted the burs lars. One of them struck at her and darted by. She struck him with the meat-hook, the point entering" his mouth and coming out through his cheek. With a shriek of psin tbe burglar ran down stairs, leavin a trail blood. Mrs.

Echlumner then ran back ta vcure the other. As she entered the room other burglar jumped out of the back window into the yard if is ankle was badly ivrZZMZ the fall, and he could not escape Airs. Bcblumnerehoutedfa? help, end several neighbors ran in to her aid. They grappled the wounded thief aid sent for an oo cer. Offlcer Kennedy took the prisoner to the Fifth Street Police Station; where aescriDea nimseu as ueorge J.

Quinn, of 2C2 East Broadway. A jimmy and a set of jewelry belonglnrto Mrs. 8chlumner were found on him. With the jimmy he had pried off the fastenings of the hall window. The wounded burglar escaped.

Quinn was locked up. TThat it Costa AattaeaUeate a SspU Eoch ester Democrat and Chronicle. Lowenstein, the convicted murderer is ti be left to bis fate. He has no money and iu? iwjcn ui wi ma, inereis.tA be sure, a remote suspicion that Weston tha man allered I to have been his victira.commit' ted suici.Je by shooting himself, like the Goodrich; but it picloa a fact, 9.

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Years Available:
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