The Dover Weekly Argus (Newspaper) - February 4, 1881, Canal Dover, Ohio f be goner PUBLISHED BY Every AT CANAL PER IN AN INDEPENDENT DEMOCRATIC VOLUME I. CANAL FEBRUARY 4, 1881. NUMBER THE ARGUS OFFICE n wm AM OF Description of with and Our Presses are run by we can fill your Orders Promptly and at Reasonable by Mall will ful BEWS Interesting Home and Foreign Jan. sub- but the be ready receive thf House of s in Semite lit o'clock for the ot ut thf opening mill totes fur Vice President nf the that persons bo to the thf tic Hi shall tn the President shull the si ite uf which be IT if a been thf Mil h entry nn tho n Ulinn Mr. to lull Wai from mid referred In Thf lull win from I on ami it i nit In Ml without II Si i. HI t im Foreign il lull thf tnr the col- oI Mr. Morey k f of n i-l ihe f ih on Mr. up proponing a for ilif the ms. itn ami thfn u In- playing thill thf with In future iri Mr. i system Mr. an nil In in of free Inking IIM lui on ult. Mr followed In The nn The ing ion the lied j inn us d i. Oil I- I N t 4. A te 1 Ihe House -I w. Si-N The n lint Iho i Company In in ii tele- i nf thf 1.....1.1 ol i -i to nil I iri ni I lull I I it HI nt r on -I e with a i. il of a thf ni l-l I H t- -I II i li i l I'M ih nt n ol I with l 1 I iii I h M v I- i. 11 In. uH t to .I oI Minx 1.1 I hii re- turn in -bi- of thf lo I In I. II hi I II I I i ul it wi ni i t the A i of for all i. or the 1-u'f-nliir. I for I on the Static 11-" a ami Is win tho intv in thi rr or his SI thr he wis tali I re- In the Si NATI ro- with n lilit to It tn en- of n Lot f. In i i motion of Mr. his i .il was up i it Itn i In I Mr. o' i v. the I l-l ill of l piv for nt the Mill's on t s of Kli in I Mi. the I to ol rally tin i i up as n ir Ml it. st North in ol the r. Credit ni SM Iris nut 'n tlie Fort wink i work ii 1. It i- A St. 1'iuil. tn l unit trill t 1'. I f n nrt Cor of on tbe I i rock fell in Hie I i e .it on n A In en in thu a to tlir in ol of of New rei for Tor n. A M Mi IT. nn n in I. A left r n. i A in New YorU P pr v. I A cart felt nt N. on in of Legislature of n on t i for T il- or at i Ins n I'll 111- A MX lit New York ni an I In of M un Total Crow ion of in i of and te Tbo about 4D.ll.IO of 01 vear nli fit of wool anil 000 n. into lor tlic of Mrs. iu ut on tile 27lh Imr li four t-i TIIK on the war path N. M. at I ut tint 111., wife on mill then flint ni tlie suy munt llu was it hard emu with a very containing eight rouniN ot a lew mfn In a In It li that I were there of I the A KANSAS says Unit O. principal of thu nt Holt will tn Illil wan one of the faculty I of nt when Mr. i of that THK of for on the 1 ult. i livery nt bv lire on the of the ult. n was or I more Is thu on the ult a resolution tlic ol the In tho Re- 1 of tho the on Public on ult. unil I the propriety uml for n the The tee its to tlie to In thu hill an for this i 1 A. nn tlie ult. tube District Attorney for of New place of TKN business houses nt were hy lire on ult. TIIK steamer vita blown up on the Ohio above on the ult. six were were by u on the ult. I A in works ol the Phoenix Iron on Iv Injuring five two nf THK tho army ut WIH by tire on Only n smull piirt of were of nt fatally on the ult. A in Illinois mi ult. that nny man of his wife tie thu pust year con- to the ol the i feet of 9htnjrlci unit of at i on the for the uf TIIK wheat crop in st ucici in The crop li PiiM tu bo In excellent will be a fair at TIIK of exports of In The of nf silver folii bullion for the wus A Dm says the report of mint In the Fort to be W. f. HARD n prominent ft ten of Ills wile on the ult. anil He hail for several the Hill of very tn his nife and As on the bury near on the SOtli bv a broken The cur the the front cur with It. when both turned over on the Jes ami took The i Inken with ami after the unil broken Fifteen persons were inju five Only twenty persons on the U. In the Detroit the ten or twelve years of their with the Their the A MAS wan ar- Lake on for In About tin hour WIH in II Broun in hit H. nl shot unit bv I a a nn The u horse Was tit on the for the Ar on tlir Bellini while Several Is a at a on the nf tho a man Buck was uml bv a man AT on forty of In an J. o. anil but noun on tho 27th a mob went to dethrone thr colliers had taken the of tome una a riot Infantry and rolicc were on the The riot net wna Thn then charged the Several miners and policemen were THK Paris publishes tho lowing as the Chilian conditions of Cession of to surrender ol Hilled Meet und of Indemnity of hereof shull and Bolivia Cum to occupy und work the and saltpetre mines until ol the Is ma A dispatch says twelve fishing smacks were wrecked at Sables Hay of and forty-six men were Ax dispatch from South on Colley with 170 cavalry 6ii the after and nearly successful nil ub mall am mounted shot were to Thu lost wounded or Tho Doers arc i reported to have lint killed und j A shuck of was i felt at Switzerland on the ult. I A correspondent that nothing IH known of the revolt Itl which it improbable in. the A at Paris reports n pint to dethrone Prince him been discovered and numerous has been caused by ods in provinces In in a ro- Ihe Sixty In the Senate on tlic to lie Milled by Kansas that the from pension and claim of Washington mid he was not In any sense represent the of the that Mr. a for the the battle of and for the and of those now dend The Indian was then taken up ami disclosed until tune for The following bills were In the the prevention of adulteration of food or in nay viee for injuries received whtle in of their to the on of by telegraph from the of the land warrants to soldiers and ot their widows or proposing a A BOAT used for harbor work at foundered on the The crew of eighteen persons TIIK St. sals there will be nu at Kneh treat with the The will bn but not horse armory and the at the Tower of have been closed to the on count of apprehended Fenian from on the that the Russians had and after nine and that the were in full Their loss was TIIK Homo members of ment have resolved to oppose Ihe coercion bills to the extent of their A dispatch says many urn earnestly the Importation Into which say seriously their A ST. dispatch news from of the states that iu sortie on the 10th the sixty sold whom they Immediately Turcomans and killed one hundred Persian AT White on tho Mrs. killed her two little oou three years old and tint other seven sho then probably fatally stabbed As dispatch on the 21th ult. stated that battalions had been ordered to be ready to march to the frontier any Ax uprising is reported in Turkish which la an stute for seme THE Egyptian cotton it is now will exceed the estimate about thirty per cent. ENGLAND has notified tho Porto that does not wish to obstruct negotiations on Greek and that she will not in harmony with the other a meeting at for tlic election of Senators by the to the rale of of whe lost a limb and are totally disabled to per to reserve lands from to distribute the 'the lima eases were dis- of. Messrs. and The lull was relation to the Northern K broad li authorises that to such of Us In the of Idaho uml with the and and tlic sumo terms and conditions as provided for its main A B. on the sins the eruption of Mount is propeller St. Albans was wrecked about miles from Milwaukee on tin 30 h Tlie crew and seven In were rescued on the follow All were badly the feet and BY the derailing of a train on the R. O. near N. in the and a number of passengers were baitly Tlie wrecked caught but were put out by A SHOP ami tenement house at were destroyed by lire on of the Mrs. and two perished in tlie ABOUT iOO in bands of to thirty on the war in New They killed not less than le In two were fourteen miles from alive on the Mill by u mile of a mountain Tin re wi re ten A says tho sent the Turkish are men from to ot Valo us a KINII of arrived tit Mvn on the ult. Cheese from A paper says that cheese la maim from potatoes in and in the manner Possibly tint may found worth if not in this After having collected a 01' potatoes ot good the to a white arc boiled in a and after becoming cool they aru to u either by means of a prater or To live pounds of this which to be as as is one pound of sour milk and necessary of Thu kneaded and the covered up to lio for or four At of this time it is kneaded anew and the are placed in when moisture They are then allowed to dry in the and placed in in large they must remain for Tho older these the more their kinds are The and most common is as detailed the with four parts of potatoes uml two parts of curdled the third with two parts of potatoes nnd four parts of cow or ewe These cheeses have this advantage over other that they do not engender and they keep fresh for a berof provided they arc placed iu a dry situation and iu well-closed It always the correct thing te show deference to public So of thought unit he acted on his ideas in j this was against with a in so who was a tho cane and substituted a of good Tlie pupils didn't seem to the neither did the the accommodating Holland a couple of lars for Hogging a too John now laments tho public the Chinese Professor at dresses iu costume of his native His coat U u crimson silk d with white which contain ures of His s lire of preen his slippers are embroidered j with and his tiny I cap is with a Ho is I very and is one of first iu a to oiler a lady a i I THE lower house of the Tennessee i Legislature has Mollio I Engrossing bhe is a I relative of David and her husband was n Unionist who lied to the swamps and was killed by Union i diers tor an escaping is the new Two boles are made in a The performers stand behind it and place their eyes in the while the sons in front guess to whom the H. of New has read an interesting per before the Chicago Historical to prove that Mrs. Benedict Ar- nold was not in complicity with bet h tin 4 ui his OF loan Under the JOHN the miner who was burled alive under a which tilled tho shaft In which ho was near lust is not forenoon eleven hla chilled body was hauled out of the shaft where it huu lain for hours under feet of and Wilson will lo toll to wondering 11st en era a talc as terrible and pathetic us nny ever told by Dumas or Wilson 1st n Colorado minor lying In a cabin near Chalk Qod for tho truo friends who dared did so much to rescue hi in from tho grave he wast burled Mr. John nn of the Mining and Investment of this lust night from tbe beyond Chalk where Wilson now und gives a graphic account of thu perils which ed tho expedition from this city lo son's uml also tho liuts of the rescue Mr. Virgin owns tho the Alice on which Wilson and his C. anil wben Mr. Chapman broeg it tho of tlic on Friday Mr. accompanied by his three C. W. Leslie anil J. M. nil of whom hud known Wilson in ut once stinted on back tor the It was u of storm and and 1'our men were out in well knowing tuo peril of tlic but to do all that was possible in man nature to rescue thu poor fellow ing In iho Thuy believed as nil others thut und that the work of rescue won hi be but the work of disinterring u four men nil night along u trackless course snow Irom lo leet blinded by the storm beat in their at one for three hours in the to a distance of billf u They goito at o'clock day after a went their horses be- From Chalk to thu cabin tho was from live lo seven and they struggled along through this snow until three o'clock in the before they the to the Tho whirling tho snow In their unit at times some of the party would sink down to from exhaustion to the nf such a and others would drug them When they reached thu font of the hill on which tho cabin Virgin und Downing fell down In ihe snow and In un Crews mil I Culd well started up Iho hill to tho and several 1'ormer 1'ell for- ward only to ho kicked cuffed Into renewed by and when they reached the cabin Crews wus utmost In the condition of the object lying In ghastly slumber In the shall ucur by under twenty-six leet of Caldwell made a returning to tho foot of the aroused sleepers there and guided them to the It was for men In their condition to do any work thut and It wus not until next miming thut the four could their way to the shaft no the mountain sido through seven feet of another man up during tho night nnd the six wetu to work to not the snow out of the They fastened ii gunny sack to the rope tilling the out tho shaft as rapidly us When near tho bottom shovel broke through a uf iti one corner bU fallen resting on the point of u was poor cried ns ho back and s A lew moan from tho blue lips or the crouching Thu men worked with tying a rope under Wilson's drew him out of tho with got him down tho hill to the The body wua chilled and eyes swollen und closed nnd the teeth The limbs wore but nut Tho moan coming through the clenched teeth was thu only Mgn of and while one man for a doctor to camp tho others worked santly for rubbing tho wilh ky to and Setting whisky down hH throat by prying open his After live or six work son showed of and in the the consciousness Virgin Wilson could and give Idra of hu He Buys thut when thy shaft filled with snow bo thought was and that both would die of Ha went to work with frantic Irving 10 climb but In u few grew and he down In bis to nothing Tho snow was packed tightly in tho but 1m- around his there wiis u space of arid tills enough air to prevent son's escape Iho that air a covering of snow ia quantities to und had no ous bruises on his lie will soon be en- tirely The U u of of the ate of the Forty-seventh Theao murked with an asterisk are new whilo those market been re- Republicans In In und CT In T. A. T. 188T. M. K 1W. HU 1-87. Vnn Henry Jl 18S5. John P. Nathaniel 1S.VT. 18-i.V M. It. lluu Hit t T. t C. 1C. a. 1S83. J. K. John A. NEW K. 1C, W. NKW W. NKW 1'l.ut. 18-fi. 1845. H. 1OWA. To W. n. 1887. 1SS3. H. B. John J. 11S87. E. JunKS H. k. C. I i in. P. K. 1885. James O. 1S87. 1KSS. Jama U. 18S7. F. ir. 1887. L. Mm N. 11. 1SS.1. Justin S. 1SJ7. r. 1887. J. u. from Laurel Hill report a story from that A gentleman from there remarked that thoy hnd n fall of black snow lust The snow fi II to the depth of half an ami instead of the usually element It was dark und sooty in Immediately following the descent of tho snow families residing In the neighborhood were attacked with sore and the er portion with The theory advanced Is that tho soot und other impurities from the hundreds of coke ovens In this ity had been collected iu tlie by nn unusual direction of tbe hud been driven to Laurel and mingled with a that tho measles nnd sore throat that followed nore due to the taet of Booty collecting and retaining gonna of the diseases in this and ond contaminating the atmosphere where thoy A Fin In u Eleven Miss a Mrs. G. It. of when eleven or twelve years of wag one making hurried to attend a Sho hal a pin be- tween bar which passed Into her und was supposed to be Dr. ier assumed such to be the but tho girl insisted that It was under her The physicians made search tor it but failed discover and treated her work ot Recently Miss Harvey bad a large bunch or swelling upon one side of her increasing lo Dr. L. D. opened the The ncx t after cloven years oi successful tbe pin came out of thr It wna two-thirds covered with a and wus J OHIO Jan. journal of tho day be- fore was read after which tho Senate ad- until tbe afternoon of the 25th. To amend the code BO as to authorize the construction of sidewalks to approaches to foot bridges over to amend the code so provide that actions ail kinds of corporations may be brought In the county wherein the cause of action or any part thereof as well aa in tho county wherein tbo corporation la situate or has or bud its principal office or place of Adjourned until Tuesday January Jan. Pond presented a from General Durbin Ward and other members of committee appointed at the recent meeting of the to urge tho adoption of the Constitutional amendment proposed by the The following bills wove that only one Assessor shall bo elected in a township or to provide for the ment of robbery by a of not less than for more or Milking ations to the principal mid interest on public debl und the expenses ot tho of the Sinking to provide Cor tho reimbursing of tho sinking fund for moneys transferred to iho mlo and authorising certain counties to build railroads and operate tbe Jun. following was in- Amending Section so us to low tbe of tue Stuto Institutions to draw at one time of the for their A waa passed providing for t' c livery of convicts or criminals Irom other number of petitions wore pre- sented in of n Option The following bills were To all tbe municipal corporations of Ohio to provide for levying n tax xi pon the business of or malt nnd that tbo proceeds of Iho tax shull go to tho school to allow married women to control their own and to become tios for their to provide for the punishment of certain committed on railroad to provide that Judges shall u complete re-cord of nil cases of tried by to amend the law by making tho stealing of timber amt punishable A resolution adopted Finance Committee In its investigations of public moneys In the State institutions to send for persons and papers whenever iu the ion of such committee tt may be necessary do sn. The following bills worn Ing It a misdemeanor to or ir any way deal in medical to provide an additional sum to complete further Improve fair grounds for the use ut county agricultural Jan. following bills wero Allowing the Hoard of Directors of agi societies in counties a population by of 1870, to enlarge fuir providing in addition to the of County ers n board of consisting of live bors in county containing a city of the tirst to and of tho changing the law to the of counsel by the court so as to make the obligatory in of und discretionary in of following lulls Amending Section 5 so that when a grand or petit juror is excused from serving us a il shall be with tho court wht ther his munc ahull be returned to the box fur drawing or to compel companies to advise holders of policies of the of tho providing the lines accruing Ir m violation of the road laws be into the school fund Insten lot the road trustees for corporations instead of to cities and Incorporated to and prohibit porter houses or shops aud houses uml of notorious or report for tippling or Providing thut rond tux inny bo collected by action before a Justice of the und erty bo exempt from execution for the providing additional protection to mines and Warm If grown people choose to go to bed with cold tci Maybe they agree with the old mtm having tried various ments and without at hist delied thu Aeho old I can it as us you But to put into cold sheets 1'cet that should bu warm and but tiutt are numb and is enough to make nil the liltle toes this side of the tropic Some con- that will bo cold in spite of woolen and thick nnd nny amount of The nervous system of children is said to be live times greater ately than their Who can doubt And certain restless common to every should be in justice lo ordinary ranked as for how can one pair of 1'eut accomplish all those But bedtime rolls and then the tired the yielding bones of the growing should lie in huppy un- knees and chin should not be brought into unnatural and genial ilow can they help it when all below the hem of the is a dreaded It the bedrooms are there will be no chill iu the mattresses and but every one knows how it iu a cold We should like tu urge all elder aunties and nurses to use cither a which id or a warmed for the feet of their little With that ant to bed will be robbed of halt its There will be fewer coughs and catarrhal digestion will und become less there will be no hours of chilly Mothers may with tlie good-night safely invoke dreams and sweet residing in did not wish to continue with his and asked his wife to remove with him lo another Upon her refusing to do he removed after lapse of time suit for a divorce on the ground that his wife had deserted him arid re- away for more than three Under the laws of Maryland this is ficient ground for a The wife did A decree re the court holding that the wife's conduct did not constitute contemplated by and intimating that the case looked like one of this were it says man wife desiring a divorce could agree to and after three j alleging could apply for a That would be a state of things more lit for the atmosphere of Utah than that of IT is unon the authority of the of that during the whole of as many as inhabitants of that ince were attacked with that of them died in and that during the ten months of 1SSO, ending with the 31st of the number of deaths therefrom was which may be more or less re- garded as endemic throughout South has been on the increase lately in some parts of especially at where in the town hospital there are at present no fewer than SCO patients stricken with the who ornaments a York has arms no larger around than a but he Has great strength in his and can lilt with his teeth a huge barrel of Arranging for His Donn during the recent said that General field know enough about fairs to negotiate a promissory The epigrammatic Colonel was anxious to defend his iriend and put in this plea A little peep into political affairs since tho election will indicate that the President elect knows how both to execute and ate political promissory No sooner was he elected once with the cunning of a veteran with at least the wisdom of a man who knows how to negotiate a promissory he began to arrange for his In order to lay the tion for a what was essary to be In the first there was of He had been twice almost nominated for the Still still ambi- and with a splendid he must be disposed of. offers him a Cabinet which he will tlie one popularly understood in this country ami on all sides of all oceans to be the head of tlie argues that Hlaine iu his inet could with decent bo- come a competing candidate against him for tho Presidential nomination tour years and is still a man for the an candidates for the Presidency to reasons that lie would make of Blame an ally instead of a com- This indicates that had knowledge enough of human fairs to negotiate a promissory Then was John How to get of John Sherman was an ex- railroad of the money power in both parties and in all business were pouring in their petitions upon General to retain John man in his This could not He was undoubtedly under promise not to do it. He had with the Republican enemies of John Sherman not to retain of by announcing to their to that the election of General Hancock would compel the factories to become mercantile houses to reduce thuir bankers to limit their had done tuo much toward the election of to be Sherman must bo vided for in some It was not agreeable to John Sherman to go he would not listen to this Ho must be provided for a At home there wore but Uvo things he would ship of the Treasury and thu ship from could not give him the former without breaking liis Ho therefore coaled Foster out of the Senatorial race to give the Senatorship to John I his Senatorship will last two years longer than and it improbable that a part of Hie bargain was thai John made a Senator for sU would lie a competing for tho lial in 1384. Two nent competitors have been disposed of very much as knew how to negotiate a promissory But there was Foster had nominated for tho certainly could not have been elected had ho not been Foster could not be though he might bo Foster was not a date for the and was less in way than John better to be to Foster than to bu ing in toward John Foster was a muss of He was promised future Governorships and and various which had not to and distribution of Federal patronage in Ohio which had Sherman presumably agreed to the surrender of all claims to tue control of the which his Senatorial position would naturally give if and Foster would give him tho Whether John Sherman will keen his or whether will keep his or whether and Sherman logether can give Governorships and in the is another Perhaps Foster was made to believe that the Cabinet would be suited to his and that he was a Cabinet place is not it is possible that tho Department will be dered to thus one with enormous will be in There was another element of the Republican party to be was anxious for an harmonious An inharmonious one would injure his chances for That portion of the Republican party represented by must receive Cameron went to Mentor to consult tlic President-elect touching the and he in gan will be soothed in a similar the foremost civilian of the Republican is lo be disposed of in two He is the control of a Cabinet and if he is wrathy because that place is not one ho would the country is to be made to un- that his elements of ship are becoming still more enmities are Sherman iu the and ling will be Throughout this antagonism Conkling will make himself more and more and thus his hold upon the public miration will be Colliding will in John with ened no op- will seek to placate Conkling by the oiler of a moderate patronage in nnd will a man in the Senate to light him in the second really appears to knowledge enough of human to promissory If the were not to elect the next would seem to have arranged for his own En- Tho and Lord Whether or not the President-elect will fail hi Lilly adhere to made by him with the of the his parly in the treaty of Mentor is a question which at present excites Some days ago Hayes sent to the Senate two nominations to eral in the Suite of Xew one for the at the other for the at which arc regarded by tho cal at Washington as tive of the determination of General to ignore the Conkling faction in his distribution of the The present incumbents of the offices re- ferred to are friends of Senator ling and their terms of office will not expire until the latter part of next The persons named as their successors are known as opponents of the Conkling The fact Mr. Hayes nas made exceeding haste in sending these nominations to the Senate is calculated to excite a suspicion that something mora than his well-known devotion to reform moved him in the ting this and that together the political soothsayers at Washington tind that Mr. Hayes sent these nominations to the Senate at so early a date in order that Senator Conkling may not defeat their confirmation by dilatory that because General hint a personal anil secret conference with Mr. Hayes just before these nominations were made they were inspired by the and it is therefore predicted that the leader of the Now York will get the cold shoulder from the incoming Whether there is or is not anv warrant for such a prediction it is certain that General predilections and sympathies are for the wing of his He likes to be regarded as a in affects at once tho of the scholarship of and the of can a man with such tastes and feelings have in common with the the and the on the other it is true that his public career is void of anv evidence that he is a man of strong convictions or that he possesses the courage of such convictions as he has Iu Con- gress his course was not by any principles of political science or public He was things to all On the troops at tiie Federal election it good as best suited his purpose at thu It is therefore not sonable to believe that has been ing fast and loose with the and that he will cheat as he will cheat anybody else it he concludes that the deceit will If ho suggested to Mr. Haves Uic appointments 1'or tho Federal bo- fore the fourth of March should be madn at he probably did so lo re- lieve himself to the extent of those from any with i Senator the imperious and petulant nature o' the Xew York Senator will be aroused bv this exercise of Punic and he refuse lo be until General shall surrender to him the control of the Federal in the In deed a between Conkling aud Ihe new Administration will be ble unless tlie control the Ch of and not the Chief the i Unconditional or Stormy Whether the Treaty of Mentor was ever actually and lully consummated or it is certain that as the head of the Grant to the rights and powers that were supposed to have been conceded iu co m General will be permitted to enter upon Administration in on one that Conkling s are complied It is for the of General talk or think of a compromise with lie does not know tlie ing oi that lie has never humiliated to u com- The ration that he cannot ho With the pire State in his he wields a formidable and Sherman and Wheeler have heavy how he can wii Id that In the tarly days of his tion Mr. Haves was more than to arrange terms of with tho York all overtures that hinted at any ar- rangement but the render of the pushed by and decided logo on with the They have hail the satisfaction of putting some ot s out of and installing his enemies in the But dragged them at wheels in two lie has compelled them to for the of Governor ot York and of the United the two of whom they attempted to No Indian ever wreaked more ample on his foes than Coukling lias scored against Kvarts aud Tlic New York Dictator gave the vote of his State lo and thus saved him Irom lie claims recognition as the ruling in the He demands the Treasury and the and he treats with lolly disdain the oiler of a choice of inferior of the with the wing of the party A chasm that cannot be bridged yawns between Hate that cannot lie planted divides They co-operate in such emergencies as the recent in so their mutual tion is not When the contest is they renew their factional light ail the more bitterly for having been compelled lo to a One side or other must or General lield will see POLITICAL A conservative Democrat nnd a Republican who was an intimate of Lincoln's agreed in a at Washington other diy that with iu Cabinet s Ad- ministration would lie one of the corrupt in our history era of The of the f hania recommen Is the adoption in that Stale o methods lor the eradication of the anil iiril 1C Ill's io i Carrie I out knock fie St ite higher General uard 1 to that after a of a tury of public Tic hu is than when he entered to which Senator Hamlin am I had nothing when I ami haw So far as originating any or anv policy is liis reputation i- like his Senator was probably when lie meed who swears that he was brined by a- a Unt a- Kellogg impartially indebted for his to the testimony Moore gave in his and for h ho wa- with a in New there m ly be question as to propriety oi making the According to some the Re- publican newspapers d has con- sented to a intrigue bv which C. Gorham is to be mado Secretary of the United States Senate by the vote of Senator of in consideration 1'or which ice to the new Administration is to be given control of the Federal in his If this be true field will be disgraced beyond tion in the very outset of his One calling on another last was asked if could mend a suitable said the beg of you to take he's honest but I've had to discharge he isn't or good-looking enough for but I should think he would just suit The Republicans of the Michigan having elected Conger to tha United States turned around and requested to give asnat m his free Interesting Decision About THE Supreme Court have just made a decision in a cace arising in this county which is likely to betaken as a leading case both here and elsewhere in this The facts are briefly In 1879, the Hon. Alexander of leaving a will with four codicils After due public notice these instruments on the stih of February admitted to as the last will and testament of the The having been duly proceeded with the tration of the This continued for a period of four when they produced a the advice of their Hopkins they tiled in the probate with their petit ing that the same might be admitted to probate as a part of the will of the said Alexander This book was a common blank containing written testamentary directions on teen each separate direction ing the signature of the testator in all twelve This signature was witnessed often as it but by one person On the cover of the book was this tions to my executors in the way and manner I wish all the legacies to be paid as near as Should I dispose of any of the property herein named before me I order and direct my executors to make up the legacies iti stocks or other or as they may think This was signed by the testator and witnessed by the witness to his other The book now is referred to in the the third codicil lo the will in those my or the survivor of i to pay the legacies in my will and as near as possibly to the directions written in a book bv in W. signed by Alexander De- and by said Melvin W. The book was not at first with the will the did not think it was to have the same After 110- the i a-e came on for hearing before Judge and at July term a wa- entered up the pails of said book and the di- rections therein written and by said de- ceased be approved and allowed as a part of third and of tlie and testament of said From this decree an appeal was taken to the Supremo and the case was at the September term in I hat court have now tho decree of the Probate it is will make a serious in the disposition ot the Ferocious Courage of the A r of the Calcutta 2'ioneer contributes to paper some Reminiscences of the War in Referring to the lighting ties of the Afghan soldiery lie Afghan never thinks of ior but lights with the ferocity of clings to life until glaze his hands refuse to trigger or a knife in a dying I maim or kid stern realities of war were more pronounced on the in Afghanistan than perhaps they have ever been in if we except the retributive days of the To spare a man for a minute was the death of the next soldier who walked One thing our men certainly learned in and Urit was to keep their when pursuing an enemy or ing over a hard-won There might be danger lurking in each seemingly in- animate form the and unless care and exercised the wounded would steep his soul in bliss by killing a Kallir just when life was at its last Tnis stubborn love of lighting in is prompted doubtless by and we so of it that our at close ters always drove their bayonets well there should be no take as to the of the Tlie courage which ihe untrained mobs who fought so resolutely us was worthy of all admiration the tenacity with and clung to their positions was re- In of the sullen they often when re- But when the tide of the light in fully against them and they saw I'm ther would more there was so sudden a change always apparent that one scarcely believe the fugitives hurrying over the were thu men so desperately but a few minutes They knew their in scaling or in making tin ir by ness of and the dis- I'd with a but c rah If ry overtook they like wohes anil f night a- a- men hut there v rally in the true of the ard but at- at Th. ir ular troops were but amenable to by of ami they to had pursued a- when once they were d to It Went is a man in this who once a He ami San with over The Li had to thirty a gulden Ar le an Blue m lo ami it went did ii per a At this the New ker went lo a and a ked What is your candid opinion Bine I think it will go was tlic within a The buver of stocks tor and before bis entire for- tune had the same for two or three and Ihori fell to ten per of face The New broker in consternation and you tell me that Blue Ledge was sure to go gone just as I I heard two weeks aso that it had worki d out its and it only u of a few days when it great It has gone I it has gone and hundreds of people will be Street Daily PITH AND Miss a teacher in the Chinese mission school at has married Deng one of her Her mother is her friends are but she is TWENTY American cities to-day con- over people American States contain over people LOOK upward in the city and tee the network of Then you will under- stand why it U natural that there should be so many rumors in the Boston A man recently a masquerade wrapped from his head to his heels in a brown cloth and with his head He represented a lighted Syracuse AFTER a Milwaukee doctor had put in six time doctoring a man for a worked out of the patient's The doctor made up his mind that something had to if the man lived long Detroit Free You arc in said the gogue to one of his who entered as the last stroke of the bell was dying said the bad for there's no in And now that boy is having a bad spell but not THERE are none so deaf as those who won't said a youne pitching his voice so the old gentleman would be sure to let me have one hundred said the inclining his Let me have two hundred heard you quite distinctly the first my quite Sctc Haven I'LL take a said the to tbe as it went down the And I'll take a the saw said while they were ing it But the fooled while they were rolling it by taking a Please nut jumble these 1'mrcob Reading such puns might incite men to do wattle Hume I'm going to he an- as bis teeth rattled together and his ears stood out like on They tried to stuff me with a story ot a boy who froze to on the rink at the but I one freeze to Come to find out about he just froze his ears and nose and fingers aud and the rest of his body touched at They can't scare me with any of their talcs ot Detroit Free SCIENCE AND IT seems that the application of a to the web ot the garden spider will not only entice the insect toward but even cause the spider to act toward a lly drowned in a substance as though the Uy were alive and without so disagreeable a of the leading chemical factories of Germany employs six lar with salaries varying lo and in addition engages the services of an eminent chemist for theoretical work paying him nearly per It ia doubtless to this liberal patronage of qualified scientists that the ity of German chemical manufactures U PAMPAS grass is a very agreeable thing to everybody possessing what im- to in their own peculiar and vague the artistic in- Some farmers in Southern fornia have found that ibis beautiful grass can be grown with very little trouble sold purposes at a large One of these men put three-quarters of an acre under the and was able to sell each head or plume at two and a half netting about another sold all he raised at seven and a half cents a This industry is Ten thousand plumes were disposed of in Southern California last could lake an almost unlimited number of AT the Greenwich Observatory a very ingenious instrument is in use record automatically the duration of sunshine through the It of a glass globe hung within a hemispherical cup of grealer the cup be- ing lined with a strip of paper covered with stencil The globe is entirely exposed upon the while the sun is acts as a and causes a continuous line to be made upon the This line will be as often as the sun's light is obscured by and thus a record of the amount of sunshine for the will be THE dangerous properties of carbonic oxide have long been at- which contains only a this gas may produce poisoning and Some exact experiments on this et have now been described to the Academy by M. He concludes that a or one of the er compelled to breathe for half an hour in an atmosphere ing only of carbonic oxide ab- sorbs the gas in such quantity lhat about ut the red blood corpuscles combine with the gas and become in- capable of absorbing in an at- containing Kith of oxide about a fourth of the red corpuscles combine with this Overwrought of men and women in our fair land have no other capital than their which they use without or The clever American never lakes a lesson from nature and his brain to lie fallow for a To he pirs it to work t The German lad is leaving the to enter the university at the age w hen the American quitting the lo study a As for the schools of law and medicine require four or live while ours are with nr at the most Hence the man or Englishman when ready to earn own living is what tho American would call middle In our the cramming process is terribly and fosters ambitious idea which be put down at All the bright or girls nowadays who have an idea which stems to them seething in their or see the many wrongs in the world thai lhat Heaven put a pen into hands and sent them out as said a young man of ajear or two the age and to earn my own I feel sure t cm make a mark in ihe She finally secured u tion on a cheap Sunday to write squibs of literary and was paid enough to keep her from From that day there an end of ail development of her She became a poor hurrying here and there to scrape up grains of matter to dished up in an article which nobody would re- nif five after She and her writings aud her life by the sheer power of now are of Yet when she went into the office she was with brain if generously fed and to might have given some real work to the How many thousands are there in the lower rank's of in just this At first they put their brains to work to help the age and to earn their own but soon they let the age take care of to keep selves go on wringing the tired like a dried will not yield a drop of hope has America of a high order of when such a course is pursued even by masters in