Logansport Weekly Journal (Newspaper) - October 30, 1869, Logansport, Indiana Publishers k mi tU d Per I Payable III 21. X^OaAiMSPOUT, OCTOBER 1869. B. AT Notary No. 27 Fourth Special attention given to all and prompt Notarial and done with and B. AT CLAIM Office 31K Fourth A IX p. V. AT ice in State J. AT practice in and adjoining Special attention to OFFICE WITT C. AT PI witli L. S. on Fourth the Court in Room 9, Entrance on Fourth AT in all the higher Office AT attention to all all kindi of and prompt dune with and NO. Court and at Law Booa lo. I NO. u. and 8. AT In and ul tbr tn the i and AT ESTATE and T. A ATTORNEYS AT No. D. L. over Stuart 101 Market having returned to to make a permanent to uld anu new that lie will be to give satisfaction to those who may favor him with their various operations of the profession performed in the most careful and thorough on opposite the Post to Dr. IT 85, Pearl and W. HENDERSON and Wholesale and Dealers in all kinds MARKET i CANAL WINES AND Vi NEAR 44 M. 101 above the AT ALL BE found a good of which he is to make up in the most approved St short DoUce and on 7th, 1885. 4J-tf AKD and ee H. JEWELER AND every and above A N IS IA N and T. and at Law Md UM P. of lu i tor the of aur and all of tbr Men ol | of ood oil In Cur V W. ABS ie Market i 41 DR. J. W. k of ilie and O nf in and ra n ill wt II on putt ao our I I an- liv In Ihr j A It Murk In the ' the all Ihr Itar K and A lilto A all and t hrap and A BKO A 1iI<v;. 8. Ecumenical the Editor of the Ind. arc the Pope shows that he knows it. If he can get his council acknowledged as will have gained what many of his through of have failed to word means world But an ecumenical in theological means a council that to the church in all places in every generation and Christ promised that the gates of hell should not prevail against His it has been held by Catholics iu all that an ecumenical is practical question that has divided ndum has not been the one for all agree that a truly Ecumenical Council can only err when the gates of hell shall have prevailed against the but it has as to what makes a council In the early times of Christianity it was held that such a council should be called out of all national made open to delegates from be sanctioned by Christian princes as representatives of the lay and that its decrees should be promulgated throughout the world and generally by the aud not till the council became fully and truly have been many all marked in in the Church since those ancient but been a steady grasping of tending always toward centering the in the or at the of the French Church has been a prominent and persistent opposer of papal but it has never doubted the of an Ecumenical It has been willing to accept the approval as to a and thereby allow him a kind of veto of but it has resisted the stupendous claim that the speaking could not antl a fortiori has declared him personally A necessary adjunct of this position was the further that a Pope alone could not make a council ecumenical simply by his Tlie right of Christian princes was still claimed lo be that the assent ot national should be not merely by the attendance of prelates or priests from those but by their attendance as duly appointed the dispenses with the consent of of courso he does it by absorbing in himself quoad the whole authority and influence of the lay element in the If he can with an election or of ho puts underneath all other makes it upon and to himself in its Umis Slid and thus himself the open power within and over tlie whole this position is taken by in calling council at Home in December Ilis are of which tho are the most powerful and The has been a of tho The fate of Pore is chiefly because it shows that a man true to the if not in harmony with tho in In it has d the over iu most historical and that Franco at hist is bending under the Until ot the coming no one tan It is M said that Pio Nono to have papal to be a matter of If must ever on of believe it. it wili be time lo credit luch a fact when i it the power lo make a IKi by his j which the attendance on it by ' Homan from foreign formally and f a giving up of whole i it no practical to Pupal trr The of ihe Papacy leave no doubt in the mind of any of that I whatever the next Council leave it will I be before some Pope will I call Council that will the Papacy by supporting J ol bolli official aud It by no out of for the lo a necessary logical consequence ol ihe assembling ol the 11 It lUtlf it will have the call a ient thuK Logansport Kwr the part ic M In k tot n ai Market anal on ai iho A. 51 k fui ktii t O. H J W an W 4(1. to ATtin IS M ai oil vr P. of icn Il 10 lid i- r 2 Im... l tJ r w U 90 M eo 1 Wt 1 IW U CM i mt Xw M f 6r ri m talli fl 1 afr. arc mu i in al lili or Iw foi 1 aV-rr W 10 ia arc tlie ot tlie Cam are of the are ot are of lliu Malay antl ihe are and 1 of the rnic of 91,.'>!>t per per the Hfe 1 of ilic population ni or ol 5 or IT one al the of WH one iu the ol and iti Itm lirpi lo tUe ol 0(1. nini Ute than In and i I more In and j in any other month i i of the of the whole a great in- ' I fluence on In 1,(K> Wr at the age arc or publie 30 ' or are the or 27 sre I a about the women and the darkies and the rest ol none of 'em all aro half so badly used as boys I a and I can give you all their They'll tell you to be a boy is to be somebody without right in tho to take all the sass that's given to and give nono you're a You are to pay full fare in the cars and 'cause a boy and not a and never have a 'cause you're a boy and not a Fat lady gets in after it's all and looks abont everybody looks at Old Conductor you You've paid your No is You've on your legs bundles all Who cares a a horse has such a load given to him as he can and a man won't any more than he can walk Ask what grown lolks think they can There's no limit to doesn't a boy who docs a and does it well for a tenth of what man would get for it. Who hasn't read an advertisement for a boy Who a good understands is willing make himself boards with is sitting best and boys whether old folks don't make as much fuss about as if they were doing you a favor would set you up for wants a boy Your sisters don't in tho Your he always asks if not wanted to do something You make your mother's head whenever you come near Old ladies snap you Young ladies Young men tease and give it to you if you tease Oilier because they're aggravated I want to if they don't know aod when you get a black eye and a torn jacket you hear of it at look back aud wonder if you ever were that pretty little fellow in petticoats that everybody stuffed with and you wonder whether you'll ever be a to be liked by tho girls and treated politely by tho other paid for your and to as you And you your mind every day not to be aj boy any longer than you and hear your somebody complaining that no boys iif he remembers the life they that he don't consider it a subject of only one comfort in it boys will grow and when they do they generally forget all they Went through in their and make the boys of their day just as they V. From tlic 1.) 1 V. lied from Now York iu 1860, a defaulter to a considerable has recently Ho was a man of marked of brilliant social had many and was one of the leaders of the par ty being Grand Sachem of lie was appointed by and in 1850 he yielded to tlie persuasion of his and to their promises of and employed the money to for The were not after bearing his terrible for four exposure became aud he Great were made to procure his pardon from Mr. but the President was is he said to a friend of Mr. who came to the White Mouse With a petition by many of the most men of all praying for the pardon ut tlo and burs of the and and and and all w rile to ask that the be from the uf his not an evidence that he cannot be a bad Do had men have so and ouch friends do not understand that their friendship them so far as tu refund the money which he took from the which some ol his political friends were largely Let them come with and they will furnish an evidence their sine rity w hich will give a claim for a think much he has suffered in his long 1 really believe that the penitentiary would bo a than that which he constantly lot hirn come for that is all he can Hut don't yon Mr. that a man may mure his own than he can any legal and have told iis 1 never heard uf a that upon sort ot ata upon Order of Red Sketches of its and tho Detroit Free secret organization known as the improved Order of Rod Men is but little known among the as outsiders arc technically It is an institution having for the corner stono of its Friendship and It is rapidly spreading its branches throughout the United and has now three prosperous tribes or lodges in this city all of which ave recent the evidence that can be gathered touching its origin points to Fort on the Delaware as the place where tho first society was and in 1812 as the year in which the first was None but soldiers wore admitted it was designed for their benefit civilians exercised no control over it. It will be that daring this period of our country's there were tho party and the Between these two factions there had arisen a hitler which spread itself in such a as to cause considerable It found its way into the and soon began to discriminate its demoralizing influence among the and some of tho proposed and tho organization of the society above referred and fortified it by grips and pass tho object of which was to dispel discord and propagate the close of the war of 1812, the society in the fort was necessarily tho volunteers being to separate and return to their But it seems that the principles inculcated by tho society had made a lasting and it was after they had resumed the peaceful pursuits of life that they could not resist the of and many ot them to a Accordingly some the year 1817 a call was iu uno or more newspapers in Philadelphia for a Council of Red which in the organization of what Was subsequently known as tho Tribe of Columbia of the Society of Bed But owing to a corroding element which was introduced into ilie Tribe of tribes deteriorated to a 1835, is considered the date marks a new era in the history of A completo organization was was brought about by a meeting of tho Past Chiefs aud representatives selected for that who iu the old wigwam on Thames At this meeting the Grand Councils of Maryland and of the United States and the hitherto Society of Red Men was announced to tho world as the Order of lied Shorn of its political and titles wore new ones adopted organ regard was paid to the and the Ordes clothed with independent authority started Juto upon its broad has much of homos have been made happy through its filling high places pf trust who perhaps neVer In but for the good it their and it taught is full of good and tt now counts its The Order is the oldest organization of American birth and growth and all the terms in use in it are taken from tho Indian and in their workings the of speech peculiar to the Indian vernacular are For tho presiding officer of tho grand body is known as the secretary is Chief of the treasurer is Ureal Keeper of and the is styled Great of Time within the year is computed by and a your is called a grand Mills and tlie Temperance London Five Points on tho Christian Seven Dials on Sunday surely it is a market a dog an open air it is Seven Dials on What crowd of what what buying and To a visitor from a Devonshire a Yorkshire dalo or Highland tho uproar is simply asto Hundreds of tho poor are buying and selling all kinds of things as fast as they can. Nearly every shop js bird and dog and are eagerly competing for the poor man's Little Earl street swarms with people selling walking braces and other In Great St. Andrew street of rough loungers are making bargains for birds and In Great Earl street you may buy old boots and and many articles of a similar butter shops and shops nourish in Great White Lion Returning to Seven Dials wo find the crowd greater than Everybody seems to make a Tho butchers shout you Tho the cheese mongers and tho news boys try to shout louder than the and they do it. Babel is come and the deafness would almost bo a But another of Sunday life to force itself upon our pleasure This is the day for an Men with fishing rods and lads with tin cans go hurrying They are olT to or Lea or Hampstead for a day's sport such as it is. carts and vans thunder across Sevon all of laden with noisy and very drunk some of them will bo they return from tho swoot It is one o'clock in tho Alas I that is the golden hour to many the hour when beer and gin may bo sold at tho counter to thirsty Since 12:30 crowds of and have been converging toward Sevon and getting nearer and nearer the doors of tho and and potboys have been dressing for the opening of the gin One I Open goes the door and in rushes the and soon smoking and gabble and loud laughter mark the of revels which will blight many a homo and break many a But those people eat as well as Down tho up the across the flit husbands and wives with hot dinners fresh from the beef by the sample dinners of those who dine at Many of them do Tho are and do a rare It is ten o'clock iu the There is the door a window a then a roar of sudden rushing of It is a the and tho at poll In a moment the street is full of a yelping it to is shrieked out by mad with and heavy blows are heard as the men beat each other with tremendous Up comes some of the and all is But both Joe and aro at tho worst for tho It is eleven o'clock in tho houses send forth great crowds of drunken thieves prowl fallen women in gay attire roll home stupid with children fall asleep on hawkers with empty baskets and sore feet limp toward the cellars where they live aud tho omnibuses cease lo thunder the last reveler staggers into tho passage of his the silent policeman watches lest some thief should slip knock him down and rob aud as 12 o'clock booms our visit to Seven Dials on Sunday comes to an and wo return home for have not wo seen ead Ericson has recently a portion of tho world by of his theory that the moon's surface is an irregular mass of this being based on a scries of which tend lo show that the temperature of the lunar is much lower than that on our the iro theory is open to grave objections is when it is that the moon has no and thai all liquids and even rapidly tn If water were on the in appreciable it would give olT ol which form an Race for Jackson 5.1 afternoon the Ft. Wayne Railroad Company sent a construction Irain up the preparatory to the ol work on as is the The anxious of to make his Sunday work as short as rushed the train out of the depot around the curve to the bridge at tho top of her Upon arriving at Iho ho saw that which caused him to reverse the engine and apply the breaks with all hit A with his wife and two were on tho narrow portion of tlie where it Ih just wide enough for a train to about midway of its length of tiOO Neither end could be readied by the imperiled Ihe train would rush upon them but the father and was equal to the Catching up the children in hit he told hit wife ho would see lo and bade her run toward tho of the the 110 0 11 M lo the hU | to indicate its waH | the of light from upon the w iih the or a Everything meni ol lo p. ol the moon to ion for Mr. lo prove the the v. Itut the lime In connection with our of v oii the conia Io a ' not oli the and tlint aud Mr. Fowler Cil hU the consti of appr. of ii hv laboring earn the money t o Innar are In Slid must run for her as her depended upon her gelling near enough to the to tind shallow water before overtaken by the Qho did an he and when felt the hot breath of the iron jumped from the fortunately alighting in not more than two feet of water and and the her in Hut what of the father and the lit i tie He could not run has Become a great National It retards Financial to revenue the annual retail sales of ardent spirits lo or for every and child in the In. years this amount would buy every farm in the United at the value fixed by the census of 1860, and leave It lacks but 28 of the whole amount of money coined by the general ment up to 1860. In one year it would buy all the live stock reported in the census of 1860, and leave In two years it would amount to more than the expenses of the general Government up to 1861. In two years pay our national debt and leave for the internal of It would feed and tbe furnish them with papers and and do all their printing for five that ten per of this amount is used for medicinal and mechanical we have the appalling fact that of this immense sura is employed to make and not to improve the 11 Intelligence and and Fills the land with Pauperism and are 419,464 more persons engaged in the sale of ardent spirits than are engaged in preaching the gospel and teaching the various branches of science and As a suit we have nearly three million persons who 600,000 confirmed drunkards 100,000 annually sent to prison 200,000 children dependant on and 2,000,000 children deprived of the means of securing an 3d. It Destroys tho of more than four years it is estimated that the Union army lost in battle and from 96,086 and 184,331 from sickness and other making in all 280,420. This loss of life was a great national and filled the land with But ardent spirits kills at least 60,000 men every 143,911 in ' than were killed in baUle and died from wounds the late and as as were lost from all other view of these facts it the imperative duty of the people of the United States to employ moans for tho suppression of this ruinous which now not only the destruction of all that is good in the but also the very the nation a we had our full share in the During the year ending Jone 8(r, 1867, Indiana paid for the enormous sum of now CAH WB AND TUB EVILS OF 1st. This is an evil that has spread in all parts of tho among all and as a masses of the people must be prepared for its must bo through tho tho tho Sabbath tho church and the Light and truth must direct and elevate them to such a state of will demand in tho name of the that this traffic shall teachers in the common schools and tho Sabbath ministers of the members of the and managers of tho press must aid in light upon the public mind and aiti in showing tho their will and this traffic will Special public meetings for tho consideration of this should be called in all parts of tho Indiana State Alliance is a combination of all the friends of Its great work is to arrange for tho proper education and direction of public In this work it embraces all influences that favor tho A great work is being is a favorable time to proper direction to tho During the fall and winter lot bo made in all parts of tho Stato lo prepare the Let every parent be careful lo show to children the ruinous effects of of this in a very important is committed ta Teach temperance and pledges in the Sabbath Preach specially on this subject In tho Let tho press come to tho Call public Circulate pledges in by aad the circulation of the State with Let temperence men see that good men are nominated and to till all the Let special prayer bo made to Almighty God that Ho may and turn the of the lo sobriety and In limes of It it our to ourselves and call upon tho Lord lor U slaying more rapidly than famino and It is criminal to be inattentive the this without regard to sect or demand that this shall Ind. On I. 9, 188'J. IS M 4 0.1 led to lo for ami i ihe in the con he hiin a ol we have more limi ' every to and the the who i height of tho hit led bini the they have noi boen abraded i down by the of and Hnt tho the lunar not ice. and the | and while distracted not necessary to a theory of Medically Commercial The question as to the propriety of to which we alluded is attracting no little attention in Dr Director of the London Professor of Vaccine in Paris Dr. a prominent vaccinator of Professor of and other medical men equally write in condemning the They assert that it not only affords no protection against the but that it inoculates the human system with syphilitic affections and other disgusting and tends to the of the average of human Drs. C. T. Pearce and of that people who are not vaccinated recover far more easily from any acute disease than those who are owing to the injury done to the constitution by the introduction of the The based on statistical is also made that in before inoculation was from three to eight per of attacked by died under the mortality increased seven to ten per and that vaccination run tho rate up from eleven to thirteen per cent. In Copper Dr. Bayard that in former times the average deaths from from five to soven per it now from fifteen to Dr. Copland that scrofula and tubercular diseases have largely increased since the introduction of and and other eminent French affirm that consumption has been considerably augmented sinco tho introduction of Epidemiological Society of London in their last report declare that during twelve years before the compulsory vaccination law was established 82,825 persons died of after 1853, during the same there died only 47,710. Other skin increased as upwards of 100,000 more people having succumbed to scarlet whooping and croup than ever before during a similar length of port likewise says that since 1853 nearly 230,000 more people have been carried away by consumption than during the same term previous to 1853. such as the result of tho experience of some of the most eminent physicians in the aro not to be treated lightly aud it now remains for the scientific men who faith in Dr. theory to show lipon what their faith is There is no doubt that a strong feeling is growing against and will spread its advocates can prove its One thing is the number of scarified faces by are not so numerous now by ninety per or as prevailed a century Whether tho off in disease is owing to general and this gain is not more than made up for by the large increase of other diseases produced by as assorted by its may be regarded as open Whisky Will years in one of tho counties in New a worthy man was decoyed Into a and tempted to drink he was In the delirium of his he went home and murdered his wife in the most barbarous He was carried to the jail and was kept through the Awakening in the morning and looking around the walls and seeing the bars upon the he this a yon are in answered some am I here was tho earnest murder still greater astonishment and earnestness he my wife know it wife know replied some it was your wife you this announcement the poor man as suddenly as if be had been struck Toronto Telegraph waited and watched over the ' border for tho news of Tuesday's and this is its opinion of the The hopes of the Democratic party in the United States have been rudely disappointed by the vole past tor State officers on Tuesday In both Commonwealths the Republicans have if not by such large majorities as they gave to Grant a year at least by such a decisive vote as to show that there is no In public sentiment at all favorable to the early resuscitation qi the old Democracy of Buchanan and The party seems to have been hopelessly broken The war killed it It has never been able to get over the odium of having for four years persistently thrown cold water upon the efforts and sacrifices of those who were determined that the Union should be maintained at all establishment in Mr. of a Chinese immigration agency would seem to bring before onr sugar and rice in a shape for practical tlie feasibility of supplying their labor deficiencies by a system of contracts According this is proper 'the plan and schedule submitted thoy can obtain the laborers at tho rate of ten dollars a mouth in or eight dollars per month in But it is required that thoy shall bind to pay the together with an advance of two months tho say to come out of the amount of wages Thus tho employment of ton laborers would at tho of of of Hero two questions naturally the as to the ability of planters to advance money to such an extent for the bare privilege of engaging an additional number of the to the adhesive fidelity of tho laborers after the term of their engagement had proposes to the after they aro received by their respective as to the ordinary vices ot a They are to under stipulation on his sound iu sober in capable and industrious Further than this there is no practical room for The faithful performance of the laborer is a matter that must be determined between these three factors tho aud the law of the Orleans Commercial look the advantage of and lelt hiai to bear the 24 iure who their to I Ihe prolongation of that of i die the old lady on a track a the The and rang the but to no She to on until wat ou tho Wheit train completely and very to ihe I heaid your but I thought it from a I am much obliged lo you for down long like that of the but all the more rapidly there no Innar to retard tho of into The relative brilliancy of the for by a of their comparative and a recollection of the faet that the reflected from them are not to by passing through an medium at the beginning of their flight towards n for hit he bound lo some escape for Taking tho little ones in ho coolly and in the face oi the approaching with lo a brace the bed and there held them fait a feel Iniin the water while tho train came thundering over About the time the engine reached the centre of Iho the exertions uf the engineer and breakman effected tho stoppage of the train and their rendered to the from yet perilous aud they went on their way thankful for their fond wife threw a of hair at her husband's at which he must tbc dye is who has just died in England at tho age of 102, was a in the time of William and He was tried and condemned to death for sleeping on post on tho of He absolutely denied tho and solemnly declared instead uf sleeping on Lis he distinctly heard the clock of St. Paul's thirteen at The truth of this was doubted by tho because of the great of St. Paul's from the post where he was under tho sentence of death was made that ihc clock of St. Paul's did actually strike thirteen instead of twelve upon that Which circumstance saved his and he was pardoned by His what's the price of this silk asked a deaf old was the exclaimed give you is the price of the replied tho honest seven replied the latly giro you singing of a country choir is thus described in a volume called Years I look at such nothing sweeter or or more delicious to a simple can bo conceived than tho unaffected of a country There is so little scientific fuss and professional palaver about it. And the melodies come out so full and a creation in rising and falling in its cadences like tho steady swell of the seal I know few for more true and There stands tho choral male and heads and mouths opened letting out souls and voices the fiddle squeaking with excitement to got the and the hardworking with quick eye thrown lo one side and the other actually singing down the whole I As to tho melody simple and so so filling the house as with a flood floor to and drifting out the opened doors and windows into tho echoing It is enough to move tho most worldly heart that ever tried to mint itself Into One hardly thinks lie catches such seraphic strains he goes all the way from New England to are the unopened flowers of a small tree sembles in appearance the laurel or the It is a native of the or Spice but has been carried to all the warmer parts of the and is now largely in the tropical regions of The flowers are small in and grow in large numbers in clusters at the very end of tho The cloves we use are the flowers gathered before they have and while they are still After being gathered they aro smoked by a wood and then dried in the sun. Each clove consists of two which is the four petals or leaves rolled enclosing a of small stalks or the other part of the andk is in fact the flower cup and unripe seed these parts may be distinctly shown it a few cloves are soaked for a short time in hot when the leaves of the flowers soften readily The }s very strong and but not their when with other is and Both the taste and smell of cloves depend on the quantity of oil they contain this is so great that it may be out with tho Sometimos the oil from the cloves before thoy are and ihe odor and taste in- consequence much by such unfair of thb Place a young girl under the care of a graceful and unconsciously to grows into a graceful Place a boy in the establishment of a business and the boy becomes a self-reliant business Children are and scenes and actions always impress them not by arbitrary not by stern example but in a thousand ways that spoak through bright and pretty so will thoy Teach to love tho Give them a corner iu the gardon for encouraging them to put in shape the hanging allow them to have their favorite lead them to wander in the prettiest show them where thoy can best view tho rouse them in the not with the stern to but with tho enthusiastic the beautiful sunrise buy for them pretty and encourage to decorate their each in his or her childish The instinct is in Give them an inch and they will go a them the privilege and thoy will make your home strange story has got abroad in in regard to an aged female pauper in the St. The woman has boon an inmate of tho for a good many in addition to her other she has afflicted with Not long ago she was attacked with a violent such as tho medical could not far less It lasted the whole of tho and part of the following and was described as of such a nature that it threatened to tear her eyes At reached a poor woman for a time was left in a state of to her as soon as tho pain liad passed she found that her eyesight had been restored 1 One can imagine the astonishment of one of the shaking him heartily by the she have often shaken hands with you I bave often heard your and spoke to but never have I seen your face till this morning is no secret about success in said Commodore you bave to do is to attend to your business and go one nover to teli what you are going to do tiii liave dono Rev. F. C. an English inspector of in a report to the Committee of gives the following of a Life of he by otherwise shrewd and clever was the sou of and when he was yet quite young be play the when his father was in trouble he used to send for bis But above when were having a large feast there were an hand upon the and were bat he called for bis physicians so has he would get to know what the handwriting could not tell so then be said he would give any man a new suit of clothes 1 that could tell So then be ' tent for and David told