Image provided by: Oregon City Public Library; Oregon City, OR
About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1871-188? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1876)
J.' v r J i rrfS DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE, AND THE BEST INTERESTS OF OREGON. 1 III I I 1 1 111 II W 1 f -J I 1 i I I . I 111 I I I ! I I II 111 III I A o VOL. tl THE EkfEBPRISE. X LOCAL KEWSPAPER for t H K Farmer, easiness Man, i Family Circle. ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY. FRANK S. DEMENT, tSOPBIETOR AND PUBLISHES. OFFICIAL PAPEE FOB CLACKAMAS CO. vrrrF-In Enterprisk nullding, one r south or Mason lo Building. Main St. frrinii of Subscription t Single Copy One Year. In Advance $2.50 Six Months .... 1.50 Terms of AlvertlInjf Tranent advenl!vnvnts, including " u legal notices,' gquan-of twelve linos on" week For :" subsequent insertion. 1. On . Coiu.n.i.one year - lWW fr-llrt,.r - 4.00 inMnosf Card, 1 square, one year 13.00- i "j SOCIETY NOTICES. OIiK(;()X LOIKil? NO. 3. 1. I. O. I'., I,..'ts cvitv Thursday ev'cnin-' it 7 l;ek, ''V1 he Oil I'.Iltws nail, .limn -i7--?y---strc' t. M.-m!irs if the Or der are invited to attend. IVy order ki:i:cca i!-:;ui-:i: f.oir; . no. 1 I ).). l, Mivts M the -i.-fjsJrri s,voiid an I F..u; t?i Tacs- duv uvenings each mouth, ' .-jF ,t 7 'j 'i -lock, -!' t a' i-viiowi' ii -. M.-Hi'L-isuj'tJi n.gree nro invited t attend. mI.vno.m vii loik;m no. I, a, i vt A. M., Holds its regular roin-Tiiiini'-ation-s on the First and v Tu'rd Saturdays in cueh month, S ;it 7 o'clock from the 20th of. Sep. t (J . , i ! v i- tothe2Hh of March ; and o'clock from the 20th of March to the :0t!i of S.,U-hi!mt. brethren in good standing are invited to attend. I',v order of W . M. r m i:c.vu !ir.NT xo. i,i. o. O.K.. Meets at Old Fellows' O, II.ill outhe First and Third Tues .lav of eie'.i month. Patriarchs v in .l standing are invited tontteno. n f ; s a r s s card s. .1. W. XOH Li IS, -i :llei vii. 1 U-sid -nce on 4t li .Street, i, !). .f i T MairAiiy. tf Dii. .roii VK1. 'I I :t'h tx ,-ti'. jl-- UKtX CITY, OltKGOX. H-r'ft "ai Prim Pa Itl for County Order. JOHKSO 0. McCOWN" ATT0!;EYS AMI WHSEtOKX AT-L.UY. Oroon City, resron. eVWlll praetie in all th Courts of the Ktat- Special attention given to case in t hn U. S. Land me at. Oregon City. 5airlS7i-tf. I.. T I5ARIN OREGON CITY, : : OREGON. Will practice in all the Court of the State. Sow 1. 1875, tf W. II. HKJHFIELD. Established sines '49. )n dior inirt!t,of Poe'n Hall. Mun Str-pt, Orion fity, flrrpon. tncsnrtmnntnf Watehe. .rewel- ry.and st h Thomas' Weight Clocks all of whieli are warrantee! to oe as - .. i "R'nairing done on short notice, and thankful for past, patronage. C.tH p:.l fur County Orleru 11E VLF.R IX fJS DOOKS. STVTIOWHY,' I Pl'tiir." Krames. Mouid- : and MisccVian'Mius Goods. fE ?-0E TO OrlDEPi. Oregon City, Orejron. .M the Post Offlee, Main street, east lde. novl,75 Ar. CM KXKT-IIT, camiv, onr.r.ox. P'l ysici v x v x thv ( i i r .!X'sorip,ions 'r-'u'ly tilled at shor nnnc'' Ja7.-tf. LuU;t;itio Savicr & Co. O rotors City, Kprorist:,ntly on hand tor sal- Klnur. Mii, hn-s, .:r.,n and Chlckon V ed. Parti.-i "ureHii-inc tee,j ,IIS) furnisti itie;ck. J- H- SHEPARB, Hoot and Shoe Store, line door north of Ack riuati rtros n.vts and shoes made mid repaired as ch"apas thj cheapest. Nov. 1, l!75.1f MILLE3, CHURCH &C0., 1AY THE HKiHEST PRICE FOR WHK VT, at all times, at the Oregon City Mills, And have on hand FEED and FLOUR r8;11' at markot rates. Parties desiring feed, must furnish sacks. novlLtf TO FRUIT-GROWERS. rpHK ALDKX FRUIT PRESERVING Company of Oregon City will par the orPl5HEST MXET PRICE aSVfohcpTnaUt tG PUF- U D. C. LATOURETTE, '"OS. CHARMAX, Secretary reSident' Or'?0ttClty, July 2S. ISTS -tf PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. I Concluded. THE NATrKALIZATION ZJiVfS In former messages I hare called attention of Congress to the necessity of legislation with regard to fraudu lent natnralization, aad to the sub ject of expatriation, and election of nationality. T.ue number of persons of foreign birth seeking a home in the United States, and the ease and fidelity with which the honest emi grant may, after the lapse of a rea sonable time, become possessed of ail tne privileges of citizenship of the United States and frequent occasion wuicu mauce sucu adopted citizens toffreturn to the country of their birth. render the subject of naturalization and the safe guards which experience has proved necessary for the protec tion of the honest naturalized citi zens of paramount importance. The very simplicity iu the requirements of law on this .question afiord uni formity in the proceedings and rec ords of the various courts, and in the forms of the certificate of natura lization issued, afford a constant source of difficulty. I suggest no additional requirements to the ac quisition of citizenship beyond tloe now existing; but I invite the earnest attention of Congress to the necessity and wisdom of some pro vision regarding the uniformity in the records and certificates, and pro viding agaiust the frauds that fre quently take place, and for the va cating of the record of naturalization obtained in fraud. These provisions are needed in aid and for the protec tion of honest citizens of fcreign birt.li. For want of this he is mad j to suffer not unfreqiiently. The United States has insisted upon the right of expatriation, aud has ob tained, after a Ions: struggle, an ad mission of the principle contended for by ucqnie-scenee therein on the part of many foreign powers, and by the conclusions of treaties on that subject. It is, however, but justice to the government to which such naturalized citizens have formerly owned allegiance, as well as to the United States that certain fixed and definite rules should be adopted gov erning such cases, providing how ex patriation may be aecouqdislied. While emigrants in large numbers become citizens of the United States, it also is true that persons, both na tive bom and naturalized, once citi zens of the United States, either by formal acts or as the etlet of a series of facts and circumstances, abandon their citizenship and cease to by en titled to the protection of ihe United States, but continue, on convenient occasions, to assert a claim to pro tection. In the absence of provision on these questions, I again invite your attent on to the necessity of legisla tion concerning the marriages of American citizens contracted abroad and concerning the status of Ameri can women " who marry foreigners, and of children born of American parents in foreign countries. The delicate anil complicated questions f ontinnally occurring with reference to naturalization expatriation and the seatns of such persons as I have above referred to; should induce yon to earnestly direct your attention to the subject. In like manner, I repeat my recom mendation that some means be pro vided for the hearing and determin ation of the jnst and existing claims of aliens npon the government of the United States within a reasonable limitation of such as may hereafter arise. Under exis.in: provisions of law the otirt of .claims may in cer tain cases be resorted to by our al iens, bnt the absence of any general provisions governing all sneh cases and the want of tribunals skilled in the disposition of sdeh cases upon recognized, fixed and settled princi ples, either provide no remedy in many deserving cases or compels a consideration of such claims by Con gress or the next executive depart ments of the government. It is be lieved that other erovernments are in advance of the United States upon this question, and that '-he practice now adopted is entirely unsatisfac tory. ADMISSION OF COLOKADO. Congress, by an act approved the 3d of March, 875, authorized the iu haln'fantsof the Territory of Colorado to form a State government with the name of the State of Colorado, and therein provided for the admission of said .Slate, when formed, into the Union upon an equal footing with the original State. A constitution hating been adopted and received by the people of that State, and the act ing Governor having certified tome the facttt as provided by said act, to gether with a copy of sneh constitu tion and ordinances, a provided for in said act, and the provisions of such act of Congress having been duly complied with. I issued a proc lamation upon the lstof August, 187C, a copy of which is hereto annexed. KErop.T OF THE SEC'KETAIJT OF WAR. The re ort of the Secretary of War shows that the army has been active ly employed during the vear in sub duing, at the request of "the Indian Bateau, certain wild bands of the bionx Indian nation and in preserv ing peace at the South during the election. The commission constituted mder the act of July 24. 1876, to consider and report on the whole subject of reform and reorganization of the ar my in August last, has called a large mass of statistics and opinions bear ing on the subject before it. These are now under consideration, and that spirit is progressing. I am ad vised by tht president of the com mission that it will be impracticable to comply with the clause of the act requiring the report to be preserted thrnnrrli m f i C.rn rrrcco nn C, , day of this session, as there has not ' OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, DEC 15, 1876. yet been time for that matnrA di;K eration which the importance of the subject demands. Therefore I ask the time of making a report be ex tended to the 29th day of Januarv 1877. In accordance with the reso lution of August 15, 1S76, the army regulations prepared under act of March 1, 1875, have not been pro mulgated, but are held until after the report of the above named com mission shall have been received and acted upon. By the act of August 15, 1876, the cavalry force of the army was increased by 1,500 men, with a proviso that they should be discharged on the expiration of the hostilities. On this authority the cavalry regiments have been strength ened, and a portion of them are now in the field pursuing the remnants of the Indians with whom they have been engaged during the summer. The estimates of the war dent, are made npon the basis of the number of men authorized by law, and their equipments as shown by years of ex perience, and also with the purpose, on the part of the bureau officers, to provide for all contingenees that may arise during the time for which the estimates are made, exclusive of the engineer's estimates, presented in ac cordance with acts of Congress call ing for surveys and estimates for improvements at various localities. The estimates now presented are about six millions in excess of the appropriations for the years 1874, 1875 and 187G. This increase is ask ed in order to provide for the in creased cavalry force, should their services be necessary b prosecute economical work upon important public buildings, to provide for arm ament of fortifications and manufac ture of small arms, and to replenish the working stock in the supply de partment. The appropriations for these last named have for the pa t ten years been so distributed that the accumulations in store will be entirely exhausted during the'pres- ent year, and it will be necessary to at once begin to replenish them. 1 invite your special attention to the following recommendations of the Secretary of War: First That the claims under the act of July 4, 1864. for supplies taken by the army during the war, be reis sued from the office of the Quarter master and Commissary Generals, and transferred to the claims com missioners, lhese claims are of pre cisely similar nature to those now before the southern claims commis sion, and the war department bu reaus have not the clerical force for their examination nor the proper machinery for investigating the loy- altv oi the claimants. Second That Congress sanction the scheme of an annuity fund for tie benefit of the families of deceased 'fleers, and that it also provide for the permanent organization of the regular service, both of which were recommended in my last annual message. Third That the manufacturing operations of the ordinauce, be con centrated at an armory, and that the remaining be sold and the proceeds applied to this object by the ordi nance department. K1VER AXD HARl$OR IMPROVEMETS. The appropriation for river and harbor improvements for the present vear was $3,000,000. With my ap proval, the Secretary of War direct ed that of this amount 2.000,000 should be expended, and no works should be begun and none prosecut ed which were not of national im portance. Subsequently this amount was increased to J?2.237,fi00. ariJ works are now progressing on this basis. The improvements of the South Pass of the Mississippi river under James li. Fads and his associ ates is progressing favorably. At the present time there is a channel of 20 3-10 feet iu depth between the jetties of the mouth of the pass and lSJj ieet at the head of the pass. Neither channel, however, has the width required before payments can be made by the United States. A commission of engineer officers is now examining these works, and their re torts' will be pre-ended as soon as received. THE NAVY. The renoit as the Secretary of the Navy shows that branch of service to be in a condition as effective as it is possible to keep it with the means appropriated to the' department. It is, of course, impossible to rival the costly and progressive establish ments of great Euroexn powers, with the old material i f o ;: navy to which no increase I. a.- b-en au thorized since the eight small cruiser war. brsilt the fly lie :;;e . ;d the itluce of others whn to decay; yet the mo-r ! that was possible Willi command, and by s r!, building some of our n! durable material, and ..-.:.; ..";ng. repairing aud refitting our m u:t r fleet, the navy has been gradually so brought upthat though, if it does not maintain its relative position with the progressive navies of the world, it is now in condition more power ful and effective than it has ever been in time of peace. The complete repairs of our five heavy iron clads are only delayed on account of the inadequacy of the appropriations made last year for working the bureaus of the department which were actnally less in amount than those made before the war, notwith standing the greatly enhanced price of labor and material, and the in crease in cost of naval service grow ing out of the universal use, and great expense of the steam machinery necessary for these repairs. It shonld be provided for at once so they may be completed without further unnecessary delay and ex pense; when this done all the atrength that there is in the navy will be developed and useful to its 1 full capacity, and all will be power ful for the purpose of defense, and also for offensive action, should ne cessity for that arise within a reason able distance from our shores, and ine lact that our navy is not more modern and powerful than it is has been made a cat . of complaint against the Secretary of the Navy by persons wiio at the same time crit icise and complain of his endeavors to bring the navy that we have, to its best and most efficient condition lut the good sense of the country will understand that it is really to his practical action that we have at this time any effective naval force at command. rOSTOFFICE DEPARTMENT. The report of the postmaster gen eral shows the excess of expendi tures, excluding expenditure on ac count oi me previous year, over re ceipts f:r the fiscal vear ending June 30th, 1879, to be 84451,988 CO. Esti mated expenditures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1878, are 36, 823,432 43. Estimated revenue for the same period, 830,642, 165, leaving an estimated excess of expenditure to be appropriated as a a deficiency of 5,078,267 43. The postmaster general, like his predecessor, is con vinced that a change in the basis of adjusting the salaries of postmasters of the fourth class is necessary for the good of the service as well as for the interest of the Government, and urgently recommends that the com pensation of the class of postmasters above mentioned be based on the business of their respective offices, as ascertained by the sworn returns of the stamps cancelled. A few postmasters in the Southern States have expressed great appre hension of their personal safety on account of their connection with the postal service, a d have especially reqnested that these reports of ap prehending danger should not be made public, lest it should result in the loss of their lives; but no pos itive testimony of interference has been submitted, except in the case of a small messenger at Spartanburg, in South Carolina, who reported that he had been violently driven away while in charge of the mailsm ac count, of tiis political affiliations. The assistant superintendent of the railway mail sevico investigated this case, and reported that the messen ger had disappeared from his post, leaving his works to be performed by a substitute. The Postmaster General flunks this case is sufficiently suggestive to justify him in recom mending that a severe punishment should be provided for the offenses of assaulting at.y person in charge of the mails, or of retarding or other wise obstructing them by threats of personal injury. A very gratifying result is present ed in the fact oljthe'deficieney of this department, during the last fiscal year, was reduced to 84.0S1.790 IS, as against 86,169,938 88 of the pre ceding year. The difference can be traced to the large increase of its or dinary receipts. which greatly exceed the estimates therefor, and a slight decrease in its expenditures. The ordinary receipts of the Postoflice Department for the seven past fiscal years, have increase 1 at an average rate of over 8 per cent. per annum, while the increase of expenditures for tho same period has been about 5 per cent, per'annum, and the decrease of deficiency in the revenues has been at the rate of nearly 2 per cent, per annum. DEPARTMENT OF Aor.ICUL.TCRE. The report of Agriculture accom panying this message, will be found one of great interest, marking, as it does, the great progress in the last century in variety of products of tho soil, increased knowledge and skill in the labor of producing, saving -and manufacturing the same to pre pare them for the use of man, in the improvement of machinery to aid th- agriculturalist in his labors, and acknowledge of scientific subjects necessary to a through system of economy in agricultural produc tions, namely, chemistry, botany, entomology, etc. A study of this report by those interested in agri culture and deriving their susten ance from it, will render it of value in pointing out those articles which must sell, therefore, for less than the cost of production, and those which command a profit over cost of pro duction because ihere is not an over production. I call special attention to the need of the department for a new gallary for the reception of the exhibits returned from the Centen nial exhibition, including exhibits donated by many foreign nations, as , to t e recommendations of the Commissioner of Agricultue general- DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA The reports of the district Com missioners and the board of health are Just received, too late to read them and to make recommendations there on, and are herewith submitted. THE CENTENNIAL. EXHIBITION. The International Exhibition, held in Philadelphia this year, iu com memoration of the one hundredth anniversary of American Indepen dence, has proven a great success and will no doubt be of enduring ad vantage to the country. It has shown the great progress in the arts, sciences and mechanical skill made in a single century, and demon strates that we are but little behind the older nations in any one branch, while in some we scarcely have q rival. It has served to not only bring people and products of skiil and labor from all parts of the world together, in bringing together peo ple from all sections of our own country, which must prove a great benefit'in he information imparted and tho pride of country engendered. It has been suggested by scientists interested in and connected with the I COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, Smithsonian Institute, in a commu nication herewith submitted, that the Government exhibit be removed to the capital and a suitable building erected or purchased for its accom modation as a permanent exhibit. I earnestly recommend it, and believ ing that Congress would second this view, I directed that all government exhibits at the Centennial Exhibi tion shauld remain where they are, except such as might be injured by remaining in a building not intend ed as a protection from inclement weather,- or such as may be wanted by the department furnishing them, until the question of a permanent ex hibition is acted upon. Although the moneys appropriated by Con gress to enable the participation of the several executive departments in the international exhibition of 1S76 were not sufficient to carry on the undertaking to the full extent at first contemplated, it gives me pleas ure to refer to the very efficient and creditable manner in which these several departments, to provide an exhibition on the part of the govern ment, have d scharged their duties with the funds placed at their com mand, without a precedent to guide them in the preparation of such a display. The success of their labors was amply attested by the sustained attendance which the contents of the government building attracted dur ing the period of the exhibition from both foreign and native people. 1 am strongly impressed witn tne value of the collection made by the government for the purposes of he Exhibition, illustrating as it does the general resources of the country, and statistics aud practical evidence of our growth as a nation in the uses of the mercantile arts and the appli cation of applied science in the ad ministration of the affairs of the government. Many nations have voluntarily contributed their ex hibits to the United States to ip crease the interest in any permanent exhibition Congress may provide. For this act of generosity they should receive tho thanks of the people. and I respect fully suggest that a resolution of Congress to that effect be adopted. CHOOSING THE PRESIDENT. The attention of Congress cannot be too earnestly called to the neces sity of throwing some greater safe guard over the method of choosing and declaring the election of a Presi dent. Under tho present system, there seems to be no provided reme- ly for contesting the election in any one State. The remedy is partly, no doubt, iu the enlightenment of elec tors. The compulsory support of the free school and the disfranchisement of all who cannot read and write the English language, after a fixed probation, won'-1 meet my hasty approval. I would not make this apply, however, to those al ready voters, but I would to all he- coming so after the expiration of the probation fixed upon. Foreigners coming to the country to become citizens, who are educated in their own languages, would acqurie the requisite knowledge of ours during the necessary residence to gain nat uralization. " If they did not take enough interest in our language to acquire sufficient knowledge of it to enable them to study the institutions and laws of the country intelligently. I would not confer upon them the right to make our laws nor to select those who do. SAN DOMINGO. I append to this message, for con venient reference, a synopsis ot ad ministrative events, and of all recom mendations to Congress maie by me during the last seven years. Time may show some of these recommen dations not to have been wisely cou ceived, but I believe the larger part will be no discredit to the adminis tration. One of these recommenda tions met with the united opposition of one political party in the Senate, and with a strong opposition from the other, namely: The treaty for the annexation of Santa Domingo to the United States, to which I shall espe cially refer, maintaining as I do that if my views had been concurred in, the country would be in a more pros perous condition to-day, both polit ically and financially. Santa Do mingo is fertile, and on its soil may be grown jnst those tropical products of which the United States use so much and which are produced or prepared for the market now by slave labor almost exclusively, name ly: Sugar, coffee, dyewood, mahog any, tropical' fruits, tobacco, etc. About seventy-five per cent, of the exports of Cuba are consumed in the United States, a large percentage of the exports of Brazil also find the same market. These are paid almost exclusively in coin, legislation, par ticularly in Cuba, being unfavorable to a mutual exchange of products of each country. Flour shipped from the Mississippi river to Havana can pass bv the very entrance to the city on its wav to a port in Spain; it then pays a duty, is fixed up into articles to be re-exported, transferred to a Spanish vessel and brought back al most to the point of starting, paying a second dutv, and still leaving a profit over what would be received by direct shipment. All that is pro duced in Cuba could be produced in Santa Domingo. Being a part of the United States, the commerce be tween the Island and mainland would be free. There would be no export duties on these shipments nor import duties on those coming here. There would be no import duties upon the supplies, machinery, etc , going from the States; the effect that would have been produced upon Cuban com merce, with these advent ages to a revival, is observable at a glance. The Cuban question would have been settled lonrr ago in favor of free Cu- ba; hundreds of American vessels "ar,"-rjr.x. - F would now be advantageously used in transporting the valuable woods and other products of the &oil of the Island to a market, and in carryin supplies and emigrants to it. The Island is bnt Fparcely settled, while it has an area sufficient for the profit able employment of several millions of people. The soil would soon have fallen into the hands of U.S. capi talists. The products are so valuable to commerce that emigration there would have been encouraged, the emancipated race of the South would have found toere a congenial home where their civil rights would not be disputed, and where their labor Mould be much sought after, and the poorest among them conld have found the means to go. Thus, in cases of great oppression and cruelty i such as has been practiced upon them in many places within the past eleven years, whole communities would- have sought refuge in Santa Domingo. I do not suppose the whole race would have gone, nor is it desirable that they should go. Their labor is desirable and indis pensable, almost, where they now are; bnt the possession of the terri tory would have left the negro mas ter of the situation, by enabling him to demand his rights at home on pain of seeuriug them elsewhere. I do not present these views now as a rec ommendation of the renewal of the subject, of annexatian, but I i-efer to it to vindicate my previous action in regard to it. FAREWELL.. With the present Congress my offi cial life terminates. It is not proba ble that public affairs will ever again receive attention from me. further than as a citizen of the republic, al ways taking a deep interest in the honor, integrity and prosperity of the whole land. (Sigued) U. S. Grant. Executive Mansion, Dec. 5, 1876 Temperance. loung Watkms, ot Virginia, came north to visit his maternal uncle, Col. John Martindale, a very worthy man, in the vicinity of Boston, who was at the head of the Temperance party there, and never allowed any of the intoxicating fluid to be kept on the premises, or drank by any one in his employ. John was a grent favorite with the fineLe and -all the family, fronrthe parlor to the coach-house. His visit had been anticipated with pleasure, and everybody was dispos ed to make the most of him. Aftar breakfast, before the Colonel went into town, as was his daily practice, he asked John into the li brarv, aud said to him: "We are all temperance folks here; but I keep a little brandy here for mv own use take a drop before you ride." John took a thimbleful, and the Colonel went off. No sooner was he gone, tlian Mrs. Martindale. seeing John on the piazza, beckoned him to come in, and, leading him to her boudoir, remarked very good-naturedly: "You see, John, we are all very strict temperence folk;. The Colonel never drinks and lets no one else; but I keep a little for my dyspepsia. Would yon drink something before you go out ?" So John took a glass of brandy, and the Colonel's wife joined him in the same. John strolled out to the carriage house and thought he would take one of the Colonel's saddle-horses and run over the country a while. As soon as the coachman saw him, he touched his hat and said: "Beg your pardon, master John, but maybe you would like to taste a drop of liquor this cool morning. The Colonel is so hard on us we have to kape it all snug; but I have some that can't be bate." So John took a drink with the coachman, and gave him a quarter for his politeness; but by this time he was so nearly drunk that he had to postpone his ride till the nxt da-. John said that the worst place for liquor that he ever was in was Colonel Martindale's, and he had to shorten his visit and hasten home to keep out of the way of temptation. The Salem Mercury of the 2d has the following: Articles of incorporation were filed in the Secretary of State's office on November 29th, incorporating the lhiUi-lla Publishing Company of Portland. The names of the incor porators are: I). II. Stearns, W. S. Chapman D. S. Hendee. We are not informed further 'of the inten tions of the new company, but presume it to be a revival of the old Bulletin newspaper in connection with the Evening Bee, and that it means uncompromising war on the Oretj'iinau and its Senatorial aspira tions, by the "Mitchell" wing of the llepublicans in this State. Rural Arkausas was being in structed by a panorama of the Holy land, recently, enlivened by sparring matches between the scenes by two eminent bruisers, until, one evening, one of the pugilists was knocked clear through the ruins of Solomon' temple and took refuge behind the Sea of Galilee, just as his adversary's foot went through that sheet of wa ter, after which the moral show went into drv-dock for repairs. In every local community there is an awful nice class of people whose sole business i3 to go about repre hending gossip and scandal mongers. Their heavenly wish is to pass by the fradties of their fellow men with charity accompanied by an insinuat ing smile and a critical shrug that are more critical than real scandal. After all, open mouthed Thermites is more admirable than piously leering Iago. NO. 8. Tlie Lincoln Monument Outrage. The Knll Story of the Affair. o The naTraMve of the attempt to steal the body of Lincoln, election night, as divulged by the detectives after the capture of the criminals has removed tl.e necessity of silence, shows it to have been the work of a band of Ci.ioago counterfeiters, who plotted in hopo of securing a largo ransom and a5.-o the pardon of one of their pal?, who is in the Illinois state prison for 3 term of 10 years. The scheme wur discovered by an agent of the Uni'.cd States secret service, who had work ed into the confidence of the g:u :: for the purpose of discovering a counterfeiter who had passed quan tities of bail money in the city. After this man, Hughes by mm.e, had been arrested and released on bail, the detective continued his as sociation with them for general re sults, and was invited, about the mid dle of October, to join Hughes and a man named Mullins, the keeper of the saloon where they made their head-quarters, in rifling the grave of a wealthy citizen of Kenosha. This offer Detective lyrrell and .Ldruer Washburn suspect., d to be merely a feeler, and their subordinate de clined to go into it, and the others, being satisfied from his conduct that he was "all right," unfolded their plan for stealing the body of Lin coln, which, thev hoped, would en able them to "obtain 820 ,000 to 8300,000 and also secure the release of their partner, Ben Boyd, from Joliet. This Boyd was one of the four most expert engravers of coun terfeit money in the country, whose labors had produced among others the plates of the Massachusetts 5 s, which had been used for the New Bediord,Northampton and Westfield Hampden banks. These men hadQ all been of mutual benefit to each other and to the associates of each, but they had all been captured, con victed and imprisoned, so that those who had made a living from their la bors were getting into desperate straits. The scheme was at once reveah (; to Leonard Swett and Robert Li:: coin, and the stool-pigeon, .o--; name is given as Swegies, was to keep up the part he was !. inl and to go on with the plan, thut 1; ... men might finally be captured :'. convicting proof. Swegies, accord ingly, joined with the conspirator in arranging the details, and secured their confidence so thoroughlyjtha! in was able to modfy their' pia:i.s to suit his own, and kept his superiors informed of every stej. A contrac tor of Chicago who is not yet arrest ed," and whose name is not given, v. as originally one of the schemers, In was to remain at Chicago, and the' extent to which Swegies was relief upon' is shown by his success ir. introducing one of his own kind ; be a member of the party, but V.-.-fourth man did not accomiauv the others to Springfield. The three went to the state capir-d. the day before the election, niovi:; ' the date of the attempt forward fortnight, to take advantage ot t '. excitement of that day, as the pie ence or strangers on tne street would be less noticeable, and the. guardians of the monument might be occupied with other things than their regular duties. Washburn, Tyrrell and two others, detectives were also on hand, and were kept well informed of the progress of matters, and were promptly on hand and concealed in another part of the monument before the would-be body-snatchers arrived. The per- feetionjof the villains' arrangements would be admiraable, if they had not. been of such an outrageous nature. The clews were fixed by which their agent was to be able to prove his authority to negotiate for the ransom, the team was supposed to be at hand in charge of the fourth man by which the leaden casket was to be taken to a bridge aud sunk, if the water was deep enough to hide it, otherwise to be buried on the bank. and a bag was provided in which the body was to be doubled up and car ried off if the casket proved too heavy for the men to handle. The way in which the attempt fail ed has already been related. The party were allowed to go cn with their work until all was in readiness for the casket to be taken out. when Swegies went out nominally to call his friends, but really to g ve words to the officers in their hiding-place. Hughes and Mullins, for greater safety, had withdrawn from the vault, and retreated behind a tree, so that they could have escaped, even if tho accidental discharge of a re volver had not given prematura warning of the approach of the de tectives. The two criminals made their way on foot for 60 miles before Mullins dared take the cars for Chicago. He was there joined by Swegies and his friends, who des troyed whatever suspicions he may have had, induced him to send for Hughes and put the detectives on their track until they were captured together. The crime these men attempted is almost new in police records, and im itators will doubtless be found iu many places throughout the country. Notwithstanding the dastardly char acter of the attempt, it seems that the only pnishment provided by the state of Illinois is a simple tiita hll 1 imnrisonment for one vear in county jail, .as the conspirators as certained before proceeding witTj. their plans. SheXow, Charles, dear, do K. sincere and tell the truth for once in your life; don't you wve Danv just little bit?" He "Well, Mary, I can't sav exactly that I love the little l.cfrrror "bnt I've a sort of sneaking respect for him for his father's sake." o o o o o o Q o f -