i C3 AH ABLE ADDRESS. JL Be view of the Republican Party's Record. Hassachnsetta Independent Ite count in if the. Republican l'ar ty'ti History of JELerra ttaneet and "hamelesa Acta of Jobbery, The recent address to the public by the committee of one hundred, representing the Massachusetts anti-Blaine Republi--cans, contains the following: "We are told that the past of that party 13 glorious, and that -we are there fore bound to support its candidate to -lay. We yield to none in our pride at its great achievements or in our devotion " to its principles, but when the lesson of - its past is forgotten and its principles are abandoned, its name alone cannot com .tnand our allegiance. The question is not what the Republican party has done, but what it will do; not what it was, " but what it is ; not whether Lincoln and Seward and Sumner and Andrew and Stanton and Fessenden were great men jmd leaders, but whether Blaine and Robe son and Keifer and Elkins and Clayton and Kellogg are men to whom we can safely confide the future of our coun try. For many years corruption in high of fice has been conspicuous. It has shown .itself in every department of the public service. We have seen a Vice-President driven into private life by proof of per sonal dishonesty; a secretary of war im peached for participation in felony ; ' a secretary of the navy charged with cor rupt practices and leaving office under a -cloud of suspicion, only to appear as a Republican leader in the Ilouse of Repre entatives; a secretary of the interior forced from his office by charges affect ing his personal and official character; an attorney-general compromised by evi dence of petty fraud. Wc have not for getten Colfax and Belknap and Robeson and Delano and Williams. "In tbe treasury department we have ecn prominent officers implicated in San born . contracts and suspected of com plicity in the gigantic conspiracy to de fraud the revenue known as the "whisky ring,' and the private secretary of the President indicted as a conspirator, while the minister who sought to punish the criminals was dismissed from office. In the postoffice department we have seen an assistant secretary conspiring with Senators of the United States in 'Star . route' frauds, and the conspirators boldly defying the government, which was pow erless to secure justice in its own capital city. We have seen the last Republican Speaker disgraced by proof that he had shamefully abused his appointing power, and in face of this evidence, which has destroyed the confidence of his constitu ents, again the chosen candidate of the Republican party for the same high office. In the signal service we have een a superintendent, in the treas ury department a chief clerk, and in other departments trusted officers guilty of stealing the public money. We have s:en the guilty pro tected, but we have yet to se them punished. We have seen the whole patronage of the Federal government used openly to support a leader in Virginia, whose principal is repudiation and whose methods violate every rule of political morality. We have seen the public business neglected, the reform of the civil service sneered at, and political assessments levied in defiance of party promises and public opinion, until the wave of popular indignation forced a re luctant Congress to inaugurate reform. The evils of a debased currency have been disregarded ; our navy is a monu ment of maladministration ; the surplus, with all its temptations to extravagance, remains substantially undiminished. "Finally, we have seen the Republi can party relying for its continuance in power, not on its own achievements, but on the mistakes of its opponents, and we have seen its leaders not seeking to prevent, but to encourage these mistakes .in order that thereby, at their country's expense, they might be furnished with arguments for their continuance in power. We have seen all these things, and have been told that the party must be reformed from within; that our remedy lay in its caucuses and conven tions. For years we have yielded to this advice, and have struggled against the men who have sought to use the party for base, personal ends. At times we have thought them beaten, and have hoped that the party, which was once so great, might emancipate itself from the control of the men who had degraded it and reassert it3 original cliaracter. Instead, we now see these men promoted and their influence in creased, while under their inspiration the party turns it3 back upon its princi ples, and, in piace of declaring in clear words its policy on the questions of the day, by equivocal declaration and un manly appeals to a prejudice, seeks to secure votes only to perpetuate the power -of its managers, and not to advance the prosperity of the country. "Its candidate for President is a man charged with the basest of public crimes the abuse 01 political power for his own pecuniary advantage who for eight years has nevt;r dared to demand that full investigation of the charges which his political associates would gladly have accorded, and by which .alone those charges can be met. Upon the evidence already produced we believe him guilty, and we know that many of hia prominent supporters share our" be lief. Their declarations before his nomi nation, their silence or their guarded language in public addresses since, are conclusive evidence of this. lie is con victed by hi3 own statements of delib erate falsehood on the most solemn occa sion. The men who in the past have disgraced the Republican party are united in his support, and admitted to a con trolling influence in the conduct of. his campaign, while of the honest men who are joined with these, the leaders are largely either holders of or candidates for public office, who urge their fellow citizens to follow them more to preserve the party than because they approve its chief. In fine, the Republican party has to-day no policy which it dares to avow and a leader whom it cannot defend. "It is idle to hope that, with such leadership, the abuses of the past can be corrected or the party reformed. Un der the influences which now dominate its councils, its tendency must be down ward ; and there is no clearer proof that this tendency exists, than the fact that honest men are found ready to tolerate and excuse offences which a few years ago would have made the offender in famous. We see in increasing fidelity to party great dangers to our government, and it is an omen of disaster when this fidelity leads men of character and posi tion to throw their influence in favor of dishonesty and to mislead their fellow citizens by misrepresenting the facts and obscuring the. issue. The fascination of the name "Republican" ha3 made men blind of offenses which otherwise they would condemn. .It is our imperative duty, therefore, to disregard the appeals to party spirit, which, in the language of Washington, it is "the interest and du ty of a wise people to discourage and re strain," and to consider how best we can stay the progress of corruption in the government of our country. "Leaving to Congress the great ques tions of policy, which must be questions of legislation, and reserving the right to vote in congressional elections for such men as represent our opinion on these questions; intending in the State to vote in the f.iturc as we have in the past, we see in the presidential contest a simple issue. Our platform is the single prin ciple that none but men of proved integ rity should be supported for public office, and that the use of official oower for personal ends is a breach" of trust which should disqualify for the public service those who are guilty of it. A party nomination which violates this principle must not only forfeit our sup port but incur our unsweeping opposi tion. By the nomination 0 James G. Blaine the Republican party has thrown down the gauntlet for partisan govern ment. The Democratic party answers the challenge. Its candidate is the acknowl edged champion of reform and political honesty. The issue is thus joined. The leaders are representative men, the fore most of their kind, and we cannot for an instant hesitate in our choice or doubt what the true interests of our country demand. "For these reasons we urge all our fellow citizens to unite with us in our ef forts to secure the election of Governor Cleveland, and to organize in their re spective neighborhoods that the vote of Massachusetts may be given in Novem ber for honest government." Thurman on Republican Misrule. At the Democratic ratification meet ing in Columbus, Ohio, Judge Allen G. Thurman, the principal speaker of the occasion, spoke substantially as follows: When I accepted the invitation to ad dress you to-night, it was my purpose to speak somewhat fully on some great questions now under consideration by the American people. But for the last few days I have been suffering severely; not anything the matter with my heart or feelings caused by disappointment or regret, but from that to which old men like myself are sometimes subjected an attack of rheumatism and the conse quence is I am in no condition to make anything like an elaborate speech. How ever, if I were in the best possible con dition I should occupy but a small por tion of your time, for the reason that there are numerous speakers here, and some of them from abroad, and it would be but common courtesy, to say nothing of justice to me, to occupy but little time. 1 do not desire to deprive them of the privilege of being heard, and there fore I 6hall be very brief in my remarks. I shall speak civilly, as has always been my habit in my life to do, ana shall not depart from so good a habit to-night. I shall speak civilly of our political oppo nents as well as ourselves. We are at the outset of a most important political cam paign, which will decide whether the reigns of government shall longer continue in the hands of the Re publican party. I have never in my life been so "thoroughly convinced of the truthfulness of what I shall say to-night as I now am. The spirit of our institu tions, the welfare of country and the rights of our citizens of a great common wealth all demand that the Republican party shall go. (Applause.) That there Khali be a change in the administration of our national affairs. (Applause.) In monarchial countries, the spirit, nay, the very letter of their institutions prescribe where and when a man shall rule in un broken perpetuity. The central idea of Democratic institutions are that power shall not long rest in the hands of any one man or set of men; hence we find in our constitutions, both State and Federal, limitations upon the power of the officials whom we choose. Your President is chosen for four years, although eligible to re-election; yet the example set by the father of our country, who was re-elected but once, has never been broken down to this day. There has never been but one attempt to break it and it was a sig nal failure. Also your Senators in Con gress are elected for limited terms, and likewise your members of the Ilouse of Representatives. The officers composing the State government are also elected for limited terms. The same is true oS-youi members of the legislature, city and town .hip officials. Hence we see the central idea of a Democratic form of government is to prevent long continuance in office. What is true of individuals is true oi parties. No man believes more firmly than I do In great blessings that have been be itowed in times long gone by upon tha country by the honored Democratic narty. It was the Democratic party that added such immense territory to our country ; that added so much wealth to our courftry; that disseminated the principles far and near throughout the length and the breadth of the land, but this all finally came to an end. The Republican party came into power at the outbreaking of the civil war, with an apparent fixed determination to hold it is long as the sun may shine and streams shall continue to flow; It is a bad thing for parties to remain so long in power, t is not necessary they shall have bad motives ; not necessary they shall be un patriotic and corrupt in order to be turned out. " You may grant them hon esty and patriotism, yet a long contin aance in power brings with it evils. In the first place, the inevitable tendency i3 to create rivals and leaders, who at last, from long continued success, come to think the government belongs to them, ind belongs td them in perpetuity, some thing like divine right; therefore any detestable means is justifiable to keep them in power. Look at our own his tory. Only a few years back, in 1876, when Samuel 1 Tilden was elected pres ident of the United States, he had a majority of the electoral votes and a majority of tbe popular votes. Gover nor Hendricks was at the same time vice-president. (A voice: "And will be elected again.") I agree with you. (Laughter.) If any two men were ever elected in this country, they were. (A voice: "Why didn't they keep it?") Because they were defrauded out of it by one of the most atrocious and black est deeds which blacken our free govern ment. (Applause.) The leaders of the Republican party would never have dared to inaugurate, much less dared to carry into effect, such atrocious crime if it had not been for their long continuance in power. In 1880, four years afterward, the election for President turned upon Indiana. They managed and carried through one of the most stupendous and corrupt echemes that ever disgraced the annals of any country. The vote of that State was given against Hancock, who would have received it if the election had been fair and honest and he would have been elected President of the United States. The chief agent was afterward given a grand dinner in New York." Now, my friends, such a thing would never have taken place had it not been for their long continuance in power. They came to the conclusion they would Win, no matter if they violated the Con stitution and trampled under foot the liberty and the rights of the people. Shall we sustain them in power? It is only a question of time until the people of this country will teach them a different lesson from "that (applause) ; that there are other interests in our country beside those of the Republican rings and lead ers; that there are other interests beside star-route plunderers, and whisky-rings, and Credit Mobiliers. (Applause and laughter.) Now I think you are going to demonstrate that to them this year. I think there are 10,000 right-minded and Independent Republicans who will clasp hands with us to teach these men that this government does not belong to the Republican party, but to the people of the United States. (Applause.) The continuance of one party in power, my friends, becomes despotic. I was very much struck the other day at a railroad crossing, at Fosteria, with the remarks of an old Irishman, who was a switch tender. He said : "Judge, how much better off are we if one party is to continue in power forty years than if we lived under a monarchy?" (Applause.) I would as soon have lived under Queen Vic. as to live in a country where one party holds power fifty years. (Applause.) No person can deny that at least half the people of the United States are Democrats; yet what Democrat in the crowd, ever so well educated, ever so upright and moral in conversation and all the walks of life, has the least possi ble chance of getting a Federal office? There are millions who are thus far com pletely disfranchised, who are as completely ostracized as any person who is subjected to ' a foreign power, instead 01 being free born citizens of the United States. The people are protesting against this kind of thing; they do not intend it shall go on forever. In Mr. Blaine's letter of acceptance the only civil-service reform measure he urges is to increase the length of time of Republican officeholders. (Laughter.) They have held the offices of the national government twenty-three years, and yet are not satisfied; and their candidate for the presidency advocates one civil-service reform measure, and that to lengthen the terms of office. Is it not time to ask the people whether they desire a form of government in which the many are made hewers of wood and drawers of water, while a few ride upon their backs? There are a good many things more I would like to say, but I have already spoken longer than I intended. (Cries; "Go on," "Go on.") I cannot do so this time. Some of these times when there are no other speakers, you can come and hear me, and I will just spread my self. (Applause.) A man leaning over a fence in Ken tucky asked another man who was riding past with a shotgun across his saddle: "Where are you going?" "There is a little social gathering at the grocery. Suppose you come along." "Can't do it." "Why not?" "My six-shooter is out of order, and I haven't sharpened my bowie-knife in a week. Good luck to youl Take care of yourself." Texas Siftinys. An English physician says that un ripe apples, pears and plums are much more wholesome than 'overripe berries, which often swarm with incipient life. FRENCH. FARMS AND FARMERS. What an American Traveler Saw in France. In going from Paris to Geneva, via Dijon, says an American traveler, we pass through the best portion of France. For hundreds of miles every inch of land is cultivated. The abrupt side hills are in grape vines and the fiat land in grain. Here we see the phenomenon of double crops a crop of grain and vegetables growing under a crop of trees. The Normandy poplar trees are from an inch to three feet in diameter. They are planted thickly, but give no shade. They are trimmed within six feet of the tops. The boughs, which are cut off every year, make faggots enough to warm France. We often see men and women cradling wheat or hoeing beets in the midst of a wood giving no shade. When you look across the country the tall, boughless trunks look like black streaks painted against the sky. They make the view very picturesque. Our farmers on the prairies could plant black walnut trees where they want fences, and then string barbed wire on the trunks for fences. At the end of fifty years the black walnut trees on a man's farm would be worth, more than his .farm! Wood in France is sold for a third of a cent a pound. It is worth as much as corn in Kansas by the pound. So when the Kansas man burns corn, he is no more profligate than the Frenchman who burns faggots. The French farmer would never think of burning wood to heat his house. He sits in the cold all the win ter long, only using wood to cook with. The average farmer does not know enough to buy coal or kerosene yet. He does not live as well as the poorest negro in the South. He has no home com forts; poverty and ignorance are his companions. France is literally one large garden. Every inch of soil is cultivated. In riding from Paris to Dijon, 150 miles, we counted only thirty cattle. We saw no sheep or hogs. The farms have uusually from one to ten acres. Some farms have half an acre, and some have as many as twenty acres. They are usually from thirty to 300 feet wide and and from 1,500 to 2,000 feet long. There are no fences between them. When I asked a French farmer how his farm happened, like all the rest, to be so long and narrow, he said : "It has been divided up so often. When a French farmer dies, he divides his farm, and each one of his children has an equal share. He always divides it lengthwise, so as to give each one a long 6trip. The Ions strips are easily cultivated, because we plow lengthways. These strips always run north and south, so that the sun can shine into the rows." "How large is your farm?" I asked. "My father's farm was 300 feet wide and 2,000 feet long. When he died my brother had half. Now my farm is 150 feet wide and 2,000 feet long. It is quite a large farm. There are many farms much smaller than mine." "What do you plant in it?" I asked. "See over there," he said, pointing to what seemed to be a gigantic piece of striped carpet, "is a strip of wheat sixty feet wide. 1 hen comes a strip of pota toes twentv-five feet wide. Then comes forty feet of oats, then ten feet of carrots, twenty fee; of alfalfa (luzerne), ten feet of mangel-wurzels, five feet of onions, five feet of cabbage, and the rest is in flowers, peas, currants, gooseberries and little vegetables." "Can you support your family on a farm 150 wide and 2,000 feet long?" I asked ; for the narrow strip seemed like a man's dooryard in America. "Support my family?" he exclaimed "Why, the farm is too large for us. J rent part of it out now." "But vour house." I said, "where is that?" "Oh, that is in the town. Five fami lies of us live in one house there. My wife and I come out every morning to work and go home at night." "Does your wife always work in the field?' "Yes. My wife," he continued.point- ing to a barefooted and bare-headed , 1ne4. ,:,. f oof amiin tU Mining "she can do more work than I can. Sho pitches the hay to me on the stack. All French women work in the field. Why not? They have nothing to do at home." This is true. The wife of a r rench, English, Irish or German farmer has nothing to do at home. They do not keep house" like the wives of American farmers. The handsome farm house off by itself, surrounded by trees and gar dens do not exist in France. French f arme rs al ways congregate in little tumble down villages situated about two miles apart. These villages may have been built three hundred vears ago. The roofs are moss-covered, the houses are dirty, and remind one of a coimtry poor house in New Lngland. There are millions of farms in France containing from a quarter of an acre to four acres. I find that an acre and a half is about all the most ambitious man wants. The rent for land is always one-half the crop. The land is worth about $400 an acre or, if in grape vines. $000. This is why France is like a garden In France there are 227,000 landown ers; in France there are 7,000,000 land owners. The Frenchmen on his two acres, with his barefooted wife cutting grain with a sickle by his side, is happy and contented, because he knows no bet ter. Such a degrading life would drive an American farmer mad. The French man thrives because he spends nothing, He has no wants beyond the coarsest food and the washings of the grape skins after the wine is made. 1 es, he is thrifty He saves inonev, too. The aggregated wealth of 30,000.000 poor, degraded barefooted peasants makes France rich The ignorance of the French farmer is I appalling. I never saw a newspaper in a French farm village. Their wants are no more than the wants of a hone. The Frenchman eats the coarsest food ; about the same as he feeds his hone. He will eat coarse bread and wine for breakfast -soup, bread and wine for dinner, and perhaps bread and milk for supper; he does not know what coffee or tea is. The negroes of the South live like kings com pared, to a French farmer. Still, the Frenchman is satisfied because he knows no better. When I asked a French farmer who was cultivating his farm (150 by 1,500) if he saved any money, he said: "Oh, not much. I go to all the fetes. I laid by 500 francs ($100) last year. I put it in the Caisse d'Epargne." "What is that?" I asked of the land lord. That is the government savings bank. The government takes the money of the poor, up to 1,000 francs, and gives them, three and one-half per cent, for its use. The peasant farmers of France have near ly $800,000,000 on deposit ii these sav ings banks. These poor, degraded, half- fed farmers keep the French treasury full of money. lhe French fanner loves the republic but the people of Paris hate it. The em pire made Paris. Without the empire, trade is bad in Paris ; so Paris sighs for some Louis XIV., or Napoleon III. to come and establish an expensive court again. The Manufacture of Moccasins. Evebrybody in Maine is familiar with the baggy, yellow boots and shoes called moccasins, which in winter form the fa vorite footwear of our lumbermen and farmers. These unique boots have a his tory which dates back to the middle of the century. The material is common leather, but tanned in a peculiar way. The principal ingredients in the tanning are salt and alum, with a kind of oil. The method is something of a secret, known to but few. Leather thus tanned was first U6ed as lacing for mill belts. It was some time before its utility as boot and shoe mate rial was discovered. In 1851 E. P. Bald win, who kept a 6hoe 6hop in Bangor, obtained some of the leather from Paw tucket, and began the manufacture of the moccasin. Iu 1852 the business had increased considerably in Bangor, and a. manufactory was established in Oldtown. The work in those days was quite crude, and far behind that of to-day in style and finish. In 1855 another factory was started in Bangor, and from . this estab lishment was sent the first pair of mocca sins that ever went to Dubuque. Trade was very prosperous until the opening of the rebellion. Then the business lan guished, but in 1868 became established upon a permanent basis. In 1871 the mode of moccasin manu facture was revolutionized by the advent of improved machinery and new ideas. The cut of the leg was altered so as to bring the seam upon the side instead. of at the back, and tne seam which for merly made an uncomfortable ridge in. the leg was superseded by the flat lap seam. Much of the sewing is let out at so much a dozen pairs to French -Canadian families who live in the suburbs. The larger part of the stock still comes from Rhode Isiand, but Bangor is the great centre of the moccasin manufacture, as many pairs being made here, probably, as in all other places combined. At Red Wing and St. Paul, 3lmn., and Kacinc. Wis., the manufacture is quite extensive ly carrried on, and it is from these places that Bangor encounters the strongest competition. Over 300 people are em ployed here, and the production, which in 1881 was 80,000 pairs of boots and 20,000 pairs of shoes, has been increasing; yearly. . 1 he tanning renders tne leatner a per fect non-conductor of water, and, to a considerable extent, a non-conductor of heat and cold. For these reasons the moccas:n is popular with lumbermen and farmers, and thousands of Western far mers are supplied from Bangor, while our own lumbermen would as soon think of going into the woods without their axes as without their moceasins. When, new the boots have an oily feeling, au ordor not disagreeable, and of a bright golden color. ""The axe artist trudge away in winter in boots to the snowy woods, while the small boy of the, city frolics in shoes that are now known as Bangor's golden slippers. The Hallos. One of the strangest, most remarkable and least known regions of the world is the little group i f islands in the German ocean called the Ilalligs, or Halligan. They are on the Sleswick coast, and not many years ago passed from Danish to German rule. The people sjeak a Fris sian dialect, resembling the Plattdeutsch of North Germany. The islands are all small, sandy and low; and in winter the sea breaks over them for weeks together. Some of the islets have only one family on, and a few are unpeopled. The houses and haystacks stand on stilts or piles, and in stormy weather the sheep are car ried into the houses to keep them from being washed away. Hay and wool are the only crops, and fishing is the chief employment. Life on the storm-swept Ilalligs is dreary and monotonous, but the people are healthy and happy, and seem strangely attached to their poor farmsteads and niggardly sheepwalks. The islanders cling fondly to their old language, and feel no 6mall contempt for their neigh bors Germans, Danish and Jutish, the Jutes especially being looked down upon, as in every way their inferiors. The East Indies are overcrowded with goats. There are millions in the islands, and the land from one end to the other smells like an immense stable. , In Aberdeen, D. T., artesian flowing; wells are being used to run a grist mill.