The Coast mail. (Marshfield, Or.) 187?-1902, August 14, 1880, Image 1

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.flir. ..,
'WM"WHSffe,1"WP",-'J5S 'J"VI-Win?PFw!5
The Cons I. Mn.il.
ri'MiiNintii
every Saturday morning
IIV
WEDSTER, HACKER & LOCKIIART,
Marshm-ld, Coos Co., Or.
.The Coast Mail.
DEVOTJ;i) TO
aijIi livh lastjzis.
THE
MAIL
thi: iNTKitr.sT.s of south
ern OUHGON ALWAYS
FOREMOST.
o
Teiins, In Alliance.
One j oar
Hix months
Three months
2 ro
i r.o
l do
The Development of ourMines, tho'
Improvement of our harbors, nnd raiT
road communication w it!) the Interior
specialities.
Vol. IT. MARSIHrii:i5LIX OK., SATUBDAY, AUGUST 14.-, 18SO. !No. 33.
(HiiriAi, p.vpnit or coos co.
j m ini 1 ii iwww
COAST
-.ludo 1IiiimIm I. filer on (.'ni'
Held.
ludgo 1'iilui d, the Cliiiirniivu of tlio '
Ciiulil Mobilioi Committed, woolly
addressed tln follow lug litter to (ho
VioHiilonl of llio Itopiiblieaii Statu
'(invention of Voimont :
Mi .lons'siit uv (Vt ), Juno , mso
To I hi' Prtaitlt nl of tlir Convi nlinn
frllr I was cIuhoii ii delegate to the
Convention liy the ItopulilieaiiH of
this town, mill Imped to do alilo to at
teiul, lint (lie unexpected prolongation
of 11m eonit in this county piovents
I inn not at nil anxious to p.iilieii ito
in the si-lei lion of a SlnU ticket. The
Republicans of Vermont can alwas
lie safety dusted to tinmiua'o good
men I onlydosiio In liitvcauoppor
t unity to expicss to the Convention
iiml to Republicans everywhere my
cntne aipioal of the nominations
made at Chicago Ptohahl no man
in Vermont Knows (loucral (iarliclil
nioie iutiuuitcl I hau myself Huwas
in Cmigieiw during tlio whole of my
Ion ears' service, anil eight jours wo
HtootI togcthci in the House, and over
on terms of friendship ami iiitimaey
Of Iiih ominout nhilily, power in do
hate, and untiling devotion to puhlie
nervicol need not speak Mis lung
orvi. c and leading position in Con
IIMJd llllll) ll.tt.l.. 111 .11 1 I1IIU II lltllll (III!
HI I Tl 1.1.11' ...11.11 1...1. KIMIII II 11.1111. .11
peopled theonuntiy who take any
inteicst in pulilii iitlaii. Hut our j can nomination for tlio presidency,
jinlitn al opponent ailed to question All these lionorw oaino lo him witli
lits pcrs mat integrity and puiity of out solicitation, and without cll'ort
t Iiiiiiii tt't, iuiiL In lm-o (licit areusa-on his pail to nr.i") them. So far
lion upon the evidence before a com-1 ,ls falo fhapeil hit career in life, ll
mill... of Cong, ess of which I was '!" lll t,Iir,',,r f ? ,W,l,b,,lolf
,,, . .. ,, ... , J 1 1 iuii pin pillow, an indomitable will,
l.ai.ina.,, Known as the (icd.t M..-a Jm't . f((r nk (jN(,((
l.iltci ( om.nitleo. Now 1 des.ro to . jm,i)K,Si 11(i KOcul linliils onahle.l
k.iv to the Ooinontlon, and to all who , (), ,.oml(,i f.itf, and change that
mux feel any inloiosi in my opinion career to one of conspicuous honoi
o ( eiicrui mil em. iiiai iiiiiiiiiik
in neiicrm viii.iieiii, i.u.i. i.iiiihiik '
which appealed hofoio that commit
lee, or w hieh appears in their repot t,
or uuv other niiitlei or thi.ig which
or iin other niiitlei or thi.ig which
eve. . amo to mv knowledge in .ega.d !
i
lo h.m, ever led ...e (o iloul.l Iiih pou . ,i( ul)() l().s jn iu!tl,hU ,
soi.al integntv. I bolievo bun lobe. i (,RV uoih1ioi, H is a les-on full of
(ho.oi.ghly upiighlaiiil honest man, cncotnagoineiit and cheer. It show-,
and who would be so under all oil thu' the country is not wholly giv
oiiiiiMiiinees and against any leinpta- 'on over to the nilo of politieal lings
turn rim uso that is being iii.ulo of 1osm', and conspirators anil that
ni niune, ami the lopo.l of the foiii-, ity nl . li-it-t is t-till Miong
mill.... which was d.awn l.v mo, m h,' '""1 '"' I'nough to pluck
. fimii the ne to danwr the tower
in v op,.,,.,., inauos u propei loi nioi
ini'iliuwiiij-iH'iwiiii. j,...Bo..HMH..mnn HHl. vvoithincss and litness
tothochninelei of the man. I ask i (1(l i,,,,,. sticnulli. It blinws too,
j on lodo mo the favorlo coiiiiiituii-, tlmt in -iit of nil tlio change", in
tnlc nils nolo lo llio idiiveuiion
Li hi: I' l'oi.vvn.
.ni.Immi u. iirj.to lVomaii.
'
... . 1
. .'ii'i ..in.
On Hit .'Id of .liiiie lact, theship Mn
llulili , Cntl It. 11. .loncs, sailed fiom
Ks.iiiiult, It C, for Calluo reiu.with
tuii;o ol luinoer. un 1110 -.in i 1
.linn, oil t lie coast of Meuco, llio vos
nil eiHounteioil a huniiuno of smh
moIoiico us lo eoinpul her abniiilou
nieiit, in a finking condition, in niiil
000.111. 'fho ollicois and oiow, seven
teen in nitmhm, took the IniiiIs, ami
on the Kith of Jul.v, thu bout com
manded bv the unite was picked up
oil .Maiitlan bj the .Mexican gunbo.it
lh moii nl it 11 .'fho bo.it ('0111111111111011
In, the Ciiptaiu, ooiilainiug eight men
niul the Captains joung wife, paittil
eoiiin.inv with the olhei one on the
dth of .Inly, in a gale oil the inland of
Sum,.,.,, niul linn 111,1 In. i'ii lipiiiil fion. 1
.'......W, ...... .....J .....
wince. It is believed that the Captain lioh eonipiinj had a biaeo of altoi
'H'cltMl a landing on tlio island, and 1 uevs, and foi one poor, obscuii) iutc
the (ioverineiit has been asked to riot and b.inkiupt uiil.vuy, appealed
wciiil a lovoniiu cii'ler to Ine loliol 01
the pui y. (ioo. Stevens, the mule,
wiis of the biuve wife of Cupt. .lones
Hofoio eloMiug this lepoit I wish to
speak of tho Captain's hiavo wife.
When all hands weie called to mini
(ho pumps, she was one of the fust to 1
iosioiid, although the watoi was up to
her noil, on deck, and when we hud
to lake to the bouts sliu ehieicd us all
by her hntvo wonls, and dining thu
(inn) wo weio in company with the
boat, lu would feuduri eli 01 fill giecl
ings fi.iiu 0110 boat to the oilier. Pool
lad I It is vei ilistiossing that one
wo good, .voting and biavo, should bu
loft lo such a sad fate. Shu was mil
nineteen, and been maiiiid mil a few
il.iM hofoio wo sailed. Mis. .lone,
m i' .Mimi Lulu .McNatto, foimuil 10
willed at Pint Ludlow, .IcH'eison conn
ly, W. T., wheio she was inaiiiod but
11 khoit tiniu bi'foiu tho ship sailed 011
hoi lust vouguovoi tho sou.
John 0. Wiiniimi, the Amoilian
pool, unable to atloiiil a mooting up
pointed lo orguiiii) 11 Itoptiblican
oluli for Amosbuiy and .Salisbuiy,
SliiHi, on tho 7th ult, wioti) a letter
in which ho pIcdKod Ids siupathy
niiii ooo)eiution with his Hcpiihlicun
fiiiinds ''in suppoit of a candidate of
pui 0 ohaiactci', wim) statesmanship
mid lifu-lmiK Iblolily to the pilnelple
-of thu Itopiihlioiiu paily, the union of
tbu Stale and liia t)uuilt'of thu
iibliof paiKuiu lmoi'Oity il ii'
yhiy." 7
'l'lm I.cmnoii oV 4itilli'ld'H 1,11V.
August Atlantic.
O.onoriil Ctirfilflrt curoer illus
Ir.ili'H in u letniirkiibli) dogreu thu
poHibililio: of Anifi tffiii lift? lo one
witii uilli n ulmnir lniiin in n Mtmmr
body, anil gifted with ittdiiHtry, ennr-
ngo, pot novel unco, and u high ambi
tion. lis father, n lioor fiiimei,
poew-o(l ofu few Htoiile acioH and
a Inive family, died when ho wiih
nix years old. lie had iiowoll-to'do
lelativoH to help him along. In fad,
ho had no help wave tlio loimwelw of
a wine, losolulo, toligioim motlior,
and no cupiliil wave what lay in hiw
own head and liantlw. With tlio lu
horofhiw. hands, put foilli in the
lower forms of honest toil, with the
nxo, the hoe, tlio carpenter's piano,
niul on tlio tow-path of a canal, ho
gained llio means to obtain mieli ed
ucation as u rural academy uHord-
1...1 'ci ...l : i ,.r i.:,.
I I'M i urn, inmwiif; u iiijni.ii in imp
I now stole of Know Ic.Il'o. he lulUiht
- - ' ni - n
eoiintry n-hools, tin. I got the lne.inw
lo take a higher com so of tUinly.
K.piippod with tlio training of a
Massachusetts college, ho opened f.n
liitiiM'lfu path in life which bog.iu
with the I-.itin and (Ireek profo'.or
sliip of an obsetiio school in Ohio,
and bioadenoil out until it lid ton
major-generalship in tlio Union ar
my, to a well in Congress held foi
nine consecutive terms, to an elec
tion to tlio Senalo by the imiiini-
. i in n e i) co in
noiiH choice ol his party in the Ohio
I,.,,!,.,.!,,,,. ,m, ,m (o (110 Hcpubli
anil use i ness. r.i.' v armor imv
nun im'iiiiiio-i. rvciv liiiioe. uuv
cannot become a major-general, n
llllllllfl "ll 1111.1 II IIIIIJ'.I 1-..1 ...., ..
.....1 u:.l..t.iini iini.iiiwin
M'.ti.lii., I. in. a jiii'-iui'iiiiiii iiuiiijiii-i ,
" " """'' " "'""."." ". r.. .... .. ""-"'
'"" tll(' n.st.ti. .ons of this oom. try crush l.kr the leverbcrat.oi. of ait.l
iilim ii iim nliutiii In in tlii urn' ill (In'1!,.... .1... r.n i.,.. .,...:....., ir.n f....
out llio lesson ol iiiiiuoinw llio is iv pusi i.ir a si. on instance, men .i
ii.... ,i... ..:,..,: r.i.: ...!. .... ..i .. . ... , , ....
iiniee no oosiai ic in ine vvnv in nil
fiil im(, () M.eet for its leader .1
loin Mieial fiibrie. brolli'ht about bv
ithogiovvth of gieat ( orpoiationw
and the aociiiniilati m of vast wealth
ina few hands, talent and inaiili-
:....! 1 uilli
in'-.., iu.iiii.ru in iiniiu-. vim nm.
win their wav to the most oaltod
positions. The piesiilonev i not
yet wold to the highest bidder, not
'n lunosod of bv a iiintoolweltish Doll-
tu'iil mmioiiiois
l.i(;-i'-.illluii 1 ll.
.Somo vents ago a vry inipoilant
railioud suit was tried befoio the Su
pioino (Joiirl of Illinois at Chicago
A nunibci of railiouils churned that
thoy wore being ovoitaxod no voiv
iiiiiisual delusion and weie lighting
the levy, 'fho big eoipoiations, Lake
shoio and .Michigan Southern Itoek
Island and Chicago; Chicago, Itui
liugtoii ami (jiimc.v, and other lich
eompauii weio loproeoutod bv the
stiongoNt iiiiay of legal talent ever
scon before an Illinois Court. Laeb
itoiioii ingeinoii , nun oiny i.uowu
.....-.. ...n..u B- 'IIIIWIIIIHIIIIIIW! ...1. Vi.l.lll.1 1.1.1. ...i.
asa blight law 01. The aigiiincnts j nifiml,j f the fedeial tioopof Mei
woio weighty, leaiiicd and lengthy, c , attacked the Aluiehes iiiuloi
oecunvinir eiu'bl davs in all. When
all the attorneys bud presented tlu.11
cum's except the alloiney 101 the up
country bankrupt coneoiii, 0110 of the
.Midges asked . ".Mr Ingeisoll, do ou
dosiie to address tho Coint?" Ingor
soll slowly aioso and said. ".May it
ploiuo oiu lluuoiw, ou Inn 0 listened
to the cbiiius of Ci.osus will 011 deign
to beai a wind fiom Laiirus?"
An IliMlni' Siilcl.lcw,
About (1 o'clock 011 the evening of
tho 1st of August, .Ma lliuolhaut, ed
itor and piopuotor of tho llitmoiinl,
a (ionium weekly papoi of San Pian
eiio, was found iloail in his lied in
his loom at (W.1 California stioet. A
phial pf inoipliiiii) was found on a ta
ble near the bed puilly emptied, and
a glass besidu it continuing diogs of
iiioipbia Decoaeil hud ovulentl
boon dead several boms No pupois
woio found locust any light on tho
cause of the suicide, but it is lopoitod
thai he leconlly loinaikod ton fiiond,
"W'lion one is doiio with this winld
the liost (hing is to take .1 do-o of poi
son." Deceased was a mitivo of llot
liu, and aged about iifly veins.
Hiiviii.ck, W. '1'., i theliveliost inill
iug low 11 011 thu uoasl. lloifidoe tlio
inatiuiiil foi a ship, a lingo soboonui
and an oeoan hIoiiuiui. whiuh 11111 ho
iug built tliiuu, llio mill ont.s 70,00001
80.UJ0 loot of lumbur daily.
IjOKKlnK1 In 'I'ri.okcc.
Trui kee Itcpiililiciui.
A chtilo is laid fiom tlio river's
hiink up llio stoop iiiotinlaiu to the
iiiilroail, and vvliilu wu nru telling it
the monster logs nio rushing, tliun
duriiig, flying, loiipin;; down thu de
clivity. They coino with the spood of
n (hunduibolt, and foiuothing of its
our. A linuk of firo and smoke fol
lows thoin liio struck by their fiio
lion with din cliuto logs. They de
scend the 17(KJ feet of the chuto in
fourteen seconds. In doing so they
diop 7'KI feet perpendicularly. They
strike the deep water of the pond
with a repoit that can be heaid a
mile distant.
bogs fued from n cannon could
senicely have gienter velocity than
they have at tlio foot of the chute
Their aveiago velocity is over 1(X) feet
in a s. conil throughout the entire
distance, and al (he instant lliey lu.ip
from the mouth their speed must be
fully L'Ol) feet per second. A sugur
pino log sometimes weighs ten tons
What a missile! How the water is
dashed into the nil I Like u grand
plume of diamonds and rainbows, the
feathery spiny is hurled into the ail
lo the height of a hundred feet. It
fonns the grandest fountain ever be
held How llio waters of the pond
foam, nud siethe, ami lash against
the slime.
One log having spent its foico bj
its mud plunge into the deep waters,
has floated so as to be at light angles
with the path of tlio descending mon
ster. The mouth of the chute is pei
luips fifteen feel above the suifncc of
the water. A huge log hulled from
the chute cleaves the air nnd alights
on the llo.iling log. You know how a
bullet glances, but can you imagine a
i "
"..vv-log glancing' Tlio end strikes
Willi ti linnw nIhii'L lull filling iinif'L'
"- - --" - n.... .,.....
lorv, the fulling log spiings 100 feet
vciticullv into the air, and with a
euivo like a locket, falls into the pond
seventy v.uds fiom the log it struck
aii.. .Han iviio -iu xVoxi.
I was fulling into a doe when .1
plain, fai nioi looking iiian ucioss the
isle poked mo with bis cane, am) said :
!"Heen up in the We,t?"
1 told him
that I hud He continued "Cleat
country, thai we-t of ours 'Taint
half uppicciateil jet. Gtooloy under
stood it though. He knew what it
could do for .1 voting 111.111 Now vvc
bud a voting fellow up wheie I bo
long Huron county, Sinuiter'n a
whip. Could do an thing. Itut,
bk'as ve. bo hndn't no eh nice round
llieie. 1-vei thing occupied cvopt
binii-elf. Lvery place full. Folks
said if he would onlv go west with all
his tal ut he would be a big 111.111
Ho wouldn't listen Un .1 long tune
kept struggling on, but fundi bo
wont. This was two ours ago And
now, sir, (lifing up in his scut with
eagerness and animation, while I.
catching soine liiug of bis entlm-i-
H8II1, half ioo 111 self,) and now this
voung 111111, who has no uianco 111
the woild in Ohio, wheie do ou sup
pose he is? I said 1 didn't know.
(Kesuiniug bis sent) "Damilido oith
ei. Wo haven't heaid a word fiom
him since ho left."
.1IoIcai.H .Val.iNl Apnolitw.
Advices fiom .Mexico state th.it on
the L'lst instant Col Adolpho Valle,
:.. ,..i... ........ 1 ,,f i7n ..1., id niul l.'ii)
Victoiin nl nut 10 miles fiom old Pint
(jiiittiiiaii. 'fho light was decisive
The Mexicans lo-t tlneo men kilbd
and 10 hoises. On tho ''(itli the .Mex
ican foi co again at lucked the Indians
in tho Pine mountains, about f0 miles
fiom the lino. A flora long light tho
Indians ictiicd. Their los is not
know 11. The Mexicans lost six killed.
Col. Valles intends lo follow and at
tack thuin again. Ho is of tho opin
ion that they will liy to get buek to
New .Mexico, in which ease Colonel
(JiioiMUi and eight companies of the
1()t li ciivali', who aic stationed with
in 10 miles of their cios-dug place,
will doubtless bo on thuir tiuil within
a few boms after the eios.
llmpir'1 H'tikly sa.vs: "llonoiublo
men no inoio believe that (.oiioial
(iaillcld sold himself for if.'ltK), and
thou Hid about il, than th t (ionoial
Hancock was anxious to hang Mis
Sunatt. Nothing shows fionotal
(.im Held to be a coi nipt man, 1101 t.en
oi 1 Hancock to bo a blood-thiist
man; tho pot-houso pail of tho con
tost began early and ended soon."
In speaking of the Deinooiatio paily
the H1Ay sa.vs: "What is theio in
il foi a generation that can puas.bly
inspiio any Aiuoiieau, or oauiu his
hunt to swell with piidoV"
Siiii('itiiiu for llio CoAar Mail
Only tU.fii ior milium.
IIUJM, ll) IIlllK'Nl !
The Tribune,
liy which wo do not menu simply
not to steal. That goes without say
ing. Tlio young man who, before
his beard is grown, thinks it clever
lo client his tailor, or lo sneak nut of
his little debts at college, has nlrcndy
laid a stuo foundation for ill fortune.
Nothing is knowi. so quickly or sticks
lo n mini so long us the reputation of
dishonesty. It is the (leek of mildew
which eats and grows blacker and
spreads from ear to ear. Ilos aro
fatuously blind to tho lengthening
shadow which tiieso faults of sharp
dealing and ling in their curliest
eais throw down their whole future.
In a ear or two they will bo asking
for piitioirige fiom the public or a
chance in tho business world, nnd
they will find thai in damaging their
character the have already squan
dered their only capital. No mer
chant would take a bo even as porter
into his employ who was not known
to bo honest. We take it for grnntid
that our bo.vs aro honest, i 1 the coars
er meaning of llio term. Itut there
is 11 liner honesty that enters into a
mini's natiiie nud lifts him nbovo his
follows. He is no sneak or shuni,
neither to bis compunioiis, bis Cod,
nor oven to himself, lie docs not
sham a viituo which lie has not ; ho
does not intimate another man's chur
ncter; but ho trios to go to the bottom
of his own to clear it mid lift it up.
As the boy begins, so tho man will
end. The lad w ho speaks with afl'eeta
tion, and minces foreign tongues that
bo docs not understand at school,
will boa weak eliromo in character
through life; tho boy who cheats bis
teacbeis into thinking him devout at
chapel will be the man who will make
religion a tiade and biing Christiani
ty into contempt ; ho Who wins tho
highest aveiago by stealing his exam
ination papers will figure some dny
as a tiicky politician. Tho lad who,
whether rich or poor, dull or clever,
j looks you stiaight in the cc and
keeps Ills answer liisjdo the truth, al
leady counts rtiends who will but all
his life, and holds a capital which
will bring him in iisuierintcrcst than
money.
Wom iv ov i in: C vi.r.ow s At Xew
ton, X. .1 , where Picdorick Cull was
hanged recently foi the murder of ids
daughter, Mary Colo was tried, con
deiunid and hanged in the o.ir 1S12
for the murder of her mother. The
body of the niurdeied womm vva
concealed beneath the lloor of the
kitchen, ami for ncaily one month
the murderess poiforinod her hotie
hold duties in that kitchen. Monev
was the inducement for tho commis
sion of the act. Mary Colo's husband
was arrested and tried, but was not
convicted. Over 20,000 poisons wit
nessed the hanging that took place
in the deep hollow about one mile
fiom the village. Tho condemned
woni'in pievailetl upon tho .Sheriff
lo s).ue her (ho niortilicatioii of rid
ing to the gallows in a cait seated 011
hoi eiillin, and she followed the out
on foot, supported 011 either side by
an aunt diesed in white, e-iortcd by
a stiong military gu.iid. The cart
baited beneath the lope. Maiy Cole
stepped up without assistance. Her
husband who stood near by, smiled
w1piu she loinai kod that she could
toll something (hut would caiiso him
to tin 11 p. do with tenor and weep
The Sliei ill' adjusted tho rope, pulled
the black cup over her face, t lie curt
was diiven away, and, amid the jibes
and jeers of the multitude, M.uy Cole
died A'. 1'. Suit,
Siiknci: Looking mound on tho
noisy inanity of tlio woild, winds
with little meaning, actions with little
worth, one loves to rellcct on tho
gient Lmpiio of Silence, 'fho noble
silent men scattcieil horo and there,
ouch in his dopaitiuoiit silently think
ing, silently winking, whom no morn
ing newspaper mentions; thoy are
tho salt of the 0111 th. A couuliy that
has nouo of these is in n bad wn.v
like n foiest which has no loots, which
has all turned into leaves and boughs,
which must soon wither and be no
foi est. Woo for us if wo had nothing
but what wo can show or speak. Si
lence, the gieat Kiupiie of Silence
higlioi than the stais.deepei than the
kingdoms of death' It alono is gieat ;
all olo is small Cttilyh:
John Huuiikw, of St. Louis, sloops
with a pistol under his pillow to use
against buiglais, His wife got up un
commoul oaily the other morning,
and wont to wink in the kitchen. Ho
heaid her iiiov iug about, took her to
beiibiiiglai,aiid khot her. 'fho wound
was blight, however.
0 vi:u fi.lXH) w onion of ibis countiy
hm 1) applied foi positions as latter
(uniiuiti, hut thoCiovoiiiiiiuiitsa.Vb"no"
toovoiy uiiu,
AVIuit Iilinn llio licit. ocrsilw
Diuii'V
Post and Tribune.
The nineteen years sineo the be
ginning of the war have been fruitful
of imperishable nchicvetneiits by the
Kcpiibliean party. And these years
have tendered great opportunities to
tlio Democracy. How has it used
those opportunities? What have the
Democrats done for the country?
What did they do as a party to sup
press the rebellion?
What did they do to prccrvc the
Union?
What did they do to emancipate
the slave?
What did they do to protect the lib
erty and lives of loyal inon South?
What did they do to prevent the
South from ro-enslnving the blacks?
What did thoy do to bring the
South intoliarniotiy with tiie con
stitution and Union?
What did they do to secure the
passage of the niiti-slavcry amend
ment to the constitution?
What did thoy do for civil rights?
What did thoy do to suppiess the
Klu Klux-?
What did thoy do to suppress the
White Liners of the South?
What did thoy do to prevent tho
scourging, outraging, aiid murder of
white nud black loyal men in the
South
What-havc they done for a pure
nnd free ballot?
What havo they done for free
speech?
What have thoy dono for a free
press?
What have they done to enforce
tlio laws in the South?
What have thoy done to enforce
the collection of the public revenue
in the South?
What have they dono to preserve
the fruits of tho war?
What have they done to preserve
the credit of the Government?
What have they done to prevent
inflation?
What have they done to promote
resumption.
What have they done for an honest
currency?
What have they done for an honest
dollar?
What have they done for the pro
tection of Anieiican industry?
In all these cars, with theirgolden
opportunities, what bus the Demo
cratic party done to inspire the con
fidence of the American people?
Let every voter ask himself these
questions. The record of tho party
gives buck for an answer only utter
and shameful biiiicnncss. They
havo done nothing. On the contrary
' they Inn o dono much lo binder, ob
struct, prevent, and nullify. These
things voters will lemcinbei, and
lb.it lomembi.iucc must again covci
the Democracy with disaster.
Vttv the Household.
Kvt.v it to YornsKi f You have
trouble your feelings nre injured,
your husband is unkind, your wife
frets, our homo is not ideas uit, our
friends do not treat .von fairly, and
thines in L'oncrid move unnleas.iiitlv.
Well, what of it? Keep it to 0111-1
self. A smouldering lire can be found
and extinguished ; but when the coals
are once scattcicd you cannot pick
them up! Itury vour sonow. The
place for sail and disgusting things is
under tho ground. A cut finger is
not benefitted liy pulling oil' the plas
ter and exposing it to somebody's 0 0.
Charity covercth a multitude of sins
Things thus covered are cured with
out a scar ; but ouco published and
confided 10 niodlmg friends, theio is
no ond to tho double they may cause.
Keep it to yourself. Tioublos aro
tiansient, and when a sorrow is healed
and passed, what a comfort it is to
say: "No 0110 ever know it until it
was over."
Tea ltoi.i.s One quail of flour, one
teaspoonful of s.ilor.itus, two teaspoon
fills of eioani t.utorj moisten with
iniik or water as ou would biscuits;
Kill to one-half inch in thickness;
spread with butter; spi inkle with
sugar and 10II upas you would jelly
cake; cut the slices one inch thick
and bake.
Fiu.ino- foii Pn:s on Ti'iivovnits.
Ono-fouith pound of laisius stoned
and chopped, 0110 ciaekor rolled lino,
0110 egg, juico and giated rind of one
lemon and nearly a cup of sugar. If
used for pie use lop oust.
Prnnixa. Ono quint of milk, six'
eiackeis, rolled lino, four eggs, three
fourths cup of sugar, nutmeg; fiost
with tho whites of two eggs One
half tho quantity makes enough for
three poisons.
Jumiii.kw, Ono cup of butter, two
cups of sugar, ono cup of sour milk,
one egg, one teaspoonful of soda, nut
meg and Hour enough lo toll.
To Cm:an Si haw Hvtw Hub tho
soiled straw with a out lemon, and
wash oil' tho juice with wu'.ur. Stillbn
with gum-watui.
Nlroiiff -vi III. flio Iropl II1111
coclc uml 4i!iirll'lt Compared.
St. Paul Pioneer-Press.
We believe it vvns some one at the
Ilnncock ratification meeting at St.
Paul who said that Hancock remem
bered that ho was a citien before be
was a soldier. This is incorrect. Hnn
cock never was a citizen before or
since bo vvns a soldier. He entered
West Point a boy of sixteen, where he
wus educated at the expense of the
Government. Ho graduated nt West
Point in ps-H as second lieutenant of
the regular nnny, and has been an
officer in the regular army ever since,
a period of thiily-six ears. All his
education, bis linbils, his modes of
thought, his associations, liavc been
those of an officer of the lcgularnrmy.
He nas never been in civil life He
bus no experience of the common life
of the people, of its toils and struggles,
its hardships, its needs and its aspira
tions. Ho has never come in contact
at any point of association or sympa
thy, with the common people. His
whole career hn been on a plane
apirtfroni them Ho has belonged
all his life to an oidjrof men who aie
set apart by the wpeeial iunctioiis of
their prosession as well as by its aris
tocratic traditions, as a caste, which
is not only cut ofrby its social delu
siveness from any sympathetic social
lclutions to the mass of the communi
ty, but is still more widely Separated
fiom the politieal life -." the country.
As an officer of the lo-ular nrmy he
bus been habituated nil bis life to a
Government of pure despotism. lie
has know n no duty but to obey the or
ders of his superiors and to exact im
plicit obedience to his own. He has
known no law but that of force, the
rule of an arbitrary will, tempered by
courts martial and limited by the ai
my regulations. Ever since he was a
boy of sixteen Gen. Hancock has been
exclusively under the intluenceof this
despotic regimen. All his ideas and
habits of mind have been formed in
Ibis aristocratic school. He has nev
er been a citizen, or performed any
civil or political functions. All llib
life has been in a world far apait from
the social and politieal woild of tbc
nnnnle. Tin 1ms been formed in a
society organized upon diametrically
opposite principles fiom the great free
civil society of the American people.
He is not one of them. Ho has no
experience or sympathy with those
elementary social conditions which
lie at the bottom of all public opinion.
He knows nothing fo tlio deep heart
of the American people. He has nev
er worked by thsir side in field or
workshop, never had companionship
with their thoughts or their passion
never felt their needs, novei shared
the vicissitudes of their struggle for
daily biead, never encountered any
where in the narrow ciicle of his iso
lated profession the gieat economic,
social and political problems which
t.ike f.ist hnlil of tlio d.iilv life of tho 1 '
people. And vet this is the man ourl qfc-cl in by a pcoplo who indiv id
Democratic friend, think is strong 1 aMim Heve it is a lie, established by
with the people. It is this respectn-j miEHt aml not n'ht? Is lhe ri8ht oi
bio arm v officer, whose solo trade is 1 M claSsCS of cilions nt the South to
war, and who bns not and never had oto especial, so that their elections
ain thing in common with the people,
in "inteicst, in feeling or sympathy,,
whom they supposo the people are
pining to put nt tlio head of tho Gov
ernment. The American people
thing well of tho men they have edu
eated and set ap.ut for soldiers; but , tl,c Gov eminent over tothe control of
having educated and destined them the xcr' nwa w fouSnt to destiny
for that purpose and paid them well,u? 'ill this be just to tho memory
to devote their attention to that lino ot tl,0s0 s,ai " its defense? Can
of business, thev aie likelv to serve t,l politicians of tlio cisy-going
notice on them ne.Nt November. South appreciate tho needs of tho
through Gen. Hancock, that they will
bo heieaftcr expected to attend to
that business; that tho American
people do not puip iso to convert this
Government into n milit.uy aristocra
cy to encourage the ambition of inili
t.uy chieftains, by looking to tho reg
ular army as a nursery school for
Picsidents.
Wo trust we have made it sufficient
ly plain that Gen Hancock is not at
all likely to be strong with the pcoplo;
that ho lucks all those solid elements
of popularity which belong only to a
man of tho people. Such a man is
Gai field. Tho son of a poor fanner,
ho was not educated nnd furnished
with 11 salaried piofossion, like- Han
cock, at tho oxpoiiso of the Govorn
mont. He earned by haul toil at the
carpenter's benoh, and by driving
hoisos on the tow-path, tho money
with whiuh to pay for his oaily school
iug. It was by his own unaided ex
ertions and through long stiugglcs
with poveit, and not tluough the
bounty of tho Government, that ho
laid tlio foundation of that splendid
and varied scholaiship and eultuio
with whiuh ho has equipped his gieat
mind for tho highest tasks of legisla
tion nud Govoininont. Ho is tho fel
low of thu toiling iiiiifstw. Ho has
funjflit in their ranks (he hard buttle
of life. He has lived their life and
thought their thoughts. Ho is ono
with them in feeling and sympnthy.
JIc is to-day the greatest living rcprc
enlativc of the common people of
America. lie understands them, their
social nnd economic wants. Ho has
sounded the depths of public opinion.
He knows the moral forcos which un
derlie it. In that school of rugged
and manly virtues, the common life
of the people, has been nurtured the
lofty integrity of his character. From
his symgathy with the people springs
his broad and comprehensive politi
cal insight.
This man of the people has that in
his history nnd character which ren
ders him irresistibly strong with the
people. He represents nil thnt which
takes fast bold of the admiration, tlio
'
respect, the wmpnthie, the love of
the people. Even ns a soldier he has
far greater elements of popularity
than Hancock, for he was not, like
Hancock, a soldier by trade, educated
and paid by the Government to follow
the business of war. He was a citi
zen fcobher a volunteer who went
forth to fight the battles of his coun
try fr6m motives oi unselfish patriot
ism. This .Republic is a Government
of the people, by the people and for
the people. At its head they will
place, be assured, n man of the people.
IV lint can IVc Uxpect from
Southern Control ?
Orton, whom the Democrats claim
ed would support Hancock, says :
"If the Soutb had the strength un
aided to elect a President, would any
body believe "Wade Hampton would
have stood up, as he did, in the Na;
tional Convention of the paity at
Cincinnati, and pledged the 13S elec
toral xotcs of the South to tho candi
date for President the Xorth might
select? The temper of the South at
this time will justify no such con
clusion. Jeff D.n is said but a short time ago,
that the principles of the Confederacy
were enternal, because right. Be-
yond doubt this is the opinion o the
mass,of f W,",0M Population of the
SoUh.-Tl,cy failed on theb.ttle-
"-'"-""'" - !... i-.us, umi
now seek the same object, substan
tially, by political manipulations
through the Democratic party.
This practical question then pre
sents itself to every honest voter in
the Xoith: Is it wise or just, and
ought the American people to placo
the Republic in control of this party
of the South?
Will the national credit bo safe in
its hands? Will the national treas
ury be safe in its hands? Or will not
. rat.fr ilf lloors J t,,,,,ttn 0PC t0.
satisfy tho greed of thousands of
Southern claimant, whoso loyalty
can be easily established to the satis
faction of this Southern party? Will
the principle that the Republic is a
nation be honestly respected and ac-
can be considered a fair and lntclli-
Sc,lt expression of public sentiment?,
Or are such lcsiilts merely dictated
by .1 class, despor.ito for political pow
er? Will the North bo truo to tho
noble history it has made, now to pass
great, eneigetic, progressive Noith?
And will they bo disposed to regard
them?
Dunicl Itooiic'si ItoilCK.
Ye.us ago a party wont from Ken
tucky to unearth the remains of Dan
iel lloono and his wife, whoso bodies
had been buried at Matbinsville, about
forty miles northwest of St. Louis,
and a few miles f 10111 thohouso whero
lloono had lived and died. Fearing
interi option fiom the citizens of the
place, tho party huiiied back to Ken
tucky witii what they got, leaving tho
gMvcs unfilled, and they remain so
to tliis day. Tho person who owns
the lot whore tho giaves aie, is said
to no so angry at tho loss of tho mon
ey which ho might havo made by
showing thorn in their original state,
that ho is thinking of taking legal
measures to lecover what is left of
tboirbonos.
Miss Ilm.LK Ci vkke, of California,
and Miss l?inmii Jewett, of Litchfield,
Minn , who aioturidon20 milo'equos.
tiain race at Minneapolis, on tho 7th
ot Sopteinbor, linv 0 both nceepteil
tho proposition of Miss Minnie Pin
neo, of Gieoly, Cob, to ride tlio win
nor a 20 mile moo for ifi.OOO a side,.
Thu mco to bo made on tho sumo
track on tho 101 b or 11th of Sept