Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1875-09-06 page 1 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
COLUMBUS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER G, 1875. VOL. XXXVI. SIEBERT 4 LILLET, Blank Book Manufacturers Printer, Binder, Stationers Ani Legal Blank Publisher BOOK BINDING 0( every description, by th EdiUon or OPERA HOC8E BTOLDIlf O, (Up Stain.) BrJ0 COMJMBCS. Ohio Merchant Tailoring Co. Ti AID DIALHl I Gents' Fine Famishing Goods, No. 1G8 SOUTH JIIUH ST., . (Open Houts Block), COLUMBUS, 0. JNO. RTCIT, Supt nd Tree. 8. W. STIMSON.Foieraan. myl ly WM. WILSON McUKEIV, 152 Wert Fourth St., Cincinnati, (Bet. Race and Elm Su.) WA.TCII1SS and CLOCKS Beat by Eipreu for repalis will receive oar immediate attention and returned. All work warranted for one year. je!4 6m lp A SPECIIXTY OF FINE GRANITE Monuments. Addreu ALFRED WHITE, ass Fifih St., Cincinnati, o. mv20 lp . GDMBLE SEEPS 0OsSTATLT 01 BAUD FRESH LAGER BEER. Alio, tb beat brand of LIQUOR!. WINK aad CIGARS. Ho. 174 North High St., ColnmbM.O. mvl 1 rvfi rtm to '3 Officei llitfli, l'rarl mill Cl.npcl. ail.. J. X. OOULT. . w rS.SCIBCO. COMLY & FRANCISCO, BUBM-HEBB AND PaOPBlETOBS. J AM Ft M. fOW.T, .... Editor. GOVERNOR HAYES! Our New Premium! FROM NOW UNTIL AFTER THE di ction, we will giro to each single subscriber to the WEEKLY OHIO STATE JOURNAL. At one dollar and fifty cents, ai well as to clubs of ten at one dollar nnd twentyfive cents each, a splendid life-like CRAYON PORTRAIT or GOVERNOR HAYES! This admirable Crayon Drawing is 19x24 inches, and retails at ono dollar. It is an excellent picture, and in the highest style of art. Tim offer affords a rue chance to get a valuable portrait of our next Governor, and at the same time secure the iklt Joon-ma.Ii for one year at a great reduction. Send in your subscription at once, and receive the portrait and paper by the next mail. Address ; a COMLY & FRANCISCO, CIM FWBrH, OK 10. Warm and clear or partly cloudy weather to-day. Putnam is now tbe proprietor of two newspapers, both weakly. ' Hon. Lobenzo Danford addressed four thousand people at Bellaire Satur day evening. It turns out that Kalaton was a defaulter to the amount of between three and four millions. 1 Liltell't Living Age tot August 14th ha Gladstone's article from the Contemporary Review, "Is the Church of England Worth Preserving ?" Ballots for voting down constitution al amendments prohibiting a division of the school fund were distributed in the Catholio churches in Paterson, N. J., yesterday. ' Tbe largest Bessemer steel manufactory in the Union, having a producing ca paclty of 40,000 tons, and employing a cash capital of nearly $3,000,000, was formally opened at Braddock's Fields, ' Pa., Saturday. Thia is not a symptom of a money famine. . If Governor Allen has any just ap preciation of the services of General Charley Sargent of his staff, he will brevet that gory warrior under some such title as "Grand Custodian of the Gubernatorl al Ginger, and Yanker-in-Chief of the Gubernatorial Coat Tall." Old Bill Allen rakes in nil the present that are offered. Thia does not pre vent him from blackguarding better men, whose illustrious public services have been recognized by presents amounting to an infinitesimal per cent, of the money . made by the given wnile thedonees were exposing their lives dally in the fight. (senator. Oolicsby closed his Cin cinnati speech with this happy but brief peroration t I leave my best wishes with 7011; and whatever becomes of it in th future, whatever may he our fate hereafter, let me say this to yon as my parting word, "whatever else shall fall be sure that school keeps." Prolonged applause. Soke of the most gorgeons being in the civilized world ere the new militia of ficers of Governor Allen's "Catholic Guards," arrayed in green velvet, cat Zouave fashion. It would be a fearful and wonderful thing to see such millinerv on a forced march " with one wagon to Begiment." , Imagine one of those gifted beings, after fighting tlx week without a chine to experience a change of shirt, " . ..!., .. . ,.J weahinf hia trill, in a muddy pond, wail a dirty tin cup atewed hia coflet oyer a smoky camp fire! Oovishob HuiDuciti , begged th Zanee-illane, with Kara in hia eye, not to abandon the principle of local eelf-rorernment. Hendricks aeema to bare been worked up to a (earful pitch by the efforts of the rag money inflationist to pot tho whole buiineaa lotcreats of the coun try at tbe mercy of the United Bute Sec retary of the Treasury, and of tho caucus product in Congress ennobled. Tmt dally increasing rgntnta of Go ernbr Allen, as shown perpetually in hi ludicrous self laudations, la the meet pit iable thing in the news of the day. It i not in human nature to feel resentment with th poor, tottering old man, for hia senile boast of atrength and f igor before every audience be meets.; 11 is worst enemy hi moat promising rival for the Presidential nomination must feel a ahrinking repugnance to seeing him make hinuelfao ridiculous. " . r'r w - Garfield, in his speech, argued the impoaaihiliiy of obtaining greenback without giving some equivalent for them, even if large amounla were printed by the Government. On this point he said : D these gentlemen .propose o distribute them as a gift? A business man in the Mahoning Valley wrote me : " We want more currency to carry on' the business of thia valley. I myself need mo.-e for my own business." I answered him that I abould be glad to aid him in any way I could, and if he would tell me how much currency he wanted, and tend me $omelhing to buy it xith, I would buy it for him and end it by express. It waa not currency ho lacked but capital, and all the paper printed at the Treasury would not have increased his capital. Let us put ourselves in shape to use the one hundred millions of currency that is to-day lying idle in the country, before we add to the pile by priming more. ,- Isn't it about time for Amos Layman to write a new speech for Governor Al len? The people are getting tired of that excellently punctuated production hich telle 11s about "Old Bill's bare- feet " when he was a carpet bagger with out the bag, his 1300 acre farm, his ''overseer," his love for the hod carrier, his immutable wisdom, hia eternal and unchangeable foreknowledge, Amos got that from the Shorter Catechism, his youthfulneag and physical vigor, hia personal recollections of Jackson, Jefferson, Adams, the Popes, "Old Bill Alien," Melchizedek, Noah and Mothuzelah, his love for the farmer, hia honesty, his popularity, his rescue and redemption of the Democratic party in 1873, , his j.ge, bis youth, bis manhood, his son- in-law, his ox and his ana. His audiences would be glad of a change. And think what might happen if Charley Sargent should happen sometime not to be on hand to yank the old man's coat tails I In a leader on the Ohio canvass the Globe-Democrat Bays : There seems to be a recognition, on the part of those managing the canvaBS, of the necessity 01 attuning the people something better than Allen's blather, and so Pendleton was sent along to make show of reason, if he could do no nioro The Ohio JJemocrats wish ana try as hard as people can to be all things to all men, but it is sad to see the contemptible straits to which they are reduced by the abject fear of losing votes. Thia is one reason why a man of ability is made to accompany Allen in the present campaign. The latter can influence the rabble by his looiish appeals, anu Dy is frantic wish to be called "the friend of the people;" but his nonsense will nave no weight with thoughtful men. ana so a man who can argue is taken along to do the real work, to present the Democratic situation in the best possible light. As Old Bill says "O-r-e-a-t O-a-w-d I" The idea of Old Bill having to take a man along that knows more than he doe 1 Governor Allen-holds 'the same sentiments now that he has always held so he-says. He has "nothing to take back nothing to regret in his career." It ia not often that a man with Governor Allen's opportunities remain as big a fool at a hundred yean old as be was when he started .but that is neither here nor there. We have his word for it that Governor Allen has not changed, and may therefore bold that these sentiments, from one of hi speeches mad' in 1863, are still held by him t v.. "What could the South do 1 The North had shown that it not only had the power of seizing on the whole country, but the Government and the South barely atood by, knowing what they had to expect at the bands of their masters. What could the South do if Lincoln and his gang chore to pass laws to aboliah slavery ? What nse would it Da tor tne ooam 10 ray, 'Uh, here's the Constitution: Mr. Lincoln tiad nothing to 110 -Hit to bbv, 1, A. Lincoln, being elected by the North ern Slates, have a right to do what I please with the Southern states.' wnat could the South do? There it was. Now, who ever heard of a man Killing to bold the riihts and interests subject to the will, caprice and good pleasure of another man I 1 put that question to you in re' gard to your private affairs." We are told that a prominent local politician, who is a Catholic, complains of the State Journal for aayi'ng that Catholics are opposed to the public schools and are not allowed to tend their children to them. He states that he is counted " a good Catholic," and that' he ends his children to the public Bohools. Now, thia surprise us a little, The Cath olic Columbian ha said as plainly as it can be said, it seem to ns, that Catholic who send their children to th publio schools in this diocese, will be deprived of the sacraments. We might quote columns to the Batne effect, and uniform. ly to the same effect, from every Catholic journal received by ns The' Catholic Telegraph, Tbe Pilot, The freeman's Journal, The Catholio World, etc., etc, Will our friend be kind enough to read the following, and tell us what it means, if it does not mean that he is doing wrong to send his children to the public schools Catholics who think they can approve of the secular system of public education which ha been adopted in this country, would do well to acquaint themselves with the dogmatic decision of the Holy. See, contained in the forlyreventh and fortyeigbtu propositions of the Syllabus, "Aut niundus errat aut Christiis" "either the world or Christ ern." In the Svllabua the church has explicitly and absolutely condemned education, from which religious instruction has been eliminated. If any Catholio approve of thia ntlin of Daranism. tie must, a a- conse quence, hold that the church has erred, nl h. has therefore slven hi assent to heresy. Ther it no way in which b can evade th eoccloaiou. No opbutry i wrong enough to enable him to pass thie dvrpest ol spirituous piuaiia. ue thia point, a in all other aaalier of doctrine, he mast be either with Christ or against Him. He can not auake a u- tral position upon which thecondemn--tioa of the Holf Bee doe not fall. Cali-otic Tcltgrapi Jus 24 Owlt eight yean agj laat March, in hi letter to Nixon, Cary drnouncea th Democracy a party steered in crime and covered with infamy : Th party that opposed., th Govern' mant in ila tttirt to oruah out lb rebel lion, and organised consitiraeie in Ohio to aid traitor.; the party that denounced Lincoln as air rant and usurper, and our auldieraaa hireling aad dogs; Ilia parte that denounced the war a a failure, and tried to make it o: the parly that dis suaded urn from enlisting, aad persuaded them to-desert alter they had emitted Tho true and loyal men of Ohio are ready far the issue, and can lot if they would. aad would not if thef could, avoid it. Truly yours, etc., -- 8. F. Cahy. Poalnl Law. Jo Mm Editor f the Uhi. Son. Journal 1 If A. B. L, will ook in McOuffey' third reader, old series, page 143, he will wnd The Rainbow" credited to Camp bell. ' Thia credit is no doubt sn error, fur the "(earned line-" appear in the best edi tions of Csmpbell'a works. But who waa John Hollatul? I have long adaiiied the poem and regarded it as among the moat beautiful in our language, and would like to know more about theauthor. . . . ; i i a Reader, Extraeie from Oe;l"'r'a Clairliiiiatl Bnceco. THE PARTY kECOBD. Has tliis Republican Uriv in the last fifteen yean, from 1804 to 1875, fallen Into any error, committed any outrage, performed any act, that any Republican or any American cititen can atlord to be ashamed of ? Look on it, look over the deeds of its life, look back to the cradle, and trace it up to the high position it holda to-day, ruling a notion of 40,000,000 of people, with all their complicated and diversitied interests; thirtyseven States and ten or eleven urgaiied Territories, with boundless ftireien, 'commercial, and civil relationa with the) world; holding these preciors and grave Interests In the hollow of its hand; marshaling the assets of patriotism, of wisdom, of power; carrying forward tbe flag of the republic ma- eaticaily as It never was borne before. Great applause I - lell me who seriously ran be offended at i (a career or displeased with ila record. Solt mnlv, I ask any far-minded man in the Democratic party opposed to us what serious ground of complaint can he have against a party that inn niarahnl such uiagnificentresulta? Was it nothing to save thia nation in all its original splendor and honor and beauty ? Was it not h- lng to elevate the flag of the nation still higher that the eyes I of all the world might see it? Appladse Wasitnoth-ine to reach down into , the dark caverns of human slavery and lift up the robs in the beautilul ami shinuig habiliments of American citizenship adown-trouuen and helpless race? -Applause. ..Was it nothing to extend our arms gracefullv. yet firmly, across the walen of 1 he sea to the loreign courts ot 'the world and be the instrument of loosening the bonds that held the foreigner in his allegiance to hia crown, or his king, his dynasty, aim make it an easier matter fur him to become an American citizen? Applause. Was it noth ing to throttle the enemy of union and libertv and to defeat the foes of the He- public ? Waa it nothing to preserve peace and order throughout alt these Northern States during these dark and fearful days ? Was it nothing to maintain the credit of our people before the world ? Was it nothing to reach dnn into the resources 01 the nation and nod the means to carry on the war? Was it nothing to develop the latent energies of a people who, before they were developed by thia Republican party, had no conception 01 their powers hidden in our Constitution? Applause. Was it nothing to bring peace to the land? Waa it nothing to confront these difficulties and irritating and harassing questions all through the war nnd after tbe warr was 11 noming to aeam ana 10 reunite the disniesibcred fragments of the Reuubltc onoe more into a common and united whole? . Waa itnothing to lift the baton ol power before tbe British throne after the conclusion of the war, and tell them that we must have satisfaction for the, outrages perpetrated upon ns during that war? Applause.' Waa it nothing to drive from the plains of poor, weak, frail Mexico that Emperor who came thereat the lidding ot power to subjugate that people? Was it nothing to send him back home vith his army? Applause And has it been nothing to create all these financial measures all these finan cial Mliemti which gave strength and power to pur.armtea in the held, ana to the Government since the' restoration of PMC? . rvnygoarouna tne Bireeis 01 Cincin nati driveling about aonie fellow that stole a few dollars in that poatofEce, or some shau that did not gaiige his whisky right, or some other fellow that drew a pension and he was not entitled to a pen sion, ori some .other contemptible little roguery i ,1131, giuu 1 ,vu ku iivi.iuk about the country, and swear you will leave tin party ? Laughter. Leave a party with such a splendid his- lorv ? Ijcave the party at the close of the first onet hundred reara of our liberty I Leave the party that on the 4th day of July, 1811, will bear aim tne pag tnai records Its Dirtli 01 our lnoepenuence 1 What consummate nonsense 1 tieaveii,, to join the Democrats I Now, how does it look to yen ? , HEALTHFUL OPPOSITION. The Democratic nartv is good enough of the kind. TLaufihter.l It nas been a very good machine' lor u to wnaie year after year, lime after time, occasion after occasion. It has been good enough to stink props in us onoe and a while to ratf us a little, to laynira around Laughter. It has been well enough for IhJ purpose, uui, my vruo, wuu ever thought of trusting them with the Uov-erament? Now, a joke is a joke laughter ; but I am entirely opposed to carry- in h to anv sucu extreme as mai. now, ihi noor fellows have got nothing to he priud of. 'They have don nothing for fifteen years. They have got no record, We have not allowed them to have a chanc to have a reoord. They have done very well if) ijome things.; mere are some tliiDga that 1 oan not cpmniena mem ior. ' Aloni about a rear or two, from eighteen toltwentysix months after we hivestarted'ulgesied tnem, ana gei mem written down in 111 constitution or on the statute book and they have become prac tical measure of every day lite, anu tney have hooted at them and opposed and abused about then, why thy have generally cam ki and ralilied them, and indorsed them,' and accepted them. Now in that respect they do 'well enough. Laughter. , They an first rate tochook while we ar going up hill. They have done that Vttywell.; Is theaaaRyquestion in thia campaign in Ohio about enaaaaipation ? Has anybody heard aty thing of it? Has there been any question about the 13th Amendment to (be Constitution? Tbey have almost forgotten (hern was pne. Has then been any question as to the 14th Amendment? ,ribeJ5th? Scarcely anything said aboif reconstruction I Hardly ever hear the (Ivil rights bill mentioned any more I Ttey have all disappeared from the antia in Ohio, unless some Democrat will take the hint now from what he heart to-night, and go and stsrt out about it to-morrow, just for the fashion of the thing. They have disappetred from thapolitical arena. All the country approves team. Haa there been any gnat fUM ) th tariff? Ha tbr Men any great fuss thia summer about oar eys-Uta of internal revenue? About our riciaer Have yon heard any complaint about ur pni m laws ? Any complaint .rout our general legislation r Yet 1 tuiv. nut mentioned a measure that baa not been brought into life and written dowa into law by the Republican party. Applause I touched upon no ineme or ao auojecl in the shape or law that that party i not responsible for and entitled to honor for.. They have disap peared; disappeared in Illinois, disappeared in Indiana; disappeared from the arena in unio. Why is ibis? Everybody feels, every woman and man and everv child old enough to think and feel, all feel that tbe precious intervals of thii great people and this great country are secure in the hands of the Kepnhlican Dart v. IAdd auae.l Men will deliberate a long time before they will seriously go to work to drive that party from power ; with all it rich experience ; with all it practical wisdom ; with all it profound learning in states manship in the practical attain of gov. eminent, it would be almost a sin to overturn that great organiiation of liberty, and drive it from power, and aup- pi.ui 11 witn a concern mat nas no experience and no object in life. Laughter.Can anv human In-rennifv devi. an. better system of National law than we have to day 7 It can'i be done. What a grave mistake it ia for the pub- iiwMKiiuuii; iu me uriveiiiigcuin-plaint of men who would carry your minds from the contemplation of truth and gnnd subjects in a mere hoorah of assaults on the private character of public men. Have American cititen arrived at the point when they will atop at everything, and subject everybody because he holda official position ? My countrymen, may God forbid that that calamity shall ever settle down seriously upon this land. Applause. THE PARTY CLAIMS. Men go to Conaress. men become Presi dents and Governors, member of the Legislature and Judge upon the Bench. nd Foreign Ministers; men become exec utive officers, administrative officers in the execution of the laws of the Nation and the States, for the purpose of honest ly and Honorably discharging their duty. Many of them may do so for the com pensation in the subordinate poailiona as they may aome of them in the higher ones. But I do believe there is left yet in the heart of this country a body of men to be chosen every two yean, or ev ery four years, who do have at heart the good or tbe nation and the good of the country. Applause so 1 say, we stand to-day unparalleled, every element of power, every public measure inaugurated by the party. The Republican party ahould maintain the control of this Government if then were no new principles at stake; if there were no controversy at all about new principles, the Republican parly should retain the control of the Government alone for the purpose of administration. You muat have a parly to administer the laws of the Government as well as a party to make the laws. The parly in power ahould be as busily concerned in executing the laws 01 me nation as in making the laws ol the nation ; and I tell you, gentlemen of Ohio, it is no small matter uow to carry on this vast Republic of ours. It is no small matter, with its complicated interests reaching in every direction and into every corner of the glube, domestic nnd loreign, external and internal, abroad and at home; complicated theories, grave interests, require the most constant attention and the very highest administrative ability. ainm. f'nry'a 'frne luwnrdneaa. Cleveland Lendoi'.l When Sam. Carr made his atock eneech here the other day he unloaded all the blatant deuiagoguery which he is in the habit of easing himself of in public. But he reserved for a select few next morning a little double distilled hog-wash, which even he was ashamed to throw overboard before a crowd of people. At tho National Hotel, next morning, in the pres ence of several prominent citizens of War ren, two or whom, unknown to him, happened to be Republicans, he made a labored argument In favor of the utter repudiation of the National debt. The Government might pay the debt in green backs or repudiate; it could uo as it chose. The Republican party had a great horror of repudiation, and bo had many good Democinta, but it would have to come to that. No nation ever paid a war debt. The French Government had repudiated twentyone times. The South had repudiated ila war debt. Several of the free States had disposed.in the same way ot tneir stale debt. And ao on, at considerable length, did Mr. Cary talk, much to the edification or his Utile group of listeners, whose memories are good and whose names are responsible. It seems that even Sam. Cary, brazen as he is, cherishes opinions which be dare not make known to the general public, but which escape from his pent-up bosom when among his friends. Senator Thur-man ia no longer alone in the enjoyment of "true inwardness." Dlt, Myers, a Methodist minister, and formerly a Chaplain of the Ohio Penitentiary, delivered a lecture upon prison reform and orphans' homes, here, on Sunday evening. He took exceptions to the prison plans of th State generally, but failed to enlighten ub upon a better plan. His position upon the orphan question ia worthy of consideration. As he says there is an enactment upon the statute books of Ohio, providing that the coin-miRsionereof each oounty may establish an Orphans' Home, where the poor children of the county may have due attention and proper surroundings, but as is known the commissioners ara faw who ever gave the subject a thought, and the result is this tender class of our communities are the associates of the raving maniac, the idiot, the epileptic, etc., in our infirmaries. Thia being the fact where is their training to come from, and what kind of citizens are they to make. There are fifteen of these tender infante inmates of our own Infirmary now, all sound mentally and physically. How long will they remaip bo, if they are to continue the associate of the craay and idiotic ? This is a question that should engage the attention of our people at once. The coat of a separate home for these unfortunates would be but a trifle. AVw Let- iiioion. A ttneer Mix. A correspondent of the Logan Republican, writing from Qreville, without ever thinking of being funny, write In sober earnest, aa follows: In addition to the enterprise of our town, W. A. Nye esq., aie 01 uare, nas located here and started a first class saloon; and attends at all times to the duties of his otfice and gives special attention to making deeds, mortgages, contracts, etc Major John N. Rlwards, one of the editors of the St. Louis Times, and Col. Emory 8. Foster, editor of the Evening journal, same cuy, lougut a duel Saturday in Winnebago poupty, Illinois. But Aa .n.,M ... nj a !, . 1 w ..uu iuuM no. uicumiu fiEiiuer inrir who hurt. After the exchange of shots the parties amicably adjusted their differences. A Michigan paper tells, on one psge, of a man who haa lived 105 years, drinking whisky most of the time, but over on another psge it tells of one, Mr. Nib-belink, much younger, who has just died of deljriuu) tremens, leaving a wife and five children. Mow, what's a man to do? There are two newspapera in Wexford, Ireland, and, of course, theediton are on bad terms : one is a Catholic and tbe other an Orangeman. The Orangeman owns a hull which he palled "Pio Mono," to rile hi enemy. The grand jury of Washington county, Ala., failed lo find till against the negroes accused ol insurrection, BY TELEGRAPH TO TBB OHIO STATE JOURSJU LANCASTER. 1-aUrsleU ?, at.stabltraai XmmU ill... Special la tlia Ohio HUM Jiwnial. Lahcastu. Bent. 5. Th. Fu'rR.M County Republican Convention this after noon nominated a lull lMialaiiv. and county ticket. aa follow: BenreaenUlira. Captain A. R. Keller; Treasurer, Samuel Jaclceon; Clerk, Lafayette Abbott; Probate Judge, Jone Uihboay; Auditor, Amos Graham; Commissioner, W. W. Luckey Recorder, Charles R. Drink le; Infirmary ...nviuEj oaniuei Darr. COMMERCIAL PROJECTS. IlrseetTrauivketeaiihetf.ajaaipsl u7 smej bmbiiii taMrita- Llnra mf die am and lllai( Veaavla, St. Lome &.t H A ti. 1 to th 1'n.lr.ffi ft...,..-. ! . - ' ' ' HI end mails lo Rio Janeiro by the Mis- iui.nl ' . 1 1 , 0 . . . ....i.i , rnnvj any oieamsuip una con- '"t" vim wuicu ai is nought proper to correct. Th. . - " I V " " U.. .AfUW enterprise and has ila headquarters there, but will start its steamers from New Orlpan. fWioht tl.bn. k: l; , ........ ..i.:ui vrmg Bllippeu from Cairo or by Mississippi Valley Barge Line. The fi rat steamer ia expected to leave for Rin th r v... u.. i ----- . - - -" . ..uichiuci instead of October. The company ia o- liciling a cargo for this veseel from varioua nni,il. in lh li..i..:....t tr.n and has assurances of freight from Louis- Tinr, vincinnaii, ucirmi and other places, prise of similar character called the Mis- .iaa,n..l .-J , ' ft- .. ,ucj iuu irnnoco iraaingoom-pany, which haa recently been incorporated here and organized, with aome of our mini acuve ana enterprising merchant as itinfhYera Thi. . ....... ... , -.,-.., .iu man a sailing vessel from New Orleans for the valley of the Orinoco river, touching at all intermediate points, probably next month, wilh an assorted carec, and bring back a freight of coffee and such South mucium pruuuriB as are moat saleable In thia cnunlrv. Th!. ! inuh.lnj . , . ..... .,,.i;.,ucu ttB au experimental veil tare, and if it prove sue- O0.ll1 1 tl.A Ann, nan. n. 1 1 lu . 1 .... .uu,f,Bll n in inuivBHe 1IB BIOCK, nilt nn th linn alaamnM .-J I...M.I , - - ......b, anu uuuu up an extensive trade between the two countries. iiiun mese enterprise are meeting with much encouragement from merchsnts, manufacturers, etc., and their proapecta for the speedy oiening and establishment of a large and remunerative trade between thia Vall.v an.! H.mk An...:.. :. .. j vwu.u auinit. S Y 1 1 JT flattering. GUIBORD'S BONES. The niatnrbnuce Abont Their In. lerment in tbe Mnutrenl I'mholle l'enaeler-Nvro Troubled Expect, ed. MnNTRVAT.. &mt A Tna.nl. hn.lu Queen's counsel, haa prepared an atlidavit! uei-inruiK; me puunc peace threatened. Thi. iil, .r,i... .n:,l ' :. ..t , ' n.uun.iiui similar ei- feet has been submitted to a magistrate, in uiuei tu proi-nre me presence ot a force ol vtMiiiueeis a. me uunai ol tiuiborn, which is postponed until next week. Further trouble is apprehended, and, with the ill feeling on both eides, it will be fotlunale if no more serious result follows the second attempt than succeeded the first. Some three hundred armed men ar in !hn !,.,.- ..:,;- .1, . n....: ... nuitiii. iu, inrcuuK: for the funeral. They have been there all nigni, anu nave blocked the Corle des T.rau rnJ ,1am. .!!.. . 1. J -"B-" , .ui"uiui ,v iinuiv anu business of travelers. The inhabitants around feel much alarmed, ahd have applied lo the Government for police aid. Mr Dnlltna InJu, n.nson a.....na In be issued against twenty of the ringlead- nra in tlta In, int nn I, ia nn. .....1.. stood theso were lo be proBecuted before me ouriai lakes place. P. It.ii.,- I. ,n here, and volunteers were, last evening, uili.lllK. Doutrc'a life has been threatened, as also that of prominent members of the Institute Canadienno. 11111 Water in Iowa, Omaha, Sept. 5. The water rose all day yesterday in the Boyer river, and Logan creek, on the Chicago and Northwestern railroad and road bed, ia in many places three and four feet under water. No trains have paased over the road, but all passengers have been gotten off the damaged part of the road. The water also rose rapidly all day in Coon river and Walnut creeks, on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific road. The track in many places is four feet under water, and the track is badly damaged. The Pacific express, en roufe west, was thrown into a trench west of Commerce, Iowa, twelve miles west of De Moines, last evening. John Hughes, brakeman, fell between the can and was instantly killed. Several other persons were aligbtly injured. The water in Walnut creek is three feet higher than ever known before. CftlhO'le Controveray. Louisvillb, Ky., Sept. 5. The recent changes iu the Catholic Church Diocese of Louisville are the subject of much talk in th city and Slate. Rev. Father Box, pastor of St. John's, Louisville, whuin Bishop McCloskey removed to Bowling Green for insubordination published a card to-day defending himself, and giving as a.rause for the publication a desire to vindicate his character as pastor of St. John's. To-morrow Bishop McCloskey will publish a card severely criticising and condemning the remarks of Father Box. Roth parties will lay the case before the Pope ere long. Messengers are now on their way to Rome. Opening or asninnioih ateel Works, Pittsbd-ro, Sept. 5. The formal open-ing of the Edgar Thompson Steel Works, near Braddock's Field, took place yesterday in the presence of a large delegation composed of representatives of the leading industrial interests of the day. A large number of prominent railroad officials were prescpt, a,nd. great interest was manifested. The steel is manufactured by the Bessemer process, and the works are among the largest in the country, having an annual producing capacity of 400,000 I" WO OOQ pearlv Indian Snperlmcuileiil Injured. Okmulgee, I. T., Sept. 5. Aa Enoch Hoag, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, waa relnmina in t,ta nl.n. ,n Aan r ' .... a u .uir uihp .u-mj llvill the grand council at Omulgee the learn he was unvmg ran away and his shoulder was dislocated, but he succeeded in getting into town, had the dislocation reduced, and left for hia home in Kansas by the train this evening. Major General Ingallj, of the Union Agency, will preside at the Okmulgee council in the absence of Mr. Hoag. New Jersey cmiinilca nnd tbe Meliool Qm'stiiin. Paterson, N. J , Sept. 5. Ballot for Cnnfllllllllnnal . 1 .t- .1. XT Jersey next Tuesday, were circulated at ikaCiliJi-ni I !u .1.1 I.- , vn.iiuni; IllirUlieS 111 HUB KIIJ lO'Oay, with amendments 1 9. ft ami 11 n-n...l out. The erased amendment prohibit appropriations ot public money and lands to private or sectarian purposes, guarantee a aysteui of free public schools and prohibit special legislation. Bonn Knee at Wheeling. Wheeling!, W. V., Sept. 6. The scull rape between Frank DenmarBh and Ed Powell, both of Pittsburg, took place on the lawn course in thia city yesterday, And WAS vitnaBand ka r..lln ID OOA ...I. iuu .v,vvu people. The distance waa three miles, DenmarBh. winning ny three boat lengths; time twenty two minute and twentyfour seconds.A recent city omnia ol Boston shows a loiai population Of fi411tf, RALSTON'S RUIN. He la- t'enad Ubtt Defaulter for belt Fair HilU.u, And to day Secretly Mule tat Over . issue or Stock. The Uailetj Stales Mlit li Debt te the Buk. Raw Q.ni A Tt I... I a .nanitauv, in .h 1 k , fTTU reported that the Bank of California was largely indebted to the United Stale Mint here. The bank haa been refining f. IP I lia U i nl ..J i. I. - I i.. :.. - .. , . u u i. wppusciA us iu debtednesa has increased through that cnannei. ine Superintendent or the Mint al.le. I .1-. ..... . L. - ar.., .1,1 . 1IO HMUUJi th. Mint MM tha hanlr CIO-. llAO na.al.la on demand. ' ' D. O. Mill authorize th tatement that lha defalralinn nf II. lata PKai.lant of the Bank nf California will amount to i ween 3,uuo,uuu and l,OO0,OQ0, and that OVfriSall (uf alnnlr haa kun siaw... red. Particular later. It la not bud- posed that ll is will iu any way prejudice the arrangements now being made. Th. rliiiiiin n..ki;.i.i i:,n..:.i this evening, in which, after referring to o wun-s ui in. paper witn regara 10 the Bank of California and Ralsion. it says: 'Whan ll, hinlr anananrla.! laal aut. we thought it our duty to protect as far as ueiwsiiors ana otner creation 01 ai tne conclusion or the circu per-that institution. We published just to forinancet given at Jackson, Mich., Sat-many fact aa wa believed would best urdav. bv Sell's circus . hm.si- ksllnnn serve the purpose, and no more. We lhn Stilt tll.l ll.a fail. .an t.. . I . r. v i the mismanagement of the lata President, anu ma. una mismanagement waa without Ih L-nnaalarlaa. nf In. fl! . . L. I these statementa we were soundly abnsed. -" '. . . UI ,un ASUCtUllB-. IUI ...,.. lu.i.a. ... thecorruptelemenuagainsl us. Wewere In IMMHmlftlt afkl lAta ali.-l wav. sVlisIH mtnt I .... k . . . iV . we.mot.'ou lh' the Directors should, if nosaib e. contrive Z? T,f ,h,e "Tl- We preferred lo snfler the assault of the ene- uiica .a.iiaji mm iu give lacia a. llie lime whan ik. miki r...i.k . .....!.,. i dication of our attitude toward the bank, but might at the aame time hinder, and possibly d.feat, plans which the Direclore wen. d.,;.m. f. ii,. .k. ... K'""M.. creation ol that institution. The Di- . I rectors, tomeol whom bave always been atanr-h .r!n,l. nf ik. i!..n.i ... ... nnm I..-. n,..r.,., .1 .1 . : 1 l i ., - ..i.i fiaus, auuuave ettled on a basis of action, whereby every creuuor or tne bang will be fully paid. We UaV. fllll MhRitann. hnlk In ik. ..kll ity and in the good faith of these men. TI... .ill I .... .. . n m.i. . r.r.i k 1 8 ' ' tha.rtha n-I I "eb,nk 'ro8 'en than the one which su,rded. it was lime that the Bulletin should be relieved from the secrets which it has been alinaerl f. !,..: ,. , sue tiiii reutem ineir pteuge, ana may proposed to ask the consent of the Board r ri: . . i. . .1 r. n ...V WWII, Ul I1IQ UUHIl of Directors In mlinv n. r .n r... ther oblications lo keep secret some facts within our knnwlarlo 11..!.. Ar.n n... best to protect others, it is part of our duty to protect ourselves. We are now ailthnrizpH hv D O M.'lla In a., it... ik. ' ....a ,u n.j .nn, inn late President did, without the knowl- iimunii uis, wuoout ll.e knowl- edge of the Directors, use privately from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 of the bank, re- sources, which amount remains unpaid, This wits the cause of the recent failure, setT. W0U'i haTe , author rl h. in. m. .k -. . u fh.t ,h J "ulhonty to say that there was an ovarinsn nf sinnlr . .... .u V..I1D3UB u. .lUb., Which nVerisflllA hss nns kaan n.ni.l..n ... . . . for. The particular use which was made of this large sum of money it is notour duty to mention. When these discoveries nrn nihlla th. m.nnunlinn nf ik. !.,. President with the institution waa at once severed. Between if 3,000,000 and $1,000,-000 of money had gone out of the bank without the knowledge of a sine-la Di rector." iron icitiiv. TURKEY. 8ERVIA QUIETED. London, Sept. 6. A dispatch from Constantinople slates that information has been received from Belgrade by the Turkish government and foreign embassies wh ch removes all apprehensions that Servia will, by her conduct, add to the complications. A solid agreement between the powers and the Servian government has been effected at Belgrade. Owing to the pressure brought to bear by rnrAanfsli.aa nt Ilia '..en... C..:. ... t ...vn w. .uv imiu.i uci.iB undertakes to restrain the party of action wituin ner oorders. SPA H. MATERIAL FOR THE CARLIST9. T.ownnv Rani K It la ik.i -., va. w. n icuuiltu 111., an Knuliah atanman kn. J !. . ft" Bi.-a... uuo mvnucu iu landing at Motrico a large cargo of war ana. t.,1 . 1. n 1.T,. . U1..C11U1 ,ur iuu iariiflis, lnciuaing lour piece of artillery, 60,000 rifles and 1000 cases of cartridges. i Weather rrobnbilltle. WinntNOTnv Hunt It 1 . For New England, the Middle States and the Lower Lake Region, slowly rising barometer, northwest to southwest winds, high temperature, clear or partly cloudy weather and occasional light rain in the Lower Lake Region, the northern part of New England and the Middle States. For the Atlantic States, slowly rising barometer, east to southwest winds, decidedly high temperature, clear or partly rlnnrlv wslliar with li.k, in .k. j , n.. '.fS .null, ,H .11. southern part of the South Atlantic coast. For the Gulf States slowly rising barometer, southeast to southwest winds, high temperature, clear or partly cloudy weather, with light local rain in the Lower XI: : : i if.n auiBttiRsippi vauey. For the Ohin Vsllav anil T.nn.uu slowly falling barometer, northwest to .UM..I.G.V .,nun, vienr ur paruy ciouay wcniuer ana nign temperature, porthe Upper Lake region, the Upper MiRHlfwinni Snil Miaant.ai V.ll.n. ..J . .. -"-I.-- I the Northwest, slowly falling barometer dUrlnST the daV. antlthSSt. IA snillhmaat :.J. k:L . , : SWa.1??. Ur"!.?na " . I-.,.,, vivuu. w.aiuer, wua occasional ticht rains in Mi..n,i Tniii... nn.... and the southern part of the Upper Lake region. Redn.ll.rtn nt.. ..r. ,...,.,!. To,.. Ram Rn. .7'' because or a, eduo , "-'v. . aw oaa niuittouii, I AarOPmanl haltVA..n tlio nrn n.Inln.. tl.A I Comm.ml.l .n.-l ni.n. .n ik. n.im... working on those paper, the price of type setting'on morning paper, has been re- ductd from 40 to 35 cents, and on evening pa pen from 36 to 30 cents per thousand J i t ,n i , .n n , .... -iv... a. ma. . SUMMARY OF SUNDAY'S NEWS. . Texas has five thousand Odd Fellows. Specie shipments Saturday $259,000, all Mexican coin. The sect of Shakers in New York is said to be dying out. JMaehviiie will observe October zaa a memorial day to the late ex-President Johnson. Great numben of grasshoppers are flying in Central Illinois, but have done no damage, as yet. Gen. Longstreet ia making arrangements to build an elegant dwelling house in uainesvuie, ueorgia. Of Southern voten thirtynine percent, are unable to read. In the North the proportion ia only onefifth of that percentage. Pietro Vianni, the Italian artist who suicided at a clam-bake, was buried on f nday. tie leu property valued at $20, 000. It is estimated that over $2,000,000 worth of property has been stolen from Texas by th Mexican robbers on tha Rio Urande. There was a general strike in all the boot and shoe establishments of Nalick, Mass., last Friday, At Coehituat eight hundred partoni are thrown out of m- Dloraaent btKaus. Mnnlnr Mfna. in atom the pay to the SB rue rale a before the reducuoa mde some mouths ainc. Dr. IMmbold wa discharged from the renntyiTuia Insane Asylum Saturday, and will bring suit against the intlitulioa iw aamagea. Willie, youngest ton of W. C. Depauw, of N.ar Allisnv ahr.i Linautr .k 1. - J , . . MllUUgU tbe heart I-riday evening while playing wiiaapuHol, trtoT.riuir Jannlis nf Taarf '::.:. 1 ..- . 1IKIU1B, ha ordered an election to be held Ucio- lHr i ' n In i IK. wan. ... . 1 L ... death of Senator Purnell. A netitinn fur fh.nsrrlnn r VJa.J a . 1 ..-..aiwa. v. Ml.ltu .3. Stokes, convicted on the charge of the auuuitng ui .lame, nsa, na oeen eni to the Governor of New York. A distlirhanna nMinnul al a .1.11. can me ling at Clinton, Mist, Saturday. Thrna whit man .l . i 1 i " iiiinufinni were killed, and aevenl of both colon wounded. t he Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad company and the Chicago and Northwestern K.irnit nnmn.n. k- terminated the favorable rate heretofore given the Rockford, Rock Island and Hi. LOUIS Kail-nan r. nn 1 I .-1. . - ' I " "II . I Cl n , IUI Chicago, and now charge full local rate. A lemale inmate of the Memphis poor finnta rl.lrn. nn. l 1 1., nk i..; .. L. -n ...... v. ... f.-jriLiau. .1,11 making improper advance to her and afterward discharging her because of her refusal lo comply wilh hi demand, ll is also alleged that he kept a prostitute there a matron. The charge an being investigated. ... At tbe conclusion of the circu per wa sent up. In descending, the aero- ..... 1 -.17 T I , J , " 1 v, jituipcu u 11 1 when aome distance above the ground, and alighting in a mill pond was drowned. ; L.I., 1 BCt.llllia UHBUIIT VJ HWI Ul. While a lion tamer in a circua In Dei raoinea waa performing and putting hia head inside the animal's extended iiws, i ... . I me oruie closed them with a snap. There wa. great commotion for a short time .k. .l j .L " b"' lh from hU peril with only a badly cut face. A IT1 it. ll- i t At UlT City, Mich., a woman known aa ??n,d?' Em',,a Pr''.lil'e, died in jail on J: ,r.8dyJ J1" '"'" llad tn bodJ' u,""";r";u f "d len witnesses who were present say the corpse had turned on Ih.si.l. ..,. k.J ' ., ... ... , . J "'ui " 1 1 fl I f ta? fl fl fltTAtB I I. A 4 inn a. n .1 a I. . '. " , "u" . 'uero WM eveJ indication that she had been buried ail... Washington. Th. PrUaM.n, kaa annninlnn T TT1 land Duel!, of New York-. i:nmmi..;n... of Patents, vice Thatcher, resigned. lne government receive an average income of $4000 from the sale of waste naper from tne dead letter olHce alone n , , . , , IT .. . Governor Wells, appointed United State Attorney for the District of Colura- bi"' t.ook,t1,1? ,'!lh,.of,?ffi.ce Salurday, and aDnolnled 11. II. Wells ii ionai.nl Th R0,l Rarsin rltnt.inn l.a.a tnfna. malinn lk.1 P.i. ll .... .1 ..J ...a...... ..... . cic iiicj , ll, v IIUICU counterfeiter, who escaped from detectives 1 .1 . . 1 ., ..v., . .. anu uepuiy marsnaia in lexaa tnree umea, haa turned up in Mexico. I he total amount ofgold tranaferred to San Francisco banks and business men is $2,501,000. Another half million may he transferred Monday, from the bullion account of the mint. The total amount of gold tranaferred to Go'e"' P. of Vermont, ha. com- m""'oned Preston Powers to make a atatue of Sellalor Coilalner t0 bo placed i.;.. , ... .. 1 ... 1 . in iue iauitoi ai vvastiinErinn. 'hivnri was originally assigned to Hiram Powers, hia father, but hn riipH hfn. h.n;n. ning it. The impression prevails that Secretary BrialoW Will endenvnr In mil inln nirnii. lation, within a very sbort time, silver vuiii, iu piace oi iractioiial currency, withdrawing and canceling the lalter, It ia maintained at the Treasury Depart- uieui am mere is enough silver on hand suuteoitiuiiy carry out sucn a policy. The PoRlnfflnn flnnn.lm.nt U nn.f.nt. ed arrangements for a fust mail train rmm V.. V..-1. Tn.:t..i i. . ..... ..wui a.cw aura, iruiiaaeipuia, Washington and Rallimnr vis Pitt.k.,P in Pki- cago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, and all points In ik. Q .1 . nn . ... r ouuiuweai. ine train will commence running Monday, September 13, over the Pennsylvania railroad and it connections. The CaSB nf Tlmnilnr W Ttana.. reeled in oonneolion with the larceny of the $47,000 from the Treasury, has been adjourned till Tuesday, when the Judge -in g,vu . uecision on me point raised by counsel for the defense, that whereas Brown waa arrpatun nn infn....: . - aii.ii uiniiuu charging him with stealing, the Government ought not to hold him with receiving stolen money. Foreign, ' It is renorted that I4na,.al n,-. . 1 ...... ......... ... nxui lea!,. has escaped into Navarre. . The propeller Maine carried away four ffalea of the WellRn.1 r. I u -j . - ..-..-..I., vj.ii.i oimniaj afternoon, and the guard lock ia in a per ilous touuuion. At win take several days to repair the break. , The Sidney mail of July 24 reports the loss of the ship Isabella, from Newcastle to Hong Kong, with coal. She struck Bellona Kenf nn lit ni.l.t nf T..I. A rni . .... ., , Muij -s. xiie otticen and crew escaped, but seventeen Eunice, ptuswngers were leu on board, When Ibev nnm In .Ti.ln. ik. k..1l - j . ,u u.wiu, inn uilll of the Groat EaBlern they found 62,000 4.ire leeioi iron piate incruated with mussels, In some places to a thickness of Bix inches. The tnlsl arninkl nt Ik... In. cumbrances was estimated at 300 Ions, enough to load two brigs or thirty freight The leaders of the insurrection In Turkey have agreed upon a manifesto, demanding the independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina under a Christian Prince, to he chnnpn (mm nn. nf a.. European dynasties. They are willing Intn. l,!kiii.inTn.l ...J .. lu P7 "louieto luruey, and to parlici- PatC 10 CfinferenPB Bt Mnslo- fao.ini. Turkn influence. .' hlB The Snrinefleld Rnl,i:n ,!.- tt . ' n - . , . r Hayes for President, Jonn F MiBer, a well known railroad man, died auddenly at Crestline Saturday. . he P 1 erT,'.n, th8. Cleveland Leader tlUU Ul WUifefl, A fn" brass band and base hall tour- rnT., I'nit irT"' S'l'-S. ??Ja tb 16th-16,h and 17th of MJUiuei. William TvllhlniSn an amnln.a tn ikn Lnfayette, brewery in Cincinnati, was nincu ujr me oreaking ol an elevator Flrca. A fire at Fort Ann, near Whitehall, N, Y., yesterday, caused a less of $50,000. The State Normal School building, at sioomsnurg, ra., was nurned Saturday, Loss $60,000; insurance $30,000. . ... . At Cuba, N. Y., the Cuba House, three Darns, six horses ana a man named Kel- ley were burned Saturday morning, St. Vincent's Hotpital. nnsectarian. kit under the charge of Sisters of Charily, was ueui-sieu anu upenea oy Ki. itev. .uienop juunen, bi. nne, ta., yesterday. Connlnn of Pcnra-Tlie Beat Tarle Ilea, Ele. As this is the season of canninir fruits. and the pear being the only nioe fruit of vaiue ior tuts purpose, i have thought a tew nims as to tne varieties would be acceptable.Those most sought after for canning are the Bartlett, Flemish Beauty and Seckel. First, the Bartlett. Why this pear should take precedence to th Flemish Beauty, haa always been a mystery, unless it is ror it. peculiar flavor, and thi is lost almost entirely In cunning. i Having more add It is more easilv soft. toed in the little ocoking or Maiding COLUMBUS MANTEL and GRATE CO., lOO SOTJTBCHIGH ST. WE ARB MANn'ACTDBINQ THIS SEASON THE HOST ELEGANT STYLUS W SLATE ana IltOTV BIA1VTL.ES Ihat w bar yet made, and are selling them Lower than they have ewer lMn Mid iu ihU or any other Market. " flail ana a. an.! .... - 1. V .1.. , " . , are the cleanart and belt grate setting that is oeawsary for putting up than the Flem- Iful Rnatllw .nil I A. . f - - Hmw uvea no. reiain as Well it. h f.naaa .nana. 1 1. , a -- -'-', wcsiua, ib ia not o large a pear, nor does it put up aa white aa th. Istt.- Th. vi :.k n... --.mi iriuilH UCBUIT ui Jy more beautiful, with a fine red cheek, more even and smooth and larger than the Bartlett, and when put up the halve look whiter, larger and more hand- snm. tuuriilaa ikn L'J :i. n i , n, a-inisnsu jieauir, oemg a mora augary and weet pear, lieep ila akana an.l f A 1 1 i ' . .wuu anu luosB, wnen properly canned, aa white a anow, and the haivea appear aa natural aa a fresh pear just nlnHinil kal...l I, I I . r ..--.. .. is ..stusr, larger, Whiter, more handsome and Certainly more . ' ary ior Toursetvea, ana you Will afwav Want it In nrctiH... In ,k. . - - a--.uvub. .V III. Bartlett. Thn Kantl ii... .'. a..JM:kl. i or pickle whole. It is the prince of pears 8.iu nsvur, neing Ol me nigbeBl t n nil n nl . n f... a.ki.k .11 . I ... ...v, .iuu. . ii iv.il an ui nn pars are judged a to flavor. To y that any nai. k.. .. ki.L ...1 J.I!.: ,n.. .... na uiKU .,1U UeilCJOUS a UaVOr BS the Seckle i giving it at once the highest praise aa to Duality. They are very hand- Snm. MHIIail .knl. ...1 l. ...vi. Mill inrj ueiiiiiuus. They are pared for canning and aweet ninlrlaa km f..- an... . J . . i i t v.. ,u. biiui nun sweet pioaiea many persons only wash them clean, leaving the stem on and then do them up. A few words a to my style of canning. Aft, .nn. '..A I-l.l "j j , p-;ain aic pareu, naivcu nu seeded, wash and drain carefully through a cullender, then make a syrup of coffee and sugar, clearify aud skim aame by knilinm ik.. ... I. ....... a, men pu in juur peara aa pre- a.".w ..u siccp ieiu a nine, over tne nre, soft, sufficient for a straw or split of a broom to pierce them through easily. Then, having your cans or glass jan ready scalded for filling, put in your pear carefully with a spoon until full, and then cover; with the syrup. Cut a piece of wuue paper large enough to cover the top of the pears fitting to tbe eides of the jar or can, then put on the top of the paper Is. innnntnl. af ...- TI . L '.11 nw aauvuiHI. u, BJI Up. all. VUll SIIUUIU stand after full, before the paper is put uh, a minute or two to let tne gas escape, then close tight or seal up. The above way will leave them white as snow, but if nnnkA will In. Ik.. 1 A L' . 1 . - ...a . .. . .u.ui ,ni, a. .a'Unne- ttock, in Toledo Blade. DIED. U IDaHIT.I.9anatnha. Ql nf ak.l... I. fantum, Ricb,ri T., infant eon ot Kdward i.anuannieai. aiarsuati,aged eleven months and six d vs. New Advertisements. A JIANOiMC. ,a4yT STATED MEETING OP OHIO ' Chapter No. 12. R. A. M..this (Mon day) evening, 3eptember6,at 1H o'clock. ' n. J. uua, sec y. Dispatch copy. MUULESALE PAPER WAREHOUSE. COLUMBUS PAPER C0MPAHY, Manufacturers and Wholesale Paper Dealers, 119 and. 121 NORTH HIGH ST., COLUMBUS, OHIO. W. H. FOSTER, Seo'y and Treasurer. sep6 6t . The Sixth Grand CINCINNATI L f Opens Wedneiday, Sept. 8. The Opening Ceremonies Will be preceded by an immense Trade's Procession. The greatest attractions have been provided in all the departments. Admittance , 35 eta To all Fart of the Exposition. Excursion Rates on all the nauroaus, t A. L. EVANS, 1 WHOLKSAIi AND PFTilt, DEALER IN HATS, CAPS, FURS, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, Ns. 96 N. High 81 , Columbus. THR LAT-ST BROADWAY ST VLESIN Silk. Stiff and Soft Hata iw-iv.H a good Bat for $1. Special inducement offered in Furnishing Uoods. Call and see for yourselves. aep66t VISITORS TO THE STATE FAIR Are invited to call at the store of BALDWIN BROTHERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS, Where they will find a well selected stock of Watches, Clocks, ' Jewelry, Silver ware, And Spectacles, AT LOWEST CASH PRICE. Repairing Promptly Done. NO. 144 SOUTH HIH STREET. sep6 eod 31 AKINS & HAMTSON, ISC SOUTH HIGjH STREET. We have just received a new thing in way of Family Ranges. XalVOXiISH STYLES, Very Elefant, very Economical and very Cheap. Call and examine. ep6 eod lm X. OLAY BRIOQS, attornej, at Lrnr aad BI alary Fablle, In Odeon Building, 47 South High St ., . me ,oi Agent for the March Patent Grate, maue, wnl ur' Oak Street Se ect Schtol. No. 29 Oak Street, (star Foarth. Fall Trm Btgint Monday, Septmber loft, ls7. THOROUOII INSTRUCTION GIVEN IN tbe elemenlarr and higher brancbea. Number of pupi s limited to twenty to each teacher. Careful attention given to Undent preparing for the Ohio Agricultural and H-rhanical College, liefer, by permiasioa, to President Orton. For particulars, call at the rooms, or address ep6 6t lp J. WKTHKRELL, Prin. STOP AT CORRODI'S HOTEL, 53 AND 23 West Slate street, for good Meals, good Room, and careful attention to guests, 8-p8 4t J. 31. STUART, UNDERTAKER. OFFICE AND WAREROOM, NO. 1G EAST BROAD STREET, (Opposite State House) COLUMBUS, OHIO. BODIES EMBALMED FOR SHIPMENT. Sobes and every article in the Undertaking line. Orders promptly attended to day or night. deel ly lor4p STATE FAIR JOB PAH STATE JOURNAL JOB ROOMS. Fast Presses and Bottom Prices for First-Class Work. EXHIBITER9 AND MERCHANTS will nnd it to their advantage to order all work neccessary for the Fair this week. Cull nt the Counting Room for prices and samples. Cor. High, Chapel and Pearl Streets. WAGNER'S Central Oyster Depot. cor. men and state. I am now daily receiving WM. TAYLOR S celebrated BALTIMORE OYSTERS In cans. The cans ore well filled with large Oysters and not much water. C. A. WAGNER, Agent. anUtflp OAHRIAQES. JOHN CURTIS, 9, 11 and 10 E. SIXTH ST., CI N CI SI N ATI, OHIO, UANUFACTDRIR Or f IRBT-CLASil Carriages, (skeleton Wagons, Phaetons, Sulkies, llnggies, Etc., Etc. ' Also, the celebrated "Curtis Patent Side Bar Wagons." my21 6ro l4p MITH0FF HOUSE, LANCASTER, OHIO. II. II. DA. VIS, Proprietor. "UKAoVrV.K.01"1'8- P2 3mlA4p ir. 3t. Ajovairo -v. Cor. Third and Maple Streets, (Near B, A O. Bnllroad.) ALWAYS ON HANDTHE BEST EAVE Troughs, Pipes, Doors, Blinds, Mould-ing,Flooriugnnd a choice lot of Lumber and Shingles. Low prices for Cash. au25 deod w tnov30 Ii. M. BAKER'S Photograph Gallery, .- 828 339 S. High St., ' ' COLUMBUS, O. aen34 ly U4p ttUllT, A. O AWliJi.lt, LADIES' AMD GENTLEMElfa . Wig 3VE ajuor, AKD DBALBB nt IITJMA.T IIA.IK GOODS, 17 tU TOWH ST., Clnanbna, o, fr(laeh paid for Human Hair, nclfl dAwly 1r4p 55cutfi) 5fit ttd) tab at -ht- Sciiact'i StpoibeU, Rift bcr otfj unto ttid-6trae. je31 3m lortp jAtO l BlaaSIIX., Lime and Free Stone Yard, - No. 269 Sonth Fourth Street, (Betwaan Mound and Friend St.) tor mm vOhVSWUB, OHIO Hit
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1875-09-06 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1875-09-06 |
Searchable Date | 1875-09-06 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000039 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1875-09-06 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1875-09-06 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4317.13KB |
Full Text | COLUMBUS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER G, 1875. VOL. XXXVI. SIEBERT 4 LILLET, Blank Book Manufacturers Printer, Binder, Stationers Ani Legal Blank Publisher BOOK BINDING 0( every description, by th EdiUon or OPERA HOC8E BTOLDIlf O, (Up Stain.) BrJ0 COMJMBCS. Ohio Merchant Tailoring Co. Ti AID DIALHl I Gents' Fine Famishing Goods, No. 1G8 SOUTH JIIUH ST., . (Open Houts Block), COLUMBUS, 0. JNO. RTCIT, Supt nd Tree. 8. W. STIMSON.Foieraan. myl ly WM. WILSON McUKEIV, 152 Wert Fourth St., Cincinnati, (Bet. Race and Elm Su.) WA.TCII1SS and CLOCKS Beat by Eipreu for repalis will receive oar immediate attention and returned. All work warranted for one year. je!4 6m lp A SPECIIXTY OF FINE GRANITE Monuments. Addreu ALFRED WHITE, ass Fifih St., Cincinnati, o. mv20 lp . GDMBLE SEEPS 0OsSTATLT 01 BAUD FRESH LAGER BEER. Alio, tb beat brand of LIQUOR!. WINK aad CIGARS. Ho. 174 North High St., ColnmbM.O. mvl 1 rvfi rtm to '3 Officei llitfli, l'rarl mill Cl.npcl. ail.. J. X. OOULT. . w rS.SCIBCO. COMLY & FRANCISCO, BUBM-HEBB AND PaOPBlETOBS. J AM Ft M. fOW.T, .... Editor. GOVERNOR HAYES! Our New Premium! FROM NOW UNTIL AFTER THE di ction, we will giro to each single subscriber to the WEEKLY OHIO STATE JOURNAL. At one dollar and fifty cents, ai well as to clubs of ten at one dollar nnd twentyfive cents each, a splendid life-like CRAYON PORTRAIT or GOVERNOR HAYES! This admirable Crayon Drawing is 19x24 inches, and retails at ono dollar. It is an excellent picture, and in the highest style of art. Tim offer affords a rue chance to get a valuable portrait of our next Governor, and at the same time secure the iklt Joon-ma.Ii for one year at a great reduction. Send in your subscription at once, and receive the portrait and paper by the next mail. Address ; a COMLY & FRANCISCO, CIM FWBrH, OK 10. Warm and clear or partly cloudy weather to-day. Putnam is now tbe proprietor of two newspapers, both weakly. ' Hon. Lobenzo Danford addressed four thousand people at Bellaire Satur day evening. It turns out that Kalaton was a defaulter to the amount of between three and four millions. 1 Liltell't Living Age tot August 14th ha Gladstone's article from the Contemporary Review, "Is the Church of England Worth Preserving ?" Ballots for voting down constitution al amendments prohibiting a division of the school fund were distributed in the Catholio churches in Paterson, N. J., yesterday. ' Tbe largest Bessemer steel manufactory in the Union, having a producing ca paclty of 40,000 tons, and employing a cash capital of nearly $3,000,000, was formally opened at Braddock's Fields, ' Pa., Saturday. Thia is not a symptom of a money famine. . If Governor Allen has any just ap preciation of the services of General Charley Sargent of his staff, he will brevet that gory warrior under some such title as "Grand Custodian of the Gubernatorl al Ginger, and Yanker-in-Chief of the Gubernatorial Coat Tall." Old Bill Allen rakes in nil the present that are offered. Thia does not pre vent him from blackguarding better men, whose illustrious public services have been recognized by presents amounting to an infinitesimal per cent, of the money . made by the given wnile thedonees were exposing their lives dally in the fight. (senator. Oolicsby closed his Cin cinnati speech with this happy but brief peroration t I leave my best wishes with 7011; and whatever becomes of it in th future, whatever may he our fate hereafter, let me say this to yon as my parting word, "whatever else shall fall be sure that school keeps." Prolonged applause. Soke of the most gorgeons being in the civilized world ere the new militia of ficers of Governor Allen's "Catholic Guards," arrayed in green velvet, cat Zouave fashion. It would be a fearful and wonderful thing to see such millinerv on a forced march " with one wagon to Begiment." , Imagine one of those gifted beings, after fighting tlx week without a chine to experience a change of shirt, " . ..!., .. . ,.J weahinf hia trill, in a muddy pond, wail a dirty tin cup atewed hia coflet oyer a smoky camp fire! Oovishob HuiDuciti , begged th Zanee-illane, with Kara in hia eye, not to abandon the principle of local eelf-rorernment. Hendricks aeema to bare been worked up to a (earful pitch by the efforts of the rag money inflationist to pot tho whole buiineaa lotcreats of the coun try at tbe mercy of the United Bute Sec retary of the Treasury, and of tho caucus product in Congress ennobled. Tmt dally increasing rgntnta of Go ernbr Allen, as shown perpetually in hi ludicrous self laudations, la the meet pit iable thing in the news of the day. It i not in human nature to feel resentment with th poor, tottering old man, for hia senile boast of atrength and f igor before every audience be meets.; 11 is worst enemy hi moat promising rival for the Presidential nomination must feel a ahrinking repugnance to seeing him make hinuelfao ridiculous. " . r'r w - Garfield, in his speech, argued the impoaaihiliiy of obtaining greenback without giving some equivalent for them, even if large amounla were printed by the Government. On this point he said : D these gentlemen .propose o distribute them as a gift? A business man in the Mahoning Valley wrote me : " We want more currency to carry on' the business of thia valley. I myself need mo.-e for my own business." I answered him that I abould be glad to aid him in any way I could, and if he would tell me how much currency he wanted, and tend me $omelhing to buy it xith, I would buy it for him and end it by express. It waa not currency ho lacked but capital, and all the paper printed at the Treasury would not have increased his capital. Let us put ourselves in shape to use the one hundred millions of currency that is to-day lying idle in the country, before we add to the pile by priming more. ,- Isn't it about time for Amos Layman to write a new speech for Governor Al len? The people are getting tired of that excellently punctuated production hich telle 11s about "Old Bill's bare- feet " when he was a carpet bagger with out the bag, his 1300 acre farm, his ''overseer," his love for the hod carrier, his immutable wisdom, hia eternal and unchangeable foreknowledge, Amos got that from the Shorter Catechism, his youthfulneag and physical vigor, hia personal recollections of Jackson, Jefferson, Adams, the Popes, "Old Bill Alien," Melchizedek, Noah and Mothuzelah, his love for the farmer, hia honesty, his popularity, his rescue and redemption of the Democratic party in 1873, , his j.ge, bis youth, bis manhood, his son- in-law, his ox and his ana. His audiences would be glad of a change. And think what might happen if Charley Sargent should happen sometime not to be on hand to yank the old man's coat tails I In a leader on the Ohio canvass the Globe-Democrat Bays : There seems to be a recognition, on the part of those managing the canvaBS, of the necessity 01 attuning the people something better than Allen's blather, and so Pendleton was sent along to make show of reason, if he could do no nioro The Ohio JJemocrats wish ana try as hard as people can to be all things to all men, but it is sad to see the contemptible straits to which they are reduced by the abject fear of losing votes. Thia is one reason why a man of ability is made to accompany Allen in the present campaign. The latter can influence the rabble by his looiish appeals, anu Dy is frantic wish to be called "the friend of the people;" but his nonsense will nave no weight with thoughtful men. ana so a man who can argue is taken along to do the real work, to present the Democratic situation in the best possible light. As Old Bill says "O-r-e-a-t O-a-w-d I" The idea of Old Bill having to take a man along that knows more than he doe 1 Governor Allen-holds 'the same sentiments now that he has always held so he-says. He has "nothing to take back nothing to regret in his career." It ia not often that a man with Governor Allen's opportunities remain as big a fool at a hundred yean old as be was when he started .but that is neither here nor there. We have his word for it that Governor Allen has not changed, and may therefore bold that these sentiments, from one of hi speeches mad' in 1863, are still held by him t v.. "What could the South do 1 The North had shown that it not only had the power of seizing on the whole country, but the Government and the South barely atood by, knowing what they had to expect at the bands of their masters. What could the South do if Lincoln and his gang chore to pass laws to aboliah slavery ? What nse would it Da tor tne ooam 10 ray, 'Uh, here's the Constitution: Mr. Lincoln tiad nothing to 110 -Hit to bbv, 1, A. Lincoln, being elected by the North ern Slates, have a right to do what I please with the Southern states.' wnat could the South do? There it was. Now, who ever heard of a man Killing to bold the riihts and interests subject to the will, caprice and good pleasure of another man I 1 put that question to you in re' gard to your private affairs." We are told that a prominent local politician, who is a Catholic, complains of the State Journal for aayi'ng that Catholics are opposed to the public schools and are not allowed to tend their children to them. He states that he is counted " a good Catholic," and that' he ends his children to the public Bohools. Now, thia surprise us a little, The Cath olic Columbian ha said as plainly as it can be said, it seem to ns, that Catholic who send their children to th publio schools in this diocese, will be deprived of the sacraments. We might quote columns to the Batne effect, and uniform. ly to the same effect, from every Catholic journal received by ns The' Catholic Telegraph, Tbe Pilot, The freeman's Journal, The Catholio World, etc., etc, Will our friend be kind enough to read the following, and tell us what it means, if it does not mean that he is doing wrong to send his children to the public schools Catholics who think they can approve of the secular system of public education which ha been adopted in this country, would do well to acquaint themselves with the dogmatic decision of the Holy. See, contained in the forlyreventh and fortyeigbtu propositions of the Syllabus, "Aut niundus errat aut Christiis" "either the world or Christ ern." In the Svllabua the church has explicitly and absolutely condemned education, from which religious instruction has been eliminated. If any Catholio approve of thia ntlin of Daranism. tie must, a a- conse quence, hold that the church has erred, nl h. has therefore slven hi assent to heresy. Ther it no way in which b can evade th eoccloaiou. No opbutry i wrong enough to enable him to pass thie dvrpest ol spirituous piuaiia. ue thia point, a in all other aaalier of doctrine, he mast be either with Christ or against Him. He can not auake a u- tral position upon which thecondemn--tioa of the Holf Bee doe not fall. Cali-otic Tcltgrapi Jus 24 Owlt eight yean agj laat March, in hi letter to Nixon, Cary drnouncea th Democracy a party steered in crime and covered with infamy : Th party that opposed., th Govern' mant in ila tttirt to oruah out lb rebel lion, and organised consitiraeie in Ohio to aid traitor.; the party that denounced Lincoln as air rant and usurper, and our auldieraaa hireling aad dogs; Ilia parte that denounced the war a a failure, and tried to make it o: the parly that dis suaded urn from enlisting, aad persuaded them to-desert alter they had emitted Tho true and loyal men of Ohio are ready far the issue, and can lot if they would. aad would not if thef could, avoid it. Truly yours, etc., -- 8. F. Cahy. Poalnl Law. Jo Mm Editor f the Uhi. Son. Journal 1 If A. B. L, will ook in McOuffey' third reader, old series, page 143, he will wnd The Rainbow" credited to Camp bell. ' Thia credit is no doubt sn error, fur the "(earned line-" appear in the best edi tions of Csmpbell'a works. But who waa John Hollatul? I have long adaiiied the poem and regarded it as among the moat beautiful in our language, and would like to know more about theauthor. . . . ; i i a Reader, Extraeie from Oe;l"'r'a Clairliiiiatl Bnceco. THE PARTY kECOBD. Has tliis Republican Uriv in the last fifteen yean, from 1804 to 1875, fallen Into any error, committed any outrage, performed any act, that any Republican or any American cititen can atlord to be ashamed of ? Look on it, look over the deeds of its life, look back to the cradle, and trace it up to the high position it holda to-day, ruling a notion of 40,000,000 of people, with all their complicated and diversitied interests; thirtyseven States and ten or eleven urgaiied Territories, with boundless ftireien, 'commercial, and civil relationa with the) world; holding these preciors and grave Interests In the hollow of its hand; marshaling the assets of patriotism, of wisdom, of power; carrying forward tbe flag of the republic ma- eaticaily as It never was borne before. Great applause I - lell me who seriously ran be offended at i (a career or displeased with ila record. Solt mnlv, I ask any far-minded man in the Democratic party opposed to us what serious ground of complaint can he have against a party that inn niarahnl such uiagnificentresulta? Was it nothing to save thia nation in all its original splendor and honor and beauty ? Was it not h- lng to elevate the flag of the nation still higher that the eyes I of all the world might see it? Appladse Wasitnoth-ine to reach down into , the dark caverns of human slavery and lift up the robs in the beautilul ami shinuig habiliments of American citizenship adown-trouuen and helpless race? -Applause. ..Was it nothing to extend our arms gracefullv. yet firmly, across the walen of 1 he sea to the loreign courts ot 'the world and be the instrument of loosening the bonds that held the foreigner in his allegiance to hia crown, or his king, his dynasty, aim make it an easier matter fur him to become an American citizen? Applause. Was it noth ing to throttle the enemy of union and libertv and to defeat the foes of the He- public ? Waa it nothing to preserve peace and order throughout alt these Northern States during these dark and fearful days ? Was it nothing to maintain the credit of our people before the world ? Was it nothing to reach dnn into the resources 01 the nation and nod the means to carry on the war? Was it nothing to develop the latent energies of a people who, before they were developed by thia Republican party, had no conception 01 their powers hidden in our Constitution? Applause. Was it nothing to bring peace to the land? Waa it nothing to confront these difficulties and irritating and harassing questions all through the war nnd after tbe warr was 11 noming to aeam ana 10 reunite the disniesibcred fragments of the Reuubltc onoe more into a common and united whole? . Waa itnothing to lift the baton ol power before tbe British throne after the conclusion of the war, and tell them that we must have satisfaction for the, outrages perpetrated upon ns during that war? Applause.' Waa it nothing to drive from the plains of poor, weak, frail Mexico that Emperor who came thereat the lidding ot power to subjugate that people? Was it nothing to send him back home vith his army? Applause And has it been nothing to create all these financial measures all these finan cial Mliemti which gave strength and power to pur.armtea in the held, ana to the Government since the' restoration of PMC? . rvnygoarouna tne Bireeis 01 Cincin nati driveling about aonie fellow that stole a few dollars in that poatofEce, or some shau that did not gaiige his whisky right, or some other fellow that drew a pension and he was not entitled to a pen sion, ori some .other contemptible little roguery i ,1131, giuu 1 ,vu ku iivi.iuk about the country, and swear you will leave tin party ? Laughter. Leave a party with such a splendid his- lorv ? Ijcave the party at the close of the first onet hundred reara of our liberty I Leave the party that on the 4th day of July, 1811, will bear aim tne pag tnai records Its Dirtli 01 our lnoepenuence 1 What consummate nonsense 1 tieaveii,, to join the Democrats I Now, how does it look to yen ? , HEALTHFUL OPPOSITION. The Democratic nartv is good enough of the kind. TLaufihter.l It nas been a very good machine' lor u to wnaie year after year, lime after time, occasion after occasion. It has been good enough to stink props in us onoe and a while to ratf us a little, to laynira around Laughter. It has been well enough for IhJ purpose, uui, my vruo, wuu ever thought of trusting them with the Uov-erament? Now, a joke is a joke laughter ; but I am entirely opposed to carry- in h to anv sucu extreme as mai. now, ihi noor fellows have got nothing to he priud of. 'They have don nothing for fifteen years. They have got no record, We have not allowed them to have a chanc to have a reoord. They have done very well if) ijome things.; mere are some tliiDga that 1 oan not cpmniena mem ior. ' Aloni about a rear or two, from eighteen toltwentysix months after we hivestarted'ulgesied tnem, ana gei mem written down in 111 constitution or on the statute book and they have become prac tical measure of every day lite, anu tney have hooted at them and opposed and abused about then, why thy have generally cam ki and ralilied them, and indorsed them,' and accepted them. Now in that respect they do 'well enough. Laughter. , They an first rate tochook while we ar going up hill. They have done that Vttywell.; Is theaaaRyquestion in thia campaign in Ohio about enaaaaipation ? Has anybody heard aty thing of it? Has there been any question about the 13th Amendment to (be Constitution? Tbey have almost forgotten (hern was pne. Has then been any question as to the 14th Amendment? ,ribeJ5th? Scarcely anything said aboif reconstruction I Hardly ever hear the (Ivil rights bill mentioned any more I Ttey have all disappeared from the antia in Ohio, unless some Democrat will take the hint now from what he heart to-night, and go and stsrt out about it to-morrow, just for the fashion of the thing. They have disappetred from thapolitical arena. All the country approves team. Haa there been any gnat fUM ) th tariff? Ha tbr Men any great fuss thia summer about oar eys-Uta of internal revenue? About our riciaer Have yon heard any complaint about ur pni m laws ? Any complaint .rout our general legislation r Yet 1 tuiv. nut mentioned a measure that baa not been brought into life and written dowa into law by the Republican party. Applause I touched upon no ineme or ao auojecl in the shape or law that that party i not responsible for and entitled to honor for.. They have disap peared; disappeared in Illinois, disappeared in Indiana; disappeared from the arena in unio. Why is ibis? Everybody feels, every woman and man and everv child old enough to think and feel, all feel that tbe precious intervals of thii great people and this great country are secure in the hands of the Kepnhlican Dart v. IAdd auae.l Men will deliberate a long time before they will seriously go to work to drive that party from power ; with all it rich experience ; with all it practical wisdom ; with all it profound learning in states manship in the practical attain of gov. eminent, it would be almost a sin to overturn that great organiiation of liberty, and drive it from power, and aup- pi.ui 11 witn a concern mat nas no experience and no object in life. Laughter.Can anv human In-rennifv devi. an. better system of National law than we have to day 7 It can'i be done. What a grave mistake it ia for the pub- iiwMKiiuuii; iu me uriveiiiigcuin-plaint of men who would carry your minds from the contemplation of truth and gnnd subjects in a mere hoorah of assaults on the private character of public men. Have American cititen arrived at the point when they will atop at everything, and subject everybody because he holda official position ? My countrymen, may God forbid that that calamity shall ever settle down seriously upon this land. Applause. THE PARTY CLAIMS. Men go to Conaress. men become Presi dents and Governors, member of the Legislature and Judge upon the Bench. nd Foreign Ministers; men become exec utive officers, administrative officers in the execution of the laws of the Nation and the States, for the purpose of honest ly and Honorably discharging their duty. Many of them may do so for the com pensation in the subordinate poailiona as they may aome of them in the higher ones. But I do believe there is left yet in the heart of this country a body of men to be chosen every two yean, or ev ery four years, who do have at heart the good or tbe nation and the good of the country. Applause so 1 say, we stand to-day unparalleled, every element of power, every public measure inaugurated by the party. The Republican party ahould maintain the control of this Government if then were no new principles at stake; if there were no controversy at all about new principles, the Republican parly should retain the control of the Government alone for the purpose of administration. You muat have a parly to administer the laws of the Government as well as a party to make the laws. The parly in power ahould be as busily concerned in executing the laws 01 me nation as in making the laws ol the nation ; and I tell you, gentlemen of Ohio, it is no small matter uow to carry on this vast Republic of ours. It is no small matter, with its complicated interests reaching in every direction and into every corner of the glube, domestic nnd loreign, external and internal, abroad and at home; complicated theories, grave interests, require the most constant attention and the very highest administrative ability. ainm. f'nry'a 'frne luwnrdneaa. Cleveland Lendoi'.l When Sam. Carr made his atock eneech here the other day he unloaded all the blatant deuiagoguery which he is in the habit of easing himself of in public. But he reserved for a select few next morning a little double distilled hog-wash, which even he was ashamed to throw overboard before a crowd of people. At tho National Hotel, next morning, in the pres ence of several prominent citizens of War ren, two or whom, unknown to him, happened to be Republicans, he made a labored argument In favor of the utter repudiation of the National debt. The Government might pay the debt in green backs or repudiate; it could uo as it chose. The Republican party had a great horror of repudiation, and bo had many good Democinta, but it would have to come to that. No nation ever paid a war debt. The French Government had repudiated twentyone times. The South had repudiated ila war debt. Several of the free States had disposed.in the same way ot tneir stale debt. And ao on, at considerable length, did Mr. Cary talk, much to the edification or his Utile group of listeners, whose memories are good and whose names are responsible. It seems that even Sam. Cary, brazen as he is, cherishes opinions which be dare not make known to the general public, but which escape from his pent-up bosom when among his friends. Senator Thur-man ia no longer alone in the enjoyment of "true inwardness." Dlt, Myers, a Methodist minister, and formerly a Chaplain of the Ohio Penitentiary, delivered a lecture upon prison reform and orphans' homes, here, on Sunday evening. He took exceptions to the prison plans of th State generally, but failed to enlighten ub upon a better plan. His position upon the orphan question ia worthy of consideration. As he says there is an enactment upon the statute books of Ohio, providing that the coin-miRsionereof each oounty may establish an Orphans' Home, where the poor children of the county may have due attention and proper surroundings, but as is known the commissioners ara faw who ever gave the subject a thought, and the result is this tender class of our communities are the associates of the raving maniac, the idiot, the epileptic, etc., in our infirmaries. Thia being the fact where is their training to come from, and what kind of citizens are they to make. There are fifteen of these tender infante inmates of our own Infirmary now, all sound mentally and physically. How long will they remaip bo, if they are to continue the associate of the craay and idiotic ? This is a question that should engage the attention of our people at once. The coat of a separate home for these unfortunates would be but a trifle. AVw Let- iiioion. A ttneer Mix. A correspondent of the Logan Republican, writing from Qreville, without ever thinking of being funny, write In sober earnest, aa follows: In addition to the enterprise of our town, W. A. Nye esq., aie 01 uare, nas located here and started a first class saloon; and attends at all times to the duties of his otfice and gives special attention to making deeds, mortgages, contracts, etc Major John N. Rlwards, one of the editors of the St. Louis Times, and Col. Emory 8. Foster, editor of the Evening journal, same cuy, lougut a duel Saturday in Winnebago poupty, Illinois. But Aa .n.,M ... nj a !, . 1 w ..uu iuuM no. uicumiu fiEiiuer inrir who hurt. After the exchange of shots the parties amicably adjusted their differences. A Michigan paper tells, on one psge, of a man who haa lived 105 years, drinking whisky most of the time, but over on another psge it tells of one, Mr. Nib-belink, much younger, who has just died of deljriuu) tremens, leaving a wife and five children. Mow, what's a man to do? There are two newspapera in Wexford, Ireland, and, of course, theediton are on bad terms : one is a Catholic and tbe other an Orangeman. The Orangeman owns a hull which he palled "Pio Mono," to rile hi enemy. The grand jury of Washington county, Ala., failed lo find till against the negroes accused ol insurrection, BY TELEGRAPH TO TBB OHIO STATE JOURSJU LANCASTER. 1-aUrsleU ?, at.stabltraai XmmU ill... Special la tlia Ohio HUM Jiwnial. Lahcastu. Bent. 5. Th. Fu'rR.M County Republican Convention this after noon nominated a lull lMialaiiv. and county ticket. aa follow: BenreaenUlira. Captain A. R. Keller; Treasurer, Samuel Jaclceon; Clerk, Lafayette Abbott; Probate Judge, Jone Uihboay; Auditor, Amos Graham; Commissioner, W. W. Luckey Recorder, Charles R. Drink le; Infirmary ...nviuEj oaniuei Darr. COMMERCIAL PROJECTS. IlrseetTrauivketeaiihetf.ajaaipsl u7 smej bmbiiii taMrita- Llnra mf die am and lllai( Veaavla, St. Lome &.t H A ti. 1 to th 1'n.lr.ffi ft...,..-. ! . - ' ' ' HI end mails lo Rio Janeiro by the Mis- iui.nl ' . 1 1 , 0 . . . ....i.i , rnnvj any oieamsuip una con- '"t" vim wuicu ai is nought proper to correct. Th. . - " I V " " U.. .AfUW enterprise and has ila headquarters there, but will start its steamers from New Orlpan. fWioht tl.bn. k: l; , ........ ..i.:ui vrmg Bllippeu from Cairo or by Mississippi Valley Barge Line. The fi rat steamer ia expected to leave for Rin th r v... u.. i ----- . - - -" . ..uichiuci instead of October. The company ia o- liciling a cargo for this veseel from varioua nni,il. in lh li..i..:....t tr.n and has assurances of freight from Louis- Tinr, vincinnaii, ucirmi and other places, prise of similar character called the Mis- .iaa,n..l .-J , ' ft- .. ,ucj iuu irnnoco iraaingoom-pany, which haa recently been incorporated here and organized, with aome of our mini acuve ana enterprising merchant as itinfhYera Thi. . ....... ... , -.,-.., .iu man a sailing vessel from New Orleans for the valley of the Orinoco river, touching at all intermediate points, probably next month, wilh an assorted carec, and bring back a freight of coffee and such South mucium pruuuriB as are moat saleable In thia cnunlrv. Th!. ! inuh.lnj . , . ..... .,,.i;.,ucu ttB au experimental veil tare, and if it prove sue- O0.ll1 1 tl.A Ann, nan. n. 1 1 lu . 1 .... .uu,f,Bll n in inuivBHe 1IB BIOCK, nilt nn th linn alaamnM .-J I...M.I , - - ......b, anu uuuu up an extensive trade between the two countries. iiiun mese enterprise are meeting with much encouragement from merchsnts, manufacturers, etc., and their proapecta for the speedy oiening and establishment of a large and remunerative trade between thia Vall.v an.! H.mk An...:.. :. .. j vwu.u auinit. S Y 1 1 JT flattering. GUIBORD'S BONES. The niatnrbnuce Abont Their In. lerment in tbe Mnutrenl I'mholle l'enaeler-Nvro Troubled Expect, ed. MnNTRVAT.. &mt A Tna.nl. hn.lu Queen's counsel, haa prepared an atlidavit! uei-inruiK; me puunc peace threatened. Thi. iil, .r,i... .n:,l ' :. ..t , ' n.uun.iiui similar ei- feet has been submitted to a magistrate, in uiuei tu proi-nre me presence ot a force ol vtMiiiueeis a. me uunai ol tiuiborn, which is postponed until next week. Further trouble is apprehended, and, with the ill feeling on both eides, it will be fotlunale if no more serious result follows the second attempt than succeeded the first. Some three hundred armed men ar in !hn !,.,.- ..:,;- .1, . n....: ... nuitiii. iu, inrcuuK: for the funeral. They have been there all nigni, anu nave blocked the Corle des T.rau rnJ ,1am. .!!.. . 1. J -"B-" , .ui"uiui ,v iinuiv anu business of travelers. The inhabitants around feel much alarmed, ahd have applied lo the Government for police aid. Mr Dnlltna InJu, n.nson a.....na In be issued against twenty of the ringlead- nra in tlta In, int nn I, ia nn. .....1.. stood theso were lo be proBecuted before me ouriai lakes place. P. It.ii.,- I. ,n here, and volunteers were, last evening, uili.lllK. Doutrc'a life has been threatened, as also that of prominent members of the Institute Canadienno. 11111 Water in Iowa, Omaha, Sept. 5. The water rose all day yesterday in the Boyer river, and Logan creek, on the Chicago and Northwestern railroad and road bed, ia in many places three and four feet under water. No trains have paased over the road, but all passengers have been gotten off the damaged part of the road. The water also rose rapidly all day in Coon river and Walnut creeks, on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific road. The track in many places is four feet under water, and the track is badly damaged. The Pacific express, en roufe west, was thrown into a trench west of Commerce, Iowa, twelve miles west of De Moines, last evening. John Hughes, brakeman, fell between the can and was instantly killed. Several other persons were aligbtly injured. The water in Walnut creek is three feet higher than ever known before. CftlhO'le Controveray. Louisvillb, Ky., Sept. 5. The recent changes iu the Catholic Church Diocese of Louisville are the subject of much talk in th city and Slate. Rev. Father Box, pastor of St. John's, Louisville, whuin Bishop McCloskey removed to Bowling Green for insubordination published a card to-day defending himself, and giving as a.rause for the publication a desire to vindicate his character as pastor of St. John's. To-morrow Bishop McCloskey will publish a card severely criticising and condemning the remarks of Father Box. Roth parties will lay the case before the Pope ere long. Messengers are now on their way to Rome. Opening or asninnioih ateel Works, Pittsbd-ro, Sept. 5. The formal open-ing of the Edgar Thompson Steel Works, near Braddock's Field, took place yesterday in the presence of a large delegation composed of representatives of the leading industrial interests of the day. A large number of prominent railroad officials were prescpt, a,nd. great interest was manifested. The steel is manufactured by the Bessemer process, and the works are among the largest in the country, having an annual producing capacity of 400,000 I" WO OOQ pearlv Indian Snperlmcuileiil Injured. Okmulgee, I. T., Sept. 5. Aa Enoch Hoag, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, waa relnmina in t,ta nl.n. ,n Aan r ' .... a u .uir uihp .u-mj llvill the grand council at Omulgee the learn he was unvmg ran away and his shoulder was dislocated, but he succeeded in getting into town, had the dislocation reduced, and left for hia home in Kansas by the train this evening. Major General Ingallj, of the Union Agency, will preside at the Okmulgee council in the absence of Mr. Hoag. New Jersey cmiinilca nnd tbe Meliool Qm'stiiin. Paterson, N. J , Sept. 5. Ballot for Cnnfllllllllnnal . 1 .t- .1. XT Jersey next Tuesday, were circulated at ikaCiliJi-ni I !u .1.1 I.- , vn.iiuni; IllirUlieS 111 HUB KIIJ lO'Oay, with amendments 1 9. ft ami 11 n-n...l out. The erased amendment prohibit appropriations ot public money and lands to private or sectarian purposes, guarantee a aysteui of free public schools and prohibit special legislation. Bonn Knee at Wheeling. Wheeling!, W. V., Sept. 6. The scull rape between Frank DenmarBh and Ed Powell, both of Pittsburg, took place on the lawn course in thia city yesterday, And WAS vitnaBand ka r..lln ID OOA ...I. iuu .v,vvu people. The distance waa three miles, DenmarBh. winning ny three boat lengths; time twenty two minute and twentyfour seconds.A recent city omnia ol Boston shows a loiai population Of fi411tf, RALSTON'S RUIN. He la- t'enad Ubtt Defaulter for belt Fair HilU.u, And to day Secretly Mule tat Over . issue or Stock. The Uailetj Stales Mlit li Debt te the Buk. Raw Q.ni A Tt I... I a .nanitauv, in .h 1 k , fTTU reported that the Bank of California was largely indebted to the United Stale Mint here. The bank haa been refining f. IP I lia U i nl ..J i. I. - I i.. :.. - .. , . u u i. wppusciA us iu debtednesa has increased through that cnannei. ine Superintendent or the Mint al.le. I .1-. ..... . L. - ar.., .1,1 . 1IO HMUUJi th. Mint MM tha hanlr CIO-. llAO na.al.la on demand. ' ' D. O. Mill authorize th tatement that lha defalralinn nf II. lata PKai.lant of the Bank nf California will amount to i ween 3,uuo,uuu and l,OO0,OQ0, and that OVfriSall (uf alnnlr haa kun siaw... red. Particular later. It la not bud- posed that ll is will iu any way prejudice the arrangements now being made. Th. rliiiiiin n..ki;.i.i i:,n..:.i this evening, in which, after referring to o wun-s ui in. paper witn regara 10 the Bank of California and Ralsion. it says: 'Whan ll, hinlr anananrla.! laal aut. we thought it our duty to protect as far as ueiwsiiors ana otner creation 01 ai tne conclusion or the circu per-that institution. We published just to forinancet given at Jackson, Mich., Sat-many fact aa wa believed would best urdav. bv Sell's circus . hm.si- ksllnnn serve the purpose, and no more. We lhn Stilt tll.l ll.a fail. .an t.. . I . r. v i the mismanagement of the lata President, anu ma. una mismanagement waa without Ih L-nnaalarlaa. nf In. fl! . . L. I these statementa we were soundly abnsed. -" '. . . UI ,un ASUCtUllB-. IUI ...,.. lu.i.a. ... thecorruptelemenuagainsl us. Wewere In IMMHmlftlt afkl lAta ali.-l wav. sVlisIH mtnt I .... k . . . iV . we.mot.'ou lh' the Directors should, if nosaib e. contrive Z? T,f ,h,e "Tl- We preferred lo snfler the assault of the ene- uiica .a.iiaji mm iu give lacia a. llie lime whan ik. miki r...i.k . .....!.,. i dication of our attitude toward the bank, but might at the aame time hinder, and possibly d.feat, plans which the Direclore wen. d.,;.m. f. ii,. .k. ... K'""M.. creation ol that institution. The Di- . I rectors, tomeol whom bave always been atanr-h .r!n,l. nf ik. i!..n.i ... ... nnm I..-. n,..r.,., .1 .1 . : 1 l i ., - ..i.i fiaus, auuuave ettled on a basis of action, whereby every creuuor or tne bang will be fully paid. We UaV. fllll MhRitann. hnlk In ik. ..kll ity and in the good faith of these men. TI... .ill I .... .. . n m.i. . r.r.i k 1 8 ' ' tha.rtha n-I I "eb,nk 'ro8 'en than the one which su,rded. it was lime that the Bulletin should be relieved from the secrets which it has been alinaerl f. !,..: ,. , sue tiiii reutem ineir pteuge, ana may proposed to ask the consent of the Board r ri: . . i. . .1 r. n ...V WWII, Ul I1IQ UUHIl of Directors In mlinv n. r .n r... ther oblications lo keep secret some facts within our knnwlarlo 11..!.. Ar.n n... best to protect others, it is part of our duty to protect ourselves. We are now ailthnrizpH hv D O M.'lla In a., it... ik. ' ....a ,u n.j .nn, inn late President did, without the knowl- iimunii uis, wuoout ll.e knowl- edge of the Directors, use privately from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 of the bank, re- sources, which amount remains unpaid, This wits the cause of the recent failure, setT. W0U'i haTe , author rl h. in. m. .k -. . u fh.t ,h J "ulhonty to say that there was an ovarinsn nf sinnlr . .... .u V..I1D3UB u. .lUb., Which nVerisflllA hss nns kaan n.ni.l..n ... . . . for. The particular use which was made of this large sum of money it is notour duty to mention. When these discoveries nrn nihlla th. m.nnunlinn nf ik. !.,. President with the institution waa at once severed. Between if 3,000,000 and $1,000,-000 of money had gone out of the bank without the knowledge of a sine-la Di rector." iron icitiiv. TURKEY. 8ERVIA QUIETED. London, Sept. 6. A dispatch from Constantinople slates that information has been received from Belgrade by the Turkish government and foreign embassies wh ch removes all apprehensions that Servia will, by her conduct, add to the complications. A solid agreement between the powers and the Servian government has been effected at Belgrade. Owing to the pressure brought to bear by rnrAanfsli.aa nt Ilia '..en... C..:. ... t ...vn w. .uv imiu.i uci.iB undertakes to restrain the party of action wituin ner oorders. SPA H. MATERIAL FOR THE CARLIST9. T.ownnv Rani K It la ik.i -., va. w. n icuuiltu 111., an Knuliah atanman kn. J !. . ft" Bi.-a... uuo mvnucu iu landing at Motrico a large cargo of war ana. t.,1 . 1. n 1.T,. . U1..C11U1 ,ur iuu iariiflis, lnciuaing lour piece of artillery, 60,000 rifles and 1000 cases of cartridges. i Weather rrobnbilltle. WinntNOTnv Hunt It 1 . For New England, the Middle States and the Lower Lake Region, slowly rising barometer, northwest to southwest winds, high temperature, clear or partly cloudy weather and occasional light rain in the Lower Lake Region, the northern part of New England and the Middle States. For the Atlantic States, slowly rising barometer, east to southwest winds, decidedly high temperature, clear or partly rlnnrlv wslliar with li.k, in .k. j , n.. '.fS .null, ,H .11. southern part of the South Atlantic coast. For the Gulf States slowly rising barometer, southeast to southwest winds, high temperature, clear or partly cloudy weather, with light local rain in the Lower XI: : : i if.n auiBttiRsippi vauey. For the Ohin Vsllav anil T.nn.uu slowly falling barometer, northwest to .UM..I.G.V .,nun, vienr ur paruy ciouay wcniuer ana nign temperature, porthe Upper Lake region, the Upper MiRHlfwinni Snil Miaant.ai V.ll.n. ..J . .. -"-I.-- I the Northwest, slowly falling barometer dUrlnST the daV. antlthSSt. IA snillhmaat :.J. k:L . , : SWa.1??. Ur"!.?na " . I-.,.,, vivuu. w.aiuer, wua occasional ticht rains in Mi..n,i Tniii... nn.... and the southern part of the Upper Lake region. Redn.ll.rtn nt.. ..r. ,...,.,!. To,.. Ram Rn. .7'' because or a, eduo , "-'v. . aw oaa niuittouii, I AarOPmanl haltVA..n tlio nrn n.Inln.. tl.A I Comm.ml.l .n.-l ni.n. .n ik. n.im... working on those paper, the price of type setting'on morning paper, has been re- ductd from 40 to 35 cents, and on evening pa pen from 36 to 30 cents per thousand J i t ,n i , .n n , .... -iv... a. ma. . SUMMARY OF SUNDAY'S NEWS. . Texas has five thousand Odd Fellows. Specie shipments Saturday $259,000, all Mexican coin. The sect of Shakers in New York is said to be dying out. JMaehviiie will observe October zaa a memorial day to the late ex-President Johnson. Great numben of grasshoppers are flying in Central Illinois, but have done no damage, as yet. Gen. Longstreet ia making arrangements to build an elegant dwelling house in uainesvuie, ueorgia. Of Southern voten thirtynine percent, are unable to read. In the North the proportion ia only onefifth of that percentage. Pietro Vianni, the Italian artist who suicided at a clam-bake, was buried on f nday. tie leu property valued at $20, 000. It is estimated that over $2,000,000 worth of property has been stolen from Texas by th Mexican robbers on tha Rio Urande. There was a general strike in all the boot and shoe establishments of Nalick, Mass., last Friday, At Coehituat eight hundred partoni are thrown out of m- Dloraaent btKaus. Mnnlnr Mfna. in atom the pay to the SB rue rale a before the reducuoa mde some mouths ainc. Dr. IMmbold wa discharged from the renntyiTuia Insane Asylum Saturday, and will bring suit against the intlitulioa iw aamagea. Willie, youngest ton of W. C. Depauw, of N.ar Allisnv ahr.i Linautr .k 1. - J , . . MllUUgU tbe heart I-riday evening while playing wiiaapuHol, trtoT.riuir Jannlis nf Taarf '::.:. 1 ..- . 1IKIU1B, ha ordered an election to be held Ucio- lHr i ' n In i IK. wan. ... . 1 L ... death of Senator Purnell. A netitinn fur fh.nsrrlnn r VJa.J a . 1 ..-..aiwa. v. Ml.ltu .3. Stokes, convicted on the charge of the auuuitng ui .lame, nsa, na oeen eni to the Governor of New York. A distlirhanna nMinnul al a .1.11. can me ling at Clinton, Mist, Saturday. Thrna whit man .l . i 1 i " iiiinufinni were killed, and aevenl of both colon wounded. t he Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad company and the Chicago and Northwestern K.irnit nnmn.n. k- terminated the favorable rate heretofore given the Rockford, Rock Island and Hi. LOUIS Kail-nan r. nn 1 I .-1. . - ' I " "II . I Cl n , IUI Chicago, and now charge full local rate. A lemale inmate of the Memphis poor finnta rl.lrn. nn. l 1 1., nk i..; .. L. -n ...... v. ... f.-jriLiau. .1,11 making improper advance to her and afterward discharging her because of her refusal lo comply wilh hi demand, ll is also alleged that he kept a prostitute there a matron. The charge an being investigated. ... At tbe conclusion of the circu per wa sent up. In descending, the aero- ..... 1 -.17 T I , J , " 1 v, jituipcu u 11 1 when aome distance above the ground, and alighting in a mill pond was drowned. ; L.I., 1 BCt.llllia UHBUIIT VJ HWI Ul. While a lion tamer in a circua In Dei raoinea waa performing and putting hia head inside the animal's extended iiws, i ... . I me oruie closed them with a snap. There wa. great commotion for a short time .k. .l j .L " b"' lh from hU peril with only a badly cut face. A IT1 it. ll- i t At UlT City, Mich., a woman known aa ??n,d?' Em',,a Pr''.lil'e, died in jail on J: ,r.8dyJ J1" '"'" llad tn bodJ' u,""";r";u f "d len witnesses who were present say the corpse had turned on Ih.si.l. ..,. k.J ' ., ... ... , . J "'ui " 1 1 fl I f ta? fl fl fltTAtB I I. A 4 inn a. n .1 a I. . '. " , "u" . 'uero WM eveJ indication that she had been buried ail... Washington. Th. PrUaM.n, kaa annninlnn T TT1 land Duel!, of New York-. i:nmmi..;n... of Patents, vice Thatcher, resigned. lne government receive an average income of $4000 from the sale of waste naper from tne dead letter olHce alone n , , . , , IT .. . Governor Wells, appointed United State Attorney for the District of Colura- bi"' t.ook,t1,1? ,'!lh,.of,?ffi.ce Salurday, and aDnolnled 11. II. Wells ii ionai.nl Th R0,l Rarsin rltnt.inn l.a.a tnfna. malinn lk.1 P.i. ll .... .1 ..J ...a...... ..... . cic iiicj , ll, v IIUICU counterfeiter, who escaped from detectives 1 .1 . . 1 ., ..v., . .. anu uepuiy marsnaia in lexaa tnree umea, haa turned up in Mexico. I he total amount ofgold tranaferred to San Francisco banks and business men is $2,501,000. Another half million may he transferred Monday, from the bullion account of the mint. The total amount of gold tranaferred to Go'e"' P. of Vermont, ha. com- m""'oned Preston Powers to make a atatue of Sellalor Coilalner t0 bo placed i.;.. , ... .. 1 ... 1 . in iue iauitoi ai vvastiinErinn. 'hivnri was originally assigned to Hiram Powers, hia father, but hn riipH hfn. h.n;n. ning it. The impression prevails that Secretary BrialoW Will endenvnr In mil inln nirnii. lation, within a very sbort time, silver vuiii, iu piace oi iractioiial currency, withdrawing and canceling the lalter, It ia maintained at the Treasury Depart- uieui am mere is enough silver on hand suuteoitiuiiy carry out sucn a policy. The PoRlnfflnn flnnn.lm.nt U nn.f.nt. ed arrangements for a fust mail train rmm V.. V..-1. Tn.:t..i i. . ..... ..wui a.cw aura, iruiiaaeipuia, Washington and Rallimnr vis Pitt.k.,P in Pki- cago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, and all points In ik. Q .1 . nn . ... r ouuiuweai. ine train will commence running Monday, September 13, over the Pennsylvania railroad and it connections. The CaSB nf Tlmnilnr W Ttana.. reeled in oonneolion with the larceny of the $47,000 from the Treasury, has been adjourned till Tuesday, when the Judge -in g,vu . uecision on me point raised by counsel for the defense, that whereas Brown waa arrpatun nn infn....: . - aii.ii uiniiuu charging him with stealing, the Government ought not to hold him with receiving stolen money. Foreign, ' It is renorted that I4na,.al n,-. . 1 ...... ......... ... nxui lea!,. has escaped into Navarre. . The propeller Maine carried away four ffalea of the WellRn.1 r. I u -j . - ..-..-..I., vj.ii.i oimniaj afternoon, and the guard lock ia in a per ilous touuuion. At win take several days to repair the break. , The Sidney mail of July 24 reports the loss of the ship Isabella, from Newcastle to Hong Kong, with coal. She struck Bellona Kenf nn lit ni.l.t nf T..I. A rni . .... ., , Muij -s. xiie otticen and crew escaped, but seventeen Eunice, ptuswngers were leu on board, When Ibev nnm In .Ti.ln. ik. k..1l - j . ,u u.wiu, inn uilll of the Groat EaBlern they found 62,000 4.ire leeioi iron piate incruated with mussels, In some places to a thickness of Bix inches. The tnlsl arninkl nt Ik... In. cumbrances was estimated at 300 Ions, enough to load two brigs or thirty freight The leaders of the insurrection In Turkey have agreed upon a manifesto, demanding the independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina under a Christian Prince, to he chnnpn (mm nn. nf a.. European dynasties. They are willing Intn. l,!kiii.inTn.l ...J .. lu P7 "louieto luruey, and to parlici- PatC 10 CfinferenPB Bt Mnslo- fao.ini. Turkn influence. .' hlB The Snrinefleld Rnl,i:n ,!.- tt . ' n - . , . r Hayes for President, Jonn F MiBer, a well known railroad man, died auddenly at Crestline Saturday. . he P 1 erT,'.n, th8. Cleveland Leader tlUU Ul WUifefl, A fn" brass band and base hall tour- rnT., I'nit irT"' S'l'-S. ??Ja tb 16th-16,h and 17th of MJUiuei. William TvllhlniSn an amnln.a tn ikn Lnfayette, brewery in Cincinnati, was nincu ujr me oreaking ol an elevator Flrca. A fire at Fort Ann, near Whitehall, N, Y., yesterday, caused a less of $50,000. The State Normal School building, at sioomsnurg, ra., was nurned Saturday, Loss $60,000; insurance $30,000. . ... . At Cuba, N. Y., the Cuba House, three Darns, six horses ana a man named Kel- ley were burned Saturday morning, St. Vincent's Hotpital. nnsectarian. kit under the charge of Sisters of Charily, was ueui-sieu anu upenea oy Ki. itev. .uienop juunen, bi. nne, ta., yesterday. Connlnn of Pcnra-Tlie Beat Tarle Ilea, Ele. As this is the season of canninir fruits. and the pear being the only nioe fruit of vaiue ior tuts purpose, i have thought a tew nims as to tne varieties would be acceptable.Those most sought after for canning are the Bartlett, Flemish Beauty and Seckel. First, the Bartlett. Why this pear should take precedence to th Flemish Beauty, haa always been a mystery, unless it is ror it. peculiar flavor, and thi is lost almost entirely In cunning. i Having more add It is more easilv soft. toed in the little ocoking or Maiding COLUMBUS MANTEL and GRATE CO., lOO SOTJTBCHIGH ST. WE ARB MANn'ACTDBINQ THIS SEASON THE HOST ELEGANT STYLUS W SLATE ana IltOTV BIA1VTL.ES Ihat w bar yet made, and are selling them Lower than they have ewer lMn Mid iu ihU or any other Market. " flail ana a. an.! .... - 1. V .1.. , " . , are the cleanart and belt grate setting that is oeawsary for putting up than the Flem- Iful Rnatllw .nil I A. . f - - Hmw uvea no. reiain as Well it. h f.naaa .nana. 1 1. , a -- -'-', wcsiua, ib ia not o large a pear, nor does it put up aa white aa th. Istt.- Th. vi :.k n... --.mi iriuilH UCBUIT ui Jy more beautiful, with a fine red cheek, more even and smooth and larger than the Bartlett, and when put up the halve look whiter, larger and more hand- snm. tuuriilaa ikn L'J :i. n i , n, a-inisnsu jieauir, oemg a mora augary and weet pear, lieep ila akana an.l f A 1 1 i ' . .wuu anu luosB, wnen properly canned, aa white a anow, and the haivea appear aa natural aa a fresh pear just nlnHinil kal...l I, I I . r ..--.. .. is ..stusr, larger, Whiter, more handsome and Certainly more . ' ary ior Toursetvea, ana you Will afwav Want it In nrctiH... In ,k. . - - a--.uvub. .V III. Bartlett. Thn Kantl ii... .'. a..JM:kl. i or pickle whole. It is the prince of pears 8.iu nsvur, neing Ol me nigbeBl t n nil n nl . n f... a.ki.k .11 . I ... ...v, .iuu. . ii iv.il an ui nn pars are judged a to flavor. To y that any nai. k.. .. ki.L ...1 J.I!.: ,n.. .... na uiKU .,1U UeilCJOUS a UaVOr BS the Seckle i giving it at once the highest praise aa to Duality. They are very hand- Snm. MHIIail .knl. ...1 l. ...vi. Mill inrj ueiiiiiuus. They are pared for canning and aweet ninlrlaa km f..- an... . J . . i i t v.. ,u. biiui nun sweet pioaiea many persons only wash them clean, leaving the stem on and then do them up. A few words a to my style of canning. Aft, .nn. '..A I-l.l "j j , p-;ain aic pareu, naivcu nu seeded, wash and drain carefully through a cullender, then make a syrup of coffee and sugar, clearify aud skim aame by knilinm ik.. ... I. ....... a, men pu in juur peara aa pre- a.".w ..u siccp ieiu a nine, over tne nre, soft, sufficient for a straw or split of a broom to pierce them through easily. Then, having your cans or glass jan ready scalded for filling, put in your pear carefully with a spoon until full, and then cover; with the syrup. Cut a piece of wuue paper large enough to cover the top of the pears fitting to tbe eides of the jar or can, then put on the top of the paper Is. innnntnl. af ...- TI . L '.11 nw aauvuiHI. u, BJI Up. all. VUll SIIUUIU stand after full, before the paper is put uh, a minute or two to let tne gas escape, then close tight or seal up. The above way will leave them white as snow, but if nnnkA will In. Ik.. 1 A L' . 1 . - ...a . .. . .u.ui ,ni, a. .a'Unne- ttock, in Toledo Blade. DIED. U IDaHIT.I.9anatnha. Ql nf ak.l... I. fantum, Ricb,ri T., infant eon ot Kdward i.anuannieai. aiarsuati,aged eleven months and six d vs. New Advertisements. A JIANOiMC. ,a4yT STATED MEETING OP OHIO ' Chapter No. 12. R. A. M..this (Mon day) evening, 3eptember6,at 1H o'clock. ' n. J. uua, sec y. Dispatch copy. MUULESALE PAPER WAREHOUSE. COLUMBUS PAPER C0MPAHY, Manufacturers and Wholesale Paper Dealers, 119 and. 121 NORTH HIGH ST., COLUMBUS, OHIO. W. H. FOSTER, Seo'y and Treasurer. sep6 6t . The Sixth Grand CINCINNATI L f Opens Wedneiday, Sept. 8. The Opening Ceremonies Will be preceded by an immense Trade's Procession. The greatest attractions have been provided in all the departments. Admittance , 35 eta To all Fart of the Exposition. Excursion Rates on all the nauroaus, t A. L. EVANS, 1 WHOLKSAIi AND PFTilt, DEALER IN HATS, CAPS, FURS, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, Ns. 96 N. High 81 , Columbus. THR LAT-ST BROADWAY ST VLESIN Silk. Stiff and Soft Hata iw-iv.H a good Bat for $1. Special inducement offered in Furnishing Uoods. Call and see for yourselves. aep66t VISITORS TO THE STATE FAIR Are invited to call at the store of BALDWIN BROTHERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS, Where they will find a well selected stock of Watches, Clocks, ' Jewelry, Silver ware, And Spectacles, AT LOWEST CASH PRICE. Repairing Promptly Done. NO. 144 SOUTH HIH STREET. sep6 eod 31 AKINS & HAMTSON, ISC SOUTH HIGjH STREET. We have just received a new thing in way of Family Ranges. XalVOXiISH STYLES, Very Elefant, very Economical and very Cheap. Call and examine. ep6 eod lm X. OLAY BRIOQS, attornej, at Lrnr aad BI alary Fablle, In Odeon Building, 47 South High St ., . me ,oi Agent for the March Patent Grate, maue, wnl ur' Oak Street Se ect Schtol. No. 29 Oak Street, (star Foarth. Fall Trm Btgint Monday, Septmber loft, ls7. THOROUOII INSTRUCTION GIVEN IN tbe elemenlarr and higher brancbea. Number of pupi s limited to twenty to each teacher. Careful attention given to Undent preparing for the Ohio Agricultural and H-rhanical College, liefer, by permiasioa, to President Orton. For particulars, call at the rooms, or address ep6 6t lp J. WKTHKRELL, Prin. STOP AT CORRODI'S HOTEL, 53 AND 23 West Slate street, for good Meals, good Room, and careful attention to guests, 8-p8 4t J. 31. STUART, UNDERTAKER. OFFICE AND WAREROOM, NO. 1G EAST BROAD STREET, (Opposite State House) COLUMBUS, OHIO. BODIES EMBALMED FOR SHIPMENT. Sobes and every article in the Undertaking line. Orders promptly attended to day or night. deel ly lor4p STATE FAIR JOB PAH STATE JOURNAL JOB ROOMS. Fast Presses and Bottom Prices for First-Class Work. EXHIBITER9 AND MERCHANTS will nnd it to their advantage to order all work neccessary for the Fair this week. Cull nt the Counting Room for prices and samples. Cor. High, Chapel and Pearl Streets. WAGNER'S Central Oyster Depot. cor. men and state. I am now daily receiving WM. TAYLOR S celebrated BALTIMORE OYSTERS In cans. The cans ore well filled with large Oysters and not much water. C. A. WAGNER, Agent. anUtflp OAHRIAQES. JOHN CURTIS, 9, 11 and 10 E. SIXTH ST., CI N CI SI N ATI, OHIO, UANUFACTDRIR Or f IRBT-CLASil Carriages, (skeleton Wagons, Phaetons, Sulkies, llnggies, Etc., Etc. ' Also, the celebrated "Curtis Patent Side Bar Wagons." my21 6ro l4p MITH0FF HOUSE, LANCASTER, OHIO. II. II. DA. VIS, Proprietor. "UKAoVrV.K.01"1'8- P2 3mlA4p ir. 3t. Ajovairo -v. Cor. Third and Maple Streets, (Near B, A O. Bnllroad.) ALWAYS ON HANDTHE BEST EAVE Troughs, Pipes, Doors, Blinds, Mould-ing,Flooriugnnd a choice lot of Lumber and Shingles. Low prices for Cash. au25 deod w tnov30 Ii. M. BAKER'S Photograph Gallery, .- 828 339 S. High St., ' ' COLUMBUS, O. aen34 ly U4p ttUllT, A. O AWliJi.lt, LADIES' AMD GENTLEMElfa . Wig 3VE ajuor, AKD DBALBB nt IITJMA.T IIA.IK GOODS, 17 tU TOWH ST., Clnanbna, o, fr(laeh paid for Human Hair, nclfl dAwly 1r4p 55cutfi) 5fit ttd) tab at -ht- Sciiact'i StpoibeU, Rift bcr otfj unto ttid-6trae. je31 3m lortp jAtO l BlaaSIIX., Lime and Free Stone Yard, - No. 269 Sonth Fourth Street, (Betwaan Mound and Friend St.) tor mm vOhVSWUB, OHIO Hit |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000039 |
File Name | 0882 |