HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1888-8-10, Page 1* E
DEVOTE II c0UNT
NEWS
GEN. SHERIDAN
hon. In persona, appearance "Little
— ( Phil" was very short, and each year
seemed to add to the rotundity of lie
Death of the Commander of the I�Ry fixw filters. When I sehis to the
lobby, says a recent correspondent, he
wore upon the batik it/ he round, bullet
bead a very slim, high. old-teemoad
silk het of a style that wan very popular
about ties time of the close of the ear.
It was oboist two sizes ta. small. His
j short iron -gray batr stood out (rent un-
der the rim of bis bat at nearly right
I&ogles with it His red weather-beaten
face did not show any new lines of ad-
elicing nee, bat his grizzly, iryo-gray
moustache and imperial were whitening
very fast. 11, wore • short, light
yellow -gray overcoat which had only two
bottom, and they were nearly ready to
fly off from the endue strain of Sberi-
dan's round figure. The coat, like the
hat, appeared to have been long oet-
worm. The trousers were a grey, plaid
and fitted very snugly to the deeeral'.
tat Iegs. His boots were tkiek saki
and unblocked. He wore no gloves.
The aide and rear views ..f tis General
suggested • low comely nett who had
walked uA the stage all made up for •
funny part, but when you came to look
the General square in the fore its eters,
solemn, composed lees were enough to
make nae forst his grotesque figure and
careless dram. Ow Sheridan leaves a
w ife and four young children— three
daughters sod • eon.
U. 8, Arm
Me Death • asrnelme t. !es Faintly ..d rhe
Doctors Tit ►•ser•, Aev..esaxss.—
Tbe a eee..l'e flood Deers nae Co-
mm, ae
..rete'es . Soldhe-r. ,
Noxst ter, Maes., Aug. 6 —Gen-
Sherideo'a death occured at 10 20 last
evening. Preroea to the sudden ap-
pearsooe ut heart failure at st,uut 9.30,
there had been no pnsoostione yester-
day of unfavorable clang& in his coolie
tion. The weather has been warmer
than usual, and the Neral was at times
• a little restless, but .saved g.nerslly
bright and cheeriul yesterday. Hie
,orae was strong. H. took s full supply
of nourishment, slept uccessionally as
usual, and the doctors and the family
wen in hopeful spirit. At 7 o'o{osk
Mrs Sheridan and the doctors went to
the hotel far mapper, and sour after their
return the mesal preparations for the
eight were made, At shoot 9 20 Colons!
Sheridan said "Good -night" to his
brother, sad went to the hotel,there bev-
ies been throesheet the day en sign
whatever of any usfavorabb chrige in
hie condition. At 6.30 symptoms of
hurt failure soddenly appeared, and
Drs O'Reilly sad Mathews, who were
with him .t the tine, ivvedismely ap-
plied tba remedies which proved eeeese -
1 no all similar priorities emanons.
But this time they were withoct died,
and despite all that could its done the
General gradually sank ieio s 000ditioa
of complete sn000soiaesetess, end at
10.20 breathed hie last Ya Sheridan,
the sisters Mahan sad J.sibeiw, sad the
faithful body servant, Klein, were also
e t his bedside tbro.ght his dying hear.
missal aatANORSItJTa
The week of embalming the Geetsts1's
body was begun this turning. Gonsnal
Sheridan has repeatedly upraised a
strong dislike of display in loos dt% and
in aoourdans with his w i hue sod toes.
of Mn Sheridaa,tha esrevosies In Ws.h-
iDgten are to be as simple as possible.
The funeral, however. will be a military
one, mid the ishlremeat will be mode et
vowed of the Soldiers' Home in Wash-
ington, if the.saersnCe ego be obtained
that his wide and children may be given
• resting plan beside hien.
IreetIO.Oy OONOOLEUCR
Manny of egwddemee to Mrs Shell-
dan are arriving M Neogeitt from all
parts of the .Min$.,. Mrs Sheridan
Men up with gent self-aootrvi, but is
terribly grief- The duek was
intensified by reason of the Amnia/ re-
ports and the apparently cheerful out-
look of the last few days.
T.M UENIIA/. a LAST •OCR
Itis learned today that sithoogb the
symptoms of the renewed hese failure
began some forty minutes before the
General's death,and although no possible
exertion was spared to being hiss out of
it by the examen application of all the
known remedies, the General's condition
wee appsreitly not more dangerous than
it hod been on a number of former
oecasioss, when the remedies snoop -
plaited their p.rpow. Injections of
digitalis,spplisatioss of masted pesters,
the use of ass.soels, end the repeated
employment of a pow.rfel galvanic bat-
tery were 'employed last night, bat ale
proud .•availing. Nen to noose the
General from the state of complete se.-
tal uncooscioesee•s into which he sank
after the first eyssptoms of recurring
heart failure ooearred, and in whish he
remained until he drew his last breath.
TIM DIAD 6strasi . a CARMEL.
Philip Henry Sheridan was born in
Soserest, 0., Match 6, 1831, of Irish
p.'4.(. Aspiring to become a gas
deet at the West Point Military Acade-
my, he wrote to the member of Con-
gress for the distrtet is which be Heed,
askieg for the appointment, sad gut it
at It yeses of age. A good, bet sot one
of the beet esholare, he allowed his high
spirit to lead him to Son a cadet who Im-
sided him, sed was seat leek • year is
his gttdestioe. AI 9s he left the Mili-
tary Academy. sad ea the horde, ha was
teetotal far the gnat work he was late,
called to perform. Whin the war bruin
net he wee s first lieotir.t, and when
be wee node .dasdiatt isiq�
loofa in the lit, t was his rwoissbte
hops net he milgbt win a major's sous -
sides before the war no over. Ia
three yen be was • major -veers/ In
Ire years man he was lieetensnt-geow
rat, and Stine years lobe, he ares ed
the .oswesd of the cry in whish he
had been se hrflleant and se*.e.3.1 s
In the war 4 aloe rebellion he
bight aA over tM Slots el Tennessee,
mane •host (p).aieka
eaet.elM+o WRdlae to l.1 d`th`e
bril/IDt f11.usa s h ltd when he
1.4 dna.. the salligteethe followed
ep the tete el I'es'his ee w
rood, Rlltyt1Waeg tales to GUNN�llieriia•'s
way ihseeste.idie. Bet military
arida Yoked dolts • *hly his deter-
ggegglee aid rad , his
ttMlore a , def duets.posereu
preemies
W fired hhIddiges though hie
Rte~ W tl( !ge OA In its
Ag Haa.ibel,
__ag the wt se .meas the
ysigkeellgny Nk, the 0w110-
from N. first arrival he
bee tie whsle eyes of the army open
BISHOP CARMAN.
Disou.Des the Question of the
Efficacy of Prayer.
U. mel oyes sh. Worse .f Me C..treverieen•
nets-- w..s be the Joao of e.ae.s
woes she n.hjrs bees settees—A
rea•ucat Ats.lysis .f tae tare.
item Tuesdays Globe.
Bishop Carman, being interview-
ed on the prayer 000troverey, said he
thought some of the cootentions of the
anti -prayer people might possibly be
treated oro gravely. Dr Carman then
spoke es follows—partly in an ironical
and partly in a serious tone—hie re-
marks constituting, in the (Polo's opin-
ion, one of the most convincing utter -
saes yet given on the subject under
discussion. He asid —
"'the joke for July, if it were not on
so serious business, would he the tug on
the prayer problem b atheists, agnos-
tics, infidels, materia ts, evolutionists
sad even SOWS Christian ministers who
give up their vocation to watch wolves
in wool sten y edllMte' sanctum& ll
all cavillers It prayer rad ridiculers of
praying people would spend their
strength in boaest prayer they would
find out more about 11 than in their pre-
sent mind they want to know.
"What is prayer anyhow 1 What
weed we know about It but fur the
Bible 1 Why should we set type in a
printing office to leen astronomy, use
the microscope to find out the taste of
sager or cherries, or read in • grammar
or geometry to ascertain the texture and
quality of cloth 1 It we really desire to
know anything of prayer, whynot go
n
whewe learn everything oit, and
without which instruction we know noth•
iog at all about it 1 For it is one thing
to have a done, and instinct, w apti-
tette, a predisposition, • capability; it u
entirely another thing to know ow to
direct, improve end apply it,
"Why don't those lazy peeeohses
brim dews run on peeked istrieh 1
Ie defsalt thereof, should not their sal -
ones be stopped of pnyen stopped 1
Why don't they keep off tsrthq.skes,
potato' bugs. smallpox and
cholera 1 Why don't they do sometbisg
for a living, to be eel Make some re-
turn to the people whose hard earnings
they secure by ddssios 1 Why don't
they beat their townsmen mnitid► and
very their names sad spells, sad repeat
thslr incantation i Why doe't they
dans, and leap, and sweat and pray 1
Why don't they get rain of the God
they worship, and into whom fear they
would like to cajole as ale 1
"What, after ell, if It be the prayers
of tawvery a.s, ppeeaagyime better and
►
logger they 'Mak, that ties,
W� after all, the
hem 11 re predate,
l
��
hied eoneties arspsre1.i their
tams 1 furelyy!tirir les V�ieU�t to
tins`! M pray is God, If prayer ie of sap
see, by some mesas tie other 10 save the
lave or
to the Teeth' by
the land rom grow•
i•g up is dre.k...... Thea mtdl.ed
etit.sties eta beat the world om barley.
So for es I know theme is tea section all
the wa Prothe entre tea Icebeltsthe b.
of J.pittem nr the _Awe d Attars that
yam the ve the berry mei a renew, ei.b-
mcde gel .Dine se His ht Vdby of the
The Orad R.ler of the adverse,
if Bo dere for say of doses thug., might
to born up barley Sey..nd hitt
and whisky erode nearer then ben
.p liens meg and *epos them to
e.eel..tiag harness. 11 WI weed
he soder a emend Geter.megt-_wed
ween Deldt say s a.e1—• demesnes
er • waning might dao n ee hero. Rich
ead•r.., waving grcata, fell ddei.s
abeaadit Amok. tad bode of wem
beget *de theft bhend•isste, in
'asked Giver, the awl out ybtwaf
thence hde. Mapsrblg their lath, im=
�ng their assied sod mead *seam
the people poet at their edam -
ed sore tato the tr.nmrl ei of tte Lord,
the works of b.m.v.leee and the .decor
,.ml.raione
GODERICH. ONT.. FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1888.
414
1 cf humanity. We squander so heti'
our substance, waste so little of it in war
totem feral.c. and vice, accumulate i
c with such honesty, preserve it in such
:'eternal and distribute with such este
le ,
hive end liberality that we ought to set
tans right off 1 do not know but, like
i the antediluvians, w• deserve a down-
: 1pour ikely
tint, day and forty nights. and
ikely only the covenant keeps it ofi.
Not that I think that the people of the
midland counties are sinners above all
men that dwell in Ontario, but having
lived in this section for ,.any yen, 1
judo* we bane received at least as much
as .c have used faithfully for the good
of wan under the moral government of
God. I notice emu this dry summer
you wouldn't know on circus day then
is any drought.
"They used to my 'Woe to the crown
of pude, the drunkards of Ephraim,
Whose glorious beauty is • fadirg Bower,
which are on the head of the fat valley
of them that are overcome with wine.'
If the preachers' prayers against drouk-
. nnesia and for sobriety, industry, quiet ;
for healing broken heart. mud restoring
✓ uined homes are worth anything, pro
bably they ought to bang a drought, and
possibly drought iu the barley holds may
help them. Ouse a man prayed that be-
cause of the idolatry of the people and
the wickedness of the roles it might not
rain ; and it rained not, so the Book
says, by the space of three years and six
months. Perhaps one of the best things
the .Etijallsof this hoar oould do, yea
powbly their solemn duty. is to cry to
(3od that n rain not till ere feel their
dependence and cease to turn tides of
blaming into floods of cursing. Bat
ammo( them are afraid that those ravens
that brought bread and ffesb in the morn-
ing and bread and Saab in the evening
are deed long ago. ft might hart their
income, especially if any of it came out
of the breweries or dlaloll.nes, to be
beard pubi e'y pleadiog on the Sabbath
that cursed he the barley : dried up be
the barley, wheat and hops that go to
drunkenness and greedy gain ; leaving
is enongb in mercy for our bread and
next sal ration.
INrELLiGENCE.
:A» TA EADIN APrimeness.
of Royal authority, then, ostitic, see-
, pend its own Act ur touch • Provincial
t Act to save the Empire. "No, no. We
believe in the 0onetancy of lobe, No iem-
mutabdity of taw, .0 we never think of
a higher law's setting aside, say tem-
porarily, • lower law, of an Imperial
law's suspondieg or venue a Colonial
law, sad g•, we sever petition the Queen,
prayin4 her Majesty to help es in the
Cologne. Mee ought to see it if they
ane agnostics sad hare public license for
i6norattce and stupidity ; there is higher
les and lows, as and there is philo-
sophy enough for .sen • miracle. There
is tinivetpl Law and Ronal law. And the
moral law of Ood is the universal law
sad undertioes, comprehends, pone -
ate", justifies and energises all physio.)
law. Prayer is • moral act under the
moral governmeet and law, sod so has
elI physical law for moral purposes ; not
for whims and caprices, not for wishes I
or woes, but for the good of man and'
the ,tory of God et its finger ends. Men
ignorant of these thing', whatever else
they know, may harp at prayer ; bet
thousands of praying men and woven,
at least as intelligent ae they, are daily,
yes hourly, working the realities of
prayer torn the tissues of their being
and the fabric of their life seMpentively
huuuuger and stat,, *s'k hued shin:
their muscle and bread into their toss.
What find of a emery .hoo{d we have.
what kind of people should we be, if all
were these regnanimuus ovill.rs and
harpies
Isn't it stra.e that the Lord Al-
mighty should, by anybody that admits
His existence. b. thought incapable, is
His local and temporary arraogoenot.— ,
for whet are earth's rain laws but loll
laws in the gnat universe of God 1—of
doing what any day the Parliament or
Legislature would denies its Premier
for profession of incapability to do, that
is, incapability to secure the interest,
the good of the Dominins or Provisos,
because, forsooth, county or township
resisted, refesed to be crossed say by a
canal or railroad r
'4We learn astronomy with the tele-
scope. We learn the flavor of cherries
by testing them. We Doors u primary
"{meats by chemical analysis, and
verify py experiment We get geometry
and *ammar by tesehera std hooka
Why not give prayer half the chess?
Why Dot to to Its organon. the Holy
(Scriptures 1 "Oh, that iv taking every-
thing se granted at the start t0 use the
tables sod the telescopes 1 Is it taking
e aerytbiag as granted in philosophy to
are Aristotle's organon or gallon a, and
test it sad prove it as every .cticlar
does 1 The Prayer Mastic stale, "What-
soever things ye desire wTiss "r7'
believe that ye receive them an ye
shall have them." lotensest desire, the
agony of starving millions, does not
make prayer. Frantic faith does not
make prayer. Bet the right done and
the right trust linked by the right ek-
ing make availing prayer. "This is the
confidence that we have in Hun that if
we ask anything .eoording to His will,
He hearth as, and if we know that He
hest es, whatsoever we ask we know
that we have the petitions we desired of
Him.' "If ye abide in me, and my
words .bide in you, ye shall ask what ye
will sad it shall be done unto you." "If
ye .hall ask anything in my name I will
do it."
"Now try the multiplication table on
the earn. Put the rale on the prayer.
'Omni .s, 0 Lord more rain. We want
.or. barley, sod we world like the
highest pantile price for tt, too. We
remember the happy time when the
Kerman war, slaughtering its tboonseds,
pee es two dollen a bathe) for wheat
Row we wast, 0, how we want, mon
barley; and they will make mot. bon
sod we will have more fineries sad
luxuries, sad perhaps we can lift ems of
the ,stuffs s that our worldliness sed
extravagance, ..pesially in hard ....esu,
have beoeght on es. Oh, give es more
rain, vie pentane for out ezewive
seek* sad herd., more hope and more
barley for more hew, and more rye for
more whiskery—we hardly like to my for
the Redeemer's sake—w. just say, Ames.'
Why dont these preachers go at it mad
posy up rail 1
"If they have any beldame hese et all,
any claim to the 's rasped mad
e A
r.isarsMaNem
o,elder.
weeny.mightier, grander than
the British mise ; they goad its We
Wrests .d ars governed by S. law.
Their Inc the Lord God Alesigbty,
govern. the ..,li for moral perpa.is,
sad sot for beets, •ad busy. ' Wbee
these morel parries are involved Hs
name .cots,• enter the pbyelal rune, for -
ter I.w'--•o o , sesP••d, donuts se -
U60 alteusties say. For a
high sod Previewed
purpose the I.egnla-
tmrs el Onside anent evade a township
leIr. 'Roo no ; w. are believes in the
msastaney, the essheseblee.m of law.
We protege ; the Ontario Lgisl.tere
.assn!, to .ve the whole Pretense,
ehsage m.aielpsl law or atep'ed sane
load repdatioa' The 1.04 re,.Lti.e
meet or anuses taste pre.edene.. sod
eed the
tb.o o.s/th,, sf*ora►deee great tsil..y
out et 1tn li..s
mudhead sed ono tearde! poli. inn -
the Ivk seem damage of
ted., That is the way we do ibises ti
*ft waltatey. The Iseeseist Ian
whin
the red y es , bagof ttt. Z
ash*, er the welfare of all hes L
ta «•, mooed toei�e
tissue l bet our
Week the n '•s
hor-
ity and power of the (ow •• TttIS
IRELAND'S CAUSE.
Balfour a Tlctics of Coercion are
Bound to Fail.
arrival .f *Sr Thseses b..es4 is Irel•a.—
A. IoW e.r.'a Creel TrrNesesi le •
Ura b Jail—Ur. remelt Thewws
Dow. Sao a•aeUet
Sir Thomas Y.mosd, arrived at Kings-
town, Ireland, from England teat night.
This is the first time he has been in Ire-
land since his return from America. fie
met with a oordial reception and was
presented with addresses by the Kings
town ooncissirmers and the South Coun-
ty Dublin Registration society. In re-
plying to the address.. Sir Thomas spoke
in terms of warm praise of the patriotism
of Irish Americana, who, he said, had
accorded him a hearty weenie every-
where.
Mr. lane, M.P. for Cork, writes
to the press that when he was in prison
he was unable to est the prison food,
sltboogh he was starving. Dr Ridley
towed him to go into the hospital ; "bo-
nes," he said, "if you do not they will
dory' you to death here." Dr Ridley
then brought him better food and finally
said, "I must either defy the prison's
board . r have an iogoeet upon you, and
se I don't want a verdict of murder
sgslnst met will give you exercise de-
spite them -- A few day. afterwards Dr
Ridley ..me to Mr Linn s s1l is an ex-
cited state, and said he had seoeivd a
terrible reprimand from Dublin for
allowing Mr Lane to take exercise. He
also said he had orders to sign a ee,tlfi-
sate, authorising the isfictiun of punish -
which would certainly kill Mr
Lan He main begged Mr Lane to go
jet. the hospital, sod he seceded,
Mr Parnell writes to the Timms dial -
levering Mr Chamberlain to publish the
Great Government scheme alleged to be
ii Parire l's baedwriti•g. Mr Parnell
says : 'lie pebli.ation of the scheme
will felly establish the entire oonsisteaey
of my publie and private declaration oa
the subject. If Mr Chamberlain still
declines to publish th...beta, and eon -
teats himself with &steaiiensg versions of
its purport, the peblle will appreciate
his oond ct and soderstsed that he pub-
lisatw.n .o.1d mother sobstamiab his
truthfjlne.s nor *tedious his candor.
The same remark also hs the as
toosding otete..est of ch nes p -be
twee, O'Shea. Let Idea pent the alleg-
ed Cosmos Ast with the ellceatin.s in
my hand in hraekste." Mr Paro4111
thee argues at lemgth that it wee only
Chamberlain's illegitimate extension of
the Dublin Committee @shone foo merely
administrative porpoises which he favor -
d is 18rtlomed that he be sines demean
.d it. lie seri : 'Seek a ashen
would have herr • twit ble asideve se.t
for our small party of 111. hum the veers
of 86 Irish members sad Lord Omeer-
von', declartio,m to me in favor of w
Irish Parliament fe edcred h ecsidcr.•
GA of Trishieli.peu .blm.
mid I laid dews b pal o. at the Imo
pwW
Hotel dialer la tie esteem d
1888. ser view le MIK from whist we
weer departed, wee that the Agostino
of the proposed Cana should be
y selmtnistrative mod that it shoed met
be snowed is the slighted nitres as •
substitute int the Fullerton whisk 114
Oh.vbsrlai. pes,u.d If Mr Cheesiest -
Ida publishes my Weis, it will be sun
that he mod. early he MIShave 1...
felly s.giilsted with ow views"
FROM THE CAPITAL.
Latest Political and General
News from Ottawa.
.seed.• lodes .uve•eeese of rel■tilers -
•espeNed M Creole, arse Apeoist.
reste tall►Its woo ,he Farr \..es
frees the Carafe!.
Aesii(INIanlA sutorin:e.
The writ for the election of Eastern
Assiniboie has been issued, and the
nomination will take place on the 12th
of September, polling being fixed for
the 20th,
Hoeitzi TY or Wrrl$T.aM
Sir Hooter Langevin left on Monday
for Juliette to lay the foundation stone
of the public budding. there. Hon Mr
Chapleau will also stied, and a polio -
cal set-to ei likely to be the result Sir
John Macdonald goes to Kingston on the
11th September to attend the Exhibition.
Hon John Henry Pope, who was in the
city for the put few days, and who is is
very poor health, left for hie hese at
Cooksbire, Quebec, this evening. Sir
Adolphe Carestiros
today. -
A IMP EOmer.D.
The teeter of the N'.rwegii bargee
Thor, welch was wrecked at Petpiswich
Head, in the County of Halifax, on Sun-
day last, has advised the Marine Depart-
ment that after the crew were taken o6,
the ship's stores, clothes, rigging, etc.,
wen stolen and the cabins of the vessel
dismantled.
• CAPTAIN St•$PG'IDEI,.
The Marine Department has been in-
formed that the lova Marioe Board in-
vestigation 51 Portsmouth, Bong. , on
July 14, suspended the certificate of
Capt. Daniel E. Mahoney of the ship
May Stewart of Amherst, N. 8., fur
misconduct and tyranny on the high seas,
on account of his ill treatment of first
tate Richard Ewald, who wag suffering
from dropsy cud heart disease.
NEW APPOINT1(M'(T i.
L. C. Pereira, who was private seem
tary to Sir. D, L. Macpherson and after-
wards to Hos. Thomas White, has been
appointed to the same position by Hon.
Mr Dewdney, and J. H. Balderson, who
for weeral year has been in the Auditor
General's office. has been appointed
private seevery to l'oetmastee-(nonoral
Haggard
IZHrm/TS FOR 1Hm FAIRY.
The staff at the Experimental firm is
at present engaged in preparing • num-
ber of exhibits of this year. Cenral
farm produce for the principal fall fairs.
It is proposed to send to the leading
fain in the provinces samples of .boat
two hundred named varieties of Densis
grown hen, as well as photographs of the
small fruit crop. Information with re-
ward to the growth of the varieties shown
will be given. It is anticipated that
these exhibits will prove quite a pones
of attraction in the places where they
will be shown.
xlwoR !NOTE*.
The Senate debates for last session are
being distributed. Iodexiug the Com-
mons debates has not yet been complet-
ed.
It is stated that the Governese.t has
osrokssd two 40 -pounder kilns for the
use of the battery .t Charlottetown, P.
E. L The battery is at present using
smooth bona
The detachment of the First Stilted'
Forfarebire Artillery, which had pro-
posed visiting Canada this fall, will be
unable to ooze, as none of the officers
an ,vest, if coovenisut to sumo mpany
them.
Hon Mackenzie Dowell will leave foe
Manitoba and British Columbia os Act
Ib on a business tour, visiting Wert
Lyons, Winnipeg, Lethbridge and
n umber of other planes.
Professor Lotter of London, Eng.,
passed through the sit Tuesday bis
way to Manitoba sad on the Northwest
He represents the Church Colonisation
Sreiety which has settlements is the
wighbocbood of Q.'Ahdl..
Pnatmster-General Haggett returned
feel Q.eb.e Tuesday .gel entered epos
the duties of hie often
FROM WASHINGTON.
What in Going on at the Ameri-
can Capital.
ae.arer I llasowes Donal epee ss the
,bl subs esewitss-7!. D. Mhta 5.a.s'.
,trap-TY►eewe as Wean—Tse e..
,noses.
Frey oar .we Oarreapsadoat.
Wsskiagtea, Asgsst 6, 1868
Senator Edmsnds ie a mw of snag
prejadieS. He hes always hems ep-
ic .peen exe.stive s.aiou of the
lint when a mons rel his party
Amid ed to seaside, the IshiM.s treaty
in apes ssssiomg, he voted with thea
But be hes bikes no pert is the dine
atom .ot widetadi.g the het that he is
on of the beet poled and M the sato-
jest
at•jest is the.o..ery. Net e.)y dem be
Mem to hike say pert ie the these elect,
hat he will tut eves espy lis mat
while the.ebjed la ktdese the Snake.
Some psogle are i.dined to evident his
.eta..essewlet severely, .rad to emcee
him of .dki.i Monose he 'Mid sot
hare hie owe way. However he is about
as iadibre.t to r6. r pini,r,s „( other
people se any nom 1 eel- .A■ B,
proved that fully in tLa as.peyt• e.1
1884
la these an organized 'ornament to
brims sheet a war with England ' Too
n eve rowan this may appear a Iodterum
gnsttttee, but in vias ..f the r..n.rk• of
sat
two Seesa—Rittilehrrrer mid Trlter—
on tae Ano, of the Seam, sith.n the past
week, it berateo a re.11y amuse yes -
tion. L the eters. of hie remade
against the fisheries treaty, Mr 'feller
said that the Trued States mould
never be • free nation m ileas it as-
serted that which lol.'.ied io it, mad
unless it wee ready and willing t., steel
up for that which the treaty of 1:S3 re-
cognized is it -whether that wen iii
boundaries or ire independence. Tho
people of the United States w,'uld get
their rights peaceably if they eouI4,
forcibly if they must. Rather behgerset
talk for a satin• without a navy, taa'1
it 1 But Mr Riddleherver used sea
stronger language. He said among other
things, that we would never be • Na-
tional Government until we bare whip -
. d Esglwd for the third time. Theta
is no denying the fact that abuse of Eno.
land in any shape u popular, perticul,-
ly so with the pioneer generation.
_ Many shrewd politicians think that
the Senate of the fifty-first Coogress .i11
1e a tie, sod that the Vice Preatdsst
elected in November will have the 4. -
Mktg vote.
The House committee on educative'
have reported favorably the bill to estab-
lish • national industrial institute in
this city.
Fenton' Gorman and Edmunds had
quite • wrangle on Friday on the subject
of Canadian railroads. Mr Gorman
twitted Mr Edmonds with being the at-
torney for railroads whom interests he
had to officially act upon as Senator.
One cf the signs of the times is the
alacrity with which any sort of resole -
tion for investigating Canadiao eneroaek-
meote, or alleged encroachments, on oer
rights, is passed by Congrea Mr Cal-
i lom's resolution in elation to the Cow
diao Pacific railroad wed through the
Senate Friday with s rush, although op-
pred by iofuential Senators of both
parties. The "don't tread os m.' feel-
ing is rapidly spreading in this country,
god it bodes ill for—•ovobody.
The Sewte tariff bill has not yet boss
reported, sad no one •even able to my
just wh.ji Jt will be, though some Roo
pnblioy'.sesatora have set the 20th iia,
as the' -data
The attesdanos at the sessions of the
filmes ie very small these warm days.
Mr. Outb•.ite thinks the pumas 1
any Pacific railroad legislation at too
present session very doubtful
Booster Palmer thinks the wished
Washington lobbyist is • myth. I
don't. i
Senators Hoar, Alliabta, Hale. Dolph,
Pugh, Eustis, sad Bloget, have bees
appointed a else committee ander the
Her resolution, to investigate the com-
mercial relations between Canada and
the United Staten.
As soon se anything cnncernioe the
ex -soldiers is tentio.ed in Cowen
look out for • bitter political discussion
This was exemplified in tote Home
Thursday, she the Republicans tried
to pat &•qn yadmeat on the gen-
eral d appropriation bill. The
discussion covered shout everything that
affects the soldier. and wee warmly par-
tiotpst.d 1n by half • dozen sumbua
The vee of the Northern Peke Rail-
road easiest Guilford Miller, a home-
stead settler, whish has been poodles in
the Interior Department for two yeses.
has been denied against the ,unread.
The deetlisn, it is said, affects &boat
two thometied similar mess in the Gent
al Lel O_..
The Seadry Civil appropriation has
been pained by the Peace, with • large
number of cmendae.ts.
Chief Justice Taller has leased one of
the eo.dteat private reddened' io this
oily for s keg tees. He will sot take
the oath eft eM sstil October.
In the British douse of Comm me last
ev.aion Sir James Fmgeeson, parliamen-
tary suautLry to the Foreign °pies,
stated that Bir Lionel West. Brink
minister at Weeliagto., had been is -
emoted to request the Visited Stats
0iover•emmmt to p stpn.e the al, at Poet
Townsend of four Brutish .eheoaar.,
pending
u an
gairy into the legality of
their A e.retsl estimate places the number
of hoods employed during the eesssser
by sh Ietidisg lumber drum at Chanties
at .early 8000. sad the ease Ouse em-
ploy to the wood, during the whiter
3800. The hember.w my Chet idly Ills
per mat. of the employee be the mile
dories dot essmer go te the intim la
the wider, the red .f their winter
e s.tt• an nide .p of e.lside moa. Of
the 3800 tato elle work in the .hentieo
dorms floc ter about 9000 liv.la Bail
.04 pgbpo.t winOttawa,r.
1000 1. tbe maim -
hag esu dreag r.
The attendee of Collectors of Cashless
i, deemed by a singlet jest imbed fen
the lase of the Assistant Counimi,ner
te ,hens 1111 aid 8811 of the twill, under
dick export dati.n of $1 par diegim 1
ea spews lege, and $2 pea thass.d es
pia. lege wq1pe•edIt he bees thought
that stnse elle.., i.t.rpr ttthe wised
"loge' te nm.ae� � bedroily. Cedar
for nom
sir pi •, weld sot be regarded as
enable. The impn.itios d dens,
however, is imperative ne all sprees .ad
pies kg.. .n easter ender what sunsow. m, kr what p.rpses intended.
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