Newspaper Page Text
»«& lottcnsa & Mga^tiggc,
_ „, ■ Mr. Lincoln, and while in 'Washington
The Hunnj s ® n V** ^as j Dviled to an informal meeting of tbo
For the Ttiegnph and cabinet. The question of the disposition
I ring the land where many States are of j e jr eraon Davis and other prominent
"SU* settingis a noondaysun, | Confederates, after th^-toafabe atg-
31A HIS WHITE ELEPHANT.
| The Great Eutera Vainly Seeking a
Buyer »ta Tenth of ller Coat.
|==5SiS»-a3.j|gg i SSy5|sgfggS
New England in the East revives the Old; «» »“ ^ ^JJStSSiSSS^
TholVeet supplies the world with grain and >a|d * <lNo¥ *| Mr . Lincoln, yo „ have invit- g“ ■— si"r /sambard^! Branelf bf
Th. sK8'«™» «* •<“ d *“*■““ £fi“ I 8 & “»rf urSttto *»“•. he J, “Sf.S
TO.g!S?!Srtn«-.sgfwTSSfuSJTfflfS S3Si!2USi>i!SS5i*.ai«n.
song. Sl’ri of a stow Whe^ l’ww a bov bntlib® stuck on the ways, and not until
mil0 Washington remains a household L n Indiana I went to *
While n Sewall" Jackson reaps eternal P 011 ^ ° n f e mJ own S ^ JmSJ L» « ,n P lo > e Vd n immoS’foJIays
Vnd Robert Lee a lustrous hero shines ^Tand^whathT w^dofng “ne^ eV“n 4hen theTwere^‘exerting a pressure
The South shall flourish like '-a land of **andwhat He tag, to the square mch When at
The Z’of .very, which long
w KI» StatMond ED8landonco £&s tsalzsssittsxrxte
issS^vsssts^ U^Aj
“ “" C ‘' ,h “ t 2lS2f°itarlr U ^iMSbuiS N?.°SjSr?.nnd“»0 P r|e to-
me bell. slaves had been ,ost in lauucbin " ber. Her *11-
I is.'s^smssis
Were glad accusers of the guilty Sonth.
At length the day for abolition came;
Thu “Rebol” boro the undivided blame, _
While Pharisees, forgetful of their own, I At one time Lincoln penned a message I ^ ionn imr rmi-miamler Contain Har-
For her transgressions set their judgment to Congress recommending the appropria- i» au » Jd Cunarder, ’was drowned
JftTSSSKSSSrsSi Tto
Just lUnven looked on with nit, mHin eye, tl lgt the confederate, would Uy down «*“■ I'.dVenmtcndedfor UNpego-
Beheld tho victim’s tears and hearddus cry, t heir arms and acquiesce in the abolition 8 er t™ 110 * and w — "gg* to cal ? 7 . 800
Tlien bade tho South the bondman’s rights ,, 1 :Ti„ i,;,i.n fitst-class passengers-, 2.000 second-class
isoneiu mo tiowui o ® ■r—r-j
Then bade tho South the bondman s ngnts # _ _
And sonUxer’on her way to sin no more. I MbineConly"one member favoring^
Anu sent nir ' the President di'icked It into a pigeon
Let no man say sho sinnodnnd suffered not; hole, where it ever remained.
Sho boro a crushing blow for every blot; a O iieat military MESSAGE.
11 When Gen. Grant was besieging Rich.
esce in me anounon — tt
nf slavery.. 1. „« Ug-~b« g £3 StX ffi53S?-Wi n ni. ot«0
and l.aw tnird-ciass, wuu a crew 01 w
men, but there was no market for such a
traffic. June 17, 1SC0, under Captain
Vine Hall, she sailed for New York.mak-
“"K.r“ r "• assessass*£?&£ ^sr^sTiK^SiSSsSs
Since then, her progress, like tho sinning can stockholders being again called upon to
Has onward moved with swift advancing Grant* “I am informed by General Sber- JJjjjjJJ* menSSsSd BoodwwIce £rry-
might; . man that it the thing is pressed you cau 8am ® summer see urn goou J
Th6 W i±J ,Dd blaClt “ m0tnaI trU3t 1B ' capture Richmond. Let the thing be the great slflp ami
And break ’tho bread of feUowship in P resse • at vicksduro. hound a vocation for her. On June 30,
l " ac °- While unsucj Mg *• "0* Wiethe new Atlantic
Malicious slanders oft are spread abroad ; cessful siege of Vicksburg was being con- My^y’accomplished July 27. On the
The tongue of hate, a vilo envenomed ducted by Gen. Grant, a great hue and cry 12^ W a^mbw she lifted tbo old
sword, . was raised abont bis incorapetency, aud a I - r n hich was rolaid, and
Assassin-like, would stab her growing pressure almost irresistible was brought ^of *805, iraa rouw, Ima
fame, „ . . . to bear upon Mr. Lincoln to remove him »■? tb e 19th returned triumpnanuy to
And sell her blood forsitverhngsof shame. I nd subs ^ tute anolber gener al in hb |
Lot none who hear tho right and love the place. Everj^ody around Lmcoln. evcn P k the sheriiPs hands on her
1 Washburoe, Grantboest friend, couclud- *•““ Jn j 1869 sho laid tbo
ed that Grant would have to b® removed _. Atlantic cable, aud in Jauuary,
to satisfy the general desire. Lincoln was * „ cab [ c ‘' j„ ig73 she once
about U> yieTd to the pressure, but at SSjKSSSl on a cable-laying
this juncture T. Lyle Dickey, now chief I d ition. As a business enterprise,
justice, of Illinois, who vaa on Gen jj 0 ^ uver sbe bas never paid. Last year
eral Grant s staff, came to Washington I 0 . value then being
and called upon the FmMent. placed at $433,575. At present tho Great
mentioned to Dickey the universal dis I . • iit»ed with four cable tanks,
satisfaction about Gran^ and asked ‘™ r c “d most of
Dickey for his opinion of 1dm. Dickey I diniuz saloons but all can be easily
related to the President the circumstances ,‘“ oved and the slip lilted as originally,
of tne battle of Pittsburg Landing. aii -pj ic nom | ua i power of her paddle engines
Grants maneuvers and splendid S/meral , qqq i, orse> an d her screw engines are
ship on that memorable held. Retold Qf lj000 ], orse .power. Her boilers, which
bow little confidence he had felt in Grant I tubular aud situate amidships, are
previous to that time, and expressed the number, of which six, by Fores
admiration that hb achievnients there - . the other two
trno . ,
Confido in that calumniating crew,
Who lie for party, policy, or pay,
And slaughter reputations for their prey.
Tho South is human, liable to err—
Let suclf as sin not cast a stono at her;
But let her fiercest foes stand still and seo,
Her prospect b a grand prosperity.
Tnioxnv H.uilkv,
John-street Chapel, Bedford-row, W. C.
London, Sept. 12,1681.
AIIK AII.i 31 "blS COLS.
youth of nineteen years, was the only one
to care lor the dying woman. The youth
until recently has been employed
at Point Breeze in an oil refinery, so that
all day long lor weeks the suffering
woman lay on her couch with no voice to
cheer her, no hand to minbter to her
wants. “It wasn’t consumption alone,
sir, that she died of,” said a woman
yesterday afternoon in the neighborhood;
«<ft was neglect and starvation as much as
anything.”. • The corpse yesterday lay in
a rude box, in a dark, dirty and cramped
room. The place looked as though it bad
been the scene of a recent frauds, and on
investigation this was found to be the case.
During Saturday a party of roughs in a
charitable moment collected in ths neigh
borhood $9 for tho purpose of defraying
the expenses attendant on giving the wo
man a decent burial. This sum wa3 given
to the son, who added $7 of his meagre
savings to that collected andpntlhe$16 in
hb inside vest pocket. That night
neighbors, who had been invited by the
boy to hold a wake, consumed great quan
tities of bad liquor aud while the orgies
were at their height tho roughs who had
collected the money repented of their be
nevolence and went to tho scene of the
wake, where they found the son asleep on
the floor. They rifled hb pockets of the
whole fund, which they invested in whis
ky for the use of the mourners. When
spoken to yesterday tho son said he hadn’t
any idea who would bury his mother or
where tho body would be interred, aud
didn’t seem to care. William Bowles, the
husband of the woman, was sentenced on
the 30th of September, by Magistrate Col
lins, to twelve months in the house of
correction for habitual drunkenness. He is
known at the Second district station house
as an old offender. On Christmas day,
1S75, he was arrested for committing a
nameless assault on a pretty little eight
year old girl, and on February 4,1876,
was sculenced for this offense to solitary
confinement iu the Eastern penitentiary
for five years. An officer last night said
that Bowles served in the 110th or 118th
Pennsylvania Volunteers and deserted.
He was captured and sentenced to be shot.
Lincoln granted him a reprieve and final
ly he was pardoned.
All inquiries made last night as to
where the dead woman would be buried
proved fruitless.
FedajognM nr 1 Preaidenla.
St. Louie Globe Democrat.
“He was mortal and he had been a
schoolmaster,” is the brief and suggestive
way in which Sir Walter Scott describes
one of his characters. It is an open ques
tion whether this was intended to be
praiseful or only excusatory, but what
ever Sir Walter may have meant, itbeer-
Sidney Lanier cut out hb life’s work very
broad—the largeness of the exquisite pat
tern is seen plainly even in the fragments
of it wrought out. Alas, it was not only
a life work, hut a lifetime work, and only
the fragment of a life was given him to
I do it In. It Is wonderful that he should
TOBACCO PHMXE PACKAGES,
Tke Business Hurl by a UMppithea.
(Mssflhsls*.
New York Sun.
Nearly all the manufacturers of chew
ing tobacco in aud near ■^®^ ^”^' l a i “ d I L»ve done it so well, with that faiming
some of these who mannfoctora ■molting aQd f ,, e frame of bis tbat feebly nur-
tobaccosandcigsretUa,have!been«tmd- tured B brahl| an d in the face
ing the sale of their goods by giving tbe f„, g duty which the peed to
sway prizes,sachas albums, pocket books, alwa !* bread-winning forced him
pipes, tickets to Coney Island, umbrellas, ^ di#cba Le. He never complained; be
watches, jewelry, and money. In nearly I nover re p ine d; tasks did not seom
every case tub was u d ° n « “ eat S£f tasks to him, and labor itself was touched
orders packed m with tho tobacco. The JJ“ bt ~ ’ A lways cheerful, always
orders for all the prizes, except the money, b ^ f ” %iV,y S patient, he made even
were redeemed by the ^nursctureri at “ESS wearing hb wrvanls, and lay
their offices. The money orders were bed wr ftiug poetry where other men
cashed by ratldto, wlw sold pie bave listened only for the doctor’s
goods, and as. an incentive the retailera fd^teps. But, because Lanier set bim-
were paid as high n ton centeonthe j ^ bro ” d work _ wit h wounded
dollar for their trouble. **®*.“¥® lungs and the moat fragile of frames his
big Peters, in gay colors, announced the only resources—the larger part of that
magnitude of the *® JjSJten* wotk which he expected to do, and which
given away. In other ewes processions hJj frlends kuew t ^ atbe ^id d o,remains
in the streets called attention to the . in ., coinn ii, be d i w e ko0 w by the
prizes, while still other sketches, by the prelimmaiy models, what
dealt out prizes and said nothing about tbQ ^mpi^d statue would have been. It
them. Tlie scheme was found by all to ^ tbjd work> i be perfecting of which only
produce large Mid qutek «*«; death ^jd ,rrest, that thb proposed
manufacturer told the reporter tbat memorial is intended to crown. It
ders so immense came in twenty-four . .. . j. f which was a poem
hours after the first announcement that " it8eir an ’ d w bich he exhausted
lie could not supply half the demand. He * a noble and lofty 0 udeav-
had expected the same result in two ora , that we seek to hoqor—honoring our-
weeks, but it followed in one day. selves in the act by proving that we re-
One of the tobacco trade newspapers, of j n , eottber and appreciate it. Had that life
which there are three in the dty, called be0n pr0 i 0Il ge d) it would have borne much
attention to the practice asteml ing to de-1 far8 aud generous fruit to him, to his art,
moralize the trade, aud thus the United tQ his ea ^j t to bis family. We cannot
States authorities were led to investigate comp | ele b [s poems, nor live out his life;
the matter. It was found tbat^ lsw bat CAU at | east> anticipate in some
which has been practically a dead letter * - ^ —• - • • **- *—*•-
NlebolM Teat Beech, el Ewclend,
SMud bjr llM rwllee—HccouMM *»-
hum While laSswTwksxl Preka-
bljr Journrjriac (a niufears to Ba
tons Mid SsAr Arrest tor ataeoa-
daet.
From the New York Sun. nth,
Mr. Nicholas Ten Bosch, the wealthy
grain merchant of Liverpool, who has
been missing since September 9th, was
found yesterday and identified by hb
wife, who recently crossed the ocean to
prosecute the search for him. After the
Jersey City police gave up the search
which they began at the request of the
consul for the Netherlands, because the
missing merchant telegraphed bis wife
from that city tbat be iutended sail’ng
for home on the Bothnia, they
turned the case over to Cap
tain Eakiu, of the Leonard street
station. Captain Eakin read on the back
of the consul’s letter to Chief Murphy, of
Jersey City, a description of the missing
man, aud was struck by the similarity of
the description to tbat of a man who
called at the station on September 15 to
complain that he had been robbed of hb
watch and chain ou the previous night.
He was a short, pale, thin-faced mac, in
poor health, and with such a defect in one
iiqib that it dragged behind him as he
walked with the aid of a stout cane. He
was dressed in broad-cloth, and wore a
silk hat. He told the captain tbat he had
credit in this city lor $100,000, that he was
a foreigner, and that be was an
operator in corn. He said hb lameness
was caused by paralysis. The Captain
introduced Detectives D. J. Fogarty and
push
CnpnbllHlicd Chapter* or Ills Public
l.lfc—A Talk with Bis Friend and
Biographer, Ward B. JLamon—Facts
That were Nuppressod I admiration that his achievnients mere i Jfgo7 i and the other two,
The Denver Tribune, of October 16, had aroused for General Grant as a great by ’jj llmpbreyS) pennant & Co., were new
contains a letter from Boulder, Col., giv- coMmMnder.todadvftodMr; j' 1S 70. The number of plates in the
in, tb. nt-uac. of » loUivlow .10. ^“TlSS SPviSS* - SaitW-t
Ward H. Laraon, the former law partner bad promised Lincoln to capture thMj 1Q ^ toni of ir ° u was used i n lier
and biographer of Lincoln. Some of Vicksburg by the 4th of July, construction, and sho was the first vessel
these lacia, now for tho first time pub- Dickey said it wcialdsurelybedonoa filted wilb stcaa-stecring gear.
lislied, are of an intensely interesting na- further expressed his belief that Grant
turc. The correspondent says: I was the greatest genere* or the age. Alter | old Tiger Tall Bead
stanton asd lixcoln. this Beo^Tade radI the <***» °°^ u ^ I ..My old man, my father, old Tiger
I gather from Col. Lamon some facts to press for Graut s removal. But lie _ bi „ s i ee p_no get'up no more.”
regarding the appointment of Edwin M. told tbemof Dickey s oplnioii &iid o These g W ere the words in wbicliyoungTi-
S tan ton to the office of Secretary or War own faith in Hickey, to whom he lia {old us at Miami of the death ol the
by Mr. Liucoln which have never been himseif al w a y. s old chief. Tiger Tail was nearly ninety
published. In order to make the history lawyer, and that on Dickey s assurance n # la n 0 f stature, over six feet,
of thb appointment complete In all Its he Gen Grant well proportioned, and agile even at hb
meaning and bearings it will be neces- On the 4th advanced age-his hair was vvhite and hb
sary to go back to the year 1858, when .planted the » id “ r ' ou . s v g“ of 1 eyes somewhat dim, and these were re-
Abraham Lincoln was procuring law to Union 0Te ^*2amubaSm aI1 J’ 1,10 on 'y ouLward ai S ns of , a SCJ ki*
Springfield, III., and Edwin M. Stanton the Assassination. m / nwar was very dignified, and he was
was at the bead of bis profession in Cm- For some time PWjJoB**® the I notec j f or integrity in bis dealings. He
cinnati. The celebrated McCormick’s dents death, pei haps as tar back as a y ea ri I scetned t Q command the respect of all the
reaper and mower case was before the Colonel Lamon, w b °was marahal of^the a o e t j ng , r Ind i a ns, and was always wel-
United States Court in Cincinnati. Stan- district wjhad wated? of the by tbe w i llle3 of OU r settlement,
ton was retained as the couusel-in-ehief dent, had been apprehensive of 6an„tr to wou i d liave made a line ideal for an
to the cmc for McCormick, with. T. D. hb life; in consequenceef whichhe {“^“'ro rnanee, aud sometimes would,
Lincoln, of Cincinnati, and Abraham doubled the arouml tlje White Jn h|> appearatice> justify Cooper lu
Lincoln, of Illinois—Liucoln having House and remained there h.mself al - I pictur 1 0 3 of ..chin-ga-chook,” or the
been McCormick’s attorney in Chicago, constantly day and ni S bt ’ There was no fath £ r Uuca3> Ue was lu ny couscious of
When Lincoln arrived to Cincinnati well-defined reason v the ta?k advanced age, though his appearauce
to attend the trial he called upon sions, but they were aroused by the talk ind icated a long lease of life. He often
Stanton, who treated him iu so rude and that was mysteriously S°‘“S ar °“nd, un- JgjJJjUi to llim ^ lf ^ « 0 i d too much,”
impoliteamannerthathewent toMcCor- defined by threatening anonymous letters I i duiiabIeto lmut as wheu ho was a
mick and infonued him that ho shoula hearing threats and “JS. 1 . 1 "* I -.young man” on accouut of his failing
spiracles, etc. The Lp.],, Sometimes he would come to
and Surratt crowd were unknown as a 1 ». brln^in" a few farm articles,gophers,
conspiracy. Lamon wateh,^nd fe hTs ca.me would lay’lb old
Swhere. *S3Vb&&S£ I riff® faithful old scrvantofp^ycars-
It was discovered tbat the man In tb®
buggy hired hb rig at the livery stable of
W. SV, Dingmau, corner of Gratiot avenue
and Farmer street, for it was returned
from Birmingham the next day by a man
hired for that purpose. That person trav
eled North on tbe cars, and although be
was subsequently identified from certain
descriptions giveu of him he escaped ar-
rest. *
A few weeks prior to thb an establish
ment in Cleveland vu robbed in a simi
lar manner, and a few weeks later than
tbe bank affair in Detroit a bank in Co-
hoes, New Forfcy vu robbed in almost
precisely the same manner' as its sbter
institution in this city. In the last named
instance, however, one of the men was ar
rested, bat before the Detroit authorities
became aware of that fact he was released
on bail to the amount of $1,000, forfeited
lib recognizance and was apparently loet
in the many haunts of thieves in the
great cities. The second person in th®
transaction was chased down in Albany,
where he bid himself for some time in a
closet, when, feeling that he was suffo
cating, made his escape Into auother
room, threw off his clothes, got into bed,
and when the officers reaehed his apart
ment feigned sickness in the most natural
manner possible, and escaped recognition
and capture. Tbe man who figured In
the buggy in Detroit and vas subse
quently arrested for the Cohoes bank
robbery was none other than the noto
rious
MINNIE MARE,
a thief of Israelitbh extraction, and whose
real name is Emmanuel Marx. This man
Marx is considered one of the most skill
ful iu his thieving profession. He is
about 45 years of age, resembles lu ap
pearance a well known and popular gov
ernment official of Detroit, and is con
nected by ties of blood with one of the
most aristocratic Israelitbh families “*
Chicago, which is his home
ED. BUBR.
sometimes called the “Kid,” and one of
the most nimble-fingered and adroit
thieves in the country. The authorities
in Detroit have been patiently following
these two men, bat have always been just
a little too late to capture them. A few
days since Marx was in New York City,
tradesmen In Hen cf .», Wm I .STB I *»»5Bgg 3YSS. ImPZ
medium of f xcb ““S0- CbiefDrammond, thoughtj ^ t v ot hlmM if t but only of the ^Kt.-ol of his senses.
of the secret service, vbitedroveral man- | beTOeantto witli >n mankind w ^- a 'cn the detectives read Consul Bur-
5SK»8?82?&SSSSMn ^ -n. !■!»'•*£<•««-**&*&“£ss
explained the old statute, and, taking 1
apSoatUiewnSuMtonoftoe* practice! I Gr oaa lB .—r*iu7 mtbe Government 115 were theaam®. mfdffi^on 1 ’Monday I Mart lia“d fledr A'requbrtion _ iTcase of
lu each case tho manufacturers promptly j-j-mUmr Ofllce—Tbe Developmento f‘®“, c fL“? b ^ e aa ^ e , ^ ia “^^fuul^enarreri- his I arrest !n tl,e J“ luro was > h ^ weve ^*
promised to comply with the law and e*- » DlMtaargea employe Tbreatens. late on the l° d K ed with Governor Cornell,
pressed satblaction at having t<» do so. | Wa , hi ^> 0 n Special to Chicago Timee. 1 edaad brought to tha.station iaie on tne
They each claimed to have _ been forced
st weVgSrssSdttS|g;insssrs\v^
wofild Slop it. Re printer, has dismissed Ids foreman, t®i™of^eboxtsQusdtoeoaway bad bsen arrested and lodged toLodtoW
A statement .of some of these facts Is Q P because he learned that Oyster f °“b® a ff u M^°|o^away t t ja j K Saturda y eveulng DetectiT®
said to have been made in some ne*spa- ^“ r ’ aad idate for hb place. Since Oys- bww^edto*. m. At ^sergeant^ ... —•-
pers In such a wayasto give the impres- ler bas be en dbmbsed he has threatened d ^, Le .f* ho l bad no bo , ne , aud claimed purpose ol
tain that we of this ago aud country have said to have been made in some newspa- w *, % cand idate for hb place. Since Oys-1 b® rofiued to do . xtehol^ Du- Bisbop left the city for New York for the
adopted his pungent characterization as pers in such a way as to give the impres- ler bas Pecn dbmbsed he has threatened ,. ad no home and claimed purpose of bringing him to Detroit. It is
the happiest form of estimating our great 8 i 0 n that tho tobaccos were seized a[ J d I to expose some of the insido workings of I „ f r ™ Fr ’ nce At the I expected tbat Marx will make a vigorous
men. Tbat all meu are mortal goes with- that tho sale of them in the future would th , ‘ t govemal ent machine. Among ^ bare come from • , legarresistance on coming to Detroit, hut
out saying, of course; still, It b well to b0 attended with danger of imprisonment Xf things, Mr. Oyster charges gross T^mbs poUce> court n«t morning, gg- evfiry prosp ect tbat it will be oj
keep the fact in mind, lest our admiration and, perhaps, the closing or those stores | imnl0ra Hty ln the place, and says tut 8 docto« there nrotiounaed I no aTall> Tbe g»ng a r® numerous and.
of towering personages lead us to imitate in which they should hereafter be found. 0 j d women are kept upon the pay-roll to P? 0111 ,' n~ 0 mn ii be was sent to the asv- powerful in personal influence and money
the extravagant sycophancy of the cour- in consequence, the manufacturers com- act M pr0C uresses for some of the subor- ' w ’ r 5^ 7 I in New York, aud Moss has many friends
tier who, when told that God at least was pl a in that their bussness has been serious- d inate officials. Iu answer to a general ~ a ~^ , f b _ in that city. Detective Bishop hopes to
i tl.a aalnM •nniln lincln tr. I fl. 1..,^ flnn tnonilfn^tlirPr VSHtfiN I . . al.. ..ktaar lfa Hnatue I Mrs# Jxl&rift A* i€Q UOSCOj DIS W ICy 118 I . Ilia nrisoilfir Oil cdu6sdiy
__ j her fears aroused by his non-arrival uls i ’ U5U ' :
is'not quite clear, however, why wo | to answer the telegrams ana leucra oijod- i ‘“"" ne holdfng’ positions when! jP.fSjjSS^SShiftonfci^TlmradaT* -
should make so much of the fact that a hers and retailers, who wrote to know k W#J 8carce an d the pay correspond-1 ^l“‘i“ t r r ^pnarturf from home she had Touched lor by Fishermen,
great man has at some time in his life whether they could safely continue to sell Their promotion to a more S^^vKSSSSStoSTfi*M>S? nT Yorks’n
been a pedagogue-unless it be for tbe hb goods. His reply to all was that the ^ Uve portion was the result of an un- a PP>l® d ^^blr^ibandand ^hlu
purpose to emphasize the notion that I retailerscouldlooktohimforprotectiouin | W nh several foremen that! anr ® toBnatagner^ |
been a pedagogue—unless it De lor uie j his goods, ms reply ro an w " l ““ L ^ a I lncrotive position was the result or an un- i wfiT UnHiA^ber’liusbanil' and’ when I . ... ., blnr thirtv nouuds.
purpose to emphasize the notion that retailers could look to him for protection in de rstanding with several foremen tb »t I a '*ro J® e2 :, t ’ in „ a , tbe A Vw> b ib^ wfsi ever cauaht vu
teaching 1* a profession which loads to an y case of interference, but that there b woul J > atcl Uiem iu tbeir nebrious ^e areived here. a g g jg Said to ^i the laigesl Meeker of
anytliiiig, if, as tho Frenrii say, you aban- would be none, as the money orders were al J me to debauch certain of the female N«w York llotel, ab ® bad go f tfkn WUtftrJV C ‘ '
don it. I dbcoutlnued, and the retailers were re- T he methods employed »re , _ „„„
We are persuaded into thb lino of sponsible for the past only as his agents. , llb , fB ,,ti,iiy those: The old women’s I i utru i tcd ^ 0 h “t'S b tlie de- Frankie Lansing, of Syracuse, seven
thought by daily reading of President Ar- Another manufacturer who was be-L enur0 of office depends tbe fidel- b °ro heroelf bravely, k y years 0 f aze , caught a pike three pounds
thur that lie was a man of the world, and sieved with inquiries, obtained from the | Uy witb wb i cb they discharge their trust. [ 'T'^ B.rnfn/ Lr of the I in w® l 8 bt In , ° ua P, da 3f_ 11 waa
Vim nnra lronf cpltnnl. Thflt Tin is n. tnan I TTnithH faffttAS Attomev Ills 4S*
away, and finally refused to teach an-1 probable thatthis will bs done as it bas . ^ obta i ned only at tbe priceof| was 800a enabled
.. . • f tr l a .11 I f »_ .a rPha nvivaa avAr I . . . V, _ ’ i,. *V^ I to
liave to withdraw as hb counsel in the case,
stating his reason therefor. McUorniick
hedged him to remain, aud went to Stan
ton to talk about tlie matter. Lincoln
was iu the room adjoining where their
was iu the room adjoining where their evejywhere. And Miss Risiey, me mog- ^ ^ ^ ]0<Acd at it be wouId sbak e hb
conversation occurred, and with bbown rapber of Mr. Seward, uwrli it to pave I o and , my . «>fo good no more, long
ears heard Stanton say that he could not. been lib firm an d 0 ft-expr^ed b elii.f that Ume ki u plenty.” This, after realizing
associate with such a damned gawky, had Col. Lamon been in '^“ ,u Dg tbc |if e 0 ffaring and adventure bo had
lone-armed ape as that; if he “could not assassination could not have occurred. which he had so many scars
hare a San Who was a ’gentleman in ap- The Colonel has In his ^ssesslon inclo ed b ved and/or wu.c^ ^ so ^ ^ Jdcn
pearauce he would abandon the case.” to a silver case, the last^piece_of messe „Wer lightning which called him to
When McCormick returned to Lincoln the ever given him by the ruar.jr Ires . „ tIjc bapp y hunting grounds,” seemed
latter refunded hb $500 retainer’s fee, It b a pass, written by hb own Land, in 1 1 . l ‘‘ c a , ™ re]eas0 f f 0 m the ills that fol-
noremntorily declining to keep ity ftud re* I tlie following l&ngu&g. • . I orrp.
turned’to Urbana, Ill., where court was “Allow tbe bea ro r » W. A. Lamion, a Many years ago, after bard fighting as
then In session, and then related the facts friend, with ordinary bafigage, | warrioTj he accepted thesltua-
audhb mortification to bis friend Lamon from AVashington to Richmond and r t( ^ n ad mit,ed the white man’s power,
and others, as an excuse for hb unexpect- turn. a. l.inco .. I aud adv i SK d a role of peaco as the best
ed return. Alter thb event Mr. Lincoln “April 11, IBOo. ,t, ft t2tb of for hb followers. As near as the writer
never met Stanton till the events which , L ^on left Washington on the 1-th of |a n i tiarn> he was deposed as chief for hb
will now be briefly related brought them April, but before bavin went lo M contiuuod f r i eud |iness to tho whites, and
sr. P fa^suErja «*"^5 s afSSJf“ ,L0 ““ sc
on the English mail vessel Trent, there sequeutdangerhowMn.andbeggdlihu 0]J Ti Tall WO nld sometimes speak
was, it will be remembered, great exulta- to promise not ^ 8® out at all, and espe- of ^ wben Tallabassce was an out-
tion among loyal people all over tbe conn- cially to the tbeat ®ll> , aftc f, “'“.l.,, arv sKirt tradin" post, wben Generals Jack-
try, in which Lincoln, Chase, Blair,Sum- President turned to son u am cy and Worth were.waging war
ner and the rest shared. But Mr. Sew- of the interior, and said, “fhb toy Hill ™ J f tbe tIm0 ^ beu Scmi .
ard, Lincoln’s Secretary of State, shook (referring to Lamon) *■ a notes were hunted like beasts by blood-
bis head and expressed fears of grave He bas the guards d °“ b!ed [ i 10lin ds, and or starv a tion or exile staring
complications with England. All remem- the bouse, and to here him bU trled and despairing little band in the
her the signal danger that tho govern- self at all -hours of tlie .. t face how they came to the Everglades
ment escaped through Mr. Sewards dip- to who tovrilling ami vines of extreme southern Florida,
lomacv. By .December Mr. Lincoln rad allnomn®!. to wu“* I bare tbe water ootmes hid tbeir traib
his cabinet were in a state or alarm be- to 8ac " fl “ b f ®wn »^ a « kill “ M and they subsisted on comply and such
cause of the danger of a war with R^Mte^Tb^voalwua other f«»d as nature provided, and re
land. Mr. Chase one day came to the ldwto oi U>® R^wMlc^ I hare a I way cd ^ toU . talo smoke t0 prepa re, how
1tbcou.ilIti'.y »*»w *“»“ »" a —
under Buchanan, had Ulked with him on
tho subject of the troubles with Great x -
Britain, and had expressed the opinion a Wcll,l will do Ue them, others were transported to Arkan-
that the action of the American Gov- can. Good-by. God bltss j ou. | ^ Osceola, whom he' often spoke of,
ernment in arresting Mason and | Thls WM ^be^Jatt^Ume Ut Lj in front of tho parapet near .the
Slidell was right and could be sustained ever met hb faithful friena miiie. ye sally-port of Fort Moultrie, Charles-
by international law. Tho President told was in he city of gMgrondjvbmOs ™ a on h slab wblch marks
Mr Chase that Mr. Stanton did not like great calamity of Ltoeoto ■ ^Mlh Ibtft.U ^ inscribed ^ ^ MChlcf .
him and had treated him rudely on one the nation, and he hurried home to share PalrioU »
occasion, but tliat if Mr. Chase thought in the last rites to his mmnory. Wil “, er Tail n vcd to seo hb wan-iors’
Mr. Stanton would meet him he would be Booth was a most byidsomo an l accom = d daughters grow to manhood and
glad to have him do so, andgivehis views p islied man, and was ambUious in £0 ^ anbo0[1 b acd to b filld them slowly bub
on tbe subject. In aA hour Mr. Chase bis profession. But art‘ bring ahlio to worn accep ’ ting tbo marcb 0 f riviliza-
Lad Mr. Stanton in MnUaegntopw*- rMChtbe tbe tion/wlncb lit could foresee long ago.
once. Mr. Liucoln expressed his gratifi- er great actors, Damon advanea* of ids immediate family, one son and two
cation at bearing of Mr. Stanton’s views SSnioSStoSlf b; daughters survive bim-tlie eldest mar
Herring will always follow alight. If
you want novel sport, provide yourself
she I with a torch made of cotton batting sat-
Sway, and finally refused to teach an- [ probable that thb will be done as it nas I it can be obtained only aftbe price of I nT dS?
other term, and, goiug off, bewept by all ] been in tbe past. The first prizes ever tb j v [ rtue . For the credit of the lady ^ ^be T b ®* b ^ t The boat is rowed as
tlie pupils, to be a lawyer or something, Lent out in tobacco were si vei■ cota and the fair name of woman- ^^^J^nKaud i^fnthMro“ Jwfftfy ™‘lble.nd when! school is
with “a book of poems" under hhana wrapped to P*?er_ an £P^°. d I hootl in general, tbe . insulting pro- | gSSrf2todto T ww5.Ti5auS “re I "track K begin*: Tbe herrlngdart
the boat, coming close to it in
aud while one of tbe men rows
the other dips up the herring
8 Iku m dipper.
addingitup. Did he become rresmeni, Only one manufacturer haayet an- j ^Vay.^A ^om^AVbolMT‘temily d^-1 be'^elhet^b^g^ ] .Fybingpanies at Gc^o DJ®. gorida,
because of his sohool-teachiDg, or in spite nouuced by what means he will evade d ent upon her for support, or a young e met at £en or beard of before. J. Z. Srott first
of it? Does the honor lie in tho fact that the law mat lias caused the P^ 8 :1 5i r l, penniless and friendless, who accepts I 'f£>o r HMbmse8 street, »uom ue met ai i seen or neara o ^ basa body be-
he showed his ability to bo a good peda- ent trouble, although many have notified iegrading proposals, does so, I be- tb MrTenB^‘<ffi to thf'senior partner in tween fiiteeA ad’dtwenty feet in length,
issaoyaSuiS. arsisafTb. s'ofiss&sajss.tij® stsjss
•vsLmn ou mm 5SiS’o?.ssr-.rJ»aa£|lsB2rewsstfa:
g .a ^ | •* **1 i s:
I|£?SSS&lgrS^|
cupatiou to sitting around on dry goods deeming them with tobacco.
boxes and sponging his necessary victuals “Nobody would take a bushel of those . week> jj. or tbe present you must db sat- ■ - * - ' r n Pittsbunrh I
and lodging; but ho would have been orders in exchange for goods, except at a | „ | street and Fourth avenue. _lnl itUDorga | deeplj
l’resident just as soon, no doubt, If lie discount,” said one dealer, “and nobody
had never taken up tho ferule. Tho would attempt to buy anything with one
truth is, such accidents have little to do I of them. They are exchangeable *°r luat uuring mu noon uuur, »usu ■ hnitia, ir«a« this trunk I
with the subtle forces that shape men’s money only by the man who receiveslone, mMtof tho ’ emp i 0 yes are absent at dm- d ™?^ i ,"J^ > , b 1 “ b and .^fthe birber \ The 0r * B, “ Tbeir >«w York Boom.
fortunes iu politics. They aioibardljr and the tobacconist who cashesi oneican j certain foreman and his mistress ^2^°L tb f ® ba Sh ear d her broth- Cincinnati Enquirer.
worth considering even as incidents of only exchange it for tho manufacturers themseiVes halfau hour at a time Jflie ^"b" 8 ^" 8 e bat | b ^ d J™ h br ®“ xkw York, October 20.—There to
personal biography, if tlie intention bo to goods. They aro not money.and they are iQ 0QQ of the many crooka and crannies i r bI “ b ^!lf^ ue k bv f the TenSwlvania rail- quite a flutter In society, owing to the anr.
draw from them any premonitions of fu- not illegal. If they were, why were not { u estahiighment, while the procuress wblch whlrln law died her nouncement tbat General and Mrs. Giant
ture greatness. Tho half of Hie is much the manufacturers arrested aud prosecu- ° t “d™ rd . Utoa burning disgrace ro* d - nu.d^nwrramrand “re to give an elegant reception as soon as
a matter of course, and one man’s ted? It looks like illegality If_not tyran- d on^L otbat such practices should be buab ?“^ ^5 b hlaf the ’Dea- their tew house to in period order, and
career up to its turning point Uy, for tho officers to use the^power ^U.ttedin a government department, I-"** . . tb « b8 ® a S® at A m an who eveiy day workmen ami artiste are bring-
but duplicates that of a thousand others, without having any true authority. tbe gentleman with whom the report- l>n g”**}* 8 S” ) gg > ™ dwh o Knew 0 f ing nearer the desired end. I undersUnd
Not every President Is born with a stiaw-
berry mark that sets him apart as a son of
destiny, and signalizes him even as a
country schoolmaster. There are hun-
Sldney Lanier
From tho Baltimore American.
country schoolmaster, mere are nun-i The meeting at .Hopkins Hall on Satur-
dreds of nameless young meu now teach- d ay flight in memory of Sidney Lanier
ing school for the same reason that Presi- iu every way a success, as a meeting I
dent Arthur once did, and doing it just as | J . t / . ^ rp,,- '
well; aud m time they will he lawyers, for suchan object des-rved to be. Tbo tes
or ministers—or possibly editors, if they tiniony to tho deceased poets worth as an
are real good—hut it will ( not ^follow, j ar tistand as a man was warm, sincere and
THOPHIES OP THE SEA.
Odd Things that Have Been Fennd
About the Wreck* or Temtcla.
The Coast Wrecking Company has iu
its office, ln this city, a curious collection
i-imivunmnun* h ».HH iiuu v - impressed evoiyoue I are still "unknown. The collection con-1 - BoetonPoet. I of^woinen’by vising' the finest
at Cohoes with success, and could have I and attracted every one who knew him; tains tba broken bell brought up from I On the 22d of June last the *‘ rs ^." a * I - nd moat exautoitely woven India cash-
bad a second, or evon a third, term; but, bu t to he his intimate waa to find one’s the ill-fated Bteamer Atlantic, of the I tlonal Bank of Detroit was robbed of $2,- j .. tb e draDe ry of her own boudoir,
at tbe same time, we think bo would him- self in contact with an ideal man—a soul white Star line, which was wrecked on 250 in half signed bills, by three men at “J'™ 1 * and glands are of buhl and
self sav, if interrogated, that the matter I so pure and so tender, so serene in con-1 Golden Buie Rock, on the Nova ocotia I mid-day, and in the boldest manner po^si- I r c wor ^; tbe mirrors hang in curl-
nn A nf broad and butter rnerelv. and le.innlation of its limitations and in pres- CO ast, on April 1.1863, with a loss of 6571 ble. Mr. Emory Wendell, cashier of the “SKLi-L, it. hv Lb a iuikknivei
SlOU Oi tuo UWG nuu *uw •- bewing
thereon, Mr. Lincoln listening attentive-
ly. Mr. Lincoln expressed his thanks,
and asked Mr. Stanton to pnt his opinion
in writing, which he promised to do by
10 o’clock next morning. The opinion
was brought at tbe appointed time. Mr.
Lincoln read it and filed It, and then said.
“Mr. Stanton,this is a time of war,andyou
are as much interested in sustaining
tho government as myself or any
other man. This is no time lo consider
party issues. The life of the nation fa iu
danger. I need the best counselors
around me. I have every confidence In
your judgment, end have conceded to ask
you to become one of my counselors.
The office of Secretary of War will he
vacant, and I want you to accept the port
folio. Will you doit?” Stanton was
amazed, and said: “Why, Mr. President,
you tako me by surprise 1 This to an em
barrassing question. But If you will gjve
me a day or two to consider I will-give
you an answer.” The next day, but op®>
he called on the President and signified
his intention to accept. On tbe 13th day
of January, 1862, the portfolio of secre
tary of war was placed in his hands.
JEFF DAVIS.
Joshua F. Speed was one of Lincoln s
oldest aud most confidential lriends in bis
younger days, and tbeir friendship con
tinued through all trials. After the ca
pitulation of Gen. Lee’s army Speed came
from his home in Louisville, Ky., to vto.t
death of Booth, about wbicu some suiy a ' nd X iger
people profess doubt, he £a y 3 ‘ ber ^ tb ° a tJJ tho son of* a former squaw, who
asysSSflSStaff ««««»•>. v«»»
to identify it.
THE HIGH WATEB,
Continued Blao ol tlie Mississippi—
Bainace at Burlington, Quincy and
Other Points.
Keokuk, La., October 26.—Tbe river
last niglit rose an inch. A further rise
of several inches is anticipated b7 river-
men, after which, it Is expected, the wa
ter will recede. Tho situation of affairs
at Alexandria, five miles below here, to
lamentable, it being one of the worst in
undations the town ever experienced.
All that can get away have loft, taking
their household effects. A number of
citizens are liviug in the second stories of
the buildings, and have skiffs moored In
front of their dwellings in case of an
emergency. Tho loss to property has al
ready been great. The tracks of tlie M.,
L & N., C. It. & P-, K. & St. L., and the
C. B. & Q. railways, leading into this
city, are under water. The river this
morning, at 10 o’clock, was 12 inches
above tbe rise of last spring, and lacks 2
feet 4 inches of tbe great rise oflSol,
which occasioned so much distress.
in manner like his father, In looks like
his mother, and will no doubt make an
able successor to his father in his official
line. Tho old chieftain will he missed,
probably, not mourned, as death is to
them a welcome release to happier
spheres. So he passes away and becomes
a type of tbe past.
“He was a man, tako him for all fn all,
I shall not look upon bis like again.”
Inde.
Miami, Fla-, Sopt.,1881.
HEATH IS THE HIHST OP 3118-
mur.
Money Collected Tor n Funeral Waa ted
In n Midnight Orgte.
Philadelphia Time*.
In an unkempt room up a court in tho
rear of 517 Metcalf street, an alley run
ning offBaiuhridge street, above Fifth,
Elizabeth Bowles, an Irish woman, forty-
five years old, died, after a lingering ill
ness, on Friday night, unattended and
uncared for, ln the midst of squalor and
filth. For years the woman had suffered
with consumption, and for the past five
weeks she was unable to leave her bed.
While ber husband was penned up in a
Tint government 'will allow”Guitcan cell In the bouso of correction, where he
twenty their expenses, had been rent for drunkenness, the son, a
A man who I every day workmen and artists are bring-
L — I *— sVio riastna^ enH t undcrsiAod
or or-
discovering that the effects it contained on his foi^gn tour^rurnun g
tfaetral* overSh® poSS when thedT- JbereKffitoto^rllh objects of art of
remove her bus- No two piece* of furniture in the par-
band tomorrow to aom® Place, where fib® gStoS^CSa^wl^ and gold!
1 embroidered divans, and ebony and ivory
fauteulls, upholstered with Gobeljp tapes
try and hand wrought brocades, will take
tbe place of tbe modern ret.
The Oriental bangings and Persian car
pets were made for the ex-President as
Bifts. and Mrs. Grant will Incur tbe ever-
P . _ f L m tLa finul
| Arrest of “Mlanle” Marx far a Detroit
Baak MoMkery.
Botlon Pott.
board.
room Biauus a uiiuiaui. ”
f , i stories, and nearly three feet in height.
Robert entered the cashier’s office aud inquired it is of solid silver, curiously beaten and
11 «r_ t.r—]-,i rina n f ,.ha «n«n placed I raised in queer flowers aud odd birds. On
a desk I opening the various doors and windows
notes, I that lead on comical little balconies, can
cash- be discovered cases of fretted silver con-
ques- | taining bottles and flasks of carved ivory
out, but j filled with different and delicious per-
uenauny, ue never worn, u»ta. n, «, i pireu w ouci»j iu •“'-i —q——■ muu; w«*» . -r ■ — — i _ n ij return in a few minute*. The 1 fumes. This was presented to the owner
and it is a matter of record lbat be thought, but It must be Shelley devoid of e nty feet of water on tbo coastof Maine, immediately retired, and Mr. Won-1 iu China. A pleasant reminder of India
afterwards lost an excellent situation be- bis vagaries and cranks, for there were also a mussel shell firm y imbedded four men immediate^ rei rro, ^ ^ of gu ^ rb elephant tusks nearly
cause be would not consent to teach pars- neither eccentricity nor affectation In La- inchea in depth In a well which waa found dell almost ‘ bJ y , abor# c f ^ , A, in jg^b, the polished ivory set
ing and the cube root In politics-and the ule r, nor iu anything he did-always he i 40 feet above the sea level on the Jersey of^at- g id m ^nUngs.
next thing we knew he turned up as Vice- vvas content .each day to do c o a8 ^ 8 ^ a P«J 1 “ n88k,, J* andbbb '™*??* ^fu'^^e^db^discovered that the The wall ou one aide of thefamily ait-
President. Ho was once a schoolmaster, duty aud earn bis bread by patient, faith- ur i ug two feet from back to Up (making As he pr^resre ® - dly lhan u u Mar i y covered by a remark-
Yes; but tbat was a long time agd, and f u l toil. Edmund C. Stedmans letter, an excellent though wideiflipper), whhffi P^j® ®‘“®. ta8 ihlt amount to ab ll Japanese picture-a hunting scene.
xassjz&amIS a ifidT^ I*• SHV9 -ft a?
and which is said to have been
bail ont the boat by tbe crew
HUH U1 IUC Jiuct} w 1 U9CU LU Bill UUfc LUO UUW
wbicuuouuo* mu™.. ,, uu „„ r „, b. Indeed, there never w hen endeavoring to escape. The jaws
ter. away back yonder when what he did 1 was any young poet ln this country who 1 0 f a shark killed on the South Carolina
bad no special purport, and to no more so quickly and closely endeared himself to coast, wbich have been preserved, can
worth recalling than the marble-playing 0 ur poets and artists. In his first visit to easily be passed over the shoulders and
aud kite-flying that distinguished the boy- jfew York and Boston he was down tbe body of a full-grown man. One
hood of future blacksmiths and carpenters made free of the guild at once and 0 f the most curious relics to a lamp chim-
d,o ..mo u future Presidents. Perhaps forever. Longfellow's, Whittier’s, nev taken from tbe remains of the iron-
lt would euit him aa well if we let tho Holmes’, Aldricn’a hearts warmed to clad Merrimsc. Oysters three inches long
statute of limitations run in the matter, him; Stedman and Bayard Taylor became were found studied to tbe glass, and four
He doesn’t want to be invited to address his friends aud brothers, the cold Stoddard i ar ge oysters which had grown about the
thawed and, ln those cosy Saturday nights brass bas® of tbe the chimney form an
at the Century Club, the venerable Bry- I irregular square. The hilts of several
all the teachers’ institutes.
i ,,, , l a t the Century Club, tlie veneranie wry- irregular square. Tne nuts or sevi
“Oua cow to dead, money exhausted," a nt and he grew to be chimney-corner I swords and some old firearms are also
c „d llp i.„d o« t . a ib« rri r,Igg.’i?A°Sd 1 •g’fjgg'
This to the piteous appeal made by the I earne stness of purpose, so knightly pure
McRae Advertiser to its delinquent sub-1 and lofty,in his speeeh and thought, that
aenbers, but we have our doubts as to j none ln whom the instinct of honor sur-
whether or not It will “fetch ’em." | vlved could fall to honor and love him.
casually to tbe president, who subject to worked out in varied silk em-
quickly arose and walked over to the 1 broidery, tbe figures and foliage standing
cashier’s table and commenced to count I out as in real life, and tbe colors oxquuue
tbe notes, aided by Mr. Wendell, and tbe an d natural. (b . ■
longer they counted the more they be- How exceptional a memory uenerei
came convinced that - the money was Grant has is shown in the tact that ne
gone. The object of the man in the buggy know* at a glance where each or toes®
and the men who inquired for Mr. Wen- | thousands of gifts came from, the name of
dell, who were the confederates of the the dty, the donor, and tbe dreumstaaee®
former, was instantly made plain to of the presentation. H® 6oes « b ibit
them. Mr. Wendell, without losing time the least complacency iu their exhibition,
or presence of mind, ran to the police but Mrs. Graut shows a woman a natural
headquarters and soon had Detective O’- gratification in them.
Neil at tbe bank, who was followed by f —*•*
Mar tbc CtM SbcsMcr
Whitehall Timee.
The devil haa one redeeming trait,
never gives a boarder a cold room.
He
Chiefof PoUce Rogers, and he a little '
later on "by Detective Stadler and Mc
Guire, who were for the time being en
trusted with tbe care.
OH THE SCENT. .
The authorities at once ret about dto-1
covering tbe perpetrators of the robbery.
Boston Poet.
“Yon are weak,” said a woman to tar-
son, who was remonstrating agaiaet tar
marrying again, “iea, mother,’’ha replied,
“I am to weak that I oannot goaf*“—
father.”