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THE CONSTITUTION.
NOW 18 THE TIME
The Weekly Constitutor)
Single Subscription, - - $1.25
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YOLTJME XVI.
TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 22,1884.—TWELVE PAGES'.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
“THE DEATH KETTLE.”
“O THOU MAN OF OOD, THERE IS
DEATH JN THE POT."
There are Now in the Wo A A B Tmao!^ n *
of Death; The Co!o«alm.>>» M
utlonrm. Shenn Some ■ T *»« “*«■“
and are Saved, WhllaOV hcra Do Not ’
Dr. Ta’.mage preached the follew'mg Mr-
mon. Subject! “The Death lvi • , ,
Kings IV. 40: “0 thou men of t - od > thcr0 “
death in the potl” . .. „ .
ElUha had goue down to lecture , 0 “2,
ological students in the seminary u „ .*•
He found the students very hungry,
are apt to be. In order that he might p* Tr
with his lectures successfully, ho sends
some servants to gather food for the hun^
students. The servants were somewhat rec k
lc39 in their work, and while they gather up
some healthful herbs, they at the same time
sather coloquintida, a bitter, poisonous, death,
fnl weed, and they bring all the herbs to the
house and put them in a caldron and stir them
up, and then bring the food to the table where
ore seated the students and their professor.
Ono of the students takes some of the mixture
and puts it to his lips and immediately tastes
the coloquintida, and he cries out to the pro
fessor: “0 thou man of God, there is death in
the pot!” What consternation it threw upon
the group. What a fortunate thing it was he
found out in time so as to save the lives of his
comrades. Well, thero ore now in the world a
great many caldrons of death. The coloquin-
tida of mighty temptation fills them. Some
taste and quit and ore saved; others taste and
cat on and die. Is not that minister of Christ
doing the right thing when he points out these
caldrons of mouity and cries the alarm, say-
ing: “Beware, there is death m tho pot. In
a palace in Florence there is a fresco of Giotto.
For many years that fresco was covered up
with two inches thickness of whitewash and it
lias only been in recent times that the hand of
art has restored that fresco. “What sacrilege,
you say, "to destroy tho work of such a great
master!” But there is no sadness m that com
pared with the fact that the image of God m
the soul has beeu covored up and # almost ob
literated so that no human hand can restore
the divine leueamonta.
Iniquity is a coarse, jagged thing that needs
to be roughly handled. You have no right to
garland it with fine phrase or lustrous rheto
ric. You cannot catch a buffalo with a silken
lasso. Men have no objections to having their
sin looked at in a pleasant light. They will
bo very glad to sit for their photoghaphs if
you make aWhaudsome picture. But every
Christian philanthropist must sometimes go
forth and come in violent collision with trans
gression. I was in a whaling port and I saw a
vessel that had been on a. whaling cruise come
into the harbor, and it had patched sail and
.spliced rigging and bespattered deck, showing
hard times and rough work. And so I have
seen Christian philontropists come back from
some crusade against public iniquities. Fhey
have been compelled to acknowledge that it
has not beeu yachting over summer lakes, but
it has been outriding a tempest and harpoon
ing great behemoths. A company of emigrants
.settle in a wild region. The very first day r
bear from the mountains comes down and car
ries off one of the children, and the next day
another beast comes and carries off another
child. Forthwith all tho neighbors band to
gether, and with torch in one hand and gun in
the other they go down into the caverns where
those wild beast aro secreted and slay them.
Now I want to go back of all public iniquity
and find out its hiding place. I want to know
what are the sources ot its power, or, to re-
«ume tho figure of my text, I want to know
wlmt ore the caldrons from which these
iniquities aro dipped out. ■ -
First, unhappy and undisciplined home*
.are tho eource of much iniquity.
A good home is deathless in iti
influences. Parents may bo gone. The
old homestead may bo sold and havo passed out
•of tho possession of the family. The house it
self may bo torn down. Tho meadow brook
that ran in front of the house may have chang
ed its course or havo dried up. The long line
of old-fashioned sunflowers and tho hedges of
wild roso may have been graded, and in place
thereof are now tho beauties of modem garden
ing. The old poplar tree may hive cost down
its crown of verdure and may have fallen.
You say you would like to go back a little
whilo and see that home, and you go and oh,
how changed it is! Yet that place will never
loso its charm over your soul. That first
-earthly homo will thrill through your ever
lasting career. Tho dewdrops that you dashed
from the chickweed as you drove the cows
afield thirty-years ogo; the fireflies that flash
ed in your father’s homo on summer nights
when the evenings were too short for a can
dle; tho brook; tho berries that you strung
into a necklace and the daisies that you pluck-
•cd for your hair—all have gone into your sen
timents and tastes and you will never get over
them. The trundle-bed whero you slept, the
©hair where you sat, tho blue-edged dish out
of which you ate, your sister’s jumping rope,
jour brother’s ball, your kite, your hoop, your
mother’s smile, your father’s frown—they are
all port of tho fibro of your immortal nature.
The mother of niUehn&ry, .Schwarts, threw
light on tho dusky brow of the savages to
•whom he preached long after she was dead.
The mother of Lord Byron pursued him as
with a fiend’s fury, into all lands, stretching
5 loom and death into Childe Harold and Don
uan and hovering in darkness over the
lonely grave of Missolnghi.
Itascally and vagabond people for the most
’part came forth from unhappy homes. Par
ents harsh and cruel or on the one hand or on
the other lenient to perfect looseness aro rail
ing up a generation of vipers. A homo in
which scolding and fault-finding predominate
is blood relation to the gallows and peniten
tiary. Petulance is a reptile that may crawl
up into the family nest and crush it. There
-are parents who disgust their children, even
with religion. They scold their little ones for
not loving God. They have an infernal man
ner of hearing the catechism. They go about
•even their religious duties in an exasperating
way as though they were possessed of the
-devil. Their house is full of the war-whoop
«>f contention and from such scenes husbands
and children dash out into places of dissipa
tion to find their lost peace, or the peace they
uever bad. Oh, is there some mother like
Hagar leading her*Ishmael into the desert to
be smitten of the thirst and parched in the
sand? In the solemn birth hour a voice fell
atraigbt from the skies into that dwelling,
sayiug: “Take this child and nurse it for me
and I will give thee thy wages.” When an
gels of God at nightfall hover over that dwell
ing, do they hear the little ones lisp the uame
of Jesus 1 0 traveler for eternity with your
little ones gathered up under your robes, are
you sure you are on the right road, or are you
leading them on a dangerous and winding
bridle path off which their inexperienced feet
may slip and up which comes the howling of
the wolf and the sound of loosening ledge and
tumbling avalanche? Blessed ths family altar
where the children kneel. Blessed the cradle
where the Christian mother rocks the Chris
tian child. Blessed the song the little one
sings at nightfall when sleep is closing the
eyes and loosen'ng the hand from the toy on
the pillow. Blessed the mother’s heart whose
every throb is u prayer to God for the salva
tion of her children. The world grows old
and soon the stars will cease to illuminate it,
and the herbage to clothe it, and the mountains
to guard it, and the waters to refresh it, and
of ita sin and shame and glory and tnumpl
will torn to ashes; but parental influences,
starting in the early home, will roll on and
• 8 • * n ■— *“ -1 the
tall
i pain
and shrinking back into all the shame and
frownfflft all tho darkness of tho great
prison hoilM. 0, falher! 0, mother! In
which direction is your influence tending?
I verily believe that three-fourths of the
wickedness of tho great city runs out rank and
putrid from undisciplined homes. Sometimes
1 know there is an exception. From a bright,
beautiful, cheerful Christian home a husband
or a son will go off to die. How long you have
had that boy in you prayer. He does not
know tho tears you have shed, no knows
nothing about tho sleepless nights you have
passed about him. He started on the down
ward road and*will not stop, call you never so
tenderly. Oh, it is tough, it is very tough’,
after having expended so much kindness aud
care to get such pay of ingratitude. There is
many a young man proud of his mother who
would strike into dust the dastard who would
dare to do her wrong, whose hand by his first
step in sin is uhnrpening a dagger to plunge
through that mother’s heart. I saw it. The
telegram summoned him. I saw him come in
scarred and bloated to look upon the lifeless
/ 0 rm of his mother—those gray locks pushed
bos k over tho wrinkled brow he had whitened
by hi * waywardness. Those eyes had rained
flood# tears over iniquity. That still
white h,™d had written many a loving letter
of couns'el ami invitation. He had broken that-
old heart- When he came in he threw hira.-
self on tho and sobbed outright and
cried: “Mother! mother I” But tho lips that
kissed him in imf* nc 7» and that had spoken so
kiudly on other djy* when ho came home,
spake not. They w*ere sealed forever. Rather
toon such & memory c'R my soul I would-have
rolled on me tho Alps And the Himalayahs.
“The eye that mocketh lv* father and refuseth
to obey its mother, the rltvena of the valley
shall pick it out and the young eagles shall
eat it.”
The second caldron of iniquity to which I
point is an indolent life. There aro young men
coming to our city with industrious habits,
and yet they see in tho city a great many men
who seem to get along without any work. They
have no business, and yet • they aro better
dressed than industrious men, and they seem
to havo more facilities of access to amusements.
They hare plenty of time to spare to hang
around tho beautiful hotel* or lounge around
the city hall—their hands in their pockets, a
toothpick in their mouths* waiting for some
crumb to fall from tho office-holders table, or
gazing at the criminals ns they come up in
the morning from tho stationhouses,jecring «fc
them ns they loop from the city van to the
courthouse steps. Ah, I would as soon think
ot standing at the gate of Greenwood to enjoy
a funeral as to stand nt the city hall in the
morning, when tho city van drives up to look
nt tho carcasses of men and wo/nen slain for
both worlds. Tho industrious people see
these idlers standing about, and they
wonder how they make their living. I won
der too. They have plenty of money for the
ride; they have plenty of money to bet on
the boat race or the horse race; they con dis
cuss the flavor of tho costliest wines; they
have the best scats at tho theater. But still
you ask me: “How do they get their money?”
Well, my friends, thero are tour ways of get
ting money—just four. By inheritance; by
earning it; by begging it; by stealing it. Now
there are many people in our community who
seem to havo plenty of money who did not in
herit it, and who did not earn it, and who did
not beg it. You must tako the responsibility
of saying how they got it. There are men who
get tired of the drudgery of life and seo these
prosperous idlers, mid they consort with them
and they learn thesamo tricks and they go to
the name ruin—at their dentil their departure
causing no more mourning than is felt for the
fast horse they fouudored and killed by a too
hasty watering.
Oh, tho pressure on the industrious youn*
men is tremendous when they see people nil
around about them ftill of seeming success,
but doing nothing. The multitude of those
who get their living by sleight-of-hand is
multiplying. What is the use of working In
tho store or office or shop or on tho scaffold or
by tho forge when you can get your living by
your wits? A merchant fii New York was
passing along the street one evening and lie
saw one of fits clerks hulf-disguisod, going in
to one of tho low theaters. He said within
himself: “I must look out for that young
man.” One morning tho merchant came to
his store and the clerk came up in assumed
consternation aud s&id: “The storo has been
on firo. I have got it ^ut out; but many of
self. Don’t you be worried about mo.” Tho
father toys: /‘Be a good boy and write home
often. Your mother will want to hear fijoro
you.” Crack goes the whip and nwav ovei
the hills goes the wagon I The scene changes.
Five years after and there is a hearse coming
up the old Inite in front of the farmhouse.
Killed in a porterjiouso fight, that son has
come home to disgynce the sepulchre of his
lathers. When the old people lift the coffin
lid and see the cliangdil lace and seo tho gash
in the temples where the life oozed out, they
will wring their withered hands and look up
to heaven end cry: “Cursed be rum! Cursed
be rum!* Lorenzo de Medici, was sick and his
friends thought that if they tteuld dissolve in
his cup some pearls and then got him to swal
low thelu he would bo cured. And so theeo
valuable pearls were dissolved in Ids cup and
he drank them.. What an expensive draught!
But do you know that druukeuucss puts into
the cup the pearl of physical health, the pearl
of domestic happiness, the pearl of earthly
nilnenee, the pearl of Christian hope, the
pearl of an everlasting heavenand then presses
it to tho lips? And on, what an expensive
draught! The dramshop is the gate of hell.
There are some in the outer circles of this ter
rible malestrom and in the name of God I cry
the alarm. Put back now or never! You sny
you are kind ami genial and generous. I do
not doubt it,but so much more the peril. Mean
men never drink unless some one treats them.
But the men who are in the front rank of this
destructive habit aro 'those who have a fine
education, large hearts, genial natures, and
splendid prospects. This tin chooses the fat
test lambs for sacrifice. What garlands of vic
tory this carbunclcd hand of drunkenness hath
snatched from the brow of the orator and
poet! What gleaning lights of generosity it
has put out in midnight darkness. Como with
me and look over—coine and hang over—look
down into it while I lift off the cover and you
may see the loathsome, boiling, seething,
groaning, agonising, blaspheming hell of the
drunkard. There is everlasting death in tho
pot,
THE CHOLERA.
The City OfflUclnls of Marseilles Desert*
ing Their l’Mt^i
Washington, July 1ft,—At the meeting of the
cabinet yesterday, It was decide* to toko prompt
and vigorous measure* to prevent the Introduc
tion ofcholera Into tbc United Slates. State and
treasury department* will act In conjunction In
enforcing the regulations which aro to be prepar
ed. The vessels of tho revenue marine service
will establish a cordon.talong the coast to prevent
the landing of oil vessels from foreign port* wbieli
do not possess clean bills of health.
j;8 pjtoM r
service „
New Orleans thst the secretary of The treasury
lias directed tho vessels of the rdvenne marine
service to patrol tho coasts of the’United. States,
Including the gulf coast, as a precautionary meas
ure against cholera. It is expected that tho
president will issue an executive order till* ai
temoon, calling attention to tho necessity for
more stringent precautions against tho Introduc
tion of cholera, and urging the greatest vigujmce
the part of agents of tho government, both nt
BLAINE ACCEPTS.
VERY FORMAL LETTER FROM
THE MAINE STATESMAN.
A Letter Which Will Not Prove 8uoh a Terror to
the Democrats After All-Not Much “Dash 1
Displayed A Document Whioh Will
Disappoint Expectant Friends.
Augusta, Me., July 18.—Mr. Blaine’s letter
of acceptance hns been given to the public. It
is dated Augusta, Maine, July 16th, and is ad
dressed, to lion. John B. Henderson and other*
of tho committee, etc. Mr. Blaine in accepting
tho nomination, soys:
Gentlemen—In accepting the nomination for the
presidency tendered me by tho republican na
tional convention, I beg to express a deep sense of
the honor which is conferred ami of tho duty
which is imposed: I venture to Accom
pany the acceptance with some observations upon
the questions involved in tho contest—questions
whoso settlement may affect the future of the Ra
tion favorably or unfavorably for n long series of
year*.
In enumerating the issues upon which tho re
publican party appeals for popular support, tho
convention has been singularly explicit nnd felic
itous. It has properly given tho leading position
to the industrial Interests of tho country as affect
ed by the tariff on imports. On that question tho
two political parties are radically in conflict. Al
most the first act of the republicans, when they
cauiolnto power in 1801, was the establishment of
tho principle of protection to American
labor and to American capital. Thts princi
ple the republican party has ever since steadily
in M 111. II ifivvi IKSI.IO .
epidemic ol yellow fever. The epidemic fund* of
which there is an uuexpended balance of about
78,000, will bo utilized by tho
authorities for these purpoe*.
TUB PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION.
By tho president of tho United titate* of Amer
ica— a proclamation: Whilo tho quarantine reg
ulations aro committed to the several states, the
g eneral government has reposed certain powers
i the president, to be used at his discretion it*
nmvnntint, t hr.-titi-nort rnlrit-mlcs. FcCllllg it to
in all persons who,.
regu-
the goods are gone.” 'fbo merchant instantly
seized the young man by tho collar and said:
“I have had enough or this, you can’t deceive
rao. Whero aro tho goods you stole?” and
tho clerk confessed it instantly. Tho young
man had gone into the plan of making money
by the sleight-of-hand and by his wits.. You
will get out of this world just so much as, un
der God, you earn by your own hand and
brain, Iloratius was told ho might have so
muc h ft ..d as he could plough around in one
day with a yoke of oxen and I have noticed
that men get nothing in the world that is
worth possessing of a financial, moral or spir
itual nature save that ;bey get it by their own
hard work. It isiust so much as from the mor
ning to the evening ot yourlifo you eon plough
around by your own continuous and hard
sweating industries. “Go to tho ant, thou slug-
glard, consider her ways and bo wise.”
Another caldron of iniquity, is the dram
shop. Suroly there is death in the pot.
Anacharris said that tho viue had threegrnpes,
S leasuro, drunkenness, misery. Richard III
rowned his owned brother, Clarence, jn a
butt of wine—these two incidents quite typical.
Every saloon built above the ground or dug
under ground Is a center of evil. It may be
licensed and for some time it may conduct ts
business in elegant »tyte; but after awhile the
cover will fall off and you will seo the iniquity
in its right coloring. Plant a grog-shop iu
the midst of the fiuest block of houses in your
city and the property will depreciate 5,10, 20,
30, 60 per cent. Men engaged iu the ruin
ous traffic sometimes say, “you don’t appre
ciate the fact that the largest revenues paid
to the government are by our business.”. Then
f remember what 3fr. Gladstone, the^ prime
minister of England, said to a committee of
men engaged in that traffic when they came
to him to doplore that they were not treated
with more /xmsidoration: “Gentlemen, don’t
be uneasy about the revenue. Give me 30,-
000,000 sober people and I will pay all tho
revenue and nave a large surplus.” But, mv
friends, the ruin to property is a very small
part of the evil. It takes everything that is
sacred in the family, everything tbnt is holy
in religion, everything that is infinite in the
soul and tramples it into tho mire. The mar
riage day has come. The happy P B * r • r *
the altar. The music sounds. The gay lights
flash. The feet bound up and down in the
drawing room. Started on a bright voyage of
life. Hails all up. The wind is abaft, iou
prophesy everything beautiful. But the
scene changes. A dingy garret. No fire. On
a broken chair sits a sorrowing woman. Her
last hope gone. Poor, disgraced, trodden un
derfoot, she knows the despair of being
a drunkard's wife. The gay bark
that danced off on the marriage
morning has become a battered bulk, dismast
ed and shipwrecked. “Oh,” she says, “he was
as good a man os ever lived. He was so kind,
he was so generous—no one better did God
ever create thau he; but the drink, the drink
did it.”
A young man starts from the country home
for the city. Through the agency of metro
politan friends he has obtained a place in a
•tore or a bank. That morning in the form-
bouae the lights ore kindled very early and
the boy’* trunk is oft the wagon. “I put a
Bible in your trunk,” says the mother as she
wipes the tears away with her apron. “My
dear, 1 want you to read it when you get to
town.” “Ob,” he says, “mother don’t you
be worried about me. I know what 1 am
about. I am old enough to take care of tny-
be my duty I hereby calf upon all persons
under existing systems in tho several states,
Intrusted with tho execution of quarantine
lations, to he diligent nnd on the alert In order w
prevent the introduction of the pestilence which
wo all regret to learn hns made Us appc/imnco In
some of the countries of Europe, between which
and the ports of tho United Stnto* Interests mv
direct ifnd frequent. I further advise that
the cities nnd towns on tho lines of Inter
communication, by sound sanitary
regulations and tho promoting
cleanliness »>e prepared to resist .
power of the disease and to mftlgato its severity
and further direct the consuls of tho United
States, in tho ports where poslilenco has made or
makoits appearance’, to exercise vigilcnce In
earn ing out the instructions heretofore given
and In communicating to the government of the
United States any information of value relating
to the progress or treatment of the disease.
TIIK CHOLERA RECORD.
Paris, July 19.—Tho deaths in^Mnrselllcs from
cholera last uJght numbered 30, In Toulon thero
were 17 deaths from cholera last night. .
The public official* of Marseilles have, become
panic stricken because of the failure to check the
menu have destroyed tariffs arranged for
jn, nnd Since the close of thecivllwnr,
whenever they have controlled the bo two of rep-
rcsenUtivc^hostileJafffsIation has beeu attempted
—never more conspicuously than In their princi
pal measure* at the Into session of congress.
THE TAirwa qUEVHON.
Revenue laws aro in their very nnturc subject to
frequent revision fn order that they may tie adapt
ed to changes mid modifications of trade. Tho re
publican party is not contending for the perma
nency of any particular statute. The issue between
the two parties *ocs not have reference to* a sped*
fielair. it is far broader and hr deeper. It Jn
volvcs a principle of wldo application and benefi-
—. — n tilery which we be*
joneention mid Inevitably
hurtful in practise. In the many tariff re*
visions wJiichbavebeen necessary for tho pest
twenty three years, or which may hereafter be-
corao necessary, the republican party has main
tained and win maintain the policy of protection
to* American industry, whilo our opponents Insist
upon a revision, which practically destroys that
polley!.The Issue is thus distinct,^ well defined and
tf
lYntmluc°tlouVth.Vngreof theAmerl*
florer, besides involving the loss of vast
^ Hal invested in mans*
... , . o value of the present
revenue system to tho pcaplo of ths United HtnMa
is not iv matter of theory,, and I shall submit no
argument to smtsin it. Tionly invito attention to
certain facts ot official record which seem so con
stituen demonstration. a
In the census of 1880an eSbrt was made, far are
first time In our history, to obtain a valuation o!
all the-property in tho United States. The al-
than domain hulk anil value the whole am wot
exported b/ her between the settlement of the
first Dutch e •dony on the Mand of Manhattan a B<i
tho outbreak of the civil war In 1800.
ACIH, CULTURE AND THE TARTFP,
Tho agrlcultu.^tl ftuprest ieby fartho largest In
the nation, nnd i * entitled in every adjustment of
revenue law* to th , u,v rs f consideration. Any pol
icy hostile to the f«.'l]* it development of agricul
ture in the United .States must be abandoned..
Realizing this fact the* opponents of tho present
system of revenue have* labored very earnestly to
persuade tho farmer* of the United States that
they ore robbed by a protective tariff, and
tho effort is thus made* to consolidate’ their
vast Influence In favor of ft*W /l»dc. Rot happily
the farmers of America are fttMilgeut. and can
not lie misled by sophistry wrVtf conclusive (acta
are before them. They seo pawl.that during
Ihepont twenty-four years, wealth ha* not* beeu
acquired In one section or by one interest at the
expense of another section fir smother interest.
They see that the agricultural stole* have made
even more rapid progress thau tho munufacturiug
tfc8es.
The farmer**eo that fa 18fl) l’awwehusctta and
Illinois had about the nine wealth—oetrreen
eight and nine hundred million aollars eaehr-and
thas In 1880 /fnasHctitwetl* had advanced to twsn*-
ty-sft hundred mill fen*, while Illinois had nd l
vanccd to thitty-two hundred millions They seo
that jScw Jersey anti Iowa «tre Jtu*V equal In pop
ulation In lsil) nnd that in twee ty year* tha‘
weklttbotNew Jersey mu increased »*>y SW sum oi>
eight hundred and fifty mill foo* of dollars, while
1 the wealth of lowivwa* increased by the sum of
fifteen hundred million*. They see aint tho
aloe leading nerfuiUurxl! states of the wosthave
grown so rapidly hi prosperity that tho aggregate
addition to their wealth since MfiO Is almost as
gw»t as tfto wealth of the entire country I* that
year. They see that tho aauth,. which 1* almost
GREELY RESCUED.
A THRILLING STORY FROM THE
FROZEN NORTH.
, Tomm&nder Schley Rsturn* With the- Rormjont of
tho Greely Party-The Record of Hardship.
Disappointment and TJving Death—
Lieut. GroelyV Offlolob Report.-
tempt rtwln tune decree ttniucceMful. l iuttjr
from lii.k ot time, pertly Irom. prejudice, .mon*
man, who thottniit the InqtUHc. forciliadowwi a
Mean, jrctorday. In
> closing their ciLeli-
o ruldcnts Irom town
lbhmcnu. The lllght ot the realdenti from..
In univerntl. Men stationed at the arsenal aro
leaving. , ,
There have been five deaths In Marseilles from
cholera since 0 o'clock this tnornlug. Ten pa
tients who were suffering with the disease have
bwn litre deaths Irom the disease In the depart
ment ot tho lower Alps. The fumigation of the
railway stations ut Toulon, MnrsellUa and I’arls
lias been discontinued, as It has proved a useless
precautions
The steamer St. Dunztan, ’which Arrived in the
board at Marseille*, have been dUinfcctcd, and
her water bilge been pumped out.
YELLOW FEVER IN CUBA.
Havana, July iu.—Twenty-nine deaths from
yellow fever occurred here during the week ended
to-day.
appeared to bo certain that China would shortly
satisfy France as to the indemnity demanded.
Rerun, July 10.—Dr. Hchwcinfurth, an African
traveller, who yesterday made an appeal to
England to rescue General Gordon, telegraphs
to-day that he has received details of General
Gordon’s position through an indirect source
from the Nubian*. The date of the news 1* un
certain, hut is believed to be recent.
SHOT IN THE BREAST.
Two negro Mon Wind up n Picnic nt Locust
Grove With Pistols.
Intelligence of a fatal shooting scrape at Locrnt
Grove reached Atlanta Saturday.
Locust Grove is a new station on tho East Ten
nessee rood about thirty miles from At
lanta. Yesterday, tho times residing at
Locust Grove and the neighboring country bail a
picnic at the station. There were fully three hun
dred negroes present, and until late In the even
ing everything passed off quietly and pleasantly.
About 3 o’clock, however, two darkeys fell out
about a trivial matter aud in a short while tho en
tire crowd was engaged fn a miniature
war. Mtnnes, clubs and pistols were used promts-
euoiiAly, but no one was hurt until* large bellig
erent negro, known as Howard McKay, climbed
upon the stand and challenged everybody present
to dispute a statement he then made. A Urge
negro In the crowd named Jack Scott openly ac-
hIs and directing the muzzle towards McKay poll
ed the trigger. The pistol went off and McKay
dropped to the floor dangeionsly wounded. As
soon as Scott saw the effect of bis shot he wheeled
around and ran away. Aitout fifty negroes started
in pursuit and for more than two
miles the race was a swift one, but Scott was too
fast for his pursuers, and made good bU escape.
During the chase Scott was fired at a half dozen
times by hi* pursuers, and whenever one of the
gang came too close to him be would whirl around
and fire at him until begot clear away
McKay wa* picked up by some friends and carried
to a drugstore, where medical aid was secured.
HU wound was examined and pronunceda fatal
The ball entered the left breast near the nip-
A Hanging In Waynesboro.
Waynesboro, Os., July **■ -.Wj2gftL-.SK?
Williams, who killed Clem Bosh. Oetober 20tb,
WO, was hung here at 12:17 o’clock, to-day. He
strangled to death and bung fourteen minute*
before death. Williams had been very neglectful
of his wife. Bush tried to get him to change his
now scheme of taxation, tho returns were (neons-
plctc and unsatisfactory. Little more was <hmo
than to consolidate the local valuation usci
the states for purposes of assessment, and tha. —
everyone knows, differs widely, from n complex-
exhibit'of all tlic property. , ,
In tho census of i860, however, tho work wan
done with great) thoroughness—tho distinction
between “assessed” value nnd “true” value bo
log carefully observed. The grand result wa*
that tho “true value” of all the property In the
states and territories (excluding slaves) amounted
to fourteen thousand millions of dollars (®hj.W(b-
OuO.OoO.) This aggregate was the net result* of the
labor Mid tho savings of all the people within the
area of the United States from tho timo thy first
British-olon 1st landed ill W*7 down to tiro-year
IN.-0, rcpr»c*tite.! ttiu trutt ol 1.10 toll ot two
hir-id’. mill titty imr.i.
' Du.tu.ia ot tho country wra-orv-
caurtfKl ouJ dcvolopmt hyu protective tarlK At
the cud ol twenty yoari the[total property ut tho
United Stotes, ns returned by tho census ot Dwn,
amounted to tho etiormpus asgreCTto otforts-
tmir thousand millions ol duller* (oH,000,00(h00w>
This great re.lilt was attained, notwith
standing tho tact that countless million*
bod In tho Interval boon wasted' in the
prooroMofa bloody war. It Hull oppoaro that
while our papulation between isao and 1WI0' ln-
orctood sixty per cent tint aggregate property ot
the country lucreaoed two hundred and fourteen
percent-showing a vastly enhanced wealth per
capita among tho people. Thlrtythonaand mli-
1 Intis ot dollars (*:»,000,000,000) had bean
added daring theae twenty years to
tho permanent wealth of the natlnii.
These results aro regarded bribe older notllmo
ot the world «• Phenomena). That our countey
dred ami twcnty-Sve uillhon dollars per month
auspaise* tbo experience ol all other nettop*,
ancient or modem. Kven the opponent* or the
pretent revenue system do-not pretend thnt In tho
whole history of civilisation any para lei can bo
found to the material progress ol the United
States, since the accession of tho republican party
to 'ffe r< perio<l between tMO and to-day baa not
time In the Wstety’ot tic uKt«f8ta^ha»|here
raTiW^ifsStfpaiBa:
schools, seminar!** and colleges, have been fimnd-
0.1 and endowed far more generously than at any
prevloua time In onr history. Urcatct and more
varied relict has Iwon extended to human wITcr-
Ing and the entire progress of tho country (a
wealth hss been accompanied aud dignified by a
broadening aud elevation ol our national cbarac-
ter a* a iieonic.
Our opponents find tanlt that pur revenue sys
tem produces a surplus. But they should not
forget that tho law lias given a spect#® wupoie t<j
which all ol the surplua U proflubly and honora
bly applied—the reduction of the paMte debt and
the consequent relief of Uie burden o« taxation.
No dollar lias been waned, and the only extnva-
payment of a sacred debt. When reduction of tax
ation Is to ho made, the republican potty can b«
trusted to accomplish it In such a fbrui as will
most effectively aid th© industries of the nation,
ova roxDGN comxzkcx.
A frequent accusationbr our ooponents U that
the foreign commerce of tnc country has Rtesdlly
decayed under the influence of the protective
tariff. In this way they seek ttvarray the Import-
lug futerest against th© republican party, it is a
common anayet radical errorto confound the,
commerce of the country with it* carrying trade
an error often committed innocently and some
times designedly—but an error so gross
that It doe* not distinguish between the ship and:
the cargo. Foreign commerce represents tnc cv
ports and Imports of * country regardless of tha
nationality of the vessel that may carry the com
modities of exchange. Our carrying: trade has
from obvious causes suffered many discourage
ments since 1*50, but our foreign commerce bos
In the same period steadily anoprpdlglou*l7 In
creased—Increased indeed at a rate and v>- an
amount which absolutely dwarf all previ
ous developments oi our trade- be-
wa
fffer
men* IuolIn<Jl in out tavur. but It would have
been much larger It wtr Inulc with the eoantrfn
of America, eiaewbere referred to, had been more
sBftggrattawrrog
coin's election in added to all that bad m-
vlously been exported from the American colouie*
from their original settlement, amounted to fern
thon* nine thousand millions of dollars
fW(riO,or0,«O.) on the other band our exports
from 1800 to the cite of the last fiscal year ezeced-
ed twelve thousand millions of dollars (112,000,-
000,000)—the whole of it being tie product of
American lab*. Evidently a protective tariff bos
not injured our export trade when, under its In
fluence, we exported in twenty-four mrs fortv
percent more than the total amount that had
been exported in the entire Pjwtotm MatofyoJ
American commerce. All the details, when
analyzed, correspond with this gigantic result
The commercial cities of the union never
mcrsneethehetpfuHispulsucf a home xnurkrt,
and tbeyrsco that’ the financial and revennu sys
tem, exacted s'.ticc thosepubllean-party camO in'JD
power, has established-and ooaataittly expanded
the home market: Thor see that 1 oven in tho cate
ot whet Hi which is our thief cereal export, they*
have sold, in theuverageof. tho years sinco the-
close of ;hir war, tlireo bxslicls nV home to ouefl
they have sold abroad, and that In the coso of
loom, tho only otlwr cereal- which* wo export to
any extent/ one hundred ‘bushels hnvo been uiu d
at homo t* three nnd'a half hfwhalsexported, I
Iu some years die disparity hns- been so grout
thnt for every peck of corn exportedtone hundred
bushels have been consumed fn the home market* I
The tanner! see tltatl*,tho iQCTCustnif aotmN.'tltloti|
from tho grain fldldvof Russia and from the dist
ant plains ot India, .the grovrth of tho homognmM
beo *
s dally otgrenter apneern X> them and
every acre
OUU INTtftNAL-OOHUKUUK.
Such facts as these touching the growth and
consumptiono/corcaU nt home give- m some
slight conception of the vosthewr- of the- internal
commerce of tho Uufted States. They suggest
also that, in addition >o the advantage* which the
American people enjoy- from protection against
foreign competition, they enjoy tho aAvantairv*
of absolute free trade over adarg© area and with
f :rcater population than any other tuition. The
eternal commerce of-' our thlrty-elgh) states
nnd trine territories is carried ou without let or
rerument-
11 spreads
threo'-nud a hnlf million
square miles—almost cqwal in extant Wi the wholo
continent of Europe. Its profit* ure on Joyed to
day by fifty-six million* of Auurtomi utvemen,
nnd from this eaioymtnt no monop
oly is created. According to* Alex
ander Hamilton, when he dttousstd the
snmo subject in 1790, "tha internal* competition
which takes place docs awAy wIth everything like
monopoly, nnd by dcgms-reduccs* the prices of
articles to the minimum of a reasonable profit on
the capital employed.” 16 is impossible tepoint
to a single monopoly in the United Sltntc*that has
been created or fostered by the industrial! system
which Is upheld by the reTMbllcnn j*rty. , .
Compared with our foreign commereo tlicso do
mestic exchanges are. Ibcouoclvnbly. great In
amount—requiring merely**one instrumentality
a* large a mileage of railway ns oxtats to-day In
oil tho other lmtlous of the world combined.
These Internal exchange* are estimated by tue
statistical bureau of the ttenaury department to
bo annually twenty tlnips o*gmit In- amount ns
our fordKu commereo. It* in-Into .thlw viut Held
ol home trmlo—ut once the avntlon uud tno
horltego ol tho Atncrlmn Mop)*-tlueft>M4m n»-
tlon* nroItftvJllK lt>* ovcry dovlro to- .liter. It Is
Into thl* Hold that tho' o|',onent* o! .Mir prtwmt
revenue' ontom would freely .dmlt’tlio oountrfn
ol Kurope—countries Into tvliwio • lutormil tnulo
wo could not rodproooUy enter; oountrlc* to
which wo would Iw imrrcndorlnB ovory Mvantue
of trade; from whluli wo .liouklbo K.lniUR notn-
Iiik iu return.
rrrxiT upon this HMHtn* aud tux tiARomui.
A poller of thl* kind would l» dlwatnm* to tho
..icclmnlc* nnd worktnirmcn ol tho IfnltM Htntin.
IVm nro uujtutlv rudum.il', whuu «n liututrlou*
innn 1* not nhlo hy JiUcninlnir* to Jlvo Iu mimfort,
mlucato hi*children nndlnvlijnilliactentnmoun
for tho onucwltlu* of uc. Tho rcdu.llonof wn«™
Inovitnhly oonMqMM>WWn throwliur onr homo
mnrket upon to tho world would, deprive them of
•• tKiwcr to do thl-. It'Would nmro a (front ca
tty tnourcountry. ft would prodneoa con
flict hotweeu tho poor nnd tlio rich, nnd in tho
■orrowful donradatlou rttUtwr wunltt plant tho
uodiol puhllcdanzor.
The republican purtji bxi .tcadlly nlmod to
malntnln lu»t relation* hutwcoii labor anil cnpl-
tal—Buaralng with care the rbthta ol ijaeli. A con-
met between the two ha* nlwayo-lud hi tho paat
nnd will alway* loailln the future to.Uui Injury of
' '' Ijdi,r I* ludLir.mahlo to tho oreatloii and
ileUM of capUMf anil capital Inerearea tho
mr and vain* of labor. Wiocvw array* tbo
one nzutnst tho other U an onorny ol lioth. That
policy I, wlHwtaud tontwhlrdiliormonlicatho two
on tlio baal* of alrvdut* Jiutlie,. The roptibllcan
party lie* protccteii the free labor of America jo
that It* comimnratlou la lanfer than to reallxcd In
any other country. It. ha, xuardtd our people
Hitalnxt the unfair coni|>ctllton of lootract labor
from China and may be ceiled; nimi» to pmhlbtt
the nowth ofn-.lo.llar ovU from Itororw, It Ia
obvlonuy unfair » i«'rmX,oanllfJUUi to mako
eontracu for cheap labor In, forelim cpnntrlc*
to the hurt and oApanui-mcnt oflho alior of
American cltlrena. Booh a, policy. <*Ihp thwt
which would leave the tine anS'otber rondltlyna
of homo Ulior exclusively In tho eontrol oflho
employer,) I* InJunnu* to all partlc*-not tho
box 0 !d° -- ?
. HUtt ,
virtue ol atl tho |ioople.
tho nu _
Contai. 1 Schlep, commander of tho Greely*
relief o> -.pedltlon, dated ,-rt. ,Jolnic,.New Vnund-
laml, to '"day, atatlun that tho aur.virora of
Ucutoim ot Oreely’* signal icrvico party were
found live niilo* olf Capo Sabine, in Bmith-e
■Hiiind, by tho relief skip* Thetlt aad'Benr.on
the SSd of o 'une, .Only seven men wore aMvtr
as follower
UttUTEX. NT GREELY,
HKttUKAttl BKAISAKB,
BtatUhiANT EREDEttlcfc,
BKbliKA.VT .hONO,
MOMWaI 8 , TEWARDIlEllBEltBACK,
SERGEANT >. bLIBOX aud
I’KITATE C».- 'NELL.
Sevgmuit F.IV won wa* very badly frost
bitten, irten fou >'l anil died at Godlmven July
O'after undergo i 'ng amputation. Tho relief
thlps Tiltiis nud.. Boar, with tho iurvivori, arc
vow oh St-Johns.
mrwaTOBV i> r cuxuxmdiir kiilky.
Tho JhlJowing fte • the telogrora which wax
rwclvcit froan Conn i candor Sehlov:
m JottttiaP, f.. July AffjBa* w-B.
Cbandlerf Kecfctary t -ItheNavy, WarhlniUmn Tho-
Thetis, thrBceran41 1 Lockearry arrived hew
to-tnyfroxiowat (live ii'Jund; oUw'cU Wo sepa-
ratfsl from tTiir Alert u o' rallra mirth daring a gate.
Att-p/m,, ituMihlJH -e< milesofrOrenBablnc, in'
Bmlit'semaidv tho TV* ;td» *iul tho Bear rewurod
alive.Lienttinnrt A. W. thccly, Bcrgcant Braln-
onl, acrgrmim bredcrtiK Sergeant Long, Hospital,
stoward BereHt.s'k, m vwseConnel omi Sergeant
Ellison, the only survf* or*ȣtho Lady Krankllii
boy urpeitltteni Bergw nt Ellison hail lost botlo
Jinuds and one-ftwX by It »t- bite, oml ittod July
r.th, at Uodliawm,. three) i lays after ainpatatfon,-
.'which had boeom* Impitn 'tlwk Bcvcntecrv of the-
(twentyfrve- ixnonn ««a npwlng this rrprill-
lion letlshed by star ra«ou at tho point
where found, mie-irna tint W*ed while fooling to
,root;re food. lArcL-tu host -eai ff tho dead were-
rescued end arenowonbo* nlttreHiotlsainUho
Ucor, 0.0* KikUuos Turns orefc. wns burled at*
IMsco, Iu arcorilann* with tl» o dhajre of the inspec
ts. of'WeaMrtt aia-iutoud. • !»•» boillcs burled In
av list fortf uinr ramp, were; siKhtt to sen by tho
w toils nnrl,cu*ren»ibofr*ro in) -terlval, anil could
notbeveooviml. The name schtho dead recov-
end,-with the date-oflitath, a ro ua follows;
t'KItt'EAHT OltOE3;.Jtonuary lst>UM.'
IfEUElUUE,Eskimo,April A 111.
BHKHKAW LlNN,.AprfUth. ,
LIEUTENANT MMJKAVtX)!). i IM Oh.
HWttlKANT JEWTIlL,. April II 1th.'.
I-IUVATK ELLIS, May mb. ,
HFttUK ANT-ltA liiTl'N.- May 21 Id.
1-l-IVATK WIIISTIKIt, May-Jit h.
11HVATK llERUY v .Hinvwn.
- ItlVATKScaiMKlDKIl, Juno 1, flUx*-
The nomMO( tho dead buried In 'iiq Ice fort,,
with tho into of deal h where tho
bodies were aob rcoovcrea, aro
mifolba**:
.Sergeant RICfyAprll.9tlh.lMt.!
Corticnri HA Jnv.o
Frivol© HKNDV.IL Jana wh. ‘ .
Autlnn AMlMtant NeiTtaanliFAVY. JuaoOth.
Horgeont GAUDMKR, Jim©l2th-4 Iro-.vncd while
brcaklnu through uowlj) fonned U :c, whilo seal-
'fiSNS EDWAK93; Eskimo, April.2lit-
1 wooM-urgently.) iiusgost that tl 10 bodice now
on board bo itlarcd in raetalrlo cauq for sate
and betuv tmnapertattoiiln seaway. Tfcfc appear*
to mo imperative.
\HEUTKNAWT.OIUMtal*» RETKEAT-
Greely abandoned Fort Gongcr Auaiut 3th, 1R8.1,
and rcucli .d Baird i■ taCVeptaabcrzHh.Mlowlag,
with entire party wlL Abandoned;all nw boat*
drift 'ft*.
null
liahod Ootebor — —.. --
founds During tim nln* roontli* bin jwrty
hud to llvi
!)f
Th© inatltutlona
■pmra Cnllrd Htsto. " rest upon tho
IntcUlgciiee and virtue of all tlio iwnplp.
Bninratte I. miuln unlvursnlaaa I net weapon ol self
protection to ecory.olttaeo- It lx not the Interest
of the republic that any eonnoraio system slmulil
be adopted which Involve* the rcdiictlon of
wage, to the hardatandarel prevailing elsewhere.
Thercpubllran iwrtyalm.te.tovate *nd dignify
'“AxlTiutoi'ttnte ter tlio IndusSrtal system which
under rcpulilcan adnrinUtnitioua has developed
our system.of revenic-a potter wh<»o end must
t« Imrm to our mainifactunstand greater h mn to
our labor. Experiment in the Industrial anil
financial system 1* the country!* tfreatest
dread, as stability Is It* greatest boom Even
tbc unecetatnty resulting from the r ®ge»tt*rirr
agitation in congresa ha* hurtfu y adtotedlhj
tmiiiicssnltbc cull re country, "^o can, measure
ths harm to onr shops and our homti, to nur
farm* and our comiuasw. If the cmerUluty
ol periwlual Utritt agitation" h . tw
be liillctcd upon tee country? Pfe are In
the midst el an abundant h.rvtcs; we a*
on th* eve ol a revival iSSS'l'Ii,.™
thing atanda tn our way but the drtsul of a chaogo
in H»e Industrial aystena which has wroughta«h
wonders In tee I si twenty years rod which with
the. power ©f Incrwirad <tapital will work atfll
J¥f A tVr nSrtela ot prosperity in twenty jsan
to bo tnc.
OIXVORWON roi.v.Y.
Our foreign, rctotionz favor owt domealle de-
valopmeuL VV« or© at peace with the wwid—at
upon a soand basin wifi no unaettlc* que*-
Mouofanfgeleut nugnlitueto. embarnmor di*
tract ua. Uappfly removed by our Keaoaphlca
position from particlpatlott or interest In tboae
queatieua of dynasty or bwmdnry which, zofrc-
quenUy disturb the peaee of Kurope, wp are
left toeultivatn friendly relation* with all aud
are tree from poraible entanglements lt» the quar
rel* of any. The tin I tod ittatea has no cause and
no draireto engage fn roailiet wnhMir p©wor on
Wth the nation,id the western hcmUphcro we
should cultivate closer relations and tor onr com-
mon prosperity ondadvaocemeni we abowd In
vite them all to Join with u» lu anagreoment that,
for the future, all iiiUrnatlonal trouble* In .North
or Hotilh America iball be adjusted by imparttai
arbitration and not by arms, tjui ptpjeet waa
port of tbe fixed “ '
of I’rwldent Garfield's ad
it abonldpInmyJuT
accomplishment on
jent, be
iniEEci. ,H uaa.i-sssp■ ■ 11■ .»•*•,w —■■ ■ Is con
tinent wonM favorably affeet tbe nations
SRBIVWa.fi thus powerfully too tribute at uor dis
tant day to th* oulvetsal acceptance ol thc phll-
anthmr.Ic and Christian principle of urbitnttotb
The «Aet even of loggesllng It lot *he HpanUh
American states has been most happy and .has ln ; |
crcwcd the confidence of tbo«nwaM|MUj||
in i in
Coutlno
people In our
tlon. It fell to iny lot ““
on First Column Hfflh Rfb
iratti
lapse of time.’- Tlutt-raoluHt by Becba at (tape Ha-
bin© In ivwland a rinnll amount savod L-oia tho
wreck of thwFrotcitoindllB, and landed by Lieu
tenant* Oarlington and CcAwcil on tha- beach
whero Greely'* pwty was found .nraped.
When tlu«sa provisions were consumed tho party
wax forced to live apon bofled sealskin stxfpafrofn
tholr lealakin-clothfu&Jiclieni and alirlin|w»-pro-
served in good waathep when thoy we*.©-xtrong
enough to laoko exertion* Aa l.nposhrimps were
required to Ml a girilow ineaaaro, tho labonwax too
exiiauxtitig.to depend' upon thorn tojtutaln life
entirely, ’/hochanael between Capo 8aUbo> and
Littleton UUud did *»V cloe© on account of the
violent gales alt winter, so that 210
rations at*i tho- iktfor point cruld.inot *
be reached. All Crcely's records, and all Uie In-
htriimcntx .bought by him from Fort C.wger ar©
reoovmdf and aro on t*onrd.
1UK man* Off THE TRIP,
From Hail bland to Hmlth's sound, I had n con
stant and • furious struggle with tho Iro* kn hn-
ttasaaldo flaex.. The- nolm burrlerx of le© were
overcome by*wnU:hfnlnoas and patience- Jo op-
i»ortunlty4o«dvanoe a mite eycaped ma, andJor
several hundred mll» tho ships were Joraed to
mm their way froin load »> lead througa ta
ing in tide knees from three to six feet, grid when
rafted lauofixreatew Tho Tlietlx aptvlb© Bear
fuAchal fffpo York,, JSbo© 18, 1H8I. aftcea invmoki*
of 21 day* in MclvlU© bay, with the twoadvanra
shiiw. of tho llnudwe whaling licet, and
continued', to Cm- kaWne, retorting seven
days lata* fell in with so ran others
of this iitjetaoff Wcxtcnholmo island,and anuoun©-
eil Greelv.'wrescu© to tiu-m. tfiat they might not •
be delayed from U air tiJtinggnmjris, pof, b«- ■
tempted into tbo dsnpns of Smith ss^und in v lew
of tno retard of offered by c ©ngrew. Ke-
turiring across Melviilo lay, we fell In wAh th© ••
Alert aul XAwbcar.yy off Devil’si ThurJk StruKgllng
liirrMiHhJioavy'tcai commander Cjfnn old ml-
rolrabJjidofet aUraxaw far with the - transport-so*,
early ItvAko^softsoSoeforc the opcr fng otcurred.
Lieutenant Kmory, with the tar, iaa nKOfijU
tn© tor ©ughout with great 11 f is mnw »*iid «J* 1 ”",,
llinehlaff reaillrwf * in aceomplUldnjt tbe great
duty ci relieving.-Gre»ly. ., .
1 wtiuid ask instructions about t^c Locktcmy, a* ..
tho charter patty held by her master uUitri in .^
several nspsctf Iron mine.
(xinnmert or the retoued.
Th* Greely party aro very much imi.rovcd since
tbtlaraoai, bfct> were critical to tno cxtrvmo >
when found, and* for sevemidaya after. Forty-•
eight hours'delay In reaching them would navtw
btam fatal to nil now living. 5 ho season north ffe
Int v nud the closest for years. Smith asouud wa*w:
OO^open when 1 left Capo ThewInUr-
about nel rillo tavy wn* the meat severe for twenty
yewis. Tlila great result li ta.iirciy dw. tawtvig*
v,.c arled sUffl of yourself and the* secretary, otj
vrar in fitting .out this expedition to* tho wota it.
Los.had ibuTiouorto accumjHhh.
W. ti. Kvmley, Commander,
Hccrattmy Chandler to Commom&er ,Scd>lny%.
WAirtJiiN irox, July 17.—The following. dl*r.
ptteft has Just tan ferwardei, by Bsc retard
Chandler, from WeatUoint: . n
Commander W. H. Hchley. Ht. John, N- K.: Ib©-
ceivemy congratulation* and tftonka l
and. your whole eomitsand. ft* your prudcM*.
peraeveranee and couiignn nRwnrW'Jjja
find dying countryme*. The hw”; 18A , I ? c .f’
icon peMJexo out w'dh great affeettpn teUtu*
Utianl tirceiy and tha few survivor* «i hb dwul y
laerll. Care for them unremittingly, and bid
them be cheerful, ar>l hopc v on acsounP oi wbat
III© yet has In store for thorn, Ur^crve tenderly
the wtualna of tbe berolo dead. JpVff tat
aceonling to your Judgment, and bcuig them,
home. -._
Lieutenant Grwdy’a Narmttve.
TUX HTORY OV THREE WINTER* WMI IN THE BOA&
nr THE raOZEN NOXTH.
Wsaaixo/vx, July 17—The following is o.
ieeoud dttpeteh r»ceiv«l from Licutonant
Greely, by General Utsea, to-il»y s
Tor the Ant ttmo In three centurtra, IngtonA
tnrte, U.A0. They **w from '.*,000 lect elevation nn
land north or northwrst. Lut to ttw northaask
(irccitland, (.'i|-s Rohert Unooln, Utitu.lc, fikfrK
longtltucle. ;ts. lieutenant I-ockwood was turncl
back In MB by open W*t«jn th* norhOrwn-
laod shore, the party barely c-c*pln(; .Inlilng Into
tl« 1-nlarocean. Dr. iwvy. in lwA toHOJ**®*
Markham route, was a-lnit oue ilay iu tho l'olar
oraau, north of ftopo Joseph Henry, and caeaped
to land, abandoning nearly everything-
KXI-l'KIMiOhlU.NU L I.ASI).
In WO, I madea .['ring, and later a summer
trip. Into the Interior of Orlnncu tana,
dttcovrrtug Uke Iluen, ?“!”?_
ral'cs In extent, which is fdl by the Icecap of
(irhni.ll Uud. draws Ituitgln river and
I outln'itt-lou S-jejudi-'olumu Eighth r«ge.
W tsmxovos, July 18,—The Greely mirvir-
ora hi * vo l* 6011 Ibuml. Tho acting secretary of
1ms just received a telegram' from