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Show OGDEX DAILY COMMEPXIAL: SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1691. TW Bi Jkroefw Hi which in the light clnax to tbs If Ure k anything (is hiftory will it it that the peoj nfto anew 3 fa tu w'in) Bank, bTbt anaig tmmte turn if4 fcreok. ilia Will vwdiiac swift Autt-rica-n i aljcg 7. try Fla aat bm IW aaaf M It mf ia iy Ha. St. fciunr;; ( mg. t kiir HKfr Oats TW SBrtjdy cC frmt TW r jiira u tu Matt Huory a paprr ran-au-ki- W--ft tu hemr! The minister hesitated for a moment the prayer, betraying no sign of eiritenieut. Mr. 1Io1iii., however, bnrrul oat of the church, followed by three young men of th congregation. They hastened to the house, bat tha thief evidently saw thera earning, for be departed by the back Jeer a they eutered the front. The young men gave chaw, however, and overtook him, but failed to hold hi in. lie broke away from them after a struggle and succeeded in making his escape. The party then returned to the prayer mneUiig and continued the service. The thief was interrupted before he liad ecurtl anything of value, although he had gone through some of the drawer of a bureau that contained many valuable articles. Chicago Tribune. mud then calmly finished Wk rj Ilagr. A correspondent of a St Petersburg contemporary has published the result of ao inquiry he made into druggist' charge, and by ao doing ho has caused fear and trembling among the apothecaries of the city, who dread some government order on the subject. The inquiring individual presented to fifty-Bin- e different apothecaries a prescription fur a solution of boracio acid 1,000 grammes in quantity and S per cent in strength. For this he was charged vari-ra- i prices from thirty kopecks up to a rable (100 kopecks), and even tip to one ruble seventy-sikopecks. And he mode be solution at home for about two or three kopecks. This was bad, but worse follows. There was as great variety in strength as in cost, for out of fifty-nin- e 4raggists there were eight different ways of. reading 8 per cent In the 1,000 grammes of water there was anything from half an ounce to three ounces of buracic acid. London News. tery of the great Slat tlurln Tennwa. are given from one when he was in the rxtrat-t- s pe-h- by s h. to o the spleudi I wa- m-allin- Mh-dw- t thorvb of Sooth EvansUss. m KMifird hitecdumng jrayf meeting TmmdMj night that a borglar was the parsonage next door, but b dtd but 14 it dUturb Lin deration. Li Vyear-o- l J ton alone in II ha-tlx harue, and the Ur lying on moi when Us a Strang man rater. Ha maintained Lit preioe of wind and f4eaded to be adtp until tbeiusa bad ptssard out of the room and gone upstairs, TV bejuruped op and ran to the church. Mr. Holmes m in tha middle of a prayer when b was startled by the ei-- t Lunation: Papa, there's a strange man in the DnUU m lae I H rtslaknl Ik "rver. The fcev. W. IL Hulme. ff the u m-- ut Andrew Jubnaoa tuu But had jaetic don t it H wi on tjf th trongta4 pro-- j BMfet patriate turtt America L of ckml tb in diacorj U d?Ki, rpiu and biuae that ubamred bis Utrr On days and h'irtcrl Lis Amer-k-a- a k gisd to see in The SUgtuia l Lis Lnitl senate. It was os March J, 11, juM U fure LincJa wan inangor&ted. From Mine was to Texa public exciument and Usling. Cungre was expiring. It was known that JuIwmmi desired to speak, but Confederate sympathizers that he shoald not if they could help it Wigfidl,of Texas, had said in open senate: "Gentlemen of the Republican party, the old Union is dead. The only question that concerns anybody now is as to its burial Shall we have a decent Christian funeral or an Irih wskeT Senator Lane, of Oregon, had purposely tried to use np all the time, so none would be left for Johnson. Northern senators and those who upheld the old Union had been freely taunted with being cowards. At length, in spite of interruptions, Johnson got bis chance and used it He had not a scrap of paof any kind. What he said per or was the outburst of a born orator's patriotic heart He spoke of the tannts as to lack of courage that had been flung in the teeth of Union men that day. He said: tte le . LmditV UcleM thm from en SlwekL. Fruea In rati Vrr. Ttirty list-lieoswn, wt3 rop RidjucOr, AprJia haiiy. ten JVb. 21 3 in O.'d,. aud lad-aI beroby rrt.fy that I s it tte tie sUreiM-truuUoi with a dMease of W. C-- T. V. Li to fcrtmist as to tad kidneys tor the lak thirty r tL Kissers fjr cee ef the and that after using four jrtj !r--'- u Kidney Taa I Lais found unitte and popular e.jrIot TL utbrLt and relief from il cx are f reeb asd well trailed and A. R. Fwas, the ladies in their iua:ct rational Late County J udS rf Fo-- k County. tuiues Lav tt4r audienoee by and bnacty no tea than by tber grace Stoves Cheap. wherevt their toe ifeey Lave apAt35L Twenty-fourt- h Lav sung U immnse They peared. buy them, payable wbee J. W. MiXutt aadnoes in Xrw Vork, Cbieagfl. u aud 8t Louis. mayor. AnnounLwmect tit place and prices Xotie. will be made later. Having sold my most Bt&iket I dcire nil iistrti iru4drfA.l in un t.k The Wtrkin?iiifn lleeiiii?. oa or befora February 3Ah, or the ao-........ . l . .. .. i tt The workLngnuMi's meeting announoed owuia iuoxi uupsai Will ue (ujubu us uw hands of a collector. Pu:ixir Usuix. for the Union opera bouse Wt night took place at the court bouse intoad-Tc- e For gale, bills calling it ere circulated in Ths three yearlAase of the Congress part at least by members of the "Citihotel and saloon. Cheap for cadi. Lodg- zens " party. It was attended by about sixty to ing apartment and saloon will be sold eventy-tiv- e H Voweuu. men, many of whom were separate if desired. voters in the People's party. In fact.it Wisilnm'a Vinlnt r1..,,. .ill Vmii tha appeared to be largely a rally in the inskin prouf against the effects of severe terest of the fuskm combination and was not a remarkable suocwh. aoauter. i ry it. fb Cms. JBdrt Frier, Who Stf-fer- Tfce d Seeiik e tv Ln jrs tx tl--.- Crt rtyHi rn t-je- d i.J UNION I GROCERS. UP-T0-THE-T1ES son, x XrTS WTT Y 9 BECAUSE they give ', Ti XX X i their customers better prices and goods for the money than can be bought elsewhere. A XLliX I i FOR INSTANCE: fian-chiM- 1.1 it ,. TVVO Cans of Salmon, for 25c. SUGLAJR. Cured Hams, only nc. a tt. Breakfast Bacon, 10c. a lb. Oranges, 15c. a doz. Anything and everything in our line FINEST EIVEESIDE AND fii-l- M m S Whin Bill Slkea Tut Oliver Tnriit. In Chertsev, writes a correspondent, house which, if rumor says true, is 'I if B ti 3 I is of immense interest to readers of Dickens, and it is for pale. It is believed to be that into which Bill Sikes put Oliver Twifit for burglarious purposes. The house h good one, and ought to fetch a good price apart from its valuo of aswo ctation. If any one of a philanthropic disposition and a keen admirer of Dick- ns were mindful to erect yet another memorial to his genius, a purchase and endowment of this house as the homo for destitute boys would be in every way anttable. London Star. . Tiuia They Were Tapped. Mr. Francis Davis purchased n pair of boots twenty-tw- o years ago to be worn at his wedding which are now in good preservation and are good for further service. They have been in use for party wear daring the entire time, and this were improved by the addition of a pair of taps. Gloucester Times. Rudyird Kipling is coming to this country in the spring to enjoy a hunting tour in the west before he goes to India, where he expects to spend much of his time during the next few years. Mr. Kipling s father is a clever artist, and tea prepared a series of elaborate illus trations for his son book. . t Blankets are loaned to the poor during th winter months, free of cost, by a land hearted citizen of Brunswick, tier many. They aw stamped, to prevent theea from being sold or pawned, and they are returned at the close of the cold a ; 'weather, i It is proposed making engines of alu wwninm to develop thirty-- f onr horse pow X, to be used for directing the movements of a French war balloon of 3,000 cubic meters capacity, experiments with wTikh are to be made in April next The Weimar Society for the Circulation of Good Literature has distributed since last March 800,000 copies of wholesome tales and novels. At the same time it has mcrcassd its membership to 5,000 and has laid by $10,000. umph, and lu the language of another, the Goddess of Liberty hovered around when "the rocket's red glare" went forth, Indicating that the battle was rosing, and watched the Issue; and the conflict grow fierce, the istiue was doubtful; but when at Migth victory perched upon our stars and stripes, it was then on tha plains of New Orleans that the Qoddens of Liberty mails her loftU'st flight, an I proclaimed victory in strains of exultation. Will Tenneswee ever desert the grave of hlin who bore it in triumph, or de sert the fl;f Wist he waved with suecossf Ko! We were In the Union before some of these states were spoken iuto existence, and we intend to re main in, and insist upon -- as we have the con fident belief we Nhall get -- all our constitutional rights and protection In the Union and under tha constitution of the country. p gtang. Tbrfs is tittbln' in tLi world wuna kiting foar temper fcWat. A &isdiizmmi to bis nautt ihruurb the away. I this a lis&tftel buu;rrt rwettlv iav!h-x-u-Uw- t-e- funeral 's ti9 mi'r isiutber-ia-U- ? New Jersey hmt oure mure put brrlf vt tiuoraliry and reuord oa the that virtue. Ste has set Ler fjut the will not alkw fiirtiu, girling and mb a tarrying en"auocg yXii-- petpS in Um k f uf the cbnn he. g the New Jersey us likewise enligLtied the w orld on w hat a eummon sctdd is. The hatit of scolding. rulting in a public nuisance," will lay a wuman liable to be dragged befure the bar of joctke and incarcerated in a pruun ctll, 51 o there to meditate. Still there are strikes innumerable in various parts of the country. They might all be avoided by a thorough good understanding between employers and employed. If workmen could trust employers to do the best they could f the labor interests, if employers could trust workingmen to be reasonable when hard times came, if each knew the other to be jn-t- . honest and kindly disposed, there would be no strikes. Bat these will never cease till such mutual confidence is established. e The fanners have had such hard times in the last half dozen years that they grasp at anything they think will help them. Therefore they demand that government shall give aid to agricultural education, and encourage in all ways the teaching of agricultural science in colleges, in order that, if there is any way of farming so as to make money, the rural population may find it out Further, the ruralists very generally speak up for government supervision of railroads, and many declare for ont and out government ownership of the roads. On the tariff question the farmers seem all split np in their minds. Their opinions on the question of candidates are the most interesting of any perhaps. Some believe that we should have a new deal all around, with new issues and a distinctively agricultural man like Secretary But Rusk for presidential candidate. as showing the inherent clinging to the old of the rural mind, it may be said that the favorite candidate of the Democratic farmer is Cleveland, of the Republican farmer, Blaine. The Republicans are more divided on the question than the Democrats, however. o pres-ident- al o u Ht-- dent John- single handed, once cowed and backed down a whole mob of roughs who were trying to kill him. The speech against Lane and for the Union was one of the greatest ever uttered in that old senate house. As he warmed up and went on he carried the packed galleries with him completely. The excitement vented itself in wild applause that the officers of the senate could no more restrain than if it had been a raging torrent There are young Americans who will be interested to know what a patriotic speech just at the outbreak of the civil war was like. Senator Harlan said that this speech of Johnsou's had never been equaled la the country. The applause did not subside till some minutes after he had finished. The order was given to arrest those who were making the noise. Mr. Aldrich heard some of them declare with oaths BwtnM Willie Went Skating. sergeant-at-arm- s might arrest, Parental solicitude is natural and that the were ready to go now. that they but has ridiculous it its pha.ic. proper, Johnson closed as follows: It wasn't very long ago since Willie went skating. His mother was tilled The people of the country ought to be aroused to this uouditloo of thing. They ought to buckle with apprehenNion, and spent about lialf on had done (God armor, and as TVnnwwt-the day standing in the front door to see blesstheir her!) by the exercise of the eloctiTe whether ho was coming home Ktiitninl by going to the ballot box under a new set cold on a shutter or otherwise. His Bi- of leaders, repudiate and put down those men who ster waded through the snow to tell hiH Save carried these states out and usurped a government over their heads. I trust in Uod that the father, and the old gentleman got hie old flag of (he Union will never be struck. I hope feet wet standing on the edge of the It may long wave, and that we may long hear the pond trying to make his son hear his national air sung: command to come homo. Xolnxly but ' The Ur spangled banner, long may it wave land of the free and the home of the Willie had an appetite for tho evening O'er the brave," now looks meal. His mother after the Long may we hear old "Hull, Columbia," that hired girl a little when she. can leave her good, old national air, played on all our martial Vnag may we hear and never re room; bis father has such a cold in his instrument the old tune of "Yankee Doodle!" Long head that bo cannot talk, and hix (sister pudiatewave thnt gallant old (last which went has such n cough that she is afraid to tuny through the Revolution, and which was borne by leave the house, and when any of them Tennessee and Kentucky at the battle of New that soil the right to navigate the wants any medicine Willie goes out and Orleans, upon Mississippi near which is now dented. Upon that bays it Washington Post the stars and stripes waved In trihloody Bow to get tiere: Farmers' View The Springfield (Mass.) Agricultural Press and a number of other agricultural papers, both east and west, have made a tolerably thorough canvaxs of the rural sentiment on leading questions of the time, aud particularly on the question of who shall be the respective Republican and Democratic nominees for presi- llercantile Comp'y There are men who talk about coward, courof thing;' sa l la tibia age, aad all that. connevtioa 1 want t) iny, sot tjuantlagty, that theaw two ejree of mine never tuoked upoa anything In the shape of mortal man that t!ii heart reared. It was the truth, too. Andrew f IT PAYS TO TEADE WITH THE TT "nnr in n I mon lercantue uo. Many attempts have been made from century to century to toughen glass, Joseph Martin, a glassblower of New Castle, Pa., believes that at length he has succeeded in solving the problem. He claims to have made a piece of glass so strong that a blacksmith could not SU ' break it with a hammer when it was laid upon his anvil. If this be true lamp chimneys will no longer break, every body can have beautiful glass dishes for Tltrlcal Kotes. common table use, and half the fun of whose "World's Fair" has E. E. Rice, the world will be gone for bad boys, becalled in, will put a new cause they can no longer shy stones just been "Never Better," is road. on tho piece through the windows of empty houses. Mr. Rice's next venture. Mr. Rice has connected with the burlesque busi-nes- s The proposition has been made to put been continually since 1875, when his children's playgrounds upon the roof of "Evangeline," without doubt the most city school houses wherever yard room popular Ameriean burlesque ever writ, is scare and land is dear. School houses ten, first caught the public. in London have already been built in Speaking of "Evangeline" makes us Crane, Henry E. Dixey, that way, and the result has been satis think that W. H.Richard Golden and a Goodwin, Nat factory. It is a poor substitute, how host of ot her less popular stars all served ever, for the old playground upon ths their time on this famous burlesque, olid back of mother Earth. It Is prob which, has been playing for the past sixin popular favor. ably the best we can do though, this teen years sad Is stillthe fact that the Notwithstanding roof playground. , But if we had rapid Fifth avenue theatre was but recently transit and cheap railway fares parents burned, work has already began upon could afford to live in less crowded dis the new structure, which will be one of tricts and their children cottid have the finest in the country. There will be somo important changes in the plans of room to play. the new house, aud New York will be much better off, from a theatrical point An additional member of the presi- of view, for the fire. Harry Miner has s dent's cabinet is being urged in some leaae of the theatre for ten years, and an Henry Irving quarters to attend to the labor interests effort will be made to havereason. there the entire first of the ooon try, and to be known as the play LvHia Thnip"Mi. who from time to But too much head time k s broi secretary of Jabor. ght to t lis country some of the finest burlesque talent ever seen k a bad thing aometimeii, C. J. 340 25th CEABTEEE, Mgr. J 1st Grocers below Broom Hotel. ; in America, has made a big hit in New York in "The Dazzler." The receipts went steadily from 1330 at the opening to 2,200 at the close of her engement. She will play a supplementary season at the Standard theaterin that "Yon Swedish dialect play, is meeting wun ine most unqualified success, both from ths press and the public. Many novel effect are introduced, and the company is of general excellence. It is doubtful of the play gets as far west as Ogden the present season. The latest importation from England is Jennie Hill, "the Vital Spaik," who will open at Tony Pastor's theatre the latter part of this month. We are anxious to hear how "the Vital Spark" takes in New York. The name is unique, at least. ' The critics speak highly of Arthur Sullivan's grand opera, "Ivanhoe," which was produced in London the 3lst ult. The music is spoken of as possessing great power of imagination. , The Little Queen Short Order restaurant, nett to Reed Hotel, is now open and rtoiilv for imtrrmntra Mauls cents. Day board by week H. . a. Rad the scribe now. ENftvsow, froprietor. Sunday Commercial. Sub- Cause of the Indian Rising. Elaine Goodale has been among the Sioux Indians seven years, teaching them and trying to lead them into civilized ways, except as to their dress. She thinks the red race is far ahead of the white one in the matter of comfortable and convenient dress. Elaine knows the language of the Indians intimately. She has lived among them familiarly, and knows what tho Indians themselves are unable to tell about their troubles. She writes a letter to The New York World setting forth the influences that have been at work among the savages since her advent among them. We have had disgrace and suffering enough over this last Indian outbreak. Once for all, the wisest, most upright and unselfish persons in tho country ought to be selected to deal with the Indians, those who will go to them with the desire to help them, to be honest with them, and not to make money off them. If the savages are easily cheated, all the more will a decent white man abslain from cheating them. The commercial and political way of dealing with Indians, is bearing fruit now, and bitter fruit. Miss Goodale says: . The prent crisis in Indian history is certainly unexpected W most of us. We who have been intimately acquainted with the Sioux for the past few years have felt CI can at least say for myself that I have felt) gtrongly two conflicting currents of feeaog.. There hag been a grow ing eagerness forthe highest good that our civilization has to offer a desire for the best education, a the purest teaching of Christianity. Indians have learned to recognize the power of a self sacrificing love whea it appeared to then! in the person of a woman or a jnan of the hitherto hated and suspected white race, and such men and women, usually missionaries, hav gained their respect and loyalty. But there has been a powerful undercurrent of discontent, sadness and bitterness sod a taste of despair. Civilization has not been to the people what It promised to be. The food it brought was usually vapid and immaterial. The misery was real and present, while the noble and devoted white man was a rarity. The low minded, sensual, greedy, overniliiiK and utterly selfish white man wai too frequently placed otut them as a teacher, fanner or agent. Most unwillingly thev relinquished a third of their domain and saw none of the remj ised ueiirfiis. Labor wai robbed of iw reward by aa uiirelt'niiBff cHiiiate and an ungenerous soil. was and sickness' Hunger universal, and Oath became a familiar guest iu almost every .. bouse. ' Especially was tlmuortality among little children sad and fearful, and it is noticeable that la Ue songs and ceremonies of the ghost daooa much mention is made of this universal bereavement. Then, by continual brooding over the old, (res, healthy animal life, a sort of revival of old customs, culminating in the passionate, pathetic atary of the sew Messiah, a savior, has come to . . tbe Indian. How actual warfare was brought about was another question, and one upoa wfaioh there must have be in much difference of opinion. My personal conviction h that there was no deliberate intention to destroy the whites: that the Indian ar standing in tke attitude of self irfense, 8"htr fhg only as they conceive themselves to be brought to hay. .... O o i i O PS f 3 O d e |