Show E D T ar LA X fad S S GATH the s alen r t i i e d i iti iri 71 W washington E i elshang jr 11 correspondent fet fit of the chicago tribune T bline is evidently not an ardent W admirer ifor or sorge songe some of our prominent men in ite a recent correspond correspondence corre spon d ence I 1 in n wh which I 1 ch h he e d dwells wel wei Is at length upon mr sumner samner he thus alludes to the chief executive and the principaL Secretary y so man who contemns condemns constantly and ignorantly ibe public press ress as do the tha president and his tuii dull lull secretary of state understand eovito how to govern the american people they repulse nobody who seeks them out to know anything but they neverda never do know anything they have no genius to be communicative when they wish and from trustworthy hearsay as to the atmosphere of horse at the white house and of terrapin at the state department I 1 have never felt a particle of desire to inquire at either aware as I 1 am that mr bancroft davis dayis for many tears years the new york correspondent of the london times is the author of mr fichs fishs state papers including tle the moran motley letter of course I 1 do not include those which mr sumner wrote at mr fichs fishs request and completely satisfied with a distant perusal of president grants message my knowledge of both these distinguished officials is limited to a hand shake at receptions and a couple of bradys photographs there is no organization amongst editors and writers s certainly none to which I 1 have eyer ever lent myself but perhaps throughout the united states there is a wide breach between power and mind under the present administration when mr pile file the pink of deportment and mr morgan jones are carried through the senate with ith the executive bludgeon while the be historical head of mr motley is chopped off insolently as if he were a streetcar street car ear conductor men of letters readers thinkers and all the reverent educated natures of the country feel feel of the president that A primrose on a rivers brim A yellow primrose is to him and it is nothing more tre THE theat st domingo correspondent corres ondene of the new york herald describes describes that thit island as a paradise for those who favor the intermixture of the white and black races they see there their dogmas car carried out ort to the fullest extent white men and some of them americans marry or og live with negro negra women n and ana it matters little which and bring up their mixed progeny as their proper families just as the families of white married people are axe recognized la in the united states miscegenation there BO so far from being odious is the rule of life and not damaging socially this habit of life together with the vast preponderance of the colored race the degraded condition of the population and the tropical tro p ical teal climate soon have a demoralizing influence over even american americans he ile thinks our nation might improve the dominicans but E their influence upon it small as the population Is could only be injurious ida urious THE omaha JT herald erald in alluding to the election of gov clay clayton ton of arkansas kausas kansas to the U B S senate gave its readers an idea of his character of which recent events are furnishing a remarkable confirmation fir mation clayton who was elected to the U 8 senate declined the honor his declination as stated by the papers being based wish to remain and attend to the duties of his position as govern or affairs in the state being very unsettled his conduct in thus declining a was held up to admiration as one of the few instances in these iatter latter times tim es of pure patriotism and unselfish devotion to the interests of the people but now comes the sequel at the time clayton was elected gov 6 arnor a man by the name of jahnson was elected lieutenant governor john son after his election did not work in harmony w with ith clayton and it is said turned democrat he had a number of influential bart jart partners ners and he be and they succeeded in 16 impeaching the governor the time for trial clayton sue such deeded in making nicking a treaty with them one of ta he e conditions being that he should resign the and on their part they were to withdraw the i rn rui peach ment both these conditions were observed that completed clayton ar 1 ranged v with johnson to appoint the latter secretary of state he of course to resign oie uie position of lieutenant Gover governor nore we ye pr former of ogo i flee was a more lucrative one than the latter hene henc the acquiescence of johnson to clay tons proposition A A senator hadlic hadi Had leya ieya ij a clayton man nian wab was thell theil then elected president of the senate scarcely had this change been effected when the legislature under the kawwas rec reo required gIred to take steps to elect a united states senator to fill the vacancy bocc occasioned as toned byplay by tons resignations did BO so elect and yr ing la to n hd helas was chosen b to be his own successor son soh hadley being president prisident of the sanite senate now of course succeeds as gover governor r so 80 far everything worked wobkea C charmingly I 1 to suit claytona clay tons touA plans buthia atrium ild lid not stop here he had go out ut of his way by giving liim the dalice secretary of pf state but now he was way no longer needed tile thie there fd A c clause of the jag yas yag remember remembered ea which prohibits prohibit an executive officer holding any other ath e 31 term for which witch he was elected bo so johnson is now to be excluded from the office of secretary of state after this we should judge senator olt chayton aton is admirably adapted for fai congress arkansas is too narrow a jl field for the exercise of abilities such as he possesses A tactician astute bold and skilful as he be will make a stir in washington it is such qualities as he has evinced that extort admiration there and we shall shail not be surprised to hear of his managing the administration ba fore the close of the present congress DR dioletis dio dlo LEWIS utters some plain truths in his second book to our girls in discussing the reasons there are for men not proposing marriage it says bays it Is because they have grown to be afraid to take thib this step they are afraid of the expense they are afraid of the dreadful responsibility thrown entirely upon them Vo mens habits of dress action and society repel instead of attract offers of marriage they destroy the beauty of their womanly bodies which are the most beautiful things in all creation and expect a man to fall in love with a compound double and twisted starched comical artificial touch me not wiggling curiosity i he thinks piano music is a humbug as a rule that is thousands of dollars and much precious time are wasted in its cultivation upon girls who haye not the slightest possible talent or ok promise the bame same is true of the study of french and the other languages as this study Is pursued nowadays to the neglect of the very rudiments of english dr lewis believes in square dancing but not in round dances his reasons for tabooing tabo the latter are because the rotary try arv motion is injurious to the brain an and d s spinal marrow and because the becu ari arl contact between man and woman may suggest impure thoughts let a modest girl stand in the presence of company in the same contact with a man aschen as when she dances in any of the round dances and she will appreciate the force forcel of the latter remark THE concord statesman republican in alluding to the republican in new hampshire which was acquired llred in 1856 and has just been loat lost nus mus thus treats of the causes which have produced this r revolution evolution t i some borne of the causes of this disaster date back months perhaps years while others have sprung into existence i within a few days some of them have weakened not only us hut but our political associates all over the country others have arisen within our own borders had charles sumner not been forced from his liace place as chairman of the senate committee on foreign relations Ee lations the publican republican Ee vote of yesterday would have bave been larger had the san domingo doming 0 scheme been left to the operation of nai nat ural causes instead of pushed with unreasonable persistence it would have been larger had congress succeeded in le ie storing our commerce to the extent and importance it had before the rebellion it would have been larger had bid bome some of the land grant bills however wise and just in themselves been discreetly deferred until the public understanding standing had bad grown up to them tham it would have been larger and had all these causes of embarrassment been withheld we might have carried the state stae by byr nearly the usual majority in spite of the demoralization produced jn in the party by the Tor forcing cing upon apoll it of unpopular nominations made mann in pia packed e d cau cusses 1 I 7 the datty daily mono Moni toai aiso a xeva hamp hire bire republican paper commends a study studs of the return returns to preal grant and senatorial benator Senator lal lai jahada lead bead moni meni who so io recently tho note rote or ng ex X toward pared creoli have ave imd and express an opinion abc abd in unison with ith the view sand wishes of the present federal administration some odthe democratic papers papers admit that the cause of the state going democratic was wafts the war op on mr sum bum rier tier lat at ear far cannington Pann ington avis coun conn jy 01 march loth 1871 of consumption i elvira affif holmes bolmes aged 57 ye years ars arb three months and 17 days a I 1 IS W 1 she october the 1835 emigrated to kirtland in I 1 1836 left lef kirtland nd the eail fall of 1838 for missouri and ithol thui thur there re sh shared ar ea in all the summer suffer sufferings ings ingv privations incident to the people of abod portion poi roi of while fathering to far west wast she rhe he was wag atop stop ped at and nna nd not p grin prin e I 1 to go further she a arrived in the nall nail of 1839 and in the spring following became a member of the family of the tropher joseph smith where she remained a happy nappy happy inmate till the day of december when she was married to jonathan if H holmes she left nauvoo with the exiled saints in 1846 and arrived arri arni vid at council bluffs about the of july and on the 0 of the same month parted with her husband who had volunteered to serve in the mormon batal lion llon being left with two helpless little girls garl she spent the next on the banks of the bleak missouri river and ancl in the summer of 1847 crossed the plains in the first company walking nearly all the wa way during the winter of 1847 8 she frequently frequent frequently Ty shared sharod her scanty supplies with those less fortunate than herself taught school etc till the return of other her husband the follow following ln september since which time she has lived mostly in Farmington she has ever proved herself a kind wife affectionate mother and a generous kindhearted kind hearted neighbor faith hope and charity were the chief traits of her character through life sho she retained the full fall strength of her mind to the last and ana continued to bear a powerful testimony to those around her to the truth of the plan of salvation and gently fell asleep in a sure and certain hope of a glorious resurrection she was buried in the farmington cemetery on sunday the and being universally respected a procession of friends nearly half a ailein mile mlle in length followed her to jo the grave corn coin at mount pleasant on the lath instant in the ath year ear of her age MARY UARY A ANN N relict of william smith formerly or whitwick lei cester shire Ed england gland glaud she died as she over lived good and true believer in the principles nud hud doctrines of the church charch of jesus christ 01 61 latter latteo vot which she had bad been a EL much respected member nearly dearly thirty years dom dox mill ifill siar start please copy |