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A2 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1879-TWELVE PAGES OUR VETERANS. The Military Forces .of the ® Republic. _ An Adress Delixered Before the Sorlety of tho Army of fhe Potemac, At Its Annnsl Reunion, Albany, N. Y, by Gen, Josoph B, Hawloy, ‘ It {snot out of place before this audtence to discuss the Miltary Forces of the Repubile, cou- sidered both In relation to foreign war anit do- mestic violence, and thefr audordination to civil authority, It is hardly necessary to assure you that, in considering these topics, {t is not done with referonce to anything that has been a sub- fect of party debate, ‘Tt acems quite certain that the true doctrine can bo latd down in such man- ner ns tocommand the assent of all thoughtful men, without entering upon the particulars that havo piven rise t6 hestod party strife, DUTY OF MAINTAINIG AN ARMY. Within Ofteen yours after the cloro of the tremendons war, {t may appear superfiuous to foslet upon the erent duty of maintaining ithoroughly educated, disciplined, trained, cf- fective national army. The reduction of our army from a million or more men fn arms to * 80,000, 40,000, 30,000, 25,000 ia one of the mar- «ols of modern history. It fs no Ices strange to fiod in the public prints and in the halls of leg- ialation, sometimes among thonghtfni, well- read men, the suggestion, if not the bellef, Unt atill further reductions might, and if they might they ougat to be made. Those who recklessly-doclare that we have no need what- ever of afyjarmy aro not worth regarding as an element inthe discussion. It is altogether childish to prophesy that we aro never to hava war ‘with: any foreign Power. It is almost equally foolish to say that wo necd not continue any precautions :against civil war. Can oven the most unrensonoble of tho teazing critics ot oor National ‘army deny tile? If not, then certainly what {s,to ba done {n this re- gard should ‘be energetically, thoroughly, and moat camnietely gone. - We aro glad to belicvo that the enlisted force yéed not be very larga: indeod, while at 25,000 or 80,000 {t moy “be sniMl- tent for our purnoses and ridiculonsly amall in comparison with Europeanarmics, yet the more, therefore, is it the part of wisdom nud ecoonny thut whatever wo nave shovld be the best possl- blo, the moat complete of {ts kind, nnd capable of rapid expansion. Our academies can give us not to exceed 129 educated soldiers and sailors sach year, It is hardly possiblo, therefore, that {n case of n great foreign war, we could summon to the fleld 8,000 fully trained offlcers from the schools, evon including those who will in the future, os they have most honorably fn the.pnast, come promptly from clvil life ‘at the call of their country, Ido not underestimate—and one cau hardly exagrerate—the yatue of the morrelous facility an American citizen has for converting bimeclt {nto o useful and effective sotdler, but this fs inovitably a roatter of time; and that botmay so convert himectf, the services of o trained corps of instructors and Icaders are in- arable. Ido not believe that creat Gen- Tals caf be extemporized. The facts will show. few, bat very fow, who were not trained fram foutn in the etudy and practico of arma,—very few Generals who did not.know from actual practice what {a required of the Captain of a company. Itis hardly pussibte for a man who Never marched or manouvred on foot with his sol- dicra to comprebend the time required and the aiMcaltles to be overcome in rapid and long marching and quick deployment over the ob- Btaclos of fence, and bog, und wood. From the growing: ranks of our skifled clyil-engincers, engineer officers can be made, but vest requires time, From our innumerable: creat manufac tories of fron and ateel, ordnance ollicers ean bo trained; but that reqalres time, Our foundrics cduld in time ¢ast us great guns, but it would require vesrs to- bring thelr work to an equality with foreign caunon. We have men enough of chemical and mochanical ingenulty who can learn to make torpedocs, but that ra- autres tima; and this branch of olfensive and defenstvo warfare {s assuming a most surprising importance. The suporficial critic thinks moanted men can be summoned and mustered {no few daya, but old’ sokliers know that it takea yéere of traning to make a good cavalry corps, Every coliega boy takes n few. lessons Inthe selence of projectiles; but the art of compounding powder for small arms ani heavy guns, the best methods of rifling and fonding, the form and weight of stot, large and small— alk theso things aro incessantly boing stulied and teated by the brightest men thut cou be caltod into the servica in other nations. When war (s made in these days, it fa made quickly and with tremendous force. To be bo behind the thnes in any of these things is to ba almost defensoless for months and to baat o disad- vantoge for years. No boasting Amerlean fny Kenulty and energy will prove it otherwise. THE MILITIA, 2 A regular army in a Republic like ours canbe but the nucleus of 2 very much greater possible force. ‘Tho States are wisely forbidden by the Constitution to maintain standing arnles, hut it 1s right for many reasons that iy should. make {t their conataut policy to Talay ina well- organized and offective militia, Nono of the calamitics that have happened to ther peoples are Impossible to us. I can hardly conceive it within the bounds of any reasonablo probability that a regular army will ever be acrlously dan- eEcrous to tho liberties of the country; but the tiie when thera ie Ros fangor fs the time to Ruard against tho posell pe of danger, wn an effective militia in cach.State on the one hand, ®compact Federal army on ihe other, and that Patriotisin and sound senso in the people, with- out which our Government fs in ony event a failnre, reduce the dangers of artned force toa minimum. By the theory of the Constitution and by the letter of our Jaw all men within the speciiled years and capablo of bearing arma are enrolled ‘in the militia, but the time when all such were summoned once or trico a year tothe force of a company and regimental muster has passed away forovor, and it isthe imperative necessity and duty of every State, if it. excuses the majority of ‘the enrolled militia from any active duty, to draw from such excuse the mone! 8 sufttclent to thorouchly equip and’ rea- sonably drill acompact, mobile, and effective force of at least somo regiincuta and: brigades and divisions, according ‘tothe population of euch Stats. ‘The same considerations in somo Tespects apply to this that apply to the reular army. Whatever isto be done st afl must be well done, Skeleton reciments of ono or two hundred, shally equipped and clumsily drill. ed, making a jolly Jaree ora tipsy spree of a few days of nomiual drill every year, are worse ‘than nonsense, The cxperienco of a nunber of our States sluce the War bas shown that what is most -desirable in this respect can easily be ac- complished. “HOME DUTIES OF ANMY AND NAVY, T have had referenco thus far to foreign com- plications, or to such difileultics at home os might rise to the dignity of war; but there are other and exccodingly important consideratlona, ‘The armed forces of the country, the reguinr army, and the trained militia, may be, and sometimes are, called to duties far more dis- agreoable, yet equally exsential to the malnte- Dance of few, ond order, aid Mberty, Every atable nnd wiso Government has in view ui- ‘ways the possibility of a resort to armed force against fle own citizens, Besides those dis- turbances which rise to the dlenity of insnrrec- tlon or ely! war, I refer tothe lesser evila of domestic valence, coming down to the riot Rise aod amatl, and all such Infractions of law 08 break tho public peace und surpasa the power of the civil authority to suppress. Law and public centiment ought to aedulously puard against a-too prompt resort to the soldier; but it is equally on offense arainst. sound practice to omit providing the ready means of vindicating Jay in the Inst emergency. We know too well what civil war meaus.. [a earller daya of the Republic We Shay’e rebellion in “Massachusetts, the whisky lusurryction fn Pennsylyaula, the foedp feut treason of Auron Burr, gaye us scrioua vurning. Not {nfrequently there ure disorders, due to personal or local causes, overpowerlng the ordinary racaus of keeping tha peace, The Native Auierican riots .of Boston, the similar Gisturbances a Philadelphia und other elttes, the Macready aud Forrest riots {a 1819 In New York, the terrible draft riota iu New York in 1603, und the more widespread and much more serious railroad strikes and riots of 1877, ure exainples of what it wero folly to say wo need, not expect sguiu, As the Nation zrows fn popu- lauop, from its now forty-fye milli ey, sixty, and 9 hundred, the eddi wares + and great tides ot social, religious, und politic: al agitation will ocvaslonally break bouuds. The. Government which respects felt and properly feels the immense responuibility of Guarding the Hves and property of its citizens, wile it with palatulty and reluctantly resugt to. armed force, and will tret coupe! the cyeaw thority to exbaust its resources, will neverthu- Joss be really yt last to act with decieiun und overwhelining mower, . : _ YONCH IN GOVERN ENT. + The element of force has Its indlapensable Pisco fu wyy well-considered moral of pulitical theory of governtuent, To dally with the de- terilued violators ot law fs supreme cruelty to the peaceable citizen. Beyure a6 it counda, Ik fa who comes to the scene when criminals resist Umit in ward the wisdom of its employment. The Mag: (strate and the Sheriff haye the right to sum- alon of violence and the arrest of the olfenders, duty. quatites all necessary violence. By the anclent proceed to sacrifice life unt!! order was restored, orasxembtics of persons, or rebellion againat the authority of the Government of the United States, tt shall becomo impracticable to enforce ty the ordinary course of Judicial proceedings the Merry as tell as justice to call at the proper time upon crushing, irresistible, and, if need be, Killing, force, and’ this force must be ready; allent, slumbering perhaps, but ready, and It muat be known to be a0. ‘Tho vory knomledo of {ts oxlatence is a. ropragsiny, pence-piying tn- fluence that cannot be overestimated, In gens eral {t auMces, inthe matter of danger to society from individual crimes, a Republic cannot differ materially from a‘ Monarchy; but there ara palnful possibilities of riots arising from social, commiunistic, or wide-spread and inflammabie Political tendencies, nnd from the prejudices of Pace, caste, and religion. In protecting itself against wrongaoora society begins with the eingle Constable of the ancient latr, and a Justice of the Pence. Above the Constable stands his supotior, the Sheriff, In accordance, there- in any Stato or Territory. tablish justice, ineure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote the general wolfaro, nnd eectro the bicasings of Nb- port, the millrary arm; and if with violence or tn larce numbers, And tothe | civil officer in the enforcement of inw. Where- Sheriff is committed a power almost withont ntti law inthe brekerownd, to mesaure iter Bard thie Wiel ot tee soldior ini the professtou of arms, ADSURDITY OF FEARING THE ATMY. mon to thelr assistance, for the instant suppres- any such regular army ns we havo ever main- all citizens of Jawful age (all above 15, uncer an- tafned or aro ikely to maintain In time of peace Slant law), of whatever grade or calling, within their jurisdiction, aud tocall them fromaltother ‘The summons pormits nobxeuse, and | yon, That 95,000, or 50,000, or 100, : if bittous General, ave of England, indeed, the Sherlifs micht arm troops, tinder the lead of an am iF themeciyes nud all whom they summoned, and | not within the limits of possibility; and, it we may judge of the future by the spast, there Is even Teas tikelihood thut any great American sol- ‘The poere comitatus supplied in mil the indis- pensanle clement of irresistibte force. Indeed, prior to the thine of Charles I. in England there twas Iittle of what fs Known asa standing army, All men were armed under the Jaw,—the general call upon the posse comitatus meant a call for armed mon, and the Sheriff wns practically mili- tary as woll as civil commandant. ORIGIN OF POLICE FORCES, Within the present century a new force has grown up to mect the public want. ‘The Duke ‘ot Wolllngton in 1829 made the suggestion which tod to the organization of the metropolitan po- ico os known throughout ‘the British Empire, and ag copied in the United States, 80 much accustomed are the people of both nations to respect them aa agreat friondly power, esaen- tal to the preservation of peace, that one learns with surprise that at the origin of this force it was looked upon with suspicion, and encountered strong onposition, Jt was regardod as hostlic to tne liberty of the eltizén,. and’ a dangerous or- gauization. A very eminent Rnglich writer re- marke that had the police appeared nos pow, with the milltary uniform and the spiked hetmet, it fs doubtful if their organization or presence would hava been permitted. Yet thelr totat numbers in the United Kingdom are greater than wero those of the whole repulur army in 1703. ‘Tho metropolitan police, as known there and here, . ste almost a military force. They are selected men, thorouchly drilled und organized ina semi-mil- itary form, yet they are but the Constables of ihe ancient law in uniform, and constantly upon uty. They are nermitted the club and revolver, to approach still more nearly the regular rol- der. Wellington devised them: os a counter- nofse to the Guards, and because he shared the distaste of all. soldiers for service against his {ellow-citizens. NATION VERSUS STATE, In the United States we have o divided gol- Gicty with a divided relation to the ciril power. The National Government hos its spbero of dutiot and powers, which, through jroat tribula- tlon, lave ‘vocome toierably woll defined in the Judgment of all patefotic men. It alone fs nu- thorized to matniain a standing army, and with- in the dotned limits of the law it may and must uae that army for the maintenance of proper National auprermucy, Partly because of ita hay- ing, such forces always reddy, the States nro authorized througn thelr Legislatures or Goy- ernor to call for aesistance incase of insur- rection or domesite violence. ‘There ia no sense or reagon It thig country for tho flerca prejudice against the Natfoual army thaw had such o Philosophical and vatural foundation in En- ginud. Ourarmy fs not the army oF *King, maintained by his prerogative, Lt 1s matntareed oy our voles and direction, by taxes levied by ourselves Upon ourselves, 1b is used und goy- erued by an Executive ond by officers who re- celve their commissions, their pay, and all thelr ordinances and regulations from us. » And yet it isnot well that the péoplo of our States dhould fall tuto an easy hebit of relying upon Natlonal power in caso of domestic vio- lence; wherefore it scema to aieevery one must admit the yery great. tmportance of a respecta- ble and efficient ratiltia. It was not agreeable to ren, 05 we- Hare econ within two years past, the Executives of soyeral: States compelled to call upon the Natloual Government for the svanty forco of Federal troops kept on the At- Tnntic const; but, on the other hand, it was ex- tremely satisfactory to see that nowhern was a single soldiar of thé National army oasaulted, nor wasit necessary for the amallest aquad moving through the most violent tumults to firoastngle shot. Wherever the National flag swas carried by our boys in blue {t wes saluted with honor. "it was recetyed asa blessing by the well-disposed citizens, and even the rioter would oftes Brant tk respect, 43 gh excuse for deviating from. the NRCrOUs course which he liad started, = mm NATIONAL, MILITIA TAW A DEAD LETIRN Naturally enough, our course has been an- alozous to that of Great Britain, Tho militia in most of our States has fallen {nto a still mare Jamentable condition. The Constitution ordains that“ Congress shall hava power to provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the Union, to suppress insurrection, and repel invasions; and that {t shall provide for organizing, arming, and disciptiaing the militta, and for governing such part of them as may be employed -in the servico of the United States, reserving to the Btates, reavect- {vely, the appointment of tho offlcera ‘and the authority of training the militia according to tha isclolino preseribed by Congress.” At tho tine of the organization of the Government Congeors proceeded to discharge this duty by the cnuctment of laws adapted to the time, bit the Jaws are us totally uscless as those that nut ashort time ago provided for arming all Ep- pilsh youtlie with the bow and arrow. The stat- Ute of 1702 fe still In forco and published in the revised. editions of the statutes, It prescribes tiat every able-bodied male citizen of the States over 18 und under 45 cere of aga shall bo on- rolled. You will bo nleased to learn that every, citizen who ball have notice of his enrollment aball be coustantly provided with a good mnsket. ar fire-lock of u bore sufictont for balls of the eighteenth partof 9 pound, a suldelent bayonct, two spare fiints, und oo knapeuct, a pouch with a box therein to contato uot less than twenty-four cartridges suit- ed to tha bore of his musket or fire- lock, each cartridge to contain & proper quanti- ty of powder und ball; or with a oud rifle, kuapsack, shat-pouch, und powder-horn, twen- ty balls sulted to the boro of bis rife, and a quarter of a pound of powder,” and shall ape peur Ao armed wwhon called out. Ench commia- sioned officer shall bo “armed with a sword or snger and spontoou,* * With the cnactiwent of that law and the nr- Bent appeals of Washingtoa and John Knox for the organization of un offectiye militia, ag well as the inaintenance of 4 sufliclent army, the in- terest of the country on the subject apparently ceased, gave that itt 1808 Conerees made what was for the time the excecdingly Mberal por- menant appropriation of $200,000 annually to rovide arms and equipments for tie millitta. We huve vearly seven times the population of 1808, and certalnly moro than tenty times the reavurces, but a praposition to appropriate threo or four inition of dollars annually for the nillitia would be received with astoulshment by Congress, * UNREASONADLE JEALOUSY OF THB SOLDIER. We nercelye then that the indlapensable ale- ment of force iu civil covernment is supplied in this Republic, first, by the right of the Buert® bud Justice of tho Peace to call usou the power of the couaty to summon every citizen above WS years of azo to his asslutance—to summon them elngly or in bodfes, armed or unarmed—to beat down the enemies of public order, after due warninys, at whatever vost of suffering or fe. And du many of the States due provision is made by which the Sheriff may summon to Kis ald the organized militia of bts county, fully armed and eqitipped, under thelr proper offlvers. In cases of prolonved or greater disturbances, the Chief Macistrate uf the State coca to the rescoe, und with analogous powers summons to Mg afd the armed force of the whole militia, 1 noed be,--theorctically every citizen between the ages of 18 and 45,—with the anne which the Jaw theoretically supposes him to have ready for survic By way of making tho kevper of the poace, the simple Consta- ble, more poworlul, ud to avid as far as posul- ble a recort to the military power to maintain, order in the Jarger celtics, modern ctyiltzation has uniformed, and to gome oxtent Ormed, the inctropolitan police, In case of still for domestic violence or insurrection, the Legiata- ture, If 46 be in wession, or, if not, the Executive of the State, may call upon the Drestdent of the United States, who has at bis sarvice for the restoration of order the militia of all the Btates and the land aud waval forces of the Uniied Bates. There fs etill another class of necexsl: will send a Conetable after him. than the officers of the regular army. durlng the ate great Rebellion a larger propor- any other class of men, executive, Judictal, legisiative, professional, or of sort, oven clericat, This ought to linye been the South, cyen in sone measure creeping into the Inw-books used at West Point, the surprise la that 60 few joined the Rebellion. port of the proposition fam now urgii, Dean selves, Sor within thelr spliere they were with- out exceptioy loyally subordinate to thelr own elvit Government. Our standing army, dependont from _vear to year upon the appropriations of the Congress, fal neople, purposes. Ispenk of the otlicers. Rebeltion at {ts outbreals, apprehension of the multitude of personal the cessation of hostilities. imaginary injustice, thut au occasion of redress of factory, pratifrlug, aud ships botween our creat lenders. majority of the noble baml of chiefs, alm of the soldier fy subordinate to the civil ward given many of his uredecessors. Presidents, proved theniselyes worthy of the highest reapect of publle seek tts hich honors save by ple. ogainat certain fnlse prejudices Constitution, the dn evory second of thu. BUERIDAN’S nipr. LEztract from the poam by Byancla M, the Reunion ofthe Ariny Of the Poi on the (sth af dung.J . Hc, in Albany, Some one tas framed in battle hymn ‘The story of his angry ride, With spur drove dvep In churger's slde. Baya for the poct who aweetly sings! Lue this Js the way a war-gun rings !— Murry, Philtsheridant Htdo!—Fly— Raca with the wind, Ontgnilop the river, Yo thy coliimua thinned, ‘And the Ined in a whlver!— Ridot~for the gleam of your furtunate star Will blaxe new hope on the valley afar! Tiidot— ‘tiv a rout of eanuon and car, Jlko a drift In a storm of cordego and apart Ttide!—or the glory just born of tho war Will bleed with the bullet, or blush with a scart Sueridan, ridei— ‘ With blood on the ep ‘Ani blood in the al Ridet Ridet ‘With your helintesa bar, nT r Corning ts Sherhlan, Not~wild!— A speck on the hill, A sluntow far dying, Tucarnated will, Dirnstor detylngt Coming! where threatens the catoract's roar, And crossing his gallop the witd waves pourt Conny! where blows of the lightning toro ‘The oak behind, and tho pine betoret Coming! though fonds from thy flery woore Brigade tn bie path the furles of yuret Sheridan comes! With blocd on the spur, And death in the air, Cotes !—comva!— With nuge in hts nui} Ajurry--O Sheridan! Tide i-Fly Riel thy stecd Till the wild huofs rattlet Yonder they bleed, In the storin of the battle! Ride!—or your age 4u the valtey will fall, ‘Torn with the bayonet. riddled with ball! Utile!—or tie ranks tnat have answered your eal Wi famiah, awit die in bondage and ural! Hide!—or the emoke wil! wind tn ftw pall Gun, cannon, and Nag —lope, glory, and allt Sheridan, rldat With blood on the spur, And Maine fn the air, Rida!—ridet With your streaming hale! Couring, bs Sterldan! THaltt—Vorws— its foam, At tho front he ts ridings The waster at howe fs guiding? halt! and the fear und the terror ure lead, Aut they harden ta toroas whe hopelessly Mod! Form !~ ani the front of the batsle Is spread al Charge !—and the foemen have hitterly Ani the aun that way clouded Shondan, charge! With blood on the spar, Aud lead in the alr, Chargul Charge! ‘Tie e bannor, your hate! Glory for Bheridant Namo! Fawel— Baye toe ble brow And etars for hiv shoulder; Never wo bow é ‘Tu warrior voldor! Fame !—For the urmy he galloped to save From tho bar of the priron, the mold of the Bravo; Fame!—for the nation whose bauners he gavo New flauhes of freodous fron monutain to wave} Yame for the lesson the proua worlds crave ‘That bee Jand Of tho freo" ta **the home of the rave |" Sheridan, ridet co. tes calling for armed intervention. For t With gold on the spur, President is uworn to aupport Uio tava, Mace And fame tn the ol, {nstances aro specliied in the statutes of Ride i—itidet fc) fs jeer to use the hawt and naval forces, und hie 6 in general dirccted, in caso of lnsurrections against Stato Governments, upon proper applt- cation, to call for such wuniber of the millitia of any other State or States as ho deems sufliciont 4o suppress the insurrection, or to eu ploy such, part of the land aud naval forces of tho United “States as ho deena necessary, Ile has lke authority whoen- ever, by reason of obstructions, comblastions, We laurel pour aa Ts Conade Loyal? A writer in the London Eraratner asks the . following, question, uiyl answers 1 substantially {o the negative, Wo ure assured that Canada hag uny amount of lipJovalty when everything Koos well, but that, should there be apy hitch, somethiug very ditferent will speedily be Liurd, Annexation to the United Btates becomes thea laws of the United Staten, in general, with- fore, with the declaration that, * We, the peo- ple, tn order to form a nora perfect union, es- erty to ourselves and onr posterity.” oxtablleh the Constitutton, Congress hae, atnong ottier in- numerable wise provisions pertaining to inter- nal affairs, duly provided, in theory at least, for that indispensable backing ani irresistible sup- there be one thing tn relation to this that {s more clearly un- erstood than nnother with the Amorican peo- plo, it {s that the soldier {s anbordinate to the fore, | protest, as unjust to the army and dan- gerous to the Government. against false economy, and an tinreasouable jealousy of the To discourse upon the dangers to liberty of js an injustice to the Atmerican soller and a lamentable misjudgment of the Atwertcan citi- ,000 rezutar could overthrow the American Government 1s der will ever undertake It, If lio snall try it, we Beneath the iniliions of citizens capable of bearing arms in euch an emergency he would xo down lke a reed, Judged as a whole, we haye no moro Joyal ami patriotie body of men tu the eountsy, Even ton of them remained truc to the flag than of whatever expected from their special education as the national champions; yet If one considers the Ie gal doctrines taught thasy who were natives of But fn sup- suitor even the Rebel West-Polnters them- ofiicered by men who bave elowly won their way to the head, promoted by the judgement of ihe Chicf Executive, under the eye of 4 watch- nd seottered from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the Lakes to the Gulf, is in no. respect likely to bo subordinated to treasonable Observe, as to Ube privates, thut there is to recorded {n- stance of so much asa company’s siding with the Aud from its organ- ization to this day the tone of the army has been that belitting soldiers oud gentlemen, I admit exceptions, but they are certainly quite as few a8 any man has aright to expect of pour human nature, For one, during the Inte great War, I thought sometimes with n disagreeable quarrels that would break out everywhere after You and iknow many Instances of wounded feeling and real or and naturally supposed ‘ould bo sought for sone eort layances by sppeal to public opinion or the tribunals of the army. You have beard of a vory. few painful exceptions, and, on the other hand, one of thy most satls- . 1 honorable chapters of the history of ‘that atruggle records the triend- Lknow nothing finer, og an czampte of per- sonal friendship or of exalted patriotism, than some of thu curresponicnce between Sherman and Grant, or of the deyoted ssfaudlelifos ofa No, wo ‘need fear no attack upon our liberties from any army thot America witlever organize, ‘fhe high authority, and, if ho indulges In ambition out- side of lits profession, It is atimulated by the ex- aniple of the generous confidency and hizh re- 1 Washing- ton, Jackson, Harrison, Tayler, and Grant, of our in all things the “Ainerican people, but in Jarge deerce they carsed the Preferment to whieh the triumphal volce of the peoplo carried them by their services a3 sol- diers; nor will any soldier of the American Re- proving a noble devotion to the civil taw,the Constitution, and the ancfont rights and Mberties of the peéo- i am not to-duy elevating the soldier's calling above-nny other, but oly ARR INE It in some regards dangerous, tatk that ‘would de- grade hin tn his own estimation, abolish the army, and nurse n bitter hatred of that element of force which all moral Inw teaches us must’ bo held in reserve in any Goveroment. This fea Government of the people, by the peopte, and for the people. But that Government so made, once cstablished, shall in no whit fallof the power and majesty accorded to any other, Tho laws, and the Union must bo defended and maintained on eyery inch of space, Much, read ot Where ths, blood of the moaning morning was ly hled, - plondid and red} the favorite cry, Woanro toll that immediately antecedent to Confederation— Loyalty and attachment to the Mother Conntry— sentiments never remarkably atrong of extensive— ere very low. The neople grew weary of incom: atent alateamen and of political ‘deadlocks, jot onty xo, hut an unmistakable dinposition war Manifested for an alliance with the neighboring Ropubdlle. The writer goes on to remark: To speak of such a mixed population ns that of the Dominton of Cannda, now consisting of seven Provinces, ss boing loyal, la simply a delusion, Loyalty is dofined an fidelity, or firm and faithfal devotion toa soverclmn; wiitle a loyalist fe repre- sented to be ono who. rellgionely professes anil ob- ferves an inviolate adhorence ton monarch, Why, the Canavian population of French descont num: bers abort 1,081,000; tho Iris popnintion 830, + 000; natives of the United States number 05, 000, to say nathiog of Swiss, Norwegians, Dances, Swedes, Icolanders, Grecits, Mexicans, Indians, Ttatlans, Spaniards, Mnesians, and even Chincac and Japanese, Howecan tho people of auch na- Monniitles be expected to form an attachment to the British Throne, ot even the Sritish nation? ‘Tho Isiah, it in well known, are hostile to Rugland, and ¢ympathized with the Fenian movement when & rald was mate npon Canada, Not only no, but they had formed rebel organizations: arn one. thom- selves, and no doubt wonld have alded the In- vaders had their project been eucceasfal, THE INDIAN PROBLEM. Tho Effort of Extending the Protection of the Courts to the Opprossoi and Plundored Indians, ‘To the Eaitor of The Tribune. Cmicago, June %5.—The habeas corpus cnac for the release of Standing-Bear, a Ponen Chief, and bis party, who were belng returned by mill- tary force to the Indian Territory, ond which re- sulted fn their discharge from custody, hos Prompted much comment in this country, and even in England. So horrtble are tho details of the transactions out of which the caso grow that the genoral public ia slow to belleve that such things cnn bo done, and they could not be but forone fact, and that fs, that Indians haye been dented all protection of law, It hns been held, although thera has been no ruling by any Court. to sustain such n course of action, that under no circumstances could an indian or an Indion tribe appeal to m Court for elther the pro- tection of Me or of property. Judge Dundy’s decision overthrows this propo- sition, and it ts belleved by eminent Jawyers, distinguished army officers, and londlug citizens that « case can be brought by which this can be tested in the United States Suorome Court, and, (f successful, overthrow the preaent In- dian policy. In that event, whon an attempt is made to rob a tribe by venal Indian Agents, they can appeal to the Courte, und thus remove the cause of Indlan ward which cvery fow years desolate our frontier. That the Infamous trentment of the Poncas, as has been charged, {s true, and that it is be- Moved that thelr wrongs cap be righted in the Courts, the following quotations witl prove. ‘The fon, A. J. Poppleton, who ts known to the legal profedsion in this city as a lawyer of die- tinguished ability, wrote o letter to Biss Lo Flesche, an Indian girl of the Omaha tribe, which was published In the Oriaha dally pa- ners of ane 4, in which he speaks of the treat- ment of the Yoncas as follows: “'Thete treatinent by tho Government fs, in my judgrocnt, infamous, ‘This treatment Is due, let is hope, not to the President or Scerctary of the Interlor, but to venal and ungertipulous Agonts, who havefound means of deceiving shose High ofllcers of the Government. If any Court should reverse the decision of Judge Duniy, it would be a supreme exercise of mercy to consign them, without respect. to age or sex, to a Chivington massacre, rather than return them to the fever jungles of the Indfan Territory to swell the number of the 150 fresh-made graves of their kindred in that tropical reservoir of malaria, from which they baye escaped, “It remains now to recover by appropriate legal proceedings thelr reservation on the Nio- brara, ceded to the tribe by the United States, in the language of tho treaty, ‘by way of rewarding them for their constant fidelity to . the Government and citizens thercof,’ and never voluntarliy abandoned. “With the highest respect, I_am very truly Youra, A. J. Porptrton,’? ina letter to the same person, of like date, Gen. Ggorze Crook, commanding the Depart= partment of the Plutte, say: “ichave beon Jaboring for years to got for the Indians the rights they are entitled tounder or Governinent, und tt affords me much (fica- tlon-ta.know of this Important stup tl Mieasa ‘of tha Boncus hy ordec of Judge Dini ih that direction:you Nave just gained. Singt ely your friend, rORGR IR sal = Sabie ps ‘ Nielgadler-Gonerat C. Wok. Thon don. Elmer fi. Daudy, dudge of the United Btates Distrlet'Court for the District of Nebraska, shortly after the Yoncas wore dis- charged, in answer to some criticisms, author- ized an Associated Press telegram sent out, in which occurred the following xeatence: ‘As there 1s no Jaw of the United States, nor treaty stfpulation, setting apart a reservation in the Indian ‘Territory for these Ponca Indians, nor for remoying them thereto, nor keeping them thereon, they connot. bo removed and kept there by forve. This Is for the reason that no Taw or treaty in anjy way authorizes thia to badone.” The Hon. J. L, Webster, a lawyer known all over the Btate of Nebraska, and highly estecin- ed, not only for hla legal attatoments, but for his Integrity of character, saya ina latter dated June 17, 1870: ‘Tho possession of the reservation can be re- covered to the Poncas by legal proceedings, and the tribe bo permitted fo return to it, und thus save from extermination a friendly poople."? Thera docs not seem to be much room for doubt left whon all the facts aro certificd to by inen of such standlng.at the Bar, on the Bench, aml in the army. ‘The modus operand! of three unscrupulons underlings of the Indian Bureau, whereby. they were enabled to rob, this tribe of thelr cattle und horses, houses. and tands, and send them whero tha death-zate among them has been greater than among our troops who fought in the late War, would requira more space than A nowsraper article would porinit, yet, ot any stage of if, it could und would have been stop- ped ff the Ponca Chiefs could have a ppeatea ta the Courts, T. i ay A Novol Dispnto—ows Inasting upon tho Romoval of the Body of a Jew to a Jew- ial Cemotery, Dalton Ga.) Corresponitence Atlanta Diswatch, About the 20th of Anrlt last a dow named Hirschoerg dled suddenly und quite unexpected- ly in this place, Next dar the question arose among those who had chargo of the body as to ‘the proper pluco of burial, thers belng no dow- ish cemetory ot this place, Mr. D. Bukofzer bud been one of Mr, Hirsenbere’s most intimate frlends, und was in charge of the remalna, as Mr. Hirschberg had no relatives here. Me had a brother in St. Louis, to whom Mr. Bukofzer telegraphed in reeard to the disposition of the body, Ite rovlied that the boty should bo buried here, ‘The objectors, who were Jews, e- squicecesl, Tt seems to be very much against the jewish falth for thefrdead to be buried among Gentiles, Aa soon as the affair became known, many Jews fn the Btato insisted on the re:noyal of the body, Rabb! Browne of Atlanta, bud a vorrespondence with D. Bukofzer, It resulted in refusal on Mr B's part to haya tho body removed, and ako in a per sonal altercation and bitter {celing between Dr, Browne and Mr, Bukofzer. To-day the question came up before the City Council on their refitsal to grant Rabbi Browno’s avpilcation to exhume the body. Rabbi Browne appeared In bebalf ot himsolf nnd the Jewish Church, aud Mr, Dukol- zor wos present, but was represented by Col, Buumnuto, his attorney, A llycly scone ensued, and some polnted language, mors emphatic than. complimentary, was indulged In between Messre, Browne and Bukofzer, Rabbi Browne insisted on the right of punself and Chureh to remove the body, on the ground of the usage of the dows, und that it was the desire of the de- parted, expressed some months before his death, Dr. Browno addressed the Mayor and Council, commenti sevorcly on Mr. Dukof- zera course. Col, Shumate replied, holding that the brothers of the dead man had the right to dictate as to where the bodyshaula rest; that it was not a tattor which the City Council had ihe authority to cousiders thut thé law gave the right to a may to bury his bro her auywhers he pleased votwithstandlog the tenets of the Jow- Istt falth tu the contrary, Tho City Council sus. tained their former refusal to grant the applica- don. Rabbi Browne will carry the queation to the higher cour ———————__$§. Subdividing the Klectric Light, A novel solution of the problem of subdlvid- fing the electric Ueht is claimed by Musars. Molera and Cebrulo, which fa explained at length in the Sclentijic American, ‘Thelr mothod is to have one central light, in close convection with the gonerator of thu olectricity, and to distribute this light by moans of reflectors and lenses through pipes to tho strect lamps, and through public and private buildings, und to all ints where {tis deaired, By thle means tho Ios by the divisionjof the curruut is avolded, ana the rays Leung rellected In strictly parailol lines, it fs claimed that the Joas of light by such traus- tolasion ts hardly enough to be taken Into ac- countaball. ‘The fuyentors claim that they aro ablo to produce by their systom 105 Hehta per hone power, giving a liubt equivalent to 1,039 candles, aud “‘Uiat” the cost of Hghting by less than one-twentieth tho custof gas. ~_ADWAY'S IREMLED. oH me If thatd—d gray didn’t distance the black CURRENT GOSSIP. 4n the second hent! In ten minutes I was bitud runic an? knowed no more til niorniz'. Then 1 oilod up my. shooter an’ started out to find Hardy, If Td found him he srauldd't “a been water-Ught long. L was aure he'd put the job up on me onthe track Friday night. Wo didn't happen to meet. Friends looked out to that, 1 know now. Harness wasn’t no whera ground, an’ I fonnd ha'd gone to the Bay. It ‘wasn't forty-eleht hours atora the whole town was howlin’ with dolizit at the way Hardy au’ mo'd been eat up. It was that cussed Harness na’ his gang. ‘They'd Inadedl the shoss of the gray with lead, an’ then put Hardy an’ me up to our little game, “It was,” sald Mr. Jirdaall, With tenra in bis coves at the mere memory, “ the Jowest-down shenanizan that ever was played on fio honest mon. Ou'y think what would have happened if Mardy an'me had met. He tras Huntin for mo just the samoas L was after him, ‘The game was blowed before we did come to- VERSICLIS. THe TROUBADOUR. Gasiy a tronbadour ‘Twanged his guitar: Ceased a maldon then to snore, And snatched mosguito-bar— ‘Wrupped St around hor form In mazy, graceful folda— And then heard that ainger sing, “*Take Smith's Dead-Shot for Colda|” —Wheeling Leader. MISS COLUMBIA TO UNCLE SAM. If you're waking,.call me enrly—call mo just as soon a4 you've learned That Congress tina roully gotten through—has finally adjourned For that wi nets the ‘happleat nows I'vo heard for Strong Testimony from Ton. Georze Starr ag to the Powor of Radwny's Ready Relict ina Caso of Sclattc Rheumatism, No, 0 Vax Nee Pact, Now Yop With mo yonr Reltet hae workeree For the tase then years Liave had perke von. suvera atiqvks of aciaticn, samettiner oxtending font figlomauar Foeions to my anktes, aad at times is, (78 uring the thma T have been th tried tiost all'th reinedlew rorunmnrenied jE Nae) Tagiand fools, noping toind rolier, Uae ail arty ied V have tried various kinda of baths, mnt outwranl oppttentions or lnimenen tae eeeetattons, hinmesone ty monttony and proscriptiona a st : many a morn. xether, an’ then after five minutes! tall wo | claim all or which Falted to cise ga eee ie uments And I anil the roxt of the folke will gry: ‘Thank | gtarted for te Bay to sce Harness, Ifo aleipped (mito had boon non cae,fHO eRe Teuuest of f friend God that nt fast they've gone!" ust berora wo wut there, an', although wo fol- | (oiPemedyen slcted as munelt), Lwaatndces Albany Journal, = lowed hin for mor'n a month, he Kept nbead | uf imy old tums. Tomy aurprigo aga iter rinavonte. | of ts. ‘They sive him hits doso over to | nppiicatt Atvor bathtnieand lon gare tia enee, tha parts affceted, leaving the tint in ne created hy tha Relief. In‘e short tting thay “entirely away, althotiah (tinea might peripilc approaching a chanuo of weath TONe How now ee nt, euro myself, anc to RADWAYS HEADY HOMER ine fehema tion. Pieche, though,” added Mr. Birdeall, cheerfully, and then he sighed und, relapsed into tpoacco- smoke and silence, A MEAN TRICK. Detroit Free Press. The Captain of Police of the Contra! Station wns yesterday waited upon by a young man tn Po Immediately ne palnon dep stomach campy. a very large straw hat anda very short Inen crampe. coat, who liad the partletiars of a mean game to o7Etohaage. unfold. Es ROML * You seo, I’m riglt up to all dodges,” ho ex- Bears iene prec a eer plained as he took a chair. {know I look Hurdette, green, and I tfye out bere among the cows and “ Man fs the architect of his own fortunes, In } owla; but whon any one picks meup for ao flatho alt the sweeping currents of human events, in | gets blistorcd." all the nspirations and ambitions of other ases, Just so—I see,” ropiica the Captain. how nobly—* Well, I dropped tnto o saloon down hero " Night beings out the efare, [It nlao brings | awhile ogo. Inever drink, but it’s well cnough out the bugs, but the essay neglected to say 80. | to go into theso places once in aihile to let the —Ev.] It fs only when sorrow and migfortune | boys know you're allve and up to clover. ‘There have darkened our Ives that the brighter tralts was a feller ther : of character, the God-like instincts of man's na uybs is) reat: big lowe sha ‘thate NET eravdi o: Hut ate forth amid the surrounding gloom, turnlptops, and that he lad a suudst ona ook om Don't blame him any; but he didn’t hare, all “The press and ‘the ballot-box, the great pal- the same, Ho Ind downalump of sugar—l Indium of human liberty, what power is thetrein | did the same. Ie latd down u dollar—L cover: molding national characteristics; what has been edit. Seas" “ ’ game. WI their influence as agents of clyilization; what do fly Nudoenoen ee nes) Ushover dimes woseo—"? i “(As wo glance bacic across the wide unfold- thoinoney.” + “Just so. Wall, we sat, there, and dong came ing centuries that stretch between us and the c buried ages of the past, how the rainsand wrecks a fly end haw-geed around, smelt of both lumps, and went for the culling, ‘Then another came, of the grandeur of inan in his proudest estate, fa tg! and walked aronad ils Jump, got akeered, und “Life, like a mighty river, springing in unseen away he buzz ‘Then the Mg Seller jatd down, another hundred cents, and L tumbled. Four fountains deep in some mountain-glen, then th meandering, & ceaseless, sparking rivulet, dollars up, aud more’ forty ites around. More’n a dozen flies made for his lump, stepped thrown verdant meadows, and adowa many | Short und flew away, and bime-by ong eame an steeps, aud at length—" “To-day we stund upon the threshold of fe, old pionecr with both eves futl of preserved Nihtuing. . He walloped down on the table with ready to crosa it with Impatient feet, and, as wo strain our cyes to plerce the curtain of tho athud, eyed both Jumps for a minute, and then atarted for mine with his mouth open and toath future, our hvarts tell us Uiat—" “What man has done, man can do. Atl that onecdee. I had them four. dollars fair and aauare, when what d’ye s’poso thut big feller the nast has taught us, all that the Hives of the | 2d! reat nud good in other azes bave done for ns, “ Upsat the tablets i ae all tbat the pagesof history, iu tho stormy ttines No, he didn’t. Ife pulled out n great bic of old—" Fovalyets B89 Jong as sour aro, pnd alot tires <-Thucydides, towering heh sbove ordinary | oiimed it Was a-QY hod. hewn following af men inanage that cou among cl & and teachers euch posts, tnd artista, and states- | Months to Ket revenge on for biting hls father! men os Sophocles and Eschylus, Phidlag, Zeuxis, Wasn't that a squeal? Was that what you and Parrhaslus, Herodotus, und Xenophon,— | Call square work! Was thut honorable to go ‘Thucydides, himsolf great ainong the ercut, is and shvot the piltor from under a fly just be- anid to have remarked" cause thero was money up “But what, let us ask ourselves, were the mo- ogee arbat RT eerie ih eae gear tives of Alexander in these brilliant nchtove- | any ono arrested, but f thoucnt Let tet eee incutad “Whon we consider that no other con- | Tits Vou eonld look out ior kine Pros ate qneror ever effected co much in so short.a time, meanness biled down. When mau will shoot and when we reflect that the only motive that | tiy right. away from white sugar ho'll rob a Jol him to carry war, und bloodshed, and terror | agi or pick a pocket. Have the boys Keep an Novw tho awall, tn atvlo arrayed, Goeth forth to promenade, “, Dutwilita'neath the fervor of the sunbeam’s glance, And sodo hija voilars, and his jJackot, and bis pante. — Yonkers Uasette, . Now the boy climbs up the trees, And tho vordant fruit doth acize, RIEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, ae LORNT Sore Throat, Difficult Breathing RELIEVED IN‘FRW MINUTES, NY - RADWAY’S READY RELIER, For headache, whether alck or nervons: rhen Jumbaxo, pains‘and weakness in tha back, sntunint ere neyas palns nround the liver, pleurisy, awellinen of dics {ines raine in tho Iymwela, Reariburii: and patie of ne trvin, chiilbiatna ond frosthites, "a Healy Hee Met will afford immediate care, ‘aud ite continued es for a few deyaeRect a permanent cura, Price, Gs cis RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CURES TRE WORST PAINS In from One to Twenty Minutes, NOT ONE HOUR Aftor Reading this Advortisoment nocd any one Suffer with Pain, RADWAY'S READY RELGG CURE FOR EVERY PAIN, Te waa the fratand is tho ‘é ONLY PAIN REMEDY ‘That tostantly stops the most exeructating pains, ale Jaya Inflammation ant cures Congestions wheter of the Lunys, stomach, Howels or otiier glands or organ, by one application, In from One to Twenty Minutes, No matter how violont or excructating the pain. the Theumntia Bedsridden, Inn Cripple. Nerrous, infirins Neuratgic, or prostrated with disease may aufler, RADWAY'S READY RELIEP into almost overr part of the then known world, | ston him, und {C you get the bolts on him send WILL Tea coli actly uiaman nrattion. a-are lod the word. I want 1 look through the bars on AFFORD INSTANT EASE, pee rome palithied hides ey Dook of | Himand tell him that mennness Is always re- fate’ And although olten we would fain pene- ‘wurde while a square game pays 60 per vent Infommation of the Kidneys, trate the rei of the future, yet at length, in the | Prout : B wisdom of riper yeara, thucht in the rugged qurrs. seatie niiessmiatioe of the Bladder, wane saperleney, we yield ‘Totaught by the And whore was Thomas Edison when the clec- Inflammation o Leics of tho Langs, Inatinet of the lower snimala, jucapable in his | tric light went out.—ZBugulo Express, ‘ ¥ nt i oe natural condition of protecting himgelf, a prey | ‘Tuer isn’t mutch romance in the oxtstence of | Sore Throat, Difficult Breathing, to the elements, and at the merey of the beasts bekotsa bis. i ; Palpitation of tho Heart. of the flota, yet, aided, dovelovad, and elevated | ¢ Member of a hose company—his Ifo is too Ih Croup, Diphtheria, by the creating art of his own brain and the sktll | recl. [yaterica, IP, Dip! n of us own hawls, he Is found =" ‘: ia Missourl farmers aro roported to bo driving Catarrh, Influenza, : clones come, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, tous through the centuries, it vas considered one of the highest und first duties of the eltizen to'trovide tor—" Woman, Heaven's last, best gift to man, yyhat‘ie hier mission? What ts the Ilfe-work Mathie tor her carnest, patient hands? ‘Tho A Jarmer on tho shores had nine acres washed av! Ho ja evidently losing ground. Lake Ontario has Cold Chills, Agus Chills, ©.’ in twenty years, x ; Chilblains, and Frost Bites ‘When 9 baby stuffs his too into his mouth, he | <The ay stteatton of the Teaay Retter to the parter hand that rocks the cradle truly may shake. the it parte where, the pata or diMculty exists will afford cua world: her strength fs gontlenvss, ter courage Uttle reatizes how hard it will be for him in later Eteeaitort eee ae years to make both ends mect. When a man docs us a kindness wo calt him o brick, and when he aocs us on unkindness wo want to bit him with one.—Oit City Derrick. Mr. Parmenns Mix has furnished the Dotroit Tree Press with a new song, to be sung by the man on the drop, entitied “I’m saddest when I swing.” Qrandma—" Yes, children, when I was young os you are I used to walk in my -sleep.- ‘Thirty to alxty drops in half atumbler of water will ina fow minutes cure Cramps, Spnems, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, SICK Mendache,, Dlarrica, Dyseaicty, Colte, Wind in the Bowels, nndail Internal Palos. ‘Travelersationid alwayn carry a bottioot RADWATS: READY IELIEE with . A tow, drops in water wil provent sickness or paing from change of water, }itstetter than French Urandy or Ditters aa a stimu: FEVER AND AGUE; FEVER AND AGUE cored for fitty cents. There is 4s confidence, and she walks—'? “On the broad ocean of ilfewe launcn our barks fearlessly; we faco the storms us we wel- come the sunlight; and, serenv and confident amld tha changing currents and the bafilin; wine, wo spread our safls and boldly hot our— “Koows he, who kmoweth himsolf, the first principles of human knowledge? = The mun who “ Blows tho wind nover so il! that it blows no fool to some ole. Across tho broad occan of Bot a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fe fe, into our very faces tho tomposts may bowl, | Lommy (eagerly)—“Say, grandma, what timo and Arue, and ail otller Ralarious, Mlllour, Kesr but the fearless saflor. meets the storm aud | did you maka!” . Pile oo QUICK ne HADWAYS EADY! HELI calmly trims his—?_- When a boy scrapes 9 ttle skin’ off his | Fifty'cents per bottic. knnekies whila sawing wood for his mother, ho makes moro sdo ubout it than.when he knocks hls big toe-nall off In runing toa dre, This {s relfable, isn't my poctry of a high order?” asked o spring poct, indizaautly, when ft dfdn't appear In the'paper. “It th, it 18," replied the editor, recollectiig that ha saw bis wile papering the garrut with a lot of ft. “Johunle, what s a noun! “Name of a: person, pluce, or thing.” “Very good, Jobu- ale; give an example.” “HHatd-organ grind. ev) “And why {6 a hand-organ grinder o noun?” Bevausa he's a person plays ao thing)? ‘ A South Hil man had n terrible dream last night, He dreamed that Congress was only go- ing to mect ance every 200 years. Ho awoke in such a state of nervous agitation that he bad to drink about threa fingers of nervino before he could get to sleep again.—Burdette, About this tls of year elty people are fit: thug terribly anxtows about the woltaro of thelr country consti. ‘hts anxiety and sofleltuds will grow as the scuson ndyuoces, nnd, when they can bear it no longor, thay will pack up four children and two trunks and go and ace about it,—.Widdietoon Transcript. . “Corn Is Rug. To-dny, more than ever bo- fore, the agricultural interests of the country are overahoduwing all others until as we con- tomplate them in thelr immensity—" “We gay farewell, To you, whose patience and wisdom have Jed ua with gentle hands along tho dizzy eteeps of Iearning's hill, and .to you, doar classmates, whoxo cheerful—” “Aswmint Bim! Young gentlemen—h’'mm! ims and youug—b’m—a—Indles; itis—whoo- toot!” (That settles it, ‘That mptured the machine, There never wag a phonograph yet built strong enough to stand the resonant strain of aschuol- comiittceman winding hls small but mellow horn with a red bandana handkerchief while he thought of a word. ‘That winds up the report.) DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER, FOR TRE CURE OF CHRONIC DISEASE. SCROFULAL Ut ptt POTN HEREDITARY OR US, DEITSEATEDIN THE Lungs or Stomach, Skin or Bones, Flesh or CORRUPTING THE SOLIS AND VITIATING Chronic Rheumatism, Scrofula, Glandular Sweltinc, ‘Hacking Dry Cough, “Uancerona Anteetions, syphlitie T HOW BIRDSALL EUCHRED TNE BOYS ATA UORSE-RACE. / Virgina (Nev.) Chronicte, “Speakin’ of hore-racin’,” sald Jatier Birdsall last evening toa select coterio in the City val, the tricka of tha tuel being under discussion, “T had mydose once, au’ I'ma horse-thief if 1 haven't kept it dark foreizhteen sears. [was keepla’ a big stable on Ji street tn 80, and there was a bight o! racin* goin’ on in them times, and 1 wanted my fin in everything of that kind, = £ was younger and fresher than Tam now, ‘Two horses, a black nnd gray, were brung up from Gonos to run for $1,009 a side at the track near Long Valloy, ‘The raco was to come off on Sat- urduy, and there was some: heavy bettin’ on the thing, Iwas holding back for points before putting up any coln, Bill Harness cumes to mea ‘Thursday, au’ put up the prettlust job 1 ever hear tell of. Youdon’t remomber Bill, I s'pose? Well, ho was lynched ovor to Pioche in 71—poor fol- lor! We took Rough Hardy in, an’ {t was sgrecd (hat the swag was to be divided equal. At was a pretty job, and the ehfot beauty ot it was, that it was so almighty easy an! shuple, [t was just for Hurdy an' ino to take the horses out {he night afore the mee, an’ speed fem round the track till we found their place. It wouldn't be no trick, then, ut all, for its to haul in all the pools und clean up handsome, ‘The nogs was in my stable, which made tho bustiess Just too casts Friday night me an’ Hardy act to work und got the jockica blind, stayin’ drunk, an‘ by midnight they was os limp an’ sonscless ns a patro' nes. “Tardy an’ me, when we'd cot em 80 they couldn't tell a stirrup from a distance. pole, iid tem ont in the straw {nan empty stall, an’ took the black und gray ont for practice, It was a pretty mognlignt night, clear os day, on’ everythin’ worked. alick, rode the black, an’ ft beat the Gray easy, although they was both pow ertul good goers, ‘then 1 took the gray an’ Hardy tool the black, a0 thers couldu't’ bo no suspicion of roots agin one suother, and stilt the black a’most distanced the gray, We jest laughed till the teara rolled down our ail! 8, whew we led then horses back to their stalls, to think of the soft thing we had on the boys: an! Hardy an! my was quito willing to put in about two hours rubbio’ dowy them fiyera, so as to Teimoyve-all thy signs o' the work they'd beon through, The race was mile heats, best two in three, an’ me an’ Hardy wae on the track good an’ early uext day, tukiu’ everythin’ that was offered agin’ the black. We boil hed scade in thera thoes, an', when the start was made. we'd Compinints, Tieeding of the Lungy, Dyspepals, Water Trash, io Doloreays Swelithge. tumors. tle cers, Skin and Ip Dleeases, Mercurial: Dinesses, Fer male Cuinplaints, Gout Dropay, bait’ Kivun, Bren chitls, Consurnption, Liver Complaint, &c. Not only docs tha Sarsaparttilan Hesolven’ excel 2k reimedtal a 9 the cure of Chrunte, serufulous Constttntio id Bila Diecases, but ib ts the oly positive curu fur KIDNEY - AND BLADDER, COMPLAINTS, Urinary and Wom Diseases, Gravel, Diabates, Dron, tuppme of Water, Incontinence of Urike, trict’ Phease, Aluumtitiria, and tu mil cases where there ar brick-dust deposits, Or thu water ta thick, cloudy iulxod with aabatanous Uke tha white of nh wee oF threade jike white all, of thera ts a morbid, duck MMious apoearance, and hits bune-dast deposits, atl fom waters and ain inte amadlat ane vack ant none nz water, and vain in the smuil a park ani wit tie lotus,” sold by druygl. LICE ONE DULLAL. OVARIAN TUMOR OF TEN YEARS GROWTH CURED By Dr.RADWAY'S REMEDIES. DR. RADWAY &CO,, 28 Warren-sl.,%¥, DR. RADWAY’S REGULATING PILLS, Perfectly tasteless, elecantly coated with sect run. cages Urges Feculste, ‘purity, cleauac, viel streust on Pillar for’ tha’ cure) lsorders, uf (03 ————————__— ¥athor and Two Sons Marry a Mother and Two Vanghtors, und How tho Triple Event Resulted, : Filta Rack (Ark.) Gurette, Mr. J, L, Holcomb, gentleman of Kentucky, but who has been tn Crittenden County, this Btate, for soveral months, tells us of a rther remarkable, thotgh hardly unprecedented, matrimonial affair, which occurred im that county recently: Out from the line of the railroad, and aside from almoat any other very well-dcilned mari of clvillzation,—marks go {Il-delineated, in fact, that they are os 4 halt-worn date oa au ancient cain, —therelfved old nan Rogebury and twosone, twins, The age of the old man ts rather doubt ful, but f¢ Is belleved by hfs near neighbors, the nearest of whom aro within a stone's throw, that 4s, if the stone bo thrown a mile and a half, that ho ts about 60, ‘The sons, being twing, are about the same age,—27, The nearest human habltution was a housa occupied by a Mrs, Glenn and two daughters, though, pity to aay, Whe daughters were not twins at the tine of their birth, und have not yet succeeded In at- tafoing tuut point. Mr. Rosepury fell deeply in love with Mrs, Glunu, and tho two sons, Robert. und John, fell equally as much go with the two daughters, Mary and Rachel, ‘The moat tagia- ablo wholesale loye-maklug ensued. ‘The old nay aud widow seomed devoted to each other, and the younger people were sullictently ao to marcy, whieh theyall did on the samo day, After the ceremony the six happy souls and. tha. alx happy bodies repaired to the residence of ‘thy husbands. Everything workod filkuat es The old man was very Kind to hls nowly-made dauchtors, particularly so to Rachel, the wile of Mig son John, ‘The Kinducas furreascad and the other matrimontalists murveled, onato another, ‘The old man even disregarded the wishes of his wif. nul Rachel snuffed her (recian nose at her Roman-uosed husband. Ono morning about two weeks alter the marringe, the family of several divisions discovered that the old man and Rachel bad guue. Searching und not belie able to tlnd therm, but, learning from a forryman that they had crossed the river into Tonncssee, tho family returned, Protty soon au intimacy Hendscnee Core ums Headache, (an mestion, "Dysnereia ‘Mliousiessy ofthe owelk, Files, and alt dara al Viscera. Warraited toe Mnsely veuetable, contaiuing 0 deleterious drugs, #7 Observe tuo followlns ay rey tho Agestive Ur, rule, sral oF tome resultiog from 2 Boot la of, enetbartn toniacl, tun Beto about $5,000 on the black between us. Wo let | sprang up between obert, Mary's husband, nnd uf Eructatlous, Blakinzycr Hiutternes hci y an up bettin’ Jest out of pitty for tue poor dovils | the old laay. ‘The old lady was so wise und had | jie, htpinach, owhnming af the £5 Heart, chaglit thut touk ug up au innocent und eager. Every | had such broad experiouce that Robert nover | oo 2culyureaty Febaations when Io rt bain IA now an’ then, Harness, on’ Hardy, an’ imo | grew tired of prodting by ber counsel. Avother ots or ete pejore the B A eliuwness 0 would meet an’ go an’ taken drink, au’ roar out | disaster, Robert und the old lady ran away, | fie skinwad byes, Pata in tha Bide, oat, Eb Jaagbin' ¢o you could hear usa nile. Whenthe | Icaving John aud Mary, who, scelug, us ther | sudden Fiusnes ur teat, Jsurmiee ta tne free Vi, aystony horses started Hardy au' ine felt Wigger’o old | were not blind, that they wore left along, clasped item COs OF alwys ey diaurders, Uric. = runt. It kiud o' surprised us to see the way | themsclyes in loylue embrace, for it veoms that | ceuisper Lox, bold by Druglsts. the gray Hfted his foet though, ant when bo | they had loved each other from the iret, Did come {na length ubead of the black, it kind o’ | they atay on the farm? No, silts ‘There ts a READ made us feel nucasy-atious the gills, OF coui mortars on it, ‘They packed up, and, accord- e a3 we kuowed it wast Gurned jackoy's fault a ? | ing to the ferryinan, went over Into Tunnessec. “Falseand True. inanaged to wit to im an’ ellp tive twenties EE foto his tiv. ‘Lot her out this time,'Cuez. If] gee toitthat your child meety with no neglect CO., No, 33 Wer tho black wins you'll get two hundred toro.’ | wen sick, uso for tuo discaes uf Haluneet et eign aJetten stamp to RADITAY & Nee He give a wink an’ nudded, Boys, you kin roust | Bull's Baby Syrup—it never dlaappolote, #5 conta. Anfortdation worth thyusands will be ee3!