Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 6, 1894, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SUNDAY. MAY 6, :‘!’in i B NOW ON SALE Chenille Porticres Kitchen Safes % 8035 “Mllll“l[l' I(uus.‘ = 168 enille Forine Beds Fillers T . Bedsteads Clocks. . Parlor Rockers Ritebmulots it Snntors roil B LSOO Hiara ntdment- o cne 1] S No Waiting! N> Blanks! No Coupons! I e s R 8465 Tiaioered Ji bostauatity $255 o, finished antigue or waluut, of the best elock fastories, i 0 N 4 Sge e Missourl Rivor witor, worth Hidam. 5 o regular price, #4350, now ot olnch clock warrnnted LS With every purchase of 5 or over you recrive a Soruvenir Photograph b0, ut ternsat Matresses G145/ 004 L Curtains et T R R ek Souvhie Riod Ingrain Carpets Wardrones otk (0] b SRR () ' e e A L TEIEL 80 Vith every purchase of $25 and oves sive a Fancy Cup and A L R 28 RRbFAl tnego draor $59 T =1 30 With cvery purchuse of 30 and over you reccive an Imported Bisquo e D e . 20.rols G R g R R OO Easels isoline Stoves, _$2 9 clothys, — ettt U MDY mude of solfd ouk. 0 Wit s, nbsol Ornament. Linoleum fce Boxes 3 & « f Vith every rchase of $7. d over you receive a Pair of Lace Curtains finished antique, o e, every one guarant With every purchase ot nd over y of ! B v ——— With every purchase of $100 and over you receive a Solid Oak Conter N Rt Fa Lo VLR v Winishod Antlque, nif tight 3320 Arm-Chairs : $245 Refriderators 3865 Table. Y 0L Dhttbt, cWoreh 4100 28[} R Lo T | Solid ok, polished, cane Finished Antique Oak, Ohnr- peryird, ow it Pt very combottable LRI ST A DT Mail Order Department, "m\‘l, BORE e e | DoorAlats o iTiong Mude of good quality tin, with ok ) ! 0pS N ‘ n LU SRR 8585 T e 13 89750 Send 103 to cover postage on big 0% Catalogue and Price List s ot gt ot ik O] st S 24 . provements, balance oven quoting lowest prices ever known. it ULERGAE S L AL Sp:cial Baby Carriage Catalogue mailed free, Plush Parlor Chairs, Lawn Setlee T Antig Rocke Tavestrv Rocke 5 rator Catalogue mail:d free We have about 300 of ther in $ 90 Painted rod, vory neat,just the 65 ity bl high buc $|28 i R»D[I\l!\““.l in ;:'»|'$265 ohe sasoline Stove Catalogue mailed free, D Cioh ok At oo A R LRI $ umbrelin racks, nade by or aRb v, Dest factories in the country, Finished antioqn . i cane seat, and sells everewherd for .50 st o rocker for the We pay freight 100 miles except on goods advertised at \\lll(lli\\'—S!l‘l\ 0. 240 Lonnges ! wdo by ono of the 6565 ikl {oinge factorios - Cut Prices, Mide of wishy )3, on bost In Lhe connt by, horoumly. well Shambolders v Carriades : spri Ners 7 feet long ... s XV | upholstered (i tapestry, sell $10 One of the best shambolder made 233 iy I mly up- “ E\ASY TER M S Center Tables, $I35 Brussels (.l[[)t‘l] ‘ 5nc LG AL AL b 0 worth of goods $1.00 per week, or $ 4,00 per month. 811d ok, polish Anish, top 24x X Gy W 24 inches, s tuege shott balow OXLEIL NOUVY QUALILY D..vsen 5 worth of goods, $1.50 per week, or $ 6,00 per month. T T 2 i e T G T b J ush Divan 75 | Lace Curtains. 0 worth of goods. $2.00 per week, or §.8.00 per month. Uphalsterud in o o, ml,v‘.',hhs II’ul“ ;ul. o »’~,m.rl;»$I28 ite Snrings T $75 worth of goods, $2.50 per week, or $10,00 per month. e [ - Wite Springs v O 3 [ goods, 3 | : ' Moguette, Parlor Suits, : 98[: Wl B $100 worth of woods, $3.00 per week, or $12.00 per month. A Fivo piecos. onle frame 52375 3 B 42 T Litest piatterns of the seas Has doublo ‘ With all modern improv antigu yles, very com ments: hasnickel ornament fortabl Visiis LIt tion, ash pan, & $ Reed Rockers = @iz | Four-lole Ranges, $ $ 1 ] 5 7 erywhere for #1650, will no wolwr erashed — plush, thie Head and foot 00 worth of goods, $4,00 per week, or $1500 per mon:h. .....i.L.________l Morch $40. u¢ This strong carpet §s still In fa- vor on account of durability and cheipnd Made of polished ok, has nd- justable shelves with brass rod Chinese and Tapanese, s o Bluffs. Cur Tickets Furnished those Rssiding (et L UL Gty Bl nab e innke s i at a Distance. of pitoriy 4 for draperivs. ; ‘ Lripos SR -l 5 Sideboards amber Suites. : = 0il Cloth. SS0¢ Sl:-(.smf.uu with farge bevoled $I450 (h‘lvrnl!x)ltvld\‘\Ellilhmf' or 16th - WE CONTROL: - Enormous Business! Small i al hundred camnants in sizo c Sover: o he for c nirror, silver t y red cen stylo, I nirra v : i Fbes DA Lot GO, Rk it esses Featherstone Baby Carriages, || Profits! No interest charged. Toundes made,nice styles and pitierns, all the very Latest fm- at . . . How 1t Lawn Rockers 4.9 Estension Table Northern Light Refrigerators, Cash or Payments. Satisfaction Upholstered in_tapestry, w GilfEahiveed: tha- best frosser | XS Made to fold up o as toput out $ 9 e of soli h, 3 of the way, finished either light with bolged legs, finished Quick Mcal Gasoline Stoves, guaranteed. Complaints heeded s plenity of drawer Lalnost indisensalflo, nt T 3 : i Gunn Folding Beds, Prompt Deliverics. A Pleasure Pillows. China Clasets Plush Eas f 2 4 AHONHa 5 S . r.just the thing 78 u}l‘}.‘.‘}u-t.:lhlu-d. solid oak, $|275 ”.{I.l\.!l Iu:‘»‘. ll‘}'»'l‘l‘;”l 'y, Peninsular Stoves, to Show Gnods. ':n-\n;: 'f ‘\'\[:751 ‘rff‘.".'f\'r."'\‘\[".» fiive c solld lurge drawer at the bot- holstered in sitlc plus| r ? . sold hundreds of th oW it ton. ... e ninient for a parlor x Novelty Oil Heaters, e 0il' Cooli Stoves - - — Picture Roll-Top Deslis Trish Point Curtains, Palace Folding Bads, CIoRoir vor has at0i00 1 xo Hundreds to scleet trom at it $I28 We enrty u tull lino of Novel- 8265 You 1o 1 t The s nove picture dealers' prices. One lot g L Sl A e BTV, KB | e il CRUER R © New Era Steel Ranges. oo ALY s Bl A ac g yes By e 0nilo oo 0 ot A Bl 5 e aro locked; - patterns cannot be excelied; v % ok Any size you want, will not hara wood frame, sells at & Bookicases 3490 Matting: Daily Deliveries Made to South Omaha and Council Stair Garpet, |3 Hemp Carpel. / &) impressions in _Infancy? Who were the | dictive function, in the fulmination of the | done where all prisoners are isolated from A “0“ x\] “ITH A ]”STORY easy. She wa midst of friendly | coss is In general the standard of all merit, UT YOURSFLF IV HIS Pl \CE companions of his youth? By what social | sentence against the convict. From the mo- | cach other by confinement in separate cells, | MAN. Quakers who hurricd her on to Wes o pasted my, timg here ulte cheortulles 4 4 13 atmosphere was he surrounded? What.| ment that he passes through the prison gate | or where they are in association, under | ter, where she was safe for the time being. | still trusting that neither my life nor my Were the examples set before him? Who | the intercst of society ceases to be an inter- | proper regulations, is one concerning which It was while stopping at West Ch death will prove a total loss. As regards —_ were his dearest friends and most trusted | est in opposition to that of the prisoner and | the best authorities arc not agreed, and that Mrs. Adams met Fred Douglass, then a | both, however, I may mistake. It affords q {scipline adviser? With the same training that he | the two become identical. Soclety demands, | perhaps it can never be conclusively settled. | Thrilling Experience in Slave Days Recalled | young —man, delivering speeches against | me some satisfaction to feel conscious of at Plain Words About Pricon Discipline from | rocoiveq it is possible that you might have | or should demand, vhat the couvict has a | The former system is followed in the East- U D G ery under the auspices of an anti-slavery | Jeast trying to better the condition of those Prison Reformer. become even a worse man than he. right to demand on his own part, namely, his | ern penitentiary of Philadelphia, and is y & Participant, soclety. Douglass heard of Mrs. Adams and | who are always on the underhill side, and T a Veteran Prison ji On this point, finally, you must in im- | restoration. prevalent to a large degree in Burope. In as taken to the house where she was stop- | am in hopes of being able to meet. conse- — agination reconstruct and subject yourselt | But if wou were in chargo of a penit:ntiary, | the United States this system has been y ping. He at once thought he recognized in | quences without a murmur. I am endevor: to the convict's peculiar and terrible tempta- | you would soon discover that this is not the | abandoned clsewhere, for reasons which it ! (i {to- zat ceady forlanotlios AEIAE JEIE UNSATISFACTORY RESULTS ATTAINED [ thonr” §2" - mebassary Lo undratand: ot | femand whioh society actuaily formmylatée. | Would make. this. article too lons to aiscuss | LETTER AND DAGGER FROM JOHN BROWN : Sl R ST L R T AR o ot only tho _prlsoner's orlginal - constiution | You would be expected to liold your pris: | here. Dut there i no difference of opinion e that the | ) Sown sister that | That God reins and most wisely controls all ez and his education, physical, mental and | oners, to prevent them from escaping prior | among experts as to the necessity for in- : = | ne_ofterea ner a home with himself and | gvants, might, 1t woull seem. oosemein p he Convict. the Injured | moral, but to conceive of the precise relation | to the expirtion of sentence; that goes with- | dividual treatmenf under efther system, Dorn' a Muman Uhattel In Maryland, Luter | wife {n Massachusetts. It was while 1lVing | who belleve it, Too much that app ralioike The Flace of the 3 and attitude existing between himself and | out saynig. You would be expected to keep | and there is none as to the folly of trust- # Successful Fugitive, Now Enjoying in Lynn, Mass., a8 a member of Mr. Doug- | vory disastrous. I am one who has trled Party and ‘the Prison-Keeper—Tho the soclal whole, at the moment when he | the prison with the same regard for order | ing too much to routine for reformatory re- Peaceful Old Age in lass” famiily, that Mrs. Adams, through DOU- | peliove that, and 1 still keep trying. Those Prison In Politics—Causes committed his first oftense, and at the | and neatness which is displayed by cvery | sults. e lass' personal relations with’ the prominent | o"ic or the truth will nrov ts be pon of Crime, Ete. moment when he committed the particular | proprictor of a large establishment, whether | DIFFICULTIBS IN THE WAY OF REFORM. leaders of that state, formed the acquain- | quorire o' Luat o T continue naning o (11T ofense for which he was tried and sen- | a hotel or a mill. You would be required to | The difficulty in all attempts to reform tance of William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell | g1 ing that 'the truth must finally prevail _ tenced. It would be unjust to suppose that | exercise and to maintain discipline in the | men. In or out of prison, s that of securifig : 5 Phillips and other leading anti-slavery men | "4 not foel n the lonst dogres dospardest . the orror was all on his side, and that those | senso of compelling obedience to Il neces | thalt wo-speration - he reformators wroc. | . Few people In Norfolk, Neb, are aware | of theday. At the solicitation of Lydin M. | 0" diiruced by s sironmianoe onaent (Copyrighted) = law, a | Who antagonized him and ‘excited him to | sary and proper orders. But you would find [ ess, In prison many-circumstances conspire | that IVing in their midst is a person whose life | Childs, she became a member of an antle | oniroat my friends not to grieve on my ac- Crimo 18, In the estimation of the W 4 o criminal reaction Were wholly free from | Yourself often in a quandary how to make | to excite the prisoner to the most deter- | has been closely associated with that of Fred | Slavery soclety whose ebject wis to assist | count. JOHN BROWN. public Injury. For this reason the public | pjupe, the lawless observe strict rules without com- | mined effort of which he is capable not to | Douglass, who knew John Brown, the mar- | hunaway Slaves ®nc (OERER o or (0 | o After the death of John Brown, Mr. and kes notice of it and claims the exclusive | In speaking thus I must not be understood | pulsion, how to compel them to obedience | yield to any influence for good. What m B v J fmoneyand SLLansnoaLIon aio _ Mrs. Adams, at the eainest solicitation of RE Cothateh it (0" express any sympathy with crime. The | Without the use of physical force, and how [ tive can we appeal to, In his case, to over- | r: has conversed and shook hands with | points in New England where public senti- | fujenqy, ‘wont to Hayt, where they remained T ovhry crime Is also a private wrong. | Christlan religlon teaches us to distinguish | (o Inflict the necessary physical pain without | come the resistanca? The motives which | Willlam Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, | ment would protect them from capture. until t 6 of theiwa st Gl | In the carly history of mankind the natural | between the sinner and his sin, Nor am 1 | subjecting yourself to the charge of brutal- | actuate mankind may all be reduced to two, | Stephen F. Foster and Samuel Bowles; was AT DOUGLASS' HOME. to the United State okE AL A reaction against crime took the form of pri- | seeking to find an excuse for his conduct, | ity. Many ‘things, too, would be demanded | hope and fear. What does the prisoner de- | an intimate acquaintance of Maria Baker and | pDuring her stay in the Douglass family | 1508 from a disease c AT P vate vengeance. The inconveniences of such | which will relieve him from his moral and | of you, not strictly in the line of your duty | sire most ardently if not his freedom? It Lydia M. Childs. The generation that lived k "Lh ’“ i’: glass and her children | Haytl. A 'system as that are pulpable. In the first | legal responsibility. Least of all do I regard | as a public official. is to this that we must appeal, and there fs | gl S S S she ‘.f“{“‘ N Donglass went to | . Mrs. Adams takes modest pride fn narrat- place, the individual who fancied himsclt in- | Lis right to consideration as paramount. | I do.mot refer to the Implied obligation | but one way in which it can be effectually | 1UrINS the days of these grand old abolition- | to read and write. Wit DOUEESE WEEE L g (he events of her life which have associ- jured was unable to- distinguish between | All that [ ask on his behalf is fair play, | to make the prison pay, as it is called, by | done, namely, by making the date of his ists has nearly passed away, Occasionally t:“-‘""‘ x:‘l "“Iff m“‘ffl o aeross - the | ated her with men of national reputation, eriminal and_noncriminal actions, on the | which you would desire if you were in his | tho organization and development of prison | discharge depend.upon his conduct while in | one is met who knew some of these men and | SbSeRee &1 1A CEAEE B GERER g | Fler declining years are happy ones. She 1 part of his adversary; and, besides, he had | place. You would feel an instinctive oppo- | industries. You would find this no easy | prison. The “ood time” laws fn most | women, but very few, If any, who were ac- | s} |ty wow hat fn hew possession (he let. | tenderly cared for by her daughier and son- no measure of retribution, other than his | sition to being judged with undue severity, | task, especially in view of the opposition to | states are a step in this direction, but they Satw o 01d:a8Y; 5 Mr.. Douglass, also a | In-law. For fifty years she has been a mem- personal passion or interest. In the course | and, on account of your errors, gither by | profitable employment of convicts manifested | operate in one direction only. that of short- | duaimted with all of them. Fred Douglass is | ters npitten e “wood sent | ber of the church, always looking cheerfully Bf time regulations were established, in the | excess or defect, regarded as wholly and | by those trades with which the Industries | ening the sentence, and that to a limited | (N 1ast of a class of men who, twenty years {,""‘,f e atocine D onaon 18 forward to the time when the Master makes form of customs, which finally crystallized | hopelessly bad. As a man may be sane on | selected come into greater or less compe- | amount; thelr only influence is to make the | before the first gun blazed above Fort Sum- | DY ,“f"v eltanetanttha s the final summons for her to join the friends Into laws, limiting the right of private ven- | some subjects and insane on others, so most | tition. This opposition is not confined to [ prisoner observe rules. What is needed is | ter, had stirred the northern heart to a real- | b5 PGLNECR the Mibe B0 400 v CHEST R ET 0T GO CEN (L it o geance, and finally, in all civilized countries, | of us are good and bad in spots. When so- | the special trades affected, but extends | power to hold him until he is reformed. | jzation of the terrible wrong of human slay- L“‘L:N':.r“ {rom her brother, Fred Douglass.’” ' 'tol the treedom! and'alevationtoriitiia Sonying 1t uttoget! | cicty, outraged beyoud endurance, takes pos- | through all ramifications of all organized | We enter here upon the threshold of a large | o Y ftor Mr. Douglass returned from abroad | colored race, PARTIES, IN PUNISHMENT OF CRIME. | session of a criminal and excludes him from | labor. The financial interests of a_ prison | subject, which cannot be disposed of in a | °/¥: Aftor Mr. Douglass returned from abro Now the person in whose place T venture | contact with the world at large, he has a | and the higher intercsts of the prisofers are | few sentences. But It is clear as anything | At 410 Second street, Norfolk, s an | Mrs. Adams was marricl, Che Ceremiony (ool cook's Tmperial. World's fair “highest to ask the reader to put himself is not one | natural and inalienable right to such treat- | not always In harmony with cach other, | can be that the reform of criminal juris- [ old colored lady, mother-in-law of Rey, | W8 performed i (e DECRISE RO hd | award, lent champagne; good effervess person, but three. In the punishment of | ment as will correct his er 80 far as | especially where the supposed necessity for | prudence and of prison discipline lies along | W, H. Vanderzee, whose life, if written, Douglas ;'A"T‘ ;,’7‘ rm:’-lv several pre oenee, i8 hle bouquet, deliclous flavor.™ crime ‘the three parties to the transaction | that is possible, by the development of his | pecuniary roturns suggests the expediency | the road indicated, namely, the ultimate | oo, cOrSiEm RS o B WEGOR | making (he hapby couble SERSTL BTCCR are the party wronged, the party who did | better nature, of leasing convicts to private parties or:| substitution of indefinite for definite terms | WOUld make Interesting reading. Seventy- ||1|mh_s.'vl!n-|»|‘, A abroad, Tt was not'uns P the wrong and the party who medi- | Py PLACE OF THE INJURED PARTY, | Miring their labor to contractors of imprizonment for crime. There are so | fOUr years ago, relates the News, Mrs. Ruth | he purchased wh fter this event that Doug- ates between them. According to the | =0 0 U . 3 : THE PRISON IN POLITICS. many independent lines of reasoning which | Adams first saw the light of day in a litule | Ul several vears aftef (IS FEERE G o 7 modern theory, the party wronged is society, And now put yourself in. the place of the & YN Sty lead up to that, the inconsistencles ande| Maryland cabin. She was b v lass discovered that Mrs, Adams was not hia A certain doctor living in the upper part the state; the party who did the wrong is [ Injured party. Think of the man whose But I refer to the improper and degrading | absurdities of our existing penal codes, the born a slave, as | gister, but through all the years of Wis | oo yjon N, Y., has a bright and observing e sonvicted criminal; and the mediator | S3fe has been blown open, or of the woman | use of the prison as one of the potent fac. | incquity of punishment as administered by | Were her father and mother before her. The | eventful life he had never forgotten pouth [ 4-year-old daughter. She has a brother a between these two is the prison warden, [ Whose husband has been murdered, or who | tors in machino politics. The pecullarity of | the courts, the abuse of the pardoning power, | st Work she remembers of doing was to | Adams, and hus alwiys ,s'“,..l.‘\?:.m.,.'.‘:'..r"l'”_'l‘ few years older of whom she is very' fond, iito whose custody the prisoner is com- ‘um]hr elf been outraged In her woman- | intense partisanship is tht it begets a zeal | the unsatisfactory results of our present | care for the children of her mast As she | brotherly feeling. ¥ “»l Y8 IO S and ‘who, for her amusc sometimes mitted for the term af his incarceration. oo, Y jentimental view of crime and | not according to knowledge, In whose In- | systom in so maily ways. The analogy be- | grew to womanhood, and continued in the oc- | (Fack of each othar, and “SFLAGHE o' | draws pictures on wlate or paper. A fow Let us begin with the case of the conyict, | criminals, which leaves this element of the | teuse heat all considerations other than that | tween the Insane and the criminal diatheses, | cupation of nurse, to the increasing fa 1 Douglass had earned a name and a4 PIOSE ' | ovenings ago he was thus engaged, and es- We will assume that his conviction fs just. | 9uestion out, is mawkish and detrimental | of purty success shrivel like a leaf in the | from a medical point of view, points in the | C ¢ » o the Increasing family of { tho hearts of hls race and has fowh | wayed to draw an elephant. [fo'shaped the There are of course innocent men in prison, | {0 the soclal welfare. The criminal is in no | flames. It a warden Is given his position | same direction. It is not surprising that | N€r master, she was enabled, with the help | wealthy and resides on and owhe the AR | body, head and legs, and before adding the but their number is comparatively Insignifi- ““"l’"‘_"lv hero, whatever may have been his [ as a reward for party services (which is | this suggestion has taken a strong hold upon | 9f the older daughters of her master, to read | of his old n!llfi‘t‘f-|‘llvl‘t[y :"l'h e e, Droboscis stopped a moment to look at it. ey e nstanceesthey have beeh gulliy | Ay have dlsplaved Is” spasmodie, and ot | Yery. asten snd mptitises whion de bim 1y | piND WORDSIFOR BROCKWAY. | knowledgo came a longing to escape from | (i loter to his Norfolk friend. atdently for him 10 fnlat, and when' ho b Sther acts of tho same Gharacter, and | Dest physical rather than'moral. If he has | pe 5 party leader. But whatever may be his | . The man who, of Al living men, has done [ bondage, although her servitude was pleasant A FRIEND IN JOHN BROWN. stopped, and she thought he was done, exe Delong by instinet and habit to the criminal | S¢emed not to think of himself this is be- | fitness for his place it I8 certain that under | OS¢ to convince ithoughtful and unpreju- | compared with the lot of many of the other [ ) per marriage Mr. and Mrs. Adams | claimed: “Why, Johnnie, you fordot to put class. An innocent man in prison is either | C4use of his inherent lack of imagination | a political administration of prisoners - ho diced uu:;le[nlua ;luul":l\:r« are ]u;xnllx)llllh:n ot ::n:'u:yml lh‘ugll:olxhhnrlmud. l‘:m-mwm from | ont to Springfield, Mass., to reside. He! on his satehel{!® oth 0 oneis und of prisons | slavery in 1844 was no easy matter even | N N0 FEEUEIT G0 Tone of them mow the o o B and foresight. In the gratificati t reform fool or else he is the victim of some ex- ! gratification ot a!l will ba turned. out: wheneyer.ihe. contcol. o :Epllulml combination of circumstances. For | momentary impulse he lost slght of conse- deemed at one time beyond hope is my friend | from the border states. To assist a fugitive wife of Rev. Vanderze», It was shortly Dr. Thirdly—-I am glad to hear, my son, D {ocent man in prison we all feel com- | Guences, ‘or foolishly supposed e could | the Sopesita. party oe even: e, hands of | Mr. Brockway of ithe Elmira reformatory, { slave in escaping from bondage, the lash and | Nife oF Buvt VERGERET oL 0 Chuia that | that you refused to fight Willie Suipper, 4 assion, but tho convict who merits his pun- | &vold them by his ingenuity or his good | faction of his own party. He has there- | DOW under fire aiilicloud. Lot me close | the bloodhound was considered a moral crime | Ghjae Justice Taney rendered a decision de- | Johnny—Yes, sir, it's wicked to fight, and shment in the eye of the law Is too gener- ""k-_‘”'"‘ first and highest sympathy s | fore fittle inducement to master the busi- | DY Asking you to put yourself in his place, | by many who regarded the black man in the | cluring the fugitive slave law constitutional. | then Willie's father is a taflor, and besides ally regarded as without the pale of human [ forever due to the man who has been in- | ness entrusted to his hands. Worse than [ 4hdask yoursell whether the treatment | same light the law of the land designated | Groy was the Indignation throughout the | he's bigger than I am N ured. Tt e b rdinate positions ‘In his gife | Which has' been accorded him would seem | him—the chattel of his white master. But [ ot WO iis docision was handed down But, if you had been in the conviets | It 1s the fashion of the hour to decry ven- | aro regarded as counters in the game, and, | t9 YU fair I applied. to you. 1 have known | there were not wanting In the north thou- | nyo™ Aqums, having obtained free papers Tottle (aged B)—I wonder why bables is place, do you imagine that you could or | KWhce, and to Insist that retribution has no | ynless he himself has the sense and skil | DM intimately for a quarter of a century, | sands of men and Women who looked upon | grom “his master several years previous, | always born in de niglit-time. Lottie (aged Dould have nctod otherwise, and that you | Place in the criminal code. 1t the retual | Lo oimy them tar an thon ae worih. (heed | and he s as difforent 0 man from the por- | tho negro as a human belng, entitled to hu- | fout ot be molested, but Mrs. Adams was [ 7, a litde wisr)—Don't you kiow? 1t's cog' would have risen superior to the fate which | 10 avenge one’s self has root in the senti- | minor appointments will be dictated to him | (Falt of him whichils sought to be paimed y . It was not So much a ques- | iablo at any time to be dragged back to | they wants to make sure of fndin' thelr ppointm 0 off upon the public in his name as it is pos- | tion of law with the old abolitionist as it ¥ It was about this tme that she | mothers at home sible to imagine. ~ How would you like, [ was a question of morals. They did not be- | pap Brown. “He called at our inyolved him in destruction? To put your- | Ment cf love and pity, if it grows out of the | ynd he will be forced to put up with incom- after a lite of dovation, and after having | lieve In the divine right of kings, neither | home' said Mrs. Adams to the News re During a call that little 4-year-old Mary e H o oral consclousness that the f enc self In his place you must imagine yourself | fhoral . e Indulgence of | patency if not with disloyalty. There can be endowed with his heredity. The inheritance | this passion is detrimental to character, it ::u pl'tl:aun reform in Ihl'yl'll)i'll'll States untfl earned by faithful, and competent service a | did they belleve that slavery was a divine | porter, *and presented my husband with | o inaking with her mother, a slice of cako reputation second, lin its sphere, to that of | institution, sanctioned by God, as one of the | this dagger, saying, ‘use this only in de- | g given to her, “Now, whit are you goin of most criminals is defective nervous or- [ 18 outward expression of the noblest human » diorce o prispn system from practi- ganization, lack of mental balance, depraved | sentiment, that of forgiveness of injurios. Lisdirasas ok I DEIAGE 7MCH fromy prackty ond y appetites and dull moral perceptions. ut it 1s oftén, on the contrary, merely weak- | jiy as to prevent any subsequent remarriage, | "O% 10 be condemned on the testmony | leading churches of the country had declared. | fonse of your family.’ " — The dagger 18 | (o gay to the lady?”’ asked the mother. “Ta PLACE OF THE CONVICT. ness, timidity, irresolution, and betrays a | ' ' *] of. convicts by a:Goart martial composed ot FLIGHT FOR FREEDOM now in possession of Mrs. Adams, and fn | o M0 % o norkhn ikea itile Mary, de- THE PLACE 0! A . real lack of ‘manhood, covering itself from CAUSES OF CRIME. one man unfitted for the position and func- 4 RERROM, an objoct of veneration. Not many months | F5 L ’ It is true that black sheep are found in | r:probation with the hypocritical mantle of I do not say that the first duty of a warden | tlons of a judge, under the pressure of In the 24th year of her life Mrs. Adams | upiar this event John Brown and his follow- g - the best families, and that some of the | suberior piety. Unquestionably, the criminal | s to. refarm his prisoners, nor expect of | opinion formed by a large expenditure of | formed the acquaintance of a free negro In | ars ratded Harpers Ferry, where he was | AR worst men have parents of undoubted virtue | law in its Inception was founded upon the | him a degree of Sucess In that dfrection | Money by an influential “fournal, without | the employ of the underground railway. At | gubiired and imprisoned. During hix con- Minnte, you an' oo muxti't talk about and lutegrity; but, on the theory of atavism, | conviction that wrong needs to be redressed: | which transcends reaconable expectation, | BAVINE a’chance to refute the evidence ad- | that time this rallway extended from the | {GRLICHE 4y just prior to his death he an- "'d!'l;"j I":"]} 9 }"fi' § Haoee Thy. nalen when we consider the great number of every | that the man who mado others suffer de- | in view of the well known persistence of the | duced or even to cross examine the wei- | boundary line between Pennsylvania and | gwareq a letter written by Miss Howles, of "; " "' '“\’ L oy S "m;‘ man's,ancestors, and that in no very remote | serves to suffer in his turn. It was the sub. | erimipal type of character, Which resists | nesses? ANl honest men, it seems to me, | Maryland through to Canada. As s0on as | \nioh Mrs, Adams was kind enough to al- [ bors'll think thi and of pany. dogreé, It s easy to suppose, though It might [ stitution of a public, megsured method of | every. influence for Kood Which may - ho | OUSht to refolce that the wrong done him | a slave crosed the Pennsylvania line he | joo“the News representative to copy. This [ o000 - aartirdiyidedt be difficult to prove, that there Is in these | securing such redress for the private warfare | brought to bear upon it. But to make all | ' this respect 18 to be partially righted, | was taken in hand by the guide or engineer, | Joiiap was among the last John Brown ever '"‘,.”r“‘ LA P iy freaks of inheritance a reversion to some | Which hud been tolerated in the inchoate | possible efforts for their reformation is his | 0d that the great state of New York is not | hurried on the way during the night and | [onneq, for in five days afterwards his soul | Bright Boy= s by Quaken. carlier type, or at least that the elements | period of human history. Nature is organ- | duty, nd he should regard it as his priy- | t0 be disgraced by an act of manifest Injus- | secreted from pursuers in the day time and | {iarted’ on that historic merch of which - i P derived from various aucestors have been | ized ou the retributory principle. Tho deed | lloge, also. The four most common proxi- | tice to a man who has uttracted the admir- | the next night was off agaln in' charge of | nilljons past and present have sung and [ Kheums T badly mixed, and that in their combination | returns at last upon the doer. Action And | mate causes of crime are the hAbIC of self- | Ation of the civilized world and added a | another guide In the direction of Canada | millions will sing i the fture. —The lot I have been afflcted all winter with they have formed a new aud dangerous | reaction are equal and contrary. The mills | indulgence and insubordination to lawful | fresh laurel to the chaplet which adorns | and freedom. And so the race was kept | cor i5 s follows rheumatism in_the ba At times an 3 y | he gods gri v her brow by branding himas a brute with ight after night until British b 4] 4 T 5 s0 severe that 1 ot stand up straight, moral compound. In order to judge of any | of the gods grind slowly, but the character | authority, ignorance of & trade, imperfect , up night atter night uni W bayonets ENCOURAGING WORDS g A ; o : mily | of the grist depends upon e Dpmel "0 or | out & fair hearing. uarded the fugitives from the stingin, " 1 but was drawn on, one sid Kiys wan according to truth his whole family [ » pon what is put In the | iptellectual development and a blunted or FREDERICK HOWARD WINES, | Jor e e e eyt ININE | A RLESTOW \ 21, '00.My | Bl O A Y hanns, Conn. bn talkA istory needs to be known for at least 100 | hopper. The criminal code which should erverted consclence. To counteract these . t lette P ellel ;!aurl.y Uil You know the eriminal’s | bave in it no regard far justice weula Leng | Bryertet. S right and the power to enforce AT Ruth Adams left the home of Ber master | Dear Miss: Your most kind letier of 18th Inal. | difterent remedies. but without reliet s history und compare it with your own you | the moral sense of all men capable of cor- | obedlence, to compel the prisoner to labor, | We could not lmprove the quality If we | forever, in charge of her dusky guide, and | Is received. ~Although § have not ut all b sbout aix wesks ako, whan I bought & hattle are not in a position to suy how far you | rect thinking and to impart mental and moral instru paid double the price. DeWitt's Witch | started on the road to freedom. Twelve | low spirited nor cast li‘\\.x ) teoling dlns of Chumberlain's Pa n Balin, After Ul Jd have been influcnced to the cholce of | ppe 9B OF THB PRIS 5 The excellence of @ prison as a re. | Hazel Salve Is the best salye that experience | miles were traveled the first night. On the | being in prison and under a sentence which | for three days, a g to directions, my could have THE PLACE OF THE PRISON KEEPER, | 190 Ao _9X08)l0 R o, or tha can by g charge of & pic er | Tam fully aware is s0on to be carried out, It is | rheumatism was ne, fnd has not re- evil rather than good by a nature thus con- ER. | formatory agency depends upon the skill | can produce, or that money can buy. following night, In charge of a plous Quaker [ H " T hates alnce Faciii mendsaRtE strueted So that we must at last put ourselves In | and force with which he applies these —— shie crossed the Maryland line Into Pennsyl: | exceedingly gratifying to lvarn from friends | turned since. 1 bave since recommended it Agaln, you must place yourself In the | the place of the prison keeper. In the | agencies to individuals, acc to their | The National Carriage and Wagon Workers | vania, and for the first time planted her | that there are not wanting in tile gonaration | and given It Lo atheres and know they have prisoner's onvironment, and that from his | prison there Is no further room for vindic- | personal tempefament, babits and capacities. [ unlon has gained twelve locals during the | feet, with a prayer to God, upon the soll of | some to symoathize With me. bt APbrrciate | B (o0 Sarliest childhood. What were bis maternal | tive treatment. The law exbausted its viu. | ' The question whether (his cay best b | past cight months. From now on escapo was | my molives; ¢ven now that our wished suc Egists,

Other pages from this issue: