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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,