Newspaper Page Text
4 3Da% @ CElabe. Official Paper ol the City and , County. Printed and Published Fveiv Day in the Year, BY THE _ frr. PAUL GLOBE PRINTING COMPANY So. 821 Wabaehaw Street. St. Pad. ~ THE DAILY GLOBE. SEVEN ISSUES PER WELK, Daily tuid Sunday Globe; one [Doiiiß per south. BIX ISSUES PER WEEK— BY iflAll*, One month .90cte I Six months I 5.00 Three r*onths. . . 2.50 | Twelve months . . 10.00 TES GLOBE. An eight k .»ge paper published every Thare lay, cent post paid at $1.15 per year. Three •nonthe on trial for 25 cents . gT. PAUL, MONDAY, JUO 23. 388?. Democrats State Convention. The Democrat* of this state are hereby incited to meet in delegate convention at the Market ball in the City of fct. Paul, on Thursday, the eecond day of August, 1883, at 12 o'clock neon, for the purpose of nominating candidate* for governor, lieutenant go7ernor. secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general and railroad ccm inissioner, and ench other business as may prop erly come before said convention . The basis of representation is one delegate for each organized county, and one delegate fov each 150 votes or maior fraction thereof caet for Gen. R. W. Johnson fox governor, viz:— Anoka 4 Mille Lacs 1 Becker 2 Morrison 5 Benton 3 Mower 3 Big Stone 2 Murray 2 Blue Earth 10 NicuDot 4 Brcvn 5 Noblee 3 Caileton 8 Norman 1 Carver 6 Olmsied 8 Chippewa 2 Otter Tail 4 Chisago 2 Pine 2 Clay 3 Pipe Stone 8 Oottonwood 1 P01k.... 2 Crow Wing 3 Pope 1 Dakota 13 Ramsey 25 Dodge .? 4 Redwood 2 Douglas 2 Renville 8 Faribault 5 Rice 10 Fillmore 3 Rock 2 Freeborn 2 Scott 10 Goodhue .- 3 Sherbnrne 2 Grant 2 Sibley 4 Hennepin 11 Steaniß 16 Houston 6 Steele 5 leanti 1 Stevens 4 Jack6on 1 St. Louis 8 Kanabec 1 Swift 4 Kandiyohi 2 Todd 3 Kitteon 2 Traverse 2 Lac Qui Parle 1 Wabashaw 9 Lake 1 Wadena 2 Le Sneur 13 Waseca 6 Lincoln 2 Washington 9 Lyons 2 Watonwan 2 McLeod 6 WiJkin 1 Marshall 1 Winona 15 Martin 2 Wright 9 MfiPkpr ..8 Yel. Mcd 1 By order of the committee. Michael DoBAH, Chairman. St. Paul, July 6, 1883. It now seems to be a season of com parative political quiet all over the farm. "So young and ao wicked," is the Boston Herald's comment upon the observance of the first eemi-centennial of Chicago, which is to occur upon the 10th of August, proximo . The first person appointed to a govern ment position at New Orleans, under the new civil 3ervice rules, was a lady. T* 1 ® new law does discriminate against the sex thus it doth appear. Peking the week ending July 14, at Boston, Mass., 317 oases of measles, with forty-seven deaths were reported. There were also Biity-six fatal cases of cholera in fourteen days, the same week. An agriculturist has learned how to get rid of the visitation of his neighbor'o hens and the concomitant ill-feeling attendant on shooting or otherwise thinning out the flock. His plan is to capture the pctd old rooster, who generally leads tie i» vaders, and. drees him up in thick bivwn paper leggings, which, besides astonish ng him, causes his brood to flee from him in affright, and leads him to sit down in M woe-begone a manner as a base ball im pire, who has been hit by a foul ball i nd sworn at by both sides. It is needless to say that after Mr. Chanticleer has rid himself of his dude clothing he never yisits the premises of that inventive tailor again or permits his "sisters or his cousins or his aunts" to loiter around that shop. In taking leave of his congregation for his summer vacation, Henry Ward Beecher toldthem^a period of abstinence from church going would probably be as bene ficial to them as a period of rest from ' preaching would be to him. The frank remark of Mr. Beecher is capable of the application that people need to guard against too much dependence on their preacher, and an excess of spiritual min istrations. Mr. Beeoher doubtless had in his mind's eye the class of people who cram themselves with religious truth or dogma, and so become mentally and spirit ually narrowed and dwarfed and need the opportunity for a vacation for intellectual refreshment. Mr. Beecher's clear under standing of human nature is happily illus trated in this remark. A. SALARY GRAB BILL KILLED. By an act passed in 1879 the pay of members of the Massachuaetts legislature was fixed at $500. ■ It was not anticipated that the legislature would be in session more than three or four months of each year. The present legislature haß now been in sessien seven months, and it seems probable that the sitting may be per petual. In view of the length of the ses sion the lower house passed a bill raising the salary to $700. When the bill reached the senate it created a spirited discussion, principally among the Republican sena tors. The senators generally favored the bill, and ail who spoke said they saw nothing wrong about it, and at one time, bad the vote been pressed it would have passed. It was urged against the bill that it was a salary grab of the rankest sort and men who voted for it would be unable to explain each a vote to the sat isfaction and approval of their constitu ent*. The great length of the session was the plea urged in behalf of the "grab." Senator Baldwin of Essex rejoined that ■while it was true the session was long the legislature had been prolonged not in the service of the people, but to serve party ends. He had been kept a prisoner to hear a report on the Tewksbury matter and in regard to an institution whose entire management had been changed. Party men, he said, have wanted to make party speeches and for this reason the session that might have closed with March was going on after the middle of July. That speech killed the bill, and only four senators had the cour age to go on record in its favor. Indi reotiy this is a triumph for Gov.Butler,and throughout the whole Tewksbory af fair the facts brought out and the con clusions arrived at have been in his favor and against the Republican party," who sought to cover up and defend the enor mities exposed, which will 'stand as an everlaeting shame to the Republicans of Massachusetts. THE SEW HAMPSHIRE &EXAIOR SHIP. The selection of a senator by the New Hampshire legislature remains undecided, and last week cannot be said to have evolved any material progress toward a solution. The votes of all the candidates have flcstuated more or less forward and back. The retirement of Bollins and tfee withdrawal of Patterson did not advance matters perceptibly. The coming, into their field of Mr. Chandler did not bring any symptoms of conclusion. There is a big gap between the vote he is receiving and the number required to elect. It looks as if the legislature are not 'in search of a boss, and Mr. Chandler's presence at Concord it is thought has not added anything to his prospects, and he is unable tc-name the coming man. Chand ler's anxious efforts to induce Mr.Sappan to withdraw has cost the former votes.; Mr. Sappen is known to be a man whom the secretary of navy cannot control and Chandler's hostility to him has made those who favor him all the more determined in his behalf. So far as judgment [may be ventured at this distance Mr. Sappan appears to be the most desir able man in the race. Wnenever it hap i pens that one of the old barnacles are turned out, the people are anxious that his place shall net be taken by a man of ; the same clast. And this desire, which ie a hopeful one, has been gratified in all recent cases, ani most notably in Minne sota and Michigan. However much time may be occupied by the New Hampshire contest, it will be profitably employed if the result is the choice of a man not iden tified with the old corrupt gang now rapidly disappearing from the United States Sen ate. " Turn the rascals out." ASSISTED EMIGRATION. The inutility and foolishness of assisted emigration is completely shown by the recent labor trouble in New Hampshire. A company of manufacturers imported from Sweden a number of people, with a view to giving them employment, partly for the reason that it was estimated that the labor thus secured would cost less, and partly for the reason that there was a scarcity of the operatives in demand . The people selected for this purpose were very poor. Their passages were paid for them, and when they reached this country furni ture and other supplies were bought for them, and thus they had a fair start in their new homes and new life. But the scheme was a total failure. The laborers turned out to be shiftless, thriftless, and dishonest. And furthermore, they turned out to be dangerous and insubordinate, and the state authority was invoked to quell a disturbance that arose. Another case was that of a glass manu facturer in Ohio. An agent of the house visited Europe and selected a body of glass blowers from Bohemia. A contract was entered into in regard to wages, services and other matters, to cover a period of years. The passage of the men and their f amlies to thi6 country was paid, and in addition some advances granted . After a few months, when the operatives had begun to be of some use to their employers they suddenly quit work. An action was brought in the Courts to com pel the men to return to work and to car ry out the contract. A counter action was instituted by the men, and after a vexa- tious delay the manufacturers were satis fied that their assisted emigrants were I jnpre cost than profit, and so they were ; abandoned t<o their own wili. Among these ' people there is no material for citizenship, and in that respect it is a misfortune to the country that they have come into it. Another case, differently managed, pre sents a different view. The present min ister to Sweden has established a colony of emigrants in the pine woods of Maine. These people had the means to pay their own fare and surplus enough to buy or build and furnish such houses as they needed or desired. An inducement as regarded land was all the offer or assist ance afforded them. The colony is pros pering . The people are industrious, fru gal and developing into good citizens. This importation i 3 a success. The class of people who had some accumulation and means in the old country, will flourish here, where broader opportunities are within their grasp. The history of these cases, is valuable. The deduction is that assisted emigration is a failure . The people who accept transplanting under such conditions become public hindrances and burdens . They add to the volume of consumption, but in the department of production they merely beg and steal. The lesson which this experience affords should not be lost. SURPLUS REVENUE. It seems that that estimable young man, Mr. Wharton Barker, is the author of the Pennsylvania protection scheme to distrib ute the surplus revenue among the states . The wonderful Mr. Barker went to Presi dent Arthur before the Pennsylvania Republican convention was held and asked his approval of the contrivance to tax the people so ac to pay the surplus revenue back to-them. It is said that Barkers resolution got in the Pennsylvania plat form upon the story being told that the president was in favor of the idea and would reco/nmend it in his next message. Now it is denied that Arthur gave any approval at all to Mr. Wharton Barker's scheme, and the denial has at least in its favor the probability of con sistency, as in his last message the presi dent advocated a different doctrine, to-wit: that the revenues of the government should be limited to the actual needs of the gov ernment economically and honestly ad ministered. That is a sound position, and Arthur iB too little a dreamer to have for gotten what he had said, and too crafty a politician. to have given his endorsement to the dishonest project that would open the floodgates and turn on to this country a flow of corruption that has never been known, and it is hoped never will be. Those who favor the idiotic notion of Mr. Wharton Barker say that it is impos sible to determine bsforehand exactly what the revenue will be in any one year. No government has ever done that. So they argue it is "pure folly" to say that the government ought not raise more money than it needs. Granted that the exact amount of revenue cannot be fore cast, still the most stubborn surplus reve nue protectionist will admit that it can be arrived at nearer than $130,000,000. Sup pose a surplus of $5,000,000 or even $10,000 : 000 occurs, the next year taxes can THE ST. PAUL DAILY GLOBE, MONDAY MOROTNG, JULY 23, 1883- be reduced by so much, and the burden of the taxpayers lessened. Mr. Gladstone in making up his budget is able to estimate within a margin like that, aad it can be done under this govern ment just a* well. A surplus of such dimensions would be no embarrass ment to business or impose a hateful bur den on taxpayers. The conntry will not tolerate Mr. Whar tcn Barker's plan fcr perpetuating fcigh taxes in the interest of monopolists, even if the president is in lavor of it, though the truth doubtless is, he is not. What the country intends to have is such an adjust ment of taxes as may be limited to the necassities of the government economically administered. A system of taxation so ad justed in its application as to prevent un equal burdens, and at the same time offer encouragement to the productive interests of the country, affording to labor a just compensation, but powerless to create or foster monopolies. Any j>roject that ie hostile to the method just outlined cannot be engrafted upon the American system, the monopolists and protectionists of Pennsylvania to the con trary notwithstanding. Mr. Wharton Barker is just the kind of statesman to de stroy his party, and President (farfield did £, wise thinj in giving that selfisk schemer the cold shoulder. President Aithur can .iollow the same policy to bis personal profit at the very least. All men, includ ing Mr. Wharton Barker, may as well understand that this country will never see the day when its government will collect money by taxation to pay it back tc the people. The surplus revenue robbere sszaj as weli shut up thoir shop. MAHTOMEDI. Sunday tbe Greatest Day of All at Mahto- xnedi— Children's Day To-Day. A testimony and praise meeting at 9:30 a. m. inaugarated the successful meetings yesterday. Mr. Hammond led the morn ing devotions. At 10:30 Bishop Fobs preached an excellent sermon to 600 souls. His text was: "He that spared not his own life but delivered it up for us all; shall he not freely give us all things ?" His divisions were as follows: 1st — We see God delivering his son. 2d — Reasons why God should withhold his son. 1st — Arguments drawn from the fact of God's giving his son. He dwelt on the lowliness of Christ, his persecution, suffering, sorrow and God's feelings through all. The union that we sustain to him. The bishop was very elo quent at times and every one seemed pleased with [the effort. At 1:30 p. m. the brethren of the Swedish conference held held a meeting in the amphitheater. Rev. Nelson, of Minneapolis, preached. Many were present from different parts of the state. At 3 p. m. Rev. E. P. Hammond preached, using as a text these words: "For me to live is Christ to die again."' All must pre pare for eternity, he said, and gave many illustrations from biography showing the excellence of character which we should imitate. At the close a consecrating meet ing helped some souls into a higher life . EVENING MEETING. Dr. Smith read a lessson from Ist John. Rev. T. McKinley, of Winona. preached the sermon. Text: But as many as re cesved him to them gave he power to be come the sons of God. He said we are transfigured from generation to genera tion We may be born in religious ideas. We are naturally born the sons of man but not the sons of God. Vice and virtue run in families, not gene ologies. The will of the flesh can not make man the son of God. We may not underestimate the will. There is a ten tency to do this. Man has power to do much more for himself than he does do. The strength of will is increased by contact with other wills, hence the power of organization . The effect can never transcend the cau6e.so they will caii nevGE produce union with God of itself man may, with his wi!', begin a Christian life. God accepts these in every nature that accepts him. The sermon was a good one, An altar service at the close of the sermon was of great power. Today is children's day. An excursion Lorn Stillwater has been arranged to bring seveial hundreds from that place. It is also expected that there will be a large at tendance from St. Paul and Minneapolis. Quite a company of soldiers, including Col. Johnson, were present yesterday af ternoon. It has been arranged to continne Sunday services at Mahtomedi during this month and August, co that those on the ground and at White Bear may be sure of attrac tive services each Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m. The interest in the camp meeting will continue unabated this week. Winston, Foksyth Co., N. C. Gents — I desire to express to you my thanks for your -wonderful Hop Bitters . I was tronbled with dyspepsia for five years previous to com mencing the use of your Hop Bitters some 6ix months ago. My cure has been •wonderful. I am pastor of the First Methodist Church of this place, and my whole congregation can testify to the great virtues of your bittere . Very reepectfußy, Rev. H. Ferebee. CRIMES. FATAL QTJABBEL OVEB A GIBL. New Yobk, July 22. — Charles New was probably fatally stabbed by Charles Nel son during a quarrel at Bay Ridge about a girl. New was seriously injured by a kick. A THIEF MUTILATED BY A BAILWAY TBAIN Allentown, Pa., July 22. — George Kim mer, a German baker, robbed a room mate, making his escape from the city last night and was run over by a train and horribly mangled. A DEADLY FAMILY FEUD. Augusta, Ga.,Jnly 22. — A special to the Chronicle to-night tells of the killing of Adrian Yanderwood by D. E. G. Sorngge. at Scraggsville, Glascook county, through a family feud. Scruggs represented the county in the state legislature for a num ber of years. FATAL SHOOTING. New Haven, Conn., July 22. — John Castagnetti fatally shot John Riggs during a quarrel about a woman to whom Castag netti is engaged. He also shot the officer endeavoring to arrest him and escaped. the officer is likely to die. •Fashions in Buttons, The fashionable people are running to buttons. A New York correspondent de scribes a dress recently finished for a Fifth avenue lady which carries 1,800 buttons, and required the constant labor of a seam stress for ten days to sew them on. On each sleeve there are 100 buttons, on the body, basque and collar 350, and on the skirt 1,350. Those on the skirt are arranged in triangles, squares, crosses, stars and other curious shapes on a foundation of black satin. The dress has a satiny ap pearance, and is very weighty — so much so that it will require a lady of considerable strength to wear it. London, July 22.— The City of Paris from New York and Peruvian from Bos ton arrived out. SUNDAY IN CAMP. The Christian Soldier Considered by Rev. Carroll— The Choir— Oapt. Reeves' Detail — Fallof a Fjkvillnn With Fortunately Xo I-oss of Life — Ball Piay— The Reviews of the Week, etc. Tne trains to White Bear yesterday car ried out near 5.000 people from St. Paul and with the visitors from Stillwater and Minneapolis and from the farming towns around the lake the population of White Bear yesterday was increased near 10,000 souls — most of whom during the day and evening visitied Camp Hubbard. Had it not been for the rush of visitors Sunday would have been -a dull dey in camp, for the usual morning drills were suspended, i The religious servioes in the forenoon were attended by most of the men in camp, and by hundreds of regclar and transient resi dents at the lake. Eev. Mr. Carroll's dis course was an apt and effective discussion of the new teslament exposition of the dniies of the soldier of the eross — the man who enlists for life as a Christian. The singing, led by forty men ef the regiment, selected or detailed by fours from each company — was quite satisfactory. But in this connection it is told that Capt. Reeves, of Minneapolis, found tee singers of his company unwilling to volunteer, and accordingly made a de tail in regular course, which he sent to the choir in charge of a corporal — a detail of four men vrho are not singers, and who did not try to sing, but held their place in the choir with commendable respect for or ders. In all over 1.000 persons attended the services. Th^lO a. m. train from St. Paul carried ten car loads of passengers. The 2 p. m. train included fifteen passenger coaches, and i p. m. train twenty-one, all crowded. The two heavy traics required three or four engines to draw them up the grade out of the city and two engines through to White Bear. The anxiety of people about re turning led to considerable complaint be cause there was no train in at 8:25 p. m., as many had understood there would be. At dress parade in the evening the regi ment turned out strong. Evidently the surgeons have few men under their care. In the forming of companies and moving them to the parade line there was more time takea than was neoessary — that is the men were called for forming line and street inspection earlier than necessary. They are getting used to the business and need less time than they did a few days ago. Once more the parade line was not truly formed, the end of the left wing being not less than six paces behind the line of the color guard with the right wing. The rear rank was poorly aligned and the officers' line at the rear was badly out of line. AH this shonld be corrected before the gover nor's review to-morrow evening. The pa rade line viewed from the front is admira ble but the effect world be much improved by making a true line. At the close of the dress parade last evening the companies for the first time marched in re view before the colonel commanding under command of their sergeants . The review march was excellent. Most of the companies wheeled in good line, and as they passed before the colonel, three or four of them presented about perfect line?. There was more evenness of Btep and but little of dragging behind the company guide. A little improvement only was ap parent in the guard mount, except that the men came to their places in line with less delay. The inspection of arms still drags, though not so much as first. The wheeling and marching of the guard showed the steady improvement of the regiment in camp, and would not have been subject to fair criticism if the second platoon at the center had not dropped to rear of the guide just as the platoon was passing the colonel. THE BEVIEW. It is not yet known which day Col. Brad ley and his associates on the Ilges court martial will review the regiment, which will remain in camp until Thursday morning; nor is it known yet whether Gen. Tv"" can take time enough away from his duties, accumulated by his late absence, to visit the camp. But the reviews will take the place of the daily dress parade at 7:30 p. m. and those who wish to witness them can do so by taking the 6:15 p. m. train from the union depot and can return by the train leaving White Bear at 9:40 and arriving at the union depot at 10:15 p. m. Col. Bradley and his associates may review the regiment this □evening and Gen. Terry may review it Wednesday evening . The gov ernor's review will be on Tuesday evening. The governor will be formally received in camp with a salute of seventeen guns, and while present will occupy his position as commander-in-chief of the State Guard. The regimßnt was inspected yesterday morning by Col. Van Cleve, inspector gen eral of the state, whose verbal report to the colonel commanding was almost wholly complimentary. Company D is said to have passed inspection perfect as to guns, quarters, etc. DETAILS. The officer of the day for the twelve hours beginning at 8 a. m. to-day is Capt. Merry, of E company. The senior officer of the guard is Lieut. Estes, of F company, and the junior officer is Lieut. Koernan , of H company. For to-night the officer of the day is Capt. Clapp, of F company. The senior officer of the guard will be Lieut. Pusch, of D company, and the junior officer will be Lieut. Burnham, of F company. The noon hours were used yesterday by D and H companies for a burlesque pa rade. Th 9 line officers of the two compa nies were captured and compelled to act as field officers, while the non-commissioned officers formed and commanded the com panies. Four company lines were formed Capt. Bean was set up as colonel, and Lieut. Pasch was made aajutant of the battalion. The company commanders were Sergeants Tenwoody, Busche and Leavitt and Lieut. Morris. The fun of the parade was in the prompt and creditable execution of orders which were not given, as, for in stance, an order to right sholder arms would result in order arms. It was fun for the boys in it and rather an instructive exercise. Corporal Metz is the man to be credited for the fitting up Company D's firing range. He had never seen anything of the kind before but has made a good, safe range. A and E companies' men pitted against each other in a game of base ball Satur day. It was a regular muff game of only four innings, with "kicking*' and er rors unlimited and Company A oomirg out ahead by a score of 12 to 2. A lot of graceless young civilians played base ball on the parade ground yesterday, but the lads in blue want it distinctly understood they don't play ball on Sundays. It is stated in explanation of the St. St, Paul & Duluth company not putting on more trains between Minneapolis and White Bear during the encampment, that its privilege of crossing the river bridge in Minneapolis is strictly limited by its con tract with the Manitoba company. Musician Hussey is offendea at the pub lication of the bogus dispatch his com rades concocted Saturday. He is willing to take a joke — even a practical one — but thinks the boya carried it too far in put ting their joke into cold type, where it doesn't read like a joke. One of the band men wouldn't get up yesterday morning, and asked to be shown who would make him get up. The colonel when informed of his action,sent a corporal and guard, and the obstinate fellow was soon convinced there were men who could make him get up. The music for the sham drill and parade was composed of mouth organs and snare "Srums, both operated by amateurs. If the performers had been heard at head quarters they would all have been sent to the guard house . People who were out from town yester day complain that the boatmen charged them double the usual price. In the long run extravagant charges will be a damage to White Bear. but local men will preserve the traditions of the camp and village and pay little attention to current comment. About 2:3? p. m. the large pavilion in frGnt of the Williams house, having at the time about twenty-five people seated under its roof, suddenly broke down, the water sine piers haying probably been under mined by the big storm of Monday, The floor fell to an incline down the bank, while the heavy roof settled down and then slii off into the water. It seemed to have caught a number of ladies and chil dren, and a cry was raised that the floating roof carried several drowning persons. Capt. Burger, Mr. Mashoe, Capt. Jno. Fish, Dr. Davenport and others promptly sprang into the water and worked for release of any who might be under the roof. Among the men :n the water was Wade Hampton, formerly a sergeant in the Twenty-fifth D. S. Infantry, and Col. Lawson, his former company commander, called to him to dive and look under water to see if there was anybody under the pavilion roof. Hampton recog nized the voice, and only half turned his head before he went under water. The cne-armed Capt. Burger and Capt. Fisk also went under, and the three quickly discovered there was no one else under, the roof. Meantime it was ascertained oa shor6 that all wno were in the pavilion had escaped without being thrown into the water. One woman had her right arm badly bruised and a baby's hand was severely bruised, but all the rest fortunately escaped with out harm. Before the doubt was solved and while anxious relatives and friends were searching for those supposed to have been in the pavilion, the excitement of the crowd was intense. The wind was not favorable for sailing but all the boats were our daring the after noon, and they, with all sail spread, made the view from the shore at all times a Deautiful one. C._ FOREIGJCNOTES. ~H London, July 21. — In the trial of Jews at Nyreghhaza. Hungary, Julia Vamosi and the coachman Hatalowsky withdrew their evidence, which was favorable to the prisoners. They admitted that they had been threatened with death by the popu lace. They will be prosecuted for per - jury. Upon the conclusion of the match the crowd broke through the ropes. Earl Brownlow in a short speech thanked the Americans for coming to England . Col. Howard returned thanks on behalf of the American team. He said the Americans hoped to take their beating gracefully. They had backbone enough left to join in cheering the British team and nation. The crowd then dispersed many shaking hands warmly with the Americans . Five more corpses of the victims of the steamer Daphne disaster at Glasgow have been recovered, making the number of bodies so far found 123. According to the corrected list of victims only one body' is now missing. ' St. Peteesbtjbg, July 21. — Members "of the commission of inquiry have been sent to Germany, France and England, for the purpose of obtaining an exact report con cerning the civil rights of the Jews in those countries. Madbid, July 21. — The senate has ratified the treaty of commerce between Spain and Germany. Caibo, Jnly 21.— The coffins in which the victims of the cholera are buried are coy- Bred with only a few inches of earth. The minister of the interior declines to inter fere to compel a safer interment of the bodies. Alexandbia, July 21. — The European volunteer committee discovered that the canal which supplies the crowded quarter of the city with drinking water communi cates in the native cemetery with a place used for washing corpses. Alexandria, July 22. — Hicks pasha has again asked to be relieved from his post, owing to the systematic opposition of na tive officials. Two majors and ten lieutenants in the Egyptian army were sentenced by court martial to seven years' penal servitude in Soudan for complicity in the massacres last year. Pabis, July 22.— M . Alfred Naquet, Re publican member of the chamber of depu ties for the department of Vancluse, is elected senator for that department. The Journal dcs Debats hopes the ap pointment of M. Waddington as French ambassador to Great Britain will dispel the present difference between the two na tions. It says: "France will then be able to preserve her colonial policy and prove that it satisfies her ambitions, and all use less precautions against her will then fall to the ground. She loves peace at home and needs it abroad.*' Caibo, July 22. — The sanitary commis sion composed of General Sir Evelyn Wood Baker Pasha and Gen Stephenson will be formed immediately. The inhabitants of the most infected portion of Bulah. Tarah, ten miles up the Nile will burn their houses. Officials of the department state that the Domains have been removed to Heto nan, a few miles further up the Nile where they are encamped. A great quan tity of tar is burned in Cairo every night. Alexandria, July 22. — The sanitary commission have decided that all passen gers must undergo a medical examination before leaving Egypt. The commission are considering perma nent sanitary measure*, to be enforced against vessels arriving at Egyptian ports from Bombay, The deaths from cholera on Saturday were 381; in Cairo and suburbs, thirty three; at Mausurat, seventeen; at Saman aud, twenty-six ; at Mehalla, ninety-three, and at Chibin twenty-two. There were also twenty-two deaths at Chabar, thirty-three at Ghisch, four at Damietta, eleven at Zif teh, eight at Menza leh, besides thirty-four in six villages. Rome, July 22 . — Orsini, the promoter of the Rome exhibition, has defeated Ricoiatti Garibaldi for a seat in the chamber of deputies. London, July 21. — Queen Victoria has telegraphed to Cairo to-day for informa tion in regard to the heaith of the British troops. She has received an answer that all are well. There are several cases of cholera in Ismalia . Meeting of Cuban Patriots. New Yobk, Jnly 22.— The Cuban patriots met to-day. Addresses were made by Gen. Bonachea and others urging that every means be taken to assist in freeing Cuba from the Spanish yoke. The Spanish promises, it was urged, should be disre garded, because they were never fulfilled. G ranted an Extension. Boston, July 21. — Gann, Curds <fc Co., reported suspended with $120,000 liabili ties, have been granted an extension by their creditors, and their label works are running as usual. DAKOTA&MONTANA IThe Daily Globe has established a North western Bureau devoted to the news and general interests of Dakota and Montana. The head quarters of the bureau will be located at Fargo, with an office on Broadway nearly opposite the Headquarters Hotel, and adjoining the Red River National Bank. Parties having mail correspondence relative to this section of the country should address Daily Globs Fargo, D.T.I OUR NORTHWESTERN NEIGHBORS, News Gleanings and Points Specially Collected aad Forwarded by Tele graph to the Daily ttlobe. [Fargo Special Telegrams, July 22, to the St Paul Globe. | The Game Lan: The following section, taken from the game laws as amended at the last session of the territorial legislature, should be carefully studied by all sportsmen. It is said that there are places in the territory where the law is enforced, and if com plaint i 3 made the hunter is liable to suffer: "It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to kill, ensnare or trap, in any form or manner, or by any device whatever, any prairie chicken or grouse, between the Ist day of January and the 15th day of August in each and every year. The Public library. The public library of Fargo after laboring through long and serious diffioul ties, has at last arrived at a state where it can do some good and be of some account. Some of the officers have worked inde f atigably while others have never been near the work, and at last after public seniiment had almost come to feel a sort of pity for the institution it comes to the front nobly . Several hundred books have been placed on its shelves, some donated and others purchased. A large number of the leading periodicals of the day have been subscsied for, and the library is daily visited by a large number of people. Its success is now assured as it is on a good financial basis, and will be a source of pride to the people of the city. The Fargo <£ Southern. [Wahpeton Republican.] Officers of the Fargo & Southern have asked the people of Wahpeton to secure and donate to that company the right of way for five miles north of town, through town, and five miles south of town, eleven miles in all. A meeting of the citizens was called to meet last Friday, to take the matter into consideration, at which time President Kindred was present. But he left for home by the -i:SO train, and said he would return on Monday, which would give a little more time. Then the meeting chose Hon. J. H. Miller and Hon. J. C. Pyatt to see the land owners and secure contracts for right of way over the dis tance above mentioned, and to report at the meeting on Monday. This would en able the citizens in town to determine how large a sum they would need to donate to pay for such right of way, when they could act understandingly. Daily Mail to the J'arh. [Livingston Enterprise.] Postmaster Wright yesterday received a notification from the postoffice department at Washington that a daily mail service from Livingston to Mammoth Hot Springs had been authorized to go into operation on the 20th inst . The contract for the route has been awarded to Wakefield & Hoffman. They will probably not be in readiness to enter upon the service before Monday next, but after that date their coaches will run daily. At present, at least, coaches will take the mail direct from the Livingston office, though it is possible that after a time it may be taken out to the end of track by rail. The same order authorizes a tri-weekly service to Cooke City, in the Clark's Fork district, and the weekly mail from Bozeman to the Park and the mines is discontinued from this date. The new arrangement has long been a necessity and will be hailed with gratification not only by those at the ter minus of the line and intermediate poicts, but by the people of Livingston, who thus see themselves brought into direct and regular connection by mail with the min ing region of Clark's Fork, with the tourist crowded Park and with the prosperous country along the route. Postmaster Wright feels a degree of elation over this desirable con?umat:on for which he has worked long and diligently. Though the Livingston postoffice has a large revenue the total emoluments for the postmaster hitherto has only reached the sum of $1000 and as Mr. Wright hired a clerk there was absolutely nothing left for him. By the new arrangement, which .ijijfg- ston a distributing offise, there l-Tau^B lowance for clerk hire, thus leaving a mar gin to compensate the postmaster for his labors. Tf rr it or in I Hi ri.s ion. Judging from the following article from the Valley City Times, that paper is in favor of Dakota as a whole, and not as two separate commonwealths. It seems bat a short time since that paper was as profound for division as any in tha terri tory. It says: The Mandan Pioneer copies an article from a recent issue of The Times and says "the fact is that th? demand for the division on the 46th par allel is rapidly growing less pronounced, and it will shortly die out altogether." The Pioneer claims that the 46 th is an "unscientific, impractical line," and urges as a counter claim,the division on the Mis siouri river. Now as to the charge that the 46th is "unscientific and impractical" we fail to see it in that light. Ihe Time 6is not an advocate of the division of Dakota on any line, but granting that such must come, the division on the 46th would make two states or territories of nearly equal proportions, while to divide on the Missouri river would make of the eastern portion a section of territory similar to the letter V, while the western portion would resemble an inverted a Can anything more absurd be imagined : The selection of Bismarck was made so as to secure a geographical centre, which it does, — taiy of access to all pertions of the territory as present formed — while if the river division scheme is followed, it wonid throw Bismarck to one t?ide, and we should then have the same ground for complaint against Bismarck that existed against Yankton. There would have been ex pended the hundreds of thousands of dol lars for the erection of capital buildings for nought, and the question of re-location would have to be again arbitrated. Better let the question rest and make of Dako ta as a state what she is as a territory — a power, a paradise and a pride. But ad mitting, as the Pioneer does, that the sen timent in favor of division on the Forty sixth is growing less apparent daily, there does not appear to be a very strong tide setting in for division on the river, as es poused by the Pioneer. The whole truth of the matter is that the people are fast learning that there is strength in large territories or states, and we are firm in the faith shat the schemes now on foot for division on any imaginary line will fail, as it should . A Salutary Lesson. [Grand Forks News. J The Red River valley, noted the world over for its fertility and for its exceptional exemption from the vicissitudes that em barrass farming operations in other regions, has barely escaped a serious ca lamity in the shape of drouth. A practi cal farmer from the stony hills of the east looking over our prairies in the spring, with their superabundance of moistuie, and examining the friable surface soil, un derlaid by a clay subsoil that holds water like a barrel, would wonder how it were possible, with proper cultivation, that such land could fail, even in the dryest season, to produce at least a reasonable yield of grain. Tljat it has barely escaped failing to do so this season is a fact too apparent to doubt, and a truth that our farmers should be ashamed to acknowledge. | There is an axiom, that "where provi dence does most for man he does least for himself," illustrations of the truth of which are abundant all over this conntry, and the Red river valley furnishes its quota. In many cases with first settler?, superficial cultivation is almost a necessity, but unfortunately, after the necessity ha's disappeared, it becomes a habit, and slov enly farming, with its consequent short crops, is the result . And had there been a failure of an average crop in the Red river valley this season, inefficient culti vation would have been solely to blame for it. The writer of this article has given close attention to crop report during the present season, and the result of his ob servations is that where land has been properly drained so as to relieve :t of the surface water early in the spring, plowed to the depth of six or seven inches, and carefully seeded, there would have been an average crop without a drop of rainfall from the Ist of July until harvest . In the cultivation of wheat, and that the best produced in the world, the north Da kota farmer is almost absolutely inde pendent of climate or meteorological in fluences. The melting of the snows of winter and the spring rains furnish aa abundance of moisture, which is retained in the soil; the timely drainage of surplus water in the spring, and the cultivation cf the soil to a line tilth of sufficient depth to give the roots of the plant room for growth will insure a good crop in any season. It is hoped that the scare they have had this year will prove a salutary lesson for our farmers, and that they will by better culti vation provide sgainst such a iiist:raceinl calamity in the future as a failure of the crops in north Dakota. Tiijht Luring. Mr. Richard A. Proctor, the weli known lecturer on astronomy, once tried the ex periment of wearing a corset, and thus de scribes the result: "When the subject of corset wearing was under discussion in the pages of the English Mechanic, I wag struck," he says, "with the apparent evi dence in favor of tight lacing. I was in particular struck by the evidence of some a? to its use reducing corpulence. I was corpulent, I was always disposed, as I am still, to take an interest in scientific ex periment. I thought I would give this matter a fair trial. I re;id all the instruc tions, carefully followed them, and varied the time of applying pressure with 'that perfectly stiff busk' about which corre spondents were so enthusiastic. I was fool ish enough to try the thing for a matter of four weeks. Then I laughed at myself as a hopeless idiot, and determined to tjive up the attempt to reduce by artificial means that superabundance of fat on whichj only starvation and much exercise, or the air of America, has ever had any real reducing influence. Bat I was reckonihp without my host. As the Chinese lady suffers, lam told, when her feet bindings are taken off, and as the flat head baby howls when his headboards are removed, so for awhile was it with me. I found myself manifestly better in stays. I laughed at myself no longer. I was too angry to laugh. I would as soon condemned myself to using crutches all the time, as to always wearing a busk. But for my one month of folly I had to endure three months of discomfort. At the end of about that time I was my own man again." BIG FIBE IN NEW YOBK. New Yobe, July 22.— The five upper floors of the Monroe building, 17 to 29 Vandewater street, were gutted by fire this afternoon. The floors below were dooded with water, and ev«ry tenant suffered more or less. The total loss is about $300,000. There were many narrow es capes but no lives were lost and no one was serion~ly injured. The building is eight stories high, and the firemen worked at great disadvantage. The principal loss sustained by Geo. Monroe was on stock and machinery $100,000, and on the build ing $30,000. Fully insured. Lovejoy, Son & Co., electrotypers, loss is $30,000, and partly insured. The Hub Pub lishing company and the Clay Manu facturing company lost $25,000 each. Several other tenants lost from $5,000 to $15,000 each, chiefly by water. Peter Smith, Wm. Hagan, John Malon, James McCann. Wm. Turle, Stephen Kent, assistant fireman McCarthy and six other men of the hook and ladder truck were cr:t off by fire and -^moke on the eighth floor, bnt they were rescued by means of a rope. Nine other firemen imprisoned on the same floor were also rescued in a similar way . The firemen on the roof were ordered off about a minute before it fell. The cause of the fire was spontaneocß combustion. About 1,000 persons are em ployed in the building, and but few will be thrown out of employment. NOT INJUBED. Toledo. 0., July 22. — Chief Justice Waite arrived home last night from hi& Western trip, and spent Sunday with rela tives and friends in this city. He is suf fering from injuries received in his recent accident, but if is not yet deoided whether his rib is f ractured or not. He goes hence to Connecticut. From Minneapolis to Shafcopee. The Shakopee Argus has reliable inforna ation that surveyors are locating a line for a railway between Minneapolis and Shako pee. That an arrangement has been made with the Minneapolis & St. Louis company whereby the St. Paul & Omaha company secures the privilepe of running into Min neapolis over the former road from the citz limits of that city . Starting at that point, the survey is to be run in an air line to a junction with the St. Paul <k Omaha road at Shakopee. The length of the proposed road will not exceed eighteen, miles and can be cheaply constructed. With the arrangement for getting into Minneapolis, as above stated, all damages for right of way would be avoided and the principal objections heretofore urged by the company done away with. For several months the Argus has understood the above arrangement was to be perfected but for obvious reasons Baid nothing about it until it was an assured fact. Little doubt now remains but that there is under way a determined effort on the part of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha company to tap Minneapolis in the man ner indicated. "Rough, on Corns.' ' Ask for "Rough on Corns." 15c. Quick relief; complete, permanent cur?. Cores, waits taivie.