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Gladstone Issues a Pamphlet Upon the Subject. Be Says Ireland Will Attain the Object of Her Ambition, Ex-Promier Gladstone has just issued a pamphlet upon the question of Irish Homo Rule which has attracted great attentions The brochure is undervtwo heads. The first i a history of an idea, in whioh Mr. Glad- stone summarizes the following conditions, under which alone, inhlsview,, home-rule be- came possible: First—The abandonment of the hope that Parliament could serve as a passable legisla- tive instrument for Ireland. Seoond-rTho unequivocal and constitutional demand of the Irish members. Third—The possibility of dealing with Scotland in a similar way in : circumstances of equal and equally clear de- sire. Mr. Gladstone then passes on to defend himself from the charge of having sprung the Home Eulo measure upon his friends* Ee- plyine to the charge of Hartington and Chaniberlain that hehad conceived the idea precipitately, and to the charge of Bright that he had concealed it unduly, he denies that it is the duty of a Min- ister to make known, even to his colleagues, every idea forming in his mind, whioh would' tend to confuse and retard instead of aid business. He continues: ''Whatis.tiw is that'I had hot publicly ' and in principle condemned it, and also that I had mentally considered it; but I had neither adopted nor rejected it, and for the very anjple reason that it was not ripe either for adoption or for rejection.\ Mr. Gladstone then goes on to point out that during all the earlier years of his; public life the alternatives were repeal on the oue hand, and on the other the relief of Ireland from grievances. It was not possible, he says, at that time to prognosticate how in a short time Parliament would stumble and almost writhe under its constantly accumulating burdens, or to pronounce that it would eventually prove incapable of meeting the wants of Ireland. Evidently there wasaperiod when Irishpa- tribtism, as represented by 0'Conriell;looked favorably upon this alternative policy, and had no fixed conclusion as to the absolute ne- cessity for home government,;arid seehied to allow that measures founded in justice to Ireland mightpossfbly suffice to meet the ae-r essstyot the case. . - . - It was>as' early as 1871,.Hr. Gladstone says, thai-he took the first step toWardJplacirigthe controversy on its true;basis. In the second portion of thepamphlot, the ' lessons of the eleetiohs, Mr. iSladstone begins • drawing certain lessons from the elections as they affect the Liberal party. In the course of some full calculations, he estimates the loss to the Liberal party from the Unionist s.-hism at two-sevenths of the whole, but this fraction is distributed, he points out, unequally among the classes. It has com- manded five-sixths, he says, of the liberal pee: B,but not more than one-twentieth of the liberal Workingtuen. Mr, Gladstone points out that even now the Tories have faued to secure an absolute majority and draws the conclusion that at the first moment Liberal- ism is again united, it must again become predominant in Parliament. He sees further ground for hope in the abatement that has already taken place in the Tory opposition. \We hear no more pot-valiant language,\ he says, \no more of the Hottentots and uo more of the famous twenty years during which Parliament was to giant special pow- ers for firm government in Ireland, and at the end of which' time, in a larger or less degree, the coercive laws might be rep:aled and meaures of local self- government entertained\ Mr. Gladstone then goes on to point out that the Unionists are already pledged to an immediate and large concession, many of them on such a s- ale that they give to their idea the name of Home Rule, declaring themselves favorable to its principle and only opposed to -'the awkward and perverse manner in which it was handled by the late administration.\ '•Look'at the quest'on,\ he contiuues, \which way we will, the cause.of Irish selt- f ;ovei\umect lives and moves and can hardly ail to receivo more life, more propulsion from the hands of those who have been its successful opponents in one of its particular forms. It will arise as a wounded warrior sometimes arises on the field of battle and stabs to the heart some soldier of the vbtori- '! oro army who had been exultiug over him.\ Mr. Gladstone then looks at the elections t io.il a ge-gra.-hical point of view. He ; sh-ws that even in the case of England what wo havo is not really ft refusal, but is only a slower acknowledgment. Thi effect\of all this in Ireland he describes as follows: ''All the currents of the political atmo- sphere as between the two islands has been cleansed and sweetened. For Irehni now knows what she has never known before, that even under her defeat a deap rift of di- vision runs nil through the En dish nation in her favor; that there is not throughout the land a parish or village where there are not hearts beating in unison with hor heart, where there not minds earnettly bent en the acknowledgment and perniune&t establishment of her claims to ' national existence. Under these happier cir- cumstances, what is thero in reparation that that would tei.d to make it advantageous to Ifehmdl As an island with many hundreds -of miles of coast, with a weak marine and a people far more military than nautical in its haKts, of small populations and limited in her present resource;, why should she expose herself to the risks of invasion sua to the certainty of an-enormous eost»ih t«3 creation and 1 maintenance of a navy fqr dofonce rather than remain under ulie shield of the) greatsst maritime power in the world, bound by every consideration of honor and inter- est to guard hor? \Why should she bo supposed desirous to forego the Qdvantage of absolute community of trade with the greatest of all commercial countries to be- come an alien to th9 mavkot which consumes Bay nine-tenths of hoi' produce arid instead of using the broad arid universal path of enter- prise now open to her to carve out for her- self hew and harrow w»ys oi a third-rote Btatei\ «______ AN dOEAlsr TBIOYOLE. A. Machine Twenty-seven Feet High to Aid Wrecked People. An ocean trlcyclej twenty-seven feet high, is in course of building in Camden, N, J. says the Philadelphia ifev!3, t and will be com- pleted so that the inventor may test it in the surf at Ocean City within two weeks. A tricycle oh which to ride through and over the breakers which beat on the Atlan- tic Coast may have been dreamed of, but that it would ever be thoughtof when awake arid souer has entered into the Blinds of few besidesE. B. Lake, who has secureda patontfor his invention, and expects to find millions in i t The object of this, probably the latgest tricycle ever built, is not sim- ply for exercise arid amusement, as are the less pretentious three-wheeled vehicles, but it is proposed to utilize it as a.means for the saving of life from vessels wrecked oh the dangerous beaches This one will bo used by the life-saving station at O-'ean City, and if it proves a success, as all who have examined it believe it will, others will bo built for the life-saving stations ail- along the coast. The machine may be run by two men easily jftud yet is'So strong and so constructed as to pass through the roughest water with- out 4u;iury, and Without ever wetting the men who may ride upon it except such wet- ting as may be.due to spray. \It can be run out to a wreck at any time,\ said the man who was superintending the work, \audit will, beyond question revolu- tionize the ; present system of saving life on the coast. There need bo ho trouble Hereafter in launching the surf-boats, and the motor used for snooting a line across stranded vessels may be laid aside forever, once this machine is in working trim. Instead WOB»| OF WISDQBL One talent carefully employed, is bet- tor than a hundred merely possessed,. When a man has not. a good reason, for floing a thing, he has one good reason for letting it alone, A good word is an GUBJ•obligation,bat not to speak ill requires only our silence which costs nothing; Prudence and good brooding ore |n nil stations rieccssaiy; and most young men suffer from the wnnt of them. The three essentials to human happi- ness, are, something to do, something to love, and something to hope for. Hohestv may not always win, but gen- erally Uves respectably and to be re- spected. There is some solace in this fact. Truth is the best seed whereof welfare is the fruit; for every grain -of truth we plant, some one will reap a harvest of welfare. You find yourself refreshed by the presence of cheerful people, Why riot make saraest-effort to confer that pleas- ure on others? \ » The best recipe for going through life in a commendable way, is to feel that one needs all the kindness he can get from others in this world. When you make a mistake d'n't look back at it long. Take the reason of the thing ipto your own mind, and. then look forward. Mistakes are lessons of wis- dom. The past cannot be changed. The future is yet, in your power. I» a trial speed the horse that starts off with a rush is often distanced in the end by the horse that trots steadily from first to last. In your competition for this world's goods, young men, remem- ber in this race, also, 'tis the steady ad- vancement and not occasional spurts that is successful. -___ _ Personal Eesomblaaeas. Since the story of Mr. Boss's search for his lost son Charley there has been noth- ing so pathetic as the story of young of romirtngan hour or two to reach S i'\S™ F\?.\\ » « *£?** <\ /<««»» wrecked, vessel, it may be done on the 'sea Conant of his search for his lost father, wagon'in ten minutes, arid withoutithe least '\ \ \ danger. The imperilled crew could be taken ashoreon the machine if desired; in fact a -perfect communication betweenthe landand the wreck will be-established, and absolutely without danger, when- this machine is put into general use.\ »..'•'•' General Newton Made New ISorkte Coinmissioneir of JPnblic Worka. Recently Mayor Grace, of New York, pre- ferred charges against.Commissioner of Pub- lic Works ltollin M. Squire. This position, controlling as it does thousands of workmen and the annual handling of millions of dollars, is one of the most powerful in the Lnited States. The principal charge against Squire was that at the titnn of his appointment in lS84'lie'had written a letter practically put- ting his office in the power of Contractor Maurice B. Flynn. The letter was produced at Sauive's trial. Mayor Grace removed Squire, the removal being subject to Gov- ernor Hill's approval. The Governor has denied the motion of Squire's counsel to re- open the case for further evidence and approves the Mayor's order re- moving Squire from the office of Com- missioner of Public Works. The Governor does not at this time promulgate any formal opinion giving the grounds of his decision, baeau e, as it is understood, of lack of time, although he may hereafter do so. He con- curs in* the result, without indicating whether it is placed solely Upon the Flynn letter or upon the violation of the civil-ser- vu-e law, although it is believed to ha-upon the former grounds. The Mayor of New York has appointed as Suire's successor General John Newton, Chief of Engineers of the United States At ra, r , well known in connection with his successful removal of the obstructions at Hell Gate. MANDALAY INiMATEB. Estimated IJOSS of 1,000 t,ives the Capita;! of Barman. in The steamers on the 1'ftoific uro all' manned by Chinese, who make vory good, willing, sturdy, good-natured sailors 80 long »« they are well officered. 'I hose, vwols aro budt for freight, not passenger 801'vico, and, consequently, the speed and equipment are different trom those of the \AtlanUo greyhounds,\ Mr; G-. E, \Off-rdon Baltimore, Md., Coro> inisalonor of Deeds for all the States, suffered for a lone time with rhoumattem, whioh yield- ed promptly to St. Jacobs Oil. AHDBEWS, the Georgian, who lost year Walked from Atlanta to Boston, is now'on his second trlp.accompaniedby tho same llttlo dog. ThepooulW thing about it is that tho pedes- trlakis ninety-six years old. Diphtheria is frequently the result of anog- loctcd sore throat, which can be cured by a single bottle of Red Star Cough Cure. Price,, twenty-five cents a bottle. THH Marquis of Bath, whose aid .materially helped tho Tory cause In the recent English elections, own».00,000 acres, tho annual rental of whloh'brlngshlm $200,000. GErLVpn's Patent Heel Stlffeners applied to yourTjeWbooS arid shoos before you wear thorn out;- . ^ <^What JEv«ry One Should Know.\ Among the 150kinBs of Cloth Bound Dollar- Voinmesglvenaway by the Kooheoter (N. Y.) ^.mtrican Rural Home for every $lsubsorlptiori to that great 8.page,.«-coi., 16-year-old weekly, (all 5x7 inches, from 300 to 900 pages, bound in cloth) are: Law Without Law- yers. Family Cyclopedia. Farm Cyclopedia. Farmers and Stock- breeders' Guide. Common Sense, in Poultry Yard. World Cyclopedia. What any one should know. Danelson's (Modioal- Counselor. Boys'Usef ul Pastimes. Five Years Before the Mast. People's History of United Statesi Universal History of all Nations. Popular His; of Civil War (both sides). the former editor of Huvfier'e Weekly, who disappeared so mysteriously a few months since, Somo very curious adventures have grown out of his-researches. In the- first place,, the day after tho father disap- peared and the son was searching for. Mm in a Jersey City hotel, thefather was in an. upper room of that, hotel, But as the night porter did hot know hiin and- he had failed ti) register his name, the son was quite unaware of his riearnessjo him. Soon after the son l«3!t, the father came down sta'us, and in the temporary -absence of the clerk who did know him, put hisjiame on the register, went out of the hotel and was nevtr seen again. Thus the two almost crossed each others'! tracks^ but without knowing it sepa- rated again and all trace of the wanderer was absolutely lost. ~~ The search for hirh revealed the fact that a much- larger number of persons thanisgenerally.supposed disappear and are sought for by their friends; and that many persons closely resemble one an- other except in one or two particulars. One corpse differed from an exact de- scription of his father only in the fact that its two • front teeth were not artificial, like the missing man's teeth. Then a newspaper man who coiild, like Cohantj speak three or four foreign languages, applied for assistance in a newspaper office near Louisville,. Ky., and was afterwards fi'und drowned; but it was not Mr. Conant. A man, all three of whose names, 'Samuel Stillman Conant, were the same as the editor's, sent a communica- tion to a weekly paper in. New York from a poor house in Sew England. On Conant's brother going to him, he found that it was not the one he was in search of, but a man whom he had known in One of the embankments of the Irrawaddy husines several years before. On coming Eiver bur^t in Mandalayj Burmah, a few dayB since. The break Was 300 yardsin length, and so rapid was the flow of water that in a few momenta the Whole district was flooded from four to twenty^ feet deep. Engineers at once cut the dam south of the city in order to allow the water to subside. But tbe result of this manoeuvre is as yet unknown. The damage done by the fiobd amounts to over S5,O0O,OUl). Fifty thousand persons were rendered home- less in. the city, their houses and possessions having been either submerged or destroyed'. The flooded district bad within lis territory many of the food supply stores, and all these were swept away. Ihj re.ultwill bean ap- proach to famine among the homeless popu- lation, 'lhe river will not fallsiifflciently to xerhiit any attempt at ricoristruction of \the broken embankment until November. The British military operatioris are seriously in- terfered with by the overflow. It is estimated that one thousand persons fflree Press, st their lives in the flood; ' home from Europe after a vain search young Conant saw the perfect image of his father sitting at a table in the steam- er's cabin, with the same hnir, forehead, nose, mustache, ring, eye-glasses and attitude, while writing; The son stood transfixed at the thought of this unex- pected end of his search. Just then the man arose, He was half a head Bhorter than his father. As in the case of young Boss, external resemblances would mislead the relatives into disappointing visits half across the continent, and even to telegraphing to Australiato take into custody the alleged fugitive, when there was no such person •ever on board the ship. The family still believe him alive, aha haveatheory that he is hiding in Now York-which he might do for years undeteoted.T--J5ui!roif lost Any one book and paper one year, postpaid $1.15 oiiiyl Satisfaction guaranteed, Refer- ence: Hon. O. B. Parsons, Mayor Rochester^ Sampie&s. Rumi.-HoieBCo.,LTD*Rochester, N'« Y. . '. - THIRE are several towns in Montana With- out a single unmarried woman. Something: About Uuiarrh, A great many people are afflicted with ca- tarrh who do not know what alls them; arid a great many more continue sufferers who might be cured, Thickening of the membrane Whioh lines the nasal passages, thus making* breathing difficult; a-discharge from the nostrils, more or loss copious, watery or thiok; apcordiajg to the stage of thediseat J; a sense- of fullness In thoikei&i*const»nt irioUnatioa to eplt; and, 'raadvanc6a^cMB9f*droppta»otirit«B^ty.'tt^^?• gnotlng matter Into the throat, aro a few of the prominont symptoms of Catarrh; Deafness, Inflamed oyeat neuralglo pains. Bore throat and :a loss of asnse of smell' are very often caused-by Ca'.arrh. All these troublesare cured by Pisote Rem- edy forCatarrh. Relief is had immediately after boElnnlng its use, but it is important that it be continued without interruption until the.calarrlial virus is eipellod from the sys- tem and healthy secretions replace the dis- eased action of the mucous membrane. Man- ifestly it-is unreasonable to expqct a cure in. a ihort time of a disease that has been progress- big for months or years. Thlsquestion of time la provtded for in the putting up of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. It is •o concentrated that a very small dose is di- rected. The quantity in one package is suffi- cient for a long treatment, consequently tho expense Is a mere ti-iliu, and thero isnoexcuse fornoglect nor reason -for it but forgetfuluess. A cold in the head is loliovcd by an apiilica- tlon of Piso's llemorty for Catarrh. The oom- fort to bo got from it in this way is wortu many times tbe cost. . The following letters are specimens of tposo received everyday, t*silfying to the worth of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh: ALLEGHENY, Pa„ Sept. 80,1888; Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is doing wonders forme. I believe it will-cure any case of Ca- tarrh, if used according to directions. Mns. F. JOHNSON,.*? E, Diamond St. SI-BINO Hrr.ii , W- V^a., Oct. 20, 1885. M Enclosed find one dollar for two packages of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh; Tho sample package, received in June, sayo.perfect.satis- faction. GILLJ MiffeSIiR. KJSRTEOIID Mll.ts, Nl Y.,.Aug, 8,1885. . I have used a little over half S package or Piso's Remedy for Catarrh, and it has helped me more than any of the different medicines I have used. I feel cohfidentthat it will cure lean andidorecommend it to others who »ro troubled with that disease. REV, A. DAMON; MINSKAN'S PEPTONIZED BEEFTomCitheonly preparation of beef containing its entire nutri- tfotis prbpei'Mes. It contains blood-making force,generatingandlife-8ustalniiig,properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepiia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general -debility,; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration.over- work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell.Hav,arda» Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold.by drueglatSi How to Secure Health. SCOVIIA'8 SAK8APA.UM.t4 AKJJ SlIU.iNaiA, OR BLOOn AND LrraRSvnbr will restore perfect health to tha physical organization, ft is, lhdeoa, a strengthen- ing »yrup, ploaaant to take, ana liaa otton pro\** Ksoirtobethobost Blood JSuriftbr over dlsoovered, effectually curing, Scrofula, Syphilitic disorders. Weakness of tho KiSneyi, Eryoipolos, Malaria, all Horvous disorders ondEebUity, BlUoiU Complaint* aud-all diseases indioaung an iiflpuro condition ol the Blood, Uvcr, Klaneys, Stomaoh, etc It eorteoti Indigestion, especially when the oomp alnt Is ol at exhaustive haturo, having a tendency to leosea ttsfl viior 6t the brain and nervous system.