1(5 ( THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , MAY 27 , 1891-TVVENTY PAGES. r POSITIVELY LAST WEEK. Great Consinment Prices. SendlOc for postage on big'94 catalogue. BABY CARRIAGE AIslD REFRIGERATOR CATALOGUE mailed free. I ' " NEBRASKA FORTY YEARS OLD v- vr r A Bit of National History Eeoalled by Its Anniversary. DECORATION DAY AN INTERESTING EPOCH JUny 30 , 1804 , the Nebrasltn and Kmi- BUB 11111 , that Did 80 .Much to Urine ou the Civil War , W'ns Approved. * - \v \ Besides being the annual Decoration day , next Wednesday Is the fortieth anniversary * of the approval of the Nebraska and Kansas , It1 N bill of 1864 and the organization of the tcr- rltory of Nebraska. A moment's reflection will show the appropriateness of the co incidence , especially wnen the legislative nnd political history of the bill Is taken Into consideration. The Nebraska and Kan sas bill not only conferred territorial govern ment upon a largo portion of , the northwest , but occasioned n most vindictive struggle between the friends of slavery In the south , and the almost unanimous north. While the victory was with the south , the preliminary Bklrmlsh more firmly united the enemies of slavery , and prepared them for the civil war It hastened on. Further , the effects of that bill are to be felt oven In the present dny , for It was the first of a series of legislative events In which party lines were drawn along sectional lines. ntiJ which made the couth the "solid south. " In 1803 Louisiana , the largest peace ful acquisition of any country of any time , was ceded to the United States by Franco What was after ward called the "Nebraska country" formed n comparatively small portion of this Im mense purchase. Yet the Nebraska country wns larger than Texas nnd California com bined , extending from the southern boundary of the purchase , thirty-six degrees thirty minutes , to the northern boundary of the United Statei on the forty-ninth parallel , and from the Missouri river and the state of Missouri to the Rocky mountains. The settlement ot tho.Nebraska country was slow. In 1810 , seven years alter the purchase ot Louisiana , John Jacob Aster's American Fur company established n trading post nt Bellevue , making the first settle ment In Nebraska. When the Indian trading post at Fort Calhoun was removed to Bellevue - vuo a dozen years later , Bellevue became a place of Mime considerable Importance. The Indian tribes for hundreds of miles made It the market for. their furs and pelts , and In llellovuo obtained arms and ammunition , and the , liquor and trinkets so dear to the red- ekln heart. At Bellevue was located the firs ! mission In Nebraska , and there the first postmaster served as the first editor and the first schoolmaster of the country. Bcllovue was the commercial , social , religious and educational metropolis. TERRITORY FOR TRESPASSERS. As early as 1844 petitions were presented to congress asking the organization of a ter ritory west of the. Missouri. Though under the patronage of no less a man than Senator Stephen A. Douglass , the petitions were hcarcely given a passing thought. Aside from the Ilttlo settlement at Bellevue , the country had but few white Inhabitants , and they were , In the strict letter of the law , trespassers on the reservations of the In diana. Of the Interior the Ilttlo ttmt was known was not favorable for the organiza tion of the territory. Congress was not apt tq organize a territory for the benefit of u handful of trespassers squatting on the land that belonged to the Indian. But with tlo | growth of the country came a moro favorable reception * for the proposl- lions. At each successive congress the mat ter was presented , but for years failed to pass the committee stage. In 1849 came the discovery of goU ' " California , and the mad racp to the west. Many a wtary tenderfoot Involuntarily settled on tbo prairies of Ne braska In 1819 and 1850 , oud In the dcupera- tlon of his extremity undertook the appar ently hopeless task of forcing a living from the soil of the Great American Desert. To his astonishment and delight he found land fertile and easily cultivated , and that ho could "tickle the earth with a hoe , and It laughs with the harvest. " Then settlers multiplied along the rivers ; the possibili ties of the country were better known , dnd the propositions for the organization of a territory "more respectfully received. In the second session of the Thirty-second congress Representative Wlllard P. Hall of Missouri Introduced a bill for the organi zation of the territory of the Platte , com prising all of the Louisiana purchase be tween the Missouri river and the Rockies. Nearly two months' consideration was given the bill by the committee , which then 're ported It back as a "Bill for the Organiza tion ot the Territory of * Nebraska , " there being no. Important changes except In the name. No reference was made In any way to slavery , but by Implication the bill would follow the Missouri compromise of 1820. That compromise provided that Missouri might bo admitted as a slave state , but for ever prohibited slavery In the rest of the purchase north of the line of 3C degrees 30 minutes. Nebraska territory , as de scribed In the committee's bill , was within the prescribed area , and therefore when ad mitted would come In as a free state. OPPOSED BY THE SOUTH. The bill met the bitterest opposition of the southern members , who were unani mously opposed to the organization of fur ther free soil territory. A stormy session ot the whole house closed with n recom mendation for the rejection of the bill , but In seine way Its defeat at that stage was pre vented. The bill was passed by a vote ot 98 to 43 , but when sent to the senate It mot an opposition most strongly organized to secure Its defeat. The bill was referred to the commltteo on terri tories , of which Senator Douglass was chair man. Though a strong minority of the com mltteo , headed by Douglass , Is said to have favored the bill , no report was obtainable from the committee. As the session drew near to a close , the friends of the Nebraska bill made a ctrcnuous though futile effort to obtain a report. In the closing hours they became almost frantic. On the last day of the ses sion but one a motion to take the bill up was defeated by a vote of 25 to 20. The next day a similar motion resulted In the motion being tabled for the few hours 'left of the session by the solid vote of the southern senators. On the following day Franklin Plerco was Inaugurated president. Mr. Plerco was a New Hampshire democrat who had been triumphantly elected over General Scott , the whig candidate , The campaign had been ono ot personalities alone ; the national plat forms ot the two great parties being almost Identical on the vital question of the day slavery. Mr. Plerco In his Inaugural address con gratulated the country on the successful termination of the Mexican war. Though the acquisition of new territory had brought now responsibilities they had been faithfully met , and the over disturbing slavery ques tion , as far as concerned the Mexican acces sion , settled by the compromise measures of 1850. These Jio regarded as a final settle ment ot the questions they contained , and It was his Intention , ho declared , by every means In his power to prevent any shock to the repose of the country by a renewal of the slavery agitation. Mr. Plerco was but reiterating the resolu tions contained In the democratic anil whig national platforms of the year previous. A majority ot the members of congress had been elected on the strength ot their pledges to prevent a renewal of the slavery agita tion. It would have been Impossible to liavo moro emphatically or officially declared the conflict at an end. The Thirty-third congress assembled on Monday , December 6 , following tha Inauguration. Tuesday Presi dent Plerco submitted his annual message. In the strongest language ho again promised to regard the compromises of 1850 an end of the discussion and denounced any attempt to shock tbo repose ot the confederacy. PRESIDENT SWITCHED. But on the day previous Senator Augustus 0. Dodge of Iowa had given notice of hla In tention to Introduce a bill for the organiza tion of the territory ol Nebraska , and Dodge's bill later on rdtclly changed the president's position. On the llth Dodge In troduced the bill , which , on examination , was found to be practlcaly Identical with the unfortunate measure of the preceding ses sion. After the first nnd second readings It was referred to Senator Douglass' com mltteo on territories. The next day It wns reported back with a number of amendments , which were received with surprise not unmlnglcd with doubt. A number of northern senators expressed their surprise at some of the amendments , which seemed to operate as a repeal of the Missouri compromise. On January 4 , 1851 , the committee made a special report In ex planation of the amendments which divested the bill of any ambiguity of meaning. The compromise of 1820 , the commltteo said , wns no longer operative , It having been repealed by the passage of the compromises of 1850 , with which It was Inconsistent. Congress had no right to Interfere with the domestic Institutions ot the states. As each sovereign eign state was said to have the power of controlling slavery within Its own boundaries the territory of Nebraska was , on organiza tion , to be free soil or proslavcry , ns a ma jority of the voters might choose at the first election. The Issue , the committee claimed , was "The great principles of self-govern ment , that the people should be allowed to decldo the questions of their domestic In stitutions for themselves. " The people of the north were first as tounded ; then as the full conception of the effects of the bill dawned upon them , for the repeal of the Missouri compromise there was awful Indignation , for "squatter sever eignty" bitter sarcasm. The south was also surprised , for the pro posal to glvo slavery another opportunity to obtain additional territory came unexpectedly nnd gratuitously from northern sources. The proffer was as quickly accepted ns mado. Indeed the south was In desperate straits. Slavery could no longer control the senate If the north would unitedly oppose tlio insti tution. Unless Texas could bo divided , an unlikely contingency , the south could not add one new state. The north still had the vast unorganized portion of the Louisiana purchase to form Into states In which the Missouri compromise prohibited slavery , and many of which would bo physically unfitted for the Institution. The Nebrnska country wns the unorganized portion of the purchase best adapted for the slave. For these reasons the couth coveted Nebraska. The conditions were now changed. Those who had been the friends of the bill now became Its most unrelenting foes , and these who In the last session secured the defeat of the Hall bill now were most eager to secure the passage of the committee's bill. To account for the sudden change of front various theories have' been advanced. It seems highly probable that two elements compelled the embodiment ot the repeal of the Missouri compromise. The journals of the tlmo openly charged that a conspiracy had been formed In the Thirty-second congress to give the slave power additional territory- nnd the Investigation of later times tends to confirm this statement. U certainly appears strange that on the day before the Inaugura tion of the Thirty-third congress , known to be of pro-slavery views , a bill to organize the territory of Nebraska under the Missouri compromise should have been killed by the unanimous vote at the slavo-holdlng sena tors , and then that the Thirty-third con gress should have received the same bill , modified to please the slavocracy , with great avidity. SENATOR DOUGLASS' AMBITION. Again , Senator Douglass was known to cherish an ambition for the presidency that was all but overpowering. With the south he rightly believed himself popular. It Is thought that he used his tremendous influ ence as chairman ot the commltteo on ter ritories und his glowing eloquence to more certainly secure the favor ot the south while appeasing the north by engineering another compromise with Insatiable slavery. Having committed himself , and having found that his course was not popular In the north , ho bent his wholu energies toward accomplish ing his original plan. The combination of these two motives will account for the trend ot the bill. > On the second day after the special re port Senator Archibald Dlxon , a Kentucky whig , gave notice ot his Intention to amend the Nebraska bill when It should come be fore the senate by Inserting a clause re pealing toe Missouri compromise. Dlxon was a man ot marked Influence and charac- I LADIES' REED ROCKERS , very stylish double can scat , sells ordinarily for Consignment price .CHINA CLOSETS , polished oak , double fT s j -x x x thick glass , worth $22.50. Til \ * ) ( ) Consignment price HL -L . < Zs V-X UPHOLSTERED ROCKERS , finished an tique , latest style , worth $6.50. Consignment prlco HALL RACKS , solid oak polish finish , largo mirror , usually fells for $12.00. Consignment prlco LAWN SETTEES , painted red , four feet wide , regular prlco , $3.50. Consignment price CHIFFONIERS , extra largo size , antlqtio oak , well made , usual price $12.50. $ Consignment price WARDROBES , extra large size , finished an tique oak , worth $12.00. Consignment prlco BOOKQASES , polished oak , adjustable shelves , largo size , worth $12.50. $6.18 Consignment price . EASELS , solid oak , polish finish , worth 7" rp $1.50. 42e , Consignment price ' CENTER TABLES , solid oak and polish Consignment finish , worth price $3.'GO. $1.1O PLUSH RECEPTION. CHAIRS , oak , fin ished antique , worth $5.00. $1.9S Consignment price . CHAMBER SUITS , 3 pieces , latest style , large mirror , antique or ICth century finish : , worth $30.00. $16.9O Consignment price MRS. POTTS SAD IRONS , nlcklo finish , three Irons , one handle nnd stand. Consignment price Ono lot BEDROOM SUITS , 3 pieces , fin sell ished them antique for , worth $17.50 ; consignor says $9,1O 65 CHENILLE COUCHES , nicely draped , any color , well worth $15 , consignor allows $6.8 § us to sell them for Close evenings at 6:30 : , except Monday and Saturday evenings. ter. Ho liatl served as governor of Ken tucky until sent to tlio senate to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Henry Clay. Mr. Dlxon was a representative of the first element named ; the clement which must have formed the conspiracy against the first Nebraska bill If such a conspiracy existed. Ho was a pronounced pro-slavery man , and had the frankness to announce that by the repeal of the Missouri com promise he , jped "the citizens of the vari ous states shall be at liberty to take and hold their slaves within any of the terri tories. " Clay had been "honorably Identi fied" with the compromise of 1820 ; his suc cessor In the senate was the first to openly commit a breach of the old compact. Before the commencement of the debate proper on the bill a delegation appointed by the nominal Inhabitants of the Nebraska country arrived In Washington and waited on congress. They made two requests that the southern boundary be fixed at the Thirty- seventh parallel , and that the Nebraska country be divided along the Fortieth par allel Into Nebraska In the north and Kan sas In the south. The first suggestion was made to avoid a division of the Cherokee country , the boundary line being placed thirty miles north of the original Missouri compromise line , the first boundary pro posed. The reason for the second sugges tion was not readily apparent , but It was Intimated that there were more ulterior mo tives than the gratification of local pride. For Nebraska the slavery clement cared but little ; Its climate was thought too vig orous and its toll too difficult of cultiva tion for profitable Blavo holding. Then Ne braska was bordered by Iowa , a free state , and Minnesota , Washington and Oregon ter ritories , all free soil , BO If finally obtained for slavery It would be Isolated from other slavery states. Kansas was thought to bo warmer and more fertile , and then it was nearer to Missouri , Arkansas and Texas , all slave states. If Kansas could be made a slave state the south would have one more link In the chain of such states , reaching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. To gain this the slavocracy was willing to glvo the north Nebraska , that It cared little for. thinking that such generosity would make the north more willing to give the south Kansas However , the Missouri and Iowa delegations united In recommending the changes , and the committee on territories renorted a bill to the senate providing for the organization of the territories of Ne braska and Kansas , and which was as em- phatlo In declaring ! the compromise of 1820 Inoperative as theircport of the 1th of Jan uary. DOUGLASS' SPEECH. A week or so jotter the spjclal report Senator Douglass opened the debate. It was a battle of giants * The master minds of the nation engaged In the terrible combat. Tacticians nnd generals whoao sheer weight bore all before them ; skirmishers and ponderous nrtlllew guerrillas and plodding Infantry fought Inlthe war of eloquence and logic with desperation never equaled In the history of the country. Mr Douglass' opening speech brings to view the second clbment not at all radical on slavery questions , but standing on techni calities , like n qalUbllnB lawyer who Is un willing to go Into dho merits of his caso. Senator Douglass"- argument was highly Ingenious. In 13481 Just after the acquisi tion of a largo amount of territory from Mexico the senate'amended n bill lioforu It by extending the compromise line of 30-30 to the Pacific. In this amendment the house did not concur , lly defeating the senate amendment Mr. Douglass claimed the Mis souri compromise had been abandoned. This compromise ended and no longer operative a new discussion arose In 1850 and closed with fresh compromise measurta whoso lead ing feature was the doctrine of noninter vention by congress In the domestic Institu tions of the territories. The measures of' 1850 were ot universal application , the old line of 36-30 being entirely disregarded. The cffJct of the Nebraska and Kansas bill , said Douglaes , was neither to legislate slavery Into or out of the territories , butte to leave their Inhabitants free to act as they chose In the premises. What could be more reasonablu than this ? Thus half of the states which recognized slavery nt the adop tion of the constitution had abolished tha Institution. If there was any bad faith manifested It was on the part of the abolitionists , who opposed the compromise of 1E20 , who opposed the continuation ot the ' I compromise line through the Texas acces sion In 1845 , and who refused to carry the line through to the Pacific In 1848 , aqd yet were so zealous In keeping unprofaned the compromise they maligned for a third of a century. Senator Salmon P. Chase of Ohio , after ward appointed to the supreme bench , opened on behalf of the opponents of the bill. Mr. Chase began by moving to strike out of the bill a clause which declared the compromise of 1820 Inoperative , leaving the committee's bill an unconditional repeal of the compromise. It was his Intention , If the motion carried , to then move to strike out the whole clause , leaving the bill with no reference to the compromise of 1S20. The statement that the omnibus measures of 1S50 superseded the Missouri compromise ho promised to "demonstrate to be without any foundation In fact or history , " and his masterly speech he directed at this point. Mr. Chase represented another class of senators men whose love of liberty or hatred of slavery , or whoao deference to the expressed wishes of their constituencies led them to fight the bill. There was anothT class , small and unimportant , who regarded territorial organizations west of the Mis souri as unnecessary , In bad faith with the Indian tribes who occupied the land , nnd as altogether too costly luxuries , But where a principle was at stake mercenary motives could not long bo the issue , and this class was compelled to join Chase , nnd Simmer , and Sewnrd , and Fessenden , In opposition to the bill. Just so the Douglass element coalesced with DIxon's following , and fought under a pro-slavery banner against aboli tionism. MADE IT DEMOCRATIC. Tha discussion had not progressed far before the administration adopted the meas ure , and made It n democratic , aswell as southern bill. Many northern democrats still refused to support the bill , protesting that they could not , with honor to them selves , disregard their pledges made In the campaign preceding. Then , many northern congressmen opposed the bill on account of the effects the Missouri compromise would have In opening additional territory to slavery. The whig party was unharmonlnus when the discussion opened , and the.debate completed the demoralization of the party. The democrats were much stronger In the south than over before , but were much weakened by rebellion and desertion In the north. The northern whlgs were badly divided ; In the south they no longer had an organized existence. For over four months the debate pro ceeded. The mercurial public opinion fluctu ated from one extreme to the other. As the bill ncared a final vote In the senate the excitement became Intense. The last formalities of the senate were watched with feverish anxiety The Issue at stake was nominally the organization of two frontier territories ; really it was the extension or limitation of slavery. The northern sena tors mot their first defeat In the rejection of Chase's amendment. Then the commit tee's substitute for the original Dodge bill was adopted , and an amendment proposed by Clayton of Delaware disfranchising for eigners who had taken out only their first papers and making them Ineligible for ofllco In tha two territories was Incorporated , The bill passed by a vote of 37 to 14. A week after the senate committee had divided the Nebraska country Into Nebraska nnd Kansas , Hepresentatlvo William A. Richardson of Illinois , chairman ot the house committee on territories , reported n bill for the organization ot the territory of Nebraska , which hud been recommended by a majority ot the committee. The Rich ardson bill soon became the subject of as much debate as the matter had received In the senate. The public mind In the mean time , was Incredibly Inflamed. "Town- meetings , conventions , state legislatures , denounced the repeal of the Missouri com promise , " Three thousand Now England clergymen , "In the name of Almighty OoJ , and In Ilia presence , " protested against the extension of the Institution of slavery. Mass meetings and private citizens poured remonstrances Into congress. But the pro gress of the debate In the house In a meas ure allayed the excitement caused by the senate debate , as amendments were tacked to the bill which Keemed too unpopular to permit Its passage. Then the nation was again tranquil. On the 8th of May Mr. Richardson offered an amendment to the house bill , making the latter almost Identical with the bill passed by the senate , I'ublio intercut lin- 140 PARLOR SUITS , five pieces , oak , ffn-j Ished antique , mohair crushed plush , worthK $50 , but the consignor says sell them for. . . . . Over 2.000 EXTENSION TABLES , finished antique , latest style , you would Bay they were cheap nt $12.50 ; they nro consigned to sell for 140 FOLDING BEDS , never retailed for less than $ l r If you need ono you can get one on account of being consigned for 350 rolls BRUSSELS CARPET , value $1 per yard , consigned to sell for 201 rolls INORAINS. Infest patterns , full yard wide , regular price 75c. consigned to soil nt " " 1,400'dozen WINDOW , ? long , best rollers , best cloth , actual viiluo 75c , consigned to sell for SC3 pairs NOTTINGHAM LACE CUR TAINS , full length nnd width , latest style , made to retail tor $2.50 , consigned to sell for , , . . , , . A lot of GASOLINE STOVES , each ono guaranteed worth $ C , consignment price Good fashionable BABY CARRIAGES , full size , bicycle wjiccls , cheap at $10 , consign ment price \ . i i i i i - . _ , - . , SOLID OAK SECRETARIES , In antique finish , has large writing desk , plenty of book room , worth $12.50 , the consignor says sell thorn for , 118 ICC BOXES , lined with best quality of zinc , patent locks , hinges , best make , worth $7.60. Consignment price 215 DINNER SETS , best Englli goods , rich royal blue color , 102 pieces , easily worth $20. Consignment price A big lot of 4-hole cast RANGES from a foundry that only makes good goods , worth $12.00. Consignment prlco ALL COPPER WASH BOILERS , No. 8 size , best cold rolled copper. Consignment prlco mediately re-awakened. The debates In the house were much moro violent than the discussion In the senate even marked with malignity of feeling. The sessions were unusually prolonged. Once the house re mained In session thirty-six consecutive hours In discussion over the bill. The de bate lasted but two weeks , yet the suspense was awful. No other theme was publicly discussed. Business suffered In the general stagnation. May 22 the house took up Its amended bill for action , and the efforts of the opponents of the bill to prevent a vote were even reckless In the height of their despair. It was well known that the vote would be very close ; both sides used every exertion. Twenty-nine roll calls were or dered In a twelve-hour session. Just before midnight the clerk called the roll for the last time , and the house passed Its amended bill by a vote of IK ! to 100. The house bill omitted the Clayton amendment to the sen ate bill which disfranchised aliens who had declared their Intentions but had not com pleted naturalization. On Saturday , the 25th of May , the senate took up the house substitute. The upper house was known to bo strongly In favor of the bill , nnd the opponents of the measure of course saw how useless further attempts to delay Its passage would be. The closing hours wore , therefore , devoted to solemn warnings of the results to follow thu passage - sago of the bill , and the scene was memora ble as Sunnier rose to close the dcbato just before midnight. SUMNER'S WARNING. "Sir , " ho said , "tho bill which you nro nbout to pass Is at once the worst and the best bill on which congress ever ncted. It Is the worst bill , for It Is a present victory of slavery. In a Christian land and In an ago of civilization n time honored statute of free dom Is struck down , opening the way to nil the countless woes and wrongs of human bondage. Among the crimes of history a new ono Is about to bo recorded , which , In better days , will ho read with universal shame. The tea tax and stamp act which aroused the patriot rage of our fathers were virtues by the side of this enormity ; nor would It bo easy to Imagine at this day any measure which moro openly defied every bcntlnicnt of justice , humanity nnd Christianity. Am I not right then In calling It the worst bill on which congress ever ncted ? But there Is another fildo to which I gladly turn. Sir , It Is the best bill on which congress ever ncted , for It prepares thewny for that 'All hall hereafter' when slavery must disappear. It annuh all past compromizes with slavery , nnd makes all future compromises Impossi ble. Thus It puts freedom nnd slavery face to fuco nnd bids them grapple , Who can doubt the result ? It opens wide the door of the future , when at last there will really bo a north , nnd the slave power will be broken , when this wretched despotism will cease to dominate over our government , Impressing Itself upon nil that It does at home and abroad ; when the national government shall bo divorced In every way from slavery , nnd , according to the true Intent of our fathers , freedom shall bo established by ociigrssi everywhere , at least beyond the local limits of the states. Thus , sir , now standing at the very grave ot freedom In Kansas and Nebraska , I find assurances of that happy resurrection by which freedom will be se cured hereafter , not only In thojo territories , but everywhere under the national govern ment , Moro clearly than ever before , I now see the 'beginning of the end' of slavery. Am I not right , then , In calling this measure the best bill on which congress ever noted ? Sorrowfully I bend before the wrong you are nbout to perpetrate. Joyfully I welcome the promises of the future. " Just after 1 o'clock on Sunday morning , the 20th , the bill was finally passed. Mr. Bumncr called for the yeas and nayu , but a chorus of "Oh , thcro IB no necessity for that , " prevented the call from being put. The senate stood , however , Just about an at the passage ot the Dodge bill , 35 yeas , 13 nays. Thursday , the 30th of May , 1851 , just forty years ago , President Pierce ap proved the bill , and Nebraska und Kansas entered upon their history as organized com monwealths. The effect * of the passage of the bill were tremendous. The Indignation shown In the north was only equalled1 by the Joy maul- foiled In the south. The first effect was the widening of thu sectional breach between the north and south. Douglass had hoped to roach the presidency by the old of the bill , but ho had no political following In New England , the middle and western states $8.9 § S9c 97c $2.78 $4.87 t M 1 X 1 $6.98 $3.78 $9.99 $4.9O $1.86 now. Ills aspirations for the highest post of honor In the nation were completely frus trated. The second effect , then , was the removal of Douglass as a candidate. The whig party , In the third place , was com pletely destroyed. Fourth , the democracy of the north molted away , but made gains In the south until It was the only party having1 any perceptible Influence. Then after a short period of political unrest the rem nants of the whig nnd democratic parties who opposed the Nebraska bill were compelled to unite in a new permanent party whoso chief tenet was opposition to slavery. C. B. A. _ CO A .V Vll T. ILITIKS. He Well , what sort of a mood nro you la this evening ? She Well , ns I have * squeezed your hand nnd let you kiss mo I think I'm In my Indicative mood. "Two men fought for n wife In Oregon , " remarked Mrs. Knags , looking up from tha paper. "Which had to take her ? " asked Mr. Knags sarcastically. Calloc Women liavo .mighty queer ways , don't you think , Uncle SI ? Undo SI I kaln't say thct I know much about women. I only been married four times. The formal announcement Is made ot the engagement of Miss Hope Goddard , the only daughter of Colonel and Mrs. William Goddnnl of Providence , II. I. , to C. Oliver Iselln of New York city. Mr. nnd Mrs. William Strnnsberry , the old- Cbt married couple in Stark county , Ohio , celebrated the sixty-fifth anniversary of their marrlago last Tuesday. They are both In good health , ho bolng 88 yearn old and she 87. They have cloven children and have lived on the same farm since their marriage. President Carnet has elgncd a decree for bidding members of the consular or diploma tic corps to marry without first asking the consent , not only of the young lady and of her papa , of the prospective mother-in-law und of a minister of the gospel , but of the minister of foreign uflalrH as well. A Cincinnati man recently presented hla wife with a piano lamp , which she said ulio would call after him. On asking her the reason she replied : "Well , dear , It haa a. good deal of brass about It , It Is handsome to look at , It Is not remarkably brilliant , re quires a good deal of attention , is sometimes unsteady on Its legs , liable to explode when half full , flares up occasionally , Is always out at bcdtlmo nnd Is hound to smoke. " "Who Is that young man standing over there by the door ? " Inquired the lady In black , "Let mo tec , " replied the modern and advanced girl , observing the young man critically through her lorgnette. "His face In familiar. Why , I ballovo that that's the . young man I'm engaged to , " " When a man points out to his wife an other woman who dresses , as ho lays , just the way ho would like to sco her dress , aha can usually get her revenge by telling him how much the other woman's clothes must cost. Another elopement of n beautiful and ac complished white girl with a. Sioux Indian Is to bo recorded. The girl this time l Miss Allco Tucker , n daughter of prominent people living at Nlobrara , Neb. , and tha Sioux , known by the adopted name of John. Lauman , belonging to Rosebud agency. Mls Tucker Is 10. At the marrlago of the oldest son of Babu Raj Kuma Roy , SSomlmlar of Narnll , recently , the procession was u "lost Imposing ono , the bridegroom party alone consisting of 1,200 to > 1,600 men. A notable Innovation In the shape of an Indian female string band , which drove with the procession In a wagonette , attracted a great deal of attention. The silver wedding of the emperor and em press of Japan , according to foreign papers , was celebrated with great pomp a few weeks ago , There was a review of the soldlen In the afternoon , and In the evening there warn n gala dinner , to which all the prominent of ficials and their wlven and foreigners wer Invited , Afterwards there was a reception and dance In the throne room. Male danc ers produced the famous "Banzalraku , " a dnnco which was composed by the emperor Yomel 1,300 years ago ; the "Talhelrnku , " which was the fashion 1,037 years ago , ana the "lialro , " a dance brought from India , about the year COO , which , In Its various evolutions lutions , represents the subjection of all cne- > mles of the state , All the uuost * receive * silver momentous ot the coloration.