Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1883 — Page 2

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in visiting Paris was to bring about u perfect reconciliation in the Bonaparte family. Prince Napoleon, she sotys, was a thorn in the side of the emjdre. but she forgave that ami went to Paris to show her sympathy for the head of the house of Bonaparte. She declares that she has no future in France, ami will never leave the country which contains the ashes of her husband and her only son. and concludes her most imperial and womanly letter thus: “That tranquillity may be restored to France under whatever government she may choose to maintain, is rive prayer of one to whom all earthy ambitions are forever forbidden.” This letter was really not needed, the Radical organ, I am glad to be able to say. having stood quite alone in its ungenerous comments upon the bereaved wife and mother. CHINA AND JAPAN. Crowing Hostility of the Former Toward the L:ttr—lncrease of Armament. Shanghai, Jan. 3. —The attitude of China toward Japan is becoming unpleasant, if not actually hostile, the cause of the ill feeling being the still unsettled Loo Choo question. Affairs in Tonquin are still in an uncertain state. The commercial treaty between China and Corea is published, but it is probably of a temporary nature, being imperfect in scope and supplying few essential details. The Nanking Viceroy. Tso, shows signs of recovering from the illness that was expected to prove fatal. Yokohama, Jan. 12. —Active steps are being taken to increase the naval armaments. Vague and unsatisfactory rumors are ufloat regarding relations with China, presumably on tbe Loo Choo and Corean questions. The president of the new steamship company proceeds to England on the 27th inst. to purchase .-ships. The paper currency has nominally ini- j proved 30 percent, within three months, but | bankruptcies are reported in all parts of the country. Foreign trade is seriously affected by tluc position of the currency. The politjral and commercial outlook is regarded as unsatisfactory. GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS. The Austrian Court Laying tlie Base for an Extension ol'the Empire. Losjhjn. Jan. 20.—A dispatch from Pesth says: "The unusually long stay of the imperial family in Hungary, the repeated visit3 of the Crown Prince there, and constant use of the Magyar language by the imperial family during their sojourn in Hungary, have been silently effecting a r approchement between the court and the Magyars, and tend to confirm the suspicion that the governine it Leon tern plates eventual extension of the frontiers xji the empire in the southeast, for a realization of which project Hungary will be the base of oj*erations.

TlwLlbcra) Leadership. Mr. Jennings's Cable to New York World. Sir Stafford North cote, I learn, will undoubtedly return in time for the opening of the House, but it is considered at least doubtful whether Mr. Gladstone will be there on the Treasury benches to meet him. The .Premier's friends are all exceedingly anxious that he should remain at Cannes until Easter. but it is reported that he is once more thirsting for the fray and will insist on being at his post when the session opens. If their counsels should prevail and his vacation be prolonged the leadership of the Liberal party in the House of Commons will, by tite kind permission of Mr. Chamberlain and Sir Charles Dilke. be devolved upon the Marquis of Karting ton, but if any permanent changes should happen to become necessary the Marquis will go overboard as he did •when tbe Liberals returned to power. Loss of Life at Sea. London. Jan. 29.—The bark Royal Tar. from Philadelphia for Liverpool, was driven into Penarth Roads. Her decks were swept, : and other damage was done. One mau was lost. Ten bodies have washed ashore near I’enurth. A steamer is supposed to have foundered with all hands, twenty in number, near Port Heawl. A vessel, supposed to be the steamer Blackwatch. was sunk off Mumbleshead, and twenty-six persons were drowned. She was of J. 397 tons, and belongs to Cardiff. The storm continues. An Important Point. Bf.ki.in, Jan. 29. —The North German Gazette points out that Emperor William’s recent letter to the Pope was countersigned by Bismarck, thus proving that the letter was not simply a compromise, but a document of political importance. Notables at Nice. Pauls, Jan. 29.—The Prince of Wales has arrived, incognito, at Cannes, where Mr. Gladstone is staying for his health. Sir Stafford Norihcote is expected there shortly. Loid Randolph Churchill ?a residing near Monte Carlo. A Warning: for Outsiders. Vienna, Jan. 29.—A placard was posted a few days agb in a public garden at St. Petersburg enjoining people to avoid places frequented by the court, lest they should be hurt by anything that might happen. Floods in the English Lake Districts. London, Jan. 29.—The heaviest floods in the British Lake district for twenty years now prevail. Lakes Her went water and Bossiiuhwaite now join, and a portion of Mesunck is submerged.

Cubic Notes. The ceremony of electing an Archbishop of Canterbury took place at the cathedral yesterday. Bishop Roskoll, Catholic, who resigned the bishopric of Nottingham, England, in 1874, is dead. General Klapka, of Vienna, publishes a letter testifying to the bravery of the Jews in tlie war of liberation in 1841). Iron huts have arrived at Dublin for protectors of the informer, Kerrigan, in the Joyce case, and the informers in the Iluddvs case. A St. Petersburg telegram says- Two heading Nihilist prisoners, a man and a ■woman, in the fortress of Peter and Paul, fiare become insane. The Newliall Inquest. Mii.waitkke, Jan. 20. —Roundsman Stilli■vau said he thought Night ( Jerk Delaney did not do what he could have done to rescue people, and besides Delaney lie saw no other Tiotel employes help. At the noon recess, Landlord Antisdcl and son approached flic district attorney with complaints that he was following up Delaney. That official replied that he would show that Delaney ran ilf to save his own precious self, not heeding I cries of those who were roasting to death. It the Antisdels had rescued lives like the policemen did, they would not have so much 4o contend with now. Truth Ii Mighty. When Dr. pierce, of buffalo, N. Y., announced 4bxt Ids “Favorite Prescription” would positively l>!ire tlie many diseases and weaknesses peculiar Ii women, *ke doubted, and continued to eiatloy the )utrli aud efiuatio local treatment. But he mightv truth gradually became aeknowb bilged Thousands of ladles employed the “F.v f orlte Prescription" aud wore speedily oared. By *rggl*w,

STATE NEWS AND GOSSIP. The Gougar-Mandler Suit the Absorbing Topic at Lafayette. Sunday Row at Newcastle- Discovery of a 31etU<l Ist minister Who Is About Half Democrat—Notes. LA F A VETTE’S SCANDAL. Ailmiisiou of Evidence as to General Rumor—'The Case tirowing: Exciting. Special to the ludlanapolls Journal. Lafayette, Jan. 29.—1n the Gougarj Mandler case Judge Gould, at the I opening of court this afternoon, ruled | that testimony from the defense relative to | general rumor against the chastity of Mrs. : Gougar i* admissible. The testimony of ) Kwry and others this afternoon against .Mrs. Gougar was damaging and smutty. The attorneys on either side grew warm, and came near engaging in a personal warfare. ■ Eess than a dozen witnesses for the defense , have been examined and one hundred are yet to come. The case grows daily in ex- ; cite men t and general interest, and in all respects it may he said that the combat deepens. Mrs. Gougar and half a dozen female friends faithfully stand the storm of indecency in the court room. The defendant is quiet and easy. This was the greatest day of the great trial. A RAKE MAN. A Close Search Discovers a Methodist. Minister Who Is Almost a Democrat. Special to the ludianapoUs Journal. Orleans, Jau. 29.—A few days ago there appeared an item iu the Journal in reference to the chaplainship of the prison South, intimating that the present incumbent will have to step down and out because he is a Republican. The item further intimated that the directors would probably experience ftoiiie trouble in filling the place, inasmuch us statistics show that there is not a Democratic Methodist minister in the State. Your correspondent does not understand tbe absolute necessity of the position being filled by a Methodist preacher. However, if such is true, Orleans can produce a man who will relieve the prison directors of any such embarrassment. Rtv. L. F. Cain, who is serving his third year as pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church of this place, is a Democrat, but he claims to have voted the Republican ticket last election, with one or two exceptions. Mr. Gain is a young man of excellent social qualities, and possesses average abilities as a minister. He is not an ordained minister, but is preparing to receive that degree at the annual conference next summer, It is understood that friends are pressing his claims for the position, prominent among whom is Hon. David lluffstetter, of this place, who spent last week at Indianapolis. But it is expected that Representative Stacker and Senator Benz, of this district, will use their influence to defeat him. because he refused to support them in the last election.

LOSSES BV FIRE. Burning- of an Kxteiiflvi Pactorj at Elkhart, Causing Heavy Loks, Special to the lu4ianajolia Journal. Elkhart, Jan. 29. —This morning Conn's mammoth band factory was destroyed by fire. It was one of the largoat in the world. Than*was an in>ur'C" ~ x ——blob will not cover more than one half the loss. One hundred hands are thrown out of employment. Church Dama<*M by Fire. SpeelAl to tlie Indianapolis Journal. Lacokte, Jan. 29.—Tle Presbyterian church was damaged by fire, at 8 o’clock this evening, to tbe extent of $3,000: insurance $15,000. It was the finest building in the city; built in 1871. at a cost of $33,000. The lire started in the furnace room. RpHidencv Burned. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL Delphi. Jam 29.—The residence of Mr. George W. Dudley, near Delphi, was totally burned yesterday. Loss $2,500; partially insured. MISCELLANEOUS. Spirited Encounter Between a SchoolTeacher and Refractory Pupils. Special to the judiauapolia JournaL Shelbyville, Jan. 29.—1n Brandywine township, some seven miles from here, is located a school-house known as the “Bishop school-house," and the school is taught by a young man named Richards. For some time past the larger boys have attempted to bulldoze young Richards, and if possible force him to quit teaching. To-day the trouble culminated in a general fight in the scbool-room, the principal participants being two young men, sons of ’Squire John B. Bishop and William Harrell. Richards, in order to maintain his rights as a teacher, did some knocking. Pistols were drawn, and on the outside of tiie house several shots were tired, happily without doing any damage.

A TVlisce laneoiis Row with a Small JEmliug. Special to the Indian aoolia JouruaL New Castle, Jan. 29.— The usual Sunday celebration in a suburban attachment known as Hurd Scrabble, was attended with more than ordinary sarioua results yesterday. One Berry Foreman, who when he pets enraged is utterly ungovernable, yesterday took one of his spells, and proceeded to work off his auger by abusing and beating bis sister until his mother cried out that she was dead, when Berry began to deal blows upon his mother, with no serious results, however. He next began to split open the furniture, and tin ally ran out, pulled up the pump and split it open. At this juncture the neighbors were aroused and took a hand in the circus. One man struck Berry with an ax-handle, and a woman snapped a rille twice at him, but it would not discharge, when a boy named Dolan look the gun, picked powder into the tube and fired, the bal] striking Foreman in the ankle. These attacks had the effect of overcoming his auger with fear, and he took to the woods. Seymour Broom-Drill Corps. Special to the In<liainuoll* Journal. Seymoi k, Jan. 29.—The Seymour broomdrill corps gave a public exhibition at the opera-house last night for the benefit of tlie new Presbyterian church. The audience was one of the largest that ever assembled in this city. The drill corps consisted of twenty young ladies. Their costume consisted of white dress, red jacket trimmed in white, military style, and red caps. At the conclusion ot the drill, Everett Carter, the cap-

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1883.

tain, was presented with the works of Shakespeare by the ladies of the corps. The affair was a complete success. Miss Bond Very Low. Tatlorvii.lk. IIL, Jan. 29.—The condition of Miss Kmmaßond, the victim of the brutal outrage last summer, is very critical. She is believed to be at the point of death. From Exchanges an<l Correspondence. I>r. J. W. F. Gerrish is uuite ill at his residence at Seymour. Judife B. K. Higinbotl'ani, of Frankfort, has gono to Hot SpnngH, Aikausaa. The mother of Dr. J. F. Shultz, one of the oldest pliyatcian* of Delphoe, died at her home on Saturday, aged eighty-Uiree. An interesting meeting is in progress at Hanover, under the care of the professors of the college. Additions aro made to the church every | evening. A meeting In the interest, of securing the Hall Safe and Lock Company's location at New Castle, was Held on Saturday night. Very liberal aiu can be secured at that place. At Shoals, on Friday, George Chapman, a secDon hand on the Ohio and Mississippi railrout, I was struck on the bond with a spade by a fellow- ; laborer, near Huron, and is perhaps fatally lnj jurad. i Miss Nellie Shepherd, a sister or the late Rev. j lather Shepherd, and Miss Agnes Kelly, two j young ladies of Madison, have renounced the i world aud entered the couvent of 81. Mary's of j the Woods. 1 Word reached Seymour on Saturday of the deHth of Joseph Bauta, at. Sorroceo, N. M . whither he had gone for aia health. Mr. Bauta was for iiiauy years connected with the O. AM. railroad in the capacity of engineer. Amos Thorp, a fireman on a freight engine of the L., N. A. A C. railway, was killed near B*lutorldxe, on Monday, by the driving rod of the wheels breaking and forcing through the cab whore he sat. His home was at New Albany. Zihii F. Williams, charged before the hoard of coiiiiuigsieuers rs Martin countv, in September last, with corruption in office in the sale of ;he state Board questions, was again tried on appeal to tlie Cirout Court, commencing oa .ast Thursday and closing on Saturday. Williams was again found guilty, and the case will probably go to the Supreme Court. Bishop Bowman will be in New Albany next Sunday to make a Rpeclal effort in the interest of Anbury University at Greence.stle. and on that day the Methodists will hold two union mass meetings, to he addressed by the Bishop and others—one in the forenoon at Centenary Church, the other at Wesley Chapel. These meetings will be held for The purpose of raisiig a portion of the $150,000 accessary to secure the $300,000 donation of Mr. W. C.DePauw.

ILLINOIS. J. A. FTayward, of I’ana. colonel of the Fifth regiment of National ruurds, is dead. J. W. Smith shot a wolf tbs ether day on Balt creek, iu Corwine iowushlp, Logan county. Three cases of scarlet fever are sakl to lave appeared in the Feeble-minded Institute at Liucoln, which has over 300 lumatos. A horse if Charles T. Anderson, of Mtuut Pulaski, wag killed last week by ruunlug nganst a picket fence. A picket penetrated the animal's head about five Inches. J. W. Johnson, the notorious forger who was arrested some time ago in Chicago, and vho escaped from tire ofticors by jumping throtgh the cat-window on arriving at Wurseka, has iigain beep arrested at Donovan, anil lodged in jail to await trial oa four indictments foriorgery. Charles Derate* a German butcher at Chaneston, while on horseback undertook to stop a runaway team, and us he marie a grab for the rein* his horse missed its footing and went b&eis over head with him, scraping along tlie ground with him with great velocity, leaving skiu and blood in the trail. He was carried off and cared for, but It is hoped his injuries nay not prove fatsuL L. H. Crawford, of Parsons, Has., arrive* In East St. Louis last week, and had disinterredthe hodv of a young man who was killed on the Ohio A- Mississippi railroad a short time tgo. ( mwford bad read of the accident, and tromthe description of the deceased he concluded tlut it ladled with that of a sen of his who lias teen missing from his homo for some rime. The disinterment, however, demonstrated that the bdy was not that of his lost son.

TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES, A fire at Atlaula, Ga. ( caused a loss of nearly $190,000. at'Ca’nton'.TtffWNtftW.Jtoasd fuTtUo coWA young girl at Cleveland committed suicide because she could find uo work to do. The fund for tbe aid of the flood snff-rers in Germany, raised in Cincinnati, now auiouuts to $16,794 62. . 1 Dr. Herman Pstershausen, of Detroit, attempted on Sunday, iu a tit us religiois insanity, to kill bis sister. A valve chamber of the Cincinnati Pumnltie Works, weighing thirty tous, wus ncceasfully cast on Saturday. I'rederika Strauss, a New York city lomestlc. fell out of a second-story window on Sinday to the ground, and was instantly killed. John Stewart, the Texas forger waqout the arteries of his neck at the Desbmiaa-screet forty, New York,died in tbe hospital. Schuyler Green, who resides two w a UaLf miles north of Mention, Mich , was struk by a falling tree on Saturday und died froar,bo effects next morning.

Jobn McDonald ami Robert Elliott, of (ncinm*tl, were etiot yesterday morning in u q a rrel by Jobu Wiiaou. tlie well known oireuamac. Elliott will probably die. It was a more joke of a St. Louis Catbok editor that a priest of Perry county, Mlsyoui going to devote $1,000,000 to the pay in A qj the Cincinnati diocesan debt. The 140th anniversary of the birth of Tlik as Payne was celebrated by the PrM ThiukeJ of New York and Philadelphia on fluidity, large public meetings were held iu both litles. For the past two years David Cl irk and residing ueur Bt. John's, Mich., have lived % r y unhappily together, and on Fritay night |he shot him dead at the bedside of a tying ohil^. General tyrant Is aaid to have b**n eurpried at the opposition of congressmen t> tlie elating of the proposed commercial treaty vttii Mexi<n It seems certain that no further coreasions cui be obtained from that country, ad that tie scheme will fail. A citizen of Dps Moines has securd an infiinntion against a municipal loan of 3X),000 w ith which to pay for the new city bnilc&srs, on the ground t bat tho city debt of S7OOOO already exceeds the constitutional limit of > per cent, ou the taxable property. On Saturday two miners, Law* and Owen, were caught in a snow-slide nealrwip, Coj.’ and carried several hundred yarc down the' side of the mountain. Owen. wh4>ad a long pole used iu snow-shoeing, sucoeedi in making a hole through the snow, thus him to breath until he eould extricate hlnif. A large party o miner a later iu tho night find Uwier dead. _

Indication*. War Dkpaktuci ) Ofticp. of the ('hike Signal oprebs. [ Washington. Jan. 3. Ix. \ For Tennoaseo and Ohio Valley —kir we^ r . followed by increasing clou dime and | o< southerly winds becoming variabL, statiury or higher temperature, generally itwer pre^e. For Lower Lake Region—Partlycloudy wfier, with ralu or snow, sourherU backiito northeasterly winds, rising followed by fig temperature, stationary or lower treasure. For Upper Lake Region and Upp*r Valley—Cloudy weather, with rain or i winds shifting to northwesterly, station air lower temperature, rising, preceded iu tlie h and east portions by falliug bannueL-r.

Obituary. Cairo, 111., Jan. 29.—Captain Willia, Hombleton died at his home at Mound, at 1:4.3 o’clock this afternoon, in his • fourth year. Boston, Jan. 29.—Garfield Learned, si member of the tirtu of Learned, Tlzoinpsj Cos., publishers of the Shipping List of; city, died, this forenoon, at his lion! West Newton, after a brief illness, seventy-five. He was the father of Amt Learned, of New York, ugeui of the England Associated Tress. “Why, what are you putting that on in for," asked a man with a heavy cold. ,r W draw the cold out of your head," answer* considerate nnrse. The deuce rent mv; I rather have it at ay where It is then le drai whole leogtii of my body." At any rat*, tt a more pleasant, method than that; go at ine a bottle of Dr. Hull's Goujck fl.rrnp.

HAWTHORNE AND THE WAR. His Loyal Heart Stirred to the Depths—His Hatred of Slavery. Commodore Bridge at Bowdoiu Aluuini Dinner. Both these distinguished classmates [Longfellow and Hawthorne] lived to witness the deadly struggle of our civil war, but their antecedents were ouite dissimilar, Longfellow* being associated with the cultured antislavery men, while Hawthorne’s assimilations were with the Democratic party. He was always a Democrat in principle, but was neither extreme nor narrow in his view’s; ?' or ever take an active part in political controversies. Doubtless ho expressed himself to me as unreservedly as to any one, and I am sure that he always took broad and liberal views of thegreat questions which divided the country. From the commencement of the war Hawthorne's patriotism was thoroughly roused, ami his Puritan blood was up, but his mind was too penetrative and clear not to recognize the confusion prevailing in the issues of the hour. The condition of his mind is fully shown in a letter, winch I found among my papers, and which I think will interest vou all. He wrote me under the date of May 26, 1861, familiarly and clearly giving his views. After an urgent invitation to hi? new home, “The Wayside,” he writes thus: “The war, strange to say, has had a beneficial effect upon ray spirits, which were flagging woefully before it broke out. But it I was delightful to share in the heroic sentiment of the time, and to feel that I had a country; a consciousness which seemed to make me young again. Oue thing, as regards this matter, I regret, and one thing I am glad of. The regretable thing is that lam too old to shoulder a musket myself, and the joyful thing is that Julian is too young. He drills constantly with a company of lads, and means to enlist aa soon as he reaches the minimum age, but I trust we shall either be victorious or vanquished before that time. Meantime, though I approve the war as much as any man, 1 don’t quite understand what we are fighting for, or what definite result can be expected. If we pummel the South ever so hard they will love us none the better for it, and even if we subjugate them our next step should be to cut them adrift If we are fighting for the annihilation of slavery, to be sure it may be a wise object, and offers a tangible result, and the only one which is consistent with a future union between the North and South. A continuance of the war would soon make this plain to us, and we should see the expediency of preparing our black brethren for future citizenship by allowing them to fight for their own liberties, and educating them through heroic influences. “Whatever happens next, T must say that I rejoice that the old Union is smashed. We never were one people, and never really had a country since the constitution was formed.”

YANDER BILTfSK. A Home View us the Recent California Railroad Horror, San Francisco Chronicle. The whole matter, put in a nutshell, mav be reduced to this: The so-called accident at Tebichipa, which was really manslaughter, was due to the carelessness or incompetence of the train employes of the Southern Pacific railroad. On the railroads in this country which pay their officers and workmen good wage?, and which have a full complement of employes, and which make use of all the latest appliances to guard against accident, one hears of no disasters such as this. These railroads carry a thousand passengers where the Southern Pacific carries ten. But their men are well paid, they take a pride in their work and in the road which they represent. In a word, there is liberal management, which in the eud pays a big corporation, as it does in any business enterprise. On tbe Central and Southern Pacific railroads tbe management has always been niggardly. Large salaries for tbe half-dozen high officials, wretched pay for the army of train hands, to whom are in- , nopoly on this coast. It has ended in destroying all the pride of employes in the service of the company. It has resulted in the employment of half-grown boys to do the work of men. It has set ud inexperience and incompetence in places 'which require skill and judgment. One great railroad at the East has adopted the same policy—the New York Central. Within a year 'it has had two great disasters, each the result of criminal carelessness, almost equal to that shown on Saturday at Tehicliipa. Perhaps Vanderbilt, whose opinion of the public has been shown in recent interviews, has found that his niggardly policy is false economy. Juries at the East give heavy damages against a great corporation which kills mid mangles the passeugers whom it is puid to transport safely, and to pay the value of the lives of a dozen people reduces the profits made on cheap salaries of incompetent hoip.

Rotation of Crops. Corres,pou<lcßco Country Gentleaiuu. Here upon the Western Reserve the importance of rotation of crops becomes every year more apparent. Just why one crop can not succeed another of like variety, year after year, without deterioration, does not seem to be well understood, and theory can effer only a partial solution. Exhaustion of the soil does not fully account for it, for even with full fertility failure soon comes. The idea of exudation of plants is now trought forward, and “self-poisoning” is hougiit to account for this falling off In the 'told T 1 . n n/l ...... ..a ~n .. - - I.

•ieid. Tlie advance step in botany now asribes to plants a power or function analoons to animal life, in absorbing its food, nd after assimilating snch portions s are suitable to the maintenance of its ,rowtii ami development, tbe parts not üb--irbed are rejected and returned to tbe soil, ‘bis-rejected matter once expelled, if again tede soluble and taken tip bv tiie growing lant becomes injurious. So il cropping to ie same variety is continued tiie soil is Sswlv exhausted of tlie needed food eie-

nents, and at the same time is being charged wth this rejected matter. The superior rebuts attained by rotation would show that wlat one plant rejects may be food for another, and so rotation, in* truth, is the best way of freeing the soil of the excrementitions maLter. and the best selection of grains to succeed each other becomes the science of farming.

When Ilia Intellect .Rests. Washington Better in New York Tribune. en “ ,or r>avi,i Davis was complaining of the dullness of the Ia riff .lebato nml how surprising- it was that senators conld hnd anything to talk about. “Why, there is beuator Beck, ' said the President pro tern of tlie Senate, “who is constantly on his feet and does nothing but talk. Dear me, when does he give his intellect rest? 1 ’ Senator Hoar replied to this inquire that when he talks his intellect rests.”

A Good Rule for Governors. Lonivvillo Courier-Journal. Governor Pattison, of Pennsylvania, said inhrs inaugural: “I shall make it a rule to grant no pardon except for causes appearing Hince the trial and in cases of manifest injustice.” Bet tlie Governor stick to that principle, and he will set an example to thirty-seven other Governors, whosediv need some wholesome suggestion on the subject.

A Superfluous Young Man. Philadelphia Tim*s. There is one young woman in Allentown who never will go sleighing again. On Monday night, in company with a von.is; man from the lower end of Jjahigti countv, she went into the OMW-try for u sleigh ride When returning home at midnight the young man fell asleep, and, in reaching for a handful of snow, the young woman fell from the sleigh. The young man slept on in peace and quiet. The horses trotted back

to their stable. In half an hour the young woman entered Alieatown on foot and went to tbe stable to get her purse, which had been left in the sleigh. The young man had no use for the purse just at that time, and subsequently the young woman had no use for the young man. Thf Advantage of Being: Secular, St. Louis Post Dispatch. The managing editor of the religious journal, the St. Louis Evangelist apologizes for the tameness of his paper this week on the ground that he is afflicted with a carbuncle. 1 hat’s the time the editor of a secular newspaper makes things hum. The Pe.'lh of Congressmen. Atlanta Constitution. It bus come to that pass in Washington that an upright member of Congress can’t step out to get a link of sausage and a soda cracker without passing through eleven picket lines of lobbyists. An English writer suggests the possibility of compressing green fodder into small bale’s by means of a press something like a hay press, and piling these bales in any convenient building, filling up the crevices between the bales and the space between the bales and the wall with chaff. This he thinks would he as well as to pack the fodder in an underground silo, and press it all at once with heavy weights, anu at the same time could be stored away or fed out much more easily.

The Great Cons u mp t i o n Remedy BROWN’S EXPECTORANT Has been tested in hundreds of cases, and \never failed to arrest and care CONSUMPTION, if taken in time . It Cures Coughs. It Cures Asthma. It Cures Bronchitis. It Cures Hoarseness. It Cures Tightness of the Chest . It Cures Difficulty of Breathing. Brown’s ExpEcjo^NT Is Specially Recommended for WmQQ&ING CQUGMs It will shorten the duration of the disease and alleviate the. paroxysm of coughing , sons to enable the child to pass through it without leaving any serious consequences* BRICK, GOe. and SI.OO. A. KIEFER, Indianapolis, Ind.

RECEIVER’S SALE. Manufacturing Establishment. Notine is hereby (riven that bv virtue of an orW 1, u UI f t al. Hie plaintiffs aud Thomas Httrdimr is defendant, the undersigned receiver appointed therein, will, ou SATURDAY, THE 3d DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1883, establishment of the late arm of Hardin*. Barbee & Cos., on the uorthoast corner of Second and South streets, in the city ol Lafayette, county and State aforesaid, h' at nublic auction for cash, the boiler, engine, machinery, tools, patterns and appliances of all kinds, heretofore used by them iu the, business us luiuiufacturiUK iron fences, cresting?, jail a ‘ S ° “* e S °° a W,U * AUo, at name lime and place for cash, at pubHe auction, all the stock of iron and materials of various kinds on hand and used m said business, the probab l © yjwueof which is about six thousand dollars ($6,000); ami all the foregoing, of le value of twelve thousand dollars i,?riv? 00 {' lijr e certain patent rights lately belonging to said firm, secured by letters patent from the United Stutes-onr, y°. 107,0 x-, Tor an improvement in machinery ror upsetting iron burs and making bulbs thereon ii"® 41 - 1 " tkVbuntifaeiure of iron fences, and one, no. 1<0,300, for designs aud specifications for tbe construction of such fences—said letters iscerober**}B*7s *° Dcteulb ‘-‘ r ' IST1 ’ huU DeAla, >, at auine time arm place, but not in anv way connected with said business, I will, as such receiver, sell in the manner aforesaid the ri(fht or said tirm aud the members thereof to certalu letters patent issued from the United States May 23. IbS2, for improvement iu tubular seotional steam boilers. Full information as to said property or anv part thereof can be had by canine upon or arldressiui; mo at Lafayette, Did. Jan. 9, 18S3. ILLIAM J * ATWELL ’ Reiver.

REMEMBER THIS. IP YOU ARE SICK. If you are *ick. HOP BITTERS will surely aid nature in making you well again when all else ran*, it you are comparatively well, but the need or a grand tonic and stimulant, never ueeof*** t,U yoU lile lU4i<lett new being by the HOP BITTERS. Ts you are costive or dyspeptic, or aro pufforerinc irom any other of the numerous diseases £ r bowul6 ’ 1113 wn rault if HOP BITTERS arenseveremu remedy in ail suck complaints. I , *T“ l ““ re casting away with any form of JCid- , alo|> tempting death this moment, and tutu for a cure to HOP BITTERS. If you are ek-k with that terrible sickness. Nervousness, you will tiud a “Balm iu Uilead” in rue use of

HOP BITTERS. ' f , ,1 it r, ;‘t" rer. or s resident of a mtasniatie ili.irict, barricade your system aga‘nst !V'' ' ollr PJ <>f n countries—niAlnrtal, epuienuo, bilious, and interimttent fevers—by tlie use of HOP BITTERS, "-T®" h “ Te congh, pimply, or sallow skin, had . rrnv I 'll<‘.’i’‘"iMT -yoT’' a ," d 18,1 ndserable ven*GPRIrTEJtB will give you fair skin, rich Wood the sweeten breath, health and comlort. In charts they cure ALL disease* of th Htoruacb, Bowels. Blood, Liver, Nerves Kidueys. etc., and #SOO will be paid for a c 4 they lYil rtrtiff 1 ? ! ,el £* or for impure or la. 1“ lhe, ‘\ That P , ' r . bedridden, invabd wife. R , *te r . mother or daughter, can b* HOP R ° f , ) / eal , Lh ,yy a few bottles of . KI ri LRB, costing but a tzlfle. Hill vou let tliem suffer! ftrrSSJ'SS Pur 3 fv * nd onrtoh the blood with HOP and you will have no sickness or euffaring or doctor’s bills to pay.

Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway. Ci.nvKi.AND, 0., Januarr 9, IBS3. ~_A d ' T ’''cbd of two per cent, has been deolarpd by tins company, payable on and after the Ist day of February next. All stockholders, or record at tho olnse of the in w 8 . f . Trust Company of New York, No. >Vall street. The transfer limits will be dosed from the evening ot the 15th instant until February 2 By order of tho Board of Directors. GEO- IT. RUSSELL, Treasurer.

CROWN.IE WEL FLOUR! 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL FOR 1883. ESTABLISHED 1823. Tbe Indianapolis Journal will enter upon its sixty first year with the support and confidence of a larger and constantly growing constituency, and with an influence, we feel warranted in saying, never exceeded in its long and prosperous history. It will bring to the duties of the ensuing year a better equipment, more thorough and systematic organization, and a sharpened desire to meet the steadily pressing demand for a clean, high-toned and complete newspaper. Its facilities for the gathering of news and for its faithful and satisfactory presentation were never so good as now, and it will continue to be the purpose to accompany the news of the day with such editorial treatmeufc and comment as to still further ally the paper with the interests and conscience of all the people. The year 1883 will be one of special interest. Congress will be in session—the last session of the Forty-seventh Congress and, in view of the re* ceut elections throughout the country, its proceedings will be watched with the greatest anxiety. The Journal will be represented at Washington, as heretofore, by a special telegraphic correspondent of experi ence and ability, and his dispatches, together ' with the Associated Press, wiii give the most complete report of congressional proceedings printed by any Indiana paper. The State Legislature wiil also be in session this winter, and its proceedings will be of the highest importance to the people of Indiana. The Journal will print the best reports of the General Assembly, and, from day to day, will give a clear compendium of all important matterspending before both houses.

In general news, and especially in the news of the State of Indiana, and of the territory in Ohio and Illinois naturally and commercially tributary to Indianapolis, the Journal will be found to be largely in advance of all contemporaries. We have correspondents in the larger cities and towns, while the county papers are carefully gleaned. In all regards the Journal is, by odds, the best reflex of the interests of the entire State and of the territory it seeks to serve. Its present superiority in this respect will be fully maintained, and enhanced as opportunity may offer. The Indianapolis Journal is the only Republican morning newspaper printed in thijl city which publishes tho Associated Press * reports. Since the recent consolidation of the New York and Western Press Asssociations. combining all the leading newspapers of the entire country, both the quantity and quality of the news gathered from all parts of the world will be greatly increased and bettered. Its commercial reports, court record, Supreme Court decisions, railway news, and editorial and miscellaneous departments arq conceded to be as good as the best, and their present excellence will be fully sustained id the future. The Journal will continue to maintain its assured position as the LEADING NEWSPAPER OF INDIANA, and esks support on account of its general, merits no lees than upon its superiority as s special representative of the best thought aud culture anu character of-the State. •

T**s c*. <iijr journal. The Saturday edition of the Journal bai taken such rank as to make italmosta special and independent paper. It is prepared to meet tbe demand for a newspaper of the highest class, filled with reading matter of tbe best character, and thoroughly unobjectionable in every respect—a paper that can be welcomed into every home and be a companion at, every fireside. It is a splendid treasure-house of tlie best literary ability of Indiana, and, as such, is worthy the support l of the people. The Saturday Journal reachei into the furthest limits of our territory in time for Sunday reading, which a Sunday papej cannot possibly do, becauseoi tlie lack of railway facilities on that day. It is also on hand for the long hours of Saturday night. Th Saturday Journal wiil be found to contain that winch will interest the old and the young alike, the farmer, ilia wife and his daughters, the literary man, the scholar the politician, or simply the one who desires the 1 ullest news of tlie day. It already has a much wider reading than any other’issue of the week, and a greatly more extended and better patronage than any daily published in tb utate. Special contracts for advertising for the Saturday edition are made, and si>eciai subscriptions for it are received.

The Weekly State Journal. The Weekly Edition of the Journal D especially prepared for the demands of tha people of Indiana outside of the cities and towns reached by the Daily. It is not a reprint of the Daily, but is an entirely separate and distinct edition, under the care of an independent and experienced editor. It contains the best literary and miscellaneous features of the Saturday Journal; but it has exclusively prepared for its columns a com plete compendium of all the news of tha week, both foreign and domestic, and par ticularly of the State of Indiana, and of thr territory which it naturally commands. Its market reports are carefully compiled, and its" agricultural an-1 household departments receive particular and competent attention. The

Weekly State Journal will contain full ' digests of the proceedings of the Legislature and of Congress, with editorial reviews of the most important topics of public interest. In all its features the Weekly State Journal is as good as any weekly newspaper printed in the country, and, of course, it is much

better for every Indianian because of its local news and character. Indianians are not interested in the local news of Ohio, or of Illinois, or of Kentucky, or of any other State; but they are interested in the affairs of Indiana, and these the Weekly Journal will give them, and at the same time be as‘ good a general newspaper as the best. The Weekly Journal is the paper for the Indiana farmer. Every postmaster is an authroized agent, and wiil receive subscriptions for the Journal, which can commence at any time. For additional information, circulars terms to agents,or in writing as to advertis-’ ing and subscriptions, address JNO. C. NEW & SON, Indianapolis, Ind.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily, By carrier, per week 25 By mail, per month $ f Afi ‘ By mail, ueraumini 12100 Th Saturday Edition. By mall, per nnnntn 52.00 The Weekly tilate Journal. By mall, single copies, per annum at ott By mall, iu clubs, per 900,