Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1883 — Page 5

BUTLER IN NEW ORLEANS How the Expedition for the City's Capture Was Organized. The City’s Secession Record The Hanging of Mumford, and the Famous Order About the Women. Gath’s New Ycrk Letter. McClellan reported that it would take 50,000 men to occupy New Orleans. Butler, enforced by Gustav us Fox, of the navy, insisted that it would take no such number. Suddenly Mr. Lincoln decided in favor of Butler. The government gave him about 13.000 men, and they were rendevoused at Ship Island. It cost $1,500,000 for this expedition, which had such extraordinary results. It is said that as he left Washington, about the 24th of February, 1862, Butler said to Lincoln, “Good-by, Mr. President. We shall take New Orleans, or you will never see me again.” Stanton then spoke up: “The man who takes New Orleans is made a lieutenantgeneral.” He sailed from Hampton Roads on the steamship Mississippi, with 1,400 men on board, and his wife at his side. She went ■with him in all his campaigns as long as she lived. Nobody in the country supposed there was an expedition ready for New Orleans. The rebels had been deceived with the idea that it was to be attacked from above, and not fVora below. “Did Butler take any further advanced ground on the slavery question at Ship Island?” “Yes, he influenced his subordinate commander who arrived there before him, General J. W. Phelps, to assail slavery as the bottom principle of the rebellion. ‘Free labor and workingmen’s rights,’ said Phelps. The issuing of this proclamation caused Butler ♦ o be denounced as a beast and the enemv of human society all over the South. Butler was thirty days getting to Ship Island, and his wife was accommodated there in a board shanty eighteen feet square. She lived there among the flies in the intense heat without complaint. While there they heard of the Merrimac breaking loose from Norfolk and sinking the Union vessels. Farragut, then a captain, joined Butler, and the scheme of ►reducing the forts below New Orleans was matured. Before the expedition sailed a lot 'of rebel gun-boats came out and attacked gome of Butler’s people, tfarragut got over the bar on the 15th of April, and Butler, .with 6,000 troops, followed two days afterward.” “How many vessels reduced the rebel forts?” “There were forty-seven armed vessels in all, a good many of them new and many were mortar vessels. There were 310 mortars in ail. Farragut was then sixty-three years old, and had been in the navy ever since his [eleventh year. After six days’ bombardment [the forts were hushed and Farragut then ran by. It was almost the anniversary of the murder of the Massachusetts troops in Baltimore, when the same Colonel Jones who led riiiem there started for New Orleans. FarflUgut’s fleet was already at anchor before [that city. Butler landed in the town on the Ist of May.” “How did New Orleans stand on the secession question at the beginning?” “In 1856 it voted for Fillmore, and also voted for John Bell, giving him nearly as many votes as both Douglas and Breckinridge received. The sugar interest was much devoted to the Union, on account of the protection it received. After secession was accomplished, however, the cowardly perpetrators of it began to drive out Union men and women, too. There was a fierce, low creole element in the place fend of assassinating. After the forts were passed the thugs undertook to burn the city. Twiggs, the renegade, started to run away. They burned 15,000 bales of cotton, twenty steamers, vast heaps of coal and wood, and the levee ran molasses. The Governor took a steamer and departed. When the Federal fleet came in sight of the city its seven miles of levee were packed with human beings. Farragut sent a boat ashore. °”d the fools gathered there began to cheer for Jeff. Davis and the South, and groan Lincoln and his fleet. A few respectable persons conducted the officers to the City Hall. There the mayor (Monroe), assisted by Mr. Soule, refused to surrender the city, and sent for a General Lovell, formerly a street commissioner of New York city, who said that he would not give up the town, but meant to fight on shore. While these men were at the mayor’s office their companions in the boats had been assailed with that fury of epithets which no man who has not experienced it can understand. Farragut wrote to the Mayor: ‘I shall speedily and severely punish the perpetrators of such outrages as were witnessed yesterday of armed men firing upon helpless women and children for giving expression to their pleasure at witnessing the old flag.’ The Common Council formally surrendered the city on the 26th of Aprii. Commodore Morris then hoisted the flag on ;the Mint. Guns were trained on the flagstaff, and if any man had tried to haul it down he would have been murdered from the war-vessels.” “Was the flag pulled down?” “Yes. Four ruffians stole it, headed by one W. B. Mumford. The New Orleans Picayune the next day mentioned all their names as great heroes. It cost Mumford his life, for Butler hanged him.” “What followed?” “Farragut got ready to bombard the city for its want of civilized conduct after the surrender. A company of marines landed and restored the flag to the mint and cus-tom-house. Butler came up in the Mississippi with fourteen hundred men and his wife, put his vessel alongside the levee and began to disembark his troops in the afternoon, and pressed the crowd back at the point of the bayonet. Butler and bis staff marched on foot to the custom-house. The mongrel crowd enjoyed themselves by shouting: ‘Bull Run,’ ‘Big Bethel,’ etc. He immediately suspended a newspaper for not allowing his proclamations to be set up in the office, ana he soon put down all secession newspapers. He made his headquarters in the St. Charles Hotel. He gave orders if the mob made any more foolishness to open on them with artillery. The mails were filled with anonymous letters diiected to Butler, calling him ‘Cock-eye.’ ” “What were the circumstances of the hanging of Mumford?” “Mujpfortl was a gambler, about forty-two vears did and rather good-looking, who enjoyed tor awhile his notoriety as the insulter of the flag, till he was picked up on the streets one day, sent before a military commission and condemned to death, and on the 7th of June, 1862, he was hanged, and near the same time seven men were condemned to death for trying to get up a riot, These men were finally sent to Shin Island. The gallows was put up before the mint, and an old preacher came in to Butler and said: ‘Give me this man’s life, General? It is hut a scratch of your pen.’ Butler refused. As soon as Mumford was hanged the mob separated. Their moral gizzard was all gone.” THE ORDER ABOUT THE WOMEN. “What was the fuss that Butler had about the women of New Orleans?” “Why, the women, after the courage had j been taken outof the men, thought that there was no way to reach them, and they concluded to inflict the mighty chastisement of their ill-manners on the soldiers of the government. Women, as soldiers came, would throw aside their cloaks to display rebel

badges. Secession colors were worn in bon' nets. When a Union officer entered a streetcar the women would eret out of it, or if one went to a church these Christian ladies would , all leave the pews. The female school-teach-ers kept their pupils singing rebel songs. About one tune was the only one discoursed, and that was ‘The Bonnie Blue Flag.’ Finally a woman spat directly into the face of two officers who were walking peacefully alopgth§ streets, and Butler then issued nis celebrated order No. 28, saying: ‘As the officers and soldiers of the United States have been subject to repeated instills frofil the women calling themselves ladies of New Orleans in return for the most scrupulous non-interfer-ence and courtesy on our part, it is ordered that hereafter when any female shall, by word, gesture or movement, insult or show contempt of any officer or soldier of the United States, she shall be regarded and held liable to be treated as a woman of the town plying her vocation.’ ” “What was the effect of that order?” “Its effect was immediate. The woman nusiance in the grosser forms ceased to be.” “Did Butler qualify his order at all?” “Yes. He wrote to the mayor: ‘I shall not abate a single word of that order; it was well considered. It will protect the true and modest women from all possible insult. The others will take care of themselves.’ ” “Did Butler do anything else in New Orleans’” “Yes. He suppressed the mayor of the town, and sent him to Fort Pickens, and his wife went with him. He sent Soule to Fort Warren. Butler not only got bushels of anonymous letters, but they wrote poems about him. Paul liayne wrote: “ ‘Yes, but there is ono who shall not die In battle harness: One for whom lurks in the darkness silently Another and a sterner doom. A warrior’s end should crown the brave, For him swift court and felou grave.’ “Butler also combed down the foreign consuls in New Orleans.” “When was he recalled?” “About November, 1862, after he had been six months in that city. Banks replaced him. In fact the government at Washington showed the white feather in view of the attacks made on General Butler for his woman order and for his general interference policy.” “What did Butler say when he left New Orleans?” “He issued a public address, saving: ‘I am not conscious of a single personal animosity. I found you captured but not surrendered, conquered but not orderly, relieved from the presence of an army but incapable of taking care of yourselves.—the enemies of my country unrepentant and implacable. I have treated you with merited severity. I Hold that rebellion is treason, and that treason persisted in is death. I might, have regaled you with the animosities of British civilization. You might have been snicked to death in caverns like the Covenanters, or roasted like the inhabitants of Algiers during the French campaign. Your wives and daughters might have been given over to the ravisher as were the unfortunate dames of Spain in the Peninsular war, or you might have been scalped and tomahawked as were our mothers at Wyoming by the savage allies of Great Britain. Your sons might have been blown from the mouths of cannon like the sepoys at Delhi. This rebellion was a war of aristocrats against the middling men, of the rich against the poor, of the land-owner against the laborer. I shall now leave you with the proud consciousness that I carry with me the blessings of the humble and loyal under the roof of the cottage and in the cabin of the slave, and so am quite content to incur the sneers of the salon or the curse9of the rich.’ ” “Did he do any thing for New Orleans?” “Yes, he actually fought off the yellow fever. He stopped the fierce chastisements of the colored people by the whites, kept off insurrections, redeemed a great amount of land from the river, kept the streets and canals clean, had fair elections, and said about slavery in his final message: ‘There is but one thing at this hour that stands between you and the government, and that is slavery. The institution cursed of God, which has taken its last refuge here, in His providence will be rooted out as the tares from the wheat, although the wheat be torn up with it.’ In short, General Butler’s address to the New Orleans people he can safely go into a presidential campaign with.” “What lias become of the man who hanged Mumford?” “Jonas H. French? Why, he is one of Butler’s leading men, a Democrat, and lias been with Butler in a good many business transactions.” A SICKENING STORY. An Awful Narrative of luhumanity and Crime. Atlantic City Special. The death of a young girl named Clarissa Bounds in this place, last night, was the means of bringing to light an awful story of inhumanity and crime in the New Jersey pineries, ten miles west of Atlantic City. A coroner’s jury examined, to-day. the scarred, burned and putrescent corpse of what was, a short time since, a young and beautiful girl. The facts now known show that she was of humble parentage and wild habits, and that she left here some time ago for Doughty’s Coaling, in the pine woods, where a number of men burn charcoal. Whether means were used by a white man, named John Thomas, and a young negro named Joseph Kelsey, to entice her to their vicinity is not known. She had been acquainted with them here and in service in their neighborhood, but soon joined them at their camp in the woods. At the close of a drunken debauch of several days, in which tire girl participated, the white man, the girl and the negro crawled close to a smoldering coal-pit, the blasts from tlie ocean being severe, and went to sleep in the embers. At dead of night the girl aroused '.lie camp with loud shrieks. She was enveloped in Humes. When the fire was extinguished her body was burned to a crisp, from bee* to foot, hut, strange to say. she ln%| inhai *4 no flames. It is believed by many that the men iiad poured coal-oil on the girl and fired her clothing. Life still existing, they assisted her to a hole in tlie ground near by, where she was kept without food or medical attendance for a day and two nights. Finally, the overseer for the poor of the township, it is alleged, came and removed her to another hole in the ground, where she was again kept with her roasted frame subjected to the damp ground and cold air -without treatment. Then she was brought to the poorhouse at Smith’s Landing, where she was refused admittance. She prayed for death, but was dragged back to the woods and again left all night in a rootless cabin called’‘nigger hole” without care of any kind. Already she was a mass of corruption, hut she did not die. Thrown into a wagon of straw, she was brought to Atlantic City, where she expired last night, having been taken charge of by the city authorities. The awful story ot her suffering was given to your correspondent to-night by the mayor of this place, who took the girl’s dying confession. He said the stench from her poor t< tured frame was sickening, yet she would make no complaint against the men, who are. however, in the hands of the authorities. A rigid examination will he made at once. A Pertinent Question. Brooklyn Eagl. (Item,) ‘•Turn the rascals out,” i3 a very good shibboleth, but if that were all that were necessary the rascals would have been turned out long ago. The trouble is that the country continually asks, when the rascals are turned out, what will the fellows do who are turned in? It is a question so pertinent that the country will keep on asking it until it is answered. Boils, Pimples, Freckles, Rough Skin, eruptions, impure blood. Hop Bitters cures all.

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, ISS3.

A CRANK IN PRTTICOATS. Louise Michel’s Trial and Sentence—Personal Appearance of the Prisoner. Paris Letter in Chicago Tribune. There were 1,000 persons or so in the room, four-fifths o( them standing on the benches. Few were still a minute. 'Fhey were freely chatting, laughing, shouting across the room to each other, and every few seconds somebody crowded forward to shake hands with a large woman who sat on a dais about twenty feet in front of me. Her I recognized as Louise Michel, the chief prisoner at the bar. Inquiring if the court was in session, I was answered yes: but the trial was over and the jury had retired from the room to consult and the judges to take lunch. The crowd surged to and fro in the freest of humors —evidently a Republican crowd in a republican country. Ma cried: “Michel! Michel!” ami there was an uproar; women laughed excitedly, stood on the tops of benches and sang, here and there, little snatches of song. Every now and then somebody rapped on a high desk at the other end of the room, but nobody paid the least attention to it. Beyond that desk, on the wall of the room, was suspended a great picture of the crucifixion, unnecessarily repulsive in its details, and on the left of the desk, in a high niche, stood an ideal bust of Liberty, superseding a bust of Louis Napoleon that was there twelve years ago. The woman in front of me was a study. Dress her in a man’s clothes, and she might pass anywhere as a man. Tall, strong, fear-less-looking—a woman of fifty-odd. Eyes that quite contradict the mouth—eyes a quiet gray, gentle, smiling, almost pathetic—mouth large, irregular, obtrusive, carried by an inflexible jaw that a clumsy blacksmith might have put in recently. Black hair, streaked with gray, combed severely back, every feminine ripple relentlessly subdued, cut short behind and falling square upon her shoulders. She is dressed in plainest black serge, with a little knot of it at her throat, but no bow or ribbon anywhere. She looks serious even when she smiles. She sits between two young men who share with her the attention of the audience—common-place looking fellows, who might pass for her sons if they seemed more earnest. These are her “fellowconspirators,” who marched at her side, Pouget and Mareuil. When she sits they sit, when she stands they stand beside her. This is the woman who, being arraigned for trial and being offered a lawyer, said scornfully, ‘ No! I will have none of your hireling lawyers. I will plead my own case. I know it better than they do, besides which, Judge, you have not summoned me here to do me justice, but to sacrifice me.” So she has defended herself in the trial. The crowd is obviously tired waiting. Some shout, “Fetch in the jury!” at which there is much laughter. At my right a griset stands on a bench square against the wall, and flirts desperately with two fellows standing at her side and one sitting at her feet, and she seems to succeed in entertaining them all. Her lips are red with Vermillion; her waist is of a waspish pattern, like those of most well-dressed ladits here. One of the men at her side is gay witli red and yellow—an officer of the gen d’armes, or home guards. I should think; the two others are lawyers, each wearing a square black silk hat and a silk toga falling around the shoulders and app entlv fastened by a cloth button as big as a pancake on the left shoulder. And everywhere the uproarious noise continues. Suddenly there is a inovementat the other end of the hall, and additional excitement, and a door opens beneath the painted crucifix and admits thirteen citizens—the jury—and under the bust of Liberty another door opens and admits the well-fed judges, in black hats and scarlet robes. Violent rapping on the desk, responded to by the audience, who unanimously climb still higher upon their chairs and benches and unanimously demand, in loud voices, that everybody else shall sit right down and sit still. Clamor, confusion, rapping, a breaking bench, laughter, and a general “Hsh! hsh! hsh! hist! hist!” The police and soldiers, of whom there are a hundred or so present, take no more part than if they were dummies. It reminds me of a caucus I once attended in the Fourth ward of New York city, and of the tumult when the committee on nominations retired. Finally the clerk began to read the verdict of the jury, sending Louise Miciiel into solitary confinement for six years, and the others for various terms. Then there were renewed cries of “Oh! oh!” and opposition. “We are with you always, Louise Michel!” shouted a female voice in a high key, whereat there was another uproar of responses. Rochefort sat near Michel, looking at her, but taking no part in the demonstrations. An odd face is his—long, thin, eager, cranky; no beard except a light mustache and goatee; an eye like the head-light of a locomotive, the white showing all around; a high brow, and turbulent greyish hair, tumbling in cataracts over his ears and rising in a gey- m ser on top. “Accused,” said the Judge, rising ana looking at Louise Michel, “have you anything to say why I should not now sentence you?” “Only this,” she answered, standing up and speaking in a voice without a tremor, “that 1 have been convicted for political reasons. I have said and do say thar this is a sham republic, full of misery. Revolution is my only hope; my constant demand, revolution! Revolution, the happiness of the people! For this am I sacrificed.” Cheers and cries of “Louise Michel! Michel!” broke out again. Then she was sentenced, the judge adding: “I give you three days in which to appeal to another court.” “Never!” she said; “never!” Pointing her bony fingers at the judge and smiling one of her bony smiles, she continued: “You have served so faithfully the Emperor that made you that it would be a pity to ” They would not hear her out. Cries of admiration and denunciation arose. A sergeant seized her, while a tremendous uproar swelled through the hall. She had made her point in alluding to the fact that her judge was actually appointed by Louis Napoleon, and had never been superseded by the republic. There were cries of “Michel!” “Michel!’ “Ala has!” “Ala has!” “Vive la commune!” “Vive la revolution!” “Vive la republique!” “Ala has!” The two men were now sentenced amid considerable confusion, and the three prisoners were taken through a side door, Michel in the rear smiling, and waving her hand to her friends, wdio wer* vehemently shouting her name. The court seemed to have adjourned itself, or perhaps Michel adjourned it with that farewell flutter of the hand, for everybody cried what they would and surged out just before I fainted away in the stifled air. I notice that a crowded court-room smells just the same in French as it does in English. A strange scene was the trial. Louise Michel is evidently a sincere, earnest, tenderhearted woman, not caring for notoriety—one of those dreadful cranks whose conscience has been bloated by abnormal stuffing, like the geese that are stuffed for pate de foi gras. She cares more for others than for herself, and the misery around her has made a crank of her. Rochefort testified that on the voyage to New Caledonia, whither she was transported in J 872. she deprived herself of both needed food and clothes to make others comfortable. The Itlood of Christ. Beoclior’s Sunday Sermon. “I have no fault to find with the use of the term that is so plentifully found in the Bible

—the blood of Christ—but I have great fault to find with the vulgarizing of it. When I iiear men preaching all the timeabout blood; when I hear them cry: ‘I have felt the blood of Christ,’ ‘I rejoice in the blood;’ when I wade ankle deep in blood, as in the hymns of Moody and Sankey, I am tired and weary and sick. I] is time we. sltpuld understand that are Saved not by the mere material blood of Christ, but that Christ’s blood simply represents His devotedness and love, through which we are saved. Are we forever to be saturated in imagination with this physical symbol that was only meant to carry us into a spiritual existence? I believe we are saved by the blood of Christ, because I believe the blood of Christ means the love of God.” A SEVERE REBUKE. A Lawyer Reprimanded aud Fined for Filing a Scandalous Document. Denver Special. In giving his decision in the Willard Teller contempt case, Judge Dawson took occasion to severely rebuke Teller for filing a scandalous document concerning the Tabor Bush litigation. Teller was fined SSOO for contempt. Following is the Judge’s decision; “I regret that the pleading which gave rise to this proceeding should have been filed, and especially that its. paternity should be assumed and its propriety seriously defended by one so eminent in the legal profession, commanding both in his personal and professional life universal respect as well for his learning and ability as for the propriety of liis conduct. I had hoped that on sober second thought the answer would be voluntarily withdrawn from the files, and that thus I might be relieved of a duty as unpleasant as it is imperative. I have been unable, physically, to visit the library and examine the authorities thoroughly, as I should have been glad to do, but in the books furnished me by counsel and others to which I have had access, I find no case precisely in point. I doubt if a parallel case can be found in the books, for the reason, to the credit of the profession, that in the history of our jurisprudence there has been probably never filed in any court a pleading such as the one under consideration. It has long been the pride and boast of lawyers that the administration of justice in the courts has been kept comparatively free from the debasing methods which sometimes appear in other departments of business and life. If, however, the files of the courts and the causes of judicial proceedings are to become characterized by such pleadings as this, then that boast will have become simply a mocking reminiscence, and a style which, though tolerated, is yet condemned in the market place and on the hustings, will have usurped the place of traditional dignity and purity which constitute the foundation of the respect in which the courts have been held. The foundation being gone, respect mast of necessity disappear, and the courts of the country become a mere arena in which the petty spites and private scandals of litigants will be paraded; where skeletons dragged from secret closets will be exhibited to the entertainment of the degraded and the disgust of the better elements of society. A Preference for Widowhood. Washington Capital. Mrs. Leslie told me with her own lips that she was not married, and that she was not going to marry the gentleman reported to be engaged to her. “For what reason should I marry,” said the lady, as she was signing a SIO,OOO check for white paper. “I am making more money than I know what to do with. My newspaper establishment and magazines of various kinds, which the lawers told me would produce nothing, are bringing me an income of about $150,000 a year, and I tell you that when a woman is making money like that there is no earthly reason why she should marry a mart to help her squander it. lam entirely devoted to my business, and you must agree that it is becoming enormous. No; I shall go to Europe and enjoy myself for a few months, establish agencies, engage new writers, get new ideas, and return and direct all my energies to building up my publications. You may say for me that I am not to be married to any duke, count or king just at present.” Ladies’ kid vasaur ties and French kid opera slippers just received at 21 Nortn Pennsylvania street. C. Fuikdukn. Advice to Mothers* Mrs. Winslow's soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It. relieves the little sufferer at once: it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “bright as a button.” It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twentyfive cents m bottle. - ■ A Bk in Like Monumental Alabster may be attained by using Glenn’s Bulphur Boap,‘ whicn does away with the necessity for Sulphur Baths. Try it, ladles. It is a geuuiue beaut Mer, aud very economical. Hint to those Prematurely Gray, use Hill’s Hair Dye. Corticelli Sewing Silk is the best in the world. Mother Swan’s Work Sykup, for feverishness, restlessness, worms, constipation. Tasteless. 250.

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ATHUf IS THE TIME I \| \A/ TO CURE :’U V V SKIN HUMORS. I IT is at this season when the. Pores open freely .and the Perspiration is abundant that Disfiguring Humors. Humiliating Eruptions, Itching Tortures, Salt Rheum or Eczema, Psoriasis. Tetter, Ringworm, Baby Humors, Scrofula. Scrofulous Sores, Abscesses and Discharging Wounds, and every species of Itching, Scaly and Pimply Diseases of the Skin aud Scalp are most speedily and economically cured by the Cuticura Remedies. Ft is a fact, * Hundreds of letters iisour possesion (copies of which may be had by return mail) are our authority for the assertion that Skin, Scalp and Blood rTumoß, wFeth^rJcrotulous, Inherited or Contagious, may now be p frill an efitly cured by Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, internally, and Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, iho great Skin Cures and Beautiliers, externally, in one-half the lime and at oue-half the expense of any other season. I HAVE"BEEN connected with the drug business for twenty years and have handled every blood purifier and remedy of any consequence for the treatment of Blood, Skin and Scalp Diseases, and unuesitatingly say that uo system of remedies ever devised or compounded so completely and thoroughly eradicates the diseases for which they are intended as the Cuticura Remedies. Many remarkable cures have come to my knowledge ami I feel safe in warraming satisfaction if directions are followed. CHAS. H. MORSE, Druggist. Hoij.iston. Mass. CUTICURA RESdITVENT, the new Blood Purifier, expels disease germs from the blood aud perspiration, and thus removes the cause. Cuticura, the irreat Skin Cure, instantly allays Itohum and Inflammation, clears the Skin and Scalp, heals Ulcers and Sores, restores the complexion. Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautifier, is indispensable In treating Skin Diseases, and for rough, chapped or greasy skin, blackheads, blotches and baby humors. Cuticura Remedies are the only infallible Blood Purifiers and Skin Beautitiers. Sold by druggists. Cuticura, 50 cents; Resolvent $1; Soap, 25 cents. POTTER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO., Boston. A V SANFORD’S RADICAL CURE cleanses the nasal a passages of foul mucus, rei&L 3torea the sense of smell, taste and hearing when affected, frees the head, throat and bronchial tubes of offensive matter, sweetens ami nurifies the breath, stops the cough and arrests the progress of Catarrh towards Consumption. Complete Treatment, with Inhaler, sl. Ask for Sandfnrd’s Radical Cure. BALL’S COSSETS Every Corset is warranted satisfactory to its wearer in every way, or the money will be refunded by the person from whom it was bought The only Corsot pronounced by our leading phyeieluw net Injurious to tbo wearer. MMI endorsed by Indies as the ‘ * most comfortable and perfect fitting Coraot ever mad ‘ PRICES, by Mall, Postage Paid Health Preserving. $1.60. Sclf-Adjuntlng, $1.50 Abdominal (extra benvy) s*.<>•. Nursing, $1.50 Health Preserving (fine eantlD SC.OO. Paragon Sklrtjtawprtßuc, sl.ss. For sale by loading Retail Dealer* every whera. CHICAGO COIUSLT CO., Chicago, HI. Agent for the above Corset. PHILADELPHIA STORE. XL J. STTIXLiI VA.N, DEAI.KK IN DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS, No. 50 North Illinois Street, corner Market. BRUSH ELECTRIC - LIGHT3~ Are tast taking tne place of all others in fao tories. Foundries. Machine Shops and Mills. Parties having their own power can procure au Electric Generator aud obtain much more light at much less cost than by any other mode. The incandescent, aud storage system has been perfected. malting small lights for houses and stores hung wherever needed, aud lighted at will, day or night. Parties desiring Generators or to form companies for lighting cities and towns, can send to the Brush Electric Cos., Cleveland, 0., or to the uuaersigued at ludiauanolis. J. CAVEN.

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The only successful and practical short line Telephone apparatus in the world. NO BATTERY REQUIRED. Per feet satisfaction guaranteed.

INSTRUMENTS SOLD OUTRIGHT. GENERAL OFFICE, FACTORY, 11N. PENNSYLVANIA ST.,' HEAD OF MASS. AVE.. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.

AMUSEMENTS. DICK SON S’ GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. TO-NIGHT AND TO-MORROW NIGHT! Wednesday and Thursday, July 11 and 12. “THE SPIRIT OF *76.” Only appearances of the Famous CONTINENTAL GUARDS, OF NEW ORLEANS, la their renowned eeries of Revolutionary Pictures Tin.* most realistic living pictures ever witnessed. Scats on sale at box office. Price* as usual. ZOO „ AND DOUBLE ELEVATED GARDEN. C. T. GILMORE Manager. Monday, Juiy 9, 1883. Matinees Tuesday, Thursday aud Saturday. LOOK! A LIST oTsTARS. LOOK! The Vivian Sisters, Durell Twin Brothers, Chas. Banks, Miss Nellie Brooks, Miss Flora Weston, Ullie, John Muyon, Hines and Remmington, Melville and La Rose. Prices: 15c, 25c, 35c and 75c night. Prices: l(Tc, 15c, 25c and 75c matinee. IT IS A FACT THAT THOUSANDS OF OUR BUSINESS MEN (JO TO THEIR OFFICES IN THE MORNING AFTER AN UNEASY NIGHT, OR A LATE DIN* NER, FEELING DULL AND ALL OUT OF SORTS. THIS IS ENTIRELY UNNECESSARY, FOR A SINGLE DOSE OF THAT SPARKLING, FOAMING SPECIFIC, TARRANT’S SELTZER APERIENT, TAKEN BEFORE BREAKFAST, WILL IMMEDIATELY DISPEL ALL FEELINGS OF HEAVINESS, REMOVE GENTLY HUT SURELY THE CAUSE, AND QUICKEN INTO HEALTHLY ACTION EVERY FIBRE OF THE SYSTEM. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, ■ -a JUST PUBLISHED! WAR SONGS! For Anniversaries and Soldiers’ Gatherings, WITH CHORUSES arranged for MALE VOICES. Piano ro Organ Accompaniments. Price: 50c paper; 60c boards, ,5c doth. When the CAMP FIRES are lighted after this, there will be anew enthusiasm, since love for the old songs has revived, and this capital col* lestion is just what is wanted for Grand Aruiv singers. Music simple, and all with Piano or Organ acoompaiiim-nt, and all the great favorites are here. WAR SONGS has 96 pages, is in large octavo form, and contains nearly a hundred song* and hymns. It contains nil the songs recently given at the most, successful Grand Army Concert, in Mechanics’ Gland Hall, Boston; and soldiers and all others wiil timl this a tine collection tor concerts and social singing. Abundant provision is made for Memorial and Funeral occasions Mailed, post-free, ror retail prioe, OLIVER DITSON & CO., BOSTON, C. H. DITSON Si CO.. 867 Broadway, N. Y. C. K. KREGKLO, CHAS. TEST WHITS KIT, 183 N. Teun. Si. 336 N. Alabama St. C. E. KREGELO & WHITSETT. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND SMBALMUR3, No. 77 North Delaware 8V&&t. Telephone connection at office residence. fti e" cheapest newspaper IN THE WEST. THE WEEKLY INDIANA STATE JOURNAL ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. Ninety cents in clubs of five and over.

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Reasonable charge for erecting lines, or wjll give estimates. The only Telephone where three or more can be placed on single line. We have six valic. U. S. patents, and others applied for.