Indianapolis Leader, Volume 1, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1880 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS. LEIDER.
BAGBY & CO, Publishers,
INDIANAPOLIS,
INDIANA
Entered as r:ond-claas matter at tha Pott Office Indianapolis, Ind. I
Terms of Subscription :
Sing! Copy, 1 year.
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RESUMK OF THE WEEK'S NEWS.
, WASHINGTON AND COSGRES8IOWAI ÄIW8.
Tn thRpnatA on Wednesday, ex-Governor
Rrnwn was sworn in as the successor to Gen
MiRordon.and the pension deficiency bill
y.xT th fLddiMnii of a number of
Tndl. ÄÄu Kolllns. Teilerand
other Rfpäbllcan made campaign apjeenea nominally against the bill to regulate the te of Supervisors of Elections, and hen they h talttea themselves out the measure
waspa-HBtu. , cLunotA amend-
UOQN grc "T Kill
tha I'nriiaiA internal mveuuo uu
The
ments
to
DüTla Oommltteeof the Whole, the moaUm-
portani acin . - ihe National
of Health and the adopUon of an -.tVi.nr.tr thai, the money ex-
mdSiTfhiwShioalA be In silver coin. P"u " ZT.fl o rxmrnni rötest against
crease
Board
amendment providing
the approlauo f thV Washington Mocumsecretary Sherman announces that, begintH Wt he will buy four and four ! fSlneraTcharle Adams has written toSecreSÄ Ähurato urÄ the profound importance ol unmiate tiJn by Congress on the Ute
in its present w"'.00."' .7 York
regarding the obstruction of
TSlair presented another of hü, wonde.
Wri.Sm of saff
Rhode Isünd. MButleFsubmitted a resoluriuOue 1SU4UU. Ml2r f,.on mint's rialm
tion relating xo wo .T The bill
if toICUS-
" - saonr Kill nraa
m m w a a a mra iMrin,tJiu a.ua mvu
runned by Mr" Bayard, who favored the conUnuea dj . -j Messrs. Thurman
d BecV whortedlhe Garland subsü-
Gainst the 2?ewYori Central Road. The bill aai nst t lie e w i u i a . , on of tne bonds of to-
!"fr- nad. and the dlacus-
nte.
The
in
tt . nfoh oA th consideration
V" . .Z htt .iu
JSSSrÄ Conradeäte Äffice records and the expenses of lor seats being the chief subjecta of vldlnz for the payment for 1880 M oi larsnais Ind &eir Deputies, except for election ser-
me of the Washington
xnav dp , hl. other8 gay that the
iru l n m i. ii &&vave . ...
lMttpr's stock, fixtures and good will i SSSi iurned over to Judge Black
MUCQ OPPOSlUOn uuwu . . , tha nnn formation
SfEEaMoS Account fhi. bitter partisanship
and hoaUlitv to the 'South, wnen in wjuk" a dunitch says that the majority of the MiS!n to .Cincinnati will vote fn. ur Bavard irom the nrst.
of it tho v neomed to be havinc Tryinjr work,
certainly, even for the strongest man, towade
lor mü throng b. knee-deep mow in mis ou
ter frost and. biting wind, along these narrow.
slippery mountain-patns, witn pre
cipes hunceds or ieet aeep an
round. , The soldiers lookea mm uu nesvjf-
i fnr want of food and sleep, ana tne
pooriiorsca that were ara nm nturahlfid at everv step.
- But there was " one among them wh seemed quite to enjov the rough marching, and tramped along through the deep snow and cold, gray mist, through which the great mountain peaks over-head loomed like ahadowy - giants, as merrily aa if he were going to a picnic. This was a little
drnrrr.pr-tov of ten vears old, w nose ires u,
rrvrv face looked verv bricht .and
among the jrrim, scarred visages of the old
soldiers. When the cutting wuw wui shower of snow in his facohe dashed it away lurb and awoke all the
echoes with the lively rattle of his drum, till it seemed as if the huge black rocks
around were all singing in chorus.
"Bravo, retit Tain hour I" (littie drum
mer) cried a Uli man in a snaoDy gray
cloak, who was marching at the head oi the line with a long pole in ' his hand.
and striking it into the snow every now ana then to see how deep it was. "Bravo,
Pierre, mv boy I With such music as mat
one could march all the way to Moscow."
The boy smiled, and raised his hand to his cap in salute, for thu rough-looking man
was no other than the General nimseu.
Fltrhtiner Macdonald." one of the bravest
soldier in France, of whom hiä men used to
say that one sight of his face in battle was
worth a whole regiment. 'Long live our General!" shouted a hoarse voice, and the cheer flying from mouth to mouth, rolled along the silent mountains like a peal of distant thunder. But its echo had hardly died away when the silence was again broken by another sound of a very different kind a strange, uncanny sort of whispering far away up the great white mountain-side. Moment by moment it grew louder and harsher, till at length it swelled into a deep, hoarse roar. 'On your faces, ladsP' roared the General; it's an avalanche?' But, before his men had time to obey, the ruin was upon them. Down thundered the great mass of snow, sweeping the narrow ledge path with a water-fall, and crashing
down along with it came neaps oi siones u
KNULISfl IJItKSSES.
How Some of Them Were Exhibited at the , Opening eir the GrovDor Gallery, i . London Queen. r 'It is original, it u amusing it is full of interest and character, it is an art and dress
inthA hPftw seen from a point of view different from urs," mg tne neaTy French lady to me last Friday, as we
stood in the large room of the Grouven or Gallery. As she spoke she made a comprehensive gesture with her hand that took in the pictures on the walls and the people walking about. It was, indeed, original and amuring a sight only to be seen in London at the height of the season, perhaps only to be seen in the Groeveuor (iallerVt the , head-
orettv luarters f unscholasticism in art and dress ie old There were quaint, beautiful, extraordinary
costumes walking about ultra aesthetics, artistic aesthetics, aesthetics that made up
their minds to bo original and daring in their costumes, and suddenly gave way in some important point put a frivolous bonnet on the top of a grave and flowing garment that Albert Durer or Holbein might have designsigned for a mantle. There were fashionable costumes that Mrs. MaBon or Madamo Elise might have turned out that morning, from the boots to the bonnet. The motley crowd mingled, iorming into groups, sometimes dazzling you by the array of collors that in sooth you never thought to soc promenading about in full ' daylight, some
times saddening you by the uncompromUing neutrality of tints they affected. Canary-yellow garments flitted cheerily by
the side of draperies of saddest green; a hat in an agony of pokes and angles was seen in company with a bonnet that was a gay garland of flowers; a vast cape that might have enshrouded the form of a Mater Dolorosa hung by the side of a jauntily-striped Langtry hood. Nothing came amiss, from the garments that the days of Botticelli might have beheld, to those that May, 1880, inaugurated. The red-satin
draped walls of the room, and the pictures upon them, formed a setting to the scene. It requires a combination of qualities to say successfully good-bye to fashion, forswear
fashion-plates as guides and seek inspiration
Indianapolis, Fern and Cblc&ejQ ly.
THE GBEAT THROUGH LINE
NO
IOUTHi
there are exception, and I do not want to bear hard upon an honest man who is brought down by sickness or heavy losses; but take the rule as a rule, and you will find debt to be a great dismal swamp, a huge mud hole, a dirty ditch; happy is the man who gets out of it after once tumbling in, but happiest of all is he who has been by God's goodness
kept out of the miro altogether. If you once ask the devil to dinner it will be hard to get-
him out of the hou.se'&gain. ' Better to have nothing to do with him. "Where a hen has laid one egg, she is very likely to lay another; when a man is once in debt, he is likely to get into it again; better keep clear ot it from the first. lie who gets in for a penny will n.h lr f.. n i i I O t A wllATl A TV. I 14
over shoes, he ii very liable to be over boots, And all poiats In Horthern Iadiana and Michigan
.Never owe a farthing and you . will never
BETWEEN THE
th Awr m
SHORT LINE.
1
R u
INI) I A NA F OL IS iß CHICAGO, i FT. WAYNE, HUNTINGTON, WABASH, TOLEDO, DETROIT,
owe a guinea.
Mrs. D. Morrison, Farnham Center 1. O., writing about Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, says: "Goorge Bell used it, on his son, and it cured him of Rheumatism with only a few applications. The balance of the bottle was used by an old gentleman for Asthma with
the best results. . It acts like a charm." For sale by Louis Eichardt, Indianaplis.
WhatThey Knew Four Thousand Years Ago f Chief Jmtlc Daly, in Popular Science Monthly. From 'one of these books, compiled after tha manner of our modern encyclopaedias, and the compilation of which is shown to have been mado more than 2,000 years B. C, it has been ascertained, what haf long been suppose'd.tbat Chaldea was the parent-land of
Direct connection! made in Chicago with the trunk linm for all north-western summer resorts and prin cipal points in the north-west aud far west. Close connection made from the north at Indian apolis for Louisville, Cincinnati and all points in the south, east and west. Woodruff Sleeping and Parlor Coaches run between Indianapolis and Chicago, via Kokomo and Indian apolis and Michigan City. Ask for Tickets via I. P. & 0. Kailway
V. T. MAL0TT, Gen'l Manager.
a P. B0CKWELL, Gen'l Fass. & TicketAgt
OH TO TM33 BREACH !
Ti mm Mill
WASTED FOR THE I.VDIAV APOI.IS LEADEU.
LEWIS SCHWENK. Dealer in all kinds of
astronomy; for it is found, frorn this compila- flrnnDriAS. flnnritnr Prnrliicfi. Flour
n other bnckä. that the Babvlon-
tion and from other bricks, that the Babylon
ians catalogued the stars, and distinguished and named the constellations; that they arranged the twelve constellations that form our present zodiac to show the course of i the sun's path in the heavens; divided time into
weeks, months, and years; that they divided the week as we now have it, into seven days, six being days of labor and the seventh a day of rest, to which they gave a name from which we derived our word "Sabbath," and which day, as a day of rest from all labor
of every kind, they observed as rigorously as
the Jew or the ruruan. Ihe motion ot the
AND FRESH FISH, 308 North Blake St., cor. North & Blake. DR. WM. E. WHITE,
DENTIST,
No. 70. N. ILLINOIS ST., Koom 19, Miller's Block, INDIANAPOLIS
only in old or modern pictures. The eyes heavenly bodies and the phenomena of the
must be unpreiudiced that, beholdine the
face and figure to which they belong in the glass, can discern their weak points as their strong. There must be a spirited resolve to
the weak points to account, as a cook
weather were noted down, and a connection
detected, as M. de Terville claims to have discovered between the weather and the changes of the moon. They invented
the sun-dial to mark the movements of the
lml
Upper or Lower Set of Teeth $8.
turn the weak points to account, as a
r- 1l J!.l 1 A.
eravel and loose earth, and uprooted bushes, manuiaciures a goouiy uisn oi poor materials; heavenly ladies, the water-clock to measure Ld. neat blocks of cold blue ice.. For a there ?nust and they srak in this work of the
nave
politicians assert
has set up for himself
at ine are in k.
Demo-
of Mr.
moment all was dark as night; and, when the rush hai passed, many of the brave fel
lows who had been standing on the path
were nowhere to be seen. They had been
carried down over the precipice, and either
killed or buried alive in the snow.
But the first thought of their comrades
was not for them. "When it was seen what
had happened one cry arose from every
mouth:
Where's our Pierrie? Where's our little
drummer?"
Where, indeed? Look which way they
adopting a peculiar coftume and sticking to it through thick and thin through the days of crinoline and the age of lank skirts yet invests it with a modesty that seems to
put it into harmony with its surroundings. This . combination of qualities : is rare, and consequently artistic dressing is
often a failure. That it can be made pieas-
proved by some costumes
spots on the sun, a fact they could only
known by the aid of telescopes, which it is supposed they possessed, from observations
that they have noted down of the rising of Venus and the fact that Layard found, a crystal lens in the ruins of N ineveh. These ''bricks'' contain an account of the deluge, substantially the same as the narrative in the
Bible, except that the names are different.
IT IS THE ORGAN OP THE COLORED PEOPLE
OP INDIANA AND THE UNITED STATES.
Another memun , u.'" r;.7; nh mn1A tr,ino. wm to be seen of their Door
utile favoriterand, when they shouted his nK5 tne aeaa was ensconcea m a poKe oon- plowirjg with his oxen, beguiled his 'tarv Sherman told the .Cabinet on I. t. ' . ' ' Then there wreathea with feathers of the same shade with short and homely songs, two of
- Friday, that the broke forth a terrible crv of grict, and many the dress. Another young lady wore a have been found; and, to connect Äffi'Ä J hard oU wÄ SA without gown that seemed to go through every scale remote civilization with theusages
1 The . na on Thursday f briefly discussed AufTr,T kniMin. nutation, and Mr.Uar-
land made a -echnpon Mr. ton s Urlff
commit sion . dui. dlMlon d the
i1?? Vrnnrooriatlon Committee'.
aTÄevSe,'spent the day upon the sundry .! .iTl .M.finuinn!) being over the
civu .uiii. E-vr- rtvate naere of the
Prl". '7. v Snrt iWz. and over the
" . V Tnnam ior the Soldiers'
tKK a Tattempt to elect Oen-
rat Rntier as one of them failed. X toMtch hai been received in Washington from Consul Ueneral Farman announcing na?thVAJandrlan obelisk h been placed on board oi the steamer deslaned for it, and uÄe voyage to New YorJc wlU begin in
T?aiirort4 Committee of the
-iTnnL it la said, has decided in favor of exSndz for six year the time in which the !?niLnAorTrT Roii mav earn its land
gnrbutadTerlylothe almllar request of mUenSal nomination as a United States District J SgSffg.
'"o -r .Tlniment as Postmaster
The Houso Committee on Forelp Aflalt
Is said, will m lis reponeAvu. m H nrkAi mrt A VAS.
I Tis anlated that the total eaten of the VewfoQdUndseal fishery will not exceed Iwow Ä, whereas in former seasons It would
nach from aUU.UUU w aAi,uw. rei r TTivf tha Naw has sent a com
"tTA-'rnBM advocaUne the com-
ui uu m wy- rVT"-;, h od monitors.
P,euo ? Tindilna. made an ad-
ant to look at was
tuui. we saw wiau,wiiuuY wruuguw i Thev disclose that houses and land were
out. We noted a dainty figure clad in rod then sold, leased, and mortgaged, that money velvet; an old silver buckle fastened the gir- wa- loaned at interest, and that the market-
die of the Short-waiSted dress: the Sleeves hardeners, to use an American nhrase.
were puffed; a high fur tippet was round the Worked on shares;" that the farmer," when
labor which
this very if to-dav.
a IiarU U1U BOlUlor. W lJ uw lyvaiA n ii.uvui 1 , n . .... . s jw
flSnin- at . liriA öf Ifivftled muskets, felt the and modulation oi green, irom somber sage
"'"""'fc : . ' . . Un ha .rhfniif ahada nf (rroanuh.ru ntv tha L.t.t..' . .1.1. 1-1 : ' .v. t:
toftr BtÄrt into his eves at the thoueht that .w "" " " x' & uriCK8 ol lQls nurary, in ill- lurui 01 a iwuir.
that bright face would never be seen among w vuC B.IIO a6 .u s, wüicq is to tne effect tnat visitors arerequesi00: a large green gauze veil formed the bonnet ed to give to the Librarian the number of the
But all at once, far below them, out of the -6 .-w v D00K iney wlsn w consui) ana lüai u wm
shadow ofthe black unknown guJf that lay wu V ow .u a , ü'acf be brought to them; at the perusal of which
ks, arose the Baiin mann wueu uuwu iud gcueiaj ruwi,. j one j3 aisposea 10 ian duck upon tne excia-
f.int of a drum, beatin- the charge. The wce areas siru. Kuaaa particularly cnaruung matlon of Solomon, that there IS
oMipr, tartpd and bpnt oittetW forward to .gray suk, wuu a graceiuuy urapeu 6car
listen; then up went a shout that shook the
air. ; . . . ..
"He's alive, comrades! our Pierre s alive,
after alii"
14 And beating his drum still, like a brave
lad! He wanted to have the old music to the last!''
"But we must save him, lada or he'll freeze
to death down there. lie, must be saved!
"He shall bet" broke in a deep voice from
drels before Thomas A. Hendricks Club.at dowilj doWTlf till he vanished at last into the
darkness of the cold black depth oeiow.
Then every man drew a long breath, and
all eyes were strained to watch for the first sign of his appearing; for they knew well that he would never come back without the
boy, and that the chance was terribly against
him.
of the same; the edge of the skirt ruched
with deep crimson; the round hood lined with crimson; a coal-scuttle bonnet the jininiature edition of the Quaker bonnetgray outside, crimson inside, thowing a ' shade over the face. The costume was a piquant mixture of simplicity and rich coloring. Among the bizarre toilets we noticed a black silk, slashed and puffed with gold-colored satin: a dolman-
behind, and the General himseir was seen 1 " a Ya v tu v- ' . . . - - . . . . . I hooTMlv tnmmoH rct h from t hp hat mofr-hinor
stand on the brink or tn precipice, tnrowing "v "".v --- b ,v a 7 .VT & V- v the cloak. Two ladies walked together, one en his cloak. I -aa
,.V. - n 1 -IaA tha nniH on OHU-K.iccu uunu. wuM3 viva uumiriow
with one voice: "you musn't run süch a risk ?u. and broad-leafed green hat; the other S Sat Let one of us go instead; your life m a blue satin garment draped with blue
i. irnrth mnro than all of ours nut tof?ether
WW V VM w - - - O
"My soldiers are my children " answered Mcdonald quietly, "and no father grudges his own life to save his son."
The soldiers knew better than to make any
more objections. They obeyed in silence, and
the uenerai was swinging in imu air, uowu.
new under the sun.
nothing
..-!-. rsr UotnnlAV Tl .iZIlL.
to Chicago. trTsrELIAXXOrS SXWt WIMS.
a total of thirty people have been poisoned InÄTN. VVting n metope
pie. Several are suu uauoiwj Di u.oW ftf tri Troasurv has Instructed
. Voar,rr Hiiihouie to purchase
United Utes bonds to the amount of 13,0(,000 fn. tha.lnltlnitfQnd.'
Nearly : eighty persons have been killed by anxiously rouna m searcn oi x.erre; u ui. IndSns in ioro County and the MoguUon beating of the drum had ceased, and he had
Mountains, in New Mexico, uns "1UUWkSdU will have to be given up until the
Indiana are subdued.
rM 4rh Clark, who has acted aa house
keeper for O. W. Wagner, a wealthy ana wen tH1-wlii ina.. lor bot-
instituted' a .alt gainst
him. claiming Ufl damages for brea promise. '
rMLira. Rntter. newnau wf ww
and puffed, the skirt embroidered with green leaves,forget-me-nots and red flowers producing a peacock eti'ect. Round the throat rose a high, cotfee-colored ruche; a yellow rose was fastened on tho side: a small, blue-velveted hat, trimmed with yellow roses and a green feather, completed the attire. Stuff of gold was much worn in trimmings. We took note of a dark-blue cloth dress thus adorned; the heod of the tight-fitting cloak lined with gold cloth; the bonnet blue and gold. Bugle trimmings of gold, green and blue beads were also much affected, producing a shimmering, somewhat gaudy effect. The ten-
Meanwhile Macdonald. having landed safe- dency to strong coloring , in the majority of
. . . . .. . ... I nrnMmmHdeLUHUiai'KurBuucfiuucutuuiciiis
ly at the foot or the precipice, was loosing anxiously round in search of Pierre; but the
nothint? to cruide him.
a .5 . ... . i . 11
"Pierre! ' shouted he as loud as ne couia, i'where are you, my boy?" "Here, General," answered a weak voice, so faint that he could barely distinguish it.'
And there, suie enough, ivas the , little fellow's curly head, half buried in a huge mound
were of snow, which alone had sved mm irom
compelled to suspend myment a week ao dashed to pieces against the rocks as he oinV to the failure ,ÄPrtbÄÄ felL Macdonald made for him at once; and
every step.
Sanies havVsettled with their creditors and although he sank waist deep at
resumea dubioc- rwcuuu mo bjv
Mr. JOMPll b. tumni'utt
of
. fSR.. Aka Af
Richmond CouW a:.wld preaent .him m candidate to succeed Senator Gordon at the ; rnUng of the next Assembly, ex-Governor Brown' appointment not being satisfactory to many Democrats in that State. Hermann Levy has been arrested in New TOTkCity forthe forgery of 37j0UO in Chicago. , L iX; A , - . loiir. to aererai eminent
lawyers in New York City, and swindled them
T, f thon-ands of doUars by collecting ana
rr.f. h. in a very fluent lin
ofiist. lie will be sent to Illinois.
Tvrt of ivpntnckv. lumped from
. ..MHion th snanenHlon bridae, at Cin
Tt.i vo nhin uivcr. a distance
; ' ""r"V" TfTT XZZa twice in the air and
truck the water with his head and shoulders, hnt waa nicked ud unhurt, though his shirt
where it struck the water waa baoly lorn
Representative Russell, of Massachusetts, has lQtroduced a bill in ihe House authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to pay to Charles Watson, oi fcmell, Mass..5.ü00 f;r meritorious services rendered by him to Union officers andaoldler. in Ubby Prison and the Pest llonpital for contagious cases at Richmond in 1803 and 18bl.
President Hayes. Secretary of War my.
: Attorney General uevin, abiui, -rx'';; , MofAm mnn and üosereumen Kelty
: and Bingham arrived in ' Philadelphia Saturday, and were received by a Committee of the j , Th. PmainAnLHecretarr of War
Atroev Genifai Twill 'be the guests of
"All right now, my brave boy," said the
General, cheerily. "Put your arms round
my neck, and hold tight; we'll have you out of this in a minute."
The child tried to obey, but his stiffened fingers had lost all their strength; and even when Macdonald himself clasped the tinv arms about his neck their hold gave way di1 Ctl Va What was to be done? A few minutes more, and the numbing colds of that dismal place would make the rescuer as powerless as him whom he came to rescue. But General Macdonald was not the man to be so easily beaten. Tearingoff his sash, and knotting one end of it to the rope, he bound Pierre and himself firmly together with the other, and then gave tho signal to draw up. And when the two ; came swinging up into the daylight once more, and the soldiers saw their pet still alive and unhurt, cheer upon cheer rang out, rolling far back along the line, till the very mountains themselves seemed to be rejoicing. "We've been under fire and under snow together-" said MacDonald. chaffing the
boy's cold hands tenderly, t;nd nothing
dresses made the black or sober-toned garments
peculiarly effective. A few representatives of ultra astheticism in dress were present. There was a costume in which the folds of the gown fell with an archaic effect round the wearer, as may be seen in the early preRaphaelite pictures. The lace collar was turned down, leaving the throat uncovered. Our fashionable ladies as a rule affected dark colors and very small bonnets. Flowers were worn in profusion flower-made bonnets, flowers on the muffs, flowers pinned high up near the throat, flowers on the parasols, i Lady Lindsay, of Balcarries, wore a bronzegreen satin costume, trimmed with orange and black plush; a pale blue bonnet and feather: larcre vellow roses fastened : to
the body of the dress; a black
with cotfee-colored lace, a bouquet
rosea upon it. Mrs. Langtry wore a costume of black satin ; the hood ot the mantle lined with crimson and gold stuff; the trimmings of gold butterflies, the wings shimmering with green and blue bugles the small bonnet was black and gold. Lady Lonsdale was in black satin and jet, with a touch of red in her bonnet Mrs. Wheeler was in black. A charming old lady was dressed in a costume that Kembrandt would have chosen to paint a black satin gown,
with a ruching of dead-gold satin on the
fl, F. McCarthy, wholesale and retail druggist, Ottawa, "Ontario, writes: "I was afflicted with Chronic Bronchitis for some years, but have been completely cured by the use of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. in doses of five drops on bugar. I have also pleasure in recommending it as an embrocation for external use." For. sale by Louis Eichrodt, Indianapolis. One of the Most Remarkable Living Literary Men in England.
Hardly any man in Britian of like age has more reputation as a thinker and philosopher than William E. H. Lecky, who passed only his forty-second birthday the 26th of last March. Most persons acquainted with him merely as an author imagine him to be at least twenty years older, and very naturally, since few men acquire so much literary fame as he has acquired before they are at least sixty. Leckey though of English antecedents, was born near Dublin. He exhibited remarkable talent from his boyhood, having aninappeasable appetite for reading. Before he was fourteen he had mastered the contents of more volumes than most youths master at twenty, and many of them were very solid in quality. When he entered Trinity College, Dublin, where he was graduated in his twenty-first year, he was pronounced by several of the Professors to have the best stored mind of any student of his age who bad matriculated there within their memory. As
Boon as he had left college he began to write
W. F. RTJPP. GUST. RÖSBERG
W. F. RÜPP & CO ,
Merchant Tailors,
23 E. Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind.
STOP! BKFOKE 60INO FURTHER CALL AT LUCAS & SCOTT'S Sliaving- Parlor, And get a clean and easy shave. Clean linen a specialty. Good artists in attendance lml BARBER SHOP. FOR A GOOD SHAVE CALL AT W. A. MAY'S
STÄß BA&8EB SHOP ISO INDIANA A VENUE. Clean Towels and ood artists always on hand.
For New York, Boston, AND ALL Eastern Points, TAKE THE
LEADING COLORED MEN SAY IT IS THE SPICIEST! IT IS THE NEWSIEST! IT IS THE MOST ABLY EDITED! IT IS THEIE BESST! PAPER EVKIt PUBLISHED BY COLORED SIEX IX TBE UXITEI STATES.
C- C- C&IRY. Trains leave Indianapolis as follows:
4:15 A M.
Train arrives Muncie C:22 a. m.; ion, 7:25 A. a.; Sidney, 8:45 A
Bellefontnin, 9:28 a. a.; CreHtline, 11:47 A. M. rive at Cleveland at 2:20 p. m.; Buffalo, 7:50 p. Niagara Falls' 9:50 p. a.; Binghanxton, 4:35 a.
Unit.; Aril.; m.:
Rochester, 11:03 p. u, at New York City at 25 p. m.
; Albany, 6:10 a, 10:30 a. m , and
a., arriving Boston at 2:-
SEYEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF OTHER ROUTES I This train has Palace Drawing Room and Sleeping Coach from Indianapolis to New Tork witbont change. Fare always the samo as by longer and slower rontes. Baggage checked through to destination.
for publication he had decided to be an au- JA p Train arrive at CreiUUne 4:10 thor when he was but twelve and after con- "y ,A iU A- -5 Pittjbnrgh, 12:15 a. m.; tributing to a number of the reviews, he pub- K lX ,
Charte Gibbons during their stay In that city shall part us two after this, so long as we
nt- 4 .i.or TTnttaHan Association, at its
annual meeting hi dobwu. jiwi i.V.T.. Henry P. Kidder President: Geor William nt iinmirnnr John L) Lionz. Vice Pres-
Z i.nu ! Ra v. K. B.7Bh l p pa , Secretary; Charles
n wnnd. Treasurer. The Treasurer, reporiea
hottharMint th oast vear had been H2,
en . nonu UIH47. Tha Directors report
rC.rJw.!! th etblibnient ol a Chan-
nlng Memorial Hall in Boston.
' At Stockbridge, in Caiumet County, Wls a few diva ao, William Dedrich nrf Herman. I TL Jr ,i äm, friends, had been out prac
Ith revolver of the latter, aud. upon
Mtnvn trt the honse. Moss took the
. - .Uvfnllv anannpfl
lteatDedrlcü, both men supwosln all the
chambers to be empty. One 'Chamber -was still 7ZZ,i .n.i im bail D&ssed through the heart
of Dedrich, kllliDg him insianuy. moat frantic with grlel.
Mxmm is ai-
The Drummer Boy. I Western Catholicl . ' One cold December morning; about eighty years ago, a party of tourists were crossing the Alps and a pretty large party, too, for there were several thoutands of them together. Some were riding, some walking, nd most of them had knapsacks on their shoulders, 'like many alpine tourists nowadays. But instead of walking-sticks they carried muskets and bayonets, and dragged along with flftv or sixtv cannon.
Tn fact, these' tourists were nothing leaf
; than a French army; and a very hard tim
both live.'
And the General kept his word. Years later, when the qreat wars were all over, there might be seen walking in tho garden of a. quiet country house in the South of France a stooping, white haired old man, who had once been the famous Marshal Mac
donald; and he leaned for support upon the arm of a tall, black-mustached, soldier-like fellow, who had once been little Pierre, the drummer.
I have sold at retail price since the 4th of
December last 106 bottles of Dr. Ihomas Eclectric Oil, guaranteeing every bottle. I must say I never, sold a medicine in my life that crave such universal satisfaction. In
my own case, with a badly Ulcerated Throat, after a physician penciling it for several
days to no effect, the Eclectric Oil cured it thoroughly in twentv-four hours, and in
threatened croups in my children this win ter it never failed to relieve almost immedi ately C. R. Hall.
. Grawille. 111.. March 2G. 1880. For sale
by Louis Eichrodt, Indianapolis.
Solved at last I The Hartford Journal says
when a female contributor to a monthly mag
azine speaks of 'the. most . delicious: delight
fgj, delectable, entrancing and distracting of
lished, in 18G1, though anonymously, "Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland."
nis nejt acknowledged performance was "Rationalism in Europe," and four years later H8G9) he produced what many rpnk as his ablest work, the "History Of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemange." The Edinburgh Review has pronounced him one of the most accomplished writers and thinkers of his time. Ho has also written
the Eighteenth
and Morals"
have been translated into German, and are greatly admired by all intellectual Germans, who are fond of complimenting him by saying that his mind is of their order, and that they should feel certain, did thy. not know to the contrary, that he had been educated at one of their universities. Lecky, whose home is now in or near London, is a constant contributor to the periodical press, many of the most noticeable papers in current literature
being from his pen. Very little is known ot him personally, as he seldom goes into society, living mostly among his books, and finding
4:35 p. m.; Albaay, 12:4 a.m. Arrive at New York City 6:45 a. m., and Boston 9:20 a. m. Hours quicker than all other lines Thi train has elegant TAlace Sleeping coaches from Indianapolis to Cleveland and -from Cleveland to New York and Boston without change. At Sidney close connections are made for Toledo and Detroit and all points in Canada.
at aA i Hi III K LT Ol IIIS HLL1Ö. Alt Iii ,?i the "History of England in th( omuWpd Century." His -Rationalism" . ei oi jeuow . . trnn.itj (jprT,
, vi. -1. .1- .1 i IS -1 liviiiir UH'Biiv auiuiiE uia uwivs, oi
Mur.: a D,iac hin chief nleäaarc in rcadinc and reflection,
W in aeaa-goia; a mg.i racne oi oia lace a Ui8 n' U of so 8trong
white satin poked bonnet, with a suggestion
of gold thiough the soft old lace that trimmed it.
Domestic bliss, "kissing tho maid." Do
mestic blister; "man's wife catching him at
it." More domestic buss, "wile rubbing JSclectric Oil into the wounds caused by the
aforesaid contretemps. For sale by Louis
Eichrodt, Indianapolis.
strong an individ
ual stamp that, notwithstanding his great stock of erudition, his conclusions are his own, while his style is in no sense bookish.; He is now engaged on an important work , whose subject na3 not been indicated.
i J.
A Fatal Habit.
Columbus Route, VIA Dayton and Springfield. n.KA I X! Train arrives at Mnucie 2:23 p'M ,0J t All. Union. 3:35 p. m.; Dayton, 5:55 p m.s Springfield, 7:15 p. m ; Columbus, 9:15 p. m. The only line running through Parlor CoachfB from Indianapolis to Columbns, where direct connections are made with the Baltimore fc Ohio Railroad. This train connects at Muncie with the Ft. Wayne, Muncie A Cincinnati R'y for Ft. Wayne and Detroit. V See that your ticket reads by the Bee Line. A J. SMITH, J. W. CAMPBELL, C. C. GALE. G. T. A. Pars. Act. Fcpt. Cleveland, O. Indianapolis. Indianapolis
O-O TO V. T. FLOYD'S BAKBER SHOP. V No. 5 Indiana Avenue,
FOB A GOOD SHAVE. ST1IAIR Specialty.
CUTTING lm
TAKE THE
Economy and Debt. From One of Spnrgeou's Lectures Living beyond their incomes is the ruin o many of my noighbors; they can hardly af ford to keep a rabbit and muet needs drive a pony and chaise. I am afraid extravagance is the common diieane of the times, and many professing Christians have caught it, to their shame and sorrow. Good cotton or stuff gowns are not good enough nowadays; girls must have silks and satins and then there's a bill at the dressmaker's as long as a winter's night and quite as 'dismal. Show and style and smartness run away with a man's means, keep the family poor and the father's nose on the grindstone. Frogs try to look as big as bulls and burst themselves. He is both a fool and a knave who has a shilling coming in and on the strength of it spends a pound which does not belong to him. Cut your coat according to your cloth is sound advice; but cutting other people's cloth by running into debt is as liko thieving as fourpence is
like a groat. Debtors can hardly help being liars, for they promise to pay when they
Cincinnati, India-npolis, St. Louis AND CHICAGO Ii, It.
For all Points
Irresolution is a fatal habit; it is not vicious in itself, but it leads ' to 'vice, creeping
Lupon its victims with a fatal facility, the pen
alty ot which many a nne nean nas puiu ai the scaffold. The idler, the' spendthrift, the. epicurean and the -drunkard are among the victims. Perhaps in the latter its effects appear in the most hideous form. He knows that the goblet he is about to drain is poison, vet he swallows it. lie knows, for tho example
VJ.fl0: X6TWEST AND NORTHWEST.
bunt i v win ucoucu an mo v v f. u;s Iva a rwl fha linnninnaa
r i" v v -u A:StonA CHICAGO EXPRESS, with Parlor Car attached,
hui mo uvaiv, ui'ui wo uwn .tu "v . imTea daily, except Sunday, at i:U5 p. m., makMni
hurry his progress to a dishonored grave, yet J close connection for Kansas City and the West, ei V,A1i.ams if Unn. Krwintlfnl nn thfl CnntwrV. I all Of th
is the power of resolution, enabling the one who possesses it to pass through perils and dangers, trials and temptations! Avoid the contraction of tho habit of irresolution. Strive against it to the end. i
Go to Louis Eichrodt's for Mrs. Freeman's New rational Dyes. For brightness and durability of color are unequaled. Color from two to five pounds, price 15 cents.
One of the Grreatest social problems of the
h-nnvr thftvean not. and when tnevhevemada I dav into AxrtiRin whv there are so.manv
. v . . - j r j i " - "j np a lot of false excuses they promise again, marriageable women who never get married, and so they lie as fast as a horse can trot. Exchange. , It may be explained in the Now, if owing leads to lying, who shall say fart 'that there 'are so many yöüng men not that it is not a most evil thing? Of course, worth marrying. Norristown Herald,
COOL SUMMER RESORTS MICBlGAH.WISCONs'm and MINNESOTA. NIGHT EXPRESS, with Sleeper for Chicago and Reclinging Chair Car through to Burlington, leaves daily at 11:15 p. m. Through car to Peoria and Keokuk on 7:35 a. m. train. Four trains a day to Cincinnati, where connection! are made in the same depot for BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON. NEW YORK AND BOSTON Sarins transfer through city. For local trains see railroad time table In another column. J. W. 8HERWOOD, JOHN EQAN. Supt. G. P. A T. A., Iadlanapells. OiaiaaaH
IT CltlCOUTES III EVERY STATE III HIE
It eon lain h more news, and a greater Yarietj, than any other paper published by colored men. It contains choice selections from the best Literary Journal of the World. It contains, every week, AN EXCELLENT STOUY.
IN POL TICS, THE LEADER IS 'STALWART" REPUBLICAN, OP THE STRICTEST SECT Its editorial deal fearlessly with the living issues of the day. Ever)' colored man in the land should rend and support It.
OFFERS RARE AND MOST EXCELLENT ADVANTAGES AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM. Our white friends will find it interesting and should encoura the enterprise.
SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE For a paper that will be a blessing to yourself, and encourage an enterprise that will honor the race. SEND FOR A SPECIMEN COPY, AND SUBSCRIBE.
Our terms, cash, in advance, are aa follows:
Single Copy, one year. " six: months, 44 three months, 44 ' one month, Clubs ot six, one year, each copy, 44 ten, one year, each copy,
1.00 OO 20 1.75 1.50
BAG-BY & CO., Publishers, XTo. 12 Miller's Bloolz.
The Proprietors of the LEADER inform their friends that they are, pre pared to do all hinds of
AS LOW AS THE LOT7EST.
BON'T FOBGET IT!
' HADLEY DROS., DRUGGISTS. 317 'Ie diana Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
Near'Oorner Bt. Cr Bt, and Indiana Avt.
V. V. HOOVER. Dealer in Staple and Fancy
COUNTRY PRODUCE . A. Spaeialty. 408 Indiana Ave,
