Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 115, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1885 — Page 2

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THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SATURDAY MORNING' ArPtIL 25 1885.

GENERA.! TELEGItim

Fatally gtabbfd-.Theater to b Rebuilt. fiecUJ to the BentlaeL AB2H?05f Ind, April 2ULt nlht, after a dance In Adams Township, Lather Brown fatally 6Ubbcd Eli Cammins. Brovn left tte dine over an hoar before it closed, and concealed hirawlf behind a farm, and aa Cammlr.s and a few others were qnietlj passing on their way Lome, Brown jumped from his htding-placa and strack Cammics with & rock. Tha blow knocked him down, and Brown immediately jumped npon him and stabbed him ten times. He died in ten minntes. Camming wm the sac ceesfnl rival tultor of Browa. This is the only rea?cn for Brown's conduct. Tn?y wt re relghbcrs. Brown is twenty foar aDd Cummins was twenty years old. Browa it in tne hand 5 of the fcheriffand will have his preliminary trial to morrow. Last niut an enthusiastic meeting held of the stock subscribers of the joint s'eck company for rebatldiap; the Doxey Theater. Articles of association were perfected and filed in the Recorder's ofiica today. The capital etock is $tO,OuO, and has all been subscribed. C. T. Djxey, K. P. Sen later, L. J. Barr, J. H. Terhune, II. J. Brcnsenberg, W. T. 1 arbin and A. I. Makepeece were elected Directors. Work has already actively commenced, and Anderson will have a new opera-house for the coming season. Nomlrmtlona f.ir the May Klertlou. Special to the Eentinel. LrATEiTX, Ind., April 21. The Republicans assembled In convention yesterday afternoon to nominate a city t'ckeU J. L. Caldwell was nominated for Mayor on the first ballot; Fnd Wthh, cf tha Junction House, for Treasurer; John Fletsmeyer for Clerk, and James T. MoCar Jle for City Marshal. Henry Epstein and Bal Abbott were nominated fcr As?cSüir and Water Works Trustee, respectively. The Conocilniea are the followiag: l'.rjt Ward, J. Djrr Falley; Second Ward, Tatrick Feely; Third Ward, V'jliiem Folkrr.er; Fourth ward Thomas J. Levering; Fifth Ward, John Kimmel; Sixth Ward, John Eliiatt. Tbf se nominations are not the bst by any mracs, except the candidates fcr Mayor aad Treasurer, and one Councilman. At the primaries last nijrht the following CooEciImn were chosen for the Democratic t cket: First Ward. M. II. Hickey; Second Ward, Itlchaid Respan; Third Ward, Nicholas, Ccnners; Fourth Ward, failed to nominate; Fifth Ward, C. Hankeny; Sixth Ward, Dr. Washburn, the present incumbent. The city nominations will be made to day, and candidates for the various places are already on the ground. ltalth Gonforence. New York, April -1 A conference of the health cßicers of New York, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Haven and Boston was held at the Fifth Avenue Hotel yesterday, to discus quarantine matters generally, aid to prevent the introduction of chelera into the country. It was decided to estib lish more rigid rules and to throw additional f afecnards aronnd those now in force. The matter of the admission of old raes was taken np and fullv ducuesed, and it was concluded to establish a close quarantine against thera arjd to allow none to be lauded, except after beirg thoroughly bailed or steamed by the superheated steam process. The sulphur process was declared to be a failure, and the conference decided against it. It was mentioned incidentally that the factcf their beiüs; so few cases of small pox 10 New York City during the past montb was traceable to the strengant regulations requiring all old rags to bedisenfected. The df cisioa reached was to make a clcsa quarantine against all old rs, which will be carried to all the Atlantic port?, and will, iv is believed, prevent the introduction of any dueaie into this country through sich im porlatiou. MadUou Item, Special to the Fentinel. Mapion, Ind., April 24. The directors of the Madison Opera House Company have decided not to build a new Opera House, bnt to remcclel the old Wesley Chapel aad turn it into an Opera House. Amateur talent is now rehearsing for an amateur dramatic festival, to be held the 11 rat two weeks in May for the benefit of the public fountain. Professor Franck, 0! New York, is tbe manager. The plavs are: Game to tbe Last," "chadows ol Crime," and 'Tarn Him Oat." The Republicans of this city met in maa convention and nominated for Marshal, M. Dillon; Treasurer, John K. Weyer; Clerk, John (j Moor; Ase3for, Gcorjre F. Harper; Water Works Trustee, Henry Stanley. Mr. M. Wilson, a?ed fifty-nine, died on "Wtdnday and was buried yesterday. Deceased was one of our oust enterprising business men. Btjiuour Item. 'S racial to the 8tntlne:. IU-.own&iowx, ltd , April 24 -John Gray and Virgil Huff were convicted in the Circuit Court, last night, and sentenced to the State Prikon for two years each at hard labor. Their crime was burglarizing Dr. McMillen's drug store, at Medora, come months 20 and stealing a lot of cigars, tobacco and other pocds. They make fonr victims sentenced to tbe penitentiary for the same crime. During a severe rain and thunder storm a few dajs ago the ticket o.'Uce at the Cjn:it? Fair Grounds, at this place, was strack by lightning and burned to the ground. it is thought that Judge Collins will finish up tbe court docket by the end of next week. He is one of the most expeditious Judges this county ever had. Aauta 1'rcsbjtery 011 Teaching Uvolatiou. An.fTA, Ga., April 24 Tbe Augusta rretbjtery, after investigating the question of Dr. James Wcodrow's orthodoxy in reference to hia teachirgs in the Columbia Theological Seminary on evolution, resolved: 1. We find noiblnz that warrants a trial for btrejj. 2. As no one arpor or offers to make o il charges, no process can be Instituted, ce Dook of Discipline. Ctapter VI., par2raph2 ) Rcsolvi d. That our action In this matter is not to be understood as Tallin? In question, the acttoa ot tbe 8jnod of Georgia, held at Marietta in ISSi. Dr. Woodrow waa present at the mestlng, and notclied the President of the Augus:a Synod that he would complain of their action to tbe Synod of Georgia. The Green Connty Court floate. Social to the Sentinel. Bloomfiilp, Ind.. April 2. After all tbe f ass and wind werk about the removal of the county teat from here, the affair la now settled by the Commissioners awarding the contract for erecting a new Court House in Bloomfield, to Messrs. McKay & Bashocg for $68.095. Mr. Banting, of your city, being th architect There were quite a number YTcrttüngtonUnj her to protest, bat not

enough to excite any feeling in the matter. The Bloomfielders are happy that the w.nk begins text Monday, and that Mr. MoKay got the contract, and no one ob;:cts to the plars. Pltaro-PoeamoDl I.avr. St. Louis, April 24 Information is received here that Attorney General Garland, on more careful examination of the law, has reversed the decision given a day or two ao, empowering the Commissioner of Agriculture to purchase and slaughter all cattle ailiicttd with pleuropneumonia or other contagions diseases. This confines the Commissioner's action to simply quarantine measures, and throws the burden of stamping out the disrate upon States or individuals, &j heretofore.

Shot His MUtress Fatally. riTTPBCR, April i'4. A special to the Chronicle-Telegraph from Steubenville, 0., mt: "In Hennegan's saloon this morning Foster Wilcoxsen bot Millie French, his miitref s, through ths head, inflicting a fatal wound. Wilcoxeen has been aTes'ed. Ha says he intended to kill her aud then himself. The woman was just recovering jrom a desperate attack mace on her by Wiicoxen ssveral wetks sgo, in which he stabbed her ia tbe back with a knife. Fallares Dariug the Week. New York, April 21 The business failures occurring throughout the country during the last eeven days, as reported to R. (i. Dun fc Co., of the Mercantile Agency, number for the United States 21" and for Cm1a 25. or a total of 210. as against a total ot '222 last week and 212 the week previous ti ths last. More than two thirdi of the filus in the I'n'ted Statea are fnrnihed by the Southern, Western and Pacific Slates. Terrible Condition of a Load of Iudlaaapoils Hogs. 8i-rix;hh.o, Ma e , April 24 A car losd of 121 hegs, th:pped fram Indianapolis five da j s ago, and consigned to a packing firm in this city, was received yferday in a tsrrib'e ccrdition, thirty -cce of them being deid. The ?cent of the Society for the Prevention cf Cruelty to Animals is investigating the case. Angola 'ouitimiloa, pf ciai to the Sentinel. Angola, Ind., April 21 The Republic-ins of Aurola have nominated the following ticket to be voted for at the May election: Trnstfe, Third Ward, G. X. Bodley; Trustee, Fourth Ward, Jacob Sticly; Clerk and Treasurer. E. A. BrattOD; Marshal, E. R. More. The Democrats will nominate next wetk. Obstructions on It at I road Tracks. Deti-.oit, April 21. An unknown perssn placed ties on the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad track in this city this morning, causing the early passenger train to jump the track. The only injury was to the locomotive. Obstructions were also placed on the Bay City Road, but were discovered in time to prevent Injury. SUter Mary De Sales. Baltimore, April 21. Miss Constance Edgar, step-daughter of Jerome N. Bonaparte and great-grand daughter of Daniel Webster, was yesterday afternoon invested with the habit and veil of the order of the Visitation, and assumed tbe religions name of Kiste r Mary De Sales. Archbishop Gib bons officiated. A 1'ublic Han clue. St. Loh-, April 21. A Dallas (Ark.) special to the rost-Di3patch says: "Columbus 8. Mcflit was hanged here to day for the murder of William Webant. Tha execution was public and was witnessed by a great crowd. The doomed man maintained his incocency to the last and met his fate without a tremor." Feeding the Wnrrlers. Chicago, April 21. A member of the larpe packing establishment of Libby, Metall it Libby, of this city, states that the firm has evld to the Koglieb Government all the canned meats it had to offer, for which it has received its own prices. Quotations have advanced abont 12 per cent. The Grant Letter of 18UI. I New York Sua. We copied on Monday from the 8t. Luis Glebe Democrat a letter said to have been written by General Grant in the days of the war. It has attracted a good deal of attention on account of the vigorous way in which General Grant then expressed his belief in the determination of the North to suppress the rebellion, and particularly in regard to the probable effect of the war upon the institution cf slavery. An estemed correspondent in Washington, with a rather analytical, if not skeptical, turn of mind, believes that he has found internal evidence that the letter is a forjery. Tbe points which he makes are interesting: That published letter of General Grant to Mr. F. Dtnt, April, R, 1SG1. is certainly a forgery. It refers to the President's proclamation, which was Isaued on tbe 15th, calliag out 70,000 militia to "suppress said combination, i. e., in the six seceding States- and cause the laws to bs duly executed." That proclamation studiously avoided any expression implying the existence g! a state of war. But the pretended letter of General Grant eays that Virginia "thonM ba made to bear a heavy portion of the burden of the war for her guilt." Again, how could a conservative Democrat or even a radical Republican, on the l!)(h of Amii, bvfore the first blood was shed at Taltimore, or, if petchance shed, before the news bad retched Galena, have written this? "In all this 1 see tbe doom of slavery!" Even the Garrisonian Abolitionists had not got their eyes 10 far open as that. Rut there is another sentence in the letter that pioves it a forgery beyond ail doubt. The fabricator say: "Ihe news today April 19 is that Virginia hes gone out of the Union." Virginia did not secede until April 2'.. It :s true that Mr. Lincoln, in h!s proclamation of April 15, studiously refrained from using the word war. Bat it by no meats follows that General Grant would have been unlikely on April 19 to ass that word in speaking o! the struggle them impending. Sumter had been bombarded and Anderson had evacuated the fort. Drums were bfating all along the line, and in every town North and Booth volunteers were coming forward. Jefferson Davis had isiuei his proclamation of April 17, calling for privateers, and providing for letters of marque and reprisal. Lincoln's proclamation declarirg a blockade of the ports of States In rebellion appeared on April 10. For days tbe colonics 01 the newspapers na nsen filled with dispatches headed "War Triparations." "WarNaws." "War Movement." and "The Ciyil War." In tbe fact that the Grant letter speakj of "tbe war," we sse no ground whatever for doubting its genuinenefs. Why, even Jamei Buchanan, certainly conservative Democrat, was wrlttlng on that very same day, April 10, to General John A. Dix: "The preeent AdminlstrtUoa

had no alternative but to accept th wa initiated by South Caclina or the Southern Confederacy. The North will eustala the Administration almost to a man; and it ought to be sustained at all hazards" Aid be had jost written to llr. J. Buchanan Heury: "The Confederate States have deliberately commenced the civil war, and God kaews where it may end." Thre is coth'Dg remarkable in General Grant's perception cf the far-reaching consequences ot the conflict then beginning. Was he tbe only msn who foresaw in April, lS'Jl, that the existence of the slave eystent wis a take.' More than a year before, Mr. Cnwordv of Georgia, in the flcuse Kpreseatatives Lad declared that the question between the North end tbe South resolved itself into tbis: "Shivery or disunion, or n'j slavery and union." The third point made by our correspondent, ai;d the ote which he regards as coucjnsive evidence that the letter is a fabrication, is still less satisfactory than the others. Grant writes on April 1'.: "The news t rny is ttat Virginia has gjne out of the l iiion." Our correspondent tavs that ViruiLia did not lecede until the 2fth. Thu Is the date on which Virginia adooted her convention with the Confederate Srates. As a n.htur cf fact, the ordinance of tecesua was paed on April 17. On April IS Go? ernor Letcher issued his proclamation reozr.izing the Confederate States as independent. On the eame day he wrote to Secretary Cameron refusing to comply wi'.h tue re'juiait'on fir Virginia's quota of troops, caying: "Van have chosen to inaugurate ciyil war, and,

havirg done so, we will mpet it in a epirlt r.s determined at the Administration has ethibited toward the Soath." Surely Vtrg'iaia had gone out of the lln?u when Grin wrote his letter in April 1 The nea of her eece:-Mon had been p.inttd in the uewjpaptrs of theKcrth. What is the Uae of 1, Auf Wa).' In the April number of Harper's Magaz'ne Charles Dudley Warner writes as follows: ' Now two cf the vulgar notions of this latitude ere that we need "bracing up," and thot eeow is a useful product, cons?queutly that tbe more severe weather we have and tbe more blow, the better o.T we .tre. And people go on fct-litving this to Their dtath evtry yar. As to snow, thereis a pentiTiu lal notion ol its beauty as wrll a3 of its utility. And agocd desl can ba sa:d lor it frcin an artistic point of viesv. But wa are not placed in this stera world merely to iaeinige our Etctuouenesa. We are put hera to insie the most cf our powers in view of a hereafter; end long life is aduty. besides beleg, in the Old Testament view, a regard of virtue. It is probably necessary to have scow at the plej in order to kp the poles ccol and insure a rroper circulation :ind change cf air around the globe, just as it is necessary to keep the equator to hot that it is as unpleasant to sit on it as on a kitchen stove. Snow, indeed, might do little harm in a land where tbe sun never thene. Bat ia tbis region, where the sua does ehiue, where half tbe winter days are clear, the only etlect of tte presence ot snow is to fill the atmosphere with chilling moijtore, lung fever, pneumonia and that sort cf thing The pleasenter the weather, the more sunshine we have; withsnoff on tbe ground, the worse is our condition. And yet it is in vain' to argue this wichpoople. They are wedded to traditional ideas and full of prejudices, :iod it feerrs impossible to convince them that snow in this region is harmful. It does no gecd to demonstrate to them that but for mow we should hate royal winter clinate. On a email fcale we see occasionally what it might be. There were such days in January last, The snow had disappeared, tbe sun shone with the light but not the het (like an electric lamp) cf May, and the air was fore, exhilarating, bnt cot damp and prave-like. It would have been perfect but for tbe chill that came down from the vast enow-fie!ds of Canada, where cold and sno are worshipped and fetei all winter. And yet, after such experience, people, convinced, co Lack to snow. The Ignorance of this scientific 8ge ii discouriiln??. The other vulgar notion ia that a hand to hand struggle with extreme cold for months does a parson good braces him up. It must be admitted that up to a certain point any struggle or trial is Invigorating to the moral and intelligent nature. Bat we see what too much indulgence in this lead a to. The Esquimaux is but little raised above the polar bear and the seal. Uis whole existence is just an effort to keep alive, to get blubber and skins enough to generate and keep in his body vital heat He can think of nothing e!se; te has room for ho other mental eCort. We sse the same thing in the diaries and accounts of the polar exploration fanatics. It wou'd be the most painful reaiirg in the world if it were not fo monotonous, r&ch one tells exactly the same story the story of his physical story to keep a'ive with the thermometer fifty degress below zero. Scon tbe mind has no other occupation Uan this strupzle. It almost cesses to work in any other direction. This is interesting to us at first as a study of the capacity of tbe human organism to resist the unrestrained attacks cf nature. The experience of a person wbo thould in tbis latitude, in winter, I retire to an ice house, with a hatchet and a supply ef frozen bmh, a whale oil lamp, and a fur overcoat and body-bag, and sit on the ice in the darkness, and record his feelings, the gradual lowering of the vital powers, the concentration of the mind upon the numb ness of his legs, would doubtless have a physiological interest. But the second excerimenter would not interest bis readers so much as the first with his narrative. The Widow Gartield. I Letter to Cincinnati Enquirer.) Gat field once taid to me about this woman: "I have never had in my life, although there would have been plenty of excuse if he had made euch a mistake, to apoiogizs for anything that my wife has had to sayoncernicgrr.e. My constituency has its own sensibilities, and a very little thing Mrs. (Jarfieid might eay that was ili timed or hasty woutd go very far against me. But ehe has been to dieereet that I bave not a single instance of thiskird on record. She is never stampeded," said Garfield. "She is the c-o!e?t when thines excite me the mo?t. Now," taid he, ''she is doing at present what I did for her; I taught her Latin at school, ani she Is now teaching our children Litin and iireparlng them to gi to Exeter." President Cleveland, I see, -has been entertaining at Eajter the orphan children of Garfisld. This ia one of tie best testimonials I have seen to Cleveland' upright domestic Intentions. TIi Career of a CoTirnmcnt Clerk. I Burlington Dally Gsxette j The young man who is ambitions to try a clerkthip at Washington should take warnin from the career of the oldest clerk In the Treasury Department. Appointed in 1317 at a salary of $1.200, he it now getting $1.103 a rise cf $200 in thirty-eight years. A Texai Vle-w. Pan Angelo Standard. What the world is In nei'.d of right now. in out humble opinion, is more cash &ni les3 credit; more work and lesa war, and a little more learning and a great deal less law. Truth baa a quiet breast,' sayt Avoa'i bard, but when the breast is ricked with a rough it can not be quiet Try a bottle of Dr. Bull' Cough Syrup. The ou?a it will stay, tha sorenets allay, and you'll bless Dr. Ball for win j a day,

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look -M a j'ltfcCat Address, SENTINEL COMPANY, 71 and 73 West Market Stroot,

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V --,r ..-V J- .3. -..j A NU FITTINGS, SoUIne Asrent for NiUoaJ I ut e Works Co.. G!oba ValTOH, sio VKk TO.NH, CUn tK, ViSEa, T A 1 rt , aa-I Di., V.'jcuch''. Trin, im;, ßAr.uT hetalh, (l.T. round lin v, C iitoa Wiping a a.tc, whit an i czlorrd tl'W-rnnd ta'r-), n,l ail other u,rri'ts u-c l la cvjr.cctson with sr;:M. v. Aii.u?i l r,Ki iaJjUor Rt TAIL LOTS. a r.-ci. Ir.r tp&m Citi' bi:.incfH, rslln;a:? ar.d tor.trct ii heat Mills, .Siior. Farirl' ft'jd Lu;nb?r Uiy Hotioi w.ia isve orex2a".i Mcaa. Ilo? cut to oiJcrby 6tei-n. power. S.Ü13HT & JILL50H, 75 an 77 8. renn. t-t. irr" f iK t" iii-.t ii.t'v r r r t'i "J attrlc, aii J i::-if,? orif n ,;.' v'..-r fj ;J ,-y ir.liaLtrn, tl.n rtn. f - c a nii-nt, relaxcut'. ;'3-n:. f.i :!. '-:t fit- ec iomSiiH, M in.l fiicM. PfrAKTv w !.- -II o-'ri re Lj i-nd:c f..! W'Jativ A tr!,!v,.:;(..:.v,r.ce never f i l r. t il i t 't- . .,r i I .. : Tr. il tvk..e fr-. s I o ly dj i.I. fir m . :." (" t .!; : N Dk n k: ill .-.'v. r.vr.. y.ir r HAPPY BELIEF 'Ie'Mlr ob'rtd at all sttxcuof Caronicfiiftjai. f-CTtraclisj tie Tsrionp fotiri of Fiia lhrv&. T-ht-usnailsia, Scrofula, I'rloiary and tf'cndary r?:iil8. G'.oft. Irrc'.cncy, Seminal Wcnknca t'i! bpennaterrhea perr.iancntly cured. Eiill aud i srri(Mice c?n te rc'le.1 cn, Ml am a crli:r.la ct irni.iniiesud fnrirery, and loncer locnt-.nl In tUJ d'T tbsn RDT otr.erpi.Ts'.r.lm In my sTvicW.ty. hftvp L.flue a tp'cl.O stndyof renale Ir."?' an tl e'r trcatrcent. Cftu ci7 perrcancnt rvut in T:.f Anitntia or Clctra.lioa ot W'orao, Putu ' 12 i Vvlittle Fiilf, with lull rrlnici (11-octJ.rA. icr-i to r.r f.drps for 81 per box. rnniciutlon free and Inrlteo. P. M. ABBBTT. IL. B., Ho. n otit N.B. Please note the cumber, aaa tiaiAT-iJ rnce near with aame name. I? T ZED 3ÜT T

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Obtained, and all T'Att-nt Bulnoa t home or abroad atten-Jed to for Moderate Fecc Onr office Is o;pfsiie tbe l 8. 1'atent OSco, and we c-an ottgln i ateuta iu Ices time than thond remote from Wp.sMn2tn. ßond Model or Drawing. We adv'ife as to patentetillty Irec o! charce: aad we Charge no reo Ualens latent la Allowed. we.cfer, here, to the I'o;ra&'-ter, tbe Sanerin tondent ol Money Or'lpr Division, and to ouulala cf tbe U. 8. Patent Oflic-e. For circular, adici, crma, and references to actual clieata la jour wn State or County, wri te to , ( C. A. SNOW A CO.. I Ornoslte Patent face, W'aahtnton. I. (5.

lhe aooompany!nc!l a correct catrepreaentatioa ot our premium Watch, it ii a e tern-winder, U c'de of nickel silver, aa l will alwayi rcniala u brUht hi new silver dollar. It fcas a baary beveled e3?e cryatal face. tta worki are eonstmcte o' vood material, and arc male bf tbe finest aato ' mtlo njachiusry. Every watch Is perfect befOT i -Ving tbi factory. All are tnoroagblj teetel r;1 adjuntel, an cm fce honestly recommoadet initio) ::iae-keerr8. They are just aa repra wüua, au.t ire vrotth three tlmea the prico. AMY ACTIVE BOY ".ia easily aeenroone cf taw.o Watches by gettL-f hiftlfrieudd to subscribe tor the Indiasa tTATi IS K" 7? T INKL. roli0vln are oar oTerf to aeatf : orf 23 will send The Sentihei. to twnty ant ccrlbcrs and the Watch Iroo to the agent gittty cp the club. Kor 112.5 we will send Thk 8TiNi.to ten tab scribers an Watch to the agent lorwardlnj tclub. For f7.50 we will send Tke Sentinel to five itx ecribeis and a Watch to the agent forwarding Ui eleb. For 15.50 The Sewtimkl to three snWcriben aa a Watch to the agent. For $3,5 TH2 Bentinel on year and a Watch t any address. Address, SENTINEL COtfPANV, Indianapolis, In

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