Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 26, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1877 — Page 4
TILE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH 14, 187 .
4
TO SUBSCRIBERS.
Sobeerlbers whom time h expired will plea remit at once, or we shall be com polled to drop their names from oar fmbsoripUon list. INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL CO. TERMS: One Subscriber one year.......... 1 SO OatM 4 toeertbers, on year, to ob P. O. 6 (i0 m 10 - - 12 00 23 u h h 20 00 Where ten or more camn are ?nt In, an extra copy is given to the getter-up of the club Agents Bending over four names and fl 23 fo each name will be allowed a commission of twenty per cent, on the grots amount of their vbsertptlons . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14. Some of the papers say Key was once a confederate brigadier. Arnold was once a continental general. Hayes, they say, neither drinks nor uses tobacco. Tt Is strange that such a highly rirtuons specimen of the race should get down to stealing. That trip to Columbus after the Cincinnati convention was not in vain. Brother-in-law Holloway has been recomruissioned as postmaster. Kellogg' s case is brightening. The committee will report that he has a prima facie right to a seat in the senate, which is better than Hayes's right to the presidency. Bob Ingersoll dined with Hayes on Sunday. Wonder who said grace? Bob lectures in New York oa Wednesday night. Subject; 'Tolitioal Questions and Answers." Three hnndred applications for clerkships have already been received at the white house. Hajeu turns them all over to the heads of the departments, with instructions not to tarn any "good boy" out of office. So, Lew Wallace is after the Mexican mission, says' late news from the capital. We thought Lew was not leading an active alligator and banana life for nothing. It was too much like work. Mexican mission, isitT Morton compelled Hayes to leave the presidential mansion and sit in his carriage while he unfolded to him the beauties of the bloody shirt policy. As a result the Indianapolis mail bags will still be under Morton's j urisdiction. Senator Cameron has resigned his senatorship to deTOte all his attention to his breach of promise case. The Cameron clan being hereditary rulers in the state of "addition, 'division and silence," his son Don will probably succeed him. Hare all the Cincinnati and Ohio folks generally arrived safely at home? We trust so. They say a good many of them ran short of fand while in Washington. We hope the walking westward ho! was good. Did the good editor of the Cincinnati Gazette find it so? It Is stated in some quarters thst the success of Hayes has proved a large financial gain to the -country and insurance companies, from the fact that if Tilden had been counted in the probability is that very bildtng in Washington and elsewhere containing evidences of radical fraud would have been matched. Burnt recrda and dead men can't be used in court Justices Bradley, Miller and Strong were hang in ögy in the court bouse yard. Monticello, N. Y., last week. On a placard attached to Strong was, J'I want God in the 'constitution." On Miller was, "Throw con'science to the devil, fraud reigns supreme." And on Dradly, 4,No man worthy of the of'fice of president should be willing to hold 'it if counted in by fraud. I a-n crucified 'between two thieves." The first lie which the radicals started on Mr. Tilden was that he was president of the Chicagj convention of 18C4, and the last one "Was that Mr. Tilden took the oath of the president of the United States in New York at the same time that Hayes was taking it in Washington. Between these two there were two or three hnndred big and little lies, bat these two mark the beginning and the end. ng. Everybolv ouuht to take the Indianapolis Sentinel. Cincinnati Commercial. The people bjr hundreds and thousands, anticipating probably the advice of the Commercial, are taking the Sentinel. They say they like the Sentinel. They are advising others to take the Sentinel, and the Commercial is rigtft wbe n it says "everybody 'oupht to take the Indianapolis Sentinel." The indications are that a very large per cent of "everybody" wilV find it to their interest to take the 8nünel. We are satisfied that the more they take it the better they will ik it The Sentinel wiil continue to expose the frauds of radical villains. It will ceasletsly point to Hayes as a fraud, and in every Issue denounce perjury as a means for making a president of the United States. The Sentinel
will demand that the will of the people as declared at the ballot-box shall be supreme and that when so declared, . euch creatures as J. Madison Wells and Marat Halstead's pattern of womanly perfection, Eliza Pinkston, the baza saw prostitote, and their confederates in crime, shall not constitute a returning board to reverse the verdict of the ballot box.
IIAYE8 AS THE OLTGKOWni OT FRAUD. The nien who have placed R. B. Hayes in power are now working with might and main to obtain for their fraudulent president the unanimous indorsement of the American people. To accomplish this they will be as indefatigable in their labors as they were to plan and perfect the damnable schemes by which they succeeded in swindling the American people out of their victory obtained at the ballot-box. last November. From this time forward all that can be accomplished by consummate strategy, unblushing hypocrisy, and by cold and calculating lying will be done. Every petty act of the presidential fraud that is directly or remotely in harmony with justice will be seized upon with avidity and made to obscure some infamous act in the programme of crime by which Hayes was forced upon the people contrary to their declared will. The declaraticn will be made that Hayes is not responsible for the frauds and crimes committed in South Carolina, Florida, Louisiana and California. They will repeat with increasing emphasis that the electoral commission by its acts and decisions whitewashed Hayes and relieved him of the stigma of fraud. This however, is false, and, if possible, more infamous than the perjuries that have brought the returning board into a notoriety more detestable , than that acquired by the guillotine when Robespierre used it to hush the voice of opponents to his reign of murder. The electoral commission was only a second edition of the returning board. The first, mapped out the course of fraud; the second adopted it The first, by perjuries such as never before blackened any record in a Christian land, revoked the will of the people; the second placed upon them the stamp of indorsement and made them the passports of Hayes to the white house. R. B. Hayes, as president, viewed from any standpoint high or low, is an outgrowth of fraud. His credentials bear upon their face evidences of every crime that in the past have been used to overthrow liberty. He is a creature of military despotism exercised by Grant. Fair minded men, at all conversant with the facts, would be compelled under oath to swear it or damn their souls with perjury. In South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana troops were stationed to aid conspirators in carrying out their plans. Such is authentic history. He is the creature of multiplied violations of law. .This he knows. The records of the count in four states proclaim the fact. He is the creature of lies, of all grades, from the statements of the beggarly crew who lie by instinct, to the plotting scoundrel who perjures himself for money or its equivalent creatures like J. Madison Wells and his returning board confederates, who do not hesitate to make presidents for a consideration, and are ready to barter soul and country for pelf. That these crimes made R. B. Hayes president is a truth as axiomatic as any known to mathematics, and as firmly fixed in the minds of the American people as any in the entire realm of verity. They constitute R. B. Hayes as president the outgrowth of fraud. He is a monster from the slime of radicalism, a possibility of radical pollutions of the fountains of truth and virtue. The radi al theory now is: Fraud has triumphed, therefore cease denouncing it Perjury has throttled truth in the capital of the nation; applaud it A thief is enjoying stolen property; confirm his title. The stench of radical fraud poisons the air; make no effort to disinfect the government The sickening effluvia of radical rottenness is spreading over the country; make no effort to close the cesspools. The malarial poison of radicalism exudes from every pore of its loathsome organism; make no effort to neutralize it3 withering influence such is the theory of conspirators, and it is of vital importance to the existence of radicalism that it should be approved by the democratic party and by honest men of all parties. Hayes talks of wiping out the "color line," but he is vastly more interested in wiping out forever the line that Jehovah has drawn, dividing truth from perjury and integrity from fraudHe may succeed by the use of military force in obscuring the "color line." He may and doubtless will humble at the feet of the African the proud Caucasian. Having Mexicanized the government to the extent of obtaining office by fraud he may, under the plea of "universal education," be able to carry out his policy and mingle white and black blood, wool and hair, until the tallest archangel that adores and burns around the eternal throne will be unable to determine which is which. But he will not be able to wipe out the other lines any more than he will be able to convince the world that he is not a presidential fraud. There is to the reflecting mind something in the elevation of Hayes to the presidency calculated to arrest attention. . The antecedents of a party that made it possible to place a man in the presidential chair by fraudulent means becomes a legitimate subject for criticism and analytical discussion. In this connection it is well to remember that it commenced its career by declaring the constitution a "league with bell," and bas proceeded by regular gradations to a condition of demoralization where it could so manipulate fraud as to make it potential in every department of the government, and as a culminating outrage point to a president as its legitimate outgrowth.
HEATING CITIES DY UTE AW. How to live comfortable and for the least possible outlay of money is a matter that prudent people are dispose! to Investigate with all the ability they can command. A continuation of '"hard times" in thousands of instances places the victims of reduced incomes in a position where they are denied the privilege of choosing, and compels them to submit to its exactions nokns volens. Unfortunately the edicts of fashion impose the most burdensome taxes that civilized and Christian people are compelled to pay, but their effort in one direction to keep up appearances is not without its benefits, since in numerous instances the victims and votaries of the fickle and des potio' goddess are compelled to adopt a policy of retrenchment in matters beyond the reach of the Paul Pry gossiping brigade. There is also a remote possibility that common sense in the management of domestic affairs may eventually gain the ascendency, and so vitilize society that a person having an income of $500 a year will not be ashamed to confess that he is not as rich as his more fortunate neighbor who has $5,000 a year. If such an era should ever dawn upon the country pawn-brokers do a less thriving business, and the inmates of poor houses will be less numerous. Events now transpiring give reasonable assurances that the science of cheap living is to receive practical demonstrations at an early day. The fuel question is the one that seems first to have attracted the attention of capitalists, and the scheme under advisement is to heat entire cities by steam; to supply private residences and public houses with heat, and to perform the important service at a sum vastly less than private individuals can do it themselves. The idea is a capital one, and as practical as capital. Houses can as well be supplied with steam as with water or gas, and since the proposed new departure in heating houses is practical, and cheaper than the old methods, there need be no doubt about its general adoption in cities, great and small, in due time. The first city to try the experiment is Lockport, N. Y., and the New York Evening Post, in commenting upon the undertaking, says: There la really no problem to be solved In the matter, no experiment to be made. The problem were long ago wrought out In the heating of large public buildings. Inns and factories by st-am, and the new application of the old principle differs from the old one In ways which favor Its success. One set of workmen Is required for each battery of boilers, whether the work of the battery Is to heat a single building or a dozen blocks; and, if steam heat is cheaper than any other, when applied by IndlvtdualefTbrt to single buildings, of considerable size, the savin; roust be greater when a single set of workmen attend the boilers that furnish heat to all the houses within an area of half a mile square. There Is room for the adoption of this plan, profitably, here In New York and Brooklyn, and the time Is propitious for beginning now, while labor Is cheap, while the wetherls cold, and while household) are keenly alive to the annoyance of Are mating and fire maintenance In their dwellings. There Is no good reason 1tr postponing the matter to await the result of tne Lock port undertaking, as the use of steam In this way Is In no proper sense an experiment. Once introduced In these cities, steam will soon become as much a matter or count as water in now. The Bridgets and Oretchens, whone first quextlon now at the preliminary conference which precedes their engagements has reference to stationary tub and other modern improvements, may soon Insist also upon having steam heat, and landlords may find It Impossible to let houses into which this latest modern improvement has not been Introduced. We shall then live In a real age of steam. The company formed to supply Lockport with steam will make the experiment in that city under the following estimate: Estimated present cost for coal, wood, kindling, labor, repair of stoves and furnaces for warming the following district In the city of Lockport, being about one-half mile square, bounded as follows: Ewt by Washington street, south by High street, west by Saxon street, north by Caledonia street, Including the following: Four hundred and seventy-five dwellings at 1U0 ach (for fuel and labor) $17,500 One hundred and fifty stores at 1125 ech. - 18.T0O Two hundred and fifty office and rooms (over and about the stores) 12,000 Twelve churches at f 100 each (labor and fuel) 4,800 Ten hotels at 1700 each, four school at XJ00 each, one opera house... 10,000 Factories, shops, mill offices, etc 1,500 Lifetime of stoves and furnaces, for ten years, at 10 per cent.. 6,000
Total.. ....1100 500 Forcost of works for warming the above district with steam : Eighteen thousand four hnrdred and eighty feet of main pipe at tl per foot. I18,4S0 Building and smoke stack- 3,000 Hlx steam boilers and fixtures.. .......... 10.OUO LiOt for building and coal yard 3,0o0 Incidentals...... Ü.00U These figures indicate a large saving in the investments necessary to heat the district within the limits of the experiment, and with guarantees that when persons have made arrangements to use steam the price is not to be advanced, we see no reason why this new method of heating cities by contract may not work like a charm. The company formed to heat Lockport have put forth a small work, in which the plan for supplying steam for heating and doing all the various machine labor for cities and villages, domestic, mercantile, manufacturing, etc., is set forth. We extract the following, which is of interest: In cities or towns of from 3,000 to 8,000 Inhabitants, where the main business pori ion does not exceed one-half mile square, one wt of boilers located near the center of the place, with pipes leading ont In four directions, will do all the work. If the city Is one mile square four sets of boilers will be necessary. Tne muin pipes that leave the boilers will be four Inch, and will diminish to three, two and onehall, two, one and one-hal and one inch at the extreme end away fron the bolleis, the mains of four Inches continuing as the use along the lines 'nay demand. The main pipes are placed about four feet below the surface of the earth. The -ron pipes are flrt covered with asbetttos, and then put In wood pipes two Inches thick, leaving a space for cou fined air between the asbestos and wood. The outside pipe keeps all water and moisture from the steam pipe and prevents condensation. The pipes boih wood and 1'on, are put down In lengths of two feet, when they terminate in hollow, upright posts, firmly secured in the earth. Tue upper part of this post Is arranged so as to receive the ends of the su am pipes through stuffing boxes to allow the pipes to expand and contr ct without moving tne post. The pouts are also arranged so as to receive the euds of the service pipes either with or wlthou expansion joints. Vhe service pipe are not taken directly from the mains, but from the hollow supports, thus allowing them to be attached or detached from the support Instead of pas-lug through the outside wooden pipe to enter tho steam pipe, which eould not be done because the steam pipe expands and contracts, while the wooden pip does not This overcomes one of the most important " objections to the use of long lines of underground
team pipe. when branch pipes are tobe taken ntf. Another objection Las been condensation. This the asbestos reduces about three-fourths, and the air space and wooden pipe will reduce It still further. Tests made during the month of July, with very small pipe, prove that the steam may be carried threugh well protected pipes for a mile, and then be more economical than any other system. But it is thought that I, 'AX) or Ifiuo feet each way, making a half-mile square, is about aU that need be furnished from one location. This, even In a city with a population of 1,50, would include nearly all the buHlnens places, hotels, churches and schools. Buildings further out could be reached by a single line of t-mall pipe. Steam can be manufactured on a large scale for one-fourth the cost that it can on a mall scale, for warming a single dwelling or block. You can stop the expense at any time by turning the steam cock in your house, whereas In the use of a private boiler, when you shut on" the steam, combustion goes on Just the same. There is about 150 cubic feet of hot air per minute lost through the chimney. Underwriters are likely to favor this new idea of heating cities, since the liability for fires will be indefinitely reduced, a fact that will also interest owners of property, since with decreased liability there will be a corresponding reduction in the insurance tariff. WUT IN RADICALISM KOT DEAD AND BITIUED? It will be the wonder of posterity why it was that the radical party held sway for so long a period in the history of the nation. We unite our surprise with the generations to come. Of course, the fraud of the returning boards and the widespread corruption and fraud that the party leaders have made use of will account for much of the success that has attended the radical party, but we repeat that we unite our surprise with the wonder which will come with posterity at the tenacity of life exhibited by the radical party. Much of its strength is fictitious. It has never had a clear honest majority of the entire voters of the country. In the last national contest Mr. Hayes was defeated by an immense majority. If we take the white vote alone, the majority was perhaps one round million against him. We do not propose to discuss any of the reasons which may go to demonstrate why the radical party is alive to-day and why it bas existed for the last ten years but why with all the rottenness, corruption and fraud, which are synonymous with its very name, it is not buried and out of eight Why is it that its crimes and policies against the very culture, education, progress and civilization of the nineteenth century have not been sufficient to damn it politically and, we might add, more especially, socially? Why is it that it can crown all its many infamies with the stupendous fraud of the century, committed within the last few weeks, and not excite within its own party limits loathing and disgust? Glance for a moment over the history of the party for the last eight years. Look at its southern policy, concerning which the decent, conservative element of both parties has stood by powerless and aghast as it progressed, and held up Its hands in holy horror as it unfolded itself, and to-day the fraudulent president apologises for the radical southern policy by calling into his cabinet sonthern men who have been identified with the opposition, thereby endeavoring to make amends for the mistakes and errors of the previous administration. The radical party is its own accuser as to its unfriendly and uncharitable policy toward the Southern people. It acknowledges all the charges made against it by the democratic party by a confession of the dead failure of any profitable results in a single southern state, and by its complete change of policy and the calling in of southern dsmocrats to its consultations. The radical leaders wish now to conciliate the southern white element, get rid of the carpet-bagger, and win back the confidence of the negro, whom his carpet-bag radical brother had well nigh plundered of all his. earthly goods and betrayed his confidence as well. Then if we return to the surroundings of the party administration at Washington we find rings within rings, fraud within fraud, corruption without aud corruption within, and from thence spreading throughout the entire country we find the same kind of corruption fraud and rascality pervading and permeating everything and everybody with their influence. Passing all these things by, we have witnessed within the last few days the concentration of villainy and corruption and their final triumph and consummation in the seating of a bogui president in a chair unsullied by at least the corruptions of the hustings and the ballot-box. All of the predecessors of the present fraudulent president have been at least elected fairly before the people, which is one of the distinguishing features between Hayes's election and the long honorable line of his predecessors. Now then, why is it that radicalism, with such a record, is not dead and rotting away with its kindred oirt and nastiness? The solution, partly, to our mind is because ther j is in the radical party a large, respectable, moral, decent, religions element attached to it because of the attractions of some of its early founders, men like Lincoln, Chase, Sumner and Greeley, who can not cut loose from it, although knowing the corruption of its present leaders. Then there is a large element which refuses to believe any evil concerning it; who confine their readings and sources of information to radical organs of the standing of the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and the cmaller, less influential provincial press; who positively will not inform themselves as to the moral and social status of their party. This class may be called an intelligent-ignorant claxs. The moment you ask them if they have read such an article (naming something in connection with it) in any prominent democratic paper, the answer, as if insulted, will be: "No; I never read tmi paper;" and upon close questioning you will find thst the only paper read is a radical sheet, with stories of the Eliza Pinkston class, an i juri fications of the late radical returning board rascalities, etc., etc. Whether we have given the true reason or not of the existing vitality of the radical party certain It is tha posterity, in reading the iiiatoryof this period, will wonder why has radicalism existed so long with its interniixabte catalogue of crime, rascality, fraud and corruption.
THE SENTINEL AND TUB DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF IX DIANA. ' The democratic party was not defeated on on the 7 th day of November last Nothing in truth is more luminous, nothing in justice more inflexible, nothing in law more secure than the fact that on that day the American people, by an overwhelming popular electoral majority, elected Tilden and Hendricks president and vice president of the United States; and there is nothing in the records of crime more clearly established than the fact that the democratic party has been robbed of its victory by means which the more they are examined the more infamous do they appear. The democratic party was not defeated, but robbed. The deformities of the transaction are being brought out more distinctly every day. Some new feature for detestation makes its appearance; some undiscovered perjury, like a deep sea monster thrown upon the beach, attracts attention and elicits expressions of horror. The great crime of the conspirators unceasingly grows in its hideous proportions and its dark and damning nhadow lengthens and deepens until, like the Egyptian plague, the darkness can be felt The democratic party, though robbed of its victory, is neither demoralized nor disheartened neither broken nor bent. Its sublime spirit is not subdued. The calumnies of the venal, the vulgar and the vile will not change its purposes. Democrats will not consent to be numbered among the stall fed votaries of the radical conspiracy; they will not be found with the venal mob, cringing and fawning for crumbs that fall from a table around which sit men whose right to rule is derived from their crimes; whose souls are like cages of unclean birds, and whose highest ambition it is to colonize crime in every department of the government and reconcile the people to the rule by professions of virtue that inBult heaven, and with a profligacy of opulence characteristic of Satan, take the people to the highest elevations of their frauds "and offer the wealth to which they have no title if they will fall down and worship Hayes. It is said that the country now needs rest However true this may be it is not more true than that the country has required rest since the radical party obtained possession of the government When Grant was overrunning states with his troops and Morton was waving his bloody shirt The country needed rest, but there was no rest for it When southern states were trying to relieve themselves of the infamous carpet bag incubus, that rest and prosperity might be obtained, neither was vouchsafed by the radical party. What the infernal crew wanted was political, social and business chaos that they might in the midst of confusion perfect their plans for the success of fraud, and now, when crime has triumphed, and when the conspirators are enjoying the stolen property, they demand that they shall rest undisturbed in its possession, and that there shall be a guaji-indorsement of their crimes. With this granted, the conspirators gain every thing and the country loses every thing. With this granted, perjury walks the highways of national affairs as proudly as truth, and J. Madison Wells becomes the peer of the citizen whose life has been devoted to every pa tri. otic virtue. Grant this and the damned spots of crime which rest upon Hayes are obscured, and every motive to labor for the re-enthronement of truth and honor in the management of governmental affairs is silenced. On the contrary, what is wanted now is to keep before the people the monstrous crimes of the radical party, by which the people are defrauded of their choice of rulers as declared at the ballot-box on the 7th day of November, 1876. The indignation of the people should not slumber for a day or an hour. The wheels of time will very soon bring around another day of trial. Indiana will at no distant period marshal her forces to determine whether Oliver P. Morton shall longer disgrace the state in the senate chamber of the nation, or whether Daniel W. Voorhees shall take his place, and by his matchless eloquence, integrity of character and comprehensive statesmanship, atone in some measure at least for the foul contaminations of bloody-shirtism. The Sentinel has distinctly mapped out its policy. It will make no compromises with the party that has obtained power by fraud. It will ceaselessly and fearlessly wage war upon credentials obtained by perjury. It will not hesitate to associate R. B. Hayes, the fraudulent president, with J. Madison Wells and the entire crime blackened crew from whose hands he accepted office. We are satisfied that this policy every democratic and independent journal in the country will sooner or later adopt It can not be otherwise. The alternatives are, indorse radical crimes or denounce them, and silence will be accepted as an indorsement We have abundant reasons for knowing that the Sentinel is in harmony with the democratic masses of Indiana. These words cf cheer and substantial tokens of appreciation strengthen our purposes to make the Sentinel reflect their sentiments, and become,' in the future : even more than in the past, a potential agent in moulding public sentiment into inflexible hostility to a party that conceived the crime of usurping the government, and in defiance of the public will as declared at the polls, inaugurated R B. Hayes as president, and established fraud in the chair of the chief executive of the country. We ask democrats in every county, town, village and hamlet to strengthen our hands by increasing the circulation of the Sentinel. Give us your support and we will give you back in scripture measure, pressed down and running over, evidences that in the Sentinel the unmitigated scorn of fraud that democrats feel is fully represented, and this we will do until the inexorable sentence of
the people shall again condemn t!oe radical party for its crimes, its follies ar.d its incompetency. r TUB STATU llOtwE. The indications now are that the state U to have the necessary legislation in regard to building a new state house. The house bill went through the senate yesterday with several amendments, but the bill as it finally passed the senate is substantially as it came from the house, the amendments being chiefly for additional guarantees of faithful performance, of trusts committed to those who may have charge of matters connected with the enterprise. This being the fact, we calculate that the house will promptly agree to the amendments and place the important matter beyond controversey. With the state house bill passed, we are inclined to regard the acts of the legislature, in regular and pecial session, well calculated to give the members highly flattering retentions when they return to their constituents. The Sentinel has no cause of complaint It has taken special interest in several measures, and its views have been most satisfactorily indorsed by the legislature. That these measures will bear good fruit we do not doubt, and with the friends in both branches of the general assembly we are willing to stand by the record. Where is old Ben Butler's spot in the situation now? We have been trying to locate him. He has begun to flit through Washington again; in and out of the departments, advising for or against cabinet appointments, etc. We wonder where he will plant his weary foot Ben is a raraavx. There has been no one in the past just like him, nor have we any promise as to the future. With him, we fear, will die teat peculiar, highly original type of the American of which old Ben seems to be the only specimen.
Hayes will make a supreme judge pretty soon. He will probably have an eye to future returning board requirements. Judas Bradley answers for the present, but he may be in before the present fraud's successor has to be counted in. CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. XLV. Congress Special Session. Tuesday, March 6. Senate. Considerable time was consumed to day in the consideration of the credentials of L. Q. C. Lamar, of Mississippi. Morton, Blaine and others of the radical gang did all In their power to prevent his being sworn In, but all their efforts were thro a n away, as the senate voted that he was legally elected, and he was therefore sworn In. The credentials of Kellogg were then brought and discussed, and before the matter came to a vote the senate adjourned until to-morrow. WEnsEanAT, March 7. Sknatk. Shortly after the opening of the session to-day the discussion on the admittance Of W. P. Ke logg as a senator from Louisiana was taken np, and Mr -Bayard argued against him taking the oath and in favor of his credentials being referred to the committee. Mr. Blaine spoke In favor of Kellogg, Packard and the returning board. Morton made one of his bloody shirt speeches In favor of Kellogg's being sworn In, but his credentials were finally referred to the committee on privileges and elections. Senator-elect Grover was in the chamber ready to take the oath of office, bnt Mr. Mitchell offered objections to his being worn in, and pendlug the discussion the senate went into executive session, and when the doors were opened adjourned until tomorrow. Thursday, March 8. Senate. The discussion on the admittance of Governor Orover from Oregon was taken up to-day where it was left off yesterday. Mr. Conkllng spoke at length In favor of G rover's admittance, and was followed by Blaine, Morton and others. The motion to swear him In was then voted on and passed, and he took the oath and returned to his seat. There was no other business of importance transacted, and the senate ad Journed. Friday, March I. Sen ate. There was no business transacted In the senate to-day of any special Importance, beyond the appointment of the standing and special committees. After they were appointed the senate went into executive session, and when the doors were reopened adjourned until to-morrow. Saturday, March 10. Sejatk. There was nothing done In the senate to-day except the confirmation of the cabinet nominations sent to them several days since, and adjournment was taken until Tuesday morning 10 o'clock. That nasal twang, it is catarrh; cure it at once, before it shows on your face, by Dr. J. H. McLean's Catarrh Snuff. It soothes irritation, cures sores in the nose, face or skin. Trial boxes, 50 cents, by mail. Dr. J. H. McLean, 314 Chestnut street, St Louis. A beautiful woman must be healthy, and to continue heilthy and beautiful you must take Dr. J. H. Mclean's Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier. It imparts tone and flush to the skin, strength, vigor and pure blood. Dr. J. H. McLean's office, 314 Chestnut street. St Louis, Mo. That tickling in the nose, stop it before it becomes catarrh, by Dr. J. H McLean's Celebrated Catarrh Snuff; it soothes and allays irritation, it cures sores in the nose or skin and removes pimples off the face. Trial boxes, 50 cents, by mail. Dr. J. IL McLean, 314 Chestnut street St Louis. You say consumption can not be cured. -It can, by this new principle, new way. Dr. J. H. McLean's Cough and Lung Healing Globules. The healing gas generated when sucking them being inhaled, stop tubercula. irritation and cure coughs, colds, hoarseness,, consumption or any disease, throat or lung. Trial boxes, by mail, 25 cents. Dr. J. H. McLean's office, 311 Chestnut street, St Louis, Mo. If you are to marry a delicate, pale and' sickly lady, make her take Dr. J. H. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier; it vitalizes and purifies the blood, 8trengthensand invigorates, causes the rich blood to the cheek again. Dr. J. IL McLean, 314 Chestnut street, St. Louis. Mo. Sore noses, catarrh, sore throat, a srrre cure is Dr. J. II. McLean's Catarrh Snuff. It is a new antisceptic principle; never fails. Trial boxes, by mail. 50 cents. Dr. J. H. McLean, 314 Chestnut street, St Louis, Mo.
