Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1879 — Page 4
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WBTESD AY, NOVEMBER 26, T 1879.
WITH SUPPLEMENT.
YitNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2G. CaKm general 19 better than being railroad conductor. Grant ia still in luck. Jay Gould ia locking borns with VanderVilt. It they were both angsla the world would be the better off by the change. Grant and the Canal ia the favorite headline now. For Heaven's sake let Grant have something to do that Will give him living. To orr Grant out ol politics, fc3 ia te be made captal steneral with pay at $50O0O a year. And tt ia -reported that Democrats favor the boom. Grant uaderatanda horse. He talks howe fluently stnd dog, passably. As a matter of course, he should be madecaptatn general with $6O00 afvar. J-phh Shbbmas has no right to be secretory of the treasury. His whole official life, in his present position, has bee a indirect violation -of law. He is likely to be investigated. TEtatarrs continue to flow in upon General Grant. The Utest ia from the manager of a Tj&Io theater, who ssnds a epleodilset of herness ornamented with gold aodiicquered. A-mbttjsouished soldier in the late war, in high esteem in Indiana, is emphatically opposed to creating a special military office for Grant at a salary of $59,000, or any other amount. Biilksap, we notice, had a seat at the Grant banquet in Chicago while Grant's brother, Orville, seedy and played out generally, loafed around the 'corridors of the hotel trying to get a glitnspe of his brother. Admiral Ammen is at the kead of the Xicaraugnan canal boom for Grant If $80,-090-,000'is subscribed. Grant will take hold; but Ammen wants to run it up to $100,000,000. That done, Grant will say Ammen and sail into the ditch. Pennsylvania Democrats want Hancock because he belongs to their State. If that is to be the cry, every State in the Union may want a candidate for president. When so niairy are called, there is danger that none will be chosen. Ma. Compteoli.ee Kicox estimates the money In the country of all descriptions at $1,165,553,504, and shows by hia report that on the 14th of June latt the total deposit? in the banks of the United States, of all descriptions, amounted te $1,893,520,000 that is to say, there was on deposit $727,963,496 more mosey than-ibere was in the country. Viry are sot some of the Southern negroes sent to Ohio? During the recent campaign the Cincinnati Ilepublican press unanimously agreed and published that times were never so good. Gold was paid out to the workmen in the iron regions a day or two before election, it was S3 plentiful. In fact, everything was booming. Why can not the negroes find homes there? Tbejxdzatte and Commercial might start "the boom" in that direction. SMi-ocGfiioKAU.r, if not oftaner, we hear thai some distinguished IS jut tier n Democrat has concluded to abandon the Democratic petty, join ihe-Republicans and declare for Grant. Toe name of the distinguished Democrat who has gone over, or. who is getting ready to go, is always withheld, but as peeudo Democratic organs deal extensively in such kind otlitjratare, tie public Ulead to believe that - the smoke means fire, and just so far as the delation passes for reality, the work of demorsljestiou extends. It is about time for Dimocritx papers to set down upon-this sort of nonsense. Ssnator McDonald informs us that fee will leave Indianapolis on Friday for Washington. He goes to Chicago to-iey on business, but will be in the city again on Therad&y. The senator does not antieipats a stormy session of Congress. Deaiocrcts, North and South, wfL doubtless improve the occasion for a clear understanding of he . situation, aud tobringaboat harmooy La toe party. Senator McDonald baa very pro nounced views upon tie possib.l ties and probabilities of the ecccess of Democratic aspiraata for presidents honor?, and iiis reasons for believing, tiat Mr. Hendricfcede the man for the nomination are exceedingly -cogent. - .NsGReca are coming ut Indiana from oil .directions. -Yesterday four emigrant passed through the city from Missouri, ess route for Columbus, Bartholomew county., And in. cenversatioa with ' a gentleman of Chia cityrf iid that many cure negroes from' Missouri were coming to . Indiana. The in sllcations are that Ladiana ic to be a sort of negro roost for the benefit o the Rjpublicao j arjy. ,The white farm, hands of ladiana may make their riinda to stand aside and cive-the negroes a' chance. Xhe Republican party wants votes, and wit have them if talf.the white laborem starve to death as a resulted its efforts to secure them. ar; told continually that the country baa too much .money, nd . that the green backs ought to. ba retired. We ass also toSd thet!theTtionalank, if the .mattr of circulaiion ia left to ,th4r discretion, wiU regulate the volume of cacieney to.meet tbc demands of egitimaK-e trade, and, (trerefore, the danger f iqfUtion will be avoided Asa maUar.of course this Is all bosh. It is a statement la the interest of tae National banks, and shews .very . conaj naively the desire of those who mau it ia to strengthen the National bank power. Under the opwatiou of what was kao-ra as the 89 per csot latue of the specie resumption act, tke vol a me of green be is was reduced from $32 000,0 J on January i( 175, to .$36,631,900 on June 1, 178, co t'c -ing (he currency t the amount ji $3 318 -103. Tois80 per sQt. eUvj.44 wai repele-J, and the repealing aet went tito effect Juoe1, 1878, eines which time tie amouat of greenback in circulation has remained ucxnolested. As aa evideaee of the wisdom of the repealing act which arreet id contract on, and demonstrate tiat the country not only had not too muoh paper ia circulation, bat not tnws it if ilsteJ thi from the pw-
ags of the 80 per cent repealing act, May 31, 1878, to the 1st of Novembe,' f the addlUonal circulation issaed to Nrional banks was $35,000,000. I! this additional circulation had not been .-' required to transact the ' legitimate ' business of the country, the ' banks, would not have issued it 'and it may be assumed, that
if, with the.' retention of greenbacks to the amount of $316,681 900, the National banks still found it necessary to extend their circulatioji $36,000,000, they would have extended. It still further to take the place of even 'greenback withdrawn from circulations, and that now, instead of having, say, $3Pe.,'000,000 of National bank paper in circulation, the amount would have been exmnded to nearly $700,000,000 and the peo ple would be taxed more than twice as much as at present to support National banks. This thing of having a paper money upon which the people pay a tax of from 4 to 6 per cent, when it is practicable to have a better currency without acy tax, does not strike the average mind as faultless financiering. COMPTROLLER KONX S STATEMENT. The report of Comptroller Knox stales that "the total number of National banks organoid from the estiblishent of the National banking system, February 25, 1363, to November 1, of the present year, is 2,438. Of these 307 have gone into voluntary liquidation by the vole of shareholders owning twe-thirds of their respective capitals, and 81 have been placed in the hands of receivers, for the purpose of closing up their affairs, leaving 2,050 in operation at the date last named. Since the list annual report 38 banks have been organized with an aggregate authorized capital of $3,595,000, to which $2,390,440 in circulating notes have been issued. Thirty-sight banks, with an aggregate capital of $4,450,000, have voluntarily discontinued business within the same period, and eight banks have failed, having a total capital cf $1,030,000. The insolvent banks include two, with a capiUl of $700,000, which failed after having previously gone into voluntary liquidation." The following table exhibits the aggregate average capital and deposits on May 31, 1879. of all classes of banks other than National and the capital and deposits of the National banks on June 14: t 3 t 3 Jk m J Z: : p ! : I a : I H: ! " : 5 5 : 0 ST 55 O 2 13 SIS 813 3 15 - S 1 2 52 J. I 3r C - 4 9 S 1 s V CO o H o 9 S? a i s 3 . 5cscl '"Theold forms of tab es, giving the autouiit ad kinds of eurreooy ia circulation, are nowobsolete, aad must be eaperscded by cewones, which shall include notn!y the pape? currency but eso the cola of the country. The total aacount of the circulating mediuaa can not, for this roe sod, be berecfter accurately given, such total being effected by estimates ofOhe amount of coin in the country. The letter amouat Is 6atimateiby the director f the mint to have been- $427,000 on theilstday of November ia thisyeor. of whii amount $121,000,000 as in silver coin. If this estimate is correct, the circulating medium on that date was composed as fulSows: Treaacry noKwatstandI.;: ........! 681,018 NalMieal bank ei.lea ouuiutuuing..... xc,l8i,4is Uula Ui Iho inweary, lomteertifljuUM helai y tne baas 1AIPC0.19J eiiver Ju (be tr.8Uiy... oti-jliiuai Coin la. Iho bankM, (Oatobuc'2) . ti!3,7il JuUuu:d emuuxtt of cola Held by the people ... 23U-8 501 Tot! ................ ....l,lt,tt515 The estimated total currency of the country on November d thui appeao to have beta more than $1.15,000,000 riich ampuntis at least ,$380,000,4(00 in exceu of ibe higbact point oached between theeasipenslon.afid the resumption of specie f.'xycaent." , iSENA.T0ad02IKLlK.'. .It is gratifying to t.uow that the devil -is a&er ConkUng. He it now, though only $0 y3rsof aga,iin adilap&dataioondltion. Ee hac for yea be cultivated partisan oancers ia hia&eart, seeUonat carbuncles ok his soul, fanatical haso stys in bis eyes. Northern white swelliocs in his feints, tbloody shirt malignity m i: is heart, and at Asst. like Ei7Pt he i da!ng. His i'lood ia shin ; his hair - js Rray; his consonance iias nn dergono a cbange; at? .eyas have lost the; luster; .the kink ia hia oarl has disappeared, and Conkling lea wreck. His . onishmaat is deserved. Erry kick.te has received ajs justly due, an 1 from this time forward he will sink until he will reack the deq- sea soKidiogs of the peopleVcontew p; Toe Washin(ton oorrepondent of the Boston Post say : Speaeinxof Senator Cookllng, I aaw hJa the dx that be arrlvei Jin Wiiblagfju. it will be aecolleoled that Ih4 day ba ora he ai reported dead be rode from the rail ead aui tion to UTurmleyV, where he always stop, with Mr. Cacrofi, the historian. It Uaur pricing to aoe how tiwevenls of the aoiaiuvr ana his lllaena have worn upon htm. He certainly loots It) years older tutu he did the day tbat Con great adj mrned. HI faoe, instead of being ruddy aillihoa was. Jb almost of a leaden oroplexloo, and he looks not only older than he teemed last evasion, but older than he really is. CoaeUo.it is not aa old ana. He was oaly bo on the 30tb of last
month, and Mr. Bayard Is a year older, and yet appears much , younger. Something baa agi Conkllog. He baa lived not the moat wholesome of lives. It matters not whether he was criminal lu his Intimacy with Mrs. Bprague or not; If bo was not, he strove to make it appear thtt he was, and It Is a cowardly and despicable man who will do what be can to bring pnblte scorn upon the daughter of the dub wbo was chief Justice of the United States, and more than all, bis friend, and who was tne wife of another friend. The members of bit profession in the Senate loudly protested against the public exhibitions that Mr. Conklinj was constantly making of his intimacy with Mra.ipragne; but the New York senator seemed to glory in the notoriety of which he was the cue, and seems only to have been brought to a reat'ztnj sense of the risk he was running by the shotgun at Canonchet. All this and the outcry at his political methods must have helped to bring the gray hairs to Confclinj's head. Ha has not been happy at home, and he has not met with maoh favor abroad. Ho has had nothing bat power. No one hai loved htm, and very few have respected him, for anything but his Intellect and his strength. A score of senators, who sit on both sides of the ohamber, will not speak to him, and his friendships la the Sen ate are with the lawyers, who love him professionally, and with the men who want axes ground, and who can help him grind his axes He looks as though he beau to realize the life he leads, and the reputation he has. It may be possible for some -other Republican, Radical, bloody-shirt conspirator to reach a fame more essentially nefarious, but we doubt it Blaine and Sherman and the rest of the vile crew may prudently read Conkling's history, contemp'ate their own odious record, and realize th9r doom.
WILLIAM B. ENGLISH. There Is one position for which the Times thinks Mr. English eminunfy fitted, and whicn Is a stepping Btons to political preierment, and that is ouairman nf the ltemucratlc S'te Central commute. He is a gentleman of large political experience; ia a good organizer; has tho leisure to give it the required attention; la a good inaich-for John New, the Kepablioaii chalimau, and last, though not leant, has abundance of the sinews required lor a political campaign. How does the suggestion of the ri uea suit the Indianapolis Journal? Latayelte Time?. We don't know how the suggett ion will suit the Indianapolis Journal, but we can assure the Times that It suit! the SaLtlnel. If Mr. English can be lnducsi to accapt the chairmanship, our word for it there will not be enough North Carolina negroes imported into the State to rob her bans fide citizens of their true voice and will. To change the politic! of a State in a pre idect'al year by such a plct as is proposed, and is now being pushed lot) effect ia Indiana, would be infia tely worse than the disfranchisement of her people. Disfranchisement wool! simply rob tbe Stare of it) voice in the e' action, while the change which the Radical conspirators propose, through the Eaeaus ot Imporbag negroec, would give tk-s vote of the State against its own will as expressed by the honest majority. We -don't expect Jud-e-Martindale, P. M. HoKoway, P. M. laogsdale, or the deeperatecang of conspirators generally, to heed our ad vlo, but as a Blatter of duty we will nevorthtless ssyfesyou, gentlemen, it won't do, and you bad hetter stop better not attempt any further this wicked robbery of the sacred will of the people. To colon' ze American negroes in Africa has been a favorite dream of some very distinguished statesmen for many years. But the project has nercr worked satisfactorily. Liberia has been failure from the beginning, and will be 43 the end. The subject Is brought Into prominence again by the arrival in New York ot the bark Monrovia, which left Monrovia onCeptember 21, and with 33 negroes who were a part of the Ill-starred passengers who called from South Carolina for the Liberiau'-llepublic on Easter Sunday, K7S, on the bark Azor. The Azor took out 370 exodists. &Z these 29 died on the -voyage out. Some 40 of the remainder k-a?e been eftle to get back to the United Slates.; and of the remaining '300 and fiyer, only -60 ere alive. Most of the poor deluded negroes were paupers when they arrived 01 the coast of Africa. "They had no food, shelter, nor medicine, exeept what was inetqoete)y doled out by the Government or by the poor -settlers of Monrovia. The result is that they aave perished fcy scores until only aemnant ot the band remains. The srcvivors are sow inured W the climate, and tbc most of tLem are at lest self supporting. But not oee of them 4s earning more tbaa toe scantiest subsistease." The retained Begooes give a deplorable account of thoir ,joameyings in Africa, aqd tbay say "that every passenger of the Azjr paid, beside h or her passage mauey, for provisions for a month's voyage end for six months' provisions after landing-ia 'Liberia. The money was paid to the association he fere the emlxcants embarked atharleetou,and theystillshow receipts far it. When they landed at Monrovia the provisions were distributed and there was found to be osiy a scant three weeks' supply. The unfortunate atrangers, in a far-od land, tave been too poor and miserable to trumpet their wrongs or to make investigation, and none has been attempted by their friends on this side the water. -Bat they claim Uiat there has been foul play somewhere and that their money has been ralsaappropriated. They were .promistd shelter for six months and they had paid for six months' food. fy that tme they .ex pec ted te have worn out the ill .3tcts of the climate and to have Accustomed themselves to their surroundines and found some steady means of support." These poar, deluded negroes were comfortable in fljuth-Corolioa. They itere in health; ttiete wasplenty of work forevery oneof them, bat some Langsdale. red hot (or the good of the ttegrq, enticed them aJiy from health, home, friends aad life to sickness, perils, sbirva too and death. This devilish work i a'tll goiag forward. Huudreds within the past year have euSared all the horrors of privation, persecution, siexnees, starvation and death ia Kinsai, and the poor emaciated victims of &-publicn conspirators and faoa ice are s'ill suff.-riog and dying in Kansas. Aod now these m:guidd negroes are to be brought to Indiana where tLey are not wanted from StaUs where tby can live in com'ort. They are coming to be supported by cbtrity, cooling to fr. n, to larve, to dng out a miserable existence; because the Republican party want to use tbt-nt for voting machines. The men who ere engaged in the business are more erual than death. They are men of the same ty ps as tbose wbo obtained the confidence of the Southern negro to rob them of their last dollar tbroiDb the agency of the Freed man's
Savings bank. They belong to the class of men who for year kept the South in trouble, by exciting tho prejudices of the negroes against the whites, that murder might vitalize their bloody shirt baraDgues. They are the implacable enemies of whites and blacks, and their nefarious schemes should be exposed. Washington dUpatcbes continue to announce the arrival of Southern negroes at that point bound for Iadiana, and without any money mark it dead broke . Now, what sort of a population is this for Indiana? Are these the sort of emigrants that Langsdale, ot Greencsatle, says are wanted in Indiana to tickle the 8011?' As soon as they reach Washington, the Radicals there make np a purse and ship them to Indiana. Why Indiana? Pennsylvania is only 100 miles away, and Ohio much nearer than Indiana, but money is raised to send a lot ot negro paupers without a cent of money to Indiana. Is not this scheme on the part of Republicans very plain? Djes anyone doubt why they are sent here? A special from Wash ington, In the Cincinnati Commercial of only last Saturday, announces the arrival of another batch from North Carolina bound for Indiana. The dispatch states that homes will be provided for them. Some were without any money, but in the exact words of the dispatch, "tjk necessnrj amount uas raised" that they might continue their journey. White people of Indiana, how do you like this last spread of the Radical feat?
GESEHAL NOTE. Horatio Seymour will b To next Mar. ' Senator Bayard was 51 on the 29th of last month. Texas would make 35 States the size of Massachusetts. E-Lx hundred Venetians have reached Genoa on their way to the United States. One bundred and fifty-two car loads of pig metal ore were received in rittiiburg in one day. One of ozr local coal firms Interested In Clay county mines, recently sold 600 car loads of block coal to Chicago. Out of a voting population of 44,763 In Fan Francltco23,ue8 are foreign born. Kearney's Influence Is thus partly explained. The Greenback vote at State elections this year has been only about one-third of what it was at the State elections last year. Dkkkis Kearney, the agitator, lias been arrested In Saa Francisco on a charts of attempting to extort money from a prisoner. Mk. MooliY and Mr. Sankey Intend to maintain revival work in St. Louts all winter. Tbey will open their meetings there In about two weeaa. Reprcsshtativb Alexander H. Stephens (Dein.) aaysepeniy that in the next presidential canvass he will vote for Grant before he will vote for Tilde n. Comptroller Knox, of the treasury department, se It is said, will, la his coming report, advises tie complete wKXidruwal and destruc lion of the greenbacks. A earaEASE of 20,000-cows la reported in Ireland -this year as compared with last. Railroad toooks show a large falling off la the amount of butter shipped. The Richmond (Va.) State (Ind. Dene.) asserts that "all these professions from the Soclh of a desire fr Grant, on the part of the 'Democrats, are hypocritical." -Cattle in considerable numbers are being -chipped from Minnesota to Iowa, to be tatted tpon the big corn crop. In llliuols feeders are -picking up ellgilrh lota for the same pnrpose. The manufacture of the little round Dctou eheene, made f n sweet milk, so popular in he retail trade ia cities, weighing liom three and one-half to four pounds each, U being -andertaxen in lib nois. The czar has nice Utile income a trifle of 125,100 a day. saltan gets f 18,000 a day, the emperor of Austria 110,000, the eatpeior olOer many fS,'4X, the king of Italy tt,4u0 and the Icing of the Belgians I1.BI3. We ahali watch with curiosity this opening fight of the Norhorn stalwart od the South ern. Bourbons for the body of tienera! Jrant. But we auxpert the stalwarts wtil fee-bMten in the end. Newiork Herald; A BtncHEK In York county, Pennsylvania while cuttlogiTounds from a Slaughters! steer recently, toaai in the beef a gula dollar, date at 18a2. By thenoTearaoce of tbeflpaco-ln which It was inclosed it most have been -taere for some time. A certain amount of salary is -eefe-agalnst -creditors to arc arrled man la Florida, tin or der to taKe adriutago of this law, a BUohn'a .river stoamboet captain hastily -married a woman to wuotn. he had previously -been perlect atranger. TiiE cost of transporting a bushel of -wheat from Chicago to.lilverpool or daKgow -varies brt little from 20 ceats; and 100 pounds of bacon put into the cars at Chicago and landed at the dock of Liverpool cots 47 ant for freight charges. An intelligent ia ldent of Havana mys.that Cuka ia the graverard of Spain, and a more 4)8 fitting name than "Pearl of the Antilles." Ia one cemetery near the capital tiS.SJd Interments have been made within 10 years, and In a neighboring burial ground over 10.0(A). ' The New York World says let Messrs. Blaine and Hamlin howl afoud that they "will submit Ubdefeat, but not to robbery." Il'sapity that these hlgh-souta! beings, when their ta ty was defeated three years ago, didn't counsel kubmuwlon lnetead of assisting In robbery. Everv day or two some political trump, some buugry offloe seeker from the Sooth, earns up ia Washington, and tells a hardjpuxhod neauipaper man that the South made a great mistake ia not coddling Grant when he was ia bhe White House. Philadelphia Times. ' . - r ITuat Qrantand an empire, a splendid govruA eHt and a foreign war, are familiar topics of speculation in the Booth, Is an undoubted fact, and further, it is true, that a considerable sectioo of the Southern mind regards Ibem iChieomplacenei, If not with hope. CourierJournal. - . Dual mo tbe week ending last Friday there arrived at New Yorfe 2(2 vessels, including 8d at araera, 2 ships, lis barks, 88 brigs and 82 aetaooners. This la the greatest number that ever arrived la New Yok la any one week. In one day aone arrivals amounted to U vessels. Vabiocs statistics from every leading branch of Industry allow a great improvement In the affaire of the coo u try, and the-e reasarlng omens promise to be peraiauent There Is every pros Dec t tnat woralogmen will soon experience much better times than they enJoyed lor years. In a conversation with several of our leading grocers recently, we gather the Information tbat Indianapolis wholesale dealers are selling Irom four to lour and a half millions of groceiies annually. This Is rather a favorable repor, we should think. This Includes only tho tsbacoue and c'gars which they Inci
dentally sell without 5,ay special eftott. Ihe large sales of e-claaive)y wholesale Ubacco dealers are, 06 1 included in this estimate. Chandler spent $37,000 of his own money to get Hayes In the White House, but the Republican National committee never reimbursed him. Horatio Seymour, Jr., who was elected elate engineer at the late election In New York, and the only man elected by tbe Democrats, is a nephew of S-nator Cockling. There are in Worcester, Mass., 1,200 women who own property assessed at 4 ,500 ,000, yet out of all the women in the city only 100 have registered so as to be able to vote at the scnool elections. Another Southern outrage is added to the list. Congressman John Kenna, Democrat, of Charleston, W. Va., saw an exhausted negro struggling in the river, a few days ago, and, swimming out to Ihe drowning man, saved him. Senator Conk lino is described as being "still fresh and beautiful" when he appeared before the Supreme Court In Washington, on Wednesday. He seemed to be in perfect health. His hair was more unkempt than usual, but he wore his light bine necktie, and argued his case with vigor and tact. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch says that real union, real peace, real nationality, real patriotism, real civil service and revenue reform, real economy and real self-government will be the Democratic watch-words next year, against the one-man power, fraud, force and a sham Republic and a sham Republican party. The following are shipments of live stock
and Iresh meats from Hew York to Europe last Saturday : By the Fran ce, for London, 240 head of cattle; by the Anchorla, for Glasgow, 2,177 quarters of beef and 50) carcasses of mutton ; by the Victoria, for London, 09 head of cattle; by the City of Berlin, for Liverpool, 100 tons of beef. Governor IIoyt, of Pennsylvania, has the merit of perfect frankness. He announces that he is not only a third-termer, but a fourth-termer. lie Is or Grant now, and sais he will be for him also In Wby should he not continue to be for Grant as long as Grant lives? The governor manifestly desires to be considered when the honors of the new empire come to be distributed. Ddribg the last mouth the most encourag ing reports have been received from all parts, showing great activity and largely increased exports. In San Francisco during October these amounted to nearly .OOJ.OOJ in the article of wheat alone. In many years this bus not been equaled. From Bavannah there was shipped to Liverpool one week ago tbe largest cargo of cotton ever shipped to that port, con sisting of 6,500 bales. In Angusta, in the same State, there was an increase In the price of cotton over the corresponding period of last year of over $100,000, chiefly Irom better prices. Ok Ch irlea F. Browne (Artemus Ward) the Voice, of Cleveland. says that once at Vincennes, Ind .where be bad been lecturing, "he was grossly Insulted by a very consequential depot baggage master. This fellow, out of a deelre to show bis authority ,had used him very roughly on some trilling pretext. Browne meditated revenge, and walked np and down tbe platform of the depot for fully IS minutes In deep study. Suddenly a basket of eggs attracthis attention, and he bought about a dozen of them. He put three or four lu his own pockets, and gave as many to two friends wbo were with him. Then he took them Into the baggage car and awaited his opportunity. In a few moments the train began to move, and immediately Browne and his friends made a target of that wan, tbe first egg bluing him en the none, and the others decorating him at rregular intervals. Oaeof the persons who eaw the occurrence lays that the look on the baggage master's face as the shower of eggs came upon him Is indescribable. Browne was la his happiest snood for the remainder or the trip, and aprared entirely satisfied with his revenge. rilK STATE I'KKSS. The Starke County Ledger says: Forevery negro Imported into this State by the Kepotollcau age nia the party will lose Iwo Republican votes. Because aa a oiit-euaenpe white werklugmen will be tbrowa out of employment to make room lor tho negroes, and ail tor t ke pnrpose of getting tnelr votes atour next election, it will b aceu when the Mine eninea whether the- uoor white Knpubilpans will be wlhlog to slant! bxck and become beg gars foreom- tning to uo ia oroer 10 put nearo Ueuabllcan Ituooiters Into office- We would like to hear an expression from oar Republican exebanRt-s lu Tt Kurd to this matter, if there lauo in the well he ought to be got out. TheSentine 1 has "gof'ihe dog out. Bead the Sentinel of Monday morning, November 21. The dog is a black aud tan. The'3rawfordsvllle Review says: Let JO0 or 300 colored men, with tbelr raiiillkxi, be iirougni in'o mis eoaacy tor tne purpose of voting tbe R(Mibltcan ticket next lan. 10 oring of-guiuiiuu upon uiu isuoTra now with us, for ihe taxpayers t keep from Hlarvtcg and trees n, ud tbe Journal will boar a reinouotrauce that there viil .be no mistaking its meaning. Tbe Waynetown Banner eoyj: The acreage of land sown to wheat this fall In theJJiiileil States will be tally one-third more til sii was put In one year ago. With a laiee orop of wheat next year, tbeie will be aaoii a pietbora in the wbeat market aa was unver oeiore anown. joeuer raise wn nvuo and lees wheat. Tbe Bloomington Courier says tbat "there can be no question tbat the colored people are wanted here for tbe sole purpose ot vot ing tbe Republican ticket." The Courier ia undoubtedly correct EXPRESSIONS. The only thing a hoggish man does not try to get aiore than hia share or is religion. Nearly every woman tbat dies suddenly in Connecticut is found tj .have arsenic in her stomach. They must be born tbat way. "How nimbly works my mother's hand," is the way a poem opecs and we'd like 10 give long odds tbat the Mlow wbo wrote It was thinking how nimbly his dam wafted her old tapper over hie prostrate body. - "Ob, yes," aaid a grumbling b'ggar, "folks alyi telps tbm as don t needaiyhilo Why, there's l'gbtnln'; it can g t Uowntt the ground fatt enougb, all by H lf, an' y t folks is sll the time a puttin' np rods (or it to tlide down on." "Byron, my son," said a libra-y father to his atel t'O son, '-Byron never ilyedbase ball " "No," aaid tbe b y, polling on his rrangf-lored ahlit, "and tiwgi- Washington never wrote poety." Herr toe morning hour expired and the bill went over. It Is ttrange bow the sudden opening of a parlor door will tend two people t j the ends of a sofa, and eit tbem to counting the figures in the carpet. There must be some tblng powerful In toe dralt of ' air ti blow human beings around in that wsy. Providence Journal. " Wben young people, with a eingleneas of purpose and a doublenefs of atleciion, sit np with each 01 her, and wben tbe Clock strikes 12 be says, "Is it po-vlbtef aod sbe save, ' Wby, I didn't know it was so leu!" yon niay draw your conclusions that, If tbe business boom continues, a unified coaple will be booting a house to rent in the spring. "8tlck to one thing," says the Nw York Herald, "until it is done, and well done.". Tue man who wrote tbat most have been inspired by watching tbe tenacity of purpose which inspires a spoonful of tar on a pine boarJ, doing its lev I best to overshadow -the bright prosperity of tbe. after guard of .aa unwary pair of linen pantaloon.
CONCERNING WOMEN.
Fashion papers gay the muff should match the bonnet. At last accounts there were 17 ladies regularly connected with the press in Chicago. Miss Lucy M. Hall is physician for the Massachusetts Reformatory Prisan for Women. Some English ladles wear, for mournine, black cloth or crape on the left arm, making no other change in their drear. Miss Ada Cavendish, the actrese, is raid to have originated the female fashion of wearicg a bunch of field daisies in the waistband. The Massachusetts women show remarkable backwardness abont coming forward to register. It is a good deal like getting marriednothing at all when one gets use to iu So great have been tbe changes since the establishment of the Repnblio in France tbat many ladies of bigh family are studying in convents to qualify themselves for governnessea. Ie 1619 90 young women were imported from England and sold in the colony of Virginia as wives, at 100 pounds of tobacco each. This waa tbe origin of many ot tbe F. F. Vs. Mrs. Scott Siddons is a woman of business. Tbe day she got a divorce from her husband sbe handed him all her money, and said: "Go kill yourself with whisky." And in an hour he was drunk. Bright colored silk neckerchiefs are all the rage. They are rorn knotted simply around the throat outside of the coat or circular. Deep cardinal and Spanish yellow are especially desirable colors. Boston was probably the first city in the world where women engaged in the study of medicine, and at the medical university there they now have a lady demonstrator in anatimy, also three other ladies in the faculty, one who lectures on diseases of women and the other on diseases of children. The temperance women of Utlca, N. Y.. opened coflee booths near the polls on ejection dsy, and gave away no less than 4.000 cops of that beverage, and unlimited quantities of crackers atd cheese. This Is a great improvement on tbe emotional insanity of tbe crusade. There are few women wbo look wcil perched on an empty beer barrel, but a woman with a cup of coffee in her band on a raw November day is a minis'eriog angel, and so the voters ot Utica eeem to have regarded her. Washington Poet. A beautiful wife In the count-y has expended much icgeunity in devising a scheme to keep her husband at hom- at nigh', and it proved very effectual Sbe flatters ber lifge lord about the exquisite daii.ty proportions of his fett, and induces bim 10 wear boot i two sizes too small for him. He is on bis feet all day long in town, and when he gets home at bight sbe hss a soft chair, and a pair of loos, cocl slippers for him; aod by the lime he, with great drops of agony pearling his brow, bts got off bis boot-, he comes to tbe conclusion that there is no place like home a'tsr sll, and has co desire to go to town to the lodge, or to ut cp witn a sick irtetid. A Joyful AunounoeintHit to suffering millions is the glad tidings that at last a certain cure for piles has been discovered. Five hundred thousand persona who nave used nr. sushee "Auakeels," pronounce it infallible. Doctors of all medical schools prescribe It in practice; empirics and nostrum venderscounterfeit and imitate it, -and all, without txceptioo, admit tbat it ia entitled to the name ot "Medical Miracle." Nothing in medicine is more simple, rational, prompt and certain. It ia not an aoeidental blunder of inexnerlenea, but the scientific solution of a most difficult problem by an accomplished physician of 40 years' practice-and study. "Anaketis" is a happy combination of a soothing poult ce, supporting instrument and curative medicine. It alleviates at once the most excruciating pain; It holds up the raw, sensitive tumors, and by firm, continued pressure and medication applied to the swollen vein is able to cure the most inveterate cases of blind or bleeding piles. The inventor of "Anskesis" may well be regarded as a public benefsc'or, and sufferers from this terrible disease will thank ns for calling attention to a discovery so worthy. It is not less singular tbat in iim vutuju vuuixruiug; auiknu, iuii tioos are given for preventing piles, a fact never before observed in any medicine the proprietors wished to aelL "Anakesia" is sold by druggists everywhere. Sent free on receipt of price, $1 per box; tamplM gratia by P. Neustaedter & Co., Box S 846, New York, sole manufacturers of "Anakesis." (SAPANULj) arraes by boptioi.-ne wellknown medicinal prorvrtlra of Glycerine, of which "MPtstll." la largely eomptMed, la an assnranen to the public of tne wonderful curative power of 1 his celebrated Union for ail Nervous, Inflammatory aod Skin Diseases. Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Lam Buck Ht-ad-tu-he, Braisea, Sprains, Burns or Scalds, chll. blains Bunions. Piles eie, yield a- once to lra aootblng Inflnt-noe and are permanently enred. Unit Kbeom, Biyalplaa. Humors, Chapped Hands, B ngbness, and all diaeaae of tbeSklnare quickly and pitlvely cured. Used in SDoneo or foot batha khiiim all uln or sorU' ss 01 body, limbs and leet. -Hold by all drug 11. ttatlsfse Ion caaranterd- or - " "-1 - . -- .... 1 u . iiHiiuiuBMi cinitt. lar and earns. WAMI'KI.OEKRY A vO., Proprietors, office 237 Broadway, N Y. Tne tradn aop t iled by Browning Sloan. Indianapolis, li.d. , , fb wonderful mo or Ullal'S baa ln,nsl manv to advt-nise tbelr wonhiVaa preparations for tbe cure of Kidney - -Diseases, hoping to aril tbem on Its well establishnl re pa i at Ion. Do mm not risk yonr health by nslng any of IQMt lDlo-1..n pteparaUona, . . . . ,, . , j , 1- 1. . . : stood the teat for 30 years. I.ATE BOIETESTIHSST. '- -'..- - . ' 100 Westminister St. Paovrnajrca, It. I. Oct. 13, ism . Wat. E Clabkk-Dear Sir: t hav suffsr very roach wlio my K'dnt-ya and Liver for J'Sara. lu Jsnnary, IK7V, 1 grer Wjw, blow log -r lillv. Ms Di-vslclao. imeof fh b-t In Prnvirienr-e, wished me 10 try HUNT'S REMKDV.as asar and reliable eotnpoantf. ash ha known It 10 care Kklaey uls- when a 1 other ined cloea bad tailed. I dl I so, and In 21 hours I pasd four air Ova gxl.ou of water, too bloat waa removed, and . toe great relief made m- feel a well ma Ware it not lor HUNT'S RtCMKDY I roald not be altv today. E. K. 8I1KP VRDHOt. M JUT'S aKSHDf, I trpted -xpn-lv for the Dlseaeof th, Kidneya, Biaide L'vsr and 1 ujjm j vio,, viv, uaavw. vuuioim, Hrtgba Disease of na tvioneya ana eooiineoee and Retention tnT Cnne, O ts naeri tw tha Medical Fucnll v. Seod lor pamphlet to Wat. a, .auJaJS. TOTKionrm. B. L. JLil.4L.UU eL.l tlT XttttGOlsn.
