Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1880 — Page 4

4 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1880.

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL

WITH SUPPLEMENT. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 28 . SPECIAL NOT I CK. A-ert f I the Weekly 8entiuel (or subscriber? sending their subscriptions to Una oilice d.recti should, when ordering the Rc.-e Tamer and Name Writer premium, give the r.ame of the eswin' machine to which this device is to be attached. If th is direction i? followed, it will save ranch trouble and unnecessary correspondence.

MISCEGENATION. To the Fd.u.r of the Sentinel: sir Will you plea4 write an article on talscetrenatlon i The ladle of lUis town , I H-mo-crats and Republicans, ask It as a favor. The ladies look upon the Journal of your city as a miscegenation paper, because it lias said that nobody's daughters demand white husbands or none, except ttoe of Democrats. In view of the treat number or negroes now coming to Indiana, the Journal's posit ion is regarded as exceedingly objectionable. A Fkiexd ok Women. Mont icetc-, Ind., Jsn.w. - We are aware that the Journal's Tile Innuendo,tfcat the daughters of Republicans do not demand whitehuebauds or none, has created a profound f9asatlon throug'aout Indiana. Tb intimat'cn is so vile, ho filthy, so abominably naety, to repuleive, so libidinous, bo prurient, that Republican women feel that a luoFl d.iuicable insult lias been offered them. F-:t what is miscegenation? Webster de; nea it as follows: "Lat. : r..VA. to mix, and pcarrc, to beget; sniixlrof rtif es; amalgamation. A recent and iti-formed word; it should le raiscegen eratior.'1 With Ui.t aeti&ilior. in view, it will be well to ijaoir rr.e Journal of December 1, l7l: "NOBODY'S DAUGHTERS DEMAND WillTi: HUÖBAND3 OK NONE, EXCEPT THOdF Or DEMOCRATS." To mix ravw is what miscegenation means. It if ff- ne?ro men to marry white women' and f j: white men to marry negro women. It mean? fc rotate whits blood with negro blood. Is means a mixture of hair and woci; at noses with Roman and Grecian coses; to make thick lips thin, and this lips thick; to take oil some of the nroe'abeei and epuce on to the white man's heel. It. means yellow instead of blonde, and to deepen Cie tinge of the brunette to darkness. It me ans, to tili the land with hybridism and a ;ac;t of human mongrels. It means that tue Caucasian blood shall mingle wirb the cfi:ro blood, end that the most exalte! oi the human race Jiall be brought down to the level of the most inferior race. It meai.t to bridge tLe chasm which the Creator ta: placed between the white and black races, and thp.t the sublime in human nature &nd in human aspirations shall abanIod it upward march and provel in the aboiiiinc.t.cnf of miscegenation: and what we ask I better calculated to bring about tb:j new era of abominations than to declare "that Lor.ody'e d.iugutsrs demand white husband? or none, e.vcept truw-e of democrat:.' Indites if not praying for such a reign of lth. It not true that "Nobody's daughters demand white hu?ban;lj or none, except those of J'srnocrats." In the name of the daughter? of Kepublicane.we repel the Journal's ic famous innuendo. But the singular feature at out this monstrous intimation of the Journ.ii is rbat it should have been road a: a thre when negro Republican kidnaper were, in North Carolina roncoci'cc; :ce most infamous falsehoods to induce j asper negroes to immigrate to Indiana: ani bile this execrable bneiness was goite en ic North Carolina, Republican papers in. Indiana were endeavoring to show that the barefaced lying of the black scamps in XortL Carolina wes truth; and it was at this jarctare that the Journal declared that "Nobody's daughters demand white husbands or none, except those of Democrat?." Wis this language ueed as an inilucemeLt Icr pauper negrots to immigrate to Indiana! Tbe daughters ot Republicans feci jusüy indignant; they feel the insult keenly, and the report has gone abroad to the detriment of Indiana. The Sentinel has done whet it tould to corrtci the Journal's intimation, but it seems that the more the Republicans think about it' the madder they bfume. WHAT IS ir? I the Cincinnati Enquirer a Democratic newspaper? Cincinnati Cororuf rial. Well, let us lock at it a little. First, is the F.mpirer Democratic? Ite accredited repre sentative here puts a m&u into the Insane Asylum tc manufacture some sensational items ostensibly to be used in the Enquirer matters of news. He "consults,' Recording to his own sta:c-ment, with the chairman of the Republican State Central committee and a party by the name of Dudley, who, in addition tc his duties as United States marshal for the State of Indiana, dabbles in dirty work for the Republican, party. What do-s this agent of the Enquirer "consult about? Is it regarding the ust lo be made of the discoveries which tiifc Insane Asylum spy makes for the advancement of the Enquirer or the Radical psrty? There is only onean6wer. It ia for the ue cf the Ridical party. Is it probable that Mr. Jim Woodard, '' J ayhawker,' would consult with tco leading Radicals is to the character of the news wticb should f o Into the Enquirer if it were not to the decided advantage of Radicalism? Therefore we are safe In the conclusion that the consultation was altogether in the interests of Indiana Radicalism, or else ''Jayhawker" is a fool, and we do not believe bf is by long shot. Now, is the Kcnirer a Democratic paper, which allows it agent, under pretense of getting ' up "news"' for the paper, aids the Ridical managers of Indiana in manufacturing political capital against the Democratic party? Secondly, i the Knquirer an energetic, live paper, if it allows tiro other papers to scoop In, and Lcbliäh a full day in advance an entire account of the lies and misrepresentations, cLUiltpaid for and afterward ..vi:.i...i. It looks ixru our standpoint that the Enquirer 13 nether Democratic, nor is it a newspaper. ? was "scooped" badly, either by Jim Woouird or two Indianapolis papers, or by 1. In one branch of newspaper activity f give It th red ribbon, and that

is a wonderful knack, fcgathena in U rapes, seductions and bastardies which occur in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky. It hears' of them early, and spreads them oat In coarse and vulgar language,. far in advance of all other Western papers, unless, perhaps, it be the Chicago Times. Between the two it is nip nd tuck f or this choice and refined class of literature. IN MAINE. Things are not lovely in Maine. A governor and a Legislature in possession of the State House and the military resources of the State in violation of the constitution and laws of the State are carrying things with a high hand. Armed troops paiade the streets of the capital oity and a GatliD gun la placed in position to rain death upon the populace. The Republican conspirators are elated. They Matter themselves that they hold the fort, and Davis, the fraudmade governor, acting in conceit with a gang of unscrupulous knaves, threatens the people with death. Blaine, the arch conspirator, who, if the constitution and the laws prevail, will be in danrerof eternal disgrace, believes he has won the battle, and has retired from the scene. A New York paper, in commenting upon Ais Augusta speech, says: "There is very little but self gratula tion In it. It is full of denunciations of 'the desperate men who sought to disfranchise voters by the thousand, and to substitute a f ilse count for an honest ballot.' It is furious in its condemnation of the Democratic and Greenback voters of the State, who are in a majority of. nearly 2,000. And it takes infinite credit to himself and the Republicans that they have accomplished the revolution and trarrnled the constitution and laws under foot without shedding a drop of blood. Blaine compilments Chamberlain for playing the part of dictator oro tern, so successfully, and almost split the ears of the audience by the rigor of his denunciation cf fraud in elections and the corrupting of the ballot-box. Very likely his partisans regarded his speech as timely and eloquent.

But In view of the facts in the case it is simply amazing, not only that a senator of the United States could make such a. harangue, but that a mob could be found m a New England State to listsn to it wifa patience, much less with approval. The 'desperate men' to whom he referred are intelligent and conscientious State officer? . The 'false count' substituted for 'an honest baUot' was precisely the cmint required by the letter of the constitution, directed by the decisions of the supreme court and established by Republican precedents. Of the votera disfranchised .'by .the thousand,' a much larger number are Fuslonists than Republicans; und, according to the declarations of the supreme court, the blame for the disfranchising fall J on the municipal officers who neglected to do their duty." The situation is tveli calculated to try the pluck of the Fusionits. They are in their places by the operation of the laws of the State, and there is no legal flaw in their credentials. These men Davis proposes to disperse by force While the threat lasts the Fusion Legislature of Maine should remain. Let Iavis ram shot and shell upon them let soldi'Ts march upon them wlt'a fixed bayonets. No matter what may come, they Fhoald stand their ground and meet force with force. There may be other wsys out of the dilliculty, but if the conspirators are impatient of delays and seek to solve the problem by force, then it should be solved only when the last true man in Maine has bit the dust. To ba k down or back out will be a crime against law and constitutions, and ielding to a mob of men whose acts, if they could be brought before a rroper tribunal, would eend them to prison. A FE 77 PLAIN WORDS. The economical administration of our Asylum boards has caused the Republican managers to take desperate measures to counteract the influence it iaustbave upon the public mind. In this work they have a willing ally in a professed Democratic paper published in Cincinnati, but largely circulated in this State. The Cincinnati Enquirer for such ia the journal's name employs none but Republican correspondents, and srh no news from Indiana but euch as ha. been run through a Republican tieve. In the Enquirer of yesteiday it correspondent here dishes up a column and a half of falsehoods and slanders against the Democratic party, which, however, was but a repetition of the nauseating stuff given the public the day before by the Joarral of this city. The purpose of theee onslaughts by the Enquirer . and the Journal ' is to destroy the confidence of the people in the management of our benevolent institutions, and thereby weaken the Democratic party in the Stats. The author and utterer of thes; calumnies is a radical Republican of the most virulent type, and although he writes for a professed Democratic paper, hin partisan malignity is plainly apparent. He took into his confidence John C. New, chairman of the Republican Central committee, and United States Marshal Dulley, and the unit id wisdom of the triumvirate culminated in the employment of one as a spy, who hfd given evidence of the fitness for the work by selling his manhood for, 30 pieces of silver. The rpy and his backers sought to blacken the character of the men who are charged with the management of the Asylum, and at the same time to give the Democratic party a stab in its most vital part; but the testimony we gave the public yesterday will cause this well-laid plan of the conspirators to come to naught. The public will learn from it that the charges of the Enquirer and the Journal are base fabrications, and worthy of the well-known reputation of the monumental liar of the nineteenth century. Chairman New, Marshal Dudley, and the "J ay hawker," of the Enquirer, will have to Invent soma better plan to destroy the Democrat ic party of Indiana, or it will be triumphant next fall in spite of lying charges ega'nst our benevolent institutions and the votes of imported pauper negroes. NOTHiyo conld be more ridiculous than the coime tbus lar of Fenator Voorbees exodus In vent Ik(t tion or more disappointing to his expfClKtlonn. Of cou-ite be hopt and expected to prove a political plot, a Republican conspiracy. Journal. Not ao fast. - Surpoae you read some of the evidence which came over the wires last night. Charles N. O uy, a colored man, and the editor of the Argus, and a founder of

i - . i t , t. f ... t 4 t ' r ' r the National Emigrant Aid society, testified yesterday betöre the committee that at one of the first meetings of the aid society a speech was made that nrn' thbvl't be th tj Iud'tw, btcuH. e il ti a ' ifouMfvl State No one made any objection, except himself. He withdrew from the society because, he said, THE ENODC8 WAS TO nt rSEFJ VoLITlCALLT. Now, Mr. Journal, this r does look like "a

political plot," does it not?,. GE.NKKAL KOTES. W. H. Vajttjerrii.t gives employment to 27,00 men. , , . ' Sexatou(onkux'8 wife Is at Washington with her husband this winter for the first time In several years. A stk el rail mill Is to be established in Indianapolis, railroad olticials having . promised to give the manufacture their active support. The KendalvlUe (Ind.) News la of the opinion that the "dark horse" at the Democratic National convention will be English, of Indiana, tf there be one. Eik.ak Allan Poe's watch lauow owned by a family in Chicago, to one member of which the poet many years ago gave It as security for a debt It Is a gold repeater, and bears Foe's name. Mk. Kamcel B.WILKJ4 has received from the king of Italy a valuable decoration as a mark of tin- royal appreciation of his books. "KeifHelp," translated, has been nold in Italy to the number ol 50.0CO copies. The crop report of the Board of Agriculture of Illinois, shows that the whoat acreage of that State is .,&"6,82ti acres, or 25 per cent, mere than last y ar, -and considerably larger Hian the average of any previous year. Whk.v Judge Day offered in the Kentucky Leglslature, on Monday, a bill taxing pistols and other weapons Representative Rudv caned a sensation by suggesting that every member step up to the speaker's desk and deposit thereon the shoot lug-irons he happened to haw with him. Ock imports of rails from Europe for 11 months, ending November 20, 1S79, compare with previous years as follows: Eleven months, 1ST!' steel rails, 20,.'71 tons; Iron rails-, 17,316 ton; total, tons. Eleven months 1S78 h tee 1 rails, t01 tons; Iron rails, 335 tons; total, SM tons. Tue Louisville Courier-Journal does not seem to be In a good humor with the United states SenaU and says the United states Senate has a motto of its own "Four days a wit'k's work." The same paper says: With a few trick-horses Congress would be fully into the circus business It already has its clowns. The Mobile Register thinks that it Is impossible lor Mr. Hayes to rid himself of the rascals who stole his position for hlra. He has rewarded them liberally, but they arc loud in their demands for more distinguished favors. J. MadLton Wells Is in Washington Hecklug a new omcc, and other returning board officers re expected. The New Orleans Democrat calls attention to the fact that Asia Is a terribh consumer of silver. Every year millions of dollars find their way to the East, never to return to the civilized world. This Eastern demand for silver seius to be on the lucrea.se, as 16,0cv,0OU waatnus swallowed up this year, as against IJ'J.UiO.OOOiulsTS. What becomes of this bullion is more than the greatest political economist can tell. The Now Orleans Democrat Is authority for the statement that In 161 two-thirds of the tonnage entering American ports was of American vessels, while last year It amounted to k'HH than one-fourth. We have Rctually only (iU per cent, as" mauy vessels a we hud two decades ago, although the country has almost doubled in population. Such is thf fruit of Radical rule, a:il its so-catli-cl protection of American ship builders. A Hotox paper says that In August last a den It-r In thatclty Hold 2ö,03 yards of cloth to a New York manufacturer of umbrellas. The cloth bsiuK poor, the Ne w l'orker returned it Hud the goods were packsd away. I4st week, according to the same authority, the New Yorker went to Host on for much needed supplies, which are difficult to obtain, and actually ksught of the Roiton man the swrae 25,00 yard ol cloth at an advanc- of per cent, on the original price. The Washington, Capital tays that Jay Gould, the great Wall street gambler, must be aurterlnii from softening of the. brain. It is claimed that he Is actually engaged in organizing a telegraph company In opposition to the Western Union, that is not intended for blackmalllDg purposes, but to give the people cheap telegraphy. If this hi a fact, we may ex pect ere long to hear of Jay l ionldV Incarceration in an asylum for lunatics, and shortly after, his dembe. Jay Gould a public benefactor! Gf.neeal JAtKsjov truly and forcibly said: "Nor is our Government to be maintained or our Union preserved by invasions of the rights and powers of the several States. In thus attempting to make our general Government Ktronsr, we make it weak. Its true strength consists in leaving Individuals and States as much as possible to themselves; In making itself felt, not in Its power, but in its benefleonee; not in its control, but in its protection ; not in binding the States more clwly to Its center, but leaving each to move unobst meted In Its proper orbit." The Peoria Democrat says: Judge Watchford, of New York, did an act that Is to be commended, though no in oro than his bounden duty to do He refused to sit In judgment on a cae In which the Illinois Central Kailrond company was a party, because he was the owner of stock in that road. This is in honorable contrast to the partisan judges of Maine, who were swift to decide a case on ex parte hearing and statement, wherein their polltlal party was a suitor. A statement of these cases and their circumstances is alone enough to throw doubt on the honesty or Justice of the decision of the Maine judges. The Brookville (Ind.) Valley Sentinel says: Hon. W. H. English la looming np all over the country as the man who can heal all of the dissensions existing betten the Democracy of the East and West, and also receive the cordial support of the South. If we had had such a man as English at the head of the Democracy in 187, we wonld not now have a fraud occupying the presidential chair. He would have hiut the backbone to stand up for his and the rights of the people who elected him, and to take the place which of right belonged to hlra. If the Democracy is wise It will nominate a ticket with English at the head, and a good man like Potter orOarcelon for second place. With a ticket like that they will be beyond the reach of all returning boards. The New Orleans Times says: When it is recollected tun t there are now in session some 3D odd, more or less, of State Legislatures, all bent cn making laws of some sort or other for the government of the people, the situation would seem formidable enough. One would think that every possible provision would be made for every public need, and whatever might be required to promote the best interests of the people, and to protects rights, franchises, property and life wonld be thoroughly provided for. When, however, we reflect that this sort of wholesale law-making has been golHgon for a century, and that the most pressing wants of the public' Kervlce are still badly provided for, an J in not a few cases utterly neglected and even injuriously dealt with, It la plain that public confidence In the

yUlom et tie avtragi lawmaker is gritgf

misplaced. The fact 1. about the best service done by our Legislature Is In repealing the wrong-headed and Ill-advised acts of its predecessors. . Fob 12 years Dr. Julius Schmidt, of Athens, has been at work upon an Immense map of the moon, which shows 32,5 craters and' ring-like formations on the lunar surfaces and S18 rifts and clefts.' , GovernokSmith, of Maine, isa biggeijinan than Governor Davis Is. Smith weighs ZV) and Davis only 1 to. The re publicans had better see that their man Is kept at a safe distance from the big Fusionist. Mb. J. C Flood has just bestowed a pleasant little amount of. pin-money upon his daughter, Miss Jennie Flood. He has registered 12,300,000 in United States bonds In her name. This gift provides for her an income of a10J,CO0ayear. Miss Josephine Haeiek, daughter of J. W. Harper, Jr., Is the author of the charming story, "A Night on the Tete Noire," In Harper's Masazlne for November. She sent the manuscript anonymously, and it was accepted and paid for unbeknown to her father. Thk I'eorla National Democrat erpressen the opinion that the United States Supreme Court Is a superannuated body. Judge Qlfford Is past 7t, Swayne is past 75, Strong has turned 7h, and Bradley is turned tw. Hunt is paralytic, with little hope of recovery. They all ought tobe retired, and younger and more vjgorous blood and brains infused Into the court. Con;kkssma.n Joseph E. Johnston, of Virginia, and General Sherman aie like Damon and Pythias. Once in a while they can be seen riding out together airing themselves. A Washington correspondent says: They seem to have a great admiration for each other, and they compliment each other on the masterly dodgmg each did in the Georgi; cauinaisn. It is said that the great pencil manufacturer, Faber, who began business In Nuremberg about U) years ago with a capital of il'Jt has decided to commemorate this event by setting aside C"i,000, the Interest of which, at 5 per cent., 250, is to be annually given, undi r direction of trustees, to some poor and worthy young man who is about to start In business, and 13, presumably, a native of Nuremberg. Theke is a student of natural history at Chlco, Cal., who believes that the deer of Butte county know what day pie game law goes Into cflect. He has gravely read a paper before the California Academy of Sciences, in which he asserts that they stay on the foot hills every year until November 2, and then, knowing that on and after that dale it is unlawful toshoot them, go boldly down Into the inhabited valleys. Skcketaky Thomixis says that he saw Andrew Jackson at the time of his Inauguration as president. "My fatoer, who introduced me," says the secretary, "told me then that 1 was getting on the other political side already. Instead of lecturing me, as I supposed be would, Jackson put his hand on my head and said: 'Whatever your politics, think always lor yourself, and let conscience be your Invariable guide.' " Cardinal Manning, speaking at a temperance meeting at Liverpool the other day, said that in Manchester, Liverpool and London the Teetotal League of the Cross numbered 50.0CO of the soberest men in England. Drunkenness was atlectlng England's factory band.s to audi an extent, he said, that Americans who had visited England to study the labor question declared that the factory labor of America was more efficient than that of England In consequence of intemperance among the EuglWi factory operatives. Thomas Addis Emmet, a grand-nephew of the famous Robert Emmet, who was tried for high treason against the Engllsa Government and put to death, died in Carmel, N. Y., on Monday. Mr. Emmet was a prominent civil engineer and had charge of many Important State surveys. He was especially proud of one relic of the Emmet family a large emerald ring, which was used as a seal by the United Irishmen in 17i. At one time the English Government offered a reward of 500 for its possession but they failed to obtain even a clue to Its owner. JcixiK. J. '. Gkoroe, United states se u a torelect for Mississippi, is about 5 yearsof age, and is In the full vigor of health and manhood. He has for years stood among the foremost lawyers of his Stale, and In 1578 he was chosen chief justice of the supreme court of Mississippi. He Is conservative in bis political ideas, and on questions of national Import agrees with Senator Lamar. For some yea 2 before the war he was reporter of the supreme court, and he has writ' sn several law books that are of staudard authority In his and a-t-Jolnlng etates. ' Charles Dickens once wrote to Sir John Bennett a letter which has just been published for the first time in the London Dally News. It runs thus: "My Dear Sir Since my hall clock was sent to your establishment to be cleaned it has gone (as, indeed, it always has perfectly well, but has struck the hours with great reluctance; and, after enduring Internal agonies of a most distressing nature, it has now ceased striking altogether. Tnough a happy release for the clock, this is not convenient to the household. If you can end down any confident'! person with whom the clock can confer, I think it may have something on its Works that it would be glad to make a clean breast of. Faithfully yours, Charles Dickens." Sir John Bennett replied, giving good hoie of the clock's perfect restoration. "I believe in a Providence," said Victor Hugo to a company gathered around him in his red salon In the line de CUchy, "because I am a Providence myself." Some one asked for an explanation of this curious riddle. The venerable poet replied; "We caught a mouse yesterday evening. Its death sentence was pronounced, when' my little granddaughter, Jeanne, with eyes glistening with tears, begged for the life of the gray prisoner. Her mother hesitated whether to listen to the dear little advocate or not, and In her doubt said, Grandfather shall decide.' So they came to me. For a moment I held the power of life and death over the diminutive creature, and I thought the He avenly Providence may find Itself in my situation when the fate of a being of higher order Is to be determined. Naturally I set the mouse free, for wltf-n a man undertakes the role of Providence on. a small scale, he nhooki at least Imitate iU generosity." Makii," a spirltUHllsite spook, fes been unmasked in London. She waa dressed In white, with a long veil, and had her arms and feet bare. She had forgottea to leave her elothesin the spirit land, and when she entered the room in Great raell street, and took her p'ace behind the screen, she conld be beard taking off her boots, unhooking her dress, and making the usual sounds accompanying the act of undressing. The sceptic' rarther say thst her eonduet when she appeared was that of "onsplrltnal levity" indeed and conversation. Bat be that as It may, two Inquirers, as they could see a corset thrcugh the white dress In which she had shrouded herself, decided to find out what a ghost was really madoof. One of tntm accordingly seized neu. nd foond In his arms something that by no means vanished Into air, bnta substantial pleceof flcih and blood. Ills com pablon (darted behind the holy of holies and there were "Marie's" dreea, boots and stockings, with the medium's chair empty nd the knot slipped.

rL tixODUaTEBi ' IN Kansas

Fraying for Help From Some Dlreetlon , ; . Intense Suffering. j , The Independence Kansan gives a graphic account of the misery and suffering' among the negroes who have emigrated to that State. During the recent severe weather many of the poor people have had their feet and fingers frozen. Children of a Southern clime, they came in numbers from 25 to C, almost daily in poverty and In rags and before they can be sheltered suffer greatly. The same might be said of those who are constantly arriving In our city, who tuffer untold miseries, which have been mentioned in the Sentinel time and again. "Beg some for us. If possible, and send it sneedily. We must build a hospital immediately if we can get lumber. Rheumatism, pneumonia, coughs, dysentery and measles are among them," ia the language of a lady philanthropist of Topeka, Ka;.. to a friend in Chicago. The Kansan adds: The managers of the exodus are continually assuring the ignorant blacks in the South that their brethren in Kansas are "all self-supporting, all doiug well, all com lor table, contented and happy in the promised land;" Die object being, of course, to stimulate further emigration in the same direction. Yet at the same time t bat these outrageous lies are put forth, the ChicaKO papers are full of appeals to the charitable in behalf of the sutlering colored people in Kansas. If these poor negroes had been driven out of their Southern home into this terrible waut and suffering, what a howl of wrath and indignation would have come from Republican throats. Neither before, during, nor siDce the war; at no time since the first ship load or Africans landed on the American soil, have nc groes endured what they are now eDduring in Kansas. The fictitious miset ies depicted in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" fade into insignificance when compared wiih the grim relatives described above. Even the lively imagination ot Mrs. Stowe could find no such material to work upon, though she ransacked the South from Virginia to Texas for the choicest "horri rs of slavery." The so-called "enemies of the negro" are not responsible for this wretched condition of things. It i his "friends," bis Republican friends, who have temp ed him Into this Inhospitable region to suffer, Rtarve and die; and the responsibility of the deadly deception must rest upon Republican shoulders. THE PIVOTAL STATE. What of New York With. Seymour s m Candidate? The New York Herald, discussing the presidential question and the proposed ac tion of New York, eays: We are, therefore, warranted in assuming that New York, which, by universal concession, ia the pivotal State, the deciding State. Is, and for the present remain?, a doubtful State. It would be better for tne Republicans to carry it in the ordinary manner than to have recourse to a desperate grab game, especially as the electoral votes will be counted by a Congress of which the Democrats have a msjarity in both llouse s. New Y'ork isa doüb'fal Slate. Whether the Republicans can carry It with any candidate, even the strongest they could nominate, depecds on the wisdom or folly of the Democrats in selecting their standard-bearers. Against Mr. Tilden almost any popular Republican candidate would have reasonable hopes. But suppose the Democratic candidate should be Horatio Seymour? We do not in the least doubt the sincerity of Mr. Seymour's reluctance: but there is a growing conviction in the Democratic party that he ought to be its candidate. So strong a pressure may be brought to bear upon him that be will be compelled to yield. He is the most popular and respected Democrat in the State of New York, and the most popular and respected Democratin the United States. If he could be prevailed on to be the candidate the whole face of the situation would be changed. He would reunite the Democratic party of the State thoroughly and heartily, aud would arouse a fervor of spontaneous enthusiasm which would electrify the Democratic partj. Whetever may be thought of Mr. S ymour by Republicans, he ia unquestionably the most popular, the most beloved, the most venerated citizen of the Demccratfc party, especially in tbe State of New York, where h ia bo wellknow and so highly honored. The Democratic party would so wild and crazy In its loving enthusiasm for such a candidate if he would but consent to run. Now, supposing the ardent Democratic hopes to be. realized, what chance would the Republicans have of carrying New York and electing the president? What Republican candidate tbat could be pitted against Mr. Seymour could have any hope of carrying New York, this doubtful and pivotal Srate? THE rUESIDENCV, Seymour and English. (Charlotte (N. C.) Observer.) ' We propose to day to name two meu whose lives, characters and services stand out in such bold prominence as to mark them with distinguished merit, and who, if nominated will lead us to victory. They are, HORATIO SEYMOUR, of New York, lo& i'R.3ItENf, AndWILLIAM H. ENGLISH, of Indiana, EOR VICl PRESri'ENT. With this ticket the Democracy of the nation can win, because it will deserve to win. B -th men are comparatively out of politics now, because they have not been willing to enter the political hustings and scramble for party favors, but both, if nomi rated, will bring into the campaign records and characters ihnt will prove invincible at the grand assi). No stain hasevertarmshed the political or personal escutcheon of either, and both cf them stand to day honored by their friends and respected by their enemies, conspicuous exemplars of American statesmanship. Their characters are beacon lights amid the gloom of political corruption which has beclouded American politics for the past few decades, which serves to point them cut as a vindication of truth, honor, incorruptibility and political integrity. They bave not been ana they can not be truthfully assailed, and if elected they will bring into the upper councils of the afTnirs ol the na tioniipe experience and sound discretion, which can not fail to leave its impress. GOOD LUC K. ! Tno Kvarnvlllians 'Hit" tbe LuiiUktnw Lottery Capital Friie Hut They II H it With Half Ticket. ;Evanvllle, (Ind.,) Journal, Jnuary 1 k Last Monday morning Messrs. John AlLerker and Wm. Ztpp concluded to invest in the regular month I drawingiof the Louisiana Lotteiy, and to thi8 end they purchased cf the agents here, Messrs Brawn and 1'aUison, 20 half tickets. One of the;e halves was No 51,7.15, and last nigat both of them were kicking themselves because they did not take the whole ticket. Yesterday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, a telegram came to the agents from New Orleans, wbere the drawing was proceeding, which said: JCW OKLKJJiS Ja-ii. IS. Have you sohl half-ticket fifty-oue seventy forty-lvet M. A. Da vr i"H iK. Mr. Albecker, who held the ticket above, was hunted up and shown the telegram. His ticket was 51,745, and then It was teen that the telegraph operator had made an error In transmitting the number. They hurried to the West ern Union office and tad the meesage repeated. Instead of fifty-one seventy forty-live came the number fifty-one seven forty-five. "Well, by George!" was Mr. Albeckers alightly profane exclamation. Btill there was no explanation of the dispatch, and it was only to be inferred from i the inquiry about the number that it had

UfiWu UUBOlUlO lJg pr-Sn. Au mies large prizes wer $J0,0uü, $10.01 and $ö,u00, respectively. Mr. Albecker xpUii:uI that Mr. Zapp owned half the ticket, and the newa waB carried td thatgentlemr) and then spread over town. Although it was not known tbat a prie had been ' drawn, they were? both considerably locsened op about tbe shoulders by vigorous hand-shaking-. All the afternoon they remained in uneasv

suspense. Last night at o'clock Messrs. Pattison &. Brown rtceivsd a dispatch giving tht three prize drawing? as follows: $.".0.000. No. öl. 74-"., sold in Kvansyillr. $10 000, No. 10 410, sold in New York. $ ,000, No. li.-'.SW. not placed. This settled he anxiety, and Messrs. Albecker and Zapp were immed:'atrly moved upon as persons who were the owners of $7,.M)0 eacb ha clear, clean cash. Holding only half the ticket, tbev ran claim only half the prize. They were Daturaily in m good hninor over the freak of lack. Mr. Xpp said, when asked what he was going to do, thai he wonld first pay every d6bt he owed in the world, fix np his house, move Into it and smile complacently on life. Mr. Zapp's resolution was greatly applauded in same quarters, while others ht Id that even such a turn of luck did not justify him in setting up a precedent in the way of paying debts, which would entail seriousoppreesion, rrbaps, on others who had their debt9 on ice. Mr. Albecker takes it all verr quietly. He has been there before. He h.ta "hit" the same loitsry a score of times, all the way from $5 to i-OO, and the ede-8 of appreciation is dulled. " The Kum- Name Writiag mh1 l;ring Attachment for Sewing Mach lue. Attention is called to the advertisement of thisj very valuable device published in another column of this psper. It will prove indispensable to any family having a sewing machine, from the fact that it enables the machine to do all the darning be well as tbe sewing, and every family has more of the former than tbe latter. The holes or tear are scarcely noticeable after being darned by this attachment. By using it ladies can write their names upon" all kinds of underclothing, bed linen, handkerchiefs, etc., as easily as with a pen and ink upon paper. Every new subscriber to the Sentinel, at $1 '2T, per annum, is entitled to one. Send your orders to the Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, stating the machine it is to be used on. " 'Sellers' Liver rills' cured me of liver complaint of tight years' s'.andirg." Wm. Evans, Johet, 111. Give them a trial. VOLTAIC-ELECTRIC POROUS TEN times more powerful than the best porous planter this grand anion of Llectriclty and Healing Balsams, Gums and Essences when placed over the center of the nervous forces, the pit of the stomach, stimulates the Liver, Stomach and Bowels, perfects Digestion, cures Dyspepsia, Kiious Colic, Cramps and Pains, and prevents Ague and Malarial Diseases. For Weak and Sore Lungs, Palpitation of tho Heart, Painful Kidneys. iJame Bactc, lUieuiuHism, Neuralgia and Hclatica, they are the best re nedy in the world. Relief instantaneous in every cace. Get the genuine. Ask for COLLINS' VOLTAIC ELECTRIC I 'O ROUS PLANTERS. Price 26 cents. The only combination of the true JAMAICA GINGER with choice aromatics and French braudy, making a delicious.harrnic'Fs and strengthening substitute for all kinds of stimulants, is SUniord s Jamaica OiDger. It promptly relieves Dyspepsia, Oppression altsr eating, and every species of Indigestlob, corrects all disturbances of the stomach and bowels,and cures cramps, chills, fevers and malaria. As for SAN FORD'S. s JAM lISAPANULÖll r'A ? t UHtfrt Kr ABWKPnoSr-KHEUMA TISM, NV:URA.V'IA, MALARIA. "Sapanule,"the wondtXful Glycerine Lotion, Is a positive cure; it ha never failed. "Sapanule" has no eqinl for Chronic Lamenews, Lame Back, Lumrogo, grains, Plies, Chapped Hands, Chilblains. Buatrnw, and all diseases of the Skin. Erysljelas, Ktlt Rheum, Eczema, Humors of the Scalp, eUi.; Diphtheria, Sore Throat, Pneumonia, and all inflammatory diseases. Ladies who suf7w from local difficulties find immediate relieLaud a permanent enre by nsitg' sarnule." TJsed in sponge or foot batu removes all soreness of body, limb., andleet. Satisfaction guarantee or money refunded. Sold byall druggists. Price, 50c and il per bottle. Send for lllnmlnated circalarand cards. SAMOELGERRY fc CO., Proprietors, office 2S7 Eratdway, N. T. The tiade supplied by Brow ring 4 Sloan, Indianapolis, lud. Why "o yon suffer aril n t h rtaln . In your Bark, Lotns or fide? lour Kidneys are diseased. Do not delay, as delays are dangerous, but try at once I CKT'S KEtiEHY. AU diseases of tbe Kioneya, B'adder, Liver and l'riuarv Or g a n a. Dropsy, Gravel, Diabetes, Blight's Disease ol the Kidneys, and Incontinence and Retention of l.'rine, Hre cured ky at IT IV aKKI)V. It la prepared KXPKEJM.Y for these dlases. Cameron Central Penn DuiKTvuon, Nov. 1187. Dear Slr-I may say HUNT'S KEMkloY ha raised the dead. It raised me from the dead for 6ure, as the doctor had given ie np to dio in SIX HOURS, and so had all the people. My friends called In the priest to prepare me fordeatb, and he also said I was doomed. They all had me dcd, but HUNT'S REMEDY savtd luaodlHia alive to-day, sound and cured or D opsy. K. W. 1 KUDE. From lie v.E G. Taylor,. D-, Pastor First Baptist co urch, .... Prtovmr.NCE, R. I., Jan. 8, 1. I can wtlfy to the virtue of HUNT'S REMEDY in Kidney Disease from actual trial, having been greatly benefited by itsnse. E G. TAI IAmL IIl'S TT BK3IKI Y bas been used by Family Physicians for S9 years. It has never been kDowi to lalL It la C3EDV1 a sate, sure ana needy cure. It Is purely vegetable All wbo nei u enjoy k..Hh Hanil lor pamphlet to WM, E.CL KKl Provldenoe,

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