Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1880 — Page 4

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY APEIL 28, 1880.

WITH SUPPLEMENT. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23.

FOR PBE8ID.ENT, THOMAS A. HENDRICKS, or etdiaha, Bubject to the decision of the National Democratic Convention. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally, delivered by carriers, per woe It 80 2S ')aily, delivered by carriers, Including Sunday Hentlnel, per ween 30 )aily to newsdealers, per copy 3 hdlanapolla Sentinel for 1880 Dally, Sonday and Weefcly Editions. DA-LLT. lellvered by carrier, per week 1 25 alty, Including Sunday, per week 30 Dally, per annum, by mall 10 00 Dally, per annum by mall. Including Sunday by mall 12 00 Daily, delivered by carrier, per annum- li 00 Daily, delivered by carrier, per annum, including Sunday. 11 00 BCND.tY. Sunday edition of 70 columns I 2 CO WKEZLY. "Weekly, per nnum -. 1 100 The postage on subscriptions by mall la prepaid by the publisher Newsdealers supplied at three cents per copy postage or other charges prepaid. Secretary Thompson will go to the Facific Coast 'cross lot3. He dares not double the horn in one of bis war ships. Postmaster Gsxeral Kei is down on the third term boom. Says he would be a poltroon to accept the position of tail to euch a boom. Indeed, Key ia a poltroon without further effort. Victoria, who absolutely represents nothing at all in British affairs except a link between the past and the present, has been compelled to bow her queenly head in the presence of the Great Commoner, Gladstone, and confess him King. I.vNew England if a man loses his leg by a railroad accident there is simply no telling what the damage may be in the estimate of a jury. One man recently received $15,000 for the loss of a leg, but if a man loses his life by a railroad accident the price is fixed by law at $5,000. Some more legislation is demanded in New England upon the subject of railroad accidents. If a leg is worth $15,000 a life ought to be worth more than $5,000, but if a life is worth only $5,000 then a leg is not worth $15,000. A little leg legislation is therefore in demand. t'r to the latest moment of going to press it is not known who put the slits in Whittaker's cars. Townsend has sent for fifty Southern hogs to see if the slits are of the Southern hog Btyle. When the hogs arrive an exciting scene is anticipated. The most learned engineers ero to be employed as experts to compare the slits. Diagrams of the slits are tobe prepared and sent to the War Department. If the slits in the hogs' ears and the slits in Whittaker's ears correspond, then Towneend will offer an additional thousand dollars reward for the slitters. The institution is under Republican rule, and if Whitiaker has been maltreated the Republican party is responsible. The fight between Carpenter and Blaine in the Senate is in all regards eminently proper. Nothing could be more in consonance with the eternal fitness of things than to eee these two bull terriers ohewing at each other's political ears and legs. They are masterly mastiffs splendid spaniels, terrible terriers, nonorable hounds, and two as contemptible political poodles as the Republican party -can boast of. To see the Journal and Streight go for each other is a gopher fight compared to the fight between the two leading Republican bull pups of tho Senate. Carpenter is for Grant for President; Blaine is for himself. In the debate over the Geneva award bill Blaine and Carpenter came together in fine style. Blaine has a splendid bark; Carpenter excellent teeth, and in auch a contest it is easy enough to know which dog will win. In the course of Carpenter's exploit he annoyed Blaine by caving that Grant is the man "who to-day and of this generation Is first in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen." This declaration demorilizid Blaine. It took the snap ou to him. It changed the tone of his bark. He had a fit, as it were. lie forgot his bureau, the third term, the Empire, and set in to praising Grant, and, to make Carpenter's victory complete and overwhelming, he sarcastically told Blaine, "You will ruin Grant if you praisa him." This last bite ruined the Maine dog, and the Wisconsin Carlo was declare I the victor. WILLIAM PITT KELLOGG. We are fully Impressed with the importance of thorough investigation when the right of a member of Congress to a seat in either House is questioned. The question reaches above and beyond the interests and ambitions of the member himself, or the strength of the parties. It goes back to the fundamental idea of government the rights of the people, the rights of States. If the people, under the forms of their laws and in compliance with their provisions, have conferred the right of assat in either branch of CoDgrfsa upon a citizen, then the member ought not to be deprived of It. If, however, it is shown that a member has obtained his seat by corruption, fraud and bribery, then he ehcuM be promptly deprived of it, no matter to what parly he may belong. William Pitt Kellogg ia one of the most notorious Republican villains in the country. He is c disgrace to the Senate and to the whole country. lie is unclean and loathsome. The facta inconteetably establishedi by the Committee on Privileges and Election in the .Ipofford-Kellogg case, place such declarations beyond successful contra diction. A Washington dispatch eays: 1. It 1 proved beyond controversy that several months anterior to the 6th of November, 1S7Ö, KfclJogg, as Governor of Louisiana, deliberately conspired to prevent a fair, free and peaco ibie election In certain Parishes of that State by neglecting and refusing to appoint supervisors of registration. 2. Wbn It was found, after the election, that tue throwing oat of the votes xt those Parishes to which supervisors of registration were not sent, would not defeat the Tilden ectors, and give Kellogg a majority In the Legislature, he conspired with divers othera to

procure supervisors of registration in other Parishes to Illegally and falsely make protests In order to give the Returning Board the semblance of right to throw out their votes also. 3. It Is proved that Kellogg was nightly Informed of the result of the Returning Board in manipulating the returns so as to count out the Democratic electors and members of the Legislature; and that even alter the Returning Board had begun Its work, protests and false amJavits were manufactured In order to afford a pretence for counting oat Democratic legislators and counting in fellows who would vote for Kellogg. 4. It is proved that, even after being the instigator and chief villain In all this rascality, Kellogg had to buy his election ; that he paid cash for so many votes and promised political preferment and patronage for others; that the Legislature which elected him was only kept together by money furnished by him. 5. Tnat to reward the men who served Mm then and to prevent exposure since, as well as to procure a sufficient amount of perjured testimony, Kellogg filled the Custom House with his creatures. Out of the eighty-three members of the Legislature who. It is claimed, voted for him for United States Senator, thirty-four are now In the Custom House at New Orleans, one Is Consul at Klngstou, Canada, another postmaster of New Orleans, and various other minor rascals enjoy fat salaries in the Treasury Department. 6. It Is proved by the statements of the Commissioners sent to New Orleans by Mr. Hayes In April, 1S77, that the Nlcholls government and the Legislature which elected Mr. Spofford were the only tie fv t government and the only tie jure Legislature. With such facts before the Senate it is passing strange that Kellogg is permitted to retain his seat; and such indifference to what is absolutely right is well calculated to Injure the Democratic party, for, say what we will, the responsibility rests with the Democratic majority in the Senate.

BUTTER, MILK, CHEESE AND EGGS. In a strictly commercial point of view, the commodities named in the caption of this article have not had the importance in general estimates assigned them, to which they are entitled. This is doubtless owing to the fact that it has been difficult to obtain statistics relating to home product and consumption. About all we know of dairy products is what is reported in tables showing exports of cheese and butter. The wealth represented by poultry and eggs, cuts no figure at all in commercial repoita, beyond quotations in some publications specially devoted to such matters. But a new era is dawning. The great staples ara no longer to crowd out farm product?, which ' in the aggregate mount up to millions, and which are in universal demand. Next week there will assemble in Indianapolis a large number of Intelligent gentlemen, representatives of the dairy and poultry interests of the country, and in representing these interests they will also represent an amount of capital and an extent of commercial interests with which too few of the people are familiar. As an evidence we find in the agricultural reports of the Department at Washington the following: "Less than ten years ago (in 1SG9) Commissioner A. D. Wells estimated the value of the dairies of the Unit s States at $100,000,000. In a paper read in the National Agricultural Congress at Philadelphia in 1376, Professor X. A. Willaxd thought It much within the truth to state the value of the products of the farm dairies for that year at $000,000,000, illustrating the force of these figures by the comparison, that in 1SG0 the total products arising from agriculture in the United States was estimated at $100,000,000, so that the dairy farms of the United State?, in 137G, produced a' sum equal to one-third the value of the entire productions of agriculture in all its branches in 13G0. The butter products of the United States at this time (1877) may safely be put at 1,000,000,000 pounds, 'and that of cheese at 300,000,000 pounds. It may be interesting to ahow in this connection the extent of the exports of butter and cheese for a aeries of years:

Year Butter value Cheese value ear Pounds. NaJue pounds. ame1870........ 2.019.2SS 592.221 57.2ÜG.327 SS.KS1.931 1871 .. 2,765.(14,1 htt.Wrt 01,678,SS7 8,752 WO 1S7J... 7,746.201 l,4!H,12 66.201,025 7,72,918 1873 4.51HAH WJ2.9I9 8J.36S.510 10,498,010 1874 .. 4,:567.s: 1.092.3HI 9J,6U,077 llWS.SW-5 1S75 0,300,827 l.SOO.WHi 101,010,853 13,ttT,03 187 .. 4,044,K!4 l,lD!J,4Ü3i 7,076.264 12.270,084 1877 21.527,242 4.421.61! 1U7;MI1,W) 12,7lX),627 1878 21.SJ7.117 3,'JJ1.S22 iaa.7H3.7-ib 14.103.5

There were in the United States, in 1S79, 11,826,400 milch cows, valued at $250,953.923. Of these Indiana is credited with 439.200, valued at $10,305,120. These cowa ought to yield their owners in milk and its products $30 a year, which would realize an annual income of $13,176,000. But the dairy interests of the West are in their infancy. The breeds of cowa are inferior, and there is a want of system in all matters pertaining to dairy interests. These interests will be thoroughly discussed in the Convention to a-s?mble in Indianapolis on the 27 th Inst,, and it will be one of the most important that will assemble during the year. OE.NEUAL KOTES. "Bob" Inoebsolx, wears diamond shirt studs. Boston Is to have a new Court House erected on a site costing (800,000, on Pemberton Square. Mb. William Thaw, of Pittsburg, Penn., has offered to give 825,000 toward building a Homeopathic Hospital la that city. Florida gardeners get I MO .000 this year for the early vegetables they have sent North, and next year will see the business Increased. Wmnx the past six months more than 1,000 while people have emigrated from the neighborhood of Ooldsboro, N. C, to Indiana and the Northwest. Home Mea may be formed of the rapid growth of seaside resorts by the fact that at Atlantic City, N. J., about 300 new cottages have been built or are building this spring. Dcrino the winter the ice pinnacle under Yoaemlte Fall became a tower over 600 feet in night, but latterly It has been decreasing, because of the change of temperature In the water falling upon It, The clumsiest waltzer In Philadelphia is Juno, the elephant. While favoring the audience at the circus on Wednesday with a display of her heels, she swung her ponderous head against her trainer and floored him. Every tooth in his month was knocked loose. Mas. Elizabeth Jewell Saxx, the mother of John O. Baxe, the poet, died on the 14th Inst., at St. Albans, Vt., In the ninety-first year of her age. She was married in 1813, and was the mother of lour sons. She was a remarkable woman, regaining her freshness

and vigor to an advanced age, and possessing excellent ability. At the time of her death her hair had not turned gray. She died of no disease, but peacefully passed away In a quiet slumber. A remarkable feature in the history of William Smoak, of Charleston, S. C. Is that he has lived to see his youngest and thirteenth child a grandmother. He baa Just entered his ninety-seventh year, has 10G grandchildren, 391 great-grandchildren and seventy great-great-grandchildren. Mr. Oeorgk W. Childs offers to boar the entire expense of .removing anl rebuilding in Us original style in Falrmount Park the house which William Penn built for hi daughter Letltla, In Philadelphia, and In which she lived and died. It Is soon to be demolished to make room for Improvements. Pct.iitajsic New England Is stirred to Its depths by the announcement that the Agassiz Museum at Harvard College is to be opened to Visitors Jrom 1 o'olock to 5 o'clock on Sunday afternoons, aud that the Peabody Museum and the library will probably follow suit. Libera. New England Is correspondingly pleasedCarry the news to Cotton Mather! The American show at the Berlin fish fair Is already the subject of admiring comment for Its fullness, variety and rarity. Bat It must be a puzzle for the Prussian observers to determine to what depaatment of pisciculture be long the fire engine, with horses yoked and men seated, which appears among the exhibits. UEXH.RAL Washington, in a letter which Is now published for the first time, refers to Lafayette as follows: "He possesses uncommon military talents, Is of a quiet and sound judgment, persevering and enterprising, without rashness, and, besides these, he Is of a very conciliating temper and perfectly sober qualities which rarely combine In the same person." A parrot that had strayed and been found by Mr. Orafion, of Port Jervls, proved to be a fluent talker. When the children neglected to rock the cradle Poll cried: "Mother, Sally don't rock the cradle." After religious services were held in the house they were frequently interrupted by Poll calling upon some one by name to close the meeting with prayer, and It was done. Raisin grapes are being planted In California on a gigantic scale. This furore is stimulated by the great profits, the superior quality, the export demand, and the very light work required in that climate for preparing raisins. A large company of capitalists Is Incorporated to Introduce raisin culture In Fresno County, and In five years' time California raisins will drive all such Imports from the United States. Edmunds' strength as a Presidential candidate is recognized In the Northwest. The St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer-Press eays that the Worcester Convention "give a commanding prominence, backed by all the traditional moral prestige of Massachusetts as a leader of progressive political opinion, to tho Republican statesman who Is, perhaps, beyond all others, the worthiest to fill the great ollico of President of the United States." The Shelby Democrat says that as the time approaches for the Cincinnati Convention, It begins to be acknowledged that Hon. Thomas A. Hendricks Is the coming man for the Democratic nomination for the Presidency. Other candidates may go and other candidates may come, but the fame of Hendricks, like Tennyson's brook, flows on forever. His strength steadily Increases, and It Is admitted on all hands now that he Is the man to win the race. A sweet young thing of sixteen, who wanted to do something unique, recently arrived in London from Scotland, and explaining that she was a clergyman's daughter, asked the manager of the Aquarium to let her marry a Zulu. In vain he remonstrated with her on her folly. She replied that her heart was given. He suggested that she M ould only be one of many wives when her contemplated husband returned toZululand; but she persisted, finding that it was useless to reason with her, she was toll she could not marry without the consent of her parents, and was sent back to Scotland to obtain it. The middle of April, marked in other parts of the country by hot weather, followed by violent storms of wind and rain, was accompanied in California by a violent snow storm the saverest. we are told, ever known in the Sierra Navada sines the Pacific Railroad was built. The elides of snow down the side) of the mountain were so heavy that great lengths of the enow shed were crushed in, blocking up the tracks and rendering them Impassable. Snow plows drawn by eight engines were employed to clear the track. The snow fell for four days in blinding clouds, until It had attained a depth of four to six feet. Joe Botts, a negro desperado, has been the terror of sections of Wyoming and Colorado for years. Arrested a year or two ago, he knocked the Sheriff down, and escaped by swimming the Missouri River. A few days ago, Captain Hawley, of the Rocky Mountain Detective Association, met the negro In the streets of Denver, and, walking straight np to him and holding out hla haud, said, "How are you, Botts?" They clasped hands, and Hawley reached for the negro's revolver, which was in his pocket. The next Instant he reeled back from a terrific left-hander from Botts, who ran ap the street. The Captain shot six times, and put a bullet through the fugitive's body. But, after that, the negro scaled a fence, and escaped for the time. He was afterward captured In a dying condition. The liberal clergymen of Boston are taken severely to task by Mr. Wendell Phillips for their failure to aid the temperance cause in that city. "It is a singular fact," says Mr. Phillips, "that these liberal clergy, the outcome of what Is called the best culture and humane faith of the day children of Tuckerman, Channlng and Mann are rarely or never seen or heard on a temperance platform. I have been for forty years familiar with all sorts of temperance conventions, meetings and appearances before Legislatures, and I never have happened to meet any of our prominent liberal clergy, now living, at such gatherings; have never known of their taking part In any such efforts, with the one honorable exceptlen of Mr. Hale." A defalcation in the great banking concern of the Rothschilds is such an extraordinary occurrence that the European papers devote much space to the late affair In Vienna. It seems that the Vienna branch or the house had long had In Its employ a man named Straffer. He entered its service In 1864, at the age of twenty-one. Nothing In his way of living excited suspicion. He was a bachelor, and hi salary of 12,000 a year seemed ample for his expenses. About a fortnight since Straffer called upon the principal attorney of the Rothschilds and confessed that for several years he had been speculating on the Bourse with funds obtained by hypothecating the securities placed In his charge, and that he had covered ap his operations by false entries In the books of the bank. A series of heavy losses had made it Impossible for him longer to conceal his guilt, and he made a clean breast of the n hole affair. He was led to speculate by the belief that be could safely Imitate the operations of the bank, of which he had early knowledge. His mistake was in not taking Into account the fact that he knew only of the transactions of one branch of the great firm which has its agencies In every money center of the world, and that the Rothschilds might choose to lose in Vienna for the sake of winning In London or Paris. Straffer' defalcation amounts to 2S,000.

HOMAS A. HENDRICKS.

A "Warm and houghtful Article In Fa Tor of the Representative Democrat of Indiana, and nis Nomination at Cincinnati. Evansvllle Courier. The Syracuse Convention has demonstrated that Mr. Tilden'a friends have no confidence in his ability to carry New York 8tate. The proceedings of that Convention show that he is mixed np in auch quarrels at home as could only have been fomented by a man of his peculiar methods. It now becomes the duty and an imperative one of all Democrats who cherish the traditions of the party whose shibboleth has been "Measures, not men," to cease to advocate any man's supposed claims to the suffrages of the Democratic party. So far as the Democracy of Indiana are concerned, we are willing to surrender our first choice for the good of the party at large. This is saying a great deal. It is saying that we are ready to overlook the services of the wisest and bravest party leader of this age a leader whose chief claim to the affections and respect of his followers, has always been his own pure character, sturdy courage and gentlemanly conduct against the greatest inducements to desert the field of action and seek that repose which comes to those who, in great emergencies, are too weak to be brave. If we were disposed to cits the instances of the courage and sagacity of Governor Uendricka as a party leader, we should be compelled, to go over the history ot his splendid achievements in the United States Senate in behalf of constitutional liberty, at a time when he had but twelve party followers in that body; at a time when Sumner ruled and Fessenden won the name of being the greatest debater of hiatime; when Thaddens Stevens, in the Lower House of Congress, wrote history; when Henry S. Lane placed the name ol Indiana statesmanship in the frontrank; when Oliver P. Morton exhibited his masterly powers for party organization; when all the world looked on in wonder at the ex erciEe by the executive department of a great Republic, of a despotism such as the world had never known before; when States were wiped out; when personal liberty was abridged; when the voice of the preis was hushed by the mailed hand of power; when every Democrat's life was carried in his own hand, and only he could be a Democrat who was ready to die for his faith. It was then that Thomas A. Hendricks never shirked his place in the fore front of bittle. His own life would have been freely given for the cause he loved and led, and his life was often in danger because of bis lead erahlp. These are a few of the reasons why the Democracy of Indiana stand a unit a unit that schemers can not break for Mr. Hendricks. But the Democracy ot Indiana are ready now, as they have always been, to take their place in the ranks, if the Cincinnati Convention should eo determine. Let It not be forgotten by the Democracy of the Nation, however, that Indiana Democrats stood an impsssable barrier between tho e who first conceived the idea of establishing an Empire in this country, and those who held to the faith of the fathers. It should not be forgotten, either, that Mr. Hendricks was the man who led the forces of constitutional liberty through the four memorable yeai a when personal government and party fanaticism menaced its existence; and to round out his career, it Bhould be remembered, too, that he was the first Democratic Governor elected on the north side of the Ohio river after the termination of the war. This much ought to be said, now that otber papers are contrasting his conduct with other Presidential aspirants. It may be, or may not be, that Mr. Hendricks is.not to receive the Cincinnati nomination, and it may be that his defeat will be attributable to the personal hostility of the one man in this country who should be most grateful to Governor Hendricks. The triumph of 1876 was due to the fact that Mr. Hendricks held his people at home firmly in line when there was a general tendency to revolt. Whatever other people may think, the Democrats of Indiana feel that there could be no added honors to Mr. Hendricks public career in taking the Vice Presidency. This was the feeling among Indiana Democrats in 187G. and while Mr. Hendricks doubtless Bhared it while it is well known in this State that it would have been a business sacrifice to have taken his seat as Vice President, yet he accented the nomination and gave the canvass his personal supervision. If Indiana's vote was necessary to Mr. Tilden'a election in 1876. Mr. Tilden is the last man who should now make a personal contest against Mr. Hendricks. Whether he docs or not, he and his friends will find that the "fighting Democracy" of Indiana have not forgotten tne maglo of Mr. Hendricks' leadership, or how to accept an open gauge of battle. Jefferson's Desk. Special Dispatch to the Chicago Tribune. Washington, April 22 There waa a ceremony which will become historical in two Houses of Congress to-day, in connection with the presentation of the desk upon which Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. The Coolidge heirs, of Boston, a wealthy family, found in their inheritance the writing desk upon which Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. The genuineness of the desk is attested by unquestionable proof. The heirs, who came of a patriotic family, thought it waa fitting that this historic detk should be the property of the Nation, and that it Bhould be placed Bide by side with the original manuscript of the Declaration, which is now lodged In the State Department, and of wh)se history it forms a part Accordingly, suggestion was made to Robert C. Winthrop, an eminent citizen of Massachusetts, formerly Speaker of the National House of Representatives, who proposed the means by which the wishes of the family were to day executed. The desk, which is a mediumaizad, old Btyle mahogany writiDg-caee, was sent to the House, accompailed by a message from the President and a letter from Mr. Winthrop giving its history and tendering it on behalf of the owners to the Nation. It was to formally accept this tender and to assure the ownership of this historic treasure that TUX CEREMONIAL WAS HAD in both Houses of Congresp. The mo'i)n thtt the gilt be accepted was made in the House by Mr. Crapo, of Massachusetts, and in the Senate by Mr. Dawes. The motion that the gift be accepted waa seconded in the House by Randolph Tucker, of Virginia, and in the Senate by Senator Johnston, of that State. It was worthy of notice that the resolution proposed that the Nation should ec cept this gift. Attention was called to the fact in the Senate that it waa the United States and not the Nation that was to receive it. So atrongly does the Southern mind adhere to the ancient doctrine of State sovereignty, that accepting this precious historical heritage from Jefferson, a Bourbon Sana tor and a Bourbon Representative in Congress must protest that the United States ia not a Nation, but a great confederation of States. However, the desk is accepted, ia lodged in the safe of the State Department, and the 'dogma to which the Bourbon representatives made allusion to day is fortunately powerless. Mr. Crapo. in tendering the gift on behalf of the citizens of Massachusetts, made an extremely graceful speech. He thought that THE TIT EE8TISO-PLACE for the desk was with the Nation's choicest treasures; that it waa more eloquent and suggestive than any statue of bronze or marble which may commemorate his virtues:' thatin accepting it the United 8tates would honor Thomaa Jefferson as the father of popular government, and aa the great apostle of literature, and "with the pledge that we will keep this reho safe is joined the solemn promise that we will guard, with still greater fidelity, the heritage which has come to ng through tbe valor of Washington and th wisdom of Jefferson, and that we will faith

fully transmit, undlmmed and unbroken, their richest legacies, Liberty and Union." Mr. Tucker, who ia one of the ablest and most scholarly of the Democratic members, in seconding the motion on behalf of the South, made an eloborat address upon tbe life and character of Jeffersen, and the policy of the Declaration of Independence. During the ceremonies, Sir E Jward Thornton, British Minister, sat by tbe side of the Secretary of our State Department, and lis tened with evident interest to the history of the separation of the colonies from Great Britain. In the Senate the ceremonies were of a aimlar character, Mr. Dawes making a very felicitous speech in presenting the desk. TILDEN 'S TACTICS.

How He Can Prevent the Nomination of a Person Objectionable to Him. "Special Dispatch to the Boston Herald Washington, D. C, April 21. The result of the political Convention at Syracuse yes terday was read with very great interest by the leading Democrats here this morning. A prominent Democrat says it appears to be very clear, first, that Tilden controls the vote of New York in the Cincinnati Convention; and, second, that Tilden himself is not to be the nominee. This gentleman eays that it is now beyond question that Mr. Tilden will be able to prevent the nomination at Cincinnati of any person who is not acceptable to him, and that this preoludea the selection of Seymour, Bayard, Hendricks or Thurman. The Seymour boom may be said to be dead. His nomination would be a direct reflection upon Tilden, while that of eitherot the other gentlemen would be equally distasteful to him. The Tilden men herd seem to think that it will beeitber Judge Field or Speaker Randall. A prominent Democratic Senator, who is strongly opposed to Mr. Tilden, says thst tbe New York Convention shows that the old man ia determined to rule or ruin the party, and that he is retaining his power to do so. He called the writer's attention to the fact that the Tilden men are everywhere insisting upon the maintenance of the two thirds rule. In those States where tbe Tilden men are in the majority they also insist upon tbe unit rule, but in the States where they can not control, as in Nebraska, they Btrongly object to the unit rule. The Senator sajs that Tilden knows he can not obtain twothirds of the delegates in the Cincinnati Convention, but that he does feel sure of more than one-third of the delegates, and, by rialntainingthe two-thirds rule, he can prevent the nomination of any person who is objectionable to him. The Senator fears very much that he will succeed, and says that there is great probability that he will control the action of the Convention. He very much fears that this may result in splitting tbe party, and making the election of the Republican candidate certain. It is appaient that the anti-Tilden men are very much depressed and demoralized. They admit that the old man is managing with very great ability, and that his band has lost none of its cunning, It would not be at all surprising if Mr. Tilden should control the Pennsylvania Democratic Convention one week from to day. A prominent Democrat from that State Eays that the Tilden men are spending money freely, and that they are likely tc accomplish their purpose. Mr. Tildeu's Candidate. Special Dispatch to the World. Syracuse, N. Y., April 24. The opinion that Mr. Tilden proposes to retire from the Presidential race is strengthened by the fact that D. 8. Lam on t. of the Albany Argus, clerk of the Faulkner Sute Committee, passed through Syracuse to-day en ronte to Cleveland, O , the residence of Mr. Henry B. Payne. Mr. Lamont, who has frequently been trusted with missions of a political nature by the Tilden managers, made no eecret of his mission to Cleveland, which he declared to be to confer with Mr. Payne in relation to having tbat gentleman's name presented by the New York delegation at Cincinnati.; Mr Lamontfdeclared that in his opinion Mr. Tildtn would not be a candidate at Cincinnati. The Rose Name Writing and Darning Attachment for Sewing Machines. Attention is called to the advertisement of this very valuable device published in another column of this paper. It will prove indispensable to any family having a sewing machine, from the fact that it enables the machine to do all tbe darning at well aa tbe Be wing, and every family has more of the former than the latter. The holes or team 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 25 per annum, is entitled to one. Send your orders to the Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, stating the machine it ia to be used on. TAKE NOTICE ! ! Th Order of the Postmaster General against the Mails of the Kentucky State Lottery Company is RESCINDED. Registered Letters and Mony Orders can ba sent through the Mails to the Undersigned as formerly. IN THE KENTUCKY STATE LOTTERY WHICH IS DRAWN IN PURSUANCE OF AN ACT OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF KENTUCKY. THE NEXT DRAWING TAKES PLACE WEDNESDAY, MAT 19. LIST OF PRIZES 1 Prize of 120,000 is 1 Prize of 4,600 Is. ..-....... 1 Prize of 2.0U0 Is S Prizes of 1,000 are 5 Prizes of 600 are . 20 Prizes of 2i0 are . ... Km) Prizes of 50 are.......... 200 Prizes of 20 are 500 Prizes of 10 are.....-.... 120,000 , 4,600 , 2,000 6,000 2,500 6,000 5,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 2,700 1.1)00 Prizes of 5 ar. 27 Approximation Prizes amount'g to. 1,860 Prizes amounting to.. . 860 ,800 TICKETS SI. Club rates npon application. For full particulars and orders address G. UPIMOTON, 6SW Broadway, N. Y. Or M. J. RICHMOND, Covington, Ky. List of drawings published in the New York Herald and Sun, Staats Zeltung. Philadelphia Record, Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, Pittsburgh Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Cincinnati Commercial and Louisville Commercial. Ah out-of-town ticket holders are mailed a copy of the official list aa soon as received. N. B. TFIE KENTUCKY STtTE LOTTERY COMPANY U AS NO AGENTS IN CANADA. ALL PERSONS SOLICITING ORDERS FROM THERE BY CIRCULARS ARE SWINDLERS.

HOLMAN PAD

4 tbeitmext. Rational and Popnlar. Tbade-Mark. RATIONAL because it the vital fnnv. hut ilnrtm nver antagonize oil. 4. I . aud sought the world over, because It cures at it, rvuuuir. UkWV UVUViV auu O AAA AAA lyUf)fe THE HOLM AX TREATMENT has elicited the highest praise from patients of both sexes whose cases, anally acknowledged to be beyond the reach or medicine, have been saved by the mild action of the 1 1 OLM AX REMEDIES. They never fall when taken as a treatment for the removal of chronic difficulties of long fctanalng, comprising every form of female -.;om plaint, debility, and nervou prostration. It la a fnnt that. nrlr nil (ttaaaiuu. )n . . n humanity can be traced primarily to neelect . , . I Ji - J J uu mcipieiii luujgesuoQ unuer maianai influences and Inordinate use of poisonous drugs. The Holrnan Liver and Stomach Pad absorbs the poison la the blood and throws miuiuoBjBicm nu lu viurMUDg ionic, arOOSing and quickening the secretions of gastnc and pancreatic Juices, and regulating the supply of bile from the Livei. thereby restoring the natural tone and vigor to the stomacn, opening the bowels and lenovatlng the whole system. It is certain cure for every species of Liver and Stomach troubles, Fever and Ague, Bilious Disorders, Liver Complaints, Intermittent Fever, Periodical Headaches, Dyspepsia, Agu Cake, Dumb Ague, Jaundice, Neuralgia, Kidney Troubles, Irregular Action of the Heart, Rheumatism, all kinds of Female Weakness, Sick Headache, Sciatia, Pain ia the Side, Back, Stomach, Shoulders and Muscles. PRICE LIST-ReKiilarpad,t2: special, onethird larger, $3; spleen belt (covers stomach, liver and spleen), 3; body and foot plasters, 60 cents each. For sale by all druggists. Depots for the Northwest. 131 Madison street, Chicago, III., and room 45, Fletcher & Sharpe's block, Indianapolis, Ind. Sent free of postage on receipt of price. BATES A HA LEY, Managers. Beware of ALLlmitations. Send for pamphlet and testimonials. Agents wanted in the country to canvac s for these goods. HUMOR REMEDIES. For tho Radical Treatment of Blood Skin and Scalp Diseases,with Loss of Hair. J. CuHcura Resolvent, possessing cathartic, tonic, alterative, absorbent, hepatic, ctioiagogue, ant l-bilious, detergent, dlurertc, sudorific, nutritious and sedative properties. It gathers to itself poisonous matter which lloats In the nlood and fluids and carries it from tbe body. It purifies, cleanses, strengthens and supports the system through the most critical stage of Blood, Skin and Hcalp Humors, and Disorders of tbe Liver, Kidneys and Urinary Organs. 2. Cutlcura, a Medicinal Jelly for external use, arrests disease, allays inflammation, itching and Irritation, and eats away dead skin and flesh, renders healthy u cers, sores and discharging wounds, heals and soothes every ontward humor, and restores and bu titles the hair. It Is the best hair dressing In use, making the hair soft and glossy, li contains nogrease, never becomes raucid, and is very agreeable. H. Cuticura Medicinal Soap, for the Toilet, Bath and Nursery, and for cleansing, soothing and healing diseased surfaces and restoring, refreshing and beautifying the skin, is prepared from Cuticura, is free from caustic alkalies, and perlumed with rare'flower odors. Gentlemen pronounce the Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap a positive luxury. saltIheum. Helpless for Eight Yearn Unable to Walk tiot About on Hands and Knees A Wonderful Cure. Messrs. Weeks & Potter: Gentlemen I nave bad a moot wonderful cure of Salt Rheum. For seventeen years I suffered with Salt Rheum ; I had It on my head, face, neck, arms aud less. I was not able to walk, only on my hands and knees, for one year. I have not been able to help myself for 8 years. I tried hundrdsof remedies; not one had the least effect. The doctors said my case was incurable. So my parents tried everything that came along. I saw your advertisement and concluded to try Cuticura Remedies. The first box of Cuticura brougbt the humor to the surface of my skin. It would drop off as It came out, until now I am entirely well. AU I can can say Is, I thank you most heartily for my cure. Any person who thinks this letter a fraud, let them write or come and see me and Una out for themselves. Yours truly, WILL MCDONALD, B1315 utterfield Pt , Chicago, 111., March 4, 1879. REMARKABLE CURES. A Druggist of Twenty Years' Kxperience Says They Are the Rest. Messrs. Weeks & Potter: Gentlemen I have been connected with the drug business for twenty years and have handledevery blood purifier and remedy of any consequence for th treatment of Blood, Skin and Scalp diseases, and unhesitatingly say tbat no system of remedies ever devised or compounded so completely and thoroughly eradicates the diseases for which they are intended as the Cuticura Remedies. Many remarksble cures have come to my knowledge and 1 feel safe in warlantlng satisfaction If directions are followed. Respectfully CHAS. H. MORSE, Proprietor Morse's Dyspepsia Cure. Holliston, Mass., Dec . 11, 1879. uTERINEDISEASES. h Dr.T. A. Smitn, Brooklyn, N. 1 writes that he has used the Cuticura Remedies with great satisfaction In uterine diseases and finds them truly valuable. The Cuticura Remedies are prepared by Weeks & Potter, Chemists and Druggists, 360 Washington street, Boston; 21 iront street, Toronto, Ont., and 8 Scow Hill, London, and are for sale by all Druggists. Price of Cuticura, small boxes, 50 cents; large boxes, containing two and one half times the quantity of small, 11; Resolvent, II per bottle; Cuticura Medicinal Toilet Soap, 25 cents per cake ; Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap, 15 cents per cake; and In bars for barbers and large consumers, 50 cents. COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTERS Instantly relieve Pain, Soreness and Weakness. J M. KICHOL. W. D. KIRS. J. M. NICH0L & CO. No. 78 East Washington street, Indianapolis, Ind., wholesale and retail dealers In all kinds of Agricultural Implements, and Seed. Agents for the McCormlck Harvesting Machines; Fürst & Bradley Ooods; Willoughby Rubber Feed Grain Drill; Star 3, 5 and 6 Hoes Drill; Empire Thresher, etc. ANNOUNCEMENT. THOSE who contemplate going to Hot Springs for the treatment of syphilis, gleet, scrolula and all cutaneous or biood diseases can be cured for one-third the cost of such a trip at the old reliable stand. I have been located here for 23 years, and with the advantage of such a long and successful experlenoo can confidently warrant a cure in all cases. Ladies needing a periodical pill can get them at my office or by mall at tl per box. Office. i Virginia avenue, Indianapolis, Ind, D. B. EW1NU. M. D., and Partner,

QitiGura