Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1880 — Page 4

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THE oJnilAj 'STATE': SENT

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 7. -RATES Or - SUBSCRIPTION. Dally, delivered by earner, per week JO K tally, delivered by carrier, Including Bunday Benunei, per wee-, fell to newsdealers, per copy 80 dlanapolls Swtiocl for 18&0 Daily, 8u day and Wcefely Editions.. BULT. Vll-rar! by carrier. Mr week . t 35 .mil-, inelndinc bandar, per week 80 Dally. ter annum, by mall., 10 W) niiv. nr uinnm by mall, lneludlnat Bunday by mall 12 00 Dally, delivered by carrier, per annum 12 GO Daily, delivered by carrier, per annum, lnciudlnz Bandar. 14 00 SCXDAT. rnndav edition of 70 coInr.ins - I 3 00 WZKEXT. Weekly, Vr annum 1 - -I 00 The pontage on sufcscilpUons by mall Is pre paid by me punusner Newsdealers supplied at three cents per copy postage or other cnargee prepaid. . TOR PRESIDENT, WINFIELD SCOTT HANCOCK, V . r Of FTXX6TLVAKIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. WILLIAM H. ENGLISH, t Or INDIANA. ----i -- ---' 1 t - STATE TICEKr. For Governor FRANKLIN LANDERS, Marlon County. For Lieutenant Governor ISAAC P. GRAY, Randolph County For Secretary of State JOHN G. SHANK. LIN, Vanderburg County. For Auditor of State MAHLON D. M ANSON, Montgomery County. For Treasurer of State WILLIAM FLEMING, Allen County. For Attorney General THOMAS W. WOOLLEN, Johnson County. For Clerk of the Supreme court GABRIEL SCHMUCK, Perry County. For Reporter of the Supreme Court AUGUSTUS N. MARTIN, Wells County. For Superintendent of Public Instruction ALEXANDER C. GOODWIN, Clark County. For Judge of the Supreme-Court Third Dis-trict-JOUN T. SCOTT, Vigo Count,. For Judge of the Supreme Court Fifth District J. A. S. MITCHELL, Elkhart County. Who is "Judge" Torter? "Will Garfield be withdrawn? A Refcelican Club of sixty-five member, at St. Louis, declared for Hancock and English a few nights since. Prrzr. "Wilson, described as "an ardent Grant man," joined the Hancock Club at Streator, 111., on Thursday night. The Hancock "boom" is nearly two weeks old, and 6 till it gathers strength and volume. The Garfield boom died "a bornln'." On the 1st of July, 1SG0, the public debt of the United States was $01,812,2S7, and in five years it had Rone up to $2 080.017,809. Southern outrages have begun. The colored folks in the Carolinas and Georgia are joining Hancock Club 3 in heavy force. Bulldozing, of coarss. Ths St Louis "Grant Club" has flung out the Hancock and Eaglish flg. It was sixty five strong when it transferred Its allegiance, and is growing rapidly. John W. Forstet, a veteran Republican, believes that 100,000 Republicans will vote the Democratic ticket this year. His head is level, though his estimate is too low. The Hancock boom is growing larger and larger day by day. The disgruntled Radical said the day of the nomination: "It won't last over a week." The week has passed, and the boom continues to gather strength daily. Let it be understood that a change of only 9,000 votes in Pennsylvania gives the State to the Democrats. General Pearson believes that the hero of Gettysburg will gain more than twice that number in less than half the State, and General Pearson, having been a leading Rjpubiican, knows whereof he speaks. vScke enough, here it la. The rumor comes from Washington that leading Republicans are diseasing the proposition of withdraw log Garfield. By the way, why does the National Republican Committee, . now in session in .New York, hold long secret sessions? Are the members demanding Garfield's withdrawal? The changes are all to the Democratic side bo far as heard from. The first week of the harvest brings to our standard the names of Hon. John W. Forney and Major General Pearson, of Pennsylvania; Leonard W. . Jerome, of New York, and an entire club of sixty-five Grant Republicans in St. Louis, and the cry is, "Still they come." Tnoe. J. Stcdt, Esq , one of the most prominent and able members of the Wayne County Bar, who has been a leading Republican, has declared for Hancock . and English, Landers and Gray, and has accepted an invitation to address the Democratic Club at Richmond on Thursday evening of this week. This is a valuable accession to the Democratic party. The News says "the Sentinel is playing a game of dirt slinging." The Sentinel has published the conclusions of the Poland Committee in the Garfield case. It was a Committee composed chiefly of Republicans. The decision was that Garfield had committed perjury. If that is dirt slinging.it is a part of Garfield's record, authoritatively published, which the News is trying to cover up with something vastly more offensive than dirt. Ir the people would have a sample of what Is going on In the country, they have only to look at the number of Republicans who are coming forward to " rally under ' the Demo cratic banner for the campaign. The veteran soldiers of Utica and vicinity, the neighbors of Mr. Conkling, says the Washington Post, "are rallying en masse to the Hancock column. General James G. Grindlay, who baa hitherto been a stanch Republican, and was

presiding officer of the Convention which

elected Conkling a delegate to. the UUca Convention, is President of a Hancock Club .that was organized on the very day that the Cincinnati Convention made the ticket. 'As aociated withGeneral Grindlay are numer ous veterans of the Fifth Army Corps, who served with Griodlay during the war." GENERAL HANCOCK AND RECONSTRUCTION. No mah in any party dares, In the face of history and of universal public sentiment, to utter a word disparaging the military record of General Hancock, the Democratic candidate for President. The verdict ren dered by .en of all parties. Wg and low. rich and poor, learned and unlearned, sol dier and civilian, Union and Confederate, native and foreign born, has been rendered. That General, Hancock was through all the fiery ordeals of war, a brave soldier, a sagacious, heroic commander, has passed into history and is secure. That record is beyond and above the polluting breath of slandej. Partisan hate can not reach it. But grand and inspiring as General Hancock's military record is admitted to be, he has made a still more illustrious record. .When the clangor of arms had ceased and the great work of reconstructing the Union had begun, General Hancock sheathed his sword, and recognizing the majesty of the Conslitu tlon and the civil authorities, sought by every means known to American jtatesman ship to rebuild ths Union and restore it in all of its pristine glory and beauty. The country had been tortured to madness and almost to despair. And it so happened that General Hancock was in a position to assert tne majesty ot the law in deference to the highest obliga tions that the liberties of the people and the peace of the country ever imposed upon soldier or citizen. For this he is denounced by the Republican press of the country. The New York Times, one of the blatant organs of the Empire under Grant, and whose blind bigotry would even now subjsct the South to military rule and compel American citizens everywhere to the intimi dations of bayonets when exercising the rights of suffrage, says: The episode in General Hancock's career which commended him to the favor of the ex-Kebels, and which has made him their can diJatefor the Presidency, Is that In which he figured at New Orleans In the winter of 18ö7-" as an Impediment to the execution ot the reconstruction acts. It Is the one thirjg in his military record the only record he has which Is utterly discreditable to him, and yet upon It Is based the rldlculou. pretensions to statesmanship which are set up for hltn. The record made by General Hancock, while ia command at New Orleans, is characterized as "utterly discreditable to him." Upon such an issue, the Democratic party Is ready to fight the battles of the campaign. General Hancock recognizad the fact that the war wasover a fact that the Republican party does not yet admit. To reconstruct the Union by military power was what he knew, and what every other man not filled with implacable and consuming hates knew, was impossible. To reduce the Southern people to a condition of slavery more abject and forlorn than that of the j helots of Sparta, was the Republican idea. but it found no advocate and no defender in General Hancock. Soldier as he was, standng as he did, crowned with all the renown that an admiring country could bestow, or that ambition could desire, he was in a position to take still another step forward and place himself upon a plane of statesmanship as elevated as that occapied by Washington, when the world, filled with his fame, knew not how to rank him oa "glory's page," and proclaimed him "more than soldier and just ess than sage." To establish the patriotism and statesmanship ot General Hancock, it is not necessary that volumes should be pub Ished, any more than it is necessary to fill the land with affidavits to give him rank as the peer of the mojt chivalrous soldier of this or of any other age. A few grand utterances answers our purpose here. Hancock s on record as saying: The true and the proper use of the military power, besides defending the National honor against foreign Nation, is to UPHOLD THE LAWS AND CIVIL GOVERNMENT AND TO HKCURE TO EVERY PERSON RK-UDINU AMONG US THE ENJOYMENT OF LIFE, LlBc.K-1 AU fKUl'W.ll. THE RIGHT OF TRIAL BY JURY, THE HABEAS OORPtT-, THE LIBERTY OF THE PRESS, TU IC FREEDOM OK SPEECH, THE NATURAL RIGHTS OF PERSONS AND THE RIGHTS OF PROPERTY MUST BE PRESERVED. Power may destroy the form but not the prineiplesot justtce. THESE WILLLIYEIN SPITE EVEN OF THE SWORD. THE GREAT PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN LIBERTY STILiL ARE THE LAWFUL INHERITANCE OF TU1S PEOPLE AND EVER SHOULD BE. Armed Insurrections or forcible resistance to the luv will be Instantly reores-ied bv arms. NOrillSt CAN INTIMIDATE ME FROM DOING WHAT I BELIEVE TO BE HONEST AND RIGHT. ARBITRARY POWER JIAS NO EXISTENCE HERE. : Upon such expressions, says the Times, "if limed the r'nlh:ului pretension to statesmanship which are net vp for Genend Han' cock.'1 But it will occur to all American citizens who are not mad and blind with fanatical hates that such declarations as General Hancock has made are the embodiment of American statesmanship. They are the pillars of the Republic, the corner-stones of American liberties; and yet the Republican party, like a blind Samson, would tear them up and pull them down ; or, If prevented from carrying out their fell designs, are still capable of leading np their mud batteries for the purpose of insulting the champion of civil rig'ata and of offering an indignity to the patriotic sentiments of the American people. FIRST PREMIUM FOR THIS DONKEY. The Alta California's (San Francisco) editorial on the recent decisions of oar State Supreme Court, re, ds as If the paper was edited in a lunatic asylum rather than in any sensible quarter of the globe. The brilliant editor, referring to the members of the Court, says: Their secession proclivities have not died out any more than have those Ideas among the late Confederates In and ont of Congress. And they have shown this traitorous disposition by declaring unconstitutional the amendments to the Constitution of the United states those amendments presumed to be those which the rebellion made necessary. . That a State Court could declare unconsti tutional the amendments to the Constitution of the United States is certainly an unusually brilliant idea. However, there is some excuse for it, as the editor, In conclusion, confesses that he really knows nothing about the matter, but bases his remarks upon the wild, harum-scarum specials from Indianap oils to the Chicago Times, and its Ignorant

j editorials on the subject The conclusion to

this brilliant flash of California genius is t Not having seen the opinion, nor upon what question the d tot ton was made, of coarse all comments mint be baaed upon the editorial and special of the Chicago Times. How sucn an opinion could fina utterance, in the face of the fact tbat those amendment were adopted by a Constitutional approval by the fcJiate, is inconceivable. " 'rTirfc Washington correspondent of the New Ycrk San writes that "noted Republic cans' at Washington ' whose names would excite surprise if given to the public, advocate the policy of withdrawing Garfield and of substituting another candidate, whose record is not tainted with venality and dishonor. They think the party is not strong enough to carry such a load, and that defeat stares them in the face if it be not relieved. This Idea is by no means confined to a small circle, but has extended to important influences, and finds favor among the friends of more than one of the aspirants who were defeated at Chicago." Manifestly the Republicans are heartily sick of Garfield. The infamy of his record denes exaggeration. When the Grant managers remember how cruelly their great chief was slaughtered, charged with treason, defamed and insulted by the men who brought forward Garfield, it is not surprising that a demand is made to remove Garfield, whoso record makes him odious to every honest man In the land. Hancock is a Fourth of July man. In making your speeches, gentlemen, run in a few of his grand declarations. These for instance: The true and the proper ose of the military power, besides defending the National honor against foreign Nations, Is to UPHOLD THE LAWS AND "CIVIL GOVERNMENT AND TO B ECU RE TO EVERY PERSON RESIDING A MONO US THE ENJOYMENT OF LIFE, LIBERTY AND PROPERTY. THE RIGHT OK TRIAL BY JURY. THE HABEAS CORPUS, THE LIBERTY OF THE PRESS, THE KREEDOM OK SPEECH, THE NATURAL RIGHTS OF PERSONS AND THE RIGHTS OF PROPERTY MUST BE PRESERVED. Power may destroy the forms but not the principles or J um Ice. THESE WILL LIVE IN SPITE EVEN OF THE SWORD. THE GREAT PRINCIPLE) OF AMERI CAN LIBERTY STILL ARK THE LAWFUL INHERITANCE OF THIS PEOPLE AND EVER SHOULD BE. Armed insurrections or forcible resistance to the law will be instantly repressed by rms. NOTHlNO CAN IN 11 M I DATE ME FROM DOINU WHAT I BELIEVE TO BE liON EST AND RIGHT. ARBITRARY POWER HAS NO EXIST ENCE HERE. A better Fourth of July oration can not be made. We challenge all the orators of the land. A Garfield man writes to the Philadelphia Times as follows: Garfield is my candidate and he gets my vote. A man who drives a mule oa the towpath shows he's not stuck up, and that's the kind of man we want for Prei lent. When he is elected and draws his first month' salary he will pay the SC9 for which he got credit in Mobile and about which the Democrats are making such a fuss. If Garfield will ,:shin" around Washing ton and raise that $329 for some g kkI pur pose And make an opsn confession that be accepted as a bribe and swore falsely to clear himself, Democrats will take his case into consideration and determine where to place him to do the most good. The New York Evening Post, a Rspublican organ. says that "it is amusing to see how Btrenuously the Republican organs oppose the candidacy of General Hancock on the ground that he is merely a soldier. These same organs, a few years siaca, were the most animated advocates of General Graut, whose civil experiences at that time were no greater than those of Hancock are now, if so great, and yet some of them were so pleased with Grant's administration that they were willing to violate the customary law of the Nation to get him elected to a third term." GENE UAL NOTES. Ax infant boy in Little Rock is named Hancock English Clingmau. A partridge nest with 200 eggs In it was recently found In Lexington, Ga. Hon. George Boctwell has so far recovered from his Illness as to be out again. Senator Bayard says he will come to Indiana to make an active canvass of the State. Dr. Magoon, of Philadelphia, has provided a j,(XJ scholarship at Vassar College, of which he is a Trustee. Mr. Blaine will be compelled to fight to retain his hold in Maine, and there is every Indication that he will lose the State In September. HiNtor Rowan Helper, author of the "Impending Crisis," has written a letter in which he announces himself in favor of Hancock and English. Don Cameron is really Blck. Eut the great question Is, would he have been attacked by this powerful malady had Grant been nominated at Chicago. The newspapers of the Far West are confident that fifty good-looking girls wUl do more toward civilizing a mlniDg camp thau all the preachers In Christendom. Secretary ScnuBZ will leave Washington about the middle of July for an extended tour through the West and to the Indian Reservations. He will b9 gtie about six weeks. The Montgomery Advertiser says that Grant's defeat for the nomination was caused largely by the few kind words he had dared to utter lor the South, since his return to this country. Peter Cooper and S. F. Carey, Greenback candidates for President and Vice President In P76, have pledge! their votes and Influence to General Hancock, and the great majority of men who voted for them In 1876 will now follow suit. The Cincinnati Commercial Insists that Sen. ator Conkling should come to Indiana and make speeches, which the same the Senator is in nowise likely to do, aa it is said he will make one speech in New York and then sail for Europe. If a few more Major Generals like Pearson, and a few more leaders like Forney, come out for Hancock in Pennsylvania, it will furnish proof of the latter statement that 1CO.00O Repnbllcans in the State will vote the Democratic electoral ticket. From s-me cause or another the Chairmanship of the National Republican Committee was not offered to Colonel John C New.of this State. There was evidently a fear on the part of the members of the Committee that he wonld take the place it they should be so foolish as to offer it to him; hence, the extreme caution in the matter. Colonel George L. Perkins, of Norwich, Conn., is a cheerful old gentleman of ninety lour years, who wrote to a clever young doetor the other day: MI have already buried seven family physicians, so he must be a brave man who now accepts the post. Colonel Perkins is ao active and energetle person; Treasurer ef ft Connecticut railroad and performs the duties of the office,' and walks

half a mile to chorsh every Sunday. He is erect and straight as an arrow, and writes a hand like that of a man of forty or fifty. . Colonel Perkins attended a memorial service in honor of Washington, and has talked with very President since his time except James K. Polk. ' .v ,.:.: i Tiisi census la California Indicates an Increase of 20.000 in the aggregate population of the State. The population of San Francisco will be brought far below the estimates of the directories. The number of Chinese In that city has alno' been greatly overestimated. Soaie ol the interior towns, such as Stockton, have receded In population daring the decade. ' II ox. John a. Kassow, United Htates Minister to Austria, has been nominated for Congris by the Republicans of the Dos Moines (Iowa) District. He proposes to return home to make the canvass, but will not tender his resignation. He Is one of the strongest men In the Repu Mlcan party In the country, and may be rega dcd as the coming leader of the minority oil the floor of the House. -'Senator Edmunds action in Congress. In opposiog an appropriation to lmproe" a mountain stream becauss It would disturb the

trout, reculls the fact tbal the Senator Is an inveterate and enthusiastic angler. K or many years he has been a regular visitor of the salmon rivers of Quebeo and New Brunswick. Not a summer passes in which he does not Indulge in the fascinating task of angling. The best erj graved portrait ever made of Governor WllMaaa Allen, ot Ohio, was the one generally used In his last campaign In that State. It was cut on a saw blade, In the Ohio Penitentiary, by Charles Ulrich, a convict, Ulrich is one of the most skillful tngravers in the ountry.but he hns nsed his ability mainly In the work of counterfeiting. Having plenty of time to spare In prison, he made this pic tute from a photograph. When King Georee appeared at the city banquet In Loudon the other day,an unhappy Alderman became somewhat bewildered upon hearing his Majesty addressed as King of the Hellenes. The Aldermanic nose was uplifted, and a contemptuous sniff was heard. "I thought the King of Greece was coming," said the disgusted city man. "Who'a this King of the Ellens? a place no one ever heard of!" A dinner was given hi Boston last Friday to Mr. Francis E. Abbot, who has Just severed his connection with the Index newspaper. Among the letters of regret read was one from George William Curtis, who wrote: "I am very much obliged for the kind Invitation to the dir ner to Mr. Abbot, it is a tribute of honor to a scholar who has so resolutely maintained the three fundamental American rights the three in one, and the only trinity which probably he would be Willing to acknowledge Irte thought, free 6peech and free press." Mr. Robert Browning, referring to the obscurity of his style, writes to a friend: "I can have llttie doubt that my writing has been lu the main too hard for many I should have been pleased to communicate with; but I never designedly tried to puzzle people, as some of my critics have supposed. On the other hand, I never pretended to oner such literature as should be a substitute for a cigar or a game at dominoes to an idle man. So, perhaps, on the whole I get my deserts and something over not a crowd, but a few I value more." Chalks De Young's will has been admitted to probate in San Francisco. It was made two years betöre his death. It recites that he owned twelve-eighteenths of .he San Francisco Chronicle, and his brother, Michael, sixeighteenths. He bequeaths the profits of three eighteenths to his mother as long as she lives, and leaves the remainder to his sisters Amanda and Laura, and their children, and to Mrs. Julia De Young, wifo of his brother Gustave. The will makes several minor be quests to his nieces and nephews, and to his favorite employes on the Chronicle. Dick Peters had a favorite trick which he frequently played on the saloon keepers of Madison, Cal. Entering a crowded bar room, he would say in a loud voice: "Well, boys, what are you going to drink?" Everybody would rush to the bar on Peter's seeming In -vitation, bet after the round of drinks had disappeared, ho would lay down the exact price of his own beverage and saunter away. If pay for all was demanded of him, he would coolly remark: "Oil,! only asked what they was going to drink out of curiosity, because I Intended to take something myself, and wanted a suj; jestioiu I pays for my own horn, and no more," He was what is la California called "a bad man," and few cared to get into a controversy with him; but finally an exas perated bartender shot him, and at last ao counts his recovery was improbable. Judge Black's Letter to General Hancock, When General Hancock's order No. 40 was made public the political s'.anderer then as now charged tbat Hon. Jeremiah S. Black was its author. The subjoined letter, written by the Judge to General Hancock at the time, not only disproves the charge, but shows his opinion cf the statesmanship which had prompted the order. It Is as follows: Washington, November 30, lbtf. My Dear General This moment I read vonr admirable order. I am innrh cn:wc(l but 1 can not resist the tempation to steal time enough from my clients to tell you how grateful you have made me by your patriotic und noble behavior. Yours is the first most distinct ana emphatic recognition which the principle; or American liDftriy nas received at the hands of any high officer In a Southern command. - It has the yery rlne of the Revolutionary metal. Washington never said a thing in belter taste or better time. It will prove to all men that-'Peare hath her victories not less renowned than those of war." I congratulate you, not because it will make you the most popular man in America, lor I dare say you care nothing about that, but because it will give you through all time the solid reputation of a true patriot and a sincere lover of your country, its laws and Its government. This, added to your brilliant achievements as a soldier, wilt leave you without a rival in the anections ot all whose good win is worth nav ine. and give jou a place in history which your children will be proud of. This acknowledgement from me does not amount to much, but I am expressing only the feellops ot millions, and expressing them feebly at that. With profound respect, yours, etc J. S. Black. Withdrawing Garfield. As we suspected some days ago, and so recorded it, the time would come when the proposition to withdraw Garfield would be seriously considered. The Washington cor respondent of the New York Sun says: Noted Republicans at Washington, whose names would excite surprise If given to the publlcadvocate the policy of withdrawing Garheld, and of substituting another candidate, whose record Is not tainted with venality and dishonor. They think the pa.-ty is not strong enough to carry such such a load, and that defeat stares them In the face If it be not relieved. This Ideals by no means confined to a small circle, but has extended to important influences, aoa nnds ravor among tne mends of more then one of the aspirants who were defeated at Chicago. The suggestion is impracticable, because even if a new name could be put op without once more assembling the National Convention, tbat step wonld be regarded as a complete surrender of the Presidential contest. But that such a proposition should be entertained In any form, or become m topic of discussion, Is evidence of the demoralization caused by Oarneld'a candidacy, and of a want of conn-., denceln his personal integrity. - -.. . The Republicans at the Capital, who are f.-imillar with the dally walk and life of Garfield, know full well that the Credit Mobilier corruption and the De Oolyar bribe are mere Incidents in a eareer notorious for jobbery and hypocrisy, IDs votes and the in flu en oe of bis position In the House of Representatives navebeen huckstered about Washington for years In almost every scheme of spoliation before Congress. . The parties who bought -and who sold him, of course, have an Interest in concealing tielrerlinlnal complicity, and lnvesUr.

gation has barely scraped the surface of his habitual traffic ss a legitlator. Considering his talon ts and his opportunities, Oarfield bas generally got les money for bis support of Job In Congress than almost any of the corrupt erew who have made merchandise of their positions on Committees, or their votes on the floor. He has usually been In the hands of aharp intermediaries, who have made him pay dearly for preserving venal secret. Thus, Dick Parsons, of Cleveland, who was hired by the agent of De Golyer and McClellan to bay dar fit Id1 influence aa Chairman of the Appropriation Committee, pocketed f iU.OJO for that .ervlca. while he only gave Garfield 5,0()0, although, as he swore, he had agreed with him te "share the fee.'- . . As a business corruptionlst Garfield is not a suocess, though he has contrived to make himself t:sy in circumstances, and might have -een ranch rieht-r than he is, if the lacnlty of exaction hai;been added to hla easy virtue in taking bribes. Morally rotten, and defiant of opinion, he has constantly required ready money, and he usmthy accepted whatever sum' was offered, without stopping to consider whether It was an equivalent or not for the service rendered. For these ana for other reasons which may be made known hereafter, the nomination of Garfield felJ flat at the Capital; not ao mcch from disappolntmenton the part of the Grant, Blaine or Sherman men, as from a knowledge of his chaiacter and the conviction that it could and would be assailed success'ully as wholly unworthy of the place to whicn he aspires. Thus far bis opponents have practiced the utmost forbearance in referring only to those point which investigations by Congress have made Ciear. Whenever the time comes to consider Mr. Garfltld in bis capacity as a Christian statesman, and to strip on t lie mantle of hypocrisy which has coveted a foul Interior, the country will see an object to be loathed . It Is the dread of his exposure, superadded to what Is already known, that Induces Republicans ot established repute to urge fo desperate a resource as the withdrawal of Garfield's name from the ticket ss the only mems ot saving the oarty from disgrace as well as from defeat.

A Journal Convert." :' The Journal announced recently that Dr. S. Van Meter, of Charleston, 111., a Democrat, had declared for Garfield. A friend of the Doctor, Dr. Collier, ot Sullivan. Ind., wrote to him concerning the statement, and the reply reads as follows: Friend Collier: Dear Sir Your letter Just received, and In answer to your question, viz.: Whether it is true as stated in the Indianapolis Journal, thsit slnca General Garfield's nomination 1 bad declared myself a Republican, I answer, no, sir. What gave rise to this statement, one of our citizens remarked that I would vote for Oeneral Garfield, as he was a member of the same church. I remarked that General Garfield was a Christian gentleman, and I would vote for him If we had a corrupt man as our candidate. I have not fallen from grace, but still defend that time-honored and righteous doctrine taught by Jefferson and other good and great statesmen. Yours, etc., S. Van Meter. Charleston, Id., June 28, 1S;0. Not Worth Saving. New York Herald. If the Garfield boom can not be held together except by assessing the poorly paid women clerks in the departments at Washington, and hinting at dismissal in case of non-payment, the said boom is not worth SiVing. PruLic Benefactors. Harvey, Jenner, Guthrie, and other discoverers of great facts in medical science, have been properly called the World's Benefactors. Whoever succeeds in lessening the psin and dancers of the human family deserves co less a title. HUNT'S REMEDY, the great Kidney and Liver Medicine is a medical marvel. It cures all Complaints of the Kidneys, Bladder, Liver, and Urinary Organs even Bright's Disease and it eaves valuable lives by the thousand. SJld by all druggists. Trial size, 75 cents. "'Dr. Lindtey's Blood Searcher' cured my son of erysipelas.' Mrs. E. Smeltzer, Larimer, Pa. SPECIAL NOTICES. To Northern Summer Resorts. Chicago to Milwaukee, four trains dally. Chicago to St. Paul, two trains daily. Chicago to Madison, two trains daily. Chicago to Sparta, two trains daily. Chicago to Green Bay, three trains daily. Chicago to Menasha, two trains dally. Chicago to Green Lake, two trains dally. The morning train runs through from Chicago to Green Lake, without change of ears or delay. Pul'man Sleeping Cars run from Chicago to Green Lake on each Saturday night and back to Chicago on Sunday night. No other road runs to Green Lake. Chicago to all Northern Resorts, one to four trains dally. All of the above are via Chicago and Northwestern Railway. It alone runs Pullman Cars north of Chi caeo. It has Parlor Cars north of Chicago. Go through Chicago when going North. The ticket agents of ail Nortn-bouud railroads will sell you excursion tickets via the Chicago and Northwestern Railway. It is the' Pioneer' 'Tourist Route, and is the best in all respects. Ups and Downs of Cities and Towns. The changes of commerce tbat destroy and build up cities rapidly, almost like the visions of Alladln's golden lamp, find another exemplar in the seeming great prosperity of New Orleans, not only present, but still greater In the near future. War-worn poverty-crust plague-stricken she, like a Pbpnlx, revives and presents a busy scene of wealth-produc irg Industry. But amid It all stands the Charity Hof pita!, which depends for its existence and every ready means of doing good on the revenue it derives from the tale of the tickets of the Louisiana State Lottery Company whose drawings monthly afford an opportunity to win a lortune. For further Information apply to M. A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La., or same person at No. 319 Broadway, New York City. 0 . A Sour Stomach causes dyspepsia, and poor teeth produce sour stomach, because the food is not properly masticated. Keep the teeth healthy, and the body at large will be In trim. Use SOZODONT regularly, for it is pleaant and healthful. Once in the house it stays there. Once smeared '"between pieces of wood, SPALDING'S GLUE never lets go. It Is a fixture. 0 Thirty Tears' Experience of an Old Nurse. MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP Is the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses In the United States, and has been nsed for thirty years with never failing success by millions of mothers for their children. It relieves the child from pain, cures dysentery and dlar rhoea, griping in the bowels, and wind colic. By giving health to the child It rests the mother. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. - It Is a happily established fact that Fellows Com pound Syr up of Hy pophosphites wil retard vital consumption. Increase Involuntary mus cular power and thereby harden the organs, promote vitality and facilitate restoration. It consequently possesses the wonderful property of prolonging human life. o Quern's Cod LI Ter Oil Jelly. Approved by the Academy of Medicine ot New York for coughs, colds, bronchial and tubercular consumption, scrofula and general debility. The most mild, bland and nutritions form In which Cod Liver Oil can be used, and with more benefit secured to the patient by a single teaspoonful of this Jelly than by double the quantity of the liquid oil, and the most delicate stomach will Bot reject it. For sale by all druggists, and E. H, TRUSX, 8 Piatt street. New York. No remedy In the world ever came Into such universal ose, or has so fully won the confidence of 'mankind,' as AYEB'fl CITEBRY PECVORAL, for the core f Coughs, Colds and Consumption.

rYTY

UN FERMENTED MALT BITTERS . ."; - TRADE MARK MALT AND HOPS sa, ----------- - - ' -w OS T?-T7 FT3 i DYSPEPSIA. Dyspepsia is the prevailing malady of civilize. 11U. It lies at the bottom cf one half our misery. It Is the rock upon which many of our br.slcess ventures have split. It clouds the mind, weakens the body, and preys upon tne vitality. There is no peace, no Joy anywhere, because no digestion. Where shall wo find relief from this morbid, melancholy misery? MALT BITTERS : Atonce a medicine and a food, this wonderral nutrient and lnvigorant builJsup enfeeblPd digestion, regnlatts the flow ot the gastric jaiee, disuolve and as:railBfs every article ot diet, and cures eeada -he. D:zzlns, Bilous Attacks, Palpitation ot the Heart, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Melancholy, and a thousand other nor bid forms assumed by Dyspepsia. MALT BITTERS are prepared without fermentation from Canadian BARLEY MALT and HOPS, and warranted superior to all otter forms ft malt or medicine, while free from the objections ureed gal not malt honors. ask for Malt Bitters prepared by the Malt Bitters Company, and see that every bottle bears the Tkaie Mark Lakkx., duty signed and inclosed in wave lines aa seen in Cut. MALT BITTERS are for sale by all Dm agists. PORTRAIT -OF Gen. Hancock W. J. Morgan Co.'s portrait of General Hancock tis commended by the Press, Pulpit and Public as being altocnuer the finest r'lclureas well as the best likene-s extanL It is full life size and printed on Cne plate parr. Eend 25 cents ror sample to W. J. MORGAN & CO. CLEVELAND, 0. Special terms to Clubs and Central Committees Administratrix s Sale, Notice is hereby given that ths nndersignf d Administratrix of the . estate of Sterben Tyner, deceased, will ofler for sale at publicoutcry at t";e lite residence of tl.! deceased, iu Warren Township, Marion Count-, Indiana, on THURSDAY. July 20. lss7, The personal property of said estate, consisting of one Horse, one Cow, on Ca rriag. Saldies, Harness, Household and Kitchen Furniture and other articles. Bale to begin at Ida. m. Terms Sums of 83 and under, cash : on all purchases over S3 a credit of six months will be given; the purchaser gtvmg note with approved security, bearing 8 p-r cent, interest from maturity, and waiving benefit of valuation or appraisement laws and ttornev's fees. ELIZABETH M. TY1SER, June 21, 15S0. Administratrix. tf f a Bj -" Mm of enrgy and bust7&.rs C s it nesstaet.ln every county f Smiim Jnlndiaoa and Ohio, tewliom steady emrloymeut will be given lr selling "AdamV Historical Chart." This popafar work has now become stans ard. Ve have increased our facilities HO',ti we can oCer xtra Inducements to the rigs men. Times have improved, and nowlayos chance to make money. For lull particular, address J. S. CA Kit, 220 Mniu f., Cincinnati, lllil Mannractorj Kr..l:ihod ' Orla äXillo or FKlTCFI BI HR STC5 fortati y-.Ui for Kumffl, F Hi 1 Owner, wc. fric Irr: f ) op. Comflftc Mi l and ßof ''T (9& A raa find ac4 kfep in ordr. A4r" ". of 11rid Cirn M:.l rcrr ebeap. vzizrzz b käsx::: C3 lcd:aBapolif. led. PHYSICIANS say it is a PERFECT SUBSTITUTS for the eaipbate quinine. Buperloi in tonic properties, and produces no disagreeable eCecL Dose the Same as Sulphate Quinine. Sold by 11 Drngrlit, er atnt by mall price) 8130 per ox. BILLINGS, CALPP fc CO., Chemists, Bootoa. FREE TO ALL! Any one who loves good, choice reading can haye a copy of the ROSCDILELIUUIUY FREE. FREE Containing 32 large pages, mailed to them, by sending their name aad full address to STRKtTSBHH, tEW YORK WEEKLY, 31 KOSE ST., SEW YORK. NEW FLOEäK am. Illustrated, with Birds, efcroils. Fern, Flowers, etc., 48 pages ) Covers and edges elegantly gilded, also 47 select quotations, all 16 cents, postpaid, stamps taken. Agents wanted, o. W. Bocemades, west Haven, Ct. pprtljiTC'l Every soldier disabled. In line I fjil lit'ito . of duty, by wound, disease, or Injury, is entitled to a pension. Pensions Increased thousands rated too low. Claims of all descriptions prosecuted. Copies of lost discharges obtained. Claims filed by Attorneys w bo nave ceat-ed to practice finished without delay. Address, H. S. BERLIN t CO.. Attorneys, Lock Box, Washington, D. C. WESraOÖIÄLE SEMINARY. OXFORD, O.. Mt. tf olyoke Plan. The 26th year will commence September 1, 18ö0. Boaru, Tuition, Fuel and Lights, flTO per annnm. Send for catalogue to jnism MaCLKN 1'KAUOUT, Prlra. EfinORS OF YOUTH. Dretpe Fr for the speedy cure of Hemlr.al Weaknets, Lost Manhood, and all diseases brought on by youthful indiscretions. Address DAVIDSON & C0..7S Nassau St , New York. Dim 7l Dutcher's Dead Shot. DLv uLlo Bottles 25 cents: mailed. 80 cents! FLIES Dutcher's Fly-Klller,6 cents. Certain death ; sold everywhere. FOR SALE. ITIOR SALE I have 13,000 acres of good xm j improved uplands, situated on and near the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad, in Northeastern Arkansas. Title good. These lands will be sold low to any real estate dealer for cash, or part cash, or general merchandise, in a body. These lands were entered fifteen to twenty-five years ago. Borne good and responsible agent wanted to sell ihemjand a list will be furnished. Address E.L. WATSON, Jacksonport, Jackson County, Ark.