Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1880 — Page 4

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1880.

WEDNESDAY,' "NOVEMBER, IQ..

RATE? OF SUBSCItlPTIOX. ( 7" Dtüy; fiellTtrpi fcy rrier, per eek.?...LfO S5 Daüy. deUwpM by -earners, including buaay beaUML er pe.. Daily to nrnNten per owpy so a Indian poll! &etLet for 18KO Daily, g.n. AJoIfvered by earner, per weec.. , per MAT, . Bail-. iiudui'Tia bu dut. mt w . 89 , inily, pex tnauA, by nuti iauv. BatnauA. bv uuL..t.M...r...- sw uu Daiiy, jer axnuta, by marl, fuduaias 8unday, ly -raaü. . .A i 12 00 Ua.nr flciiTBrM tv earner, ier unum.. li 00 Vhiily, deUveted By carrier, per annum, in eluding BUBcay , 14 00 $ 2 00 - Iii 1 ' ' J i Sunday edM!a of seventy columns.. 1 I. Weekly, .per aaauin 1 . 1 1 00 The postatre subscriptions by mail is prepaid hy the pbhir. . . Newsdealers inppWed at three cents per copy, postage or other charges prepaid. DEMOCRATIC DOCTRINE. Th Cat am as ant aatl shall ! prscwd. Jackson. The GoTeraraent la best which (trenu Goremiaent re founded and Iam en aveteU far the prpoe mt protecting the honest, the weak, the Justj punishing the guilty and rewarding the meritorious Jefrson. v V Na aersMBiaeata upon, or Interference i the affair t this people of the North American Continent by any foreign power King, Emperor, Prince, or Fotenatate. Monroe. The largest liberty to the greatest number of persona, providing they do not encroach aptn the rights of a minority. Calhoun. The people of every State, as t well as of very Territory, hare the right to regulate their own domestic affairs in their own way subject, however, to the provisions of the Constitution f the Csvtted States Douglas. The great principle of American liberty are stm the lawful Inheritance of this people, aad ever should be. The right of trial by Jury, Uk habeas corpus, the liberty of the ' press, tüV freedom of speech,' the natural rights of persons, and the rights of property must be preserved. General WJ.Uancock. Governor BrnauvE and his wife got along veil enough as long as Sr.rapue had money. IIox. Jons C. New will ' be the Indiana. Senator, mark that. -. John has the spondulics, and that is what wins in Kepubliean councils. The Democratic press of the country in commenting upon Garfield never went beyoo1 the boundary line of Republican authority. ' Sesatob Cos klikc will foreclose his mortgage on Garfield in due time. Dut in the matter of appointments a Democratic Sen ate will have something to say. "Wivkr and ciiildren are now happier than they have been for bo rue weeks past, the occasion being an opportunity to get somewhat acquainted with the heads of their household. Therk are employers in New York who pay women thirty-eix cents a dozen for- making shirts. , Christian womanhood ought to be a - little too precious to waste at that rate; and now that the election is over, and General Garfield is elected, can't we all agree that justice, sound policy, ,' and common humanity alike declare that the interest of these, our sitters, and such have at least equally aa high a claim to being conserved as that of their employers? . Captais Bads' jettic have had a remarkable effect on the commerce of the Mississippi Valley. Since the first of last January St. LouU has ehipped (o Euroie twice a much grain by way of "ew Orleans as passed out of the country by that route in the corresponding period of last year. It is said that the shipments are at present limited by the want of barges with which to move the grain, and fleets of boats are to be built to supply the want. General Garfield will be President, and as such will impersonate" ,-the- collective honor of the whole people of the United States. Every true American, therefore, of whatsoever shade of political opinion, ought to wish to feel that the President of his . country is a stainless gentleman. The Sentinel would like to so feel, and, moved thereby, will venture to ask our neighbors, the Journal and News, and ;the; Republican press generally throughout the country if they can not retract the charges of dishonesty and falsehood which they seven years ago preferred against the President-elect. "What we have said concerning this matter during the campaign was based entirely upon Republican authority, and if the Republican journals will now. .recall their condemnation of Lim in 1873, we will be glad to eramirr with favorable - consideration their reasons for so doing.'- - ' 1 ' ' A WashisgtoS dispatch says: "The forthcoming annual, report' of General Sherman will be his last, aar' ho has determined to carry into effect an intention frequently expressed to go ' upon Xhe retired list next spring, having served the" thirty years re-1 quired by section 1,243 of the Revised 8tat- , utes to qualify him for voluntary retirement The title of Generai.is .exclusively his own, and his retirement will not make T -a hi j Vit mV ntiii A 10 1. 4 . n ttvwever,' bring Lieutenant General Sheridan to Washington as commander of the army, and will open the way for Major General Hancock's transfer to Chicago as commander of the great and important -military -division embracing nearly, the whole theater of Indian operations and the greater part of the active forces of 'the army. The custom of the service which places this command at the acceptance of General Hancock ; accords him also the privilege of declining it should he prefer his present command and ! resi dence or duties, and should he avail himself i this privilege the "successor of Lieutenant General Sheridan at Chicago will, doubtless. Toe Major General Schofield, who has the reputation among his profession of being in AU-ewpeoial sense the intellectoal member' of Ue corps of general officers of all grades. Geaersi 8Aofield's residence at West Point has cot been altogether an- agreeable one, mi it is nndewtaod' here that rhe himself xeoogaiz the fact that playing pedagogue

over some ten scorcof unraly Jxjjrs is hardly

congenial to hi rank or capacities. As the retirement of General Sherman will cause no vacartcJr.Ute command of Vie e-trn Division, thould General IIancock4ecline it, must devolve UponVither npon General Schofield Or General McDowell, as it couH riot well be conferred upon one of the brigadiers." The probabilities are that General-Ifancook will prefer to remawa ob , GoverDora Island. He could find no plate ia or aWt Chicago half as delightful as -a residenca. , ' - v THE ELECTION. w "We have but iittle to add to our estimate of la?t wvek rjfrding the -election. California We1 give; to, the' Hepvblicana, but later returrw ve Hancock fiva of the six ElectOHs; "-th"'t.Ixth,vudge Terry, was so baily scratcied as to elect Lis Republican opponcJt., The Electoral College will etand for Ilancock and - 2U V'.for Garitld. 0 The' New York' Herald". estimates General. Hansock's popular "ajority over General Garfield 'at 2G.09Q. The UnUed ; States Senate will stand Öairty-riiDe Desaiocrats to thirty-seven Rcpubhcaris. The House of Representatives will probably be .Republican by 'a very ,smÜl , majority, ay two or three. r.Tennesses " electa a T Republican Governor. , Tlie iiaöiediat cause of the defeat of General, Hancock was doubtless the result o the dtesensioas which have prevailed among the New York Democracy for the past lew years, If . they, had but done their usual duty New York would hare cast her thirry-fiv Klcctoral votes for Hancock, whicll'.wjth Nevada an4 5ew Jersey would liave elected him, to say nothing of the five votes which he secured in California, i ' j BEGINNING EARLY. i The New York Evening Post(Repablican), in sin article captioned .''A Business' Question," says: ' ' . YcfcU'rdsy'a elections rove'l to be as decisively in favor of a continuation hi power of the liepuMieau party us the, most witigulne hud hoped. o It nisy be that th KepubUcan party will now consider Itself Btron? enoush and will bsve the courses to fund the deraaud debt (the tezal-tender nolo), and in due time inake the entire lawful money ot Uie couatrj' metallic. ,,.',., ... That the election of General Garfield will bring this question respecting the legal tender notes into proruiuence is as likely as it is fortunate. ' ' - ' The matter suggested In the foregoing pnra-graph-is one of the most importaat with w hich President (Jariicld's udmluLtiration will have to deul. . The counlry Justly cxjiects that the Kepnblican party will debe and adopt these measures. ' Here we have it. The money interest which elected General Garfield, and whose President he will be, is unable to contain itself forevena week from electionday before putting in its claim for the fulfilment of the conditions of the compact. It will be remembered that the Sentinel predicted, before the election', that in the event of General Garfield's election this very thing would come to pass, and we repeat now that there is noth ing in the political future more certain than that the $340,000,000 greenbacks (the people's favorite money) will be converted into interest-bearing bonds, thereby burdening the tax-payers with $18,000,000 per annum additional interest. All, and exclusively this, for the benefit of the moneyed interest, to the injustice and hardship of the masses. A great many people in Indiana voted, recently that this should be, through party blindness and prejudice, who are in fact opposed to such a lolicy, and who dislike to take upon themselves such needles3 and unjust burdens, quite as much as Democrats. "Yes," as the Post puts it; ' the Republican party will now consider itself strong enough, and will have the courage' to fund the demand debt (the legal tender notes), and make the entire lawful money of the country metallic" If this policy brings good times to any other interest than that of concentrated capital we shall be greatly mistaken. - THE RELATIONS OF PARTIES. Theadmisston that the Democratic parly was defeated at the recent election by no means releases tlie Democratic 'press of tho country from the duty of discussing the causes of the defeat, nor from pointing out the formidable dangers which the result has brought into prominence. ' A Washington dispatch gives a view of the situation well calculated to arrest the attention of thoughtful men. The Washington writer puts aside all that has been said, or that may be ' said with regard to blunders , of managers, and seeks to "define the present relation of parties and cut clearly the lines that divide them.!. -It is remarked that "reduced to simple terms!, the campaign "was a struggle between an a.itocraoy of wealth and the Democracy of numbers. The office-holders, the Treasury, the whole Governmental machinery the ru'.Miomires, the great corporations, the rich monopolists, the banks, and all their vast connections were almostconsolidated for the Rerublicans. Against this powerful array the Democrats had only th votes of the plain people. The combination which elected Garfield represents no popular ideas and has no popular instincts.- Garfield himself is an avowed follower in the footsteps of Alexr anderHamilton and an open advocate of a strong centralized Government, with all that the name implies. He would wipe out rlate lines entirely, and thus destroy the foundation upon which the Union rests. The Republican leaders are not content with a simple, economical, and pure conduct of -tic affairs. They demand a -showy Goveiiiment, j with glittering distinctions and rocial classes,' regelated "by", 9ealtS. The millionaires who met In'flie'irreat' cities. ard who gave all (bat wasHlehianded of them by the Republican 'nuvhagcrs , to buy factions , and ' to transport, repeaters and roughs to close States, see'i titular honors to mark them as a preferred class. .Their ability to purcjialsee vp ry luxury" and to shine with exceptional splendor doevnot aatisfy the craTtn?tortltlesTIt Is "said, t the dis; credit of the American citizens resident in Europe, thai they 'are the most servile cour-. tiers of rank. Certainly they ' were conspic-

uöWat Ihe filtly fcodrfol Lour Napo

leonj and they have generally acquired a fame abroad which may well make every true American blush. Our traveled rich come home discontented with the Republican system. They dislike these frequent elections. They admire the army and navy. They can build palaces, ; adorn them with splendor, and indulge every appetite to the fullest extent. But still there ia something wanting to separat them from the toiling masNes. who jostle their pride and pretensions, and who claim unpleasant equality. If money can. achieve the aim of their ambition, these Interests that combined for Garfield mean to advance it by the election ef Grant in They have prepared the way. They hive shown what a minority, backed by irameBe wealth and willingness to employ it without scruple, can accomplish The retaru of prosperity", after long and disheartening privations, favored their designs." . Unfortunately, the "plain people" were in thousands of instances induced to vote for their enemies to vote for centralization and the Empire. They were told that devotion to the Constitution, to civil liberty, was to invite beggary and ctarvation; and this bold and impudent duplicity contributed to the success of the Republican party, and helps to still more sharply map out the lines that divide the two parties. It is believed that within the next four years the people will find out that they have been grossly deceived and will indignantly desert their task-masters and reas-sert their independence. If such a result is to be achieved, Democrats will continue to point out the treachery of the Republican party. Rev. De Witt Talmage, in consideration that the campaign is over, is very happy, and so expressed himself at his last Friday evening meeting. He remarked that "in June last the political storm began; more portentous in July; angrier in August; more gloomy in September; thunder and light ning in October, till last Tuesday the two showers met, the clouds emptied and then the sunshine broke in all parts of this vast land. I congratulate the victors and the vanquished the victors that they have won the day, and tire vanquished that they hare escaped the troublesome duties of takir.g charge of o great a Government. The Republicans will be bound to do their bet-t and the Democrats will see that they do it Now we shall be able to spend a night at home without having to attend to politics. Now we shall be able to pray in church without calculating on the back of our prayer book who is to be the next President. Now we shall be able to stay at home and attend to our business without tlie danger of being called to Wahinjrton to' fill some important office. What the State has lost by not receiving our services is our gain." A great many people of both political parties will vote thatTalmage is level-headed some times, and that his view of the situation shows him to be a philosopher. GENERAL NOTES. Bekniiardt's clothes were assessed at 12,000. The Czar has asthma, and It continues to get worse. He will not likely live long. Joseph Jefferson, Lester Wallack, Sothcrn and Miss Kate Claxtou are said to be Spiritualists. Tiieodoke TtlTO has returned from Europe. Ills new lecture is entitled "The World's To-morrow." Counsel for Mrs. Howe of the Women's Deposit Bank In Boston will urge the plea o' insanity in her behalf. Carlotta Patti is giving concerts la India. She Is probably mating India pale ale look paler than ever. - SAJii EL Watkins, the richest citiwu of Nashville, Tenu.. who. recently died worth S"00,000, begsn life as abricklayer, and left the city 5100,000 to increase the knowledge of those unable to attend the higher achools and colleges. Tli E -Wido of ex-rrewidefit Millard Fillmore is diUigeroily UK at her home in Buffalo. About a week ago, she received -a severe stroke of paralysis which rendered, powerless one side of her body anl very, nearly deprived her of the faculty of speech. ' . " w t A letter has been received at Copenhagen from a young Danish failor who Is with Stanley ia Africa. He writes.tha't yellow fever has so weakened the expedition that several, of the members were for turning buck,"whereupon Mr. Stanley called them together and said : T "ot one of you shall I allow to turn back before the expedition Is over. , My motto Is 'Forward!' and even If a thousand devils with revolvers ordajrgers opposed Xis.'or UlnoKS, pestilence and misery threatened us with destruction not even then should I allow a injle perm to turn his nose homeward." OrFESBAc'ii came to this country m: th steamship Canada, of the French line. IJ was superstitious, and before lie sailed spent sleepless nights. One nightjhe steamer suddenly stopped to cool her engines. He started out of his sleep. He Imagined at once that the vessel had struck 'against a rock and Was' rapidly sinkir g. OfTenbuch, 1 his, nigUt garment, but with his eyeglasses on his huge nose, rushed on deck pleading for'llfe. The efforts of the Captain to persuade him that there was no dauger were for a moment almost unavailing,' When General Grant was in Milan, Italy, on his tour around the world. he was met on the street one day by' a well-dressed woman, who stopped him and asked the Geueral if he knew her. "Yes," said he, "you kept aa apple and fruit stand near the gate leading to the War Department in Washington." ' He asked her what she was doing in .Milan, and she replied that her eon had shown great musical talent and she was : there to give him the benefit of instruction under the best Italian masters. That son ji now the basso of the Strakofrh-Hess Company, and sails under the name of Slgnor Moptiffirie. Great Britain is said to possess four famous shots Lord de Grey, Lord Wabdngham, Lord Huntlngfieid and the Maharajah Dhuleep Singh. The latter is a short, stout gentleman, who has become thoroughly Anglicised. He is a sound Churchman,' and a generous one; he is cultivated in art. especially in music, playiag well on several instruments, and. Indeed, working at composition with the hope of some day writing an opera. He Is fond also of 'mechanical pursuits, and is a good clock and watch maker, doing all the repairs in this line needed in his beautiful country house of Elveden Hall. k . Mas. ü a k Fi eld is that described as she appeared on a railway train a few days since: "Just here if may not be out of place to give a little pcu picture of the wife of the next President. She is a trifle above or about the average height of woman.Fp&re In flesh, with dark hair combed plainly, with just one wave at the temples. - Her eves are dark and brilliant, and she has a very kind, motherly look. She was dressed In black silk with huivy plated skirt. and .wore. a jthlp bonnet trimmed with wine-colored ribbon. , Across her arm she carried a gray wrap. From her appearance I should take her to be about forty-five years old. Those who know her speak most tulogisucally about her, and ascribe much of Qarfleld's access in mo to her inncnce over mm." .

i t i Stable1 cUrtk A J. J 1

An Old Bean. .1 ; -a:i ! FPCAit rAwcrrr. ! r How cracked and poor his laughter ring;! , How dulled hU eye. once tWhlog warm ! But Mill a courtly pathos clings About his bent and withered form. ' To-ntaht, as mirthful music swells. With wrinkled cheeks and locks or snow. He meets the gTsudions of the belles He smiled ou forty years ago! We watch him here, and half believe Our gaze may wltues. whije he prates, Death, like a footman, touch his sleeve, Aud tell him that the rarrittge waits. The American. Trouble can always rates. be borrowed at low Many preachers seek to impress their hearers with the fact that life is short, but forget it in their sermons. The Lacrymai Christi wine made from grapes grown on the lava-enriched slopes of Mount Vesuvius is unusually fine this season. Andrews A me ri con Queen Fays that "Mrs. Swift went to market yesterday on a side wheel velocijiede. The eggs will have to be bought over again." They who disbelieve in virtue because man has never been found perfect might as reasonably deny the sun because it is not always noon. Hare. Miss Clara Louise Kellogg has been highly successful in Vienna this season. The Neue Freie Presse speaks of her performance as ''colossal." A patent medicine advertisement aks "Is vour stomach out of order?" No, it isn't. We didn't turn out with the last political procession. Norristown Herald. The Danbury News remarks that "there is one thing that the next century is going to miss the man who has voted at every Presidential election since the first." Young man love your neighbor as yourself, but don't break down his front gate, just because his daughter had rather talk with you there than ask you into the house. It is a mean thing for a handsome man to go to a town and give every indication of being in the market until half the girls are wild about him, and then send for his wife. Roston Post. A hardy seaman, who had escaped one of the recent shipwrecks upon our coast, was asked by a good lady how he felt when the waves broke over him. He replied: "Wet, ma'am; very wet," The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts; therefore guard accordingly, and take care that 'ou entertain no notions unsuitable to virtue and unreasonable to nature. "There Are no Rirds in Last Year's Nests." is the title of a sÄig. Probably not. If it were equally sure that there were no rats in last year's rat holes the public mind would be more at rest. Philadelphia Record. Mr. Thomas Hughes is said to have told a friend in 15oston that his Tom Brown was intended as a jortrait of Dean Stanley, and that a gentleman, now a distinguished officer in the Kast Indies, and the best shot in the Uritish arnfy. was the original of East. A colored man applying for a marriage license in Cincinnati, was asked if he and the lady were related. "Yes, sah," he replied. When asked how, he answered: "I thought you deluded to de tendirelashuns cb luv 'w hat prevails between us at de preseut moment." A Good Idea. A Norfolk man has invented a gas meter with a price indicator attached, which shows in dollars and cents the a nount due for gas. The Norriätown Herall says: "A good idea, but a meter with a gas bill-payer attached would find a more ready sale." Young men and maidens who are holding back from getting married until they are rich enough thould remember that Adam and Eve had n such squeamish notions. liu Halo Express. What ignorance! Why, they were the undisputed owners of the whole world. Philadelphia Bulletin. The well-known Russian millionaire, Warsehwaski, has been arrested by order of the Rusian Government in Odessa and brought to St. Petersburg. It is stated that evidence is forthcoming to show that he defrauded the authorities to the extent of not less than 'Jl'.OOO.OOO roubles by army contracts during the late war. Parisians delight in monstrosities of various kinds, and have been crowding round one of Chevel's windows in the Palais Royal to see an enormous mushroom, which, grew in a wood at Versailles, and was brought to to Paris with the utmost care as a positive phenomenon. It is more than a yard in circumference, and the weight is something over twenty-four jtounds. "Sure," said Patrick, nibbing his head with delight at the prospect of a present from his employer; "I always mane to do my duty." "I believe you," replied the employer, "ami therefore I shall make you a present of all that you have stolen from me during the year." "I thank your honor," replied Pat, "and may all your friends and acquaintances treat you as liberally." ÜThe late Lord Clifford, a Roman Catholic Ieer, provided in his will that should his younger sons, to whom he left $150,000, take holy orders their portions are to be reduced to $25,000. In like manner the portions of his daughters are to be reduced from $00,000 to $12,500 should they become nuns. Another Roman Catholic gentleman of high position made a similar ' provision a year or two ago. When we read the statistics of education in Russia we get a new cause of the discontent of the people, and lind another justification of the hatred of the despotic Government. A - Russian journal of education shows that if all the Russian people are to bo educated, there will be 1,000 new schools wanted In the St. Petersburg district, 2.G00 in that of Novgorod, and, net to mention other instances, as many as 5,000 in that of Charkow. E. F. Loiseau hit upon the idea of pressing coal dust and coal tar into small balls for fuel. He patented the process and formed a stock Company. The manufacture was begun in Philadelphia five years ago. The pressed fuel, as it was called, was fur cheaper than coal, and about as good for some 'purposes; but the public did not accept it readily, aud a capital of $200,000 was gradually lost. Having ruined himself financially, and being censured by some of the stockholders, Loiseau took so heavy, a dose of laudanum .that his life was saved with much difficulty. . There is a girl under treatmentat Rellevue Hospital, New York, for inability to use her legs. 8he wore gaiters with inordinately high French heels. The distortion of he'r feet and ankles caused an undue tension of the cords and muscles of her calves. She persisted, however, until her legs became misshaitcn, and finally she was wholly distbled by lameness. She lies un fashionably on her back now, with her unhandsome feet and legs in a shaping apparatus, enduring a great deal of pain, and uncertain whether she will ever be able to walk . without crutches. A too zealous detective officer in Paris has been made to suffer severely for his rhania for arresting innocent citizens. This official, who is endowed with herculean strength, is in the habit of drinking too freely, and when intoxicated inststs oh arresting any individual who may happen to come In his way. About 2 o'clock.' one morning he met with an artilleryman in search of lodging, to whom he bragged of his infallible manner of arresting malefac tors. In order to make good his boasts, and Mpying a party of eight people peacefully chatting at the corner of a street, the de tective went up and ordered them to follow Iliim to the police station. ' Instead of obeying this insolent command, however, fire of

' I M J f t 4he raerf attacked the detective, overpowered him, notwithstanding a revolver of which he made use, administered a severe caetlgation, ahd left him mote dead than alive in the gutter. .The. over-zealous detective was picked uptjy some policemen and carried to the hospital. i ' A sweet, sirup-like' liquid 'exudes fron the bodies of plant lie (aphides), which feed itpon the younger portions of trees. This "honey dew," as it is called, is frequently so abundant as to cover the prround hevieath, and in many places is usually spoken of as 'the oil from the trees." Bees gather the sweet exudation for the puroose of making it into honey, and ants are also fond of it. It was his first appearance at church, and In order that he might sit perfectly still and keep his little chatter between his teeth, he was told that a big dog would bite him if he didn't keep that quiet "The little fellow cast several glances up and down ' the aisle, and at last, just in the most interesting part of the minister's prayer, startled the congregation by piping up: "Mamma, where Ls th dog?" it, Louis Dispatch. . The Polled Angus breed of cattle have been yearly rising in. Value. In 1S50 the late Mr. McCombie held his first sale, ; The highest price then- realized was 33 sterling ($175); m 18.57 the highest price realized was $130; in 15JO$313 was obtained; in 1WJ7 the price went up to 3ftS; in 1871, $374; in 1874, $305; in 187S, $723, aud in . 18.S0, in a season of great depression among English farmers, tlie closing out sale was made, and the highest price obtained was $1.418. . . It was in the Gal veston Opera House. Tlie two gentlemen were from the country. After the curtain fell on the first act one of them, who had been readingthe programme, said, in an excited manner: It's an infernal swindle, jnst got up to take in strangers." "Wrhats a swindle?" '"Here it says the next act is two years later. I wonder if they think we are going to stay in Galveston, at two dollars a day, for two years, just to see this thing out?" They went out and saw the ticket mau about it Galveston News. Rev. Mr. Geneflux fell down stairs last Sunday morning, with a flower-vase in one hand, a pitcher of water in the other, a lamp-globe under the other, and a china sau er tucked in his coat-pocket He. was trying to cxry all these things down stairs, and he succeeded. But when he got then! to the bottom, .'and . his anxious wife screamed from the head of the stairs to know if he had broken anything, he took an account of the stock, and calmly reported that "he had broken everything but the Sabbath." "The only thing," petulantly commented his careful and economical wife, "that we could afford to break." In Providence, R. I., on the 29th inst, there will be a gathering of Eddys from all parts of the United States, and ierhaps representatives of the family from England also. They will meet to celebrate the two' hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the landing of John and Samual Eddy at. Plymouth, Mass., in 1G30. Samuel and John were the sons of William Eddye, vicar of St. Dunstan's Church, in Clanbrook, Kent, England. The vicar died in 1616, and at least two of his children found their way to the Western wilds. They sailed from Box ted in the good brig Handmaid, and were of the last company of the Pilgrims, properly so culled. ... Recorder: "James Webster, you are ac Cused of robbing old Mose of four dollars on the corner of Galveston avenue." ' Prisoner: "Yes, sah; I is ob de 'pinion dat de raitigatin sarenmstance ought to be tuck inter consideration." "What mitigating circumstance do you refer to?" "De trouble I tuck not to hurt, his feelings. I knows what de ole man suffers when he has to part wid a dime, so I fixed it so he nebber knowed when he parted wid de cash." "That was very kind in you. How did you manage it?" "I jest chloroformed him out ob pure kindness wid a club before I ran my hand in his pocket He is a mighty wiry öle man when he is awake, and you ' has to get a sesment fur campaign purposes outcn him." Galveston News. It was C. F. Denccourt, or the "Sylvanus of the Forest" as he grew to be affectionately called by the people of Fontainebleau, who first made its beauties accessible mainly, if not wholly,, to the American tourist. He was born in 1788. near the forest and after serving under the first Napoleon, whom he adored, came back, broken and wounded, to die there. But the solitudes he thought would be his ' tomb became his remedy. Knowing every splendid-tree and curious site, he noted it, and, marking out an Indian trail for himself, conceived the idea of making little foot-pat lis to lead to these special spots.. He cleared thus 150 kilometres of road, and planned at least twenty different walks. Favorite sites and trees were named after favorite heroes; he branded each notable object with a blue or red star; he painted blue arrows on rocks or trees to indicate the route, and, though now dead five years, his mapand guide-book still direct the wanderer.

Looking Back to '72. Wheeling Intelligencer. That the great campaign now upon s will exceed that of 1872, when the 'Go West' philosopher" was in the field and fray, no one doubts. Time works wonders; but with some things it can moke no change, as the following from our esteemed fellowcitizen, II. F. Behrens, Esq., will show: I have sold the Hamburg Drops since 1S72. and have never heard a complaint; I know families who would not be without the Drops for anything. Every dealer says the same. An exchange remarks that sometimes an old man will laugh like a boy, just as old apple trees sometimes blossom in the fall. The advertisement of the American Shoe Tip Company, which appears in another column, is of the greatest importance to parents. Read it and learn how to save money! . Ask your shoe dealer for these goods. . . ', . , , "Wk'es Happy at Opb Homb." See the advertisement under this heading, and note the very good reasons for' being happy. Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer is the marvel of the age for all Nerve Diseases. All fits stopped free. Send to 931 Arch street Philadelphia, Pa. ' . Hoofoline cures sick horses. Canvassers make from $25 to $50 pep, week selling goods for E. G. PJdeout t Co., 10 Barclay street New York. Send for catalogue and terms. - .. o FROU-FROU. : ' FROU-FROU, . . FROUrFROU, OCT TO-DAY, OCT TO-DAY, OCT TO-DAY. OUT TO-DAY, OUT Ti-DAY, OUT TO-DAY, , OUT TO-DAY, OUT TO-DAY, OUT TO-DAY, IN THE FIRESIDE COMPANION. ; FIRESIDE COMPANIONFIRESIDE COMPANION. . . ALSO, t . DtVEX, THE ARCHER. A LEGEND OK AGINCOURT. By .Launce Fovntz, Author of "Kuight ol the Rubies," etc., etc. . A thrilling story of Irish life, i entitled ,. I0XLY AN IRISH GIRL, .will be commenced la No. GS I of the Fireside Companion.-.'1- i ' ' ' - ' ,. Fur sale by all newsdealers. THY8IC1AN8 say It la a PERFECT , BUB3T1I TUTK for the sulnhate Quiuiue. Superior

in tonic properties, and produces no disagreeable fleet. ... i " Dose the Same as Sulphate Quinine. SOLD BY AXL DRUCKJI8T8. OR BENT BY MAIL. PRICE, $1.60 PER OZ. BILLINGS, CALPP CO., , V : : , , , , ,(J . Chemhte, Boston, Uta. : ,

Mirac!e3 of Healing Unparalleled in Medical . History. t i Cuticur Resolvent the great namral blood purirter. absorbent, renovator and vifsiuer. has shown its rrand curative power in scrofula, white swelling, ulcers, erysipelas, swelled necit. scrofulous inllammatiotis, mercurial affections, old sores, eruptions of the skin, sore eves and scalp affoctioii. with dry, thin and laüiiü; hair; and when the Cuticura, a Medicinal Jelly, and the Cuticura Soap, prepared from It; axe applied to external sym Moras, the cures effected by the Cuticura Remedies are marvellous. - ' SÖFULA. , ' Scrofula .Hon. William Taylor. Ronton, State Senator of Maksachuwtl, permanently cared of a humor of the htce and scalp that had been treated UDüuece.fully for twelve years by many of Roston ' best physicians and most noted specialists, as well as huropern authorities. lie says: "I have been so tiated with my successful use of the Cuticura Remedies that I have stopped men in the street to tell them of my case. ' KUNNINO SORES. Rrxxix Sores. Henry Laudecker. Dover. 11., certifies that Aucust 23, 177, he broke his lefr. The bone was set by a phician. I' pon removing the splints sores broke öut from the knee to the heel. Joetor called them varicose veins, and ordered rubber stockings, paid 525 f-r stocking, without any siga of cure. Bought Cuticura Remedies and was rapidly and permanently curvd. Certified to by Lothrops & Pinkham. Drugipst. Dover, N. 1L . , - salt"rheum. Salt Rhei m. Geo. T. Owea, Dealer in Tianos, Grand Rapids, Mich., was troubled for nine years with Salt Rheum. Tried every medicine known to the trade, and was attended by many physicians with only temporary relief. Cured by Cuticura Remedies. CmcritA Himedies are prepared bv WEEKS & POTTER, Chemists aud Druirtfsts, 3GoVahinfrton street, Boston, and are for sale by $tll druggists. Price of Cvtictra. a Medicinal Jelly, small boxes, 50 cents; larse boxes, fl. Cxticcea Resolvent. the new Blood Purifier, 51 pet bottle, Cvticcba Medicinal Toilet Soap, 25 cents. Ccticora Medicinal Shavin? Soap, 15 cents; ia bars, for bsrhers and larpe consumers. 50 cents. All mailed free on receipt of price. .

SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE For CATARRH, One Bottle Radical Cure, One Box Ca- . l tarrhal Solvent, and One Improved . Inhaler, Price for All, $1.00. Economical, agreeable, safe and never-fail-iup. relieving . iustautly and curing permanently, this great combination of medicinal sgents otters to the wcarv sufferer from every form of Catarrh relief and ret. It satisfies every demand of reason and common sense. It attacks and conquers every pha.-e of catarrhal disease. It strikes at the root, i-lencinp the nasal MLssapes of purulent matter, to swallow and inhale which means destruction, sweetening the breath, restoring the senses of smell, taste, and hearing to full activity, purifying the blood of catarrhal virus, and checking its constitutional ravages. Buy It while there is yet time. Ask for Pan-ford's Radical Cure. Bold and recommended everywhere. General Agents, Wests & Potter, Boston. One Collins' Voltaic Electric Plasters, costing VOLTAIC E r, rr.- -.- cent, is lsr superior to IU.UIUI, every other electrical annliBi nC, ance before the public. AsASTuVv' ' They instantly relieve Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint. Malaria. Fever and Ague, and Kidney snd Crinsry Difficulties, and may be worn overth pit of the stomach, over the kidneys, or any aflected part Price 25 cents. Sold everyw here. Mural Fruit Flavors, EXTRACTS. Prepsred from the choicest Frolts, without colorlne, poisonous oils, srids, or artlftrlsl Kssniffs. ALWAYS UNIFORM IX STKE.VGTU, WITHOCT AXY ADl I.TLUATIOVS OK LS P CHIT I KS. Hare pained their reputation from their perfect parity, superior ttrfnpth and nallty. Admitted by all who have used then as the most delirat. gratefsl and aatarsl flavor for rakes, paddings, creams, etc., ever made. Bann fart a red bySTEELE & PRICE, Bskers of Lpll Teast Gems, Cream Bak Ing Powder, etc. Chicago and SU Louis. . The Only Remedy That Acts at the Same time on Tis liver, Tta Bowels and The Kidneys a M9 cumoinr action nv9 it iruruMcrj Why Are Ve Sick ? JBecout us tüjw thtttgrtatorganTtoblX eonu clotjaed or torpid, and poitonous huA mors or thirtfort forced into lha bloodl that tkotdd I expelUd ttvraily. L 1 Blllossness, Piles, Constipation. Kldaeyt Complaict aad Diseases, ileahui snd rrons Disorders. tri, Wair.r i::ilnn nalna and aches I H Vf hy tormrnwa wiui rues, vsiip"b i i M Why rrlirntenea OTSTCisoraerea siaji I J rnnmrc arrrnn irii WhT hays tleenless aishti 1 J Cm KIDNEY WORT and rfoU in hjaliA. It it a dru.txvelabU compound ana F 1 ll. Mfe km will auks alz etaaf liedleiaa. I Ott is of your ifrugmn, as tri crtur , tnrii tifflAiscoa a Co.. rnKUtoa. (WillwnapOTtpaM.) UirUafUa, VS. AGENTS YAHTED tXT, R.VWTT K RH to sr& the best F ami! ir K sUttlaur Machin mr tnvrnW. knit s pair of UKklnjre. wim 1 1 KJ 7L, and TOE emple4t tu JOnunutea; -It UM knit a (re4 rarvrt) ui fancy ' wor for wnu-E then is alwari a ready ma-trt hrad tr rtrrn'ar -vi tern to the TfynMy K nfftlmg

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