Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1883 — Page 3

INDIANA STATE SENT1NEU WEDNESDAY JULY 4, 1883-

THINGS 1 HATE.

BY JAKES LAYIZKS. 1 bate to s-ee the world go wrong 1 metn the people In It wihh they would tit down and think. It only lor a minute. And try to art like honest men And faithful, loTlng women : Oh. what a biesirg it would be To all in our dominion! I bate to see a man that looks With lonein eves the whhe Up in the bon a face, la hopes From him to draw a smile; And if perchance the boss should laaea. And that way turn nis eye. ' This miserable crawling hlcs With joy would nearly die. I hate to ee a churchman. With face so Ion? and ware, With tears a rolling down his cheeks. Prey God my 83ul to save. II I ask him for a dollar To buy mv babes some bread. He'll veiy soon dry up his tears And shake his saintly head. I hate to see a checkwclshman. That is paid two dollars per day Py bis bumble fellow workmen. Turning from them away, And we.igb.irig for the operator, At the very same machine, For a dollar and fifty cents aday. Does he think the men are greea? I bate to look upon a man Taking himself a wife. And biiDRiDS her to his mother's house. To make ber cad for life, gayicg, "ily darling, you must do All mat my mother may say, Beeanee you took a solemn vow Your husband to obey." W'bst Ehall we do with all such men? 'Tis enough to make one swear. But it takes all tort to make a world; Tfctn let us all beware. National Labor Tribune.

Love and a cough can not ba hid. Gaorge Herbert. Be a philosopher; but amidst all your pb.ilicphy, be still a man. "Every man is a volume, if you know how to read him. Channicg. No yousg lady ie of fashionable account at Newport unless she has a village cart. John Adams said: "The appearance of religion only on Sunday proves that it ia only an appearance. " An outline of the temple at Jerusalem traced on elasa hsa bean foand in the catacombs at Rome. Ycu can't get happiness out of wrong-d iE any more than jou can get wool from shearing a hydraulic ram. The years write their records on human hearts as they do on trees, in inner circles of growth which no eye can see. Love never reasons, but profusely give?, like a thoughful prodigal, its all, and tremDles then lest it has done too little. llannah 2J core. A man resembles a shoe which has to ba heeled when it ia run down; but, unlike a i hoe, he can not have anew soul wheu his old one has become demoralized. Follies committed by eensible people, extravagances Eaid by clever people, crime committed by honest people: this is the history cf revolutions. 1)3 Bonald. Another "sure cure' for rheumV.nm hat been found, this time it is only in total abstinence from food. This reraaiy will cure anything if it is only used loag enough. Thou must not resist thy fate, Neither must thou thun it bliadly; If tbou'lt go and meet it straight, 'Twill invite thee on most kindly. Goethe. Joeh Billings says: ""When a young man ain't good for anything else, I like tew B63 him carry a gold-headed cane. If he ctn't buy a cane, let him part his hair in the mid die." The really superior man U he who dominates net the acts, but the thoughts, ia such a way that those who submit to his direction rcay still believe that they have preserved their free will. Why fchonldst tloa 11 the day with sorrowAbout to-morrow. My heart T One watches all with care most true, Duubt not that he will give thee, too. Thy part. I'aul Fleming, 1G0V. "She had the very essential attributes of a lady high veracity, delicate honor in her dealings, deference to others and refined psrsonal habits.'' This person is fcuni in fiction ote of George Eliot's novels. It is observed that Switzerland at.i Garmany, as regards the bulk of their populatiers, are the most highly educated of European cations, and they are at the same time the two which are the most given to suicide. Ttough sadder seems the song I trill, Yet sorrow with its plaintive thrill Adds sweetnes to the strain. As fragrant perfumes softly flow cm hawthorn bioroom bending low, Eeat down by wind and ria, Jnit because a Pittsburg pastor persisted in re ding the names of parishioners who rave men ey to keep the the church going and the amount ot their gift?, the majority of his people got mad and a3ked him to resign. They were perfectly willing to get their preaching lor nothing, but they didn't want the whole thing given away in that mac tier. Girls ought to be able t talk well on current tcpics books rw and old, all that interest thtir brothers. Bat do they show themselves competent to carry on a conversation that will stimulate and refresh thoso they meet? Good talkers never fail to intere3t and to charm; but a young woman whose idaas are only broad enough to b3 expressed In the words "awful,' "horrid," and "perfectly lovely," will hardly be classed aa one of them. Youth's Companion. The latest American story going tho rounds of the European press is . that of a traveler of that calicLa.'ily who found it neceffary to excuse hia inability to join in the hilarity of other travelers becauso of his poverty. Gentlemen," eaid he, "1 know I am mere or less of a saturated blanket on this party; but the fact is I am a very poor itan steeped to the lips. I may say, in impecuniosity. When I teli you in strict confider.ee that this ia my wedding tour, and I have been compelled to leave my wife at heme, you can form an idea of the narrowcess of my resources.-' Abdicated. So I step down and you step up W hy not. why not? I draicci the draught, flung down the cup, And you have gut The little place I once called mine. And you will quatt The wine 1 quaffed and call'st fine; It makes me laugh. You'll get so weary of the thing before you're through The shows, tbe lies, the paltering Of all the c rew. 1 wonder if somewhere beyond This earthly track. W hen we have slipped the fleshly bond. W'e shan't look back With just this kind of glad relief. And laugh to find That we have left the grind and grief fco far behind ! Nora Perry In July Manhittarj. (belts Them. Pack-J Ftt pbraiea which we hope never to soo gain in the columns of our e3teemei contemporaries: Sickening thud. Toe happy pair. Wee tens' hours. Speckled beauties. igardles of expense. Launched into eternity. The immediate vicinity. Difciples of Izaak Walton. The extreme penalty tf the law. A revolting pectacle was wit-

rested. The house wax crowded to the doers. A wealvhy and public-spirited citizen. The sight was shocking in the extreme. The perpetrators of the dastardly crime are still at large. Devotees of Terpsichore tripped the light fantastic toe. The tables groaned under the weight of a bountiful repast. The Christian life, says Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, may be compared to a system of railroads. Some are broad-gauge and some are narrow-gauge. Some run parallel and tear to each other, come diverge and follow what seem to ethers needless round about ways. But all lead to the celestial city. The churches are so many stations. These have walls which inclose a certian number who want their protection, and wide projecting eaves which shelter a great many mere who wish to be near the track, but must have plenty of air at any rate. Two churches have the broadest eaves of all. I will net name them, but this I will say, that they spread their caves so far cut toward each ether that a poor sinnar can slip from ere station to that of the neighboring track without getting very wet ia the worst theological weather. McDonald and Hendricks. I New York Star. I Ex-Senator McDonald, of Indiana, is talked cf more generally and more approv: ingly by Western Democrats than anyotaer man who has been mentioned in connection with the l'residency. He serve d with great credit in Congres?, gaining a National reputation by his abiiity and statesmanship, and hia thorough identification with Democratic ides s. II e apparently has less of a hold on the Democracy of the East thsn some other men Bayard, for instance. But his candi

dature is strengthened by the feeling that Ir diana is a doubtful State, and that it is impcrtant to make sure of the electorial vote of that State beforehand by putting an Inanian at tbe head of the ticket. The republicans understood this maneuver and are talking quietly, but much, ot General Harrison, cow Senator, whose grandfather was elected by an overwhelming majority in 1.V40. It is to be regretted that in canvassing the merits and strength of candidates the name of ex-Governor Hendricks is not mentioned with more warmth. A recent unfortunate interview, published without his consent, or even knowledge, has placed lAn in a position which is unjust and misleading. He is generous to a fault. He harbors no resentments. And in the course of several conversations, in which he spoke with the confidential frankness of personal friendship, he showed the magnanimous character of his mind. He could not now unsay anything attributad to him without appearing to reflect upon others; and he generously prefers to bear the misconstruction rather thau inflict a rn ment's pain. The attitude of Mr. Hendricks toward the events of 1876-7 and his feelir.g in reference to them are matters of history, and are too well known by too many people to be swept aside in a mood of princely magnanimity. Mr. Hendricks was nominated for Vice President at SL Louis in 170 against hia will. He was persuaded to accept the nomination with no little difficulty, ar,d very largely by the ellirts of bis friend in New York. After his letter of acceptariC3 bad been published he had next to nothing to do with the campaign, and was hardly consulted in it. When tbe Republican managers began to maneuver to defraud the Democracy cf their great victory, Mr. Tilden assumed the entire management of the eise, as though it were his personal cmcera, with which no other had anything to do. And Mr. Hendricks, one of the ablest constitutional lawyers in the country, who was elected Vice President by the same vote that made Tilden President-elect, was ignored and virtually pushed wide. During the long controversy over the Electoral Commimon his wishes were not consulted, Lis opinions were not sought, and he was treated a) though Le had no rights and was altogether too insignificant a person to be noticed. The injcs'.ice done to Mr. Hendricks by Tilden and bis friends was so palpable and markel that both Mr. Hendricks and his friend were cut to to the quick and deeply wounded. That they did not till tbe country with complaints is due to their good sense and modesty, not to their want of a proper cause. Mr. Hendricks early won distinction at the Indiana Bar. His great talents' his generous and conciliatory disposition, his ijij.li character, bis unfailing common sense and fc.d humor made him one of the most po i; Jar lawyers in the State. He has many traits of character similar to those which made Abraham Lincoln the favorite of the people, office came to him unsought, and every position to which he was chosen was so abl ti d faithfully filled that he rose without r rt to be Governor of the State and Uni . u st ntes Senator. He always ran ahead of Lis r. let and was a tower of strength to his party. In a Republican Senate he commandtd respect and inlluence, and made such a mark that in 1S he was the most popular and promising candidate before the National Convention which met in this city, the lint ereat gathering in the then new Tammany HalL His nomination wat considered almost certain; and then, in the full vigor cf manhood, with his Senatorial b'onors fresh upon him, with a host of admiring and enthusiastic friends, it was believed that he could be electtd. Butsinister intrigues effected what could not be compassed by open opposition. Tilden was even then an aspirant for the Pretidf ncy, and actively conspired to keep tte way open for himself; and as Iiis time htd cot yet come, he did not want auy other Pemofrai to ba cnosei. lly what means he drew Valiandinham cf Ohio on impulsive and brilliant young man who had grown up under the inöueLC3 cf Hendricks into the meihescf his scheme i3 not known; but he succeeded in pumiading V&llandingbam that Seymour was the only man of all others to nominate, and Vallandirguam made the nomination in a speech cf ringing and magnetic power. The e ü'cct waia.'m ist electric; acd Tilden followed with an adroit address, lauding Seymour in the highest terms, conclutling with the rr- gret that, as au old man, weai of puh'.ic hie, Semour did not want the nominaticn, and would not accept it, Serrour was found; the nomiration overctnn him; he refused and protested until he actually becirne ia nt, end stimulants were ncessa-y to recti re him. The nomination was literally forced on him against his will, a nomination which should have gone to Hendricks, and would have been given to him but for the wily intrigues of Tilden, who was the nnät active man in the Convention. In the midst of Jhe campaign, when there was a possibility that Mr. Seymour micht be elected, the World, with whose editor Mr. Tilden was personally intimate, declared that his nomination was a mistake, that his election was out oi the question and that he ought t3 relieve the party of a burden it could not carry. A cd Mr. lüden, who was an active member of tbe Democratic Committee, was not willing that this dastardly blow, struck from a traitor hand from behind, should be authoritatively disavowed by tbe New York Committee. t These historical facts show plainly enough that Thomas A. Hendricks has n?thad justice done him. He was pushed aside by a dexterous and cunning trick inlS;s, when he might and should have been the Dem era tic standard-bearer. In 187U he was the first choice of the unpurchased delegations of the West, Had no corrupting Influence been brought to bear on the Convention at St. Louis, there is little doubt that Mr. Hendricks would have been the nominee. Again it was Tilden, and Tilden plus his barrel, and Hendricks was given the second place ta insure Western support. Bat his name gave a opular strength to tbe ticket which no other could have given it. His treatment after the Domination, ami particularly after the election, was inexcusable. He might have been ncminsted for President In but for the deteimiraticn of Tilden and his friendi that the whole of tho old ticket should ba nominated or ronr, and their well-understood threats to defeat Hecdricka were he nomi-

rated. He has to thank that intriguing and compiling faction for not being the candidate in 188a And while Tilden lives to dictate and maneuver, Mr. Hendricks stands a very pcor chance cf justice. It has been well eaid that it ia the nature of a mean man to hate the person he has wronged. Mr. Hendricks, though younger than Tildec, ia now a venerable man. lie has made his name famous as Senator and Governor; he will have a place in history on acouot of being defrauded of the Vice Presidency; he will be long remembered as one cf the most popular and iofluenti'?! statesmen of the West for a whole generation. And there is no doubt that the younger school of Democratic statesmen, of whom Senator Fendleton, c f Ohio, is one of the leaders, owes its impulse to his teaching. Whether a higher honor is still waiting for him will be determined by events it Is now too early to forecast. But certainly among the truely eminent men of the Democratic party of this generation there has been none abler or worthier than Thomas A. Hendricks ot Indiana.

MRS. GARFIELD'S HOME. II er Ouiet Life and tue improvement In her Appearance Miss Molly and the B)y. Cleveland Letter. Mrs. Garfield has made her home in Cleveland, and selected her tunounlics in so quiet and careful a manner tat comparatively few even of the late l'residan'.'a more intimato associates have any kno lede of her plans and of her daily lifo. II ir house is a plain brick structure, eituated oa a smill lot in Trospect street. Sh paid $30,000 for it, and regards it mors in the light rfau invcttment, than as a permanent hjme for herself and children. The affections of the Garfield family are evidently can'.ared in the cottage at Mentor, and there is an impr es si en that their reiidenea at any otW place will bo tomporary. The occupants of the city home at present are Mrs. Uardeld, the l&te President's mother, Mrs. Lir&bie, his sister, who is in failing health; Mies Molly Garfield, and the youngor boys, Irwin andAbram. The solernn-lookins: foo'mn, who ushers the visitor into the drawing room, is the only ceremonious person to be fcund in tho houee. In consequence of Mrj. Garfield's withdrawal from all society, the family usually dine alone. Grandmother Garfield seldom site a dinner through, and when the desert is served she takes whatever she fancies in her hands and adjourns to the library. Sheia the one occupant of the houee who is always visible, "With her white hair and white cap, she can be aaen at the window, in a little wicker rocking chair, busied with her knitting or the daily pipers. Miss Molly is now a charming girl of sixteen, and to her has fallen a greater share cf physical beauty than to any other member of the. family. She is pursuing hor studies at a private school, and has few acquaintances outside of her school associates. She is a bright scholar, and her mind is but little given to ecciety matters. Irwin ia like the Rudolphs, his mother's family. His mind is keen, and he possesses a shnwd mother wit. For a long timo it was thought that the children were ignorant of the fact that they were ever the sutjscta cf public comment, bat one day, after Irwin had Lean ccrro:tüd hy his mother, he astonijhed her by repeating, word for word, an extract from an Eastern paper in which he was made to appear as a very model of juvenile excellecc3. Irwin and Abram, th-3 youngest hoy, together, form wfcat might be called a team. They are regular younp: athlete?, and aro tho prime movers in the boyieii sports of the neighborhood. Harry and James a-e in tho traniition 6tate neither men nor boys. Harry is to anew hat romantic, boing; fond of painting, poetry, and vocal and instrumental mugic. He draws very cleverly, has a pleasant tenor voice, and is unusually skilful at the piano for one of his as. While he is a creditable etudant, Hi mini is given up to such a variety of subjects that in does not perfect himielf in any one of them. James is in all reepe:ts Usrry'g cppD-ite. He leads in his classes, and is much givoa to oitdoor games. Mrs. Garfield berEelf is a changed woman, and cne who saw her two years ngo, burdened with tho responsibilities of a lifo 6he never cared for, would scarcely recoenizo her, so much is ehe improved. The doep linea that enco marked kor face are gone, and in their stead is an expreesion th&t t long only to cne who is well coctart with the world. She manages her afTairs seemingly forgetful of the past and unmindful of the f uture, and yet to one knoviicp; her it is apparent that ske has a regard for both. Whoa asked by a visitor who was paying her a visit of condolence, if the was not comforted by the fact ttat the entire world mourned with her, she replied, "Yes, when I think about it." To her friends, Mrs. Garfield sellom spoaks of her late husband as dead, but makes uso of tho present tenso in her allusions to him. In her surriundings there is but little to deutle the sad tragedy cf his death, and all thiegs pertaining to his sickness in the way cf pictures, busts, resolutions of respect, and the like are placed by themselves in a memorial rocm. In hc-r drawing roam is a fine portrait of General Garfield, taken in his unifcrm; cn the piano rests the picture of Queen Victoria, which ea cent to Mrs. Garfield, end cn a tablo are a fow bxks, mostly clf.sie authors. It is understood that r.o member of the family will go to "Warhington daring the present administration and Mrs. Garfield dcubts is ehe can ever brine herself to visit sg&in the tcenes cf the sailcst moments of her life. .Shall wo buy copper, tin, porcelain-lined, grsnita ware which of these? The objection to coppar ia tha di2i:ulty of keeping it clean ard tho candor of pononing from verdigris. Tin ia gocd, bat it swn rtut3 through and has to bs renewed. Porcelain lined ts expensive tut serviceable. GranitQ ware ccrcbires tho principla excellencies of the other Ihr to. It never rust, or ii affected by article eooked in it, barring accident never wears cut, ard is comparatively cheap; cot so cheap as tin, but much cheaper than porcelain-lined r copper. It is made in table lets ah o. such as eugar-howl, tea and coffee pot, butter duh, slcp-bowl and creamer; s!so in lamps and in chamber sets, which are not mere expensive than ordinary stone china ttt. The granite ware is to be distinguished from the maibleized ware, which is now no longer manufactured, since it wa3 found to le soluble in various acids aid alkalies common in articles cf food, and hern injurious. The granite ware is ceitifiei by chemists to be incapable of solution in any acids or alkalies known to the housekeeper. Tasteful curtains for the eittinpj room windows are made of drab momie cloth. Put them up with a cornice, and in the usual way; then, where they part, fit in a piec9 of the momie cloth on which a pretty group of flowers is embroidered in Kensington 6titch; the edges may be trimmed with fringe or with lace crocheted of linen thread. Tie the drcped part of the curtains back with narrow bands of the momie cloth on which is a vice matching the bouquet on the curtains. o - Dr. C. C. Abbott has kept a carefil record, extending over twenty years, regarding the building cf winter houses by muskrats, the storing of cuts by squirrels and other habits of these and ether mammals, and hai found that the habits referred to, or their om'usion, in certain autumn?, bears no relation to the character of the coming winter. Horsford'a Acid Phosphate Drank with soda water is delicious. AlldrugfcUts have it. It is refreshing and cooling. Try it often.

GOTHAM GOSSIP.

Inger&oll Entertaining' Loafers in Stokes' Fniou8 BarRoom. feeing Some Other ftotabtca Mr. and Mrs. McKee ftanklo, Charles K. 1 borne, et. iNew York Letter.l About an hour ago, star ding cn Twentyfourth street and debating in my mind whether I should go into Madison Square Theater or into the magnificently decorated, picturesquely adorned bar-room kept by the tolerably well-known F-dward S. Stokes, a group of men pass me and entering the latter named place, determined my course. I followed them, and, taking a seat at one of the round tables near the window, had the pleasure of seeing Cel. Cob Ingersoll extend the hospitality of the bar to his friends. It was a tolerably warm time and the Colonel confined himaelf to a seltzer lemonade, which he drank with evident . relish. Don't ba alarmed. I am not about to inflict a criticism or a review of the noted special pleader's views on religion, bat as bis personality interested me, doubtless it will you. Ingersoll has come on from Washington flushed with victory and with Governxent scalps decorating his ample belt. A reasonable expectation would picture him jaded, tired, pale and feeble. The fact is precisely the reverse. He stands nearly six feet high, with a round, bullct-shapei bald head, twinkling blue eyes, a perfectly clean shaven face, red as a cherry, leading to a- sturdy neck, which loses itself in shoulders of tremendous proportion!, a fitting top to a woll proportioned but noticeably rotund figure. The man ner in which he wears his hat, THE TOSE OF HIS HEAD, the entire status of his physique aptly picture the individualistic mentality which has made him not only notorious but famous in realms of thought. In common with Beechor, Webster, Ben Uutler, Garfield and other heavy framed men accustomed to deal with public audiences, Mr. Ingersoll has a cot entirely pleasant habit of apparently addressing his utterances, not alone to the individual with whom he is conversing, but to the surrounding spectators, who ere leng find themselves in semibly mada part and parcel of what hitlertohad been a perfectly private conversation. Still, Ingergolfs talk i3 bright and breezy, tinctured with selt-reliance, self-esteem and a trifle of self-conceit. He is an inveterate smoker, but has tho habit of allowing his fiame to die out, after which he finds the, to me, utterly non-ucderstanda-tle enjoyment ot a second, third and sometimes fourth and fifth relighting. Duricc the o minutes of Ingersoll's stay in and about tte bar-room there were probably HOO other visitors, of whom not more ttan 10 failed to recognize him. At times he was surrounded by 15 or 20, some of whom he knew, the msjority being strangers who locked at ki:a as though he was as insensate as the picturo3 on the wall and as ready to be stared at as the statues oa the pedestals. This, by the way, is a peculiar tendency of human cature in this part of the world. When Mrs. Lingtry appears upon the streets rot only rude men' but others who appear to be gentlemen, and WOMEN BY THE SCORES follow her, walk closely by her side, preseie her soveral yards, turn eo as to meit her lacs to face and stare at her as though she were a piece of luquo or a phenomenon in earthly guise. It is the same with others who might be mentioned, a habit which, whether peculiar to 2Jew York or not, certainly finds its develcpxcnt cn our etreets, in our hotols ard in all our public places. Mr. Ingerjoll tel's mo that he has come with his family to batbo in tho cceaa and rest :n the quiet of Lorg Beach. He takes no Etoek in any more Star Koute trial', and in naturally exhilarated but perfectly good niturei in his discussicn of the farce whiüh has tediously and expensively worn its way to tha Earne verdict with which wo are all familiar. As 1 7as thinking about Ingersoll, a mtn entered the place, who, by T8a3oa of his past successes in .New York, his annual tours of the theatrical circuit of this country and a position to which he has been assigned with in tbe past 43 hours, is a well-known figure ia .New York, and bids fair to shina with yet i greater lustre in all our local dramatic cirI clcs. It wes McKee Rankin, who is now un der contract at $000 a week to ba "leading man" in the Union Square Theatre next seasen, succeeding Mr. Thorne. We have all known Kankin for the past 18 or 20 years, during ten cf which, at least, ha has been prominent in his profusion. He is striking ly bendtcme. Doubtless B:ston peopla remenibir him, more especially &3 the successful wooer ot Kate Bianchard, who, during her engsgemtnt IN A ÜOSTON" MUSEUM. wss the favorite of New England in. general and o! the Harvard boys in particular. Shortly after K&nkin married Miss Bianchard they came to New York, and were part of the marvelous steck company in whose hands tho ''Two Orphans" Lecaine one of th three succesfcs of the century. What a marvellous play it is, exceeding any that I now recall in the large number of leading parts the chevalier, tto minister of police, his wife Madame Froctard; her two sonp, Jacques, and I'ierro, the cripple; Ljuisi. the blind girl; Henriette, her ciäter; and Picard each a part worthy cf a star. Kackin played oh, in addition there were G mvieve, the stately i'.tter of charity, and Marianne, the mckdramatic wife of tho outcast Jacques. Kan kin's part was Jacques, and you may well imtgice how pictureiqielv he looked in the romantic garb cf that recsdess and dissipated wretch. In "Led Astray," and, in fact, in all ths pieces he played, he was cast almost invariably for the vüliai, and it has has often occurred to me whether the continuous effort to adequately portray the rascal,, the scamp, the scoundrel, the seducer, the man who lives on his wits can psa without producing some indelible impression upon tho character cf tte actor so cast. However tbat may be, Hankin, like many of his fellow members in that great company, left th9 theater and started out for himsalf with plays ttpon the road. Iiis pretty wife was with him and did much toward building up the ample fortune th6y now eDjoy, Baakin has contracted for the ERECTION- OF A THEATER on Third avenue here, where he purposes pi ay in sc combinations an d stars. Mean w hile, Mrs. Bankin's health is far from rugged, and it has been in contemplation for her to give up actio g and remain at hon.) with her children this winter. Just at this time, Shook Si Collier having determined that it was folly to waste further time in waitirg for Charles "Warner of London, nd the negotiations with Charles Coghlan having fallen through by reason of his embarrassments abroad, Mr. Kan kin was offered v-00 a veek to tsko the position of leadiDg maa. You know we no longer play parts in this part of tho world. "We "create'' them a phrase originated by the versatile Dan Frohrran as a'sort c f catch word and m?net in Lis prolific scheme of advertising little peo

ple into great ones and Mr. Rankin it to create the leading part in the great spoc tabular and romantic melodrama, "Storm Beaten," which will be produced in the Union Square Theater m November next when the company returns from its California and western tour. The management are tobe congratulated upon securing Rankin, aa he in turn is to be felicitated upon making his re-entrance here in a part to sturoy, so virile, so romantic and so thoroughly adapted to his peculiar and interesting school. Do you pay much attention to coincidences? I had barely exchanged salutations with Rankin an! passed out upon . Broadway through the Hoffman dcor place of eiit,when I ran against an old gentleman, who, in return for my somewhat unceremonious bump against him, facetiously proposed to punch me in the head. I looked at him. lie was quite six feet high, without a WRINKLE IX IIIS FACE, as straight as an Indian, slender and "genteel" in figure, well dressed and with a fa:e full of life. It was Charles R. Thorne, the father of Rankin s predecessor, Charles R. Thorce, Jr.,who was the leading man in theUnicn Square Theatre from the day of its opening till the illfated hour when, a few months since, tempted by ambition and somewhat by money, ho left the scene ot his manifold triumphs and foolishly essayed a work for which he was in no sense fitted.and at a time, too, when nature rebolled against effort of every kind and his friends too plainly saw the seal of death upon his face. Old Mr. Thorne is the hero of a history parsonal and professional which has few 'parallels. He has been upon the stage, man and boy, mere than CO years. In thorough and tumble of his early days he had many hard knock, but gave äs goöd as he received. As a young man he was a marked success.and the record is filled with the story of his triumph in tho

Bowery, in San i ran Cisco, m China and Australia. As leading man of the principal theatres here, years before the present generaticn were dreamed of, he supported the great names of the past. His experiences on the road run the entire gamut of fun and frolic, of trouble and disaster, of disappointment and defeat, of wonderful eu:cess aul great pecuniary return. He was left for dead ence in Panama, was kept captive for three weeks by South Americans, was UlTEI) ox a stage covered with lumps of gold in Marysville in the days cf '4fl, begged his way througa the almost impassable fastnesses of Australia, redo in triumph on the back of an elephant, fled with nothing but the shirt upon his back frcm a gang of miscreants in Sydney, fcught the fight of a true American against the prejudice of English colonists, fatherod a family noted as was their mother for talent, versatility and marked physical beauty, and in his old age walks the streets of the city of his birth with enough money in his pecket t pay his way to the gate of death, and to defray the expenses ' of his funeral after he has passed it unnoticed and unrecognized by the million known to and loved by the few. "Poor Charley, poor Charley," said he, ''how I müs him," and so he must; for, although Charley's housaw&s not a home for his father, cor,"indeed a welcome place to any of his kith and kin, when Charley and tbe old man met, and, especially, if Edwin was of the party, they were like boys upon a frolic, young men upon a spree; it was give and take among them, and many a jolly masquerade they had together. The old man is nothing but a boy, anyhow; a jolly, rollicking, reckless boy, as ready today as he was 60 years ago for a lark; a man among men, suiting his tempar, his conversation and his manner to the company in which he i. Are you Bilious? Try the remedy tbat cured Mrs. Clement of Franklin, X. H. Hood's Sarsaparilla, made in Lowell, Mass. THOMAS .IKFFliRSOX, As lie I Kecalled ly Iiis Grandrfanghter ma He Appeared Toward the Clone of His Life. Mrs. Meikliham, the granddaughter of Themas Jefferson, recently interviewed by the Washington Post, eaid: "My mother was Martha Jefferson. "When but a girl she accompanied my grandfather to Paris when ho went to France as Minister for the United States. "While in Paris she met Thomas Mann Randolph, who had come from Glasgow, where he wss being educated, to see my grandfather. The acquaintance ripenei into an attachment and an engagement. This was the romance of my mother's marriage. Young Randolph was afterward Governor of Virginia, lived at Elge Hill, just across frcm Monticello. My mother was my grandfather's favorite daughter, and he hated to have her marry, even though she was only going across the River Rivanna to Edge Hill. So, after my mother was married she married at 17 she was constantly in and out of grandfather's house and thus it came that I was born in Monticello. 1 lived there and at Edge Hill unt'l grandfather died, at which time I was 12 years old. 1 remember him as a grand old man, one of the Surest domestic characters that ever lived, e wa3 always kind and amiable. I rernembtr tfcat it used to be my delight to climb upon his knee, and, with one of thoe sideccmbs which were in fa hic-n in those days, I used to run the comb through his hair in my childish way. Never once would he put ms down, but would wait until I grew tired and climbed down of my own will. Then my mother would bru h the gray hairs that I had disarranged. I remember also that there was a hall n the house, along which my giandfather would promenade. It was a grand delight for us children to run from one end cf the hall to the other, and have him stop us with his arms outstretched. These were happy days in the old home at Monticello. "Ycu were ir. the house when he died?" "Oh, yes, although I was not in the room. The children were removed just before the last moment. In his sickness he was the same grand character, patient, forbearing, and kind. I do not think that he died unconscious, for just before I was taken from his room, which was just a minute or two be fore his death, I said to him, G rand rather, do you know ne?' He did not answer, bat I felt a slight pressure of his hand upon mine, which was lying in his. During his illness he expressed a desire to live until af ter 1 o'clock on the 4th of July. His wish was gratified, for it was 1:10 o clock on Jalv 4. 1826. when he died." 'Do ycu remember any famous visitors to MonticelloT' "Madison was a frequent visitor there. I remember him particularly because he al ways wore knee breechet, whereas my grandfather discarded them when they went cut of fashion. As tar back as 1 can remem ber, too, my grandfather wore a queue. Lafavette was a visitor for nine weeks at Monticello, and I remember him dis tinctly.' "How was it that Monticello passed out of the family?'' "My grandfather, in the unfortunate style of these days, went security for a friend to the amount of $1:0,000 or S30.U0U, ana lost everything. The place passed into the hands f a Dr. Barkley, who plowed up the beautiful lawn and made it a cornfield. A favorite room cf my grandfather he filled with silkworms and branches of trees, ana in ether ways he seemed to do everything in his cower to depreciate the place. 1 am m m m

to'd that he vaa a little deranged or erratic. After him a Cjptain Levy, of the navy, o waed Motticelc. He restored the place to seme degree. His descendants now occupy the louse, and charge an admission fee to visitor. When I was there, some twelve years ago, I was obi iced to pay twenty-five cents to enter the house where my grandfather lived and where I was born." There teemed to be a shade of bitterness in Mrs. Meiklekam's voice as she said this. "Have you been there since?'' "No; a visit there would be too painful. When I was there I did not pay to visit ths gravel, for I went around into t'ae graveyard through the broken wall, so that I might be alone. I understand now that the price of admission hr-s been raised to fiftv cents."

Skill in the Workshop. Todogood work the mechanic mut have good health. If long hours of confinement in close rooms have enfeebled his hand or dimmed his sight, let him at ot c?, and before "omeorpanic trouble appears, take plenty of Y op Bitters. His system will be rejuvenated, his nerves strengthened, his sight become clear, and the whole constitution be built up to a higher woi king condition. CURIOUS, USEFUL. AND SCIENTIFIC. Beet root sugar is now admitted tobe quite distinct from cane sugar. Its sweetening power is SO per cent, lower at least, but its polarizing power is greater. Mr. II. C. Harvey mentions the cv?e o: a cht that has become quite blind from cataract, tut is still able to do mousing and to make journeys from and to home. Copper has been regarded as a very poist neu i-ubttance, but after long eipäriman r g tvuh its various salts upon doss and upon Liirf elf, Mens. Galippe has cone lud 1 that it can not cause latal poisoning. The Journal do Pharmacia eivai the fol lowing recipe for a mucilage which will unite wood or mend porcelain or glass: To 81 ounces of a strong solution of gum arabic add U grains of a solution of sulphate of alumilia, dissolved in j of an ounce of water. M. Tacchini has su iceeded in observing the solar prominences upon the very disk oi the sun. By enlarging the opening of his spectroscope he has been able a few times to recognize on the edges of the spots these grand eruptions of hydrogen and the unknown sub stance helium. Several Belgian firms are now manufac turing paper imitation of satin which is especially desirable for walls on account of its rich ecect. a here is little dcubt that the process consists in coating ordinary paper with a glue solution and then shaking color ed asbeetcs over the mass. The asbe.'tos takes all colors readily. The nature of the b'.te of the le3ch has been examined by M. CarUt. Ha detached the animal from tbe shaved skin of a rabbit at different stages. Suppose a scarifier, with three tocthod and equidistant blades with drawn from one anoint r while they press iuto the skin, and operating several times successively in the ssme place; this gives a protty exact idea of the mechanism. A prize of SGOO is offered by the Company of Grecers, Londor, to any one who will describe "a method by which the vaccine contsgium may be cultivated apart fro-n the animal body in some medium or media not ether wise zymotic the method to be such that the ccntsg'um may by means of it be multiplied to an indefinite extent in successive generations, and that the product after any number of such generations shall (o fir as can within the time be tested ) prove itself of identical potency with standard vaccine lymph." Competitors must Bead ia tb ir treatises on or before Dessmber 31, 1880, and the award will be make not later than May, 1887. Mr. J. B. Cisero, Indianapolis, was cured of Biliousness of two years' standing by the use of Brown's Iron Bitters. Ayer's Cherry Tectoral invariably relieves and often cures consumption and whooping cough. Try it! Allen's Brain Food, positively cures nervou&nefs, nervous debility, and all weakness of generative organs; $1; six for $3. All druggists. Send for circular to Allen's Pharmaey, 313 First avenue. New York. Sold in Indianapolis by r.rownini it Sloan. LOG-ROLLING. While Wrestling: With a Fallen Tree a Lumberman Receives Consequential Dam, ages. While on a hunting excursion in the great coal and wood region of Carbondale, Fa., the writer met William Coll, a lumberman. Accustomed to life and labor in the forests from early manhood, hewtsatrue Knight of the Axe. Many a tree had fallen before his ringicg s;rokes,.and fleets of rafts had borne away to market the sawed products. Coil is a character, and if Oscar Wilde Is right in saying that all movemer ts in unhindered lator sre graceful, our friend William stripped for bis work, and attacking a tree as Richard I. assaulted the heavy doors of Front de Reuf's Castle, must have presented an admirable picture. One day, however but let him tell the story himself as he told it to me: "I was out In the woods, you know, trying to start a log down a hill. Thinking I coull get a better purchase cn it frcm the lower side, tackled it there with my log-rolling hook and thiewmy weight on the lever. She started, she did, but as luck would have it, before I could get ut of tbewsy she rolled tight over me. If it hadn't been for a lot of small limbs and brush lying in the road, which lifted her up, she'd 'a exuthed me fiat. As it was I got up without a broken bone, but with some mighty bad bruise!." 'Then you were all light,'' said the auditor. "Not by a blamed sight, straDecr. I took cold, rheumatism set in, and if I hadn't heard of BEXEON'S CAPC1NK POROl'8 PLASTER3 and used 'em, its my opinion I should never have made another chip fiy. But the Capcine took hold quick, and I'm about as good as new. But there's one thing you kin calculate on I shall never wrastle with another log unless I have the advantsge of tie ground; fur, as I told you before, if it hadn't been fer them bu6bes I'd beea smashed so you could 'a fold me for a door mat." The Capcine is the thing for rheumatism. It doesn't keep jcu waiting. The word CAPCINE is cutin the center of the genuine. Price twentyfive cents. Besbury & Johnson. Chemists. New York. RflAWHOOD 'f pcdily rvn.l hy the w of 1 if nif, whi-h effa-iul! corn XmM lability. UMt Virilit?. Prenaatar Ir.T. nt i truul.les an.ine from or-work and xrsM. Kan pie of Vitaline mill tVe. nalel.bT -drawuia Ir. W hlltVr. 17 Ec c.. Cincinnati. O ERRORS OF YOUTH. irreOii-nt. A1lr 1 AV 1 1N S immi lfTea txUlvreme1 for ttie U,f uiseaw; hilts ,irld, rf of the won,, kind in U; undine bv tx-en cured, lmleert, Mmii 1 tot futi "Tu atSriVti ,t l will urt owrrLMKmn kretber with a VALfABi-K tkkvj r.fc d-. w iiJU . JL tUiUJl. U 1 waifcUJ'S '

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Seldom tl&es a popular remedy win t nth a Strong hold upon the public confidence as Laa Hall's Haik Iitxiwr.it. ThecaseeinbitU it has accorai'lib"d a complete restoration f color to the hair and vigorous health to the oalp, are innumerable. Old people like it for its wonderful power to restore to their whitening locks their original color and beauty. Middle-aged iop!e like it because it prevents tbcui from getting bald, keeps dandruff amay, aud makes tie hair grow thick and strong. Young ladks like it an a dressing because it gives the hair a beautiful glossy lustre, and cuables them to dres it in whatever form they wl-u. Thus it is tLe favorite of all, and it has become to iikp'.y because it disappoints no oce. BUCKINGHAM'S DYE lOIt THE WHISKERS Has become one of the most important popular toilet articles for gentlemen's use. the Ward i gray or naturally of an undo sirable shale, 1U ikincuam's Dyk is ike remedy. rrtrrAr.ED rv IClMIall & Co.,XasIiua,X.lI, Sold by all Druists. MANHOOD, KNOW THYSELF. A BOOK FOR EYERY KAN! YOTJNQ, MIDDLE-AGED and OLD; The untold miseries that result from indiscre tion in eirly life may be alleviated and cared Those who doubt this assertion mould purchase and read tte new medical published by the Fesvly Bferitrnl Institute, Boston, enrjtled the Science of Life; or. Self. Preservation. It fc not oilv a complete and perfect treaüM; oa Manbcod. Exhausted Vitality. Nervous and tMyucil Petiiity. rremature Dtcline in Man, Error of Youth, etc , but it eon aing 1?6 prescriptions for acute and chronic diseases, each one of which la invaluable, so proved by tae author, wnose experience for 21 years Is such as probably never belore fell to tbe lot of any physioUn. It contains SO psges, bound in embossed covers, full cut. e mbelllihedwito the very finest neei engravings, guaranteed to be a fine work in every ene mechanical, literary or professional tnsn any other work retailed in this country for JJ 5J. or the money will be refunded. Price only fl.2s by malL Gold Medal awarded the author by tte National Meciral Association, ll'nstrattd samele sent on tcreiptof mx cent. Send now. AddreM FEABODY MEDICAL IN5TTTUTE, Ot Dr. W. II. PARKER, No. 4 Bullfinch ftrjet. Boson, Mass. The author may be consulted on all freaks raouiting skill and experience. -jj , i f v-nartered by uie&ttieoi nu ll' '"" V. ( r si nois for the express purpose Vr?ör!-' - Al of giving immediate relieiin j Hirt . V. iv ail chronic, urinary and pnV - y t 4 j: r5. TjVN. .vi, Gleet andSyphili mail th lf"F .','ijfy complicated forms, also f'-A '4 cisM.se of the Skin a 1 their all rVl ,.-& cisci.se ot tne akin ana lilood promptly renevea ana permanently cured cy remet,... :t ;m;al Weakness. Night Losses by Dreams. Fimples on the Fare.Lort Manhood, imsitirtHy rnrrd. Titrrm is tio rxju rhnrt.tiini. The appropriate remedy is at once used in each case. Treatment by correspondence if a visit to the city is inconvenient. Medicines sent by Mail and Express. No marks on package to indicate its contents or the sender. j- All Consultation and Commune cations tiarmlhj t'onfilrntial. " ihm mi ortmnsAö edy for Diseases cf tr.c Kidneys. Female Wellness, Leucorrhcea and Painful Menstruation. $2.00 per quart bottle; C bottles for fit). tiff V tfT'F H? Eh3 The best known remjAftäd mk U fc'Ji WVdy in the world for Nervous Debility, Lo-öt Energy, Imprudences of Youth or later Years, Wasting Diseases, and Dyspepsia. St per quart bottle ; C bottles for f ft. . JAKE? NFEVIKS PILLS. RSdi'Li They act like a charm upon the debilitated Nervous System, invigorate the Generative Organ and radically and permanently remove all immediate and remote effects of exhausted vitality caused by imprudences or excesses. l.OO per box; G boxes for $0.00. Sent by mail, scaled, on receipt of price. Address DR. JAMES.No. 204Washington SL,Chicago,IIL The Milwaukee Medical and Sugical Institute. (Chartered by the State Lf g.iUture ) S.W. Cor. East Water and Kason Sis., Kllaaukee.Wis, For I he srdy aud permanent JJJ cure of all special, rvoim an iJ Chronic AfW-tus. Cileet, Stria V tiir. ypml;s in all its form. t m-T Blood anJSikln iisass. Seminal jm ' A-nd rvoui lability, attended. f m . by Irs of Memory, Kvil I ore. WtuiwJr bodiiip. Premature IHtrv. etc. Also alt nffections of the Kidneys and IXadder, Rheumatism. Fite, Chronic Catarrh and fcur(tTO YOUNG MEN of holfvune advice to -al J lineare penerniiv. vounp men Just th book for falber to rut In their wn-' hands. Sknt 1le oq receipt of two 3 rent vamps. lr. William, located In tha eine effire, for 15 Tears, is a regular phvicinn, who has made speciaitv of ahc-e ailment, lor 25 years, of established reputation as a physlc'an and surgeon, well known and recommended by leading c:t!sen. Patients unable to isit him can be treated b Correspuudenre and have harmless remedies. saf and sure, rmpi.ring no rhacK' of d'" or business, sent by mail or express in plain facksces. Those '.i ned of honest, scientific treatment, aboulu consult Iii m belore teopardiiina- tbeircaeew with quacks w ho make hue promises but lall M cure. Address T. WILLIAMS, M. D.. (.If tending l'hy Kilian.) MILWAUKEE. WliT Electric Appliances are sent en 30 Days' Trial. TO MEN ONLY. YOUNG OR OLD, WHO are mfferinir from Ksnvors PrsruTT, Lost Vitality. Lac or Ncbtb Foaca ab Viooa. Wabtiko Wbiekkhsk. and all tbose oineesrs et a PiksohaL f'ATfa resuitinir from Am cs and OTlisa Carst. 8reedf relief and compute restoration of Health. Viooa and MAHOObGrAKAKTEtir. The irrandeet tliw-oer of the Kineiwntn CeuUirr. Send at once for 1 llusuwved Pamphlet free. Addreee) VOLTAIC BEIT CO., MUSHAll, MICH. HCOSIER AUGER TILE &. BRICK MACHINES. I v. i ia ewu-1 r .----esi - . --- We cfcalU r the Yorld to produce as perfect ermblnfd Tue and BrUk Machine tbat will do the Mire amotiLt of work with tte fme amount cf power. This machine la denned expressly lot parties baring; thiehina engines. 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f DR. rfli , ( BEFORE AND AFTER I

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