Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1883 — Page 2
THE IMHALs A STATE SENTINEÜ VEDNlSOAY- J ETA J 8. 188:5.
WEDNESDAY, JULY IS.
Twice as many men as women die of pneumonia. Ti In Ja jaii is Co per cent, cheaper than last year. II the price continues to fall, the motive fcr adulteration Trill soon ba wanting. Some cue asked Colonel Inserso'l what his handjome cpy of Voltaire's works had cost him. "The Governorship of Illinois," wai the reply. Gi5ebal Lew Wallace proposes to negotiate a commercial Ireaty with the Turks. The trouble is, General Lew Wallace don't know anything about commerce. It is held that the leading railroaia of the country are doing more for the cause of temperance than all the prohibition laws that were ever enacted. They employ only temperate men. If the National .Kepublican Convention bhould be held In Indianapolis next year, Mr. W. P. Fhhhac- will be asked to point out the Indiana Ilepablican "high officials" who connived at Porsey'a crime to carry IntliäLa for Forter and Garfield. Tomatoes have fought their way Into public favor with avecgeancs. Not many generations aso they were known as love apples, and considered poisonous. Last fall there were "2,3.2,052 cans cf tomatoes put up by the canning establishments of the United States. The Chicago Tribune remarks that "Dorsey is seeking his affinities." If so, he evidently contemplates visiting Indianapolis, where he win look around for the "high officials" who connived at hi3 crime of "bribing election cüiciaIto stuff ballot-coxes and falsify election returns." P. T. Eabscm has started out to add one or two white elephants to his greatest show on earth. So far he is out of pocket $1-30,000, with nothing to enow for it bat Burmese priests end sundry tusks and trunks. But it is not to be supposed that Mr. Larnum will "give it up so." If the great showman has determined to have two white elephants he will have them if he has to whitewash them. Old Mackey, the bonanza king, has gone into the art business with a regular Sitting llull whoop. Advices eay he has purchased pictures valued at $ööö,000 at one lick, which, beats Vanderbilt out of Lis boots. The collection that wi'.' ?a future adorn the Mackey palace is that of Lsih Court, Somerset, Mackey calls it his "Samuienault collection," and says "the pictures are the best daubä in Yurup." A Boston sharp has found oat that milk which has changed may be sweetened or rendered fit for use again by stirring in a little soda. In the course of time that scientist may further discover that some Hour and a pinch of salt in addition to the soda will reEult in a batter which can be baked on a griddle, and the result will be a dish known to his ancestors for centuries under the general tame ot ßannel cakes. A siw buggy is the latest addition to narrow gaue vehicles. Unlike the bicycle, which possesses two wheels, though it has them in the same plane, this bugzy depends on a siegle wheel, and it is also to be drawn by a horse instead cf being propelled by the rider. According to the descriptions given in the parera cf Illinois, where this invention originates, the peculiar merit claimed for it is absolute safety fain apsettm?, possibly because this is the thing which would come into the readers head at first as the danger tf ecially to be feared from so ;ueer a conveyance. Colo.vel E. X. Hill, of Washington, win was in Indianapolis helping Doraey when he was preparing to carry Indiana for Porter and Garfield, in a recent interview, in reply to questions about the purchase of Stanley Matthews by Jay Gould, he sa'.d: The charge was made in tii3 Washington P.opublican that Garfield, when he was in New York at the August conference, asked Jay Gould to advance 5100,000. and the latter consented todofooLly oa receiving Garfield's promise in wilting tha.t Matthews would bo elevated to the Sui-rene Bsuch. Gould gave the letter to Whiteaw P.eld. and when the tisht over tue Collectorship of the Port ot Sew Voik was at Its hottest Garf.cH decided to withdraw RoociUDn's name. Reid telegraphed Garfield that night to the efTtCt that it Robertson's nama was withdrawn the Gould letter would to published. Siac3 the letter was published neither Gould nor R;-id ha denied it, and it Held were to ba put under calh he would not deny the existence of tho contract with Gould. The Stanley Matthews business is worse than Tewksburyisni in Massachusetts. "There is not a lingering doubt," says a contemporary, "that truth is etraus-er thin fiction." Unquestionably. Dorsey, aided by Indiana "high tlttsials," committed crimes which shoal! have tent the entire panj to the Penitentiary. For the success resulting from thes-e crimes, Dorsey was banqueted in the city of Ne York, and Arthur and Beecher oraed for the purpose of malcinz Dor?ey appear like a patriotic h3ro or colossal proportions. Then the men who gloritie Dorsey went to strip Lim cf his paint and featLer3 and reduce Lira to the vulgar level of a "big Injun'' io irons, with hands and forehead branded "thief." Sich licts are stranger than fiction. Bat there are other facts s:ill more astonishingly stranger than fiction. They are In Dorsey'a possession, and should .he conclads to give them to the public it will be interesting to see Republican bo3333 dodge the lightning. Arthur himself will sigh for a "pus cavity" in which lo hide from the storm. The Queen of England may not be cray, but that she is becoming demented no one will deny who can boa. t of a thimbleful of common tease. It is told of the old martinet that when the Priucesa Louise arrived at the palace of her mother fron Canada sh was not permitted to see the old lad until certain preparations were nie de to receive her, and when audience was granted the poor girl appeared in the wrong stjle ot fitoting3, and was peremptorily ordert d to her room to remove the obj?ctioLab!e le gear and put oh white. As a matter of course. Louise had to put cd regulation hose. That done, royalty wts appeased and dinner ordered. Lome was iiuircd lo dine at another table. Just
how Victoria treats the children of Loa'as is not stated. They are only half royal sort of half-breeds and it is not presumable that the Queen admits them to her presence. Such are tbe ridiculous ways of royalty in "enlishteced" Kngland. Victoria's children never viäit her except by invitation, and then they are received and dismissed as other subjects. A female cf the genus bovine CO-ld scarcely- show lea parental feling. Such mothers may have labor parjgs, but -ever a thrill of affection, without which humans are mere animals.
THE YOUNO MEN IN POLITICS. Once a man always a man, is the law, and the law determines, politically, when a youth ceases to be a youth and becomes a young man clothed with the high prerogative cf wielding the ballot of impressing hi3 convictions upon the political affairs of the country. The law, however, assumes that while a young man of twenty-ono years may vote, there are offices within tbe gift of his fellowcitizecs which he can not hold until he is qualified by more years and more experience to assume creftt responsibilities. The school population of the Republic in lSO amounted to lö,"02 SC.. Assuming that half of this tchool population is males we have 7,051,431 youths, of whom at least 1,000,000 graduate as voters every year. These young men, as tfiey come to the front, are cot in sympathy withefTete ideas. The policy of the Republican press has been to Inoculate the youth of the country with the prejudices born of war and the asperities wbici war always ergenders. "There is,"' says the New York World, "such a thing as progress, which these newspapers do not take into account. Progress gather, ia all the young men. It brings within its scope men who nave nothing in common with the likiDgs and prejudices born twentylive years ago and nursed through the War and paraded at every election since. The Republicans waived the bloody shirt and run, the Southern outrage mill as their stock In trade at election times, while nnother generation of voters w&3 growing up and preparing, with wider views and broader aims, to make their influence felt in the elections. The old election managers could devise no better means to reinforce the Republican party than to bargain with euch men as Mahone, while around them growing up to their hand were young men with frcih blood, strong impulses and high aim?, who will not be contaminated by contact with methods like these." The yourg men of America are Dot disposed to cast in their fortunes with the Republican party. Its bosses are too corrupt In Virginia Mahone is trying to swindle honest creditors out of their money, and Arthur i3 dome what he can to enable Mahone to achieve success. Yourg men do not care to affiliate with a party which encourages repudiation in oren defiance of all honorable considerations. The young men of America, as they read tbe history of Bepublican methods to seat Hayes, the frauds, forgeries and rerjuries which Vi ere utilized to accomplish such an infamous result, turn from the party with unutterable loathing. They see theft, robbery, embezzlement in every de partment of the Government. Star Koute robbery in the Postcffice Dapartment, stupendous land stealing in the Interior Department, pe culatiua and fraud in the Navy Department, and vile corruption in the Deparment of Justice; the Treasury Department honey-combed with frauds where sneak thieves rioted in security under the nose cf John Sherman as their bo33 a man in the Presidential office whose record was so infamous that even B. B. ZIaye3 refuted to tolerate him. Here in Indianapolis so corrupt have the "hixh officals" of the arty become that they are cpsni- charged by a distinguished member of the party with conniving at crimes which long since should have sent them to the Penitentiary. Yourg men just comin? into the possession of the high prerogatives of citizens carFt ailord to act with a party whose record is bo ineffaceably stained with corruption. REPUBLICANS AND THE SOUTH. A mighty effort is being made on tbe part of the Bepublican managers to obtain the Southern vote in the nest Presidential elec tion. So far, little headway has been made, but the Republican boaaes are not discouraged. They are still at work. To help Mahone In Virginia, a Republican Administration is lending its influence in favor of repudiation and robbery, and every wheie throughout the Koutb spoils are to be distributed under the immediate direction of Chandler, the Secre tary of the Navy, for the purpose of breaking the Democratic column in 11. If that can be accomplished, there is hope of Republican snccess. If it can not be done, the proba bilities of Republican victory ere about equal to the chances a buttetlly would have to ex plore the interior of Hades without getting its wingiicorched. To succeed, however, the Republican man agers will leave no stone unturned in any degree calculated to win Southern votes, and now the indications arc that the bosses are baiting their hooks with Southern Confeder acy bonds. The Supreme Court of the United States is in the hands of Republicans, and on the Bench ere such man as Judas Bradley and Stanley Matthews. The world knOTS all about Judas Bradley, and is scon to know more of Stanley Matthews. If the Supreme Ccurt can be purchased, and few men doubt result, provided the bid is sufficiently attractive, decisions of the right ßtamp may be had. That the Republican bosses are preparing the way for such a move ment there can be little doubt. The Electoral College of 1SS1 will consist of 401 members, and 201 votes will elect the President and Vice President. . The sixteen Southern States will have 15.1 votes, distributed as follows: Alftbfimt 10 Mississippi ....... Arkanita 7 Missouri Delaware 3 North Carolina, it ricrlna...... 4 ?outn Carolina Geerbt 12 Tennessee , Kentucky . 13 Tens - 11 I.omrtaiia A'lrg'.n1a 12 Maryland... fe, West Virginia i Southern electoral vote .i3 These li'ures indicate the character of the probltm the Repub.ican, bosses are now striviDg to solve. If they can satisfy theraf elves that fivcring tbe payment of Confederate bonds will give ther.i a fair per cent, of the Southern electoral vote, th9 people may te assured that the Confederate bond boom will Le atartcd at once. t roi-r've at briin elutlo-i 'J.ci tie t ) U'I t-ai;ot boxes arid i'!sify t.lt-ciitu reu.rj r inr-r l"or riin ihn Jarcrfr the ;. i ... xr-lr-It of a footpad 8M11 mt Rpubllpfi rrrn date intimate that Mr. FUbuicii has till an ua-
truth.' fech In r.cpuMIcaa rascality, and such the f'eteatle cowardice of Republican organs. Mr. I ihbeck' charged have boen contrdlcVa ever aid cvct, though they dlla't need It N
tody ttiievedtnern but Democrats, tuanii v--lieve thm hinitelf or he coul.l 1i.t expo-ted ite oiAont practices at onoe aud defeated lastn, Jat'ead of waititg tiuee jears, gciUag a oyi crip f the tatt t ihue In the State, and cxposin? t wfct;i, ii could do iiu ol. If there 1 "rascality" in the .:. inr auy wliers, what la ilr. Fisabici'a jaitul ll'.'-litview. Haa the Indianapolis Journal contradicted Mr. Fish 1 mark's charge agaic&t Iadiana "high cfilciala?" lias the Times contradicted the ttatement make by Mr. Fishback? If so, when, where, how? Not a word. The charge is that certain "high officials" connived at Penitentiary ctimea. 2o&rver charge coald be made against "hi;h cfliciala" in so far as violating election laws are concerned. Ordinary contradictions do not answer the demand, as in the case of mere rumor. Reptibl'caa "high officials" are not branded as uilty of infamous conduct as a matter of hearsay, common, and often meaninglec-a, gossip. It is done by a distinguished member of the Re publican party, a man of recognized char acter and ability, honor and integrity, ths boon companion and friend of such distinguished Republicans as Tostmastsr General Gresham. When such men niiko charges against their political associates something more severe than .a mild contradiction is required. The charges are true, disgracefully and abhorrently true, or false, infamously and libelously false. Republican "high officials" Indiana who are ambitious of being leaders can not. we should conjecture, r jst easy under such charges as Mr. Fishback brinr against them. Rat so far not one of them has exhibited the spirit of an average Colorado grasshopper. The reason is at hand; not ore of them da-re arraign Mr. Fishbac'x as guilty of uttering an untruth. Honest Republicans are making a note ot the fact, end ere concluding it is not wise to train under the Republican banner in the future. HIGH AND LOW TARIFFS. It has been thought advisable to get the tariff out of politics that is to eay, we presume out of partisan politics. This would be well if it were practicable. Simplified, there are two propositions high tarlffi and low tariff; in other words, high tax and low tax. The Republican party has declared in favor of high tariff taxation. The Democratic party has announced itself the champion of low tarilT taxation. The Republican theory of government is to burden the many with taxes that the few may grow rich on extortions. The Democratic policy is that no man, however humble his position, shall be taxed to creat and maintain any individual or ' corporate enterprise whatever. We have heard much of the A, P., C of tariff. Be it remembared that tariCT is lux. That is the A of the business. The methods of col'ecting raay be the Band the C. Politics is the science of government. Governments must have revenue. Revenue is obtained by taxation; hence you can no more get tariff' out of politics than you can get revenue out of government. Tbe Government must have revenue, and therefore taxation is inevitable in some form. The people are willing to be taxed to support the Government. They are v! willing to be taxed to support individuals or corporations. The people are willing to be taxed that the Government may have all the revenue required for its economical administration, current expenses, pensions, etc, but they are not willing to be taxed to create a surplus revenue to be squandered, stolen or embezzled. It is not a difficult matter to get at the A, R, C of the tax question. The people of Indiana are willing to be taxed to build a State House. The csst is fixed, say S'.'.OCO.CIO. The contracts are made. The money tiows into the Treasury without a word cf ccmplaiut or proieit. Bat the demand is made, for instance, to increase the tax $100.000, or any other sura for the benefit of th9 contractors. Quick as lightning from the clouds comes the protest: Not one cent for any such purpose. And the party that would advocate a tax for such a purpose would go down as certainly as a Colorado grasshopper would lose its wings in a cyclone. The Republican party demands, in levying a tariff tax, that the r ecple thall pay enoueti to support the Government, and this done that they shall also Le taxed to xnaVc certain individuals and corporation rich beyond r.easure. The Demociatic party demands that the tariff tax shall be modified and so adjusted that its burdens shall be cqnally distributed and that one clas of people shall not be taxed for the express purpose of creating a moneyed aristocracy, a gang of soulless monopolies. Ihe Democratic party declares eternal hostility to class legislation. There must be a tarilY" tax, and it will afford incidental protection to certain industries. The Democratic party dees not place itself in opposition to the inevitable, but it docs antagonize the Republican theory that the many shall be taxed lo enrich the few. . Il05. Geokge W. Julian', Hon. Thomas R. f Ccbb and Hon. W. S. Holtuan. all Iran ians, have made the Interior Department more than averugcly odious by exposing the stupendous land steals tbai have been perpetrated with the aieistance cf various Secretaries, including the pre-cnt incumbent, Mr. Teller. As u consequence Mr. Teller baa felt called upon to look into the lar.d stealing business, and now publishes, the fact' that lend stealing has been carried on by small thieves continually for years, and boasts that he has managed to get back land worth $125,C'CC. This exhibit is intended to obscure the steals amounting to at least $100,000,009, which, when all the facts are made public, will show ths t the Interior Department has been a party to the stupendous frauds. The high-toned thieves have not been disturbed. When Congress meets the great land steals should have prompt attention. They are vastly more important than the Star Route steals. T7:is f the way the New York World puts up the Republican platform. The whole Vaity can stand upon it. The World says: litre Is a modern, genuine Republican rlatforai In tricf twelve ilauks and twelve pillars: 1. . JrotccUon. 2. Prohibition. :;. Privileged classes. 4. l'utllc plunder. .". Ortieebclder. (. Mci.opolies. . 7. Millioualics. S Cant, y. foiruptfon. If. Ontpoiatlouf. lb Fraud. rajuiiclsiu.
CCPiRRXT NOT KS.
Cor lis, the ecRlne man, la buUllng on. tries In the Cist Chinese cot to a mill. t Twelve ver r ent. cf the tu'.c'.df In Eaclind and 5 per (tut. of Ihote ia Gexmacr are due to latent jtJBMV. A Sax Feajccwco preacher advertise! that he wor.ld discuts a family fecandal en ta foltowlas tuulsy doming Asaceaeqitf.-i?e toe cuu.-ch was crowded. The subjsc'. war Adam and Eve. A youno woman, v-jd. elf n teen year, who live In Lapeer, 5!I:n., Ins row been thrice narricl and thrtce a widow. Lucky wcinan! When she van?cd to rcminc her mcurtilcg it hada't gone out of stjle. A telfi.eam from Montreal, Canada, reports that a meteur of iaineme iz le'.l wltn a loud detonation Into the St. Lawrence. & few yards only from the shore, at Stony P,.Iat. Lichlne, between I and 2 o'clock Suc'lay afternoon. No thunder preceded or followed Its appearance. It Is sail, and t;ie dazllr.g li?ht wtka surrounded it almost blinded the spectator. Dn. Bakkr EnwAnss, the Governmeit analyst, has anal; zed the so-called soda-water sold by many apothecaries In Moatreal, aud r?porta that neirly all of them contain traces of lend, iron or copper, and that one sample was so largely irnpiegnatod with corper aDd lead as to te a dangerous beverage, lie further rays that none of tha samples contained soda, only aerated water. Bi Eixfi a storm at WeHsboro. the other day, l'flitclr g Hashed through a ladow lato one cf the cis attached to a train ia rapid motion and shivered Id to n torn 3 a little Eickel watch that Miss A (I die Wbittaker won tusrended from ner belt by abroad nickel chain. She was severely süocked ar.d differed Iroin a profound numbnes3 of oue at m if or several daye. The gentleman who. sal next the wiudow, in the came seat, was unharmed. The life of RJchard Belt, whosa suit a?alnst the critic who accused him of patting out others' work as his own, is still before the London courts, an i reads like a romance. There was a time when he carried messages to tbe House of Lords, and chiseled with a nail, out of a piece ot rough stone, his first artistic effort. But there came a day when he woiked oa Charles Klugsley'a bust in Windsor Castle, In the presence of tho iieen, and at Chiselhurst, before the Empress, ia the studio of the Prince Imperial. Macuie Mitchell tells a story of something stisDfcer than a fafth cure. "I wasai'llcted with rartial paralysis of the left limb, and almott lost tbe use of it. I was billod to open In a large city, acd I was still oa crutches. Everj means that medical skill ecu Id sug?es including electricity, was brought to lar in my case, but 1 wes benefited little. The night an ivetl. the hcufo was crowded, theeslleries were noisy, and I waa at a side wing on crutches. When the tims for my entrance arrived as 'Farjchon,' with a supreme effort I threw the crutches aside and sprang through the window with the chicken la my arms, and went on with my part as naturally as ever. Frcm that day to this I have never had a recurrence c f the trouble.'' Ax old man rashly attempted to cross a bridge near Moundsville, W. Va , on the Baltimore and Ohio Kailroad a fewdAya ago. In front of an approaching train, lie mlot pofstbly have succeeded if he had been able to keep hi footing as he ran over tte süppery iw. b it 12 the middle of the bridge S;e te'l aid when he n 't upaui looked around the tr?Io was tl.nostuwjn htm. In an instant he decided 11 r.t hlior-'y rba::cecf escape vecsto lie flit t:pr. the ends of the ties, and he promptly took that potUioa. Eut lucre was not room enough cad the cow catchei struck him. Iat tcad, however, of killing turn at a blow or push ing him inward upon the Uc!.to be crushed by the whetlF, it threw hira down uku across beam several feet below tte rat's, whcie he clung until the train had parscd. The trait was stopped as soon es possible, tod abrakeman goirg lack found the dd man sick frcm frii'Lt but uninjured. Ava recent Convention of ecitors one of the veterans got up to give en experience. He said that once ui-011 a time he reported a little political meeting and spoke of one of the candidates as a veraclus man, Iv.l the printer mtde It voracious and it v as overlooked ii th pro'. Thejncxt morn ing the man was waiting fur him when he got to the ofiice. Without a word he grabbed the editor by the left hand, smashed his fingers so badly that he had to have three of them amputated, knocked lix teeth dov. u his threat, bit the lobe ol one ear, disf-jured bis face for life with an iron inkstand, Kouged him in the eye until he ia permanently crcFg-ejed, bit the bridj-e off his nose and then kicked him under the desk. He showed the E8rksso plainly that no one doubted a word he tsid. The applause wts vociferous when he s'.attd that ill-luck had followed that man ever y.Lic ind that he is now in the 1'oor Uouee. A 1 T.oMixENT German scientist, after .several ycari' invettisation ar.d numerous exhaustive exIt ilm en L3, concludes ths', "red nose" or "beer Ece." is the effect of paralyze Hon of the fine nerve tliaments in the cofc and the ikin of tbe face, by the L&ibolic acid that is generated la the stomachs cf tho-e whocator drink such things as contain the acid or caure fermentation. When these cetves lose their power the blood vessels become engorged, enlarge acd often burst. Alcohol in any form has a marked paralyzing influence outhe nerves of tho eyelids, no-; and tongue, and long continued use of it produces redeyes, drooping eyelid, swelled noee and hoarse voice. It also lies a marked paralyzing mllucnce oa the nerves cf the stomach, stopping digestion almost entirely. This is lollc wed by thj generation of .carbjlic acid which produces the swellei heid so well rerajm bervd liy itosc who have ever mads a Dight of it. This Is I Rlticularl J true la regard to champalgae wbith is highly charged with carbonic aci-I. At a recent mf-ctlnfr of the Royal Geographical Society Sir J. Kirk, Brltha Consul at Zanzibar, read an account cf a visit which Hr. J. T. Last maSe last wiatcr ta the Mtsai people, a race living in a regit n of Kist Africa never before visited by a Mi.ii 1:1 m. Their mtaccr cf building is dis tiuci f . ui tr.u of any otber trite. They select a spot on the t ps cf Mils pre j ttting from the stdei of mountains, a:.d idre a largo square wi'.ii a single row of houses, seme cf which are six feet ia diameter tnd four feel Ei3 Inches hlsh. Theso are covered rith ox hides an! cx dan? till qai'ewa' terrrocf. When litis outside ting has been built a Jew adiitior.al bouses are scattered about in tnc square, ti-d .cith Ki's division h narked off. Then a 6trong fence of bushes and prickly thorns 13 set up a'l round, lesyhg here and tiere jf&tc wsyF, which are clöS3.1 6t niht. The ma are gTeat dandies. Ken a use tfievcan not gettheir ka'.r 10 grow lccg enough, tbe; tike tae iaaer btrk of a srrf-ll 'krub. split It up flciiy and dry St 13 the eur, acd then cutliofr it Li lenRths about eighte3i Inches lor:g, weave it Into their own natural htir. The whole mus Is then woll saturate! wita a mil tureof fat and clay, and ctrefully bound Into a Hud of pigtail. i:i:i:ize3 ntoji tui. fcCJiMKii koukts Tr-TALMAGEisatLakeCcotce. Fishing at Cedar Lake, led., is reported very fine. Eisner Simpson and party are now la the Color ado mountains. The wife and family of Mayor Harrison of Chica go ere settled at Uconnomowoc for the season. LongBeanch la very much excited and privately considerably intcrcrted in the latest aad most successful attempt to open a gambling hell at that breezy stretch of sand. Lccas, the celebrated colorel head witter, who knows everybody and Is kuown to everyboly, li ppain doing duty as monarch ot the dining-room of the United SUtcs, Saratoga. Moi xt Vaiiisgtox hasbeea lowerel several feet for the benefit of asthmatic climbers. At Southampton, L. I., this year, the slzn o! the sum mer boarders' cells is tobe reduced to 3x7. The finest rara rubher Is to be iu.ed la the construction ol the dams to be served at Coney IsIaad this sum mer. ! !:. GAr.FiEl.i, widow of the late Trcs'dent, has Leta visiting fcr the last tea days at the house of
her-broiher-lalaw, Mr. Rockwell, of Morrlianla.
Ufc her dsv.ghcr MollU, she r.as now gone to Baratrgt. f ha will be joined by her two sous at Sara toga, acd intends to rem un there for some lime. Mis. GcrSeM is la excellent health. CuiLoeEx delisht ia this place, aad mich atten tion la pall to their welfare. The menu for them Is 8S Cirefullv piepsrel as that of the erowa pa vie. They disport iLemselves ia the surf with their Veieots or curses, ani without dsagjr, and ir any Cl lien are g0o3 swlamorä, the motloa seemias to ccme natutal to Lham after a few lessons from the very efhclent swloiiiilu master. Old Point Ccrufcrt Letter. At Coney Island, Kockaway aad Asbary Park me hurdrc-ds of women who can not swim, and who ectuslly go la the water with their hair cnmi-ed and their face painted and powdereJ. Tfcey attire themstlvcs la resplendent bathing cos-tt-mt?, seme of thea being of rise broadcloth, lined with Bilk, with embroidered stjektn, and real lace runt es about the neck and sleeve, and a dainty embroidered handkerchief stuck ia the belt, to bo near at hand ia case such aa awful thing at adron of water should get on her carefully gotteu-up face. She walks gingerly Into tne water and stands la one spot, holding oa to the rope, and then she walks out agaiu, and at luucheon she tells every one Bhe had "auch a de'iightf ul bathe. The water was so lovely," etc. A Jorr.XALizEB jast back from Long Branch observed that the guesU there have only commenced to bathe. The water ii still very cold, having a temperature of , sixty-three degrees. Every one bathes at Long Branch, the morning being the moft fashionable hour. Lidies at the different bote's mest la the corridors at a stated hiur and go In a body to the bathing house. If one is ready to go Into the water before the rest she sits calmly down oa a bucket turned up-side down, or some other equally as comfortable seat and waits until her braver sisters (brave through numbers) emergo from tfcelrbathlas-houses, all of taera going into the water at one Urne. The bathing-houses are situated La long corridors and are very private. A White Prarin p. (Va.) letter says: -'Oh! here we are at the detr old 'White' again. There"s no place like it'.' This was the joyous, laughing aad emphatic eiclaniatioa of a bouncing Blue Grass belle aa she jumped from a 'bus containing the latest arrival. Tbe opinion of the Kentucky girl, which was an outburst cf womanly enthusiasm, is generally, if not unanimously, shared by all the lady vfsitora here cf recent years. Nature, ably aided by ait, bai done everything to equip tbe place with beauty, means of en'oymeat aad every inducement ot scenery and comfort to attract the tourist or the pleasure Eeckc r. A few days ago the thermometer jumped Into the nineties, aad every day since they are trooping In from all the cardinal dlvhlons of Uncle Sam's great country." A coP.r.EsioxDF.xr writing from Old Polat Comfort, Va., says: "Old Tolat is now ose of the most crowded of the many lanre aad well known watering places. Desiite the hotel being never closed ar d remaining open all the year round to visitors, it It always more or k?s full, which is not a surpi birg thing vi ten we consider the baauty of the situation, the iai2oratIi:r; climate and delUhtfül surf te thine, lor it io safe to bathe be re at ail sea-sout--. IS'oihirg can surpass the hotel accommodati:rr. The dtiilag pavl ioa seats eleven hundred people, and the baU-rocm. also a pavilioa, adjoins it, U irdivi.ied from It only by Urge square windo. These rooms are built upon the very weter'sedge, ar-dthe aulrnatol, brilliant thronj that cor stan tly fills them iuopressf s one with the clfgsEce and refinement of the class that patroaixs the place." ri?i:soxAi.s. Martin Fap.qi hak Iitpb is a spiritualist. V.T. Earn i-m was seventy-three last Thursc!nr. One huLdrvl and ninety jouni men have arplied for admision to to thj ilascf 'f7a; Yale Ccl.tge. Miss Ciaka Loi ie Kkijogg has altered her planf-, end will not return from abroad until August 10. DAVin Frown a colored man, has been the mcsfcncer cf the Philadelphia Board of Ileal th forty years. Hon. IIaxxibal Hamlin ha- been ode red as high as t"0 a column for all hs may write of his political reminiscences. Caitain John Ebics-on, the inventor of the monitor, still hale and hexrty.Is now eighty, looks about seventy, ana works like sixty. Hii-s Catharink L. Wolfe, "the American Esroncs? Burdett 00011," is building a hall-million-dollar residence at Newport. FiNATon Matt W. Ransom ii to deliver the oraticnata leunioa of ex-Confederates of Warrea County, N. C, on the 10th of August. Ai ENAXt'En Hamilton's monument in Trialty Churchyard, New York, has crumbled so much that the iuLtrlplian can barely be read. Senator Fayap.i Is thiee Doctors of Laws, as it weie a sort of Dr. Cerberus. He has received the degree of LL.l). from Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth. Victor Hcgo, who is sow a hale old man, rides every afternoon on the top of an omnibus through I'arls. He liies to view ihs tity and chat with fel-low-rasengcrä. Bev. Etephex H. Tvat., Sr., who is eighty-four years eld, has no recollection of anything occurring in the past fifty 3 ears, but a to events in 1J0 and before he is perfectly clear. O.NEhcndred aad feveu couples whotiiougM themselves ill-assorted, and too many of whom, perhaps, were so, applied for divorces ia tlie CotiBCC'.iCUt Supreme Court during ihe first six months of this year. A young woman who has been "raifslng" six Cays from Plymouth, UAs , is Miid to have at length tuen discovered hidden iaaclp-ct la the ceilai tf her house. She had ief c ber place of couC( alment at night, when all around was still, and scai -id piovhlorsrjlli.'lcntto last through tho day, but it waa therap:d disappearance of the fijxily iCFP'r f cld;r, porter aad wine that let the way tofcerducoury. Pr Er.cwN SE.rAi-.r his dUc-.ve.-cd a new 1 nnstbelic which deitrojs seukibility, but not conclousness cr phjf ical activity, for ai entire day or more. When It ia administered to a mm by the hjpodcrm.lelcj3ctlonprociss.be is no: incapAO itated for vorkor ir.j jymsnf, yet h3Cansubnit to havirg Els II sh C Jt without fseltcK any iiin. ft is obvlouj-ly a msrvclous rtia for taaOlcal iclercc. ItlSEcnielKinifCirbonlc acil Mc-Cokmk k., the reapi Cinsu. who was raUed la Ecckbridge C'cunly, Virginia, recently ordered a friead of his lo seek cut cud find the crihia which he was locked when he wan a labe, regar lles of C st. S. M. Wilkes, tlie furrilurj dealer of Staunton, set cu the track of it, and the rr;rtj owning it orTered to alve It tu f jr re new o r, which was furnished, when tho old nlic was .rrc-mptly shipped to Chicago. It was found tcr Cr-sbea. Sam Ward says the man who cuts lettuce with a knife would robbla grandmother. Ho dries his lettuce on a crah towel.cart ful not to bruise a leaf. Then, on the other hand. Larry Jerome, in mixing a lettuce salld, turns the leaves over po vigorously as to break and crack tho leaves, so as to premeate the dressing with th9 opium Ilowing therefrom. However, salad making, like the compounding of a cocktail, is a sublet oa which no two agree. Ji -x.eBlat hfop.d is worth fl3.0O0.0CC. He has no children. He is by far the richest of the J uJges of the Supreme Court tf the United States. Six others are wealthy, however, their fortunes being as follows: Judge Field, tToO.OOO; Bradley, 1300,OCO; Matthews. S;130,000: Weite, 52c0,0CO; Gray, wno is an old bachelor, J130.C0O. and Wood. tlOO.OOO. The poor men on tbe Supreme Court bench are Judges Harlan and Miller, who hava nothing but their salaries. James Freelani cf Aceomae, Va.. ermrted a young lady who had bad teeth. One day he asked herw by she never smiled, and she made bold to tell him it was oa account of her ragged mouth. He thereupon took her to e dentist and had a splendid set of tfc"h made lor her aad was rewarded with a world of smiles. All of a sudden
she cot only ceased to ' smile, but grew cold towards him, acd finally told tim he wasn't ber style. He then demanded tha teeth, but she refused to spit them out. Without further ceremony be tbuist his fingers ia her mouth to take them cut.' Eheclcsedoa his Supers and did not let up until be promised to let her keep them. His fingers are so badly bitten that It is probable, one at least, wir. hie to be amputates!. Wahi.iscto- ldy told Mrs. General Sherman that the reason why tte General had such a mania for St. Louis wts because "all the lidieS there would !et hici kio them la Wihlajjtou they wen't." Urs. cheror.a admitted thst the "General was rather hartdy with Pis mouth," ar.d "does nearly all the klsvjng fer the family.'- Mrs. Sherman ovght to itiist on dciog her share; perhaps be wouldn't like to lave ber so "handy with her mcutb." Hans we-t to the country for a few clays' recreation, but rcturxed oa the early more lue train. V hen asked why he did so he said: "Dot moso.nlter vas a grade i ird. Hevasvunof dese aecwliar gafesdotven you got him he don't vas dere. It vssalvays youst the same vay. Yeu you schlap him you alvays shtrike de blare dot he vas youst left already. Hevss got a f'ne voice, doe, und ven be sings "you some lecdle nog. you doa'd could vend to shleep right avay for more as a coolie cf hours already." L'r. Hon ace P. Kellogg, of Crbana, has la his possession a weapon ia the nature of a f ilehioa. which was made for Xiipolcoa Bonaparte whea he waa First Consul of France. The Bonaparte family presented it to Leonard Kellogs, the hc'.or, an tbis relic of his wardrobe fell to his brother Horace, wbo row lives ia this city. Mr. Kello?? was recently ofTered f O0 f or the relic while it was beiog exhibited at a charl:y Fair in Cleveland, a yeir or twosgo. The blade cf the weapon is nearly Ito inches wide, eiRhteen inches Ions, with a black crow guard, ivory twist handle surmountel by a brafs ball with a knob. The scabbard is bra-?, ia-b-id with velvet oa the upper part. The style of the sword is that so familiar ia pictures of R m a soldiers, and was very probably taken from tie design of ancient patterns of swords. The weipoi is not a very terrifying looking weapon, and not near so dangerous looking as those we now have. Tbesword bears the Inscription, "Made for Xipoleou Bonaparte when First Consul of France. "
WOMEN NOTES. "She tbcuglit he was a millionaire, She doted on him for it. She saw bis gilded pocket-bor.k And vowfcd she woulj adore It. But th, theorca lefsoa wg With grim prcc:il u taught br r. When erst the heaid him tell tho mart To 'charge' ihe soda ntter." Yoakers Gametic. To OM foreign lady w 10 v b.'s the United States at least KO American lsdic. vi- it llarope This Is tbe tes.wu wuen Ue ontiding wife tskes tlie children 10 be cotiatry or the Feshore and leaves the old ci'u at h jme to lllrt with the servant girl. "Wiif.p.e is tte girl f 1 r R a?o?"' sings Joa-iala Miller. We s aw her the other dy, J oa j Bat she isn't a tlrl r ny r.t ,ri. S-l.c l.a-J gray hair and a wart on her cose, had to t'.c'.h &vA wore spec. One ef tte noveliies in evening dress is the threc-piiutec trji:;,Ld w iih it 1 the lhree-pilated bf.fi;ue, -Able h i' sns ihst tin-c wave cuJ.s ia three points. I k and front ; but this is not a prclty fcrhion. A woman wr.o ma ''.a up an oiMf.t ftr Ler son ta go to Mexico Rsve him r r.f-üi piirs of socks l;u?ht tt a barphia. two wLi:o f l-.'.rr.-. a pound of cam rhor, a bottle cf sai'.liLe aul two bjxesof liver pills. A lady Floppi: g at a J:ptcl It) Austria was tilten 'by a iat, and has sued the prcp;Iit.)r of the hotel for I IQ.C2Q dam eg.' s. 7'Pe bite was nnt severe, but her flight waa so great taat her hair hanging oa the back of a chair tarncd riy before morniu-; FATirrxG suits are new made all in one ;iece coveritg the wearer f.-f m the nec k nearly to the anklcf. n the belt cf tbii garment Is buttoned a skirt that drapes the f.?ure. The single long garment is made of two pieces a Mouse wait and trousers that are p-crmanently joiaed in one at the belt. A sc'Ial philosoplior dhcovers that wealthy girls v-bo summer at tbe seaside do not get busbar ds as soon as the poor girli who remain at home. People who have fcea jrtrH coming out of the water and t hi vering aloug to tie bita-houses like balf drowned rats, will r.o' be surprised to Ctd that lovers' Isuits aad bathing snlU do not mix very well. POLITICAL POIXTEKS. Johs Bricht, "aCeged inventor of a celohn'.ed disease of the kidneys." is the way aa Omaha piper speaks of the LcElish Quaker statesman. Ki xsET Cox's game, according to one of his Intimates, is to be made Speaker, and use t'ae place as a stepping stone to the nomination cf Vice I'resident. Haxxical Havi in to "Gath," who went to see him up in Maine: "My Lord! haven't you got any more sense than to ccme here just as I am playing with a trout?" Me. Carlisle, of Kentuc ky, says his cliances for the Bp cakershlp of the next Hou.se of Representatives are as jrocd as Mr. Randall's, aad that the latter can not count up mere than sli t y votes. Me. lir.ORG e William Cc;:tis, of Harper's Weekly, declares that, the recoi l of the Republican T&rly is smirched with crimes aud swindles. And yet Jlr. George V.-Kiam Curtis arid other kidj.lcvcdlndepeaaentswillcjatiuu? to wallow la the mud and support tbe party that is smirched with Climes aud swindles. Atlant Coubütutoa. Governor Bi'Ti.F.r.'s latest characteristic a?pcintment is that of E W. Stevens, a locomotive d: Iver fcil-d lately a brehVoian, to the vacancy oa Hoard of Rf-Ilrccd Co cm is liners, i-tevens led thefghtof the railrcnd enj-incers figalnst th Cc lor blindness examiii itlcn last year, and won tic n real cf the law under which these exim'.aatiens wc male obliit Jry. The S'alwart manr per at the regular session cf the Icncylva'-Ia Lcghlature agreed Dg vethe Dcmccrats twei.ty tf the f f:y members under the tew apportionment, but wrta vhc extra session mit it was dcltmiirtd to allow tv.eoppo-i'.ion only ciDtteea unators, the purpose etldentiy bctnt to prevent any fpioriioniaent at all. is Jt six ftepubllcan Senaten hate ltfu.ed to be ordered in ti ls manner, lusiiiitg that the Republican party Should cot te place 1 ia such a discredUaV.c pitiCH. Tli favrty. LoNbON, July 1" - The Irish party are i-uirh f!at?d over the Uovprntuf-r.L's defeat I on Mr. Chaplin' American cattle bill. Of ccurse, the lrisa party ao not tyrapsunzs with any anti-American legislation, end did nttesnbedy vote with Mr. Chaplin. To stow their absolute jojsession of tne present talance cf power they pave the n-otioa just fight votfs. helping the Conservatives to beat the (Joveruuient and Itadicals by five votes. Tbe rarnellites ae probably just now the most exclusive and the most respected fsction in tbe Commons. Crape for Louise fll.cliel. Taris. July 15 Many flags yesterday ia honor of the National fete were draped with crape for Louise Michel. After unveiline tbe fitalce of republic two Anarchists stuck a black na upon the statue. The people surrounding the 6tatue immediately seized the llagand tore it to pieces. Much of the distress and sickness attributed to dyspepsia, chronic diarrhea and other causes is cccasioned by humor in the stomach. Several cases, with all the characteristics of these complaints, hava been cured by llcod'a Sarsaparilla. Other cures ellected by this medicine are so wonderful that the simplest statement of them affords the best proof that it combines rare curative a-rents, and when once used secures the confidence of the peopl-a.
R. R. x x way ' READY RELIEF Tho Cheapest and Best "edicino lor Family Use in the World. IT Ct7P.ES ASD PEEVEXT3 Diarrhoea, Ijentaiyt Cholera Morba. Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, Ni-nrslgis, Uiphtheria, lnrlunri, Asthmrs, Sore Hiroat, Dilhcnlt iiieathlng. IT WAS THE FIRST AKD 13 T1IE 0'ALY PAIS 11E3IEDY That instsntly rtops the most excrucicu-g ralna, allays lDf.atuK-a'ion and cures concirsUona, whether of the Lurps. Stomecb, Bowels or other glands or organs, by ore arphcatioa In from One to Twenty Slinuttes. No matter cow violent or excruciating the pain the Khcurcatic, BidiidJ-a. Infir-a. Crirpied, Nervous. Nenralrio or prrstrs-d w"th disease my fuCTcr, KAhWAY'j KÜADV KLI.- will aflurd instant ease. lnflimmatlr.n of the KIdnevs, InSamma'.Ion ol the b:acdi-r. IufJaantnatloa of tbo Kownig. (loDeeation Cl the Lur-fr, i-alpimtloc of the Heart, U y rttric. Crotin. V-tarrfc. Ncrv.vjsuss, Sl'.-oj li'-acis, 8ciarioa, l ain in the Client, Back or Limbs, Braiaea, -"prcls. Cold Chills and Ague Chills. The application cf the Ready Relief 10 the part cr farts where the diQicuity 0: pain exists will aflord ease and comfort. Bowel Complaints, IiCoscncss, Diarrhoea, Cfcolera Morbus or Painful Iicharce. from the Bowels are stopped in l-i or '20 minutes by takln? Kad-say'a Keady Relief. No ccrgeiion or lcHannati&u, no wesn?ss or lassitude w ill follow the use of the K. R. Ro'ief. 1 hirty to sixty drop la ha'.f a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cram 5, epasms, .-kur Stcmach. Heartburn, trick Headache, iJiairaea, Ljsenury, Colic, V. fad in the Rowels, aud all tatt n.ai pains. Trateiers sbouJd alwsys carry a bottle of Radway'B ReeCy Re;icf with them. A few flrnin ia weicrwiUirevtiit sitkness or pales hoiu chanice of water, it is better than. F.-euch li.ady or Bitters as a stimuli!. t. MAL AHIA IN ITS VAKIOCS FOUMi. FEVER AfJ D AGUE. FEVER AND AGUE cured for fifty cnt. Trier Iscot a remeclisl aireu; in this voc'. l tuat will cure Fever and acuo :.d all other Malarious, Bilio.s, i-tailet. Typr-nij, IVIiow arid ciher fever !ned by RADWAY H IlLLri) so uuily as KAlOWAV a READY KiLlEF. Fifty Cents pjr Bottle. DR. RAD WAY'S Sarsapariliien Resolvent Tlie Croat JJlooil Pnriiler, FCR THE CURE OF CHR03IC OiSEäSF, Scrofulous or Syphilitc, Hereditary or Contagious, Be It Seated ia the Lungs or Stomach, Skin or Bones, Flesh or ITerves, Corrupting the So'irJs art. Yitialisg ths Fluids. Chronic Iheuatiin, r?crofula, Glaadniar Swcliin?, nackir g lry Coreh, ( auccrojs Atr.-c-tions, fcyptilltic C mi lair.tp, Blrclri? of the Lures, Dyspepsia. Water Krai-h, Tie loioreix. White ftveliints. Tnmots. Llcers. frkia and Hip I'lfcss"s, Mercurial I)i-.ea-e, Female Complafma, (iout. Dropsy, trait Rheum, Brot-chi'is, Consumtlon. LIVER COMPLAINT, Etc. Not only docs tbe Farsaparilian Resolvent excel ail remedial azenis in the cure of Chronic, K-rcfulous. Constitutional and Sain Disea&cfc, but it is the only iuitive cure for KIDET AUD EL-AIDER COHPLARiTS, I'linery and Wccb rv'scasec. Cravtl, Dlabetea, riop-y, Stoppaifeot Water. Incontinence of Ciine. BijLl'a Dlüc-ase, Albuminuria, rnd in all oaeea t Lue there Kre I rick dust dejo.i:s., or the water is thick, tloudy, Elied with sulAtances like the whito of an tpe. cr tbreads like white silk, or there isainmbul. Oark. bi:ic. ri c trai ce, tn1 whit tcre ül'tt üeiOFits,8d wtreu there is a prioklin?, burr.irc KD.t!cn v hc n ps'lig wattr, arjd pa!a in the lck and a'oujt tbe loins. fco Id t.y l'ni5gis.ls. Ono Dollar a Eottlo. RADWAY'S Regulating Pills i Tho Great Liver nnd Hfccdy. Stomach FcrfertPcrjatire, Sonthlnt;, Aperieut, Act ttt1iout 1'hin, Always ReltAbti aud -Natural tn Oprratiua, A VccctaLIa :'biti!ute for CiIa.TiC'. rerfcft;y tastelcs, elceantly coa'ed wllh swee zuni.rurt-e, ngu.ttc puiLfy, cleaus-e aadatreagn. iradway'a nils, for tbe cn of ell disorder of the t-tvmsth. Liver, Bowel, KMneys. Biallor, Ncivrus Uiscares. IjOSS cf Appetits. HeaJacoe, Ce-nstiratioD. (ttitenr sf, Indi?ctt:-u. DysT-ep-!-, BiP.ousrtss. Fever, lnflsmmation of the Hiwela, IiUsard all denurnu80l the It:ternal Viscera. 1 uiely veKctable, contalulng no mercury, minerals pr'delcterious drt:cs. Obferve the follonir.sr f-ymptoi-? resulting frcm Diseases of the Dlnetsiive trcans: Cc-nstlp-tion. Inward IUea. Fullnc- of Bi.od In the llea-t. Acidity cf the Stomach, 'ai;sea. Heartburn. Dlgustof Food, Fuhnes or Weieht in tbe Storatch, rour Fiucutitns, Sipkinz or Flutteriutt at the Heart, ChoekinfZ or Buflerivg sensation wheniaa hiue ponure, Dirref-s of Vision, Dou or Web fere the eicht. Fever and Dull 1'nJu in th Head, Deficieiicy of Foi-spiratlon, Yellownewa of thet-kin tnd F.jes, Fain in the tlJe.Chc-st, Umba, end fcuddea Fiusht. of Heat, Bumins ia the Flesh. , , A few dose ot lUnwAT's Pill will free the eyctcxa from all the above named disorders: SOLD BY PRUGGI3TS. riUCE, 23 CENTS PEIt ÜÜX. KZAD "Fals- lyDTart-'-Pend a letter stamp to RABWAY A CO.. No. tl rYaric-D, corner Church St.. New York. Icfc:ratloa worth theuvauJs will te scat ta you.
R.
