Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1883 — Page 2

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY. .Hlf.Y 2,". 18S::

WEDNESDAY, J'JLY 25.

Brdy says thai it took $ in October, but Iwo were enough in November. Bis ma eck could cot let tha American hog alODe, and now the American press is getting its revenge by harping continuously about Bumaica's health. Jat Gould got as far as Newport with his yoL Then he thot his yot met expectation to a dot. He asked how New England could be bot, liked the price and bot the lot Chess is taught in tue schools of Stro"eck, Germany. Americana think that their educational system, in which base ball and rowing are taught, is an improvement on the Old "World methodi It cow looks as though W. P, Ke'logg Would have to stand trial. The occasion will afford Brewster, Arthur's old dude, an opportunity to fee another set of Republican lawyers out of the public Treasury. A kiw Kentucky law fixes the leal distance between a Church and the nearest saloon at one mile. Tnia will make it a long time between drinks for the few Kentuckians who attend Church on Sundays. Ho. Jamx3 G. Blais's brother, Mr. Robert G. Blaine, has been appointed Curator of the Agricultural Department at Washington. He probably, is the guardian of Lis distinguished brother's guano interests. Brady says in hia coniession, published elsewhere ia this morning's Sentinel, that Arthur was willing to give uvilUn autltoritj (. the collection of the ttir Honte money, but it should come from Garfield. Then Garfield wrote the Hubbell letter. A large number of fashionable Churches in our large cities have announced that they are closed for the ceason. Fashionable religion can cot stand hot weather. What it is going to do hereafter in its unacciimated state, says one, only Heaven knows. Did it never occir to those who are continually starting newparlie5 that only two have lived since the foundation of the Republic? Many have sprung up to die before they arrived at that stata of maturity which would afford their promoters a single ofliie. The Michigan Legislature has passed, by a nearly unanimous vote, a bill requiring teachers in that State to pass an examination 'in physiology and hygiene, with particular reference to the effects of alcoholic drinks, stimulants and narcotics upon the human system." Thk Abbe Moigce has founded a Cinipsny in Faris and raised $150,000 for the purpose of n coveritg the aims and treasure lost by Phareah's host in the Red Sea. If successful this will be the first modern proof of the verity of miracles, and as a plain-spoken exchange puts it, make Colonel Ingersoll out a liar. Rtmor has it that Senator Edmunds will resign tha Presidency of the Senate pro tntp f, preferring to be oa the Soor and take active part in legislation, but it is surmised that his decision is influenced by the robust health of Arthur and the scarcity of half-breed cranks. Manifestly, when Edmunds accepted the position, he had faith in lotteries of assassination and felt confident of drawing a $50,000 pme. General Swaim haj come to the r?scne of Garfield's fame. It is to be hoped that he will be able to show that Doney and Garfield were not on terms of great Intimacy. If Dorsey should conclude to notica Swiim's remark that Garfield "expressed the opinion that there was a screw loose in Dorsey's moral rnake-np," there will b? developments which will make good men tremble in their boots. Doraey has documents which, if he concludes to give to the public, will make the Republican party as offensive as Tewksbury. Several Jewish ribbis, in difTirent pirti of the country, are accused of the sane offense that caused King David and Henry Ward Beecher, both of whom were married tuen, to get their names into the papers. The prevalent idea that Judaism and Christianity lave nothing in common seems to be exploded in the light of recent events. Thia reminds us, says Sittings, of a little incident that occurred in India. "What is your religion?"' asked an English officer cf a native servant. "Me religion same as your religion. We drinkee brandy." A Chicagk mathematician who does not claim to be a prohibitionist, nor a city canvasser entrusted with the duty of attracting thither political Conventions, asserts that the 3,750 Chicago saloons seil $2.000,000 worth of liquor annually. The consumption in Illinois, outside of Chicago, is put at $'13,000,000, so that the per capita for the whole State h very little short of $10. Taking this as a basis for calculating the probable figures for the whole country, the total annual retail eaie of liquor amounts to more than half th entire National debt This is doing quhe well for a sober Nation. MAKING BBEAO DfiAR. He cry D. Lloyd, in tbe August number of the North Americaa Review, has a p3-?r captioned "Making Bread Dear." Tin article in question is one ef the best that has appeared of laf in any publication in the country; in fact we call to mind no papsr upon tne subjects of which Mr. Lloyd treats that can compare with it in point of .terseness and perspicuity. If Mr. Lloyd had aeen proper to have captioned his convincing essay "Making Bread Dear by Stupendous Rascality," he would have given it a heading strictly in cod son a ace with the facts which be marshals with consummate skill, showing the deep laid villainy practiced by tbe speculators to 4 make bread dear." There is not within the range of scoundreli3m, and we cue not in what department of human affairs it is practiced, anything mote essentially damnable than the scheme set on foot by the "criminally rich'' to "make bread dear." and by "bread" we mean the entire list of the absolutely necassary food products of the country. Such schemes are at once crimes against God and man. Thoee who er.gage in them are the wont enemies that curse society. To make bread dear is to make the poor a if-

fer. To make bread dear ia to invite famine and starvation when every consideration relating to the well-being of society demands that bread should be made cheap. Mr. Lloy d, in the course of his argument, says: "The universal strikes into which the laboring

people have been forced in the last two years are traceable directly to the increase in the cost of living, which these corners have done ao much to produce." 5 "The following sentence is from a petition to Congress to which a member of the Produce Exchange personally obtained the signatures of a thousand substantial men: "'As only men of large means or extensive credit are capable of engaging m these enterprises they become essentially ah array of capital against the industrial classes, wherein the banks and moneyed institutions are almost invariably drawn to the support of the former against the latter.' " "This," says Mr. Lloyd, "is the eomnvmin f the ftnuiicate, and it is the only communism the United States have yet produced." And it is a form of communism which, if it does not cease, will shake this country aaif it were in the grasp of a thousand earthquakes. No greater mistake could be made than to underestimate the vengeance of millions of working people, who are compelled to buy dear bread by the machinations of men who disregard the boundless benevolence of Jehovah and shame the devil himself by their mercenary .greed. It is quite out of the question, within the space at our command, to present the facts and arguments which impart commanding importance to Mr. Lloyd's article. It ought to be universally read by the rich and the poor. No rascal engaged in corner robbery and bucket shop gambling will come to the rescue of the scamps who plot to "make bread dear." Society is ceaselessly bombarded by a set of newspapers which slop over about Sunday laws and saloons, lotteries and draw poker. These organs of sham journalistic pharisees, long-faced and longhaired reformers, never bave a word of denunciation against "syndicate communists" who combine money and credit to shroud humble hemes in darkness and create hunger pangs from center to circumference throughout the country. Sleek hypocrites, they illustrate by their professions the r suit of the devil's venture when he sheared the hog, "great cry and little wool." What is wanted in the United States is a united voice against those miserable miscreants who plot early and late to make fcod dear, to reduce the purchasing power of the poor man's dollar, thereby creating labor troubles, strikes and all the ills which strikes force upon society. This thing of making food dear when Jehovah provides that it may be cheap, is a question the importance of which can not be overestimated. As a general thing the men who make food dear have ike Courts and the statutes on their side. Under Republican rule nothing better could be expected. It is a monopolist party, a comer party, a "dear bread" party. It taxes the poor to support the rich. It create?, fosters and protects combinations to rob the many for the benefit of the few. Under its protection corners flourish, acd the "commision of the syndicate" has been produced. Mr. Lloyd's article is a valuable contribution to the business literature of the times and should have the widest possible reading. Tu a "independent" newspaper is usually a curiosity. The proprietors of independent newspapers are generally Republicans. We remember no exceptions. Republicanism has produced mora than its full share of dudes and dunces, miscreants and ' mercenaries, scamps and sea V, skunks and Ecavesgers, but in the entire list none more worthy of reprobation than the proprietors of EO-called independent newspapers. Listening to their gush one is led to conclude that their proprietors are sublimated creatures who regard party lines withaj much horror as the devil does holy water, but when the time comes for voting and for active campaign work, these independent newspapers give unmistakable proof of their vulgar hypocrisy, exhibit their cloven , hoofs and go tthe whole Republican bog, or tickst, which is the same thine, without a grunt. These in dependent Republican organs manage to obtain a large support from Democrats, whose interests they invariably betray. They al ways assume great righteousness for the pur pose of ca.kb.icg the "better element." As a consequence they prate about Sunday laws. salooDs, lotteries), etc., but they are never known to attack ccoumlrelism in high places, and one does cot bave far to go nor long to search to lind the reason. Independent Re publican journals confessedly have no prin ciples which they are bound to advocate or defend. Pirates on journalistic seas, they rly any Hag that best subserves their mercenary schemes. They settle the ques lion of profits as best they can, and follow up a lead as long as it pays, and being independ ent (?) they can uup as often as the moon changes, if thereby their pocket-book become more plethoric. Having with Pharisaical cant established a reputation for godliness, they are in a position to work the re ligious mine to any required depth, and the aliva of their piety is turned to about the same account as that of an anaconda. It al ways flows freest about the time they are preparing to swallow lomethicg. Occasion ally caught in advocating stupendous fraud?, tbey clamor the more vociferously for the enforcement of Sandty laws, the suppression of saloons and lotteries', but are careful never to attaek gilded scoundrelism, simply be cause it is from that "element" thev draw largely for their gains. Such is a fair ex hibit of independent Republican jour nalism the country over. In Massachusstls the Boston Herald, a Republican inde pendcnt(?) journal, defends Tewkesbury because it represents Republicanism. In Indiana not a Republican independent sheet denounced the infamous course of Dorsey and his "high official" pals, because the proprietors fear, doubtless, that in tbe next scramble none of the "crisp" $2 bills will fa?l yito their pocket. What is true cf Indiana and Massachusetts Is true throughout the country the independent Republican she its advocate or denounce for dividends. There is more chicanery in it to the eqna e inch than in an average lo'.tery or a square game of draw poker. It is journalistic kfnism. It is tbe old cheat "cow you sea it, and now you don't" It h utiliesd hyp:crisy organized thimble-rigging, auJ atvuliras it is venal.

TBWK3BURY. The celebrated Tewksbury investigation, which has been going forward in Massachusetts for weeks past, is closed and the whole matter has been referred to the Legislature ot the old By State. Th presenting the report the Legislature was addressed by a gentleman by the name of Brown, who appeared and wade a plea in behalf of Tewksbury, and by Governor Butler, who presented the other aide of the question, and made a plea in behalf of humanity, and it may be said that he performed the duty in a manner that will add indefinitely to his renown as a nn who has the courage of his convictions and the ability to state them in a way to arouse attention in all communities where men are not blind to outrages and dead to every .sentiment of justice. It may be well just here to give the closing paragraphs of the Governor's address to the Legislature.

In regard to the tharge that the Governor was influenced in his action by political con siderations he said : I was accused of having political objects ia this matter. How was I going to obtain them? By do ing say duty, I laanoss. I don't know any other way. Ia not that a good way to accomplish poliitlcal ends? I think so. I have thought It my duty to look out for those who have no other friend. Mot t of those men can not vote none of them. Why, If I had been looking tor voles I could have bad all the Marshes on my side in a wink: no trouLlealout that. They used to run politics in my ce?ghboihocd, and they did it exce;dlngly well, too. But I could not do that. I am not on their aids ever. God has made me In one way that I must be with tbe und r dog la the fight. I can not help it, I can not change It, and upon the whole I doa't want to change it. At Tewksbury the poor pauper i were the underdogs in the fight, anl ths Marshes were on top. It is not that way now, and in all human probability never will b9 that way again. The Tewksbury Alms House, in Massachusetts, under Republican rule, will stand forever as a synonym of Republicanism. As an ulcer it grew and developed into abominable proportions under the fostering care of the Republican party. Governor Butler stated that out of seventy-two babies sent to the Tewksbury Alms House, seventyone died. Only one left. Only one escape I with its life. The Governor said: The gravest of all grave oiTenccs acalnst these lDmates, that of Charlotte Anderson, who wai taken to Tewksbury with quiet insanity, who had a child at Tewksbury. was taken up. IlisKxcjlleacy complained that certain cvilence was ruled out. The sister went there and asked who the father of the child was. The answer was: "We know how to make btbies here, don't we, Charlotte." If Captain Marsh had, boon fit to live, he would have tola her that he would have hunted the rascal down, It he had to hunt the world over. Is the-e a mm wh J dare) to doubt the witness? The girl diel, and they never let the sister know of the death. She could not get her. Three months after she hear! from an acquaint ance that her sls'.er was d?ad, but shs couli not obtain tho body, and never saw the sister afterward. Bit the body was worth $li to Tom Marsh. That was the market price, whether it was sent for dissecilou or aoL There is no record of burials. I not that enough to turn the Marshes all out with a whip ot sm ill cords .' As to Eva Bo wen, she has baea the targjt f jr all the pru rient Imaginations in tia State. Shs wvi educated In the Normal Art School, and tush. to model the nude in clay. The State develops! her itnajlaation befoie it developed her conscience. If she i not a good woman to-day, it is tho fault ol tii 3 State. Her seducer was a man ot hish social posi tion. The witness who said she did not remember the name lied, for if there is anything a worn m never forgets It is a name in a scandil. But the story grows in horror. Repablican Administrations ia Mas-achusett) never made an effort to correct the Tewksbury outrages. Nothing of such infamous proportions ever horrified civilized comrnunitier. Tbe Governor said: I will now show you what they d i 1 with the dead. Since l&t to now, except for tbe last tea years', there is no prsteniion to a record of wh t'. is done with the dead, and there was only a $10) bond. All the Colleges and everybody else hard been supplied. All bodies not called far by friends and the frloaJs are cw arc asm away for dissection alter f an iral service have been held over them. Up to tei yeirs the diyectel remains were thrown where the fUh would g;t them, ami they were called 'eslbtlt." anieels and lobitois ate them. No account is made o! bodies furnished to private physicians. Alt this his been d nc without any pay or account. Koursa's aoo juitis false. The price he elves is $U aud some cents. But Harvard give S'5 and all others Rave $lt. All this is undisputed. Dr. Dlxwell said nothing to me after he was cilled before the Grand Jury till this time. He said hs fitted un a dissecting room in his father's house, and uer9 were 273 to 250 children's bodies brought to the Institution from Tewksbury. He came agaiuct his will, and no min has contradicted him. He said he got the infants Iron Andrews. Two other itnes3et tesUfljd to substantlallr ihe sams thing. Every Institution has bad men. They brought three or four of them to testify fhat they never had a baby there. Kverr rascal ot them said they uever had more thin two bodies in the deadroom at a time, but outside men saw twelve and twenty thrown In together like cord wood, hlgglely pigsiety, with the children between their lea. It is a matter for which thanksgivin.s Ebould arise like clouds ol incens3 that ta9ro is but one Tewksbury on the face of Gad's gieen earth and but one Republican party. Tewksbury, by virtue of the courage of Governor Butler, has been turned inside oat, an I the Republican party is makinz its last kick for existence. Governor Butler, after tellinr the Legislature of Massachusetts what became of the dead pajpera, referred to the business of tanning human skin, and produced specimeRS of the article. He said : Thcte pieces came from teveral tanneries and it had got to be an industry. There are old men and young men with jaded passions, male so by their vices. If ther could put their feet In shses male from a woman's breast, perhaps their pisioas could be excited. These shoes went ou the feet of rich aristocrats. The Governor read from Ctrlyle of the tanning of human skins during the Frenci revolution oll7S9. It is the pauper'a akin that ii tanned cow for the feet of the aristocrats. It wa t. then my lord and my ladt's ski i that was tannel to make ahoes and breeches tor the paupsjs. Let us lookout that our turn doei not come, for It theieisanythiog tint one side will not stand all the time it is skinning. A.Harvard record shows that they had a tanned negro skin in the library as a curlodty 150 years azo, and the; have been at it ever since. It is time they were stopped. We have cot the space to give farther extracts from Governor Butler's address. It ought to be published in pamphlet form and sent broadcast through the country! is a record lot Republican corruption in a State where the Republican pari? had full sway since the time when an inscrutio ( j i permitted the mon strosi'y to be spawu-i upon the country. DK3PICABLE. Ucmax depravity never takes on a more repulsive garb than when it eeeks an utsophisticated girl for iti victim decoys hsr from home acd friervls for the purpose of wrecking her life and making her an outcast in ecciety. On such occasions it is never best to talk much about statutes. For auch cat es God Almighty has made a law and

written it en every brave man's heartr and

when that law is executed society always breathes freer. A case Is told of two brothers in West Virginia who decoyed girl away from her home under prom ise of marriage. The poor girl place implicit coDfidecce in the honor of tbe one who pretended to woo her, and quite as trust ful in the honor of the other brother who was a party to the fraud. One of the brothers personated a minister and married the girl to the other, who took her away to a wild part of the county where she had neitler friends nor acquaintances, and as toon as tbe infamcus miscreant got tired of her he informed her that the marriage was a sham, end left her to her fate. She managed to reach home, and her father had the two brothers indicted. One of them, the husband, goes to tbe Penitentiary for three years; the other, the mock minister,, gets off with a fine of $5C0. A contemporary remarks that "it is difficult to make the average Legislator, and still more the average Juror, comprehend the harm done by auch a deception as that practiced on this girl. Doubtless, she ought to receive from society only the warmest, kindest sympathy, and tho fact that she was ruined by a gross deception ought to cast no reflection upon her virtue. Theoretically and morally she was in no way differently situated from the thousands of her sisters who are married everyday; but, unfortunately, though the world, if questioned individually, would admit that the girl's purity and morality were unaffected bj a mock marriage, practic illy sce'ety in the aggregate takes a different view of her, and she suffers her life long from the dif grace which she may have been absolutely incapable of avoiding. These are the positive and tangible results of tbe crime perpetrated at her expense; but, beside the disgrace involved, there is an injury to the feelings entirely incomprehensible to and immeasurable by the legislator who makes laws or the average Juror who applies them. A life may be far more effectu ally ruined by each a piece of rascality than by depriving the injured person of her sight, hearing or other physical powers. If such a trick could be punished by imprisonment for life for both the false minuter and the false groom tbe sentence would be little, if any, too severe." It is simply because it was clear to omniscience that none but those who suffer in such cases can fix the right penalty for the crime, that fathers and brothers are clothed with the high prerogative of deter mining that matter themselves, and hence, when the villains are required to hand in their checks forthwith, men who have hearts as bz as a flea are entirely satis tied. If society will remain so perverse as to declare a woman "ruined" when she is sim ply the victim of a damnable plot, then there is a thousand times more necessity for some one to make the miscreant atone for the ruin with his life, and if the laws upon the statute books and Jurors who try such cases render verdicts which set such wreck ers free, or barely recognizs the crimes with mild penalties, then, in such ctses, the laws will be spurned, for they only aggravate the sufferings of the outraged victim. It is such instances of disregard of wrongs by the law makers', the tricks of trials, and the viciousness and ignorance of Jurors, that are bringing . the laws and the Courts into disrepute. In the case under consideration we have a miscreant who as sumes the character of a robed priest for the purpose of subjecting an innocent con tiding girl to the lustful embrace of a brother. We have a villain with false vows upon his lips for the sake of gratifying his brutely in stincts. The mock priest is lined $500, and the mock husband goes to prison for three years. The poor victim of the villainy is de clared ruined, and society thinks it has done its duty. If tte poor girl is ruined, it were better that she had been murdered in cold blood by the brutes who betrayed her, and justice could only be satisfied by killing the villains. In such cases twaddle is out of order, and only simpering flatulent fools will give it nMearire. RETRIBUTION. No man in tbe land of average ability, and at all given to reflection and to analyzing the logic of events, can investigate, however superficially, the present predicament of the Republican party without coming to the conclusion that retributive justice is overtaking the Republican party, and that the fates have decided that it must perish in overwhelming a if grace. Hitherto when the Republican paity has been arraigned before the tribunals of public opinion on charges suppoited V- incontrovertible facts the policy has been to escape righteous penalties by the convenient reply that tbe accusations were limply Democratic lies, originating in malice and a purpose of depriving the country of the benefits and blessings of Republican rule. How well the party has succeeded hitherto is a mattar of record, and need not bs enlarged upon here. It ia proper, however, to say that thousands of Republicans have had many and serious misgivings relating to the schemes employed by the managers of the patty to secure and maintain power. The history of the party furnishes abundant proof of the absolute truthfulness of the assertion. Tbe defection of Horace Greeley and other distinguished Republicans years ago, on account of the corruptions of the party, was full of warning to the country, and from that time to the present the virus destined eventually to destroy the party has been doing its work, and cow tbe people are permitted to behold a party tottering to its fall burdened with accumulations of infamy such as never fell to the lot of any other polit'cal organization since Governments were established among men. In the present case Republican managers can cot turn upon the Democratic party and escape the indignation of the people, shouting "lie," "slander," "malice," and other catch words, which hitherto have proved a refuge and a defense. The charges cow brought against the Republican party, perfidious, corrupting and terrible to the last degree, are made by Republicans whose opportunitiea to know the facts whereof they speak are cot and can not be questioned. The country has cot reovered from the shock which it sustained when a few unscrupulous Republicans concocted the scheme fcr robbing the people of their choice for President and Vice President in 187G-77. That exhibition of stupendous villainy, though successful, created a wave of amazement and indignation which has not subsided. But it may be questioned, daik and damnable as were tbe plottings of Republican bosses to reverse the will of the

people, if they contained a larger p-r cenr.

of fn'amy than the schemes which were re sorted to in 1880 to elect James A. Garfield. The facts now coming to light have been hinted at and partially written out before, but they have been to some extent forced in to obscurity. They are cow coming to the front, and that, too, by Republicans who, having concluded to turn State's evidence, are prepared to substantiate their declara tions by testimony which will force conviction upon the minds of all men who are not blind to facts and deaf to reason. The facts so far developed have been product ve of creat demoralization in the Republican party. Tbe orgtns of the party try to explain, but every explanation requires a dcz?n explanations. Some of the orgaca resort to the old method of denouncing the stories afloat as so many lies but the next day they are required to do all their work over again. The charges are that Garfield himself acted corruptly in obtaining money in many ways, culminating in a bargain to seat Stanley Matthews as a Justice of the Supreme Court for $100,000 paid by Jay Gould. It will do no geod to denounce these charges as lies. Thy must be proven to be lies. All the circumstances go to show they are substantially true, and a Congressional investigation, it is believed, will establish that they are absolutely true. Dorsey still holds the "archives." He has the documents and is prepared to show, for he was one of the villains himself, that every allegation has documentary as well as circumstantial evidence to support it. It is humiliating to know that the Republican party is such a mass of corruption. In this connection the Boston Herald, about the last Republican paper to give in, as long as there is hope that whitewash will answer the demand, remarks that "the charge as to the agreement under which Stanley Matthews was appointed to his present condition fcaa been made many 'times before and never denied by any of the parties implicated, or who are alleged to have bad a knowledge of it It is too monstrous for ready belief. That a seat in the Supreme Court of the United States, the last resort of tbe people for legal justice, should be sold in advance for a cash contribution to a known corruption fund, and to an unscrupulous speculator, whose mercenary and selfish activity in politis3 has been braenly confessed under oath, would be incredible if the rottenness of our politics had no history. If it is true, our elections are a ghastly farce, legislation is mere barter and justice is a mockery. It is time for the friends of the late President to stamp this story with the brand of falsehood, if they are able to do so." Doubtless superhuman efforts will le made to show that things are not as infiruous as they now appear, but the outlook is nevertheless gloomy. The mills of the gods were never more busily engaged. Grists of the living and the dead are pouring in. The fiat of fate has gone forth. Retributive justice is taking the helm of affairs, and the p. o. r. p., scaly as An alligator, warty as a dungeon toad, venimous as an asp, ugly as a tarantula, and loathsome as a corpse, is doomed. The country is ready for the obsequies. ABOUT AN 1 31 A LS. In a dwelling house that was burned near North Adam-, Mass., three children were sleeping, their parents being sway from home. The house dog succeeded in getting- into the children's room, and leecued them with great difficulty, as two of them had fainted. A koy of Lntber, Mich., on his way to school met a tear, aud hastily climbed a tree. He clung to his dinner pail, but as bruin sat at the foot of the tiee patiently waiting for him to come down, he finally tossed the psil to him. The bear gulped down the content of the pall, and then leisurely walked ctf. A iog at Newcistle, I., was for twelre years the In eparable companion of Sidney Davis. Davis died recently, and after rearchingia vain for bis master, .the deg finally settled dwn in his armchair and awaited his omlng. It required stratagem to get him to take the smallest quantity cf food, and he gradually pined away ana died. A Botox lady had a dog whici, when it or its friecd the cat wished to go lato the kitchen, stood by the door ar.d allowed the cat to jump upon its back. The cat could then reach one paw over the latch, snd by presslcg tho other paw on the thumbpiece was able to open the door Tho cat would then drop cn tbe deg's bick, and ride into tbe kitehen in triumph. Gkori.k J. Romanes, in a recent lecture in Manchester, told of the benevolence of a cat. A hungiy acd miserably thin stranger cat came into his garden, and Tabby was observed carrying some of her own meal to tbe wanderer. Soon, seeing that tbe hungry cit was not jet satisfied, Tabby went and brought out a new supply ol meat, which the stranger appeared to accept with ever evidence of gratitude. Two coon degs belonging to Tim Buekuer, a North Carolina negro, visited the Court Boom during the trial of their master for inciting a riot and sat by hia side. Arter be was sent to Jail they took up their staUon at the Jail yard dour. Duriig the entire term of his imprisonment these dogs did not stay away a night from their po3t. They relieved each other during the day to get food, but at nicht both were constantly at the door. ' The townspeople hare now built a kennel for tbe Cogs near ihe Jail door, within sight of Buckuei's window. A (.oon duck story Is toid by the Detroit Free Pi ess. While hunting above the brand Elver dam a man wounded one cf two duc'ii which were mates. He sent his dos: into the river alter it, and, as the inj ared duck could no", swim very fast, the dog seemed likely to get it. Seeing this, the other duck, which had awam ahead, turned about snd came near the dog, which Immediately left the other and chased this one. Ths duck j ust kept but of reach of the dog, and led It down toward tte dam. and just before teichiag it dived under. The dog failed to get it, and, being so neu the Cam. he went over and came very near being drowned. John Moore, of Savannah. had ablgitump-lalled bulldog with which he made his living. The brute was ungainly and had not the appearance of an accomplished fighter, but he always came out ahead and John took the stakes. One dayaa Italian came along with a hand organ and a monkey, and the dog man bantered the musician to let tbe monkey fight the dog, offering to bet $5 on the result. The Italian took him up and a large crowd collected to see the fun. The Italian tossed the monkey onto the dog, and In le? than a jiffy the little brute bad his teeth and bis claws fastened like a vise In the stump of that dog's tall and was screaming like a hyena. The dog gave but one astonished look behind as he bounced to his feet and made tracks tor another County. The monkey held on until Rattler sprang over a ten-rail fence at the tack of tho garden, when he suddenly quit his hold and sat on the top rail and watched the dog's flight with m chatter of perfect satisfaction and danced along the rail with delight. Tbe little Italian shouldered his monkey affectionately and walking up to Moor raid : "Your dog not weU today; maybe your dig gone oil to hunt rabbeet. Your dos not like my monkey he not icuuaint. Maybe ven I come again next year he come back and ficht fome more." The dog Oil not return f r thrte dsyi snd can not be induce! to ftjat eve i a comri; cur.

PERSONALS.

r.T. ParrN haprauied to the Chnrc"a of the ft deemer at Bridgeport a conpleie set of stainedglata windows at a cost c f 11 .CO. 1 Heljn Taylor a step-daughter of J jhn Stuart Mill, is the first womia elected t the Presidency of Standing Committee on the London. School Bxtrd. 1 wo xo ale descendants of Martin Luther are now living iaaa obscure village In Thiirinta. One .'s a carpenter and the other a theological student. The Sight Hocerable Lord Mayor of Iublln, Cbtilei i.wsou. M. K, Is a baker by trade. His wagons go through the street every day, and ssrve bread so th Mansion Howe regularly. Senator Jone, o: Florida, says this of Ireland: "Whllelenjixel my visit to the old country I conld not live laere again. That 1 the country of the past this is the country of ths future." Eexator Want IlaxrTov. who has gone trout fisbinc Iti tbe Virginia mountain, says ia a letter to a friend ia RIchmoud that he expects to be thought a fish liar, if not called one. when he reaches home. Chari.es D. Clav, of Kentucky, grandson of Henry Clay, and J. B. Vance, soa of Senator Vance, of North Carolina, hare been designated by the President to appear before the Board at Fortress Monroe, October 1: to be examined for second lieutenantcies. Ex-liovKRXOE Uarrixax, of New Hampshire, who has just been stricken with paralysis, was a Univeisallst preacher before the War, and give up hia Church to command aieslmeat in the Army of tbe Potomac. He used t be conside-ed the test stump speaker in the State. Niehai ' model for a statue of Garfield for the State of Ohio is finished. It represents the statesman m the act cf addressing an audience, standirg erect, with the right foot advanced, the right hard thrust Into his bosom, and the left groping a glove, hanging easily at his side. At his feet are a .scroll, books and a laurel wreath. Eugenie 1. according to a writer who has seen her very recently, -a rather stately woman, in deep black, not a bit of color anywhere, about her eyesarethe twinkling ripples that years made, around her mouth the deep drawn lines of sorrow, a fallow face, balr with (ray in it." Mr.. Margaret F. Siluvas (Margaret Buchanan), wife ol the President of the Irish National League ef America, Is writing a new book which the Appletous are to publish. It is to be entitled "England, Ireland and the l aited States," and will be economic, historical and social. Sfeakin-g of Henri r.ocbefort. a writer from France says: "An odd face is bl-long, thin, eager, cranky; no beard except a light mustache and goatee; an eye like the headluht of a loomotive, the white showing all around; a high brow and turbulent, grajish hair, tumbling in cataracts over his ears and rfeiog in a geysc r on top." Ail the litigation preparatory to ths sal; of Greeley's estate as directed in the will of the late Mrs. Greeley has bocn completed, and on the bih of September next the once famous Chappaqua farm in West Chester County will be old at auction. Among the buildings to hi soil is the old stone barn which Mr. Greeley took so much pride iu. Ft mki'.ody put a small mud turtle, abcu'. the size ota silver dollar. In a bed in a New Jersey hotel, and the stianger who was assigued to that room, on preparius to retire, raucht sight of it. He at once resumed tii thuhts. remarking: "I expected to he a pre:ty lively night cf it, but if they're as big as Uut I dvn't propose to get In witn 'tm." ViMah UiNMJN. fciin'ier of Montaia, the first town built in Coiorado. died recently at hi howe in Vergeus. Vt. He was the leader of the firs , raity that left Lawrence, Kas., f r Pike's Peak in May, 1158. In February, the now town of Montana was incorporated 1. ih j State of Kansas. Not even a log cabm dow ira-ks the town's location. While visiting the White Mountain last werk, Mr. P. T. Barnum went to ths top tf Mount Washington. It was a floe day, and the scene was unusually impu-tsivc, and the famous sbowmtn gszrd atout locintllcnt admiration. Then he drew a telegraph blank from his Docket and penciled this message to a friend: "I am at the top of Mount Washington. It is the second greatest show on earth." Mb. ALroTT.whD is now nearly eighty-four years old, has read daring his tedious illness much of the correspondence between Carl vie and Eaierson. His sight and hearing continue good, and he endures his sickness with cheerful serenity. He can now stand on bis r aralyel lee, but cm notwslk nor can he make effective use of his right arm, which wes also paralyzed On SuncUy last he went on the street, in his wheel-chair, for the first time tince last October. One of the most indefatigable book buyers la New York City you caa hardly call h'.m a collector, though he has a large library is Mr. Samuel J. Tilden. Mr. Tllden's hobby is large galleries, lie has more of these great folios thaa he knowa what to do with, aud ha had to build a library expressly for them. 11 buys a great deal la tie way of general literature also, but the big illa:trated books are his joy and pride, and he will turn their psges for ycu until jour head swims. In reply to rumors as to her marriage, Mrs. Frank Leslie U alleged to reply: "For what reason should I marry? I am making more money than I know what to do with. My newspaper establishment and magazines of various kinds, which the lawyers told me would produce nothing, are bringing me aa income of Jt 0.03J a year; and I tell you that when a woman is mklug money like that there is no earthly reison why she should marry a man to help her squander it." The real name of "Jcaiuin" Miller, author of the "Sonps of tte Sierras," U Citclnnatus Heine Miller. His divorced wife's maiden name was Minnie Theresa Dyer and her literary pseudonym was Minuie Myrtle." It n aid that the name of "Joaquin" was given to Mr. Miller by "the boys" In his early California ex pci ience, when he was "ronghirg it," from a real or fancied resemblance to a noted Spanish bighwaymab, and he adopted It as a pseudonym. Mme. Oly.mfe ANfofAKi relates that she once met the late Abd-el-Kader la Cairo, as she was on her way to sisit the Sues Canal, whither, alio, he was going. "I asked him." she says, "if he did not speak French a little. His reply, through his Interpreter, wai that i.e did tot ut Verstand one word of French. We tock our seats ia the car, and he conti; to converse through his interpreter. 0 Onboard the ves el whi:h was to bring us to Ismallla ttu- interpreter fell asleep: and I chatted with uir compacions. I remarked that tbe Emir tee nrd very amiable; that his face wat really Landome, and that his gie possessed a strauae tlnroi. Then wc began to Ulk about his ptst lif?, his wives, his young nephew, who-e eyes weie so ardent aud who e mouth was ao tencuous reel y, we said awful things amoog curtelves. Grave as a bronze image the Emir watchel in, calm and Impassive. The passage lasted eicht hours. As we were about to lea v?, Abd el Kader offered me his arm to assist me to where the dromedaries were waiting for us. Oa the way he said in excellsnt French: 'Well, madame, I trust the trip has not tired you too much?' A thunderbolt could not have startled me more : He had heard all we were saying! 'Ah.Jhat is treachery,' I gasped. You see,' he replied, ' I do not speak French perfectly; and I hold that whatever a man does should be done perfectly or not at all. So I do not speak French. And 1st me tell you my nephew understands French quite as well as I. He heard you saying that he was haudsome and looked like an ardent lover. Don't trust yourself alone In the desert with him ; he Is a savage, you know.' " Extreme Tired Feeling. A lady tells us: "The first bottle has don my daughter a great deal of good; her fo:d dozs not distress ber now, nor does she suffer from that extreme tired teeling which she did before takinjr Hood's Sarsaparilla." A second bottle effected a care. No other preparation contains such a concentration of vitalizing, enrichine. purifying and invigorating properties aa Hood'a Sarsaparilla.

R. R. READY RELIEF The Cheapest and Best Medicine for Family Use in the World. IT CURES AND PXIVJLNT3 Diarrhoea, Dyaentairy, Cholera Morbn, Headache, TothJseht Rheumatism, Neuralgia, lllpbtbena, I anuenm, Aithma, Sore Ihr oat, IHfflcult llreathlag. IT WAS THE FIRST ASD 13 THE ONLi' TAIN REMEDY That Instantly stops the most excruciating Paina, allays lnflammauoa and eure eongoatloo. whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other glands or organs, by one application In from One to Twenty Minutes. No matter now violent or eicmciatins the paia the Hheumatlc, Bediidden. Infirm. Crippled. Nervous. Keuraleic or prostrated with dibean Emy suffer, KADWAY'S RELAU Y KELIEF will afford instant ease. Inflammation ff th TTMnora Tnflimmitlifi I the Blander, Inf animation of the üowe'.s. Cousreaticn oi me Lungs, raipitauoa of the Heart, Hyateiica. Cronp, Catarrh. Nervousness. leepiesnea, Sciatica, Pain in the Chest, Back or Limbs, Bruiaea, Sprains, Cold Chills and Ague Chills. The anrlicatlon Of ?1A Ra&,1t RpHcf tr th nart or rarta where the difticulty or paiu exists will auoru case aua conuort. Bowel Complaints, Looseness, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus or Painful Discharges from the Bowels are stopped in 15 or 29 minutes by taking Kadway'a Keady Relief. No coDgesiion or ln2ammatiou. do weakness or lassitude will follow the use of the R. R. Kelief. Thirty to sixty drora in half a tumbler of water will in a few minntea cure Crampa, äpasms. Hour stomach. Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhea, Dytcntary, Coilc, Wind la the Bowels, and all laterbal pains. Travelers thould always carry a bottle ot Ratway's Keaay Kelief with. them. A few drop la water will prevent sickness or psins from change of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a stimulant. MAL AE I.A. IN ITS VARIOUS FOR2I3. FEVER AND AGUE. TEV1RAKD AGUE cured for fifty cents. There isoot a remedial agent in this world t&at will ctre Fever and Ague aiid ail other Mt-Jariou. Bilious, 4-carlet. Typhoid, Yellow and other fever (sided bv KADWAY'S PILLS) so qui-kly as KAI VS AY'S READY RELIEF. Fifty Cents per Bottle. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent The Greet ltlotxl Purifier, FOR THE CURE OF CHRONIC DISEASE. Scrofulous or Syphilitc, Hereditary or Contagious, Be It Seated In the Lucgs or Stomach, Skin or Cones, Flesh or ITerves, Corrupting the Solids and Vitiating tte Fluids. Chronic Rheumatism Scrofula, Glandular Swelling, ITack ii g lry Couh, Cancerous ASTeet1or,, Syphilitic C'rmpialnts, Bleed i or of tho Lungs, Dyspepsia, Water Brash, Tic L'olorenx, White Ewelllrps. Tumors. Ulcers. Skin and Hip IHseases, Mercurial PiFeae, Ftmale Com plaints, trout, inopsy, Bait Rheum, Bronchitis, Com u ration. LIVER COMPLAINT, Etc. Not only dors the SarfarsrlHan Resolvent excel all remedial asents in the enre of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin Diseases, but it Is the enly roaUve cure for KIDSET AUD BLADDER COMPLAINTS. Uiinsry and Wemb Diseases. Gravel, luabetea. Dropsy. Etoppsge of Water", Incontinence of Trine, Blight's Dibesse, Albuminuria, and in ail cases wbt re there are brica dust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like tbe white of an ecg, or thread! like white silk, or there is a morbid, dark, bilious appearance, and whits bote dust deposits, and when there is a pricklin?, burning i cD&ation when parsing water, and pals in ihe back and along the loins. Sold by DrugaUts. One DoUar a Bottle. RADWAY'S Regulating Pills I The Great Iiiver and Hemedy. Stomach Perfect Portative, Pool h in (, Aperient, Ael Without Pain, Always RelUtbl and Natural In Operation. A Vegetable Substitute for Calomel. Perf(Ctly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet rum, purge, regulate, puiify, cleanse andstreaf then. Kadway's Pills, for the cure of all disorders ot the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys. Bladder, Nervous Disease. Löfs of Appetite, Headache, Constipation. CcÜene, Indigestion. Dyroepsla, Biliousnesa, Fever, Inflammation of the Bo we la, lllesand all derangements of the Internal Viscera, lmrelj vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals or deleterious drtics. av"Oberve the following symptoms resulting from Disease of the Digestive Organs: Contipcv tion. Inward Files, Fullness of Blood In the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Diarust of Food, Fullnew or Weight in the Stomach, 8our Eructaticna, Sinking or Fluttering at the Heart, Checking or Sufferisj Sensation whea in lying posture. Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs belore the Sight, Fever and Dull Pain In tha Head, DeficJeucy of Perspiiatlon, Yellowness ol the Skin and Eyes, Pain In the bide.Chest, fJmba, and buddea Flushes of Heat, Burning In the A few dores of Radwat's Film will fret the system from all the above named disorders. BOLD BY DRUGGISTS. rHICE, 25 CENTS PER KOX. RIAD "Falsi asd Tara.-w Send a letter stamp to RAD WAT & CO., No. Wairen, corner Church 3t-. New York.. Infotmatioa worth thousand! will be stal t

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