Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 29, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1883 — Page 4

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I'ÜE INDIANA STATE SEOTI 24. 1883. 1

weiixesday. ocTor.p:n 21.

OFFICE: 71 and 73 West Market Street. KATES OF SUIiSCKU'TlOX. Indianapolis Sentinel for 1883 Ially, Sunday and Weekly Edition. DAILY. Delivered bT carrier, per wcek......... J 2 Dally. Including Suuday. per week Daily, per annum, by mail Daily. per annum, by mail, Including bunday, by mail ---...- i Daily, delivered by carrier, per auaum Daily, delivered by carrier, per annum. Including Sunday . - Dally, to newsdealers, per copy 30 10 U 12 Oil 12 00 11 00 3 8CSDAV. Sunday edition of eiuty-four columns .3 2 00 Sunday Sentinel, by carrier....... W To newsdealers, per copy U)a WEEK LT. Weekly, per annum . , 5 1 00 Tie postage on subscriptions by mail Is prepaid by the publisher. Newsdealer supplied at three CcnU per copy, postage or oder charges prepaid. Entered a afcond-class matter at the rostofiiee at Indianapolis, Ind. The outh is crowing inhospitable. The Mobile Register says: If the Mormons send eighteen missionaries to the Southern States, as they say they will do. tney will tend eighteen candidate lor tar aud leathers. t i TliJC editors of several Republican papers continue to reiterate that really the letnocratic party was badly used up in the Ohio election. Wake up, l'oraker, old by! There is a litfht in the window for thee yet. Cheer up and look lively. JcpiE 1Ioilv seemed to have recovered immediately after the election. Those Republican topers were always prompt to publish the fact that he was a very sick man Not a line in any oi them since. Wonder how l'oraker stands "the racket?" Jt ik.f. For.vkek made 1W speeches during the Ohio campaign, and if he had made fifty n ore and kept Harrison, l'orter and Tom Brow ue over there to help him for a week or two longer lloadiy's majority would have been just about double what it wa. "The 0. G." is already talking about the 'revolutionary legislation expected"' by tbe new Democratic, Legislature. If it can do any more develtry than the Republican party has done, whe never or wherever it has had the chance, then may it never meet. Thk g: o r. p. is about to loose the colored vote, hence we are not surprised to learn that the Republican bosses at Washington have already on foot a scheme to use the Civil Rights decision as the basis of a new issue. The "bloody shirt" is in tatters something baa to be done p d. q. The Cincinnati News-Journal is anxious that the jieople shall not mistake the cause of the Democratic victory in Ohio. Herein Indiana we have "caught onto" it. AVe know that CJovernor Porter made six speeches during the Ohio campaign. With the knowledge of that tact, mystery disappears. Oi.r Ben Butler is working Tewksbury for all there is in it. In one of his last Speeche he said: 1 appeal to your mothers, daughter, sisters, and to you. men, who follow in the step of Jesus who refused not to eat with publicans and sinner. Tewksbury now it a place where a decent Wernau tnay go an J not be skinned, cut up, and eaten by rats when she die. The Tewksbury Republicans must be con-s-octing some deviltry to beat old lien. The Boston Globe gives a pointer as follow: From a party which stole three State in H7t" t-omcs the refreshing cry. "Watch the ballotboxes!" This is well. We agree with it. T le err Come a little late, it Is a kind of death-bed repentenre. but, in the wordi of the great statesman, it is still "a useful and salutary thing." Wjjat an elysean field of glory would now s-pread out before the eager eyes of Republican editors if the Supreme Court of the United States was a Democratic body. How they would flap that old rag, "the bloody shirt," and how they would appeal for "the fruits of the War." Too late the saddest wards are "it might have been." Pobteh, Harrison and Brown should Irasten to Massachusetts and help the Tewksbury Republicans bury old Ben. The old chap is a monstrous lively party, and the way he is shaking up hypocrites in the old Bay State is a caution to sinners. He says a poor man can die now in peace in Massachusetts and not have his skin tanned after death. Til K Indianapolis Sentinel did heroic work for 1ne party in that city. It had to tight all the other Indianapolis pa pert, and it may congratulate itself n the mull. From now until the next Presi-1-lial election It shoild be in every Democratic household in the State. -Tipton Times. Yes, we bare to fight them all The People helps us j little, along about election time, and then blackguards us the balance of the year. Like the old man whose wife licked liim it did her a power of good and didn't hart him. Juki to thinic of it! Harrison and the Republican speakers in the Ohio campaign mixed ''the bloody shirt", as much as they dared to in their canvass, and yet we have the frightful intelligence: Hoadly carried tbe Soldiers' Home in Ty ton by 01 majority orer Foraker. What wi J become of "the fruiti of the War" if this thing goes on much longa-? The nauplitr DcmocraU will have all ''the fruits." Ahtthiso that matten of "States' rights" is Terr obnoxious to our Republican friends. Some . have even gone so far as to advocate tbe aristocratic centralizing ideas of Alexander Hamilton. Since the decision of the Supreme Court, however, relating to the "ciyil rights bill" the Republican gentry are calling upon the States to aid the colored man, or practically acknowleding that the Iemocratic theory regarding the rights of the State and the scope of the Constitution of the United States is the correct one. Thooe two New Yorkers killed each other the other day in the big city just like those wicked Kentackians sometimes do they died with their boots on. The New York .Sun, in speaking of the little incident, remarks: That is a lurid picture of criminal life in New tors tbat ia unveiled In tbe story of tbe killing of two thieves in a terrible right in a Sixth avenue retort kept by a criminal for criminals It is startling to thiuk that auch desperate men com ml ko at will, mingling by day with the thron, n ot honest nien and womei in the busy thorough, fare, aad at uiant gathering to plot crimes against Meiir. The report that detective kept nightly watch on taeix tavcUas place alvrUi jjij aur.

arceof oro'ectton. hut it would teem tbOQZh mon of such character mi;ht by ome nein be driven fro;n ti e city. At least. Mr. Sntuj Draper should not be licensed to keep a bar-room.

F. a'srrt with confidence and claim exulting!-, that the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette is incomparable a a iKWSpaer. C. G. Oh, Yes! You are a first rate paper no doubt about that, ttitf, then, you did hate to prim the truth about your man Forakcr the morning after the election, and, in fact. rou Le lpcd to mix every paper in the country except ti e Sentinel on the result. We announced lro:u TMO to l",000for Hoadly, and stuck to it. Ohio rreidential candidates should tear in mind '.hat one James C. Biuiue. of Maine, says he cm carry thnt State in IsSL Chicago Herald. Well. If is not the only man who could do it. Commercial oaelte. Think of the cheek of it. Here is a party paper writhing under the terrible castration of the lcmocratic laib. brassing about what the KepuMican party will do in aitother campaign. Oof! oof! Big Injun, me! CIVIL. RIGHTS AND STATE RIGHTS. The recent decision of tbe Supreme Court relating to the civil right law has its chief significance in the declaration that it places on the highest judicial elevation known to the Constitution of the country the fact that the power of Congress the authority of the Federal Government is limited; tluit there are some questions with which the States alone have power to deal, and with w5ifh Federal interference can not bt tolerated. The Democratic doctr : e has been opposed to the centralization of power in the hands of Federal authorities. The Constitution has limited the power of Congress and the President. The states delegated certain powers, other powers they retained. The Republican party has been a centralizing party It lias wanted what it called a "strong Government," a despotism. It has demanded the total obliteration of btate lines It has howled fur a nation with a big "N," instead of a Republic of States in some regards ' sovereign. " This idea the Democratic party has always opro.-cd. It has been a constitutional party, and now a Republican Supreme Court lias been compelled to decide questions in line with thv Democratic idea. The, .jucstions of race, which cnlcr inlo the decision of the Supreme Court, we dismiss without comment, admitting their vitality and sweep. They are questions with which States and not Congress hare to deal. That is what Democrats have alwaysjcon tended for, and now the Republican Supreme Court declares that tbe Democratic doctrine is absolutely correct. Now then the question nrie-, l'pon what ground can objections be raised? The fact that the colored man is a citizen i? not questioned; but he stands before the country like any other citizen, without a special statute to support his citizenship. He takes his Chance., Fuder the grand civilizing and elevating influences abroad in the land he can not be overlooked nor discarded. The advancing forces lay hold upon him as they do upon other citizens. He moves forward in spite of obstacles. He ceases to be an object for special legislation. He is "out of politics," lives and moves and has his being under laws which apply to white men as well as black men. It would be a task of little difficulty to further elucidate such propositions. But we prefer to dignify the decision of the Supreme Court of the Republic by giving prominence to the idea that it gloriously magnifies the Democratic opiosition to the centralizing joliey of the Republican party. Now, when the lenocratic party is coming into power and is about to take the helm of Govern taent again, it is gratifying to know that even a Republican Supreme Court is compelled to declare that upon great Constitutional questions the Democratic party has been right and the Republican party wrong, and that all questions relating to citizenship are to be decided by the legislature of the State, and not by the Federal Government. RESPONSIBLE FOR BUTLER. Within the entire domain of human poisibilities, in the line of retribution, nothing could be more in consonance with the eternal litnetsof thiDgs than to see Denj, F, Butler, of Massachusetts, in full possession of a mill, with all the modern machinery, operated by water, steam, wind, horse power or electricity, ready and anxious to grind Republican bosses in Massachusetts to iowder. it is said that in early life Butler WAS a Democrat, and that while in the Democratic party did some foolish and inconsiderate things. To that extent, and the Republicans are welcoma to make tbe most of it, the Democratic party in a certain seme may be responsible for Butler. But Butler apostatized and went into the Republican camp, was received with open arms and magnified into a hero. In the Republican service he won notoriety, became entirely familiar with Kepublican methods and remained in the party until its abominations drove him out of it. Of all the men in Massachusetts he was, by his intimate knowledge of Republican policy, purposes, theories, corruptions and general cusaedness, tbe best man in the State to expose the astounding rottenness of the party. He Seemed to be seized with a mania to enlighten the people of the State as to the ''true inwardness" of Republicanism. He knew that it was aristocratic, bigoted, opposed to the right of the masses of tiie people, dictatorial, overbearing, false in its professions, and that under its sway there existed infamies which, exposed, would horrify Christendom. Butler is bold, defiant, shrewd as the Yankees say, "smart." He aspired to be Governor, because if he could reach that elevated position he could be of service to the people of Massachusetts. In hiscanvass he mapped out his program me. He went before the ieople of Massachusetts and told the story of the blighting curses which Republican rule had fastened npon the people. The people believed him and elected him. Good as his word, Butler has horrified the world by exposing Republican corruptions. Tewksbury is a monumental and a continental crime. Tbe Republican party irresponsible for Tewksbury. Tewksbury beats hell. For loathsome, indescribable abominations it is unparalleled. Insanity, poverty, idiocy, filth, torture.Jdeath, savagery, Jbarbarity, debauchery, lasciviousuess, greed and venality, blending, intermingling, intertwisting, make a horrid agglomerated mass of wretchedness - and crime, in the presence of which exaggeration sits dumb, imagination gives up the search for other pallutions. scenes of unclean ness and defilements; devils blush, and a thousand cyclones of iudiguatiou close each other,

over the State, the Republic and the world. Republicans knew of Tewksbury, but they refused to cleanse it because it would hurt the party. Butler determined to cleanse it if it reduced the Republican party to a Tewksbury stilT ready to le sold for $1G or to be skinned. He has done it. Thepauier stiff and skinii!::g business has ceased. Insane mothers no longer make night and day hideous as monsters quicken into a horrid life beneath their hearts. Idiots are no longer robbed; bathing pools, unfit forswine, r.o longer burden the air with pestilence; infancy is r.o longer permitted to perish for want of care or to reduce expenses; thestitY business has received a back-set, and the human skin tannery has collapsed for want of raw material. Such istlie work Governor Rntler has been doing for Massachusetts, and if the Democratic party is responsible for it by making But'er the instrument by which such a work could be accomplished, then all the tail feathers of all the ostriches in the universe would not sullice to make a plume long enough to decorate the occasion, when good men and good women meet to celebrate the event. The Boston Herald may, therefore, proceed in its eilbrt to make the Iemocratic party responsible for Butler. Butler says that he is growing old, that in the course of nature he has not long to remain in the world, and that he wants to be of service to his native State during the closing days of his life. It is the right way to talk. Whatever may have been said of Butler in the past, just now he U engaged in a good work, showing up Republicanism in its strongholds. That he will beat them down in Massachusetts seems to be a foregone conclusion. That done, Butler may hope for repose, and dying it may be jkjssible, and as fitting as possible, that his last word should be "Tewksbury."

I.ikitf.xaxt Governor Hansa, high Republican authority, in response to a direct question upon the subject, did not hesitate 1 to declare tüat the late decision of the Re publican Supreme Court upon the civil rights act "was the law,'' and a right decision of the question at issue. Lieutenant Governor Han na being informed that a prominent Republic au of Indianapolis had recently said, that the "jiroc; properly belonged, to the Democratic party,'' promptly acquiesced in that opinion, and. as if to emphasize the declaration, extol'ed Republicans for cleanliness, saying that they "washed themselves regularly and thoroughly,'" intimating that the colored I man, by virtue ot Jus iiltliy habits, was öni of place in the Republican party. The colored We2 seem to be catching onto Governor Hanna's ide.t yt'.i marvelous alacrity; that is to say, they are IetOs B of the Republican party everywhere. v Tupy fceem to think they have been used as Re" publican chattels about long enough. , They are becoming utterly disgusted with the way t lie Reiublican party divides with them. They observe that it is very much after the fashion the white man divided the game with the Indian. The result of the hunt, it will be remembered, was a turkey and a tcrkey-buzzard. The white man, to make tilings appear eminently fair, made two propositions to the poor Indian. He sajd: "Now I will take the turkey and you .take the buzzard, or you take the turkey-buzzard and I will take the turkey." "Fgh," said the Indian, l"you no say turkey to me once. The Republican party never have said "turkey" to the colored man ; it has always been "buzzard,'" and the colored man is tired of that sort of division. As a matter of course, the people will be delighted to know where His Lieutenant Excellency stands on the civil rights question, and the colored men of Indiana will doubtless give his opinion in regard to their proper party afliliations prompt consideration. The Democrats had a grand jnbilee hi Cini cinnati last Saturday night. Senator Penj dleton concluded his re marks as follows: inil nnw mr fnllmv-eitiiiii what of tin. fniiir That is too large a subject. Th time U too short. We muitt speak briefly. But if we are true to ourselves, true to the principles that bave guided us for leneraMons, true to the great Interests of t!us luichty Hepublie, true to ourselves and thnsa who Come aller u, the iclory is our. Il will uot le ISirily won The Kepublk-aus are intrenched, tiieir Bl'TJDy ni (.flcolioluers is disciplined, they are amistonnni to success. The people have often distrusted us, and sou.elinjes not wilboul reason : the minioti of power will not surrender their fat places without a nrng.de. It behooves v., tZm, with. c?ol leaded judcinent. firm purpose. lin-Ifluli devotion lA ö'Jr tause and not to perjont, to maroh fotward to the victor" bieb is ours if we show the people we dlerTC It Unf all this will require activity, carnCHtness. unselfishness, and constant devotion to the nxhta of the people and tbe interests of labor. If wc do this and live to the traditions of the past, and nerve ourselves by the hopes of the future the l'emocrntic party will carry tbe Presidential election of ISM and once more return the Government to tl.e ways of tbe fathers. Thea the policv of the Government shall be guided by Jeffersoniait principles and the helm of .state held with Je.fersomau firmness, as the ship is wafted onward by the winds and waves of Democratic progress and ballasted by the conservatism and constitutional law. Old Fred Douglass thinks that the more antagonism the colored people are able to create between the whites of the two scctioua the better it will be for the colored folks. Hence he rather advocates a little "hell raising" between the North and the South. Wonder what old George Washington would think of such a sentiment Compare his farewell address with it. After all, this is the outcome of such sentiments as Senator Harrison promulgated during his Iowa campaign bloody shirts, copperheads and butternuts. Go it, Fred. What a team you and the Indiana Senator would make. It used to be the style to drive teams of white and black horses. Hitch up and go it tandem. Theke are some people very fond of calling the Democratic party ''the whisky party," and that was the reason that Hoadly was elected in Ohio. A Columbus letter-writer hits the nail on the bead as follows: ' The brewers and the whiskr element in the cities got w ared and made terms' with the Itepuolicans: whilst in the country the Republicans were pledged to the second amendment to gain prohibition votes. It was the curious spMnacle of a party with one end in the pulpit aud the other in a whisky barrel. Vet the sequel shows thst whisky ou the one haud and the prayers Of the Church waa not enou:h to ufttlwm. lTnter tne circumstance the defeat is terrible. H is such a defest that it can never be recovered from. Tu Republicans are now mad at the Prohibitionists, and the 1'rohlbitionists are equally maa at the RluMicans. It ends tne fsiou between these two partita. Here is something about tbe "big wages' tkat an American mechanic gets under the protective theories of Republicanism.. This i official. The witness was before the United States Senate Committee on Labor now in session in Boston, last Friday: Mr. Robert Howard, of Fall River, was the next witness. He showed by statistics that the wages of the operatives is eiahtv-two cents a day on the average. Instead of f I GO, as has been renerally supposed. He said that one cause of low wagwas the waste in the American mills. The crowdiugof the workinguien is what is driving them into intemperance, Xhey gUen ay they can uot

cat their noper without foroethln? to stimulate the fctowach after a day pt in hard work tu the vitiated aUi.o-phere of the mill. They are driven to drink. .

Tue bottom is clear out of everything. Now comes Pink Fishback and swears before an investigating Committee that Republican tickets that were voted last fall were illegal and regular swindles Watch out, Mr. Fishback, they will jolt you out of the party, and what is infinitely worse for you, out of that 20,000 slice you are enjoying now. A man must be a Republican of the Dorsey-Rnidy brand to enjoy a $JO,000 chunk of the Re publican pudding. A man that talks out in meeting like you may go to heaven, but they have no use lor him in the Republican rar,yThk interview with Senator Harrison recently telegraphed from Washington, and whi';h appeared in the Sentinel of yesterday, rather indicates that the Senator's spirits are gloomy. The lamps are burning blue ant all nature isawry. Tbe fact is that he had built great expectations on the results of his Iowa and Ohio campaigns last month, and to have the entire Republican failure come tumbling down upon him is death and destruction to his future hopes. . Between the lines his advice to his partisans is to "rlee to the mountains." The New York sutt carries a level head and is undoubtedly very much in earnest in advocating Judge Holman for the Presidency, but it says: And ret. when the nominations are made, we hall heartily support the candidate, whether it be Mr. fleiidrk-ks with his disuity and experience or Mr. MclKinald with his amiability aud talent. No disappointment of Mich a sort can make ns unhappy '1 he Republic may so.netitnes make a different choU-e from that tve have advised, butsh-ill we doubt the luture of free institutions for that rcamn? I'OI.ITICAI. IKIKT. Thk salem Unzctte says that political profesions do not count lor mucit on either tide iu Massachusetts this year. The Maron tcia.) Telezraplt wants to Halt and see how good a Governor Jud'je Hoadly makes before talkinz about him for President. An. the living ex Governors of Massachusetts have been invited to a diuner of the Social Temperance Union in lioston this artcrnoou. The VstfiJngtoii rpsj sumsest tlutt womÄIl frage, civil rights and prohibition the sixteenth, seventeenth nnd eighteenth ameudiucuts will give the Republican party something to live for; an excuse for an existence that has for some years seemed to lack a reasonable apology. Kx SiTAKEE Keitei: says Carlisle will suceced him as Speaker, and that McDonald will be nom- i nated for President. The ex Speaker, however, i destroys tbe force of his claim to be a political ! prophet when he adds that the Republicans will j enjoy four more years' control of the vourjtry. j Thk Dayton Democrat saya it is a good thin? that j the Cuited States Supreme Court is Republican. If j a Democrat c Supreme Court had made tha recent j Abhiion in the cill tights bill cjs"s the cog u try . would not 8093 have heard the last f "hydra- j headed , secession." "State Rights fossil," wCh; ' federate tison," etc., etc. " ' Tue Hon. JoLü 0. Carlisle, of Kentucky, is tne youngest prominent democratic candidate for the Speakership of tbe next House of Representatives. He was forty-eicht years old fa fcjptcmber 5. Mr. Cox was fifty-nine on September '), su I tin Rin daJl was fifty-five on October la. Mrtsr. Morrison and Converse, who have been named as In the race, are respectively fifty-five and fifty-six. Jipr.E Foraker has found out what it was defeated him. It was lecause the election was on the mh of October, which he thinks is an unlucky day for him. On this day, when a child, he fell from a waluut tree aud broke his shoulder blade; on the 9th of October, while in the army, he fell off a horse aud had to go to the hospital for a mouth, and on the 9th of October. 1776, he lost an irnKtant lawsuit, which had changed the course of his lite ever since. He thinks he would have been .lected but lor that. His a cood thlug that the Judge has finally found out what it was. and c,u 110W let the I I'ohlbitiouists aul the wool growers and the Oermaus aud the grape growers rest in peace. Thk Atlanta Constitu'ion, in a lengthy editorial on the civil tights decision, says: "It now behooves the South to show to the world that she is capable of doing the negro fullest and amplest justice without the fear oi any impending statute. Tbe place set apart for him in the Theater and ia tne railroad cars should be in every way as good as those occupied by the white men who pay the same money. They should be Just as secure from the intrusion of boisterous persons and kept In as opportunity is now afforded tbe South to show u:aifciie is as magnanimous as sue proved herself to be courageous, site will deuiouitrate, we have no doubt, that whUe sue could never be driveu by J T'?? JiltO doing what was clearly wroug, that she wi'.l not be (emblea by tue removal of all restraint Into dein;; anything that is less than riyht Sour. tv2 perpetrated a joke npo:i It v. Mr.- fielt, of Chambersbnrg. Pa., last Sunday, by placing among the notices to be read from the Dulpit, an announcement of minstrel performance. Vennor, the Canadian weather prophet, has a rival in the South In a Fffessor Calher, of Alabama, ' who publishes the statement that the doming winter will be distinguished by its "phenomena! seasons of cold, interspersed br paroxysmal spells of hut." A Lafayette, Ind., lady a tcodcl wife and mother broke her husband ot the sa-loon habit by walking up to the bar beside Jiira ana-calling for the beer. She broke the awful silence, as they walked home, witn tbe remark: "1 love you, my husband, and if you are going to hell I'm going right aloug with you." Exchange. Ma. James Crow, who died recently in London, aged eighty-one. was in command of the steamer Edinburgh in 1S40, and was forced to land Prince Louis Bonaparte at Boulogne, where be made a futile attempt to induce the French garrison to take part with him in a hostile demonstration. Napoleon was himself taken prisoner and confined In the Fortress of Bam, from which he escaped disguised as a workman. The Kins: of Piaui is a most extraordinary looking man. Karl I. is apparently about twenty years of age. and the most remarkable fact concerning him Is tbe inordinate length of his nails, each of which measures about bait a yrd. This deformity is considered by the Siamese as an attribute of sovereignty, and. of course, reduces the monarch to a state of absolute helplessness. He can do nothinz for himself, and it obliged to have recouiae in every instance to his aid-de-camp. . It isfcaid tbat the new portrait of Hawthorne is tbe result of an artful strategem on the part of John Luthrop iloller. Hawthorne, who could not endure to have his picture taken, was beguiled by Motley into the studio of a London photographer "to examine some portraits." The novelist dropped into a chair and Motlry, going to the other side of the room, called his attention to some object. He looked up wlth: that glance of quick intelligence wbkh bis friends remember so well, and at that moment the photographer, privy to tbe little con- ; spiraey, exposed the plate. This portrait of Hawthorne ia said to be the best in existence. As ex-Confederate surgeon relates in the Cleveland Lender that once during the War, while a terrible thunder-storm was raging, "Stonewall" Jackson ordered General Mahone to take his men and charge tbe I'nion forces., Then, tired out, Jaefcson lay down under a tree aud fell asleep. Soon be was aroused by oue of Mahoue's aids, who laid ; "General, I aji seat by Geueml iiauoa (or

order, lie t-ar the rain has wet the ammunition of his troops, and wants to know whether he shall retun-.." Replied Jackson : "Ask General Mahoue if tbe same rain which God rends to wet his ammnnMon a ill not also wet that of the enemy. Tell him to charge them witu cold steel." Mahoue made tbe cbargs. Mks. Maetha Gakrison, of Cleveland, who put a bullet through her brain last August, died the other day. The ball parsed through tbe womau's bead about an inch above tbe ear, struck the skull on the other side and then took a downward course. It could not be found when the probe Was nsed. A physician wes called, and in probing for the bullet passed his instrument clear through thebealacd tapped the skull ou tbe other side. No hope was entertained of her recovery. Coutrary to all expectations, she rallied aud appeared to be restored to health. I.ast week, however, the wonnd gave trouble, aud finally death ended her su fieri nc. The shootitig was accidental. At the lime of the occurrence Mrs. Oarrisou had been married one month and was hut ninetetn years of age

KOR AM) AltOl'T WOMKX. 1k. H arriet A. Lor.isc, of Boston, is oue ot the delegates to the Xaitonal llomuepatbic Convention this year. It is reported that Mrs. David Moses, nee Blanche (ircyjthe New York fat girl, picks her teeth with her husband. Mr.s. IIvmi . Eastman, of Leon, X. Y., is now her own mother-in-law, bavins just married her dte eased busbano's father, who is seventy-two years of ate. The Wisconsin Suffrage Association holds its annual meeting at Racine October and 21. The local management is in the hands of Rev. Olympia Brown, wbich assures iu success. A C'oxswiii iT woman, whose husband was a toper, sold out her roillenery More and started a saloon, in order to keen some money in the family. Then the old raau swore otT, aud Connecticut contained one very mad woman. "Wh sr yer gwine wid dat inanr asked a negro of his daughter. "lie aint fittvn tcr 'comp'ny yar." "(Jwiae ter de show," replied the girl. "lut's all right. Thought yer was gwiue ter Church. A 'on.au keu go vid mos" any man ter a show, but she's got ter be mighty pertic'iar who goes ter (hutch wid her." Pi:, l.tcv Halt, of the Massachusetts Woiuau' Prison. Kuid. at the conclusion of a carefu ly prepared paper, at the Social Science Associatiou, the Other day: "Nowhere is there a u active work of reform more needed than among the mill population of our state. Those who know only what were the social conditions there tweuty or thirty years ago cau form but an imperfect idea of the ticiWHj and disorder whicn now prevail in thes-i localities."' 'ANiKMNA. darling." said the dade to the dudine, "you're the apple of my eye." "You are a flatterer, Adolphus." "Not at all, my dear; but when we're together you're no longer the apple of my eye." "Why?" "Because it takes us loth to form one pair, then. IIa! ha'. liaV "Yes," growled an old bachelor who had heard the con versation, "a pair of spoons." Cruel man! r.xt hange. A pavnMohi dealer in hosiery has been t-ivinj an Inquisitive reporter some do'uIs onthesieof stockings worn by lady purchasers. He says: "The Sizes range from eight to ten. In Baltimore the average is from eight to eight and a half, la Boston and Chicago it is from nine to nine aud a half, and In New York from eight and a half to nine. It ; is a well-known fact among hosiery dealers mat ' tbe women of Baltimore have the smallest feet in I the COliatrv." It must make life appear a barren ; w.ste to the average Boston woman to reflect that i hor a 'ockings are the same In size as those that are worn by women in Chicago. Tbe New y 'rt Heralli f recent date says: . ducea qututity of yeat into a H ouceyon In fry ,rac8 impossible to stop the pan of dough it Wk KVe wen the dough , process pi lermeniaiicm. ,tion fcttll coutinues. ! Mself objects the fermenv itroduced into the I Likewise, when a new idea !. make the people I public mind U is very difficult lo . -.cd mere:y j forget it. Some time ago it was stv. -that the I suggested, and in the most modest red to j academic advantages of CMtfinbia be s pre. ! girls as well as boys. ( course, it se3s. .he preposterous to encroach upon the rights of i lords of creation, and eqt:ulv of course as ail kcew that women belong 1 an inferior order ot ; beings, and that the more they are educated the ; worse oft they always are in all nnrts .d the world. Ve quoted the phenomenal distich wlu'ch the wis- , com of past generations originated: A woman, a doS and a walnut tree. . The more they are whipped, the better tl ' ey be. and hoiwd fhat tho rash and u n reason a h! ä ttauslasts. not to say fanatics, would see the folly rt their veumre and n-tire in ood rder. But ai the meeting of the alumni Mr. Campbell declared. thl,t there is no reason why a woman should not uva ";'r brains a well as a man; and though thechivalrov 8 youth laufthed boisterously at the idea, and iv ' spite of the prompt tablimtoi a resolution to open the College doou wide euougli to admit sisters as well as brothers, there was a general and uneisy feelini; that the concession would have to be in tne not distant future. It was made evident at the rxieeUng thai the genus man proposes to hold his own as long as he can. and as much of other Deoole's as he can eet. It ia rath er difiicull to resist one's wife or daughter when She asks for a winter sacque or a spring bonnet in ; guase of C icero and Demosthenes at ns. or In pure Cbaldaic demands tbe various adornmenta of bcauUJiil womanhood, our caw will be boneless. There are. other drawbacks also. To fret and scold in forty languages, to use one little tongue to hurl anathema. of all tbe nations of the earth at us bet atie we come home in the wee ma' hours, well, it does seem hard indeed. Still Hie yeast is causing fermentation, and Columbia's doors are Creaking ou tbeir hinees. j Here is R description of Mrs. Cornwallis i West, said to be the handsomest lady of the British Islands. She was born in Antrim, Ireland, and married a Welsh gentleman. She it now visiting the British Ministerin Washington City, who is her cousin by mar riage: - Her face is of that charming, peculiar style of beauty which has aiways moved mankind more than the most regular icalures. She has a very rich complexion, on which an occasional freckle stamps a certificate of fineness, and taereby adds to tbe charm of general e fleet. A splendid head of rippling hair, which was very long until this year, when she cut it into boy-like curls, clusters framewise around her face, producing an effect which many ladies have sought lo imitate, but which none have approached. She is impulsive, original and daring, and says upon occasion the mofct delightful things in tbe most delightful way. Ube is most sympathatic. full of fun, a great favorite with all who know her and a subjeet of adDJiration for those who do not. bhe dresses generally iu careless and sometiinetimes in startling fashion, but beins; small in stature and of an admirable figure, she aiways looks well, no matter however she may be dressed, she rides with a certain dash. She has thoroughly Irish eyes, while she possesses the traditional smartness at repartee of the celebrated Milesian. A propensity to practica 1 joking may be said to slightly mar a chancier that is otherwise a kindly one, but tue lady is at the same time very popular. Jt has grown into fashion to announce a successful candidate for Governor for the next Presidency. There is a good deal of humbuggery about thi., and the Xew York Sun puts it into shape as follows: Some sanguine politicians are insisting that Judge Hoadly ought to be nominated for tbe Presidency in 1SS4 because he has beet) elected Governor oi Ohio. According to this rule, wny not give a rhance to all the Democratic Governors uow in Office, or who will be elected this fail, in the old free states, the portion of the I'nion from whieu the randidate ia pretty Mire to be selected? . New huland can present Bu tier aad Waller. Shoulder 10 si ouloer with them will stand Cleveland and Abbott, and we might include Fattisonof Pcnurylvanta if he were a little older. Across t'te A llejri.ni- Judge Hoadly will Bud plenrv of competiioik. There are Begole, of Miehigau. iilick. of Kansas. Giant, of Colorado. Adams, of Xevad I. and stoueinait. of California. In addition to these, sicxkley. of lHdaware. Mcl-ane. of Marvland. who will be elected in November, and Jackson, of Wei I irclniH. mv hiMst that they are not so far South J miL IA fall ntlt.l.l. if lh. flliin .ilia This rather loi.z lh.t adonis arleasin varietv. but we fancy the Governors will not have the Held all to theuselve. A contemporary says: Connecticut is really striving to keep up her reputation for religious fanaticism, ana meeting with considerable success. When we note the excitement which prevails in Salisbury because of a crucifix which has been placed at a cross roods we naturally inquire a ith amaement; "What seal, what jury has inspired thee now! Is Puritanism jo averse to liberty of conscience tbat it can't rcKiikin its indignation when the tvmbotofour holy tcligiou is crvctcAl f We have. uougUt that

the old Blue laws bad become a dead letter, and that a blender glow of comuiou aeuse had sunplicd their place, but the people of Salisbury are Mill Insisting that, though a man has a perfec t rieht to be an infidel and should be proles-tod iu his infidelity, no man has a right to be a catholic. They hate Catholicism, but lnietit not be able To tell the reason why, and regard it as a great crime lolavea crucifix ou the communal premises. There is nothtoe for ns outsiders to do except to smile at their folly. The days of persecution have gor.e by and, though some pretty villagers may build a little fire of their own with which lo slve heresy a roastin:. they will end by the dibc-overy that they have tfade themselves a laugh in it stock and had better prepare themselves to wake their puny minasoutof a Kip Van Winkle sleep. There are a Cleat many things in this naughty world which ought to be aoolisned. and at once, hut putting up a crucihx to remind tbe people of their moral obligations is not oue of them. That, at lea-t, will do no harm to the public conscience. Make war on rum shops, if you please, good neighbors, and raid ibe gamblers' dens, and institute as quickly as tnay be ail manners of reforms, but don't cet up a mob to haul down a crucifix. There is a homely pi o verb, as old as il is homely, and as true as it is old. that "He who spits against the wtud spits in

Here, now, is a Republican estimate of the Ohio election contained in a Cincinnati spec ial to the New York Times, dated October 1. It smacks of the grotesque. Sample it: The probable Republican majority is placed by conservative members of the party at 10.IWI. while there is a class of anuiiie prophets who say they wiil le very much disappointed if the Republican majority fails below öt).0"P. The latter estimate is probably the nearest lo the truth. The stav-nt-homes will this year be Democrats, and besides the loses Hoadly will suffer on tuis account there is a percentage i IH uiocrats w ho will scratch him. llepuhlhans will turn out this year, tmrtlv because their candidate (or .overnor In iKipuUr, but ktill more on accouut of the interest they take iu the license and prohibition atneuduients, which are to t-e voted upon With good weather on election day a verv nearly full Republican vote wiil be cast, and their majority is not likely to fall below 'J5.O00, and may inn considerably higher. In Cincinnati a vote of fi,".OOn is exiected. A plurality id the ballots ate likely lo le Kepublican. The reform 1 eui.xr.-n-ticket will lie given a vote of 7.UW, and there are individual candidates ou it who will poll nearly or quite as high a vote as the cainti.iat.-s on the McLean ticket If Judge Koraker carries Hamilton County, therefore, the f epuhlioan Legislative and County tickets will hsve an average maiot ity of T.CC0 lo s.uuo. The Old Ticket. Some one has kindly sent usa Texas paper with the following marked: Mr. Kpitok In a recent editorial von sav "if his health willaduiit. Mr. Tilden is the Jdmng.-st n an that could )e nominated" for President. He is in the full vigor oi intellect. He can carry New York, which is essential io our snceess, and the Democracy are I on no iu houor to put him in the otiiee to which he aas elected iu ISTii. and of winch a Democratic IJous of Representatives permitted him to berobled. We do not so much blame the llouai; for not "sticking."' Ilurd, Morrit-on, Springer, and Other bold lenircrat Congressmen would have Trade the field, but the Democratic Senators took fright at the butteries and battaillutis Grant was ! bunding into Washington aad persuaded the Pcmocratic members of the House to agree to that infamous trap, ihe Electoral Commission. We must get New Vorfc and Indiana. With Tildcu and Hcudrivas we can succeed lu Iudiata Uic people idolize Governor Hendricks. HI? fctauch, unflinching Democracy, his public and private character without a blemish. hs great services lo the party, make him a tower of strenzth It is proper and ns'ut, it is just and expedient, that Tilden and Hendricks should be oursimidard bearers in 1SSL Their nomination means success. In the New York Sun of the 11th last, we find the following: RU.HTfsi; TUE liREAT WHOM.. An esteemed conesoiideut favors us with tiie i subjoined communication : I "LdüorSun l spent the month of July iu the mountains Of North Carolina. Tennessee and Virginia, combining business with pleasure. During my trip I look pains to ascertain from prominent Democrats the sentiments oi the ueo pie in tue Slates uamr-d. with reference to the candidates of the Democratic party m the next Presidential cauiaign. "1 found an almost unbroken preference expressed for the oid ticket, lüden and Hendricks. The feeling is remai kable in view of the fact that in tbe Cincinnati Convention these three States, North Carolina possibly excepted, were bitterly opposed to Mr. Tilden." . , And the Sun saya editorially : "We print this let ter of our friend because it expresses a public sentiment that is well nigh universal aiuoim members ot the Democratic party in all sectionsof the couutry." The Cooking School. The average girl at marriage is well instructed in sewing. To take her place at the head of a family without a fair knowltdge of this useful household art. would be to disgrace hor mother and herself in the minds of I their acquaintances. The average young r,Q uoes to a home of her own with a few practit aJ ideas on a matter which will have to romc bffo.r 1,er t.urice ,tla-v' aml one " which the health ;d """Ls1!"3: ! Iwrself and otlfeM Tnw.i essentia. iv ucor.iu. 1 Then, if ever sh acquires evC." passable I a-ill in rookerv it w ill doubtless thron!: much wasting aud worrying and K2w non-successes. Meantime dyspepsia. 6? Other evil angel, is lurking in the shadow of her table. To the youilg Wife nd housekeeper so circumstanced half the terrors of the kitcher. are at once removed by the inrodtiction of the ever-ready, always reliab 'e. Royal Baking Powder With its proper 1 there can never be failure in bread, bis-,-f Or I'BKv, Wlllltr uif i:ucvi t.. ....... ...w -food produced is likewise so well asot thk that ail who partake may defiantly sured . i T lingers in the tace ot oiu uyspep6 nap ti e. . ?njne(i ti,e vjctorv over In exigence ",d 1ad h,rk t,,er 'ihn& is M ied fv wo. n- J ,,e Koval ltakinS ,!"dersi cc " " . its superior powers as a lea venon account of reat facility with which it !n?wf",.t' i' proved eVorton.v. and its may be used, its -shed w,l0ieMenes, and thoroughly estabi, uV the tests of (iovernpurity as eslablishec itb ha8 beco, tbe ment chemists and N m q tartar and general substitute for . ( ni sweetf lhtt soda in the making t elc With flaky, digestible bread. bk f the boue may its use. the young mistress v e work of her lake a pardonable pride in tk ban d.s. v. ,. ;; ' ' for a KanHie discovery baa been rcservu judges sasTity reponer that lawyers tu 9 xhe lake hicrer drink than anybody' fh t reporter should not have been so ruiae m $100 A WE We can guarantee the abotd amount togo?V active, energetic AGENTS. Ladles aa well a Gentlem'n make a incc?i lu bntnea. Veiy little capital required. Va hare a household article as saleable as flour. IT SELLS ITSELF. It ts nsed every day In every family. Yea do not reed to t xplaln tts merits. There ia a rieh narrest lor all who embrace this golden opportunity, it ccst you only one cent to learn what our bu&iDeaa h. Buy a postal card and writs to na and we will send you our prospeetus and full particulars And we know yon will derive more good than you have any Idea L Onr reputation as a manufactnrirg company la stich that we can not aXotd to df celve. w'rite to us on a postal and give your addtess plainly and teeeive, luU particulars. BUCKEYE MANUFACTURING CO., Marian Ohio. ASTHT.1A CURED! lirrnss Asthma 4.:re DeveryuO. toive mMxait rWi'in the worst ca.iuanrcuiufortahle sleen enects eures wnprea'ioiuerw iu. i Prioe .Ve. St 1 AH,of Iru(nriata or bv mail. Hnjj4 V K I . K I fTrWamp. Da. K. HCHIFFM AN. St. I'aul, Minn ai ; IP am a.CDMTEMfS.'uuMMio'ipv" i iw Rf ACT I AT N'l:. tiiannnv .if her i. f'nsi ii, fh wurkL IS never fails. V.urMM tit :.uifet.Ne Yurk. mm WAITED Tw 12A9 10 eta a hex. J. J. Untersinger, Cincinnati. O. T0DN6 HIS learn steam enpliM'rIng.anl earn SSltMt nor inonlh. Ki'iiii VAiir I1HUC and lue. iu stamps to F. KrrrY, Engineer. Hridgeport. Conn. TITT Tn permanently cured. Ko dangerous r No en re. no pay. rlllPiit pamiul operations. nla. Fissure and Pctal C leers cured. Send f jr cina.ars, A. W. I IsHKIt.M. I.. f) , DeUwara tik, iMiüspoU.

IS THE TIME TO CURE SKIN HUMORS. IT is at at th;s season when the pores open fr aud the pempirstioQ is abu admit thai DUti ins Huinois. Humiliating Kruption, Itrhine; lor titres, fait Rheum or heem. Psoriasis, Tetter. kinsworm. Baby Humors. Scroluia, scrota oi gores. Al-seesses and Dischnruinz wound, a id every species of Itchins. Scaly aud Pimply Diseases of the Skin aad Scalp are most peedity and csourmiially cured by t!.e f uttcura Kemedies, IT IS A FACT. llundreds of letters in our possession (cooie- ot which u.ayLe had ty return mal! are our authority for the nsserllon tbat skin. Scalp and Mood Humor?, wr ether Scrofulous, Inherited or Contagious, may NOW le permanently cured br ct Ttu i:a Hesoi VF.NT. the new Blood PuriStr. Dinrclic and Apperieui, internally, arid Ci T;."1 its and Ct Tt t i:a Soar, the great Skirt Cures a id Beauiiturs. externally, in cue half the time aid at one half the expense of any other season. GREATEST ON EARTH. Cuticura Keniedies are the greatest medicines on arth. Had the worst case Salt Rheum in (his t onuiy. My mother had it twenty years, and in lact died from it. 1 IxMieve Cuticura won d have sflved her life. Mv arms, breast and head

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were covered for three years, which nothing r- fy llol'fil f., ftltrul llflilil I liA.t aliA 1'ntii.iiH l'b.l i . f

ent internally, ai:d Cuticura and Cuticura Sk externally. J. V. Aiums, Newark. c. GREAT BLOOD MEDICINES. 1 he half has not been told as to the great cur ive roncn of the Cuticura Remedies, k havn paid hundreds oi dollars for medicines U. esire diseases fl the blood and skin, aud never Iwa t anything yet to e;ual the Cuticura Ileinedies. I H AS. A. VI II.MAMs. I'rovidetice. iL I. CURE IN EVERY CASE. Your C'u tier ra Remedies outsell all otbet medi cities 1 keep for skin diseases. My customers a t patients jay that ti ey have cflectf -l a cure in every instance, heie other remedies nave ia.lcu. H. V. Bkwkway. M. I. Franklin Fafs. X. H. Sold by all drussists. I'ra-e: Cuticura, r cents; Itesolveut, Si: i, i" cents. Potter Drug an 1 Chemical Co., Boa ton. Muss, Send for 4iHow to Cure Skin Iieae." n 1 m !ä ia 13 PSuraval of to Rtlesls 51 A lUSHT JTZDICiSZ 7317 HIS aSlLE mmmBsWmM mat; a:;d iiilyst! r fjjHE0LDSTÄBE8TL!HlrnEHT& 5ALS3 LAP,G-HTlIAir E7IH. j" sf ilic JU,-xnj,i jii'iihii-; i..:iiinrn rIMti known for wore than ihirty-Cv M years ns th la st Of' a!l Liniments, l'dl lfl LfS Man anil iteitst. iu scues today ar j V. 1 r i s. T - . , jam wjht rg-r than -ver. it cures wtien m 'Jfj til other tai!, and penctnitcs skin, tond.n $1 rVnn.l r.m-cl-, u us very Dono, si.tlLI 3 P3 LOST MANHOOD CAN BE RESTORED, Aud Nervous Debility. Seminal Weikaess, aad alt Evil F-ffccts of the Errors of Youth aud Tremauire I.oje-0' Energy of Middle Ae Speedily Cured by DB. WILLIAMS' JJEW X3ZSOOVJ3RV, Compound Fxt, Fleur it Pasqus. i 12 per Package, .1 Packages lsstinj s Mouths ut T i Sj by Man or fcx press. j Address iDB. T. WILLIAMS, ! h. 1S9 Wisconsin St.. Milffaaiet. ffü J. J. Cooper. Attorney for Pia.ntin". i i OHHRIFF'S SALE. By virtue of sn execution tr Ö me directed from the Clerk of the Superior Court Of Marion Couniy. Indiana, I will expose :at j i iibiicsaie. to the highest bidder, on Saturday, toe ' -Trh davof K-totxT. A. 1.. lsS-"t, between the hours 1 OI 10 A." M. snd 4 I. M. of said dsy, at the door of tn . . n..iA.rnitntr Imlisna the rents' t.ourt nuusc ui .uuu ....i nrnfit for a tprm not excecdiuK seven year. of the following real estate, lo-wit: Lot number four (1) in James M Myers snbd;vision of one buudred and fifty U'-Oi feet off of tbe cast side of lot number three IU, la Mayhew Heirs' addition to the cilyof Indianapolis, ia the County of Mariou and Slate of Indiana. 1 And on failure to realize the full amount 4 judgment, interest and costs. I will, at the sana time and place. exos at public sale the feesimp.V ) of said real estate. .... . ,v ' Taken as the property of James M. Myers, at the . suit of S. A. Hetcheret ai., for the use of JofcaJ. I Cooper. ,, , . . I Said sale wilt be made without any ralief what ever from valuation or appraisement tawa. two v ' ' - Sheriff of Marion wouaty. tolerl. A. P.. l.sg.1. VSW - X JT Ä FOR SALE. t KALK. V orter t'ountv. 1J0 acV'?3;Jf 'ion County. tsO acnriu' usko County. i0 seres Mi"Krtv County. iMOacrt a .B'vrw"e ny. KO acres in Crr Ct. tty. SO acres iu lkjone Css v. 400 acres in l"arko'Ccss. v. 100 acret in Putnam Cot", ty. 'SM acres In Hendricks Cc3a l.W acres in Marioa Oauot-'-SO seres in Jobnson lonntr. 127 acres in Morgan County. .'KO acres in Oneu County. TiO seres In f-ireens County.' ntiea. 0 met in Brmwu and Monroe C s.c. 4VU acres in Bartholomew county. 189 acres in Jenniues Couuly. S.'S acres in Ripley County. s acres in Jackson Connty. PJ8 acres in Jeferon County. (all on or address ULSKV M0NM:Cv i ?rl Wayne. Ind. Jy TBE BIGGEST THIKG BOT lllnatratHl' Boo Kant rrAk; (wl . K ASON t t O.. 120 Fulton SU. New Yorfe Consuanptives can be improve!, and often mrH. vym-r-iti. Kent by n ail for-.ft;., Jolmt. McA vin. lortneriy Tax c ollector, uoweii. Mas. rfn(f rf perday athoms. SUmnlewoHh . fr . tSJlUwZU AddrM SUoaon Oo.. Portland, ae. to Pr. M. F. lU'IU.EV. Indiapapolis. Ind. $250 A MONTH. Ac'iantd.!pnbs(a4l. S artwiea in t hawnrtd. laniw rm. ddreaajAY BKO.NssINJtwtAlw tlT AXTLID BRirSTR anil TwirM.. Vr,-. in large or Kmall quanliiies lor use mtlio' new State House builrtin A HOW A KU & rF.NK;,Caitraour. Iy C P. Owati, AgtaU it

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