Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 29, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1883 — Page 2

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ffHfi INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. T7EDNESDAS, DECEMBER 5,

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STATE SESTIIL

1883 FOR THE YEAR 1884 An uncompromising enemy of Monopolies in whatever form appearing, and especially to the spirit of subsidy as embodied In the present THIEVING TAEIFF. THE SETTTIITELis the recognized leading Democratic Newspaper of the State. Many new and improved features have been introduced, making it in all respects a Superior H-Page 55-CoIuinn Paper, This Enlarged Edition will be ftzr niahed, Postage Tree, at ONE DOLLAR It will contain well considered editorials on every subject, political or social, which may arise. The Commercial and Market Beports of the Weekly Sentinel will be complete. Its Agricultural and' Home Departments are in the best of hands, and will be a distinguishing feature. In a word, In its news. Its editorials, literary, miscellany, and in its general reading, it shall not be surpassed by any paper circulated in the State. It will be particularly adapted to the family circle. H o thinking man in the State can afford to do without the WEEKLY SENTINEL, at the small cost at which it is furnished.; THE SENTIDÜL, in addition to its superiority, is, moreover, an Indiana paper, devoted to and especially represents Indiana's Interests, political and otherwise, as no foreign paper will or can do, and ought, therefore, to have preference over the papers of other States, and we ask Democrats to bear this in mind, and I Tieir On State Paper When they come to take subscription and make up clubs. The Impending Conflict. The recent elections hare revealed political com altions which will, without doubt, make the Presidential election next fall the greatest political conflict of our history. It la due to truth to say that the condition! shown are such that each partj max reasonably believe that It can succeed by a mighty effort.Here in Indiana, as in '76 and '80, will be enacted a mighty struggle. The corrupt party which has been for nearly a generation fattening upon spoils and plunder, will go from its long possession of a Canaan flowing with the milk and honey of spoils, only when it has exhausted its utmost endeavors to stay. The - country is no stranger to the character and variety . of means brought into requisition where Republl ran monopolists, bosses and plunderers, unitedly make an effort Fellow Democrats, there are conditions npon which we may reasonably reckon a probable suc cess. These conditions, and they are the only ones. are a united and great effort. Evui shocldkh to Titxwxrn.1 Even now the conflict is in the air. THESEN TIL win contribute its best effort to the end of a grand Democratic victory. Its work can be beat done when a weekly visiter to every Xtemocratic home, hence we ask to be come men visitor, and add that now is the time for every Democrat in the State to subscribe lot tboSeaUaei. TERMS: WEEKLY. Single Copy, withe nt Frmiani 1.0 Claas of 11 to - - - 10.00 CI a be ef 20.0 CI a be of , ....,. 95.50 DAILY. Ooe Copy, On Tear.. 10 00 One Copy Six Months-..., 0.00 50 One Opy. Three Months.. One Copy, One Month. 85 BUXOAT SJOrrXNXI. BT MAIL, 3.00. Agents making up Clubs send fox any lnfbrmatioa desired, SPECIMEN COPIES FREE. Address Indianapolis Sentinel Co

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5. The Chicago Times thinks that President Arthur would raise his popularity by goin into tbe rural districts and raising pumpkins Instead of eating Newport dinners. . The "Washington monument is now 410 feet high, but rats go to the top of it to steal uncbeons oi tbe workingmen. One old rat, dubbed "Dorsey," by the workingmeu, has been arrested. Some of the iron and steel men of Pennsyl vania have redured the waesof their employes to ?1 a day. "We thought that the high tariff republican policy would prvtrct the workhigman. Bah! Some of the Republican organs have ev idently a pick at Sergeant Masonor shooting atGuiteao. Well. Gulteaa did help the party out of a yery ugly scrape and then, too, he is one of the natural outgrowths of Republicanism. Yes, Guiteaa is one of those precious rascally boons that we find dotted along like milestones on tbe road that Republicanism blazed its wy to power and partisan spoil. Now that the Democrats of Congress have done the wise thing of naming Mr. Carlisle as ?ieaker, no time should be lost in securing the passage in the House of a judicious tariff reform bill such a bill as will speak for itself in no uncertain sound as the Dem ocratic tariff platfornt in the Presidential campaign. The business interests can best be reassured by the prompt passage of such a bill. It may interfere somewhat with the business of the average banker in .the interests of thieving monopolies, but still such a bill ought to pass. Asn now the New York Times brings con fusion to those bloody shirt Republican journals such as our neighbors over the way, who have been endeavoring to make political capital out of Mahone's Danville story. The Times says: Further investigation of the Danville affair by our correspondent fails to justify the oonsi ruct ion put upon U bf tnoce anxious to give n pouucti purpose. It was undoubtedly an incident of tbe excitement wrought npou in a contest In which au effort was made to draw the color line. The feelinr between whites and blacus was aucti that a street row was liable to be precipitated at any moment, and it came as the result of a personal altercation with which politics had uoiliing directly to da, but ruce ieeling much. Some of Mr Randall's friends were recent ly wiring all ever the country that General Gordon had written a letter urin,; Iiis friends to support Mr Randall for the Speakership. The first sentence of tbe letter give the information that the General is opposed to the tariff views of Mr Randall. That is the chief reason why he is opposed by any Democrats fur the speakership; otherwise we believe he is acceptable. It is the tariff views of Mr Randall that make him so great a favorite with the Republican party leader and newspaper editors He is aiso favored by monopolists and the large manufacturing interests of Pennsylvania, and the East gen erally. J nr. Sentiuel says if Lieutenant Governor Ilanni had lived in France he would have ha I a snort tiip to the guillotine. The howliur Democratic mob, on more than one occasion, were armed, and had thev not been cowards as well a conspirator. there might have been bloodsned. The Democratic hummers lacked only tne courage oi tneir convictions to have inaueurated the scenes of the French revolution in this city in the furtherance of their mad schemes for paruz-tu plunder. Journal. Perhaps you did not notice that howling mob of Republican ward bummers crowding the Senate lobbies and as opportunity of fered bracing up Tom Hanna and his con freres to defeat the Metropolitan police bill. We published the names of this gang of bummers at the time. They were the same set that were prominent at the counting oat of Dan Lemon, and the political descendants of that other notorious and disreputable set of adventurers that mobbed the President of the United States at the Bates House in tL s city, in 1316. These are the fellows that tbe Journal is spreading its motiierly wings over. They are spotted. Tora Hanna will demand his part of the swag when the State Convention meets. We shall see it this Re publican gang will deliver the goods. THE FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Mr. Chas. A. Dana, of the New York Sun, is not, as a general thing, denied the respect which his talents and independance of ex pression entitles him to receive. Mr Dana's Sun Las a large circulation, and makes monev for its owner. But the Sun is not infallible; it is liable to make mistakes. Its frailties may . not be as conspicuous as appear in some of its contemporaries, but it has, nevertheless, its imperfections. The Sun, in giving its reasons as to why Democrats were sent to Congress in number sufficient to control tbe House, remarks that "the Democratic majority in the House exists for a definite purpose, and that purpose has nothing to do with the tariff" The Sin further says: "It was not a change in the tariff, but a change from dishonest, extravagant and incapable government to honest, economical and efficient government, that tbe voters wanted in ISSi 'Evidently, Mr. Dan haa (tot things sadly mire i in his mind. The arrangement of facts are of the style of putting the cart before the horse. Another paragraph will further in dicate tbe muddled condition of Mr. Dana's intellectual faculties. He says the Democratic majority was elected, not to tinker with the tariff, but, so far as lies in its province, to give the country honest government. Its duty will be to avoid extravagant appropriations and jobs, to expose abuses and to remedy them, to deal prudently with al! the public questions that come before iL It must stick to its proper werk, and do that work as economically and as well as it can." The tariff, as it stands, is not "honest government, it is dishonest government, an iniquitous government, a traud-patroaizing government, a monopoly-building and nursing government, and hence if the Democratic majority was elected to give the country an honest government, about tbe first thing to do is to eliminate from the Republican monopoly-swindling tariff, its iniquities. Mr. Dana onght to le able to see and comprehend the force of this proposition. The Government has been engaged In taxing the people one way and another, to an extent that has burdened the treasury with a surplus revenue of more than $100,000,00 a year. Every dollar of the rast sum not required for an economical administration of the Government, has been wrongfully taken i from the pockets of the people. To get rid of

the surplus tbe tariff must be reconstructed,

and when Mr. Charlea A. Dana says tbe Democratic majority was not elected tt) revise or 'tinker" with the tariff, he does the sub ject great injustice and himself no credit. It is gratifying to know that the election of Mr. Carlisle ii indicative of a purpose on the part of the Democratic majority to reduce taxation, and that means economy ia ex penditurev Appropriations will be in keep ing with receipts, and economy will be not only a virtue, but a necessity. It is supreme folly to talk about economical appropria tions when unjust taxation is creating wide spread complaint. To extort money from the people unnecessarily is the supreme in iquity. The present tariff does that very thing, and the surplus thus created is tue foundation for a thousand corruptions that blacken the record of the Republican party. AMERICAN BONANZA BEAUTIES IN GERMANY. Germany is wonderfully prolific in titled gentry. It has more to the square mile than any other country in the world. Germany has twenty odd reigning families, with all sorts of titles, and with many of them, their title is about all they can boast of. These reigning families, unfortunately, have a full average number of children and as a c nse quence, Kings, Dukes and Princes multiply until Germany is completely overrun with titled vagabonds. There is Alsace, Lorraine, Anhalt, Baden, Bavaria, Brunswick. Hesse, Lippe, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, MecklenburgStrelitz, Oldenberg, Reuss-Greiz, ReuasSchleiz, Snxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Saxe-Meinigen, Saxe-Weimar, Elsmarch, Saxony, Schaumbarg-Lippe, Schwarzburg-Rudolstad-Waldick, Schwarsburg, Sondershousen and Wurtemberg. All these countries, principalities or what-nots, produce titled nobles. These titled nobles have to live. Many of them are mendicant, but they are, nevertheless, proud. They are related to reigning families, and have to be taken care of. A favorite way of the masculines is to mary fortunes. They are fortune hunters, and lately they look to America for ricli wives. Thousands of American families are anxious for their daughters to marry European no. bles. They go to Europe, visit Germany, hnnt nobles, find them, offer their daughter to them, sell them for a title and are hippy. Somet'ines a German noble vidit- the lTnitel States to inspect the entire lot of youn Indies, picks out one whose daddy has money, makes love to her, marries and takes hid wife and what money ho can pet hold of and returns tc Germanj The thing has become a regular business, and moMjJ unfortunate for the Aiuericjn girl The son of IVter. Wilhelm, !!einrch, Ernest or Karl Solu seven by nine jutentate stalls out to raise funds with which to main tain hid title. His attention is called to the fact that an o'd codfish, bucket-s op, wateredstock or bonmiza Yankee is in Germany with a daughter, hunting for a titled husband Uaron Adolf at once goes for her, finds her, gees through the preliminaries, and the announcement is made that Ara b. Da. the daughter of Drown, the millionaire, is to marry Baron Adolf, of the reisnin family of Schaniburg Lippe, and all tlunkeydomon this side of the Atlantic goes into conniption fits over the event. Arralella becomes Baroness Adolf, of Sclianm-burg-Lippe; old Brown gives her a cool $100,C00 to start in on; Baron Adolf spends the money, and Arrabella finds out, in due time, that the reigning lamily of SchauraburgLippe is pretty much all lip and slip and grip, and she wishes the titled nobles of Germany in a warm climate. This thing has been going on until it is possible the Government will take notice of. it. Why not? Blaine, when Secretary of State, attended t the interests of the American tog in Germany, and possibly old man I'reiinghuysen will look after the American girl. The New York World says: It appears from the record of the State Department that some of cur American girls who have been traded off by their parents or who htvc sold thenif-elves to titled vagabonds in Germany are having an unpleaasant awakening from their dreams of bliss. They find themselves but little better than drudges in their foreign hoinea. Housework, cooking and even washing, to say nothing of patching and mending, are expected of them. Some of them submit. Perhaps they have no preference between acquiescence an4 a beating. But there is a limit to all things, and submission stops at blacking boots. When an American girl who has been thus dispos-ed of in the foreign market is required to black tbe boots of her lord and masler her spirit rebels and she throws tbe brush and tbe black Ins box in his face. But why obtect to that particular domestic employment? A girl who black eus womanly self-re-pect by marrying a foreign rapscallion with a title to bis name and not a dollar in his pocket ought not to mind blacking boots. The occupation is not a dishonorable one. There are lootblacks in our bottU tod on our streets with mere manly and honorable instructs thu.i these foreign uro ps ever dreamed of possessing. A girl who sells herself or allows herself to be sold for a title without love or affoctioa sacrifice tbe best attributes at womanhood. Wbat has she a riiht to expect except a cold, calculating life, full of frivolity or abuse? . .. But the American girl is not half si much to blame as her foolish parents. It is in the addled patea of the old folks that the title bug gets in its work. Men and women of vnlgar natures, ot a low order of ambitions, who have grown suddenly rich by fortunate strikes are those who sacrifice theirdanghters or the altars of second hand nobility in f Europe, who sell their duaghtera for the empty honor of a title, which in nine eavs out of ten decorates a loafer or a pimp. The facts as they are leaking out are a disgrace to the American name and character at home and abroad, and still the State Department ought to do as much for the live and suffering American girl in Germany as has been done for the dead American bog. ! J FRANCE AND CHINA. On general principles we assume that in the quarrel with China France is in tbe right. Why not? France says she isright. . France, is an enlightened and progressive country, so much so that she is a Republic . China is a land of barbarians.' In stating the cause of the trouble, which ought to ; be believed? China has no rights in Ton quin that enlightened nations would regard as of any value. The right of the Chinese Government to exercise any authority whatever in Tonquin is purely fictitious. France proposes to fnin a foothold in Tonquin. This done, who would be banned? Not China She needs French ideas of civilization. She needs to get rid of several dozens of ber ods. She ought to know more of of French opposition to dynasties, and all that sort of barbaric trumpery. In a word. 8he needs the light, euergy and vitalizing

power of Christian civilization. France, like England, is saying to tbe Celestial

Kwong Shu "thon teachest tbe wron; dortrine, and if you don't improve your method of government .1 will break, your China." AU civilized Nations should sympathize with France. China must adopt a more 1 literal policy in her treatment of the civilized Nations of the earth. It is manifest destiny. China must have railroad, the telegraph and the telephone. Her people must become familiar with modern inventions. Chinese walls must go. A ton of dynamite will topple over the , monuments of a thousand years of barbarism in a minute, and giant ideas lift like giant powder. Tbe time is at hand when the outside world will get inside of China. Tigtailism is out of date, and France, it is to be hoped, will contribute to hasten its death and to the eclat of its funeral. POLITICAL NOTES. It costs an average of St to collect il of Internal Kevenue. Five Territories will probably ak the next Congress for admission as States. Kkowiso ones In Massachusetts sat that Governor Cutler's campaign cost him JlcyOGO. Thk Cleveland Herald meanly insinuates that Mr. RaudaU's pout la only a lo-tge to aave his liq uor bill. Bux her says few gamblers are bad men. Their business is bad, but they are warm-hearted aal courageous. IIoadly, of Ohio, tells his friends that be wants a quiet inauguration, with no fuss and feather to follow In the evening. Me. SrcntGKR is in haid luck. Springer has many friends, but they all say ihey can not support him, for "be has no show." The Cleveland Herald declares that with Mr. Arthur as the Presidential candidate, the vote of Ohio can not be counted on for :he Republican ticket in ISiL Inmakapolh, Buffalo, Cleveland. Cincinnati. Chicago, St. Louts and Albany all feel that they have special charms for National Conventions next year. Fx-RrrBKKNTATiva Johm R. Rldino, of New Hampshire, is said to be the only surviving New England Member of the Twenty-seventh Con res V 1S41 3. There is no rest for the Bostonians. They are now worrying over Ihtir municipal elections. which will be held on ttie second Tuesday in December. The Buffalo Express advises that the National Republican Convent ion be held at Xiaxara Falls. Buffalo, it admits, has not hotel room cuouga. Tlis'. fact hns already been demonstrated. Mr. Dorm an It. Eaton, the Luther of the Civil Service, has made up his mind at last that the coin pctiiive examination racket is a failure, an 1 a rai Id falling off in the attendance at night scaooU may be expected. "Pltase be good c non;h." Hon Joe Bradley I supposed to l ave written ti.e tiraphic, to p.-rmli me to suggest in jour columns that Maltue.v Arnold was not the b ft to utoai-h the theory of ml taken majorities. Yon inT remember thut in 17 ; a quefctloT in which this idea vcji involved was dttided bv me." The EvansTllle (Inl.) Oouriersays that Govjnu r Porter wUid make as uod a caudidate for Presi dent s aiiy Republican it knows of. and it believe that tl. e ladies would like l.im, because he is in imcr of womau Millrfjje Tl-at is not a Tery h gli compliment, bin then it lias a "taffy" flavor, ana the Governor will snap it up eagerly. Senator ('ampex. of Vet Virginia, tells the people of his Stute, in a published letter, that they cn iu five years put their Commonwealth twenty live years in advance of its present position if they will make the 1 1' ort. But, he plainly tells them, they must all work together harmoniously, and one section of the Stale must not be jealous of any other, or dhcourase improvements therein. Sti-hp-speaker? in Massachusetts must be car. ful what they say. Colonel Hufcnley, of Governor Bullet's ttaff, Las commenced" an action against Alanfcon W. Beard for alleged libel uttered in a rpeech first made at Lawrence and repeated at other places, llusuley's attorney has, it Is report ed, attached Beard' property to answer a claim for damages for ,000. It is further rumored that William A. Simmons is also about to sue Beard for allesced libel uttered in the same speech. Quite tbe most remarkable movement in poli tics of late is the frantic appeal to ex-Speaker Keifer from his Republican associates to save his party by sacrificing himself. It must be cleasant to him to read how much good he can do "the grand oi l party" by not asking the empty honor of a com plimentary nomination for Speaker. Unhappy K'eikr! Does it make him reflect how muc'i more good be might have done his party it be had never permitted Robeson to put him in the chair. Su Louis Republican. The Republican New York Commercial Adver tiser asks what the duties of a Minister to the Court of St James really are. Our excelleut coutcmporary ought to know that the duties of an American Minister to a foreign Court are au unknown quantity. This Government could save $X0,CC0 a year by doing away with all its European legations ana appointing one diplomatic ageut, wbo could, by worklnj quarter time, look after our a ffaiw over there just as well as they arc now looked after. But we would not have a flunky made the agent Trey Press. As astute correspondent of the Philadelphia Times writes from Washiuglon that the whisky in terest is oi: the side Of Mr. Carlisle. So far as the whitly interest represents a irrest Industry and 1. favorable to bis electiou at being ior the best good of the w hole country, its partisanship is in'no way discreditable. But so far as the whisky interes has any special and aelSsb pUnt. we think Mr. Randall is its man. On peneral principles, at least. this must be so. But as a matter of fact we do not think whisky ha nearly at inui-ii to do with the question as Mr. Randall and bis orgaus would like to have appear. Boston Post. "Tur. other day." says a writer in the Chicago Herald, "1 met Joa ßroan, the son ot old Johu Brown, of Oawalorai and Harper's Ferry. lie Is a gray baited old loan hiru elf now, but still a bard worker, a coromou laborer. lie was rather bitter H?alnst Kev. Isvid N. Utter, of Chicaeo, and other wbo have been wiitiua; acminst his father in the North American Review and other periodicals. Utter.it will be remembered, charges old John with the wil'nl murder of five unoft'eudiux men in Kansas, who were taken from their homes anient down on the prairie. JMa admits that these men were killed, and that hin father approved ot it. though be did not do any of the killing himself. But be adds the important information that th men thus killrd bad bea selected at a secre. meet ing of pro-slavery leaders to assassinate tbe Brown family. Jason Biown, who lives in Summit County. O.. and John Brown. Jr.. whose home is at Pnt-ln Bay. Lake Erie, are the only ones of the famous family oi Brown ooys now living." FOREIGN LABOB ITEMS." - In the Argentine Republic 14.500 mea are now employed in railroad Construction. . Tii Agricultural Laborers' Union, organized by Joseph Arch, bas a membership of 20,001 8eve of tbe largest T.ugllsh trades unions have fpent Id six years $10,000,000 for the defense, sup port and relief of men out of work. In Canada tbe necessaries of life cost 30 per cent. more on an average thau in England. Wages are low and the supply of workmen is la excess of the demand. In England there are women's unlous ot bookbinders, dressmakers, power loom weavers, tailors and upholsterers, besides a Women's Trades Coun cil. They have a membership ot about 3,000. In England the great trades anions are tucreu-

Ins in membership. In five of them the number

ef members bas rrown from GO.OOd to 123,000 with in six years. Both their income and rcaerres have doubled. 1 The Trades Councils in England and Scotland are active and large, .The London Council repre sents 1 1,904 accredited members, Glasgow has 12,CCO members,' Edinburgh 8,000, Manchester 6,000 and Bolton b.500. ' . I ' ! Tug Engineers and Mechanics' ' Union bas a ' membership of SACO0. During the year 1879 it distributed F750.0W to members wbo were out of work. In the pat five years ii has paid for the same purpose $1.833,000. The English Miners' National I'nion Ins a com prehensive but quietly working system ot assisting emigration. Lare co'onie arc located in Illinois and there are pro-perous settlements in that State made by the mUratin miner. The membership of some of the English Unions Is as follows: Pooler makers. 20 000; weavers, 23,COO; carpenters 52,503; cotton mInuers.l7,CO0; tailors. 17, OOS; laborers, 12,500; Iron founders, 11,503; stone masons, 12 000; printers, 8,200. Wagfs ia Mexico along the lines of the new rail roads have nearly doubled. Common laborers receive SI and Si. 2a, as against fifty cents twelve months ago. Masons and carpenters get from $1.73 to Z20. and the pay of clerks bas increased at least 50 per cent The Toronto Trades Council, through its Legis lative Committee, states that wages have been higher during the past year than formerly. The average is about JLiO a day, or $153.40 per annum. Outside of Toronto and the larga cities wages lauiö from JL50 to SI.75 a day. CURRENT NOTKS. Milwai kek i agitating the question of a dude show. Cows are still ucd to drag the plow in Central Germany. Englishmen when traveling through the bound less West are struck with the enormous amount of land to the acre. Since it has become generally known that the science of base ball and boat rowing are not taught in German Colleges, more American youths are being educated at home than formerly. Norristown Herald. In tbe whole Russian Empire of nearly 100.0-10,000 persons there are only 776 journals and periodicals of all kinds. Eighty two of these are Government gazettes and forty -four are organs of the official ecclesiastical authorities. Mem urns of the Illinois Constitutional Conven tion of 147-4S will hold a reunion at Springfield on Janusry 8. Get). .ml Jo.ln M. IV.rcer will deliver theaddret. Tticre are about twenty members of the Convention now living. The New York Giapbic the other day printed a portrait of Martin Luther's wife. "If," remarks the Philadelphia Call, "it at all re-mbles ih vt no doubt at one time estimable lady, we are of the mind tl at Martiu ll.rew the inkstand at the wrong peison." In these times of a riotic memories triers will probaMy be miugled pltamre nud re?retover the aniiOuncetneut that seventy feet hare been added to the height of t'.ie Washingtou monument, by the labors of the season Unit ended on SiturJay. As only 140 ieet n:o:e reir.aiu before the prost d limit of ;"0 feet will be reached, two years may suflice 'or the remainder of the Usk. The present feeling of pleasure Ut!at!he shift, such as it is, ne.irs completion, instead of remaining a mouumeut of national neglect; while there must be a ceep feeling of regret that someihing more tatoful than a preposterou lv bii stone chimney U not going up t the fame of Washington. A stone in ihe graveyard adjoining the old Coucord school house abovb Washington Uue. Germantown. Pa., iears the following inscription: 'In memory of Adiim ShL-l;r, who departed thu life December the 22d, 1777, uged 9ü9 years." It Is easier to read the inscription than to believe that Mr. Sbisler lived to the age ascribed to him. Tbe explanation is that the stonecutter made a mistake in marking the stone, giving the man's age as ninety-six instead of sixty-nine, which it really was. To correct this the "9" was filled with ce ment, and another figure cut after the "C" But t'me and frost loosened the cement, and now the once obliterated figure appears as distinct as the others. A r.rr.in village has been fouud by Hon Amado Chaves a mile from his house, near Socorro, X. Mex. Mr. Chaves writes to the Santa Fe Review: "It is built of stone. The outer walls are three feet wide, and the city Is large enough to have accommodated 3,000 houl. I have already cleared our rooms iu the upper story and two ou tbe first floor of one house. The dimensious of the first floor room just finished are 11x12 feet, while from floor to ceiliug the distance is about fifteen feet. The village is almost square, and this building U situated at the northwest coruer. The large room has a large door leading to the ouUide of the wall, but no windows whatever. In this room I found the skeleton of a cirl. The hair is iu a perfect state of preservation; St is fine, and of a chestnut color. I also found there a string of fine coral beads, one ol torquoise beads, another of long Ivory beads, and a ring set with a black stone, on top of which is a piece of torquoise. All the timbers of tbe roof are burned to a char. I have arrived at the door which appears to lead to inner rooms, and I am full of curiosity to open it, but the second floor is only supported by the stones and debris about the door, ana should I attempt to remove these the upper Btory will tumble in and fill up the lower rooms, just cleaned our., with a mass of stone, charred timbers and debris," AX OLD-TIM: DEMOCRAT. Mr. Katun Speaks for h Large Section of the Democracy. New York Herald. Ex-Sonalor V. W, Katou, of Connecticut, is quoted as faying: "TLe Democratic partv will in a few dtys orgsirre tbe popular branch of Congress, and it should look the truth squarely ia the face. Tbe people will do so, and they will not misunderstand the action of the p irty leadern, however plausibly they may soak to hide their aims. Tbe party is to be put on trial for the ' Presidential race of 1884, and it is , not: to much to ray that the Democrats will elect or defeat their candidate tor President, as the coming Democratic House shall be wise or fOvliih in its public record , Jlecunt signs the people's action seem to point strongly fo the a-lectin of a Democrat for President in lSJ,and thepr at hope of our beloved Republican brethren is the probability of tbe Democrats defeating themselves by their misuse of power 1 f the House is organized in the avowed intere&tof thatelement of our party that seeks to disturb the present business . tranquility of the country, it will matter very little whether the Democratic rai didate for President shall be Samuel J Tilden or Joseph E. McDonald, for neither could be .elected. These facts are well known to at least twothirds of the Democratic leaders and to all the Democratic voters in the land oataide of Washington, which is the furthest off from popular sentiment ot any other point in the United States. - "A tariff for revenue only lost up Ihe Presidency in 1SS0. A like platform, or evea a doubt as to tbe disturbance of the tariff policy of the country would defeat us again. I will never, by my vote, do anything that will in the least tend to the disturbance of the business ot the country. If we should organize tbe House by electing a Speaker pledged to the agitation of the tariff at the coming session, - it ivould- defeat .the party in every debatable State, and we would be buried beneath a 'popular majority of a million votes. Ve cannot afford to adopt a policy that is offensive to Indiana. Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York. New Jersey, and my own StateConnecticut If we do, tbe contest will be settled in advance. .Tbe contest now going on over the Speaker is but the preliminary trial of the leaders and representatives of tbe Democratic party. It is for them to say whether they will continue to te political suicides, or will adrance to the enlightened and progressiva sentiments Of the present day."

TIIE ASTLU3I COXMISSIOXtr.

The Plans for the Bullaen? at EvansTille and Lopatisport Adopted. ' The Board of Commissioners of the new Insane Hospitals met again yesterday morning, and spent the day in examining the plans in the oClce- of. Architect Ketchatn. During the day and after a full discussion of the merits of the live different pystems that were prcsentrd, the Hoard finally nzreed upon the plans for tbe buildings, both at Lvansville and l,oganspori. The system adopted for the Kvansville site isthat known us the conjoined, radiate plan and consists of a central hall, from which radiate, on each side, narrow wiu, containing dormitories, etc., and terminating in large, airy day rooms, having easy access to the proünds; to the rear, another wing, containing diningrooms for officers and employes and patient, female employe's quarters and amusement hall; on the front, and separated by a carriageway, the Superintendent's and'oßicers' house; entirely separated, and in the rear, the kitchen, boiler-house, laundry, store, etc. This plan embodies the principle of the house plan, namely, separation of day rooms from dormitories, either on the same floor or in diff erent stories, as may be needed : it makes possible the easy preparation of single rooms or associate dormitories when wanted; tbe violent and noisy may be cared for in the rear wings, the convalescents and quiet in the front; the day rooms will be widely separated and have a pleasant and independent outlook; the dormitory windows are not facing each other in the various wings, so as to permit noisy colloquies among patients who may be in single rooms in day or night; the areas between wings will constitute airy courts into which many patients may go at will; a large general dining-room in the rear wing may very agreeably serve a large number of patients and afford them a change in going from the day rooms or courts, even in bad weather. The dormitories may be laid widely 0eu every day, summer and winter, for ventilation, and, in cold weather, heat may be economized by sending it exclusively to the day rooms, omitting the dormitories. For the site at Ix)gansport the Board adopted the detached pavilion system, consisting of a small administration building; for the medical stair, detached wing at either side, into which the patients are received for the prrrpose of classification, one wing being for moles, and the other for females. In the rear of this is tbe kitchen, heating apparatus and other buildings of this character. On either side of the administration building are located detached pavilions which are connected by covered ways. A detail of the plans will be prepared at once, and an effort will be made to let the work as early in January as K)Fsible During the meeting the Commissioners discussed matters iti regard to t he adornment of the grounds, buiidin,; of walks and other thing? connoted with the Institutions, but no definite action, beyond the adoption of the foregoing plans, was taken. The two systems are the result of the most cartful research on the part of the Board and may tritely be said to combine all tie conveniences, modern improvement and beauty of design which are found in the Institutions of our sister States, and which k so far towards the alleviation of the miseries and hasten the cure of the tinfortui.aie ininat-'s In addition to thfo, which is the first and truly noble ob jecf, the Institutions will be another stand ing monument of the philautnropy of our people and a source f just pride and pleasure to th- lIooMt-r State. The Commissioners will meet azain this morning at iJ ::J0 o'clock. O d Sojourner Truth, who ded recently in Pattie Creek, Mich , is thus refetred to by tiie New York Herald: i-r.e always declared that she was spiritually coinmfiitded to take the name of "soiounier Truth." The ecmitric old woman often declared that there was no person livins h knew ber ae, the v as born in lister County, N. Y., nearKin?ston. Kingston was burned by order of Sir Henry Clinton iu 1777. She saw Kingston many times when it v RS a blackened ruin and befo-e anyattemrt wa made to rebuild it. She distinctly remembered the dark days of 170, when candles were kept burning throughout the day and every one was more or le-s terrified. She was a full grown woman when the I Liter Gazette camo out in mourning for the death of Washington. This Wf s in 17y'. She saw the steamboat Fulton go up the river for the first time, and said it made the Dutchmen very angry, becauce it frightened away the fifties This was iu 1S07. The act of 1S17 in the b:ate of ew York emancipated all slaves who were over forty years old. Sooa after tntt 10.000 fciavca were eet at liberty. All younger than forty were retnined in londim till is-27, when all were freed. Sojourner was freed by the first act She continued In harness until a short time ao, letnring occasionally and maintaiuinj a cheerful apposition, fche delist. te.l to babnie of her experiences, talkine frequently of Horace Ureely, whose name she always mentioned with reverential rvsi ect. Eut the proudest moment of her long life was when the waa presenter! to I'resid-ut Lincoln at Washington and was congratulated on her work. She ownd a comfortable borne at Buttle Creek, Mich., and a valuable farm a short distance from the town. Two yearn ago she uta to her will, bequeathing everything to her three uaunter, who lived with her. Kxeluftive Information. Tbe Hancock Democrat has the following exclusive information : "A n error of 100 votes in favor of William L. Enelish, iJemocratic candidate for Congress, has been discovered in Marion County. This gives English the election by thirteen." 1 hat is a very good story, only it is not true. Iudianapolia Journal. The information will not be so "exclusive" a month or so from now, when the evidence in Ihe contested election case is published by order of Congress, and Mr English takes his feat. Then tbe Journal may tind that U:t? btatetnent of the Democrat is not only "a verv good story," but is a very true story as well. The remains of Dr. William Harvey, who iscrcdlieu with bavins discovered the circulation of the blcoft. h'.ve just been removed from the vault in milch i hey have repoed for 'JU0 years, lathe CI inch oi Hmps'eat. Essex. They have beeu deposiiiKi in a mat ble sarcophagus in au adjoining chut 1 built by the iiarvey family. Extreme Tired Feeling. A lady tells us: "The first bottle has done my daughter a great deal of good; hex food dues not distress her now, nor does she suffer from that extreme tired feeling wh" ih she did l fore taking Hood's arsaparilla." A second bottle effected a cure. No other preparation contains such concent ration of vitalizing, enriching, purifying and invigorating proportiea as Hood's Sarsaparilla.

AYER'S Sarsaparilla Is a highly concentrated extract ol Sarsaparilla and other blood-purifying roots combined with Iodide) of PotaaSiom and Iron) and is the safest, most reliable, and most economical blood-purifier that can be used. It invariably expels all blood poisons from the system, enriches and renews the blood, and restores its vitalizing' power. It is the best known remedy for Scrofula and all Scrofulous Complaints, Erysipelas, Eczema, lilng-worm. Blotches, Sorea, Boils, Tumors, and Eruption of the Skin, as also for all disorders caused by a thin and irai-oTerirhed. or corrupted, condition of the blood, such as Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Rheumatic Goat, General Debility, and Scrofulous Catarrh. ' Inteafofy Riiaolisn Cured. "AVER'S SAKSAPAS.IIXA has cured me of the Inflammatory Rheumatism, with which I hare suffered for many yean. W. IL MooaX." Durham, la., March 2, 1882. PREPARED BT Dr.J.C.Ayer&Co.,Lowel!,Mass, SdU by all Druggists ; 91, lis bottle foe IV

R. REIM RELIEF The Cheapest and Best ?.!cdicina fcr Family Use in tho World. CURES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sere Throat. lloareneoi, Inflammations, ltheumatiftm, aralgijt, Iieadnehe, Toothache, Diphtheria, Intinaca. Difficult Urea thing;. THE OXir PAIN HEUKDT That Instantly slot the most excruciating palna, allays inflammation, and eure congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other planus or organs, by one acpUcaUon, In from One to Twenty JKInutea. Ko matter bow violent ar axrrarlatinr thanala the Khen matte, Bed ridden. Infirm. Crippled. Nervous Neuralgic, or prostrated with disease mar suffer, KADWAV'o READY RELIEF will afford instant ease. lulls mm a Uon of the Kidneys, lacammation ot tne Biaaaer. Inflammation of tbe Bowels, Congestion of the Langs, Palpitation of the Heart, ' Hysterica. Croun. Catarrh. Chilblains. Frost Bitea, nervousness, bieepiessnesa. Sciatica, Pain in the Chest, Back or Limb. Brutaes, Oprafsa, Cold Chills and Ague Chill. The application of the Readv Relief to the cart or parts where the diniculty or pain exists will afford ease and comfort. Thirty to sixty drops in ha:! a tumbler of water will in a few minute cure Cremt, Spasms. Boor Stomach, Heartburn. Sick Headache, Diarrhea, Dysentery. Colic, Wind in the Bowels, and all Internal pains. MALABIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS, FEVER AND AGUE Cured for Fiftr centa. There is not a remedial agent in this world that will eure Fever and Arne ana an otber Malarious. Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow and other feer (aided by RADW&Y'e riLjo) as quicitiy as KAUVtAi'b kkadi belut. Fifty Cents per Bottle. HEALTH IS WEALTH. Health of Body is Wealth of Mini. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsapariilian Resolvent The Great Blood Tarifler. Pure Blood makes sound flesh, strong feone and a clear skin. If you would have yonr flesh firm, your bones sound without carles and your com plexion iair, use RADWAY'S Sarsapariilian Resolvent A remedy cempoted of Infrredlenta of extraordinary medical properties, essential to purify, heal, repair and invigorate the broken down tad wasted body Quiek, Pleasant, Safe and Permanent in its treatment and cure. No matter by what name tbe complaint may be defipnated. whether It be scrofula, consumption, syphilis, ulcers, sores, la mors, boils, ervtlpelaa or salt -rheum, diseases of the luoga, kiariey, bladder, womb, skin, liver s'.ouiacü or boweia, eitner chronic or ronKtitntlcnal, the virus is in the BLOOD, which supplies the waste and builds and repairs these organs and wasted tissues of the system. If the blood is unhealthy the process of repair must be unsound. The Sarsapariilian Resolvent Not only Is a compensating remedy, but secure tbe harmonious action f each ot the organs It ee'ablfches throughout the entire system funetionsl harmony and supplies the bloodvessels with a pure and healthy current of new life. THE SIOIIV, After a few flays tise or the Barsaperllllaa, becomes clear and beautifuL Plmplea, blotches, black spots and akin eruption! are removed ; sorea and ulcers soon cured. Persons su Bering from scrofula, eruptive diseases ot the eyes, month, ears, legs, throat and glands, that bare accumulated ana spread, either from uncured dlsees or mercury, or from the use of corrosive sublimate, mayrelv upon a cure if the Saroapaiilla is continued a sufficient time to make lta lmpreastoa oa tbe system One DoII&r BottU. RADWAY'S Regulating Pills ! Perfe. t Titrsative, goAtldnf, Aprieol, Ac Without Palu. AI; Ii.eiitla sad Natural in Operation. A Yecetiblt Snbttltrtt far Calami, The Great Iayei and stomach Remedy. Perfectly tastete, eieaaotiy coated with sweet pum, purge, rculAte, purily, cleanse and treagtaRadwat's Pixixa, ior the cure of all disorders of the Bloniacn. Liver, Boweia, Kidneys, Bladder. Servoua Diaeases, Lou of Appetite, Ueauacbe, Constipation, CosUvenesa, Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Fever. Inflammation of the ttoweta, Piles and all aanrerons derangements of tbe Internal Viscera. Purely veeeiable. contain in no xnercurv. minerals or deleterious drugs. ae,Observe the following symptoms resnltlnc from Diseases of the DUtestive Organs: Constipation. Inward Piles, Fulness of Blood In the Head. Acidity of tbe Etoaiach, Nausea, Heartburn Lnarust of Food, FullneorVYchTbtla the Stomaoh, Four Ecrottations, Sinkings er Flutterinjrs in the Pit of the Etomach, Swimming of the Head. Hurried aud Difficult Breathing, Fluttering- at tha Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when la iTiDg posture. Dot crWebs before the Bight. Fever and dull pain In the Head, Deficiency oi Perspiration, Yellowness ot the Skin and rea, Pain in tbe Bide, Chest, Limbs and ouddea Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh. A few doses of Baaway'a Pills will free the system from all the above named disorders. PlllCJS, 25 CENTS VE& BOX, BOLD BY DRUGGISTS. EAD "FALSE AND TRUE." Send a letter stamp to SADWAY fc OCX. Na. tt Warren street, corner Church. New York. Information worth thousands will be sent you. TO THE PUBLIC: Be sure and ask for Radwaya, and as that the pact "Eabiui" k oa w&tt iru tu

R. R.