Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 30, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1884 — Page 2

TAH INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 17. 1884.

WEDNESDAY, SEITEMCER 17.

OFFICE: "I and 73 AYest Market Street. Caf.l Sciicn. will speak ia thia city tonight. That 25,000 republican majority in Uaine somehow cid cot materialize. 'Yes, my one vote 13 for Cleveland," says IJr. Eristow, Grant's Secretary of the Treasury. Is less than two months from now the II Tnblicans will be dolefully exrIafoiBS it oappened. . As a question of good taste it must be allotted that the New Jersey bankers chox well in goins to death rather than to Canada. A Washington special to the New York Times says that it cost ?2C5,000 to carry Maine. Jim hal to have it, but it "came hi-h." Clevelasd used to be a ba3e ball player. Therefore do not be harsh on him. No man ever played base ball without committing errcrs. "Ir my friends, the Germans, will please turn their backs a moniert, I will crawl down from the prohibition fence" J. G. Elaine. Nkal Dow says Mr. Elaine is a teetotaler Well, yes; when it comes to voting on the prohibition question, he is at least an abstainer. "Judging from the nvschief he U makin?, I am more than ever convincel tiai Carl Fchurz i3 a bad man, a very bad man." JLepublicaa Boss. "I tiiixk Governor Cleveland is the man for the present crisis," eaya Mr. Farnell. The Irish are goinj for IUaine veiy mhch a3 the old woman kept tavern. The la3t Republican Legislature of Maine gerymandered the State in such a manner that it was almost impossible for the Democrats to secure a Congressman. Elaine has been making a Trohibitio campaign in Maine. When ne begins to workcnObioitwillbe curious to see what his tactics will be. Philadelphia Times. The Germans have gone into camp close to the prohibition fence upon which J. G. E. is perched, and they propose to atay there until after the election in November. Blaine is'a treed coon sure. It ia claimed now that Grant's Secretary of State, Hamilton Fish; his Secretary of the Treasury, Benjamin II. Bristow, and Francis A. Walker, Chief of the Census Bureau, will all vote for Cleveland. Some one has said: "Doubtless the Lord could have made a better berry than the strawberry but he never did." So doubtless the Lord could have made a grosser liar than the Journal but he never did. The prohibition question seems to be as great a terror to lHaine, of Maine, aa the Mulligan letters. That comes of being a twofaced, hypocritical political dodger. Avaunt and quit my eight, thou lily-livered, creamfaced coward! The Blaine organ ca lis lion. Carl Schur "the Flying Dutchman," and Cleveland and Hendricks German "beer-guzzlers." The Tindictiveness of the Republican press is amazing. But all that is in keeping with Blaine's Know-nothing record. As exchange well says that B'rr.e's recovery makes the Democrats more hopeful. Should he from death or other cause be removed from the Republican ticket and a better man put in his place, some of the doubtful States might be counted lost to us. Here's to the health of Mr. Blaine. Thx Totters' Gazette, one of the strongest Republican papers published in Columbiana County, Ohio, has come out for Cleveland and Hendricks. This journal is the organ of the boss potters, and has wielded great influence politically in the district. It has always been radically Republican. The question now is, has Blaine enough magnetism to slip down from the top rail of the prohibition fence without the Germans seeing him? In that the Germans will have to be watchful, lof, if the dodger once gets down, he will swear by all that is holy that he was never up there. It is now said that the Germans will vote for Blaine because he did not support the Maine prohibition amendment. If there is any one thing that a German hates more than another it is a coward, and when the coward dodges behind a lot of old women to hide himself, the hatred of the German becomes disgust. RzFZzmu to the performances of the striking miners in Ohio, the New York Evening Tost recalls the Protectionist hymn: Protection, oh. Protection. The joylul sound proclaim. Till each remotest nation ii&tn learned the Tariff's name. Blaise is the Artful Dodger of the Republican party. A special says: "Blaine did not vote until the women had left the polls. Then he and Walker Blaine came to the voting place. Xo person spoke to him. The ward clerk called his name and the warden repeated it. Blaine voted, but refused to vote either way upon the amendment. Both father and son dodged upon the amendment." Lit ua have Jndge Cresham again this morning on Calkins. Terhaps Secretary Michener will order the State press to put it p In black type. Here it is: "There is not d d thing in Calkins. He has practiced in my court, and he never could erasp an idea that is, he could never get hold of the big features of a case. He always contented himself with piddling around the little points." "There can't be anything in the Sentinel's allegations," said &n irate Republican on the etreet, "there can't be." "Why not?" queried a bystander. "Because Blaise Is not a d d fool," vr&s responded. We are inclined, ourselves, to think him more knare

than fool. The trouble Blaine has gotten himfelf into was by thinking the rest of the people of this country that kind of fools. MRS. MORRILL, AGAIN. Mrs. Morrill reiterates her opinion and that of her deceased husband regarding the wicked and corrupt character of Blaine. She repeats and reaffirms her scorching letter to the Ohio Republican donkeys. Mr. Secretary Mirhener, please instruct yoar Republican editors to put it in black type. Here it is: "I am in mourning for my huaband,but,a3 much as I mourn his death, I thank my Father in Heaven that He called him home before the party he loved so well and clid so much for had so dirgraced itself as to nominate so wicked and corrupt a man for the highest office within the sift of the American people as I Know and my husband knew Jame9 G. Blaine to be. If be were alive he would not support Mr. Blaine, or any such man, even at the bidding of his party. "Charlotte Mokkilu"

TARIFF TAXATION. It would be difficult to find an example of greater duplicity than that practiced by protectionists when they declare that the tariS is not a tax. At a Manufacturers' Protective Convention, held at Chicago, Mr. G. B. Stebbins, of Df troit, made a declaration which took the form of a resolution, and was considered by the convention. He said: Of all the misstatements of free trade alvooates, none is more gross than the impudent and oft-repeated falsehood that a taritT is a tax added to the cost both of the imported article and of the like article made or produced in this country a tax on the people for the benefit of so-called monopolists, etc. Mr. Stebbins is explicit. He say3 that the tariff is not a tax added to the cost of the imported article, and that a tariff does not enable manufacturers in this country ta maintain higher prices for their ware3 than would be demanded if there were no tariff. The Galveston News, in commenting ipon the remarkable statement of Mr. Stebbins, remarks that "the resolution is not only conceited and arrogant but it is a stupid reha3k of the 'oft-repeated falsehood' that it charges the fact.with being, and llatlvcantradicts all the grounds on which a tariff i3 urged. It assumes that the people are foals and easily gulled into any false theory that is gilded with gold; and to this extent it insults their intelligence, and attempts to betray them into the condition of hewers of wood and drawers of water to the protected manufacturers. The man or the set of men who assert such an absurdity, and essay to give it currency as genuine coin among the people who are supposed to be familiar with the subtleties of the tariff system, are amenable to the charge of ignorance or deception." Inrely the organs of the manufacturers will be accepted a3 authority touching the real facts. A recent number of the Iron Age furnishes full quotations of the prices of metals in Europe and in the United States, and, as matter of information to its readers who may want the knowledge ?n fixing their prices, it adds, in connection with the different articles, the rates of duty. Two or three articles mentioned will suffice for the purpose of this argument. Taue Bteel rails; its English correspondent reports that two manufacturers have been taking orders at 3 lös. per ton, say tj.75; but most of the makers insist on XG to 6 5s. per ton, or $30 to $UL--. The duty on steel rails is $2S per ton. Add this, you have a little less than $00: to this must be added the cost of ocean freight. AThat was the price of steel rails in the New York markets, according to this same paper, at that time? Sixty dollars a ton. Take the case of pig-iron ; the quotations are from the same paper. Garthsherne is quoted on the other side at öSa, to GOs. Cd., say to $15.12; the duty is ?7, which raises these amounts to $20l23 to 42.12. Then there i3 the freight to be paid, and the quotation of Garths lerrie in New York is 23 to 25.50. The lowest quotations of American pig iron were $21 to 1-21.50. Is the duty added to the foreign price, and then is the price so arrived at the basis on which prices for the domestic ar ticle are based, or not: If it is then the tari Q is a tax; and if not, what do these figures mean? It is not required at this time to extend the argument further to prove that a tariff does ust what Mr. Stebbins declares it does not do, and the extract given from the Iron Age so conclusively contradicts Mr. Steb bins that people of average understanding can not fail to see a purpose to rob the peo pie by processes which are supported by false hood. The tariff tax upon woolen goods which the people of Indiana are required to purchase continually is simply enormous, It is sale to say that if the tariff en woolen goods were reduced one-half the Government would receive more revenue owing to in creased importation, while the people would be benefited by lower prices, as the result of sharper competition. As the case now stands ready-made clothing is taxed 3G per cent., loths 72 per cent, and blankets sr per cent, ad women's and children's dress goods 70 per cent. This enormous tax is laid upon foreign importation of woolen goods, mainly for the purpose of protection, to aid Ameri can monopolies to obtain from consumers fully 23 per cent, more than they would be required to pay if the purpose of the tariff was to eeenre revenue. We assume that the 233,000 families in Indiana will purchase two blankets each annually, at a cost of ft for the pair. This would represent an an nual expenditure for blankets of $1,010,000. The tariff tax on blankets is 89 per cent., and amounts to almost total prohibition. The revenue derived from such importations during the year 1830 amounted to only $127,443. It is fair to assume, if the tariff were reduced, the Gevernment would obtain more revenue. Importatoins would increase, and the people of Indiana would save at least 25 percent of their expenditures on the one article of blankets, which, upon the basis of calculation here introduced, would amount to &0,000 a year. In the article of woolen cloths, universally in demand, it ia the opinion of dealers that the tariff tax makes difference in coct to consumers of fully 33 J $ per cent. The tariff on cloth is 72 per cent, sod this enormous tax, while it does not arrest importations, enables dealers to sell to the people of Indiana for $1 a yard cloth that ia England or Canada sells for not more than sixty cents a yard, and when the sum total of Indiana's demand is estimated, the burden of tariff taxation swells to enormous proportions. Assuming that of the 1,000,000 males in Indiana 700,000 of them will require four yards of woolen cloth a year, we have an annual Consumption of 2,800.000 yards. II we assume that the cloth coat $1 a yard. J we have an annual expenditure for woolen

cloths of $2,300,003. If we assume that the

tariff of 72 ter cent, on woolen cloths ad vances the price of the home product fifteen cents per yard, the tax amounts to the sum of $20,000 a year. If we were to take into consideration women's and children's woolen dress goods, upon which the tauff tax is 70 per cent, the showing would be equatly astounding, and the same would bold good in ready made clothing, upon which the tariff tax is 5C per cent. There is not an intelli gent dealer in the State who is not willing to admit that the tariff is a tax upon the article protected, and there is not a single Instance where the facts do not apply. This being the case, the demand is that the tariff tax npon the essentials of life shall be re duced, in the interest of the Government and of consumers. FOR PRESS AND PEOPLE. In both the Chicago Tribune and St. Louis Globe-Democrat of the 10th inst. appeared specials from Indianapolis, from which the following is an extract: "The Sentinel is daily charging that Mr. Blaine does not answer the interrogatories filed with its answer to the complaint in the libel suit, seeking to create the impression that it wants a speedy settlement of the case. Senator Harrison states that when the interrogatories were filed he offered to the counsel for the Sentinel to enter into bonds for Mr. Blaine's appearance in court within a week to answer them in per?on. If the gentlemen would agree to try the case then. 2Co rer ponse was made to this proposition, and the next thing done was the notice filed yesterday that depositions would be taken in Kentucky next week. Senator Harrison pays he is satisfied the Sentinel management does not intend to allow the case to come to trial if it can be in any way avoided." Now, the Sentinel's answer to M. Blaine's complaint was filed on the 4th inst. The interrogatories propounded to Mr. Blaine were filed simultaneously with the answer. On the 4th inst. Senator Harrison was not in Indianapolis. Ue had not returned from his trip to Maine, and did notretumuntil the evening of the Cth. Mr. Harriam could not therefore have made the proposition asserted in the special when the interrogatories were filed. Not only that, but we have Senator ITarrison's own assurance that he has ma le at no time any such statement. To a re porter of the Sentinel who approached him last night and handed him for perusal the special quoted, Senator Harrison said in these words: "I had no interview with anybody about the matter. When I was approached by repotters I always said that I was not trying my case in the newspapers. I said notnlng of the kind." His last sentence referred to the clipped special which he held in his hand. We have one or two statements to make here, the first of which is that neither Mr. Harrison nor any other attorney of Mr. Blaine has ever made, directly or indirectly, to the Sentinel or any of its attorneys, the proposition recited, or ac-y other proposition either offering to give a bond, to have Mr. Blaine come here to testify, nor to in any manner accelerate a trial of the suit of Mr. Blaine against the Sentinel. Our second statement is that on Saturday, the 4th inst, the Sentinel's answer and the interrogatories for Mr. Blaine having been filed two days, the Sentinel, by its attorneys, appeared in court and moved for a rule compelling Mr. Blaine to answer its interrogatories. Immediate notice ot this motion being served on plaintiff's attorneys, they appeared in court and gave notice ot objections to the ml 6 being granted compelling Blaine to answer, but stated they were not then ready to argue their objections; whereupon the Court adjourned further proceedings to a day when he should have returned from a visit to Fort Wayne, a city in the northern part of Indiana. So it must be admitted that the present stay of proceedings in the case is entirely due to the objections of Mr. Blaine's attorneys to the Sentinel's motion. Our third statement is that, instead of seeking to delay a trial of the case, the Sentinel has shown a desire to expedite it And while the assertion that a" proposition for hastening the issue had come from the other side is false, it is a fact that a proposition has been made by the Sentinel, which, if accepted by Mr. Blaine, (and we submit to the public if it was not a generous one) would have brought the suit to an early determination. "We refer to an editorial in the Sentinel of the 5th Inst, the day following the filing of the answer and interrogatories, and which we here reproduce: "If plaintiff Blaine will now at once answer ur interrogatories truthfully, positively and without evasion, the Sentinel will agree to submit the case without other evidence and without argument, to an impartial, lawful jury, just as soon as his Honor Judge Wood can convene Buch jury. "We suggest to Mr. Blaine the wisdom of ending his blundering herein right here by availing himself of this merciful proposal, as it will save to h'm the reading of much unpleasant testimony within the next few weeks." Our fourth statement is that any assertion or insinuation that the Sentinel has sought or is seeking to delay the trial is false;' that the special Quoted herein, like numerous other ones seat from here by the same correspondent was false, and that he knew them to be false when he wrote them; that, like the Blaine organs of Indianapolis, the attaches of them, who send off specials to outside Republican and several Democratic papers, have been guilty of willful perversions and misrepresentations of the proceedings bo far la the libel suit, their object being to manufacture sentiment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant But we add that this crusade of lying in behalf of the plain ti IT will in the end fall humiliated before the evidence which justifies the Sentinel's side In the libel suit. BUSINESS. There is ne good ground for distrust in business circles, albeit commercial failures and a heavy decline in nearly all commodities are apt to produce a feeling of suspicion and uneasiness. It Li clear that all strictly legitimate enterprises are ' rock-rooted, so to peak, and it ia only those possessed of a speculative disposition that are in any way affected by what is termed overproduction, which ia but another name for speculation. An insane desire to become suddenly rich see s to have taken possesion of a good many business men in the past few years, and the very liberal Oerings of specila tive railway and mining stocks and bonds, with their seductive promises of fabulous fortunes, have exerted a powerful infloence for evil among this class in the business world, insomuch that the wrecks of business enterprises can be seen on every

band; but for all that legitimate trade and commerce have cot suffered materially, although the hand of distrust and suspicion is npon them as well as their speculative neighbors. As a matter of fact, the cacses of nearly every commercial failure can be traced to what is known as ontside speculation, in which the funds of the firm or company, as the case may be, have been employed, and investigation shows that fully 75 per cent, of the failures would not have occured had the energies and capital of the bankrupt been confined to his business proper. It is true that this kind of faithlessness, for it is really that, on the part of some business houses is well calculated to place the whole business communitv under suspicion and create a feelirig of distrust among lenders of money, yet the fact should not be lost sight of that the majority of our business enterprises, as the history of trade aud commerce shows, are conducted upon sound business principles, and that to distrust the many because f the questionable methods of a few is not only unfair, but is calculated to do great harm. Of course under our present system of discounting commercial paper, no bank can know beyond a doubt whether the assets of a given house are above or below its liabilities, but that is largely the fault of the banks themselves, for they, as a rule, let their anxiety to swell their list of depositors and increase their lines of discount run away with their better judgment, and thus encourage the very business methods that always briDg disaster upon both borrower and lender. Sot a very great while ago a commercial failure in a neighboring city revealed a state ot affairs in the firm's business that was simply appalling, if so strong a word may be used. The credit of this firm was excellent and its account was cor&'dered valuable because of its large line of deposits in certain seasons of the year and its large line of discounts in other seasons, tnd its offerings of paper were always tafcea it the minimum rat3 of interest Bat i' jailed more, it was a complete wreck. Intcstigation showed that it had been little better ti an a mere shell for years, and that It had been kept afloat by permitting its bankers to base their estimates of its solrency upon something that did not exist tt all. That is, the lirni was known to fave a large block of the stock of a certain bcal company and other investment operties locked up in its safe, and it was tipcostd that these securities were free torn all entanglements; that they, in fact, jepreeented the firm's surplus money, and tould be made available at a moment's notice should an emergency arise in the firm's business operations. Bat when the trm suspended payment investigation revelled the fact that these very securities had been hypothecated months before ta liquid&e debts made by operations that were outside of and entirely foreign to the firm's regit mate business. The faithlessness or decetion which this firm practiced is cited to shw that while there may be some grounds

foi distrust in business circles, there Is no reison why the suspicion should extend to anl embrace trade and commerce in general; bu. it does show the importance of some mtthed or system by which banks may know the financial condition of their custoners. Nevertheless, loose and uncertain as ihe existing system is, the industrial interest of the country and all legitimate trade and commerce are not only sound bat prosperous as welt There's an organ of Blaine In the Hoosier State, Which it gives us pain Its fall to relate. Tor, from Sunday-school trutks It was wont to recite, It now lies to us youths In a way shameful quite. 'Tis a Journal to-day, With pages all blurred (So says I. V. Gray, And we doubt not his word) With lines so flim flam. So perjured, so fly That Munchausen himself Would their writing deny. 'Tis a Journal all smudge With scandal and scum, With personal sludge The political bum. Those Sunday-school truths It now daily defies, And instead, to us youths It lies and it lies. BLAINE'S SUBSTITUTE. When Blaine was drafted he promptly furnished a substitute no war or bullet "in his'n." Everybody supposed that the substitute had received hia money for taking "Majah" Blame's place in the army, but it seems that he was swindled out of it, and since the war he has been kept out of his pension money also by a Republican Board of Ex amining Surgeons. Jle was to have receiyed $000, but got only SSO, and is LOW living in Nashville, Tenn. He is an old colored man, and was wounded during the Rebellion. "The Buckeye Vidette," of Ohio, contains a letter from Nashville, Tenn , which gives us valuable information concerning Mr. Blaine's substitute as follows: "By the Dy, Blaine's substitute in the army resides here. He is a poor old negro. He was wounded in the army, has tried twice to get a pension and has twice been refused by the Republican Board of Examining Surgeons here. He was to get $003 as his pay for taking Blaine's place, but he never got but $C0. I was his second lieutenant and I know this statement to be true. I read the dispatches from Maine. There were six substitutes put in Company C, Fortieth United States Colored Infantry, for men ia that State, and Jacob Poor of my company was mastered in as James G. Blaine's substitute, and was wounded in the smoulder at or near Lebanon, Tenn., in July or August 1361. Ue still lives here, but will not support Blaine." List of prominent lambs slaughthered since January in Wall Btreet: Henry Villard, rail tray president; James R. Keene, professional speculator; Henry D. Victor, railway magnate; Ulysses S. Grant, ex-l'resl-dent, and his three sons; E. Morgan & Sons, banking house; Ferdinand Ward, Wall etreet adventurer; James D. Fish, President Marine Benk; O. M. Bogart, note broker; John C. Eno, President Second National Bank; F. D. Dickinson, Cash'er Wall Street Bank; W. E. ßcoville, lawyer's clerk; A. IL. Warwick, President Bank of Albion, together With others too numerous, to mention,

PERSONALS.

The health of Emperor William, of Germany, is so infirm that it is not thought he will live the year out JaesGokpos Bznxett has turned teetotaler, and his appearance is improved 10 per cent, by a year of abstinence. Miss Anse Whitney, the sculptor of the Harriet Martiaeau statue in Boston, owns a a farm of 175 acres, and i3 an accomplished farmer. A Texas Is suing a side-showman because the placard promised a living two-headed calf, while the reality was a stuped and fraudulent hide. Mr. W. II. Vasdep.bilt as the alleged richest man in the world must now yield to the Canton banker, Hau (Jua, with ?l,4O),0W,00O and hankering for more. Mns. A. M. Edmsuton, of Butte, Mon., the far-famed "widow of the Cieurd'Alene" gold mines, is the mother of the actress Lillian Edgington, and weighs nearly 400 pounds. Bishop Cbowther, England's black Bishop of Africa, was made a slave in a battle between African chiefs fifty years ago. He was told for rum to a slaver and then captured by an English cruiser. rrE.siPr.5T J. H. Seelye, of Amherst College, thinks best on the whole to decline running as a Prohibition candidate for G overner of Massachusetts tells the committee Seelye later, as it were. It is recalled that Handel, the great composer, was a great eater. He would often order a dinner for three and then frighten the waiters half to death by calmly eating the triple dinner himself. l)n. Dro Lewis is out with a fresh edict that babies must not be permitted to sit up because their backs are weak, but mothers don't keep 'em up long enough to hurt 'em wouldn't let 'em sit up for a week back, at all events. Parson Newman is now metaphorically making another voyage around the world. He is anxious, it ia said, to get back from Congregationalism to Methodism, and see3 various channels in which he thinks he can be useful. Mrs. Pi-EsinENT Tyler has left Easthampton for Kichniand, Va., quite restored in health. There is a current ruraor that her beautiful young daughter. Miss Tearl Tylf r, is soon to be married to a rising youn statesman of Virginia. Mi:. Mi rat Halsteao boasts the largest family at Lor g Branch, ten small "coming journalists." Mrs. Halstead is described as a very sweet lady, with an extraordinary bead of hair, nearlv seven feet in length, of unusual thickness and beauty. Henry M. Stanley, who is to help the British to rescue Chinese Gordon, was once desperately in loye with one of the daughters of the millionaire Pike, who built the operahouse of that name in Cincinnati. The parents disapproved, and the obscure Bohemian became famous. George W. Childs, of the Philadelphia Ledger, performed hia last service for the season as honorary sexton in the church at Elberon last Sunday, and will close his cottage there, going to his residence at Bryn Mawr, and then removing for the winter to his marble palace in Philadelphia. Hanlan was mourned as dead at Keighley, England, by relativ and frionda, who thought that they found his body in a pond. The widow got the money on his life insurance policy, and soon took a second husband. But Hanlan has emerged from a hospital alive and well, but greatly displeased. General W. S. Hancock's wife has composed a piece, arranged for an orchestra, to be dedicated to Sir Moses Mon tefiors in honor of his coming centennial birthday, October 2, when also the entire Masonic fraternity, of hich Sir Moses is an honored member, will take appropriate action commemorative of the day. W. W. Corcoran, the millionaire banker and philanthropist of Washington, is said to be exceedingly proud of his ancestry. He glories in the fact that his father was a poor, honest shoemaker, and he treasures the coDbler'a sign board among his choice possessions. The late Henry M. Phillips, of Philadelphia, left $10,000 for a fountain in Fairmount Park, and $3,000 to keep it in repair. The Park Commissioners wished to place a statue of him above the fountain, but his family refused to allow a cast of his features to be taken. A DAt;(.nTi:r. of George Alfred Townsend ("Gath") was recently married clandestinely in Europe to Mr. Bonaventure, a middleaged New York book-seller. She Is described as a young lady eighteen years old, briekt and interesting and of more than ordinary intelligence. Mr. IS. P. Siiillakek, in his characteristic way, relates that when old Jerry Noble, of Fcrtimouth, N. II., was once on the witness Stand, he spoke so large and at the same time so vaguely about the extent of the world he had seen, that the Judge remarked, "Mr. Noble, you have traveled much." "Yes, sir," said Jerry, "I have traveled a great deal, but principally in Buckingham County." Charles G. Leland, no in London, i often struck, in conversation with English ladies, by their belief In ghosts particularly in ancient, hereditary, ancestral ghosts. When "we have one in our family," they can not be expected to forego such an opportunity of reviewing their genealogy. It is owing in part to this respectability of spectres and the "good form" of faith in them, he surmises, that the theosophists, Olcott and finnitt, are doing a good business in London this season. ni'MOKS OF TOE CAMPAIGN. The news from Maine looks as it Blaine might be able to carry his own State la November, after alt Philadelphia Inquirer. Mb. St. Johx is bringing the fate of the Tallapoosa into his speeches to show what one schooner will do. Louisville CourierJourcaL Bkn Bitlek's obliquity of vision was brought about by his pernicious habit of winking at old ladies on the street. New York Mail and Express. Tiieki appears to be a rich Prohibition harvest in Maine. If Mr. Blaine persists in ignoring the Prohibition element, Mr. St. Jona ought te rush in with his sickle. A TiKixo campaign banner: "Vote for Lockwood and ice cream.'" Whether the

young men will support the tiofcet is another question. New York Morning Journal. Now wt know that Ben Butler is a bloated monopolist and aristocrat He got mad when an old Chicago chum slapped him familiarly on the Ehoulder. Workingmen, do you hear that? Saginaw Courier.

.Respntnirtkt of the llline. V.'athington Letter to the Philadelphia Press-1 It is well known in Washington among these well acquainted with the rresent Secretary of Slate and bis familv and Mr. Blaine and his, that the latter have nevei felt kindly towards the forn:er since Mr. Frelinghuysen sncceeded Mr. Blaine es Secretary of State. Neither Mr. or Mrs. Blaine hv, e'vr, as the writer knows, taken the alight e; t pains to conceal UAh ill-feeling. JiJrs. Li ait)6 U alwaj! ef pe daily frank in mentioning openly Ler dishke of any one. More than one person who was at a dinner given in January, 18t2. by President Arthur to members of his cabinet and a few others has told me Low openly both Mr. aad Mrs. Blaine, who were pre3e.1t showed that they felt aggrieved with President Arthur and also with Mr. Blaine's kv'CCessor a9 head of the Dpnartmentnf Srat 1 44 e dinner occurred not loug aftr the suc cession caa oeen enectea. üir. u;aine sat opposite the President, and the latter, with an evident desire to make himself agreeable to Mr. Blaine, addressed him several times across the table as "Mr. becretirv." The first time he did it Mr. Blaine, as my informant, who was present, said, looked annoy e. acd, when it was repeated, said to the la iy next him: "If he calls me that again I'll take hini up." "Oh. don't," pleaded the lady; "don't rotice it" But, deaf to her wüe counsel, Mr. Blaine, the next time the President called him "Mr. Secretary," electrified the whole community by exclaiming with acrimony: "How can you call me by that title, of which you haye deprived nie?" With consummate" tact the President answered: "Oh, I thought once a Secretary, always a Secretary like 'once a General, always a General ; 'once a G overnor, always a Governor."' But even this diplomatic reply did not dissipate the unpleasant feeling, and more than one who was present has said to the writer: "it was the most uncomfortable dinner I ever attended, owing to Mr. and Mrs. Blaine's evident desire to make it so." Indiana Inventors. A weekly lint of United States patents issued to the inventors of, Indiana for the. week ending September 0, 1SS1; and eat a patent in the list will bear that d;ite. Reported expressly for the Ind;anapoIis Daily Sentinel by A. H. Evans Jt Co.. American and Foreign Patent Solicitors. Wahinrton, L. C. Charge for obtaining a pattnt $'J0. A copy of the petent laws sent free on application: II. Ic. Aileu, Iiidiar.apilis, corii-harvestinj raa11. 1'w Allen. In-iianapoli. cutting apparatus. KCer, J. M.. liiliaiifipohs. culiiva or spnu. fnt. J. V., Columbus, Traiin a vroiuct irota IuU.su co:n known o itrcaliije. Hiii Lie, C C. Ha:clton. iciice. Opborn, II., Kic!morii. machine !jr't-hrMer. Kiter. J. L., Brownsville, fertilizer distributor. t-at:er, C. W.. FiiHon. pump. biocLroaii, (. V , lnh&nnpo!i?, water-eook-r for re ngcraiiuF nu5 ic- machines. S ocman. G. V., IndUnanoi!?, rooliu? htj1 abFort ii,!? apparatus for ammonia r;insc"UaJ or ic machines There hall Tie No Alp. When Napoleon talked of invadicg Italy, or.e of his officers &iid: "But, sire, remember the Alps" To an ordinary man these would have seemed simply insurmountable, but Napoleon responded eagerly: "There shall be no Alps." So the famous SIrnplon pas was made. Disease, like a mountain, stands in the way of fame, fortune and borior to rcany wfco by Dr. Pierce's "Gold?a Medical Discovery" might be healed, and so the mountains would disappear. It la specific for all blsOd, chronic lung and liver diseases, such as consumption (which is scrofula of the lungs), pimples, blotches, eruptions, tumors, swellings, fever sores and kindred complaints. Tns daily papers of Monday oontainad bigheaded, double-leaded accounts of the burning of some lumber yards at Cleveland, O., entailing a loss of 52,000,000. The Indianapolis Times headed its account "The Burning of Cleveland's Lumber Yards." A rather elderly gentleman from one of the out townships was reading the paper, and when his eye struck this headline, he dropped the paper, exclaiming: "I've been a Republican all my life and believe in fair play in politics, but when it comes to pass that my party will set fire to the lumber yards of Sir. Cleveland just because be is runnin' fer President agin' Jim Blaine, I'll be dod gasted if I hain't a notin to quit 'em that's the sort of a hickory-elm I am, aud Idon'tkeer who knows it, nuther." Kjkomo Dispatch. EEPCBUCAjr papers are weakening down oyer the scandal suit They say eyen if it should be fastened upon him that he was good enough to repair the in ury. That is almost admission that he is guilty, and preparing the way for a feeble defense. Lebanon Tioneer. TnE question as to whether Cleveland was always chaste goes to our heart, but the ques tion whether we are to go on paying high taxes to pile up a corrupting surplus goes clean through our heart and clinches on the other side. Bcckville Tribune. "It Will Cure Asthma." "I have suffered with asthma for over forty years, and had a terrible attack in December end January, 182. One day I took four doses of Parker's Tonic, The effect as tocished me, I slept perfectly that night and am now wholly weli. Parker's Toaic will cure chronic asthma." E. C. Williacis, Chapman, Pa. Horsford'a Arid Phosphate, 15! SEASICKNESS. S. S. Parker. Wellington, 0., says: "While crossing Lake Erie, I gave it to some passengers who were seasick, and it gave immediate relief." DYSPEPSIA Causes its victims to be miserable, hopeless, confused, and depressfd in mind, very irritable, languid, and drowsy. It is .t disease which docs not get wojl of itself. It requires careful, persistent attention, and a remedy to throw off the causes and tone the digestive organs till they perform their duties Willingly. Hood's Sarsaparille has proven just the required remedy iu hundreds of cases. " I have taken ITowd's Sarsaparilla for dyspepsia, ironi which I have Buffered two years. I tried many other medicines, but none proved so satisfactory as Hood's Sarsaparilla." Thomas Cook, Urush Electric Liht Co., Uew York City. Sick Headache r "For the past two years I have been afflicted with severe headaches and dysiep. sia. I was induced to try Hood" Sarsaparilla, and have found great relief. I cheerfully recommend it to all." Mu- 1 Anaele, New Haven, Conn. Mrs. Mary C. Smith, Canibridgeport Mass., vras a sufferer from dyspepsia and sick head ache. She took Hood's Sarsaparilla aad found it the best remedy she ever used. Hood's Sarsaparilla Fold by all druggists, fljsixforja. Mad9 only by C I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. , j 00DosesOno Dollar.

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" THE C7 BESTTOrHC. Th!s ire li":r.c. con-.b:r.?r,3 Irn with pure vco!.v'e ti!:ic. vii'V!y nr.ii enmtwetely C ure lv.jeisla, IndiccMinn, WraUnc, 1 m fire niooil, .Val.iriu.l bilUnnd I ev r, and NcurnlKia. 1! is c:i u:;: ii:;:'ir remedy for Diicases of the Iitdn.-"?- nnd Liver. I; i iuvaki;i':!e i-ir J-.-cr.p peculiar t9 iTornen, HI.1 :i v!io leml j..-U :.tary live. '. '1 1 not injure the teeth. ome ht m-Ik he.nr pr i ; ni-;i .t;uii n'Ur Iron mciiriwtöt. It clinches ftn-1 purines the Vl'vxJ. stimulates th" !i iio. Ki'ls the n::r i'ati n of food.rliOVcs 'Heartburn a: ü j".j! liing, ci:drtreugthiii ?he MT.st-'.'s mi. 1 tk : iv. For I:!tertiii;:ei:t 1-V vet s LnsMfc:dt Lack of I'aergy. vc, it im ei?:al. - Tli" i'ern.ine !.:; 1 .ve trsT narli arte" cros: e l red l:r..-s on wrap;. TaLe noothet tkJtwl) l j i:i:OM t HFCl AL 0 FAl.TI90KE.Ha LYON'S KOIOXniUIi BCrCPXU3!M. AFTER LZl.iZ. A cirr to the cr.Ar. I vt.-'s KroTiir.-M h rot a dye, but a c!:r.r fnprar.t oil, and iili pun.'. a a tm.ic to dt ha r blacks and crpii'ary circi::rt;on cf the sca'p. wht rebjr it restores the natur.il actinn, and a mult rsstoret t'ie natural c-lcr to the hair, leaving it soft ar.J lautlfu!. Unlike all other scwnllcJ restoratives, it is entirely free from Sulphur, Nitraie Si.'r rr, and all rmious and deleterious chcmkals. It is an !epint Hair Vrttsing, dcp-'Siiir.jr no ssdirtrrnt ac the tculT des not tain the skin, nor soil the most 'Vi-ite fabric. Adlxess A. KIEFER & CO. Indianapolis lud. DAVID h fr uj . .J k Jej Vn U TortTie Ottrr oT lii'lncy nitl TL,l-rer Complatnts, Co:i3i;,u tini-, mrl k.1 iiorde.a arimu? from tn i:a :-rc ftni-'C V . " l'.l.OD. To worr-f tj who s '-X r lrcai snr of tli" ills pe. liar t V.Ar it. ii r.ti ttnfni'.i'i; r:. r.d. All Drusnri-ts. On oJ".iit n 1 -tt ; 1 e, or t-lviiesa Lr. L)aVld licuT.SC. J, l'.uE'i.ll.t, Ii. Y. A CURE FOR GRAVEL. A Common and Painful Complaint-A State nient You May Conride In. ItKmsto kave been rescrred for Dr. DtI Remedy, of Kocdout, S. Y.t to accompli, throtiuh Ms preparation widely knonn u KESN t DY'S FAVOR1TK KEMKDV, what othern haw failed to compass. The anhjolned letter will be found of Titl interest to sufferers Irora graTel al to tte general public: Albany, March 20, 17S4. Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y. : Deab Sir Let me tell you frantly that I bar never been partial to proprietary medicine, u I believe the majority of them to be no tain.; better than methods of obtaining money from people whom snfTerlae: makes ready to catch at any hope of relief. They are mean cheats and delaions. But your FAVORITE REMEDY I know bv harry tP'r'cn,:e to be a totall different thine. 1 hal been a sufferer from gravel for TCira, and tied ref-orted to many eminent phv-slciarre lor r lief, but no permanent pood came of n Akout thrfeyearseBO your FAVOUins KEMEDy vu r coramerdel to me;. I can plre rou te result la a Fentenee: I tried it and it cured me eouap.eiey. I urn confident it saved mr life. You can use tola letter il you think best. Yonrs. etc . KAIUAN ACKLEY. Captain Nathan Acilcy wan for a lone Urne connected with the Canal Appraiser's oSice tn Albany. He 18 well known aad. writes for so purple bat to ?o good to other. As a medicine for all diseases of the Jiorvl, LiTpr, Kidney, and digestive organs, KESKfcuvi FAVOB11E KEMEDY has fairly won its Mgh reputation. Write, If desirable, to Dr. Divli Kennedy, Rondiut. N. Y. PÜ Ü J-' X ' 3 - - .'''.I - : .-v ! .. , - I". p-.r ; TB? i: Four. I r l".vii"s Foiit7.V. 1". -a '.: I . i i an-l erf :.n: t .. iiCil S'V! r J , r , . Dr.Ar t ;: ! M-..i!'- ..i : ; ' :- .-' Fonr'j IV.m ii- i-j v. in. o;v, .Njü.-;iC.j.u. txU evcrywbiTf. David r. m-jT, rrorric.r, ri:.:i.. --.Hum C ATAR R K?ay Fever. a cä y a l . T-TZ . a r or I w .erer during tH :r xninth .r, ' ay r ever, i procurca ,CU-: a bottle of Elv'a Cream I Faim. and was cared by ' - n V.ltln Yl ...... i m , a,.i no return of t uuc uvuiv. im . tj urn A the Commie Par7 FXFEVER ä rlam. -Charlr Vt . A ey One und one-half hof. J f '-4 ties of Ely's Cream Bala J&f'.'-X entirely cured me i iV-. S Ht Fever f ten Tears' tandic?. Have bad no 0. X trace of it for two yeag. Albert A. Perrr. 8 JilthU.S. boro, K. Y. l a w t l! a rf .- uream isaiaa JngAvi !JE V d fi remedy founded ca correct Urj iofthig disease and can be da pended TiTwvn. Crram Blm c&Uftea no paiia Gives rlif r once. Cleanse the head. Cuae rpaithT PTreMoTit Abates Inflammation, FreTents frh rolds. Hetli tie ores. Restore the mum o utand smell. A thoroneh treatment! will Cur. Not liquid or annO. Applied into tte nontriln. at druggist; 60c. bynuul. Sample bottles ty mall, loc ELY BROTHKR3 Drttolst, OweZO. N. T. STOPPED FREE DrJLLINE'S GREAT lrgTiAtwaKrtva Diss asks. Pn.y mwt nfFALUBLBUt?kea M directed. f ut mtw ffrti daf$ r. 1 reaÜM Au J f l trial btt-.i frr I Fit rAtK-BB.thrTpapni-rrnrrssrliirnrjooW hr lamttiL Sed . . O. I' d eztxns 4 I..J Iflicted !. KLIN E.O-W Arch S..Phi!A-lphi.f. psufest mm i c tti'e r-.'.T.f tr is irom th t.t vouti.ni! error, fwniiaitl vai-n-sä. iiri ..iur iwy, Kt manhood, ju'rvon etc. I:il n iifi viQ hri ici'lirn t a wrar leor:,! cH.-r.Ji in mno: "-'l -ft:rn. I I.I KoyrHAIMil. Fntl your ftOuren, uF. K i Oi l.i.1K. MtMiu Cons. FOn OALB. F)B BALE Matthews' Patent Keneirublcj Messoraadum Book, bend lor B&mple copy aaa price lhrt. Sample aent rostpaJi to auy tdlren on receipt of 60 rents for No. 1, or 40 oen itforNo, 9 Ad(llHSKXlKJLIj COXFAKY. ladjAlUkcMUcb

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