Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 30, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1884 — Page 2

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1884.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8. OFFICE 71 and 73 "West Starkes Street. Ths Buffalo Courier, a pawr that is as eonservatiye as it is able, declares New York State assured for Cleveland and Hendricks.

Democrats moat not be too sanguine of Ohio. The Republicans hare recently put Sato the canvass there fcW.OOO. That Steens rascality. "Oosa! "We guess we've found who marriel 7iu Blaine. An exchange says: "In one f the mountain counties of Kentucky a Vornan has held the office of Justice of the Peace without legal authority for the last tirtj years," Tue Maine State Constitutional Campaign Oommittee has decided to organize at once ßtate, county, city and town leagues for the forcemeat of the new constitutional prohibitory law. Exchange. Blaine should tell the bigoted Ohio 3utcb,M as Neal Dow calls them, about this ftew wrinkle in Maine. A "spoyTAjriocs" reception will be tendered Mr. Cleveland on the occasion of his Tiait to Buffalo to-morrow. It is not known whether his son will accompany him, Journal. Bat we will tell yon what is known. It is inown that G rover Cleveland will never Ti&it a little son's grare for the purpose of ieatroying the date of birth upon the gravestone of that little son. Ejamiite their (Democratic) national fclatform. Bead it carefully. You will find mo mention of the Union soldier there; no acknowledgment of their services, but on the other hand all such reference is careially guarded against. Organ What a liar. Ths above too in the face of He fact that the Eepublican party "left to a Democratic House of Representatives the first eflbrt to equalize both bounties and pensions," It is for Ohio to decide. If Ohio secures protection, so will all the other States. If sot the result may prove disastrous. Blaine's speech at Hamilton, O. Yes, quite disastrous. What if those 'bigoted Germans" vote for Cleveland. The Plumed Knight is evidently more uneasy than he was concerning the validity of his secret marriage. "Kind regards to Mrs. yiaher." , How many fathers would visit a city and jioi go and Bee their young sons? Will O rover Cleveland visit his son in the Orpfaans Home on the occasion of the 'nonpartisan" visit to Buffalo? Journal. We don't know, we are sure, how this Will be, bat while in this kind of inquiry Why not ask how many fathers will vUit a graveyard for the purpose of chiseling from at little son's gravestone the date of that little son's birth? The Freeman well remarks that people ghould remember that tariff means tax, and that a protective tariff means an unnecessary nd unjust tax; it is unnecessary because it laises more revenue than the Government Seeds, and unjust because it compels one Citizen to pay tribute to another, and bears IL s hardest upon those who are least able to Btacd it. People should also remember that Jlr. Blaine Is the leading representative of Xhis iniquity. ''Ths statement is utterly and abominably false in every statement and in every impli cation." Blame s dispatch to Holloway. Being cornered by the Sentinel's ''shot gun," I confess I was only married in March smd the child was born in June. But "my aiear Mr. Phelps," (these American people feeing fools will believe whatever the ,riumed Knight" says). I will pretend to Lara been "united" in Kentucky a year be lore; eee? You bet I am "no deadhead in this enterprise." Substance of Blaine's let ter to Phelps. The Republican party also pledges itself to the repeal of the limitation contained in the arrears act of 1879, so that all invalid soldiers Bhaa share alike, and their pensions begin with the date of disability or discharge, and Bot witü tne date ol tue application. Ks publican National Platform. Who is responsible for the passage of the arrears "act of 137'J?" Why was it passed? ,TTby has it not been repealed? Oh, how these Republicans love the soldier once every four years! Such love "passeth all understanding " Their love for the saldier is only equaled by reelle' love for the Postal Clerks. AN ALABA3TERIAN HINT. Here now is a pointer for the guidance of ail blind guides who are at present occupy inj? pulpits and advocating the election of IBiaioe to the Presidency. Brother Alabaster, please give ns your attention : A clergy wan, inclosing a small contribution to the Democratic National Committee, after stat in that he had always voted the Republican ticket, said: "But I think now that every God-fearing citizen, not party-blind, must jein me in the fervent prayer: May God in H is mercy avert the day when the majority of the American people shall have become so lest to honor as to preler for their chief ruler James G. Blaine, whose only title to their suffrages is his bad pre-eminence among his fellows in corruption." BLAINE'S LATEST LIE. "I a ai not and never have been the ownor Of any coal lands or iron lands, or lands of aay character whatever, in the Hocking Valley or in any part of Ohio. Nor have I at any time owned a share of stock in any coal, iron or land company in the State of Ohio." p-BIaiae to H. S. Bundy. "Find enclosed my draft for $25,000 in gMtyment of my subscription to the Hope Tuniace enterprise." Blaine to J. Den lsoa. "Received from James G. Blaine $2",000, eing payment in full for one share in the association formed for the purchase of lands known as the Hope Furnace Tract, situated in Vinton and Athens Counties, Ohio."J. N. I Raison to Blaine. MORE LYING. When the troubles among the Hocking Talle miners began in July Mr. Blaine was charged with being interested in toe mines. lie wrote the following;: "I a:u not, and never have been, ths own r of any coal lands or iron lands of anr kind whatever, In Hocking Valley or in any part oi uaio. nor nare i at any time owned a ah tre of stock in any coal, iron or land company in the State of Ohio.' Ttiia, it will be seen, is a denial by Blaine

as emphatic and sweeping as langnage can make it. He denies that he ever at any

time owned any land of any kind or any stock in any coal, iron or land company anywhere In the State of Ohio. And now read this; "Sesatk Chamber, Washisoto, Dec. 30, 1830 lrar ,Sir: Find inclosed ray draft for 52-"),0OO in payment of my subscription to the Hope r urn ace enterprise. "Touching the interest, I have to ask that whatever it may amount to, you will permit .us payment to be postponed until some mat ters between Mr. Lee and myself are definitely adjusted. Very respectfully, J AXES U. 1L AIXE. "Mr. Denison." A statement appeared in the New York Tribune recently that this subscription to the Hope Furnace tract was in the nature of a loan or an investment of a conditional character, but J. Henry Brooks says that he delivered the $50,000 in Standard Coal and Iron Company's bonds in May, 1832, to Hon. S. B. Elfins for Mr. Blaine, "with no such knowledge or understanding." HARRISON'S "IDIOTS." According to Senator Harrison, any man who believes that a dollar can be made by an act of Congress, out of a piece of paper, is an Idiot. Now, as an "idiot" is a natural born fool, and, In the eyes of the law, is never likely to attain any understanding or knowl edge, and therefore can not be held responsi ble for his acts, the proposed gathering of Greeubackers here to hear General Butler speak, will, according to the degenerate grandson of an illustrious grandfather, be a gathering of natural born fools, totally irresponsible before the law because of their idiocy. These Greenbackers, or born fools, as Harrison calls them, are to be addressed to-night by a man who has been in a state of idiocy from birth, the condition of whose mind is such that the intellectual faculties and the moral sentiment are entirely wanting. When it is remembered that the Supreme Court of the United States has indorsed the opinion of the Greenback party and settled beyond cavil the question of the right of Congress to make a piece of paper legal tender money, Mr. Harrison's attack upon that party seems to stamp him as the nat ural born fool. At all events the charge that Greenbackers are idiotic is far-fetched and unbecoming in a member of the United States Senate, albeit be himself may be only a very poor specimen of a statesman. "THE BIGOTED DUTCH." Blaine negan to dish out the taffy yester day as soon as he, neared Cincinnati, espe cially to the Germans. He knew weeks ago that the Ohio Germans were leaving him and Republicanism by regiments. The word came up from the Ohio bosses just before the Maine election, "Tell Blaine not to vote on the prohibition amendment it will c fiend our German friends if he does." Old Neal Dow let the cat out of the bag. This hurt the Prohibitionists, and they in quired of Dow what the trouble was, and he replied that Blaine dodged to satisfy the "b'i'juttd DnUh of Ohio:' Blaine is "smart," and as soon as he neared Cincinnati he began to ladle out the taffy to the Germans, and his remarks remind us of old General Scott when he was making just such a trip as Blaine is now making and for much the same reason. De feat was staring poor old Scott in the face as it is now threatening Blaise. Here is what the latter eaid yesterday as he approached Cincinnati: "Wherever you find Germans you find great geniality, hospitality, and a natural outflow of good welcome and cheer." Old General Scott said: "I love the rich Irish brogue and the sweet German accent." Blaine is perhaps one of the most accom plished demagogues in the country, but the Germans are too well posted on his record to be caught voting for him. "DON'T ASK ME HOW, BUT FIX IT." Mr. Calkins has been meeting the chargelof his indebtedness to the school fund and the swamp land transaction by denouncing the entire affair as a Democratic lie. This he does oa platforms and in places where he thinks there are no reporters or wicked Dem ocrats to molest or make him afraid. Well, we have the evidence now that will shut his mouth. We have what the boys call "the dead wood on him." Elsewhere in this paper will be found letters to a friend, written before the State Convention, acknowledging the debt, and begging him to fix it up p. d. q. "Don't ask me how," wails Calkins, "but fix it." If Calkins were hon est, be knows there was but one way to fix it, and that way the laws of Indiana provide for. Ah, Mr. Calkins, you and Jim Blaine ere so much alike in some particu lars. How steadily and beautifully you would trot in double harness together. If you could only get Brother Alabaster to give you a boost from his pulpit next Sunday night. His text will be the ninth commandment or stated briefly "thou r hull riot lie." Go around and take a front wat. May be he will call you "Xruthfa Bill." THE OHIO TUSSLE. There seems to be quite a difference of opinion among .Democrats as to how the battle will go in Ohio. Some think it im possible to be carried in Presidential years, while others are sanguine that this year victory will perch upon the Democratic banner. Chairman Barn um is not an enthusiast, and never make? any reckless statements upon aay point. He is especially conservative upon expressing himself as to future events. He said very recently: "I am not speaking for political effect now. I am simply giving form to the spirit of the assurances we are eonstanly receiving from Ohio. That Ohio would certainly go Democratic would be a reckless statement to make, but we have the best reasons in the world for believing that the days of Republican triumphs are at an end. Jadge Thurm an believes that we will carry the State by a majority of about 12,000, and I shall not be at all surprised to see his judgment vindicated at the polls. It must be remembered that ordinary conditions do not prevail In Ohio to-day. Hitherto the German vote has been counted upon as a reliable Republican factor; now the Republicans themselves admit it is an unknown quantity. If liisy be rail themselves into the belief that the Germans are going to the polls with the same fidelity (o the Republicans they are likely to nod themselves mistaken. Carl Schurz has had an excellent opportunity for reachId an intelligent conclusion on the subject.

j and his best judgment is that the Uerman

disaffection Is large enough to overthrow ths

party which has been dominant in the State so long. To aay that he is at fault, when it is remembered that a change of about 10,000 will insure a Democratic majority. Is to venture a certain statement upon uncertain provocation. I do not say that we are absolutely sure to win in Ohio this month, but it is true, nevertheless, that we were never In better fighting trim, and that the promise of Republican disaster was never anything like so brilliant as it is to-day." THE KIND OF A MAN BLAINB 13. The Journal, the home organ of the In diana Republican syndicate of liars, is very fond of pointing to Mr. Blaine as a typical American, but we deny that he ia in any sense the representative of true American manhood and manliness The typical Amer ican is an honest man, and that is just what Mr. Blaine is not. If we were a Nation of rogues, rascals and liars, then Mr. Blaine could with great propriety be called the lowest type of American thought, virtue, truthfulness and honesty. But we protest that that is not our character among the Nations of the earth, and the Journal's acquaintance with the real moral Bens of the American people must be confined within the narrow limits of its own association, else V ould never set Mr. Blaine up as a type y which the world is to judge of the morai worth of us as a Nation. The basis upon which the founders of our Republic built the Declaration of Independence, and subsequently the Constitution, contemplated nothing bnt the loftiest patriotism and the highest standard of integrity and honesty in those into whose hands the affairs of the Nation should be entrusted from time to time, and the typical American should be he in whom not even the faintest suspicion of faithlessness and dishonesty could be tound. Dees Mr. Blaine come up to that high standard? Is he not in fact a conspicuous representative of just the opposite the other extreme? Has he ever failed to make merchandise of oflicial trust? Has he not always placed a commercial value upon his official acts? When Speaker of Congress did he not attach a money value to every rise and fall of the Nation's emblem of authority when upon its rise or fall depended ths dis tribution of portions of the public domain for the encouragement of the upbuilding of internal improvement or the adjustaiens of claims against the Nation? And yet the Journal would set this man up S3 a typical American ! If he is, it were better that George Washington had been captured and shot by the British before the idea of a republic was conceived, for, if the fathers of the Nation established a system of government, the highest type of wiicwe man and womanhood should reach out and embrace treachery and lying, both in official and social life, as the apex of the American theory of a government of the people and by the people; the crowning of their efforts with success was a calamity in which the civilization of this and all the ages to come must participate. No, James G. Blaine is in no seas a typical American, but he is the most prom inent representative that ever lived in this country of all that is vicious, dishonest, corrupting and debasing in morals.religion and politics. From early manhood, when he first stepped upon the stage of action in Kentucky down to his last falsified state ment about his connection with the Hocking Valley coal speculation, the whole way is strewn with the debris of broken tows, be trayed confidences, violated official caths and dishonest political methods and prac tices. James G. Blaine a typical American! God save the mark! A SYNDICATE OF LIARS. The Indiana Republican syndicate of liars bas had much to say of late through its official organ, the Indianapolis Journal, about Colonel Gray's alleged Know-nothing record. But it is a significant fact that nothing was said about Colonel Gray's Know-nothlngism until the Colonel proved in his Logansport and Richmond speeches that Blaine was not only identified with that ism, but was a conspicuous leader in the organization, when the syndicate at once Bet about securing alleged affidavits for the purpose of besmirch' ing Colonel Gray. The syndicate's resources for obtaining desired proof by affidavits for all purposes are very great, as has been proven in many a campaign in Indiana, and too its machinery for manufacturing lies, which being of the Dorsey pattern, insures the delivery of round lots ef diabolically constructed and villainously compounded slanders on short notice. But then its stock of re;dy-mada lies is always large; besides it has a goodly number that were left over from the last campaign which only need revamping and warming over. Then it will be seen the syndicate's faculties for besmirching character aie not only extensive but, far-reaching and India-rubber like in character. But tbeoutputis always lies, black, wicked, damnable lies, and the relish with which tl Journal takes hold and peddles them out at wholesale and retail gives the organ of the syndicate a very high rating in the estimation of the depraved, vicious and vile element of the community, and also gives it prominence in the I country as one of the most disreputable sheets in the land. Awhile ago it did make the attempt to be decent, but the dog has returned to its vomit and the hog to its wallow. In charging that Colonel Gray was once a conspicuous member of a Know-nothing Society, it knew that the material for the story was furnished by the syndicate, and therefore a broad, deep, wide, deliberate lie. Yet it printed the story and said amen to every word of it. Now, had the Journal wanted the facts, it could have obtained them; but as it is clear that the syndicate has full possession of the Journal and all the approaches leading to it, we shall have to call the attention of both the syndicate and its organ that they are egregious liars of the Annanias school. The Sentinel prints this morning affidavits of recent date which prove beyond the possibility of a doubt that Colonel Gray was alwayia Kepublicin until 1872, and supported Salmon P. Chase, the free toil or Republican candidate for G vernor of Obio, and made speeches for and supported John C. Fremont, Republican candidate for President; and that he did not reside at all in Ohio in l&G; and further that such a thing as his being a Know-nothing was never

heard of until the syndicate's organ maie the charge on the 10th day of September last. This shows that the Journal's affidavits are not only false, but maliciously false. Now let the syndicate of liars invent or warm over another batch, and in the meantime let it throw some light upon Calkins' swamp land school fund transaction and the Widow Duncan affair.

SENATOR HARR130N. Senator Harrison represents the fanatical v. ing of the Republican party. He is the John Brown of Indiana Republicanism, only there was some method in Brown's madness while Harrison seems to be possessed of an e?il spirit and ia actuated by the lowest instincts in his attacks upon not only the Democratic party but all who are in opposition to him in politics and religion. He certainly must be a lineal descends at of the inventor of the chief instrument of inquisitorial torture in the middle ages. It he were a man of letters, er a statesman or a student of the science of government and political economy, or anything else that would commend his utterances and observations to the public his wild and beastly attacks upon those who are not of his political faith light be attributed to a mind that had become impaired by too much learning, but he is nothing of the kind, He is a mere protoplasm when compared with the Edmundsea and Conkllngs of his party, and hence we are bound to conclude that he was created to exemplify and prove the correctness of Calvin's theory of total depravity by his daily political walk and political utterances. His chief delight when making a political harangue is to charge the Democratic party with being the friend and supporter of slavery, treason and repudiation, but the effort is always so dramatic that his hearers generally conclude that it ia only a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Jgnify ing nothiDg. The reason why the people have con cluded that Harrison is considerably below the average politician, is that he never in vents or suggests anything for the public good. His mind can not gra3p any of the great problems of government. He is a lilliputian in all those things which go to make a man conspicuous in literature, law or science. His speeches both in the Senate and on the hustings are lacking in every tLing except billingpgate and abuse. He never argues a point. His brain is not broad. clrar and comprehensive enough for that. and when he does attempt to discuss eco; noni'c questions he so reminds one of a boy trying to batter down Gibraltar with pebble stones that his effort becomes lud: ercu. But as a dabbler in and flinger of mud, he pane's without a peer in the Nation. A de generate grandson of an illustrious grand sire, he moves, breathes and has his political beirg in an atmosphere so thick and stifling with egotism and self-importance that dudes wonder where he got it, as they step aside to errape the constantly accumulating and never-ending supply of what the street gammins call "gas." Hence, horrible shadow! thy blood is rold, thy bones are marrowlesa. thou hast no speculation in those eyes which thou dost glare with. At all events, keep out of the way of the "Tall Sycamore of the Wabash." ADDITIONAL INIBRROQATORIE J ATTENTION, MB. BLAINE. Mr. Blaine having, at his own instance, obtained a ruling of the United States CLr cuit Court that he was not compelled to answer the questions we put to him in our answers, afterward published in the newspa pers pretended answers to these questions. In th j court they are yet unanswered, be cause after the ruling that the questions themselves were improvidently propounded, these pretended answers subserve no legal purpose whatever. The original inquiries being as yet wholly without answer, we have concluded to as'c a few additional questions of the same easy andsimpl; character as the first. Sa that the distinguished plaintiff, when he comes to really respond in the cause, may have no annecessary trouble in recalling the whole oi his early marital career at a single glance. Mr. Blaine was asked in the first series of questions who were present on the occasion pf his marriage. He an awers that two persons were present at his pretended marriage in June, 1330, and that two other persons were present at his marriaee in March, 1851. Oi the latter he says. "I bad the marriage totemnized a second time in Pittsburg. Pa." Thus implying that it had been solemnized a first time at Millers burg. We give him now the opportunity, for he seems carefully to have courted it, of stating who solemnized this first marriage. Of the two witnesses named by him as being present at the mock marriage, one was a lady she conld not have done so. The other was a grocery and provision merchant, liv ing at the time in Maysville. Who then solemnized this (?) first marriage? Mr. Blaine says that his first marriage was always by himself Leid sacred, and "kept ia purity and honor." His own account of these matters shows very clearly that even his second marriage was not so kept. We have thought it entirely proper to ask some questions, and to require answers thereto respecting his conduct immediately after his real marriage. . Did the "sacred honor" due to a wife then at least lawfully married require Mr. Blaine to leave her alone and unprotected 'in a strange city, in a most delicate condition, to undertake a long and at that time tedious journey without a friend or companion? Plain people will call this desertion and abandonment. They will say this shows how even "an indissoluble tie" may be broken. Mr. Blaine left his wife to pursue hei soli tary journsy, while be returned to Drennon Springs and enacted the part of a gallant auitor for other hearts and hands, sighing for other conquests. He did not return to his wife until nearly a year afterward; thus

himself, for some reasons which we have

taken the trouble to ask of him. causing "an indefinite separation from her who possessed bis entire devotion." These things appear even in his own account very strangely. We think they require some further ex planation, and, i. '.though Mr. Blaine may "shrink from the suggestion," yet we must insist, at least, upon "one simple thread of truth in the endless tissue of falsehood" which now wraps hi name. Mr. Blaine must be the most singular hus band, with the most singular notions of marital honor and duty, or else, of all the liars upon the continent, the most umbrageous and august. A VILLAINOUS LIB. Among the more conspicuous of those who have no right to the Tree of Life, nor will be permitted to enter in through the gates into the City of the Lord, are whosoever loveth and iuaketh a lie. They and death and Jhell, according to the seer of Patmos, will be cast into a lake of fire. What hope, then, has James G. Blaine of a dwelling place on the banks of Life's eternal stream? Is he not one who loves and makes a lie? In another column will be found Mr. Le Moyne's testimony in the matter of Slain e's Pi ttsbu rg marriage. E very lo ve r of truth and fair dealing should read It. Ia it will be found the most remarkable state lent that Mr. Blaine, when he called upon Mr. Le Moyne to secure that gentleman's service in the matter of procuring a person with authority to solemnize mar riage, in Pittsburg, in March, 1851, Mr. Blaine represented to his old college friend that he was desirous of getting married to a young lady who was then visiting friends in PKtsburg, but owing to the argus-eyed opposition of the lady's friends to the union, the greatest secrecy and precaution would have to be exercised in order to get the lady away from her friends at the hotel where she was a guest, without being observed, else the scheme would come to naught, and both he and she would be mads miserable because of the enforced separation that would follow any frustration of their plans. Mr. Blaine also requested Mr. Li Moyne to say nothing about the marriage for six months. Now what construction other than that Blaine willfully and deliberately lied to his friend LeMoyne can be pat upoi the story about the lady being handicapped by an opposition to the marriage, aid if hs willfally and deliberately misrepresented the true situation there, hew much more likely is it that his claim of a secret marriage in Kentucky at an earlier date, a marriags which if irregular should have been legalized right there in Kentucky, is founded upon a broader, deeper, higher and thicker falsehood than the one which Mr. Le Moyne was inveighed into being a witness of? And yet this is the man whom the Indianapolis Journal calls a "typical American" and Deacon Richard Smith says "represents the progressive American idea." Whosoever loveth and maketh a lie shall be damned. MAKUIAGE NO. 2. Ex-Congressman Lo Moyne's Tes timony That Shows Blaine Lied at Pittsburg. He Seemed Anxious That the Second Marriage Should be Kept Secret and Was "Mum" as to the First (?). EA -CONGRESSMAN L.E MOYNE'S Deposition In Regard to Blaine's Marriage at Pittsburg. peeJaI to the 8eauneL Caicago, Oct 2. Ex-Congressman John V. Le Moyne, of this city, gave hi deposition to-day concerning the secret marriage of James G. Blaine, at Pittsburg. Hon. W. C. Gondy represented the Sentinel and W. H. H. Hiller, of Indianapolis, the plaintiff. In answer to questions Mr. Le Moyne testified as follows: "Mr. Blaine came to the office where I was studying. He told me he wanted to get married to-a young lady who was then passing through Fittsburg with her friends; that her friends were opposed to the marriage, and that he could manage to get her out of the hotel for a short time if it could be arranged to have the ceremony performed. Mr. Blaine asked me to get another witness to the marriage. I went to see a friend of mine, Mr. David V. Bell, a lawyer in Pittsburg, and asked him if he had any objections to be a witness to a marriage of tbat kind. He said he had not, and by agreement I got him and went to the preacher's bouse. Shortly after we got there Mr. Blaine came in with a lady, and they stood up and were married and went out. The only person i present were Mr. Biyan. Mr. Bell, Mr. Bla'ne, this lady and myself. I did not see her face. She had a heavy black veil over her face, which was not raised during the time she was in the worn.- My recoilectioi is that she had a c'oak and shawl about her, but I am not positive as to that. I think she was bundled up a good deal. I could not tell if I had ever seen her before because of the black veil. Blaine gave her name as Harriet Stanwood. A marriage certificate was handed to Blaine. He said nothing about a former marriage. He told me at the time that he didn't want anything said about it for six months. A WARN IX Q TO BLAINE. Be Is Advised to Call Off the Cars Who Are Hounding Mrs. Slorrill, New York World. Augusta, Me., Sept. 24. Since Mrs. Lot M. Morrill gave her first Interview to a representative of a New York paper all sort of means have been used to break tbe force of the blow, but each new attempt to break the strength of her terrible arraignment has only added fuel to the fire instead of quench ing it The knowledge that Mrs. Morrill

was in possession of documentary evidence xEOst damaging to Mr. Blaine when read in tbe light of subsequent events in which Blaine was an active participant bas been a source of constant trouble to Mr. Blaine and his managers. The New Age will aay on this subject to-morrow morning: The effect of Mrs. Morrill's reply to the insult offered the memory of her lamented husband by the Republican State Committee of Ohio bas been incalculable. Coming from the source it did, it bas created the most profound sensation of the campaign. This is apparent from the most inhuman and disgraceful means adopted by Blaine through his henchman, J. L Stevens, to counteract its effect. Kvery eflbrt has been brought to bear upon Mrs. Morrill to induce her to retrsct, but she bas steadily maintained her position, and in answer to hundreds of letters received by her, has reiterated her statement as given to tbe public through the New York press. Realizing tbe impossibility of extorting from Mrs. Morrill a retraction, and fear, ing further statements backed up by proof they have succeeded in getting tbe brother of the late Senator Morrill to take a most heartless and outrageous part in tbe case. Governor A. I. Morrill knows full well the truth of Mrs. Morrill's statement, and that she has bnt expressed the sentiments of her late husband. Eight years ago. as can be proved, that gentleman denounced Blame as a corrupt man and as unsparingly as Mrs. Morrill has done. Did Senator Morrill then take the Governor to task for this? It Mrs. Morrill has not stated the truth why did the Governor publicly declare that if Blaine was nominated at Cincinnati in 1S76, he would not support him. but would stump the State against him? Was not Senator Morrill in full accord with the sentiments of his brother? But Mrs. Morrill has not misrepresented tbe sentiments of her late husband. She haa told the truth, but not the whole truth or half of it, as her persecutors in this city well know. Hence their rage and the dastardly treatment to which Mrs. Morrill and her family are subjec ted. They know that Mrs. Morrill has in her control certain letters of Mr. Blaine, written to her husband, which, if given to the public, would fully vindicate her every statement They demand that these letters shall be surrendered by Mrs. Morrill and placed in the custody of some friend of Mr. Blaine, or some one whose affiliations are with tbe Republican party. It is to obtain possession of these interesting documents that the Blamites are making their attacks on the widow of the dead Senator, and resort to the most detestable means of persecution, intimidation and terrorism. These letters in question Mrs. Morrill regards as sacred and she does not propote giving them to the public unless compelled so to do In self-defense, to vindicate her course and to relieve herself and family from Blaine's satellites. The letters will not be surrendered at the demand of Mr. Blaine to him or to any one of his appointment. They are now beyond the power of Mr. Blaine to reach or control, as we know they are deposited in trustworthy barjds, ate accessible to us and will be given to the public with Mrs. Morrill's consent, unless Mr. Blaine shall so change his couoe as to compel his purveyors to withdraw their persecutions and threats against Mrs. Morrill and her family. A word to the wise is sufficient.

A Dakota farmer, in 1S81. planted a single grain of wbeat In one of his oat fields From it grew twenty two stalks, each one bearing a fall head. These yielded SO) grains, TtiO ef which were planted the next year, producing one-fifth of a bushel of splendid wheat. This was planted last spring, yielding seventeen bushe.s. making 1,020 pounds of wheat from one grain in three years. Workingmen like Ben Butler will be glad to team tbat a big crop of .cbampague is promised for this year in France. A I'rluter's Error. Bweet are the uses of adversity, the printer's copy said, but he set it up, sweet are the uses of advertising. Sweet, indeed, to those who in sickness und suffering have seen the advertisement of some soveign remedy, which upon trial has brought them from death's door. "The best thing I ever saw in my paper was the advertisement of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,' " is again and again the testimony of those who have been healed by it of lung disease, bronchial affections, tumors, ulcers, liver complaints and the ills to which flesh is heir. Paris bas just taken a census. It shows a population of 2.23!988, of whom 10,7i8 are English and 5,187 Americans. A Spanish proverb says: "There is no evil without some remedy." Good Mother Hubbard says, that f r all the ills tbat proceed from inflammations and hemorrhages, and there are many, that Mother Nature has provided Pond's Extract. This opinion seems to have been shared and indorsed by at least half tae families of civilized countries. This remedy, so efficacious, also, for piles, burns, sprains and colds, is so harmless that it can be taken as well internally as externally. A Georgia man shut a green snake up in a glass bottle thirteen weecs ago. The snake is still alive and doing well. "I have both used and sold Prickly Ash Bitters for a number of years, and think it tbe best bitters for biliousness, liver complaints and for toning up the system," po writes W. H. Cole, druggist, of Joplin, Mo. A single trial of this remedy will convince any person of the truth of the above. The Mormon question : "How much will 573 vards of dress goods cost at $l.ti3,'i a yaid'r Donslu Six Month. Tbat roil of hair on the back of yoar head dear lady. It is better than nothing aid deceives nobody. In six months or leas fr am to day you may dispense witti it if you are inclined to give Parker's Hair Balnaai a fair trial. Cleanses the scalp, restores color, a delicious dressing. Xotadve, not oily, elegantly perfumed. A Newburg man has 200 diftrnt ort of apple grafted on one tree, 137 of them were n bearing last year. Horsford's Acid Pliowphate. TOXIC rOR OVERWORKED MKX. Dr. J. C. Wilson, Philadelphia, Pa., ssys: "I have used it as a general tonic, and in particular in the debility and dyspepsia of overworked men, with satisfactory results." LYON'S KOZOTHIUM, Of 4 r4 i if fJSV ecroREusmc. AFTER USINC A GIFT TO THE GRAT. Lvons KozoTHiot m not a djre, but a clear fragrant oil, and acts purely a a tonic to the ha r follicles and capillary circulation of the scalp, whereby it restores the natural action, and as a result rttlortt tkr tuttural color to the hair, leaving it oft and beautiful. Unlike all other to-called restoratives, tt , fa entirely free from Sttlfhur, Nitrttt Sifrrr, and all noxious and deleterious chemicals. It is an tU' gnt Hair Drttting, depetiting n sediment ufom the scml; does not Mam tbe skin, nor soil the most ..'Clxate fabric. Address A. KIEFER CO. Indianapolis lud. for bal: TPOR SALK-MiUhewi' Patent Renewable MenJD orandom Book. Bend for aampU copy and price list. Samples aent paatpald to aay aadreaa oiLirecelpt ot M oenti for No. I,or40 caataforNa. I Aairen8ÄTlÄlL OOaCPINT, IaiHaaPoU

m 1A. MA,--

mm II

DYSPEPSIA Causes its victims to be mi.veraMe, hKta confused, und depress In mind, v.-ry irritable, languid, and drowsy. It i a dice which does not R-t well of itself. It reiuirea careful, persistant attention, and a reiii'-dy to throw ofl tlip cuus and tou up the dicnettve organs till they perform their dutica Willingly. Hood's t;trsapari:u has prm Just the required remedy in hundreds of CXe. ' M I have taken Howl's Sars:iarill.i for dyspepsia, irom whieh I have suffered, t year. I tried many other inedieines, but none proved ro tuit f aetory an Hood's Saraparilla,.' Thomas Cook, Uruh Eleetric Light Co, Kew York City. Sick Headache For the past two years I hare be? afflicted with severe beadaelieH and dyiej. ia, I was indueed to try Hood's Sarsanarilla, and lm? fnd pre.it relief. I cheerfully r-oiiiiiiend it to all." Mit. V- F. ANAi:LK, New Haveu. Coutu Mrs. Mary C. Smith. Cambridge jrf.rt. Mass., Mas a sufferer from dysjo-psia mid siek head ache. Mi? took Htmd's HarMiparilU aa4 found it the bct remedy tbe ever used. Hood's SarsapariUa Sold bv all druckst, f 1 ; six for 5. Made oidybyC.I.HOl & CO., Lowell. Mas. ( IOO Doses Ono DoIlar.N

-THE ITTLT) POTTER CTJRTI3.UtViPHREYS an e-miaeat Phictau. 2Ü24ijl,!&feaaltar. 1 Pover. lv,n.t:on. Ia:'tra:ut.nTJi.. .1 21 Worm, Vu.'iu l'etr. Worm t oiic... C r yt n Cn'. 1 1 . r 7l U '. ne of I aiaata DlarrIVotrh.1.1ren or Arialts Disentcr y, CtiuirR, BiiiouaCoiic.... CheteravJZorb.Ts, Yaruiuuj ("ouha. lironcbitw SMi'l;?a. 'i'nnt a 19. Kacvarh. .. Ilesdo. im, s;--k I'tIscj, Vertigo I)t-areDsia. C.o-jiiSt-Tisrh 4 4 6 7 1 1 Su?))i:.ik1 or JPaiul't:! I'crlod PJ1 H org go PATH 1C VVhitM.tM l'mfii Hno.l ri .r,i w0 t ritli p. Coai. Aui jt.i Ki-w.' Lbiuw. .. . "Salt i;:.rui,t, r -i-:p..J. 1'r.y.mii 14 t M H'.ien ma t .;i, 1 L .-i-u' -s Vi . . I t'A Fotm 1 .. jtfi i. ' v us. iuua.'i4 . ft 31 FUp. I'liaa r tj;.o.nr 1 1 rar-h, :'j or earn:'; l-r'ac-.- -!-.-; rili.V toi X C vipua CJenen i't Ivittney I i-ne .... iVenwi 1 Vr( lit y. law i4 Vrinirv UV.l.iyi, Wctrir Bed t il lUaeaertiT'w rl-r rt.i'ain.'mn iJX ta.d by lrj?:i:s. or vrt p. ';.! on Tent ot iri.-.:.i tr r. .lamonrrTr Itoooo l?Hrfai-, tic. iHiiz:; r.'-t ' n m 'lo:"". I"n. vi-ln-x, laVriii'lilt K S 'Jlodicine Co., liJ iuilou bU,Siv koriu DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S REMEDY For the Cnre of Kidney and TArtr Coca plaint. CouatlpatioM, ant a'l disorder animi; from an impnre tat of tb BIXrOD. To women who auifcr fiom any of the ills peliar to their tax it ii an unfailing friend. All I)ruirtriU. One Dollar a bott'e, or aJdreM Dr. Ian4 Kennedy. Hondont, N. T. FEARFULLY COMMON. Kidney Complaint Amour Itoth Sz aaf AM.-A Brilliant B-OTry. There'ig tometbing startling ia tbe rapid ia crease cf kidney diseases among the American people within a few years past. Many causei peculiar to certain classes tend to produce and aggravate these troubles as. for example, careless living, overwork, and exposure. Dr. lavlJ Kenrjexiy, of Rondout. h". Y.. Is often congratulated on tbe exception al saecess of his medicine called FAVORITE REMEDY in arrestlni: and radically curing these mon painful and dangerous disorders. Proofs of this, like the folio wins, are constantly brought to his attention, and are publifheU by him for the sake of thousands of other suflerers whom he desires to reach and benefit. The letter, therefore, maybe of vital importance to yon or to some one whom you know. It is from one of the best known and popular drusiosU ia tbe fine and growing; city from which he writes and doubtless where those may find Mr. Crawford at his place of business, on the corner of Mala and Union streets: Srp.is;nF.i.r. Mass., March 22, ISM. Dr. David Kennedy, Rouaout, K. Y. : Dkah Sir. For ten sears I bad been afflicted with kidnev disease in its most acute form. What I soflered must be leit to the Imagination for no one can appreciate it except who have gone t.'irousb it. I retorted to many physicians and to many different kinds of treatment, and spent a great de J of money, only to rind my sell older aad worse than ever. I may aay that I used bottles of t preparation widely advertised as a specific tor this precise sert of troubles, and found It entirely useless at least tn my caqe. Your FAVORITE REMEDY f say it with a perfect recollection of all that wai done for me besides, is the o!i thins that did me the iligatevt good: and I am happy to admit that it rave ma permanent relief. I have recommended KAVOK1TE REMEDY to many people for kidney disease, and they all scree with me in saying that DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY has not its equal in the wide world for thli distressing and often fatal complaint. Cse this letter as you deem best for the benefit of others. Yours, etc. LYMAN CRAWFORD. FOUTZ'S HORSE AND CATTLE POW0ER3 wo llor.'K irttl file of Colic. P-or or Luse Fa Tits, If Fontr.'s I'owfiers are used Intimi. FoiitrH I'owriom willmre and prevent HoflCiinraa. Fount's Piwlra will prevent Gen lv tnwi Fontz Powden will tm-rea-" ifce nnantrtr of nil! and cream twenty per cent, and make the butter Ural and wpf t. Fotitz Powder will enre or prevent lnxwt avssi Dir bf to winch Hbrse and attle are afihet. FdTO'i Powmas will sivk KATisracrios. 6old everywhere. DAVID . FOUTZ. Proprietor. BALTIMOEZ.KS. Catarrh What Is Catarrh? It is a disease ot the 3S mucous membrsne generally originating iu the nasal passages and msintaining Its Stronghold In tee head. From this point it rends forth a poisonous virus along the membraneous linings and throught the .ii ge live organs, corrupting the blood and producing other trouh:eooie and dangerous mitomr. Cream Halm is a remedy tasd upon a -or reel diacnosls of this dii-eaiie and can be de- - i'-"iin , cv -. r aar aav a, v iinrnrrr'&!?. i r riAr r citrt i -, HAY-KVERaJ.Tlxri.i. Ely'i CrMn Bal w is a remeuy lounueu oa acorrectdiagoo"of this dineaae aud can be depended npon. Cream Balm causes no T. Gives relief at once. Cleanses the head. Causes healthy secretions. Abates Inflammation, mrenta lreb colds. Beala the anre. Restores the sense ot tasttand smell. A thorough treatment will cure. Not a liquid or nu9. Applied into the nostrils, ßoc. at drnggiata; 60c. by mail, Sample bottles tr mall. 10c K IA' .BROTHERS Druggists. Owego. N. T. STOPPED FREE tmane Parous Rettorst' DrJLLDTE'S GREAT Nerve Restorer 'drtunftNim IHutui. i a tirr SIX! BL tftea as directed. A t" ßrttiatt. TrMth4Baltrlalbls(reB F oabeat. tT awvagerjireM rharrm tJ mm rim KU N K-i Arrk k..PktlalrllilH rewmm A. Ami iMMal. f Mrt. Mb I DMtxbO. SiU AJt-M OF IM1 TAU

0-0

sii