Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 30, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1885 — Page 4
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL" WEDNESDAY. JANUARY T 85
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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7. TERMS PB IEABi Ingle Copy, without Premium. 1 1 00 lab of eleven for- . 10 00 We ask Democrat! to Dear la mind, and select fcelr own SUte paper when they oome to take Ubscriptions and make np clubs. Agents making np club send for any Inform Uoa desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianpolu, Ind. . JfOnCE!
Oar friends who send ui their own names or those cf others as subscribers to the Santinel will please be very careful to write initials and surnames intelligibly. Ia this connection will Mr. Sim Dann f lease tend us the postofSce address of Mr. "William I. Eloomer? We received the letter containing the money, but the poatofUce rddre-s was omitted. F.efxerihq to Mr. Hayes' remark that he ad determined never to be interviewed again, the St. Louis Republican camaieats tis follows: "Wey any human being should vr3nt to read anything he says or knov any thirg about his movements is a mystery we can not solve. He has illustrated in his parton tie highest capacity of ;an 0ht3 Republican for fraud, and having ebne tau, let Jiirn sink out of tight forever." A gentleman called on the Tresident elect the ether day, accompanied by his little Hind boy, six years eld. The boy ia an inmate of the New York Institution for the Blind, in which thirty years ago Governor Cleveland was a teacher. "When his father toid him to shake hands with the President he exclaimed: "How I do wish I could see him! ' The cppeal was eo pathetic Qd earnest tkat others beside the boy could not tie clearly for a few moments. The wranglirs and rioting which are coing O n in Dakota ovtr the choice of" county eat wonld, we fear, prejudio the Territory's chances of bciu admitted to the Union at the present time if it lad any to be impaired. Philadelphia Pres (Rap.). What! "Wrangling and riotiag" in a Territory where every county givrs a Republican majority and the wickrd Democracy continually routed? Graciois powers! How can it be? Ferish the unhHowel thought. Wrangling, rioting and Republicanism almost three R's. The Philadelphia Tines says of Presidentelect Cleveland's civil service reform: "This letter w iL' not, howevjr, bring mach comfort to the nun now in mcs who have made their pUces recruiting stations for a political jarty rnd who have suddenly been seized with peat admiration for the tenure of office portion of the civil service reform principle. He srves notice upon such persons that thej will be expected to go and that without Fcriuscf unnecessary delay. And if thsre is t be any genuine reform of existing method! Ihe official guillotine can not be set ia rYion too quickly." INTO THE DEMOCRATIC FOLD. The National, of Montieello, Ind., of the ti inst., begins its leading editorial with the Allowing announcement: - "With this issue of the National we take cur leave of tbe Greenback party and join lands with the new Democratic party of the inure." Continuing the editor wisely remarks: 'The recent letter of Mr. Cleveland on civil f-ervlce reform, his past official conduct together with the recent policy aad the declaration of the Democratic party has led ns to conduce that the best interests of the whole ;v?op.'e who form what is known as the labori es passes, will be safely guarded by him p.nd that party, and that he and that party deserve end will continue to deserve the moral support of every friend of good government." The Sentinel extends a cordial welcome to Che National upon its connection with the Democratic press. We have ever held the .Nationals Greenbackers as they are familiarly known to be the natural allies of the Democracy in any contest between the latter and the Republican party. We wish our contemporary a prasperous career in its ew departure. 'ÜHRE3 "R'a" WANTED IN DAKOTA. There b a large class of Bourbonked Republic ans who assume, in their unpardonable Ignorance and prejudice, that in addition to all the morality there Is in tte world that the Republican party have monopolized all the education and polite learning as well. In Dakota it Las been claimed that every county rolls up a healthy Republican majority. Democrats being scarce one wonld think according to the Eourbon Republican theory lh&t education and refinement were the normal state of the inhabitants of this new and aspiring Territory. It was with some surprise, therefore, that we found in an exchange the following letter, written by James Heath, the Republican Probate Judge cf IfcLcan County, Dakota: "CO-NKLIK, Oct. 8, 1831. "Mr. Peter Stuart: "Ihe school is Btandin in Need of Wood ts teacher and Children bath sea they Suffer with Cold. I Sint you Woord that I woold Lai) and chop some wood but I Got N3 reply Only that Mr. Alien was Going to Hall Srae hut Mr. Allen has Started to Bismarck this morning. Must the School do with fire till Ha return? James Heath." We are told that Judge Heath was recently elected ia McLean County, and that there are only three Democrta In that county. The three "K'a" wanted in Republican Dakota are '"readin, 'ritln', and 'riti-metic' THE COLORED MAN AND THE DE LIOCRACY. That an andienca of colored and white citizens should come together, ai occurred at Checkering Hall one night last week, to indorse the incoming President, must be extpperatin to the Blaine nowsparpere and demagogues who still rant of the Democracy being the enemy of the colored people. There were two speakers at the meeting a 'Mack man, Ker. W. Ii. Derrick, and AlgsrTioa S. Sullivan, a white man. Mr. Derrick made , an eloquent speech, in which be argued that, .while local trocb!es might arise In same fkmthern States, the colored man need have no fear respecting his rights In the hands of the Democratic party. He frankly confessed to disappointment at Mr. Riaine'i defeat, but In a manly way expressed an earnest c'.alre for the success of Mr. Cleveland's a JixLafetration, believing him to be of the
manly nature that could rise above party and become the ideal ruler for the good of all the people, lie hild that no impediment should be thrown In the way of Mr. Cleveland's administration. The duty ot the colored man, he said, was to mind his own business, learn all he could, and when he was possessed of educated intelligence his brain power would have its way and the question of rights would be a thing of the past The resolutions adopted by the meeting declared "the cheerful acceptancelby the colored man of the result of the recent national contest, with the stern expectation of their jast dues via., the proper and faithful administration of the laws which protect the rights and privileges guaranteed by the Constitution to all American citizens." It is very evident that intelligent, fairminded Republicans, both black and white, are beginning to tee that the defeat of James O. Blaine and the triumph of Grover Cleveland was a God-send to the country. They see in the result the dawn of an era of goodwillthe going down of sectional animosities. To-day the most pitiable creatures in the United States are the sore-heads who are continuing efforts to stir up strife between any portion of the country and the incoming administration. Bat it is gratifying to see the signs that they will fall in this as they failed in their eCorts to elect the man who attained to notoriety and to leadership in his party, Bolely in the role of sectional
strife stirrer. THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT IN DANGER. There is one blunoer this country has committed upon which no criticism can be too severe. In the City of Washington has been erected a monument, the highest structure of human hands on the earth. Jts summit reaches into cloudland, and may be 6een from afar. For nearly forty yean the people of the United States have been taxed or its erection. Hundreds of thcusands of money bare been expended upon it money which might hsfe been used, had it not been thai foolishly applied, as "sosp" for the Republican candidate during the recent hippodrome canvass for votes. And for wha. was this costly monument npreared? In hose honor has its crest been lifted heavenward? Whence came he? What was his property holdings? We would fane twist an answer which wonld bring no shame with it, but truth compels the admission that Georg9 Waahington was from the SDuth that solid monstrosity which good Mr. Blaine and his virtuous organs decry. He was born in the South, lived in the South, and died in the Scuth. This circumstance alone is sad enough to relate, but there is one much worae to follow: "The Father of his Country" was a slave owner. That these are serious charges to bring against the memory of him who was "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen" is admitted, nor would the Sentinel risk a libel suit from the millions of children of the country's father anlets fortified with indubitable proof of its statements. The latter comes from the lips of Jos iah Quincy, an old man of eighty Beven, now residing at Marshall Hall, on the Maryland aide of the Potomac. While a youth Quincy liyed many years with tbe Custis family and personally knew a number of the slaves that had belonged to Washington. 'Washington did not own slaves for pleasure,' Bays Mr. (Quincy. 'He made thena work, I tell you, and if they were not out ia tbe morning, they must have a good reason for it. Mr. Custis often said that General Washington could get more work out of a negro than any other man in Virginia. Bat he was a very just man. He would not overwork them, and he would not let them be punished il they did not really deserve it. lie would not whip a slave himself, but sometimes he would knock one dawn with his Cat. One of his slaves, named Sam, had a tear on his cheek which he told me his master put there. The General caught Sam riding one of his fine horses one day, and he gave him a blow that Sana never forgot.' " What will the patriots ef the Republic say upon reading the above? these patriots who twenty years after the abolition of slavery in the South, have been holding the people of that section np to hatred for having o?rned slaves. What will be their appreciation of the Washington monument? Will they net move to raze it to its foundations? May we not expect to see the editors of the Tribune of New York and Chicago, the Commercial-Gazette of Cincinnati, and the Journal of Indianapolis, armed with battering rams, marching to Washington to beat down the Washington monument? Nay, nay we not look to see their respective papers moving to have the name of the National capital changed from Washington to Blainetown or Plumedknightsville? Seriously, if the monumental asses who can never separate Southern Democracy from slavery would be consistent, they should hold George Washington as unworthy, for the same reason, of national respect and include him prominently in their denunciation. But it is true, in all fairness, that such ridiculous twaddle should cease. Slavery was approved by the Constitution of the United States as fully twenty-five years ago as in Washington's day. The South has no more desire to reinstate slavery to-day than has the dust of Washington in his tomb at Mount Vernon. Peek HrACiirrH has fallen upon evil days since his return to France. He ia, indeed, a voice cryiDg In the wilderness, as religious bodies of all denominations refuse him their pulpits. The other day he proposed to deliver a discourse at Neuilly, In the neighborhood of Paris, but could find admission nowhere. At last, in desperation, he brought the English rector of a little Anglican church, recently erected, to grant him admission, and at first the English minister was as obdurate as the rest. Finally Fere Hyacinth won him by promising to pro nounce a panegyric on Luthe, which he did, comparing him to himself. The congre gttion amounted to seven. At Havana, when a distinguished stranger visits the tobacco factory cf E:nor Cibaua Or Partagas, the custom ist) offer him an "öb?equio" by fashioning a new brand of c'gars in his honor. To this we owe the excellent cigars known es the Serrano and the Hen ry Clay. The London tobacco manufacturers elected to pay Char'.cs Dickens the Cuban campliment. A neat little cigar, costing only two cent, was devised, and was christened the "Pickwick," which etill retains itajxjpularity in England.
INDIANA STATISTICS.
Chief Pcelle Submits II U Sixth Annual Report. Something- of the Work: of the Bureau Agricultural, Economic, Manu facturingf. Educational and Other Statistics. The sixth annual report of the State Bureau of Statistics for 1884. which, whea la print, will make a good sized volume of considerably above 500 pages, will shortly make its appearance. Ia his letter to the Governor, William A. Peelle, Jr., the Chief ot the Bureau, says: "Although acting under many embarrassments not the least of which were the defectiveness of the law and the want of funds available, arising from the fact that the appropriation bill in 1383 did not become a law the department has b pared neither time nor labor in its endeavor to present as creditable and complete a re port as ia former years;" and in conclusion he repeats most urgently the request already made in the report for 1333 of so amending the law creating the Bureau of Statistics as to require all county officers to make annual reports to the department, and also to pro vide for a reasonable compensatlen for their statistical work. The Urge material tabulated and classiSed iu the report for 1S31, embracing agricultural, economic, manufacturing, railroad, so cia.', educational, vital, criminal, and mineral statistics, followed under the head of "Miscellaneous" by internal revenue and pension statistices, contains a great deal of valuable information concerning the development of vast natural re -to arc es aad the advancement and progress our people have rna-'e during the year on the road leading ta civilization and refinement. AGKICTLTCRAL STATISTICS. The following totals of the acreage and production cf the principal eroj a för 1331 are given in the report, viz. : Wheat, 2 9W.SH acres: 40.6U.200 bnhe!s. Com, .1371U acres: bO.lM.lsi bui-liel. Catc, 7äl.8i3 acres; W.57Ö.U7 burets. l;arlry, ll.'JQ? acres: 2T3.10 bushels. l:ye, acres: 43i,2tt bushels. Potatoes, S7,4 18 acres; 5,S0'J,4G1 bushel J. Buckwheat, 5.&2 acres; 62,231 bustiels. Tobacco. 20.7U acres; 15.5.J2 408 pounds. Timothy. 1,217 üj) tzia: L43.312 tons of hay. Clover. 90s,-i3S acre: 1,501, sou tons of hay. Flax, 28.1C6 acres; 185,2i7 basbela ol flaxseed; 21,57:s tons ot Uax straw. orhum, 1,-00,601 gallons of molasses; 70,073 pounds of sunr. Maple, 172.44) gallons of molasses; 115,239 pounds of Fusar. Wool, clipped in 1S31, 4,773.703 pounds. Total number of dotuestic animals-all ages: ITorf-es ... 510,957 51.318 1.112,'J73 1 ,7,9fU 2,122,57 l.av,12 4i3,5'.'l Mules - - Cattle (of which 4Cl,4b"3 are milch cows) Hogs Stork lio.;9. ..........-........ t?uOCP SLirGUTEKED ANIMALS. Cattle...Hoes 137,342 1,270,71 Shoep... .. 5j,CJ3 MII.K, BUTTER AND CHEESE. Gallons of Milk 152,415,44 Founds of Butter made.....................M 34.551.423 Pounds of Cheese made . 6X,"j4 CIDKR, WINE AND VINEGAR. Gallons of Cider 3,175,41 (ial ions of Wine 49.629 Callous of Vinegar - 8ö7,l3t There are Ii 95S.347 rods of drain tile in operation in 1SS1, against 11,4S7,M4 in 1833; atid C8 1,372 rods of open ditches were reported constructed in lSl. The estimated apple crop for 1SS1 was 2 3:io,l5 bushels of summer and fall, and 1,7J8,014 bnshels of winter apples, giving a total of 4,lvSi,l47 Vushels. Total value of all farm products for ISSI, as estimated according to the current market prices, is f ir)3,OiVJ;3; value of stone and coal, $2 500,C0J; value ot manufactnrd product, fl(;3.sjl,872; grand total, $31,4-37,-ECONOMIC ETATTSTIC3 The principal items of economic features are the county expenditures which are Bhown, by counties, for the last six years, sj as to allow a comparison, at a glance, of the same class of expenditures in the E&uie county. Ar other table Eives the amount o( Btate, county, townsüip, tpes'al 83hotl, road, dog and all other taxe. with the total taxation on the tax duplicate of counties for the year ending May 31, ls.l: State tax , New fctate House tax 51,217.02 43 lt.0.9-3 74 l.J.fcO.411 i6 42.CI0 73 4,187.0)3 Ü7 524.4 2 0 ;-iate bcaool ......... I 'vrxnancnt endowment Inidiana Unl vtrsity County tax Townüvlp tax... Tuition tax JJ3 60 61 Special ecbool tax 1,611,8 li 19 Road tax- . as,4 o 79 Dog tax - 20VJH 29 All other taxes 1.2rl.3l 77 Total taxes of lsi3. 12,5.59.131 35 leliniutnt taxes 1,853,619 36 Total Uxes including delinquencies... 11,372,553 71 VALUATION OF TAXABLE PROl fiBTV, Value or land 5321,522,297 Value of unpToveiccnts. 69,10s,911 Value of lots 65,49(, J57 Value of Improvements.. 80,212,&22 Value of personal property, Including rat! road and telegrapu property 293,109,3S5 Total valued taxables &49.4i,,.i2) lotal state debt JuneöO, lSa4 . 4,ii70,tSu MANITACTCKIXG. The principal Industries in the State are Kiven, showing in twenty-five tables, the number of establishments of each clajs, capital invested, the value of the raw material and of the manufactured product, the average number of hands employed, and the total wages paid during the year. The following summary ia given or the year: Number of establishment...... 12,229 Capital Invested...... J53.0U.9I9 Value of raw material - ..... 97.267.90' Value of manufactured product. 163,851,873 Averape number hands employed . 73.921 loial wages paid... 31.273,31J EAILKOAD STATISTICS. There have been added during the year 18! SO miles of main tracK, 7.93 miles second main track, and C5.10 miles of side track, eo that the entire length of railroads now ia Indiana amounts to 5, 429.4: miles of main track, C3.52 miles of second main track, and MOO 4 4 miles of side track. Total valuation of all the railroad property in Indiana for 1884 amounts to ,007,037, against $3 14 30,t)32inl8S3. One hundred and eighty-seven persons were reported killed by railroad accidents in Indiana during the year, and C17 were injured. SOCIAL STATISTICS. Total number of church organizations, of all denominations, in the State, 4,130, with 3.7S3 church edifices, and a total membership of 453,883. Members admitted to full membership daring the year, 37,413. Total value of church buildings, lots and other church property estimated at 1 11,030, 51; salary paid ministers during year, f 1,120,700; other church expenses, f3G2.6'Jl; missionary and other charitable cantributions, $211,803; number of Sunday school teachers, 21401, and number of pupils attending Sandayschool, 243,i3. dumber cf piaaos reported in the State for 1S34, 10,507; number of orcans, 24,115; number of sewing machines, 14D.533. The Circuit Clerks of CS counties reported 1.237 divorces, of which number 732 were granted to the wife and 314 to the husband. Naturalizations were reported from 01 counties, 6hoing a total of 1,310 persons nataralIzed during the year. Seven were from Austria, It from British America and Canada, 20 from Denmark, 135 from England and Wales, 2'J from France, G54 from Germany, 28 from Holland and Belgium, 07 from Ireland, 11 from Italy, 2'i from Uussia,
113 from Sweden and Norway, 25 from Switzerland and 18 11 other countries. There were 3,473 inmates of County Asylums reported for 1S34, 1,847 males and
1.C26 females; 2,783 were over sixteen years J or age, and (ft2 ander sixteen years, ur the total number, 94 were blind, 30 deaf and dumb, 649 insane, 3C0 idiots, 2 tö crippled, 310 ot old age, 349 were sent to asylums for medical treatment, and 344 died during the year. , EDUCATIONAL STATISTICS. The aggregate value of the common school property of the State is $13.440,470, against $13.010,931 in 1833, being an increase of 129,548. During the past year 305 new school houses have been built, at a cost of $.514,630. The common school fund has beea increased during the year $G7,45D.79, and the amounts held on mortgaged real estate by the counties is $5,308,775.33. The enumeration of children of school age (ix to twentv-one years) was 722,800. against 719,035 in 1SS3. being an increase of 07er 3.800 fcr this year. Thera were 401,831 white and 7,285 colored children admitted into our public schools during the year, making a total of 4G9.11G pupils, who were instructed by 13,615 teachers (male and female), among whom there were 145 colored teachers. VITAL AND 6AMTAEY FTATISTICS. The total number of births for the year ending September 30, 1831, was 40,153, viz., 30.3SO white and 703 colored. In 31.903 cases both parents were American, In 2.819 both were foreiga, 479 had an American father and foreign mother, while 1,200 had an American mother and foreign father: 443 of the whole number were plurality births and 573 illegitimate births. The total number of marriages was 13,762, the highest number occurring in the ninths of September and October, and the lowest in June and July. In 14.0G0 marriages bath husband and wife were American; in 9J3 both were foreign, while in 270 the husband was American and the wife foreign, and in 527 the husband w,as foreiga and the wife American. The total number of deaths darin? e year has beea 15,3'3, of which number 7,875 were males, and 7,193 females. CBIMIXAt PTATISTI3. The number of persons confined iu jail during the year (only sixty-three counties reporting) was 12,530, of whom 6 305 were native aad 1,007 foreign born; 0,931 were for misdemeanors, and the balance for criminal offenses. Number of State caEes commenced during the year, 7,435; number of indictments returned, 6,481; convictions in criminal cases, 2,523; convictions for misdemeanors, 2'40i; leaving 2.900 State cases pending at the end of the year. In another table the number of prisoners in the penal and reformatory instituitions of tbe State are given with the classification of crimes for which they were sentenced: Number of prisoners in tbe St.te Frlsou North Octor 31, 1&4. - C63 Kumbsr of prisoners In the Southern SUte ITisou. 50 F.cfOim School for Boys, at l'ialulicll 457 Ke'ormatory for Women, Indianapolis, renal Dcpartm e n t ...... 60 Reformatory ... 142 MINERAL STATISTICS. The mine and quarry product reported during the year has been: 768,376 cubic feet of sandstone, 6,012,110 cubic feet ot limeStone, 1,211,508 bushels of lime burned, 302014 bushels of cement made, 1.722,031) tons of coal mined and 502,115 cubic yards of gravel sold. MISCELLANEOUS. In this part of the report some very interesting statistics of Indiana revenue and of pensions are given. The collections of Indiana revenue in the several districts of the SUte for the year ending June 30, 1331, have been: From distilled rplrita ? 5,931,163 from tobacco- .... lW from tcrciemed liquors.- 3J5.6J1 J Li 09a - ... Collections not otherwise provided lor.-. 12 ToUl receipte. Refunded. ,9 5,618,512 14i Nct totftl.(MMMii,.iMi..t-t &,ClH3G7 The total expenses of the several collection districts in the State have been ?1?G,4C6. and tbe State has paid since the Internal revenue has been in operation, from 1803 ts 1831 in clusive, 109,707,141 of internal revenue. There were on the roll of the Tension Auen at Indianapolis, on June 30, 1831, 23,352 pensioners, to whom, during the. year, the following amounts have been paid: Kepular pensions- 8 4,isi,0st Arrears. :i.4ö7 fcui&ry and other ollica expense. 19,117 Total disbursement, S 4.503.6C6 In closing his letter to the Governor he pays him a compliment in the uniform courtesy and kindness which His Excellency has at all times shown him. Of his principal assistant, Mr. Charles Forster, he says: 4To my principal assistant, Mr. Charles Fors'er, I desire to again acknowledge the valuable cervices he has rendered me by his efficiency and the fidelity with which he has performed the difficult duties assigned him. F.is position has been one of labor, but his superior education and aptness have enabled him to satisfy the conudence that reposed in hliu." THAT FKEE TRADE CANARD, Frank Hard explains That He Never Said Cleveland Ya the I'resldent of a Free Trade Clnb. Toledo, Jan. 2. In relation to the circulated report as to an assertion made by him in reference to the connection of Governor Cleveland with a free trade club, IIou. F. H, Hard says that he had a private conversation in a private room with a few friends, in Cincinnati, in which the policy of the new administration as to tariff reform was under diicnssion. In that conversation Mr. Hard said he thought Governor Cleveland would be found in sympathy with the views of a majority of the Democratic party on that point. As a circumstance, he stated he had been informed by a prominent citizen of Buffalo that the organization of a free trade club, in that city, took place in the office of the law firm of which Governor Cleveland wss a member. Mr. Hurd never intended to be understood as saying that Governor Cleveland was ever connected with a free trade organization, as he had no informs, tion upon the subject from that gentleman, ner from any one, except aa herein etated. The conversation was supposed to be a purely private one, among a party cf gentlemen. Rather a good joke was uttered the ether day at one of Pierre Veron'a dinnerj, to which literary and 'political men alone are invited: "Do you know why Kichepin, after all, did cot go Into the desert? ' said some body. '2o, indeed!" "Well, he was careering along on a camel, when he met an Arab, and asked him the name of the waste land be saw extended before him. ' 'Tis the great 6a(ha)ral' said the Arab. 'What, a?ain!" cried Kichepin: 'I really thought I had got rid of her?' And, turning the camsl'a head round, he returned to the fcpot whence he came," London Truth. A Kixo-BiARTED lady of Gilroy, Kan., has constituted herself a good angel of all tramps. She not only gives them a square meal, but wine and cigars. Taught by an Octopus. A diver who was trying to find pearls off the Alaska coast found none, but found himself, all of a sudden, in the graip of an ugly ortopus with arms twenty-seven feet lung. Such an experience is rare; but there are thousands of people who are caught by dyspepsia, which is quite as bad. An octopus hates to tet go. So do9 dyspepsia. Orown's Iron Bitters settles dyspepsia and makes it loose Its cruel grip. Mrs. Schmidt and her daughter, ot 150 Conway street, Baltimore, were both cured of dyspepsia by the ose cf Brown's Iron Ritters.
EMPHATIC GUARANTEES,
TThlch are Justified by an Extraordinary Public Experience. To the Public Greeting: As the conductors of the largest business of the - kind in the world (and therefore having an extraordinary experience), we feel justified in making the following statements: Oar Theory Proved. First. We have held from the beginning that most of the common ailments are caused primarily by kidney and liver disorders, net primarily by bad blood; that bad blood is caused by temporary or chronic derangement of the kidneys and liver, and that by restoring these blood-purifying organs to health we could cure most cf the common ailments. Other practitioners, however, haye held that extreme kidney and liver disorders were incurable. VTe have proved t) the contrary in thousands of cases. Safeguards Against Epidemics. Second. The kidneys and liver are the sewers of the system, and unless they are kept in perfect working order no amount of public sanitation can prevent epidemics rag lag among the people. The prudent man, in the winter and spring, will fortify the system against any such possibility. Dr. Koch, the celebrated German Scientist and physician, eüys, for instance, that cholera will have but little effect among tho-e who keep tbe digestive organs and the kidneys and liver in a healthful operation. Warner's Safe Remedies are the beet scientific curatives and preventives, and Bhould be used now as a safeguard against any future scourge. Scientific Specific. TfiiRP. We do cot cure every known disease from one bottle, for Warner's Safk lUmedies number seven scientific specifics, wh:rh have been put upon the market only in obedience to Etrong public demand. Becognled Standards. Fourth. Warner's Safe Remedies, spite of all opposition, hav9 won the favor of the profession as well as the masses, and am recognized as the leading standard medical preparations. Strong Guarantees. Fifth. After six years of unequalt-d experience, we can give these unqiitlitled gnaranteea. GUARANTEE I. Pure and harmless. That Warner's Safe Remedies are pure and harmless. GUARANTEE II. Testimonials genuine. That the testimonials used by us, so far as we know, are bora fide, with a forfeit cf $.",000 fcr prorvt to the contrary. tiUAlUNTKE III. Curative Effects Permanent. That Warner's Safe Remedies are not merely temporary, but peruiaaeat. ia thtir curative effects aad will sustain every claim, if used sufficiently and as directed. Proofs of Permanency. Sixth. Special inquiry among hun dreds of our oldest patients results in unequivocal testimony that the cures wrought six, live, four and three years ego were permanent. . And most of these patients were pronounced Incurable when they began Warner's Safe Remedies. Read a few of thousands of testimonials. ELDER JAME3 8. PRESCOTr, Box 202, Cleveland, O., in 1S73 was pronounced incurable of Brighfs disease; ia 1870 he began the use of Warner's Safe Cure, and in 1331 he reported: "Health never better; just past eightieth year; am an enthusiast for Warner' Safe Cure." K. II. McMICHAEL, Emporia, Kas., in 180 had inflammation of the bowels auda monstrous abdominal tumor. lie began nsirg Warner's Safe Cure, 23 bottles of which, he Baid July 15, 18S4, "permanently cured rr." MRS. HELEN LEIKEM, West McHenry, 111., two years ago u?ed Warner's Safe Cure and Safe Nervine for complete prostration. August, 1S31, ehe said: "I have never enjoyed such good health." S. A. GEirVS, East Liverpool. O., in 1870 was attacked with vertigo and dyspepsia of the worst kind; he was cured by Warner's Safe Curt in 1882, and December 5, 1SS1, he reported that he had had no trouble, since he was permanently cured by Warnei'e Safe Cure. REV. JAMES WAXHAM, Laporte. Ind.. la l!vS2 was cured of Bright's disease by Warner's Safe Cure, and in 1884 he wrote: "My health is tnlly restored." EDWIN FAY, of Davenport, Iowa, was cured of Rrlght's disease and Kidney complaint in ISSI by Warner's Safe Care. Dacamber 4, 1331, he wrote: "I am now free from Kidney disorder." Seventh. It is a source of great gratification to ns that Warner's Safe Remedies have been permanently beneficial to so many sufferers. This permanency of power over disease gives them the most exalted rank, and in this particular they have do equal. II. H. WARNER & CO. Rochester, N. Y., January 1, 1885. PEUSOXAIiS. ArrpREW Campbell, the postmaster at Clemetb, Union County, Georgia, has been arrested for robbing the mails. He admits his guilt. Cap.lyle's boose is to be marked similar to the house of Goethe, in Frankfort-on-the Main, with the idea of it being then a monument to his memory. Is America we call men who dabble in dynamite "dynamiters," Canadian papers call them "dynamiteurs," and the English press refers to them as "dynamitards." Osz of his few remaining admirers sent as a Christmas present to Schuyler Colfax a $12 suit of store clothes suitable for the lecture platform, but Schuyler will continue to wear the same old smile. Georgs Tyleb and Frank O . Walker, two young Americana who have been studying in Florence for the past three years, have been singing in the London Crystal Palace concerts with decided success. Tom Matthews, a famous clown, is living at Brighton, England, eighty years old, hale and hearty. The jokes he used to get off are also bale and hearty, and much older than eighty years. Boston Transcript. A nors temperance lady expressed her delight when she read that many gin houses are burning down in Georgia. Bat some one killed all her joy by informing her that the gin houses referred to were cotton gin houses. W. E. Ccetir, who failed of confirmation by the Senate the other day as Secretary to the South American Commission, says William Penn Nixon, and not he, wrote the letter reflecting upon Senator Logan in the Zuni Indian matter. " Geokgk Edwards, alias Giles, who had pleaded guilty to the charge of passing a counterfeit dollar, was sentenced by Judge Morris in the United States District Coart, at Baltimore, last Saturday, to five years in the Albany Penitentiary. It is a little hard to convince the average fast young man that alcohol is poison, but four fast younemen in Westmoreland County haye made the discovery all at once. They ordered oyster stews, and poured common wood alcohol into the stews and ate it. Two of them are dead, and the other two hare hardly done wishing they were dead too, eo
s'ck did the mess make them. Philadelphia Times. Adjctart Giseral Drck is said to agree with General O. O. Howard in the opinion that deserters from the army ought to be branded. He says that dor hag the last fire years 10,901 soldiers have deserted from the regular army, or nearly every other man. It is the young lady with the brand new sealskin who is ever remarking, "How awfully cold it is!" while her less fortunate sister, with notiDg on but a summer jacket, is "just suffering from the heat," though the thermometer be twenty degrees below zero. Coucicai'lt says that he never goes into a dry goods etore where handsome girls are employed as forms on which to display garments without realizing that they are better actresses, in the manner of beauty, style aad grace, thaa those whom he finds on the steee. A dispatch from Raleigh, N. C, says: "Mia, Lucretia Garfield, wife of the murdered President, will in a fortnight visit Stanley County, this State, to look after mining interests there. She owns a goldmine, which yields her quite a neat income." An Arizona editor is letting the ofSce seek him as follows: "The miserable scarecrow who edits our contemporary is lying as usual. We don't want the FostoSice, but we are in the hands of our friends, and by the Eternal they'll see that we get it whether we want it or not." Virgil's birtbp'aee the little village of Fietole, in tbe Lombardy Plain, about five miles from Mantua bas just inaugurated a monument to the poet. Close to the village rises a truall hill, tbe Monthellt di Virilio, and here, according to local tradition, stool the house in which Virgil was bora. Mr. Vanperbilt can sleep o' nights now that he is secured against loss through General Grant's fissncial difficulties. We are advised, also, that Mr. Vanderbilt will now return to the former custom of having three full meals a day.--PbiladeIphia Press, The venerable General John C. Fremont, first defeated Republican Presidential csadidate, is still vigorous enough to promise to head a Mexican exploring party, thus resuming his original profession of "pathfinder," possibly in search ot the last defeated Republican Presidential candidate. Queis Banca of Castile, Fays a recent German writer, was the inventor of wigs. She was so shocked ht the bald head of her son, Kirg Louis, upon his return from a crusade in the Holy Land, that she requested a lock from each knight of the court whose hair reeembled her son's. These locks formed the fir&t wigs. Me. Oscae Wilpi, speakin? at Glasgow re
cently on ui)ftS." said a Lancsshirs mill girl, with a shawl over her shoulders and wearing clogs, knew more about dress than a fashiocable London lady recently returned from Paris, because in the former case there was comfort, while in the latter there was discomfort. A rnoMiNEST Government official in Washington tays that when in New York a few days ago he learned that five physicians had been called in consultuation to examine the Etate of General Grant's health, and that they had arrived at the conclusion that the General was completely broken down physically, and required absolute rest. An Arizona sporting man was recently Inveigled into a church fair and induced to try his baud at the wheel ol fortune. In half an hour he had all the money in the bank and a mortgage on the church. He very coLBiderately gave them back the mortgage, and in the future the church will choose its victims with mora care. Puck. Editor Caleb Foots, of the Salem (Mass.) Gazette, claims to be the oldest still active and acting journalist In the Unite! States, but as he is now eighty-three. Editor Foote is reasonably presumed to have one foot in the magnificent mausoleum most New England editors build for themselves or for their Presidential candidates. New York World. In Del ten, England, there is a club of men competed entirely of habitual wife-beaters. The object of the club is mutual assistance and protection. When a member beats his wife and a benighted magistrate fines him, the fine is paid out of the club foods, aad the gentleman goes home and gives his wife another beating just for lack. The noble Briton must have his fun. Me. Sharon, who Is having snch a scandalous Ume of it in San Francisco, owns about f 500,000 worth of real estate In Washington. Not long ago parts of the property were sold, one of the purchasers being Secretary Frelinghuysen ; but since the decision declaring that Miss Hill is Sharon's wife the purchasers have refused to complete the sale, lest there be legvl complications. Chief Jcstice Waite, of the United States Supreme Court, has been attended by a woman phytlc'.an during the recent serious illness from -hich he Is j net recovering. Mrs. Dr. Winslow is the family physician of the Waites. A strong pressure was brought to bear upon Mrs. Waite to induce her to call in some other physician. As hia was on the score of gender and not of ability or experience, that lady positively declined. Mr Herbert, of Muckross, who has now been a resident of New York for many months, and seems to have taken a fancy for this country, has let his beautiful forest, overlooking the celebrated KUlarney Lakes, to Mr. Amphlett, who, judging from the accounts In the Irish papers, is having royal sport there. Forty stags and nearly 1,200 woodcocks were brought down In a day. The O'Connell family have also a fine foreat near. When medical science admitted that rheumatism and neuralgia had their seat ia the blood, it remained to find a successful remedy for the poisonous acid which caused them. That remedy has been found. It has been named Athlophoros, which is a Greek word composed of athlon, a prizs, and phero. to bear away, that is "bearing away the prize." And this it does both in promptitude and final efficiency. Says Mrs. Eliza Evans, of Upper Derby, Delaware County. PetJEsylvania: "A.ter the third dos cf Athlophoros I rested better than I had done for months." TOS MEN! I atifTpvnr.tr fmm 111 f5fect ot Toothful ermanhood, etc. I will m-nu ou viiallc ireatw upon thebove1iao-.lso l;wi"i If'jriT',,-nI- VT"' ebirgo. Ad drew TruL t". U 1U LLK, Moodua.Unn. $250 A MONTH Aernti wnti. 90 N inir jiru.-W in tbf w..Hd. 1 .iii!e fr. iwwJAY BRONSON.Detroit.Mi&rw
A POSITIVE CURE For Every Form of Skin and Blood DUeaea, from Plmplci te tcrotuia. I bare had trie Psoriasis for cine months. A bent five months aeo I apphel io a doctor near Boston, who helped me, but unfortunately I bal to letve, but continued taking Ms mediciue for nearly Hire months, but tne disease did Dot la. i raw Mr. Carpenter's letter In tbe Pbllalelpnla Becord. and his case perfectly described mine. 1 tried tbe Cuticura Remedle. lusina; two batUoe Kcf-olveut, and Cuticura and Cuticura doo, la proportion, and call iajbclr completely ruroa. U. f. BAESAliD. Yk aterford, R. J. ECZEMA TWENTY YEARS Cared. Kot a 6 ten of Its Beapptarant. Your Cuticura bas done a wo-der!ul cire for me more than two years aco. Not a sign of lti rearptarenee tince. It cured rue of averybal Hzerra which bad troubled me for more tuan twenty years. 1 snail always speak well of Cuticura. 1 sell a great deal of it. FEAXK C. SWAN, DruLst. EaTernill, Mass. 11 EST FOK ANVrillNG. Daring used your Cuticura Re me lies for eighteen mfcutns for letter, aad finely cured it, I am auxku'to get it to eil on commission. lean recon:ment il beyond any reraeilt-s I have erer nei lor Tetter, Burns Cuta, etrv, in fvt, il 11 tue Let; medicine I bar a ever iriel for anytniag, k. s. uouro.N. Myrte, Mi:s. ecuoriLoi -i soue-;. I bad a dozen bad sores upon mr body, and tried all remedies 1 could near of, and at lwl tried your Cuticura Ktmjd.e a-'d tri-r hte cured we. JOHN GAdKlLU Hebron. Thavcr County. Tenn. Every pe les of Itchin?, A'ily, Pimply. Kcrofulotm, Inherited and Coutxgious Humors, wiia Lof a of Ua'r, cured by Cuticura Besoldest, tl new Hlood 1'uriQer, Internally, and Cuticura aad Cutifuia Soap, the gnt siin curei. cx'einally. Sold everywnere. Price: Cuticura, oj ccum; RcM)lvent, 1; toap, 3 cents. Potter Urns aud Chemical Co , l;.fton. "RT7 A TTrrr7rForChappelandOi:ySiLia. J311Xi.U JL 1 Cuticura Soap. Ii a ö PULLS at THE OLD RELIABLE." ,25 YEARS M USE. The Greatest Iledical Triumph of the Age I Indorsed all overt tic World. SYMPTOMS OF A TOF2P.D LEVER. LossofappetJte, Nausea, bowels cos tive. Pain in the Head. with a dull sen; ' sationm the baclrpart. Pain under ,thohonlder-blade, fullness after eat jlng,nthdiinclination to exertion I of body or mind, Irritability of temp.er, Low:pirits,LoSof memory .with j a. ieellng of having neglected seine duty, weariness. Di zziness, Flutterf ing of the'Heart, Dots lfoejhee3eSj 'ylloJti-KdichejR estiessriesa ; at night, highly, colored Urin ' IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED, tzz:z3 ri:zA:i3 tsill c;:s es isyil-xm. I I'JirS PILLS are ce:H ciully :iljn;cdto suc h cases, one do eü'ecta tue h a cLange of feeling as to astonisli tbe sufferer. They Increase the Appetite, unl cause the body to Take on l iest, thus the fystem is iiourl.hed, end by the'r Tonic Action on ti'.o IMc'tivc Organ. ItcftnUr Stvol tr prot'i'i1-., lri--e rmti. TÜTT'S HAIß ÖYE. Ghat If air or Wupki ks charpod to & GLOT KlaCK l-.yainple rp!ic:.ticn ( l th.it Irc. It in-.riirts n i.::tur:il color, acta Uistauuir.cou;'!-. .--M l y I n::ppta, or ecu.l t'y cx-,-7 : CT! TT-4""' of Cic14. f.lurrsy :.. Now Ynrk. i-i . . - - i SHERIFF'S SALIC Bv virtue of an exc-cutiou to mo Cirerted Iroai the Cltrk of tliö Lili ii Circuit Court of lu!ois County. I ad una. I will ex. peso at public sale, to to hi-on bidder, on SATURDAY, THE SIST'DAY OF JANUARY, A. U., l&ii, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. an 1 o'clock P. M. of Kai"l day, at the door of the Court-nou-of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and prorlu for a term not exceeding seven years, of the foilowinc real estate, to-wit: Lot No. thirty-two (32 in R'vett" second tubdi-vii-lon of part of outlots numbered ouebunired and heven (107) and one lrmdr?i anl e:pht(:usi, in the city o) Indianapolis: a's", lots inimxred eiJbty-four '.84) and tignty-five f) in Mccarty's subdivision of out'.ot number one hundred and ten (lie ;, Jn the city of Indianapoü. except fifty (50) feet off of the we?t ends of said lois numbered eighty-four (M) and eibty Cre ("i. Also, lot number four (i) t l Woods' subdivision of outlot number six (), west of Waita Kiver, la the city of Indianapolis. Also, lots numbered one (1) to forty-four (4i),inclnsive. in block number sixteen 1C. seventy three (73), seventy-four (74i andsereniy-five(75). in block nnmberseventeeu (17); one (1 to thirty (30 Inclusive in b'ock number nineteen (l'.'i one il) K thirty two (32) inclusive In block number tw?nty (20). and twenty ( JO) and twenty on (21), in blocs number twenty-four (21), In ürooklyn IleighU, Mar'oa County, Indiana And on failure to realize the fall amount of Irtertst and costs, 1 will, stttie tame time and place, expose to public s:de the Ice simple of ail rel estate. Taken as the property of Dp'o-s Root and JerOTje B. Kot. at the uit of Joun Ü. J ulAti, AafcikTii(eof Wiillam Hannaman. l?aid sale wi:i be made without eny relief whatever from valuation or arprii( Tnont laws. CihOR'.iE H. CARTER. 5-l.eriä'of Marion County. January 6. A. 1.. lsa. w3w Bases rrr& üKTOBirK, Attorneys for riainSTATK OF ISKTAXA. Mapio CorvrT. w: In the Superior Court of Marion County, ia tho State of li'diHita, No. S5.2C5. iienry K. Bond, Trustee, vs. Teaelope G. Mann ct ai. be It known. Tnatonthe 2?-t2syf lo-caber, lv4. the above named p'.ainti:!', by Lis attorneys, filed in theofiiee of the Clerk of thePupcrior Court of Marion County. In tne fctate of Indiana, his complaint astainst the Nve named defendant, and that altera ards. on tne Cth day of January, lvsi, the Faid plaintiff fl!M in open Court in said Superior Court, theathdavit of a com oetent person, trtowinx that said defendant, Pcnelopi. Mann, i- ai -... ;y party defendant to id action, thai the object of taid action Is to enforce amortra;e Hen on leal estate in Manon County, in trie St ue of Indiana, ad that Penelope G. Jlann la not a rofident oi tbe fctate of Indiana. row, therefore, by order of said Court, said 4effLdant above named Is hereby notified of the fUInR and pendency of said complaint acRirift her, and that unless she appears and answers or demurs thereto, at the caliitii of said Cause on tbe fccond day of a term of said Court, to be begun and iheld at tbe Court House in the City of lndianaiolis, on the first Monday ia March. IN, 6aid complaint and the natters and thinps therein contained and alleged will be heard and determined in her ab'enee J4USK3 G. McLAIN, JmT-?w ' Clerk. That Grover Clevend Is to be the next President, and thai loo.ooo ou.ee told r will surrender their positions to the party cnnlni? Into power. Full lnformrtion how to priori to obtain an ofTice or pof ition In Govern incut employ, sent postpaid on rwe'pt oC ? : WADE & CO.. AUGUSTA, MAINE. Apr7p Pond six cents for postage, aad ral lila.C cetre fnx, corCy boa cf (rooda which will help sil, of either mx, t" tr.ore coney right away than fcnythint: eute In this world. Fortune awnit t e workers a'oaolutely sura. At one addre- TRUK A CO.. Anennta Maina S S T O Ä2L-Ii TointfTNhtf fir (--.l In mry rn, ma it -'1! vi t inr vrr--(B m-ihI i r tV. fr i--.---. Ar., fc a: j V. I: , l-itr: two 4 - wir V Merpftf 4. -rr t-ii ,
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