Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 16, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1885 — Page 2

THE INDIANA 8TATE BENT1NEL W EDNESD AT . MAY 20, 1885,

2

VARIETIES.

Hals with brics in them are again worn. Many young married ladies, obliged to rear last spring's clothes, prefer diroice EUil. In Norway they have six motnhs night. It certainly tries the conjtitutioa of gate hinges and bcotjacks. It would aeem a wata of breath to rail at nothing, aad yet piragraphers continue to make sport ef the dcJj. All lawyers ara not racals, eays an exctanfte. Oar curiosity is therefore aroused to tind eut how thia disover was made. E Children grow taller, it is eaid, daring an acute sickness, sucu aa lever, the grown of the oones being stimulated by the febrile condition, Four pccketa in the vest without any money in them, although not popular, are nevertheless worn mora than ever. White hall Time. An Ohio bachelor, aged e:ghiy-five, committed aaicide last week becae, as he said, he was of no use to the world. Objection sustained. Next. Tne forests of the United States comprise 412 speciej of treaa, beljngiDg to 158 genera. Of tb.es. fjrty-t'ght genera and sixty species are peculiar to Florida. The revi?d Old Testament will be issued next month. Many people will be pained to learn that the ten commandments have not been materially changed. When south side saloon keeper heard that "reading makts a full man," he said he was dead opposed to libraries. He was afraid they would hurt his business When you see a piece ot ham entangled in the average citizen's raouätashe you must believe that be has tackled a lunch counter, you have prima face evidence of it, A society writer eays that eighteen-year-old giris are tame. An eighteea.year old girl we were going to get off a joke on that, bat can only smile and mutter "tame." An eigiiteen-jear-cli girl tame! My! Somtbody observes that in love we swap a peck ot trouble for a pint of happiness. Ha ioTif la to add that there is mere solid connfort in a thimbleful ct colid genuine love cut on the bias than there is in a whole grain elevator of alleged bachelor bliss. The city of Lcs Angfele3, Gal., has a puliation of about Sö.OUO. Im streets ara lined With eucalyptus and pepper trees and with handsoixe business bleck, which are more numerous and costly than in most American cities of rive times the population. "I nebier wastes my tiras in wushin datl wuz like de man what am great an er way npyatder. I doan keer how high de buz-' zard fly way up 'mong da deads he's gat ter come down arter a while an ba jia ez low ez a bird whut cauldn' Üy ha'f 83 high.' Miss Julia Tease, a graduate of Yassir College, cultivates G00O acres of laud in Texas. But the higher educa tion of woman will be proven a failure if s be doesn't know any better than to carry a red parasol when she goes int o the pasture lot where the gsntieman cow is grazing. A zaalous Christian woman in Lowell has left her busband's bed and board because oe will not be converted. She has reached ih9 . "perfect state," and is so outraged that her husband, otherwiee an exemplary man. will not come to her way ot thinking, thataae will no longer live with him. "Never go back," advises a writer. "What you attempt do it with ail yoar strength." This may be good advice, bat it wouldn't work satisfactorily. When a young man, for instance, attempts to cjurt a girl he msy do it with all his strength, but be goe back all the same. He gees back about six nights a week. Norristown Herald. According to the Mf dical Record five per cent ot all cancers are situated upon the tongue- An average duration of life in cancer of the tongue is. without operation, stated to be ten and a half months; with operation, sixteen months. In some caes after operations patients have lived fro a two to five, and even ten years. "What is it that kitty says?" asks a poetess. "We Jon' t know, dear, what it is that kitty says, but we know pretty well what the taaa who is leaning out of the window In the pale mcuEiigui, wiiu a uuu ij n iu uii uauu, aiding tolccite kitty's position, eays, and if yon will enclose jour aldress with stamp, we will tend it to you privately. It wouldn't look well in print. The astonishing statement comes fron Washington that of the money now actually In the vaults of the Treasury butldiug at the National Capital. $3,1)03,000 ara in silver dollars, 2 5U0.Ü00 in gold. $4 000.000 in United Hiates notes $2 000.000 in a lrtr cer tificates, and $33 000.000 in factional silver ard minor coins. This hosrding of s:nIi Cfacpe would seem to imply the moat diigraceful financiering ever heri of, since the coinirg of fractional tiler i3 in no wty csiDFulsory. Tb people probably know very little of the xeil tcopeof the gold conspiracy. The art of making paper from woid originated long before maa ever dreamed of it. On a drowsy Bummer's day the waip alghts on somebody's front fence and slows away in LU hind legs all I he loose fibre he can gather. This he rJxes with saliva aad forms into a substantial paper covering for his nest. The male wasps usually die in the winter, txd the females, hibernating In seme warm, sheltered nook, come out with the aotshite and become tbe mothers of new bicods. Wasps secrete themselves in leaves, roucce nton the vounz befs that come oat to eatöfr noney. kill them and carry them hnir tr feed their larvae. The waiD also lil's for the same purpose epiders and coterpillar j. r Ignorant, bot Eloquent. ürcojiljn Union pity editor (to new rep3rter) You say In V-s report cf the tire that tne lana glare ot -the forked flames shot atnwart tne aarx Momediky. Are you sure cf that. ) New reporter Yea, sir; I saw the who.e Ihing. I City editor Did you notice any Insurance llurking about the place, or learn what caasei j tne ere, er tne prooaoie auiuuuk ui destroyed? New reporter No, sir. . Ciiy editor (striking a match) Well, jut vratch the lurid glare of forked flames aiioat athwart thia report. LITT LB FOLK 8. "Mamma," ajked Carrfe, "can you tsll me What part of Heaven people live in who ara good bat not agreeable? ' "What do carpenters make out of hollow trees?" asked Sammy. "I don't thine fny can nee them at all," was the reply. "Why, papa, I should thick they'd make empty boxes out of hollow trees." A bright little boy, about three and a hilf years old, to whom his mother had on sev eral occasions repeated the Lord's Prayer, surprised ber by asking one day: "Manama, what is God's other came? I It God Hallowed r Little Harry was out in tbe garden in the spring, seeing h!s papa put in the seeds The different torts interested himgreitiy. "Here, peps!" he cried, running to him with something clutched tiirht ia his hand, "pant 'is one ! ' He opened his hand, and there was a CBh-worm! "Gran'ma," said a bsy of nine yars."how O'dar you?" "About sixty-six," raicthe grandmother. "You'll die saoa won't yon. gran'ma?" "Yes, dear; I expect to." "And when I die, gran'ma, can I be buried side ot jcuf' "Yes, deal," BiUihs, as ber heart warmed toward the little one. whom she folded cloeer In ber arma. "Qran'ma'aof cly wbiBpered tte little rogue, "gimme ten cents." Charley nnbbell, with his mamma, was riding in the cars, in tha northern part of Ohio, Bearing the end of a long journey. It yra early springtime and near nightfah. Tha ra .Lnnned. and Charier leaned hU v.. j t. iv,- indn. and listened to thv croaking cf the frogs. "Mamma,' laid he,

'ere tbe frogs ssying their prayers?' 8careelv bfeding the question, aha aaid, "Yes" "Mamma," he said again after a loog pauss, as if be would be so glad to have thera stop 'w ill they pretty soon say amen?" A little girl who has beau a citefaiiy trained In the matter ot reverence for eacrei things as a minister's child cauld be, had bf en told that God was everywhere, wai with her night and day, outdoors acd Indoors, and sbe seemed to understand it. Bat on one occasion ber little pet dog was followirg ter closelv when 6ha didn't want him n uh her. She stopped as she wai about to go through a door and eaid witl great emphasis: "Now, Tonto, you go back. Its bad enough to have God tagging round attar me everywbera without having you." And Iis slammed the door, shutting from her view the horror stricken face ot herpiouimjther.

lb Los leal View of It. I New. York Times. 1 "Mamma," inquired Bafcby, "do only gocd little boys goto Leaven?" "Yes, dear." "And bad little bays gato the bad piice?" "Yea." . . "I'm a good HU'.a boy, ain't I?" "Sarx etirr.es, Babby, ard sometimes you are quite a bad little boy." "lhtn 1 8 pCS? 1H ES 13 speuu prt ui the time in one place aad part of the time in the other!" Ahead Yet. Uuly.l Boy neae, sir. Tommy Johnson has made me make a blot. School Board Teacher-Then Tommy Johnson won't go home to hia dinner today. Tommy eaid afterwards, when tbe teacher bad gone away : "I 'spowver think yer done a fine thing bv roundin' on me, but as it tappers, I ain't pot no dinner to go home to Yah, yer sneak PRESIDENT POLK'S NEPHEW. TlkJns Fifty Mile tu Oet Away From a Retreat fi the Insane t Harttonl. Äe,tport (cna.) Special. James Knox Polk, a nephew and namesake of tbe late Tesideat Tolk, has for nearly a year been an innate of the Insane ratreat at Hartford. For many years he occupied a large farm -n this town on tne banks of the Sanpatnck Kivfr. Withaa incaaieof 3)0 a aicntn re pes ea ma i:me aimoäi atuua iu an ancient house Eear the stream, and was ktown as agreat loveroi boating, hshmg aaa fild sports. He wa? getial a?d Bocial. bat hie friends were selected with care Tao3S vhom he made his friends were treated in a rcyal manner. Why he led a hermit's life m his chaUau, as he termed it, was never d:sciceed. Tftiea years ago, however, there teemed to come over fcim a sadden change, lie mingled in society, and after a short courtehip married a beautiful Swedish lady, to whom he devoted his entire time. The eld house was transformed into a most elaborate dwellicg place. Eveythin went on pleasantly until there carr.e rumors ot financial embarrassment. From that moment Mr. Folk was a changed man. He a?ain became n rinded, and t fortret his troub es took to the cup. Despite the efforts of his family, he drank deeper and deeper, and finally there were Indications of mild insanity. He et-emed to understand his condition, for, after being advi&td to seek relief in an institution, he consented to go to Hirtford. He remained there until March of tha rment year, when he insisted that he wi cured and expressed a desire to return to his borne. He was' allowed to d3 so, and for a time It seemed that the change was awis cne. The old apcetite returned, however, sud he was strain taken to the retreat. As an inmate he fcas been treated with great ccurtesy and allowed all the freedom posshle. On Saturday last he quietly left theretreit, aod, following tbe tracasof the Oonsolidited read, started for home. Oa reschine Stratford, a distance of fifty miles, early Sanday morning, he went to tha residenca of Benjamin More, an cli friend, aad tsrrtei during the day. As his mental condition was observed, word was sent to Tatrick Murphy, station agent at the depot here, and a fnend was at on?e sent to Stratford to take Polk in charge. He wss accompanied to his home here. He was net his former self, however, for he would acknowledge cone of h:s family as friends, and declared opn hostility to all who apI reached him. It was found necessary to inform the mansgers of the retreat of his whereabout, and two mn were sent yeaternv to take him back to Hartford. Polk was determined cot to eo, and it wai only by tte use of force and the application of ha'idcofis that he was kept in subjection. He was literally lifted aboard tbe train last night. The scene it the depot was most distrhing as his young wife a;ain parted with liira. There is if aoa to believe that Mr. Polk will nltia-aiely recover. STAKTL1NO STATISTICS. A St Paul Tonng Jln Submits tils Annual Otculatory Report An Iftterestleg liecord. IPIonecr Tress.! How many osculations do you think I hare been guilty of dcrigMhe year? Well, sir, exactly 1.1S7. I've kept aectuate count and there cvn't be a miataae. I divide It something l)ke this: Maternal andsororial aflection, 242; pars love (thstVCarl. you know), 20; conventional atlection elderly aunts, babies, etc. 111); guilty osculation, 205. Now, what d j you think of it? I bave )avii ed ca Carrie, who will soon be "Mrs. Yours Truly," a little more than half of my affection hatte, as evidenced by caresseu. That's a pretty eood average, now, isn't it. hen joa thick of the cumber of times yoa k 'ts your mother and sister and all thess ctisiiiS and their babies, and your old flames w ten ycu happen to meet them of a summer evt-ning or at a e'eighing party, or something J ie thit Here's the record by months. Just glance at it. It's an interesting taOie. Ii I a; iou ougut i uave iiiuicu u u your year's resume. Now, Jet's figure a lit- J tl; ycu Jl f.na it a proiiHC saojeci. oay ttere are 5 (XX) young Mlows In St. Paul wbo taven't got over the puppy-dog period. I i ay be a little more devoted ttian mot of t em, so we'll gie them 1.0Ü0 kisses each. That makes 5 OuO.COO ki3s. Of these about cr e-fifth. or 1 000,000. ere In the family. Not mere tcan a inira oi meBe leuowa are eufped, so that of tbe 1 000.000 only abut (u.COO are wtat yoa might call legitimate Lestowtd upon one's fiance. I mean. Tht leaves nearly 3 5X.'X0 kiaees, the parties to which ought to be ashamed to acknowledge. Now let na f gare on the causei, results acd t mnnc ta cf tem DQrarv i'aure aid a'tsr jepentance occaloned by tnese C 500, 00J. Fire at KaahvlUe. Xashviuje, Teno., Kay 16 -At 1:20 o'clock this alieraoon a Cre broke out la the yardJ of the Ctmterland Lumber Company, anl the contents fie entirely öetroyed: also tbe New Era fl vjr v iJL One of the city engines caught fire ani has ttn abMidoued. Tbe firois beyond tüecoutrol rf the riremen, and neishborlng houses are artatened. Wherever yoa make a purchase always leek for the best article, even though it should cost a little more tfcan an inferior one. Yoa will always get satisfaction from at gccxl article, while yon meet with nothing but disappointment in bayiDg a poor one. v.Tiaiiv ia this true in recard to a good family medicine; and Pond's Extract is s preparation which does S3 much gocd that many atteapta bave bten made to imitate It, E careful then to gst the gennice. ' Bhtamatlim gulckly Cared, There tu ne-rer txvn a medicine for raenmat Ism Introduced in UiU State ldt .tven mach vztitml ritltfection u DQrE Heiit Kemedy. It sunds out alone as thepne grew remedy that actually curee thia dread amoMe. II Is Uken lnternaiiy and nerer tw nl ."ViT"0.1; fall to cure the worst case In the shortest time, it bas the lndorserceDt and recommendation ol many leading phyiiciaas In this Bute and elsewhere. It la aofd by ererr draggUt at I. for free forty-page pamphlet to ß. K. HiLPHlU. emit, Drwaist! Waihlagtoa D.O.

WAUTNEK. SuntlMag Mit Man Who Walto llavo Iiee a Haas; oa Friday,

I New Trial Granted Tha Oallowa Already Prepared Tha Crime Interview With tho Murderer. RsKssiLAza, Ind., May 15. A scaffjld painted blick, a gibbet, a trap-door, an ominous spring, the cl'ckiog of which is suggestive cf darkness and a life gone out, are what your correspondent saw to-day. But Wiebren Wartner breathes easier, becsue of a lespite granted by the Sapreme Court of tbe State, which cet aside the sentencs of death patted upon him for the murder o! John Dreger last Octoöer. The circumetancej of the crime ara yet freth iu mind, and the atrocity of tbe mirder, the artfalneea of the man in decoying his victim to the river, ani then, the miment his bsck was tarned,v slay him aj coolly as a person would hav killed a do, are matters too terrible to be iorgottea by an outraged comraonlty. Wartaer plead guilty, on the suppositiin that the Joeige was op;tosed to capital paniib meet, but aller hearintt the evidence, he was still found guilty, and sentenced to death. Now the point is, can a Jude ssn teure to the death penalty on a plea of goilty, without a trial by jury? It teems that the pros cation claim that In this cue there was no trial, and the sentence wss pasted on tbe sdmis3ion of giilt by the defenfant, and the unmittigatu.g circomstances cf the murder rendered no other decision adequate. The case will probably go over tD the Oatoter term of court, as it U not llke;v aa application for a rehearing in the Supreme, Coart will have been filed before the expiration cf sixty days, owicgiothe absence and illceis of 'he prosecutor. Ötmuel E Yeoman, the Sheriff, had carapleted the preparations for the execution. The gibbet post Is seventeen and a half feet high, the ami from which tte rope is suspended is five feet long; the scaifold is nine feet high, the floor Ul fa feet square and the trap four Jeetenaare. The trap ltrelf and the opening are dtff-reLt from the U3nal method, and were planned by fcheiirl Yeomar. and made by John Chamberlain. Instead of dropping the truo from cd elde it is mase with an opening in the middle, and by the action of a lever, joint and iron arms, each half of the doar is thrcwo down and back againBt the tloor barn ath, which is he!d ßtcareiy by steel sprints. The handle to th apparatus for spricg'.og the trap is three feet long, and is concealed within a box at the side of tho ssarlold. Tue iron lever running from the handle parallel with the floor toward the trap, or cente, is two feet long acd is secured to a joint or spriDg, from which an arm of irara extends to eacn corcer parallel with the end of the lever, of two feet and two lncnes in length, where they are fastened by a swivel jf inttoastrio of Iron running the leaia cf the trap. These are securely fastened to the tisor by a half-inch iroa bolt ix Inches beytnd the center, thus leaving safheisnt rconi for the arms to work. The advantage of this trap is that it sends tbe body perpendicularly through the apoer txre, and occasions no swaying, as the usual form of door often does. Th'j appliance has been tested repeaudly with bai of snd weighing ISO pounds and found to work perfectly. The gallows a-e surrounded by an eighteen foot enclosure large enough t3 acccroniodate '-00 persons. The man who came so nearly beiue banned to Cay is, npon first Bight, of a mild and iaoiTe .sive sppearance; forty yearj oil, five feet and nine inches iu height, weight 1G0 pounds, erect In carriage of ruediam brown hair, eg? shell blue eyei, atd fair complexion, with a weak, nervous mouth, one would nor select mm as tne perpetrator cf such a cold blooded aSair. "Why did you do such a thing as thiä, for which jou are'euflerlng?" we aked him "To keep ray woman and children from suffering." ' Could you get no work?" "No," with a shake of the hea.i. "But he was your best friend." Tm8orryI did it I'm eorry;" he returned. The prisoner told your correspondent that he came from Holland two years ago; that bo was married sixteen years ago to-day tbe day be was to have beu executed to An;o Jane Huiszeng. and bad fiye children, who are all at tie County Poor Farm, lie was incarcerated on November 4. Hi celt nbare ol everytniLg save a comfortable ha'neuocs cot a:id blauketfl. On the Ub.e ia i:-o corridor into which his cell opens, were newspapers and a lew pictures. He watches eacn or e furuvely ithan expression Cf inquisitive interest, He baa bera indolent in the extreoae siace Itvirerinthe county, aud capidity was toe siVa riiuliVH ci tne crime. iu vicniu uu trorifd his family with food and at tae tinao of his murder had accompanied Wartrtrorthe sole purpose of getting fiih for Ma Wartr.er'a familv. Your corroeDondent aaw the bundle of c'othes Wartner buried belonging to his victim, the iron pumps which he took with him nith which to sink the body, and the shotenn with which he struck him with and hrr.ke m two. then using a sharp splint eed roint to finish the fiendish work by jabbiag it into the neck of the dvintr man. ünmrn ara rire in the county that if hanun lifp. outrseed iastlce and violated law run not ha vindicated leC&llV. the'e IS anstb r irihnnal more DOttnt. It la to bo hope! ti at law aDd order may be observed la the continuance of the case. TBE VICTIM AND DAUOSTER. How a Paris Newspaper Telia a Dramatic Storj Iii Crjpt In the Madeleine. Translated from Le Gauloia. Every morniDg about 11 o'clock, for the pact three years, a womtn closely veiled aid cid in severest black, gilded like a half iavtfihle figure throe gh a little private door bidden in the wails of the church at the alaitleice, and which introduced the living a bo visited the dead into the sombre crypts of the Loly basilica. Puuctnal as if tt was a meeting of honor or love, this shadow, bo familiar to the old sexton who guards the keys of the sanctaary where tbe cotfina are waiting (as if at a tiavelicg station for the mysterious traia to eieruity) ' passed through with a norseless at d rapid step. This door is uokaown to the nujority of the faithful and is accessib:e only to the initiated. It is closed to tbe indifference of strangers. It is eacred to those who mourn their dead. How many pious mourners, with teifuleyf8snd prayerful lips, aud hearts fiiled with hope of meeting the dear departed in a brighter and better world, have patted through tbat portal of sorrow! As jou enter, leavirg behind you the busy, crowded street, with its surging throngs and jostling vehicles, the little passage leviing to the crypts of tbe dead turns to toe left, near the main altar. Tbe number of thse scbteriacean guests varies; sometimes more, sometimes lets, according to the number of branches detached from tbe parish tree, and wborelast restics place ia not as yet pre pared. All the dead do not pass on at the tame pace, thengh the old ballad sajs tbey do. The vaults prepared for soma of thoss dear departed oftentimes require aa much time in bnildinz as a palace hotel Some are waiting to be translated to the old spot of their childhood, or to friends now living far away. And again, the lo7e of a father or mother, husband or wife, brother or slater, often arek to retain the coffin as long as pos sible, as if In committing it to tbe boiom oi the earth the dead ara a second time torn from their tendf rneea and love. This elegant woman, veiled and clad in Mark, lhat elides throuehthe door of tha Madeleine every morn leg, is a mother. A mother who lost her only daughter ere she had attained her twenn em year, ana wan

was hardly ever out ofthat mother's eight til! death tora her rudelv awy.

How old was hat mother who saemel now only to live for the dead? Those who tswber could not guees. Her ni'a was simple, but involuntarily retiring. Her step was light, and her carriage eav and graceful, even amid the gravity of her daily pilgiimage. Sbe descended with familiar step lie dark andcarrox stairway that led to the corridor opening into the chamber of the dead, half lit op with a few etragjliig rivs of l'ght. There fche stopped at leait an hoar sometimes three hours and very often tbTee! Apried;euwas awailicg her. She knelt on it, and ptaved SDd wept acd went aid preyed before elittle chaoel. the only laminr.ns point amid tbe dark surrourdiogs. Frcm time to time he would interript her cevotiens to arraoee or rearrange the flowers on the little altar, or xesew tbe b.iauets aid faded crowre, and the yasesadjrned wilh their white sjmbols. On a white bed. testing on foar squre colunjts. in the style of the bsdi oi the sixteenth century, covered with white draoerIe. embroi()ered with silver. re?osed a citlia, whijh was alfio draped in white. At the focr corcers of the bed were fmr large eilver candelabra, atd white flowers in boqusts, crowns, pots everywhere on the bed at its foot ar.d around it. There reposed the re maiDg of that lovely virgin, torn from a mother's tenderness, aud there that mother came to visit her child, and in this asylum cf the dead to bathe her soul in the J.iys of living over again with her child the hSDyitcs cf former days. One day this week this lsdy c:ad In bias failed to pay ber morning visit to the d?ai, and the old sexton muttered as he stumbled hv : '-What mu t have happened to her? This is tbe first morning In three years that sbe bas not epent the morning with her dacghter. Sbe must be sick, and very sick, irdted." And he muttered his uneasiness and forebodings to tbe servaata ot the church. Soon the rumcr spreads that s ghastly mar der hd been committed! All the vicinity is stirred and soon all Paris is moved. A won an has been found with hr throat cut, dcHtl in ter bd ia tbe Rae de Seza. The name of the victim is o.a every lip. It is tbat or the mourning mother, whu that dsv for the firs.t time failed to coma to pray hefide her daughter's collia. It is ilaie. Cirnot. The next morning the epoilt child, spoilt even in death, awaited tbe mover s vi3lt. TM mother was at the Morgue. Two ccfiins, oe while, tbe other bUck, new lie Bide by sMe in the dark cvern of th9 iißdeleine, and eoon both will be oa their jorrrrey to the Cemetery of Pasy. acd motaer atd daughter will be separated no more. THE SOUTHWEST. Excited Ovr Uin'a Capture Other ouera Oo!re Home. PrUEatclchä, N. W. T., May 10 via WisxirE., May 17. The camp is still excited over Kiel's capture, and he is very closely guarded. He bes very little to sayjlojks completely broken down, and feels his p eition keenly. Major Bjultoo and 203 mounted men have been tcooring tha coun try iu search of Dsmont, but so far without fuccers He was last seen Friday morning, ten miles eonth of Ba louche Everything is quiet aiound Batouche, while uajs are flying from all tbe bouse. One hundred and fifty riflfs and guns have been hsndel over by the rebel. Most of the prisoners have teen allowed to return bonne, but the ringleaders will be taken to Prince Albert Mandy- . . . A Saskatchewan sanding at'patcn oi Thursday says: '-Colonel OJer has sent word from Battlelord that he min es it saleable to hold all teams with supplies for him until f aitber orders. This is, no doubt, caused bv the recent capture ol teams, etc., on the trail. There are nearly 209 team cow ready to leave at a few hours' notice. It is expected 100 will start Monday with a strong escort. Scouts are now being enjagel to go in advance of the supply trains. "Ite teamsters that escaped .from Poundir.aker'8 Indians are expected bera iu a day or two. The river is falling very fast at this point." A IIOKfllttLE DElTg. WVJf Out on a Mountain Bxeanilui J. P. Colo fall Dow a freclplce iidln Killed. gritiM; Place, Ga. ilay 15. Mr. J. P. Cola, of tola place, wet witaamoftt horrible dca'hlast evening. He, In compjinv with two or threo oihcrt, were out cn Cohutta a ouutatu la the vicinity of the Legal Tender mine. In . r !ch he was one of the owner. Thty were a'.ongsid of tbe mountain in tlie lull Klee of moun'.tun adventurer, when Mr. Cole stepped on a rock which was male slick bv a tuial stream of water. His feet sllppei from under him. and he went dishing wtld'.y down over tbe rocky cHlis below, lie disappeared almost la the twlakliajof an eye. His cofnpm'ons, Lr. W. w. Anderson and Aujrustcs Tarier, made thtir descent around tiie preciplco as quickly as pcffcible, and found him lyln uiicousclous, a distance of. perhap.', IVj or 200 feet ociow. JLIis right thigh was broken, his head fearfully gashed by rock., and other portions of his body were bruised, lie was brought down tha mountain on a litter and conveyed to his hone la Spring Pisco tn a wftßon. He lingered in great BKOny ontil about 10 o'clock to niartt. when he died. Mr. Cole was a leading merchant aal a progressive aud prosperous bunuets man. Ue wss thirty-five years of age anl ltarea a wile and two small children. Oatdore Life. I American Home 2Jan seems p'anned for an outdore lire in a mild climate, with just a leaf cr two of shelter for a rainy day. His nature will bead for time to tr e conventional barren of a art ficial civUzation, but replant him oa the cnidore ca.-den of and his recTporative forces wiil teboand with the elastic energy tf steel sprines relieved. Oar fr'hionable friends would Ice caste were they to ose thtii neikhbera' secondhand c.otitng, but tbey will dally try to purify their oa b!ocd with their neighbors' secona nana or ten-times-used breath, poised as it always Is, even when exhaled by youug aod healthy peisons. Man, in common with other warm blooded creatures, generatej h sulphus ot beat within his body. Ont-iira sleepers find that no matter now c:ia ia sufrour.ding air may be, if dry, enoagh of the oatilowicg heat may be dammed bact and retained by suitable clothing to sustain the vital functions in health and comfort. Until dcmestlo art can supply our lungs with cool, fir't-mortgaged air, in warm ricrcs, its votaries will have an important problem to solve. In tbe meantime oat campers and hovel dwellers will wear the best aerated blond in the land. "Love 8oea Ho Faults,' It hss been said; but when a woman Is dragztd down, emaciated, waa and a shadow of her former self, with never a cheerful word, sbe can be no longer beaulifal or lovab'e. Katuie may bave been generous in her pif's ard endowed her with all the charms of her tex, but disease has crept m unawares atd Molen the roses from her cheeks, the luacrfrotn her eye and the sunshine fr)m ber heart. Eat to be well again li in yoar own rower Take Dr. Pierce's "Favwin Pretcriptlon;" It will cure you; thoassads bave teen cared by 1. Isoibing equals it for all ihe paitfal maladies and weakneses pcuiiar to women. Price reducad to $1. By drufgiats. Know thyself, by reading the ' Science of Life," the best medical work ever published, for young and middle-aged men. Tonnf Blent Bead This. The Voltaie Belt ompany, of Marshall, Mich., öfter to Bend their celebrated KlectroVoltaio Belt and otter Electric Appliance! on trial for thirty days, to men V( young or old) afflicted with nerroue debility, loas of 7ltality and mtnibood, and all kindred troubles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralyala and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health, rigor ami mau hood guaranteed. Ho risk Is incurred as thirty days' trial is allowed. Writo Uara t nee fox illustrated pamphlet free

PRESIDENT CLETELA-XD.

Bin Difflcaltlea ta Mating Appointments. trpedal to the Sentinel. Washington, May 17. Mr. Cleveland's administration will prove satisfactory to the taxpayers, however the politicians msy fare. Not one in 10,000 who are hoping for cff.ee will be gratißed, bat, once understood, Lie policy will certainly be approved. Tne r eeple tike rindly to retrenchment aad reform. That character ot goods natll the department clerks can't re3t Is promised ani essured. It ca? not be dirgoised that the Democrats on the ground, looking for something that dees not seem torje here, wear a far-away excretsion. like a man tbat was about to be left.- Iu tbe very nature of things this has get to be so. If every racal at thia moment wss set adrift, the number of offices would be insufficient to eo all round. In any event there would have- been paiu. The number of people who have asked Mr. Cleveland tor office is not near so great as the wolfish pack that infested the White Honse from tbe in. auguratioo of Garfisld to the day he was easninated. Yet, in view cf all this, these department fel.ows firo'.ected by the civil ee.vice law, the most un-Anierican eaactttsectia the statute bosks, have the affranery to lalk abiut hungry Democrats. This is an experience ihat the Damocrat3 have not had before for a quarter ot a century, It,is something new to them, and the adaiioistraticn recogaizad tha'. it iäalso new, acd that there is a vast duty to perform. In tbp Eimple matter of CoEgnssional patronage a vast reform could certainly be mad?, and President Cleveland hss shown a disposition torx-tkeit. The matter of olfijial appointments has burdened the life ot the real statesman in both branches of Congre3s. Th9re is co question about that. I bave heard of a cottcientious United States Senator who, wttiried almost beyond endcrance by the rivalry and clamor, for Federal patronage, seriously contemplated resigning. Haw do we know but tbat it tas had an immoral inüneuce. vastly to the detriment of virtaous and intelligent l-ul-lation I Mny pe pie are tsken up and elected to C jo greus, not for their talents or worth, bat becaae of their patronage. Too many are reta'ned la CcDgresp, not beciuse of their servic??, out becaoee of their patronage. What ia many localities does public worth amount to when a Federal oflice Is applied for? A Congrassman gives to a political roustabout and personal friend, regardless of the public good. He has nothing to lose and mu:a to gain in the way of individual services. A member of Congress from oae of the States or. the Pacific slope within tha list month madn a recommendation f jr the apl ointment of an Internal Revenue Collector. It was not only the largest cfiice witbin his cift bnt one that in the eye of bnt one that in the eye of the law is most delicate. Calling at the White Usus a few days after filing the application the President 6aid to the Congressman: "Tie wan you bave recommended is ineligible. The law prohibits brewers end distillers." "My man is not a brewer." "Then my Informer ia at fault," replied Mr. Cleveland. "We will let the matter rest fcr live days; at tbe end of that time call again." The (Jon pressman cmea aitne appoint?! lime and maintained with more force than before: "ily man is rot a brewer." lathe meantime he bad telegraDhed the cmiidats, who bad transferred all his brewing interests to his wife. Here was a terrible deception contemplated, and this is bat one instiace of th number that if properly written oat would fill tbe American Encyclopedia. "The man that yoa have recommended for Pcstmatter," said Mr. Cleveland to a Congressmen lately. T am Informed is of bed character, a borrower of money he never retnrns, ard once imprisoned for securing a lor.n on a false bank check." "I know that there are some things in his hifctory," was the reply, "that can no: easily be explained, bat be was very useful to me in my canvas?, aud u a warm personal friend." "Much as I wou'd like to obli"s3 yoa I can net assume the responsibility ct making tne apro-ntment" The- facts related were told to your correspondent this afternoon by a Demucrit whc:e reputation is national, and, asking f jr no otüce, lcoka on without prejudice. Congressmen whose only motive is ta retain office insist upon the right o! making appointments, and as it has grown to be a de?p-rooled custom reform is a very delicate wort. Congress akonld be as it enca was, the heute of giants, and but for patroaa?9 datl, incompetent men would largely fall from ths bodv. Otlymea of culture, character and the finest attainments would be cbom. 'Now." concluded my Informant, "ot course there will beheartbumlnge, pain and dii appointments. Only a few a emill ley of the many desiring places will be able to get them. A eense of eli2btand neglect will for awhile largely prevail. We will feel wounded and mortified. In our anguish we will forget that Mr. Cleveland was sworn to support the law the civil eervice law but I am satisfied that in tbe end the Democratic party will heartily approve this administration." Mr. Hillerbracd, of Ripley County, was beie locking after the Batesvilie PostDlS ;e. Kr. Holman, wanting farther evidence, declired to make a recommendation, and this morning called upon the President far enconragement. 4T fcardly think you have chosen wisely, Mr. Hillerbracd," replied the President. "Ihe Batesvilie Postoüice is a small fcfifair, and sou are an able-bodied, fine-ap.-K&ring, very curg men. Go home acd think aboat an office worthv vour talents and rnassle " Mr. Uiiletbatjd lft Washington a few benrs later delighted, declaring that he was going home fall of a determination to sap port Prs-Mdsnt Cleveland for a second term. Tbe President, when waited upon by dal eeatloue. gives ear to no oae individual. He converses iu ax ordinary tone, refusing to be mad a repository for secrets. All must betrank and above bDard. and his replies ere invariably in a tone loud enongh to be heard bv all who choose to pay attention. Yesterday a Democrat from a Western Sfftte. ahn ire?ence in the recspt'oi room was unknown, overheard another citizen of tbe same State giving him a terrible blast-it-p. Tbe Democrat blasted slipped back into ibe ante room, concluding to think farther before seekics an inUrview. They o me together on the steps of the White IJou'.e, when one asked the other: What was jou telling Ihe President about me?" 'T never mentioned your name," was the diDlomatio answer. "That is false, and in my own time I will give you sucn a setting np that you will never ba received at the White House sgv.n.' Jap Tcbpeit. LtDcoln'a Start la Life. New York Graphl&j "He rode," an old friend says, "Inta town on a borrowed horse, without earthly goods beyond a pair of eaddle-bags, two or three law books, and some clothing in a bag. He came into my store, set his saddle-bags on the counter, and said: "Speed, tell me what the furniture for a single bedroom will cost." 1 took my pencil, figured it np, and found it wonld cost $17. Lincoln replied, It is cheap enough, but I want to say that, cheap as it ja, I bave not tha money to pay. Bat if you till CleaH me nntu tjnnsimas, anu mj experiment here is a success, Iwiilpayyoa then. If I fail, I shall probably neer ba able to ray you.' The voice was so melancholy I felt for blm, and told him that I had very large double bed, which he. was par-

fectly welcome to share with me, if he ch'e. Where is your bed?' said Ltacoln. 'Up ttair,' I answered. He took his eailla bi;i 'Tt his arm, went cp-stalra. set them oa tbe floor, and came down laughing saying. Well. Speed. I'm moved The ludicrous idea of moving all his eartniy goods and chattels by tikirg his saddie-bsps np stairs, had mada his elastic spirit as mirthful as just before it Vtssdiprefsicg. COLD-BLOODED A8SA.SSIXATI0X.

Mexican Kanchero Satlüfies a Old Crnd-e by Treacherously Shooting aa Otlicer In. the ltacb, and the Tattnt'a Itrother-Ln-Law Slay a the Blarderer. PixdgrasNegras, Mex., May 17. A double tragedy was yesterday morning enacted in this old town. Alfonso Baerti, one of the wealthiest raccheros in this vicinity, had long entertaiced dead'y enmity toward a Mexican Police Captain named IUvid Monte z, because the latter ones arrestsd Baerti when he came to town and got drusk. Baerti claimed before the Magistrate at the time that Monte: had brutally beaten him and otherwise exceeded his official powers but the Magistrate refused to order the arrest or censure of the Captain. This mcrning Buerti rode in'o the city, aad. ander a pretext ot requiring the ass stance ef Captain Montez to make an arrest near bis big raoch, tfcey together left the city. They bad only proceeded a few miles into the country when Buerti, firing from behind. en pticdhhsix-slooter into Montez, hilling i him iiMantly. About half an houralterwrrd rime Mexican cattle-herders found tlif fcedy where it badfalien. When the corpse wss brctght to the city it caused tremeadcr s excitement. A squad of mounted police weie immediately summoned, and, ander the Uhdenbip of Oonziles, a brother-ir-iaw tf Montez, they s'.artsd in ewit pursuit cf Buerti, whom they rver'crk in a grove nesr the Kiileto River, ten m ilea from Piedras Negras. Baerti fe.eirg resistance was useless threw up bia hancs ard exclaimed: "I surrender, gentlemen, and claim tha killing was justir eble." At thia Gonzales rods np close to Buerti acd drawing his pistol exc'almai: "And to is thia justifiable!" At the earn moment he eent two bullets crashing inti the bruin cf Baerti. This occurred in the meneeof the entire tqcairon of po'ic. Bnerti's body was buriea n the spot, aad tbe equaron returned to the city about o'clock this afternoon. No arres's have besa made. The matter is considered hooorab'y adjosted by the relativ? of both the victims. Monlfzwas widely known along the Itio Grade for his efficiency as an officer. CLEAK1XCES. Tbe State of Trade for the Faat Week, with the Percentage of Increase and Decrease. Boeros," May 17. Tne following table, compiled from special dispatches to the Post, from the managers of the leading Clearinghouses in the United States, gives the clearances for the week ending May IG, 1S35, with the percentage of Increase or dscreaM in comparison with the corresponding week last year: New Yorc..... BostOD-.... . Philadelphia.., Chicago.. ...... 511,557,: lec 41.1 6J.?7,614 Dec 15 5 4t.207.410 Dec H.H 4-,,3.M).0OOl Dec .12 1 10.681 616 Deo. 5 6 ll.4Vi.17-i1 Dec 6 9 S.SJtJ.'.UDdC . 8.7 Uaiuiaore.. Dk AA'Utfl... wt. Ran Krancisco........ Cincinnati. - New Orleans 8.509 C0Ü Dec. 17.3 6.316.10. Dec 31.2 Louisville .. 4 9Gs.8t6 Dec 16 3 Kansas City.... Milwaukee Providence Detroit. Omaha.... Minneapolis New Haven 4.000.109 Inc. 21 8 R.210.GO0 Dec 2.9 4.002,203 Dec. 2i4 3.1CJ.54S Dec L 2.018.000 I.OtS.n?:; Dec. 15. Cleveland Hartford.. l,93S,8'.l DecIM 1.4(r..lS3 Dec-..- 8 1 lnd iaoapolia.. -. 1.053 025 De3 .213 Hemnhia Peoria - Portland .Vi erceslerByracnm?..., LowaiU . i74.0 Jl lac -.-.20 2 6 is 119 Dec 13.7 3'27 lac 7.1 7inJ,N0" Dec. S ti 475.519 Dec. .. 0 4Sl.7;:t,DoC 7.7 Total.. OatHide 737,8l9.S2ti,ne2..-Sö.4 '226.2G2.4:ii, Dec 17.9 Now YorkNote: totals. Omaha and Minneapolis not Included In C: aba Morris is a Canadian. She was born in llcntreal thirty-five years aco. Having Jost ner father, she became a ballet girl in tbe Cleveland Acsdemy of MosTc in that city at 15. to topport hermothw. She rose so lap dlv In her profession that at 19 she was JeeäfDg ltrty in one of the Cincinnati Theatres. Tbe year following she was encaged at Du'.y'e. Fiickly Ash Eittera ia not an intoxicating leversg. bnt a pleasant, mild laxative and efficient Tonic, acting directly on the L.iver, Kidy. ßfomach and Bowels. For is years at 37 Court Tlace, now at A rfniilmrlT 'A-' 0,1 1'H-1 thyJcian as! t!u CHRONIC and SEXUAJL Dlh bpermatorrhea ana Impotency Mtl. remit ef eir-sbai In jooth. s-roil In turwTer. orotSer com, and n-odwiii(t iwneof lhe f. Inwiai effects Serrou.oe. Stlnin! Kiuik.ioo. (uiRMtmiKt.HU bf öranil. Dimnj of t-t.-ht, Decti Memory. Phf. irhlDfcmT. liniilMOB fuM, AtersoB U Socirt. of , Confusion of I of Sexual Power. 4.C rnlermj eum.tr. Imi rciT r-r nnr.pr.T, ara thoroushlr and r--ntlr,rM. SYPJ.IlX.IS eoarljnni aod ea. tir-!. -.'ti-U j (ti,m Ui n.tt u,, GonOTTDta, CliEET Pf.clure, lirolii-u. Rcidm. Euj-urort I'liand.HlirprfratcdiMwj qufc-klt cured. It U arlfviO'mt Uwt a pliy .le'.an who rar Wta! afrDtVXl to a eertaiQ elaaa of ü:ihu4-,. ati'l trwt.liC tbcil'1 antM. ally, acuima frrrai asill. i'h.sKi haowin ihi tmet oft recommend persoai lo toy care. ben u 1 ivnuiroi ui TiiittbccitT tot tretm -at. lutdlcbet Ott b "t pnw.y aad nttlf ij null or expreai anThre, Cnre Onaranteed ixt all CaaM Uai uUUi u aJlT r T letter free lnTi' Charrei rcaaooa'ul ud cnrr'rxindeao itriclly CudS iaua A PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of J00 aea. aent to any ödresa, aeourelT a-salod. for thirf 13) ceui. Niotild a-- read br ail. Adlreai aa atw. ym kun traw a. a. w . u. 8m.ds iwtf.M.

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WAR.'JER'S copy.; ihTii'T. BLOOD ) co X o - al :c CO"!'l?''.1 ' SATISFACTION CUAANTEED. , 7AElf2lS d 15.. Rochester, Jh.: H.YALL STOMACH DISORDERS. S X . O O ' i OTTIj 33 H. D. mim & t o., Uctlisster, 5. Y. REV. W. 8. BRATHWMTL RM Ban. N.J. was cured of dys' e;R r.o o'ber stomach diaorätrs, by Warnet' Tiim-e. inoe, lhe Bett. INDIGESTION, UNEQUALLED. Gl.OO A OTTIiU. C.'li. YiAuXES !lot'jt r. 5. Y. EOT?. D.D. a BKOWN. I'ochcfter. X. Y., uet WarDer'8 liri'F"ANoa. r B:i. :or Honura tierDgcU!enlA, aad atVo.n.atJ hi the good it did bi UI. DR. D r-v 8 iL 14 al i ... iFar the Care of H'O plaint, tMnsr't'tariaia? from sn nnp-jr To wotuen .t Ijo i. j ci ' liar to t'.cir aot i'. i DrorcKs. Oij-j ?i-V..- -DaridKEhhCwy.L ju ; J J.!fr t(W : der ;v .t.i iL. ; So iJiap" :'-.-. 'r:r.'.. ALi . .;ioa l . HE FELL XHE STREETS KENNEDTS TAVOKITE REMEDY Cat a Terrtbl ajHBa of Urarel VTi Other Help Kalld.2 Wbt la GraTel? what causes It. and who ara most lisble to ltT It is lreqcently attended with, acute rain, and unless relit! can be found, produces Inflammation and ciath. Both Eixes and all ases are Uacle to it. although men who have reached or paswd middle age are Its most common rictim. Nothing i more tirgently needed than a reliable medicine lor GraTel. a tho dieasa t-eems on the Increase, and we are glad to say that ruch a specific Is now before the public in the form af DR. DAVID KENSF.DY'S FaVORITK KEMEDY, of Rondout. N. T. We out in eTidenea tte foliowlns: letter, seltcted from many similar communications: w PiTTr:2i.r, Mass., March, ISM. Dr. David Kennedy. Dear Sir You have a right to know, and I dasiie the public to know my experience with UraveL ard my remarkable recovery through tha ue of your "FAVORITE KEMEDY." I am a carpenter living In this place, nd there are plenty of witnesses to the truth of what Iay. My first eomraraUve'.y slight atwek of Gravel w m the year U& It passed away, and I had litt.e more trouble ontil last Julv, !&3. One dir when at work la my shop I w saddenlv fe!zel with a keen and terrible pain ia my left tide. I consulted two physicians nt uce. One said: "I can do nothing for you. Your case is incurable!" I wai frightened and went to the second, who sail little, but pave me a prescription. It did no good. Then Vega.n a eeries of experiences, the agony end fcorrcr of which words can not depict. Thinic of ltl I was sometimes taken lathe street, ani would fall, writtlDg with eeonv, upon the sidewalk. It wss death in life. 1 buns: Heaven, I tceu beard of KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY," through Mr. P. P. Cooley. I had not used half a bottle when 1 passed tnr?e stones in encessioa, one of which wss nearly one-half an inch Ion?. I verserered with the me-Jiclne, the symptoms gradually abated, and 1 hva had no more tronbie inr. I ara well, thanks to yon andFAVOSHK KEMEDY." Your, most 5.KKJfs.EDY. Whst "FAVOSITE REMEDY" did In this case It Has done la many others. II yoa desire to da bo Address Dr. David Kennedy. Rondout. N. l. 8 PHYSICAL r.rnAV. lnYounjr& Middle artrrrf Ith sttH .r,- "J ti-.n or iuccir crime i irij t.bti t3 tuin. or cui TESTED FOR OVtrf O.a.-,. A U,T tunndrd Ol i VEARSOVtJSSIKtANYf..5, l(.nt nj inflict 1 princ- ;( ThOUSn3C3ES. - V'iPi uyo recurpiicaufni .o the ae of d:eaat ta $W ?S1t.l t"ar.rtior of th ha ö .-7-iX v T.tlo-KnirnrtorL l FACKACta Jlo ai.ima:in2 e:nnt " Ij ' , ,f lifo- vUici Tiaa TB EA T&LEyT. ri.ioJiarrivnbc.ar.d In Month. - $3 -CO.Vi.! patient bftomefcnr T.n Mon'h e.OC VJf-j i and rarid'T Ifair. botla itrea iioatts, I.OL E-j ."vnrj na eauai ar. HARR13 REMDYnCO.. K FOCKtKST DIIDTURED FEH&ONS! WciaTruM. RUr ""kfrt"-if of o-.r Arrhvice. TT. mtt CotttafK yo'.InjvrUmsDrugt CATARRH Head, AllaySFr.Tn1 Icflamma tion.w vfoJf'i Heala tho Borcs.b , Vi.; A pealtivo e77 CBEA BALM ha Ra'nerJI Un P1?1 reputation wherever kno vnt. d'" all other reparation-. a er' 'JZ K ticlelstrplied In.oeacjj costHuannarrio rain, and to asreeabJe to use, rlw W oentt bj nall ot al Dm reiste end iotc.rcnlsr. ELY BROTHERS Pnuel'tr. Owero, N. Y. b"iiTrrur7ciTRER-A rare opportunity for Mlske&Jcoanty. Michigan, own. a larc , thro oit building, MxlOOfeet. well lighted, afttn? nrt nniiPT lull lenetn, with engine room &ui4U Let an pie bo er anden sine : ail in tood jir; rcoriy ground.: convenient for w.te BUrnt nt, Artdiecs lor price and terms, HOBEST CAiraNES8,Agtut. i FOR SA-Xa. FvootT Tt-MatUiewi Patent Renewable S UsTSSt Bend .LaS

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