Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1885 — Page 4

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL- WEDNESDAY JUKE 10 1885.

HMO

1! MO IDS Blind, Bleeding, and Itching, Positively Cured by Guticura. A warm bath with Cuticura Boap and a single application of Cuticura will instantly allay ihe intense Urning of tne most agcravated cuse of 1 ten in Piles. This treatment, comblaed with email doses of Cuticnra Resolvent three tines per day, to regulate and strengthen the bowels, overcome constipation ana remove the catutr, will tnreEiind, fcleedinz, and Itching Piles when all Otter remedies and even physicians lall. ITCHING FILES. The Price of Cutlcara No Account. I was taken, for the first time In ray life, with Blind Piles, to severe that I could hardly aeep on my feet. I need various xemtdies for three weekj, wben the disease took 'he form of. Itching Pi'ea, and prowins; worse By advice of an old gentleman 1 tried the Cmicora. Out application relieved Vte itching, and I was soon cured. I wish to tell tbe world that In ce of Itching Piles the price of the Cnticura id of no account. From an theo Iicltert quarter. O. C. KdBBY. 6J Vest Street, Concord, N. H. PILES 20 YEARS. A. Martyr for 30 Years Cared. Having been a martyr to Piles for twenty years, I was aivipedby a friend to try yonr Cuticnra Remedies, which I did, and am thankful to state that I am now perfectly relieved, an J hone permanently fo. RICHARD NORMAN. Kew York. P. 8 1 would send yon my aldress, bat I prefer to remain In obscurity. ITCHING PILES. ' I beean the use of your Cutlcura Semedles when yon first put töem on the market, and I know of two cares of Itching Piles that nave been cared by the use, at my suggestion, of these remedies. F. K. if ARTIN. YIrden, I1L ALL THAT YOU CLAI5I. I have tried yonr Cu lenra Remedies and find them all that yon claimt and the demand for them In this section is great. AUGUSTUS W. COLLINS. nigsston, Ga, Cutlcura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, lnterDslly.and Cmcrsa aid cuttcvba öoap, tne great Skin Cures, externally, clear he complexl'jn, cleanse the IS&lu and Scalp, and purtflythe Blood of every species of Itching, Scaly, Pimply, Scrofnlons, Mercurial and Cancerous Humors and Ekln Tortures when physicians, hospitals, and all other means fall, told everywhere. Price: Cm. ccea, 60 cents; Soat-, 25 cents: Reoolvext, fL, Potter Dru and Chemical Co., Boston. VELVETY ?IC?EiIoaPSklalrom CB" rut "WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10. K0TICE. The following are the names of those who have at various times since January enclosed money to this office without giving their postofEco address, and we hire no means of reachixg them: John W. SUnson, W. Hinds, Lewis Btiers, J. F. Smithey, Jacob F. Baker. Charles Huffman, "W. Ii. McQuoid, Abe Laughman. TEHM3 FEB YEAR. lujle Copy, without Premium, ob of eleven for -II 08 .10 00 Tffe ask Democrats to Dear In mind, and select heir own EUte paper when they come to tax 3 nbscrlptloni andmake up cluba, Agents making op dabs send for any Information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTETKL COMPANY, Indlanpolu, lad, The Secretary of the Treasury received a strong protest against the farther coinage of the silver dollar from South Carolina. Twestt two carloads cf strawberries left Centralia, IlL, for Chicago last Friday. There were 237,000 quarts in the shipment. Air indictment for grand larceny has been found against Ferdinand Ward, of the de fund firm cf Grant & Ward. It was rather ."grand," fcr a fact. Thi aggregate of the crop reports shows a largely increased acreage of corn throughout the Northwest, and a fair condition of the plant, notwithstanding the lateness of the tea-ion. General Jackson's eld home, "The Heranitee'has been given to the United States Coverament as a home for veteran soldiers. This is a very generous action on the part of Tennessee. A meteor as 'big as a fbur barrel" wai seen in Texas Saturday night by rome returning prajer meeting folk, who thought the day of judgment had come, and they "took to the woods." Tixas has 4,231,023 head cf cattle, the largest number cf any State In the Union, an a tout as many as all France possesses. For all the States and Territories the cattle papulation is 42,5-17,307 head. FEontssoR Swing, the noted Chicsga preacher, advocates not allowing anybody to vote who is possessed cf less than $000 worth cf property. It is suggested to the brother, with respect, that this would have ruled out the il aster and all the apostles except Jndaa. Ah eminent phjsician who has been studying Rev. Mr. Jones' method and his peculiar power said the other day that to his mind Jones' illustration of the similarity of measles and religion was his best, and showed that his great power is In his simplicity. Said he: "The nakedness of his language is eo plain that it leaves no room for daubt. This is a mechanical and physical age, and Jones knows it and leaves out the bird3 and the trees wkich belong to an a;;e more rcrf antic and sentimental. 'Fortiter In re' is mere to him than 'Sauviter In mod?.' " Dcbifg the ten months ending Jane 1 the total revenues of the Government were leäs by over $2j,0CO.CC0 than thsy were for the corresponding period of the last fiscal year. The customs receipts fell off $13,000,000, the Internal revenue $3,010,000 and the miscellaneous ? i.OCO.Cvü. The expenditures increased $1,000,0.0, thus making a difference cf I12.CC0.CC0 In the surplus to the disadvantage of the current fiscal year. The expenditures fcr the month of Slay last ysar were ?26,;S0,C53, but for the month cf May this year they were 523,537,521. Tin New York Sun vouches for the cure of one actreJJ smitten man. He had for many ytari been an inmate cf an Insane Asylum. He became a f Urions lover of Riatcri as Mary Etcart, and immediately went daft. Of late years the one mania of love for the mimic queen was all that ailed him. Seeing that IUitcri, on her recent farewell tour, had become a middle-aed woman, with rone of her personal beauty left, the physician decided U .take hla patient to see her. J he result was astonishingly successful.

There was enough of the former BIstorl fo convince the man that she was the earns individual: but he was so thoroughly diaencbsnted that recovery was almost instantaneous.

OPENING THtfl BOOK AND GETTING UNDER WAY. The books have been opened in the various departments of the Government for a trifle over three months to Democratic inspection not very wide, it is true, but wide enough to reveal a considerable amount ot bad management and raecality on the part of employes of Republican administrations. A large amount cf crookedness has been unearthed in the Navy and Interim Departments, and much rottenness Indicated by Secretary Bayard in the Republican consular service. Some rascals have been turned out, tome (kipped out, and others" have committed suicide. Secretary Lamar, in the Interior Department, has put an end to the enormous raids on public lands left in progress by his predecessor, and has surprised even hla friends by the vigor and success with which he has filled a position requiring large - administrative abilities. Attorney General Garland has made an efficient law officer ot the administration, and has been able to effect something in eecuricg, through subordinates a meet careful looking after the interast of the Government. In referring to Secretary Bayard, the Baltimore Sun saja that he has been more fortunate than the rest of his colleagues in having been called upon by events in South and Central America and in Germany to declare Boon after entering effios his views upon several large questians of policy, and in seeing the ideas he has formulated as to the attitude the United States should assume in dealing with foreign governments cordially accepted by the entire American public, without distinction of party. His foreign policy as regards the rights cf Americans abroad is, in fact, approved even by his opponents as a r3turn to "the broad, noble Democratic doctrine held b7 William I. Marcy aed en'orcd ander the administration cf Franklin Pierse." As the New Ycrt World says, "Every Amerikas citizen cnght to be proud of this change in our national policy," and the Charleston News and Courier, in common with all fairly conducted journals of the country, speaks in the same vein of enthusiastic csmmsndaHon. Yet no member cf the Cleveland Cab inet has been more studiously Ignored and misrepresented by certain leading newspapers In New York and the East. His acts as Secietary of State are either passed over in silence, though he has placed the question cf the rigbs3 of the American citizsns abroad and the future of the Panama Canal on an entirely new fooling, or ascribed to President Cleveland. His appointments ta important positions have been necessarily more numerous than those of bis colleagues, and have, therefore, of teuer given his opponents texts for criticism. Secretary Manning is looming up wonderfully, andthe indications are that his administration of the Treasury Department will surpaess that of any of his predecessors. It is brainy, bold and fearless and conservative enough to meet the views cf old fcgylsm, which deprecates anything outside cf a very quiet and careful policy in financial matters. We think that the opp titicn have outgrown the idea that Mr. Manning was a mere politician. Mr. Endicott is making a very vigorous War Secretary, and, as the Son remarks, has sought to put an end to favoritism in the army, and is endeavoring to raise the standard of official duty and honor in his department of thi public service to what it was twenty-five years ago, but, apart from his management J of the Indian outbreak in the Southwest, tie country has nothing by which to test fcis executive ablity. CBCOKEDNESS IN THE AGRICULTURAL BUREAU. As rapidly as the books are bsing opened in the various departments cf tbe Governm?nt eo rapidly doss it appear tint loose mcaeercent and corruption were largely the chsracteristics of Republican adminiatrat;ccp. We have already given indications cf this in certain matters connected with the Interior, Navy and State Departments, and now we have a chapter from the Agricultural Bureau, to which we are indebted to the Philadelphia Times, a paper that always treats friend and fue alike in its columns. S3 that the expose which it makes concerning the Agricultural Department is not made from any narrow partisan standpoint. Lorlcg, the Commissioner of Agriculture under the last administration, it teems, was absent from the bureau at least three-quarters of the year, and most if not all the time traveling upon alleged Government business. His traveling expenses and those of his private Secretary, who always accompanied him. bad to be paid out cf the "contingent fund." The Commissioner made ere fust class junketing trip "across ths continent," ecsompanied by his private Secre tary, and when they returned the Secretary estimated that they had traveled over 10.000 miles, making 20,000 miles for the two in tbclr sixty-day trip. Altogether these two gentlemen traveled over 500 days at Governcent expense. This, at $10 per day, is over ?3,tG0. More than one-half of the appropriation was required to pay their expenses. In addition to the foregoing, the Times representative exposes another batch of junketing tours made by attaches and hang-ers-cn ot the Agricultural Bureau. But they were net the enly "wayfaring" men In the bureau. Chief Clerk Carman was a'eo a traveler. Professor Atwater. holding a good position and salary at Middietown, Conn., was sent to Europe on a pleasure trip at the exp er re cf the bureau. Mr. Spencer was the traveling companion of ex Governor Warrxoib, cf Loaisiana, who went to Eirope to examine the improved machinery lox manufacturing cane cugar. Mr. Spencer's ostensible tuelness was to examine into the cultivation of beet-rcot sugar. Frcfesaor Riley, the entomologist of the bureau, was Bent to the scuth cf France to study the peculiar habits of the poisonous insects cf that locality that destroy the iuar teet. Professor Wiley, the cheralet, tock his outing . by a visit to the Pacific slope. His business was to look for beet sugar, and he found It. He tent on a barrel of ordinary beets from California by express at at a cost cf $21, and one hundred pounds of beet sugar at the same cost. The Professor was very anxious to visit Alaska in his eearchfor beets, but the Chief Clerk objected, as be wanted a turn himself. Professor Riley returned from Eureps without discovleg the dangerous bug, and neither Frotauor

Atwatercor Mr. Spencer have contributed anything to the agricultural knowledge or wealth of the country by their trip with exGcvernor Warmoth. The regular agent of the department, Mr. MofFet, kept in London, bas done much better. He succeeded cimplele'y in doing what ha was sant tor. His office was kept in the building of the Mark Lane Express, ths great agricultural paper of England. From this vantage ground the gent succeeded in advertising Commissioner Lor in g very extensively, and this was all that was expected of him. He performed the equally important labor cf drawing his salary. The Times charges that the new Commissioner, Coimsn, was really the selection of Lormg, and. that the former has secured the placed ef nearly all the attaches of the old regime under the manipulation of Loring. It is also charged that the fund of "seed money" was used to pay for the junketing tours already referred to, as the regular appropriation of $10,000 did cot meet the demands of Loring and his creird. - Mr. Lonng' s chief subordinates are responsible for a good deal cf tho mismanagement cf the Agricultural Department, and the old farmer who hai succeeded the theorist and agricultural dude is the ir legitimate prey. They claim to have rrade him Commissioner, and on tbe strength of this will en lea vor to prevail upon him to smooth over the seed find peculation and the outrageous misappropriation cf public moneys. Perhaps Mr. Colmau, the new Commissioner, ceed3 a gentle hint concerning Loring and his management of the bureau. If he would make a clean enreep of the eubordisa'es cf the old chief and put in honest Democrats, perhaps it would result in a more prudent management of the Agricultuial Department.

THE "OLD SOLDIER" BU3INE33. General Logan is worrying himself because some "old eoidieis' are beicg turned out of officia! position. He need net let this annoy him. The administration will take care of "old soldiers." There lsagecd deal cf Republican humbuggery stalking around in the clothes cf "old eoMiers," and masquerading in bcth the blue and the gray. The country repudiated John A. Logan last fall, and be pretended to oe something of an "old soldier" himself, but the exact point ot transit where John ceased being a "copperhead" era "butternut" and eyoiutedinto an "old soldier" has nerar been satisfactorily located. These Republican crocodile tears over the old soldier business are played out. If any Republican "old soldiers" lose their positions there will be an abundance of Democratic "old soldiers" put in their places. When Hayes was defeated for the Presidency the burden of his lamentations took the shape of a bogus mourning for the poor negro, yet when he was fraudulently bat safely located in Mr. Tilden's seat in the White House, he deserted the poor negro's supposed friends as they were represented in eeveral Southern States, although they had reached official position by tbe very tame bogus means that he had reached the Presidency, Hayes of course was a humbug, and eo is John A. Logan. As Heyes poured out bogus lamentations over tbe "poor negro," Logan pours them out over the "old soldier." What doss he care for "the old soldier," as such? If the soldier votes the Democratic ticket Legan does net care a baubee whether he secures an office or not. Did he rejoice when Ger era1 Black was appointed Commissioner of Pensions? Did anybody ever hear of hla shedding tears oyer the defeat of General Hancock because he was an old soldier? Hancock contributed largely to the Gettys burg victory. What difference dil ihia make to Logan or any other Republican? Hancock was a Demo crat, and this cut him o3 from Republican patronage and sympathy. There are te-day ten or fifteen of Logan's relatives holding Federal positions. Are any of them "cid soldiers?" Let Logan suggest a vacating cf these tositlons, and then the "old soldiers" that he is crocodiling over might be placed in them. Legan is a towering, mon umental, political fraud a genuine type of tbe huxnbuggery of Bourbon Republican ism. COURAGE, MS. PRESIDENT. Democrats of New Ennland, indeed to a large extent throughout the country, are watching with interest the contest for the appointment cf Postmaster at Augusta, Me. The issue seems to be whether Mr. Blaine's wishes or the wishes of the united Dmoc racy cf Maine eball prevail. With all due deference we wish to record one vote with the Maize Democracy. It is stated a3 beyond doubt that Mr. Biaine has on two separate occasions asked the President not to appoint Colonel Morton rcstmaster of Augusta. It has alEO leaked out that the President a few days ago indicated his purpose ta ap point Colonel Mcrton, and that soon after this perpese became known the Maine en atcrs called at the White House and notiSed the President that Mr. Morton was specially obnoxious to Mr. Blaine, and warned him that if he (Morton) was nominated he would te rejected by tbe Senate. Greater imperti cecce on the part of Senators to the Presl dent would be difficult to conceive of. It tbcnld be treated accordingly, and we make eo doubt but the President will do it. It will be time enough for Republican San atcrs to act on nominations when in the usual way they are before the Senate. No man was ever backed more strongly, and cone have bad a cleaner record to pre sent, than Charles B. Morton, and the con duct of Mr. Blaine and the Maine Senators in tie premises presents additional reasons why tbe appointment should be made, that the country may know that Republicans are cot In power at this time. A valuable and sterling New England Democratic exchange well remarks: It can not be possible that President TlevelAud allows Mr. I nine's cpposi'ioa to Mr. Morton as Postmaster at Augusta to aSect bis position in the irancr. cccn a conumon ot mint? wouia indicate tbat!Clalne had some controlling influence over tne administration, which no one In his senses DeneYts. Here in Indiana Democrats are just a little sensitive upon this subject from baing over treated to bits of the same pie in short, are sick and tired of the attempted bulldozing ot Mr. Blaine's henchmen as to who ahall or b all not be confirmed If appointed by the administration. . It is an open secret that an Indiana Sena tor, tbe close friend and late attorney of Mr. Blaine, has caused It to be given out tba certain Indiana Democrats who are no In favor with Mr. Blaine would save time ar.d trouble by not applying

fcr positions under the administration, as

they would not be confirmed by tba Sanate. Scarcely a week has passed since the election tbat one or more of the Republican organs of this city have not with mere or less gusto given out similar i otices. With respect we volunteer the opinion tbat the time has fully come when all this kind of thing may well be treated by the administration with the contempt it merit. We fully agree v;ith the Galveston News when it says: If an admittedly qualified man Is rejected be rat re a Simply private citizen decs not want htm er pointed the country ehouid know it. Tae President can afford to Invite a contest with the (Sen ate cn this basis. If tbe President is convinced that a certain perecn is the right man for a given position he thculd appoint him and depend upon the herbst opinion cf tbe country for support iu esse the Republicans cf the Senate refusa to confirm tbe appointment We can lafely assure the President that the 215.CC0 Demccrcta cf Indiana who directed the electoral vole of their State, cast for him s ere man, hope end expect tbat he will listen to and honor the reasonable requests, not only cf the united Democratic brethren of Maine, in'.regaid to the Augusta Fcotrassterehip, but these cf Democrat! throughout tbe country. Democrats may fairly be supposed to have the interests of their party at heart, and understand how tbose interests can best be served. We trust that Mr. Blaine and his imperti nent partners in intrigue, both in this and every other instance, will be disappointed, and not the Democrats. Let Cclonel Mcrton be appointed. COLONEL DICK THOMPSON A3 AN EVOLUTIONIST. Colonel Thompson has s-'en every Presldant of tt e In tied (Mates but the t'.rst two. and has carticif aUd in fooHeen Presidentfnt campiUnN. Hi lauier as a L'emocrat and at ederalisl, aad voted lcr Jactfon. but the Colonel early became a '.Vhl. and remained ore until that organization wai ruerstd into the Republican party. Times. Yes ! Colonel Dick evoluted right along into and through ell the parlies that have existed during his long life. The connecting link between the Wbig party and the Republican party is. however, missing in the foregoing extract from the Times. Republican papers seldom care ta refer to it. The old Whig party went Into the Know-Nothing organiza tion, the history cf whicb Is simply disgraceful to American politic?, and old Dick ThomFSon was one of the Grand High Prie3ta of that organization. Th's Know-Nothing crowd, with.the old Abolition organization, which held that the Constitution of the United States wai a ''covenant with hell," formed a new party, which they called tbe Republican party. During the war the party was so thoroughly distasteful to the great mass of the American people that the bosses and manegers dropped the name of Republican and called it "the Union party." Dick Thompson swallowed everything and climbed right along up through them all Whig, Know-Nothing, Republican and Union until he reached the fraudulent Hayes Cabinet. He has been excer dingly useful to the Republican party, especially in helping them to make up its National platforms. Ho had a knack of "cotchin' the cocn gwine or comin'," mora particularly at the time when about Binetenths of the people were opposed to tegro suffrage. Then old Dick's platforms were models of oil and gammon. The old Abolitionist of Massachusetts, the consenative Whig of the Middle States, the Xnownothing of Kentucky and Maryland and the backward Indiana Republican all had to be accommodated, and old Dick Thompson's smooth 'and bombas'Jc platitudes seldom failed to meet the wants of the entire combination. If the awarding committee of Indiana Republican ism are bestowing any testimonials old Dick Thompson is distinctly entitle J to a red rib bon. Tie it cn the left ear of the old war horse, Mr. Chairman, and let him give the Wabash snort of triumphal satisfaction. Not wnnsTAB diso the Inclination of the Bourbon Republican papers to slur and undelete General James Black, of Illinois, as tbe Commissioner of Pensions, It is comforting to knewn that he is making one of the njcst efficient officers in the eervice. The wide' awake correspondent of the Naw York World tays that he will probably make abetter showing for his bureau at the beginning cf the fircal year than any one of tb.9 new bureau officials of this administration. He bae gone ahead very quietly, without eaying hat he was going to do, and ha3 succeeded in putting his office upon a very thorough and complete business basis. The effectiveness of his office management can best be shown by giving a few figure?. Upon the 21st cf March tbe Pension Office bad handled aid dhpesed of 3 710 cases. For the month tr dlDg April 3D the cases disposed of were tecily doubled, reaching ai high as 7,822. For the month just ended a still farther increase is noted, the cases dispose! of in the month ot May belDg 9.3G0. This, too, without arjy increase of force and with a redaction of tbe number of clerks by eeventy-five. General Black Is very popular In the bureau, ar.d bas accomplished all cf this increase of business in the most quiet and easy fashion. Iiis bureau promises to be, if it is not now, cne cf the model bureaus of the Government. DiscrrusE in English prisons is rigorous in tbe extreme. The two dynamitards. Cun ningham and Burton, have been taken to Chattam prison, where the balance of their lives will be epent. Daring the coming nine months they will .ufierBclitary confinement Their mls will be brought to them, and ttey will see no person but the Warden, nor talk with anyone but the doctor, nor hear acy voice but tbat of the chaplain. They are confined In remote parts of the prison, and probably will never again see each other. With colden eccd eense and good spirit, the Atlanta Journal (colored) remarks that we are livirg here among the same people that once cwned us. We must get on together. There la nowhere for us to go. We cculd cot go if we wanted to. Tkey could net send ns if they tried. We should thank Grd for the measures of peace that exist amccg us. Let us try to educate our children, buy lends, make car homes pure, dignified and ccmfcrtable, and save money, and every ttter right will follow. Tt Ib worthy of remark that the only jour cals.'pnbllshed In tbe United States that seem to begrudge the payment of pensions to eld soldiers, and that bitterly antagonize every proposition to create new classes of pensioners, are those opposed to the coinage of eJlver.

FOUR ACTS PLATED.

Sad Beport About Ex-Preldeat Arthur Will tbe Fltm and Final Act be a Tragedy? Hochester Democrat and Chronicle. "Dr. Lincoln, who was at the funeral of cx Secretary Frelinghuysan, says ex-President Arthur looked very unwell. He is Bhffmng from Bright's disease. Daring the past year it has assumed a very aggra vated form." Ttat telegram is act IV. ol a drama written by ex-Freeident Arthur's physicians. In act L he wes made to appear in "Malaria," of whicn all the country was told when ha went to Florida, In aci IL te xeprasnied a tired man, worn down, wa.k'r g the sands at Old Poht C)nfort and looting eastward over the Atlantic toward Europe for a Ion s?r rest The curtain roils no for act IIL upon the dist'npui&l ed actor affected with nnaacho(y from Bright's dieeese, while Act IV. discovers him with the disease "in an egravAted form, suffering intensely, (srhich is uousaa!) eca iDoat to täte a sea voyeze." Just such as this Is tne plot cf many dramas by play-wr ghls cf the medical pro fession. Thty write the first two or three acts with r.o conception of "what their character will develop in the final one. They cave not the discernment for tracing in tbe early what the latter impersonation wiil be. lactone physloiin in a hundred has tbe adequate microscopic and ch-micil a?pliaLces for discovering Bright's disease in its eer.'y elates, and when many do finally comprehend tbat their patients are dying with it, when death cccurs, they will, to cover up their ignorance cf it, pronounce the fatality to hfcve been caused by ordinary ailments. wberer.8 thes9 ailments Sre really re3U ts of Bright e defease, of which tcev are unconscious victims Bejcnd any doubt, 80 per cent, of all deatl s. except from epidemics aid accident?, result from diseased kidneys or livers. If thedyirg be dittlcgnishtd, and his frinla too intelpgent to be easily deceived, his pbysicierjs, perhats, pronouncs the complaint to b rericaraiti?, pjiemia, septicaemia, bron chitis, pJeuritis. valvclir lesions cf the heart, pneumonia, et 3. Ii the d-csai6d be less noted, "malaria" is now the fhxoaabie assignment of the cause of death. But ail the same, named right or named wrong, this fearful ecoirge gamers them in. Whil it prevails among persons of seden tary habits lawyers, clergymen, Congress menit also plays great havoc amvig f drmers, diy laborers and meenanicä, though they dj not 6uere::t it, because their physicians keep it from them, if indeed they are able to detect it. It sweeps thousands of women and chil dren into untimely graves every year. The health gives way gradually, the strength, is variable, the appetite is fickle, the vigor gets less and less This isn't malaria; it is the beginning of kidney disease, and will end wl'o does not know how? Nc. nature has not been remiss. Indepen dent research has given an infallible remedy for this common disorder: but of course the bigoted physicians will not use Warner's safe cure, because it is a private affair, and cuts up their practice by restoring the health of tbrse who have been invalids for years. The new saving of "how common Brizht'a disease is becoming amosz prominent men!" is getting old, and as the Ealishman would esy, tonnes "stupid" especially "stupid" since this disease is readily deteo.ed by the more ieerncd men and specialists of this disease. But the "common run" of physiclaps, not detecting it, give ths patient Epsom salts or other drugs prescribed by ths old code of treatment ander which their grand fathers and great-grandfathers practiced! Anon, we hear that the patient is "comfortable." Bat ere long, may be, they "tap'' him and take some water from him and egain the "comfortable" story is told. Tortine him rather than allow htm to use Warrer's eafe cure! With such variations tbe doctors play upon the unfortunate until his shroud is made, when we learn that h9 died from heart disease, pjrear.a ssoticocnia or Berne other deceptive though "digaiSed cause." Ex-President Arthur's cae ia not singular. It ia typical of every such ci?a. "lie la satferir g intensely." This is not usual. Generally there is almost no suffering. Hs may recover, if he will act independently of his physicians. The agency named hascireJ thoabandaof persons, even in the extreme Steges is to-day the main 8ay cf the n-.a'th of hundreds of tbou9P-nds. It is aa unfortunate fact that physicians will not admit there is any virtue out s:de the r own aphyre. bat as each echool denies virtue to all others, the people act cn their own jidgient and socept tbing3 by the record of merit they make. The facts are cause lor alarm, b'tt there is al-ucdant hope in prompt and ii-djpazieät action. INDIANA DEMOOBaCT. The heart-rending solicitude of certain R jpublican journals ts to possible divisions in the Demccrat'c camp in Indiana is pitiable In tbe extreme. For almort a quarter of a century he Democracy in this Stat9 bai been united and harmonious always tolerating the Jaraest li berty of thought and expression. In its organized captclty under the leadership of its great Captains it hai found tint sife eound and conservative solution of all disturbing questions that seemed to'challeuge an undivided Bnpport Dd enable it to present to the enemy an unbroken front. Htdf.edin between two mighty Republican States to the east and west of, u? Indiana ha 3 steed as a breakwater agiinst the fanaticism and Intolerance of tbe times until to day she is more thoroughly Democratic tban ay Bister State of the entire North. Under a wise and sagacious leadership such poi'cled have obtained as to challenge the support of the liberal-minled, conservative element of tbe entire State, and to inspire the rank and file with a courage and enthes'sem absolutely resistless. This matchless leadership will be continued ; w.tbeut dlvlEkn or factional opposition, ard all expression of concern as to Democratic dissensions or infelicities from an adverse press ia entirely gratuitous. Tni: man bo commanded tbe Virginia militia ccruiary that capturtd John Ilrown at Harper's Frry, one Grjeus, now livlnjf In Dakota, is an appMcmt for oflic j. His claim is somewhat embrmsed, however, by the fact that, while be made a iquure tbrim at Brown with bis saber, and struck the old hero over tee head several times after he (Brown) had fallen to his knees and was entirely htlplef!", the attempted murder was a failure. Ulobe-Dcmocrat. The man who hung Brown did not make failure of it. and now we hear that Ms son will be the Republican candidate for Governor cf Virginia. Thus, while "John Brown's eoul keeps marching on." the g. o. p. keeps psce with It. General Chalmers, another distinguished Republican, did not make a mistake In the slaughter of ths colored troops at Fort Pillow. A kd row Gladstone rests, we are told. After mary moths of anxious efforts to sscure peace he has succeeded, ard thus saved a wcrld of woe. Good people everywhere should boner him therefor. It may be only a truce, as his enemies charge, but it is peace for a time, and in that period who can tell what may happen to eecure a further postponement of tbe evii day, or procure its entire removal? The peace sentiment is making rapid strides. This popular judgment of nations more and more controls the actions of rulers even cf despots.

MAGNETISM AND OXYGEN The Grandest Curative Known to Man.

S IS I U. II v-- vM-

z-':y : -:'--t ' ";.' ' X.- Z yy::--'iX' : $''?V.Z;

tatnre's forces for aid in the restoration of man's physical nature. By universal consent MacnUfcm bas been recognized as the force In na'.nre which ho'ds worlds In plp.ee, and by thj laws of attraction and repulsiou they are kept In tae.r orbits, moving la majestic tllcrce through the realms of space. As Magnetism is the force which controls inanimate nature, 83 also I jcen the livin? principle on wbif h all animal life depends. Bo by these wtn star of Hope, ;uetism aad Oxygen, a ctlDB in barrrony. each performing Its proper function, disess-3 is eliminated, and tbe victim of dl.-eat bids adieu to the tcrtmes of the pns Baaice: an ailmeat that flosn i heir to but what has been cured by cur method, sf cr endless failures and experiments on the part physicians. When y onr phytdctan proposes to you to chango climstss be usually means that ho don't want you todio ob bis Lands, end be wants you to get away. He remembers, perhaps, thai be made a mis ke and i sve j cu the wrons; meoicine. or ho disgnoeed yonr c-e at the tttt rrn, a:vj ot course pave yo i 'te wicek rred;cine. Physicians ate fcuican and not infallible. Then why not employ au inUllible if tM? Mature nfVtr makts a mistake. Ungnetifm ena Oxysen are the enly pbreicisns that nerer mako mIMske?. Throw acils, therec re. your ptlts atid r.uwder. and lot nature resto-e boti n lad and body to a lie exixtnce. 1 ai r rr part-d tu furnish our 3a;ni:c iplisucn aad Uxjgp Combined at less 'I'fr til err ctprge for the Oi yceu alone. Ve can t rest yon at your hotne s sncessfuHy ss if you a! It r! n r j ctf ne.ly. ly our method Cot.suropMo-i csn be cured in nineteen cases out ot twtctT. Cur buide to tlcauh la free to alb Testimonial from every part o: tae l'aiied öuttiä. OXJ1X 'X'lClitaiS: Ladiea Maguotio Jackets or Gsntlemen'j Magnetic V?ste, with JO ''it' cfSce treatment, or 3mcnhs' homo treatment Cora,ou:cl Oxygen $25! Cotrult&tion FKEFi. Address. DS L- TLViiY. 47 1 W. Midisai Sired, iftav. hi

THE SPICE OF rOLITICi'. The republican doctrine ha3 baei millions for repairs but not one cent for a navy. Florida Times Union. Wiscoksis and Michigan will be the next two additions to the Democratic column of Slates. Brooklyn Eagle. TasNSYLVAifrA is entitlsd to no more conlirJeration in Demccratic National palitics than Canada. Itccheäter Union. Tee new postal cards will be a light pins. Just a delicate blush at being Introduced to sorcaBy new Postmasters. Hartford Post. Mn. Vilas swings his ax lustily among Mahone's c flan give Pcetm asters in Virgiania. OfSci&l guillotine never operated on a worse parcel of rascals New York Graphic Sicketary Whitnes has just discovered that the government has paid 900,000 for repair on a wooden navy vessel, the original cost of which could not have been more tban one-third that amount However, "the cesh in the treasury balances to a cent." Chicago Times. Mb. Cleveland's course as President has rot prodeced discontent or schism in his own party in this Stste, and It will be a disastrous mistake for Republicans to count upon inch discontent as a factor of tafety in tbe coming election. New York Commerclol Advertiser (Eep,). "Whew Clair and Chandler begin their fiht for the New Hampshire Eenatorship it is expected that the country will be entertained by a catch es catch can combat between the eld fashioned rock ribbed goodness and the genuine copper bottomed cus&edness of sturdy New EDgland. Philadelphia New;. Tbe puzzle as to where our Republican fritrds would find lumber for their platforms tMs fall hes teen eolyed. They can view with alarm and apprehension the conjunction of the thirteen and eeventeen-year locusts under a Democratic administration, an outrage that ha? r.ot ben perpetrated since 16G1. Philadelphia Record. Oss Demccra1; who n bones: and efficient baa no more right to an efhee than any other Democrat wto is honest aad efficient, and those wha think tbey have 'c'ain:s" are in a trercecdooB minority when compared with the great maia of Demccratic voters who do ret care wbat particular individual holds office provided he comes up to the standard cf eflciencj. Atlanta constitution. Ths turning out of Mahone's official creitnres in Virginia bas begun, and it ehouid net be stopped until the last one of them has been supplanted by a reputable man. These men are cf tbe most objectionable character. They either bought their offices or earned ttem by villainous political dirty work. No bencet man, knowing the facts, can .object to a clean sveep in that State. Ths organs are praising the members of tbe Illinois Legislature for "remaining true to their party." And yet they r---'.se a great how l when President Cleveland, true to his party atd his country, ee'zes a Republican tquealer by ths hair of his head and lifts him out of a fatcfiice. Th. organs 6hould make srrangemants to in create their howling capacity. Atlanta Constitution. Oss of the fourth class clerks In tba Agricultural Bureau has beei dismissed for "'offensive partisanship." He did not belong to any club, he never pulled any wires at a convention, or made h'ni-olf uief ul for cam paign purposes. His partisanship was of a deeper acd mere ins'dious character. He Eaved all the deed seed in tbe department and forwarded it to Demccratic farmers applying for "samples." Brooklyn Eagle. Ths substitution cf the Hebrew word thcol" for hell in the reTiaioa of th9 Old Testament is a timely and fortunate idea. Its value es a euphemism can hardly be exaggerated. There Is no doubt that Its ganeral acceptance will precede that of ay other chw ge made by the revisers. Hereafter it will be possible for a pious mugwump, as he castihis eje 0Tr tha list of the President's appointments, to express his real feelings without retiring to the woodBhed. Broaklyn Eagle (Dem.). The New York Times eeys: -There Is much eald lately, especially In the Damocratic papers, of the narrower sort of the President's civil eervice. This reported intention is to sooie extent confirmed by the "Washington correspondent of the Boston Advertiser, wbich Is joyfully quoted by the Son of tbia city. Oa the otter hand it Ib alfo reported from Washington that the Republican Senators are consalting with a view to deciding their own course lathe premises. The President, hinself, has given to evidence of 6nyeuch inteution as ia attributed to him, his removals and substitutions having been relatively few in numbsr, and including tbe appointment cf eo many Republicans that it would bs quite rasti to Infer that he entertains such a purpose.".

Dr.Tenterits the Inventor and so' e M rauf acta rer of the famous Eureka Macuetic Applianrt, which have attained a world-wide reputation aa bain? the only scientifically coattruetel magnetic garment made; also founder of me twm BapeliciCcnijsürtd Öijjenüo, For the relief and cure of all forms of disease WITHOUT MEDICINE. The Introduction of these twin forces of nature. ?I ago ti in and Oxjk". have r?To!utionted the practice of medic te, n.-l the Old Sctool Pnysiciani have already tsfce- r.lärai. and have lately field a meeting t prote-' iNeci eives auslast tlieir introduction, lbe pnt:;c aru awatv, howtvar, of tn fact, that they hava t p,j-el every advancj ia Dedtcal tcience for ths iat two hucdre-J year, and the very line of tn attaeat f cmu-.io-xl by then thirty years ago as raise s to-day neid to beaUaolut9 truth.

The leasooa which should have boon tan eh t by pest experience have faiieu on etotiv ground ait rave borne but llltle Ir.ilr. a frw alrn;ed thinkers in tee prtfes?.:on. falling to be recognized in their effort for r niranity. hre broken the bonds which tiiel ti.m,RUt rtceguMtc xhat nature was the best Ciicaisi, have reaj(il to ii yi b 5i fr,. "TKC OLD KSUAPLE," 23 YEARS iH US2. rh Greatest Kedicsd Triumph, cf the Aff Endorsed ail over ttio World SYMPTOMS O? A .TOPPED LSVER. Loss of appetite. Nausea, bovels costive.Paini n theHesvd.vrith adull eensation in the baclg part. Fain nndci th9houlderblade, fullness .efter eat? Ins, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of tempTi I9YL ?PirUs,Lossofjnemory,witS a feeling of havlrtg neglected sornf duty weariness. Dizzines3, Flutter tng of the Heart, Dots before the eyea YellowSkin.He&dache,Restlessnes3 at nightt highly, colored Urine. IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHXZDFD. tii:z2 Ecz23 7iu, c::s ss rxviLcrza TU1TS PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one dose etfocts such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer. They Iucrense the Appetite, and cause the body to Ttk: Vs. Vlesh, thus tbe system Is nourished, and by their Toni Action on the Iie: itlve Orcui, ll(?ular Stools fir prcxinced. Pnoe a." crntaTUTTS losst Black bya single application ot this DrE. It imparts a natural color, acia Instantaneously. Soid by Druggists, ot eent by express on receint of 9 1. Cf77ce.-44 Murray St New York PERS0XALS. The Pftrneliite tribute for Victor Husa'e funeral was a gigantic eüararcck crown. It is raid of Secretary Whitney that be Is able to laugh without xea:oviog his spectacles. A Clsvelakd Leatt:r vr'tjr credits John McLean with being l r chf st maa in Cincinnati; worth at hst ? o .00 COO. Featbick wiilrecr lw s-m wedding presen from the Isla cf V-ht U;e Keepers' Ass elation a silver be with J acacnd-stndled wings. A gestlemak who saw Mr. Bsjarl out ridLng the other nlbt sajs te has grown fuily ten years older, since ha went into the State Department. Bob Inqeesoll is probf.b'.y aaxicusiy scanning the revieed Old Testament to sse if the change will compel him to rewrite his sacrilegious gags. Danville L'retz?. Mes. Oxe Bull and family will probably retain possession for another year cf 'Elmwood," Mr. Lcwe;l'd h&u;e at Cambridge, vbich tkey have occupied in his absence. "It is never too la'e to learn." Deacon Jabez McCall, o! Lebanon, cirhty three years old, ie j06t row acquiring hla firet practical knowledge of meashs Wiilimanlic (Cjuu.) Jo urea1. Foe mere ttan a week tie winiawcf Wa'.t Vi'hitmen'a humble chamber in Mickle street, Camden, tas displayed a picture cf Victcr Hugo, draped in crape, p.lesilngly indicating theklrdly feeling the great poets have for one another. r Mme. MrssiE. Hack rraie no great exchange in names when ehe married Warte gg, but they two will live pieasattly, no doubt, In the lately purchased Biss castle ot EchloeeBinnigen, instead cf s'crsin round in Continental hotels as heretorore. Professor J. K. Raise, a composer an 1 professor of music, checked the sensibilitiei of some ot his feminine hearers at a recent lecture by calling the-ir attention to tbe faci tifct wemen have ' never excelled in musical composition. A review cf the famous cüxpesera ettablißhea the truth cf this statement, vllch at first seemed Ir:probable. The Scientific American calculates that the force with which Odium etruct tha watr CLder Brooklyn BriJe was equal to 23,2)3 pcunde. It is tot, there fere, d.ffi:ult to explain the doctors' statement that the vlcaai vsns 'simply mangled to death," Pr.orifcri Lcomis, cf Ytle Coll??, h treu a loca tine In dl coverinz that last February was tbe coldest known for tbeps.st century, when ita proximity to March 4 made its frigidity sufficiently obvioui to the thecserda cf Republican baraacles about ta be out in the cold. Ir we may judge by he bills for repairs we have evidently been engaged in a most terrfic naval war for many years. Many of tbe vessels seem to have been almost dsmolisbed by the enemies' broadsides, acd all of them have been very bidly cripp'el. Strange to tay, there has been no lo;s ot life, but a great many era re men have bean obliged to have their reputations amptited. Hinneapclis Tribute (Rep.).