Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1885 — Page 4

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY AUGUST 10, 1335.

UNIVERSALLY COMMENDED BY PHYSICIANS. DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS EVERYWHERE. WE have obtained satisfactory results from the u.se of the Cttictra Remedies in our ow n family, and m-ommenfl them beyond an y other remedies for diseases of the fdrin nnl blood. The demand for tbem cmws as their merits become known. M ACM ILL AN k CO., Drnsr'-rbt. Latrube, I'a. Your CiTicfRA Remediks sell well, especially theCiTici RA toAP. I tll more Ccticcka than of anv other three kinds of ikin medicines I arry.'and the Cvtktra soap M?lla to inv test lav. of customers. My lady eutoraers will buy no other. 11. K. SAMUfcL. Uruesi-d. I'auvilie, Ky. Our opinions on the subject of the C'itwvra EMEDiiare formed from the expressions of our customers, to detail w hich would be to w rite a volume. They m?11 more readily than any other Mood remedies. BARXABY S I'HARMACY. . 72d Fulton Mt., Brooklyn, N. . Your CrnrtRA Rfxlvent Ls a Maple article wim us. aud never have 1 known of a MarIo instance vlii-re it did not Rive entire satisfaction. YonrCcntVKA Soap speaks for itelf, and those isiasr it ontc will take no other. B. CiL'TIKRRE7, Drusrsjist. Situta Barbara, (.'. Your fiTjri ha f?OAP cau't Ik beat. We have ?eto handling your ( itih ih Kkvkpifm for everal years, and would not be without thew under auv consideration. ir. c. p. judsox & nno.. Alvarado, Tex. I have found your ('i'Tictka Rr.Mr.rirs to excel auy like preparation. A. (i. MILLER. Urngrrist, Philadelphia, Pa. Out'cum. the great Skin Cure, (TTicrnA Soap, an exquisite Skin Bcautifier, and Cl'TK t'R.V I'Km'LVkn r. the new MmkI I'uririer, are sold everywhere. Price: Cithcra, ."Wc: Soap. i"e; KkKLv:.vr, fl. I'repared by the I'ottep. Driu and Chfmk: l Co.. Boston, Mass. Send fur How to Cure Skin I)ieaie4. it'll iw tfinv IVII ltTV ivlih Ti o human skill seems able to alleviate, is the eondiIii hi ii iii MiNiun ii p m jr a, in ' w nothing of that recent, elegant ii1 I nnnApfnl litiilftt In Til I II A Fill ill flammatinn. the CmcutA IL.TKK. No arhc or iain or bnti.so or strain, or Imt yicids to its -wir, all-iKw?riul. aud ncycrf. ;1 ; t,uiti.a11ovnitii( rPiTurtiAu At i"1 rilcrriktsl. ; the fT ?1: mailed free. Pottkr Dur and Che.mic-ai. Co.. Boston. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST l'J. TERLS PER YEAR. B:n?!e Copy, without Premium SI 00 Clubs of eleven for.. - 10 00 AYe ask Democrats to bear la mind and select their own State paper when they come to take SObscriptions and make up club. Agents making up clubs send for any information desired. Address INDIAX-APOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. Exi..n does one-third of all the banking in the worldTsrw York has 1,200 ministers and 100 times as many sinner. The loss by Thursday's fire at rhilipixpoli, Turkey, was $200,000. . The President is forty-seven miles from the railway station at Au Sable. Since January 1 there have been twentynine new postoffices established in Indiana and ten abolished. "Wyoming Las quarantined against several Illinois- counties suposed tobe infected with pleuro-pneumonia. Governor Marvaihtkk, of Missouri, iys that civil service is "a brilliant theory but a practical humbug." The liabilities of Mr. John Roach are scheduled at $J.2!,877.S1; nominal a.ets, $5,10V 0ivb7; actual assets. $4,41,1 The corn crop in central Illinois will he one of the largest ever known, many tUUli averazinz scventv-fivc bushels to the acre. The New Orleans Picayune is of opinion that heaven is a very big place, el.se it would be crowded by hangexl men who have onc there directly from the gallows. "We worLi respectfully inquire if Senators Teller and Itowen have any more horse thieves to unload on the administration. That recommendation of Uruee was so Tcl-ler-L-h. It is understood in well informed circles at "Washington that Mr. Carlisle will be nominated by aclamation for Sjoaker by the Iemocratic members of the next House with the hearty concurrence of Mr. ihiudall and Ids friends. It is suggested that if John Brown's foul is ttill marching on it must liave stopped in disgust when lh'i'ublican organs began pingi:ip' the praises" of John "Wise whose father hung the body of the man whoe "soul is marching on." The Indianapolis Sentinel gravely inr:uire: "If the verdict of the la-t l'r?idential election did not mean that the IlepuMican partv must go. what did it man?" it meant that sectionaliain and the "biuody tnirt must go also. Angola Herald. Wc accept the amendment. U. C. I. Jcdd, who wax recently arrwded for hrr:-e ftcaling in Colorado, was recommended for appointment as special agent of the Bureau of Labor Statistics by Senators Teller and Itowen, ex -Senator Chikott and other prominent Repnblican!. IV i: old Moses, the ex-(Jovernor of South Carolina, lias been arrested ag3in in Massa huettsj for swindling. M.oscs is a relic of IU-t:blifan reconstruction days. He got his Land into Mealing so natunllj' then that he Las never been able to overcome the tempta tion. . "Wjiy.El.hey .?ecni Jo 1 rea.onabl y Luy Hrin out the rascals, somehow or other It wmH to our country iople to be a mighty longtime in getting down to theioPostoSiees. It has been a long, long time of wait insr. and they want and fed that they bare a right to see a Democrat licking itumps once more. TnE capital invested in the dairy business cf the United States, say3 an exchange; h computed to be over oai,ia',000 and to cmr ploy about 700, CKO men and nearly l.OOy " ) L.orses, 13,000,000 cows fed on J0,0U,f.iu acris of pasture, meadow and grain land. An c fficer of the Eric Milk-Producers' Av?ociation fays: "The average cow yields a1out 4'A) iralions of milk a year, giving a total product of C,73O,OO0.0i gallons. Twelve cent- a gallon ij a fair price to estimate the Value of this inilk at a total return to the

dairy farmer of f slO.OT-O.OOi: Ttfty" percenC

of the hrtlk ii male into cheese, ani.buUr. It takes. 7 pound; of' jnilk to make one pound of butter,1 and boot-'. I pouikLs of milk", to make one jioant of cuec. ".There is the same'amount of nutrition in three an -J a half pounds of niiik that there. Is , ia one jtound of beef. A fat steer furr.ishe3 50 jer cent of boneless U.-ef,' but it woui require about 24,000,000 steers, weighing 1.5' pounds each, to produce the same amount or nutrition as the annual rjilk product does." THAT HORSE THIEF APPOINTMENT. C. P. Judd's appointment as a special aent of the Lalor Pnreauof Statistics was brought about by liepub! leans. Senators Teller ai l Bowen and ex-SemtorChilicott seem to have been his heaviest backers. Judd has recently been arrested for horse stealing, and as already extensively announced by Republican newspapers, who thought that Judd was a Democrat, has served a term or two in the penitentiary for the same offense. The Washington corresioudent of the Chicago Times sounded the true inwardness of ' this Judd appointment. He telegrrphs his paper that there had not been a strike in Colorado for vears that Judd had not "gotten up," nor an election that he had not offered the vote of the Labor League for money to both sides. As soon as the news of Judd's appointment reached Colorado P. E. Goodell, of that State, wrote to Commissioner .Sparks, saying that he couldn't possibly see what indorse ments Judd could have secured in Colorado, and inclosing a newspaper clipping intimat ing that Judd had several times been in dieted for larceny mid other ofTene. The letter was referred to Secre tary Lamar, who sent it to Commissioner "Wright for explanation. In reply to this Colonel Wright replied by letter to secretary Lamar, in which he said: "Charles P. Judd, of Leadville, Col., was recommended to Colonel Wright by that dis tinguished Republican Senator and ex-Secretary Teller; by J. S. l'auer, a clerk in the Adjutant General's ofiice, who spoke of him as a man of character and intelligence, and cheerfully recommended him; by Congressman Powell, of Illinois, under date of February in, liS5, who said he had known Mr. Judd for many years, and believed him to le particularly qualified for efficient work in the Bureau of Labor, and he took great pleasure in recommending Mr. C. P. Judd, of Colorado. Judd was also recommended to Colonel Wright by Senator Thomas M. Uowen in a letter dated in the Senate chamber February 19, in which he said that he had known Judd seven or eight years, and that he was an earnest, honest advocate of reform, and was beloved and respected by the workmen of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska. Iowa, and Illinois, and he was entirely worth' of their confidence. Lee Crandall, editor of a labor organ in Washington continues the Times correspondent wrote that Judd had devoted his manhood to the bet industrial people of our country, and gladly recommended him to a position in the Labor Bureau. Mr. Judd is also set forth as ihe founder of the Labor League of America, and was recommended for Commissioner of the Labor Bureau by ex-Senator A. M. t'hilcott, (Republican), of Denver, Col., who wrote to Judd: "It does seem strange that you can not get your appointment with all your backing. If you were here you could get all the backing in the State." Mr. John M. Raymond, of Leadville, Col., a year ago this month wrote the President (Arthur) urging Judd's appointment as Commissioner of the Labor Bureau, and described Mr. Judd's brilliant military 'experience." " Judge George Goldthwait, Judge of one of the Courts of Lake County, Colorado, wrote to Presidentelect Cleveland last December, saying that he had known Judd for years, and that he was a conscientious, honest. earable man, and that any osition he should oc upy would be a public trust. He recommended him highly ns a laboring man. L. S. Moore, Assistant Treasurer of the Labor League, writing from St. Louis, December 8, 1SS4, urged Mr. Judd to -eure the appointment of Commissioner of Labor, and Mr. Leland W. Green, Xo. SW Mound street, St. Louis, in a letter of August 4, 1SS4, urged the President to appoint Judd Commissioner of Labor. D. M. Beaver, of Hamlin, Brown County, Kan., under date of January 21. 1$ , wrote to Mr. Judd that he had w ritten to Mr. Cleveland urging Judd's appointment as Commissioner of Labor." Colonel Wright added that he had stopped in Colorado and instituted a more searching inquiry relative to Judd. the results of which would be prompt I j' laid before the Secretary." The Colonel was evidently satisfied that Judd was all right. More recently the Secretary received the following Utter: shth 1vi:p.i.o, Col., July 1. lsv,. IIw. L. Q. C. Lamar, Hmtarr of the Tiiterior, Wa.shijigto'j. J. C: I:ap. sir The grand reception tendered Proftwr C i Judd on hi arrivnl here whs a full answer to all his tradncers, nil of whom combined have not the i -on ride nee of the workintrmcii of the Mate ns he lie ii oneoi our alletaud truest friend. I refer you to the intelligent labor of Colorado. Kefore cloinK I must thank you for bis appointment as au at'eut of the liureaii of I-a-lr. Hoiii7 tliHt ou may live lotip. mid alwavs as well as heretofore, 1 have the houor to he. with due resjuft. yours. J. E. 1cmai'.t. Senators Teller and IV) wen, ex-Senator Chilcott and Representative Powell are all Republicans. MONOPOLIES ARE FOE3 OF THE PEOPLE. The Democracy has always been the protector, and the only protector of the eople against monopolies nd all such foes, so constant and insidious. The Republicans, conspicuous for so much that is bad, are marked throughout their career for fostering m monopolies of every frpecies of railroads, by immense grants of the peoples' land and money; of herders, by connivance .at immense seizures by them of the peoples' land; of manufacturers, by exorbitant tariff for their special benefit; of Government ship-building, by giving all contracts therefor to John Roach, etc. The Democracy lias . been reinstated in Iowerbut a tew months, ' and yet sec how rapidly progresses the removal of these intolerable grievances so long heaped upon the people by the Republican?, while proclaiming devotion to the poopleV-lrrterest. ' "It took a Irniocrt ti throttle that danger,ui monopoly, 'tho Uniteif States .Bank; it takes a Democrat to throttle these dangerous monopolies fixed on the "people by the Re-" publicans. Throt tie them all, the Democracy nruet and will. -, . . Such resolute bearding of audacious and gignntfc monopolies in rfferit!." exemplified br dur Democratic IteiUeiit Voul J be worthy

6f mi Hicknrr-hirof. - It w jl-rulid xhibitiou of courageous fidelity to the people, and will live in hL-tory side by ide with that which made Old Hickory so famous for moral as well as military courage. It tue people should desire no other benefit from IH mocratic administration than this throttling of Republican monopolies, it would be enough; would justify their confidence ir restoring Democratic ascendancy and their determination to maintain it. But this benefit is only the initial of good to be w: ought by the Democracy.

BRILLIANT METEORIC SHOWERS. Most people who have been out" much at night for several days past have noticed the unusual number of ''shooting stars" that have been observable in the heavens. We are now passing through a meteoric belt where clusters of these bodies, which make shooting stars, exist in myriad numbers. They are supiK5ed to be fragments of solid substance, perhaps remains of destroyed planets, which are revolving about the sun as a part of the tolar system. Contact with the atmosphere of the earth is thought to produce combustion or ignition of these small stellar bodies, and in their process of consumption they produce the magnificent natural fireworks which give us a fine exhibition even.' year; arid in return periods of thirty-three years the display is equal to that of any Fourth of July celebration. To-night the spectacle will be brilliant if thes-kybe clear, and all should be out of doors who wish to enjoy the sight. Calculations as to the height, velocity and magnitude of these meteors are necessarily liv.perfect from their characteristics. Though a few are f-eeu nearlv even nizht when the sky is dear, yet is it at almost regular inter va!s that we notice the phenomena of me teoric showers, and the time for such recur rence i- a matter or totally accurate calcula tion. From observation and study by astronomeis the conclusion is reached that meteors are largely distributed throughout the space traversed by our earth in its orbit; that they, however, more numerously occupy a zone or belt, and when our sphere is passing through this ring of meteors, thn-e which enter the earth's atmosphere are consumed with the splendid effects which we witness frequently in perfec t showers of brilliant shooting stars. The n rolitcs so commonly found sprinkled over the Earth's surface, often deeply im bedded by the force of their fall from space, are undoubtedly consumed meteors. The appearance of these always shows the action of fire, and they have occasionally been dis covered so hot as to burn the hands of ven t tiresome ieople who essayed to touch the newly fallen a rolite. Their composition is almost uniformly the same, being iron and nickel, or "meteoric iron." From remotest ages meteoric phenomena have been observed in all parts of the earth and their apiearances have given rise to the evil suit-rtitions usually indulged in by the ignorant, who ascribed to such natural phenomena signs of war, or pestilence, or famine, or other great calamity to be inflicted uion nations or people by whatever gods superstitious mankind wor shijx'd. Kven in our day sue belief exists in some countr"?s where these visitors from the vast firmament beyond our world and it3 covcring.of air, excite alarm, and frantic ap pals for deliverance from the wrath which they think-near at hand,, as illustrated re cently in Texas, when a meteor "about the vivas of a Uower barrel," which illuminated .all the heavens in view of the beholders caused consternation among the natives who augured from it dire calamity. NEW ENGLAND IN 1757.Among old spinning rheels, lat century fashioned chairs, dasher churns and other ancient castawavs of an old XeV England garret, thej orrespondeiit of a -"New York paper found a copy of the first newspaper 'published in New Haven. It bore - the date of October, 1757, ar.d was called the Con tti-cticut Gazette. It measures fourteen inches one wav and nine and a half the other. The advertisements are, of course, alwavN matters of interest in an old news paper "find." At the head of the first page the notice of the publishers apijared, and reads as follows: "Printed by J. Porker it: Company., at the Potolhco, near Captain Peck's, at the Long v barf, where this patter may ie üad at L's. (id., Jjnrfvl M"tity, per quarter, if sent by the special i)st, or ls. U.M., JlnlJ renat, without Postage; the first Uuarter to be paid at r.r. trance. Kle. Thirteen Pupers go to the Quarter, none to stop but at the end ot the Quarter. . aturday, Uct. 1st, !. Apparations used to appear in those days, One man saw three angles one night. He was evidently "on the make," however. lie wrote an account of it and advertises it for sale under a headline. "To le sold by the printers hereof," and then follows: A True and Wonderful Relation ; of the appearance Of Türke Anoels, ; . (Clothed in white raiment) to a Young Man in Medford, In New England, at nbrht: to gether with the substance of the Discours, delivered by one of the Angels, from the öd Chapter of Colos. and the 4th Verso. The Public mar dejend that the above Xarrativeia no . Imposition, but that it is a true account as related bv the young man himself to numbers of people, many of whom can attest lie is a person of good character, - Home of- the good 2Ccw .-England folks o those clays imported slaves from Africa and bought and told them like horses or mcr chandiso of any sort. The following julver tienent tells the etory : To bo Sold Several likelv Negro Itovs and Girls; arrived from Coast of Africa. Samuel Willis, at Middleton A Likely Negro Wench and Child to be sold. J nq iure of the Printer. To.be Sold By the subscriber, of Branford, a likely rsero Y encli, eibteen vears ot are is acquainted with all sorts of Housework is sohl for no fault. The whipping-post was nsd at the time the paper wa published, and the'criminals branded on the forehead, as the following hows: Last Saturday afternoon David Slusher and James Daly were cropt, branded with the let ter 11 on their Fore-heads, and received each of them l ifteen btrines on their naked Uod ies, pursuant to their sentences, for some time since br aking open and robbing the Shop Ol Mr. Philo Mills of Derby. , The following indicates that iostal faciii ties were poor: Kcxt week wilt be" published Proposals for sending, by Subscription a Post to Albany, during the minnicr, and for paying the postage of all Utters to the Connecticut Soldiers in the Army. Toward which the Printers of thlt vaerwil advance 1-ive Pounds, lawful money. This U mentioned now, that Oen

ttemeu may he 3 expeditious aa, j?Oasibbi ia. sending in subscriptions.

A mock Indian fight and a sad accident are thus related: Last Monday a very unhappy accident lappened at the muster of the Militia in North Haven. After the arms and accoutrements of the Militia Company in that place were viewed b'y the Ofiiccrs, for the sake of merriment it was agreed to have a mock Indian tight, and a part of the company dressed in Indian dress encountered the other part of the company, when one Enoch Ives, a young man about eighteen, who was one ot the Indian party, had his Y lmlpipe, Jugular Vein and his throat tore in such a manner by the discharge of a gun that was close by him that he expired in an instant. MAXWELL'S "CONFESSION." Maxwell has made what might be called something of "a confession" regarding the Sou iern Hotel tragedy. He denies that he killed Preller, or that Preller is dead, and promises to produce hira in good time. He savs: "Preller and I were old friends. " We came tolloston together on the steamer Cephalonia. We were constant companions, and made arrangements to meet at St. Ix)uis at the Southern Hotel, and there to carry out a scheme whic h Ireller had devised for getting insurance on his life. We met according to agreement. We were in room 144 in the hotel for about all the time we spent there, but, mind yon, Preller was at the hotel only three days. He remained in seclusion for the re mainder of the mystery at the Southern Hotel, and he left St. iWis alive and well on the fcame tlay that I started West. That wasn't Prelier's body found in the trunk at the hotel. hen the case comes up for trial I shall have proof of where the body found in the trunk was irocured. whom it washouicht of, at what hour it was brought to the hotel, and all the details of the plot. I can teii you now that the corpse was brought to the hotel in a trunk in broad daylight, and was carried up to RoorallL Everything was arranged to give color to the theory of sudden murder and hasty flight. Nothing was omitted which I thought would add to this misconception. My design was to get clear out of the country" before the body was discovered, and once in Australia I thought it would be easy to bury my identity in the East Indies until things had been forgotten. 1 will show you how entirely I trusted Prel ler, and how completely 1 was his assistant in this scheme, when I tell you that I don't know to-dav how largo an insurance he carried on his life. I knew it was for a big sum. and gave my help in the enterprise solely be cause he was an old friend and associate, Where he is, or what arrangements I have for communicating with him, of . course 'tis out of the iuestion for me to tell, but you can rest assured of the accuracy of these facts I have given you, and they will all be proven on trial. ' DEATH OF THE GOLD DISCOVERER. Jamei W. Marshall, who in January, 1S4S, first discovered gold in California, lied in Coloma, of that State, last Monday. A Placcrville. Cab, dispatch tells how Marshall first discovered the precious metal: Marshall was superintending the building of a mill-race. After shutting off the water at the head of the race he walked down the ditch to see what sand and gravel had been removed during the previous night. He strolled to the lower end of the race and stood looking down at the mass of debris, At this juncture his eye caught the glitter of something that lav lodged in a crevice on a rifile of soft granite. He stooped and picked up the substance. It was heavy, of a peculiar color, and different from anything ha had seen in the stream before. He was satis tied that he had indeed made an important discovery. In several davs he collected a few ounces of the precious metal, and as he had occasion to visit Sutter's Fort in a short time he took the specimens with him. Hein formed Sutter of his discovery, but the (Sen eral was incredulous, and it was not until chemical exeriments had settled the question bevond all loubt would he admit the mineral was gold. At last all doubts faded, and the excitement began to spread. The news flew over the country like wildfiro, and those whites who were then in California went into the quest for gold with great ardor and energy. Additional revelations were made daily, and the news of the discoveries was spread. He will be remembered by "old MfK-rs" as the first discoverer of gold in that State. The fact of his having lud at the age of seventyfour years a ioverty-strieken and dis appointed old man, w.hen thousands of people have amassed fortunes in the golden State, resulting directly or indirectly from the discovery of the precious metal there by Mr. Marshall, is one of the sad pictures presented to us when we reflect ujon the fortunes and misfortunes tfnian in life the picture of man's inhumanity to man. JOSEPH. It is said that he will soon retire from the Supreme IJench. His celebrated ranch e, Aliunde, in the dark lands, will then be his place of rei-ose, where he will enjoy ever lasting life, having found in Aliunde that water so craved by Ponce de Jjenn, but found not by him, and where he will be c heered by communion with the congenial spirits of vis iting statesmen and of honest Returning Boards. These reflections are suggested bv the cheering intelligence that Justice Bradley a man who did more to seat that grand national pretender, R. P.. Hayes, in the White House than any other man living or dead is about to retire from the Supreme Bench of the t nited States. MORALITY LEGISLATION. One ot the worst signs of the times is a disposition among many people to legislate people into morality. There is evidently just now a growing craze in that direction; especially is this notice able in the South, a nection of the country heretofore almost free therefrom. But there can be no reasonable loubt that it will end sooner or later as similar movements have heretofore ended. When the sober second thought brings to bear its con vincing ower, such fanaticisms can not stand the test, ami are remanded to the rear by a better considcml public opinion. As a useful invention in the love-making business, the type-writer is not a signal success. A Cincinnati girl, evidently more romantic than practical, cut her intended be cause he unf?elinjrly used a type-writer in conducting his hide of the correspondence, We do not blame her. There is no sentiment whatever expressed by the work of that infit rumen t, and the man who would employ one in expressing words of endearment to his intended I'gh! what an iceberg he must be. ' Let the Ciood Work Go On. We desire to call attention to the work now being done by tiie Price Baking Powder Comany in exposing the imposition that has ias been practiced upon us for years by the makers of adulterated baking jiowders an imposition that has enrl:hed the adulterators and ruined the stomachs of many an unsus pecting family. ro better proot oi i ue purity and wholeomcness of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder can be onered man u is rec nmmin,io,i lw ho homU of the prent univprVilMJIV IUI.! v " ' - " - f- -- sities of this country, mul is used by the If., iln.l W.A.Aca Civ.pniiiAnt

' ' , r .it'. . . t If elple Fpon a Friendle Sa$ V Tib', in "taking itassa'ge'Tn'a creat tran5-r

Atlantic steamer, does not feel a thrill of ex ultation over her magnificent power. Against her the Storm King may hurl his elemental forces, nor pierce her armor, nor stop her onward course. But let me lescribe a scene when, one morning in mid-ocean, there came an alarm from tha pilut-house. followed by a cry: "The f hip's rudder is lost!" From'the con fident expression, consternation came to every face. The wheelman being helpless to direct her course, the vessel was at the mercy of wjnd and wave. The Captain had been negligent, the hangings of the rudder were allowed to we;ir weak, and suddenly it had dropped deep into the sea! Strong in intellect, in physical vigor, in energy and in ambition, man confronts, undaunted gigantic tasks, and commands ai1 r :r. i piause ior ui3 imiguiuceui acnieveiuenis. But. all unexpectedly, an alarm comes the rudder of his constitution is gone. He has been careless of its preservation; mental strain, nervous excitement, irregular habits, overwork, have destroyed the action of his kidneys and liver. This would not o-cur were Warner's safe cure used to maintain vigor. And even now it may restore vitality to those organs and give back to the man that which will lead him to the haven of his ambition. The Traveler. PARKE COUNTY GLANDERS. Dm. Metralf aud Prltcliard do a Goxl Day's Work Among Glandered Mock. Br. Metcalf, Secretary of the State Board of Health, and Br. E. H. Pritehard, the wellknown veterinary surgeon, returned yesterday from a visit to Parke County, where they went to investigate the case of Weslej Jejsup who died on the 11th inst. with glanders. The symptoms wore described by the attending physician, and there is now no doubt that Jessup died of that disease He first complained of soreness in hi eye ami that member became badly swollen. Hi nose then became affected and tinallv his mouth and throat and. after twelve days of suffering. be died. The div ease was firet pronounced io be erysipelas, but two or three days before his death the pnvsicians came to the conclusion that he had contracted glanders from his horses. Four years ago Jessup was presented with a horse by his father-in-law, and the animal afterward sickened and was eventually killed. Two others horses beloneini? to hira were similarly affected, as were two others belonging to his father-in-law. These animals were examined by Drs. Pritehard and Metcalf, and were found to have glanders. Being given the alternative of killing or quarintining the auimals. the owners chose the former, and the four horses were killed Saturday afternoon. Frank Payne, of Rockville, had a mule that had been sivk for some time, and when Br. Pritehard pronounce itsHsease glanders, the animal was immediately killed. Several parties learning that Indianapolis talent was in tle county, called upon the doctors to examine their stock, but no further cases of glanders were discovered. The parties whose sto k were killed promised to disinfect their stables and do all in their power to prevent further contagion. Irs. Pritehard and Metcalf did a eood work in Parke county, and the wonder is that such a disease could exist for four years without proper medical au thority being consulted. The Commercial (iazette has been circulat ing quite a number of hard stories on the Prohibition candidate for Governor of Ohio It fell, a day or two ago, clear up to the neck, as the following shows: Vif KICKSVILLE, O., AUgUSt 12. To the Editor of the Commercial Gazette: Sie The camp-meeting ale-lrinking story in your issue of to-day is an infamous lie. A. B. Leonard. The fact is that the C. G. is trying to prove too much. If Br. Leonard drinks ale and chamjiagne as freely as the C. G. is endeavor ing to prove, the first thing the C. G. knows it will be driving the Republican party to his support. The Repubs do like their "tod" on the sly. MONTEFIORE. lie lies there like an Hgedoak. Uprooted by the tempest stroke. Hut regal, great and noble still. Whose name and fame ttus -ouutry fill: Now erowuli'sB, ttiornless, and from wild winds free. Let men show houor to the fallen tree. J. II. Hartzell in "Wanderings ou Parnassn-." Siu Mosf.s takes rank with the great arid gool men of all the ages. The Interior, Chicago. ME.vof wealth and true benevolence are not so plenty that one can die and not be missed. The greatest of them is gone. San Franciscan. No joi rney was so long, no labor so arduous, no fatigue so painful as to turn back the brave soul when once it heard the cry for help. Charleston (S. C.) News and Courier. He was a noble Hebrew who loved his fel low-men. That is not so strange, perhaps, as that all his fellow-men lovetl him, whether they were Jews or Gentiles. New York Tribune. He was a fine example of the character that even the old Mosaic system, in its gentleness to the poor and tire stranger, would produce in a loyal and faithful Israelit? an ancient, goodly patriarch projected into modern times, The Advance, Chicago. The death of Sir Moses Montefiore has C'rilled all Israel, and the civilized world in general pauses to give a kindly thought to the good old man, who was the type of all that is noble in humanity. The Jewish Messenger. It is given to few to have command of such resources of wealth, rank, health and time, but the world would be very different if those who have but a pittance of these things would administer them with half the fidelity and large-hearted ness with which this noble Hebrew discharged the trust he had received from God. The Christian Union. If, since the days of the patriarchs themselves, there has been a Hebrew who has used his life, his experience and his treasury wholly for the good of his people and of humanity in true patriarch.d fashion, that man is Sir Moses Montefiore. Philadelphia Bulletin. ' Nothing more clearly demonstrates tlw? onward progress of civilization than the universal honor and esteem which has been demonstrated toward him who lived aloof from the camp and the Senate-house, toiling bravely in the field of philanthropy. The American Hebrew. His achievements, directed primarily to the improvement of his race, have benefited all civilized nations, and have won for bim the admiration of the world. Hi career is a sp.'cndid example of what a person in private lifo, inspired by unselfish motive?, caa accomplish. Philadelphia Bulletin, j ,

MAGNETISM ..AND . OXYGEN i

THE GREATEST CURATIVE KNOWN TO MAN.

: , " "'- " ''. jT ?

f : i

Et universal consent niarnetism ha been refoenized as the force In nature which hnM' -.rl

in plate, aud by the law u( ntirac.tion aud tepulsicu silence through the realm.-, oi space.

As Magnetism in the um which controls inanimate nature, so also Is Oxygen the livlri? principle on which all animal life depend-i. So by these Twin Stars of Hope, 5faguetisra and Hrz'i, aetini? in harmony, each in -run-mine its proD-T function, disease is eliminated, aud the victim o: .irs-

ease bids adieu to the tort toes of the past, pcarcely an ailmeut that flesh is heir to but what has lv?ea cured by our method, aftei t ndless failures and exrerinieiits n the part of physicians. Wheu yoar

iujMciu i'ninws iu juu ic luincc nimaic ne tciuaiiy mrans mal ne aoii i tut vou to die on hm hands, ami he wants you io ml away, lie remembers. icrhnps, that he made a mistake aud gave yu the v roil? medicine, or he (tfljrnooed vour ce at the Mart wrong, and of course Rave vou tin? wroif medifine. Physieians are inimtu and not infallible. Then why not employ an iuiallille agent? Nature never DiHkex a iiiislnki-. Magnetism aud Ox) gi n are the only physicians that never make mistakes. Throw aside, therefore, your pills and powders, aud let nature restore I nth mind and bod v lo a new existeay. V rr prrpoml t. fnrnikh wir Muftnetlo Applinnrea And Oiycrn Combined at less thaa Others c-lmnre ior the Oxygen alone. We t-au Irent j- u ui your home as nut-cevdullv as if you fallt J os p-ionally. Uy our roeihod ' n .ui-t- aa le run-d ia niuete'n caes öut of "tweaty. Our" id e to Health is free to all. Tcmic ouials fro a ev iy part of the I'uited Mates. OUR TERMS: Ladies' Magnetic Jackets or Gentlemen's Magnetic Vests, with"3o days ofice rtatment, or 3 months' home treatment Compound Oxygen, $25. Consultation

rKtt, Address DR. L NOTES AND OPINIONS. Kvy is an acknowledgment if the fortune of others, Uoston I'ost. One of tliegoo! effects of a genuine revival is to show ecclesiastical martinets that routine may be broken up and tbe church not fall to pieces. Christian Advocate, Nashville. No stkonoep. ties can le woven between two countries than thoe which grow out of the lushest and most beneficent activities in literature, science and philanthrophy. The Christian Union. The character and career of Mich a Jew as Sir Jfot-es Montefiore are enough to make the Ci I .ation worltl lament the tlay when the children of Israel shall gt back to dwell in Jernsalem. Drwklyn Eagle. O (ioriDEss of Liberty! How many thousands and thonsamls of dollars has the New York World wrung from men who won't pay their bills, and who want to see their names in print as public benefactors. Political hacks who talk eloquently about honesty, with their hands in the public Treasury, must go where their vices will not be Men or their voices heard. We have had enough of that sort of thing. New York Herald. The home in the woman's to make and guard; and she will lo her work in it all the better with trained facilities, and an educated and adequate cnscience to aid and guide her in her work. Jennie June in The Woman's Magazine. The North and South uniting their tears over the bier of the hero of the war fr the Union is a sublime spectacle. There can no longer be any question tliat the great Ilepublic is reunited in sentiment as well as it has been for twenty years ia form. The work begun by the election of Cleveland is finished and consecratetl by the death of Grant. lJoston Herald. Hasty conclusions are the mark of a fool; a wise man doubteth; a fool rageth and is confident: the novice saith, i am sure that it is so;" the letter learned answers. '"iVradventure it may be so; but. I pray thee, inquire." It is a little learning, and but a little, which makes men conclude hastily. Experience and humility teach modesty and fear. Jeremy Taylor. A Pi.AVEHOi.PEns rebellion led to the solution of the problem involved in the existence of that other "twin relic of barbo.ri.sni," and fearful as was the cord, all feel that it was worth the price. But the war upon the Mormons ought never to become necessary. If the laws are henceforth vigorously enforced, the civil authority can deal with the problem. Boston Herald. It is to be hoped that the extremists who still in their hearts wish to have the Jvr.ith treated as a conquered country will be converted from the error of their ways by Mrs. Giant's request that th CVnfelcrate General. should not be forgotten in the choice cf pall-bearers at the funeral of her illustrious husband. She is n truly patriotic as the man she mourns. Boston IVt. ' The greater the mind the more it mu-t be impressed by the moral beauty and the poetic truth of the teaching of Jesus. But such acceptance of Christianity by no means implies belief in the theological system which has leen developed from these sublime loctrines. It does not even involve belief in the supernatural origin of Christianity, as tau-'bt bv the chert h. N. Y. Sun. PERSONALS. Oscar Wii.de is said to be a father. He will now put up poetry and pour down paregoric. Charles Nevvii.le tlied in the Ohio Penitentiary, and not one o his fifteen wives was present. Emperor William, of Germany, always has a chapter from the Bible read to him immediately after dinner. Ex-Presipest Hye i getting thin. He keeps the lower part of bis face hi.lden with long beard, w hich is nearly gray. Ir John lloach is seventy-seven ye.irs old, as is alleged, he has reached a period when Le might be expected to begin to fail. Pope Leo has enjoyed better health thi? summer than in any previous summer since his election and confinement in the Yatioan. Geouoe John'V. colored, 111 years oM, resides in Pos.ey County Tor-house. aid Dolly Fa'an. also colored, aged 107, lives four miles west of Evansviüe. Joshta Mont ef ior k, en uncle of the laie S:r Moses, was the first Hebrew commissioned in the British army. He wa tho author or compiler of "f'ominercial Nautical Precedents," "The Co-aiu'-rc-al Iktior.ary" j aud other aotibie works and. aitcr travelinj

Ir. Tenny is the Inventor and sole mnnfrtTinr of the famotut hurek Magnetic Apphtnces, waick have attained a world-wide rep autioa as beia tueonljr k ientiticallv coastrucwd marneiic g irnieut made : iU fouuder of tlie America Sfeiic asd Ccmpouni Omei ft., For the relief aud cure of au forms ol dfUae Without Medicine.

The Introduction of thee t win forces of nature. Masiietiaui und Oxygen, have revolutionist the practice of Medicine, and the Old S- W1 PayPiesaus liave already taken alarm, and have lately held a meeting to protect themselves asain-t tieir introduction. The public are aware, however, of : ine laet, tnat tney have oprxtea everv advance ia ; medical science for the pat two Luiidred y-arv. and the verv line of treatment denounced bv"ta. thirty years ago as fahe ia to-day held to be a -' luie iruia. The lesson which shnnlrt hr Wn liiiiil H 1 past exjKjrience have fallen ou btony rrjnu iaai M V. .... a ... M . . . thinkers in the profession, failing to be re-ouiz-l in their effort for humanitv.hvae broken the t,ni l which trailed thera, and recosmizinr thatjuature was the bet chemist, have reorte'd Xo nature forces for aid ia the restoration of maus physical nature. they are kept in their orbits, movinj ia majestic TEXXET, 171 V. MaJisoa Street, Chicaji, IlL in nearly every country on the glühe he .vt tied down in his eightieth year to end hii lavs as a recluse at St. Albans, Vt. Prof. Hu h u:i A. Peoctor prepared himself for a pleasant reception on his return V England by casually remarking that the raau never lived who knew as much as Matthew Arnold thinks he knows. Mr. Andrew W. Bcrmux, of Evser, Mass-., celebrated his 100th birthday Auu-t 5, and owing to his lifelong regular habits i:i the use of liquor and tobacco he djes not look to-day like a man of more than seventy. A Parat: a correspondent wys that Mr. A. T. Stewart and Judge Hilton are generally seen taking their laily ilrive together. Both are still in mourning, the Judge for his wife. Mrs. Stewart's face is said to wear a tired and pitiful expression, as if ''her millions did not make her happy." Allen Thormuke Ru e. the proprietor of the "North American Review" and the reputed professor of a million, is Uscribed as a young man with olive complexion, darkbrown hair, hazel eyes and a close-cut full beard. He Iresses quiently and ha a fancy for a top coat a little worn at the seams. The great commercial family of Baring, a member of which has recently beenenu blel, is said to be the most successful of the pericxl in England, having received three peerages in fifty years. Alexander Baring, Lord Ashburton, for whom Ashburtoa Place in Philadelphia was named, married the rich Miss Bingham, of Philadelphia, aud negotiated with Mr. Webster the fatuous Ashburton treat v. Uoval Uloixt. We are all kings and queen in this country, and we have a right to as good blood as ttiat which ciurs through the veins of Emperors If the blood is j.oor and the cheeks are pale, it is well known that Brown's Iro;i Bitters is the great tonic which will give color, vigor and vitality. Mr. M. K. Gibson, of West Point, Miss., says: "I felt we.tk and debilitated. Brown's. Iron Bitters ma is me strong and well." SLLS " THE OLD RELIABLE." 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest Kedical Triumpi cf tia äst! Indorsed all over the World. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of appetite. Nansea. bowels cos; tive. Painin the Head. with a dull sear sationin thVb'ackpart. Paiajmd ef theEfiouider-bladevfuilnes3 after eating.tlajiisiUäation toerertiort of body orraind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits,Los30f memory iWitli a feeling of hariEg neglected sorne duty, weariness. Dizziness. Flutter ingof the Heart, Sots before the eye3 YellowSkin-Haadacheestlessness c.t night, highly colored Urine. IF THESE WAENINGS ARE UNHEEDED, Ei2:rwi:2A223 c::a ei cxviicrw. TUITS PILLS aro especially adapted to ouch cases, one dose eHecU such a t aug of feeling 33 to astonish the nufferer. They 1 errate tle ApprtUe, and caas the body to Take n Flesh, thus the system is nourished, and ly their Toni Action on the lMceative rpa, llegolar Ntooli nrw produced. Prico g ftnti. TUTTS HAIR DYE. Grat FUre or Whiskers changed to a Glomt Black byafcinglo application of thU I)r. It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. SoKl by Drugiatf or Office. 44 Murray St.s Now Yorlis V i:.uam t. IlEi.vBit it", Atiorrcy for flainUT. SHERIFF'S f ALE. Iy virtue of a certifid copv ofad.crte to me lirected. fnm the c'letk i the f-npcrSor Court of Marion County, lii'lian. i a c'm therein Hora-o H. HeU-hr in pl-iiut.15. and William J. Iavls et al. are l'f-nla:U3 iCn.No. RlsfA n'quirinirmetoniake the mm of twhutidrel dollars (?-V0). ia manner ss provi lcd for in Mill doort-e. with interest ou Mid Uvrveni cost. I will expone at public autle, to the b:ghet bidder, ou SATURDAY THE 12th DAY OF MUTF.MBr.It. A. D. lvvi, betwcH-n the hours of 10 o'clock s. rn. i :rl 4 o'rl.vk p. in., of ofti! ilar. at theloor t no I u rt lioys of Marion Countj-, Indiana, the tvnu ami protiui for a term wt cxccctiug seven J cars, of the followin 2 r n! -tate. to-wit: l.a numU-r twenty-one c -1 1 nnd twenty-tw (2J iu 1WV ri:ht m in Maywood. a m'xirn i th. city of liKlinna'.M.i'is. Leins a part f the vi:t,i-eu-t quiiiter ot mlioii twenty (JOi, toivnshi rifu-vn ( l.'.i north, muco tbrvc (:) ed. bving iu Marioti or.ntv. Indiana. If n;rh reut. and profits wiM not sell for a ritC-cic-it sum to satisfy viM hn-nv, interest and eo-t I v ill. at the muie'tinn- and platf. -xjo to p'itlio m the fit unpU" of said n-l -tt. or Ei'ii h thereof s may K nifl'uiMit t iiM-lmtse Mi 1 l. rf. interest suJ cots, aii m!c w:!I he miwle without anv rvliei whatever from valuaUoa or appraLnieut tat-. GFORCE H. TAKTE-X. , Sli-riff oi MAri-i Couutf. Ave'Jst 17. A. P. K-V

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