Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 42, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1885 — Page 4
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 1885.
HEMORRHOIDS Blind, Bleeding, and Itching, Positively - Cured by Cuticura. '
A warm bath with Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Ekic Beautitier, and a single application of Cuticura. the irreat Skill Cure, will instantly allay the iutense itching of the most aggravated rase of Itchiug Piles. This treatmeui, combined with pmall does oi Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, three times per day, to regulate and remove the cause, will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Mies, when all other remedies and eveu physicians fail. ITCHING PILUS. I was taken lor the first time in my life with lUind Pile?, so severe that I could hardly keep on my feet. I used various remedies for three weck, w hen the disease took the form of Itching Piles, and growing worse. By advice of an old penileman I tried the Cuticura. One applicalieu relieved the itching and I was soon cured. 1 wish to tell the world that in cases of Itching Piles the price of the Cuticura is of no account. From an unsolicited quarter. O. C. KIBBY, Concord, N. II. ITCH IN (i FILES. I began the use of your Cuticura Remedies when you fcrst pnt them on the market, and know of two cases of Itching Piles that have been cured hy the use, at my suggestion of these Jremedies. F. N. MAKTIS, Verden, III. ALL. THAT VOL' CLAI3I. I have tried your Cuticura Remedies and find them all that you claim, and the demand for them in Ihia section is great. AUGUSTUS W. COLLINS, lli-gston, Ga. Cuticura Remedies are a positive cure for every form oi fckin and Blood Diseases, from Pimples to Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, foe: Soap, 2."c: Resolvent. SI. Prepared by Potter Xrugand Chemical Co., Boston, Mass. Send for "How to Cure skin Diseases." C LT TTN Blemishes, Pimples, I --'lvll Baby Humors. Cuticu Blackheads, and ra Soa p. KVKKY 3ICSCLE ACHES and dreadful pains rol me of sleep and rest and strength." To llTTh suen the cuticura Piaster comes iiKe & W an annl ft mnfftr Krtnfri n friHil iflff OTlil strength to thousands upon whom all other plasters have beeu powerless for good. Warranted a new aud jerfect antidote for pain and inflninmation, na tue liest pain-killing plaster in the world of medicine. At Iruggist!. "J-V" : five for SI- Mailed free. Pottek lüii'o and Chemical Co., Boston. WEDNESDAY, SEITKMBKR 1. TEIIM3 PK TEAK. Single Copy, without Fremium fl 00 Clubs of eleven for .. 10 00 We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper when they come to täte Subscriptions and make up clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. That the people of London "look with f usjiicion upon the rapid rise in marketable Talue of American securities" is not strange, after past experience with the stocks and Jonds of American enterprises. Mr. Steak, of the Pall Mall Gazette, lias returned to London, and will face the music in the Mrs. Jarrett matter. The catalogue of charges preferred against him are conspiracy, abduction, indecent assault and administering a noxious dni". The St. Faul Pioneer Press (Hep.) is of Opinion that, whatever may be Mr. Cleveland's faults, nobody will be inclined hereafter to raise a question about his decision of character or his ability to adhere, under Ires-ure, to a determination once formed. A "Vico3f?ix exchange informs us that in Ceventy-five cities and towns in "Wisconsin, since the liquor license fee was raised from $73 to $200 a year, the number of saloons liave fallen off 432. Hut the amount received for licenses has increased more than $221.000. Jlr. Laehabee, the Republican candidate for Governor of Iowa, is a one-eyed man with a larjre barrel. A man with a barrel can not Lave too many e3es when he poes into Republican politics, and Mr. Larrabee stands Ct such a disadvantage that there will probably be nothing left of his barrel at the close Of the campaign. E. Eep.ry Wall, '"King of the Dudes" of ICcw York, lias come to grief.- This young prodigal came into possession of some &",- Chi about three years ago. His wardrobe embraced about 3bo full suits of ciothes, and Iiis trousers numbered not Joss than Ö'X) j.air-i. lli.s generosity, -xtravagaiiee and folly have brought him to financial grief at a rate of $100,000 jxr annum. The reply of General Manager Talmage to the Knights of Lalor, was what might have heen expected. The "Wabash Railway being in the hands of a Receiver, the financial condition of the company being deplorable and constantly getting worse, the officers could not, under the order of the Court demand ing economy in operating the property, comply with the demands of the employes. The accidental drowning of Mr. Matt Morgan, only son of Senator Morgan, of AL liaina. is a sad blow to the father, and would doubtless prove fatal to the mother of the young man, were she to learn of the calamity while prostrated on the bed of sickness to "which she is confined by dangerous illness. Young Mr. Morgan bravely struggled to save "Mrs. Stella, and in this manly attempt he, with Ler, found a watery grave. The reported excellent condition of the wheat crop in England and on the Continent comes at a time when it should be taken with a grain of salt." Just now farmers in this country are selling their newly harvested crop. Speculators and grain buyers all favor high prices until they have peenred most of this cereal in elevators and warehouses. Anything to keep prices down until they have done thi.s is their motto. The circular issued by the Republican ftate Committee of Pennsylvania, signed ly Thomas V. Cooper, Chairman, asking aid el Interior Department employes to help carry their State at the coming election, is a direct violation of the Civil Service laws, and fchould be severely sat down uion. A nice party that, which squeals at every removal of a Republican official hy the administration, then seeks to extract roup from department employes in defiance of law and decency! The Republican organs are making merry fcver Kme recent misspelling of ex-State Senator Faulkner. The National Republican Las a kind word for Lim as follows: If any Democrat deserves a place in the Tension Bureau it is C. IL Faulkner, lie frave two sons and Iiis own zealous efforts to the cause of the Union. Since the war lie lias been a true friend to all the soldiers who fought for the old flag. lie is not an educated man, in the usual sense of the tcna. Ltf he is one of the shrcwedest and taoit ca-
nable business men in the State of Indiana. lie was employed for years by a great commercial house in Cincinnati to loot after its
'dame ducks," a business requiring knowl edge oi law and consummate tart. in this he was exceedingly successful. He has been several times elected to the Indiana Senate, lie could not compete with, a smart school boy in book learning, but he is a good deal of a man. FREE PASSES AND PUBLIC MORALS. The morals of bribery are as well understood and as universally condemned a those of theft. The laws of the earliest civilization forbade briber' in its every form, and all, out of self-respect, should spurn the slightest symptom of this vice, yet it exists in the highest places and most dangerous forms. If each one of the voticg citizens knew how many of our Legislators and Congressmen had all the railroad passes he wanted, and how many of our judges and county officers were so supplied, he would see that the fault lies with the voters as much as with the officials. Judge Thomas Hartley, lately deceased, whilst one of the Supreme Judges in Ohio, told the writer that nearly all the judges in the State had a full line of railroad "pases" not that they had aked for them, but that the free tickets were sent. One of the officials of the Pennsylvania Company said that of all the passes they had issued to judges and legislators, only one had been returned, and that one by Judge Sample, of Coshocton, O., a man of Roman virtues, who would have been a Quaestor among them had he lived in their time. The memory of this transaction is preserved the longer because of the dry humor in his letter returning the pass: "I return the enclosed you so kindly send me, presuming you ore not mrurr tlm' I Im re ji'.'t beert elected Jfloe r,f tlii J'i-triit Court." The whole transaction of freely thrusting these passes upon our otticials by the railroad companies, and of their acceptance on the other hand, is of that sly nature that is of itself unmanly and demoralizing. The lame ex?uses that the participants must invent to quiet conscience couid not satisfy the dullest boy in a Sunday-school. "My company directs me to do, or to offer, this bribing; it is their business, not mine." The legislator and judge will conclude that as he did not solhit this pass he will make free use of it, all the same, and not allow it to influence him in his official calling. It is a bribe, nevertheless, so offered, and. if accepted, the terms are well understood by both the parties, and that completes any and all contracts. If the receiver accepts and profits by the pass and then refuses to perform his part of the implied contract, he accepts a worse position from a moral standpoint. The class most hungry for such favors is said to be county officials not as humble mendicants, hut clamorous as if for a sort of inalienable rigbt, almost saying: 'I can do you favors if you favor me, and I can do you harm if I am not favored.' Passes given to the press and to shippers are upon a different basis. They are not public functionaries, nor charged with any sort of judiciary trust. There is always a quid pro quo in the favors to the press, paid back in pen, ink and paper often in excess of the benefit derived from such passes. A telegraph frank is said to be worth on an average of $000 a year to each recipient. They are charily reserved for Congressmen and such high functionaries as can serve, or most annoy the telegraph company. Governor Pennison, when Fostmaster General, recommended to Congress the establishment of a postal telegraph department, and said that he found nine-tenths of the Congressmen had telegraph numbers on annual cards, and that with such backing the President and his Cabinet did not like to press the subject. The Use of free passes to our lawmakers and judiciary is bold bribery of hideous proiortions. It corrupts the very source of all our rights under the Constitution. It is subversive of moralit3'and good government. It has no defenders and no defense. Laws can not control it for it controls the law. The remedy is only where most remedies must come from through the ballot. If every voter should see to it that eacli candidate publicly promises never to solicit, accept or ue a pass, this evil will at once be suppressed, and a higher plane of public morals attained. BALLOONING. Last January a memorial celebration was held on the anniversary of the feat of crossing the Kngli.-h Channel in a balloon by the American Dr. Jeffries and the French :cr naut, M. Blanchard. On the 5th of that month, under very perilous conditions, they crossed from Dover to Calais. Repeated attempts have been made since to cross from the Frenc h to the English coast, but we believe that irone has ever succeeded, and during the first week of last month Mr. Gower, an English aronaut of great experience, was lost while attempting the passage from Cherbourg. Several successful passages have been made from England, but, so far as we can recall, none the other wav. The reader of the humorous "Ingoldsby Legends" will remember that they commemorate a balloon voyage from England to the continent under the title of the "Monster Halloon," the poem concluding with a description of what had happened on the way, and a prediction of the jollification that would be held when the aereonauts returned from "Weilburg, where they had descended : 'How they ronshed how they sneezed how they stifli-ied with eoid How they tipfw.'d the cordial as racy ami old As Hodge, or lM-ady. or Smith ever sold. And how they all then felt remarkably bold: How they thought the boiled beef worth its own weight in cold; And how Mr. cireeu was beRinning to wold, Because Mr. Mason would try to lay hold Of the moon, and had very near overboard rolled "Then they'll play np a tune in the royal saloon, And the people will dance by the light of the moon And keep up the ball till the next day at noon: And the peer and the peusaut, the lord aud the loon. The haughty grandee, and the low picaroon. The six-foot liic-giiarilman, and little gosoon, Will all K.in in three cheers fur tie "Mousttr" balloon. It is worth nothing in the history of aeronautics that the first fatal accident in a balloon occurred in the first attempt to cross the English Channel westward, from France to England. One hundred years ago, on the 5th of June, 173, M. Itilatre de Roziere, the first man that ever cut loose from the earth in a balloon and made a voyage In that strange conveyance, though but a short one, made the attempt to cross from Boulogne. He had Lit upon the- expedient of combining the Montgolfier, or "hot air" balloon the original of ail &ronautical appliances
witl the hydrogen reservoir, with the puqose of using the former instead of a ballast of sand-hags, to regulate bis ascent and descent. When be wanted to ascend he would light his fire of straw and the Lot air would lift him. When he wanted to descend he would put out his Montgolfier fire and let some of his. hydrogen escape by the top valve. The idea was ingenious, and might have proved successful, if he had guarded sufficiently against the chances of contact between the hydrogen and the flame of his Montgolfier furnace. That was where the danger and death came in. He felt a little uncertain of the practicability of his combination, and was nervous and r.neasy all the time while preparing for his ascent at Boulogne. His intention was to ascend alone, but at the moment of unloosing the balloon from its anchorage a young man named Romaine, aa enthusiastic amateur in natural science, threw a purse of fifty löuis, about $200, into the basket and insisted on sharing the voyage with M. Roziere. The latter remonstrated, exhibited all the points of the passage as far as he knew them, and begged M.Romaine to wait the result of this first experiment. Rut all in vain, the enthusiast was resolved to be one of the first to sail through, the air from. France to England, and M. Ilozier yielded. These particulars are traditional in Boulogne, where they were told to an old Indianapolis editor, who lived some months in that residence of the celebrated leader of the crusade that captured Jerusalem, Godfrey of Boulogne. The adventurous pair ascended about a half mile and were carried northward parallel with the Calais road to the conspicuous headland, Caje Orisnez. or Gray Nose, from whk h to the English coast the distance is but sixteen or seventeen miles, the shortest line of separation between the two countries. Here, thinking to reach an air current that would bear them westward, M. Roziere lighted his hot-air furnace
to ascend some distance. As the halloon rose the density of the atmosphere diminished, the hydrogen, of course, being less closely pressed, expanded, and the inrlanimable gas came pouring out of the neck of the balloon directly upon the blazing straw. It took fire as quickly as powder, and in an instant the whole huge mass of the balloon was ablaze, a most portentious and fearful sight to the inhabitants of the little hamlet of Wimereux, directly alove which the disaster occurred. They had never heard of a balloon, end had no more idea of what that awful fire away up in the sky was than they had of the portents that should come with the destruction of the earth. The balloon and basket capsized, and the two uronauts fell about a half mile, striking the earth just at the edge of the village, and directly in front of the village church. M. Roziere was dead when the villagers reached him. M. Komaine breathed for a few mo merits. A small stone obelisk stands on the spot where they fell, and an inscription tells briefly of the calamity. That was the first balloon accident, and the first attempt to cross from France to England, a feat which, we believe, has never yet been accomplished. UNDUE LENITY IN LEGISLATION. It happens sometimes that the humanitarian tendencies of some special period grow too strong for its judgment and run off into legislation that proves futile or mischievous. "Without assuming to decide upon the com parative efficacy, as a restraint upon crime, of death and imprisonment for . life, we may notice that in repeated instances the human ity that shuddered at the exaction of a lifo for a life, and abolished the gallows, had, after a few years of experience, to return to the old system as the most merciful to the community. It might be humane to the murderer to spare his life for such compen sation as he could make under the restraints of ' the penitentiary, but it might happen, too, that it was a cruelty to the community to leave him the chance of escape, or the still stronger chance of an executive pardon. Laws are for the protection of the public, the community, and by so much as they weaken that protection to deal tenderly with the criminal who violates it, by that muc h they are sillily merciful to the wrong-doer and cruel to his victims. This, at least, would seem to be the conclusion of the iopular mind as represented in the Legislatures of several States that have re-enacted capital punishment after abolishing it. The re-creation of the whipping-post for wife beaters is another illustration of the same reaction toward security against a period of undue crueltj-. "A man who wjll whip his wife is too much of a brute to be affected adequately by a punishment that docs not apply itself to his physical sensibilities," say the champions of the old "cowhide" and'xat-o-nine-tails" system. "He must be hurt, and hurt keenly, not at all to the imperiling of life or limb, but sufficient to make him feel that when he hurts his wife he will be hurt as badly or worse to pay him for it. He has no sentiment or sense of any. kind to be affected, except through Lis skin and nerves, and so all the penalties applied to him have failed except the old one that we thought unworthy of a civilized age. So we re erect the whippingpost, and in Baltimore whipped two men, and,.as you Lave no doubt seen, there Las been an immediate and marked decrease in the number of wife whipping cases." The restored gallows and replaced whipping-post all go to show that sometimes the community may run after a sentiment or a principle too far and make it do harm, or at best doubtful service. HONEST ELECTION3. The Republicans profess to be stirred to their depths with virtuous solicitude for honest elections. Now that the ieople, disgusted with their multifarious corruptions, especially those of elections, have ejected them from jower, they become enthusiastic in laudation of virtues unknown to them when in power. 'When the devil got sick, a saint he would be. In 1STC these same Republicans, now brim full of solicitude for honest elections, deliberately, iersistcntly, atrociously overthrew the election of the people of this w hole country and forced on them as President a man they well knew then, know now, and the civilized world knows, was never elected to the office. Before they can inspire the good people of this country with any degree of faith in their sincerity in posing before them as friends of honest elections, they must repent that crime, the most dangerous ever committed on our country,
ar.d let the people see that they have repented it, and have resolved never to try to commit such a, crime again. It i3, indeed, an awful guilt to stand in, to go down to pos terity in, to go on the pages of history in, to be read by the descendants of the guilty. The best thing for sinners to do is sincerely to repent and thu3 seek forgiveness. Do the Republicans repent? As yet the people have seen but small manifestations of their repentance, but, while the lamp holds out to burn, the vilest sinner may return. When they be ready for general repentance, let the fact be known and the Democracy will pray for them, for the Democratic heart is full of the milk of kindness for the repentant, and can forgive and pray for even those so wicked as to set the dangerous example of overthrowing the election hy the people of this whole country and forcing upon them as President a man never elected. The rebels have often avowed repentance for their great sin. It is now the turn of the Republicans to do likewise. Shall the Rebels show more virtue than they?
FILTH AND CHOLERA. In his detailed report on the cholera situation at Marseilles, Consul Mason, among other things, says: The most elementan principles Of sanitary cleanliness are unknown in Marseilles. The gutters of the streets How with the veriest filth; the canals and sewers are infected. On the eastern side of the old port is one building which contains 700 inhabitants, whose excrements are thrown into the recesses of the stairways. Behind the Marie is a school for young girls, poisoned by exhalations from the vaults of neighboring closets, and which are aired only by windows opening uton a dark, closed court, which is a veritable sink. From the 1st to the 10th of August there were 7:'l deaths, or an average of thirty-eight per day. To Americans tbis reads like & fiction too hcrriMe to be real. A plague is veritably needed among a people who can live so surrounded by grimy filth. Foisoncd earth, water and atmosphere are inevitable where such still-houses of nastiness produce corruption which must pervade everything. "We, on this side of the Atlantic, do not care to have much commerce with this port of France for a while. Malaga grapes and French sardines are not appetizing at prescnt. NOTES AND OPINIONS. "Whatever stress some maj lay upon it, a death-bed repentance is but a weak and slender plank to trust our all upon. Sterne. V Old men love the past, young menj'ove the future, but if you want to tickle a girl's fancy give her a present, Pittsburg Chroni-cle-Telegrapb. It is always a man's fault when he becomes a drunkard. Prink never take to a man. The man takes to drink. New Orleans Picayune. "Next to a pretty woman I love a fast horse," says Sam Jones. Just over the Canadian boundary lines are a good many Americans with that same dual sentiment. For truly deep feeling let me call your attention to a negro waiter who has to stand by while the hotel guest whom he is serving eats watermelon. Utica Observer. It has been decided that a naval cadet who throws kisses at a girl is guilty of ungentlemanly conduct. Quite right. He should carry them to her and place them gently on her lips. Philadelphia CalL Retter times are coming, and business men and bankers say the outlook is bright and encouraging. Let everybody feel good and hopeful. This country is bound to prosper and go ahead. Utica (N. Y.) Press. Instead of frrieving over his lost voice, Mr. Gladstone should imitate Mr. Tilden, whose highest whisper is heaj-d through an extent of country compared to which England is but a cabbage patch. Philadelphia Inquirer. Ix eight States excellent laws against the circulation of depraving literature have been passed, and only require a faithful execution of them to defend, especially the young people, from their moral poison. Zion's Herald. The rumor that Mr. Tilden proposes to go on the warpath madly intent upon capturing the President's scalp is pleasant enough reading, but probably not true. Mr. Tilden is an old man now, for whom scalps, political or otherwise, have little charm. Philadelphia Times. Ir there are any vestiges of a sectional spirit remaining in the country they do not apiear to be at the youth. Some of the planks of the platform of the Mississippi Democrats have a close resemblance to those of Republican platforms of twenty years ago. New York Times (Ind.). "Wh do not even allow ourselves time for simple bodily re-t. "We begrudge a Saturday half-holiday. In the whole year we have four days fur National bolidays. It Is work, work, work, and what is worse, this passion for work has for its object simply the getting of gain. Indianapolis News. That fine old-fashioned word ''discrepancy" is coming into vogue again, and is used in Massachusetts to describe the relations -f an unfortunate cashier with his accounts. The Massachusetts cashier of the future, instead of being known as a defaulter or a thief, will probably be a "discrepant" or "discrepancist." Detroit Free Tress. Sixce the United State3 has really become a Nation it is obvious that uniformity in law and its procedure is not only desirable but in manj' respects necessary. It is apparent that in many matters not within the province of the National legislation the legal interests of the States are identical, and that the wide diversity of statutes and decisions is an obstacle to the highest prosperity of every section. Chicago Tribune. The Fmpcror of Austria has not much more to do with Austrian politics than a Drum-Major with the movements of the regment in front of which he marches. A toothache of the Fmpress of Austria, or any other woman, is probably as important in its relation to the sum of human happiness as any other incident of the conference. It is to be hoped that Her Imperial Majesty will summon courage to have it out. New York Times. The opinion that Grant did not know men is a mistake. He was fond of sketching off a public man in a sentence or a story. Lincoln had his special admiration. He always spoke of Lincoln as the greatest statesman he had ever known. His regard for Conkling was profound, and it is curious to recall how that high-tempered, imperious and lofty spirit gave to 0 rant in return an af
fection like unto a woman. I suppose that Hamilton Fish Lad more influence over Grant than any of his advisjers. John Russell Young. - The funniest thing about the story that a man out in Nebraska has seen a human soul by the aid of a microscope, is that it should have been telegraphed over the country. Utica Herald. The bandanna of Allen G. Thurman will wave over the Democratic hosts in Ohio this year from the stump. The old Roman has been badly treated, but he is not resentful, and he will lift up his voice to secure another victory for the party he loves and has served so well. Philadelphia Herald. It is not true that Mr. Cleveland intends to visit Ohio this fall. A man who has fled to
the woods and buried himself in a wilderness three days' journey from a railroad station to escape Vie importunities of office beggars, is not likely to venture into the State of Ohio, of all places in the world. Chicago Times. This re-echoing of the Ohio platform by Pennsylvania and Iowa, in the face of the storm of ridicule, is suggestive of Josh Billings' story of how one hog after another will dip his nose into a trough full of hot slop and go away squealing. None has sense enough to take a warning from his predecessor's fate. Omaha Herald. The Philadelphia Ledger says: "Interviews with a numberof leading business men with reference to the revival of trade would indicate that 'the day of falling prices, scant purchases and diminished stocks Las passed; that the inevitable reaction has set in, and that it is the hope and belief that the improvement at present noted will be continuous, unless confidence be shaken by unwise tariff legislation.' " Joseph O'Connor, of Buffalo, is mentioned by the Buffalo Courier as its candidate for Secretary of State. Mr. O'Connor was until recently editor of that paper, and, as it was generally understood at the time, was removed, to make room for some one more in accord with President Cleveland. Under such circumstances the proposition of the Courier looks like a gentle prod at the administration. Why is Mr. O'Connor acceptable for the State Department and not in the Courier office Albany (N. Y.) Times, Iowa prohibition s?eni3 to be the leading issue in the contest between the two great parties. The Republicans have pledged themselves to maintain the prohibition law, while the Democrats are committed to its abrogation and the adoption of a high license l&w. Iowa is a strongly Republican State, and up to a recent time a Democratic victory in that State was entirely out of the question. "While it can hardly be expected that the Democrats, even with the aid of a large numler of former Republicans, will be able to carry the State, the straggle attracts much interest, and the Republicans apparently are not as confident as one might naturally expect to find them in one of their strongholds. Buffalo Courier. The Elizabeth. N. J., Herald says: "It is pretty generally believed in New York that Tilden and Cleveland are out. It is well known that Mr. Tilden opposed the appointment of Tostmaster Pearson at the start, and only acquiesced when it wa3 understood to be a reward for Liberal Republican or mugwump aid given to Mr. Cleveland. Since, however, the policy of the President has taken shape, and it is understood that he will remove no more Republicans on purely political grounds, the sage of Greystone has concluded to let the administration severely alone. Governor Abbett is said to be in the same boat, holding to the old Iemocratic doctrine that a Democratic administration should be officered bv Democrats." PERSONAL. Frvxk James, the Missouri bandit, is far gone in consumption. Hexhy Ir.vixu names Edwin Booth as a master of the art of elocution. Tue Indians are said to call Oeneral Sheridan "The - Chunky- Man- "Who-Means-Busi-ness." , TiiKKEof the original seven men appointed to guard President Garfield's grave have gone crazy. A Coxxecth UT bridegroom burst into tears in the mid?t of the wedding ceremony, but made no attempt to escape. Jonx Jarrett, the labor leader, is now at the head of a Pennsylvania temperance movement in the churches. Richard and Elizabeth Wort ley, of Leicestershire, England, have just completed their seventieth year of married life. Sam c el Mirac le, an Ohio man, is the father of seventeen boys. The days of Miracles are not yet over, by a large majority. Gladstone tramping eighteen miles on foot is an example for thousands of young men who mount a car to ride four squares. They are trying to deliver Sir Charles Düke by insinuating that Mrs. Crawford was "the victim of a religious craze." We thought it was the other way. Ix spite of his great age Mr. George Bancroft still rides horseback gracefully. His horse is jet black, and when the venerable historian is on it the two are the jhserved of all observers. Edmund Yates, editor of the London World, is credited with having forced Lord Coleridge into Iiis recent marriage. This was his revenge for Coleridge's having sent him to jail for contempt. John Riskis, whose obituary was taken out of his pigeon-hole and dusted in a thousand newspaper offices a few days since, is now able to walk out and look at the landwapc. The obituary will keep. When in the woods, President Cleveland is a regular sportsman, wearing flannel shirt, slouch hat and top boots. He is out hunting and fishing every day, and is reported to enjoy the simple Adirondack fare better than, the elaborate dinners of the White House. Thomas Baii.ey Alirich is said to be a man of strong likes and prejudices. In Iiis work he inclines to things that are naturally bright, loves pretty women, jewels, flowers, and the daintiest romances of the daintiest climes. In apiearance he is somewhat thick-set, blonde, und of middle height. He Las feature that lend themselves easily to the hu morous play of his fancy, and the pointed ends of a moustache, treated somewhat in the French manner, accentuate with a certain chic the quips and pranks which 80 often is$ue from beneath it. .
WOMEN PERSONALS. Sarah Bernhardt has just turned fortyfive years, and, 'tis said, sh looks it. Patti is to make another farewell tour of this country. The old girl likes to fare well. Margaret Weston, Dakota's weather prophet, is 110 years old. She is old enough to know better. Mme. Nilssov, the prima dona, is a guest of King Oscar II, of Norway and Sweden, at Bergen, Norway. A Philadelphia woman, 10S years old, is cutting a new set of teeth, and has recently regained her eyesight. Laura E. Richards, the author of "The Joyous Story of Toto," is said to be a daughter of Julia Ward Howe. Miss Faxxie Hicks, of Richmond, Y3., is said to be the most gifted singer at the White Sulphur Springs this sea-on. Mrs. Mcrphv, the widow of the millionaire cattle king, has just married her Private Secretary, who is quite a young man. The Archduchess of Oisela, of Bavaria, daughter of the Eropejor of Austria, has set her face sternly against c rinoline and bustles. The New York Mail and Express sees luck in the name Emma, and instances Emma Albani, Emma Nevada, Emma Thurshy, Emma Jach and Emma Abbott. Postmaster General Vilas' sister. Miss Etta, twenty years old. has been ill for many months with Bright' s disease, and can not live more than a few weeks longer. Hei.esIIi ntJ.ci rsox had in her literary style all the robustness of a man and all the delicacy of a woman ; her mind was enriched constantly by study and travel; her talents were most versatile and her pen most read)'. Salt Lake Tribune. Kte Field's rqertoirc of lectures this season will talks on "The Mormon Monsters," "An Evening With Charles Dickens'' and her well-known entertainment which sh has styled "A Musical Folly; or, Eyes. ami Ears in Londou." Mrs. Keeley, a retired English actress, who held many years a leading position on the London stage, and was at one time manager of the Lyceum Theater, never sat for a portrait until recently. She is eighty-one years old, and played as recently as 1STS. The late Professor Pattison, of Oxford, who at fifty married Emily Frances Strong, aged twenty, said Emily now being the affianced bridj vl Sir Charles Düke, wrote a very in
ter ft ing volume of personal "Memoirs," in which, singularly enough, he made no nien- .. , . ., n .,, , tion whatever of Lmily Frances. Possiblv he thought she was too young to speak of. I, "What Shall We Do With Our Daughter?! This question is asked by a well-known lady lecturer. Well, we can iio a great niany things with them; one thing, we must take good care of their health, and not let them run down and become enfeebled. For the feminine ailments, which may be summed up in one word debility, we have a sovereign remedy in Brown's Iron letters, which has done much good. Miss Mary Greenfield, of Galatia, 111., writes: "Brown's Iron Hitters cured me of nervousness, indigestion and general oor health." Let other youm; ladies take the hint. TT PILL Em ' iiuiui imii i mi n 2 "THE OLD RELIABLE." 25 YEARS IN USE. Tis Greatest Keiical Triumph of the Age! Indorsed all over the World. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Less of appetite. Nausea, bowels cos-. tiveiJPainjn the.Iiead.with a dull sen satioa in the baclr part. Pain tmdef a disinclination to exertion plbodTorinind, Irritability of texp tT LpypirSjLossomemoiy.witti gLfcsfifig öf having neglectea'sbme duty, weariness. Dizziness, Flutter Ing ofthe Heart, Dots before the eyes, Yel'lowSkin.Headiche'ostlessness at ni ghtt highly colored Urine. IF THESE WARNING3 AHE UKHEEDEIh s::o':S't:ssi2i3iiL c;;s E3 sstsicpm. TU1TS FILLS arc especially adapted to Such cases, one doso eU'ecta euch a cliango of feeliDfr a to astoaisa the euiTerer. They Incremc the Appetite, anlcau39 the body to Take on ! lesh, thus the system is liooriihrj, and by tbeir Tonio Action on the Digestive Orjaai, ICegular Mrol uro produced. Price art ctnu. TU1TS-HAIH DYE. Grat IUnt or Whiskers changed to a Gloss r Biack byasinple application of thij Dte. It imparts a natural color, acta Instantaneously. SoM fcy lmggist, or sent by express on receipt of $ l. Office, 44 Murray St.. New York
TU) rn':.:."rrr
S22
MAGNETISM AND OXYGEN THE GREATEST CURATIVE KNOWN TO MAN.
f . n"T U4 IUI v V.x universal consent raasmetlsm h been recognized as the force In nature which hn&-Z trorM In rlacJ. an.1 itv theUwi " I ntuac.iou and repukuou they are kept iu their orbits, movins iu mojesUo iICmAhÄ control inanimate nature, .0 also I. o W the lirin prtacipleeA whi So by these T in Mar, of Hope. Magnum .n ai liUK in harmony, taeü prrloriiiin its proper function, disease is e.innnated. and ll.e , -.in 1 d.a2se hi Is a.lk-u to the tortures of the past, scarcely an ailment that tiesh i heir to bnt what ha, been
KLda. 2, 1 LVwami -lu to pet auay. He rt members, perhaps that he made a intake and gave ? the wrong medicine, i-r he diagnosed your ae at the start wrong, an 01 -..ure srayy ru the wr.. nKditim-. I'hvsicians are LuiL-u and utn infallible. 1 hen w hy no; employ an imaUible agent. Na
ture never makes a mistake. unit OivMi ire tne ira.y i.nin OUR
fore wir lüll and powden. nn.i let nature ivMorv l-nth mn an.l t.nly to a tiew existence. ' e ure Vrcpaad to furnish our Jlcgnetic Appli - Oxygen Cnu,l...M at less than r , tWiTrvi-f.n V !,e We ran t-eat voti at vour home as nu-cesfully as if you cabled 0:1 0t 1 'cured in ijInHoen ca out of twenty. Oar luVto Health is tree to sU. TefcCimoiiUh, from vi ty part of the L nited fctstes.
nine not ism
Ladies Magnetic Jackets or Gentlemen's Magnetic Vests, withO days' office reatment, or 3 months' home treatment Compound Oxygen, $25. Consultation
FREE. Address DU L
Ml 1 IM Jl
ß .. : TrVrPt-r'."r; ixr.u.rBLK rut BTTEXS, SUNEUEXS, DIARRHEA, CHATIN GS, STINGS OF INSECTS. PILES, E0EE EYES, S02.Z FEET, TUE WONDER OF HEALING ! For Pile, mind, nieedlnv or Itching:, it U the greateEt known remedy. For Rurn, Keald, Wound. Itruie and Apraln, it u uneptiled topinng pia aud healing iu a ni&rvelloiu manner. For Inflamed and fcorr Eye. If effect upon these delicate organs n simply tnarrellau. It Is Ihr Ladlr Frlrnd. Ml femU complaints yield to its wor.Jrous power. For l leer, old forr-. or Open IV mind. Toothache, Farraehr, Bite of Ineet, fcore I'eet, iu icUju upon tacs is m out remarkable. IlECOMMEXDEn UT PHTSICIAXS! USED IX hospitals: rnttion.rOXD-S EXTRACT has bm imtViUd. The genuine hat the yenrdt "I'OXVS EXTRACT' blown in the glatt, and our picfure trade-mark on tut rounding buff vrrapprr. ..Von t4ST it genuine. AlvayM xnmt on kaving lOSD'S EXTRACT. Take no other preparation. It it never told in lulk or by measure. IT IS UNSAFE TO TS AMT PBEPAJL1TTOH except the Genuine with ora dieectioxs. Csed Extenalbj and hutrnaV'j. Prices, 5(c., $1, f 1.75. Solil everywhere. $ 0-Om New Faxifhlft with IIistobi of ovm FrxrAEATioxs Sem I'EEE os Arrucinos to POND'S EXTRACT CO., 73 Tifth Avenue, New York. R. V. Medkip-K, Attorney for PlaiutiflT. STTEPJFF'S SALE By virtue of n execution tl me di ret tel from the Clerk of die Marion Circuit Court of Marion County, Indiana. I wiil expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE ::D PAY OF OCTOBER, A between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and i o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court-uotie of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profit for a term not excccdinc: seven years, of the undivided oue-haU interest iu and t-j the foilowi:i real estate, to-wit: Ix)t numbered one (1) and two (2) in Lowman'a sutidiviMon of outlot mimln-r one hundred and. seventy-four (174). in the City of Indianapolis, Marion Conntv, Indiana. , Aim on uiiiure 10 reaiie me iuii niinfuui ui Jinmiu. mteres time aud place, e p of tai.l real cm interest ani cRt. 1 win. at tne same expose at public sale the fee amida to. Taken as the property of Elia E. Lowmaa, at lue 1111 111 .Mariiu vxhuiii.. Faid tale to be made w ith relief from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE If. CARTER. Sheriff oi Marion County. Sept. 7, A. D. 1SST. TlM BUTEIW GtTOE la tuned Hrpt. und Maren, 1 each fear. tW 238 pagtff 8x 11 Inches, withorcr 3,SOQ lllutralloas m. whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Price. direct to eonaumera on all frood for personal or family no. Telia how to order, and glrea exact cost of erery thing yon nw, eat, drink, wear, or hT fan with. These I.XYALCABLK BOOKS contain Information frleaned from the markets of the world. We will mall a copy FREE to any ad dress upon receipt of 10 cts. to defray expense of mailing. Let ua hear from yon, Kespectfnlly, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 27 & 220 Wabash Avenue. Chicago. 111. FOR DEITZ FRUIT EVAPORATOR 1.000 liiiohels SEED WHEAT Peixl earlr 10 Cents f-r 4 HeaN of IMt7'. New, WoinK-riiil. Early, llardy aad Pruritic Wheat. Agt-uts wunU-tl. G. A. 1)1 KTZ, Chain bersburg, Ta. PENNYROYAL "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH" The Original and Only Pennine. i !wri r. 'ii' !-. K''irnf M ertkle liLiiatun. TO LADIES fr slL NAME PAPER.! 1 I I 1 nH'arier . .rii"'.i v.. mum SSOUsdlMaSai'iiUsls,ral B LsiaW V I WK WANT 1.000 MOKi: HOOK AGKNT rOK THEiUWIXAL HIvTOUY OF XJ. S. GRANT. Peiwl for S-TECIAL TEKM? TO Ad EN Ts. fr sec-v.re ffrneyat owe ly tending cts. iu fctaiaj's f"T oullit." Allre roiCIli;K Jt MrMAKIN, Cincinnati. O. 40 irMdcaNaiae.EnWars.-'l w CkrasM Carsa.Btm.ln iw' trw, aa tlrrmt4 par 4. lit bouad Floral Autorrnps Albaai wvJi quotations, 13 pag IlluBU-a-ed Prenu 1 0FrieeListairi Appnt'sCsnvassirgU'-i'-'i.-! tor 16 cts. fOW & CO.. ilenden, Coafl. $10 AT, A' "CrSrlfllJ-l OprVTfttW UA JL CREAT NOVELTY iu ronraii. Small In-tur-s f i.i.nved, CIUDESTiUt ci t U. Fu-oa SU N.T. Ir. Tennv is the Inventor atii sole maaufar turer of the famous Eureka Magnetic Appliance. vti:'t have attaiued a world wide reputation as ben-.? the only cictitiili-ailr coiWrueteiH uiaguelic grxneut clade: also fouiider of the American Italic and Compound Oivhii Co., For the relief aad cure of all forms of disease Without Medicine. The Introduction of these twin forces of nature. Maarnetim and OxyBeu, have revolution' zed the practice of Medicine, and the Old School Phyfciciaas have alrea.lv taten alarm, and have lateiy held a meeting to protect themeive ajraiu-t tae;r introduction. The public are sware. howe' er, of tbe fact, that they have opposed every advance iu medicai science for the pa.t two hundred years, and the verv line of treatment dcnouint d hy them thirty yeare" ago as false is to-day held to be alsoluK" triith. , . The lessons which should have beentauehthv fat experience have fallen ou ttony ground and iave borne but little fruit. A few advanced thinker in the profession, failine to be re-ocuize.i in their ertort for humanity. hvae broken the bonds which galled them, nud recocnizin tha:iature was the best chemist, have resorte d to natures x , t : j x tu. .- - ..aw t . tn stf m n n is t Vi t-tvir 1 tcf.V. T,ro,r aside, there. ibu. mai i.r.vi .....-.--v. . TERMS: TEXrar, 471 W. MadLoa Slreef. Chicago, IIL
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