Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 42, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1885 — Page 5
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1535.
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LYDIA E. PINKHAIYI'S f VEGETABLE COMPOUND IS A POSITIVE CURE , Fr all f tkoM Painful Complaints and Weakneaaea a common to aar beat FECIALE POPULATION. It wttx ctm xttih.y rn wokst roast or FaAll CorXAnrrs, all Ovakiax tbocblxs, Ixtlahsatio isd Ulcxkatiox. Faiaixo AXD DlSrLACCXESTS, AJ THI COXSRlirSfT SlTXAI. WllKkess, and ia rATirxxAJu.r ADArrxa to toi Celasos or Lrri. aaa It wm. issoxv aicd irrst Troiw titom th ,TJ tzrcs ix ah early tnsK cr srrtLopxiNT. Th TtXDESCTTOCAJSCIROrS IICMOE THERXilCHICKJtO ,TXST CPEEDO.T BT ITi VBI. .. It uvoni FAnrrxTss, Flattttxct, bshtroti AXXCRATIXO JOB STIMULANTS, A.VD r.ELIIVXS WEAK-. mess of rni Sto ACH. It cm Bloattjto, IlE AD-j Loa, fiEBTora Prost-ratioic, Gkszral Dmilitt,' iDzrasssioN ajts Lvdigxstiox. . That fjixtts of Ueaktno Dottx, cirsnra Pact, Weight atd Backache, is always rsim axixtlt jOTiDBimm.' . It wiix at all ttxzs ajto rxnsa all cracr-' TAXCES ACT It HARM OXT WITH THE LAWS THAT 'OVERS TBE KXALE SYSTEM. . jr a a Jf Wlrs fckfose is SOLELY for the leoittx ate SEALING or HI?EA9B AND TUE RELIEF OF PAW, AND THAT IT DOES ALL IT CLAIM j TO IX, THOCSAXDJ OF LADIES CAM SLADLTTEiTITT. "iü a Fol THE CURB OF KlDSET COÄFLAINTS TT JKITBEn tZX. Tins BZXEDT 13 t'XSCRTASSED. I. YD I A F PIXKIlAars TEGETAELK C05fPOrXT U fr-prfd t Lynn. Ks-a. I "rice ti. Six bottles for SS. 'Soli 7 afl ät-uggut. Sent by mail, pmtafra paid, ia form of Pili or 1 wts- oa receipt of price m above, airs. Pinlcham's "Odds to Health" will be mailed free to any jkAj ending' stamp. Letters confidentially answered. ? fvmilT should b wt'hnut LYP1A E. PHTKHAM'S I.IVEK PU.LS. They cur. Constipation. Biliousness and pTarpicutT of ths Liver. 5 ctcu per box. a EDUCATIONAL. MEDIA (Fa.) ACADEMY fits for B;t!nes or Colli2e. Special Lrill for Backward Boys. Suits'.e or double rooms. All student board with 2riiicip:tl. MWTHIN C. sIIUKTUü (llanard A.B. aud A.M.). University of Virginia, MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. Full (nurse of instruction in Medicine. TheSepion l.t-üiii -t. X und t-oiititiueH nine months. For t u.alotrue apply (F. U. Cnivcrsity of Va.) to F. HAKIilSOX, M. I.. Chairman of the Facultj". Atkin;'Circr.lar, Crosscut. Baud, Gang, Muly ann Iira Snws anl Saw Tools. aWAll work fully warranted. Special attention girea to repairing. JL. C. AT K 1X3 i CO., Inl!anajo:is Ind. GOLD MEDAL, PAEIS, 1873. GER1VIAN CkoeolATii in thn mirlrPt Tt is nutritioua and palatable; x parucuiar lavorite witn cluldrezi, and s most excel lent article for family use. The 0mMi'n i mfantpett S. (r rintitt, Dorrheater, Moaa Jietcare of imitations. Sold by Grocers Terjwhere. ff. BASER l CO., DcrclEstep, Mass. Sample of Dr. 1VW. Keed'i lief sent free to all who apply. It is also an exoe lent remedy for Coughs. Colds and Catarrh. 50c and fl packages sent by mail. AND fATAPPU A' lETHKIDGE, ViT. 1 I.l.n. Manulactnrer and Proprietor Koma. N. T. J lit OA nsea aod recorsimfnilea by k. II I'ltK'l I. a IllC ATM IV a. rroitMi.n lor Jr loss of appetite, nervous proatratlon, J ,li:illl.ITV. iOli-'ALiBY AI I.DKI OiilSTS i.laiiliooti Restored Kekkdt r nf.iL.-A r-ctimof youtfcdil imprudent etnmn? Prematura IecAj. ?erou9 Dehiiitr. Ixt alanhond Ac, htic( tried in a:n eery kco reme.ly.ha d:nrfjered a 1 tuple meiriof se!f-cur. wairb he wil wr.d KRfK to tu f eilowtuCorera aHr -I iLRfctVtS. ri)Ulja StSwV WANTED. $250 A MONTH. A cents wanted. gObeateel! ins articl.- in In w..rl l. I anip'.e free. Aidre JAY llKONSON.UetroltiMkB. AND' If or T ;-. rei 7 .. - . 4 "- ' i WEAR. OC1 SO letJ tree. J. ä. ürAca Ii Com3 bor fat- Si. V MYSTERIOUS AFFAIR. The) Idenity of n Ieal ltxly Found In n Iik- Still I rtHettleil. C'nrr v.o. Hop. The dead body of a man was found by the lake at the Indiana. Htate line yesterday. There was a bullet wound in the laokof hi? had and al a brui1 oil his right cheek. Several t-ople thought the ixly was that of a school teacher nameil 3IcK.ini!y, of Whiting, Jnd.. althouli his wife failed to identify it. It is alleged that on Monday ni'lit McKinney assaulted two little Polish Kirl near ('olehour, and lie lias been mi.-.--in since it ii thought he may liave been murdered by the friends of the jrirls. who were greatly excited over the supposed assault. McKinney's wife pave no information on the subjec t of his disappearance, and the matter as set U shrouded in mj-ytery. Tlie ilentity of the man fonnd lead is still regarded by some people as by no nieans Fettled. Several friends of McJvinney called during the mornin to look at the remains, and, although the features are in a futliciently good state of preservation to make recognition no difficult matter, it is said the remains are not those of McKinney. The charge that McKinney had made the assaults on the little girls is not substantiated, and seems to rest mainly on common report. The wife of McKinney declares the remains are not those of her husband. Jeremiah Hayes, five years of a?e, died at Tarrytown, N. V., at the residence ot William Il'itton, of Sleepy Hollow, from a disease resembling cholera.
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HOADLY'S SPEECH,
Delivered at Hamilton, Ohio, oa Saturday Evening. A Fair and Thorough Iiriiioa of the Lire I vtie of the Ohio Campaign John Sherman and Mr. Foraker Handsomely Handled by theGoternor of Ohio. Governor HoaJly opened his campaign at Hamilton, O., on last Saturday night, to a large and enthusiastic audience. The following is the speech in full, with the exception of the Governor's remarks on some purely local matters. He said: Fellow Citizens of Butler County: Two years ago I opened in your midst the canvass wb ich resulted in Democratic success. Surrounded now by the friends who gave me then the magnificent majority of 2,8'.;! iu this Gibraltar of Peiuocracy, I ask for a renewed expression of confidence, and for an increased majority, which hall express with emphasis your opinion that Icmocratic success, as proved by results, means not only good government, means reform, Union, personal liberty, economy, no fraud, no disjniises, no concealments, open dealing and canoid treatment of the public iu affairs State aud National. The Ohio election will express the opnion of the people iion my administration and that of the fcixty-sixth General Assembly. It is the first State election after the inauguration of Cleveland and Hendrick. It will therefore le regarded as the expression of popular judgment upon the policies of the President and his advisers. Of these i a.-k your approval, confident that Democratic Miccess means good government. State and National, which ought not to le rebuked by defeat. The leader of the Republicans of Ohio has carefully prepared the appeal of Iiis party and sent it from the stump through the press to the country, lie waves the bloody shirt he indorses the policy of alienation aud bäte he seeks to transplant and cultivate in this country the feelings of the English aristocracy toward the Irish, to array section nainst section, to govern the South from the North as Dublin Castle governs Ireland as a conquered province, and all this in the year oi gra'-e ls-s., twenty years and more after the close of the war. Tbe average life of an ordinary generation is thirty years. Ow iug to the casualties of war, w hich cost our country at least a million lives, the duration of the generation now passing away has been less than this. Tweuty-five years have elapsed since Mr, Lincoln's election. Five-sixths, perhaps more, of the men who devised relellion, the men who fought its battles and the men who overcame it. have passed awav. The great civil and the great military leaders. Lincoln and Grant, both sleep in craves bedewed by the tears of thi whole Nation Sonth and North: for both died with words upon their lips and feelings in their hearts oi charity to all, malice towards none." Seward and Sumner, Chase aud lessenden. louglas and Stephens. I.ee and llrctken ridge, these are hi.-torie. not living names. Alone of the authors of rebellion. Jed" Davis survives. Boys born when the war broke out have leeu voting for three years past. Boys born after the war will vote nextyear. Boys too young to bear arms are now mature men ot thirty-five. There is a new South and a Jiew North. A new generation, toll of new life is at work. A very large portion of the icop!e of the South have never seen a slave, and have lived under no other regime but that of universal suffrage. Is it not time for the Sherman's and the Forakers to ac cept tlie results of the war and no longer to continue in battles? Kinht million bales of cotton, the probable croo oi this year, is in sight. There are no idlers in the South, why croak in the North? White men und black men are side by side at work. The outh is developing new industries, weaving -ot-ton cloth, digging coal and iron, forging steel, (od and nature, religion and tlie human heart, are the forces agninst which Sherman and Forakt r contend, ami Foster plots. To tne policy of alienation, we oppose Union; for hate we Substitute love: we welcome the new ssmth nn.l the old Snuith. old men and boys, fathers and sons, not as allies merely in a crusade against the forces of nature, but äs brothers in aiiection and blood. We bid them all, white and black, join us in the great march of In ion and liberty, to the peaceful conquest of the future. "Let us have icace." said General Grant many years ago. His eyes at last saw it. "1 have witnessed," said his dying voice, "since my sickness, just what I have wished to see ever since the war harmony and good feeling between sections." And njrain, rejok in? in tlie present, ho prophesied the future in words of glowing hope. "We may now well loot forward to a neretiirtl peace at home, and a national strength that will screen us nfrainst any foreign complication. Let us then banish these unmanly fears of Southern wrong-doing, and cease to exaggerate occasional er.-onal conilicts into wars of races. Danville and Copiah are worn out. Turn out some new grist, oh grinders of the outrage mill! Home rule, ami as little application ot the "eternal principle of regulation ' as is consistent with the greatest liberty of all will in ;ime cure all the ills of State and Nation. Mr . Sherman w ill fail in his efforts to stir the dying embers of sectional animosity. Ohio h not forgotten what Geueral GaniehJEo well said The man who attempts to get f tpCaTpolitical excitement in this country on the old sectional issues will find himself without a party and without support. The man who wants to serve his country inut put himself in the line of its leading thought, und that is the restoration of luisilKss. trade, commerce, industry, sound political economy, hard money and honest payment of all oi.li'at ions; and the man who can add anything in the direction of the accomplishment of "uiiy ot" these purj-oscs is a public benefactor." Tlie solid South! Have Senator Sherman and Judge Foraker forgotten that there was once a I;.-. iiMiaii Solid s-outh, and what ttecamc of it the omh of Muses aud Madison Wells, of Parson Prow nlow and Warmouth. of Dennis, '"the little iriant of Alachua.' who invented tissue bailors: of the strumpet. Betty Higgius, aud the chaplain w ho joined efforts to debauch the Legislature aud bankrupt the Treasury of Tennessee; the Solid South of Kellocrgand Eliza Piuksion'.' But a tew vears apo every Southern State, except Kentucky, had a ifepubliran Governor and Legislature. Vi here are they now? Some in exile and some in prison, and their party, like Hans Breitmann's baity," "all gone avay, in die Ewigkeit"' tied away, n marh miasma evaporates before the sun. Mr. Sherman is distressed because I.aniar and Garland and Bayard, "two members of the Confederate Congress and one man who sympathized w ith them, are at the head of great departments of t lie overiiment.' Oh., yes! it was well to put Mr. Key at the head of the i'osto:lee Department. i pe Co" federate in the Cabinet was all right, but two two are a lamentable concession to treason. No. not ouiti" this even. Akcrman was n proper Attorney General, and Key a most becoming Postumster General, hut two at a time. Garland and Ijirmar tmjeher aye. there's the rub. The t a is ot crocodile are freely shed, as Sherman softly sin-v "Insatiate archer! would not one suffice?" Mushy, Madison Wells. M.thone and Chalmers, the guctrilla, the Iteturniiig Board, the rcpudiator and the Fort Pillow butcher, all these have bad their garments washed, but Lawton and Jackson. Jonas and Lamar and Garland, the liest end purest of the South, these to our senator are the unregetierate children of the political Satan, unfit to serve the Kcoublie. And Bayard, too. is a bug a lxo with w hich to frigiden ' republicans. Bayard w ho ' sympa thized not quite so long, nor yet so fumuisly as l.nyin, tthosf name it used to delight the NewYork Tribune to adorn with the prefix of "d. w.." dim work John A. Logan," bo ause he boasted of his delight in doing the "dirty work" of re turning staves to their nmsters. And all this that John Sherman mat fe Senator, or perhaps President, with our beloved Foster for Senator, and that Foraker mav lie Governor. What can an opposition Senator do for Ohio? A i hn. nie negative, a continuing scold, a running sore of petty partv complaint, is not w hat will bes sei e Ohio. Let tis put an equally sound lK'ii.ocrat by the side of Ilenrv B. Payne, to join him in generous sup)ort of (i rover Cleveland, I elping to settle the silver question, to settle the Mormon difficulty, to revise the tarirl' on the lines of principle stated in the Chicago lH'iiioerate plat torm, and to relorm the civil service. Against Senator Sherman's appeals for disunion. we set the good work of the Democratic party, its lr sident and Cabinet, and their declared aims and purposes. 1 ask for re-election, not for my own sake but tecause it will be understood as ( 1mo's endorsement of these. No doubt there are dissatisfied Democrats. Yes, and b rtunatelv there are satsified republicans How much better would cither have felt, had lysine and Ixean triumphed? Iu January, l-so.:. Mr. Lincoln said to my friend M. D. Conway, "Most of us here present have lai'en nearly all our lives vorking in minorities, and may have got into a habit of fieing dissatisfied." Speaking at a jollification meeting In this city last NovemiKvr. i Plead tor generous commence in our newlv elected President, and that every Dem ocrat, educated though he might have Ijeen for twenty-four years in opposition, should treat him w un sympawiy anu guard ngauisi earpiu iiii cism. Ieave that to Sherman and Foraker. Now. I ask for more. I solicit approval, not forrcaraiice. Mr. Cleveland has held office six months. Congress has not been in session, yet in ii h lias been accomplished. I he spirit ot reform and economy has entered all the depart ments, useless offices and exi-enses have been done awav. while the performance of duty, civil and military, has been enforced. The Government is not solicitous to provide such offices for jH-t, but to save money for the people and to keep the faith piedtred In the plat lor in. If the navv. which the Republican partv de s.troved. be restored, it is now certain that it will K- lionestlr done. I nder this administration there w ill be no loose contracting.no jobs let at prices nomiuaily low to be, made high by extras or by scamping the worn. The remnant of the national dornoirt. which iH-mocratic President. Jefferson ami Mourn and Polk, added to our territory, the residue which Republican exUavagautC usx cot wasted oa cor
tporations and favorites, is saved frfm cattle kings and other plunderers for the tienetit of the people. No more assessments will be levied on the departments to carry elections; no more clerks will be dismissed because ther refused to bulldoze the Jeople at Congressional elections in the guise of 'epnty Marshals; the Pension Bureau will never again be emptied of its officers to defeat a wounded l'euiocratic soldier for Congress; there will be no more Star-route frauds; no more whisky rings; iu short, a breath, a strong breeze of economy and honesty is blowing through ail branches of the public tervice. No more wool will be pulled over the eyes of Ohio farmers by a tariff nominally high, but ingeniously leveled down at the Custom-house by fraudulent invoicing;. Mr. Sherman has recently l-oasted that he has converted Senator Morrill", of Vermont, to the support of the wool tariff of Isö7. But is Mr. Sherman sure of himself on thU question? Is he certain that he will not again attempt its reduction, as he did in 1872? Is he sure that iu his anxiety to secure other tariff reductions he w ill never again give the casting vote i:i favor of reducing the wool tariff", rather than lose the opportunity to cut down duties ou other articles as he did iu lv.." Is be sure that if ever elected President be will not. as President Arthur did in lsi recommend "a substantial reduction" in the duty on wool?" The three great Republican scare-crows have been taken in for pood, and relegated to the ragbag and the dust-heap. There will be no payment of the rebel debt, no pensions to rcUi soldiers, no freed men reduced to slavery. The results of the war, which Hancock and Ward. Warner and Morgan, Ewing aud Kice. aud thousands of other Ohio Democrats fought to secure, will be preserved intact. Here iu Butler County, yon have a memorable instance of the beauties of Republican professions. Except for a short time under Andrew Johnson, there has not leen a moment since the close of the war, when Ferdinand Yandcveer. the the hero of tw o w ars, could be permitted to cuter the civil service ot hiscountry. He was welcomed to fight in Mexico, was welcomed to light the rebellion, honored, promoted, inad a Brigadier General. He was invited to shed his Democratic blood for his tw ice imperilled country. Against foreign foes and domestic traitors, he freely extcsed his life, but under a Republican President he has not been good enough to Ik? even a whisky ganger. Thank God Grocr Cleveland has destroyed all this. Democrats, who for twenty years have only 5ceu considered tit to be enlisted as private soldiers at IPl a mouth, are now. at least occasionally, promoted from hard tact and st.wlelly to the oysters and ( hampagne of official
position. At last it has become possible for tne majority of the American people, the majority not in numbers merely, but in all that makes a Nation great, in intelligence, virtue, sobriety, right thinking and right living, to see an officeholder occasionally at least sdee'.e I from tneir midst. Doubtless Mr. Cleveland seems to some to move too slow ly, but remember, he is the head of a government, not of a machine for the distribution of spoils. Of one thing I am sure, and that is that w hile maintaining and executing: in all their force, as is his duty, every law he finds upou the statute book, including he law for the reform of the civil service, he w ill iu time fill every office involving political action by men lclieving in the Iemocratic Chicago platform of ls.s. aud sympathy with Iemocratie progress. For twenty years the Republican "party of Ohio and the Natiofx has proved by its action that Its siugle idea of the mblic service has leen that no Democrat should lold any civil ottice whatever, business or politial. and that every public place, great and small. should be filled by a partisan Republican, put there because, and ouly because, lie was a partisan republican. AH this is now reversed, nnd "the mourners go about the streets." It is sweet, it is delicious, brethren, to bear the Republican 1ameutaiiou. as expressed by ,ionn Mierman. w ho worked the Treasury Department for all it was worth in lsso to nominate himself for President, and who never recommended a Democrat for civil office in his life, that impartial. non-partisan civil service of our country is in langer: Why, John, brother John, there is a beam in thine own eye. Do I say beam? Yes; a cord of wotxl. a whole forest. Go thou and pluck it out. then come, and after we have done our share of official duty, we w ill rub Out OUt little motes, and listen to your complaints. And while these reforms have been in projrress, the country lias not Rone tothe demnition bow-wows," as every republican, orator has prophesied for a do.eii years past. If that great and v ise leader of the Democratic party, Samuel J. Tilden, that clear-sighted reformer, beiore tne electric light ot w hose penetrating vision, fraud and waste shrunk and slunk into hiding places and exiles, or was driven to prison. were inaugurated, the country would lie ruined so prophesied our republican 'assaudras: therelore. Hon la and liouisiaua, the latter with Mr. Sherman's owe personal connivance, were robbed of their electoral votes, and the Government for tour years hamVed over to a Usurper. If Hancock, the superb leader of the loyal legions in battle, were elect.'d. dire calamity, the carnival of treason, would ensue, they said. But lo! the hour has ome and the man. Democracy has effectually revailed at last, and where is the calamity? What has become of the disaster? Business reiving. stocks advancing, are these the tokens of listress? True, times are still hard, made so lw republican misgovcrnment. Itome was not built in a day or a year. It is only six months since the Republicans lost power. It may be that the revivals of industry we road of are not the results of Deuwcratic success. Thevareatanv rate coinci dent. Republican prophesy is falsified, and Re publican prophets silenced. Let us take heart and with renewed faith iu lemoeratic principles, nuil doubled courage, with tfeuerous continence. continue our support ot President ( leveland, sure and secure that his inflexible integrity. his invincible courage, his persistent labor. Supjxirted by the counsels and wise citisiation ot a lcmocrauc Mouse of rep resentatives this year, and a Democratic Senate and Douse in 1SS7. will richly reward his. their nnd our endeavors. The country w ill thus enter Uon a carees of prosperity such as has attended other Democratic triumphs, such as came in with Jetierson. Madison anil Monroe, under whose administration nil xiliucal opposition to the Ie-iiHK-racy 'eased, and who gave to the country Louisiana and Mississippi, the territory west of tlie Mhsissinpi, and Fforida. or with Jackson, who paid the public debt, or with Polk, who it'l'Icil Texas and t ainoruia to the national do main. And at the election of Ihks Democrats and Re publicans alike w'ill have the satisfaction of voting lor tue man oi tneir tuoiee, unawcu oy rumatis drawn from the slums of distant Statesand Territories, armed with buil-dog pistolsaud headed bv Powell Clayton, Dndlev. Bathbone and Lot Wright. Marshal L'rner is a Democrat aud a gentleman, and his deputies will be gentlemen, and they ill rejK'l, not actively aid the happy family of republican colonizers who may be then cujoying the hospitality ot Hogiiead Joint. , Fellow Citizens Three candidates for Governor arc presented for vour suffrages. Dr. Leonard w ho argues for Prohibition ; your humble servant who lielieve in license, and Judire Foraker, whose party is authoritatively stated to be not far and not againvt Prohibition, and w ho, by taking this position, is put into the place of the sandwich man of politics, and who is under obligation to carry ois other sandwich men do) a placard iu Iro'tt to be n nd ove r the Kline i i ( incinuati against I'r hibilion. and another behind tobe rend in Olierliu for Prohibition. Mr. shernian indicts the Supreme Court of Ohio for having nullified the ott law bv a "partisan judicial decision." "They promised the liquor dea:ers a decision in refunding the tax collected. but got out of this by another partisan de cision. - By their acts the Scott law is a dead letter, and according to their partisan judicial ds ision there is no power in the Legisla ture to either prohibit or tax the sale ot liquor. Auel his astOHishingand shaieeiul remedy is to nulify these so-called "partisan judicial decisions" by the election of Republican judges that will construe the constitution of the state on tlie side of tenierance and good order." There was once a Sherman in Ohio, and his name is dear to every lawyer in the State, who. adorning the bem'h of tlie Supreme Court of Ohio, would have scorned to have been chosen for the purpose of deciding in any particular direction, and who. if elected, would have refused to sit in a case in w Inch he had expressed a previous opinion. This great and good man's son now unbliishingly appeals for the election of a partisan judiciary and challenges the present Court for partisanship whose conduct in the highest degree creditable to that dienitied and i minuted ImkIv. because it so scrupulously avoided the suspicion or appearance of partisanship. What did the supreme Court of Ohio do? How did it treat the Scott law question? 1 hat itiestion has been liefore it four times. First in the case of King vs. Capelier. it refused to decide because the question argued was not presented by the record. See -tl o. ... 'is. sec ond, iu the case of Butman vs. Whitbeck. 41 O. S.. it decided that the scott law was a license law so far as it provided for a lien on real estate, and unconstitutional to that extent, and refused to deride whether it was unconstitutional in any other respect, Itccause the ouestion argued was not presented by the record. Thirdly, in the case of State vs. Sink", 41 O. S.. 8I. tlie question being at last presented by the record, the court held the Scott law wholly unconstitutional because, in legal effect, it was a licensed law. without de'idiiiK(l.caiis4 the record did not require it) whether any other law could Ik? passed for the taxation of the traffic in intoxicating liquors; and four.hly, the court hasdecided in a case which is still pending ou a etition for rehearing that the money paid under the Scott law tan not be recovered back. One of the ablest and purest men In Ohio, a meniiicrof the supreme ( ourt. who was largely concerned in these decision.-, has. since they were rendered, cone to his long account. I pause from the current of political debate to indulge for a moment in the sorrow I feel at the loss of one of the I -est lawyers f the present age: one of the truest friend', and one of the noblest gentlemen In Dliio Jiu1l'i Jnlin W. Oker. C n tliis record, i claim for the .-ntiirerne Court of Ohio the Indorsement of every Just and rlgnt thinking niau m the -täte. It has proceeded wit'.i dignity and a ted w ith prudence and wie judg ment. It has rendered no "partisan judicial de cision whatever. It remain for the new court, to le created by the people, If they indorse Mr, Sherman's speech, to indulge in what he prophe sie will be the result of their action, viz., the con s'ri 'tiou of the Constitution of the St ite iu favor of -what he rail "temperance aud cool order: nktMil! the DvEiocratic party suucii Lu'cü
ins their candidates for Judges, the Constitution
will le construed in accordance with law. ana not by any partisan rule w hatever. The Constitution oi the Mate of Ohio, requiring taxation to be tifiou property, according to its 'inoney value, forbids, by a strong implication, the arbitrary taxation of any of the functions of property. The taxation Of the Sale Of liquor is jU.-t as Constitutional, and just a unconstitutional, as the taxation of the sale of a farm or a railroad. The supreme Court of the l uited States has twice de cided that the taxation of the sale of property is taxation of the property itself. Brown vs. Maryiaud. 12 Wbeatou. 4VJ: Waltou vs. Missouri. 91 U. S '.'T i. It is familiar law. as every lawyer knows, that under tlie law of w ills, the gift of the income aris ing from property is a gift of the property itself. For these reasons it has always seemed clear to niv mind that this taxation of the sale of Honor. as if it weie an entity or substantial tiling apart from the liquor itself, the power to levy, which was ncd supposed to exist in Ohio for more thau thirty years after the adoption of the present Con stitution, can not be sustaiued without an amend ment to the Constitution. The real question at issue Is that of prohibition or license. The character of the Scott law as a li cense, in morals if not in law, would be at rnce visible if it were proposed to tax every house of ill fame or gambling house fJOO or any other arbitrary sum ; and th.t the Scott law as a temperance measure was ineffectual was shown bv its results. It did not diminish the amount of drinking iu the State. It rejiealed the Democratic legislation of IfCst, and by permitting the sale of liquor to be drunk on the premises, it had the effect, as Allen O. Myers well said InTolesloin ls.sa. "of ohnrteriiiir every inanjwho wasw illing to pay t: 00 far the priv ilege to manufacture urmiKaras." The good point of the Scott law, it it have one at all. is its haracter as a revenue measure not that it pro motes morality, except "for revenue only." ("ons idcring the real question in Ohio, then, as being ing between prohibition and license whether that license be iu the form of a Scott law or per mitted by an amendment of the Constitution, the lemocratic principle is plainly stated in the plat form of our partv. ve are opposed to sumptuary legislation and in favor of licensing the traffic in intoxicating liquors. We Ivelieve in self-control, and that the true remedy against the temptations of liquor drinking is to make happy homes; and that personal liberty should not be destroyed by law, exept where Its exercise is always wrong. No man seeks to license houses cd ill-fame or gambliug houses, simply because the wrong iu such cases is in the use and not in the abuse: but the tralhc in intoxicating liquors is the legitimate subject of license. Iiecause the use is lenettcial and only the abuse injurious and destructive. That which Christ and St. Paul encouraged aud Mahommed discouraged; that which the great Popes and the great reformers the i.eos and oregones, Luther aud Calvin, indulged in : that which shakesoeare and Goethe and Cervantes used, and Bums de fended in song, the wine of Ohio which Ixuigfellow has celebrated in immortal verse, wine w hich has been in common nse bv the most sober of na tions, and has furnished a daily drink to the most ivihzed of pco de, which keeps Kaiser ill helm and many other ancients in health and life, is not always an evil even as a beverage. But it is liable to abuse and thereiore we propose to regulate it by license, to give it the sanction aud protection of law, subject to conditions reitiinngthe vendors engaged in tins t rathe to be have themselves, to keep decent houses, and to keep them in proper neighborhoods, and w e pr.v pose to chargv the tratlie a fee tor the privilege of carrying on the same graded in proportion to the amount ot business none as a compensation lor the burdens and injuries of its abuse. TheSixtvsixth General Assembly would have submitted to the popular vote a license system but lor the application of the great republican principle that whatever a republican proposes is rieht, but when suggested by :t Democrat is necessarily wrong, w hich prevented three republican members of the I-ower House from voting for the amendment w hen enough IK-mocrats w ere pres ent to give it the necessary three-tilths votes, because the I H'mneratic partv would get the glorv. Three Kepublieaus, Burnett aud Haler, til Cleveland, and 1'eet. of Cincinnati, voted tor the license amendment, when not enough IVmX'rats wen. present to pass it. They were loud-mouthed advocates of license then. But when every lH-m-ocrctwas iu his seat, and the full tale of sixtyvotes was recorded in the aftirniative. sistv-three 1eiiiK needed for its passage, these three iiepulihcaus latng present refused to vote. The Republican caucus dictated this evil course, and they followed in blind slavery to the party henest.. lellow citizens of Butler County, if the Demo cratic party succeed at this election, and secure toe necessary thrce-htths majority in the Ohio I-egislature, a Constitutional amendment permitting the lice use of this traffic the most salutary and wisest scheme ever devised for its regulation will la? submitted tothe popular vote in ISsT. ll tlie ltcpubiicau party succeed in securing a Republican legislature. "which Mr. Sherman has toM us will give us "wise temperauee laws." and Rcpublicim judges are elected w ho w ill construe the Constitution of the State not in accordance with its meaning and intent, "but upon what Mr. Sherman calls tlie side of temperance and good order," the result will no doubt be reached either to reverse the decision oi the supreme Court against the Scott law and collect the uncollected taxes of lsx; ami lssi, or to pass another law of which the Scott law is a sample, and submit another prohibition amendment for which the action of the Sixty-fifth Oeueral Assembly gives us the precedent. Between these alternatives, as between Scylla and Uiarybdts, the Ucpuhii.-an party hope to secure the emoluments of oUee within the state of Ohio, thankful for so little dow that the "Satiou has been lost to them. Judged by its results, so far as ascertained, Pro hibition seems to be a failure, in Maine, where it has been on trial the longest time, the reoorts of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue show that the number of persons paying special taxes as re tail and wholesale dealers in spirits and in ma it liquors in all for the year ending April :to, lsj-l. uasVliV: year ending April lss.:. was 1.0:! i: vcar eliding Ajril 5i, Ins;:, was l.pis; year ending April . isj, was i.w... in lowa in ivm, i.T'.b: in lssj, i.-it: in l.ss::. r,.-n7: in lss, 4,xfl. And in Kansas, the state of St. John, w here, if anvvvhere. virtue ought to be enforced by law, in lssi, l.j.'T; in lvsJ, )..-,n;: in lx;, l.'.f.'s; in 1W. iOTl. 1'rohibit'oii may be enforced, doubtless, to the extent of di-strjving tlie manufacturing establishments in Ohio. Every brewer, distiller and maltster mav becomiHlled to emigrate to Kentucky or Iudi-inn. The train, rye and wheat out of which whisky and leer are made, may be produi-ed in oilier States. The hoop, staves, glassware and other necessities of the tragic, mav be furnishel in other lands, but trafficking will continue in Ohio as long as the citizens of Ohio crave drink, and that they will crave drink as long a human nature continues under its present couditiou, is ab solutely certain. But say our distinguished adversaries. license has licen twice defeated. Yes, by snndl majori ties. In ls.-.i by a majority of s.li.VJ. InlsTlbya majority of .-sVi. On this theory, however, wh-u becomes of the ' eternal principles of taxation and regulation?" The scheme ot the "regulation and luxation of the liquor Irnflic" was submitted tothe ii'oplo titnier that name 111 1:,. aim re ceived es than iw.um votes oui ci a total vote ot Jl.wu votes, sine' lss:; taxation and regulation has M-eii dubbed "the eternal principle" ou the same theory I sup ose that it issani, "iiopespritigs eternal m the human breast, because the small vote ghen for it in lss: indicates an et.'rual clamor for its adoption without success. The real question, us 1 said betöre, is prohibition or jcetise. and the partv who is mu lor or a,'at:it prohibition is the partv of the Laodicean-1 ot whom St. John w rote: "And unto the angel of the innren orthcbiodiccans write: These things saitli the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning oi the creation oi God. 1 kuovv thy works, that toon at t neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. o then beta use thou art hike warm, und neither cold nor hot. I will stK W thee oiit my mouth." Fellow-citizens of Butler County, one Lirther thought and I shall retire. The last General As sembly submitted for adoption by the peojne a constitutional amendment which, if it prevail, will lesult m holding our futtireatiinial state elections in Novcm her. The DeiniM ratie state Convention adoided a resolution in favor of this pmlect. According to the present C onstittition ev -ry vole which is siient ir,on tuis subject, or which is both in the negative aud the amrmatlve. is count ed as a negative vote. This lender it extremely difficult to adopt anv amendment to the Constitu tion of Ohio. The importance of the amendment is seen and recognized by all. Ohio was the cormotion ground of the last Presidential election. To save the State from a repetition of su.-h disaster. the intelligent attention of every vot -r to the form of bis ticket is necessary to curry this amend ment. Do not forget to record your vote in the affirmative so that Ohio may cease to be a pivotal stale, and our suffrage may la1 relieved from the pressure which all felt so severely iu 14. I have thus at length submitted my reasons for asking a renewed expression of your conrt.iuiu-e. Believing that the lK-mocratlc party is the party of progress, reform, good government, an independent and unbiased judiciary, with the greatest iMsiiiic ittertyot action consistent wiingooo government, wise economy and wholesale re form, I invoke vour suffrages in behalf oi our can didates. Chicago- diseased Hogs. CuifAf-o, Sept. 7. During the past week the health inspector condemned 170 cholerastricken Logs to the tanks. Yesterday, in slaughter house at the yards, he condemned twenty-nine that had been killed and dressed and were all ready lor the market. The hog were the proierty of various scanners who do business in the vards. The heaviest weighed nearly pounds nnd the stnallestonly thir ty pounds in weight. The putted and discolored flesh inside and out. and the sickening sm ell which nt tackled to the carcasses made the discovery an c.tsv matter. Cholera has never been so prevalent among hogs at the Stock vard.fas it has been this season, and scalpers, it is alleged, instead of endeavoring to stamp the disease by refusing to purchase. delÜKTutely buy the. stock in the hoie that they can evade the health inspector on thur regular round..
UNPROVOKED MURDER.
The Murderer "LjTiched by a Determlued Mob. Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. C. Charles Williams, a disreputable nerro, shot and killed a street car driver named Folk Mitchell, at 5 o'clock this afternoon. An hour before "Williams had been ejected from the car for entering it in a drunken manner, smoking in the presence ladies, and when asked for his fare refused to deposit it. "Williams swore he would have revenge, and followed the car. While tbe driver was waiting on a switch, "Williams walked up, shot the driver three times, and then shot twice at bis body in the throes of death. A crowd of citizens pursued him, and he was captured a mile from town and carried to jail. Mitchell was recently the Assistant Chief of Police, and was very popular. Intense excitement prevails, and the jail is closely guarded. The Sheriff has taken every precaution to prevent lynching. A large force of men are keeping guard at the jail. and the local militia companies will be called upon, if necessary, to preserve the peace. The murder wastlxe most brutal and unprovoked that has ever occurred ia this city. A mob of determined men. mostly composed of factory la borers and railroad men, armed with shot guns and all other kinds of firearms, marched about 11 o'clock to the county jail, followed by several hundred people, and at once begaiidemanding admittance to the jail. It soon appeared that nothing would deter them, and shootiin? into the crowd by the posse of the Sheriff would certainly result in the killing of a large number of people, so nothing was done to prevent the entrance of the mob. and the front door of tbe jail was broken in. The Sheriff would not give up the keys, and as the jail is a strong building, the inside of which is a complete sheet of half-inch boiler iron, and the entrances of the latest improved and the most secure manufacture, the angry mob is having a hard time effecting m entrance. For an hour they have been battering at the iron doors. At midnight the report of a pistol caused a fusilade from a number of shotguns and rifles, and it is reported that a white man and a negro have been shot, but how seriously con not. he learned. It will take some time for the mob to get at the firisoner, but lie will be hanged before dayight. The mob is in the liest spirits and orderly. They even stated to the military that if they would show their authority froiVi the Governor, which they had not, they would disperse. Iter. At 1-:1" the negro was hung to a rafter in the jail in a most methodical and systematic manner. He was taken from his cell and carried up stairs, when his hands and feet were securely tied. A heavy rock was tied to his feet; the lynchers lifted him up and dropped him, and he strangled to death in three minutes. Not a shot was tired by the military and all is nowiuiet. A Gang of Five Thieves Arrested. Ulf bsnAi.E, Mich., Sept. ü. The .Sheriff; two deputies and the Prosecuting Attorney have arrested rive men in Aniboy, near the Ohio line, who are charged with belonging to a gang of -thieves who have been committing depredations in Southern Michigan and Northern Indiana and Ohio foravenror more. The gang had a meeting, of which the officers were informed, and were on hand at the time and place. Five others of the gang were arrested last week, and the otlicers are on the track of the others. Tee cattle ranches in the West occupy 1,300,000 square miles of land. The most emennous and popular medie""ne known in Europe are the renowned Victoria ril Is. mey are unequaled for Malaria, chills and fever, or dumb ague, and we heartily recommend them as a safe and s-ure remedy. Advice to Mothers. Mrs. WInslow's Boothinj Syrup 6hou!d always be used when c hildren are cutting teeth. It re lieves the little sufferer 8t once. It produces natural, quiet sleep, by relieving the child from pain, aud the little cherub awakes as "bright as a button.' It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all rain, relieves wind, regulates the towels. and Is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents . bottle. Frö! It Absolutely Pure. This nowder never varies. A marvel of tmi-UT strength and whoiesomeuess. More economic than the ordinary kinds, and can not lie sold in competition with" the multitude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. Royal Baklnq Powder Co., 100 Wall street, New York rWSPEPSIA la a danferoaa as well aa distressing complaint. If leglocted, it trada, by impairing nutrition, and dapreiwiuft thn tone of tha system, to prepare the way fur Kapia Uecline. BOM5, THE DESTTQUIC. ? Quickly and etmpletelr Cores Dyspepsia, in all itftfortn, Ilearlbnro, Belching, Tasting the r tMMl,Ae. it rnncoes ana panoea ine Diooa. ximiu Ium t ho annatitA. and aida i 1 toe aaatmuauno 01 hkxi. Kry. J. T. KOksttkr, the honored sntor of the First Reformed Church, Balturore, Md., says: 'Hann need Brown's Iron Bitters for Drspepsi and Indigeetinn, I take great pleasure in recommmding it hUthJy. Alsooonsidcritaspleodidtonio and inTignratur.and rery strengthening." Genuine has above trademark and crossed red lines on wrappnr. Tiikn lie elkl-T. Mdonlybr liKOVVN CTIKMICALCU.. MALTIMOKK, HD. 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In making this Watch, and bo exact are all Its parts, that if it needs repmr. f ntirect tothe factory, the charjro for actual repairs ftncludinsr parts used) üever execciaSO tta. TLü WUCXptain way they are so cheap aud so easily repaired. EVERY WATCH IS WARRAXTED TO GIVE SATISFACTION. A Few Testimonials-Thousands more could be given: Tbe.V. r. TribuMsw. "It 13 rema?ka!) hovr quickly tl;e W?.p rtr.ry Watch has steppel tnto popular favor. No'donbt the secret of its instant Micces has teen tin t.ict Ot Its excellence. No amount of adver Aiing could puish U.to favor a poor atrik lo. 1 he W uicrbury is good a2Ü-I have carried a Waterbury for over a yerr. a?A n:l it a inert f scfl-rt t'rakeeper. It fc m ran beside a 4100 gold Watch without bhov.ics the least var.at.ca." F. C. I LL-vl, kzt-J-IEI.O, R. 1. . ,.,",, Jly Waterbnry aftr three years' trial continues to plve satisfaction, and Is now tro'riT as rood as when I received it. At 4 o'clock daily we rcr-civo ti.i:e ovtr our w ire tad ray Watca Li always prompt to the minute." A. S. LETTS, Pr.-s. R. IL, J eusk t C'itt. Your Waterbury Watch gives euch satisfaction tho prioo cor.!jer-äd that the wonder w how you are enabled to give eo much for the n;oncy." A. G. LLlss, Lnt. Rktsxcb lnrr., Washington. ... rin-.v " Kave worn a Waf erbvry for nearly a year ; it h always on lime aad as use:ul a Watch as I ever had." J. W. LED YARD, with U. K. & F. Ii. Towuita. K. Y. City. We have made arrangements whereby $3-5 will ,F3y ,or ,he above deserted watch, delivered free, including the Weekly Sentinel for onr year. Address SENTINEL, COMPANY Indianapolis, InJ.
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DR, PEIRO has deyotedB years t the rellrfrMt0' Catarrfl Throat, Lunar Disease, founder of the Am.Oxjr-n fortb pro. ducUonwf that wonderful remeUy. used by Inludation.ao widely ksomi aa IM OXVGEW TRENNT fsr th relief and curs cf Consumption Bronchitis, Asthma, Hay Fever, Catarrh, Nervous, Prostration, etc. Bj;n4stm fur tha "Manual." an tnOTrxunr book of 1!0 parr Four Colored. Plates. Addrenn DR. PEIRO, Chicago 0 iTf We ref fr by permission to a f ew of emr patronst lw ' .IT" Hon.Wm. Penn Nixon, Ed. Inter Ocean, Ä-y-w- g"f? F. H. TubbS. ESQ., Wanaitrr W.C.TeLCo., Ch CSO. Can. C. M. Howard, Mrs. T. B. Csrse, " Chcago. O Si. Hxon, M. p.', Mrs. Netta C. Rood. tfVfr u.nn r. stii. M. D.. nevTora..
Orwm is tiftlv anvrhfrf U t Unite State. Oinuf Kxprt, tuy, plain, tompUtt aircctwns nlh a trtalmeut.
