Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1885 — Page 4
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1885.
ECZEMA
And Every Species of Itching and liurnincj Diseases Cured by Cuticura. ICZEIIA, or Fait Rheum, with its a?oa!Iusr j itchinz and burning, instantly relieved by a warm bath with Cuticnra Nmp. au.l a single application of t'uticnrii, the prent .kiii Cure. This repeated daily. iih two or three dose of Cuticsira lcoolvetit. the New blood I'uririer. to keep the 1-ummI i-ool. the er'i ration pure mid tniirritatiii','. tiie lo els open, the liver und kidney aetive. uwl v4-cdi!y cure Eczema. Tetter. Klnsworm. 1'sorusis. Lichen, Iruritus. Scall Head. iMiidnirT, and every peeies of Itching. tM-aly mid fimply Humor of tiieSca!p and s-kin, when the best physician and II known remedies fail. Will MclonaM, 212 hVarborn St.. ehi.no. jtratt iully acknowledge!1 a cure of Kceni:i. or .-alt JCheiini. on head, neck, face, amis and leg for seventeen year; not able to walk except on haud Mild knees for one year: nut able to help himself i'r tight years: tried hundred' of remedies: doetors pronounced his ca-e hope!es: permanently med y Cutietir Resolvent (blood puritieri internally, and Ciuicura and t lUicura .oar vthe great skia eure) externa! Iy. C'has. Houghton, K., lawyer. State St.. Boston, reports a cae of Kccma under his observation for ten years, which covered the patient's body and limbs, and to whic h all known methods of trcutmcnt have been applied without benefit, v bit h was completely cured .solely by the t'uticiira Remedies, leaving a tlea:i and healthy skin. Mr. John TMel, Wilkest.arre. Pa., write?: "I have suffered from Salt Rheum for over eight years, at time m bad that 1 could not attend to i;iy business for weeks at a time. Three boxes of 4 nti ura anil four boxeoi' Resolvent haveentirely Cured we ot" '.his dreadful disease." Sold by drnsreists. Trices: Ciiticiini. .0 cts.: Resolvent, fl.oo: Soup. -". I'repari-U by the i'otter lrujf tint Chemie I Co.. B.st,n. T"" TC A T TTIFYthe Complexion and Skin J I2sJ-. by usiujj the Ctitu ura Soap. "TIRED AM ACHING Ml sCLK. crying throt'h countless nerves for ret and reiki.' I.iUe manna to the children of Israel is the Ci ti ura I'i.astrr to the tired, overworked, aching muscle. Do not deny yourself the comfort afforded by jtnis new. original and speedy antidote 'to pain and intlmninatioii. All drug gist. -j:c; five lor ?l.(X. Mailed tree. I ottek lKKi ANnC'ltEVM ALl'O.. BostOU. "WEDNESDAY, SEITKMBEK 21. TERMS PER YE-VII. Eing'e Copy, without Premium ST 00 Clubs of eleven for 10 00 We ask "Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper when they come to take subscriptions and make np clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any Information desired. Addres-s INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. A" raze for simrt hair has seized hold of the young women East, and is reiortcd to be spreading over the country. Christians are murdering; Chinamen in Anierira and Chinamen are murdering Christians in China. It seems to be an international stand off. Henry Cf.of.oe is writing another book for vorkingmen. Thia time he will discuss the I'rotective tariff, and it i said will oppose it its inimical to the interests of workingracn. Kx-Mimster Yotsti says our anti-Chinese "r'mi;rration act in this country doe3 not disturb the Government of China, whoso policy i. to discourage her subjects from leaving their empire. i"VF.noi: St. J.ti. ii in Washington, and told newspapermen there that Ohio wonld roll tip an inimene prohibition vote this, fall. When fisked whether hi" I'tirty would eventually enter the national eainp:iign. he replied: "Well, you will see if they will not. Yes, sir; the movement is not to be confined to ihe winning of one or a few counties in a "Nate, or of one Mate in the Enion. hnt it aim I.- to In come a national movement. The land decision of Judsre Drewer, of the l"i:ited States Circuit Court, St. I-oitis. Jia lta'cilan unprecedenttnl stir. an well it jniprht. liy its decree some :!7.n0) acres of I t!:d. principally in Woinisen County. Kan-.'a.-, j't- wrested from the Southern Kanfas lL"ti!vav Company. AHSooiias the decision was matle known mm rlocled thither from all iJie surrounding counties, in tngiesi, wao is find nfotd, an 1 at once j rx-eciled to M.-ike ofT claims: nor did tliey confines themselves lO the disputed territorj-, but spread ver the country indisx rini'nat'-ly. enu ring npn lands long since patented, and ujhii which the rightful owners were living. A JOURNALIST'S REMINISCENCE. Sp akin cf the repairs of a stone sh.ttteied in the peak of the Washington Monument by a tlrote of lightning, a correspondent of the Sentinel last summer said: "Tha labor Incomes interesting when we reraemi.vr titat the workmen are Ö43 feet above the ttirfuee of the cartli, shinning around in unotlicr atmi.shere on rope; but it is gratifying to know that still other ropes lathed alout their txjdies prevent the possibility of a fall. Crowds gather on the street to look at them; they look like eagles on a limb, und strong glasses are regarding them from every part of the city. The operation hxs the interest of a trajeze performance above the clouds.'' This feat recalls to an old Indianapolis editor one very like it which he saw in a still more celebrated place home twenty years ago. Tbe pictures in St. J'etcr's at Home are all mosaics. The little Works of stone that compose tLem some limes get loose and drop out, and have to be speedily reiiircd to prevent a serious mischief. A fon e of "hands" is kept in the building with their families in a long string of one-story barracks on the paved roof of the hurcli, in front of the big domes, and these men do all or most of the repairing needed. Of course they get used to the conditions of th ir labor and are utterly fearless where anylody ele wonld be a helpless as babies. "Wlien the mo-aic blocks in tbe panels of the 4lon;e become 1cksc, a scaffold is ruu up the inside fron tbe lower gallery, in the shape of a series of big stair steps a half dozen feet J't;g and as man' hili. and these are contdmetrd by the workmen. Just how it is done the narrator couMn't say, but he saw the men while they were fixing one of these Katlold fteps at the b:is of the "lantern," just 4 2 feet above the paveincnt. lie ?uxxl in th little upper gallery below the workmen. ne of tbe men climled the upright po-' of the scatToM Heps the bigbest of the h is and got :isiradd!e of the little stick of tioiber, about the size of an ordinary "tud ling," that r:f bed from that upright to the wall, and without any rope to hold him, or any security but his legs locked around the little 4'.-tuddiDg," leaned over aud caught the, crj'l
of a plank and lifted it up to ue in some part of the work,-talking sometimes, and sometimes wbi.stlinjr. a- unconcernedly as if he had been lying on tbe top of a common fence. Yet he was over feet from the f'oorof the great church, with nothing between him and it but the air. No trapeze work or rope walking ever needed a level head more. Hut this seems to have been a common experience with him and his ajoci-ate.
THE NAVAL PROBLEM. Tbe most intricate and interesting problem of our day, partly because it involves industrial ami economical as well as jolitical considerations, is the reconstruction of our navy. Ve have none of any consequence now, and can make such an one as we need. If we had an effective one of the class of vessel that has been developed by the experience and ingenuity of the age. we .should be held, in some measure, to the line of construction maintained for it by considerations of the expense of changing it. Creat Britain basso many heavily armored ships of one form or another that she can not abandon the armored system without throwing into the lumber of her navy-yards some of the mo.-t formidable war-ships ever conceived. She is fi ed by precedent and big expense to a certain style or line of defense. So is Frar.ce. though in past years she has acted with an indejendeiice ef precedent and a close regard for scientific suggestions that has made her war vessels models of marine architecture. Iuring tbe Napoleonic wars it was a standing joke that 4,tlie French built ships for the English to ue." The best sailors and fighters of the English navy were built in France and captured by the English. The "Fighting Tcmeraire" was a French vessel, but Turner's celebrated picture, quite as much as her ewn achievements has identified her fame with her enemy's navy. The French built ships on scientific ideas, and beat the English out of sight in naval architecture, but they were not the sailors that the English were, and Nelson, and Trowbridge; and Cotiin. and a score of others, "nabbed"' those vessels and made all their points of superiority count on the wrong side. This was the case for a long time, but in later years France, like England and all the continental powers, has been building impregnable ships. Cermany has a lot of them. Italy has probably the most formidable vessels in the world, both in defensive aryior and offensive arms. She has guns of 100 tons and 2,000-'oiind shot, with a range of a half dozen miles. Turkey has them a little less formidable, and Austria and China have been getting some of the same kind. Since the fight in llampt jn lloads between the Merrimac and the Monitor naval architecture has been running in the direction of impregnability. Ships that can't be penetrated by shot ami can't be sunk have been the aim of all maritime jiowcrs. The limit has probably been reached. Within a few months the English have launched the lienbow" on tbe Clj-de, containing li,VK tons of metal, mainly or w holly steel. She carries two guns of 110 tons each, fired by a charge of txio pounds of owdcr, the two conveying a destructive momentum more than equal to the united broadsides of every English ship at Trafalgar. She has a defensive armor of eighteen inches of -chilled s-teel, with a ba king of several feet of solid teak. Her engines are suflicient to drive he'uhrough the Mater at seventeen or eighteen knetsai hour. "There i no use in lighting a monster like this," says the old fogy of naval history; "neither wood nor iron has any chance against her; she is impregnable to all hostile lire, and nothing is impregnable to her. She has only to show herself in :i belligerent harbor and command w hat ransom of hanks and manufactories and treasuries she will." Naval architecture, in Ihe estimate of these ptplt, h:is reached its limit. It is invulnerable and irreslstiblo. There is another side to the case, as there, is to most cases in this world of mortal fallibility. While the defensive armor lue bsm thickening tj a foot and a half of chillcl steel, as ii-.ijs netrable to ordinary naval gunnery as an express sale to a Chinese cracker, there havo been changes in artillery going on even greater than those aimed to resist artillery. Guns that will throw a shot ('fa ton or more with half a Urn of powder, and a momentum greater than that of a locomotive at full speed, have been made and are uiisde e ery few days by Krupp and Armstrong and other big manufacturers of metal. A steel plating of two feet, with five feet baekingof solid "teak,'' Las been shot throngh like a pine plank by a Winchester bullet. TVe impregnable steel armor of the ' lienbow" is not impregnable to this awful frce. Then a huge steel-covered vessel, when encountered by such artillery, is very considerably worse off than a common wooden hull, like thoe that the carpenters prepared plugs for at the Eny of Aboukir, and when the American frigates thrashed the Uritish seventy years ago. A shot' went through them easily enough, but the shotLoles were as easily plugged, and no great harm done. Now, with heavy armor and shot as big as a soap-kettle, a hole in a ship's hull is averj' different sort of affair. It can't be plugged when it is a ragged rent in a great mass of steel and splintered timber. S'o,unl(ss armored ships are made absolutely impenetrable, they are worse than the otd "wooden walls" that defended Home from the Carthagenians, the Greeks from the Persians, the English Irom Napoleon, the Americans from the English. "To this complexion it must come at last." Ships ean not be made invulnerable, but they can easily be made so heavy and clumsy in the effort to be. invulnerable that they will be of little, ue except as floating forts or as cruisers at an intolerable expense for fuel and jower. That is one consideration pointing io a change in the costly and cumbrous style ef naval architecture and ornament how pursued. Another is growing constantly in imjortance and urgency that is the torK-do and the submarine Imat with a torj-edo attachment or dynamite gun, as available under water as above. These inventions have been coming up and going down for many a year. Jacob J'erkin and Eobert Fulton both ir veil ted torpedoes before the war of lsiif and the author of the "Uattle "f I forking" makes way for tbe German rteet to the English coast by toredoes. Something was actually done in this fashion of naval warfare during the Civil War, and very good improvements have been made since. So it won't do to condemn thatVystem of warfare because it has often proved Ics
effective than inventors have predicted, or sanguine friends have hoped. It is within the limits of reasonable probability that the toriiedo system of harbor defense will make armored ships of no more use than a cedar racing skiff. If the boat of Lieutenant Falinski or the dynamite gun of Mr. Holland or vice versa shall be advanced to such a ttate of perfection as to make it a chance of one in two that an enemy's vessel will be hit by the dynamite bomb, or sawed by the projecting peak of the boat, with a torpedo to blow up in the bole, the enemy will be more than bold who will tnke the risk of entering any harbor w here those defenses are known or susjiected to be available. A whale at the mercy of a "thrasher"' and a "sword fish" would not be more pitiably helpless than a big steel cased ship with her hundred ton guns, lying when these torpedo assailants could reach her. The conditions of naval warfare and architecture, therefore, seem to us to portend a necessary change from the costly and enormous structures we now hear of to light running, light draughts, swift and cheaply moved e rifiser3 with one or two guns of the best construction, heaviest metal and longest range. Extremes will meet. The extremes of naval cost and complication will run out into simplicity and cheapness, and change of mode enforced by the scientific progics of the age.
A RELIC OF FEUDALISM. As none others will come to the relief of women from the oppressions caused by the Olerations ot the "aws of bailment, we feel constrained to make the effort. That a custom originating in the dark ages should be continued, and in every way encouraged and even required, by our laws, would seem to prove it had right and equity for its toundation. It has neither. It has nothing whatever to stand upon except custom. That one man should stand for, or be holden for, the debt of another, he having in advantage nor interest in the transaction, has no reason for it. no justice in it, and no excuse except that legal sham, "his next friend." It is in direct conflict with that other principle of law, the law of "consideration," the j"iii pro o", which governs all through the whole volume of laws, and which is based on the plain common sense of mankind. They tell us it comes from that source of all our common laws, the feudal system of England. lut the feudal system of England when every 11a ron Mas lord over not only the property, but even the lives of the people in his petty dominions, is not the system nor the civilization of this country and this age. If we had no laws by which suits could be brought and collections made outside of each township or bailiwick, and if our county 'Squire, by his mere word, could strip us of our property, he would be a very proper person to go on the note of one of Iiis own subjects, in payment for a cow bought on trust from a man of an adjoining distriet. Cnder the feudal system it was right and proper, and no doubt necessary; but apart from this system it was neither right nor neeessury to support it. The harm it inflicts, especially upon women, is widespread and in si.ü;ht everywhere. There is scarcely a man who amounts to anything but who has been victimized more or less by 4 go 'ng bail." AYliere is the man or woman ever benefitted, or even grateful, when some other man has Ih-cii compiled to pay Iiis lebt? The husband goes bail without his wife knowing anything about it. ho, his property, nearly all of it is jeopardized, and jtrhaps goes to pay the debts of one from whom the indorser has received no consideration or benefit. It has ix en tio act nor deed of liers far from it. Indeed she would have seen all those who were connected with the transaction set Tilling first; yet if a piece of real estate is squarely and fairly sold the law says the deed must be acknowledged by the wife apurt from all coercion or compulsion. This is an inconsistency in the law. that "grandest of ail human inventions,'' to so care for the interests of the wile in the one ease and !:so indillerent to her rights and Interests in the other. In looking over the many private fortunes lost and the families reduced! in e in unistances, perhaps brought to pauperism, through this beloved remnant of feudalism, one is bewildered to iind excuse for the law. Its abolishment would no doubt cause derangement in business affairs. The banker must look up a new line of .security in collaterals and no one could borrow without collaterals or a gilt-edged reputation this would contract the volume of credit. Well. let it contract, say the masses, whose universal verdict is for the abolition ot bfiilments. And this iniquitous custom would go but for the opisition of money lenders, Shylocks, and'lhe army of civil officers. They are not our best citizens, nor the most loveable; we mibt fay they are the most despised; whilst the victims of this law are always from the. frank, free-hearted and generous clas. In management and influence the opjosition would be great, ami in numlers they are not to be despised; but we do think a revolution in this matter in Indiana could be begun that would not go backward. If the women of the State would petition our legislature for a law securing to married women the same safeguards in the matter of bailment that exists in that of deed none genuine nor valid unless countersigned by the wife then would the evils of bailment disappear. When a friend of the husband "honeys" around him and gently invites him to go on his bond, he can answer, "Certainly, my dear friend, if my wife will join," it would almost extinguish the practice. With proiK-r effort we could get thus much legislation in the premises enacted during the next session ot our legislature, and give tbe businessmen time to adjust themselves to it. Such change of our laws from the old feudal system would be a grand achievement lor our day and generation. Le t the people of our State rise equal to the emergency, and nsk their law-making body or Indiana to place itself on record and our State in the front ranks of justice and right to all citizens, by doing away with the institution of bailment; or, at least, of protecting women, as wives, in their joint projerty rights, by making their indorsement to bail bond as necessary as it is to a deed or other conveyance of projerty. 8.VY an esteemed exchange; When Mr. Hendricks goes to any kind of a show nowadays the baud always strikes up "Hail to
the Chief." Then they tackle such melodies as "Snakes in His Roots," 'The "Whiskers on the Moon" and "Wake Up, William Riley." Ami yet they say that Vice Presidents never have anv fun.
PRACTICAL TARIFF NEEDS. A r fx ext. conversation with the hading member of one of the largest and most successful boot and shoe manufacturing firms in this country was substantially as follows: "What length of time on an average each year are your factories in operation?" was asked by the interrogator. "About nine months," replied the manufacturer. "Why no longer?" "Because of the inability to dispose of our goods, on account of the American markets being supplied." "Why do you not seek foreign markets?" "Because we can not compete with European manufacturers." "On account of their cheaper la1or, I presume?" "Not at all." "What then?" "The difficulty lies in the tariff on the raw material. You are perhaps aware that the Government taxes everything, from the raw hide out of which leather is made, down to the smallest item entering into the manufactuie of our roods." "Were this tax removed, what would be the result?" "We could then manufacture at a cost so reduced as to enable us to enter the markets of the world, and compete successfully with any makers of boots and shoes on the globe. Our people would feel assured of employment for a longer time in my judgment the entire twelve months of the year, instead of nine, as now. The most beneticient result, however, would consist in what must follow from prime necessity the cheapening in price of boots and shoes to the whole American people." There is a wealth of common sense in the statements of this gentleman, who is understood to be the second largest manufacturer df boots and shoes in America. Such evidences of practical business men are invaluable in arriving at wise conclusions upon the vexed eptestion of the tariff. Hoots and shoes are necessities to every one of the entire fifty-live millions of our people; and such adjustment of the tariff as will result in giving to the jteople this ami all the articles of prime necessity at the lowest possible cost, is the just demand of the times. That such an article of domestic economy as salt should be taxed trit r as heavily as diamonds and other kindred luxuries is an oppressive wrong a burthen uion our eople which should be removed and we trust and. believe the days of such unjust tariff are nearing their end. NOTES AND OPINIONS. i.KKiT should be given to a man whiht he is still alive. You might as well drench a dead hore as to sound the praise of a dead man, for all the goenl either will do the tie(eased. Ironclad Age. Ci.vra Hammo.vp. of the Peace Society.says that if we are to do away with wars the ehildrcn must not be allowed to play with the soldiers. The Peace Society should go in strong against toy drums. 'What is a pessimist, papa?" asked a hotelkeeper's son. "A pessimist, my loy, i a man who would find fault with heaven, if he ever got there," replied the experienced Eonifate. New York Journal. Hi si, asks who are only good when their wives are watching them are like thoso matches which strike only on the lot not much tobe depended upon when away from the family safe. Fall JJivcr Advance. Tiik Monroe doctrine, translated into the governmental maxim to "mind your own business, would, if adopted ami applied by all foreign governments, cure tbe biggest part of the evils that at present flllict their people. Hut the miilenium will not be inaugurated f r a year or two yet. Boston Herald. S.s Fogg, "When 1 reflect upon the fault ami shortcomings of those about me, l am surprised that they should not forsake their errors and always do right; but when I think ef my own shortcomings and faults, I am thoroughly convinced that a man is a slave to his organization, and therefore is nowise rcsiMinsibk for his wandeiings from the 1 ath of rectitude." Boston Transcript. Wn t has succeeded Wtter than any other attempt to mitigate the evils of the liquor traffic is high license. In all the States where such a law. has been passed it has worked like a charm, and the more we see of its operation the more thoroughly we are conduced thai it is the most effective remedy for the wtrat evils of the liquor business which has yet been tried in the Fuited States. New York Sun. TiiEitK are loud cries for missionaries to go among the Wyoming miners, but so far we have heard of no volunteers. In fact, it dots not seem so much a case for missionary work as for something more emphatic. If any missionaries go, care should be taken that they belong to the church militant. A household journal says that "a very pretty cover for a milking stool is made of golden brown silk serge, with a conventionalized apple blossom in shaded pink silk, with the stamens in gold silk between the petals." Very gay; but a much prettier cover for a milking stool is a maid of golden brown hair, rosy cheeks, silk fringed eyelids, and attired in a pink muslin dress. But we don't often see them outside of fiction. Norristown Herald. A Kit;ii) economy in small things is almost unknown among our eople. The waste from the table of an Americ;.n family would keep in comfort a French or German peasant with his wife and children. The waste of fuel in an American kitchen where an ignorant servant presides world cook tbe food of another family. The cast off clothing of a fairly well-to-do American family would comfortably clothe another of the same size. The Presbyterian. Tiik Alabama Baptist is of opinion that loor men's wives love them best. It says: No woman w ill love a man better for being renowned or prominent. Though he be first among men, she will be prouder, not fonder; as is often the case-, she will not even be proud. But give her love, appreciation, kindness, and there is no sacrifice she will not moke for his e oMent ami comfort. The man w ho loves her well is her hero and king. So less a hero to her though he is not to any other; uo Icsaj a king though hU
only kingdom is heart and home. It is a man's own fault if he is unhappy with his wife in nine cases out of t?n. It is a very exceptional woman who will not be all she can to an attentive husband, and a very exceptional one who will not be very disagreeable if she finds herself wilfully neglected. The phenomenal man is but one ste-p in advance of the natural fool. Give me the average man every time to tie to if you please. You know where to lind this sort of a man when you want him. Often when you want the phenomenal man he isn't there. He is among the clouds, in the depths of the ocean, or deep down in the bowels of the earth. I have known some men to be such phenomena that they were not good for anything else. Yonkers Gazette. Policy then, as well as patriotism, will hold the Southern people to the large-minded and abiding love of the Union, the manly and candid desire for peace and brotherhood, the deep and inspiring sympathy w ith American institutions and American glory, that lives in the hearts of her people and makes itself manifest on every proper occasion. Far above the mere triumph of party or the jK?tty plunder of office, the election of Mr. Cleveland was precious to her, in that it closed the chasm into which she had cast her blood and treasure, and it reunited in heart as in hand the Union she had honestly sought to divide. Atlanta Constitution.
PERSONAL. Yk tok Hi-o's property is found to Oe worth $1,(nhi,(H.i0. IIev. In. Phillips Ürooks has returned to Ik ton from Europe. Ji stix McCarthy will visit America alter the Parliamentary elections and lecture. Sk kerarv Lamar laughs at the idea of his health being impaired by close attention to business. Oknklai. M Clf.i.i.ax is the only survivor of the commanders of the famous Army of the Potomac. Sai.vixi is fifty-six. and the Italian critics say he is as attractive on the stage as he was twenty years ago. Enw.p.n Eoi.i.kstox says he is beginning to realize that it is only a rich man who can afford to write history. Jcstix McCarthy, M. P., a great favorite in this country, will visit the United States after the Parliamentary elections. Si'.xor. Sai.vixi is to be the "best man".at Mdlle. Emma Nevada's wedding October 1. Iliftori and Gounod have promised to attend. D.wiii Davis has lost about PO lounds in weight since his marriage. It is rumored that his skin now Kcts on him in Mother Hubbard dress style. Kx-Pkesii'Ext Artiii r attracts attention at Newptrt solely as' a dandy. He changes coats four times per day, and his pantaloons never show a wrinkle. IIev. H. II. IIawfis who will soon visit this country, is a I : road Churchman an excellent musician, a iopular preacher and an expert in methods of hygiene. Mr. Joitsr Boylk O'ltkiLCY having declined to read an original poem at the Boston Grant m inorial exercises, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe has been chosen to perforin the office. JIknry iIkorof. is writing another look for workingmen. This time he will discuss the protective tariff, and it is said will oppose it as inimical to the interests of workingmen. Mi:. PsotTOB, it is said, is writing a bxk on American girls. If he knows as much about this subject as he pretends to about so many other thing?, the book will be a revelation. Goveknoi: I-oxc, of Massachusetts, advises that at banquets the speeches should t ome first ami the dinner afterward. This might le a good way to shut off the flow of oratory. Talxi AtiE doesn't approve of Sam Jones' methods ef converting sinners. He says the man who is driven into Christianity by the use of a club will need a sling-shot to keep him there. The lines of W. I. How ells have fallen in plcasaut places. He has been employed by the Harpers at a salary of ten thousand dollars a year and his future works will appear in their publications. Senator Ba'yard says that Mr. Cleveland is a greater man than he thought he was. The general impression is that Mr. Cleveland's opinion of Mr. Bayard has undergone a change in the opjosite direction. Professor Bell, notwithstanding he has grciwn so rich from his telephone and other electrical inventions is still busily engaged upon other devises for the application of electricity and has about succeeded, it is reIorted, in transmitting images over a wire. FnoFEssoRHrxLEY's health seems to be hopelessly broken. He will give up all his appointments ami probably live henceforth in Italy. It is said that the British Government will grant him a pension of $o,noö a year. Bkv. Moses A. HoeKrxs, apiKÜnted Minister to Liberia, used to live in Pittsburg. He went there a poor boy and worked as a hotel orter, devoting all his spare momenta to study and finally prepared himself for college. Mr. George W. Cable writes to a friend in the Crescent City that he selected Northampton, Mass., as a residence on account of its educational advantages for his children, though he still loves his native New Orleans; but the trouble seems to be that his native New Orleans doesn't like him. 3Ir. Glahstone'h summer vacation has almost restored him to health, and he is able to speak now with a clear voice. Sir Andrew Clarke, his physician, believes that he will be fitted for hard work this autumn. It.waa Sir Andrew who refused to permit Mr. Gladstone to visit this country with Mr. Andrew Carnegie, although Mr. Carnegie had made complete arrangements for the visit, and had even selected the Steamer the Etraria on which Mr. Gladstone was to sail. " hut Shall W'9 IoWlth Our Dniurhteriir! This question is asked by a well-known lady lecturer. Well, we can do a great many things with them; one thing, we must take good rare 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 remedv in Brown s Iron Bittcrs,which has done much good. Miss Mary Greenfield, of Galatia, 111., writes: "Brown's Iron Bitters cured me of nervousness, indigestion and general toor health." Let other young huiivi! take the Uut.
WOMEN PERSONALS. Mis Cleveland will probably not return to the White House before Ottober 10. Miss Sweet is not tbe only young woman in this world who has had to step aside for a widow. A FAK-sEEixc. lady of Louisville has a scrap lKKik made up almost entirely of cholera cure reciiKS. iiss Mt r.n:EE (Craddock) has been spending a few days in Knoxville, Tenn., and is now in the Smoky Mountains. Nine hundred and fifty-five farms in Iowa are owned by women. The rest of the Iowa faims are only bossed by women. A Philadelphia man says the banker PrextTs three daughters will get $-l,ooiVnn apitce from his estate when it comes to them. Mrs. Caroline Biker and Mrs. Betsy Brazie, of Schoharie County. X. Y., celebrated their ninety-fourth birthday lately. They are tw ins. A Wisconsix pirl has been discovered w ith horns ujkii her head, the existent e of which she has long concealed by a skillful arrangement of her hair. It is reassuring to be informed that Patti will be here again next spring for another last tour of the United States. The American people would feel very lonesome if the dear old girl should fail to come at least once a year to bid them an eternal farewell. Mns. Frances Honosnx BYrnett, the novelist, differs from most non-literary wives in the circumstance that she is conspicuously they might say foolishly in love with her lord. They are as intimate in everj' resrect as they can be; they have no thought or feeling that they tio not share. They might be termed a connubial pair of spoons. A Providence girl writing from Paris says: "American girls studying under Parisian tinging teachers find it difficult to pay their deference exacted by their distinguished instructors. Mine. Marehesi requires that pupils ri-e w hen she enters the roomr courtesy to her when they withdraw, and kiss her hand on occasions of ceremony.'' Mrs. Stanley Hi xti.ey, once the wife of the late deceased Stanley Huntley, the w riter, and better known as "Stoopendyke," is residing with her brother, Captain Chance, of the regular army, stationed at Fort Lincoln, near Bismarck. Mrs. Huntley is a charming lady, and one can only esteem her. Sh 5s a constant reader of classic literature, and also keeps eminently posted upon topics of general interest. A correspondent of a Boston newspaper says Mr. Nast's wife is the original of Columbia, the tall, beautiful woman with the classic face who has been so prominent in the allegorical pictures during and. since the w ar. This pictures first gave Nast his National fame. In beauty of conceptions! and execution they have never been excelled, and are chaoters cf the history of the Nation's mind photographed moods, a it were. Columbia, let it be noticed, is altogether a difierent figure from the tiexldess of l.ibc-rty. She is Nast's special creation in the world of art. TAPE WORM ISKALLIW.Y t ritEDw-Uh 2 sjK)f.n..f iii.-lioim-. in 2to:l hours. For partieulHrs and reference address, with t-tarap, 11. FICK11Ö11N. 6 PL Mark's J"! n. e. Is". Y. iZSJ&H ' ' " "V-1 AKD' HOT ' f Ml. wtc)'.iuaitrH. fcy uaaiiav, CiranfcM UULDlra. J.8.B&ta.8SDe7&t.N.y
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MAGNETISM AND OXYGEN THE GREATEST CURATIVE KNOWN TO MAN.
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I Bv universal consent maTietim ha been reoc-ifntzed it the force In narnre which ho) worldi S I J VVV- uw. of attraction ami repulsion they are kept iu their orbits, moving in uiajeüo
Ii Kl na i. v int -v - a tilTue e wltro,, Lmnlmate natnre. .o is Oiyen the Hr!n? prlneirle on which all animal life depends. So by tlieMs Twin stur f Mp. Mui tis-n and 'Sja. i ihicin liarmcnv each BcrforiuiiiK it? proper function, dihcase is ehminated. ud tbe vu tim of disfase hi 15 adieu to , tRKi tl e Ut. Kareely an ailment that flesh I heir to but what ha, been cud by o r i let hod. afur 'ei" lies U Shirea and cV-riment on the part of physician. hen yonr pÄuÄ thl,t " rtoV want roil to die on hii rands and he aula vou to eel awav. He remember, perhaps, that he ma Je a nusuke and save yoa ihVwn.r Ä" u? Jr heXiH-vIl y,.aree hi ihe:nrt -ryn-. and ot cur Rive ; auu Ü - wri. mollcine. I'hvfician are human and not iufalUldc Thcu why not employ an ia:alhU agoi.tT NatUreTasrÄ "T" TV! Throw aside, therefore, vo u r 1 1 ills a Ii d P o w d er . and let natiw restore Mth n.it.d and U-iy to a new cxn- ence. lore, nr h J tw flirnih Mr Mvfrntie Applntn p nnd 0yK. mnbl. e.l st .e than I, J .V .!..... C, ln.a1 s,il Ht VOlir llOlllf 8 F'.lt VOSsf U . IV HS If VOU CH I ltd OO
oinersenarue.iii v,-."... de to Ikahh ia free to all. TcBtimoniHls from
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f item.a.AüIv I J-n. J l "sitti.; ixv.vh abi.e ron BTTinrS. SUNBURNS, DIAEEHCEA. CHATIN GS, STINGS OF INSECTS. PILES, SORE EYES, S0EE FEET, THE VOHDER OF HEALING S For IMle, mind, meed In or ItcbIlliT. It U the great-nt known remedy. For Burns cald. Wound. ItruUest and fcpraln. it is untviualied stopping pain sad healing iu a marvellous wanner. For Inflamed and sre rye. ItsffVsrt upou these tlelicate orgaus i simply laarreUoua. It ! tbe iJidleV Friend. All fema! complaint yield to ita wor.droua power. For Uleen, old fcore, or Open Wounds, Toothache, I areaehe, Uwe f Inect. fcore Feet, iu action upon taete ia most remarkable. MtEC03I3IKDF.n BY rUTSICt.lXSt USEB IS HOSPITALS! fmttiof.fO.KD'S EXTRACT till hm imififrf. The petiuine hat the word POSITS EXTRACT blown in the glatt, ani owr picture Irail'-marlc on turrrmnding bujf wrapper. Sort tth'r it sj-nuiw. Altoay intitt on having POSD'S EJCTRACT. Tatet no othrr preparation. It it ntrtr told in bulk or by measure. it is xrssxrz to vsz awt feet a. ratio except the Genuine with ocb directions. Csel Externally and InfernaV.y. Prices, 50c., $1. $l.Tö. Sold everywhere. J-Oub Sew Pamphlkt with Hitokt of ovw PSKPAHATloNS StNT 1T.EE OS API'LICATIOS TO POND'S EXTRACT CO., 73 Fifth Avenue. New York. TUTFS PDLLS TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER. Fmmand MALARIA. From these sources arise Üire-fourth9 of the diseases or the Luruan race. These symptoms indicate their existence :Lom of Appetite, Bowels costive, feick Headacbf.fullnett after eating;, Tcnicn to exertion of body or mind. Eructation of food, Irritability of temper, Low spirits. A reeling of hiring neRlerted. some dnf r, IMwInm, Fluttsrlna; at the Heart, Iota before the eyes, highlr colored Frlne, COASTIPATlOxf and demand the use of a remedy that acts lireet l?r on the Liver. AsaLivcr medicine TCTT'S J1,1,8 hav no e.inal. Their action on the kidneys and kin id also prompt ; removing: 1 all imimnties through these three kit engers of the system,' producing app- , tite.sound digestion, rejruliir Mools. a clear skniaatl a vigorous bod v. TriT"!1 PILLS cause no nausea or griping nor interfere ! with trAilr work and nie a ierfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. gold eve ry In re, Sfv. IW. M Murray Sre.t. N. T. WANTED. $250 A MONTH. Aceat wmnted. 90 bt mIU mg article in t ti w -c M . 1 ftavrupl fro A Jtre J AY BRONSU.yUctrslt.MjAlk A1TANTK1 Men ami women in every tuwn to tt svll 8 v-t if liristmas lks. Anviiuvmii nil tlicm. They sell for :, i. mid" f.. ne. new asctit a lady) ju)!d fifty-live the I rl tveek. making fU.vj; another l:t worth the first lioor, niitk'miT s.vjo. Send lor t-itvidar. t"AisKU. jl 'o.. Limited. 40 iH-arborn Mreet, f'h ice ;;--, r.i. Dr. Tenny is Oic Inventor and mle msnufiicluret of the famous Eureka Magnetic Appliauce. which have attained a world-wide repuutiu . tieiug the only seie:iti(ical"iy construeteclj magnetic garment niade: also founder of the American Macclic tad Compoocl Oivrea Ca., J-'or the relief and cure of ali Xortns of dV-case Without Medicine. The fntrodwtion of these twin foreo of nature, ' Mapnrtisin and Oxygrn, hare revolutionist! the practice of Mediciue. and the OM School 1'hrPicians have nl ready taken alarm, tud have lately held a meeting to proteet themselves aptiust their Introduction. The public are aware, however, ol the fact, that ther have opposed every advance la raedieal science for the put two hundred years, and the very line of treatment denounced by them thirty year ago as false is to-cUy held U be absolute truth. t . . ... The lesFons which idiould nave been tau?nt by past experience have fallen on ttony ground and Lave borne but little fruit. A few advanced thinkers in the profession, failing to he reeoguiaed in their effort for humanity.hvae broken the bonds which Railed them, aud recojruizinij tbaOature waü the best chemist, have reporte d to natures forces for aid in the restoration of man physical i d til Pa '. -"y in ,n,.fr,..n ,...,., of twenty. Our tvt ty part of ihe I uited tale. TLNNEY, ill W. Mm Street, Chi-, HL
