Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 October 1885 — Page 4
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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1835.
jABY HUMORS
Infantile and Birth Humors . Sptediiy Cured by Cuticura. TTOF. Cleansing the Skin and Soalp of Rlr;h SI liumors, for allaying Itching. Burning and luf.uEimation. hr curiii:- tin- lirst symptoms of Kveiaa. Psoriasis. Milk I'rust. Krald" Head. Scrofula nd therinheritod sWn and Mood disi-es-s. t'l.Titvn.x. the pn-at skin "ut-. and C;tiouk So.xr. an xiv!:--iteSkiu lieaii tiller, externally, and I'nu i RA '.Ki vi vint, tin- new Klood PuriUer. internally, are infallible. Absolutely pun. TKKKIltLY AFM.ICTK1." Mr. and Mrs. Kvorctt Sicilians. P?lohertoxvn. fnss., w rite: -IMjr little toy terribly afflicted witli Scrofula, Suit Rhenui and Krysipelas ever irre In was born, and nothing c could give liini helped him. until wo tried tXTH i k I'hMKnus. w huh KrucluiiHy cured him. until ru is now as lair iis auy child." '100 volt otiiin;." William Gordon. ST Arlington venue, 1isrlesmii. Ma.ss., writes: '"Hax iug paid atxmt to fcrst-clftvs doctors to cure my baby, without sucoss. J tried the 'l ti i k v I:k.m.iik-. Mliieh completely cured, niter uiug three packages." "FROM IIKA1 TO FF.F.T." . Charles Kayre llinkle. Jersey City Height. X. J., writes: "My sou, a lad of twelve years, tvasi-oui-Vletely cured of a terriMc case of taenia by the i'iih.Li:a Kmkwk.s. r roru the tp ot his bead 1o the holes oi his feet was one luuss ot scabs." .very other rentcdy aud pbyMcians bad been tried invaiu. "A LITTI.K HOV Cl'KKII." Nh tXash. C'ovinjrton. Ky., write: "Hue of our customers bought yonrYi'TioiRA RkmriIi ior his little boy. who 'had a kind ot humor in I lie head, so that lie was a solid scab of sores. He mbs entirely cured, and his iatlicr says he Mould not begrudge S-'tiO tor the good it lias done lttm." Sold everywhere, l'riee: Ci tutha. rfl rents; Pv-ot .vknt.$I.Wi; So.w. rents. Prepared by jt'orrw. Lnuti am Chkmicai. Co.. boston, Ma-s. hend forIIow to Cure Skin Disease.1 BABY ert'iimed si i; sf, an exquisitely kin nr. Vi TIKI Kit. Kidney Pains. Straius. ltaok Achf, Wcakucvs and Weariness caused by overwork, dissipation, standing, walking, or the sewing-machine, cured bv lb'' Cutieura AmiI'Bin I'la-ter. New. elegant. original aud in fallible, 'ir-c. "WEDNESDAY, OCTOJJKli '.'l. WITH supplement TKUMS l'KK YKAU. Single Corr without Premium SI 00 tl'ibs of eleven for 10 00 V e est Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper w hen they come U take Stabscriptions and make up clubs. Agents making up clubs teud for any Information desired. Address ISWAXAl-OLli SKXTiyEL COMPANY. Indianapolis, Ind. ii AVeeUly Sentinels fur .. The rumor that Nellie (.rant and her husJ.and are looking to a separation is again roived. Pr.tiDi:.T Gr.F.vY, of France, is onl?ev-rnty-two, and Lores. by impartial e.e'utive judgment, to live tlirou'li Itali alozcn reveJutions yet. Tpw: price of wheat in Muntern Ohio in ivjo uas liftocn cents a bushel; in 1S21, twenty-five cent-; in ISi"-'. thirty-seven euts. At Ilochester in !:. the jrue van Jiftv-nine cents. ip harJ-headcil ircjtbli ans who still believe in the parable of the division of the. ioaves and lishes ro rota, are liorrified at the insinuation that tlie Ohio tontest was a triumph for the inurwunipians. nd in the clubs of i Sentinels for llf t rr.r;i (; to the claim of the new protective oran of New York, ' to have no politics." an esteemed exchange well remarks-: "Neither has the pickpocket in a crowd. All :tre robbed with the greatest impartiality." I r has lcen a current axiom that a rainy lertion day meant vit tory for the Iemorat. It la now becoming a matter for loabt. and while it remains thus American unities will lx comi'lkated, w itii the addiction of the glim f-hoo. Ii: IAvr.xror.T. the Kepubliran candidate ip i.ovemor of New York, is called an '!- ,'uut idler." He must be somewhat of a tlude. His business has been to travel the tfrcan for pleasure and to talk up the merits f the I'leasant Valley Wine Company. A V II AT about nur townshii orders? It is -aid now they have all disappeared, ami that the Canada colony furnished the money. yiieJotirnal and other Republican organs should have the manliness t oiler aa ?ij.lo'.ry to Trustee Kit for their very unkind and uivcnorons inuendoes. nnteil. J.00 club of nix. Sentinel for .". Tiir. wealth incrca-eif the South during 1 he last live years is phenomenal. The a-M-sed valuation of that section has risen .ince lw from .s',l" i.mioh to Stt,?;.'.or a gain of $:, ',(. This is an a - ret ion so wonderful as t. negative the cam"paign tales of a chronic lawlessness in that Mtlion. It is only where life and property iire safe that snob an increase can take place. Iv a recent conversation between Henry eor.ne. the atritator. and lavid Hudley Field, published in the North American Review, the latter admitted that Mr. f.eonro's lKtri.ne concerning land-ownership was right in principle and meritorious It pur7osc( but lie sbowc-d it to le utterly impracticable by pointing out the diiliculty of upsetting all existing title-, and substituting a system of tenantry in place oi" the present r-y-tcni of private ownership. The Sentinel jiixl the Fsirni 4uile for al.'i.. 1ed I!5ix.i.Mf Cm r mi i., although so young that old fogies like Lord Salisbury "Won't let him g t away from his leading Ftring", shows more political insjjht and rne statesmanship than any leading man in IF.ngland, rot excepting (Jladstone. If he 3ives, Le can not but be the central figure in J.'nglish politics. A little young bleod is Jieeded since the old ones from Palnar-ion down have allowed Kngland to Ise her lir.-t j'lace in KurojH. "TnE biggest land sale ever made on rartb,' Fay the morning dispatches, was a transfer o Texas lands amounting to .".uoo,IW arces, for the sum of f i00u,X. The e xpression fits the American hat exactly. 2 1 is a big thing, and appeals to the bigger fense of pride that resides in the American mind. It is sure, however, to be a mich JijS-T thing, and in way not very flatter-
Las la our piiile, Wioxt toe Lave done with, this merciletis Mailänderin; of the public domain to foreign capltalhis ia 'blocks equalling an Knropean primipaliy, and for jurpO;os thrt can not in auy way redound to 'A me can interests. The etil of ; large proprit tarshjp will be added to landlord absenteeism, and the nine point3 of possession wili make the 1m1 a ixk-some and diihcult as the old nvan of the sea was to fcjinbad.
Six copie of the Wfkly Sciittnel tor 3. RIVER AND HARBOR MATTERS. A new proposition has been formulated in reference to the com in s Kiver and Harbor A ppiroprIalion Kill. It is contemplated to work .for appropriations in a single lump Kufhcitnt to complete whatever work may be undertaken, instead of as heretofore, with an amount just sulticient to Lein a work, leaving it to dribble alonj? in certain slow nen and uncertain amount from year to year. It is surprLeins that the enormous losses which have resulted f roni fcuch loose methods had not caused a revision of method before. In many cases we know of, workhai. been be;;un, costly machinery and appurtenances employed, or built, part of the material delivered, and the work opened, when matters would get into a tan-lc at "Washington, either from fon;etfuluess or through the instrumentality of the railmad lobby, and the whole plant, labor and materials left to go to rack and ruin. lUit this does not represent all the loss entailed,' for the work, when prosecuted in such a spiritless way proceeds sdowly, half of a season being required to gather up the ends of the preceding year before work can proceed regularly. The supervising force remains nearly constant, and the. assistants, where they are employed on a basis of a short appropriation, bcin. engaged principally in cleaning up machinery or in otherwise preserving such work as may he finished from complete ruin. A jrrcat deal of unjust criticism has been heaped upon these appropriations through the instrumentality of railroad interests and others whose private interests were interfered with by contemplated improvements. There has also been some criticism that was not unjust, because appropriations have occasionally been given for wild or unworthy projects. Uut as a w hole the improvements are demanded for Ibe public benefit, both on the seaboard and lake, and on our noble river system. That a river like the Wabash should ''flow unvexed to the sea" by not even a llatboat, when with improvements in three jKiints between its confluence with the White and Terra Haute, boats could reach the latter point w ithout hindrance during nine mouths of the vear. QUALIFICATIONS FOR THE FOREIGN SERVICE. Several prominent Kasterti journals insist that no man should lc appointed to a place in the fereign service w ho can not speak the language of tho country to which he is accredited. The enforcement of such a regulation would admit to the service any one of the countless society dudes of the Lastern cities, w'hile such men as President Cleveland, Vice President Hendricks. Senator Voorhees, Senator Harrison, Hon. Joseph 1. McDonald, Hon. W. H. FnglLsh, and, in a word, a majority of the ablest and be-t men of the country would be excluded. To show how strong this absurd rule is insisted uj-on in the Last, we(uote from a prominent journal: "The lirst and great pre-rcquisite the fr 7'"? vnn oi fitness in an ambassador or consul Ls that he should have k thorough and intimate-acquaintance, cither with the language of the country in which he is to represent us and our interests, or the language of diplomacy, the French." The men w ho are most thoroughly and intimately ar-quainted with foreign languages are of three dashes, fit Men who were Krn and bred in foreign countries where tho-e languages are spoken, and who. from in.-tiur t, habits, a-socutions, ami often from interest, are thoro'tghly un-American. (2 American snobs, whose vuktu wealth has enabled them to travel abroad, and whose stock iu trade is au affected contempt for everything American. (:; Americans lorn and bred in allluence, who have acquired the foreign langnages simply as elegant accomplishments, and w ho, relieved by fortune from the neccesity of work, are destitute of all practical knowledge of business a flairs. Of this class no better illustration can be found than the helpless generation of elegant gentlemen bequeathed to the South by the institution of slavery and sent adrift by its overthrow. Now, it is obvious that a policy requiring an intimate acquaintance with a foreign language as the principal quantitation for a foreign apiointm nt would fill our. diplomatic and consular service mainly with men from the ( lasses described; in other words, with foreigners, snobs and ornamental nonentities. A result like this must be the furthest thing ossible from the purose of the administration. If the rule in question were to be enforced its broadly as is urged, changes, except on a very limited scale, would bo prohibited, for the great body of our present foreign agents have been so long in set vice that they themselves are far more expert in the languages ot i lie countries to w hich they are accredited than any new set of men can be. lhtt nothing letter lows the fallacy of the rule than the patent fact that a large Mrtion of these men, Uiougb expert linguist arc worthless officers. And the converse faet is equally true, that many who were at lirst. and isomer who areeven yet, entirely ignorant oi" the local languages, are among the best and mo"-t useful of our foreign servants. The best iosible forecast of the foreign system the new administration may be expected to inaugurate is afforded by the character of i bo men who are to shajie and control it. The President and his Cabinet are not only able men, but in every feature of character they are broadly, tlmrughly and emphatically American. AVe may therefore safely anticipate that the first positive requisite iu the character of every one of our foreign agents w ill be an absolute and intel- ' ligeni devotion to American principles and American interest?. Again, both iu character anil achievements, the President and his Cabinet present the highest exemplification of the practical, restless, aggressive energy which is the impelling force of American progress. We may therefore predict that our new diplomatic and consular force will lc composed of energetic, intelligent business men, ac,s
' , ,t.-.w .l I..- I.l.'t -v 1,n p,drr!t5f5 Dil !
difficulties, and trained by exierience in the ' complicated details of practical business. Hut fruch men may not be exiert linguLsts. The most successful linguist is the man who makes the study of languages his business. He is generally good for nothing else. He would not be a successful consul or diplomat. The practical. the tuccessfnl man finds ordinarily, little time for the use of foreign ' languages. The very industry and application by which he eanis .success deprives him of the opiortunity to master strange tongues. But he is the man to learn. Send him abroad, where it becoaies necessary to speak a new language, and lie takes it up as" part of his business, and applies to it his characteristic industry, and masters it accurately, sw iftly aud ierfectly. Any industrious man of good English education and fair general culture can learn to sjeak and write French or German with reasonable lacility in from three to six months. If he is a good Latin scholar, and has a liberal general culture, he will, even in less time, attain equal success. It is not to be denied that a knowledge of the J language of the country to which the sigent is sent is a great advantage, but it certainly i.s not, as the Mastern press contends, "the one great prerequisite the fine ita non.'' "We hoic to see the new Government expel and exclude from our diplomatic andconsulor service, not all foreign born citizens, but such toreigners as care nothing for our National interests or honor; snobs, who bring us into contempt; elegant idlers, who are worse than worthless; and ignorant political bummers and dead beats, who degrade the service and disgrace the country. We hope also to sec the service rapidly reinforced with practical, intelligent, eneregitic, new men, to the end that our commerce may be magnified, our prosperity increased, and cventtt ally our Merchant Marine revived, and the honor of our Hag restored upon the sea. We cull special attention to our new rlnli terms of ix Weekly Sentinels for ."; twelve for 10. THE RECENT CITY CANVASS. Oood citizens everywhere will rejoice that the city elections are over. Never to such a degree had flatulent hypocrisy assumed so high an air of virtue and fidelity as during the past campaign. Under the cloak of public morals, in which restriction upon saloons was blazoned as the rallying cry, Avas hidden the most despotic, unjust and undemocratic .scheme of taxation ever devised a scheme of taxation that would throw all its burdens upon the poor: that would eomel the small trader to pay the same money for the privilege of doing business as the most prosperous rival. The inate flunkcyism of society was gathered under the ltepublican banner a I banner with heroic traditions obscured with the corruptions of a long lease of iower until the air teemed with stories of lawlessness and disorder, and tin; auost orderly of cities wa.s reduced to a condition of anarchy and riot. It is the habit of the newspapers which have helped on this- wave of insincerity to berate those unlucky business men and honest Republicans who are so fortunate as to reside in the ''North L'nd," because they did not tiun out ci ino.c and support their favorite romance of riot. It bespeaks but little for the judgment of such papers that their watery pretenses should be expec ted to obtain credence, or that business men shoulu le endow ed with so little sense as to fail to puncture its thin disguise of cant that clotted their utterances. That the Democratic ticket was in all respects the best that could have been provided, maybe a matter of doubt ; that the Republican ticket contained some good material, is beyond question. We would luive fared worse bad our opponents conducted the campaign with less blind, ill-judged and dishonest pretenses; had not many Republicans become disgusted with the hyjocrisy of the issue raised, and the insidiousness w ith which its real purposes were concealed. The result should teach two things that honest' is the best policy in politics as in other things; and that attempt to divide our population into bureaus asd working men, the one the saviors of oeiety the other menacing its foundations, are both dangerous and futile. That the result was not more favorable is a curious commentary on the ower of sophistry over the weakminded and fearful few, who see the commune in every street corner conversation and are every ready to raise the standard of oppression. ' ySix Weekly Sentinels for 3. Friends, Give us l.OOOot these neat little clubs with. In the next thirty days. ' " ' FALSE ECONOMY IN BUSINESS. It is the habit of psoudo political economists to preach tho doctrine of cheapness as the iilt hut thvtc of human perfection in Government and social life. Theories of the coming millenium have been made synonymous with the good time coming when as much would be purchased with a rent as could have been had for a dollar in the barbarous days in which we unfortunately lind ourselves. This sentiment would be harmless enough if it were merely the idle dream of a fireside story. But unfortunately it has been preached from pulpit and press impressed in the first reading book placed into the young enild's hands, and continued through the wrangles of . university seniors until it has gained a hold on the Hpular- mind that time and hard times only can eradicate. Anent the above, many of our railroad managers have united to restore paying rates for every class of their business. Ixw rates have not benefited the general business of the coantry so much as they have injured the best interests contained in the railroads. It may le taken as an axiom that anv production whatever, if sold below its costs, w ill injure the party buying as much as the party selling. The rules of economy that govern private life can only be accepted in a olitical sense when applied to a nation as a whole, or, for that matter, to an number of nations, if their commercial relations are close and complicated. First, in the modest sense, labor must live, and there is no national economy in reducing its share in the general products by reductions of wages or dispensing with it by labor-saving machinery. If the man is denied his share, through any possible means, he becomes a tramp, or, ierhaps, he goes to jail; but in any event he is maintained, if not by his own exertions, by those of. other people, and the cost gt hU main
tenance is about the s-uue in any event, aui draws just that much from the geueral itore. If a railroad does, its business below a paying rate, ii must either discharge its helper reduce the iucotue it w ill receive. In the one case the help must eonsunit the capital it has saved, or de-end upon public support. Ip the other, II juercantil transactions are reduced by the total amount of the income so cut off, and in the end this will be no saving whatever, but a direct loss owing to thecquelibriutii between supply and demand having leen disturbed. In all the argumenta of means for the stimulation of business activity we have noticed, this action on the part of railroad managers is the first sign that a way has been found, and that the example will be largely followed is certain, if the scheme is persevered in. So much of American capital and labor is identified with our railroads that any ber.eiit they may be able to derive will be communicated through all the channels of business. The depression in the price of wheat is the only tangible reason that business should lag, and that wheat speculation has taken up so much of the imagination of the business world may be due this continued timidity. P.ut wheat really makes up but little of this country's wealth, and has really but little to do'with the present stagnation iu trade if we except the one of conservatism induced by the popular misapprehension that American prosperity was bound up in that production. AVe believe if this policy of the railroads were generally imitated, an era of prosperity would soon follow. Prosperity is more sure with equitable dealing than cheapness. The Weekly Sentinel and the American Agriculturist for ?, only CO cents more than the price of the Agriculturist.
RESTRICTING LAND OWNERSHIP. Who can deny that there is a bed-rock of light underlying the growing jopular conviction that land ownership should be legally restricted? In Ireland vast areas of agricultural lands, owned by absent landlords, arc arbitrarily withheld from use, while all round them the wretched inhabitants, to whom their cultivation would afford comfortable support, are living in squalid poverty and dying by thousands ot" actual want or of disease induced thereby. Iu Fngland the condition of the unfortunate poor is but one degree better than that of their unhappy Irish neighbors, w hile throughout the island magnificent landed estates, from whose cultivation the joor might derive an abundant maintenance, are withheld by their lordly owners from the use of man, and dedicated to the luxurious support of beasts of the chase. In other foreign countries as well as these the evils of excessive land-ownership are already felt in all their deadly reality. On this continent that extreme point has not been reached. Here a refuge for the lxr lias always been open on our Western domain. Rut of this only a fragment now remains, and the signs are unmistakable that the cruel conditions prevalent in other countries are gradually closing in on us. Whole regions, almost incredible in extent, of the richest soil, of most perfect topography and climate, of incalculable future value, in our Western States and Territories, are now owned by great railroad corporations, almost as iowerfulas the Government, and more despotic than monarchies. Only last week one vast body, embracing thr million acres or the richest agricultural lands in Texas, was purchased by a company of foreign landlords, combined as a syndicate, a form of organization not less tyranical, and even more avorieious than corporations. Other similar acquisitions of equal or greater magnitude will rapidly follow; and w hile time will be required for the engrossment of the whole of our freedomain. none can deny that both the speed and the manner of its absorption are justly alarming. Who can not foresee that all lands acquired anil held, so long as the profits from their natural rise in market value exceed what they might yield in net rent5, w ill be withheld from circulation? And who can foretell how Soon we Khali experience the actual evil of land monopoly ? For the present, the retreat still open to our public lands, our ready facilities of migration, our still numerous opportunities of profitable industry, with other conditions favorable to individual independence, afford ample security against oppression; but this security will Ikj rapidly eroded, les? by lapse of time than by encroachments of the evil. The juncture is not one of instant peril, but it is one of import. It is time to sound the warning. These vast titles, once vested, areas eri!iniiont as the lands they hold. There exi-ts neither method nor jiower of compulsory divevtment. These 'vast regions of lands, onve in the grip of legal ownership, are gone, and there is no remedy. The evil land monopoly, om e legally implanted, can be extirpated only by revolution. The juncture, therefore, is one, not only of ominous impart, but also of grave. reionsibility. The duty of the hour is the adoption of a public policy, prudent, wise and resolute, which will grapple, now with this terrible evil and prevent its entrenchment in American soil. The evil is impending; the duty is clear; the power is unquestioned. The form and substance of the requisite policy arc questions of .statesmanship. The present aud growing public conviction is that the strongest safeguard wiil be found in the stern restriction of land-ownership. Rut be the policy wliat it may, successfully founded, it would stand among the noblest bulwarks of American liberty. (let rle of your neighbors to take Sentinel ii ml your own will be paid for. Thk hanging of Coffee yesterday at Crawfordsviile was a very bungling job. The rope broke tw ite. The hangman's task is not an easy one, and wo do not care, to lind fault with the Sherill of Montgomery County, but there ought to be some remedy for these too often recurring "" ;' at executions. Probably the Inst plan would be to hang murderers in one or the other of our State Penitentiaries by a State executioner, provided for by the Legislature. It is now known that the so-called new star in the nebula of Andromeda is an old "variable," although its magnitude or brilliancy was never so clearly marked as on the present occasion. Lord Rosses investigations several times revealed it, but as au exceedins'y faint and nebulous point, some-
tüntü fadiag ojJt altogether, .lt.. w. one of those curiosities of science that seem to defy solution, and it . is likely that the question will agitate astronomers fcr inany years to come. Thk ltepublican party has gone out of jower at Washington m that the monev raight be counted and the books balanced"; but now that everything has been found right, even to the cent that rolled under the table, there is no reason why the jxurty should not resume business at the old ttanll in IStfi. Chicago Tribune. There is a fine louquet bubbling up on the foregoing. "Kverything found right!" The $'",000 stealage in the New Orleans sub-treasury; theTWjOOO acres of Iouisiana land given away to Jay Gould t Co. by ex-Secretary Teller; the thieveriesof the star-route gangs; a score or two of defaulting postmasters; the undervaluation of Roods in the New York t'u.-toin House by Republican officials; the extravagance and "shortage" in the coast survey sei vice; all these under Republican auspices, and the Chicago Tribune declares that everything was found right." Iiosh! Get ttii auhscribers far the Sentinel, retain SI and bend us a V.
The Turks have, in all, Uu.Oüü men ready to fight the Servians, Uulgarians, or Creeks, as the ease may prove. The Servian army is said to be crossing the frontier, although j what her real purpose is Ls not yet manifest. Correspou dents, who are directing all the plans of all the courts and all their armies in the field, say that Servia and Greece jgo as the ally of Turkey, but they have not yet taken the liberty to say they hate abandoned the Russians altogether. It will be a famous victory whichever wav it goes. SPIRIT OF THE STATE PRESS. The ltepublican party has no principles, its iolicy is expediency. In Indianapolis it declared war on the liquor sellers; in Cincinnati the saloon men closed their doors Tuesday and worked all day for the success of the Republican patty. Miami Couuty Sentinel. A newsimi-er is like a pretty woman in many respects. To be perfect it must be the embodiment of many tycs. Its form is made up. It is always chased, although sometimes inclined to le giddy. It enjoys a good press, the more rapid the better. 1 1 has a weakness for gossip. Talks a good-deal. Can stand some praise-. Is awfully proud of a new elress. liochestcr Sentinel. IK.MocK v knows no class, and has always been the idea of government of the people, whether they are learned or unlearned, rich or poor, washed or unwashed. Democracy does not and can not acknowledge a working class, an upier class or a lower class, because to do so would be to open the way for a government by classes such a government as the Republican party in the quarter century of its supremacy nearly succeeded in establishing. Pike County Democrat. The candidates entered for the next Congressional race, according to our exchanges, are Messrs. G. V. Menziesand K.M.Spencer, of Posey; William F. Townsend, of Pike; James K. McCulIough. of Gibson ; lienoni S. Fuller, of Warrick; Henry Kramer, of Sjeneer, and William Rahm, of Vanderburg. Hon. John J. Kleiner, the present incumbent, does not expec t to be a candidate. When the campaign fairly begins there w ill be a lively time. Urethren of the press, please name the winning "runner." AVe are for the man who "gets there." Mount A'ernoti Democrat. SrEAKixof old and new Democratic leaders, the Vinccunes News has the following kind and deserving words of Hon. J. L McDonald : "As for McDonald, lie is an able and a conscientious man. His services have been real. He stood between his people and their own folly at a time when all the other lenders were run mad, and to-day he has the proud satisfaction of know ing himself honored and esteemed by those most bitter against him six or seven years ago. He Ls the only prominent man in the party in Indiana to-day, who has stood out iioldly and consistently against that thieving taritl. Ihtviess County Deinocral. Perhm's the most ludicrous thing in American iolitics to-day is the apparently unconscious ignorance or dishonesty displayed by a class of Republicans. No matter how exemplary in his habits a citizen may be, if he is opposed to prohibition he is, according to the idea of these people, in favor of free w hisky, drunkenness and all the results of riotous living. Ifhebcposcd to woman suffrage, they at once rank him as opjioscd to educating women, a tyrant of the lirst water, and hostile to a moral consideration of political questions. If ho Ik- opposed to a protective tariff, or in other wordi, if he opjioses a plan whereby the Government gives a single individual the power to levy an exorbitant tax Uon the whole people exclusively for his own benefit, thcs;e one-eyed ignoramuses set him down as opposed to all manufacturing. No matter if the opponent of protection be a manufacturer himself, and, as is often the case, engaged in a highly protected industry, these stupid critics class him -a opposed to all manufacturing. Of course all intelligent jK'Opie regard these critics as either very ignorant or very dishonest, and their mouthings only excite demion. Laporte Argus. Tut: Democratic party has supported the liquor traffic regulated by just and reasonable laws. It has opposed prohibition upon principles and not as a matter of policy. The Ilepublican party, as has been illustrated in numerous State elections during the past four years has connected itself with the l'rohibitionist, when they lelicved by so doing they could carry the election. Klierwise they have evaded the question entirely. This could not be better demonstrated than by reference to the Ohio campaign. The Democrats made a firm stand against Prohibition. With them there was no equivocation, no ovasion; they came out boldly for high license and against Prohibition and local option. Foraker advocated locai option until Deadly, in bis Toledo speech, so plainly demonstrated to him that the principles of local option and Prohibition were the same, then he "dodged" the quostien entirely, and could not be made to state whether be favored or opposed Prohibition. Yet in the recent election the liquor men gave their support to Foraker, and by that means defeated Hoadly, the Democratic candidate. Now, then, let them suffer. It is in this wav that they willarousea sentiment of opiosition in tlie Democratic party and some time they will awake to find the suiport of this party or a portion of it withtown. AVabash Times.
i A MTitKi'j tears are the t-a:e in all languages. Thk young man who desires to get vf with tie sun should not stay up too late to see the daughter. More men are wanted everywhere with the far-reaching iower to min i their own business. Philadelphia Times. Thk Irish question figures as the principal issue in both Tennyson and Salisbury's pro. RTOgrammes. They w ill both be compelled to stand Pat. -Chicago Current. "Political caucuses, gTcat as are the evils connected with them, seem to be a necessity, because the communities they represent tire unable to meet to-etber," says Rev. AV. AY. Fverts, D. 1). It will occur to nio-t -ople that it is about time for pious non-combatants. North and South, to lay down their guns. They have creeds particularly enjoining upon them the forgiveness of past injuries. hicage Herald. The New York Journal of Commerce cruelly says: "In this country the humbug of platforms and stump sjeechcs is ierfectly well understood. None but the youngest and most innocent voter exjM ct parties and candidates to keep fait!) with them." How it must gall the noble spirits of old Thilip of Macedon and Alexander "Philip's warlike son" if they are cognizant of what goes on on earth, to see all this talk in the pajcrs about Macedonia being annexed to Servia! In their days Macedon u-ed to annex the world. Minneapolis Tribune. It is possible that tho mugwump's liue-of reasoning for being a Republican in theState and a Cleveland man in the Nation is similar to that of Mark Twain when questioned as to his belief in the future life. 'Tin really indifferent, " be said, "for I have friends in both pi aces. A Iba n v '1 inies. A riiYMfiAN has discovered that nitroglycerine is a superior boart-stimulent to brandy, and mjy be safely substituted for the latter in many cases. It has the merit of creating no unnatural craving. Thus do the doctors continue to batter don n the bulwarks of the liquor trade. Chicago Current. Never before was the dream of local -elf-government so near accomplishment for Ireland as it is to-day. It would seem that Proviöenco is about to answer the prayer of I '.ihmen, after centuries of wrong, and resttfre to that ancient land of heroes, saints and sages the privilege of conducting its owu affairs for its ow n benefit. Augusta (Gm. Chronicle. A new paper in New A'ork impudently avows that its purpose is to benefit "the toiling millions" by advocating their tax.itiott under the name and style of "protective tariff." It assures the public that "no man, no clas., no party ow ns our conscience." This improbably true. An intelligent advocate of protection as a benefit to ''the toiling millions' has no conscience. Detroit Free Press. PERSONALS. The King. of Sweden and Saxony arc both poets. CintsiEir A. Akihck, .It:., now at Lenox, is very much out of health. Mr. Rt K.rs, designer of the Puritan, b;is orders for a dozen yachts. Chmm.es Fi; was Aims, III., is one of the I la rva rd A t biet ic Com m i 1 1 ee. Thk Princess Ionise, of England, paints and writes, and does both very well. Dom Tecko, of llrazil, writes well and learnedly, chiefly on scientific subjects. Siim'Rck Nii-ext, the "moon man," of New York City, laims to be 1'2't years old. Pr.ini T AitTitt r reform wa genuine. He attends church in New A'ork City regularly. I r is more than twenty-five years since Jay Gculd tasted whisky. His first drink was his last. P.kv onseiei i talked iu a soft, low voice. Gladstone talks distinctly, in medium tone, and Ijrd Salisbury loudly, often loistcrusly. A Mormon editor has been arrested for supporting two wives. 'Jhe arrest was undoubtedly ju-tifiable. An editor with an income sufficient to supiort two wive must be engaged in some sort of crooked work. Genei: u. Gi: wt's height, as stated by Colonel Frederick D. Grant in a letter to a:i inquirer, was five feet eight inches; ehest measure, about thirty-eight inches; weight, in April, IScil, lo3 iounds; in June. lSti.1, 1 12 ound.s.
...NOTES AND. OPINIONS.
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tSSU Ii A, in i. pr nnfrerilVonent rfla'mctism has been recognized as the force'in nature which holds; wnrlda 1" TOM f3Vion and ret.ul.sion they are kept in their orbits, moving ia maie-stiO
silcuceth ciple on w hich all animal lifo depewK c.inunafe daTl the ?.p?;mT.fdh acting in hnrmonr. each pertorroing its proper f urn ,10 '.,,f, f. 's, ' .",, V he r to hnt w bt l.a -ea 'idMo lieaith Ä lre 19 alL Teatimoniala from every part of tbo United butea. OUR TERMS: Ladies Magnetic Jackets or Gentlemen's Magnetic Vests, with days' oSc. reatment, or 3 months hgrne treatment Compound Oxygen, $25. Consultation
FREE. Address DR. I
Hemorrhages. KSK iSSÄ Iwv. r from aaycauM i booedily con. troiled and atopped. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds; Sprains and Bruises. 1; u cooiiiig. cleansing and Healing. fo Ifl r,V"l Trart 'flici-iii for tliLatlUalallfl ease. Cold in the Uead.&e. Onr -Catarrh Cnre,' i .s;em:.r .reMred to meet tterioiia rut. Out A -M I K ringe ia aluiple and iiiexpensive. Rheumatism, Neuralgia. No othr preparation Hm enrvi mora ca.ef these (tistresainK niplaints Uiau the Kxtrart. Our Platter i lnV. -ahM in tbefe disease, Lumbac.., Pain ia Back or biUe. A.c. Diphtheria & Sore Throat Use Hie Kxirau-t iroiujily. llay U Uaageruus. PiloC M,lm. Bleeding or ll hint;. Is 1 HCjf 'a the gtatei known remedy ; ipi.l raring when oilier mexlifirus l,v lai'.ed. OiirUlntitieat i r t;reat nervine whe: the removal of clothing inconxeaient. For Broken Breast and' Sore Nipples. 230 used The Kx tract ill never bn wi:h' jt iu Our Ointment ia ihn bci .-moUieut that can be applied. Female Complaints. InÄ,n?f'laV dineaseslhe Kxtrart can l uW, us is weil tiM.y. u. with the avai-M beiietC Full directions :uvoiin.uny vac-it UlUe. CAUTION. Pond's Extract IE tiie wonts lonit' Kxlrarf' l,l.i ia Iii glass, aiul our piet-in trado-marL on ninouiiJmi tmit mm. 1 m i. N"oiet:iir tss genuine. A I wav ii,a',r- on hax-iti Honda Kxtrart. Tai tx other r.rliou." It is hvtr Mi l in Liuk, or ty incKxiv-. Sold ei ery Were, I'rleew, 50e, $1, $1.7.. Prepared only by POXD'S 1X.TKUT CO., NÜWYüUK AND LONDON. fiTUTT MILL TORPID BOWELS, 1 DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. Frrm thesa fouivcs arie thii'e-lourta.iof the ilisoasesj of the human race. Thesa nyniptonis iwlieato their e. u-lcncu : Ia mi Appetite, nontU roitUe, Mrk Head ache, fullne. after eating-, avtrilon t EcrUon of iMMly or in I ml, Krnttattoai of food, Irritability of temper, Lor pirits, A feelini; or hating negierte! aouie duty , li?lut, ITutterluK ot tfca Urart, IHits lerore the eye, highly colored I rlue, COASTlPATIOX, and demain! theuse ot "a, remedy t liul iutalireetlr on the Liver. Asa Liver medicine TCTT'fl J'ILL Have no r,ual. Their act ion on th Kidneys and ."kin isuiso prompt; reinOTinr, all impurities thron-rli these tlireo ? Kri of the system," rMliH-ing appetite, Sou rid digestion, regular mmi1s, a clear skin and u vigorous lody. T f 'TT.s rTLIM rause im iiauscH or fti ipiu nor iuterlero w ila dailv work anl a is; u jx rfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. usM every her". 'JV. 3i.s-. 44 Muinv stissS. tx'. T. "25 YEARS S the Toiiltanl." is title of one of the most common seu-e. vultr lxvs ever published. Mr. . M. Ijuis. its author, is. aiJi. practical ina u. and oue of the most siu ees-sud poultry farrier in theeountry. The book is simple summary of his txvetity Sve ean" cspcrienee in the business. It has hcfeu xvorta tweoty times its nice every car l ninny of its readers. Piice, twenty-live cents post pitid, or xxe will t-ead it as a preseut to any one of our patron spndins U5 a SI MILK N'K srRsXT.IKKi:. Please bear in mind, friends, thai this ofler 4 intended to induce as near n. 4sibie. eveiy one of yon to send us a now Siibcribcr. The Wecker fssnlinel ha now the larg-t tsulwription list t any paieriii i lie State, but xxe arcdeteriaiael dwtible.it and ask cxvry ne of urpatrons to help uoii Ibis li!eral otlcr. The bock otishl to be excry farm house in the country. Adare-s INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. 71 and 73 West Market Street. Indianapali. V n i: iirrio ki oki)i:i: iikitakoi-n, a weiicstnlilisheU and rot-'cron Kudowmeut Orcaniation. Certificates One Thousand to Kivelho isa id lKilars. Terms verv liberal. Address S. A. WILL. Supremo Archou, t :ti FI fill A V KNI K, pni-i!ii;i., pa. Samples of lr. K.YV. Reefl'i CelebratMrt A'llima vUef sent freo to ail who apply. It fa aJso aa exeeilerrl remedy for Cough. Cold aud Catarrh. 6x)ca4 f 1 p&ck&zes sent by mail. A. LTHRIDUE, Manufacturer and Propria. tor Borna. M. Y. AND CATARRH. Dr. Tenny is the Inventor and sole manaUcturer of the famous Ktiroka Magnetic Appliances, whicfc bave iituüned a world-w ide reputation a leiDfj the only aoienUiically eonstrueteOJ magnetic garment made: also founder of the American Maznelic and Compound Oiyttn Co., For the relief and cure of all forms oi duase Without Medicine. The Introduction of these twin forces of nature. Magnetism and Oiygen, lmve rex-o'utiotiie the prartiee of Medicine, and the Old s hool Pny-t-icians have already taken alarm, and have Utoly heM a meeting to protect themselves aiminst their introduction, 'the public re aw.re. however, o the fact, that they have opposed every .Ivane ia medical science lor the past two hu wired year. nl the very line of treatment denounced by tbtMa thirty years ago aa talse ia to-Uay held to Uj atltite truth. . . . A ... n-i . l - Y,(Vi .Xnn ,1 Earn TKrn t:i?r ht nT 2 past experience have fallen on ktony ground and . . nit, r itn uc ' -1. ' - -" ....... - .. . - thinkers in the profession, foiling to lw tvs-ORinae! in tlieireffort for humanity.hvac broken the lHud which galled them, and recopniintr ihaCuatare wa tho best chemist, have rosorte'd to nature f.m-en tor aid in the restoration of inana p by steal TLNNET, 471 W. Mafc?a Street, GhicagJ, HL
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