Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 51, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 January 1886 — Page 4

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY JANUARY 2a, 1886. I ' V 3 t , f , . - . . - ... . . r . .

BABY HUMORS Infantile and Birth Humors Speedily Cured by Cuticura,.

TO li 'Cleansing the Skin and Scalp or Birth J? Humor, for allaying Itching, Burning and Inllammation. for curing the first symptoms of Eczema, Psoriasis. Milk Crust. Scald Head, Scrofula and other inherited skin and Mood diseases, Citictra. the great Skin Cure, and C'rncCRA Soap, an exquisite kin Beaut ifier. externally, and Cuticura KtoLvr.NT, the new Blood luriflcr, internally, are infallible. Absolutely pure. "TERRIBLY AFFLICTED. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Stebbins, Belchertown, llass., write: Our little boy was terribly afflicted with Scrofula, Salt Rheum and Erysipelas ever ince be was born, and nothing we could give him helped him. until we tried CCTiciKA Remedies, which gradually cured him, until he is now ad fair as any child." fc 200 FOR XOTHIXG." William Cordon, 87 Arlington avenue, Charlestown. Mas., writes: "Having paid, about SJA) to tirst-rlas doctor to cure my baby without success, 1 tried the Cuticura Resieiiks. which comjjiletely cured, after using three packages." "FROM ITEA TO FEtTT. (.liarles Eayre Ilinkle, Jersey City Heights, Jf. J., writes: "My son. a lad of twelve years, was completely cured of a terrible case of Eczema by the Cvtictea KEMEnres. From the top of his head to the soles of his feet was one mass of scabs." Every other remedy and physicians had been tried In raiu. T "A LITTLE BOY CURED." j'a.sh A Nash. Covington, Ky., write: "One of our customers bought yonr Cuticvra Exjiediü for his little boy, who had a kind of humor in the head, so that he was a solid scab of sore. He rn; entirely cured, and his father says he would not begrudge $500 for the good it has doue him." Sold everywhere. Price: CmcTBA, 50 cent: JtF.-ioi.rFfT. $1.00: Soap. 25 cents. Prepared by 1'uTTW Drug and Chemical Co., Boston, Mass. fceatl for "How to Cure Skin Diseases.' U DV rM? Ci-Ticr DAD 1 perfumed si Lr Fse CrTicrRA Soap, an exquisitely 1 SKIS BEAt TIFIER. fS Kidney Pains, Strains, Itark " Ache, Weakness and Weariness - j , . ... lauseu vj overwork, uiipauon, standing, walking, or the sewing-machine, cured by the Cuticura AntiFain blaster. .New, elegant, original oud laiallible. 2."c. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20. ' TER3IS PER TEAR. Single Copy, without Premium .. . Jl 00 Clubs of six lor.....-..- . 5 03 We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper when they come to take subscriptions and make up clubs. A genu mating up clubs send for any information desired. Address ISDlAXAPOLia SEXTIXEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. SENATOR BECK'S GREAT SPEECH AGAINST THE GOLD-BUQ CONSPIRACY. "We make no apology for giving up a large part of our space this week to Senator Beck's great speech against the gold-bug conspiracy to destroy the p2ople's silver dollar. "We trust no reader of the Sentinel will fail to read this speech and aid in its circulation. "We feel that it should be in the hands of every voter in the land, and as our part to that end we have arranged to furnish it to tiny address post piid as follows: 100 Copies for ,.G0c. 50 Copies for . 33c. 23 Copies for ........ ...20c. lO Copies for .10c. Address, SENTINEL COMPANY, Indian.-fpolis, Ind. GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Sentinel wants live men to represent it in every part of the country. No township iu Indiana should be without a good canvasser for the Weekly SentinV.. We offer the best of inducements, e'-ther in jrenium or cash. Write for particulars. A'lre. Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, lud. DOUBLING UP AND MORE. Many thanks to our friends generally for their kindness in sending even one hew reader. Some are sending five, ten and more. Friends, let the good work go on. See your neighbors and induce them to join your club for the Sentinel. We have good reason for promising that the Sentinel for 1SSG will be far more valuable than any previous volume of its entire years. Six Weekly Sentinel for 3. IIkeeford cattle have fallen in value in England. Tolled oxen that sold for $.110 in 1353 now bring but $125. Washingtox specials foreshadow "a hot fight" between the President and Republican Senators on appointments. Six copies of the Weekly Sentinel for S5. Mc Cobb is being urged to make another race for Congress in his district, le is a very valuable member of that body. The negative vote in the House on Mr, Hoar's Presidential succession bill was cast "by Republicans and two Democrats from tv Jersey. IT anted, 1,000 clubs of six Sentinels for 5. It is said that Judge Bradley sleeps on the Uench of the Supreme Court. If he bad only s!ept in 177 when he was on the Electoral Commission ! ! Gemt.l Pam Carey knows what lie is -talking ahout, and his remarks to the Temperance Alliance that there can be no reform till the Republican party is wiped o it is baed on solid substratum of fart. tfead la the clubs of six Sentinels for 95 Ix New Vorblast Saturday, G. W. Monk?, the man who has lived twenty-three years with a musket ball in his brain, wa? dying. At the battle of Chancellor? .Tile, about 2 o'clock in the afternoon, a musket ball struck him on the head, entern. the right parietal bone, and dropping into the skull to the base of the brain, where it lodged. The result in every previous case of the kind was death in seven days, bnt Monks is still alive, or was twenty-four hours ago, and the musket ball la still in his brain. Tor ßcarlj ,Treaty-thj:ce years bfi 13 Jtt3

tu

perpetual marvel to physicians, who bare named him the "Iron Man." ' . . '

We call special attention to oar new club terms of six Weekly Sentinels for 5; twelve for lO. Evasgelist Moody has opened his batteries upon Chicago sin, and Sam Jones is expected soon. Mr. Moody's very radical views on Sabbath desecration led him to put up at one of the down town hotels, whence he could reach his church yesterday morning without invoking the aid of street-cars or hacks. . THE EUROPEAN CLIMAX. The aged German Emperor still displays his old-time will and courage. His address to the Prussian Diet was made in person, as if to demonstrate to the German people that reports of his invalidism were untrue. He was obliged, however, to admit that the State must effect a new loan, which, he promised, would be smaller than in 1335. Prussia is no exception among European States in the matter of loans; albeit, it is par excellence the best and most economically managed in Europe. But new loans are so much a matter of course in Europe that the yearly announcement on the part of European governments elicits no surprise. It is curious to speculate upoa the climax of this debt question, and upon its bearings ppon the grand political climax that every one recognizes is now not far in the future of Europe. They are so closely dependent upon each other that they may be considered as one, for the political climax depends on its nearness or remoteness to the time when universal national debts terminate in universal national insolvency. If there were the slightest tendency for debts to deCrease, one could imagine that insolvency would grow more and more remote, but as the contrary is the case, and debts are rapidly increasing, both in their principal and interests, and this interest, owing to the greater purchasing power of money, represents a greater strain lipon national industries, it is clear that a Äne ruijst at last come when the strain will break down the superstructure that has been so laboriously reared. But these debts have been accumulated upon an assumption of a continuance of Industrial activity equal, at least in paying jower, to the amount of the interests. The assumptions have been that the paying power, or the industrial activity which gives paying power, would at least become no less; but more often they have been based upon a certain ratio of increase presented by the statistics of a previous era. Broadly, debts have been increased in the prosecution of enterprises holding the allurement of prospective profit, which, from various causes, fail to give a profit. But suddenly, almost without warning, the world woke up about four years ago to the consciousness that the industry of production had gone clearly beyond its power to eonsume. Instantly it began to be seen that if th:3 condition were not reversed the enormous momentum of debt would soon carry a nation far beyond where its industries could keep up with them, and also, that once in advance, that it would be hopeless for the profits of industry ever to overtake the profits or interests of debts. Time only adds further corroboration to this view. The paralysis of industry from one end of Europe to the other becomes more and more hopeless and complete. Extensions of credits do not disguise the gradual contraction of each nation's industries, as measured by their productive capacity. Trade, that once universal panacea and certain road to wealth, having grown universal, finds that the worlds yet to conquer are few compared with the industrial armies of invasion everywhere on the lookout for new adventure. Debts are increasing in Europe with frightful rapidity, while the means of the taxridden Nations to pay is in an equal descending ratio. Market after market is sought, only to Cnd them Hooded and overrun, while tie labor and machinery that was set Lp motion by the very means these accumulated dvbts c Horded, is stopped. The wost of this situation is that there is nothing whatever, either in the present or the future, that leads to a single hope. Nations seecm to be driven more and more back upon their own resources, as this age has levelled the conditions that formerly gave one Nation superiority in production over another. It is poor consolation for an English farmer or cotton spinner to know that the wheat and cotton

goods that is supplanting the English articles come from India instead of from America, and it seems the irony of fate that led Englishmen to supply to the Hindoo the very machinery that was the product of his own brain, and that gave him the magic wand that made him so superior in productive power, is now overcoming him. It also seems ironical that America should supply the reapers, the threshing 'machines, the elevators, the oil and pumping machiney that enables the Hindoo, the Australian or the Russian, not only to compete but actually to undersell American wheat and petroleum. From these flow many, inductive conditions. The armies of Europe, that to long have served the national economies by withdrawing surplus population, are confronted with annihilation by this insatiable debt, and the more so as the industrial paralysis Increases. They can not be much longer maintained in inactivity, and yet the economy of their action is even more . obscure.- General disarmament in the present condition of over labor supply of Europe would simply be to make communism rampant, and the rulers -.trow it. Bismarck is the only statesman who is seeking lor a practical solution in the formation of Germany into a vast imperial commune. Yet unless the positive and natural tendencies of things be reversed, he is certain to fail in his aim. He has set in motion the extremest power of democracy, and he is fitting it for self-government and self-control by the discipline of his universal military system. The natural tendency of such a condition Of things is toward the extremest free trade. Perhaps extremes may meet when he has succeeded in imposing bis extreme protection policy. We have found that -extreme protection did not release us from the disasters of close competition, for we are suffering precisely from competition within that we have sought to avoid from without. The tendency of the world toward an industrial equilibrium, which comes as ' fast as differ tncniaiU-x 917 IctcU?4 Exilic diflwton - .... - i -

of education, of machinery and" skill, indi

cate a positive tendency for absolute free trade, as well as-extreme Individual liberty, that Bismarck will not have the strength to counteract. In fact, every move he makes is rathtr a destruction of obstacles to free trade than a means of protection. The apys when nations measured their rise by the degree of their monopoly of trade are gone forever. The time when Venice and Genoa controlled the trade of the world is separated from the present by an impassable abyss. Bismarck may be right in " his prescience of society on a basis of socialism, but he is wrong in his attempt to confine it on the narrow basis of a middle ages trade guild. France, with all her foibles, is nearer the end politically as sne is socially further on the way, and will lead again as she led a century ago. She is nearer the national bankruptcy that is inevitable before nations can be born again. The subject is interesting, and a single sitting can only enable us to give the merest glimpse of the somewhat shadowy, but not altogether gloomy-looking future, in which we of America must grope our way as we can, a little at a time, through innumerable silver questions, and endeavor to rule in this chaos of trade-seeking, drifting each year further into the broad current of the world, losing a little of our proud eminence as others climb up to meet us, as each one moves with accelerating force towards the climax that can not now be far away. The Sentinel and the Tarm Guide for 91.23 FREE SHIPS. Our merchants need a commercial marine, and yet from the condition of British, French and German ship-yards, it is clearly impracticable to attempt to build them in this country, at least at present. Once that our trade is built up to its former proportions, and a steady demand for sliips springs up, that question will settle itself. But if it did not it would be no great loss. We are selling to Europe, and if we continue to sell we must continue to buy. It is niuih cheaper for us to trade our surplus products, of whatever kind, for ships than to build them. Europe has many ship-yards which represent an enormous capital. At present, and for that matter, for four years back, these yards have not been paying one per cent, on the investment, and they are so clearly in advance of demand, present and prospective, even if we should begin to buy ships liberally, that for us to attempt to compete would be the height of folly. There would result no profit, but just that much more would be added to the now prodigious amount of dead capital. We have found by experience that it is not national economy to try to do everything ourselves. We have lowered the standard of national morals, the high standard of American labor, and have destroyed many profitable avenues of commercial profit in an endeavor to surpass Europe in several lines which Europe in many ways is more naturally adapted to produce. In order to produce many articles we have had to import Chinese, who live on a plan totally repugnant and detrimental to an American, and in many cases the status of the American has been so lowered that he is almost as degraded as some of the lazaroni we import. The sum total of the effect has been poverty and commercial disaster. There is every incentive for trade between the two continents. Europe would prefer to buy and sell with us rather than with Asia, for many reasons; but such a one-sided arrangement as we offer reacts badly on both. We need ships, and it will not pay, for many reasons, to make them. . Our ridiculous navigation laws should be so amended that an American could go on the market and purchase them at the lowest price. We hope that Congress will make a horizontal reduction on the shipping question that will leave the surface as smooth as a mill-pond, and that before many days. Get five of your neighbors to take Sen tine and your own will be paid for. INVENTIONS AND INVENTORS. ' Mr. Parsons, of Ireland, in his lecture on "Heroism in Science," related some striking anecdotes of the wild misapprehension of the effect of some of our greatest modern inventions. Among the the most learned and capable men of the time, Sir Astley Cooper, the celebrated physician, he said, was convinced that "no one could travel through the air at a greater speed than ten miles an hour without a serious risk of becoming insane." Another scientist equally eminent, Dr. Lardner, was satisfied that a steam vessel could never cross the Atlantic Ocean, though an American steamer had crossed and gone up the Baltic a dozen years or more before, and he demonstrated bis proposition in an elaborate article in one of the English Reviews at the very time an ocean steamer was crossing, and his argument was published just in time to meet the announcement that the passage had been safely and readily made. It is encouraging to men of mere common sense, with no scientific - illumination, to see that the wisdom which forecasts the future in practical achievements is not the monopoly of learning, and that workers are very apt to be better guessers at results than theorists. The first steam railway was believed by many to be threat of general mischief. A speed of ftwenty miles an hour was held by wiseacres to be impossible. .Said a member of the Parliamentary Committee appointed to investigate the character and possibilities of steam carriage on iron railways to George Stephenson, the inventor of the locomotive: "If your engine and cars should run off the track at a speed of ten miles an bom, where would they go?" "They would go to the devil," was the rather "unrespective" answer, "and if they should run off at thirty miles an hour, they could not well go any further." It has been a lucky thing for civilization that the future of great inventions has depended little on the approval or aid of the accepted wisdom of the world. The Almighty in thse, as other things, has taught mankind "out of the mouths of babes and sucklings," 0 far a3 their maturity of scientific knowledge might measure their ability. It is a fact worth noting that very few, if any, of the great civilizing inventions of the age have been made by men following the pursuits which would be most likely to lead to such developments, and most in need of them, or by men of such general scientific or mechanical attainments as would be most likely to discover the need of changes and improvements. Uargrave, who in rented, the "-.pla

ning .jenny," was not a wood-worker or machinist, but a country spinner, who took his work to his house. Arkwright, who inTented the "water frame," which is said to have enabled England to pay subsidies to half of the continent of Europe, to fight Napoleon, and finally beat and banish him, was a barber. Professor Morse, the Inventor of the greatest of monern scientific miracles the electric telegraph was a portrait painter. Catling, the inventor of the most deadly weapon of war ever known or used in civilized warfare, is a doctor. Fulton, who made the steamboat a practical and profitable means of transportation, was a painter like Morse. Whitney, the inventer of the cotton gin, which really was the foundation of the system of slavery here that is, it made a weak and unprofitable institution strong and profitable was a school teacher and a lawyer. The inventor of the automatic operation of steam-valvea was a boy who contrived the first one to get time to play marbles. The invention of the balloon was an accident. The Montgolfiers were paper, makers of Annonay, not scientists at all, and they saw a shirt drying before a fire swell and rise and shrink and fall with the greater orless accession of hot . air, and thence reasoned their way to the hot air balloon, and from that to the gas balloon. However, there are but few of the great inventions of the world that were wholly accidental in origin or suggestion. They have grown in object and process and facilities by the constant and laborious study of the men whs have conceived or jerfected them.

Six Weekly Sentinels for 85. Friends, Give us 1,000 of these neat little clubs within the next thirty days. ATTENTION, B ATT A LLION1 We presume the martial constituents of niiftiy Congressmen will be satisfied with the great number of bills introduced to pension the soldiers of the civil war. One has lately been introduced to give every one of the 2,800,000 men who sought glory at the cannon's mouth the sum of $100 per annum. Do we oppose it? 'Most certainly not. The only objection we have to the bill is that it does not include every male and female taxpayer throughout the length and breadth of the land. Every head of a family ought to haye a pension of $3 per month, and we feel certain that the first Congressman who sees this proposition will present a bill to that effect, and we will guarantee that it will make his re-election certain. To be sure it would cost the little sum of two thousand millions per annum, but that is nothing te a country like this, especially if it be applied according to our plan. You see that to raise this amount would require a tax of "$100 a year from each responsible member of society. This just exactly equals the amount he would get back in the form of a pension. Bnt to avoid the costs of collecting this large amount, and to save the people from the exactions of pension agents and from the corruption of officials, we propose that Congress pass a law, first authorizing the pension, and then authorizing each person affected by the law to draw upon himself each quarter day for the sum of $25. It will be seen that this law, in addition to the pension, would provide every man with an office. Each individual would become a pension agent and a Treasury disbursing agent. Every man would have his fingers in the public purse. Besides, it would compel each man to become acquainted with business forms, population and wealth statistics, and he might in course of time come to learn where all the government money comes from. We commend this plan to all thinking Congressmen. The eldest daughter of Secretary Bayard died suddenly and unexpectedly on Saturday afternoon, about the time that she was expected at the President's reception. It came as a painful shock to the society o the Eastern States, where the lady was widely known and respected. The reception was immediately dissolved by the President upon receipt ot the news, and the event has cast a cloud upon the society of the Capital which will be reflected by the entire country in its sympathy for the alllicted family. Thoma Whali.ex, a Hoosier, was pardoned from the Kentucky penitentiary a day or two ago. He was sentenced for three years for dangerously wounding a negro in a fight at Portland, Ky., last March. Many people thought the sentence unnecessarily severe under the circumstances, and made efforts to secure a pardoa for Whallen, whose home is in Indiana, twelve miles back of New Albany. The succeeded only veiy recently in securing him his liberty. Those who take Dr. Jones Red Clover Tonic never have dyspepsia, costiveness, bad breath, piles, pimples, ague and malaria, poor appetite, low spirits, headache or kidney troubles. Price, fifty cent". It would be interesting to know what "hold" Mr. Burt has upon Mr. Vflas. Our Washington correspondent says that Mr. Vilas alleges that he can not make any changes in the Posial Service because he fears a strike among employes. Our correspondent remarks correctly that he will find plenty of young Democrats to take the places of the strikers. The Republicans inaugurated a custom when in power of paying all discharged House employes one month's extra pay more than they earned. A Democratic Congrees yesterday put an end to it. The efforts of the land pirates to displace Commissioner Sparks resulted in a flat failure. Perhaps the best way far the scoundrels to escape the penitentiary will be to go to some foreign country from which they can not be extradited. Whex you go to New York hok over the fence of Trinity Churchyard, at the head of Wall street, and before you lie the graves of Alexander Hamilton, Albert Gallatin anl "Don't Give lTp the Ship Lawrence." Behind you lie the stock brokers. Everything for the Garden Seems a broad term for any one firm to adopt, yet the widely-known seqd and plant house of Peter Henderson k. Co., 3.r and 37 Cortlandt street, New York, supply every want of the cultivator, both for the greenhouse and garden. In their handsome and comprehensive catalogue for 18 will be found offered, not only "everything for the garden," but all things needful for the farm as well. Our readers will miss it if they fail to send for this catalogue, which may be had of Messrs. Henderson & Co., by sending them six cents (the VQ$S? on17 & Uap

THOUGHT OF THE HOUT. Patriotism. My son, . No ound is breathed o potent to coerce, And to conciliate, as their names who dare For that sweet mother lanl which gave thezn birth Nobly to do, nobly to die. Their names, Graven on memorial columns, are a song Heard in the fnture; few, but more than wall And rampart, their examples reach a hand Kar thro' all years, and ever) whey? they meet And kindle generous purpose, and the strength To mold it into action pure as theirs. From Tennyson's "Tiresias."

The more we understand mankind the more likely we are to love our feilow men. Chicago Sentinel. The habitual wastefulness of Americans, as compared with the saving habit of peoples of other countries, can not be denied. Fittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Yor put a fancy uniform on a man, and let 2.000 people pay fifty cents each to watch him, and he will saw wood as hard as he will play base ball. Brooklyn Eagle. Thiek are plenty of people on earth who are going to be very indignant when they reach the other world and find there are no reserved seats. Century Bric-a-Brac. Whex it happens that mosquitoes in New Jersey have hydrophobia, along with New Jersey cats and dogs, living there will be even more dangerous than it is now. New Orleans Picayune. "Criticism," says the Minneapolis Journal, "is the laying of the smooth, straight edge of taste to the action of a man." It is alnj sometimes the laying of the dull edge of ignorance and stupidity to what it is unable to comprehend. Mobile Register. General Jacksos has an unusually good year, this time. The old gentleman is plainly one of the most popular citizens, and the people in the Southern wilds who occasionally vote for him, have their hearts in the right place, though they act rather inipractically. Albany (N. Y.) Times. We think we may claim to know some thing about the merchants of New York, and we aver that among the Jewish merchants who reside here there are men of high character and of principle superior to any form of cheating. In truth, the Jews are no more dishonest than Christians, nor is the proportion of rascals among them any greater than it is among Christians. New York Sun. That labe i ras rights is a recent discovery. And just as the new discovery of the rights of man led the French into all sorts of errors in their search after a new dispensation in which the rights of man should be suitably recognized, so now the discovery that labor has rights which deserve recognition is begetting mistakes which, if not corrected in time, may retard the reforms which the laboring class proposes to promote. San Francisco Chronicle. . The present age is pre-eminently a scientific era. In the almost feverish pursuit of knowledge and the incessant pushing of original investigation, the sciences multiply, till at almost every new moon, one may say, some new science takes its place in the horizon of the world's thought. But it is doubtful if there be any other science that is being pressed forward by so many of the best and clearest thinkers of the time as this one, which may be termed the science of "applied humanity," of man's humanity to man. Chicago Inter-Ocean. PERSONALS. Joseph Cook will deliver eight Monday noon lectures in Tremont Temp!e, Boston, beginning February 1. Jeffehsos Davis' auiocraphs to the number of many thousands are said to Hood several Southwestern States. Chai xcey F. Black, son of the late Jeremiah Black, is frequently named by Democratic papers in Pennsylvania as a candidate for Governor of that Stale. . Presipf.nt Eliot, of Harvard, denies the report that Professr Asa Gray has resigned and is to be succeeded by Professor John Coulter, of Wabash College. Clark Stevens Dean, of St, Louis, the oldest relative of Ethan Allen, died on Wednesday at Columbus, Neb., while on a visit to his daughter. He was eighty-four years Old. Senator Bkck has been named for President in 1SSS by an enthusiastic Idaho editor. But there is one little difficulty in the way the Senator was born on the wrong side of the Atlantic. General Ji dal A. Early is described as a venerable-appearing man, his long, white beard reaching to his waist, and his bent figure indicating the rapid advance of extreme old age. General Francis .E. Spinner, formerly United States Treasurer, whose signature was so odd and so well-known, is living In Florida at the age of eighty, though he walks like a man of fifty. Civil Service Commissioner Edgerton prepared an address to the graduating class of the hig"v school at his home in Indiana, several years ago, which contained no word of over four letters. Matthew Arnold is at Berlin studying the German educational system. He has become a great favorite with the junior members of the British Embassy, who, the London World says, "have been quite successful iD stirring up the embers of the poet's youUi." Dr. FiLMor.E Bennett wrote the favorite hymn: "Sweet Bye and Bye" In 18GS. Dr. Bennett lives at Richmond, 111., and is quite poor. He says it did not take him more than twenty minutes to write the hymn which Lotta, the actres, did so much to render famous by its introduction in one of her plays. General Clingman of North Carolina has been an untiring worker in the field of science, and has achieved almost as great distinction in that field as in the field of politics. He has patented an improvement in the electric light, which consists in" the application of zircon as an incandescent conductor for electricity. Ji liax HAWTnoF.SE grows like his lamented and illustrious father more and more each year, and will In time strongly resemble him In personal appearance, at all events. ' His stalwart figure and strong, muscular development are those of the professional, or at least practiced, athlete. He continues the active course of gymnastics he commenced at college, aad L) nil tbv tin? Ia gw4 tfti&tos.

His curly confusion of hair and his drooping mustache characterize the literary man. He aims to work at least three hours a day at original work, and though living in scholastic retirement at Sag Harbor, L. I., manages to come to the city pretty .often. President Cleveland reiterates his intention not to attend evening porties at all while he is in the White House, and will only accept dinner invitations from the members of his Cabinet. Miss Cleveland adheres to the same determination. Both the President and his sister are fond of dinner parties, having an unusual fund of good spirits on such occasions. Thomas W. Keene. the actor, who was recently taken ill in Kansas City, has reached hi3 home in Brooklyn in a much improved condition. The rumor that he had decided to abandon the stage is pronounced untrue by his manager, who says that Keene's company, inc luding Mr. Keene, will be on the road again by the first of March. Until then Mr. Keene will rest. JcdgeA. W. Tovr;ei, the novelist, has about twenty patents granted on a new harness and expects four others. The harness is lo be entirely of metal, and among the advantages claimed for it are that it is lighter, less cumbersome, more easily adjusted, and will not chafe as much as a leather harness. It is expected to cost about 30 per cent, less than leather harness, and it will be more durable. The sharp saying of General W. T. Sherman, if collected in book form, would make a large volume. Some time durinz the latter part of the war, or just after it, the society people of the south were in the habit of turrin? up their noses at "OWecumseh" as not blue-blooded. In supjort their charge it was reported and published in the Southern newspapers that he had o.ce kept a corner grocery. Some of the younger members of the family wrote to the General, inclosing a cutting from a Southern paper to tlm effect, and asked him to deny it. The old warrior wrote back that he did not think there was any necessity for a denial, "because, for my part, I think a corner a very good place to keep a grocery."

CONCERNING WOMEN. Mrs. Bancroft, the EngPsh actres5, is writing her recollections of actors and actresses, and of fashionable life. Mrs. Frank I'm.; er, known under the nom de plume of "Zac," is one of the brightest women journalists on the Pacific Coast. Fanny Davenport's physicians have forbidden her to play "Fedora" after the close of the present season, as the work is injuring her health. Some of the women of Charleston, S. C, furnished the street car drivers with steaming coffee as they passed their houses during the cold snap. A fashionable New York mother has brought home a Japanese nure, who goes about the avenues clad in her native costume, provoking a great deal of sensation and not a little envy, . Mrs. Sherman, wife of the United States Senator, has had some training as an artist, and the walls of her house in Washington show several examples of her work. She has copied a great many celebrated pictures. TnE announcement that Queen Victoria is going to open Parliament in person is another sign of her strong sympathy with the Conservatives. She opened it last when Disraeli was in power, and never once daring Gladstone's last administration. Mme. Nilssox has at last secured her quarter of a million francs from the Rouzeaud estate, to reimburse her for money spent m her husband's industrial enterprises. She was fond of her late husband, but since he wasted her money she was not such a fool as ti lose the chance of getting it back out of his folks. Mrs. LilmeDevf.rf.ai x Blake has engaged in a crusade against corsets, and enjoys the novel sensation of having all the men in the country on her side of the question. But these same men, if pinned down to it, would protest hradly against the abolition of the corset and the resulting general shapelessness of the female form divine. "Jay" sends the Albany Journal this description of Miss Louise Imogen Guiney, the young Boston poetess: Miss Guiney is tall, and as lithe as a willow wand, with a sweet, interesting face that has that delicacy of contour and refinement of feature betokening a sensitive nature, the poetic nature m a high degree. Her mouth and nose are lovely, but she mars the expression of her eyes by wearing ej-e glasses, the customary insignia of Bobton's intellectual women. Miss Guiney is, however, near sighted, and would rather see what she is doing than to look pretty. Out door sports delight her, and in summer her boat is her greitest pleasure, for she handles in oar like an old tar, or as though she belonged to the Harvard crew. She is a tremendous pedestrian also, doing her eighteen miles a day without fatigue, and going to a reception after this J "little exercise" as fresh as a däi-y jttsl waked by the dew. A big St Barnard, a splendid tawny beast, whose noble head just reaches his mistress' elbow, is her constant companion in these long tramps. No wonder the verses she writes are filled with the candor and freshness of youth, when so much of nature is daily brought into the environment ofthe city filled with the ordinary routines oflife and society. Purify your blood, tone up the system, and regultte the digestive organs by taking Hood's Earsaparilla. Sold by all druggists. SENATOR BECK'S GREAT SPEECH Against the Cold -Bug Conspiracy To destroy the people's silver dollar, should be read by everyvter in the land. We will send it to any address, rosT-run, as follows: 100 Copies for cent. AO Copies for rent. 23 Copies for ....."0 rents. 10 Copies for .....10 cent , .A. tltl res SENTINEL CO., Indianapolis, Ind. NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that there will be ta election of three Trustees at Knral Lodge o. 416, 1, o. o. F., at Trd$rV JPoiat oa Jauuary so,

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AsaLirer medicine TCTTS 1'ILL.S have no e.jual. Their action on too Kidneys and skin iaalao prompt; removing all impurities thronprh these three "sear engers of the system, producing appetite, sound digestion, regular ntnols, a clear skin and a vigorous body. TCTT'S PIX.Utf cause no nausea or griping nor iuterfer With daiir work and ai-e a perfect a ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. JmesM. Winters, Attorney for Plaintiff. . SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk ot the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Frederick Rand, Receiver, etc.. is plaintiff and Mary Morrison et al. are defendants, (case No. 54.249.) requiring meto mW the Eum of money In fald decree provided and 1 manner as provided for in said decree, with interest on said decree and costs. I will expo&e at public aale, to the highest bidder, oa SATURDAY, THE 13TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, A. V., 1S6C, Between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. in., of said day, at the door of the Court-house of Marion County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceed ingseveu years, of the following real estate, to-v it: l.ot twelve tl'-V in square foitr-five (4" except twenty-live (ivtfVt ou toe allej north of said lot, in the city of ItMianspolis. Alio cue undivided rifth of lot number six 'G), except nicety (90) feet oil the north eud, in Ptterion's subdivision of square uumber nineteea (li, in the city of Indianapolis. Also one undivided tifth ol lots number twenty (20 1. tweiity-one (Jl, twenty-two U-. twentythree (-::, twenty-four (21 1, twenty-five twenty-six Jt") anl twenty-seven c.27. of Morrison and Talbot's subdivision of a seven (7) acre tract in the east half of the northeast quarter of set tion seven ('). township fifteen t lot. rauge four M), south of the Michigan Road, in the city of Indian apolis, Marion County. Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a snffl cient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs. I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Saidsale will be made with relief from valuation or appraisement laws. itX)K(jE II. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County, January 18, A. D., 188C. Hn.Lfc Lamb, II. E. Smith, Brown Harvkv, Hez. Dailey, Attorneys for Plaintiffs. SHERIFFS SALE Bv virtue of seven executions to me directed from the Clerk of the Marlon Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, oa THURSDAY, THE 11TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, A. V., lt6, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m, of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a terra not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, to-wit: Lots numbered thirteen (13), fourteen (14), fifteen (15), sixteen (16), and that part of lot twentytwo (22) embraced in the following bounds: Begionius at a point on the south line of Biddle street three hundred and twenty-five (825) feet east of Fine street, running thence east forty (40) feet, thence south fifty (50 feet, thence west forty (40) feet, thence north fifty (501 feet to place of beginning. All situate in Biddle's subdivision of outlot forty-five (45). in the city of Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana. Also on the same day, and between the hours aforesaid of said-day, at the Indianapolis Bridge Works, on Biddle street and the Bee Line Railroad, in the city of Indianapolis Indiana, all tlio personal property of said Bridge Company, consisting of one Atlas engine, one boiler, together with sll shafting, pullevs, belling, and all other fixtures attached. All the blacksmith's iron, tools, machinery, composition sale, oflice furniture, etc., etc. " And on faiinre to realize the full amount or judgments, interest and cost. I will, st the sama time and place, expose at public sale the lea simple of said real estate. Taken as the property of The IndianapohJ Bridge Company, at the suit of The First National Bank of Indisnspoli. No. 2..Vi: Stouebton J. Fletcher et al.: First National Bank of IndisnspolR No. 2,.V6: David Ersden : Jones & Langblia 'limited: Dsvid Kussel, Sr.,et.al.; and Central Iron snd Steel Co. ... ,. . . . fraid sale to be made without any relief whatever from valuation or sprrslsomont laws. ,'eoKi.K II. CARTER. Sheriff of Marion County. January is, A. D.lSSfi. GLEKDALE FEME COLLEGE. ' The Second g-isslon of the Thirty-second year will egin February 1st. Best facilities, and tliorougH instructions in all branches hng'isti. Scientific and Classical. Superior advautagei la Music and Art. Addns UKV, 1. . I'OTIEK, n.D., Glendale, O. A CASKET OF SILVERWARE FREE To anv person who will show it to their neighbors id as our agent and send orders. Give your neatest Express and Postoftice address. Addre CONS. MANH1 CO.. UARttOKl), COXX. 35 W 3 IO Patterns. Ctrculfrc0. t Toledo, O,

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