Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1886 — Page 4

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THE 1NDIA2TA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 3 1S3S

ECZEMA And Every Species of Itching and Burning Diseases Cured by i Cuticura. 11C7.EMA. or Salt Rheum, with its agonizing It itching and burning, instantly relieved by a warm bath with Cutictira Soap, and a single application ofCuticura, the great fc-kin Cure. This reflated dailv, with two or three does ot Citicnra jcsolyent. the New Blood Puriiier, to keep the Mood cool, the perspiration pnreand unirritatinjr, the bowels opeu. the liver and kidneys active, will peedily cure Eczema. Tetter, Ringworm, Psorasi, lachen. Pruritus. Scall Head. Dandruff, and every Fpecies of Itching, Scaly and I'imply Humors of the Scalp and skin, when the best physicians and &il kuon remedies fail. Will McDonald, 2l2.JW-arb.irn St., Chicago, frratef ally acknowledges a cure of Kczenia, or .-alt jiheum, on head, netk, fare, arm and legs for seventeen years: not able to walk except on hands and knets forone year; not able to help himself ior ei?ht years: tried hundreds of remedies : doclors pronounced his case hopeless: permanently tured by Cuticura Resolvent (blood pnritier) inlernally. ad Ca'icura and Cuticura Soap (the great skin cure) externally. IChas. Ilonghten, EsM lawyer. 2S State St., iio&ton. reports a case of Eczema un.der.his observation for ten year. which covered the patient's lody and limbs, and to which all known methods Cf treatment have been applied without benefit, which was completely cnrel solely by the CittiCUia UemeJies learing a clean and healthy skin. Mr. John Thiel, Wilkcsbarre. Pa., writes: "I Lave suffered from Salt Jiheum for over eight .years, at time so bad that I could not attend to my bus Ines for weeks at a time. Three boxes of Cuticura and four boxes of Itcsolvent have entirely Cured me ot this dreadful disease.." Physicians Pre-M-ribe Them. I have nothin? lut the hi?ht praise for the results obtained from your Cuticura itemcdies. of which 1 have old n:orc than of all others of the kind. MONRO BOND. M. P.. 2. '00 X. Itroad St.. I'Uiladclphia, i'a. Pold by nil drtifrjrMs. Price: Cmrnu. .W.; JvKsolve.n r. 5l W: o.p. -J."-. l'rcpiiied by the I'OTTER Vf.lt. AMI flltMICAl. Co.. bustOU, lasa Xor pamphlet. p"p A T TTIFYthe Complexion and Skia J3 JZx-V v by usins the Cuticura soap.

ltlieumatic, Neuralgic, Sciatic, "WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3. " TEKMS PtR TKAB. Blngle Copy, without Premium .......... . tl 00 Qnba of six for . 5 00 We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper when tfcey come to take Wibscriptions and make up club". Ageau making up clubs tend for any informaMoa desired. Address IMDLXAKLId SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Sentinel wants live meri to represent It ia every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good CSUTläser for the "Weekly Sentinel. We offer the best of inducements, alther in premium or cash. "Write for particulars. Adress. Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, I ml. DOUBLING UP AND MORE. Many thanks to our friends generally for their kialnes3 in sending even one new reader. Some are sending five, ten and more. Friends, let the good work jro on. See your neighbors and induce them to join your Club for the Sentinel. "We have good reason for promising that the Sentinel for 1SS) will be far more valuable than any previous volume of its entire years. Six Weekly Sentinel for 3. IIf.i'Knt statistics estimate that one in every , people die who use chloroform. Ik Ok:o isn't ashanud of her Legislature isn't, in fact, ashamed of herself she is not a State of the kind of people we have taken them to be. Send in the clubs of six Sentinel for 95. A Piciladklphia paper thinks that the Augean stables were originally located in the State of Ohio. Pennsylvania has contained en annex to the same establishment. Thkiik are too many mors happening in the Fifth Division of the Postal Service. It is not to be wondered at. Hurt, Superintendent, and ify j" r !'. ,;: urc .Vpublico?. Turn the entire gang out. Let us have a Democratic Superintendent and an entire force of the same complexion. Six copies of the Weekly Sentinel for 95. Urs. Bayard, wife of the Secretary of State, died yesterday. Our "Washington special intimates that the sad bereavement will probably lead to the retirement of irr. üayaid from public life. The great heart of the Nation will jro out to the Secretary in a large and sympathetic measure in this hi day of sorrow and bereavement. Theocoh the kindness of Governor glesby, Peter "Wea-st, a convict in the Illinois State Prison, was allowed to attend the funeral f a favorite daughter yesterday at Streator, 111. This was Very kind on the part of the Governor. Such an episode in a convict's life would perhaps have a better inlluence upon that life than the usual prison sermon by the Chaplain. Wanted, 1,000 clubs of six Sentinels for 95. Ost of the greatest temperance revivals known ia . this country is in progress at Youngstown, O. Over 5,00u nearly half of the population lave signed the pledge. The Bigners embrace professional men, merchants, mill men and others. All of the police except two have donned the blue ribbon. The Saloon keepers are in despair. Some of them hare quit the business, and others are preparing to move away. Thx Sentinel's allusion, last Sunday, to some amusing typographical blunders has suggested to an old city editor some funny blunders that were not made by the types. Jteporters are as sharp as "they make 'em" usually, but sometimes they gtt "nipped" in a way ''they despise," As for instance, a Cincinnati reporter heard an orator one night 'inote a Latin proverb, "Magnus est Osar fied major Veritas," that is: ( a sax is great, but truth is greater." His Latin was rusty and he probably wearied with much, if not well, doing, and he reported the utterance, " 'maghus est Osar,' said Major Veritas. A .Kew York reporter fceaid tfcs Feasfc jati-

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ment. "aimer, aimer, c' est a YiVre" "b lore, to love, ia to lire" and he thoagkt it was a reference to the then celebrated opera boufle singer "Almee," and he reported the quotation as nearly according to French pronunciation aa-he could pet. "Aimee, Aimee, saint of eve," which wasn't the character by any means, or indeed that of many or any of the French or other foreign artists in comic opera of those days. A very funny typographical blunder was made in 1855 in the list of premiums awarded by the county fair of this county that year. The prize for the ' best eight yards of jeans" was made to appear for the "best eight quarts of beans."

Greece has settled down at the mandate of the "rowers," and for the twentieth time since December 1 all is quiet in the IJalkan country. There is yet time for twenty more r wtf before the winter breaks np and gives the ambitious parties of the first part opportunity to put up or shut up. Get live of your neighbors to take Sentlne and your own will be paid for. SOLDIERS" PENSIONS. Some two weeks ago we printed a burlesque on a resolution offered to pension every soldier who had ever enlisted in the Union array $ier month. A correspondent, who failed to give hi name, is indignant at what he seems was concealed in the burlesque to mean that we are utterly opposed to any pennon law. "Soldier" tells us that unle.-s we can explain the matter "so as to satisfy all classes" we shall be held responsible, etc. Soldier, you have no idea what you are asking us to do. To satisfy all clashes is ijuite beyond our power, although we are cominsj to it just as near as we can. The particular bill referred to would make an expense to the people of .,(U0.OX) per annum. As things stand it is out of the power of the people to pay this without imposing many additional taxes. We are in favor of any legislation for soldiers within the power of the Government to fulfill or the people to pay. Soldier is indignant at the Government lor giving railroads enormous bodies of land and great sums of money. So are we, and we will agihite as we have agitated that these spoils be taken from them and given to the soldier and to the people. Does Soldier reflect that this Government is poor, that the people who pay taxes are poor, and that both have been made poor because the Government has given all their sustenance to the corporations; that to pay taxes to the rich bondholder on money that the bondholder loaned at thirty-three cents on the dollar has made them poor? "Will not Soldier reflect that several kingdoms in lands have been taken from the soldier, from the people, and given to the wealthy railroad companies until the people have little more to give'.' Will Soldier reflect that financial jugglery, worse than the methods of highwaymen, has compelled the people to pay not only a heavy interest bill, but twice the entire National debt without reducing it? besides, this has forced a loss on $liKH),(Vi0,0oi of property through shrinkage due to this expansion of debts? Is it any wonder that America has got 20,000 more tenant farmers than the whole of Great Britain, including Ireland, and that the great masses of the people are ioverty-stricken, and like "Soldier" are indignant and threatening? We are in favor of a bill to equalize the pay and bounties. ''Soldier," very justly, is indignant that while he was promised $1." per month in gold, was paid that amount in paper worth thirty-three cents on the dollar. He is also justly indignant that the early soldiers of the war. who did the heaviest lighting and the most of it, have suffered, while the men who enlisted later got bounties amounting to M.IHD or ?2,(M and $13 per month. This is all wrong. The soldier who enlisted" from patriotism should have been the one to get the large bounty, ami now C ontrress should pass a law giving all soldiers who did not receive a bounty a lump sum, and should also increase the amount of his pay to the gold standard promised. The Government has not failed to give the bondholder gold for a thirty-three cent dollar, and on a cale that has ruined the country, j and soldiers do well to be indignant at their neglect. "Soldier" is also indignant thai the land warrants promised him were never given. This is another thing that demands legislation. Hither the land warrants should be is-ued or their value in money given. We are also in favor of pensioning every soldier who is di-ub'xd. or become unab'e to täte care of himself, through any cause induced by his army life.' Now, soldier, how are we going to get money to give nearly ."5,000,000 of men $100 per year. You know that the people who stayed at home are poor, that they are getting daily poorer. You know that they, like the soldiers, have been forgotten by the Government, and robbed by the Government. You know that gigantic monopolies nd wealthy "corporations and individuals j control aiTairs and exact taxes that have made them what they are, and that have made the jx'ople poor. You certainly will not claim that bounty-jumpers are entitled I ... r. .1 X' . 1 ..1.1 L i'j i ivii?njii, u t uu . iti iury vtO'iiu gei one under the provisions of the bill that we satirized. Yet we do not offer objections even to this if the way is made clear to pay it, for this money, even if in some cases it were wrongfully applied, would for a time stimulate enterprise. Yet we do not see how to get it, except by raising the whole amount by taxes on the rich. Theioorcan not pay any more. We do not care how much the soldiers get if the poor eople Soldier's neighbors, some of them, whom you know can not afford to pay more tai do not have an additional and unbearable burden placed on them. We do not think the soldiers want new burdens placed upon the poor. Now, then, if you are struggling Icr so much, a tax must be placed on incomes. The lands given to railroads must be taken fromthem and sold, or the railroads taied to pay this sum. Taxation on all corporations and individuals must be doubled, and much more than doubled. Eut these corporations control the laws and the powers of government; through Congressional committees they control legislation, and they control the courts. "Soldier" will see that we have a heavy labor to do before we can get the powers of Government to place taxes on these powerful corporations and wealthy individuals. The soldier and the artisan and the farmer are a unit on the necessity to do thi?. Wc have been lummexips on it Ia years, aal maUßg wae

progress, too. ' "We shall continue to hammer on it, and we are willing that the soldier &houIi hare all that can be got from them.

Six Weeblr Sentinel Cor SS. Friends, Give 1,000 ot thes neat UtU clubs within the next thirty days. OUR PUNDIT IN PRAISE OF WAR. "If the governments of the civilized world could be assured of peace forever, what a change would come upon the earth, and how the waste places of wild continents would blossom as the rose!" Thus read the Sentinel's "pundit," the other day, in a cynical humor, and at once broke out in a pessimistic snarl, "Oh, yes, the change would be . particularly gratifying to the workingmen, who can't get enough now to live on decently, and with the competition of all the soldiers of all nations to encounter they'd starve by inches. The German mechanic and farmer makes to fo a week and feeds, clothes and houses a family of a half-dozen with it. Turn out on tue farms and in the shops and mills the tnousand3 who are more or less fully occupied with ' military duty, and the effect would be like the importation of 200,000 or :u0,U0f laborers. The loss of wages would equal the taxes that go to pay and feed the soldiers. I tell you, Tope was right, away down in the very depths of the most profound philosophy, when he said, -Whatever is is right' The condition that an Omniscient Providence creates for us or lets us create for ourselves is the bet attainable, and we are as silly as babies crying for the moon when we deplore the evils of war, of standing armies, and extremities of wealth and poverty, and sigh for the communistic paradise, of equal wealth and luxury that could not live a day in any planet peopled by the sons of Adam." "Why,'' he continued, "here are the markets of the earth filled so full that the mills and factories have had to stop. Business is buried under a load of smothering overproduction urged by competition and greed. Instead of many hands to make more at less wages for all, we want more consumers to make room for the work that must keep many from starving. War makes increased consumption of iself, regardless of the forces it withdraws from p roduction, and makes consumers. It wastes provisions, clothing, ammunition, arms, and these must be replaced. So much on the helping side of the loborer's account. War kills oil thousands and takes others in their place. The change from producers to consumers, and overproduction to smother life out of business Incomes impossible. It is all humbug, this lamentation over the evils of war. There are evils enough, to be sure, but the final result is good and beneficial. So Wordsworth was not bo far wrong when he sang to I'.yron's infinite disgust that 'Slaughter is God's daughter.' " Timidly the interviewer suggested that "the taxes with which the waste of armies was made good and the cost of wars borne came off the products of labor, more or less directly, and that probably more was lost in that way than in the loss of wages in hard times brought on by over-production. Our national debt was made by war. It costs us many millions every year in interest, and a great deal more in pensions. Suppose that burthen was taken off labor and capital at once, wouldn't the relief and the reduction of expenses make sales at prices that would set the market going again? Let us see what sort of a fix the nation would be left in by a full indulgence of the military caprices and needs of the country, as displayed by the various statesmen, dema gogues and cranks who mate it their business to keep holes in the Treasury. The Board of Coa-st Defense wants $120,000,000, divided up through a half-dozen years. The rivers and harbors want $10tO00OO, it is reported from Washington. The soldiers all want pensions, whether they are rich or poor, sick or well, strong or ieeble; they all want $100 a year, which will add at least $80.000,000 more. The revived and reconstructed navy wants $1",OOO.fiOO or so every year till it is able to tak? care of the country and its business on the high seas. Fully $100.000.(i00 a year would be added to the taxes to meet all these demands, and with the burthens already saddled upon the business and labor of the land, it would crush them as no panic or "hard times" ever did or ever could. Now, if we could beat spears into pruning hooks and study war no more, we could avoid all army and navy expenses, all coast defense, all future pensions, and labor would have a chance that it has never yet had in any other country, and has not had for twenty-five years m this country. . Tle frosty-bearded old cynic had gon to sleep, and our anti-bilious dose was wasted, We have some hope, however, that the big outgush of bile in his eulogy on the benefi cence of war has relieved his system, and that he will be less sour and cynical for a while. The Sentinel and the Farm G.dde for 91.35. A QUESTION OF IFS. General Sherman's garrulity has been an infinite cause of trouble to him, and his statement to Frye, afterwards forgotten, is only one of a hundred instances of it. General Sherman fiercely denied having ever told General Frye that Grant's career would have ended at Donaldson had General C. F Smith lived. We can see no reason that General Sherman should not have made such a remark, nor why he should be ashamed of it. The successful ending of the war did not deiend upon any sing'e man. As soon as Congress, the IVesident and the Cabinet stopied interfering with the Generals and the movements of the army, the army succeeded as its overpowering strength admitted that it should. We had plenty of good Gen eralsSherman, Thomas, Sheridan and a hundred others who could have ended the war. It was not Napoleonic gcniu3 that defeated the -South, but sturdy fighting and fcupejior numbers and resources. No one of our Generals took the field with a halfstarved army, and totally annihilated three separate armies, each of them nearly thrice as great as the attacking army, as Napoleon did. Perhaps such tactics were totally impossible owing to the generalship and organization of the enemy and the difficult nature of the country to an attacking force. One might just as easily speculate what would have been the condition of the world to-day had Eve not eaten the apple. Speculation in ifs is perfectly useless, but it is also perfectly hartnJe??. General Sherman's error was the challc335 ta Cucrxl- lryc, arrUIcU tUg

latter was placed as a traducer, and which compelled him to offer a fac simile of a letter of General Sherman's, in which his assertion stands proved. It is not necessary to defy Grant; his great sei vices are admitted and well known. No one seeks to decry them. The remark of General Sherman can not be reconsidered, and never would haye been if he had been less energetic ia their denial. The element oi chance in the affairs of life are a great deal stronger than the element of will. It was possible for but just one man out of a population of 32,000, 000 to lead our armies to success. To imagine that

the one can guide himself by his own genius to this point is assuming an absurdity. The individual only commands aftv he has proved himself. The means by which he so proves himself are legion, and beyond his control. The slightest accidents make or mar the fortunes of a man, and they are especially liable to the operations of war. Napoleon gained Marengo through the vigilance of Dersaix; he loöt Waterloo through the lack of vigilance of Grouchy; both were surely accidental and beyond the plans and control of the commander. The episode has grown from the effort to make Grant a superhuman and all-guiding power, instead of a brave, somewhat plodding, but calculating and careful soldier. We hare ecured the following nnnitnal Indeed, most extraordinary, clubbing arrangements with the Cottage Hearth, one of the verj best of home and fireside monthly magazines: We will end the Weekly Sentinel and Cottage Hearth both one year for Ml. 7. only 23 cents more than the price of the Cottage Hearth alone. JOHN SHERMAN AS A COMMUNIST. John Sherman has offered a resolution that the Government proceed to buy bullion silver at its market value, in quantity not less than two million ounces nor more than four million ounces each year, and Issue therefor coin certificates, of not less denomination than $10 eac h. This is one of those miserable monopoly-building measures for which Mr. Sherman in his later years has become noted. It does not touch the financial question in the least, except so far as it would affect the surplus of the silver mines and employ the men engaged in silver mining. It is not only the demonetization of silver, but it is in addition the creation of a new monopoly. We want to retain silver in our currency at par because we consider that a single gold standard is in the direction of high priced money, sinking of the values ot commodities, and increasing the burdens of .the debt-paying classes, and not for the little advantage of a few silver miners. The gold bug position is just like that of Mr. Sherman, but it has an advantage of being honestly maintained. They honestly ask for what they want, while Mr. Sherman proioses to reach an identical position by cheating the public who he considers will be misled by the bait he holds out in his certificate plan, which is based on the value of goll. It is our interest, financially and commercially, to get away from the gold standard, and if we can do no better and must have a single standard that it be a silver standard. We call upon the farmers of the country to instruct their representatives to offer an amendment that the Government buy their surplus wheat at the market price, and issue certificates upon it which must pass as money. Let the iron manufacturers petition that the Government buy up stoves, steel rails and machinery and issue certificates uion them. Let the shoemeker take a case of boots to the Treasury and demand that the Government tike them in exchange for its certificates. Let the publisher take the books and newspapers he can not sell and ask the Government to buy them with its certificates. All this is exactly what Mr. Sherman proposes to do with silver. Whatever value silver of gold, or any other commodity has, depends upon its use, not npon its amount. One of the great uses of silver is as coin. It is because gold has come to be the sole legal coin of many countries that its value has so largely increased above the level of prices of commodities, and that is exactly why it is no longer lit as a measure of values, and the reason why it should be diluted with silver. The only financial legislation that will relieve any of this depression is a legislation that will prevent further reduction of prices that decline with the advance of gold. Whenever the Government must go into the certificate business, let it be upon the recognized standard of its annual income, and demonetize all metal money. Otherwise it is a ridiculous perversion of justice and law, and becomes a mere machine for enriching a small class at the public expense. The Government might as well save itself the trouble and costs of storage of silver bullion, by issuing the certificates upon the silver ore . before it is dug out of the ground. The silver will do just as mucb work in one place as the other. A floating silver coin will advance our trade with South America. Asia, Mexico, if we will only accompany our act of coinage with proper legislation in the tariff and for the navy and commercial marine. Hut there seems tobe a total incapacity on the part of Oongress to concert its measures to one common end of promoting the sale of our vast surpluses, upot which alone prosperity depends, excepting the single one of compelling Uncle Sam to buy them. That benevolent personage may be rich enough to give us all alfarm, but it is ba.e ingratitude to ak him to bny all their products. We resiwctfuily inform Mr. Sherman and his ilk that the public mind i- not yet ready to accept the commune. Km-neat, active democratic friends, yon can't secure the best ewspaper In Indiana easier than to take the uubncnptlons of Ave of your neighbors to the Weekly Sentinel. The 5 will bring yoa x opies. Hkli.ii m does not withdraw from the Latin Union. The Union is extending the time of its operation in the process of silver demonetization, and in order to avoiA the losses due to the process, ail the hope that the tliflerences between the nietdhi niay somehow become equalized. There is by ud means a unit of financial sentiment in Europe n th's question, and this hesitation, together with many informal expressions, indicates that the doubt in the expediency of the measure is growing. The Weekly Sentinel and the American Ag-ricultia-ist for 2, only CO cents more than the price of the Agriculturist. Scrofula, salt rheum, all humors, boils, pimples, and diseases of the blood, general debiVty, dyspepsia, billiousness, sick headache, kidney and liver complaints, catarrh and rheumatrsm, are cured by Hood's SarsapariUa, lake it aow, W Vac Dollar,

THOUGHT OP J"HE HOUR.

Yes, Lord I Yet some saust eear The burdf a of the dAf , Its UlKr sad its heat. While otaers ht thy feet May m'xse aal prayl Ye. IOrd! Yet ome matt de Life's daily tiäic vork; wm Who fain would jia must tod Arnil earth's dost and moil, Whi'-a lips are dumb! Yea. Lord ! Yet man mii.it earn, And womaa baie the bread; And some must watch and wk lrl for others' sake, Who pray instead! Juli C. R. Dorr. The men who are shooting themselves throughout the country on account of jealousy of loose women are siniply performing the functions of the fool killer. Boston Herald. IIo. T. V. Powdep.ly, the highest officer of the Knights of Labor, takes the wind out of the sai!3 of some of his opponents by declaring explicitly that "the petty strikes and boycotts into which assemblies rush are deplorable in the extreme." Ti:Jproject of establishing a Government university in Washington does not fire the popular heart or excite the popular bead. Many years will glide by before Uncle Sam engages in the business of distributing diplomas. Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier. The public exhibition of insane, idiotic or deformed children ia museums is clearly contrary to public policy, and should be forbidden by law. The same is true of the exhibition cf insane, idiotic or deformed persons of any age. New York Herald. We would like to ran a paper without a line of advertising in "it, but experience has taught us that four-fifths of the people will take a large-sized paper, even if it is filled two-thirds full of advertisements, instead of a small-sized paper, no matter if it hts more reading matter in it than the large one. Chicago Sentinel. When one reilects what an easy thing it is to make one's self ridiculous, and then, again, what ready opiortunities for doing it exist for instance, for Judges on the bench and preachers in the pulpit it is a wonder how the dignity of the bench and the pulpit is maintained. Let us not make over-merry when the Judges and the preachers go amiss. Philadelphia Record. A city of 700,000 inhabitants will crowd its station-houses with able-bodied men to whom it denies work. At morning this city will empty te men out to beg along the residence streets. .A foot of snow will fall. The snow will lie in the heart of that city until it has waied fat with dirt, and then the compound will melt and spoil the Christmas trade of the whole city. The mixture will freeze again ; another foot and then another foot of snow will fall, and the whole Will go into winter quarters for the follow ing May, when the complete preparation of diphtheritic filth is emptied out into the city's drinking water, where the corpses of many of that city's starved citizens already float, secure irom the added perils of the succeeding winter. Chicago Current. I o as you please when you please to do right; and you will always do the proper thing in taking Bigelow's Fositive Cure for coughs, colds and all throat and lung troubles. Pleasant to take, and cure speedy, 50 cents and 1. CONCERNING WOMEN. Mrs. Ji ma Wakd Kowk and Miss Howe are spending the winter at tlu Jllerkeley, New York. Mks. UaiimjRF.n, the novelist, is a Zaneaville, O., girl. "She is wealthy, and owns several houses in Washington. Mis Jokiiiink Jenkins, who is becoming a successful writer for the press of Boston, is a niece of Nathaniel Tarker Willis. For.Tv-six ladies are registered as students in the Boston School of Jlxpression, and have passed a thorough examination as a condition of admittance. The ladies of Portland, X. 15., have petitioned for the right to vote in civic matters. They have been stirred up by the success of the Ontario movement. Mamimoiskli e Loiseai:, a young Parisian lady, has taken a prtze for joetry at the Academie Francaise. Her verses were read at the last meeting of the Academy by Mr. Francois Coppee. ' Mother Eve was curious, and Papa Adam was willin'. Both he as well as she possessed the element of curiosity, and both "got their foot in it." Man is just as inquisitive as woman, and generally from more questionable motives. Miss Ccerie Dike, of Louisville, Ky., daughter of General Basil Duke, now the editor of the Southern Bivouac and once the famous Lieutenant of the Confederate General John Morgan, has made a brilliant success as a violinist in New York. Ceremonious and stately as she has become in later life, Queen Victoria retains the fondness for her children that was such a marked feature of her early years, and she keeps a record of all the bright sayings and doings of the little ones that come to her notice. Tiie old-time admirers of Jean Davenport (Mrs. General Lander) will be gratified to learn that she is in excellent health, and enjoys life at Washington. She is up in years, but does not show it. Her eyes are blue and bright, her skin is pure and smooth as a girl's, and hex form erect and full. Miss Jcua FiKTrnr.it, author of "Kismet,' ' "Andromache," etc., has been living in Rome for the past twelve years with her mother and stepfather, F.ugene Benson, the artist. They have an attractive suite of apartments upon the seventh floor of a palace not far from the Quatros Fontanes. Miss Fletcher ia a liaudscnie young wozaaa with large, dark eyes. She converses always with grace and often with brilliancy. In speaking of Bryant, she enoe said his poems should le bound in fur to keep them warm they are so cold. A sew kind of boycotting has been developed in Ireland. This time the female portion are taking a hand in the measure. At a largely-attended meeting recently held at Torlaw, County Waterford, to denounce Michael Hickey for evicting a workingman. Miss Margaret Sheehan, in a few eloquent words, proposed the following resolution: That we, the girls of Waterford, Tipperary and Kilkenny, resolve and promise this day, before this vast multitude, to treat with

posals from Michael Hickey, as a punishment for his high-toned hostility to the poor laborer Ilurke and his family of seven." The resolution, being seconded by Miss SulL'van, tacsed amid much enthusiasm. If Mr. Hickey wishes to marry any one of the fair daughters of his neighbors, he will have to change bis course and repent. The "Friday afternoons" of Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton, says a Iloston letter, are immensely popular, because no effort is made to surround them with ceremony, and every one is so cordially received by the charming woman. She has the rare gift of being able to bring agreeable ieople together and making them jerfectly satisfied with themselves and each other. There i no woman in literary Boston, or indeed in America, who is more thoroughly liked by ber own sex, and the other, either, for that matter, than Mrs. Moulton. No bright gathering seems complete without her, and her hosts of friends make the most of tbe few months shestavs in Boston

PERSONALS. General Biti.er continues to appenr in the United States Supreme Court. His residence is in Lowell, but he maintains law offices in 1'oston and Washington. John J.uh: Asmr. has promised the Young Women's Christian Association of New York $-2."i,000 for the building fund if they raise that much from other people this month. JrixiE Staj.i.m, the new American Minister io Italy, has made a line impression in European diplomatic circles, owing to hi ability to speak Huently French, German, Latin and Greek. Minister Cox, who is residing in the Hotel Iloyal, Constantinople, for the winter season, came near being burned out of house and home on the stb of Jauuary. Perhaps the old-fashioned Democrat was celelxrating. The Chinese Ministerat Washington is Mr. Isas, Jr., though he is considerably over sixty. His wife is only twenty-nine. The only Fnglish sentences the Minister can use are "How do you do?1' "Good-bye,' and "Champagne is good." Although Mr. William Waldorl Astor is a comparatively new author, his success has been somewhat marked marked enough, at any rate, to induce the managers of the Authors' Club to add his name to the club's distinguished list of members The recent prostration of John T. l!aymond and Thomas W. Keene, the wellknown actors, is said not to be due to dissipation, as is often suspected in such cases. "Raymond never drank a glass of liquor or smoked a cigar in his life, and Keene has been a total abstainer for sixteen years. Judge Davh Davis after being Circuit Judge, Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States, United States Senator and presiding officer of that body, at the annual meeting of the Illinois Suite Bar Association, last week, said: "I am free to confess that I enjoyed traveling the circuit, while I was Judge of it, more than I did any other period of my public life." To the President of a Brooklyn Irish Society who had sent him an invitation to a charity ball. Lev. Henry Ward Beet her recently wrote: "I never learned to dance, and am too old to learn new triefcs of that kind. But if there are younger feet which can beat out dollars with dancing for the orphans, I shall be glad to have some good nimble dancer work out one ticket's worth for me." One marked peculiarity about M. Worth, the Paris man milliner, is his great dislike to perfume in any shae. His workwomen are prohibited from, using scents and even from wearing flowers during their working hours. When a woman sends him her costly laces for the adornment of new dresses, all odorous from long sojourning in perfumed satchels, the first thing that he does is to cause them to be thorouchlv aired. Or r Washington dispatches indicate tinunearthing of more old-tirned Republican corruption. The Signal Service seems to be rotten with radical rascalitv. We respectfully call the attention of every subscriber to the seed advertisement of James J. H. Gregory, Marblehead. Mass. His large and complete catalogue is sent free. We mil upecial attention to our new club terms of six Weekly Sentinels for So; twelve for io. Everything for the Gardeu Seems a broad term for any one firm to adopt, yet the widely-known beed and piant house of Peter Henderson A: Co., .'r and 37 Cortlandt street, New York, supply every want of the cultivator, botn for the greenhouse and garden. In their handsome and comprehensive catalogue for 1SS; will be found offered, not only ''everything for the garden," but all things needful for the farm a well. Our readers will mis it if they fail to send for this catalogue, which may be had of Messrs. Henderson it Co., by sending them six cents (the postage only) in stamps. TT j DEBILITATED MEM. Yon are allowed afrtc tridl of thirty day of the use of Dr. Dye' tvlebmted Voltaic Belt w itn hleolrie Suspensory Apli.in-!. tiT the ptly n-lief and ITrnanont curt- f At-rron. lebilit. ls f 1 itnhly nd Matihiiod, and all kln.lnni trouMes. Also for in any tbT tlLvafiPA. Compu te restorst ion to Health, T 'ik or, and Miuüi.mm! vn;iraiitt-. So risk in InenrmU Ulli, trated Irani r-hW in wnM enrtfr maile! rree,ljr ddressiag VOLTAIC BELT CO Marshal I, Mich. mm JL f 90 t month M I ü X fcipN pa ui fm m m - agents crryhere to tx&vel and sc.i tAjae ooK to dealers, or t40aiuouth & eipcnsc to distribute t:nuUr in your vicinity. Al! expense advanced. satary jTumtiy y- . - oat roods and full rrtn-uUr IKlr. Srod Is rraU NATIONAL SITPLY COMl'AXY.M C- 4 Crn Ay falling Rur Machlnsnd 5 W IO patterns. Circulars free. . ROS3 A CO., Toledo. 0. IAAAAAG rarr wasted at oxce 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 tor Dr. Scott' Klertric Corsets. Belt. IUUUU Hrtiihes, te. Larjre a-ivenisinir. sales & mrotiti imaraiiteed. ' risk inonitit. Only reMieetabl Apply immediately. jYOR Man and Beast. Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year.

Hemorrhaqes.

i..-.-. .r lrwii any cause u poeO-iT OOtV trolled ariil topjed. , Sores, Ulcers, Wounds; Sprains and Bruises. It is cooling, cleansing and Healing. rfcktrVt 11 i mnlit efficarious fir tliUdiadXl.ai 1 Hi ease. Cold in tlw Uead.ic. Our "Catarrh Cure," u hthx-wSj r.i epar'xl to meet eeriona cum. Ot:r hmm mml Syringe i bunula and tuexpeuairaw Rheumatism, Neuralgia. ! No oiiior tirep-iration Im. cured mora cassof tlifte iii.-trii.s i-ow plaints than the Kxtrart. Our 1'lantor is iavaJia aWe in tu.-i disease, Luiabao, i'aaiaia lUci or ide, Jic Diphtheria & Sore Throat, L'-j tiid Extract prwui;ii;-. UcUr in daagryus. PjloC Blind, nieeding or Urning. U A IC J - tU" greui-t known renlT ; rai.tjlj cunnwimu order M-li.-inn uiv f.uld. O'ir Ointment is ..! :?.it 6"i-i. whara tlie remoral of ciominir is inconvenient. For Broken Breast and bore riippies. . to" hue rlJ li:ivj onca used The Kxtmci will ncvor bo without it Our Ointment is iL best emiü:aS mai van oe applied. Female Complaints. "S frmaJr livM;s t'n.; i:ii ac t ran 1 uvl, as i weil known. i;!i tue urniHc t l-ntUl. full diruvlioiU) iii'connKiiiy eücli bo'.Üd. CAUTION. Pond's Extract ft: Ä.taS tu words " I'ofd'M Kitract ' Mown ia the :l;i.-.s, and o tr i":c.".urt? trv!.-;iihik on turroundin iiii" wr;i-i r. None other id priiuüiö. Alwavs on liivim l'und' Kilrau. 'lake ik otuur rep;irUv)a. it it narr told ia oall:, or l y t uurc. Solcleveryvhere,Price,5tkc, $1, $1.7& , Prepared only by P0"D'S EXTUU'T 10. SEW YOKK ASD LOSDOS. iTUTY IURPID BOWELS, i DISORDERED LIVER. and MALARIA. rrqpi thcde sources ris- taree-fourthflof the ui.sra.scs of tue l.nman race. Tbeaa symptoms indicate their exigence : tou Appetite, Itoivela tiiir, sielt llad acUe, fulluehs after eatini;, aversion tm xertion or body or mind, LrnrUtUa Of food, Irritability of temper. Law spirits, A reeling ot" Im vine nejcleetedl imntdntf, JMzxiate, t-'lulterint; at ! Heart, loi4 before the eye, hicbly col ored Trine, COXSTIIMTIOX, and de. roanil the line of si reiniy thst acts directly on the Liver. .Asal-tver tnedicine Tl'TT'U PILLS have no c , jnal. 'flu-ir act ion on Urn Kidneys and Skin i.s lo jirompt ; removing all imparities Ihrontrh tin-so tlirea ( enters of th )il,m," producing ppo tito, sound digestion, regular Monis, ariea skia and a vigorous body. TÜTTS riMI cause no iimisea or pripinir tior Interfer With dailv work anil a rs a jx-rfect fl ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA Sold even biv. SV. t ifli. -e. U M drrsy Street. !t T. i m.m m Ivi Fi.ur.A k and SM'inA-llAw'MS. Attorneys lor riaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE Byrirtneof a eerUSMcopr of a decree to me directed, from the ricrk of. the Marion Circuit Court of Marina Couuty, Indiana, in a cause wherein Itcsdamona Howlandet al. are plaintiffs, and t'harles Mayer et ul. aro defendants, (case No. ::.T01) rcn.uirins me to make tue sum ot thirty-five thousand lour hundr! and forty-eight dollars and forty cents i$-"-3,4w.4ui, in ia vor of cros-coraplflinants t'harles Mayer et at.,illi interest on mid decree and costs. I will expose at public sale, to Uie highest bidder, oa SATURDAY, THE 2T:h PAY OF FKP.KUARY, A. D. IV., between the hours of 10 o'clock a. ro. and 4 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court-house of Marioa County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceed i tig seven yea t, of the followincr real estate, to-wit: Lot e'jjht iv. in square six if,. and nine (9 feet oft" the south side ot lot evcii 7 in sipiare sit. ti ; all in the City of Indianapolis, Marion County. Indiana, subject to the right of I.ydia H. ll;irrisou , as wiie of the defendant. Alfred Harrison. If kucIi rents and profits will not sell for a KiifflCient sum to satisfy snid decree, interest and costs. 1 will, at the Mime time and j.lace, exwosa to public sale the fee's imnle of said real e-tate. or so much thereof as niy Ik; suCicient to dtnclttuxe said decree, interest mill cots. i-judsale v.ilbo made without any relief whatever IronivaluaUoa or appraisement laws. CKOTK.E H. CARTER, Sheriff of Mariou Oonnty. February 1. A. P.ls. Vax Yorhw it Si'EMF.r. Attorneys ior Flalntif. SHERIFF'S S ALK By rirtne of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion county, Indiana, ia a cause wherein John M. liirk et al. are plaintiff?, and June At.lott, exr., etc. et al.. are defendants. (C'a-e No. .2$,e;4.H, requirins; rue to make the sum of money in said decree provided, end in man ner as F abided for iu va:d deem, with interest ou said decree und cosu. I will expose at pueiic le, to the hij;ht t bidder, uu SATUWAY.THE 27th PAY OF FKRCÜARY, A. v. is;. between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. of iid day, at the door of the Court-house of Marion County, Indiana, the remits and profit for a teem not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, to-uit: All that part of the west half or the southeast Harter of section thi'ty (:., tounsliip seventeen 17. north of range five lyint; west of Fall Creek, in Marion County, Indiana. Jf such rents' and profits will not sell for a suffi r jent Mini to satisfy said decree, interest and co-t.e, 1 will, at the same'lime und plrtc. expose to public? sale the fee i-iin-le of sid real csatte. or ro mucin, thereoi at iny be auJticicnt to discharge said, decree, interest and cot. sSaid sale w ill tie mada without any relief whatever fruta valuation or appraisement law. r.EOBGf! H. CARTER. ' f-heriffof Marion County. February l, A. P. !". ninim Li: iKo-ci.n n.r.n MARIANA mills. ORNVM ATAIA l.tl.llfciit.r. hoot a i: KT. n ns- t: m: ytuixu STARK NURSERIES1 1 52d Year. 300 acres AULE'S CARDEN Cannot be Surpassed. Htm Seed Catalogue for 1866. trrr to nl. U--t puMi-hwI. tv 2.W cojm alreadv mailed. Tau aarhl ! if. KMlyon vMress ul once on hisi;o i-rl tor a ropr to fa. Eenry Knie. 1705 HM street. rMIs)üa, iL A CASKET OF SILVERWARE FREE To any person who wili how it tf their neighbors, act a our asent and send orders. Uire your nerc-t Express and Fntofl'ce ddre?. Aldres CONN. M.WKU CO., 11AKIIOK, COX. .4 rm Ktas. Ii on i r i d n c Tke ft 01.1 iinnuo f U1.K Ii, 4 ar B'k I """j'",.r,"y""u J.1 . . a Mkc Send lC.I'T"" l"nu. ii'u vKiuwrr -fr-i Instant relief. Final cure la 11 'er ret nra. K r I I jUiO. Uars. nd never pnrKe.no aJvc. n fcuppository. Sufferer, wiu learn of Umple remedy Free, by UltttslaS C J. MASON, 7 Mß'RU sU H., Y,

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