Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1886 — Page 4

THE 1ITDIAHA STATE 8ENTOTEL WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY. 17 168G.

SKIN, SCALP, BLOOD .,..'. Cleansed, Purified and Beautified ty the Cuticura Remedies. 1X3 causing the Skin and Scalp oJT Disfiguring 1 Humors, for allaying Itching, Burning and Inllammatioa. for curing the riret symptoms of Eczema. Ihoriasis, Milk Crust, Scald Head, scrofula, nd other inherited Skia and Blood Diseases, C'uticnra. the great Skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, fn exquisite tiiu BeHiititier. externally, and Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Furiher, internally, tre i-oi:iib'e. NAUGHT HUT GOOD. V have been selling your Cuticura Remedies Tor the past three or four years, and have never fceard aught but good worus in their favor. Yom Cuticura .-oap i decidedly, the best selling medicinal soap we handle, and is highly prized here for its soothing and sniteninr effect upon the skia. J. CLIFTON WHEAT, JR.. Druggist, Winchester, Ya. THE LIRGEST SALE. Our. tales of Cuticura are as lanje, if not larger, than any medicine we sell; and wc assure you that we nave never had a single instance in which ihe purchaser was dissatisfied. As to your Soap, tvecauafU no other; evervbodv wants Cuticura. MILLER & CHAPMAN, Druggists, Louisiana, Mo.

. SALT RILE UM CURED. Two of the worst cases of Salt Rheum I ever saw frere cured by your Cuticura Remedies, and their M'es exceed those of all other like remedies. I Kell very little ot any other medicinal fcoap than. Cuticura. GEORGE A. ANTHONY, Druggist, Kewanee, 111. DOCTORS PRESCRIBE THEM. The Cuticura Remedies are excellent remedies lor allskia tiu-easvs J. C. W ILSON'. M.D.. Harvel, 111. CUTICURA REMEDIES Are said every here. Price. Cuticura Me; Resolvent, si.oor Soap, Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston. Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases. GRUBS, 0 Pimples. Skin Blemishes and Baby Hu mor curea iy vuueura soap. WEAK BACK, PAIN and Weakness across the Kidneys. Shooting Pains through the Loins. Cteriue Paius. Lack "f Strength and Activity instantly relieved and speedily cured by the Cvtiti'Ei Ati-Pai Plastee. At druggists. TVEDITESDAY, FEBRUARY 17. ' TERLS PER TEAR. Bla'a Cop7, without Premin m fl 00 Clubs of aix for 5 00 We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their owa Suite paper when they come to take fttbecriptioas a ad make np clubs. Agent making up dubs se&d for any Information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Seatiael wants live mea to represent It in every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good Canvasser for the "Weekly Sentinel. "We 02er .the best of inducements, either in premium or caah. Write for particulars. Adress, Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, Ind. DOUBLING UP AND MORE. Many thanks to our friends generally for their Lindner in sending: even one new reader. Some tre seading five, ten and more. ITriends. let the rood work go oa. See your neighbors nd induce them to join your "Club for the SentineL We have good reason for promising that the Sentinel for 1S30 will Ze far more valuable than any previous volume of its entire years. NOTICE. The following named persons have remitted money to the Sentinel without giving Tostofnce address, and we are therefore unaHe to give proper credits. Those whose names are printed below can, by identifying their remittance, obtain due credit for the game by notifying us promptly: John D. Jottnäon, $2; Lewis Long, $1; no name, New Harmony, 50c; Abe Laughman, $1; John McKellens.$l; W. R, McFuoid, $2; no name, Tipton. $4; t'has. Huffman, $1; Ihoma3 A. Sharp. $1 ; no name, Augusta, $1.50: F. Ii. Parker, $1; H. Long, Postmaster. $1; II. Shey, $1; Charles Jlickey, $1: no name, Bluffton, $1; Charles New kirk. $2; George W. Murphy, $1 ; John Concord, $1 ; Sam Dunn, $1.C0; A. J. Hainbaugh. $1; Adam G untie, $1; Jac T. Jiaker, $1; August Jinhoff. 40 cents; Selrna, Van Buren County, Iowa, $1; Eli Pence, $1.75; Rev. William S. Stinart, or Stewart, $1 ; no name. Markte, Ind., $2; Harvy Leach, per K, $120; G. H. Giddes, no town given, $1; IL Bürget no town, 50 cents; George ITreida, Buck Creek, no such office, $1 ; John llcghes, $1 ; no town. What is the Senate going to do in case the Xreaident refuses to heed the call for inforjnation relative to removals? A public is anxious to know. W eall special attention to oar new elab terms of six Weekly Sentinels for 95; twelve tor 10. Thk epithet ap plied to the Chevalier Bay ard, "without fear and without reproach," -applies with added force to that American iiero. General Hancock. New Yobk City is growing at a. tremend Ous rate. More new houses were projected during the last three months" than ever be fore in the history of the city. The Sentinel and the Farm Guide for 81.25. "A Florida paper asks this question: 'Ought Senator Jones, of this State, be paid ft salary for the pleasant pastime of sparking a widow T That depends, dear brother, al together on (lie age of the relict. This U a bad season for Republican City Treasurers. Fleehart, of Eushville's "short age" is Increasing. It has now reached $2,.r00. Our correspondent at Rushville advises cs that "illicit speculations" led to the troubles. Get fire of your neighbors to take Seatin Had your own will be paid for. It if understood that the telephone suits frill be brought to trial in Columbus, O., before a jury. Judge Thurman, who will be the senior counsel in the cases, was given the power to make the selection, and is said to favor Columbus. J Tue State House of New York, built and administered upon by several rotten RepubJiraa administerations, has already cost 117,VflyjQ, and, mors 14 require ft fiöi it, li

building has been a history of Republican jobs and a history of unusual Republican corruption, in startling contrast with the management of the Indiana State House, administered by Democrats. ' Wanted, 1,000 clubs of six Sentinels for 95.

It isn't every day that we find a paragraph as sharp as this from the San Francisco Wasp, cynically denning a jury "to be a number of persons appointed by a court to assist the attorneys in preventing law from degenerating into justice." Ella Wheelee WiLeox evidently believes she has married a man above the average, or else she is contemplating a divorce. Her latest is: "The chivalry of the average man consists in protecting a woman against every man save himself." With Judge Thurmaii as the leading counsel in the Government's suits against the Bell Telephone Company, that monster monopoly will need to bring other ammunition than bought newspaper opinion to bear if it expects to defeat the old Roman. Six copies of the Weekly Sentinel for S3. Whoever heard of the tariff robbers having anything to say against tariff tinkering when an increased rate of tax on any article of import has been proposed. It is only when it is proposed to lessen the tax that the imputation of tinkering is laid upon the parties who favor the reduction. Is 1830 Mr. Tilden, on account of ill health, declined a renomination for the Presidency and General Hancock was chosen in his stead. Tuesday Mr, Tilden, in rather better health than usual, observed his seventy-second birthday at Greystone, and General Hancock lay dead at Governor's Island in the sixty-second year of his age. A series of coloal land fraud have been discovered, where houses were placed on wheels and moved about from day to day on to a different section, while a man would sleep on it the single night necessary to preempt. In one case the house was 12xlG inches, and had a handle by which to carry it, the man sleeping with only his head un der it, taking up a quarter section each day. The whole record of our land business is sickening. It is significant that it has been left to a Democratic administration to remed v it. There are signs of bad blood between the French and Germans, which the rulers of both are trying hard to keep down. Only the other day a German military court sentenced a German officer to twelve years of penal servitude for furnishing the French military authorities plans and information relative to German defenses. Sometime an opportunity will come to France if she has patience, which is doubtful. Bismarck haa succeeded in making a secret enemy of Russia, and his threat that he could set Russia by the ears by stirring up rebellion in Russian Poland would hardly work now since he has entered such a bitter war upon the Poles. In truth be has embittered the hatted of the whole Polish race against Germany that Russia may sometimes choose to apply against her. Bismarck's depot ism is certain to bear bad fruit for Germany. The system he is intent on building is totally opposed to the aspirations of the common people the world over. A strong Republic at bis very door is a constant manace to his success. It is an invitation to the German people to govern themselyes,and ita stability 1 1 . . , 1 is assurance luai 11 can govern iiseu wiien it chooses. Send in the clubs ot six Sentinels for .3. The eight-hour rule Is an illusion. If everybody would agree not to work more tiian eight hours a day, tue rule would work as long as greed and hunger refused to assort themselves, and no longer. Brooklyn I nion. . The same was said of the fourteen hour illusion, of the twelve hour illusion. It is no illusion. It is and has been a fact for several years. We venture that no more ihan eight hours average of work per day has been made in any city in the United States or any location where manufacturing industry for general consumption is carried on since 18-2. The whole question brings on that fact. If the country can not do its work In eight hours, the eight hour rule is an illusion; if otherwise, it is not an illusion. A country overloaded with machinery, with a large surplus and dull trade due to overproduction, certainly would improve in morals and cash it it could do its work with more system and order, and not in a way that a large portion of the people have no work at all. There are many difficulties in bringing it about, and it will take some time to do it, but it is as inevitable as the fact that we have too much capacity to produce, and it is in the question of that fact that its success will lie. Six Weekly Sentinels for S5. AMERICAN PRODUCTIONS. If America would take in exchange lor her wheat and cotton the goods England makes, wheat and cotton would bring better prices. But when we send abroad wheat, cotton and tobacco we ask "cash." India and Kgypt will take pay in other commodities, and so they are England's favored customers. Louisville Courier-Journal. The Journal took the above for a text of an editorial in favor of its usual protection idea. That an American may pay an en banced price for home-made goods in order to maintain home trade will not alter the economy of the case. If the presumption that the American workingman got the dif ference In tliis trade were true, and uot no toriously false, we would be willing to forego much of our objection to the protection idea. The flour milling industry was one of the few that never were protected, and it stands to-day, in spite of the opposition of all of Europe of Great Britain, France, Austria. Austria and Germany, as controlling the flour trade of the world, and the operative millers are the best paid of any skilled mechanics in the United States. So much for the theory. The flour milling industry has not, it is true, built up a vast wealthy class of millers, yet in bulk and value, it exceeds many fold the iron industry or the cotton industry or any of the industries that have thriven on American soil, and to whom are due the poverty, the distress, and the dangerous attitude of their employes. The hatter, the shoemaker, the weaver, the iron molder, might have steady employment and larger wages if he would follow the plan of the miller and place his wares where other and foreign people could get them. Not a floor merchant in Europe bat carries fall tack gl Aaeäctui &tv, tutf it M ten mal

cheaper than erea Hungarians can make it on LheLr own coil, with the very machinery that Americaoa copied ia order to compete with them, with all the advantage of Hungarian cheap labor. If we would aell our hats, our ahoes or our iron, and take something that other people have to sell in exchange, we could sell indefinitely. If we are to persevere in demanding cash we shall fail to retain even the advantages we have at present. If people will disabuse themselves of the idea that money is not a commodity, and consider that trade is a selling of one commodity for another, we would easily see that if trade, ia to exist at all it must exist upon a commodity basis, because if a European wants Hour or iron he must either sell his shoes or his hats, or whatever he manufactures, for cash and then pay the cash for iron, or we must trade for them direct. Ultimately he must trade for them, the cash doing nothing more than to sustain the relation through many transfers of the stock. Now, as money is "close" and scarce all over thejworld, yet in Europe they have an excess of articles, and we in America have an excess of articles, suppose we trade one excess for the other. Lach will find in a large proportion of the other's commodity a great deal that he does not produce, and to that extent he would be getting something that he actually needs. But the fact that in the division of labor a man produces but a small fraction of his needs, if he can not convert that fraction into cash he must süßer from want, unless those who make up the balance of his needs will trade them out. America stands precisely in that position to-day. She has a large sarplus of her manufactures and staples, and she will not sell them except for cash, and that cash Europe hasn't got, so our people are suffering from want of many of the necessaries of life, and going without the very things the European would gladly exchange for our own. He would take every bushel of wheat our farmers could raise; he would take our surplus iron and cotton and machinery, if we would take his surplus in payment, and our own farmers and mechanics would not be obliged to do without clothing, machinery, and even food. It only requires that the world's surpluses shall be kept in rapid motion to have

all wants supplied, for evervbody has an ability to make something, and enough of it to equal a good living. But the tariff steps in here and says to the American farmer and mechanic, you shall not take the commodities of Europe or South America, or India; if you can't get the cash you shall take nothing. Your surplus must stay in your shop or on your farm. This is a curious inversion of what the simplest rule of sense would dictate waa the true end of trade. We venture the assertion that there is not a manufacturer of any consequence in the country who does not make of barter, pure and simple, a large element of his trade. The most successful manufacturer in this city has reciprocity with many makers of machinery, whose goods he sells, and by whose influence many of his own sales are made, and that this extends to several foreig-n countries in spite of the tariff ob stacles indicates to what an extent the reciprocity might grow if all the obstacles were removed. Every principal factor on either continent would be on the lookout for cus tomers and sales, and if we would only reciprocate with them, they would eSect thous ands of sales of A mericaa goods where r.ow they effect dozens. It takes a very great many ieopIe to cover the commercial area of this world, and we would &ell as much more if we would only act fairlv as there are more men from all other nations engaged in looking up sales exceeding Americans who are looking up sales. Practically, there are a thousand to one. But no; we refuse to sell any goods but our own. or what our one man can sell. Con seiuent;y a thousand times as many men are enaed in falling every species of goods except our own. There is more competition in such odds than even the superiority of American gcod.j can overcome. The tariff h a fiction, having no other effect whatever than to compel X,i!M,UW out of 00,000,000 Americans to pay a facial and onerous tax to 2,000 protected monopolists, who never have made, nor ever will make, that long promised divide with the workingman. This shilly-shally nonsense about the prosperity of oxir protected workingmen, who have been protected so much that even in this land of milk and honey they are threating a revolt against many ideas of social order, and on the verge of starvation, should cease. It is rapidly ceasing to have any influence, as the workingmen themselves have long outgrown the idea, through the grinding arguments of poverty and distress. He knows that no matter what the causes of his poverty may be, that in no case has it been hindered by the tariff. DYING INDIVIDUALISM. The tendency of the time, the world over, is to proceed by government execution in the accomplishment of any schemes in the name of general interest. Never anywhere ia this tendency stronger than with us. We who ia the beginning founded this state to get away from being governed, and who proceeded on the laudable principle that the world was governed too much, and that we wanted all the individual liberty possible to peace and good order, go on plunging heaalong into national educational schemes, national savings banks schemes, national control of the telegraph, national control of the railroads, and so on in that way, which carried out will destroy individual character, sap freedom, and reduce us to a mass of supine dependents ruled by strong centralized government. There is a woric1 of thought ia the aboyj excerpt from ourlcontemporary, the News We have, indeed, drifted far, very far from our ancient moorings. If the fathers of our Constitution, who gathered from their farms, from their workshops and from their offices, where each had earned his simple living al most within the precincts of his own fireside, could have seen one century into the future of their country they would never have written the Constitution "as it is." They would have seen a thing against which they had steadily fought for fifteen years with the strongest nation upon the earth, a thing we now term tariff for the protection of American industries, bad ' 'destroyed the independence of their homes, luey would nave seen an element, steam, and a peculiar inventiveness that attached it to do every species ot labor with aa hundredfold speed ; destroy the distaff and wheel of the housewife, the shop of the mechanic,' and gather maakiad together ia vast industrial herds, dolus but a thing or two, and dependent upon another laOoftriid herd, a thoKsai cdlci way, (

other of its necessities. They would have seen the independent freighter with bia wagon and teiim disappear, as the locomotiveipplaated him, drawing a thousand such loads, a hundred times faster, and it would have seen that these independent freighters, instead of being the sole masters of their living, la a state of rugged independence, were employed at day's wages, where a hundred ihoosaad would own one man master. They would have seen their law of primogeniture s?t aside by the growing importance of personal property, and they would have seen aa enormous productiveness become visible ia enormous wealth wealth controlled by a few who paid their five hundred- thousand employes engaged in carrying freight and passengers a weekly stipend. , They would have seen these five hundred thousand men reduced to mere servants, living nearly from hand to mouth, or at best by the personal good will of half a doen masters, by a species of tax called subsidy, through which they were compelled to give large sums to their masters, and by which the masters were enabled to accumulate the vast wealth through which they were controlled. They would have seen aggregations of these masters gather together and form pools pools in iron, pools in wool and cotton, pools ia bread, pools to import labor, pools ia every essential to human life, for the purpose of making such prices as they might consider the people able to pay. They would have seen that these pools and prices were made possible by a terrible, despotic act of the very Government they had just founded on such fair principles, which compelled the people to buy of these pool-makers and no other. They would have seen aa oppres&ed people band together with an instinct of self-preservation, into vast aggregations called trade unions, granges, Knights of Labor and the like, and warring oa these masters with blind, relentless fury. They would have seen personal independence of the mass of the people, in the matter of getting a living, submerged into dependence upon men and creditors entirely beyond their influence or control. If they could have seen all this they would not have written the Constitution. They would have established an autocrat. They would have given him absolute power to control the owners of the vast wealth that ccontrols 500,000 railroad men as well as the men themselves. They would have made it incumbent upon him to hold the destiny of pool-makers and Knights of Labor alike in the hollow of his hand. They would have considered means and measures by which

the wealthy corporations should be made to obey the same laws that their servants obey. They would have made the pool-masters re sponsible for the just, equitable government of their serfs, just as thev would have made the autocrats lesponsible for just, equitable government of the whole. In a word they have builded a government upon a military principle, with personal responsibility attached upon every member of the host. Our real government, our living institution that viel do power, is an untitled aristocracy Year by year tneir number grows smaller, a few rising to greater power, the many falling back into the seething mass of the people. Year by year power is more and more con centrated into fewer and fewer hands. Well may our contemporary say that the tendency of the times is to proceed by government ex ecution in the accomplishment of schemes of general interest. What but the Government stands in the way of absolute legal control by this aristocracy that already yields absolute social control? Is there anything left but Ca'sar lor the American people to appeal to, divided and distracted and largely controlled as this C;'sar may be by wealth of this untitled aristocracy? "Will our Government ever succeed in making itself a C.fsar of strength a CVsar whose modern name may be called the law? Will it ever succeed in imparting to the law the majesty and strength of CVsar that cm govern in its own strength and by the rules of its own justness? Sometimes we fear it may not succeed, hut that the aristocracy will grow in smaller number, exerting more and greater power until one day some one man will overtop the whole, and then there will be a real, living Cci-sar in rlesh and blood. This we consider is the meaning of this modern tendency. Can a Grand Master of a united trades corporation expand his powers ever the multitude and rule as he does rule over a smaller multitude? Or will some railroad priuce expand his powers until he can rule over both his peers and the multitude? Or can laws be established and enforced that will rule them all? One of these things is certain to occur. That, as by an unerring instinct, the popular mind turns to its own creation, its government, to do things it can not do alone is the most natural result of the conditions that surround us. This is an age of great things. Great masses of capital, great masses of labor combined under the direction of a single mind are the necessities of nearly every kind of enterprise. That people prefer that the Government, their own creation, the only power they have any influence upon, should usurp the great powers of the railroad, and telegraph, and banking elements, that, organized as they are, not only tend to impoverish, but to enslave them, can only be regarded as an inspired instinct for self preservation. We have going oa in Washington a a illustration of this very thing. We have a President confronted with a demaud from certain of this social aristocracy to do a thing the law has decided he need not do. However wrong he may be on the Immediate question (which we consider right), the position itself is a great bulwark upon which the power of law over the personal government of a clique may be tested. We have another illustration in a suit being brought by the Government against an aristocratic corporation that by a series of unexampled exactions, has become representative of the whole brood of despotic hated things. We have bills in Congress to give back to the people the millions of acres of their patrimony of which they have been robbed by this brood, sprung from unholy sowing of dragons' teeth, tariff subsidy, taxation and theft. . Centralization is the inevitable tendency drawing us with a resistless force. We may gravitate toward it in the several paths, but we will get there at last We may regret it, bat the regret . will be vain. Most of us would prefer the rude comfort and simplicity and independence of our fathers, bat we cju pot 1uy9 it to UL ac t( arch 9r

late interdependence of human beiags upon

each other. Never in the world waa man's collective power to great and never was his individual power &o little. There is no individuality ia fact and the Government, as the highest exponent of hamaa collective power, must either become superior to all its parts or give way to something that will or to anarchy. THOUGHT OF THE HOUR. Chance. Call you this chance? A tiny seed Is b'.own by wandering winds that tpeed O'er land and 6ea. Oa ocean's breast 'Tis swept and whirled; then flung to rest Upon a lonely isle, 'mid reed And sedge, aal many a straggling weed. Lo! soon the Isle a flowery mead Hccomes, with brilliant blossoms dressed. Call you this c nance T Ofttimes a word or kindly deed Bestowed upon some soul in need borne soul where Love is never guest Transforms the heart by hate opprest. Till flowers the noisome weeds succeed. CaU you this chance? New York Independent. It is evident that really clean houses are preserved in' this condition by something more than currents of air generally, and that good housewives resort to the practical methods of rubbing by hand, and it see mi clear that no furniture can be preserved from that peculiar condition of mustiness ia any house where the doore and windows must be frequently closed, unless the absolute removal of certain substances from the surface are resorted to. And what is the substance that requires to be removed? It is one of organic origin. Saturday News. Chicago. One thing do remember, to hare your home, every-day-table. j ust as attractive as the one to which you invite your honored guest. It pays to exert one's self for one's family. They never lose sight of it. Ten to one if the honored guest, tired with social courtesies will not forget you in a day, or only remember your little affair as a debt to be paid back some time. We do not underestimate the duty of hospitality but we do think we are more likely to err in the lack of the courtesy toward our own households. Be hospitable to them we pray thereby some of you may entertain angels unawares. Margaret Sidney, m Good Housekeeping. In the long line of heroes who joined the virtues and attractiveness of private life with the front of Mars and the very genius of war the name of Winfield S. Hancock must ever stand pre-eminent. Although it was not his fortune to be intrusted with an independent command, his qualities were of that kind that signalized him as the Marshal Ney of every engagement, the "bravest of the brave." From the first campaign of the Army of the Potomac to its crowning triumph his crest was in the thickest of the fight, a signal of daring deeds and an inspiration of victory. Noble heart, true soul, thy life ha3 been a precious heritage to the land of thy birth and to all the generations that shall follow thee! New York Evening Tost. Two Mormon women met on the street a few mornings siow and talked so loud that it was imjvos&ible for those near not to hear them. The talk ran as follows: "Say, is it true that Brother has married a second wife?" "Yes, it is true." "How do you know?" "I can see it in hb first wife's face." We never heard a more perfect or effectual rratgnmeut of the Mormon Church than is contained in those nine words. The woman who uttered them is a good Saint. She believes that the cruel edict which tears the hearts out of women came from God; but she is. nevertheless, a woman.- and the wanted no other evidence than a look to satisfy her that a man who had prom ised to love and cherish a women until death had, when the care of maternity and of a family had chiseled their lines in her face, found solace in a fresher a:ut fairer face. Salt Lake Tribune. CONCERNING WOMEN. Kilsson has refewed S"X),(.i00 for fifteen concerts in ltussia "because it is cold." Louise Michel will devote the proceeisof the sale of her "Memoirs" entirely to rehabilitating fallen women. Bismahck's wife is described as a talk aristocratic-looking woman with decided but pleaaing features, ar.d of elegant but simple taste in dres3. Thk newest ladies' hat is facetiously called the "doctor," because, as the girls say, it is perfectly killing. Binghampton Itepublican. Kate Fieli is gradually moving from Louisville, where she lectured last week, to Buffalo, where she will lecture next Tues day. Her chief theme is "The Mormons." Tu e women of Persia, says a missionary, notwithstanding their seclusion, are a power in the land, both in private and state mat ters. For instance, if a man wants to make a deal with a man who he thinks will be averse to his scheme, he tells his favorite wife about it. She visits the other man's wife, and by making her a few presents, or paying her a few compliments, she enlists her sympathy. I a this way the man first hears of the scheme through his wife, and under most favorable csreumstances, and he is brought into it before he realizes what he is doing. Wiiev the late Laura Don was a mere Child she began writing sketches for publication. The first one, entitled " Gathering Pond Lilies," appeared in Frank Leslie's Indies' Magazine. Laura, when yet a girl, visited friends in Brooklyn. From that time she began to take a special interest in dramatic matters. While visiting Troy in 18G3, S'ae formed the acquaintance of George Fox, a young photographer, and a year after they were married. Mrs. Fox was fond of painting, and helped her husband at his business. One of her small paintings was some years later exhibited at the National Academy of Design, New York, and sold for $150. Toward the end of the first year of married life. Laura took a fresh desire to go upon the stage, but her ambition did not find favor with her husband, and a divorce followed. She determined, however, to go to Brooklyn and aecure an engagement if possible. She soon secured a short engagement with a traveling troupe. For several years Laura Don waa called by her admirers the handsomest womon on the American stage. Four or five years ago she brought out at ' the Standard Theater, New York, the realization of her ambitioa as an author and actress, a beaati-

ner friends say she waa offered 42,500 for the'

drama, but refused the offer. The worry and anxiety consequent upon her being at once actress, stage directress aad manageress broke ner beaith. A bau year's rest in Juce, France, did not avail, and she grew weaker and weaker, and about eight months ago went nome to ner parents. PERSONALS. Maek Twain says he has received J-V'.000 as his profits on his last book, "Hucklelerry Finn." Hon. Jobs; M. Geecoey, late of the United States Civil Service Commission, is traveling ia Europe and corresponding for several papers ia this country. John Bigelow, of New York, has ia his library the original manuscript of Fraakiia's autobiography. He bought it ia Paris when he was a minister to France. Commakder Gorringe's friends have collected $2,500 with which to erect to him a monument, bearing a representation of the Egyptian obeiiäk and the apparatus he iavented for moving it Lieutenant Greely no years long Dundreary whiskers, and these, with his eyeglasses, give him a dandified air, rather than the appearance of one who bearded the great bear in his Arctic den. PaortssoR Bap.ti.ktt at the coming commencement at Dartmouth College will open his house for a reception to his surviving classmates of the distinguished class of their semi-centennial reunion. Aethcr M. Sacnders, President of the British Indian Imperial Railway system for Madras, is in this country, examining the railroad systems with a view to introducing American method in India. He is now in Philadelphia. Captain Guy C. Go-, of Bath, the leading ship-builder in Maine, says he does not believe a single ship will be built in the State this year, although many schooners wilL The wooden ship must give way to the iron, he says, and the sooner Maine goes to building iron boats the better. He believes the Yankees can easily compete with England ia building iron ships when they oace get started. 'Such literary men as Ho wells are bora, not made," says the Philadelphia Daily News. "The variety and brilliancy of his work are the result of that decided natural bias which men call genius. He began his career as a man of letters without the advantages of a classical education. Like many of his brethren of the quill, he graduated from the printing office. He is an Ohio niaa, born in 1S37, the son of a printer, who brought him up to the same trade. That he should write was inevitable, and he was employed early in life on the editorial sta9T of the Cincinnati Gazette and of the Columbus State Journal. President Lincoln seat the young writer to Venice as Consul, and he remained in the lovely city until the accession of Mr. Johnson to the Executive chair induced his recall. Many a page of Howells' works retains the impression made by hü Venetian experience. He had not been home long when he was engaged as assistant editor of the Atlantic Monthly. This was in the year ISOi, and he held the same position until 1871, when he became sole editor of that scholarly publication. In 1S30 he resigned the chair of the Monthly and lenan an independent career as a literary man. one which has been singularly succe?3fu!. "Let me wright the ballads of a nation." Slid a wise man, "and I care not who maks its laws." This is true, and it mav also be Slid that the discovery of St. Jacobs it. the conqueror of pain, has been of more value to t ie world than the finding of a comet. The New York Sun says: After the war Hancook commanded success ely in Missouri. Louisiana, ami Tea a:il Uasotn. lu Ixtuihiana his task as peculiarly diilioult. U wa a iHrmocratic officer acting under a Republican administration that was engaged iu t!ie MinKrt of ati Infamous gang of carmM-bag p'unierer. twine ot the uili- paper wbicli veueia! Hancock put forth during this period are mle of political insight aad animated statement?. V .! U In l.vtO General Hancock was nuittiatel as tii? Democratic candidate for tbe President y. aa-l. after a canvass of unusual animation, he as a; feated. ' receiving the blow with cuaratK-T isNc uiiity. Kffraining from any subsequent attempt to Ik come the candidate of his party, he reniAiue I to the eud one ot its most honored member, l acompromising Democrat as he was. he was a vritversa! favorite witli every trty. aal it is not t-o much to say that he dies without a i enemv. A 50 cent bottle of Dr. Bigelow'i iWtive Cure will promptly and thoroughly cure the worst case of recent cough, cold or throat or lung trouble. Buy the doliar bott'.e f.r chronic cases. Pleasant to take. DETECTED BY A DREAM. The Curious Circumstance Which Led to the Arrest of a Trio ot Burglars. John Hoe was locked up Saturday evening by Officer Bruce for burglary. It is charged that Koe was concerned in the Moan: Jackson burglary with Ashley and Steward, both of whom are awaiting grand jury action. Steward wants to plead guilty and take two years, but this will hardly be allowed. The manner of the gang was somewhat remarkable. Mrs. iSealey, the old lady at Zionsville, was so badly scared that she did not notice Steward's face when he was robbing her, but after his departure she fell asleep aad she dreamed she saw Ashley bending over her. As a matter of fact Ashley was not in the bouse, but she had known hita when he was Constable at Zionsville. Upon this information Orhcer Bruce went to see him and charged him with the matter, at the same time demanding the Barnes of his acconiJ dices. Ashley trembled like a leaf and conessed all, after which he and Steward were arrested. Answer to Correspondent. . II. S. Your suggestion as to care in tie sale of poisons is excellent. The new remedy. Red Star Cough Cure, contains no prison, and can be given with safety to infants. Health officials of BrooKlyn. Philadelphia and Baltimore indorse it as a most wonderful cure. It costs only 23 cents. Scared by a Grizzly. Wabash, Ind., Feb. 12. New Holland, this county, is all agog over the appearance, in the community, of a grizzly bear of mammoth proportions. The beast is alleged to have been seen on the outskirts of the village by several farmers several days ago, but the reports gained no credence. The huge beast is now said to have turned up in the neighborhood of the postotfice, and the inhabitants are freightened half out of their wits. Parties ,of men for the last twenty-four hours have been scourina- the vicinity of the hamlet, trusting to obtain a shot at Bruin, but thus far the efforts to find him have proven unavailing. The driver of the cart which carries the mail between this city and New Hoi land unhitched his horses and joined the searchers, and, as a consequence, the villagers are without mail facilities. Sick Headache. Thousands who hare suffered intensely with aick headache say that Hood's Sanaperilla haa completely cured them. One frentleman thus relieved writes: 'Ilood'a Saraparilla is worth its weight in eold." Sold by ail, druggist, Oa huadred C?S1

PflHD'SBTOCTI

Hemorrhages. Bleeding fro thfl Uaei, Stoma. Wo, or fro ai any cause is peerkif eoo iTOtioa inj kyppeo. . Sores, Ulcers; Wound?; Sprains and Bruises, It U c:olin, cleansing and Healing. Ptfarrtl lt U m(Mt eScaciona tor thudWtUUll t tl ease. Cold in Um Head. Ao. Ur -Catarrh C ure, u epectf preitared to meet serious ca. Our I a aal Sj ringe is sun p la and mexpeoairsw Rheumatism, Heuralgia. I.'o other preparation Tiaa cur-3 more camt of these distressing complaints thaa tu Kitract. Our Plaater u taralia. Jie in these d-eae3. Lumbar. Pains La Üvk. or .d. &c Diphtheria & Sore ThroaL Ute the Kit rmel promptly. Delay u Ua gttroua. PlloC B,,n. Bleedttag or Itching. I A iltvOf 5s the greatt known remedy ; rtMdiv curing when other medicine have failed. OuiOinJmaat U of great eerrioe wtaerrs tud removal of clocking is iocoaveuiet. For Broken Breast and Sore Nipples. ujd The Extract rill never be withoaj it. Our Ointment Uththet eavxoaj tuat can be applied. Wnmnin rimrtlemln Ia tbe JLUlliaiG V.UlllJiailll5 jonty h i won kuo ii. wim iae greatest beueafi Fuü directions accoaipiay each boUia. CAUTION. Pond's Extract The genuine haa tue woraa Pond's Extract" Mown ia the gla, and our picture trade-maxk om aurrouudiue bud rapider. ione other EHiuiae. Always insL-i on havüig FomTe xtrart. Take no other preparation. A is never sold in bulk, or ty measure. Soil everywhere, Price, 50e, fi. &1.T5. Prepared only by P0XDS EXTRACT CO., JfEW TOIiK Aim LONDON. nrumr PULL TORPID BOWELS. 1 DISORDERED LIVER. . and MALARIA. From these sources arise three-fourths Of the diseases of the human race. These) symptoms indicate their existence : Ixaa 4 Appetite, liowela costive, feiclc BleaeW acUe, fullnrti alter rating, Tertloa te action of body or mlud, Krartatleei Of food, Irritability of temper, Iow plrita, A Oeling of having neglecte! some duty, IMzzineaa, Flnttc ring at Uta Heart, Iot before tbe eye, highly col ored Iriue, osTIPATIO, and demand the use of a remedy tha t acts directly on tbe Lirer. As a Liver melicine TÜTTH PILLS liavortoegiial. Their action on t2kS Kidneys and Skin ianlo prompt; removing all Impurities through these three ca. engere of he eyatem. producing eppe tite, sound digestion, reijulBr stools, a einer skin aad a vigorous body. TÜTT'S PILX41 cause no nausea or griping nor iaterfei with dailv work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. 6oU errrj hrr. Sac. Office. M Murray Mrwt. ft X. NN ii.liam NN . NVooLi.t.1, Attorney for flalatitr. . SHERIFFS SALE By Tirrue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of tue Suierinr IVmrt of Marion Count. Indiana ia cane wherein Michael Dar is plaintiff, and Thomag Ferguson et a!, are aeenaants, (Cae No. :c.,ti:;) requiring me to make the bum of one huudrt-vi aud sixteen dollars and forty-aeven cents (116.47). with mtereMou baid decree aud rots. I will expose at public ale, to the highest bidder, oa SATUaDAY. THE l-ith DAY A. D. 1SS6. OF MARCH. between the bours of 10 o'r'.ot k a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m.. of sai-1 day. at tbe door of the Court-houae of Marion touaty, Indiana, the rents aril profit f ir a term not exceed ins tvea years, of the follow int real estate, in Marion County in the .State ol tudinua. to wn: L(t tiumbcr tweuty-niue (-?;. iu the tow not Wellington. If mii ii ieuts and profits will not tell tore sufficient in;n to Mitisfy il decree. iu.teret and costs. I v. id. at the same time and place", expose to pu!iic sale the Ice fcimple of Mid real estate, or w ur.ich thereof as may he fcuHicient to disoharr baid dec ree. interest and costs. Said aale will b. made witnout anv relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE n. CARTER. Sheriff" of Marioa County. rehtuarv 1". A. D. 1SSC. Ka.no & Winters-." Attorneys tor Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a certified copy ot a decree to me directed, from the Cteck of t Je Superior Court of Marioa County, Indiana, in a can'- wherein Mary I"erMnette ia piaituiff. and A'il.0!i pray et al" are defendants (.Case ho. lU.STD, requirinaf meto make the sum of aeven hundred and tixtv-uine dollars and forty-nine cent (7i'..v.). with interest on Müd decree and conts. I will expose at public bale to the highest bidder, oa SATURDAY. THE lr.TIl DAY Or MAR3H, a. d. m;, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and o'elock p. m., of Mid day. at the door of the Court ilou&a of MarioH county. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the follow ms real estate, to-wit: 'thirty (30) feet off the north side of lot numtier thirty-two (:2). in second Wiley addition t the ity öf IndiauapolU, Marion County. Indiana. If m n rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient fum to wttisfy said decree, interest and cost. I will, at the same time and place, expose fc public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or M much thereof as may be sufficient to dischanre as id decree, interest and costs, baid kale will be made without anv relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORC.E H CARTER. Sheriff of Marion Ccuuty. February 13. A. D. 18S6. O. B. Ortou and Van YorhU & speacer. Attorneys. notTce. Probate Cause No. 1.1 17. No' ice is herehy given that in pursuance of aa order of the Marion Circuit Court I will sell at private sale, at the law office ef Van VorhU& lleuter, in Boston Block, Indianapolis, Marioa Countv. Indiana, for uot less than iU full appraised value, one-third cash, one-third in air and one-third in twelve months from date ot sale, putcbaser giving bankable notes with mortgage security, the following real estate belonging to the estate of Thomas Bair, situated in said county aud Mate, to-wit: .. , . . Lot five (5). in Athon A. Klliott's subdivision ol block one (1), in eutlot one hundred and fiftyeight Hf-8). In the city of Indianapolis, as recorded in Mat Book No. one (1), at page 199. in the Uecorder s office ot said county; aiao. the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section one (I), township sixteen (C) north, range two (2 east: also all that part of the southeast quarter or the southwest quarter of said sec'ion lying south and west ol the White Kiver and Big Eagle Creefc t, ravel Road, and if not sold on said day the sale will be continued from day to day until sold. PAl NOKKS rfOLLI N iS WW KTH. Administrator of the estate of Thomas Kair. deceased. Notice of Appointment. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, of the estate of Thomms late of Marion County, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to i solvent tCtt.ADTTT SAUNDLK HOuLlXGfWORTH. Van Vorn is & Spencer. Attorneys for estate. Tbe publication in a Cincinnati paper chart-, in that Senator Bolts, ol Warren County. Kentucky, lived openly with his negro mistress at Frankfort. Ky.. caused that Senator to demand an invest Uratton yesterday. The iseoate appointed an investigating committee. The steamer Athlete. Captain Prtona, was burned at the wrrf at New femjrrna. Fla., eartr Frida r morning. TheTeseelis total loas aad, half of the cargo was turned. Captain I'artoaa had a narrow escape frca suc,Uoa Th- iC