Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 6, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1886 — Page 4

LT THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY I MARCH 10. 1886.

HEMORRHOIDS Clind, Bleeding, and Itching, Positively Cured by Cuticura.

A warm bath with CMticnra Roan, an viniaitA PkLc. Beautirier, and a single application of Culi- 3 rvra, the great Sain Cure, will instauTly allay the intense itching of toe most aggravated cake of. Itching Piles. This treatment, combined with Mnall dose of Cü Meura Kesolreiit, the new Blood Purifier, three timee per dar, to regulate and mnoTe the cause, will cur JUlind. Bleeding aud Itching; Piles, wiin all other remedies and erea jhystciaiig laiL rrcniNa pilks. I was taken for tbe first time in my lile with 231 io d files, so MTtn that I could hardly kep ou id? feet. I used various remedies for three weeks, when Uie disease took the form of Itching Piles, and growing wore. By advice of an old gentleman I tried the Cuticura. One applicalien relieved the itching and I was soon cured. I wish to tell the world that in cases of Itching Pile the price of the Cutieuia is of no account. From an vosoliclted quarter. O. C. KIBBY, Concord, N. H. ITCHCfO TIL.ES. I began the use of your Cuticura Remedies when ?oti first put them on the market, and know of wo cas of Itching Piles that have been cured by the use, at my suegisstion of these Jremedies. f. H. MaKTIN, Yerden, m. ALL, THAT YOU CLAIM. I hare tried your Cuticura Remedies and find them all that you claim, and the demand for them iu lifts section is great. AUUL'äTUd YY. COLLINS, Higgston, Ga. SPLE2CD1D SATISFACTION. Cuticura Remedies hare given splendid satisfaction to those of my customers who have had cession to use them. HENRY GERMANS, Druggist. Quincy, III. Cuticura Remedies are a positive cure for every form of Skin and Blood Diseases, fron Pimples to Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, 60cr Soap, 25c: Resolvent, $1. Prepared bv the Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston, Mass. Bend for 'liow to Cure Skin Diseases." S rv I IV Blemlahe. Pimple. Blackheads, and aJ1- Baby Humors, use Cuticura Soap. TIRED BIUSCLES Strenghtened, Pain Annihilated, Inflammation subdued, and Malarial and Epidemic hivavi Proven ted liv that tnf.i1Ht.ln ' j antidote for pain and inflammation, L" the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. 25c. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10. TERMS PER TKAR. Single Copy, without Premium fl 00 We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their owa State paper when they come to take Subscriptions aid make up clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. ÜOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. : The Sentinel wants live men to represent it in every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good canvasser for the "Weekly Sentinel. "We offer the best of inducements, either in premium or cash. "Write for particulars. A dress. Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, Ind. DOUBLING UP AND MORS. Many thanks to oar friends generally for their kindness in sending even one new reader. Borne 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 183G will be far more valuable than any previous volume of its entire years. Six Weekly Sentinels for 95. A Eeppbucas paper of Ohio advises its parly to nominate no man to office who touches, tastes or handles liquor. If whisky Was eliminated from the Republican party, that party would become, in the language of a distinguished citizen of that State, now dead, "a d d barren ideality." Send In the elans of als Sentinel for S-5. It is real amusing to know that during all this era of Senatorial presumption and President's messages, the Senate has been in possession of the President's reasons these many weeks. They were clandestinely given by Republican officials in the various departi. eats. Let the ax fall, and let no guilty ian escape. Six copies of the Weekly Sentinel for 95. Therz is a rumor that Russia and Germany have formed an alliance in order to "modify" the triple alliance. As the other party to the contract is Austria, the modification would imply a heavy spring trade. Germany never has lost sight of Bohemia and ct-i r Germanic localities belonging to Ausand the man in Vienna is nearly as sick a) the one in Constantinople, seeing that the existence of either ia largely one of suffer--nce, with the noble Roman in the background with a long list of inherited assets now in possession of the Vienese Kaiser. ; Wanted, 1,000 lab of six Sentinels (or 85. Would it not be well for Congress to quit its quibbling and quarreling and attend to the state of the country? De Freycinet, Prime Minister of France, in the following statement offers some advice that will apply with quite as much force to an American as to a Trench Congress: "France is in the ii'st of a commercial and industrial crisis. Ii e depression in trade will not be remedied by the expulsion of the princes. Let us grapy!u with pressing questions, franc, e, j .ulres calm, just now." We also require calm, just now. We are in the midst of a commercial and industrial crisis. We also need to grapple with pressing questions. XV have seenred the following unusual Indeed, most extraordinary, clubbing; Arrangements with the Cottage Dearth, one of the very heat of borne and fireside monthly Biagmzlnesi We will send the Weekly Sentinel and Cottage Hearth both one year for Si. 7 A, only 25 cents more than the price of tat Cottaige Hearth alone. Thk Secretary of State will find the Government of Hong Kong willing to unite in any serious effort we choose to make to control emigration from that colony. And until the administration has exhausted the powers conferred upon it by law and treaty powers which China has accepted and understandsany men legislation as is proposed looking to the abrogation of the DurJin game and other conventions can only be jegarded as a wanton discourtesy to China, and a confession that we can not insure obedience to our own laws, John Rossel 1'oung. Whenever the Government shows a dispo-lüic-a to cake a ü icziou eftrt '2 to cgatrol

emigration, all the other questions will disappear. The only effort the Government has hitherto made has been winked at by government officials. We would advise the Government to be honest in whatever it undertakes in this direction, as well as in others.

Earnest, active Democratic friends, yoo ean't secure the best ewspaper la Indiana easier than to take the subscriptions of Ave of your neighbors to the. Weekly Sentinel. The S5 will bring yoo. a oplea. A POTENTIAL RUMOR. All sorts of wild rumors ara current as to the intentions of the Chinese Government in the matter of reprisals for the outrages aganist Chinese subjects on the Pacific Coast. The very fact that the Chinese Emperor has so many "subjects" in the United States should teach the remedy. We do not give credence to the statement that that government has demanded capital punishment and pecuniary indemnity in toto. The matter of indemnity is in our control; the matter of capital punishment depends upon catching the culprits and proving the crime. We do not argue that this would not be just, for that is the measure decreed by our own laws for - murder, and, if possible, it should be meted out. But the Chinese hordes should be told to go, and nothing should be allowed to objure this main point. We can not admit their presence in the country under the present limitations to their immigration. Whether the international complication is imminent or otherwise, it is always potential under such anomalous conditions. The plainest dictates of safety and self preservation show that the present occasion should be seized as the most conveinent opportunity to press the matter to at least prospective solution. Wholesale eviction is unnecessary. The country would survive without disorder if none were actually evicted, provided that no more were admitted. They would go of their own accord as soon as they had saved a sum of money. Six Weekly Sentinels for S5. Friends Give us 1,000 of these neat little clubs within the next thirty days. CANADIAN BUNCOMBE. The Governor General of Canada issues an address of welcome to the Chinese as an answer to the American persecution of the same people. It is a piece of buncombe so like many of our own demagogic politicians that it becomes ridiculous in the light of the fact that the whites of the Northwest Territory were the first to inaugurate a social proscription to the Asiatics. It is very safe to say that the British will not abide them a whit more than the Americans, despite the Governor General or anybody else, includ ing our own Bragg. They will go, and there is not military force, either active or poten tial, on the North American continent to prevent it. J If they are not peacefully sent away, they will be relentlessly persecuted and destroyed. Our Government will do well to send them peacefully away and pay them all damages that the removal may incur. It were better to do this than to await an inevitable catastrophe. The idiocy of trade is not higher displayed than by the trembling apprehension of a loss of $30,000,000 of Chinese traffic. As we are the best customer China has, and as Japan will gladly sell us all that the Chinese would refuse, we are in no danger of losing trade, at least if we act justly toward them. Chi nese immigration has been sought to be pre vented by the Chinese Government ever since it began, aud any peaceful, humane settlement we may make of the question will be received in excellent spirit by that power. If it be not done, a time will come when the damage can not be repaired. We call special attention to our new club terms of six Weekly Sentinels for S5; twelve for 10. A MAD MONOPOLY. The threat of the Bell Telephone Com panies, doing butsaess in Indiana, to draw out of business is a sequence to its previous hietory of extortion. Indiana did a long while without a telephone service, and can do so again, ia the same spirit that the Revo lutionary heroes did without tea. The case will not end here, however. The application 5t the principle applied by our Legislature will be general. Other Stetes are rapidly following the example, that the Supreme Court's decision in favor of the right of a Legislature to pass laws regulating common carriers will stimulate. But the case displays a national weakness in approaching such problems, and that is that the great power of many of our corporations is superior to the power of State control. The General Government is the only place where they can practically be managed. During the era of Farmers' Granges, railroad companies doing business in Wisconsin, answered a legislative enactment defining rates, by taking their rolling stock out of the State and reusing to do business in it. It is on' just such things that the centralizing tendency of the Government becomes visible as a general necessity, and on these lines we can see no means of overcoming or reversing it. The telephone people claim that the rates imposed by the law are unjust Perhaps it may be with the enormous rents exacted of local exchanges by the Bell Company. As a whole, their old tariff was an exaction equal to downright robbery, pertaining to the Bell Company, that under cover of a monopoly of the telephone business afforded by a liberal patent law, has preverted it Into a means of exaction, ürvra hundred per cent, profit nnon a thrice watered stock," as well put by a contemporary, kaa W I M passed ft? b?inJi of fairness and just dealing" 43 to" bare brought its own defeat perhaps accomplished its ruin. If the last should happen, the people would feel more like sowing a little salt.on its grave than shedding tears. The Weekly Sentinel and the American Agriculturist for S2, only CO cents more than the price of the Agriculturist. MORMON NULLIFICATION. Nullification doctrines are the same to the American people, whether they relate to the tsriff or to polygamy: and the pretended " higher law " of spiritual truth, when put forth In the name of such reeking bestiality as Mormoniem, is more hideous than it can be in any other shape. New York Mail and Express. True. Why does not Congress take stronger measures for the repression of polygamy, and the political character of the Mormon Church that ia directed solely In its defense? The disease is spreading and oversowing info Bcigtiboriiis Territories. It ü itM

and upon good grounds, that the Mormon government has decided to fill the State of Nevada with their people until they get electoral control of the State, under a belief, that the question as it would then relate to the United States Government would become so complicated from the number of constitutional questions it would involve that the . country would let ' the peculiar institution' alone. Of course we do not believe in any such result. Such a eophiscation of constitutional guarantees would not be allowed to stand. Yet it can not be denied that the Mormon power is daily growing stronger, in spite of all the Opposition before it, and it is daily growing more difficult to deal with it It has been temporized with ever since the close of the war, bat without result. It was hoped that the Pacific Railroad would introduce such a strong Gentile element that it would soon overcome the polygamic population, tout it has tailed to have an appreciable effect. The institution has thriven in spite of everything, and ii is now so strong as to make the question of its regulation a matter of extreme difficulty. It can not be taken strongly in hand a moment too soon.

Get five of your neighbors to take Sentlne and your own will be paid for. Why not have the next Legislature fix the price of mowing machines? They are patented; they are a necessity, and, they are dedicated to a public use. There are more harvesters in use than there are telephones. Journal. Of mowing machines there are legion. Competition, and not a wholesale monopoly Las fixed their price. Had the Government given an exclusive privilege to an individual or firm in such way as to effectually prevent any one else from making a mowing machine of any sort or pattern, the cases would be similar in fact as they are in principle. The principle involved is clear. It is whether or not the State or the Government has any right to enact laws for the protection of the people whether the people can take any measures of self-protection whatever, but must suffer any conditions that may be imposed. In defense ot this principle the people can afford to forego the use of the telephone for a while. It were much better to do this than to submit to unjust extortion. The Sentinel and the Farm Guide for S1.2; The good old party is always at its best in a fight. Nothing else so fills it with enthusiasm and fuses it into unity. It delights to stand by a man who has the pluck to lead it, and old Jackson's "By the Eternal" is still music to its ears. It will love Grover Cleveland all the better if he swears a still rounder oath that the people have elected him President, and President he means to be. New York Star. The President is peculiarly the creation of the people, despite the old fiction of the electoral college. The Senate, however, is a remnant of that old spirit that distrusted the people. It is not a popular creation. Men are sent to the Senate who could not get a corporal's guard of support were they dependent upon the people. The people will sustain their own progeny. The Southern Evangelist, Sam Jones, is quite a tobacco chewer. The following is in point: During his recent stay ia Cincinnati he was approached one day, after a very ferveut meeting at the Music Hall, by an elderly lady, who had taken a great interest in the services. "Mr. Jones,'" said the lady. "I waut to ask you why you chew tobacco. A great many people have ask me that question and they have all thought that such a habit materially interfered with your work as a Christian worker."' "I don't like to teU my reasons for chewing," replied the preacher. "I have a little delicacy on that subject." The lady insisted, however, and assured tlie Kvangelfct that if she only knew why she could tell her frieuas, and that would save him a great deal of ungenerous remark. 'Well." said Sam, after a long pause, "If you must know why I chew tobacco, it is to get the juice out of it and to spit red." 1 be lady fainted, but was fuUy satisfied. He was riding in a street car shortly after this, and was seated beside a lady a very devout ChrisUan who was elegantly attired. "Why don't you preach against the use of tobacco. Mr. Jones?" said she. "It would do a power of good." "There is too much sin and wickedness in the world to preach against," said ham, "aud 1 haven't got down to tobacco yet." "1 think you ought to do so, however," said she, "and your words would have a great effect upou the voung men.' "When I get so low down as to hare to preach against tolacco and ear-bobs, I will quit breachlug altogether," said Sam, somewhat petulantly. The lady, who sported a pair of $1,000 solitaire ear-rings, rose hurriedly, and with a dushed face and hashing eyes, left the car. Sam Jones, in a recent sermon, said: No man who has the disposition to tell the truth ever told a lie without ramming a truth back in order to let the lie get out I am sorry for a man who ran't tell the truth wheo he wants to. 1 heard of an incident, which may shock your modesty, but I don't care if it does. Truth aad f alsehood went in bathing one day, and Falsehood rushed out on the bank and put on Truth's clothe, which be has been wearing ever since. When Truth came out he refused to put on Falsehood's clothes, and said he would go nude before he would wear that garb. Since then we have had stark-naked Truth. Brethren, saturate your hearts and tongues with truth, and you will speak the truth. Now, you often hear of merchants lying. There are not as many lies told behind the counters as in front of them. The purchaser will stand there and lie as fast as a dog can trot, about where he or she can buy the same goods at such and such a price. As long ai there are ten lies told in front of the counter to one behind, tne merchant who goes to hell for lying will have pleuty of company. The Yellowstone (Miles City, Mont.,) Journal has some good words for Judge Pollard, recently of Delphi. Ind., and most outrageously villilied by Cincinnati and Indi-. ana Republican newspapers. The Yellowstone Journal says: Judge Pollard is winning golden opinions from both bar aud juries by the prompt audi decisive manner in which he decides cases brought before him. During the past two days this week he has heard five cases and rendered decisions. His charges to the jury are short and always to the point, and he allows no unnecessary time to elapse after one care is disposed of before another is called and commenced. Custer Coumy never hart a better or more expeditions Judze. and we believe that will be the honest opinion of the tax payers in every county of his district wneu they nave naa au opportunity oi giving nm a iriai. Now, here is a, delated letter that is worth readir ah.-flf. it etui-ted nnt eleven vears igb, When the Republican party was in the hevday of its exuberant deviltry, and comes back to find the "g. o. p." among the reminiscences of the past. The Utica Observer says; This Wpett iirtne of a returned letter, which Is a returned letter indeed. It was written in the Observer office on the isth day of October, 1S75 over ten years ago to ". C. Gilbert, Ksi., care of 1'uited States Consul. Lima, Peru." The oid letter is decorated abundantly with stamps of various sorts, American and Peruvian, but they tell very iaipcrlccly the story of Its adventures. The Greensburg Standard says: The mall sack containing the wettern papers for this place was put off at bhelbyville last Tuesday by tue efficient postal service appointed by this administration. It is a commou thing for the paper sack to be carried past. There is a preying need for reform in our railway postal service. To whioh the Shelbyville .Democrat replies: You are right, Brother Haxelrigg. There Is great need of reform, and the way to do it Is to tire all the Republicans out ot the postal service, and fill their places with Democrats. Your system is now more susceptible to the benefits of a reliable medicine than at any other season, Jake Uood'a Saropaxilia,

THB LABOR QUESTION. What will be the outcome of this great avalanche of strikes, 4ack-outs, and this extreme antagonism between employer and employed that is rising to a flood throughout the breadth of the country? As it stands it is anarchy. The employe asserts a right to control the power of an employer in so far that he can hire none except men belonging to certain labor organizations, nor make any rules that do not meet with their approval. The employer asserts that he has an inherent right to hire any one whom he pleases, and also that if this right be not conceded, his business is practicably entirely out of his control and that he must submit to any conditions his employe see fit to impose. This, in view of Lis exact knowledge of the necessities of his business, and of what it will and what it will not bear, be assumes means its practical destruction. This difference is fundamental. Both sides claim an inherent right and both claims are diametrically opposed. Worse than this, there is no middle ground upon which to base a compromise. They are two opposing ideas that clash the moment they come together. From all the mental habits and the growths of our industrial and social system, under which our people have developed, the idea that an employer may hire whom he chooses, has been constantly accepted. We ao not assume that the multitude who compose labor organizations are wrong; but neither can we conceive that the principle involved in the assumption of the employers of their right to hire whom they please, or whom they can, is wrong. Especially as we conceive that to make a general application of the principle will destroy enterprise, cripple industry and react with disaster upon every man, rich or poor, and the most upon those who have not the means to subsist, except from the earnings of their hands, simply because it not only takes his business out of his hands, but makes demands that often are impossible. Modern civilization is exceedingly complicated, maintaining itself by a very delicate equilibrium thit if seriously disturbed breaks into confusion and inaction. Already the threatening and militant attitude of the laboring classes is frightening investors, and people who have money are hiding it. Two large enterprises contemplated in this city have been abandoned solely because of the threatening possibilities of this anarchical struggle. Even if the laboring people were right on the fundamental principle, they can not change the habit, the conditions of trade, the method by which industry is utilized, with the suddenness they seem to be attempting, without destroying all corellative conditions and institutions that have slowly grown up out of them. We submit it to them if it were not better to call a halt. Even if the ideas of the unions were right in the abstract, they can not substitute a condition of co-operative socialism for a condition of competitive .individualism in a day, or in a year, or in a decade. In our opinion they are going toward self-destruction by going further and soaring higher than the commou level of popular understanding. As a friend of labor, we ask them to consider if they are not going too fast, and that unless more peaceful, more conservative, less exacting and less combative counsels prevail the country will be thrown into inextricable confusion .that will result in untold misery. Labor feels the pressure of low wages and only partial employment. But it fails to perceive that employers, as a whole, are in a life and death struggle for existence. While it is employed, getting its wages regularly, no matter how small, it knows little of the struggle the employer has had to get this little together. This is not true of all, bat it will apply as a rule. If the laboring man were to be given a number of bills to collect, we know he would come Dack with a different perception of the condition and difficulties of an employer. The labor organizations have gone so far, and to such an extreme, as to engage many employers in direct antagonism. As the case stands, it is nascent war. Where will it endin compromise, in surrender, or in drifting wider and wider apart into more pronounced antagonism? These questions are full of portentous possibilities. Portentous from any point of view. Both sides have gone far, and both in the firm conviction that each is struggling for a sacred right. Both of these rights are abstractions. As abstractions both may be right. But as equivalent forces both may he wrong in making their assumptions of rights, that ouly exist concurrently with surrounding conditions, a matter to be decided by force. Whether right or wrong these surrounding conditions are a matter of growth, and they are conditions that the labor restlessness is threatening to overturn, aud overturn before other conditions have grown up to take their place. There is no other actual or possible industrial condition that will supplant the competitive system, the wages system, except a socialistic system. And this the country has not, can not understand, and will prevent. That many of the great minds of the earth regard a socialistic system as certain to grow, does not in tne least affect the present, and least of all America, where even so simple a thing as a co-oierative store has failed to take root.' Forcible agitation can only result in destruction and anarchy. We again ask trades organizations to con

sider if they have not gone too far. If their aspirations have not proceeded far beyond their development, as it seems to us they w ill perceive in their failure, unless they resort to brute force, and worse than failure, in anarchy and despotism if they do. Would it not be better to call a halt and counsel moderation and patience? "All things Come röünd Co those who will wait," There are certain liniments which will deaden pain, but it soon returns. St. Jacobs Oil goes to the root of the malady, and the sufferer is permanently cured. Fifty cents. A SUBSIDIARY INTEREST. Iu our criticism of the President's mesäage we said: "The President is held responsible for the proper conduct of affairs, and not the 'undeiling.' The people, of course, have a subsidiary interest in the office-holder, but this interest does not, and can not, go so far as to practically make the incumbent independent of Executive control without throwing that business into confusion. While in tLeory the President may be merely an agent for the people, to select a man for them, this agency U accompanied with ach responsi-

biiity for the acts of the man that any dere

liction of the latter reacts directly upon the agent." To which the Evening News dissents as follows: We hold that the people have more than a "subsidiary interest" in an office filled by Executive appointment. Its duties afreet the people only. The President is not concerned, except to see, by himself or proper representatives, that they are not abused. The people are acted upon directly by them. wno is nurt u a blundering revenue otucer misapplies his power? Who is disturbed or damaged by carelessness in a postomce? The people, and they only. The President, as we say, is only indirectly affected, so far as he may be blamed here or there tor appointing such a man. Everything done or possible goea straight to the people, acts directly on them, and directly on nobody else. Being the chief or only "parties in interest" in the execution of the duties, the people have a right to know why the man who discharges them is taken away from them. As we see it, our neighbor has furnished the material for an answer. True, the people are acted upon directly by officers filled by Executive appointment. If th are hurt, do they censure the officer? No, they immediately howl at the "administration." If a blundering revenue officer or postal clerk abuses his power, or becomes careless, the "administration" is immediately asked to discharge the man, and censured if it fails to put a man in the office who is equal to its duties. The people can not act in this capacity for manifest reasons. If the offices were electoral, then, indeed, the people would be directly responsible in their choice. But the people could not apply a remedy if the officer elected were unfit or unfaithful, except at stated times. The people who really employ the officer are too im personal to exercise the choice or effect the discharge. They have preferred to elect a man who shall do this for them, and that is among the principal reasons why a President is elected at all. They hold that Presi dent responsible, and discharge both him and his party if he and it fail to properly provide for these offices according to the popular demand. The government of a people of sixty mil lions, spread thinly over an enormous territory, is a very serious thing. Complicated as some of our commercial enterprises are, and difficult to manage, they are simplicity itself compared with the Government. Its methods are clumsy enough, and responsi bility is divided enough now, the Lord knows, without interposing an additional check to executive action. If the President in effect must be compelled to ask "the people" before he may assume the resionsibility to discharge a recalcitrant postal or revenue clerk, it would take somewhere near four years before all the various parts of this Government, from the people up could act upon it. The line must be drawn somewhere, and it had better be left where a century of habit, good results and trial has left it to the President. When a man becomes a slave to opium he can not give up the habit. It may have been acquired by giving him opiates when sick, and this is why Red Star Cough Cure commends itself for its purity, freedom from narcotics, and prompt efficacy. Only 2-3 cents. PERSONALS. Samuel Plimsoll, M. P., is looking about him in Florida. Congressman War. L. Scott, one of the wealthiest members, began life as a page in Congress. Senator Evarts will go to Ann Arbor during his Northwestern trip to lecture to the students, Bishop Bowman, in opening the East Pennsylvania Methodist Conference, at Reading, Thursday, delivered an emphatic address on temperance, denouncing the use of tobacco as well as whisky. The conference passed resolutions forbidding members to chew or smoke. Dr. Yak Gallham has cured insomnia in himself by bandaging one of his legs to the knee with layers of wet calico and covering these with a sheet of waterproof cloth. The vessels of the leg were dilated and the amount of blood in the head diminished, and sleep followed. Loyai.l Fabracct, a son of the Admiral Farragut, has offered to return to Captain D. Johnson, of Savannah, the sword he surrendered to his father on the 5th of August, 1864, when the Confederate ship Tennessee was captured in Mobile Bay. The offer has been thankfully accepted. Joseph Cook advocates for the workingmen, in his Monday lectures at Boston, cooperative banks, stores, building societies and trade unions, to enable them to cope with capital. The laborer, he says, should also have the frankness to demand natural wages, which means that he should receive at least double what he has to expend for food. He also says a State Board of Arbitration would be a wise provision. William II. Hiixiabd, the distinguished American painter, has recently returned home after a long residence in Europe. Among his pictures is a very beautiful one of the burial place of John Howard Payne in Tunis. The scene is the Protestant cemetery, with the high walls enclosed by Italian cypresses, and showing in the foreground the square tomb, overhung by the graceful branches of the pepper tree, which resembles our own weeping willow. On the distant hill-side the mosques and towers of Tunis are seen lying in the broad sunlight. This from Pennsylvania, a State that gave Blaine and Logan 80,000 majority. Head it. A Ilarrisburg (Pa.) special says: Governor Tattison to-day began a personal examination of the soldiers' orphans' schools of Peunylvania to ascertain the truthfulness of the revelations recently printed as to the grossly improper treatment of pupils. A reasonably thorough investigation was made of the school at Mount Joy, Lancaster County, and a terrible condition of ftfl'alrs was found. The bed-clothln was ttlscovired to be filthy, the sleep in$-rooms filled with noxious odors, ana the premises generally unfit for the purposes for which they have been used. Nearly everything indicate! the most reckless management, and the Govarnor to-nignt stated, that not one-half of the truth as to the shameful treatment of soldiers' orphans la the school had bten given the public. 1 he principal of the institution was forced to admit that since the recent exposure additional beds had been Introduce 1. This precaution was adopted to meet the statement that ia recent instances three boys had been obliged to sleep in one bed. The Governor was accompanied by Attorney General Casidy and others, who will continue the examination to-morrow. The investigation iu progress to-day Indicates that nearly $100,000 of the ts.000, 000 expended to educate the soldiers' orphans has cono into the pocket of speculators who have charge of the schools. Among them is an exState Senator of Pennsylvania. A positive guarantee i s given by the manufacturer of Dr. Jones' Red Cloyer Tonic that a 50-cent bettle of this remedy contains more curative properties than any dollar preparation. It promptly cures all stomach, kidney and liter troubles.

LäkaiBl Sfal"" " 'fiiaTh HHrsWWjaV-VW fffjf

Hemorrhages. Nose, or from any cauAS is speedily Con, trolled and stopped. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds, Sprains and Bruises. It is cooling, cleansing and Healing. Co ( 1 fffl 11 mmt ßcariona for this diaWCllXll 1 II, ease. OM in the Head. Ae. Our "Catarrli Cure," is epedany prepared to meet serious cases. Our Na aal Syringe is simple and inexpensive. Rheumatism, Neuralgia. No other preparatioa 'has cured more cases of these distresuUig complaints than the Extract. Oar IMaater ie tovalift. able in these diseases, Luinbaro, Pains in Back or Bide. &c Diphtheria & Sore Throat, Use the Extract promptly. - Delay is 4aagerous. PlloC B1,n4 Bleeding or Itching. H Jl llCdf . is the greatest known remedy ; rapidly curing when other medicines have- failed. Our Ointment is of great service where u luuiuvai oi ciotuing is inconvenient. For Broken Breast and bore nipples, ssx Mothers who hare o n c a used The Extract will never be without it- Uur uintment is liio beet emollient uim, can oe eppueo. Female Complaints. lni the m jority of female diseases Uio Extract can be used, aw u wtu tviivvf u, wlLU KUKJ 4 t-ülCt LWIlrily l'ull dirtctioiiö accompany euch bottle. CAUTION. Pond's Extract 5S the worda Pond'. Extract- blown in the glass, and our picture trade-mark on 6urrouudln2 bull rapper. None other ia peituine. Always Iiwiot on having I'ond Extract. Take no other preparation. Zl if neper told ia bulk, or by vnMure. Sold everywhere, Price, 50c, $1, $1.75 Prepared oaly fcy POND'S EXTRACT CO., nrun TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER. and MALARIA. From tlieso sources arise three-fourths Of tne diseases of tbe Immun race. These symptoms indieate Incir existence : Ioss oi Appetite, Itowtls costive, Mck Head svche, fullness after rating, aversion to xertiait or lfxly or mind, Ernetatlon X rood, Irrtutbilil jr or temper, Iow fplrits, A feeling of having neglected some ditty-. Dizziness, Flutte Hntr at the öejirt, lots oeforc he eye, hlehlrcoi ored Urine, coästipatio.'V, and de tnand the use of a remedy that acts directly on the Liver. As a Liver medicine TÜTT PI LLS have no equal. Their action on the Kidneys and Skin is also prompt; re moving all impurities through these three acav engers of the system producing appe tite, sound digestion, refpri:ir Mools, a clear sklnand a vigorous body. TÜTT'S PTXXJM cause no nausea or griping nor interfera With dally work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. 6otd everywhere. S6c Oflk, 4 Mnrray Mtrft, K, T. ; ferab' Orchard CWATER.-y.?H THEMVER. nrm m.' xc TUN -"' THE STOMACH THE BOWtW A POSITIVE CUBE FOR DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, 'sick headache smiw ei"ins. t iwr f PAcnntMifYilA. 1VOSk V4M " r . i Pin ORmiRD Salts in sealfed packages at 10 and üct. So gen uine BAIL, pvtu III um.. Crab Ore tiara water to., rropn. S. N. ION ES. Mtataer, LouistüI. Kr. SENATOR M'DONALD. Ills Views of Tilings Political and Other, wise. Chicago Times. Ex-Senator Joseph E. McDonald, of Indiana, was at the Palmer House yesterday. The venerable politician and statesman is in Chicago in the interest of the trustees of the Chicago and Atlantic Railroad, who have applied for the appointment of a Receiver. The ex-Sentor is counsel for the Bell Telephone Company, and is deeply interested in the suit which will probably be brought by the Government to test tbe validity of the patents to the company, which are claimed to control the entire principle of electric sound transmission. He said there were two places where the suit might be brought either in the District of Columbia or in Massachusetts, where the company was incorporated. He ignored entirely the demand made by a certaia class of people that Secretary Garland should resign from the Cabinet because he owns or did own when he became Attorney General a certain amount of stock in the Pan-Electric Company. To resign on that account would be a very foolish thing for Mr. Garland to do. He had simply taken the stock of the company as an attorney's fee. It was worth nothing then and it was worth nothing now. His action in that matter was a perfectly honest business transaction, and had not interfered in the least with his official duties. He thought, however, that the Government had made a mistake in assuming tae parentage or responsibility of a suit, but that the matter should have been fought out between the Bell Corapanv and other individual claimants ipr irrV.B mriA nririlpfrp Tli ex-Senator then gradually fell to talking of national affairs. and on being asxeu nis opinion in regaru tu the unpleasantness existing between the President and the Senate, he expressed himself heartily in favor of President Cleveland's letter to the Senate. He thought the Executive and the higher branch of the legislative body were maneuvering for position, but the Senate had exceeded its functions when it attempted to vindicate suspended officeholders, or demand the reasons of the President for removing them. The President had simply told the Senate that it may as well save itself the trouble, because the papers in his possession they can not have. He thought it would be found that most of the charges made against suspended officials were made orally by Senators and members of Congress, who would not like to have their charges broueht to public notice. Senator Edmunds understood this perfectly well, and astutely inquired ouly for information concerning the official conduct of an incumbent for a period of about six months prior to his suspension. He didn't think the result would be very serious. The Senate mitrht attemnt to make iarty capital by renominations, and that was about all there would be to-the matter. Aneust Belmont's' Gift. nr. v xr Pharrhmtn. of the Hen dricks' monument fuad, yesterday received a dispatch from August Belmoat expressing his interest in the monumeat movement and desiring to participate in the fund. He also authorized the Treasurer to draw upon him for $100. The Treasurer is receiving remittances from all parts of the country, end. encouraging reports are constantly coming in from the commttteej ia caar.e of. the work.

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NOTICE OF SALE

OFLANDS MORTGAGED -TO THECOLLEGE FUND Notice is hereby given that the Inlawing decnbed Utnds avd Jot, or much of eocb tract. parc4 or lot a- may be necenarv. wilt be onVred et public sale, t the h igten bidder, at tbe Court House door, in the city of Indianapolis, indiaua. between the hmrs of 10 o'clock, a. ia., and 4 o'clock p. tu., ou tbe TWENTIETH DAY" OF XA.V. 14, the same being moKiraged to the State of I!iau to secure the payment of losn frwj; or sold oa a credit, on account or the College Fund, and forfeited by non-payment of iu tatest ine it! No. 564. The east half of the northeast quarter of section seven (7), in town tip twentyone Vll.) north ol range three (:V ea in Tiptoa Countv. Mortgaged by Joseph i(r Rod CiariMo Goar, his wife, l'rincipal, SJUO; interest. Hi. St; damage. $12.79; coßts, $10; total, sw.iu. No. 712. Seventy acres off the soutlend of the west fraction of the northwest quarter of section tiireteen (19t in township eighteen UM, north of range six (t), we iulountain Countr. Mortkged by William 11. i'pnininj and Mirabecb S. rnuing. his wife. Principal, $j00: interest, Jr."W; damages, S;;i.65; costs, S10; total. No. 71s. The east half oi the southwest tuarter' 'lid li e west half if tbe southetst quarter of sec--tion ishteen (isi lo township twent-fivT (, ort i vt range five (m. wet. iu Whiie Cot-nty. i rig: ged by Jotm . Williams aud Mary i. Williiiiuv his wife. Principal si.-j.iCi.7h: iiitere.M. yj !.. -J: damages. STS.tW; costs, MO; total. $1. St. No 7.Vj The northeast q nartcr of section eicht' ee;i (1. ) iu township thirty-one (11). north of ranee Dine west, in Jasper County. Mortpsctd by TtnmOle i. 1'almer aul Romania K. Palmer his wife. Principal, JJ: interest; f-vVM: damage, 13.2'.; costs, flU; total. r,t.. No. 7ir.i All of tbe wesi half of lot number one hundred aud twenty-one (,121s iu the original -plat to the town of Lafayette (now city), except twenty-two ) let-ton the east end of said wct half, heretofore couveyed to the city of Lafayette -by U-ed dated April R, InJj, in Tippecanoe County. Mortgaged by Jamei L. Vinson. Principal, t -00: interest, 51W.24; damages, r.rl ; coits, 1; tt tal. .-'U.7Y No. 813. The northeast quarter of the northcast quarter of section twenty-wx y, iu township twelve ( l-, north of range two (2t east containing -jo acres, ia Morgan County. Mortgaged by John W. Thompson and Catherine Tbompou, his wife. Principal, $n; interest. SGl.ft); damages, JX2; cost, $10; total, $WJ.w. No. tf.r)i The northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty (im. in township twenty-one (21 1, north of range three i3i wc&t, except ten acres ff the east side of said tract, the lauds herein conveyed hrtng acres in Tippecanoe County. Alorttntged by Thomas Westiake aud .sarah A. Westlake, hi wife. Principal, interest, $12XS; damages, y.l.GJ; costs, $10: total. No. ?79. Beginning in the center of the National Koad, ou the west line ol the southeast quarter of section four, in township fifteen, north of ranse four east, running thence south with said line sixteen chains and thirty lints to the center of the central railroad track, in section nine, towu and range aforesaid ; thence east with said railroad three chains aud eight links; thence north, parallel with tbe west line of aaid quarter . section sixteen chains and twenty-uine links to the center of the Plank or National lload; thence west with said road three chains aud eight links to the place of beginning, containing live acre, moreorlifs, in Marlon County. Mortgaged by liannah Moloney and John Moloney, her husband. Principal, f oo; interest, tM; damages, S;SO,40: costs, fclU; tdtal, S&S4.40. No. l.OUX The northwest quarter otthe northeast quarter of section twelve, in township twelve, north of range two east, containing forty acres, more or less, in Moivan County. Uortf aged by William.. M. Brnnnemer and Nancy 4. srunuemer, his wife. Principal, t-S: interest, $29.17; damages. $16.9': costs, $10; total, 1.12. No. 1,040. The east half of the Nouthwett quarter of outlot No. thirty-three i3. in the town ol Martinsville, Morgan County, and State of I ndiana. Mortgaged by Ann E. Craig and James C. Craig, her husband. Principal, $400; interest, 131.7; damage?, $2-1.58: costs. $10: totL S514.82. No. 1.0&7. The northwest quarter of the northeast quarter and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of soctioa . twenty-four (24), township two (4 north, range five 5 west, containing eighty acres more or less, in Martin County. Mortgaged by Vincent (i. Miles and Lrficretia Miles, his wife. Principal, S00; interest, $222.96; damages, &0.00; costs, $10: total, $768.06. No. 1,088. The west half of the southwest quarter of section twenty-three (2$. in township thirty-one ), north of range two 2 west; also the south half of the east half ol the southwest quarter of the same section, townsht? and range as aforesaid, containing one hundred and tweaty acres more or less, in Pulaski County. Mortgaged by Isaac L. Bloomer and EmmaC. .Bloomer, his wife. Principal. $0: interest, $11.21: daraages.$l.".21; costs, $10; total. No. 1. (no. The northeast qaarter of the southeast quarter of section fourteen (11), township tenty (-20), north of ranee seven (7) east, containing forty acres in Madison County. Mortgaged by William Kirk and Amanda Kirk, his wife. Principal, $500: interest, ST2.92; damages, $29.14; costs, $10; total, $611.96. No. 6kL The east half of the southwest quartet of section three (3 in township fifteen (131. north ot range seven (7) east in Hancock Couuty. Mortfflfod tiv Kit tri r A Rmvn and Matti J Rrnwn his wife. Principal. $500: interest. $lt.24; daaa aees, $i2.2 ; costs, $10; total. $o77.50. No. l.lll. LoU numbered two (2), eight (3), nine ('J), sixty-three (&n and one hundred and eleven (111) in Davidson's second addition to the city of Indianapolis, Indiana. Mortgaged by Catherine A. Miller and Ueorge F. Miller, her husband. Principal, $5U0; interest. $lAi.0; damages, $-i.U; costs, $10; total. f7i.23. No. l.isO. The east nil! ot the northeast quarter of section fifteen (15), in tc wnship three (3. north of range four (4) west, containing eighty acres ia Martin County. Mortgaged bvZ&chariahT. Hampton and Ellen Hampton, his wife. Principal, $600; interest. 1 112.77; damages, S3L.1S; costs. $10; total, $65VJ0. No. 1,156. The south half of the sounwest quar- -ter of section fourteen (14. township twenty-tire (), north of range tea (10), e-st. containing eighty acres more or lam in Wells County. Mortgaged by Zeno W. Coffin and Mary B. Co ihn, his wife. ITincipal, $100: interest, $20.M; damages, $21.8? i costs, $10; tout. $450.35. No. 1,160. Lota Noa, S and 4, In block Ho. 5. in Cunningham's first addition to the town of Martinsville, Morgan County, Indiana. Mortgaged by E. M. Coleman and J. M. Coleman, her husband. Principal. 5000; Interest, SJV.lb; dainaga. $30.48; costs. $10; total, $640.23. No. 1.173. Lota numbered thirteen (IX) and fourteen (14) and eighteen (18) and nineteen (19) and seven (7) and eigut (). all in Mary E. Wool's addition to Crown Point, it being a part oi Ute southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section eight (8). townsbin thirtyfour (S4, range eight (8) wes , i- lake Countv. Indiana. Mortgaged by Mary E. Vood and Thomas Ji Wood, her husband. P-ircifal, $2ö0; interest, $72.1; damages, $16.6; c4c CIO; total. I34.H.79. No. 1,181. Sixty acres, described at folto'-. towit: Beginning at the northeast cortcr of ths southeast quarter ol section twenty-s'.Tcn (37. ia township two (2), north ol range (7) otr. thence west ninety-six (96) rods to the northeast corner of James C. Yeale's forty (40) acre tract, thence -south on 4 hundred (100) rods to the southsast corner of said Veale's tract, thence east ninety-six () rods to the section line, thence north with, said section line to the plate of begiuryag oon--taining sixty (60 acres; also, the southeast quarter of the nortneast quarter of sectioa twenty seven (27), township two (2), north of range seven (7) west containing forty acres, except ten act taken in a square form out of the northwest coc ner oi. the said forty acre tract. Mortgaged byPhuba A. Gossett and Alva W. GORsett. her haband. Principal. KW: interest, $4?.-; damac $27.")2; costs, 810; total, $ö0.10. N. r,2tf2. Lett numbered focefcee (14) arK fifteen (15) in Spann, Smith &. Hammond's subdivisionof lots numbered twenty-three (2, ta twenty-eight (28) inclusive, in Charles St. John's west addition to the city of Indianapolis, luf liana. Mortgaged by Frank S. hedmond and Ida Kedmond, his wife. Princiral. $-W0; interest, J VkU; damaces, tl.2."; costs, $10; total. S-la-Xt. No. 1,114. The southwest qvartcr of the southeast quarter of section twenty. (2U), township fiye (5i, north of range three f:t) west, ia Martin County. Mortgaged by Silva C. Tedd an J James .s. Todd, her husband. ITincipal, $400? interest, $5.H.M; damages, $23.43: cosis, $10. total. $12.07. No. 1,249. Ixt number five (5) in E. T., 8. C and A. K. Fletcher's oodlawu addition to tbe citv of Indianapolis, according to the plat thereof as 6hown in plat book No. 4. page ui, of the Recorder's office of Marion County, Indiana. Mortgaged by Mary A. lkwny an 4 lohn T. Downey, her husband. lTln-lial, Z-m: interest, $.77; damages, $27.9S ; cosU, $10: total, $.S7.75. Tbe above described lands and lots will be first offered for cash. Should there be no Uid they will be immediately offered on a credit of five years, with interest at the rate ol 7 per ceat. per annum, payable in advance; but in neither case will any bid be taken for a sale less than the principal, interest and costs due as above stated, together with $ per cent, damages on accoant at Bale. JAMES IL RICK. Auditor of State. umceot AuaLwt wt nvaic, latuaaapviwi - Maren W. I