Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1886 — Page 4

r THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MARCH 17, 1886.

ECZEMA Itching, Burning, Cracked and Bleeding Skin Cured by Cuticura. IT in at this scA.on, when raw winds and chilly blasts wake into activity Eczema and every species of Itchinj and burnin? Skia and Scalp Lt9tases, that thm Cut ion ra Remedies are most successful. A warm bath with Cuticura Soap, and a single application of Cuticura, the great J-km Core, instantly allays itching, removes crusts and scales, and permits rest and sleep. This repeated daily, with two or three dosea of Cuticura Resolvent, the New Blood Purifier, to keep the Llood cool, the perspiration pure and untrritating, the bowels open, the liver and kidneys active, will speedily cure Ei-aenia, Tetter, Ringworm, Psoriasis, Lichen, Pruritus, Scald Head, Dandruff, and every specie of Itching, Scaly and Pimply Humors of the fciin and Scalp, with Loss of Uair, when the best physicians and all known remedies fail. CCZE1IA CURED. About two years since I was badly afflicted with a form of Eczema, and ordinary medical treatment signally failed to cure me. I then used yourCuticura Remedies, and in a few weeks was perfectly cured. I think faithfully used they will cure the worst skin diatases known. GEO. S. DICKENSON. National Home lor D. V. S., Hampton, Va. SALT KHEUM CURED. I was troubled with Salt Rheum for a number of ears so that the skin entirely came on" one of my Lands from the finger tips It the wrist. I tried remedies and doctors' prescriptions to no purpose until I commenced taking Cuticura Remedies, and now I am entirely cured. K. T. PARKER, 379 Northampton St., Boston, Mas. ITCHG, SCALY, PIMPLY. . Tor the last year I have had a speciesof itching, pcaly and pimply humors on my face, to which I have arched a great many methods of treatment without success, and which was speedily and entirely cured by Cuticura. MRS. ISAAC PHELPS. Ravenna, O. Cuticcra Rexfoies are sold everywhere. Trice Cuticura, ,V)c; Rbolyent, fi 00: soap. ze. Prepared by the Poms Dam and Chemical Co., llOhton, Ma.si. Send for "How to Care Skin Diseases." T)TfPLES. Blackheads, Skin Blemishes ani A. XXlJL Baby Humors use Cuticura Soap.

SUA HP AND SHOOTING PAIN'S that stem to cut through you like a knife, are instantly relieved by placing a Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster over the spot where the pain original.-, Elegaut, original ana infallible. oc. WEDNESDAY, MARCH. 17. TEIUI3 PER TEAK. Single Copy, without Premium . 51 00 Clubs of six for... . 5 CO We ask Democrats to hear in mind and select Caeir own State paper when they come to take Cibscriptions and make up clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any Information desired. Address INDIAN APOLLS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Sentinel wants live men. to represent tt in every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good canvasser for the Weekly Sentinel. We oSer the best of inducements, either in premium or cash. Write for particulars. Adress, Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, Ind. DOUBLING UP AND MORE. 2Iany thanks to our friend3 generally for .their kindness in sending even one new reader. Some are sending five, ten and more. Friends, let the good work go on. See your neighbors and induce them to join your club for the Sentinel. We have good reason for promising that the Sentinel for 1S3G will be far more valuable than any previous volume of its entire years. lx Weekly Sentinels for S3. Tnx comet will be visible to the naked eye about the middle of April. There is talk that the President's health is failing, owing to confinement and overwork. We fear the President has taken apon himself work that he could have hired better done by a $1,500 clerk. This country is a little too big for ene man to be able to attend to every detail. Send La the clubs of six Sentinels for S3 "Logan for President," is what our Washington correspondent says is agitating the hearts of g. o. r. p. Senators. We had thought from the speech of Senator Edmunds, and the resolutions of the Senate, that Logan had already made himself President, or Lord Protector, or some other convenient appellation for aa usurper. Senator Kenna replied to Dictator Edmunds, and crushed the Star Chamber with such a quantity of precedent sustaining President Cleveland, dating with Washington and continuing down, without interruption, to President Arthur, that the Star Chamber will be compelled to make an actual, absolute rerolution in the Government, or retreat fiocn its position. - Six copies of the Weekly Sentinel for S3. , Govxrhor Grat has begun a crusade against "Judge Lynch," and ordered the officers of the law to protect prisoners, even at the risk of placing the "Jedge'' under the od. A general awakening of public responsibility is needed in oar entire criminal machinery among sheriffs, lawyers, judges and juries; and we hope the inspiration of Governor Gray will be followed with conscientious energy. Ir the railroad interests, if the labor organizations would reflect that their conflict is injuring millions of people innocent of any participation in t their trouble, they would arbitrate. If the railroad companies and the strikers did bat reflect that it is these millions who employ both, they would settle their differences. Perhaps this great public will compel them to settle them, and compel both to concede something. Sometime the public will receive some protection from the law. But when? Perhaps when the law becomes powerful enough to control a railroad company, the labor troubles will subside through inanition, and submit to control. Wanted, 1,000 dabs of six Sentinels for S3. ; Wx submit if it be fair to criticise the ad--xninistration of a President who has been in office but a year, and took it after a quarter cf a century of the most unparalleled corruption and jobbery. If people would reflect upon the magnitude of the work put tipon the House and the President, and reec that the. most unscrupulous, destruc

tive Senatorial majority that ever sat in Washington was obstructing both the reform legislation of the House and the execution of the laws by the President, they would be less impatient. The Senate will allow nothing to be done that it can prevent. The people will not forgat that the Senate is in the control of Republicans.

Earnest, active Democratic friends, too. ftn't secure the best ewnpapcr In Indiana easier than to take the subscriptions of live of your neighbors to the Weekly Sentinel. The 85 will bring yon x opies. ATTORNEY GENERAL GARLAND'S POSITION. Friends and foes alike hitherto have been largely misinformed concerning Attorney General Garland's relations to the Pan Electric Telephone. He purchased the stock at its market value. It was open to the world for sale at the price he paid. Any man with the money might havs become a stockholder. To imagine that "Mr. Garland's Influence as a United States Senator was to be used in part payment of the stock is unfair. There is no reason for believing that legislation was even contemplated. At the time he become a shareholder he certainly could not have builded upon the prospect of becoming Attorney General. The facts are all before the people to-day. There 13 nothing in them that any friend of the Administration feels called upon "to extenuate or deny." The enemies of Mr. Garland and the friends of the Bell Telephone, however ingenious, have no love. Every American citizen, whatever his walk in life, vocation or profession, has a perfect riebt to do all that Mr. Garland has done. But some white-souled newspapers, feigning to fear that the reputation of President Cleveland's Cabinet will be soiled, evidence a ludicrous inability to grasp the truth. The New York Times, assuming always to be fair, over this subject laments: It is admittedly wrong, dishonorable, disgraceful, and usually corrupt, for a Senator of the United States to accept shares in a stock company as a "gift" We do not think it is much less wrong and dishonorable for a Senator to come into possession of such shares as those Mr. Garland holds in the way described by him. The Times is evidently of the number that will not be satisfied. It tells us in substance, if not in words, that being a Senator of the United States, Mr. Garland had no right to invest in affairs. He had a perfect right to purchase an interest in the Pan-Electric Telephone Company, and his rights were as clear in consenting to his election to the office of attorney of the company a3 are those of any other gentleman engaged in legislative life who goes into court and pleads a case, as all do who can. Stz Weekly Sentinels for S3. Friends1 Give us 1,000 of tbese neat little clubs within the next thirty days. THE WHICH AND THE WHITHER. The organization of society into combinations, pods, fraternities, seems to have developed a sentiment of fealty in each of them superior to patriotism, and even religion. It is a fealty to the idea of self-preservation, as interpreted by the necessities of the moment. The tendency towards oppressive centralization has permeated every class alike, and created conditions for which neither the habits of men, the limits of constitutions and laws, nor the experience of statesmen find any solution for. We enjoin moderation, but seldom reflect that men never did learn moderation in the pursuit of their aspirations and hopes, but rise to altitudes where they are equally unable to sustain themselves or retreat to a safer level. The great question that is uppermost in men's minds throughout the Christian world the labor question the organization of masses whose methods are essentially military, and whose discipline, obedience to their chosen chiefs, is absolute and unquestionable the organizations of capitalists into pools, agreements and syndicates, all lead np to the single point that the habits and methods of government are either undergoing fundamental changes or are breaking down through sheer complexity of evervarying selfish elements. This very complexity renders it certain that the social quantities must move automatically if they are to move at all. If they can not move automatically, they will break down and give place to simpler forms. It is seen throughout the Christian world that the automaticity of society fails to co-ordinate that society does not move with the ease and vigor that it did, and continues to grow more and more incapable of existence amid the multitude of interests that no longer ilnd in each other that interdependence and community of sentiment that binds society together. The laboring people throughout tbe world are different in no respect from the capitalists and leading social elements; each see in the existence of certain ideas subversion of the conceived rights of the other; in fact, each conceives in the pretensions of the other a threat to their existence. There can no longer be question that these ideas are fundamental, and not local; that instead of coming closer together, as an automatic system of individualism, they are both separating by identical processes, in which collective power autocratic power is substituted for individual power and liberty of individual action. The complexity of modern civilization may be seen in the absolute interdependence of its parts, and that when a single element is wanting, the whole machine is disabled. The loss of the Knglish market has npset our entire industrial system. The loss of our market by England has overturned the English industrial system, nor can any artificial check be interposed to prevent the acceleration of these force?, that once started continue, in spite of human effort, to carry human nature into paths for which it is not prepared by experience or habit to enter. . The labor movement is not intended to be subversive. Neither is the railroad syndicate intended to be subversive. Both are intuitive efforts to check the movement that is dragging and changing them beyond their well known lines of safety. Within each of the two grand divisions are a multitude of opposing interests that are only held together by the tupreme necessity of self-preservv tion. No Babel, with its confusion of tongues, could have been more bewildering in its confusion than our modern world. There is lacking the stable element of faith in our modern calculations, and in supreme self-consciousness mankind has planted itself upon itself alone, to find that its vaunted self

knowledge and ommnipotent formula were tbe most misleading of his fancies. Will it end in anarchy, like that typified in the other Babel? No analogy is quite so complete as the human arrogance, that with its science, imagined it could scale the heavens. Yet it must end in this or in despotism. Society has refused to be guided by its old habits, or rather those old habits are no longer available &s a guide to the future drift. Whether a railroad ccmbination or a labor society succeeds in stamping its commonality upon us, the result will be precisely the same. A railroad king, a Grand Master of a labor army or a Julius Caesar are but different names for the same quality. Some one must lead, direct, plan the balance must obey. This question has beea solved a hundred times, and never has it succeded in removing the curse of drawing water and hewing wood from off tbe shoulders of the masses. Constitutions are aa fragile and artificial as the fashions of dress, and are taken off and laid away when they have served their purpose or when they no longer serve any purpose but o obstruct. The edicts of capital and the edicts of Knights are but declarations of war against existing things, and they are too frequent, too general and too powerful to be mistaken for mere local ebulitions. The complications of machinery will not be solved by the will of classes.- If labor controls it, it will serve the useful purpose of aiding humanity to exactly get a living, and that is exactly what humanity would do without it. Introduce machinery and hours of work may be reduced to ten hours, to eight hours, to five hours, but the result will just equal the capacity of the human stomach. Somehow we think humanity will not be happy to contemplate idleness inuueed by machinery. There will be more time for restless thinking upon the problem of solving the ultimate millennium. and more time for fighting to attain it. We are more inclined to look forward to Babel than the millennium, seeing that every one's self-consciousness has imparted to him the spirit of the wandering Jew. We see in our grand system of education more an awakening of the longings of impossible transcendentalism than a positive gain, for in all its strength it confesses its weakness and inability to see the close of the day or the beginning of the morrow, which, low down on earth, is being sought for in the skies.

We rail special attention to oar new dab terms of six Weekly Sentinels for S3; twelve for S10. MR. PUGH ON THE STAR CHAMB3R. Tho Republican Star Chamber, led by Mr. Edmunds, has created the "ishoo" for which their bravado and hollow sympathy for republican institutions was intended to serve. It was a blow at an imaginary enemy. It recited harrowing tales ef woe that did not exist. It asked for papers of the Attorney General thac he did not have, and which it knew he did not have. It was purely buncumb, intended to deceive the public with a fancied specimen of old Roman virtue. But tne chief of the star chamber received a hammering in the Senate at the hands of Mr. Pugh that he will always remember. The star chamber advocate was overcome with emotion at the wisdom, purity and greatness of Senator Thurman. Here was the great champion of true Senatorial dignity that the star chamber chief so much, admired that he could not forbear reading from him a precedent established which would forever . obscure the administration for daring to deny to tbe Republican star chamber the right to call for the private correspondence of the President. But, alas! the precedent of the really pure ex-Senator Thurman evidently failed to precede. Mr. Pugh showed conclusively from the records that not only were the precedents of Mr. Thurman altogether in favor of the position taken by the President, but that all the precedents from the foundation of the Government were in favor of that position. But Mr. Fagh also consulted the precedents given by Chief Justice Chase, expressing the conviction that the only function of the Senate in the cases involved in the discussion was merely one of assent or dissent, and strongly controverting the Pftnt that the function of removal was a legislative one. Rhetoric is the sole dependence of the chief of the star chamber. Presumably he nor his intimate colleagues intended to harrangue for any other purpose than for electioneering buncombe. Visions of Republican stump orators "pointing with pride" to the aimless record of the star chamber and reciting as gospel the redundant sentences of the star chamber chief, probably obscured their perceptions as certainly as it did their judgment. But leaving the question of precedents, which mainly are the reliance of this chamber, that seemingly has learned nothing whatever since the war, and by which it is guided iu the well worn ruts of a lost . age, Mr. Pugh showed the absurdity and impracticability of such a power being exercised by the Senate as interpreted by the self-constituted court of Inquisition led by Mr. Edmunds. He drew the lines anew so lately questioned by the Republican revolutionists, as being the omnipotence of the Senate against the omnipotence of the constitution, showing with startling clearness the lengths the Republican Senate have gone in subverting this bulwark of American institutions. And so it is exactly. It is a war of a faction to destroy the constitution and the laws, and to usurp tbe supreme power. It has gone a long way toward its ambition, until at last the question is squarely raised whether the President, elected by the people, to exercise certain powers clearly defined by the constitution, shall remain as the executive instrument supplied by the constitution, or become the servant, thepuppet of a star chamber council. The hand writing on the wall says no. 11. G. Dun'a Cattle. Ths entire great herd of Plutnwood herd of Short Horn cattle, 110 head, owned by R. G. Dun, Mechanicsburg, Ohio, will be sold without reserve at Columbus, Ohio, April 11 and 15, 1380. As this is one of the oldest and most renowned herds in this country, the sale anords breeders a rare opportunity to obtain animals of the choicest strains. Tin newspapers comment upon what tbey consider to be a revival of French chauvinism. They cite the letter of Tallier, a Perisian boat builder, in which he refuses at present to fill an order given by a German rowing club to build a boat saying that he once served in the French artillery and hopes

that some day he will aid in the capture of Berlin, when he will personally deliver .the boat that was ordered. Exchange. French spies scattered throughout Germany taking plans of German fortifications, French money bribing German army officers to furnish information regarding German military matters, and French chauvinism, may well make the brave Chancellor pause. Yet, it is "no two to one bet" that the wily German statesman has not "hippodromed" the whole affair. With all his assertiveness the discussion on the spirit monopoly bill and other matters affecting great industrial charges indicate that the Germans are beginning to question his iron despotism and show a risii g spirit of protest, it not of revolt. What move were better calculated to draw around him the forces of the Empire than to excite constitutional apprehension of their ancient enemy France? It would seem to us that ten years in the penitentiary were a very light sentence to put upon a German officer guilty of making plans of fortification for the enemy. Flaying upon popular fears is not only the most common device of politicians, but ordinarily the most successful. Perhaps if he can keep attention directed on the Rhine, he will withdraw it from his own despotism.

The Weekly Sentinel and tbe American Agriculturist for 82, only 50 cents more than tlie price of the Agriculturist. NOTE AND OPINION. The Senate demanded certain papers, did it? Well, it got a certain paper, didn't it? Courier Journal. Peesident Cleveland has a Democratic party at his back in Massachusetts and a corps of independent reserves still supporting him. Boston Herald (Mug.). Rev. Joseph Cook says: "If I had a dog which smoked I would shoot him." So would any man. The rascal would as like as not steal all the cigars. Chicago News. Rev. Sam Joxe3 hauls his text to the top of the slide, and then toboggans the thing right through the center of his audience, regardless of consequences. Chicago Inter Ocean. Ir the Government will issue no more one and two dollar bills, they should have made the preseut issue of some material that could be washed and ironed. Newton (N. J.) Register. Ma. Conkliko is to make his. reappearance in politics, as men say. Mr. Conkling has evidently tired of the innocuous disuetude under which he has labored during his late occultaion. St. Louis Republican. The lynching of a black monster in New Jersey the other night impels a number of truly good editors in the East to inquire if such barbarism is a specimen of the much vaunted Jersey justice. It certainly looks that way to a Westerner. Chicago Herald. An American born friend of the Current dropped in the other day, and lugubriously brought to the attention of the editors the idea that the only office he, a resident of a large city, could hope to attain, was President of the United States. For any other place, from Alderman to Senator, he declared that ' the applicant, to be eligible, must be foreign born. He went out asseverating that one chance in sixty millions was a poor opportunity for an ambitious man. Chicago Current. The Milwaukee Knights of Labor have determined to have nothing to do with the Socialists, and the recent attempt of the latter to control the organization made it clear that they constitute a very small minority. American workingmen can have no sympathy with men who import foreign notions looking to the disorganization of society. It is only in countries where the people do not have their future in their own hands that the desperate propositions of the Socialists can find a hearing. New York Tribune. tiet Ave of your neighbors to take Sentlne and your own rill be paid for. CONCERNING WOMEN. Between the "Yes" and "No" of a woman I would not undertake to thrust the point of a pin. Don Quixote. Ouida says if the Venus de Medici could be animated into life, woman would only remark that her waist was large. Mas. Zklda Seouim Wallace sang "Kathleen Mavoureen" at the Chicago Press Club reception a few evenings ago. I Taris the women crowd to the lectures on political economy. Colonial questions have an especial fascination for them. "Women are very inconsiderate toward each other. No one ever saw one rise in a street car to give another one of her sex a seat. Madame Greville defines a good book to be one which in color, detail, word and action will not redden the cheek of a modest girl. Gas Bills are not the worst things in the world. Wait until you get the footings of the cost of an Easter bonnet. Hartford Sunday Journal. Not many women are blacksmiths, but all of them will undertake to shoo a hen when the occasion seems to demand it. Chicago Telegram. Aged suitor: "I shall love you as long as Hive." Young lady: "That will not suffice. I want some one who will love me as long as I live." Fliegende Blatter. Mas Eglantine Randolph, who died at Washington recently, was the widow of Lieutenant R. B. Randolph, who pulled General Jackson's nose on a steamer at the wharf in Alexandria. Eastern young ladies anxious to pre-empt ICO acres Of good land and a husband In Dakota are advised to make so delay. There 13 a strong probability that Congress will soon repeal the pre-emption law. St. Paul Globe. A Yorxo woman passing along a street in Leavenworth and carrying a washtub was attacked by a rabid canine. After slight maneuvering she dropped.the tub over the dog and held him securely trapped until assistance came, when he was killed. A yocho woman in Winchester, Tenn. Las made a unique pair of gloves. She snared a lot rabits, carded and spun their fur as if it were wool, and from the yarn knit the gloves. She decorated the back of each glove with the ear of a full grown rabbit. Ladt Assr Blüht, the granddaughter of Byron, h one of the cleverest women in England. She- is an author, an adept in music and painting, a student of Oriental politics, a scholar capable of writing to her Ceylon friends, in their own language, the capable manager of her beautiful home, Crabbet Tark, and tne teacher of her only

daughter. Her husband, Mr. W. S. Blunt, is a politician, a prose writer of much ability and the author of the "Sonnets of Proteus." The Princess of Wales' health has been so bad for the last few months that there is beginning to be serious anxiety and fear that she may become an invalid. When the Queen of Madagascar attends Sunday-school she passes into the chapel, where guards, with fixed bayonets, stand ten deep. Within the chapel, where 1,000 persons may find seats, the Queen sits high up on a throne on the side of the pulpit.

The Sentinel and tbe Farm Golde for Sl.X". SHORTS. The Bowers that bloom iu the spring, tra, la, (I would not their beauty efface,) Ate just like the hands of a watch, tra, la, 'Cause they've "nothing to do with the case." Yonkers Statesman, Hk who hesitates is bossed. California Maverick. This is by no means a "forward March." Commercial Bulletin. Senator Jokes has urgent business in Detroit, to-wit, to woo. Lowell Courier. A max can fall in love on a salary, but can't keep house on it. New Haven News. Fencing may be a manly art, but not one farmer's son in a dozen takes to it kindly. St. Alban's Messenger. "Boycott the dog!" howls a Newark paper. Yes, but that's the ganl of it, stranger. The dog caught the boy. Burdette. Some one says a beau on a girl's arm is worth two on her hat. That depends on how tight it is tied. Oil City Blizzard. A young girl who has had both afflictions says that a broken pocketbook is worse than a broken heart. Philadelphia Herald. It was a Congress street four-year-old who, when asked what God did, replied: "Oh, He's up in Heaven, and when folks die and go there He puts wing3 on 'em and lets 'em fly around." St. Alban's Messenger. The Portland Democrats wanted the earth, and they have got something like it a candidate flattened at the polls. Portland (Me.) Advertiser. It i3 said that "love is blind" and perhaps this may account for the fact that two lovers never care for any light in the front parlor. New Haven News. A cigarette-smoking dude is as much like a man as an opera boufie is like an opera. He is merely a thin and amusing burlesque. Fall River Advance. The prophet who said this waa going to be an open winter was right. It has been an open winter so open that all the cold got in. New Haven News. "Ir de weduer grows much worse and de work harder all de time," said an Alabama colored mau, "dis nigger will have a call to preach," Lynn Item. Geocer: "Half a pound of tea? Which will you have, black or green?" Servant: "Shure, ayther will do. It's for an ould woman that's nearly bioind." Is every life there comes a time when hope Is crushed, but the man with a healthy liver and a shirt that doesn't pinch in the neck seldom gets discouraged. Chicago Ledger. Lives of sweethearts all remind us. From a retrospective view, That the beaux who come behind us Will get stuck for oysters stew. I'ittsburg Commercial Gazette. An old woman in North Carolina fainted a few days ago at her first sight of a locomotive. Well, there is something "tender" about a locomotive, sure enough. Yonkers Statesman. The Washington correspondents were curiously negligent last week. The purchase of a door-mat for Secretary Whitney's house was entirely overlooked. Washington Hatchet. The fellow who swallowed a trade dollar the other day is probably the only man in the country who is heartily and sincerely glad that the Government didn't put in the other fifteen cents. It was the frequent saying of an old hunter in the North Woods: "If all men knew as much a3 some dogs, fools would be skusser n they are now." He was a wise old hunter, too. New Haven Palladium. Three little dudes all on a spree, Three little canes and three little hats. Three little straws with sangaree Gay little dudes are we. Three little dudes all on a bat. Three little slims piled iu a hack Theee little heads without a hatTired little slims are we. Three little dudes and three little beds, Three big doctors, three swelled head', Three Iii tie tombstones epitaphs rea 1 "Dead little dudes are we." St Paul Globe. These mean little $5 lawyers! They do some mean thing, and then say: "I did that as a lawyer, not as a man." When they drop down in hell, I suppose they'll go about saying: "I'm here as a lawyer," Sam Jones. Love is said to be the motive power of the world, and yet fifty-six women out of every ninety-two will stick to it that a well-seasoned broom-handle is more reliable than moral suasion for immediate results. Chicago Ledger. "Are you a Prohibitionist?" asked Colonel De Stone, poising his pocket flask in the air as he regarded his chance acquaintance suspiciously. "I am." "Then you will excuse me if I drink before passing you the flask.". Macon Telegraph. A St. Louis dealer advertises: "I am selling fine corkscrews in men's pants at $5." It seems as appropriate in St. Louis to give a corkscrew to every man who buys a pair of trousers as to give a boy a drum with a suit of clothes. Pittsburg Chronic!e-Tjle-We nave secured the following; anaaoal Indeed, most extraordinary, clubbing arrangement with the Cottage Hearth, one of the very beat of home and fireside monthly magazines: We will send tbe Weekly Sentinel and Cottage Hearth both one year for 1.75, only 25 cents more than tbe price of tbe Cottage Dearth alone. PERSONALS. Dom Pedro is to found a big fine arts academy at Bio. Whin a good traveling show visits Coniston, John Uuskin takes all the school children of the place, 200 or no, to see it. Frederick E. Chubch, who painted "The Heart of the Andes," says that Mexico is the paradise of artists, "the Italy of America." Richard G beere, a grandson of the Revolutionary General, Nathaniel Greene, was a private soldier in the Union army. He has been reported a deserter, to tiro reglweat. j

to one of which he never belonged, while tbe charge in the other he was relieved of at the time. He is now an applicant for a pension. The wire of Minister Tendieton, with her daughter, has suddenly started for this country on account of the death of a near relative. Jons GiLBEBTi the actor, so defies the debilitating hand of time that, at the age of eeventy-six, no one may say he lingers superfluous on the stage. Cham Hon Fan, a Chinaman of Portland, Ore., is a regularly ordained preacher of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and belongs to the Puget Sound Conference. It is surmised that William D. Howelts, who is ostensibly resting in Washington for a month, is getting ready for a work of fiction which will relate to Capital life. Senator Vest, of Missouri, has lost forty or fifty pounds in weight during his illness of the past few weeks. It is said there i nothing like sickness to pull down the vest. Senator Edmunds rides in a street car between the Capitol and his home. He seeis to get a forward corner so as to look out of the window and escape the bore of chance recognitions. Pabks Godwin, though still retaining his interest in the New York Commercial Advertiser, has retired from its editorship, being succeeded as editor-in-chief by George Cary Eggleston. A school-mate of Senator Evarts says that as a lad the latter was a lank, ungainly fellow, who usually got the worst of all the rough-and tumble games into which he allowed himself to be led.

To thoroughly cure scrofula, it is necesrv to strike directly at the root of the evil. This is exactly what Hood's Sarsapanlla dv, by acting upon the blood, thoroughly cleansing it of ail impurities, and leaving not eveu a taint of scrofula in the vital fluid. JOHN GOODE, OF VIRGINIA, IN DANGEB THAT HIS APPOINTMENT AS SOLICITOR GENERAL WILL NOT BE CONFIRMED BY THE SENATE. It is understood that the Senate Judiciary Committee have decided to report unfavorably on the nomination of John Goode, of Virginia, to be Solicitor General, and that the President ha3 been informed of their decision in time to withdraw the nomination before the Senate Ehall take action upon it, in case be may choose to do this. What the charges against the gentleman are, is not certainly and circumstantially known to the public. He asserts that they are false charges, and indignantly denies the allegations made against him, which are understood to bo. as generally described of bribery and receiving money to procure an artintment tor an office-seeker. The wellinformed reader will remember, of course, that Representatives of the Forty-Fifth Congiejspave Mr. Goode the seat as one of its members, after the Goode-Platt contest. Aftfr tbe Fortv-Fifth Congress Mr. Goode returned to the practice of his profession as a lawyer, and did not again enter public life until last May. when he was appointed to the oilice of which, itseems p.robable, he will be deprived by the action of the Senate of the United States. lie was born at Norfolk, Va., in the year 1821). The State Convention which passed the ordinance of Secession had Mr. Goode among its members, and he was subsequently a representative in the Confederate Co'ngress. From 18GS to 1872 he was a member of the Democratic National Committee. He was elected a member of the Forty-Fourth Congress, and of the Forty-Fifth, as previously stated. You fay you have only a cough; still it ought to be looked to. Red Star Congh Cure will at once remove it, free from opiates, safe and sure. Tweaty-five cents. When the recent snow storm in Maine was at its worst, one of the selectmen of Limlngton was told that a neighbor needed medical attention at once. He sent a messenger on foot, the roads being impassable for teams to the nearest doctor, three miles distant, telling him to stop at all the farm houses uu the way and ask the inhabitants to turn out and break roads lor the doctor. And they did. The messenger started about 3 o'clock in the morning, and the doctor was able to drive to the patient before noon. A huge California hawk swooped down on a sleeping cat at Santa Rosa the other day, and bore it squalling and scratching high in the air. When about 500 feet high the hawk lost its grip, and the cat came down with fearful velocity, but the hawie caught it again just before it struck the earth, and was carrying it off, when suddenly both fell like lead to the ground. The cat had bitten through the hawk's head, killing it instantly, and the fall killed the cat. Two bales of cotton raised by slave labor in 1762 were sold the other day at Kock Hill, S. C. The owner had been offered 33 yt cents in gold a pound, but for some unknown reason would not sell, and when he died he Still had it stored. It was in excellent condition, although twenty-four years old, and was sold for 8V cents a pound, the lowest price touched by cotton since those bales were grown. Oscar Willet, of Davenport, Iowa, is said to be the possessor of a horse of excellent build and good gait, with five legs, and every time it is shod five hoes are required. The horse is s'x years old. and was reared oa a farm near Moline, 111. It runs as well as a four-legged animal, and to all appearances finds no inconvenience in using' the fifth member. Without health life has no sunshine. Who could be happy with dyspepsia, piles, low spirits, headache, ague or diseases of the stomache, liver or kidneys? Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic quickly cures the above diavases, 'Trice, 50 cents.

Hemorrhages. Bleeding from thQ Langs, StmacI Kos, or from any c&uso Im speodJf ooow Sores, Ulcers, Wounds;' Sprains and Bruises. It la cooling, cleansing and Healing. Po!orrL Ifc mo6t eCScacions for thiadla XtXUXl 1 II ease. Cold in th Head. Ac. Our "Catanh. t are," is speciali7 prepared to meet serious cases. Our Swm aal Syringe is simple and inexpenbiva. Rheumatism, Weuralgia. Ko other preparation lias cur3 more cases of these uiotrvAKine complaints tlia.ii tbe Extract. Our Plaster U invaJtftbio in these diseases, Lumbago, Pains in Back or Side, &c w Diphtheria & Sore Throat, tiie Extract promptly. Delay h doageroti. Piles Blind. Blrdinflr or Itrhinir . T I hi Use greatest known rcmedv : raoidlr curing wheu otber medicines hate failed. Ocr Oiatintnt is of grc-at service wlier tho removal of clothing is iuoonveuient. For Broken Breast and ? Sore Nipples. ftrS used The Extract will never bo without it. Car Ointment b tluj best emollient tuat ciui be applied. Female Complaints. In the majority of Jerolc d!sercesthe Extract c&n be used. full (iireciioiis accouqiany eacii botUa. CAUTION. Pond's Extract SÄKtoSS the vrorcM t'onu a Exfracf Mown in the pipsH. bin! our pii-turw trade-mark en purrot'.iiciuiJ hi: Vi rpier. 2Cotio oUter ia genuine. Al:y3 insist on having I'ond i Extract. Take üo otiior pieiaratica. Ü it never Oid iu Oik, or by noil ure. Sold ever rwhrre, Prices. SOc, $1, $1.75 rrcimrn! only ly TOXD'S EXTIUCT CO., ICTTW YORK AT LONDON. Pan nBacrzan IUI 0 TU ft HJ D DOWELS, I DISORDERED LEVER. end MALARIA. From theso sourcea arise tnree-fourtne Of the diseases of the human race. Thesa Bymptoms inJicate tlic;r existence : Lots oi Appetite, ltow.-is coal irr. Miete lleacU fallncua after catinc, aversion o exertion of body or lnlud, KrurtAtlon of food, Irritability of temper, Ixtw piritK, A feeling of having neglect! orae duty, Ilxxie, l'lutl rin( at tn Heart, Dots beforeth? eyes, highly col oredl rlne. COXSTI PATIO, end do tnand the use of a remedy tint acta directly cmthel.iver. JisaLiveriTiodicine TWT'9 VH.JJH have no cijual. Their action on tbej KMnoys awl kin is alo prompt ; removing all imparities through these- three enger of 'the system, producing eppe tite, sound ti:jr?srion, regular stools, a clear Skin and a vigorous hod v. TCTT'SPILÖ oanse no nausea or prnpinsj nor interiors) With dailv work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. Sotd hpry. lbs. OffW, 44 f, urns MnH, K. Y. Teelle & Taylor, Attorneys for riAintia. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of decree to me directed, from the Clerk ot the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana. In a cause wherein Mary N. Dunlap et a', are plaintiffs, and Arthur L. Wrisrht et aL are defendants, (case Ko. 35.oa-r), requiring me to make tue sun of one tnousand one hundred and sixty dollars (S1.1C0), with interest on said decree and costs. I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, ou SATURDAY, THE 10th PAY OF ArBIL, A. D. 1SSC between the hours of 19 a. m. and 4 p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, situate in Marion County, and State of Indiana, to-wit: Allot lot number nine (9), fa Robert Tatterson's subdivision of block number one (1). ia the City of Indianapolis, Indiana, excepting seren and ODe-half Ct) feet front off of the west side of lot number nine (J), previously conveyed to K. M. Urown. more particularly described as fallows: Commencing at a point seven and one-f half t7'i) 1'eet nortbeast of the southwest comer of lot nine 'i), runninjr taeuce parallel with the line letween lots nine (9 and tea (.lot for thirtytwo (:VJ) feet, aud continuing ou a straight line until it intersects tne line between lots nine () and ten (10). thence west and northwest with said line to Massachusetts avenue, thence with tbe line of Massachusetts avenue seven and one-half 17'. ) feet, to the place of becinuinjr. , If such rents and profits will not sell for a anSB- . Cient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs. 1 will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee'simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge taid decree, interest and costs, tviid sale will be made without any relief whatever front valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE TL CARTER. She riff of Marion County. March 1". A. D. 1SSC D. M. BaADBVBY, Attorney tor rial n US. SHERIFFS SALE Py virtue of a cert!5(vl copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of . the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, " in a cause wherein George P. BisselL trustee, is plaintiff, and John Caven et aL are defendants, lease Ko. &1.847), requiring me to make the sum ot seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-three dollars and eighty cents S7,s; $0). with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public aale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, .THE 10th DAY OF A TEIL, i .D. 1SS6. between the hours of 10 o'clock a. ra. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House Ot uarion louniy.inaiana.iue rents ana pruuis toe a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, situate in Marion County, and : State of Indiana, to-wit: Block number one (1). in Caven & Rock wood' East Woodlawn subdivision of said Caven fc Rockwood's subdivision of lots A, B, C. E and F, of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company's subdivision of the east half and the north halt of the west halt of the southeast quarter of section seven (7), township fifteen (15). north of range four (4) east, (said Kailroad Company's plat is recorded in Pint Book No. one(l). page X'.t, and the Caven Rockwood plats in I'lat Book No, seven (7), rages 28 and 37, in the Recorder's oihee' of Marion Countv, Indiana . If such rents and profits will not sell for a snfliCient sum to satisfy said decree, interest andcofctA, I will, at the same time and place, expose to pub- " lie sale the fee simple of afd real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufEcieut to discharge said decree, interest and costs, aid sale will be made without suv relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE n. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. Murch IS. A. TV O. B. Orton anl Van Vorhls & Ppencer, Attorney! NOTICE. Irobate Cause Ko. 1,117, Notice Is hereby given that in pursuance of aa Cr ier cf tbe Mariou Circuit Court I will sell at private sale, at the law office ol Van Vorhisi hjteneer, in Bohtou Block. Indiauauoli. Msxioa County. Indiana, on Tnesdav. tne 3Tth day ot March, 1?, lor not lea than it full aipraistd value, one third cash, one-third ia six and one-third lu twelve mouths from date or sale, pu-chaser giving bankable notes with uiMtpsge tecurity, the following real estate beloDgin? to the estate of Tbomas liair, situated in&iil county and State, to-wit: Lot five (?). in Athon & Elliott's subdivision of block one (1). in eutlotone hundred aud tii'tyeip'ht (!"). In tbe city of Indianapolis, ai recorded in Mat Book Ko. one (1). at page !'... in the Recorder's tC5oe ot said county ; alw, tbe southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section one(l), township sixteen (irt north, range two ( J) east: also all that part of the southeast Quarter ? the southwest quarter of said aec'ion lying 3uta and west of the White River and Big Eagle Creek Gravel Road, and if not sold ou said day the sa;a will be continued from day to day until sold. SAUNDERS HOLLINi.SWOBTä. Administrator oi the estate ot TUoxm Lt jc, do oeased.

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