Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1886 — Page 4

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY. APRIL '21, I88G.

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IXVR Cleaning the Skin and Scalp of Birth ; Humors, for allaying itchin , Burning and InrUmmatiuu. for caring the first symptoms of Ej'zema, Psoriasis, Milk Crust. Kald Head, Scrofula and other inherited skin and blood diseases, Cvticuaa, the great skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, aa exquisite akin Beautitier, externally, and Cuticura Esmoivent, the new Blood Purifier, internally, are infallible. Absolutely pure. "TEREIBLT AFFLICTED." llr. and Mrs. Everett Stebblns, Belchertown, Mavs., write: "Our little boy was terribly afllicted with Strom;, halt Rheum and Erysipelas ever iure he was bom, and nothing we could give htm helped hiiu. until we tried Cuticura Kemediks, which gradually cured hiu, until be is now as fair as any child." "ZOO FOR SfOTHrXG." Williani Gordon, 87 Arlington avenue, Charlestown, Mass... writes: "Having paid about f-UO to first-class doctors to cure mv baby, without success, I tried the Cuticura Kemedies, which comIcteJy cured, after usiug three packages." . rßOJI HEAD TO ET..-; Charles ICayre Hinkle, Jersey City Heights. J., writes: "Mr ton, a lad of twelve years, was completely cored of a terrible case of Eczema by the Cvtkx'sa RKMEDitü. From the top of his head to the soles of his feet was oue mass of Fcabs." Every oilier remedy and physicians had been tried In rain. "A LITTLK llOX CCBED." Nash & N'ash. Covington. Ky., write: "One of our customers bought yonr Cuticura Remedies lor his little boy, who bad a kind of humor in the bead, so that he was a solid scab of sores. He was eutiretv cured, and his father says he wotild not begrudge 5300 for the good it has done him." Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, 50 cents: Rmoltf.xtSI.OO: Soap, 25 cents. Prepared by Pottk i'Ruii ad Chemical Co., Boston, Maas. - Send for "How to Care Skia Diseases." D A pv Tse Cctwtea Soaf, an exquisitely r)r D 1 perfumed skis beautifier. Kidney Pains, Strains, Back Ache, Weakness and Weariness caused by overwork, dissipation, standiug. walking, or the sewiug-ma-chine. cured by the Cuticura AntiPain Plaster. New, elegant, original uud infallible. 2öc. - WEDNESDAY, AVR1L SI. TERM3 PER YEAR. Single Copy, without Premium fl 00 Cuba ol six for .. 5 00 We ask Democrats to bear In mind and select tieir own State paper when they coma to take -j '.script ions and make up clubs. Agents making up clubi send for any Information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMP ANT, Indianapolis, Ind.

TO OUR PATRONS AND FRIENDS: We never weary in trying to attract and please our subscribers. We now have N the pleasure of presenting a FIRST CLASS SEWING MACHINE. This is an article ' needed in every household, and in presenting it, we wish ' to be distinctly understood as guaranteeing in letter and spirit, every word we Bay of it. We would not agree to present this -machine to our friends," until after we had given it full and complete trial and knew beyond question or doubt, that we could safely guarantee it as fully equal to machines that are sold for $50 and $60, and if when any machine is received and tried it does not come up to the highest standard, we will take it back and return the money. .For $22 wc will pack and ship the machine and send a copy of the Weekly Sentinel for one year. For 321 we will send the machin e to any present subscriber whose name is on our books. None ot these machines are for sale by agents. See advertisement. Send all orders to SENTINEL, CO., Indianapolis, Ind.

GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Sentinel wants lire men to represent It In every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good eanvasaer for the "Weekly Sentinel. We STer the best of inducements, either in premium or cash. "Write for particulars. ' A dress. Sentinel Company, Indianapolis, Ind. . DOUBLING UP AND MORE. Many thanks to oar friends generally for their kindness in sending even one new reader. 8ome are sending fire, ten and more. IFriends, let the good work go on. See your neighbors and induce them to join your clab for the Sentinel. We have good reason for promising that the Sentinel for 18S6 will be far more valuable than any previous yoltm of its entire year.

. Th case of Mrs. Grey, the Kew Ycxk bakery woman, is becoming national. It is . making her fortune. It is the caricature of 1be national folly, the boycott. The weapon ja literally a sword of dough in this case, t , St Weekly Sentinel for S5. j Man ted, 1,000 elnba of six Sentinels for S5.

-Host. V. C. Whitthorsi has been appointed by the Governor of Tennessee to suo . eed Howell E. Jackson as United States Senator. 1 His copies of the Weekly Sentinel for S5. '.Tai women of Iowa have seta good example. .In, a recent convention at Des 3ioines they adopted a resolution that 'Hereafter we will abstain from buying any plumage where the life of the bird is aacri- , .need to obtain the ornament." . i ' TKERr teems to' be some confirmation of the report that Agnes Herndon . is a relative of ex-President Arthur. A memorial window has been put Jn a Washington church by that gentleman "To the glory of God and the memory of Ellen Herndon Arthur," his wife. Exchange. "Herndon" ia .rood en ough. Ex-President Arthur'! hi!::rhi:, Csptaia K:rr.i;3,

commanded 'The Central America" when she went down in mid-ocean. He saw every man, woman and child aafely in the Life boats, and there not being room for hiin he took his stand on the wheel house, removed his hat, uttered a prayer and went down with his ship. If Miss Herndon is a relative of the hero, sne is, perhaps, prouder of it than any honor that might result from being related to the late President. We have secured the following nnasoal Indeed, most extraordinary, clubbing ax rangentents with the Cottage Hearth, one of the very heat of home and fireside monthly magazines: We will send the Weekly Sea tinel and Cottage Hearth both one year for SI. 75, only Z5 centa ;more than the price of the Cottage 11 earth alone. NATURAL, CHANGES. It is eaid that Chicago is threatened with a calamity that will more than balance all her advances beyond the growth of St. Louis and Cincinnati in "the progressive and continuous rise of Lake Michigan." More than one of our river cities have long been, and are still, secretly in dread of the natural changes of the current that carries their life and prosperity in its wholesome motion. Vicksburg may be left some miles inland by a cut across the bend on which it is located, which General Grant tried to U3e as a means of conquest prior to the siege that ended in Pemberton's surrender. New Orleans has been thought a not improbable victim of a shift of the Mississippi into Bayou Lafourche, or one of the narrow water lanes that drain off the occasional . enormous floods of the "Father of Waters," which would leave the city on a dry bed or a

shallow pond, as helpless as a country village left out of the Line of a new railroad. Chicago may be the victim of a change a little different in process, but quite as fatal in effect, as the change of the current ot the Mississippi to the cities living on its boundary. Such changes are not unknowo to 'savants, by any means. Not sudden and awful calamities like the earthquakes that sunk Lisbon away into the bowels of the earth, or dropped Callao and Kingston to the bottom of the harbors on which they depended and on whose shores their successors are built, or like the planetary convulsion that sunk the shores of Java aad raised new islands in the straits of .Simla, whem Krakatoa let loose the accumulated destructive force of years of volcanic aad seismic secretion away down in the recesses of the earth, but slow, progressive changes that never go backward, and aid one to another till the whole topography is made over and unrecornizahle. We have striking instances of th? little changes going on from year to year and generation to generation, in theca3eof Pompeii, which at the Christian era was a seaport, lying right on the Bay of Naples and carrying on marine commerce with the rat of the world. Now it is a mile inhtzd. ' The sea has shrunk or the land raised. For. 100 years it has been accurately noted that the water of the Gulf of Finland has been slowly rising, so that rocks on the shore that were once conspicuous are now nearly or wholly covered. Occasional rapid changes, not unlike tides, have been noticed in the waters of Lake Erie and other lakes. So there is nothing improbable in the suggestion that Lake Michigan may rise permanently far enough to cover the low grounds of its harbor, and there is not much of Chicago that would not be included in that description. It would not take a permanent rise of more than a few feet to cover the reclaimed swamp and sand bars of the city site with water, and change ''the 0,ueen City of the unsalted seas" into a sort of watery Palmyra, with cat fish and muscalonges sporting in the parlors of Wabash avenue, and timid boats tied up to chimneys and smoke stacks. And "Ichabod" would be written on the Court-House and the depots and the elevators, and what was left available of the former pride of the lakes become a muddy imitation of Venice. The Weekly Sentinel and the American Agriculturist for 82, only CO cents more than the price of the Agriculteriat. THE ANTITHESIS OF LABOR. We have heard of successful wars of "labor" against "capital," but we never heard of a successful war where the laborer attempted to fight capital and labor both. The attempt hau costt the organizations every defeat they have had. The trouble in " the Southwest began at Galveston on account of the. presence of some non-union men. They lost their case with the McCormick Keaper Company because Mr. McCormick would not agree to discharge seven non-union men out of a total of 1,400. We noted on Saturday morning no less than a dozen strikes for no other allegation than that . "scabs" were employed. We do not know how much of responsibility the officers of unions have in forcing these things, and it is not likely that they favor them, but it indicates that the unions do not exert the discipline they pretend they do, nor exert the conservatism they pretend they do, when so many of these things occur. It is in fact a mania for striking, like the smallpox or measles, for so few of the strikes have alleged any respectable grievance that it is becoming an open question how to govern organizations that can not govern themselves. ee what they ask! They ask t&a every workingman shall be ccmjxlki to join one of their orders. ' Often they do not even give him the poor consolation of allowing him to join their societies, but engage in a ruthless proscription against innocent men, against poor men men who are so poor and friendless that even "labor," the modern divinity, that presumes to ask the American people to entrust it with their, lives, with their property, with everything, attempts to drive them from their poor livings, and send them as outcasts upon the world, to starve. Why are men with justice eternally upon their lips, with a cry of oppression from a tyrannizing monopoly of capital; men who place themselves upon the pedestal of liberty as the exponent of all the virtues, and men who proclaim from the housetops that they and their cause is the last ex position of Christianity that is to carry us to a new and better world why do these men, bo many of them, proclaim the divine mission a lie by concentrating their energy upon the poorest of the poor, and attempt to snatch the last crust from the oppressed? We can not bat recall the time when the most powerful organization this world ever saw, and as powerful as ever will be, took those people who would not worship God and practice Christianity precisely as

this crsniz:Usa wished to have it practiced,

and tortured them with most ingenious and devilish malignity; established secret chambers of Inquisition that passed it3 secret judgment, drew their victims from their beds, applied the boot, the thumb screw, the rack, and consumed with slow fire. We lock upon these things as pertaining to an ge of uncivilized ferocity, and expected better ot the third quarter of the nineteenth century. Ferhaps the proscription may be a degree less ferocious, but only a degree. But it is the same spirit of devilish intolerauce, and practiced under the shield ot labor organizations who wage their war upon capital by a proscription and persecution of the poorest labor. We do not say, for we do not believe, that the common sense of labor organizations either advocates or extenuates this sort cf proscription, and it is this that the common sense in labor organizations must control, fo: the common sense in labor organizations if it fails to control will certainly leave them, and the organizations will fall from their own excesses under the crushing weight of public opinion, public safety in some inherent and intuitive perceptions of organic, real principles of liberty, that is beclouded by this labor nightmare, for it is a nightmare that is leading labor into the realms of visionary impossibilities; that in striking strikes blindly at everything; that is striking as madly at labor as at capital; that is striking blindly at itself; that is committing suicide. We speak plainly, and we speak to labor organizations as their friend, as we have the right to speak, after years of struggle with some of the things involved in this labor struggle We say what their best perceptions will bear us out in, that this mad proscription of labor upon labor must cease, and we hope it will cease from the good sense and thought of the organizations within themselves, and not that the nightmare be broken as other similar nightmares have been by a whiff of grape shot. For what protection society can not get from the law, what protection labor fails to afford by its own discipline and organization, will be exacted by force.

Earnest, active Democratic friends, yon can't secure the best ewspaper In Indiana easier than to take the subscriptions of five of your neighbors to the Weekly Sentinel. The tt3 will brine; yon a oplea. A CARDINAL POINT. The literature of the strike increases from day to day. Heading the letters of Messrs. Towderly and Gould by the light thrown on the suDject by the report of the interview between Mr.' Powdejly's committee and Mr. Gould, on March SO, it would appear that both were actuated in continuing the conflict until some law is enacted defining the powers and responsibilities of labor and capital corporations in their relations to each oilier, so that neither shall be wantonly disturbed, nor public business interrupted with strikes upon real or fancied grievances upon the part of the men, or by real or fancied grievances held by a railway corporation against the men. But whether all this diplomatic correspondence is intentional toward achieving this result or otherwise, events have brought this result to the surface, as the one piimarially occupying public attention, and a condition most necessary to be solved. Speculation upon the ultimate causes and effects involved in the present agitation is of no profit. The country has the monopoly of capital and the monopoly of labor, repre senting two pretty thorough unities, and there is no practicable way of removing either, although we have a multitude of empirical remedies proposed, through which the country may be relieved of both. There is no way whatever of the country ridding it self of the railroad or other powerful corpor ations, except by their absorption by gov ernment, and this is altogether impractica ble. There is no way whatever of the country ridding itself of powerful labor organizations except by a war of extermination, which, if tried, would leave the result in some doubt as to where the extermination would end ; this idea is also totally impracticable. There is a danger to the country in both, as they are arranged at present, wherein a few men of either may plunge the country into distress by an act tantamount to war. This danger makes it imperative that their relations shall,be established by lawin some way thatfwhere differences occur they can be settled through arbitration and through courts, which, while they may not possibly regulate every issue, would reduce the troubles to a minimum. In these postulates Mr. Powderly and Mr. Gould both agree.. It may be objected that this would require a legal expression that would compel an individual to work whether he wanted ta or not. But we doubt if the objection be relievant, because it would be overcome by the contract, or agreement, that the railroad and labor organizations might make, and when a union or a railroad company actually agree upon, 'say a scale of prices for a year, or more, and upon certain other regulations mutually necessary, it can not be objected as interference with individual rights if the law compel all the parties to it to stand by it. It is precisely what holds already and always has held between individuals, and it only needs that labor unions be held precisely in the same view that individuals and "legal corporations aie now held, to make the same hold good as between a labor union and a corporation, or as between a corporation and one of its contractors, in fact render the union able to make a contract, and legally responsible. One of the weaknesses of the present system of regarding the employment of labor a3 a matter separate and solely with individual laboring men, is .the poverty of the individual that shields him from liability of suit in case of default upon his contract or agreement He can not be held to it because he knows he is not responsible, and no suit would extort as damages what could not be levied on because it did not exist. An organization, as for instance the Knights of Labor, were it legally empowered to furnish a certain kind of labor for Mr. Gould - for a given time, and like every other contractor, were it required to give oond for the faithful performance of Its contract, precisely as would be required of any other contractor, the -whole question; Of relation between large railroad corporations and large labor organizations, -that only require legal recognition to also become corporations would be solved. It would simply be ex tending the principle of responsibility for acts committed so aa to include tha poorest citizen, instead of leaving him outside the

pale of law; for his poverty precludes him from bringing a suit against a railroad organization for real or fancied grievance, and ahields him from suit in cases where he is himself the cause of grievance or injustice. Neither are equitable. It may be urged that this is contrary to the "spirit of American institutions." It is a matter of some doubt just what these institutions are. Many will hold that they should be what our grandfathers intended them to be. But this is dreaming. Our institutions are precisely what they are. They have grown out of conditions we can neitaer control nor reverse. They must be taken as they are and so used and regulated as to result to the greatest possible general good.' It is of no use to clace a vision against an existing and powerful fact. The laboring man voluntarily surrenders his individual liberty (or a part of it) to his union, whom he empowers to act aa his agent. People surrender their possessions (or money) to a - corporation whom they empower to. act as their agent. They are alike, and should be treated alike. Both do this because they can achieve better results by so doing, or at least think they can, and when it i.i remembered that the labor organizations have thus grown in "spite of proscription, backsliding and some degree of social odium that ill-controlled acts of lawlessness have cast upon them, it seems io us it were time to recognize them as a living fact, and recognize them by law and control them by law, especially as that is exactly what they wish to have done. It is idle, as well as fatal, to refuse to recognize things so plain and so strikingly manifest. We may howl until doomsday against the horrors of monopoly, of trades unions, but we will not cure them. Both are so thoroughly entwined in the ramifications of our industries that they can only be destroyed by destroying the food that nourishes them industry through great aggregations of labor and capital the only way that industry can proceed at all in this age of vast enterprises, of steam and of mechanical powers. Gould and Powderly are fighting for the same thins.

Get five of your neighbor to take Sentlneand your own will be paid for. A MODERN DELIRIUM. Empiricism is the bane of the American mind. It is instilled in his school books, propounded in the philosophies, and crystalized in his politidal economies. It is filling the world with confusion by filling the world with men whom each seems to have distilled within his inner consciousness a sovereign remedy for ail human ills. The man who has not a ready-made remedy for a a cure of political or social evil is a rare phenomenon. With one it is land nationalization, with another it is labor organization; another presents military government and Osaiisrn, and another offers profit sharing. Many or most of the evils are imaginary, and all of the remedies are empirical, founded ratner upon what an individual mind conceives them to be rather than what they really may be. It is a habit now to see ev erything through a blue mist because to the individual who is surrounded with things he can not understand, never did understand, and never will understand, conceives that he dees understand the beginning and ultimate of the causes and results of the things that do not favorably impress him because they do not agree with what his imagination conceives should be. There is no knowledge so dangerous as iust that degree of it that misleads the mind with a conception that it knsws everything; that its judgment of things is clear, correct and , positive instead of being a reflection from within the mind upon the thing without that it judges, and therefore miscolors an insight that is positive it perceives the form, size and color of an object that may not and 'often does not have any real existence; or if it has it is totally different from what it is conceived to be. These ideas are abstract, to be sure, but that they are true may be seen by anyone who will examine the confusion that exists on all public questions. Two men, equally mentally equipped and equally earnest and honest, will look at the tariff, but will they see it the same? No; one will 6ce it a baleful, wasteful, wicked thing; the other will see it as beneficent, wise aadv godly. One hundred men will look at it and no two will quite axree on all its proportions, and each will formulate a different proposition for its' management. Take a labor ques-' tion, and it is much worse, as the imagination is more excited on it. To one it is a prodigious evil, fatal to the safety of the world. The other will have it that it is the salvation of the world, and tending to the millennium. The same is true of everything else, because it is true that no two people can look at anything from exactly the same point, and while the view as taken from a single point may be, and perhaps is true, it is only true of that point, and the confusion that may grow out from the conflict of vitws is as intense to the number who are viewing it, and the intensity with which they view it, and the degree of sensitiveness the mind may have imparted to it by education. Education has impart eJ to the mind extreme sensitiveness to impressions, but it has al33 indelibly etamped minds with empül cal ideas or visions not of actual things hut of imagined thirgs and these impressions discolor and distort the relations of all things upon which the mind attempts a judgment. The conception of a real thing may be individually correct, and the conception may be nearly enough in accord with the conceptions of another to be generally reconciled. Bat the mind filled with pictures drawn by Adam Smith, and the mind filled with pictures drawn by Hill or Prudbon, will at once seek comparisons with the one that has made the strongest impression, and it is not only possible but extremely probable that the original and fictitious impression may not prove stronger than the real view, especially as the original is a microcom of a whole, while the other is only a part of a whole; anyway it is certain to modify it. - ' ' ' ! - , As we see it there is too much of selfconsciousness in the .world ' for its own . good. Too ' mach indwelling and mental companion with pictures fictitious and unreal) and too much of . empirical formulation of ideas into realities. . The ed ucation Las gone just far enough to compare, but not far enough to arrive at a self knowledge that all knowledge relative, not posi tive; that things exist not as original enti ties, bat as reaction" from, an loyalty ot

forces ; in fact, has not learned to know tha t things are never what they seem to be, and o it zealously reconstructs a world out of tbe flimsy fabric of a vision. It is mental dyspepsia or delirium. Its effects are illustrated in this curious labor phenomena going on about ns. Everybody is just now evolving systems of political economy, in which the vision of the lion and the lamb lying down in peace is in the foreground, and paradise, peace, plenty and idleness are accessory. Everyone reads the political economy of empirics; few study the practical economy of man, of nature. Many glean from the fields of history, but few investigate. The nationalization of land is a present Utopia of man, not, perhaps, Utopia as a thing, but a Utopia as a picture. Few men who dream of this Utopia know what the Utopia is in fact. Invert the proposition that land belongs to the man, and you have as a practical realization man belonging to the land serfdom, slavery, as may be according to the vicissitudes of war or fortune. Times grow bad; something pinches; instantly comparisons with the visions of empirics begin, and, atraiehtway Utopia is evolved,"and so are moral and physical forces evolved to make Utopia fact. But Utopia, like other mirages, eludes the grasp and confusion results; man returns to his labors hungry but more contented, seeing that his visions depend upon his stomach and his stomach upon the production of his labors, and Utopia is never possible to man while he has a stomach. There be those contented spirits who with faith are content, leaving Utopia to the future when there be no longer environment of mind with stomach, and of such earthly things as potatoes. It would be well if less imagination were cultivated. Studies should be les3 intensive and more extensive, or in the plainest English, more respect should be accorded to old-fashioned, horse-sense, gained from acquaintance of the material things of the world, and less to the empiricisms of deep, but intensive and visionary thinkers, otherwise known as political economists, of whom Napoleon said, would tear to pieces a State were it built of adamant.

Six Weekly Sentinels for 5. Friesds Give as 1,000 of these neat little clubs wilhht the next thirty days. THE HINGE OF THE CASE, l.r. Powderly's appeal to the Order, of nhich he is a wise and hone3t leader, to contribute money for "the support of the men in the fight against the Gould system," show3 the hinge upon which the whole contest turns, and deserves a little serious reflection by both those who approve the siriice and those who dou't. "No matter," it says, "whether they (the strikers) acted wisely or not, they should now have the sympathy of the Order, and that which is more sub stantial than sympathy, dollars." No one need deny to the Order the duty of sympathy and help, to maintain consistently and justly that the strikers should end the contest at once, should have done it long agor and, in fact, never should have begun iL Mr. Powderly, in the expressive slang of the day, "git es them away" in the qualification, of his appeal, "no matter whether they acted wiselv or not." It matters a great deal to the country whether a large portion of its business is halted and damaged to indulge a freak or righteous purpose of those who cause it. In the first place, the obvious duty of the men is to go to work, or let others do it, and end the mischief they have inflicted on thousands who have had no more to do with their provocation, real or fancied, than the Pilgrims on the Mayflower. The contest has been unwise, as Mr. Powderly virtually admits, and as it started it must continue. It can't change to wisdom and righteousness, as it goes on under unchanged conditions. The clear course for the Order and it3 leaders now is, while giving the strikers the help against suffering, to advise them to give up the unwise struggle, go to work or make no distinction to those who will, and fight Gould and his fraud-built monopoly in the courts, as Mr. Powderly- proposes. We don't suppose that any man in America, who has not an interest in Gould's speculations and peculations,feels the least sympathy with him, o? would if the strike ruined him and sent him back to peddling maps and mousetraps. His vast fortune is the work of villainies, but for all that he has the advantage in this unwisely begun conflict, and the remedy is to deprive him of it, by ending the conflict, in the present form, and renewing it-in the courts, as Mr. Towderly proposes. The sympathies of the public are with the strikeis against Gould and Hoxie and their coterie of "stock-waterers" and "road-wreckers," br;t that does not obscure the general perception of the fact that the strike began unwisely and goes on so. Fraxck is surrounded with many dangers, mostly growing out of the hostility, of the three Emperors to Republican France. Bismarck has made a threat to dismember Savoy and Nice and give it to Italy.as the price of her alliance. France and England are practically the only nations of Europe representing "individualism and democratic institutions. and it is upon them that will fall the weight of the three communistic nations of Central and Eastern Europe, and in which we will certainly become involved. England, France and the United States are the three great powers representing ideas that tha balance of Europe will engage. The conflict on the line of this idea is inevitable, although it may be somewhat removed in point of time. Just now democratic institutions In England and America are undergoing considerable strain, and the question of permanancy of society and orderly government will be better known a couple of years bence. The recent ebulition of popular sentiment in Germany, and the growth of the democratic idea there will render a war of repression by the Holy Alliance somewhat doubtful to the three Kaizers who, in a war with France, would lock all Europe in a solidarity of communal despotism. The longest pole knocks the persimmons, and Bigeiow'a Positive Cure knocks t all coughs, colds, croup, hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma, influenza and consumption. Pleasant lor children. Safe and speedy. 50 cents Je the eigbV-liour question were kept separate from the wages question it would be practicable and in most cases easy of success. It It be attempted to so J re both at onca it will be physically Impossible, and will certainly fail. The necessity for this separation does not seem to be perceived by many labor organizations, who seem determined to at-

both, and breaking themselves to pieces in the bargain. The sub ject is one more for discussion., in order to educate, rather than a thing to be had for the af-king. It requires a law as well as concurrence of labor aad capital, to bring it about. This will require time and much patience, and we would have more faith in the ability of labor to solve a problem and carry out a programme if they had more of this indispensable article and were not so quick on the trigger. The cholera epidemic has appeared in Europe, and will undoubtedly make an appearance In this country this season unless every precaution is taken to keep it down. Cleanliness of house and street are es3ential. With the virulence it had in Western Europe last season it is altogether likely that we shall not go free. It marches' as it always has, steadily westward, partakinj somewhat of force from curious and unknown conditions of the atmosphere. Hox. David S. Goodixg was nominated last Saturday as representative to the next Legislature bv his fellow lemocrafa of Hancock County by a majority of C71. II was first elected to the same position thirty-eight yeais ago. The Sentinel and the Farm Walde for 1.?5.

A Dakota man who was running for the magistracy announced that if elected he would charge only $1 for marrying any couple, and would wait until there was a "christening" for his payment He left the rival candidate in the shade. The Chicago Times well says: In view of the early probability of chanc. in the Obinet occasioned by the failure of Sec retary Manning's health and the M-andal an'ectias; Attorney General Garland, President Cleveland should, as Captain Ed"ard Cuttle would ainse, overhaul his map of the I'nited States, aud thereby he might discover that there are other States than New York and those commoaly designated as .Southern. West of the Allegheny Mountains there are great states of whica tie President has shown little knowledge hitherlo; and in some of these Mates are men w'ioatlie whole Nation (outside of the White House) kuows for bouest and far-seeiosr statesmen. The eo"titry would be greatly pleased to see some plain Western men of common tense, HWe Thurman aal Mcl'onald, tating the places in the CaMuet of suih men a Bayard, Garland and Whituey. with tbeir blundering, questionable stock iavestmens and extrarasance. Send In tbe clnbs of six Sentinels for S3. Mnrderers Lynched. Anthony, Ks., April 11. This morning the city of Anthony was the scene of a most tragic affair. About two monthe ago a a bt occurred in the village of Danville, near this place, between two brothers, named Weaver, and a man named Abel Shearer. The latter was fatally wounded, and the Weaver boys were arretted and hurried away to avoid mob violence. Last week they were returned for trial, but their cases were continued for the term with bail fixed at $10,000 each. At 1 o'clock this morning a mob of forty or more armed men surrounded the residence of the Sherifl where the prisoners were under guard. The guard hearing them, rushed the prisoners out of the back door and into the ba--ment of the new school building. The Sherifl" was taken prisoner by the mob and guarded. The deputies, finding it useless to resist, surrendered. The Weaver brothers defended themselves, in their strugi'.e for life, with a revolver, which they had taken from one of the deputies. They were finally overpowered by the mob and disarmed. Hopes were placed about their necks and preparations was made to hang them to the rafters, but the trample of approaching feet frightened the mob, so they fired fifteen or twenty shots into each man, literally shooting them to pieces, and mountin? their horses rode rapidly away. The mother of the boys, and the wife of one of them, witnessed the entire tragedy. Fears of Cholera. Chicago,. April 10. A dispatch from Cleveland, O., says: Many residents of this city are much alarmed over the appearance-for Eeveral months past of a thick blueish fog, which appears to issue froia the earth. Its presence is regarded by persons conversant with its previous appearance .here as ommions of an approaching epidemic of cholera. It is a singular fact, cited by those who went through the cholera plagues of and earlier years, that this same blueish fog has always preceded an outbreak of the d leaded scourge, and that it has not been seen in this city until this week since the last cholera epidemic. Scientists here, whose attentions have been called to the tact, believe the conditions favorable to the creation of this fog are favorable to the spread of cholera contagion. Dead Bodies Found. ' Chicago, 111., April 19. The people of Lemont, 111., and vicinity were greatly excited this morning by a horrible sensation.' It consisted in the finding of the bodies of two women in a quarry pool near Sag Bridge, which is about three miles from Lemont. But meager details were received in the city this morning concerning the afl'air. All that could be learned was that one of the women was a Mrs. Flynn and the other an old woman who had" been visiting her. The two women disappeared from the home of Mrs. Flynn two weeks ago and nothing more was heard of them until their bodies were found as described. . A Farmer Boy Misatng. Frank Wilson, son of A. B. Wilson, residing at London, Shelby County, disappeared from home on Friday last, and his parents are very uneasy about him. Ke is thirteen vears of age. wore dark clothe with soft black hat, and has blue eyes and lizht hair. Any information of the missing lad will be gladly received by the father at the address given. The matter of prohibition which has been so hotly carried on in Charleston, W. Va., during the past week, resulted yesterday afternoon in the County Commissioner refusing to grant licenses. The saloon men say they will sell, let come what may. The Prohibition party say they will do all in their power to prosecute those who sell. There arrived this morning at New York City, on the steamer Arizona, an Irish harp. It is several hundred years old, and was the last instrument played before the Irish King. It is intended tor exhibition at an Irish concert to be soon riven in this city.for the benefit of the Parnell fund. The instrument is valued at 1,000. One hundred doses $1 is inseparably connected with Hood's Sarsaparilla, aud is tru of no other medicine. A bottle of Hold's Sarfaparilla contains 100 doses, and will last a month, while others will averag to last not over a week. Use only Hood's Hanaparilla. ,' 1 "Bulldog" Kelly, accused of a murdar in the northwestern territory, was released from' confinement 'at St.' Paul yesterday mornirg upon papers received from Wash-' inton, after a confinement of nearly half a year. ' . , 1 ' . , m 1 1 Cough preparations are used in every household, and hence the necessity for a Sure and safe remedy. Bed Star Cough Care, ie new medical discovery, caatains neither morphia nor opino, and chemists, phrsl fX-,zj tzi Iiti'A Eyfld iaiarc i 25 ctnts,

Hemorrhages. , Lo or froui arycl. 9 is spestly cx Sores, Ulcers, Vound SDrains and Reuses. troiioa nil stopped. uiio ana dk It U cooling cleaavnz and IleaU. 1 fo fo nyV " no-t efficac-cni for ra. a dis UaUXI i lit ew.Cold in tha Head. Ae. Oar "Catarrh Cum is aperi v prepared to met serious cat. Oir I ' . aal h ringe U euaple and ineipeoaiTa. Rheumatism, Neuralgia. No oUi- preparation Tiaa curJ mww cajesof these ditreincomp!aiiiH Uia the Extract. Oar Planter ü la abla lt these deuet, Lumbago, Fatu as Back or bida. &c. Diphtheria & Sore Throat, Piles EIIn4, niesding cr Itrhlnc.lt . curing wnan o'Jiir medicines hare fadi Our Ointment is of great service wtiera the raoioral ot dathinj is inconveaieni. . For Broken Breast and Sore Hippies, tued The Extract will n?Ter ba without It Our Ointment ia Cm bos; emoUiaal luai caa De appjA Female Complaints. Ia; thei Joruy ot fmale diseases tha Extract can be nwL : . 1 1 . I . . .7- " a weu ir'wb. :iu tae greatest oeaHu Villi dxroctfoim accompany eich botUa. CAUTION. Pond's Extract. 5S SPSS: tha worda Psnd't Extract Uowa ia the glajM. and o-ir plctun trade-mark on , aurrouncLiz b'i? w rapper. Is'onct oUier 19 . Suiiina AlwaTS iiWst on having Prad4 : Extract. T-iie no other pre;roa. A it never toiit in bulk, or by ne uure. Sold everywhere, Price, 50c, $1, fLTSt Prepare only by POST'S EXTB1CT CO., 1EW TOSS AiTD LOrtas. LL TORPID BOWELS, i DISORDERED LIVER, and ?V; A LA HI A. rrn tueae sources aridt three-fourths Of? ' Um lueajej of V-9 Ltiua race. The) symptoms indicate their eiiteH-e : Loss 4 Appetite, Uo ccatirr. feick Haast ache, fulluoi after eat fur;, avmlMts xsrtion of body or sniitd, Erartetteaa. of food, Irritability of temper, EOT spirits, A feeling of having net;leet4 one diu, ÄMzxitte), Flattering- at tttm Heart, lHts be tor tlte eyes, liluly cl ored Trine, to:TI PATIOS, and demand the use cf a vrely that acts flirfTtly ontbeLiyer. AsaLircr rneiicine TDTTfi PILES hare no yu.il. Tlieir act ion 00 tttm Kidneys and tiltin lia: .0 piompt; removing all tmnari'ies throia t..es three M(cat engere of the system, prolncingf app tite, sound difrestior:, rriraltir ftools, a ciear eJan aad a -rigorous bod v. TrTTS PIEE (ose no nausea cr piipirur nor interfara With daily wori an J are a perfect , ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. Cold pvtrr tyra. tic CO.-e. i V'.mj atnwt, Ti. f. ..COSSTOPTXOU CAU EE MAUL V V tssWVJfJ mm t. n.tti. m n AT t a f"OTT. "uUre3 UOuKuS,VUlU3, x ucuiiiu"ivv-' Bumption. Bronchial Difficulties. Bronchitis, Hoarseness, .Asthma, Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, ana aa Diseases of the Breathing Organs. It soothes and heals the Membrane of the Luns, is.Sam.ed and poisoned by the disease, and prevents the night sweats and. the tightness across tha chest -whica accompany it, CON- . SUMPTION 13 not an incurable malady. HALL'S BALSAM will cure you. even thougn -professional aid tails. For sale by all Druggists. 22T P. ESITST k CO., Nst Ysri. lyWrite for Illuminated Book. V I 3 fiED gLOVEK YpniC la tbe best xnown remedy tor all blond d'nea ctomach and lirer troubles, pimples, eotivenf, b4 breath, piles, airae aad malarial disease, iniliirrvtion, loss ot appetiie, low pirits. headache, aod all eases ottba kidney,. Price Wceuta,ot aU dca?pu. Chas. M. CoKTfo. rua. lo-a. ty: -I ctwerfuit feoommeal Kbl CUOVkR TONIC Cor aMck tn4rs od lirer comiUaiot. 1 am now oa my aeoao4 boctlc. a4 e aukes ate feel lu W mum," F)R SALE Texas Ranches and Lasda One of -8,040 acres ienced. cedar posts, ranch house, took pea: several spriwrs afford abundant water; excellant natural promotion; nesr school, store, mill and Postoffice: daily müh Anotoer ot &,na acres, in alwut all respects simllanly improved and advantaged, both well set with grass, and tew it any in North Texas in all respects better or ; more desirable. Price. 6 per acre, one-third or mo?e cash : balance, notes at buyer's option oa or before one. two or three years. Stock thereon for sale if desired. Also, many -JO and 6l9 acre tracts suited for farms and eraring purposes. A 1d'essorapplv to H 8. GRAHAM, Graham. Yonnf County. Texas. Daily stage from Weataertor J oa Texaf, and Pacific Rail war. . 14 The Louisville Postoffice Blatter. . LonsviLi.E, April 10. In responx to a call of Thomas Sherley and others, who actively interested themselves In the appointment of Mrs. Virginia Thompson, and a an offset to the mammoth Democratic indignation meetine. which on Saturday nicht cot- ; demned tbeaction of Congressman Wi'.Iisa forcing a Republican Postmaster on Looiv -ville, tnere were about 1,500 person of a' parties, about one-half being spectators, who came oat of curiosity, only about 30J or 4 K taking an active part. Tuere was an atsence of enthusiasm, which characterized Saturday's meeting. I. M. Atherton pnesided, and addressee were made by Messrs. Thomas Sherley, Harry Weisringer, J. M. . Atherton. C. E. &?ars and Andy BaraetL devolutions approving the action of Mr. Willis and the appointment ol Mrs. Thoaipson were adoptl. The City Council of Montreal yesterday appointed a ?p?cial committee to alleriat) the distress caused by the floods. The Fir.asce Committee of the Council will hold a ; racial meeting to take fcWs to borrow $t,- , (!i.(HK. to be used in raising the level of the low-ljirjg districts of the city, and in enlar$- i irg the present revetmeat wall. Jdiii Carpenter, oi New York, wao, mardereJ Lis wife in a Thiri avenue saloon at the comer of Twenty-sixth treet, two years ao, and who has been rorifind In the Tombs under rentence ot death yesterJiy morning killed himself in his cell by cutting open his jugular vein. At Mueller, Wathcn fc Roberta' dlstijlorr. Iehsnon, Ky., yesterdsy, Jim Taylor, the fireman, while left in charjre, turned water into a red-hot boiler, producing an ei pi asion. Taylor was faUUy scalded, and Joha Whee ley, aaLrtaat, severely inj ored.

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