Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 15, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1886 — Page 4

THE INDIANA BTATB BENTINEL. WEDNESDAY, MAT 12, 1880.

A LITTLE SUFFERER Cleansed, Purified and Beautified by the Cuticura Remedies.

It affords me pleasure to give von this report of the cure of our little graudchild by your Cuticura I'.ernedies. When six months old his left hand lxctm to well, and had every anpearance of a large boil. We poulticed it. but all u no purpose. About five moutns after it became a runii il? sore. Soon other sores formed. He then had. two of them on each hnnd. and as his blood l(me mors tml more impure it toot less time lor them to break out. A sore came oa his chin, tneath the under lip, which was very offeusive. His bead w as one solid sci', discharging a great deal. This was his condition at twenty-two months old. when I undertook the care of him, his uiotner having died when be was ft little more than a year old, of consumption (scrofula of course, lie could walk a little, but could not Ret up if he fell down, and could liot move wben in Ud, having no use of his hands. I immediately commeuced with the Cuticura Remedies, using the Cuiicura and Cuticura Soap freely, and when he had taken one bottle of the Cuticura Resolvent, his head was completely cured, and he was improved in every way. We were very much encouraged, and continued the use ot the Remedies for a year and a half. One sore alter another healed, a bony matter forming in each one ot these five deep ones just before healing:, which would finally grow loose and were taken out; then they would heal rapidiy. One of these ugly ooue formations I preserved. After taking a dozen and a half bottles he was completely cured, and ia now. at the age of f,ix years, a strong and healthy child. The tears on his hands must always remain: his hands are strong, though we once feared be would never be able to use them. All that physicians did for him did him no good. Ail who saw the child before using the Cuticura Remedies and see the child now, consider it a wonderful cure. If the above facts are of any v.se to jou. you are at libertv to use them. MRS. E. a. DUltiGS. May 9. 1SS5. CI 2 E. Clay fct., Bloomington, 111. The child was really in a worse condition than lie apicared to his grandmother, who. being with him every day, became accustomed to the disease. MAUUIEIIOPIINU. Cutictira Remedies are sold everywhere. Cuticura. the grcakin Cure. .r0 cts.: Cuticura Soap, an exjni.-ite Skin Beautifier. 2.". cts.: Cuticura Resolvent, the new Wood Purifier. $1.00. Preprred by the I'otier Drug and Chemiaal Co., Boston. Send for 'Ilow to Cure SUiii Disease." T '-p-"rTlX;, Sealy, Pimply and Oily Skin, BACK ACHE. WK.1KNKSS. Uter- :? tne 1'ains. Soreness and Lameness J speedily cured by that new, original. . t'lCBUl IUU lUIHIUUIt UIHKIOIB to (aiu Hud inflammation, the Ci ticlka Anti1'ais Plastkr. At Druggists. 25c. WEDNESDAY, MAY 12. TERMS PEK TEAK. Single Copy, without Prem i um tl 00 Clubs of six for 5 00 We ask Democrats to bear In mind and select their own Statu paper when they come to take iwbscriptions and make tip clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. TO OUR P1TR0SSÄSD FRIENDS: We never weary in trying to attract and please our subscribers. We now have 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 say Of it. We would not agree to present this machine to our friends, until after weph 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 I22 we will pack and ship the machine and send a copy of the- Weekly Sentinel for one year. For $2 1 we will send the machine to any present subscriber whose name is on our books. Nene ot these machines are for sale by agents. See advertisement. Send all orders to SENTINEL, CO., Indianapolis, Ind. "'!;.e of the linest 'the Chicago police f...ce. The ba:e ball industry ia the only one per ceptible tbat is not paralyzed with strikers. Theke are signs that the mugwump craze is over, and that a Democratic President will assume his place at the head of the Demo cratic party. It looks now as if Mr. Stockslaer would Tr ve the nomination for Congress in the xd District over the present incumbent, 1 .uO. Jonas Howard. A vzomszsr New York Republican paper savs: "It is in the air, and Blaine will run for President next time as surely as the next National Convention comes around." Desperate diseases require desperate reme dies, and the Chicago aflliciions can be more completely extirpated, if not already so, by a ftitral pursuit by the people organized as i ;,T.ce committees. We are opposed, up,,., general principles, to any extension of i iwtr beyond the letter of the law, but the in hand requires extirpation first and . . I construction afterward. :.nr( e has determined upon war, and now it will immediately be seen whether she is !ajii 4 policy or ia the advance guard of a toa!: jn of Powers behind her. Her action may l ave been prearranged as a method whertby she can make a display oi lorce in order that "he may make a dignified retreat, or it may be a prearrangement of a coalition that is secretly supporting her. If the latter, ourcrnntry may get ready with that wheat of wl .ca we are likely to have half a crop to V cither the ouiet in Chicairo is a settling C(j .ralullin the storm, Is being dis cus;... i.y her police. Chicago is in some of lerr - rictsatvpeof an European city. A j eiM . ii.ay spend hours among people whose Jar.-. je. customs and habits are strangers to Au ; ia. Whether the Anarchists are ramirkef uuoushoat this alien population or w ht:I. er they were merely a telf appointed ( remittee of blatherskites, will have much to do with th? outcome. Europe has taught ti the danger of a secret feud, and it anarch i ii in any way widespread in Chicago's

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c"Ediarism and other deviltry carried on with s'ealtby secrecy, in a way usual in European cities, whom we have drained of the scum. The Union City Eagle states that the town lections throught Indiana indicate Republican victory this fall, and congratulates its party on the favorable outlook. Union City has heretofore been electing Ilepublican tickets by a majority of about l.'O, but at the last city election the candidate for Mayor was elected by only four votes. The township, which has had a majority of 200, elected the Republican Trustee by only thirty-five majority. If the Eagle thinks that such things as these indicate Republican victory we must concede that it is easily pleased. GENERALLY COOLING DOWN. There are evident signs of an early restoration of the status quo ante in the matter of strikes. Organized labor is settling rapidly down, and the agitation is now nearly alto

gether confined to unorganized labor that has become affected by the belligerent verb. Trades unions and Krjghta seem to be engaged now in lulling the disturbance, for there is scarcely a strike now "on" that is ot their making. Confined to the unorganized classes, a few days more will see the beginning of the end; for it is formless and aimless, notwithstanding that the closing days are the worst. Asa whole, taking the enormous magnitude of the disturbance, there has been little destructive lawlessness1, and once settled down, we think it will be long before another "war of such magnitude will be muagurated, unless, indeed, it be inaugurated by capital with intent to destroy organization among laboring classes, which, we believe, with all the r mistakes, are in the direction of order rather than disorder. This has been well proven by the stability of the older organ izations, as the Locomotive Brotherhoods of Firemen and Engineers, by the Amalga mated Iron and Steel Workers, printers, and a host of others, whose conservative influence alone has prevented the disorder from complete anarchy. The Knights are a young organization, with many insubordinate ele ments. But they have learned a thing or two, as the others mentioned ahove have learned by experience. To our mind it is the evident policy ot both the people and of the law to surround them with responsibilities and assist them to erect stronger safe guard rather than to wage a war of exter mination upon them, that would at once violate their rights and reduce them to outlawry. It will be found that as they get really strong and under better control of their rules and leaders, that they will grow more conservative, and become a bulwark against disorder of the Chicago type, which they, and they alone, can exterminate. With such examples as the one at Chicago, there is danger of hasty, indiscriminate action. Yet such times should inspire cool ness and courage, rather than panic. The necessity oi some new laws for the protection of society is apparent. But these laws must recognize existing things, and endeavor to extract the best result with the least possible friction, and among them, and the principal, we believe, a law compelling trades or ganizations to incorporate will remove more cause of discontent and injustice than any single thing that could be done, as a paliative, to the fundamental disease of the tariff. OSTRACISM. The boycott is no new thing. It was a favorite method among the Athenians of the pre-Macedonian era. It means "to put a person outside the pale of the society, high and low. amid which he lives and on which he depends; socially to outlaw him, to haye no dealings of any kind with him." Bat this is a punishment so severe as only to have been meted out by law, and as a punishment for real or imagined treason or other serious crime. To use such a weapon upon pretences trivial and upon every imagined occasion lias been reserved for the people of the United States. That the Irish used it is well known, but the Irish occasion was a deep rooted national struggle, infinitely great and infinitely hopeless compared with even the worst cases of oppression in this country, and not comparable at all with the great number that have been applied by trades organizations and even some employers this spribg. There i." no sense in asking if the American people will permit this thing as a permanent institution. To accept it would put every man at the mercy of any half-dozen Individuals who might choose to combine against him and revolt, in the bravo system of Venice. It would put many workingmen at the mercy cf any employer who would choose to make their situations depend upon the adoption of his ideas, and it is a despot ism that to be admitted as a part of our social habit would be more intense than that of a Russian suspect under police surveil lance, for at least in that case one would know what was required of him. Ameiican workingmen were not the first to use this means of ruining er coercing an antagonist. Various corporations and em ployers first resorted to it either to coerce labor or to ruin a competition, but American workingmen have carried it to that extreme as to have virtually exposed its infamous injustice and tyranny, and bring it into such disrepute that it is evident will destroy its Influence in the future. It has not been used to redress a wrong once where it has been used to revenge a spite a dozen times. Men suddenly find themselves involved in a "war" with their employers because there may have been a few people in an establishment whose opinions did not exactly correspond with those who set the opinions of a labor organization. And men have suddenly found themselves thrown cut of employment for exercising their American privilege of belonging to this or that organization. This does not consider tangible business questions that arise between employer and employed, for It is not a business question, but a mental and moral tyranny that would place the liberty and safety of every man at the mercy of any person or faction that could exert force sufficient to exert an ostracism. The decision of Judge Pickett of New Haven, Conn., delivers an opinion "that all confederacies whatsoever to prejudice a third party are highly criminal under the common law as administered in this -Ftate.J The Court, therefore, finds that the threat 'to boycott' as qualified in the complaint is a threat to do an illegal act well calculated to intimidate, and that the same is sufficiently stated and set forth in the first count of the

the acts done, and set forth in the second count, were illegal acts calculated to intimidate, and that the same are sufficiently stated and set forth." Were this ruling to become accepted as a guiding principle of law it would be as effectual against a cons-piracy of employes, or an ostracism by a single employer as against the ostracism by an organization of labor, of other laborers, or of an attempt to ruin the business of an employer, or of an attempt to so arrange circumstances as to compel men to go in ways contrary to their will or judgment. The sooner organized labor frees itself from the old traditions inherent in individual weakness the tooner it will succeed in reaching the plane of liberty which it seeks reach. The resort to force is one of those traditions that American institutions deny to organization, because organization can accomplish all by the ballot it could possibly do by force. The very idea of a Republican form of government is to create opportunity for changes ot laws whenever those laws are, or appear to be, inimical to the interests of the people. The minority that appeals to force will get beaten, and so will the minority by ballot be beaten. The minority by boycott will be beaten by the operation of the same law whenever the perceptions of the majority are aroused to its injustice, and which the reckless and destructive use of the boycott this season has accomplished. What better remedy could an organizatien with the members of the Knights of Labor ask than that which their members, and influence ou legislation afford? That many of them, the moment a sign of opposition to their ideas appears, resort to measures of destruction, while ignoring both justice, and an ability to achieve a better result through the ballott, indicates that they have not begun to understand the true and legitimate value of organization, nor understand the moral equities of individual liberty; both of which they will learn faster aa that two-edged sword, the boycott, is directed against them ilr. Whitley, of Springfield is exactly in tin same category aa Mr. Irons, and both have demonstrated more the worthlessness and in fact danger of the boycott than all that could be written against it in a dozen years.

HOW ARE YOU TO DO IT? An esteemed morning contemporary thinks that the importation of the European sewage, from which grows the disturbing influences of the present crisis, should be at once and completely prohibited. The Anarchists and Nihilists should find no refuge here. This is all very well, and we say amen to it. But how are we going to do it? That is the question, and it is a question that does not seem to have occurred to the attention of our amiable content porary, deeply absorbed as it is ia the investigation of Anarchist disturbances. "If to do were as easy as to know what 'twere good to do, chapels had been churches, and poor men's cottages rich men's palaces." says "Portia" with the wisdom of her tex and her subsequent judgeship combined. "The know how,." as the China man said, "is the biggest part of the cause of cost in most cases. It is easy to stop the importation of labor by big monopolies, and that should be done at once. But these leaders of mischief, the Mösts and Spiescs and Schwabs, are never of the herd of "dumb driven cattle" that labor importers bring here to take the place of intelligent and respectable citizens. They come with money in their pockets, and never work. How are they to be excluded? Suppose Congress enacts, and every sea-boari State co-operates, that no Anarchists or Nihilists or Socialists shall be permitted to land here, and that every ship bringing them snail be fined $1,000 a head, what good will it all do?" The Mösts and their kind are not likely to be foiled in their purpaee to come here to make' mischief by an unwary admission of their character. They are taken before an examining board at Castle Garden, we will say, and searched, after a most rigid examination under oath, for any papers that mayjdisclose their charac ter or purposes. What will it all amount to with the only men that it is worth while to keep out of the country? The herd is nothing if it Is not set wrong and kept wrong by such fellows as Spies and Parsons. If it does not become pauperized and a burthen on general industry, it is doing as well as could be expected. If it does, it is doing no worse than might be expected. 'When it does worse the editors and orators who fired the Anarchist mobs in Chicago and Milwaukee are the injurious agencies. How will a Castle Garden examination stop them from coming here? They can easily destroy all incriminating papers before landing. Tbey can easily deceive the agencies of shipping companies before starting. They can easily lie about their names, business and condition. An examination will do no more good than a cold bath toward providing the means of discriminating between these scoundrels and decent immigrants. There is just one coarse that can succeed fully In excluding this class of villains. That is to prohibit all immigration whatever; build a wall along the Atlantic seaboard tbat no man can pass this way. We are not ready for that Honest, industrious, self supporting immigration is litte less desirable now than ever. What is to be done with them? we ask again. We don't know. The case passes our abilities to deal with it Ii our contemporary had not had its respecta ble head so close to the ground, investigating the malignity and mischief of Anarchist troubles, it would hardly have suggested the exclusion of that sort of immigration with out suggesting the way to do it When it looks Into the matter again, with its head end and the other more nearly on a level, it will see things with a rather wider view. FOLLIES OF SIX WISE MEN. An amusing story ia told of the celebrated orator and dramatist Richard Bnnsley Sheridan, and his ridiculous lack of re sources in the simplest emergencies. He had hired a residence, the front gate of which was tied with a rope. He couldn't untie It, and climbed the fence whenever he went out or in. A friend called one day and Sheridan told him to "ciimb the fence." "Why not open the gate?" "I can't; it is tied, and I can't untie It" "Cut the string," was the eve-openine answer. It was done, and as the friend entered Sheridan kicked the eate of! the hinges and begged to be "kicked in the same way." There are two or three other stories of the ludicrous lack of common

fcce Ui great gtoiuatt U m Uüj and

probably rno-e familiar. Sir Isaac Newton cut a big holt, und a little one through his doer to let a big cat and a little get through

without troubling him to open it Coleridge and Wordsworth once drove together to a country inn for dinner. When they came to hitching up their horse for a return the hostler not being about they could not get the collar over the horse's head. The upper end of it was toe narrow to be forced Over so large an obstruction. The bar maid watched their futile efforts with an amused smile till they saw her and asked "rnat she was laughing at." "To think that two wise men don't know enough to turn a horse's collar upside down to get it over his head," was the instructive but humiliating answer. Another wise man wanted to carry a coal of fire a little way and had no tongs or chovel. How to compass the difficulty he did not know, though he could have calculated an eclipse or argued the law of "contingent remainders." A boy filled the hollow of his hand with ashes and carried the coal as easily as- he could a pebble. Still another philosopher was still more puzzled by a still simpler mystery. Some wag had drawn a calf's tail through an auger hole in the sign post of an inn and tied it there. The wiae man wondered "how that calf had got through the auger hole." RAMPANT NIHIUSM. The disturbances at Chicago andMiiwaaee were more than a riot, they were the most dis race'ul things that ever have happened on this side of the Atlantic. It has not a single justification for existence. It is pure Nihilism, that knows nothing, wants nothing, sees nothing but death and destruction. It has no plan, no aim, no shape, but merely is a tigerish instinct for blood, by the scum of the earth, that has gathered from everywhere through the proscription of foreign Governments, and the greed of a few, who In considering the important' relation of em ployer and employed, considered only the single item, cheapness. But as it considers nothing, so it should receive no consideration. It can not be ar gued with and should not be temporized with, but it should be destroyed with the tume relentless extirpation that is its own and only characteristic. In the epidemic of strikes that ha3 covered the country, there has upon the whole been shown cieat moderation, and the results have been to. a very higü decree free from friction or unjust discrimination by both the capital and labor side of the controversy. But this movement, this riff raff, has no connection with any question of privilege, or wages, or hours, or economy, or any American living question, but is the creation of foreigners, by feceigners, for foreigners whose views, inculcated by institutions foreign to America, and only ex isting in countries long used to subjugation and conquest, comes to the front with the first occasion that from any cause agitates the public mind, and it should be extirpated, root and branch, because it menaces everything that ' labor'' and "capital" find necessary for each other's existence. It has no programme, no inspiring principle, no mission. It is nothing Nihilism pure and simple and requires no consideration, except to destroy. These things would not have occurred ha 1 there been less temporizing. The moment any man or set of men go beyond the law, that moment should vindicate the law, and, if necessary, tue entire poweof the State or Government should be invoked to maintain t. It is a consideration for labor that labor does not and has not claimed of its own account Labor organizations have a mission of their own, and they are farmed to accomplish it within the law, perhaps to change the law, but it is the antithesis of labor or ganizations or any organization to proceed to force that ii proven to ne, in this case, unor ganized loreigi ers preparing for anarcny. The sewers of Europe have emptied out their foulness upon this fair land until it reeks. How Jong must imbecility proclaim its reign of impotence? How long must sily sentiment point with mistaken pride to the lie that this land is a refuge for the oppressed of all nations? It has been, but can be so no- longer. Warnings have been given without end, but they were given by despised labor organizations w ho were held too insignificant for notice. For years memorial after memorial has gone to Congress praying for some protection from "the pauper labor of Europe," never to be heard of, while gred, that destroyed the livings and prosperity of American citizens, sees itself menaced with destractica by the very foulness of its own conception. There are sins that bring their own retribution, and if blood is rioting in Chica and Mil waukee gutters it is in payment foi the spirit of dollarism that has blighted the moral sense of this whole country, rich and poor alike, and turned it into a hcuse of prosti tution and a den of thieves-of all degrees, high and low. If this people were to paj the penalty of all their crimes, where would the retribution end? As they certainly will be paid unless we can turn suddenly anü completely ia the career of gambling in human souls, it is cur Lope that this painful, Orisgraeeful episode in our history will be tho turning point, for surely the handwriting on the wall need be no plainer. At times of excitement like the present there is a proneness to regard thvxigs with distress and fear. The disgracefal occurrences at Chicago and Milwaukee should not be allowed to become confounded with the great questions that have in a sense raised the spectre of the red flag. There is no connection except that of induced excitement and the cause of the people is as strong and vital as ever. It will require patience among other virtues, for the causes of labor discontent are deep and widespread, and so is the necessit' for relief clear and urgent The depth of the trouble requires the greatest calmness of discussion, for the remedies required must be broad and fundamental, and in the direction of a broader, higher civilization than backward to a lower, narrower one. Revolutions never go backward. The striking freight handlers of Chicago have returned to work, and a tendency to stop agitation on the eight-hour and labor question by legitimate labor Is marked and assuring. The country is sadly in need of quiet now, and labor organizations are in need of peace and better organization. The number of strikers in Cincinnati is rapidly leseenine. and we are convinced that a few dajs will find things settled into the normal.

The tendency is unanimous on the part of organized labor now to quiet, and we think the quiet will be loBger maintained, as in every instance the disquiet wa3 due to hasty organization.

THOUGHT OF THE HOUR. When nature ßlled the world with nowers. Her work was Incomplete because in all the radiaat thronj The rose aloue was sweet. The blushing rose turned piui aa-i wt-ite, And with ita sweetness blest. The sientless flower"; when lo, It grew Ear sweeter than the rest. Will J. Lawtun. This export of gold is as intimately related to the coinage of silver dollars as it is to the next transit of Venus or the bean crop of 'SG. It is about time for some able nionometalist to discover that silver coinage is responsible for hog cholera. Rhode Island Democrat. Cossipfrinu the frequency with which lawyers reach for their pistol pockets in the courts of this city, it is remarkable that no blood is ever shed. This severe self-control and high respect for human' life says much for the moral grandeur of the Bar. San Francisco Post. The liOuisville Journal calls-for a -'definition of Democracy," complaining that "prominent Democrats are found on each side of every proposition." The only definition that will hold water at the present time is that a Democrat is one who habitually votes the Democratic ticket. Beyond this it isn't safe to go. Boston Herald. The money going to France will never be repaid. The French debt has passed" across the dead-line. It will be abolished. Let America take notice. The way to evade any such mishap this side of the ocean is to pay cur public debt as we get the money not let STAiO.OOO.OOO lie in the Treasury, as now, a temptation for communists and a false source of income for 3 percent, bondholders. It is probable that the statutes of neany all the States afford a protection to peacable citizeps against undue oppression and if not the present agitation will doubtless -lead to the perfection of legislation bearing on the case. If there is a grievance the legal renaedy ought to be sought in all cases.- This country is not going to be given over to mob rule and the reign of violence for the benefit either of the boycotters or the boycotted. - St Taul Dispatch. "Pools" create an enormous and unrestrained power over commerce, which is not; provided for in legislation. They can im a dav's session make rate changes affecting commerce more than any tariff bill of Congress and enact edicts which may suspend the movements of great staples over half the country. It is by pool combination of this absolutism f corporate power, that the Standard Oil infamy was possible. Nashville (Tenn.) American. The best boycott yet proposed is that of the genuine workingmen of 1 New Ycrk against the blatherskite Socialists and disorderly scamps who undertake to gain notority on the shoulders ol the genuine workingmen. These adventurers do not work; they loaf around the street corners and the saloons. They hear early of- any proposed meeting of workingmen, and as they have plenty of time to spare they are on theground early, occupy the front places,- and do the shouting. St Lake Tribune. There is no reason why. the Stete should recognize the death of Christ that would not be an objection to its recognizing the birth of Washington. The death of Christ has thus far proved an event of greater historical significance than the birth of Washingtonand the recognition of its anniversary as an historical event is perfectly proper, and is not in any sense an interference of the State-with religion. The appointinecA of an annual fast may be objected to ou grounds of public expediency, and it is not improbable that in a few years this ancient Connecticut custom will be abandoned, but iti-s evident that the spontaneous recognition of Good Friday is growing all over the country, and will continue to grow -until it is CAiveraal Sew tlxven (Conn.) Morning News. SHORTS. The strawberry shorttake is not ioag ior this world. Whe: a hen lays siill it is hard at work and not on strixe. ijowell Citizen. The time that the undertaker likes best the berrying season. Boston Badget. It i3 the "duck of a bonnet" that makes a young girl's beau?- swim. Boston Commer-. cialk A sew style of umbrella is called the pi am. The old adage still holds good, that stolen frait is sweet Powell Citizen. The Buffalo Republic has suspended while the proprietor :s on his wadding tour.. Republics are ungrateful. Boston Post. 'Toixts" ia the stock raarket are probably so called because speculators generally get stuck on thani. Boston Commercial. The Chicago News recently gave picturt-s of all the leading Chicago editors, and the very nexiday there vsas a cyclone in Minnesota which destroyed all the crops. Juige. In Connecticut it is an offease punishable with a 3ce for a man to kiss his wife on Sanday; lut during tie spring bonnet season last year there weze few arrests. It is also a crime in that State for any man not an ordaised clergymaa to cross a river oa Sunday, wbich is rather rough on those who live on the side of the river where the fish won't bite. Puck. PERSONALS. . ColokelToj Cchtik, of Buffalo, who was Cleveland's chief of police, is said to be likely to succeed Brooks as chief of the Secret Service Bureau. Professor Maurick Berxabd, who died April G at Dresden, has left his whole estate, valued at $75,000, to Trince George, of Prussia, Who was once his pupil. "Was there ever a Prince," asks one, "who left his whole fortune to a Professor?" Feedinand Ward attempted to smuggle letters out of Sing Sing through the assistance of a fellow-convict, but when betrayed by his accomplice he made an abject apology to the warden, excusing himself on the ground that he "did not know it was wrong." This is not the first time Ward has made a lame excuse. Johxuy Walsh, the banjoist, whose rendering of "Ole Black Joe" and the "Little Ole Log Cabin m de Lane," when these melodies, first came out, some twelve or !

teen years ago, made him one of the favorites of the variety stag?, is now a Salvation Army Captain, but he tili takes his banjo about with him. C. J. CnK.Er, the California millioaaire, began life on the slope as a woodchopper. Getting a few drflarsahead.be hired men to help him, and thus began to rise. Ar.Frr.r Pooi.f., a Denver purchaser of unearned freight and express consignments, recently bought three boxes, each about two feel fquare, solid constructed and very heary. The purchase was made at a venture but on opening the boues each was found t contain a brick of solid gold worth about $12.000. The price paiA for the three wa3 The yresidentr hearing the report of the serious illness o? his prflecessor, General Arthur, sent him a basket f flowers, with a sympath?tic note accompanying then. Saturday he received a rrply wrilten by General Arthur's own hand, which would iu iicate that be is not so ill as he has been represented. William Mokis the poet, has been preaching sialism in DaLHn. An nv. lience listened to him lr sotnetrme, atid then several pfrsorrs- repliid; but vrhen he arose to make the closing speech a riot ensued. The disorder was quelled by some astutr fellow intoning '(Jod Save Ireland." and wLen the last liae was reached the gas wbj turned 08.

In hundreds of ca-es. Hood's Swaparilla,. by purifying and enriching the blood, has lrr vm a potent remedy for rhfjinatisni. Hence, it you suf?w the ii'")n3- and- aches of ir nix a- . it is lair to aMinie that II -l's .Nij.-apaMila will cure ynu. Giw it a tri.ii. Tli- Pliii-aeo Herald saj: The Administration seems v be il:-pis. 1 t'i give -the Mormons a --few point. The ucv ifvnior of Utah is a Kentackiaa uamed H'.m. .h te roan mos-t likely to be appoint. ecreurvof the Territory is un indiauian imme-1 lU.-t, t!e same who was-Vice1 Ptes'-dent Hcfl.'irit k' private wretaiy. TUTTS bcasactaaziareucasixsxcw; u hi la ( VO.IPID J3QWELS, OISOnDfc.n LIVER, and ttvALARIA. From these ourcea aviso iniee-tourtasor the disease: or tbe i.t:it.a.i- m.-e. Tbcse aymptomaiiKiu-ate ther eiwtec e: I,o a Appetite, Uo.Kru ttxttvr, Mik Head ache,falla after ratinr, nvmionto rtionor ImhIv nr mind, Kroctatioi Of food. Irritability of temper, Kxiw piriU, A eling.of liavithg neglectet otne duty, IMzziuess, lMuttci ic at the Heart, lot before the eye, liiciilrcol red I riur, l O.STIPATJO, rwul do. tnani the nse of a remeUy that act 8 it recti on the Liver. AsaLiver medicine TÜTT'äf PIL.L.S have no equal. Thoir action on the Kidneys and sliin is also prompt ; remoting all impurities through these three uaca? engers of the syateic," producing appetite, sound iiirestlon, rcffulr Mool, a cleat Bkiu and a vigorous bod v. TnTSfULU cause no nausea or giipincr nor Lnterfer With daUv work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO; MALARIA. floid eennr höre, gjc. QflW. U X c rnj M r. H, X. . A Crab Orchard 1W A T ER TU LIVER. THKKIUK TH IS UOWKLS 3- 3 A POSITIVE CURE FOR s :z2 8-s ft DYSPEPSIA, 3 SICK HEADACHE ? 3 ? iAVF. . uac iw -v iknuine Csae 4rcb ai Salts m eealUi pack.- at 10 and iicis. o geuuin taii u in onik Crab orcnara water. vo., rropr. S. N. ION LS. Manager. LoiuiTill. Kjr. 1 iSAnAicrnMIM g PoEND Foa tausTRATCO CM roixis1 RED CLOVER. TOniß la tha bet know remedy for all bleed disease. StrniDach andUvertrooblea, ptmples,ecwt!venei,ba4 treat h. pile, ague and malarial dlaeaso4,Udifre:ion. of appetite, low a plrlia. headache, ad al I dliatasea I the kluncya. Jcs Wceulit,oI UagKUL. Bi P.xs; &. Ssimxs-tic ker. Attorney v for Plaintiff. SHERIFF'8 SALE By virtne 0! a certified copy Ol a decree to me directed, from the Cle-rk ot the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wncrein Lorenz Sclimida Li piaintifi, and Elizabeth Naltneret al. ara defendants, ("ase No. 34,tk;i, requiring me to raaka the sum of fiftvthree dollars and thirty cc-at itöd ). with luterest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on 8ATCRDAY, THE r.th TAY OF Jt'XE, A. D. between the hours of 10 o'clock a, m. and 4 o'clock p. m., of said dav, at tbe door oi the court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rent and profitsfor a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate. bwit: Plock number one U). and lots number sixtyseven (67) and two hundred aud forty one (.Ml., in Kappes V Naltncr's South Meridisu street addition to the Citr of lndiauapoH". situate In Marion Countv, Indiana. If such rent and prortts will not sell lor a su Stcient sum to satisfy said decree, interest aud costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale tbe fee simple of sai l real estate, or so much thereoi as mar he sufficient to dischtree said decree, interest and co?Ls. fcaid sale will te made with rlicl from valuation or appraiment Utth GEORnF. H. CARTFR.; bherifToI Marion County, May 10, A. D. 1886. Notice of Appointment. J Notice Is hereby Riven that the undersigned baa been appointed adiniubdra tor of the estate of John A. Lyous. late of Marion County. Indiana, deCeased, estate if suppoea to be solvent. TU021AS WiS.W, Atotestnwr.

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Hemorrhages. Er4aS J'e. ir f roiii any cauS3 is speedily con tr.itld and topped. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds, Sprains and Bruises. 1: toeooiiog. cleaaaing and Ileal! wr. Pol nrrfl rt 15 m(vt 'fficjefons for ttltEVriCHui I ii ease. Cold in the Head. &r. Oun -Catarrh Cure," t rtperialr frepv-4 to ir.f?t serious caes. Our IKa aal Syringe is simple and ineipeiui Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Ii'o other pre pa -it ion has cured mora cases of- tUeUiatre-.iiii? complainti thaav tU l'trart. Our Plaster is inva'aabie in fidUecs, LuniLazj, Paina ia Hack or fcfcds, jte. Diphtheria & Sore Throat; Use tue 1? -atract promptly. iHjlay Li Ua geroiu. PIloC nii. Be4ia; er llrhin. ft1 LiKjJI S t! known remedy ; rapid! w. cutinj v.-:iiu oittrtr nl:riiiea hive failed. Oi r OinpKwot t et greit eeivice waaewtUo romoT! ot ctoJiinj is inconvenient. For Broken Breast and Sore Püppies. SSSÄ used Tht &trae- vüi sever b without i'- Our Oincfeteu) b w tea eaioUidat Uiat 1 be &rptied. Female Complaints. InÄnoc Jrturae d'setsM ii:.; V.itrart can be used, as ii wt-U k.towit. w.t itiii? -(rte b-iuefli. I' all diiecluun i'.c,-ja:;mT ea'U boUid. fSAHTiON k jv -mr i tuirr,n'-r".itu' A rxr V biOra ia in- ,!. -s we o. rvi. r."U-inJrlt oa eurn.rtHl.-. !- tr wr.v,)-.r. . Nonf other is ceuum-j ' iiirtii uu !uvn i'ODd'l liairac. U'.it uo-oaO: ;ur.;ion, if it v.'ner it-d in j-j j.i ue.rt. 3M veryM here.rrit Mr, $1, tl.7S PretarcJ t,:lT tj P0XI IXin.VtT CO., NEW YOLP" KT fCXlrtv HVv. F. HuxiiJi i-J t AttorOBT tor fiut.T. S-ZZRIFF'S 8ALI-By virtue of a ctrtiflel copr of a decree to me dire( frxMu the Clerk of The Sunerior Court ol Msrira County, Indiana, to a c'.i5e w berein Ejhel W. Fischer et al.. are plaintats. ana Louis Tandy e; al., are aefeuaanu. e No. S-Vf-Ni) raqumüK n t- make the sum of three hundred tud fifteen dallan ( 'l.S). with in sorest on said creree aiii cctK I will eipowe jrt pablir aale, to the high! bidder, on SATCRDAY. TDE-5th DAY CF JVSK A. D. 1S3&. Hamret n the bom of 10 o'r-2oo&-a. m. and 4 o'clock . p. m., of said day. et the daer ol '-Sr Court-house ( Marion Couu y, Indiana, tha re:U and profits for a term not cif-eediu seven vrs, of the fl- . lowing real estat t-ituate in Marion County, lual alia, town: Lot number '.-ifeiity-foaci '2, ia Aliert K. Fletcher's subdirisiou ot lots mnxibered lifty--eren ("7)and t-litv aO). of AlbersZ. and Ineraui Fletcher's Oak Hill Btiharb to. tbe City of Iniiinapolis. A p'at of said Albert E. Heb her'subdiTiMon is recorded in ?ia &ok 4. pace 7. ia tbe Recorder's odSce of Marion County, Indiana. If such rents and profit will not Bell tor a aui3cient sum to satisfy ald decree, interest ani eoctts, I M ill, at be same txaand place, expose to Dublic sale the fte simploof vaid rel estate, or ao amen thereof as may -suftl jriit to discharge aid decree, Inrest and tc&, bai.l sale wui be jtde without jbv relief whatever from valuation ar appraisement laws. GEORGS H. CARTER.. Sheriff of Marion County. May 10, A. Ek 1SS6. V. H. Zipley, Aoruey kt Plaintiff. , SHERIFF'3 SALE. By. virtue ol a certiflei copy of a dec-te to me d rectal, iroin the Claik of ' the Superior t'ourt of Mvrioa Csnty, Indiana, in i caue wherein Thoma II. Hiakley, ex. rel. etc. is piaiDtift. and Ja men V. Hess et al. tie detendants, ('ae No. :;5,:8., ramrinu me to. makethe sum of one thousa:A an hundred ani' tiftyi live dollars and twent-Mentt (Jl.lto JO), .rth la1 lerest on t-Ki decree aul w, I will expose at public sale x the bigLea bidder, on SATURDAY, THE f.il. 3aT OF Jl'NU A. B. between ttia hours ol T3cVi!fiK k a. m. and A o'clock, in., of said da. . al the door of the Court Houa of Mariou County. Indiana, the reuu aval proöus for a term not exceed Jis-rcu years, of tne following real eite. in Mariou I'uunly, lu tue Stau; ol? lnoiaia. -w,i : Lot uuuiUt forty-tjM ' in Maguirt'a heir" .1 f r.-.c?'i 1 1 M 1 ii-.itr ff In.l ia natml ifc. If sue.- rents and rxclis will uot sed lor a eufllcient 1x1 10 Mtti&'.jr sul de ice. injerest and costi. I.Will, at the suna lime and p'.actt. expose topublic file the fee slis.fila of nid real estate, or so mui'h thereof as tuty Ve suthcieut t discharge, said daf-n-.-, iuterest va costs, fcnid ile will be made withoay av t4X whatever f-o valuation, or aprcau-cment tw. iFOPE H CARTER Sheriff of MutM Ocunty. Mi;t 30. A. D. 1"Ä B 3iiA. e fciT-Ei-,. Ji ruey lor C3Ct Plaintiff. onüRII'FS 8AI.lt By virtue ot a certiaed cop & ol a decree to me directed, 'zcai trieClerk . tlva Superior Cour. of Marion County, Indiana, macaus-e wherein Jicha M. Caia ia plaintiff, acL ca.vsles II- Llaci at al. are defcud-ats, (Case No. rxi.7.'-J). reouinv.3 me to make -lie sum ot eishtytliroe dollars &ad seventeen rents (fsi.17), .u fbvfcrof rrots-t jirlaiuants Caofwr & Ciarfc. wth ii JrreM on saiJ viecree aud cew. 1 will expw at aubUc sale to the highe bidder, oa SATURDAY, J3E 5th DA,Y OF JI XE, 1SSC A. . batween the Vans of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock a. m. of said day, at the dsor of the Court Rouaa ü Marion Ciy,IiidiauaaU rents and prof. j. for a term not txctediiiR fcora years, ot the fl:wjne real estaie, to-wit: The soutVaeit quarter oi the northeast qr.arter cf section twentv-three (23). in township seventeen 117). rjrth o'f rang r ('-) ea.t. containiJ? forty 1-tO) asres, and alii ;n Marioa Count;t, hxiiana. If such 38-ats end proSIs will not sell for a aufflcicnt sun 0 satisfy sali decree, interest ac J costs, I will, at jfce same tim and place, expose public sale 1A fee simple of said real estati, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to dßchante said de-3ee, interest fd cost, fcaid sal will bs made wtihout anv rfcüti whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE It. CAÜTER. Sheriff of Marion iwinty May 10. A. D. 1SSC. 9 M4uti9&Xhwrx3tc.F.&, Attorneys lor laiutiff. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of Mi execution to me directed from the Clerk ol he Superior l .iirt of Marioa Comity, Indiana. 1111 exnosa 84 public sale. U the highest biddevou SATURDAY,' TI1E 5th PAY OF JUNE, A. D. ly?6, between the hours of 10 o'clock & aa. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said dav. at the diwtr of t?i Court Houe o5 Marion Couutv.'lndiana, the fee iaiple of the following real estate, in Marion County, Indiaa. to-wit: ..... ... Lot number thirty-two (S2k in HtiMtard. MeCaitv and Martindalt's snbdviiion of lotsoneU. two three t3l, four (t. fiv (5) six (S. seveu i7and eight t8t. in square twelve (1.'), iu Hubbard. Mt Cartv.t Martindale's soiilboast addition to ta City of Indianapolis. And also lots tea ilO'i. cievea (ID. twelve (12). thirteen (U) and twenty-six (Jo. m Yajen's Booth Jtrookside addition to tae City of Indianapolis. A lao lots number sixty v and sixtr-one (61). in Tilkcd h Thrasher's, east addition to the town of Irvingtou. Taken a! the property ol Franklin IL Coffin at the suit of Max ciundlefingcr, for the tse of Joan Said sale to be Eiade without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. v GEORGE H. CARTER. Shena of Maiiou County. May 13, A.i. NOTICE OFjnOTEST.. "rVTOTICE IS HEREBY 1VEK that the un-ler-1 signed has Ijcc-u apjxdnted Admlal-iritiixcl mo estate of John R. Fcatherston, Ut of Marion Couutv. Indiaua, deceased, bald CstaU is supp et I-AJvME FEAJIiERcTOX, A4a'jLUU "