Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1886 — Page 4
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THE INDIANA BTATE BENTINEL. WEDNESDAY JUNE 9 1880.
HEMORRHOIDS Blind. Bleeding, and Itching, Positively Cured by Cuticura.
A warm bath with Cuticura Soap, aa exquisite Bkic Beautifler, and a single application of Cutirurm, the great Kkin Cure, will iiistaiitly allay the lutcn.te iu hiug of tbe mort aggravated ca.se of Itchir . Piles. This treatment, conibiucd wl'Ji niall doses of Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blool J'uriSer. three times per dar, to regulate ami remove the cause, will cure lilind. Blooding and Itching Piles, when all other remedies andeveu physicians fail. ITCH I NO PICKS. I wa. tafcen for the first time in my life with Blind so severe that 1 could hardly keep on my feet. 1 used various remedies for three weeks, when the disease took the form of Itching File, and growing worse, liy advice of an old gentleman I tried the Cuticura. One application relieved the itching and I waa soon cured. I wish to tell the world that in canes of Itching Piles the price of the Cuticura is of no account. From au unsolicited quarter. O. C. KIBBY, Concord, X. H. ITCniNO riLKS. I began the nsc of your Cuticura Remedies when ou riit put them on the market, and know of wo cases of Itching Files that have been cured hy the use, at my suggestion of thee !rcmediej. V. N. MARTIN, Virduu, 111. ALL TIIAT YOU CLAIM. I have tried your Cuticura Remedies and find them all that you claim, and tbe de maud for them In this section is great. AUGUSTUS W. COLLINS, Illggston, Ga. SPLKXDID SATISFACTION. Cuticura Remedies hare given splendid satisfaction to those of my customers who have had occasion to use them. HJCNRY GERMAXX. Druggist. Quincy, 111. cttictra Remfpies are a positive cure for every form of Skin and Blood Diseases, from Ilmplea to Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: CcTicritA. 50 cents: Soap, 25 cents; Rksoi.ve.nt, $1.00. Prepared by the Potter Drug andOhrmical Co., Boston, Send for "llow to Cure Skia Diseases." QTvTTC Blemishes, pimhles. Blackheads and J1-AA' Baby Humors, use Cuticura Sonp. TIKKI MfSCl.ES Strenghtened, Pain Annihilated, Inflammation subdued, and Malarial and Epidemic Diseases Prevented by that infallible ' 111 antidote for pain and inflammation, the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. 25c. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9. TEKMS PER TEAK. Single Copy, without Premium...................... 11 00 Clubs of six for...-. 5 00 We aak Democrats to bear la mind and select tbelr own Etat paper when they come to take subscriptions and make up clubs. Agents ma-kin,,' up dubs send for any Information desired. Address INDlANAi'OLia SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. 10 OM PATIMSAND 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 with 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 wepeh 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 Jaa we will pack and ship the machine and send a copy of the Weekly Sentinel for one year. For $21 we will send the machine to any present subscriber whose name is on our books. None oi these machines are for sale by agents. See advertisement. Send all orders to SENTINEL CO., Indianapolis, Ind. It is est; mated that the depredations of the Ilrilbh sparrows iu England last year will reach $1,0k,iuo. Tut question of home rule ha been introduced by the President, and the ptrty of coercion took charge yesterday to stay. 8am Jones has opened a campaign in Washington but he has made a mistake. He should have begun on Congress first. It is intimated in our Washington specials that Ex-Senator McDonald will probably succeed Secretary Garland of the President's Cabinet. I'reüutvt C'LEvr.t r 0 said some time ago that he worked fron fourteen to sixteen Lours a day. But he was a bachelor then. "What of the future, Mr. President? An Ohio exchange pays the latest news Is that W rs. Hayes' husband thinks ot giving up the cares connected with his hennery aa I running for Congress in the Toledo district. We venture to suggest as an important bit of political philosophy that the day has gone by when either a party or person can successfully be whitewashed by blackwashing the other side. Is behalf of Mr. JJlaine it is published that he never felt better or took more interest in public affairs, and Mr. Logan thinks that the announcement Is made with very indecent ostentation. Daviu Davis said oce that a newspaper gives free gratis and for nothing to th benefit of the community in which it is printed, what costs it from $1.000 to $-1,000 per year, and David told tbe truth: When the question, "is Blaine a Knight of Labor?" was propounded to T. V. Powderly, he answered promptly: "No, in heaven's name there have been enough bad things said about us without that Let it rest there." The man calling himself a Democrat, who places disappointment in the distribution Of the o Sices, or something else of a personal character, above the success of Democratic principles, must be regarded by all right-thinking people as a bogus production. It is proposed that tl Government build ft" fine bridge across the Potomac, just above the National Observatory in Washington,
connecting the public grounds in the city with the National Cemetery grounds of Arlington Heights. This would br a grand improvement. Hr.Rinow Is such n exquisite gem we find floating about that we publish and dedicate to our highly esteemed and gentle con' temporary, the Journal: "If de debble do not ketch Jeff Davis, flat Confedrit wretch, An'roas' an' fricasse dat rebel. What is de use of any debble''' Tin bill to prevent the acquisition of real property in this country by aliens which the Senate has just passed may be well enough, but a bill to prevent American Manufacturing monopolists from compelling the people to pay them exhorbitant tribute through tbe operations of the so-called protective tariff, would be altogether more acceptable.
Itr.pt iii.icAW love for the colored man extends just to the point of where he can be used and no further, and colored people are getting on to this fact with a rapidity quite vexing to the average Kepublican boss. Colored men may be seen in almost any direction now-a-days judiciously keeping both eyes open upon the hypocritical wooinga of Kepublican bosses. The State Department has ruled in the case of the Spanish fishing vessels, recently seized at Key West, that fishing in waters of the United States does not entail forfeiture on a foreign vessel. In view of the complications In the North this may be taken at outlining the position of the Government on the fisheries question. It is the decision common sense would take at this age of the world. Tnr. Ijouisville Times says: G rover, here's looking toward you. Lucky dog that you are, with the best of all the good thing thrusting themselves upon you, remember that there is nothing more left for you in the cornucopia of the gods half so rare as that which, by the tender grace of this June day, is to be yours. Take this Heaven's last, best gift to man. and don't forget to "turn the rascals out." Wi are pained to learn of serious charges against Congressman Ilolman. It is said tbat he has been fooling away his time in public business, keeping down expenditures, objecting to extravagance, reducing taxes, and so has been unable to secure office for all his constituents, and in view of the premises it is proposed to put aside the veteran Congressman of the Fourth District and send a man who will at once fill the sack with fodder. The President's wedding ceremonies were conducted much to our liking, in the utter absence of a tendency for making a vulgar display of wealth, clothing, presents or "gorgeous ceremony." It was the simplicity required from the Chief Executive of the Nation, with whom an attempt in the direction of a public display would in the highest degree have been in bad taste. An every day common affair as it was, and not the theatrical pose for worshipful tlunkeydonito ape and caricature into a depth of ridicule that ilunkeydora wanted. These are days of reunions Generally they are well and worthy of approval. We note an exception, however, in that of the original Knownotning Legislature of Massachusetts, which has just had a reunion in Boston. The nearest parallel that occurs to us would be a happy reunion of patients discharged lrom a lunatic asylum to congratulate each other on recovering from a craze. Nothing was said or done, says a Boston exchange, calculated to injure the feelingsof the Pope, nor was subscription proposed for Ned Buntline. i r cattle export trade ere long is destined to encounter formidable competition in the European markets from the apparently Inexhaustible supplies on the Itiver Flatte. The shipments from Uuenos Ayres show a tfsdy augmentation from year to year. Thu, the shipments in 188.3 were 13,200 tons, valued at $l,0o0,000, being three times as much as in the year preceding. The business is in its infancy, the available annual slaughter of the Argentine Republic alone being 3,XK),G00 cows and ri,000,000 sheep; but even supposing only half which these faules represent were utilized, they still have for exportation (over and above home consumption) not less than 500,0 0 tons of dead meat, say 1G(X0 tons weekly, representing an annual value of more than $.0,00o,0i0. Cotton seed on. is playing havoc with a variety of products, though its manufacture Is of comparatively recent date. Four years ago It knocked tbe lard market "tigher than Gilderoy's kite," says an exchange, and now it is serving tallow the same sauce, haying reduced the price of that article 10 per cent, below the average of the past three years. Lard has never recovered from the blow, and probably never will, nor tallow. As a substitute for the latter it goes upon the market as ftearine, warranted not to melt at less than 124. These effects of cotton seed oil upon the grease market appear surprising, in face of the fact that olive oil, linseed oil, butterine, soap, etc., etc., are also extensively manufactured from it. It has knocked the price of soap down in the Chicago market fully 1.") per cent, below what it was three years ago. The House has finally passed the bill taxing Oleomargarine, placing it at five cents per pound. The bill is the first of its kind favorable to the agricultural Interest, and although as wrong in principle, as the taxes extorted from the farmers through the tariff, as matters stand it is no worse. It has seemed to us that the proper way would have been to compel makers of the patent article to sell it for what it is, and not as butter. Here is where the injustice in the patent article lies. It is palmed oft and sold as butter, not oleomargarine. Somehouy is laying a trap for fools in a careful enumeration of the deaths and misfortunes that have overtaken various persons concerned in one way or another in Guiteau's conviction aud execution. He cursed everybody connected with his case, it is said, and lo! one of his own counsel has becomi a drunken pauper; his brother-in-law and leading counsel is a divorced hus band, homeless and distressed: the President is dying; one Judge has beer displaced: one of the prosecutors nas died suddenly; halt of the jurors are dead, and soon for quantity. Kow there Lj a penty of tools who, will beltoH
that these disasters are the work of that maudlin, murderous malediction, and the fancy will more than likely do them harm. It can never do them any good. So those who have assorted out these Incidents of superstition have given themselves a wholly mischievous task.
The people demand a revision of the tariff. To revise it to a point consistent with tbe necessity for revenue is the corner-stone of Democratic principles. Let Democratic Congressmen go upon record for the principle, and the issue will be closely drawn. Parties can not succeed without issues and devotion to the principles involved in them. Each day adds to the probabilities of success of free-trade tendencies. Labor has spoken, and removed the mask of hypocrisy that has made it an instrument of its own debasement. Time has demonstrated the emptiness of the protection formula, that has developed nothing but monopoly Dy the few and poverty of the many. AMERICAN LABOR AND TUE TARIFF. The revolt of the Pennsylvania textile workers against the time-honored fiction that the tariff: is a bulwark for American industries, is the most significant sign of the times. To the number of 40,000 they have petitioned Congress for a general revision of the tariff and the introduction of raw materials duty free. If anything were wanted to overthrow the tissue of superstition that the protection idea is protection to American labor, it is this revolt of textile workers in this stronghold of protection, Pennsylvania. T Ley say: "As we have left the management of thes affairs to our employers until we find that thev have succeeded" in shaping the laws for their benefit and our injury, we now speak out for equal rights and equal benefits, believing that we possess the intelligence, strengthened by experience, to know what we want." It is precisely that the management of their affairs has been left in the hands of gTeedy employers, who have levied tribute on the American people to the extent of the tariff, and imported the cheapest of 1'uropean iiuper labor in order to whip American 1. bor into submission, that the popular unr. st of labor is due. The germ is a pestilent v rong, that could develop no other growths than wrong, injustice and hatreds between men, who are conscious of being systematically robbed and their prosperity destroyed. They show in what way the tariff oppresses them, while pretending to protect them, in the following: "We have in our possession a wage list (official) of a mill near H udders Seid, England, which, compared with that of one of the largest mills in Philadelphia, shows the t:me average, but tbe extra patd fn the English mill make its rates a little higher than the Philadelphia mill. We have also a list of another Philadelphia mill, which shows nn average of $3.7 to $S.."0 per week for steady work. In the last United States Contular reports the general average wages of weavers outside the mills in England is given at $0 01 per week; in seven selected mills in New Jersey the average is 0.72 per week. But it must be borne in mind that the American weaver turns out at least one third more work than the English weaver in the woolen industry, and nearly one-half more in the cotton industry, and this is another evidence that our tariff laws have failed to keep American waees up to the measure of the productiveness of the workmen, and therefore fails to protect them, because the tax on raw materials neutralizes the wage account and deprives American labor of the chance to compete with foreign labor even in our own market." They next compare the profits of the manufacturers with the average pay of their bands eighty cents per day of eleven and twelve hours and they feel, they say, that "there is a screw loose in the wage account," and that "a general revision and readjustment of the tariff laws is necessary." Asa matter of truth they have been compelled to sell their labor in the cheapest labor market of Europe, Polish, Italian and Hungarian. But when they go Into the market for the necessaries of life they find it in the control of a favored class, and any increase of wages they may enforce is taken from them in the shape of an increased price in their required commodities. They show that the entire wages account In the worsted and woolen Industries is but 17 per cent, of the product, and in tbe cotton industries but 21 per cent. The effect of this on international trade may be instantly seen would be nearly infinitessimal. Even presuming that the application of free trade would reduce the value of the product 10 per cent., it would affect the labor element in the worsted and woolen industries, but 1.7 per cent, and the cotton industry but 2 per cent. But when the added activity in production and consumption that would come with it is taken, its effect as a reaction upon wages would more likely be in the direction of advance. But if it did not the power of the remainder would be increased by 10 per cent, against a direct loss of 1.7 and 2 per cent. As a producer of raw cotton the industry is paralyzed from want of demand. England is supplying herself from Egypt and India and our planters have cotton to sell that can not be sold save as we can sell it in a, fabric. There is no industrial path open to us except to manufacture for the world as we formerly produced in raw form for the world. And so the labor problem is daily focusing, by a multitude of bv-patbs and over hundreds of false issues, on the corner stone of its discontent the tariff. It is on matters of this prodigious and national importance that the strength of American labor may strike with its full force, and a strong, well delivered blow will rend it into fragments and destroy the source of most all of it woes. OLEOMARGARINE DEMOOOQY. We have a bill taxing oleomargarine five cents per pound, not because it is deleterious and detrimental to health, not that it is not a palatable article of food, but because it inteifered with a dairy industry, which this measure would protect by destroying the other. In effect, it is taxing those people who prefer to eat the mixture five cents a pound for the privilege. If people did not want it, did not like it, they would not eat it. Why should they be taxed because they prefer to eat it, and when or where is this thing going to stop? While legislating for the butter people they have legislated against the beef people, and in taxing tallow five cents a jound they have lowered the value of a beef eight per cent. Now what is to be done to benefit the beet people? What set of consumers must be taxed to make up this loss? If the cheap product will run out the dear product, why not tax "ebucK" steak in order to raise the value of "loin? If some one would find a substitute lor hair in mortar, would Congresi tax it becaw, it injured.
the hide interest? Why not tax celluloid because it comes in deadly contact with horns? Why not tax tanners for splitting hides because they reduce the demand Why not tax everything that interferes with anything else? This is what the whole protection idea means, and the fact that everything docs Interfere with everything else makes It clear that the entire principle la false and is throwing all economic and business relations into inextractible confusion. Neither Congress nor any other body of men nor any individual can regulate the enormous volume of trade with all its infinity of interactions and reactions. The structure will be ruined by too much adjustment, readjustment, and fitting of cogs and springs and wheels and levers and general tinkering. Every effort in the direction of favoring particular industries has added to our commercial distress, and the paralysis will finally become so complete that Congress must begin to grant direct subsidies to prevent this, that or the other industry from falling into ruin. We are but a step from that now, and can not go much further in this direction without entirely departing from our present relations and setting up a commune as the only resort from anarchy. Congress would have done well had it confined its action to a prohibition of the sale of oleomargarine as butter, but compelled it to be sold for what it is. But to compel a man to buy butter who had rather use tallow or cotton-seed oil, is one of those assical acts that put us clear out of patience.
COLONEL MATSON RENOMINATED. The anticipations of our Republican friends that the Cosport Convention would split wide enough for a Republican to squeeze through into Congress have come to naught. The gallant Democracy of the Fifth District have wrecked all their hopes in this direction. Colonel Matson was renominated on the third ballot, and his competitors, four earnest, patriotic Democrats, came to the front promptly and cordially indorsed the action of the convention. Whatever differences of opinion have heretofore existed in regard to the renomination of Colonel Matson, there will be none now among the Democracy of the district as to his election. lie has proved himself an earnest, painstaking, conscientious Representative. His record speaks for him and will doubtless prove invulnerable to the assaults of the coming campaign. He will win easily. AN INDIANA CONGRESSMAN. It appears that Mr. Johnston, at present occupying a seat in Congress from the Terre Haute District, afflicted the people of Alexandria, Va., with an address on Decoration Day. As was expected, he made an ass of himself and disgusted his hearers with his trashy utterances. He should have recited "a piece called an antheum," as he himself styled it, during his canvass, and which sounded the praises of certain individuals "who were all Blane and Logan min." Heaven be praised that his term will soon be over and Indiana spared the humiliation at having such a man sent out as one of her representatives. The Democratic party is obligated to a reform of the tariff. When that pledge was made to the people it was accepted by them as an honest, sincere promise. If the faith which was thus pledged is broken, it will simply be bad for the Democratic party. The brave, honest masses of the Democratic party, who have stood to their guns for a quarter of a century under conditions of continuous defeat, are not the kind of people to quietly submit to being betrayed. Democrats will never consent to have the dishonest, broken promise methods of the Republicans introduced in their party. If the Democratic party has a single duty more commanding than others it is that it do all it can to secure tariff reform. If It fail herein it will be a disappointment to the country that will not be condoned. The Putnam Democrat offers the following ;ui v ce to Democratic ( 'ongressnien that they can not ponder too closely, for therein is the secret of strength : It will not atone for these sins of omission and commission to say that our opponents aie as deep in the mud as we are in the mire. Tbe obligations to duty on our part are none of the less binding because of the faithlessness of others. Nor will it satisfy the popular demand for reform to make answer that we have turned out one set of door-keepers and spittoon-cleaners and put another set in. Tbe people ask for bread, and will not be put off with a stone. Give them an issue worth fighting for, and they will rally to your support. CURIOUS AND UNUSUAL. Bakhers at Findlay, O., refuse to shave customers during a thunder storm. Cis Steel, a negro at Lawrenceville, Oa., took a strange notion a few days ago to run himself to death. He started, and after running rapidly for some time dropped to the ground and died. A ( itizen of Aurora, Tex., carries around with him as a curiosity a finger which was cut f lorn his hand when he was four years old sixty jears ago. The nail on the finger looks quite natural, but the fleshy portion looks like a piece of dark mahogany. A YorNc; man in Sacramento, Cal., went into a saloon, sat down, read a paper a few minutes and fell to the floor totally blind. It was found that the blindness resulted from inflamation of a nerve leading to the eye, superinduced by impure blood. M. Ismael, the well known singer, enjoyed the distinction at Toulouse of seeing tw of his wives on the stage in "Faust," his first wife, from whom he was divorced, playing "Marguerite,'' and his second, to whom he was married a few weeks ago, appearing as "Siebel." A tiRioiH book is that in a library at Paris. It is neither written nor printed. Every letter of the text is cut inte the leaf, and as the alternate leaves are of blue paper, it is as easily read as the best print. The labor required and the patience necessary to cut each letter may be imagined. The work is so perfect that it seems as though done by machinery, but every character was made by hand. To enrich and quicken tne circulation of the blood, and to reform irregularities of the system, use Dr. J. H. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and Blood l'uritier. Colonel Wm. Louis Schley, Grand Secretary I. O. M. Grand Lodge, Maryland, found lied Star Cough Cure a perfect and certain remedy, price, 25 rtfi ft VtUe,
THOUGHT OF THE HOUR.
What does lore mean? one asked of me In glorious spring weather. I am as Ignorant as he: That definition ought to be Found surely yet the glotaary . OmiU It altogether. But. in the light of the spring sun, Illuminating weather, Looking through nature's lexlcoa Alone, we'd mlis it, ten to one: I-ove's meaning we might chance upon, Puttint: our heads together! Charlotte Fishe Bates. Imported "cheap labor" is a chicken that is coming home to roost in the shape of a bomb-thrower. Chicago Sentinel. Tiixy must put a stop to this indiscriminate pauper immigration or those immigrants will put a stop to our laws. -Elgin (111.,) Every Saturday. Mr. Schilling says he believes in the boycott. However, we expect that Mr. Schilling Relieves in the boycott as many pious people believe in hell for the other fellows. Milwaukee Journal. General Grast in the second volume of his memoirs very summarily disposes of the assertion that his battles were won by the sheer force of numbers, remarking: "I deem it safe to say that there were no large engagements where the national numbers compensated for the advantage of position and intrenchments occupied by the enemy." The profit earned by a business, over aud above a fair allowance for the capital aud skill of the employer and the labor and skill of the employed, does not all belong to the former. A share of it should go to the latter. The principle, we believe, is settling and compacting itself as the bed-plate on which the machinery of our industries is to work. The Advance. To have paid the principal of the debt In 180.3 as it stood then in flour, at the price flour was then, it would have required 273,150,000 barrels. To have paid the principal 1385 as it stood then in flour, at the price Hour was then, it would have req aired 33,118,000 banels. In other words, it would take 110,000,000 more barrels of flour to pay the balance of principal of the debt now than it would to have paid it in full in 1SG.1. It would take 1,303,000,000 bushels of corn more now to pay the balance unpaid than it would to have paid the whole in 18GÖ. It would take over 700,000,000 more bushels of wheat to pay it now than then. Labor Tribune, Pittsburg. While there have been strikes in the foundries, the reaper establishments, the ironworks, and in almost every place in which men are employed; it is wo.rtbyof notice that in one very important domain peace has prevailed, and no murmurs of discontent or demands for higher wajes or shorter hours have been heard. This pacific department is that of the kitchen. While there has been war in the shops, the counting-rooms, and offices, tranquillity has reigned in the arena of the cooking-range and the gridiron. The stew-pan is in place; the boiler is undimmed in its glories ; the cookery is on the shelves, and the wringer and the washtub perform their routine functions aa in the halcyon days of peace. Chicago Times. NOTE AND OPINION. Drop a dime into Jay Gould's hat every time the clock ticks and you will have some idea of his income. Hartford Times. Thk Bitlsh man-of-war Bellerophon had better get away from Halifax. She can easily make mischief, and in tbe present state of our navy that isn't advisable. New York Graphic. Some of the critics speak of General Logan's book as "unredeemed rot." But Gen eral Logan knows who the critics are. "They are the men who have failed in literature." Courier-Journal. When Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland settle down to housekeeping she ought to escort him to market now aud then and take him around town walking so that he will get acquainted with the city. Washington Critic. It is believed that a matrimonial boom will now set in. Bachelorhood will go out of fashion and surprising marriages will be heard of on all sides. Perhaps the President could not have instituted a more needed or salutary reform. Elmira Gazette. The following is said to be the "official" explanation of the reason whv Attorney General Garland did not attend the Pelden t's wedding: At thedeathof his wife some years ago he made a vow never to enter into social festivities again. He has kept this vow, devoting the most of his time after office hours to the care and attention of his aeed mother. He did not even attend the wedding of his son a year ao, although his son married with his full approbation. The 6tory of his dislike to a dress suit has no foundation. Washington Post. CONCERNING WOMEN. Mrs. Mary A. Livermoek has over-worked herself and is now taking a much-needed rest. Sarah Bernhardt discovered her genius while fitting on a dress. It has fitted her ever since. Miss Caroline Booth, Marshal of the Salvation Army in Paris, expresses a -profound contempt of fame. Mrs. ix)wry, of Ietroit, Mich., has entered the evangelistic field, and is waking up the sinners in Colorado. Empress Ecoexik will spend the month of June in Scotland, Queen Victoria having placed Abergeldie Castle at her disposal. Mrs. Cleveland congratulates herself that during the summer Washington is quiet as the Roman Campagna, and that all the critical women are getting freckled by the sea. CogrELis'smost valued pupil is a Mrs. Lee. She can declaim in five languages, which might prove embarrassing. Suppose she got Lady Macbeth transformed into a linguistic crazy quilt! The Syracuse Standard quotes the following paragraph from a lettlr written by Miss Folsom to a lady In that city: "I have but one regret, and that is that I am to marry the President of the United States. I would much rather it had been the Buffalo lawyer w ith whom I fell in love." Mrs II. B. Kepley la a graduate of the Pnicn College of Lstv of this city, and a lueiiiber of the Effingham, 111., bar. Her husband is also a well-known member of the 1M Ql that places ' At . tut f??h?vl elec
tion Mrs. Kepley ran atrainst her husband for School Trustee and defeated him, receiving a majority of twelve votes. Minnie Hack is going to serenade the Yellowstona Park this summer. Should nny Indians be hovering around while she is singing "Carmen" they will want to scalp the "Toreador." The case of Thankful Tanner vs. Mrs. Lucretia Garfield, widow of the late President Garfield, was begun, in the Common Pleas Court at Cleveland, June 3. Thankful, who is a notorious woman of the town, sues Mrs. Garfield for $25,000 damages for slight injuries received by being knocked down by Mrs. Garfield's carriage on December 22, 1881. It is believed the Tanner woman purposely ran against the carriage. A woman has just died at the age of 122, in a St. Petersburg almshouse, where she had spent the last seventy yeras oi her life, during which period she had never once been seriously ill. She could see quite well up to the last, her eyes presenting no trace of atrophy so common with aged persons. Her memory and intelligence were also unimpaired at the time of her death. The same institution possesses another inmate, a soldiers wife, who, on being admitted about two months ago, presented her papers to the managers which certified that she is now 110 years old.
SHORTS. Fish bawls are now fashionable among Canadians. New Haven News. Creamy complexions go well with strawberry noses. Burlington Free Tress. "That won't go down with me," said the skeptical man, as he looked at a pill. Philadelphia Call. Last week Postmaster General Vilas named three new Tostoflices, Mikado, Yum Yum, and Kaoki Poo. A man named Benjamin F. Butler has committed suicide. It is not known whether there was any other reason for the rash act. New Haven News. It is said tbat Senator Evarts has invented a new postal card. He probably finds the present one too small when he wants to let his family know that he has "arrived safely." New Haven News. Beech r.R says: "I hold that a man should be a round and perfect man." Herein Henry Ward differs from the generality of people. Most folks like a man who is square. Lowell Citizen. A mas named Tennyson has been lynched in Texas. As he had only stolen seven horses and killed two men, it is suspected that the lynchers were laboring under the mistaken impression that their victim was the Tennyson who recently wrote: "Brit'ons, Hold Vour Own." Norristown Herald. TUTTP PILL VORPiD DOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER and MALARIA. From these sources nrfcc three-fourths Of the diseases of the human race. Thea symptoms Indicate their oxintcir-e : lVoaa ofl Appetite, llotvcl costive, Click Head ache, fullness arttr eatlnj;, aversloat rtlon of bodjr or iiiinU. llrurtattosa f food, Irritability of temper. Low plrtU, A feeling or having neglected some duty, Dli.Urn, Fluttering attha Heart, lots before t lie eya, hlgblreola ortd t rhir, t O.VSTIPATJOA', and de tnand the use of a remedy that acts directly on the Liver. AsaLivcr medicine TCTT IMI.LS have no c.junl. Thoi ruction on the Kidneys and skin Is a I wo prompt; removing ail impurities through those three car ngera of the system," producing appe ttte, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear akin and a vigorous body. TCTT'SPILXaj cause no nausea or griping nor interfara With daily work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. Bold everywhere. Sic Offloe, 4 Murray Street, Ii ( A Crab Orchard"
4 tiii: i.ivrit. i 03 Till TOMACH. iL xr Sis this uowism. v- A POSITIVE CURE FOR I o g -g.j? DYSPEPSIA, o - ?l2 S CONSTIPATION. 3 5isa SICKHEADACHEV ?1o-3 r: Onstotwotfpwnful. -3r5-5" Genuine CasORCBAn Salts in seald pack! at 10 and txrts. I gen- Bj1 ulne Salt sold in bulk. g Crab Orchard Water Co., Proprs. Z S. N. ION LS, Magef. LouhtiII. ar.
Albert YY. Wis hard, Attorney for Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a certlfled oopj of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk ol the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, id a cause wherein The Franklin (Fire) Insurance Company Is plaintiff, and Albert T. Beck, admiuioiraior, etc., et al. are defendants (case No. :.t.'J76), requiring me to make the um of two thousand seven hundred and nim-tv one dollars and sixty-three cent. ($J,791.63), with interest on said decree and costs. 1 will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE 3d DAY OF JCLY, A. D. I486, between the honrs of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m.. of said day, at the door of the Court-hou of Marion Coumv, Indiana, the rents and proflu for a term not exceeding seven rears, of the following: real estate, situate in Marion County and State of Indiana, to-wit: Lot uumber eighteen (18). In Coe's subdivision of square nuuiiKT seven (7). in the City ot Indianaro Is. Marion County, State of Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satibfy said decree, interest and cost. I will, at the same time and place, eipose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and cohtt. 8aid sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. KORGE H. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. June 7. A. D. 18SC. VY. IT. Ripley, Attorney for Plaintia. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copj of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk oi the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein lhoroas H. Hinkley.execut r.etc. is plaintifl, and James W. Hess et al., are flefeudants, (case No. 85,131). requiring me to make the sum of one thousand one hundred and tiftv-rive dollars and twenty centa (S1.13.V20). with interest on said decree and costs, 1 will expose at public aale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE 3d DAY OF JCLY, A. D. urn, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court-hous of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and pruiiufor a term not exceeding seven years, of the fo) lowing real estate, in Marion County, in the State Of Indiana, to-wit: l..t number fortv-three (13). in Masuire s heir MibdivtMon of cast half of outlot one hundred and tiftv-one (151). in the Cltv of Indianapolis. If such reut and profit will not sell for a saffl cleut sum to satisfy said decree, interest aud cosu I will, at the same time and place, expose to publh sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale wiU be roadt without any relief whatever lrom valuation o appra'semeut laws. G FORGE H. CARTER. Bherill oi ilarioa Count!. Juni7,A,D,lS3,
Mi
Hemorrhages. EÄKsSg Nose, or from any causa U speedily eon. aW4.J(i B till VbOpjBOtl. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds; Sprains and Bruises. It is cooling, cleansing and Healing. Pl I O VrYt 11 mo,t efneaciona for this (L. UUiai 1 11, esso. Cold in th Head. Ac Our "Catarrh Car,' u speHalTy prepared to meet serious cases. Our ! a aal Syringe U aüuple aud lueipenit Rheumatism, Neuralgia. No other preparation Tim cured mora, e&ses of tbeae Lstremiin complaint thaa. ' tbe Kxtract. Our IMaater U invalid able in these diseaaea, Luiubaa. 1'aina la Uack or bide. 4c Diphtheria & Sore Throat, Lmj the Extract prompt:. teLsy is dangerous. ' T!t It 1 1 n.1 m i tlOOt !s Die g-reauit known remedy ; rapidly cunnffwheu other medianes hare faded. Our Ointment is of r;iet service wbera Uie removal of clothing is iucouvenieuU For Broken Breast and Sore Nipples. titXnXi tised The Kxtract will hever be without it. Our Ointment U Umi best euiouianl that can be applied. Female Complaints, f'mnJe disease the Kxtract can U used, 8 U well k?iowu. a ith th greatntt bwuetia. Full directum accompany each botUa. CAUTION. Pond's Extract s Äu2: the words Psnii's Kxtract' blown in the Rias, and onr picture trade-mark oa currouudla? lu;f a rxMr. Nona? other is pptiuiue. Always insist 011 bavins Coad's Kxtract. Take no other preparation, it it never told in tiUK, or tg uteiuure. Sold Trywher.,Prlcm ROt, fl, ft.TS rrrpu-fd only hj r0XDS IXTEICT 10., KEW YORK AKD LONrwiN. NATURE'S SANITARY SfJIENTK teaches us to nromntlr re CURE FOR move all decompooi'ir ma terials irom our dwellings; PflHOTIDnTlnH olmore importance it the UU1IO I 11 ft I I Ulli removal ol tbe waste le Trvlucut ot the human lodr bv means of the skin, kidneys, and bowels. The .li(f!itet irregularity in the action of tlic-e important oreatts should be at once checked by the u-e of Tarrant's Erunvisf, nt Ski.tk Ai f r.i:kt. This valuable family rnodiclneClKlj") CUSsl'IPA TION by thoroughly ch-ans-Sick-Headache,'Ä inRtue ooweiH and etiiug a regular habit. It gently upon the kid neys, open-i the pores of the skin and thus assists nature DYSPEPSIA. to throw oil the morbid humors. It is ecououiiral in price, pleasant to tbe taste, gentle in action. Sold by druggists everywhere. DON'T S Until you have examined our circular and learned our prices. ADDRESS CHANDLER & TAYLOR, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. J t'D a u S: jAMtox, Attorneys for Plaintiff1. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certlfled ropy of a decree to me directed, from the clerk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein the ScottUn American Morteaire Company is plaintiff, and John K. Kaulkner et al. are delendauia, (ca.te No. ta.mO), requiring me ta make the tum ot eight thousand five hundred and ten dollars and seventy-two cent (I ..MO.72). with interest on said decree and coKta, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, oa SATURDAY, THE 3d DAY OF JULY, A. I. 1, tetween the hours ot 10 o clock a. m.and i o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the real and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of th following real fstaic, iu Marion County, lathe Stale of Indiana, lo-wit : The south half of tection eight (Si, township fourtctu (II, tiorth of range three öj east; alo ail thai part of the northwest quarter of fcoctioa ciht Ni aforostid. which lie south of White River: ulso all that psrt of section seven (7. toivbti.lp fourteen (U. north of rauge tnrcc cm. Much lies cast of White River. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to atiivfv said decree, interest and costs, I 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 sumcient to discharge aaid decree, interest and costs, haid sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE H. CARTER. Sheriff of Marion Coauty. June 7, A. D. 18.se. JtDAit & Jameson, Attorneys for riaintlff. SHERIFF'S 8ALE. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to roe directed, from the Clerk of tbe Superior Court of Marion County. Indians. In a cause wherein Francis Smith, Trustee, is plaintifl", and Samuel C. Kmleyet al. are defendants, (case No. 35.VJO), requiring me to make tbe sum of nine thousand nine hundred and sixty seven dollars and six cents iS"..-tT.0i. with interest oa said decree and cts, 1 will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, en 8ATCEDAY, THE :id DAY OK Jl'LY, A. D. Mo, between the hours of ten o'clock a. m. and four o'clock p. m., of wild dar, at the door of tha Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and probt for a term not excerdiug ereu rear, of the following described real estate, iu Marion County, in the State of Indiana, to-wit: Ten (10) feet off the south side of lot number thirty-six (K.i. all of lots number thirty aevvu (37), thirtv -eight ( i. thirty-nine fortyt40. forty -one 41. forty two (12) forty-three U't and forty-lour ( 14), and the south half of lot nunCer forty-live ( ). all In James H. M Kernan's subdivision of ontlot number twenty-eight (2). i" tbe City of Indianapolis, together with all baiMings aid improvements thereon, and ail appur-teuaui-e aud fixtures and machinery thereto annexed and attached. If such rents and profit will not sell forainfflcient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and cosu. I will, at the same time and p".ace. expose to publ ic sale the fee simple of said real estate, or t so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge aaid decree, interest aud costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE H. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion Coaaty. June?. A. D. 1&&. C. P. Jacob, Attorney for Plaintiff SHERIFF'S BALE By virtue of aa eiecuion (vendO to me directed from the llork. of the Supcnoi Court of Marion County. Indiana. I wU expose ct public aale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE d DAY OF Jl l.Y, A. D. 186, Between the hours ot 10 o'clock a. ro. aud 4 o'clock . m. of said day. at the door of tbe t;ourt -hou.se of ariou County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven j ears.of the foUowinx real estste, to-wit: lxts numb, red forty-six i i fi and forty-seven (71, iu Rutler's tirst sdditiou to College Corner, Inthet itT I Indianapolis, Marion County. Iaditna. Andou failure to realize the full amount of Judgment, luterest and costs. 1 will, at tae Mime time ai d place, expose at public sa'e the fee simple of Mid real estate. Taken as the protverty of Rachaei E. Morrison ti tt.en.itol Alva M. Makepeace. said sale to be made without any relief whatever horn t vauoa or appraisement laws. GEORGE H. CARTER, BiicriS ol Marion County.
