Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 33, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1887 — Page 4

THE INDIANA STATE BENT1NEL WEDNESDAY MARCH SO 1867.

SCALY, ITCHY SKIN And all Itchicg and Scaly Skin and Scalp Diseases Cured by Cuticnra. PSORIASIS. Eczema. Tetter, Rlntrworm, Lieben. I'rurilu. Scald Head, Milk Crust, jÄndruff. Barbers' Bankers' Grocers' and Washerwoman's Itch, and eveiy species o( Itching, Burning, Scaly, Pimply Humors of the Skin and t-calp, with L06S of Hair, are positively cared by Cutlcara, the (rreat Skin Cure, and Cuticnra Soap, an exquisite bkin Beautii'ier externally, and Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Fanner Internally, when physicians and all other remedies fail. PSORIASIS, OR S DALY SKIN. I.John J. Case. D. D. 8., raving practiced flentistry In this county Jor thirty-five years, and being well known to thonsands hereabouts, with a view to helo any who are airllcted aal have been for the past twelve years, testify that the Cuticura Remedies cured me of Psoriasis, or ccaly Skin, in eight days, af.er the doctors with whom I had consulted gave me no help or en tonrapement. JOHN J. CASE, D. D. 6. Newton, Ü. J. DISTRESSING ERUPTION. "Your C'Hicura Remedies performed a wonderTulcure last Kummer on ODeof our customers, an old gentleman of seventy years of age who mflered with fearfully distressing eruption on the neal and face, and who had tried all remedies and doctors to no purpose. J. F. SMITH & CO. Texarkana. Ark.

DUSTPAN FCL OF SCALES. II. E. Carpenter, Henderson. N. Y., cured of Tsorlacls or lprosy. of twenty years standing, by Cuticura Remedies. The most wonderful eure on record. A dastpmful of scales fell irom him daily. Physicians and his friends thought he must die. ECZEMA RADICALLY CURED. Tor the radical cure of an obstinate case of Eczema of loDg Manding, I give entire credit to the Cuticura Remedies. E. B. RICHARDSON, JJew Haven, Conn. Bold by all druggists. Price: Cuticura, 50 rents: Resolvent, l; Soap. 25 cents. Potter Xrug and Chemical Company, Boston. ttad for How to Car Skin Diseases. TT 4 TTTIFY the Complexion and Skin iplexion and SI Cuticura Soap. JJKJIV. J by using the Cuti IT FEELS GOOD, Those worn out with Pain, Aches and Weaknesses End relief in one minute in the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. At druggists. 23 cents. IUPOKTANT 'OTICK. We have received letters enclosing money ftllliout posioffice address from the follw"ing persons: . E. R. Worley. James Ii. Carr. Pavid Watson. S. P. Cabbage. Alex. Bowman. J3. H. Culberson. Henry fmddon. Jred Friday. It is impossible to send or give credit to jarties who do not give their fall addrea la writing, always give postoffice, county and State. Judge Treat, of the United States District Court of Southern Illinois, died yesterday in the .-eventy-fifth year of his age. He fvasjppc'nted by Tresident Pierce in 1854. Th2 effort of the Republican organs to make it appear that President Smith of tne Senate was not entitled to the pay fixed by law for the President of the Senate is very absurd and comes to nothinsr. The city ticket nominated by the Democracy of Cincinati Thursday, is said to Je aa untuually strong one. Even the Commercial Gazette is less vulvar and slangy than usual on such occasions. Six weeks at;o a Republican club was Organ zed at Liberty, Ind., according to the Huston "Sunday school" plan. The Sentinel correspondent inform3 us that a post xnurtem is about to be held over the club's remains. They die early. The Co onet wins the ocean race, having Wrivei at Queenstowa yesterday. She was stcrm beaten for a week, encountering at one time a gale blowing sixty miles an hour. The Dauntless hai not yet been Bighted. If she should never be, interest in yacht races across the ocean will decline. Ose hundred clerks in the Pension office at Washington bave volunteered to work eitra Lours upon the Mexican War pension C'a!ma filed under the act of January 2 , 1857. The ex soldiers of the country have many reasons to remember this Democratic administration with gratitude. Tar high license law which has ju3t been passed by the General Assembly of Kew York, is based upon the theory of the liquor plank of the platform adopted by the laat Democratic State convention in Indiana, in that it discriminates in favor oi the wine and beer traffic as against that in wbUky and brandy. Ex-Misister MacDovgall, one of the most conspicuous of Canadian statesmen, has the courage to assure his fellow-countrymen that the American Government tan not be bullied, and that the Retaliatory bill was passed in a spirit of absolute earnestness. It is Btated that his declaration of these very simple facts has been in the nature of sensational information to the Canucks. The American people have had to wait for a Democratic administration to uphold the dignity of the United Elates to the eyes of the people of foreign countries. It Is a very excellent opportunity we now have to teach the British Government and people a needed lesson, und it is to be hoped that President Cleveland will make the most of it. THE Cl'S OPP ORTUNITY. 'Ileal estate la the Southern country, Irom Louisville to Birmingham, is rising in value, though, so far as the latter city is conferred, there are indications of a possible cc!:?pe. But so general is the rise in the citsf s of the South that capitalists of a Tpcc!a!ive tnrn are flocking to that region. Ja Irc!:mapolis alw the market is rising json.tv.Lat, and without artificial expedients. It Till probably go runcli ügL r if tbe citizens of Indianapolis lake due advantage of their opportunities. The inter-Stato Commerce law ought to prove of great advantage to this city, If tre are not mistaken in our judgment ot ike effect of its provisions. Under it the manufacturers of the country, If the long and short haul section be construed according to the intent of the framers of the law, Trill be eompellci to seek the locality fyhich produces the crude material they re-

spectively use. Cotton-spinners will tend to the cotton belt, lumber-makers to the timber .lines, leather-makers to the oar or cattle areas, wool-weavers to the sheep farms, etc. The questions of contiguity to the source of supply and of convenience of distribution will enter into the problem of location, but the ultimate result will be a scattering of factories all over the face of the country. There was never any reason, other than that found in freight-rate discrimination, why the- East should have retained so nearly a monopoly of the manufacturing business of the United States. The day has about passed when the manufacturers of Connecticut and Massachusetts and Rhode Island can make goods for the people of Oregon and Texas out of material originally produced in those States, and effectively compete against manufacturers in the immediate vicinity of the locality where the crude material was produced. We shall, therefore, see tinder the operation ef the inter-State commerce law the shoemakers and weavers and spinners of 'ew England and of the Atlantic seaboard migrating to the West and South. The effect must be to build up rapidly the towns ot the South and West, to increase competition, to cheapen manufactures, and to check monopolistic tendencies in the commercial and industrial life of the country. By virtue of these new conditions in trade and traffic Indianapolis should fcain largely. We are in the heart of a magnificent cereal region, convenient to coal beds, near the center of population, within easy reach of the lumber regions, and with unrivalled railroad facilities. It is because we are so fortunate in this last-mentioned respect that we hold such aa enviable coiga of vantage under the new order of things. We, therefore, know of nothing to which our propertyowners should address themselves more assiduously than this matter of pressing our advantages upon the attention of the manufacturers of the country. W e should be ready to offer such inducements as we may abatement of taxes, ground room, etc. For years have we boasted of our fortunate placement relative to the commerce of the country, but without much effect. The reason we have not developed as a manufacturing point has been that, because of freight rate discrimination, it was not necessary that Eastern manufacture ers should come west. Now that bar td the city's development has been removed, and it is for the property owners of Indianapolis to re-assert, at this juncture, the advantages the city possesses, and to manifest a spirit of liberality.

The appointment of Mr. Oscar SImuss cf New York, to succeed Mr. Cox at the Turkish court, briefly announced in the the Sentinel of yesterday morning, will doubtless command the respect of all classes. Mr. Strauss is a Hebrew German with considerable attainment in scholarship and the author of a work on republican government. He possesses considerable fortune and is a gentleman of agreeable address. He was highly recommended from various sources, but the appointment was delayed because the President was in doubt about his reception at the Turkish court, and there was also a doubt as to his being welcomed by Christian missionaries in Turkey. Mr. Cox, on being consulted as to the first point, assured Mr. Cleveland that there would be no difficulty about that matter, as Hebrews were quite as acceptable to the Turks aa any other non-Mohammedans, and that many of them held profitable official positions under the Saltan's government Regarding the other point, as to Mr. Strauss' reception by Christian missionaries, the officers of the American Board of Mis aions, on being consulted, cordially expressed their willingness to have their interests and those of their missionaries entrusted to a Hebrew's keeping. A Washington correspondent says that the appointment of Mr. Strauss can not fail to make a pleasant impression on th9 Jewish -j citizens of the United States. This gives the Germans two good diplomatic appointments, the other being the Italian Legation. It is said that Mordecai Noah, a famous New York editor, was in 1813 a Minister to Carbary powers, and that he was the only Jewish citizen of the United States, before Mr. Strauss, that ever represented the country as a Minister to a foreign power. Thk New York Sun demands that Mayor Harrison, of Chicago, make good his assertion that representatives ot the administration were bent upon his defeat. "It it is true;" says the Sun, "if the President of the United States thinks it his duty to Interfere in a municipal election and lay ujon Federal officeholders the task of beating a Democratic candidate for Mayor, the Democratic party wants to know it," Whatever may be the measure of the censure that should be visited upon a President for conspiring to defeat a candidate of his own party for an office to which his administration has no relation, the thought of President Cleveland taking any interest whatever in Democratic politics is so refreshing and novel that we are inclined to be less censorious than we might be otherwise. Ix reply to Inquiries, It can be stated that the new Insane Asylum can not be furnished and opened to applicants until the next regular session of the Legislature two years hence, unless a special session should be called and proVide means. The late session failed to supply the money for completing and furnishing the asylums. The one here has but very little work yet to be done, but Is entirely unfurnished. Evansvllle Journal. It may be further slated that the reason why the Evansville Insane Hospital is in such deplorable shape Is because of the bullheaded and inexcusable policy of Speaker Sayre and the other Republican obstructionists of the lower House ot the Legislature. Let Southern Indiana and her people .fully understand this and "spot" every Republican who has the impudence to ask for a re-election. FnjfATOK Shebmak is "endeavoring," to Quote the somewhat satirical phrase oi the Journal, when calling attention tl his Cincinnati speech, to convince the work ingmen of tbe country that they may find relief from their woes by Toting with the RepuDlican party. He goes so far as to say that any measure o( amelloraUoa ffUicl.

may be proposed by them will be adopted by the Republican party. The trouble with the Republican paity is that it has never proposed any relief itself and has always opposed any proposition for the betterment of their condition coming from the workingmen. During its long lease of power it stood persistently hostile to the interests of labor, and the ills of which laboring men complain are the fruit of Republican rule.

A POLITICAL NECESSITY, Blalae's Ha.i in Legislation Which He Did Not Want. I Portland (Me.) Special to New York Times. Nothing which has occurred in Maine for some time has caused so much comment isnd criticism as the vetoing of the medical registration bill by Governor Bod well. The bill was to prevent quacks and Incompetent persons from practicing medicine without passing an examination. The Governor regarded It as a proper bill, signed it, and sent it to the Secretary of State's oaice for record. That very night Mr. Blaine had the Governor and Attorney-General Baker in his study. "You must veto the medical bill," thundered Mr. Blaine. "Its passage means the loss of 10,000 votes to us. We can't stand that. Eyery Spiritualist would vote against us. The bid must and shall be vetoed'" said the distinguished son of Maine. "But I hare signed it," remarked the subdued Governor. "That makes no difference. A veto must be written, taking constitutional ground against the principles of the measure. Baker will prepare the veto message for you. I am too excited to write it myself." That settled it. The Governor's name was scratched from the bill, the record of his signa-tu-e wiped out, and the veto message sent In to the Senats. The great question now is, why need Maine have a Legislature? If the G jvernor can repeal a law without legislative sanction obtained in the proper manner, why can't he make laws at will? The Medical Registration bill is really a law. It is properly signed by the Governor. The act of signing legislative bills Is a judicial act, and he can not recall or vitiate that action. lie has clearly usurped his power and bis action In mutilating the public records to satisfy Mr. Blaine is one of the most revolutionary character. Many of the best lawyers In Maine pronounce the bill, '.as signed and recorded, as good and valid law as there Is In Maine. The educated and abler physicians of the State, without regard to party, denounce the veto, and there is no doubt that the matter will come up In the courts. It is the talk of the State, and there are more disclosures yet to come. The reasons for vetoing the bill were purely political, Mr. Blaine left Augusta yesterday, and it Is aid purpose U to visit his daughter, Mrs. Coppinger, iu the Indian Territory, and that he will be absent about a month. II he has any other object In view it is not made public. Sajre a Foe to tbe State's Best Interests. I Miami Sentinel. The Democrats cf Indiana never claimed, and do not claim, that Green Smith is LieutenantGovernor of tbe State; they only assert that no election in 1SS6 for Lieutenant-Governor was valid; that Smith, by virtue of the action of the Senate, was President of that body; that the law, and 11 precedents confirm tbe view, only requires an election of Lieutenant-Governor when a Governor is to be chosen. When Green Smith attempted to secure the opinion of tbe highest tribunal of the State on that question, Colonel Robertson admitted the weakness of his de'enso by pleading want of jurisdiction by the court trying the issue. It makes no difference whether the Democratic view was correct or not, two wrongs can not make a right, and the act of tbe Republican Uouso In blocking Important legislation alter having recognized Green Smith as President of the Senate can not be satisfactorily explained or excused to their constituents. There is no law making the Speaker of the House the judge of tbe qualifications of the presiding o.Ter of the Senate, and when Warren Sayre atteapied to usurp that authority he made himsel'v and the party sustaining his revolutionary actr a foe to the Lest interests of the State. The voters of Indiana will rebuke the unjustifiable act? of the Bepublican obstructionists of the last legislature at the polls next year In a manner which can not be misunderstood by the apologists of their lau kmuss. Traveling fcr I'leasare. Evansville Courier. I Mr. John Sherman protests that he la iunosent of any residential aspirations in his pre ist at operations in the South. lie declares that bis journey is purely one of pleasure and for the purpose of acquiring the kind of information about the people ana prospects oi the Southern States that tan only come from personal observation. Why is it that great men places) low an estimate upoa popular intelligence? Is it oneof the inseparable attributes of greatness to think scall beer o f every one else? There is nothing reprehensible in Mr. Sherman's effort to awaken enthusiasm for himself among the Southern people. He is reconiced as one of the most prominent men in the land one of a dezen or to for whom there Is no public honor left except the Presidency. He has al ready been a candidate for the Prcrldcctial nomination before two National convention. and it is believed from cne end of the land to the olher that he would not now rei'-ue the nomination he has been seeking for ycaas. I'crhaps he has changed his mind, but If. he wants to make the people believe it he had bet ter quit making speeches in the South, and go home. Tbe Truth In a Nutshell. Crawfordsville Review. Tbe bulldozing tactics characteristic of the Republican parly from its organization were never better Illustrated than la the last Legislature. Tbeywere determined to win at any cost. They were bound to place Ben Harrison In the Senatorial chair, regardless of all right or equity la the matter. But they didn't. They found men who know the ropes, the Ins and outs of political life, as well as themselves. They could not force as they desired, and retired from the field defeated, dishonored. It should be ever afterward understood that when radical leaders seek to establish a 7 by 8 commission in Indiana that It shall not bi done. When they act fairly they will be met with fairness, but when they seek to force they should be forced, Failed to Materialize. I Liberty Herald The Lincoln League failed to materialize Faturday. A Corporal's guard was present, and that was all. The Republican party has learned that lu days of usefulness are pest, and all the "leagues" the Republican politicians can organ" Ize will not suffice to draw the Republican voters out cf the holes Itto which they have crawled, Immediately after the adjourning of the Legis lhture. Even Braggart Huston seems to have found a place to bids h!mc!f, as he did not "league" any, as he was advertised to do. A Corpse Within Thirty Minutes. 6ey-moi"R, March 27. Mrs. Mathew Cooley, a most estimable christian -lady and devoted member of the M. E. Church, attended divine service to-day, and on her retura home at noon, suffering some pains, the took a dose of mor phine, as she supposed, and ate dinner. She be came suddenly very aick, and soon was thrown Into violent convulsions. Several physicians were call? 3, hut they cooll do nothing. Bnc

bad taken arsenic by mistake, and Inside ot thirty minutes she was a corpse. Her age was about fifty. She leaves a family. The tragic event has shrouded the city In gloom. The Tremont House at Wabash Darned. Wabash, March 27. Shortly after 3 o'clock this morning fire was discovered In a rear room of the servants' quarters of the Tremont House, a three-story brick used as an annex to the LuU House, and just across an alley from the latter. Notwithstanding the efforts ot the hotel peonle to arouse the guests the Sames made auch rapid progress tttiaany were barely enabled to escape In their night clothing. A high wind prevailing at the time transformed the building into a

teething mass of f re, naming all attempts to remove the furniture. It becoming evident that the structure was doomed, attention was turned to saving the Lutz House, whlt-h caught Are in a dozen places, but was saved by a faithful fight with buckets lasting an hour, Mrs. M. A, Newman, proprietress oi the Tremont, lost ? 1,400 In cash, jewelry and notes, while occupanti of the rooms lost as much more. The total loss on the building Is about f 11.0C0, and on contents S,000. The Insurance aggregated 111.500, distributed in the following companies: Home, New York, S2.CC0; Merchants. Jersey City, 12,000; Girard, Philadelphia, 12,000; Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, (2.500; Phoenix, Brooklyn, S2 500; Fire Association, Philadelphia, 81,500; National, Hartford, 2,600. The blaze was unquestionably the result of an incendiary act. Mr. Itanb's Reason Restored. Lafayette, March 27, One of the distressing calamities that has befallen the family ot W. W. Kaub, of Chalmers, has been removed by the restoration of Mr. Raub's reason. The case Is peculiar and pathetic Mr. Raub is a wealthy grain dealer of that village, and last fall burglars took advantage of that fact to break into his residence. Tbe fright canted Mrs. Raub to lose her reason. She was removed to a private asylum at Chicago. This mifcfortuno was closely followed by tbe serious illness of her daughter. These afllictions so affected Mr. Raub that he became absent-minded. In ministering to his daughter he gave her the wrong medicine, with serious results. ' Regret and his a Mictions were too much lor his mind and he became insane, ne was sent to an asylum for treatment. It proved a success, and he is now at home, sane, and requires but mental rest and recreation to make his cure permanent. A Veteran of the War of 1 8 1 '3 . New Albany, March 27. James Giles, one of the oldt st citizens of this part of Indiana, died last evening at Corydon, Harrison County, aged ninety-seven years. He had been a resident of Corydon since 1S10, and was the first man to manufacture hats in Southern Indiana. Re had, served fcur terms as Sheriff; knew General William Henry Harrison well ; served as a scout tinder him in the war of 1812, and was noted for his reminiscences of the Territorial days of Indiana and the Indian wars. He was a resident of Corydon when the Territorial and State Capital was at that town; was the personal and political friend of Governor Posey, Governor Jennings and (Governor Hendricks, the first three Governors of the State. He preserved his memory to within a few days of his death, though he bad been blind several years. The Errors of a tVay ward Girl. Lafayette, March 27. Urged by her parents, the police are enlisted in the rescue of a wayward girl named Hattie Ericson from a life of shame. Her ruin was wrought by the lesions daily learned on the street, and another blasted life can be assigned to the evils of "chippyism." When the parents discovered the sad fact they were almost heart-broken, and the mother was seized with convulsions. The erring girl, when she saw her mother's grief, burst into tears and wai with CiScuHy restrained Irom taking her own life. Mr. Ericson dec'are that the law shall sift out the guilty prrtyln this distressing case, and some racy developments are expected. The parents arc poor but respectable, and feel the disgrace deeply. A Sad Cfese of ltetrayal. Wis rMEsTEB, March 25. Mack Nelson, a gay Lothario, who has teen wanted here for some time to answer a charge of betrayal preferred by a young tirl named Puckett. was run down and brought here by Marshal Fletcher, of tbis city, last night, and in default of 82,000 bond was placed in jail to await trial in the preseci term of court, an indictment ay the grand jur? having already been found. This Is a sad tase. The girl, whose father Is, and has been, hopelessly insane for many rears, is only sixteen years old. Her worse than widowed mother has kept the family of several children, and sjnt them to school by her bard earnings over tbe wash tub. Ne'son is a man of nature years, and his action In betraying a young school girl and then lleeing the country, is severely criticised and denounced by the j?ood people of th city. Destructive Fire on a Farm. Washington, March 25. Yesterday, on one o? Clement Lee's farms, about twelve miles fronv this city, a destructive fire bro'ie out and swept away all the buildings and tie garnered grain on the farm. A fire had been kindled in a deadening near the houi and bam, and a violent wind blowing from the deadsnlng toward the straw-stack in line with the houjc and birn soon set fire to the straw. From thence it leaped upon the barn, and it was lot Ion j until the bouse was wrapped in flames. Excepting the foundation of the house nothing was save!. The bouse, which was a frame, was one of the finest of country residences, and wu new. The barn a very large one was also new, and filled with hay and grain. Fifteen bnadred buihels of com were burned. Loss, a"out ?3,500; no In surance. A Prlnoner'a Attempt to Escape JtrFEKsosviiXE, March 2X William Young, a convict confined in the Bo'tthern Prison, mado an attempt to escape last avening, bat was foiled In his undertaking. When the count was made it wai discovered that Young was missing and a search for him was Immediately Instituted. A 'ter searching every nook and corner aboKi the place he was found under the dry-house well equipped with the necessary paraphernalia t let himself dowa from off the walls bad he ever gained the top. About fifty feet of rope tied up in an old coffee sack was found in his poc session. Tbe warden was unable to larn where he procured the rope, but Is of the opinion that he had an accomplice on the out side. ' "It Is a Very Nice Verdict." Bi.rFiToN, March 25. Wm. Field has been tried and found guilty of robbery, and tbe jury fixed his punlBhmcnt at two years in the Northern State Prison, ft fine and three years disfranchisement, etc The crime was committed on the person of Samuel Foncannon of this city, on the night of January 22, Field taking from Foncannon 1 0 In silver. On the return of the verdict Field thanked prosecutor, jary and A. L. Sharp, Esq , his counsel, saying, "It is a very nice verdict, except that I hate to think it will be three years before I can hold any office." ne had denied the crime under oath as a witness for himself, ILe Fruit Outlook Never Iietter. Slyxovr, March 27. Mr. William Eyarlay, rest" 'rg in the western, and Mr. Ca'cb Elliott, of tl '., end of the county, two of tbe most sucoesafi 1 orchardists In the south rart of the 8tate, were In the city yesterday, and they unite In tiying that the outlook for an abundant fruit crop of all kinds has not been moro promising In many years than at this time. Willie Sleet's Slayer Captured, r.ismo Sun, March 24. Sheriff D. P. Truitt has jutt received notice of the arrest of Wilson payer, who ihot he boj wnii.9 U piect on

March 7, at MClersburg. He was arrested at Peoria, 111., by the Sheriff, who had seen an account of the murder In a newspaper. Sheriff Truitt has gone to Indianapolis to obtain the necessary papers to bring Mm here for trial at the April term of court.

.THE POPE GIVES AS AUDIENCE. HI HoIlnes;Recelves a Number of Americans at the Vatican Yesterday. Rome, March 26. An audience to American visitors was given at the Vatican to-day. Upward of fifty American ladies and gentlemen asAnhM in -;f ajor-i -ith ancient tapestry, picturing the miracles of Christ, when they were ushered into the throne room. When the Pope's presence In an adjoining room was known, all knelt and the guards held their swords at a salute while the Pone, who wore a white sontane and a crimson Cloak, slowly approached. Entering the throne room the Pope said: "We come to welcome these good Americans." He then seated himself in a chair in front of the throne and cushions we replaced at his feet. Bishops Ireland, Watterson and Keane and Rector O'Connell were te first to approach. In his conversation with the Bishop the Pope expressed great pleasure at the progress male by the Church in America. He was concerned about the success of the new university, and felt the necessity of having such a university In the United States. Regarding the new American College in Rome, he hoped It would be worthy of the growth of Catholicity In the United States. The rector stating that the college would contain at least 200 rooms, the Pope expressed surprise. He said that such a building would cost much money and that this was a hopeful sign of Catholic growth in America. The bishops then presented the other visitors, each of whom knelt an 1 kissed the papal ring, the Pope addressing a few gracious words to each. Amons; those present was the Associated Pres correspondent. Tbe Pope held tbe journalist's band in both his, talking to him ripidly in Italian. The Pope looked his age, but his active keen, brilliant eye and sonorous, slow speed are always searching and full of meaning. A Horrible Misfortune. Jm-ERsoNviLLE, March 2Ü. William Hendricks, a photographer located at Nabb Station, a few miles north of this city, on the O. and M. Railroad, met with a horrible misfortune while experimenting with some chemicals last evening that will probably produce death. In compounding a bath," consisting of syonlde of potash and other deadly drugs, he unthoughtedly put both hands in the vessel and the poison was taken up through a crushed finger. One arm at once swelled to twice its usual szsr and produced excruciating pain. The phycisians are of opinion he can not survive. Henlrlck's body has commenced swelling and the doctors have given him up to die. He Passed By on the Other Side. Eiielbvville, March 25. At last accounts Mrs. John Collins, who lives n?ar Marietta, who was so dreadfully burned the other day, was still alive. When her clothes caught fire she ran out into the yard and tried to get through a barb wire fence and got fast. While in this condition some man, whose name, fortunately for him, could not be secured, came riding by but never stopped to offer her any assistance, passing on till he met Monroe Dritt, to whom he remarked that there was a wimaa up there with her clothes cm fire. When Monroe got there the poor woman had got out of the fence and fallen on the porch. Creclllns Indicted. Sew Albany, March 27. The grand jury of Crawford County has Indicted Charles B. Crecilius, the fugitive station agent of the Air Line at Tas well, for obtaining a gold watch and certain turns of money in a fraudulent manner. But the fugacious agent having beea released by tbe authorities at Belleville, Ills., ia doubtless new out of harm's way and basking- in the sunny smiles of his "darling Lizzie." A Prominent Farmer Dead. Setmovr, March 23. Mr. James W. Owcm, of Owen Township, this county, died last niit of BrightB' disease and paralysis. Mr. Owens was born where he . died fifty-nine years ago. He was a prosperous farmer, and life-long Democrat of the Jacksonian type; was one of Jackson County's most esteemed citizens; twice elected County Commissioner, which position he filled with honor to himself and credit to the county. A Man and Team Killed. Tutos, March 25. The north-bound pay train struck- Levi Kemper's team at Atlant this afternocn, killing him and both horses. He leaves a widew and two children. Farm Douse Destroyed. Seymocr, March 2S. The farm residence of Mr. Christian Topic, situated in Grassy Fork Township, took are last evening and was totally destroyed. THE WEEK'S NEWS. Becent Events Retold in Brief Paragraphs for-tli Weekly Sentinel. Postmaster nugsr, of Charleston, 8. C, Is dead. Two feet of snow fell last week in portions of Connecticut. Tbe New York Assembly has passed the Crosby high Meente bill. James Kearney, a- New York attorney, is taissig, witn $100,000 Secretary Whitney denies a New York rumor that he Intends to resign. r A contract has been made at Mexic-, Mo., forboring a well 3,008 feet, in search of oil. Five fine steamships are under construction in the BÄip-yard at Detroit and vicinity. A strike of coopers at Seilersburg and Cementvine, Ind., has been settled by arbitration. The New Jerse? House has passed a bill to give women the right to vote for School Trustees. The body of s well dressed young woman with her throaS cut was found near "Rihway, N. J. The steamhip Scotia, with 900 passengers, went ashore Friday on Ixmg Island. All were caved. The birthday presents received by Emperor William are snnicient to fill five icxnltira wagons. Edward Whelän, of Newberg, N. Y., is added to the list of dead of the Buffalo hotel Sre, making fifteen. James M. Trotter, the new Recorder of Deels at Washington, is in a dangerous condition from pneumonia. J. Sterling Morton, of Nebraska, Is likely to b appointed a member of the Paeiflo Railway Commission. George B. Westeott, a bank president at Charlestown, Md .died last week, leaving an estate worth S2.000.0UO. Frank Kerner was convicted or murder In t1 second degree, at Reading, Pa., Saturday, for killing his wife. A preacher at Aullviile, Mi., was fined 1 10 and coetafor kissing a lady of his congregation against her will. Twelve miner were, during Tuesday night, March 22, burned to death in a boarding house at Bessemer, Mich. Cardinal Gibbons Friday took possession of bis titular church at Rome, in presence of large numbers of Americans. Twenty-five thousand dollars' worth of gambling appartus was burned at New York police headquarters, Saturday. The Treasury Department reports C4 distilleries in operation tbroughout the country, Kentuckly leading with 156. Ti e State officers of Indiana Thursday reiertfd a proposition by a New York house to loan t-00,t(A) at 2V per cent. The wife of A. P. Luse, a typa-fmin ler of ChiC.'i. was granted a divorce anl alimony, at Crawfordsville, Ind., last week. Acoll'sion of Fort Wayne trains near Ict uIm. Obto, caused the death of Knglneer Bea'.l. Ehvht other persons were Injured. The Rall'oad Commissioners of New Yok have presented to the Legislature a itport agslnsi tbe htatlng oi cars by stoves. The ocean yacht-race was won by thi- Coronet, which srrivfd off Quoi nstown about noon 6uuriy. The dfnfarce Ia2,9y miles. Herappa-ent tlmwasjustlnRideof fifteen days. Her shortftf day's ruuwas ss.8; her longest 2 miles.

The weather was uncommonly stormy. She carried twenty-nine persons. The Dauntless arrived Monday. M. Herold, of the French War Office, has ba dismissed on suspicion of having supplied to foreigners secrets of the department Suit has been instituted against W. J. Stoke, former pension agent for Ten ueee. for an alleged shortage ia his accounts of f371,.;04. By an explosion in the Bull! colliery at Ly lney, South Wales, eighty five men wore entombed. Seven corpse have been taken out. James G. Blaine left Boston Friday morning for the Vest. He ref u sed to be interviewed regt rdlug Senator Sherman's speech at Nashville. The Missouri is falling rapidly at Bismarck, Dak. The fall is thought to be the result of a Korge above, which may cause additional disaster,

Senator Sherman, on the invitation of the Re- I publican members of the Legislature of Tennessee, delivered an address at fs'ashMlle Thursday I evening. ! A colored man named Johneawas execute! at Marion, Ark., last Friday, in presence of 1.500 persons, for an outrage on a white girl left in bis charge. The people of a village in China inveigle! a party of SCO tramps into a temple, and during night applied the torch, only forty of the number escaped. The State of California has obtained judgment against two former harbor commissioners for $100,000 misappropriated by the secretary of the commission. At Beatrice, Neb., Friday, Jackson Marion was bftctred for the murder ot Jobn Cameron fiftn years ago. Tne Sheriff found Marion in a Kansas jail in 1882. W. A. Green, wanted for the murder of Enos Brambaugb, in You tie America. Ind., lu Ju'y. 1SS1, has been arrested by a Chicago detective In Cedarvale, Kas. Joel W. KeUogg, a prominent politician of E khart. Ind., has been sentenced to three years In thp penitentiary for embezzling $11,000 from a buLdlDg associa'iou. A suit brought in Detroit to obtain an interpretation of the will of Francis Palms, covering d estate of at least S7.Ouu.uoo is said to be really a content by the da tighter. Some person unknown bought a draft for 81.9'J5 st St Joseph. Mo., and forwarded it to the SecrMary of tbe Treasury to be placed to the credit of an unknown debtor. Colonel I'aac Warmoth, who ditd Wednesday at 8a lent. HI., whs a veteran of two wars. Among h-s eKven urvivirp children is Henry C. Warn otfc, ex Governor of Louisiana. Judge S. H. Treat died Sunday afternoon at Spnngfield. at tbe age of seventy-five, iron Bright's disease. He was appointed to the federal bench by President Pierce. Carter H. Harrison has informed the Democratic Campaign Committee that he would no', run for Mayor of Chicago. . John H. McAvoy declined the nomination for City Treasurer. The stock market showed some life an! strength last Thursday, after a long period of dullness. Pacific Mail rose to 56, Northwestern common to lliJ8, and Lackawanna to 13 ij;. Willie Sells, sixteen years ot age, nw uuler sentence of d eat (4 for the munler of his parauU, brother, and sister at Erie, Kahsas, is said to have made to his guardian a full confession H. G. Douglass. Postmaster at TlainfieM. Indiana, while his affairs were being investigate 1 by Inspector Stuatt, escaped with several huadred dollars and has not been heard from. Rosa Bonheur's "Horse Fair" was sold at the Stewart col lection auction for $"3 0u0. Tbe purchaser was Cornelius Vanderbilt, who presented the picture to the Metropolitan Maseum of Art. John C. Rovelto, a Malay residing in Providence, was watching with a sick friend. Thursday night, when he was seized by Edward Turner and pounded against a door until his brain exuded. In the dining room ot the Palmer nouse, at Chicago, Friday afternorn, Charles F. Joidan, tbe colored head-water, was shot through te head by a discharged employe named Thilip F, Bearllng. It is stated that Mr. Fairchild has been promised promotion to tbe Secretaryship of the Treasury on April 1. Oscar 8. Strauss, a prominent importer of New York, has been appointed Minister to Turkey. The real estate transfers at Louisville for the current week amounted to (1,221.000, and the Recorder's clerks are two weeks behind in their work. It is fifteen years since a similar movement was experienced. W. A. Comyn, the inventor of a -fire-escape, while giving an exhibition of his appliance at Buffalo, Sunday, was precipitated from a thirdstory window by the giving way ot a hook, and received serious injuries. Owing to light receipts of late, cattle in the Chicago market have advanced to the highest figures of last week, the best beeves bringing ti.40. Although 7,000 boes were left unsold, the best grades commanded SC. Six persons connected wi:h the recent plot to assassinate the Czar were hanged lastweet. The police of St. Petersburg discovered at an adjacent summer resort stores of dynamite and apparatus for the manufacture of bombs. John A. Logan, Jr., and MissJEdith Andrews were married last week, at Youngstown. Ohio, and soon afterward left for Florida. ThebrMe's father euve the voiinir ran nie a rheek for S50.000. and her uncle presented Government bonds of the came value. In a tmement on West Twelfth street. New York. Friday, James Hogan fractured th skull of his wife with a hatchet atl then killed himself by leaping from a third story window. The tragedy grew out of the insane condition of both from the loss of their last child. Tbe President denies the stories of bis failing health, and says he was never better. The diagnosis of bis case made by visiting Democratic of-tiee-seeker8 appears to have been much nearer correct thsn that of the Washington doctor who predicts his physical breaking down. Bf rlin was decorated with flag ar.d flowers March 2- in honor of the Emperor's ninetieth birthday, and at noon a royal salute of 101 guns was fired. The students' proces'ioa past the imperial palace required several hundred carrtPRCK. Banquets were given In each continental capital by the German Ambassador. A large number of people in Georgia are nuking preparations for the end ot the worH which they believe will occur on the 1st of next December. They pretend to base this-idea upon the revelations of a colored girl who clai lis to have received her Inf jrmatiou from the snsrels: but the impossibility of running a world without whisky ia natnra'lly quite enough to suesest It tothe minds of apeop'e where prohibition is so. rigidly enforced as it is ia iGeorgia. PSBKCOOGIICHIU PURELY VEGETABLE. PERFECTLY HARMLESS. Critical Case Asthma BroncbUU. Mr Charles A. Tiel, says the Philadelphia Evening News, was so prostrated with throat trouble following upon asthma, he was ordered by physicians to 'ew Orleans. The cbacpe wrought no good; he returned home in a hopeless condition. He was adviei and he tried Red Star Cough Cure. His cough and asthma left him, aud after using a tew bottles bis health was completely restored. Another Plenro-Pueumonia Cough. Qumby House, Portland, Oregon. Alter suffering a great deal from an attack of pleuropneumonia, connected with a severe and painful cough, a friend of mine recommended the Red Star though Cure to me, alter 1 had tried several other remeltes without success. One bottle ensured my recovery. MARK A. MILLER, Traveling Agt , Erie It. R. Inflammation of Throat and Lungs. Ban Francisco. Cal. Mr. Oliver Hinkley, proprietor of the Pacific Carriage Company, 11 Powell street, San Francisco, says: "I have been sufleriug with a severe con gh, causing finally intiimm it ion of the throat and lungs for a long time. After consulting several physicians without deriving any benefit, I was induced by a friend, who bad been similarly aP.iktei, to try th- Eed Star Congh Cure.' Afcera few doses I began to feel instant relief, and after taking one bottle I wssentlr'ycurpd."' OLIVER HINKLE. A Start lieg Disclosure Tka Note. A leading physician has male the Bta-t-ling revelation that fix thousand peop e, mobtlr children, die yearly lnteis count-y from tbe effects of cough mixtures containing morphia or opium. THE CHAULE3 A.VOG ELEU CO., Baltimore. Md. IWA.'I pmwi rsiNO St Jiirobi Oil or Red Stnr Crwh Cvrr vill. by rmtluig a two-etnt stamp auf a hi'm ol their car, rarü advice FBKE. gACOBS OIL THE GREAT GEflMAII REMEDY For Pain Cam theuaitisn, tTewugU, DarkarN Wradafc.Tartfcara urii, liruW Ur 1'alas a4 Arhea, At nmricldU anil Dualer. JTUK CIUK l, 14 a. 00 kla 10, HalU rr, V. 9t at

Read and Note, ITa,S1A PCthftteonstrrnert nniarcetveo S? VI d- f er 'tement as true. And It f jtme asj true tht thee statements are not aJwi?e!iable. Tlieir clerks or theniseivrs, la mmiy ere Erst clas houaos, :AYe for a few year past. In jome Instances persistently, ev-n alter present, tion or its Injustice to consumer ani manutacJurer and others, nowand then. lmKI opoa Jrn f".Vun,Jr n 'fim of lOM fcfx. J H AI I a the inie article. Others have soMrie tyiVio as t;M ALtolo n EXTRACT, fthen i again hold op the I'ltUK a. an llac: rneiit to taie the Impure, perniclou. Injurious Cteap and danerou article. Thtugue on wbe'e. when questioned, the A.MI'LKsf ackaowiedg! nient la made that the customer ases areaieT on the good reputation oi - TOMSJXTRACfi ' We do not prerome to arraign all 6 rnprtn. btrt 00 wish our ci'-toiiieni to ti?nlert.ind mat when they want POI EXT It At T they ßijuU taunt upon having It and nothing eke. Ve ourselves go to the Drupelet for prefer'?, tion. and relying upon their skill nd experience In this parlcular py the hlphen price wilUn?!y,

tfr'-u, u jcr, c, xc. vuiwe wouia not 1 r.u, uiwytr, SC..CCC. UUt we Would Bot ai.oW ren our most trusted dropirslt to eil u an anlcia rnply b-cause lie reeomnien-led It to us aa belnz UOOU OH THE KA.MK A si the one wf tri cu want, bo we say to our old customer anl thoi lr ctr clo lor tic trat fiue. Ask'for ro.VrrS EXTRACT, aal vMs yoa r.ave confidence la your 1'ruclrta for prT'ntiorn. know that he (iWdl'M tkK I'OMKrf KXT It ACT and '. T fir.1 aBubstltutVf or it. atiC ca-ir.ot mnke yoa believe that anytlilnir Instating rOMKXTHACT.lnboiticorln huik, v i:i msweryour purpose, and remember Io. I'4 KXTIt ACT is the same wherever bouKt' on'y fee that you Ret It In the OLD. U.I eTVLK. never chunked, of liottla witu name blown la t-i-S p'.T-s, l.6 on the bottom, lnclosud in Uu2 Vriycr W lUi oar eUy w raxplikt. THE WONDER OF HEALING fcs riLSs. ts:;s, snrsrars, riA2EHEA, STttTSS, SjSE THH0Ä.T, ETE3,' fest, nTLAiAT::::s atd ez:smass er. all inzzi mr. Utrd Internally and EiternaZtH. PritsTüc. f 1.73 WM)"S LX.TKACT CO., 7i ötb. Ae.. wlorfc. THE HOVSLIlOLIt l'ATICXT EMERY YiEEEL KKIFE SKARPEKER. It m'V'Ts the rier.innd f-r a pr;v tioal anl i!i-i n-' s;ve arlKlrt l-r s'uri-n-inp Kr.;'t--, Sei-, 111"!!!. It ll'M-i !. vo 'U'c VIV a-i.: -.x-tivlv. Tii.- Adjii.ta. 'ff-J Mr Y:Mc M! ii -v : ).-..,:. i, tS&UT I f"i:i:! i : mi'' t Minnu n i I 1. . .r W. 1 - 11 .111 1.1.., i ,.i I,.,: in, ,,,. . 5 Jj The whiH-l i6y 1 :ii. rmn.l I l Vir Dra), --i'i iia.,i w t or li v. ami i llk"' ...... , 'ii.ivit im uuniw. Iii- .MdiiT.e i f ;i-(.-ii.-.l a Mnle or v;-il lv firmmf a thin mit. rr,?l -ll il-JC Liberal Teii.!. InAcentt aid 1 1 the I. A.l.lr.,-. LO-iiJ tnVSTAL EMERY AVIIEEI, CO. X ort ha rapt on. Mats. Kew Gold Plated TrXckCbarni Men. tors and eTaryixwjy tnut wj.au F U N mould have uua. 1 1 rreawt ruara of luuffhter wherever fhown. Kj toucblBE asnrmcln tbe heel It wt IV make them tburahthrlr . and do other nilri. Yoc ran have buabeiaoi run and wa?on I oadio f merriment with this trlca. Pample b rna'l ISrta. S ler üsr.a. fine noxen i ww. pfmnn r.. A CO. HI A as sau Street. A. V. L. B. Swift, Attorney lor PlaintiS SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a certified coi y of a decree to me directed, from trie Cierk ol trie Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, In a cause (No. 36 059) wherein Horence M. Lyon is plaintiff, aud Josepb W. darkle et iL arc defendants, requiring me te make the sum of onebundred and tweutv-ouedollars aud twenty cents (SU1.J0 ) with Interest oa said decree aad costs, 1 wiii expose at public &f..c. to the highest bidder, on 8ATTJBDAY, THE 2Ur DAY OF APRIL, A. D. between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and o'clock p. m., of eaid day, at the door of tho-Court-houae of Marion County, Indiana, the rtuU and profit for a term not exceeding seven years, of the follow infr real estate, town: Lots numbered fitly nine(W). sixty sirtyoneiöl) and sixty-two (61). in I. U. C. limt a i-nutbfcide addition to city of Indi.rnapo'.is. Marion County, Indiana, situate in Mar.ju Countv, Indiana. If Bucn reut and profits will not sell for a m.CI. Cient sum to emihfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, exposa to public Rule the fee 6imple of said real estate, or 10 much thereof as may be suSicient to discharge aaid decree, interest aud cots. tiaid sale will te made wttnoutany relief whatever from valuation or appraisement ia. IA POKING. RlieriT of Marion County. March SO, A. D. IS-7. Probate Cause No. 1,20 1. In the Circuit Court of Marion Couut7, Indiana, May Term, li-bl. Robert R. Sloan, executor of the iatt will al ettate of Alfred F. BloaD, deceaoed, vs. Margaret O. Floan, Ajness l). Ihndriß, Charles Innoris, ctal. . To Margaret O. EloaD, Aynefs D. IhiJrfs, Charles Ihncris, Watren Risbtnond Sloan, and James Carroll: You are severally hereby notified that the above-named petitioner, asexecutorof the estAte aforesaid, Las filed in the Circuit Court of Marion County, Indiana, a petition, making you defendants thereto, ard prayine therein for an order and decree of said Court authorizing tbe sale of curtain real estate belonging to the estate of said decedent.and in said petition described to make assets for the payment of the debts aud liabilities of said estate; and that said petition, fo filed andpen-lin?, is act for hearing In said Circuit Co'irt, at the Co jrtbouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, on the 2Ha judicial day of the Msv term, l7. ot said Court, the same being the 24 th day of May, 1&-.7. Witness: the cle-k and seal of said Court till 1SEAX. 2Sth day of March, 1S87. ; JNO. K. SC LUV AST. Clerk. Bernhamer & Walls, Attorneys for executor and petitioner, office 11, 12, 15 and 17 ThorpeB ock, Indianapolis. Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter of the estate of Solon B, So;er, deceased. In the Marion Circuit Court. Adjourned February term, 1&7. Kotice ia hereby given that William C. Saper, as administrator of the estate of Solon R Soper, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of sail ettate. and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 1Mb day of April, 18'.. at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees o said estate are require 1 to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchee should not be approved. And the heirs of said estite are also hereby require I. at the time anl p'a-e aforesaid, to appear rts.l make proof of their heirship. WILLIAM C. SOr'Efc, Administrator. D. K. Partlow, Attorney. Notice to Hsirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter of the estate of Besjam'n F. Tau tie, deceased. In the Marion circuit Court. May Term, -1X87. Nr.Uce is hereby given that Mary A. Tattle, as executrix ol tue estat of ßenjtclm t. Tuttle, deceased, has presnted and tied, her acuunt and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the anie will come 0 for examination and acti.n of said; Circuit Court on the 2d day ot .ay,MS57, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees ol said ettate are required to anoear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why t-ald account and vouchers should not be approved. And the bPirs of said enate are also hereby required, at the time and place afozesaid, to ap pear and make proof of their heirship. MÄul A. 11 llLä, Sullivan A Jores. Attorneys. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. that the nnders'.eaed hs duly qualified as administrator 01 the estate cl Chares A. 1). Wesilnr, late of Mario Couaty. ladlana. deceased, faid eiate issupi:oi:a iu 1 r-i.'uv. JNO. L. F. STFEii. Admtui Orator. Hembamer it Wall. Aticroeys. CURE ?,0 DEAF Pn K's Tatest Ivprvko Crsnios Ear Drums Perfectly Kesiore s the Hfariar and performt tho work ol the natural drum. Invisible, comfortb:e and always iu position. All coaversatloa and even wbiKper heard distinctly, h-nd for illustrated book Kh testimonials, TREK AdViir.VT.n nr. T. II1SOOX. 833 Uroadwaja I Hew lor k. jdeaUoa this rp?r.

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