Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 33, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1887 — Page 4

;THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY MA 25 1887.

.12.

SKIN SCALP Cleaned, Purified and Beautified by the Cuticura Remedies. Tor cleansing the Skin and Scalp of DisfigurIne Humor, for allaying Itching, Burning: and Inflammation, for ruriiig the first symptoms of Eczema, Psoriasis, Miik Crust, fecaly Head, Scrofula and other Inherited kiu and Ulood Diseases, Cuticcra, the great Skm Cure, and Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautifler, externally, and CnicvEi Resolvent, tna new Blood Vurifier, internally, are infallible. A COMPLETE CURE. 1 have suffered all my life with skin diseases of different kinds, and have never found permanent relief until, by the advice of a lady friend, I used your valuable Ccticuba Uemethi-s. I gave them a thorough trial, using six bottles ot the GVnccRA Besolvent, two boxes of Cctictra. and seven cakes of Cuticura Rap, and the result was just what I had been told it would be a complete cure, BELLE WADE, Richmond, Va. Eeference, G. W. Latimer, Druggist, Richjaond, Va. SALT RHEUM CURED. I was troubled with Salt Kheum for a number tbl years, so that the skin antiroly came off one f my hands from the finger tirs to the wrist. 3 tried remedies and doctors' prescriptions to 510 purpose until I commenced taking Cuticura Bxmxdies, and now I am entirely cared. E. T. PAÜKEK, 370 Northampton St., Boston. ITCHING, SCALY, FIMPLY. For the last year I have had a species of Itching;, scaly and pimply humors on my face, to Which I have applied a great many methods of treatment without success, and whicn was epcedilv and entirely cured by Ccticuba. J1K3. ISAAC PHELPS, Kavenna, Ohio. NO MEDICLXE LIKE THEM. VTe have sold your Cuticura Remedies f ar the last six years, and no medicines on our shelve i Elve better satisfaction. C. F. AT1LEBTON, Druggist, Albany, N. . Cm cm a Remedies are sold everywhere. Price Cuticura, 50 cents; Resolvent. S1.00: SOAP, 2f cents. Prepared by the Potter Drug iSD Chexical Co., Boston, Mass. Sena lor 'Mow to Care Skin Diseases." "DTTDC Pimples, Skin Blemishes and U K. U D Jj Easy Humors cured by Ccticuba .Soap.

I ACHE ALL OVER Neuralgic. Sciatic, Sudden, Sharp und Nervous Pains, Strains and Weakness, relieved in one minute ty the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. New and perfect, At druggists. 25 certs; five for $1.00. Potter Drug and Chemical Company, Boston. BT W. 7. CRAIG. "WEDNESDAY, MAY 13. TERMS PER YEAR. Single Copy, T'thout Premium . SI 00 Clubs of six f or. . 5 CO We ask Democrats to bear in mind and select their own State paper when they come to take subscriptions and make up ciuds. A genu making up clubs send for any iniorrna lion desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL, Indianapolis, Ind. IMPORTANT NOTICE. "We have received letters inclosing money yithout postoffice address from the follow lug persons: Jamea It. Carr. 8. P. Cabbage. 8. H. Culberson. Henry Sneddon. Tred Friday. Jno. Muench. Mrs. Miller. Daniel Black. Lewis Messner. It fa impossible to send or give credit to parties who do not giv8 their fall address. In writing, always give postofSce, county and State. UNCONSCIOUS GROWTH. The people of Indianapolis do not realize how much the city boa grown. The man who hia returned after an ab sence of Beyeral years is the better judge. If the citizens will call to mind the build Ines, public and private, which did not exist three years ago, a brie interval, be must discover that the city has made very rapid progress. It seems but yesterday since there was no ßtate-houie, no City Hall, no Young Men's Christian Association edifice, no monuments in the parks and no hope of a Union Depot. Private residences of a handsome character have, in that interval, been built ?y the Fcore. These evideces of prosperity strike tte visitor, familiar with previous conditions,with great force, ana ne is at once impressed with the idea that the citizens of Indianapolis should feel very proud of their city. "With the acquisition of cheap fuel we will see by next summer many more indications of development in metropolitan characteristics, and the oldest inhabitant will feel lonesome because of the rapid disappearance of long-familiar landmarks. "With the completion of the Union Depot, there will be a transformation worked along South Illinois street, the first steps toward which are already apparent. Woodruff Place, which for so many years remained the unrealized dream of ita lounder, is now what he designed it should be, an elegant residence quarter largely sought by home-builders. The rTit rash tn this locality for home sites la eloquent of the change which is coming, It is not a great while since the average cit izen looked upon Seventh street ana in arsenal as quite too far from the business jsection cf the city to be desirable for dwelling houses. Yet tte distance is now a matter of little thought, many DeoDle having become to view a long stretch between shop and home rather desirable lhan otherwise. This growing indifference as to distance the viewing of a block of two as a comparatively small matter hows as plainly of anything else that Indianapolis is taking on the -fo.tr! r nf an ambitious metropolis. It -was once the Idea of the average inhabi tant of a great city that his home should fce as near his business as possible; now we note that in large places like Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati and New York, the suburban residence is preferred, both because It is more beautiful and because it tends to cive the mind surcease from worriment of business cares. Ma. Blais intends, according to report. to make all the political capital he can for himself out of hia trip to Europe. It is frtated that he will first go to England and dine with Mr. Gladstone. Subsequently a.. -m vnt all Invitations he ja v tt r - can get to speak at dinners, and in the course of these speeches declare himself Parnell's ally. Having made himself prominent In England as a fcienä of Ireland, he will, ia company with

Mr. ram ell, and with an indorsement from

Mr. Gladstone, make a tour of Ireland, taking the stump at every convenient opportunity. 1 either Mrr Gladstone nor Mr. Farnell have consented, as yet, to the programme, but Mr. Blaine is said to anticipate bo difliculty in persuading them to recognize him as a valuable coadjutor. Mr. Blaine's cief object in this elaborate plan of campaign is to down the ghost of Burchard, which still pursues him. A QUEER OLD BOOM. About eighty years before the two wild and ruinous speculations heretofore noticed in the Sunday Sentinel, the "South Sea scheme" or "bubble" in England, and the "Mississippi scheme" in France, there occurred the queerest and most fantastic speculation ever known in any country In ancient or modern history. In some sort it typified the grain and oil and stock speculations of to-day, when millions of dollars of one or the other change hands in an hour, and not a grain of wheat or a drop of oil ever passes or appears at all, or is expected to materialize more substantially than a dead friend at a spiritual seance. This was what is usually called the "Tulip mania" of Holland, and mainly of the city Harlem. It never Infected or affected any neighboring 'people or any commercial connection, but ran ita course in a couple of years wholly among the Dutch. Early in the seventeenth century the Dutch became noted for their cultivation of particular kinds of liowers, taking a special interest in the methods as well as the quality of flower produced, and for their success in propagating species as well as diversifying them. But the taste seems to have been confined in action to decorative work altogether, and never or rarely reaching out in a speculative dilection. It was spread alone, though chiefly in England and Scotland by the Dutch refugees from religious persecution, in the first quarter of the century, mainly in the reign of James I. The "pilgrims" of the "Mayflower," during their sojourn in Holland, might have been imbued with the flower feeling and planted It in Tlyniouth, if the soil had been suitable, but, as Congdon sang: "It was their luck to land Upon almost the only rock along the riymoutn sand." And neither rock nor sand made a good flower-bed. At all events the Dutch taste didn't get here as early as it did in Eng land, when all the neighborhoods in which the Datch refugees settled became noted for their wealth and beauty of flowers, other than native or wild flowers. Here originated the florist's and horticulturist's business. And Holland still holds the first place as cultivator of what are called "florist's flowers." Out of this general diffusion of a peculiar taste and fashion of cultivation grew the conditions that made the tulip mania possible. The fever ran its course in about two years, 1G3G and 1G37. Tulips had long been a favorite product of the gardens of Harlem,' mainly, it is probable, because the qualit yof the soil was especially suited to their cultivation. Bulbs were Eold as they are now, but a "boom" was given to a particular variety by the success of a florist in improving the brilliance of its color. By what gradations this natural and easy development of special value grew into a crazy epeculation there are no records to show, but it Beems to have broken eut almost at Ita worst, and to have fallen as suddenly as it rose. "We have seen a legend that a ship captain brought a bulb from the Datch East Indies which he had seen in bloom there, and his account of it excited so much emulation to obtain others like it that some shrewd speculator went out there and obtained a lot of bulbs of that and other kinds, and with these began the mania. It was not like the fantastic prices of South Sea or Mississippi stock in 1720, for then stock actually passed with the sales, and in the tulip speculation the costly root frequently never turned up at all, and in the last of the course was not expected. The epeculation was a bet on prices at some given time in the future, exectly like the grain and stock gambling of to-day. Some of the prices paid in the height of the frenzy far sarrass the later follies Ol London and Paris. A bnlb called the "fiemner Augustus" was sold old for 13,000 .- roo Three o:?0 f 1 - - t florins or guilders, about bulbs of the same precious variety sold for 30 COO florins, or over $12,000. Many varie ties were merely invented, never seen or dreamed of except by name, and eold extravagantly, partly, it is to be supposed, because the seller's imagination was not tied down by ary consciousness of fact in descriptions of their beauty. In other cases sales for future delivery were made of bulbs that were invented and named in the interval. No limitation was exhibited. The invention did not take on so substan tial a form as that. The tumble of the peculation ruined a good many credulous purchasers and some dealers, just as wheat and stocks are doing now, 250 years later. Even now some of the price lists of Harlem florists show tulips marked at 2j to l-0 florins, or from $10 to $00. FOR WHAT ARE THEY INDICTED. The twelve men who have been Indicted for conspiracy in the Marion County election cases by the Federal Court Grand Jury have not been Indicted for conspiring to change the votes on the tally-sheets. They have been Indicted, under a theory conceived by Judge Woods, for conspiring to cause inspectors of election to omit to perform their duty, which was to aaieiy keep their respective tally-sheets, poll books and certificates. TUe question of changing the votes on the tally-sheets, the real crime, Is not in the case at all. It was necessary, in order to bring the accused within the alleged jurisdiction of the Federal court, and to avoid clashing with the opinions of Judge Gresham in the Perkins contempt proceedings, that there should have been this straining of the law. But the jury, acting under the speclnc mandate of Judge Woods, could do nothing less than return the indictments. And what is the consequence? They have indicted eleven Democrats of prominence, against some of whom there has never before been a shadow of suspicion that ther were involved, not evea on themselves, uw w

publicans, could not blind ita eyes to the fact that the most conspicuous offender un

der the theory of Judge Woods was no less an individual than General Jamea R. Carnaban, chairman of the Republican County Executive Committee. It was he who had signed the circular from the committee to the Republican judges of election direct ing them to obtain possession of the tally sheets, although, as a lawyer, he must have known that the inspector was the legal custodian. Upon what theory the jury failed to Indict General Carnahan's fellowconspirators, we can not conceive. He wrote the circular as chairman of the Republican Executive.Committee. And who were the members of that committee advising and counselling this illegal act. Their names are as follows: Dr. S. II. Mapes, W. O. Patterson, Peter F. Bryce, John B. Elam, 8. F. Gray, Dr. E. S. Elder, Edward J. Conway, John R. Leonard, Joseph It. Forbes. It would seem that these persons were as guilty as General Carnahan. As the jury appeared disposed to drag in every Democrat in sight, we would like to know why it treated these Republicans so kindly. And then again, why did it not indict the Republican judges who obeyed the order of the Carnahan circular. There were five or six of them, among them the Republican judge in the Thirteenth Ward who jumped out of the window election night with the tally-sheets. I fr appears to have made a good deal of difference with this jury whose ox was gored. A BLOOMING CITY. Indianapolis is now looking her prettiest. Few cities in the country can display so many groups of attractive homes set In lawns made beautiful by trees, flowers and careful gardening. At this season of the year, when the paint is new and the greenery fresh, it is a rare delight to wander among these quarters. Now that so many owners of private grounds have removed their fences, whole blocks have assumed a park-like appearance, and there are vistas presented now and then as lovely as ever charmed an artist's eye. Indeed, we should think that those of our local devotees of the palette and brush could find a coign amid these radiant environments from which they could catch views worthy their most skillful endeavor. A notable feature of mural decoration in many instances is the running vine. This vestment of living green adorns scores of houses, giving them a bower-like character which tempers the landscape, softening the hard lines of brick and stone, and making a refreshing compromise between nature and the architect. Though there are not many palatial residences in Indianapolis, there are hundreds of houses made beautiful by good taste in the care of their surroundings and happy concessions to the picturesque. All this argues local pride and satisfaction with the conditions of social life. To covet the admiration of one's neighbors is a virtue that makes all the difference between slovenliness and neatness. Now that the f fixes are going out of fashion, the more zealous will the house-owner be to see that his little domain is kept in apple-pie order and in a condition of perpetual readiness for inspection. And speaking of the abolition of fences, there is such a thing as carrying it to an extreme of discomfort. While It may be well enough to throw down stieet nnd division fences, yet some quarter of a lawn should be reserved to indicate that, after all, the house is the owner's castle, and that a certain degree of shlrt-Bleeved freedom still obtains. It is private ground, and there ought to be some reservation to make palpable denotement of the fact. THE SAME OLD GAME. The Sentinel protested against the attempt to interfere with the jurisdiction of the State courts when the Republican Committee of One Hundred sought to try in the Federal Court the men it had picked out as guilty of changing the tally-sheets of tho late Marion County election. Judge Gresham sustained the Sentinel in its position. Now, under a theory conceived and propounded by Judge Woods, indictments Vi Ava he en rntrirnffd bv a federal Grand Jnryi not because of the forgeries, but be,U1J,1"" w , . cause of something else entirely remote from the main question. To arraign the accused before the bar of the Federal Court, a charge has been preferred that required a legal m'croscope of a million magnifying power to discover. And if they should be convicted upon the indictments, it will not follow that the men who changed the tally-sheets are convicted. The Grand Jury, however, was not quiteso complaisant as the Republican Committee of One Hundred hoped, and it has nailed the ex-officio leader of the Republican party in Marion county, General Carnahan, while It had the hammer in hand. This is a boomerang which (he committee did not expect, and it has awakened to the fact that it has overdone the business from the Republican standpoint. The recklessness with which the indictments were made appears notably in the case of Alfred T. Beck, who has William Henderson, the chairman of the Republican Committees of One Hundred, and three other members of that Committee on his bond. The jury -fired with a shot-gun at the whole community. The fact of the matter is that the Federal Court has no business whatever to mix in this matter. There is only one question in which the people have any concern, and that is, who changed the taliy-sheeta? These indictments are upon forced charges that make an offense out of an incident which has occurred every time an election has been had, and which has never I before been regarded as an infraction of the law. It has been the Idea of the Republican Committee of One Hundred that but little mercy would be shown to a Dem ocrat in the Federal Couit, ana, consequently, to put these election cases in the hands of that tribunal has been the Committee's persistent endeavor. Now that it - has succeeded, by hook and crook, it is astonished to discover that It has put a conspicuous Republican la Umbo as well, with others of the same parly to follow most likely. There ia

this surprising outcome, and the opinion is growing among the members of the com mittee, that the game has lost its charm.

CARNAHAN'S INDICTMENT. If Mr. Coy is to be convicted, so must General Carnahan. The latter, under Judge Woods' interpretation of the law, has written himself down guilty in plain black and white. And if General Carnahan is to be convicted, so must every member of the Republican County Executive Committee, whose agent he was in advising the Republican judges to break the law, No distinction can be made. And what are the facts in this case? The object of this circular, agreed upon the night before it was issued by the members of the Republican committee, was to have these judges secure the tally-sheets, in order that the Republicans could capture the canvassing board. It was to have been the old game again, and the votes were to be counted as they hrd been before, in the interest of the Republican candidates. It was as bold and unblushing a conspiracy as was ever hatched. It must be remembered that the trials to take place, if they ever do, will be upon the indictments as drawn. These are not indictments for changing votes oa tallysheets, but Indictments for another matter entirely. Therefore, General Carnahan and his fellow-members of the Republican County Committee are in just as much danger of going to the penitentiary and wearing stripes as anybody else. G ineral Carnahan could not have been alone in this business. We have never heard that any member of the Republican Committee has resigned. They are all in the same boat. If General Carnahan ever goes to prison they will have to go with him, and so will the judges of election who complied with his mandate. The people will see presently how much of Republican partisan deviltry is back of all this business. That a crime was committed, all good citizens acknowledge and deplore. But that the particular crime has been forgotten in a mad effort to break down the character of particular Democrats, guilty or not guilty, they must also admit. The indictment of General Carnahan shifts the boot to the other leg. If Judge Woods' theory be correct, then do General Carnahan and his associates on the committee merit all the infamy which the Republican Committee of O'ie Hundied has sought to heap upon th ) head of Simeon Coy. It is now the Democratic turn to smile. PARNELL'S ILLNESS. The reports concerning the health of Charles Stewart TarneU are very alarming. His physical condition excites the worst apprehensions of his intimate friends, and it is not unlikely that his death may occur at any moment. The cause of Irish liberty could ill afford to lose its ereat champion now. The agitation is n earing a crisis, which can scarcely fail lo result In breaking the yoke of British tyranny. For Parnell to die at this time would be deplorable, indeed, not that it would can s i a cessation of the great politi cal forces which he has set In motion, but because he would be prevented from witnessing the fruition of his historical strug gle. The dav of success Is at hand and prayers will arise from millions of Irish hearts all over the world that he may be spared to witness the utter confu sion of Ireland's enemies, and to partici pate in the triumph which will make him the proudest figure in Irish history. He has buiided so well that his death would not jeopardize his cause. His faithful lieutenants, the Davitts, theDillons. the Redmonds, the Healys, the O'Briens, could carry on the great work, pausing onlv to- burr their chieftain but not to furl the banner he has bo long and so vic toriously upheld. Tarnell has made the way plain and straight for them, and geven them a chart and a method which leave nothing problematical. They would have nothins to do but to move forward on the lines which he has so definitely e3' tablished. Besides they now have behind them, not only the Irish people, but a mill ion Englishmen who have followed Mr. Gladstone to rarnell's side. Under these conditions the loss of no one man can prove fatal to the Irish cause. Six years ago Parnell's death would have put it back maDy ,yea iaiTf lima is only at long intervals of time ' ,... Mvftrn.i possibly a century, tor it (mi ev kuku u jviv-. annoara in the world. And the world has known but few politicians who have wielded such mastery of men as Parnell has shown. He has won rr - it .by trusting to the might nf hia cause and by a force of character which enabled him to command respect it im vrv remarkable that, since he as sumed control of the Irish party, his leader ship has never been challenged, for the reason hia career has been free of mistakes. The Grand Jury has ripped the coyer Ing off the Republican conspiracy to contm IVia ranvasaincr board. Among the V ' w " U members of the Republican County Com mittee which sanctioned the Carnahan circular was that assertive patriot, Mr. John B. Elam. who has been yery aealous In his eflorts to show himself the efolgent Incarnation of political purity. Mr. Elam will now endeavor to subsido-aa rapidly as he rose. Tu a Journal aaya that General Carnahan had nothing to do with the tally-sheet forgeries. Nobody said he had. These Indictments are not based on the tally-sheet forgeries. They relate- solely to alleged conspiracies to influeaoe inspectors. It iafor advising judges t usurp the inncuona of inspectors that General Carnahan ia indicted. The bigge st aad boldest conspiracy, it dow appears, was the Republican plot that failed. wnv did not the Grand Jury Indict General Carnahan's associates? How haa the epauletted Carnahan fallen I There la a class ot nondescrip'a who never hae catarrh. They mar hav "co'd" now and then, bat -row'd cat aV never. OJy people with beads an 1 mething In thtm have catairh; it must lavo something o work on "y'knoir." And inn that lXollin&rs wort 'i Catarrh Remedies will cure them. Bold by druggists.

THE WEEK'S NEWS.

Events of Recent Occurrences Belated la Brier Paragraphs for the Sentinel At the close of the week there was a light movement in commercial circles, and few changes of importance in the leading lines of trade. Provisions were again dull and developed a weaker feeling, and corn was heavy and lower, but wheat was scarce ard strong, oats firm and other grain steady. Groceries were quiet, but coffee ruled strong and sugar higher. Dairy products were easy and general merchandise quiet. Local monetary affairs were without animation or new features; the Clearing-house exchanges continue to reflect considerable activity, however, irom week to wees. Local securities were quiet. Stocks in New York were dull, the stock and mer cantile exchanges closing at noon there. The ringleaders of the great strike in Belgium are being arrested. The first sunstroke of the season oc curred at New York Friday. The corner-stone of the new public build ing at New Albany, Ind., was laid last Sat urday. Editor O'Brien left Canadt from Kinsflton Saturday, and arrived in Syracuse, N. Y., in the evening. The spring "gather" of cattle In Texa is more satisfactory to cattle men than for several years past. Major J. L. Rathbone. of California, has been appoiuieu ui tul-ucueiai oi me Uniied States at Paris. Morris JohmoD. Indianapolis, attempted to murder his wife and then committed suicide Wednesday. Ex-United States Senator Charles E. Stuart died at Kalamazoo, Mich,, yerterday, at the age of 77. Henry McCabe is under arrest in Chi cago ior ice murder of J, M. Howard, a Locansport, Ind., lawyer. Thre men sentened for wrecking a train near Pal zensro. Mex. wer "mmarily executed by gendarmes last Wednesday. William Sheets, a farmer living near Faston, Ind., was struck by lightning Saturday afternoon and instantly killed. Secretary Fairchild has issued a call maturing Jaly 1, for all the outstandl;:'; 3 per cents, amounting to about $17.000,000. Joe Wise, who killed Will Martin in asaloon fight in Logansport, Ind., a few days ago, has been indicted for manslaugh ter. At Ninevey. Broome County, New York, last week, Merchant Bennett killed an unknown burglar whom he found in his store. There are reports of terrible earthquake shocks in North Mexico in which much property has been destroyed and many lives lost. The first Saturday half-holiday, under the New York law, occurred test Saturday, and was more generally observed than its advocates had expected. Three of the Pennsylvania Railroad em ployes, arrested for robbing freight trains, nave Deen convictea in x uiaourg uuu sentenced to the penitentiary. Seventeen thousand dollars In gold and currency were stolen from the house of John W. Spavd. a wealthy citizen ot Greenville, Ohio, Thursday night. John Roscoe, Fred George and Lucien McLary were killed by the explosion of a boiler in the planing rail! of Lecornu it Iro., Fulton, Ky last Wednesday. The Louisville races closed Saturday. The wrinners were Our Friend, Jack Cocks and Irish Pat. The latter won the Champagne stakes and the Macauley handicap. Tne steamer Gaelic, from China and Japan, arrived at San Francisco with smallpox on board. Sae was at once placed in quarintine. There are 1,200 Chinese pas sengers. The indications are that the hop croo in central New York will be a failure. This is the third year in succession of bad crops, and utter ruin stares a number of growers In the face. While plowme on Smithlaud Island, in the Ohio. Bixtv miles above Cairo, III,, last Wednesday, John Peachell was struck by lightning from a small .fieecy cloud in a clear sky and killed. rvviffea continues to advance rapidly ow ing tö the short supplies In the markets of the world. 1 ancy Rio was raised yesterday to 22 cents a pound, and the best Mandahling to 2: cents. Nate Stewart, of Logansport, lad., pleaded guilty to the embezzlement of f 10.000 Irom tne BieDernng wwuisciurms Company, of Akron, Ohio, f jr which he was one time ßtaLe agent. The nitro-elycerine works at Spirit Lake, eight miles west of Dulnth, Minn., exploded Wednesday, doing much damage ana pernaps aiuing iwu meu .uunu iu have been in the neighborhood. The long contest for United States Sen ator in the Florida Legislature has ended in the election of Samuel Pasco, a Democrat. The fame of Pasco, who succeeds th lovelorn Jones, is strictly local. Michael Hannon, a freight conductor oa the Delaware and Hudson Kailroaa, waa crushed to death by his train, at WilkeshPT Pa., in an effort, which was succesf oi, to save the life of a woman and child. Mm. Marv A. Calhoun, wife of a wealthy farmer near Mansfield. Ohio, has sued A. W. Simmons, a neighbor, for $10,000 damaces for slander, the allegations being that he has boasted having been "intimate with her." Mme. Janauschek, the actress, fell down a night oi louneen siepa m mo xciij House, Newport, R. I., last weanaaaay, and was so badly injured that all her engagements 'or the remainder of the season will be abandoned. The cattle reoeipia at the Chicago .stockyards were enormous, Thursday, footing up about 12,300 head. Hor receipts agrmratAd 20 000 head, and the aheep aupply reached 4,400 head. Sheep were steady, bat cattle and hoss ruiea lower. Fnront f.m are raeln with unabated fury in the northern peninsula of Michigan and in Northern Wisconsin. The- village of Whitaey, Michigan, Is surrounded by flame, and the people are fighting for their liver The losses are enoimoaa. Tie will of the late Washington C. DeTauw, of Kew Albany, devises about $3,000000 to- his family, and the remainder of the estate, estimated as $5,000,000, to banevolent and educational opjecta, iuCiuding$l,025,lXW to IrtloOW universiijr. rvom Tana "F. Hail, of Montgomery. founty, Fa., and a married sister In Philadelphia have brought euit against the Uni ted States uo vera men io recover uum on a claim of money loaned by one Jacob DeHaven, in 1777. ane original amuu wes 1,000,000 franca. A brutal murder occurred n Lt-aon County, Ark. Madison Reams and james English quarreled about a crop wmca v"y were cultivating. English is aevcaiy-iour vears old, but whipped ueams, wuoxau oil. Later Reams shot English from ambush , killing him instantly. TVio mn dal that has clouded the Christ ian Church at Tawtucket, 11. L, since Moni.B Via. ml minuted in the resignation of ita pastor, Eev. C. 8. Burleigh. It is charged that he has been unduly familiar with a woman of his congregation. He has left the city, and will aoon remove tüs familv. inno Mwnt fnrpifn items are the folinns Kvralof the Czar'a assailants were executed Saturday and others ban will attemot to form i French Cabinet. German official circles i ,at Vila nr.tPH would Indicate a Tinni.nMii rtiriatnrRhin and war. Father Keller, tne Irish priest, was released from jail, the Court of Appeal dcldtrg hia arrest illegal. Tha UelfcUn strikers are

Invaluable for zs&ms, SCALDS, z:zz FXZT, . FILES, CHAITiTCr. Caution POND'S EXTRACT Aas bren imitated. Tht genuine hat the vxrrdt "POSITS EXTRACT" singing the "Marseillaise" and blowing up houses of workmen who refnse to join them. Premier Tisza, in the Hungarian Diet, explained the Bosnia matter. A dispatch from the City of Mexico says one of the leading tanks of that city has been robbed of about $300,00), wbich was taseu iKiii Ihe vaults several nights a no. r-w details are given, as the detectives wi n sie "working up the case" have im-p-rd f ilence upon all who are acquainted with Ite factf. Cattle were dull and lower at the Chicago stockyards, at the close of the week, the l'rtt Belling at $1 75 per hundred pounds. The bops were sold at an advance of 5 ctiite, and tbeep were scarce and slightly higher. Texas sheepmen are ready to send great cumbers of sheep here as as pood prices advance a little more. There is more exciting information about Mr. Blaine's program me for the simmer this mornine. It is said that he will positively go to Europe, and will endeavor to clinch his alleged hold upon the Irish vote in this country by entering actively into the home-rule campaign in England and Ireland. Henry George's New York "!abor party" is actively preparing for the fall campaign. Mr. George denies that there is or will be any deal with Mr. Blaine, who, he says, represents all that he "has been fightins against for years." Mr. George thinks there will be a labor candidate for the presidency in 18ss. Grain and provisions in the local speculative markets were held comparatively steady in Chicago in Friday's markets. Whtat for June delivery was "pegged" at 88 cents. The same option for corn closed at SO.'i cents, for lard at $G 70, and for thort ribs at $7.17Ji. May pork was advanced to $22.75 an improvement of $1.20. Train robbery on the International and Great Northern railroad, near Austin. Texas, was committed by twelve men, well mounted and armed. The robbers fired about 100 shots to "keep the passengers quiet," and they had the desired effect. The amount taken from the express car Is variously estimated at from $21,000 to $03,000. At New Haven, Ct., last Wednesday, Mrs. Martin, Feeny, aged thirty-five yeara, was on her way to work, when, just as she was entering the factory, she was met by her husband, from whom she separated four weeks aga. He drew a pocket-knife and plunged it into Ler left breast close to her heart, making a wound that will prob ably result fatafty. R. G. Dunn & Co., in their weekly trade review, take a eenerally favorable view or thesitution. The most important effects of the interstate commerce act noted are the "decline of trade of larger centers of distribution and manufacture and increase of districution at smaller towns, with uprising of new manufacturing works at many localities." Money is reported in abundant 6upory- everywhere except at Chicago end New York. Ileal estate specnlation continues active at the West and South. The produce exports show a declive of 9.3 per cent, during the past three weeks, while there was an increase oi o per ceDt. in imports. The business failures for the week in the l nited States and Canada numbered ISO, aeamst 152 during the cor responding week of last year. When Baby was sick, wa gave her CastorU, When she w a Child, she cne for Cxstoria, Wien she became Miss, h clang to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Casioria, What tin. Browi Thought. Sew York Sun. "Where have you been?" asked Mrs. Brown, at the theater, of Mr. R, just out between the acts. "Ob, icst out to see a man," replied Brown. "When did he die?" "When did who die?" "The nan you went out to see. "What are yoa talking about?" "Well, judgin from your breath, it must have been a spirit you saw." Caution. If you ask. yonr drugcist for Pond'a Extract, and he tries to Impose upon you by otering "something the same as Pond's Extract," do not believe him. There is nothing the same as Pond'a Extract, It can not be successfully imitated, and any artifles offered as such are worthless counterfeits. Put no faith in any druggist trying to so deceive you. ft is eold only in bottles inclosed in buffwrapperm with the words "Pond'a E act" blown in the glass, and is never d in bulk. 'Woold be Mach Mora Interesting. IPlttsburg Dispatch. I Senator Stanford recently gave a news paper man an interesting accouumi "j " a msrfa hi first dollar when a boy. The story reads very nicely; Dut it is noi nan as important in the way otpubliinformation as it would be it he wouia give a true statement as to the way in which ha made some of hia aubseouent millions in schemes not wholly unconnected with Faciac Rail way inquiry. Appreciates a Good Cow. New York 8un.l Ehe was admiring Fernwood Lily, the fa mous Guernsey. . , ... "Three hundred and fifty pounds of milk In a single day? How wonderful!" "No, miss," said the man, "not in a day, in a week." "Oh, in a week. How perfectly wonderful!" T Trying to Get There. IXew York Sun.l "My friend," Bald a solemn passenger to the driver of a Third avenue street car, "do yon know that you'll never get to heaven if you swear at your horse j i ike that." "If I didn't swear at them bosses," responded the driver, "I'd never get to Harlem, an' that's the point I'm headed for now." - A Circulating Medium. ILanraster (Tex.) Herald. I Onr agent in Denton County, who is rustling up the delinquent subscribers and advertisers, writes us and wants to kno w if we will lake a shotgun an adverf aing bill. You betcher iweet life and glal to get iL

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P. m 4Su ::z?2a.lsia, CA AILif 4 irrT,e,'J SC2LE 7ZLCA7, SIASr.KSA, Hts., Etc. 4. im J r ..." 4 i in the glass, and cvr picture trade mark on ntrravnUiny buff yrrayper. Takt- no otiier prewar ai tion. V... . mm mi TheOLl HorsK." F.obl!-he 140. JOSEPH R.PEEBLCS'SONS. r-tliOCEUS" l'UeV JiuUdlu. 4 int Lnml. O. umrsnte ihoir Pure I'roli Flavoring Kiltvls rroduer swa electe4 bad perlcily rip trail, btiug uj.tchiess Car upoeth. quality and parity. U"tlt, iub Caur.r d1 Kotivtrrpfn )M wrii fbt faeblea' ei Aboral od parueuiirized nricc-lub c-atM cc , Samples Free. CROWN 8ajEll0,Fre-' MEDICATED COMPLEXION POWDER Hiphly Indorsel by the theatrical profession. Contains valuable medicinal properties, which quickly remove all blemishes of the skin, iteffects a Complete Transformation, ard cause the most ordinary person to become strikingly beautiful. It is put up in Pearl and Flaah tint in large toilet boxes, and Is for sale by all draggtetp, or sent secretly pealed to any ac" dress on receipt cf price, FIFTY CENTS, in stamps or mrrency. ladies can obtain elegant samples FREE by Inclosing 10 cents in stamps V pay for postage and pacxlng. address, naming this paper, CROWN CHEMICAL COMPAXY. 1X18 Arch Street, FMladalphia, Fa. COFFIN As WOOD CHEMICAL CO Dcraui. Um. WANTED. r- n a mnvrn. inxta wantad. PO Vmm i lj?4W W ZntM J AY BRONSON.IetwiUUav WANTED 100 salesmen at once on liberal terms. Block complete, including full line fast-Felling Fpedaltieo. Brown Brother Nurserymen, Rochester, N. Y. 6 ITraKTlI) MAX To take the gency of our tafcs; öize SsxlSxIS luetics; weight 50J lbs ; retail price t-V. a rare charu e to creale ft permanent bufciiieis in his own city or locality. Thee teles meeta demand never before supplied by other safe companies, as we are not governed bv the Sale Pool. Address A I PISK SAFE Co VI any. Cincinnati. Ohio. WMiTEB ! RELIABLE AND ENERCETIC MEN to solicit orders for nc üiw and rr a.riotie of th nion hardy nursery f-toek, iDCluJind ornamental Trees, Shrubbery, ruit Trees, i.rape inua, ac Kleirant outöt furnished free, busiucss lilitan4 easily learned. To nuccessf ul men we pay srod salaries and expenses, and fire them- Medy employment the year round. Fiivk clas referer ces reonireil. Apply for terms, and xddresa aU, I. MAY CO .. Nurwerrmea- St. Tsui. Minn. TO LOAN. mn Tn rcMonev on morvare security. For I vnanv vpft ra we have furnished taoney to farmers of Indiana at tna lowei: narket rates, and upon conditions parumuariTupi U their needs. If you need a loan for a bars 01 small sum. apply to na. Thoa. C Day A Oo 72 East Market street. Indianapolis Ind. PKNSIUN8. All Commissioned Officers of. Yelanteera During the late War cf the Rebellion who wtre not mustered under tbei5 Commissions back to the date when their Jom.mis.siou pave tbem rank, and who per'orrscd the duties of the rank given in euch Commlsior, should at once correspond with the unaersisned. with a view of filing their clAims under the Supplemental Actor Februarys, 18?. as amendatorv of the act oi June 4, 1 M. IXJ not delay, as all sneh claims will be forever barred Jute 3 Inst, and cannot bo considered if filed thereJjter as. 11. uasikls, 7;V East Market Street, Indian polls, lud. THE DINGEE ÄfCONATtD COS ItEALTIKLL. EYElUBIOOJUi For 1 8 Yew out tirnt f realty haa bw srowina and dtributinf KOM.S, V hava aJl tha I.atrt Noveilirs and uandarH wwu in differ. nTai7a and prioea toamt all. We send sTROajj. Ua. via mim aaieiy tr mmu 3 TQ 2 PUNTS ols rlAaia aaieiy DJ mau or ezproee w u OI S8tOf25 aZJ I Der Haadred. Ourewtjiuiilewpp..descnb9 neau-lyiWHMiie varieties of liottem, tb best Hard; f-.hr, limbiiwr Vine, and New and Kara iwer fM-dnv, auia teU how tsr"w them Utr K Addnwa THE lUNtJEK Ss C'ONAKl C'Vorn Growers. ewt throve. Cheater Co. Tav. .RTJPTTJToE ft I -01 üTtly c uredla o d a by l I TrmMkearoblaed. Guaranteed U ' aVlT ooitn tl world jreneraUna nAfcritl ' ' iy. l-owerful, I a rmbi sSTandT' 1 '"5 CYtntoruhy ati 1 äl-PO f LECTB.IC Br-T.li roH I1EA a.. filiaTuriwaa lit frasasa er tu Instant reifet Final ecreaadl la retnraa holndeuoacj a nx wrroTiiR.KniTT WAlsTEO (Samplea FR aJKf titVUtllUi K 4MnJLH k '-TKit'fuKSMS BkXfrULS.BKlTS Ite. No risk; entrk aal. Territory ejven, atialactioa guaranteed. Dr.SC0TT,843L'way,H.T. PEIISlOHS.r? Offlper'aj par, Uoau'.y prorwi : rfrserlrro relieved. rears' practice, uuecem Bl . A JUv... .n't nrO lAai a or no iee. vt nie iui ,' .. . . " . tTW. ÄcCormick 4 Son. WstW-, u. c ui u.0. ! Cored wUha DHl Uie use of nlf. Patnpnie o m. t nnt aeol wt-rt.u free. Adar l , 4, rvADi AI. V Arrai - v.f

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