Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 14, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1888 — Page 5
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESlrAY, MAY 9, 1888.
KGALLS VERSUS YOOMIEES
A LIVELY BATTLE IN THE SENATE. The Jayhawkcr Attacks the Hooker and Wake Up the Wrong Individual II Get (iowl WarmiuR in Iteturn Tariff Debate la the House.
"Washington, May 1. The senate galleries presented an unusually animated sppearauce Ct the opening of to-day's session, being crowded with spectators jmacipally ladies drawn by the announcement of a speech at 2 o'clock by Mr. Ingalls, in response to Mr. Voor4 lices' invective of last Wednesday, "aud by the prospect of u bitter and excited iwlitical discussion. During the reading of yesterday's Journal the hum of conversation pervaded the chamber. At the conclusion of the morning business, Mr. Stewart proceeded to address the tenatc in support of hi3 silver coinage resolution. At the conclusion of his address the resolution was adopted. It was now approaching the hour of 2 o'clock, and the buzz in the chamber and galleries became still more marked. Mr. Installs tooJC his seat where his desk was decorated with Cowers. By this time a lar2C number of spectators had been admitted to the floor of the senate. Mr. Ingalls commenced his 6peech by recalling the fact that on the 11th of July last, MajGcn. Fit John Torter, noMt on the retired list, wrote a letter in which he thanked his friends, and said that his heart was always with them, although at one time hü hand and heart bad worked the best that they knew how against them. The senator from Indiana had complained last Wednesday with bitterness that an attempt had been made to blacken the names of all the great civil as well as military leaders in the late war who remained true to the democratic party, p'itz John Porter had been one of those military leaders who maintained their allegiance to the democratic party; and he. within the List four months (although he had been dishonorably dismissed from the service and had been restored by the action of the democratic party and its members who had been members of the Confederacy) had written that his "heart was always with them." Referring to Uen. McClellan. Mr. In?alls vpoke of his education at West Point; of his business connection with Beauregard, and of his attempt to extend and continue human slavery by the acquisition of Cuba. He spoke cf him as having begun his military career by disobeying the orders of Geu. iScou; as having abandoned Pope at Centerville; as having Jailed to put the rebels to the aword at Antietam ; as having refused to obey the orders of the president and follow the rebels to Winchester, and as having fatally controlled the destiny of the army until the battle of Fredericksburg. HLtory had pronouueed its verdict upon him as a soldier, and the senator from Indiana would not be able to place Jiini in the tategory with Napoleon, Hannibal am' Ciesar. He (Installs) dealt with him as a politician, and aid that no one eonld read his letter tt President Lincoln after the disastrous seven days ficht on the Peninsula and before Richmond vlthoutcomingtothe conclusion that McClellan was not fully and actively in sympathy with the forces, the ideas and the sentiments which were then controling the American ieoj le. As to Gen. Hancock, he alsoMr. Iiuralls siid) was one of the military leaders who were true to the democracy. His martial career was one of the imperishable heritages of American glory. He marched, and triumphed. He filled the abyss of fame with names which could be eternal; luminous the Peninsula, Antietam. Gettysburg, Chaucellorsville, Cold Harbor ana Petersburg. Had he been a soldier under JCapoleon he would have been a prince and marshal of the empire. He had been well called Hancock, "the superb." lint after the war closed he, like McClellan, had become Liinted with the fatalwirus of an ambitiou for the presidential nomination. But, notwithstanding his magnificent and unapproachable career, the American people recognized his hostility to the reconstruction measures; and. in the presidential election of 1S., be carried but three Northern states California, Nevada and New Jersey and the first two of them had been stolen by the forgery and fraud of the Morey ; letter issued by democratic politicians. He had also received the 13.H electoral votes of the Solid lVuth, which had been promised him ia his speech at Cincinnati by the senator trom South Carolina, Mr. Hampton. He spoke of the affected indignation of the senators from Indiana and Kentucky as discreditable to their intelligence or their candor. If they did not know that he (Mr. Ingalls) had spoken of these union generals not as soldiers, but as politicians, and as democratic candidates for the presidency, they were dull, stupid and ignorant indeed. If they did know it and persistedlin their assertions they were disingenuous and he suspected (if such a thing were possible) that they were both. laughter. Mr. Ingalls continuing, said: "Mr. President, from the impassioned eulogy, from the rhapsody of approbation that flowed from the senator from Indiana at the great military achievements of McClellan and Hancock, 1 betranto Iiave some doubt who it was that really put down the rebellion. I was driven curiously to inquire what was the attitude of the democratic party in the North and of the senator from Indiana as one of it great leaders in when McClellan, the ideal democrat, was fighting the battle of Antietam; in 1803, when Haucock was hurling back in confusion and dismay the scattered squadrons of the confederacy. I was really, for the moment, Mr. President, inclined to believe that the democratic party of the North, aud the senator from Indiana, and those other great patriots, whom he eulogizes as an immovable bulwark of liberty, of the constitution and the union, Mr. Thomas Hendricks and Mr. Horatio Seymour and William A. Richardson, were in full panoply of battle, assisting McClellan, assisting Hancock, doine what they could to make the success of the armies possible. And it seems like the very climax of effrontery, like the apex of audacity for these men, whose history is so well known, who were from the beginning the avowed enemies of the cause of the union at every step of its progress, and who, like the senator from Indiana, were avowedly in sympathy with the South at the outset and were advocates and apologists for slavery and secession, who gave aid and comfort to the rebellion in every possible way the copperheads,' the 'butternuts,' lausrhter, the Kui;hts of the Golden Circle,' with all their brutal and degraded lies appearing here as the advocates and champions of union soldiers and of the cause of human liberty. I supposed from the enthusiasm displayed in favor of the 9 military achievements of McClellan and Hancock that we should, upon inspection, at least find thai the leaders of the democracy who had been so eulogized were in sympathy with the union cause and in sympathy with the efforts that were making to overthrow the confederacy. Yet, .Mr. President, at the very time and during the very rear when McClellan was fighting the battle of Antietam the senator from Indiana, without excepting McClellan and wiihout excepting Hancock, speaking at Sullivan, lud,, on the 5th of August, li-J, said in' reference to union eldiers thot they should go to the nearest blacksmith shop and have iron collars made and placed around their necks, inscribed thereon in large letters: 'My Dog. A. Lincoln,' and at the same time he referred to union soldiers as Lincoln's dogs and hirelings, withoutexcepting McClellan or Hancock. Laughter and aif 'lause. And during the campaign,. Mr. 'resident, that resulted in the election of Abraham Lincoln, the senator from Indiana who i now so vehemently in favor of the prosecution of the war of the rebellion for putting down the South, who so eulon.es the efforts oi union armies and the genius of uniou comraanders, who poses here as the special friend of the union soldier and denounce and asperses a criticism upon the political character and affiliations of those who were engaged in that war, made a speech at Greencastie which waa reported in the Cincinnati t'onitiurcuJj Aug. 8. Ii' I, by Joseph Ii. McCullagh, now editor of tue Globe Democrat in St. Loui.s." Mr. Ingalls rend extracts from the speech which declared the war a failure and spoke of Lincoln as a monster and an unhappy felon. Passing to the question of the electoral commission of 1876, Mr. Ingalls said he whs not specially enamored of Mr. Hayes. (Laughter. And yet, inasmuch as the question of Mr. Hayes title was brought in controversy by the democratic party as one of the issues of the approaching campaign, he felt bound to say that the title of Mr. Hayes to the presidency was the most absolutely irrefragible of any in the whole lit of American presidents, because it was the on v one which was ever passed upon by a constitutional tribunal properly organized for that purpose. The democratic party should j.ot forget that the electoral commission was one of its own devices. It was not the first time that thpy who bad dizged the pit, and digged it deep, had fallen into it. f Laughter. It would he remembered how the lion. Henry Watterson issued his celebrated procl.ima tion calling on 1(X,000 "unarmed Kentackians" U) viiii the .city f Wash
ington on the anniversary of the battle of New Orleans for the purpose of superintending the electoral count. laughter. He (Ingalls) had had a conversation 'with President Graut shortly after the Issuing of that celebrated proclamation and had asked him if he thought there was going to be any trouble, (ien. Grant had paused a moment and, with that deliberative method which characterized bis utterances, replied: "No, L do not think there is going to beany trouble, but it has been one rule of my life to be always ready." And, added Mr. Ingalls, with solemnity, he was ready. In obedience to some mysterious impulse, troops, parks of artillery and munitions of war had begun to come to the capital: and the agitation of the democratic party had become extreme; because, if there was anything that would turn the average democrat inside out with indignation, it was the sight of a federal soldier in blue uniform. Laughter. The ImQQu "unarmed Kentuckians" hail not made their appearance and the count had proceeded, notwithstanding the indignation of the democrats at the result of their own device. The people were perictualy reminded that the republican party was guilty of an enormous and gigantic fraud in the election and seating of Mr. Hayes. Mr. Cleveland had apparently a warranty dc?d for the seat which he occupied, and j-et, compared with tie title which Mr. Hayes had to his seat, he wa-s in possession of stolen goods, and the receiver was as bad as the thief ; in the court of justice and fair conscience he bad never been elected at all. He had been counted into office by u partnerhip between Dick Tnrpin and Uriah Jlerp, footpads and sneak-thieves Cartouche and J'ccLVT; and it was some consolation to know that in that partnership those apostates and renegades had lost their share of the swag. Laughter and applause. The country had still nininst it the Southern Confederacy. It was confronted with 1.53 votes of the solid South, as it had been at every election since the time of Mr. Hayes. : The solid South was the confederacy, aud the success of the democratic party meant the success of the confederacy, which was to-day as much an organized, active, aggressive force in politics as in IStil, and in the previous times. Slavery was dead and secession was dead, but all the ideas, all the impulses, all the intentions, of secession remained a burlesque without excuse aud without explanation. He honored and admired, but regretted and deplored, the constancy of the South to that
idea; its loyalty and fidelity to the leaders under whom it fought, and its determination to reunite and reconstruct the history of its country so that it would be able to say .to the generations which are to come, that w hile it was overthrown by overwhelming numbers in the field, yet within twenty-five years after the war ctoseu its leaders had been restored, to political power. ' ' ' Iu this connection he asked who was Lucius Quiutus Curtius Iumur? He never was sus1ectcd of being a lawyer. Laughter. His itterest enemy never accused him of that. He never had been admitted to the bar of the mi1 reine court, on whose bench be was appointed. Ie never had tried a reported case in any tribunal, state or national for thirtv years. It was an open secret that the president ut one time peremptorily refused to appoint him. He asked what necessity there had been for the president to affront the loyal sentiment of the country by placing on the bench of the supreme court a man who was not a lawyer and never had been, and who had called Abraham Lincoln a buffoon. Why, of all men in the South did it select him and force him on a reluctant president and reluctant people? It was because Mr. Lamar was the nearest and dearest friend and representative of Jefferson Davis. There was no other explanation of it. If that Mas not true, then his nomination was a farce and burlesque without excuse aud without explanation. Mr. Ingalls then referred to a speech made in the house of representatives in l'TbyMr. Blackburn, declaring it to be the purpose and inteution of the democratic party to keep on until it wiped out from the statute boks the last vestige of wiir legislation. He said that Mithin the next few years- the supreme court would be entirely reconstructed. Two of the associate justices were already past the retiring age, and if that tribunal was to pass hereafter on the M ar legislation, all knew what the result would bo. There could be no question hont it. lie passed on to the sjH-ech of Henry It. Jackson, at Macon, Ga in the presence of Jefferson Davis, ,i speech which had the effect, he saiil, of defeating the democratic party oi Ohio by un immense majority. Its intluence Mas so palpable that judge Thurmau denounced Jackson as an old tramp and an old fool, and Gen. Gordon of Georgia immediately set out fox Cincinnati, in his special car, to try to counteract it, and in order to show that tii re was no bloody chasm between the North and Smth. and that a thoroughly fraternal feeling prevailed, when he met Gen. Morgan of Ohio on a public platform he kissed him in the mouth, as reported in the papers at that time, and entering his special car went back to Georgia, laughter. Passing on to the question of (lections in the South, he said that the republican party Mould have no right to complain if the South Mere kept solid by fair means. Rut the democratic party there had been playing the political game -with loaded dice; Iiad been "throwing; sixes" all the time; had held "stacked cards;'' played with a "cold deck;" had a revolver in us hoot and a bow ie knife down the back of if s neck. There were, every day, wrongs inflicted on thousands and hundreds' of thousands of men in the Southern states, which, if inflicted by u foreign power on a siugle American citizen, even the least of these, my little ones, there would be a declaration of Mar within ninety days even with the present secretary of state in office. Loud laughter. They had illustration of what was going to take place in November next by what had just taken place in Louisiana. Quiet luughter on democratic side. He quoted a sentence from Mr. Voorhees Kjeerh to the effect that the only wonder about the Louisiana election was that the vote was not unanimous; and be said that it Mas more than unanimous. The democratic party in the South have learned the art not only of making elections unanimous, but of making them more than unanimous. It hc.d learned the art of returning a larger democratic majority than the registered vote. He wondered himself at its moderation in returning only a majority of 7ö,0"U in Ixmisiaua, but it had been going up since the senator from Indiana had spoken and was now S3,ixj0. What it would amount to before the dog days nobody could tell. He read letters and statements from repullican souJces detailing accounts of outrages and cheating at the Iiouisiaua election, and declared hi lelief that fair returns would have sh own A armouth elected by a majority of 63,000 or 04,(A In closing, Mr. Ingalls said: "In the centuries that are to come I see the visiou of a united, prosperous and happy America, a vast, homogenous domain of treemen, rulers of the continent from the polar zone to the gulf, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, enjoying the franchises of liberty and perpetuating the arts of peace. The K'ojIe should remember, on each recurring day wheu they celebrate the deeds of the dead, that this country held in its fruitful breast no more irietless treasure than the consecrated dust of those who have died in order tliat this bhould be a government of the laws and not of men, and that liberty and constitutional government might not perish forever from oft the Jace of the earth." " AsMr. Ingalls sat down, Mr. Blackburn asked bim to give in the lUcord a full and correct extract from his (Rlackburn'slspeech; to which he had referred, and Mr. Ingalls promised to do so. " 3lr. Toorhees Kepttes. Mr. Voorhees arose, and In slow, measured, resonant tones remarked that the speech which the senate bad just listened to recalled to his mind the fable of the mountain in labor. Two hours had passed away after trumpets had brought a large audience to the senate. And what had they heard, and what had they seen? A poor, small mouse creeping off. His allusion last Wednesday to the seuator from Kansas bad been merely incidents!. Why should he assail that senator? Men mistook themselves, und the senator from Kansas did so more than any one he knew. That senator had not been alive. politically, since the bth of March last, when -1 - t T - . 1 . I- ' uic senaior lroui ixeniucKy (i'lacKonru) aisposed of him. Laughter and a yell of approval trom one of the galleries. He had been walking the streets and josing before the world like an old friend of his in IndianaHlis in bad health, who had said to him he had been dead a year, and was walking around to save funeral expenses. The only criticism of his (Voorhees) speech which he had seen in the press was that he had galvanised a corpse. He disclaimed any purpose of that kind. He had made no attack noon him, but upon the republican party, lie proceeded to compare Mr. Ingalls to a peacock on a barn-yard fence, posing on a summer morning, looking at his owu feathers as they gleamed in the sun. and vocalizing the whole neighborhood with his harsh, unmusical and unmeaning cry, unmindful of the fact that there were more useful fowls in the barn-jar I. How useless it had been for the senator to arraign him. He (Ingalls) had read to the senate the old, stale, putrid, rotten slander of years ?one by, on which he (Voorhees) had trnmplcu in forty political campaigns. li li.v.I seemed to Inni like tlie voices of spav- I iaed, brvken, hackneyed political campaign J
liars of the last twenty-five years. That he ever uttered one M'ordigainst union soldiers or talked of their having collars around their necks Mas so base a falsehood, 60 infamous, that the black walls of perdition could not reduplicate it. And he said to the senator from Kansas (without meaning. perhaps, the full extent of m hat his words conveyed ) that it was not in his power to lish np from the ecwers of infamy the. old campaign lies and make them respectable in the senate of the United States; but it Mas possible for bim, by a short step, to put himself on an equality with them. Mr. Voorhees alluded, in a sarcastic and amusing manner, to Mr. Ingalls' war record, and said he w ould stand m ith the senator before the soldiers of Indiana or Kansas and quit the senate if ho Mas not approved by them over Mr. Ingalls. Mr. Ingalls replied that as the senator from Indiana had seen fit to invite comparison between their records and their relations to the great questions of the past twenty-five years, be felt it his duty to put on record, from information in his possession, what the senator's record and history was. He should refer only to public matters in public records, and should venture the affirmation that whatever might have been bis own (Ingalls) relations to the grc!t struggle between the North and South, the senator from Indiana had been from thu outset the determined, outspoken, positive, aggressive end malignant enemy of the union cause. "I pronounce that," said Mr. Voorhees, rising with anger in his eyes, "to be a deli'erately f.lse accusation. I voted for every dollar that paid the soldier, for every stitch of clothes he wore and for every pension bill that rewarded his services." Mr. Ingalls said the senator came in here today and "thanked God that he had never been followed here by a committee to question his right to his seat; and with much dittuseness of illustration endeavored to cast aspersions upon him (Ingalls) and belittle him and humiliate bim in the eyes of the American people, when he (Ingalls) had only referred to the senator's public utterances, his speeches, which he had never denied. Mr. Voorhees declared that he did deny it. Mr. Ingalls replied that the senator could not deny the publication he had read. It M-aä a verbatim report, and so certified to. Mr. Voorhees asserted that not one word or syllable read by the senator was true or believed to be true iu Indiana. The accusation had bee n trampled underfoot. The senator's insinuation thathe (Voorhees) hail ever leen a member of a political secret society the Knights of the Golden Circle was so base and infamously false that he did not know how to choose language to denounce it as such. Mr. Ingalls, continuing, said the senatorfrom Indiana bud written a letter for Mr. P. A. Shnte, which that gentleman took South with him and filed in the Confederate war department in support of his application for appointment of brigadier general in the Confederate army. The letter Mas dated Dec. 12, IM, and said: "On the disturbing question of the day, his (Shute's) sentiments are entirely with the South, and one of his objections is a probable home in that section. 1 take this occasion to say that bis sentiments and mine are in close harmony." It Mas signed "Daniel W. Voorhees." The senator said that the charge that be had called Union soldiers "hirelings and Lincoln dogs," and said that they ought to go to a blacksmithshop and have an iron collar around their necks w ith the inscription ".My Dog Abraham Lincoln," was a'eanipaign slander and a scandal that had been spit upon. That averment could be substantiated by us creditable a witness as there was in the city. Mr. Voorhees "And even if the senator said it, it would be absolutely false aud a palpable lie." Mr. Ingalls "The senator is disorderly." Continuing, Mr. Ingalls read from a paper signed by citizens of Sullivan county who stated that they were present at a meeting April 0, s62, when Mr. Voorhees said that union soldiers should go to the nearest blacksmith shoo and have an iron collar around their necks with the inscription, "My Dog Abraham Lincoln." This paper Mas signed by respectable citizens of Indiana, who were not ashamed of their names and residences, which were attached. Kverybody knew what busuiess.the democratic party of Indiana had been engaged in during the "war. Seventy tliottsand of them had been members of the Knights of the Golden Circle and had been conspiring against the union. They had entered into combination, (according to (Jen. Holt) for the purpose of aiding soldiers to desert, discouraging enlistments, circulating treasonable publications, giving intelligence to the enemy and assassination and murder, aud it was susceptible of proof that they did conspire to murder Gov. Morton. This organization, which the senator said he neter belonged to, had a ritual of which 112 copies were found in in the senator's office at the time w hen Hancock was at the "Bloody Angle." In that same office was found other correspondence concerning the objects and purposes of that organization. The correspondence of C. Vallandigham M as in the office. The senator in his address to his constituents in lsol had declared that he would never vote a single dollar nor a single man for the prosecution of the war; and he had never done so as long as he M-as in congress. He had consistently and persistently voted against every measure for upholding the union cause and reinforcing its army. "Yet," continued Mr. Ingalls, "the senator, who I think deserves charity more than any man I know of on this lloor and who has received it at the hands of Iiis associates, and who can less afford than any man of my acquaintance to invite the scrutiny of his Mar record, rises here and vith playfulness and hilariousness, refers to the fact that I served during the war as a judge advocate with the rank of major, and subsequently of a lieutenant colonel. How ever obscure or inefficient my services may have been, they were always on the side oi my country not, as his have been always against it." Mr. Voorhees said that if the gentleman from Kansas would find one single vote that he had cast against the payment of soldiers, for their supplies, for their bounties, against the appropriations for their pensions he would resign his seat in the senate. Every word the senator had stated on that subject was absolutely false by the record absolutely false. lie measured his words. The senator said that he (Voorhees) was un object of his charity. The senator m;u an object of his contempt. The senator said that .he (Voorhees) had issued a proclamation in lfil that he Would not vote for money or men. That was false. He never did anything of the kind, never in the world. He had fought for free speech and a free press, but the soldiers of Indiana knew that he had voted for every dollar that had ever fed them or clothed them and the man who said otherwise was a falsifier and a slanderer, aud he branded him as such. The senator from Kansas said he (Voorhees) had announced that he had quit practicing law. That was not true. There M as not a word of truth in it. He had gone from one office to another. Some papers were, left in one office, and others, to put up a job on him, were put there and found there, and published as having beenfound there. He hoped his Maker would take cognizance of him at this moment aud never let him leave this chamber if he had ever been a member of a secret Klitical society in his life. When he M as abused by a man who said that Hancock fought two years to make the war a failure, and was an ally of the confederacy, and that McClellan belonged to the degraded clement of the North, he felt that abuse as an actual compliment, and be thanked the senator for his aspersions and responded to him accordingly. So far as the old stuff about his denouncing the soldiers was concerned, the soldiers would take care of that. Only a miserable set of people, not soldiers, but sutlers or sutlers' clerks or bummers ever alluded to anything of that kind, lie did not want to say anything offensive, but he did not care much whether he did or not. lie could only say as he said to the people m hose names were on the pajer from Sullivan county that they lied and did not tell the truth, nor did the senator when he repeated what they said. He had not the slightest concern, not the slightest feeling, not the slightest irritation iu regard to this matter. It had been passed upon time and time again. The letter with reSard to Capt. Shute he had written. It was in Jeccmbcr, before the war broke out, and he had sympathized with the feeling that there ought to be a compromise. As to charity, he responded to that with contempt. Mr. Ingalls "Did not the soldiers of Indiana threaten to hang the senator with a bell-rope on a train after he made that Lincoln dog sjteech?" Mr. Voorhees "The senator is a great liar when he intimates such a thing a great liar and a dirty dog. It never occurred, never iu the world. That is all the answer I have, and I pass it back to the scoundrel back of the senator w ho is instigating these lies." This remark was made in reference to Representative Johnston (Ind.V. who was seated at a desk directly in the rear of Mr. Ingalls. Mr. Ingalls "There is a very reputable gentleman in the chamber, a citizen of Indiana, who informs me that the signers of that certificate are entirely reputable inhabitants of Indiana, and that he knows lifty people Mho heard the senator." Mr. Voorhees "Tell him I 6ay he is an infamous scoundrel and a liar. Tell him I sav so."
Mr. KujtLs (La.) said he would inform the J
senator from Kansas that the. mode and manner in which Louisiana's election had been conducted, being a state election, was none of his business whatever. He denounced as scandalous, vituperative and unparliamentary the language which had been used by the senator from Kansas wiih reference to the people of Louisiana. There seemed to le a preconceived conspiracy among the republican leaders to question the legality of the elections of the South for no other purpose than to convince the Northern people that the democratic administration elected by the suffrages of the people was a usurpation. The senator from Ohio, some time ago, in a speech delivered at Springfield, HI., made the startling statement that -very woman and child in the United States knew that Grover Cleveland had been elected to the. presidency by fraud, intimidation, crime ami violence in the South. That declaration had been adopted ns the party cry for the cominj canvass by the republican conventions which had been held. The republican leaders were preparing the American people for a coup d'etat. What did they mean by stating that the president of the United States had been illegally and unconstitutionally elected, by stating that the democratic administration was a usurpatiou, and that wc hud a government established and installed by. revolution? We Mere reducing ourselves to the level of the Mexicans and Central Americans. They were going into a canvass with the declaration that the president held his office by virtue of the suppression of the majority by fraud, intimidation and crime. There Mas no reuson w hy any man, white er black, should vote for such a man as Gov. Wa'rmotith. The republicans had given Louisiana a government which was a disgrace to civilization and society, and it Mas only because the iutelligent men of Louisiana resisted negro domination,' because the republicans had failed to perpetuate their supremacy by the infamous machinations of political maehiuery, that the senator from Kansns rose to-day aud in Iiis wrath abused the democrats of Jxmisiana. Instead oi being abashed by the charges he threw them bacK into the senator's teeth. When the senator from Ohio and himself in that chamber witnessed the dramatic political scene, when the veil Mas draw n from the chaste body of Eliza Piukston and the wounds exposed to the credulous sympathy oi the senator from Ohio, from that time he considered that his Judgment in reference to elections inlxuisiaua lad become slightly perverted. -Senator Gibson followed. He snkl that the charges of the senator from Kansas were an aspersion upon the character and patriotism ef the Southern people. What Southern state had sought to revive slavery, what Southern statesman now advanced the doctrine of secession? Not one. They nil admitted that any man who took up arms against the l S. government M-ould be guilty of treason. The Southern peo-' pie were doing their best. With beuevolcnce, with charity, with composureand firmness they were invoking all of the resources of civilization to settle this question. Adjourned.
At e don't like to part with our old readers who have neglected to pay for The Sentinel but we are compelled to do so unless they square their accounts within the next week. THE WEEK'S NEWS. Congressional Proceedings for the Week Miscellaneous News Items. Monday, April .00. In the senate, house bills were reported for public buildinzs at Asdicville, N. C. ; Sedalia, Mo., and Monroe, La. Also senate bill to fix salaries of judges U.S. district courts at $0,000. Also to increase appropriation for public building at Wilmington, Del. Also house bill for the purchase of additional ground at Indianaiolis. Appropriating $15,000 for public building at Duluth, Minn., and senate bills for the erection of public buildings at Atchison, Kas., $100,000; Emporia, Kas., $100,000; Waterbury, Conn., $150,000; Paterson, N. J. $L 1-3,000; Fort Dodge, la., $75,(HX, aud Dover, N. II., $75,(XK. A bill was introduced bv Stewart of Nevada to require tbo jiurcLao and coinage f $4,tKX,000 of t-ilver bullion er month. A resolution was adopted calling upon the secretary of the interior for apjxjnitnionts in his department below the civil service grade since March, 1SSÖ. Dills were passea for public buildings at Younestown, O., $100,000 Akron, O.,$7ö,(.KHt, and Lancaster, Pa.; $100,000. In the house, the call of the states was dispensed with, ami members filed their bills at the clerk's desk. The tariff debate was resumed, Mr. (irosvenor sjeaking. Mr. Hayner (Md.) followed. . Mr. Hemphill and Mr. Gallagher made prepared speeches. Tuesday, May 1 In the senate the feature of the day was a second attack by Senator Ingalls on Gens. McClellan and Hancock, which he followed up by scurrilous remarks upon - Senator Voorhees. The latter returned a scathing, blistering reply. In the house the entire lav was taken up by a tariff discussion, Messrs. Scott (Denn.), Kerr (la.), Dutler (Tenn.) and Dorse v (Neb.) opposing, and Mr. O'l errall (Va.) favoring the bill. The committee then rose, and lterthe presentation of a message from the president returning without Iiis approval the bill for the relief of H. C. Wilson, administrator of ÄVilliam Trueder, deceased, the house adjourned. Wednesday, May 2 In the senate an adveie report was made on the bill to repeal the statute allowing pensions in certain cases. An executive session was held, during which the Chinese treatv was reported, and the nomination of Melville Fuller as chief justice, with others, was referred, l.ills were passed appropriating $50,000 for an enlargement of the poslotlice buildine at Indianapolis; appropriating $100,000 for a public building at Atchison, Kas., and increasing the limit for a public building at Wilmington, Del. The railroad land-grant forfeiture bill was taken up and considered until 2 p. m., when the pleuro-pneumonia bill was considered. A number of private bills were passed and a bill to amend the inter-state commerce law. Public building bills were passed for Asheville, X. C, FIOO.OOO; Woons-.Kket, Ii. I., $75,000; Ft. Dodge, la.. $100,000; Sterling, 111., $50,000; Duluth, Minn., $150,000, and Dover, N. II.. $75,000. In the house unimportant bills were passed before the tariff bill was taken up. Speeches were made by AVilson (Minn.), MeComas f Aid.), Lanhara (Tex.), Allen (Mass.), Caruth (Ky.) At 5:.T0 p. m. a reces3 was taken until 8 o'clock, the evening session being for the consideration of the tariff debate. Thursday, May In the senate, among bills reported was that from the house to retire Alfred Pleasonton as a colonel. The land forfeiture debate was then resumed until 2 p. m., when the pleuro-pneumonia bill was laken up. After a ghort execii-. tive session the senate adjourned until Monday. In the house, the senate increase from $120,000 to $150,000 , f or the postotlicc at Indianapolis was agreed to, A senate bill authorizing the admission of a cadet to West Point from Xica ran ga was pawed. The conference report on the acceptance of the French iayitation was adopted. The tariff debate was resumed,Friday, Mav 4. The seriate was not in session. In the house the California contested election case of Lynch vs. Vandever was reported from the committee on elections in favor of the sitting member, Mr. Vandever. Private business was dispensed with, and the tariff debate resumed. Speeches were made by Messrs. Caswell (Wis.), McDonald (Minn.), Gueuthcr (Wis.) and Wheeler (Ala.) Saturday, May 5. The senate was not in session. The house continued the tariff debate. Miscellaneous News Items. Emperor Frederick, of Germany, continues to improve. -. ' A K. of P. lodga has been instituted at North Manchester, lud. Citizen's of Lebanon, Tenn., burned Senator Ingalls in etligy. There is a bad outlook for wheat in Shelby county,' Indiana. . ' The minority of the senate committee on foreign relations are opposed to the fisheries treaty on the ground that it secures nothing of value to the United
states except what belongs to ns by natural rights. ' Minnie Forsythe, an eighteen-jiear-old prl, attempted to murder her father at Ml. 'ernon, 0. AVilliam II. Barnum will not again actept the chairmanship of the democratic lational committee. - A general rain-storm throughout CaliDrnia has greatly improved the outlook rr crops in that state. John L. Sullivan, while intoxicated irrisited a policeman at Doston and was lumped into the 'street. Alfred Burton, a boy in his teens, wa3 sentenced to two years in the Indiana penitentiary for forgery. The assailants of Ilarrv Winters pleaded
guilty, at Logunsport, Ind., to assault with intent to commit murder. An insane person has been arrested at Danville, 111., who is supposed to bo Tasrott, the Chicago murderer, The lion. Win. S. llolumn has been renominated for congress by democrats of the Fourth Indiana district. W. J. Kadel, a quack doctor of Terre ; Haute. Inl., hss been taken to Iowa on a requisition for horse-stealing. The Hon. Jsmes G. Blaine and wife will accompany the Carnegies in a tour throngh the Highlands of Scotland. Luko W, Ilolman, a prominent real estate deaer, was arrested at Boston for conspiring to have his sister murdered. - The jury at Quebec, Canada, in the case of the sanation army, indicted as a public nuisence, returned a verdict of guilty. Some of the tariff speeches in the house diiriig the debate on the Mills bill have been made to an audience of fifteon or tweity people. A convention of lawyers will be held at Washington May 22, for the purine of securing uniformity of legislation in the different states. Allen 0. Myers was sentenced by Judge Pugh at Columbus, to pay a fine of 200 and he imprisoned lor ninety uaA'3 lor . contempt of court. . In Vae sculling match at Pidney, N. S.WT., recenlly, between Peter Kemp of Australia, arxi Edward Hanlan of Canada, Kemp won ky five lengths. Delegates from Kentucky to the Chicago convention are uninstructed as to the presidency. The majority of them are favorable to Sherman. A number of the students of the centralOhio manual training school of Cincinnati have gone on a tour of inspection through Indiana and Illinois. In a large number of county conventions recently the administration of Cleveland was indorsed. In one instance his pension vetoes were indorsed. The senate judiciary committee, which has been investigating the Jackson (Miss.) election riots, has concluded its labors, and will report at an early date. At Somerville, Mass., Saturday, Frank Maguire and James Cookley fought a tenround draw with two-ounce gloves, (ueensberry rules, for a purse of $100. Att'y Gen. Leese, of Nebraska, claims to have found about $2,000,000 worth of property in Omaha occupied by the Union Pacific company, to which it has no legal title. Billy Carson, a eon of Kit Carson, the famous scout, shot and killed Thomas J. Tobins in a tight at Ft. Uarland, Col. Tobins was a companion of Kit Carson and almost equally famous. A life-size bust of Garibaldi, made in Italy, and presented to the senate by the Garibaldi monument association of Washington, has been placed in a hall of the upper lobby of the senate. Mrs. G. Mohr, an aged widow residing nt Kapids City, 111., drew $1,000 from the bank to make a loan. That night two masked men entered her house aud couii pelled her to hand over the amount. Mrs. Kate Fox Jenckin, one of the Fox sisters, the original spirit-rappers, has leen arraigned before a justice at New York for failing to take projer care of her two sons, aged twelve and thirteen years. Prof. Mathew Schmale, a well-known music teacher of Baltimore, hanged himself to his bedtxjst. He was sixty-three years old and in comfortable circumstances. He had been drinking heavily. Robert Clanton, a wealthy citizen of Texas, has been lodged in jail at Kansas Citv, Mo., for the murder of C. B. Coats and Stephen and Jerome Maddox, in Portlaud, Calloway county, during a political row in 1S3. Peter Baum and his two sons, while driving at Sandusky, O., were thrown out of their vehicle. One had his neck broken, another fell against a sharp stone and had a terrible gash cut iu his scalp, and the third had his left shoulder-bone and elbow broken. A memorial has been presented to congress asking for an appropriation of $25,000 to aid in meeting the expenses of the the reunion of survivors of the army of the Potomac and the armies of northern Virginia on the battle-field of Gettysburg in July next. Dr. A. M. Alexander of Indianapolis, charged with forgerv and running off with the wife of Jesse Johnston was captured at Ft. Worth, Tex., and returned to Indianapolis. He married Mrs. Johnston on his arrival, her husband having received a divorce in the meantime. The house committee on labor at Washington has reported a bill which proposes to protect free labor from the effects of convict lalwr by confining tho sale of the goods, wares and merchandise manufactured by convicts to the state in which they are" produced. In the Utah territorial supreme court the. opinion was rendered that the personal property of the mormon church, turned over to the various stakes over a year ago, should be taken by the receiver. Notice of appeal was given. Over a quarter of a million dollars worth of property is involved. The republican state convention of Indiana met here Thursday and indorsed Harrison. Porter, Thompson. Huston and StudebakVr were chosen delegates-at-large to the national convention.' The First district delegates went home mad because the convention refused to make a delegate of Gen. Shakelford because he Win favorof Gresham for the presidency. -m IV- " Other Minor Matter. Henry Conner committed puicide hy shoot,ng himself, near Itossville, 111., Sunday. J Sixty-six Grek immigrants, jurt arrived at Castle Garden, are detained on the charge of being paupers. Over 10,000 strangers attended the annual festival of the Wernlce orphans' home, at Kichmond, Ind., Sirhday. Alfred Barnes, aged ninety-eieht, said to he the oldest mason in the world, died near Mexico, Mo., Sunday. Mrs. Frank Rnnyan, of Nehraska City, Neb., has been arrested, charged with engaging two men to kill her husband. A sailboat, in which were four Germans, capsized on Lnke Erie, near WestSeld, Pa., Sunday, and William Bann and August Picrchcr, were drowned. A circus train on the C. & P. railway ran into a land slide in a ent near Steubenville.O., Sunday, and was wrecked. One rna i was instantly killed and several seriously scalded. There arc prospects of the murder of John Dunn, in Helena, Mont., in is"y, being cleared up ly a confession made by Mrs. M. A. Eckert, ot that place, just prior to her death. A carloiid of dynamite on the Philadelphia & Beading railroad exploded at Locust Gap, near Shainokin, Pa., killing seven persons, wounding twenty, burning eight houses and wrecking many others. A bold thief entered a oar at llan .field Sunday and attempted to snatch the washes from
dozing passengers. He was knocked down hy the conductor, and after a severe threshing, was allowed to go. At North Bend, Ind.,Suuday,in a quarrel fiver a game of craps, Harrison Stajiles murdered IOuis Brown ry stabbing him in the hack, and also inflicted a horrible wound on John Scruggs, who interfered. All the parties are colored. The murderer escaped. This is campaign year. You want Tun State Sentinel, Yott can't afford to do without it. Least of all can you afford to have it stopped lecause of your failure to pay for it. Think of this. Life is burdensome alike to the sufferer and all around him while dyspepsia and Ms attending evils hold sway. Complaints of this nature
I can be speedily cured by taking Prickly Ash Hitters regularly. inonanus once tims afllictcd now bear cheerful testimony as to its merits. SOME DOCTORS honestly admit that they can't cure KheumatLsra and Neuralgia. Others say they can tut don't. Athdo-.pho-ros saya nothing but cures. That's the secret of its success. Years of trial have proved it to be a quick, tafc, ture cure. Conrord, 1?. n.. Sept. 8, lS7 In my own family Atalopnoros wan ued s lat rennrt, tke uwer btvin suffered from rliennifttviui for years niut havin been treated for the disease bv dift'en-nt J'hj-sician iu this Stat ar.d MaM-ar-hu. tr wiMiont even tenirary rWitf. Uion my recommendation ieori of pea. Tie have u!ed this remedy with t!w namo results claimed for it. C. U. Wilcom. . ... . Dnfcnqu, low. Jan. X. AininphOTV'S ban coiiipleti-ly cured me of Herrn h'tdaehe. and I feel Uautful for all the rood it ua done me. Mrs. IiOUisK Cheery. 9 Send C eentj f.ir the beautiful colored plotnre, " Moorish Maiden." 7MEATHLOPH0R0S CO. 112 Wall St N. X. CARTERS rilTTLE 1IVER PILLS. Jzr3 BlcV Headache and relieve all tho troubles Incident to a bilious Btateof the system, such aa Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Distress after eating. Pain in tUo iSide, &c. Whila their moat remarkable e access has been shown iu curing Headache, yet Carter" LitUa Llvc-r Pillt ara equally valuable in Consti;ation, curing aud preventing thisannoyinrr complaint wbilo they also correct all disorders of the stomaeh,stimulat e tho liver and regulate the bowel. Even if they only curoa Ache they would be almost priceless to those wh suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their goodness does not end here.and those who once try them will find these little pills valuable in so many way tj that they will not be willing to do without them. Eut after all sick head Is the bane of bo many lives that hero Is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure it whila Others do not. Carter's Litlla Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gnpo or purge, but by their gentle action please all who usetheni. In vials at 25 cents ; ßvefor?!. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mad. CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York. SsiQ B h-1 hi bll Frta' HUMPHREYS' EBgranaft urr Or FBIXCIPAI. KOS. CUBES PBICZ. 1 2 3 4 6 7 X 9 Fevers, Congestion, Inflammations... .25 Worms, Worm fever. Worm Colic 25 C'r ln( Colic, or Teething of Infants. Diarrhea, of Children or Adults '2 5 llysentery, CripiDtr. Bilious CoUc... ,'2!i Cholera Morbus. Vomiting 25 Couehs, Cold, Bronchitis 25 uralsla. Toothache. Faceache .25 Headaches, Sick Headache. Vertigo. .25 HOMEOPATHIC 111 12 13 i4 16 16 1? I? Dyspepsia, Uihous Stomach.. .21 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .. .AO .5 ..1 .5 .AO l.oo .5 I .( I IIIKHUinillHIl ...vutimuv . - - Fever and A cue. Chills, Malaria Plies. Blind or Bleeding.... 20I l ni rrn , , 1 1 1 1 u a , . um tu iuo ul-ku Whoopln Conan. Violent Couchs.. General Debility. Physical Weakuess 24 27 2 rvianey nirw 30I rrwui i. r ' - rimrv V c knrM. Wetting ervous iicdiiiit lied... 32 licncs of the Heart. Palpii ittion. SPECIFICS. xjld by lruirgit0. or Hnt postpaid on receipt of pnca.-iiiru-iibiiitnkto.iüiaiuuisuiui. i v. ' !..;. --..-vrv'v , . t ? ' ":- . . .,,?; This is the Top of the Genuine Pearl Top Lamp Chimney, All others, similar are imitation. .This exact Label is on each Pearl TopChimney. I A dealer may say and think he has others as rood. BUT HE HAS NOT. Insist upon the Exact Label and Top. f" CA Cii r CvrMraVucir Mmr nm w SEP. A. MACBETH & CO.. PlttsSurgh, Pz. EXHAUSTED VITALITY. Great Uedlcal Work for Young and Middle Aged .Men. THYSELF. Mara Than One Million Copies Sold. P- treats npon nervous and physienl dohilitr, premature decline, exhausted vitnHty, impaired rijjor nnd impurities ot the Moh1, and the untold miseries consequent thereon. Contains :?"ti j.aes, stitixtantial embodied hindinjz, full pi It. AVarrante.t the bext popular medical treatise published in th5 English lanptiatce. ITiee only 1 by mail, jMitpaid, and eoneealed in a plain wrnpper. Illustrated Hampie free if yon send rww. Published by the I'eabcxly Medical Institute, No. 4 Bultimh Mreet, lUtston, Mu., Wiu. II. Parker, M. 1., t'onsulting l'liyiciau, to whom ail orders should tie. addressed. LIelick, Good & Go. TALLAPOOSA, GJL Real Estate and Stock Brokers. Agents for alo of land and lots for Tallapoosa Land, mining & Itlanufoc turlng Co. ITrlte for lnforniatlou and atoct quotations.
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DYSPEPSIA Cm?e3 its victims to ho miserable, hor, confused, and depressed la luiud, very Irrlta- . Lie. languiJ, and drowsy. It is a dlseasQ vlilc'd does not get well oi itsell. It requires careful, pcrMstent attention, and a remedy to tlirow cfi the causes and tone up tho digestive organs till tliey perform their duties willingly. Hood's Sarsaparilla nas rroTea just the required remedy in hundreds of cases. " I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for dys ; r-epsia, trom which I have suaered two years. ; I tried nir.ny other medicines, hut none proved to satisfactory as Hood's Sarsaparilla. Thomas Cook, Crush, Electric LlgU Co' lew York City. . ' Sick Headache Tor tho rast Vo years I have teea affiicted with severe headaches and dyspep ( eia. I was Induced to try Hood's Sarsapav ' rilla, and hr.ve f jur.d treat relict. I cheer- . lully recommend It to all." Uns. K. F Ajoable, New Haven, Conn. Mrs. Mary C Smith, Cambridgeport, Mass.,' , was a sufferer from dyspepsia and siclc Lead
athe. She took Hood's 6arsaparilla and found it the test remedy she crer uied. . Hood's c Sarsaparilla o Sold ty all druggists. $1 ; Bix for $5. Mad9 only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. , - IOO Doses Ono Dollar. a iVCOS,ITTb, - oas ant h T Tti b Wvt&tWo LIVER OWA,t PILLS. BEWAJIE OP I3I1TJ.TIOXS. AZ1TAT9 ask roR dr. FLEuccs rr.LT.rra, OB LITTLE S UGAH-COATED PILLS. nclna entirely vegetable, they operate wiihout disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in class vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh aud reliable. As a laxative, alterative cr purgative. tbo?o littlo PfcllL'td (rive tue most perfect satisfaction. sh wmm. Rilioufl Headache, Dizziness, fonatlpatiou, Indigestion, Itllioca At tack ,and ail dernnpements of tho stomach and bowel, are promptly relieved and iorinaneiitly cured bv tho ui ut Dr. Pierre's f leanuut l'urfratlve Pellets. In explanation of the remedial power of the Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it may truthfully Ik? 6aid that their action upon the eyrtem is universal, not a pUnd or tissue escaping their niiihuvo influents. Sold by drujr7i6t9, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the Chemical Laboratory of World's Dispensaht Uxxncxt. Association. Iiudaio, N. Y. is offered by the manufacturers cf Ir. Sage's Catarrh Itemedy, for a case of Chronic Nasal Catarri which they cannot cure. SYiriPTCmS OF CATAItRII.-Dull. heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passafrrs, discharges falling1 from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eye are weak, watery, and inflamed; there is rlnptnjr; in the ears, deafness, backing or couphinjr to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, top-ether with pc&bs from ulcers; the voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the treath is offensive ; smell and taste are impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking coupb and reneral debility. Only a few of the above-named' gymptoms are likely to be present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without' manifesting' half of the above symptoms, reBUlt In consumption, and end in the grave. No disease ia so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians. lJy its mild, soothinf?, and noahnjr properties. Dr. Sajre's Catarrh llemedv cures the worst, cases of Catarrh, " cold in the bead," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere; W cents. I M Untold Agony from Catarrh." vj Frof. W. Hacpner, the famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, Ii. V- writes : 44 Some ten years &go ) I suffered untold aony from chromic naaal catarrh. Jly family physician gave me up aa 1 incurable, and said I must die. My case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sun- t Bet, my voice would become so hoarse I could I barely speak above a w hisper. In the moruine J my couRhinj? and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. Ily the use of Dr. Sage's : Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well man, and the euro has been permanent." Constantly Hawking and Spitting. Thomas .T. Rcsnnro, Esq., ZW3 Pine Strut, St. Louis, Mo writes : 44 1 was a great sufferer from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and lor the last eight months could not breathe through the nostrils. I thought nothing could bo done for me. Luckily, I was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrii Kemedy, and I am now a well man. I believe It to bo tho only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give it fair trial to experience abounding results and a permanent cure." Three Bottles Care Catarrii. Eli Bobbins, JJunjwn P. 0 Columbia Co., Pa says: 44 My daughter bad catarrh when 6hc was five vears old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh itemed y advertised, and procured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped her; a third bottie effected a permanent cure. She ia now tighieta ycaxj old and sound and hearty." Tb 6 leading Mfr Corsets of Eur ope and America. Over ecld last year In T2ie reasons are: they are th& best fitting:, most cor -" fortable. , f f imostdurabla find cheapest corset ever laade. Avcld worthless Imitations. Corallne Is used in no Corsets except those made by ua None are genuine unless Dr. WARNER'S CORALt NE is printed on lnldo of steel cover. For sala by ell leading1 merchants. WARNER BROS,,257?HieEiJ I. A. MINER. Manager. -A The BUYERS' OTJIDE If, issued üarch and Bept , each year. It ia an ency clopedia of useful lnror. 'mat ion for all who purchase the luxuries or the necessities of life. We can clothe you and furnish you with all the necessary and unnecessary appliances to ride, walk, danco, sleep, eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church, cr stay at home, and in various sizes, styles and quantities. Just figure out what is required to do all these things CCMFGRTABLY. and you can make a fair estimate of the value of the BUYEH3 GUIDE, vhich will be sent upon receipt of 10 cents to pay postage, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Iii lo PARXtR'S CICER TONIC uiioui ay. A rar mcwu-inal t'ouioui) l tft'U cur . henallvlwffuiai Hmtvd the worsl cases of Coiiph.Woii: Lup rs. Am tin. lndit-sUon, Inward Tain, Exhaustion, büc Ol lrugla -HINDERCORNS. The Mfcst. Bur-st and Ixnt curet jt Corns, bunion. e. FtoaUp-ix KnsiiicsiMinforttJ t-i fvl. Ni--r fa: a ta curv li tvuu at trujjs-w. Hiscvi & Co, ,
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