Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1889 — Page 8
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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2. 1889.
1)0X7 REMOVE THE LIMIT
OPPOSITION TO MR. DENNY'S PLAN. Citirena Central! Thluk the Present Kate of Taxation High laoo;h A (iencral Iitmst of the Conncil Property Owners Give Their Views. The deplorable condition fthccitr't finare aud the mean? for remedying that condition are subjects receiving a vat deal of attention from the citizens of Indianapolis just : present. On all sides: it is conceded that ome relief must be provided, but as to what form that system of relief shaJl take there is a eery decided difference of opinion. Mayor Denny has .nsreated that the present t.x limitation of DO cents per Lnndrcd for enrral purposes he removed. This suggestion on the part of the mayor does not meet with n very hearty indorsement in any quarur except mens the contractor, who want plenty of tnoney and few restriction npou its expenditures. Yesterday a number of largo property owners were interviewed and their opinions w ill Le found below. It will be seen that while aome would he wiliia? to accept an increase of the rate of taxation, there are none whu favor the removal of all limitation upon that rate. It Is also noticeable that but few of the gentlemen interviewed think there is any necessity fo even raising the present limit. This is doubtless due to the fact that all recognize the pres ent valuation tor tnin? purposes rts far he-l-.w the actual market value: of property in Indianapolis. Another noticeable feature of the interviews, and one not very ritter;nc to the character of the councils, w that nearly all expres-j a district of those liiie. and insist that if the limit be removed. add:tiiia! restrictions be placed upon the expenditure of the city's funds, o that the r -cklos e.ttravaffliK': of the past ':d present shall imt l e repeated in the future, 'lo kntinki. reporters the following expressions of opinion were given: John I'. Freiiel "In my juLnient, it would be a mistake, under t!ic existing order of the nianaemeiit of our municipal aJi.iira, to increase the limit or the tax levy. Considered in the I i -h t e? their prut record, it Joes not come i:h good grace i a.-Ii this additional privilege. ur authorities must he able to show a cleaner s-T-re. To widen the t:tx privilege without providing tiie r.eeea ry Kti'etiuarel to insure better and more patriotic management, is simply to iiivit." iniTeacd extravagance and jobbery."' .John V". Murphy "i am opposed to the removal of the tax iimit of '.mi cents, no Ion? as t ij present council lin anything to do with expeiifliu'j the inorey. There most be a new r.rder ot things before I would favor an increase taxation.'" A. P.. ConJuitt "'The tax levy already h:rh enonsh. I think that I pay enough taxes and T think everyone c'-e that lays taxes thinks hont the same. Tö-?e politicians art; never t.ftifhed: yo;i know that. If they were pven j11 they asked, there is tto tellini; what they w-onld wai't. I nm opposed to taking oft' the tax limit' M. O'Connor "I do not believe it wip to Jhke o.'fali restrictions on the tnx levy. If the -;;y must have fund I think thttt wmc Other 1:501 hod of relief than taking otl the ninety-cent limit could be found. A vehicle tav, I think, would be jus!. At any rate I am not in favor of increasing th" levy without proper sale-.-'iiards, in tiic maticr of expending the money, being adapted." V. K. Ilendrick "It li ftramre to me that ihe city finances cannot be administered in a i-tisiness way. I have not civen the question f increasinv.' the levy tax, however, sutlicient onsideration to warrant, my saving much about it at present."' L. 'B. Mrtindale "The city is in a bad way financially and it is imperative that something .r dm" at once. I see no reason why th tax limitation should nut be increased. It we ever xpeet to make a city o-at i Indianapolis we must spend money, iiut 1 do not see that it is pnsitiveiy iiecessr'ry to rai-fc the tax limitation to t' t money. I'or my part 1 am decidedly in fat, or of rai-ing the siUmh tax at least . I "'. Then a vehicle tax woul i rai ".".ni. or -i0,-f 'X' per year lor th city ;md we muht to have tax of'this kind. There is no use expecting the eas companies to make the streets as cood as they found them, and the city to irrest extent will have to hear the esjenseef their reoustruetion." I- !. Ayers "I haven't uiveu the ubiect Tr.'jch thought, but nevertheless am afraid tlet the bars down. Indianapolis was plunged Jiopeless'y in dei't a few years ago by iriereusi.jv. the tax limitation, and ( iVar the result of a .-i-(. :i l it" riiuenf. ."-sill 1 think the tax limit Jüu'ht be increased Mittle as the city's finances r.i '. Jy very i 1 1 str.iiiiel."' J'd.u M. ltutler '"Have civee the matter no 1 houjht. but ii the city needs money, ratse the of taxation." Theo. 1. II.itiiTey ''I am pot in favor of iloing the cocneii much fwiny in iinancial nistters. liil I think the rate ot taxation a Kerle- ow and I knotv" that the echooltax ii"iiM in.Tef4ed." William i;illnp, Meriiinii national I:t;ik '"There 0'iL'ht to be a prudent, economical r-iauar.e'r.ent. of the city's liniMices, but-the cny should receive a suttieient income not t n!y t' Hand the current c.xjcnses, but also to pay Drje t.f t!:c bonded eht every yeir. rh-y are p;yini; niore interest tiow than what as the original income v-hen 1 came to Indinriapol'.s. If the city was free of debt it would be the greatest advertisement arid innefinent fr the investment of capital that could be olfi-red. I can't see but what the city ha very little to show for the money that has bem expended." Frank M. Churhmai ( I'leteher Churehnan, bankers) "We don't know anything rhout snch matters. We don't want to get our t. a mes into the inpt r.'' ". T. 2I.iltt '"I am decidedly against any wcrer.e, Yrvw what 1 can oi.erve, the year ssrtj poing t , be a very prosperous one for Indianapolis, fnrvicinily. Indianapolis has r- coiue 'he cynosure of the -yes of investment, nd th? tiTH tliii.g a ca;ialist asks when he is ontemp'atin; un invc-tnu-nt is: 'What is the t of tj.T:it'-n?' The rule is hii;h enough, and x'-.r-nVi remain where it is." rharlfs 'aycr of Mayer i'c o. "The rate n''i.t certainly idionld ie ioereased. We need xorjey a:id need it bad. Tt" rate is too low 'i lit would be r o harm to rais." it a few cents" Mr. Ii?sett of IVttis Ikissett it Co. "In"iinapolis needs a great many things that she I a not rot. If she is to get them she must bare more money." T. M. Parry of the Parry Manufacturing company "I do r.ot believe in letting the bars 'iown, t ut d not think a süerht increase would r-.aXe much di.'Wenea to the community. All J siy is, keep the council out of the pie and thins will be lovely."' ' THE SEXTlXIih'S fjf;l Jo'.'.ir pri:-j'rm'ny '.rrtit fr 1 1" rr io it.' C"bint trill rcmoix opt)l A BLOODY BATTLE t"ought Itetwee n XV Iii ten anil Rlack tn a Virginbt Town. CniCAGO, Dee, A dispatch from Fredriekiburg, Va., say-: A bloody battle between whites a id blacks is reported as having ken p.lace at Tackett's ?Iiils, in tatTord "Ounty. The conflict occurred on Cbriattnas --ve, during a peliticr.l discussion. A few of he whites and all of the colored men at the Diectin; contended that XulforJ county was pre-tmicently republican. The rernainin? whites championed the democratic party, and f-aid that democracy was the creed of tftaJ'ord. This led to a wrangle between a white man named Bennett Hillen and a colored man. Jiorh. indulged in personalities and ended up wühafight. A seneral riot was the result. Ili.len washotand instantly killed. His colore I enemy was also shot, but lired for several minutes. Twenty people are reported as dangerously injured. Tackett's Mills Is twenty miles from this city. "Whites predominate in that portion of tattord county, and for the mfst part are democratic in politics. W. White, attorney for the comonwealth, has left for the bcene of the riot, livery eSort wiil be made to punish the guilty parties and prevent further trouble. A liald-Knnbber Hanged. OZsr.K, Mo., Pec. 2S. William Walker, the leader of the IJald-Knobbers, was hanged totiar. JWalki-r was ths chief of the liald-Knohbers, wh -.r month nia-t" life a hurden for all who tinder their displeasure in Christian county. The ba!d-Kno'Vrs wr-re originally igiUnti of bund of eitiens of Christian and Tan ny counties, bo eofobin1'! torrtt ahtises tfiea ei iitin in their I'K-alities in the Ozark mountains. Tbey afterwasj lindf-rtooli to ventre personal wront?, nd In this -miy Vjm a territls are ft of crime, and men wre taken from thtir tcdi at n'.-ht and killed or bruUllj
whipped, acd women were beaten, and even children ometituet uttered when the, masked men made one ot their midnight raid. When the atrocities became treuent the authorities Qrvl-ruxik ta hreak ap tho faug. IToseetitions were Instituted ant carried thronen in spite of preat difficulties. William Walker, the chief; IaTe Walkar, jr., and Wiley Matthews wert convict'! of the murder of two men named 'rfn and Kilcn and sentenced o leth. William Walkerappraled to the supreme court, which aifirined tlie conviction und pt to-day for the execution. His companion in crin.e will l.e executed on lb. II. Ituiuors have iwen current that an attempt at rescue would t made, an'l, in constjiiene', 1 'a) extra deputies were sworn in to guard the jail. For a do'nr gov can get THE SCSDAY SfXTT'Kb for tir fmd take a change fnr tit W pri v o$.30 jot Vie bat gum on tht Jlarri' son cabinrt. STEAMER BRISTOL A TOTAL LOSS.
Many Passengers Xarrowly Kseap With Tbelr Lives, Hut Lose Tlieir Clothes. Newport, K. I., Dec. r. The steamer P.risfol of the Old Colony line w as burned at her dock here this morning and is a total loss. Mie arrived from New York about 8. in., landed all her freight and her Fall River and lloston passengers and they departed at the usual time for their destination. There was left on board the steamer only a few Newport passengers and their iers.onal baggage. At ;:L"0 o'clock, just as the last passenger train was draw ing out of the depot, fire was discovered on the steamer, and an alarm was at once given from the company's signal on the premises. The fire started near the kitchen and spread with great rapidity, rendering futile nil efforts to etop its progress. Three alarms were sounded in rapid succession. Thousands of citzens were also attracted to the spot by the brilliant illumination, the volume of fire and clouds of smoke which rose from the burning fteamer. The fire apparatus on the steamer was brought into use ns soon as the ilamrs were discovered, and the crew worked with great vigor to save the boat, but the joined work of the state-rooms, ealoou and stairways was as dry as tin ier, and the draughts through the steamer caused a fearfully rapid spread of the flames, so that before the city fire department arrived there was a mass ot fire sweeping her almost from stem to stern. Some of the passciiirers still on board did not understand the meaning of the first alarm, and were only roused by the crackling of the Haines near by. All succeeded in escanitr.;, but home with only a portion of their clothing and others by crawling over the railing near t- burning timber. One man with two little children, a boy and girl, who occupied a state-room, was awakened by the sound of crackling flames near by, and barely escaped with his little ones undressed, but with their clothing in their hands. Another young man had to borrow clothing in which to go to his home in this city. All the personal bagga-.-e of the passengers was saved. When the department arrived the tipper decks and center of the steamer were a mass of flames which gave out such intense heat that it could scarcely be borne at a distance of several hundred feet. This greatly impeded the work of the firemen. The flames bad gained such headway that they could only be fought from the w harf side while the creat heat and flying sparks endangered buildings on the docks and steamers lying on the other side of the wharf, and constant ctiort was required rn the part of the firemen to prevent them from ig. nitintr. A dozen streams were soon pouring into the flames for over an hour while others were employed in drenching the dock and building. SEVEN MEN FRIGHTFULLY BURNED ICy an ExpioMon of Kbnting Powder in a Hnrninc Ituilding. PiTTSKi nr;, Dec. GO. An EversontPa.) special says: About 8 o'clock this evening, fiames broke out in Urown row, belonging to the II. C. F'rick Coke company, and four houses were destroyed. The tire was caused by the explosion of two kecs of blasting powder. The house in which the explosion occurred was occupied by Poles. They were preparing powder for their work in the mines to-morrow, when a park from a pipe ignited the KtuH. There wr.s a terrific explosion and seven of the men were frightfully burned. For ii tlul'nr .' ri fft TueSt'ND.VY S-KNTt-XF.f. hr ii intiiilit nit'l take " chance t'-e caul prize of fvr the InH anm on the Jlarri' fin c-d'ift. THIS TIME BOYS ARE THE VICTIMS. Their ltodies More. Horribly Mutilated Than Those of tli Women M urtlf rod. J.ONiifiv, I)e iS. The mutilated body of a boy was found in an out-house at Ilradford this morning. It wss recognized a.s that of John Gill, eight year of age, who, when last seen alive, was sliding on the ice with some companions. The hoy bad been brutally murdered. Iiis legi and arms had been chopped off in n rough manner and tied to his body; his ears had been cut oü' and there were two etab wounds in his chest, and his heart and entrails bad been torn out. The remains, when found, were wrapped in a routjh roverin sr. The police believe, from the clumsy wanner in which the body was mutilated, tLat the crime was the work of drunken lads, whose imagination had been inflamed" by reading accounts of the White Chapei atrocities. It is supposed the murder and butchery were committed in some other place and the remains afterward carried by the perpetrators to the out-house in which they were found. The crime ha created the greatest excitement at Bradford. The police have not as yet found any trace of the murderers. A milkman has been arrested on suspicion of having committed th crime. The murdered boy had occasionally accompanied bitn on bis round. The prisoner was the first to recognize the remains. It is certain that the body was placed in the ouidiouse between the hours of 4 end 7 this morning. The accused milkman, whoso name is Rarrett, was taken before a magistrate this afternoon and charged with being the lat person who saw the boy alive. The boy when last een was in th prisoner's company and when be was missed the milkman was asked if he knew anything about his whereabouts. He denied anv knowledge of him. A bloody sack and a knife lilting the wounds in the boy's chest have been found in the prisoner's lodgings. He has been remanded for trial. A SECOND MURDER. The Ilody of Another Itoy, Horribly Muttbated. Found Near Kilwich. IiO.NPo:.-, rec. CO. Scarcely bad the people begun to recover from the shock of the first than they w ere horrified by the report of another boy murder. The body of the second boy was horribly mutilated. It was found at Kilwich, near Keighley. No clew to the murderer in either case has been found. The police are searching the country around and are asied by volunteer parties. AH the railway stations arc being watched. Fvr a Vier yon con TlIESt'.VDAY Sr.XTINEI. j'-tr sir mouths awl take a vhnmre for the. caxh pri-f nf .." for the lct naesi o the Harri' ton cabinrt. )Ir. ."schotield Dead. Washington, Dec. 31-M. Schotield, wife of Maj.-Cien. Scholield, died of paraly- is of the heart at 7 o'clock this morning. She had been Fufiering from the fleets of a severe cold, which developed into bronchial catarrh a few days ngo, but was rot thought to be in danger until heart failure supervened, only an hour or two before her death. I Mrs. N lioft. Id a a dao-hter of Prof. W. H. C. Birth-tt, formerly ot tiie I . !. military academy, aed iiosr uet'iarv of th" Mutual life insurance coti'ipaeiyof New York. The remains will lie interred next Wednesday at West Point.) For a dollar ynt ra yf The Sunday .SkntiXI.L fur rix woiilht and take a clintue for Ue cuh prize of Jor the best guess on the Jlarri' son cabinet. Sold Ills Colt. Washington, Dec. 2. .Senator Stanford to-day sold to Miller & Sibley of Franklin, Tr., the weanling colt, by Kleetioneer, out of the mare Beautiful Belle, for 12,.yxi. This is said to be the highest price ever paid for a weanlinj colt in Arne riea. This colt is full brother to the two that have beaten 2:20 at three years old. Tub Sentinel's fifty doUar prize-guettiug content oh JfarrisoHt cahitirl viU retrain vpen until Feb, 1.
TIIE SCHOOL BOOK TRUST.
LEGISLATION TO ROOT IT OUT. Bills Prepared to Place School Hooka C'nder Stat Control Agents on the Cironnd Fighting the Reform Publishers Cannot Form Committees. State Senator Hoyd of Hamilton county, in conversatkin with a Sentinel reporter Saturday, said that he was preparing a bill to be introduced early in the session, which, if passed, would break up the school-book monopoly in Indiana. Mr. Boyd has given the subject a great deal of study and is prepared to show, conclusively, that the school-betok publishers doing business in this state are in a truot for the purpose of keeping up the prices and to arrange for the exchange of books when changes of text are made by county boards. Mr. Boyd's bill will provide for a state board to take charge of the matter. The duty e"f this board fehall be to prepare suitable text books, which shall be published by contract by the state. The con tractor will not supply the books to the trade, but be shall deliver thera to the state board, which will supply tuem direct to the parents of school children, through the county superintendents and township trustees. Under this system parents will be able to supply their children with books at contractor's prices. The representatives of Yan Antwerp, Bragg & Co., of Cincinnati, and A. S. Barnes & Co., of New York, are already upon the ground to fight this much needed reform. Tor arguments in favor of continuing the most burdensome ironopoly in the country, they ay that states which tried the experiment of regulating the school books have failed to relieve the people. It may be true that in certain states, where the contractors supplied the trade instead of turning the books over to the board, books printed on inferior paper have been imposed upon the public. Mr. Boyd's bill, however, provides that the board shall specify the quality of paper to be used, and that before receiving them from the contractors, an examination shail be male to ascertain whether the contractors have complied with the specifications. Mr. Boyd thinks that there are enough honest and competent men left in Indiana to compose a board that will not allow themselves to become subsidized to render the law odious or impracticable, as the agents of the book trusts claim has been done in Minnesota and California. The court reports are now printed at prices fixed by the state. While many complain of the excessive rate, no complaint is maae in regard to the quality of pper or poor binding. Mr. Bovd says that the state had no trouble to select honest men for state-house commissioners men w ho did not allow a defective stone to go into the building and he has no doubt that a board can be composed which will be cs faithful with the books of the children of Indiana. The most pbsnrd argument',?) against Mr. Boyd's relief bill is the one the reporter heard a representative of A. 8. Barnes & Co. urge during Ihe teachers' convention that a grammar or a geography acceptable in one county niight be objectional in another county. Claiming to be a democrat, this young man thinks it would be undemocratic to take the power away front the county boards to adopt schoolbooks and centralize this power at Indianapolis. "Local option,"' "home-rule," '"centralization." "undemocratic," will be the nrguments of the democratic book-agents, while the republicans will rely upon the "failure in other states" and "poor quality of paper" to convince the members of the legislature that the great evil of school-book monopoly cannot be eradicated. Senator Boyd is not alone in this reform. Senator Byrd of Clay county told the reporter that he regarded the school-book reform of more importance to the people of Indiana than tariff' reform. Mr. Byrd went before the people of Clay and Owen counties upon this issue and n reform in our mining lawn, and chrried his district by a vote exceeding that of the nr.tional ticket. The reporter ha had occasion to obtain the xiews of several members of the hous? upon this subject of school-book reform, but he has not yet met one opposed to it. "The firt step to be taken toward a schoolbook reform,'' said a member from tho southern part of the state "is the appointment of member on the committee of education who are known to be reformers. We don't war., the book trust to form theo committees. I am not pledged to any caudidate for speaker, and before I cast my vote itt thu caucus I will find out who is the candidate of the book-trust. I w ill not only do this, but I shall be here on Monday preceding the caucus to work against any candidate for speaker who is not a pro-v noiineod school-book reformer. The only hope of the book trust is in the election of a speaker who will appoint ruetnbers on the educational committee picked out by the book agents. This is a reform legislature, and if ie should gv home without pnsinr a reform election law, and breaking up the school book monopoly, the democratic party will not have much capital to bank on at ihe iie.U election. But this is not a party measure. It is a movement that every tax-paver, every man who has a child to educate, in fact, every honest man ought to join, regardless of party. However, the democrats will be responsible if the book trust is not destroyed in this state within the next sixty days. Hut let us watch the committees; let none but antibook trust men le appointed on the educational committees of the senate and house men who havo made a study of this gigantic monopoly." Mr. IViyd has not yet determined whether his bill will make the superintendent of public instruction ex-ofneio member of the school-book board. As the present superintendent is not friendly to the movement, and as it is generally understood that he harbors in his ofiice a paid agent of Yan Antwerp. Bragg & Co., it is not probable that the legislature will include him in the board. 'Ihe board must be composed of men in sympathy V ith the rtd'orni, and not with men who will render the law odious. iov. Ilovcy is ttrotig!y in favor of a radical change in our school-books, and it is underStood that he will devote a part of his inaugural message to this subject. Tiik Sentinel's j'ffy dat'ar pri-.vrinij content on' Il'i.rrmn's cabinet wi'l rernnin opin viitU lb. 1. HE MURDERED HIS WIFE. Kailrnvorfl to Kill Her Paramour And Then Surrendered to tho Police. New Vor.k", Dee. 31. A Montreal special ays: John Itenson, a Swedish coppersmith, who keep? an oyster saloon at the corner of St. James and Fulford-sts which was the resort of the rowdy clement of the neighborhood, shot and killed his wife yesterday morning and attempted to kill her paramour. Benson, whose first wite, Illlen Smith, left him several yrears ago to go oft' with n more genial companion, leaving several children behind, was married, three years ago, to Bridget Dyle, the handsome danuhtcr of one of the men su&iectfcd of the murder of the Hon. D'Arcy Maec. She had fippurently been a faithful wife, but l ist night a party of men, among them Frank Sinvrer, a fellow employe of Benson, were carousing in Benson's saloon, when about .1 a. m. his little boy came running in and bold bis father that a strange man was in bed with bis mamnn. With an oath Bennon got up, nnd in a drunken stagger proceeded to the bedroom, taking as he went by the cupboard, a revolver. He met the man, fsinger, nt the door of the bedroom, nnd passing by him, saw his wife oi the bed. She admitted her guilt and pleaded for mercy, but Benson fired, the bullet entering the woman's left breast, causing instant death. The murderer knelt over the warm corpse, kissed the dead lips, and going out to the store met Singer, whom he shot through the knee and arm. Benson then went to the police station and gave himself up. Singer was taken to the hospital and may recover. Send in your yutss on JIarrison't cabinet Fifty dollars cash for the best guetx. The C'ans ot It. Judge. "Just think how unhappy the little savages mast be," said a Sunday-school teacher, trying to point a moral. "They have no Christmas at all. Can any of vou tell me why '" "It's because they haven't any stockings to wear?" chipped in little Johnny. They Leave It All to Trails. 7hSnn quite agrees with The Sentinel that "the real responsibility for the worthlssriess of our police force rests with the board of couiraiasivners,"
AN AUTUMN IDYL. ITinie.J
'Mm
-A i! 17. .... -.w lie "Why doan yo pull in, honey? Yo' float has been under fo' five minutes." She " 'Cause three am a crowd." NEITHER PARTY WILL SURRENDER. The West Virginia, l.lettion Contests Will Ke Hotly rouzht. Wheeling, W. Va., Dee. SC. Special. Judge A. B. Fleming, late democratic candidate for governor, IT. S. Senator Kenna, Senator Faulkner, ex-Senator Camden, State Senator B. II. Oxley, Secretary of State Walker and four or five other prominent democrats met Chairman Bilcy, of the state committee, Artyflen. Caldwell and other local lights here last evening and discussed the proposed election contests, and afterward they all denied that there was any deal between the two parties for a compromise by which the democrats are to seat their governor and the republicans get the U. S. senatorship, as was stated in specials from Indianapolis last Thursday. The republicans also deny the report, and the Jut'liignucr, whose editor, Mr. Hart, was one of the visitors, will say, in the morning: "The visit of four West Virginia republicans to the president-elect was so void of news for the hungry correspondents in Indianapolis that one of them, a Wheeling product, concocted and furnished to the rest of them a startling story of an alleged deal between the democratic and republican leaders of West Virginia. According to his weak invention the republicans are to give up the governorship, which they have fairly won after a hard fight, and the democrats are to let the republicans have the U. S. senator. The republicans are supposed to be clad to fall in with this scheme, because since the'national victory they will have patronage enough without the little that, belongs to the governor. Democrats are supposed to jump at the suggestion because the Jittie the governor will have to give will be all they can hope to get. "The IntcUiaencer does notj of coure, know everything that is in the minds of the democratic managers, but does know that no such proposition has ever been submitted to the republicans, and does not believe the democratic managers idiotic enough to hatch or entertain such an idea. The republicans of West Virginia, aided by democrats ho desired a change of state administration, have fairly elected the the next governor of this state. The men who elected Gen. Goft will stand by him, and Gen. Goft" will stand by thera to the last extremity. "No other proposition could for a moment be entertained lookintr to anything else than the complete possession of that for which Gen. Gotl made the gallant fight which has so greatly added to bis fame as a republican leader. The people of West Virginia may be assured that no ambition of Golfs, and none that his party may entertain for him, will lead to the abandonment ot any point in the republican position. F.very inch of the ground will be contested as hotly and us pertinaciously as every inch of ground was contested up to the closing of the polls on election day. Gen. Goff's majority for governor is small, but it is as good as thoutrh it were ten times as great. "It is the expression of the w ill of the people, and the republicans of West Virginia can have no other policy or intention than to take possession of that ofiice, if there, be law nnd justice in the state to five it to them. This assurrance is not necessary for the people of West Virginia, but it can do no harm to Jot the people of other sintcs understand tliat the slorii s they are reading abou; the democratic-republican deal in West Virginia are purely inventions, put out for the purpose of iuakiusr a few dollars." SLAIN BY DETECTIVES. Another of tho Great Hatfield Gang of Murderers Gets His Deserts. Charleston, W. Va., Dee. 31. Still another nieniherof the great Hatfield uang; of murderers has been slain by the detectives who arc prowling night and day over the mountains of the wilderness on ilic borders of Kentucky and West VirginiaDavid Stratton and "Kentucky Bill" have been hunting down Tom Wallace, upon a requisition from Gov. Buekner of Kentucky. They found him at Flat Top mountain on the day before Christmas, Wallace is a desperate man. When the detectives ordered him to halt, he whipped out a big revolver and opened fire. His first bullet passed through a portion of Stratton's coat The detectives returned the lire and Wallace fell to the ground mortally wounded. As the dying desperado breathed his last he confessed that he and Capt. Hatfield, the mouut&in demon, were paid .i"0 each by a deputy sheriff ot Juchanan comity, Virginia, and others, lor killing Jert" McCoy about two yeans atro. The murder money was placed in tha hands of "Devil Ance" Hatfield, the father of "Cap," and was iaid to them when the bloody work was completed. The deatli of Wallace is a good thing for the couutry. He was captured once before, but knocked the jailer down and escaped. His crime was a peculiarly horrible one. About two years airo Tom Wallace stole away Miss Daniels, a niece of Jell .McCoy, one of the sons of Harmon McCoy, slain during the war. When the girl learned that she had been made the victim ota mock marriage, she left Wallace iu Virginia and hid with her friends in Kentucky. Wallace boiled over with fury, lie gave Cap Hatfield to help him recover the irirl. The two men went l i Mr. Daniels' cabin. 'I he old man was sleeping in one bed, while his sick wife ami one of her daughters blent in another. Hatfield cross-examined the ola woman as to the whereabouts of her daughter. Failing to discover the Jiiding-place of the fugitive, Can Hattield wrapped the hairy part of scow's tail about his fist ami beat the invalid woman with thefheavy stump till she was almost dead. Meanwhile Wallace kept the old man in bed at the muzzle of a cocked Winchester. Soon after Jefl McCoy waa in West Virginia, when he was seized near the mouth of Thacker creek by Tom Wallace and Cap. Hatfield, who tied him to a stake and prepared to kill him. McCoy's mother waded across the river and be.-ed on her knees for the life of her son. she was kicked and forced back to Kentucky. Meanwhile Jeff struggled free from the cords that bound hint nnd leaping into the river swam for his life. Wallace and Hatfield stood on the West Virginia baiik"sand kept up a fire upon their victim. McCoy hud reached the f-hore and was struggling up the high bank. His old mother fell on her knees in a transport of gratitude for the life of her son. The young fellow had just seized a corn stalk to help him in tho last upward bound when a bullet went through his head and he fell on a tree stump below, atone dead. His mother's shriek of anguish was answered with a mocking laugh. f CAPTURE OF A FUGITIVE. One or the Lkcaperi Bald Knobbers Taken Tty n Deputy Marshal. KANSAS CITY, Dec. 31. A special from Ozark, Mo., says that Deputy Marshal James Rhodes captured John Matthews, one of the escaped Bald Knobbers, a few miles out of the city, last night At 9 o'clock Rhodes met hini in the road, and recognizing him, ordered hitn to throw up his hands, at the point of a revolver, and escorted hini back to jail. Matthews claims that the rescuing party were all strangers. William Bedford, one of the train robber who got away with the Bald Knolbers, surrendered to-day, saying that he had had nothing to eat bince be escaped.
WHERE WERE THE POLICE ?
THE POSTOFFICE ROBBED AT MIDDAY. The Superintendent of the Money Order De. partment Called Away and S2,500 Taken Other Bobberies When Will tho Police Wake Tp As staled in The Sentinel several days ago, the "crooked" gentry who seem to have found a haven of rest in Indianapolis, uo longer conduct their operations under the cover of darkness but go about their nefarious operations in broad" daylight, and the police force seems incapable or unwilling to seriously interfere. The culmination of the audacity of these brigands was reached at the hour of noon yesterday when the postoflice money-order department was robbed of $2,450 in the oldfashioned way called the "finger-stall" method. Mr. A. II. Johnson, the superintendent, was the only one in the money-order department when a larue man with a heavy beard and a velvet cap came up to the window, and while pretending to register a letter, said that there was a man in a buirgy on Markci-st. who wanted to see Mr. Johnson about some property. Mr. Johnson hesitated about going out, and opening the window, called to the man in the buggy to come in. The stranger said he had a sore leg and that if Mr. Johnson would step otitiide he would not detain him more than a miuute, Mr. Johnson accordingly went outside, and while gone the fellow whh the beard and velvet cap walked in and helped himself. Then he vent out to the sidewalk, said a pleasant word to Mr. Johnson, and got into the bmrcy with the sore-legged man. The important business having been attended to, the two men drove rapidly oil". Mr. Johnson, on discovering the loss of the money, was so disconcerted that he was not to be seen the rest of the day. At the lime of the robbery the only man inside of the room was Mr. Abbott, the stamp clerk, and, as he is somewhat deaf and 6its looking out of the narrow window to the front, it is not expected that he would either sec or hear a robber. Detectives, the able police and the marshals were all given full descriptions of the men. Detective Laut discovered that the buggy had been obtained at Lew ark's stable. If the men will stay in the city there is not much danger of their beingcaught. Mr. Travi says thathedoes not hope to catch them, and the people are not expected to be as hopeful as the superintendent of police is. The responsibility of the la of the money rests with Postmaster Jones. lie may or may not hold Mr. Johnson accountable, but Mr. Joues will be compelled to reimburse the government. Owing to the failure of the victims to cive intelligence of robberies committed, the public is kept in blissful ignorance of the extent of outlawry in the city. Among the robberies reported to The Sentinel is that of Barney McCoy, who last evening was held up at the "Big Four" tracks at the corner or" Bates and Dillon-sts. He says that two men covered him with revolvers and told him that if be said one word they would shoot him. They got 16. A lady at the corner of Mississippi and North-et. condescended to tell a negro where a certain street was, and. a.s a wav of tha.nks, he grabbed a saehel lrom her and ran. John Hueeele's residence, IM" I Ohio-st., was entered by thieves last night. The bouse was ransacked and things were turned topsyturvy; but so far, only several small articles have been missed. FOR THE WEEK. Miscellaneous Items of Important Flappennigs During the Week. In the last foreign budget the following items are of interest: Gladstone was seventy-nine years old Sunday. 'Ihe publication of tho Saekville papers soon is promised. The Italian cabinet has been reorganized. The horrible murder of a boy hy a London milkman is the latest murder sensation thcre the boy's bodybeing mutilated in the manner of Jack the Kipper's victims. Bismarck is quite ill with gout N. J. McConnell, chief justice of Montana.has resigned. Prof. Paul Combs of Maryland college drowned. Prof. Thomas G. Carey die l at Boston, a-cd sixty-four. The loss by the fire at Grand Forks, I. T., was .!:,uiX. Gladstone is enjoying himself driving and boating at Naples. With large sales Cincinnati whisky dropped from ?1.1 1 to .f 1.0-5. Pennsylvania will vote in 1 on the question of prohibition. Cleveland, (.)., is contemplating a chun$o in its city government. The business part of Deloraine, Manitoba, lu rued. Loss, i'.'XM. N. J. MeConneH chief justice of Montana territory, has resigned. William Carr, one of the weathiest men of Pittsburg, died Friday. W. F. Stanton, a dry goods merchant of Gnlesburg, 111., has tailed. Fire destroyed the business portion of Battiueau, D. T., Suuday. The cruiser Charleston wiil be ready for inspection within six months. Police Officer Henry Fehle of St. Ix)uis, died of hydrophobia Friday night. Dr. Carver finished breaking, 6,000 balls in tii days at 1:30 iSunday morning. Charles F. Merle, Fairbank's San Francisco agent, is short a large amount. At Bastrop. Fa., Pet Overton was hanged for the murder of Frank Hearse-. Jacob Peter, ox-president of the First national bank, Louisville, is dead. Fire on board the sieanicr Mexico, in New York harbor, did ?6,(Ou damage. The president has removed Edward Gushing, collector of customs at Belfast- Me. Joseph Solomon, New York, a Hebrew, killed his wile and then fcuieided Sunday. Princess Adelbert of Bavaria became insane in the Berlin opera-house Saturday. Amos J. Stillwell, a Hannibal (M.) merchant, murdered by a burglar Sunday. A passenger train was derailed near Helena, M. T., Friday and Fireman Moore killed. James Blnjrg and Leroy Gaw m ere killed by a dynamite explosion at Puyullup, W. T. Near Denison, Tex , two cowboys got into a dispute which ended in both being killed. Pitcher Batnscy and Catcher Kerios have signed with Louisville for another season. The warrant fur Ben Hopkins' pardon received the president's signature yesterday. W. D. French, in jail at Greeley. Col., for murder, was hanged by a mob Saturday mornThe miners of southern Illinois have organized a branch of the National federation of miners. The entire male populace of a western Nebraska town is under arrest for whipping WifeBeater Cutler. A movement is on foot lo build a new railroad from Minneapolis and St. Paul to Kscanaba, Mich. Martin Sullivan, a life prisoner in the Massachusetts state prison, has been pardoned by the governor. At Williamsburg, (., Friday, Miss Mary Dwyer's clothing caught lire, and she was burned to death. William H. Bay and wife were fatally injured by the collision of a locomotive and street-car at St- Joseph, Mo. Bernard J. Donnelly, a young priest nt New York, has become insane from brooding over the McGlynn ease. Ina street duel at I'mporia, Kas., Cant. W. G. Porter was stabbed and killed, and William Smith fatally shot. Tosttnaster Pearson of New York denies the report that he bad resigned, and says he will Kervc his term out LandofT Watson Andrews, whose rote passed the tarill bill of 1812, died at i lemingsburg, Ky., on the 23d ult. Fifty thousand people were in attendance upon the Te Denn in St. Peter's cathedral at Borne last Saturday. An elevated road franchise for a 4-cent fare line up W. Iikc-st was granted last night by the Chicago council. At Toledo, two boys, James Ford and Nathan Gischrist, aged nine and fourteen, were drowned in a bayou Sunday. They were skating, when the ice broke, precipitating them into the bayou. Their cries ere heard by Children Cry for
r ROYAL KSAi 1 l
mm Absolutely Pure. This nowder never vanes. A marvel of purltr, strength and vholesomeness. More economic! than the ordinary kind, and can not be sold ia competition with the multitude of low test, short weight shun or phosphate powdrf. f?oll onlr ia cans Eoval Baking Powder Co.. 10S Wall street Jf. Y some gentlemen, but before assistance coull be given them both drowned. At Dayton, Ky., Thomas Hayman fired on a supposed chicken thief and killed William Murdock, a neighbor. Rock Island Engineer Hodge and Tireman Harding were killed by a collision of freight trains at Tip Top, Col. Wallace Peterman of Crawfordsville, Ind., deserted his wife and baby and eloped with his sister-in-law Saturday. Postmaster Pierson of New York denies the statement that he wiil resign. Joel B. Lrliardt is mentioned as his successor. Pietro Dairavo. an Italian brigand, who murdered Count Ginlio Sanduz.ie at Forella, Italy, was captured at Stamford, Coan. Policeman Luke Bürde of Chicago was fatally shot by Thomas Reynolds, but shot his man twice, and took him to the station. Tom Williams, colored, was shot and killed by Night Watchman John Woollens nt Georgetown, Ky., while resisting arrest, Sunday. A boat containing six colored persons was capsized in they Ohio river, near Bipley, O., early Sunday morning, and all were crooned. The grand jury of Crawford county, Indiana, failed to find an indictment against James Gilbert, who fatally shot his son. It was an accident. It is generally conceded at Indianapolis that an important, position under Harrison's administration will be tendered to Gen. Gibson of Ohio. The secretary of the treasury accepted the following bonds: Fourhnndred and fittv thou sand dollars of Pes'.:. per cents., registered, at A number of white girls, employed as waitresses at a hotel in Springfield, O., refused to wait on a company of colored minstrels last week. Several Poles were badly burned by an explosion of blasting powder, which caused the burning erf four houses at Lverson, Pa., Suuday. At Toledo, O., Saturday, an unknown man struck a can of dynamite with an ax, and was literally torn to pieces by the explosion which fo" lowed. Edward Gibbons was sandbagged at Bellaire, 0.. his children chloroformed, and his house roubed, last Saturday night. Gibbons was faf My hurt. . e wife of a prominent farmer of Tobasco, 0. , was taken home from an asylum to spend the holidays. She set fire to a bam and tried to commit suicide. Miss Cornelia F. White, who had charge of the Indian mission 'chool at the Sisseton agency, Dakota, u." d Dec. 21. She was a graduate of Yas;ar. A new system of discipline was adopted Jan. 1 at the Ohio penitentiary. Corporal punishishment was abolished and confinement in dungeons substituted. Joseph Bennett, an aged and impoverished Pittsburger, is serving out a sentence for a highway robbery which he committed in order to get a home in prison. In Lyon county, Kentucky, James Deane playfully snapped a pistol that be didn't think was loaded, t some children. The ball struck his mother, and the wound is fatal. - ' Over Sr't.OOO worth of imported stained plass for the Dubuque cathedral was seized for duty, Collector Mclaughlin disregarding the decisions of the secretary cd" the treasury. By the burning of a Christmas tree in the residence of Mie-ahel Maguire, at Piitsbiirg. Pa., t lie building; was partially d stroyed, aud Miry Maguirc, aged eight years, fatally burned. The new steamer Bristol of the Old Colony line was completely destroyed by fire at the New York uoek Sunday nigjiL The loss is jOohnj; covered by insurance. No lives were lost. A vote takeu by a Dakota paper on the question of single or double statehood shows that a little more than rive-sixths of those answerin are iu favur ot division and admission as two states. In Craighead county, Arkansas, William West, a desperado, Sunday, assaulted Iiis wife, who was defended by Stephen Daircy. The men then got into a fight with guns and both were killed. The story published of a proposed compromise between West Virginia politicians, by which the democrats were to be given the governor and the republicans the F. S. senator, is denied by both parties. Two of the condemned Bald Knobbers and five train robbers escaped from jail at Ozark, Mo., Sunday. Unknown persons from the outside cut through the brick wall of the prison, unlocked the corridor and cells and released the prisoners. A new revolutionary proup has been formed in Paris, calling itself the Commune. Owing to the difficulty iu finding a candidate to opfose Boulangerin the Paris election Premier loquet expresses willingness to stand, but Clemenceau objects. Fx-Gov. Ijoutwell is of the opinion that there should be an extra session of congress in order that four new states may be created, the census protected, the republican tariff-policy carried out, and the cases of members elected by fraud speedily attended to. At Pittsburg, Sunday. John Cochran, a small boy, went into a sewer with a lighted match to hunt for a natural gas leak. Au explosion followed which fatally burned him and set lire to the Saw-mill run railroad bridge. The flames were extinguished after the bridge had been badly dar.ia'.'ed. Amos J. Still well of Hannibal, Mo., s wealthy merchant, was murdered by a burglar while asleep in his home at 2 o'clock Sunday morning. The weapon used was an ax which, with Mr. Stillwell's pocketbook and $.15 was found in an alley in the rear of the house. There is no clew to the murderer. Capt. A. E. Bauer, drafting clerk in the ofiice Ot the secretary of Mate of Wisconsin, committed suicide at Madison, Sunday, by shooting himself in the head. lie had been for some time pp.st failing mentally, and has lately been given to frequent spells of despondency. Capt. Bauer was sixty years of age, and had lived in Madison since 1 S7G. At the close of the week there was a further contraction in the volume of business in wholesale und jobbing lines of trade, and even retail branches were foreign to activity, but this condition of af airs is natural and normal at this time. The produce market, however, exhibited an improved tone, with more activity th.su for several days. The money market was dull, but there was an active demand for eastern exchange, which ruled stronger. Governments were firmer in tone, but quiet. The New York banks lost over a million iu reserve during the week. Send in your guess on Jfarrison's cabinet. Fifty dollars cash for the bct gues. Likes "The. Kentlnel." Richmond leniocrat. We liko the spirit of Tiik Inpiaxapolu Sentinel, it was one of the best campaign papers in the Fnited States during the last presidential conflict, and even in defeat does not stop to wipe perspiration from its editorial 1. row. and its raflvbi2 cry continues to ring along the line of democratic columns, wliich inarched out with their side arms and are even ' now picking their flints for the conflict of 1S1VJ. Pitcher's Cactoria. ,
M Ii M I
wft 1 "ail 17 it i m Why Don't Horses Live Longer? ilorss- Lives ... 25 ycunt Elephant " ... 400 ' Whale " ... 300 ' EaIc " . . 100 ' Swan " . ... loo " Tortoise " ... 100 " The msn lives to be eight. The poor horse for want of a blanket ia the stable has to die at twenty-five, and while he does life he eats twice as much as he should to keep warm. 13uy one of the following 5 Horse Blankets and save money. For sale by all dealers. 5A Fivs Mile. Uli F;re Xlltt ol Warp TfcrtiSft. 5Ä Boss Stable. V.nzi'.H Eer:t EliU:t KUW 5A Electric. SfcAolA Extra Test. ß ; f Ec:'J;lsiSv, Tcrj Etro&fy 30 othsr sty las' At jr;a tc mil tvcrrtoCf None genuine without thr 5, A Trade Mark sewed insider ICopyrii'attd iZi3, by Vitt . Avxss & Sons J s 'IIERIFFS SALK 1'v virtue of a certiPed conv of a deceo to me di rected from the ol.Tii of th superior court of Maring county, Indiana, in can' No. :j7, ., ler'in Robert lluii'ison is plaintitt ?nd Niiho!as derardy et I. aredelendants, re'juiriri nje to ruakft the euros of motif y as provided for in sai l dcror, with interest no l pr.t. I will expose at public sale to the Ligh:?t l'i ldi-r, on SATURDAY, TIII3 :o.h 1VY OI' JANUARY, A. D. If:?, bet-wn the hours of 10 o'c'ock a. ta. and 4 o'clock p. tu. of fsid dav, at the duor of the tcurt-hou$e ot Marion county. Indiana, the. r-nts and profits for term not ef-i-.lins seven ytars, of the fclowing riwl estate. to- it : The north half of t nuroher nine (3' lr onareo blo( k one M) in lIul Kirl, Martind de ud McCarty's ptiMivision of thi-uinca-t addition to the city o! Iuiianarii, in Marion county. Ituiiao:. If S'.icli rents au l pro:its wdl uut soil foraoffirirüt sum to satisfy eid decree, interest- tn-J com. I will, sf the sine tit.ie strl place, efK t public al-j ib f.f simple of .iid ral ral, or much thereof a ni.iv tip mffi'icnt to diharg MiA df cive, iiit'-re: and co-t. s..ti i tale will be mafli without any relief fr?m valuation or appraisement lav s. TvC KING, sheriff o( .Müriou Count v. Jannarv 2. A. J'. l'-P. H. L. uiiili; I'.ittrr i flitter, Attorneys for Plainti "HmFFs i.'ALL. F.y virtue of r rvrtifn-d copy of a i cree to tje di .reeled fron the ij'lc ol the uprrior Court of Marion county, linliatia, ia c;tue No. IW.CM, wherein M'.nnist. Anyu'-r. administrator of the eMate of William !Mti!th. deccsse-l. is plaintiff and William 1". 0l!irs aüii Marv A. olliua .iro ncieodantv riiiljii mo t" niaV." tl:t yuia of twdve hundrv-l and li:t-f.e i. i;;.rs sn i eVtrn cents (1,2"M1, with ii.Tfr.-t sind cot, I will expose at public sale lo the highest bidder, un SATIT.DAY, THE 2 a PAY Or JANUARY. A. I'. IV.', between th hour of lo o'clock a. m. and 4 oVlclt P. n. of s;'it d.ty, at the do r of th court housn ot Marion rour:t.' Indiana, the rentj and iiro5ts fir x triu not extiii 4 ;;n year, d the following rcnl -M3t-, to-wn; f'wnmeiicin,; at '!:e north-vest corner of lot nuralred four ! ia s,i;are cunihrred six ( in Samuel rulicn's f ond eastern addition to the town of Cumberland : thence i'oulh to Soma treet; theo fait ou hundred i.lo' lft; thenef north to lt north !id c! raid f-pja e ; th'-nce est one hundred l tön) feet u t U rilacv 01 rx-g.nai2, situate lu Mari ü county, Inuiana. Ii r 'ich rr nts and profits " Td net sell for a suflicien mm to satisfy raid d Tree, interest ani cc,t, I wdl, at the Mine time and plae, extx-so to puhlie gale th fe5 Firuple of said real estate, or so much thereof may he siifti. i.-nt to disfhari; sa'J decree, interest and costs, said stle will - made without any rvlief ha'.ever from valurtion or ri r.ii.eiur-ut l.is. ls.VAC KING, rshvritT Marion Couflty. .Ismary 2, A. 1. Iv?. ioodin A flooding. Attorneys for I'laintitf. QTATr. OK INDIANA. MAKIOX COUNTY. 5V : Iü the Siij'tTiiir Court of Marion county, ia tu Mate of lad 'una. N . V-S.'.'b. Omphmt, to rwovpr real e.tx!e and to ooht title thereto. Adolj.ii Sei.itnsti let r s. 1 he Cod necticnt Zlut ut l.i'e Insurance eonipniy. Anm Cr. Clarke, LV5 Chrkf her hushiriii. Msr'y M. Yandes et al. I it known Ih.n on the C'th da v of f'eef mher, l!s-s, the altove-named r.liantitl. br bi atloriieya. f. ie.i in tbeOJlieeof the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion county, in the Mati of InliaDa, h:s complaint nzaiust th? ahove-naiifid defendants, and the tu II daintiifl.iviur a'so liiert in -aii e.'erk ofhie lrv atodavit of a cvmpeteTit p-irs-n. fhowinc Coat raid defendants. Ann It. Clarke. Ko-s e'.arkefier hithnd. and Mary M. Yandes. wvera'ly are not residents of the Mate" of Indiana, and wher.ai sail plaint iS' brJnsr by indorsement on slid complaint required aid defendants last above-named to appeir in faid court and answer or demur tLtreto, 00. the 23th day of 1-fhriiarv. IvO. Now, therefore, by order of ssid court, Pii dofendant.s last al-ove naioe-l ere h rery no'iüed of ih filmland pendency of aid corvpiaiat apalnst th'ni, and that titles they appear and answer or dfitnuf thereto, at the cllius; ol said r:iue on the 2'ithd'iyof I l.i-iinry.ls: .1,1 he suu'c leinu the nineteenth iudiciid cl.'iv of a teriii ol saii ro;n, to be li'in iml htld st th." court house in ilcj ('.'it? of lEdisiiars'-iis on the. f ct Monday in Februar . Iss, raid complaint and tttv nianev aoil ttiiu7s therein contaioe-i and alhvod, will Iss heard ar.'! ölerui;ti-i in their h'fniv. ji'llN L MT.LIVAN, Cierfc. A. It. Youmc, Attcrn. y for riain';ST. Iuty of the Legislature. Iklphi Times. "We are row enterintr upon the campaign of lSif.' RU'i if the legislature does its duty in re jrarJ to a new, Ftriuebt election law, the pco pie of Indiana will vote their sentiments. For Abne f Alcotiol rsE HOK-SrORD'S ACID PHOSPHATE. r. Y. E. Crane, Mitchell. iak.,eays: It has proven almost a specific for this disorder; it checks the vomitinc:, restores the appetite, and, st the same time, allays the tear of iui pending dissolution, that is so common to heavy drinkers." TThen Baby was !iek, we rT 5lr Caatcr, When ihe was t Chili, ahe Tied for Catori, When ah became Xiao, she flnnir to Castoria, When all had CLiUren, he gav them C&alori, Advice to Mother. Mrv Winslow'i Soothin Syup should alwa a used when rhildren are euiiin? teeth. It relieve the little anfiVrer at one; it produce natural, ouiet ieep fcy relieving the chili lrom rain, ant the litlla cherub awake "bright aa a button." It i very pleasant to tasta. It aoothea the child, softem to si-niB, allays all pain, relieve wind, regulate th bowels and is tho !est known remedy lor diarrhea, whether arising from teething or other cuj Twiteceau bottle.
