Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1889 — Page 4
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 18S9.
INDIANA STATE SENTINEL
I Entered at tb ToatotSce at Indianapolis a second class matter. TERMS FEU YEABj Finple copy (InTsrUbly in AdTnce.).........Sl OO Wcask democrats to hoar In mind and select their (tn tat paper when they come to take tsubscrip. tionsand make up club.. Agent making up clubs send for any Information demed. Addess THE INDIANAPOLIS i-KNTINEL Indianapolis, Ind. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2. FOR HUMANITY'S SAKE. Sand TV ttrinr Apparel and Supplies For " the Clay County SufTe-rers. '. The wives and children of the Clay county miners are suffering very grievously for want of clothing. The children without exception, and most of the women ere without 6hoes or other foot-wear. Dresses, skirts, stockings, underwear, wraps, head-wear, and, in fact, any article of clothing for man, woman or child would help to protect Rome poor creature from the wintry blasts that are now approaching, and would be moet acceptable. Whether the strike ends soon or not, the necessities of the miners and their families will be very great during the winter. The men have been idle since May; and previous to that had for several years been employed only about half the time, and then at pauper wahres. If they resume work it will be at very low wages, and probably on half time. Most of theta are absolutely destitute and almost hopelessly in debt. The Sentinel will forward to Clay county all clothing or supplies of any kind w hich may be contributed for these unfortunate people. We urge our readers to examine their wardrobes and to send us for th3 purpose flieh articles of wearing apparel as they can spare. Those who liave clothing or food supplies or anythin? else that would help to make the miners' families comfortable may fend them to this oiiiee or may notify us by telephone or through the mails, and we will send for the articles. We want to forward a train load of clothing, provisions mi general supplies to Clay county as quickly as possible. We shall acknowle dee all donations in these columns unices otherwise requested. Let there be a liberal response to this appeal. Let the state of Indiana be saved from the disgrace of barefooted women and little children in winter. Our contemporaries in this city and throughout the state are earnestly urged to co-operate with us in this work. It is simply a work of common humanity. The state fair was a euccess in point of attendance, and in many respects was a very creditable exhibition. There is still much room for improvement, however. Daniel Dougherty is mentioned as the probable successor of the late S. S. Co in congress. He is a scholarly and brilliant man and would probably come nearer filling Mr. Cox's place in the house than any other person who is available lor it. The startling information comes by Associated Press that the marriage of young Mr. I'laine aD.i Miss M Cokmick ' was consummated with a ring, the couple kneeling during invocation of divine blessing." This is supposed to have happened in a crowded presbyterian church. The death of Wilkie Collins is a f erioui loss to English literature, lie wrote great fiction, and it somewhat inferior in creative power to I)ickex, .Sott and Thackeray, he was superior to either, or to toy of his other contemporaries, as a plotl uildcr. The author of "The Woman in White" is destined, we think, to permanent fame, and will always rank as not the least in that great galaxy of novelists which included Dickens, Thackeray, ikk(,e Eliot, F.ilwer and Charles C'H. W. F. .Switzler, who has efficiently served the people as chief of the bureau of statistics during the past four years, has tendered his resignation, "by request." hecy. Winpom assures him that the request for his resignation was not induced by any charges affecting him personally or officially. He was simply turned out for political opinion, in accordance with "that frank and bold, if brutal" policy which B. IlAnnisov declaimed against on ft memorable occasion in the senate. Who will be the next victim? The colored baptists, at their recent convention in this city, adopted resolutions urging the southern negroes to "go west and grow up with the country." We have waited in vain for invitations from the West for them to come. Nothing has been heard from Kansas or Nebraska, from Iowa or Minnesota, from Wisconsin or the Dakotas, or from any of the other republican states or territories of the West. What's the matter? Why don't the republicans of the Northwest ask the downtrodden southern negroes to come End make their homes with them? The London Spectator is very Bad, all because after Irish home rule has been granted, Ireland wiH separato from the empire, and the United States will recognize its independence "within a week," nd Ireland and England will straightway (all to fighting, and the United States will make an alliance with Ireland, and "that would mean a war with a stato stronger than ourselves, with two millions of allies, ready to die for her, living in our own etreets, and with an indefensible territory, which yet must be defended, stretching along her side." This is what it is to have have a guilty conscience and a sour stomach. St. Lons has jumped into the world's fair race with a hurrah, and promises to make it interesting for New York, Chicago and Washington. A fund has been started with the newspapers as leading contributors, the RepuUic and Globe-Democrat . giving $20,000 each, and the I'ogt-Ditpntrh $15,000. A general committee of 200 has been organized, with Gor. Francis aa chairman, and Charles II. Jones, editor of the lUpubllc, as chairman of the executive committee. A ücood deal of Ter.
fascinating literature is being sent out. The main argument is that St. Louis has a larger population within a radius of 500 miles than any other city in the country. A good deal of Btress is laid upon her transportation facilities, which, in point of fact, are not equal to those of Chicago. St. Louis undoubtedly has many advantages as a site for the fair, but her summer climate and the overshadowing attractions of Chicago, will, we fear, prevent her from capturing the prize. A Nation r Slaves. A recent pnjer in the XineUmtU Century gives a discouraging picture of the condition of the Ilussian peasantry. Those who were "emancipated" by decree of Alexander more than a quarter of a century ago are said to be in a more miserable situation than in their daj-s of serfdom. Agriculture, upon which they depend almost entirely, is at the very lowest ebb. The harvests are wretched, being smaller than in any other European country. The Russian peasants are without capital or an opportunity to acquire it; the little patches of land in their possession are too small to permit of the raising of different crops, which is essential to the successful prosecution of agriculture; and their ignorance, which has scarcely been lessened since they emerged into "freedom," is an insuperable barrier to their advancement. The great majority of these hiiHcraf'lrx lind themselves utterly unable to pay the government what they owe on their lands, or even to pay the state and communal taxes, for default in which they are Hogged by the thousands every year. It is said that in one district in Novgorod, 1,"00 peasants were thus con
demned in 18s7. Five hundred and fifty had already been llogged, when the inspector interceded for the remainder. There is chronic famine in many parts of the country. Usurers flourish at the expense of both the old land-owners and the peasantry. Forced labor is at an end, fin 1 the free labor, owing to its ignorance and the conditions by which it is surrounded, is of the worst possible kind. The- nobility, as a class, is practically ruined. The result of emancipation seems to have been to impoverish the nobles, while the former slaves are in a worse condition, if anything, than when the law held them as bondsmen. The power of the aristocracy is broken, and "there is nothing between the unlimited power ot the autocrat and his 00,000,000 subjects, rive-sixths of whom are peasants." No wonder there is nihilism in Russia. No wonder, either, that it is practically confined to the gentle-born. The masses of that vast empire are too besotted with ignorance to understand their condition, and have too little spirit, after their centuries of oppression, to assert their rights, even were they able to comprehend them. The condition of Russia in these latter years of the nineteenth century seems to be worse than that of the states of Europe under the feudal system. Her deliverance will come some time, but there are as yet no indications of its approach. Harrison, Tanner and DnlzellWhen Corporal Tanner and Private Dalzeli. were going around the country last fall blackguarding Cleveland, lyingto he old soldiers, and proclaiming that hell was full of democrats, 15. Harrison and the Journal regarded them as great patriots and fine fellows generally. P.ut now that Tan nek has put the administration "in a hole" by attempting to carry out promises made in its behalf but which were never intended to be kept, the Journal can scarcely find language too severe to apply to him. It lerates him for his "folly" and his "stupidity." and denounces him for attempting to establish a "wide-open policy in dispensing pensions without much regard to precedents or law." Yet this was the kind of policy B. Hakkiov promised when he declared that the apothecaries' scales should not be used in dealing out pensions, and it was the policy he directed when he told Tanner to "be lilieral with the boys." The truth about Tanner is that with all his faults he is a better man than II a riuson because he believes that campaign pledges are made to be kept, tvhilo H.vnkim).v believes they are only made to be broken. Tanner is stupid and foolish, of course, but no more so than when Hakihson appointed him commissioner of pensions with a view to making votes. It is safe to say that he to-day enjoys a larger share of public respect than does II. Hakkison, who has introduced the methods and morals of ward politics in the white house, and has shown that he has no higher conception of public duty than he has of political honesty. As to Private Dalzell, he is at least as good a man to-day as he was when he was holding i rover Cleveland up to the 6corn of the G. A. R., while the Journal was patting him on the back. The New York S'm utters a loud call for the American "that will evolve from his inner consciousness the idea of the thing which shall bo the great and characteristic feature of the New York exposition, as Mr. Eiffel's tower is the feature of the Paris show." The tower has, in the Sun's opinion, done more than any other ten things to make the Paris exposition a wonderful success. But the idea which is to do for the New York exposition of 1S02 what the Eiffel tower has done for the Paris fair is yet to be born of American genius. Another tower will not do. "Nor will any suggestiou be valuable," says the Sun, "whica owes its novelty merely to its complex or bizarre character. The undiscovered thing must have the greatness of simplicity and originality." Here is certainly a grand opportunity for Yankee geniuB to assert itself. lame and fortune await the man who shall evolve the great idea for which the Sun is yearning. Of course it is understood that tho New York exposition of ISlrj will e held at Chicago, but the Idea will be needed all the same. The most vigorous newspaper opponent of high license in this country is the Voice, national organ of the prohibitionists. This ought to set the liquor interest to thinking. The Voice recognizes the fact that a rigid high license system is the best security the liquor interest can have against the enactment of prohibitory laws. The liquor men who demand low license and resist all attempts to regulate and restrain the traffic are really the most effective allies the prohibition fanatics havt. ile Was Thinking. , , .Life, -. , . "Who ia thAt roftn with the abstracted air?" "Sh-h-ht don't disturb him; he's thinking; he rote-i 'iur i'rri?;-u "
DR. TADI AGE'S RECENT TRIP
FROM THE ATLANTIC TO THE PACIFIC Tho Preacher Takes Ills Vacation Journey For the Subject of i Sermon Aa Apt Text For tho Occasion nil tho Blatter. It was a great anthem of praise that went up from the crowded throngs at the P.rooklyn tabernacle last Sunday morning, where the Kev.T. De Witt Talmage, D. D., preached as usual. The opening hymn was: "No more let human blood b spilt. Vain sacrifice lor human guilt; Hut to each conscience be applied The blood (bat (lows Iruiu Jesus' tide." The subject of the sermon was: "From Ocean to Ocean, or My Transcontinental Journey." Text: Psalms, Ixxii, 8: "He shall have dominion from sea to sea.' The preacher said : What two seas are referred to? Some might say the text means that Christ was to reign over all the land between the Arabian sea and Cat-pian sea, or between the Red sea and the Mediterranean sea, or between the Black sea and tho North sea. No; in such case my text would have named them. It meant from any largo body of water on the earth clear across to any other large body of water. And so I have a right to read it: He shall have dominion from the Atlantic sea to the Pacific sea. My theme is, America for God! First, consider the immensity of this possession. If it were only a small tract of land capable of nothing better than sage bru-h and with ability only to support prairie dogs, I should not have much enthusiasm in wanting Christ to have it added to His dominion. But its immensity and allluenco no one man can imagine unless, in immigrant wagon or stage coach or in rail train of the Cnion Pacific or the Northern Pacific or the Canadian Pacific or the Southern Pacific, ho has traversed it. Having been privileged six times to cross this continent, and twice this summer, I have come to some appreciation of its magnitude.. California, which I supposed in boyhood, from its size on the map, was a few yards across, a ridgo of land on which one must walk cautiously lest he hit his head against the Sierra Nevadas on one side or slip oil into tho Pacific waters on the other; California the thin slice of land as I supposed it to be in my boyhood. I have found it to be larger than all the states of New England and all New York state and all Pennsylvania added together, and if you add them together their square miles fall far short of California. North and South Dakota, Montana and Washington territory, to be launched next winter into statehood, will bo giants at their birth. Let the congress of the United States strain a point and soon admit also Idaho and Wyoming and New Mexico. What is the use keeping them out in tho cold any longer? Let us have the whole continent divided into states with senatorial and congressional representatives and we will be happy together. If some of them have not quite the requisite number of people fix up the constitution to suit these c:.ses. Even Utah will by dropping polygamy soon be ready to enter. Monogany has triumphed in parts of Utah and will probably triumph at this fall election in Salt Lake City. Turn all the territories into states, and if some of the sisters are smaller than the elder sisters give them time and they will soon be as large as any of them. liecause some of the daughters of a family may be five feet in stature and the others only four feet do not let the daughters five feet hieh shut the door in the laces of those who are only four feet high. Among the dying utterances of our good friend, the wise statesman and great author, tho brilliant orator and magnificent soul, S. S. Cox, was the expressed determination to mov3 next winter in congress for the transference of other territories into states. But while I speak of the immensity of the continent I must remark that it is not an immensity of monotone or taineness. The larger some countries are the worse for the world. This continent is not more remarkable for its magnitude than for its wonders of construction. What a pity the U. S. government did not take possession of Yosemite, California, as it has of Yellowstone, Wyoming, and of Niagara falls, New York. Yosemite and the adjoining California regions ! Who that has Keen them can thinK of them without having his blood tingle? Trees now standing there were old when Christ lived. These monarchs of foliage reigned before C;rsar or Alexander, and the next thousand years will not shatter their scepter. They are the masts of the continent, their canvas spread on the winds while the old ship bears on its way through the ages. Their size, of which travelers often speak, does not affect me so much as their longevity. Though so old now, the branches of some of them will crackle in the last conflagration of the planet. That valley of the Yosemite is eight miles long and a half mile wide and 3,000 feet deep. It Beems as if it had been the meaning of omnipotence to crowd into as small a place as possible some of the most stupendous scenery of the world. Some of the cliffs you do not stop to measure by feet, for they are literally a mile high. Steep so that neither foot of man nor beast ever scaled them, they stand in everlasting defiance. If Jehovah has a throne on earth, these are its white pillows. Standing down in this great chasm of the valley you look up and yonder is Cathedral rock, vast, gloomy minster, built for the silent worship of the mountains. Yonder is Sentinel rock, 0,270 feet high, bold, solitary, standing guard among the ages, its top seldom touched until a bride one Fourth of July mounted it and planted the national standard, and the peoplo down in the valley looked up and saw the head of the mountain turbaned with stars and strines. Yonder are the "Three Brothers," 4.000 feet high; "Cloud's Rest," North and South dome, and highta never captured save by the fiery bayonets of the thunderstorm. No pause for the eye, no stopping place for the mind. Mountains hurled on mountains. Mountains in the wake of mountains. Mountains flanked by mountains. Mountains split. Mountains ground. Mountains fallen. Mountains triumphant. As though Mont Blanc and the Adirondacks and Mount Washington were here uttering themselves in one magnificent chorus of rock and precipice and waterfall. Sifting and dashing through the rocks the water comes down. The Bridal Yeil falls, so thin you can see the face of the mountain behind it. Yonder is Yosemite falls, dropping 2,634 feet, sixteen times greater descent than that of Niagara, These waters dashed to death on the rocks, so that the white spirit of the slain waters ascending in the robe of mists seeks the heaven. Yonder is Nevada falls, plunging 700 feet, the water in arrows, the water in rockets, the water in pearls, the water in amethvsts, the water in diamonds. That cascade dings down the rocks enough jewels to array the earth in beauty, and rushes on until it drops into very hell of waters, the smoke of their torment ascending forever and ever. But after you have wandered along the geyserite enchantment for days and begin to feel that there can be nothing more of Children Cry for
interest to see, you suddenly come upon the peroration of all majesty and grandeur, the Grand canyon. It is here that it seems to me and I epeak it with reverenco Jehovah seems to have surpassed Himself. It seems a great gulch let down and spread abroad, are all the colors of land and Rea and sky. Upholstering of the Lord God Almighty. Best work of the architect of worlds. Sculpturing by the infinite. Masonry by an omnipotent trowel. Yellow! You never saw yellow unless you saw it there. Red! You never saw red unless you saw it there. Yiolet! You never saw "violet unless you 6aw it there. Triumphant banners of color. In a cathedral of basalt, sunrise and sunset married by the setting of rainbow ring. Gothic arches, Corinthian capitals and Egyptian basilicas built before human architecture was born. Hugo fortifications of granite constructed before war forged its first cannon, übraitars and Sebastolu that never can be taken. Albambras, where kings of strength and gueens of beauty reigned long before the rst earthly crown was iru pearled. Thrones on which no one but the king of heaven and earth ever sat. Fount of waters at which tho lesser hüls arc baptized, while the giant cliffs stand round as sponsors. For thousands of years before that scene was unveiled to human 6ight the elements were busy, and the geysers were hewing away vi ,h their hot chisel, and glaciers were funding away with their cold hammers, and hurricanes were cleaving with their lightning strokes, and hailstones giving the finishing touches, and after all these forces of nature had done their best, in our century the curtain dropped, and the world had a new and divinely inspired revelation, tho old testament written on pap)rus, the new testament writen on parchment, and now this last testament written on the rocks. Hanging over one of tho cliffs I looked off until I could not get my breath, then retreating to a less exposed "place I looked down again. Down there is a pillar of rock that in certain conditions of the atmosphere looks liko a pillar of blood. Yonder are tiftv feet of emerald on a base of r00 feet of' opal. Wall of chalk resting on pedestals of beryl. Turrets of licht tumbling on floors of darkness. The brown brightening into golden. Snow of crystal melting into lire of carbuncle. Flaming red cooling into russet. Cold blue warming into saffron. Dull gray kindling into solferino. Morning twilight Hushing midnight shadows. Auroras crouching among rocks. Yonder is an eagle's nest on a shaft of basalt. Through an eyeelass we see among it the young eagles, but the stoutest arm of our group cannot hurl a stone near enough to disturb the feathered domesticity. Yonder are hights that would be chilled with horror but for tho warm robe of forest foliage with which they are enwrappod. Altars of worship at which nations might kneel. Domes of chalcedony on temples of porphyry. See all this carnage of color up and down the cliffs ; it must have been the battle-field of the of the elements. Here are all the colors of the wall of heaven ; neither the sapphire nor the chrysolite nor the topaz nor the jacincth nor the amethyst nor the jasper nor the twelve cates of twelve pearls wanting. If spirits bound from earth to heaven could pass up by the way of this canyon the dash of heavenly beauty would not be so overpowering. It would only be fi.m glory to glory. Ascent through euch earthly scenery in which the crystal is so bright and the red so flaming would be fit preparation for the ' sea of glass mingled with fire." Standing there in the grand canyon of the Yellowstone park on the morning of Aug. 0, for the most part we held our peace, but after, a while it flashed upon me with such power I could not help but say to my comrades: "What a hall this would be for the last judgment !" See that mighty cascade with the rainbows at the foot of it. Those waters congealed and transfixed with the agitations of that day, what a place they would make for the shining feet of a judge of quick and dead. And those rainbows look now like tho crowns to be cast at His feet. At the bottom of this great canyon is a lloor on which the nations of the earth mL'ht stand, and all up and down these galleries of rock the nations of tho heaven might Bit. And what reverberation of archangel's trumpet there would be through these gorges and from all these caverns and over all these heights. Why should not tbe greatest of all the days the world shall ever see close amid the grandest scenery omnipotence ever built? Oh, the sweep of the American continent! Sailing up Pnget sound, its shores so bold that f r 1,500 miles a ship's prow will touch the shore be fore its keel touched the bottom, I paid : "This is the Mediterranean of Arnerica." Visiting Portland and Tacoma and Seattle and Yictoria and Ft. Townsend and Vancouver and other
cities of that northwest region. I thought to myself: "These are the Bostons, ew Yorks, Charlestons and Savannahs of the Pacific coast." But after all this summer's journeying and my other journeys westward in other summers, I found that I had seen only a part of the American continent, for Alaska is as far west as San Francisco as the coast of Maine is east of of it, so that the central city of the American continent is San Francisco. Tire A roerico-Asiatic bridge which will yet span those straits will make America, Asia, Europe and Alrica one continent. So you see America evangelized, Asia will be evangelized. Europe taking Asia from one 6ide and America taking it from the other side. Our great-grandchildren will cross that bridge. America and Asia and Europe all one, what subtraction from the pangs of seasickness! and the prophecies of Revelation will be fulfilled: "There shall be no more sea." But do I mean literally that this American continent is going to be all gospelized ? I do. Christoidier Columbus, when he went ashore rom the Santa Maria, and his second brother, Alonzo, when he went ashore from the Pinta, and his third brother, Vincent, when he went ashore from the Nina, took possession of this country in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost. Satan has no more right to this country than I have to your pocket-book. To hear him talk on the roof of the temple,-where he proposed to give Christ the kingdoms of this world and the glory of them, you might suppose that Satan was a great capitalist, or that he waa loaded up with real estate, when the old miscreant never owned an acre ' or an inch of ground on this planet. For that reason I protest against something I heard and saw this summer and other summers in Montana and Oregon and Wvoming and Idaho and Colorado and California. They have given devilistic names to many places in the West and Northwest. As soon as you get in Yellowstone park or California you have pointed out to you ? laces cursed with euch names as "The evil's Slide." "The Devil's Kitchen," "The Devil's Thumb," "The Devil's Pulpit," "The Devil's Mush-Pot." "The Devil's Tea-Kettle," "The Devil's Saw-Mill," "The Devil's Machine Shop," "The Devil's Gate," and so on. Now it is very much needed that geological surveyor "or congressional committee or group of distinguished tourists go through Montana and Wyoming and California and Colorado and give other names to these places. All these regions belong to Ahe Lord and to a Christian nation, and away with such plutonic nomenclature. But how is this continent to be gospelized? The pulpit and a Christian printing press harnessed together will be the Pitcher's Castoria.
mightiest team for the first plow. Not by the power of cold, formalistic theology, not by ecclesiastical technicalities. I am pick of them and the world is sick of them. But it will be done by the warm-hearted, sympathetic presentation of the fact that Christ is ready t. pardon all our sins and heal all our wounds and save us both for this world and the next. Let your religion of glaciers crack off and fall into the gulf stream and get melted. Take all your creeds of all denominations and drop out of them all human phraseology and put in only scriptural phraseology and you will see how quick the people will jump after them. On the Columbia river, a few days aqro,. we saw the salmon jump clear out of the water in different places, I suppose for the purpose of getting the insects. And if when we want to fish for men, we could only have the ri ht kind of bail they will spring out abovo the lloor of their hins and sorrows to rea: h it. The Y. M. (J. A. of America will also do part of the work. All over the continent I saw this summer their new buildings rising, In Vnneouvers I asked: "What are you going to put in that sightly place?" The answer was: "A Y. M. C. A. building." At Lincoln, Neb., 1 said: "What are they making these excavations for?" Answer: "For our Y. M. C. A. building." At Des Moines, la., I saw a noble structure rising and I asked for what purpose it was being built, and thev told me for tho Y. M. C. A. These institutions are going to take the young men of this nation fcr God. These institutions seem in better favor with God and man than ever before. Business men and capitalists are awakening to the fact that they can do nothing better in the way of living beneficence or in last will and testament than to do what Mr. Marquand did for Brooklyn when he made our Young Men's Christian palace possible. These institutions will get our young men all over the land into a stampede for heaven. Thus we will all in some way help on the work, you with your ten talents, I with five, somebody else with three. It is estimated that to irrigate the arid and desert lands of America as they ought to be irrigated, it will cost about 8100,000,000 to gather the waters into reservoirs. As much contribution and effort as that would irrigate with cospel influences all tho waste places of this continent. lx-t us by prayer and contribution and right living" all help to fill the reservoirs. You will carry a bucket and you a cup, and even a thimbleful would help. And after a while God will send the floods of mercy so gathered pouring down over all the land, and some of us on earth and some of us in heaven will sing with Isaiah: "In the wilderness waters have broken out and streams in the desert," and with David : "There is a river the streams whereof shall make glad the sight of God." Oh, fill up tho reservoirs! America for God! THE WEEK'S NEWS.
Recent Minor Events ltrlefly Paragraphed For "Ihn 'Weekly Sentinel." Van Wert. O., will have electric light. Sept. 26 was the beginning of the Jewish, year 5650. There are indications of another landslide at Quebec. The president arrived at Washington Friday from Deer Park. A movement is on foot to organize a wrapping paper trust Six prisoners escaped from the county jail at Little Rock Friday. Several mail bags, thrown off at Salem, O., were stolen Friday. An epidemic of typhoid fever is reported in Knox county, Ohio. Miss Mila F. Tupper of Laporte, Ind., has been called to the pulpit. It is said that the rubber trust will soon be announced to the public. Steven Scoby was killed last Thursday by a falling tree at Findlay, O. John linse ßhot and killed near Charleston, W. Va., last week by a boy named Eaton. The jury in the Ives case at New York disagreed. Ten of them voted for conviction. The popular vote plan has been adopted by the republicans of Cuyahoga county, Ohio. I W. Blayton of Dupont, (.)., was found dead I in bed in a hotel at Huntington, Pa., Friday. Knights of labor, who are dissatisfied with the order, accuse it of shielding train-wreckers. The annual convention of the American bankers' association met at Kansas City last week. Matt Britton, a Cincinnati ganger, Las been arrested on a charge of attempting to blackmail distillers. Ileury S. Ires, in jail at New York, boards at the warden's table at $15 a week, and bus other luxuries. The Warren-Murphy prize ficht at San Francisco was a farce. The referee became disgusted and stopped it. The erection of a suitable monument to the memory of Cien. Grant is under consideration by the (i. A. R. Ft Li Rawlins, the young woman horse thief of West Virginia, after indictment, has been adjudged a lunatic. Dennis Kcllher of Philadelphia robbed his employer, with whom he had been since boyhood, of over $40,000. The name of Alfred Russell of Detroit is the latest mentioned at Washington for the supreme court vacancy. den. A. R. Campbell, ex-adjutant-general of Kansas, has strong indorsement for the pension commissionerfchip. A fifteen-year-old colored boy was hanged in Virginia Sept. 27 for committing an outrage upon a ten-"'Mr-old girl. The stred dlway lines at Canton, O., have been purchased by capitalists, who will convert them into an electric road. The window-glass manufacturers' association has ceased tD exist. The formation of a new combination is under consideration. Dr. J. E. Blaine, a prominent physician of Enejewood, a Chicago suburb, is charged with performing a criminal operation on his niece. The defaulting township treasurer of Stark county, Ohio, has resigned. His father made sood the amount of his deficiency over $4, CHX. Ex-Treasurer burke of Iouisianaleft London Saturday for New Orleans. He denies that any wrong has been done regarding the state's bonds. Gen. Sherman, in his speech at the army of the Tennessee reuniou, nominated Gov. Foraker for "the best office in the gift of the, people." Frank Holloway, who had been married only a few days, killed himself Thursday near Bismarck, 111. It is supposed that be was temporarily insane. A number of prominent ladies in Chicago have formed an association and employed an attorney to prosecute the gamblers ot that city under the state law. Private Dalzell has made public another private letter, written to him by Tanner, in regard to the pension comtnissionership, which is creating come intcresL Nurse Mary Donnelly, who was stabbed by Mrs. Eva Hamilton at Atlantic City, has made a two-weeks' engagement with a flowery museum at a salary of $150 a week. CapL W. R. Jones, manager of the Edrtar Thomson steel works at Bradford, Pa., and a number of workmen were injured perhaps fatally by the bursting of a blast furnace. William G. Elkin, Fred Foote and Frank Mauk were arrested at Wooster, ( ., on a charge of burglary. A prominent female prohibitionist named Shafer is implicated in the aCair. Emmons Blaine, son of James G. Blaine, and Miss Anita McCormick, the daughter of the noted reaper manufacturer, now deceased, were married at Lichfield Springs, N. Y., last Thursday. A deputy sheriff named Vann was shot ai.d billed at Birmingham, Ala.. Friday, by a ncgio named Steele, whom he tried to arrest. A posso pursued Steele, and riddled him with bullets. Sister Camille, of the convent of the Sacred Heart at Emporia, Kan., was brutally assaulted last Thursday by a young man named Murray, because she refused to leave the convent ana become his wife. . Money was in better general demand at the close of the week, with an ample supply and rates unchanged. Eastern exchange was in lighter supply and firmer, and foreign exchange ruled fcrro. Government bonds were quiet, borne kadiug articles cf merchandise were.
i A hundnWiff? hones
öS it ,lj I rd are If ' , 1 Mz? V H 't?V. 'A-J r. f,'r 7' y fairly active. Wheat was wanted at higher prices, and breadstuils in general were trong, but cat were barely steady. Provisions were firm, with but little trading. Groceries were quiet and steady. A number of expert engineers, examined bv the grand jury investigating the smoke nuisance at Chicngo, gave it as their opinion that the generation of large quantities of smoke could be easily prevented. The twenty-third annunl reunion of the army of the Tennessee was held in Cincinnati Thursday. President Brooks welcomed the veteraus at the chamber of commerce reception, and Messrs. Sherman, Howard and others responded. (Jen. Hickenlooper was chosen orator for the next gathering at Chicago. A reception in honor of (ien. Sherman was held at Mr. Hickenlooper's resilience. The democrats of Hamilton county, Ohio. (Cincinnati) nominated Joseph (. Sextro. James Brown ami M. T. Corcoran for senators'; W. M. Day, Guy Mallon. F. A. Lamjiincr, E. E. llooney. J. J. 0'IowJ, C. Jefire, Pliil De Wald. James Nolan and II. J. Schute for representatives; John Haeerty, for auditor; It. B. Brooks, for treasurer; Henry Urchin, for commisf-ioner; Charles II. Law. for member of the board of eontrol; 1. A. Hosbronk, for surveyor; J. W. Pax ton or John U'lJcarn, for infirmary director, and F. A. Johnson Vincent Schwab and Kdward Maus, for magistrates. Among the latest foreign news items ore the following: Alderman Isaacs has been elected lord mayor of London. The ltottt-rdam strikers have excluded socialists from their movement, and passed a resolution in favor of order. Ten persons were killed and a number fatally injured by a (iennan mine explosion, and many men and women were injured by an explosion in the artillery laboratory at Spandau. It is stated that smokeless powder has the eflect of asphyxiating the troops usiDg it. (Jen. Faidherbe is dead. Boulangcr has issued an address. The visit of the car to Germany has been again postponed, owing to the czarina catching old. Bismarck is working np a war alarm for 6tate purposes. Timples, boils and other humors are liable to appear w hen the blood gets heated. To cure them, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Bl'RLIMiTON BUl'TK, Through Sleepers Daily to Texas Totnts. The C, B. & Q. R. R. is now runninc, in connection with the Missouri, Kansas Sc Texas railway from Hannibal, a sleeping car from Chicago to Sedalia, Ft. Scott, Parsons. Denison, Ft. Worth, Waco, Austin, Houston, Galveston and other points in Missouri, Kansas, Indian Territory and Texas. Train leaves Chiengo at 5:4." p. m. daily, Peoria at S:'J p. m. daily except Sunday, and reaches Texas points many hours quicker than any other route. Through tickets and further information can be obtained of ticket agents and P. S. Eustis, Gen. Pass, and Tkt. Agt C, 11. S J. U. P., Chicago. Ive Harvest Kxrursionn. The Burlington route, C, B. fc Q. railroad, will sell, on Tuesdays. Aug. 6 and L'O, Sept. M and L'land Oct. 8, harvest excursion tickets at half rates to points in the farming regions of the West, Southwest and Northwest. Limit thirty days. For circulars giving details concerning tickets, rates, time of trains, etc., and for descriptive land folder, call on your ticket agent, or address P. S. Eustis, General Passenger and Tciket Ajient, Chicago, 111. "I can heartily say to any young man who is wonting good employment, work for Johnson & Co., follow their instruction and you will succeed." So writes an agent of B. F. Johnson & Co., 1,000 Main-st., Richmond, Va., and that's the way all of their men talk. Mrs Jones hasn't o grnv hair in her head and is-over fifty. She looks as young as her i daughter, lhe secret of it is that she uses only Hall's Hair Renewcr. Ir. Henley's True Invigorator. Digestion of food facilitated by taking Dr. Henley's Celery, Beef and Iron. It gives tone to the stomach, aud aids nature. Price, $1. For a disordered liver try Beccham's Pills. HAYFEVERCATÄBBH lrr-.jui ' - ' mr i Punne a severe attack of Hv Fever I used IV ELY'S ! rs maw Cream and can cnorrtuuy tes-1: tify to the immediate v and continued relief obtnineel br its use. I henrtilv recommend it -V'i?'-"vr?t77&6 to thoso ftuuerintr from t .-rtXiViv thi.s or kindred com- e '(,' 0.A. Maims. I iter.) tt. -. u c s v PC W r te.nith, Canton, Wis. Wi-VX "LlSV A particle is applied into each nostril and is ajreslle. Price Su cent at drustfist; br mail. repistred, 60c ELY liHOTULHS. 56 Warren St.. New York. BEST rEt Woven Wire fencing STEEL WIRE !DC flaw x'ttwa DnnflSplvflffl TO S' PEJ? EGO. in....Hw1!i,. n.tMiM pii-)i. Sold bTiiF-rr dealers in this lin.-o cth. KfHiilT P'f"rl;,''r? IHK MeVU.1 KV WOVEN" "IR'A,1- CM Ns. its A IS K. Market SU, Chicago, IJ. 3-eentttaisp. Vjfr,$SlVrlaj. rtraaornt potillnB. No pcxtal uswcr4. Monrr advanced lor ar. advrrtiiinc. w. Cer.tsnnlal Manufacturing Co. Cincinnati, O. SALESMEN ! Bct Tree. Itest Terms. II Newest and Choicest T7RTI1TQ1 Ii. st Dan. H. st Outfit Free. .Ul AO. MISSOURI NCRJ-KRY CO., Louisiana, Missouri. VnilKP HÜM WANTED to learaTr!wtlhy. I UUiU Iii til Situations furnished soon a ouahned. 0ft ft V arniiiK. 1'. l'arttruiiti fn. Address VAL.E.NT1.NÜ liUUS Jaucsvillr, WU. (Only Reliable) TAHSY PILLS. Xar-t-sulftr iüi iiwni twm n-nnuaJa, aeaj-xf. t rtov p. hy miL, Muteciot7. DIL ft. P. CA TON, boa Bom. Km TREES Kixit irafu Eitythiig! No lareer stock tn T.N. No better. No cheapor. Pike Co. Nurseries, Louisiana, Mo. 21-13eow PI RYQ ä" bleaux, Pneakers. for "-arlor. Hesl out.C'mfa3. laM90S.ChlsüU,
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saves bzih her tunc -ar.dher Jitar, find t her clothes with a scfier than those of her iLfSsANTA PT.ATTS c.nQ fr? "TV ' ' s Manufactured CHICAGO. SALE OF STATE LANDS vTTr OF I.NMAXA, ) Orrif &OK Afi'lTOR OF fTATE. Notice is hereby given tliat in pursuance, to ths pn.vii..ni of aa ji t o! the ci neral a-eiiil!r of tin striteof Indiana, entitled ''An kck authorizing tn a!e and con v-yaur of certain lan ln of the aiate ol Imliaua, di 0i:n- i.f t!ie proceeds thereof, and providing lor the reootery of the neion of anv Inn Ii ot the state inila -fully held, and for th rent of any of the Iau isof the Hale unul sold, rei-eaiintf ill laws In conflict th r.with. an i declaring an emergency," approved March , I w ,ll o:.i-r for silo to toe hi"h-t hidderai the onrt-iV uo fio r in the town of We-t Mioals. at from 10 a m. to 4 t. ni. on t'ctolwr 11. 1:', lhe following dsi ril e I reel estate, situate in Martin comity, lelMignx t the Male of Indiana, and authorized to i.o no:d by n!d act: The fouthi t quarter of northeast quarter, aoctioa 1. townsliiji north, rane 4 nest, forty aert. Apjr'!!"incn, ?'". I h itili'vi.t onarter of the aontheaM quarter, secti.in 1.', toM iiMii 1, range t we.-t, forty acre. Apra:"tii:tT.t, Tho uortlua'-t ouarter f Miuthent quarter, section li. toan-hin I, rang wesi, forlv a- re. Appraisement. ?ti The northwest ijunrtr o s ujt!ieat fj'iartrr, section 12, township i north, ranqe t west, forty acres. Appraisement, il-". lhe Miuf!nast U?.rtcr of northeast qunrtcr, section township 1 n nh, range 4 est, lorty acres. Appraisement. i ho suth"si quarter of southwest quarter, eetion i"), township 2 north, rans a est, forty wres. Appraisement, The northwest quarter of southwest qtinrtT, tion -l. township 2 t.orth, raiitfe .1 wet, forty acres. Appraisement, Sluo. The southeast quarter of soulheat quarter, section 2(". township north, riiuo 3 we-st, fortv acres. Appraisement. ?liJ. The southeast quarter of southwest quarter, section 2o, township north, tango 3 west. Appraisement, J! CO. The northwest miarfr of northeat jnarter of ction -."J. tow nship ., north rang 3 west, 40 acres. ArpraiM'tn nt, Jl. The northwest quarter of northeit quarter of section 24, township 2, north range 5 wot, i'l seres. Aj praisement, iViO. J he southwest quartsr of northeast quarter, section ai, township 2, uorth ran? 5 west, 4 acres. Apprai.seraent, f l.Ti. aid tracts of land shove described will first b offered for .ca'h. If no Md for cash is received said tracts of land will immediately be efiered for r-.il on a credit not toexeced five year, interest beine paid annually in advance; no hid for le than the appraised value thereof will be received. Prit E faKR. Indianapolis, Sept, 21, H?. Auditor of Mate. QTATK OF INDIANA, MARION COUNTY. SS: J) In the Superior Court of Marion county, in 'it Mate of Indiana. No. 40.M I Itooiu 1. t nip'il'jt to foreclose chattle tuorti;-ii;e. I'entiis liryao va, I.liz-iheth M. -avd, John V. Spavd, Abncr IL Hyde et al. Ik- it known, that on Iii 17th dsy of Septem Ier,ls9t the ::lov named i.laiutiii", bv his attornev, tiled in tho ofliee of the C'lert of the Superior Court of Marion -ounty. In the State of Indiana, his complaint aauiri lliaabuve named d -fendiint. and the sai l plaintiff having also tiled in said Clerk's oiiiee the affidavit of a competent peron, showing that snid defendant, John W. Spayd, lil.aU-th Hathaway and I.hzabetti Hathaway, truiee for Myrtle M. 'I !1, sre not residents of the State of Indiana, and that said action i founded upon a con t rat t, and is for tho purI o-e of t nforrini: the Ii n of a haf.le niortjrrti'e, and that said defendants are each necessary attie thereto; and, whereas, said plaintiff havimr, by indorsement on said complaint, requl.t'd said deiendants toapfear in said Court and answerer demur thereto, on the 2 1 day of Ikcember, lss;i. Now, therefore, a.d defendant last above rimed are hereby notified of the tiling and pen iency of said complaint against them, and that uules thev appear ami answer or demur thereto at the calling of mid cause oa t h 2d day of Ieceniber, 1S, the same being the first judic al "day of a term ot said Court, tt be Lectin and held at the Court llous in the city of Indianapolis on the first Monday in leortnler, 1-SJ, said complaint and the matter, and thtnss therein contained and alleged, will Iks heard and determined in their absence. Ji HN R. WILSON. Clerk. ALBERT T. BECK, Attorney for I'laintiX 'ii-.it POULTRYforHARKET -ANE FOULTRYfcrPEOFTT. By "FANNY FIELD." The most profitable Poultry Raiser in America Written extressly for those who are Interested in Poultry axd wish to make it Profitable. contents: Clears $4.49 on each fowI. Cost of keeping adclt fowls tr year. Cost of raising Chicks to six months of age. Spring management. I2,4So EGGS FROM IOO HEN'S A YEAR. I low to Feed for Eggs in winter. Hatching houses. Cleanliness. No Sickness among the towls. A word to Farmers, Farmers Wives. ff- Sons, Daughters, and others ina clear pront ot $ 1 ,500 a j-ear. b ator Si Chicks out of 100 eggs with IncuRaising EivOilers. Food for Chicks. Turkey Raising. Keeping Eggs. The cause cf Death of young Turkeys Keeping Poultry on a Village lot. A Mechanic's Wife clears $300 annuallj on Broilers. Feed in Winter. Artificial Raising of Chicks. v Incubators. Brooders. f' f Capons. Caponizixg. V'-V1 Tells Everything about L-;y" the Poultry business. T7:wr Price SS Cent, jmgt ;. r..TTSend all orde'S to Indianapolis Sentinel Co., Indianapolis, Ind. 'A SOLIDEEL FEPJCE! 13 Cts. Der Foct. materlct 3 feet sride. adapted lor Residence;?, Churches. Cemeteries. Farms, Cardens. äc. All needing hence. (J.-.te. Arbors, Window Guard. Treib-, etc.. wnt iur our lllus. price 'ist, mailed free. THE NEWEST THIKC AND THE BEST, tütr&l EsMo'li-a' SftaICs. I I. W. FmciM 3?tK. Pittaburajti. I Chicago. St. Locts rsssnd-d Metal Co.. St. Loils. rev nCEFT FF.IVCE !U 01151. Led-n Perforttne. raiDed. Br.t Field Frnoe Mactuoe la tbt I'. B. CapMjlT, rt to ) ro-1. a a... f race eoaxa löta ioc. a rod, rr-UI paid, areata waaw4. Trias fnr uiv.traiM cattinc DETECTIVES t antei !n evry eon:v. fhrrvd an -a t r id4pt l-iitrac.tna. Id aar SirrM PtrrvKf. KiprVr.r BMn?asrv. Sa4 aiairpa trinninOetettiteEurtauCo. 44 Arti, Cincinnati, 0
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