Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 10, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 June 1879 — Page 2
"45 Years Before the Public. Lo ‘rHEi d’enu’w;’ g DR. C. McLANE'S » CELEBRATED = - LIVER PILLS, FOR THE CURE'OF Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. PAIN' in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases on. pres. sure; sometimes the pain is in the left side; -the patient is rarely able to lie on the left side; sometimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism .in the arm. The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness; the bowels in general are costive, sometimes alternative with lax; the head is troubled with '~ pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part. There 1s generally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with & painful sensation of having left undone some. " thing which ought to have been done. Asslight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant. The patient complains of weariness and debility; he is easily startled, his feet are cold 'or burning, “and he complains of a prickly sensation of the skinj; his spirits are low; and although he is satisfied that exercise. would be beneficial to him, yet - he can scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LIVER to have been extensively deranged.
AGUE AND FEVER. . Dr. C. McLaNE’s Liver Pirts, 1N 'CASES OF AGUE' AND FEVER, when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. We would advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a FAIR TRIAL. For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Tl.e genuine are rever sugar coated, © Ejery box has a red wax seal on the fod, witk “he impression DR. MCLANE’S LivER Firls. .Th¢ genuine MCLANE’s LIVER PILLS pear the sigr stures of C. McLANE and FLzMING Bros. on the wrappers.. . | Insist upon. having the genuine R, 7 McLa.<z i Liriga PILLs, drepare” oy, Flera. ing B os., of Pittsturgh, Pa., ths mark -+ beirg full of imitations of tL: name MelLa@ = spell=d diferently but sate pronuaneiation
USED ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
SARSAPARILLA, LRGSR HEALTH. ‘4
Tone up the System bx using JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA. ; g It has been in use for 20 years, and has proved . tobe the best pre;iaration in the market for SICK HEADACHE, PAIN IN THE SIDE.OR BACK, LIVER COMPLAINT, PIMPLES ON THE FACE, DYSPEPSIA, PILES, and all Diseases that arise from a Disordered liver or ‘an impure blood. Thoasa::ds of our best people- take it and giva it to ti.cir children. Physicians ‘prescngg' it%aily. Those who use it once recommend it to others. ~ Itis made from Yellow Dock, Honduras Sar- | saparilla. Wild Cherry, Stylingia: Daxdelion, Sassafras, 'Wintergreen, and other well-krown valuabie Roots and Herbs. It is strictly veget«ble, and cannot hurt the most delicate constitu‘tion. Itisone of the best medicines in use fo. Regulatinf the Bowels. It is sold by all responsible druggists at one 'go}}ar for & quart hottle, ox six boutles for five ollars, = E Those who canuot ohtain a bottle of this medi- — -c¢ine from their druggist may send us one dollar, and we willdeliver it to them free of any charges. W.JOHNS'YON & CO., Manufacturers, 561 Jefferson avenus. ..., ~.,.DETROIY? MICH For Sale by C. ELDRED & SON, \ Ligonier, Ind., .
“ 528 ‘ .. 5 WEIGHT in GOLD . i . - READ WHAT HE SAYS: Dg. TuTT:—Dear Bir: For ten years I have ‘been a martyr to Dyspepsia, Constipation and Piles, LastSprmgyou_rPulsv_vererecommendegl tome; lused them (but with little faith). I arm now a well man, have good appetite, digesticn perfect, regular stools, piles Eone. a.d I ‘have gained forty pounds solid flesh. They are wortb their weiiht in gold. REV. R. L. SIMPSON, Louisville, K;. A TORPID LIVER s the fruitful source of marg‘diseanes, sucn a 8 Dys pe‘{)sia. Sick Headache, Costiveness, Dyse,. . tery, Bilious Fever, Ague and Feyer, Javadice, Pilag R'ueumumm,K{dneycomplulnt,f:ml..etc.; Tutt’s Pills exert a powerful influence on tha Esver,and willwith certainty rélievethat imps » tant organ from disease, and restore its norial fusztions, . i The rapidity with which persons take on flesn while under theinfluence of these pflls}lof jniil indicntes their adaptability to nourish the booy, hence their eficacy in curing nervous debility, dg-spv,,-psia,_wastmf: of the muscles, sluggishness of th-i:ver,chron cconstipation, andiwparting Adepill zmd' strength to the systemn. CONSTIPATION. Only withregularity of the boweis ean perfect Theaith be enjoyed. When the constipation is of aedent date, .a single dose of TUT'E’S ?}LLS will suffice, but if it has become habitua , one pitl shionld be taken e¢very night, graduail lessen= zng the freqiency of the dose until a regu{ar duily snovement i 3 obtained, which will soon follow. ! ¥ Sold Every where, 25 Cents, OFFICF,_ 35 MUURRAY ST., NEW YORK,
The Syndicate and Treasury Rings. - A few days since a Washington dispatch, glorifying Secretary Sherman—‘who has now assumed the role of a Presidential candidate, in view of the discouraging aspect of the Grant boom | —appeared in several Administration { journals. It contains, among others, .the following statement: ! ; . ““In April and May the Treasury paid out $209,000,000 of money for called bonds, the. holders of which could demand gold, and comm was on hand for them. Not a dollar of gold was asked Jfor. however, and none was paid out.”’ - Now, why was not gold asked for and paid out for these bonds? The public are led to believe that it was on aceount of the Secretary’ssupericr management of the Treasury. But the real reason is that if gold, or even greenbacks, was paid out the Syndicate and Treasury rings could not divide a dollar, as they now do millions, by means of the ‘method by which this refunding busi‘ness is conducted. Fhis is as follows: A Syndicate of bankers offersto take, for instance, $1,000,000 of called bonds from the Secretary of the Treasury. Instead of paying a million of gold, or even greenbacks, into the Treasury, as the public ignorantly suppose, they deposit; $50,00(1, being five per cent. on the million,{with the Treasurer. But' even this is: a mere supposititious transaction; they, being the favored prics of the Secr‘eta.rg, simply give him ‘an in_dem_nif%ing bond for géo,ooo,rfltogetherv with their check on themselves for $1,000,000, which he, in turn, deposits with their bank to their credit, thus virtually loaning them a million of money for ninety days. The interest on this sum accrues to the Syndicate from that day to the date when the interest ceases on the called bonds. The Syndicate has thus ninety days in which to sell the four-per-cents, or to réplace them with the five and six-per-cents which the Secretary has callefiJ in. In the meantime, the Secretary uses every means in his power to compel the holders of the five and six-per-cents to convert them into fours. After a certain time interest ceases on the sixes; at. the same time, by loaning the fours, as above, freely to-his Syndicate friends, which the Secretary calls selling them, he creates a demand for them, which keeps up their price, for it makes them scarce to.the public.' In fine, it is his whole object, and that of the Syn-! dicate, to bull these fours and bear the sixes.’ s
In this manner the Secretary: and the Syndicate play irto each other’s hands. 'They. make it a necessity on the part of the holders to sell sixes and buy fours. Henee the anomaly in the market of the bigh prices at which the low interest bonds are selling. | Of course, this drives the sellers of sixes, like so many wild ducks, into the net of the fowler. One of these, we will say, has $1,000,000 of called sixes. He must convert, or find a non-interest paying bond on his hands. If he goes to the Treasury to get fours in exchange, Mr. Sherman, very conveniently for.the Treasury ring and the Syndicate, has not got them ready. -He will, consequently, have to wait, perhaps, ninety days for new bonds with which - to replace those worth, to him, not only six per cent. in the way "of revenue, but which are used by him as collateralson loans with which he is operating in his business. -He is thus literally driven to the Syndicate, to whom :the Treasury acts as a ‘‘copper,’’ or *‘ bunko-steer-er.”” If he sells outright to them he must, perhaps, submit to a discount by the bonds. :
If he proposes to leave the money he receives for them on,de(fosit, he will be told that money is a drug to them justnow. And well it may be, for they are running their machine entirely on the money or credit of the Government, which the Secretary so lavishly promises them. :
In one day the Syndicate will, by these means, realize on the four-per-cent. bonds they have borrowed—not bought—of the Treasury, at least $50,000, calculating what they make by interest on the fours, commissions from the Treasury for selling the fours, interest on the sixes they buy from thg ;{)ublic, -and commissions from the public for converting the sixes; that is, if they sell the fours and buy the sixes at once.: If, however, the Government is not ready to deliver them . the fours, their profits are greatly enhanced. But if $50,000 ismade on $1,000,000, twenty times that is made on $20,000,000. In fact the fortunes made by these transactions are simply enormous,while they are realized by the Syndicate without the expenditure of a dollar of its own money. They simply use the money or credit of the Government. It is by means of such a system as this that the Secretary of the Treasury can. boast that he has not paid or received a dollar in gold. But if Secretary Sherman had his four-per-cent. bonds ready to deliver, either for cash or for the six-per-cents. he catled in, there wounld be no chance
for all these manipulations by which. ‘yillions of mouney are transferred from the general public to the Syndicate and the Treasury ring which is run in connection with it. Nor would the Secretary be able to say, in a dispateh glorifying himself, that not a dollar of gold was asked for or paid out, because in that case the transactions would be bona fide buying and selling for cash, ‘instead of the present ¢ snide’’ manipulations by which a ‘Syndicate is created, to which the Government loans ‘the people's money with which to ‘buy and sell its bonds, and which enables said Syndicate to create s plenty of one kind of bond and a searcity of another kind, while to crown the rascality of the entire transaction, the Government pays this bloated ring a commission on the profits realized biy the use of its-own wmoney, while the sellers of bonds pay them another, in order that they may have hglf a chance to sell their old and buy the new bonds. This is what in modern mercantile parlance is called financiering. The ancients would call it stealing.— Chicago Daily News. - =
There {8 No Resumption in Refunding. A Chicago business mn sends the following to the Daily News: » Supposethe called bonds to be in the hands of the Syndicate. Suppose the Syndicate to he c’omdposed of the managers of the banks designated by Sher-
man as Government depositories. Suppose Sherman-drew his check against the money of the Government in the hands of these banks for called bonds, ‘would this indicate resumption by the Government? . ~ Suppose again that the subsecribers for the refunding bonds to be these ‘same bankers who kold some $300,000,000 or $400,000,000 of Unele Sam’s ‘money, gold, silver and paper, in their vaults, and that they pay for the refunding bonds with their own certificates of deposit, which Sherman immediately returns to them as Government deposits, does this'indicate resumption? Does it not rather furnish a key to explainr why Mr. Sherman strains every nerve to keep as much money in the Treasury as possible, amounting at the present time to about $440,000,000? Does it not also solve the mystery of the extremely active bidding by bankers for the refunding bonds? Nuthing fatter than the pickings Sherman’ ring of financiers enjoy was ever dreamed of. Plenty. of Government money to buy Government bonds with, and nothing to do but to cut off the coupons and charge them up to the Government and divide with the members of the ring. ; Does any or all of these supposed Earts indicate specie resumption? Peraps the Tribune thinks so. They are a little too gauzy.
The Republican Platform for 1880. s 3 The truth of the proverb that politics makes strange bedfellows was well illustrated recently when the Hon. John B. Haskin, the freest from political complications of all our anti-Tamma;nz leaders, opened a correspondence with John Sherman, by means of which the latter formally announced himself as a <candidate for President. He took that occasion, also, to define what he calls ‘“the true issue for 1880.”” His platform is a revival of sectional hate, sweetened with cant phrases, as follows: : : < v ** What I would aspire to in case public opinion should decide to make me a candidate for ‘President, would be to unite in co-operation with the Republican party all the National elements of the country that contributed to or aided in an wa.g in the successful vmdi’cat.ion of Natio_naf’aut ority during the war, Iwould not do this for the purpose of irritating the South or oppressing them in any way, but to assert and maintain the supremacy of the National author-. ity to the full extent of all the powers conferred by the Counstitution.”
Striped of its disguises, the plain meaning of this programme, which has now become the leading idea of the Republican party, is to wipe, out State lines entirely, to divest the States of the rights secured by the Constitution, and, in place of #Union of States and people, to establish a consolidated government, in itself the first step toward an imperial republic. . . .The whole line of policy of the Republicans since the civil war has been in this direction. All the political legislation, beginning with reconstruction, has exhibited the same spirit. The Election laws, the Jurors’ Test-oaths, dnd the use of the army to over- ' throw State Governments, to make Legislatures to order, and to consum)mate the Presidential Fraud, areconspicuous examples of a systematic scheme to destroy the Constitutional rights of the States, and to subordinste their local and rightful authority to the arbitrary will of the Executive. v Hence the tenacity with which the ‘Republican leaders cling to the use of ‘the army at the polls, and to Davenport’s invention for depriving naturalized ecitizens of their votes. Give them an army of Supervisors and Deputy Marshals, who may receive fifty dollars each far ten days’ service, with power to make arrests without process on the eve of an election, and who may steal the pag)érs on which thousands of votes depend, and the way to success is easy. fn 1870, thousands of troops and two ships of war were ordered to this city to overawe our people, and thus to eontrol the election.© But for the prompt decision of the local authorities we might svon have had repeated here the outrages that were perpetrated in Louisiana, South Carolina and other States The experiment failed, because Grant did not dare to rouse the sleeping lion at the North. In 1878, the same party resorted to another process, more insidious, but none the less an' invasion of the jurisdiction and authority of the State. : ' The issue made up by John Sherman was adopted by the Republican Convention of Ohio, and will doubtless be followed elsewhere. In the midst of bankruptey and distress, with millions of idle hands, and the people crying out for relief, the leaders of this party have nothing better to offer in the way of statesmansbip than a renewal of animosity between the North and the South and a gevival of the passions that were supposed to be buried with the rebellion. : |
.~ The laws generally are obeyed in every part of the Union. The people North and South crave for peace and for an end of sectional agitation. The condition of public affairs is sufficiently bad, without the aggravation of an element which disheartens effort and throws backward every advance toward improvement. For fourteen years the same cry, in a variety of torms, has been renewed, and it remains to be seen with what effect it can be renewed now.—N. Y. Sun. ;
: . .The Reason Why. The stubborn opposition of the present Congress to the employment of troops at elections and to the large .powers which the Federal Congressional %]ection law gives to Supervisors and Marshals is not altogether a general and vague opposition to the principle of Federal interference. It bas its origin in a recent actual employment of these agents of Federal authority to falsify an election and gnnul the expressed will of the people.” The country has not forgotten the strange events that followed the Presidential contest of 1876. The day after the election, the Republicans admitted that they were beaten—that Hayes and Wheeler were defeated :and Tilden and Hendricks elected. A ‘week after this they had recovered from the shock and were preparing to exe: cute a conspiracy to set Tilden’s election aside and have Hayes and Wheeler. inaugurated, They appealed to the Kxecutive and received from him a ‘prompt and friendly response. Presiident Grant appointed a number of Re-
publiean partisans to proceed to Louisiana, Florida and South Carolina on the pretense of ¢ seeing that there was a fair count” of the votes, but in reality to support the mercenary Returning Boards of these States in the falsification of the returns which had been plotted before-hand. The Republican candidates needed the nineteen Electoral votes of .these three disputed States; they needed evjery one of them; theloss of one meant defeat, and therefore they demanded that the eight Louisiana votes, the seven South Carolina votes and .the four Florida vp%s should be counted for Hayes and Wheeler. President Grant .supported the demand by the adroit use of troops, stationed in the StateHouses of Louisiana and South Carolina, osteénsibly to protect the Packard and Chamberlain Governments, Eut, in truth, to encourge the Returning Boards to give the Electoral votes of the States to Hayes and Wheeler. The .conclusive proof of thisis that, when the Electoral votes of these States had ‘been given to the Republican candi‘dates, and Hayes and Wheeler installed in office, the troops were withdrawn and the A Chamberlain and. Packard Governments left to fall to the e%round., The troops had accomplished their purpose, which was not to protect -the 'Republican State Governments in the South, but to secure the form of election to the -Republican Presidential ticket. et S * Who knows but that a similar conspiracy: supported by a like employment of the army, may be- attempted at the next election? During the last days of Grant’s term of office, it was openly proclaimed that if the Republican Senate should declare Hayes and Wheeler elected, in spite of the,refusal of the House to recognize the declaration, the Executive would guaranty the installation of the’unchosen candidates with the whole power of the army and navy. Is it any wonder that Congress should be anxious to prevent tke possibility of a repetition of such a prostitution of the army by Grant’s suceessor, by limiting the Executive’s control over Congressional and Presidential elections?— S¢. Louis Republican. .
The War and the Relations of the : States. ;
It is the standing grievance of the ¢‘stalwarts’’- that the Southern people and their Representatives in Congress will not admit that the relations of the States were changed by the war. For this statement, that in his opinion the ‘war had not changed those relations, General Wade I-fizmpton has been fiercely assailed by the ¢ stalwart’’ press; and there can be little question that in so assailing him, that press voices the ¢‘stalwart’’ idea. Is it-not a little singular, however, that, both in the press and on the stump, the ‘“stalwarts’® confine themselves;to declaring that the war has changed the relations of the States and denouncing those who differ from them, without ever attempting to point'out wherein the relations have been changed? ' It is well, perhaps, for the stalwarts that they do confine themselves to vague declamation and denunciation upon this point. Even when they so
spnfine themselves they concede far more than any true patriot or lover of ‘the Union can afford to ccncede; for if the relations of the States really were changed by the war the triumph of the Union armies was one of force alone and not of principle. It was the belief that certain States repudiated their relationship to their sister States and denied “B‘he responsibilities growing out of such relationship, which united all parties in the North in carrying it on to a successful issue. On the part of the South there was a purpose to change the relations of the States, and it was this purpose the North resisted. If the Norti succeeded the Southern purpose was not accomplished. If that purpose was accomplished, as the ‘¢ stalwarts’ declare, then they are bound also to admit that the South succeeded.
The assumption that underlies all this ¢ stalwart’’ declamation is that the Southern States had some rights before the war that they have not now. If 'this were true it would be equally true of the Northern States, for there has been no chiange in thefundamental law which does not apply to all the States alike. If the relations of South Carolina and Mississippi have been changed by the war, the relations of Vermont and Michigan must have been changed in precisely the same way. And as the ‘“stalwarts’’ will not admit the latter propdgsition their support of the former fails: :
. So far as the secession heresy is concerned, no friend of the Union as it was™ and is can afford to admit, even.by implication, that it was necessary in order to stamp it out that any change should be made in the relations of the States. To make that admission tould be to admit that under the Constitution as it was'before the war, and with the. States in their then pxishin% relations, secession was justifiable. The war has, undoubtedly made it clearer than it was before that secession is unjustifiable, but it has made no change in the true doctrine on that point, nor in the relations of the States from which the doctrine grew.—Detroit Free Press. :
. Yalue Received. , ANYBODY could tell what he had. Every man in the sanctum knew in a minute.’ The timid knock at the door ga.ve him clear away at the very start. o man or woman ever knocks at a sanctum door' unless he comes on that fatal errand. ' Then he came inside and took off his hat and bowed all round the room, when everY man on the staff roered out, in terrible chorus, *‘Come in! !” Then he asked for the editor, and when the underlings, with a fine mingling of truth and %ra.mmixr; pointed to the youngest and the newest man in the og‘iice and'y:lled, “That‘i him!” he walked up to the young gentie signated,: gnd befo¥e h‘egoguld uMm ‘manuscript we knew the subjgcn of it, and a deep groan echoed around the room. e ‘¢« Poecry, young man?’’ _asked the editor. ; Y “Yes, sir,” said the poet, ‘a couple of triolets and a sonnet on the marriage of my sister with an old college friend.”’ ' 2 :
¢ Old college friend male or female, young man?’ asked the editor, severely. - ‘‘ Male, sir,”” said the young man. He said ¢ gir”’ every time, and every. time he said it, all the young gentlemen of the staff save the young gentleman who personated the governor, snickered. He looked severe. g ‘“ Anything more, young man?”’ he asked. ¢ Yes, sir,”. replied the infant Tennyson, ¢ a kind of an idyl, an ode inscribed ‘To My Lost Love.”’? . -** Love been Yost very long, young man?®’ asked the journalist, very critically‘ T 7.~ iy 5 ¥ " . # Skl “Well, it'simmaterial, that is,” stamm,ere’("x,the young man, “* it’s indefinite—it's—"" | : ; iy ‘“ Ever advertised for it?'’ asked the reporter who was writing a puff for Slab’s tombstones, but he was instantly frowned down. e , ¢ Anything more?’’ asked the principal interlocutor, *‘anything more, young man?’’ ‘ Yes, sir,”’ was the hopeful response, ‘‘a threnody in memory of my departed brother.”” ‘ 2 ¢¢ Brother dead, young man, or only gone to Sagetown?"’ £ ¢« Dead, sir.” A ‘¢ Your own brother?"’ *¢ No, sir. I never had a real brother; it’s only imaginary.” ' e ‘¢ Can’t take this, then, young man,”’ was the .chilling reply. . ‘‘Poetry, to find acceptance with the Hawk-Evye, must be true. Have to reject this threnody, not because it'is not very beautiful, but because it is not true. Now, how much do you want for these others?”” And he fingered them over like & man buyin%' menk skins. g . The poet really didn’t know. He had never published before; he had barely dared hope to have his verses published at all. A few copies of the paper containing them would, he was sure ——
' “Oh, no,” the editor broke in, ¢ oh, 'no, no sir,; can’t do that; we don’t do ‘business that way; if a poem or sketch !is worth publishing, it is worth paying 'for. Would fifteen dollars satisfy you ‘for these?’ e ¢ - The poet blushed 'to the floor with ‘gratitude, and the young journalist grandly wrote out an order and handed 1t to the poet. . 5 “Take that to the Court-House,’’ he 'said, ‘‘and the Auditor’s clerk will ‘give, you the money.””. The poet buwed and withdrew, and with grest merriment the journalists burned his poems and resumed their work. : -‘ That wasn’t the funny part of it, however. The next day the simple-minded poet presented his order to the clerk desigunated. And it was so that the clerk owed the paper eighteen dollars for subseription and advertising, and he promptly cashed the order and turned it in when his bill was presented, ‘and the manager just charged it to the salary account of the smart young journalist who signed the order, an the happiest man and the maddest man in Americaareliving in Burlington. One of them is a happy, green, unsophisticated young machine poet; the other is a wide-awake, up-to-snuff, know-the-world, get-up-and-dust young journalist, who is' already a rival of Horace Greeley in some of the verbal departments of journalism. — Burlington Howk-Eye. L Etiquette Extraordinary. :
A WRITER in the London News, chatting about the transfer of the seat of ‘Government from Versailles to Paris, ‘talks of the rigor of etiquette in by‘gone days, and cites a very remarkable ‘instance of it. It seems that Louis Quatorz, **strolling oue day in the park on the arm of Mme de Maintenon, and followed by his court, of about tive huimdred persopns, came unrexpectedly upon a servant girl armed’ with a broom, pail and duster, who had been scrukbing in one of the pavilions. She ought by rights to have made her way back to the oflices of the palace by a roundabout way, but, being late, shé had taken a short cut, and this had brought her in view of the King. His Majesty remoyed his feathered hat and made ‘her a' low bow, and as etiquette required that a person saluted by the King should be bowed to by the whole court, the poer girl, as she stood trembling and ashamed, received enough homage to make her well-nigh mad. First the Princes and Princesses, the Secretaries of the State, the Dukes and Peers, the Knights of his Majesty's orders, the Bishops, the Chaplaing, the lesser nobility, all had to make a‘profound obeisance, while the ladies stopped and curtsied to the earth; final1y the King’'s guards had to car;% arms, and a whole tribe of lacqueys, bearing lap-dogs, cloaks, fans and smelling‘bottles, had to do their duty in the same humble fashion to their eolleague —the blushing girl with the broom and pail.”’ | e o
, Poisoned by Nicetine. A RATHER unusual case of nicotine poisoning occurred lately in a Parisian suburb. The victim, a man in the prime of life, had been cleaning his pipe with a clasp knife; with this he accidentally cut'one of his fingers,subsequently, but as the wound was of a trivial nature he paid no heed to it. Five or six hours later, however, the cut finger grew painful and became much swollen; the inflammation rapidly spread to the arm and shoulder, the patient sufi'erinf such intense pain that he was obliged to betake himself to his bed. Medical assistance was called in, and ordinalgg remedies applied. . ineffectually. he sick man, questioned as to the manner in which he had cut. himself, explained the use to which the pocket-knife had been applied, adding that he had omitted to wipe it after cleaning his pipe. The apparent mystery which surrounded the ‘case was thus eleared up, and, as the patient’s. state had become alarming, he was conveyed to the hospital. Upon his admission the doctors attached to the institution declared that in’' the immediate amputation «of the arm lay the only hope of saving the patient’s life. The poisoned member was therefore amputated; but, in spite of the promptitude w%&h which the operation was- performed, the man lies in so precarious a condition that the chances of his recovery are_said to be slight.—Parisian. . , ,
The Death of the French Prince Img geriades - : B LoNDON, June 20. The following are the additional particulars of the death of the Prince Imperial: The body of the Prince when found lay on-its back. There were eighteen assegai stabs in it, two of them piercing the body from the chest to_the back, two im the side, and one destroying the right-eye. = A locket with hair medallions and a reliquary were.found around. his neck. - The face wore a placid expression. - He: had ‘evidently ineffectually tried to mount his borse, and the leather of the flap tearing he ran ,alq‘nfi‘:thex path to where lie was found. -~ “Two troopers lay -near the body, both assegaied. The Prince was very adventgréus. .<. .\ Logy e ~ An official account saysthe Prince, with Lieutenant Carey, of' the Ninetyeighth Regiment, six men and one friendly Zulu, left the camp at Kelitzi Mountain, seven miles beyond Blood River, on the Istinstant, for a reeconnoissance. The party halted and unsaddled when ten miles from camp. Just as . the Prince gave the order to remount a - volley- was fired from an ambush in the long grass. Lieutenant Carey and four of the troopers returned to.the camp and reported that the Prince'and two troopers were missing. From their statements there could be no-doubt that the Prince was killed. A party of the Seventeenth Lancers, with an ambulahnce, started on ‘the 2d instant. to recover the body of ‘the Prince, whick was foundand brought in on the same day. ey A special dispatch says: ¢At day‘break a cavalry patrol, under General Marshall, left to search for the Prince, and went to the kraals, ten miles further on. The! body was ‘disecovered among the long grass, three hundred yards from the kraal. There was no bullet wound, but - seventeen - assegai ‘wounds were in front of the body. The clothes had been taken, but round his neck was the chain with a focket. A stretcher on -lances was formed, and the body borne by General Marshall and Officers Drury, Lowe and Stewart, of the Seventeenth Lancers, to meet the ambulance, by whichit was brought hither with the escort. -There was a funeral parade ‘in the .afternoan.” Deep sorrow prevails throughout the column. The Prince did not mount after the attack, his horse being restive, but ran afoot. ‘The corpse will leave with an escort for transportation homeward. R e et :
Another special from South Africa says the Price Tmperial had been sent forward by the Quartermaster-General to sketch the site for the next camp. When the volley was fired, not a single Zulu was to' be seen. The party disgersed and sought safety under cover. he Prince was never seen alive again. ‘His horse joined Lieutenaht Carey's 'party on the road back to camp. . The London journals, while deeply deploring the ;Prince’s death, regard it as the end of Imperialism in 'France. ‘ . : NEw YOREK, June 2). The Courier ~Des Etats Unis says, speaking of the death of the Prince Imperial: - ¢ The Bonaparte party may be considered to have gone. out of- existence.. The Republicans, instead of re--joicing over the dramatic event which relieves them of the presence of a pretender of no mean caliber, will. rather think of the fate of this young man, who probably would: have worthily served the country if he had not been the son of Napoleon ll[. =~ o Prince Napoleon, who has become the head of the line, is a Democrat in politics, and is distasteful to the entire Bonaparte following. He huas two sons, seventeen and’ fifteen respectively. Party loyalty may| fasten around the name of one of these sons, but for a time Imperial counsels must be distracted, and the possibility of the return of the Empire now appears more shadowy than ever. “.. . =
—dJohn G. McCabe was drowned in Philadeélphia several months ago. He wore an oilskin coat -and high topboots. + A man’s body similarly attired was subsequently found floating off Woodbury, and Mrs. McCabe, identifying it as that of - her husband, had ‘it brought to Philadelphia and buried. The other day another body in an oilskin coat and high top-boots was taken out of the water at Wilmington, and Mrs. McCabe, believing it to be her husband, has buried it'%j ~the side of the first one. Boa ety
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