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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

li i' ii: a ii 8 'I ft I I l. jr 6r Z'r r5'ret ia and 1 1 i it tho uoor oa his Tia. tt UlWnV'ul tks d.iraL.a liziU i kroo with letter utamltx at tOSlrm. i 2 b. urr4 fvft9 airwn, iwJsnao i cTJi trimmed wnB dc.eaia tadr( Uia JT 7T A pirrn' jc TZi'j: ITondiy.

5 CvJzz UTj Ina. EXCOE4POIUTED 1833. 1 hlM Conspusr TVXTXX imcAii 50 lixkb erstadisw btoIU. Ifinijed with low. expense roctfpta.

MarUlIfy lr ttuui ammed rste. Full U.ned with rigid rare CUsec.Tjent.'y dirUsais ars Kberal, and srspaid at th ai i tha arst year, ud annually thereafter. T. IL SrANN, Gca'l Ag't, nrrusircuj, ixd. Arcthcr cf Ifrt.

CurnatV jlsouioiana. I Cloth. $1.23. I G. BOtfrSTOEE, I EAST wisHErQTO.

tXhe fi ews puaiished every after except Baady, st the S3 XmX I ixktf street i i rrice WBttaMrr Erred fcy butUti ta pwt dty, taa eaati vaekt tT axil itagvpnpald, fifty anti a maflk; f( a yaar. i Ita WaeUy ITava li imalistka rry edaea J. Trim taata a yeai, poaUga paid. a Una lor a'aek toserUon. display advartiMmaata vary ji ji ad iwjwaafi MftrM tfioHai ar katlar.

1 fipadmen inMi mi trta aa apUeatfcai. Tmi aai fa ImmWiVIw 4 aj! anM ABaoaimnnlrClnaitkanld baadptwaad Jnwm 8. HfKXlDT. prnprMoa. THE DAILY NEW8.

BaJTBDXT, MAT 1, I8S0. Tee redaeHaa la the price of iron ia is marked as taa increase ws. Aix iLe iaiicatiana point to large'cropa vfad inotherjear of treat plenty, The drift lemacralic opinion aeema to We that the rictary in ihe Pennsrlraniit ooaTeDtion tu Tilen'i. 1 I ThE Lafajetta Journal wants the pre diction "inarkei" that Indiana will cast at IcAst twentj fiT her 'rotee on the lpit illot U. S.

Grant. All right, ii .1 I i 1 "Do yon want yaor daajbter to mirry; i nigger?" ehenUd a hanrbon of West Vir pnia yesterday in the senate daring the debate on the TTkittaker outrage. If each polt aren't nuoled Whittaker may be. an issue I Tessixsek thori evidence of trampling thir lamer. Twenty two for i reman, three for Grant and fire for the rjcniinee, is if ay ene delegation wta aianplor the alate enrention.

A lev i'mevmore inte the breach and Grant will be gone. The hepee of a solid southern delegation ruined, Illinois divided with Blaine, York and Pennlrania dele gates boiling the anit rule, and It will be fGood bye, Grant'? Alien. Ttj AllIanM wTtli air vnna 1. a nnt gone to Feandland to protect oar It is welL If we are going to' pen fire on the British empire, we want in ore than a slz gun skip to do it, and a good xnany( of tham. We are not in a con d.ition to go war with any fih rate power on The proper wsy is to jOpeb neotUtiens wiUx the Gladstone gor erntnent cni this Fertnne Esy case, and if it will no hear then abrogate the treaty.

Smabtlsu from a host of maledictions Srrled at it ky saldiers lor likening CoL (Btieieht and kis eerade to who of the Journal is terrified th at The News called Grant "a soldier of fortune," and bega all eoldiers in ae polchral "accents ie consider themselves insulted. As a aeldier rallyer the Journal tax outliTed its day, and it will find when it p'pea the tune for which it is paid, that (ewer soldiers than it thinks will follow Grant is that onholy lust for power which atigmatlzes the jaered traditions of two ierms as a publis superstition in a danger cos precedent. It ia well known that wbea the war ended and Grant was "out 'ii it was a simple race between the to parties whiek should secure him for president. Scrttary said tie fctbtr day: I 1 can nrsr feel pratefa! enough to Grant. jbeefus he weat with ci in 18C8.

Snopoee, instead tt jroiajr with the reiiublicaisthen, ha bad ff.ve wik tka democrats tat ao ireptd ittir Eamiaatiaa? Be rery likely )eLid bare doae it if toe demovau had towsr a little clfam cf sense dartif the war. Grast was originally a democut. his inSi'dcAJ wtia wi a iktA party; bar, forta ratfytbir cppoitiea.u ike war dijrusted he wat dhrea by toe Llc of erw.u it to party. ItisablejKd tbbg ie jru. It Lai us ibe Ijt Bt yAr, ad niii the rsutroftbe juar a 3cci kites 4 a fainre." It this Jn't for forttine we Hie to know wLal to call it.

And if hi four yeara' eUciiorueiing tour, and ireett dtterciaal attitude to seize Jver in tLe face ef tl.e traditions of the ej sllic, iiia't a arallcl to the career of tilt pre 8ttt soU'er cf fsrtnne, Napoleon cf acalo what 'Is It? TLcre is co ce to be mealy i't iiU'A this an 1 The. I'ttrt i n't ycl afrall cf fualsbed f.rtrrs?;afvrt:U:fir5 tie truth. lie sf Care. Jkz a sild t' at whiter two V.i l't wLcrecne grew before, wss a I r. a a 1 ot ei ts ffj cf wltre tie sane amount cf 1 A rcJur 1 cne l.re, Isriaally a And both services iave tta ion; and tjtbtrr.t derive! to i dylr tleia, A r.ew'Sjer mlht i fi'Jy ef arr'v nce if It assuui tsuh fining io Urmrri, but It Is i'tU'iblf mxsAr C3 tntarlal airs to 4U ii ur7.te!.l!i facts.

Twi Vv cf r. eat ar pjsr a every year ly cr.e farc.jr ca anll cr jual i Var.t: grjF I The f.Truer CU c.n.wtija of "tiro V.t'id of And Le does it at liii! greater expect ef trouble and to greater of met: 7 lLaa Uielalter I ra cne Ha le. Ho selects his seed frcra the best Le has or can get, couatirwilhconSJeve ea nature's mak ir a return ia kind, a lie alwajs does. and good 'seed i' er.reful!y. attended That is the 1 Isle secret of the double pro duct.

The gsol crop Laa no more sun sLlne and no more opportune rains than the bad one. Good judgment has provided better seed te appropriate both, and rood cultivation has maintained the advantage. TLe dLTerence a twenty five or thirty bushels to the acre against ten or fifteen, cootirg no more to harvest or get to mar ket in the former than the latter case. Dairy farming' shews the same difference ef results from the same processes, and that diiTerence can be made as effective in products for home nse and occasional marketing as in those of a greater extent. The dairy crop, like the grain crop, wants to start with good seed, and be helped on by judicious care, instead of aelectinz in different stock, as the poor grain grown selects indifferent The state needs the best material to be had.

A common cow will eat as much as tne best muter and cive less than half a much return Tha average of stock kept for dairy purposes on the farms in this state from which, pretty much all the "country butter" we get is ebUiaed, will not give more than two gallons' at a milking, or four gallons a day. Cut one of the speakers at theCkonvention here on Wednesday said that the "Holstein breed" of cows were not admitted to record unless they gave as much as 10,069 pounds a year, and some gave as high as 29,000, or SO pounds or 10 gallons a day. In ten days such a cow would give her own weight in milk, or come very near it, and the yield of three days would fill a barrel, fAiderney cow have been known to give 16 gallons a day and make 14 pounds of butter a week. Attention to facts like these Is what brings two blades of grass in place ot one, and conventions like that just closed st the chamber of commerce, are the best means of exqting and directing this attention. The Hattortiattaeral Conferenc.

The general conference of the Methodist Epifcotal church met in Cincinnati this morning, its sessions being held In Pike's Opera house. Ia 1838 the same body met in the same city. The only member now pre' eat who was a member forty four years ago is the venerable senior Bishop of the church, i Levi Scott, who in 1836 represented the Philadelphia conference. There are ninety two conf ores ces represented, from America, Germany, China, and other parts of the world. Bishop Seottif the preflling bishop, and next to him ia years of service is Bishop All the remaining bishops are of." the elected eight years ago.

If ethodism was planted in America in 1764, and since its foundation but one change of importance has been introduced into its polity that of lay delegations ia the general conference, the firat lay delegates in the conference of 18T2. One of the principal topics for consideration before the present conference is the introduction of larepresentation into tLe annual conferences And although, in a public interview, Bishop Scott has prosouaced against it, it ia reason ably' certain that provision will be made wbt reby each quarterly meeting conference will be allowed; at least One delegate ia the annuah bodies. Another important matter is that of an elective presiding eldership. Borne members favor the total abolition of the eldership, but a compromise is more probable whereby each annual conference shall determine the number of districts it will have and elect the presiding elders. The question of the extension of the pastorate will also be discussed.

Originally of. six months' duration, then one year, then two. and now permissiraly three, a large' and influential' body in the ehurch favor four years, if atrreeaUe to pastor and people: Such a change, however, ts very problematical. 3 The heart of the Methodist church is tied to the itineracy, and will oppose whatever looks toward a settled pastorate. As it if now, the Methodist pastorate of three years is equal to if not beyond the general I average of pastorates In other denominations where congregational methodDrevail in the settlement of nreach err, b'tili another question which wilt jrire rue 10 warm auoiwioa wm xe va 01 iue ordixalion of women preachers.

Only a few weeks ago Bishop Andrews. at the New York" east eocference, refused ordination to Uiss Oliver, who applied for admission into the rank A I The elections 01 general conference bfRcers will be matters of most public interest Seven bLheps of the church bare died wltbia thr pact ten years Kicgsley, Thompson, Clark, Morris, Ames and Haven the last three since the meeting of the general conference in 1876J3iHhop Jantsdwdin New York city, September L8, 1870; Am.ee in Baltimore, April 25, 1879, And Daren at his mother's Maiden; Massachusetts, early io the preeetit year. Bishops Scott andSimpson are quite feeble, the former so much so si to be practically incapacitated, and it is probable that new general superintendents will be elee'edi; how many cannot be known, as that wllljbe left to the determination of the committee on aided by the counsel of the present Besides the bishop who harigg died, the church has lost, duriDg the same p'eriod, ibrae secretaries, of the misaooary moiety. Dt. A J.

rJ Uorbin. ,1 lio cecretary who died i Octoberj 18, 1370; r. 1 b.mas ii. tv4dy. wtjo died October 7, 1874.

and Jlv. P. DatLieli, who died in New York a few since. The va vney eaowd by the death of Or. Cddy not, filled by.

the. cooweoce ol 1376; but that I two of the three mis siomry ae'Tetares Lave fallen. ihbs cocfetecce doubtless elect two as juati to Iter. Morrifon Beid, who will bo made senior i cecretaryj The edlturs of the church vspf rs aud period are to be elected, as jbook sgenu far the New York and westert 1 coneernsi The cnferecc will be ia sion fully one month, acd ia'nroeeedings will be of gtaeral interest to all claates interested in redlous ideas and and of special moment to the large and influential church it specially I i cuBxx Qoiutiatr. Witcontin's public school system shows that out of A school population of 483,453, only 293,286 availed themielraa of it last I Gough rays there is a great change among the clergy of the Established Church of England with regard to temperance in the nse of alcoholic of them now taking strong grobiids against the habitual tfeof wine, which ones was considered as an errtntial part cf a clergyman's daily diet, as well al of that of the laity.

I Mrs. Brooks, the butter Cculptreas, is now paddling Images iu oleomargarine; Perhaps the true use ef this commodity is thus found. UcKee Eankia created A great i Daxites." and his company have wore in London ia "The are not ia. favor of Mr. Sherman's rrtsidential aspirations, but we recognize ia L'r.

tberman a mau of cefuloe3i and abil bC Jouij Globe Democrat, Grant Neither Grant nor Elaine can be elected li tie' democrats. somiaate A fair man. It is po the cards that as sweeping a change in arty power may be made in this country as as recently beea made in England. No recti tllcAa who can not carry the rotee of the IndependeLta can be elected preeideat in NotemUr Srlrgficld Btpublioan. Ai lociumeat to earnest maintenance ef tke inttiiotiocs which make this country what it is for uj is foaud la a frequent recurrence to the early erenu la its career.

1'hiladtlpbla Itecord. i Is It IJaJiU to Cat OatT IKew Alta U4iir 8tjuwlard. IndJaoAU actually foe.TildenJ 1 1' damage at c. j'v tr.i tl r. re.

Viilwrd. tl.a bow castle, who frennentlv nnmm! sulcM. th. j8ii timeby cutting his throat, is dead. The Ca.s eounty medical association ex pf lied Dr.

N. Fitch for ur professional conduct, but the doctoT is onr.icg a new society which threatens to riral the old one. Jack OTriea, of Kushville, was scufKing with another boy on a gravel wajron, whea O'Brien was thrown out and the wagon faised over htm, injuring him fatally. At North Ternon a viclons horse knocVed down and stamped npoa Mrs. Charles Will man, who was feeding him, breaking bar.

leg and causing serious internal injuries. The temperance people of Vorrirtown are determined to rid themselves of Hand's saloon. Every business man in the place has received a note threatenia a conflagration If any violence is used. Suit baa begun at New Albany against the Pennsylvania railroad to recover $100,000 for the injury done Anna Hoffman by being run over on the 12th ot April by A train jumping at a high rate of speed. Both arms of the girl were cat off.

The horses attached to the mail hack of Braxelton, of Westport, Decatur county running between that place and Vernon, ran away, throwing him out, dislocating bis col lar bone and severely bruising hint about the face and back. The hack was demolished. Ac ram aad Louis Ross have been arrested for baring asraulted and nearly killed Greeley Dili, in Noble township, Cass county. Tbey were liberated oa giriai $500 bail. Dill married their eister HBder compulsion some months ago.

Be left her in a short time aad has sued for a direrce. John Tillett, John Saxon and a man named Keere, all drunk, left Peru the other night, going north along the P. ft C. traek. Ueese soon returned alene, and next morning Tillett was fount dead with a gash 'in his head and bis skull fractured.

Saxon was found Mng in a vocl of water near by almost frozen. Reese ia in jail awaiting investigation. Tillett had $150 in his pocket whea found. There is Intense excitement amongr the farmers along', the creek between Washington, Wayne county, and Jacksonburg over the reported discovery by a farmer named Joel Brooks of the exact location of a chest containing $100,000 in gold and silver, which, according to an old tradition, was buried in that neighborhood more than a half century ago by a band of Indians flying before thd government trdbps. Uessn, Sutherland and Hayeea, trustees of Purdue university, have returned from Toronto.

Canada. brinirinir with thm ttmr "head of Clydesdale horses for.use on the nni versity farm. Une.is a fine stallion 21 months old aid weighs 1,260 pounds. A fine team of draft horses weighing about 1,800 each, which are sisters of th. celebrated Clydesdale horses, Tom and Bill, that took the first premium at the Centennial in 1876.

A Hanging Tree. A cottonwood tree believed to be over. 150' years old was recently cut down ia front of one of the hotels in Denver, Colorado. Under this tree was held the trial of Moses Young, a German, who. committed the first murder in Denver.

The jury convicted him, and beWas taken to the cabin of the sheriff. At daybreak a posse of men. took Yeung from the cabin and hanged him to a branch of the cottonwood tree. The lynching was witnessed by a large number of Indians, who bad climbed to the branches ef neighboring trees. Ia the same year Jim Gordon was tried for murder under the huge cottonwood, and was banged to the same branch from which Young was suspended.

It is believed that there were other trials and hangings io va snaae. une tree was lathe early days of Denver the largest of a cluster of co'too woods sUr dingwhere the city is now thickly built up A section of the trunk is to be sent to New York to be manufactured iato toothpicks. derated Road in Puiladelpbia. Philadelphia is astonished to find that it' to hare an elevated railroad. The enter priseVas kept a secret until lately, and toe Just public Intimation of it was the rapid dtmolition of bousps.

Contrary to what has been done in New York, the line within the city proper is to run on property owned by tbe conn any except where it crosses streets. The projectors are the Penntylraoia railroad company, and it is to run from their present depot, in West Philadelphia, Brand and Market streets in tne heart of the citv. Toe job of porrbasiog the ground of ita two hon ored ana nity owners was undertaken a vear ago by trusty agents, and buyers, were over one hundred different persona, who resold to the company at the prooer time. By this plan the property was all acquired at reasonable prices. The structure is to be of brick and iron, and tbe Schuylkill ia to be crossed by a massive bridge.

Those Awful Peats. While stopping at the depot at Williama port a few days ago an Oil Citv Derrick reporter's attention was called by theaepot master to a sparrow's nest built inside the large gong at the depot, and1 which is sound ed lor tne departure of trains. The cong is about eighteen inches in diameter. And whea struck by Its large hammer it has a deafening sound. Notwithstanding the racket made by the gong, a pair of eparrows have bailt their nest right over the knocker, and let it ling loud as it may one of the spirit) ws will remain on the nest, and tbe other bas been frequently seen to Bit upon tbe Iron of the knocker while it is striking, appar eotlv not in the least disconcerted by the din.

i The Zngllah pa "Fif I The latest Yankee idea is described by the dignified English papers as a game "played witn biteen little duks of wood marked eoa eecntivelr from' one to which Are placed indiscriminately ia a shallow box, constructed to hold sixteen, aad thus allow, ing room for one to be moved at a ttme. The game, which is in principle like that called solitaire, consists, ia bringing all the disks into numerical order, the first row counting one, two. three, four, and so on, until the fifteenth is attained." The puzzle is not appreciated in England. It is condemued as the most seneelesslv unprofitable method of wasting time which bas ever been devised. Vitality ALicalMS.

(Orlando (Fla.) Gssette. We have killtd upward of two hundred altogether. Their viulity is reuiarkaMe. chopped off the had of "one a few tuiuates atter it bad been tbot. Several minates after tbe bead was severed completely from the body I tbruet an oar at it.

The jaws opened and 8raiped to scaio like' a huge steel trap', driving the teeth three fourths of aa inch itto the bard wood and splitting the oar Even twenty minutes later tor bead would not have beea a safe toy for; children. A Deetomtioii of War. Madia jnSur.l i The Sur now says to the republican statl Central cemmiuee that not one dime goea to i diacsn jistbis iesr from this sec toa of tbe tts (be Indiatapo'is Journal is to be fpd Yon must fatten your hogs at This rnsing tbe bat to keep life in a bankrupt printing office, and the paper Issued frtro that office daily insulting the best and txutst men in the republican party mnrt be stopped. The elate will no longer pay tribute to Indiana oolis. The Best Bead Papara St.

iieuls Post DUpatcb. A All over the country the evening ters are coming to the front The public hat grown tired of the heavy blanket movalng sheets, with their desert waste of uoiaterest irg dtrpatcbes. The bright, clear, afternoon paper, with its newsy telegrams, ita freiu local news aad carefully selected miecsUny, patorally cemmeeds itself to the family circle. No newrpapers hare such intelligent readers or are. so thoroughly a and digested.

Vast Tract AladeLmnd. Tbe dukes of Bedford have converted wha was an iolacd sea in winteraaud a noxious swamp in rummer, the waters axpaoding into meres swarming with fish and screaming with wild" fowl, by the labors of sucess ive generations of engineers, iato 680,000 acres of the richest land la England, as much the product of art as the kingdom of Holland, and like it, preserved for human culture and habitation solely by continuous watchfulness from day to day. Batatas la Callfarala. EaisTA grapes are being planted in California on a gigantic scale. This furore is stimulated by the great profits, the superior quality, the export demand, and the very light work required la that climate for preparing raisins.

A large company ef capitalists is incorporated to introduce raisia culture ia Fresno eouaty, and la five years' time California raMcs will idrlve all such imports from the United 8tatea. Tba BeliPnmh rails la Teaaa. Tbe Moffat bell punch has proved a complete failure la Texas, and the next legislature is tipected to do away with it. A rraalasa Caaaty Fulton county, Illinois, boasts that It hu fot a single licensed liquor, saloon wlthla ts bouodsrlcs. It ii A democratic couaty.

2l THE INDIAITAPOLIO NEWG: cocn cms fx.it: pavs. AMotbet'sLerafor Iter An 1JC1 dent eea by rtr. J.trats lCSog, Jiri tUon Eur, Everybody ia this section knows James King, of Marble liiU, hamlet and Isndirg twelve miles below this city. "Jim King, as be is familiarly known, is an ec centric man he is like' a shell bak hickory not, a little roDjrh ca the oulsIJa, but sound to the cure oa the icEide. lie has aU wsys been known as aa abolitloniat and aa InhdeL lie is one of the richest men ia his portion of the state, owning any number of valuable farms, and doing a aouriahing buai lncfs at Aisga landing.

lie is warm hearted and open handed to the poor. A Star representative met him the other day, sitting ia Dargap's store, where he had beea buying a bill of goods, and he nnconscioualr talked such truths of sober earnestness that they were put down t'b, the said Mr. nng, Hhey'll all vote the democratic ticket! Their habir, nature and raising take them right into the democratic camp. I hate been aa abolitionist all my life and a republican ever since the party was formed, but enfranchising the niggars was a mistake Years continued Mr. King, "I was stesmboaticg en the upper Ohio.

It was la tbe days of old fashiened steamboats, with their little cabins perched up high, and divided by a ealico curtain. At Tirginia, a nigger trader brought a gang of darkies on board, chained together like cattle. They were simply chattels and treated like dumb brpus and seemed sullen, stolid and almost insensible to feeling. The first day out from Wheeling we landed at a wood yard, and a tall, lank native standing on the bar yelled to the niggar tiader: dGotany nigger babies for sale Ofee was the reply, and the mam ia search A nigger baby came on board. There were four mothers,) likely looking women, who had suckling babies At their breasts.

The bnyer went from one to another and looked rer the infants, examinieg them critically, handling them and feeling their limbs aa if tbey were se many puppies be was selecting frwn. had been raised ia Michigan, and all this wAs new to me. I had been told that tbe 'aiggers didn't mind and theun uiterahleooks, of despair, dark, sullen, hejirt cruEhing but silent of these, poor creatures sometimes passed for in difference. The purchaser 'found a sucklirg eb Id that suited him. and took it ruthlee 'ly from the mother's heart, and trader and customer walked forward, higgling about the price.

I watched the woman, and gan to think she didn't mind it much. She made no noise, didn't sbel a tear, but eat li ce a statue, dumb and No sooner did the traders pass out of sight than the woman arose, straightened up, gave one wil despairing look of heloless agony areunc and silently but swiftly passed behic I the cabin curtain. I raa to the guards, on ia time to see her raise her bands aloft An i fling herself into the boilingv muc dy water. A splash, no cry. a few bubble! on the surface of the dark.

niching water 1 and she sank. forever i. "Hallo," oi I. You have sold a baby and lost a nig; er "OTbig aad try. OTew Tork Tribuna Jt The word "Tory" was derived from a term appueo, as oriu says, to tne most despicable savages among the wild Irish and was first need in 1679 during the struggle for the exclusion of the Duke of York" frcm the line bf succession, tbe name being' given to the followers of the duke because he favored Irithnien.

Johnson's definition of a tory was this "One who adheres to the ancient constitution of the state and tbe apostolical hierarchy of the church of England." The word "Whig" is a contraction of the wcrd Wh'ggkmore' which ia tbe south of Scotland used to denote a drover. Ia 1619, a party of Covenanters attacked Edinburgh, ard after this 'Wbiggamore'i campaiga" the word was taken up as a term of reproach and applied tb the opponents of the coirt. Since the pastaga cf the reform measure of this century pbli'ical successors of the two rat ties have been knewn As "Caserra tivts' and Liberals," i t. Crt ne's and Casual lea. .7 William Canney, of Fdrmington, 8 a temptcd to beat his wife.

Their boo, William, intuftred. end the faiher seized A knife and (tabbed bim tq tbe heart. Darid Ball, Arthur Jempy, William Mar ray, Wiliem u. Goucher, James Scanlln aad Catitain iphjen Meanly, 'miners, returning from Skaget dines, while deceading the rapids of Skagtt iver, were drowned by the capsizing of a canoe. Two boilers; at Tod furnace.

Briar Ohio, exploded last evening at 6 o'clock Two men were instantly killed aad fire, wouDced. Two despersidoes named Hall and Porter, drunk, entered the Indian camp near Camp Sherideh, Neb and' raised a quarrel with the inmates, shooting, and almost instantly killing Eyes, the big medicine man among the Sioux, and wouadiag his squaw in aba leg. The desperadoes were, turned over to the civil authorities. i Washington's Warning. Farewell address The alterae domination, of one action.

over another. harpeaed by the spirit of re venge natural nartv aissensions. wuicn la diflerent ages ad countries has perpetrated the most horri ful despotb m. enormities, is itself a fright But this leads at length to a more lormal permanent despotism. The disorders and iSeries which resnit gradually ds of men to seek security incline the mi and repose in he absolute power of aa Indi vidua, and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate tban his Competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own eleva'ioa on the ruins of frfablio liberty I A Tatnanle Cotitr.batlea to Aatrnnty( The Winchester of Yale college is to have a heliometer the meet perfect instrument made forthemeas arment of Email celestial angles.

It will be of six inches made by the Messrs. Repscld, of Eelmburg, ia Bavaria, and is to be com Dieted by December. 1881, ia time fur the traLsit of Venus in 1882. As it will be the 4 only insuumeat of the kind io this oeaotrfl and tne largest ever constructed oa tne new. asodel as suggested by lilndsay, Ans wers, and Wiubecke, it wilt be avaluablead dition to American aatronomicsl science, Imprarlog Cotton Calture.

r. There has been a great, itnnroreroent in the colton groWing interest oa the Sea islands, on the coast of South Carolina. i The farmers there I are cut their farms down to fewer acres, ardd hare drained their Uads and use fertilizers. Beore the war, orrKiuto, eighty to 100 pounds of ginned cotton was the. average row it is 300.

A prize acre Waamalaw Islacd, fertilized at an expense of $80, bronpht (KG. pounds of Hat, which bTcught $2C6, end netted its proprietor $14C A net profit of $109 per acre is now very'fre quently ierby Baea Moved. Tbe Derby is to be run hut time at Epsom this yekr, as the preseat proprietor of the land doek not approve of racing, or, as some people tink, believes he can do better by letting' the ground for "eligible villa reudesces." The races will therefore be transferred, I to Graresead, tweoty two miles down the Thames, where tbe race' coarse is in nowise inferior to that at and in to the road and railroad, is accessible by steamboat "7 AlOood IndicaUm. AtUca Ledger. 7,7.

"7 The state prgaa finds fault with Col. Streighjt because he leeks the nomination for governor. Letjtbe office seek the man sounds very nicely, bt that day has gone by. If Colonel Streight for the nomination it's an indication that he'll do double work for election: 'And. the insinuation that the "bureau" hag and influence, is an insult to ery delegate to the state convention.

i DastttaUoo. Over S00 families in New Jersey, who have sustained their selves by the picking and sale of teaberries and whortleberries, are placed in destitute circumstances by the destruction ef that industry by the great forest firesJ The in this production ia the southern portipn of Oceaa county alone will aggregate $75000 for the season. Ifha Under the pld marriage ceremonies could be performed in Caliloraia by any judge, Justice of the peaee, mayor, dergy man, or preacher ef the gospel, but by an act of the present legislature, tker can be sol emaizedDnly by the judges of the supreme and superior Courts, a justice of the 'peace, or minister oil the gospel, Crea Mea Fade ea Sigbtj LsporU Ajcus.J 7. A good many people here were rather disappointed in H. B.

Wasbburae. He certainly did not impreas the majority of his hearers, with the belief that be is a great man, and his case is. another illustration that all eur idols decrease da importance the nearer we get to them, Inloematlre Information. jraru IpaUkaa. 1 If Gen.

Cobcrnhad not turned out Fred Baggs and appointed D. Grnbbi collector, Ol iniernu rereuua tor uis ioui.a.pv, dis trict, be miglt easily be aomiaatsd aad elected governor, SATURDAY, HAY 1, I'mAelleC rsUnonntr.rfji t'HtTtr filuiu nid nestll tb And to see It piulj wj ihs e.wi, liutit la 0.i. Wboerer ssy wben etoads arc ia the iter, '1 rmtimt, hrartl lierht breaksih by ana trusts Uia Most Aiigbu 'Whoever sees, 'oeatli 'Winter's eld of snow, 1 ba silent Barrnt ot the (a tun (tow, Ciod's power snast know. Whoever V.n down oa his eearh to Content to iork each rwm la ilamUs iaiows Ged wlil keep. Whoerer says.

"To mm raw, "The wIbe Ktnr," trnsis that power aloaa, Bedaresdisewn. Tbe heart tbst looks oa whea eyeMds close, aad dire to fl re wn en Ufa hasooly woes, Ood's eomlort knows. Tbera Is no nbsUef a nd toy by day, and n'srht aneoosKtoasIr. The heart Urea by that bit the lipsdeny; Ocd aaowath why. TTheWatchmsa.

KCHAPS. They say Adeline Patti Dspa swear words. There is many a stip between the banana pel and the sidewalk. Eeere'ary ef the Navy Thompson always goes to sea ia a Tollman palace car. A number of Pittsboro, N.

dogs that ate of a lightning killed mule have died. I Anaseociation to promote 'European tourist travel to America has been formed, i Saratoga and Newport costumes wUJ be stylifh beyond anything, seen ia twenty years. TWendell rhmipi never attends church, and takes no part ia religious worship anywhere. The private fortune of the' late Joseph Seligman, of New York, is estimated at $5,000,000. Congreesional delegate Cannon of Utah is an Englishman, round aad red and has four wives.

At Marietta, Ga a negro bey, ten years aid, died from aa overdose of whisky, which be took for medicine. The dnchesa of Marlborough has draped her rooms with Irish poplin ia order to give an impetus to the trade. The Havana steamer. City of Alexandria, at New York, has beeafitted with self leveling berths to prevent sea sickness. There are in one hundred counties of Texas 5,150 registered physicians.

Grayson county has be largest number 158. One county ia without a physician. 7 A race between funeral processions, to see which shall reach the cemetery gate first and pass in, while the other procession waits, is called an amusing spectacle in Iowa. A St Louis rich man drew up a will which was so pathetically worded that it moved all his relatives to It left all his property to an orphan asylum. Boston Post.

Br. John Gorham Palfrey, the hbtorian, is sow eighty four years old, and is still busily writing upon the fifth and concluding volume of his history of New England. The three Sons of D. Bowen, of WaJ ley, Georgia, all use crutches. Their banes so soft and brittle as to break from erea A slight jar.

The oldest. Silvester, has already sustained twenty six fractures. John C. Morrison, of Saa Francisco, has given notice of his withdrawal from the official bond of. Mayor Isaac S.

Kalloch ia' the sum of $5,000, the reason given being "dissatisfaction with the official course of the mayor .7 At Nashville there is exhibited aa eight pound bell clapper from the old Dridwa county court bouse tell, which broke dowa while pealing forth the glorious ews of Jackson's victory at New Orleans oa. the 8J1 of January, 1815. Hon. James W. Bradbury; Who represented Maine io the United States senate from 1847 to 18.54.

was on the floor of the senate the other cay, where he found only one man wbo served th err when he did, and that gentleman happened to be bis own colleague at tbe time, Hon. Hannibal T'm sot as strcng a I thought I was; Tie Denis I can not handle," 7 And Wt'Uco, tbo chleftan, cirached Us paws. "That's myetsa too," said KandaU. Then W.tlliaia A. aad smaet J.

icemarked to one another Blnca neither one haswoa the day. We'll eke embrace etch otaer." i Aa insidious worm called the fluke is causing loeses among the sheep ia Great Britain, actually exceeding, ia the aggregate, the coat of any of tbe wan which have figured ia the indictment upon which the tory ministry is aid to have beea found guilty, la some parts of England, chiefly ia the southwestern provinces, whole flocks have mnd Aot a sheep is found. Tbe Portland (Me.) Argus says that legal measures are taken which will probably result in Mrs. Barron, the mother of the late treasurer of the Dexter saving? bank, getting the $1,000 which was bequeathed to her by her son, as a support of ber old age, and that tbe majority ot that community thick that she ought to have had It long ago. Tie estate represents about $20,000.

7 A convict ercaped from an Alabama prison with a ball nd chain attached to one leg. Be carried the irons ia' his arms until he came to a river, whea he sat dowa to file them off. His pursuers came up. and be was compelled to choose between surrender and tbe forlorn hope of swimming the stream with the weight. He decided upon the latter, and plunged into the water.

Al though he was a powerful swimmer, and had a plank to buoy him, be was drowned. The inscrutable beings, known as "boys" are proverbially more quick witted than mea in getting out of a scrape. A lad was being catechized by his pastor, ancQhad the Soestion put to bint as to the number of i lings necewary la the rite of baptism. He replied, "Three," "Stupid boy exclaims the holy man "everybody knows that there ate only two the prayer book and the What do you mean by The boy's prompt answer came in the form of a question: how about the baby 7" Jones had eagaged a man to dig a well at his suburban place, Seeing him A month later Jones asked Jiow he was getting alng with biawork, and was told that the well was half done. Judge therefore of his eur piise when, a week after this conversatioa, upon visiting the premises, he found only a circle marked upon tbe earth.

Of conrss be boated up the man, and of course he asked him what he meant by saying the well' was half done. The man very coolly replied: 'So it is: well begun is half doue, yon know," Boston Transcript Wbile digging in a garden la Sussex cxia ty. recently. James Bun came across a section mason work. Digging down he found bricked up in a bole about three feet square an iron box, rusty with age.

The box was foil tf written doenrjfects, illegible from rust and age. The bricks were very old, one bearing the inscription "Weymouth, 1C33." Perhaps Whaley. tbe fugitive judtrs from whcm Whaley vCle was named, had something to do with the box. Whaley's flight, from England was in the seventeenth century, after the execution of King Charles, aad he tettied in Sussex .1 Antl.Tbird Term BepablicAus. Bepreeentatiyes of the Kew York independent repnblicans, of the national republicaa league of Pencsylvaoia, and of tbe young republicans of Massachusetts, held a conference in New York yesterday and resolved that tbe above mentioned associations, and all' other associations having similar views, should send delegates to Chicago to make strenuous opposition to the nomination of candidates they consider objectionable, and to urge A strong specific civil service'? reform plank upon the Chicago platform.

'Resolutions were also passed expressing sympathy with the St. Louis convention. .7 Mining rotables at BollevUli. In consequence of the manner in which the miners union ef St. Clair county, HL, have endeavored to control tbe out put of coal and the wages and hours of the operators have determined to close the mines for the present, and nntil they can control their own busicetsj Most of the mines ia St.

Clair county, and tome in Madisoa, will be closed to night. The miners have Assumed a threatening and outbreak is apprehended. 1 April Oil The Titusville Herald publishes the. follow. Ing summary of oil operations for April: Wells completed during April 531, producing 9,141 barrels daily, aa average of 1,715 barrels per well, and 1.109 barrels mare than the March wells.

Wells drilling at the clote of the month 590 'rigs up and building 563. The April dry holes were 24, but mostly wild cat wells. The showing is unfavorable the oil trade. 1 Callalar Growth. A Norwich botanist, amazed the other day at the rapid growth of fungus, calculated that it had developed 10,030,000 cells ia one day, or 116 cells a second.

Prof. Gray, however, cites aa instance where a century plant formed 2,000,000,000 cells La 24 hoars, or 231,431 a second. Qalte Generally. 7 tyosh Biniaft.1 Don't marry for pedigree unless It's backed hank notM. A familv with aothlns? hut pedigree generally lacks sense, 1 7 1800.

ruxE a insrrr." Csa It be ConoT TThat History as tj Jsy ea the Subject, The recc dL cuf. ioa la sj as to fast railroad time, the po. ire tions as to "a mile a minute" aad tbe equally rc6itire erpreerions of dJLelief ia it, scte Ir teresticg the terJmony of "Kniit's Mechanical Dictionary," which recoris eases whoee truth is beyond L. nta. It says George Stephenson's ecjiae, traveled sixty miles an hour, over a half century ago.

It alio records 81 miles ia 61 miuaies as tha fastest time erer made La the country, and it was done by a special traia oa Iho New York Central railroad. A traia between Lima and Daytaa is also on record wi Ji 72 miles in 73 tmtiutea, including two stops. The btst English time is girea as 13 miles ia 10 minutes. The traia which brought to Queen Victoria the decision of thia orera meat in the Trent cue, ia 1SJ2, raa 131 miles in or at the rate of U)l miles per hour. Now York Times says tne fastest traia ia England to day is probably that between London apd Swindon, oa the Great Western railroad, which travels at the rate of 53J.

miles per hour. The Northwestern road runs a traia from London to Rugby at the ate of 43, miles per hour, and the Great Northern company eae from Londoa to Petersborongb at the rate of 50 miles in 60 inn tea. The Londoa Holyhead, or "Wild Irishman," traia runs only at the 1 ate of 43 miles. The proposed traia from Jersey City to Philadelphia, 90 miles, to be run ia 90 minutes, will be the fastest traia ia the world. Ita actual running time must be nearer 79 miles aa hour than 60, for It has to alackea speed around curves and through cities.

The engine which is to attain this speed will have but two drivers, one on each sids, and they will each be 6)i feet high. In England single driver locomotives with drivers 1i4 feet are not uncommon, while there is aa engine there that has ten feet drivers, a Our engines, says the New York Times, are designed rather for power thaa speed; and as aa engine's dragging power depends largely upon the adhesioa of 'iu driving wheels, eur eBginei are. generally heavily built, and have at lean four drivers, la order tbe better to distribute the. weight. An extreme example is aa engine built ia 1373 with eight driving wheels.

It weighed 118, 000 pounds, and we have never seen any correction of the. statement then made that it was the largest and most powerful engine ever built lathe United States. Ia engines of this type, the drivers hare to be coupled together by the "parallel rods," which are Subjected to aa enormous centrifugal traia. whea the' engine ia put to its speed, aad Which have beea known to break with disastrous results. And even where this risk is taken, it is very hard to make small wheels revolve fast enough to give great speed.

The remedy indicated, is to increase the sixe of the drivers, aad to get rid of the connecting rod by reducing the number of drivers. we bad this new engine to be, ia this respect, very much like Stevenson's Becket The most remarkable instance of rapid running for a short distance is reported by the Chicago Times of Friday. It says that while some officers bf the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad were out ea aa inspection tour Tne day of this week, aa engine driven by William Jackson made the following time on the stone ballasted track about 25 miles east of Chicago: Eight miles were run, the first two being used for reaching tbe high speed. Six miles were then run, timed by two stop watches, and with the following result: Hues. Seconds.

ft I Second. 3 thirds Koorlfc Sixths. Tbe Above shows aa average speed for the six miles of A email tract id a less thai sev eaty miles per hour, the highest speed obtained being seventy and three fifths miles per hour, v' The engine used was built at the Fort Wayne shops, had a seventeen by four inch aad five foot 'drir ing wheels, and is one of the standard passenger engines uwctd by tha company. 7 the Editor of The TndlanapoUs Kews: ,7 The Christmas number of the New York Clipper for, I think, the year 1870, credits the fast ett rsilrcad time made in the United Srabs as follows: First, Hudson river rail Tcad. trial of new 5i feet Baldwin locomotive, 40 miles in minutes; 2d, IadiaBapo Pittsburg and Cleveland railroad, la diar apolis to Union, special train, 84 miles ia 90 minutes.

Tbe time bf these runs has since beea excelled, but only on short distance, trials, and they may yet claim the record for the best railroad I speed. Tbe nn on the I4 P. now incorporated in the Bee Line, was made ia the spring or summer of 1856,. by Charles H. Ferry, engineer, with the engine "New York" (afterwards rechristened the "Yandee," in honor of Simon.

Yendes, Eiqj then a director of the road) with one baggage and one passenger car attached. It was oa a Saturday The superintendent of the road had a telegram aanouns irg the sudden and serious illness of his wife, then in Boston. Ia order for him to readi Boston at earliest possible moment itwas necessary for him to catch the night express which had left before the telegram came to band, as there was no other traia making through connections nntil the Monday foUowing. The "New York" bad come in with a freight and Was still warm for service. The ran to Union was made in tbe time above atAted, two stops being made at Muncie for wood, and for water, and the night express was overtaken at Versailles, eighteen miles east of Union.

Tbe New York had 6 feet 1 inch driving wheels J. W. B. A Detsrolt Batoher. 7 I Detroit Free Frees.

A man who had his coat on his Arm And his bat in his hand, yesterday entered a batcher shop on Woodward avenue, aad begaa: 7 "Say, sir, one of your infernal carts knocked me down on Park street half an hour ago, and I'm going to have satiafactioa "One of my carts 7 I guess not. William William!" made his appearance from the back room, and the butcher said: "William, this man accuses you of fanning him down with the oart this morning oa Park street." "1 don't think it. was the reply. "Weil know it!" shouted the man as be threw down his bat "WbeTeabonta oa Park?" 7 the corner of High." I "Ab, ten it couldn't have been," said the driver. 1 'Here is the route I took 1 first went up Woodward avenue' and run over a boy at it comer of Alfred street.

Theo 1 went dei ra Charlotte and took a wheel oS a carriage. Down at the corner of Cass I rua down a qor and a velocipede. I came dowa Cass to Spfoat and out again to Woodward, where I expect I ran over two women and a horfe, And then came directly here. It ceoldn'tibave been, me sir." Tbed who was it?" "Indetd, I couldn't soy, sir, but a few doors above this is a butcher who has three carta. If it was him he'll own right un and be glad to see yen, for he's helping a record of the killed and wounded to show off over rest of us.

You'd better try him, sir" iw a Bali can. ba Carved. Theotestion of curved pitching has at tracted the attention of scientific and philosophical geatiemen for the past two years, aad there liave beea those who stoutly affirmed that it was aa utter impossibility for a pitcher tocurveitbe sphere ia the manner so often described ia the reports of ball gams. A soecisl committee of the Providence Frank Jin society, appointed to investigate the question in relation to alleged curves ia balls thrown by skillful bands, male a report to the society at a recent meeting to the eSTtct that after three stakes were placed ia a direct liaei at a distance of about thirty feet apart, the ball was thrown by a person standing behind the first stake ia suchamaaaer that it paseed to the right of the first, to the left of the second, and to the right of the third. The ball was then so thrown thai it nassed to the left side of the brst stake, the right ofilhe second, and left of tho third, thus demonstrating the fact that the pitcher has the power to cause taa nau to curve to ut right orjleft at pleasure.

A Bare The siateLof New York has bought a rare book, aad raid a Luge price for sL It is a copy of the first bock published in the state. Dr. Holmes, of the state library, made the urcbasa at tbe Brinley sale in New York or the Sum of $1,700. The book is eatitied, "The Liws and Acts of the General Awembly of theirlMajesties' Province of New York, as they were enacted ia diverse Sesloas, the first of which bep an April the 9th, aanog: domlni 1631. At New York printed and soli by Wriliam Eradford, printer to their Majesties Kirn William and Mary, 1634." The book is the first volume of "The Laws of New York By Authority," and is also a valuable hiatoricM work.

It frequently referred to ia Uteri law publications, and is, ia consequence jof great value to the state. Oaly five copies ate known to exist. 1 For an lrHUUd throat, eough or cold, "Brown's Brooch ii Trothea" are ofl'wd wl'htbo lullertcoB Bdeaca te their eiUrarr. 1 hoy msinuta the fwd rsf ataUaa Usy hare ju'iy ciuv4. .7 haix.7AT 3 Beautiful en.l 1 Eri.

tiotif, rntnbiaed wilh Terfct 1. tion and Lamrlo Ji I'j L' at Irg secure! sf 'cf rsr'I merit, d'e i to 1: protection assisst erri ie cf every tisri tcd.thercacR erscf the irg, ti A i.U Locis ccr sy, l.vs are more wi ielv knoa cni the cf tie I'antan th7r attention to further the comfort cf rase3grs aslcatericg ts 7J grow ic tarte for decoration with art priaciplea. Twenty new coaches have bee recently adJcdtoths earnest tor the route, aud elerea mere are being coa stroctei. These cars ara finL hed ia white walaut aai baes wood; The dwi are entirely re tie interior being Sitnewhu tie Eaatiaie style. lines preJotsI throughout, with elective carvirrs ia of veneerieg.

The e'ect is much mere .5 ing thaa the old designs, gijiag the interior the appearance of greur aid strength. Large plate glAa windows pasesgers aa uninterrupted view of the beautiful scenery fjr which the Paaiaaila and line is noted. Seats axe supplied wiia easy spri 'jaii luxuriously uphol5tered framesi. A feature of the new cars, which will commend them to the travelia; public Li a new arrangement for heatitg aadveaf.laticg. Cold fresh air is collected aad farced, by the momentum of the car, around the pbe aa i stove, aad distributed from theace throe a the car by a fine.

This plan hss prored very succesefal, since the aioptioa cf aa iajorovei patect air receiver. The. new ears are well lighted with sperm oil lamps, yield In? a soft, clear light, which is rtfieoted by the dcli cately tiated head lining so perfectly fjat a aewspSner can be read without straining the eres. When ia motion, the cotafart of the passengers, particularly while is promoted by the easy, soft movement of the trucks, each spring of which is made to conform to speciScatiorJ carefully calculated accerdicg to the weight it his to crry Th is attention to details enables the Panhandle comtany to la rite Its patrons to seats ia more perfectly instructed coaches thaa hare beea rua heretofore. $500 Esward Catarrh Care.

Some people would rather be humbugged tban to get "value received" for their money. Hence it is that such persons run after this and that pretended cure for catarrh, forgetting that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is so positive in iu effects that its former proprietor advertised it for years throughout the United States under a positive guarantee, offering $500 reward for aa Incurable case, and was never called upon to pay this reward except in two cases. This remedy has acquired such a fame that a branch office has beea established in London, Eoeland, to supply the foreign demand for ita Sold by drugguts at 50 cents. i VsABtS TO BBSATHB THA0C6B BOSS.

PoBVLArrxL, Iowa, March 11, 1379. Dr.R.Y.uam Dbab Sib Some time ago I bought A Douche, soma of your Dr. Sage's Catrrra Bemedy aadGoldea Medical Discovery, aad commenced to nse them. The aches aad pains, si well as sore throat and catarrh from which 1 have beea for so loag a time A sufferer', have entirely left me, with their use. I feel like a new man as well as look like one.

For four years I was unable to breathe through my nose. From the nse ot tha Catarrh Remedy I can now do so freely. Your medicine I know to be all that they are represented. Long lire Dr. Pierce aad the gentlemen connected with him.

Gratefully yours, Watsos Smith. The longtr you hare it, the more certainly painful does rheumatism grow. St. Jacobs Oil cures at once. i Frem a Bistlnguishel WASsmtoTOsi, D.

Juno 19, 1379. 1 have known of several persons who Hed theromlrts as (reatly benofitod, and. onis ol thooi permatMtly cored ol'dUaaseo of the kidooTO and nrtoary orfsns by your medicine, Waraar's 8ae Kldaey and UrorCora. I haro known, too, ot ita uo in similar eases by payilaisaa of tbe bi'Kheat cbaraeter and standing. I daaot doubt tbat if naa treat virtue.

oa nt "1 3SX. SABxrjr. iarasols. A.DicIlSOileiCD., TBADE PALACI1, sTsve fast orened a laria stoek of PAKA80L3 md eust Endless variety aad tho boss farortte Nereltlos of the seaaoa. Prions as low as the lowest.

MUSLIN UNDERWEAR l.alS nnn.ii.iia ttflnwd At 1m. thaa BfMOnt ralue of th miislia and txlnuniaxs. Our Hosiery and Glore Stock ia the1arre( and tnost oompleto la tho city, and mcliidas all sIms, orerr auUtT and Utwt siyias. A visit of laspeetioa Is rsspectf oily iaritod. A.

DICKSON TRADE' PALACE, Ko8. 26 imrJ 2S17. IVathJs.tsa Ct. SOME OF' OUR PHICES: LA ITS' Gold Watchra fistofim. GKISTW Aotd Wi Motor 'io.

elLVAil IS to 14 Mckelf 111. Waterbary tkeaa laUmj Watchoa DLiHONDS, JEW1SLRY, fcILYBAKE ftni CLOCKS, Xt How Dtyloa, 7 BECEXTED ETEET DAT, 1 And sold at prices to suit tha times. Xton 't fail te our stocx ouore (mAfF6 Jewel Palace 24 East Ci I ii i i Jit CF A TORPID i i 'v. T. se TTTTS riLL3 rteJta Dr.

TCTT tVmr miuXyr t. I www.fcti IOO. a i 1am 1 fprtos oit i i wwr. rooctunu 1 It I ana now mui, seal twIMI, Wlf A 0 I lVjKu' Tbey Iaere 4. botly ta T.ko on I Ii a ry it ri.b.d, andir t' 4 Ueiitiva Orram, lie 4.

V. a ii a. ilia i 1UI 1 i i Una oa WTnTF" l.l ACS Huti' li.gjui i( i' i rr aria i.w lic.Y Ycrlu on, djuocau. t' t. lit A.J Uli ti 1 'T i7s "si i I Sr.

tj. in ti." t.i 'l, i 'iV. L.v:i a 1. faWa a a Z'3 let: 7. lit toryta, cri' rt.7 r77 As a C.

9 Thejer. a tr cc i'. l. Hach box 1.. 5 a 1 the imressicp, LI 1 1 I Tich lean s'; iT C.

McLaki sal i'LEMijra I ci. I Irs: on Mvir th geau'ne C. llcLANZ s'LIVEn i ILL3, 1" i Ce inarl et ii i7 r.s cf i tame ZZcL nrtm L' une prcaaaiiioa. ax 1 Ij the laittjaad be.t ia 22 an re' tbaa any ether jeurtal ia ladlaaapoIiJ. It is tt.hs Fr.orl PArvTisix roLir.c3 BIAS" Oa all cf iaterest it i ia opinions to its best with a view only of promotiaz tie cist irjzzzzt or zzzizir, It contains tiia cream of the news frotu t'l quarters dow to 4 O'clock Saaday morzl excluding oy thit which i rrsrie or Lnmorally satia.U.

Ia few worij, Suaday Sentinel is devoted to tlatcU'Jot news, literary and 'miscellany, proper ail jBecessary to make it what it is Tas PAPiz rbs ins jrcpir; specially adapted to the The Su Is'y Seatiael's bdaence will be given ia all of i Ttt Zlev'7sa irl er Tfoaaa 1 7 to the true position, which. Lt here by vlrue natural Ju tice. Trice, $2 pef yearj 2.) cents per mouth, delivered by tire ceats per copy. IITiiZ I 1)1 Jill Qr'tTO fo 6K FOX THZ 1. AS HXrSTIUTnJ JQCi.

ros irra dsthsutics. r' rsv fN utvw itra, rmTTTT, uUllM, CUbia4. 14 InTmlki. an 1 'm auuar 4 Bfiu. ihaliauc9 tni Hiaiot tMtMt M.hfrs (baa a ra aa bml.fe Md twnM HtMiHia ia p.

1 w4 nuf ukat bf oTn iurK.na, Ko i4 at a oar, ar iwwww, mn4 ninii katui. aa SotanhKU wi io 1 whar ia Km4 ct Vb. muh 1 Iiartoo ita wnm koiiM. At. kiiMlrad and ot t.

a a rrnt inpni. Younc ncri tad Chen wto todet troa Nroa and DebL iyi frsrasiare HxJuastioa, ot a a ally hooodtad by soaamur Its eoa aota. rt r.utcntra kxvtsw rpmi th MaWnH tu. otia4 tT atiia4 vatlml Imnlin Mia 1. x.

ai tat fnt mt t. OMV Md WHO BOad V4 4 a 'iitid sw aoseysaf SAa waLua in a Btoi baSOMt fStat 4 I ii aa, tW fMuimmmm, COS. tUChTHjfc YJLt STRUTS, Pure Vitcr zzi Plenty ct It I. i Tho CtDXAt AF0U3 WATES CC2 PAST, ha visa larxe 'y iBereaasd He capacity, ta Bow prepared: ta famish par, trosh. watoS to Ua eltisena for dflnklni, washlni, lathlni, fouatalaa and rprtnkEuj'.

Alao, laUroads, stea bouera, sJ evators and factories scppltod at spocUl rstav DBCtSCOi Any onoepnsfalartnj the amaber of tsnlts (estimated at aas haadrsd aad. tfty thousaiiJ) dowa to water level ta ear city, win fadHy peroalve the danger to which thaf ate, liable tn tho nao of erdiaary wa wmtara riosrratloA at haalth at any aoat Is the hose "I haraceritrsstad fS fjsdliuiswcs W4 wall water with the Crotou ws of the FalrraouDt walar ol tr W.twf ai, ti rtTer water niod tn Tirlo'. tv.u oa Ita and with tho Well wtc sud rrtry twason eotuidartsi aa 1 a 1 1 domtatta pu.4eo as aay oj Hit isnLisj txa Tsatly saparioi to lis lart. Ifounrrespecu'aiJy, 1 I W. LAWSrsCX SUTT3.

flBI FRCtfraCTIOHTbeeafflpany pr pasa te throw apd tnatntala at aay jUraa npa the asual Brt s'nal all aeeeiwsry ttre trma Tha aumbasr ot ald streams, of eour4, to bo la seird hla prepertfca to the alio of soaltis and atmbov at hyiiaoU wlttto praetlcaMo rosch of an are STXAH EOn KA Attontiaa faeaJal to tha eonditloa thd steant boilers st tha Vslor Works bulillcf la proof ef tha saoeUonee cf the waUr lor sini ptuposoa. BATES Deilring to KraaUy toeresaa eur I't at oononmors Sna to popwarue so larftsituBai a luxorras plenty ot puro, eooi water la arary ettlsen'o bMiao, we Lar lop lw watar raWonistmt wtta tir (riiljoa fvtm. Wo rospertfoU an Irft patrons A.1 0. rJ rscaiT. pr and aJ tnijrajatjoa ehearlai.y f.Ta.

i GTC 1 rX til.tl a DIL pn. CAVJEIIi'D 7 'j crrAixisLr (OoaUia a poUoo or niaeral itbrUawo.f Ma woo rf sod Cilll.IJi H.Vl It I I raxTtrat ojr is HUT 3 i SIAIaAIUALi i try UJ yt boc i a a i a a ma a ssa a nv avMM.ai er om rainw. i I a LaUIS bX andrtry Syjlbttt. latlM, a uT wuaaaiuoa Cro s.OTreL tnc, i per Ut. CIIIUL Crvms, Cotfc, IyaBUry, El'V Kly rtax, r.

Jlarbiu, T'acainrr orap.lnt. Weak ma ..4 erxl sTiob per buttl IU twt 4ot port, la ac, at 'iil jJSPHALT: czl Ws sra rd to ti''j Co AfbJtlt 't both kc ijc t.f and fi. I 1 ia rSet" el Ur, r'" b3wX t. ctu a i ir ta n. L.

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About The Indianapolis News Archive

Pages Available:
1,324,294
Years Available:
1869-1999