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'- .-V' "'"W cv?MP-- -yrrP jv' s "T' . -1 .. .fil ..-.. - -'--.r-k ba V . n "S' iatftfcfea&aas&5&aMLgae r; tflv'.ftwJ5ai;jtirti1ifiriirMLt;i'J0j mijHfc-.tijmiJ!uaB.aa t t a Sri- S? r1 "c-i . j r -... -'v rv r5. ' - J I V- ... v V i - b K t. ..I" IJ -. -'i - . V 3S Ki.2 S53T " - . m &T le- c?r & 5- -i. -.- EJ m t :v , rJ !- t Is life fe "Hr . $ niihclt XiEWIS GREEN, EDITOR AKD PROPRIETOR. TIRMS PER TEAR, M J 2.00. The Burial of Bill Terrel. Aaother Gore Outrage, suit to the Dead. -In- Thursday, Feb. 21, 1884. Milling Inspectors. The Governor has appointed Mr. Bancroft, of Gallipolis, State JOning Inspector, and Mr. King, f. Columbiana county, Assistant. 'We had hoped that the Hocfcnjj fValley would have been recog nized in making the selection, but -.the matter in settled and the Ad- suniitration takes the responsi bility. We hope the gentlemen appointed will prove themselves -worthy and fit for the positions 'they are appointed to fill. r The Tlood Abating. The river is slowly falling at Cincinnati, but further down the Ohio is on the rise, from the floods in the'Tennessee and Cum berland. The cold wave was gen eral, and at Memphis and points below the thermometer did not how much variation from the morning record in Pittsburg. At Cincinnati early Friday morning there was a shocking incident of the flood, in the fall of a block of buildings, causing the loss of a number of lives. Fire and wa ter combined in the horrors of the scene. Congress, on urgent appeals from Cincinnati, yesterday voted an additional $200,000. A bill will be presented in the Ohio Legislature, giving authority to fill all the lower part of Cincin nati above the flood height, at an estimated cost of ten millions of dollars. Bill Terrel died in the Col nmbus penitentiary on last Fri day. It was first proposed to bury him at Flint station, where his sisters reside, but his relatives requested that he be buried by the side of his mother at Gore cemetery. His remains were brought down on the morning train and taken to Gore. About four hundred people were present. The trustees of the cemetery refused to allow interment in the grave yard. Mr. Culver proposed that he be bur ied in the old grave yard. His uncle offered to pay the trustees fifty dollars for privelege of in terment by his people. On a high hill on the old home farm on a 6pot overlooking the scene of the VVeldon murder, and overlookingThe1itmible homerof fsome-ugty-staiiis onl A No We Senator. "When the cry of distress from the Ohio river reached Cleveland a mass meeting of citizens was called. Some of the conserva tives asked an adjournment in or der to "have time to consider.5' Senator Payno made an eloquent speech in behalf of immediate relief, and sent his check at once for one thousand dollars. That man is worthy of Ohio. Bro;ScMillen, ot.the Marietta Times, apologizes for delay in -publication, which apology is perfectly satisfactory. He says: The Times is a little late in ap pearing this week, but we hope 10 be out on time with the next -issue. We know our readers will excuse the delay when they are informed that the water was nbout eight inches deep on our office floor, and the editor had 56 Miches of water in his parlor at home and that his compositors had the water in the Becond floors of their homes.. A True BUI. Ixneaster Eagle. Last week Messrs. Lew Groen, t hariff McCarthy, Jessa3utin and Jhaxles Rose, were detained in 'iaIcaster on account of high iter. They started home on Thursday in a carriage, after lay ing in a good supply of pain kil lar, crackers and bologna, by way .f Berne Station. Ti.-ey were silken across Hush creek in a IcifF, and then struck for the 'ills. We learned that they ssohed home on Friday evening. P. S. Since the above was writ ten, we have information that . ho party ran out of fodder and .":spatched a messenger to this -ity with 810. lie bought Stf.50 worth of whiskey and 50 cents '--orth of crackers. When the Messenger reached camp, he was rensured for wasting so much :aoney on crackers. ThV) above is only part of the 'ruth. The appropriation was --cnt to Tom Wetzler, who called ?o hi3 aid Sandy Griswold and Ool. Steele. These genttemen, animated by the Lancaster idea, purchased the supplies in the roporlion named. The objec- ''on mainly was that no part of s ie cracker fund was spent on Lologna. r Tuat Bvoui ot Wilted. Tii9 Columbus Herald, refer--';jgto the frequent Sentinel in ? cations thac Logan is on a y-oin. says in last week's issue: That. Logan boom is in serious :-' mger of being wilted by spring -.nshine. If anyone will tell us '- jst what a boom is we will try justify our use of the word jited" in this connection. The Herald has heard of an at-&-mpton the part of the Frog S".nd district to abandon the ca ;rJ, destroy the Falls Mills, send ray our manufacturing enter - .isee,lurn fifty men out of work, i raule the duty of the sheriff and -instable and enlarge our lnfirni .i y in order that a fow men may ive lands which they never . Mi a cent for drained at the ox- ;ise af the State. No, the Logan boom will con- lie if her citizens do not com- '.t commercial suicide, and de- :tiy about the best source of :. -.'emie we possess. Ticntucky grudgingly voted enty-fivo thousand dollars on-i- for the relief of the flood stif--.;crs in her state. Not as much -orne single Ohio counties have ?d. Kentucky will be asham i. i of hc-rself, and her best men -: "I blush at her parsimony. his youth, his bones lie mingling with mother earth. That earth which, sooner or later, will open her arms to receive us all, has folded him to her bosom, accord ing to him thesamo rest that is given to kings, and to saints. She makes no distinction, but fulfills the decree of God, that all must return to dust. It mat ters not to Billy Terrel nor to any of us where his remains are buried; whether in the most costly sepulchre, or in the ob scure and neglected grave of the Potter's Field. It matters not to him whether his obsequies are chanted in the vaulted isles by christian voices or whether the bleak night winds wail a sad re quiem around his despised sep ulchre. His body has served the purpose ior which God created it, a tenement for the immor tal soul. That soul has returned to God who gave it, and tha. same God has delivered the body to christian men in a civilized community for decent burial. and they, in the face of the piti ful pleading of Billy Terrel's grief striken sisters, have refused to permit his body to be hurried in the little church yard at Gore, where his father and mother are at rest. And this because he was convicted of murder, and died a life convict in the Ohio peuitentiary. This is Christiani ty in the nineteenth century ! Shades of Apostles and Saints preserve us !! Alas for the rarity Of christian churity Under the San ! Oh.lt was pitiful, Near a whole city full, Grave he hail none ! Grant that he was a murderer; has he not suffered the severe penalty of a just law? Has he not suffered the penalty of a just and righteous God? That God has the soul of Billy Terrel in judgment, and will deal with it in the realms of eternity accord ing to his own immutable laws ; with the body He has nothing to do; that is the mission of the christian people of Gore, his for mer home. To them is entrusted the mor al and legal duty of giving him decent, christian burial. Billy Terrel was his mother's only son. tho pride of her household, the joy of home and the hope of her declining years. How fondly 6he loved him was best shown in her wonderful devotion to him in his terrible trial, and in her awful sorrow at his adjudged guilt and sentence to punish ment. She is dead. It is well, for, perhaps, if she had been liv ing on Monday, when this wrong was perpetrated, she would have fallen crushed and lifeless be neath the terrible humiliation and outrage. That she was a christian, no one will deny, and although summoned in an in stant by the grim monster death, was prepared to meet her God. In the little church at Gore for nearly half a century she wor shiped at the altar of God. There she labored in the' Sabbath School to train her boy and the children of the parish in t! e paths of righteousness ; and many li ve to day in that community who are better men and women through the christian teachings and ex ample of Mother Terrel. Let us thank Heaven that she was not living, but that the gross insult fell alone upon her lifeless dust. Billy Terrel had two sisters who alo 10 of all the family survive him. They were present, and begging that his poor remains, be interred beside those of his fath er and mother, but their plead ings were of no avail; their cries fell upon ears of stone, and the heathen wretches, in addition to the insult to the dead, most cru elly and pitilessly insulted ihcj living. They loved their brother no doubt ; 'twas, only natural that they shouUl, the mother lamented his misfor tunes as only a sister can. God knows how they have already suffered. They have seen an on ly brother conv cted and con demned to life imprisonmont for a most horrible murder; they have seen-a father sink in sorrow to his crave over his sons awful ed and loving mother shot to death by the hand of a first cou sin ; all of this they have borne with a humble submission begot ten of the highest christian forti tude; and yet with all this they are subjected by these grave yard guardians, who call them selves christians, to an outrage that, has no parallel in a civilized community. Billy Terrel was a convicted murderer. Ho was born and brought up at Gore, that Gore in Hocking county which has be come famous as the abode of the red-handed murderer; that 6ame Gore where reside the christian gentlemen (?) who refused his body a christian burial. Those gentlemen whose Christianity is more exemplified in the condem nation of the dead, than the sal vation of the living; those gen tlemen who hope to exalt their holiness by Kicking a Corpse. It will not do; the calcium light of truth and investigation is already turned upon them, and reveals hands oT those who held the grave-yard gate shut against the pleading sisters of a dead felon. Under the lurid light of this Gehenna demonstration, Bill Ter rel seems the legitimate out growth of such a communicy, and Christian Civilization must stand appalled when it is known that the men who, against the tearful appeals of the boy's heart-broken mother, sold him drink that debased his soul and drove him down the path to mur der, should now be among the foremost to stand at the gate of the grave-yard and refuse his bones rest bv the side of the mother from whom the grog shop and its associations enticed him to crime and led him to death in a felon's cell. We can appreciate the horror which the Gore citizens feel to wards the red-handed murderer. We applaud a sentiment tnal pursues to punishment and to judgment the villian who com mits a crime. But when God, through his. avenging minister Death, interposes, we think all human scores are settled, and that the corpse, stanv ed with Divinit3T, is harmless and deserves decent interment from good and brave and gallant men. Perishing gloomily. Spurred by contumily, Cold inhumanity, Burning insanity, Into his rest. Owning his weakness. His evil behavior, And leaving, with meekr.es, His sins to hisSavior. We understand that the sisters will ask an order from the court for burial in the Gore cemeter3'. GT. kHadly and the Wol Tariff. Governor Hoadly of Ohio haa written a letter toJSpeaker Carlisle on the subject of restoring the old duty on wool. It shows him to be a protectionist in the sense in which the platform of tho Ohio Deocracy favors protection. It appeals to Speaker Carlisle's good sonse and po litical judnement. Here is Governor Hoadly's let ter. Some little timo since Mr. Ilarp ster, the champion wool-grower of Ohio, ask me to write you, urging the restoration of the former wool diity, in accordance with platform of tne Ohio Democracy. I told I thought he would find you with well defined views pro and con on this suh. ject, which no letter from me could modify or promote, but as be press ed on mo I cannot but think it well to advise you-of the grounds upon which those of us in Ohio who des ire tariff reform are able to sustain our approval of this part of our platform. "The farmers and plan ters of our country pay an increased price, caus-d by tariff taxation. On their utensil, their clothmir, indeed on evey thing they consume br'use. wnlte-theproaict of their la bor is measured by Liverpool stand ards. It is of course, necessary that this shall continue in some degree as long as we have any tariff at all. The only recomp-nse possible here at the North ia found in tho wool duty, and it is upon tho ground of sin exception to this general rule that men like nysolfare willing al together to give up as to the rice duty, sugar duty or the wool duty, while ihoso who produce rice, sugar and wool are taxed for the benefit of domestic manufactures of sugar pans, plows and other domestics pro ducd by them, but is an erception only. I admit, and not other wise. Jtis but justico to our wool -pro duce's that tbe product of their lab or and capital should receive some reasonable compensation for the out lay they are compelled by law to nvike for the benefit ef manufaturers of articles they consume. This, it is true, may be said of all producers, but not all producers have like the wool growers, been invited by sixteen years of legislation to in vest in their business. It is the sud den and rough disturbance of the vaiue of a product into which they were invited by their country to in vest, of which they have a right to complain. "Your own statement of the methods proper for snch legisla tion, your own oppositions to the shock of hastj' disposal of settled in vestments encourages them to look to you for aid in their present em ergency. I respectfully ask for this large and intelligent clas of our most useful citizens the aid which I know your high position and talents can give them' Is She Dead or Alire. A Yonnsr Indy Taken From Her C'OlQii and Placed ia Bed. Yousostowjt, O., February 15 Kitty "Gilmore, the young lady who was .piaced in a vault at .Warren yesterday and-taken from the vault two hours after, by un- To Teachers. A .Burning Shams. iu"" v Miiuijiouii j.iab tvcijti u, iai"u i - . . . ,, . i.. ... .i., anil secret ball was given in a hall, ono .Normal Department of the Ohio Cnlversl- entl of which had been partitioned off ty. The apring term will begin March 25, for slccnino-room? A vnnmr nvin tvlin lsst- We sn:,u nke a specialty OJ the ioi hiLtping rooms. A JOling m.in WHO Teachers CIass during this term. There slept in one of these rooms and who felt -m be classes in Arithmetic, U.S. History, grieved because he hail not been invit- Grammar, English Analysis, Political Geo- eil anil had to roll around and suffer SSflffiMSk SSSK'BooS3SI? Willie the erlad throng tripped tho light ink, Puumauship, and Theory and Prac- bombastie'toe, at last discovered a knot- ll;of M mlnent and suc. nole in the partition through which ho cessflI, teacher orElocution,haS been en- tuiuu naiuii uiu JMiiuy umiuiiiuu fnnri.l tiA I hc-f vll Al t dtn X lft4i lipntlAll While peeping through tho knot-hole, , The trainingclnisfortoachsrswlll bean he discovered that ono of the dancers, important feature of our work. This class , 11 . .1 i. i , will meet several times eacli week to uis- who bad an aperture in the heel of Ins nn'mMhniiunTttrtUinv nmi srhaaimv. dertaker Townsend, to the house i shoe "ind another in his sock to corres-1 ermnent 7 . norm, vvna Rt-inninn hi- thn wll with thn Corns ana snenil n. term with ns. we 1 ..... W . . . -Vi II .In .,11 .A sw.n , n.lfnnA ..nnKintA. ventilated foot near the knot-hole It YiilltyonmTvSnVi was but the work of a moment to hold a But the training you get will enable yon candle against this exposed heel until to eomirand higher wag.-s, and thus you the thick epidermis had been heated red wm son be able to make your money W Ti.fW ;,.:i !,!. .tack. For partlcnlftissulrew. eo -.'I aw. t. i UULtK, Atnem.u of Dr. Nelson, there still remains a glow of her cheek and natural expression of the eye. Physi cians 3ay she did not die of in flamation of the bowels, but from hyperdermic injections, and are yet divided in opinion as to whether she is alive or dead. The body was taken from the coffin and placed in a bed, and will be kept for several days at least. Laser The body of Miss Gil more, the young lady taken from the vault at Warren yesterday on showing sigus of life, was ex amined at live o'clock this after noon by three physicians and pronounced dead. The body was again placed iu the vault this evening. PROBATE NOTIOE. Notice is hereby given that tho follow ingaccounts and vouchors have been flled In the Probate Court-of Hocking county, Ohio, for settlement, Nelson Boucher, administrator of the es tate of Abraham Boucher audthosorae millcume on for hearing on the -23th day tfl February, 1884, at 10 o' clock, a. m.,ortiaoon thereafter as may becouventtnit- W.T.AOKEK, Probate Judge. Jan 31 Sw. PROBATE ttOTICB. Notice iis hereby si ven that the follow- I Ing accounts and vouchers have been flled in me A'rouaie Luun ui nuvKiu wuuij, Ohio, for seitloment, John A. McUielland, Gn.inlian of Frank E. McCleland, and the same will come on lor hear In" on the 23th day February, 1884 at 10 o' clock, it. m. or as soon thereafter as may be convenient. W.T. ACKER; Pro. Judge January 31, 1SS1 3w Fallinsr Waters. The greatest h!ght of the flood at Cincinnati was on last Thurs day noon 71 feet If inches. This was c nlinued for one hour, when the waters began to fall slowly, and t! e fall has continued, the river now being in most places in its accustomed channel, and at Cincinnati they expect to have the flooded gas and water works in operation Wednesday or Thursday. Although the loss of life has not been so great as would naturally be expected, many cases of accidental drowning are reported. A relief service has been pretty thoroughly organiz ed, covering the inundated dis tricts along the river, and is do ing a great good in relieving Dressing wants, in tho way of food, clothing and household ne cessities. A great number of Circuit Court Districts. Mr. Bargar Tuesday afternoon in troduced the principal bill, in enfor cing the provisions of the judicial am endment adopted last October. It divides the steite into ten judicia' districts, and provides that thiee judges sha'l be e'ected iu each distn- tnct. The judges are to be elected next October one for two, one for four and one for six years, and there after one is to be elected every alter nate year for six years. The salary of the judges is to he $4000; and the new courts to bein their sessions Fedruary9 1SS5 Hockinjj county is in the 6th district, 8472 democr atic. The district is as follows Pickaway. Franklin, Delaware, Licking, Fairfio'd, Hocking, Perry and Muskingum. If the bill becom es a law we propose that locking shall havo one of the judges. Are Yotj Going West, .North west or Southwest ? To parties who contemplate a trip to the West, Northwest or Southwest this coming spring, we we desire to suggest the advisabilty of making some inquiry enpuiry as to the route ihey ought to take. In this connection we want to call the attention of those interesteq to the real inducements offered by the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St Louis Railway, Pan Handlft Route in the way of quick time, prompt con nections and iinequaled facilities fut the si fe and comlorublo transpor tation of Dassengers of dl clashes. By this route you are carried over the safest aud best constructed sys tem of railways in the West You are not subject to any annoying om nibus transfers, but landed in Union Depo s, at Chicago,& St. Louis from which the trains of several of the leading Trunk Lines depart for -points throughout the West, North west and Southwest. You cu pur chase tickets and have your baggjge checked through to destination, a voiding all vexatious troub'e while en route. If you are going to trav el it i3 to your advantage to secure the best, and if you are ticke'ed via the Pan Handle you are sure to get it. Application for rates of fare, time tables, ect. . should be made to the nearesi Ticket Av:enJ or to E A. FORD, General passenger and Ticket Agent, Pittsburgh, pa. hot. Then there was a wail that rent the battlements above and drowned the blasts of the music. There was a wild scared cry of 'fire," a frightened throng running hither and thither, and then, where mirth and music and rum had gladdened the ej-e and reddened the cheek a moment ago, all was still savo the low convulsive titter of a scantily clad man, as he lay on the floor of his donjon tower and dug his nails in the floor. Boomerang, m m All is not Silver that You lind on a Wid ow's Farm. A new discovery, recently made, while some men were digging a well near Benton, Ky., a few days ago, threw the whole community into a fever of excitement. When down about twen ty feet, the diggers struck a deposit of glistening ore in small pieces about the aizo. and almost the identical shape of a butter cracker. A neighbor brought some of the ore to town yesterday, and calling on a gentleman who lias acquired some reputation a3 an expert, laid down a handkerchief full of specimens on the table with the inquiry: "Doctor, what's that worth?" The doctor examined it and replied: "Pyrites of iron it isn't worth a nickel a ton." And he placed some of it on a shovel, held it over the grate, when it quickly disappeared up the chimney! "The mischief," growled the old man, as he comprehended the situation. "There's a widder out in Marshall who has a whole well full of it! I've bought half her farm and my son has married her gal!" The doctor says that the old man was one of the most completely broken-up gentlemen that has come in from the wilds Paducah (.Ky.) News. A Lawyer's Opinion of Interest TO ALL. J. A. Tawnej', Esq , a leading at torney of Winona, Minn., writes; ' After using it lor more than three years. I take great pleasure in sta ting that I regard Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption as the best remedy in the world for Coughs and Co'ds. It has never failed to curt the most severe colds I have had, and iuvanably relieves the pain in the chest " Trial Bottles of this sure cure for all Lung and Throat Diseases innv bo had Free at F. Harrington's DKcar work.ag r. , . i o i na J make them better, Drugstore. Large size, S 1.00. workmen; to aid the houses have been carried away from tho bottom hinds, and in some of the smaller towns a ma jority of the dwe'lings have been wrecked. It seems to bo admit ted the calamity is one of the greatest, outside of war and pest ilence, that has befallen the country. The New. York Her ald's weather observer has this to sav : jThat the disaster beggars de scription may be gathered from the grim records giving the daily rainfall as measured by the weather observers since the 1st inst. Up to Wednesday morning (thel3lh)the February rainfall average over the entiie Ohio Val ley was 4.S9 inches, or an inch and a half more than usually falls during the whole month of Feb ruary. In the same period an averaged fall of 6.31 inches look place in Tennessee alone, exceed ing by 1.15 inches tho mean amount for the whole month in that State. When it is considered that the Ohio drains a basin ol'moro than two hundred thousand square miles in area, and that, the esti mated weight of an inch of rain over a single square mile is about sixty thousand tons, and the mental effort to rekon up the de vastations wrought by the Hood seeni3 useless. Now it must be remembered this great, fall of February ram was precipitated on a mass of nd next to ' snon' eoveiing a large part of the Ohio Valley, varying in depth from six to fifteen inches. A Huge Sale Impending. Tho assignee of the defunct Stan dard Coal and Iron Company will offer for sale the ailedged interest of that coporation in over 20,000 acres of coal and iron lands in Hocking, Athens, Perry and Vinton counties. March 10. A circu'ar states that the property, all wel incumbered, consists of iron furnaces, improved mines and railroad tracks. The as signee Iiks his office in the First Na tional Bank building and the attor neys iu the case are Ex Congressman Southard, formerly of Zunesvilic, General Thomas Ewing. fcmerly of,Lanc:ister but now of New York as is Southard and Hon. W. J.Gil more of this city. Co umbus Capital. orjra? ; Ihey have seen a cherish- The State relief fund of $200 000 is being disbursed under the direction of a committee appoint ed by the Governor. The Gov ernment appropriation is disbursed-under Ilia direction of the Sec retary of War. Can tbe Floods of Ohio be Prevented (St. Louis Republican.) navinsr showu, as we believe, that the floods in the Ohio have not reached their ultimate height, we now propose tho above query, and we feel very certain that ninety nine out of evejT hundred would say they cannot be prevented, hut hs the remaining one of the hundred we as serf they can ; also, we assert that the prevnetion is simph' a question of doilars and cents, and not one of scientific engineering. It it is not the foolish system of creating res ervoirs to counter-balance those that have been destroyed by civili zation, but is simply affording : means of ut iizing the reservoir nat ure has already furnished, and, as said bofore. it is onlv a question of dollars and cents: hut on the other hand, when we estimate the benefit to tho country of having a volumo of water taken from the Ohio river, when at flood tide at some conven ient point say the foot of ,Letart Falls to a cros section of 12,f)00 feet, wiih a velocity of three miles per hour, and :gain returned to it whenever the water in the channel got below fifteen feet. We may say if such an effect can bo produced": no price to he paid can be to great. For if we can give assurance of such results as will forever protect, the coutnry from overflow and at the same time obviate all dancer of less thau ten feet in the channel at tho lowest stage, we confer a prieclgs boon on the country that will last as long as the country laats. Want of Falili. If Miller & Case, the Druggist, does not succeed it is not for tho want of faith. Ho has such faith n Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup as "a remedy for Coughs, Colds, Consumption, and Lungaf foction. that he will give a bottle IS FUN BETTER than PHYSIC? Fun is excellent; a hearty laugh is known Ihe whole world' over to be a health promoter ; hut fun does not fill the hill when a man needs phys'c, on the other hand pe'ple take too much physic. They would be more healthy, live longer and enjoy life thoroughly, if they used JX-. fones1 Bed Clover Tonic, which cures a'l blood disorders, indigestion kidney and 'liver troub'es, removes pimples and is a. perfect touic. Can be taken by the most de'icatc. Only 50 cents per bottle, of B. C. Rebut & Co. Mch. 22, 'S3 ly. Convincing;. The proof of the pudding is not in chnwingthe string, but inhaving an opnor'iinity to test the article direct. -Miller Oc Oase. the Drug gist, has a free trial bottle of Dr Uosanko's Cough and Lung Jyrip for each and every one who is af flicted with Coughs.Co'ds, Asthma, Consumption or any Lung Aflcetwn. NO EXPERIMENT. With a majority of people it is no experiment that Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup is a sure cure for Couzhs, Colds, Pain in the Lungs. Soreness in the Chest, ect , but for those who doubt, ask your neighbors who have used it or get a free sample bottle o Millor & Ca se's, the Druggist. Kegular size 50 cent aud $1.00. CAUSB OF FA1LUUE. Want of couiidenco accounts for haif of the business failures of to day. Miller & Case, the Drug gist, is not liable to fail for the want of confidence in Di.BosnnkoTs Cough and Lung Syrup, for he gives away a bottle free to all who are suffering with Coughs, Co'ds Asth ma, Consumption and all affections the Throat and Lungs. PERFEcf'snCGBSS. Those two words have a vast meaning when fully comprehended Xitoniura and I-Tanual Art?. The mercantile and professional class es are fundamentally necessary to th best interests of the organism. Wha socioty is personally interested in. i3 nc the development of any class, but rath er the getting of the good citizen con tributing his best thought to the good of all, irrespective of any class in whicfc he may have been born, or in which he may labor; and the good citizen can come as well from the labor employ ments as any other Tho good citizenis secured by "attaching the individual to the knowledge, to the thought, of the race. But knowledge is not conlined to literature, science or philosophy. Lan guage is an important, but not the only, key to knowledge. The thought of the race that has been expressed" through the skilled hand in labor in the arts is not inferior to what has been expressed by language. The manual arts no less than literature embody the culture of the race. Public education should know no classes. It should aim to so dispense the fundamental eleir-jntsof knowledge as to open the doors to the social acqui sitions of the race, whether in literature or the arts, to all, irrespective of per sons. This, public education does not do now. It exalts the languago em ployments. It degrades the labvr em ployments by ignoring them. The practical conclusion to be drawn from our present education is, that the person capable of living by his wits, by the use of languago, is a better and more hon orable citizen than one who contributes to the- permanent welfare of the com munity by tho skillful work of his hands. It is my belief that the way to beneiit cur working classes is to try and more productive them in increasing tho wage-earning power of their labor by putting more thought into it: and to this end I would have our schools honor thought expressed by the skilled hand, as well as thought expressed by lan guago. J. 8. O. in Boston Transcript, Lord Baron, generally regarded as the keenest observer and profoundest thinker who has appeared on this plan et, wrote much on !ongevit His signs of short life ere quick growth, fair, soft skin, soft, line hair, early corpulence, large head, short neck, small mou'h, fat ear, brittle, separated toeth. Some of his signs of long life are slow growth, hard coarse hair, rough, freckled skin, deep furrows in the forehead, firm llesli with veins lying high, wide nostrils, large mouth, hard gristly ear, strong contiguous teeth, ile adds that early gray Lair id not significant, soiuo of the longest livers having turned gray in eariv life. An Owen county (Ky.) hen sat on fif teen eggs and brought out nineteen chickens, says an exchange. The hen must be a shrewd one, or elso there's a newly-hatched lie out. A compositor who was puzzling over one of Horace GreelevTs manuscripts sagely and savagely remarked: "If Belshazzar had seen this handwriting on tho wall, ho would have been moro terrified than ho was." In a lecture the other evening, Bob Burdetto said: "Speaking of the tele phone, one hundred years ago it would hava been thought an invention of the devil and I sometimes think it is now." Posters for tho annual goat show are displayed in a great many windows. Some of the goats must be very well trained, for most of the pictures repre sent them sitting on a keg and drinking cold tea from a tumbler. "What are you going to do when yon grow up if you don't "kuow how to" ci pher?" asked a teacher of a slow boy. "I'm going to be a school teacher and make the boys do the ciphering," was the reply. Omaha has a high-school Principal who makes written contracts with ths boys to the efi'ect that, after being called up a certain number of times, thoy shall be whipped; and he says the plan works finely. "Thoro is," sa3's tho Boston Herald, " a good deal of fitness in the selection of Mr. Evarts as the orator for New THE WAY TO BUY THE BEST II !, FOR THE MONEY, is to buy at the Ofllcc. It RitTcs expense of commission and ex- ?ense lu traveling from lioiuo to lion"e. 'ou can just an well sure ahove expenses as you can In buying your ilry eooils. When you bny a liomestlcor ITew Home you iii't tlie lest. All other m:iUs culled .New Hisli Arm machines are imitations, and none are their peers. The Domestic and New Home have new styles of wood work, and new sets of Attachments that othersilare not use. Comcnnil see foryour selvesaml you will be convinced that the j above In reliable, and If you have a Uoines- ucurrtew iiuhiclihil uusureii sii ii-eiruui 10 to L'O years do not let them humbug yon with thi-ir so-called new high arm ma cliincs, and trade you out of it, which they will try to do, but bring your machines to me and I will put in the new Domestic or New nome improvements, men you win have a better machine and one that will last longer than the high arm imitation ones, and save your money and have the best machine in the world. HENRY" LUTZ. 3-All kinds of machines and machinery repaired in tho best manner and at reason able prices. uenI have 8 different styles of Machines oiThar.d, whi- h I will sell at Iot rates. Call and examine them, James McGrady's Estate. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appotnted and qnallned as Administrator ol the estate of JaMies McOrady, late of Hocking cornty, Ohio. deceased. JAS.ii..ucuA". Jan 31 3w Administrator. Hocking Sentinel. CIBCULATION - - 1500, 1 wit .1 wt 1 w'ks 3 nt's Cm's 1 y T Inch 4 inch 5 inch col. col. st cm. 1 col. S1.00 S2.00 2.CU 5.75 S.CO 3.75 r,M 5.51) 4.00 7.00 5.50 8,5) 7.0o:iO.0O S.0! 12.no 10.00 1 17,00 ;?, ; J5.C0 4.00 7.U0 50 1 9.0(1 fft.EOISJOCO 9.C0I 1S.(0 K.f0f 16XO J)010.(;0 IH.COI 20.09 s.no I isjjO 1 JG.00 1 S6.ro 10 C0 15.00 1 S0.(0 I 60.00 11.CO-'1S.OOS5.00 S5.LO US,0 20.C0 f 33.C0 I 55.C0 20.00 1 3..UO 1 55.00 1 1CO.O SBEPwIFFS SALE. James R. Grogan vs Allen R. McBrcom. Iu the Court;nf Common Pleas of Hocking; county, Ohio. Feb 21, 84-tf Hexkt Letz. BAT) "Urc on James River, Va., in a AlwrlO Northern settlemont. Il lustrated circular tree, J. P. Macha, Clare mout, Virginia. (Feb. 21, '84 4w RUSKSN'S WORKS. Sesame and LU'les, paper, 10c.; cloth 23c. Crown of Wild Olive, paper, 10c. cloth25e Ethics of the Dust, pa per 10c, cloth 2oc. Sesame and Lillles, Cro-vn of Wild Olive and Ethics of the Dust, in one volume, half Russia, red edges, SOc. Modern Painters, atones of Venice, etc., in preparation. L-irge catalogues tree. JOHN B. ALDEN Publlsher.lS Vesoy St. New York. (Feb. 21, S4-4w An Only Daughter Cured of Con- sumption. When death was hourly expecthd. all remedies having failed, and Dr. II. James was experimenting with the many herbs ot Calcutta, he accidentally made a prepa tioii which cured his only child of Con Mimption. His 4iild is now in this coun try and enjoying the be;t of health. He has proved to the world that Consumption can be positively and permanently cared. 1 lie Doctor now gives this receipt free, on ly asking two 2-cciit. stamps ro p.iyexpin sn. This Herb also cures Night Sweats, Nausea at the Biomaeh, and will brink up a fresh cold in 21 honrs. AddiessCnuldoelc & Co.. 1,0.52 Rai-e .street, I'liildelplii.. nam ing this paper. (Feb 21, 34 iv ESisQ 5 nw fin ir& 8Syr 3ssS?SSi&S g gsggiinniriff i 1 bSI Notice Is hereby given that the under signed Sheriffot Hocking countj, Ohio, by vltueofan ordrofsale issued out of said Court in the above entitled cuse, and to him directed ns Sherifl orsaid county, will at the door or the Conrt House, in .Logan, on Saturday, the 1st day March, '84, at 1 o'cloek.p.m., of said dav, offer for sale at public auction the following lands and tenements, situate In H jckingcouoly.O , to-witi The east hair of Lot numl)er (317) three hundred and seventeen, Incorporated Vil lage of Logan, Ohio. Appraisd at J825. Terms oTsale cash In hand. Given under my hand at Logan, Ohio, this 30th day-of Janunry.lSSl. T. F. MCCARTHY, Sheriff. W. E. Hambiiu, Deputy. John P. White, attorney for pl'T, Jau 31 ow . 1 SAAB MEETINGS. The Hoard of School Examiners of Logan VUlago will hold regular meetings for the Examination of applicants for teachers' eertitlcatt R3'foIIows, viz : On the Third Wednesday of Feb ruary. April, June, August, October and December, at the office of the Snperlntendant, in ttaa School Building of said Village, eommen cloy at 10 o'clock, a.m.. of each day. Bv order of Examiners, J.H. DYE.Presdent. A- H. WlLSOX.Cleri.. June 21y PKOBATE NuTICE. Notice is hereby given, that the follow ing accounts and vouchers have been flled Iu the Probate Conrt of Hocking county, Ohio, for settlement, William E. FriMner, ndminihtrator of the estate of John W. FiiMiier,and theamc will come ou for hearing on the loth d.ty of February, 1SS4, at 10 o'.-iock, a. in., or :s soon thereafter aa may Ik- c-onvrnlont. W.M.T. ACKER. Probate Judge. January -.'i 3w BnsineM cards of Ave lias or less tC per annum. Slmplo announcements ofmarrlagoaantt deaths, and chnrch and benevolent society notices Inserted fr-e. Any additions to obituary notices will be charged Sceutsper line. Local bnslDMS notices 10 casta pcHn crr-3 . . SUBSCRIPTION $2 .CO TEE TEA E3TABLISI1ED IN 1856. THE OLD RELIABLE HARNESS SHOP Of Logan. N T. Enoch Karshner's Estate. The undersigned has been appointed am! quiiiiflrd aa Administrator ot Uie es t.ite of Enoch Karshner, late of Hocking aouniy, e-eeu. KOUEUT SWISEIIART, Jau. 17 3w. Administrator. would announce to the eitisena of Lsgas and vicinity that lie haa purchased lh stock ol Harness, Saddles, Collars Whips, &c, of R. C. Sandaraon aad will eontlnae tia buainMaatthe old stand, where wll. ba found Saddle ofevery description from tt tofla, BmgO Harness or all grades, prlCM froni SS to 153. Work Harness, heavy- and light from 2 to JJ0; Collars of all kinds from .50 cts so very be-t Wool Collar all nppTLtlier ror KJSD. Whlpa In ead Ieu variety, largest stock of flue warrao ved halebone whips in the city. Ham oa and Chains at low prices, Curry Combs and Brushes. A good Comb and Brush for 25&. A larjre stock of benutl ful PInxh Lap Ha. ' A good asMortment of Home Covers afiC Blnnkots. Very best Harness Oil at St per gallon. I two the very beat maWriat and employ none but skilled workraaa. unii and examine my stock and prieea lore piirc-iiuBiiijj. ausoous IG11J ted- Repairing promptly done. Shop la Wright Block, opposite First Bask of Loaa JTANDER30N. TISCHEE'S EXAMINATION!! Lift-saYhis: Present. 3 5-SfSig W-Si s-eH0C5 DSXIFRUirSX ,foreiann.:: Blooming: w) t " ir'T.3 CEOJCI r-1 Toe & other SS St Beta sad l.OOl things be S2Eti 22 1 inre er-fin fc nniiA the sronns & b kmmn so. VAiXESVUiLE, UUiS COCKSY OXZO S. WELDV. WM P. 1'P.ICS. WELDY & PRICE, Attorneys -at Law, Office, Dolliiou Bu'ldlnjt, Mailot Sirjt, LOGAN, ' - - OHIO. Fcl 21, ISS1 ly PROBATE NOTICE. Kotice is hereby given, that the follow ing accounts unii vouchors have been flled in the Probate Court or Hocking county, Ohio, for 1st partial rettlement, Bir.iu-1 II. BriKlit, Executor of the estate of John G. Blossor. deceased, and the same will come on for hearing on the 17th day 01 March, ISSt. at 10 o'clock a. m. or ns boon thereafter as may be con venient. ..-,, W. T. ACKER, Probate Judge. Ftbuary SI 3w A perfect euocc&s can be truthfully I rK ai ino opening 01 me ai? onage. 4b& rf U lJt rf . "frV W"W"MX V4A U&4 i- i . v . T,..' Pol fis.int. 10 can suspenu a si applied o Dr. Jones Ke.l Clo vei l Tome, which cares dyspepsia bi - lousnes"?, ctmivencss, u,m uiseusl-b i tho kidneys, liver and bladder. It is a perfect tonic and blood purifier ; it keeps the skin pure and bright, drives away pimples and makes tho general health excellent. Price 50 cenla, at Reber & Co. Harch 1, 'SO ly. Snre Cure for ISScs. The first symptom of PHes is au intense itcliingat nigbtafter getting warm- This unpleaat sensation is immediately relieved by an appli cation of Dr. Bosanko's ri!e Eem edy. Piles in all its forms, Itch, Salt Rhume, and Ringworm can bp permanently cured by the use of this sireat remedy. Price i)0 cents. Manufactured by The Dr. Bos free to each and every ono who is lanko Medicine Co., Piqua, O. Isold j i4 need of a medicine of this kind.; by Millor & Ca?. man in America. undorstanil that you own a great many houses and small farms in the suburns." "Yes." "Do you live on any of them?" "No." "Then yon don' t'raise anything?" "Oh, yes; every spring I -raise rents." A German wont to a friend and said: "Xo-niorrow I owe yon $20,000. I am ruined. I cannot pay it, and I cannot shleep a vink." Tho creditor said: "Vy didn't you vait to dell mo to-morrow? Now neither can 1 shlccp a virik." "What is 4 lady's sphere?" asked tho lady Principal of a public school on ex amination day. And a little red-headed urchin in thocorner squealed: "Mice!" In tho dreadful confusion that followed, tho freckled-faced liend escaped. They were boasting about ancestry. "My forefathers," said John, "came over from England on the Mayflower." "And ray r.ncery," said Pat, "kim over from Quanestown on tho Sunflower. It's .wrl.ciie, I am, begorra" Loiali CM' A Grsat Problsm. Take Ml The Kidney & Liver Medicines, LOOD TURIFIERS, Remedies. Dyspepsia And Indiceslion Cures. A Ague, fever Jlr.M. E, Allittin. Hutchinson, Kan., saed his life bv a simple T'iai Bottle of Dr. King's New Disco cry. for Consumption, which cau-ed hint to procure si large bot tle, that completely cured him, when Doctors, change of climate, and everythintre'sc had failed. Asthma ISronchitH. Ho:inenes, Severe Coughs, and ! Throat and Lnnj: 'ji.ca$Sj it is guaranteed to cu'e Trial Bottle free at F. Harrington's UrngStore. Large size. $1.00. Feb. 1."), 1 y r. (Cbn&KMdjyim Utt tfeat) How Watch Cases are Mack. It is a fact not generally known that tto James Eo Gold Watch Goes really coa tsin more pure, gold than many "solid" gold cases The demand for these watch cases hasd to the manufacture of a very poor grade of solid gold watch case low in quality, and deficient in quantity. These cases arc made from 4 to 10 karat, and a 5 or 6 karat easels often sold for 12 or 14 karate. It is hot economy to buy a watch, case so poor in quality that it will soon lose its color, or one so soft that it will lose its shape and fail to shut tight, thus letting in dust and damaging the works, or one so thin that a slight blow will break the crystal, and perhaps the movement. It IS economy to buy a James Bot Gold Watch Case, in which MONK of these things ever occur. This watch case is not an aperi wunt it has been made nearly thirty ttorsv Uazutox, p.l. Oct. at, last. Z sold trro James Bo Gold VTatah Cana thirer yean gtt -when they flirt came oot.asdtliej'arela good condition yet One of them ia carried by a carpenter, Mr.L. W. Crake, of Haxlcton, and only ahorra the 'wear ia one or two place; the other by Mr. Bowman, or Cunningham. Pa.; and I eaa peo duoe com or both of these caaea at asy Ume. 8ix.raszKB gaotst Jwnfir. baa S Mat ttaav KM Waik Caw FkitarlM, rUto. alskte. Pa, tor kaadaaiu Mutrmft raaakht miiW aav JBs t aa4Ktjiw WatoaC wnmafmm (2b (a ConXinuai) Infants and Children "Withoat Morplrfmo or Warootiaa. TVhat gives our Children rosy cheeks. What cures their fevers, makes them sleep; Tl CaatoHa. When Babies fret, and cry- by turns. What cures their colic, kills their worms." But Castorlaw What quickly cures Constipation, Sour Stomach, Colds, Indigestion : But CaataHaw Farewell then to Morphino Syrups, Castor OU and Paregoric, and HallCiMtorfau BBBBeBBVBBaVaaBMBBVBaBn Centaur Liniment. Aa.v- Bolstte cure- for Rkenmatiia, Spralas, Buxms, Galls, &c, suasl sua iastaurtaaeons Paia-relievear. The School Examiners of Hocking; coau t y, Ohio, will mevt at tho Union School Bouse ON THE , First and Third Saturdays of. - Eack Month. at 9 o'clock, a. in., except Jsnnnry. July ni AujUMt. .-ippllcxtitsmuat luralsh jrc y.ild envelopes by w'uch thay will raiv.. the result o: tlic xauiliiHtlou. TE.STLMOXIALS of good morl rbiracter Will be required u. those unlcuown to the Board. Thegruilii! i rrretienteU on a srnleof to 103 aud six clawa of certfUcatcs will be issued, viz: HRADK3. First Rlas, Five Yrars. o branch I;aj than Oiatul auuxeriencof not less than thr?e vonsocutive yenns ot teaching next preceeclijuc Hit application, eighteen months of which experienco shall have been in one phtce. Second Cl-uw, Three Years. When the applicant liKS;tnavei7;cof 95, no branch, ies'iian w.auu twenty lour nontnk.ox pcrienceln teachtnc Third Class, Twenty Fr.nrMontfcs. An average ofOO.'ui branch Iuss, than 85 and. eighteen month experfence in teachings Knurl!) eiass: Eighteen Months. An ky erase of S5, no branch less than 75 and twelve months experience in teaching. Kii:hOIuss,Tivelve Months. When in uo brai ch there is less than 70. Sixth Clavi, six months. When in no 'ranch there Is less than 60. TbW Is a tria,3 certificate und will not bo issued to an np- " pi. cant who has tanght, after Sept. 1,1832. As.itisf.etcry examination in the The oryand Practice of ti achinr; and a good de ereeofviccrss is teaching and aoverninjr o school will be f:ivorahly considered. Ab plicunts are required Jo, furnish testimo ulalaoftfood moral character. FBAXK GORDON. J. Ti. BRIGHT J. P. H.STEDEJt January 1, 1870. Kxamlhera FRANK MYERS, Occupies a Room lu tho Anil Billious Specifics, BRAIN & NOTiBL BUILDING, Force Revivers, Sreat -Health (Opposite Rochester's) Ho keeps a selected stock of ready mado Boots and Shoes. Custom Made Work a Specialty. RESTORER. A Desirable Small Farni for Thirty acres of &ou! laud, In Liberty tntrnshin. Fairfield county, two miles south of Itssil, on the old rickerinuton j AYER'S Cherry Pectoral No other complaints are so insidious in their attack as those affecting the throat and lunges none so trifled with by the majority of suffer ers. The ordinary cough or cold, resultins; perhaps from a trifling or uneouseious ex posure, is often bet the beginning; of a fatal sickness. Atku's Che&bt Pectoal haa well proven its efficacy in & forty years fight wit throat and Inng diseases, aud sltoold 1m takea ia all eases without delay. A Terrible Couch Cured. "In 18571 took a severe cold, which affected my longs. I had a terrible cough, and passed slight after sight without sleep. The doctors gave ae up. I tried Ayek's Chirk y Pec .roaAL, which relieved sjy lungs, induced tleep, aud afforded me the rest necessary for the recovery of my strength. By the continued use of the Pectokax. a perma nent cure was effected. I am now 62 years old, hale and hearty, aud ana ttyi4 your ChbBST Pxctorai. saved me. . Hobace Fairbsother.' SocUsgmus, i., July IS, USS. Croup. A Mother's Tribute. "While in the country last winter mr little boy, three years old, was taken ill with croup; it seemed as if he would die from strangu lation. One of the family suggested the use of AVer's Chekrv Pectoral, a bottle oS which was always kept la the house. Thia was tried in small and frequent doses, and to our delight in less than half au hour tha little patient was breathing easily. The doe, tor said that the Cheeky Pectoral had saved my darling's life. Can you wonder at our gratitude? Sincerely vours, -. ...t MRS-fijIJlAGEBXET." 130 West 1281b. St., Sew York, May 16, IK "I have used Ater's Cueekv Pectokaii In my family for several years, and do cos hesitate to pronounce it the most effectual remedy for coughs aud colds we have ever tried. A.J.Crase." Lake Crystal, 3Imn., March 13, 1SS2. " I suffered for eight yenrs from Bronchi t!9, and after trying many remedies with no suc cess. I was cured by the use of Ateu's Cuex-ryPectokai- Joseph "WAtDsar." Bvkalia, Miss., April 5, 1882. "I cannot say enough in praise of Atxe's CUERRr Pectoral. beliaTirp as I do that but for its use I should long since have died from lung troubles. . BRAODOJr. Palestine, Tesas, April 22, 1S82. Ko case of an affection of the throat or lungs exists which cannot be gretlyreliaved by the use of AVer's Cherry Pectoral, and it will altrays cure when the disease ia not already beyond the control of medicine. prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer &Co., Lowell, Mast. Sold by all Druggists. PROBATE NOTICE. Notice i hereby given-that the following accounts and vouchers have been tiled la inerniimtewnrioi iiocaing County, In short, take nil the l.ct qualities of all road. VS acres under wW"'?, ocing County. O., these, and the besi qualities of all tho best ; timber; Kood dwelling house an I barn- '"S Amerlnc "nardian ofFlor o Medicines of the World and tmi will find , jrood young orchard of choice fruit; rome' -.."V "'..j Anthr..iv FJti.rt ho HOP HITTERS have the teunUivo . nlent 'Wjtftir &mAmAMnK on. i. M-Vli'Jl, 155 1. hv 1 January zi- m. I !lii K& Xi m rs 3 Liu& P" 1 -5- C2r . 7M . w !" : & fe Wii d te Ki 1 JKT - M rR . n..-w";