Elkhart Sentinel (Newspaper) - November 28, 1889, Elkhart, Indiana v. 1 1866 AS THE NO 4 5. 28 18S9 110 Marion pix M. D. 1 Marion E. M. D. 132 Division 31. Berkey's trom r L i -i i and Sale by Leading MTd Solely by Davis Swing the of because the greater thau in aay other chum the toest Is the easiest to la the easiest to large majority of the New England creameries use tha factory the at where we have no aub etc. Send for illustrated BULL'S facilitates Teething and Price 25 i I ' C O and relieves tive 25 | LA CUBEB for Price 10 At all a southern and 8nnd^v. May 12 Shore ki Shore tu from Elkhart 18. via Bristol snd leaves a am 4:45' G. runs to leaves at 7:46 roBB via Bristol and via and 1 vb 12:46 p m -i a. viA Bristol to Gr. 1:90 p 0 mng to leaves at 4:10 4 passengers for 8:2Cpni n via Old 6:15 28 runs to g via hns froiD 6:80 a uP ' Grand 12:40nooD 26 ' 2:66 lin 21 No. 0, arrives from Air 40 1. 27 0bicae- a 8: leaves at rat 11:80, Afr iil does not audi Arrive daily 24 Chicago to Oos to train No. 28. " No. 37 at U Talk With the and Prom Hia IV He of tUe American Aleu Who Can Draw the Western 1889. a cozy little house in Mott New York just the Harlem lives famous in the magazine world for his drawing of the Readers of the great and monthlies find a in the life and nature of his Ho gained his position as an illustrator almost at a single Four years ago he was a ranchman of the without art making an occasional sketch or two for amusement in the intervals of cowboy Frederic the soring of he climbed up the the stairs to the art editor of with a of sketches on the Indians and horses in the war of the Apache He had just returned from that country at the end of his ranch A College in 1879 he started out to make his fortune ranching in the far An expert a shrewd and keen observer from the he soon rose from a cowboy into a The distinction on the plains is The owner of the ranch is the the whatever his age may the grizzled old are often the the wealthy from the East the But Remington's ranch did not The Indian troubles and hard luck pressed down upon and in he gave it lip as a failure and came on East. on his he determined to make a trial of his artistic fostered only by a bare month's study at the Yale School years His perfect understanding of the horse his close observation during seven years of ranching now stood him in good these trial sketches handed to Harper's there was a great lack of They bore no comparison with the finished work of the regular Yet there was in them a wide knowledge of the a reproduction ot horse but one that could be felt as not only accepted the sketches but sent him back to Arizona for first sketches of Geronimo's were printed late in the Those he did on his special mission there appeared throughout the summer with a series of articles Soldiers in the During and appeared drawings of Mexican horses and frontier Kansas cattle sketches and pictures of events in the such as racing and football and incidents on a But all this time it was as a drawer of the horse that be stood out most the early part of 1888 he illustrated for the a series of papers written by Theodore Roosevelt on Life in the Far Here he was in his element and his remembrance of his years in the saddle came forth in brilliantly graphic drawings of horse Later in the year he made drawings for Roosevelt's Work on a and Rifle on Crag and Hia knowledge of technique was constantly and what he knew of horse anatomy was brought into still better Within tlie last few months he has illustrated for the and written as well four papers on among the Indians and horses of the Last armed with letters from War Department and accompanied by a detailed Mexican officer of he visited the Mexican army in their camps and sketched the Theses ketches has just these Important pieces of has furnished countless sketches to and painted many characteristic But as a painter makes no He an Yet he works with his looking toward the future in AMERICAN TROTTING by Frederic year he spends several months in the picking up new materiaL When in New his afternoons are spent in the the mornings given up to His studio is a curious The wails are lined and the piled up with saddles and bridles and bits of of the ranchman and the Mexican There are studies of all types of horses scattered Remington himself is a stocky man of fine round-faced and smooth He has the artistic temperament a but it is an athletic His ways of and bis ideas of the who a ranK most people work a life time wasn't because I knew how to draw that I mot with my first 1 but because I knew the West bettor than any other I have been all over from the City of Mexico to the Saskatchewan up They recognized a latent quality in my work which none other drawing is done almost entirely from I understand the horse 30 that movement of his lias fixed upon For a color a hand o - n f id in the I sometimes use a but that is The model is there is a stiffness about and he struck an illustrative is alive and in Nature doesn't to drawing from a I am thoroughly familiar with all instantaneous but I use the camera I for a year The photograph lacks the interest which I seem to be able to give to horse And the best attestation of that is that my horse is incorrectly drawn from the photographic We know that the must be but it doesn't give the Now it is very easy for the artist who knows how these horses move to observe and feel the and then reproduce have no time to look at The interesting never occurs in nature as a but in It rarely ever happens that one gets a thoroughly good picture from a It's more what I leave out than I 1 merely fix the salient think If one desires to successfully the horse he should know the and the for horses are as different as Whae success I have had has been because I have knowledge of a No one can draw equestrian subjects unless he is an equestrian The most of our American horse artists live in the middle of New York and aren't out among These are the in a picture will put an Indian on a horse instead of the scrubby pony he really Knowing the type it is next the task to delineate it. the is matter of saddlery and frontier the perfect knowledge of opens up very wide Polos and the as a are the best horse They not only paint and draw them but they lead the world in their horse modeling in and Kowalsky are the most famous of these In Poland and Russia there is a wide diversity of horse stock and ranging from the in the cities tp the Cossack Those people live closer to their horses than we do There is a great deal in the liking of a horse to be able to draw him But the American artist should easily it would with such a variety of types as we the Western the American trotting and the thoroughbred These only need to be strongly individualized tp win Now there is too much sameness in the of In though the artists paint by Frederic they hadn't the knowledge of the Rosa Bonheur and perhaps they rely on models at outline sketches accompanying this were drawn by Mr. Remington to illustrate what he has here The individuality of the types is certainly very strongly AGE OF for the of Useful average age of the forty-one animals that make up the of in the last of the London was a little under seventeen while the fifty-four that are mentioned in the previous volume averaged a little over the same were of valued or they would not of have been sent to the roughly a hundred horses of sound and of whom it is safe to assume that every possible care was lived on an average as nearly as possible seventeen A few of them were killed after met with two died on their voyages to other the sea fatal to the including several Derby having died on The was barbarously slaughtered by Irish in 1884," is his epitaph in the Stud fell a victim to this disease in 1888inflamation, diseased peritonitis and broken blood are among the causes of a son of is described as having of old when no more than 14, and The Dart succumbed year to the same complaint when 25; a son and is the patriarch of recent of living is bale and hearty at the age of having won the memorable Derby of 1867. of Water in circulation of water in boilers la attracting more attention from engineers and the importance of lit is being more generally The best circulation in the cylindrical theral la to and ill the matter of the economical of but the should not be In tubular bailors the best practice tho tubes in vertical leaving out would be center The circulation is up the sides of the boiler and down Tubes placed zigzag never give good Was day when tho late Chief Justice Shepley was sitting on the Supreme Bench of Maine a of law Came up in a case in a pompous her of the bar acted as The Judge remarked lie should rule upon it such and stich a said the in a manner calculated to impress the should like to argue that before so an was the said Mr. drawing that is the case I shall with much emphasis on 1. Court expects you to replied the Chief Justice sternly and u put on with ir did not POLITICAL of K. on u Charge Case Out of tUe famous forgery the Nov. 33.The political sensation of Friday was the arrest of E. G. of the famous forgery case which played so prominent a part in the late Ohio The arrest was made at the instance of Governor-elect James E. United States Senator Sherman and Congressman It is said the disclosures in connection with the case will cause a profound sensation in the political charges AVood with perpetrating a libel William James E. Ben John S. S. W. B. C. Charles S. J. R. R. B. all members or of the or Senate of the United in that he counterfeited their names to a forged and with intent to disgrace these men and damage them in the eyes of the by leading the people to believe they were in a corrupt scheme to make money by violating the laws of the States by being pecuniarily interested in the passage of the ponding before The furthermore alleges that R. G. Wood caused this forgery to be published by delivering it directly or to Governor J. B. and to unknown to Wood's bail bond was fixed at 81,000. He tried for two hours while under arrest to obtain but He protests HEAR Sale of Seats for Opening of the Great Auditorium in Sum of First of for Opora Season SeU for Nov. 33.At Central Music Hall Friday night was begun the sale of seats by auction for the season of opera which is to mark the of the great beginning December 9. Patti and other singers of world-wide reputation members of the company which is to present the Italian grand The sale of thirty-six boxes in the Auditorium for the opera season netted last Add that to the price of the George W. Pullman secured the first his bid of being the highest The throe next sold for and were purchased by R. T. Marshall Field and Samuel Mr. Field secured a second box for The lowest price received for a the thirty-fifth was Nearly all the single seats were taken at SoO All the prices bid last laght are in addition to the card price for OF THE in a Collision Off tiie Maryland the Crew but Nov. 33.The revenue steamer Dexter arrived Friday morning with Captain Jenny and fourteen of the crew of the old Dominion line steamer also the body of Chief Engineer These were from the raft by the schooners Sama and King and transferred to the The Manhattan sunk in a collision with an unknown schooner Island Wednesday The steamer sunk fifteen minutes after the She a crew of thirty-two men and three steerage names One of the Manhattan manned by four picked up nine including the body of Chief Engineer C. J. of N. J. The rest of the crew and nineteen in got on a They were picked up about noon Wednesday by the schooner Charles R. lowan His Wife's Body and Blows Out Hia Own Nov. 33.At ter Point Friday morning John a shot his wife three ' times at the farm residence of Will Taylor four miles south of that Each shot took the in the mouth and the other in the backj bi the went to Goldsberry places near byj himself with a his The cause is to 1 domestic of long is yet but the Every body who travels on the Pittsburgh division ' of the Pennsylvania railroad knows Conductor John He is one of the greatest jokers in the and not punching tickets is busy telling stories or perpetrating a Conductor ears are They arc not for their but for wonderful His favorite trick is to double ears and then stuff them far into This makes them look as if they had been mashed with a other the train was along Altoona at the rate miles an Dinges ears and parsed through the fourth Nearly all the passengers were They regarded Dinges with The conductor's face wore a look of superb One old lady with curls and a pug nose could not take her eyes from the passed through the car again curiosity was so great that she could not the temptation to stop the matter with your she he as he elevated his and his ears flew back to their normal old lady nearly North loss of your wife have been a hard to but why do you wear such a band on your h When you take it off that hat will be it is worth it is IliM is der mather It do be I be if yer had the repast he He ate a whole fence of theatrical posters of and Was you bail iii the sum of two hundred was asked of a prisoner in the police court the other I suppose I will go on your was going to say that the President of the United States would be only too giad but I hate to bother him with such a some one I'll go to This is Mr. Harrison's busy and I don't want to disturb Free His Driver a Dealer wishes to prove to possible purchaser of his yard that there is money in - tho let you into a little that you might wani to follow There's a fat driver I wouldn't lose for any He weighs 240pcimds. toll this gentleman how long you've worked for me and how I manage to make you save your worked here Oi sits on ther waggin when oad gits Young Man AVill I must ask you to go homo earlier in the when you call upon my I find that the gas is increasing Man after his own assure I am willing to ait in the Will be kind enough to speak to about a who says that no occupied person is over observed a tramp to his laying down a newspaper he had been carrying a he's said the I could be occupied for a week select party ot square I I forget my Dollar Saved Dollar was good deal of truth in this old But we can save a dollar on a pair of and when it comes to $ $ when it's a suit and overcoat a right smart number of and see how near we come to the truth in making this and SO. MAIN trade is booming and very satisfactory in the of bus we are not making a neither do we propose to the of 1889, however we havent any intentions of going out of you have any desire to buy Dry Cloaks or Shoes and especially in Dry wool or canton Cloaks or Shawls make a big line for Hill and you most certainly will not haye any apology to make at the day of night we again 10 dollars to the working girls o' the OF PREVENTION IS WORTH OF Best Disinfectants PLATT'S CARBOLIC SULPHUR PURE PINE CHLORIDE OF