Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1885 — Page 3
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY. JUNE 17 1885
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SOCIAL. GOSsIP.
The Dark. "Where do tbe little chickens run When they are afraid T nt of the light, oat of the san. Into the dark, into the shade; Under their mother's downy ing, Jio longer afraid cf anything. Dear little gtr dear little boy, Afraid of the dark, 35M too Bond-bje to the daylight with joy, Bo ejad of tno night, lor fcarx! The dutne no l:irerr at all caa bring, It 1 the st ado w cf God's wing. Where do the lr.tio violets croep In l tie time of snow? In lot tie dark, to rent and sleep, And to wait for tue spring thev go ; Under the Rtonad where no storm can reich. And God take tinder care of each. I sm a king whea I rule myself, Stole protrb. Batter ro round about than to fall into the ditch. Branches of S:ot;h thistles lcoi prattj on boo. e bonnets. Fame never rnaia cs lie down contentedly cn a deathbed. Pope. Virtue is a kind of pood health, beauty, at d g cod habit of the pol. Oblcqny is a necea-ar ingredient in the composition of all true glory. Burke. The two powers whic1! constitute a wise man are those of bearing and forbearing. It took fifty years to bring the King James tracslation of the Bible into general use. To fret about a little trouble Only makes the trouble doable. One of the West Point cadets has 123 pairs of white bowsers. That is his education. Francis Murphy pays that mar raises are made in heaven and dissolved in alcohol. Drab white omeine like a tramo' shirt is one ol the fashionable colors this j ear. He that ascendes a ladder must take the lowest round. Ail why are above were onca below. No cord or cabe can draw sa forcibly or b;rid so fast as love can do with a single tlraad. Victor Hugo's definition cf paradise is pretty: "A place where parent i will al wave be yourg and children always little." Jcsh ELllicg: There is numerous lndividutls in the land who look upou what they hain't got az the only thing worth having. Our life, fame pierces longer at the other end, And books it farther backward dotn extead. Sir Thomas Oidbury. In Chicago the majority of the law reporters are women. There axe forty employed in the City Court Hooie, and they earn Iroui $G to $15 a eck. New Yorkers think it very nice to have boys assist at weddine as pagei. Dressed in fancy costumes, they form a unique feature of the ceremony. The lateBt style of bastle is made ot watch spring steel wire, aid may be used iir a cslander, a rat trap, a portable lightning conductor or a base-ball catcher's mask. Thi mundane spi.ee Is a mighty uncertain tort of p'ac. The bitter and sweet go hand in hand, and you always strike an up grade when jou ate in the biggest hurry. JoeHoward.of prcn ins csd ooinion always, has been pondering on the chief end of man, sec concludes: 'No matter what it ouht to ba, it 13 to get enough t-i eat and a place to sleep." Beferring to the wealth of flowers at Florence, a correspondent writes thence: "Yesterday I bought four dozen beautiful Marshal Niel and other rcses for half a fiat c." The ilerrhant Traveller thinks that if P.esident Cleveland were to marry a Republican siil it would eive the old line Djoiccistsaeiicckfroiu which they never could recover. The poet Whittier once lent a volume of Plato to one of the ntj'g boring f armors, and wbtn the bcr.k was rp turned asked, "Well friend, how did tb me my friead Plat??'' "First-rate," said the ftraier; 4 1 see he's got some of my ideea." "Wem out with shopping" they call it when a Chicago lady has tarried too long in the back room of e confectionary store, and fcts to be tent home in one of the carriages, with difcreet drivers, that are kept withia call by the obliging proprietor. Every day we discover more reasons why Adam muat have been exceedingly hapoy. The last thicg that Lai come up to strengthen our belief is the rm conviction that his wife never asked Litn why he didn't make the garden like tha man next door. It is a delightful sensation which a new passion bfgius to stir up within us when tae eld one is not entirely departed. Thus at subset we tote pleasure' in seeing the moon rise cn be opposite 6id- of the heavens, and rejoice in the double splendor of both luminaries-. , The wise and good, men who revised the Bible rave done more they have erected that wbKh inUat Uar the very roots out of the bfst English literature, were it not that their edict is impotent. Neither Paradise Lest cor Shakejpears'a tragedies will be rewritten to transform hell into sheoL Mrs. Napier Hipg:ns is writing in England a history of women in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, showing that the decay of chivalry, the risa of the . new learning and the trcgress of the Reformation marked an age in which women was more Influential in politics, society and thought than she had been before or has been since. A Catholic Op! mo a of Victor Hago. Father Phelan in the Western Watchman. He lived without a principle, and he died without a prayer. Knch would be a fitting epitaph for Victor lias?. Be was the greatest literary demagogue of any age. Konsieau ard Vsltaire taught the pople the princip'es ot blasphemy and tjave them gracd epics of literary imniety. Hug piped the popular variations. Therefore was he the demigod of the French public Hugo V cu d never has ba known had h9 b?en tcm ont.-ide of Franc?, and there his fame will not outlive the present generation. His pcetic cenics wan the traditional Frsnch fubiette; piquant, nie and a tri lie naughty. The lahi-n or the hour is titillation, and he was a tickler. Victcr Hugo wj a 'sn of the timei, nothirg mere. And svl moat be the time in Fiance when a miil'oa pcop'e could turn cnt at bis funeral. God gave the people lator to turn their mnd from the pleasures of seree. When our Il-at parents were driven cnt cf Parad'-e they were told to labor and sweat. The Frese people caa Ü7e on le than any other pe)p:e of the globs, henc they are les boord to labor; hence they es cape mcch of tha penalty ot the original tracfgresaioo, and have much more time to indulge tLeir rssiions than less favored peoples. Light wite, liiht novels, lig'it lab r and light principles of morality, constitute tie steck in trade of French civilization. Victor Hngo buried ia the Pantheon and the Lord of tb Sanctuary and meek St. Genevieve are cbMijed to retire to make room f.r him. Both arms of the croes that surmounted the vestibule were chipped ofT, cot to effend the spirit of Hngo. Tire French re artistic in every thing and polite even in their impiety. A political earthquake will hurl the bones cf the piper out of the sacred precincts, ai those of other and greater econcdrels ttan he were hurled before. France is a Ecod place for a blasphemer to live in, but a very bad place for him to die in. That people can not keeD cp the'r frivolity forever, and the rtomen. they become serious, that mercer. they begin rropirjg among the tombs. Tennyson sends a wreath to be placed on his grave, with the inscription: "To the greatest poet of the aze." It was znent that the dead put should bury its dead. Tennyson has been dead these maoy years, hlv Xcneral only i delayed It is with poet as with painters. When the brush fell from the bands of religion smal riper bean marching cp and down the world. We have no masters la art or poet ry since that unlucky day. Some of the. orate rs at the grave declared that it was not a
,1 funeral, but an apothees'su That is proper ' Tha Egyptians havs their cats, and why
should not the French have their Victor Hugo? For our part we think h is a gool enough god fir the manikins who woran. p him. KNOTTY PROBLESS, Our readers are Invited to furnish original enigmas, chrades, riddles, rubscs and other "knotty Problem," addressing all communications rela tlve to tu is department to . B. Chadboarn, LewUtes, 2. aine. o. IS JO. A Wlutor's Tale. Oh, icsny the woes the urchin knows hen wintry winds are whirling; The frtcjueiit task Lis eldeis ek Wbile etioOTballa wail (or hurling: U!iMuiiel books and wandering looks aie fruits of last nUht's statin; Tenp'ailons aye betet his way. And earn Iii in much be rat In?. If in r-mor?e ne turns his course, To his Iei50nss:rive3, Fowb playmate then will next spa'n, With taJen he well contrives Or "jolly time" anO. "port that's rrlme," Till Jtfsoas teem a bore; Ti e fport he pains nor mch conpl9lrn, Though shamed by teachers all and more. Sylvia. No. 1231 An Anagram, '.V' ijacUt am a brooi h," sid a cuffy to me, 'I uuMb it quite flt lor a voyege to de sea." Now, Cufly 's expression, that seems so absurd, V ill f urnirh the key to a ratber long wordDerived from the Greek that teils us the name Of a wonderful battle of fabulous fame, "1 wist the frogs and the mice, a conflict quite Kory, As Eon.e one describes it in fanclf al story. Nelsonias. No. 1 122. Think Before Answering, This elmple problem tai perplexed persons from whem a correct solution might ba speedily expee'ed. In one instance, a learned doctor's remit was more than three times as pre at as that cf the village sshcolma'am. What do 3 on make of it? A man eold a p;g for 7, bought itba:k for ?G, and afterward eold it for $!. How much d d he make by his speculation? E. Wight mas. No. 1223. A Charade. Sir Lancelot du Lac goes by; He bus ridden trie liveloLg day; He is nut in qae&t of the tioiy Grail, To find It it he may; For all the gallants al my aU. liave sworn to their llece. the King, To search, till one of them shall find. At last, the wondrous thing. Fir Lancelot is faint for sleep, And he, with one ligtu bound. From ! addle t prints, and lays him down Upon the mossy ground: From court be jirst. but well he lovei 'Ihe forest fair and free. And with hU last be slumbers there; Fail well content is be. When sleep has sealed hin heavy eyes, üe sees bat in a dream The Holy Gratl co pansitiR ty. With ttrauge aud mjM'e cleam; And then be hears a voice my. "A biae knight here lies low ; Ei't our pure charge is but for one Ubose heart is wLite risiow." Jos Amoky. No. 1224. Of Place and Time. If trade cf iron, wcod or brass, 1 Flop jou w htre you wish to pass; If 1 1 e of earn, or bione or (and, My province tili is t withstand; IiuHI In gold I t.hould appear 1 f rucolh the road and make It Clear. I fceive the herald to dedne A fpurious fro-n a real l!n-; erve the musicisn to divide His tncasure and hin t rue decide. The lawyer cau not Tate a fee Till first he hss been tailed to m; fut others think their case the best And t-afcht when from me repressed. AS. No. 1225. A Frame. A A Hake the frame of four words, each having eight letters, eo tbat the letter A shall come at each cf the four corners where the words interact. The words mean hindrance, one who demands, a boaster, sweet smelling. L. U. D. No. 122G A Name ot Odd Parts. Well known I am in modem story, Remembered as a Meld of elory, Mbere Britons, though they triumphed, blerl. My rarae has strange lnvredicnts in it; Yon fiDd ope half in half a minute, The other In a lion's bed. AM. The Month' Prize. Solutions in competition for the monthly prize should be forwarded within six days after the date of Sentinel containing the puzzles answered. The Msy Award. The best lot of answers to tha "Knotty Problems" of May came from Sadie Itobsrts, Indianapolis, to whom the prize is awarded. The list cf C. H. Flint ranked second, and was nearly equal t) tha best. Answers. 12CC 1, Brag not on garb. 2, Rail on no liar. . 1-07. April fool. 12(8 Fortunate. Ii'' 9 Te thumb and Sneers. 1210 Coial. 1211 Presbyterian. 1211 Ttej are people of re-Ii(s) ability. Two Eooka and a Blind airl. lli'S Lottie Nunn, of Cincinnati, is canvas iing our city in the interest of two very daPghtful little books of her own writing. She is the danghter of Eev. Mr. Nunn, a Baptist minister of Cincinnati, and feeling it incumbent upon her to do something toward gainirg a livelihood, she dictated the rnaan;cript while another wrote, her eyesight not b9irg suS-icfer.t to er.ab.'e her to use the pen. e hope the citizens of Indianapolis will respond liberally to her call. One of the b)ok, "Ada Greenwood," protrsys the life work of a young Christian girl who, by her influencs, dran 8 many to Christ The book is interesting both to old ard young, and teaches a meet precions life le'&or. 'Golden Sunbeams." the subject of the other, is a collection of short stories and original poems, adapted more especially fjr children, and parents.cou'id not find a better or purer book to place in their little ones' hands. Each book contains 200 pages of good Englieh type and bound in cloth covers. The price cf these little gems is $1. Narrow Escape of a Street Car Chicago, Jnne 13. This afternoon the propoller William J. Aver ill ran against the State street bridge, which was closed, and on which the Stute street car, loaded with passengers, was about to go on. Before the driver had time to back his horses f e bridge awunr, and the horses went off the abutment. Fortunately, however, the whiffle-tree broke and the car was left tändln; on the edse of roadway, while the horses fell Into the water. One was drowned, and his mate swam to the dock and was hauled out. Caught tn the Act. Et. I.ovis, nne U. An AtcMwn, Kaa.. special to the Fost-Dlspatch says: "This morning Jacob M. Smith, an old resident, was arrested on a Charge of attempting to burn his large pork packing establishment In East Atchison last night. He at once confessed his guilt. Ihe property Is valued at f 11 000, and the object was to secure the insurance and money from the railroad company. Ererytblng had been arraneed to burn the building, put detectives nirped the Calr in he bud,
TO COMMODORE SCHLEY.
On his proposition to clcee tbe Naval Asylum at FhiUdeipnia. BY HESRT KARLSTEX. What! drive the old men forth, who have braved the cruel North OrT coasts of icy Labrador and in the Polar seas? V bote throats are brown with tan from the breezes T't Japan And the summer winds that fan the white-girdled Cycladts? ii. Could you iec them as they roam the red paths aroond iheir "uome," Or lounge cpon the bencbea underneath theswarIds bousti, Tou would ray 'tvonll be a shame thus to ro? the halt and lame, Wbo hve earned enduring fame with their peicscompelliug prows III. Why, the very trees would 6igh, and lift upward toward the rky Their myriad leaves in suppliinca as if a hand to May; And tbe river, where It speeds 'twlxt dec tying wtarves and ree ls. Would ob as one who pleads that a curse be turned away. IV. Eo let It be a breath that is born to meet its death, This murmur of disloyalty to loyal hearts and true! Let the jolly old Jack Tars, with their crlpplel limbs aud fears, Etlll see the stripes and sUr3 'neata God's canopy of blue. A MMPLK SfOKI. New Orleans Times-Democrat. "I don't tole about that never yet," said Max, laying down his awl and the shoe he had been working upon, aud unstrapping the Iap-stcne from his knee. "It has happen now more aa one year ago, but hardly yet can I speak about iL" Here Max paused and let his blue eyes wander out over the water, while his hands nervously rolled and ud rolled the leather apron across his knees. The little cottage, whose front room served as shop, stood close to the edge of the bay, and he had the whole marine traffic of the port before his eyes whenever he raised them from the old boots and shoes, the repairing of which formed his chief industry. Transatlantic steamers puffed in and out, barques and schooners flitted noiselessly past, bound for the tropics with cargoes of breadstuffs, or returning freighted with shaggy coccatuts and miraculous bunches of banana?; strenuous trigs, laboring valiantly with their tows of barges, conveying cotton to the Bhips at anchor in the roadstead; vegetable boat frcm the ma'n land, fishing boats from the dcepsca fishing grounds, all these went by bin door, and the shuttles carried tbe threads of his thoughts to and fro across the ocsan, weaving for him a web of speculative ar.d imaginary experience, eju'te distinct fioi the dull routlna of his daily life Tans, wbile what we called Max was pounding away with sober industry upou th new half-eole of a boy'e stubb7 shoe, or stitching a patch upon the side of a cowhide boot, another Max, of whom we had only now and tben an evanescent glimpse, and standing on the deck of that low black steamer with tbe red stnofcestsck, with his face Bet f aitst the spray-laden wind, while his heart leaped up and bis veins throbbed with that glad sense cf wings, born of swift buoyant motion and a wide horizon. "You see," resamed Max, in a low tone, while his eyes came back from the white sails cf a brigantine that were melting slo wly in the evenine fky, "my mutter she marry for the second time, und she coom mit her huitand to Texas, but Ishtay behind in New York, where I learnin' the shoemaker trade. By and by I finish my trade, und when ther ifon't be much work In New York I say will I g o to Texas, may be I there shall my mutter find. So I co?m. und for a long time I don't find noting of ber, nnd then, joost all at once, I coom right into her house. It was one night gettin' pcorty lae, und I walk into a little taverns up there by New Braunfelp, und when I ask the landlady can I some supper haye, she joost cjtca me round tha ceciE und begin cry in', und say, 'Why, Max, Max, don't you know your own mutter." Poorty soon I find out that her husband had been since dree year dad?, nnd the t as this little taverns keep, und hardly could a living make 'cause of the timc-s bein' so very hard. By und by, when I done supper, she say, 'Coom mit me; I got tomething to ehow yon,' und she take me into her ted room und ehow me the poortievt little firl sleepin' in her bed. She was joost si white like a lily, mit yellow hair like gold all rumpled cp in leetle carls all over her head, nnd ber cheeks sored like two roiei My muttf r bold up tha lizht si I can better ice, u- d she look at me und Bay: " 'Max, this is your sister.' "Well, ii you belief me, that go all over me joost like when I drink a eia?s of good wine, und I could cot rest before I had take her up in my arms und make her laugh und eay in German : " 'Ich liebe dich, bruder Max.' " Here Max paused again, while two great tears rolled unchecked from his wide, blue eyes and ran unreservedly down his cheeks. "Eo, then," he resumed, with simple directne?s, "I say to my mutter, 4Coom you mit me, und I make a living for you bote.' 'So, then, we sell tha taverns so guiek as we cn, und we coom down here, und buy this leetle place, und rieht away I get work in a shop on Marget etreet, end we live very tappy- opby she grow more poorty every day. Now jou fee me. I joosta common ogly Datchmans, und neider my mutter ain't r.o beauty, end all my eisters at the Nort, tbey joost the same, plain, and noting at all P'rticiier about them. But little Sjphy? Yen do cot think she belong to the some fsmily. Every dy when I look at her 1 io mjBtlf say, 'How ever yon come to be bcrn'd like that?' Und I am always afra d sbe grow ugly by und by, when she oldsr is trow. Bat she keep ioost on the en ma like that first nicht I see her, only her hair gro v long, und sbn pet tall nnd shlim like oae of them tall white lilies I seen, growing ia some gardens. Ail my heart joost wrap its-1 f around her. People say to me, 'Max, why yon not marry? there D?s so und so, nice ßirl, make you a nice wife!' But no; whea I lock at 6o?hy. ail cder girls look like btravard geee bfeide my canary bird there. Ach, H'mmel! fche was bfautifnl." The low voice died away in a sigh. The sun was no quite out of sight, and only a pnk flash lingered across the aky, which, mirrored in the water of the channel, seemed to mark cut the pathway for the fishing beats thr.t came slipping in from the gather ice shadows before a fitful wind. Bolivar L'ght flashed oat across the tumbled waves tbat marked the outer bar, and lesser lights bean to rock at the mastheads of the ships in tbe effing. There was a sound cf somebody moving in ihe sdjoining room, and the ray of a lamp shone through the partially open door. Max leened forward and peered In, then resumed almost in a whisper: "My mutter, too, vorship her, und bote of us don't think of nothing but how we shall plesee her. She was in the hous. joost like a queen on a trone. She go to school, und always I co mit her und carry her books. At school ehe learn eingin' some little songs, und she sings to sweet. I say to my mutter she must lessons have. So I buy a plany, a second-hand, yon know, bat still good, nnd I hire the bestes brofessor ia town, und pooty soon It was joy to hear her sing und play. The brofessor is organist at the Catolic CbnrcL. My mutter und me we bes Lute ran, nnd at first we like it cot that the sing at the Catolics, but the brofessor say she one grand voice, nnd when she learn good sing the best music she always can plenty money make for herself. "So then she go U that church, und I go always mit her, because it seem not right tbat a tender, young thing; like tbat go ever out by herself. Und besides It waa such joy to bear her voice soar np above the organ
end all the cder voices icost like a golden bird what somebody lets out of a cage into the sunlight. Ach Himmel! ach Himreel!" The frequent movement of his hand te his face betrayed the rapidity with which the great tears, taking advantage of the obscurity, were now rolling down from the blue yes. "Well so it is," he went on with another heavy sigh, "that she got acquainted with this young man who sing tenor, nnd their voices joost suit each oder, the brofessor say, rtnd tbey sing always togedder. I don't kecw wby tbat is, out right away off I hate that man. He Is a fancy sort of young fellew. mit a 'ittle cane, und a flower in his but tonhole, nnd he hold himself joost up so." atd Max illustrated 63 well &3 the stoop ia bis shoulder would allow, "and he walk mit a little awing to his heal, nnd he think mere as the whole wcrid of M'ster Me end noting at all of anybce'y else. So they ting always togadder," reiterated Max heavily, "always togs di!er. und he lock at her, und talk to her, ULd tay BOnetmgs what makes her laugh end birth go as I never Baw her blush before. und he biicg her flowers, und bye und bye und bye one mornlrg they joost walk pait me in the church door, und a'k home togedder, ail the way talking und laughing, mitont rever thinking that I am there e'esa behind. Bo that gees on all summer, und Sophy ! my, how roorty that girl is become! Her voics is like sunshine und the smell of flovers und the sccg of birds all mixed togedder, nnd she all the tirr.es sing, sirg. They Bhall a little o-peia play, und Sophy shall be prima donna cud this joung man the lover's part will play. Here recollctionbecame tco bitter for ciln utterance, and Max ceased sp?aking. The yellow disc of a full moon rolled rapidly up the east, and abroad Eheet of crinkled s'Jver was suddenly stretched acros3 the sombre waters. "Ach Gott," sighed poor Mix, wiping away his tears, "May ba you remember tbatoperaund how the people clap und hand ur.d cry 'bravo!' 'encore! when the prima donna sing. That was my leetle 8ophy, what I have twelve year before teach to say, 'Ich liebe dich, bruder Max.' I tell you, I was proud, und everybody sj that voice was wonderful, und some da7 it shall make a great stir in the world. Joost tha very next week coom that dark girl mit the big Mashing eyes und a voice that sound like a croak frog beside my canary, bnt everybody is eoing wild about ber, und, whew! away rdy my fine Mr. Me-bird to flutter around this gaudy new flower. She too will lessons take from tbe brofessor, nnd then she sing also in the cheir, und poorty soon mv po"r leetle Sophy begin to droop und droop. The fine young man mit the leetle cane und the flower in the ;bctton-hole walk home now mit the dark girl. "We tave Sophy too tenderly bred. . She can notir g bear. So she loose all her tine spirits und don't Bing no more nnd when she sit don by the piany, she joost make a fe chords und go away by herself ia her o-vi .little room. So my mutter und me we have much headache, und what we shall do we don't no more know. Und then I say, I take her u little while away. So I give up my place wbere I have steady werk all the time, end the time is fix that we shall the next day sail for New York, und she shall a yenr stay mit my sister there, und study from the bestes b ofessor what I can find. ' But Sophy don't take no interest. She see my mutter make ready her clothes, und every thine fix. and she joost smile a weai little smile, und shake her h?ad. "When it is growing late already, und the sun is most eettin', I say all of a sudden "'Where is Sophy' "'In her room,' my mutter say, but sometirg tell me no no she is no more there. Then I open the door very sft, und so it ii true. Ehe is no more there, but joost a leetie paper on the window curtain pinned, uu 1 say: " 'Whv ball I go on liTintr, since I am no more happy, nor mate anybody else happy V "I take only time to read it so quick what I can, and I run the house out so my mutter dink I ga crazy. I can't eil what make me go Btra'ght to the water, but I run there eo fast as I can, und joost so e;on I turn the point, there she is walking before me not so very far. he have a handkerchief tied over her eyes, and the wind blow her dress back, as she is walkin' very guick, und I can hear she is siegln'. I run so fast as can troo that deep sand, but she too very fast walk, und presently she go straight out into the Gulf. It beshigh tide coming in. und the waves run to meet her like they is glad, und she reach out her bands nnd touch their head joost so like tbey is some frien'ly dogs. "I shout und shout, but the wind it blows my voice away, und she go on deeper und deeper, till I can noting see bat her head. Ach, Gott! my heart bursts wide open in my bosom, und I think I must fall right do vo, but my feet keeps on running joost by themselves. "When I get to the water I can no mire see her. I swim out where sse was, u"d presently I see her long hair floating. By the time I am there it is gone again, but I dive, und then I come up mit my bah? in my arms. Nobody in there to he!p me, und for that I am glad. I bring her home, und my mutter und me we everything try win: we krows how for bringing her to life hick, und bye und bye she open her beautiful eyes, end eay in a soft whisper: Ich liebe dich bruder Max.' "That is all, und then her eyes go shut egain, und ehe no more breathe." Frnx Grat. Torgue amlPea By a Politician. I said a foolish thing one day, (But what of that? Doa't ail men do ii ?) And when I found it didn't pay, 1 stiaitway easily withdrew it. 1 wrote a foolish thing one day, ('Twas printed and the millions saw It) And now I find it didn't payConfound the thing, I can't withdraw It. Chicago News. Dow-right Cruelty To permit yourself aud family to "butler!" With sickness when it can be prevented and cured so easily With Hop Hitters! !1 Bavirg experienced a great dial of " trouble!" from indigestion, so maca so that I cause near losing my Life! &!y trouble always came after eating any food However I'ght And digestible. For two or three hours at a time I bad to go thrccgh the meet Excruciating pains, "Ard the only way I ever got" Relief!" Was by throwing up all my stomach contained. No cue can conceive the ' ains that I had to go through, until "At last!" I was taken! "So that for three weeks I lay in bed and Could eat nothing! My sufferings were bo that I called two doctors to give me something that would stop the pain. Their Efforts were no good to me. At last I heard a good deal ' "About yonr Hop Bitters! And determined to try them." Got a bottle in four hours I took the con tents cf Ore! Next day I was out cf bed, and have cot teen a "Sick!" Hour from the same cause cince. I have recommended it to hundreds of others. You have no such "Advocate as I am." George Kendall, Alle ton, Boston, Mas. Columbus Advocate, Texas, April 21, '83. Dear Editor: I have tried your Hop Bitters, and find they are good for any comElain t. The best medicine I ever used In my imily. H. Taxisxb, rSTNone genuine without a bunch of green hope on the white label. Ehun all tha vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" 61 "Hepa" lothslrname.
VTIT AND PX.BA8AJTTBT.
Const that dar lost wbofe low-dceoendlng run Sees from thy pen no fiendish joke or pan. "Is yonr hnsbandan Odd Fellow?" "Weil, I should imagine he is; never saw such a strange man in my life." The wedding bell hss a very sweet tone.bnt it is cot so decisive as the tone of the belle after marriage. Yonkers Statesman. He (reading a paper) A Georgia man has sold his wife. She What a shame! He I don't ktow about that. He got $200 for her. "Dees our constant chatter disturb you?'' atktd a lady of a follow passenger on a train going West. 4 No ma'am; I have been married niga onto Ulirty years." "Why does a hen cackle?" asks an inquisitive exebanre. We have never read uo on this subject, but always supposed the eex of the bird might account f jr it. "Will the coming man be happier?' asks a writer. It depends to a great extent upoa whether his wife has got tired and goas to sleep or is elill up waiting for him. Mio Innocence: "What? Two dollar?! Why, you're just too dear for anything' Cobby: "Go aiey, M133; if ye'd only tould me that last week, it's married I was this mornin'." Yourg mother "Do you think baby looks most like me or his fatner?" Nurse "Like you, mum. Mr. Jinks is a mighty handsoms man !' Advertisement Wanted A competent and civil nursemaid. A New York State dairy ma:d has bqc-c-'tded in n iiting nine cows in 2S minutes, and that wiihout being kicked once. She'd piobabiy go tbroneh her husband's wallst in live seconds. Detroit Free Press. Emerson says, "All the world lores a lever." To'sibly, bat the love of all the world doesn't make the lover any more contented so long as one little snip of a seventeen year-old g'ul says that she can be to him only as a 6ister. Ye," e-vid the widow Smith, as she hovered o'er the dying embers upon the cold, cold hearth, ' I have one comfort left I know where poor John is these bitter cold nights, and I know, too, that he is wbere it is nice and warm." A clergyman In Illinois is reported to have startled his flock a few Sondays ago by the announcement: "Kemernber our commuulen service next Sunday forenoon. The Lord will be with us daring the morning services and the Bishop in the evening." Friest "Tell me, Murphy, how cam9 you by that black eye? Were yoa fighting, eh?" Murphy "Well, Indade, I won't decalve yer riverene; but sore, if yer riverencs only seen Mick's eye, now. thro'h you'd eay thpre waa nothing wrong with mine at all, at alL" Wife "Well.doctor, how is my husband?" Doctor "Getting along finely. He is not in a ciitical state at alL" "Sorry to hear that." "Well, that's queer." "Indeed it isn't; it's a sign he's pretty sick." "Why, madame, in what way?" "When he's we. 1 he's mighty critical, I can tell you." A youegmother, traveling with her infant chi'd, wrote the following letter to her husband at home: "We are all doing firt rate atd n joy ing ourselves very mach. We are in excellent health. The boy can cranrl about cn all fours. Hoping that the same can be f aid of you, I remain," etc. "I wish I bad eyes in tbe back of my bead," said a ycucg lady the other evening "Why"afked a devoted admirer.braathless'y. "So that 1 c--u!d see what was going on without the trouble of turning myhsad." "Yon can turn my bead witaout any trouble," responded the youth with a gloomy sigh. Mrs Brown recently advertised for a French cock, ard was surprised to receive a call from en applicant of decidely Hibernian appearance. ,4You were born in the northern part cf France, I presume, said Mrs. Bromp. "Not exactly," replied the applicant. I came from a little island just off the ccast." Ycung wife (just home from the cookingeehool) I feel so encouraged. Miss Parloa complimented me on my progress to-day. Bnt poor Miss Smith! I am really scrry for her. She tiles hard, bnt sbe doesn't seem to get cn at all. Ycung husband You must remember, my dear, that Miea Smith has no ore to practice on. "Beloved brethen," remarked a country minister at the close of his sermon, "among the pennies and two-cent pieces of last Sabbath's collection I was surprised to find a gold coin cf considerable value. As there were no strangers in the congregation it was evidently put there by mistake. By appiyipg to the" treasurer and proving propprty the owner can recover his money. Let us 1 unite in prayer. They were coming out of the theater, and as he put ber cloak about her he asZ6d: "Well, how did you like it? ' "Oh, I didn't like it at all; it waa miserable." "Indeed!" "Yes, I couldn't see anything nice about it." "Why, I'm surprised I hought it masnSScent.'' "Magnificent! Bnt tben, of course, yen couldn't tell; why, it was nothing but crmmon plnsb, and she thinks every oae will suppose it sealskin." "Bat I was speaking of tbe play." "Oh, yes, the play was pretty good, but didn't you notice the sacq ne tbat horrid Smith girl wore?" Boston Post, The Whole Panilly An English traveler in looking over some American town names came across the weilknewconesof Pawtucket. Shetucket, and Nantucket. "Haw! haw!" he exclaimed. "I'm blessed if the whole family didn't tike it!' An Insulted Man. 'Gus De Smith is very angry at you. Hs ssyB you insulted him at the railroad deo t tbe other day." remarked Hostetter McGiunistoGllboolv. "Yes, snd I'll insult him wons still if I can lay my fcand3 on him. The miserable scoundrel saw me going off with my nio'he -in-law on one arm and my wife on the other, and be aked me if I wasn't going on a pleasure trip." Sletereologtcal Item. It was in the smoking room of aa At'Antio 6temtr that a worthy Teuton was talking about weather forecasts. "Lock here, ' he raid, "I tell yon vat it is. Yon pelter dond take no stock in dem vett-r predictions. Dise beobles dond know nodirg. Day can't tell no petter as I can." "But, my deer sir," said a person near bv. "tbey foretold the storm which we haye jast encountered." "Veil, tfat ish so," said the Teuton, "but I tell yen vat It If. Dat storm vould haf come ytet de same if it had not been predicted." How it Happened, Philadelphia Call J Boston Dame "Oh, Eulalia, I am ashamed of you. Yon allowed that young man to kiss yon. I saw it. And yoa know he is no relation." Eulalia "Bat, ma, yen know I am so neaisightcd I can't tell a con-relation from my own brother without my eye glasses. "Ob, well; bow did your glasses get oEf?" "He accidentally knocked them off." "Indeed. What with?" "Hia his note." The Modern Girl's Force. Exchange. Brown The modern girl is a useless creature. Kcbinson Think 80? B. Certainly. Good for nothing but dawdling over tbe piano or largaiahing before the lacking glass. She has no force to her. K. Don't know aba at that. There's Smith's girl, now RWell? R. Well, Foe and Dee, fine young men, both fell in love with her. She encouraged both, and from being fast friends they became bittef enemies. Then, while tbey were running around chasing each other with clubs on her account, she quietly goes off and marries the aid at the roller-rink who
taught her skating, thus making three men mirab!e. B Three? R Yes, tne two who failed to get her and the one who got her. No force to her. You're mistaken about the modern girl, my friend. A Clash of Wits. Beed, of Maine, and Sunset Cox have Deen together in Congress for many years: They are both wits and love to chaff each other. Not lorg aince a friend ot Reed asked him: "Tom, have you read Cox's new book? Ttey eay tfcat it is good for men. women and children." With a queer, quizzical look on his face, Heed draried out, "Yes, especially good for children." Boraehow this tot into the newspapers, but Keel thought no more of it. Several days after, however, he was somewhat surprised to receive a copy cf Mr. Cox e newb09k handsomely bound. Oa tha fly leaf was pasted the Dewspaper clipping, and underneatn. a neat incrij.t:oa from the author, hoping that P.eed would be benefited by its perusal. It Hill Come liack to You. You have a father? You have a mother? You love them. But orce in a while yoa grow Imratienr, and the meannessjol your tature crcrs cut; it wreaks itself oa an innocent father and mother, perhapi, and tbey suCer the pubijbtneat of a cross word califd up by another's annoyance. The hard word is spoken. It may be regretted, forgiven, and forgot, but ii can never be racaL'ed. Father and mother will sigh and forgive, but tome day it will come back to yon. Yesterday, maybe, a little one ran ud to you emiliugly, and with the innocent heaven-born confidence ot child hood, clao riDg its little hands, that would not hirm a fly. in your face. The childhh actioa de l'ghted its author, but it annoyed yen. Yen were bUEy and reproved the little one. Two pftrly tears stood in her great blue eyes, her lipe filtered, and she turned away from you. The era cf childhood with its happy, fleeting hears, will erase the unkind word, but Seme day it will come beck to you. A beggar stands at your door. The rain is pouring in torrents throngh the black atmosphere of the night, and the sharp, vivid Ijgatenings only intensify by their violent contrast the awlulcesa of the darkness. The beggar's plea for shelter is punctuated by the blaet that bowls forth its anger, and you turn your brother off. It will come back to you. II you are impatient, testy, ill-humored, spiteful, malicious, cowardly and mean.your whole life will be a constant reckoning with eyil actions, whose enormity is only equalled by the increasing wickedness of the future; and an nnatcced past is always the pre carsor of a more reprehensible future. A bad heart is a boomerang of passions, whose evil censequer cs alwas fall on the head of their luckless author. On the other hand, good deeds work in a similar way, with the rules that gov era conclusions, causes and exacts; if either good or bad, tbe result will be in conformity with th6 nature of tbe deed. Your bad deeds and good deeds are juries that sit upon the destiny of your life on d decide the verdict of happiness or despair. Seme day they will cone back.
An Untimely Death. Special to the Sentinel. Mi'seiE, Ind., June 13. Oar city to-Cay mourns the untimely death of another talented and p omlsiug young man, in the person of Frank S. Tyler, who died at an early hour to-day from typhoid fever, üe was about twenty-five years of sue and leaves a young wife, to whom he was joined in marriage but a few months eeo. He was a writer of considerable ability, and for ranch of the time of the past few years he was enaEed as reporter or city editor ou one of tbe local papers. Two years, however, of that time were ppent in the employ or a county history publishing company, for whom his work was always satisfactorily done lie was the oldest pon ot City Treasurer O. M. Tyler. Funeral will take place on Monday. Purify your blood, tone up the system and regulate the digestive organs by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, Sold by all druggists. Verdict of Manslaughter. NCRRiSTOwif, Pa , June 13. The jary in the case of Alexander Steele brought In a verdict of manslaughter. Steele was an attendant at the Insane asylum and Caster was an inmate. Steele beat his victim so severely that he was 6oon afterward found dead in bed with a number of bis ribs broken. Tbe violence used was such that one of the broken ribs pierced the victim's heart. A Lovt-Iy (jomplfextun. "What a lovely complexion." we often hear persons say. "I wonder what she does for it? ' In every cape the purity and real loveliness cf the complexion depend upon the blcod. Those who have sallow, blotchy faces msy make their sain smooth and healthy ty taking enough cf Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" to drive out the humors lurking in the system. TK13 CS VAE GENUIÜE! SOLS ONLY r BOTTLW WITH BT?T WRAPT BKS, III TEAT BT BIP OVKB COSX IB UHBBOUH. Our trade-mark around every bottle. In sickness. Iren Dreg is ITcrtli Its ffeiiiit in Cold MYj 1 1 Actions J It lUbdnrs andf aeaia ail Kinds el rnsauntattaa, CA1AKKH, COLDS, DIARRHEA, RH&3MA1IBM, NKOKALGIA, has cured more eafoa thn anything ever prescribed. DIPHTHERIA, 80KH THROAT; ose it promptly, delay is dinverooF, PILKS, BLIND, BLKKD1NQ OR ITCHING, TJLCRR8. OLD OR NEW WOFND8, BRDI3K-4, EUP.N8. TOOTHACHE, XABACHK, SOHBKYRV, BCALD8, 8PBAIN8; the greatest known remedy. Controls HEMORRHAGES, FEMALE COM PLAINTS. ELK-ED ING Nose, Mouth, Ktotnaca, Lunga, or from any canse, stopped es by a charm. It 1 called the WONDER OF HJ1 LLN3. Dsan ixtxbnaixt a kd icterkaixy, We have an avalanche of testimonials. Bend for out book Mallei FroeJ. It will tell yon all about It n IS TrJPAVl TO TJEI ANT -PHSPaBATIOS IIClFT Tint oKNUINX with oca tniBicncva, Prloea 13a IL 11.75. FOLD'S EITBACT CO.. 78 Bib Kv ior. STOPPED FREE Afamieut nurtst. lnsai Perconi Restored Dr.KLINE S GREAT fEl)Am &NKRVB DlSES. Om.J tMr Krrr Ht.ttm t. f t r. J TV. f!Cm Infallible if tnkm as directed. A' hits mfttr ftrriaar't - Treatise Bnd ft trial bottle free to Fit ptient. they pa ymg express iharpes on bo whea : I M9nc D A mnA I C ftftr4re flf fflirted to OK KL.lNE.nn AtIi St..r"hildHphi.P.
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.MAN VEGETABLE t U l V . " All Bilious Comploints. They ar perfectly safe to take, bein? prartv. Vegetable and prepared with the preatt carts from the best drugs. Thry relieve the sufferer Once by carryinK oft al) Impurities through thS W els. AU cu-iuists. a Box. r f .a v.. X i jSBIT7RS3 CJRC3 ;4 ; uDiSLAS'scnsiff C. i V. LIVSR $ KIDNETxa I STOMACH AND BOWELS.!:. rcrrr v i. ft ALLCRUESISTS PRICEl CCUAS.U 9ytpii. General DcfclUtyf -f&andlco, tlnliltnuJ Conttlpo ' cion Ldver Conplaint Sit V uoys, Et-e.. Ett. 2t ewctain b O. Ilirttt .l'rttijk. i.v"'which ma7 he eaüicf.rc'.cd 1217 AC2 Siii? SSrl ii... I.. , L. . . Ei, Lij Ts Uri?s.Jt.i :A It jS not flu inior-iio:-.!'. .j ji. it be 'jfö j as sii'-h, ty k-h-mi, .; v-,1 ... . RJXTCKX.T .ZU EITTSttj. 'M').- IiTr',:".-ra; r.lo-J!S 'rt vr-r.: cirNO FEE ( Established 1851 1 1 86 So. Until Better CHICAGO. ILL. Clark StTfce regular old (MabUnited riiyalcianand Sur fr eon IMC. ILAUKE, al the oij number continues to treat with his usual rrcat kill all private, dironlr, ner vooand pect I dioeaae. DiC CLAItKEU the oldest Advertising i'ti vsician. a fil r.l Papers show and all old Residents know. Aire and experience important. 3" Xervou diseases (with, rr without dreams,) or debility and ks of nerve power treated scientificaliy hy new methods with never failing success, f It makes r.o diflerence AvbaC you have taken or WllO has failed locuie y u. rr"" Vouns: mm and middleazed men ar.d ail who sutler should consult the erlrbrated Dr CUrlc- at onre. The terrible poioiiof all bad blood and akin diKeaac c( every kind, nameand nature comji'eteiy eradicated. Iteiliema ber.that one horrible dUeasc, ifr'tedor improperly treati-1, rri0 the present and comine Renerations. fr?"Iiseaed difcfliarpe cured pron-.ptlv without hindrance t Lu:ness. 1-oih sexes consult confidentially. If in trouble, call or write. Delays are da:ijero;is. "froeTa! Ination In the ihlcrof H;tie. A written warranty of cura i veil in every tete undertaken 5 p Send two stamps for celebrated works on ClironlCf Nerrous and fK-Iicate Dise.ise. You have an exhaustive aj m ptomatolo:y by which to study your own cate. Ccnsuiuiiar. perionaüy or hy letter, free. Consult the old Doctor. Thousand cured. Oflieeaand Earlors private. You see no one but the Iortnc. ef..reconfidin? your case consult Dr.CLA IIKE A friendly letter or call may save future suffering and shame, and add golden years to life. Medicines sent everywhere secure, from exposure.-Hoars, S to 8; Suaday, 9 to ii. Address: F.D.CLAIIKE, PT.D., 1 1SG So. Clark St Ckicag?. 1H, V'ntrarr'oeALE By virtue cf a certlfiel copy O of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk ol tae bupeiior Court of Marion County, Indiana, la a cause wbereln Charles E. Cotlin, trustee, is plaintiff, and Martha Fauikner et al. are oefendtnts, (crse No. 2.1?f ) requiring ne to make tbe mm ol five hundred aud sixty -six dollars and feventy-üve cents $ö0 75). as provided for in aid decree witli interest on said decrea acd cos tR, I will expose at puhllo sale, to tha highest bidder, on SATURDAY, TKZ 27TH DAY OF JCSE, A. B,' tetween tie bourn of 10 o'clock a. rn. and 4 o'clot p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court House cf üiarion County, Indiana, tbe rents ana profile for a term not exceedin seven years, of the following; real estate bituaie In Llarion County, Icdlaua, to wit: Pat t of tbe nW.b west quarter ef Pectlon eleven 11 fn township fifteen 16 north of ranee taree I3j eaet, bounded as follow, to wit: LV'Kinning rn the north line of said ejection at a point eight e) cbaiDs and seventy TO links east ot the northwest corner of mid section, thence runclnsi south fifteen 115 chains more or less to the centre of the traclc of the Indianapolis and Terre Haute railroad, tbe-Dce eat aloug the centre of said track to WMta River, thecce up Mid river to the norvh line of said ection, thence west nine 91 chains and fifteen 15 licks to the place of bs;innin?.-exceptso muco of aid tract as is occupied by riutt of way of said Indianapolis and Terre Kaute Railroad Corjcpany containing eleven and seventy-eight one hundredths (11 73 100J arris, more or less, except therefrom three and twenty-five ona bUBdredtha 3:5 100 acre in a square form In the northwest comer ot said-tract described as follows, viz: Commencing eight aud teventy-one hundredth. 8 71-1001 chalne east of the northwest comer of sai-i sectiou aleveni 11, thence runainir south five 5 and seventy 70 hundredth chains, thence east five 5 and! seventy 170 hundredths chains, thence norih five IM and seventy J701 hundredth chains, thenca west five 5 and aeventy 70) I hundredth chain J to the place of besinnlng oontainiDg three ana twenty-five hundredth 3 25-1001 acres, owned tyJohn Klincensnlth, and leaving eiRhtandl fifty-three tsndredth S 63-1001 acres, situate la Alsrlon CoCi-ty, Indiana. 11 such rents aDd profits will not eil for a mf fJcient sum to aatiRfy e'Ald decree. Interest and cob,a, 1 wilL at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee siupie of said real estate, ot so much thereof as may be auffiel ent to discharge) said decree, Interest and cost. Bald sale will btf made without any relief whatever from valuauea or aprraifitanent lwa. GEORGE TI. CARTES, Sheriff ol Marion County Li Jcnf 1st, A, v. Itt?.
CURE
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