Indianapolis Leader, Volume 3, Number 16, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1881 — Page 3

BE HIND TO THE STRANGER.

BY H. CLAY PBEC83. Be kind to tne stranger when far from his home, t or it may be your fate, like the stranger, to roam : Ah! then how you'll prize, as a boon from above. "w-u oii wora oi kindness, or sweet look of love. Be kind to the stranger, and welcome htm well, or turn like a snail and hide in your shell ; But let the sweet waters ef sympathy flow. To prove we are all of one kindred below. Our hearts melt with pity for brutes in distress, Shall our fellow-men share in our sympathy lesa? In the Gospel of Christ this great trutn we see: What ye do unto others, ye do unto Me! When parted from home and the friends we love dear, How dreary and dark does the world then ap pear. When the "lteht in the window" far distantly burns, How the poor, hungry heart for sympathy yearns. When we feel dead weight on the "heart and the brain. And the rouI suffers more than mere physical pain: Not tread for the body can quiet our grief, 'Tis the poor starving heart that cries tor relief. There are wants beyond those of our animal frame. There's a keen, burning thirst that knoweth no name A sickness of heart only heart can controlGive bread for the body, but love for the scul. He kind to the stranger when far from his home, For it may be your fata like the stmiger to roam: Ah! then how you'll prize, as a boon from above. Ich soft word of kinauess. or sweet look of love. The Baltiraorean. TAKINT HOARDERS. The Independent, "Itwa3 a scandal," the neighbors said "that Miss Delia should be obliged to take boarders, after all she'd been, through; and Heaven knows boarders did not help a bod v to work out her salvation. And so much money in the family, too, taking it by small and large. Wasn't her uncle Eben, over at Dover, well-to-do, antl not a chick of his own to care for, except the boy he had adopted, who was no credit to him? It was odd, now, that a man with poor relations shouid take to a stranper wnen his own flesh a id blood was needy; but sometimes it does seem as if folks had more feeling for others than for their own kith and kin. Then there were cousins in the city, forehanded and fashionable, who were never worth a row of pins to Delia, and there was her jrreatuncle John's widow a-larkin on the Continent, a-gaming at Kaden-Baden, and trying the waters of every mineral spring in the three Kingdoms, for no disease under the sun but old age. She had been known to say that her folks were too rich already, and probably she -ould endow some hospital with her property." Plainly, wealthy relatives were of no value to Mi s Delia. To be sure, she had never seen her great aunt niece sinee she was a child, when her uncle John had brought her into their simple life for a month's visit, with her French maid and dresses, her jewels and fallals, which won the heart of her namesake. Since then uncle John's widow had become sort of a gilded creation, always young and beautiful; for, though Delia had received little gifts from time to time across the seas for the last fifteen years, she had neither heard nor seen anything of the being who had inspired her youthful imagination, and was quite uncertain if such a person as Mrs. John Rogerson was in the land of the living. Dead or alive, she seemed to have made no material difference to Delia's humdrum life. After having nursed her father through a long sickness, Delia found that he had left a heavy mortgage on the homestead, and her mother and herself on the high road to the poor house, unless they should bestir themselves. As her mother was already bedridden, the stirring naturally fell upon Delia, and she advertised for summer boarders Good board in the country to the river-side, at $7 a week. Larue chambers, btoad piazzas, fine views, berries and new milk. Oue mile Irom the station. Address, Delia Kooekson, Croftsborjugh, Maine. "Cheap enough!" commented an elderly lady who happened ujon it. "Delia Rogerson. An old maid, 1 suppose, obliged to look out for herself. I've a good mind to try her broad piazzas and new milk. If I don't like it there'll be no harm done." And so Delia's lirt boarder arrived an old lady with false front hair, brown, wrinkled skin, faded ayes, a black alpaca gown and a hair trunk. Delia made her as welcome a3 if she had been a Duchess; lighted a wood fire in Mrs. Clement's room, as the night was damp, and brought out her dantiest cup and saucer, with the fadeless old roses wreathing them. "Wonderfully kind," reflected Mrs. Clement, asshecombed out her wisps of gray hair and confided the false front to a box. "Wonderful kindness for $7 a week! She's new to the trade. She'll learn better. Human nature doesn't change with latitudes. She'll find it doesn't pay to consider the comfort of a poverty-stricken old creature." But in spite of her worldly wisdom, Mrs. Clement was forced to confess that Delia had begun as she meant to hold out, though other boarders came to demand her attention, to multiply her cares. The fret and jar of conflicting temperaments under her roof was a new exerience of Delia. When Mrs. (Jresonie complained of the mosquitoes, with an air as if "Miss Rogerson were responsible for their creation; of the flies, as if they were new acquaintances; of want of appetite, as though Delia had agreed to supply it along with berries and new milk; of the weather, as if she had pledged herself there would be no sudden changes to annoy her boarders: of the shabby house and antiquated furniture, "too old for comfort and not old enough for fashion" then Delia doubted if taking boarders was her mission. "What makes you keep us, my dear?" asked Mrs. Clement, after a day when everything and everybody bad seemed to go wrong. "Why didn't you ever marry? You had a lover, I dare say?" "Yes; a long, long time ago." "Tell me about him it?" "There isn't much to tell. He asked me to marry him. He was going to Australia. I couldn't leave father and mother you know (they were both feeble), and he couldn't stay here. That's all." 'And vou vou " "Now all men beside are to me like shadows'" "Anrl have vou never heard of him since?" Yes. He wrote; but where was the use? t M nvfr romp to anything. It was better for him to forget me and marry. I was a millstone about his neck. I didn't answer his letter." "And Mimrfisinrr he should return some - r z. o rlar wntild von marrv him?" -i dare bay," laughed Delia, gently, as if the idea were familiar, ' let the neighbors laiiTl, pvt so wiselv. I've thoueht of it sometime, sitting alone, when the world was barren and commonplace. One must bav recrpation of some kind, you know. Everybody requires a little romance, a little jHX'trv, to flavor every-day thinking and doing. I'm afraid you think me a silly old Til '111 1 Mrs. Clement. 'No. The heart never grows old. The skin shrivels, the color departs, the eyes rwlo the. features crow pinched; but the soul is heir of eternal youth it is as beautiful at fourscore as at "sweet twenty. Time makes amends for the ravages of the h.ulv bv developing tne epiru. luuuiuu tell me your lover's name. Terhaps you would rather not." His name was Stephen Langdon. ftometWnes Cantain Kevniour runs against him in fcih,nrne. and brings me word how he looks and what he is doing, though I never oeir and Stephen never asics ior me mat i Delia's summer boarders were not a success to be sure. If they took no money out of her pocket, thev put none in. She was obliged to eke out her supirt bv copying for Lawver Dunmore and embroidering for Mrs Judge Dorr. One by one her boarders dropped away like autumn leaves: all but old Mrs. Clement. "I believe I'll stay on, she said. "I m eetting too old to move often. Peihaps you take winter boarders at reduced rates. Kh9" ' "Do you think my terms high?" "By no means. B it when one's purse is "Yes- I know. Do stay at your own Drice I can't spare you." She had grown luch a fondness for the old lady that to re

fuse her at her own terms would have seemed like turning her own mother out of doors; be-ides, one month more would not signify. But she found it hard to make both ends meet and often went to bed hungry that her mother and Mrs. Clement might enjoy enough, without their appearing to be ''just a pattern." At Christmas, however, came a

ray -f sunshine for Delia, in the shae of a hundred-dollar bill from an unknown friend. 'It can't be meant for me." she cried. "It's directed to Delia Rogerson." said her mother; "and there's nobody else of that name, now that your Aunt Delia's de?d." "We are not sure she's dead," objected Delia. "Horrors! Don't you know whether your own aunt is dead or alive?" asked Mrs. Clement, in a shocked tone. "It isn't our fault. She is rich and lives abroad. I was named for her. I used to look in the glass and try to believe I'd inherit her beauty with the name, though she was only our great-uncle's wife." "She ought to be doing something for you?" "How can she. if she is dead? I don't blame her. anyway. Her money is her own to use according to her pleasure. Uncle John made it himself and eave it to her." "But if she should come back to j'ou, having run through with it, you'd divide your laat crust with her, I'll be bound. "I su'jose I khould," replied Delia. The winter wore away, as winters will, and the miracles of spring began in fields and wayside; ami Delia's hoarders returned with the June roses, and dropped away with the tailing leaves, und still Mrs. Clements stayed on and on. Just now she had been some weeks in arrears with -her reduced board. Xo money had been forthcoming for some time, and she was growing more feeble daily, needed the luxuries of ' an invalid ard the attention of a nurse, both of which Delia bestowed upon her, without taking thought of the morrow. "I must hear from my man-of-business tomorrow. Delia; I'm knee-deep in debt to you, she began one night. "Don't mention it!" cried Delia. "I'd rather never see a cent of it than have you take it to heart. You are welcome to stay and share potluck with us; you are such company for mother and me." Thank you, my dear. I've grown as fond of you as if you were mv own flesh and blood. There, turn down the light. please. It grows chilly, doen't it? You might kis me just once, if you wouldn t mind It's a hundred years or so since any one Kissed me. And next morning when Delia carried up Mrs. Clement's breakfast, her boarder lay cold and still upon the pillows. The lirst shock over, Delia wrote to the lawyer of whom she ha I heard Mrs. Clement sieak as having charge of her affairs, beging him to notify the lady's relatives, if she hud any. In reply Mr. Willis wrote: "The late Mrs. Clement appears to have no near relatives. Some distant cousins, who have an abundance of this world's gods, yet served her shabbily when she tested their generosity as she has tiied yours, are all that remain of her family, in the meantime I enclose you a copy of her last will and te.-tanienf, to erue at your leisure." "What interest does he think I take in Mrs. Clement's will?" thought Delia; but she read, nevertheless: IMng of sound mind, this If.ta day of June. IS . 1. lltliii K is:or-i ii Clement, do hereby leave one hundred dollar to each of my c usius: and I bequeathe tae residue f my property, viz: thirty thousand dollar invexc t in the Ingot Mining ompany, lifiy thousand dollars i.i United stales bonds, twenty thousand in the fortune Flannel Mills, and my jewel, to the tn-loved niece of my lirst hubaüd. John Kogeison, Iclit Rogeron, of j CroftsDorough, Me. j "For I was a stranger and ye took mein: hungry, and ye fed mo; sick, and ye ministered unto me " "Goodness alive!" cried the neighbors, when the tacts readied their ars. "What a profitable thing it is to take boarders! Every body in town will be trying it. Of cour.-e Steve Langdon will come and marry her. if she were forty old maids. You may stick a pin in there!" Delia did not open her house to boarders the next season. t?de found enough to do in looking after her money and spending it; in replying to letters from indigent jeople, who seemed to increase alarmingly; in receiving old friends, who suddenly lound time to remember her existence. Ami sure enough, among the rest appeared Steve Langdon, and all the village said: "I told yoq so." "It's not my fault that you and I are single yet, Delia." he said. "And we are too old to think of it now, Steve." "Nonsense! It's never too late to menu. I'm not i ich, Delia, but I've enough for two and to spare." "1 wouldn't be contented not to drive in my carriage and have servants under me now," lai.ghed Delia. "It-deed! Then perhaps you have a beter match in view. Capt. Seymo'T asked me, uv the way, it l had come to interlere with 'Squire Jones" interest." "Yes. 'Squire Jones proposed to me last week." "Now, see here, Delia. Have I come all the way from Melbourne on a fool's errand? There I was growing used to my misery and oneliness, when the mail brings in a letter in a strange nami. wnicn tens me mat my dear love, Delia Rogerson, loves and dreams of me still, is poor ami alone, and needs me me! And the letter is signed by her aunt, Mrs. Clement, who ought to know I packed my household gsls ami came." "l m giatl mat you uiu. "In order that I mav congratulate 'Squire Jones?" "But -I haven't accepted him. In faot, I've refused him because " "Because vou will marrv vour own love, like the lass in the song, Delia?" In Crofstborough people are not yet tired of telling how a woman made money by taking boarders. Independent. The Corn Song. Dedicated to hard c rn.l I was mude to be eaten, And not to be. drank; To be thrashed in a barn. Not soaked in a tank. I come as a blessing, Wh-n put in a mill. As a blight and a curse. When run through a still. Make me up into loaves, And your children are fed:. But if into drink, I will starve them Instead. In bread I'm a servant. The eater shall rule; In drink I'm a master. The driuker a fool. Then remember the warning My strength I'll employ. If eten to strengthen. If drunk to destroy. ,! Jack. "Dear mel"' exclaimed" Mrs. Smith, as she looked from the kitchen window to the farmhouse; "there are Uncle Joe and Aunt Peggy, and all the girls! They have come to tea, 1'ro certain, and I haven't a speck of gren tea in tho house. Uncle Joe can't drink anything else, and he mu?t have white sugar in it, too. 'Here, Mike, Mike! take a basket and jump on old Jack, and g to the store just as fast a? you can. (Jet a pound of the be?t green tea and three pound of white lump sugar. Now mind you are back in half an hour." Mike was delighted. Ho had come to live on the farm only the week before, and in all his life) he had never b ;cn on the back of a horse or donkey. lie had looked every day with longing eyes at Jack grazing quietly in the pasture, and had thought how happy he should be if ho were ever allowed to have a rtde on him. So he started off in great gloe, saing to himself: MIt will he easv enough to manage this little fellow." "When about half a mile on the way, they came to a brook, and Mike thought be would let Jack have a drink. This was all very well; but, v-hen Mike wanted to go on, Jack had changtd hi3 mind, and concluded not to go any further. Mike pulled and pulled no the bridle, trying to turn htm back into the road; but the obstinate brute planted his feet firmly, and would not budge an inch. Just thou a kind old Irishman came on the footbridge over the brook, and Mike called to hi oi to know what he should do. "Sure, you mut have a stick, sonny," said

the man. ''Donkeys "wont go without a stick." So he cut a stick from a tree near by, and gave it to Mike, -who used ,it as hard as he could, but to no purpose. Then the old man took another, and going behind the little beast, touched him up smartly with it, at the same time giving his tail a funny little twist. This was more than Jack could stand. Ue gave in and jogged on. But he would go very slowly; in spite of Mike's urging, and now and then he would amuse himself by kicking out his hind legs and trying to throw Mike off.

Once, too, just as they were starting back from the grocer's he suddenly lay down flat, and threw Mike over his head, scattering baskets and bundles. Poor Mike was half an hour late; but when he told good Mrs. Smith all his trouble1, she excused him. She laughed hard, too, when Mike said, like a true born Irish boy: Sure, rnarni, 1 never want to ride Jack again until I've learned how." Getting Vaccinated. I Detroit Free Press. A Detroit doctor who has vaccinated over 500 men woman and children in the last two weeks has had heaps of fun in watchiner the working of human nature under the lancet. ''Getting vaccinated" is somehow connected in most minds with getting a tooth pulled, and patients expect to suffer as mu h pain. Not moro than two men out often walk square up to the rack. They hesitate, hang on, make inquiries, and in many instances remark that they will wait a davor two. One refused to be vaccinated untill he was tied to a chair. Another offered the doctor a dollar extra to give him chloroform. Scores of them want some object to clutch to, and they shut their eyes grit their teeth, and call up sufficient resolution to carry them through the operation of having a broken log reset. A well-known citizen had made two c alls antl backed out. The third time he came, ho rushed into the office, peehd off his coat and pu.9b.ed up his sleeve, and, throwing himself into a chair, shut his eves, and called out: 'Quickl Quick! Br.ng on that laughinggas; and then don't be a minute putting that lancet into my arm 1" A negro was one day observed walking up antl down in front of the office for a long time, and the doctor finally stepped to the dtor and asked him if he wanted to be vac einated. "Deed, ah, dat's what I cum fur," was the reply, "but the worry minit 1 turneJ tint co'ner do blamed finquit aching!" The favorite exclamation with men when the lancet is felt is "Woosh!" Once in a while one will f:iv 'Thunder!" and about one in twenty refers to a land that is hotter than this. Most of the women expres their surprise with an "Ouch!' but now and then one yells ' Oh. Lordy !" As a rule, thwomen all shed tears, and many or them c rne prepared to faint away; children hte to be tUtteied ami ohxoJ, and it is foun -times necessary to tell them that bears and Indians are always on the lookout l'r children who haven't been vaccinated. Teir. ar ( sobs and waiU are the rule, tut the transit from "Oh, ma, 1 know he'll kill me!" o S iy, I got vaCi'innted and never cried but oncel" is as glorious as it is brief. The Wallace Sinter. Lincoln (Neb.) Democrat. A hoary -headed man, nigh on to a century old, occupied a seat in front of the Democrat dramatic nrn at the Opera House last night. Hie scribe noticed that he seemed deeply affected, and, finally, as the old chap burst into a chorus of sobs antl howls, the sympathetic Democrat man leaned over and tickled the back of his cars, sayii-g: "Old man, why weepest thou?" The venerabb; stranger turned around in his seat, and while the great salt tears flowed down and mingled with the tobacco juee on his snowy whiskers, he brokenly replied: "sjtranger, I never go to hear the Wallace Sisters but that it brings up sail memories of the past, and makes me stpiall like a catamount." How's that?" asked the dramatic man. The old man elevated his chin, and discharged a fresh vollev of sobs, blew his nose like a rish-horn, and slowly answered: "It makes me think of the time, seventynine years ago, when a fresh, blooming boy of twelve. I first went to see the Wallace Sisters. They ain't as young now as they used to be, and maybe not as handsome, but as I have seen 'em every year since, perhaps I do not notice it so much as others. 1 have buried nine wives and twenty-three children in those seventy-nine years, most of whom saw and admired Jennie and Maud, and consequently whenever I see the dear old gals now, I jest heiler right out." And he wept again like a house afire with four engines playing on it. The Democrat chap tried to say something to comfort the old man, but just before Jen-. nie got so affecting in her antics on the stage, and her support assisted her so nicely, that the lachrymosial stranger's feelings totally overcame him, and he seized his hat and broke out of the Opera. House, evidently bound on drowning Iiis sorrows in the lowing bowl. The dramatic man soon followed him. How to Introduce People. 1 do dislike to introduce people to each other," said Eva to me one day last week. "Why, pray?" I asked. "It seems to me a very simple thing." "Well, when I have it to do, I stammer and blush, and feel so awkward, I never know who should be mentioned first, and I wish myself out ot the room." "I think I can make it plain to you," I said. "You invite Mabel Tompkins to spend an afternoon with you. She has never been at your home before, and your mother has never met her. When you enter the sitting-room, all you have to do is to say, 'Mother, this is my friend Mabel; Mabel my mother.' If you wish to be more elaborate, you may say to your aunt Lucy, Aunt Lucy, permit me to present Miss Mabel Tompkins; Miss Tompkins, Mrs Tcmpleton.' But while you introduce Mabel to your father, or the minister, or an elderly gentleman, naming the most distinguished personage first, you present your brother, his chum, and your cousin Fred to the young lady, naming her first. Fix it in your mind that among persons of equal station the younger are introduced to the older, and that inferiors in age, position, or influ ence are presented to superiors. Be very cordial when, in your own house, you are introduced to a guest, and offer your hand. If away from home, a bow is commonly sufficient recognition of an introduction. Please, in performing an introduction, speak both names with perfect distinctness." To his absent father a little boy writes that his puppies are growing every "day,and sometimes twice a day. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. United Brother of Friendship. Sumner Lodge No. 11, regular communi cation every first and third Monday of each month. Hall north-east corner of Meridian aud "Washington streets. All members re quested to be present, also members of other lodges of the same faith aro invited. H. W. Jackson, Worthy Master. W. S. Lock financial Secretary. GLOKIOUS NEWS TO INVALIDS. rpBOSE who contemplate olnfr to Hot Pprlnit for I the treatment of Syphilis, Gleet, Scrofula, and 1 coiaoeoot or blood diaeaaei, can be cared bv t nthird the cost of such K trip, at the old reliable stand, I hY been located aere tor 23 years, and with the a tTantage of each a long and ucceeafnl experience can confidently warrant a core In all cases. Ladles needing a periodical pill can get them at my office ut by mall at fl.00 per box. Offloe, 43 Virginia avenne, Indianapolis, Ind. DR. BENNITT, (Snooeeeor to Dr. D. B. Kwing.)

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Tn lrnf liitr M'pntttff ii.l y agree tha'. most di- 9f.t8 rre caused bv dis-idcied Kidneys or Ltvtr. It therefore, the Kidut-VH and Ltver are kept In perlect order, perfect health will be the result. This truth Das only been known a short time, and for yearn people sullered great aaonvrr thout being able to And relief. The discovery of Warner's Safe Kidney and L.iver Cure marts a new era in the treatment of these trouble. Made from a simple tropical leal of rarevalne.it contains Just the element necessary to nourish and invigorate both of these great organs, and safely restore and keep them In order. It is a 1'OSiTiYK lt-m-y for all the diseases that cause pa'ns in tb longer part of tee body for Torpid l.iver -Head ches Jaundice Dizziness (i ravel Fever. Ague MalaiUl Fever, and a!l difficulties of the Kidneys, Liver ana Urinary Orpins. Jt is an excellent and sfe remedy for females during Pregnancy It will control Menstruation, and Is invaluable for Ijeucorrhoa crfallineo' the Womb As a Blorxi Purfler it ii unequaled, for it curesth nr-zan 'hit make the blood. I Iiis remedy, which hadone-uch wonders. Input tip in the LRUKSr HIZEI) BOITLE of any medicine upon the market, and Is sold by Urugji'sts. und all dealers at $125 P?r bottle. Kor IVartotts Inqnire for W A KNEtt'4 SAFE DiAlSUrES CURE. It 11 a POälllVE Remedy. H. H, Warner Oo., Rochester, N. Y. MRS. LYDIA E. FIHKHAM, OFIYNN, MASS., s LYDIA E. PINKHAIYTS VEGETABLE COMPOUND. I a T'ow'f ivo fnre for all lhoe Painful Complaint and WealtneMe) common to our beat female population. Jt will cure entirely the worst form of Female Complaint, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Dwplaoeiuent, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to ths Chanpc of Life. It will linolve and expel tumor from the uterus In an early stae of development. The tendency to canCfrous huniorn there is checked very speedily by its use. It if-movcs faintncps, flatulency, destroys all craving for RtimulAnts, and relieves weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, Genend Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression end Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times and under al (.circumstances act in harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PINKn.VM'S VEGETABLE COM POIXDis prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price JL Six bottles for $5. Bent by mail in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Send for pamphlet. AddresK as above. Mention thil Jtper. So family should be without LTDIA E. TINKHAM'S LIVER PULS. They cure constitution, biliousnsas, and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. sT Seid by all Druggists. - JOHN D. PRINZ, Dealer in all kinds of AND Country Produce. Fine Wines anrl Liquors and Choice ('iara. NO. 196 INDIANA AVENUE, Indianapolis, Ind. W. W. HOOVER, Dealer in Staple and Fancy SEOCEEI COUNTRY PRODUCE A Specialty, CHAS. SPOTTS, Board ly ihe D.-.y, Week or Month, EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS. Frnit, Ice Cream aud other Delicacies in Season. 63 GEORGE STREET, CINCINNATI, 0. w m m mn J No. 35 West Market Street, Ross Hlock, one half Square Et of Illinois Street, IN DIANA rOLIS, INI). Dyeing, Cleaning and Repairing Done in the Best Manner. V. IIEAF. JOZXIxr EDWLXIDS, GENERAL BILL POSTER Controlling th most prominent bill' boards In trie city, Including TIIKLAKUEHr BOA II IS THE STATE inclosing the State House Uronnds. Five Hnnärei Tfcres-Sfceet Eoaris In the City and Suburbs. Office, at Daily Sentinel Office, INDIANAPOLIS. DO WOT CO WEST Until yon have applied to A. JT 1IALPORD GEN Ell Ab EASTERN ACENT INDIANAPOLIS AHO ST. LOUIS i).R 13 1 S. ILLINOIS STREET, Indianapolis. VFor Time Tablet and the very lowest Freight and Passenger Bates.

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Columbus.O., MAXUFAClTRi:!: OF FINE CARRIAGES AJSTD PHAETONS. OUR MOTTO: THE KET FOK THE LEAST MOXEY. Only One Gratis of Work, And That The Best. TESTIMONIALS. Dear Sirs: AVe have u.se; I anil sold vour work for the past three years ami have found it first-class. Oar customers are all well pleased. We have sold to several livery stahlcs, and your buggies have stood the severe tisane to which they are subjected equal to the highest priced buggies. Yours truly, Dr.v A: Wilson. Laporte, Ind. Gentlemen: I have bought of you several of your side-bar buggies. They are the best vehicles for the money, I ever saw. I bave subjected them to the severest tests in my livery, and they wear better than any other work I have ever had. Yours truly, F. D. Pauk. Plymouth, Mich. Dear Sirs: From an experience of fifteen years in the liverv business we are fully convinced that the durability, style, and finish of the carriages and buggies of your manufacture far excels any others in the United States for the money. Bray & IIknn. Council Bluffs, Iowa. Gentlemen: AVe have been using your Brewster work for two years, during which time we have been convinced they are the best buggies on the road, and for neatness, durability and general appearance, they cannot be surpassed. Yours truly, H. Weeks y. Kimrle, Ca r r ia ge Mann fa et u rers. Lavtonsville, Maryland. Gentlemen: Have leen selling your buggies aud pha?tons the last two years and as yet there is the first complaint to be made. I think them the lest buggies for the money in the market. They give good satisfaction to both dealer and customer. Yours, Iv. A. MfOoiiMKK. Cadiz, Ohio. Gentlemen I have been using and selling your manufacture of buggies for two years past with great satisfaction to both my customers and myself. e Those to whom -I sold, without excep tion, speak in the most exalted terms of your work. I could furnish you testimonials from each party to whom I have sold your work. For myself, I think they are the best buggies manufactured for the trade. Wherever I go, I find those who have a knowledge of your buggies all speak of them in the most flattering terms. Yours respectfully. Johx W. Chrism ax. Delta, Ohio. Gentlemen: You made two :J-quar-ter seated open buggies for us last summer. We are very much pleased with them. Thev are the lest value for their cost we have ever seen. Yours truly, Daniel Wood, Franci A. Foster Boston, Mass. Ii. w. w hit r, MERCHANT TAILOR 37 WEST MARKET ST. 09Good Made and TrimnieJ to order a Specialtj UKXItY TU IIA Kll'S NEW GROCERY STORE COFFEES, TEAS AND SUGARS AT THE LOWEST CASH PRICES. A complete line of Groceries and Provisions at 69 HOWARD STREET,

FUED BALZ, Dealer in all kinds of FäESH AND SALT MEATS, North "West and Ind. Ave. Meat Maikel aoo Nortlx West St., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. W. F BCPP. n B08SEKY W. F. RUPP & CO. MERCHANT TAILORS .? East Washington Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

O'ßHff N & LEWI?, blacksmiths AND WAGONM WERS. GENERAL JOBBING SHOP. "BEF AIHINQ PBOMPTLY DONE., Corner North and Fayette Streets, Indianapolis. BRYANT & STRATTON . Telegraph Institute. ESTABLISHED 1858. Practical, Irofitalle and Useful Education. No useless studies. Instruction. Individual and ly Leetures. Student advanced as raiddly as their abilities permit. Original and leading In every department. Mates No Idle Claims, but relies on t lie produced results as shown by a proud record of over 2 3 years. No other school or college has started M manv young and middle-aged men on the road to success. T heschool is open to all, and cordially, earnestly invites all before entering upon a course of study to visi 1 1 1 and inspect It every detaiL Call for catalogue and full particulars at the Colli jre office. Bates Block, opposite the 1'of.t-Offiee, or address x C. C. KOERNER. Indianapolis, Jud. THE 2133? SU;22S3FUL REMEDY . ever dlpcoveied, as it is certain in Ilh effects u t riot-8 not blister. Al-o excellent for human flcsli. READ PKOOF ßELÖW. From COL,. I T. FOSTER. Youugstown, OLio, May 10th, 1880. Dr. B. J. Keuoall & Co., Uents: I bad a very valuable IlHinbletouian colt which 1 prized very highly, lie had a large bone spavin on oue joint und a small one on the other which made Mm very lame. I had him under the charge of two veterinary surgeons which rail d tu cure him. 1 was one day reading the advertisement ot Kendall's Spavin Cure in the Chicago Express, I determined at once to try it, a:-l fcot our Druggist here to send for It, 1 hey ordered three bottles; 1 took them all and inought I would give it a thorough trial, 1 uied it according tooirectionu and the fourth diy t he co t ceased to be lame, and the lumps have disappeared I used but one bottle aud me cnli's limbs are as free from lumps and as smooth as any boise in the state lie Is entirely eure'. The cure was o remarKabie hat I let two of my neighbors have the remaining two b ttles, who are now using It Very Respectiully, L. T. FOSTER. KEXDALIS SPAVIX CUKE. Rochester. Ind tfov. 30th, 1880. R. J. Kendall 6 Co., Uents: Please send as asuiply of advertising matter for Kendall's spavin Cure. It has a good sale here and it itives the best of satlsfncttou. Of all we bave so d we have yet to learn the first unfavorable report. Very Respectfully, J. Dawson d Son, Druggists. KEXDALIS SPAVIX CURE Wilton. Minn., Jan. 11th. ISSl. R. .1. Kendall. & Co., Oents: Having got a horse book of you by mail a year ago. he contents of which persuaded me 10 try Kendall's Spavin Cure on the hind leg of oue or ray liots-8 wnich was badly wollen aud could uot be reduced by any tther remedy. I got two bottles of Kndalra Spavin Cure of Preston & Luddutb, Druggists of Waseca, which comrletely cu--ed oiy horse. About five years ago h-id a three year old colt 8 ween led very bad. 1 used ycur remedy ms given In your book without rowelling and I mast say to your credit that the colt is entirely cured, which is a 8urprise not only to myself, but also to my neighbors. You sent me the book for the tntlii'g sum of 'lh cents and if I could not get another like it I would not. take twenty five dollars for it. Yours Truly, Geo. Mathews. KEXDALL'S SPAVIX CURE ON HUMAN FLESH. Patten's Mills, Washington Co., N. Y. Februa-y 21st, 1878. Dr B. J. Kendall, Dear Sir: The particular case on which I used your Kendall a 8pavlu cure was a malignant ankle sprain of sixteen months standing. 1 had tried many things, but In vain. Yeur Spavin Cure put the loot to the ground again, and for the first time since hurt, In a natural position. For a family liniment it excels anything we ever used. Yours trulv, REV. M. P. BELL, Pastor of M. E. Church. Patten's Mills, N. f. KEXDALL'S SPA VIN CURE. Is sure In lt effects, mild in its action- as it d.-K-B not. blister, yet it is penetrating and poworrul to reach every deep seated pain or to remove any bony growth or other enlargements, such as spavins, splints, curbs, callous, sprains, sweiliugs, and any lameness and all enlargements of the Joints or limbs, or for rheumatism in man andfor any purpose lor which a liniment is used for man or beast It Is now known to be the best linament for man ever used, acting mild and yet certain in its elFects. Send address for Illustrated Circular, which we think gives positive proof of Its virtues. No remedy has ever met with such unqualified success to our knowledge, for beast as well as man. ... Pr-ce 51.00 per bottle, or six bottles for ?o.00. All Prnggiits have h or can get it for you, or it will be sent to auy address on receipt of price by ths proprietors, DR. B. J. KENDALL & CO., Enosburg Fails, Vermont. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS.

7 VkelcsWX

HEADQUARTERS FOR

Boots AT 17 West Washington

CAP TA

We offer this season a stock of Boot. ami Shoes iinurpasei in the West, it is the most complete in the State, at prices that cannot he approached by small lealers. We have three stores in this State, buy rooik in large piautities ami for cash, which brings bottom prices. Call at the

ii,Hailton,jlsi "VILA. RUSI1V1LLE, CONNERSVILLE LIBERTYaud HAMILTON. fS Trains Dally, Between ttundays Ei . Indianapolis Cincinnati yCounectlous made for nil po'uts. bKast and West of Cincinnati and Indianapolis.! Sau l ftevknsox. Gen. Ticket Agt. L. Williams, Gen. Manager Indpl's Peru & Chicago Ry. THE GREAT THROUGH ROUTE TO CTJ1C AOO Ard ,n P"" In the great VDHjAUU N.Ttli i..J N.nli-vfct. Fort W'tkjVf, ITniitin-toD, L- rprT T7 r f gHncpott, ..Wnliu.li. . lUJUSllUKJ DETROIT An'1. T,i,l, in Mit,i,'ean. b , , . AND THE Di.-ect connrctioijs ms c in CLirao with tli trunk lines for all noriliet i n ummer r forts and princi1 poloU la tb nott'i west and far wt-el. Weodruff ?lphiK ul Trlor Coaches run ltween Inciianolig n i Chicago, via Kokomu and Indiana polii and Michigan City. Train leaTintr Inilianai.li at A. m. arrive at Chicago al G:5t P. n., ; Ft. Vau', 1:& p. M.; Lo. panpport, !:: p. m. ; South IVnd, tl p.m.; Toledo, 6:2-r p. J. ; Detroii , p. . Train leaving Indianapolis at 12:28 p. m. arrives at Fraokfvt, 4:: r. .; al.:h, i.ri p. Ft. Wayne 7:25 r. m.; Toledo, l-M p. Cleveland, 1:45 a." IT. Bnflalo,7:3r a. m. ; X;w York City, 10 r. m. Traiu leaving Indianapolis at 0 2 P. M , arrives at LogaiiHiort at U.02 P. M.; Valparaiso 1:20 a. m. ; South Bi-imI, 2.2 a. m. ; Ml'nwaka, ::.5 a. m. ; Elkhart Ja. m.; Ka'itiuM.w 7:'a.m.; (.rauJ lUjilIU A. M.'; lkt at;ifc:05A. M. Train leaving Inlianapo'i at 11:") p. m. (daily) arrives at Chicago via Kokomo, nt 7:5 a. M. ; Fort Wayue, 7:Oii a. m ;T. lec'o, l'':wi a. m. ; Cleveland, 2:20 p. m. ; Detroit, :.vt r. u. ,Ask tvr tickets via I., P. A C. Railway. Ilelialde Information given by V. T. MALOTT, L. G. CANXOX. Gcn'l Managf r. Cen'l Pm. and T'k't Aft, V Fast Washington Stwt. FOR NEW YORK, BOSTON AND ALL EASTERN I?OIIVXS, TAKE THE C. C, C. & I. R. W. This Train Leaves Indianapolis s Kollow: i -im 4 T TRAIN arrived Munci, f.:22 a. m. 1 I t A. ill. Union. 7:25 n. iu ; M.luey, 8:10 a in.; ISeflfonntnine, a. in.; 'ret lute, 11:47 a. m. Arrive at Cleveland at 2 2 . in.; I'.utUU 7:'j p. ro. Xiagara Falln, 0: o p. nt ; r.jn liniptoii, 4:35 a. m. Kodierter, 11;' i.-t a. in.; Alb try :I0 . ui., arriving at X-w York '.,y at 1 a. ni. and BtHun at 2:2.1 p. m. HIEVEN HOURS In A d van co of Other Routes . ttiFThi train haa Tulare, drawing Kootn and Shaping tVach from Iu Ihtrmpoin to Ne Yotk with otlt change. Fiire al waj the fani a hy nir-r aud nlower routes. Ragngc checked t!.roni;li 10 deoliuatlon. v ( 1 A T) Train arrive? at Crestline 4:10 0VU I M m.; Timl.nrg, 12:11 a. m.; Cleveland, 7:Ka. in.; I'ulV.ilo, 1 1 : 1 f p. in.; XiHara Fall, 3:,10p. m.; Itiughamptju, ll:uip. m.; Rochester, 4:5 p.m.; Alhauy, 12:4" a. ru.; airive at New York City C.:45 a. m. and live ton '.:- a. m. IIourr quicker than all other linv. This train has elegant TaLice Sleeping Coaches from IndiMiiapolia to Cleveland, and from Cleveland to New York City and Dontoii without change. At id. ney close cuniic-ctioiit are ma le iur Toledo aud De troit and ll poiuU iu Cauaia. Columbus Route, VIA DAYTON AND SPRINGFIELD. 1 pA 4 Train arrives at Muucie 2:2-1 p. I llOU A in.; Liiion u:11 p. in.; Iaytcn 5:55 p. nr; Springfield 7:11 p. m ; Coluuilnis p ni . The only lino running through I'arh-r Coachei from lndianpi.ti to t'olunilni. here direct connections are ma lo with the Baltimore 4 Ohio Kailroad. This train ci-nii'-c a at Mujiife with the Fort Wayne, .Muucie A Cincinnati Railway fur Ft. Wyn and Detroit. JäfSee that yonr ticket read ly be ee Line. A. J. SMITH, J. W. CAMPBELL, C. GALE, 0. T. A. Pam. Agt. pt. Cleveland. O. Indianapolis napolte port IOWA, CALIFORNIA & NORTHWtSl KANSAS, TEXAS ANi SOlTHvYEST, TVICK Til 12 ' Train Leave IndUinapolit at fHcu$: T i 1 II Train connect dirert for all points l40 A - 31 n Iowa, Net.rar-ka, California and the Black Hills, via Sidiw-y and Cheyenne, arriving one train in advancof any other line, and saving one night's ride. Thia train also connects for Decatur, Springfield, Jackson Tille, Illinois, Louisiana and Mexico, Mo.; and tit Quincy or Bloomington for Kaunas City, Atchison. St. Joseph, Denver, aud all points in Kausaf , Colorado and the Southwest, via Hannibal with M.K.A T. By., for Moberly, Fort Scott, Parsons, the Neosho Valley and points in Texan, and via Bl.w.niinttton tor El Paso, Mendota, Dubuque, and all points In North era Illinois and Iowa. 1 r ry tf (Xoon) Fat Line, runs directly X Jim through via Danville Junction to Decatur, SpringtieM, Jacksonville, Hannihal, M utterly, St. Joseph, Atchifon and Kanxa city, arriving at Kansas City the next morning in time to connect with trains for all tmints in Kausas, Colorado and New Slexico. nflfl l) T Train has reclin ing chair tepI iu ig car with state rooms to Peoria, and through coach to Itarlineton, reaching Galesburg, Burlington, Ottnniwa, Rok Island and Davenport in advance of other lines. Thia train also connects via Burlington or Rock IslaDd for all points in Iowa, Nebraska and California, aud via Bloomington for El Paso, Mendota. Dubuque, Sioux City, Yankton, and all points In Northern Illinois, Iowa and the Black Hills via Yankton and Fort Pierre. This train also makes direct connections via Dan Tille to Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, (Juincy Kansas City, Atchison, tt. Josepli, Leavenworth and all intermediate points. And via Hannibal for Sedalia, Ft. Scott, Parsons, Denison, Houston, Galtetton, and all points in Tex a. Special Notice to Ijand Hmmtert and Emigrant. If you want a land exploring ticket or reliable In formation about lands in the West, or if you have booght a home there and want to move with yonr family, household goods andetck, address the Gen eral Passenger Agent named below, and et our ratea and map W. II. PROCTY, Acting Gcn'l Tass aul Ticket Agt VIAXAPOLIS, IB TIIK Street, Indianapolis.

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Kmwm

S33b.o3B

STORE,

17 West AVASirrGToy Street, : INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.