Indianapolis Leader, Volume 3, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1882 — Page 3

many Sreat measures yet to be completed meas-

"5f"t!7 men lie knew were beyond the -public 'u'uu nour, out hlchhe confidently beZ woula secure popular approval within the periofinf hu own lifetime, and by the aid ol bis v n u cuurie. Diflerin?. as Garfield does, from the brilliant parliamentary leaders, it i not easy to find his counterpart anywhere ia the record of American public life. He perhaps m. re nearlv resembles Mr. Seward in hl suy.ieme faiti in the all-conquering power of a principle. He had tne lore of learniiifc and the patieni industry of investigation to which John Quincy Adams owes his prominence and his residency. He ha-i eome of those ponderous elements nf mind which distlugniahed Mr. Webster, and which, indeed, in all our public life have left the real MassacaußetU Senator without an intellectual peer. In English Parliamentary history, as in our own, the leaden in the House ot Commons prent points of essential difference from Garfield. But some of his methols recall the best features in the strong, independent course of s-ir Robert Peel, and striking lescmblances are discernible in that most promising of modern conservatives, wnodied too early for his country a .J his fame, the Lord Geoige Uentin'k. He had all of Burke's love for the sublime and the beautiful, with, possibly, something of his superabundance; and in his faith and hii magniniity, in his power of statement, in his subtle analysis, in his faultless loic, in his love of literature, in his wealth and world of i lustiation, one is reminded of that great Knglish statesman of to-day, who, "confronted with obstacles that would daunt any but the dauntless, reviled by those whom he would relieve as bitterly as by thote whose Bupposed rights he is forced to invade, still labors with serene courage for the amelioration of Ireland, and for the honor of the English name. Garfield's nomination to the Presidency, while not predicted or anticipated, was not a surprü-e to the country. Iii. prominence in Copgrua, his solid qualities, his wide reputation, strengthened by his then recent ekcion as Senator irora Uhio, kept him in the public eye as a man occupying the very highest rank among those entitled to be called statesmen. It was not meri chance that brought him thn high honor. "We must," says Mr. i.'meron, "reckon auceeas a constitutional trait. If Eric i- in robust health and has slept well and Is at the top of his condition, and thirty years old at his departure from Greenland, he will fteer west and hit ship will reach New Foundland. But take Eric oitt and put iu a stronger and bolder man and the ships will sail 600, 1.Ü0U, 1,500 miles farther and reach Labrador and New En..lard. There is no chance in results." Ana candidate. Garfield steadily grew in popular favor. He was met with a storm of detraction at the very hour of his nomination, and it continued with increasing volume and momentum until the close of his victorious campaign So might nor greatness in mortality Can censure 'scape; back wounding calumny The whitet virtue strikes. What King so strong Can tie the gall up in the slanderous toneue? Uncer it all he was calm and strong, and confident: never lost his self -possession, did no unwise act, spike no hasty or ill-considered word. Indeed, nothing in his whole life is more remarka b!e or more creditable than his bearing through those five full mouths of vituperation a prolonged Hgouy of trial to a sensitive man, a constant and cruel draft upon the powers of moral endurance. The great mas of these unjust imputations passed unnoticed, and with the general debris of tne campaign tell into oblivion. But in a few instances the iron entered his soul and he died with the injury uniorgotten if Lot unforgiven. One aspect of Uarfitli's candidacy was unprecedented. Never before, in the history of partisan contests in this country, had & successful Iresidentis.1 candidate spoken freely on passing events and current issnes. To attempt auythlr" of the kind seemed novel, rash, and even dt. , crate. The older class of voters recalled the unfortunate Alabama letter, in which Mr. Clay was supposed to have signed hit polities death warrant. Ihey remembered also the hot tempered effusion by which G neral ricott lost a large share of his popu larity before his nomination, and the unfortuuate speeches which rapidly cousumed the remainder. The younger voters had seen Air. Greeley iu a series of vigorous and original addresses, preparing the pathway for his own defeat. Unmindful of these warnings, unheeding the advice t f friends, Garfield spoke to large crowds as he journeyed to and from New York in August, to a great multitude in that city, to delegations ana deputations ot every kind that called at Mentor during the summer and autumn. With innumerable critics, watchful and eager to catch a phrase that might be tunitd into odium or ridicule, or a sentence that might Ins distorted to his own or his party's injury, Gartfeld did not trip or halt in any one of his seventy speeches. This seems all the more remarkable when it is remembered that he did not write what he said, and yet spoke with such logical consecutiveness of thought and such admira ble precision of phrase as to defy the accident of misreirt and the malignity of misrepresentation. in the beiumng of his Presidential life Garfield's experience did not yield him pleasure or satisfaction. The duties that engross so large a portion oi the President's time was distasteful to him, and were unfavorably contrasted with his legislative work. "I have been dealing all these years with Ideas." he impatiently exclaimed one day, "and here I am dealing ouly wnh persons. I have beeu heretofore treating of the fundamental principles ot Government and here I am Considering ali day whether A or B shall be appointed to Has or that othee." Ho was earnestly seeking some practical way of correcting the evils arising from the distribution of overgrown and unwieldy patronage evils always appreciated ai.d often discussed by him, but whose magnitude had bf-eu more deeply impressed upon his inind since his accession to the Presidency. Had be lived, a comprehensive improvement iu the mode of appointment and in the tenure of ofiice would have been proposed by him, and with the aid ol Congress no doubt perfected. But, while many of the Executive duties were not grateful to lilrj, he was assiduous and conscientious in their rib-charge. From the very outset he exhibited administrative talent of a high order. He grasped the helm of ofiice with the hand of a master. In thi respect indtfd he constantly snrpri-ed many who were most .i.timately associated with him in the Government, and especially those who had feared that he might be lacking in the Executive faculty. Ills disposition of busiuess was orderly and rapid. His power of analysis, aud his skill in elassiiieatlon, enabled him to dispatch a vast mass of detail with singular promptness and ease. His Cabinet meetings were admirably conducted. His clear presentation of othcial subjects, his well considered suggestion of topics on which discussion was invited, his quick decision when all had been heard, combined to show a thoroughness of mental training as rare as his natural ability and his facile adaptation to a new and enlarged field of labor. With perfect comprehension of all the inheritances of the ar, with a cool calculation of tne obstacles in his way, impelled always by a generous enthusiasm, Garfield conceived that much might be done by Ms Administration towards restoring harmony between the different sections of the Union. He was anxious to go South and spt-ak to the people. As early as April he had ineffectually endeavored to arrange a trip to Nashville, whither he had beeu cordially invited, and he was agulu disappointed a few weeks later to fiud that he could not goto South Carolina tu attend the centennial celebration of the victory of the Cow pens. But for the autumn he definitely counted on being present at three memorable a&teniblic-s iu the South the celebration at Yorktown, the opening of the Cotton Exposition at Atlanta, and the meeting of the Army of the Cumberland at Chattanooga, lie was already turning over in bis mind his address for each xcasion, and the three taken together, he said to a friend, gave him the exact scope and verge which he needed. At Yorktown he would have had before him the associations of a hundred years that bound the Sou in and the North in the sacred memory of con mon danger and a common victory. At Atlanta he would present the material Interests aud the iudustri.d development which appealed to the thrift and indcixudeijce of every household, and which should unite the two ections by the instinct of self-interest and self-de fense. At Chattanooga he would revive memories of the War only to show that after all its d'f asters and all its su tiering the country was xtronger and frreater, the Colon rendered indissoluble, and the future, through tne agony and blood of one gen eration, made brighter and better for all. Uartield'a ambition fur the success of his Ad ministration was high. With strong caution and conservatism in his nature, he was in no danger of attempting rash experiments or of resorting to the empiricism ol siatcfcinanshiD. lint he be llevtdtbat renewed ami closer attention should be given to questions affecting the material in terestsaud commercial prosperity cf lifty millions ol people. He believed that our continental re lations. extensive and undeveloped as tney are, involved responsibility, and could be cultivated into profitanlo friendihipor be abandoned to harmful indifference or lusting enmity. He believed witn equal confidence that an essential forerunner to a new era of national progres must be a feeling of contentment in every section of the Union, aud a generous belief that the beueiltsand burdens of goven ment would be common to all. Himself a conspicuous illustration of what ability and ambition may do under republican institutions, he loved his country wltn a passion of patriotic devotion, and every waking thought was given to her advancement. He was an American iu all his aspirations, and he looked to the destiny and inlluence of the United States with the philosophic compojiure of Jefferson and the demonstrative confidence of John Adam. The political events which disturbed the President's sereuitv for many weeks before that fateful day in July, form an important chapter U: his career, and, in his own judgment, involved questions of principle ami of right which are vitally essential to tne constitutional administration of the Federal Government, It would be out of place here and now to speak the language of controversy; but the events referred to, however they may continue to be source of contention Mlth others, have become, so far as Garfield is concerned, as much a matUr of history as his beroism at Cnickamauga or his illustrious service in the House. Hetail is not needful, and personal antagonism shall not be rekindled by any word uttered to-day. The motives of those opposing him are not to be here adversely interpreted nor their coure harshly characterised. But of the dead President this is to be said, and said because his own speech is forever silenced and he can be no more heard except through the fidelity and the love of surviving friends: From the begin ning to the e. d f the controversy he so much deplored, the President was never for one moment actuated by any motive of gain to himself or of Joss to others. Least of all men did he harbor revenge, rarely did he ever show resentment, and pnalice was not in his nature. He was congenially employed only in the exchange of good offices nd the doing of kindly deeds. There was not an hour, from the beginning ot the trouble till the faul shot entered his body, iwhen the President would not gladly, for the sake of restoring harmony, have retraced any step he

had taken if such retracing had "merely Involved consequences personal to himselL The pride of consistency, or any supposed Bense of humiliation that might result from surrendering his position, had not a feather's weight with him. No man was ever less subject to such Influences from within or from without. But after most anxious deliberation and the coolest survey of all the circumstances, he solemnly believed that the true prerogatives of the Executive were involved in the issue which had been raised, and that he would be unfaithful to his supreme obligation if he failed to maintain. In all their vigor, the constitutional rights and dignities of his great ofiice. He believed this in all the convictions of conscience when in sound and vigorous health, and he believed it in his suffering and prostration in the last conscious thought which his wearied miud bestowed on the trausitory stru. gles of life. More than this need not be said Less than this could not be Baid. Justice to the dead, the highest obligation that devolves upon the living, demands the declaration that in all the bearings of the subject, actual or possible, the President was content in bis mind, justified in his conscience, immovable in hjs conclusions. The religious element in Garfield's character was deep aud earnest. In his early youth he espoused the faith of the Kisciples, a sect of that great Baptist Communion, which in different ecclesiastical establishments is so numerous and so influential throughout all parts of the United States But the broadening tendency of his mind and his active spirit of inquiry were early apparent and carried him beyond the dogmas of sect and the restraints of association. In selecting a College in which to continue his education he rejected Bethany, though presided over by Alexander Campbell, the greatest preacher of his Church. Ills reasons were characteristic; first, that Bethany leaned too heavily toward slavery; and, second, that being himself a Disciple and the

son of Disciple parents, he had little acquaintance with people of other beliefs, and he thought it would make him more liberal, quoting his own words, both in his religious and general views, to go into a new circle and be under new influences. The liberal tendency which be anticipated as the result of wider culture was fully realized. He was emancipated from mere sectarian belief, and with eager iuterest pushed his investigations in the direction of modern progressive thought. He followed with quickening step in the paths of exploration and speculation so fearlessly trodden by Darwin, by Huxley, by T. udall, and by other living scientists of the radical and advanced type. His own Church, binding Its disciples by no formulated creed, but accenting the Old and New Testaments as the Word of God with unbiased liberty of private interpretation, favored, if it did not stimulate, the spirit of investigation. Its members profess with sincerity, and profess only, to be of one mind and one faith with those who immediately followed the Master, and who were first called Christiaus at Antioch. But however high Garfield reasoned of "fixed fate, free will, foreknowledge absolute," he was never separated from the Church of the Disciples in his affections and in his associations. For him it held the srk of the covenant. To him it was the gate of Heaven. The world of religious belief Is full of solecisms and contradictious. A philosophic observer declares that men by the thousand will die in defense of a creed whose doctrines they do not comprehend and whose tenets they habitually violate. It Is equaLy true that men by the thousand will cling to church organizations with instinctive and undying fidelity when their bellet in maturer years Is radically different from thrt which inspired them as aeophytes. But after this range of speculation and this latitude of doubt, Garfield came back always with freshness and delight to the simpler instincts of religious faith, which, earliest Implanted, longest survive. Not many weeks before his assassination, walking on the banks of the Potomac with a friend, and conversing on those topics of personal religion, concerning which noble natures have an unconquerable reserve, he said that he found the Lord's Prayer and the simple petitions learned in infancy infinitely restful to him, not merely in their stated repetition, but in their casual and frequent recall as he went about the doily duties of life. Certain texts of Scriptures had a very strong hold on his memory and his heart. He heard, while in Ldinburg, some years ago, an an eminent scotch preacher who prefaced his 6crmin with reading the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, which book had been the subject of careful study with Garfield during all his religious life. He was greatly impressed by the elocution of the preacher and declared that It had imparted a new aud deeper meaning' to the majestic utterances of Saint Paul. He referred often iu after years to that memorable service, and dwelt with exaltation of feeling uwu the radiant promise and the assured hope with which the great apostle of the Gentiles was "persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us frora the love of God. which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." The crowning characteristic of General Garfield's religious opinions, as, indeed, of all his opinions, was his liberality. In all things be had charity. Tolerance was of his nature. He respected in others the qualities which he possessed himself sincerity of conviction and frankness of expression. With him the inquiry was not so much what a man believes, but does he believe it? The lines of his friendship and his confidence encircled men of every creed, and men of no creed, and tothe end of his life, on his everlengthening list of friends, were to be found the names of a pious Catholic priest and of an honestminded and geuerous hearted free-thinker. tin the morning of Saturday. July 2. the Presi dent was a contented and happy man not in an ordinary degree, but joyfully, almost boyishly nappy, cm his way to the railroad station to which he drove slowly, in conscious enjoyment of the beautiful morning, with an uuwonted sense of leisure and a keen anticipation of pleas ure, nis talk was in all tne grateful and gratulatory vein. He felt that after four months of trial his Administration was strong In its grasp of affairs, strong in popular favor and destined to grow stronger; that grave difficulties confronting him at his inauguration had been safely passed; that trouble lay behind him and not before him; that he was soon to meet the wife whom he loved, now recovering from an Illness which had but lately disquieted and at times almost unnerved him; that he was going to his Alma Mater to re new the most cherished associations of his younjc manhood, and to exchange greetings with those whose deepening interest had followed every Btep of his upward progress from the day he entered upon his college course until he had attained the loftiest elevation in the gift of his countrymen. Surely if happiness can ever come from the honors of triumphs of this world, on that quiet July morning James A. Garfield may well have Wen a happv man. No forboding of evil haunted him; no slightest premonition of danger clouded his sky. His terrific fate was upon him in an ininstant. One moment he stood erect, strong, confident In the years stretching peacefully out before him. The next he lay wounded, bleeding, helpless, doomed to wear weeks of torture, to silence and the grave. Great in life, he was surpassing greatly in death. For no cause, in the very frenzy of wantonness and wickedness, by the red hand of murder, he was thrust from the full tide of this world's Interest, from its hopes. Its aspirations, its victories, iuto the visible presence of death and he did not quail. Not alone for the one short moment in which, stunned and dazed, he could give up life, hardly aware of iu relinquishment, but through lays of deadly languor, through weeks of agony, that was not less agony because silently borne, with clear sight ad calm courage, he looked ' into his open grave. What blight and ruin met his anguished eyes, whoso lips may tell what brilliant, broken plans, what ba tried, high ambitions, what sundering of strong, warm, manhood's friendships, what bitter rending of sweet household tics! Behind him a proud, expectant Nation, a great host of sustaining friends, a cherished and happy mother, wearing the full, rich honors of her early toil and tears; the wife of his youth, whose life lay in his; the little boys not emerged from childhood's day of frolic; the fair, young daughter; the stuidy sons just springing Into closest companionship, claiming every day and every day rewarding a father's love and care; and in his heart the eager, rejoicing power to meet all demand. Before him, devastation and great darkness! And his soul was ;iot shaken. His countrymen were thrilled with iustant.profound. and universal sympathy. Masterful in his mortal weakness, he became the center of a Nation's love, enshrined in the prayers of a world. But all the love and all the sympathy could not share with him his suffering, lie trod the wine-press alone. With unfaltering front he faced death. With unfailing tenderness he took leave of life. Above the demoniac hiss of the assassin's bullet he heard the voice of God. With simple resignation he bowed to the Divine decree. As the end drew uear, his early craving for the sea returned. The stale! v mansion of power had beer, to htm the wearisome hospital of pain, and he becd to be taken from its prison walls, from its oppressive, stilling air, from its homelessness and its hoelessness. Gently, silently, the love of a great peopla bore the pale sufferer to the longed fr healing of the sea, to live or to die. as God should will, within sight of its heaving billows, within sound of Its manifold voices. Wih via", fevered face tende-ly lifted to the cooling breez k he looked out wistfully upon the ocean's changing wonders; on its far sails, whitening in the morning light: on its restless wavs, rolling shoreward to break and die beneath the noonday sun; on the red clouds of evening, arching low to the horizon; on the serene and shining pathway of the suits. Let us think that his dying eyes read a mystic meaning which ouly the rapt aud parting soul may know. Let us believe that in the silence of the receding world he heard the great waves breaking on a further shore, and felt already upon his wasted brow the breath of the eternal mornlug. ACTION OF TUE TWO nOCSES. The eulogy was concluded at 1:50 p.m., having taken just an hour and a half in ita delivery. ' . As Mr. Blaine uttered the last solemn words the spectators broke into a storm of applause, which was not hushed for some minutes. Benediction was then offered by Rev. Dr. Bullock, the Marine Band played the Garfield dead march, and the invited guests tiled out of the chamber in the same order in which they entered. I lie House was then called to order and concurrent resolutions adopted: ' "The thanks of Congress are hereby presented to lion. James O. Blaine for the apEropritae memorial address delivered by im, and that he famish it for publication' and on motion of Mr. Mckinley the House, as a further mark of respect, adjourned. The Senate, upon the return from the memorial exercises, adjourned.

A DAV'i üIDJtl-A Llt'iü'S AN1LOUV.

Mid tangled forest and o'er grass plains wide. By many a devious path and bridle-way. Through the short brightness of an Indian day. In middle winter, 'twas ui7 lot to ride. Skirting the round-topped, pine-clad, monntaln side, , . , While far away upon the steely-blue Horizon, half concealed and half in view, Ilimalaj's peaks upreared their snow -crowned pride. In utter purity and vast repose. I, ere the first, faint flush of morning glowed Within her Eastern chamber, took the road, And. slowly riding between day and night, I marked how, through the wan, imperfect Ghostlike and gray loomed the eternal sr.ows. So near they seemed, each crack aud crevice Like'bas-rellef work showed, while in the light Of ruddy morn, gray changed through pink to white. But eoou the sun. up climbing, flooded all The heavens, and then a thin aud misty pall Of exaltations rose, and pale of hue And fainter ever those summits grew, Until the day waned low. aud shadows tall Sloped eastward. Then once more, in radiance, clear , . . , Of setting sunlight, beautiful as brief. Each peak and crag stood out in bold relief, Till, slowly, pink faded to ghostly gray. So through life's morning, noontide, evening, may Ideal hopes dawn, fade, and reappear. The Spectator. PEIISEYEUEXCE. Charles Keade in Harper's Weekly. 1 On a certain day in the year 1819, Mr. Chitty, an attorney in Sbafesbury, was leaving his office for the day, when he was met at the door by a respectable woman and a chubby faced boy with a bright eye. He knew the woman slightly a widow that kept a small stationer's shop in the town. She opened her business at once. "Oh, Mr. Chitty, I have brought you my Robert; he gives me no peace, his heart is so set on being in a lawyer's ofiice. But there! I have not got the money to apprentice him. Only we thought perhaps you could find some place or other for him, if it was ever so small." Then she broke off and looked appealingly, and the boy's cheeks and eyes were fired with expectation. Most country towns at that time possessed two solicitors that miht be called types; the old established man, whose firm for generations had done the pacific and lucrative business wills, settlements, partnerships, mortgages, etc. and the sharp practitioner, who was the abler .of the two at litigation, and had to shake the plum Uee instead of sitting under it and opening his mouth for windfalls. Mr. Chitty was 'o. -. But theae sharp practitioners are very apt to be good-natured, and so, lcoking at the pleading widow and the beaming boy, he felt disiKised to oblitr.1 tlttin, and rather sorry he cuiild not. He said his was a .small otlice. and he bad no cicrk'a place vaemt; "aud indeed, if I had, be is too young why, he is a mere child." "I am twelve next so and so." said the boy. giving the month and the day. "You don't look like it, then," said Mr. Chitty, incredulously. "Indeed but he is, sir," said the widow: "he never looked his age, and writes a beau tiful hand." "But I tell you I have r.o vacancy," said Mr. Chitty, turning dogsred. "Well, thank you, sir, all the sama," said the widow, with the patience of her sex. "Come, Robert, we mustn't detain the centlenian." 8o they turned away with disappointment marked on their faces, the hoy's especially. Then Mr. Chitty said, in a hesitating way, "To be sure there is a vacancy, but it is not the sort of thing for you.'" "What is it, sir?" asked the widow. "Well, we want an oilice-boy." "An office boy! What do you say, Robert? I suppose it. is a beginning, sir. What will he have to do?" "Why, sweep the ollice, run errands, carry papers; and that is not what be is after. Look at him he has pot that eye of his fixed on a counselor's wig, you may depend; and sweeping a country attorney's ollice is not the stepping-stoue to that." He added, warily, "at least there is no precedent reported." "La, no sir," said the widow; "he only wants to turn an honest penny, and be among law papers." "Ay, ay; to write 'em and sell 'em, but not to dust 'em." "For that matter, sir, I believe he'd rather be the dust itself in your ollice tuan 'bide at home with me." Here she turned angry with her offspring for half a moment. "And so 1 would," said young master, stoutly, endorsing his mother's hyperbole very boldly, though his own mind was not of that kind which originates metaphors, similes, and engines of inaccuracy in general. "Then I say no more." ooserved Mr. Chitty; "only mind, it is a half crown a week that is all." The terms were accepted, and Master Robert entered on his humble duties. He was steady, persevering and pushing. In less than two years he was promoted to be a copying clerk. From this in due course he became a superior clerk. He studied, pushed and persevered, till at last he became a fair practical lawyer, and Mr. Chitty's head clerk. And so much for perseverance. He remained some years in this position, trusted by his employers, and respected too; for, besides his special gifts as a law clerk, he was strict in morals, and religious without parade. In those days country attorneys could not fly to the metropolis a"nd back to dinner. They relied much on London attorneys, their agents. Lawyer Chitty's agent was Mr. Bishop, a Judge's clerk; but in those days a Judge's clerk had an insufficient stipend, and was allowed to eke it out by private practice. Mr. Bishop was an agent to several country attorneys. Well, Chitty had a heavy case coming on at the Assizes, and asked Bishop to come down, for once in a way, and help him in person. Bishop did so, and in working the case was delighted with Chitty's managing clerk. Before leaving he told Mr. Chittv he sadly wanted a manning clerk he could rely on. Would he oblige him and part with this young man? Chitty made rather a wry face, and said that young man was a pearl. "1 don't know what 1 should do without him; why, he is my alter ego." However, he ended, by saying generously that he would not stand in the young man's way. Then they had the clerk in, and put the question to him. "Sir," said he, "it is the ambition of my heart to go to London." Twenty-four hours after that our humble hero was installed in Mr. Bishop's ofiice. directing a large business in town and country. He filled that situation for many years, and got to be well-known in the legal profession. A brother of mine, who for years was one of a firm of solicitors in Lincoln s Inn Heids, remembers him well at this period, by meeting him sometimes in his own chambers, and .sometimes in Judges' chambers. My brother says he couid not help noticing him, for he bristled with intelligence, and knew a deal of law, though he looked only a boy. The best of the joke is that this clerk afterward turned out to be four years older than the solicitor who took lain for a boy. Jle was now amongst books as well as lawyers, and studied closely the principles of law, whilst the practice was sharpening him. He was much in the Courts, and every case there cited in argument or judgment he bunted out in the books, and digested it, together with the application in practice by the living Judge, who had quoted, received, or evaded it. ' He was a Baptist, and lodged with a Baptist minister and his two daughters. He fell in love with one of them, proposed to her, and was accepted. The couple were married without pomp, and after the ceremony the good minister took them aside and said: "I i have only 200 in the world. 1 have saved it, a little at a time, for my two daughters. Here is your share, mv children." Then he gave his daughter 100. and she handed it to the bridegroom on the spot. The good minister smiled approval, and they sat down to what fine folks calls breakfast, but they called it dinner; and it was. After dinner and the usual ceremonies, the bridegroom rose, and surprised them a little. He said: "I am sorry to leave you,

but 1 have a particular business to attend to. It will take me just one hour."

Of couxee there was a look or two interchanged, especially by every female there present: but the confidence in him was too Kreat to be disturbed, and this was his first eccentricity. He left them, went to Gray's Inn, put down his name as a student for the Bar, paid away his wife's dowry in the fees, and re turned within the hour. Next dav the married clerk was at the office as usual, and entered on a twofold life. He worked as a clerk till 5 o'clock; dined in the hall of Gray's Inn as a sucking barrister, and studied hard at nicht. This was fol lowed by a still stronger example of dupli cate existence, and one without a parallel in my reading and experience; he became a writer, and produced a masterpiece, which as regarded the practice of our Courts, became at once the manual of attorneys, counsel and Judges. The author, though his book was entitled "Practice," shewed some qualities of a Jurist, and corrected oberly, but firmly, unscientific legislature and judicial blunders. So here was a student of Gray's Inn, supposed to he picking up in that Iifti a small smattering of law, yet, to diversify his crude studies, instructing mature counsel and correcting the Judges themselves at whose chambers he attended daily, cap in baud, as an attorney's clerk. There's an intellectual hotch-potch for you. All this did not in his Inn qualify him to be a barrister, but years and dinners did. After some weary years he took the oaths at Westminstsr, and vacated by that act his place in Bishop's office, salary included, and was a pauper for an afternoon. But work that has been long and tediously prepared can be executed quickly, and adverse circumstances, when perseverance conquers them, turn round and become allies. The ex-clerk and young barridter had plowed and sowed with such pain and labor that he reaped with comparative ease. Half tfie managing clerks in London knew him aud believed in him. They Lad the ear of their employers and brought him pleadings to draw and motions to make. His book, too, brought him clients, an i lit was soon in full career as a junior connsol and social pleader. Senior counsel soon found that they could rely upon his zeal, accuracy and learning. Tbey began to reqne t that he might be retained with them in difficult cases, and he became first junior counsel at the Bar. And to much for perseverance. Tiiue rolled its ceaseless course, and a silk gown was at his disposal. Now a popular junior can not always afford to take silk, as they call it. Indeed, if he is learned but not eloquent, he may ruin himself by the change. But the remarkable man whose career I am epitomizing did not hesitate; he still pushed onward. And so one morning the Lord Chancellor sit for an hour in thj Queen's Bench, and Mr. Robert Lush was appointed one of Her Majesty's counsel, learned in the law, and then and there, by the chancellor's in vital ion, otepped out from among the juniors, and took his ?et within the Bir. So much for perseve-anc From this point the outline of his career is known to everybody. Hp wa opointed in 1865 oiii of the Judges of the Queen's Bench, and after sitting in that Court some years, was promoted to be a Lord Justice of Appeal. A few days ago he died, lamente l end revered by the legal profession, which is very critical, and doe. not bestow its respect lightly. I knew him ouly as Queen's Counsel. 1 had him against me once, but offener for me, because my brother thought him ewn then the best lawver aud the most zealoujat the Bar, and always retained him if be c-mld. Düring the period I knew him personally, Mr. Lush had still a plump, unw rink led cheek and a singularly bright eye. IIh wU-e was full, mellow and penetrating; it lil led the Court without apparent effort, and accorded well with his style of eloquenc?. Reasoning carried to perfection is one of the lino art. An argument by Lush enchained the ear and charmed the understanding, lie began at the beginning, and each succeeding topic was articulated and disputed of. and succeeded by ita right successor, in language so fit and order s lucid that lie rooted an.3 grew conviction in the mind Or.e thing more to those who copy Robert Lush in all essentials. Though impregnated from infancy with an honorable ambition, he remembered his Creator in the days of his youth; nor did he forget Him when the world poured its honors on him, and those insiduous temptations of prosperity which have hurt the soul far offener than "low birth and iron fortune." He flourished in a skeptical age, yet he lived and died fearing God. Death of One of the Characters In Mark . waiu'a "Innocents Abroad." Sava the World, of New York: Mr. Daniel Siote, the well-known blank book manufacturer, died yeiderday in this city iu his mothei'a hous", where he was visiting. Mr. Slote was for eight years a member of the B"ard of 1-Mucation, xinder the old system of Ward Commissioners, having been elected several times from the Tenth AVard. He was also an old fireman an! a member of the Volunteer Fire Department Ball Committee, and served his time as a member of the old State Kencibles. At the time of his death he was a member of the .St. Nicholas Society, of the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen, of the Olympic Club, cf the New York Yacht Club, of the old Pro?pect Park Fair Ground Association, and of Howard Lodge, F. aud A. M. II r. Slote was for twthtv years the head of the old firm of Slote Woodman it Co., and lately of Daniel Slote, & Co. Mr. Slote married, about fifteen years ago, the daughter of ex-Alderman James Griffiths, aud leaves his wife and two young children. Many people who have never seen him or heard his name will regret his death as that of an old friend, for he vas well known wherever the English lauruage was read as the "Dan" of Mark Twiin's "Innocents Abroad." He was a genial gentleman, social and pleasant, whose character was not overdrawn in the famous book. Of the pilgrims he was probably the most rractical aud possessed of the greatest shire of common sense. When the party aired the guide "Bulllinger" and they determined to rename him for the sake of romanc, one suggesttd the name of Alexis du Caulaincourt. "Alphonse Henri Gustave d'Ilautcvill," sard another. "Call him Ferguson," slid Dan. And Ferguson he was called to ftie end of the book. At another time some of ihe party were in a bath. Dan's voice rose in the ar: "Oh! bring me some soap, why don't you?" The reply was Italian. 3a n resumed : "Sap, you know soap That's what I want. IS-o-a-p, soap; so-i-p, soap; s--p-e, soap. Hurry up! 1 don know how you Insti spell it, but I want ii Spell it to suit yourself, but fetch it. I'ri freezing " Then was heard the doctor saying impressively: "Dan, how often have eve told you that these foreigners can not understand English? Why will you not tell us vhat you want? I will address this persot in his mother tongue. Here, cospetto! corpo di Bacco! Sacramento! Solferino! Soap, you sou of a gun. Dan, if jou would let i-s talk for you, you would never ex;osa your ig toranl vulgarity." At another time, whn the Innocents were traveling through Ittly, and Fergu.-on kept telling them that Michael Angelo designed every castle and Church "tht? Pantheon, the Tiber, the Vatican, the Coliseum, the Tarpcian rock, St. John Lateran, the Baths of Caraculla Dan cried out: 'Enough, enough, enough! Say bo more! Lump the whole thing and sav that the Creator made Italy from designs by Michael An gelo.'" Dan was the marker In the billiard game played by Dan and the doctor, which lasted two hours and a half withoat a tioint being nuule, when Dan asked .them if the game was not rather monotonous. Out of that voyage grew many warm friendships, and none of them were stronger than that between Dan and the author of "The Innocents Abroad." Montana people are calling for a paper mill. They say that they have plenty of Cottonwood and straw for pulp, and besides the advantages of good water-power, have springs of boiling hot wtter which can be utilized. With hot water, cold water, straw, chemicals and pulp already to hand, why should not Montana be the b -ven of the paper-maker?

SOCIETY DIRECTORY, Untted Brother of Friendship. Sumner Lodge No, 11. regular communication every first and third Monday of each month. Hall north-east corner of Meridian aud "Washington streets All members requested to be pre3erit, also members of other lodges of tho same faith are invited. II. W. Jackson, "Worthy Master. "NV. S. Lock financial Secretary.

TRUTH ATTE STE ID Some Important Statements of "NVellKnowii People Wholly Verified. In order that the public may fully realize the genuineneKH of the statements, as well as the power and value of the article of which they speak, we publish herewith the fac-simile signatures of parties whose sincerity is beyond question. The truth of these testimonials is abxolute, nor can the facti they announce be ignored. Indianapolis, Ind. July 2, 1881. H.H. Warner & Co.: Gentlemen For months I have been afflicted with that terrible disease pronounced by my physicians to be Diabetes Moletus or Sugar Diabetes all the alarming symptoms usually manifest in this disease were present the thirst became intolerable, the appetite excessive and the skin hard and dry, while the tongue became glazed and furrowed. The flow of urine rapidly increased in quantity, frequency and my health was completely "undermined. I was treated by the best f.hypiciaru but continued to growworje. At ength I heard of the remarkable results your Safe Diabetes Cure is effecting and I commenced the use of the remedy. There was a favorable change almost immediately. The symptoms subsided and I gained strength and improved in health each day. My disease being of long standing required a greater quantity of the medicine to subdue it entirely. My improvement is so marked that I am confident in a comparatively short time, I shall be entirely cured. 183 Indiana Avenue. I x 1I ana polls In n. Jul' o, 1881. H. H. Warner & Co., (rentlemon About one year ago 1 was seized with a bladder dillk-ulty which gave me much distress. Although In the Irnid of a physician for months, f grew no better. During the winter my suirering w;s very great, and my symptoms became really af:;rminc I then consulted an homeopathic physician, and remained in his hands until iiboui' 1st of April. I experienced much benefit- while under his treatment, but was still a great sufferer. Altout ttiis time (April 1st) I was iuruaded to uive Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver t.'ure, atrial. I have continued to iruprovi and am now very much better than at anytime since my ailment began. I thoroughly believe yonr preparation possesses meuieliial virtues of a most unusual character for the relief of such ailments as that I have experienced. Indianapolis Ind. July 5, 1?S81. II. II. Warner fc Co., Gentlemen About 10 years ago I was attack ed with a very severe form of Kidney disease. which caused me unbearable palu ana Unering. My body was terribly bloated. The skin was hard and dry and not tue drop of moisture was visible upon the surface, while violent pains darted across my b.-ick and about the loins. For over a year I w.s treated by our best physicians who exhausted their skill and experience, but I continued to grow worse daily. Finally I bcan to use Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver l ure, and 4 bottles only, entirely cured me. Indianapolis Ind. July 8, 1881. II. II. Warner & Co., (cntlemen: For about 25 years I have been afllicted with Liver complaint, constipation, biliousness and the various disorders arising from a torpid and deranged liver. The symptoms were most violent in the Spring of the year and always accompanied by dull heavy pains in the side. I tried various remedies and spent a great deal of money seeking relief, and found nothing that nave any permanent benefit. Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure relieved me promptly, aud I have no return of the distressing symptoms. I feel like a new man now. cccv (?aJ vThousands of equally strong endorsements many of them In cases where hope was aban doned have been voluntarily jriven, showing the remarkable power of Warners Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, In all diseases of the kidneys, liver or urinary organs. If any one who reads this has any physical trouble, remember the great danger of delay. W. W. HOOVER, Dealer in Staple and Fancy COUNTRY PRODUCE A Specialty, L1RS. LYDIA L PIKKKÄM, OF IYHH, K&SS.: LYDIA E. PINKHAr.VC VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Positive Cure for all Ue Palatal CowpUlat aa4 WaakaaMM tnaaM to aar beat feaal papalatlaa. It will care entirely the worttt form of Female Complaint, alt ovmrian trouble, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling' and Dinplacementa, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and Is particularly adapted to the Change of Life. It will dlmolTe and expel tumors from the nterns in sa early stage of derelopment. The tendency to eaneeroni humor there la checked very speedily by Its use. It remores nUntness, flatulency, destroys aU erarmar for stimulants, and relleres weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloatiaav Headaches, Ferrous Prostration, General Debilitj, Sleeplessness, Depression aud Indigestion. That feeling' of bearing' down, causing' pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cared by its use. It will at all time and under all circumstances act in harmony with the hws that g-orern the female system. For the eure of KMney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpused. LYDIA E. PIXKHAMm VEGETABLE COMFOITN'D is prepared tt 23S and S3S Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price tL Bus bottles for fS. Bent by mail in the form of pills, i'jo in the form of loaenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either, lfrs. Pink ham fmely answers all letten of Inquiry. Bend for pamphlet, Address as above. Mention this Paper. Wo family should be without LTDIA K. PIXXHAH'f LIVER PILLS. They eure constipation, biliousness, and torpidity of the IItot. XS cents per box. -jT Sld by all Drag gUta. -fc

aEQCIEIIS,

Now Read! Schools and Colleges take Notice.

FW IES1S II -BYW. S. Scarborough, A.:K. : Professor Lntlu and Ureek In Wiibtrforce University, Wllberforce, Ohio. Trete lesons contain copious notes, ful vocabulary, and extensive re'errncs to Hadly'aand Goodwln'n Gretk Grammai. ILe t-xerciaea areeay, progressive aud well gro' d. Thev orm a most detlrable boo mr beyinnerw. Wholele, or Introductory Price, ii t" t., Retail Price, Ül.Zö. For Sale by A. S. HA It MOS 1- Co., Ill aci 113 Gillian St., HEW YC-I OR BY THE AUTHOR, Wl LB ERFORCE, OH'O GENERAL BILL FOSTER Controlling the most prominent bill boards in tUe city. Including TUE LARGEST BOARD IN THE STATE inclosing the ätate House Grounds. Firs Ensirel 7hre3-Sheet Ecards ia tie City and Suburbs. Office, at Daily Sentinel Office, INDIANAPOLIS. O'BRIFN & LEWIS, BLACKSMITHS AND WAGUNM'KERS. GENERAL JOBBING bHOF TBEFAIBINQPBOMPTIiY DONE. Corner North and Fayetta Streets Indianapolis. BRYANT & STRATT0N Telegraph Institute. ESTABLISHED 1858. rractical, Profitable and Useful Education. No useless studies. Instruction Individual and by Lectures. Students advanced ns rapidly us their abilities permit. Original and leading in every depaitment. Makes No Idle Claims, but relie on the produced results as shown b a proud record of vTerSS years. So other school or college has started so manyyoung and middle-aged men on the ro&d to sue cess. The school is open to all, and cordially, earnestly invites all before entering upon a course of study to Tisit It and inspect its every detail. Call for catalogue and full particulars at the College ollice, Bate Block, ophite the l'ost-Offict or address . C. C. KOERNER, Pbest. Indianapolis, Ind. SUCCESSFUL BEXE2Y ever disco vet ea, as it is certain in its enecs snd does not blister. Also excellent for humau flrsu. read ruoor BEunv, From COL,. I. T. FOSTER. Yoonestown, Oi.io. May Vlth. ISA). Dr. ö. J. Kendall & Co., (ienu: I had a vrv valuable Hambletonlan colt which 1 prtz-o very highly, ha IihU a large bone ppaviu ou oi:e joint and a small ouh on tue other ilea rnauo him very lame. j. nad him under the charge of two veterinary surgeons which all Utocnrehlm. l wts one day reanlti: the advertisement of Kendall's bpayln Cure hi tne Chicago Express, I determined at oc ce 1o irr it, a;a got our uraggist nere to stealer K, thy ordered thieo bottles; 1 took them all aid thought I would give it a thorough tr'9, I used it according to directions and the fourth day the colt ccaed to be lame, and the lump have' disappeared. I ued but one bottle aud the coil's limbs are as free Hum lumps and as smooth as any horse lathe ttatn He U en tirely euren, ine cure was h remarkable that I let two or my ntizübors iiuve tne remaining two b ltle, who an now using It vtry iteBpectiuiiy, L.T. FOHTER. KEXDALIS SPAVIX CUKE. Rochester. Ind,, Nov. 30th, issa. B. J. Kendall A To., lien ta: Please- seiid us a supply of advertising matter for Kendall's Spavin cure, n nas a good sale here ana it gives the best of satisfaction. Of all we bave sold we have yet to learn the first unfavorable report. Very Respectfully, J. Dawson c Sou, Druggists. KEXDAL.IAS SPAVIX CTHE Wilton, Minn., Jan. lllh. mi. B. J. Kendall, & Co., G-uts: Having got a horse book of yon by mall a year ago. the contents of which persuaded me to try Kendall's Spavin Cure ou the hind leg of one ol my noises which was badly swnlleu and could not be reduced oy any ctner remedy. I got two bottu-s of Kendall's Spavin cure of l'rtsicn V Luddutu, Druggists ol Wsseca, which comfletelycu led my horse. About five years ago had a three year old colt sweenied very bud. I used your remedy as given in your book without rowelllug and I ma t suy to onr credit that the co.t is entirely ciir-d. which is a surprise not only to hjvmsIi, butblfao io iny neighbors. You tent me the book for I be trilling sum or i cent" and if I cou'd not g'l another like it I would not take twenty -11 ve dollars for iu Yours Truly, Geo. Matbews. KENDALLS S1MVLX CURE ON HUMAN FLEH. Patten's Mills, Washington Co., N. Y. Februaiy 2'st, 1S78. Dr B. J. Kpudall, iVar Kir: The particular case on which 1 used your Kendall's Hpavin Cure was a nm Igimut ankle sprain ot Hlxteen ipontbs Htanainjr- lhvt tiled many things, but in vain. Yonr dpa via Cure t ui the loot to the grouu .1 gttlD, and "or the first time since hurt, in a i-aiuia! po iiloo. Foi a family liniment It excels nj ihirg we ever u'ed. Yours tiulv, UKV. M. I BELL, Pastor of M. E. Chtrch. Fatten' Mill-, N. r KENDALL'S SPAVIN CUKE. Is sure in ita tüte's, mi'd In i:s action as it does not blister, yet It Js penftrallng and powerful to tearh every dwpneated pin or to remove any buy growth or other enlarge menta, such as spavins, splints, curbs, callous, sprains, sweillcgs, aud any lameness and at! enlargements of the Joints or limbs, or for rheumatism in man ana for any purpose lor which a llnlrxeiit is usd for man or Least It is now known to be t he nest Ii r ameut for mun ever u&ed, acting mi:d and jet cutain in IU effects. 8end aJdieas for Illustrated Circular, wb!ch we think gives positive proof of lis virto-n. No remedy has ever met with such unquaiiMed success to our knowledge, lor beast as w e:i as man. ' Prce f 1.00 per bottle, or six bottles for 5 0. All Druggists have 1 or can get it (or yoa, or it will be sent to any aid res ou receipt of price bv the p-oprietorn, UK B. J.KKVDaLL A CO., Enosburg Falls, Vermont. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISVS. GLOIUOV HEWN 'lit INYA1 M M THOSK who contemplate gitagtoBot Springs tot the treatmcn of j-MUs, Uteet, Scrofula, sud ah eatansonsor blwod diseases, can b eared byone-tniid the cost of such a trip at the old reliable Staad. I have been located here lor S3 years, and with the ad Tan tage of such a long and steoessfal experience, caa confidently warrant a core in all cases. Ladles needing a periodical pill caa get them at my office of by Mail at f 1.00 per box. Office, 43 Virginia avenne. Indianapolis, Ind. DB. BtNNITT, ncoeesorte Dr. P. B, Bwiag

mit

7 VEnTAu51Sp

THE HOST

11 II 111 111

No. 35 West Market Street, ; Boss Clock, one Laif Sua a re La-.t of Illinois Street I T'nTAV-rnr.i :n Dyeing, Cleaning and Repairing Done in the Best Manner. : PAT We rontlnuo to act as Solicitors fofratorts. Caveats, Trade Marts, tvpyrlpMs. etc., l r tl.e United States, Canada. Cuba, Eupland, France, tirauinv. etc We have had tliirty-live yeaw' eiperience. Patents obtained tlinu:fl us are riutivd in the SCIENTIFIC Amemca.v. TLislarpe and splendid illustrated week 1 y pa per. $ 3 . 2 O a year,itiows the rrogresa of Science, verv interesting, and has an enormous circulation. Address MC.VN & CO., Patent Solidtors, Pub's, of Scientific America. 27 Purk liow. New York. Hand o .k about Ituentsfree. DO iUOT GO WES Cntil you hav ap,.:Jed to .A- X. 1IALPORD lf0!äiPtU!3iäjEL0.!JIS O l34S.lLfI.(MS srUEKi.iianapolig. For Tim Abl" nn.i tn wt lowest Freigh and rwstntr iitc. Ginoinniaii. gan,üio&. 2aytca IL-.. Xi.VIA. KUKHVIU K, COSNKUSVILLa UBLltlVauU HAMILTON. fy Trains Dai'y, Bttwi-n A Sundays Exc. J li-iIiaLVolU A Uhcmuatl a"Connctlon(i Tai' for iV r'uts. East una We: t ol'Ciuciu, .tt dbu li tJiaiijpolia, Sam i. tviVKso, J-n. riebet . ut. J. W J J. 11 A MS, ., i8ii. Manager ludpFs Pci a & fihicagoRy. THE QBE AT TEEOÜGIT EÖÜTE f'lti Tf! A And all p( im. in tbe great iv awU Nrwi xul tlli-West. Foit U'ynr, lit i:tia.f.M, Lv lT'f"T TPTr san?rorl, V'at.H'h. " KJKJlllUKJ DTT'T'P OTT In Michigan, the a r tu i: Li.-ci 'in. ctii.m uuJt iu v'L.c:.;,c with the trunk tines f t Ii in I tliv. i mi i n ULH1..T i i-.it ; aud principl p ivt in tbe non'i w.t wri f-r wert. Wcwlrnfi HepMrtii1 Carlo-(cbi-s run between Ini;auapoli nnJ (Jr.cHk-, vU Kokvuioud Indiana p.iliuau i Mic!:igu -'it. Trait V:: virv In 1:;i! ip li i-t 8.53 A M. arrives at Ohicitgo at 6:5u r. m., ; Ft. Wayne, 1:50 r. m. j Lo. .tnport. 1: 0 p. m. ; South Bend, 6:21 k m.; Tolede, 5:2"r. " : lelr'i', :lo r. m. Train lenvirijr liHinnai;!) at 12:18 r. a. arrives at FrunVfort, 4:: p. m,; W Liihh,v4 r. Ft. Wayne 7:J5 r. m.; TuieJo, 1:IS p w.; Cleveland, 1:45 A. M. liuflalo,7:3r a. m . ; X. Yoia City, 1 p. m. Triu leivins ludianar-u!: nt ':'5 P. m., arrives at Logancport at 11:02 r. m. ; Valparaiso 4:20 a. m. ; outl Bend, 2 25 a. u . ; Milaitka, 2:35 . n. ; Elkhart 3am.; Kalitn.azco 7;'' x.; tirsod EapidslO A. M. ; Chicago 8:05 a. m v r-t Train li-fttinsr iD lisnu! t.tliXJ r. m. (daily) arrives at Chicago via Kokt.mo. at 7:05 a. M; Fort VVajLe, .W a h ;Tolei'o, 1 '.1 a.m.; Cleveland, 2:20 p. a. ; lMri.it, l:'M p. u BtiAek. for tic'-i- I., P. C. Railway. lie liable ItifuriuutLn given by V. T. MALOTT, L. G. CANNON. Geu'l Manager. Grn'l Phks rudTk't Aft, 101 KHxt Washington Street. FOR NEW YG?K BOSTOtf ASI ALL -.. 1AKK ill. v " 1 k rM ar ersV C. C, . & I. R. W. Tli is Train Leaves !(!iuiiiLwlis Follows: 4 1 fr s II TRMS strives Mnnci", 6:22 a.m. 411) Ä. til. L'isi u. 7:-j at.; tj:ney, 8:45 a m.; ISi'U funiit.iiiie, i:.$ a. i...; Ci li w, 11:47 a. m. Arrive at Clevt-land at . ja.; DntTtlo 7:50 p. m. Niagara Fails. 9;;.0 p.- tui; l!i).y haaiploD, 4:35 a. m Höchster, 11:.. m.; All siy : a. in., arriving at New York City a! :M n. t.i. u'jil P'-sU-u at 2:25 p.m. SEVUK IIOUIIS Ii Advance of ptlicr Koutes 4TTbis truin ha Falsce. Prawipg Room and Sleeping Cwach frum ln.iiaiiapoLa to New York with cutcbange. Ks r a! wayn t b n-.rtt as I v longer and nlowcr ronts. Bafjiaj-e cb- cLc! tbrt-rgh to destination. ' A A 1) Tiairi krriv.n at Cif biline 4:10 a ÖViU I . ill tn.: riiWur-, 12.r.a. m.; Cleve;land, 7:10a. ui.; Unftalo, 11-.H p. rn.; Niagara Falls, 3;j0p. in.'; hingbainptou, ll;iü p. ui.; Jiwcbester, 4:35 p.m.; Albany, 12:4 a. ni.; ani at Ni York City 6:15 a. m. snd Huston 9: a. in. Ilorrs quicker than all otber lillf. . . . Tb in train ban t-bgant l':la.e U-t j Iub Coaches from Indianapolis to Cb-vilrt l, and from Cleveland to New York City and liontuu without change. At Sid n-y clust-counectiuiis r n.a.l tor Toledo and Detroit Slid -11 ji'iut in Ctu-Ja. Columbus Route, -VI V DAYTON AND SPKINGFIELD. nA 1 Tralu mve t V uncie 2:23 p. !t)U A !l m ; l nlon 311 p. m.; Dayton 5:55 p. hi ; PpringtieM 7:15 p. tu ; (Xdumbas 9:15 p m. Theouly line ruuuiiii ti.rtuKii l'mlor Coaches from Iixliana; oii t Coi-nibiif , btiu direct con tit'Ctions are made with tbe tfaltioiore & t'bio Railroad. This train ronneca at ilnncie with tbe Frt Wayne, Miinci & Cincinnati Kail ay for Ft. Wane and Detroit. ß "See that yorr tl. It el reads by he ee Line, A.J. SMITH, J. W. CAMPBEIL. C. GAL1, G. T. A. I'Asa. Act. rr. Tlcvt. laud. U. Ti. .;uii.ptl na pol W FOR IOWA, CALIFORNIA & NOHTHWLSi OR WANS, TEXAS AN0 SOUTHWEST, "7: 0 TYaiuM Leant Indianapolii at JulliAtt; Tl 1 J Train conm cts dirt-ct for all pol ts 140 A ilia Iu Ia, Nebraska, Califoraa aud tbe BUcs. liijs, via iiuy end Cb trenne, airiviufi ono tia.a in K-i.urvof aiy other line, and avin one rlbt's rde. Tds train .1st e ni ect-for Decatur, Hprinsfi d. Jacks!ville, lllini.i-4. Louisiana ai.d Mexico. Me.; and 1a ijaiucyr r.bx-.miigtoi. f-.r Fum 'liy, Atchis-n. St. Joseph, Denver, and all point In Kansas, Clr ado and tbe South wt-st, via banal bat with M.KA T. Hy., for Molt rly, Kort fccott. TarKcua, the Neohe Va'toy and pninta in Tsxa. and via B! vim in ton tor EI I'rmo, ;end..ta, Dubuque, aud all points in Ncrth era Iliia"is and Iowa. . 1.1 X V (Noo:l F"st L:.ie, tuna dirtftly 1.1) I 111. through via'l'auvili June tin to Decatur, .riuittield, Jacksonville, Hannibal, Jbber. !y, St. Joseph, Atcbbon and Km;u city, ariving at Kan-an City tbe next morning in time to ctiaect wih trains for all puiuts iu Kausas, Col or a and Sew Mexico. 11.AA ) I Train as reclining char sleep. l.tlU I i'l. ine car with state room to Peoria, and tbrouKli c( !i to l urliui.tou, eachinc CaleKburg, BurtingtuD, üttumw, Kock fskad and Davenport in advance of other Pees. Tbls rain ale connects via Burliugtou or Kock laland for Jl pointa in Iowa, Nebraska aud Calib.ri.ka, anJ via Hoonilngton for El Pao, Mendi-ta Du'.mqw, SUX City, Yatikton, and all points In Northern lil Ms, Iowa and tbe Uiack Hii'a U Yankton aad lor J"ierre. jf, This train kIü nuilf Ii: t c an: eti via Daa. villa to Decatur, "rrtnjVM,"' J.-u-kst'inUa, Qniney Kai' 1ty, At:i!n, M. Jone; h,' avenwerth i.d i'l N t-i ii!ite r"' !. " i.d vt: iiliihal for Sedalla, Tt. Scott, Parsons, Denlson, Ilcistpa, Galveston, and ell poiuts in Texas, -i hpteial hottet io Land Hun tern a ui A'ta r a (a. If you want a laud exploring ticke or reliable ! formation about lands in the M est. r if jou have bought a home there -and want torove with yonr family, honsehold (roods aadatock, adreea the Gas er. I Pa.nger Agent Darned below, nd et oar rates ftasl mpa, ' W. H. PRCTX,.. Acting Gen'l Taas wl Ticket A gt

i

EWTS

22

J

1A

5