Indianapolis Leader, Volume 3, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1882 — Page 3
FLAXEN AND BBOTTX AND GOLD.'
Thr6e little curla I hold to-night. Flaxen and brown and gold ; Tears Ml over the tlsnue white That gathers them In Its fold. As I unwrap them one by one. Flaxen and brown and gold. Flaxen and brown and gold, bo fair. Clustered on pillows white. Damp with the dews that gathered there. Lay in one room all night. .morn Hearts saemed breaking when broke the Over that lovely Bight. So they went out of our house alone. Leaving it cold and bare; Then 1 unfolded, one by one, These liuie eiiU of hair; Heart too full of its bitterness, Koul too full for a prayer. Three little heads prc-ss close to-night Pillows all still aud cold ; Three little forms, in robes of white, - Under the turf and mold; Three little brows that used to wear Flaxen and brown and gold. These are the treasures left to me. All of my babes to hold : But when I near the waves and see Heavenly sates unfold: Their little brows 1 kno will look Fairer 'neath crowns of gold. Transcript. A HEAVY BURDEN. Rather aheavy burden, isn't it, my boy?" Clarence Spencer, to whom the words had been addressed, turned from the ledger and looked toward the speaker. Clarence was a young man not more than five-and-twenty and was book-keeper to Mr. Solomon Wardie, a pleasant-fared, keen-eyed man of fifty, who had spoken. A heavy burden, isn't it, Clarence?" the merchant repeated. And still the young man was silent. His looks indicated that he did not understand. He had been for some time bending over the ledger, with his thoughts far away; and that his thonuhts were not pleasant ones was evident enough from the gloom on his handsome face. "My dear boy, the burden is not only heavy now. but it will grow heavier and heavier, the longer you carry it." "Mr. Wardle, f do not comprehend you." "Ah, Clarence!" 'l certainly do not." "Didn't I call at your house for you this morning? ' Clearance nodded assent. "And didn't I see and hear enough to reveal to me the burden that you took with you when you left? You must remember, my boy, that I am older than you are, and that I have been through the mill. You find your burden heavy; and I've no doubt that Sarah's heart is as heavy as your own." And then Clarence Spencer understood, and the morning scene was present with him, as it had been present with him since leaving home. On that morning he. had a 'dispute with his wife. It bad occurred at the breakfast table; there is no need of reproducing the scene. Suffice it to say that it had come of a mere nothing, and had grown a cause of anger. The first had been a look ami a tone; then a flash of impatience; then a rising of the voice; then another look; the voice grew higher; the reason was unhinged; passion gained sway, and the twain lost sight of the warm, enduring love that lay smitten and aching down deep in their hearts, and felt for the time only the passing tornado. And clarence remembered that Mr. Wardel had entered the house and caught a sight of the storm. And Clarance Spencer thought of one thing more; he thought how miserably unhappy he had been all the morning; and he km' not how ong his burden of unhappiness was to be borne. "Honestly, Clarence, isn't it a heavy and thankless burden?" The bookkeeper knew that his employer was his friend, and that he was a truehearted. Christian man, and, after a pause, he answered : "Yes, Mr. Wardle, it Is a heavy burden." "My boy, I am going to venture upon a bit of fatherly counsel. I hope I shall not offend." "Not at all," sid' Clarence. He winced a little, as though the probing gave him new pain. "In the first place," pursued the old man, with a quiver of emotion in his voice, "you love your wife?" "Love her? Ye?, passionately." "And do you think she loves you in return?" "I don't think anything about it I know!" "You know she loves you?" "Yes." "Then you mast admit that the trouble this morning came from no ill feeling at the heart." "Of course not." "It was but a surface squall, for which
you at least are very sorry. A moment's hesitation, and then: "Yes, I am heartily sorry." "Now mark me, Clarence, and answer honestly. Don't you think that your wife is as sorry as you are?" "I can not doubt it." "And don't you think she is suffering al this time?" "Perhaps." "Very well. Let that pass. You know she is bearing her part of the heavy burden V ' "Yes, I know that." "And now, my boy, do you comprehend where the heaviest part of this burden is lodged?" Clarence looked upon his interlocutor wonderingly. "If the storm had all blown over, and you knew that the sun would shine when you next entered your home, you would not feel so unhappy?" Clarence assented. "But," continued Mr. Wardle, "you fear that there will be gloom in your home when you return?" The young man bowed his head as he replied in the affirmative. "Because," the merchant added, with a touch of paternal sternness in his tone, "you are resolved to carry it there." Clarence looked up in surprise. "I I carry it?" "Yes; you have the burden in heart, and you mean to carry it home. Remember, my boy, I have been there and know all about it. I have been very foolish in my lifetime, and I have suffered until I discovered my folly, and then I resolved that 1 would suffer no more. Upon looking the matter squarely and honestly in the face I found the burdens which had so galled me self-imposed. Of course such burdens can be thrown off. Now, you have resolved to Shome to dinner with a heavy heart and rk face. You have no hopes that your wife will meet you with a smile. And why? Because you know that she has no particular cause for smiling. You know that her heart is burdened with affliction which gives you so much unrest And you are fully assured that you are to find your home shrouded in gloom; and, furthermore, you don't know when that gloom will depart and when the blessed sunshine of love will burst in again. Andwhy don't you know? Because it is not in your heart to sweep the cloud away. You say to yourself, 'I can bear it as long as she can. Am I not rightr " Clarence did not answer in words. "I know I am right," pursued the merchant, "and very likely your wife is saying to herself the same thing. So your hope of sunshine does not rest upon your willingness to forgive but hpoq the inibility to bear the burden. By and by it will happen, as it has happened before, that one of the twain will surrender from exhaustion, and will be likely to be the weaker party. Then there will be a collapse and reconcili ation. Generally the wife falls first beneath the galling burden, because her love is keenest and most sensitive. The husband in such a case acts the part of a coward. When he might, with a breath, blow the cloud away, be cringes and cowers until his wife is forced to let the beautiful sunlight through her breaking heart" Clarence listened and was troubled. He saw the truth and felt its weight He was not a fool nor was he liar. During the silence that followed he reflected upon the past and he called to his mind scenes just as Mr. Wardle had depicted. And this brought him to the remembrance of bow he had .seen his wife weep when she bad failed and sank beneath the heavy burden; how often she had sobbed upon his bosom in grief for the error. The merchant read the young man's " -
thoughts, and, after a time, he rose and touched him on the arm.
- "Clarence, suppose you were to put on your hat and go home now. Suppose you should think on your way only of the love and blessing that might be: with this thought you should enter your abode with a smile on your face; and you should put your arms around your wife s neck and kiss her, and softly say to her, My darling, I have come home to threw down the burden I took away with me this morning: it is greater than I can bear.' Suppose you were to do this, would your- wife repulse your' "Repulse me?" "Ah, ray boy, you echo my words with an amazement which shows that you under stand me. Now. sir. have you the courage to try the experiment? Daie you be such a man? Or doyou fear to let your dear wife know how much jou love her? Do you fear she would respect you less for the deed? Tell me, do you think the cloud of happiness might thus be ban shed. Oh, Clarence, if you would but try it."' Sarah Spencer had finished her work in the kitchen and in the bed chamber, and Sit down with her work in her lap. But she could not ply her needle. Her heart was heavy and sad, and tears were in her ej-es. Presently she heard the front door open and a step in the passage. Certainly she knew that step. Yes. her husband entered and a smile upon his face. She saw it through her gathering tears and her heavy heart leaped up. He came and put his arms around her neck and kissed her. and said to her in broken accents: "Darling, I have come home to throw down the burden I took away with me this morning. It is greater than I can bear." And she, trying to speak, pillowed her head on his bosom and sobbed and wept like a child. Oh! oould he forgive her? His coming with the blessed offering had thrown the burden of reproach back uion herself. She saw him noble and generous, and she worpished him. But Clarence would not allow her to take all the blame. He must share that. "We will share it so evenly," said be. "thit its weight shall be felt no more. And now, my darling, we shall be happy." "Always." Mr. Wardle had no need, when Clarence returned, to ask the result He could read it in the young man's brimming eyes and in the joy-inspired face. It was a year after thi-- and Clarence Spencer had become a partner in the house that Mr. Wardle, by accident, referred to the events of that gloomy morning. "Ah," said Clarence with swelling bosom, "that was the most blessed lesson I ever received. Mv wife knows who gave it to me." "And it serves you yet, my boy?" "Aye, and it will serve us while we live. We had none of those old burdens of anger to bear now. They can not find lodgment with us. The flash and jar may come for we are human, you know but the heart will not be called to entertain it." PLEASANTRIES. Never ask a woman her age tbat is, not that woman. AeIt. some other woman. A woman has been found who admitted that she was not pretty. She says she is beautiful. The despairing father of triplets should remember that in London a baby is born every five minute3. Kind-hearted editors now allow cortributora to the waste paper basket to write on both sides of the paper. Butler's Analogy Professor: "Mr. T you may now pass on to the 'Future Life.' '' Mr. T.: "Not prepared." The Boston girls have begun to wear police helmet hats, and Boston young men are kept under strict surveillance. This flood is troublesome, to be sure; but you ought to have seen the one we had in the year, of the world, 1653. Oldest Inhabitant. The Detroit Free Press says ''the nightkey slavs more men than the musket." Isn't "night" a mis-print for "whia?" Exchange. If Brigham Young is really alive, it will take a large Committee of married men to estimate the thunder he will catch for staying out so long. It's the woman who has a brown plush sacque on who can quickest tell a eeal t kin when she sees it on another womau. Steuben ville Herald. A man who wants his wife to love and respect him will never make the mistake of putting his feet into her slippers. Years of devotion will not wipe out the insult A philosopher observes that there are two periods of life when a man looks to tee if his hair is coming out, at twenty, when he inspects his upper lip; at forty, when he inspects the top of his head. Free Paes. There i3 a lady atPittsfleld, Mass., whose hair on one side of her head curls beautifully, but on the other side is Tjerfectly straight. Nothing is said of her husband's hair. Perhaps by this time the poor man hasn't any. Do you feel heavy in the morning, weary, unrefreshed, unreated, languid, lirrp, utter, blase, faint-hearted, unequal to the battle of life, querulous, morbid, disinclined to exertion? you've got it The aesthetic craze is upon you, take a sunflower lily pill. A Kansas man and his woman have been married to each other once a year for four years, a divorce having separated them after every union except the last oae. As tbey are now pretty well accustomed to the horrors of war, it is believed they will stick. A woman has sharper eves than a man. Any little love passages that may be going on about her a woman will detect in an instant. With a man it is different. He will not perceive a kiss, even, unless it ia brought right under hit nose. Boston Transcript. A Brooklyn preacher says that ninetenths of the redeemed in heaven will be wi men. In such an event it would be difficult to convince the women that they were in heaven; and if they don't attempt to climb over the fence and escape it will bo strange. Oshkosh Advocate. Some one says: "Bread and butter are the dress of this world ; love and kindness its trimming." Burdette tays he'll bet $4 the man who wrote that isn't married. Any married man knows that the trimming always costs four times as much as the dress. Rolling-pin Is not aesthetic, A dis-h-rag scarcely Is divine, A squalling kid is not pathetic, A dirty floor is no i leonine; A drudging life Is not supernal; Bad Hour li not a daffodil: The weather is not al way vernal. e have nut mixed the good and ill. "The hair tells,' says an exchange, speaking oi some scientific operation. We should warble that the hair tells. After a young man has been ut late and comes home puffing his broa'.h against the frosty atmosphere of morning, it is ten to one that the hair on his coat tells his wife all about it. A young and popular artist of New York City recently went home and found that he was the happy father of a fourteen pound baby. After looking fondly at the youngster for a few moments, he said, in a daze I sort of way: You fat rascal, it you go to thinking that you are born into a wealthy family you'll get leftl" Affable old gentleman (who has half minute to spared ' I suppose now my boy you take a gooa sum of money during the day?'' Shoeblack "Yessur, 'cause lots a gictlemen, when they want to ketch a train gives me a sixpence 1" (Old gent find the sixpence, but in thinking over it afterward couldn't see the connection.) ' TVboae Son Was He? "Papa," said little Harry the other evening, u your .father a gun?' Why what a fuany question, my boy. Of course, he is not; he is a man." - "That's what I thought; but last night
when young Mr. June, that you don't like, kissed siiter Mary, over the front gate, she told him to be careful or father would hear; and Mr. June said: 'Pshaw, 1 ain't afraid of that old son of a gun;' and then they both laughed, and he kissed her again. Ain't that funny?" The old gentleman was absorbed in thought and did not reply. Steubenville Herald. Miss Venie Clancy was buried at Balti
more. Her death was a great shock to hei many friynde. She was a daughter of C R. Gardiner and the wife of Mr. Doscbamps. Miss Clancy had been marriad two years. Just before her marriage ehe re tired from the stage. KELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE AND IN CI DENT. Six healthy Baptist Churches have grown out of one at Minneapolis, which was or ganized in 1853. There are in Washington, D. C , fortythree Baptist Churches, eight white and thirty-five colored. Mr. Miln Bavs his Church is to be the Church of the future, in 1 tben tells us in tie earn breath that there is no future. What is he giving us? Bvston Transcript. - - The Lord no more 'calh" a mn to fpeak in prayer-mettlng witcout intelligent thought or hearty experience, than He dovs a man to preach who Dover prepares tor hiä pulpit carctully. So eays toe Congregalbnaliii. Rowland Hill said that he would not give much for a man's religion if his dog was cot the better for it. Dr. Loonard Bicon had a dog who was so much attached to him that he diii when th bells were tolling for the funeral of the divine. English papers report that Mr. Pidering Phipps, M P. for South North -imptor shire, whil'3 rising fYom family prayer on the evening of February 1, slipped and broke his leg. Congressmen and members of State Legislatures may be comforted that this is tho first caso on record of suca an accident They need not be frightened into a neglect of eitaer private or family de votion. A minister who was apt to occupy more than his share of the time in the prayermeeting, and then wonder why the members of the Ouurch did not take part, chanetd to be speaking one evening on the healing cf the ten lepers, and of the one who returned to give glory to Christ, and why the nine did notrlo s too; to which one ot tho dea cons replied that ha thought "it whs quite ukely the ftrst one took up all toe time. Vatch Tower. A general council of War was recenth' held at Manchester, England, by the Salva tion Army. The reports submitted tho wed that last year they hal twenty-eight stRtioDS, compared with 26-3 cow. They have now 585 paid officers, aad an income 57 -000 per annum. During the last car 9,000.000 copies of the Öaivation Army literature were distributed; 20,000 was wanted for a hall at C!apton, of which they had already been promished 11,000. The charities of London are on a gigantic scale when counted as a whole. Tr.ere are 1,003 benevolent institutions, for wboe support more than the sum of $20,000 000 is given annully. Among these are four Bible ard thirteen book and tract societies; fifiysix home missions, eleven home and foreign mission?, and twenty-three foreign missions, six Church building funds, twenty-three charities for the blind, eight for deaf and dumb, eeven fur incurables, six for idiots, seventeen general Hospitals, forty seven dispensaries, fifty-one nursing and con-vale-cent institutions, 163 pensions and institutions for tbe aged, 121 relief institutions, eighty-seven voluntary homes, fifty orphanages, sixty-nine reformatory institutions, 105 educational, forty-five for social improvement, and nineteen for protection. A Toung Lady's Soliloquy. IThe following was published In Chamber's Journal more than twenty years ago, yet many are still hopelessly waiting an answer to the question without making an effort to solve it in a practical way: Uselessly, aimlessly drifting through life. What was I born for? For somebody's wife, I'm told by my mother. Well, that being true, Somebody keeps himself strangely from view, And if naught but marriage will settle my fate, 1 believe 1 Khali die in my unsettled state; For though I'm not ugly pray, what woman is? You might easily find a more beautiful phiz. And then, ai for temper and manners, 'tis plain He who seeks for perfection will seek here lu vain. Nay, in spite cf these drawbacks, my head is perverse. And I should not feel grateful "for better or worse." To take the first booby who graciously came And offered those treasures, his home and his name; I think then my chances of marriage are small. But why should I think of such chances at all? My brothers are all of them younger than I, Yet they thrive ia the world, and why not let me try? I know tbat in business I'm not an adept. Because from such matters most strictly I'm kept, But this is tbe question that troubles my mind: Why am I not trained up to work of some kind? Uselessly, aimlessly drifting through life. Why should I wait to be somebody's wife? EXPRESSIONS. Luck is a dream of a simpleton. Virtue is the politeness of the souL Misfortunes are in morals what bitters are in medicines. An old man repents of that which a young man boasts. Water reddens the rose, whisky the nose, and tight boots the toes. Recollect that trifles make perfection, and that perfection is no trifle. Youth is the tas3el and silker flower of life; age is the full corn, ripe and solid in the ear. There is many a man whoso tongue might govern multitude?, if he could only govern his tongue. 'A smile" in the bar-room makes tears in the home; remember that, young man. Chicago Inter-Ocean. By example we become teachers, what nt what we wear on our backs, but 'Til we wear in our brains. The real Christian is like solid silver, but the mere professor is like plated ware, for after you have rubbed it a little you get down to the baser metal. It is better to yield a little than quarrel a great deal. The habit of "standing up," as people call it, for their little rights, is one ot the most disagreeable anduudignifled in tbe world. No one hopes to raise above his present situation who suffers email tbings to piss by unimproved, or who neglects, metaphorically (peaking, to pick up a penny because it is not a dollar Hoya Will be Boys. An exchange says a boy will tramp 247 miles in one day on a rabbit hunt and be liber in the evening; when, if you ask him to go across the street and borrow Jones' two-inch auger, he will be as stiff as a meatblock. Of course he will. And he will go swimming all day, and stay in the water three hours at a time, and splash and dive and paddle and puff, and next morning he will feel tbat an unmeasured insult has been offered him when he is told by his mother to wash his face carefully so as not to leave the fcore of the ebb and now so plain to be seen under the gill. And he'll wander around a dry creek bed all the afternoon piling up a pebble fort, and nearlj die off when his big sister wants him to please pick up a basket of chips for the parlor stove. And he'll spend the biggest part of the day trying to corner a stray mule or a bald-backed horse for a ride, and feel that all life's charms have fled when it comes time to drive the cows home. And he'll turn a ten-acre lot upside down for ten inches of angle-worms, and wi9h for the voicebss tomb when the garden demands his attention. But all the same, when you want a friend who will stand by you, and sympathise with you, and be true to you in all kinds of weather, enlist one ot these same boys-.
SOCIETY DIKECT0RY, United Brotbera or Friendship. Sumner Lodge No. 11, regular communication every first and third Monday of each month. Ilall north-east corner of Meridian aud Washington streets All members requested to be preset t, also members of other lodges of the same faith are invited. II. W. Jackfon, Worthy Master. W. S. Lock financial Secretary.
TRUTH ATTESTED Some Important Statements of WellKnown People Wholly Verified. In order that the public mny fully realize the genuineness of the .statements, as well us the power and value of the article of which they speak, we publish herewith the fuo-simile signatures of parties whose sincerity is beyond question. The truth of these testimonials is absolute.nor car. the facts they announce be Ignored. IVDTAXArolJS, IXD. Julv 2, 1881. II. II. Warner & Co.: (nntlenicn For months I have Iwr afflicted with that terrible disease proncum-cd by my physicians to !e DiaK tcs Mol tu or Sugar Dial c tos all the larming symptoms usually manifest in this disoase v-ro pros, nt the thirst Iveanie intolerable, the apnotito excessive and the skin hard mid dry, while the tongue became, glazed and furrow d. The How of urine rapidly increast d in quantity, frequency and my health was completely undermined. I was treated by the best physicians but continued to grow worse. At length I heard of the remai kable results your Safe Dial tcs Cure is filleting 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. 185 Indiana Avenue. Imi axapoms Ixd. Julv S. 1881. II. II. Warner & Co.. Gentlemen About one vear aro I was seized with a bladder lithu!tv which smve nie much distress. Although in the hands of a physician for months, I trrew no better. Durlnir t a . c ...i . . . .. . ..... . . . and my symptoms lu-canie re;illv afiirmiiitr. I then consulted an homeopathic Dhvsieian. and remained in his hands until about 1st of April. I experienced iniüvh benelit while under his treatment, but wns still a great suffer er. About this time (April Ist! I was nnrsunded to give Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, atrial. I have continued to improve and am now very much better than at anytime since my ailment betjan. I thoroughly believe yonr preparation possesses medicinal virtues of a most unusual character for the relief o such ailments a, that I have experienced. INIUANAPOLIS lNI. July 5, 181. H. II. Warner A- Co., Gentlemen About 10 years aaro I was attacked with a very severe form of Kidney disease, which caused me unbearable pain and suffering. My body was terribly bloated. The skin was hard and dry and not onedroo of moisture was visible upon the surface, while violent pains darted across my back and about the loins. For over a year I was treated by our best physicians who exhausted their skill and experience, but I continued to grow worse daily. Finally I began to use Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, and 4 bottles only, entirely cured me. Indianapolis Ind. Julys, 1S81. II. II. Warner Co., Gentlemen: For about 2-j years I have been afflicted 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 tho year and always accompanied by dull heavy pains in the s'. le. I tried various remedies and spent a great deal of money seeking relief, and found nothing that gave any permanent benelit. Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure relieved me fromptly, and I have no return of the distressng symptoms. I feel like a new man now. cos-Jtl c9 CaJ Thousands of equally strong endorsements many of them in cases where hope was aban doned have been voluntarily given, 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 uROCSRI COUNTRY PRODUCE A Specialty, 4:OS Ixid.istT3.gb .Asre. MRS. LYDIA L PINKHÄM, CF LYNN, MASS. LYDIA E. PINKHAr.TG VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Ib a Positive Cnre for all lftc Painful CoraplalaU ad WeakaaaaM rouiaoa ta aar beet female aopalatlan. It will cure entirely tbe worst form of Female Complaints, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Waknew, and is particularly adapted to the Change of Life. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the ntertu la m early stage of development. The tendency to caarwrous humors there is checked very speedily by its use. It removes falntnesa, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, and relierea weakness of tbe stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nerroui Prostration, General Dobillty, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, Is always permanently cured by Its use. It will at all timet and under all circumstances act in harmony with the laws that gorern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PI'KII WT8 VEGETABLE COMPOUND Is prepared at 3 and 135 Western Arenue, Lynn, Mass. Price tL 81 1 bottles for $5. Bent by mall In the form of pills, also In the form of lozenges, on receipt of price, per box for either. Urs. Pink ham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Send for pamphlet. Address as a bore. Mention thii Paper. No family should be without LYDIA T PHTKHAM'S LITER PILLS. They cure coustipation, biliousness, end torpidity of the lirer. 85 cents per box. KT Nld by 11 Draggiste. -.
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COLUMBUS
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Columbus.O. MANUFACTURER OF FINE CARRIAGES AND PHAETONS OUR MOTTO: THE KEST JPOR 'JTMJB MONEY. a Only Gns Grade of Work, And That Tlie Best. TESTIMONIALS. Dear Sirs: We have used and sold your work for the past three years and have found it first-class. Our customers are all well pleased. We have sold to several livery stables, and your buggies have stood the severe usage to which they are subjected equal to the highest priced buggies. Yours truly, Dunn & 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 have subjected them to the severest tests in mv liverv, and they wear better than any other work I have ever had. Yours truly, F. D. Park. Plymouth, Mich. Dear Sirs: From an experience cf fifteen years in the livery business we are full) 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 & Henn. Council Bluffs, Iowa. Gentlemen: We 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 & Kimble, Carriage Manufacturers. Lay tons ville, Maryland. Gentlemen: Have been selling you buggies and phaetons the last two years and as yet there is the first complaint to be made. I think them the best buggies for the money in the market. They give good satisfaction to lxth dealer and customer. Yours, R. A. McCormick. Cadiz, Ohio. Gentlemen I have been using and selling your manufacture of buggies for two years past with groat satisfaction to both my customers and myself. Those to whom I sold, uithont excep tion, s-peak in the most exalted terms of your work. I could furnish you testimonials from eacli party to whom I have sold your work. For myself, I think they are the lcst buggies manufactured for the trade. Wherever I go, I find those who have a knowledge or your buggies all speak of them in the most flattering terms. Yours rescctfully. John" W. Ciirisman. Delta, Ohio. Gentlemen: You made two 3-quar-ter seated open buggies for us last sum mer. We are very much pleased with them. They are the best value for their ost we have ever seen. Yours truly, Dandtl Wtood, Francis A. Foster Bobtoa, Mass.
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O'BRIEN & LEWIS, BLACKSMITHS AND WAG0NMAKERS, GENERAL JOBBING SHOP -BEF AIBINO PBOMPTLY DONE. Corner North and Fayette 8treeU, Indianapolis GENERAL BILL FOSTER ControUlng the most prominent blU boards in me city, including TIIK LAUUESr BOARD 11 OE ftTATK Inclosing tbe 8 täte House Grounds. Five Hundred Three-Sheet Beards h the City and Suburbs. Office, at Daily Cenunel C2cs, INDIANAPOLIS. VA n THE BEST OF ALL L FOE MAN AND BEAST. For more than a third of a century the Me xican Mn tm.ng Liniment has been known to mUllons all over the world as the only safe reliance for the relief of accidents and pain. It is a medicine above price ana praise the beat of Ita kind. For every form of external pain the Mustang: Liniment is without an equal. It penetrates flesh and muscle to me very Done ma King uxe conunu nnfA nf nflln und tnfliimninHnn mrm sible. Its effects upon Human Flesh and 4 1 A A t . me iiruHj i reauon are cquauy wonderful. The Mexican CHOSTAMi Liniment is needed bv somebodv in every house. Every day brines news of tne agony or an awful scald or burn subdued, of rheumatic martyrs restored, or a valuable horse or ox saved Dy the Healing power oxtnla which speedily cures such ailments of the Ii UM AM FLESH ES Rheumatism, Swellings, fltin ""Mi unmuica jrimciei( jinrni and Scalds, Cuts, Bruises and Sprains, Poisonous Bites and Stings, Stiffness, Luneneu, Old Sores, Uleers, Frostbites, Chilblains, Sore Nipples, Caked Breast, and Indeed every form of external disease. It heals without sears. For the Beute Creation it cures Sprains. Swlnny. etlft Joints. Founder Tlarness Sores, Hoof Iieases, Foot Bot, Screw Worm, Scab, uoiiow llorn, scratches, vvindalls, Spavin, Thrush, Ringbon, Id Sores. Poll Evil. Film noon the Sicht and every other ailment to which tho occupants of the stable and Stock Tara are liable. The Mexican Mnstansr Liniment always cures and never disappoints; and it is, positively. THIS BEST OF ALL L Mnnn?n ivJ 11 U uvJ FOB HAN OB BEAST. THE KOST EEMEDY ever discovered, as it is certain in its enecis and does not blister. Alto excellent for human fltsh. BEAD PAOOr BELOW. From COI I T. FOSTER. Youngatown, Ohio, May 10th, 1880. Dr. B. J. Kendall 4 Co.. Gents: I had a very valuable Hambletonian colt which I prized very highly, ho had a large bone spavin on one joint and a small one on tbe other which made mm very lame, l naa nim nnaer tne charge of two veterinary surgeons which tall d to cure him. I was one day reading the advertisement of Kendall's 8parin Cure in the Chicago Express, I determined at onoe to try it, ana goi our uruggisi nere to sena ior u, they ordered three bottles ; I took them aU and thought I would give It a thorough trial, I used it according to directions and the fourth day the colt ceased to be lama, and the lumps have disappeared. - I used but one bottle and the colt's limbs are as free from lumps and as smooth as any horse in the state. lie is entirely cured. The cure was so remarkable that I let two of my neighbors have the remaining two bottles, who are now using It Very Respectfully, L. T. FOHTER. KEXDAIX'S SPAVIN CURE. Rochester. Ind., Nov. 80th, 1880. B. J. Kendall A Co., Genta: Please send ns a supply of advertising matter for Kendall's 8 pa via Cure. It has a good sale here and It gives the best of satisfaction. Of all we have sold we have yet to learn the first unfavorable report. Very Respectf ully, J. Dawson d Bon, Druggists. ' KEXDALFS SPAVIN CURE Wilton, Minn., Jan. 11th, 1881. B. J. Kendall, & Co., Gents: Having got: a horse bx)k of yon by maU a year ago. the contents of which persuaded me to try Kendall's Spivln Cure on the hind leg of one of my horses which was badly swollen and could not be reduced Dy any other remedy. I got two bottles of Kendalrs Spavin Cnre of Preston & Luddutb, Druggists of Waseca, which comrletely cured uiy horse, About five years ago hd a three year old colt sweenled very bad. I used your remedy as given In your book without rowe'llng and I man say to your credit that the co.t is entirely cured, which is a surprise not only to myself, but also to my neighbors. You tent ma the book for tbe trifling sum of 26 cents and if I could not get another like it I would not take twenty-five dollars for it. l ours Truly, . Geo. Mathews. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE ON HUMAN FLESH. Patten's Hills. Washington Co.. N. Y February 21st, 1878. Dr B. J. Kendall, Dear Sir: The parucu lar case on which I used your Kendall's 8pav in Cure was a malignant ankle sprain of sixteen months stanoing. 1 had tried many things, but in vain. Your Bpavln Cure put the loot to the ground again, and ior the first time since hurt, in a natural position. For a family liniment it excels anything we evet ued. Yours truly, REV. M. P. BELL, Pastor of M. E. Church. Patten's Mills, N. i. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. Is sure In It effects, mild in Its action as It does not blister, yet It Is penetrating and po verrul to reach every deep seated pain or to remove any bony growth or other enlarge ments. such as spavins, splints, curbs, callous, sprains, swellings, and any lameness and. all enlargements of the Joints or limbs, or for rheumatism In man and for any purpose lor which a liniment is used for man or Least It Is now known to be the best llnament for man ever used, acting mild and yet certain in Its effects. 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. Price 11.00 per bottle, or six bottles for 15.00. All Druggists have it or can get it for you, or It will be sent to any address on receipt of price by the proprietors, DR. B. J. KENDALL &CO.,Enosbarg Falls, Vermont.
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m. M E m No. 35 West Market Street, : Bot Block, one balf Square East of Illinois Street INDIANAPOLIS, IMD. Dyeing, Cleaning and Repairing Done in the Best Manner.
PIT We continue to act as Solicitors for ratents. Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, etc, for the United states, Canada, Cub&, Enplaud, France. Germany, etc We have had thirty-five years experience. Patents obtained throuph us ard noticed in the 8CITinc American. Thislarpe and splendid illustrated weeklypaper,$3.20ayear,Khowg the Progress of Science, is very interesting, and has an enormous circulation. Address MUXN & CO., Patent Solicitors, Pub's. of Scientific American. S7 Park Bow. New York. Hand book about latent free. DO WOT xi'j WEST rrtil yon appli-H? to (J KN Kit AI KISTEUN At' KM inDIMftPOUSiaiSl. LOUIS 8.B 134 S ILI.iVois STH'iKr.h.diaaapolis SUTFor Tim 1M n.1 t;t. v ry lowest Freigh sod iym?u r ü -U. Giacinsavi, Hamilton. Day ten i-a . II. VIA ItnSllYILLE, CONMIRsViLLa LIBERI Yaud HAMlxlUN. 2 Trains Da'y, Between Sundays Eicl Inllm aix lr-& Cincinnati S3(Yn nnJ iriiit i n rf. f-.r u!1 'i,tr r. " - - -. . v . ' I " lltn, JUMQI and VVent of CiiiCiiiLMi and Indianapolis. SAJf-L t-TKVE.NSON L. Williams, Gen. Manager Gen. Ticket A gt. Indpl's Peru & Chicago Ry. THE GEEAT THROUGH EG LITE nT3Tn Ann And n pint in put V-J-l-LÄv7 Korth and North-Wett. Fort Wayne, Hnutington. Lo- rpT TT' C ganeport, Wabash. 1 VJilill U J DETROIT n,(J,oinl, ,n Michigan, the AND THE Direct ronoectlooe sna.de in Chicazo with the truck lines for all northwestern summer rert and prin cipal points in the northwest and far wei. Woodruff Sleeping and Parlor Coaches run between Indianapolis and Chicago, via Kokomo and Indiana polls snd U'chiganCity. Train tearing Indianapolis at 8:50 A. h. arriveeat Chicago at 6:50 p. a., ; Kt. Wayne, 1:50 r. a.; Lo ganeport, 1:.0 r. m. ; South Bend, 0:21 p. a. ; Toledo, 5:25 r. M.; Detroit, 8:15 r. a. Traiu learing Indianapolis at 12:28 p. a. arrWea at Frankfort, 4:30 p. a.; V abash, fi:(4 p. .; Ft. Warns 7:25 P. .; Toledo, 10:18 p Cleveland, 1:45 A. H. uunaio,7:. a. m. ; .ew lorfc City, 10 p. u. Train leaving Indianapolis at 6:25 p. u.. arrive at Logansport at 11:02 p. it.; Valparaiso 4:20 a. a. : South Bend, 2:25 a. m. ; Minhawaka, 2:35 a. m. ; Elk hart 3 a at. , Kalamazoo 7:30a.m.; Grand Capidi 10 Chicago :U3 a. w. Train tearing Indianapolis at 11:00 p. m. (daily) ar rives at Chicago via Kokomo, at 7:05 a. m.; Fort Wayne, 7:00 a. m. ; Toledo, K;0d A.m.; Cleveland, 2:20 P. M. ; Detroit, 1:30 p. M. aa-Ask for tickets via I., P. 4 C. Railway. Reliable Information given by T. T. MALOTT, L. O. CANNON. Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Pass, and T'k t Art, 101 East Washington Street. FOR NEW YOBK, BOSTON AND ALL EASTERN POINTS, TAKE THE C. C, C. & I. H. W. This Train Leaves Indianapolis 8 Follow: 41 K k TRAIN arrives Muncie, 6:22 a. in. IJO A. M. Union. 7:25 a. m; Sidney, 8:45 a m.; Bellfonntaine, 9:28 a. m.; Creatine, 11:47 a. m. Arrive at Cleveland at 2:20 p. m.; Hufialo 7:W p. m. Niagara Falls, 9:50 p. m.; liingbampton, 4:35 a. m. Rochester, 11:03 a. in.; Albany 6:10 a. m., arriving at New Tork City at l:3 a. m. and Boston at 2:25 p. m. SEVEN IIOTJXts In Advance of Other Routes "This train has Palace. Drawing Room and Sleeping Ceach from Indianapolis to New Tork with out change. Fare always the same as by linger and lower routes. Baggage checked through to destination. 61 A D II Train arrives at Crestline 4:10a .4:U I Jjl m.; Pittsburg, 12:15 a. m.; Cleve land, 7:10a. m.; Buffalo, 11:10 p. m.; Niagara Falls, 3:50p.m.; Biaghampton, 11:00 p. m.; Rochester, 4:36 p.m.; Albany, 12:40 a. m.; arrive at New York City 6:45 a. m. and Boston 9:20 a. m. Hours quicker than all other lines. This train bas elegant Palace Sleeping Coachea from Indianapolis to Cleveland, aad from Cleveland to New York City and Boston without change. At Sidney close connections are made for Toledo and De troit and 11 points In Canada. Columbus Route, VIA DAYTON AND SPRINGFIELD. UK( A Train arrives at Muncie 2:23 p. tOU A 31 m.; Union 3:15 p. m.; Dayton 6:6a p. or; Springfield 7:15 p. m.; Columbus 9:15 p m. The only line running thron gh Parlor Coaches from Indianapolis to Columbus, where direct connections are made with the Baltimore A Ohio Railroad. This train connects at Muncie with tbe Fort Wayne, Muncie A Cincinnati Railway for Ft. Wayne and Detroit. AWSee that your ticket reads by he ee Up. A. J. SMITH, J.W.CAMPBELL, C. GALI, O. T. A. Pars. A at. pt. Cleveland, O. Indianapolis na polls IOWA, CALIFORNIA & NORTHWtSl KANSAS, TEXAS AX I) SOLTIIWEST, TAKE THE Trains Leave Indianapolis as olows. 7:45 A Jl. and the Black enne, arriving Train connects dirert for all points in Iowa, Nebraska, California Hills, via Sidney ani Cheyone train iu advanorof any saving one night's ride. TL is other line, and train also connects fur Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, Illinois, Louisiana and Mexico, Mo.; and via Quincy er Bloomington for Kansas City, Atchison. 8t. Joeeph, Denver, and all points In Kansas, Colorado and the touthwest, via Ilannibal with M. K.A T. Ry., for Moberly, Fort cott, Parsous, tbe Neoshe Valley and points in Texas, and via Bloomington lor 1 Paso, Mendota, Dubuque, and all points in North era Illinois and Iowa. Ii r n If (Noon) Fast Line, runs directly HO I Dl through Tia Danville Junction to Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, Ilannibal, Moberly, 8t. Joseph, AtchUon and Kaunas city, arriving at Kannas City tbe next morning In time to connect with traine for all points In Kansas, Colorado and New Mexico. nAfs I) If Train has reclining chair sleep,Uu i Jjl ing car with state rooms so Peoria, and through coach to Burlington, reaching Oalesbnrg, Burlington, Ottumwa, Rock Island and Davenport in advance of other iinee. Thi train alee connects via Burlington or Rock Island for all points In Iowa, Nebraska and California, aud via Bloomington for El Paso, Mendota. Dubuque, Sioux City, Tankton, aad all points In Northern Illinois, lows aad tbe Black Hills via Yankton and Fort Pierre. This train also makri direct connections ria Das ville to Decatur, SpriLgfield, Jacksonville, Quincy Kansas City, Atchison, St. Joeeph, Leavenworth and all intermediate points. And via Ilannibal for Sedalla, Ft. Scott, Parsons, Deniaon, Houston, Galveston, and all points in Texa. tyecwrf Notic to Load Hunter d Emigrant. If yon want a land exploring ticket or reliable Information about lands ia the West, or if you have boaght a home there and want to move with yomr family, household goods andstock, address the General Paaseng er Agent named below, and et oar rates T""rf' W. H. PR0UTT, Acting Gen'l Tass and Ticket Agt ISaWABA.POU
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