Indianapolis Leader, Volume 3, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1882 — Page 3

SLEEP Y HOLLOW,

(In Memorlam : Ralph Waldo Emerson. He sleeps here the untroubled sleep Wno ooo 11 not stand the noise and moil Of public life, tut far from toil A happy reticence did keep. With nature only open, free: Close by there rests the magic mind Of him who took life's threads to wind And weave some poor soul's mystery Of spirit-life, and make It live A type and wonder for all days: No sweeter soul e'er trod earth's ways Thau he who here at last did give Hia body back to earth a?aln. And now at length beside them lies One great and true and nobly wise A kins of thought, whose spotless reign The overwhelming years that come And drown the trash and dross and slime Shall keep a record of till time Shall cease, and voice of man be dumb. At last he rests, whose high clear hope Was wont on lofty wings to scan The future destinies of man Who saw the race tnrough darkness grope, Through mists and error, till at last The looked-for litcht. the loneed-for ase Should dawn for peasant, Prince, and sage, Ana centuries ox nignt be past. Thy rest is won. O loyal, brave. Wise soul, thy spirit is not cead Thy wing'd words far and wide have fled, Undying, they shall find no mve. Academy. William Sharp. In Sleepy Hollow Cemetery are the graves of inoreau ana iiawtnorne, ana near me in nave Just been laid the remains of Emerson. A FALL FOR LIFE. INew Orleans Times-Democrat. The merchant ship Druid, from Bombay for London, lay becalmed off the west coast of Hindoostan, between (loa and bangalore, where the Ghautz Mountains were seen towering in savage grandeur thousands of feet in the air, with wild torrents leaping down the rocks, flashing through the dark green shrubbery, and rushing with the din of thunder. "If the wind doesn't rise ere to-morrow morning we shall have to anchor." said the Captain to Robert Winfield, a handsome young naval Lieutenant on leave of absence from his frigate, stationed at Bombay. "I don't want to lay the ship's bones on that coast, nor do I like to get too near it. I have heard bad stones of the natives there; a.t any rate. I believe that almost every Hindoo is a thief or murderer by nature." Bell Upton, daughter of Major Upton, who was bound hme from his India regiment on sick leave, heard ihee word, and, shuddering, drew closely to the tide of her invalid father A

quick glance was then exchmged I be- quicKer of p(irc option, more ready in applia her and the young Lieutenant, whose LLt- .,.. ,. in tu'; vV,

tween her and the young a nmiai fl-a 1 y-vrf- la. r A r wS n fx 1 o 1 .1 I rk - feaT "c Major Upton, noticing the glance, frown'no wi 1 r.ii rin?hir r.onip. Bll ht us go below." Winfield had been a suitor of Bell's since she came to visit he father at Bombay, some months before. The girl favored him, but cot so the Major, who wanted her to choose a wealthy lover. Bell was beautiful, with a form of unrivalled grace, brown eyes, a clear, pearlwhite skin, with very little color, and dark golden hair that fell in rippling masses over a pair of magnificent shoulders. The Lieutenant watched her admiringly until she disappeared in the cabin. "No harm shall befall her while I live!" he thought, as he glanced uneasily toward the coast. "We have arms aboard, have we not?" he added aloud to the Captain. "Av, ay, sir; but it isn't likely we shall be attacked. We are full two leagues from the coast, and before we are near enough to be boarded, a breeze will spring up, I've no doubt" A few hours later night closed around the ship. The sky was closeä with thick clouds, which obscured the moon and seemed to betoken that a breeze oll come before long. Meanwhile, the ship having drifte d a le&gue nearer the coast, the Lieutenant thought the Captain very careless not to have more than his one lookout forward posted on so t ark a night. Before 11 o'clock the quarter-deck was deserted by all save the officer of the watch, a lazy fellow, who was now stretched on the carpenter's chest half asleep, while the watch forward, as Winfield (who stood leaning over the rail amidships) could perceive bv the lieht of a lantern in the forerigging, lay reclining on the hatch, some of them snoring. Not feeling sleepy, the young Lieutenant resolved to go aloft on the mizzentop sale yard to watch for the lirsttign of a breeze. Arrived on the yard, the gloom was so intence that he could not tee the water below, although as be still gazed in that direction was it reality or only imagination? he thought he could detect a dim outline of something shooting around the ship's stern. He was about desending, when the clouds farting over the moor, a flood of silvery ight was poured down on the ship and water, revealing a spectacle that tilled the young man with horror a scene so sudden and unexpected, that his very heart seemed to stand still. While he was aloft. Bell Upton had come out on the quarter eleck, and now stood with I

her back to the rail, aoout two ieet irom it, nil them, but the wearing out of old prejuher head bowed, as if she was in deep dices is a work of tim. Could eirls be

thought, so that her beautiful white neck shone like polished ivory ia the clear moonlight Unseen, unheard by the young girl, a Hindoo, with a long, lithe body, naked to the waist, had clambered the side, from a long canoe, containing half a dozen of his companions, and had contrived to glide serpentlike, on the outside oi tue snip, until ne nau rained a position directly behind her, when hp had drawn a lame dirk, which he was now on the noint of plunging into the nowv nprk of the fair passenner, that she mieht inve no alirni. The lieutenant's hand clenched the yard like a vice as he beheld the young lady's peril. He must save her he would save her, he thmn?ht: and vet. how was this to be done? To give an alarm would only hasten the virl'aHnnm: to descend, no matter how quickly, by means of one of the back stays. would be oi no use, as sue wouiu penau o for he could reach the deck and attempt to stav the deadlv hand Thor was no time to lose: in three sec onds the dirk would descend, and the girl wou'd be killed at one stroke, so that the murderer's companions, who had already bpran to ascend the vessel's side, could pounce on the drowsy male occupants of th deck, and slaying them, make them selves masters of the ship, almost before a warning could be given. Like a lightning Hash the instinct of love; th resolution to save Fell in some manner from this immediate tt ack, sent a sudden thought to the agonized spectator. Th Hindoo murderer, in hia position on the outside of the ship, was under the Lieu.f UKnncrVi fnrtv feet below him: KUBA, r ... while the girl, standing two feet from the rail, was in easy reaph, of the native, whose mrm nd bodv. as stated, were now drawn back from the bulwarks to give force to the meditated mow The young man .JrfttatU

in Se only way it could now be done with white peppernint-big sticks, mind youiufficientipidity to prevent the accomplish- and 8ay, -Thifs for you."

ment of his deathly purpose a way si once i w mwy sioj uy, iubuiR 'g'uu onovel nd desperate, and which would, per tions to work something out of a pocket, nana, involve his own destruction. I Finally a hard peach or a red apple makes

Jn a woru. leutenaui iu"i v. J " . . a ... . llTlMa.lH AAt h.cil. t&tlng to risk me or umo ior me wumau ub loved, resolved to drop down irom near ue end of the mizzen wpsan-yaru upou him ere he could deal the fatal blow with vJrufiSit.v ... . He could utter a shrill cry- warning to the crew as he cleaved the air, tfcm rousing them perhaps, In time to meet the attack of the robbers, and ensure the further safety of Jieli ana ine bujp. fr. The emergency aunmwsu i intrhinsr the vard near the fend, bung by It a second, to make sure he was in a line wim .v , : then, lost as the dirk was about to descend, he let go of the spar with a long, wild cry that pierced every corner of the ship, and down he went, cleaving through the air with teThereVwa?a whirling, rushing sound, then a loud thud, as the heavy boot beebofthe ailing body crashed upon the head of the . i : v. h inn rr nonpnxn'

dusky native ere he could nse his knife, dashing him from the rail into the Bea, killing him instantly. The watch had beard the warning cry of the Lieutenant; and ere the other natives could recover from their surprise, caused by the occurrence which had so suddenly and unexpectedly broken upon them, the decks were alive with the whole crew, upon which the gang of robbers beat a hasty retreat. Meanwhile Hell Upton Lad been so bewildered by that sudden, fearful cry she had heard, and the subsequent splash of the two bodies falling in the water, that, not till a boat was lowered, and the Lieutenant, wbo

had been struggling in the sea, was brought aboard and in the cabin, to explain in a faint voice, how he had saved her life, did she clearly comprehend all that had taken place. Then she threw herself down by the pros trate form oi her lover, and hung over him in agony, fearing täat he was fatally injured. Soon, however, tue snip s doctor gave cheer iog iuformation to the contrary. The young man had received a fearful shock from his contact with the Hindoo's body; but, as that body had offered little re sistance to his downward progress when he struck it in fact, as it had been simply driven before him into the sea his lower limbs, although partially paralyzed for the tiuie, were not broken. He had, however, fallen oangeronsly near the rail; a roll of the ship to the other side. ere he let go of the toptaii yard to descend, would have caused him to fall on the bul warks, when, of course, he would have been killed. "Never before," said the Doctor, "did I hear of such a daring performance.' "Ay!" exclaimed Major Upton, with ad miration and gratitude. "God bless him! Here. Bell, he fnall have you, Kirl. for he has well earned you!" He put both hands of his danghter. who had clasped her lover's neck, in tl e Lieutenant's, and turned his head to hiJe a few tears on his bronzed cheek. Immediately after the yountr man had been brought aboard, an off shore breeze sprang up, enabling the Captain to head seaward. In due time the vessel reached her home port, when the Lieutenant, who had by this time fully recovered from the effects of his fail, claimed his beautiful and willing bride. Working Women In I he South. Gtlvefcton NtW8. A practical tett given to the employment of women in competition with nu n ha?, in an experience of nineyewr?, convinced the proprietors of a Urge hat, b ? net and iadiee notions establishment in a piori erous Southern city, that for all the lighter em ployments women ate lar preferable to men. lhey are found ax A tailTlli VtnAt A WV" s-k it a-fcS-flttv vcwisj si9 uii'ig itiuiai ait tuen uauus, more accomodate g one to another, more orderly and more amenable to discipline than men. In their trimming d'-partment partment they make from $3 50 to $10 per week, behind the f ale counters from $4 GO to $12 per week. Ihese industrious girls are more highly regarded tban if in idleness, and are of a superior class. The young men who visit them are of a better class than the as sociates of idlo girls. Soven married out of one establishment, and all aro th respected wives of good, industrious men. Public sentiment has chanced, and women of higher circles of society are applying for the work which ten yars ago tho would have considered degrading. Women are, aa a rule, conscientious in the u?e of their wages, which they take home for tte com fort and pleasure - f sick mothers, the young and dependent brotheis and eisten. The monev thus earned and emended ia a source of unalloyed pleasure to all who partake of it. At sewiDg carpets women earn from $4 to $6 per week. At the factory for making paper-boxes girls earn from $3 50 to $5 per week. Women are found useful in drug stores in wrapping up goods, labehrg bottles, filling orders. They are careful in handling and tasteful in display. They make from three to four dohars a week, and being quick, careful, cheerful, atd reliable. would not be given up for men. The working woman is respected in the South This is no' change of sentiment. Industry has always met the approval of people ox sense in the South, as everywhere else, but new fields of labor lave been opened for women. and thev are filling their new stations in a manner at once satisfactory and becoming. The nature of the Southern woman has undergene no material change. The same innate pride exists that ever characterized her, but that very sentiment impels her to bend her energies to the winnirg oi an inde pendent sunrort. It is not the labor that seems degrading, bu. the associations, arid when girls discover that only the good and true are employed they will be less reluctant to seek employment as book-keepers, clerks and operatives. There seems a general inclination to work for wages in this city, but as yet female applicants tor the labor usually performed by men have received but little encouragament. lew are employed as clerks or book-keepers. Those who have secured places aro found fully competent to assured that ttev would not be degraded by tbir humble position?, it would not bo so difficult to secure competent-help in domes tic work.. Labor tbat without help must, of neosgity, devolve upon the mott refined aDd delicately nurtured ladief, is scorned by girls who sre well able to perform it, and who need the comforts that liberal wga would bring. Two goood reasons readily suggest themselves for this itate of things: the girls do not like to be treated as servants and menial?, nnd are unwilling to be Eubjflcted to the di.comlorts of the illfurnished apartments they two expected to occupy. Uetinea and intelligent young women mtht be found who would render gcxid service as lady helps if they could know that tbey would be treated as social equals and enjoy the society of the house hold. The experiment would be worth try ing with some of the finely educated pupils of the cooking schools of ths larger cities. The question or domestic service grows more serious, and a solution cf the problem is of very general interest. The Teacher Reward. I Woman at Werk. I In the morning there are rosy lips to be kissed, and "Thank youV to be given for a few fresh flowers, more for blossoms crushed and wilted by the pressure of little warm bands, flowers with not me sutucieni to hold up their drooping heads and with no stems worth mentioning. In the evening there is a struggle for a place next teacher, fnd pleadings that she promise her arms for the morrow's walk home. The boys, ch, the boys! They don't of ten think of Jowers. They buv something for the teacher. They lay a stick of brown a J haIIa.. u.lAMa rm -t A n An tVi I aa t milk I lf of npoftJU1 orJ OBe of red and I 1 .1 1 II I . I appearance, ana mey bsk, xjo you want that?'' Th meaB it for an offer and would nev ermak" h presentation if you were "w- u j'a- 5 heart, also I candy, generally dirty, and ornamented with photographs of flnjjerends; or thei grow generous and give you a marble, nößt frequently a four-timer, sometimes a precious thing that they call a I crishtah" Uten mere are aeiigmtui taius at recess when the boys tell teacher about ponies and )igeon-houses and trades and billy-goats ni sweet-hearts. And there are the gauss that never have any tint' of qtarreling or selfishness while teacher ytkes a hand. Camels are said to thrive ia Arizona, where they nust create much astonishment on account cf beiag able to go so long without drinking.

UEORHE "WASHINGTON.

Death of a Woman Who Was Mora at Mount Vernon Minety-fiv Years Aga, and Who Lived There Till Arter Washington' Death. New York Herald, June 4. J A remarkable worn n has just died at Richmond, Va. She was perhaps the last living human being who had seen and talked with Washington, notwithstanding the number of straggling pretenders who occasionally appear before the public as claimants for this honor. Mrs. Young, the person to whom reference is made, was the last surviving child of General Washington's steward, Anderson, the honest and frugal Scotchman who for so many years had control of his domestic affairs at Mount Vernon. Her maiden sister, Miss Nellie Andereon, died in Richmond more than fifteen years ago at the advanced age ot ninety-five, and now the venerable survivor departs this life after having lived exactly the same length of time. She was born at Mount Vernon in 1787. For more than sixty years she had resided in Richmond, respected by the en tire community and beloved by all. whose privilege it was to enjoy her immediate acquaintance. Remarkable for strength of body as well as vigor of mind, she had perfectly retained, until within the past few days, recollections of the early part of her life at the home of Washington. To all who convened with heron this subject and its interesting associations she gave, without ostentation, satisfactory replies. To great dignity of bearing she united that true modesty to characterisic of the real woman. She died as he had lived a devout Christian. The writer of this sketch conversed with her in years past upon subjects connected with her life at Mount Vernon. She was thirteen vears of age when the head of that bereaved household and the Nation died, and, of course, could remembe many incidents of her childhood. The account she gave of what she insisted was the real cause of Washington's death differs much from that given by historians generally. Although all agree that the attack which earril oü" the illustrious man was brought on by his exposure on a cold December day while taking his usual ride on horseback, yet even this might, have been averted had not the incident occurred which is now given as it came from the lips of Mrs. Young "The General had returned frtm his ude cold and shivering, had retired to the house and was actually about to take his dinner when a message came to him frcni a boatwright whom he had emploj ed, and who desired immediate instructions before he could finish the boat upon which he was at work. Washington, probably somewhat fretted at the.untimely interference, hurried down to the river bank without hat or overcoat, and stood exposed to the chilling blasts that blew over the Pot on ac. His anxiety to finish the business kept him there too long, lhe consequence was a violeni accession to the cold he had already taken, which during the following night culmin ated in the attack which soon proved fatal." Mrs. lounc always took great pleasure in dwelling upon the goodness and uniform kindness of General and Mrs. Washington to all connected with their establishment. It must be remembered that at that time the relative social position of dependents, domestics, and the great proprietors were strongly contrasted. The aristocratic sentiment prevailed, and about the ' great house." as it was caned, a more man orumaiy sesne or awe presuiea. wiin tins weie connected the btrictest rules of decorum, against which it was more than treason to err. rsot withstanding this, the children of all the adjoining households wtre free to come and go; and Mrs. Young and her sis ter often romped on the porticos and through the hall of the stately mansion with the children of the Fairfaxes, Curtises, and Lewises, some of whom were constant guests of General and Mrs. Washington. Indeed, she has told the writer that she and her sister were rarelv permitted to retire from the presence of Mrs. Wasb'ngton before having received some tokens of kindness in the way of fruit, cake, and such like, and that on no occasion did the General pass them without a kindly greeting, bhe took special pleasure in referring to an incident in which Washington's stepson, young Curtis, and Rawlins, one of his manager, met with a sore discomfiture. The two were indulging their favorite pastime of dancing and fiddling, Curtis being the darcer and Rawlins the tiddler, when to their surprise and dis may the General stepped suddenly upon the scene. We may well imagine the enect of so august presence at such a moment. The air of Mount V ernon must have been conductive to longevity. Washington's favorite negro hunter and body-servant during the war. Will Lee, lived to be more than a hundred years old. Thomas Bishop, his English servant who had been with Braddock iu the same capacity on the Continent and in America, up to the time of the latter's death, and who at the dreadful day of Monongahela disengaged Washington from hi slaughtered horse and lifted lum, worn and weak, upon the back of another, also survived to nearly the same length of days, and so did old "Father Jack," the African fisherman, whose duty it was to supply the table at Mount Vernon with fish from the waters of the Potomac. llenry Glay and Alme. De Stael. In looRing over some old tannly papers the other day, General James Grant Wilson came upon the following unpublished sketch, written for a lady in March, 182!. by Henry Clay, and sent it to the New York Tribune: Your desire dear Madame, some line of friendly remembrance. What shall I say? You have asked me to record something of the celebrated Madame de Stael. She was the mast extraordinary woman of this or any other ag blending the philosophy of our sex with the imagination of yours. She seems to have been bestowed on our race to vindicate the equal claim of the female mind to intellectual excellence. I knew this remarkable woman in Paris. I first met her at a ball given on the occasion of the Peace of Ghent at the banker Hottinguer's. -'Ahl Mr. Clay," she said, "the English have been much incensed against you. I have been lately pleading your cause at London. Do you know they contemplated at one time sending the Puke of Wellington to command their armies agAinst you?" I told her that I was aware of the exertion of her eloqnence in our behalf, and thanked her for it, I added that I wished the British Government had sent the Duke. "Why?" she inquired with much surprise. "Because, madam, had we beaten the Duke we should have gained immortal hor or, whilst we should have lost none had we been defeated by the conqueror of Napoleon " I next saw De Stael at her own house, where she introduced roe to the Duke of Wellington, and related to him the above conversation. He remarked with ranch apparent feeling and grace tLat he should have placed a most noble feather in his cap had he beaten so gallant a people as the Americans. His Last Cent. INew York World.l "Whin I tuk my drink I sez to the bartinder, 'Will ye take a man's last eint?' '1 will.' sez he. Wid that I put a pinny on the bar. 'Nine cints more,' se'z he. 'It's me last cint,' sez I. 'I want pay for the drink,' sez he. 'I'll hould ye to yer bargain." sez I. Thin he het me a swine wid a wit towel, an' to prevint meselt fallin I grabbed at. the first thing widin reach. It happened to be the punch bowl, an' I - was near drownded whin they picked me up." "So far as is shown by the evidence' said Justice Smith, "your conduct was outrageously disorderly. You refused to pay for J your drink, and when remonstrated with you tried to choke toe nartenaer. x on were drunk and disorderly and made war upon a citizen who thought himself secure in the peace of the State." "Can't I swear a warrant agin the bartinder for a breach of trust? "Not at this session of the Court." "Will ye lave me git shampooed to git the rum out av me hair?" "I'll allow you thirty days on the Island, where all sucli luxuries can be obtained gratis,".

Disease is an elfW-t, not a cause. Its origin is within; its manifestations without. Hence, to eru re the disease the cause must be removed, and in no other way can a cure ever be effected. WAItNKR'H SAFE ItII:v i:v r i iivjit cxjiik is established on just this principle. It realizes tbat 05 IVr Cent. of all diseases arise from deranged kidneysand liver, nnd it strikes at once at the root of the difficulty. The elements of which it is composed act dlree'tly upon the great organs, both ns a food and restorer, and, by placing them iu a healthy condition, drive disease and pain from the system. For the Innumerable troubles caused by unhealthy Kidneys, Liver and Urinary Organs; for thedisstressing Disorders of Women; for Melaria, and for physical derangements generally, this great remedy has no equal. Beware of imposters, imitations and concoctions said to be just as good. For Diabetes, ask for "WARNER'S SAFE DIABETES (JUKE. For sale by all dealers. H. H. WARNER & Co., HOCHESTER N. Y. PRINCIPAbUN The fallOUTEST. QUICKEST and And aIlJow BEST l!n tn fit .Trunh point In IowO'Atchtson.Topeka.DenlNebra8ka,MlMourl, KanVgyfon, Dallas, Galea, New Mexico, Arizona. MoiiV& veston. tana ana Texas. "sAT fcThla lioute haa no superior for Albert Tjn,Ter8TC:?ai Minneapolis and St. Paul. lr conceded toÖ?110"1 " be the best equipped5 C't Railroad tn the World fo5!"?" all classes of travel. pj'" KANSAS CITY All connections made In Union XOAT W7 -N. rwrw. Try It, Tickets via thisN and you will ueieDrstcd Line 'Ox AÄ find traveling a luxury, Instead the Ü. S. and T C VT of a dli. Canada. All XVN. comfort. - - about Kates of Fare, Sleeping Cars. ptc. cnerruHy given T. 1. POTTER. Prorrvn inurti 3d lief Freft GerCl Manager, Gen. rats. Agt-, Chicago. 11!. Chicaaro. J1L URS. LYDIA L PlXlHiM, CF IYHH, KISS, LYDIA E. PINKHAr.TS VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Ib a Positive Cure for all Iboae Painful Complatata aad Weakaeaaa aeaatraaa taanr beut feaial papalatlaa. It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Complaint all ovarian troubles, inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to ths , Change ot life. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus ia an early stage of development. The tendency to cancerous humors there is checked very speedily by its use. It removes falntness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness or the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by IU use. It will at all times and under all circumstances act in harmony with the lavs that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. riXKHAMf TEG ET ABLE COM POrXDU prepared at t3S and S3S Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price iL Six bottles for $&. Sent by mall In the form of pills, also in the form of losing es, on receipt of price, fl per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers aU letters of Inquiry. Send for pamphlet. Address as above. Mention tkis Paper. No family should be without LYDIA t PINKHAM LITER PULS. They cur constipation, tiflinusniss. aad torpidity of the liver. IB cents per box. tr Haid by avll Draeoiata. -ft SOCIETY DIRECTORY. - United Bröthen 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 present, also members of other lodges of the same faith are invited. II. AV. Jackson, Worthy Master. W. S. Lock financial Secretary. "What's up, old man? You seem to be out of sorts.1' Snappe's been here. I begged him to give me his candid opinion about my pictures. He did." "Ah, I see. It differs from yours. Now, when I want a fellow's candid opinion about my pictures, I ask him to dinner, give him a flrst-rate bottle of claret, a cup of Al coffee, a glass of old cognac, and the best cigar money can buy, and then I show him my pictures, and I always find that his candid opinion colacides with my own." London ranch.

filin

COLUMBUS

niif!aW 0000 1 Columbus.O.,1 MANUFACTURER OF FINE CARRIAGES BUGGIES -A.KTJD PHAETONS OUR MOTTO: THE BEST FOR THE EEAST MONEY. Only One Grade of Work, And That The 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. ' AVe have sold to several livery stables, and your bug gies 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 my livery, and they wear better than any other work I have ever had. Yours truly, F. D. Park. Plymouth, Mich. Dear Sirs: From an experience of fifteen years in the livery business we are fully convinced that the durability, style, and finish of the carriages and buggies of your manufacture far excels any others in the United States for the money. Bray & Henn. Council Bluffs, Iowa. Gentlemen: We have been usinjr your Brewster work for two years, du ring which time we have been convinced they are the best buggies on the road, and for neatness, durability aud general appearance, they cannot be surpassed. Yours truly, H. Weeks & Kjmble, ! Carriage Manufacturers. Lay tons ville, Maryland. G entlemen: 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 both dealer and customer. Yours, R. A. McCormick. Cadiz. Ohio. Gentlemen I have leen using and selling your manufacture of buggies for two years past with great satisfaction to both my customers and myself. Those to whom I sold, withont exception, apeak in the most exalted terms of your work. I could furnish you testimonials from each party to whom I have sold your work. For myself, I think they are the best buggies manufactured for the trade. Wherever I go, I find those who have a knowledge or your buggies all speak of them in the most flattering terms. Yours respectfully. John W. Chrisman. . 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, Daniel Wood, Francis A. Foster Boston, Mass,

00,

O'BRIEN & LEWIS. BLACKSMITHS AND . WAGONMAKERS. GENERAL JOBBING 8HOP. BEFAIHINO PROMPTLY DONE. Corner North and Fayette Streeta Indiana poUs.

to: GENERAL BILL FOSTER Controlling the most prominent bill boards In tlie city. Including TUK LARGEST BOARD ISTHE STATE Inclosing the Btate House U rounds. Five Hundred Tire ö -Sie at Bc&rds in the City &nä Sulurls. . Office, at Daily Sentinel Office. INDIANAPOLIS. THE BEST OF ALL L V Ill FOE HAIT AND BEAST. For more than a third of a century the Mexican Mustang Liniment has been known tnmilMnna Mil nvr tho tirnrl1 m the only safe reliance for the relief of awmcuu UUU pu.111. lb 19 II iUtXliCinc above price and praise the best of Its k lnd. For every form of external pain Mustang Liniment is without an equal. It penetrate flesh and muscle to the very bone making the continuance of pain aad inflammati n impossible. Its fTWt anrrn tfnmnn VloaJi ami the llrute Creation are equally wonderful. The Mexican MUSTANG Liniment ia needed by somebody in every house. Every day brings news of the agony of an awful scald or burn subdued, of rheumatle martyrs re stored, or a valuable horse or ox saved by the healing power of this which speedily cures such ailments of the HUMAN FLESH aa Ithsnnistlim. Nnra1tlnni. IfT Joints, Contracted Muscles, Burns ana scsidt, cuts, a raise and Sprains. Poisonous Bites and StlllCS. Stlffnass. T.amnaa. fll,l Sores, Fleers, Frostbites, Chilblains, sore nippies, tskea iircstt, snd Indeed twnr form nf citcrnsl alia. ease. It heals without scars. For tho Brute Creation it cures Sprains, Svrlnny, SUIT Joints, Founder, lTarness Sores, Hoof IMseases, Foot Rot. Screw Worm, Scab, Hollow Flora, Scratches, ITlndgalls, Spavin, Thrush, Hin a; bone, Id Sores, Pell Evil, Film npon the Slffht and every other, ailment to which ths occupants ' of the Stable and Stock Yard are liable. The Mexican Mustang Liniment always cures and never disappoints; and it is, positively, THE BEST OF ALL L v M FOE IIAIT 0B BEAST. TEG KOST SVSSSS3FUL BE11E2Y ever discovered, as It is certain in its effects and does not blister. Alo excellent for human fle.h. READ PKOOF BELOW. From COIa. 1 T. FOSTKH. Youngstown, Ohio, May 10th, 1880. Dr. B. J. Kendall &. Co., Uents; I bad a very valuable Ilambleunian colt which 1 prized very highly, he had a large bone spavin on one joint and a small one on the other wnich made him very lame. I had him under the charge of two veterinary surgeons which fallt d to cure blm. I was one day readiDg the advertisement of Kendall's Spavin Cure in tne Chicago Express, I determined at once to try it, ard got our Druggist here to send for it, thy ordered three bottk s; 1 took them all and thought I would give It a thorough trial, 1 uwd it accord Ina to directions and the fourth day the colt ceaHfd to be lame, and the lump have dlsnppf ared. I used but one bottle and the colt's limbs are as free irom lumps and as smooth as any noise In the state. He is entirely cured. The cure waa m remarkable mat I let two of my neighbors have the remaining two bottles, who are now using It Very Respectfully, 1 T. FOSTER. KENDALIS SPAVIN CURE. Rochester. Ind., Nov. 30th, 1880. B. J. Kendall & Co., Gents: Please send us a supply of advertising matter for Kendall's Hpavln Cure. It has a good sale here and It gives the best of satisfaction. Of all we bave sold we have yet to learn the first unfavorable report. Very ltespectfally, J. Dawson d Son, Druggists. KENDALL'S SPAVIX CUKE WUton, Minn., Jan. 11th. 1881. B. J.Kendall, & Co., Gentv.-Havlng got a horse book of you by mail a year ago, the contents of which persuaded me to try Kendall's Hpavln Core on the hind leg of one of my horses which was badly swollen and could not be reduced oy any other remedy. I got two bottles of Kendall's HpavUv Cure of Preston & Ludduth. Druggists of Waseca, which comrletely cured my horse. About five years ago had a three year old colt sweenled very bad. I used yonr remedy as given In your Dook without rowelllng and I mnat say to your credit that the colt is entirety cured, wnicn is a surprise not only to myself, but also to my neighbors. You sent me the book for the trifling sum or 25 cents and if I could not get another luce it x would not take twenty-nve dollars for it. Yours Truly, Oeo. Mathews. KENDALL'S SPAVOT CURE ON HUMAN FLESH. Patten's Mills, Washington Co N. Y. February 21st, 1878. Dr. B. J. Kendall, Dear Sir: The particular ease on which I used your Kendall's SpayIn Cure was a malignant ankle sprain of sixteen months standing. 1 had tried many things, but In vain. Yonr Bpavln Care put the foot to the ground again, and for the first time since hurt, in a natural position. For a family liniment it excels anything we ever used. Yours truly, REV. M. P. BELL, Pastor of M. K. Church. Patten's Mills, N. t. TUEND ALL'S SPAVIN CURE. Is sure In Its effects, mild In its action aa does not blister, yet it is penetrating and powerful to reach every deep seated pain or to remove any bony growth or other enlarge, ments. snch as spavins, srllnta, curbs, callous sprains, swedioKs, and any lameness aadai enlargements of the Joints or limbs, or rheumatism In man and for any purpose ' which a liniment is nsed for man or Least Is now known o be i he best lluament for man ever used, acting mild and yet certain In IU Send address for Illustrated Circular, which we think gives positive proof of its virtues. No remedy has ever met with such unqualified success to oar knowledge, for beast aa well as mas. Pr'ce 11.00 per bottle, of six bottles for 15.00. All Druggists have ii or can get it for you, or It will be sent to any address on receipt of price by the propitetors, UK. B. J.KENDALL dfc CO.,Knosburg Fails, Vermont. SOLD OY ALL DRUCC1STQ "

mum

it

7 vSmlcsuP

if rai

No. 35 West Market Street, Boss Block, Ods half gqmsre East sf lniaols Strsst INDIANAPOLIS, IHÜ. Dyeing. Cleaning and Repairing Dona in the Best Manner. W.W.HOOVER, Dealer la SUpls sod Fancy GEQC COUNTRY PRODUCE A Specialty. DO TJOT CO WEST Until 700 hTs applied to -A- JT. HALFORD GENERAL EASTERN A6EXT IHDIAriAPOUSiniiST. L6U1S ß.B 134 S. ILLINOIS STREET, Indianapolis. sWTor Tim Tables and the very lowest Freiga aud Passenger Bte. VIA RUSH VILLE, CONFERS VI LLK LIBElUYand HAMILTON. Trains Dally, Between Sundays Eic. Indianapolis at Cincinnati ÄsTConnectious made for all points. East and West of Cincinnati and Indianapolis. SAM L BTkVKNSON, Oeu. Ticket Agt. L. Williams, (ien. Manager IndpFs Peru & Chicago Ry. THE GREAT THB0UGH EG UTE HTTTn A And u Po'nt n ths great North and North-West? Fort Wayne, Huntington, Ls- rTLT'VT TTI r" gansport, Waba.h. XUljUlUVj DETROIT StJiZ" lu Mktl AND TI1K Dii-ect rnictioM anads in Cbkajro with the trank lines fur all northwestern summer resorts and principal points In the northwest and far west. Woodruff Sleeping snd Parlor Coaches ran between Indianapolis and Chicago, via Kokomo and Indiana pol is sod Michigan City. Train tearing Indianspolis atj:50 A. . arriresat Chicago st 6:50 p. ., ; Ft. WsTne, 1:60 r. Logansport, 1:J0 p. . ; South Bend, 6:21 p. a. ; Toledo. 5:25 p. si. ; Detroit, 8:15 p. a. Trsiu tearing Indianspolis at 12:28 p. St. arrives at Frankfort. 4:30 p. a.; Wabash, 6:4 p. M.; Ft. Wsyns 7:25 p. a.; Toledo, 10:18 p. a.; Cleveland, 1:45 a. a. Bu0alo,7:35 a. m. ; New York City, 10 r. a. Trsin leaving Indianspolis at 6:5 p. a., arrives at Logansport at 11:02 p. a.; Valparaiso 4:20 a. a. ; South Bend, 2 25 a. m. ; Mishawaka, 2:35 a. a. ; Ilkhart 3 a.m.; Kalamasoo 7:30 a.m.; Grand Ksplds 10 A. M. ; Chicago 8:06 a. m. Train leaving Indianspolis st 11:00 p. m. (daily) arrives at Chicago via Kokomo, at 7:05 A. M. ; Tort Wayne, 7:00 a. m.; Toledo, 10:0 a.m.; Cleveland, 2:20 p. m. ; Detroit, 1:30 p. m. aAgk for tickets via I., P. A C. Uway. Reliable Information given by V. T. MALOTT, L. O. CA KNOW. Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Pass, snd Tk't Agt. 101 East VSfcshiBgtoa Street. FOR NEW YORK, BOSTON AND ALL EASTERN POINTS, TAKE 1HI C. C, C. & I. B. TV. This Train Lcares Indianapolis1 g Follows 41 K A f TRAIN arrives Mansie. 6:22 a. as. lt A. 111. Cnioc. f:25 a. ra.; Slcf.ey, 8:45 a nt.; Bullfountaine, 9:28 a. m.; Creotliue, :47 a. as. Arrive at Cleveland at 2:20 p. m.; Buffalo 7:50 p. at. Niagara Falls, 9:50 p. m ; Binrhanipton, 4.35 Rochester, 11:03 a. m.; Albany 6:10 a. m., arriving at New York City at 1:30 a. m. and Boston at 2:25 p. m. SEVEN HOURS In Advance of Other Routes MTThis train has INJ ace. Drawing Room aad Sleeping Ceach from Indianapolis to New Tork withont change. Fare always the ssme as by )onge aad slower routes. Baggage checked through to destina. tioa. 61 A D Xf Train arrives at Ccestlino 4:10 a lrlF 1 Jjl m.; Tittsburg, 12:15 s. m.; Cleveland, 7:10a. m.; Buffalo, 11:10 p. Niagara Falls, 3:50p.m.; Bingbampton, 11:00 p. bi.; Rochester, 4 M p. m.; Albany, 12:40 a. m.; arrive at New Tork City 6:45 a. m. and Boston 9:20 a. m. Heart qaickr this all other lines. This train has elegant Palace Sleeping Coaches treat Indianapolis to Clevelasd, asd from Cleveland U New York City and Boston withont chanfss. At Sid. ney close connections are made for Toledo and Detroit aud 11 points in Canada. Columbus Route, DAYTON AND SPBINQFIELD. 11:50 A- M. Train arrives at Mancie2:23 p. m.i Union 3;1S p. hi.; Dmytoa 6:55 p. m-; Springfield 7:15 p. m.; Colnmbai 9:15 p m. The only Hb running through parlor Ooachae from Indianapolis to Columbus, when direct connections are made with the Baltimore A Ohio Bailroad. This train connects at Mauels with ths Fort Wayne, Manor A Cincinnati Railway for Ft. Ways and Detroit. WSe that your ticket reads by hs A.J. 8MITH, J. W. CAMPBELL, C. O. T. A. Pass. AW. Cleveland, O. Indianapolis s Lias, GALZ, FT. aapolit FOR IOWA, CALIFORNIA & NORTH WIS I KANSAS, TEXAS aSilTsoyTHWEST, TAKE THE Trait Ltmwt I4ianpU$ as foUam: TA k If Train cosnects direct for all points 'AO A ill In lows, Nebraska, California and the Black Hills, Tis Sidney and Chsy. enne, arriving one train la sdvaasof any other line, and saving one night's rids. This train also connects for Decatur, SpringSeld, Jacksen Tille, Illinois, Louisiana aad Mexico, Mo.; and Tta Qaincyer Bloomingtoa for Kansas City, Atchison. St. Joseph, Denver, and all points in Kansas, lX!or ads and ths Southwest, via Hannibal with If . X. A T. Ry., for Moberly, Fort Scott, Parsons, ths Keosha Yalley and points in Texas, and via Bloesningten lor XI Paso, Mendota, Dnbnane, and all points la North era Illinois aad Iowa. 1.1 K P Hf (NoOB) "Mt Line, runs directly HO ! Jl. throsgk rla DanrilU J taction to Decatur, 8pringfield, Jacksonville, Haaaibai, Moberly, 8t. Joseph, Atchison and Kansas city, arriving at Kansas City the next snorning ta time to coaaeet with trains for all points ia Kansas, Colorado and Nsw Mexico. n.n( P IT Train has reclining chair sleep. UU i 1)1 ingcar with state roosos to Peo. ris, and through coach to Burlington, rear bins Oalesburg, Burlington, Ottnmwa, Kock Island and Davenport in advancs of otfrr lines. This train also connects via Burlington or Bock Island for all points ia Iowa, Nebraska and California, aad via Bloossiag ton for 1 Paso, Meadota, Dabuaas' tUouz City, Tankten, aad all points lo Northern IUiaoia, Iowa aad tho Black Hills Tia Yankton aad Fort Plarreta This traia also aak direct connections via Dtr Tills to Decatur, prlncflsld, Jacksonville, Quia Kansas City, Atchison, St. Joseph, Leave woro and all 1st mediate points. Aad Tia Hannibal f Bsdalla, Ft. Scott, Parsons, Denisen, Houston, Garves ton, and all points in Tszas. tfreces Notic to L4 Aoarfere oast Emifrmr. If yoa want a land oxploringtlcket cr rellaWs Information about Laads la ths West, or tf yon aar bought a horns there aad want to movo with your family, household goods aadstock, address ths Oea. ral Passenger Agsat aasaed so low, and st oar rates and .sapa, W. H. P ROUTT AcUngGaa'. raa a tl eke t Aga IsaiAAArsus a

I EI IS,

Omcmnai i,HamiIton, DayUn

ES

2 SdS1