Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1885 — Page 2
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS. THTRSDAT. MAY 21, 1885.
THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS. AX DCDJCPINDKWT XEW8PAPEX, rcKMMMD tnarr i^muroo* uofrr itc^dat mi 9«m» XL HOLLIDAY * CO., tn xm bczuom, k*. *u w.WASHntoroB at. # {Enured at Um pottoffioa at IndiaoapoUa, Ia&, aa *econd-cU« nutter. J
Jterrtd by carrteu In IndianapoUi and amroundin* towns at ten cents per wee*; ilngie Krpw% two C6QtS. By mall, poetafe prepaid, fifty cents p« mnoth, arM per year, payable tn advance. Specimen numbers sent free on applicatlam. Poeuae on sin{le cnpaa oi Ths Xrwa in Wrappers, one cent Correspondence containing news of Interest and Importance it desired from all parts of toe Bute, and will be paid for U used. NO attention will be paid to anon yin oos Ths News has a larjer average dally tfKulatldn than any other dally newipaper published la Indiana. Persona desiring The Dan/r News served at their booses oan secure it by postal card request, or order through telephone No. 2£l. Where delivery is irregular, please maae immediate complaint to the office. The dale printed on the wrapper of each paper denotes the time when the subscription •spurn / Remittances, drafts, checks, and portofflce order*, should be made payable to the order of JOHN H. HOLLIDAY & CO.
TEIXEHO*I Cat;A Editorial rooms ...—6T3 I Business office...
THURSDAY. MAY 21. ISSfc.
mm
BaiSH the aaioon license to one hundred dollars. ____________ THIS Is splendid weather to bepin the building of a union railway depot in Indiaru polls. Ta* Parnell men have planner! a campaign that looks likely to succeed, but will Iw pietty sure to bother consistent rneu a little when both ends of it are brought together. They are going to vote with the whig* in Ulster to beat the tories, and with the tories in England to beat the liberals. Th* Iowa republicans were quite as “preYtous” in Dominating Logan for President in 1888 as they were in calling President Cleveland “Your Escellancy” in notifying their intention to him. Logan will never be President, any more than the incumbent of that office is “his excellency.” Why can’t republicans leave such snobbery as this alone? _ In th* death of Ex-Secretory Frelinghuy■en a well spent life, with a lull share of honorable distinction, ends. He occupied eialted positions in the Nation, and while not noted as a remarkable force therein cou•erred their best offices with dignity. His last sickness was the less noted trom the lad of the concentration of popular uttention and sympathy upon-Grant’s bed of suffering; but with bisgdeatb, ths memory of his Hie may well be Thee* has been a decrease in immigration •f 100,000 for the first ten months of the present fiscal year as compared with that of the year 1883-4; and this is about the best thing that oould happen us now. Its continuance for a long time would be a continued help. Business is fiat; large numbers of people are out of employment, and those that are not are working for closely-cut wages. New additions to the ranks of our working people so situated are not desirable# Our rich man’s tariff tax demands about 40 per cent, of the eost of the necessaries of life, and for our workingmen to have to stand this and at the same time be open to free trade in labor is a severe and doable hardship. So it is well that the labor influx irtffiall, thus subjecting the fimariren workingmen to less competi-
tion.
It sounds odd, yet it is a ifect, that within twenty-four hours’ ride of Cincinnati, we may reach communities not only without Sunday newspapers, but with a strong public sentiment against allowing them, as well stringent prohlbition by statute.—(.Cincinnati Post. It sounds odd that you say this is odd. That country is most prosperous morally and materially th** has the most universal obeerrance of Sunday, not as a matter of religion—that can take care of itself—but as a matter of the renewal and up-buiidio|mf the mentally and physically tired man. This is only possible in its fullness by a complete •etsation of work so tar as the demands of civilization will allow, and by an entire suspension of all the things that retain the mental attitude in the same groove which the demands of the week do. Nothing does this more entirely than the Sunday newspaper. It starts the mind at once m business with the work-a-day affaira ot lite, whereas in order to complete rest these should be entirely forgotten. The Sunday newspaper iadoing as much or more than any one thing to destroy Sunday as a day of rest. FEXfcDoi OLASS is no more disinterested, probably, titan most men who bold a com- ‘ fprtable office, and would like to keep holding it. But it is not easy to believe that a man who has attested his sincerity by a long life of hard work and lute remuneration, and a man aa conspicuous by ability and general esteem as he is, would drop to so poor and mean a little “fetch” to curry favor with an adverse appointing power as to attend the President’* church. He is a better-known
, by his individual qualities and merits, tfian the President, and has been for a whole generation on* of the Nation’s prominent and admired men, in spite of his color, possibly in some measure because of bis color ■gad race associations. He could therefore have well afforded to despise the suggestions of correspondents, hungry for a sensation, that he had joined the President’s church to win a way to the retention of his office. The card in which he denies this, though manly and sensible and apt, was unnecessary. \Ye are uot sure that his disclaimer would not have been better unpublished or trusted to
second hands.
Randall recants. That is the meaning •this utterance as published in The News yesterday. Unless he is trifling with good muse and common honor his assertion that a reform of the tariff must be made means th; he has left his high protective attitude by which be defeated this reform in the last Coagrea and that he will in the next join hands to bring it about. He compactly puts the case and provides himself with a decent Way out in the statement: ' Changes occur In the ooadltfchs existing in our country and the countries with which vre ex•hanga productions more rapidly than ia supposed. Them changes must be provided for through modifications in our tariff laws. That is the whole case so far as tariff reformers, or free traders as they are called, are •onoemed. There hold that we are being robbed right and left by the tariff as it stands, and, that not merely surplus revenue, but the condition of the protected industries, demands a redoctiou of the rate of duty and a judicious extension of the free list. If Randall rallies the democratic recalcitrants to this work and harmonious counsel results in wise action, the country will indeed enter upon
an era of reform.
A Fairy Lullaby.
There are two star* in yonder ‘'eeps That watch the baby while he sleeps.
Bo sleep, dear tired baby, sleep
While little sun their vigils keep.
Beside his loving mother-sheep A little lambkin Is asleep;
Wbat doe* he know of midnight doom— He sleeps, and m his quiet dreams He thinks he pluck* the clover b.O Jtn And drink* at cooling, purling stream* And those same stars th* baby knows
Sing softly to the lamb's repose.
Sleep, little lamb: sleep, little child— The stars are dun—the night is »:M;
But o'er the cot and o er the lea A sleepless eye forever beams— A shepherd warches over ih.-e In all thy hole baby dreams;
thy hale baby dream
The shepherd loves his tiny she
y sheep—
bicep, precious little lambkin, sleep 1 —i Chicago New* “SCRAPS.” Paris bakers nse vaseline instead of bnfter. Caesar Brothers are a New York business
firm.
There are four thousand gambling houses in Faris. The nee crop never looked so beautiful.— [Georgia Ex. Filteen persons have been hanged at Washington since 1-S50. Thirty shaves lor twelve cents is the barber's price in India. The cholera bacillus is called comma because it is shaped like that mark. Venice. Italy, is about to be lighted with electric lamps, and the gondoliers are proJtesttng. John Hall, engaged in bee culture at Renata. Ua., was stung to death by an angry swarm of bees <• Kicii he was trying to hive. The contract for supply ing one-ceut postal cards lor four years has been awarded to the lowest bidder, Calvin C. Woodworth, New York, at 47.71 cents per thousand. Professor Arpad Bokai, of thb University of Kiauaenburg, has made the important discovery of an antidote lor strychnine, whieh is said to have been fully corroborated bv a series of successful tests on ani-
mals.
Alphonse Daudet, the famous French dramatist, journalist and poet, is forty-five years old. Sir Arthur S Sullivan, the eminent English composer, guilty of “Pinatore” and other comic. operas, is just two years ▼nunger than Daudet, having been born May 13, 1842. Mexico has established a central national bank. It is chartered for fifty years, and becomes to the nation substantially an institution like the banks of England and France. Its notes are the only ones to be accepted by the Government, and it has a monopoly of circulation. A twelve-cent table d'hote dinner, supplied by a New York caterer, consists of soup, fish, one kind of meat to be selected by the diner, with salad, chow-chow, coffee, dessert, and plenty of bread and butter. And the caterer prospers with an average profit of forty dollars per week. An article in a magazine tells “How to Catch Whales.” It appears they don’t jump at a fly, and are seldom caught inascoop net. This may surprise some of our anglers, but it will partly explain wuy they never caught a whale while fishing lor a bass or dipping lor suckers.—[Norristown Herald. The sons of five of the most prominent shoe manufacturers in Germany are now in this country employed in different shoe factories. their object being to study the best features of the American methods of shoemaking. It is reported that more Germans are coining here for the same purpose. The love and affection that exists between brothers frequently begins to exist when they are mere children. “Will Tommy always be younger than I am ?” asked a little Texas bov of bis mother ? “Yes, sonny.” “That’s bully, i’ll always be able to lick him and take" his things away from him as long as he lives.” “You are getting fo be a regular toper—a perfect sot, sir,” said an irate business man of Austin to one of his clerks, “don’t you suppose that I can see that you hare been drinking again?” “Of course i suppose so,” answered the employe; ’'you always see when I am drinking, but "the deuce of it is,you never see when I am dry.”—[Texas Siftings. Edison says he has invented a device by which telegraphing to and from running trains can be easily done, using the ordinary telegraph line at the side of the track. By means of a board covered with tinfoil and placed on the top of each car he says he ‘‘makes electricity jump twenty-feet through the air without spilling it.” Probably the best thing the Bible revisers have done is the throwing out of the request of Job that his adversary should write a book. It has long been recognized, even by dull people, that there are too many books, and that the Bible should contain nothing encouraging (even in the remotest manner) their accumulation.—[Courier-Journal. Miss Jane Holmes, of Pittsbutg, in her will left $270,000 to fourteen existing institutions, and $20,000 each is left for an institution for the blind, and a hospital for children; also $50,U00 for a Protestant home for boys, providing that all three institutions are organized within two rears. The residuary estate is to lie divided pro rata between all except three of the seventeen institutions named. The estate amounts to over $1,000,-
000.
The day laborers hired by Indianapolis men were defeated by day laborers hired by Milwaukee men yesterday. There wasn’t a thing at stake in which either Milwaukee or Indianapolis people have the slightest interest, yet some five thousand people paid from thirtv to tiftv-tive cents each to see these day laborers work, and howled themselves hoarse because the dav laborers hired by a Milwaukee compauy did the best work.—[Milwaukee Journal. Hundreds of men, women and even boys, in New York, are engaged in the “business” of collecting old boots and shoes, which they take to the wall-paper factories, where they receive from five to fifteen cents per pair. Calfskin boots bring the best price, while cowhide ones are not taken at any figure. These boqts and shoes are first soaked in several waters to get the dirt off, and then the nails and threads are-removed and the leather is ground up into a fine pulp. Then it is pressed upon a ground of heavy paper, which is to be used in the manufacture of “embossed leather.” Fashionable people think they are going away back to mediseval times when they have the walls of their libraries and dining-rooms covered with this, and remain in blissful ignorance that the shoes and boots which their neighbors throw into the **h barrel a mouth before now adorn their walls and hang on the Screens which protect their eyes from the fire. Carriage-top makers, and bookbinders also buy old boots and shoes—the former to make leather tops for carriages, and the latter leather bindings for the cheaper grade of books. Lieutenant tftoney, who has just sailed on the Viking on an Alaska exploring cruise, is accompanied by Ensign Purcell. Engineer Zane, Ensign Howard, Dr. Nash and ten picked men. The Viking is simply chartered to carry the party up to the mouth of the Kowak river. There is believed to be in Northern Alaska a vast and desolate wilderness in which not a living creature can be found nor anything with ~which to sustain life. Lieutenant Stoney is to make an efrt to ascertain the extent of this barren waste. A year from next October is the very shortest time set for the party's return. This expedition is provisioned for three vears, and will eventually be picked up and brought back by a vessel of the navy. There is not tbe slightest danger to lie feared from the natives, and although right on the coast the Indians ore at times disjwsed to be a trifle dictatorial, they grow more and more friendly as the interior is approached. It is said that Lieutenant Stoney does not consider the mineral wealth of the region of any great value, excepting, perhaps, the coal deposits, which may in futuie year* be opened up. The return of the expedition is looked forward to with considerable expectancy by many adventurous spirits who think they see a new El Dorado in the far-away north. Is presenting the thousands of testimonial* of the worth and excellence of Mishler's Herb Bitters, the proprietor* do so with the proud consciousness that every cure recorded is an actual bona fide case. These certificates are not made to order, but come from uprisht citizens, whose word is as good as their bond. Captain Edward Duff, of East Lehigh, Allegheny County. Pennsylvania, writes that he was cured of the worst lone of Indigestion or dyspepsia, from which he i had suffered for yean.
Copyright, KVi, by the Author -All R3*h;* F-e
served. U
A MADNESS MOST DISCREET. BY WILLIAM A. HAMMOND. M. D. AUTHOR OF “OR- ORATTAS,” "V.R. OI.IV
inros," etc.
I had had a busy day. I was fired, fagged out, and needed rest and recreation. I had finished my solitary dinner, had drunk a cup of strong coffee, bad smoked two-thirds of a comparatively still stronger rigar, and was
CATARRH
thought if best not to attempt to *'M>tlie her. ; 1 knew thsf kind words and actic-nv at «nch . j time however grateful they may be to the i , recipient, serve to aggravate the emotional j
i disturbance.
It only took her a few moment' in which ! to recover her compo'ure, and then she went : , on with her story: j ! “I pass over a rear of suffering during i which, notwithstanding ail the snares put in 1 my way. I lived an hono-able life, and then f found myself getting a fair living by singing j two or three songs every evening in a cou- \ oer; saloon of the Letter rlas-. My voice wa' | : good, and it seems that inv manner and gen-
looking over the theatrical advertisement* of tra ] appearance were still better, tor oat r .
the evening paper with the view of » lectin* ! night, while 1 was waiting for the woman Tlie v,rra I, ‘**“- atl, ’ n of " “ ch Ha - U ’
a place at which to spend an horror two j with whom I boarded to come and accompleasantly, when, greatly to my di'sru't, pany me home, a card was brought to me Thomas made his appearance at the dining- with a message that the v gentleman from _ * * ; W fiom IT Yvr.ti 1.1 itlro ?r» cae* i*ig» ?r»r fl
room door. (
Sanford's Radical Cure.
came would like to see me for a
with the timid accents that long experience |. a i waTS i re ated them with scorn and con-
tempt. but it seemed to me that I had some |
American Pine. Canadian Fir, Mari-
gold, Clover Bl^iiom, etc..
For the Immediate Belief and Permanent Cure of i very f 'i m oi Catarrh, from a simple h<-ad cold or influenza to the loss of smell. ta.-te and hearin
hiti*. and incipient consum;
uenza
sines' I had i cough. Bronchitis, and incipient c-uisumpti this, and I tal , -JSS3bf , »5SS a «lS com and con- Cure berins from first application and ... ra;
with my way when profc'sional calls were made on me at unseasonable hours had
taught him to use.
“Haven’t I toMyou never to let any patient in who calls after 3 o’clock? Did you tell her to come in the morningf” “Yes sir, but this is a lady who is very anxious fo see you to-night. She says it is impossible for her to wait, and I was sure You would give her the ten minutes she a-ks
for.”
“Oh, you were, were you? And who the devil made yon the judge of what I would do? Really, Thomas, if you had not been in ihe family lor a half a century I should—” “Shall 1 show her in, sir?” interrupted the man, with a most re'pcctful bow, but presuming on his age and length of service, and perhaps thinking that my hark was worse than my bite, and that I was not proof again:t the claims of a pretty woman on my sympathy and care.
ring. non.
Nothing like it. «.rateful. fragrant, w Cure begin* from first application, and radical, pennant n|. and never failing.
apid.
idical, permanent, and never tailing.
knowledge of the person whose name was on °ne bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal
' h ~f,«*“*»[!
me recall the assixnation to mind. A sudd’ n | c; A*k for Sandford’s Radical Cure,
inspiration seized me, and 1 sent him word
that I would see him.
“He came. It did not take me long to find out that he wa* a gentleman, for his manner was both respectful and kind. He said that he had discovered in me undoubted evidences of dramatic talents, and he pro-
posed that 1 should at once place myself tin- j iler a competent instructor with the view of ; being fitted for the stage. I told him that it ; was impossible to do as he wished, for that I | had no other means of support than my en- : gageinent at the concert saloon. To this he i answered that it would be a pleasure to him I
to supply me with the means. [CONCLUDED TO-MORROW.]
Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston.
j cou.ins' Voltaic E ectric IFLAsrut instantly affecis the INervous .sysiem «itd banishes JPaai A iVrfect Electric Rat- *:* ry combined with a I orous Plaster lor twenty-five cents, it annihilate' Pain, viiitiizes
_ SJffWWa lERYE West and Worn out ran.-, strengthens Tired .'fn-cles, prevents Disease, and doe* more in one-half the time than any oth
old everywhere, e
toes m< :>luster i
in the world. .~
KEEP IT PUKE.
Felling Trees by Dynamite.
Forest trees are now felled with dynamite.- j a A cartridge of the explosive substance is j 7oi
^es, ’ I answered in an angry tone, almost p[ aw ,j ; n n channel bored directly under the amounting to a snarl; show her into the con- 1 ' - • - - -
suiting room. You seem to think I am made of stone and iron, and able to endure all the work that thoughtlessness and sciti-hness
The Life is the Blood—Prevent I'i-ease—Surgery
the I.iv-t Resort—A Telling Letter,
Here is a fact for you to think over, viz..: Medical science proves that disease-, no matter how
riy they stem to have, proct
It is for tln>
tree to be operated upon, and when exploded l the tree is simply forced up bodily and falls J intact on its side. In most instances it is found that the tree is not fractured by the ; force of l he explosion; a large proportion of valuable wood at the base <>f the trunk can be utilized which is now lost. For clearing forest properties this method is admirably
nety they stem to
ornparat v-iy lew’causes,
that some single medi- ioes relieve or cure so wide
can put on me. 1 f this sort ol thing goes on f shall he as bad as the worst of my patients. Doubtless this person has been enjoying herself all day and comes to rob me of the few
moments i have for rest. You ought to pro- a ,|. 1 , lt ,. l | ^ | )r i nifS up the root of the tree tec me against such intrusions, but instead ut ,j le oue opt . rati J ld dispenses with the o! doing so you are always anxious to sacn- , te<lious an / 00st iv process of grubbing the
lice me to the whims and caprices of people | roots of the felIe ,,
who are not willing to come to me durtn'. ay! hour* for consultation. Well! Don’t stand there grinning. Show her in and let me get
through with her.”
With another bow Thomas disappeared. In an instant afterward I heard the rustling of a gown that I knew from the sound it made was silk, and a step that I was equally certain, from its lightness and the measured cadence of its fall was that of a well-bred woman. I did not stop to finish my cigar, but went at once into the room where mi
iut
n range of complaints—some of them appearing almost directly opposite in their nature* Wiiem a medical preparation acts at once ujxm thedi-ge-tive and urinary organs, and aisu pr.rifie'
biood, tbc lu-t of difficult!
io*t directly opp< edicai preparatii
live and urinary i-rsaria. and also purifies the
iitlieulnes subject to its control ig. But, while many things arc said is power, those which actually do ex-
x- rare.
[,xi, the UstOI is astonishini to pofcsess tht
ert it Jirc very rrre. It is conceded tin
visitor was waiting for me. She wasstandiug before an ideal portrait of Ramses II, that hung over the mantel-piece; but on hearing my iootsteps turned and faeed me. I saw at once that she was very beautiful, and what was more, that she was a lady. It also seemed to me that I had seen her on some previous occasion, but I could not for the life of me place her. “Will you sit down?” I said in my bland-
est tones.
.■‘Thanks,” as she took the chair that I drew toward her; “1 am aware that I am causing you a great deal of trouble by calling at this time, hut my ease is one that does not admit of delay, l am very, very miserable,” covering her face with her little gloved hands as she spoke. “Indeed, I think I
must be iusune.”
She spoke these last words with such depth of feeling that my heart, always of the tenderest in the presence of a sorrowing woman, was completely subdued. At once I made up mv mind to abandon the idea of going to the theater, and to give as much time as might be necessary to hearing what I had no doubt was a sad story, and to do what I could in the way ot alleviating her grief. Already she was sobbing, i went across the room to where she was sitti#g and gently
laid my hand on her shoulder.
"Do notcry,” l said tn my most sympathetic voice. ‘Compose yourself, and then
tell me all there is to tell ”
“You don’t know me?” she answered interrogatively, at the same lime removing her hands from her lace and turning her large black eyes lull upon me. “1 am Madeline
Withers, the actress.”
“Ol course 1 know you now,” I replied, kindly, but never having before seen you off the stage, I did not fully recognize you. I had just made up my mind to see you this evening in a part that i am told yon inter-
pret to perfection.”
“There will still be time,” she said wearily. “I do not come on till (he second act. and it is now,” glancing at the clock, “only halfpast 7. But, Dr. Waldron, there is something strange the matter with me, and l come to yon for aid. I am afraid I am losing mv mind, for my thoughts and emotions are altogether diflereut trom those that are natural to me; but at the same time ray physical health with a few exceptions was never better
than it is now.”
“I have almost uniformly found,” I said, as I sat down in such a relation.to-her that I could see her face while my own was in shadow, “that the persons who are insane or likely to become so are the last ones to recognize the fact. Lunatics do not go about of their own accord consulting physicians. They are brought by others,and against their wills. Perhaps, Miss Withers, you are overworked. Such a part as the oue you are now pi must necessarily require a great dei
studv.”
“That is true, and overwork may be the cause, but there is much more than tnat. I I am entirely changed; I am not the same woman that 1 was a year ago. Outwardly, bodily, I may be the same. Mentally, I am entirely different, and the change has been so evident and has been attended with so many vexations and mortifying circumstances, that my life has become a burden to me. Last night, for the first time, I experienced a strong desire to commit suicide; and if 1 had had some strong poison at hand, something that would not have caused pain, or distortion of my features, 1 would have taken it.” I smiled at the repugnance which, womanlike, she showed to looking ugly, even as a corpse. I made no remark, however, and she. seeing that I was waiting for her to unfold her ease, glanced about the room as though to mate sure that no one but ourselves was present, and then began what we doctors call her “clinical history.” “I am twenty-five yenrsold, and have been nearly six years on the stage. My father, an officer in the army, was killed in one ot the battles of the Wilderness, and my mother and I were left with nothing for our support except the pension of thirty dollars a month allowed by the Government. Fortunately, an uncle "took the care of me off her hand's. 1 was removed to his house here in New York, my mother continuing to live in the little village of Shrewsbury, in New Jersey. In due time I was sent to school, a famous girls’ school in Connecticut, and there I remained till I was seventeen, studying hard and being admirably instructed in ail good things by the worthy and accomplished lady in charge. Then roy uncle died, and it was found that he had left nothing behind him for the support of hisown immediate family. It wa* necessary for me, •herefore, to leave Farmenton. To be sure, Miss Jamison offered to take me as a teacher, but tbe idea of occupying such a position was exceedingly repugnant to me. I was not so constituted as to be tit to teach others. I therefor* returned to my mother, with no prospect before me but that of earning my living by the work of my own hands. “There was nothing, so far as I knew, that I could do except needlework' of some kind or other, at which I was quite proficient, or giving elementary instruction in music. 1 decided on the first, and made many ornamental and useful articles, some of which I was enabled to dispose of through a society* that specially took charge of such matters. It was not long, however, before I discove the demand for such things as I co was limited, and that, therefore, I expect to receive a steady income from my work. Then my mother became ill. Our scanty means went for very little when medicines and expensive articles of-food had to be supplied from it, and besides, my time was so greatly taken up in the sick-room that I had no opportunity to work. At last mv mother died, and I was alone—absolutely alone in the world.” Her voiee trembled ns she uttered these words, and tears stood in her eyes; hut I
■ Americans Ahead in Shoes.
American manufacturers now find sale for their shoes in England and on the Continent. A great deal of both sole and upper leather is sent to Europe and sold at a profit. Aiuercan facilities in machinery and the system of production of the solid, everyday qualities of leather are admittedly far superior to any
other in the world. Drink Predominate*.
Philadelphia has one saloon to every 29 voters, one grocery to every 52$, and one bakery to every 164$ voters. “THE HEART BOWED DOWN BY WEIGHT
OF WOE.”
That Is to say, the mournful heart of the sufler-
Jt is conceded that DR. KENNEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY, of Rondout. N. Y , is the ico-t effective preparation now in use for ail di-eascs arising from a foul or impure state of the circulation. Hence It is more than like iy t nat if the writer of the following letter had habV.ua: Iv taken
ll a WOmftU Iree-m ...... ...e..-.-, nd Brown's Iron Bitters. Mr.
lantuis, Marshall, Tex., writes: "My wife
ia and general 'tiers.'’ Good
hearty sympathy A. A. Muntuis, M
lias ijeeu entirely cured of dyspepsi debility by using Brown’s Iron Bi
news for the weary heart.
DOORS, SASH,
RLI^nOS, LUMBER,
LATH,
SHINGLES,
« 1 S. HUEY & SON,
LAWN M0WEK8 AND REPAIRS. We handle the Easy, Excelsior, Clipper and Richmond Star, ftirnish the repairs or put old machines in running order. No machine will work right unless sharp and properly adjusted. If your Mower don't operate right bring it tons, or "we will send for it, and put it in good shape at moderate expense. Hilpebrasd A Fugate, 85 South Meridian street.
Departing Winter Leaves the blood sluggish and full of impurities, the nervous system in bad state, and the whole body debilitated Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is just the medicine to cleanse the blood, to give steadiness to the nerves, and to ‘ restore. that teeling of srength and ambition which makes one seem equal to any kind of labor. Try-it now. • I was troubled with salt rheum three years. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla and am entirely cured, and my weight has increased trom 108 pounds to 135.” Mrs. Alice .Smith. Stamford, Conn. "Last sprmg I was troubled with boils, caused by my blood being out of order. Two bottles of Hood's Sar-aparilia cured me, and I can safely recommend it.” Joseph Sohock, Peoria, Hi. "1 used Hood's Sarsaparilla last spring and can truly say it helped me very much. To those suffering with bilious complaints, nervous prostration, or rheumatism. I earnestly recommend it.” Mrs. E. Carpenter, Kalamazoo, Mich. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Sold by all druggist* SI. six for So. Made ouly by C. L HOOD <& CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR.
state of the ctrcula- ! than hkciy Liat i riler of ihe following It
“FAVORITE REMEDY ' ten years ago he would never have suffered from cancer. Pittsfield. .Ma-s., March 22,1S.S4. Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout. N. Y.: Dear Sir—About six year* ago I w;r- obllrci to re-ort lo external treatment for the removal of a cancerous growth on my lip. On my return home I became sensible that my blood needed a thorough cleansing. My whole system, too. required toning up While casting about for the be.-t medicine todothis, your •FAVORITE REMEDY * was so highly commended in my hearing that I resolved to try it. I did so, and’ the result surprised me. it was effected so quickly and completely. I som got over the depression produced by the operation, and since the 'FAVORITE REMEDY, ’ which 1 have continu'd to rake m small doses, has kept me in such health and strength as I never had belore. nor expected to have. It is the best blood purifier in the world. I am sure of that. ‘ Yours, etc.. 24 Adams street. MATTHEW FARRELL. In all cases when a consultation is deemed de-
sirable.
Address—Dr. David Kennedy, Rondout. N. Y. But if yon have not done *o, adopt “FAVORITE
REMEDY" a* a household fneud.
REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF CAS. Notice to Gns Consumers and Others. Your attention is called to the marked reduction tn the price of gas. whieh took effect on the 1st day of March. The company is now furnishing gas to all consumers at Sl.sO per 1,000 cubic feet This price is certainly within the reach ot all for both lighting and cooking purposes. The convenience and comfort of cooking by gas, especially during the summer months, where a fire is not otherwise required, can only bo thoroughly appreciated by those who have had experience in its useful application for that purpose. The company has sold lor use in this city durmg the last four years a large number of gas stoves and is satisfied, irom the many testimonials from its patrons, that these stoves “till a iougtek want.’’ STOVES AND GAS ENGINES FOR SALE AT COST 49* Gasoline Stoves changed to Las stoves at small expense.
The Indianapolis Gas Light and Coke Co., No. 47 -south Pennsylvania Street. S. D. FRAY, Secretary.
BEE HIE PUNIIUI1LL 73 Pendleton Xvenue.
GOLD MEDAL, PATHS, 1878.
GERMAN
Sweet Chocolate. The moat popular sweet Chocolate In the market.
^ CONCENTRATED rgAB Ggca® [&/® frATEgjr' niDYSPEPSIA. . \(] 4 SICK HEADACHE. Jj CONSTIPATION, t
The three "ins’* that make promptly and positively
It
is nutritious and palatable | a particular favorite with children, and a most excel-
lent article for family use. The genuine it stamped S.
Oemtan, Dorchester, Mate,
Deware of imitations. Sold by Grocers evsrywhsr*.
F. EM i CO., DofiMer, Hass.
USE MUELLER'S BAKING POWDER, Absolutely Pure. 40 cents per pound. EMIL MUELLER, 200 East Washington Street. Telephone 987.
UNDERTAKING Rooms. 66 North Pennsylvania Street, OPP. GRAND OPERA HOL'BR. H. W. TUTEWILER, Manager.
Open Ony and Xicht. 49*Telepfioiie—Rooms, 41L Residence, 441.
1 llfb a burden, relieved by Nature’s Great Remedy, CRAB ORCHARD WATER, In use for 70 year' successfully, and recommended by physicians everywhere. Price 35 Cents a Bottle. GENUINE CRAB ORCHARD SALT* are only sold in sealed paper box packages at 10c and 25c. see that “Crab Apple” trade mark is on all labels. No genuine Crab Orchard Salta are sold In bulk. Buy oulyCrab Apple” brand. Sold by aU druggists. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., SIMON N. JONES. Manager. I.onisvtlle Ky, Wholesale A genus—BROWNING <St &LOAN, KIEFER & CO.
THE BEST
W. H. DOAN’S I. X. L. GASOLINE,
Foi? Stoves.
FRANK H. SMITH, PRINTER AND- STATIONER, 2£i N". Pennsylvania St. Finest line of Stationery in the city. Best appointed Printing Establishment. AU work at lew rotas and in tlrrt ciaas sty la
MERCHANT TAILORING. Business Suits, made to order from : : : $23.00 up Dress u “ “ : t : : I 35.00 up Bants, 6.00 up Our Garments are all made in this city, by first-claas workmen. We use the best trimming, and guarantee a perfect fit. Call and inspect our stock before purchasing your Spring Suit. We can save yon from 20 to 30 per cent. Glance at goods and prices marked in our show window as you pass, and keep them in mind. THE GLORE TAILORING CO., Importers, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in WOOLENS ANif TRIMMINGS, AVest AV'asiiington St. Store open from 7 a. m to 9 p. m. T. M. STUART.
NEW BED-ROOM SETS.
NEW SIDEBOARDS,
KING
NEW TABLES, Etc., EtrJj
ttvt TYETT? r_j 1 j±J jLii x i.
Call and see the New Goods, at prices
that defy competition.
43 and 45 South Meridian Street.
7
smm
HEADQUARTERS BABY BUGGIES. A SINGLE BUGGY —AT— WHOLESALE . PRICE.
'Din mm mu, 44 and 4G East Washington Street
SPIEGEL THOMS
&CO.,
71 and 73 West Washington St., and 32 and 34 Kentucky Ave,
LEADING Furniture Manufacturers. LATEST DESIGNS—LOWEST PRICES. IfeT Save money by seeing our stock before
buying.
LADIES’ SHOES.
BUY THE THOMAS BOLTON $2 Kid Button Shoe, Made by Thomas Bolton & Co., Rochester, N. Y.
BA-RISTALiRD’S Occidental Shoe Store, Comer Washington and Illinois Streets.
COBURN & JONES, PLANING MILL AND YARD Georgia st., bet Mississippi and Tennessee, One square west of Union Depot
SMOKE A. B. GATES & CO.’S SPOT CASH CIGAR. Best 5 Cent Cigar in America.
H AVE ARRIVED . The “CHAMPION” Lever Valve Gasoline Stove, with single generator. Lights same as gas. No extra burner required. See it before buying. P. M. PURSELL Ac SON. 84 FEAST WASHINGTON ST.
WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE PEORIA BLACK ID, The best Flying Target yet introdueed. Th* flight and breaking qualities srs aU ths. could be desired. Gun Clubs everywhere are adopting that Cube and Dealer* supplied at lowwt rates.
SAMUEL BECK & SON, G-TJN DEIALKRS, 54 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis.
When you buy Drugs a certainty is desired PRANK H. CARTER, Druggist. 300 IVIassachusetts Avenue. SOUTHWEST CORNER ST. CLAIR STREET.
ADAMS & WESTLAKE 1 Ai GASOLl MS, EARLY BREAKFAST Stoves and Ranges, best in the world. OSGOOD REFRIGERATORS Mantles, Grates and Tile Hearths.
A. W. McOUAT, 61 sod 63 WEST WASMINUXON ST.
SAVE MONEY! SAVE MONEY by buying Tapestry Brussels Carpets of ALBERT GALL. New patterns at SIXTY CENTS A YARD; former price, 91^ SAVE MONEY by buying BODY BRUSpLS CARPETl <4 ALBERT GALL, at EIGHTY-FIVE and NDt&TY C^fTS ?ya«r SAVE MONEY—RAG CARPETS, in fine styles, durable patten*, at WAY LOW DOWN PRICES. |®^rhe most magnifieent lines of VELVET and UOQUETTE CARPETS ever seen in Indiana, at ASTONISHINGLY LOW PRICE& The newest designs in Wall Papers are to be seen at ALBERT GALL’S. The Lowest Prioa in Wall Papers at ALBERT GALL’S* NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS at ALBERT GALL’S.
SPECIAL NOTICE. Those Who contract with ALBERT GALL to hone their papar WILL HAVE THEIR WORK DONE AS PROMISED, and without TEDIOUS and ANNOYING DELAYS. NO FROCRAgTlNATION AT ALBERT GALL’S. «*-Ln LACK CURTAINS and PORTIERES ALBERT GALL ha* th* largest and aaffi Y&ritttl MQk ill IrMtHuriAL,
