Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 January 1885 — Page 2
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2 11.1 JM.JAKiUGLIS IA1LY StKTJKEL,. J;J'f DAY MOItKIKG JANUARY T.i 1885.
PROCEEDINGS 19 CONGRESS.
The Senate Discusses the Oklahoma Land Question Also the Mcaraguan Treaty la Secret Session. The House Discusses Indian Affaire in Committee of the Wholo. FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. The Senate. Washington, Jan. 22 Mr. Frye, from the Committee on Commerce, reported favorably ths bill recently introduced by himself for the encourage tx eat of the American merchant marine and to promote postal and commercial relations with foreign countries. Mr. Manderson, from the Committee on Printing, reported favorably a concurrent resolution providing that the Congressional Kord should b6 an accurate transcript of th actnal proceedings and debates of the two house?. The Oklahoma resolutions of Messrs. 1'Jamb and Vest were placed before the Ben ate. Mr. Vest withdrew his reaolutioa. In doing so he took occasion to say that there conld be no doubt whatever that, as the laws steed, the Oklahoma lands were not at this time subject to settlement by white People. The President, therefore, was unable to do otherwise than as he had done. After some further discussion of the matter, in which Messrs. Dawes. Harrison and Moiey participated, Mr. Plumb said if prompt action were taken he had no doubt an entirely jnt and peaceful solution of the d::liculty would be arrived at with due rejzarrt to the rights of the Indians. Mr. Flnmb's resolution calling on the President for h?s yiews of the present status of the Oklahoma land was then agreed to. Mr. 'Vest then referred his resolution directing the Secretary of the Treasury to ascertain and report upon what terms the Creek aDd Seminole Indians would surrender all their remaining rights to the lands irj que stion. He requested that the resolution be held over till to-morrow, when he would make it more comprehensive. The resolution was lain over accordingly. The Senate then went intra executive sesvon with reference, it is understood, to the N carsgua treaty. When the doors reopened the Senate adjourn ed. The Llonse. On motion of Mr. Lanhim, the Senate amendments were concurred in, the House bill authorizing the appointment of a comemission to run and mark the boundary line between that portion of Indian Territory and connection with a similar commission lo be appointed by the State of Texas. Mr. Cobb presented the conference report on the Oregon Central Forfeiture bill. Agreed to. The House recedes from its disagreement to all Senate amendments. The House then went into Committee of the "Whole on th Indian Appropriation bill. On motion of Mr. Ellis, an amendment was adopted directiDg the Secretary of the Interior to prepare a list of all approved and pending claims of citizens on account of li-dian depredations, and report the same to Congress on the first Monday of next December. Chase then spoke in support of the increase in the provisions for the Indians of Fuit Peck Agency. Mr. 'Maglnnis attributed the starving condition of the Indians of tbnt agency to the ir efticiency of the Indian Department. Mr. Feigan said it struck him as a curious fact that the Government could always find n.eans of appropriating money to feed a et of lazy vagabond Indians, but could never iird xuears of putting thera to work. Mr. Hewett. of New York, read a letter he said he had received from Bishop Whipple, of Minnesota, who is now dying on the banka of the Mediterranean, imploring his good offices for the Indians, and asking him to request the President-elect to be deeply careful in the selection of a Commissioner of Indian A flairs. No position, says the IUshop, In the zlt of the President can bring to his party gieater honor or greater fame. Mr. Cutchron offered an amendment appropriating $50,CX) for an emergeccy fund, to be applied in case of necessity for the relief of extraordinary cases of distress among the Indian tribes. Kuled out on a point of order. On motion of Mansanares the amendment as adopted appropriating 25.000 for the erection of an Indian Industrial School at Santa Fe. Mr. Hogers, of Arkansas, moved to amnd the provision prohibiting the introduction of ardent spirits into the Indian Territory by throwing out the minimum penalty imposed for violation of the prohibition. Lost. Mr. Cutcheon offered an amendment providing that any Indian committing against the person or property of another Indian, or other person, any of the following crimes: Murder, manslaughter, rape, assault with intent to kill, arson, burglary and larceny, shall be subject to the laws of such Territory in which such crime is committed, and shall be tried therefor in the same courts and in the same manner, and shall be subject to to the same penalties as are other persons charged with the commission of such crimes, and permitting Indians to prosecute in any court any civil action at law equity. Adopted. Oa motion of Mr. Throckmorton an amendment wa3 adopted to give the United Mates District Court for the Western District of Arkansas civil juristictton over the rive civilized tribes in the Indian Territory. Mr. Ryan offered an amendmen aaihonzing the- President to open negotiations wita the Creeks, ieminoles and Cherokees, for the purpose of opening to settlement under the homestead laws unassigned lauds in the Indian Territory, ceded bv theru to the United States these are Oklahoma laudi." Adopted. Mr. Ellis, in moving that the committee ne, said in the course of debate on the bills Le had been betrayed by an informity of temper into an expression of langnacs which he greatly regretted. He withdrew that language and made bis acknowledgment to the House. Mr. Ellis had reference to the controversy yesterday between hirtself and Hoimau, and that gentleman said the apology was satisfactory to him, end he withdrew any improper remarks he mieht have made The committee then rose and reported the bill to tho House. The previous question was ordered, and the bill passed and the House adjourned. National Health Hoard Bill. Washington, Jan. 22. The House Committee oa Public Health decided that, by reason of the late stage of the session and the crowded condition of the calendar, it Trill be Impossible to pass at this session the bill to protect public health recently prepared by the delegates from various State JWij el Health, Jho committee, however,
decided to recommend an appranrUtion of $25,000 for the National Board of Health and 150,000 to be rued at the discretion of the President in preventing tne spread of cholera should It appear in this country before the next Congress assembles. THE THERM 031 ET ER
The Condition of the Weather at Various Points. Chicago, Jan. 22 Early this morning the mercury fell to 17 degrees below zero ia this city, according to the report of the Signal Service. In the extreme Northwest, however, the cold has moderated somewhat, Fargo and Jamestown quoting 5 degrees below. The mercury had ri3eu five degrees 'here at noon to-dav. Kough Weather la the East. Mount Washington-, N. H , Jan. 22 The thermometer this morning recorded 50 degrees below zero, 1 decree colder than the lowest temperature ever experienced before, which was 41 degrees below, in March, 172. Probably no longher weather waj ever exierienced than at the present moment (: a. m ). A northwest hurricane has been blowing at the rate of 100 miles an hoar for the past twelve hours. Sleep was impossible during the night. The chimney of the Signal Station was biewn off, filling the house with gas and smoke. Two men are on tae summit P. J. Cahill atd Alphonse Laundry. Oliver Bro Jt fhtllipa' intension. Pitt b uns, Jan. 22. At a meeting of the creditors of Oiiver Brothers it Phillips and the Oliver A: Roberts Wire Company, limited, to-day, a committee reported in favor of accepting the proposition of the lirms, with some slight modifications. Sjpirate n )tes will be given or the interest, payable setnianna -illy, and the mortgage creditors will not be asked to sign the extension, but will carrv thi' loatiB James Dtnnell declined to m r . e as one of the trust s. and Jumes M. Biilt-y, iron merchant, was selected in his place. Thi3 fettles the extension, and papera will be signed as soon as prepared. Internal lteveau Collection. Washington. Jan. 22. The collections of internal revenue m the first six months of the fiscal year were as follows: Spirits, f3l,Oil Zur; tobacco. sl2.7::2.:j;; fermented liquors, $570,492: miscellaneous sources, $151,22; total, $.3;51S.5,.$, being, Si 2V).7S; less than the receipts in the eame period last year. The decrease was in collections from spirits, 2 'JS-'vOnJ; from tobasco, $:V2,$"7; from miscellaneous, $272,181; the onlv increase was from fermented liquors, f 2!'0.2'S. Thes22regate receipts in December, lsl, w re ?275.or. less than in the same mouth cf the previous year. (Jatg of Kallroad Thieve Arrested. St. Louis, Jan. 22 The recent arrest of three men at Odessa, thi 3 State, for robbing freight cars on the Chicago and Alton Hailroad, h s developed the existence ot a ng of men who have been tvsteonaUc ally plundering the company's cats. Latt night seven other men were arrested and hroueht into Lexington wrier they were jailed. It is estimated that this band h.13 j-lolen nearly $20.000 worth of goods from the Chicago and Alton cars during the past ff w months. Other arrests ars expected. Itoller Kxplotaou. Ithaca, N. Y. JaD. 22, A portab'e encine, used in sawing lumber at the farm of Sirron Benedict, Groton, N. Y., eroloded today. Engineer Edwin Phelp and Ed ward Penedict were instantly killed; Simn Benedict had a leg blown o IT and skull rrnshed; can not live; his son Byron also had a lpg blown off, and is supposed to be fatally injured. Natnral f.aa Kxplosion. PiTTSF.rp.'.;, Jan. 22. An explosion of natural gas near the work house, eight miles from the city, this afternoon, seriously injured nve men, who had cone down to the ditch to repair a leak in tne mains. The explosion was caused bv one of the workmen striking a match to light his pipe. No further particulars. A. ttolt lu l lie 1-iiiCk. Peteu-u 1:0, Ya., Jan. 22. llev. George Spenc-r, colored, of Noifold, was convicted in the Mayor s Court to-day of petit larceny, and sentenced to thirty days in jail, lie was also ent to the Grand Jury to be indicted for honse breaking. Spencer preached in the Third Baptist Colored Churchj la3t Sunday night to a Janje congregation. Cru n Stork Food. Lancaster Farmer. Corn is so rich in oil that we may say corn bread is ready buttered; it is, however, very dicestible, and in cold weather this oiliness is a most valuable factor, as it serves to keep up the heat of the body more directly than starch and similar substances. With oats and barley it may form one-third of the grain ration of hard-worked draft horses, and will keep their coats e lossy and be in every way a benefit, certainly worth more than its weight in cats. Fed alone or in larger proportion it has a tendency to make horeej sweat easily, and it is said to become quickly exhausted. It is not safe to feed it as freely as oats or barley, as there is danger of impaction and just as there would be if wheat were so fed. No doubt it is best fed ground with oats, and the proportions already indicated are probably the most satisfactory, the meal being fed upon cut hay. For cows in milk, corn meal may form, with bran, the exclusive grain ration, and may be fed at the rate of one plate of corn meal to each 100 pounds of the cow's live weight. No doubt it will be found iut as gcod in Great Britain as here. It gives duality and richness to the milk, cDlor to tfce butter and abundance to the flow if the cow is a good one; bat if she is inclined to lay on fat such feeding will cause her to fatten, even though in full milk, and if she cets too fat she will go dry. For sheep corn is excellent, but should be fed whole and a little at a time. For swine, tne universal experience from Maine to Oreccn. and from Canada to Mexico, is that it will make more and better pork than any other food. For poultry it is in the countrv the universal grain, but it is not always the best. It is admirable for its fattening properties, bat for laying hens and growing fowls it is not well to use too much. "Corn-fed" fowls, iiucks and geese are firm-deshed and yet tender. They bear transportation alike with little shrinkage. The yellow corn makes yellow butter and yellow fat in fowls. English and French tastes demand white-fleshed poultry with pale, lardy-fat, and so they fatten poultry on rice, rnd their fancy market fowls have about as much flavor as boiled rice. The America nmarket demands veilow-fleshed fowls, with fat as yellow as Jone butter, and corn is the food to produce this In all poultry. Mr. Philip Reichart, Postmaster, New Baden, Robertson County, Texas, writes that Mr. Charles Levine was entirely cured of rheumatism by St. Jacabs Oil, the great paia-cure,
SEW ORLEANS. Another Letter From the World's Fair.
Croakers Tbe PpleDdid Exhibit From Sil. fllMlppt tier Coru It eat 4 the World-Other Notes. .New Of.lians, Jan. 20 This Southern climate ia very much like children when company is present on her wor3t behavior. 8trangers are here from all parts of the world, expecting to bask in warm sunlight and balmy breezes. They find it cold, damp and dismal. Well, the weather-wise inform us that winter 13 absolutely at an end, though the two last days have been quite cold and icy. The number of visitors to the exposition is daily increasing, and all go aay delighted with the grandeur and beauty of the show. Yery likely your readers will think, as I say so much about this World's Fair, that I never siw one before. Wtll, I rever did see one near equal to this, and I see to much to please and interest me that I may be a little over-enthused. Somecroakera haye been predicting that it would break down for want oi money to complete the buildings, and get the materials for exhibition into full display. Bat the buildings are completed, and almost eyery department is fully equipped and ready for ures9 parade except the woman's, and they are determined to have everything in the riüht place before their show is placed on exhibition. Tfieir department ha the material for a brilliant display, and there will b8 no failure with the ladies. Give them a little time to arrange their ribbons and curls, and they will come out in lull dress. In the Mississippi State exhibit there is. some very crediJable work from the hands of her lady artists that are attracting most favorable comments. I am p'eased to see that my old 8tate of Mississippi is making such a good display of the products of her farms, orchards, vineyards, forests and work shops. In some respectä she i9 ahead of all other state. In wool, cotton, timber, and strange to say, in corn she bats the world. The ears ot corn from Washington Connty. on the Mississippi River, are the largest I have seen in the exposition. Her woöl in England is admitted to ba the bast in the world. Her cotton has taken the medal in two World s Expositions, and it will mc?t likely do it in this. The fine display the State has made here will greatly aivance'her intertsts in attracting immigration into her borders. I am delighted to ece Southern people exhibiting so much enterprise and energy iu this work. It shows there Is still life and prosperity In the old land that is rapidly bringing her to the front again. If Congress conld only Le induced to take a high, statesmanlike view of tais Mississippi River question and appropriate a anrlicient amount of money to thoroughly rebuild the levees and absolutely protect the rich lands of its great valleys, it would soon become the garden spot of the world. Don't say "it can't be done," for money, energy, perseveronce, industry and skill n accomplish the work beyoDd any doubt. The Sentinel's attitude on civil service refoim strikes me a3 presenting the true oldfashioned Democratic doctrine of equal rights and fair play. I am in favor of giving any honest, competent, industrious American citizen a chance to attain the highest success he may aspire to in this country, whether in the direction of business, professional pursuits or official position, and these life-time offices certainly have the effect to limit the opportunities of many as good or better men tban those holding the positions It is all nonsense about its requiring a life-time for a man to become acquainted with the dntiee of a little clerkship, or even a Chief Justice or United States Judgeship. There are doubtless 1.50 men In the United States as wel I qnaliiied to till the place that Chief Justice Waite occupies as he is, and auite a number thai are decidedly his euperiors, still no one else can get there until ho dies or resigns, however much some ambitions lawyer may desire the place. I am in favor of civil service reform myself, and have been for twenty years. But my idea of civil service reform is to put the Republicans oat as soon as possible, and till their places with honest, faithful, competent characters. It would be in order to inquire the number of Democrats that have been appointed to office by Ilepublican administrations. Even in selecting physicians for services on Pension Boards, party politics was made a test, and no Democrat need apply. In Vincennes, where Republican doctors were rather scarce, they had to take one who had not been in the practice the requisite number of years, rather than appoint a Democrat who applied for the ptace. That is the kind of p-.7,l service the Eepublicans practiced. Noi Demcrat of any prominence wa3 every appointed by that party except Judge Key, of Tennessee, and in him, I am pleased to say, they made a good selection, as he is a faithful, ef ricient. honest official, and voted the Democratic ticket. Just how many Democrats have been found qualified 0 fill the official positions under the rules of the existing civil service law, I f hould like to know. Many Democrats here express a wish that Hon. Joseph E. McDonald may be assigned a place in Mr. Cleveland's Cabinet. His high integrity and treat ability and wisdom in statesmanship certainly indicate his admirable fitness for such a place. A. Patton. Indian and American Wheat. San Francisco Chronicle. We are now enabled, from the report ot Consul General Leonard, of Calcutta, to form a reliable estimate of the wheat production of British India in The area under cultivation is faid to be 20,000.000 acres and tne product 241,000,000 bcshels, or t' s bushe's to the acre. The acreage planted to wheat in California this year was about 4,C0o,000 and the product about 07,0tX),000 bushels, or 10' 4 bushels to the acre. The total aereage'planted to wheat in the United ctates is about 4'J,C0',C00 and the yield tuis 5 ear W33 about öl0,(G0,000 bushe's say 1. early 13 bushels to the acre. British India 1 as thus considerably over half as many ecres in wheat as the United States, and pro duces nearly one-half as large a crop. Last ear the crop of India was rectoned at 2,n),C 0,000 bushels. Notwithstanding the cheapness of labor in India and the fertility of the soil, the calculation of wheat growers iu that country is that it costs them to raise wheat and ship it to Delhi, which, like Chicago, is the primary n-arket for Indian wheat, l..T5 a cental say 1 ' cents a pound. This is about what it cists here if anything a trifle more. When, hs at present wheat at Delhi will cot realize as much as this, the Indian frmr holds back his crop in view of the possibility of a future famine. Delhi is nearly ths same distance from Calcutta that Chicago ij from New York. But the freight from Delhi is 34 cents per cental, as against 25 cents, whiclt is the freight from Chicago to New York a quarter of a cent a pound. Here is another advantage enjoyed by the American producer. It looks as If Mr. Cird was not far wroDg when be said that British India could net afford to grow wheat in competition with the Northwest ana California any more th&a
it can afford to compete with the Southwestern States ia the growth of cottoa. It is just about ten years since British India began to ship wheat to EagUnd. Ia 177-78 it shipped 12,000 000 bushels; ia 1S0-S1 the shipments were 11,000,000 bushels; lSvSl-82 37,000.000 bushels, and in 13S2s.t about 4 0C0.000 bushels. Ta great decline in the price of wheat, which began last year, checked 'the business, aad ia the first six months of 1SS4 the shipments were oclv 11,125,000 bushels, as against 20.513,000 bushels in the corresponding months of 1S3 The consumption of India is reckoned 200,000,000 Bushels JeaviDg 44 000,000 available for export nearly oae-hlf England's requirements from abroad. But it n evident thai with a prime cost of $1.3'; per cental at Delhi, and freight of thirty-four cents from that point to the seaboard, Ijdiacanrot compete with Chicago or San Francisco. Wheat growing in India denenda in some parts on the monsoon rains, in others upon irrigation. Ve know in this State that with anything like present pricss, if the cot of irrigation has got to be added to the other costs of erowinfr wheat, the industry will not pay. Under the present unthrifty government of India as a Briti3h colony, expenditures are incurred which promise no adequate return. But this can not Jaat forever. It wi.'l never pay, as a commercial operation, to keep np a sjstem of irrigation for the purpose of raising wheat to be sold at a cent a pound, which is likely to be the average ruling price hereafter.
Small Dairy Herds. We often hear of a dairman, says the Live Stock Journal, who has a single cow that makes $100 or more worth of butter Ina year, and perhaps his near neighbor with thirty cowa gets only an average of 30 to f 3d worth per cow. Yet the latter dairyman is entirely unconcerned about the small outcome of his herd. He goes on, year after year, milking cows that do not pay for the fuod they eat, much less for the labor of milking and caring for them. He seems to take It as a matter of course. He does not take time to consider the act that he could dispose of these poor cows and get better ones to put in their place. In facr, he has no definite idea of which are the poor and which the good ones. The cow of his neighbor, which makes es much butter a9 three of hip, dees not arrest his attention; yet, wuen he is asked how this can be, he will strike very tear the fact in the answer: "Well, he has only cue cow, and can take care of her." Jtet 60, and if you wouid sell oil' twenty of your pooiest cows and take care of the temainin? ten, yon would get much more profit than you now do from thirty cow3. A few weeks since an account waa given in a New York paper of a dairyman in Vermont, with six cows on a farm of sixty acres, who makes 30 pounds of butter average per bead. He has been improving them for fome ten years, starting with an average of only 150 pounds of butter per cow. His income from his six cows is now j000. He keeps a record of each cow separately, and each is retained on her own merits. He keeps no cow that will not respond to good care and keep and pay a good profit. He does not expect cows to make ."30 pounds of bntter each without the best of food and plenty of it. These six cows takeno chances of drought and scanty food. Their owner takes the duty upon himself to prevent the effects of drought, and to supply a full rat'ou to der all circumstances. Hip reward is penne's of butter. The Sac and Fox Indians have leased 200,0C0 scies of grazing lands to Kansas parties for ten years at Slo 000 per annum, the wire fencing to revert to the Indians at the expiration of the kase, All euch material as cornstalks and straw shonid be cut into small pieces before being placed m the barnyard. The native-born elephant bids fair to rival the great imported Jumbo in size and weight: bnt it is pietty generally known that nothing rivals the great remedy, Dr. Boll's Cough Syrup. C7H3 fOTiPg i "THE OLD RSUADLE." 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest Uedical Triumph of the Aga! indorsed all over tho World. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss ofuppetite. Nausea, bowels cos; tive. Pain in the Head-vith a dull sort thesrionlder-blade, fullness after eating, vith adi sin c Una: ion to exertioa cf body or mind, Irritability cf temper, Low pirits,Los s of memory ,witS a f e e ling oft a ving jie gl e et e d so ma duty Janiiess.JDizzineFJutte ing of tho'Heart .Dots before the eyes, llowSkin.Hef.dacheestlesnes at ni "ght, hi ?hly. colored Urine. IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED, izz::z: rj-zizzz vt:il z::v is :iv2L:r:a. TUirs FILLS nrc eq.o .-ia!ly ndaptedtc inch cases, one close cflV-cts püoh a ehangt of feeling as to astonish the sufferer. They lucrente the A ppetlte, and cause tho body to Take on 1 l h, thus tli? system ia iioiirUhnl, and y their Toulo Action on th Järstlvr Or?m, ltegu l.r MaoU r.ri prcvlui -oil. I'n e 2." rents. Töl a E V7 b k 4 b k M bil B um kat TI ait: or VVuiskfks chars pro. 1 to a Glo-st I;lack byaingle application ot thU IrE. I: imparts n natural color, acts Instantaneously. S-old lv DniirgisU, or pent by cxpre on receipt of SK 0f7TceV44 Murray St.. New York. T;; nxiY rORkT marf that rin iw rptnrr.el tT Its i.jcMt ftr t! rvt er. If rot fuaj PERFECTLY SATISFACTORY f A n erry r pe-t, a n i i: j rw 1 1: L.ad-J 1t i-.it-r. In v.n:jr of trvies an-i i-n. . h'-! I by tfrt--i.s d-!ers everywheiV. br r or worihie imitatioa. hoa frnuiti uli 1t l - Bail's Dm6oathtKx. CHICAGO CORSET CO., Chicago, HU
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1 ' 11 tmiti r it m ?lnnutncturtir. WH, O. DoVAY, President, 23 East Maryland Straat, pThepPr upca walch tig 3enUa3iüpriat3i ü laralihea by tin Qaapsai
WM. B. BüßFORI),
JIA.NCFACTürtZB OF Blank Books, Printer, Stationer, LITHOGRAPHER. Legal Blanks of All Kinds Kept in Stocks INDIAICAP Liia. rrr n n rr if n m FITTIIv Q 1 h d fieUlrj Aenti for NaUoa Tobe WorxtOo. Globe Valve, ep Toct. .tnr.ee Trimm I r-1 TOKG.'i, CUriEti VIS-, TAPS, evocw ai.4 iUH, WrencLes bLean Trapi, Pnmpa, Slnln, KOül. KiLTIVri. BA3BIT1' METAL (t'25-pounl Boxe). Ootroo Ti'lpuia Waste, whits and 00 ored (i00-pouud bi2), ail ail oiher enpplloa n'-S la oounectica -writ eru:. WATWisd QA3, in Jon 01 RETAIL LOT-1 Do a rv7nlar 6tea fitting busiaeta fctlnat? ard contra:; u heat Hilia. fiaDpa, rtaazli and Lnmber Iry Hoi, with llv3 or exhatu: ttoam. Hpe cut to crdcr by power, SKiüHI & MM, TI and 77 8. Penn. St.: i5r7iiääiu'14. Nur Cnrra. ftxT. f3itbUahl 1651 1 yrt" Ooroi 0rnm J(rrmraP t rtrfeWilcefa The accompanjlns; la ajcorrect cutiepreaentatloa of our premium Watch. It la a stera-wioler, Is made of nickel sliver, and will always reznala at hright as a new silver dollar. It has a heavy beveled edge cryntal face. Its works are constructed o! good material, aad are nade by the fiaes; aato r:atic machinery. Every watch H perfect before leaving the factory. All are thoroughly tested and adjusted, aa can be honestly recotatnealjj as faithful time-keepers. Tbey are justaarepreentea, ani are worth three times the price. ANY ACTIVE BOY Can easily secure one ol these Watches by gattlnr his friend to subscriba tor the Indiana 8tat Bentiel. Followln? are oar oSers to agenh?: For520 will Fsnd The 3ent:nei. to twenty sibcrlbers and the Watch free to the aent etUag up the club. For 112.50 we will send Thr Sestinkl to ten snb pcrlbers and a Watch to the aent forwarding tha club. For ?7.53 we will send The Sintis, to five s'lbMTribere and a W atch to the ageat lorwardlnz tt) elub. For t r 50 The Sintis el to three subscribers atiJ a Watch to the ageit For S3.5GTHK Sentinel one year aad a Watch to any address. Address, SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis. Ind CHEAPEST WORK EVER ISSUED! SVSLOPEDia a.d r.miiAitv orUITIVSSSAL Z1T0WLSD&2. f . r f.r rtiJy rblerci.ee va Horn, t. benuttrT. tedlrlne. Ihlolorv t'bilxotli Itellclon. Natural lliilnrr. Ilnclneerinr. .. , lenre Kilurntion. lirucrapb). oiertjuients. YrIJ - Illator. Ilortirulf ore. Literature. Law. rnmmrrrn, Ijibolocy, 7If rhanlcxv. .-.:, -i : .1. . v. a . '31 popular other
oecf; iwusiampsioritsratpj Medical U'orxsu BrW' Call orwrltp. F. D. CLARKE. M. o7 LiZtlSC VINE T:ETVCI(CINNATI.OHIO.
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HATCH FREE.
Encyclopedia at the price, and contains a
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