Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1885 — Page 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 1885.
3
rT tla Can day Sentinel.
V W AIT II. Ca. je rich men, lend assii'.ince To the poor around you thrown : Ere 70a help the foreign aisilons Think of raiis'.ons here at hone. All round you they ere lirfnv, All unheeded tbey may die. Lt you fcjr your kindne help theo To rtnemoer Cüriit la nl?a. Uoatoat tn ttretts and Her. Wfcere Godi word ii r ever i&own ; There la nambtri yon wl I flad them. They, cor tcaitea here at home. Go there witboat worldly pride. Go with buiaole hearts of lore, Seek them, though In feir they hide. Tell theia of a life atove. Go behind the rr!oa wall. There you'd flad them low la crime. Tell them that oa Christ to call, Tell then cf II U lore divine.. Go withla the dark ncd cell. Do sot hsve a though: to shirk Labor that lica there before yoa. God will tless yea la ycur work. Oh. remher whea yon're siring To the heathens o'er the sea. There are wretched oacs around yoa That you do no: try to ec. 0 before yon build up missions la a land almost unknown, Look aroua 1 tbe fiel U of labor And you'll and we need them home. Wretched souls Kith naught to ilghtt-o, Bardens borne hj theo aTone, Larkened lives tfcat yoa could brijhten II Tour missions were at heme. Eeauh tfcen all the directs an 1 alleys, Whirc His word is never shown, Tfcere ia numbers you wi 1 Had them. Ihey, our heathens here at hoaie. Saturday, March 7. ?."5. 7ITAK1I FLliAWMKY, Scientist! claim that cigarette-smoking leads to idiocy. Another instance of getting the cart beiore the horse. Philadelphia Call. "Vbat eball I do," writes an anxious subsrriber, "to keep my hair from coming out?" Come home at nine o'clook, xnan. Eurdette. Patty degeneration of tbe conscience;" ia a new phraze ntl to expre? aa aggravated lerm cf moal diseas. The duase, however, is n t new. "How can I rind out all abiut the young lady to who: I an engaged? aked a prospective bennl-cr. Has she a younger brolher? If so, consult him. The way to sleep," says a scientist, "13 to think of nothing;" but this is a mistake. The way to sleep is to thick it is time to get up. Philadelphia CaII. 5 Humph!" ea'd a yonnjr man at a play -wltti a ywnrjg lady. :T could play tbe lover .tetter than that mjeelf." "1 wonlda't miad teeing yoa try it," was the naive reply. "You may spak," said a fond mother, "about people having strength ol mind, bat when it comes to strengtn of don't mind, my eon Willie turpasses every body I ever knew." Mr. HeroM. tbe poet and lecturer, once nsktd Jeno d, soruehat inopportunely, if he bad read bis "Descent Into Hell." "No." replied the dramatist, "bat I should like to te if." "Ycurs is a hard life," eaid a commiseratirg philanthropist to a hand organ ruin. 'Eet ees," replied tbe njnsician, sadly. 'Obliged to be out In the cold all day," continned the philanthropist. IHt is not da worst of eet," was the meloneholy rejoinder. "No?" MNo, de miseree ees dat I am obliged to listen to de music of my own instrument." The philanthropist was so overcooie with this view of tbe matter that he gave the crgan-man a dollar. Boston Courier. Mrs, Farvenu had been abroad, and vf hen the returned she had much to tell. One day a lady was talking to her. "Ah, my dear JJrf. Parvenu, did yen go to Italy?" "Oh, jet," was the reply, "we were nil oyer it and raw everv thing." "Did you see the Vati can?" "Yes, wc were there, bat it was erupting fearfal that day, throwing up lava and smoke and stuff, and they concluded that it would.not be sale to go no to the top. It was a fine spectacle from the conservatory of the hotel, and I enjoyed it quite as much as if I had teen right on the spot." Merchant Traveller. A Satisfactory Reason. Irascible old party Conductor, why didn't you wake rue up when I asked yoa? I am miles bejond my station. Conductor I did try, and all I could get out of yon wa, "All right, Maria. Get the children their breazfast, and I'll be down in a minute." ltefore the Cla. "Dear little man with the slender lets, Man with the long, long hair, ; Why do you dance on your lender pesf by öo you rantand rear? ' Thy do you Howl and matter 0? u tj io you denen your list?" ? !?ii!y chatterer, don't you anuw? J am aa el o-cu-tion-ist." I Bardeue. A i!ai Si an. j Exchange. f'Why. what's the matter, Rusie? You lc,ok as if you had bf ea crying all night." ! Oh, Nellie, I fear George no ionger cares Icrrr.." 'Nonsense! What make yoa think 9o7 "WhT. T tripd fvorv vit to ft n r nntf. Tl with him lt rninp hn t h Krr hi boc boc he let me have my way eiery time." wtea Aaa walked tee irden round, And woman was cot kauwn. Dl Mi; aid: "It 1 not good i'ct man to be alone." Eat if the Lord had known what wws Tfeftt man throch Ee abonM Cad, rerat on tooer tcoad thought. He uUht have chcsel Iiis mind. Mercnant Traveler. lie V7a the Bearded Lady. 1 SI. rul Globe.1 V'Ve teach a Sunday school class? Yes, indeed." siid a pretty, young St. Faul society laY tbe other day. For a long time I need evry Sunday to teach a class of little boys tt 'Jb Mission Sncday school, a branch of oar church at home. There were quits a nctaber cf them ranging from eight to fourtrra years old, and tbey were just as intelligent and smart as I could hare wished. Bat, do-jjou knew, the first Sunday that I took thU da I was amused. Of course, I wanted to know their name 3. wher they lived, and, la act, who tney were. (Questioning them in turn I found their answers quite satisfactory, until I came to a bright little fellow ab4ut ten years old. He told me hn name end x:hra he lived, bat when I asked him biWather'a business he did not reply at once. 1 rtcttured hlra wish my brightest smile, but ftlldoubions when he said he guessed he cct'Idn't tell me that. My curiosity was now arched, and I at once made up my mind to knw all about it Thinking of the horrid dynamiter, and burglars, and all thoae awTollmen we are constantly hearing abaat, it wif with some trepidation that I insisted on his-telling me. His reply reassured me to a Creater cr less extent, and was: 'My napa is 1,'ie bearded lady twice a week at the Dime litHeum. " RliMd by Washington. I San Frtacxsco Chronicle. I Tie death of rt. Hannah Swasey, who Clt In Alimeda on Thnnday last,at thedTartsd tz cl nicety-six years and six
rrcnthv, is worthy of mcr than passing notice, the was tbe granddaughter of Lord Flaiited, who left ng!od on account of r Uptons perMCution, his property being confiscated. He lettled near Doyer, N. H . where Mrs, Swase? was born. General Washington drilled bis men on her father's farm, ted in passing on one occasion he took tbe little girl in bis arms mod kissed ber. Mre. Swsey was very intelligent and Attractive, and btloved by all who knew her. Ehe retained her mental faculties unimpaired to the bonr of her death, and to tbe last sr.oe cheerfully to tlnM around her. 8ne was also remarkably ac-ive and attended to her household duties up to ten days before ber death. She made tbe trio tcrosi the continent twice after ehe was eighty years of fge. ILXOITY FKOBLEXSt
Otxz readers are Invited to tnrnlsa original esittoas, charades, riddles, recuses and other "knotty problem," addreeslcz all comnnnl cations reatlvt to this department to X. E. Chadboura, JxwUrtoSi Uxlss, No. 1 123. A IJoiible-Word Enlgmrj. Ia "pleasant sight;" Jn "ctamploa" Csht; Ja "diamoads" bright; la "womaa's" right. Did you ever go la a total. And ece the wondera It contained 7 tee thereia a wheel ot fortuae, (Ia a minute large sums are gaiasd !) fe"ce the great performing monkey Walt a fine and slippery wire; Sc the wonderful conjurer Eatirg cotton ball oa fire? HY-0N. No. mo. iMt'ft incuder. Pat lived a mile or more Iron Daasniere town ; And walking down the btreet one mora A brilliant thought his ready bram Hashed through, As EridRet met him-Bridget Lorn. Down to iLestilcho drew her trembling lorm. In bli.fful ecstasy and joy: And clapped in cloc embrace an hour they sat lire au&ht he knew to bihs rlloy. Then up starts Fat la dread and sore aKriht, A fctartled glance around testows. With blank axuaze depicted on his face A Icoi .hat fcO'ja to horror grows, iiis clap la looped from Bridget's buxom form, As iuick he springs upon his feet; A monunt only oa his watch he look, Iben f eadlou dashes down the street. The siory is soatthin? like thi3, we're to'd; ricad Pat that fate:ul morn had heard A wle aud witty a of 6a?e or bard; And tto'jjht of practice had occurred To fat, as bridet s smiling face he met Upon tne lonely Dunsmere lane. Now Avtat may be tee cause of all I'av's woe, ecalloa Eaes tocxp:ala. r.cLE Claude. No. 11.17 A Charnde. An advertiseoient i'e but my all. Thoagb other thirds May tio.ir tbeir trumpets louder. l"o not the Oolong, ror tue rt'ack. Nor jet the round uucpjwder. The Oolong is a wre'ehed taing; Tte Blae will ne voa blue; The Gunpowder will blow you up hy wuat eKo toukl 11 d j t Oh. uro my al', aud nothing else. My daURhte Rad iuy two What triouxU he price may be quite rst, J t matters noi to you Polin. No. 1 128 Artacrninp. l. In the expression "a c at ka.n" Ir'iLd pale red liacu ii you can. Tbe ccolina medichiei I name Abd nvi: i:AKt tiucp-'' are tüe same. The act of winding in a ball May be a moiion laf..e," not small. 4. "Poetic art sosi;.' sung cr ppoVea, Is notnins more than to oetoten, 5. A figure in a puppet show I a "Maine ohek," as yoa know. 6. "I mm. tame hat;" 'tis thn 1 hide A Mgure having many a side. NELSON UN. No. 1 129. A Double Acrostic. I. A Mostly visitant ?tou art, Of bird and beast a compound part. II. Naples' poor, who live by alms And tourists vie with itcning palma. III. One syllable, inclusive, terse. L'eSDes the boundless universe. IV. yor mean, or purpose or design. A substitution heie assign. V. A title, cosaomea or appellation. Your credit, character or reputation. VI. A look that feeling's touch hath wrought. The language 01 unspoken thought. IXITI ALS AND FiyALS. Eow to a man aad Republican, A hero oa life's stsge. Tin your hat to a Democrat, A statesman and a sage. F. T. No. 1130. A Familiar Injunction. .My first when formed with proper crace Becomes an outline of tne human face; In fcfcoe a part jou'll find, and tee, in making all the re: ol me. Now place me in position, and 3Iy whole becomes a stern command which often posted may ie found TVhere leajs of ere or love of cleanliness abound. Knapier Tandy, Jr. No. 1131 A Palindrome. Backward and forward alike, I say "ücast of no raiment 01 fine arrav." J. K, P. Bakeu. The March Reward, The sender of tbe best lot of answers to the 'knotty problems" of March will receiye Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield." nicely bound in cloth. The eolation of each week sboukl be forwarded within six days after tbe date of the Sentinel containing the paz z!es answered. Answers. 1111. Greenwood. 1112. Sensationalism.
1 S O F L A M E L SAMPLES P0MFOLE0N PELLETS L E E T S SOS
N 1111. Wash. 11 10. Hamilton; 0 tway; L ongfeilow: E cney: E ngliah; 8 helley. Ilia A codn. 1117. Tea, ate. It was hoped that the papers of Wendell Phillips would be left in such condition tbat valuable memoirs of his life and times could be published, but this is doubtful, and there seems little prospect of any full edition ot Phillips speeches and letters. The life of Garrison, whic'a his sons are preparing, is understood to be so far advanced that por tions of it will soon appear in some of tbe magazines. It will be an extensive work. g;ving much of the anti-slavery history which Mr. Garrison helped to cake, bat did net live to write out.
TUE TEMPLE CIF DO $11.
To the Temple of Eoth la a vition Was 1 led in a vaporou land. Common ente is a butt and adcri!oa. Where the altars ot Fantasy stand. There the Theories dw?ll that have faded. And the notions that never would was a, They abide, unlmpeached, unlavidsd, In the Temple of Both. There the wheels of Perpetual Motion Mike tbe mus'.cil whirr in the lr. The Philosophers there have a notioa That tbe Circle im easy to B-juaxe: There the Fiatfners ot Earth are djfiint. And the Tribes that were lost, they are found. And tbe Arkite ideas of Bryant Uocrta'ly abound! Tbe believers la Hume and in Slade '11 be welcomed as children of grace. And there's the original Cralle 1 hat rocked all the Aryan Kace. And hypotheses, I.unarand fcoiar, Of Myth, go about and about; And Lotody deems tbat the whole are A matter of doubt! Ttiere the Spelling is purely Phonetic, Vaccination's entirely forbid. And the light of the Kerjanast esthetic No moreneath a bush is bid. As 'no reBedv' Force is suspended, Human life is not worth a galosh Let us end. leit our days should be endei jn the Temple of Brsh ! London Saturday Review. fcOCIAL GOSSIP. Mcody is doing a great work in Locis7ille. Mr. Cleveland was the recipient of no lees han 2,103 valentines. Josh Billings fays: "Editing newapapir is one of tbe most oitSkult things in life." Ex-trmy men are now known b? a copy of the Century sticking out of their overcoat pOCkftt. Mr. Emerson lita paid that "manners are the contrivances of the wise to keep fools at a distance." Washington hotel-keppers are rubbing their hands with glee and wear one vast, substantial smile. The pay of General Grant on the retired list will be thirteen thousand five hundred dollars a year. Our vanities of love of approbation make cs more work and cire than all tbe real ne cessities of life. Pilgrimages to Albany are no longer nec essary as the head of the new firm has opened an cihce in Washington. General Lew Wallace's Ben Hur has been translated by the imperial scribe into Turkish by the Sultan's command. Many are willing to die for tneir religion; few are willing to live for it; it is much easier to die bravely than to live bravely. Wahington journalists have a ner organization called the Gridiron Club. Ron lr!ey Foore is President, and Charles 1'. Murray fctcietary ar.d Treasurer. It is easy to say true things tbat are not tew; nor is it diilicult to say new things ta a-e not true; tbe great mm is hi that cm ay what is both true and new. Strength for to-day is all that we need, As there never will be a to-morrow; For to-morrow will prove but another to-day. With its measure of joy aud :orrow. W. J. Florence said in New York an Sunday: "I hope soon tn hav t theatre of my own in thN city, as Mrs Florecce and myeel! are tired cf this wandering life." Henry Cabot Lo3ge, who is to edit Emerson's correspondence for publication, says te h;s the experience of Frude in mind and feels the weight ot the responsibility. An Alfcmy bell has made a crazy oiilt for a preient to President Cleveland. All over the quilt, eet in among the patches, are badges of various desigus bearing the name cf "Cleveland." Hannibal Hamlm says he is gome to write a boos of reminiscences by and by, when he tas plenty of time. He Is only eeventy-niue 5 ears old and wants to look aroand a few years before he settles down to a little work. Minnie Maddern wears a pair of slippers woven from her own hair. The toes tarn up coquetttehly and they came to a paint, while on the top of each slipper 13 Mis Madder a's monogram in raieed letters, all done in her cvrn hair. A bouquet recently carried by the Princess of Wales was of Russian violets in the ebape cf a fan, a Jacqueminot rose in the centre, over which a bnmming-bird on a Epiral wire fluttered vritn every motion of tbe hand. Mr. Edmund Gosfo has said at least one good thing since his return to England. "My own impression," said he, "is that tne cay to enjoy America is to take the trouble to if-arn a little about its intellectual and po'itical life before going there." Alma Tadema, the famous artis in a recent diCQsion concerning the exchange of cenius between England and the United States said: "England is one ahead of the United States. We sent 03car Wild over there, but she had no fool to send back." If "l will help you" were the rule, How cüauged beyond all measure Life wr.uld become! Lach heavy load Would be a golden treasure; Pain and vexation be forgot: Hope would prevail ia every lot, and lite be only pleasure. Hannibal Hamlin, who is nearly eighty years of age, looks as if he might live to be 100. He has the hard, tough look of a maa with a frame of steel springs covered with sole leather. There is an intensity of vigor about the old man that is truly wonderful He has not the firt sign of the weakness of advancing age. The eons of some of the very rich men of New York are taid to be living at a tremendously extravagant rate, and are likely to see the bottom of the fortunes acquired by economy and thrift. One gildd youth recently chartered a palace car at $100 per day aid took a party of friend to Naw Orleans this being but one item of the expenditure. It is a singular thing in politics that every man who changes his principles and comes ont for our side does eo from sound reasoning ami a desire for honesty and reform, while every fellow who leaves oar party and goe to the other side dees so from dishonest and impure motives in search ot personal gain, and is a fcoundrel who shauld have been kicked out of the par;y lon a.30. Mr. Gladstone is in th sevnty sixth year 0? his age. He entered the House of Common in 1 ard has sat in every pss!on ior Cfty-three years. He has beeu a Parliamentary leader for half a rsntury, standing in tte front rank since 1S43, whea he wis C lonial Secretary in the ministry of St Rsbert Fel. He bfcame Premier n 1SG, wa subsequently overthrown by DiireaU, atd f gain rose to tbe first place oa the retirement of bis great rival. At the last Delmonico ball the tisraldesoratiens were more profusa ttiaa nnal and there werft 'avors for the dancing queer jade bracelets (resembling blue aud pink China curtain rings. Japanese fans in crescents and triangles, pompons of yellow feathers, and silken ribbons held by silver pins were among them. The girls in their silksand satin 8 made quaint pictures decked out with these trophies, and the mea who received the silken scarfs wore them with pride. The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette says there are very few people who have an adequate idea of the splendor and beauty and historical Interest of the "Grant relics" that have been made over to the Government These are trophies from nearly all tbe considerable cities that the General visited on his way around the world. Take tbe little town of Stratford-upon-Avon. The "freedom" of the town was presented to Grant In a rcroll of parchment, inclosed in a box of the Shakespeare Mulberry tree wood far more precious than gold, aud exquisitely carved into leaves and berries ot tbe tree. General Grant never swore, and in my long connection with him, says Mr. Mitt land, of Washington, who was a member of his military family throughout the war, I never heard him utter a profane word. I have been with him on many occasions in which perhaps the use of profanity would have been pardonable. I haye beard him
fell, in social circlet, ttorieti n which oaths have been always csed. but In retelling them be wonld not quote the oaths. He was freer fjom ciicg nnkind expressions toward his fellow-man than anyone I nave ever knowa And tbe chief rrisfortnnes of his life have arisen from bit misplaced confidence in his fellow-men. William Black made a lovely ideal out of Jndith Snakespeaie, the poet's unlettered daughter, but there is no trace of the swet English !a?a in history. This is the little known of her: Sne and her twin brother Hamm t were born in 151: a few months before her father's death in 1:16 she married Thorr :u Qainey, and they bad three children ; the died In 1001. The mention of ber in her f;;tber's will seems to indicate a good deal cf affection on his part, and we know that she could not write her name, but signed with a crcts. VARIETIES.
Ogiethorpe.Ga., claims to be the only ideal town in she United States, for the simple reaicn that not a solitary ycung man in it chews tobacco. The ideal juryman has been discovered in Albany t W York. They have found a man there wto kp5 S storö but Beter advertises ncr reads a news paper. An "athletic club" cl yonni women ha3 been formed in a western city. Are they training to wield the broomstick, or to split kindling and build fires? Tbe Government is to build a soldiers home in California. Congress has recsntly appropriated $200,000 for the buildings, and the State is to buy the land. Prohibition Is evidently much desired by the business men of Atlanta, Oa,, sixty-seven firms there having declared their intention of clc&ing on election day and working for it. Texas has just laid' the corner stone of its new state house, which when completed will be tbe largest state capitol m tne United States, second only in sizs to the national capitol. The eexton of a New York church died suddenly in his pew on Sunday. More of them would die if compelled to breathe regularly the air tbey supply to worshippers in the church. A singularity about hymnology is that many excellent hymns were written by persons who were not religions at all, or whose claim3 to religion rested on very slight foundations. In Philadelphia the police are compelled to attend medical lectures, that they uiiy b able to assist and relieve sufferers In casss of accident without waiting for the tardy arrival of physicians. A Chinese reading-room, to bs known as tbe Chinese-American union, has been opened at Philadelphia. Its library ia mostly made up of Bibles, Testaments and hymn becks in both larguages. The Sopreme Court of Ohio ha3 dee ded trat a subscriber can not swear over his telephone wiie when tha company objects, The girls at the central cilice will no doubt keep a rf cord of tbe telephone numbers that swear at tbem hereafter. A New York policeman who went down to G c ate 1 mala to organize the police force there is now tbe most powerful man in th Republic, next o PetMent Birrioj, and gets a ealary ot ?"),000 a year, an imaiea3e bam in Guatemala. Although Dakota is snppcred to be a land ci blizzards and hyperDorean coolness, a Desdwocd paper declared that "all cf last week farmers throughout the valley were busily engaged ploughing ard preparing to sow their spring crops cf grain." Tt at an autograph copy of the emancipation proclamation is among the historic pi pers of tbe British Museum is not generally kncwD. It was prepared at the request of ihe British Government under the personal supervision of President Lincoln. A country girl in Pennsylvania Is just now the object of envy by city belles because of a jauntj-Icoklcg hat made entirely ot citstraw and corn shucks that grew on her father's .nrro. It is tastily trimmed with chicken featbers dyed In poäeberry juice and blue writing fluid. A recently discovered tin mine in Calhoun County, V. Va., is valued at $1.000,000. A year ago the land under which it lies could have teen purchased at less than fifty cents an acre. The output is comparatively small, but the quality is raid to be excellent, and the quantity far above the average. There are a number of soap trees growing in tallabassfe, having a yellowish, sapy na pearance.with a hard black seed, from which the trees are propagated. People ia lallahassee boil the fruit to make soip, but in China, Japan, and other countries th ber ries are used as a substitute for soap just as they are taken from the trea?. Cincinnati has established a labor yard, wbere any man can have a ten-cent meal after f awing and splitting wood for aa hour. The tickets are sold to charitable people ail over the city at fifteen for $1, and applicants for bread are given a pasteboard instead. Over 1,700 worth of tickets have be?n sold in a year, and the BCheme works well. Mr. H. C. Kohler, a Dakota farmer whose father and uncle were the pioneer beet sugar manufacturers ci Hanover, Germany, de Clares that the conditions of soil and climate in Dakota are very similar to those of his old home across the wster, and he believe. tbe manufacture of beet sugar will prove one cf the test paying industries of the North west, because the per cent, of sugar i3 so very large in the roots raised there. A Hook of Nature. The Winter's a book of poems, sorrowful Fantasies, All pictured with empty blrd-aests, Held in the lonely trees. The turquoise ikies are the covers, Begllt with sunbeams long. The drifts of enow are the page?, And tbe moaning winds the song. K. K. Munklttrick ia March Century Bric-a Urac. The Funeral Craze. In Dr. Hammond's recent novel entitled ' Dr. Grattan," tbat astute and observing man expresses a good idea of a ma jority ox funerals: "Nothing appeals to the rustic mind with a force approaching tbat which attends a fnneral. A birth is nothing, a marriage excites enly a moderate interest, bat a funeral rouses tbe whole neighborhood to a sta'e of excitement, and men, women, aud children stop iheir work and their play, aid. attiring themselves in their best clothe, prepare, under the self deception that they are honoring tbe dead, to enjoy the occasion. Humanity loves morbidity." KINKLEI3. A roller skating rink has Its disadvantages one is 0 apt to be thrown into mixed society. Skating rinks are demoralizing. They Incline one to bsse actions, and eve i the best of Christians are liable to become backsliders. Texas Sittings. I kate, thou skatest, he skates; 1 fail, thou fallest, he falls; I ha:c, thou batest, he hates 7 o hear a girl laujh-how it galls! Gentlemen who have been endeavoring to become famous aa the original inventor of tbe roller skate will please subside. Many clergymen of our acquaintance have told ns tbat the man who invented that popular toy spells his name Sa-t an. Minneapolis Tribune. They were skating tojeiher Over the smooth floor, And he said, "iiy dear maiden. Your grace I adore. And I would tnat through Hie We could thus onward go; Will you take rae dear one, For wheel or for woe?" What he objected to "So you've been practicing at the skating rink, eh?" said a friend to Simpkins, "I have' "Well, how do yon take in tbe rollers?" ' Oh, Pve no objection to the rollers. They're all rizht It's the chalk on the fioor T object to. It's so darned hard to brush orX."
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And house-cleaning time approaches, it would be well for those persons Wishing to refurnish to call and see us, as we have a full line of Elegant
EPurniture, Carpets,
Cooking- Stoves, Etc. In fact almost everything needed in HOUSE-FURNISHING, which we sell on Easy Weekly or Monthly Payments, or lor Gash.
BORN
97 East Washington Street. 14 and 16 Store open in the evening. Saturdays. 9 o'clock.
IHK TEST. r. Li I.Man m. i.vr.r. We should judee a brother kindly, Though ce's fallen in the dust; We should not be Horn and cruel In our eCorts to be just. When the preat Iron curs of sorrow scera to msh us to the ground. And the dark c'ouCs of temptation, On ail iiJcs cur lives surround, When the star of hops is hidden By the dense fo?s of despair. And our trials aad temptations been as great as we can bear, Do wc ttea resist so bravely, With no hope nor friend in vie7 1 Aro Meat all tlmss and places To ourselves and Maker true? Wait until you've stcod the trial. Yes, I rfaily th;nk it best; Yen can judge a frk-nd more kindly After yi'U have stood the test. KEL1UIOUS I.xTFLLKiENCEAND INCIDENT. Yale Divinity Sshool has $170,C00 besides its niagniticent buildings. The last report of tte Salvation Army shows that it now has ninety-ore corps, with 'J.lOO ollicers. Dr. Haygood. ci Georgia, who declines to become a Methodist Iiiehop, ia resolved to devote hie life to educational work for the elevation of the negroes of the Soutb. Tbe Congregational Year Ttook. of Englani, shows that ther are 1 371 Congregat onal Chinches in England and "Wales, wib an aggregate seating capacity of 1,5'i-V r - The Intercollegiate Y. M. C. A. Convention, held at Harvard University, closing on last Monday, is regarded a tri bast of its kind, thus far. More than 110 delegates were present. The Baltimore Episcopal Methodist in its last issue headed a donation party item "Raiding the ParsonBge." Many ministers think tbat is about the size of it. Baltimore American. The Sunday resolution, brought forward as a rebuke to an advocate of the Continental Sunday, elicited the heartiest applause at the recent meeting of tte Y. M. C. A. of the Slate in Syracuse. Joseph Coot never had a larger attendance inTrfiucnt Temple, or a wider circulation of his utterances tbrougk the press, than during the delivery of his tenth course ot Monday noon lectures in Doston. The American Bible Society has published a pamphlet containing one verse of the Gospel of John, printed in 1212 different languages and dialects, that being tae number ot languages into which tha Scriptures have now been translated. Mcncure D. Conway, wh is coon io remove his home from London to Washingllrst attained notoriety bv his fierce r.ermoas against slavery, delivered in tbe latter city in 1S07. He entered the pulpit a3 a Metho ditt and makes his exit as a Unitarian. There has been a movement for some time among the Hebrews in this country for the establishment of a Sunday servic.' About 2(0 people met in Standard Hall. New York, recently, to consider the subject. Rev. Dvid Stern, of Wilkeirre, Pa., made a most earnest address in behalf of such a service. The Pope will celebrate his golden jnbilee this year. In Italythe observance will include: First, a league ot prayers for the triumph of the church and the prolongation of his holiness' life; seconly, by an exhibition at the Vatican of all theoiierlngs which wiil be made, specially of objects relating to public worship; thirdly, by an alms for the mass, made up of offerings from tha entire Catbolic world; and, fourthly, by a pilgrimage to tbe tomb of the apostles. Considerable excitement has been aroused in religious circles in Syracuse, N. Y.. by tbe attitude of some of tbe leaders of evangilicsl churches in tne city who had met to form a Woman's Christian Association. A majority cf the ladies present voted to exclude from membership in the society tbe ladies from the Unitarian and Univeraalist Churches, on the ground that they were not Christians. This action has given ris9 to considerable indignation. The ladies who were excluded were noted for Christian work. A School of Christian Workers has bien opened in Springfield, Mass. The course ot stndy and training includes tbe Bible, church history, Christian ethics, methods in prayer me ting and with inquirers, history, litratnre, etc. The coject of the school is to train re en tobe Superintendents of 8anday-schooh, Sec; etaries of Young Men's Christian Associations and helpers of pastorj in mission work and other fields of Christian activitv. Among the lecturers are Professor M. B. Kiddle. D. D., Dr. J. H. Vincent, Dr. George F. Pentecost and D. L. Moody. OLD UlüKOKY'd FORTH aiT. How lie Looked While at the Uermitase a Month Before Hs Death. Washington Letter to Chicago Tribune. In the Con co ran Gallery there is a collection of the portraits of all the ex-Presidents np to Andrew Johnson's time. It was made by Healy. The most interesting is that of Andrew Jackson. Healy visited the Hermitage about a month before Jackson died, and with great difficulty persuaded him to gtye him a sitting. The old gentleman was determined that he wonld not. He had a great prejudice against having his portrait painted. Healy fin ally succeeded in getting an interview with him, and of course after tbat succeeded, for Healy is a diplomatist who knows how to flatter and make his way with noted people. His picture ot Jackson makes tbeold gentleman look hideously ng'y atdiavare. The pallor of death is on his face. Healy made no attempt to fiatter bim, but painted him as he fotrnd him. This result is all the more interesting. Looking at tbe picture of Jackson, one recalls tbe remark cf tbe rural visitor who came into the gallery for the first time and saw the marble statue cf Vela's last days of Napoleon. Napoleon, emaciated aud worn, is i cated in an invalid chair with a pillow and ft thick dressing gown wrapped about
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6" t MAYER K-uia worn-out frame. The dressdng-gowu js npen at the throat, showing his hollow chest. Upen bis left kne is an cp?n map of Lurope. Napoleon's Irok is far away, a? if he were still breeding over his hopeless ambitionp. The countryman looked long nron th's statue and then he said, with a sich: g0 this is old NapoJeon, is it ? What a pity U 13 that tbey could rot have taken him whsn he was in health !" Driif l.rtl Kar. i.N'ew York Sun. "Will you be good enough to let me walk at your other side? said a gentleman to a companion. 4,I am deaf in ray left ear, and I have been trying for rive minutei to get to vonr left side, so that I niiat hear what you fay. but you seem to have been endeavoring to prevent me." "Whv, of courre I have, was the reply. "I, tcr, am deaf in te left ear, aad f w rbrccd s des I conli not hear a word yoa o!d." Beth genlleiren looked a?toni-hed and weiit cn their way laughing. "TLere is nothine nnnsual in snh an 1 pf ritnee," said a New York aurV. "Tne left far is peculiarly liable to deafness or pr.rtil lets of btarmr. An immens- nambsr cf persons rely wholly or in a preat rrestur upon the right ear to do the duty of two, and It soon becomes trained ti fally brsr tbe pressure p:ared upon it. Persons wbo hev been long deprived of the hearing of the left ear can usually hear sounds at a distance more distinctly than those whose hearing is divided between two ears, owing to the peculiar sharpness acquired by the solitary organ, which is seldom sympathetically affected. "The enly inconvenience I know of in the lofsof hearing by the left ear is when one is walking with a lady, or driving a friend in a bc??y, cr otherwise eo situated that you can not easily get your solid ear toward them. But for a constant traveler, such as a drummer, such an enaction is invaluable. So noife in a hotel can keep him awake at night. He hes ctly to press his good ear to the pillow, and what can disturb him?" flrjtnc Clothes In the White Houe. Washington Letter in tbe Cleveland L'jader The White Houe covers about one third of an acre and it has cost up to the present time about $2 C00.CC0. It is modeled after a castle in Dcblin, and the architect, who was a South Carolina man named Hobiu, got JöCO for drawi: g the p'ars. When it wa first built, away beck in the ninetie?, it coil iSUO.tCO. but tbe British burnt out its insides and it cost ha since added to that sum aboot 81,700,000. In it all of the Presidents since Wfsbirgton have lived, and each has rddedtoits beanties and its expeoses. I think it wss John Qniccy Adams who bought the first billiard tao e which was uel in it. Botin John Adams' time it was only half fnrnlsbfd, ard Abigail Adami used to dry ter clotbfs in the bic e ast roni. Yeir by 3ear, fcovever, the furnishing Vai gons on. until now it is a sort of a museum ot axt and beauiy. 1 If yon want to see things hn.m without a belt tupping, writes B.ll Nye, excite a woman's curiosity, and be slow to grstify it. Tbe way she scratches for pay dirt makes ordinary energy look lezy." ANNOUNCEMENTS. TO MANUFACTURERS A. rare opportunity for purchase or lease for a term of years. The E, P. Ferry Lumber Cooapaay, of Montague. Mutkeecn ounty. Micnigan, owns a lare threestory building, 10x100 feet, well lighted, iha'tinsj and pulleys full length, with euelne-room 50x10 feet; ample boiler and engine; all in srood repair; roomy grounds; convenient for water shipment, and also alongside c. and W. M. Railroad trart. Addreep, for price and terms, EOBF.RT CAITHNESS, Agent. i FINANCIAL. M CNEY At tte lowest rate of interest. J. V? . WILLI AilS Co., 3 az:d 4 Vlntoa Bloc. TO LOAN We have 55.000 to loan on Indianapolis real estate. ÜENUY COE & CO., 13 Siartindale Bloca. 6 3 TO LOAN Money wltn privilege or prepayment: terms reasonsbie. TLiOä C DAY 4 CO.. T3 Jtast Market street. Indianapolis. CHURCH NOTICE. SOUTH 6TREET BAPTIST CRURCLI-Sr7ie xscrnica- and eveninj, ondueted by . P. Jacctt, eundr.y-tchcol a; 9 o'docz a. xa. All io-Vitttf.
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CO. South Delaware. c2 2fin1 31 West Washington St. WANTED. LOST Any article of value, rot exceeding three lines, Inserted two times FREE. i Under the head ".-Situation Wanted," four lists or lets, inserted FRjEB. 1A7 AN I KD Work by Cr-it-cliss tai'orerB. AdV dress TAILOitK-iS, Jü Sörth .New Jersey h New Jei ttrect. 7 "ITT ANTKI--SltnRtion by a middle-aee 1 Iaty 9 VV corjlst. Addreis WIDOW, 61 South Noble street. . 4 WANTED Work of any kind, by an ac:ive. ladustriojs, experienced aad corap?tsstraa. D. PIEiiCE, care Kinpan t Co. 26 WANTED situation ou a farm, by aa ex;crienced man and wife. For fanner particulars Bddrtss W. 8 , S ntinel office. i WANTED Situation by a Erst c'.as baker ral confer tiorer; strictly temperate. Adlitsi JOHN AUGUaTUJ, Lojjaasj ort, Ind. t WANTED To Kll a KCoud-h?nd euiue. tweuty-flvo horse power oruMe.) HEMiY SANDER:ON, Lapei'e, Aladisoa Co.. lad. 5 i WJ ANTED A position in real esratü or lasur- ' acce o!?ice; '.miliar wim the busrus. Mcerate salary esprc'.id. II. N., this ci:ice. 0 7 ANTED-SITuXriON An upholsterer, a fV tip-t c'9r man, thorough la all bmac&pf, desires a tituatiou. Addrcsi A. WOOD. :iunc!c, Ind. 7 WANTED A youii ran would like to do writins t home of cvenlncs for trjstaes men; rst clare references. Address M., Sentinel OfliC:. 6 WANTED Jra e v.dcs to prune: vineyard, fruit tn or Jiade trets to trim. A 1 1res or apply to CUAKLL4 EDV AUD, 2J Wen Washington street. 2 WANTED For rent, with or v. Ehoit board, two furnished aad one unfurnisheJ rcoa: quiet nud rleasant location: retraces txe&anred. 73 West North street. , WANTED ."Situation in an o.Tice a pnonojra pher, aud to do other oilice work : woo I penman und n operate type writer. Address C. MORRIiON, 1C0 Eat Market street. 4 WANTED SITUATION A boy fifteen year old wants a hocie m the country with ;;ood Americans, where thtre are no children. Inquire St Room 8. third floor, 76 E-'.st Wasniufclon street. ' WANTED-tituatJon by a youn? maa twenty yearo of ae to 'earn the hardware busines. Uber wholeale or relall; will do any irt of tbe work doirtd. Address Box 70, lilouninj I;e, lid. 7 V17 ANTED Situation cither In dry gools or YY proctiy nore by a young man, aged twentytwo, with one 3 ar. experience: can s ve re'ertcce. Apply at Fil Kock. Shelby (Jounty. In liana. Box t.;. 4 WANTED Situation as d'ruz clerk ia city r country; t&ree' year experitne: -teady and willing to wort; correct Pabit; letter cf nxonceaditloa fron present enip:oje:!. Ad drtfs Box Cl, Oxford. O. "j Ti J ANTED Ladles nd voun? men ia tity cr t? country to earn ti to 53 every day at their own homes: noc&uva&ine: work furnished and f.ect by mail. Address CRYSTALLIZED PHOTO CO.. 5j West fcevcttb street. Cincinnati. 0. WANTED Comraetclal salesmen Tlitlu the dry goods trade In the Western aa l southern States io carry a gocd paying side line la samples; Fella from photographs. Address CAK-ON HOSIERY STAND rOMPANY, 207 and Z'J) Monroe street. Chicago, 111. G FOK SALE. F OR BALE One fine draft stallion. RALSTON F OP. SALE-I'iano. almost new, at a sacrifice S4 Kiakc street. fpOR SALE-FARM- A barzain offered: M teres JD of cood land, well improved, for Si, CO: situated Cve miles west ot Vandal) oa5 northwest of Hägers town, oa tie tt L. V. aa l 7. H. Railrr.ad. For description addrt J W. AEELL, Hagerstown, Fayette County, LUaoi. " FOR SALE Two thousand LaConte pear trees one and two years old : they will aro- ia aay soil and any climate; they begin beanr? when three years old, and wLen six to euat yera old bear tea to fifteen buatla per tree: I have 200 trees on ray fArm. neir Shelbyville, two years eld, doing finely: Mnd in your ordert early: will Je liver in March an Jd Apill; terms reaeouauie. o. S BUTTON, S-helbyvlile, Ind. n FOB RENT. rOR RENT Nice residence of thirteen room. ' large around. KO North Meridian, corner ventb s'reer. Vacant April 1. Postal Card J. B. LULLOCK, 21 West Pratt street.
