Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 85, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1885 — Page 7

THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 2G 1885.

7

AN OLD 21 AID.

UY ALU CA COLLirS. A lowering morning which made one wish for the Sunny South or fer Italy, for nay place which would make one feel happier tb&a coald this dismal morning in Wisconsin. And then to thick that this train coald not make connection with the eastwardbound train! It is hard enoah to Etop at inch a miserable little junction at any time, but to spend three boara bore this dark rooming must prove the very refinement of torture. There are a dezea taiaeners who mast wait and who preparo to make the best cf their stay hero. Oae couple, evidently just married, fiad the clouds of a rosy color, and they walk cut of the emoky old depot to make a tour of the little town, talking eagerly the while. Two yoan? fellows wander uneasily about, reading all the old tittered pssters, glowing inducements to go "West, and ancient time tables, which invariably deccrata the stained walls of a country depot These youDg fellows finally utter exclamations of impatience at the dreary monotony, and co across the streat to the hotel, hoping to had something there more cneaial to them. Two ladies at once take their departure for the hotel, and other people stroll out about the depot, and there are left two persons, a maa end a woman, who. after a ltitla time, eettle themselves to Teadicg to pats sway the weary momentj. He reads his paper. Ehe her book, and, occasionally, woman like, she casts a lok at her silent companion, wondering wbat loved ones are awaiting his arrival and whether he is impatient to greet them, or if he feels a nun' stoicism in regard to it; wonderin?, too, how it is that each woc.an tbinfc3 the maficnllne lives connected with hers bo full of manly gxacei and beauty in thcxe rugged features? Then she turned her gentle eyea toward the "window and looked out at the dreary landscape, loohed with eye3 which sett not outward objects, but were introspective solely. An old maid commonly supposed to be the type of discontent and unrest; but here, evidently, the type failed, for this face expressed the utmost content. Life had been tilled with much of sorrow for her. All her bright plans Lad failed ot fruition; one after another Ehe had bidden good by to them, and had turned bravely giin to face the coming of a new future, a future to ba peapled again by her bright fancies the old fancies all dead and gone from her except as they lingered in memory. An old rniid she Is, so far as yeara go, but no home is happier than her little ideal home. She hu filled Its rooms with bright little fac?a, eagerly calling to motter, and the dream fattier ia strong, earnest, helpful and loviDg. Her dreainiioiii3 is happier far than many a f.ne lady's real home, although the hai not pictured any srandear about it. On, no, eh fdreams tbat the carrels are faded from much sunlisht and worn from the trail of mstny littia ftet. and i.U;e io much planning to "make both tds meet," hit fha ha imagined unelhDrs laving ia this ideal ho toe, and lovicg unselfishness cm make all tri&'a in regard to wave end meons stein very straight indeed. IIt comtarion in tais dept is an elderly person, a stoat, largo man. with keen jta ard a mouth a: complete odds with the y-8, not blci:ginc to ibim apparently. Ollen eye3 do noc harmoniza iu coloring with :be rt of the faze, but. jrecerally exprt3iaza ar? aklD. This man had a tenitive mouth, cr:o with a mournful drocp to it. 3hoe wno Iookpt at hlru caught themselves w ordering which would conquer teen, card ejee, cr fensitive month. He read for some time, then gave a quick look at the thonehtful face near him. and said admptly: "Net a very pleasant arrangement, this." A quick flcab. ratsed over the settle face before him a flush which his keen eyea noted instantly and understood a Hash which told of the girlishness yet left to this lonely woman. 'Hot that it matters much to me where I am," he continued. ''Life can't give me anything harder than I've had." Tnat is a bad thing to eay," she said, in her timid wy. "A true th:ng, though,' he responded, and the comers of bis sensitive mouth drooped a little more. "I feel as if I had nothing left to live for. My wife died a ear ego " here the voice broke. Distress ever calls some touLs out from thir reserve, and bera was such a oae, and she said quickly. " Ah, bat . you have ail those vanished days and month and years to remember, all ths loylintsi of her life to think cf now." N "IIow did you know her life was lovely," he queried, a little sharply. She heaitated a moment and then said, simply: "It must have been, or you would not miss her from your living es mcch," a tribute to the manly worth in the face she saw before her which was keenly relished by tbe ownerof the face. Ha fclghf d and then looked for a time out of the moky window, then sa''d: "After all, life ia a strange muddle," and, receiving a look of understanding in reaponse to this sentiment, he went cn: "We don't know what Is right to do, and yet we're punished by fixed laws if we don't do the right. That doesn't eesm just to me." 'Oh, but it will come out atraigüt in next life," she cried eagerly. "I don't know whether it will cr not," he responded. "I haven't eeen the next life yet, and 1 don't know what n i3 lito bn't even know if there will be a next life. I oaly know that we are hedged in and around in this life." Hat fiurely the next Ufa will tako away all the rough places oi2-hi3," oheea'.d; ' it "will make us understand all that seams to strange about this aod lhero must be a future life; God surely would not put us into this life snd lei io much gooritof it incomplete. That seems to me tne strongest reason ior a fa tun that so many die witi their litewoik only juar beann." 'Is that leason or a hop with yoa?" h. aled. 8be hesitated and d'd not answer, and just then cm of the rejtlisi young men who had bien a lellow pTksa:!nr of their caue in end glacsd CiBUallr at ths two. That p;anca mioo her h1 conations, and .a b n;h dyed the delicita face &i she turned, in a ceciced way, the pages of her book, as if she weie determined not to M this Stranger pet pcMtssion cf her wandering thoughts -again. 'Ihe yonn man ps-uedoutof tbe station and tbe elderly one ras and walked restlessly about the rcon, knitting the sba? gy broK-a occasionally at eoxe troubled thought. Tbe. three hours passed, and 1 oV Icck came, and a train c true. Can I assist yon?" he a.ked gently, rearhLip; out a hsru. brown hand for some ot the numerous bundles ihe txjl carrying. She hnadedeoaie 'tr him aud fo:LTvel his s-uidy footsteps to the train. They wondered a littia vhy thsir fellow-pas-'f ncer8 cf ths morning wero not ia pre a', or luste, but forgot them prreently in the bustle of depart cue. He eccured a Pleasant teat for bv?r ard then one for himself at srm? distance from her. A few .minutes of vr&iting, of idle ratchinq of tbe dark lard-cape, ro soon to te aniens remembed thinf, and the train moved slowly out cf t3wn, and &3 it moved away another train ateame d in. She looked curiously at the cecona trait, but remembered that this was a junction, and did not obey her first nervous impulse, which was to g3 to bar whilom protector and ask him if he were lure they weis on the rht train. Ehe forgot ths train

aoon, and watched h'a atern, set face, and felt sorry for him. and wished he might fiel as iure cf the future as did she. Soon the conductor came, and hs watched him ai he made his way towhed her. When he reached her protector, as she already called him ia her inner consciousness that individual

pave a quick start at some words uttered by the conductor, after examination o: bis ticket. A troubled look ajttled upen the resolute iac, and he conversed earnestly with the conductor a few moments, then glanced at her nd rosa and came to her. "I told you," eaid he, " that we doa't know what i3 right and then we get pan ithed by unalterable laws, and here is a ppecdy illustration of the face, only that I feel new that I might have known the right, if I had taken pkins to inquire. We are oa tbe wrons; train." She looked deeply troubled, but said afisr a moment: "Bow can we get back?" "It is of no ue to 0 back to that junction. "We misht as well 3 on to Caicazo now and ro from there; it will rcilly take not much longer, tnd as yoa trusted to my leading in the first place, I will, if you will let me, see yoa safe out of this trouble " "I am need to taking care of myself," she taid, but her lips trembled a little. "Where are you going? ' he asked, and upon receiving his reply added: 4,I am going beyond there, so it will be no trouble to me to eee you safe. I will telegraph your dilemma to your friends at the next station; we shall reach Chicago in two hours, and the conductor tells me we can immediately take another train back, so that really the woratof it will ba the extra four or five hours In the train." lie regained titling with her and chatted lightly for a time, till her mind was diverted from the UDpleasantne3S of her situation. Gradually they wandered to deeper waters, and talked again, as they had earlier in the day, of the problems of life, and into those queries and answers cf theirs crept, ever and anon, a bit of the personal history of each, lie learned what a desolate life hers had seemed to be; he learned, too. what a eweet, cheery courage must underlie her whole belüg that the desolateners ehould have been to ignored, and he grew ashamed of his own repining over a lot which hady30 much of brightness in it. When the train drew into the great depot in Chicago he felt that he had learned to know a pure ecul, and she felt a deep pity for the lonely life that opened to her view. And as they took the other train, which was to take them rapidly to their destination, each felt a regret that a few hours more would part them. lie eat silent for a long time after this, wondering if he dared to do the thing he wished, lie was lonelv, pet adrift in the giest world by the death of his wife, and he wanted a true, womanly heart to sympathize with hie. Could he do better than to ask thi3 lonely woman, who had no kith cr kin in tho world, to share his lot with bioi? Could ehe do better than to take him, she who evidently had summer-land in her heart and could make a bit of brightness wherever she was? Each surely needed the other, lie asked her if sne kner any one in his town, and finding hu did know a person icsidicgafew miles from him, he too x his resolution quictiy. "I have a good farm oat there," hesa:d; "10 acres undr fine improva:ent; home end outbuildings ll in line sha;xe. You can find out ail about me from Mr. " A moment he hesitated as ha saw that she did not realize what ho metnt. Then he continued earnestly, looking down into the char ejes lifted so fearlessly to hia: "I feel as if I was looking into tbe eyes o' my wife. Am I mis'aaea?" The last words were breathed rather than uttered, and tten ehe understood, and the lliaie color mounted over tbe delicate features once more, and ehe eaid, quietly: Do 1 look so much like your wifs?" lie wa3 bail'.cd, and for a moment knew net what to eay, tben rallied, and said: "She has gone into the future. I don't know what or where that life may be, and I am lest and lonely without her. I want that which has gone out of my life, and I believe yon can supply that want. Yoa are alcne in the world, and I can mase your life pleasanter, I am eure." It was a temptation, such as only homeless ones can understand; but, after a moment, ehe shook her head, and then, reading the questioning look in those keen gray eyes, she said, while the color deepened in'her face : I loved once, and have loved ever since. and it would not be right for me to marry anyone feeling as I do." rlte door opened, and the brakeman called out the name of the place where she was to etop, and the next msmenta were epent in fathering together her belonging. lie helped her off the train, and grasped her band heartily as he stood one instant there: 'I shall alwiys remember you and your harpy ways cf looking at life, and your faith will Lilp me;" and then he swung on to the slowly moving train, and she walked away in the gloaming, a tear or two falling a3 the thought of the lonely days to come. The Econrge Of our race. When digestion is bad every part of the human eystem necessarily suf fers. The entire structure of the budy becomes ailected, even the mind itself bhowlng the effect of it in the low spirits of the patient. Indigestion is the parent of a thouE&nd indescribable miseries, and prepares a foundation for disorders that can not be easily staken off. The premonitory symptoms of dyspepsia are knosrn to every person. It is a disease that fastens Itself alike upen the eld and young, and both fall victims to its destroying powsr when the proper reraedy is neglected or rejected. It Is for this reason that thoueaud3 endure a liviog death 6.3 the natural rnalty of delay. Those who have euSered tbe pangs of this scourge of the human race do not need t3 ba told that it is an ailment which interferes with ail the enjoyments of this life, epreadins gloom and despondency over the mmd and steadily wearlxg cut the vital principle of life i'iflf. And othar complaints, such as biliousness, general debility, diseases of tbe bowels, stomach, liver and kidneys, frcqcently resu-t frcm it, end oftea terminate fatally. Have you superinduced drspep3'a by a violation cf tli9 hygienic laws which are laid down for yuur government, and vhich are observed ry animals not gifted with reason? If so, d i not llatter yourself th3t by now rajig that attention to thera their importance demands yoa can drive out the evil; something else is required. Mere diet and regimen will not restore you to perfect health. Consider the present condition of your stomach. What i3 it tone? What can jcu accomplish by simple diet towards brirging it back to its normal healthful state? Absolutely nothing less than nothingThe first step t.T be tafcen is towards increasirg tte activity and vigor of ths slcmach. And how can this be done? The enly tcnic ever yet discovered upon w'nieh you rcey confident'y rely for the accomplishment cf this great purpose is liishler's Herb nitters, which will epeedily, certainly, fUectually azd permanently produca th9 char.ee in your system yoi so much required. There are more sufferers Irani dyspepsia in the United States to-day than from any ether cne disease. It is the product of a variety cf causes, and whatever these causes may be, nevertheless the one remedy named will answer for all a sound, healthy stomach is indespeniable to sound health. If the stomach is risht, all is right iliahler'a Uetb

Bitters will prevent dyspepsia as well as radically cure it. It is a preventive as well as a curative, and "an ounce of prevention is always to bs preferred to a pound of cure," and hence a timely resort to this powerful and etHcacious medicine will fortify your physique against the attacks of this scourge of our race, and if its seeds have found a lodgement in your system, this stme stlmulajung medicine will ntteily destroy them. It can not make any difference ho v long a person has suffered from dyspepsia, in what form it has made its appsarancs, the united testimony of thousands prove that it must at once yield before the sleidy, irresistible work of this famous stomachic Whether its type is hereditary and constitutional, or otherwise, t';e ulect ot the Hitters is always the tame. The victim is at once relieved from misery and a cure absolute and permanentquietly effected. There is nothing injurious among th9 ingredients ot Mishier'a Herb Hitters nothing that will irritnto the stomach, tire tbe brain or unduly sti mulate the heart. It is the one tbing needful in these days of general complaint from dyspepsia. O! its wholesome efficacy thousands have testified who were rescued by it from the power of dyspasia and saved from Iti attendant evils. Has the disease entrenched iUelf in your system? If so, actwiseiy and nee the great household remedy'which will successfully comb.it and utterly destroy the disease and fortify you against any subsequent attack of it. Parasites in blieep. ICountry Gentleman.J I lay down the proposition. Poor feed and

poor care precede parasitism. I gD farther a and aeeert that they cause it aid by para sitism, of course, I mean not normal condition to which all beings seem to te condemned, which compels them to be hots for the entertainment of smaller forms of life, but rather that diseased condition in which these smaller forms threaten tho very existence of their host. It is the outcome cf my experience with many hundreds of lambs, and my obsarvation upon bundled more, that a lamb thoroughly vrell nournished from the beginnig never falls a Drey to internal parasite?. (Perhaps I should accept the grub in the head, as that is a parcsito which eeems to attack fat and lean equally.) In the foggy, river bottoms and foothills, where wa are compelled to rear onr lambs, they are nearly always infested more or less with them; but I havo noticed that the cossets or pets reared by hand are always exempt. Tliero is no reason for this exP3pt that thc3e latter are better fed, aa the "women folkV in their kindly zeal, will not Ecruple even to scrimp tbe evening porringer of .milk to feed their favorite plump. Parasites have as great antipathy to fat a3 a certain evil-diapcsed person has to holy water. If I were called cn to give a preventive for parasitism in lambs, I should preterite: 1, Teed them; 2, feed them; o, feed them; not only feed them, bat feed tbe ewes; anything, everything to keep the lambs growing steadily, to keep them strong. Nothing Made lu Vain. We are told that nothing was made in Vbin; but what can bo said of 'the fashionable pirl of the period? Isn't she maiden vain? Hood's b'dr?aparilla is made in Lowell, llass., wheie there are more bottles of it sold tban of any other earsaparilla or blocd puritier. And it is never taken in vain. It purities the blood, strengthens the system, and gives new lite and vigor to the entire body. 100 doses 1. Tho Farmer's Dream. i;y r. i. r. Tbc farmer tips back ia the old oaken cblr, His band ou bis head aud his foot on ihe iloor; And he drecms of tae dajs when his prospects Tvere fair. And be worked all tbe day la a grocery etore. IIow he measured oat sugar for Miry and Rose, And liberties never once took with tüo till: When ho were ratent leathers that ruined his tew: When he called on Jemima, just over the hill. lie thinks of tte days wbca they roamed through tho glade. And heard the shrill notes of the gay whlpooorwilt; V"hen they dreamed of a neat little cot in the shade. Of a button-ball hanging just over the rill. He looks at these pictures through spectacles bent, And Jemima he sees in a vision ot bliss. Jest the same as the looked In the days when he leant Tbe wicket across for the tra-la la kiss. Hethink8 cf the years that he's wortcd overdied, TiTIta shovel, rake, harrow, phow, bean-polo and hoc: He remembers the nicht to propose that he called. And. ( h ! hew ho wished that she'd only said No:" For then ralsht h's life be of Idleness full: He could loif through the daytime, sunshiny and bright, And not have to larrup an old brindle bull, And jerk up the turnips from morning till night. Eut what is tha use of his "bah !" and his "pish?" And -what is the use of his sadness and woe, And wbat Is the use of the empty old wish That he'd courted a girl who could oaly say "No?" Times Star. Habitual constipation is not only one of the most unpleasant, but at the same time one of the most injurious conditions of the human system, and ia but a forerunner of disease, unless removed. Thla is usually Eccomplished by the use of purgatives, which for the time afTord relief, but after their immediate effects have passed they leave the system in & ttoies stats than lfore. To effect a cure it Is neceesary that the remedy csed ehould ba one that not only by its cathsrlio clTccts relieves the bowels but at the same time acts es a tonic eo as to restore the crpans to a Bound, healthy condition. This Prickly AeIi Bitters will do. It removes the cause and restores health. An cxcel'ent way to warm oyer potatoes is to put a lump of butter into a saucepan; as it melts add a tablespooufal of flour, stirring it 33 that it will not burn, then pour in a cup ot sweet milk, if half cream it will be all the better; eeason with salt aud papper; stir it with a spoon eo that the ingredients will bo well mixed, then put in sliced cold boiled potatoes; let them boil for a few moments; lend them to the table hot. Hard sauce, flavored with pineapple, and arranged in the forta of one, ia a nice addition to corn-starch blacc mange. Make it by nixing two tabletpoonfuls of butter with focr heaping tablespoonfuls of sugar, or in this proportion. Uorsford's Acid Phosphate, FOR ALCOHOLISM. Dr. J. S. Hnllman, Philadelphia, Pa., says: "It is of good eervic in ths troubles arising firm alcoholism, and gives satisfaction in my practice." No fixed quantity of cream can bs deptded upon for Tisldicg a certsio. amount of butterl Cream var:e3 according ta ths weather and feed. Sometimes It yields Jesi butter than at other time3, falling below cne week and yielding more the next. Men who suffer through indiscretions, remember Allen's Brain Food restores former vigor to brain and body, fl; 6 for $5, at druggists, or by mail from J. II. Allen, 315 First avenue, New York.

R. K.

R

Radway's The Cheapest and Seat Medicine FOR FAMILY USE IB THE WORLD CURES AND PRETEN IS Coughs, Colds, Soro Throat Hoarseness, inflammation, Rheumatism, Keuraigia Headache, Toothache Diphtheria, Influenza, Difacult Braatiiing. It wu the firtt and ii the only That lnitantly ttopi the most excruciating palai allays Inflammation and care Conzeetlont, wnether of tbe Lungs, Stomach, Bowel! cr o UU glands or organs, bj one application. In From One to Twenty Jdlnuta, o inaner tow violent or excruciating the palm the lihenmatlc Bed-rlJdan, Infirm, Crippled' Nervous, Kenralglc, cr pro&lrated with dlseate soar raffex. EADWAY'S HEADY RELIEJ WILL AFFORD INSTANT EAHXIzS&mrnation ot the Kldnejx JnSammatlaa c the liladder. Inflammation of the Bowela, Congestion of the Langs, Palpitation of tbe Heart, liy terlcs, Croup, DlphtberU. Catarrh, InflaezuL Nervousness, Sleeplccsnc&s, Rheumatism, Gciatl Fains In tbe Cbeet, Bade or Limbs, Ernle Eprüng, Cold Gblllfl and Agr.e Chills. The application of the BKADY RELIEF k the part or part wfcrre tbe difficulty or pala es lsts will afford eas and comfort. Thirty to sixty drops ba hall a tumbler cl watt will in a few minutes enre Cramps, eparas, Boui Etoraach, Heartbnrn, Eick Headache, DiarrbR Dysentery, Colic, Wind in tho Bowel, and all In Vernal pains. Travelers ebonld always carry a bottle o! SS Wf'a Koady Relief with tbem. A few drapa lr watet will prevent aicknes3 or pains from c& an 2 of water. It Ls tetter than French Urandy or fcJ ters as a stimulant. M A LA R I A, In Its Yariouä Forms, FSYEE anä AGUE. FSVrx and AG (73 ir. red for 10 cetii. Taers ü nut a remedial ajtent In ihe world that will cun 7ever and Ague ar.dallcthe. Malarious, BUIou Harriet, and other Fevers (ilaed by SADWATM FILLS) so quickly ts RADWA VS II HAD Y EELIEF, Sifty Cati Pr Uottle. Sold hy Oth Dil. iUDWAY'i) Sarsapariiiian BesoiFfint. Pure blood nek? wourd foaa, strong bone an a clear pain. IX yon would Lave your Uesh firm yonr bones aoond, without carte, and yoar ccia plexion fair, we RADWAY'Ü HARSArMRlLLlAJ &LSOLVENT the Great Blood Purifier. FALSE AND TRUE. We extract fron Dr. Bad way s "Treatise ca Dis ease and Its Cure," as follows: List of diaea cured by DR. BAD WAV'S BABBAPABIIiIiIAIT BESOLVEIT Chronic skin diseases, caries of t!r --one, human of the blood, scrofulous diseases, yw'4Utla ooa plaints, fever sores, chronic or old uers, tail rheuai, rickets, white swelling, scald heal, cank ers, glandular swelling, nodes, wasting aal de cay of the body, pimples and blotches, tumort dyspepsia, kidney and bladder diseases, chronic rbcnmat2V ud guu. consnmption, gravel and calculous deposits, and varieties of the aboil complaints, to which sometimes are given ipeA Ions names. In cases were tbe system has beet salivated, and murcury has accumulated and be come deposited la tbe bones. Joints, etc.. cauilas rripnf the bones, rickets. edIiiaI curvatures, coa tort Ions, white swellings, varicose veins, eta, th Barsaparlllla will resolve away those deposits an ex termini ta ths virus ci the dlcat9 frcxa thi tyEtcxa, A GREAT COXSfHDHÖHAl EEHED1 Bxla diseases, tumors, ulcers and sore of aS kinds, particularly chronic diseases of the skin are cured with great certAlnty by a courae of Dr KADWAY'3 8AE3APAKILUAN. We mean obxij cats cases that have resisted all other treatment. SCROFULA Whether transmitiod rrom parents or acquired, B Within the curative ranse of tie S ARS AP All ILL IAN BESOLYOT. It possesses tho same wonderful rower in curtsi tbe worst forms ci strumous and eruptive AI charges, syphiloid ulcers, sores of the eyes, ears, nose, mouth, throat, glands, exterminating UK virus of these chronic forma ol disease irorathi blood, bones, joints, and In every part o! the human body where mere exists diseased deposits, ulcerations, tumors, hard lumps or scrofulous la nammttlon. this crc&tand powerful rem&ljwiU exterminate rapidly and permanently. One bottle contains more ol tbe active prtna ?lea of medicine than any otber prep&ratloa aken lu tearponful doses, while others reanirt Ave or six tlmwi as much. ONJI DOLLAB V UOTTLE. Bold by drucglsta.

Beady

Relief !

DR. RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLS Iha Srest Liver acd Stomach Ceuzsdj. Perfectly t usteleu, eiez&stly coitedj parti regulate, purlly, cleanse and strengthen. Df. Kadway's 11, for tba cure of all cia orders cl the Etomacb, Liver, Bowels, Klta?ys Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Loss ot Appetite Headache, Constipation, CostlveDeaR, Indigestion, P7STep&ia, BiliousaeeB. Fever, Inflammation c tho Bowels, nie, and all derailments of the Ia ternal Tlecera. Purely vegetable, containing 8f jaercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. Prico 25 Cents Tor Box. Bold by all druczlstx. DYSPEPSIA Kad way's Earsrrtllian, aidod by Badwayl Fills, Is a cure for this complaint. It restore! streak to tte stomach, and makes It perform lit functions. Tte Symptoms of dyspepsia disappear, and with them tbe liability of tbe system to contract diseases. Take the medicine according U tie directions, and observe Lt W8 say la "Jala and True" respecting diet. "Resä Falso and True." " Bend a letter stamp to EADWAT & CO., no, TT irren street, New York. Iclsmtittsa trcitl thauanis will ba tent to yoa. TO THE PUBLIC KT El sure and uk tor Kadway's, ant ttt UUf tit cjjxi vuAjm". U aa That m tzia

MeM is tba Price of Gas! Notice to Gas Consumers and Others.

Your attention is called to the marked rfrlacUaa In tbe price of ess. wbich toot efoct on the 1st day of March. Tbe Corntany is now furnUning ras to ail consumers at SI 80 per 1,0t cub;c feet. This price is certainly witbin tae rcvvcit of ail, for botb lighting and coofcln? purpose. Tbe convenience and comfort of cooking by gas, especially durirg tbe summer months, whereanreis not otherwise required, can only be thoroughly appreciated by tu ose who hare had experlencj in its useful arplication fer that purpo-. Tne Company has told for use la this city durin? the last four years a largo number of sas stores, and is satüced from tbe many testimonials from its patrons, that these stove "fill a loa felt want." STOVES AUD OAS EHQINES TOR SALB AT C03T. Caroline Stores changed to Qas Stoves at smaii expense. lofapolis Eas Light and Coke Co . fa. 47 South Pcnasj iranla Street. S. D. PBAY, Secretary. Redaction in the Prico of Gas! Notice to Gaa Consumers and Others. Your attention is railed to the narked reduction in the price of cas, whinh took enect oa tho 1st dsy of Harth. Tbc Company is cow furnishing ga to all consumers at $1.83 per 1,003 cubic feet. The price is certainly within tbe reach of all, for both lightins and cootinz purposes. The convenience and comfort of cookinz by gaj, especially during the summer months, where a ßre is loi other wie required, can only bo thoroughly appreciated by thoee who hare had experience in its uselul application for that purpose. The Company has sold tor ose in this city durinz the last Jour years a larce number of rss stores, and 13 ratitlfed, from tbe many testimonials from its patron?, that these stoves "fill a long felt want." Stoves and Gas Er sines for Sala at Cost e AT Electric UiMii M Gas Eeatioi ani ItoMMm Csijasy. OF2I0E: G3 East Market Street. HEN it Y DIXKi:s. Secretary. 5 7"U l?cuclletou AveuuCt El S. Huey & Sod, nuufcetarers and Dealers ii Doors and Sash, Frame Lumbar, Shingles Etc. All Manufactured Work for Exterior and Interior Furnlflnings, BEMOLIIT MOTIONS. SEALED 'PROPOSALS Will be received between the honrt of 9 and 10 o'clock a. m., on Friday, 27th Inst, at the Supremo Court Room ol the State, by the several Boards of Trustees for the Institutions for the Ineane, tu? Deaf and Dumb and Blind, for supplies for the month of April ensuing. Tho conditions upon which proposals will be received, and the kind, quality and quantity ol supplies required, may be seen by reference to statements and estimates, open to public inspection at the above-named place oa and alter Monday, the 23d Inst. Bidders must comply with spedflcatlons la making their bids. 17 order citae several Boards o! Trustees. TDOS. UL HARRISON, President. C. F. SCHMIDT, Brewer end Bottler of LAGEE BEER. bsttbielilatara. St., JOHN EDWARDS, BILL POSTER. Ono Hundred Largo Stands. S00 3-Shcet Boards.

BEE-HfV E

ilso Costal! fiejtate Egeb Fence OWTICC ntlnl GfSr. FOR SALE, o Printers and Publishers. Webave for pale cna nearly new "Stonemetz" KcwFpeper Fol iina: Hachiae. Will fold, ps.e and trim a sheet 04x50 inches, or smalle.. Trice, fcivO. Address SENTINEL COMPANY, Inilanapolia, IaJL

INDIANAPOLIS

CmFMY

Mm DO ALL ZZZZ 07 FEINTING AND iiArurjLcxu BLANK BOOKS r f tt" Slow foil SanartmeiiL .5? SIEESSE23 SB DDD5ES3. 1 fi 73 West Marmot Street, IIvJDIANArCLLi, USD. rslTO? TTsJTfeT A Iff a 1885 FOB THE YEJL3 1885 Tho Bcccpxised Leading Do mean tic 8. Pages 50 Columns The Largest, Best acd Cheapest VwvKlj In tLe Yvest at cnlv y. ij-str Hatf9 .Sii-Jv uuB Aa heretofore, an nnconipromisir-g ennjy cf llonopclles in ?LsiTeT form epprjuj end eepecially to the spirit c! sTbi.Jy, m embodied in the PRESENT THIEVING TARIF y. TO INDIANA DEyOC2AT2: Bince fcrHlrjc ozx lP8t tnnnal rro?rectus yon rtBvc achieved a rlorio victory In j on r täte audeiied mr.xriii'y la tranfifcrTlag the Katicnal Oovernmrnt ou- aora Into Democratic has b. Your trlnph .Vi s coaplete as yonr faithfulness through tt"f. for.r years was btroic. In the late cairrslrn, In lorn? r oaos, ir Sentinel's arm he ttcn tartd la U:t- Z,;:a. s stood tbotilder to shon:Ur, fc Lro'.h-.--, in tu canfilCt; we tow ak yi-ur l ;r tyiialai yeer In onr celebration c! tit? tjc'.oit. Ourcolnnns tfcat v;rre vinorousKitii f.ri.t wiita tbe C?ht T-aa on mIU hot. mucjU. c .uv . ?-r, be devoted to the ar of ia--o. Vit.u t:-, i- uriz patronage tfco fczr.niü ttIU te t'-'-er er:- yJ In an eTer to glre in Ussorpassed Eets Fssllj r'sj, The rrocee2!rr.s of Ccxnrer- and cf oir D..- ocratlc Vcpiflatnre acd the ev.:'f.";. rf t x li'.rcCratlc Uatlonal and bwto B''r.:r:-:ri' (; y,: dnly chronicled, aa well as t;:c cxreui y the Czy. Its Commercial Rerles and Msrcct fcü ;- ra will be reliable and cqim ice. Its Atrlcnircral tnd licrce Depiructnu r l the beit of hand&. Ktiy edltorlf l, telect literary trey.Vcs 3d e:jtortainlnc miscellany are awrirtsl lcsiz:.. It 6hall te Inlly tü-3 e;nal ntvct.'. lr i.t.tlon of any p?.pr in tbe lnnl, :lle in us vi -cj oa Indiana airs it will hare no ccjusl. ; i Your On Statß Fapr, and -will be leveted to an.-l revfy-r: iu'.h.i:'t Interests, poiitlfil, indUKtriai i.:;a :cv h:, - uj foreign ps per y;iil or can lo. v,i;i yo'i !.-;t b-r this In mind vrbtn yea cosie to u.ie fcüb ;r;;ti-nt and xnaie ui clutT A copy of tic Sentinel fi-.rriten ;.Lt procceQir.CT in liif-iae UY1 n:;t, faruM:-l cca new or renewuiü Bütstilt-tr L n i.;.irt:. Now is tha timo for evnry Dem ocrat rtho ia Etato to tit Bcribo for tho Sentin. T r z 7U i-VJ v WJSIDI.tI-.Tir. Single Copy w1that Prnitnn. Clabfl cf II for.. Clnbt of 23.. Clabi of SO.. JO.iV 5i .f ic5.ro One Oopy, One Year.. ......813,0 One Copy, 51x Konths. ß' 0e Copy, Three MontM. One Copy, One Xlonth fl BOTDAT glN'TIN I1Y 3 AIL, C. Amenta makiD ap dzhi Qzni (zz any information desired. ePECisrax copies msa. Addrcs2 DdianoDolisUnelCoi

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