Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 115, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1885 — Page 7
THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SATURDAY MOltNING APRIL 25 1885.
tj 1 a. v .tujrt.TH.Ty1 :T minium i 1 1 it i
A ALLAD OF FATR.
BY f. W. Ht'MfT. lMsst can forelai:. bat not avert ths future. J-andor. V idle 11 ro the days of youth. And ibininotof lie coata years; But could we learn täe fatnre'a rutö, w bat need there were of feirf al tears. Tal not al ww. ye gloomy eera, "Cruh rot our iou!s with joy elate. it matters not our tremuiio fears . I'ot tj tan chance the word of late.' IL "Youth i the season of delight, L:k' oowl lor Ca o'tr:!o.. with wine; V. at ft m of pleasure Cay and cUht, While I'arj r.e'fc klea sretn diviars. Ah, tbcu, wby t.iink of rhemiy eyae, Üf ey reart and baiting cait. re t lipf tiaa end tri ;tt eyts sh'no For wno caa charge the word ot facet in. T: vaiD to think of ccmlnjr to;ü, Wnea Hoers will fall fio a trvB'es gray; The f uture comes the present wf, 1 Lea let us lire 011 r live to day. Let n b-j Lappy while we may, Trte Qjms moments will not wait; Life can not alter tho we Try For wfco caa change the word of' lite .' ENVOI. Think not of woes wo may endure. Tfco' coining sorrows may be great: The present onlr is secure, for wno can change the word of fate ? THE 2I0DERX RUTH. Dr. Alexander Andover threw him:elf into -the big leather-covered chair before his oftice .'its with a weary fclgh. Ha was a fine-looking man of thirty; net handsome, bat noble and manly-looting cne to be trusted forever, with his broad, white brow and grave, clear gray eves. Hi3 lips, too, tinder the fall brows beard were as fine a3 a woman's without lackinj in strength and firmneES. lr. Audover's patient3 especially the poorer class and children turned to him instinctively for advics and sympathy. He ws one of thce grand klajly natural which teem made for leaders and comforters. Poor old Betty Cary, a bed-riaden paralytic, could not apeak of him without shedding tears ot gratitude. Little Jane Ellis, suffering with an incurab'a hip direue, locke t upon him as a sort of g id on earth. Time were a saore more who lucugfct cf hii.i not only ai ttelr physician, bat as a kind and generous friend, who delighted to bHraten ins livci which 'jroald o herwlte ba poor an i na-r n enough. Bat fata had iatelj iroarLel upi him. In the first place, the ban in wh:cu the greater part of bis anug little fortune was deposited, tad failtd, and directly ur.on ibis hail come the Iictjs that some ruining s1o:k, In which he Led invested, was worthi??3, or nearly so. Ths Dcctrr dirt not fear poverty himseif hij practice brought him a comfortable income, for the rich appreciated huu well ai the pcor but milea airay, in a diatiot c'ty. thsro was a lovely rl whom Ld hoped to call Ira wife by Chbtn.as tirre. A girl who, though net wealthy herstlf, Lai been ex'rayegaiuiy educated by hu- und, in rrho33 Insurious hon:9 sne liv?d. Ue knew that r.ot the slightest privation h.id ever Cisie to her; she was a yetted dcrlitg. with hands lise a babj's. He had never questioned if ehe knew anything ahons work the idea la connection with Maud Everleth waj absurd. He had bea able tj tahehsrtos bon e a fine es the cne atie would leave, but that wsa grr.e now. Lovely, dAiuty, nTe!e;i Q3 8hf; p?eui2d, Dr. Andover had pcurtd the whole pa?äion of li preat heart upon her; and yon are not to think hiiu fak becaceo jast at first, when the news of hi ill fortnne'eama to him, he shrank and trembled under it, thiokins of the phi he loved; for he must qive her up. There w3 no dondt In his miod about that. He could net ask her to share the fate of a poor physician who depeodd upoi his fee3 for a living. He even amlied grimlv in the midst of hia sutTericg at the tbousht öf Maud in a calico drers, mixing up bread'or washing dishes with her white, Elender lingers, which he had only seen toyine with her fan, working at embroidery, or dashing over the keys of a piano. So Dr. Andover had written h?r a brave farewell letter jnst a month before the time eet for their wedding, Informing her ql his altered fortunes, and releasing her from her engagement to him, and he had received no answer, although it was now Christmas week. The Doctor was worn out with exposure to rough weather and many sleepless nights. The demand upon his time and 6trength had bf en greater than usual, jet he had rep'ied to them all, never failiDg in kindly courtesy betide the couch of Betty Cary any more van in the luxurious chamber of ilme. ilddust, who feed him so generoujlr. It was Christmas week, and Maud wai to A.ave been his own next Friday night. This thought tortured him unceasingly, together with some words In a letter which had reached him a few days before; a letter from an acquaintance who was visiting in the city where ilaud lived. 4,I met your 'fiance' at a party last evening," he had written. "I admire your choice. he waa the brightest, loveliest there, and the most graceful dancer." Dr. Andover experienced a cruel sense of desolation as he turned tkat sentence over and over in hia mind. Macd had not loved him after alL Ehe could be gav end brignt when they were forever separated ! The othce tiro moldered to ashes, and still he sat there, still and sad, until from sheer exhaustion he fell into an uneasy elurubar. About midnight ha avoke, alternately burning and shivering, Trhileadull pain throbbed in bis temples. The D.ctci's apartments were commodious and comfcrtao'e. A large chamber onened irom hia private cfiic?, which latter opened from a large receiving rcoci. II waa his own patient now, S3 he hastened to bed : and wheu his landlady came in the morning to call him sbe found him unable to rise from his piilow, feverish and half, delirious. Christmas morning came bright and frosty a day after St. Nicholas' own heart and the Doctor, a tri tie better, although weak and larguid, opened his eyea to doss them again -rarrtdiateiy ryith a little pang. This was to te his wedding day. He couli hear the nerry salutations on the street, the clash of sUigh teilsand the pealing orgau from St. rani's Church over the way, and the eunUjfht anl raixth and gladness made his own pain eecrutbe keener just for a moment, until h;3 generous heart cauld gather strength to reader: iUelf and be glad because others were g'ad. The landlady, who had been like a molher to him, came in presently with a' very suuD iaz ixpressicn upon h?r broad face. Many of bis grateful patients had remembered him with some litt! Christmas taken, and Mrs. Drby had placed them upon the atand at his bedside; but new she held in her hands a small package addressed to hira in a familiar ladj'i hand and registered in a distant city. Maud had returned the encagement ring. Dr. Andover received the package in alienee, and Mr a. Derby looked at hlta with a crestlallen expretsion. 4 1 thought yon would b pleased. Doctor. I've com to know Miss Everleth'a handwriting, yon tee, and I supposed IQe had etnt jou a Christmas present ThU package came two days ago when yea wer delirious,
and I aigned the registry card and mvie held to sead ths lady a telegram notifying her cf your illness. And, Dr. Andovar. ciri yoa bear some pleasant news? I receive! a telegram in rstarn stating that lliit Kveileth would start at one to cjni tj jou Iiow, that is the sort of girl t3 make a man a good wife. She will probably bs here to-day." Today! Dr. Andover listened to kind Mre. Derby in bewilderment. What did it all mean ? With trembling i:ngtr3 he tors ths wrapper e;f the tiny paiajje and opened a jeweler's case. Tnere upon its bad of purple lay a wide gold iirger ring, extraordinarily wide, the Inside of which w:u completely covered wih tine lettering. And D.. Andover read slowly, thronga blind, rapt'irjus tears, the words which the jeweler's instrument had traced there the graad old scriptural words which had arisda in the h?ars of thn girl, bo thus proved herself worihy of him, when his letter had come to her after many weary days of delay: "Kntreat rae not to leave the?, or to return from following after thee; for whi'her thon goest I will go, and where thou lolgest I will lodge: thy people shall ba ray people, and thy God my (lod; where thoa diest I will die, and there will I be buried; the Lord do so to me and more aiso, if aught but death parts me and the 3." Airs. Derby slipped ont of the ruoi, crying herself at the sight of Dr. Audover, usually so calm and strong and eelf possessed, crying like a two year-old baby over Maud's Christmas token. It was nearly noon when Maud hralf came. She had removed her wraps in M s. Derby's room, and after a light tap oa thi alck man'a door she entered. Alexander Andover hud thought her lovely in her exquisite party and carriage and home toilets; but never had she seemed eo sweet and graciou and womanly a3 now, when in her plidn gray traveling cosiums, her lovely face a little pale with weariness acd excitement, her moulh tremu'om. aod her dark eyes glowing with a 60'.erun li ht ihe glided in her swift. noi3e!e33 way aciora tha room to hi3 side. "My darling! My own, sweet, truehearted darling!" cried the Doctor, clasp ng both arms about her and drawing her facd down to his own. And presently, after the first gresting was over, Maud explained. "You letter was delayed in corae way. I did not get it until a week ago. Yoa' remember the great piece cf gold you c-nt me from California two jears ayo? Weil, wheu I got your letter I took that gold to a jeweler and bad it made iuto a ring. And tbn aft9r I received Mrj. Drby'3 te!eraui I maie uncle promise to bring 1112 to ycu at oace. I wcnld have come alone If ha had not coma with rae, horrible and unconventional as my fashionable ftiends would hare filled iua. Why, Alexander, what a silly butt?rtiy yoa must hava thought ms! Do vol think I would care for ricLes without ycu? And do you think I ar goad fur nothiugbut to danc the gcrman and pby the piano? I assure jou, sir,'' end here she doubled one s;:iatl, whlta hand in a threitrning manner under his very nos?, "this hand which you conaider to weak and useless caa malSB mo.t tJeliciona bread and cakes: can evea make bed3 and sweep and wash dashes. Aunt Alice revfr r.eg'.ecled the mott inponaat part cf my education , and I am sure I shall make a most excellent wifa for a po?r man. That is, Alexander," and here she Hushed npplcricusly "if you will havo rae." Dr. Andover eaiotherert the last words egainEt his shoulder, and as eo?n as she could free herself from his unceremonious embrace she oegan anew to coax and whevdle hira into son.e new plan of her own, to woirh he at first objected, bit finally yielded. The result was that at o'clock tbat afternoon Maud Kverleth wai made Dr. Alexander Andover's wife and at once A3 serted her authority by taking upon her the duties of a none. Of course, under snch treatment he recovered rapidly, and every day grew to appreciate more and mere the loyalty and worth of the sweet little woman who had not failed him in his dark hour.
The Evolution of the Ileri-leaded. Philadelphia Times. An habitual frequenter of the principal atretJa of the large cities of this country can net fail to have been struck by the gradual but6teady increase of the proportion of redheaded persons to the total of persons met. The climatic conditions of America are apparently favorable to the development of red hair, and there is more than one reason to snticip&te that we shall become a nation of strawberry blondes in tne not very disuint future. The diverse foreign dements that are gradually fused into a new national character are such es corroborate rather than weaken this expectation. We have, on the one hand.the blonde type ofjthe fiaxonjraces, and on the other the brunette type of the Latin races, with Celtic re inforcements of both, types. What is more natural than that the union of these tjesina nation as in a married couple should result in a red-headed progeny? The red head is notably a?30cated with a sanguine temperament, and the expression "red-headed and hopeful' has becoma a classical phrase of local political literature. Whether red-headedness causes hopefulness or hopefulness red-headednei3 is irrelevant, soloDgasthe to vualities are found to be associated with a frequency that proves the existence cf some sort of logical relation. Now the American rational te naps ram ant is pre-eminently hopeful, and evry patriotic heart must wish that this shall continue to be a leading characteristic, as it is generally productive of a degree ot energy that accomplishes important results. Oar national hopefulness is therefore likely to b3 encouraged. The logical result will be a sorwpondlng evolution of a read-headed people, unless tome strongly xnaiked reinforcements should arrive from foreign shores for either blondes or brunette?. Fears of miscegenation aie likely to prevent any darker races from msking an impression, and there ars no lighter races than those which have already entered into the amalgamation. Moreover, the tide of immigration has turned, and immigrants who find themselves not wanted here are going back and telling their friends not to come, to that we shall before many years have received and assimilated the principal ingredients that go to constitute our national character. The eo.utiou of the red-headed, therefore, bids fair to continue with unerring heel and head of Increasing redness, readly Combat. Mail and Expresj. The death of the boy Donovan, who won the aix-day roller-skating contest here a short time ago, is the third that ha3 recurred as the direct result of that exhibition. If or butter, select cows known to give milk rich in fat. Cows vary in this respect from lees ttan 2 to 5 per cent. The averago is about 3 per cent. Concerning Red Ilulr. Many people admire red hair, but if yon do sot, rarker'a Hair Balsam will impart to it a darker hue. It will also thicken thin hair, eradicate dandruff, and impart softcess, gloeatneaa and life to hair which has become dry and harsh. Not a dye, and does not soil tha linen. Give a delicious psrfume. An elegant dressing.
SriKir OF TOE STATE PßUl
So far as heard from no Indiana raai hu yet declined a Government appointment, because they hava not been "temptei beyend what they coull bjar" .in this respjet. Vmcenne3 6an. The Democratic party has been in power now nearly tiro months and no effort has yet bren made to put the colored man hick into elavery. It logins to look as if our Republican friends had tctuaily lied in tha matter. Covington Friend. It has been clearly defined that Cleveland is runairg the Government. His suborliuates are men of brains, but t ie President h.ii a mind of his own, an 1 it can not ba g4'nlaid that he has not excallent judgment. l'.ke County Democrat. Whenever an eld Republican cfliciil dropi ontand his place is filled by aDemocratthere is weepingand walling and gnashingof teeth in the hou?a cf Republicanism. If Mr. Cleveland will uncharge hia oiain daty in taming the rascals out the whole Kpub!ican party will be in mouruing I Uncock Democrat. The people should thank the Legislature for compelling the reduction in price for use of telephones. The people have been blel by such monopolies too long alreidy. As an instance of this extortion, we might sneak of the $100 for sending about .100 words to Australia in the case of the late St. Louis murder Auburn Courier. If ex-Poetmaster Key should die and the I'ostodice I Apartment was to be closed in memory of him, as it undoubtedly would be, tbere is not a Republican paper in tha land that would have a word of censure to c Her. Key wes a rebel brigadier, but of late years ba? been voting the Republican t.'cket, wh'ch according to the Republican idea purges him oi all sin. Putnam D3rrocrat If. as we are told by some Republican newspapers, there is so much Republicanism and so little Democracy alout the nw administration, why are the Republican leaders not content? Democrats sea no cau9 for complaint; why this howl that comas up from the rank3 of tho opDOsition at every prominent appointment made by the. President, and particnlarly if the accident of birth prcclttiins the one selected to ba a Coutheru man. Seymour Democrat. Tte extra session of tho Legislature, unlike its predecessor cf ISM. did not hold the full time allowed under the Constitution. Th'13 fact, however, dees net deter the Republican prcts from bitter partisan abuse, because of the fact that it ryquired mora than sdxty days to do tho business- In 1SSI, however, not a word was said ag&inst the full term extra stision. It is suspected that the silence ws ccceeioned because It waa Republican, end ths.t the loud talk thi3 winter is beciusa the Legislature is Democratic. Huntington l)e rcocxat. Yes, you can g?t a lare weekly nowjpapsr, with considerable mora reading matter and for lers money than your home paper. Bat what haye yoa? After yon have read your ci!y psper, what do you know about home news? Your next dcor neighbor may have died, but the city par er never gives you the information. What city pHper nelpi io boaui your town or county, or cares a p cayuüe for j cur interests? The noma paper is continually doing eometLiiJK to develop the nidtsiial interests of the comrjunity and is a baueat to you in a hundred ways that a city piper dees not end t on net rcech. Which cf tue two had 30a better patronize? GasIIö Courier. Honesty and eiliciency in the public cervice are dercandsd by . the Democratic party. The Democratic party also demands that the cfiice9 in the gift of the administration be filled by Democrats. There is no duty mere plain to tha present administration than to see that as far as possible, without violation ot law, tbat public affairs be placed under the management of Democrats. There hundreds of deserving, capable and efficient Democrcts who are ready and willing to serve tho country, thereby relegating to the shades of private life the Republicans who have been drawing salaries from the public treasury for the lrst quarter of a century. Greencastle Star-Press. All the ciTiciaN from the President down, who are charged with the power of appointment, are necessarily compelled to place ecme reliance on the written recommendations of applicants and they have a right to presurue that the sieners thereto testify to the truth and of their personal knowledge. And yet in many, we might say most, instances the reverse is really the truth; the signers do not testify to the trath, nor are the statements in the petition in accordance withtfceir personal knowledge. There is no intention probably to falsify or mislead, but there is a carele3jnes as to the results, or a moral cowardice which will not permit a refusal cf a signature, although the applicant Is known to be unworthy, either of which deserves to be stigmaiizjd as political dishonesty. Shelby Democrat. Successful Treatment of Pneumonia. ' (Boston Transcript, j The following statement of a well-knon resident of this city may haye value now. where such mortality is prevalent from pneumonia: "Nine years ego I had pneumonia. My physician covered my lung3, front and back, with cotton-batting, sprinkled with spirits ol turpentine enough to Inifate tha surface without blistering. This was kept in placa by a soft llannel over all. I think I took no medicine, tut milk, chicken tea and beef tea were constantly supplied. Still I grew weaker. Another physician was called for consultation, who was considered the most skilful in ti e treatment cf lang diseases of any physician in the city where I then was. I was told afterwards tbat ha said "It was a beautiful case, clear acute pneumonia." He ordered two grain of cxlomeL If it did not operate in four hours I was to take two more grains. But it did opersts as he desired and frcm that moment I began to mend. Later I asted him why he had giren roe calomel when it was the luDg that aild. He eaid: "The calomel attacked your li?r and that diverted the enemies at your lung and cave it a chance to heL In that case waimth, an irritated surface, abundant nourishment and two grains of calomel were effective means for a patient who, in three days, was reduced to utter bodily weakneea, accompanied by mental llightiness which so often accauipanles this disease and ends in insanity." Coram!loner Miller. Washicstcn Sptc'üLl Commissioner cf Internal Ravenuo Miller said to day that he had r.ot had time to look into the question raised by the highwlne men concerning export spirits returned to this country, and .that he would take no action in the premises until he hid care fully examined the whole matter. This wis in conversation with a prornineut Kentucky distiller who was at pataa to preeent the other side of the question. The high wine men are undoubtedly laboring Under tha imnreaaian that the
J new commissioner Ls an enimj of the
R3 & ki 5 t! tg Whca the weather grow warmer, tt'.it cxtrcrue tird feolir.g, want of appet;t. duUnos, languor, and t. af.iiot a!mo-t tbe citiro human family, and ?.-rf-ula and other dioai'H ;: vd !y hunrs, manifest them.clvi? with n:my. It !s iupoxsillij to throw oil tlii -: debility au.1 expel humors from the Mtxxl witlne:: the aid of a reliable medicine like H(n .l'.i S.'.rap.inlU. "I c;'iM nut sleep, and would get up in the morning wi;!i hardly life omuh t get out of N-.i. I had m appetit ,' ;i:. l my face would break out with pimples. 1 Iwi'ght a bottle of Hill's Sarsnp.irill-i, anl soon began to sleep :::iu!y; could g l up without that tired and langnid fcc-li::g, .".rs.l i.iy appetite improved." R. A. Saximhk, K ;.;, o I bad been much troubled by 'to::::: debility. Lat ?jrii!g ll-od'i P'ars-.'pr.Ila proved ju.t the thing needed. I 'J.rl.cd an immense amount of benefit. I nevr .:It Letter.". II. F. Millkt, ltoston, "las. Hood's Sarsapariüa . "old by all druggist.?. 51 ; six for S. Male J only by i I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. & IOO Doses One. Dollar straight whbky interests, and that he would be glad to move to defeat in some wy tha recent decision of th Attorney General affording them just relief. But in this they are mot-t likely to te mistaken. Mr. Miller represents no antagonism to the whisky interests, end can not fail upon looking into the matter to se the useleesness, not to tay the injustice, cf requiring spirits ence exported t ba returned aain to the warehouse fioai which they were taken before their delivery to a purchaser. Nobody would bs benefited by such a requirement, certainly tho Government would be made no mere Eecure, but only the owner of the goods put to such additional expense. Something ulte Unexpected. A vry extraordinary case- is that of Mr. T. 0. Hell, one of the best known newspaper men in Louisville, Ky. For eixtesn years he had been annoyed with tetter, and had p ven up all hope of its removal. II was aho troub!cd with indigestion, far wnch h red Brown's Iron Bitter.. Us write: "The Bitters did splendidly for indigestion, and the tetter commenced itehinp; and developing to the surface, and for fonr dava was mere annoying than ever before. Sill I never tbouzht the Bitters waa cns5r. th trouble until Mrs. II. suggested it, ajd I I 11 ll Af A . . . I tuen reai:zea mat my great torment nai a master. I bathed the tetter externally, softening the surfaca thoroughly, whea a wateruh Eubstance poured out like July peupirction on a c:r; ii?ld darky, then in a very ehort tirn9 the itciing sena ioa slopped. Tho tore canted hy the expulsion of the tetter is not yet healed, bit I know that tte c ante cf the unmitigtUd trouble is forever removed." Cct Out for an Independent Kdltor, ?prinftfieid Union i ,'Pcoh-bah,,, in Gilberts Sillivan'a new JapaLtie opera. 'Th Mikado," says: "I was l orn sneering." "Pooh bah" was cat oat for an independent editor. Worc's are weak to express th wonderful curative properties of that prince among modern medicines. Mishler's Herb Bitters. M. A. Fairer, Superintendent of the Lancester, Pa., County Hospital, abandoned the attempt to express his delight and admiration for the medicine. He had long suffered frcm dyspepsia, diseases of the kidneys aud neuralgia, and used hundreds of 60-called remedies without good results. At last he tried Mishler's Bitters, and in a short time was perfectly cured. This Kenedy Contains Injurious Drug, Catarrh CREAM BALM HB OloansoB the Bond, Allays lnnamma 1 1 o n, ideals ltio Sores, Restores the Serines of Tab to, Smell, HoaTinsr. A quick Relief. A positive Cure. HAVEVER CItEATri iulm has gained an enviable reputation wherever inown, displacing all other preparations. s a creamy BubsUnea.A paruuic is ippueu lmoeaca nosini, msinar no pain nun .a ',reeu.uio i a use, rrice du centi Dy.maii or at uruijuisw. ten a tot circular. ELY BROTHERS UruazUts, Owego, N. Y. WEAK, ÜHDEVELOPED! PARTS ok Tin: human kqdv t i.aio;kd. dkvkI0:'K', M KKNU I HKNKH." h.. inn intffr.t,ny on if ro n m t.n p v'" r. I n r- in v t n mtry iityiily inOorHi.""TiT'Trt--i-t t."'h pi-t yet 'Mi'TTrTM71T7TtMTMuTr I hare apo?itl remeJT i't the Vit dlse ; by it nse tboonan(! of CHS.M f't ti. wor.t tiM mill of r.n s andln? bf b"n enrii. Ir!l. a roi? niy faith In Itjeffcvj tbt I will n. T"a o HOTTI.F.S 1'KKK, teet!'r with ft VAlrCA EL TP. EATlKoti thl iv. to iiiff-rr. GIth exrM A P.ÜL.1urea. DK. T. A. SLOCL il.m fovlbUN. f TP'RTPT? PSZSCRIPTIONS are to be found for the pppcdy cure of Nervous Debility, Lost Manhood. Deppondencv, etc A cony of this boo will be f ent free, sealed. Address s U i kn ok of HEALTU. UO Weat Sixth Street. Claeinoatl Ohia. Many a Ladyis beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm.
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ein At no other s? tht system S' suv ceptiblo to the ttirficial effect of a reliable tonic .i?id iraigor.mt. The impure .-täte of the M'l, tln deranged digestion, and the weak condition of the body, cu:5ed ly iH long hattl-j with tho coll, v.intry blasts, all M1 for tin reivi:!g, regulating anl restoring ir.il;in?vs so hr.pnily anl elTectively combined in IIo-kI's Sarapari!!o. 'Hood's hars iparüla did me a great deal of good. I had no particular dlvvne, hut wa tired out from overwork, and it lnn,-d me up." i'lm. ei. li. Simmons, CoImo?, N. Y. ' Tor s -ven years, spring and fall, I li.vi scrofulous sores com'' out on my legs, and for tv.n 5 errs was not free from them at all. I sullered very much. Last May I Pegau tahing Hood's Sars;iaril!:i, and before I had taken two bottles, the sores healed and tho humor left me.'' C. A. Ar.Noi.n. Arnold, Me. "There is no WoimI urifu-r efjiial to IIo'kI' Sarsapanll.k.'' rm:i.i, RK'hefetcr, N.Y. Hood's Sarsapariüa ' Sold by all druggists. $1 ; .six for MaJa oiriy by C. I. llOOlo & CO., Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Doilar I PINKEYE, A Hemnrkable Curo of a LTorso. Col. Janes L. Fleming, a prominent grocery merchant, a member of the ilrm of Fleming v- Lofton, Augusta, Ga , mrt kes the followinc statercent of ie treatment of a valuable horse with Stilt's Specific: In the fall of 1 SSI I hal a valuable; colt tV-en with r Fevere c.q of piukeje, which resuUelia tho most tear.'al case ot b öod pois-ouini: I have ever freu. After tight or nice m.vatti. of doctor- f lie-with every remedy tim J conid hear of. I dejp.iired of a eure. At this tirrt; thhoavras un.thje to move, because of swollen lirah. Iiis rieht bind leg whs as Ur:re is a man's body, r.nd hud on it over forty running pore?. He had alo a number of lar.e fores oa hU body and other limbs. Hewavimo-t pit!t'e lookinc; cli ect. and I was a;tvled to end his euff rinse with in shot gun. fie whs a valuable cnirral an 1 1 did not rant to loe Mm. After riekinq; rav br-iln in eenrch lor anotiier reraely more eiticacious, 1 täoneht of r'will'fl ficeifie. I knew It wi n valub'e to the liuaii family as a blood puri:r. end whyrhoula it net be 'or the ulitial as weil .' 1 did not Imitate, but sent last July to Atlanta for supply. 1 iH-Kau toe treatment with 4 o. of S. . S. and 4 oz. cf water thr:e times a day. Tain I continued tcraweplr. 1 hen 1 increased the -iosotoCos of cat h, and rontinued fcr a week. Then I increased to 8 oz. and run it a wtek, wbea I went back to f. o pgin. The remit was that at the end of tbe first week the horso had a fair appetite, which he bad not hd since h;s rtckiieML At the end of the second weea even greaurimj provement was apPArent. for manv of the ?nrts were ticlis n'ce anl the horse manifested a desire to move aboat. At the end o! the third wecic h be in to show jnin in :!e?h. and had fall appetite. Tte I'vclline tad alout ui-iapDoared. I used in ail about 15 rottles of Hwltt 8 Specific, an1 when I qait Its ue the torüe hRd only four small sorei ic;t on him, aud they healed un Immediately. In Augiut last all symptoms of theclise&se passed away, and up to dato no sisns ot the return of the trouble have made their appearance, and tne horse has tloue a mule's work on my farm. I repard it one of the most remarkable cures I have ever known. Thus this groat medicine nas proven a boon to the animal as well aa to the human race. Jas. L. Fleming, Augusta, Jan. ?,1S"i. Send for book on Blood and Kkin diseases. It Is mailed free. The Swift &rr irie Co., Drawer S, Atlanta, yii. NEW THE JUSTICE 8 GUIDE, By Thomas M. Clarke. A new ana practical treatiss for Justices of the Peace, stating their duties and showing them how to execute them, with all the ects relating to the Justice and Constable. About 500 pages, bound in law style, only f 3 00. Clarke's Law of Real Property in Indiana and Conveyancer's Manual, $2 00. Burns' Ilaiiroad Laws of Indiana and digest of Supreme Court decisions, $1 50. Statutes of Indiana, Revision of 137G, 2 vols., f3 00 for set. Clarke's Manual for County Commissioners, Auditors, Township Trustees, Road Superintendents and Read Masters, with the Laws Governing those Officers, ?3 00. Manual for Constables A Guide for that Officer, H 00. Second and Fourth Indiana Reports (new edition), ft 50 each. Gavin Herd's Statutes wita Davis' Supplement, 3 vols , $3 00 for set. Manual for Township Trustees and Road Superintendent?, with the laws in force overning these oncers, 50 cents. Law of Taxation Concerning the assessment and collection of taxes, 50 cents. Law of Sheriff" A Complete Manual for SberitTs, U 00. Circulars for either th9 above books fornished on application. Address SENTINEL COMPANY, 71 aud 711 West Market St. tue kbbcaxTtiib AGENOY. B, L. 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