Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1885 — Page 7

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THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL TUESDAY MORNING MAY 12 1885.

ONE 9 X7 AT. TOW.

M. C FU.AHL. Tbeday watgray md rfark and chill: j, Ibouah My had ccrae to meet us, HI So exesely April linge led stilt, fcLo bad no heart to vrft as. Vh?n. with & swift mi l Mi lden riUht, Wind blown o'er hill und hollow, Two Rtay wlnp iwept cros ray ftight.. Ana lot the flrfct wild swallow. "Alu, fair bird! the little breast That cuts the air so fieetlv. Should still have prosed Jts Southern neat. Till June was piping sweetly. In plte of cheery oog and voice. Thou brave ant blitne new-comer, I can not in thy joy if joicc One swallow runic s no tunimer." Thus In ray thought I fain would siy ; Meantime, cn swift wins? needing. It wlid and alanine roundelay The tltd pars cn unheeding Of cdoroun fields and drowy noons, Of How tide landward creeping. Of woodland filled with jocund tanet, OI i oit airs hushed ar.d sleeping; He ans of wavin? ioreet heieh'a With hioi.k grttii bnuybs upsprf CRins; Of faint Mara pal with drowsy lights, In dtaky heavens sinaing; Of nests hlßb-burc In cotta?e caves. Of jellow cornfields growlu?. -And, through the Ion?. film, flattering leaves, Ihe sleepy winds a-blowinj. lie ians ontll ray soul too'x becd Of warm, folt-Jalllusr showers. Of dells hish-piled with tangled leaves, And gay with tangled llowers; Of life, and love, and hope's bright crew. This brav and bllibe new-corner, And so and lo at lst I knew One swallow made the summer! i:ex County Mercury THE PIUKCESS BARNABAS. The Piinces3 Barnabds was in a state of th xxiC3t profound perplexity. She could not, for the dainty life of her, make up her mind on tee important question as to whethsr ah should or should Lot csrornit suicide at ta close of the season. It wa? not very easy for the PrincfFs' many admirers to understand why she ßhould perturb her mind with such a problem at all; but perturb it she did with that very problem, whether wisely cr nnTfisely. The Prirccc3 Barcabai was a very remarkable young T7cman, who had proved the puzzle, the pride, and the passion of London society for three whole enr.ational season?. She W39 not yet fonr and twenty. She bore the title of a great Russian Prince, who had married her just before she came of age, at a time when he hinielf wai old enough to be her grandfather, and who had considerately died within two years of the ceremony, leaving her the absolute mistress of his fortune and his territories, ai Ehe had baen during Uh the absolute mistress of his heart for the abort time in which h9 swayed It. Bbe was said to be fabulously wealthy. Herjewela were the wonder of the world, tad she rieifghttd in wearing them ia season and out of season, with a Femi barbaric enjojrrent of their elitter and splendor, which -was, like everything e!o9 about her, partly oriental and partly childish. 8onte time aftr her hasband'a death she had corce tci Par:a and got tired of It, and then the crossed the Channel and caoquered London Daring one rseplendent season little ilsft was talted about but the Princess Barnabas. Society journals raved about her 'delicate kfauty, which seemed to belong to the canvass of the last century, which ought to have been immortalized on pate tenet re, and hymned in madrigals. Men sdoxf d her. Women envied her marvelcns drei ar.d her irtatchless jewels. The djing asbes cf a season's scandal flared up in nianreloua activity around her pretty personality. he wen enormously "the thing". And encrmor sly "the thing" sho remained during a second eeeson, after an interval of absolute disappearance into the dominions of the Czar. Enormously "the thing" she still appeared to be now in her third season, in spite of th rival attractions of an American actress who had married an English duke, and an American girl with millions who had married the bluest blcod and the oldest name in Earope. It would have been ab aurd for any one to contest the point that the Princes Barnabas was the most interesting figure of that phantasmal dance of shadows which is called London society. Nevertheless, the Princess Barnabas was weary positively bored. If she had been lets of a success life might not have appeared so desolate. There would have been a piquancy in the possibility of rivalry wkich would have lent a new interest to the tasteless feast. As it was, however, London life at the height of its maddest activity, appeared to her as drear and gray as those 'stretches of bteppea which lay like a great a around one of the Russian castles of the lat Prince Barn ab p. It was during this fit of depression, when the Pnnceco Barnabas was graciously pleased to agree with the anther of "Ecclesiastes," that life was vanity, that it occurcd to her that in all her strange experiences she had never jet committed suicide, ßho immediately gave up her mind to the important problem, whether the would gain this tiltimate human experience at once, or postpone it indf finitelv. It was in this frame of mind that the Princess went to the great hall of the Russian Embassy. A3 f he rustled among bar f ara in the dim, luxurious warmth of her carriage, her mind was running entirely upon the various forms of sslf-destructlon which had been made famous by celebrated persons at diferent stugea of the world's history, and she could find none tht were sufficiently attractive or remsrkabie to please her. "Good heavers!" she thought to herself, with a little shudder, which even the warmth of her surroundings could not repress "is it impossible to be banale even in that?" And then she gave a little groan as she stepped out of her carriage and went no the Embassy iteps. The thought was still en her mind, and tracing tbo least suggestion of a frown upen her exquisite girlish face, as she entered the great room and took the hand of the Ambassadress. The thrill rt interest, of excitement, of ad miration, which, as a matter cf course attended upon her entrance, did not give her any answering tbrlH cf gratification. She appeared to listen with the most gracious attention to the compliments of the Ambassador. She answered with the daintiest little air of ' infantile obsfsance the Old World courtesy of a white-haired minister who would have been as much at home as she herself In a salcn cf the Regent of Orleans. She condescended to entangle tn a network cf fascination, a particularly obdurate and impassive Secretary cf State, Sha patronized a prince of the blood royal, and was exceedingly frank and friendly with the young painter Lepeil, who knew exactly how much her familiarity rceanl, but was at once tsmneed and delighted by the envy it aroused in others. Yet all the while the Princess Barnabas Trai not devoting a single serioua thought to one cf her admireis. Every idea In that vain and foolish head was centered upon the one query: l(ha)l I commit suicide next week, and if eo. how?" It T713 T7hib in thb fratno of mind, talking to twenty people and thinking of none of

flKm. (bat bpr brrght eye, wandering lightly ovi-r the crowded rooai, chanced to fall upon a young man who waa standing, somswbat ieniC7ed ?rotQ tbe nreis of the tbrj3, in h window facets, which was at least com ps'atively jnie mall, prav eelf-p3S3e$3id yovEz min. tntricieDtly good looking to be caJUd hanrfKome by au enthusiastic friend. Wbca the Princefs Birnabis looked at him, his eyp. which were bright, clever e?, ero fixed on !; with a look of half humorous contr mplation. The moment, however, fheir eypa mt. lie tnrned his heat Migbtly, nud resumed a conversation with a gray haired old n an with a red ribbon at his bottn hole, vthom shs knew to b a farf sn diplomatist. The voang man's ga.!9 had xpresed an intareat in the Princess, bat it reeu c d to be jnst as interested in be rVe, wrinklt-d face of his companion. The Princers Barnabas seemed piqued Who is ttat yenng man? ' she asked of the Secretary of ÖtaJe. ' Which young man?" The .S'ecretarv of S'ate'sstolid facegszd7guely into th densn crowd of dresa coats and white shoulders, of orders and stars and diamonds. Theyonng man In the window, talking to tfce gray-haired man." The Secretary put up his eye-gtas and considered the young man in question very thoughtfully. He was never known to harry in his judgment or his replies in Parliament, and he did not hurry now, though it wa the Princess Barnabas who was interrogating him, and not a member of the Opposition. Then he answered her, weighing hla words with more than judicial delioeration. 'He iaa young fellow named SInclar. He is going out to th East, or something. But why do you ask?" "His face interests me," said the Princes UI ehonld like to know him. Bring htm to me; cr stay, give me your arm, and we'll go to him." She rose and dispersed, her little knot of dlsconeclate courtie rs. Taking tha Secretary's arm, she moved slowly toward the window where SInclar was still standing. Tne Secretary touched him on the arm: 'Mr. Sinclar, the Princess Barnabas has expressed a desire to make your acquaintance. Allow me. Princess, to introduce tj j on, Mr. Sinclar." The young man bowed. He seemed a lit tie surprised, but not in tie least embarrassed. The Princess smiled brightly at him, and her eyee were brighter than her smiles. Thank you," sho said to the Secretary of State, with a pleasant smile, which wai meant to convey, and which did convey, tbat the bod had enough of him. He promptly disappeared into tbe crowd, with it-signed gced humcr, bf aring away with Mm in his wake the elderly rei-ribooaed diplomatist. Princess Barnabas and Julian Sinclair weie Jeft alone. 8h sat down on the coach in the it cess of the window, and slightly motioned to him with her hand to take his place by hsr side. He obeyed silentiv. The recess of the window was deep. For the moment tbey were ali03t entirely isolated from the shifting, glittering: thrcn? that sAthed and drifted around them. Sinclair kept quite silent, looking into the face of the Pincers with an air of half-amused ioqu'ry. There were a few seconds of silence, and then the wonjan spoke, beginning, wcmanlike, with a question: "Have von forgotten me. Mr. Sinclair?' . The young man shook h!s had gravely. "'o, 1 fcave not forgotten you, Princess." Her eyes were fixed on h's face, but ha re torne-d her gaza quite steadily ,kYet it must bo two years since we met " tbe uplied, and tv?o yeais is a lon time " "Y-?, two vfarj 13 a very long tiaie," he said, hßif laly. half Ecornfuliy. Ho was decidedly not communicative, this ycurjg man, for even the pleasure of meeting a friend, unseen for two years, d ei not appear to arouse in him any desire for coavertatfon. There was ariolher little paae. Neither seemed embarra3ed. and yet the interval was long enouch to be embarrassing. Then the poke oain. "Why didyouIae8t. Petersburg? Where have yon ben all this time?" He answered the second part of her question: "I Lave been in Constantinople most r.f the time. I only returned to London a few days ago, and I am going away almost Immediately to the East again, to Persia this time." "For how long? ' There was a faint tone of weariness In his reply, though he 1 otrove to make his voice pr-rpotely steady. ,Oh! forever, I suppo?e; or, at least, until I am an old man and of no further use. Then, perhaps, Imav come back 0 a pension, and write dreary" letters to the Times about the errors of my successors." And he lacgned to prevent himself from sighing. "Yon have not answered all my question," said the Princess. "Why did you leave St. Petersburg so suddenly ? We were such very geed friends, and I assure you, I quite missed you." Sinclair got up and looked down into her Jacghing eys. "I left St. Petersburg," he eaid, "because I was afraid to stay." Her eyes were laughing still, but there was an unwonted softness in her voice as she asked him, Whywere you atraid to stay? Surely you are not a Nihilist?" He began to speak and paused; then with a determined effect to keep his voice under control, he said: "I left St. . Petersburg b9cause I was tool enough to fall in love with

you "Thank you for the compliment. Was that so very foolish?" "Not for others, perhaps. For me. folly, and worse than folly madness. I never thought I should see you again; I did not dream that we should meet to-night. Bat since chance has thrown U3 together for the iast time, as I leave England in a few days for the rest of my life. 1 may as well tell yoa for the first time and for the last time, I love you." Her eyes were laughing still; those wonderful gray-blue, northern eyes which so many capitaU raved about; bnt her lips were firmly, almost sternly, set Still she said nothing, and he went on: "I know it wis folly when I found that I loved you ovr theie, in Si. Petersburg. I was a poor Eaglih gentleman, and you the Pincess BArr.abas. I might as well have fallen in love with a star. So I came away." He said the wcrds simply, with quiet conviction, and held out his hand. üood by, Princess, and forgive my folly." be rose and faxed him. Any one of the hundreds in tbe great room beyond, who chanced to look at the couple half hidien by tbe curtains cf the deep window, would only have seen a man and a woman talk'ne lightly of light things. "And you have not forgotten me yet? ' she said. "I never shall forget you," he answered Pdiy. I can not love more than once, and I love you with all my soul. Do you remember cue day, when we drove together in tbe Neva Perspective, how you stopped to give seme money to an old .beggar? I envied tbe beggar for getting a gift from yiu; you tbtn dropped a coin into my outstretched hand." Be took out his watch chain and shewed ner tbe tiny gold coin with the Russian escle on iL "I have kept it ever since." he aid. "It is the only thing I cre for in the world. I have lived, and stall live, o much in the East that I am somewhat surorftitjous. and I think it is my taiisuiin. Gccd-bye " He held out his hand 8gir. She took it. "Will you come and sea ine bafore you leave?" she asked, almost appealioglv. He shook hia head. "Better not." he said, For a moment abe was silent; she seemed to be reflecting. Then she said, with a sud

den vehemence: Promlse me that if I write and ask you to come, you will ooey mi Promhe n4 tbat for the sake of our old frendship" . Be bowed his head. I promise." ha aiid. And now give me your arm and take me to my carriace," eaid the Princess Birnabis 'I want t go home to bed." The next dayJnlian heard nothing from the Princesi. "Of come not," he aiid to hirrpeif, ahrnggirg his shoulder at the fa 1taetic hopes which had basieged is bra a ß'Dce tbat strange meeting, and he doggedly faced his approaching exile. Bat on the af terr.con of the second day after the meeting at the Embassy, Julian Sinclaire, coming to bis hotei after a day spent in busy preparations for departure, fountV a tiny note awaiting bim. It was from the Princess, and hid only thee words: Come this eveaing. I sca'l be alnne." And be went This was a part of a conversitioi which Princess Barnabas chanced to overhear at a reception at the Foreign office,'on the eve of her departure for tbe East. Th speakers were Sir Harry Kingscourt and Ferdinand Lepeil. Said the painter: "Have you heard the news about the Princess Barnabas? She ia going to marry a fellow named Sinclair, and is going to live in the East Persia or some place of the kind. The fellow hasn't a penny in tbe world and won't have from her, for I believe that by her husband's will, she leses almost all her fortune if ahe marries below her own rank." uHow very romantic," yawned Kingscourt. 1 "Romantic," replied Lepell: "it is absurd. Have you not beard? the woman has committed suicide." And the speaker moved away. "Suicide," said the Princass to herreir, 8miliog. "No, no; I was going to commit i

suicide once, but I have Jearaed what life is worth, and I bave changed my mind." s Recollections of Dr. Alfred 1'atton. LCommunicatcd j When a good man dies, society mourns. But wo are too apt to forget the lessons to be derived from the lives of such men. The cbject of this article is to recall some of the sterling virtues of one of the best men who ever lived in our State, Dr. Alfred Patton, of Vincennes A native of Tennessee, at the age of twenty-three he removed to Mississippi, where he married and entered upon his professional career. At the breaking out of the Mexican warte eatered the First Mississippi Regiment, and was Surgeon in charge cf the United States Hospitals at Matamoras. In 185G be removed to Missouri, where hev remained till the beginning of the civil war. He was a surgeon in the Confederate service for the first two years of tha war. His health failing, he removed to Vincennes, Ind., where, in 1872, 1 first met him. I knew him as the foremost citizen of that city, a leader in all the educatioDal enterprise of , the city and county, as well as in all charitable work. As tbe proprietor of the Vincennes San he was fnabled to wield an Influence for good that is difficult to fully measure. But the crowning virtue of his life (a virtue which men of inllaence too rarely pceseis) was tbat he was a friend to every yourg man and woman whp were making their first start in life. I have on many au occasion seen his face light up with joy when soma young man would call to consult bim as to his future. Every as piring boy and girl found a wise counsellor and friend in him. I reaierabcr onca when a little boy tramp, allraggsdanddirty.caUed at hie cilice to m a job ot work. The doctor at once had him tall the history of Iiis lif o, at which his gecercus heait went oot in sympathy for the friendless lad. Ho bade him go into h's piivate room to the wash bowl and clean up. After a litt'e the boy came out but partly cleaned. He waa sent back the second time: be came out with clean face and hands and brushed clothes. Then the good old doctor took him to hi3 hotel and secured him work and a home. No strest Arab ever approached him for help and was turned away. As the founder cf the Vincennes High School, a Trustee of tbe city public schools, then the Vincennes University for more than a decade, and as a Trustee of the State University for six years, he was enabled to leave his lmprees on the educational work of the State. Tbelrdiana School Journal, many years ago, honored him with the title of "The Banner Trustee of this State." Truly he was a man whose Use we! fthall not often see again. When he died at the home of friends in Mississippi last month many a young man and woman all over our State received the sad news In sorrow. Indiana was honored by his life among us. His letters from New Orleans during the past winter to the Sentinel attested his abilities 83 a writer. Scarcely a medical journal In the country but bears the same testimony to his merit. We mourn his loss as a man ekilled in his profession, pure in both private and public life, a Christian worthy to bo imitated, and, above all, one who was a "friend to the young." T. J. C. May 11. Delicious fritters may haye stale bread for the foundation; if care is taken in removing any cr all of the crust that is dark brown, the fritters will be light colored and very inviting ip appearance. Eggs are a good addition in the proportlop of four ezgs to one quart of sweet milk; a saltspoonful of salt, and four or five slices of bread are also required. The bread should lie soakine in the milk for two hours. It can be broken into small bits, and thsn it will not be lumpy. Lace Bed Furniture. Lace coverlets and piliow covers should not be rinsed m "blue watei" when washed, but dipped in very weak cold rolTee. They should be made very wet, wrung very dry in a pateat wringer, and dried with the greatest quickness, as otherwise the coffee will settle, aud uiey will lock like a symphony In yellows. A Remarkable Success. Pond's Exiract4bas established ita merits in the most difficult way, by pushing ita success for forty years, growing stronger every day over the entire civilized clobe. You hear people say continually : "Oh, yes! I U83 it It cured me of a bad case of hemorrhage, or piles, or catarrh," as the case may be While it is peculiarly a family medicine it cures boils, burns, wcundsand al kinda of infiamnjatiensand hemorrags. Bs careful to get the genuine. A po'ato to be in the best condition for seed should be kept where the temperature dees not fall below 40 degrees nor rise above fifty degrees, and also where no lieht will come to it The air should not he too dry or n oist, and when cut for seed the pieces should be allowed to dry slightly before planting. When tbe blood is diseased the general health Is bound to sufier, and the constitution is soon weakened and undermined. Tbat trnlv wonderful preparation called Vishltr's Herb Bitters, p08$esss3 the power rf neutralizing and removing all contaminations of the blood and 8j stem generally. For chills and feyers, malarious disorders. kidney and liver trouble, constipation, and ell forms of nervous ailments, this preparation stands forth as a certain, speedy and permanent specific

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Radway's Ready The Cheapest and Besl medicine FOB F1UILT USE 19 THE VORU CUKES AND PRETENIS Coughs, Golds, Soro Throat, Hoarseness, inflammation, Rheumatism, Neuralgin Hoadacho, Toothacha, Diphtheria, Influenza, DiOcult Broathlno It wai the nt and la the only That Instantly itopi the most eaxrociating wan allays InSammaUon and cures Conc&sUoni whether of the Langs, Stomach, Bowelt or ttu gland or organs, by one application. In From One to Twenty Mlniiien ro matter now violent or excruciating tie pain tha Rheumatic, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippled J7ervoaa,.Uearlgio, or prostrated with dlaeau tew laffer. EADWAY'S READY BELIEJ WILL AFFORD INSTANT 2A.81. Inflammation of the Kidneys, lnflamraaiian the Bladder, Inflammation of the Bowels, Oont a? tlon of the Lungs, Palpitation of the Heart Hyt t erics, Croup, Diphtheria. Catarrh. Influent Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Rheumatism, Sdatict Fains in the Chest, Back or Limbs, Bruliet Bpralm, Cold Chills and Ague Chill. The application of the ready UELirjr v the part or part where the dlGculty o: pain ei lits will afford ease and comfort. Thirty ta sixty drops in half a tumbler olwate. will in a low miautefl cure Cramps, öpara, Sou. Etom&ch, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhea Dysentery, Colic, Wind In the Bowela, and all in tornal pains. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Raa wr' Ready Relief with them. A few dropt li watet will prevent slcknesa or pains from chanzt of water. It is better than French Brandy or n ters as a stimulant 2 -i In Its Various Forms FEVER and AGUR PVR and A0Ü2 cared !oz SC cent. Taex? i not a remedial agent In tbt world that will otin Fever end Aga e andaUothai Malarious. BUIouq Scarlet, and other Faveri lilaedby HADWAV riLL8) tn quickly RADWAI'S KEADY RELIEF. jrifty Oenti Per Bottle. Sold b oil Irat c1xt. DSL. RA DW AY'S Fur9 fciood raikrw ound flech, itron; boäo azu a clear ekln. If you WQuld have your dd&n flm yenr bone sound, without carle, and yosr com Plsxion fair, use RAD WAT ö BAR3APAKILUAJ RZSOLVXNT tha Great Blood Purifier iALSS AND TRUE. We extract from Dr. Radway a "Treatlsa on Lis case and Its Cure," aa foUowit List oi dlaea on red by PK. RAD WA, ft) SABÖAPABII.LIA1T aBOOLVSUt Chronic b tin diseases, carles of t5 -one, humor of the blood, scrofulous diseases, ywUüQ oces plain:, lever sores, chronic or old tsrs, salrheum, rickets, white swelling, scald head, cant era, glandular ewelitnes, nodes, wasting and de cay of the body, pimples and blotches, tumors dyspepsia, kidney and bladder diseases, chronlt rheumataa iid gous consumption, gravel an calculous deposits, and varieties of the abort complaints, to which sometimes are glvan ipec Ions names. In cases were the system has boei salivated, and murcury has accumulated and be come deposited in the bones, Joints, etc.. caailn carles of the bones, rickets, eplnal curvatures, con tortious, white swellings, varicose veins, etc., thi ßarsaparlllla will resolve away those doposlta aai exterminate the virus of tha dltews tract thi system. A GREAT COKSTITimOHAl REÜED1 Ok In dific&soB, tumors, cicen and sores o! a) kinds, particularly chronic disease of the ikls are cured with great certainty by a course ot Di RAD WAY'S 8 A RS APA RILLIAK. Wenoi3 0br cat oaaea that have relisted all other treatts.? SCROFULA Whether transmitted from parents cr acquired, t within the curative range of the SAESAPAKILLIAN RESOLVENT. It possesses the same wonderful power m curlcv the worst forms of strumous and eruptive dli charges, syphiloid ulcers, tores of the eyes, ears nose, mouth, throat glands, exterminating tri virus of these chronic forms of disease from t hi blood, bones, Joints, and in every part of the hn man body where there exists diseased deposit ulcerations, tumors, hard lumps or pcrof ulcus In fianmation. this great and powerful remedy wil exterminate rapidly and permanently. One bottle contains more of the active prtno ?les of medicine than any other preparation aken in teasno-nful doses, while others reonln Ave cr six times as much. OH DOLLAB P? BOTTIJt Bold by druezlsta. DR. Ft AD WAY'S BEOUtATiria PILLS 09 Great Liver and Stomach Bcnedj. rarlectly t ttelc, elegantly oca tad j purs regulate, partly, cleanse and itrencthcü Dr. Rad way's Hlls, for the cure of all dU orders cf the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneyt Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite Headache, Constipation, Oostlveness, Indlgaitloa Dyspepsia, BlliouEness. Fever, Inflammation a' the Bowels, riles, and all derangements of the Is ternal viscera. Purely vegetable, coutainisr ws KCrcury, minerals, or deleterious drusa. Prico 25 Confer For Bos. Sold by ail drusxUta, DYSPEPSIA Bad way's B&rsaparllliam, aided by Rtdwayl Fills, it a cure for this complaint It restortl Btrencth to the stomach, and makes it perform 10 functions. The symptoms of dyspepsia disappear, and with thcsi the liability Ql the lystera to ooa tract düeaea. Take the medicine according U the directions, aud observe what wo say la and True" respecting diel "Boad Falso and Truo." Cend a letter stamp to RADWAY a CO,, No. CI T7uren iirset, Hew York. InirxzuUes vtrJ Uuusmda will ha cant to you. 0 ram publio. cTEa cn and ax2c lor Bad way" a, ant ta tail

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Send us your address and we will mail book containing valuable information. Samjrte Quart Jiottlet Bent to any address in the United States (East of the Rocky Mountains), securely iac ked in jrfa in case, Express char? prepaid on receipt of 31.25, or Six Bottles sent for ÖG.OO PUFFY. HÄLT ÜHISEEY CO.. Baltimore. Md.. U. S- A.'

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I am flxty-even years old, and have lived In this Lall) County all my life. Up to tweuiy-eiht years ago 1 was regarded as the strongest man la the neighborhood the most robust in health. Iu November, 1S3C, I had a long and serious spell ot typhoid fever. It left me emaciated aud a cripple in my right leg. At times that limb was swolleu an enormous Elze, being twice as large as its nat ural condition, and Inflamed and angry in appearance. From mv knee down small sores came, and at the ankle a large ulcer came, whica aischarged poisonous matter. My whole system became inlected. The doctors would paten tae up for awhile, tut the ulcer would never heal. The mercury and potash with which they dosel me trought on rheumatism and dyspepsia. I was an object ol pity to all my friends. Some thought tbat the enly hope to save hie was ampuiallou. I continued to grow worse, and for three years 1 Lave not worn a shoe. Hope had almo3t lelt nie. 8vsift's Specific was suggested, and I commenced its use at once. From the very first I began to feel betler. I have tafceu thirty-six bottles, and the shadows which had darkened my life for twntyeistht jears Lave all been dissipated. The effect oi the medicine tas Leen wonderlul indeed. To-day 1 8m amble to attend to all my farming Interests, acd to walk iron one to five miles per day. I am rationed tbat tbe diseate is entirely broken up. and benceforth 1 am to be freefrom tho?e terrible apprehensions and suiferlng which formerly raude my We miserable. Swift's eTeclfic has done more for mo in one tear than ail the drug store melicine piescrited by physicians did in iweuiy-elgat year.-, and I most cheerfully bear tbis testimony of its merits. Wax. K. Keed. Hall County, Ga., Feb. 2S, 1SS5. From the Dissecting Koom. ÜETirg taken Swift's Specific lor blood poteoa contracted at a medical college at a di6ect'ou, while 1 was a medical student, I am gratclul to say that it gave me a speedy and thoroush cure alter my parents had spent hundreds of dollars for treatment ily arm was swollen to twice its usual size, and aa nothing helped me I was despairing of ever being cured. Ijut hearing ol the 8 S. S., 1 bought a bottle, little thinkinsl would derive any benefit from it. 1 began taVin? it regularly, and toon the swelling began to go down and tbe arm ceased to pain me. I continued its use, and alter taking eight bottles was thoroughly cured. ' Augustus Wendell, Newark, N. J. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. The 8wikt Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. INDIANAPOLIS tn ML Li DO ALL EKDS Q? PRINTING AND filAHUFAOx'üZif BLANK BOOKS Show Work Beoailien! We are vrtll peered fcr jrittiag Postern Proa mm me s QJ1 h TV vf I T 1 j' ;w ass p Pi U & 73 West MM Street, IiroiANAPOLIS, 31). 7his mcdy ContainslKol Injurious DniQ ELY GREAH BALL1 SRFAM Rfxl-W O loan bob heWK0ZCo& Inflam ma t i o n X; Heals the Sore3,V' Restores thoV a pcamvo üure. ;s2

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CREA B4Ln has Riired an "enviable reputation wherever known, dhp:arlr?e all other p re pH ration a. I la a cn:r ntitnn'.A partide is ipplled invoeacii nostril, causing do pain, and la agreeable to use. Price hd oeati brfmallor at Drnggistx. eend ioi ccular. ELY BßOIÜß3 Dniölaü, OwegO, N. Y,

jPneumonia, Consumption Dyspepsia ana

Wasting Diseases ,aA r Ä v - TJ t a C Vt- L4 rvr A cx i wer jTb a iel Cold Mods!, Parts," 1870. Tha Fa-.-ori!e 303, 40J, S32 351, 1 70, and felsctfcsr sMes. o Ssld ttircugncu? tits tvertL THE INDIANA 1885 FOB THE YESB 1885 Tfco Hocognized Ii&adine D0rnccr2.Ua Kowsppor of the Gttto, 8 Pages -56 Columiifl Tbe Largest, Best and Cheapest Weekly in the West at only DOLLAR As heretofore, an uncompromising eneaiy cf Monopolies In Y,ht3ver form appearing, and especially to the pirlt of snb3idy, u embodied In the PRESENT THIEVING TABIFP. TO INDIANA DK40CBAT3: filnso lisulnx CUT. las: annual prorpectus yen have achieved a glorious victory in yonr fitato and aided materially in transferring the National Government once mora Into Democratic hands. Your triumph has been as complete as your faithfulness through twentyConr years was heroic. In tho lato campaign, as In former ones, tha Sentinel's arm hs been bared In the fleht. Wa stood shoulder to shoulder, as brothers, In tha conflict; wa now asi your hand for the coining, year In our calebratlon of the victory. Oar columns that were vigorous with flight when the fight waa on will now, since the con tost is over, be devoted to the arts of peace. With Its eularsod patronage the gsxTcriL will be tetter &nj.l ie4 than ever to lva an Ucsorpassed km end Farnily Paper. The proceedings o! Congress and of our Demo ratlc Legislature and the doin?s of oar Demoratlc National and Stete administrations will b duly chronicled, m well as the current event) of tho day. Ita Commercial Reviews and Market Bsporta will be reliable aud complete. Its Agricultural and Heme Department axe 1 the best of hands. Pithy editorials, select literary brevttlea and rn tertainlng mleceil&ny are assured features. It shall be fully the equal la gsue.ral miamiitlou ot any papr In the land, while In its rep rtt on Indiana affairs It will have no oauaL It 1 Yonr (to state Pa and will be devcted to and represent indistna'c Interests,-political. Industrial and social, as no foreign paper will or can do. Will you net bear thi in mind when you come to take nfccn,iptlona and mak3 up clubs T Acopyol the Sentinel Supplement, rinn tali proceeding in Blaine libel tult, furnished oich new or rrnawinz subscriber when dcsirol. Now is tho time for evoiy Dem co rat rtho in Btato to sab Bcribo for tho Sentinel. CIi r 11 for..,.Mnv....MM...MMM...MM. m... lo.r Clnbt of SO MomiM n it iiTTi hui .- tM a. 9 DAILY. a Copy, Uilt nr '"iiifiinT , j zzTg.zzi Oct Copy. Q09 TlQt;tl On Ccpy, One ls.r .1 i! 3a HEN'TSKKL, 01 21 A IL, P Apente making up Clnb3 t-end .'oY. I any information dealred. i ! Adilr?2 ndlanaoaiis Sentinel Co, FOR SALE. To Printers and Pnblishers. We hare for sale one nearly new Stoneaetx Newspaper Folding Machine. Will fold, rs:e and trim a sheet SixSO inches, or emaller. Price. $2jQ. A ddre ;SENTINHL COMPANY, liJ, IntL

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A card. to ail wno are surrering from er ron and indiscretions of youth, neryoaj weaknesa. early decay, loss of manhood, eta, I will eend a receipt that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. Tnll great rcxedy wjls dUooyered by a missionary In Month Amerlov fkth1 fll-d-dretsxd envelope to ET, JOSSPUT.;iNMAlI, 6ta tlca D, h"eu:icri4