Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 23, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1874 — Page 7
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- -TO AN OAK AT NEWBTEAD. ' r LOKS BTROlf.
Young Oak! when I planted thee deep In th ground, ... I hoped that thy days would be longer than mine; . That thy dark -waring branches would flourlaii aronnd, . , And Ivy thy trank with 1U mantle entwine. Bach, och tu my hope, when, In Infancy's - tHa the'land of my fathers I reared thee with ' 5 - nrtde: They are punt, and 1 water thy stem with my Wars--Ttir deear not the weeds that surround thee can hide. - . I left thee, my Oak, and since that fatal hoar, A atranirer hM dwelt in tha hall of D1V sire: Till manhood shall crown me. not mine lathe i nnwer. Eat hi whose neglect may have made thee expire. rvit harrivthon wert even now little care Might revive thy young head, and thy wounds - gently heai; ' Tint, t tin n wrL nnt fated Affection to share For who could sappoaetbata stranger would 'Ah, droop not, ray Oak I lift thy head for a Ere twice round yon Glory this planet shall run, . The hand of thr Master shall teach thee to mile. tVhen Infancy's years of probation are done. Oh, live, then, my Oak! tow'r aloft from the weeds. That clog thy young growth, and assist thy decay. Yr still in thv nomm Are life's earlv needs. And still may thy branches their beauty dis play. Oh ! yet. If maturity's years may be thine. Though 1 ball tie low in the cavern of death. On thy leaves yet the day-beam of sges may ahine. Uninjured by time, or the rude winter's breath. Tor centuries still may thy bongns lightly wave O'er the corse of thr lord la toy canopy laid : "While the branches thus gratefully shelter his The chief who survives shade. may recline In their And, as he with his boys hall revisit this spot, lie will tell them In whispers more lightly to tread. Oh ! sureb by these I shall ne'er be forgot: .Remembrance still hallows the du I of the dead. And here, will they say, when In life's glowing frime. i a I he has poured forth his young simple lay. And here he must sleep, till the moments of time . Are lost in the hours of Eternity's day. STANZAS, LORD BTROX. Oh. talk not to me of a name great in story: The days of our youth are the days of our glory; Ana the my rue ana ivy oi sweet two-ana twenty Are worth ail your laurels, though ever so " plenty. "What are garlands and crowns to the brow that is wrinKleur Tis but as a dead flower with May-dew besprinkled. Then away with all such from the head that Is hoary ! -"What e.-tre for the wreaths that can only give gIOT7 Oh Fame! if I e'er took delight In thy praises. Twaa les for the sake of thy high-sounding Tlrae, Than to see the bright eyes of the dear ene dls1 cover tine thought that I was not unworthy to love ner. There chiefly I sought thee, there only I found thee: Her glance was the best of the rays that surround the-: When it sparkled o'er aught that was bright in my mory. I knew It was love, and I felt It wasjlory. NEWS AND GOSSIP. Georgia obtains $3,000 a year from the labor of her convicts. Boston's blood cure establishment has been named " Gore Hill " Wajrnor'i Lohengrin is again-bei Dg sung in New York, and Campanini has a benefit from it. A Doctor Brown-Sequard says he once successfully grafted a cat's tail into a rooster's comb. Pauline Lucca reappears at the Academy Of Music, New York, this week, in Auber's Fra Diavolo. The late Judge J. W. Edmonds, of New York, left his entire estate, valued at ?500,000, to his daughter. New York is going to pnjss a bill making the payment of fares in horse cars dependent topon eeats furnished. Michigan has 3,300 miles of completed railroad AH but four of the roads are supplied with air brakes. A. T. Stewart has fixed the price for board at his Grand Union Hotel, at Saratoga, at 1 3 a day for the coming season.' Josh Billing's queer spoiling brings him in $20,000 per annum. There are some people who don'; get pay for bad spelling. President Grants prospective son-in-law, Sartoris, is said to hare $20,000 credited somewhere as belonging to him. George Ripley, the reviewer of the Tribune, is the one man engaged in literature all his life who has never published a book. Prince Arthur was initiated as a Free Maon on the 24th ultimo., by his brother, the Prince of Wales, the worshipful master of the lodge. The London Echo says: Mr. Ralph Waldo Emerson has consented to be nominated for the office of lord rector ot the university ol Glasgow. Margarine is pronounced by the manufacturers better butter than the other kind. Still, we prefer the udder kind. Richmond Enquirer. Croton lake has been stocked with a supply of salmon trout. Fifty thousand of the same species has also been deposited in Oneida lak New York. Mr. Henry Taylor, an English writer, is preparing a new biography of Lord Byron, bringing fresh and authentic evidence th Lear on the subject of Mrs. Stowe'a scandal. - Mr?. Olive Logan Sikes remarks that America doesn't suit her psychological tastes, and that she has no desire to see it any more. That makes It bad for America. A lady remarked,',The climate of America don't agree with me, and I wish Columbus bad never discovered the place, anyhow. I might have been born somewhere else, and njoyed myself. ' Mr. William Miner has just finished a portrait medallion of President Woolsey, which is to bi presented to Yale College by William M. Evarts and a few others of the Hew York alumni. - Bavard Taylor is in Europe and he writes back advising Americans not to think of coming to Europe, expecting to live cheaper there than here. As it anybody evor went to Em rope for such a reason. Another'American girl makes a diplomatic wedding, the daughter of Frederick Howland, an old New York merchant, who is shortly to be married to General Benavides, Mexican minister to Germany. Mr, Jefferson Davis has arrived In Paris and is staying with CoL Dudley A. Mann, 51 üue da Luxembourg. Mr. Davis, who has
gone to Europe for his health, will remain on tha continent. That is as good as his
epitaph. MDont nrevmricate, sir,' thundered Cclnmbian iudee to a witness from the mines. " Can't help it, judge," answered the miner, " ever since I got a kick from a mule, that knocked my teeth out, I prevaricate a good deal." Governor Ames, of Mississippi, has gained a good deal of popularity by dispensing with wine at his recent reception, thus freeing the state from the disgraceful drunkennews which on many former occasions has stained such gatherings. PRO PrfETIC VOICES. SENATOR SUMNER'S BOOK. M050ORAPH OF AHT1QUK ALLCSIOHS TO AMERICA A QÜAIST VOLUME. Three columns of the Springfield Republican are devoted to a review of, and extracts from.the forthcoming work of Senator Sumner entitled, "Prophetic Voices Concerning Americans part of which is here given: Considering the discovery and colonization of America as the greatest events of secu!ar history, Mr. Sumner has here collected many passages from ancient and comparatively recent writers, foretelling, more or less distiuctly, the greatness to which this continent would attain. He begins With the passages in Seneca's Tragedy of Medea, ending Ultima Thüle; and comes down bywayof Strabo,Pulci,Chapmau. Dravton. DanieI.Milton.iX)wiey, etc., to Turgot, the French statesman, Horace Walpole, the English wit, our own jonn Aaams, the later writers; the whole work showing an enthusiasm for his native land, and an extent of rare reading, which is very agreeable in a public character like Sumner. Seneca's verses, be says, "are vgue ana loftv. rather than specific;" but Bacon, alter setting them forth, aaysof them: "A prophecy of the discovery of America;" ana we nave them here in the translation of Archbishop Whatelv: "There shall come a time In later ages, when ocean shall relax his chains and a vast continent appear, ana a puoi Bnaii una new worlds, and Thüle shall be no more earth's bound." Fox wrote to Gilbert Wake field : "That prophecy in Seneca's 'Medea' is very curious, indeed:" and Irving says of it: "Wonderfully opposite-, 'and shows, at least. how nearly the warm imagination or a poet mav approach to prophecy. The predictions of the ancient oracle were rarely so unequi vocal." T he verses were adopted by Irving as a motto on the title-page of his "Life of Columbus." Columbus himself had read this passage in Seneca, as Mr. Sum ner shows. and on a later pace do turns asiae wnne quoting old Judge Sewall's prophecy in 1727, to cite a passage from rsicnoias r uuer in regara to the right of Columbus to give his name to Amer ica, a land which Fuller says was first peo pled "by the posterity of our great-grand father J arhetn. though he will not be very strict with us as to the particular brauch of that wide family." lie adds, "which every where they call America; truly ana aeservedly they should saj rather Columbina, from the magnanimous hero. CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS, the Genoese, first explorer, and plainly di vinely appointed discoverer of these lands." Fancy the United States of Columbira! Judze Sewall himself, the ancestor of Miss Alcott and many other excellent people, had high expectations of Bos ton and its environs that is, the res ot New England; fancying it was to be, not the Athens of America, but the .New jeru salem itself. Fuller, writing a little later, was perhaps moved by Herbert when he said: " I am confident that America, though the youngest sister of the four, is now grown inarriagable, and daily nopes to get Christ to her husband by the preaching of the gos pel." In a dinereni vein a -contemporary poet, the favorite of Charles I., Thomas Carew. in a mask penormea dv tne monarcn and his courtiers at Whitehall, February 18, 1633, made sport of New England, saying that it bad " purged more virulent humors from the body politic than gaiacum and the West Indian drugs nave from the natural bodies of this kingdom." But these words, uttered at the English court, were praised. Then came answering voices from the colo nies. K9verena William JMorrlll, ot the established church, a settler ol 1623, said of New England, in a Latin poem translated by himself: X crranHphllfi to earth a n.tradlAA 1 horn. Well Umbel, well nerved, fair, sweet, yet for lorn. Mr. Sumner also quotes John Adams in regard to a couplet as good as Herbert's, but having the air of antithesis which Dryden and Pope delighted in; so that it doubt less belongs to the eighteenth century, though the old statesmen give it a more an cient and fabulous history, reminding one of the "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God" epigram, which Jefferson insisted was inscribed on a cannon at Jamacia, in honor of Bradshaw the rezicide. It was Bishop Berkeley, however, who threw this belief about the rising glory of the west into its most proverbial form of expression; and. before quoting it, Mr. Sumner digresses into a charming account of Berkeley, which closes in these words: It was while occupied with his plan of a college, especially as a nursery lor the colonial churches, shortly before sailing for America, that the great future was revealed to him, and he wrote the famous poem, the only one found among his works, entitled "Verses on the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in America." The date may be fixed at 1726. Such a poem was an historic event. I give the first and last stanzas: w The Mute, disgusted at an age and clime Barren of every glorious theme, In distant lands now waits a better time, Producing subjects worthy fame. Westward the course of empire takes its way; The first four acts already past. A fifth hall close the drama with the day; Time' noblest otlsprlug la the lat." It is difficult to exaggerate THE VALUE OP THKSK VERSES, which have been so often quoted as to become a commonplace of literature and politics. There is nothing from any oracle, there is very little from any prophecy, which can compare with them. Not ess remarkable, however, because more in detail, is tbe prediction of D'Argenson, the French idealist, in 1745: "Another great event to arrive upon the round earth is this: The English have in Northern Amerca domains great, strong, rich, well reguated. There are in New England a parlia ment, govenors, troop, white Inhabitant n abuudance, riches aad mariners, which is worse. I say that, some bright morning. these dominations can separate from Ensland, rise and ereet themselves into an in dependent republic. Mr. Sumner also quotes at some leDgth from Turcot, the great French statesman of our revolutionary period, whom he describes and praises lor his wisdom and benevolence. A more entertaining writer than Turcot was llonea alpole, who H not generally esteemed ss prophetic, but who had a worldwise divination about political affiirs. Concerning him Mr. Sumner says: Most unlike Turgot in character, but with something of the same spirit of prophecy, and associated in time, was Iloraoo-Walpole, youngest son of England's remarkable prime minister, Sir Robert Walpole. With the former, life was serious always, and human improvement the perpetual passion ; with the latter there was a constant desire for amusement, and the world was little more than a curious gimcrack.
WHEN TE OAKU AWA, JAMIE. When ye gang awa, Jamie, r'sr across the sea, laddie ; When ye gang to German le, ' What will ye send to me, laddie T 111 send ye a bran new gown, Jeanle, ' The bra west In the town, lassie: And it shall be o silk and gowd, W 1 Valenciennes set round, lassie. That's nae girt ava, Jamie, Wik: and gowd and a', laddie. There's nae gown In a' tbe land I'd like, when ye 're awa, laddie. When I come back cgfcin, Jeanie, Frae a foreign land, laasle, - Ill bilng wl me a Uallant gay, To be your aln gude man, lassie. Be my gudeman yoursel', Jamie, Marry me yoursel', laddie. And tak.' me o wer to Germanic, Wl you at name to dwell, laddie. I denna ken how that wad do, Jeanle, I dinna aee bow that can be, lassie. For I've a wife and balrnles three. And I'm no sure how ye'd agree, lassie. Te shoald hae telt me that in time, Jamie, Ye should hae telt nie that lang sy ne,laddie, For had I keut o' ) our lause heart. You'd ne'er had gotten mine, 1 vidie. Your een like a spell, Jeanle, Mair sweet than I can tell, lassie, That lika day bewltdaed me lae, I could nae help mysel, lassie. Gae back to your wift and harae Jamie, üze back to your balrnles thrte, laddie, And I will pray they ne'er may thole A broken heart like me, laddie. Dry that tearful e, Jeanle, Grieve nae malr for me, lassie, I've neither wife nor bairnies three, And I'll wed nane but thee, lassie, Think weel for fear ye rue, Jamie, Ye'll no get aln more true, laddie. But I have neither gowd nor lands, 'To be a match for you, laddie. Blair in Athol'a mine, Jeanle, Fair Dunkeld la mioe. latusie, SalntJohnstoan's bow r.and Hunting tow'r, And a' that's mine is thine, lassie.
HEW "LEGEND OF THE FORGET-ME-NOT. When Psyche lost her Lord, the Lord of Love, Weeping alone she wandered, Listlesa by well-known Held and grove, And on her lost Love pondered. Lastly by Lethe's stream her footsteps strayed : And "Oh !" she said, in sighing. "That I might dip, and my past life be made Like dreams wiin uayugut dying 1" The big tears from her blue eyes raining down Feu on earth s pity!"" n : Sudden there sprang Jbno&g tie ledg is brown rune aa ner eyea a iw And o'er her head, soft rustling sweet and low, ai tnongn some uiru swing cuttereq. In those loved tonet whose loss was ail her woe. "Forget-me-not !" was ottered. No more ; no sight, no touch ; these words alone : And "Ah !" she cried, "foreet thee? Nay, but half Love in our glad lire was known: ilali l)ve is to regret thee. Forget thee? Nay, these flowers my tears begot Shall be to me a token Of Love: they shall be called Forget-me-not, rue name to cneer me spoken. . Bo well, sweet rlvei-flowers, we welcome you, r-arwi wiin iuiui aauaess ceniing B-rn of the tears from Fsyche's eyes of blue, For her lost Love lamenting. WHAT WE SHALL EAT. TIIE IDEAL COOKS AND THEIR SELECTIONS YANKEE STEWS AT A DISCOUNT ODORS AND FLAVORS AS APPETIZERS. Mis. WalterC. Lyman, of New York, has just told us how to select and prepare our food, and she also gave expression to this refreshing prophecy: The ideal cook will pre fer wild animals to stalled, because their meat is more digestible; he will seldom prepare tor taoie salted meat, Dec a use it lacks poros ity; he will laugh at fried steak and call it vulgar because all the juice and much of the flavor will have exuded; be will forbid veal for the same reason that he would throw away unripe fruit, and discourage the use of iamb tor anologous reasons. If wild hogs could be obtained he would occasionally grace me table with, pork; but because swine have been so long domestica ted they have become scrofulous, and therefore unfit for food; he will never have Irish or Yankee stews,, because cosmopolitan living among vegetables cooked together produces discord in toe stomach, if ne served a refined family he would prepare food artistically, and select with reference to Its odors and flavors, because a pleased eye and agreeable nasal sensations are appeti zers; if his masler were a student he would give mm an allowance ot nsn perhaps once a day, and oysters ad infinitum, because ova ters and fish as brain-builders stand first: if his mistress thought little h6thould give few oysters, because her jrain not being ex hausted, an excess ot phosphoric stimulus would have an effect upon her similar to that or alcohol on a hale, robust man. THE CHICAGO HERETIC, THE CASE AGAINST PROF. SWING PRESENTA TION OF THE AMENDED CHARGES. Chicago, April 21. In the Chicago Presbytery to-day, Dr. Patton presented his charges against Prof. Swing, amended as required by the report of the judiciary com mittee, submitted yesterday, the amend ments beingsimply a mora explicit statement of the alleged offenses. The amended report was then recommitted to the judiciary com mittee, wno arter making some verbal emend ations, submitted it again to the presbytery, and it was adopted, thus bringing the charges formally before the body. A copy oi tne cnargea wes men delivered to .Fro tea sor Swing, who was present, and Dr. Patton was, in accordance with tbe book ot disci pline, admonished of the duties and respon sibilitieM resting upon him in the matter. It was then ordered that citations for witnesses in the case should be issued by Friday next, and that the Presbytery meet one week from next Monday, to begin the trial. Professor Swing expressed himself as desirous of as speedy a trial as possible, as ne was entirety reauyrto meet tne cnarcea against mm. t . - DESTRUCTION OF A TOWN. ISHPEMINO, MICH., CONS O MED -LOSS OF 1150,000. Chicago, April 21 A destructive fir occurred in Isbpeming. Mich.. Sundnv night, originating in Samuel Price's store, on Main street, spreading north and south., makings clean-sweep of the block from Kirk wood's drug store, on the corner of Main and Division streets, to, and including, Anderson's Hall, It then reached across to Westside Btreet, destroying the entire block to Pearl Btreet. Thirty families are rendered homeless, and 25 business places burned. The loss will not fall short oi 150,000. Insurance 580,000. The only fire steamer in Negaunee, three miles distant, was sent, batiu fifteen minutes afier it left a Are broke out in Negaunee and the engine was recalled and on tho way back overturned and rendered useless. Six residences were destroyed in Negaunee, with a loss of from 115.000 to $20,000. Mrs. Matthews, wife of the hotel proprietor in Isbpeming died from excitement. Among the insurance companies suflering from the fire in Iebpemiuic are the following: Allemania, S3.81K); Continental, $1,500; North Missouri, $1,000. , The Springfield Republican warns the leaders of the dominant party of the pride that goeth before a fall, and alludes to the great strength and sudden fall of the English liberals, concluding thus : There is a les-1
son and a moral her for nnr rnnM;M
leaders and journalists. Their psrty 'is strong; but it is not strong enough to live upon its pMt, to indulge in corruption, to break its solemn pledges to tbe people, to trifle with public opinion, to mismanage tbe public busines, to abandon the principles and alienate the elements from which its strength was originally derived. It is not strong enough to affront the morality and common sense of tbe country. It is not strong enough to get alosg without votes. In fine, Samson unshorn, jaw-bone in hand, beating down the Philistines, isaverydif' terent person from Samson prone in the lap of Delilah, and all unconscious of tbe wlftlyplying scissors.,, J Massachusetts might object to being mads to suffer for the general good in the manner ol which the Detroit Free Press peaks: It has been suggested that the beet and earlU est way for the republican party to get rido! Butter is to give him whatever he may ask, Instead of leering at and opposing him at first and finally acceding to his requests. Thus many congressmen think the party would be relieved ot one of the worst thorns in its side In congress if Butler were chosen governor rt MuuiMinuiia h k .nnku rcans. He cannot ruin the state, thev mt. but he can do much toward ruining the party while he is in congress, whereas in the gubernatorial chair of Massachusetts he would be comparatively out of mischief.' VrOTICEOF ADMIMSTK iriOX. -i.v Notice is hereby iven that the undersigned bv the t'lrrk rf tlm i naa oeen appoint Circuit Courtof Marlon county, ntt or Indiana, administrator a the estate or Wilson C Hartsock, late of Marlon count v, deceased. Said estate is supposed to ba solvent." HAMUKLCOttr, Administrator. CARBOLIC SALVE. TUB. MOST POWIBFDL HBAUSfd AGEST EVER DISCOVERED. tne wonderful relerlty with which this eomumauon oi isrhoiio Acid with other soothing and Curative Emollents HE A LA THE MOST -TIRVLE5T SORES AND CLCERS is something akin to the marvelous. It Is with pride that the Proprietors call attento the gratifying fact that Physiciani give it tha highwt mead cf praise, and use It and prescribe it in their practice. POINTS TO BE BORNE IN MIND. CASB0LI0 8ALVE positively cures the went iwei. CARBOLIC 8ALVE instantly allays th pain cl birn . CARBOLIC SALVE cures all cutaneous erruptloas. CARBOLIC SALVE removes pimples and blotches. AEBOLIC SALVE will enre o:ts and bruit tt. iaroollc fealve rank at the head of all Halves, Ointments or other Healing Compounds, and lies acnieveu a greater reputation and has a larger m'o mau iiiy oiutr similar preparation ol con temporaneous Invention. Sold everywhere. Price 25 cents. JOHN F. HENRY, CURRX CO, Proprietors. w auu w wiitc Xtttt'f ntW 1 Ulk, ALI. SIZES AXI PRICES, from 813.00 TO 875.00. WARRANTED TO BE THE BUST IMPROVE ANI BEST OPER ATING WOOD OOKI.VGSTOVE IJT THE WORLD. FOB SALE BY FIRST-CLASH DEALERS EVERY-WHERE. TO TIIK LAD I ICS. a page Doos, containing answers to ques tions of great Importance, sent free for two stamps. Address Mrs. H. Metzger , Ilan over.Pa FEVER AHD Aöüiü GÜKKD UX which combines all the alkaloid of the Cinchorj Barks, and in a eilectu.il a remedy as the Sulphaö of Quinine, while 't id much cheaper and mor palatable. ySend stamp for descriptive clrcula rith formula) for usinj the CluchoQuniue, an: Testimonials froa Physicians all over tha conntr Prepared by BILLINGS, CLAPP & CO., Chemist. Successors to Jas. K. XichoU & Co., Boston, Mass. , Represented in New York by S. II. Austin, at Oha F. Henry's, No. S College Place. ßJEDIOAI SPECIALTIES! Twenty-five Tears Experience. MEDICAL OFFICE OF OR. ROS No. 38 West Market street, oae North of Bates House. square OFFICE HOOra 8 A.x.to r. y, and C to F. x. Bondaya, 1 to 4 r. u. Dr. Bom, the great sepeciallBt, devotes his at tention exclusively to the treatment of Chronic and Long Standing Maladies. Dr. Rose's sncoets in the treatment ol ail Throat and - Lnng complaints, Pneumonia, Asthma, Bronchitis, Cos snmption, etc., et?., is unprecedented. NASAL CATABKH sneedilvand Dermanentlv eared. Kapid relief afforded In DvsneDsia. dis eases of theLJver and affections of the blooc, Nervous Debility, Female Complaints of every character receive especial care, and treated with the most pleaainK results. In performing aoeedv cures of fiivate Diseases or complaints of the Uenltal and Urinary Organs, Dr. Rose's remedies NiviK fail. Kadical cures guaranteed without loas of time or change of diet. - l&ose will be pleased to furnish Inquir ers the most convincing proofs of bis marveluu sncoess. Private emsultation rooms connected withotace. Charges in accordance with elrcumtanci8 of patient. Conscltatioj Fkkk. Addreei au eommccicauoris to Ilt. r. W. RUSK, Patent Box 11. IndlanaDolis, ind. JOVKIiS New edition. 250 prices illustrated. Model Love Letters Art of zaininz love and rrcarrvinir who and when you pl-a-e How to be handsome Cures for huudredü of diseases. Alm many new Becrets, arts mj-sterlcs, monejr-nisk-ln methodß. An Price only 10 cents. Adlre&i UjJiosi PCBLismso Co., Newark, N. J. Fair bank's Standard Scale Of all kinds, at maonractorett prices. Also, Warehouse Track. WM. P. GALLUP, Agent tor Rtate of Indiana and Oer CraJ Illinois, 43 and 46 North Tei nasses stret, iualaaaodr( la dlana.
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94 EAST GEORnTA ;TPrrT rx, . . .
, Agent for Henry Distcn g C3lei rated r.. SPECIAL ATTENTION ADVB ftTISEMBNTO. THREE SCHOOLTEACHERS WANTED a cuuniyor the Fprlng and Bn aimer 130 per month. Hend for circular jrlvingln particulars. ZElULZIt A McCÜKl)Y7 - '"ineinr.atl.Ohio. WILD LIFE FAB WENT. AGENTS WANTED everywhere for this new and beautifully illustrated Book of the Author's 'A) years' life sd adrentares union g tbe Indians, in the Mexican Warn, ban ting wild aomala, 4c, 4e. Thrilllngly Interentiug, aod wiling faster than anything ever before known. send for Illustrated circular and liberal terms. F. A. Hntchlnson Co., Cincinnati. Ohio. i i THE 8I0RTF8T EOUTF. TO FORI US E ! $450.000 GIVEN AWAY! $100,000 FOR ON LY $2.80! A GRAND LEGAL GIFT CONCERT In aid of a Juvenil He form School at ' LeavenwortU, Kan sun. DRAWING APRIL 30, 1874. One Prise guaranteed in every package of 11 Tickets. Single Ticket, 92.50; b tor f 12; 11 for -"). Hut few tickets left; and, as our sales are rapid, purchasers should order at once. Av money arriving too late will be retinae 1. Good, reliable Agents wanted everywhere. For full particulars, address SIMON ABELES, y ... ... 11. .LLIMIWI 'T FLO 7Wr E H 0 C. L. aLLTX offers his surplus stock of CHOICE MIXED GLADIOLAS at wholesale for 3 per 100, S20 per I.OOn. Sent by '. express upon receipt 01 price, ieua tor catalogue. Aiidress C AM.KV.Qnfn. ".V. (MTl (f r EWe gfS . 0 i-: M ,i The Jong-continced suit of the ttFLjUECE HEWINO MA CHINK CO. ti agttinst tne Mrger wheeler & i;son jv tl and Urover & Baker Co.V, involving overW M $i!60 OOO. " J-J Is finally decided by the v ; Supreme Court of the United States frl . In favor nfthe K IjOHKNI'R. which a!one has i-i M broken the monopoly of hih prices. H '.5 C-5 M THE NEW FLORENCE yis the only machine that sews backward" W and forward. rr t rlpht and left- ' 0 Bl VtIV llj'l "I 'It. p . f-5Soi.i)K(HCfH Oxi.t. Kp?nL Terms to v. . Klmnli.1 I1iiiiiru.t Ilo4.t CLUlfcJ AND DEALEItS. Arvrll.lS74. Florence. Mam. ?' THE LAST NEW HOOK OPT. The subject is all important , yet a rrnzzllni one. It replenishes the uovernment treasury and Impoverishes the people: makes the rich poor and the poor nch ; makes fools of wiee men ; exnausis lue wimom orieKiaiaiion:maaes men run mad and women leel Bad. The crusade has begn n ; on to victory. Men or women wanted to cauvusi verr town. Addreaa HE.NUY HOWE, Cincinnati, O. This Sarin g Machine givft the bfU wtirfaetivn to the urr, m paid for niort reaiMy, and i the bett 0 all to n il Jfthere is no "Domettic" agent in your Uavh, ayply to DOMESTIC S. M. CO., X. V. liAUiKWfiEMD far elegant Fasbfon Boob. PORTABLE SODA FOUNTAINS. WO, 150, I7S AND 1100. GOOD, DURABLE AND C1IKAP. SHIPPED READY FOB TJSK. Manufactured by J. W. Chapman & Co., Madison Ind. 9-Send for a Catalogue. ti TSYCHOMANCY, OR SOUL CHARMIMJ." i I How either sex may fascinate and gain the love and affections of any person they cboeee. instantlv. This simple mental acquuement all can possess, free, by mail, for 23 cents; together with a Marriage Uulde, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams Hints to Ladies. A qneer dook. iw.hw soiu. Aadress T. WILLIAM Jt CO., Pubs., Philade.phia tUACKS. A victim of earlv Indiscretion, causing nerv ous debility, premature decay, Ac, having tried In vain every advenisea remeay, nas aiscovereo a simple meins of self-cure, which he will send free to his fellow sufferers. Address J. K. Beeves, TU N assau street. N ew 1 ork. N O T I C K Notice is hereby given that Ihe undersigned have petloned the Common Council of Indianapolis, uray ice that an order be pawed lor the vacation of so much of the first alley tomb of Marvtand street, running east and west from Tennessee street to Illinois street, as lies wes'. o tbe first alley east of Tennessee street, rnnnisgnorth and south from Maryland street to tieor gia street, and your petitioners will ever pray ; and that said petition will b taken up for action on the 11th day of May, 1871, or at so ne subsequent meeting to be held bv the 'Yrrimon Council. SlJSTEIW Or' I'KOVlfcENCE. . Indianapolis, April 20, 187L IOWA m mm um, MILLIONS OF ACRES or THE BEST LAND IN TIIE "WEST FOE SALE BY THE Burlington 4 Missouri River Railrd Co, On Ten Years' Credit, at 6 Ptr Cent. Interest. No pjvyment required on principal till FIFTH venr, and then only u.Mi.vc.intacn year nntlinaid. Tho Noil is rich and ecsilj Culti vated: a'llmnte watm: Neawoua lorjg; Taxe I low, nd Kdnralion Tr. Large reductions ou Fare and Freights to buyers and tiielr families. BUT THIS TEAR, And take advantage of the Premium oral per ecnt, for cultivation, offered only to purchasers during 1874. For Circulars containing full particulars, and Map Of country, send to GEO. S. HARRIS, Land Commissioner, Buxliagton, Iowa.
NBf VBftTISEMBNTa. J KD Urapolis
BUY J. & P. COATS' BLACK .THREAD FOR YOUR MACHIKE.
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A D A. MBS r:.zjOQ 9 CTsnutsi Ind. J V.2C3 Stwi, of which be now has a large stock. flTVTTlff TIMOTHY, MILLET, HUKQAEIAH KesUaeky Bin Grs, FIELD, GARDEN AND FLOWER SEED. at wholesale and hotall. Afrnta wanted for I. TU ed. norcK, ORESN OO, W West Washington street, IaCianapolfc GENERAL -AGENTS ' " - I I I A. TO BlSIWEftS MEXt A good advertisement in a wideiv pint.ii rr.r"j vkr!' best Of all. Wlble aalET "5 . vug fTUV oLr.rf,er!S nd J" never weary ; who goes after busiatsa early , and late: wh accosts the merchant in bis store, tbe Bcholar la hlsstndy, the lawyer in bis office, the lady at her breakfast table; who can be In a thousand places at once, and speak to thousands of people every week, politely and agreeably, saying toeach one the best thing in the very best manner. A good advertisement injures a buKinessconne. lion on the most PEHMAKENT and INDKT PENDENT basis, and. Is. In a erta'n eree. a GUARANTEE to the CUHTOULIlof lair and : moderat prices. Experience ha shown that the lealer, whose wares have obtained a pubOs S celebrity, Is not only enabled to seit, but is forced to sen, at reaaonaoie rates, ana lu au cawi to furnish as good an article as represented A dealer can mute no better Investment than la 1ST the advertising columns of a popular nwrpaIer. A good ad vert tit men t In a widely circu lated newspaper is ihe ciy btct eaieaiu . Gr
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