Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 25, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1876 — Page 2
I HK' INPIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY. APELL 5, 1876.
; WEDNESDAY, ; APRIL. 5.
Editorial Inklings A eon of the S. F. is sealed to a good po rtion as it were. Long-winded is the verbal extinguisher Or Salt Lake City editors. Pedro, the emjreror ol Brazil, Is en voy CVefor this country. Dom Pedro. ' Mrs. Van Cott has enaicbed filty-six v rands from the buraiDg" at Troy, New .r.. 1 Chicago reporter, Just up from Joliet, ;o has credit at a bar, baa Been a ea serpent. Weeton claims to be a Jiterary man He la undoubtedly the author of many track. American papers a-e one by one setting down on Mrs. Guelph'a imperial aspira tlons. Judging from tie talk Oxford, (Eng land) university mufct turnout many floe cullers. Bilk is tfco name of a Turkish town. It was probably named in. honor of the Buitan. The obitmrles of LTambeltoniap, the famous stallion, excite the envy of several statesmen. Joseph O. Lamb, a Connecticut politi cian, recently committed the sheep'sh act oi euicide. St. Lou '.3 children are taught to reply to the qnfsUon, Who created all things? Uapt. Jiiiiei u. baa?. The congressional throat rot ia attributed to poor drainage the drainage of glasses filled witn poor rotgut. Mr. Fawcett proposes to act as the top cock to prevent Vick's assuming the title oi .impress ci India. Robeson will require the whole towing power ol his junketing yacht to keep him on me Drtakersjusi anead. If the Centennial had been held at Chicago there would have been no question as to lodging accommodations. "As thick as leaves in Vallambrosa" can be improved tfn. For Instance, as thick as thlevcs In Washington. Cocgrecs hes been infringing Peny Davi&N mediclue patent by proving itself an cuicaciou3 ' Payne Killer." The prospect of securing that peanut trade cm not console Cincinnati for the loss oi the bacd at Newport Barrackf. At a recent batquet given to Orth al Vienna, buttermilk was barred and did not appear on the bill ol fare. Those who go to the Big Horn country will be likely to emerge from tfce little end of that cornate landsuap?. Mr. Child?, in order to make more loom for his poems daring the Centennial show, has added four columns to the Ledger. The enforcement acta have been declared unconstitutional: "Wave Morton all vour red shirts, wave, And charge with all year Belknapsy." The Newfoundland seal fishery promi -es badly. That's good Dews for our friend in Alaska. We have as much local pride as any bod 7. General W. H. H. Terrell to Morton after tue Cincinnati convention: "Never ehake your gory ebirt at me, thou cans't cot eay I did it.' If the editor of the Toledo Blade could only be induced to add a whetstone to the outht of his desk, he might perhaps not leem so dull to his reader. The editor of the Chicago Journal re:ently got his family histoiy before the irorld withou-sppired egotism, by pufciahing an essay on mules. Dry goods others are advertising cream aa the fashionable color, as a device through which they hope to work off an overstock of sky-blue silk. Westminster Abbey holds eighteen kings end fourteen queens. That beats anything ever held ty the la'e American min's er to the Court of St. James. Morton's record ft r Sn.-rcer ran nrhaps b accounted fcr on the ground that J Bpem-er a the i a vector of the bsst " repatter" ite world ever beard of. B echer calU Plymouth Church Lis casket of jewels. He couldn't pawn the let for thirty cont, as they are in the rough. They need cct'.ing and polishing. Tho editor ol ibe Enquirer fcaj evidently called on the editor ot the Louisville Connr.erda!. as the latter states that the fbrour baa discovered "a mare's nest," All of the Morton movement in Ohio Is yet on deposit in the banks of this state and in the pockets and banc's of the Indiana Republican State Central Committee. The S Lou's Republican speaks of the aober thought of senators, evidently referring to the working of the senatorial intellect while waiting lor the matutinal cocktail. A union Ji3tlllery company has beon formed at Ptktn, 111. If there is not too much peekitt' on the part of the treasury officials, dividends are among the poaibilitles. A Chicago man baa invented a smoke consumer, but so few chimneys are In use In that city, that he la likely to starve tj leatb, although his invention is a good ne. Illinois Is to send two tons of geological Pehmens to the Centennial. The Chicago Intsr-Ocean efflce will be represented In the collection by several fossils of prehistoric men. Commercial papers report a "genet al deprns'on la the wool business." Morton evidently isn't attending to this branch o' trade as closely as formerly, or be is losing his grip. The Richmond Ecquirer wants a gathering of American humorists at the Centennial, and mentions several who might, with perfect propriety, send their shears as proxies. We have seen no announcement of new editorial talent employed on the CourierJournal, and yet a late issue of that paper editorially speaks of "the customs of good aockty." Lippincott, the husband of Grace Greenwood, has been bounce J from bis position as chief clerk of the land office for tortuous transactions of some character net yet made public An exchange aays that Shaks petrels being translated into Polish. It is the general belief that Shakspeare'a writings, aa
they 'came ;ro in his peo, show more polish tt.iu those of any writer who ever lived. The Chicago Tribune hop6s that Dsn Ft-dro and wife won't visit Chicago. He certainly won't if he ia properly posted in regard to the probabilities of losing his parse and Jewelry entailed by a visit to
that city. A New York paper inquire, "What is humor?" The reputation ol Its posses sion has been acquired by the paper In question through tue medium of a talented pair of sheers aud 9 defective memory in regard to credits. Kite Field thinks that every American onght to blush over the non completion of the Washington monument. The nose of every American in Washington is in ctronic state of blush. Who knows but tht its on that account? Mr. Robert Buchanan has grasped Walt Whitman by the cruffof the neck and is a'temptirg to plant him upon a poetic pedestal by praising his "Leaves of Grass." Bab! a Kansas grasshopper would starve on such diet. Who's Buchanan any bow? An exchange says "the fashion of load ing the skirts with shot to keep them down must have originated with some bullet beaded mac." The editor of that paper must be an ass to think that an invention ot this kind ever met the approval of any man. The editor of the Milwaukee Sentinel so exhausts himself by bis professional labor that he rarely ever goes home ot a morn loe, bat when the paper has gone tD prets "he wraps tke mantle of his era about hiuo and lies dewn to pleasait dreams" upen his sanctum floor. The Chicago Inter-Ocean propounds the following' conundrum: "There is a prcsp ct that the army headquarters will soon be removed to Washington. And what will St. Louis do then?" This is easy. St. Lou's will utilize every business room iu town as a printing office to supply the demand tor blank mortgages In Chicago. Give us a hard One. A New York paper publishes what it calls proof that all first class jackasses are virtf. In TarnaalAm TvnA AK1 kt if a and those who know you will never attempt to impeach your verbal evidence Oil this point. The Philadelphia Press is editorially treating the subject of European finance at great length. Forney's financial ability is beyond question great. But what he did w.th thai $25.000 is ot more general interest to the average American reader than the shift of the sultan and khedive to raise the wind. The Chicago Tribune apologizes lor hav ing inadvertently given circulation to one of EU Perkins's lies. This apology is entirely unnecessary, provided the fiction was under or over the signature of the al leged humorist, a? it is generally under8 toed that he is outside of an asylum, for the weak-minded merely on euflarance. The St. Louis Times says that the fol lowing is the most prominent point of a good newspaper man: "Abrain aa flexible and elastie as steel." The party who preside over the "Odd Notes" column of the Times must be a first clas journalist, as h s brains are all in his scissors, which were doubtless warranted fcteei PEN POINTS. Where, oh, where ia Binary Purple! The hides of March showed considerable of a fleece of snow this year. Ob, that some dynamite fiend could be tiidncbd to operate on our s'ate house! The "Beautiful Blonde" is said to watch the correspoudence submitted to his keep ing much more closely than did his predecessors. Doctor Withrow succeeds better in his description ot striped hose, than in his trans'atiors of Latin. Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who never to himself bath said That Saratoga beats home. If so he ought to report a week on the J, a real. Capt. Begar Jus will accelerate the flight of p'geons from the Exposition grounds on the 13 tu inst. W6 have frequently seen D. S. A. in the Cincinnati Gazette. It probably stands tor "Dull, Silly A?s. If Lee had only attached that wire c'o'.bes line it would probably have pulled the republican through. The Iliff brothers have got out of the wilier sees, a fact which.will give pleasure to their friends, who are in number as the leaves of the forest. It other people weie as industrious in looking up th6ir stolen jokes as Ell Perkins is, hia stolen carpet-baj,he would yery soon be in literary limbo. Frank Matthews, of this city, is engaged In the composition ot aa cpera, which he will submit to the Judgment of Offenbach during his visit to Philadelphia. Thtra is a man in this town who feels aggrieved because the superintendent of the insane asylum did not Interview his hat before advertising for brick. The stock of Wallace Foster is simply stored at Stoat's, awaiting the sale which is to be made In bulk. An item In yesterday' paper might convey a different Impression. A lunatic connected with a weekly paper of this city is a roonomaniao on the subject of watch keys, lie carries a fine collection, and constantly f.rces them upon his iriends. Dr. Peck, of the Surgical Institute, recently made a new cheek for a little girl to replace the original, destroyed by a reckless use of mercurial p3iso. What reporter furnished the material? 1 It is not only possible but highly proba-i ble that in a few years the English language; butchered as it ia, will be com4 plecely metamorphosed Into a new tongue combining all the elements of slang. I Ben D. Ilouse acknowledges that be owes his life to George C. Harding, and, having bad It appraised, a nickel awaits bis (Harding'.) order at the Rothschilds bank ln house in Berlin, provider! Bis matck will indorse. A sub-bead In the Herald on the Charley Ross busluess says that "truth is stranger tht n fiction." It would undoubtedly excite more surprise among the readers of tbat sheet than a chapter from Gullivei'4 Travels. I llacg out your Ulsters on the outer wall, the cry Is, spring h4 come. (If It rains or snows to-day, we can only plead'that
W4 have been reading Eli Perkint, which oogbt to let us out on the charge of any
cotceivaoie idiocy.j " The editor of the Herald rai seen wendiDg his way homeward vaeterday with two loaves of bread under bis arm, while the terminal digits of the other grasped a string oi blue birds, we dine with him to 4 ay. Blue birds on toast. A municipal Horatius proposes the de mol.tion' of the bridge on Noble street, that elevated structure on whose planks so many have been made to feel, while taking lunar observation, that "there's nothing halt so sweet in lite as love's young aream." A late issue of the South Bend Herald contained an article headed "Hell's Har ves" This is a fraud on Indianapolis exhibitors, as it has been generally sup posed that the reaping match would not occur until August, and then that Terre Haute would lurnlsh the grain. The People says : The Sentinel's young man is endeavoring to imitate Snacks In pre pounding foolish question?. Hs wanted to know, in latt Thursday's pper, ltwe were to have a new gas company. As a contra conundrum what is the use of it as long as the People is published? When Miss Fannie Baane (who plays the white-headed dandy) remarks to Moser, the Jew, in "Euchre," that if she had a red head Bbe would go out and shoot herself, It ''brirgs down the house." Th's will be accounted for when it is known that Miss Beane's trasses are the deepest vermillion hue. The city editor of the Central Catholic has come to the front aa a writer on finance. He wants to know "what is the use of discussing whether agold dollar is better than a paper one." We submit tbat until his salary has been increased up to the point from which he Btarts, that modesty in money matters would become him. The Herald perpetrates a Charley Ross sell. If it Bells the paper, all right. That's all there is to it. This is the way we have for getting even, because we were not suaait enough to steal a paper Friday night. Byron wrote: ''For time at last sets all things even, And if we do but watch the hour. There never yet waft human power, . Which could evade, if unforgiven, The patient search and vigil long, ' O: him who treasures up a wrong !' An! ha! The Herald's critic at the Metropolitan, having been caught within Simons's hospitable gates without a nickel, thus in veighs against the vanities of life. (This is what he c Iis getting even): It seems to be the height of a small boy's ambition to part his hair in the middle, attend the theater go out between acts, and come back wiping his chin and munching a bunk of stale cheese or a wheel of bologna. By the powers! the Herald will no; be caught again. Those dogmatists who have howled over the doctrinal character of the Central Catholic, may find food for thought in an editorial in the last issue which commences as fellows: "A lesson from a Jew is a thine cot S3 bad for some of our ChnstUns in name." If those journalists who take pleasure in mentioning any infraction or the law on the part of a Hebrew, a rare occur rence, could be induced to read this article, they might, perhaps, absorb the principle of justice even against their wills. The Sentinel has been informed by a party who U3ed to be well acquainted with Pharaob, when he bulled the corn mnrktt against the progenitors of Joseph, that it? allualor s to Slnks's picture were incorrect. As the Sentinel is not acquain ed with any one besides the dependents of Jo. who figured prominently iu Egyptian history: it clings to the idea that it knew what it wa? talking about, and will leave it to either Jo. or Mrs. Pctlpnar, to be interprated through the Virginia avenue spook shop. "The People saye: Ben D. House and attiet Sinks now scintillate through the Sunday Sentinel. The good Bishop Is not allowed to writ9 a line for the Sunday Ipsue of cur neighbor. How can be recon cile with bis conscience the employment of these guileless young men, who risk their Immortal sou's' salvation in etriving to make an interesting Sunday pspar? tie bad better, by far, shoot the Sunday Sentinel." Mr. Reed probably kcewte lied In making this statement. If, however, he desires to practice on the Sentinel's art tar net be Is at liberty to tire away. rihe editor of the Sunday Sentinel may be a PagaD, but he will fetand a catechism ex amination, if Reed will agree to answer who was the first man and not reply Reed, CATCHING A TARTAR. A short time ago some London sharpers caught an undoubted Tartar. A well known detective officer was standing opposite Euston Station in the garb of a omntryman, when one of a gang of thieves who infeet the railway termini, uccoeted him and asked him to take a drink at a neighboring bar. The couple were joined by more of the thiers col leagues, professedly strangeis to each other, and as the bland young man Bhowed every disposition to be easily plucked, they treated him to a good lunch, plenty ot liquor, and the best cigars tbat the dramshop would afford. By-and-by rolls of bank notes and handful of coin were prcduced, and each exhibited unbounded confidence in b!s neighbor. The child-like stranger deplored his poverty. He had no notes or gold with him, but had plenty at the public house where he was lodging. Would his friend go there? Their hospi tality should be returned tenfold, for the landlord was an eld friend, and they might enjoy themselves on his premises the whole night long if they desired. The sharpers were 'delighted, but where was the hotel, and for whom should they .ask T "On! here's my card," said the supposed countryman, producing his warrant ticket "Detective, etc., etc., Scotland Yard.' The scene tbat followed can be better imagined than described. There was a general stampede, and the detective was left in the quiet possession of the cigar and whisky to wmcn his wouid-oe plunderers had so kindly entertained him. If we are to believe the Dublin corre spondent of the London Times, criminal law Is a dead letter in Ireland. He states that the Irish assizes have almost ended for the season, and in net one instance baa the crown obtained a conviction on a cap ital bärge, although a score ol lives have beon sacrificed through murder. He ascribes this sta'e of things partly to a spurious compassion on the part of the
AN ENRAGED EDITOR.
THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PISTOL. THB REMARKS OF MURRAY ON TBE TRIAL OF PALMER, AT SOUTH BEND. .C.T. Murray, editor of the South Bend Herald, and W. A. Palmer, a Justice of the peace for St. Joseph county, occupied rooms on opposite sides of a narrow hall way. They soon became acquainted with each Oi.be r's anTalrr. Murray had ia his employment a buxom but frail widow who attracted Pa'mer'sattentior, and they cecame altogether too intimate in a very soort vime to iuit tne ideas or propriety held by the neighboring occupants ot the buildiug. Murray warned Palmer' toquit nis aoeociauons with the woman first. privately, then by means of innuendoes in the columns of his paper, then by arti cles giving tue names of. the partus and their crimes. The scandal became the theme of all the gossip ot the city. Palmer's wife, mort'fiod by the disgrace brought on the family by his conduct and neglect, left him. This accumulation, of misfortunes so preyed upon Palmer's mind that be determined to be aveoged on Murray. He met his victim as be was ascending the stairway to his office and fired the deadly shot. Murray was uangerousiy dui not jsiauy wounded and has recovered and is now at work agaio. After firing, Palmer tried to ecape but wa3 soon captured, and In due tims was indicted and last week placed upon trial. He was found guiltv and sentenced totwoje8in the Northern Prison, the ugniest penalty mat can oe inflicted under the law. Mr. Murray thus savagely comments on the result of the trial in last Sunday morning's Issue of hla paper: THK FARCE IS ENDED. W. A. Palmer, a peace officer, on the 21a of November last, In cold blood, and with devilish and premeditated malice, made an assault upon the person of a citizen, with an attempt to commit murder. The man who did the deed was an officer of the law, sworn to observe if, and of all others, to protect it from violation. The citizen who was thus shot down by him was a newepiper ditor, equally intetested in the ooservance of the law as a citizen, as the publisher of a public journal . in duty bound to use such influence a3 he posss8S6d .for social purity and crder. - The man who committed the crime was admittedly vicious and corrupt, prostituting himself to the lowest vices, pandering to the brutal luste, using bis efficial position to promote concubinage and to encourage perjury and violations of the peace a man who lived a foul blot on the community, a disgrace to himself and a stench In the nottrils of bis friends. The man who published the newspaper be came cognizant of this, warned him pri vately ana puDticiy. and tuen ex do sod his doings. For this be was .HUNTED, CORNERED AND SHOT. Not in a street altercation, or In the beat ot fiist sight, but by cowardly and thought fully executed assassination. Nothing but the mcst fortunate combination of circumstances prevet ted death, and made the crime fail short of wanton murder. The assassin has just been tried by a jury ot nis peer." Atter a lanz and tedicus trial, in which five counsel and a newtpaper did what they could in hla defense be has just been found guilty and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. The principal piea was insanity, the meru statement ol which caused the jury to smile, the evidence of which mirie a court-room roar with laughter at its abs-irdity. It is not denied that be shot and Bhot to kill. It was not denied tbat Le brooded over and calculated the chances ot personal safety. It was not denied tbat what was said of him was in every resDact true. They claimed he was insane, and asked acquittal on that ground alone. The provocation, toe troth or falsity of the charges, the circumstances which led to the commission of the crime were ruled out. The ciurt ruled that provocation bad nothing to do with it, and tbat it didn't ma ter what made him do the deed the question was WHETHER HE WAS RESPONSIBLE OR NOT for bis actions at that Ume. What was then left to the jury? To find him guilty or not gullry from the standpoirt of re sponsibllity. But, 11 they were to find mm responsible how could they decide as to his punishment, having no question of provocation before them? The jury took the cas) and studied over it a night and day, and then found the criminal "guilty." ne was not inereiore, in their opinion. insane. There was nothing before them but ti bare articles published, ail evidence as to their I rath, the infamous character of the man as an individual and as a public officer, having been ruled out. They found him guilty of an attempt to murder. An at tempt to murder is valued at two years in tae garb of a convict. No wonder the r!soner laughed when it was announced, t was an agreeable surprise. It was mere wonderful than to have let him gone ecot tree, to gratify bis next "irreeistable impulse" to kill. What a melancholy Batire onjuitlce! How like a premium on murder! With wht deserved contempt must we be looked upou? Our government in the grasp of thieves, our cities gorged with vagabonds and murderers, our temples of justice polluted with open and shameful prostitution, oor trial by jury turned let j a miserable farce. And not a man dare raise bis voice in condemnation. lett the keen knife of the assassin or the swift bullet of the murderer find lodgment in his own care as? N BEAUTIFUL HAIR. HOW TO OBTAIN IT AND HOW BEST TO PRE SERVE IT. To get and retain beautiful hair you must attend to daily brushing it, occasionally washing it, and periodically trimming it, and striving at all times to keep the general health up to the average. Now as to brushing. The skin of the head, like that of every other part of the body, is constantly being renewed i eter nally, and these are to be removed by means of the body brush. But it is not bo ay to brush the hair properly as one might imagine. Few hair-dressers indeed, know very much about it. The proper time for tte operation, then, is the morning, just after yon have come out oi your Lata, provided you have not wetted the hair. Two kinds of brashes ought to be found on every lady's toilette table, a hard and a Ott. me former is firtt to be used, and used well, but not too roughly; it removes all dust, and acts like a tonic on the roots of . the hair, stimulating the whole capillary system to healthy action. Alterward use the soft brush this to give the gloss from which the morning sunshine will presently glint and gleam with a glory that no Macassar oil in the world could imitate. Whence comes this gloss? you ask. Why, from the sebaceous glands at the roots ot the hair, nature's own patent pomade, which the soft brush does but spread. Secondly, one word on washing the hair. This Is
necessary occasionally to thoroughly cleanse be tb bead and hair. Or.eor two precautions mcst b3 taken, however. Never use soap if yon can-avoid it; it you do
let ii De ice very miidtst and urperfurned: vuiu fKj-ciuea rair-cieaneicg Uuida, aud use win water filtered. -The yolks oi two pew laid ezga are much to be preferred to soap; they make a beactiful lather, od when the wasatng is- finished, and the hair thorougb y rinsed in the ,port rain witer, you. will find, when dry that the gloss will not be destroyed, which an alkali never tails to do. The first wtter must not be viy hot, only just warm, and the last perfectly cold. Dry with soft towels but do not rub till the skn is tenderand afterward brus.b. Be very careful always to have your brcsbes and combs perfectly clean and free from greate, and place othtr brosües on the table foi friends ol yours who happen to be Macatsa rites. . Pointing the hair regularly not only prevents it trom splitting at theend?, but randers each individual hair morehealtnv, lean attenuated iff may apply the term to a hair and, moreover, keeps up the growing procei, which otherwise might be blunted rr CDecked. Singeing the tips of the hilr has also a beneficial effect. It will be seen that I am noadvoratA for oils ard pomadf s. My advice. In ell casee. ii to ao wuauui tnem n you pjesibiv can, for by the'r clotgirjg nature atd overttimuUting properties tfuy olten caut-e ms uair io grow min and is H off sooner than it otherwise would. Ltt well alone. Oae word, in conclue-i r, about dyes Avoid them, if yoj be your own friend, Uair-dyeirg is very eatinfatt ry, as far as dGad hair is concerned, bnt on ihe living head i's perfect suosi is a chemical impossibility. As to bair restorers, those that are tot lmply Mai tiers, but der end upon the action ot thelight chemically a!triDg and cxidiz'Tg the application after it has been used. Their incautious use, 1 must add, is fraught with great danger. Harpers Bazaar. BLACK HILLS. Book written br -ne who has hppn thr Now ready. All aoout BlucK Hi'ls. Clold Min ing, llowio Get There, etc. Fall partiolars. 8eut by null for 50 cent?. Address It. T. UUTL'UlJiSOS, Indianapolls, Ind. JOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice is hereby given that the Dnderslirned bas b?en appointed by the clerk of the Ma rion civil c lrcuit ixmrt or Marion county, Indiana, administratrix or the es Ute of Christian Hwier. late of taid countv. deceased. Haid estate is supposed io b Solvent. v r.LHti.Mt a bWifcH, Administratrix. farh I, 1ST. Notice op adtjimstr tio. Notice is hereby elven that the Dndmisnnl has been appoinieu by the Marlon Civil Circuit Court of Marion county, Indiana, administrator of the estate of Orlando P. Wiles, la e of said county, deceased Said estate la supposed to ba solvent. w.u. wil.es, Adminlstra'or. March Sla, 18T6. TICK TO HEIRS Of PETITION TO NtLLRCAL KSTATi:. State of Indiana. Marlon county. Marion Clvli Clrcoit Court. Notice i hereby eiven that John McCloskey, administrator of the estate of Charles Diver, deceased, nas riled hi? petition to sell the real estate of the decedent, hta Drsonal belt g inMitlicieut to pay his debts, and tbat said petition will ba ntard at the next term of the Mai Ion Civil circuit Court of 'aid countv. Attest: AUSTIN H. BKOWN, Clerk, March 9. 187. M. C. C. C. Marlon county J A UlTC t AUKNTSf jrthe best aellYff I C U.lax Prize Pacta "e in tbe world. It contains lb sheets papr, li envelopes, golden pvu, ten ho der, pencil, paient yard rjeasare, aud a piece ot jaweiry. single packages with Hesaai "prize, postpaid, 2j cents; o packages f r $t. Thin package has been examined iy ine publishers or tbe Weekly oeutinrl and found as represented, worth me monev. Wafeben elvfn awav t 11 agent. Circulars fiee. BK1D fc .O.j 7t9 troaawRy.JN. i. LOSSING'GmWI WOKK. UW RFADVl r B A H1STC3Y THR UNITED STATES tafi' ihe i.ieeut um. Th o..i C&KTvhi.LiiiinQ au tmtnrnM autttor.or worthy to ba publirhed ia lolh Englinh and German. Oae larfe and profitably illiMtratrd, Jri low-priocd volume. Wie the coDtDUofftny oilirr. Splendidly illuttrmted acormnt ofwprmarh ln Grand Ctpnnlal Celebration. AC EN TS WANTED! Pat(rovio(iDlereateTeryvbera in tbe tkniUnf history of our min'rr : huee, rar rh.n. for Areata. rVnd mtonce fordiiiertpuoaandterma.toSCAMMELL&CO.i Cincinnati, O- ' 1 h rortiee Mod ttanip for partx-v h?v rlai-o.' m. C.F.WtDeateACo. ISun.N'.Y.Jan. limited, Do an rt-N.Y fA t t Nli'l ta. i bl hK lL.ialiMUi.ir iiu.ui.Un.. IUurutf-j. Sent free m .11 lr 1 poatare e-ampa. ddreaa J. 1U.TCUEB A CO Wlliamaburr,h, Kew Yoift S1IEKIF."S SALE. By vlrtne of a certified copv of a decree to me directed, lrom tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court of Marion county, Indian?, in a ctase wherein J he Capital City PI an inj? Mill Company is plainnuana jacod weil man et al. are defendant, requiring me to make the sum of one hundred and fifty-three dollars and fourteen cent, with Interest on said decree and cost, I win expose at public sale, to the highest bid der, on SATURDAY, the 22d day of April, A. D. iS(b, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. si and 4 o'clock p. M.of cald day, at thettoor of the CoQit Ilouse of Marion county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not excetdin? seven year?, of tbe following rel estate, to wn: Lot No. thirty (3T1 In Jo'in B. Stumnh's sub division as pvr P. B. 1. page 3"7 of tbe east half y) oi uuixvfc iio. n, idu iut ru. one Ii; oi nie J. A I. K. rf. Co. 's BubdlvlPlon of outlots forty three (43) and forty-four iU) In tbe city of In dianapolis, In Marion county, Indiana. If such rents and Drofltswill not sell for a sufficient Bum to satisfy said decree, interests and costs, I will, at tbe same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of aald real estate, or so mucn thereor as may oe suiflcieatto dischargj said decree, Interests and costs. Sa'd sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or aopraisement laws. ALBERT REI-SNER, Sheriff of Marlon county. March 28, A. D. 1870. Berxhameb, Att'y for Pl'ar. mar23-3t i.H9IIXlSl BATOR'S 8 ALE. Tbe undersigned will eil at public sale ou the premises of Jacob Springer, deceased, on studay, the 25th day of March, ls7ö, four Dorse, i wo rows, corn in criD, nay in barn, farming implement?, carpenter tools, etc., etc. Term of sale: Oa sums of 13 and under cash In hand on day of said, and on sums of over S3 a credit of twelve months will be given, with good freehold eecurity. j. j. snui u&u, Administrator. WALL STREET CABIOATUBES. A NEW BOOK, 43 pages, containing 11 en graved ill astral ions, with lnformailoa for block speculators; price, cloth covers, 10 cants, paner covers tree, by man. X u aijsiujjuü, a cu. , can cers ana tsroaers, 8 Wall Bt.. New York. TTAT5T3TT?nT A TU 17 C! under 43 years all.A.U.lVlÄjJÄV JJAaaiiJU ofags6nd tamp fcr onnfideotial ctrcnlar, of prent Tahw. Dr. iL U .i'AIUL , WntidBgUHSt. Indianapolis. Ind.
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Sale for Street Improvement. By virtue of a certain precept to medlrected, by the Mayor of the city or Indianapolis, Indiana, and duly attested by 'he clerk of said city under the corporate seal of aald city, I 1U on SATURDAY, April 22J, 1876, sell at public auction, at tbe City Court Rocn bf tweeu the hours ot 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock P. x.,of said day, the following described lot or parcel of land, or so mach ibereof as may be necessary to satisfy tbe sum hereinalter named as assessed against such premises for street lmprovem.nt, and all costs, io-wlt: One hendred and flrty (IS") ;eet norfi end of lot No. thirteen (lc)v In oatlot Mo. one hundred and forty-seven (147) in tbe elty of IndlanapoliH, Marlon conuty, Indiana, ownd by Henry I Pierce, against which 1 assessed the Fumof 11 ty-two dollars rdulty cents ( ö2 6) fo street improvement favor of James Mahoney, contractor. BENRY W.TOTEtYILER . City Treasurer. Indianapolis, Ind., March 3, iö:e. Sale for Street Improvement.
reeled by tbe Mayor of the city of IndianapO i4. Indiana, and duly attested by the clerk ot said cliy under tu curpoiaie seal of said city, i will on SATURDAY, April 22J, 1S76, sell at public auction, at tbe City Court Room, Between ne noursor iu o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. M.of said day, the following described let or parcel oi land, or so ranch mereoia may be necessary to catisry the turn hereinafter named as assessed against such premises for street improvement, and all costs, to-wit: Lot 'o six (t) in York's subdivision of A. E. Fletcher's first addition to the city of Indianapolis, Marion county, Indiana, owned by 15 zill McCann, against Wbirh Is assessed the am of twenty dollars and fiftv-two centa (1 o 6) for street Improvement In lavor or John chler, contractor. HENRY W.TUTEWILER, City Treasurer. Indianapolis, Ind., March 29,1878. Sale for Street improvement. -j , i i via vci ktLjii Jicrvr it ujujo uucvirru, by the Mayor of tbe city oi Indianapol C Indiana, snd duly attested by tbe clrkof said city under the coiporale seal of said city, I win, on SATURDAY. April 223, 1876, sell at public auction at the City Court Room, between the hours of 1) o'clock A. M. and 4 o'c'nek P. If . of said day, the following described lo or parcel ot Und, or so mucu thereof as may uo necessary io sausry ine fum bereit after named as assessed against such premises for street improvement, and all c sLs, to-wll: Lot No twenty-eight (2?) in Rnddell's subdivision of square .o. twenty-two (22), Johnson's heirs' addition to tbe city of Indianapolis, Marlon ouuty, Indiana, owned by Mary A. E. Woollen, against whlcu Is assessed tae sum of sixty-nine dollars and twenty-three cents (t69 3) for street Improvement In favor of James Maboaey, contractor. HENRY W. TUTEWILER, City Treasurer. Indianapolis, Ind., March 29, 1876. Notice to Non-heHidenc. Whereas, a certain precept has been duly issued to me by tbe Mavorof tbe City of Indianapolis, under tbe corporate seal or said city, dated March 6th. 1876, howing that there is due tbe following named conti actor the amount here n after specided for street improvement in the city of Indianapolis, Mai ion county, Indiana. Due Frederick Gansberg for grading and graveling Pltasant street and side wa Iks from Dillon to Linden streets, l:om D. K. Richardson, (christian name unknown), the tum of twenty-tbree doliars and twenty cents (SJ3 a ), amount o' assessment cbargt-d against lot No. sixteen (lb) in Fletcher's vtoodlawn addition to the city of Indianapolis, Marlon cou&ty, Indiana. Now, the laid defendant is hereby notified that UDless be pay within ( ) dnys after tbe publication, for three weeks, of this notice, the mount so assessed rgalnbt the above described lot or parcel of laud, I wi l proceed to collect the amount bo assessed by levy and sale ot said lot or parcel ot land, erso mach thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the above claim, and ail costs that may accrue. HENRY W. TUTEWILER, City Treasurer. Indianapolis, Ind., March 22. 1870. OHERIFF"S MALE. By virtue ot a certiO bed copy of a decree to me directed, from the clerk of the Superior Court of Marion county, Indiana, in a cause wherein Btoughtou A. I'ietcher It plaintiff and John U. Shoemaker et al. are defendant, requiring me to make tbe sum of one hundred! and 8 xty-nlne dollars and thirty-seven cents, and such other sums as provided fr in said decree, with Interest on said decree and cost, 1 will expose at public sate, to tbe highest bidder, ou SATURDAY, the 15th day of April, A.D. 1876, between the hours of 10 o'clock a.m., and 4 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the .oor of the court house of Marion countv, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding levtn yearr, of tbe following real estate, to-wit : Lot sixty-eight (8) In Shoemaker and Llppencott's addition to Brookslde, tbe same being an addition to the city of Indianapolis, Marlon county, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not cell for a sumcient sum to satisfy said decree. Interests and cost, 1 will, at the same time and place, expose to public tale tbe lee simple ol said real estate, or bo much thereof as may be sufficient to discbarge said decree, Interests and costs. Rai J sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. ALBERT REI&3NER, Sheriff of Marlon county. March 21, A.D. 1876. Tatlob, R, & T Attys. for Pi'ff. mar22-8t MEDICAL. GBEAT MEDICAL BOOK and Hee eta forLtaiee and uents.LL BTJOsKPH MkDtOA L I NSTTTtTTK Kt Joxepn. Mu SAMARITAN NERVINE! Is a sure cure for Epileptit Flu Bpasma and Convulsion! It haa been tested by thousand, and am never been known U fail In a slxgle case. Tri package frer. Inclose stamp fa; circulars, glv- Ing evidence o cures. Ad drees DR. 8. A. IUHMOND, Box 74), 8U Joseph. M CENTRAL INFIRMARY Culbertson Batch Eaton, For treatment of tbe vv ETE, EAB and CA-:W T1HRII. and dlseaaea 1 F: V lof the A CIAL EYES I5SCKTED for references.
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