Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 26, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1877 — Page 7

THE IXDIAXA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MOHNING APJHL, 25; 1877.-

7

TVIIT THE DOG'S JTOSE I ALWAYS COLD. .

BT MADGE ELLIOTT. "What makes the dog's none alwayn cold?" I'll try to tell you, curls of gold, If you will good and quiet be, And come and utanil by mamma's knee: Well, yean and yearn and year ago How many I don't really knowThere came a rain on He a and shore; Its like watt never seeu before Nnr Mince. It fell nnrfiMlnrilnwn Till All the world began to drown. But Just before It Ran to pour. An old, old niau In name waft NoahBuilt htm an ark, that he might save 111 family from a watery grave, And In It also he designed To shelter two of every kind Of boast. Well, dear, when It was done, And heavy clouds obscured the sun, The Noah folk to It quickly ran. And then ttie antmalH betcan To gravely march along In palm: The leopards, t'gers, wolves and bean, The deer, the hippopotamus', Thrt rhtltM, squirrels, elk, walruses. The camels, gouts, the cam and donkeys. The tall giraffes, the beavers, monkeys, The ruts, the bl rhlnoesreses, The dromedaries and t he horses. The sheep, the rnlce, the kangaroos. Hyenas, elephants, koodoos, And hundred more 'twould take all day, And at the very, very end Of the procession, by hl friend And master, faithful dog wai seen. The livelong time he'd helping been To drive the crowd of creature In ; And now, with loud, exuliant bark, He (Oyly sprang aboard the ark. Alas! ho crowded wan the space, He coulil not In It ttnd a place: So, patiently he turned about Stood half way In and half way out. And those extremely heavy showers liesoended through nine hundred hoars And moe; and, darling, at their close, Half frozen wan hi honest nose; And never could it lone again The dampness of that dreadful rain; And that Is what, my curls of gold. Makes all the doggie' none cold I Baldwin's Mouthly. ALI SORTS. The masons of Belfast, Me., have subscribed $25,000 for a new temple. Three-fourthi of the applications for postmasterships come from unsettled clergymen. Deacon Richard Smith, of Cincinnati, would Like the Spanish mission or anything else. About $000 was found concealed in the clothing of an Albany county pauper a day 0 ' two ago. About three million fans were shipped from Japan in 1875, almost all of which came to this country. A tulleroof car has been constructed at York for the Spanish government, to be used in Cuba. Wade Hampton has been invited to attend the centennial celebration of the battle of Bennington, Vermont. Thirty-five mill:ons of dollars was the apregate value of the rice, sugar and cotton products of Louisiana last year. Both branches of the New York legislature have passed a bill prohibiting beta, wagers and pools on races, elections, etc. In the way of puns there is nothing keener in the language than Douglas Jerrold's definition of dogmatism as grown up puppyism. Albert Grant, the London capitalist, of . Emma mine notoriety, is about to sell his magnificent collections of modern paintings. J. II. McCarthy, the son of Justin McCarthy, the novelist, though not quite 20 vears old, is a promising contributor to the London press. t There are vacancies in three consulates. Seven hundred and thirty men from Ohio and two hundred and seventy from the rest of the country are after them. The lowly beet now ranks in commercial im nortance above the patrician sugar-cane. More beet sugar than cane sugar is now made by the world, every year. The remarkable phenomenon is reported from Naples, Italy. It is that forthree whole days in one week there was no births out of a population of 500,000 souls. Anon-partisan president is one whom no party hsa elected, according to the New York Commercial Advertiser. This makes Mr. Hayes a non-partisan president. The Kassian government will send a summer expedition to the month of the Yenesei river in the hope of discovering a direct passage through tb Arctic ocean to Europe. If you want to be in style you will wear an amethyst ring on the third finger of the left hand. Also cough sadly now and then, as if you were the last of an illustrious family. The San Francisco Chronicle says that the average land of California is not so rich as that of Illinois, and that the wine grape crop is the only staple crop of the great Pacific state. Mr, William V. Bowen fell dead at a prayer meeting in Chelsea, Mass., on Friday evening. He had just been speaking, and hia last words bad been: "And the Father received im." Workmen are making an advance of about 18 feet a day on the St. Gothard tunnel. The proposed Simplon tunnel, for which drawings and estimates are now making, will be about 11 K miles long. The Authors' publishing company of New York offers $200 premium, in addition to regular copyright on book sales, for the bet manuscript on auy scientific or religio-scierv-tific subject of general interest Marble is being shipped from Knoxville, Tennessee, to San Francisco, California, to build a "stock exchange," which, it is claimed, will be the finest building of the kind in the United States when finished. The Washington Star is authority for the statement that the president is preparing a message to be presented to congress recommending an appropriation for the representation of this country at the Paris exposition. All the books used in the Minnesota public schools during the next 15 years are U be bought of a St. Louis dealer, who contracts to sell them at about half the present retail prices and submit them to revision every five years. A crusty old fellow once asked: "What is the reason tha griffins, dragons and devils are lilies fa' $?Ae subjects for embroidered designs?' "An. because they are conti finally thinking of their husbands," u tift quick retort, A woman in Springfield. Mm who aptealed against a police court fine of $1 for eepingan unlicris;d dog, wan kept in jail two months in default of bonds, and was only allowed to depart on the payment of the dollar and costs. Colonel 8 8. Taylor, of Ca'f, 111., has careling a rop ladder aad a thick pair of gloves, j At tie baruiog of the Southern hotel at St.

Louis, where he was a guest, the ladder and gloves saved his life. The consulate at Callao is the latest vacancy. Leprosy, yellow fever, an epidemic of earthquakes, and a salary of $3,500 are some of the allurements of the position, and yet there are only 7(!1 applicants. The approaching marriage of Cora Pearl, the notorious Aspacia, whose adventures have depraved the columns of the lighter 1'arisian journals for some years past, is announced. It is said that the bold individual, like Miss Tearl, is English. The National Academy of Science will meet at the Smithsonian Institution in New York on Tuesday next. One of the principal subjects cf discussion will be the methods for a more perfect prosecution of scientific exploration and research. The new Jury law of Florida provides that when in any case, civil or criminal, a knowledge of reading, writing and arithmetic is necessary to enable a juror to understand the evidence to be oftered, he may be challenged if he does not possess such qualifications. Mrs. Gen. Sherman has been successful in her efforts to organize the jubilee movement in America, and already $2:10.000 have been contributed. Besides this large sum, great numbers of fine articles manufactured in this country are on their way to Home. When a man Is laid up with a broken leg and there is no flour in the house, nothing pleases him so much as to have the members of the society to which he belongs present him with a series of resolutions, expressing their high appreciation of his fine moral character. Norwich Bulletin. "A perfect picture of oriental repose," says a German correspondent, "is to be seen in the Turkish parliament. The phlegmatic Dutchmen who sit half asleep in their comfortable chairs in the house of deputies at the Hague are vivacity itself compared with the lifeless statues on exhibition here." Birds killed on the western prairies, packed closely with paper in barrels, ana without any freezing or artificial process of preservation, now go regularly to Leadenhall, and are sold and eaten in the dining rooms of London and the west side by Bide with the much more expensive partridges and fowls which are reared in Kngland. Among the recent applicants for postofflces from the new administration are a daughter of ex-Senator Joan J. Crittenden, of Kentucky, author of the famous Crittenden compromise; also a daughter of Alexander Campbell, founder of the religious sect known as the Carupbellites, or disciples of Jesus Christ. At the "Old South ball." recently given in Boston, a descendant of John Hancock wore a suit that Hancock himself had once worn. It was a coat of crimson velvet, with tight sleeves and a waistcoat of white, satin, finely embroidered. The ruffled shirt front was adorned by a big brooch, which was a painting on ivory of Hancock himself by Copley. Milton Nobles, the actor, who plays "Jim Bludsoe," did his best at the St. Louis hotel tire to earn a right to play the part of John Hay's hero. He saved a half dozen lives and was badly scorched in doing it, which comes near Jim's feat of "running her nose ain f!ie bank and holding it there until the last galoot vas ashore." One Italian asked another at what moment the nineteenth century commenced. "On January 1, 1800," was the reply. "Not o," said the first, and thereupon a bet was made. The mutual friend who was to decide the matter gave it as his opinion that the century in question began on January 1, 1801, and that it will terminate on December 31, 1900. Some of the southerners retain their coolness. R. A. Alston has been an applicant for the United States niarshalship in Georgia, and has published a card in which be speaks of calling upon the president and laying before him Iiis papers, which were "the same he had prepared for Mr. Tilden, and which he presented without erasing Mr. Tilden's name." Mr. Macdonald, M. P., at a recent meeting of miners held in Glasgow, advised young men to leave the occupation. There were other fields of labor open to them. If they had a few pounds let them ro to the great west of America. Let them not go to the coal fields of Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio or Indiana. There was no room there, but there was room in the states of Nevada and California, where the wagos were $4 a day in grid. The Virginia democratic papers are diligently discussing the subject of the candidate for governor, and the Charlottesville Chronicle closes a long article on the topic with a somewhat surprising exclamation for that section, as follows: "A wooden leg, an empty sleeve, a blood-stained sabre and a railroad reputation are all well enough, but statesmanship is to be preferred when we select a governor for the great commonwealth of Virginia." Mile. Prevost-Paradol, when shocked by her distinguished father's suicide, renounced Protestantism and sought consolation in the Catholic church. She determined to become a nun, but as her guardians opposed this, so long as they had authority over her she was unable to carry out her design until the other day, when she became of age and immediately took the vail. The young lady has rare beauty, and was before her father's death a bright and merry little creature. In the language of the tramps, the letter "II" on the gate post means that the residents will give the caller a handful of grub; "8" that he will get a seat at the table- "S M" that he will get a square meal, and "G B" that he will get the "grand bounce." Now that the secret is out, let every householder hie himself to bis gate post and. dig inletters deep, and that can not be misunderstood, the mystic sign "G Bl" Here at last is the complete solution of the tramp problem. Chicago Evening Journal. An article in the Church Eclectic for April is exciting considerable attention in Episcopal circles. It was written by the Rev. Morgan Dix, D. P., rector of Trinity church, New York, and is a severe denunciation of certain classes of fashionable novels, and especially those of Ouida. Dr. Dix suggests that a catalogue of prohibited books be adopted by the Episcopal church, and urged upon its members by ecclesiastical authority. It is doubtful if the bookellers will oppose this scheme, provided they be permitted to put the index before the public Burlington Hawkeye: Mrs. ex Secretary Fish allows no smoking in her elegant hou-. And she makes you stand and paw over the icraper and door mat for ten minutes before you can couie in, and then if it 1 very muddy she send you around to the side door and she makes you take off your overshoes on the porch and leave them outside, and the dog always comes aT.und and curries them away to pound the yard with, and somehow or other, after you have vifited the Fis'ies or re. you always feel as though y'ou didn't feel like going back again, as the man nid who was hi wn out of hhi state roosa by a boiler explosion. :

THE STIRRlJPCrP.

BY SIDNEY LAKIFR. Death, thou art a cordial, old and rare; loolc how compounded, wit h what care! Tl'oegot his wrinkli s reaping thee . Sweet herbs from all antiquity. Pavid to thy dlstlllage went, Keats and Ootania excellent, Omar Khayyam, and Chaucer bright, And Hhakspere for a king-delight. These were to sweeten thee with song; The blood of heroes made thee strong. What heroes! Ah, for shaiue, for shame! The worthiest died without a name. Then, Time, let not a drop be spilt; Hand me the cup whene'er thou wilt; If death such dear dlmlllment be, 111 drink It down right smilingly. Hcribner for May. THE NTATE. Three hundred pounds of fish are sold every day in Seymour. Tell City has street lamps and is putting on city airs generally. A democratic pappr is to be established at Brownsville, Union county. A young woman named Martha Travis committed suicide at Madison Saturday night. Wheat looks very promising in Luce, Hammond and Grass townships, Spencer county. The Rockport Democrat estimates the tobacco crop of Spencer county for 187G at $500,000. The census of the school children of Richmond, ju-t completed, shows that there are at present 3,902. The Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis railroad will lay twenty miles of new rail near Columbus this season. Connersville Times: Several fast horses from a distance will be put on the track in this city for training this spring. Boonville has bad the peep show, the candy puller, the walkist, the little man and the powdered wig of '7G, during the week. The Logansport Daily Star, which suspended some time since, made its appearance on Tuesday as an evening paper. Mr. Feacock, aged eighty-seven years and inventor of the famous Peacock plow, died at his residence in Seymour one day last week. Rock port Democrat: Young tobacco plants look fresh and vigorous. There will not be a scarcity of the tender weed this season. Connersville Times: Connersvillians. we believe, contemplate turning out en matsr to the odd fellows' celebration at Cambridge on the 28th inst The wife of a former Floyd county official will shortly bring suit against a saloon keeper of this city for damages occasioned by selling liquor to her husband. The stockholders of the Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis railway company meet at the principal office of the company in Jeffersonville, on Monday, May 21. New Albany Ledger-Standard: There are but two applicants in Floyd county for the position of state house commissioner. The nuilding will cost this county not less than $50,000. The people of TTarrison county are paying their taxes pretty briskly. Within the past eight days tne money has been flowing into the treasury at the rate of between $2,500 and $3,000 per day. By the accidental discharge of a revolver on Sunday last, the priest of St. Mary's Catholic church at Mooresville was shot in the hand. He was loading the revolver to shoot a chicken-hawk. Rocbville Republican: A little child of Mr. Hersey, of Montezuma, fell into a rain barrel on Friday, and when found and taken out was apparently drowned; but by application of restoratives it was resuscitated and its life saved. New Albany correspondent Louisville News: The boiler in the saw mill at Livonia, which is owned by two German gentlemen, blew up on Thursday last, killing one of the proprietors, whose name we are unable to ascertain at this writing. Fort Wayne Sentinel: The red ribbon society held its last meeting at the Third Presbyterian church last evening when thirty-six persons took the pledge. This makes 1.200 recruits to the cold water cause gained during these meetings Madison Courier: A very large hay press and stock barn owned by Mrs. Agnes Clark, of Switzerland county, was totally destroyed by fire Saturday night The building was worth $2,500, and was insmred in the -Etna for $1.500. It was evidently the work of an incendiary. Boonville Enquirer: Mike Sculley, the pedestrian, is walking a 100-mile heat in 100 consecutive hours, making a mile in every hour. He began his walk in Hudspeth's hall last Tuesday, and concludes his feat to-night at 10 o'clock when be will have a 200-pound stone broken upon his breast. The horse thief will have a better show in Warrick county now, the $100 reward paid by the county having been recinded. The system has cost the county quite s sum of money, and the commissioners propose to economize. Paying about $300 for a $25 horse by the county was looked upon as a bad trade. . . New Albany correspondent Louisville News: At the Fourth, street colored church last night, a colored girl named Slaughter arose in the congregation and stated that she had been warned in a dream that at 12 of the clock she would die, or, as the boys have it, "pass in her checks." This announcement created a profound sensation in the congregation, many believing, herself among the number, that the premonition would be verified. The gill Was taken to her home, followed by a large crowd, but up to this writing the colored damsel survives, and the black burying party stands postponed until further notice. THE JfEff NARROW UAl'GK. The Indianapolis Anil Evansville Mineral R 1 1 rond The Fe In re of the Route. Special Correspondence of the 8entlnel.l Nkltomvii.lk, April 18. The people along the line of this contemplated railroad are becoming confident that it will be built. Encouragement is given in almost every direction of means sufficient to survey and build the bed of the road, and promises of responsible parties assure the iron and rolling stock to put the whole line in running order. It is a matter of wonder that this direct route from the capital to Evansville has not been occupied years ago. ' No line in the state can be made to par better than this, because its termini are the two largest cities of the state, while the road itself passes through the richest mineral regions of the state. Then the agricultural area which it

will command must give it importance and

success just as soon as it is finished and ready for travel. rfcOSPECTB OF THE UWE. We learn from the president of the road Dr. Pierson, that but little cost will ensue in getting the right of way along the whole line. The farmers are largely aware of the fact that the building of this road will enhance Jhe value at an average of $5 per acre of all linds within five miles of the road, and they know that the whole county, as well as the state itself, will be greatly benefitted by the building of sach a road along tais line. Evansville is to be the great southern mart of this state, bringing from the south all the products of that vast region of cotton, sugar, rice, etc., which in a few years will amount to ten times as much as they do to-day, and the more railroads that city ran have to distribute these and other producta over the north the greater will be its own trade and resources, and th richer will our jiate become. Indeed, this road, though a narrow gauge, can not help becoming one of the leading lines of the state. FEATURES OF THE ROUTE. Your own city will be, of course, largely benefitted in the immense influx of trade it will bring to your people. Passing, as it will, through Marion, ana striking Trafalgar, in Johnson county, it will next pass through Nashville, Brown county, and thereon to this vicinity, and run on to Bedford, and so on to Evansville. The route is as plausible as any ever built in the state, and is demanded with as much earnest interest by the farmers along the line as any other road ever was. They need it as an outlet, and for t'ie development of future agricultural resources, as well as to secure a market for the unlimited wealth of mineral found along its entire route. To build such a road must r trove to be a ereat public benefaction, and f the president and directors can go right on and build it at once they will accomplish an enterprise such as should clothe them with honor. ADVANTAGES OF THE NARROW GAUGE. The cheapness of narrow gauge railroads will doubtless make them much more numerous than they now are, for they will J rove to be safer than the heavy freight ines and fully as convenient in the transportation of both freight and passengers. This township will vote on the 12th of May on a two per cent, tax to help build this road, which they will surely carry, as the building of the road will increase the value of their lands from 50 to 100 per cent. Some may doubt it, but it will do this and more. The prospects in this part of the state lor a splendid wheat crop were never better. The farmers are now at work preparing the ground for corn, oats, etc., and the probabilities are that they will have large crops in both these lines. Fruit promises to be abundant, except peaches. They were mostly killed in the winter. The scarcity of money makes rather dull times through most of this portion of the state, but the people make out to live without the benefit of returning boards, for all of which they seem to be profoundly thankful.

Mouth Carolina. New York World, 11th.) The federal troops have withdrawn from the politics of South Carolina and the whole fabric of the Chamberlain government has toppled over like a bouse of cards. It is clear that the structure was based on nothing but foreign support, and hereafter no ene will listen to any argument in favor of a party that after controlling the state for nine years is so weak that it is obliged to surrender what it considers its civil rights the moment military interference ceases. Republicanism in Sonth Carolina had neither vitality, virtue nor intelligence, and it is gone like yesterday's clouds. INew York Herald, 11th. At. noon yesterday, in pursuance of the order of President Hayes. Ihe federal troops were withdrawn from the state house at Columbia. Under the rfgime which has now closed South Carolina has suffered more than any of her sister states. Her legislature has been the most ignorant and corrupt, her county officers the most incompetent, her minor judges the most scandalous, her taxes the most exorbitant, her expenditures the most extravagant and wasteful, the increase of her debt the most stupendous in proportion to her resources, and the depreciation in the value of property the most alarming of any even of the tarpet-bag states. The people have been compelled to pay six or eight times as much annually for bad government and for intolerable oppression and swindling as they paid for good government previoas to the war. J. Madison Wells. Philadelphia Times. The J. Madison Wells family, of Rapides parish, Louisiana, have a small war claim pending before the southern claims commission, itemized as follows: J. Madison Wells.-". . t-tfn.&'M Fanny M. and Ida Wlls..... .'1,405 Mrs. M. L. Wells. 18,790 Eatate ot Michael 15. Wells-.... . l.iöO t Asl .ww mi iwM M a 92)013 J. Madison Wells's last hours in Washington were devoted to the fruitless efforts to persuade the commission to allow the family bill. Even after having made a president and languished in prison therefor, the trifle of pocket change that he wanted for the Wells family was denied him. The ingratitude of republics! Itaby Huntln. Globe-Democrat How the heathen of the Chicago press will rage, and how the much mortgaged inhabitants of that Tillage will imagine vain things when it is stated as an incontrovertible fact that there were only 187 entries for the Chicago baby show, while there were 190 for the St. Louis baby show. Futhermore, how they will howl in Chicago when they hear that there was "a complete set of triplets" at the St. Louis show, after the terrible trouble to which the Chicago showman was fut to find twins. We regard the figures ust given 190 to 187 as a complete vindication of Gould's Directory, in its assertion that the population of St. Louis is much larger than that of Chicago. A Itaby Fatal !!. Marietta (5a.) Journal.) Last week in Dallas, Paulding county, a mother had her baby in her arms when she approached a large pot of . boiling lye soap. The baby suddenly spring out of her arms and fell bead foremost into the pot. The mother instantaneously ran her right arm down into the boiling pot of toap and brought forth her baby dead, while ber arm was so badly burned and eaten into by the boiling soap that amputation, it is thought, will be inevitable. A Remarkable Family. rPaxiu North Texan. . . Mr.L. A.Cunningham reports that the other day he found a remarkable family on bhockey s prairie. The rather was ol years or age, the nioder 44, and yet they rejoiced In the modest number of 18 children, all born of one woman. Ia the number were five pairs of twins. They were all born in Arkansas, and the parents had only bceu married 23 years.

WHAT I KNOW ABOUT VEGBTINE

South Boston, May t, 1870. II. It. Htkvenh, Eh.: Dear Sir I have had considerable experience with the Vegetlne. Kor dyspeptda. Keneral debility and impure blood tnt VeKetlne In superior to anything which I have ever used. I commenced taking Vegetlne about the middle of last wlnterknd, after using a few boltle,it entirely cured me of dyspeplu, and my blood never was In so good condition as at the present time. It will afford me pleasure to give any further particulars relative to what I know about this eood medicine to irny one who will call or addreHS me at my rewidence, 3iJ Athens street. Very respect fully, MONROE I'ARKFR, ' ütS Athen tttrevt. DYSPEPSIA. HYMPTOMH. Want of appetite, rlslnR of food and wind from the stomach, ttcldity of the stomach, heartburn, dryness andwhltoneKs of the tongue, in the morning, sense of dlnteiiitlon In the tornacli anil Oo w els, Knmetlines rumbling and pain: cotlveness, which is occasionally Interrupted by dlarrhwa; paleneas of the urine. The mouth is clammy, or has a soar or bitter tax to. Other frequent symptoms are waterbrash, palpitation of the heart, headache, and disorders of the Mnsfs, as neelnir double, etc. There 1h general debility, languor and aversion (o motion; dejection of the Kpirlta, disturbed bleep and frightful dreams. (.aim:!) fiftktof pounds of fm:sii. South Berwick, Me., Jan 17, 1H72. 11. R. Ptevknh, Kq.: Dear Hir I have had dyspepsia in its worst form for the bust ten years, and have taken hundred of dollar' worth of medicine without obtaining any relief. In Heplember butt I commenced taking the Vegetine, since which time my health haa tdeaully improved. My food digests well, and I have gained 15 pounds of tleMh. There are several others In thia place taking the Vegetlne. and ail have obtained relief. Yours truly. THOMAS E. MOORE, Overseer of Card Room PoriMinouth Co.'a Mills. FEE!, MYSELFA XEW MAN. Natick, Mass., Juue 1, 1S7Z Mr. II. R. Stevens: Dear Hir Through the advice and earnest rfTsuasion of the Iiev. K. 8. IJest, of this place, have been taking Vegetlne for dyspepfeia, of Which I have suffered for years. I have used only two bottles, and already feel myself a new man. Respectfully, Dr. J. W. CARTER. GOOD EVIDENCE. Cincinnati, Nov. 2G, 1872. Mr. II. H. Ptevens: Dear Sir The two bottles of Vegetine furnished me by your agent my wife has used with great benefit. For a long time she has been troubled with dizziness and costive nous; these troubles are now entirely removed by the use of Vegetine. She wan also troubled with dyperia and general debUlty, and has been greatly beneIlted. THOMAS ÜILMOUE, Walnut street. IlELIABIiE EVIDENCE. Mr. II. -R. Ftevens: Dear Hlr I will most cheerfully add my teatlmony to the great number you have already received In favor of your great and good medicine, Vegetine, for I do not think enough can be said in Its praise, for I wm troubled over thirty yearn with that d'eadful distale, Catarrh, and had such bail coughing spells that It would Reem as though I could never breathe any more, and Vegetine has cured me; and I do feel to thank God all the time that there ia so good a mediclue as Vegetine, and I also think It one of the best medicines lor coughs and weak sinking feelinca at the stomach, end ad vine everybody to take the Vegetine, fr I can assure them it in one of the best medicines that ever was. M M L. (!OK K, Corner Magazine and Walnut utreetn, Cambridge, Ma. APPRECIATION. CiiAitLKSTOWN, Mass., March 19, 18C9. II. R. j-tevkss: This 1 to certify that I have tixed your "Blood Preparation" (Vegetine) In my family for several years, and think that, for scrofula or Cankerous humors or Uhenmntlc affections, It run not be exreiled ; and aa a blood pnrifler and spring medicine it In the bent thing I have ever used, and I have used almost everything. I can cheerfully recommend it to anyone in need of such a medicine. Yourw respectfully, MKS. A. A. DINS.MORE, 19 Russell btreet. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. BEST FRENCH BURR GRIST MILLS. . i Farmers, Baw Mill Owners, Et. A boy can grind and keep In order. Price, 989 and up. Manufactured by N0RDYKE, HARMON & CO., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Shops and Office, BonthweRt of Union Depot Quaker City Works. rind for Clrcula and Price. FAMILIES AUK DAILY USltiO coorcrxa hooi roR-orxn trxstvB, m ovn tsx xirr ivp tzrtn. Th.new lizet for 1877 art PQS'TjVELy MARIHTfE1 tobsTHE MOST FCONOM1CAL. Cooklsg Stove ia th. world. VSK YOUR STOVE DEALER FOR THE "FAVORITE,' ARK best obtained through th. Iiivrotur.'AMociation latent AfrriicY. All limine, pei Lining to 1'st.nt promptly "1 C.refn'.ly attended to. Knd itamp fur copy of ' 'XL. Ineutur." 1'or further lulorni.Uun. 1ilir. C. BUAIFORI, yffomev, ludiauapolia, lad.

PATENTS

WAGOXS ! WAGOXS! TOIS! The North Indianapolis Wagon Worki Go. offer t- Farmers about Indianapolis, Farm Wukoiih at the following prices: tt, iü, &&, f tH), Ö and no. They are complete and neatly riuinhe0. Warranted for one vear. JAMES FRANK, Pre.

TOTIfK OK ADMINISTRATION. Notice 1 hereby riven that the nnderslgned luui been appointed by the Marlon UtU Circuit Court of Marlon county, Indian, RjminlHtrator tie loniu rum of the ewtaUt ot Henry M. I'll tin xt. late of said county, deCensed. Huld estate Is Htipponed to fce solvent. . J KHK y I All (XJKLE, Aprirö. 1S77. Administrator de bonvu rum. NOTICE Ol- ADMINISTItATIONV-Notlc is hereby given that the undersigned Las een appointed by the Marlon Civil Circuit Court of Marion county, Indiana, administrator of the etate- oi John Coble, late of said county, deceased. Haid estate is supposed to bo solvent, . .. . JEREMIAH COnLE, April ft. 1K77. Admltitst raw r. NOTICK OF ADMIN IHTHATION. Notlrw is hereby Klven that the undermined haa Una appointed by the Marlon Civil Circuit Court of Marlon countv, Indiana, administrators of the estate ol Uavld Huff, late ol mud county, deceased. Haid estate U supposed to be solvent. JOTTN R. HUFF, WILLIAM II. HUFF, March SI. 177. Adminixtratont. Notice to Stockholders. There will bean Annual Meeting of the Htock holders of the Iudl'uapolls and Leaven worth Turnpike (i ravel I load Company at the Toll House, on tfitturday, the 6th day of May, 1X77, at 10 o'clock, for the purpose of electing nve directors and to tr nsttci hucli oihcr bo0ness aa maybe necannry Ilv order of the Hord. JOHN HOKFOEN, Hee rotary. THE SENTINEL. Invariably Cash In Advance DAILY. 1 Copy one year.. tie M i 2 66 K 1 Copy six months....... 1 Copy three months...... 1 Copy one month. Clubs of five or more, 1 year $8 each 40 64 C3ubs of5or more,e months, 94 2Tj each.... 21 25 Clubs of 5 or more, 3 months, S2 25 each..- 11 25 Unbe of 5 or more, 1 month, 7S cents each ITS Clubs of 7 or more, one copy extra to getter up of club when no commission ia charged. WEEKLY. 1 Copy one year... f 1 M (Flubs of four, one year 6 00 Clubs often, one year . 12 Ot Clubs of twenty 20 SO In Ckibsol ten or more, one copy extra to getter up of club furnished free when no commission is charged. Bunday Sentinel same terms aa Weekly. Specimen copy furnished free. Address, I mllunapoIN Sentinel Company, INDI NAFOLIS. INI. "VfOTICE is hereby Riven to Uio citizens- of the Tenth ward, in the city of Indianapolis, Center lown&hip, Marion county, Indiana, that I, George Koxwinkel. a male inhabitant of said.wara, over the aee of twenty one years, will apply to the bomdof county oommlMunnen of said county, at tlielr May meetlnK, for a license to sell, or one year, splritous, vinous and malt liquors, in a lm quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drar.k on my premises. The precise location of the premises whereoa I desire to sell said liquors ia duwribed aa follows: Fart of lot No. 2 in eq n a re 1. I'alU'rs'm 's subdivision, and known as No. 13 MawuichettB avenne. In the city of Indianapolis, Center township. Marlon County, Indiana. HtRnedl OKOrWK I tOH WINKEL. Baker, HordA Hendricks, Att'ya for PI tiff. STATE OF INDIANA. Martin county, as: In the superior Court of Marlon county, in the state of Indiana, May term, 177. 18)1. Bank of Commerce vs Oustavas II. Zscbecta, Emily M. Kilvtrt, Rudolph J. Winter, et al. Be ft known, that on the v3d day of February, 1H77, Uie aboved named plaintiff, by his attorneys, filed in the office of the clork of the Hupenor Court of Marion county, in the state of Indiana, his complaint against the above named defendants, for forclosure of mortgage, and on the 5th day of April, 1H77. the said plaintiff filed in said clerk's office the amdavlt of a competent person showing that said defendant, fc.nlly Ä. K 11 vert and Rudolph J. Winter are not resident of the state of Indiana. Now therefor', hy order of said court, said defendants last above named are hereby notified of the filing and pendeucy of said complaint against them, and that unit they appear and answer or demur theieto, at the culling of said cause on the aecond day of the term of said court to be begun and held at the court honso in the city of Indianapolis, on the first Monday in .luiie. 1S77. said coirn lalnt. and the matters and Illings therein contained and alleged, will be hoard and determined In thel. absence. AUSTIN II. LROWN. Clerk. Ey JOHI HCHLKY, apill-1w Deputy. Herr, Rkid A Lowe. Attorneys. OTATK OF INDIANA, Marlon oounty, as: O In the C rculi tkurt of Marion county, ii the state of Indiana. May term, 177. No. I.K78. John H. Kitchen vs. Mry A. Touchy, lbert Tonsley and Jese Jones. lie It known, that on the 7th dayot March, 1877, the above named plainlltt, by his attorneys, tiled in the oince of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Marlon county, in the staU of Indiana, his complaint against the above named delendmits ior attachment, snd on the I till i day of mill. 1?7, the said plaintiff filed in wild clerk's öillce the aniduvit of a competent perKou showing that said defendants, Mary A. Tow-lej and Albert Tousley are not resident ot the state of Indiana. Now, therelore, oy order of said court, Akt defendants luM ubove named an hereby notified of the Ming ami js ndency of said complaint nguinst them, m.d that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at Uie vailing; of säld cause on the second day ol the term of wild court, to h . bt'uri and held at the court house In the city of Indianapolis, on the first Monday In M . 1S77. said ooiupioint. and tti matters und thii'K therein contained and ailyed, will be lieard and ditennlned in thtlr absence. AUSTIN II. BROWNApllMw ' Ciera. want"! tnr OenpM Llt of Or Cm. A (gySTER KmtimchirhU trl'l'ant rrajf life, fcta w Ddstfat plolula Indisa wii's,tc.,H4. A thrilllr osmth of daring dd and mhivticeoarr. rivrnti Uli tried sod hoaad. (Ulla to srsrytxdy. iWrn'tdelart od for larr rfTtilar snl sorsra territory ftr lb. bet-ellltic book of the yea. AAnm A.G.MCTTU.TON 4 CO., Odcsgo. IlLr dodo uad.O.