Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 26, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1877 — Page 7
THE INDIAXA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 13. 187 1.
OVER THE SEA.
I can not hear thee, for the lntls are moaning; I can not Hear thee, for the waves are high; I can not hear thee, for the good ship groaning, Seaward doth fly. And yet my fond heart listens to thy singing; And yet methlnks t clasp thee once again; I hear thy voice as If I were not swinging Across the main. So be it ever! If the world torment me, Happy in thee and in the past I'll rest ;'. To sleep upon thy memory will content me As twere thy breast. Harvard Crimson. ALL SORTS. Ex-Governor "Wannoth's present to his bride was a $4,000 diamond brooch and ear ring set. J. IL Osgood fc Co. have the telephone in constant use between their store and their printing office. The young1 earl of Shrewsbury, now 17 years old, will have an income of about 90,000 when he comes of age. Horace Greeley, infant son of Colonel Nicholas and Mrs. Ida Greeley S-nith, was baptized on Tuesday, May 29. at the family homestead, Chappaqua, New York. The qneen has assumed the new rnonoe qt V. gram V. IC 1.) tictona tcgina et jmperainx) upon her letter paper. This is the first personal indication of imperial dignity. An ingenious gentleman has invented and is exhibiting in Chicago a poison sucker, by which the virus from wounds made by mad dogs or other creatures may be extracted. General Grant has the right to wear a uniform upon occassions of ceremony. The law permitting it is that referring to officers "honorably mustered out of the volunteer service." The department of state at Washington is to have official information of the recent discovery in Egypt of a peculiar species of cotton plant that produces double the crop of the ordinary kind. The district school in Greene, Maine, witnessed a sad tragedy last Wednesday when Miss Olive Lane, the teacher, fell dead just as she was closing the forenoon session. She was only 20 years old. A resident of Meriden, Conn., offers to supply from 80 to 100 French, English and American magazines monthly, for the free use of its citizens, if somebody will furnish a well lighted room. An Irishman has denned nothing to be "a footless stocking without legs." A description by another Emeralder is better. "What is nothing?" he asked. "Shut your eyes and you'll see it," said Pat. Mrs. S. S. Cole conducts successfully a printing house in New York city, and has secured a contract to furnish 5,000 pro grammes for each concert to be given at Central park during the season. There Is a report that a preliminary conference is to be held in New York this week for the purpose of organizing a new party, to be known as the national union party. It will be safe to put Mr. Blaine's name on the roll. There are tricks even in the farmer's business. Themanagers of an English workhouse have detected a contractor supplying them with common sheep, painted to represent the Southdowns which the agreement demanded. A showman recently presented to his son-in-law, as his daughter's fortune, an elephant that danced a fandango: a camel that went down on its knees, head to the ef t, at sunset; a dog that cast up accounts, an . two canaries that played cards. A woman in England read a notice in a newspaper that her husband, from whom she had been separated 17 years, was lying ill in a San Francisco hospital. She hastened thither, and found that he had been discharged. She continued the search, found hiia, and they were reconciled. . Mrs. Mercy Studley, of Brewer, Maine, is 103 years old. A Bangor paper says that she can read the finest print without glasses, walks a mile before breakfast, milks two cows morning and evening, and often does the family washing on Mondays. Betsy Quale, of Baltimore, aged 85, set fire to her clothing the ot'ier day with a spark from her pipe. They say she was the oldest Qaale on toast ever served up in the city, but ihe restaurateurs of the monuirental hty know better, if they would only telL Governor Hampton, of South Carolina, apologising for keeping a white visitor waiting recently, saia: "I have of late been represented at Washington as refusing to see the negroes, and hence, when there is any doubt, I always give them the precedence." t A clerk in the Allegheny post office brought down his hand stamp upon a letter which be supposed to contain garden seeds. Instantly there was a loud explosion and a clerk ghastly pale. With an utter disregard of the department regulations, the envelope had been filled with paper caps for toy pistols. A well made hand should be delicate and somewhat long. The back should be just plump enough to prevent the veins from being too prominent. The fingers must be long and tapering, forming little graduated columns of perfect proportion. When the hand is open there should be little dimples at the knuckles, which should be slightly prominent when the hand is closed. A large number of ladies of St Petersburg have entered into a solemn engagement with one another to abstain, so long as the war lats, from wearing silk, satan or jewels, as well as from giving balls or indulging in any kind of luxury, and to devote the money they. would have expended upon these articles to the succoring of the sick and wounded amongst their compatriots. Mr. Moody and his family have returned from Boston to their home at Northfield, Mass, Mr. Sankey will go to Cohassett. No definite plans have been made for their future work, but Montreal, Cincinnati, Baltimore and other cities are anxious to secure them. It is probable that Mr. Moody will begin a new series of meetings at Boston in the autumn, perhaps going to Baltimore later, and to Cincinnati in January. A near sighted and modest resident of Cazenovia, N. Y., entered a dry goods store in that village, . and. thinking to perpetrate a joke, stepped up to a dummy on which new patterns of dresses and mantles are displayed and struck it on the shoulder, say leg, "Well, old woman, how are you?" The old woman at once turned around and not only answered his question, but volunteered a great deal ofjnformation besides. 2MRang' writes ar follows: . "Heroenway'a toy has haunted a Cambridge toy shop th past two weeks, buying prize candy aud trying in yaio to qraw a base ball ap. Hairpins "na chemise batu n txs all tbe piizesthe tortured, half insane boy has drawn yet He has searched the premises for old scrap iron; and, baa even sold tu mother's - steak-broiler to a junk dealer. tQ accomplish bis unhal .lowed purpose. ' La?t üaturday hs spent fcia
last cent and drew a diaper pin. His folks became alarmed at the wild look on his face as he came home at night, and a doctor was called in, who thinks his feeble intellect; has succumbed to the repeated disappointments he has suffered, and that he will eventually become idiotic." Boston Advertiser. Barnum's offer has resulted already in new discoveries of Charley Ross, and it is predicted that the boy will be restored early in July. One report has it that all that is necessary is the promise of the governor of Pennsylvania that the parties having the boy at present shall not be prosecuted. That Eromise should be given at once. The law as tried in vain to restore Charley Ross. It should at least refuse to stand in the way of his restoration. The monotony of existence at the insane asylum of Pan, France, has been relieved by a singular accident. A keeper pt an insane woman in a bath, her hands tied, she being a violent patient. She complained that the bath was cold, and the nurse turned on the hot water; then, her attention being attracted by a noise elsewhere, she left the room. Result a boiled lunatic and an official investigation not yet concluded. Professor Tyndall. who was among the speakers at the recent meeting in London in favor of the opening of the public libraries on Sunday, unintentionally gave clergymen a severe slap during his speech. After alluding to Dean Stanley and several other clergymen who were present he said: "We do not desire to invade the time set apart for the pulpit; we only want half, of Sunday for intellectual improvement." The innocent implication that the pulpit had nothing to do with intellectual improvement caused a roar of laughter. A superior tramp made his appearance in Norwich, Conn., the other day. He asked for breakfast, and having received and eaten it he was requested to cut the grass in the front yard. He at once cheerfully went to work, and labored for three hours in the hot sun. The neighbors were called in to look at this unprecdented phenomenon, and such was the admiration which the spectacle ex cited that the industrious tramp received a good dinner, 25 cents in cash and a tolerable pair of pantaloons. The western man who fails to discover a new bug is not thought much of. Judge Stewart, of Iowa, is the latest heard from. He contributes a new pest resembling the pinch bug, which has destroyed ail the chestnut, butternut, elm and cottonwood trees on bin place, and has commenced on the apple trees. Mr. Stewart says there are millions of them. In daytime they work into the ground around the trees, and cover themselves up, about sundown come out, ascend the trees and go to work. The sweat box in the Massachusetts reform school is thus described: "It is an upright box about seven feet high, ten inches deep and fourteen inches wide at the bottom and seventeen inches wide at the top. There are three slits one inch wide cut in the front, to breathe through. The sides are moveable, and pressed in with a kind of wedge. It is located in an attic, having but one fckylicht in the roof, and no other window." A former master testifies : "The assistant superintendent told me in presence of all the officers that it could be so compressed as to crush the boy's bones. The officer said he had seen boys stagger on coming out. Another said, in three or four cases he had to take them out, and the y dropped down." The unhappy Kentuckian, who bet on every race during the week and lost every time, illustrates the freaks of fortune in this respect He had just $50 left, and in sheer desperation cried out in the crowd that assembled at the hotel after the races, "I'll bet $50 I can name two men here with twentythree fingers." When the bet was taken, this child of fate continued: "Anybody'll do. Here, my friend, I'll take you. I have thirteen, and you have ten, that makes twenty-three. I knew there was one bet I could not lose." The stranger gazed at him a moment with a pitying expression, and then said, compassionately: "Well, I'm sorry for you. You have struck a hard streak of luck. I had three of my fingers shot off at Chickamauoa!" A droll discussion took place the other day in the town council of Musselburgh, near Edinburgh. Bailie Smart moved that the council spend 5 on the queen's birthday. "Nothine of the sort," said Treasurer McKinlay. "Oh, you are teetotalers!" exclaimed the provost "It would be better for you," was the retort, "if you were all teetotalers. If you want to fuddle, have it at your own expense." After more sharp talk the provost said, with much dignity, "In consequence of the coolness with which the motion is regarded, and since we can not observe the day in a manner creditable to her majesty, we had better let the matter drop." "our conduct," he added, addressing the council, "is utterly contemptible." So the five-pound note will not be abstracted from the borough funds. There was a curious accident at Philadelphia on Sunday. A Mr. Shoemaker, about to leave the city for the summer, got a watering-pot full of benzine with which to dampen the carpets and furniture and preserve them from moths. In less than an hour the gas generated by the benzine exploded with a fearful concussion and the room burst into flames. The servant girl was fatally injured, her clothes being burned away and her body baked to a crisp, and Mrs. Shoemaker was very dangerously hurt. An examination of the parlor after the fire had been extinguished showed something of the force of the explosion and the intense heat of the flames. The window shutters were blown open, glass smashed into atoms, wall cracked and the register knocked to pieces. The heat was so great that a small bronze figure was actually melted by it. Oh. no, a man don't like to have his name in print! It never flatters his vanity at all! The other day, while a man from Norwalk was doing up some Commercials, a reporter said: "Ab, my friend, we put your name in print, did we?" . Then the Norwalker looked up and assumed an important, cynical air as be said: "My name in print! Humph! I'd be a fool to save a Parier because my name appeared in it. If I saved all the papers that had my name in them I would have enough to fill a barn. There was an article in the paper which pleased me, and I thought it would interest some of my friends. That's what I was marking those papers for, if you are curious to know, sir. I don't notice whether or not you had put my name in the paper, but if you have done so I do not thank you for it. I'm tired of this being published so much." That's what Mr.- Jamison, of Norwalk, said, but when he stepped aside a moment to talk with a friend, the reporter looked at the papers and the article which the stranger had marked. It was very brief, and as follows: "Horace Jamison, of Norwalk, is at the Burnett House." "Oh, vanity, thy name is man!" Toledo Com merciall. The lightnings flared; übe hid her bead; The tbnnder roared; "Dear me!" Rhe said, Then 'neath the chin ha chucked her, And whispered, "It mo scared you are, Why don't you take a 'bob tailed' car f . that's sen conductor!"
WASHINGTON LETTER.
The Powertf Public Sentiment Republican Sovereignty The People ResponsibleWealth Dominant Only by Permtaalon. Special Correspondence of the Sentlnel.1 Washiitgtox, Jane 4. Orders from headquarters usually have authority, and sentiments from the same source should certainly have the greater bearing, because it is naturally supposed that such a locality is a proper standpoint for correct observation, as well as for sound ' knowledge. TbU city is the gathering place of the leading spirits of the government of the men who make political economy their study and wbo usually lead off in the creation and rule of public sentiment. In fact they largely run the government, and to accomplish their purposes they mold the people to their will and manipulate them to the shackles of their party. This is patent to every intelligent observer. While the average voter may fail to see it he, by his suffrage, is building up an empire of costly officials to rule the country at the expense of the sweat and toil and financial embarrassments of the voting masses. The poor man enjoys the glorious liberty of voting at the pools, and thinks it a great privilege; but does he imagine that in doing so he is only carrying out the plans and orders of his masters? But few of our people, comparatively, are thinkers, and but few of them art in government matters from their own personal convictions. With them the wheels turn, but they seem not to know that hands behind the throne give the impetus; and hence the forms of, the ballot-box evince too often only the mere theory of a republic. The plannings and results of elections are the work of designing and interested politicians. We talk of the power of public sentiment and of the talismanic results of the ballotbox, but where does this public sentiment originate? Who creates It? Who rules its results? How often is it the case that our great excitements are rotten up to carry a campaign, and to secure the success of men who after their election care only for themselves. The true interests of the public welfare are not considered. Political selfish ness rules as law, while the ignorance and pride of party spirit are all that is left as the heritage of the people. What is termed public sentiment is often only the simple creation of leading and designing men who want jobs for themselves, or wish to occupy some place or office that will fill their coffers and add to the arm of their strength in farther ruling the people. Even the theory is wrong and always wrong, and the sooner the people wake up to it the better. This is not a government of rulers, but of the people. They are the sovereigns and the legitimate creators of public sentiment, and as such they should see to it that their own sentiments rule in all government affairs, and that their public servants obey them and carry out their orders to the letter. They should not suffer themselves to be cajoled by political or moral tricksters, for the one will lead them into political slavery and the other will only seduce them to the igorant subordination of a blind fanaticism. Tne union of these two classes of demagogues has often done great harm in our government, and as yet their power has never been fully checked by the voice of the people. Sectionalism has taken the place of patriotism, and sectarian fanaticism has done its best to hold dominancy over the policy of the government. It is not a matter of wonder, then, that the people are everywhere complaining of dull times, of official extravagance and of ciyil tyranjr. These are the legitimate results of their own carelessness, and of their own political delinquencies. They have trusted the affairs of the government to the management of selfish trickster?, designing demagogues and moral mountebanks, who have shaped the outlines of our national partyism. arid created an order of government wholly incompatible with the genius of the republic and in direct conflict with the best interests of the people. For all these things, however, we hold the people responsible. They are to blame, because they are the guardians of their own rights and the protectors of their own privileges. If they suffer from false rule they surely are to blame, for no one can exercise official power without their consent, and if, through neglect or indifference or fanatical partisanship, they let selfish demagogues get into power they must reap the penalties of a misgoverned republic. In a government like ours this responsibility can not be shifted from the hands of the people without public injury, for the rule of the many instead of the few is the only safety of the government. It is often said that wealth rules all governments, and that it is an easy matter to buy up the masses to any desirable or coveted policy. This has, indeed, been done, as we are aware; but that it should obtain in a government like ours, where the people are the guardians of their own rights and privileges, is certainly the manifestation of a strange self-stultification, such as no thinking people would long submit to under any party name or under any circumstances whatever. The American people at this sime are complaining loudly and everywhere of the financial economy of this government But who made this government? we would ask. Are not the people the arbiters of the nation's destiny? Can any policy long exist without their consent? If they do not submit to the tyranny of rulers, can they be ruled at all? The very idea of a free people sitting still and complaining of the oppressive policy of the government when the whole thing is in their own hands is, to say the least of it, simply ludicrous. Let them be up and doing; let them speak out, and let them teach their public servants to do their will; and if they do not comply, let the voice of the ballot-box call others to serve them, and then they will see a redeemed republic and a prosperous people. O. P. Q. MCXCIE MATTERS. Store About Educational Matter. .... Mcscie, Ind., June 6. To the Editor of the Sentinel : Sib In your paper of the 5th appears a report of the re-election of 0. M. Todd as superintendent of Delaware county, and that report closes with the following obscure and equivocal paragraph: "A feeling of dire hatred is rue toward the superintendent of Muncie schools in regard to the position taken by him. Threats of bouncing him from bis position are coveted by some. He took strides, no doubt, outside of his business." Now, m justice to Superintendent McRae and the educational interests of the county generally, I, as a citizen, respectfully ask the use of a little space in which to partially review the above quoted statements. It can not be denied tuat a feeling of "dire hatred" does exist toward the superintendent of the city schools, for he was instrumental in defeating a deep laid scheme, the success of which would have been deleterious to the schools of., this county, both in the city and in the country., , But this ,"dire hatred is far very far from being "rife." It is confined to very narrow limits; it is confined . to the . defeated aspirants and a feeble band of expectant satellites. i Your Frenchy reporter says; 'Threats of bouDcing' him from hi; position are coveted
by some." Well, perhaps the position is coveted much more than the threats by that indefinite "some." And just here is a good place to suggest to that young reporter that he acquire at least a tolerable use of the common English before he attempts to pile on the French. "He took strides, no doubt, outside of his business." In Muncie and vicinity there are men of brains, men of wealth and influence, men of unquestionable character, men of many years' residence here, men who were identified with the educational interests of the eoanty beforeyour reporter was born, who believe that the action of Mr. McRae was perfectly legitimate and entirely within the compass of his business. What he did was done under the sanction of Mr. John McClintick, the president of the school board, who also took an active part in the same nent business men were vigorously exert direction, tjuite a number of the pronii ing themselves to the same end for which Mr. McRae was working; indeed, one of the defeated candidates declared nearly all the leading men bad used their influence against him. No doubt this assertion very closely approximates the truth. These men are not ward politicians; they keep out of every thing of the kind, and they regretted very much that this superintendency matter had been worked up by a few chronic place hunters to a state of affairs that forced them to take part in it They publicly gave their reasons for their actions in the matter. They say they are opposed to ingratitude, and as the defeated candidates were chiefly indebted to Mr. Todd for all the positions they ever held in this city, and for all the prominence they ever had in the county, the school officers took this plan to place themselves square on the roll of honor. Then the school men here are not in favor of putting a man out so long as he is doing good work; they never favor change until change is necessary; they are opposed to change merely to gratify the towering vanity of ambitious and untried adventurers. Mr. Todd has filled the place five years, and men of educational ability say that he has weeded out about all the incompetent teachers, and thereby brought the teaching ability of the county up to a standard that will compare favorably with that of any county in the state. It is quite possible, too. that , in this fact lies the great bulk of the opposition to him. Another reason these gentlemen had for reelecting Mr. Todd is that they have an arrangement with him by which they are trying to run the schools of the country and the schools of the city for the mutual benefit of each other. The city school officers refuse all offers from book agents to exchange text books even, unless the agents will give the same advantage to the whole county. And further, they wish to retain him because they know he is competent to examine the graduates of the Muncie high school. And last, though not least, they used their influence against the unsuccessful applicants because they (the school officers) are in favor of ethics among teachers, and will do all in their power t: discourage every enterprise that shows such a flagrant want of it. They hold that it is improper and unprofessional for one teacher to try and secure the place of another, until it is announced that there is. or will be, a vacancy. Mr. McRae has been superintendent of our schools for 10 years; im fact it was he that organized and put in motion the present graded system, and the people of Muncie will never remove him without a cause. On Monday night last the council selected Mr. John Husted as member of the school board, a position which he has held for 12 yi ors. He was elected by a majority of 9 to 1. This don't forbode any danger to Mr. McRae. Now I have written this to set right your readers who may have been misled in regard to our school matters by the ambiguous paragraph in Tuesday's Sentinel, and to let them know that we are still thoroughly alive to the sohool intereits of our city and county. Our two superintendents are prominently known among the leading educators of this and adjoining states, and we don't want them misrepresented by obscure individual?. ML VC IK ITEMS.
Reported Specially lor the Sentinel. Mckcie, Ind., June 8. The farmers and stock dealers in Delaware county are receiving large amounts of fine stock and poultry. This will soon be one of the leading counties of the state in this regard. ' The court now in session in Muncie is bringing whisky and billiard men to swift justice. Fifteen year old boys playing billiards will soon be a thing of the past here; indeed, it is now. The Murphy temperance movement has assumed a permanent organization in Muncie. Several committees were appointed this week to alleviate the sufferings of those out of employmeut the duty of one of the committees being to obtain work for those out of situations, who have signed the pledge. A westward bound 'freight train on the Bee Line, due at Muncie at 2:33 a. m. yesterday (Thursday), ran over and mutilated buth feet of Dillard Drake, a well known painter of this city. The whole sum and substance of the accident is due to his being under the influence of intoxicating liquor. It appears that Mr. Drake had started home east on the Bee Line railroad during the night and had fallen into a cattle guard on the railroad, on South Monroe street, and was so much under the influence of intoxicating liquor as to be unable to extricate his feet from between the cross bars, and that he moved his body off the track and left his feet lapped over the rails to the mercy of the train, which mashed them into a perfect jelly. The shock and his intoxicated condition prevented him from making his injuries known, and when he did resuscitate it was by d:nt of great energy and exceedingly lucky that he was found, and already he had sustained a loss of blood that made his chance for life very small indeed, it seemed impossible for him to live. At about noon to-day amputation was decided upon, and both his feet were amputated just above the ankles. Latest. At this writing (Friday evening) Mr. Drake is doing as well as could be. expected. He survived the chloroform and the surgical operation more favorably than was expected, and hopes are entertained that he will recover, though it will be through great adversity. , The manufacture of Chartreuse brings the convent of Chartreuse, in France, in millions of francs a year. Out of the profits between 12,000 and 20.000 a year is sent to the pope. The secret of making Chartreuse has now been known for the last three centuries to the monks. The recipe is kept carefully sealed up under the chief altar, and the t tone coffer in which it is contained is opened only when a new general is elected. . a a , . In Denmark it is customary to pray for the king, using the words of a regulation prayer appointed for the purpose. ' A discontented dominie on a recent Sunday so far departed from the prescribed custom as to pray that the "Lord would enlighten the mind of the king and turn bis heart so that he migtrt deserve the affection of his people." in a less enlightened age that dominie's head would have, dropped from his shoulders on Monday morning.
(SETOSE Strikes at the root of disease by purifying the blood, restoring the liver and kidneys to healthy action. Invigorating the nervous system. VEGETÖE Is not a vile, nauseous compound, which simpy purges the bowels, but a safe, pleasant remedy, which is sure to purify the blood, and thereby restore the health. VJEGETItfE Is now prescribed in cases of Scrofula and other diseases oi the blood by many of the best physiciar.8, owing to it great success in curing all diseases of this nature. VEGETIXE Does not deceive invalids into false hope by purging and creating a fictitious appetite, but assists nature In clearing and purifying the whole system, leading the patient gradually to perfect health. VEGETIXE Was looked upon an an experiment for come time by some of our best physicians, bat those most incredulous in regard . to its nie tits are now its raobt ardent friends and supporters. VEGETIXE Says a Boston physician, "has no equal as a blood purifier. Hearing of its many wonderful cures, after all other remedies had failed, 1 visited the laboratory and convluced mysell of its genuine merit. It Is prepared from barks, roots and herbs, each of which is highly effective, and they are compounded in such a manner as to produce astonishing results." VEGETIXE Is acknowledged and recommended by Physicians and apothecaries to be the best purifier and cleanser of the blood yet discovered, and thousands speak in its praise who have been restored to health.
"WHAT IS NEEDED. BosSon, Feb. 13 Mr. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir About one year since I found myself in a feeble condition from general debility. Vegetine was strongly recommended to me by a friend who had been much benefited by its use. I procured the article, and after using several bottles was restored to health and discontinued its use. I feel quite confident that there Is no medicine superior to it for those complaints for which it is especially prepared, and would cheerfully recommend it to thone who feel that they need something to restore them to perfect health. Respectfully yours, J. L. PETTING ILL, Firm of ß. M. Tettlngill & Co., 10 State street, Boston. Cincinnati, Nov. 26, 1872. Mr. II. R. Steveks: lJear 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 neu; these troubles are now entirely removed by the use of Vegetine. She was also troubled with dyspepsia and general debility, and has been greatly benefited. THOMAS O ILM ORE, 2äX Walnut 6treet. PEEL MYSELP A NEW MAN. Natick, Mass., June 1, 1872. Mr. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir Through the advice and earnest r? n-aasion of the Rev. E. 8. Best, of this place, have been taking Vegetine for dyspepsia, 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. Report from a Practical Chemist and Apothecary. Boston, Jan. 1, 1S74. Dear Sir This is to certify that I have sold at retail UA dozen (1,852 bottles) of your Vegetine since April 12, 1S70, and can truly say that it has given the best satisfaction of any remedy for the complaints for which it is recommended that I ever sold. Scarcely a day passes wi thout some of my customers testify ing to its merits on themselves or their friends. I - am perfectly cognizant of several cases of scrofulous tumors being cured by Vegetine alone in this vicinity. Very resrwctfully yours, AI IUIAN, MH Broadway. To II. It. Stevens, Esq. Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. VEGETINE IS SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SECOND GRAND DRAWING KENTUCKY CASH DISTRIBUTION CO.. LOUISVILLE, Ky., June 30, 1877. $310,000 CASH IN GIFTS. New Organization, New Scheme, Xew Maungeinent. Farmers' and Drovers' Bank, Louisville, Ky., LeposUory. The Kentucky Cash Distribution Co. Authorized by a special act of the Legislature, for the benefit of the Public Schools or Fraickfokt, will have the second of the series of grand drawings In the city of Louisville, Ky., Saturday, June 30, 1877, at Public Library Hall. $60,000 for ONLY TEN BIAS THE LIST OF GIFTS ! One Grand Cash Gift KW.OOO One Grand Cash Gift. 25,000 Ohe Grand Casn Gift .. 15,000 One Gruna Casn GitT 10,000 Three Grand Caen Gifts. ?5,0U0 each .. 15.0UO Five Grand Cash Gift, tJ.000 each 10,000 20 Cash Gifts of f 1.0UM each 2u,000 40 Casn Gifts ot 500 eacn 20,ouC 100 Casn Gifts of 200 each 20,000 300 Casn Gi fts of 100 each 30.000 500 Casn Otrts ot 50 eacn. 25.0UC' 6,000 Cash Gifts or 10 each 60,000 6,072 Cash Gifts, amounting to S310.0C0 Whole Tickets, f 10; Halves, 5; Quarter, 12.50; 11 tickets, 100: $ilA tickets, $300; b&A. tickets. S500. Drawing Positively June 30th, 1877, And Every Three Months Thereafter. The present management emphatically notify the public that there will be no postpone, meotof this di awing, as Is usual in such enterprises, bat that it will positively and unequivocally take place on the date named. This, the Second drawing, whl be conducted like the first, to the fairness of which the following named gentlemen have testified : The Hon. Alvln Duval!, late chief justice supreme court of Kentucky. James G. Dadley, chairman board of school trustees. ' Grant Green, cashier Farmers' bank of Ken- ' tucky. The Hon. 8. 1. M. Major, publie printer state of Kentucky. The lion. Thomas N. Lindsay, president Farraers' bank of Kentucky. The Hon. Thomas o. Jones, clerk of supreme conrt of Kentucky. J udge R. A. Thompson, presiding Judge Franklin county court. James G. Crockett, clerk Franklin county court. Remittances can be made by Mall, Express Draft, P. O. Order or Registered Letter, made payable to Ü. W. Barrow A Co. . Ticke' paid promptly and without discount. Reliable Agents wanted. All communications and orders for tlckeU should be addressed to ,, i . W. BARROW CO.; I ' ' General Managers, J Courier-Journal Building. Louisville, Ky., Or THOS. H. HAYS 4 CO., General Agenti, 697 lirwadway, SewYorfc. Sccc for CLculir.
CAN
-AT THE GRAND HOTEL. Dr. Von Moschzisker, Whose Success in the Treatment of OATAKEH, THROAT, LUNG, CHEST DISEASES, DEAFÄES3, NOISES LU THE HEAD, IMPAIRED SIOHT.COMPLAINT3 OF THE LIVEE, KIDNEYS, AND OTHER 0HR0NI0 MALADIES, Has never been surpassed by any other Physician or Specialist, has, by the most URGENT REQUEST of his former patients, PROLONGED HIS STAY, And should at once be seen by all who desire to be treated by him. Since his stay here, now nine months, he has published over 120 TESTIMONIALS From some ot the very best and most responsible citizens, who names have so often appeared in the papers that he thinks it but Just no longer to parade them before the public, but their letters can be examined at his office. Grand Hotel. GOOD OLD STAND-BY, IF all the Liniments, Lotions, and Com pounds, advertised during thirty years past, to cure pain, could be poured together in a solid mass they would probably fill the Erie Canal I It all the money spent In puffins these '"sure cures, "could be computed, the amount would well nigh pa j the national debt! Yet human suffering continues, and the "cureall8," where are ihey? Gone to the limbo of forgotten things. But we are aU Darwinians in one thing, at least: we believe unanimously in thescKViVAL OF THE FITTEST. "There's the respect that makes the old Mexican Mustang Liniment ot so long life." Shakespeare (improved). The great flood of clap-trap medicaments has swept itself "down and out;" the M nwtanc Liniment has seen them come and seen them, go, and it survives triumphant and almost aione to-day! After more than thirty yeart of of populurily and well doing absolutely m'ttchle Che reliable old MKXICAN MUSTANO LINIMENT eil today more rapidly, and perform more miraclet of cure, than ever beore This is a significant fact, and we may properly asK, why is it so? BeCinM (Ten Reasons). 1. No Liniment equal in powers to the MUSTANG has ever been discovered. 2. It performs what it promises to do. 3. It is equally valuable for man and for beast. 4. While the catoh-pennjr plasms only relieve for the time, the Mustang cures perma nently. 5. The people have had an average life-time to decide the matter in, and they are not to be misled at this late day. 6. The Mustang Is a balm for every wound; a cure for every cripple. 7. From a film in a horse's eye to a painracked and tortured rheun.atic,there is no case where MnetAng Liniment is not sure to do good. 8. It is the cheapest medicine in the world; a twenty-five cents often saves a valuable horse, or a life on crutches. 9. It is as safe to use as water and as sure to cure as the sammer sun Is to melt ice. 10. It is the natural remedy for any kind of sore or lameness in the Human Family, or the Brute Creation except cats); in short the Mustang is The Good Old Stand-By If neither your father nor your grandfather has impressed these truths upon you, learn them now. Go and invest twenty-five cent In a bottle of Mexican Vf nUng Liniment. Don't undeitake to improve upon the safe reliances oT your parents. When an emergency comes have a bottle of Mustang ready for use. It is the Liniment of Liniment, the one whose merit have kept before the people when all the others have dropped out of sight and were forgotten SOLD BY EVERY DEALSE IN" I0INE EVERYWHERE. MEDFAIR FAIR PAIR PAIR FAIR FAIR FAIR FAIR FAIR PAIR FAIR FACES. FACES. FACES. F CKS. FACES. FACrS. FACE-. FACES. FACES. FACES. FACES. If yon adntir beaaty in woman, advlxe I ho of MaernoliM Ha I in. This bean ti tier given the warn, nearly flnh or rionctlew beanljr to the plainest fa er. It remove ernntionM, freckle, and the finwli of tndlen excitement. o fashionable lady ran lo without It, Mold at all lime and fan cy stores. Dr. JAMES, Lock llotpital, 2 04 "Washington St, Cor Pnaklln, CHICAGO. Cht tend tr Ik Kuu af IIH"i. tor th, prrm pn rpnm UcofpnTt, chronic 4 rlnarr dWu la 11 their a.Urai4 i m. it U well Dr. Jum ha aus 4 the head of the prsfeuioa for the pt thirty rear. An and eipertea- art all tmpartanu anlMl WraaaM airat Iraar br dreana. timptea aa thm faca, lot manhaod. aaa aaclüTelj b aiarad. Ladua waatiag the aKwt drlirata atttntioa, nil ar vrta. Pleswit bom tor patiaata. A book for tb Million Warria Galde hieb tcUa 70a all almt tbeae dla. wha abouM aaarrT, art? aat, 10 rata ta pa peatu. Ir. Jaaiea baa in. roaau aad parlar. Ya are ao oa teat ü Irtir. OffWc boor. a. u ta I p.m.; Beodar. lOtala Dt. Jim bj tOraar at aa. . v V. ITPI1 r" ... IWlm ftaai rl.etaiiaTa mad law a toad. 0 1'KUULi U. Salary Ubarai, baat Mat permaotaL Bowl aad tr'.H( txpcaaaa paid.
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