Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 27, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1878 — Page 6
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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, "WEDNESDAY MOHNTNG, MAT 1, 1878.
RAN D FAT II ER'S PET.
This Is the room where she slept, . Only a year to Quiet and carefully swept, Blinds and curtains like snow. There, by the bed In the dusky gloom, - ' 8he would, kneel with her tin) clasped hands and pray! Here Is the little white rose of a room, With the fragrance fled away ! JJellv, grandfather' pet. With her. wise little face 1 seem .to hear her yet Hinging about the pltce; But the crowds roll on and the streets are drear, And the world seems hard with a bitter doom. And Nelly Is singing elsewhere and here is the little white rose of a room. Why, if she stood Jnst there, As she nsed to do. With her long light-yellow hair And heT eyes of blue If she stood, I say, at the edge of the bed, And ran to rny side with a living touch. Though I know she is quiet and buried and dead, I should not wonder much; For 6he was so young, you know Only seven years old ; And sue loved me, loved me so. Though I was gray and old; And her face was so wise and so sweet to see. And it still looked living when she lay dead And she u'sed to plead for mother and me By the side of that very bed ! J wonder, now. if she Knows 1 am standing here, Feeling, wherever she be, We hold the place so dear? It can not be that she sleeps too sound, Still In her nightgown drest, Not to hear my footsteps soundIn the room where she used to rest. I have felt hard fortune's stings, And battled in doubt and strife. And never thought much of things Beyond this human life; But I can not think that my darling died Like great strong men, with their prayers untrue Nay, rather she sits at God's own side, And sings as she used to do! HOW GREAT MEN WORK. CasselTs Magazine. The methods of authors in the course of composition have been singular, and, thongh no two of them have worked alike, they hare, most of them, illustrated the old proverb that genius is labor, and that few great works have been produced which hare not been the result of unwearied perseverance as well as of brilliant natural powers. Some men have undoubtedly possessed astonishing facility and readiness" both of conception and expression, as we shall presently see; but as a rule, the writings of such men, except in the case of Shakespeare, are not so valuable as they might have been, and are marred by crudities which might otherwise have been finished beauties, 'by detormities which should have been graces. F i rst among the sons of literary toil stands Virgil. He used, we are told, to pour out a large number of verses in the morning, and to spend the rest of the day in pruning them down; he has humorously compared himself to a she bear, who licks her cubs into shape. It took him three years to compose his 10 short Eclogues; seven years to elaborate his Georgics, which comprise little more than 2,000 verses; and he employed more than twelve years in polishing his ".Kneid," being even then so dissatisfied with it that he wished before his death to commit it to the fames. Horace was equally indefatigable, and there are tingle odes in his works which must have cost him months ot labor. Lucretius' one poem represents the toil of a whole life; and so careful was Plato in the niceties of verbal collocation, that the first sentence in his "Republic' was turned in nine different ways. It mast have taken Thucydides upwards of twenty years to write his history, which Is comprised in one octavo volume. Gibbon wrote the first chapter of his work three times before he could please himself; and John Foster, the essayist, would sometimes spena a week over one sentence. Addison was so particular that he would stop the press to insert an epithet, or even a comma; and Montesquieu, alluding in a letter to one of his works, says to a correspondent, "You will read it in a few hours, but the labor expended on it has whitened my hair." The great French critic, St. Deuve, expended incredible pains on every word, and two or three octavo pages often represented a whole week's incessant effort. Gray would spend months over a short copy of verses; and there is a poem of ten lines in Waller's works which, he has himself informed us, took him a whole summer to formulate, iliss Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Hume and Fox have all recorded the trouble they took. Tasso was unwearied in correcting; so were Pope and Boileau. Even Macaulay, with all his fluency, did not disdain the application of the file; and there are certain passages In the first chapter of his history which represent months of patient revision. There is a good tale told of Malherbe, th'j French poet, which illustrates very amusingly the elaborate care he took with his poems. A certain nobleman of his acquaint ance had lost his wife, and was anxious that Malherbe should dedicate an ode to her memory, and condole with him on the loss he had sustained. Malherbe complied, but was so fastidious in his composition that it was three years before the elegy was comEleted. Just before he sent it in, e was intensely chagrined to find that his noble friend had solaced himself with a new bride; and was, consequently, in no humor to be pestered with an elegy on his old one. The unfortunate poet, therefore, lost both his pains and his fee. So morbidly anxious was Cardinal Bembo about verbal correctness that every poem he composed is said to have pased successively through forty portfolios, which represented the various stages toward completeness. The great Pascal affords another instance of similar literary conscientiousness. What he especially aimed at was brevity. He once apologized to a friend for writing him a long letter on the ground that he had had no time to make it shorter and the result is that his "Provincial Letters" scarcely yield to Tacitus or to the "Letters of Junius" in concise epi grammatical brilliancy. Some authors have rapidly sketched the plan of their intended work first, and have reserved their pains for filling out the details. The great French novelist. Balzac, followed this method. He sent off to the printer - the skeleton of the intended romance, leaving pages of blank paper between lor conversations, descriptions, etc As soon as that was struck off he shut himself up in his study, eat and drank nothing but bread and water till he had filled up the blank spaces, and in this way laooneusiy completed his book. Goodwin wrote his "Caleb Williams" backward beginning, that is to say, with the last chapter, and working on to the first. Richardson produced hia ponderous novels by painfully elaborating different portions at different times. Burton, the author of ' the "Anatomy of Melancholy," the great scholars Barthius and Turnebus; Butler, the author of "Hudibras;" Locke; Fuller, the "witty" divine; Bishop Horne, Warburton, Hurd and many others kept commonplace books, which may account for the copious and apposite illustrations which enrich their volumes. Sheridan and Hook were always on the alert for bits of brilliant conversation and stray jokes, which they took good care to jot down in their pocket books for future use. The great lientley always bought editions of classical authors with very broad margins, and put down the observations which might occur to him in the course of his reading which is the secret of his lavish erudition. Pope scribbled down stray thoughts for future use whenever they struck him at a dinner table, in an open carriage, at his toilet and in bed. Hogarth would sketch any face that struck him on Ills finger nail, hence the marvellous diver aity of feature in his infinite galleries of por
traits. Swift would lie in bed in the morning "thinking of wit for the day;" and Theodore Hook generally "made ,np his.inv Fromptus the night before." Washington rving was fond of taking his portfolio out into the fields and laboriously manipulating his graceful-periods while swinging on a stile. Wordsworth and De Quincey did the same.' It would be easy to multiply instances of the pain and labor expended on compositions which to all appearance bear no traces of such effort. But it is now time to reverse the picture, and to mention meritorious pieces produced against time and with extraordinary facility. Luciliusv the Roman satirist, wrote with such ease that he used to boast that he could turn off 200 verses while standing on one leg. Enniua was quite as fluent Of Shakespeare we are told, "Ilia mind and hand went together, and what he thought he uttered with that easiness that we I the editors of the -First Folio) have scarce received from
him a blot in his papers." When the fits ofinspiration were on Milton his amanuensis could scarcely keep pace with the fast flowing verses; but we must remember that ..tbe poet had been brooding over his immortal work for years before a line was committed to peper. The most marvellous illustrations of this facility in writing are to be found in the two Spanish poets, Calderon and Lope de Vega. The latter could write a play in three or four hours; he supplied the Spanish stage with upwards of 2,000 original dramas, and Hallam calculates that during the course of his life he "reeled off" upwards of 21,300,000 lines! Of English writers, per'haps the most fluent and easy have been Dryden and Sir Walter Scott In one short year Dryden produced four of his greatest works, namelv, the first part of "Absalom and Achitophel," "The Medal," "Mac Flecknoe," his share in the second part of "Absalom and Achitophel" and the "Religio Lalci." He was less than three years in translating the whole of Virgil. He composed his elaborate parallel between poetry and painting" in twelve mornings. "Alexander's Feast" was struck out at a single sitting. Everybody knows the extraordinary facility of Sir Walter Scott how his amanuensis, when he employed one, could not keep pace with the breathless speed with which ne dictated his marvelous romances. If we can judge from the many original manuscripts of his novels and poems which have been preserved to us, it would seem that he scarcely ever recast a sentence or altered a word when it was committed to paper.- The effect of this is that both Dryden and Scott have left a mass of writings valuable for the genius with which they are instinct, but defaced with errors, with grammatical blunders and with many pleonasms and tautologies, the consequence of their authors not practicing what Pope calls The first and greatest art, the art to blot Dr. Johnson's "Rasselas" was written in a week, to defray the expenses of his mother's funeral. Horace Walpole wrote nearly all the "Castle of Ontranto" at a sitting, which terminated not by mental fatigue, but by the fingers becoming too weary to close on the pen. Beckford's celebrated "Vathek" was composed by the uninterrupted exertion of three whole days and two whole nights, during which timethe ecstatic author supported himself by copious draughts of wine. What makes the feat more wonderful is that it was written in French, an acquired lanfiuage, for Beckfprd wa?, of course, an Eoglshman. When we learn that Ben Jonson completed his highly wrought comedy of the "Alchymist" in six weeks, and that Dr. Johnson could throw off forty-eight octavo pages of such a finished composition as his "Life of Savage" at a sitting, one is indeed lost in bewildering admiration, and perhaps half inclined to doubt the author's word. The Atheist and tbe Flower. Exchange. When Napolean Bonaparte was emperor of France he put a man by the name of Charney into prison We thought Charney was an enemy of his government, and for that reason deprived him of his liberty. He was a learned and profound man, and as he walked to and fro in his small yard into which bis prison opened he looked up to the heaven?, the work of God's fingers, and to the moon and stars which he ordained, and exclaimed "All things come by chance." One day when pacing the yard he saw a tiny plant just breaking through the ground near the wall.' The sight of it caused a pleasant diversion of his thoughts. Not another green thing was within his inclosure. He watched its growth every day. "How it came there?" was his natural inquiry. As it grew other queries were suggested. "How came these delicate little veins in its leaves. What made its proportions so perfect in every part, each new branch taking its exact place on the parent stock, neither too near another nor too much on one side?" In his loneliness the plant became the prisoner's teacher and valued friend. When the flower began to unfold he was filled with delight It was white, purple and rose-colored, with a fine silvery fringe. Charney made a frame to support it and did what his circumstances allowed to shelter it from the pelting rains and violent winds. "All things came by chance," had been written by him on the wall just above where the flower grew. Ita gentle reproof, as it whispered, "there is one who made me so wonderfully beautiful, and He it is who keeps hie alive," shamed the proud man's unbelief. He brushed the lying words from the wall, while his heartfelt that "He who made all things is God. ' But God had a further blessing for the erring man through the humble flower. There was an Italian prisoner in the same yard, whose little daughter was permitted to visit him. The little girl was much pleased with Charney's love - for his flower. She related what she saw to the wife of the jailer. The story of the prisoner and his flower passed from one to another until it reached the ears of the amiable. Empress Josephine. The empress said : "The man who eo devotedly loves and tends a flower can not be a bad man." Then she persuaded the emperor to set him at liberty. Charney carried his flower home and carefully tended it in his green house. It had taught him to believe in God, and had delivered him from prison. Mistaken. Humming birds are very fond of flowers. The Middletown (Cat) Press tells of one of the little fellows that went off on a "new scent" decidedly: "A young gentleman of this village has one of the rarest pets, a hum ming bird, which has a nest near his home, and which has become so thoroughly tamed that it readily feeds Irom his hand. A laughable incident occurred recently while he was feeding it He had been holding fuchsias and other flowers in his hand, from which the little beauty was enjoying a fine repast, and he had also given it some syrup. Suddenly a blossom, which has lately appeared on the young gentleman's proboscis, attracted the attention of the attention of the bird, and he made a dive for it, finding it a fraud when it was reached. When a nose gets so attractive with blossoms that even humming birds go for it it is time the owner of such a nose donned the blue ribbon." There is one thing calculated to develop all the latent pedestrian ability a woman has in her, and that is to be caught out in a shower with her Sunday bonnet on, and no umbrella. Bny It la Cans. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder should be bought only in cans, securely labeled, as it is sold by the proprietors In no other way. Loose powder is often sold as Dr. Price's, when It is not. It has stood the test of chemical analysis, and is decided to be the most perfect made.
45 Years Before the Public. THE GENUINE DR. C. IilcLANE'S CELEBRATED LIVER PILLS, - FOR THE CURE OF Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, DYSFtFSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. PAIN in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases on pressure; sometimes the pain is in the left side; the patient is rarely able to lie on the left side; sometimes the pain is felt under. the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in the arm. . The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness; the bowels in general are costive, sometimes alternative with lax; the head is troubled with pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part There is generally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation of having left undone something which ought to have been done. A slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant The patient complains of weariness and debility; he is easily startled, his feet are cold or burning, and he complains of a prickly sensation of the skin; his spirits are low; and although he is satisfied that exercise would be beneficial to him, yet he can scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it In fact, he distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the liver to have been extensively deranged. AGUE AND FEVER. Dr. C. McLane's Liver Tills, in cases of Ague and Fever, when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. We would . advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a fair trial. For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are Unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. ' Every box has a red wax seal on the lid, with the impression Dr. Mc Lane's Liver Pills. The genuine McLane's Liver Tills bear the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros, on the wrappers. .Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. McLane's Liver Pills, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Fa., the market being full of imitations of the name JHcLane, spelled differently but same pronunciation. LINDSEY'S BLOOD SEARCHER I, ib f rcau iimmm lieMM m iu are. TVltrr. rrotiiln, Lima, h..ila, Pi m ;, mid nl I Rloorl ii-i yild toit womit-r-ful pow-r. Hare HIolilhKUariitofllvalth. Kcadi It carrd my worn of Krofla." . K. HroeU, linnU, ft "It crrJ T ckilii of Eri,wU." Mr. K. Smrltttr, l.r-iMn,A-Inc. II. R. E. M.LI.LH k HI., Wop', I itt.burrh. fa, Sul4 f aVnfguu ttd The Phoenix Drain Tile Machine Is claimed to be the most simple, strong ana durable machine now n the market. May be driven by either steam or horse-power, and will make either Tile or Brick of a qual ity that la unsurpassed. .Purchasers will no e the substantial aa well ai finished make of this machine; the easy uccesslbility of it working ptrts; the meana of keening 1W plunge-chnnber to fi' closely, without reference to sire or wear; and It general suitability for making Tile at the lowest COSU SEND FOR CIRC UL 4 K.H. CHANDLER & TAYLOR, Indianapolis, Ind. SALE FOR STREET IMPROVEMENT. frw thi m a k 4 ha t w r Titillanu nrkltti I ni) ana, and duly attested by the clerk of said ciiv unuer we corporate seai ui buiu cjij , W 111 uu SATURDAY, May 18, 1878, sell, at public auction, at the City Coort Room, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m., and i o'clock p. in., of said day, the following described lot, or parcel of land, or o mnch thereof a m;iy be neceiwnry to nutisfy the um hereinafter named an assessed asainM, such premises for street improvement, and all coots, to-wit: Lot No. flny-slx (V5) In Panlop and Tntewller's subdivision of Morria'adtitlon to the city of IndianapolU, Marion count, Indiana, owned by Josephine Balz, against which in assessed th sum of twelve dollar and ten cent ($12.10) for street improvement in lavor of Frederick Gansberg contractor. WILLIAM M. WILES, City Treasurer. Indianapolis. Ind.. April 24, 1878. $200,000 Worth of GOLD PLATED JEWELRY. For OWE DOLLAH we will send an below, all M'arrnlrl tint lttl 1 Pair Gold Stone ttleeve buttons; 1 Pair Kn graved Hlerve Ihittons; 1 set Pointed Studs; 1 8et Amethyst Studs; 1 Wedding King; 1 Engraved Bnd Finger Ring: 1 Amethyst Stone King; 1 Elegant King, marked Friendship;'' 1 Handsome Scarf Pin; I Splendid Silver Hat Pin; 1 set Ladies' Jet and (Jold Pin and Drops; 1 Muwes' set. Jet and Uold;l Ladles' Jet Set, Ornamented; 1 et Handsome Kogebnd Ear drops; 1 Gents' Elegant Lake (ieorge Diamond stnd;l Cardinal Red Bead Necklace; 1 Pair Ladies Pearl Kar Drofw; 1 Ladle Ornamented Jet Brooch: 1 Fancy Hcarf King and Eletcant Watch Chain. Take youfrhoice, the entire U4 of 20 pieret tent pot-jtul for &1, or any 8 pieces you chitouft for aoerntt. C'luO premium Any one sending us a club of twelve at one dollar, we Will se id a rolii ft! Iter Watch Free. F. STOCKMAN, 27 Bond St., New York. CONSUMPTION. Cause, Treatment and Curability. Short treaties sent freo to any address. DR. BMIXU, Hq, M Can Fifteen! 1. st,, He York,
OLD,
TltlEDs AND People ar pitting noqr.ainted tltoae who are tmt ought to Ikv with the wonderful merits of that great American Kennedy, the MEXICAN Mustang Liniment, FOR MAN AND BEAST. This liniment very naturally originated In America, where Xatnre provide In her laboratory uch surprising i.ntidotcs for the maladies of her children. Its fame has been rproodlng for Sj5 years, until now It encircles the habitable-globe. ' The Hex lean Mustang Ualr.ient 1 a matchless remedy forall external ailments of imncndbcaKt. To stork owners and farmers it Is invaluable. A finglo bottle often saves a human life or restores the usefulness cf p.a excellent horse, ox, cov.-, or f hcep. It cures foot-rot, hoof-ail. hollow honv, grub, crew-worm, shoulder-rut. r.iange, the bites aud -stings of poisonous reptiles end inseets, and every such drawback to Ftock breeding and bush life. It cures every external trouble of horses, such as lameness, reratches, rwlnny, spruins, founder, wind pall, rins-boac, etc., etc. The Mexican Mustang Liniment Is the quickest cure In the world for uccldents occurring In the family. In the abr-enco of a physician, such as burns, scalds, sprain, cuts, etc., nuJ for rheumatism, and MllTncss engendered by exposure. Tar. ticularly valuable to lliners. . It Is the cheapest remedy In the world, for It penetrates the muscle to the bone, and a single application Is generally sufficient to cure. Mexican Mustang Liniment Is put up la three alzesof bottles, the larjrer ones bell g proportion(.toZymucu the cheapest. Sold everywhere. THE ORIGINAL & ONLY 6ENUINE Vibrator" Threshers, WITH 131 PRO VXD MOUNTED HORSE POWERS, And Steam Thresher Engines, Made only by NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO., BATTLE CREEK, MICH. THE Matchless) GrKin-etavin-, Time, baring, u4 Mioy-Svitiir 'ihraairs at ml day 1 rBe ration. Brroad ail Rivalry lor Rapid Work, Parfeet Ckauiaf , sad for barluf Onia from Wastaf. GRAIN Raisers will not Submit to tbe enormous wastasa ut Grata A lu Interior work nm hj lb atacr machines, wlio ouct potted oa the difference. TIIK ENTIRE Tbreshlnsr Expenses land oll la llinr llutt aaauaul can k tnl l. Um Kztra Orain BAVKD br Ukh Improred lindanes. HO Revolving: Shafts InN tho Separator, fclillrrly fre I low Beater, llriter. kU.MU-, and all amen tlm-watlac and rnun-waatlair rompliratlooa. Ferfwtly alaptrd to all Kind and Cnndltlou of Grain, Wet or Dry, Lonf or 6hort, Headed or Boa id. MOT nlr Vastly Pn perl or for Wheat, Oata. H.rlY, Uym, and Ilk Uraioa, but cne oLt bo ceaafnl Thrcouer In Plax, TlmoUijr, Millet, Clow, and Ilk Seed. Reqnlrra no " attachment " or rtmUdln " ' to cbaaga from ttmia to Seed. ARVELOUS fer simplicity of Parts, in, a out uwi ai nai jmiio oaw weara Hakes BO LUtcriBf a or ocsUuiuf. FOUR (Sizes jf Separators Made, ran trine, from Nl to Twelve More ftise, and Iwoatylraof Muanud Bono rower to awtca. STEAM Power Thresher a Specialty, a. ecia. aUo bepnmtor Bind ejtfreeal; tat bteam Power. OUR TJnrlTalerl Steam Thresher Ea Kino, wlia VainnUo lmprovemouta and Piallaciivo feat area, far beyond nay other tank or kind. IV Th or oath Workmanship, Eleraae Platan, Perfection of fart, Compieteae ot ataiBmrnl. tte., oar VwaaTOB" Throsbcr Outfit are Incomparable. R PaMtoaila". mII . fiatalavM WEtto to no tor aUaatratod Clrcoiart wnk w mail treo SMOOTHKG, .GLOXSLW, FLUTIXO, Crimping and Band Iron. X1 Vaft EH w nf u a LATELY IMPROVED. Every Iron and Its attachments heavily nlcket.plated and Highly polished. The cheap est, handsomest and best Uloaslng, Klutlug, Crimping and Banulron In the world. Five irons on one handle and e ach Iron complete in itself, with its adjustraenta so simple that a child can avdjuat tiiem. We want amenta in every county In the Union to sell this beautiful, useful and saleable article, to whom exclusive agencies will be Klveu FREE, affording an anurpuisel opportunity to make money. Send postal eard for circulars and terms, we will send saru pie Irons to test, complete with starch, receipt- order boofc, circulars, large pouters, etc., on receipt of tho remarkable low ptice OIfi.50. Don't fall to send for samples. We guarantee you will be dellzhted with 1L Address HOME IIpON CO , Box WO Pittsburg, Ta. amnwaeammawawannwannnwnwan WANTED IMMEDIATELY, Ascents to sell Navln'a Explanatory Stocfc Doctor, the New IllastraeJ History of Indiana and Fine Family 111 oles.' Great lndivyments to agents. Adilres J. W.LAXKTKKE A CO., Indianapolis Ind. o i icj nvr . Habit Cured. A Certain aad Sure tnre. Likrf; redaction in prteM. a trial bottle free. Mr. J. A.DKULL1NUCR, La port, Ind. Box, .Formerly Hrs, Dr. b, Collins J
TRUE
C VI B R AT 0 a s Kcc-KareaU.
nOTICE OF SALE
-OFLANDS MORTGAGED t-TO TH1 COLLEGE FUND. Notice is hereby pven that the following described lands and lots .or so much ot each tract parce or lot, aa may be ntcessary, will be offered at public sale to the highest bidder, at the court house door, in tbe city of Indianapolis, Indiana, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m.,on Monday, April 22, Wrt.tbe same beln? mortgaged to the state ol Indiana to secure ttie payment of loans from, or sold on a credit, on account of the College Fund, and forfeited by non-payment of interest due It: Xo.130. The eat half of the southwest quarter of section 5 In township 15, north of range 7 east, containing eighty acres moreorle-s in Honcoek county, InUi-na, Mortgaged by Harry PieriKin and Betsy Pierson, his wife; principal, fiiO.00; Interest, f2H00; damages, 13J: costs, S12.UU. Total, taw.!).o.41:. Commencing at the north west corner of the westha.fof the southwest quarter of section 2, in township 13, north of range 6 east, running thence south eighty poles to the center of the UlufJ road, thence east with said road to a cherry tree, thence north to the north line of said Quarter section, thence west to the place of beginning, containing twenty three acres and lifty-three poles. In Shelby county Mortgaged by Thomas J. Norvell and Ibby lSorvell: principal. Sloo.Ou; interest, $.50; damages, f V2(i; costa, 11ZUU. Total, tl;2.5ti. 0.630. The northeastquarterof section 32, In township 7, north of range 10 eat, containing ltio acres; also the southwest quarter of the noithwest quarter o; section 5, in township 6, north ot range 10 east, containing 4:i acres and sixty-one one hundredths acres, all in Ripley county, Indiana. Mortgaged by Sarah A. Vail; principal, 574.00; Interest. IK1.40; damages. fct$.87; costs, m.UU. Total, f7SC7. ' """CB A o. 6SI. The eiust hall of the southwest quarter of section 3, 4n township 15, north of range 7 east, in Hanc ck countv. Mortgaged by Lewis .SebaMian. Jr., and Ellen E.Sebastianprincipal, "OOO; interest, M6.65; damages. 11-7.33; coKU.812.0t.. Total, foS5.8. S ' No. 7S4. Eight acres and eighty-six hundredths of an acm off the south end of the west half of tbe north west quarter of section 19, In township 15. ranee 4, eat. In Marion county Mortgaged by 1 qmellus W. Van Honten: principal, .(. ; Interest, 112.00; damages! 319.00; costs, I12.ui. Total, J123.U0. a 77. The undivided one-half of the following described lands, viz: The east half ot the southwest quarter, and the southwest quarter of the nortbwet quarter of section 34 township 18, north of range 7 west, containing in all one )iundr.?d and twenty acres, more or less, in fountain connty. Mortgaged by William H. White and Elizabeth Wnite, hu wifeprincipal, J4H00O; interest, 143.30; damages! 22.18; costs, 512.(0. Total, S477.40. S A" e. 799. All of the west half of lot numbered one hundred and twenty-one, In the original plat to the city t.f Lafayette, Indiana, except twenty-two teet off of the eist end of said west half, heretofore conveyed to the city of Lafayette by deed dated April 3, ISoa, and recorded in Deed Record o. 35, on pages 2H0 and 291, in the reoorder'a office of Tippecanoe countv Indiana, Mortgaged by Jay Mix: principal. .VX).(J; interest, f?-7.00; damages, rJUlo- costs 812 00. Total, 82SJ5. co,,l8, Ko.&03. The southwest quarter of ihe northeast quarter oi section 22, township ll, north of range one eat, containing 4 j acres, in Morgan county. Mortgaged by Benjamin F. Riley and Elizabeth J.ltiiey, his wife. Principal. 8408.00; interest, 8i3.00; damages, 823.15; costs 812.00; total, 839M5. ' No. All of lot Xo. 5 in Samuel Merrill's subdivision of outlet number one hundred and four, in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana. Mortgaged by John W. Rrocgh and Sarah E Brough. Principal, $500 00; interest. 824.00; dam ages, 82 20; costs, 812. 0; total, 8o62.20. Ko.37. LoU"R"and-S"in James M.Ray'; subdivision of the south and east parts of out lot number one hundred and fifty-nine, inth city of Indianapolis, Indiana. Also thenndi vlued seven-eifhteenths o the following de scribed tiact of land, viz: beginning atth southeast corner of the northeast quarter ot section No. 7, in township No. 15, north of range No. 4 east; running thence north seven chains and 00 links to the Michigan road; thence north seventy and degrees west with the south side of said road two chains and 65 links: thence touth, and parallel with the section line, eight chains and 0 links; thence east two chairs and 49 links, to the place of beginning, con-ainlng two. acres, in Marion county. Mortgaged by David H. Chaise aDd Sarah Ann Chilse. Principal, $500.00; interest, 845.75; damages, S27.27 costs, 8i2.0j; total. toN5 02. Xo. 877. Part of lot 3 in the subdivision bv Elizabeth Frazer of the southeast quarter o'f outlot number 3 in the city or Indianapolis, Indian, and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at ihe southeast corner of said lot No 3 on Noith street, and running thence north bO feet to a point in the e.ut line of said lot No. 8, thence west 30 feet to a point in the east line of th5 loot alley on the west side of said lot: thence south and paral'el to the first line 8 feet to a point in the south line of said lot on North street, and thence east. 30 feet to Xo. 977. The northeast ouarter of the nonth. west quarter t.f section 10 in township 12, north of rauge 2 east, containing 40 acres, more or less, in Morgan county. Mortgnged bv George W. Pettet and Nancy E. Pettet. Principal, f-VW.iiO; interest, 373.00; damages, 828.65; costa 812.00; total, $ 113.65. . ' Mo. 99. The northeast ouarterof the southeast, quarter of section No. 2 township 30, north of range 7 west, in Jasper county. Mortgaged by David H. Yeoman and Emma E. Yeoman, til wife. Principal, 8300.00; interest, 850.C0; damages, 827.50; costs, 812.00; total, JiS9.50. Ko.1.020. Twenty acresoff north endof the north quarter of the northeast quarter of section No. 3, township No. 12, north range one east. In Morgan county. Mortgaged by Abre ham Stlpp and Nancy Rtlpp, his wife. Prit? cipal, 8-" 0.00; Interest. 831.00; damages, 826.5T costs, f 12.00; total, 8o09.55. No. 1,044. The northwest quarter of thi southeast quarter and the southeast of th southeast quarter of section 0, township 1C northofraiige4east, in Brown county. Mort gaged by Conrad J Klskey and Rebecca KJs key, his wife. Principal, 8350.00; Interest tJK.bo; damu-es, 819.44; costs, 812.00; tottd 8420.29. no. 1.047. Lots numbered 32, 33. 31 and 35 in John ti. Webb's subdivision of lots numbered 13. 15 and IB in Han way and llanna's Oak Hill tuburb to the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, in M rion county. Mortgaged by Eliza beth Halney. Principal, 8500.00: interest, f 02.10: damages. 827.60; costs, 812.00: total, 8591.00. So. I.OSO. Lot No. 2 in J. M. Myer's resubdivislou of lots numbered 5(1, 57, 6H and 59 in Drake ami Ilayhew's second addition to the city of InditmapoHs, Marion county, Indiana. Mort aged by James M. Myers and MarvO. Myer6. Principal, 85O0.00: interest, 130.50; damages, $17.62; costs, 812.00; total, 89.52. o. I.O6. Lot No. 4 in John Young's first addition to University place in tbe town of Irvington, as laid out on the recorder's plat of same, being 50 leet front on National avenue by 1S4 feet c eep to an alley, in Marion county, Indiana. Mortgaged by Annie C. Young. Principal, 8200.00; Interest. WiJi); damages, 810.M; costs, 812.00. Total, 8 3L44. The above described lands and lots will be first offered for cash, should there be no bid they will b Immediately offered on a credit of five years, with interest at the rate of seven percent, per annum payable in advance, but In neither case will any bid be taken for a sale leaa than the principal, intereat and costs due as above stated, together with five per cent, damages 011 amount of sale. Sixty days are allowed the original mortgager or his legal representatives for redemption opon paymeat to the purchaser Of such damages an are fixed bylaw; E. HENDERSON. Auditor of State. Office of A ad i tor of St ate, Indiana tolls, Ind., Februry 15, 1878. Dr. JAMES, Lock Hospital, 2 04 Washington St, Cor Franklin, CHICAGO. Chartered by tbe State ot Illln.lt forUKrreMHirpoe of pviiit ImniwluK relief la aUcaroriri, nte.chrr.nte and miner? dine wen an all their oenuilicated fcrma. It I. vr known Pr. Jane bat toveJl the bend f the trofesls Mr in at tain, jenra. Jt g an4expcit'nre are all Impoe tnnt. Srmlnal enkarei nirbt leaae by dream, tin pie an the fa a, koet manneoil. eaa poaltirely tw anred. L4i wanting the mtamt Oeilealn nttentten. call or writ. Flrnxax home for p lent. A book tor the million Ifarri Catdeanlsk tell y m all a boat the dl -, whn iho.M marry, Hoax, 10 een a pay nonage. Dr. Jaanea ha fifty rneaui nay nariors. Ym ne nonne hut the Doctor. Office hour. man, I .avj finattt, UMia,. Itr, J tarn it 9 ar nf as.
itie piace oi beginning. Mortgaged by Narcissa Cook. Principal. 8:00.00; interest, 1-31.50; damage.. 827.57; costs, 12.00: total, $591. 07.
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TEE HDIMJFOLIS SEXTUE
SHOW PRIiVTIJfG -AND Binding Establishment, CORNER MERIDIAN and CIRCLE Sta.". INDIANAPOLIS, IND. This establishment has recently been entirely remodeled, and the mechanical departments are now equipped with all the latest and most Important Improved Machinery for the speedy execution of every variety of work in our ne. Each department Is under the management of one ft lorougbly skilled in 1 the details of his business, urbane, olite and at all times willing to exert himself to the utmost to please the varied tastes and wishes our numerous customers. OUR COMPOSITION ROOMS are spacious and airy, and are supplied wit every convenience and facility for the speedy execution of every variety of Book, Job and Mercantile Printing, such aa BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, MAGAZINES. JJAWYERS BRIEFS, CATALOGUES, PRICE LISTS, SPECIFICATIONS, CONTRACTS, etc., etc, Also proceedings of societies; Daily, Weekly Monthly and Annual Publications; Bulletins; Prices Currents xecuted in the highest style of the prices that can not fall to please, as satisfaction is guaranteed as to the quality of materials nsed. Merchants, Lawyers, Judges, Justices and Professional Men from a distance, desiring work executed In neat and expeditious manner, can send it here where It will be done In much bette style and In half the time that it could poKs.oly be at home, and at a less cost. Those contemplat'ng the publishing of New Books will consult .their interests, financially by giving ns a call to get our estimate of cost before going elsewhere, aa we know that we can give entire satisfaction. In the department of Show Work we are equally well provided with all the facilities for the execution, at short notice, of all varieties plain or in colors, of POSTERS, STREET BILLS, PROGRAMMES, DODGERS, HANGERS, FLYERS, ' SNIPES WINDOW CARDS.etc Cheap as the Cheapest and Good as tbe Best Our oster type is nearly new and the font are the most varied of those of any establishment In the state, enabling us to print the largest bill n a neat and ta-steful manner,, and when executed in two or more colors with striking and marked eTect. OUR PRESS ROOM Is supplied with the latest Improved Presses o standard makers, which are capable of turning out an Immense amount of printing when taxed to their utmost capacity. Large edl tlons of LEGAL, MEDICAL, CLASSICAL, THEOLOGICAL, MISCELLANEOUS, Q AND 8. 8. BOOKS-v have been printed on these presses in a beautiful and artistic manner, and to the entire satisfaction of those for whom - they were executed. Everything In this room has been purchased with an eye to the accomplishment of the greatest amount of labor with the leastpossible expense, thereby enabling us to compete suecessfuly in price with older and larper cities. OUR LOOK BINDERY, One of the largest In the city, is fully equipped with all the labor saving inventions calculated to cheapen the co6t of binding in all lta varieties. Here we are prepared to turn out atshort notice anything from the tiniest Primer to tne largest quarto Bible in any desired style of binding and at prices that defy competition. We are prepared at all times to bind in the neatest and most substantial manner Cyclopedias, Medical and Law Books, Music and Hymn Books, Magazines, School Books etc. Old Works rebound In any style to suit the taste of the owners. OUR BLANK BOOKS. We would call the especial attention of Merchants, County Officers, Justices and others to the superiority of our Blank Books, ruled to any desired patterns. The ledger papers from which they are made are the best that are produced in the countryi nd being purchased direct from the mills, are furnished to our customers at the very lowest figures. Snenorlty of material, beauty of design and elegance of workmansnlp are their chief recommendations. Onr Blank Books are to be found in nearly all the counties of tbe state. Parties desiring Day books. Journals, Ledgers Cash Books, Shipping Books, Receipt Boots, etc., etc., made of the best materials and at satisfactory prices, should not fail to give us a call. In oaf RULING ROOM We are at all times prepared to execute work of the most Intricate patterns in the mo atlsfactory manner and at short notice, as also LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATEMENTS, COPY BOOKS, and, in fact, every variety of work that may be desired, at ra'es that can not fail to plea and, at the same time, satisfy tte most economical MATTHEWS' PATENT Renewable Memorandum Book The neatest, cheapest, handiest and most convenient Memorandum Book in use. Business Men, Reporters, Students, Lawyers, Physicians, and, in fact, every person who has occasion to make a note of passing events should at once procure one. They can not be excelled for Physlclans'pre scrlptlons. Every Druggist should supply hia favorite Physicians with them at onee, Makes a very nice present when appropriately inscribed on the cover. Orders by mail will receive prompt atten tlon. INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY Indianapolis, Indj x
