Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 27, Number 39, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1878 — Page 6

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTTXEJU WEDNESDAY MOKNING, MAY 15, 1878.

Bt-autlful face are those that wearIt matters little If dark or fair-Whole-ouled honesty printed there. Beautiful eyes are those that show, Likecrytal panes where hearth-fires glow, Beaatiiul thoughts that barn below. IV-antiful lips are thone whose words Iraa from th heart Ilk aongs of birds, et whose utterance prudence girds. Beautiful hands are those that do Work that Is earnest and brave and true. Moment by moment the long day through. Beautiful feet are those that go On kindly ministries to and froDown lowliest ways, if Uod wills it so. Beautiful nhouldera are those that bear i 'eat-l;s burdens of homely care With patient giace and dally prayer. Beautiful lives are those that bless Hilent rivers of happinewt. Whose hidden fountains but few may guess. Beautiful twilight, atset of ran. Beautiful goal, with race well won. Beautiful rest, with work well done. Beautiful graves, where grasses creep. Where brown leaves fa'l, wheredrlftalledeep Over worn-out hands on, beautiful sleep!

MISCELLAXEOlf. The best production of the mint has ice and a spoon in it. John Jasper is a bigger man than Joshua. He makes the sun move. Never put off till to-morrow what can be done j list as well the day after. The advertises is not superstitious. He knows it is foolish to trust to signs. "Htnnery the VIII.," as the tramp said as he paused at the last hen roost he visited before day break. Jane Gray Swlsshelm says: "Give the working girls work." Also give them their pay after they have done their work. A Minnesota girl has been serving as a brakeman in male attire. She gave a civil answer to the question of a passenger, when her sex was at once suspected. The liquor dealers of Harrisonburg, Virginia, are so mad with the bell punch that they have closed their saloons. Harrisonburg is the home of Dr. Moffett. Colonel Ingersoll has begun a suit in the 1'nited States court against the Detroit publishine comoanv to restrain it from publish ing his lectures, and for damages for already publishing an addition of such lectures. The Rev. Mr. Pentecost, the evangelist, has had a piece of good fortune. Mrs. Rogers, of Jlidd'etown, Conn., a lady known for her benevolence, has presented him with a bank book with a comfortable sum to his credit. Detroit Free Tress: Although Victor Hugo refuses to exchange authographs with the sweet singer of Michigan, sha can proudly point to her baby and scornfully cry our, "Match him! me atch him it you can!' And he can't. Why should the government spend a great many thousands of dollars in manufacturing small arms in its armory at Springtield, Mass.. when a private company in the same town can make and sell precisely the same arms at much lower figures? French paper: Scene at the door of the European congress. Russian to Turk: "See here, now, you know! We are friends treaty of alliance complimentary telegrams exchanged, and all that sort of thing. Smile, d n you; look cheerful or I'll lick you again." It is reported that Kaiser Wilhelm said to Rothschild, at Frankfort: "I've passed my eightieth year, and at that age we must begin to think of the end.' lit p.'at the jovial banker said: "Your majesty was born to live a hundred years, and we bankers will not let you go at less than par." The San Francisco merchant to whom you have letters of introduction calmly advises you to go to the Yos'-mite, the big trees and the Santa Clara valley, none of which he had ever seen; and then he takes an overland train and finds bis pleasure on the Massachusetts and Rhode Island coast. Twelve years ago a thief hired a horse at a livery stable in Xatick, Mass., and the owner did not see either the man or the beast until recently, when they entered the villace. They looked older, but were recognizable. The thief claimed that he was on his way to return the horse, but his explanation as not accepted. Tae Toledo Weekly Blade must be a reform paper. It savagely denouuces 'biscuit" as the "national gastric clog, the huge spore germ of self-propagating and self perpetuating dyspepsia; fat soaked and jaundiced with boda or salaratus; more indigestible than the sodden tortillas of the Mexican greasers." Then it goes on and gives six receipts for making them. The novelty about the elopement of Al exander Bablinkacd ML?s Hallidsy, in Hyde park, Massachusetts, was that the girl went in her night dress. Her father had hidden most of her clothing on her going to bed, but she climbed down a ladder to her lover, who took her to hi3 home and dressed her from his sisters wardrobe. Then they rode to a clergyman's house and were married. Mrs. Van Cott, in her recent campaign in Buffalo, pathetically described the agooy she went through at her conversion before she parted with ber wedding ring. She could easily give up her diamonds and jewelry; but "that little worn hoop," which her husband had kissed before be died, she could not part with. "But the Lord would have the rng," and she finally yielded and was eared. One of the mcst successful counterfeiting schemes is to issue a small quantity of notes on a certain bank with the name of the plac. president, or cashier misspelled. Upon discovery the bank senda a warning through the country, ioiotingout the error. Then the counterfeiters make a second issue with the name or names spelled correctly and circulate them boldly, knowing that merchants and storekeeper ill look only for the indicated "catch." William of Orange, crown prince of the Netherlands', has reached the age of 35, has never married, and has hitLfTtO llOWD a.1 invincible repugnance not only to matrimony but to the duties of royalty. For many years the prince has domiciled himself in Paris, and baa made Pistols, Nym, and Bardolpbs of the Boulevard cafes not only hia frieuds but his associates. He openly declares be would rather be known as "Cit roc" than as the heir to the throne ot Holland. One of the noticeable-things on Union P cific trains at stations along the line la the Steady stream of coCins that bring back the remains of those who by mistaken medical advice and a popular notion are led to go to the mountain regions and to Santa Barbara in search of lost health, which, in cases of consumption, they rarely if ever find. These processions of the dead contain some who might be still among the living if they had remained in their own homes and among those whose sympathies, care and support are so essential to this class of untortuuates. Serafina, Countess Cagliostro, the wife of the gentleman qualified by Mr. Carlyle as "the quack of quacks the most perfect scoundrel that in thet? latter ages Las marked the world's history," visited England in 1787 and took lodgings in Sioane street, Kuightsbridge. The count advertised In the newspapers his "Egyptian pills" at 30 shillings the drachm; while the countess did a very thriving business among the female . nobility and gentry by selling the "Wine of Egypt' "producing restoration of rigor, youth and beauty to the most wrinkled and the most worn out," Thhj eiuOr was yerr

costly, and the countess adduced herself as a living evidence of its efficacy. She averred that she was DO years of age, and that she had a grandson who was a retired admiral in the Dutch service. In reality, she was a young and blooming woman of six and twenty. . Some of our exchanges are finding fanlt with the dimensionsof the new silver dollar, but in our opinion its size depends altogether upon circumstances. For instance, when you hand it to your wife to pay for last week's washing it lo6ks big enough to eclipse a full moon, but when you toss it on the counter and yell "Setemupagain!" it looks as insignificant as a peppermint lozenger in a cheese factory. English royalty is expensive, the people of

Great Britain and Ireland being compelled ; to pay annually for the support of its roval family the neat little sum of 2,700,000. The queen receives 3S5.000 a year, her children, with the exception of Beatrice, who has not yet attained her majority, 121,000, while the princess of Wales has 10,000, the duke of Cambridge 12,000, the duchess of Cambridge half that amount, and a couple of Hanoverian nobodies 3,000 each. If the ro.,al couple had practiced the doctrine of Malthus the British people would have been a trifle richer in pocket. . Mr. Edison, the inventor, is said to dislike eating, and to be very impatient of the time spent in that pleasant exercise. His friends say that when the frenzy of a new invention is upon him they are obliged to Btudy his moods, and put food about on benches where he can. not help seeing it. "I hate this eating business," he is quoted as saying; "I always avoid it when I can." He is working on an extremely cheap -and efficient electric motor especially designed to operate sewing machines and light machinery. He is perfecting the phonograph, and has been able to reftroduce words spoken fifteen feet from the nstrument. He has improved it so that words spoken into the instrument in the ordinary tone of voice by any person are perfectly recorded and can be reproduced. Gentlemen of leisure who live in Nevada will be glad to know the fashions for 1878. It will be a gross breach of politeness to bhoot at anybody further off than six feet, and if he falls at the first fire it is de rigueur that yon should walk up to the party and put at least eight more bullets in his carcass in self defense. This necessitates carrying two revolvers, but that can not be helped. Fashion at times lays heavy burdens on its votaries. The knife is no longer used in polite circles, and the correct thing to do after the occurrence is to immediately give yourself up to the police and send a letter of condolence to the nearest relatives of the deceased. It is not usual to go to the funeral unless it happens' to be your own, in which case it is in bad taste to either stay away or take any active part in the proceedings. Virginia' Elephant light. The Piedmont Virginian gives the following particlara of the elephant fight, telegraphic mention of which was made a week or two ago: "A rather exciting scene occurred while Old John Robinson's circus was traveling en route to Louisa court house. The belligerents. Chief, Princess, Mary and Bismarck, were the actors and actresses in the "little difficulty. It had been apparent to Mr. King their keeper and several older attaches ot the show that trouble was brewing: the two factors, Mary and Chief (Asiatic) on one Bide, and Bismarck and Princess (African) on the other. The denouement occurred while crossing the South Ann river on a bridge, the elephants crossing in the following order: Princess first, Mary pecond, Bismarck third, and Chief bringing up the rear of the squad, the other elephants not being allowed to come on the bridge at the same time on account of its apparent weakness, their weight being twenty tons. About midway of the bridge Chief became nnmanageable, and despite the ttforts of Mr. King, with hook and spear, made a fearful onslaught on Bismarck; and such was its force that he was knocked head foremost into the river. As the wateT was very deep he sustained no injury from the fall, but when he rose to the surface he emitted from his flexible trumpet such an unearthly blast that it was beard for miles up and down the river. And then a scene commenced which is indescribable. .The elephants on the other side rushed into the river to the assistance of Bismarck. Chief ran off the end of the bridge and into the river, where he renewed the contest with redoubled fury. Emperor, an Indian animal, got to Bismarck about the same time tLat Chief did, and then a trunk-to-trunk contett commenced which beggars description. They fought right on top of Bismarck, who did not come to the surface for ten or fifteen seconds. At this juncture Radjak, Whoodah and Caliph came up, and the fight became general. Bismarck gradually worked himself up to the shore, but the banks being muddy, and he being weak, he sank in the mad, completely bogged and perfectly helpless. Just then Mary, together with Princess, who had been passive spectators of the trouble, sounded their horns and pitched in. They made short work of it, and soon put the rest to night. They then, with almost human intelligence, tamed their attention to old Bianiarck. Mary put her tusks under his back, a-d, with the assistance of Princess, succeeded in getting him into a sitting posture. Mr. John F. Robinson, Jr., with all the managers, canvasoaen, grooms, performers and musicians, with rope and block and tackle, came on the scene at this time, and after two hours' hard ork succeeded in getting old Bismarck on dry land. Chief and Mary were bound together with chains, and, although they looked daggers at one another, they could not hurt themselves or any cf the herd. In this they were marched into town. Chief was conquered, but not subdued, and the old fire still flashed from his eyes. Mr. Robinson saw that more punishment was necessary to make him perfectly tractable. He ordered him to be taken, down into a thicket, iv here, being properly secured, he was beaten until he cried enough, that is, blew his horn Iik a good fellow.' He then walked to his quarters as meek as the his torical little lamb that followed Mary." A Kemtitirol Ttiongtif. We prune our trees, we cat back our vines and our rose, we pinch off the excess of buds on our floral pets, having in view all the time the highest development ol the plant; to let it have its own luxuriant way oald tf ten be to cultivate its ruin. And in the same way we watch our children, checking a propenbity here that may lead to rice, killing in the bad a trait that may develop bitter ftuit by and by, cutting off branches that mar the symmetry of the whole; and watching continually to keep the thing straight, till It is firmly rooted In the soil and can bear the east winds without 'bending. Exchange. A Glimmer of lease. I New Albany Ledger-Standard.l We are decidedly of the impression that labor political parties are damaging to the laboring interests, and are no more willing or capable of relieving labor of burdens than any of the old organizations. Kate Southern, who fatally stabbed Miss Cowart in- a ballroom in Pickens county, Georgia, in a fit of jealousy, a year or two ago, was found guilty of murder on yesterday and sentenced to be hanged on June 21. Miss Cowart danced with Mrs. Southern's husband, and was killed while at his side. Southern took his wife's arm, drew his pistol and forced his way out guarded by relatives. The couple retreated to North Carolina, where they were captured three months ago. The trial was intensely exciting. Mrs. Southern had her baby in her arms when she was captured. Her husband's case was continued. An appeal has been made lor stay Of sentence

THE FEMALE ARM.

One ef 2fewlna Favorite IIjpofbrMH Utterly Disproved. I New York Time. Sir Isaac Newton long ago pronounced a theory which, in spite of its fallacy, has had many adherents.- He. insisted that the anatomy of the female arm is such that it is impossible for a girl to move her arms in the plane of her waistband. . Without dwelling on the fact that he unwarrantably assumed the existence of female waistbands, it is sufficient to say that facts conclusively contradict his assertion. Several scientific persons have since demonstrated by a simple and pleasing experiment that a girl can move her arm in almost any plane. Professor Faraday took a girl of the usual pattern, and a young man selected almost at random' from his class on the "theory and practice of stone throwing." He placed the young man on the floor of his lecture room with thegirl immediately in front of him. The lights were then turned down for a few moments in order to favor chemical action, and on suddenly turning them up again the girl's arms were found to be tightly clasped around the young man in the plane of his waistband, although at a somewhat greater altitude. It is impossible to break the force of this experiment. Inconclusively shows that the female arm can move in the very direction in which Sir Isaac Newton asserted that it could not move. The same experiment has been often repeated, and always with the same result. Any young man who can command the cooperation of a girl can repeat it for his own satisfaction, and it might be added that it is universally agreed that it is one of the most thoroughly satisfactory experiments known to science. We need, then, pay no further attention to Newton's hypothesis, since it has been completely disproved, and is now held by no one who has even a moderate acquaintance with science. Death. Cornhill Magazine. There is a great deal of very vile nonsense talked upon both sides of the matter; tearing divines reducing life to the dimensions of a mere funeral procession, so short as to be hardly decent; and melancholy unbelievers yearning for the tomb as if it were a world too far away. Both sides must feel a little ashamed of their performances now and again when thew draw in their chairs to dinner. Indeed, a good meal and a bottle of wine is an answer to most standard works upon the question. When a man's heart warms to his viands he forgets a great deal of sophistry, and soars into a rosy zone of contemplation. Death may be knocking at the door, like the commander's statute; we have something else In hand, tbankGod.and let him knock. Passing bells are ringing all the world over; all the world over, and every hour, some one is parting company with all his aches and ecstucies; for us also the trip Is laid. But we are so fond of life that we have no leisure to entertain the terror of death. 'Tis a honeymoon with us all through, and none of the longest. Small' blame to us if we give our whole hearts to this glowing bride of ours, to the appetites, to the honor, to the hungry curiosity of the mind, to that pleasure of the eyes in nature and the pride of our own nimble bodies. We all cf us appreciate the sensations; but as for caring about the permanence of the possibility, a man's head is generally very bald, and his senses very dull before he comes to that. Whether we regard life as a lane leading to a dead wall a mere bag's end. as the French say or whether we think of it as a vestibule or gymnasium, where we wait our turn and prepare our faculties for some more noble destiny; whether we thunder in a pulpit or pule in little atheistic poetry books about its vanity and brevity; whether we look justly for'years of health and vigor, or are about to mount into a bath ch&ir, as a step toward the hearse; in each and all of these views and situations there is but one conclusion possible, that a man should stop his ears against paralyzing terror, and run the race that is setbeforehim with a single mind. No one surely could have recoiled with more heartache and terror from the thought of death than our delightful lexicographer; and yet we know how little it affected his conduct, how wisely and boldly he walked, and in what a fresh and lively vein he spoke of life. Already an old man, he ventured on his Highland tour; and his heart, bound with triple brass, did not recoil before 27 individual cups of tea. As courage and intelligence are the two qualities best worth a good man's cultivation, so it is the first part of intelligence to recognize our precarious estate in life, and the first part of courage to be not at all abashed before the fact. A frank and somewhat headlong carriage, not looking too anxiously before, not .dallying in maudlin regret over the past, stamps the man who is well armored for this world. IMenMure suit iioodnewt, Sermon by Prof. Swing. Could the verdict of -all experience be found as to whence comes the most gooa, that erdict would be cheerfulness and character. The ancient maxim, "A sound mind in a sound body," may have implied this habitual cheerfulness as a natural result of a sound body, and may have implied a good character as the natural result of a sound mind, for a mind that could bp guilty of excesses or sin would show little claim to soundness. It would be a truism to affirm in a world where all seek pleasure that to make the most of life is to be happy, for how to be happy is the enigma placed before us; but it certainly is no truism to say that a happy disposition or a reasonableness regarding plessure is one of the best ways by which to find the most import in this existence. There can be a foolish chase after enjoyment, and there can be a very wise one, and hence what may be affirmed is that a wise pursuit of happiness and then the perfect devotion to character are two forms of action which will make these years yield the most possible of good. There have been those who have felt that cheerfulness and laughter were a sin, or at least an infirmity. To these, esrth has been a great failure. They have dragged out life, and have niaae of "it simple existence, rather than the sojourn on earth of a divine soul. These have all mourned their way along, declaring at each step the wretchedness of man and the vanity of all earthly works and hopes. And at the antipodes of these there rises up another class more numerous, but not more wise, who have fully resolved to have what, in the poetry of their language, they call "a good time." They declare that they Will find what pleasure there is in food and drink and games and vice and luxury. Could the world now give its candid opinion as to the success of these two multitudes it would declare, without reserve, that neither the ascetics of the formerschool nor the epicureans of the latter have found the most worth that is possible to the three-score years of man. The avowed pleasure seekers and the avowed pleasure haters are alike enemies of God's laws, for the human heart is made for joy just as much as for virtue; and the class which seeks virtue at the expense cf all pleasure as truly violates the divine economy as do those who seek pleasure at the expense of honor. Not as greatly, but as truly, breakers of God's law. Nothing seems more evident than that man is placed in a career which possesses two watchwords of paramount significance, and that these are happiness and character. To be good is only one-half of man's mission, the other half being summed up in he phrase, to be happy. It Is not probable that these are exact geometrical hemispheres, for the continent called character is in all probability the larger, but in the moral globe there is no exact geography or mathematics, but only a spiritual and hence indefinite measurement It character be the greatest end of life, it is also the easiest found, for man has power to be cheerful and smiling. We can control our conduct, bet not the event of time. Disease in self or fjunily will come, death,

will fall like a thunderbolt in a group bound by inexpressible love, and there Is no hand to stay its ravages. One can keep from tin far more easily than from suffering of body or mind. Character is hence the most accessible of these large hemispheres, but the other is to be perpetually sought. That pleasure should be sought is proven by a single glance at not only man's bate re, bnt at all animal nature. All God's creatures begin life with play, thus shadowingm the outset the Creator's design; but of all these, man only lamrhs, and man only carries on his joyfulness to the extreme limit of his stay in this world. The play of the lower animals is merely physical, and hence it leaves them the moment youth's bouyancy is gone; bat man's play or laughter is mental, and hence will live while his mind retains its faculties. The human delight in music or in a good anecdote will live as long as the mind lives. All those surprises of situation, of answer, of words, of incident, which so excite mirth, will do so as long as the mind retains its delicate and marvelous powers. The dying, within a moment of death, will smile if some little absurd thing occurs within their sight, or if some strange story or bon mot comes suddenly into the chamber of memory. Many instances are on record where the solemnity of death could not prevent the mind just about to sink away from smiling over something laughable in the yesterday. You will thus perceive that man laughs and plays by an innate law, and that thus happiness is his birthright. His mind is made for a smiling destiny. The only creature, indeed, that weeps; he is also the only one -bo laughs, and thus his merriment is as divine as his tears. Happiness, therefore, reaches out before yon all as a continent you are to sail to and to possess and to transform into a home. You will not find it all you could wish, but you will find it a better land than any other philosophy can point ont a land that God made, and where He will be with His children. Those who have counted existence here a form of waiting for real life, or those who have called this world a failure have, only by that course, made the failure more complete, for the mind is so fashioned that it needs the perpetual buoyancy ot real or supposed happiness. A discouraged soul is a ruined soul so far as this life is concerned. Human success demands a climate and soil of romance. Man must always say, "Ob! what a world ii this! I should love to live in it a thousand years!" The Herman Way. When an officer in the German army makes scandalous remarks about a comrade's wife something of that sort was done at a post on the upper Mississippi not lone ago there is no military trial, but merelya duel in the forest. A captain in the Gith Prussian regiment had been paying marked attention to the young wife of the lieutenant an adjutant, and had allowed himself to speak publicly In a cynical manner of his Intimacy with her. Some of the remarks of the captain having been repeated by his brother officers to the husband, the latter laid the matter before the court of honor of his regiment, and with the sanction of this tribunal a duel between the officers was arranged. The lieutenant, being the injured man and the challenger, demanded that th duel should be fought with pistols, the 'fin-1 sho's to be fired at 15 paces distance, the opponenta being then at liberty to advance to within five paces of one another, and the firing to be continued until one or the other of the opponents should be so severely wounded as to be unable to fire any longer. The meeting took place in an open space in a wood. At the first exchange of shots the bullet of the lieutenant grazed but did not reriously injure the captain; and at the fourth round the latter shot his adversary through the right lung and heart. The deceased officer, who was only"29 years of age, was buried with military honors.

Pleaannt Bedrooms. There is nothing more indicative of refinement and a genuine culture in a family than bright, cheerful and tastefully-decorated bed-chambers. Tasteful decorations do not necessarily mean expense, and it is possible to make a chamber look very pretty at a very small outlay. Indeed, in many instances, no outlay at all will be required "beyond what would be incurred under any circumstances. The women of a family, especially, are apt to pass a good portion of their time in their bed-chambers, and in some households the sleeping apartments are nsed dike for sewing rooms, sitting. rooms and nurseries. It is worth while to obtain all the innocent pleasure we can fina in this life, and there can be no doubt that life U pleasanter if most of its hours are passed in cheerfullooking apartments. The beauties of Parisian society are said t be the Duchess of Cbaulines, Mme. de Montebello and Mme. de Folster. the last one of the most fascinating women Paris has even seen. Her head and face are those of a wonderfully beautiful boy, while her countenance is fnll of character. Vlgror or Mind and Bsdy. Every person would have more vigor of mind and body and mental clearness were they to use a daily diet of unbolted wheat flour. Mix with the flour, dry, Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder, stir in pure water, form a soft batter, bake in gems or biscuits, and the result will be the most nutritious article of food that can be made. SURE REWARD. 5 VEAIIS TO PAY FOR A FAKJI. $4 to SIO Per Aero. Beech and Maple Land In ITIlcIiljraii In the IVIILL1 0.V A(lt It ti It A I T ot (he Grand Ilapldwaiid Indiana Itallrvad Company. TITLE PKHFIICT. Strong noil sure crop plenty ofttiubcr no drought no cltlacli bug no hoppers." It ii mil ns Mrrinm-pnre water ready markets wclioola Hall road completed through centre of the gram. Send Tor pamphlet, Ensllh or (.erinau. Addre IV. O. IUC.IIVRT, Land oinmlvloner, Git AND 1IAP1DS, 911C1I. the xiAGic con: box. uMsovprfiS.OQ of fliWercotn. "Half l.UuVT"S!ii-irtt.T be'-r?-ivt itHWt-iiM-nt of your tlimu'J llMn-a t no Mivil coin Inti our uu.J, aiiu aiio'iM-Tcn-i l.nmeumUlT Ukl iU p! WO V ill lliUt Vie lime ith nndw til rcrof drofpinjrany. bannil j linnl!rtnii'lT rioted MCKEtf BILVtK. ent port rM. SO ct. afiwt" T.'""1 Package, contain! 3. -om tows . or 1 .00. wanted ei rr where. Bin rajr. I'oeUnca htainps taken a caslv. HUTCHINSON & CO. 13 Usla C;sir5. It. I. MANUFACTORY OF HRIQT Mil I Q fir TUa aaa TlnwW 04am A r mm Dim ciuiic. , 'U . Establhhed 1831. IV A . ailllA iUlllllB, For Farmers, SawMillOwner8,&c. Price ' from SHO no. A dot vail 11U4 f M order. Aaapiea w anr kind ol suitable power. Belf-olling; Relf-teedlng. NOKDYKE, MAItMONAOO.. IndlanapolK ELECTION NOTICE. The stockholders of the Indianapolis and Fall Creels Gravel Koad Company are bereDy notified that the annual i lection for Ave director will be held at school houne No. 11, in Center township, Marlon county, Indiana, on the 11th day of May, 187K, at 9 o'clock:, a. m. By order of tna Board of Directors. POWEU UQVfULXV, Secretary,

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45 Years Before , the Public. THE GENUINE DR. O. McXjANE'S CELEBRATED LIVER PILLS, FOR THE CURE OF Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, vsrsrsiA and sick headache.

Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. PAIN in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases on pressnre; 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 dnll, 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. McLanl's Liver Pills, 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 derangementSy and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATTOSS. The genuine are r.ever sugar coated. Every box has a red wax seal on the lid, with the impression Dr. McLane's LlVER Pills. The genuine McIane's Liver Pills 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, Ta., the market being full of imitations of the name JHcLanc, spelled differently bnt same pronunciation. ful powf r. tuie KltlistiieKur.iut. of health. Rrad i " It cured bit of SpiNifula." J. K. lnb, PaiH'lviUr, O. "it eurnl n.y ehiM of Emipela".'' Jfr. K. Smttirr, Iti mm, I'm. I'riet $1. K. E. hbLI.KKS I o.. rmp't, I'l'tibnTl, Pa. Huid If Ifrngjitit mnd - ll-"-1" -" !'.'- NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. Whereas, a certain precept has been duly issued to me by the mayor of the city of Indianapolis, under the corporate seal of said city, dated April 25, ls8, showing that there Is due the following named contractor the amount hereinafter ipecifled for street Improvement In the citv of Indianapolis Marion county, Indiana: Due John Greene for grading and. graveling Wisconsin stroet and sidewalks from Mississippi street to Meridian street, fron unknown owner, the sum of forty-three dollars and fifty cents (ft3.5). amount of assessment charged against fifty by one hundred and fifty (150 feet fronting on Wisconsin b tree t west ot one hundred and fl'ty (13M) feet went of Meridian street and nuinberea lot four (4) in the city of Indianapolis, Marion county, Indiana. Xow, the said defendant is hereby notified, that unless ithln J0) days after the publication for three we ka of this notice, the amount so assessed against the above described lot Of parcel of land Is paid, I will proceed to collect the amount soas-tess by levy and sale of said lot or parcel of land or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the above claim, and all costs that may accrue. WILLIAM M. WILES, City Treasurer. Indianapolis, Ind., May 1, 1878. ATLAS WORKS w. imm FADM-EKMKZSI NOTICE, Notice is heteby given Uat the undersigned Have tiled their petition with the Board of Commissioner of Marion coanty, state of Indlana.fur the vacation of lots 18 to 41 Inclusive, lot known as "Water Iark," and tbe streets and alleys weft of (irand avenue, in William Hannaman's Trustees' subdivision of part ot the northeast quarter of section twenty-two 21, and part i f the northwest quarter of section twenty-t)ireeli,in township sixteen hi north, range threw 3 east, known as Clifton on the River, In Marion county, state of Indiana. Said petition will be heard at the June term, 1878, of the meeting of the Poard of County Commissioners of Marion county, and State of Indiana. HENRY S-HNTJLT., MM ITH & II ANN AM AN, , mayl-w3w OKOIKUANA SMITH ELECTION IJOIICE. The stockholders ot the Fall Creek and Warren Townahl p Gravel Road Company are hereby notified 111 at the annnal election for five directors will be held at school honse No. 11, in Center tonihin, Marion county, Indiana, on the 11th day of May, 1878, at 10 o'clock a. m. By order of the Board of Directors. JOS. K. ENGLISH, Secretary. o Ilsblt Cured. A Certain and Bar dire. La rare reduction In price. A trial bottla free. Ura.J. A.10ROLX.IKGER. Lanorte, Ind. im, (formerly Mn. Pr, S, ColUnaJ

YUINDSZY'S BL00D SEARCHER ff V li me private KlfMxl MvmrAj ui the axe. tf VTt-tter. Srrdlnb, I lef r. Hulls, riir.Jl", zy rauilall ItlcMtlci-rMTi.d toil won-li-r-

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AND TRUE. . People are getting a-qoaintI uml tho-e who are not ought to ft with the wundVrf al nit-rfu oC that great America Reined y, the MEXICAN Mustang Liniment, FOR MAN $D BEAST. ThUUnimont very imluriflrJr)nated In America, where Nature provltlin In hor laboratory such rarpriglng antidote tor thn-aialadirs of her children. Its fame has been spreading for 35 year, mail notr It encircles the haMtable globe. The Mexican Jlustang Llnlttent b a matchlewt if nwdy for nil external allnvntt- man and beast. Tt-k owners mad farmrrs-a hi invaluable. "A rtngle bottle often saves a numaa life or re-rton-4 the usefulness cf na exuvSeat horse, ox. cm.-, or sheep. It.:'-rvs foet-rot, hoof -ail, bolTW born, grub, crew-worm, eboulUer-rot, ir.Aiiipv the bites ami st!ngs.of poisonous rrptii ?.'ul lnt-tctn, and every 8uch drawback to etoc-lc bnvdlns aftd bobh life. It ran.1 every rxtorm.l trouble of hones, ich "as lameness, ncratcljcs, swinn y, Fpnaios founder, wind-gall, ring bon, etc., etc. The Xexlcra Host an;; Liniment lit the qntrkcKt cure In the world for accidents occurring In the ' famny, la tbo absence of a plirsiuian, snch as burns, !ralis, Fpraln., cuts, etc., and tsr rheumatism, and stiffness cngrtuU'rvd l y exparare. Particularly valuable to Miners. It b the cheapest remedy la the-world, for it penetrates the muscle to the bone, , an a fclngla application U generally sufficient tooiin-. Mexican Jlustan Liniment Is put up In threa Uesof bottles, the larger ones being-pnoport tooCtoy anacb the ctwa pent. Sold everryhs. SHOOTDHG, GLOSSIM, FtUTIXG, Crimpln and Band Iron. LATELT IMPROVED. Every Iron and its attachments heavily nickel-plated and bighty polished. The cheapest, handsomest and best Glossing, Fluting, Crimping and Band Iron In the world. Five irons on one handle and each Iron complete in itself, with Ha adjustments so simple that a child can adjust them. We want agents in every county in the Union to sell this beautiful, nselul and saleable article, t-. whom exclusive agencies will be given FREE, a3brding an unsurpassed opportunity to make money. Send postal card lor circulars and terras. We will send sample Irons to test, complete with stareh, receipt, order book, Ircnlars, large posters, etc., on receipt of the remarkable low oi ice of ri.5o. Dont fail to aend for samples. M'e guarantee yu will be deli eh ted with it. Address HOME IKON .CO , Box HO Pittaburg, Pa. The Phoenix Drain Tile Machine Is claimed to be the most simple, strong and durable machine now n the market. May be driven by either Bteam or horse-power, and will make 3 either Tile or Brick of a qua! 3 ity that is unsurpassed. Purchasers will no e the -substantial as well as finished make of this machine; the easy accessibility of its working parts; the means of keeping lta plnnge-chtmber to-ft closely, without reference to age or wear; and Its gen eral suitability for making Tile at the lowest COSt. KI FOR CIRCULARS. CHANDLER ft TAYLOR. Indianapolis, Ind. $200,000 Worth of GOLD PLATED 1EWELRY. For OXE DOLLAR we will send as below, all Warranted old fluted s 1 Pair Oold Stone Sleeve Buttons; 1 Pair Eneraved Sleeve Buttons;! set Pointed Stnds; 1 Set Amethyst studs; 1 Wedding King; 1 Engraved Band Finger Ring: 1 Amethyst Stone King; 1 Elegant Ring, marked FriendsbJp:lH;4udome scarf Pin: 1 Splendid Silver Hal Iln; 1 set Indies' Jet and Uold Vtn and Drops; 1 Misses' set, Jet and Oold;l Ladles' Jet m, Ornamented ; 1 't Handsome Rosebud Ear drcp: 1 Genu' EWant Lake (Jeorge Diamond Stud;l Cardinal Red Bead Necklace; 1 Pair Ladies Iearl Ear Drops ;l Ladies Ornamented! Jet Brooch: 1 Fancy Scarf King and Elegant Watch Chain. Tairr jn-J-nr, the enire lot of 2(1 piece rnt j tout -paid l.rj Hpieeetpv ehomtf fur 5U Club premium Any one sending us a club of twelve at one dollar, weWill send a 'oin Silver Watch Free. F. STOCK.MAN,27 Bond St., New York. TT IEBIO'S Fever and Aua Cure In liquid O JLJ pills. Positively cures any kind of atu eitner first, second, third or seventh day ago and keeps it off taken according to direction. Cores sick headache, neuralgia, female debility and the liver, strengthens tle blood and stomach, brings into hatmony nature's laws of health. Warranted to do good or the money refunded. If your druggist dont get it for you send the proprietors 6u cents or ?1 and get It tree. Sold by druggist. PERSHING CO., proprietors, Plymouth, Indiana. Agents wanted everywhere.. Jul WANTED IMMEDIATELY, Agents to sell Navln's Explanatory Stock Doctor, the New Illustrated Illstory of Indiana and Fine Family Bibles. Ureat inducements to agents. Address J. W. LANKTKKE A GOm Indianapolis Ind. " CONSUMPTION. " Cause, Treatment and Curability. Short treaties sent free to any address. DK.SiUTH, 9, Iti at Fifteenth Bt, S.ew York

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