Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1879 — Page 5

THE DfDIAXA STATE SENTIJTEIa WEDKESDAyi MORNING, JANUAliY 15, 1879.

5 '?

"HO SOKE SEA."

Aye, artists come to paint it; and -writers to pat it in book. How grand in storm and fair in calm, the old North Sea oan look. I've wondered to hear them talking, how to mimic in mnsic or song. The -voice tbat thrills the brooding air with Its thunder low and long; Since never anghtbnt Itself, I wot, could sound like its angry roar: "Wlien breakers rise to the East wind's call, to crash on the, rocky anore. But rough or smooth, in shade or shine, the face of the mighty main Can speak of little else to me, bnt memory, fear or pain. Father and trusbaxd, and bold, bright boy, It has taken thn one by one ; I shall lie alone ia the churchyard there, when my weary days are done. God never sent me a maiden bairn, to stay by me to the last, Bo I si t by the restless tides alone, by the grave of all my past. , . , . . ., By the waves so strong and pitiless, that have drowned life's joy for me, And think of "the land where we all shall meet Che land where is no more sea." , Vet I can not rest in meadow or fell, or the quiet inland lanes, Where the great trees spread their rustling arms over the smiling plains. I cant draw breath In the country, all shadowed, and green, aud dumb, . The want of the sea is at my heart, I hear it calling, "Come," , , I hearken, and rise, and follow ; perhaps my men down there. Where the bright shells gleam, and the fishes dart 'mid sea weeds' tangles fair, Will find me best, if still on earth, when the angel's trump is blown, On the sand reach, or tne tall cliff" side, ere we we pass to the great white throne. Bo summer and winter, all alone, by the breaker's lip I wait, Till I see the red light flush the clouds, as He opens the golden gate; And though at the sound of the rising waves, I ofttimes tremb'e and weep, - When the air is void of their glorious voice, 1 can neither rest nor sleep t And strangest of all the promises, writ in the Book, to me, Is how on the shores of Paradise "there shall be no more sea." All the Year Round. CCBBESI TOPICS. Rosewood is again coming in favor for furniture. According to Joseph Cook, Boston has eight miles of grog shops. Kentucky shipped, the other day, 48,000 pounds of hemp to New York. In Washington the old heel and toe polka is superseding the waltz. Skating as a fashionable recreation has been successfully revived in New York, It can be said of society people that they all do combing his hair at Trufaut, Mich., a young man picked a hole in his scalp with a - tooth of a comb and nearly bled to death. , . -; . ,. The discussion concerning the kind of wine to be used as the communiontable is kept up in some of the churches with . unabated energy. , , . The University of Xebraska, located at Lincoln, has erected a hall for young ladies, where good living is supplied for three dollars per week. The supply of flour in 3uestville, Henry County, Ky., gave out last week, and as the mills were frozen up, the people were obliged to grind their corn in coffee mills. . More Southern planters raised their own meat and bread last year, than ever before. Those who did so are independent of the price of cotton for one year at least. Elijah Bradbury, of Clifton, Me., has a powder horn made by his grandfather, Elijah Bradbury, at West Point, December 21, 1773, and which is now consequently 100 years old. A candidate for the lieutenant governorship of, Kentucky is eulogized as "the man who put 136 bills through the Senate in one night and let the boys out before to d bar rooms dosed." Georgia has a village mayor of resource, who, having to commit two prisoners when there was no calaboose, turned the box of a wagon over them upon the ground, and anchored it by placing a cotton bale on top. Kansas -City is agitating a project which contemplates the annexation of a certain portion of the State of Missouri to the State of Kansas, so as to include that growing city within the boundaries of the latter State. Arthur Chambers is the man named who will enter the priza ring and fight John A. Clark. When the fight will occur is, of course, a'secret known as yet only by sporting men. It will in all probability take place in Canada, nominally for $1,000 a side. "American drinks" known at Pans: Blue Blazes, Fairy's Kiss, Flash of Lightning, Heap of Comfort, Boston Float, Dog's Nose, Rattlesnake, Arctic Region, Corpse Reviver, Colleen Bawn, Maiden's Blush, Morality Punch, SpelHng Bee and Prairie Oyster. i Southern cities generally have been reducing the salaries of their mayor, but Dennisoo, Tex., distances them alLrin economy, allowing its chief magistrate only $120 a year. That mayor will nave to mane the money go pretty far unless he has a private income. A temporary assistant probably a stranger in those parts in a Lexington (Ky.) grocery went lo the whisky barrel when a customer called - for a quirt of vinegar, and there was o uite a run on that clerk for vinel gar till the storekeeper suspected that something was wrong. ! Lawyer Eager has been disbarred at Clevej land, O., for blackmailing liquor sellers. He i would get some one fo visit the more respect- ! able saloons and drink liquor there, after ! which he would sue the proprietor for violatiDg the State law, prohibiting sales or li1 quor to be drunk on the premises, and stop ; proceedings on the payment of $50 or $100 I by those who preferred to be bled to being dragged into court. THE HISTORY OF IKUSJi ESSKSS. Wbea the English Sot the Habit el etUns Drunk-Tfee Gradual Progress. The vice of drunkenness is said to have keen of rare occurrence in England prior to tka reign of Elizabeth. But when a portion of iher troops went over to the Netherlands to assist William of Orange in defending the liberties of bis country against Philip II. of Snaco. they there acquired convivial habits, whieh, on their, return, were speedily spread over their own lana. jaruien stales, in ms "History of Queen E izibeth;" that "the English, in their long wars in the Netherlands, first learnt to drown themselves with immoderate drinkiDg, and, by drinking other's health, to impair their own. Of all the Northern nations, they have been before this most commended for theii" sobriety." The sameassertioa had been made by Tom Jfasu, in his "Pierce Penniless," which was written at the very time when inebriety had begun to degrade and enslave the people. "Superfluity in drink," says this writer, "is sin that, ever since we have mixed ourselves with the Low Countries, is counted honorable: bat. before we know their linger ine wars. u' held in that highest degree of UStreO UW IDtu w. iuou, ijt wvuou dccu man go walitfwing in the streets, or lain aleeninar under tba board, we should bave spat at him, and jrarnad ail oat friends oat of bis company." . DLsraeU advances the opinion, In his

article on "Drinking Customs in Europe," in the "Curiosities of Literature," tbat all the terms of drinking which once abounded in England were of Dutch, Danish or Ger man origin. Thus the phrase "halt seas over" he regards as borrowed from the Dutch. The term op-zee, or over sea, was given to a stupefying beer introduced into England from the Low Countries, and, by an easy transformation aud expansion, ran finally into the expression half-seas over, or nearly drunk. Rouse and carouse came from the Danes rouse being the name of a large cup in which a health was drank, and carouse the act of drinking healths by a company. It was a favorite notion with writers on drunkenness, in the time of Elizabeth, that a man in the different stages of intoxication exhibited the vicious "qualities of different animals; and in this notion Mr. Disraeli fancies that the expression peculiar to the English, "drunk as a beast," or "beastly drunk," has its origin. Among the writers cited in illustration oi his idea, a sketch of different classes of drunkards is quoted from Nash, which is of sufficient interest to merit repeating: "The first is ape-drunk; and he leaps, aud sings, and hollows, and danceth for the heavens. The second is lyon-drunk ; and he flings the pots about the house, . breaks the glass windows with his dagger, and is apt to quarrel with any man that speaks to him. The third is swinedunk: heavy lumpish, and sleepy, and cries for a little mare drink and a few more clothes. 1 The fourth is sheep-drunk; wise in his own conceit when he can not bring forth a right word. The fifth is maudlindrunk;1 when a fellow wilt weepfor kindness in the midst of his drink, and kiss you. The sixth is martin drunk; when a man is druDk, and drinks himself sober ere he stir. The seventh is goat-drunk; when in his drunkenness he hath no mind baton lechery. Tne eight is fox-drunk; when he is crafty-drunk, as many ot the Dutchmen may be, which will never bargain but when they are drunk. All these spsciej, and more, I have teen practiced in one com pauy at one silting; when I have been permitted to remain sober amongst them only to note their several humors." At the time of the Restoration, excesses of every sort were at their height. "Dueling and raking," says Green, "became the marks of a fine gentleman, and grave divines winked at the follies of 'honest fellows,' who fought, gambled, swore, drank, and ended a day of debauchery by a night in the gutter." Beer or ale was the beverage of the people, being, as Macauluy states, "not only all that beer now is, but all tbat wine, tea and arden: spirits now are. It was only at great houses, or on great occasions, that foreign drink was placed on the board." The introduction of co3ee in the latter part of the seventeenth century bad a visible effect in diminishing the use of intoxicating drinks; and inebriety among the upper classes was, according to Lecky, never quite so general as between the time of Elizabeth and the Revolution. "It was computed in 1G88," remarks this author, "that no less than 12,400,000 barrels (of still beer or ale) were brewed iu England in a siDgle year, though the entire population probabiy little exceeded 5,000,000. In 1695, with a somewhat heavier'excise, it sank to 11,350,000 barrels;, but even . then almost a third part of the arable land of the kingdom was devoted to barley. The English manufacture of spirits was greatly extended by the prohibition in 1089 of the importation of foreign HqnoT9. ""It was not till about 1724," writes . Lecky in his most

graphic history of drunkenness in England, "tbat the passion for gin-drinking appears to have infected the masses of the population; and it spread with the rapidity and violence of an epidemic. - Small as is the place which this fact occupies in English history, it was -probably, if we consider all the consequences that have flowed from it, the most momentous in that of the eighteenth century incomparably more so than any event in the purely political or military annals of the country. . The fatal passion for was at once, and irrevocably, planted in the nation. The average of British spirits distilled, which is said to have been only 527,000 gallons in 1684. and 2,000,000 in 1714, bad risen in 1727 to 3 001,000, and in 1733 to 85,394.000 gallons. Physicians declared that in excessive gin-drinking a new and terrible source of mortality bad been opened for the poor. Retailers of gin were accustomed to hang out printed boards announcing that their customers could be made drunk for a pennv, and dead drunk for two pence, and should have straw for nothing; and cellars strewn with straw were accordingly provided, into which those who had become insensible were dragged, and where they remained till they had sufficiently recovered to renew their orgies." The govern mert finally interposed to lesson the frightful prevalence of the evil. In 173 a measure (act 9, George IL, c. 23) imposing en enormous tax upon all salable liquors recited in the preamble that "The drinking of spirituous liquors, or strong waters, is become very common, especially among the people of lower and inferior rank the constant and excessive use whereof tends greatly to the distraction of their healths, rendering them unfit for useful labor and business, debauching their morals and exciting them to perpetrate all manner of vices." In consequence of this tax the consumption of liquors fell for a brief space; but in 1742 the production, again increasing, amounted to 7,000,000 gallons. "In ". 749," to return again to the narrative of Lecky, "more than 4.000 persons were convicted of selling spirituous liquors without a license, and the number of private ginshops within the bills of mortality was estimated at more than 17,000. At the same time, crime and immortality of every description were rapidly increasing. The London physicians stated in 17a0 that there were, in or about the Metropolis, no less than 14,000 cases of illness, most of them beyond the reach of medicine, directly attributable to gin." By active and efficient legislation the evil was gradualey subdued; anl it is observed by Lecky that among the favorable results ensuing was the decrease of dropsy, which had risen In London to a wholly unprecedented point between 1718 and 1751, but dow 'immediately diminished, and the diminution was described by physicians to tue marked decrease of drunkenness m the community." A Mean Advantage. Philadelphia Becora.J There were a score or more of women gathered together at Mr. Johnson's house. Mr. Johnson js a good hearted man and a respected citizen though he is rather scepti cal In some things. The women had just organized ine f oreign lienevolent Bocie ty" when Mr. Johnson entered the room. He was at once appealed to donate few dollars as a foundation to work on, and then Mrs. Graham added: "it would be so pleasant in after years for you to remember that yon gave this society its first dollar and its first kind word. - He slowly opened bis wallet, drew out a $10 bill, end as the ladies smacked their lips and clapped their hands, he asked: "Is this society organized to aid the poor oi loreign countries r . ; "Yes yt s yes!" they chorused. "And it wants money?" "Yes yes." - " w el), now," said Johnson, as he folded the bill in a tempting shape, "there are 20 married women here. If there are 15 of yon who can make oath that you have combed the children's hair, tbls morning, washed the dishes, blackened the cook stove aud made the beds 1 11 donate $10." - "I have," answered two of the crowd, and the rest saia: ' "Why. now. Mr. Johnson!" "If fifteen of you can make oath that your bubaad are not wearing socks with boles in tie heals, the money is yours," continued the wretch. ' - ' - -j - " J ust hear him I" they exclaimed, each one looking at the other. "If ten Of you have boys without holts in

the knees of their pants. misX goes to the society," said Job- . ; "Suck a m"-' ' the7 whispered. "It the are five pairs of stockings in this room that do not need darmus, I'll hand over the money," he went on. "Mr. Johnson," said Mrs. Graham, with great dignity, "the rules of this society declare that no money shall be contributed except by members, and ai you are not a member, I beg that you will withdraw and let us proceed with the routine business."

Republican Minorities. The Democrats and Greenbackers combined polled a majority of 25,000 votes at the last election in Illinois. The Republicans are in a minority in every single important State from the Atlantic coast to Kansas. They are in a minority of 40,000 in New York, of 80.000 in Pennsylvania, of 30.000 in Ohio, of 70.000 in Indiana, of 75,000 in Michigan, of 25,000 iu IUino.s, and 270,000 in Missouri. Yes, out of a total of 327,000 votes cast last November, the Republicans cast only about 50 000. Tne Dlfterence. . pfew York Times. The administration of President Grant failed because it was in part badly managed, and because it was indifferent; that of Mr. Hayes has failed because it has been weak and sentimental, and has allowed the laws to fall so much into the hands of the' if enemies. - - . . , Not Improbable. fSt. Louis Post-DispatchI "Tilden and Hendricks" in 1380, against "Grant and B!aine," are by no means vfery improbable tickets. ' , Well, Let It o. Washington PosUl The secret service bureau "must go." It U a relic of barbarism. It smells of tyranny and the days of star chamber. A certain newspaper tells how a deaf man spilled two women out of a wagon, breaking the ribs of one, and drove a mile before he missed them. Caution to tne Public. ' To avoid imposition, purchasers of Waltham watches will observe that every genuine watch, whether gold or silver, bears our trade mark on both case and movement. . Gold cases are stamped "A. W. Co." and guarantee certificates accompany them. Silver cases are stamped "Am. Watch Co., Waltham, Mass., Sterling Silver," and are accompanied by guarantee certificates, signed R. E. Robbins, Treasurer. The name "Waltham" is plainly engraved upon all movements, irrespective of other distinguishing marks. This caution is rendered necessary by reason of the fact that our cases are frequently separated from our movementsand put upon worthless movements of other makers, and vce versa, thus affecting injuriously the performance of the watches and vitiating our guarantee, which is intended to cover only our complete watches wholly made by us. It is necessary also because "it is so notorious as to be a public scandal, that there is great fraud in the metal quality of both gold and silver cases as now generally sold. We have demonstrated by frequent assays that many gold and silver cases offered in the market are debased from 10 to 20 per cent, from the quality they assume to be. lhis is a fraud upon the purchaser, and ac counts for the low price at which such cased watches have been sold. "Eighteen carat" gold, such as the Wal tham cases are made ot, is as nearly pure gold as can be made and be durable. It contains 750-1000 of pure gold and 250-1000 of alloy. Sterling cl!lver(,nglisn government stand ard) contains 925 1000 of pure silver and 751000 of alloy. The Waltham Watches will always be found up to the standard represented. For American Watch Co., ROBBINS & APPLKTOIT, General Agents, Kew York. Hot a Beverage. They are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the highest de gree, containing no poisonous drugs. They ao not tear down an already debilitated system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hope that is, more real hop strength, than a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester sells them, and the physicians prescribe them. Rochester Evening Pond's Extract. Ought to be in every family ready for use. .nature and science are combined in the manufacture. Disease originates from disorder of the system. 'So a medicine acts on the cause. Experience has heralded the virtue of Pond's Extract Xternal application or inwardly taken with safety. The cures of Pond's Extract are marvelous. Relief from pain obtained by use of Pond's Extract . A bottle for 50 cents, $1, and $1.75 largest cheapest. Can be obtained from druggists everywhere. Try it once, and you will never be without it Carbol'ine, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the only article that will restore hair on bald heads, is an elegant dressing, and contains not a particle of lead, sulphur or other poisonous drugs.' Sold by druggists. The well known and popular seedsmen, Messrs. D. M. Ferry & Co., of Detroit, Mich., are again before our reader with their annual announcement Their catalogue, which is mailed free, is offered to all of our readers. We would advise them to avail themselves of this offer. .. Everyone of our readers should carefully peruse the advertisement of the Royal Manufacturing Company of New York, which appears for the first time in our issue of this date. The goods will speak for themselves, while the responsibility of the firm "is vouched for by the editorial indorsements. SPECIAL NOTICES. Giles' Liniment Iodide of Ammonia Is almost magical In its removal of pain, no matter from what source the latter proceeds. o Chew Jackson's Best sweet navy tobacco. . -O .. 'J The Centaur Liniments are of two kind The White Is for the human family; the Yellow is for horsus, sheep and other animals Testimonials of the effects produced by these remarkable preparations are wrapped around every bottle, and may be procured of any druggist, or by re all from the office of the Centaur Company! 46 Dey street, Kew York city. WANTED. W Aft TED Agents to sell oar new sporting . and magic goods, novelties, magic lanterns, microscopes, coat.(lcs, ladles' articles etc.; 47 new articles. Wee-kly salary of tX and all expenses paid ; 72 page illustrated catalogue sent free to any address. LA-DD fe CO., 'JU Broadway, NewYork. ' A. a-ood man for everv state to sell our eoous bv samnle. Fair miarr paid. " References required. LA BELLE MAWKFACTCJBJN3 CO., W Clwk street. Chi. cago. - . !6wl

POKDS Ea

.lHhul. EWS-DnUR. The People's Eemcdy. , The Universal Pain Extractor. Note: Ask for Pond's Extract. Take no other. "Hear, for E will spenk of excellent . ihlne.' POTVl' S EXT K A CT-Tlte great Vejrtable Pain Orn.roicr. Has been In use over .. tlalrtjr yearn, tin J for ciianltncsa and promnt eiirauvc virtues cannot i-c excelled. CBItDKRN. No family can aitord to be witlinnt iond Kilrart, Arrtdents, Brnines, :ontnion, Cns, Sprain are relieved almost Instantly by external apU-,-ration." rromptly relieves p-iinsof Rnrn, Scairia, Hxeo'-ir.tloiiN, C-haflDgt), Old Sure", KoIIh, Melons, Corn, etc. Airests inflammation, reiluces swellings, s.opa Settling, removes discoloration and heals rapMlv. LAdlEi fl" l it their best frifn-1. Tt as-inacs the p ilns to whicii they are peculiarly suhject notably uulnts anl pressure in Hie liea?, nan ea. vertigo, 4 It promptly ameliorates and prmanrntly tvals all kinds of Inilani" rrJon and ulceration. SI&.TOOltltHOIDS or ft I. ICS find In this the only immediate relief ami ultimate uro. No ca.u however ciiroiilc or obstinate can ions r?ist its rc?nlar u. VARICOSE VI !XS. It is the only snre rnrc. JIi.EV mSiCASUS. It lias hoenuulibr permanent cure. IiLjEi:Dl from any cane. For thl3ltlsa ppecl!c. It has saved hundreds of lives w hen all other remedies failed to arret bleeilIhr n-oiu now, stomacb. lungd, and clsoTOOTKtrnE, Faraclin, Neuralgia, nd Kiienmatlsui are uiluliku relieved and often nermsuietuljr cured. PXdr-lVIAK'tnf'au schoolswho flrerieqnaiiiS. ei wi: li Pond's Kxtrart .r Htrli Hazel reeomnierxl it in their practice. V,'e hava letters of commendation from hundreds of Physician-, many of whom order it for n9e in their own practice. In addition lothe forejroing, they order its use for Swellings of all kinds, Q ninny, Sore Throar, Inflamed 1'ctnaiis, simple and chronic Diarrhoea, Catarrh, (for whieh it is a specific). IWIblKlna, Frosted Feet, Stink of Inserts, SZosqultoes, etc.. Chapped If suds I-ace aud indeed all maimer oi skin diseases. TOILK sjs :. Removes Soreness, Ronghneos and Smarting t lu alsrats, Eruptions, and Plrn-ples. It rrtlves. invitjorale and refrtfkt. wiiiie wonderfully Improving the Complexion. TO FA KJTIKKS -Pond's Rxtrart. Xo Stock Breeder, no Livery Man can afford to bo withontit. It is usi d by all the leading Livery Stahles, Street Railroads and first Horsemen in New York City. It has no equal for Sprains', Harness or Saddle Chafing, StifTne. Scratches, Swellings. CnLs, Lacerations, Bleedinas. Pneumonia, Colic, DiarrlKea, Cull!, Colds, Ac ltfl ranpe of nation is wide, and the relief it affords is so prompt that it is invaluable In every farm-yard as well as in every farm-hou--e. Let tt be tried once and you will never be without it. CAr'TION! Pond's Extract has been Imitated. The pemiino aoiclo has the words Pond's lixtract blown In each lmttle. It is prepared by the only persons liviusr who ever knew bow to pr-jpaii- it properly. Hefn?e all other preparations of Witch IlazeL Tbis is the only aiii. le nsed hy Physician, aud in tha hospi'als of tills country end Europe. HISTORY and I sesol Poad's Extract, in pamphlet form sent free on rnulicationtit POND'S EXTRACT lOSrANV, 88 Maiden Lane, Kew York. A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FORTUNE! Second Grand Distribution, Class 5, At New Orleans, TTESD AY .February llth,1879, 105th Monthly Drawing. Louisiana State Lottery Co. This Institution was reguiany incorporated by the legislature of the state for educational and charitable purposes in 18, with a capital of Sl.OUO.OOO, to which it has since added a reserve fund of KSSO.OOG. Its grand singlk bumbkb nisTKiBCTioN wilt take place monthly on the second Tuetday. It ktvs:r scales ob pobtponxs. Look at the following distribution : CAPITAL PRIZE 8 3 O.OOO. 100,000 Tickets at t2 each. Half Tickets, fl. LIST OF PRIZES. 1 Capital Prize.. ... r,ooo 1 1 U M 1U.UJU o,wu 5.0UU 2 Prizes of (2,500.... 6 1JW).. . 6,000 , 10,000 20 100 2U0 500 1,000 500. 100. 60. 20 10 lh.OOU 10,1100 10,006 , 10,000 APPROXIMATION PRIX S3. 9 Approximation Prizes of 300... 9 do do 200 9 do do 100 2,700 100 9(0 1,867 Prizes amounting to 1110,400 Responsible corresponding agents wanted a all prominent points, to whom a liberal compensation will be paid. Application for rates to dubs should only b made to the Home Office in New Orleans.. Write, clearly stating lull address, for fnrtbei Information or sena oraers to '- " M. A. DAUPHIN, - - P. O. Box 682, New Orleans. La. Or J. T. Woodward, 15 North Illinois street, Indianapolis. All our Grand Extraordinary Drawings are under the supervision and management of ueneraisw. 1. ueauregara ana jud&i A. Karly NERVOUS DEBILITY. Titsl wmkBn or denrwwlon : a weak exhausted leellnz.no energy or courage: the result of mental overwork, Indiscreiioas r excesses, or some drain upon the system, is always cured by HUMPHREY'S HOMEO PATHIC SPECIFIC No 2X. It tones up and invigorates the svbtera, dispels the gloom and despondency, imparts strength and energy, stops tbe a rain and rejuvenates the entire man. Been u-ed twenty years with perfect success by thousands. Bold by dealers. Price, (1.(0 per single vial, or S6.O0 per package of five vials and 82.00 vial of powder. Rent by mail on receipt of price. Address HCHfHKEYN' HON MIPATIIIC HEDH'I Si ECOHPAHT, lUVfainDRirwi Aew lors. PATBWTD. Tn connection with tbe publication of the Sefrstijic American, wecontinuetoactsASolicitors for Patento, Cvets.Trtde-Mrkg, CopjViiruta, etc., for the United Htates, Canada, Cuba, England, Franc. (Germany, etc. In tbis line of businesa we have had thirtfi-tnrre pearm' trperienee. Patents obtained through na are noticed In the Scientific American. Tbta larjre and aplendidly illustrated weekly paper shown the current proprreaa of Science, in very interesting, and baa an enormona circulation. Subscriptions $3.20 a year, portpaid ; vinule copies 10 cenU. Isold at all iiooketores and Newa-offlces. Can I Obtain, a jfatml? The qnickeet and best way to obtain a satisfactory answer, without expense, is to wr-ite to us (Muud a Co.), describing the invention, with a smull sketch. All we need is to pret the vittk. We will immediately answer, and (rive the necessary instructions, for tins advice we make no chcroc ..... ... , . We alo sendree onr Hand Boo about tbe Patent laws. Patents, Caveats. Trade-Marks, tbeir costs, aod how procured, with hint for obtaining ad- .' vances on inventions. Address MCSS tt CO., Publisher of the Scientific American, SI Park Bow, KewXork.. fcr C Ess! yss .J r Ua, tmL sf agents: Wan tod to sell Dr. CHASE'S 1.000 Recipe Book. New Price Addms Tlr. nhAAA' PVlnttnff ilnnrt inn Am. per . Jaiamgan,

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AND CHEAPEST HAIR DRESSING IN THE WORLD. FOR THE HAIR It softens me hair wires nAnarr asd bbv. It soothes the iesitated scalp. Ir AFFonD3 Trrn isicitest lcstke. It rnntests Tins UAin fbom faixixo off. Ir PllOMOTES ITS ZTEALTny, VIGOROUS CBOWTO. It is sot greasy kob sticky. It leaves SO DISAGREEABLE ODOB. It inr.i a CAMJBfJFF. D. I. C. Is an absolute and lrreslstable core for enness. Intemperance and the nse of Opium, Tobacco, Narcotics and Stimulants, removing-all taste, desire and habit of using any of them, rendering the taste or desire for any of them perfectly odious and dieguKtirg. Giving every one perfect and lrreslstable control of the sobriety of themselves and their friends. It prevents that absolute physical ana moral prostration that follows the sudden breaking off from using stimulant or narcotics. Package, prepaid, to cure I to 5 persons, 92, orat your Druggists, Jl .75. Temperance and charitable societies should nse it. It is harmless and never-fading. HOP BITTERS MFC CO., Sole Acts., KOCUESrER, K. Y. The Hop Cough Cure' pestroys all pain, loosens the cough, quiets I I he nerves and produces rest. It sever stls In performing a rerfeel core ftuere mere M a naaeir 01 Bope, Try it once and you will find It so. FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. My animal Cslatorne of Vegetable aaid Flower Kerd for 179. rich In engravings, from original photographs, will be sent FREE, to all who apply. Customers of last season need not write for it. I ofier one of the largext collections of vegetable seed ever pent out by any seed house In America, a large portion of which were grown on my six seed farms. P. in ted di ections for cultivation on each package. All seed warranted to be both fresh and true to name: so tar, that should it p ove otherwise, I nill refill the order gratis. The original Introducer of the Hubbard Squash, Phinney's Melon, Marblehead Cabbage. Mexican Corn, and scores of other vegetables,! invite the patronage of all who are anxious to have their seeds directly from tbe grower, fresh, true, and of the very beststraln. SEW VK6ET4BI.Es NPF.tjIAIrY. JAMES J. IL GRKGORY, Marblehead, Mass. Baeeb, Hord, t Hendricks, Attorneys. STATE OF INDIANA, Marlon county, ss: In the Superior Court of Marion county, in the state of Indiana. No. 23.0J0. levember term. 1K78. Jonathan Edwards, trustee, vs. Aaron L. Hunt, Ann E. Hunt, his wife, et al. Be It known, that on the 13th day of September, IbTH, the above named plaintifl. by his attorneys, filed in the office of tne clerk of the Superior Court of Marion county, in the state of Indiana, his complaint against the above named defendants; and on the 21st day of December, 178, the saia plaintiff filed in said clerk's office the affidavit of a competent person showing that Raid defendants. Aaron L Hunt and Ann E. Hunt, his wife, are not residents oi the state of Indiana; and that said action is in relation to real estate. Now therefore, by oraer ot said court, said defendants aliove named are hereby notified of the filing ana pendencv of said complaint against them, and that unless they appear and answer or demrr thereto, at the.cal ting of said cause on the 4tn day of March 1879, the same being tbe smood judicial day of a term of said court, to be begun and held at the court house in the city ot Indianapolis on the first Monday in iarch, 187!, said com plaint, ana the mattTS and things therein contained and alleged, will oe neara ana ae termlnea in tueir aosence. BAN I EL M.JRANSDELL, jan8-3w. Clerk HE

IN THE

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A BEAUTIFUL CRAYON DRAWING; THE VCt

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From (lie world wawwd pslsttina-by th tin ( HmmU:t Ot JLrt - KA fUlEL, wb tell soldi tor

$82,000 GIVEN AWAY! THIS picture at once apprala to the trnest and noblest snnpattiiM of the bnman bsrt. Tba rnuuful, innncent, holy, and pur ei predion upon the Ana-el rm, ai theTturn tbir tntTftrd thir Heme in Hemveav m snch an to lead all who Took upon inem to exclaim with OIK fi VIOR. "o nch it Im kingdom kemen." The artist h auereeded ia mm me thie the vrv perftomricntion rr pure aneelic sweetness and perfret bftppinese. 9ie natte?r siioalel b wiltaout tttls picture, and to those who have lost E.iU Ones this will be a lued treas:ii e. W e o-n the cnnvrtcht of tbe American edition of this wonderful petnre, and hve pqblirhed it mm a Crajos llrswinc. in a l--:pe rnnelT of color, mk mr; e-sehl tUrmn lire-slu. Tb4 buuuful uawujjant free on. receipt of Postal Charges and Certiacate cut from liiu paper.

DedKeafed ( the 600 BLESS THE I St: s sere IA or . sitae crovt arm bloom A er Sthee of SftEsle Snne and

m uuue uuiiuk e-iiow rnrrnrwRl in tne nouin. I K-my-iV.iT t'KKK with every copy ofTlsw Ajssrels," making Freratsms worth gK.SS.

f tl T THIS CERTIFICATE OCT, On receipt of this Certifteate, logotber with Stamps to P" pnetaie and rroonuog charges, w ton bj i ieet wiae, entr.iea TUC AUQCI C ! rev i lib anubfcv no.io. ewUtlos Ft), by mail, post-l-paid. hrn'i at osee.

Cooaty, and Stale. AMrtn all Orders (o L-OWTIWESTAa. lPlllJMIMa CO 4 BoaM Ht ClBefaaaMf. O.

THE HOLMAN LIVER m STOMACH PAD Absorptive Medicinal Plasters CUBE WITHOUT MEDICINE, Simply by Absorption-! he Best Liver, Stomach aLd SpleenDoctor in the World. FACTS -FOR THE PUBLIC: More than 1,500,000 Persons,' Including all known classes and professions, have successfully used these Remedies for the following Diseases: ' ' . '

Fever and ague, Billons Disorder, .. Liver Complaint, Intermittent Fever, Per I od ical Headaches, Dyspepsia, Ague cane, Chill Fevtr, Dumb Ague, Bilious and every kind of Fe- - ver, lirrho?a, CatMirh, J a u n d I ce, -. Neuralgia, Kidnev jTroublt-t-, Irregular action of the heart, 5-Rheurni.tism, ail f kinds of Femnle i Weaknesses, Sick Headache, Lumbaco. iSeiiiti3. P:n Tbade-Uabx-In the Hide, Rack, Stomach, fc-Iioiilders ai.d Muscles, Lasitude a:d Bilious i olic. All these hive their origin, directly or Indirectly, in tbe stomach and liver. A fellOitT (HAPTKk on HLDKISt. Voltaire defines the pliyslclsn as a "man who pours'dowu drugs of which he knows little. Into a body of which he knouts lfss" while Rnsh admitted thai, "we hare r.ot only mult iplied disea es, but have made them more fatal." These are frightful admUi-ioue, and only show to the nou-professional how little real knowledge the average prtysieiBn posRpses. While the li-clple of Eschlapiusbave been groping through densedarknossm search of medical truth. Science, with U torch of rcsntreh has discovered a law and put it luto praciical operation, correcuns the old medical cre!s, and sweeping away with every new peiception, false theories and practice. Thin lam of absorption, as adniini-tf -ed tbrongh !' 'wnty of tbe HOLM AN FEVF1 AND AGl . .XD LIVER PAD, la a preven ice and mire cure of diseases, disclosing a series of lasts full of wonder and astonishment. It is impossible to put a value on a discovery which, without iue of medicine, will prevent or cure bilious. Intermittent, typhoid, congestive, and ell other kinds of lever, and. Indeed, all diseases growing out of a disordered liver or stomach. THE HOLMAN PAD PLAC ED OVER THE STOMACH end LIVER, from which nearly all diseases bave their origin, will exert a never-falling beneficial Influence over the vital loices (nerves and blood. IT CONTAINS WONDERFUL PROPERties, consisting of heaithy tonics tbat are sent into tbe system by absorption, stimulating the nerve centers that pervade tbe digestive O'gans, wit n out which digestion aod good vitalizing fluids (blood) is Imiwsible. IT ALSO HAS OTHER PROPERTIES that absorb al! foreign matter from the system, found in lhe blood, whether Medicinal, Malarious, Bilious, etc. It will do for you what nothing else can. Think, too, now very icexiensle it is compared with most, other treatments. Asa family medicine, for cheapness, tafety, convenience and effectiveness, it commends itself to every household. PRICES. Regular Pad . .K 00 Special Pad, i larger) 3 ) XXX Pad or Buleetj Belt 5 00 Medicinal Body Plasters, each 40 Medicinal Foot. Plasters, per pair -to Absorptive Halt Foot Bath, pscssge ,., , - 2 Abs iptlvetlt, per box, 6 packages . 1 25 Wholesale and Retail Depot Boom 34 Fletcher & Sharpe's Block, indinnax polls, IbmL. With Separate Apartments for Ladies, Under care of Lady Atteodant.from to p. in (TAKE ELEVATOR ) BATES & HAKLEY, A ents lor the Northwest. MISCELLANEOUS. GOLD AnTWntkvrciuimmkeSIX k4t at horn. CnatW lOotlUCTM. AddreM Tkce k Co. , XapuxuL. M suae. $66 a waek In vonr enra fcnra. Terra and git tmrSt Itraa. Addraw H. Hallkti Co.. fortuxl. Main Um HI ANTED r neterttTrSrrvt'-e Aarrim JUL II li ferret lKrrlcct. Cinciutiatl. 0. l'J Utmmi. lilt-rrtr. Jf4iE in STDar. caTv t?-,-"-' LOvUE FREE. Buckeye Nov elty Company, Cincinnati, Ohio. KEVOLVEEt FKT; E. Seven-sliot revolver, with box of cartridge. Addrws J. BOWS, A BOX, 130 and Ua Wood street, Pittsburg, Pa. : FauhlonarjleCards,no2a!ike,wi'h name, 1 10c. 20 Kcroll, luc postpaid. GEO. I KD A CO Namaa, N. 1 . C 4a tf 1 n per day t hnni. Rmpl worth $5 f. $3 IB J ZU Addrrat Snw k Co., Portl.nd. Ha. O i f A WEEK MADE Kew good : cata-tJ-iU logue and samples free. FELTON A CO , .New York. 2iw $7: A Day to Agon ts canvassing for the Fir side Vlsltar. Terras and oatnt Free. AIdres.P.O. VIOKERY Angasta Mim. 2Q f?f A MONTH AtiEVTS ANTE! DOOv- best selling articles in the world; one sample tree. Address Jay Bronson Detroit, Mich AfJEVTS WANTED! A KA' " CilN-T TABLE BQuii OF A3 Magnificent in all its details. 3 large Elegant Ei gravlngs, all masterpieces by the world's best artist". The book for Holiday Presents. Send for circular snd sample engraving. P. W. Zisolzr A Co- O. h Buildirje, ClnM, O. FIT J CUED. Dr. Brown's great prescription for Jr-pliepsy having now been testxl iu over II ;,i 0 eaj-j without a failure, he has made up his mlud to make the Ingredient known to :J1 sntlerers fiee of charge. Address PH. O. PHELPS BROWN. 31 Orsnd st.iwt. Jersv Pslv, N J 1 inlU iiomeartt Amend atiomu IIELFIKG UAtlDS . tita and. UU mum . mmmt mmm mr Air: Chnm In memnrv Af the mtA trmm. IT WORTH yM TO VOC.vw Nineteen CenU (Ittei.) in Currency or Pssuee will send tba t Crawana DrmwLsta?, i f.tt oUil ftltia illC ntLrlrisJ HArl JS -4 suutaa Mama in full, with Fauitk. W3

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