Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1879 — Page 6

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINELl -WEDNESDAY MOBNING, ' JANUAJR Y 15, 1879.

ST CREED.

BY ALICE CART. I hold that Christian grace abounds Where chfirity 1b seen ; that when We climb to heaven, 'tis on tie rounds Of love to men. - ,t I hold all else named piety, A. selfish scheme, a vain pretense; Where center is not, can there be Circumference? This 1 moreover hold, and dare Affirm where'er my rhyme may go, Whatever things be sweet or (air Love makes them so. . Whether It be the lallahles That charm to rest the nestling bird, Or that sweet confidence of Highs And blushes without word Whether the dazzling and the flush Of softly sumptuous garden bowers, Or by some cabin dor a bush Of ragged flowers. lis not the wide phylactery, Nor stubborn fast, nor stated prayers. That make us saints; we judge the tree By what It bears. And when a man can live apart From work, on theologic trust, I know the blood about his heart Is dry as dus. RELIOIOCTR HOrEs. The fair in aid of the Roman Catholic Cathedral in New York city, realized $175,000. The Protestant Church in Canada will probably divide itself into high neck and low neck. Archbishop Eyre, of Glasgow, presides over an archdiocese containing over 250,000 Catholics.. Mrs. Van Cott, the revivalist, is said to have a dressy daughter. Some poor fellow will get Cott yet. Rev. Mr. Meile, of Lawernceburg, Ind.i had hi3 feet frozen last Sunday while preach ing in his pnlint. It is the humble Christian pastor who converts people, not the howling dervish of acrobatic Christianity. The late George M. Marsh, of Portsmouth, N. H., left between $50,000 and $100,000 to the Episcopal Church. On the Pacific coast the average attendance of Chinese boys and girls upon the Protestant Sunday schools is 1,000. A preacher may get soaking wet on his way to church and yet be exceedingly dry the moment he mounts the pulpit. Boston has at last abandoned the ancient custom of ringing certain of the church bells at sunrise and at 9 o'clock at night. Special prayers were offered in the Episcopal Churches in Baltimore on Sunday for the recovery of Bishop Whittington. A violin is the recent addition made to the musical force of the cboir of the Second Presbyterian Church of Madison, Ind. Mr. Spurgeon does not believe that a slight weakness for " 'alf and-'alf ' will prove a barrier to his eventually entering the New Jerusalem. It is rather wicked for Boston morning papers to publish the names of all the deacons and church members who go sleigh riding on Sunday. Professor David Swing will not have to preach in a theater next year, as bis Chicago friends are going to build for him a lecture hall costing $150,000. The Presbyterian Church, at Dixon, III., has jest been helped wholly out of debt. Two women took the matter in hand, and contributions had to follow. The parsonage of the Methodist Church at Worthington, O., was entirely destroyed by tire on the morning of January 2. The house and contents were a total loss. Cardinal Manning has read in the Roman Catholic chapels of London a pastoral asking the faithful not to partake of intoxicating drinks on Christmas or the day after. Beecher Bays that the history of our treatment of the Indians ought to bring the crimson blush of shame to the cheeks of every man who loves iustice and religion. Mrs. Frances E. Willard, president of the Illinois Women's Temperance Union, is stirring np women all over the country to renewed efforts in aid of the temperance cause. FASHION MOTES. Boas are worn mostly by young girls. Cheviot patterns appear in the new calicoes. Bill dres3ES are now mada very short in front. Opera cloaks of plush are handsome and stylish. Cherry red is a favorite color for evening costumes. Telvet striped materials are popular fabrics for dresses. Black monkey inuffe and collarettes are a fancy of the teasou. Small Swiss-wood easels for photographs are prefered to frames. Breakfast caps of Breton lace are all the rage, and are very pretty. The French twist of the back hair is among the fashions of the past. Undressed kids are worn for full dress occasions by many of our fashionable ladies. It is rare at present to find a bonnet made Of one material only or of one single shade. For fall dress the more the hair is tortured oat of place the more stylish is the coiffure. Belt bows ot lace and ribbon are taking the place of belt bouquets worn for so long a time. Floral garniture is in the ascendency for evening dresses, and nothing cau be more effective. Bouq net brooches are in all sorfsof fan tastic forms, such as those of lizards, serpents, bees, beetles and other insects. Novelty pins are bouquet holders to fasten on the corsage, with a nng at the back in which the flowers are held. Imitation feather ' trimmings, made of white, blue or pink muslin, are used to trim inexpensive organdy ball dresses. Some of the new evening dresses are so elaborate, both in color and design, that they are fitly termed rainbow costumes, Ktd gloves for full dress have nine buttons, and reach to the elbow; the top of the glove is finished with a frill of lce. Many voane 1 -dies continue to wear the thick clustering Montague locks of crescent ahape on the forehead and temples. Scotch plaids have found favor with een tlemen as .weil as ladier, and are worn by them in neckties and handkerchiefs. New and becoming opera scarfs lor winding around the head and throat are made of gpanidU lace and are three yards long. Pale drab or beige-colored cloth suits are worn by young ladies as late as the present season, ana witu iur trimming win De asea all winter. , Parlor tables are covered entirely In garnet silk plash, not a particle of wood being visible, and are trimmed with brats .moldings and silk fringe. ' " Brocades for bridal robes are of satin ground, in elegant patterns of holly leaves,

pss3ion flowers, H'ies, roses" and other distinctive floriation". . Much at'ont'on is paid to the "bouquet de corsage" this winter, and the little breast knot of violets or pansiea is a positive requirement of fashion. The handsomest bonnets for midwinter are made entirely of feathers; for a maroon costume a bonnet composed of maroon ostrich tips is the most elegant. Mother of pearl buttons in tints of rose, green, bine, smoke and opaline effects are much used on dressy street suits of silk and camel's hair or cashmere. The fa-hionable muff is finished without tassels or bows at the ends. New clasps for cloak are of silver, with a number of small chains with coins attached. Skating suits are made of dark blue cloth, trimmed with bands of fur. A. fur hat turned np at one side, and held by a bright feather, completes the costume. WIT AH 1 HTJHOK.

He who drin ks and goes away Will live to drink another day. But he who drinks between his drinks Right quickly in the gutter sinks. Stern necessity the rodder. Mint's meat gold and silver. A strapping fellow the barber. The first fall of man down stairs. A speaking likeness your twin brother. The laziest place in Germany 'Eidelberg. Ode to a money lender "Meet me a loan." A regular attendant at the club a policeman. Ought a baker to drive a thorough-bread hotse? , A button is a small event which is always coming off. A lady need not be athletic though she jumps at an offer. Dennis Kearney is the author of "Our American Cussin." There is no poetry in the light fantastic toe that wears a corn. ' A man wno owes more than he can pay is naturally more ose. Why is a rosebud like a promissory note? It matures by falling doe. - The most important part of a barrel is the bunghole. Wheeling Leader. An elevated railway conductor One that is a little "high." Oil City Derrick. Getting cold victuals in hot weather ia what a tramp considers to be hard work. There are 13 different grades of brown sugar, and yet some folks can't be sweet. Any man pays too much for his whistle when he has to wet it 15 or 20 times a day. Shere Ali knows he can't, and it is a Ques tion if Yakoob Khan. Boston Advertiser. It is said that Secretary Thompson smokes more cigars a day than ever Mr. Grant did. A small boy and a gun are harmless whea apart, but they make a terrific combination. A Wyoming man won $10 in a wager by eating 20 pigs feet. This was a pigs' feat indeed. Now the ameer is said to be suing for peace on any terms. His defeat has been ameer flea biie to John Bull. The king of the Fiji Islands is said to rel ish "Baby Mine" very much. He likes it well done too. Vox Humana. Spikes is under the impression that the reason Noah's wife was not named Ann was for fear it might lead to Ann-arky. Talk about the wickedness of dancing. were not many of the early martyrs, who were bnrned at the stake, light of foot? "There is a world of difference between a successful and unsuccessful attempt at suicide." Ex. Correct. Just one world. Minister (to young Sabbath-breaker) My son, do yoa ssy your prayers? Boy Yes, I says 'em like the devil when I get scared. A great many men are of opinion that a certain quantity of wine is good for a man. it is tne uncertain quantity that harts him. "This business is being carried too far." shouts the end nan minstrel in his search around the stage; "here, some one's stolen my Dones." We have just been thinking how language came into the world. It was during Adam and Eve's quarrel, when one word brought on another. Marriage improves some women's beauty. Some of there never have a pair of lovely black eyes until after they are wedded a yearer two. Is there a scientific man in the country who can tell, after a sock gets a hole in it, what becomes of the material that once tilled the aperture? We can easily explain the case of Mollie Francher. The deceiving creature is the most recent invention of Thomas Edison. Buffalo Express. The Boston Commercial Bulletin says that the "season for cutting ice and coupons is at baud." Also, for catting off to Europe to avoid detection. Under the head of "Country Intelligence," the Utica Hearld places the item: "Brooklyn had five sudden deaths Christmas." Let the Eagle scream. The only ground for believing that Mrs. Leaman, of New York, was insane was the fact that she was worth $109,000 and need to wear blue nightcaps. There is no place like home, especially if it is the home of a pretty giri, where they keep fire in the parlor and tarn the gas down low to save expense. When Laplanders meet they rub noses; when Englishmen meet they bow; but when Jerseyman meets Jerseyman they shake and smile and shake again. The Chicago girls want longer straps in the cars, and the Inter-Ocean tells them to lean on the tall men. The L-O. is a tall man himself, hence these leans. "One kind of a ship I always steer clear of," said an old bachelor sea captain, "and that is a courtship, 'cause on that ship there's always two mates and no cap'n." Clubs for women are the fashion in London. They have been fashionable in these parts for many years. They are used as an inducement for heads of families to stay at home. . ,v A lady friend just from Pans says she raw this inscription in Worth's millinery establishment: "When yen see a waist, basque it." The wicked bodice snatcher. Utica Observer. How Is Tbla T ISouthside. Th coal ring cay they do not solicit. They do. An agent of a leading firm stepped into a store in this city and inquired of the proprietors where they purchased their coal. Of so and so, was the reply, mentioning a firm not in the ring. A wife of one of that coal firm happened to be present, making- some purchases, as she had been a regular patron at that store. The agent stepped up to ber. held a whis pered conversation with her, and she turned away, made no purchases, and has not been in the store since. Our authority for the above ia perfectly reliable, and will be made known to any , who are Inclined to dis pute it. -

PBIAjTS PALACE.

Ha$ It Been Unearthed by Dr. Schliemann? Bemuats of ma Older Troy Tban Tnat ' of Homer. Dr. Henry Schliemann has written to the London Athenieam an account of his excavations at Hissarlik daring the past season, of which the following is a part: "What I have brought to light of the Trojan houses in general, and the last town chief !s or king's mansion, in particular, are merely the substructions, on an average, five feet high, which in the absence of cellars served as store rooms. A similar habit of using the ground floors as store rooms appears to have existed at- the time of the poet, for we see in the Iliad (vi. 288 9) that Hecuba descends to the store room where the artfully embroidered garments were stored. Had the store room been on the floor inhabited by the family, the poet wonld not have said that the qaeen descended. The substructions of the royal house consist of uncut stones joined with clay; the inner side of the house walls has a thick coating of clay which has been whitewashed with clay. If asked, 'Is this Priam's palace as described by Homer?' Iliad (vi. 212 9) I would answer by the verse of Virgil: 'Si parva licet componere magnls.' In fact, according to the poet, the palace contained 50 chambers for the king's sons and 12 for bis daughters, and all were of polished stone. But Homer can never have been the Troy whose tragic fate he describes, because at his time, and PROBABLY AGES BEFORE HIS TIME, the city he glorifies was buried beneath mountains of debris. Bat at his time public edifices, and probably also royal mansions, were built of polished stones, and he, therefore, attributes the same architecture to Priam's mansion, magnifying it with poetic license. This building has toward the gate a corridor 40 feet 8 inches long by 6 feet broad, leading to a chamber only 7 feet (Pinches long by 4 feet 6 inches broad, in which the ingenious Dr. Moss discovered a gutter of hemispherical forn; this room is nearly hlled by a huge lar 5 feet 6 inches high and 4 feet 7 inches broad. By a door only 1 foot 10 inches broad this chamber communicates with another larger one, which is 12 feet 3 inches long and 7 feet 4 inches broad, and contains three immense jars, of precisely the same size as that just referred to, and a somewhat smaller one; the pottery of the jars is upward of two inches thick. From this room we enter, by a door 3 feet 2 inches broad, into a larger one, which runs parallel with the aforesaid corridor, and is 24 feet four inches long and 12 feet broad, end leads to another chamber 10 feet long and 8 feet broad. This is the best preserved part of the man sion, to which belong also the buildings wnicn separate it irotn the northern part of the great wall. I therefore do not see any reason why the mansion, if, as is highly probable, it had five or six upper stories of sun-dried bricks or wood, may not have had even more than a hundred smaller or larger rooms. I secured one of the bricks, which is 2 feet long 1 foot thiee inches broad. and 3 'A inches thick, and which has in the conflagration been converted into burned brick. "In several directions beneath the royal mansion we see the walls of a still much more ancient bnilding, which we can not but ascribe to the first city erected on these sacred premises, because all the fragments ot pottery wnicn we nna in the very cham bers oi tne ancient mansion, immediately below the Trojan stratum, have on both sides that beautiful lustrous red, black or brown color which 1 never yet found elsewhere but in the strata of the first city. I now feel even bold enough to say that the great circuit wall was not built bv the Tro jans, but by their predecessors, because ia carefully digging on the debris from that wall I find it covered by a layer of rubbish about one foot thick, which is KOT TROJAN, because it does not contain any burned matter, and because it is full of pottery peculiar to the first city, which can not possibly be there by mere accident. Above this layer the great wall is covered six and seven feet deep with brick colored ashes of the tower tike buildings ot sun dried bricks aud wood. which once served both ss its ornaments and as its works of defense, and Dr. Moss calls to my remembrance that in this respect Troy resembles several cities in Scripture: so. e. e.. Joshua (ii., 15) describes the house of Rahab, situated on the circuit wall of Jericho. I have equally acquired the certainty that the gate, which has now turned out to be treble, was built by the inhabitants of the first city, of large, rudely cut white stones, which we see in all the lower layers of the gate walls, and the passage was paved by them with white flags. The succeeding people, whom I identify with the Trojans, bad merely repaired the gate, covering white flags with others of a reddish color, and heightening the side walls of large white slabs by a masonry of small stones. The reddish flags, having suffered too much by the white heat in the conflagration, have nearly all crambled away since I brought them to light. OI the white nags 1 lifted one, and having dug beneath it a large square hole, three feet deep, i only found there potsherds belonging to the first city. The third gate is li ! feet broad, and beyond it the masonry continues still for 10 feet on either side. Of coarse, the three gates, as we now see them, are merely the substruc tions of a tower-like building of son dried brinks and wood. . .. "One of the most curious objects ever found here is undoubtedly a distaff 11 Inches long, around which is lengthwise wound a large quantity of woolen thread, black like coal, probably from being charred; but I trast that, locked op in a glass vessel, it will keep very well. I discovered it in the royal mansion, at a depth of 28 feet below the surface. According to Dr. Moss the wood of the distaff Is the stem of a very young tree, "Visitors see in the tolas of my trenches billions of cockles and muscles, which are not found here on the seashore, bni only in the deep inlets which communicate with the sea; of course they mut have been used as food by the inhabitants. In the Trojan stratum, in which all the kitchen middens are charred, Dr. Moss recognizes raizor shells, limpets, pectana and oysters, mixed with sea sand, hare and pig, as well as small fishbones, flint -chips, boar tasks and stag horns. He observes that the latter are nearly all cast antlers, with the burr much worn, which implies that they were probably . COLLECTED VO MAKE ISf PUXEBT8, and not merely brought to the town with the products of the chase. He also found in the Trojan layer of der-ris an ulna of a boar with a Hint Hake upon K. Visitors will see that tbe well which has been dng by the late Greek Iliaus, is at a depth of 28 feet below the surface of the hill, pierced through one of the walls of tbe Trojan town chiefs mansion, and it appears, indeed, extraordinary that, according to Strabo, they should have ' shown in their own city and. of course, on a level . with their other building? a fantastic Pry taneion of Hector and a fantastic man sion of Paris: further, that they should have preserved in their temple of Athene fantas tic Trojan weapons, without eyer thinking that the real Trojan bmldings ana weapons lay buried 28 feet deeo beneath their feet." Ttee Fat tli or tbe Italians. , Mrs. Eugene Bob son. ' Unless one lives in Italy one can hardly imagine what depths or naive, cniiaiike credulity reolaoe our Inexorable Northern intelligence in the minds ot the people. As

you enter any church how yoa wonder at those oldest of men and thus oldest of women living, who, with faces made beatific with rapt adoration', and having in thei eyes the strange look of those who through the mystery ot prayer have penetrated into worlds unseen, go and prostrate themselves before an image of tbe Madonna or of some saint, and devoutly kiss it perhaps waiting for a miracle to be performed in their behalf! This childhood of faith began with the beginning of all religions enthusiasm of the middle ages, and is now the instinctive poetry by which simple souls appropriate to themselves the consolation and tbe hope they need. And it was this that sent thousands of people to San Giorgio Magiore on each occasion when after some signal victory won by the republicover the Turks new relics were intrusted to the church as the pledge ot a new divine protection. At one time great multitudes had gone to San Giorgio Maggiore to worship the body of Santa Lucia, when a squall ot wind suddenly came up, and in an instant the barks were upset and several persons were drowned. To prevent tbe occurrence of such calamity, the Senate ordered that the body of Santa Lucia should be transferred to one of the city churches, where without danger it would continue to receive the homage ot popular adoration. But, upon hearing of the irreparable loss it was eo soon to sustain, tbe monastery of San Giorgio Maggiore was turned into an abode of sorrow; but happily on the dreaded day, when every cell had been left empty, and

the monks were all assembled kneeling and weeping in the church, gazing tor the last time at their precious relics, suddenly an arm was seen detaching itself from the body, and it clung to the robe of the superior! The fervid piety ot the monks was satisfied by so manifest a favor of the Lord shown to them; and to-day, if yoa are at all interested in fleshlets bones or the legand that consecrated them centuries ago. yoa may ask the old sacristan to show them to yoa. Bat I would advise yoa to look at him rather. He has lived so long enveloped in the lifeless atmosphere of stagnant superstition that with the dead glance of his wan eyes, and his slow, silent tread, he is surely the most remarkable of all relics in San Giorgio Maggiore. IRIDESCENT GLASS. " What Causes Its Peculiar Character and How It la Made. Tbe Crockery and Glass Journal Says Much of the old glass brought to light from the buried cities of Pompeii and Herculaneura, from Roman tombs, and more re cently from tbe treasuries of tbe Cypriote cities or temples, possess the curious prop erty of iridescence, by means of which it re fleets light with all the colors ot the rain bow. - There has been some dispute as to whether this glass was iridescent when made or whether it acquired this quality subsequently by some natural agency. The more reasonable conclusion, and the one adopted by Mr. Peligot, the celebrated French chem ist, is that tbe glass, originally plain, be came iridescent from long exposure to the action of the air and moisture at a high temperature, these conditions being admirably luiniied in the old Koman tombs, where most of the glass ts found. All glass has a tendency to become irides cent, uoder certain circumstances, but in some kinds this tendency is more strongly marked tban in others, in glass for optical instruments a tendency to become iridescent is a serious fault, and different kinds of glass are combined to form a perfectly colorless lens. Modern chemists and glass makers have long been trying to discover the art of making glass iridescent by some more speedy means than that of burying it in a damp soil for tbe benefit of a thankless posterity. With all tbe progress made in kindred branches of the art, nothing of note was done in this direction until two French chemists quite recently succeeded in artificially producing this iridescence. The process they make use of is said to consist essentially in submitting the glass under a considerable pressure and at an elevated temperature to the action ot water con taining fifteen per centum of hydro chloric acid. Only certain kinds of glass are suitable for this operation. Tbe action of this acid is thought to be aoalagous to tbat of the elements upon the older glass, in dia solving the alkaline silicates and leaving the surface of the glass finely ridged or corrugated, and thus capable of retraction the lieht with prismatic or rainbow colors, like those ' or mother-of-pearl. The modern glass stands any amount of rubbing or cleaning without losing its curious property, but if the exposed surface be cat or ground off, the iridescent effect is instantly lost, showing that its cause is merely superficial, and not structural, as is the case with mother-of-pearl. The Bohemian glass, so far. seems to be the favorite for embellishing with the new iri descence. Bohemian glass will resist a ranch greater heat than any other kind, and is made in graceful shapes, and is clear and transparent. At present the leading Bohe mian factory is producing a good deal of this iridescent glassware, principally for the European market, as the American public is hardly, as yet, acquainted with this novel and beautiful glassware. uoe or tne greatest charms of this new glass is its infinite variety and freshness. No two pieces are alike in color, and no piece remains the same when placed in a new posi tion or regarded from a dinerent point of view. All show a greater or smaller raoge of the spectrum, carved or bent according to tbe shape of the glass; bat while some pieces flash with red and yellow others are tender with a silvery blue or rich gold gray. and still others exhibit all the colors of the rainbow. . . ' Though Lost to Sight to Meiqory Bear. Chicago Tlmes.l McLin is not lost to sight. He "loomed" in the Senate the other day when a bill was favorably reported directing the treasury to pay him for services alleged to nave been rendered as chief justice of New Mexico during the brief interval between Hayes" ap pointment of him and the eena'e s rejection of the appointment as one utterly unfit to be made These "special cases," of which MoLin's was one McLin having rendered invaluable service as a member of the Florida returning Aboard will rise occasionally not to push Hayes from his stool he Is too hrmseated for tbat but to make him squirm most ancomiortabiy taereon. Not tbe Slightest Dancer. New York Sun. -It is hinted that the recent cowhiding of a Hoosier Greenback editor by a Hooeier ureenbacK lawyer may lead to a duel. We hope not. The Greenback party is not so numerous as it was. and can not afford such internecine proceedings. "Itching; PUeaM The symptoms are moisture, like perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching, very distressing, particularly at night, as if pin worms were crawling in and about the rectum, the private parts are sorrw.-times affected: if allowed to continue, very serious results may follow. Dr. Swayne's AJ 1 Heal ing Ointment is a pleasant, sure cur j. Home Cures We were great sufferers from Itching riles, the symptom 1 were s above described, tne ose of bwayne a Ointment in a short time made a perfr ct cure. J. W. Christ, Boot and Shoe 'House, 344 North 8econd street. T. C. Weyman, Hatter, 8 South Eighth street, Philadelphia. Header, if you are suffering from this distressing complaint, or Tetter, Itch, Scald Head, Ring Worm, Barber's Itch, anv Crustv. Scaly Skin Eruptions, use Swayne's Ointment and be cured. Bent by mall to any address on receipt of price, (in currency or postage stamps;, ou cents a nox, mree boxes si.za. Address letters. Dr. Bwarne x Bon. 830 North Sixth street. PhiladelDhia. No charge for ad vioe. Sold by leading druggists In Indianapolis at French' Medicine .Depot, anaer aueonus lempie.

OLD, Y TRIED, AND TRUE.

People arc petting acquainted nd thoae wb are not ouga; to be with tbe wonderful merit ot that great American Remedy, the MEXICAN Mustang Liniment, FOR MAN AND BEAST. This liniment very naturally originated in America, where Nature provide In her laboratory uch surprising antidotes for the maladies of her children. Its fame has been spreading for 35 yean, until now It encircles the habitable globe. The Mexican Mustang Liniment Is a matchless remedy for all external ailments of man and beast. To stock owners and farmers it is Invaluable. -A single bottle often saves a human life or re. stores the usefulness of an excellent horse, ox, cow, or sheep. It cures foot-rot, hoof-aa, hollow horn, grub, screw-worm, shoulder-rot, mange, the bites aud stings of poisonous reptiles and insects, and every such drawback to stock breeding and bush life. It cures every external trouble of horses, such as lameness, scratches, cwinny, sprains, founder, wind-gall, rjDcr-bonc, etc etc. The Mexican 3iustang Liniment Is the quickest cure In the world for accidents occurring in tbe family, in the absence of a physician, such as burns, scalds, sprains, cuts, etc., and for rheumatism, and stiffness engendered by exposure. Particularly valuable to Miner. - It Is the cheapest remedy In the world, for It penetrates the muscle to the bone, and a singie application is generally sufficient to cure. Mexican Mustang Liniment Is put up In thre Uses of bottles, the larger ones being proportionUy much tbe cheapest. Sold everywhere. THE GENUINE DR. C. MoLANE'S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC OR VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. rpHE countenance is pale and leadencolored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull ; the pupils dilate; an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid; the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing ot the ears: an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a knawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in me stomas; occasional nausea and vomiting;, violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels ir regular, at times costivr. stools slimy; not unfrequently tingeu with blood; belly swollen and hard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but gener ally irritable, &c - Vhenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cm e. IT DOES XOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form; it is an innocent preparation, not capable ef doing the slightest injury to it most Under infant. The genuine Dr. McLane's Vermifuge bears the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. :o: DR. C. Mcl.ANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy "for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. " AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they are uncqualcd. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on tbe lid with the impression Dr. McLane's Liver. Pills. Each wrapper bears tie signatures of C McLanr and Fleming Uros. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. McLank's Liver Pills, prepared br Fleming Bros of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name JIcLane, spelled differently but same pronunciation. FOB 8A.X.E. FOR BALE Matthews' Fatent Renewaoll Memorandum Book. Hend for sampk copy and prioe list. Hamplea sent postpaid M any address on receipt of ou cents or No. 1, oi 40 cents for No. 3. Address, bENILNKL XC PA-NY, Indlaaapolla, F OR SALE Matthews' Patent Renewable Memorandum Book for GO eents fof No. 1 or 40 eents for No. X Sample copies aent any wnereon receipt oi price. Adores, tuusNKL COMPANY, Indianapolis. Vor the BEST ?DL- CJOLIL Addr A. a. HiMg. IikHinajmh. Tisli

NOTICE OJ5 SALE 0FBEAL ESTATE

Tbe real estate of Andrew J. Vanlctle. deceased, for sale at public aaction by WiUian Hunter, administrator. - Notice is hereby given that on Bstorday. the 25h day of January, lo7H, the undernlgned. adtnlnlHlrator of the estate of Andrew J. vansirltie, deceased, will, in pursuance of an order of the Marion Circuit Court, made at the December term, 1K7H, Uxreon, in the cause pending in aald court, wherein I am petitioner and barah J. Vanidckle and others are defendants. No. eell at public auction to the hlghent bidder (nr.t lew than . two-thirds of tbe appraised value) on the premises the following described real estate of aaid deceased, situate in Warren township. Marion county, otate of Indiana, to-wit: AU of the east halt of ttie northeast quarter of section twenty-five (25), In township sixteen (10,) nonbof range four (4). east, containing NO acres, more or lees, except tbe fol- ' lowing described part thereof, which has been set off, assigned and adjudged toarah J. Vanlckle. In her right ae widow of aald deceased, that is lo say: A tract beginning at the southeast corner of said east half of the northeast quarter of section 2a, township IS, north of range 4, east; thence running west on tbe south line ol said half quarter 2,ull links to the southwest corner thereof; thence north on the west line of said half quarter lM2f links to a point; thence east parallel to the south Une of said half quarter 2,006 links to the east line thereof; thence south on said east line l.sr.3 links to the place of beginning, containing US tiS-UK) acres, thus leaving of said tract to be sold 41 3-lU0 acres, more or less, subiect to a lease of one-half acre in tbe northeast corner for school house purposes. A so, all of the west half of the northwest quarter of section 3(1, in township 10, north of ranges, east, containing tQHo-luu acres, more or les, eicept the following described part thereof, which has been asngaed, set off and adjudged to said Karah J. Vansickle, in toer right as widow of said deceased, to-wit; A trsct beginning at the southwest comer of sakl half quarter; thence running west on the north line thereof 1.K97 links t a point in said west line; thence east lfc-'S links to a point; thence south parallel to the west line of said half quarter 1,J7 links to the south Une of saia half quarter; thence west on said sout h line 1J4 links to tbe place of beginning, containing 3 4M-1UU acres, and leaving of said hair quarter to be sold 5V 32 100 acres,. more or lessmaking in the tracts to be cold 100 67-100 acres, more or less. Terms of said sale are as follows, to-wlt: Onethird of the purchase money to be paid down, one-third thereof, with 6 per cent, interest, ia 12 months, and the remaining one-third, with r-r cent, per annum interest, in 18 monthsfrom the date of sale, said defem-d payments to be seenred by the notesot tbe purchaser or purchasers, payable without acy relief front, valuation or appraisement laws, and by mortgage upon the premises sold. Sale will take olace between 10 o'clock a. m. and 2 o'clock p. m. WILLIAM HirSTER Administrator. 6 RAND DISTRIBUTION !: Commonwealth Ilistriktion Co., By authority of Commonwealth or Kentucky. Drawing aud details under supervision of prominent clUr-cmi of Kentucky, In the city of Louisville, on Thursday, Jan. 30th. 1879. NO SCALING! NO POSTPONEMENT! PRIZES PAID IN FULL,. 115,400 ZN CASH DISTRIBUTED. TICKETS ONLT S3. Unparalleled Success of the Popular Drawings Read the following attractive list of prises forThiJakcaki Dbawiko: 1 Prise. 3S,0M . 1,VU . 6,0W . 10,(100 1 Prizo 1 Prise 10 Prix. of fMMIrach 20 Prists of 6UU each If ,000 1S.0U0 10.01O 100 Prices of :j0 Priieesof fiuO Prijs of 1,000 Prizes of 100 eaeh AO each. 20 eaco. 10 each.. APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 9 Prizes of lino each.. PtiMsof a 10 eacti Prizes of 1U eacfa. - . U0 IJKU Prizes.. -ii&,40 Whole Tickets, H. Half Tickets, ft, 27 Tickets, SoO. K Tickets, 100. Remit by Pott OiTlce Money Older, registered letter, bank draft or express. Full list- of drawings published In Louisville CotxnerJournal and New York Herald, and maild to all ticket holders. For tickets and in for -nation address COM MtX WEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO. or T.J. tOKMEBrOKD, Secretary, Courier-Journal building Louisville, Kv. Kor further Information apply to J- T. WOOD W A RD, Agent, la North Illinois street, Indianapolis, Ind. Saksk, Hord & Hzsdkicks, Attorneys. STATE OF INDIANA, Marion county, sa: in the Superior Court of Marlon eoanty. In the State of Indiana. No. 2i,4H, December teriu.ISTS. Jonathan Edwards, trustee, vs. W111!'mh D. Wyatt, Thereca A. Wyatt, his wife, Andraw J. JnbDMMi, James 1. Rnbblns, Rudolph K.- Mooday, Okcst S'raxburger, George E. F.'elier, Ueorge Kargeleldt, et al. Re it known, that on the H!n da; of June, 187s, tbe above named pliiiullS. by his afc torneys, tiled in the otlice or the clerk ef the Superior Court of Marlon county. In th Stave of Indiana, his complaint against the. above named defendants, and that afterwards, on the2'stdayof Dwiember. lrfTX, the said plaintiff filed lu said clerk's oftice the affidavit of a competent pensoa showing that said defendants, William D. Wyatt, Theresa A. Wyatt. his wife. Andrew J. Johusou, James X. Bobbins, Rudolph S. Moudsy. Oscar Stsmsburger. Ueorge K. Pfetferand George Bsnreleldt, are not residents et tbe state of indiaoa; and that said action la in relation to real estate. ' Now, therefore, ay order of aald court, said defendants last above named, are hereby notified of the filiug and pendency of aald eemphunt against tnem, and that unless tbey appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cease, on the 4th day el March, ti8, the same being the second Judlc!J day of a term of said eourt, to be begun and' held at t he court house in the city of Inalanapolis on the first Monday 1 Match, 187. said, eoroolalnt, and the mattets and things therein, contained and alleged, wU be beard and determined la their absence. DANIEL. M. RAJS3DELU J an 8-8 w Clerk. Baker, Bwd A Hendricks.. Attorney a. CjTATE C INDIANA, Marlon County, sa. O In the superior court of J!wion county, la. the state of Indiana. No. 229. December term, 1S78. . - Jon alba a Edwards, trustee, vs. Aaron la. Hunt, Aid E. Bunt, John U. Werts, et al. . Re It known, that on tbe 6th day of Joly, 187s, the above named ptointiu", by his attorneys," tiled In the otlice ot the clerk of the superior eourt of Marion county, in the stale of Indiana, his complaiai a?uni-t the afeove name defendants and stiieMhdjoDe. oetnber, IKTs, the said plaintiff filed in uid clerks omce we anmavra oi a competent person showing that aaitl defendants, Aaron L. Hant, Ann E. Hunt and John H. Werts, are mot residents of the state of Indiana; and. that said action Is in relation to rtal etdate. Now. therefore, by order ot said eourt, said defendants Isai above named are hereby notined of the tiling aal pendency of said eumplalnt against them, aud that unlets th-y appear aud answer or demur thereto, at tbe culling of said cause on the fou nil day ot Mai eh, 178, the same being the second judtetnl day of a term of said eourt, to be begun and held at the court house in the city of lndlaaapolls,onthe fiist Mondsy in March, 1879, anki complaint, aud the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard aad determined in their absence. DANIEL M. RAN8DELL. Jan8-8iE Clerk. wit niiint to 'isSsSfrl

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