Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 15, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 April 1879 — Page 6

THE DTOIANA' STANCE SENTINEIj; VCTNESD 918791 T

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WRITE THEX A XKTTKB TO-NIGHT. . ; t V : t Don't go to the theater, concert or ball. But stay In your room to-night; Deny yourself to the friends that call , And a good long letter write , . . Write to the sad old folksat home - , t Who sit when the day i done, ' i I With folded hands and downcast eyes, And think of the absent one, - - --" Don't selfishly scribble "exouse my haste, "I've scarcely the time to write," Let their brooding thought go wandering back ij ! -t . . . To many a by-gone night. When thev lost their needed sleep and rest, And every breath was a prayer That God wonld leave their delicate babe To their tender love and care. Dontlet them feel that you've no more need Of their love or counsel wise; For the heart grows strongly sensitive .,. When age has dimmed the eyea It might be well to let them believe You never forgot them quite; That you deem it a pleasure, when far away, Long letters home to write. . Don't think that the young and giddy Mends, Who make your pastime gay. Have half the anxious thought for you That the old folks have to-day. The doty of writing do not put off; Let sleep or pleasure wait. Lest the letter for which they looked and longed lie a day or an hour too late. For the sad old folks at home, With locks fast turning white. Are loneing to hear from the absent one Write' them a letter to-nigh U

THAT OTHER WOMAN. "Hullo, pard, what's your nnrry?" "I'm bound for the landing. Its steamer day, and my little woman is due." The first speaker was a slight, delicate looking man, with a face that said gentle man to even a casual observer, and the person he addressed as "pard" was tall, broad shouldered, and massively built. The two bad been staunch friends for months in the mines, and wooed fickle Fortune's favor in many an enterprise together, had seen floods wash away in a single night the fruits of hard months of toil, and fire sweep off the fortune that was to take them back to home and friends in the "States." They had slept together under the open sky, and dined out of the same black pot. The tall man. Harry Trent, had left a wife in a far away Sew England village, who was on her way to join her husband, and to-day she was to reach San Francisco. Harry trudged along the unpaved street, .the wind blowing clouds of dust in every direction, and turned at last down a roughly built wharf that stretched out to the bay. His friend, Hilton Montgomery, followed, feeling a curiosity to see the little woman about whom his partner had often talked .at night in the lonely chaparal. The steamer had entered the Golden Gate, and was leisurely puffing past the bare eand hills, that now constitute a thickly populated suburb of the city. There were wives and daughters clustered about her prow, and handkerchiefs were waving, and eager fuces watched for familiar ones on the rickety wharf. At last the plank was shoved out, and, after the usual tantalizing jerks and hitches by the sailors, it was satisfactorily adjusted, and the crowd came squeezlne dawn. A braid of light, wavy hair, a jauntily plumed hat, and a plump, well-fitted figure, was all that rewarded Hilton's attentive f aze, for more could not be seen of "pard's ittle woman." She was clinging about .Harry's neck, her neat boots dangling a foot from the ground, and her lacs invisible crammed," burrowed, u. the lapel of her husband's coat .,... Hilton waited a moment, with an amused smile on his lips, hoping one glimpse of her might be vouchsafed him, and then turned away and sauntered up the dusty street. Several times during the week that followed he found himself thinking of the radiant look on Harry's rather heavy features, glorifying his whole countenance, and of the little clinging figure; and night after night, as he returned to his big, cheerless, carelessly arranged roams, he allowed his thoughts to dwell on an imaginary scene. It was of a woman with braided hair, who went briskly about, bringing order and beauty out of Harry Trent's bachelor den. Her little high-heeled slippers clicked cheerily on the floor, and a lace ruftle peeped out when her skirts whisked about, and now then a white hand patted a bronzed cheek. The picture made him restless. "What a fool I am," he said aloud, at last. "Harry's wife is probably a shrew, a longtongued vixen, who scolds about tobaccosmoke, and nags a man for money to buy mere lace ruffles and high-heeled slippers when he is tired to death; but, hang it all, I will go and see her for myself. Harry is always asking me to." He arose, stretched himself, and forthwith began to search among a pile of moldy boots for a presentable pair, which, having pulled on with a little swearing and stamping, he oroceeded to kick all the others savagely under the bed, for he felt a grudge against all his possessions and against himself, . too, at that moment. - Was he not a confirmed mlsogomlst and misogynist, and here he was philandering off to see Harrv's wife, and punish himself with that tight pair of boots, which, to be sure, did make his feet look half their cretin ary size. ..- He was growing idiotic, maudlin, to dream of lace ruriles and clicking heels. He set forth, nevertheless, and rang the boor bell with a vicious jerk. A pattering of heels was heard, just as he imagined, and the door opened, revealing an oval face, with brown eyes and red pout ing lips. Hilton was for a momenta trifle embarrassed, and said, almost gruffly. "I am an acquaintance of your husband's my name is Hilion Montgomery." The brown eyes brightened, and two white hands stretched ont confidingly. "Ob, I know all about you"' she replied. "You are Harry's chum, and are such a good fellow, Harry says." Hilton was soon seated in the best chair, given a cigar, and made to feel nearly amiable. Harry's wife was indeed a quick, defthanded, taking little body, and she trotted about caring lor. her guest's comfort, or sat pearched like a wren on a high chair and chattered, and was altogether bewitching. Hilton stayed late, and heard all about the quiet family life in a sleepy Vermont town, where Mrs. Trent or Kitty,- as she was called, almost as soon as her friends knew her, had spent heretofore her uneventful - life. - - . ' - - He heard, too. of a certain sister " Nannie, whose virtues Kitty dwelt on, and never . seemed able sufficiently to laud.' . At last he went back to his lonely rooms, and they made him more savage than ever. The next evening he sought refuge from his new and unaccountable dullness in a billiard-room, but the balls were wrong and the boys played wrong, and, finally he took himself to Kitty's cheerful hearth.. She was writing to sister Nannie, and Hil ton taid. m lest: - . ; ., r- . . ' "Tell Miss Nannie f am in love with her from her sister's vivid description of her charms.' ; Mrs. Trent jumped up suddenly," and be can rutmnartne in a mammoth trunk. She produced at last -si photograph,' and showed it with a pretty air of triumph. "There." she said, "behold th9 charmer. It really was a pretty face that looked out of the frame a good isce, too, with true, steady eyes, and a broad brow. 1 Hilton felt strangely attracted by it "ou may tell her I am grovelling at her feet since I have seen her picture," said he. laughingly, and Mrs Trent sent, literally. the message she bad received. . , The reply came in due season. -.- ,' . Miss Nannie was pleased to think favor ably of her unseen admirer, and lo Kitty's next letter a little note was . enclosed from Hilton, thanking her for the indulgent

kindness she had shown for hi audacity',; and would she not write to hint direct? .,

An answer arrived, and a 'Tegular corresSmdenoe was soon tstaplished r between arry's partner and Kitty's sister. " - . Hilton. wondered himself at the Interest he took in writing to and hearing from a woman whom hs had never seen, and probably never would see, but there was a subtle charm in the girl's letters for this rnan . who bated women. : ' , : . n u - There was a purity of thought, a tender womanliness in them that struck a chord in the young man's heart, that was not yet deadened to the approach of good. His life had been a hard one: a long straggle against poverty, and a false friend and a faithless woman had well nigh ruined a character originally teeming with good impulses and noble aspirations. Now he caught himself at times thinking of a snag little house, of a garden and of merry little children playing about it, - of a face lightening as be came home at night, and cheering him on to a nobler, happier future than his past had been, and to day he laughed bitterly at the picture - his imagination had conjured up; but it would come back again, and it made him look carefully in the cracked mirror, and wonder if he had grown old-looking, vicious and altogether unattractive. The reflection be found theie was of a grave, almost stern, face, with a few wrink les and gray hairs about the temples, and he thought of that same face as it looked when he left home years ago ruddy, fresh, and beaming with hope and courage. The rememberance brought . a sad smile, and he sighed as he turned away. What had such as he to do with women? and vet he was allowing himself to think often of one he had never seen, and was almost trusting in her. too. 'Bah!" he said, "it is too ridiculous! I am certainly in my dotage!" and he turned to leave the room. A letter the only pure white spot on his untidy table caught his eye, and he stopped and looked at it Its surroundings were half-empty bottle, a rusty pair ot pistols, a cloudy, brandy-stained tumbler, cigar stumps and ashes, and a worn-out pack ot cards. ; He lifted the letter, tipped up the table. and sent his valuable collection tumbling to the floor, then wiped with an old vest the cracked, notched, ink-stained surface, and replaced the letter. - Still he stood staring at it, and seemed to struggle with himself to decide some weighty matter. At last his face cleared, his knitted brow relaxed, and a smile played about the firm, tightly closed lips. "I'll be hanged!" he burst out, '-if I don't go and see the girl! And u she is a delusion the fiend may . take me,' for he is after me, sure enough." About this time a lucky venture in a mine that "panned out" well seemed to aid Hil ton's resolution, and, after same hasty preparations and much animadversions at his own foolishness ha at last started. At New York Hie tried to delay again, hoping to get over what be called his "at tacks of idiocy," but finding his desire to see the girl for whom he entertained such a strange interest, he resolved to start without a moment's longer hesitation. It was a bright, sunshiny day as he reached the end of his pilgrimage, and the shrine at which he was prepared to bow was a low, rambling farm-house tucked away under a MIL ' It was vine clad and picturesque, and the air was heavy with the fragrance ot dowers. The door stood invitingly open, and Hilton felt tempted even then toneeignominiously, when a tall, pleasant-looking girl came for ward and bade him enter. She bore a strong resemblance to the picture Hilton knew so well of Miss Nannie, and still he was sorely disappointed, and scarcely knew why. The girl was common place, and so little pleased was he that he simply introduced himself as an acquain tance of Mr. and Mrs. Trent who in passing through the neighborh od had stopped to give news and greetings from them. After short chat, on commonplace subjects, he arose and said, "Good day," and, bowing, left the house. As he walked down the garden-path Hil ton realized for the first time how his great expectations of the interview had been, from the keenness of his disappointment. Jtla tried to whistle and walk briskly as he mad a his way to the station, but there was rea. pain at his heart under his cheerful exterior. Perhans when he was back in the routine of his bichelor life, the nonsense would leave his head, he thought To while away the time before the steamer started for no railway then took the traveler across the continent in seven days, Hilton went to a little sea-side resort, and buried himself in gloomy reflections. One day an unusually heavy surf was beating bim and his fellow-bathers about in an unmerciful way. They clung to a rope that was fastened to the shore, and let the breakers dash and sport about them in what seemed a dangerous fashion. The pretty girls were so disguised by their hideous suits, that one could not pronounce on their various charms, and men who were so exquisite on the promenade a few hours later, were now limp, shapeless guys. ' Hilton noticed one woman near him who had lost her footing, and who was struggling and choking as the salt water overwhelmed her.. ..,.,., . 1- v.rHe seized her with one arm, helped her to recover her upright position, and then of fered to conduct her to the shore, for she was frightened and trembling. As they climbed together the sandy beach, he noticed for the first time that his com panion was plump and fair to look upon.and then, as she turned her face full npom him while she thanked him for his trouble, he saw with a great heart-throb, that she re sembled his much thought of picture and correspondence. Here was a mystery, tor wno couia sue . ... ... be? He found in the evening an excuss for en tering into conversation with this perplex ing woman, and was so charmed and be witched by even this one interview, mat ne firmlv resolved it should not be the last Day after day found him at ner siae, ana the charm increased. Thev sat or.e evening on the yellow sand. and Hilton, who had not by a singular chance learned the name of his friend whom the ocean bad given him, mentioned his contemplated return to San Francisco. - "San -Francisco," cried the girl; "why. that is where Kitty lives. I do wish you knew my little sister K.ttty." "Is her name Mrs. Trent?" said Hilton, and he was trembling with excitement "To be sure it is," replied she; "and yon know her, the dear do tell me quickly all about her." , '. "Tell me first, are you her sister Nannie?" "Why of course I am, who else did yon. think I was?" r "Who was Hie other woman?" ' "What other woman, and what can you possibly mean ' was the reply; tor iNannie begat to think her pleasant acquaintance was a harmless lunatic. "The woman I went to see, and who was you," was the incoherent reply. Bat Nannie was planning an. excuse. for lea vine this man. who certainly was crazy. and who might grow violent, and did not answer. "You are Miss Nannie." he cried, "and I have been thinking of you for months, and a ad you all nay, more than I hoped for but who was the other woman?" Nannie arose, having concluded to run and trust to her stout muscles to escape from this madman; but Hilton arose, too, and detained her, saying, humbly: , "It must all appear very strange to you and I was never more puzzled in all my life, I wrote S3 often to you, and ielt such an interest in " but before he could go further Nannie, to whom the mention of letters was a revelation, cried, "Is it possible , that you are Hilton Montgomery?" '- ; . "Of course I am,' he replied, borrowing

her words; "who did yon think I wasr' "l thought I did not know I believed " and Nannie looked as bewildered as Hilton hlmself. They stood for a moment staring at each other, until Hilton, with a tenderness

in his voice, said: -. "Miss Nannie, through some most singular mistake, i was going back to San Francisco without having known you, whom I cam especially to see." . You came lust to seer me: - saw nauuie, oftlyw " . ... ' ,. "yea," said Hilton. "l came to see 11 you were the one woman of women in the world to me. Br vour letters 1 learnea to know , U , j T ,- I you, and in these last days I have learned to love you. - He looked so earnestly andbeieechingly at her that Nannie was touched, and lalU,l -J 1. : - i "I liked your letters very much ana nat ty says you are nice, ana peruaps i uuns. maybe I like love you a little, toe," and sbe felt herself held close to a man she no longer. thought a lunatic i - Tha silence was at length broken oy xxuton. who reDftated with strong emphasis. "Nannie, my.own love, who wai the other woman I went to see?" and then related his lonrnev to the farmhouse, his melting with a tall lady who looked like his Ninnie, but so different, and his sore disappoutment Nannie soon cleared -up the mastery, by tellimr of her cousin named Ninnie, too. who was filling her vacant place it the home circle, and they laughed over tne instate as thev went iovfiillv home. ,' The next steamer carried twaiappy passengers through the Golden Gate, ind Harry and Kittv stood on the wharf t welcome them. Hilton's dream of a snug housl and garden, and merrv children has com to pass, and he lookea grave at the thought of all he might have lost Chance naa ni cieareu no the mvsterv caused by "Ttat Other Woman." Communities and Colonies. [New York Times.] Scattered through the 13 States branches of eight main bodies, are 72 communities, whos central idea is that of holding all things in common. They number some 5.000 persons. owning, perhaps, 180,000 acres of land and $12,000,000 of property. The Icarians are French; the Shakers and Perfectionists are Americans, although the former were organized by an English woman ; the remainder are German. The Eben-Ezers of Aurora call themselves "Inspirationists," their present leader a woman claiming to speak by divine inspiration, and this claim runs back over a century with them in Germany. before they became communal. The Separatists came from Wurtemberg, under stress of persecution on account of their religious views. The Shakers, who are the oldest and most numerous of all these groups, were organized by an Englishwoman named Ann Lee, who, while in prison for her religious manifestations in 1770, claimed to have had a special revelation from God, and was directed to come to America. She arrived in New York, with eight others, in 1774, and lived in the woods until 1780, when some unusually affected subjects of a revival in the neighborhood happened to wander to her. Her professions of supernatural and even miraculous powers were kept up, and she is srill called "Mother Ann" by the Shakers and venerated by them as a sort of patron saint. The Shakers and the Rapnists or Harmonists are celibates, and it is an extraordinary fact that the latter, after several years of communal life, and while many of them were living in the marriage relation, deliberately abandoned it, a few who were unwilling to do so withdrawing. The Perfectionists at Oneida, in this State, and Wallingford, Conn., have what they call a complex marriage state, every woman being considered as married to every man. They say that there is no "intrinsic difference between property in person and property in things," hence their communion extends to themselves as well as what they have acquired. and the relationship between the sexes is as free as consent can make it, except that any disposition to a permanent association be tween the same two persons is repressed as being a manifestation of "selfishness." The Communists unite provision for the wants of this life with peculiar religious notions which might be called fanatical but that they are entirely free from a spirit of intolerance. Some are Spiritualists in the ordinary sense of that word; some look very soon for the second coming of Christ and the end of all things, while others believe the second coming already past; they believe in a special nearness of God to themselves; they have their own hymns, literature, and observances, and seem to be moved by a desire to separate themselves from the world. The Perfectionists profess to aim at complete sinleanness, and some individuals among them even claim to have attained it. All the Communists are good citizens. They break no laws; they add nothing to the public charge on account of pauperism and vice; they are all non-com-batants, and do not even attempt among themselves anything beyond moral sussion, but allow those to withdraw who be come insubordinate. They have neither defalcations nor breaches of trust, and their honesty in all commercial dealings is as proverbial as their shrewdness. The morality of their life is unimpeachable. This must be admitted of even the Oneida body, with the exception of their peculiar institution, which is worse than the Mormon practice in its demoralizing influences, and justifies the present agitation against them in the central part of the state. The Oneida people are manufacturers mainly, agriculturists incidentally; the rest are agriculturists mainly. All have shown an extraordinary aptitude for invention and for economizing labor. The Shakers, who are particularly well known by reason of their numbers and their many colonies. have a large variety of trades, and the work of all communistic societies has an established reputation both for uniform excellence of quality and honesty of quantity. The Icarians, in Iowa, were led by a Frenchman, who spent 16 years in trying to realize a pretty dream of what he could do in founding a society if he had half a million in money, so his followers began with 4.000 acres of land and $20,000 of debt. To escape from the latter they finally surrendered the former, and after hard work and bitter economy, were able to redeem 1,936 acres of it; they are now independent, but reduced in numbers. The Bishop Hill Colony in Illinois, once having 800 members and some $800,000 of property, was broken up by inefficient leadership and the trouble of debt, and their town is falling into decay. Bat the societies generally have rigidly adhered to the rule of having no debt and getting property only as they earn it. None of the communes are rich in the ordinary sense of the word, and they do not try to be. Bone and Muscle. Liebig has shown that oatmeal is almost as nutritious as the very best English beef, and that it is richer than wheaten bread in the elements that go to form bone and muscle. Professor Forbes, of Edinburgh, during some 20 years, measured the breadth and height, and tested the strength of both the arms and loins of the students in the university-a very numerous class, and of various nationalities, drawn to Edinburgh by the fame of his teaching. He found them in height, breadth of chest and shoulders, and strength of arms and loins, the Belgians were at the bottom of the list; a little above them, the French; very much higher, the English; and the highest of all. the Scotch and Scotch-Irish (from Ulster), who, like the natives of Scotland, are fed in their early years with at least one meal a day of good oatmeal porridge. Bonnets and hats are larger than those of the winter season; gay colors prevail-flow-ers and tips are used-bright ribbons are used-and the honors are divided between bonnets and hats.

DEATH TJT COIN.

A Car Driver Covered With - Abscesses Through Patting Money in His Month. ' INew York Mercury .J A terrible cass of blood Doisoninz and death occurred this week., occasioned entire ly by the frequent manipulation of coin and the absorption of poisonous virus into the system, and it has thus been newly demonstrated that that the most deadly alffections can be communicated by the circulation of money throughout the community. The case reforred to was that of Charles Schin uier, years 01 age, a young marnea man, h,gQly ken of J ai country; .who lived with bis wife and family in nn ostatious but happy' retirement at No. 360 f.Mi iMgai street . lie nad charge ot a-Dob-tail car on tha Avenue C line, and acted as both driver and conductor. ' On one or two occasions passengers gave him money for tha package with which, ha was provtded to make change that was declared by the cashier of the road to be counterfeit, and thus he iound himself, ms did also others on the line, mulcted out o IWKSTV-FIVk OR FIFTY QKSTS A DAY, whioh, deducted from their small pay, makes tne wages exceedingly small. When the drivers said they -were . hot . experts, and could not discriminate 'at night between good and bad money, the officials of the road told them to bite the coin, and thus ascer tain whether they were lead or the genuine article. This maimer of testing 5, 10, 20, 23 and 50 cent pieces became quite common on the road, and self-preservation, or otherwise the preservation-of their wages, caused the drivers to resort to this test, which was the only One tbey were familiar with. Mr. Jscbtndler, therefore, made It rule before handing.out the packages to passengers who wantecr change to PUT EVERT COIK INTO HIS MOUTH" ' and try its value. On March 12 Mr. Behind ler complained that his mouth was sore, and pustules began to appear upon his face and body, lie corapiained ot general lassitude, weakness, disinclination to euort and ex hibited a lack of his usual vitality. He was compelled to remain at home, and, not growing any better on the following day, the services ot Dr. George 5. HIckok. of No, &H Esst Fourth street, were called into requisition. Mr: Hickok is one ot the pro lessors in the Eye and Ear infirmaiy, at Second avenue and Thirteenth street; is con sidered an adept in throat diseases, and in cases Of blood-poisoning is called an expert ae saw at once mat Mr. schtndier was sut fenng from the inoccnlation ot some deadly virus in the . system, and after questioning the ratient as to his business and habits. concluded that poison had been absorbed into biooa BY MEANS OF THE MOSEY which the man had placed in his mouth. There was no evidence ot lead poisoning, but everything tended to show that virus had been received into the blood from matter or pus from an abscess, eruption, or perhaps from a dead person, by means of coins wbich had been brought into contact with the mucus membrane or absorbent portions of the mouth. Antidotes were administered but the man had been steeDed. so to sneak with the deadly matter, and sores, pustules and foul-appearing abrasions appeared, all over the man's body. The sores emitted matter which was of a noxious odor, and finally large abscesses broke out upon his arms and other parts of the body. It was a clear case ot . , PYEMIA OR BLOOD POISOSIKO occasioned by the absorption of pus into the blood. The pus is a secration from the inflamed texture ot the skin. Under the drain on the system occasioned by the running matter-from the pustules or nicerons sores and the weakness of general debility which caused the sufferer to lose his vitality, he grew weaker and weaker until last Thursday, when he died. The funeral ceremonies took place the following day, ana yesterday the remains1 were removed for interment to Calhoun, In this State, where the parents of the deceased live. The attendant pbysioian returned to the bureau of vital statistics a certificate stating that the primary cause of death was from asthenia or general debility of the system, and the second cause pyaemia, or blood poisoning, caused by the absorption of pus into the system, the latter occasioned by poisonous matter received from the out side of silver coins or nickels which Mr. Schindler had kept in his mouth. A 8TARTLIHO- STATEMENT. In conversation yesterday with a member of the health board concerning the inocula tion ot poisonous matter in the manner stated above, the writer was informed that cases of poisoning by contact with the face of metallic substances which contained pus or virus of any kind were quite frequent on the other side of the Atlantic, ana that in times ot contagion and plague it has been customary to wash and disinfect money. - If the silver pieces now in circulation should contain in the interstices on their faces any malignant matter, it could easily be trans mitted to any other person through the ordinary manipulation of the hands. In the mouth the glands form a more ready con duit or canal for the matter to reach the vital parts of the system, but absorption couia taxe pi nee , . , THROUGH THE SKIN AKYWHERE. It might be that many cases of pyismia or blood poisoning from pus have been occasioned In this manner, and the cause of the difficulty remain a secret to both patient and physician, "in fact said the commission er, "I have known of cases of abscesses and consequent pyiemia resulting in death when the cause was not known. It might have been caused by abrasion and lnnammatton resulting from tha HA5DLISO OP INFECTED MOSEY. Coin is a very ready means of communi cating disease, and people should be careful in handling it In the case ot Mr. Schindler cause and effect were easily traced. In hun dreds of other cases it would be impossible to follow the disease to its origin. Are cases of death from pyremia rare?. On the contrary, they are quite common. The mvsterv mostly lies in the circumstances at tending the poisoning. I have no doubt that many such cases have been the result of handling money which has passed through somebody's hands who had been afflicted with some vile and noxious disease, and has communicated his affliction through money to others. Coins should be handled with gloves, especially in this country, where It circulates through' all classes of society. It is impossible to be too careful in manipulat ing it A MyMterious Law Student. " 1 nfnw York Star. Arjril 2.1 For severals day past the clerks at the law library have been puzzled by the regular appearance of a little, old gentleman in a thin blue overcoat, who always treads with the utmost care and keens his ieit nana pur led out of sight in his coat pocket He sits for hours, surrounded by law books, which he scans with the utmost care and delibera tion, stopping occasionally to get a clerk to brine him another volume to increase the dusty pile before him. The aged student is Samuel J. Tilden. It is said be, in company with another caDitalist well known in con nection with railroad projects, has a scheme for a steam towing railroad along the berme bank of the Erie canal, and that he is mak ing a thorough search of the statute books to ascertain whether there is any existing law that would prevent them from securing control of the tirlvileee bv legislation. Mr.. Tilden has already matured his plans for obtaining the legislation at the State capital necessarv to tha snoceas of his new scheme, the real obiect of . which is to capture the tow-path of the canal ; for a road-bad for a new railway. n,-.; .:,: .' II- , , Giving Timely Warning. - . j . INm Vnrtt Snn.l .-ui- 4i Lat Havea bawara lest in iolning the straggle ot military power gainst a Ire bal lot, ue cimseu m grouua to powaor. n

45 Years Before tha PubEs. - THE GENUINE T

DR. C. HoLANE'S CELEBRATED LIVER PILLS, FOR THE CURE OF Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, SvsrantA akd sick headacbs. Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. ! PAIN in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases on 'pressure: sometimes the pain is in the left side; the patient is rarely able to lie on the leu, 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, accom panied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part There is generally a considerable loss of memory, accom panied with a painful sensation of hav ing left undone something which oujrht to have been done. A slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant. Thi 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 forti tude enough to try it In fact, he dis trusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the liver to have been extensively deranged. AGUE AND. FEVER. Dr. c mclane's liver Fills, 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. 6 For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. ivery box has a red wax seal on the lid. with the impression Dr. McLaME's Livsk FILLS. -. The genuine McLane's LtVEK Pills bear the signatures of C McLakk and Fleming: Bros, on the wrappers. insist upon having the Pennine R. C McLank's Liver Pills, prepared by Fleming Bros- of Pittsburgh, Fa., the market being full of imitations of the name JHcIxine, spelled diHercntly but somj pronunciation. Take Care! aVoid IMPOSITION Most drniortsts are conscientious In their deuimga, but there are a few who are not. A number of case have been reported to ns centlv where drt slxts. for the sake olnliiing a siuui auoiiiouHi prom, nave sougui to impose dpou their customers bv offering them cheap and worthless imitations of KKSbOS's c Ai-einE roaoua -lastk in mace oi tne senuine, or nave vnea to sen inem uie common Parous plaster when Benson's Capcine Porous luster was asked for, falwly clulming that the common artte e possessed etiual merit. We therefore caution mil buyers of Benson's Capcine Plaster to see that the word CAPON E is correctly spoiled, uisi eacn piaster has ine word C-A-P-U-l-N-E cut IHroueh It. Bv this simple precaution imposition may De avoided. . P0SIT1TELT THE EEST. 77w falwtblc mcaJllift of the ordinaru narouM planter are in UntarUrU inoreuaed ten-fold ly new ana icirmie mcauxiivm The manufactimerM were maardeA the hlnhr and only medal rubber plaster, at both the favorablu knoim amnng 1i,s,ciaiu a a great improvement on the ordinary pu,u platter. .VHIC AIVY PHYSICIAN IN YOUR OWN YICINITY ABOUT IT and you wUl be convinced that It Is n far su perior io common poivu , , inuiuruui and the so called cheap electrical apiAiances that it can not be compared with them. Theiefore, do not take a common or luierior plaster at the same or less price. m.am vat BENSON'S CAPCINE FJROUS PLASTER, and insist on getting it. Observe above caution la buying. - - .. This article la spsctuly rscommended for Lme and WeaK?ck, Coughs, Weak Lungs, Kidnov and Spinal "Complaints, and all Local Ache and Pains. SOLD BI ALL DEUQAKTS. f&ICB 35CEHT8. $500 PRIIE BUTTER ?' i-ru in at 1hojrrtX)!iiry 1 tha i-n I, lit rFur. I NK UTtK 7l3M 31 jUattonal Diploma 1 1 was avarar-i in fur rnt't i 31 N v9" l""!"! mtmtau. Al s i 'rrmanmc. c TOurUruK ant It It: or i. wt,.lt coots, whereto SAIt. vrlteat once to WBAb kHmsDSOa CO Cnjricaf BwUast"S Vk WA-N TED Agents to isiionr new sporting and magic goods, sovtltles, magio lanterns, microscopes, cosmeics ladles' articles etc.: 47 new articles. WeIalary of rJOand sent fre loan y address. laJACJ2V Broad. way, Wew l ors:. . ; - WANTED Homes fevyoutg girls and boys In the -country.' lso employment for VOUDg ana mmuiw S'7' -. wiu umhu, servants, gardeners, eli Msrled help ean aiso be furnished. Adreas 1U Thorpe Block, Indianapolis nensvoien ouoicv.

tee nroiAii APOLIS

MIL

The Daily Sentinel Is acknowledged by business men as the COM MERCLaX, FINANCIAL and INDUSTRIAL PAPER, superior in editorial, equal In literary and news merit to any of its rivals In the State. THE SENTIKELU prospects for tha new business year are most flattering. Special attention is lven to our MARKET REPORTS, both home and foreign, and business men will at ail times find It as correct as we can make it. The attention of the legal profession Is called to the eonrt decisions. THE BEN TLX EL haa long enjoyed an enviable reputation for lis eonrt reports, and la pleased to know iU eflbrta are appreciated by the bar. During the coming sessions of the State Leg islature and Congress we will give a full and concise report of each day proceedln , and as it is expected a long and heated session will be held, THE DAILY SENTINEL wUl ba more than ordinarily Interesting. - The Sunday Sentinel Has been published with great success, without sob pension, for SIX YEARS. Ita eolnmns ara filled with the latest news. Including the As sociated Frees Despatches. Special attention is given to Literature, Science and Art, and to Educational and BeUglons matters. It is a welcome visitor at the flreslda of thousands so firmly established that It can not be supplanted by any other. The first edition Is lasued at 11 o'clock Saturday night In time for the trains on the Vandalls, Indian spoils and St. Louis, Lafayette, Peru and Bloomlngton Roads. THE SEfJTIBEl Is An Advertising Mian The DAILY and SUNDAY SENTINEL naa tha largest circulation of any Indiana daily paper. The vast railroad system of Indiana with the thirteen lines of railroad diverging from the Capital to all points of the Oompaaa, enables us to serve THE SENTINEL by carrV srs in over 3D0 cities and towns tributary there to. THE WEEKLY STATE SENTINEL reaches every Indiana postofllce In large & ambers. Almost every farmer or stock raiser la this State takes or frequently sees It. Specimen Copies Sent Free to Any Address. TERMS; (POSTAGE PREPAID BY PCBLISHIU) Invai-lmbly Casta 1st AflvneoJ Without Sunday Isso. With Bunday Iasua U.OO. 0.OO. 10.60. Oaio Month Bemlt in Drafts or Postoffioe Money Or. ders. If possible, and where neither of these can be procured send the money In a B.EOISTETRWD AjETTKB. All Postmaster are obliged to rehlster letters when requested to do so, and he system is an absolute protection against learn by malL Give full address, Postoffioe, County and Stats, Address SEIiTUlEL COUPAIIY V;.,:. Indianapolis, Ini ' JOHN C, SHOOMAKBR, Prest.

One Year

Biz HoaUu Threw M tha ... . 8.00.

.. .88.