Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1879 — Page 6
THE, INDIAN A f ST ATI? SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MOBNING, APBIL 23, 1879.
6
IX X.K2TT.
BY VAXSYKX BBOWN. Down the cathedral steps she oomw, With fash ionable look dem ure ; Jor all her life's perplexing sums i ' Are solved within, where Ineense pure, And gorgeous carvings overhead,; , ; And costly carpets under feet, ' And music soft, and prayer low said, Combined to make religion sweet. Her carriage waits her at the door, . She sinks upon the seat within ' Why should she now think any more Of wretchedness or woe or sinT If others doubt, she knows her worth; Where others grope, the light she sees; Her Heaven is but a grander earth, Her earth is all a Heaven of ease. Bhe knows no doubt, she feels no fear, Her faith is perfect in its way; Twould shock her fine, fastidious ear To bear what scoffing skeptics say. That Heaven to which her future points, The final home her fancy paints. Rejects the many and annomts A most exclusive set of saints. The Man of Borrows wandering down The stony steps of Galilee; The humble fishers, rough and brown," - Who cast their nets upon tbe sea ; , Can she connect her lordly church. Where every line is shaped to please, Or trace it back by long research To such plebeian souls as these? Kay, give the gentle saint her dues, For lo, on sacrifice Intent, She lays aside her gaudier hues. To don the ashen silks of Lent. And, lest such penitential tasks Should not suffice a crown to wia, Sne pays the price that fashion asks To bring the distant heathen in. Adown the steps my lady goes To where her liveried carriage waits; Bright is the only life she knows. And far removed the furious fates. And so the lofty creed she hears Has come to be serenely sweet. While skeptics' darts and scoffers' sneers Fall harmless at her dainty feet. Clipper. RELIGIOUS NOTES. Bead the 146th Psalm. It is the crusade psalm of the temperance women. Hiss Frances E. Willard is doing grand work in the ranks of temperance reform. The Methodist congregation at Bloomington, lnd., will soon build a new church. A German writer has calculated that the exact day of Christ's death was Friday, April 9, in the year a. A very valuable painting of Christ has been stolen from the Church of Campo de Cnptana, in Andalusia. Last month a reputed witch was nailed np in her hut and burned alive by peasants in the Province of Novgorod. Fisk University, at Nashville. Tenn., has just received $50,000 from the Stone estate, through Rev. W. H. Willcox. Heresy appears to be becoming epidemic among clergymen. Dr. Bullock, of Oiwego, &. Y., is the latest victim led to the slaughter. Four pastorates in the Massachusetts town of Waitham are now vacant the Congrega tionalifit, the Methodist, the Unitarian and the Baptist. The Lutherans are collecting funds on what they term the "Peter's Pence Plan," an imitation of that pursued in the Roman Catholic church. Kev. Dr. William Butler, founder and superintendent of the Methodist mission in Mexico, has been compelled by failing health to leave that field. It is said that Dr. Edward Eggleston has dramatized the Pilgrim's Progress, and is going to have it performed in the parlors of bis Brooklyn church.. A London newspaper furnishes the curious and surprising statement tbat 1,833 out of 5,241 shares in a new brewery company in Sheffield are held by English clergymen. There are no less than 110 vacant parishes in the Catholic dioceses of Munster and Limbnrg, Germany, and they can not be filled except by compliance with the Falk laws. Kev. Dr. I. G. Hubbard, of Claremont, N. H., 60 years old, was obliged to dismiss his congregation Sunday week, and died while returning home in a sleigh, of heart disease. A Jewish ex-rabbi, near Berlin, has celebrated his Iron wedding on the 70th anniversary of his marriage. He is in his 93d year, and 69 of his 145 descendants attended the festival. The king of Belgium has expressed his thanks to the Church Missionary society for the assistance given to the Belgian explorers in Africa, by a missionary of the society Dr. Baxter. . i . , ... The Nonconformist ministers of Great Britain have, after consultation, declared that the time has come for the disestablishment of the Church of Scotland, and that it ought to be made a political qaestion. ' Bev. Dr. David Swing has a telephone leading from his study, with various branches to the houses of Intimate friends and parishioners. He does much of his pastoral visiting with the aid of this apparatus. The venerable Dr. Bushnell, of the Gaboon Mission In Africa, is looking among the theological seminaries for three or four young men who will go with him to enter on missionary work when he returns in August Colonel "Bob" Ingersoll offers to give $1,000 at once and half of his income for the next five years, if necessary, in aid of the negro emigrants to the West. If ' this be true, we believe that the devil may slip np on Bob yet. Iceland is a cold land, but it is full of religious warmth. All its inhabitants are Lutherans. There is a Bible in every home, and it is faithfully read. As a natnral sequence, Iceland has no theater, prison, sheriff, cannon or militia. Bishop Spalding, of Colorado, writes from Denver an appeal for financial assistance in the work of the coming year. The work will be greater than ever before,' owing to the large immigration expected during the spring ana commg summer. FASHION NOTES. Marabout feathers are most used in millin cry this spring. Very few black bonnets are seen at the spring openings. ( , K . .. , . Violet button-hole bouquets are worn by Ladies and girls. . . . , Bonnets of jetted and gold-beaded lace are in special favor. t ;.... "Little Buttercup" is the name of a new style of hats for ladies. t ; -. . . ., One of the pretty toilet graces of the day is the use of ribbon bows. - ; Handsome articles in crystals, designed for ornamenting hats, are shown. Exquisite taste is shown in the models exhibited at our fashionable bazaars. Modistes are now kept busy day and night preparing and finishing new cos tames. - The newest dining-tables are square, the round extension table being out of favor. Canton crepe will be one of the materials most used for elaborate bonnets this summer. -''-,' New walking boots for ladies have pointed toes, and are much higher in the ankle than formerly. ' '- .- Chips are first-class, Tuscans come next,. English straws rank third, and rustic braids bring ap the rear and are counted ordinary;
jet when a rustic hat is prettily trimmed it looks Quite nobby.
New and elegant gloves are finished with a kid lace which falls oyer the arm with ele gant effect. The most original bonnet of the season is a coarse straw, composed, like Joseph's coat ;of many colors. The combination of materials and the charming shading of dress goods are very artistic this spring. Very large flowers are used in millinery this spring, a single rose in many cases forming the crown of a bonnet. Some of the latest evening dresses, and intended particularly for wear in daneing, have the short round skirt. The most fashionable combination of the season is that effected by the union of moire antique with fine camel's hair. The Japanese ladies paint their 'cheeks with a green substance, which, on exposure to the air, soon turns to a sea shell pink. As the summer advances there will be new shapes in lace wraps to chronicle, shawls having long ago ceased to- be fashionable. The conspicuous Alsacian hood which was worn in the winter in place of evening bon nets, will be superseded by the flower crown bonnets. Very- elegant mourning parasols are of finest quality black silk, having a deep band of crape on the edges, and finished with crimped fringe. The many handsome new suits displayed in the churches and on the promenades on E ister Sunday created quite a furore among fashionable ladies. There is a probability that audacious combinations in spring and summer attire will meet the eye, such as a dress with blue sleeves and a sash lined with scarlet. A broad band of chenille, resembling sea moss not sea weed in color, in which is set at irregular distances the most minute sea shells, is the latest fancy in trimming. Sun umbrellas are of twilled silk or Tare satin, plain or bordered on the edge with a satin stripe. They are mounted on sticks of ebony, lnaiacca or rattan, with self polished. ivory or horn handles, and on light paragon frames. Costly black satin parasols are ornamented with successive sprays of fine embroidery; usually bouquets of flowers in natural colors with attendant leaves of green; but some are worked in black silk on a foundation of black satin. The most fashionable evening dresses are now either black or white, the staffs which are in mixed colors being reserved for day wear. This effects a sort of revolution in dress, black having been for so long a period a sort of uniform for the street. The parasols that have come out are peculiarly fanciful. They are of polka-dotted and sprigged damask and Turc satin, satinstriped pekin, basket-pattern brocade and plain chameleon Tare satin, mounted on sticks of ebony, malacca, bamboo and rattan. with 16 ribs of gilded steel. The lining is generally of a contrasting color, and placed under the gilded ribs. The sticks are cut square off, about an inch above the color, ana the enect is unique and rematkable. The Boys and the Farms. At the meeting of the Berks County Agri cultural society. Professor James Calder. president of the Pennsylvania Slate College, was present, and spoke upon the subject of How to keep onr sons on our farms." Among other things, he said: A fortune acquired through the tillage of the soil is more permanent than that secured tnroagn any otner means, it farmers have failed in their business and suffered pecuni ary losses, it has been because they diverted their attention to other matters, such as unprofitable - speculations and business undertakings with which they were anf ami liar. "There is no calling without its tempta tions, but there is none so tree from tempta tion as tnat ot the farmer, wno, by his loca tion, is so isolated as to be removed from the evils and vices which beset the denizens of cities. The calling of the farmer leads him to commune with nature. He is also taught patience, perseverance and hope, and be comes naturally a man of faith, confidence, hope and assurance. Under all circumstances the farmer is more likely to be a man of honesty and integrity than if he was engaged in any other avocation in life. "Young men should be left to understand that if they desire to becom good farmers they require an education. Much can be done by farmers in the care and improvement of farm stock. On some farms in Pennsylvania can be found as fine cattle, horses and mules as can be found on any farm in the world. Quite a revolution has been accomplished in this respect, as compared with the practice of years ago. If a farmer desires to have his boys early trained to the farm, it is well to instill in their minds a love for farm stock, and this can be best done by giving each son an animal, and letting him know that be has absolute ownership in It So, likewise, in regard to fruit growing, a child can be interested by giving it a certain number of trees or a plat of ground to take care of." As to the opportunities of farmers' children to acquire better educations than can be given them in the ordinary country schools, the teacher instanced the State Normal schools, which are greatly improv ing, ana concluded by referring to the Pennsylvania College in Center county, of which institution he is president He related the difficulties encountered in estab lishing the college upon a paying basis, and recounted the numerous things which had to be learned. He expressed a sincere wish to have any gentleman present interrogate him in reference to the managem nt of the State College, as there is not a single thing, he said, which it was desired should be concealed. . '. ' The thanks of the society were tendered the professor for his interesting address. Electric tight at the Circus. Philadelphia Times. Tbe electric light was put into use at the circus last night for the first time, and with great success. Eighteen chandeliers, with one burner each, and estimated to be equal in power to 8,600 gas-jets, made tbe interior of the vast spread of canvas appear almost as bright as if there was sunlight The brilliant scene was enjoyed by the largest throng that has yet been at the circus. Between 7 and 8 o'clock every street car running to the vicinity of Broad and Federal streets was literally packed with people, and hundreds who desired to ride were obliged to walk. ; The entrance to the circus had to closed a quarter of an hour before the performance began, so great was the throng inside, and it was estimated that at least 2,000 persons who sought admittance had to be turned away disappointed. - The Rose of Sharon. : The so-called rose of Sharon is one of the most exquisite flowers in shape and hue. Its blossoms are bell-shaped, and of - many mingled hnea and dyes. Bat its history is legendary and romantic in the highest degree. In the East throughout Syria, Judea and Arabia, it is regarded with the profoundest reverence. The leaves that encircle tbe round blossoms dry and close together when the season of blossoms is over, and the stalk, withering completely away from the stem, the" flower is blown away at last from the stem on which it grew, having dried in the shape of a ball, which is carried by the breeze to great distances. In this way it is borne over to the wastes and sandy deserts, until at last touching some- moist places, it clings ,t the soil, where it immediately takes hash root and springs to life and beauty again. .
SINGING. " Let me count np the songs of life that we Have sung together from the first till now; The simple baby rhymes of bird and bee. Of sun and star, ef stream and blossom bough. The deep music of our youth's new song, In days when life looked wonderfully fair: When hearts were daring, pulses, quick and strong. When woe was not and joy was everywhere. The wilder strain of passion, smiles and tears. When love awoke with power to slay or save; 'The calmer melody of graver years. In minor key like music by a grave. And now we have another song to learn, Tis written for us, we but wait our turn. I often think this unseen, unsung song, With ail its strangeness, will have notes we know And we shall hear Its awfulchords among The mingled muMc of our long ago, The simple snatches of our baby rhymes; The thrilling bars of youth's triumphant strain; The peals of melody like wed?ln chimes. That bring our Bummer love song back again. It may be this new song Is hard to sing ; But shall we grudge to learn It, who have grown 'it Tired and voiceless in earth's caroling. Yet vain would have some melody our own? And thongh It is the song of death, we know That singing it, to endless life we go. All The Year Round.
CVBREM TOPICS. Missouri has a silver mine sensation. Waltzing contests are held in Illinois towns. The New York dog show was a financial success. CoacbiDg clubs are being organized now in all the colleges. From 50 to 100 covered wagons pass through Nebraska City daily. The Boston Post says Rhode Island is too small to contain a vacuum. Thirty thousand dozen eggs are shipped from Milford, DeL, every week. One hundred and seventy-four of the 632 students of Boston University are women. The first strawberries of the season have put on overcoats, and are not glad that they bave come. Gad's' Hill Place, the late residence of Charles Dickens, is to be sold by auction eariy in May. The work on the East river bridge is "sub pended," tbe New York Tribune says. We supposed it was. ' A Tennessee judge has fined a man $10 and sent him to prison for three months for carrying concealed weapons. Under the new tariff the Canadian subscriber to one of our magazines has to pay five cents duty on each copy. It is reported that the silk mills in Paterson, N. J., are employing 10,000 persons, aad are running to their fullest capacity. An old man in Monroe county, 70 years of age, has bad a six weeks Illness, and bis hair, which was quite white, has become a dark brown. " One-fifth of the population of Richmond, Vs., are Baptists. There are in the city nine churches of white Baptists and 10 of colored ones. Small-pox and scarlet fever prevail in Montreal; typhoid fever cases are on the increase, and several cases of lung disease resulted fatally last week. A rascal stole into the reservoir at Hart ford, Conn., and opened tbe floodgates, letting 80,000 gallons of water run to waste. The reservoir walls have partly caved in also. Smith & Wesson, at Springfield, Mass., are running light at their pistol works, and business promises to be dull through tbe summer. A good many men have been discharged lately. Tbe whole of Swift county, on the line of the Northern Pacific railroad in Minnesota, is occupied by SOO Roman Catholic families, brought there by the National board of col onization of tbat church. The Little Rock (Ark.) Gazette expresses the belief that the tide of immigration to that State could be greatly increased by properly organized effort on the part of the people to invite and aid it ' E F. Flynn, the lather of General Mite, contradicts the statement that the midgets, General Mite and Lucia Zarate, are to be married. He says the idea of matrimony has not entered their heads. A delectable amusement In English pro vincial towns is catching and killing rats with the teeth as they are secured by a string on a table. Wagers are generally on catching three in lo minutes. There are 193.183 shade trees kept op by the municipality of Paris at an annual cost of $20 per annum. The trees of the French capital are one of its great attractions, ana the money they cost is considered well spent . A young lady of Brooklyn, New York, died Tuesday from consumption resulting from a heavy cold caught on the night of tbe burning of the Brooklyn theater, De cember 6, 1876, from which she had escaped with great exertion. - At a New Bedford, Mass., church, last Sunday, while tbe clergyman was waxing eloquent in his Easter address, a minute youngster, to whom the exercises had become rather wearisome, startled the persons in the vicinity of his seat by suddenly exclaiming, "Oh, div us a west!" Even the Talmage trial in New York Is being put to other uses besides scandalizing religion and decency. The Herald of Wednesday printed this advertisement: "Talmage Trial, West Gallery. Would tbe lady with white hat ana feather sena aadress to Brown Suit Herald Up town officer' Although 12 paper making establish ments in England have become bankrupt since December, scarcely any American paper factory has been reported insolvent within that period. Fine paper is being exported from this country to South America, and there is a great demand for coarse paper from Germany. A Delaware county lawyer employed by a lady to collect an account wrote to the debtor and secured the amount Bat he made no report and when a demand was made upon him, replied that tbe whole amount was $15 less than his usual charge in such cases, but as his client was a woman he would call it square. They are building a little steamboat at San Francisco for Honoluia parties, ana ner own era have made its name tbe subject ot a rid' die at the Hawaiian Islands, promising any one who discovers it before it is announced a free passage on the vessel to any point on her route for one year. 17!.. I fl.ntiA MmihlMI lft NflV Yflrk for Europe, Saturday, carrying 255 first-class nA&oAncoM ih 1 u roetit nnmbr ffailinsr on any one day this season. Among them were Chlu Lao fin, tne umnese minuter; cmm.m - i I .1 - uerster, oignor iiminuiui. nuu .uwuu Myer, of tbe signal service. A Hartford, Ct, boy has always declined to eat oatmeal, although his mother had Mil 1 nnAn Kins el UIKCU WlWa " o- . ' a.-AAy-wr ka arifnriaorl rt AT hv nnt mominff eating Hbral plate fall and calling for "more." ' When asked $r an explanation ne replied: Tm bound to eat oatmeal till I get sirong enougu w wuijp nro.. irAi.u Ttmas mvi that fha din Alin Auaiw -. v. J - -v tingnished foreign gaesta wbo are expected to arrive m japan uunog mj iwjui many and Italy, will be intrusted especially
to the care of three ex-daimlos of once powerful and influential provinces. They are all young men, and thoroughly .conversant with Western usages, having resided in Europe and America."
A London po''"man lately saw a lad of 10 lying, as he thought, in a fit against the railings of a bousew He proved to be dead. He had complained of being unwell a few days before, and had not been sent to school. He and other bova had been "nlavinir at Peace" for several days, and had tried to imitate banging, etc. .Unfortunately for the boy, his play turner! into grim earnest and he successfully accomplished what he commenced in fun. This is the fourth case of boys strangling themselves in England since Peace was hanged, in endeavoring to imitate bis banging. . The Pedometer. , One of the most curious little instruments brought out lately, says Eli Perkins, is the pedometer, a small machine about the size of a watch, which you carry in your pocket to denote the distance you travel on toot or ride on horseback. It is a very accurate machine. A friend of mine put one in his pocket the other day, and walked from the Fifth Avenue Hotel to the Central park and back. Strange to say, it marked the distance as accurately as a surveyor could measure it The little machine works this way: It tells tbe number of steps yon take, or that your horse takes, during any given time. To gdt the length of these steps yor take an average. That is, you walk 200 feet; then count the number of steps; divide the number of inches traveled by the number of steps, and you will have the length of your average step. Then set the pedometer, and start. The other morning a young married lady, Mrt. , who had an idea that her husband was "larking" it too much when he ought to be in his office attending to business, put a pedometer in his pocket book. Kissing bis wife good-by, the innocent husband sauntered out and took the stage for his down town office. In the stage he met a dashing widow, wbo took him up" to Central park to see the animals, or rather to carry on a flirtation on some of those bowery seats, roofed with woodbine and ivy. After promenading through the park, visiting the seals, the ostriches, the baby lions, and the museum, the sentimental husband returned home. "Ab, duckey, where have you been you look all tired out?" asked the wife, as she kissed him as usual. "Oh, down to the office; the same old drudgery. Oh. pet I'm so glad to get back to my little wifey." - "Did you take the stage to the door, sweet?" asked the wife, tenderly. "Yes, lovey; and I was too tired to walk borne. Why I never went out to lunch; I was so busy." "Just sat down and wrote all day, darling, did you?" "1m, daisy, all day long. Oh, I m so tired!" "Let me see your pocket book, precious. continued the wife; I want to put something in it." Then she opened it and took out the little pedome'er. "O, Edward!" she screamed, as she held it up. "What Caroline?" "Why, here you've traveled 11 miles since morning. Where have you been? How could you? O, you wicked, bad man, to de ceive your wite so. "But Caroline " "Don't but me, Edward! You've been walking around all day.' Yon couldn't have been near the office at all. Oh, you naughty, naughty man! I am going horns t my mother; I won't live with you another day. Now, who was she? Who was the lady?" "Why, Caroline, I met Mrs. Swope, our clergyman's wife, and " "No you didn't: she's been with me all day! O, Edward!" and then she burst into tears. Thst night that poor, heart-broken hus band swore by all the pedometers in Heaven or earth that he'd never lie to his wife again. He even took a pew in the church next to his mother-in-law, and every Sunday we can now see him with a pedometer in his pocket measuring his way to church. Ingersoll' Ideas. Colonel Ingersoll has christened his new lecture the "Words of a Man About the Word of God." Below are a few extracts from it: I can't sin against God. because I can not anect mis Happiness. . Tnink of God giving man brains, and then making it a crime to reason. Ho man on earth controls tbe wind that fills the sails of that ship called himself. According; to this treat scheme (Chris tianity) the innocent suffer for the guilty. The church nates a moral unbeliever a thousand times worse than it does an im moral one. He who has made the best use of this life will be the nearest ready to enter upon the next How does the murderer In Heaven feel with his victim in hell? If he was a gentle man ne would trade places with him. It is possible that if an infidel has been honest all bis life, he will, upon his deathbed, regret that he has not lived a lie. According to the best of Christians, man is totally depraved. If a man is totally de praved, then all his sets are sinful. I like Voltaire because he carried the torch of Reason. I like him because he loved humanity and despised superstition with ail his heart I had rather be in hell, where there Is some sympathy, than in Heaven, where they are so hapy that they don't care for their friends. Anything is sin tbat causes innocence to suffer. Anything is sin that causes unhappi ness in this world. Everything is right that tenas to maze men nappy. Whenever I pronounce the same of Vol taire I feel as though I saw some glorious leader of the host calling on the beleagured city ot superstition lor immediate surrender. If I go to hell, no matter how hot it Is, and there remember some good and splendid thing that I have done the hanger I have fed the darkness I have clothed I believe it will cool up on me a little. Now, tbey Bsy tbat tbe persons who never heard of the scheme of salvation the heathen will go to Heaven. Why, O God, it there la one. did you not keep us all in ignorance of the scheme, that we might all be saved 7 My doctrine is that if I go to Heaven and I probably shall if there Is one no matter in what star I may be spending tbe summer, and there meet a man whom I wronged, and read the story in his eyes, I shall fall behind a little in the tune; I won't go quite so lively with my harp as I was. A minister told me once thai if I did not believe the Bible I oueht not to say so. aaked him if he believed it He said he did. I told him I didn't know whether he did or not for a man who would advise another to lie, might lie himself. And I shall die without ever knowing whether that man be lieves the Bible or not A man lives to tbe age of 00, and then dies, but not being a Christian he goes to hell. He baa always been a good citizen, His whole life hss been devoted to makiog people happy. Another man, whose life has been dishonest, who has plundered widows and. orphans, also dies, but at the last moment he accepts the scheme and goes to Heaven, Sherman and Groat. . New York Sun. Wo do not admire Mr. Sherman. ' His principles and practices are alike odious to us. Bat if tbe race lies between him and General Grant, we certainly hope that he will rflitanM lila tnltitjKrv mmMtitnp.
THE GENUINE DR. C. IXeLANE'S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC
OR VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. fpHE countenance is pale and leadencolored, with occasional flushes, or 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 of the ears; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very toul, particularly in the moraine : appetite variable, sometimes voracious, witn,a knawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels irregular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfrequently tinged 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 generally irritable, &c Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form; it is an innocent prepara tion, not tapabk of doing the sligJiUst injury to the most tettdcr tnatu. The genuine Dr. McLane's Ver mifuge bears the signatures of C. McLane and i leming Bros, on the wrapper. :o: DR. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy "for all tbe ills that flesh is heir to," bnt in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and sick Headache, or diseases ot that character, they stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or alter taking (Juimne. As a simple purgative tbey are unequalcd. BEWAJBE OF IKITATIOXS. The Pennine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with the impression Dr. McLane's Lives. Pills. cich wrapper bears the signatures of C McLAKE and r LEMING BROS. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C Mo Lane's Liver Pills, prepared by Fleming Bros of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name 31 c Lane, spelled differently but same pronunciation. Take Care! AVOID IMPOSITION Most druzztsts are conscientious In their dealings, but there are a few wbo are not. A number of canes bave been reported to as recently where druggists, for tbe sake of gain ing a smau additional pront, nave eougni w impose upon their customers by offering tbem cheap and worthless Imitations of Be.vhoh's Capciwe Porous Plastkk in place of the gennine, or uave tried f sen tnem tne common porous plaster when Benson's Ca peine Porous Plaster was asked for, falsely claiming tbat the common article poatteiised equal merit We therefore caution aU buyers -of Benson' Ca peine Plaster to see tbat tbe word CAPCiNE Is oorrectly spellfcd, that each planter baa the word C-A-P-C-l-N-E cut through it. By this simple precaution. Imposition may be avoided. POSITIFELT THE BEST. The valuable mtaUtirt of the ordinary porouM platter are in this article increased ten -old by new ana tctetuyic meatcauon. The nanufaetvren teere awarded the htohett and only medal given rubber plattert, at both the Centennial and Parie Bxixmlkm. Widely and favorably known among phyiaan at a grtal tm provemeni on me oramary potvum jwhkt. AS1S. AJSTS- PHYSICIAN IN YOUR OWH YICINITT ABOUT IT and you will be convinced that it Is so far superior to common porous planters, liniments and tbe so-called cheap electrical appliance that it can not be compared with them. Tbeiefore, do not take a common or Interior plaster at the muue or less price. Ahik rou BENSON'S CAPCINE POEOUS PLASTER, and lnalot on getting It eaatlM la stay lag ObMrve a ov This article Is specially recommended for - Lame and Weak Back, Coughs, Weak Lungs, Kidney and Spinal Complaints, and all Local Aches and Pains. SOLD BT ALL DRuQOaJTB. PRICE SB CbTK. IN SOUTHWEST MISSOURI. l.ono.0rt) acres of wpll watered, timber and Rraine lands adjacent to to Bt. Louis and an Francisco H'jr for sale, at ft-ora flio to SH per acrs, on srvra years' tune. Kxcelleufc for slock, fruit, ant ajcrtrultunU purpowes. Free transtiortaUon to lhoe bu purcha land, flwin for mans and circular to WANTED. "T TAINTED Agent to sell our new sporting JT ana magic gooas, novaiuea, magio iatn terns. microsooDea. cosmetics, ladles' articles etc. : 47 new articles. Weekly salary of fcJU and all expenses paid ; 73 page Illustrated catalogue sent free to any aaareaa. uuju at iaj., a iroaa way, new xora. AIIYLADFts: Gent that sends as their address will receive something of great value free, by mall. Only a gfU q I7 Greenwich bu, New York.
THE nrDIAIIAPOLIS
SEITIML The Daily Sentinel Is acknowledged by business men as the OOMs MERCIAl FINANCIAL, and INDUSTRIAL PAPER, superior In editorial, equal in literary and news merit to any of its rivals in the State. THE SENTINEL'S prospect for the new business year are most flattering. Special attention Is lven to oar MARKET REPORTS, both home and foreign, and bust, ness men will at all times find it aa correct aa we ean make It. The attenuoto of the legal profession Is c&llnd to the court decisions. THE SENTINEL, baa long enjoyed aa enviable reputation for Its oourt reports, and Is pleased to know its efforts are appreciated by tbe bar. Boring the coming sessions of the State Lee Islature and Congress we will give a full and concise report of each day's proooedln , aad as it la expected a long and heated session will be held, THE DAILY 8 EN TIN EL, will be more than ordinarily interesting. The Sunday Sentinel Has been published with great success, without suspension, for SIX TEARS. Its eolnmns are filled with the latest news, including the As sociated Press Despatches. Special attention is given to Literature, Science and Art, and to Educational and Religious matters. It is a welcome visitor at the fireside of thousands so firmly established that it ean not be sup planted by any other. The first edition Is issued at 11 o'clock Saturday night la time for the trains on the Vandalla, Indianapolis and St. Louis, Lafayette, Fern and I"?A"1i?gHa rVfflSi THE SENTINEL Is An Advertising Medium Tbe DAILY and SUNDAY SENTINEL has the largest circulation of any Indiana dally paper. The vast railroad system of Indiana with the thirteen lines of railroad diverging from the Capital to an point of the compass, enables us to serve THS SENTINEL by carriers in over 300 cities and towns tributary thereto. THE WEEKLY STATE SENTINEL reaches every Indiana postoffice in large numbers. Almost every farmer or stock raiser la this State takes or frequently sees It. Specimen Copies Sent Free to Any Address. (POST ASK PmZPAXD BY PTJBLISITKBsSt la variably .CM la AnsmJ Without With Sunday Issue. Sunday Issue is- !. . ' SIS., ris o.ev mum , sot. sve Six M Kmls .88. L . .. ST Remit in Drafts or Postoffice Money Orders, if possible, and wb are neither of these can be procured send tbe money In a REGISTERED LETTER. All Postmasters are obliged to rehlster letters wben requested to do so, and be system Is aa absolute protection against lessee by maXL Give full address, Postoffloe, County and State. Address ntnw i WW gM AWM ww oU'lUlliL UuLlf'iUU, JOHN C. SHOOMA.KER, Prest.
