Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1879 — Page 6
THE TXTVTAyrA STATE gENTINEt,- WEDNESDAY ' MORNING JUNE 11, ?1879. - J 1 7
6
THE ROSE TREE ASD THE PANSY.
A rose tree in my garden grows. And on it blooms the red, red rose; With perfumes sweet it fills the air. And bright its tone, its form so fair, And by its side a pansy lies A flower like wings of butterflies, Of Indigo, and white, and green. Its colors interspersed are seen. : The sua was shining hot o'erhead, When to the rose the pansv said, "Your straggling, widespread branches cheat He of the sun's bright rays and heat: Bo through the night in cold I He, And through the day for warmth I sigh, All through your selfish, spiteful ways; But pride, llk other things, decays, ? And so will yours, for die yon must. And withering, crumble into dust." Then quickly answered, strong with pride, The rose, who thus began to chide, "How dare you, little puny thing, "With "such impertinence, thus bring Against me charges quite untrue. And wicked, base and monstrous, too! But so it is the world all o'er. Impertinence is sure to bore Its friends, and charge its foes with ell The crimes that e'er can them befall." And thus went on irom day to day This grumbling, till at leDgth away The summer passed. All winter through The snow was deep npon the ground; But covered o'er, the pansy found A shelter from tne biting blast, "Which nipped the rose tree, and at last Killed it outright and left it dead. The pansy lilted up Its head "When spring returned, erect with pride; The mid day sun his glances plied Upon it in a streaming tide Ol glowing heat it drooped and died. rEKSOSAL, Judge Taft is 69. Joaquin Miller is ill. Chawle9 Fcstah is 51. General Garfield is 43. Senator Thurman is 66. Stanley Matthews is 55. "Walt "Whitman dresses in gray. Senator Voorhees son Is an actor. Fernando "Wood is going to Europe. Gone to Halifax Lorne and his party. Kate Field is at work on a new comedy. A lady in Bridgeton, X. J., has hair eight feet long. The Philadelphia Bulletin calls him the immi-Grant. General Banks is said to he something of a Spiritualist. Garibaldi says Italy needs fewer soldiers and more farmers. Count Joannes would retire from tragedy II he were not egged on. "Henri" Mr. Watterson writes it. He ought to write it "Henrye." Governor Hollidav, of Virginia, has re covered from a severe illness. General Fremont is in New York trying to interest capitalists in Arizona. Brick Pomeroy has returned to LaCrosse and revived his ancient and fish-like Demo crat. Mr. iloody the evangelist, has gone with his family to Lis summer home at Korthheld, Mass. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher has written a book warmly m . favor of emigration to Florida. Bishop Peck fears that the people of the United States are sailing to perdition on schooners of beer. Adeline Patti will not come to America for less than $3,000 a night. Adelina's price is as high as her voice. It is said that the Marquis of Lorne is WritiDg a book on Canada which is to be illustrated by the Princess Loui3e. The Baltimore Gazette says: "Mrs. John Russell Youue has tired of the Grant excur sion, and is coming home next mouth.' A New Orleans paper says Mary Anderson holds her age remarkably weiL V e suppose Mary always sits next the dealer. The Marquis of Lorne will spend a few days next month in fishing, miking his first appearance in Canada as the Lorne fisher man. Senator Bayard will be the orator on the occasion of the dedication of the Washington Headquarters, at Valley Forge, on the 19 th inst. It ia '(finally announced that President Hayes bs present at the Grand Army encampment and the meeting of the army societies at Albany on the 17th and 18th insts. Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, the philanthro pist of New York, is visiting Mr. .bmerson, at Concord. She has recently given $1,000 to the Kindergarten enterprises m Uoeton. The Duke of Hamilton has been looking into his accounts and finds a mysterious deficit of 1.500 000. He intends to call in some of the best mathematicians in Edin burgh. Ex Governor Tilden has declined the invi tation to deliver the address at the coming commencement at Trinity Colleee, North Carolina, saving it is impossible for him to go South at this time. Among the passengers for England who sailed on Satnrday, aboard the Erin, were Mise Alice Harrison. Mr. Frank Clements, Mr. H. J. Sargent, manager for Modjeska, and Mr. and Mrs. u. U. Knight. Father Ryan, the poet-priest, has returned to St. Mary's church in Mobile. He .desires to have the quiet necessary for the arrange ment and revision of his poems, which ' will be published in book form early in autumn. Of Mrs. Haves a correspondent of the Cin cinnati Enquirer says she is sunny, bright, Tatient and child like, arrogating nothing to herself; and adds that one might talk to her forever and hear only pleasant tningj sne sees the bright side of everything. CURRENT TOPICS. The Denver Tribune taking a rest. The Colorado potato says the exodus is bug has located in Tennessee. A pine root 102 feet long is one of the wonders of Georgia. Among other things, Leadville is notable for grizzly bears. One man in Texas has 110,000 head of stock in one inciosure. A Catholic monastery and convent is to be built at Conception, Mo. Cotton cut-worms have made their ap pearance in large numbers in Arkansas. A Georgia belle chops out four acres of cotton, and then goes to town shopping. In the South, since the war, over 200,000 negroes have joined the Methodist church. Only 30 business failures occurred in New York during May. The number is remark ably small. , The 63 Methodist churches of Nebraska Contribute to the conference $2,300 and re ceive from It $24,300. The Ohio Sunday law exempts from the observance of Sunday, Jews, Saventh-Day Baptists, ferrymen, emigrants and toll gate Keepers. A telegram from Ottawa to the Montreal 'Witness says that the Orangemen of that city will have a procession on the 24th of
July, the date of meeting of the Triennial council, and that trouble is feared. Strawberries are so commen m the Montgomery, Ala., market, that they are freely offered at 25 cents for two crates. , Ice cream in homepathic doses is given away by an enterprising Bridgeport, Conn., confectioner, who takes that way to advertise his business. . ' A German inventor has just hit unon the notion of stone soles for shoes. When a St. Louis girl turns np her toes she can use the soles of her shoes for gravestones, can't she? The butchers of Palatka, Fla., have been requested to keep on hand a full supply of alligator steaks. It is said when the gator is young his steak is tender and good. The New York Herald says if the Oneida community go to Iowa as a colony, they won't be very far off, geographically or morally, from their congeners of Utah. "It is for you to say, said Judge Butler, of the United States district court, to a Phiia delphia jury, ' whether a man who plays poker for money can have a good character." A Virginia muie was killed the other day by the accidental discharge of a gun. In justice to the mule, however, it mast be said that the bullet did not approach him from the rear. Western papers say that the meteorite which fell the other day in Minnesota is being broken up into small fragments and sold, a piece the size of an acorn being rated at $150. A Maine man, writing a card to a Boston paper, signs himself, "Proprietor of the Marshall House and owner of the same." Probably it will now bs conceded that the house belongs to him. The highest point in North America reached by a railroad is at Kennersha Summit, reached by the Denver. South Park and Pacific road, and which is 10,140 feet above the level of the sea. Pccketbooks found in Berlin so often contain fish scales that the authorities, always suspecting something fishy, made inquiries, and learned that these piscine morsels are held to be luck-bringing. The Christian Brothers of Coblentz who, without being expelled from Germany, had established recently a convent at Verviers, have been requested by the Belgian Government to recross the frontier.
We discover the latest development of Bos ton culture in the Transcript. A young lady. in speaking of a piece of. at at nary, declines to use the vuigar word "bust," out gives it the more refined appellation, "burst." FASHIOX KOTES. Bunting is extensively employed for children's costumes. White pique is still prominently consid ered for children's wear. Ornaments for the hair are silver arrows. daggers or pendants. Small mirrors for the toilet or boudoir have porcelain frames. A specialty in hosiery is in the mottled hose with embroidered tops. Dresses for evening wear are embroidered in various and brilliant colors. Black satin sleeveless jackets of short, jaunty cut, draped on the shoulders with a China crepe scarf, are new. The tops of long kid gloves are embroider ed, the embroidery also following the outer seam on the back of the arm. Heal pansies are worn in the hair. Small wreaths of flowers are now worn on the top of the head for evening dress. The existing fureur for satin give? satin ribbon the preference over gros grain ribbon lor sashes, and seven inches is the extreme width. A new material for trimming summer cos tumes is the Oriental summer velvet in damasse brocade, which comes in all the new colors. Black ia mast worn by Parisian as well as New York ladies, and it is sometimes diffi cult to determine whether thev are in mourn ing or not. Many co3tly mantles of questionable taste are ornamented with colored beads of am ber, old gold, steel and coral red formed into showy passementerie. The new materials for black mantles is Bengaline, which is soft, lustrous, pliable, and drapes beautifully; its peculiar shade of b.ack is also excellent. Stockings, hair-striped on the Instep and ankle, and clocked or embroidered in a band around the calf of the leg, are among those lor which there is demand. Small shoulder capes are seen with street suits. The handsomest of these stylish wraps are made of black silk, covered with jet beading and hmshed with fringe. Tan and cream-colored cashmere or cloth jackets are trimmed either with Pekin fabrics or with plaited satin introduced down the front and back as a plastron. White lisse fichus are trimmed with lace and insertion, in which Breton designs are darned in with colors; they are fastened at the waist with buttercups or cowslips. The sash is scarcely as much a require ment in a little girl's dress as it was a season ago, and. if worn, it Is generally sewed on at the side seams and girded back rather than laid around the waist. A new caprice in evening gloves is to have them laced instead of buttoned. Eyelet holes are not used, and they are laced by very simple arrangement, which adds greatly to the neatness ol the nt. "Waists open at the throat and made with' out sleeves are to be worn this summer, The chemisettes and sleeves worn with them may bs of white, or of silk grenadine or foulard to match the dress. The most popular wraps which are shown for very small girls are of the light, soft cloths, made up in the double-breasted, deep, balf-ntting sacque, with several rows of I stitching on the edge and a finish of fancy buttons. Some adventurous spirits in Parts have been trying to revive the terrible Cabriolet bonnet of the .Restoration period. II may be seen in pictures, with an erect plume of feathers at the side, a shape trying to even the loveliest and lreshest lace. Paris authorities order that an airy scarf, the same color as the dress, be worn this summer by obedient belles. These scarfs will be much better than veils for the young Ren tlemen to twine about their hats. They will be a longed for token, and much prized when had, for, of course, the ladies will only lend them to dear, very dear, friends. For very dainty wear for little girls, there are delicately clocked and lace-wreught silk and Lisle-thread stockings, in cream-white ivory-white, pearl color, oiel and navy blues, rose-color and various shades of red. For general use, plain colored stockings of Lisle thread and .British isalbrigan manufacture seem to ba preferred, varied by a fancy for the .clouded and mottled stockings of the season. ' Bough straw hats are in great favor, for the moment, for children. They are in white, Norvege-blue, gray, brown and in mixed colors. The prevailing shape has the crown a very little conical and hollowed out, with the fiat brim curled np all around, or shelved np in the basin fashion. They are bound on the edge with ribbon or galloon, and a fluffy tassel set down in the hoi low of the crown. - ' -
Y0LCANIC PHENOMENA.
i t I Scene of .Terrific Magnificence Unsurpassed in the History of . - the World. Trie Earth Rocked and tno Air filled With Overwhelming Thunder. The Tremendous and Destructive Eruption of the Skapta Jokul in Iceland. New York Evening Post.J Many fresh fissures have appeared on Mt. jtna, and the whole adjacent region is in a state of dismay. The latest reports from Catania are to the effect that the flood of lava is very extensive.- It is said to be streaming toward the Hiver Aicantra, and to have devastated the Tillage of Mlo. - That the general apprehension is well founded is only too true. It is possible that the eruption may cease at any moment, but on the other hand it may last for months or even years. The duration and extent of volcanic phenomena are absolutely incalculable. All that experience teaches is that when a volcano has been dormant for a long time its eruption, when it comes at last, is likely to be a fierce one. But it may be short as well as fierce, like the memorable outbreak of Vesuvius that changed the face of the Campagca, and swallowed up Stabke, Hereulaneum, and Pompeii; or it may be protracted lixo the eruption of Jurullo, in the Mexican province f Valladolid or Mechuacan, that lasted from June, 1750, until February, 1760. Humboldt describes this famous eruption of Jurullo as having been continuous between the dates we have named. But its progress was at tended by some ebullitions of extraordinary fury. On the night of the 28th 29th of September, 1750, a scene was presented by the volcano which tor terrific magnificence has, perhaps, not been surpassed in the history of the world. It was witnessed from the neighboring mountain of Aguazanco, and Humboldt got his account from those who were on the spot. He says that the flames spouted up over an area nearly a league square. The waters of two rivers, the San Pedro and the Cuitimba, plunged into gaping rents that - were torn through the earth, and actually disappeared. Thousands of small volcanoes burst forth over a wide tract of country, and vomited smoke and sulphurous flames. Six large cones also sprang np, rivaling the original crater, and yielded torrents of fire, lava and basalL Whirlwinds packed with colored ashes flew over hundreds of square miles. The earth recked, and the air was filled with overwhelming thunders. The simple Indians, who, not unnaturally, thought the end of the world was at hand, fled in mad terror nd confusion. It was long before the sur vivors ventured back into the region once filled with smiling and prolific "haciendas." but now a black and desolated waste. Those who returned looked for the once familiar rivers that had watered and enriched the surrounding plain; they bad vanished, and were seen no more, Bat wandering natives profess to this day to hear the ravished streams creeping, like Ilyssus in "lingering labyrinths," far below the surface of the engulfing earth. The craters of Vesuvius at 15. u. 73 had slept for time immemorial. The gladiators who fled from the .Roman proctor and hid in the figures of the volcano had no fear of nature, whatever they might have of man. When they burst from their lair to release their leader, Spartacus, and to overthrow for a space the cruel Roman power, the outburst of the lava whose track they followed had become a mere tradition. Even on that memorable day, before the kalends of September, when the two FUnys the elder who perished, and the younger who re corded first saw the cloud over Vesuvius, hey deemed it a curiosity only. Probably when the worthy admiral got the letter, further on in the day, praying for help, from Kectme, the wile of Ctesius isassius, whose house was at the foot of Vesuvius, he thought her womanish fears uncalled for. How were people to believe in a catastrophe of a nature that had scarcely ever been heard of? But the sad tragedy of Stabue followed, when Pliny, in nobly striving to save others, lost himself. Eruptions like that of Vesuvius, coming at such intervals that the broadened space is scarcely bridged by authentic history, are naturally the most appalling. A volcano like Heel a, on the other hand, which, be tween 1004 and 1766 unburdened itself 23 times, does not at any rate take the world by surprise. The terrors of Hecla, indeed. sink into insignificance when compared with those of its awful neighbor, the ttKapta Jokul. Iceland has been very minutely and accurately surveyed and mapped by the Danish Government, but the region about the Skapta Jokul constitutes an exception. There is a tract of 400 square miles not de lineated in the Government ordnance maps, and in this terrific region it is said no foot of man has ever intruded. Lord Uniterm went very near the forbidden territory, as bis ".betters from men Latitudes' so graphically show. The space about the great volcano is for the most part, how ever, as void of man and his works as the Poles themselves. It is an area heaped to the clouds with masses of ite and everlasting snows. The most tremendous eruption of which there Is trustworthy re cord occurred in li63. la May ol that year there was seen throughout that part of Ice land a mysterious light, blueish fog. Early in June there were slight, and, as it teemed, apprehensive tremblings of the earth. On the 8th of June immense pillars of sable smoke gathered oyer the lofty country of the north, and, bearing ominously down against the wind, wrapped the whole district of SIda in pitchy darkness. On the 10th of June a whirlwind of ashes swept over the entire country. Innumerable hrespouts, like so many demon beacons, now flashed and leaped through the frozen hollows of the mountains. The River Skapta, one ot the largest in Iceland, having first poured down to the plain a volume of fetid waters mixed with sand, like the Mexicans rivers, sua denlv disappeared. Forty -eight hours after ward, a prodigious mass of lava, issuing from sources to which no one has ever been able to penetrate, came sliding down the bed of the dried-np river. The channel, according to Lord Dutferln to whom we are indebted for most of these details was of great depth and breadth; but the fearful deluge brimmed up to its banks, overflowed them, and drove in molten masses over the face of the whole country. Two oceans of lava were the products of this eruption. The one that flowed down the Skaota was 50 miles long by 15 wide. 'The other, which rolled down the HverfisHiot. was 40 miles by seven. Where it is imprisoned by the Immensely high banks of the Skapta the lava is 500 or 600 feet thiok: bat on the plain, alter it emergen the thickness of the. mass never exceeds 100 feet The emotion continued until August, "when the Plutonic drama concluded with an earthanake." The effects of this amazing phenomenon extended over a whole year and oyer an im mense distance. During all this time oionaa nmiumd with cinders hunt over Iceland. They overwhelmed to a great depth tens of thousands ol acres ot iertue lanas. me
Faroe Islands, the Orkneys, and the Shet- I
lands were covered with volcanic dust. This substance even extended to the atmosphere of England and of Holland. A number variously estimated, but doubtless including many thousands of human beings and 150,000 cattle, perished in Iceland. Apart from such calamities, this eruption must have effected some gigantic physical changes, concerning which we have seen no speculations. It would appear, first, "that the propelling force within the crater of the Skapta Jokul must have been exerted at a vast depth below the external point of egress; next, tbst caverns of enormous extent must have been left by the masses which were expelled; and, finally, that, as the bulk of lava, bowlders, and other ejecta flowed a long distance toward the south, and represented many cubic miles of solid matter when cool, a change . must have been wrought in the position toward the previous center ot grav ity of a considerable portion of the mass of the earth. Whether this movement was of sufficient relative importance to produce anything more than a local inuuencs, we. must leave to (dentists to determine. In any case the subject presents an interesting held ot inquiry. This stupendous eruption devastated terri tory at a long distance; but Mount vEtna is much nearer to man and bis works than Skapta Jokul, and there is apparently danger that Catania, and even Messina, may be gravely iajured. To protect the former city a wall was formerly built 60 feet high; and yet the lava has been known to surmount this wall and to pour into the streets of the city, since the hret recorded erup tion of Jtna named by Diodorus Slculus, ther.j have been 70 considerable outbreaks of the mountain. That of 1669 was preceded by an earthquake, and attend ed by the same phenomena that is reported now, namely: the opening of many fresh chasms or craters at different points of the promontory. The eruption overwhelmed 14 towns and villages, some of them at a great distance from the volcano. . It is a remarkable fact that eruptions have sometimes occurred at or about the same time from volcanoa far distant from each other, giving rife to an opinion held by some physicists that a subterranean connection existed be tween the mountains. The fact that Vesuvius is reported to be in lively and increas ing eruption at the present moment, gives color to this theory, and lends additional interest to the volcanic situation. Melons. f Atlanta Constitution.! Generous care and culture will repay in a meion crop, a warm, sanay soil tree irom , . , weeds and grass is the most suitable. Then manure, asnes, ana yara-scrapings answer well for melons. About as good a way for planting melons as any, is to open deep trenches, letting them be some eight feet apart, and deposit a shovelful of fertilizer about every six or seven feet. Then fill the trench with a plow and harrow it level. Then drop the seed eight or 10 seeds in space ol a foot square over the manure and cover one inch deep. After the vines begin to grow, care and labor is necessary to - keep off insects. "When the plants have attained considerable size, all superfluous ones must be cut out, leaving two or three to a hill. The plants should be well cultivated and free from weeds until they cover the ground. UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION Over Half a Million Distributed! .ouisiana State . Lottery Co. This institution was reetuany in corpora tec by the Legislature of the 8 tale for educational ana onaritaoie purposes in itma lor tne term of Twenty-live Yearn, to which contract the inviolable raitn or tne state is pledged, wltn a capital of (1,000.000, to which it has since add ed a reserve iuna or s&u.uuu. its grand emout cttxbkb drawings will take place monthly on the second Tuesday. It ncvkb scales ob postpones. Look at the following aisuiouuon: GBASD PROMENADE COSCERT, during which will take place the lOOtU RAJ MOAT1ILY AND THE Extraordinary Semi Annual Drawing, At New Orleans, Tuesday, June 17, 1871), Under the personal supervision and manage ment oi Cten. . T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana and Gen. JT. A. EaKLT, of Virginia. CAPITAL. PRIZE. SlOO.OOO-as-NOTlCE Tickets are Ten Dollars only Halves, so. utus, wi. xenins, i. X.IST OF PRIZES. 1 Capital Prize of 100,000, 1 Grand Prize of bO,yx. .8100,000 . 80.000 1 Uranu frlze or 2 Large Prizes of 4 Large Prizes of 20 Prizes of 20,000 . 20,000 . 20,000 . 20,000 . 20,000 10,1 UO-.. 6,000 1,C00 600.. 50 - 25,000 loo aoo 600 800 200. 30,000 40,000 100, 10,000 10 100,001 APPROXIMATION FBTEBB. 100 Approximation Prizes of J200 100 do. do. 100 100 do. do. 75. 20,000 10,000 7,500 11,279 Prizes, amounting to.. ?o220r Gen. G. T. Beauregard, of La. rjommiHonera Gen. Jubal A. Early, of Va., Commissioners IPAonllcation for rates to elubs should only be made to the office of the Company in New Or leans. . Write for circulars or send orders to ,- - 91. A. DAtTPIIIS, P. O. Box 692, New Orleans, La., or JOHN T. WOODWARD, 15 North Illinois St,, Indianapolis. THE TASTELESS BE 9TJL ATOit . THE LOZENGE LAXATIVE. The bet preparation nf UAQNESIA made Into de lightfully flavored LoZKN'GES. lining on nf ths most tuefal aid rcliabls Laxative Medicines, aitabto for all af d condition, for regulating the bowele, and for the prevention, Immediate relief and permanent cure of Constipation, HEMORRHOIDS or PILES, BTUOUSXBSS, SICK REAOACHB, ERUPTIONS OF THS BKitc, rumutcT, jicisitt end hkaktburh; It isaleo most valuable at a Spring Medicine. Price 2 Seta, per box. SatAfcy all DrBirKlUiormafl4 FKSB on rwelpt of price by PvaDAe T.r M Co , as WoostorSt., Hw York. ExpUoeterr mneir feu n tfipneuioe, Circulars FREE at mil drug store.' GIVES IMMEDIATE BELIEF ' Am Infallible Cnre fer PUBS. Sold by all Druggists. . as cents per bos.
Catarrh
Thousands suffer without knowing the na ture of this almost universal complaint. It a an ulceration of the head. Its Indications are. hawking, spitting, weak inflamed eyes, fre quent soreness of the throat, dryness and heat of the nose, matter running from the head down the throat, often ringing or deafness In the ears, loss of smell, memory impaired, dullness and dizziness of the bead, often in the first stages, but mora commonly in its advan ced stages, attended with pains in chest or left side, and under the sdoulder blades. Indiges tion usually attends Catarrh; a hacking cough and colds are very common, some have all these symptoms, others only a part. Very lit tie pain attends Catarrh until the liver an the lnnes are attacked in consequence of stream of pollution running from the head the stomach. All persons thus affected take cold easily and have frequently a running at the nostrils; the breath sometimes reveals to all around toe corruption within, while the patient nss frequently lost all sense of smell. The disease advances covertly, until pais in the chest, lungs or bowels startles him; he hacks and coughs, has dyspepsia, liver complaint, and la urged by his doctor to take this or that; perhaps cod liver oil is prescribed. Perfectly rldlcnlons! The foul ulcers In the head cannot be reached by pouring such stuff into the poor, laded stomach. The patient becomes nervous, the voice Is harsh and unnatural, he feels disheartened, memory loses her power judgment her zeal, gloomy forebodiugs bang overhead; hundreds, yes, thousands in such circumstances, feel that to die would be a relief, and many even do cut the thread of life to end their sorrows. Thousands aro Dying In early life with consumption, who can look back a few years perhaps only months when it wasonly Catarrh. Neglected when a cure is possible, very soon it will transform tne features of health and youth into the dark, pallid cess of blood gushing from the lungs, or night sweats, ui sigmncanuy proclaim it is too late; and thns a neglected Catarrh ends in the con sumptive's grave. NASAL CATARRH. Sometimes tne disease only affects the mem branes lining the nasal passages, and they may be easily rescued and cured by simple means bui wnen it is locaiea in me ironuu sinus, or in the DONtenor narea. or if it has entered the eustachian tubes and istnjuiing the ears. then nothing out nneiy medicated vapor can euecvuallv reach it and destroy It. And certainly af ter it has allotted the throat anil bronchial tubes. all well read physicians will readily attest, nothing can be relied on to effect a permanent cure out tne innaiation oi property meuicaiea vanni. in tne same manner mat we oreaine common air, we can innate and nreatne a medicated air; and it Is perfectly simple, any one can see, thus to treat disease of the throat, broncniai pipes ana lungs, now mucn oener this method by which remedies are conveyed directly to the seat of the disease, than to resort to the uncertain and too frequent mischievous action of medicines taken Into the stomach. TEACHERS IS OCR SCHOOLS are crreatlv subiect to this fearful malady. Connaeaient in close, ln-venuiatea scnooi-rooms: thA nver-heatod atmosnhere. cliarced with the steaming poison exuding from the bodies of tne not always over-ciean cniiaren, Dreea mis diseuse with fearful ranldltv. many oi uur khuius uiiuvB,inw;Qianuu prominent business men have tried this reme-ly with wonderful success. We know Mr. CI i lid 8 as an honest christian man, Cin cinnati Dally Gazette. VI7RI.in RPKHHEM. after leaving the platform, over-heated with the strain of their mental and physical effort, negtcct sufficient precaution, and a cold is the result. This neglected opens the way to catarrh, and to a pos sible toss of voice. I have suffered so keenly mvself that 1 can not unce upon public speakers too strongly the ne"ssity of re moving aisease when a cure is pos&isie. MY EXPERIENCE. E Kb teen years ot terrible headache, disgust ing nasal discharges, dryness of the throat, 1 acute bronchitis, coughing, soreness of the lungs, raising bloody mucus, and even night sweats, incapacitating me for my professional duties, and bringing me to the verge of the grave all canned by .and the resul's of, Naaal Catarrh. After spending hundreds of dollars, ana ootainine no reiiei. i comnounaea mi Catarrh Specific and Cold Air Inhaline Balm. and wrought upon myself a wonderful cure. JNOW 1 can speaK lor noun wren no aimcuiiy, and can breathe freely in any atmosphere. My cure is certain, thorough and perfect, and is indorsed by every physician who has ex amined it. x. r. Luiiara. FROM THE CHANCELLOR OF THE UNI- . VERSITX OJT .NEBRASKA. T. P. Cn I LD8 Dear Sir: 1 think yon have tha true tneory ana practice ror tne care oi xoasai Catarrh, and also for the treatment of tha re spiratory organs. My throat Is now so well resiorea mat x lecture ouiy viuoni aimcuiiy, and I find no difficulty wnatover In preach ing. You are at full liberty tousemj nam lor me oenent oi outers. Yours very truly, E. B. Fairtikld. D. D.. LL. D.. Lincoln. Neb. Juno J. OOLLwrr, of Lima, O., writes: "You well remember how terribly Catarrh had taken hold upon ' me. making me offenidve to myself and to all around, and withal suffering day and night I am cured : head free, air passages all open, and breathing natural. (Write to htm.) Many surprising Incidents of peculiarly distressing eases, cured, will be sent on applica tion. . s CONCLUSION. It Is now a well established fact that Chllds' Catarrh Kpeclflo, for thorough ness, completeness ana emciency, nas no equal in the world. Everything known to be good for Nasal Catarrh in ail its horrid forms, in the head, throat and broncniai tubes, arranged into one complete system of treatment. uonotinnewim nme cntao iniusr. wmcn at best can not aHord but temporarary relief, wblle the roots of the vile disease are left to strike deeper and deeper. Be In kabnest and thorough, or do mothikoI Circulars. price lists and all necessary information lor BCil-ireauneut v uuino, cam ve uw vj audressing (wiin return stamp), - Bev. T. P. CHILDO, Troy, Ohio. avpiaase state that yon saw tola advarkU ment in im oanemei.
THE INDIANAPOLIS
SEKTIWEL. The Daily Sentinel Isio knowledfced by business men as tne COM MERCIAL, FINANCIAL and INDUSTRIAL PAPER, superior In editorial, equal in literary and news merit to any of its rivals in ths State. THE SENTINEL'S pros-iect for the new business year are most flatterin Special attention Is lven o our MARKET REPORTS, both home and foreign, and boat. ness'men will at all times find it as correct aa we can make 1U The attention of the legal profession Is called to the court decisions. THE SENTINEL has long enjoyed aa enviable reputation for Its court reports, and is pleased to know Its efforts are appreciated by the bar. During the coming sessions of the Stats Leg islature and Con'reas we will give a full and concise report of each day proceed in , and as It is expected a long and heated session will be held, THE DAILY SENTLNEL will ba more than ordinarily interesting. The Sunday Sentinel Has been published with great success, without suspension, fqr SIX TEARS. Ita eolnmns ara filled with tha latest news, including the As sociated Press Despatches. Special attention is given to Literature, Science and Art, and to Educational and Religious matters. It la a welcome visitor at the fireside of thousands so firmly established that it can not be sup planted by any other. The first edition is is sued at 11 o'clock Saturday night In time for the trains on the Vandalla, Indianapolis and St. Louis, Lafayette, Pern and Bloomin Roads. THE SENTINEL As in Advertising Mediam The DAILY and SUNDAY SENTINEL has the largest circulation of any Indiana daily paper. The vast railroad system of Tnrtiana with the thirteen lues of railroad diverging from the Capital to all points of the compass, enables ns to serve THE SENTINEL by carriers In over200 cities and towns tributary thereto. THE WEEKLY STATE SENTINEL reaches every Indiana postoffiee in large num bers. Almost every farmer or stock raiser in this State takes or frequently sees It. Sniman fAnioe Sanf V raa fn Anw AftIraee TERMS: POSTAGE PREPAID BT PVBUSBEKS) Invariably ;CMb In Advanee4 witnout :vntti Sunday Issue. Ban day Issna Six Montna. Three Kel S.OO. , .e. One loalb. .SO. . l-OO. KVRemlt In Drafts or Postoffloa Money Or ders, if possible, and where neither of these can ba procured send tha money In a REGIS TERED LETTER. All Postmasters are obliged I to rehlster letters when requested to do so, and he system is an aOsolnte protection against lasses by mail. Give full ad dress, Fostomos, County and State. Address ' SEirmiEL C0UFAN7 1 v. . Indianapolis, Ind. JOHN.C, SHOOMAKKR, PimU
