Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1879 — Page 6

k .. .... t - ' 1 T " i .. i . i Si THE IKB1AKA STATE S2KTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE 18, 1879.

i-J ) i I' , i i )

HOSE. A liONO -WAT AFTER FOB, TK FUCK.

LADIES' t

'Hear the ballad of the Hose Striped Hose. : m "What a bllsstul wealth of plumpness they tenderly enclose 1 Haught you'll nnd in anelent story Like these shapeless symmetries. Solomon, in all his glory, Was not arrayed in one of these Dainty hose, hose, hose. Nothing can compare with those Btriped with the crimson -color of the fragrant scented rose. Oh ! those bote, hose, hose, hose, Hose, hose, hose Those rounded garter-bounded hose. . There's a charm about those hose . 6ilsien hoco Which, front an aesthetic standpoint, admiration will imDOse ! And whene'er we chance to spy them, Then they seem our sole "Utopia." And we would like to buy them Buy them filled, like Cornucopias ' Saucy hose, hose, hose. A nfl th heanl.V l.htV disclose

How the eye of the beholder in entranced rapture glows On those hose, hose, hose, hose, TIiva. hmw. hmifl Those grace-eayeloped, full-developed hose. Ton, by chance, may see those hose Wnll-flllai hnwi Peeping from the mystic meshes of a labrynth 01 ciouies. Damsels dark and damsels fair, Vjanh. mavhana-di&DlavS a Dair Of deftly-woven, parti-colored stockings, which more wlnsomely allure By the floral garniture Of their Blockings, But the people ah! the people Tt.ey that dwell up In the steeple, Far from those, 'Mid the clanging and the rumble Of the bells they never "tumble" To the hose. At that lofty elevation. They maintain their equipoise, Suffering not the excitation - Consequent on seeing those Shapeless hose, hose, hose WhltA AA vlnl'r'H Knows. Save the stripes so richly tinted with the blusnes or tne rose. Are the hose, hose, hose, hose Those hose, hose Are the fascinating, aggravating hose. RELIGIOUS NOTE AND ANECDOTE. Moody preached 275 times in Baltimore. Few people have as strong a teacher as Jonah, It was the whale that brought him up. Mrs. Mary Clemmer has just formally entered the Episcopal church, having been confirmed at St John's, in Washington. A minister can't live on anticipation or promises. If the Gospel of Jesos Christ is worth anything, it is at least worth the price of the support of the herald who proclaims it. That famous .New Orleans church order prohibiting colored churches from being open after 10 o'clock at night has been rescinded, as it should. It ought never to have been issued. The minister who never calls on his people unless they are so sick that he thinks they are going to die, carries with him the atmosphere of the undertaker rather than of the pastor and friend. The sermon ought to be in one respect like Bam Welter's love letter. Sam's father asked him why he brought that document to such a sudden and unexpected conclusion. Sam answered : "Cos, to make her vish there yos more." At the recent Minnesota State SundfySchool convention Dr. J. i. Vincent ex pressed his conviction that there was "no place like home for teaching religion," and quoted the old Scotch proverb: "An ounce of mother is worth a pound of clergy !" A negro preacher described hell as ice cold, where the wicked froze to all eternity. Asked why. he said: ' 'Cause I don't dare tell dem people nuffin else. Why, if I say hell is warm, some of dem old rheumatic niggers tfe wantin' start downder de very fus The next General conference of the Evan gelical 'alliance is to be held in Basle, Switzerland, to open August 31, 1879, and continue till the 7 th day of September. Members and friends ;of . the alliance going abroad next summer will find it very pl ant to be in Switzerland at that time. The Methodist General conference next year will have to settle whether bishops shall be elected in place of those who have died since 'a, wnen ine last election was oeiu.. Since then, when eight bishops were cnosen Bishops Morris, Janes and Ames have passed away, leaving only 10 to do the episcopal work oi a large cnurcu. There died in gtenuentown. N. Y., June 6, Key. Elanthna Sweet, In the eighty-third year of his age. xia oegan preacuiug at m ms a of IS vears. and thencefoward until the time of his death was engaged in disseminating the Gospel. He occupied the Baptist pulpit at Stepentown for more man 4U years, . , i . . t -1 i i 1 r r . : ana ne reaa me .didib turuugu vo uuua. The order of Sisters of Charity who con duct the Home for Destitute Children in Boston number 30,000 throughout the world. They were the first, and for many vears the or.lv. religious community that ventured to labor in Boston after the TJrsu lines, disheartened by the destruction of the convent on Mount .Benedict, quitted it ior ever. At the beginning of this century the Turk lsh Government allowed only 300 Jews to live within the city of Jerusalem. Within the last 10 years all restrictions have been removed, and now there are over 13,000 in habiting their ancient capital. They have bought up the old houses and built a large number of new, and have established schools and hospitais. They have some queer clergymen In En gland. One at Gloucester requested his can didates for confirmation to retire to their closets and write down all the sins they had committed since their fifth year for bis ex amination. Several seem to have compiled. but the parents of the other children were so disgusted with the assumption that they took them away from the class. There died at New 'Haven, -Conn., on Monday, at the age of 93 years. Miss Mary Hand, the lastfsurviving daughter of General Howard Hand, an omcer of the Continental army. Miss Hsnd was, in early life, the friend and confidant of Rev. Dr. Muhlen berg, and connected with the unhappy romance which gave to the world the beauti ful hymn, "I would not live alway." STUDY SKETCHES. What Gentlemen Expect at Home. (Forney's Progress. Not the average man, for he generally ex pects so much that he is sure to be disap pointed: and there is nothing so unfailing in souring ihe manly disposition as a domestic annoyance. But, putting aside the average man, and coming to his superior, the staunch, hardworking, methodical, generous and loving man, of which, the Lord be praised, the world is yet fall, we must concede that he has some rights at home, and in too many cases (let it be said in a whisper. ladies, and among ourselves) veritable causes for complaint. Admitting the servant nuisance a fact that in this country has be come a foregone conclusion, which, in spite of the many proposed plans of reform, and and the frequent introduction oi national! ties, still seems to assert its dominion -we will touch lightly upon this almost thveadbare subject. Servants must be trained as we get them. No matter how various their quanti ty and quality during the year on always has a ohance of securing a prize. I bay often heard the remark : "Why I ooald accomplish a certain amount of work in half the time it would take to teach a stupid Irish girl to do

It!" Perhaps; bat the stupid Irish girl would

never know her duties, we may uwtu learn to look upoh these Individuals philosophically, take them as among the crosses of life and not become tneir staves, ana aa weir work, either because they have neglected it or have left it, or partly poorly done. Teach them gradually to feel they are relied upon In for certain duties, ana tney will giiae into a habit almost mechanically. What men complain of mostly, is tne continual confusion of house-cleaning, the everfloating subject of household cares, the postponment of this or that proposition or pleasure party on account oi wbsu-ubv, ur Bridget's day out, or the death of the cook's proverbial cousin, or some ouier irmiug petty annoyance that a woman should push aside as she would a branch in her way, or step over as a pebble in her path. A real difficulty becomes a fretting cause of irritability when it is bruited around to the discomfort of every member of the family, who all have their outside interests that belittle the concerns of domestic life. As for washday! Is Monday the only day ia the week to wash? And can Bridget not be bribed with an extra boor - or so to chanee her dav of perambu lation? This, however, is a derail that should be discussed in advance, experience having proved that the best plan in arranging for the "afternoon out," is to make the day subject to the running events of the house. Then in regard to the cook's trou bles, if there is no one on the premises to supply the vacancy, and there are no dollars to cuietly invest in a dainty dinner from the restaurant, a little picnic may be proposed to paterfamilias, or the misfortune may be turned into a Colonel Sellers jest. There is alwavs a wav to get out of a difficulty, especia'ly one that need not last long; for there is no one whose plane can not be sup plied the main object being not to give this everlasting housekeeping topic so mucu importance either In conversation, appearance, or thou eh t. 7I remember visiting a lady in Lynn, Mass., who was mistress of quite a large establish ment. In addition to her nusoana ana chil dren there were a number of young people visiting her at the time, and this little Yankee woman had but one house servant, a female cook, whom no one ever saw unless eoiDe Into the kitchen: she may have come cat of her quarters mast have indeed ior some one kept the house in oraer. we sometimes conjectured that it might be the madam, she was such a busy, sprightly, joy ous little creature, flitting constantly; but how she could find time to work we could never imaelne. for she was always ready to take a mallet in a game of croquet, drive us in a phaeton, or join us in a jollification of any kind. Once or twice I did notice, when we mlssea ner irom ine lawn or piazza, a figure very like hers wielding some thing that closely resembled a dust brush. She was never tired. We never heard her give an order even. The whole machinery of the house was noiseless, ana ran as smoothly as the Corliss engine. There may have been dust in the corners, cobwebs on the ceiling, or a spct here and there on the window panes, but none of us saw them, and the little woman herself could not be made uncomfortable about such trifles bad they appeared. On another occasion, this time in a Boston house, where there were four servants, cook, housemaid, waiter and coachman, during a winter visit of several weeks we never encountered any oi these personages but the waiter and coachman, the former only in the diningroom, dressed like a gentleman, and the latter in his uniform, seated on the car riage box. The work of the house seemed to be done by magic. I was almost tempted on several occasions to try and steal a march upon these good people, and ascertain for the sake of future convenience what nationality of domestic kept my room in so tidy and comfortable a condition. And the directions must have been given at midnight after we were all asleep, or in the morning before we were np, for the ladies of the house seemed always to be with us, always at ease, always en toilette, and apparently as much the guests of the mansion as ourselves. What men expect to find in their homes is comfort. After carrying a burden of responsibility on their shoulders all day they look forward with the keenest pleasure to those hours when they can settle down in quiet ease at their own fireside. They want their dinners good and without the bitter sauce oi Knowing (H such has been tne cae) that there has been a domestic broil over it. They want to feel and see. rather than hear of it, that there has been a deal of consider ation for them; that tbeirsuppers are in the rlaht place, papers undisturbed, shirts, col lars and cuffs starched and shiniDg, buttons on. stockings darned, in short, they want their home life to be in joyous contrast with their life across the . threshold. And all these little things are matters of such serious import that without them the haven of home is transformed into an abode of discord. I know the argument on the other side, about grumbling husbands expecting to scowl their careworn wives into smiling angels. We are not thiuking of such men; their lives are what they make them, as are all our lives to a certain extent. But expe rience all the world over proves that good men are dependent upon good homes, good dinners, and good women, for their happi ness. I never knew the masculine member of any family to look with a kindly eye upon that period of household purification generally called house cleaning. They will submit quietly, even suggest the necessity of a gang of painters, carpenters, paperhangers and whitewashes, if they are men. and will even supsrintend these workmen, and watch the progress of their work with a degree of interest, the one tithe of which they would scorn to bestow upon the scrub ber or the general cleaner. Lack of method has been the prime cause for this abject terror in regard to house cleaning. The best housekeepers i have ever known were those who gave themselves the least trouble about it, and who always have time for something else, whose; pleasures in life were balanced by their work, and who do not pay others ior work done by themselves. A FATAL FLIGHT. North Carolina Convicts Mowed Down While Breaking for Liberty. Special Dispatch to the Globe Democrat. Raleigh. N. C, June 14. A party of con victs at werk on the (Jape if ear and xadkln Valley railway, near Chatham county, made a desperate break for liberty to-day. They had planned the escape well, and attempted unsuccessfully to carry it out. Among the prisoners composing the gang was a desper ate character by tne name oi iiunusy. This man last year committed the crime of horse stealing at Wadesboro and fled to this city. He was pursued here, and continued his night to ureene county, where he was captured. Since then he has been in the gang of prisoners, aud has been the master-spirit in the plans lor escape. The gang each night had to march some distance along a road to their camp. This evening at the close of work they were being carried there, and when a farm house was reached 10 men of the gang, led by Hunt ley, made a sharp dash right through the yazd. The guards were not taken oy sur prise, and in an instant 10 leveled rifles vomited leaden death among the flying men Eigbt dropped at the flash. Two escaped. not being touched by a second fire, which instantly followed the hrst. fashing for ward, the guards found four of the men stone dead, and the other four badly wounded. Among the latter was the des perate Huntley. As the convicts rushed through the yard the people of the farm house were at their vocations. A woman was stoonins milking a cow." One of the gang ran toward her, and just as be reached a point only a few feet away, a bullet pierced his brain, and he fell dead at her feet. She almost fainted from fright, but was not harmed. The other convicts of the gang made no attempt to fly. and it was only the ill-fated 10 who took part In the foolish plan.

DEATH IN THE BE AW.

EeBponie to a Midnight Alarm the Tire Department Bushes Madly te the 8cene. State Street Bridge Being Open, a Hose Cart and Two Men Plunge Into the Dttrk Biver. Chicago Times. At 12:20 this morning an alarm of fire was turned in from box 19, at the corner of Lake and La Salle streets. The cause was the discovery of flames issuing from the fourth story windows of Nos. 143 and 145 Lake street, occupied as a hardware and .house furnishing store by Cragin Brothers & Chandler. The department was promptly on hand, and the conflagration extinguished before it had crept down lower than the third floor. The damage done aggregated $1,200, and the insurance was placed with Eastern companies. But the slight Interest felt in the fire faded away when the awe-stricken crowd learned that a hose cart coming to the scene of action from the North Side had driven off the street into the river because of an open bridge. Rumor said that five men had been drowned. then three, and then one. The latter statement in the end proved correct, and as soon it was ascertained that the scene of the catastrophe was State street bridge, there was a general rush for that locality. Per haps the story of the affair can best be told in the words of the driver, James Foley: Our cart number," he said, "was 11, and we came from the engine-bouse at Wo. Michigan street, nigh on to 1 o'clock, mak ing for the Lake street hre in obedience to telegraphic call. I was driving, and there were beside me on the hose-cart Captain Godfrey R. Charleston, Pipeman Lewis Larsen and Henry T. Coyle. We were coming down at a spanking rate and everything looked all right ahead; but there's a lamp just north of the bridge about twenty feet that blinds one so he can't see beyona it. l had ' just got past that when I saw to my horror that the budge was open. 'The horses I was driving are old stagers at the business, and I pulled them up with a short turn, to which they gallantly answered by coming back almost on their haunches. But it was no go. The Impetus of the cart actually forced the whole concern right over the brink. Charleston jumped off; so too did Larsen. I let go the reins as we went over and leaped as far to one side as I could, striking the water maybe half a dozen feet from the rig. I stuck in the mud and lost one boot, bu after a desperate struggle managed to get ashore by the aid of Charleston. Poor Coyle went right in with the cart, and that's the last we've seen of him." "Was he an old hand on the force?" "No: he was on his 60 days' trial: but what is the worst of all he was the only sup port of a sister and widowed mother." "Where did he live" "At the corner of Hubbard and Halsted streets." ? "How old was he?" "Not over 25." "Could he swim?" "I don't know; but what good could that do him? He was all tangled up with the pipe and things. E.ven I, with all my luck had a aeucea narrow escape.' The bridge tender, Ernest Sas?, was seen : "How did this accident happen?" "Sass. who appears to be an ignorant Ger man, could hardly answer for excitement. At last he sputtered: "It was no fault of mine." "Oh, d n all that!" cried half a dozen ex cited men: "tell us the facts." "Well, gentlemen, the propeller Annie Laurie was coming up the river from the east, and whistled for passage. I rang the bell as usual, ana then openea up. J ust at that moment, crash, clatter, bang! beard the cart coming, and the next mo ment it tumbled right over into the river. and that's all 1 know about it." "But have you no warning light, or any thing of that kind to tell whether or not the bridge is openT" "No: l never heard of any." Meanwhile the crowd kept gathering, and the curses showered on the system of bridgetending which had resulted in sending Pipeman Henry T. Coyle to his untimely fate, were both loud ana bitter, ine Annie Laurie, one of the innocent causes 'of the sad affair, lay just below the bridge, having stopped immediately on her pilot witnessing the fatal plunge. A tug occupied a position on the other side, while over its bows men peered down into the giimy, somber depths, as though to seek out the dead man. the drowned horses and ruined cart Lieutenant Martin Hayes promptly appeared, accompanied by several policemen, and at once set about hunting np means whereby to recover the body. A general sense of outrage prevailed among all present, which was by no means lessened when it be came known that this was the second similar accident of the night, and that an aged woman had almost come to a watery grave some hours earlier through the nearly crim inal carelessness of the Clark street bridgetender. At 1:30 o'clock Chief Benner organized a force of firemen to search the river for the body of the drowned hoseman and the cart and hone. Officer Little rendered valuable service. At quarter before 2 o'clock the grappling irons took hold of the hose cart and animals. They were found about 18 feet east of the bridge. A passing steamer, wnicn naa gone out of the river a few minutes after the accident, had stirred the water to the bot tom, the commotion thus caused doubtless carrying the cart some little distance from where it had struck. The search had failed to discover the body of Coyle up to 2 o'clock. It was the theory of the chief and Officer Little that it had been drifted some distance away from the bridge by the action of the waves raised by the passing steamer. The cart and horse were easily got ashore by the aid of a block and tackle. While the search was In progress the bridge was crowded with anxious spectators. ROSE EXLAN'S STORY. Eloping From Her Massachusetts Home and Deserted in New York. A young woman, leaning heavily, as it in distress, against a fence in Eighth street, near Third avenue, attracted Officer Waldron's attention at a late hour last evening. Bhe said that she had been sick, and agreed to go with him to the Fifth Street police station, remarking that she had run away from her home in Massachusetts, and was anxious to return again. Tbe officer was impressed by the refinement of her manner and conversation. Her slight figure was clad In a pearl gray traveling suit, and her hands were encased in spotless light kid gloves. She wore plain jewelry. She had large gray eyes, and ber dark auburn hair was brushed back from her broad, low forehead. The story which she told, and which is believed by those who listened to it, is in substance as 'follows: n. raiu stna n.ma atiA a I vesl is the daugh ter of Herbert Elian, the wealthy proprietor of a paper mill in Lee, Massacnusetu. xne uuuuy have resided for a long time in a large house on Fourth avenue in that place, known, she says, as tbe "EUan Mansion' Rose is now li years old, and for eight years has attended a private Mhool near her home. Among her V.tnim.iM warn WilMr flrlffen. two vears older than she, the son of a business mau who Uvea In close proximity to the Ellans. The iwtuhlMmnhan nflvn no together, going to and returning: from school in each other's company. Mr. Elian became anxious aa the children grew older,and young Griffin's atten tions became more niarawu. .v w

daughter to avoid seeing him as much as possible, but they were already engaged. The opposition from her parents made it nnpleaaant for them to be seen together. They contrived to have secret meetings, however, and ahe consented to elope with him. Two weeks ago, Tuesday, late at night, Grlffln climbed up one of the pillars by the front door of the Elian mansion, and knocked on the window of his betrothed 's room. "This is our last ihance," he said; "come with me to New York; we will be married, and your father and mother will be glad to welcome us back." 8he hesitated to take so rash a step, but finally consented. Hurriedly dressing, ahe slipped down stairs, out of the door, and joined her lover. The first train brought them to New York. They took rooms at the Westchester House, Her bounded conadenoe in Grlffln unarmed her of all susElclon, and she was not alarmed that he detyed the wedding ceremony. Saturday an advertisement appeared in a morning Journal asking for Information of her whereabouts. Bhe knew that her mother must be nearly broken down by her unexplained absence, and told Grlffln to communicate with her family. He promised to do so and hurry up the marriage ; but he did neither. Wednesday night and Jyesterday they were at the Com p ton House. Last evening Griffin

w ent away, asking her to meet him later at Eighth street and Third avenue. Bhe went there at the appointed time, but he did not coii.e. A flashily-dressed young man approached her, and asked her to drink soma thlntc. Bhe replied that she was not feeling well,and would be grateful for a Blase of ice water. He led her Into a saloon and induced her to drink a glass of beer. This made taer sick, and she was afraid to be aloae longer, and gladly ac cepted the protection of tne police. Her confidence in Griffin is unbroken. She believes he will marry her, but thinks something detained him. She wan placed under the care of Matron Webb, at the Police Cen tral office. All nations must pass through the same process. Fifty years ago, and for years beto. e, every man in England had bis price. Offices and seats in Parliament were bought and sold, and fearless opinion was punished with fines and imprisonment. A free press cured a dishonest ministry, and a haughty court were terrified into decency, we in the United Btates are passing through a terrific ordeal. The people are frightened or asleep just now; they will soon awaken to duty and' to courage. Forney's Progress. Last Sunday a Sunderland. Mass.. super intendent, after the lesson closed, asked the little boys the following questions irom the smaller question book : "Who knows better than father or mother?" A little five-year-old promptly answered, "I do." BENSON'S; At no time In the blstoJry of medicine has an ariucle appeared which has CAPGItlE met with greater appruvHl and success than BenKon's Ca peine Plaster. why they are preferred POROUS to all other porous plas ters, is owing to tneir improved composition ;they Fict instantaneously, cure Ispeedily and effectually. jrnysicians ana toe general public who arknowlledge the great benefits deprived from tbe use of tbe ordinary porous plaster, nowever, maintain mat their action is not saffiMANUFACTURERS AWARDED ' THE ONLY MEDALS i AT Iciently prompt, requirliDg time, patience and continuous wear to effect cure, Bonson'sCapcine Plaster overcomes this Idlflioulty by accompliHhlug in a lew nours mat wnicn it taKes any otner plaster as many days. Although a recent invention Benson's Capcine CENTENNIAL' rorous riasier nas oeen 1876. boroughly tested by phy. kicians, aud have been pronounced tne most thoroughly efficacious piaster ever aevisea. PARIS EXPOSITION 1878. its marvellous lnnnnce over the circulation and general effect on the l-ysu-m is almost incredi ble; nomine moment or its application to tne aifected pait. it operates with astonloring vigorGIVEN FOB RUBBER brings relief and cares more effectually than any known Plaster, lilaiment PLASTERS. lor compound. FOB w nen you aesire prompt UMKBAOK Relief, ask your Druggist weak iincK, Kneu ior .Benson's uapoine matlsna, Kidney Dis-IPlaster. Avoid worthless ease. Stubborn and plasters having a similar Neglected Conghs Afsoundlng name. Kach Cold. Female w ' kenuine plaster has the ness, and all Local Aches and Pains, it. word utDclne spelled KA-f-tl-JN-B. Is specially mended. recom-l Sold by all Druggists. price, cents. The Only 25 Cent AGUE REMEDY IN THE WORLD, A safe and reliable snbsjtitnte for Quinine. The great tasteless medicine for all diseases caused bv naiarlal t"ol Boning, being a preventive as well as certain remedy for FEVER and AGUE, Dnmb Ague, Ague Cake, Remittent, Intermittent Fevers, Kid ney Disease, Iilver and Bowel Complaint, Dyspepsia and General Debility; tbe best general Ton lc for Debilitated Systems. Price 25 oentaperbox. family boxes $ 1.00. Sold by Druggists. Mailed on receipt ef price! DtJJfDAs DICK at CO., 35 Woos ter St., New York. Explanatory book mail ed free on application. Sandalwood Capsules. The safest and most reliable Can to all Diseases of tbe Urinary Organs. Certain Our In eight days. Bswaie of dangerous Imitations. AH Drna-trlsls. Writ for Clraolar. DTJNDAS SICK ft CO., 3 Wesstar ftttsat, Bew Tors. $500,000 TO LOAN. I am prepared to make loans to an unlimited amount on bonds and real estate mortgage, on time from one to twenty years, to suit borrowdm. On atrlctlv flrst-claa" clt V DrODerty. with good margin, my rates are 8 per cent. Interest and 4 per cent, to cover all other expenses. Us farm property well located, wltn good margin, tn v 1-n.t.Aa urn 7 ner r(tnt. lnterent and 5 ner cent to cover all other expenses. No delay or red tape. Applications i;y mall promptly answer eu. AQdress or cau on WM HENDERSON. Office in -Etna Building, Indianapolis, -TOTrriS la Vierehv srlven to the cltlsens of JM the Twenty-third 28) ward, in the city of Indianapolis, Centertownshlp. Marion county, Indiana, that 1. Frederick Hofnerr. a male In habitant of said ward, over the age of 21 years, will apply to the board of county commis sioners of said county, at tneir next meeting, tor a license to seu ior one yearpiniuouisyiii' mis and malt Honors, in a lees Quantity than I Suart at a time, with the privilege of allowing he same to be drank on my premises. Tbe precise location of tbe premises whereon X aesire to seu saia liquors, is aeronaeu iw Inwi- It No B In F. Valuer's s-nardlan's addl lion, northeast eorner of Downey street and Madison avenue, in the elty of Indianapolis, uenter townsnip, aianon county, inuiana. Signed) FREDERICK HOFH&KR.

Catarrh

Thousands suffer without knowing the na ture of this almost universal complaint. It s 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 dladness of the head, often In the first stages, but mora commonly In its advanced stages, attended with pains in chest or left side, and under the adoulder blades. Indigestion 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 lungs 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 tne corruption within, while the patient has frequently lost all sense of smell. The disease advances covertly, until pain In the chest, lungs or bowels startles him; he hacks and coughs, has dyspepsia, liver complaint, and is urged by his doctor to take this or that; perhaps cod liver oil is prescribed. Perfectly ridiculous 1 The foul uloers In the head MnnnthAKBAhMl bv nonrlnff such stnfrinta the poor, laded stomach. The patient becomes feels disheartened, memory loses her power Judgment her seal, gloomy forebodings hang overhead; hundreds, yea, thousands in such circumstances, feel that to die would be a lief, and many even do cut the thread of life to end their sorrows. Thousands are. Dying In early life with consumption, who can look back a few years perhaps only months when it wasonly Catarrh. Neglected when a care Is possible, very soon it wui iransiorm vne ieabum Il UWUbU BUU 1VUU1 UW WAV um.m, WUU1 appearance, while the hacking eouKh. the ex cess of blood gushing from the lungs, or night pweats, all significantly proclaim it is too late; and inns a neglected uatarrn enaa in we con sumptive's grave. NASAL CATARRH. Sometimes tbe disease onlv affects the mem branes linlnk the nasal passages, and they may be easiiv reacned ana carea ov simple means Hut wnen it is locatea in tne rrontai sinus, or in the posterior nares, or if it has entered the eustachian tubes and Is lutm Inn the ears. then nothing but finely medicated vapor can enectnally reach it and destroy It. And certainly after It has affected - the throat and bronchial tubes. all well read - physicians will readily attest, nothing can be relied on to effect a permanert cure but the inhalation of properly medicatod vanot. In the same manner that we breathe common air. we can Inhale and breathe a medicated air; and It is perfectly simple, any one can see. thus to treat disease of tbe throat, bronchial pipes and lungs. How much better this metnoa rjv wnicn remedies are convevea directly to the seat of the disease, than to resort io we uncertain ana too uvanvai mischievous action of medicines taken Into the stomas h. TE&CRFKS 1ST OUR SCHOOLS are greatly subject to this rearrul maiaoy. confinement in close, ill-ventilata school-rooms; steaming poison exuding from the bodies of tne not always over-ciean cmiarea, oreeu una disease wltn learrui rapidity. ftianv oi our leaainir ai vines, lawyers ton prominent business men have tried this remedy with wonderful success. We know Mr. Chllds as an honest christian man. Cin cinnati Daily (iasette. PUBLIC SPEAKER, after leaving the platform, over-heated with the strain of their mental ana physical enon, neglect snmcient precaution, and a cold is the result. This neg lected opens the way to catarrh, and to a possible loss of voice. I have suffered so keenly myself that 1 can not urge upon publio speakers too strongly the necessity of removing disease wnen a cure is possible. 2XY EXPERIENCE. K ehteen years ol terrible neadacne. disgust ing nasal discharges, dryness of the throat. acute bronchitis, coughing, soreness of the lungs, raising bloody mucus, and even nlgnt sweats, incapacitating me for my professional duties, and bringing me to the verge of the grave axx caused by .and the results of. Nasal Catarrh . After spending hundreds of dollars, and obtaining no relief, I compounded my Catarrh Specific and Cold Air Inhaling Balm, aud wrought upon myself a wonderful cure. Now I can speak for hours with no difficulty, and can breathe freely in any atmosphere. Mv cure is certain, thorough and nerlect. and Is indorsed by every physician who has examinea iu x. tniun, FROM THE CHANCELLOR OF THE UNI VERSITY OF NEBRASKA. T. P. Chili Dear Sir: 1 think you have the true tneory and practice ror ine euro or Masai Catarrh, and also for the treatment of the re spiratory organs. My throat Is now so well restored that i lecture daily without difficulty, and I find no difficulty wnatever in preaching. Yoa are at full liberty to use mj name ior tne oenent oi otners. Yours very truly, E. B. Fatbjtxld. D. D- D. Lincoln. Neb. Jttdgx J. OoLLirr, of Lima, O., writes: "Yoa well remember how terribly Catarrh had taken hold upon me, making me offensive to myself and to all arouad, and withal sufferlngday and night I am cured : head free, air passages all open, and breathing natural. (Write to blm.) Many surprising incidents of peculiarly distressing cases, cured, will be sent on applica tion. . CONCLUSION. It Is now a well established fact that Chllds' Catarrh HpeclOo, for thoroughness, com pleteness and efficiency, has no equal In the world. Everything known to be good for Nasal Catarrh in all Its horrid forms, in the head, throat and bronchial tubes, arranged into ana eomnletesvstem of treatment. Do not trifle with some cheap thing, which at best can not afford but temporarary relief, while the roots of the vile disease are left to strike deeper and deeper. Be In XAkintst and thobouoh. or do IfOTHiwo! Circulars, price lists and all necessary Information for self-treatment at home, can be had by s dressing (with return stamp), Sev. T. P. OTLXDB, Troy, Ohio. estate that voa saw this advertls meat in us oeuunei.

THE INDIANA

STATE SENTINEL 3Has Been Redneedlin Wee .00 hi K.?j V A T., The merits of this paper arewell known amongfa large majority of tne farmers and stock raisers of this state, no paper rumlahea mora news far leas mosey J WEEKLY!, iOscfTeu. (CLUBJKATES.).' I lOne Tear, S Oepla Onefrear, Uvopieav. Usm sw, SB Copiea. IO.O. THE SENTINEL'S Boot, Job, Show Printing and Binding establishmeuti Is the largest In the State. Is faUy equipped with all the latest and most approved machinery for the speedy execution of every variety of work In this line. Special attention given to every kind of Book, Job and Mercantile Printing, such aa Books. Ma art new, Lawyers Briefs, Catalogues, Price lasts, Specifications, Contracts, etc., etc Merchants, LawyerB, Judges, Justices and Professional Men from a distance, desiring work executed In a neat anal expeditions manner, can send It here where will be done in mea better style and In half the time that it oo Id possibly be at home and at less cost. Our large Improved presses 'are capable of turning out an mmense amount of printing. Large editions of Legal, Medical, Classical, Theological and Miscellaneous and Bun day-school Books have been printed on these presses. LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, NOTB BEADS, STATEMENTS. COPY BOOKS, and. m fact, every variety of work that may be desired, at rates that can not fail to please, and at the same time, to satisfy the most economical. srHsmlt In Drafts or PostofBos Monear Orders, If possible, and where neither of theaa can be procured send the money In a REGIS TERED LETTER. AQ Postmasters are obliged to register letters when requested to do so, and the system la an absolute proteetioa against losses by man. Give fun address, Postofao County, and Stat. Address SEWELWMI t .v,M 1.4 hiiii tanie JOHJTCh

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