Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1879 — Page 5

'XCANlSIA&CttBtE.

A Thrilling and Curiously Interesting Story. How the Authorities Were Baffled for Tears Boston Special to (he Globe-Democrat. Seldom it one called upon to chronicle a ' more curiously interesting' story, even though the story Is one of crime, than that the "circumstances of which are narrated below. Happening,' as It did, nearly two years ago, aad in one of the neighboring British provinces, yet the slight publicity heretofore Riven the event by the press to this day is inexplicable. AS EXTRAORDINARY STORY. On the 12th of October, 1S77, one Timothy McCarthy, a saloon-keeper, at Moncton, N. B.. left Moncton and started for Pointe du Chene, for the purpose of joining a girl named Mclnnes, bound for Prince Edward's Island, Pointe da Chene being the nearest point of departure for the same. Owing to a storm which prevailed that night, the packet for Prince Edward's Island did not start, and McCarthy the Mclnnes girl having gene on by an earlier boat went to Shediac, some two and a half miles from Pointe du Chene. He then proceeded to the Waverly House kept by one John Osborne. There be made himself at home, taking several drinks and having a jolly time. Soon after midnight, having already become somewhat oblivious to his surroundings, he was given a powder or drug of some kind in ;one of his libations, which rendered him unconscious. He was then approached by one of the delectable family with whom he had been carousing and struck a heavy blow, which must have resulted in almost instant death. He was hit with the pole of a hatchet behind the right ear. His lifeless body was then rifled of all valuables, including over $1,000 in money, and taken, it is claimed, in a wagon by A TOC5G sos or osborje'i " .'. to Shediac river, a mile and a half away, where it was dumped with a stoae tied to its neck. Considerable stir was made over the disappearance of McCarthy. No one seemed -to know what had become of him. In the meantime a girl of French extraction, . by the name of Annie Parker, who bad been employed as a domestic in the Waverly House at the time McCarthy visited that hostelry, and where it is asserted he lost his life, came to Moncton to live in a family of respectable people of that place; shortly after her arrival she let fall some indiscreet remarks, which - led to her being questioned; she thereupon acknowledged that' she had seen McCarthy made away with; that he was murdered at the 'Waverly House, Shediac, and that she was presentat the time in the very room barroom in which the tragedy occurred. She fully confirmed the statement which has been made of the manner in which the - crime was committed, and gave other important details bearing upon the case, which served to impress her hearers with a belief in her truthfulness. Among other things, - she stated that after the blow had been dealt McCarthy,-which deprived him of life, and his money and other valuables taken from him, she was oiTered ' ' A PORTION OF THE PLUNDER, which she declined to accept, to keep her mouth shut. Her refusal alarmed the Oaborns, and they then obliged her, under fear for her own life, to swear on a Bible that she , would never reveal what had taken place. "The girl's story having been related to the district judge, he was called upon to act, but for some unaccountable reason he de--dined to until positively ordered by the 'prosecuting attorney of the county to take - the needed action. The girl's deposition was thereupon - taken, - and John Osborne, . his wife, Martha; ,- his daughter, .Eliza, and son, . . Edward, were taken In custody and committed to ' jail. It is now proven that when the fact of Annie Parker's disclosures became known, at least two of the interested parties proceeded with the horse and carriage referred to to the spot were the body was originally deposited, and invested the same with the overcoat, replaced the watch, chain, etc, the amount of money advertised $157, and the pistol, which latter had usually been carried by the deceased in his hip pocket, 'In the clothing of the corpse, and then took it and carried it half a mile further up the river . J r" f ' 10 A PEEP rOOL t I made by the current of the river in the bank, where they threw it in, the intention being, as there was a railroad bridge near by, to give the impression thatMcCartby had fallen off the same and drowned. The defense was to that very effect; that is, that McCarthy, intoxicated, instead of going to . Pointe du Chene, as he intended, attempted ".. to cross from Moncton Shediac over the . railroad bridge in question, and that he fell Off, striking his head against the abutments of the bridge, and drifted down the river - to - the place where his body was found when the ice, which shortly after - formed, had broken up in the spring. It was clearly proven at the coroner's inquest . that McCarthy had died from concussion - of - the brain, made by - a blow from a blunt instrument at the base of the skull behind the right ear, in precisely the place men- - tioned by the girL Parker, and the hatchet with which she had said the deed was done, wa3 also shown to have . been in the hotel a. the time McCarthy disappeared. A rope was found in the river answering the description of that given by Annie Parker, as was also a stone, adhering to which was HUM AS HAIB i exactly of the same shape and size as that spoken of by her as being attached by a rope to the neck of McCarthy. A long, patient and careful investigation, lasting 27 days, was held by the coroner, in the course of . which.m addition to the facts related above, many others of Interest were brought out. Then followed a trial for murder, which re-.-sul ted in a disagreement of the jury 11 for conviction and one for acquittal., A second trial was ordered, and' , this , time the jury stood eight to four for conviction, whereupon the Oabornes, aided by their friends, caused the arrest of Annie Parker' 1 ' the principal witness for the Government, onacnargeoi perjury, un tne, JUta inst.; Annie barker was released from custody by order of J udge Fisher, the crown having de- . made against her by the Oabornea. ..The end of the remarkable case Is not yet, however, and more, important developments may be expected in the near future. , LIGHTNING, Some Results of Its Terrible Power Hint . for Protection. V. ' , . ,.- . J"' Galveston News.1 Sir The painful story in last Monday's paper of .two happy children killed . while sitting in their garden seat under the tree, "by a stroke of lightning, will deepen the .horror of those who suffer from fear of lightning. The most agonizing of all nerv- ' us fears is that of lightning, and a count of those whose lives are really embittered by this dread would number scores of thousands, many of them persons who know no other - fear. - .-. : Twenty years ago the : writer remembers turning with a smile to' others who shrank and cried at the peals of a terrible storm in a country house. The glare of a bolt coming down the' center 'of the room caught the eye at that very instant; the next was an explosion that shook the house, and insensi bllity followed.-, Two men in the same room

were burned by the bolt, though no lives were lo t; but I have never been -able to smile at lightning again. To give any idea of the terror left on a - nervous organization by the shock would involve extravagance of Wrms. - ) But, unfortunately, so far from being an exception, there are too many who suffer the same harrassmenta with me. Nor are women alone subject to this nervousness. I knew a school -superintendent and canal contractor, a man over 50, with a large family, who would hide in a closet in a storm, and had been known to rush from his bed with fright at lightning. Many will remember the professor at Bowdoin College, who always retreated to the cellar in a thunder storm, although his house was bristling with lightning rods. The strongest man I ever knew, who could throw another man across the street, and work a hand press in a printing office as if he were a part of the machine, was discharged as a reporter because his desk eras vacant every time there was a thunder storm. Tbe mother of Washington was afraid of lightning, and never failed to retreat to her room at the first flash of a storm, where she staid till the last flash died away. The physical effects of this fear are most depressing. One woman knows when a storm is coming hours before, by a prostration of strength and spirits, accompanied with symptoms like cholera. One of the most dauntless young women I know was sick in her bed for hours after the great storm at Springfield, Mass., last month. She bad received a shock of lightning years before, and never fails to be ill in a thunder storm since. Beason and study of tbe laws of lightning have done much to lessen the fears of it. It is true we live between two magazines of electricity one in the earth and the other in the air and a cloud charged with elec tricity passing overa point ot body in a negative condition will discharge its surplus by the very quickest and most congenial medium, which it finds in the human body, a tree, or house indifferently. But it is also true that, provide the lightning with a convenient and easy conductor, such as is now made of steel wire and each covered with fine copper and twisted into a cable rod with points higher than any point of a house and reaching well into the ground, where electricity may scatter harmlessly in the damp earth, it will prefer that conducting rod to anything in its vicinity, and people wbo stay indoors in the well protected house are safer from lightning than any bomb-proof

from bursting shells. J&very accident from tnis cause I ever knew ot came from carelees exposure in situations known to be unsafe. The first I noticed after my own accident was that' of a missionary's daughter killed while passing an open window, just as a woman was on Long Island last summer, while sitting at her sewing machine. A young man in Maiden, I think, was killed while sitting out on a porch with his chair tipped back and his head against the knob of. ihe door bell, making an excellent connection with the bell wire. Many men have been struck while riding into a barn on a load of hay. Many will remember the frightful calamity at Scranton, Pa., where a party of women, out picking berries on one of the high hills, crowded into a deserted log hut in a sudden storm, and seven were killed by one bolt. Steep hills, with mineral veins cropping out, are not places for any one to live on who wishes to escape lightning, and unprotected houses are doubly dangerous. It is never too soon to go in the house when a storm is rising. When the clouds are fully charged with electricity they are most dangerous, and this fluid obeys a subtle attraction, which acts at great distances and all directions. A woman told me of a bolt which came down her mother's chimney from a rising cloud when the sun was shining overhead. X. P. Willis writes of a young girl killed while passing under a telegraph wire on the brow of a hill, while hurrying home before a storm. Sunday's sad accident at Morrisiana should warn every mother that it is not safe to let children stay out of doors till the last minute before the storm falls. People should not be foolhardy about sitting on porches or by open windows, whether the storm is hard or not. Mild showers often carry a single charge, which falls with deadly effect. It may or may not. be fatal, to stay out; it is safe to stay in the house with the windows and doors shut. The dry air in a house is a readier condenser of lightning than the damp air outside, and any draught of air invites it. A hot fire in a chimney attracts It, so to speak, and it is prudent for those who would be sure of safety to use kerosene or gas stoves in summer, and avoid heating the chimneys of the house. People are very ignorant or careless about lightning. I have seen a girl of 13 crying with fear of lightning, and running every other moment to the window to see if the - storm was not abat ing, unconscious that she was putting herself in danger. If everyone would hurry to shelter as soon as a storm cloud was half way up the sky, when certain that it was coming nearer, if they would shut the doors and windows, and keep away from them afterward, and from bell-wires, stovepipes, mantles, chimney breasts, heaters and mirrors, with their silvered backs, which carry electricity, and keep away from lightningrods and their vicinity, and from metal water spouts, with good rods on their houses. they might dismiss the fear of lightning from their minds, so far as it is a thing of reason and not ot impression. A good lightning-rod is one that is thick enongh to carry a .heavy charge of electricity, not less than three fourths of an inch in diameter, which has a point above each chimney or pinnacle ot the roof, joining the main rod by curves, not by angles, and run ning into the ground down to a permanently moist soil. . ltBnouid be neid by glass insulators in collars sere wedto the wall and roof. Any good mechanic can put up a rod which will be a perfect protection. When ac cidents happen to a house with lightningrods it is because tbe rod is too small, or not rightly attached, or the ground connection is not good. Tbe - ignorance and carelessness habitual to the American on all point not connected - with his amusement or moneymaking, are fatal to such conditions as insure safety from lightning. It was exem plified in the case of a friend who, afraid of lightning, slept half the summer in a newlyrented house with a stout r d, till one day happening to look at the ground connection he found it rusted in two just above the sod, and a hundred times more dangerous than no rod at all. ' So far from lightning being a danger most difficult to avoid, it has very simple laws, and may be almost entirely guarded against by proper conductors. Witness the iintish navy, which met 500 disasters a year by lightning, till the ships were provided with conductors, by which the fatalities were reduced to 50, among ships in the tropics, exposed to violent storms, and these may be fairly charged to carelessness in ' regard to tneconauctors.ana rods wnicn are.wortniesa. The copper cable rod is the best. A Tarantula in a Bunch of Bananas. ' INew Haven Palladium. - Day belore yesterday a tarantula was found in a bunch of bananas by John -V. Judson, of the firm of Mix & Judson, in the city market. When Mr.-Judson discovered the tarantula, his hands were within half an inch of the insect. : Chloroform put an end to the life of the dangerous curiosity, which is now a part of the collections ot scorpions, centipedes, etc.. belonging to Charles P. Merwin. To show the fear with which the tarantula is regarded by the natives of the West Indies, Mr. Merwin states that during bis stay last winter in Jamaica, where he made his collection, be was unable to induce any of the natives to catch one for him. - " The clergyman in a certain town, as the custom is, having published the bans of matrimony between two person, was followed by the clerk's reading the hymn beginning with these .words: "Deluded souls, that dream of Heaven 1"

CHASTTVE COX AS A RADICAt.

The Way In Which Has Case is Treated; in r the . South. ' . f Petersburg (Va.) Index-Appeal J ' ' ! ' .' ' When we wrote, two or three days' ago, referring to the just conviction of the negro murderer Cox, in New York, that be would doubtless be hanged, according to his sentence, on the 29th ot August, "unless his case could be gotten before some corrupt Radical court," we had no idea that the words carelessly written would so soon prove prophetic In fact, although we had just been arraigning the Badical party of New York for making an organized effort to protect Cox from punishment, because he was a negro and his victim a white woman, we had no serious thought that - the depravity of his . sympathizers would proceed to such .- audacious lengths. But the sequel has shown that we underrated the mawkish and morbid disposition of Radical fanaticism to assume everything in the negro's favor; and that we allowed too little, for once, to the usurping tendency of the corrupt and partisan United States courts. It is announced that on Saturday Judge Noah Davis, one ot the most malignant Radicals of New York, and personally one of the most unworthy men on the judicial bench, has granted a writ of error on some thin and transparent pretext, the effect of which is to postpone and to endanger the righteous conclusion reached at the first trial of the black-hearted and red-handed murderer of Mrs Hull. Obviously, the motive that operated with Mr. Davis was exclusively political and fanatical. He is satisfied to know that Cox is a negro and a Radical. Davis is also a Radical fanatic, and he takes it for granted that Cox can have done no wrong. His conduct is exactly in keeping with the degraded behavior of tbe women wbo have sent Cox cigars and roses as expressive ot their personal admiration . and political sympathy with him. Disgusting as all these proceedings are, perhaps they were fortunate in a public viefV. They will open the eyes of many thoughtful people to the rancorous tendencies of Radicalism, and tbey will show how utterly impossible wou'.d be the conviction of any negro of any crime, if Radical extremists were charged with the administration of justice in this country. Perhaps in all our time there bus been no more cruel nor more wanton murder than this Cox, and he is the man whom Radicalism has selected. in tbe chief city of the Union, to lavish its fayors on and to idolize as a kind of hero. From the infamous women who made him tbeir pet to tbe partisan judge who has interfered with the due execution of his sentence, all elements of New York Radicalism have rallied to the comfort and pro tection of this most heartless and vulgar assassin. Does anybody ask the reason why there should have been such an outpouring of feeling? Tbe answer is found in the fact that Cox is black. That is always a sufficient reason for Radical sympathy, and explains why in every conflict that has ever arisen in the South between the races, the Radical party has taken sides sgainst its own color, and assumed that the negro was wholly and infallibly in the right. COFFEE'S AWFUL FALL. Eating a Lunch on Top of a Rock, 100 Feet High, Which Gives Way. Across the chasm at the Passaic Falls, Peterson, rises "Morris Mountain," about 200 feet high. The rock terminates at the top in an apex only a few feet wide. For nearly a hundred feet down from this point on the northern aide the sides are almost perpendicular. At the bottom lies a mass ot broken and jagged rocks. For some days past a gang of men have been working right on the top of this rock, blasting and quarrying rocks for macadamising Mill street. Throngs have watched men at work from the opposite side of the . chasm, expecting that some of them would fall from the dizzy height. At noon, yesterday, all but John- Coffee, the foreman, who lived in Spruce street, quitted the rock to take their dinner at the bottom, or at their homes. Coffee remained to take his lunch on the top of the rock. He finished his lunch at about half-past 12 o'clock, and then was seen to rise and step nearer the edge. Suddenly the rock gave way under him and he fell a distance of at least 100 feet. He struck on a large rock and then bounded and rolled 50 feet further, landing in a pile of jagged stones at the bottom. There was hardly a whole bone left in his body. Coffee leaves a wife and three children. General Stoneman, of Southern California who has spent many years in what used to be the Western wilds, is inclined to make a joke of General Fremont's great project of fertilizing the desert basin of Southern California and Arizona by turning the waters of Colorado river into tbem. He says that it would take a river 1.000 feet wide and 10 feet deep, running at the rate of five miles an hour, 200 years to fill the basin, and after it was filled an equal supply would be needed to compensate for evaporation. It is now in order for Fremont to submit the facts and figures to show that Stoneman does not know what he is talking about. Workingmen. Before you begin your heavy spring work, after a winter of relaxation, your system needs cleansing and strengthening to pre vent an attack of ague, bilious or spring fever, or some other spring sickness that will unfit you for a season's work. You will save time, much sickness and great expense if you will uso one bottle of Hop Bitters in your family this month. Don't wait. See another column. Consumption Cared. An old physician, retired from practice having bad placed in his hands by an Fast India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy, lor tne speedy and permanent cure of consumption, bronchitis. catarrh, asthma and all throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for nervous debility and all nervous com plaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has felt it bis duty to make it known to his suf fering fellows. Actuated by this motive. Bud a desire to relieve human suffering,"! will send, free of charge, to all who desire it. this recipe, with full directions for prepar ing and using, in tierman, f rencn or n-ng liah. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper, W. W. Sherar, 149 Powers' block Rochester JN. X. The Bianchard Blood and Nerve Food Has been found by hundreds of the people of this community to be the moat reliable invlgorator. It contains really the essence of life, being made directly from the wheat kernel tne great lite staple. Prescription free for the SDeedy cure of sem inal weakness, loss of manhood, and all disorders brought on by indiscretion or excess. Any druggist has the Ingredients. Address DavidBon Co., 78 Nassau street. New York. SPECIAL. MOTICS Luck Scattered in a Crowd. ' In the last drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery the grand capital prize of one huu dred thousand dollars was divided into tenths, and became the property of as many young enterprising merchants, salesmen, clerks and commercial travelers doing business about Leonard street and Broadway, New York, who, for a dollar apiece, became each worth ten thousand, dollars. Much complaint is made by each lucky man that he lacked fore sight enongh to buy the whole ticket and get a hundred thousand. The next (the 111th) drawing occurs August 12th. at New Orleans, La,, where any information can be had by writing to M. A, Dauphin, P.O. Box 692, New Orleans, La., or same at 319 Broadway, New York City.... Chew Jackson's Best Sweet Navy Tobacco.

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leura REMEDIES Have speedily and permanently e tired Humors of the Skin and Scalp of Children and Infants afflicted since birth. Tbe treatment prescribed In Bach enseals mild doses or the Ccticpba Resolvent, a perfectly safe yet power! al blood purirter, uucl the external nse oiCcticura, tbe great skin care. Cuticura 8oap eboald be tbe only soap applied to the diseased skin for cleansing purposes. HUMOR oTa CHILD Into Birth Cin4, after faltbtnl Btedl. . Treatment bad tailed. Messrs. Wkiks A Pottkb: Gentlemen. My Utile son, two years or age, has bad a bonior on one side of his lace since he was born, which daring the last fonr months baa spread over tbe entire aide of the face, the chin, ear and side of tbe head. It must have itched and irritated hlra a great deal, as be scratched the surface all the time, no matter what was applied. I used many remedies by advice ot friends and my physician without benefit until I found Cuticura, which immediately allayed the Itching and Inflammation, and in a fewdaysentlrely cured him. Respectfully, JOHN L. SURRY, with Walworth Manufacturing Co. , Boston, April 15. 1878. More. Once eared, the skin may be rendered sort and fair by using the Catioura Soap exclusively for toilet or nursery purposes. CHILDREN AND INFANTS. re'Cares of Skin and Realp affections by the Cntlcnra Kemcdlea, Fred. Rohrer, Esq., Cashier Stock Growers. National Bank, Pueblo, Colorado, writes : "I am so well pleated with its effects on my baby that I can not afford to be without in my house, it Is a wonderful cure, aud is bound to become very popular as soon as Its virtues are known to the masses." J. S. Weeks, Esq., Town Treasurer St. Albans, Vt., says. In a letter dated May 28: "It works to a charm on my baby's face and head. Cured the head entirely, and has nearly cleaned the face of sores. I have recommended It to several, and Dr. Plant has ordered It for them." M. M. Chick, Esq., 41 Franklin street, Bostou, says: ''My little daughter, eighteen months old, has what tbe doctors call Eczema. We have tried most everything, aud at last have used about a box of Cuticuka, and she Is almost a new child, and we feel very happy." , PRICKLY HEAT. . Incidental to tbe Texan Climate. Messrs. Weeks 4 Potter: Gentlemen Enclosed please nnd one dollar . for a large box of Cuticuka. The small one that I received some time ago has been very efficacious, especially ln Pr.ckly Heat or Rash, as some people call it. BiuuumugikHuuui. xuun iruiv. THOMAS W. BUCKLEY. Mason, Tex., Sept. 22, 1878. Ccticcra Is a most valuable external annllcatlon. It Deals all cats, bruises, and abrasions of the skin, restores the hair when destroyed by scalp diseases, removes oandrutf and keeps the scalp clean and tbe hair soft and pliable. It Is as agreeaole as it Is effective, and is ably assisted In every case by the Cuticuka Soap, which is particularly recommenuea to motners for cleansing the skin and scalp of infants and children. It is toilet as well as medicinal, and Is the most Imuran t and refreshing soaufor tbe nursery and bath of any yet prepared. Parents have our assurance that tuese remedies contain nothing Injurious lo the youngest lniant, eviaence or wnicn may oe lound in tne certificates ol Dr. Hayes and Professor Merrick accompanying each remedy. The Cuticura 'Remedies are rrerared by Wkkks A Pottkk, Chemists aud Druggists, No. 360 Washington street, Boston, nd are for sale by ail druggists.- Price of Cuticura, small boxes, 50 cents ; large boxes, containing two aud one-hair times the quantity of small. Si; Resolvent, si per bottle; Cuticuka Soap, 25 cents per cake; by mall. cents; lureecaaeK, ncenta. They destroy all tendency to Inflammation by VOLTAIC nrrroi v J LHWfliw morbid or unwholesome matter, thus preventing or curing ' Rheumatism. NenraiKitt. aud sciatica. Worn over the pit of toe Biouiacli, they prevent Suae and Liver fains unammiitlon oitne uversao moneys. Bilious colic, DyapepsiJi, lnogesuon, uramps, and pains ' TUTT'S ' PULLS INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN AKD THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE. THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE. TUTTS' PILLS CURE SICK HEADACHE. TUTT'SPILLS CURE DYSPEPSIA. TUTT'S PILLS CUREjCONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS CURE PILES. TUTT'S PILLS CURE FEVER AND AGUE. TUTT'S PILLS CURE BILIOUS COLIC. TUTT'SPILLS Diu Tctt has suc ceeded in combining in these puis the heretofore untouonirtic qnaliliesof a Stkenothino, Puboativb, ami a ruBirviNa TONIC. Their first nnnarent (.fleet is to lucrease the appetite by causing tbe food to properly assimilate. Thus the system is Bonrtahrd. and by their tonic action on the digestive oriraus, regular and healthy eracantlous are pro-' dnced.. The rnpirtitv with which PERSONS TAKE ON FLESH while under Ihe influence of these pills, indicates their adaptability to nourish the body, hence their ' efficacy in curing ner vous arniniy, nuiancholy; dyfpejMiia, wastinir ithe mnclea,sl!t3ithua of the lirer, chronic constipation. Cure KIDNEY Complaint. TUTT'SPILLS nnd i minuting health B strength to the system. Sold everywhere. Price S5 cents' Office 53 Murray Street) . MEWYOBK.. CURE TORPID LIVER TUTT'S PILLS IMPART APPETITE. ! i PEHBOJAL. "TJERftONALi for tbe benefit of oar Agents 1 tnrouenont tne state, ana tne umeeisis in particular, we would announce that we nave placed "Professor Morse' Ague Magneto" with. Browning A Sloan, A. Keifer, and French's Patent Medicine Depot, nncler Masonic Tem ple, where you can buy either on direct pur chase, or on commission. UtUlllil!.! X fJU. IT It A SURPRISING FACT That there are not 1,00) orders Instead of 100 dally for the illustkatbd pocket dictionary containing SO 000 words, wliloh is given away as a premium to every subscriber to Dr. Foote's Health Mommy ior one year, ai,l for fifty cents, renu your oraers at once to MUKKAX 111.. Li rUiJLilSHlNU CO., 1'ja East 28th street, Hew York City. MWJIslTtiMMteUMtmtmrtrftlMitat.. , 000,000 una for Si. Tor five cop? of Kaaaas Pacta " n ttsas," tAinm Laa fliMilnlssit Siuai, amM.

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POND'S EXTRACT. TEB OnZAT VSUETABLV : ?A15 DESTBOTEB AKD SPECIFIC fr I.1FLAX- ! JUTIOX AXD HEI0BBHA6E8b ' J Rheumatism, Neuralgia. No other preparation has cured so maay cases of thene dit.tresaiuccompiamU as the Exl ract. Our Platter is invaluable In these diseases, ' Lnmbsiro, Pnir.sin Back or Side, Ac. Pond'i Extract Ointment (50 cents) for nie when , . removal of clothing is inconvenient, in a great beip in relieving lnnammatorr caws. Hemorrhages. fJzgSf SEJS; Nsse, or from any ranse. Is epeadily controlled and stopped. Our Naaal Syringe (S5 cents) and Inhaler (SO cents) are great aids in arresting internal bleeding. . . Diphtheria and Sore TU Kn-f 1 the Extract promptly1 1 1 UdU It is a sure cure Delay i dangerous, : Potorrh The Extract is the only specific walai III. for this disease. Cold In Head, &c. Onr " Catarrh Cure," specially pre- , pared to. meet serious cases, contains all the enrative properties of the Extract t our Naaal Syringe is invaluable for nse in Catarrhal atleclious, is simple and inexpensive. . . Sores, Ulcers, Wounds, Sprains & Bruises, ie.'" Ing, cooling and clcansintr. Use onr Oln t men t in connection with the "Extract; it will aid in uaaling, softvning and in keeping ont the ah-. Burns and Scalds. and pain It is nnriraled, and shonld be kept in every family, ready for nse in case of accidents. A dressing of onr Ointment will aid in healing ana prevent Kara. Inflamed or Sore Eyas. It can be nsed without tbs slightest fear or harm, quickly allaying all InCammation and soreness without pain. " Earache.Toothacheand Carpanho When the Extract is I uiiCal I C od according to directions, its effect is simply wonderful. PilciC Hllnd, Bleeding or Itching:. ICO, Itis the greatest known remedy: rapidly ciiriiisr when other medicines have failed.

on4ra Extract Medicated Paper for closet use, is a preventive againt Chafing and Piles. Our Ointment is of great service where the removal of clothing is inconvenient. For Broken Breast and Sore Nipples, socleanly andefflracions that mothvrs who kave once nsed it will never be without it. Our Ointment is the best emollient that can be applied. Female Complaints. No physician need be called in for the majority of female diseases if the Extract be used. Fall directions accompany each bottle. OATJTION. Pond's Extract -la?. $S?5S!S2. . has the words " Pond's Extract' blown in the glass, and our trade-mark on surrounding wrapper. None other isirennine. Always insist on having Pond's Extract. Take uo other preparation. It it never acleL in bulk. Price of Pond's Extract. Toi let. Articles and Specialties. POND'S EXTRACT.... 50c, $1.00 and $1 75 Catarrh Cure ....... 75 Plaster ' Inhaler.... 50 NasalSyrinee. ...... as Medicated Paper..., 15 roilet Cream 1 00 Dentifrice 50 Lip Salve 25 Toilet Soap(3cakes) SO Ointment 50 PRElATtEI nstT RT POND'S EXTRACT CO. New York and London. SOLD BY ALL DUl'tiUISTS. THE KENTUCKY STATE LOTTERY Is drawn In pursuance of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Kentucky FOR THE BENEFIT OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS. The Next Drawing takes place , '79. THE THREE FIRST CAPITAL PRIZES: $5,000 For $1 . KIJLLi SCHEME: 1 Prize of 15,U00 is 5,Ono . 8,000 , 5,000 . S.0UO . 2,000 , 5,000 . 6,000 l rate or h.ouu is 1 Prize of b,UJ0 la 2,500 are.. 1,000 are. 500 are.. , 100 are.. SO are.. - 2 Prizes of S Prizes of 10 Prizes or 50 Prizes of 100 Prizes of 2U0 Prizes or 500 Prizes of 6,000 S.W0 Voo 5,000 2,V2o So are., 10 are ,5 are . 1,000 Prizes of 27 Approximation Prizes amount'g to, 1,884 Prizes amounting to i ...167,925 TICKETS 9L, " Club rates upon application. - ",. Hf Address all orders to our Western Agent HOBBIS BICHMOSn, Covlnft-ttta, Ky. Or to our Oeneral Eastern Agents, - WILLI A CO. 6W Broadway, New York. List of drawlnes published in the New York Herald and Kan, Btaats Zeltung, Philadelphia Kecord, Pniladelphia Snnday Dispatch, Pittsburgh Dispatch and Louiaville Commercial. All out-ot-town ticket holders are' mailed a cony ot tbe official list as soon as received. -- The next roiiowing a rawing August so, istv. Wanted at once Oood, Reliable Agents la every Town. Address as above. TOR. SALE. FOR SALE Matthews' Patent RenewaDl Memorandum Book. Send for sample copy and price list. Samples sent postpaid U any aoaresson receipt ot ou cents ror kio. i, oi 40 cents for No. 2. Address, SENTINEL COM PANY. Indianapolis. FOR BALE Matthews' Patent Renewable Memorandum Book for 50 cents for No. 1. or 40 cents for No. 2. Sample, copies sent any. where on receipt or price. Address, HEN XI. NEL COMPANY. Indianapolis. FOR SALE Valuable farm at public sale 250 acres of first-class land, suitable for train or stock, will be fold to the highest bider on Wednesday, August 13, 1S7M. This farm is among tbe best In the White Water Valley, situated one mile north of Cambridge City, Wayne county, Indiana, on a pike and convenient to good market, railroads, schools and churches. Terms liberal. For infojrmatlon address Henry C Meredith, Cambridge City, Indiana, agent for Richmond National bank, Richmond, Indiana. '26-1 WANTED. TO LOAN Money In sums of SSOOtotlO.OUO, on Improved Indiana farms, 8 percent, interest, payable annually; no commission ; principal or any part can be paid at any t ime. H. B. Palmer i Co., 78 E. Market St., Indianapolis. WANTED Agents to sell onr new sporting and magto goods, novelties, magle lanterns, microscopes, cosmetics, ladles' articles eto. ; 47 new articles. Weekly salary of 120 and all expenses paid : 72 page 111 ostrated catalogue sent free to any address. LADD A CO., 28 Broadway, New York. WESTERN MALE SEIIIHARY Oxford O.. ML Hslvoke Plan. The 25th year will commence Septembers, 1878. Board. Tuition, Fuel and Lights, 17 net annum, mbu ior catalogue to Miss HELEN PEABODY, Principal.

11510 FOR SI. 9,000 FOR 1

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ion Withont DosiBg-The Better Fay. TkUDavMAKK. Liver&StomacliPad AND edleteaa Absorptive . AND FOOT PLASTERS S BODY ABSORPTION SALT, FOR Medicated Foot Baths. - These remedies, which are the sole exponents of the t ors by AbMratlosi as opposed to Itoaf nsr. have been proved the cheapest and .Hy-toal Keawdy for all piseasts Arlnlnsr frn Malaria r IMaorAered f isaiscs wr Liver, and It Is a well kno vn fact that nearly all the diseases that attack tne human body can be traced directly or lnalrectly to these two organs. The PAD Exerta m Pranpt and SpeelBe InMnesice apoai tbe System, atSMt BesMves be Potnoawas ecrui wbleb Pstsljic Its Action, and Bestore a Normal Jose df tson of Healtb laa Msaacr AbMlndr Wonderful. It Is known by actual experience that there Is no disease that attacks the youth or adult of both sexes that can even be modified by the nse of drug?, but that ean be acted on In a far more satisfactory and permanent manner t".y.. Lh "OI'MAH "VEB PAD CO.'S KEN K 1)1 Km. . am.MM;rirm u., floally Aefcnow 1-eda-ed to be steyond tbe Beoeb of Sled Ifine, bave been stayrd nnder tbo HIM Action at Tbeae Benaediea Alone. - If questioned, send tor onr pamphlet, tore s Law," giving extended inform lnformation and testimonials from the first people of the country. Mailed free. Tbe remedies are sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, except the Salt, which isent by expres at purchaser's expense. Consultation free, and solicited at onr office, or by mall, giving full description of your ease. Tbe public is earnestly cautioned against imitations and spurious articles. Buy none but the Uolmsa Pod. Descriptive Price List. Reffnlaur Pad 12; Incipient diseases of the stomach and liver, first stages chills aad fever, etc. Special Pad S3; chronic liver and stomach disorders of every form; also, malaria, biliousness, etc. XXX Pad or Hpleen Belt $5; Is Intended to - cover stomach, liver and spleen, and Is a sovereign remedy for all chronic troubles. Infant Pad SI JO; preventive and cure of cholera Infantum, diphtherial scarlet fe ver, summer complaints, eto. Body Plasters 50c. ror nervous and circulative troubles, g throwing off obstrnotions and removing ;J pains. For colds, sick a head aches, nambnesa Foot 1 pair COc Absorption Bait 1 box, 25 cts; 6 boxes, si.aa. of extremities, etc. Sent by mall, free of postage, on receipt of price. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEPOT, 34 FLETCHER & SHARPE'S BLOCK, : Intliajiapolis, Intl. Managers for the Northwest Tubpik A Piebce, Attorney!. STATE OF INDIANA, Marion connty, ss: In the Superior Court ot Marion county, in the State of Indiana. No. 22$. Room 2. Complaint, foreclosure. Samuel C. Banna, administrator of estate of James U. McKernan, deceased, vs. Martha H. Barrett, et al. Be it known, that oh the Slh day of July, 1878, the above named plaintiff, by his attorneys, filed In tbe office ot the clerk ot the Superior Court of Marlon county, in the State of Indiana, his complaint against tbe above named defendants and William H. Kilvert, the cross plaintiff having also filed In said clerk's office the affidavit of a competent person showing that said defendant, Thomas Brennan, is not a resident of the state of Indiana; and that a cause of action exists against him; said action being in relation to real estate and for the purpoH of enforcing a lein on certain real estate In Marion county, Indiana, and that said defendant la a necessary party thereto. Now, therefore, by order of said court, said defendant last above -named is ' hereby notlfled of the filing and pendency of said complaint against him, and that unless he . appears and answers or demurs thereto, at the calling of said cause on the 7th day of October, ltfta, the same being the second Judicial day of a term of said court, to be begun and held at the court house in the city of Indian apolis, on the first Mondav in October. 1879 said complaint, and the matters and things uierem coniatnea and alleged, will oe neara and determined in his absence. DANIEL M. RANSDELU Jul 30 Sw. - , Clerk. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. Session besrlns on the First of October, and continues nine months. Apply for catalogues to the Secretary of the Faculty, P. O. University of Virginia, Albemarle Co , Virginia. Chairman of the Faculty. T"OTICE OF . APPOINTMENT Notice 131 - is herebvaiven that the undershzned has been appointed executor of the last will and testament of Alios Perkins, late of Marion county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. WILLIAJU Jdai tttUOK. " Execntor. t4 AAA A Year tor n Sellable Business J.VVV (fan in each- county. New business. Address J. B. CHAnsaM, 75 West at., Madison, ina. MISCELLANEOUS. 77 a month and expenses gnaran teed toag'ts. H I Outfit free. Shaw A Co., Augusta Maine. $777 A year and expenses to ageats. Outfit free. Adl"s P.O. ViCKKKY,Augusta,Me FREE HKW a4 RHntita on hr Km mm DiMKtr. wiUioat M41ciim. rron wfcaurer 8Me. - ' tm.SUttn-CHemicmirdC.-'Ji.hmMXSa.K.Y. VOW TS BET THEM bsnsts ji.rt.lis. .on.oe acrnforula. tutfrf topj of ' turn HadBe Hosao S$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 borrowers. On strictly flrsV-elass city property, with good margin, my rates are 8 per cent, interest and 4 per cant, to cover all other expenses. On farm property well located, wiUi good margin, my rates are 7 per cent InteresV end & per cent to cover all other expenses. No delay or red tape. Applications by mail promptly answered. Address or call on WM. HENDERSON, ' H)fflce In iEtnA Building, Indianapolis,

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