Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1879 — Page 5
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1879.
TIVE L'EMPEREUB.
The Nefarious Designs of the Han on Horseback. Shall the TJsited States be the Scene of a ,- Coup d'Etat? The Selfish and Sordid Career of Ulysses Grant. S. -The following article, from the pen of A. J. Grover, receDtly appeared in the columns of the Chicago Express: Grant was a great general, probably, but as a military man he j L.11J .-.,,..,. r.llit,T anr, hnll bead lack. These qualities helped much to sarin his fame and rank over much better men. He also had judioious friends to look after his interests in Congress ana in we cabinet. He was apparently discreet in holding his tongue, but he kept his mouth shut from natural lack of the power of speech. His silence passed for wisdom, and served the better purpose, politically, of a counterfeit discretion, which stood for the genuine article. This Was nereuiusrjr iui - the luck that comes from mental inertia. Insensibility to human slaughter, suffering, the destiuction of life and property may be necessary to a great general, but it was another element of hereditary luck. With men and money ad infinitum, he conquered an enemy with neither men or money. But he certainly conquered. In the exultant and generous joy of the nation, when Lee surrendered to Grant, to him was ascribed all praise. At that clad moment the people would have made a hero of any donkey if he had been at the head of the army and had received Lee's sword. Grant was the lucky , man. An ass might draw a prize as well as . a philosopher, if he should bold the lucky ticket. Grant held the lucky ticket, great general or small, and drew the capital prize VI UIO TIOA - , Grant's mouth continued shut, or open only at the call of appetite. Want of thought and emotion locked his tongue. Silence passed for wisdom, and stupiuity and insensibility for discretion. He never had a thought, h9 Tiavar had a rjolicv. except nepotism and an : , - i xr - . T. oifta knd sold appointments without num ber and without ehamo. He called none Kni a notioKt men of the nation about him. that he mizht share their wealth, and be taught the (to him) priceless secret of how to . et neb. - A. T. STEWART COULD NOT QUALIFY. Others were called, hut were too manly or no mean to nav for their offices. Moses . Grinnel could not or would not pay, and Grant removed him for Tom Murphy and a Long Branch cottage. Stewart rewarded Grant's good intentions toward himself by heading a subscription wun iu,wu ior a $100,000,000 donation. Borie got the navy portfolio, and Grant got a $60,000 house '-in Philadelphia. McCulloch finally got the treasury on private terms. Grant's friends got the London financial agency of the treasury about the same time. J. Knssell Jones got the mission to Austria, and Grant got a valuable tract of land in West Chicago and West bide railroad . stock. He appointed all of his own and all of his wife's -brothers, uncles, cousins and -aunts" to office. Brother Corbin invested for Mrs. Grant in McCulloch's Black Fridays, and made money; also in an abandoned sugar refinery, which was sold to the -Government for a bonded warehouse. It cost the conspirators $300,000 and was Eold to the Government for $1,000,000. It took ' rf . iAkVn. Mil through authorising its purchase. There were seven shareholders in the job. Tom Murphy was one, a member of Grant's family was another, and each of the seven made $100,000 in the operation. Most of the seven took stock in the San Domingo scheme. -Grant appointed Professor White, Dr. Howe, Fred Douglas, the innocents, and Ben Wade to take charge of them, to go to San Domingo, make an investigation and report favora bly. They did so report. The scheme was , rosy. The jobbers were to buy San Domin go of the bogus president, Diaz, and then sell the harbor to the United States for double or treble the coat of the whole island, ' and then colonize and sell oat the remainder. A member of Grant'sifamily hfli two shares of the stock, and Tom Murphy two shares. Senator Sumner killed the thrifty enterprise, and Grant never forgave him for the honest act. Sumner was about the only genuine statesman the Republican party could boast at that time. Graut very natu- , rally hated him and STRUCK MKB A VENOMOUS SERPENT ' at him and his friends, and continued to strike long alter the honest senators aeatn. Then came the minor developments, Bjss Rhanant'a ntaal Ttalmnnt's steal. Indian rin? steals, the St. Louis, Chicago, Pekin, Mil-wanb-oo wrilabrv rinir stpAla. and mnltitndna of other Bteals, whitewashing prosecutions and pardons, which rendered Grant's administrations a stench in the nostrils of all honest men. Imbecile Urville, and Corbins by the half dozen, and many more distant rela tives were kept in office eight years, and a parting request that Hayes should continue certain favorites at the public crib, it is said, has ' been regarded, and they are in office stilL . ' General Grant's sons have been pror xnoted in the army over old and meritorious officers, in defiance of law. Grant made a ' bareain with ' Belmont, the spent of the 1 Botbachilds, by which Belmont was to and - did abandon Seymour and the Democratic party, and furnish funds, influence and .Democratic votes to elect Grant in 1868. . Grant, as president, was to work for the interest of European bondholders and Americas, money dealers during bis term of office. " Most faithfully did he afterward keep the juiamuus promise, xlo uwiys appumteu " tbe rich bondholders or their friends to oiuca. . xi t) uever appuiuieu m puur mail to ' an important office in eight years. Heregarded poverty aa a crime, and despised tbe j. poor; forgot his former estate, and vastly overestimated toe value oi weaitn. f- ; HJt WAS AND IS MONET MAD. 8inea landine in California he has said he . "wished to engage in something to make - some money." iie married his only daoguter to a wealthy English scion of nobility. ' His eldest son was supposed to have married ' . riches, but perhaps they have been swallowed np by the bondholder's policy espoused by ."- his father. The youngest marriageable son has just engaged himself to the only daugh- - ter of the wealthiest banker in California, If . not in the whole country. In obedience to " the conditions of the Belmont bargain, and In AntinaKnn ii tha wiawi a-if ftha lakelrliria' . Republicans, among whom were Sherman, Morton, Wilson, Logan and many others, Grant vetoed the bill to increase the curTtracj $300,000,000 in 1873. It was done unexpectedly in tbe night, nnder pressure of a special car load oi JNew lorx Dancers end brokers under the lead of Belmont. The defeat of - this precipitated and aggravated the panic and terrible financial suffering which has held the country in its cruel grasp ever since that time. He intensified the national calamity resulting from sndden contraction, by secretly conspiring to demonetize silver, and by the credit acts of his administration and all in fulfillment of his perfidious bargain with Belmont and the Kothschilds. Finally, on retiring from office tbe high office which ha most shamefully degraded
and disgraced he left his country more dls tressed financially than it ever was before, and started on a luxurious trip around the world at the expense of the rich men he had so faithfully servsd for eight years- He has been feted, wined, dined and made rich by the foreign holders of bonds he had prostituted his office to double in value, at tbe expense of the financial ruin of the people who elected him. He has taken two or three years' training under tbe tuition of luxurious despots in tbe art of arbitrary government and the best means of extorting revenue from the toiling masses, and returns to this country TO RUN FOR THE PRESIDENCY THE THIRD TIME, with perhaps, the secret hope and expectation that he may become more than president, and may have occasion to put in practice the useful lessons he has so diligently learned from emperors and kings. Belmont's bag of money equips a right royal reception to meet him at the Golden Gate a reception unprecedented in a Republic, and worthy of the first emperor of the United States of America. Tbe first act in tbe drama has pasted, but the plot thickens. This genuine royal reception is to follow
the "Silent Man" across the continent. The hero worshiping spirit of the masses is to be appealed to throughout the country, and worked up to the highest pitch of enthusiasm, and at the proper time the Republican convention is expected, with unanimous voice, to nominate him for the ominous and dreadei tbird term. Money is the ioepirer of the whole scheme, and will be relied upon to override the best judgment of the people and secure his triumphant election. And very likely money will succeed. it generally does succeed. It it does, then will come a third term ot mercenary jobbing and disgraceful misgovernment, if not a cbauge in the nature of tbe Govern ment itself. If a change shall come, Grant will rely, as did Napoleon, on votes to make himself emperor, and he will rely on money te) procure the votes. Tbe glitter of pageant and of wealth will, perhaps, captivate the masses of this country as it does the masses of the old world. The cry will resound in English, '-Vive la emperor!" and ail in the name of liberty, as in France. Is it not time to pause in our insane bellowing for Grant, under the manipulation of the money kine-i. before the final act in this terrible farce shall be reached and the curtain drops upon a ruined Republic? 1 defy any mau to men tion any public measure of a public nature, or any line of public policy, that Grant as a civilian ever suggested or executed, except the San Domingo job and the legislation for the bondholders above alluded to, and these he did not by any means originate. Grant never had an idea above his personal appe tite, his personal ambition, hU pocket or his lamiiy. HE IS NO STATESMAN. His personal habits and moral example are not such as the youth of America may safely follow. His record as a soldier prior to the war of the rebellion is not creditable. His sword was drawn in defense of tbe Union to supply his family with the necessaries of life. He had no sympathy with tbe North. His wife's family were slaveholders, and their interests were with the South. His wife held slaves till they went down his throat while living a life of dissipation near St. Lome, liraut was as much a mercenary soldier as was L Jgan, though a very fortun ate one. As a statesman, he is a ridiculous pretension a tool of jobbers, a low selfsee feer, without ideas or conviction on any public question. Is it possible that the American people will elect such a man to the presidency for the third term? Do they owe him a debt of gratitude still? Has he not already been amply rewarded? If the debt is still unpaid, it never can be paid, eo let him be made emperor at once, and the office hereditary in his fam lly. ' Ic is said that he will protect tbe negro. What did he ever do when in office to protect tbe negro? Nothing. And be never will protect tbe negro. He appoint ed Mosby, Slringfellow and a score of other rebels of tbe worst stripe to office. His wife's relatives were generally, it not all rebels, aud his sympathies were always before the war with the slaveholder and against the negro. He was a pro-slavery Democrat, and always voted with that party before the war, as aid "Dirty Work Logan." Has be been converted? A man will conquer his prejudices for a major-general's commission or the presidency. But Grant drifted into tbe presidency without conquering his prejudices or reforming his politics, and with no more volition than his cigar smoke. Tbe current set that way and bore him along to the office, 1'or which he was so eminently unfit. He proved a king leg in statesmanship and a sing-stork in greed. It will be tbe saddest day this pnblic has ever seen that finds.him president or tie third term. The Outlook for Hogs. Cincinnati Price Current, Nov. 6. The production of meats for the past year amounts to about 1,600,000,000 pounds, and of lard about 425,000,000 pounds, or 1.2S7.000 tierces. The total product amounts to 2,025,000.000 pounds. DoriDg tbe same time the exports were about 835,000,000 pounds of meats and 339,000,000 of lard, or a total of 1,165,000,000 pounds of product. This indicates that the exports have equaled 57 per cent, of the Western production, against 59.84, 57 01, 52 15, and 42 71 respectively for 1878. 1877, 1876 and 1875. The opening of the winter packing season, which commenced last Saturday, but which in its records will embrace more or less of the business of the last few days of October, has been more active than at corresponding time last year, and likely not excepting any previous season. Hogs were plenty, and the fall exceptionally favorable for feeding; prices were high, and a free marketing of them now means a less excessive deluge of them later cn, and thus more assurance of steadier markets and better average prices than would result from a holding-back method, it is a wise policy on the part of farmers and feeders. The most of the large packing points are now doing an active business, and partly cured meats are going largely into consumption on orders from domestic consuming districts. In regard to the outlook for hogs for tbe winter, we eee no possibility of there being less than last winter, and not much probability of an increase much, it any, greater than half a million head, which means that our present guess would be 8,000,000 head, though there are many who expect a much larger increase. There will be plenty, and the packing business promises to be hazardous, in view of current and prospective prices of hogs. Current prices of hogs at leading points are 75 cents to $1 per 100 pounds higher than a year ago. Can Piles be Cored? is the most important question to-day with suffering millions who, when looking at the long list of useless pile nostrums, feel as the afflicted Bible Patriarch, like exclaiming: "I have heard many such thing, miserable comforters are ye all, how long will ye vex my soul and breac me In' pieces with words?" It is not recorded that Job had piles, but he could not have had anything more painful, and the same question might have been asked then as since for three thousand years: Can E lies be eared T We believe that Dr. Sllsbee as solved tbe problem, for nothing is more certain than that his "Anakesls" does abeolute'y and promptly cure the worst cases of piies. wnea nan a minion oi amiciea assert positively that It haa eared them, and In 20 years no one has ased tbe doctor's wonderful remedy without instant relief, and by following his simple Instructions aa to habit and diet, all were .benefited and over 95 per oent. eared, all arguments and theories of those who havn't used them go for nangbt. Anakesis la now prescribed by physicians or all schools and has been pronounced as near Infallible as Is possible. It Is easily applied, perfectly safe, Instantly relieves pain, and ultimately cures the most Inveterate eases. It has grandly solved the problem that Piles ean be cared. Samples of "Anakesls" are sent free to all sut ler rs, on application to P. Neustaedter A Co. sole manufacturers of A nk a 1. Boi 8e, New York. Also sold by drusslsta where. Price 1 per box. every -
THE GRANT POOX.
Another Old soldier Heard From. Democrat, are you ready for the Grant boom in Indianapolis? The man who vetoed tbe soldiers' equalizing bounty bill, and In nine days afterward signed the bill increas ing his own salary $25,000 per year. Oh, consistency thou art a j weL If General Grant would come here as a private citizen, with the general understanding that be was not a candidate for a third term, there is no man who would assist more readily to help along the boom tban myself. But wbue his lips are silent as to bis future course, God forbid, that L as a Demo cratic soldier, who served over throe years, should have it said that I, who differ from him politically, should assist him and his party to send him rejoicing on bis way to glory and the presidential ohair. 1 Know mis to oe me sentiment or many ex-soldiers, who voted and helped to make him president twice, but who do not believe in monopoly in tbe presidency. When his boom in Indianapolis was announced, and was published to be non-political, no man felt nor took a deeper interest in it than myself, especially for the interest and welfare of Indianapolis. JJut when toe committees were appointed a single glance at once opened the eyes of every thinking Democrat. For instance, the committee on Invitation of ex-soldiers, which consisted of 19 members. Two out of the 19 were Demo crats, and the other 17 were Radicals of the deepest dye. I asked the question of some of the Radical committee why they did not make the con mittee equal. Their answer was that that was about an equal percentage. Democrats, how does this kind of talk suit you? You who risked yopr lives on the battle held, ana because you happen to am. r politically Irom this sell same idol of the Radical party, must turn out and help put him again upon tbe throne. - ' All praUe is due to tbe Democrats of Indiana for being outspoken in the manner they did. The Radicals found tbe boom was not working to suit them and immediately sent one of their number to bear the tidings to the great chieftain. The next day the news came booming over the wires the great could not visit Indianapolis on the uth, but no reasons stated. Gentle reader, imagine tbe reason yourself. .a. ivi u u u , u & O v. v. .u.n au., and water way of doing business, and say let every tub stand on its own bottom, and If Grant and tbe Radicals want a boom, let them have it of their own accord; but Democrats, especially ex soldiers, keep your hands and skirts clear, and do not let it be 1 We nmn am Ml inif ,1 w1 nf Ihla tnl IP said of you that you helped to put a man in the presidential chair who has proved be yond a shadow of doubt that he never has been, and is not now, a friend to yon; if so, he would not have vetoed the equalization bounty bill. an .x soldier. Indianapolis. Nov. 8, 1879. A Great Enterprise. The Hop Bitters Manufacturing Company is one of Rochester s greatest business euter prises. Their Hop Bitten have reached a sale beyond all precedent, having from their intrinsic value found their way into almost every household in the land. Graphic. Faela That We Know. If you are suffering with a severe cough. cold, asthma, bronchitis, consumption, lo6s of voice, UcElirg in tbe throat, or any aaec tion of the throat or lungs, we know that Dr. King's New Discovery will give you immediate relief. We know of hundreds of cases it has completely cured, and that where all other medicines had failed. No other remedy can show one half as many permanent cures. Now, to give you satisfactory proof that Dr. King's New Discovery will cure yon of asthma, bronchitis, hay fever, consumption, severe coughs and colds, hoarseness, or any throat or lung disease, if you will call at J. C. French, Indianapolis Iod., drug store you can get a trial bottle for ten cents or a regular size bottle for $1.00. An Event to Occur In New Orleans. It is well known to everybody that the foremost warriors in the Confederate Army, Generals G. T. Beauregard and Jnbal A. Ear ly, are called to meet in that city at an early date to arrange the tickets, etc., for the extraordinary grand distribution of the Louieana State Lottery, which occurs on December 16, under the sole supervision of these man who deservedly enjoy tbe popular con fidence, uver S5U0.UU0 win be distributed. aud any one anxious to try their luck should write to DA. A Dauphin, if. u. Box ws. JNew Orleans, La , or same person at No 319 Broac"way, JNew lork City, M. X. What Compound Oxygen Is Doing. A lady officer of 8r. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Norfolk, Va., writes: "My improvement is wonderful, though slow. I have gained in flesh, and they say that I appear 20 years younger. With moegrateful thanks, and the wish that I could spread the reputation of your wonderful agent, I am, etc." All information sent free. Das. Ktabkky & Pales. 1112 Girard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Summer's Heat relaxes the system and renders us liable to attacks of diarrhoea, dysentery, bloody-flux, cholera-morbus, cramps in stomach, colic, and other painful and dangerous affections for which Dr. Pierce's Compound Extract of Smart-Weed compounded from the bett French brandy, Jamaica ginger, smart-weed, or water-pepper, anodyne, soothing and healings en ma and balsams, is a most potent specific It is equally efficacious la break ing up colds, levers, and inflimmatory attacks. Every household should be supplied with It. Fifty cents by druggists. SPECIAL NOTICES. 1,375.87 Profits la 30 Days. What 110 has done in Wall street by legiti mate stock speculations. Pamphlet explaining everything sent free. SIMPSON A CO., 19 Exchange Place, New York. Get Lyon's Heel SUfrhers applied to thote new boots or shoes before you run them over. o Bneklea) Armlca Salve. The best salve In the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all kinds of skin eruptions. This salve la guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case, or money refunded. Price 2S cents per sox. r or sale by J. c r rencn, Masomo Temple. o ' The Secret Key to .Health. "The Science of Life; or, Self-Preservatlon,' 800 pages. Price, only VI. Contains 60 valuable prescriptions, either one of which is worth more than 10 times the prioe of the aook. 11 lustra ted sample sent on receipt of 6 cents for postage. Address Dr. W. H. Parker, 4 Bolnnch street, Boston, Mem. 0 Chew JacKson's Best Sweet Navy Tobacco. AMNOUNOBUBNT. THOSE who contemplate going to Hot Knrlncrs for the treatment of syphilis. gleet, scrofula and all cutaneous or blood dis eases can oe oureu ior uoo-iiuru wo nw, i such a trip at the old reliable stand. I have been located here for 23 years, and with the advantage of such a long and successful ex perience can confidently warrant a cure la aiimuna. Ladles needing a periodical pill can get them at my offloe or by mall at 11 per box. Office, 48 Virginia avenne, xnaianapous, id D. B. EWINQ. M. D , and Partner, MI8CELLANEOTJS. 77 a month and expenses guaranteed toag'u. 11 Ontnt free, bhaw t wo., Augusta jaaine, A year and expenses to agents. Outfit 9 II free. Add 's P.O. VlCKEBT.AugustaMe FREE SKW aa Mratlfto nr tor Mm in DcMHtr, witfeMt Madtcio. tnm rturw cum. M11A UmMituit Hunt w ft.r.u.kaiaaa,a.c
PONY PORTABLE OXraCTJXAJR. SAW MILL,
Standard Circular Saw Mill, Engines, Boilers, THRESHING MACHINES. General Foundry, Machine and Agricultural Works. EAGLE MACHINE WORKS, &Send for Circular."! Indianapolis.
(flticura BL000 AND SKIN HUMORS The Scourice of MankindOld Sleittotis of Treatment aud Remedies) a Failure. Cuttcura Rrholvkst is the Oreat Blood Parlrter and Uver Btlmulaot, is the most aearchlns. cleansing, and purifying agent of this century, it may be detected In tbe saliva, sweat, lima, blood, and urine in 40 minute after taking the first dose, showing that it has entered tne circulation and been carried to every part of lha system. It forever eradi cates the virus or wypnins, ecioiuia, cancer and Canker, those terrlblu blood poisons that rot out tne macninery oi m, ruling tne oouy with foul oomiDtlons. Taken Internally in conjunction with the external application of CUTicuRAtbe Great Sam Cure, it speedily outes Scrofulous Ulcers, and Old Sores, Bait Ktieum, Pi-orlasls, Tetter, Ringworm, Bcald Head, DandrnD. and all Itcfilng and Soaly Diseases of the Skin and Scalp. ECZEMA oTHE SCALP, BrtHul LlmbilSml. Messrs. Weeks 4 Pottkb: Ueutlemen I can not refrain from adding my debt uf gratitude to you for having placed within my reach the wonderful Cuticuba, remedies wblch have rendered unnecessary all further experiment of physicians, and la a remarkably short space of time Usui rid me of a loathsome disease. I dispensed with all physicians two years ago, believing thev did me noermd. The CutIcuka has stoo ped this uji satisfactory expense even if It were necessary and I bad the courage any longer to follow their ad vice and brought tbe long looked -for care and happiness. 1 have been afflicted with Eczema or fait Rheum on mv scaln. breast and limbs lor five years. daring wmch time I have been under the treatment of physicians, or at mineral springs, or taking some kind of medicine. I have been treated by Drs. of . Dr. of . and vi sited sulphur springs, and taken numbers of l atent medicines, all without the faintest approach to a cure. April 1st last 1 began the use of Cuticuba, which was immediately successful in mv case, entirely curing me. l nave not nau a clean scaip lor to years uu til the use of Cuticuba entirely healtrd it and left It clean and healthy. The otber parte of my booy wereanecteu lu a more sggravatea form, but are now completely healeu. I be lieve myself entirely cured. I shall continue the (jUTicur. A KEsoLVENT as aireciea, ior its wonderful uctlon on tbe stomnch and bowels, and cooling Influence on the blood. It will aflord me pleasure, as i nave aone in many cases, to urge tne amiciea to use these won derful remedies. Yours, etc.. STEPHEN CUOWEI4 New Bedford, Sept. 30, 1878. A RUNNING SORE Cared In One Week. Messrs. Weeks & Potter Some three or four weeks ago I ordered a box of Cuticuba for a bad case of Salt Rheum. Tbe back of one of mv wife's hands was a running sore. In one week from the day it arrived her hand was well and has remained so up to to-day. K. P. DAGGETT. M ii. ford. Me.. Jane 10. 1878. Note. Reader, dont you think these cures remarKaDieT CUTICURA SOAP medicinal nd Toller. Is prepared from Cutlcura In a modified form. and is positively Indispensable in the treat ment ot Skip and Scalp Diseases, we recommend it for the preservation of the Skins of In fants, for gentlemen who shave and are troubled with tender faces, for those who de sire a clean and wholesome Skin and Scalp. and for all purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery; ltsdelightfal and refreshing fragrance equals or surpasses tne nnest rarisian soaps. The Coticcka Remedies are prepared Dy weeks et jr otter, jnenii8is ana Druggists. No. 360 Washington street. Boston, nd are for sale by all druggists. Pnce of Cuticuba, small boxes, 50 cento ; large boxes, containing iwu ana one-nan times tne quan tity oi small, i; kesolvext, i per Dome Cuticuba Soap, 25 ceuts per cake; by mall, cents; three cases, to cents. . a Pain and Weakness can CVJe--'nfS not exist where they ate kx-m K.IIUA ITl,.- .11.1,-, VOLTAIC maiXTBOrtrenhen and suTport Jj. - 0gi Weak and Painful Parts, LA SI t-1 cure Chronic Ailments and Diseases of the Liver and Kidneys; absorb all Polsot'B from the Blood, and thus prevent Fever and Agne. Malarial and Contagions Diseases; stimulate the Stomach and Digestive Organs when placed over the pit of the stomach, and prevent Dyspepsia, Bilious Colic, Cramps and Pains. NOTICE Is hereby given to the citisens of the Kleventh (11) ward. In the city of In dianapolis, Center township, Marlon county. Indiana, mat 1, uuver sj. iwris, a iubmb inhabitant of said ward, over the age ol twentyone years, will apply to the Board of County CommUsloners of said county, at their December meeting, for a license to sell for one year, spirituous, vinous, and malt liquors, in a less auantity than a quart at a time, with the piivege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. i ne precise location 01 ine premises wue-rwu I desire to sell said liquors is described as follows: On the north side of lot No. 4, square fifty-five, and known as No. 23 North Illinois street. In the city ot Indianapolis, Center township, Marion County, Indiana. (Signed) OLIVER C. DAVIS. AGEHTS WASTED FOB A TOUR AROUND THE WORLD BY G-B-N. GUsAJNT! This Is tho raatest Solllov Boots ever published, and the only complete and authentic history of Gen. Grant's Travels. Send for circulars containing a full description of tbe work and our itxtra Terms to Agents. Address JONES BROS. & CO., Cincinnati,. Special Mice to Young Men. A mem ber of the T. H. O. A. who Buffered from Local Weakness, Nervousness Debility, Lost Manhood, caused by TOCrHrCii BatatORfS, was speedily cured by an old retired physician after the failure of every advertised remedy. ' nls Kaeel pt baa since rand thaaasada I will send It to sufferers fSEI VF CtsABGK, with advice. Address E. TRE MAINE, 205 East Fourteenth Street, New York, STOLEN. STOLEN From the undersigned, at Martinsvllle, 111., on Monday evening. September 15, 1879, a Small Black Mare, round bodied, about 16 hands high, weighing 7U0 or 800 pounds, small hump on back under saddle, eight years old last spring, rather stylish. Had on when stolen, a new fair leather saddle, and a dark bridle with racking bit. Thief Is about five feet five inches tall, rather spare, about 25 years of age, dark mustache and imperial; had on dark clothing and box. toed shoes. I will give t2S reward for return of Mars, and Clark eonnty offers ISO reward for arrest and conviction of thief, T. M. & ALLELE, Martinsville, Clark eonnty Illinois.
101
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. GRAND PREMIUM GIFT OF A GENUINE OIL PAINTING GIVEN TO EACH AND EVERY SUBSCRIBER OF THIS PAPER 1 A GRAND OPPORTUNITY, READ I
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each and'every Premium furuisbrd ourter this arranavnient will be a Href-class, genuine Oil Hunting, painted by a nrst-class artist, on good canvas, aud that we are selling even inferior works every week
fur from tin to S25 each. nr ,K. waiitaHl PrMnhim ml Tnlnt1nOTt
out the Premium Certificate found below, and sends it to the National School of Design. 124 Wells St., Chicago. Ills., together with eight three-cent stamps, or SS cts. currency, to pay cost of mailing and postage. Kau-h PatlaUata; will ax aeat ky awall, securely packed and warranted lo reach its destination uninjured. .
Cut cut this Certificate and seal it to the National School of Design. It is -rorta $10. DDCMIHM PrOTiriPATC " r-ript of thi. Ortinoate, toother with S3 eta. to rT ! rnLIYIIUiYI IsLn I If I Oft I L and nuulms, e willkuixi by mail to the subscriber a naely-executcd ORIGINAL HIGH-CLASS OIL PAINTING. Thli Ortincats It good until January 1, lssn, after which IS eta. additional will he charted. Va Painting will be sent without thia CertiScale, eicept on receipt of Slw the retail prioa tat IbeM Premium Oil Painting. All Certificate muat be sent directly to a) Tbe National School of Desism, 124 Wells St-, Ctaieafco, Ills.
ainsrw Tliror alosrBllfTinalt All Certificates shonld heeent In before January 1. ISO. Af!
, sent In
cate must in all cases be sent, otherwise persons not entitled to the benefits or tn is arrangement migns reap the advantage. Each Painting will be strongly protected by heavy wrappings, and postage wilt be prepaid thereon out of the S3 eta. sent in. But one Painting can he obtained for each copy of tbe paper this week, anal I be ei-tlrate will wt ax agala r!atSt hence, the importanoe if cutting It out at once and sending It in for redemption. Address all Certificates direct to THE NATIO AL, SMIIOOL. OF DESIU.1, 1 Wells -. Cfcleaaxw, lift, and yon will receive by mall the finest and moat valuable Art Premium ever offered in this country
The Christmas Cabinet. K FIVE WEW JlimcXES AT ONS HALF Til kilt VAI.IE. H 48 Cts, USEFUL. AVtrslMO, ASD lhsrkucxivs. 48 CH gSS Wo. 1. Japanese Magnetie Flab. rive varieties, complUl SMtbox efJuwMH wood.wita jataua baauxx n. !lk luw, a4 -oaticaoek. The aia sua Ua kaok, aad tbe laeay SaaenBaa draw tbem owl of It: 2. He Plas Ultra Poc Uet K n I fe. Warranted deBtquaUtjeavlatesll theapriaa cannot irol alafaWaor wear ta pocket, beinreurely oob.obiob wtuu tbe baadl.walcb ia eae aelta Diecai lta biveDthoa la eeuerj, elegantly aauaed, are! rlaa totj wy. Mse ef ftaettsora, toagb end earable, I l;t cel ol I bo aocaet. Saleable far ladies er tlBtea. A a, aeMel ftrleue. - No. d.. Plnaumi RarJ Game Two gomes In one, the lmom ews. vnaii, jouteu, aa most origin! ererpabltabod. Capable f e4tM ebaagoe, fe say aamber of ljm baa a qul a ocil peeluno. Tbe lea arae.lacledla 0tfoe. in. Inrer, ead forfeit Cerda, will keep the ftaUeM partlr aaa eocia ratberior la Irene ef UagUUr fe aa eun eieeinf. K. 5. Japanese Crepe Pictares. ReDresentlna ele-a-ently ereeaed Jaoeneea lediea, bBtllnl hadleew,rderUtlcaily drawn furores, transferred In Indelible colors te Japanese Eloslle t'repe of tbe loses takn. They Kobe beeettrel and brilliant tidls fee bus of rasa and bwwesala, Metreptees for table eeers, etc; are eery fashionable, and swill be edulittd nd f-- ' 1 J--lnmtH anon try year friend. Oar IllnatratloDS ahow but four ef tbe article, la Cabi, and these ea a-reallr tedsced !. (Cm Pletare net ehowa beta dlAcelt In - Ulaatrate.) We fare!. the entire lot, ef g article,, in nil, ta a awonsense, eyaneii, sssipsie,iereaiyci e-ate, er Is three cent posters stemps. This effw 1 Bed for the pwpos of tetrodnring ear roe in new loenllUse, end te procare new newee for ear Holiday Catalrren, Ws will sand 3 Csbtact for SI. 20. -K farther redncUea. Bead Be clean poalawo stomps ef any d , Sena neaaeM ewYork.' eucseas. aedrss all oedeia to Eureka Trick and N-velty P. O. Box 4614. 39 Abb St- K TM$ advtrtliwunt wUt net aeor ntsH" Bakkb, Hobs A Hkndricks, Attorneys. CJTATE OF INDIANA, Marion eonnty, as, O In tbe Superior Court of Marl op county. In the State of Indiana. No. 2d,i&2. October term.lsTU. , Jonathan Edwards, trustee, vs. Rachel C. Locke, Richard Pearson, the Mltcbeil A Ram-rueh-burg furniture company, John B. Gerard, Ettone S. Mlracml, Alllo Moxelti, Frederick P. F. Temple, William Workman and D. Freeman (whose christian name is to plaintiff unknown), and E. F. 8 pence (whose christian name Is to plaintiff unknown), aeaignees of said Frederick P. F. Temple aud William Workman etal. Be it known, that on the 18th day of Angnat 187t. the above named plaintiff, by his attorneys, filed In the olfloe of the cleik of the Superior Court of Marion county, in the Stats of Indiana, his complaint against the above named defendants, and on the ISthday of October, 187, the said plaintiff filed in open court. In aald Superior court, the affidavit ol a competent person, showing that said defendants, Rachel C. Locke, Richard Pearson, the Mitchell A Rammelsburg Furniture company, Jonn B. Gerard, Ettone S. Mlragoll, Atllo Moxettl, Frederick P. F. Temple, William Workman and D. Freeman (whose christian name Is to afflan. nuknown), and E. F. H pence (whose christian name Is to a fflant unknown ), assignees of aald Frederick P. F. Temple and William Workman are not residents of tbe state of Indiana: that sa d defendants are necessary parties to the complaint In aald cause; that a cause or action exists agalnat t hem ; and that the same is In relation to real estate. Now, therefore, by order of said court, said defendants last above named are hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them, and that nnleas they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cause on the 6th day of January, 1880, tbe same being the first Judicial day of a term -of said court to be begun and held at the Court House In the city of Imlianaoolis,on tne first Monday In January, 1880 said comDlaint, and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will bs beard and determined In their absence. DANIEL M. RAN BD ELL, Clerk. Oct 28. Am A MONTH Asants Wanted-TS best J il H II filing articles in the world ;1 sample aw W w rr free. Address tmj aVroa s, Detroit, MicbJ
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T School of TWtirn, of Chicago. Ills., wblch awnre painted on canvas by a corns of the nest arttsta in srn.iui: .,iia,.ii .,mu mure uur wi in.vnnnuv Their beauty and value may be determined by tLe Assure all subscribers that jshiiwal ocmmt or UBira. will ho i-i vpn to each reader of this D&Der who CIltA thereafter require . additional. Tbe Certifi AuttawriBvexi by the wwitk r Kesttaclty. Fopalai- tally Drawls?; af the Commonwealth Distribution Co., At Macauley's Theater, In the City of Louisville, on NOVEMBER 29, 1879. These drawings, authorized by act of the Legislature of lhtm, and sustained by all the courts of Kentucky (all fraudulent advertisements of otber lottery com pan lea who claim the sole ownership of "all the grants In Kentucky," to the contrary notwithstanding), occur regularly on tbe last day of every month (Sundays excepted), and are supervised by prominent citizens of the State. 6md and aapreeasated ear etas af trt atew feat area. Every tleket-aalder tmm sVe rala awu supervisor, call ant mt Banket sad asa it plaeees la tttm Wis eel. The Management call attention to tbe grand opportunity presented of obtaining, for onlySi, any of THE FOLLOWING PRIZES: 1 Prize of 1 Prise of 30,000 lo.ouo IVCKO 10,009 10,000 io,ou 10,000 12,000 10,000 2,700 L8C0 80S 1 Pr ze of. 10 Prizes of 20 Prizes of 1(0 Prizes of 2U0 Prizes of 00 Prizes of 1000 Prizes of y Prites of Prizes of Prizes of 1.000 each. 500 each100 each60 each20 each. 10 each1 Approz'n Prizes. 200 " " 100 " " 19ts0 Prizes S1U,400 Whole Tickets, 12. Half Tickets, fL 27 Tickets. foO. 56 Tickets, f 100. All applications for dab rates should be made to tbe home office. Full list of drawing published in Louisville Courier-Journal and New York Herald, and mailed to all ticket-holders. For tickets and Information address T. J. CO MM ERFORD. Oonrler-Jonrnal building Louisville, Ky. UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION Over Haifa Million Distributed. Louisiana State Lottery Cs This Institution was regruarrr incot porate. try the Learlsl&ture of the State for educational and ohari table nnrroaes In 18S8 for the teraa f TarratT-flce Voara, te which contract tha Inviolable faith of the State Is nledaed. with capital of VlfmjXO, to which It has slnos sdW ed a reeerve fund of $XoO,000- lis okajto bxtsusirrniBKB DkAWfsos will takeplae monthly. It kkvws scaxsw oa lKiarpoKe. Look at tha follnwinc distribution: GIAIO PKOHEBADE CO Jf CERT, . during which will take place the 115th GRA5D MOXIIXY AXD THI Extraordinary Semi - Annual Drawing, At New Orleans, Tuesday, December 18, 1ST, Under the personal supervision and management of Cea. G. T. BRACREO 1KB, or Laalslanaat saa Geat. J. A. KaRL,T,ar e-.lala. CAPITA I PRIZE. $100,000. VNOT1CE TVeketa are Ten Dollars only. Halves, S3. Fifths, 12. Tenths, L. USf Of FRIZSS. 1 Capital Prize of HOP ,000 tl00,00 1 urana mie oi ou,uuw aujuva 1 Orand Prize of 20400. 20XOS 2 Large Prizes of 1000 'X Asj,ooe 4 Large Prises of 6,tiuu 20 prizes oi i,tJ 50 " 600 20,UU 25,009 ao,ooa 40,08V Jts im " auo atjo 0 100 10,000 , " io AJTTTOXXalATroBT TMIXBL ,100,0 100 Approximation Prizes of 1300luu no. uu, iw108 v do. . c. do. 11,27V Prizes, amounting toJlbXtJSK Gn. O. T. lnregard, of La. I r,mmiioners Gen. Jnbal A. Early, of Va., wuuuiieiuoiei Application for rates to clubs should nnly bv made to the offloa ol the Company in JNew ur leans. Write for circulars or send orders to ST. A. DAUPRIS, P.O. Box 602, New Orleans, La., or Same Person at Ha. S19 Biaaawsy. Haw Tark. or JOHN T. WOODWAKB, 17 North Illinois St., Indianapolis. FOR S-A-XaB. FOR BALE Matthews' Patent Henewabia Memorandum Book for 60 cents for No. 1 or O eenta for No. 2. Bample copies sent ansa, where on receipt Price. Addiwas. &EN1ANEL COMPANY. Irxdianaj)qls,
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