Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1880 — Page 6
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1880.
6
' " 1 ! i a 1 1
ALL. IS NOT LOST.
C. T. C. "Nil desperandum Teucro duce, et ansplce Tencro." Horace. AU I not lost, yet the fight I not over; See! men of valor, our fla i tili there; What tho' the rkirmlsh line falls back to cover, Never give placo in your hearts to despair. All 1b not lout; yet remember Antietam, Remember the hero of Chaixvllorsville; Under the lead of our "Teucro-' we'll meet 'em. As he did the Southron on Gettysburg hill. All Is not lost; let the He of November Find us all marshaled In battle array. Then to extlniish the last dying cmler, Hate kept alive 'twixt the Blue an4 the Gray. All is not lost; see the lcacon fires burning, Lighting the ebon vault with their red are. Round them are leathered a milliou heart, yearning. Wrcatiirg with hope for their country in prayer. All is not loct; yet, then bo up and doing, Follow the fl.is where it leads you me ay, ILiircoci and English, all others eschewing, Under their auspices we'll win the day. CONCKKNINO WOMEN. ln.'t this decidedly Frcnchy? A UarLsian tom nSVra for sale "the rkin of serpent that BP.lnr-pd the first woinati. with testi monies of theologians. Miss Frcderika Terry and Miss Ellen 3Iartvn, the only ladicV law firm in Chica go, are both graduates 01 tne-uw uepanuitnt of the University 01 Jiu-nigun. The latest case of display in New York City is an f 8,000 bonnet. It is described as "a model of quiet tasie, oemj in ura, maroon pluh, with little other trimming than diamonds. In three Counties of Washington Terri tory the Democrats have nominated ladies Kitsap, -Miss Ordway; in Tierce, Anna C. "Weiler; in King, Anna Bean. Teresa Tua, of Turin, a young girl of . thirteen, bore off tho first prize as a violinist at the Tans Conservatory, last year, ön has been offered $40,000 for a five years' tour through the United States. Says the Denver (Colorado) Inter-Ocean: 'What right has the law of the land to imprison a man one foot this side the Territory of Utah for having two wives, when one foot on the other side it lets him have twentv?' And that is the case in a nutshell. " A lady traveler remarks that the cleanliness and order on board ship, where all the work is done by men, including that of the kitchen and the care of tha cabins, almost convinces her that woman has mistaken her vocation in attempting to grapple with housework. At the Social Sc ience Meeting in Saratoga, Mr. Conway thought in a few years co-education of the sexes in colleges and universities of England would be an assured fact. The example of America in its Vaar, Oberlin and other colleges has great in fluence in leading England in the paths of the co-education of women. Nothing bears so directly upon the interests of home, and nothing should interest women more than those who teach and control the common schools. Why shall IndU ana longer delay in this matter? So long as two-thirds of the teachcis in this State are wmen, why not allow them to express their sentiments in the selection of. the officer under whose direction they mu3t labor? Helen M. Cougar, in Lafayette Courier. Miss Sarah A. Crown has accepted the Democratic nomination for . State Superintendent of Public Intsruction in .Kansas. She says that in nominating her without solicitation on her part, tho Democratic party of tho State has shown that it is in full accordance with the JeCVrsonian doctrine, that the office should seek the man, and not the man the office, and alio that it fully appreciates tho fact that the best interests of the schools damand that the office of Superintendent, both of the State and County, should be, as far as possible, disconnected from politics. "Woman's fondness for flowers L commonly supposed to be universal, but itseeni3that there are exceptions. Speaking ot the beauty of the Bernese wild flowers a recent writer says: "Foreigners excepted, I have not seen a single wild flower in the hands or on the person of man. woman, or child. If I could wait here by the touch of an enchanter's wand an Andalusian child of the ljwe.st condition, a woman, a muleteer, they would pluck such flowers as abound here by handfuls. You would see them ia every woman's bo-om, in every man's hat, on very child's neck." Girls as Housekeepers. Ladies' Floral Cabinet . Begin with your own things and your own place. Reform your upper bureau drawer; re'.ieve your closet pegs of their accumulation or' garments out of use a month or two ago. Institute a clean and cheerful order, in the midst of which you can daily move; and learn to keep it. Use yourself to the beautiful, which is the right, disposing of things as you handle them, so that it will-be a part of your toilet to dress your room and its arrangements while you dress yourself, leaving the draperies you take off as lightly and as artistically hung, or as delicately folded and placed, as the skirts you loop carefully to wear, or the ribbon and lace you put with a solt neatness about your throat. Cherish instincts of taste and fitness in every littl-' thing you have about yoa; Let it grow impossible to you to put down so much as a pin box where it will disturb the orderly and pleasant grouping upon your dresing-tab!e, or to stick your pins in your cushion even at all sorts of tipsy and unconrfortable inclinations. ' This will not make you fusy" it is the other thing that does tht tn not knowing, except by fidgety experiment, which is harmony and the intangi bit-grace of relation. Once get your knowledge beyond study and turn it into fxct bich is literally having it at your fin hta' ends and order will breathe about ou. and grace evolve from Commonest things and uäes and belongings wherever you may le; n:.d "putting t rights" will not be (. .Vf-ntrt task-work and trouble, any more thin it u in the working of the solar system. It wmI g. on all the time and with a continual pleasure. Take upon yourself gradually for tho sake or trrttiu them in hand in like manner if no oü-er tVd all the cares that belong to your own small territory of home. Oet together t. ting- for use in these cares. Have your little w.tsncloths and your spoages for bits of Heantng: your furnilure-brush and your f-aihr-duster and your light little broom and jour whisk and paa; your bottle of iwc-t-il and spirit of turpentine and piece of flannel to preserve the polish, or restore (he gl s where dark wood grows dim or geta poi ted. Find out, by following your surely grw:ng sense of thoroughness and niceness , the bet and readiest ways of keeping all fresh about you. When you have made your-elf wholly mistress of what yoa
can learn an I do in your own apartment, so
hat it is easier and more natural for you to do it than to let it alone, so that you don't count the time it takes any more than that which you have to give to your awn bathing and liair dressing, then you have learned enough to keep a whole house, so far as its cleanly ordering is concerned. The Open Seaame. Co'onel üiggüison, in the "Woman's Journal, ha; this to say of crocheting: For one, I have nothing to say agiinst the crochet needle. It not only trains hand and eve and even intellect and what male mind could ever grapple with the mystery of its stitches found so simple by every woman? but it is first an employment then a free masonry; In some great hotel, where the newly arrived groups of ladies look askance at each other, each a little afraid of making an undesirable acquaintance, how are all hearts opened and all distinctions broken down, by the appearance of a shawl of a new pattern softly unrolled from its white swathing by the lady who is working on it! "We hear ot the 'bortherhood of toil," but this is a sisterhood of a toil more delicate. I do not
suppose that there is any conceivable barrier of social pride in a ladies drawing room that would not be annihilated before a new crochet stitch. A Girl's Postscript Rochester Herald There is nothing fresher and more dewv and more deughtlully emphatic than a young girl's letter to her well her brother. Every third word is underscored, and then there's the postscript The postscript to a girl's letter is as indispensable as a tail to a dog. The letter is nothing the postscript everything. Tcrsons experienced in receiving girl's letters have informed us that when they are particularly anxious to know something the letter contains they always skip tho letter and read the postcript first It is like the peroration of tho orator. It is a great misfortune for a young man not to receive letters from his fair young neices and cousins. If he is not blessed with such relatives let him go down into the old trunk and dig up letters written by his wife when she was his sweetheart. - He will get more sweetness amd light out of them than he would out of Arnold or Tennyson Pleasantries Concerning; tue Fair Sex. "Nine o'clock I" says Mme. de M. to her maid. 4I must begin to undress for the ball." T? Ladies in England traveling alone that is, without male escorts are sententiously termed "petticoat parties." "I can't go to Europe," a lady is reported to have said; "I am reading forty-five continued stories, and my limited means would not let me pay the postage." The fall bonnet. There is no truth in the report that the fashionable fall bonnet will be built with a mansard roof and a flagpole at the third-story window. The time is coming around again when a man can not open his window to shout at a passing friend without either removing or upsetting a half dozen flower pots. Dr. Mary "Walker can throw a stone. Boston Tost. But she can not jump from a railroad train when it is in motion without straining her garments. Albany Atgus. Troves.it. A Kentucky girl died with the heart disease a few hours after her marriage. This prove that young women sholdn't marry until after they had given their hearts away. A South Hill debating club is wrestling with "Can a community exist without women?"' We think it might exist for a while, but then it wouldn't know what was going on. Burlington Ilawkeye. Fhiladelphia husbands have induced a local paper to state that "the last thine-to explode was a milliner's window. Two Iadie3 who were looking the new styles were seriously injured." But it won't work, gen tlemen. What is danger to a woman compared to the sight of a new bonnet? Boston Tost. Adolphus, my dear," said she, "It's nearly a year since you first began to call." " Yes, I believe so," nervously. "And we've talked about books and music every night." "Y-y-e-B, I think so," more nervous than before. "Well I, I Don't you think a change would be agreeable?" There was "a change" in a few weeks time. The pastor made it. New Haven Register. Gathering chestnuts is dangerous pastime, if wo may believe an eastern paper, which tells ho a young lady sat down carelessly 'neatn the over-spreading . branehes of a chestnut tree, and then got up immediately, feeling that a sort of land devil-fish had seized her. She screamed to her youn man to take it away, and nearly went into Fpasms before the frightened fellow grasped a chestnut burr and bravely tore it from her polonaise. A sea-captain explains this difference between young ladies who are leaving their lovers and those who expect to meet them when the vessel lands. The former "are always perfectly reckless about their complexions, never wear a veil, but let sun and wind color them at will, and they are constantly looking back at the land they have left. The latter smother themselves in tissue and bangs, carry parasols, and sit below in high wind. They are always looking ahead, and are fearful lest their supply of cold cream should give out before landing." Florists. In 1850 there were twenty-five florists in New York. To-day there are 500 not to mention tho street stalls, and it is estimated that their sales reach $4,000,000 a year. About 1840, if a wealthy citizen gave o dinner party, one large bouquet on the center of the table was considered quite enough, and on such a holiday as New Year's the hostess was satisfied with a couple of nosegays on her mantlepieco. For the New Year's celebration of 1840 the great florists of the day sold $200 worth of flowers, and ' the sales of the whole city did not amount to $1,000. It is estimated that on the last celebration $00,000 worth were used,' and Mrs. Taran Stevens alone had hlotsoms to the amount ot $3,000 in her reception and dining rooms. ' . The Advantage of Unity. ' An old monkey designing to teach his sons the advantage of unity, brought them a number of sticks and desired them to see how easily they might be broken one at a time. So each young monkey took a stick and broke it "Now," said the father, "I'll teach you a lesson." And he began to gather the sticks into a bundle. But the youn monkeys, thinking he was about to beat them, act upon him altogether and disabled him. "There," said the aged sufferer, "behold the advantage of unity! If you had assailed me one at a time, I would have killed every mother's son of you!'!'; say tooth hurt I've got to go down town now, ou can draw the other while I'm out" and you A Kansas paper ends a marriage notice: "The couple left for the East on the night train where they will reside."
The Brooklyn Eagle reports a missing woman. "During her absence," it says pathetically, "a child was born to her." "I .... . .1 1 A X 4.1 L C L
. said tue man to tne aeniist, maw unb
flXPREKSIOXS.
"Don't yon dare to kisn cue once," She cried, with blazlwc eye. At John, who felt himself collpel To half his usual hLze. "I won't." he naid: "please pardon me. And I will be so nice" She smiled and siiid, "Dear John. I didn't Say you shouldn't kiss me twice." rrairie chickens are game to the last Advice ' of the sail-boat to the amateur yachtsman: "Luff me little, luff me long." The only way to keep a boy from , going in swimming is to convince him in some way that swimming is a duty he owes to his mother. The Bishop and the farmer: "Does the conversation and the carriage of your new Minister become the Gospel" asked a learned Bishop of a simple-minded farmer. "Well," was the reply, "his conversation is rather fluid and he don't keep a carriage." The mysterious Mr. Anon. In one of the Tarisian journals the Chicago Times finds the following: "When you encounter a woman whom you have not seen for a long time, and who has grown so old that you can scarcely recognize her, never neglect to say: 'My dear niadanic, pardon me if I failed to remember vou. You have changed so little in lif teen years that I could not believe it was you.' It always succeeds. Watermelons are unusually plentiful this year in Oalveston, and the capacity of the colored citien for chambering them seems to be absolutely unlimited. A gentleman called to a colored man and asked him to go over to his house and split up some wood "How long is it guine ter take?" "About an hour, 1 reckon. "Cant do it, boss; 1 could cat five watermelons in de time I'd be fooling away at de wood-pile." BREAKFAST TABLE GOSSIP. Cremation has become so frequent at Milan that it has been decided to build by the side of the cremation furnace in the cemetery a cinerary temple or ash house, In which the remains of the dead may be deposited and labelled off in jars made like the old Latin urns. The Milan press is in favor of the new temple, xhe architects have handed in their plans, and they have been approved by the city authorities. Texas has a cash balance of nearly $1,000,UUU in her State Ireasury, and it is given out that Governor Roberts will advise the next Legislature to spend that and millions more in establishing a fetate university and building Tcnitentiaries and a State House at Austin. 1 he Governor hojes to counteract the disposition to split the State in twain by this means, but the measure will be opposed bv those determined to make two States out of Texas anyhow. If a definition were needed, writes a re cent essayist, a loy might properly be de scribed as essentially a stone-throwing crea ture. To take up and fling missies at any animal or weaker person, or even inanimate thing, which is within the range of his aim or strength, or even outside of it, appears to bean impulse beyond his power of resistance. Whether it is a habitwhich he in herits from theaboreal animal to whom Mr. Darwin traces our descent, and who is said in some countries to reply with cocoanuts to the stones llung at him by persons desirous of possessing those articles of exchangeable value bya more economical process than that of barter, is a question upon which we need not enter. The fact remains, whatever the explanation of it. Ocean soundings made with what is known as Sir William Thompson's steel wire show that along the entire coast of California a depth of 1,500 fathoms or more is reached as within a distance of from twenty to seventy miles westward from the shore, the greater part of this sudden fall occurring in the last ten or fiftv miles. .At 100 miles west from San Francisco the bottom is found to be over 2.50O fathoms deep. The bed of the ocean continues of a uniform depth greater than l.oOO fathoms until the Sandwich Islands are reached, the greatest depth being 3,0(i0 fathoms, at a distance of about 400 miles east of Honolulu, which great depth is maintained until within ninety miles of Honolulu: at fifty miles from that place the depth is 1,500 fathoms. PEI5SOXAL. Mr. White, the American Minister at Berlin, is writing a "Life of Thomas Jefferson." Miss Kate Field has been highly complimented by Worth for her exquisite taste in dress. John C. Calhoun's old residence in Tickens County, South Carolina,' was destroyed by fire on Sunday night. Mr. John B. Gough is in excellent health, and weighs 1S( jwunds. He is to lecture most of the present month in Canada. Rev. Stephen II. Tyng, Sr., of New York, now in his eighty-first year, enjoys a pension of $5,000 a vcarfrom St. George's Protestant Episcopal Church, over which he was thirtyfive years the pastor. Captain Eads ill sail from New Orleans for Mexico on November 4, accompanied by a party of engineers, who will examine the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in order to verify the Captain's ideas as to its adaptability to the purposes of a ship railway. Captain Eads will at the same time endeavor to secure Government sanction for his proposed survey and to ascertain what the Mexican Congress will be willing to do if he decides to make the railway. Mrs. Mary J. Holmes, of Cleveland, during her recent visit to Paris, discovered on-j of Jefferson's manuscript letters in the Bibliothequc Nationale. It is dated at Annapolis, December 5, 1783, and was written to M. de Marbois, Secretary of the French Legation at Philadelphia. Marie of Russia and Edinburg is said t deeply desire to become known to and popu" lar with the English people. She is described as genial, kindly, accomplished and highly educated, and her want of popularity is probably partly owing to her devoted attachment to her father and to his ideas of politics and government ideas which do not correspond with those of the English. Perfect Success. C. II. Blecken. M. D., of Minneapolis, Minn., says: ''I saw-Hunt's Remedy used in a case of Dropsy with perfect success. I did not treat the patient but four attending r)hysicians had given ' up the case as hojeess. Hunt's Remedy was then used with perfect success, and the patient is well. I ihall give Hunt's Remedy in Dropsical and Kidney Diseases." One of the first requisitions received from a newly-appointed railway Station Agent was: "Send me a gallon of red oil for the danger lanterns." Boston Globe. ... Any disease of the kidneys, bladder, urinary organs, nervous system or case of lame back that can not be cured by Day's Kidney Tad, can not be cured by any other treatment or remedy in existence. FiT8.All fits are stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, a marvelous medicine for all nerve diseases. Send to !l Arch Btreet, Tniladelphia, Ta. Malt Bitters builds up the nervous and muscular system and so overcome disease. Cincho-Quinine cure chills and fever. For DynpepM, Indigestion, Depression of Spirits and Oenend Debility, in the various forms : alto, ma a presently ftjraltivt fever and ague, and other Intermittent fevers, the "Ferro-Phos-pkorated Elixir ot CallMya, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all druftsrltu, la the beat tonic; and for patieau reeoTering from fever, or.other sickness, It has no eiuaL
45 Tears Before tlie Public THE CEMUIEJE Pr.C. XIcTj A HE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy " for all t Vj ills that flesh it heir to," but in affections si the Liver, and vn all Silious Complaints, Dys pepsia, and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, tber stand without a rival. AGUE AND PEVER. No better cathartic can be used prepar .cry to, or after taking quinine. As a simple purgative they are nnequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are neve: sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid with the impression, McLANE'S LIVER FILL Each wrapper bears the signatures of C McLans and Fleming Bkos. EZjr Insist npen having- the genuine Dr. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by - FLEMING BKOS., Pittsburgh, Ta., the market being lull of imitations of the name JIcLfMf!, soeüed differently but
oitj pronunciation. BOWEL COMPLAINTS A Speed j and Effectual Care. Perry Davis' Pain Killer lias stood the test of Forty Years' trial. Directions with each bottle. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGSIST THE Git EAT GERJIAW BLOOD PURIFIER, CURES DYSPEPSIA, irer Comprint. Costireness, Bilious Attacks, Indigestion, Jaundice, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Dizziness, Nausea, Heartburn, Depression of Spirits. Sores. Boils. Pimples, Skin Diseases, Eruptions, foul Breath, and all Diseases arising from Impure Blood. The Hamburg Drops re rnmmended aa twtlng th best nr.-i rhmpeat Family Mmlioino Ywr offoml, ami are sol I bj Droits and Dealers at 50 Cents B..UI. Directions in Eieren Languages. Genuine bmru th f;io-iniile slnAtur. and priTato proprietary stamp of A. VOf.ELKU it CO., Bltiohe, Md., U. S. A. TESTIMONIAL TO MR. FELLOWS. ' n "rT7"E the undersigned. Clergymen of the Mcth. dist Church in Nova Scotia, having used the preparation known as Fellows' Compound Syrup op IIvpopnosPHiTEs, prepared by Mr. James I. Fellows, Chemist. St John, N. B., or having known cases wherein its effects were bene ficial, believe it to be a reliable remedy for the dis eanes for which it is recommended. JAMES G. IIENWIGAR. Pres. of Conference. JOHN McMCRHAY, Ex-I'res. of Conference. VTSl. SAUG EXT. JOHX A. MOSHRR. JOHN W. HOWIE. riTEPIIKN V. HUKSTIS. RICHARD V. WEDDALL. ALEX. W. NICHOLSON. CRANSW1CK JOST. ROWLAND MORTON. JOHN JOHNSON. net FSLLO "W S COMPOUND SYRUP of HiPOPHQSPHlTES Speedily and permanently cures Congestion of the Lungs, Bronchitis, Consumption, Nervous Prostration, Shortness of Breath, Talpltation of the Heart, Trembling of the Hands nnd Limbs, Physical and Mental Depression, Loss of Appetite, Loss of Energy, Low of Memory, and will rapidly improve the weakened functions and organs of the body, which dopend for health ujon voluntary, semi-voluntary and lnroluntary nervous action. It acts with vigor, gentleness and subtlety, owing so the exquisite harmony af its Ingredients, akn to pure blood itself. Its taste is pleasant and its effects permanent Look out for the name and address, J. L FEL LOW3, St. John, N. B., on tb yellow wrapper in water-mark, which is seen by holding the paper before the light Price, Sl.r.O Fer Bottle. Six for 7.50. Sold by all Druggists. fTThe accumulated evidence of nearly thirty years 6how that the Bitters is a certain remedy for malarial disease, as well as its surest preventive; that it eradicates dyspepsia, constipation, liver complaint and nervousness, counteracts a tendency to gout, rheumatism, urinary and uterine disorders, that it Imparts vigor to the feeble, and cheers the mind while it invigorates the body. For sale by Druggists and Dealers generally.
IlllJlfPf
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lit. l-iurco' Golden Medical Diovsry cures all Uamrs. from the worst Berr Uoueh kiU, m hert all diseases canwd by lad Wood, are coauered by thi? powirf uL purlfvlng. and invioraiug medicine. ' pumnui, Ksicially fcas 1 u wnmestcd iu potency In curing Tetter, Roae Baals. Boll. Carha.. Ä.nd ffir5ri;u,fc,rM 8W,U-8- Tkl" we,BCa. Ul.Ä'ÄSX If ? fsi 1111. drwv, .Icbilitated, have sailew cftlor of skin, er vellowish-brown soot a on face or body, trenent h.V..rhe or dizziness, bad taste in mnith, internal Thea? op cnü ! aiterved wiU hot nahes, irregular ap,etWe, and tongue eoated. von are suffering from Jovpid llvsr, or " BUI.Bsnes.- As a remedy for alt snch cases Dr. lierc oB Üel!c.il DucoTery has no eital, . it effects perfect and radical cures. wwuwi I:i the eure of Bronrbltl. Severe , Weak Lsiags. and early stages of Cob. nj"'M- ;.aonii.hl the rned1CAl faculty, and eminent l.hTScians pronounce It tne frroaten medical discovery of the a;e. Sold by druggists. preaounco u tne
TWWCe 3 rt a a nut flTJI--W "'"ff
,,.,v j L'rwTi wiinc using me i V&aAV svstem, diet, 01
Thj - I:Uo Oint" Chrtio. Stomach. Had Taste la Month, Itilioua attacks. Pain ta , . . . resjlon or Hldaieya. Internal fever. Bloated feellnar rtt Stomach, Bush or Mood to Head, take Ir. Pierre's I'lrasaut Purgative reUet 4 b7 drr.gglats. ywurS DISPE5SABT HIPIC1L ASSOCIATION, Prop'n. Buffalo, jr. T.
wjü SHriMtD OUST SO nAVK' l-t-?-r at. DR. DTP'S CTTr.KRllATFn riPf-marnt -rtif n -rj ..... .r-c.uo.-.
DR. DTK'S CELEBRATED ELECTRO-YOLTA IC BELTS, ifA'hli 10 P"on (voang or old) (Tenng GSESZS2SBSZSZSZSrISZS2SZSZSS
Chili Cure, Tonic & Appetizer Two Reasons why tills Is the Best Cure for Fever and Ajjue, Chills and Fever. Bilious FeVer, all Malarial Diseases, and the BESX LHER MEDICINE II USE! . FlRSTi-It is a certain cure in all cases, olJ or new. It is a quick cure. It is a rrmanent cure. SECOND It is safe. It can not do harm. It docs not contain Arsenic, Quinine, Calomel. Mercury, Poisons or Stronjr Dnis. It may safely be piven to a baby. It is a fine Tome and ArrmzER, and does not leave the system weak and debilitated. It is an unfailing remedy for
iokpid ljver, uuiousness, uyspepsia, constipation,. liilious Headache, ana ail kindred aff.ic
lions, l rr it wnen you teei languid. It will do
per bottle, six bottles J- fod by Drug-jrists and general dealers. R, Express, charees prepaid, if not to be had where you deal. I prefer to hare the medicine supplied bv dealers to their customers : but. In order to place it
tQ within the reach of all sufferers, where it can not be had from your dealers. I will on receipt of z J,, send hrfif a dozen by express, charges prepaid to any point reached by an express company ; mJ one bottle by express, to any address, on receipt of $i, charges to 1 paid by purchaser. Send Lrj money by registered letter or money order, addressed to
ll,rH. A, ncn wnunjj to tne proprietor, mention uns SOSES,
Used and approved by the leading PHYSI- f5ST CIAKS of EUROPE and AlttEItAgC K
gTho most ValuabloZ2 H mm U JUtSS
Ii (Villi W II. ä ' . sfl 3 mtm J m im'
lyMAts.st CT 1 1. r m - m m mmw a. m -m jr mi
CATASBH, HEatOSSHOIDS. Etc. Also for
Conets. Ccldj, Sore Throat, Crotip sriry mem. Zd and oQ cent sizes
CBAMt SIEIIAL AT TXSE rUILABEXPIIIA IMPOSIT I OX.
ILVXR AT THE PARIS cesgfu and pleasant treatment is SCARBOLATE
' sTT?rjrrm"7n Terrible IieiMi. Its fearbil effMto corrnpOoi fVi .. A Ö? JS "raalng down the t,hroat, weak eyes, deafoess. loss of Toiot l V IU Jtyi r r loa of smell, dwpwünj? odors, nal deformiüse, and finalt V2rV il ji U UU UU U eommmption. m Unit tu last it is erer aggnwivs. OrdJ naHMMnauMBBiuMBn narr treatments are worse than uaelnaa. If n-rl-tl whil
4 IQ
mm,
;',1r.-"".'7-.FOR CATARRH, ASTHMÄ7 the value of farbolate ef Tar. the wojt lO AftlOll nn ruri o pi
...
Bakams and CottIk1s of the most healing a.id soothing properties
a.iU uuiaini; properties - . -rtre so combined ith Tii ie Tree Tar, that the mere breathing conTerts them I BRONCHITIS & hto a dense smolte or vi nor. This is irüuilM taken rieht tn the diuiuH '
rrU. 0 heat, no hot vrMcr, simply inhaling or brtathtug it, and yoa feel tw r A 17EMCC C5 ta heallnfr power nt one. This treatment ia endorser by physicians UCHrllKOOt
rrsrywiere, and highly mmmemiM tT thmiMni1 who )erfprt satisfapüon. Fl'LI. TltKA r.ATItiiaT sent TIOX ALWAYS GUAMAJfTJ-lJili.
Address,
lZZäT1"' Br. M. 17. CiSE, 933 Arch SU Philaaebhia. Pfl
DYSPEPTIC ORDILIOUSUL
A Medicine recently disoorered and used by an eminent physician with wondrf.J success. AH dnicirts and cob n try stores hart it or will ret it for you. Also a sure cure for INDIGESTION
VJ U JJ I J M tVJl $5,000,000. Tho American Shoe Tip Co. WARRANT TQEIB A. S.T.Co. 2C Lo)LACKlfDP That ii now 10 extensively worn on CHILDREN'S SHOES TO WEAS AS L05G A3 TEE METAL, Thlrh was Introduced by them, and by which the nhove amount has been saved to parents annually. Tliis Black Tip will isre still more, as bejldei being worn on the coarser pradea it is worn on fine and costly slices where the Metal Tip on account of its loota would not be used. They all have our Trade Mark A. 8. T. Co. tamped on front of Tip. l'arenta should ASK TOR SH0E3 with this BEAUTIFUL BLACK TIP en them when purrbsslnf for their ehlldren. NOTICE is hcrebr riven to Ihe citizens of the Seventeenth (7th) Ward, In the city of Indianapolis. Center Township, Marion Countv, In diana, that I, Michael C. White, a male inhabitant oj said Ward, over the a?e of twenty-one years, will apply to the Bmrd of County Commissioners of stud County, at their next meetlnjr, for a license to sell for one year, Fpiritous, vinous and malt liquors, in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. The precise location of the premises whereon I desire to sell said liquors. Is described as follows: Lot No. 1 and part of lot No. 2, square 75, and known as Xo. 79 South Illinois&treet, in the city of Indianapolis, Center TownRhip, Marion County, Indiana. MICHAEL C WHITE. CHEAPEST BIBLES fc'WtCft 'Ä'CASH PREMIUMS
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)i - . T.1f.0.nseof.V?k,?5.!be Ur wpnhdve, auseous pills. These
-e-ree.r arger th. mnatard ,k y Tr,rr,bl 1,0 l,art''culr eare is requi.ed them. Ther onerate without Hsturlxanr i th. or occupation. For Jaaastlce. Headache, a . lainaiw Rlawtit. Iiia I m k.i.i BAVDR. srPPFNSORIES, TRfSPES. PrrWRTOUatJ from EKVOl'S DiÄasU MUnECA Vi Ui vou p-ood : it can not do vou harm. Price i m.J.MM.Mu,Mj lOUlSVlaie, paper. The Toilet Article from pure YasaJna -ucli as Tot the Pomade Vaseline, Vaseline Cold Creaa, Vaseline Camphor loo. Vaseline Toilet Soaps. ' Treatment ofl WOUNDS. BURNS. CUTS, CHILBLAINS, ar snpcnsr is aar iiallu nr. TASELRE C0XFECTIÖX3. An agreeable form of toting Vaseline internally. 25 CENTS A BOX. and Drphtheria. etc of all oar goods. EXTftfelTIOK. COLGATE & CO.. N. Yinto oiiick eonwimpBon. The mot thorough, rat 1 TAR INHALANT mi rk w m g a s svf have e neon ll witn , ; sr-sic-CIrCTilars, etc., Sent rre; 'ess, ssavaBBBBBBavBSBavamaaaaawaiavMaaaBfl UREL i MINUTES BY i IN VIA-SANO ll IMA f'B 1'hilodeliJtitu I'' KNOW THYSELF. THE untold miseries that result from indiscretion in wrly life may be alleviated and cured. Those who doubt this assertion should purchase the new medical work published by the PEA BODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE. Ronton, entitled TUK SCIKNCE OF 171 KK; or.SELl'-PKEStltVATION iLLiiauMeJvitality. nervous and rbvsicaldebilitv. or vitality impaired by the errors of youth or U close application to business, may be restored and manhood regained. Two hundredth edition, revised and enlarged, just published. It is a standard medical work, the iest iu the English language, written by a physician of great experience, to whom was awarded a Rold and jeweled mediU by the National Medical AsMKiatloti. It contains beautiful and very expensive enirra ring's. Three hundred pages, more tlinn fifty valuable prescriptions for all forms of prevailing disease, the result of many years of extensive and successful practice, cither one of which is worth ten times the price of the book. Bound in French cloth; price only fl, sent by mail postpaid. The London Lancet says: "No person should be without thi valuable book. The author is a noble benefactor." An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt of six cents for postage. The author reifer, bv permission, to non. P. A. KISS ELL, M. V., ITesideut of the National Medi cal Association. Address Dr.W. n. PARKER, No. 4 rtullfinch street, Boston, Mass. The author may be consulted on all diseases rcquirln skill and experience. HEAL THYSELF. Lowest prices ever known on - al mil la4erm, HI flea, and BeTlTra, at greatly radaced pric. muia siaBiEk r t our nr Illuatrai ted Ca talorae IB) .POWELL A SOK.M9 Uaia 6trMt. CIKLLa HMATI.O. (PLC week la your own town. Terms and S3 ontnt iree. fortland, Maine. Address IL HALLXTT k COM
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