Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1880 — Page 3

THE INDIANA . STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, -NOVEMBER-10, 1880.

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TEXXTSOJrS NEtf POEM.

KTDMGHT, JVVX 30, 1879. 1 Charles Tennyson Turner, in whose memory - this poem tu written, wm ths brother of Alfred Tennyson, and wu himself a poet. He wm born july 4. He graduated at Cambridge in 18s and became Vicar of firasby. By the will of a relative, who bequeathed him a smail estate. Iii surname of Tennyson" wm changed to that of "Turner." "He died April Z 170. His brother, the poet laureate, says of bis Bonnets that seme of them have all the tenderness of the finest Greek epigram, and that a few of them are among the noblest in our language. ilidnight in no midsummer tune The breakers lash theshores; The cuckoo of a joyless June Is calling out of doors. And thou hart vanished from thine own To that which looks like rest. True brother, only to be known By those who love thee best. ii. Midnight and Joyless June gone by. And from the deluged park The cuckoo of a worse July Is calling through the dark. But thou art silent under ground, And o'er the streams the rain. True, poet, surely to be found When truth is found again. HI. And now to these nnsumraered skies The summer bird is still. Far off a phantom cuckoo cries From out a phantom hill. An; thro' this midnight breaks the sun Of sixty years away. The light of day when light bgun. The days that seem to-day. When all my griefs were shared with thee, And all my hopes were thine As all thou wert was one with me, May all thy art be mine! CONCERNINQ WOMEN. Woman as Sanitary Reformer. At the recent EnglUh Sanitary Congress Dr. Kichardioa gave & lecture on woman "as a sanitary reformer.' He observed that long ' before sanitation was heard of the good, cleanly housewife was a practical sanitary reformer. The office of prevention of disease was especially fitted for omen. The training requirod was simple, and every woman willing to go through it might be--come mistress by it of the destinies of the world. She should master physiology, so -fu t understand the-general construction of the human body, and know the great systems of the body the digestive, the circulatory, the respiratory, the nervous, the sensory, the abaorbant and glandular, tbe muscular, the osseous or bony, and the membranous. If she would act on this knowledge there would hardly be one deformed child left in the land in one or two generations. An educated woman, who had seen the exquisite build and symmetry of the skeleton, would turn pale with disgust whenever she detected one of her foolish sisters strangling her body in tight corset and murderous belt, to make it hideous ai well as useless, or who was intent on destroying the perfect arch of the foot in a contracted foot-vice, elevated on a peg-top. The educated woman would master the structure of the house, demand to have a plan of every drainpipe on the establishment, and would insist on having every drain kept as systematically clean as the china in the housemaid's cupboard. She would see to the biennial purification of the dwelling as though a Passover were still a universal practice. Dr. Richardson -concluded: One effort as a Sanitarian would call forth all her powers. She will stand to resist with her full persuasive might that process which I have eUowhere called the intermarriage, of disease. She will tell her sisters what that terrible process means. She will tell that disease heredity united in marrage means the continuance of the heredity as certainly as that two and two make four; that madness consumption, cancer, scrofula, yes, and certain of the contagious diseases too may be perpetuated from the altar; and that the first responsibilities of parents toward tht-ir offspring ought to be, not how to provide for wealth and position over which they have no control, but that preliminary healthy parentage, which is the foundation of health, and without which position and wealth are shadowy kgac es indeed. Delicate ground, you may ehv. I admit the fact. But in a world in which those who study the living and the dead most carefully rarely see a man or woman hereditarilly frco from disease, even this ground must be entered on by tho enlightened scholar. I touch on it here for the best f all reasons, that the subject it include, affecting deeply the human heart in it sympathies and affections, is one on which the influence of woman, the arbitress of the natures that are to be, is allpotent for good or eviL To know the first (rinciples of animal physics and life; to earn the house and its perfect management; to learn the simpler problems relating to the fatal dieeaae; to ordain the training of the young; to grasp the elements of the three psycho physical problems; the human temperaments, the moral contagions, with their preventions and the heredities of disease, with their prevention these, in all respect and earne-trtess, I set before this congress as the heads of the educational program for our modern women in her sphere of life and duty. She Wouldn't Promis to Obey. London Train. A young lad, well known in Liverpool on account of her benuty, was married last week. When the Canon who was officiating read th words, "lore, honor and obey." the young lady declined to repeat tho last. Three times the Canon paused for an echo, and paused in vom. Then he went on with the service. But is this young lady married or not? ' What should her disobedience lead to an interview with Sir James Hannen will that eminent Judge rule on the subject ? He Considered flow Dependent Sh Was. . . urns Journal. In explanation of advocacy of woman's rights by Alexander Dumas in his latest look the following reason Is given: lie is the father of two daughters. It appears that the eldest was married some months ago, and happily. But on her wedding day the father's heart was stirred to its pro- - foundest depths as the state of legal inferiority to which she descended was forced home upon him by the sentences from the codo read by tbe Mayor. Tears started to his eyes, although he is not a weeping man, when he considered how dependent she was made by the law for her happiness upon her husband, and how debarred she was from obtaining redrus for possible, though improbable, conjugal wrongs. Law, he argues, must first establish certain rights as Sie woma '; then as she gradually comes to assert them, men would treat them with a respect that can not now be compelled. 'Men argues M Dumas, "would shrink from gallant adventures in which they now flory. . As a consequence infanticide would e nipped in the bud; the criminal population would be notably diminished ana public . morality increased." . Dumas ' la ' not a - publicist nor a philosopher not even, per- . haps, a man of practical common sense. 13 ut feand.hi works form one 6 fine most potent social influences in France,'and his work in th right iüreuüun against th on g"eat

blemish on the French national character can not but produce important effects in the end. Pleasantries Concerning the Fair Sex. "Oh dearl I wish I was dead!" exclaimed a neglected maiden. She had heard that matches are made in heaven. Boston Tranacript. . A Texas Joan said he preferred to fight a duel rather than act as a judge of a baby show, lie saw a chance to dodge. a bullet, but how could he escape from thirty-nine indignant mothers? Fifty thousand women are needed in Arizona at once, and no questions asked. N. II. Register. Then they won't go. They want to emigrate to a place where there'll be one question asked. Boston Post. And they will all answer "yes" to that one question. "Don't you think the weather is very humid?" said 31 Us Fitzjoy, as she leaned on Mr. Toplofty's arm. ' Yv eally, I kant say; I always, aw, go in when it wains, aw." "Then he does know that much," said she, in a very low voice, aside. Car driver ,4You can't smoke in this Galveston streetcar." Passenger "Why not?" "Because there are ladies in the car." 'Why, that's the very reason I have; to smoke; I want to deaden the smell of musk and patchouly." Galveston News. Chicago girls are wonderfully full of resources. Their new device for hurrying up bashful suitors is to secretly procure the marriage license themselves, ana the publication of the fact in the papers nerves the timid youths up to the required pitch of desperation. A social philosopher takes note that where a lady is very pretty one never looks at her dress, and where the toilet is very striking, one forgets to look at the wearer. In the first case the dress is an ajunct to the woman, in tbe latter the woman is an accessory of the dress. Two ladies went to see Clara Morris. In one moet affecting passages of the play, when the whole house was hushed in stillness, one lady who had been using her opera glass attentively, remarked to tbe other: "Pooh! The trimming on her dress is nothing but Hamburg edging." A gray hair was espied among the raven locks of a charming young lady. "Oh, pray pull it out!" she exclaimed. ''If I pull fit out ten more will come to the funeral, replied the one who made the unwelcome discovery. Pluckit out, nevertheless," said the dark-haired damsel; it's no consequence how many come to the funeral, provided they all come in black." This may be a warning to the ladies who paint and powder their faces until they look like the wax-faced figures intended to exhibit goods on. A lady in New York went up to a dummy to put a shawl upon it to see how it looked, but when tbe dummy turned upon her with anger and indignation, the lady saw that it wasn't a wire figure, but a would-be blooming lass of forty or more. A Boston man besought his wife, he being but three yeara married, for the privilege of a night key. "Na5"ht key?" she exclaimed in tones of amazement, ''what use can you have for a night key when the 'Woman's Emancipation League' meets Monday night, the 'Ladies Domestic Mission' Tuesday, the Sisters of Jericho' Wednesday, the 'Woman's Science Circle' Thursday, the Daughters of Nineveh' Friday, and the 'Woman's Progressive Art Association' and the 'Suffrage Band' on alternate Saturday nights. You stay at home and see that the baby doesn't fall out of the cradle-" He stays. Burlington Hawkeye. An impertinent busybody importuned a young lady with the question: "What shall I say to people who ask me if you are going to be married?" "Say the truth the girl promptly replied. "Yes, and what is the truth?" continued the questioner, eagerly. 'That yea know nothing about itl" was the conclusive reply. "Women, bless em," exclaims the New York Graphic. They haven't got any torch li;ht processions to arrange or any camE signs to take care of, or anybody to elect; ut they have to work Vo hours every day to get on a skin tight 'Jersey' in order to appear stylish en the street." Young ladies have the privilege of saying anything they .lease during leap year, she said, eyeing him out of the corner of her eyes with a sweet look. Iiis heart gave a great bound, and while he wondered if she was going to ask him the question which he had to long desired and feared to do, he answered, 'yes." "And the young men must not refuse." said 6he. "No, no! how could they," sighed the young man. 'Well, then," said she, "will you take a" lie fell on his knees and said: "Anything you ask, darling." "Wait till I get through. Will you take a walk, and not hang around our house so much." lie walked. a aaa M A Solemn 8cene. IPeck'a Milwankee Sun. There was the queerest scene at one of tho churches lat Sunday. It seems that during the vacation the seats had been r.swly varnished, and somehow the varnish was not right, as it was terrible sticky. You know wh.nycupull any '.hing off of sticky varnish that it cracks. Well, the audience had

all got seated, when the minister got up to give out the hymn, and as the basement of his trousers let loose of the varnish of his chair there was a noise like killing a fly on the wall with a palm-leaf fan. The minuter looked around at the chair to see if he was all present, and that no guilty man's pants had escaped and read the hymn. The choir rose with a sound of revelry; and after the tenor had swallowed a lozenge and the base bad coughed up a piece of frog and the alto had hemmed and the soprana had shook out her polonaise to see if the varnish showed on tbe south side, the audience began to rise. Uoe or two deacons got up first, with sounds like picket-firing in the distance on the eve of battle; and then a few more got up, and the rattling of the unyielding varnish sounded as though the fight was becoming more animated, and then the whole audience got on its feet at once with a sound of rattling musketry. The choir sang "Hold the Fort." When the orchestra bad concluded the people at down gingerly, the services were short, and all went home praying for the man who painted the seats. WnyT Graphic. Why do women always step off horse-cart facing the wrong way? Why do women always particularly those who hate each other most kiss when they meet? Why do Germans with the most unpronouncable names drink less beer than plain Yankee John Smith? Why are the wooden forks one finds - in restaurant horse-radish pots invariably bereft of at least one tine? Why are blood-curdling stories of vice, crime and suffering most eagerly read by people whose sensibilities are sq delicate that thev couldn't see a flv hurt? .-- - Why do people who know, the least about newspapers al ways' shed tue most acWlcö for Ute editor teauii?- ...

FIFTY YEARS A ROGUE.

Canter, the Celebrated Forger, la a Pennsylvania Prison. Philadelphia Times. Every penal establishment has among its collection of convicts some who are distinEuished above their fellows by reason of aving perpetrated some peculiarly atrocious, blood-curdling deed of villainy, some extraordinary burglary or bank robbery, a phenomenally audacious forgery, or other crime which served to lift him above the common herd of petty rogues. The Kastern Penitentiary, or Cherry Hill, a it is termed, is no exception in tbe possession of these envied rogues. Among fts resident population are double-dyed villains whose blood-thirsty instinct have been satiated in the life current of their victims; bank robbers who would scorn to undertake any operation except where the spoil promised to be among the hundred thousands; forgers who have so successfully imitated the handwriting of other people that the bank accounts ot the latter have been depleted many thousands of dollars. One of the "lions" in the collection of roguery at this famous prison is an aged individual with an eye like a hawk, who, within a few months past, has begun to betray the symptoms oi breaking up, and no wonder, considering that he is a sexagenarian and has passed half a century of his career in the practice of the forger's art, and doing sen-ice to the State for Iii misdeeds. Twenty-five years of his life drifted away behind the walls of ing Sing and Auburn prisons, New York State, ami he is now doing this State a long term of penance for implication with the celebrated Safeguard Insurance frauds, in which Halfnian, Hilt, ami others were implicated. The prisoner was convicted under the name of George Ripley, but he has been known for years to the detectives as Jack Canter. Long years of criminal experimentation has made him familiar with all the devices and tricks of the forger's art, so that the imitation of signatures has come with him to be second nature. He is one of the men whom it is safer to have under lock and key than to allow them to be at liberty. His manners and conversation proclaim him to be entitled to his pretension that he received a superior education at some of the best universities abroad. He says he is a native of South Carolina. He was educated in the best schools of Kurue, and studied medicine and surgery and took regular degrees. Most of his knowledge was gained in the most famous schools of France. His father gave carte blanche in the matter of 1 expenses. The great oint was to give hi son a finished ed a cation. His name fir-t appeared in criminal annals forty-two years ago, in connection with the counterfeitirg of notes of the State llank of South Carolina. These were not put into circulation at once, but were sent over to New York aid there used in election betting. They wrre so well executed that they readily passed into circulation. The forgery and coun:erfeiting was traced to Jack, and he was arrested and sent to the Eastern l'enitentary for ten years. Some time ago one of the Inspectors recalled the fact to the veteran's attention, but first he professed oblivion f it. In a moment he recollected it, and told the name of the man for whom the work was executed. His memory was refreshed by a file of a New York criminal newspaper, which'rinted an account of the whole affair. He passed subsequent terms in New York State prisons for forgery until hi reputation came to be as national as that o' Cross, Pettis, llrockway and other noted forgers. He has the whole minutiae of the art at his finger's ends, and is Jp.ided by his comprehensive knowledge ot chemistry. In the last incarceration in Sing Sing prison, New York, he was selected to till the post of bookkeeper on account of his skill in accounts and his superb penminship. He turned the latter advantage to account in a way that startled ths prison authorities before long and procured his dismissal from the easy berth he was occupying. The discovery was made accidentally, as all discoveries of rascality are made, that Canter had altered the records so that the sentences of some of the principal convicts had been remarkably curtailed. It was charged that this was done through the corrupt work of some of the outside friends of certain bank robbers. Canter was next heard from in Philadelphiain lS76,when he wanarrested under the name of George Ripley, tor collusion in heavy Insurance frauds, involving the alteration of stock certificates, etc., which formed part of the assets of the Safeguard Insurance Company, from a low figure to one proportionately higher. He was arrested, convicted, and sentenced to a long term of imprisonment, which is likely to be his last, as recently lie. lias begun to succumb to the natural debility of old age. He has often been complimented by the prison officers upon the cheerful, contented spirit he shows and his freedom from restiveness. "No," he replied to an Inspector, "I don't allow myself to worry. I have ray reading and my guitar and my short-hand writing. I keep all these up and nnd diversion enough to keep my mind from brooding. I leave that for the numbskulls. I get my cellmate to dictate to me from the papers, and I write it, all down in short-hand Nothing makes a man break sooner than the lack of occupation and diversion. I'm going to put his sentence through, I think."' Notwithstanding his cheerfulness and confidence, however, it is apjuirent that the body is not strong enough to execute the work the intrepid will has set down for it "Ah, that old Sammy Tilden and Sinclair Tousey, his Secretary of State, hoodwinked me nicely," he remarked on one occasion. "After I came here, you know, they sent on a commission to see me to find out something about the abuses and favoritism at Sing Sing. I knew all about it, and they extended promises to me which I placed full confidence in. They took my statement for three days and it was a long one, and made many printed pages. Well, they got that and they ferreted out the handwork at Sing Sing, and that was the last of it. Here I am and here I am likely to stay till my time is out. I saved New York State many thousand dollars." Several months ago there was a contest in the New York Courts over the will of a de ceased Judge. There was a codicil to the will, the validity of which was . disputed. The parties interested in proving it tobe bogus sent on a commissioner to have an in terview with Canter, who was reputed to be the man who had forged it. A United States Commissioner and the executor obtained a pass trd visited the Eastern Penitentiary, where they saw the forger. When they told him what they wanted and how important it was. he responded: "Gentlemen, I won't get into any trouble or criminate myself by anything I may confess, will 1?" He was assured that nothing would be done to injure him. "Well, then, I'll tell you. I wrote that signature to the codicil myself." A week or so ago on came another Commissioner. This time it was the other side who wanted to get at Jack. They had procured a stay of proceedings. The first parties had not acted up to Canter's expectations, it appeared. When the F arty of the second part visited him he cooly said: "Gentlemen, I never signed that paper which you say they presented in the Court It was a piece of legerdemain which was practiced upon me. I never said that the signature to the codicil was a forgery. They read something to me and I signed a paper, but it wasn'tMike that you say it Is. That will is entirely genuine. I never signed anything." The notary drew up an affidavit and Canter signed this just as readily as,he had the first one presented to him, although they were widely contradictory to each other, lie afterward laughed over bis duplicity. : It is said that he taught the celebrated forger, Rollins, the composition of some of tiie sympathetic inks employed by that accomplished rascal in his forgery operations. Among his' chemical triumphs is said to bo

an Ink which would destroy a check entirely upon which it was used, so that a bank cashier coming down in the morning would find no evidence of the fraud practiced upon him except a slight puff of ashes left in the drawer. He once attempted to enlist the United States Treasury authorities in a scheme for his release by offering to betray the secrets of the chemical compositions nsed for extracting the numbers from bonds and bank checks, but the proposition was declined. He is said to have instructed some of the principal convicts in the Kastern Penitentiary in the use of the Morse telegraphic alphabet, and by this means they were enabled to carry on a correspondence at night with each other for a long time lieforc the officials discovered the purixs of the tapping noise iion the steampipes, which were used as a telegraph tine, the sound being related from one "station" to another. Canter has about two years yet to serve. A STUAXOEK OX A STREET-CAR.

Western and Kantern Politeness Practically Illustrated IIow She Smiled. x By dint of crowding and squeezing one of the Third avenue surface cars will seat twenty-two men, and that number were in a car which went up Chatham street at 6 o'clock last evening. At Chambers street a sewing-girl entered, and she was obliged to stand in the i.-le and cling to a strap for suport. The car proceeded until the Bowery was entered, without picking up or discharging any passengers, and the woman remained standing. About the intersection of Canal street a well-dressed man, who had leen reading in one -orner, looked up from his paper, and saw for the first time that a woman was aboard and standing up. Quickly arising he motioned her into a vacani seat, with annology for not discovering the condition of affairs before. "You imist in; a stranger in New York?" said a young man from the opioslte corner, with a plug hat, low-cut shoes, red stockings and a general song-and-dance air. "Yes," answerel the stranger, in a tone of disgust. "I am from the West; from a city where no woman can go in a street-car filled with men an ! ride a dozen blocks without being oilerea a seat." The woman smiled, the swell young man subsided, and the remaining twenty men in the car looked sheepish. At Grand street the stranger left the car, and an apple woman got in. Before she was fairly inside the door five men, still smarting under the Western man's rebuke, arose, and asked her to be seated. The llernharrit as a Social Problem. Washington Post. Sara Bernhardt, who arrived in this country Wednesday, will in all probability repeat in the metropolis of the United States the splendid triumphs which she won in the British nietrjolis. New York will not be behind London in doing honor to a great artiste. The best society of the city will crowd the house during her season at Ihm th's. She will be the great stwiasation of the year, nor only in New York, but in all the cities which she vhits. For months people will go wild over her. In Ixnidon Mile Bernhardt was invited to the homes of society leaders, and noble ladies vied with each other in paying her honors. We suppose the same thing will happen in this country. Good people will ignore the fact that, although she is the mother of two fine children, she has never been a wife. It is not worth while to condemn the fashionable womenwho lionize Mile. Bernhardt She has won a brilliant reputation on the stage by the display of phenomenal ability and she has shown a good deal of talent in other directions. She is an artist in a rather broad sense of the word. But isn't it worthy of more than a passing comment that thousands of ladies who have worshiped and will worship at her shrine, would tnrn in haughty scorn and cold disdain from their dearest friend, if that dearest friend, being unmarried, should be called mother? Five hundred dollars reward for a better remedy for Heart Disease than Dr. Graves' Heart Regulator. Give it a trial. Physicians recommend it. Pamphlet on symptoms of Heart Disease free. Address F. K. Ingalls, Concord, N. H. Price 50 cents and $1 per bottle. Sold by Stewart fc Barry, Indianapolis. UNLIKE PILLS Aid Us asaal rargattTea, Is pleaaaat to take. And will pro st ones ths root potent snd harmless Nyateaa Renovator snd Cteamoer hat has jti twes brought to public notica. For Constipation. Blllovsaesa, Ittdah, Pllea, snd ail duorder mnwtg from aa ottruettd tteM of IM &yttmt it ia ineompsrsblj tbe Utt euratit utmt. Amid imitation: init en Min the article called for. TKOPIOFliCIT LAXATIVE i put up ia bronzed tin bosea only. Price 60 cenU. Ask your drug list for Deecriptir Pamphlet, or addreea tbe proprietor, J. E. HETHERlNiiTON. ' .36 Park Place, New York. fif forf PuRCHiswa ANY FORM of So-Caluo Electing belt, a a Iff niw. Band, or ApP''TteoI"i"!", and Soecial DieaM. aend to the PUL ACMBK GALVANIC CO.. New York, N. V., Cinciuaa, -., or ao Francisco. Csl., for their JV Pamphlet and The Electric Reriew," and yoa will ssre ti. health and Mwy. The P. Q. Co. are the eny dealers in Genuine Etectria Appliance on the American Continent. EXTRACT the Great Vegetable rata Destroyer and Specific for Inflammations, Ilemorrhitges, Wounds, Cats, Braises, Burns, Sprains, Ac Stoppine the flow of blood, re lieving at ence pain, kudduing inflammation, healing and caring disease so I a rapid It as to excite won O der.admiratiqn, grati: tide. endorse, recommend and prescribe it. It will cure KheumatiBin, catarrh. Neuralgia, Asthma, Lnmbago, Sore Throat, Pian hrca. Headache, Dysentery, Toothache, Broken Breast, Earache, BoJ!sfc Sores, Piles, And stop sll Hemorrhages from tbe Nose, Stomach, or Longs. hysicians Destroyed! Immediately relieve pain in any place where itcan be applied internally or externally. For cut, bruises, sprains, tc it is the very best remedy known: arresting the bleeding at once, rcdncin g tbe swelling and inflammation, stopping the pain and nesting the Injury in a wonderful manner. Vegetable. It is harmless ia any case no matter bow I applied or taken. Is never sold la bulk, but only ia rur bottles with " road's Kxtract" blown la the class and oar trade-mark en outside ball wrapper. Eewanttf imUotiont. Try it and yen will never be without h a single day. EoHi by all Druggists. ,. URCLY U W3T T0USTEESTH STEHET, Sew York.

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For Diseases of the Horse O CewsQufttor. Fractnre. Scratches. SoreBhlna. f rust iUea, ad Cracks, Quarter Crack. Cure Contracted Hoof, Inflammation of tbe Feet, Boras, Fistula, Epralcs, Tumor. Fouadcr. Cures Poll Evil. Epizootic, Curb, Throajnilucom, Shoe Bolls, Grease Herl. Fraud Flesh. Cnres Capped Elbow or Hock, Suppurated Corns, fumiced Feet, Collar and baddie Scalds. Cures all Diseases of the Throat od Longa. For Salt at Drug and Harness Stores at SI per can A discovery which mrr by tbe natural process, v AIUItlrH(l., all disease of tbe Kidneys, Bladder, l"rlnary Onran and Xrnoui Kytrm, whea not hing else can. It is comfortable to the patient, positive in its effects, and the first enre for those painful and much dreaded afiV-ctions, Diabetes ami Urteilt Iiscnse, while its mres of traTClTlmpy, Catarrb rf the IXladdrr.Brlrkdnt Deposit, Painful t rinattnK, Hlgta-Colnr-ed t rine, Kerrou Weakness and l'aln in the Back seem more like miracles than cases oi aatnral heal in p. IKT.ICAT12 l'lS.HAr.TRS prostrated by invRular babiu.the abuse of nainre and mental or physical over-exertion, find their greatest relief in the use of DAY'S KIDNEY fAD, which, strengthen, invigorates and restore tho vigor of health. p.vrx i. tiii: hack. tVo say iKwitivt-Iv, and without fear of contradiction, that 1AY"S"KIDXEY PAD is the only certain " and permanent cure for every form of this prevalent and distressing complaint. YOUXU MKX suffering from nervous and physical debflity.loes of memory, or vitality impaired by the errors of youth or too close application to work, may be restored and manhood regained. Avoid all kidney medicines which are taken into the system by way of the stomach; it is an old treatment, well tried, and proven inefficient, though sometimes effecting apparent cures of ono complaint they sow theseeds of more troublesome and permanent disorders. The price of our PAD brines it within the reach of all. and it will annually save many times its cost in doctors' bin, medicines and plasters, which at best give but temporary relief. It ran be used without fear or harm, and with certainty of s permanent cure. For sale by druggists generally, or sent by mail (five of postage) on receipt of the price. Regular Pad. $2.00; Children's. J1.S0; Special (extra size, f .1.00. Ou r book ,"Hotr Lifo was Saved," givir g t h e his tory of t h is new discovery an d a 1 arge record of most remarkable cures sent free. Write for it. Ad.lrws. DY KIDNEY PAD CO.. Toledo. OfiBJIITinil Owing to the many worthies UAU I lUMs Kidney Pads now seeking a sak on our reputation, we f'eem It lue the afllirtod tc wnrn them. Ak for DA Vis UID.XLY PAD ud take no other. STEWART & BARRY, Acont?. Indianapolis Indiana. KNOW THYSELF. TIIE untold miseries that result from indiscretion in early life may be alleviated and cured. Those who dnnbt thla assertion should purchase the new medical work published bv the I'EABODY MEDICAL INRTITI'TK. liwton, entitled T1IK SOIKNCE OF LIFK i." t v Kwivvn r a ttav LxnauMed 'wtTuity. nervous and physical debility. or vltalitv impaired by the errors of youth or too close application to business, may be restored and mann'HKi resumed. Two hundredth edition, revised and enlarged. just published. It is a standard medical work, uie tHtU in tne KnglisTi language, written by a physician of great experience, to whom was awarded a gold and jeweled medal by the National Medical Association. It contains beautiful and very expensive engraving Three hundred pages, more than fiftv valuable prescriptions for all forms of prevailing disease, the result of many years of extensive and successful practice, either one of which is worth ten times the price of the boos. Bound in French cloth; price only fl, sent by mail postpaid. The London Lancet says: "No person should be without this valuable book. Tbe author is a noble benefactor." An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt of six cents for postage. 1 he author refers, hv permission, to Hon. I. A. BISSELL. M. D., President of the National Medical Association. Address Dr.W. II. PARKER, UTA I No. 4 Bullfinch street, Boston. LM U Mass. The author may be eon- TUVQCI P suited on all diseases requir- n I wtLr Ing skill and experience. McDonald & Bittleb, Attorneys. SHERIFF'S SALE. By Tirtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed fiwm the Clerk of the Superior urt of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Henry II. Cook is plaintiff, and Harmon Woodruff et al. are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of three thousand two hundred and seventy-nine dollars and seventeen cents, with interest on said decree and costs, I a ill expose at public sale to the highest bidder on SATURDAY, the 27th day of November, A. D. 1880, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. ra. and 4 o'clock p. m.. of said dav. at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits lor a term not exceeding seven years, oi tne 101Iowing real estate, to-wit: Lot number three (3) in Woodruff Place, a suburb of the city of Indianapolis, Marion County. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs. I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee him pie of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. johm i . rKtssu, Sheriff of Marion County. November 1, A. D. ls0. Kew sad Very Attractive Styles are sow Ueaay. MASON AND HAULM ORGANS BEST CABINET OB PARLOR ORGANS IN THE WORLD, winners of highest distinction at BVBKT flKJKAT WOILO I aXHISITioa roa tbistssw, ysaas. Prices. 51, 57. , tä. 1 to ISub and upward. For eay par . meats. -3f a quarter and upward. Catalogues free. MASoM HAM LIN ORGAN CO, lMTremontBtv. BOSTON, 4 East Utb St, (Union 8q.) NEW YORK ; 14 Wahaah Aveaue, CHICAGO. c ONSUMPTIO Can be cured by the Continus ase of 0m tin's Cod Liver Oil and Laeto-Phosphata f Lime a curs for Consumption, Congbs, Colds, Asthma, BroncMtis, and all ScrsVuloss Diseases, Aslc your druggist for Osmnn'Sa sad take no other. If he has not got it. I will sod six bottles anywhere on receipt of 15. CHAS; A. OSMUN, -N ' " " IS ybUi Jlrsnus, KswYortU

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m SURE CURE FOR, Cou(rhs( Colds, Horo Throat, UronoIiltlH, AhUuiiu, Consumption, And All Diseases of THROAT and LUNGS. Put up In Quart Size Bottles for Family Use. Scientifically prepared of Balsama-Tolu, Crystalled Rock Candy, l)ld Rye and other tonics. Tbe Formula is known to our best physicians, is highly commended by them, snd the an air sin of our most prominent chemist. Professor G. A. Mariner, in Uncago, is on the label of every bottle. It is well known to the medi-al profession that TOLU ROCK AND RYE will afford the greste relief for Coughs, Colds, Influenza, Bronchitis, yore Throat, Weak Lungs, also Consumption in the incipient snd advanced stages. I'sed ss a BEVERAGE and APPETIZER, It makes a delightful tonic for family nse. Is pleasant to take; if weak or debilitated it gives tone, activity and strength to the whole human frame. O A TTT'Tf'XT Don't be deceived Jjt. U -L . by unprincipled dealers a ho try to palm off upon you Rock and Rye in place of TOLC ROCK AND RYE, which is tbe only medicated article made, the genuine having a Government Stamp on each bottle. LAWRENCES MARTIN, Proprietors, In Madison Street, Chicago. Ask your Druggist for it. Ask your Grocer for it. Ask your Wine Merchant for it Children, ak your Mamma for it. Sold by Druggists, Grocers and Wine Merchants everywhere. 'Wholesale Agents In Indianapolis. Stewart A Barry, Browning fc Sloan, A. Kiefer snd A. Stout A. Son, wholesale grocers, wUl furnish the trade at manufacturer's prices. MEDICAL. PRESUMPTION FREE fr the mpr4y Vmrr mt rrv9n VThImm, tut 2 Vitality. HmMture lability, Nmwiins IlWfulrwr, Crafaaltta f !, lVfretlvr Mm. rr aaa disorders hi-aacht M by verwrk m4 Kxfrmm. Amt Srocst the Injrredleiita. tmt la Bteta NmM KawWp. Addrtm KK.W.H. J AQCtA, IS Hh Mlxth Ptrvet. IIimbbkiI. Ohl. 37 Court Race, LOUISVILLE, KY., A rmlarrr r4ocated sad Inrallr qualiSM bhrsiciaa aad tba oat MOOtartil, a bis pracu will prove. Cures all forms of PRIVATE, CHRONIC svnd SEXUAL Sisl & AS ES. , , Spermatorrhea and Impotency, athrea!t of elf-Mu ta yarns, ariaal nna ia mtnwr yean, mr other onn, oi muring mwii ihr (o rwiof efleel: Norrousaeu, 6iuiDl F.atismoat, (ni-lit rntiaSMn or Imni), DimaxM of feicbl. Defective M.orT. fhT. ical l)eey, Pimite Pace, X rroo Ut Soorty of Ken Irs; Coofutioa of Ideal, A f fieiual Povrr. e.. n-nd. nag nmrrute fmproprr or onhonrr, ra taonmf faK aa4 prrmanratly eared. SYPHILj IS P"UU""'J' C1"T - SHa" ,raat b- : Gonorrhea, GLEET. Strict ira,- Urcfcilis, Henu, (or Mutrturcj, Files and otber print disraae jairkW cared. ltfcaeir-Tdeot'h' a Hi, mrium hö paia wrial ittratioa a oertaia u ot diear aw. trcatiua tbuuMnda anaaeUy, aoqairot great ki" rVTjictaB kaowtoc ttiW faun one reeamatrad perMt w my rare. Whea k Ir litcoarrvH at to ritit Uie city ftr irrmtmeu.. airdtrinra caa bo. acnt inraley ad saftly by mail or nprra aarabera. Cares Guaranteed in all Case undertaken. . . touauiiaiiou prraoaaDr r bf letter tree and favitrd. Caargoa reaaoaablo aad vm retwadeaoa aarftcUy waniirtoaiiai A PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of S)0 pafea, or tit to any addrru, eeetrrelr oralrd, fnr thirty real. Should be read be aU. addreaa al aha. Go, bHK trmmt (A.M. wr T. M. ftasdava. S to 4 P. M. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY Gray's Specific Medicine. pinf MtBr.il especially re-TRADC MSaV unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness, Spermatorrhea, Impotency, and all diseases that follow as a sequence on SelfAbnse, as Lora of loraTaidiigr.'.nudtAlW Takln rain In the Back. Dimness of Vision. Premature Old Age and many other diseases that lead to InMinuy, tJoriRumption and a Premature Grave. Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we de sire to send free by nail to every one. The Spe d&c Medicine is sold by all druggfcts at SI per package or six packages for f5, or will be sentby mail on receipt of money by addressing THK GRAY MEBIUXECONo.lO Mechanics' Block, Detroit Mich. For sale by Joeeph R. Perry. 50 . Wax hin it ton atreet. Aaati"?ly Ncaa4 poaitivcly ffactTva Heaied for tb Orr -IT aad nera.anaa cureoi Seminal Emiaaion and Impotency t tb only aao oar, to.. Iwroq fiK-ata. to tb anaeiyai ft it Iit Tb a f lb waaM; atHaaea anh atav.a) nMaavrMeaa. aad aoM aat hi.i i.r. mi iBwaranaarr p.i.aiai ar an. TnM IMH mf ili.lai.ia aaa ' a a. paaofily ftiaraataa bat a out air aarfeel aauafama. It aaa. aian at lair tun aad ranaf lajs vary neralaai an ajoa ey toe awieai rrjanawa m m u am ha). Ta. Kraiaay a) ft. llNAcMia ); U: . a ih. (aalaiiDrwia aaiU fmaf iiwanl llMitiila m mm aMoi a ill Wat ia iaa a, fwMl m aM aii,! '.. am av f Ml far im Mm f Ma, n at if w.. IT i - r 1 1 w atmoub M KARRIS REMEDY CO. KF'fl CHEMISTS. Market and tb. fttreet. TtUH'l, MO. A aw tor comrtt tttPE TO M FPLOTK. mtataiar Chipters on A lompe;esU Wmmv hotxi, bcteetKMft wif. Eridencea W Virfrttitr. TtiprnkB.ttv. feteriltfr. AdfKt to BruiCrjäf Maarsl Dojf, faSMX-t, CaaaV H a mi, am -. rrasmaHasaä, vss wm, vta-y ssMnsaM Via, Hi'bSanw Iiiiwi Sias, sSaajts) Ltf MHH laataaJ Sitt daT , aaaa, l" aaa ss n ia, iaa.r na--a a -. It i itw a PriTttt dedio&l IdviMr M m 4usn r mlliat fr iaspwr wiail waocislto, ud sw'f-abs- thm ssssjl aassjss tins. m sWKbs-ies. WW bssv ss MtWy gss. . Lass tt Vbfet. sM. Msi avaktssj lufflifi tmsfmm m afcsaa. f'nm? U mt as saw sjsst saaaf .: kswJ as mtn (Dr. ftojSSa .aa-ieaa M aai-aa aa aaaflWtav tVsNBi IrrlTlt Sat aswat tsts Wbry sssraaarV SBal Saalias. aaaaf Swawiaw liSSa StaaS taWf Msl SBSkS SSWSbSS-SaS-i SS aSbaa SaSaaaWaayi, 1 Hal tkSte Tr-as AsMrsm I'lAIITCn -AWef,rlwtf(.i,nTi4 Al I tUAff l-sw4cr. H.tor.nr T --.i-, tracts, te., by uui pie, ramthet. Troü CtMsä. Outbi Ire. rMpiV. Tc t ba jüaV. at. ttxiitr. M STOPPED FREE Murrriou ttmxu, !nn Peronj 8e?ton?5 DR. KLINE'S GREAT. Nerve Rfstorti otcM Ba nt A hrara Lishoes. Önty nrt 'mrtJiir iLi. L'Dtlrma and Acrre A tf returnsInriLLiBH If taken aa dlrerf-d. 2io Fils after ßr-sldaf1 tut. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free to Viteatienta,they parincrxprewae. fend nm, P. O. and eipreas adiirras to la. K 1 ' N iv. 31 ArchSL lti'l3i!eli,hta. I'a. wrt 'ci'ii "'i. Tiooi t prlcee evrt known on nrctra - aMMaoera, Klflea, and ReToWera, OUH $15 SHOT-GUH at prrpjttiy reluced pric. Send RtAtnp fir our IVew P. PO WELt A S0N.23.) Main Street, CI'CI Ji ATI, O. " McDonald 4 Bctlek, Attorneys. SHERIFF'S SAIJi-By virtne of a certified copy of a decree to roe directed, from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Henry II. Cook is plaintiff, snd Orpheus Everts et a), are defendants, requirin me to make the sum of twenty-nine hundred sua ninety-three dollars and eighty-wren cents, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, the 27th day of November, ' A. D. 1880, between the hours of ten o'clock a. m. and four ß'clock p. m., ot said day, at tbe door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, to wit: Lot number fouf (4), In Woodruff Place, a suburb of the city oi Indianapolis, Marion County. Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, st the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estalfe, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, Interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. JOHN T. PKKSSLY, a.- . a"- .of ataxtovCauatja ..

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