Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1880 — Page 5

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, NOYEMBEll 10, 1880.

DICKENS AND THACKERAY.

How tb First Ttd Whn HWm Poor ; XonngMan: and How the Second Crltlefw Hit Karry Writing.. - Londoa Corrotpondence of tha Datroit Frea rri!J Dickens' immeme popularity has been subject, to considerable discount since " his death, especially in America, where he was best loted. lie is still reac, and perhap u much or mora than, during his lifetime, but with abated feelings1 Thariainj: generation can hardly j rescue -tha enthusiasm . with which be- wal regarded, ,by hiscontemportries; and in a 'decade br o his ""popularity will ba) almost as muah a-tking of the past M "Walter Scott's. A great deal of lt.. was, it Is true, honesüy"woBv. though some accrued from our 'simplicity and uncritical ignorance. The perihelion was so brilliant that we took jt. fox, the suq, ,But, now that ft has rdipparted, we begin to reckon apthechar acterustica and shortcomings ot such a phenomenon. - DICKERS LITERARY 8TANDI5Q. V e have, so to apeak, found - htm -ouU Magnificent genius as he was, poet, humor ist, Liord ot Jjaughterandlearand farceurgeneral to all men of English speech, Dickens had his limits, his fault, his unvoracitie. He was a great egotist, whose sentimentaliam ., and lore of effect. dominated hia '.intellect. II could neither take,- am extensive on an intensive view of any subject; nor i grasp it as whole, nof Uhorouiily exhaut any part; lul habitually caricatured acd . "overstated jU'-His plots were mostly inartificial, hackneyed and 6tale, though. from the- ex- . ceeding richness, of the, characters fand detail, ttsy aumed 'the ' guise of novelty, lie did not believe in nature, but thought it necessary to satisfy his own wrong idea of artistic effect by putting in refining touches, which he lOTcctedVuot found, illia genesis of character im -rode and, unphiloiophic, often' -contradict ry. 'and "-impossible. He was, aaÜady"ßulwer styled-him, -the j Aristophanes of the Pothouse and the 4 Plutarch of the. Pave," and weakened the moral effect cf his pictures of vice by; the comic coloring given to them. - Eis literary execution though often graphic and felicitous and rising to pasaas of the mostetriking beauty, commonly retailed a taint of exaggerative penny a-lining, and too frequently sunk to sheer buffoonery. Finally, dealing overmuch in accidental manifestations and too little in universal principle, he win hardly live as an. English classic. Nevertheless, those who were. Dickens' contemporaries Had it hard to uit-love-him.' Jiven Americana, thought justly aggrieved by his base" disparagement oi their country, as revealed to those selüiWpoä'tuuoGou's letters, and the ugly contrast between his . life and writings, are still half-enthralled by his genius. For them London is peopled with the creations of his fancy; their England is the England of Charles Dickens- ' They seek out the localities described -by his pen and haunt the scenes ol his, personal histpry. For.such good-natured," , and, on the whole, wWa persons, this letter is written. ; '' t I : WCKKSa'.'SABLT, LOXDO OMK. . ."Möst people kno w that Dickon ' lived In chambers; at .'FarnivalsV Inn, . Uoiborn, when'; in early manhood, ' he ' achieved ; his first success by4writing the "Pickwick Papers.". The plaeo is easily found, but not generally 'identified," even by "Londoner,' who are rarely curious about such associations. I have recently visited the spot and also obtained some information concerning the great novelist and his equally famous contemporary and rival, Thackeray, at thiä comparatively obscure but interesting period, which information has been overlooked by other gleaners in the same field. . ' Furnival's Inn is in or near the very center of the metropolis. (The word inn, be it remarked, is Saxon for a house, habitatiocor lodging; and though now applied only to law-places and taverns, formerly signified a great house, mansion or palace. The French still use hotel in the same sense). Situate on the north' side of Uoiborn, at its widest, about midway between Gray's Inn Lane and Hatton Garden, it is just opposite Barnard's Inn, (where, it may be remembered, Uro" lived), and just west ofthat magnificent viaduct, the construction of which abolished Field lane (described in 0,iver Twist'') the site of the Saracen's Head and Snow Hill (introduced in 'Nicholas Nickleby'') and many other loccalities celebra'ed by Dickens. Southward of Ilatton. Garden is Thavies' Inn, whither Mr. Guppy conveyed the heroes and , heroines of '"Bleak lloim to the aboda of the Jcllaby's. A little to the west of Furnival's Inn, on the other side of the way, are the curious old wooden houses which escaped the great fire of London, alluded to in Oar Mutual Friend." Notable tenements they are, too, as dry as chip, and with six brotherly black gables rising grim and desolate above the busy little shops that have nestled beneath for at least three centuries. Five minutes' walk, still westward, up Uoiborn, brings Joa to Kingpgate street, where Mrs. Gamp odged with roll Sweedlepipe,' the barber, and had that immortal quarrel with Betsy Prig. ' Here, then, in the heart of London, like a glorified spider in a spot which was destined to become the center of a web of his own weaving, to enmesh all the world, Dickens 7ery appropriately lived. TUB CHAMBERS AT FCKNIYAL'S INN. His chambers were on the third or to story of No. 15 the center house on the right or east side of the wide court leading from the archway to the inner square, and facjns its wettern facade There re but thrl e houses thus situated each about thirty feet wide, and. of a somewhat. ornamental appearance, being . crossed by horizontal lines and having stucco Ionic pilasters between the windows aid the two middle stories. The doorway of No. 15 is central, having two windows on each side of it, and five on each of the upper floors. To the third you aecend by what N. P. Willis truly called 'a long ft ght of stair" indeed, six series of stone steps, about . three feet wide, accommodated with an ' iron ballustrade. These bring you to a central back landing space, with a room on each side, lighted by a tingle window, looking eastward. D;ckens cuamber, the south front one, is reached by passing through the left of these two rooms, the doors being cor.tiguous, near : the inner corner of the landing. There are three windows in Dickens' apartment, which is now tenanted by Mr. A. A. Dowtv, one of our minor comic writers the O. P. Q. Philander Sniff of Figaro. The back rom is occupied by a Mr. R. E. Brine, and those on the north (frort and rear) by Meesrs. Mason & Taylor, -solicitors. The rooms are simply ofHces, posseesicg no other interest beyond what attaches to their associations. i , PK US iVlL APPEARANCE. Dickens lived here in 18G3-4 5 and 4 pa of loC from the time when he was , one and-twenty to the date of his marriage. II was a very poor young man and like his father (Wilkins Macawber),a Parliamentary reporter on the Morning Chronicle. Ke had taught himself stenograph y, which exi perienee. b afterward ' utilized in "Davtl uopperfield" In this rooraThe 'wrote the 'Skeiebea by Boz." -Oliver Twist' and "Pickwick." N. P. "Willis has left us what U douUiesi! perfectly jtccy rate. description oi uiCKen oz rnu perioa. . lie round mm

"in in uncarpetcd and Weak-fooiingfio'rÄ, 'with a deal table, two or three chairs, a few bocks . and a email boy.' He. was dre?ed.

rather in the Sniveller style, with clothW scant and jaunty," nad close-cropped havr and 'looked ''the very personification of a close sailor to the wind.'. He was, too, very deferential to his pubhhe as became a poor author. Indeed there had been talk of discontinuing "Pickwick;" it did not sell sufficiently in pay expense until the appear acce of Sam "Weiler. .That immortal characterthe best and most original type of a shrewd London- "rough" et all the papers and magaanes quoting "bis sayings and anecdotes, and' "Pick wie kiana1 became a standing head in all the journalsv' And the book rose to quite unheard of popularity. CHARACTERISTICS. Dickens did no at that time or afterward affect to crmewsl hit poverty rrhAt of his family. Anold janitor ot Furnival's Inn, now dead, used to tell some suggestive anecdotes of him at this period. After joining the staff" of the 3Iorning Chronicle th;re was a. great, improvement.. in -his. dress. He bought a new hat and a very handsome blue cloatf (then a fashionable garmsnt), Which he threw over his shoulder a la Ipagnole when walking. ;,Thi$ cloak he- not unfrequently pawned, in order to tide over" some temporary interval ,of impecuniosity. ! Ho was very industrious, very hopeful and ill i rnititly aelf-conßdentl "Vith hfo reportorial friends he often supped at an oyster shop in Uoiborn the riiistress of which they idontU tied with the heroine of the "Misplaced AU tachment of Mr. John Dounce a story in the "Sketches." I myself know a retired. tailgr, once of tho neighborhood, who distinctly remembers refusing Diekens credit for a suit of clothe. " - : ; TUACKERÄVs I'lRST VISIT. Tu'stWow'VUlU. Twit,. MBoz". had a much more distinsulshed visitor to his diney Chamber frtjurnival's Inn (where, by the way, I have forgotten to mention, John "iV esIocB lived subsequently and entertained Tom Pinch and his sister Ruth the reader will find a capital description of tho inn in that chapter of ."Martin Chuzzle wit"). Robert Seymour, the' caricaturist, .who suggested Pickwick and' began -toi illustrate it, had coihinUteX suTcldeTand It was found thatBu's could not -.satisfactorily replace him. The original edition of the "book con--tainfftwo scarce plates by thiai artist, afterward suppressed). Then ' Thackeray, who was almost as poor ay young man as Dickens, and trying to live, by his pencil, in his own wordi, walked up to', his chambers with two or three drawing ia his hand, which, strange to say. he did not find suitable.'; "Thi disappwlatment," he add i, "caused me to direet-my 'attention to a different walk of art" nafnely-, literature; '.One wonders that th notable interview has never formed a subject fora pjcture,' ; ' IHA.CK;ERA.T9 OPINION' OKDICKEXS. . Thackeray hardly took his, rejection gra ciously, thojgh. he livedo to joke about it afterward. He criticised botU- "Boz" and "Phiz," his mist, pretty freely There is a slighting allusion to the latter in'4' An E?.say on the Genius of George Cruiksbank," pub " lished. in No. LXVI. of the "Wetimipster Review, arid in a companion article on French' Caricature," printed in the same" . journal and year.(lSU0). he advised Browne to study Daumier, who was certainly his in. ferior in execution. You will find "the passage in Parton's - "Caricature and. Oiher Comic Art.'' And Dickens, Thackeray fell foul nf in varioin urticlpa in Krnar'a rnTo. . i.i I,, r zine, wnicn are not generally Known to De from his hand. In an article entitled "Charles Dickens and His Works," published in April, 1840 (vol. '21), he mercilessly dissected "Pickwick," "Oliver Twist'' and ''Nicholas Nickleby," dwelling at great length on the faults of these novels, their improbabilities, inconsistencies of character, dilfuso descriptions and inartistic construction. He evidently was acquainted wit'i the origin of ''The PickwicK. Papers," and used that knowledge rather ill-naturedly. The pictures,' he says, ''ia fact, sold the numbers, and the writing was a matter of secondary consideration . ,, The necessity of filling a certain number of pages per month imposed upon the writer a great temptation to amplify incidents and to swell sentence after trifling sentence with any sort of words that would occupy space. Tho very spirit of a penny-a-liner, lor instance, breaka out in the prolix descriptions of the various walks through the streets of Lonon. In short, the habit of the reporter break out the copy i3 to be given in and what shall we write of but what we know?" Dickens could hardly have liked these reflections on his original profession; indeed he attempted to answer Thackeray'eat tacks in prefaces to subsequent editions of ''Pickwick" and "Oliver Twist, but he was n t very successful and, in fact, rather dodged the objections. Again, in "Going to See a Man Hanged" (Courvaisier, for the murder of: Lord William Russell), an article published in the same magazine for August, 1810, as in the final remarks to his story of ''Catherine,' Thicker y refers, and very unfavorably, to 'Oliver Twist." In fact, as he confessed, he 'quarreled with .Dickens' art a thousand and a thousand times," while he "delighted and wondered at his genius."' Although he was more popular than Thackeray, ever expected to become, the latter always expressed himself in unmistakable terms regarding him. ' Dickens U making $10,000 a year," he would remark. ' He is very angry at me for say'ng so; but I will say it, for it is true, ne doesn't like me. He knows that my books are a protest against his that if the one set are true the other must be false. Bat 'Pickwick,"' he afterward added, "is an exception. It ia like a glass of good English ale." And he lived to pay a noble tribute to his great rival in his lecture on "Charity and Humor.' THACKERAY'S JEALOUSY OP DICKENS. In short,' must the truth be admitted? Thackeray was jealous of Dickons. Itseerns almost incre üble that so large a mind should have been guilty of so miserable a weakness. But such was the fact. Lrd William Lennox relates a striking anecdote in proof. Hearing some flattery of Dickens going on at a dinner whore both were pre-ent, Thackeray turned to this nobleman and said, in a voice full of bitternesi: Did your hear that? I go nowhere but' I am subject to it. I should not mind hearing Lytton Bui wer praised to the skies, for I own my inferiority, but ' He then held down his head, evi dently tortured in mind, and was silent for some minutes. This, too, after he had savagely satirized Bulwer.both in tho 'Yellowplush Pape," and "1 unch'a Prize NovelLt." Such unfavorable revelations, whether TonccrningThackeniT or Dickens, involve a moral which I r fiad: f ready to my hand in HawxhrneJ ' It ia lot the high interests of the porjd n.ei to insU upon finding out that Its greatest men are, in a certain lower' sense,' vorymuch the same kind of men as the rest of us, and often a little wore; because a common, mind can, not properly digest such: A discovery, nor even know the true propr tion of the .great man's pod -and evil, nor5 how small a part of him it was that touched oar snuddy orüust fartkJüTb .ootne? moral bewilderment, -and-even-inUllectulJ loss ia regard to what U best of him." j ' T. B.g -

71 Sln 70O Herr at Xxok on the Pike's Ur i. Peak TrattAA ttaekad by Lions. " j -;f Colorado prtnga Gazct. K fWjrcant Keefe returned la.-t evening from an unsuccessful attempt to ascend the Peak. He saVB that it Is the first time within hi e'xrxrietvee- that he' haj- ben thus baflled,' ami le ask to be excused- from -ever being subjected to a similnr experience. Ty the reports which he had received from Mr. Hweency, who is stationed at the Peak, he was led to infer that but little enow had fallen, and in consequence he was not preored to. contend with the obstacles which blocked his path. The journey for the first few miles of the" trail was without -any dissatisfactory fe&tnrt, but while making . an abrupt turn in the trail in the vicinity of Minnehaha Falls, tfie Sergeant wus bronght to a standstill by an immense herd of black-tailed deer, which impeded his further propre.sa. lie contends that the nerd contained fully 700 head, and says it took just one hour and forty minutes for -them to pass a given point The Sergeant ;waa only armed with a thirty-two caliber. Smith fc Wesson revolver, and with this txor apology for a firearm, he sncceeded " in killing seventeen of the deer. The only plausible reason that Sergeant O'Kcefe can give for the remarkable appearam-e of this vast herd, is that they were driven from South Park by the recent etorru. As the Sergeant was compelled to continue his journey to the Peak, he gathered the game which he. had slaughtered, tied their tails together and slung them over the necjc of hi faithful mule-, "Balaam," and continued du his way. Everything pissed off smoothly until timber line was reached, when the "Sergeant encountered another serious bar rier, as the fierce northwest wind which hau accompanied the storm had formed mountains, of. snow across the trails With the i much-tnisted ' veteran mule, 'Balaam," and an unusual - amount of perseverance on. the part of liimself, Serjeant O'Keefe contrived to surmount a tre nicndoui snow-drif t twenty-eight feet in depth. When safely upon die other fide he paused for a moment, and taking his fleldglais o'er and examined the difiiculties with which lie had to contend. As far as the eye ; could reach, nothing but snow-banks could oe seen, some oi wnicu were at iea.se iw leri in high f It only required abrief space of time for the Sergeant to make- up his mind that it would be useless for him to risk his life in making another rash . attempt, so he concluded to - return t. to the . Springs, but i upon ; turning 'to step into the saddle, he discovered that the mule had disappeared. . The Sergeant was now in a sad plight, j Had he only survived : the terrible rat raid of 187Ü to tind death again staring him in the face from - starvation. He retraced his steps through the mammoth enow-drift and after a terrible siege of over one hour he found himself standing ujon the other side, thoroughly exhausted. After he had somewhat revived heglanced around him in hopes ot finding some traces, of the lost mule, and .what wns his chagrin, to perceive the much trusted '.'Balaam" lying upon his back, with " feet uplifted In the air at' the bottom of a . deep ravine. The deer, with which- he - had been festooned, were scattered- from top to bottom of the ravir.e. Tho Sergeant secured the game and the mule and again started on his homeward journey. - While passing along a very secluded iortion of the trail he was attacked bv six ravenous mountain lions, and, in order to save his own life, he was compiled to cast away the game which had reo aired so much exertion ' to capture. Even the seventeen deer dkl not replenish their ravenous appetites, and still they pursued hint, but by the proper manipulation of thfmule O' Keefe "managed to evade LheniA Ho reached tho signal office in this i city at 8 o'clock last night, and itit doubtful whether he ever . again attempts to traverse the Pike's Teak trail. . ., , Vote of Indiana.Following !s the vote of Indiana by Counties as far as received: ' - 1 - 1 3 7t 3 C .5: 2 COUXTIES. : fT.: Adams Allen..... Bartholomew..... Benton ISlackford ltoone.... .. Krown .......... .. Carroll. Cass Clark Clay .. . flu ton . Crawford . Daviess Dearborn IeoUur DeKalb Delaware....Puboti Elkhart Fayette ...... Floyd Fountain. Franklin yulton Gibson. Grant. Greene Hamilton Hancock - Harrison Hendricks.... Henry Howard.... Huntington. Jacksou ... Jasper Jay .4. Jetlerson ... Jennings Johnson Knox KoHolusco Irange I-ftke j. Laporte - Lawrence Madtson Marion Maibal.....: Miami Martin..... Monroe.... Montgomery .jl.. Moryim Newton.'......-.... Noble.,... Ohio...... Orange..... Owen ......... .... Parke.. ...... l'erry - Forter ............ I'OKey Pulaski lutnam Randolph .. Kipley Kosh . Sfiott . nelby... Soeneer Starke ft. Joseph... .Steuben . ... 1,214 2,11! i 218 10 19-21 75ll - 42; 62 4S7 129 47 l.j 137 8 .39 183 7S1 1,021 4 , 2.211 6S. 3.571: 2,m 2 2.M7 2,fltf 1.0&S 53 S0! 112 I 1.82C 117 C9 84 104 20 3.M3! 1.S5; 912 1.761 2,114 1,757 2,5601 1.2T.1 530; 15 3,100 1,046' 2,201 4, 47 33 t 48 6S. I 3." Mj 2.4." 3.C3.S; -1 2,378, V,24V 210 1,M. 2,üy3 36 3.7SS 3.0 iö 2,ftn 1.7T.7 1.J04! , i 47; C49 35 140 2.6Ö7: sis' 2.11; 2,617 19 43 128 1.141 1,rrw 421:1 1f.ll 451 Hi 2.00S 1,710 '434 741! 91? 5S 13 . 249, ' 339 13 185 100 ;.722' 9241 laoi ii,:jo 3,016 8.000! 2,436 271 67 44: 50i 240 138 15 1.20Ü, 716 4JU 1.4S6: I 491 61 108 114 69 137 34 13 : 53 79 977 J.C5S. 1.SC7 201W 142 I 2.243 1,57 ; 665 489! . 897 4,294 1,004 107 310, 80! 20; 2,156. 2.12.N -1 353 71 2.R7S 771 2,363 2 32-" 1,100, 2.1 i. 112 3.CR2 Jfiöl 2,3 20,1, l.ttiC, 1 49 33 50 7 Sullivan 1.442 Switzerland. 9 1.! 119 Tippecanoe.-, Tipiou.. .. truion....., Vandrbur,.., .OiiU 3.82l) 1.211 241 1,034- .711 2CI 4,9104,183 ,4,982 , 4,575 41 145 111 Vermillion ....J F 1407; vigo.: Wabash Warren Warrick Washingtou ..... Wayne ells.......... White ... Whitley . Total ... Plurality 1.41 903 2.342 913 111 2,009 t333 73 30 29 6.2521 1,514' 8.32 2.92ÄI 2,3'J; 1 j 19 1,944 2,232 .200 2.W2677 C iThe JExperieneeof an1 tkHls tytre.-.I, t 1 lAtleniowsi . kcphiUcdnL ' X ' t I eonmder it pmpr tor 'put in cwd word tfr Sc Jacobs 0lTrwhirh I.do frc::i aiy own erperierice. My wife hai rheaiaatltm for "jtAM, and Buffered, reall;. she sed very

IT

77TTTT lieL A Tew miny remedies without reli months ajjo I bought a bottle of t Jacobs il, and tue success which attended its U!e leads me to' recoramer.d this article to all similarly') affected, The -first application acted like magic, and the occasiowil use of 5L Jacobs Oil Las prevented a returu of this great trouble with its almost intolerable j.ain. I consider St. Jacobs Oil a great ben-, efaction, and advice all who suffer with, rheumatism or other painful diseases to try this .remedy, , and. they will see for themselves that I have not said too mnch in its praise. ... ; E, E. Eisx, Ed. . E. R. Dawley, of Trovidence, JL I.,' says: '"Having witnessed the wonderful effects of Hunt's Remedy in ruy own case, and in a great number of others, I recommend it to all afflicted with Kidney disease! Those afflicted by disease should secure the medicine which will cure in shortest possible time.' Hunt's Remedy will do thi." m ,i llrd j ;i What It Doe. -- Kidney-Wort moves the bowels regularly cleanses the bloodand" radically cures kidney disease, grav-l, piles, bilious headache, and pains which are caused by . disordered liver and kidneys. Thousands have been cured why should you not try it? Your druggist will tell you that it is one of the most successful medicines ever known, j - For impaired digestion, and, in fact, for debility, from any cause, I know of nothing equal to Fellows' Ilypophosphites. Its di-f rect e fleet in strengthening the nervous system renders it suitable for the majority of diseases. Wm. S. Howe, M. D., Pittsfield, Me. Not Mag IJke It! It Stand Alone! Such is the verdict of the medical world and the public, on Hale's Honey and Horehound and Tar. Coughs, colds, influenza, all irritations of the organs of speech and respiration, vanish under its influence, like fojrs before the sunlight. iold by druggists' Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minnte- ' - . ' ' : '.. . SPECIAL NOTICES. Greenbarkers. ' ' "' ' Oreenlxack leagties are being organised all over the country. Subscribe for the old reliable Indianapolis Sun; eight pages and only $1 a yeah Address TIIE SUN, Indianapolis, Ind. ' 0 Thirty .Years Experience of an Old Kurse MRS. WISSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP la the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses In the United States, and has been used for thirty years with never failing success by millions of mothers for their children. It relieves the child from pain, cures dysentery and diarrhea, griping in the bowels, and wind colic. By giving health to the child it rests the mother. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. V l o . : A CARD. To all who are Buffering from the errors and in discretions of youth, nervous weaknew, early decay, loss of manhood, etc., I will send a recipe that will cure yon, free of charjje. Thi great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Scad a self addrqfxed envelope to Rev. Joseph T! Ixman, Station D, New York City. novlO Yho Were the October Winners? j v At the grand monthly drawing, the one bnudred and twenty-fifth of the Louisiana State Lottery, at New Orleans, pn Tuesday, October 12, No. 90,332 was , drawn for the first capital off ,000, and it was sold Lu halves ono-half In recponse to a letter addressed to M. X Dauphin, Nd. 319 Droadway, New York City, to M. R. F, Miller, of No. 537 Court street, Brooklyn, L.' I., while the other was sent by mail In response to a letter to A, Dauphin, New Orleans, La., by Mr. James A.. Farley, through Messrs. Farley, Ppear & Co., bankers at Montgomery, Ala., and collected by Messrs. Jusey & Gillis, of New Orleans. The cost of each iuvestment was only ?1. The second capital or $10,000 was drawn , by No. 20,233, in New Orleans, La.; No. 10,143 drew the third capital of 85,000, was sold in Memphis, Tenn and collected by the First National Bank of Memphis. ' o The standard quality of Burnett's Cologne and Flavoring Extracts have, without an exception, won for them the highest awards for excellence over all competitors, In every Exposition whereever they have been placed, for the past twenty years; and to place the cap stone upon past hon ors, The Tribunal at the Centennial, composed of experienced judges at home ana from abroad, join In the popular verdict, and pronounce then "the best lu the world. . , . . 0 Queru's Cod Liver Oil Jelly. , Approved by the Academy of Medicine of New York for coughs, colds, bronchial and tubercular consumption, scrofula and general debility. 1 The most mild, bland and nutritious form la which Cod Liver Oil can be used, and with more benefit secured to the patient by a single teaspoonful of this Jelly than by double the quantity of the liquid oil, and the most delicate stomach will not reject it. For sale by all druggists, and E. H TliUEX, 3 riatt street. New York. ', '' Nervous Debility. -1 ! 1 Cured Without Medicines ! Onr Special lialvawie Appliances reach at once the eat of disease, and their Electro-Galvanic action is upon the center of the . ; NorvoitH, 3Xttt!iciilfii , , i j uiid Grexierutl ve ; . Y 8PEED1LY RESTORES THK. 1 VITAL FÖRCHS' LOST MANHOOD, . : And curing the worst cases of fSeminal Weakness. Exhaustion. ImpoteiicT, and all Disease and Weakness of the Urh-genltal Cleans. , YOUNG MEN Suffering from early indiscretion lack nerve force and fail to attain strength. MIDDLE-AGED MEN , , Often lack vigor, while OLD MEN ; Believe It to be the natural ' progress of age and decay. To one and all we cau say that " are merely wants natural aid, which our ep appliance give Without drugging the stomach. We guarantee a cure in every case of short structural degeneration. Special Illustrated pamphlet sent in eealed envelope on receipt of 6 cents postage. Cou ultatlon free. Oflice hours, 9 a. m. to & p. m. . . 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TTT" "s" ' lSOa?ia Mothers Lie, and Physician tecoimnend it. ' ! -j- "j ' i ' ... . ... IT IS NOT NARCOTIC. CENTAUR L.IXI3IENTS ; the Wbrhrs ' great Pain-Rclicviiij? remedies. Tlieylical, soothe and ciircBurnsWoundsWeak Back and Rheumatism upon Maii and Sprains, Galls, and Lameness upon Beasts. Cheap, quick and reliable." ' - ES SPURTS of disguating Mucns, SanfUea. Crackling; Pains in the Head, Fetid Breath, Deafness, and any Catarrhal Complaint, can be exterminated ty Wei Do Meyor'i Catarrh Cure, a Constitutional Antidoto by Absorption.' The most Important Discovery since Vaccination SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue ot an execution to me directed, from the Clerk ot the Circuit and ex-ottirio of the late Common Fleas Court of Marion County, Indiana. I will expose at public aale, to the highest bidder, on ' SATURDAY, the 4th day of December, ! 1' ' T . Olli, A. U. lOO, j between the hours of 10 o'clock a, m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seveu years of the following real estate, to-wlt: t , The east half of thesonth half of 'ontfof ODe hundred and forty-four (I4l); als.j. the south' end of the west half of lot Xo. nine ('J), iusqnarel No. sixty-seven (C7), described as commenein at a point one hundred and thirty (lattj feet south of the north line thereof : thence running south to Kentucky avenue, being the same lot described lu the decree of partition in the case of Y. Mi t;iK lespie and others, recorded in the Recorder's office of said Marion Couuty, in Tecd Keeord of town lot. Book ll, at thikc 4."7, as set. apart to Anna R. Mnguire, wifc oi Donglaas Masaire; al.-w part of lot one (l) In Austin V. Morris' subd vision of the northeast part of square eigntyeight described as follows: , Beginning at the uorthwttit corner of said lot one l) and running east seventy-five (75) feet, and thence south fifty (.tO) feet to the north went corner of said lot to the point of beginning; also, twe .-live (25; feet on of the west side of iLe eat ' half of lot -.five (o) In Merrills - subdivision ot out-lot nineteen (19), and twentv-five C5) feet running back one hundred (100) feet from the south side of South street; also apart of square one hundred and one (101), described as follows: Commencing one hundred and thirty one and a half (131 ?i) feet from the southwest comer of the west half of said square; east on South street, running thence at right ancles from said tbn one hundred and five (10ö) feet north; thence east alonjr Toon's line twenty -six and . a half 2C.',) feet; thence south to South street; thenee west alone said street twenty-six and a half (2ti) feet lo the plaee of bei(inniiirv the Kiiiri. beintf,. parta of lots weight () and nine in jmid e-jaare one iiuiidml and one i lül.i ' , . Also, lot number nine (!)vTu bhxk or square eighteen (I), of Drake's aJ.tuin to the city of Indianapolis.. ; t Also, the undivided one-half of lot three (3), in Little's subdivision of out-lot eighty-four (W), except siity (60) feet of the south eu'd of said lot three (31. . i 1 t Also, löt nine (0), in Hendricks' sulxlivion of out-lot ninety-nine (99); all of Hie foregoing real estate being in the city of Iudianarali, Marion County, Indiana. ' - '. Also, the west half of the southeast quarter of the northwest qnarter of section twenty-two (22), in Township fifteen (15). north of rangi four (4), east, containing twenty ("20) acres more or less; all of the foregoing real estate btfng in Marion County. Indiana. And on failure to rea'.iza the full amount of Judjnnetit, interest and oosU, X will, at the same time and place, ex -ose at public Bale the fee simple of said renl eftatc.. ', , Taken as the property of Winslow f?. Pierce, at th suitot William O. Kock wood, and at the- suit of Delowt Root et al.. for the benefit of Henry 1. Pierce, assignee of the Judgments in tbelr faror. (said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuttliou or appraisement laws in the Iteckwood Judgment, and with relief, etc., on the Root Judgment. ( r '-. JOHN T. PRESSLY, , i Sheriff of Marion County. Kovember 9. A. D, ls0. . . Nov9-3w 'Iwilliam a.'lowk, attorney for Plaintiff. , STATE OF INDLVNA, Clarion County, ss': In the Circuit Court of Marion County, in the State of Indiana. - Xo. -210. Complaint r William W. Hmitb in. EniTBaSmith. . 1 I Be itknow n, that oo the 2:Jrd day of October IPSO, the above namei pLiIntiff, bv Lis attorney; tiled In the office of thetlerk of the 1rciit 5ourt of Marion County, in the State of Indiana, his complaintnpainst the ab)ve named defendant: and" the said plaiatiff having also tiled in the wild Clerk's cöioe the a.lklavit of a competent person, fchowinjr . thut juid.. defendant. Emnm Hruith, is not a resident of the State of Indiana, that a cause of action exists nsminrt ber, and that the object of Mtid action i' to obtain a dtvrce if di; vorce, and whereas said plaiutitl' having by " indorsement on wild eomphiiut required ai4 defendnnt to appear lit id Court and aner de-, mur thereto, on the 2d day of .December, P0. Now, therefore, by order of said Court, said defendant last above named is hereby -notiiied of the tiling aud pendency of said complaint against her, and that unless she appears and answer or demurs thereto, at the callitin of said can? on the A day of December, 18M), - turae fceins the 1-ith judicial day bf a term of huU Court, to be b'gun and held at the Court Hou.e in the city of Indianapolis, on the first Monday in December, 1SW1, paid complaint and the matters and thing thereia contained and alleged, will be heard and determined ia her absence. DAN. M. KANSDELL, oct25-3w - Clerk.: iilil HanofArtorj Ga-tm Axilla FREXCB BI IIB KTOX1 Verfh lur 'armra, Raw Mill Oncra, etc. FrV-t lmm ( 4) Bp. CurlUU!U r.d Strict fi. 1 bOfCM (rtfiS bb4 ttp la .ordf. 4UW4 taai.; kiod rf rml-tk-powrr. Complete rtüwi4. nd Crm Hit very kop. - IndiAaapolia, lad. . OKXKU.iTIvS lS.H-ir and ante. Kcntovcft Trv.mi timtüily. Impomrr. kiul SxuA4duljlitty. ri.irf thecnurpT, nrwnnil Tt'. pfrmith In twnt mlmue. prV. tV.C'X. - jt!r' t!ta SEV ENGLAND ilEWClL INT1TI"TI li Tnnaoot Row. Boston. Miv.

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D Habter 8 1ms Toic h a pirnaratlon of Protexide of Iron, remvUn Burk and the rhosrthates MorlaUd with the V epetabte AromaUc. Endoreel by ttw AU-dlcal l'rof-lon. and tvcoinmended by them for DyacsMlaw efarral lability, FrmaU) JL;eue. Want or VlUkU i-eVn?7;e,.'?-'i: ssf tt ci,ro-,e thAl1 ISunfadored bj TK Dl HARTER LEICi::E CO., U 213 Wt lhfn Street, SL Lwls.

DYSPEPSIA;

DON'T FORGET THAT $1 . . INVESTED IX THE" KENTUCKY STATE DR1WIXG or NOVEMBER 30, MAY RETURN .YOU ONE OF THE FOLLOWING AMOUNTS: . - ; tlS.OOO, ' $5.01)0. .' 2..V10, ' : Si,0(.Ki, I Jl.OOU. Rerait by Mall. Draft or Expre, ANT) NOT BY MOSEY fKDKU OR REGISTERED LETTEß until Further Notice. For full particulars and orders address G. LTIMGTOK, 5?9 Broadway. New York. Or M. J. RICHMOND. CovinKton, Ky. .Gtli Popular Monthly Drawing of the COMMONWEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO., At Maeauley's Theater, in the city of Louisville, ' . on Tii4Ntlay, Nov. O, ISO These Drawinra, authorized by the Legislature of 1878, and snstained by the ('curt of Kentuekv. occur regularly on the LAST DAY OF EVERY MONTH. Sundays and Fridays excepted, for the period of F1VK YEARS. ; The United St&te Circuit Court, on March 31. rendered the following decisions: First. That the Commonwealth Distribution Company ia legal. Second. Its drawings are fair. The Company has now on band Innre rewrr fund. Kead carefully the ILst of prizes for the NOVEMBEB DRAWING. 1 FTi-.... ..... 30,000 1 Prize. ..4W.0U0.1 Prize 6.1X0 19 Prizes 1,000 ea, 10,000'20 Prizes 1500 ca 10.000 10OPrlcs' 100 ea 10,0002ii0 Prizes 50 ea 10.000 600 Prizes TO e.v. 12.0001000 Prizes 10 ea 10,000 . 'APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 9 Prizes of SW0 each t2,700 9 Prizes of 9 Prizes of 200 each... 100 each.... 1.S0Q 00 1,900 Prize Whole Tickets, 12. 27 Ticket, öu. $112,400 Half Ticket. L 55 Ticket. flOO. Remit Jloney ot Batik Draft in ICtter. or send by Express. DON'T FEND BY REGISTERED LETTER OR JXWTOFFICK ORDER. Ordert of i and a pward, by Express, can be sent at ojr expense. P.. M. HOARDMAN, Courier-Journal BuiLr.ng, Loui.t-llle, Ky. or G07 and 3011 .Broadway, Sew York. . Or to J. T. WOODWARD, Agent, ' ' 17 North Illinois Mreet. Indianapolis. Fori Home Garden Farm. WEHE HAPPY ' at OTTS HOSTS, and Tou may be too.' WHYJ..... HOW1 " Because we have PLENTY To EAT; XENTY To SELL TT Eeai The American Agriculturist, and Ita Thousands of Good nints and Eoggeetions kelp u to Uiick, plan , and work better and more profitably. Ithelp Wife, and pleases and Instructs the Children. It U FlrH-rate. and every Man. Woman, and Child -ia City, Tillage, and Country ought to have it." It Will Help Yn. TRY IT! Terms for Vol. 40 0881). SlX ; Threa, 84 1 Four. S3. & Rest of this ytm.r free. EitabKsMUnlSQ. VoL40 1SS1. 80Ö Instructive, Original, Pleasiag, Usefd EüfraTias. CSeraam Edition tuppliei pn tarn trmtuthtnoHX. Splendid Premiums at no Coat. Send your addre em Ital Card for Fret Copy of 41 pagct I'JuttraUd Description.. ORANGE JCDD CO., Pnbl!8hi-s 245 Broad wsy.ITEW TOET. Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon the Liver, and. cures liver Complaints, Jaundice,'. Biliousness, Malaria, Costiveness, Headache. Itassists digestion, strengthens die system, regulates the bowels, purifies the blood. ' A Book sent free. Dr. Sanford, 162 Broadway, N. Y ' FOR SALE XT7 ALL DRUGGISTS. FOR CHILDREN! THE M7ELSERT. Tin well-known m T1 1.. . , . 1 II, on ita fifteenth yea? in 1S.M; IM a year, in advance. Send for sample number and premium lift. New subscriber tret extra numbers by subscribing now. .Address ; ;. . . NKifERY rUBLISIIING COMPANY. Roston. Ms.. $100 A MONTH We cffpT paying employ ni"ttto an intHlictrntmaa or woman in every A Ti TlTTTin for tmr 4ow. want JJC jLtK &. O onro,. superb, hiahly mmnM'iMifd, inioienm ly .i ui .r nnd faetfNElVBOOK iBietiüesv) niir. snt A(iitRnia!:mum-v fist fnl for clnrulur and terrna. Alfa, for 'ffce IVnple I Kigazine and (JrHiid I'reniiutKH. t.r.r Jear. g.miplfl fne f-r ftmp, or 3 m- v.x'm fr 10 rivfs. ins LOCI

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