Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1880 — Page 3

BV 3

FATE AJiT WILL.

k JAMES arssnx' LOWILL. We call oot norrow detlny, but ought Kather tt name our high successes so. -. Onlv the instincts ( great souls are fate. And have prodestiaed sway: all other things, , txcept by leave of us, con Id never be. For destiny u but the breath ol God Still moving in 11. the hu-t fraenient left Of our fallen nature, waking oft . . Within onr thought to beckon us beyoud The narrow circle of Wie seen and tuown, And always tending to a noble end. ,ELIGIOUS IN.EIXIGIOCE CIDENTS. AND IXThe Jews are proposing to hold a confer!l(eto discuss the relations of Judaism to the ices of infidelity, -which are so rapidly increasing. Two of the Chinese members of the Presbyterian Church in Oakland. Cal., are taking a theological course in Lane Theological Seminary, Cincinnati. Mr. Moody's sermons have been translated into Arabic." Protestant missionaries in Syria read extracts from them every Sunday evening to their converts. The Jewish Messenger"" says of its folklore: "It would be extremely beneficial if all our customs at a house of mourning received a scisntiflc and satisfactory explanation. Many of these havo degenerated into superstitions, which most are too timid to inquire into, and slavishly follow B3 if they were part of the Sinaitie revelation." Ker. Dr. Cuyler says, in the Congregationalist, that a vital question is thj small attendance at religious services. "It requires but half au eyo to discover the alarming fact that this attendance is steadily falling off both In the cities and in the country, both at the East and the Weet. Forty years ago it waj claimed that one-balf ot the population of the city of New York were either wholly or partially connected with some Protestant congregation. Now only.onefour.b. of the population are ever seen in any Protestant place of worship " Dr. Cuyler adds that, en the first Sunday in October, the fifteen nioet popular churches in the city, capablo of seating 20,000 persons held only 10,500. i Kentucky preacher rose to speak, and opened the Bible. The first verse that met his eye happened to be, "The voice of the turtle shall be heard in the land." "Brethren," said he, 4,at imt tight one would not think there was much in this text, but, on a little consideration, you will see there' a great deal in it. Now you all know what a turtle is. If you have been along by a pond, you've seen them setting on a log sunning thenselves. Now.it ia said, the voice of the turtle shall be heard in the land.' But the turtle hasn't any voice that anybody ever heard, so it must be the noise he makes n plunging off the log into the water, llence we must conclude that immersion U jleasant, and that immersion will become universal." . t The New York Herald savs: It is nonsense to say the day of miracles is past," for it is the same omnipotent God rules the universe now as ruled it at an earlier date, and it is not for us to dare decide the special period at which it may please Ilia Divino Majesty to work miracles through His servants or through Ilia own special will. The whole matter comes to us in a nut-shell. The power is with God, and when we see that power work the miraculous effect we must believe the testimony of our senses? or else act like the man who denied the existence of matter till a dagger was thrust into his hipjajnt. However, as we said before, we repeat now, that we suspend our judgment in relation to the Knock apparition and others till the Church solves the matter. 3Ir. Josiah Copley, In an article published in the Presbyteri in Banner, says ol the Canteroury revision of the Bible: ,4Let it be borne in mind that this is not so much a new translation as a revision of the old one, that it is made in the light of several ancient manuscripts which were unknown to the former translators, and also that it will bring the sacred text into harmony with our language in its present advanced aad perfected state. Nothing more. . "Were the new version divided into chapters and verse?, as the old is, it would require a pretty close Bible student to distinguish the one from the other. Still thousands of the present generation will maintain that 'the ola is better and will cling to it, while" others will welcome the new, because it will be clearer, more In harmony with the original, and with our own language as it is now understood and used." An interesting collection cf Bibles was recently exhibited in London, which comprised copies of all the editions that, because of peculiar errors of the printers, or from some other reason, have been known by strange names. Among the Bibb s on exhibition were the following: The Gutenberg Bible the earliest; the Bug Bible, hTt). 1554; the Breeches Bible, the English lam-, ily Bible during the reign of Queen Elizabeth; the Place-Makers' Bible, from a typographical error, "Blessed are the place-rankers," instead of "peace-makers," A. D. 15(12; the Treacle Bible, A.. D 15C8: the R.sin Bible, A. D. 1009; the He and She Bibles, A. D. 1611; the Wicked Bibles, from the fact the negative has been left out of the seventh commandment (Exodus xx., 14), for which the printer was fined 300, A. 1). 1631; the Thumb Bible, one Inch square and half an inch thick, A. D. 1G70; the Vinegar Bible, A. D. 1717; the Printers' Bible; the Murderers' Bible, A. A. 1801; the Caxton Memorial. Bible, wholly mted and bound in twelve hours, A. D. 1877. DRAMATIC AMI MUSICAL.. Sara Berahart ha made a 'most successful debut in New York. The n;w play of '-One Hundred "Wives" has been termed a success. Saulsbary's Troubadours have returned from their European tour. Oustave F. Hall, the welKknown opera singer, has settled down in St. Louis. The New York Lodge of Elks have been presented with a$l,(xX) piano by "Weber, the instrument maker. Laura Don who supported Frank Mayo last season goes to San Francisco as leading support to M. E. Sheridan. Miss Jennie Parker, of the variety stage, was married last month in Kokomo, Col, to one of the bonanza kings ofthat city, W. F. Ccrbett. Raymond Holmes, a clever young comedian, ' has made hit at the New York Standard as a ''Fop" in the new drama of Upper Crust. . . - Plenty of amusements this week. "The Tourists," "Uunipty Dumpty," 4 Sol Smith Russell," "Joshua Whitcomb and "Oliver Doud Byron." A violinist on a Nevada stage was anxiously turning one f the keys of hisrviolin backward and forward, but it did not suit him. He turned it over and over again, while the audience impatiently waited, until a vole came' from the gallery, Chonny, yoost hit der bung.". ... A new candidate for honors as a '. stage wizzard made his appearance last week in New York, in the person of Baron fcJeeman. The gentleman is highly accomplished as ft preatidigitateur, and performed very clev

erly a number of tricks which other ' magicians have made familiar, and : many feats besides, which are- new and entertaining. He was assisted by his brother, Adolphe, and by his sister. A feature of the entertainment was called the electro motor, and consists in the playing, by electricity, of a number of musical instruments placed about the hall, and operated on them through the keyboard of an organ on the stage. M'lle. Seeman figures in an act of mesmerism while invisibly suspended in the air. The baby elephants and the animate and inanimate marine curiosities attract, as usual, a large and interested attendance of spectators. Oliver Doud Byron's agent lately wrote to a ball proprietor in a small town near Buffalo for an open date and received, the following reply: "I don't know you. "Who's Byron? "W hat have you got?" But Joe Banks, going to the postoffice for his own letters, was handed the postal card in mistake. A broad smile suffused Joe's sevenbenign countenance as he read it, and, not saying a word to Byron, answered: "Dear Sir A piece called Across the Continent,' now in its eleventh year; fifteen acting people, a business manager, two agents and an advertising donkey; six different lithographs in five colors, two half-sheet hangers, three different streamers, one twelve-sheet cut in two colors, on 5 nine-sheet cut in two colors, six different three-sheet cuts in three and and four colors, five assorted character cuts; also, a 'full' company, all 'good cards,' a flush' treasury, never in a 'strait,' 'two pair' of comedians, bij; on the 'draw,' plays a 'good deal,' 'cuts' as above, 'packs' every ball, lives on 'high game, and sure of ' getting a hand.' Now, I call you. "What have vou got?" The last London Figaro gives this amusing . sketch of a battle between operatic voices in that city, "Mine. Lorenzini Gianoli, who made her debut as 'Norma' on Tuesday, was, it is said, engaged by Mr. Mapleon for America, but through a slip she remained in Europe, and, in the absence, of Mme. Bacchi (who hassince arrived), was engaged by Mr. Armit. O era-goers will heartily wish she had been shipped to America. A tall, gaunt figure, a voice unpleasantly harsh ani a stage presence certainly DruiJical, all told against the debutante. The new 'Norma' had a powerful organ and seemed an experienced actress; and, indeed, if she had but freshness of voice and any sort of method, she might be an acceptable artist. But in the result (as atthe earlier representations of the opera, when the 'Adalgisa of Grist overshadowed the 'Norma' of Pasta) the positions were again reversed. The star of the evening was the 'Adalgisa,' Mme. Dauermeister; and the new artist, despite her powerful voice and histrionic gifts, had to give way before her. A few friends of both artists supplied, however, the chief fun of the evening. The supporters of TMmo. Biuermeister applauded her, while the newly found friends of the debutante did all that lust- throats and powerful palms could do to applaud their favorite. By and by at the duet, 'Mira o Norma.' the two forces appeared nonplu-sed. For the friends of the one to applaud the other stemed to be absurd, and to this incident may be attributed the fact that probably for the first time in the historv of the opera the famous duet missed its usual encore," EXPRESSIONS.

Buckwheat Cake. I'm king of the land with the broad fist griddle I'm lord of tbi flap-jack" clan; To no pancake will 1 play ercoud fiddle. And 1 cuter to mortal man. I'm found in palace or hotel the tarne, The table's my native heather; I dihIi when KpriDK kiaara soft o'er the plain, And I vanish Id winter weather. Burlington Hawkeye. Oblivion is the flower that grows best on graves. George Sarcd. "Up to the hour of going to press" she said her beau had never hugged her. Many a man slips a three-cent piece into the contribution box with a ten-cent air. Milkmen rarely have water on the brain. They put it where it is far more profitable. A fellow who had been to the circus spoke of his girl's cheek as a splendid side show. Lovin' a cottage is more common than lov in' the cottage mistress Boston Transcript. A determination to be amiable i9 an appropriation for the improvement of the river of lire. The Lowell Sun recommends a ''patent inside" for a country editor troubled with dyspepsia. Many preachers seek to impress their hearers with the fact that life is short, but forget it in their sermons. Every man's work, pursued steadily.tends to become an end of itself, and to bridge oyer the loneliness of life. Somebody notes that love is moro interesting than marriage, for the same reason that romance is more enticing than history. An old fashioned spinning wheel i3 tho proper thing for the parlor, but old fashioned spinning yarn is confined to the back-yard fence. ""What a blessing it is," said a hard working Irishman, ''that night river comes on till lnte in the day, whin a man is tired and can't work any at all." The man who owns a fine gold collar button with a diamond set in the center, always considers it cooler now and more comfortable to go without a necktie. "Landlady,"' snid he, "the coffee isn't fettled." "No," she replied, "but it comes as near to it as your last month's board bill does;" and that man never spoke again during the meal. "I haven't work enough for another servant," said a lady to a girl who applied for a situation. "Oh, yes, you have, ma'am. It'll take precious little to keep me busy," was the naive response. I tell you," says a rabid free thinker, "the idea that there is a Ciml never comes into my head MAb, precisely like my dog. But there ! this difference he doesn't go round howling about it." An Irish porter, closing a shop one rainy evening, took off his coat while putting op the shutters. When asked why he went out in his sh;rt-sleevea in the rain, "Shure,'' said he, "don't I want a dry coat to go homo in?" "Introduce to mo your intended," said his friend. "She is not my intended; she is my wife." "Pshaw! you were hugging and kiisin her almost in public." "Yes, but we have been married only a month, and I had forgotten that she was ray wife." "Darling, Kiss Me Sweet good-night," is the latest song. One young man sang it in the presence of his girl the other evening, and just as she was about to act in accordance with tho words of the song her dear .papa put in an appearance and filled the youth's coat tails full of boots. Danbury N ws. , ( . . , , "Don't you think," said a brother ' lawyer to Judge Undewood, "that Jim Pierson - is the greatest liar of a lawyer tbat .you ever saw?"; "I should be sorrr 1 to ' lay that of Brother Pierson," repliea the Judge; - "but he is certainly more economical of the truth . than . any other lawyer in the cir. cuit!" ! "

COXCZIUOXO WOMEX.

To Woman. . , , - ! BY MART. Lines suggested ly hearing the following in Mrs. Julia Ward Howe's paper on "Woman's Work in Society," read by her at the Woman's Congress, Boston, tcUber 13, Ismo "Women gather the poppies, and leave the rite corn in the tield." O listless hands, shapely, divinely fair, That idly Rather but the scarlet flower. And piss the ripe, rich corn within the tield Of life, the perfect bloom of Harvest time is ours. Alns! the flame-like poppies lull to sleep The waking thoughts, that stir within the breast: Andweary, heart-Rick, with a sense of loss, Out hands droop lifeless, from their barren quest. God's smile of sunshine floods the rosy East: , The harvest waits, "the laborers are few." Rise, Womanhood! and bind the golden sheaves; His angels bear this message unto you ! Woman's Journal. Grace Greenwood and her daugther are now traveling in Italy. One of the ablest writers on the Boston Evening Traveller is Miss Lilian Whiting. "Women riding on horseback in the fourteenth century, were drested in male attire, which at that time included pantaloons. ' A party of twenty-one ladies in 2sew York city have filed articles of incorporation of a society for the care cf infants and young children. Susan B. Anthony and Mrs. E. Cady Stanton have been at work together ail summer on a book that will place man just where he belongs. It is said that 5,000 women have applied to the l'ost Office Department for the position as letter carrier, but were all refused because they were women. There scarce can be named one quality that is amiable in a woman which is not becoming in a man, not excepting even modesty and gentleness of nature. Dean Swift. It is said that Miss Yonge devoted the profits of her most famous novel, "The Heir of Iiedcliffe," to fit out a missionary ship, and $10,000, the profits of her "Daisy Chain," to building a Missionary Church at Auckland, Jsew Zealand. It is a noticeable fact tbat a large number of women of genius have in our own time seen fit to marry men many years younger than themselves, prominent among them being Marian Evans, Miss Thackeray, ltose Terry, Grace Greenwood and Dinah Mulock. The women of Salt Lake City have or ganized a ''Woman's National AntiPolygamy Society." It is the purpose of this society to furnish the public with full information respecting the working of the system in Utah, in the hope that the effect of such knowledge will be to awaken public sentiment on the subject. Meetings to promote tho parliamentary suffrage ot" women have been held all over the United Kingdom by the English Women Suffragists. England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales have had large and enthusiastic meetings. Miss Helen Taylor, Miss Tod, Miss Decker, and others have stirred the whole kingdom with their cogency of statement and the earnestness of their appeals. The chief quality of the womanly woman is her motherhood that is her power of self-sacrifice and care-taking of those who need her care. From earliest childhood the difference between those who demand sacrifice and those who can make it is plainly marked; and in the nursery as in the schoolroom and the home there is always one who is ready to give up, and always one who is ready to be given up to. Tho former develops into the mother the womanly woman par excellence; the latter is never more than a toy, a thing to bi caressed and waited on, decked in jowels and clothed in purple and fine linen, but never asked to work, to think, to suffer, or to sacrifice. These are things which she requires from others, not gives of her own grace in which she is the exact opposite of her sister, the womanly woman, who finds her greatest happiness in making the happiness of others, and her best joy in sacrifice, self-denial, and duty. A good wife is to a man wisdom, strength, and courage; a bad one is confusion, weakness, and despair. No condition is helpless to a man where the wile possesses firmness, decision, and economy. There is no outward propriety which can counteract indolence, extravagances, and folly at home. No spirit can long endure bad" influence. Man is strong, but his heart is not adamant. He neeas a tranquil mind, and especially if he is an intelligent man, with a whole head, he needs its moral force in the conflict of life. To recover his composure, home must be a place of peace and comfort. There his soul renews its strength and goes forth with renewed vigor to encounter the labor and troubles of lite. But if at home he finds no rest, and there is met with bad temper, jealousy, and gloom, or assailed with complaints and censure, hope vanishes, and he sinks into despair. Ex-Secretary M'Cullough often alludes to the fact that when Secretary Chase called upon him to organize the national banking system, he organized the bureau with two ladies and one gentleman. One of these ladies, Mrs. M'Cormick, at that time a young and beautiful girl of Georgetown, but now. a widow, is still employed by the Government in its national banking business. The two most abtruse sets of sheets, figures and reports made in the office of the Comptroller ot tho Currency are those prepared by Mrs. M'Cormick, and a Miss Simpson. Only a few years since, the whole banking bnsiness of tho country was left for two months in the hands of women, while the male heads of the department were enjoying their summer vacation. jNotwitnstanaing sucn iact3, men would be shocked at the idea of a woman as the recognized head of the banking department, holding the office by virtue of proper appointment, and receiving before the world, the honor and pay connected therewith. Social Inequality of the Sexes. ' fLoaUa Souihwärtb. In the National Citizen. The different inequalities existing between men and women are to-day awakening attention, and presenting problems to the minds of those who regard all human institutions as a growth, and as based upon some cause, however obscure, as their raison d'etre. Some of these, such as the political property and educational inequalities, are found to be bloisoms of seeds sown during the barbarous ages, and to hav their origin in that odious source, "The Law of the Stronger t.'' But it is in the realm of Ethics that we need to study the great drama of human evolution. This subject, so long Enigmatical to thinking women is doomed to be held before the mirror of modern thought and there anaiyred and criticised according to Nature's law. To-day earnest women are looking each other in te face and asking why tbey should condtain their own sex to a social ostracUm lor a crime which they so readily and froely pardon in the other. It is a well known fact tbat through some periods ot the . world's history, husbands have bewn exceedingly jealous of the virtue of wives, while at the same time they have been extremely careless of their own. We may begin with that period when the world first acknowledged that women alike with

man possessed a soul and an eternal destiny. We shall find the course of history to show that both sexes have not been amenable to the same moral code. There has always been one marked exception, tbat of chastity. Different races, nations, and religions have alike made this exception. The teachings of Christ affirm the same moral code for men and women; yet it has been and still is the practice of Christian nations. to hold women to a higher standard of continence than men. and punish them more severely for its infringement." The question inevitably arises, what is the cause, or where hall we look for the root of this social inf quality. I w uh to suggest and at the same time ask if it can not be found to lie in the very nature of things them, selves, accompanied by the fact that the guidance of all human affairs, in the different relations of life, have usually been in masculine hands. Man in order to preserve to himself the greatest gift Heaven ever bestowed upon him that of fatherhood, has surrounded woman with limitations and laws both legal and social. He has recognized this necessity more or less distinctly in all ages. Legislation has usually been in the interest cf fatherhood, thf.t man might gratify with certainty that strong desire that his name and blood should descend to posterity. Motherhood from its very nature can never be uncertain. This can be true of fatherhood only by requiring woman tobe like Caear's wife "above suspicion." If chastity in woman is 60 invaluable to fatherhood alone, and woman the most zealous and faithful in preserving it, a light estimate should never be placed upon what she contributes to the welfare of humanity. With this contribution, woman may come forward feeling her power, and rightly de mand to be placed upon a basis of perfect equality with man in all tho relations of life. The reasoning spirit of the.age is penetrating every order of society, and sweeping away with resistless force customs that have been forming for centuries. It depends upon woman's fidelity to herself, to hasten on that hour when there shall be but one moral code for both sexes. Pleasantries Concerning the Fair Sex. "Nature regardful of tbe chattering race, r la 11 ted no leard upon woman' face; Not Mechi'a rar.oro, tbo' tlie very best, Could shave acuta that never is at ret." A little girl who wa much petted said: "I like sitting on gentlemen's knees better than on ladies'; den't you, ma." The woman who trims her own bonnet can always be picked out of a crowd by other women ; nuw if men only had this peculiar gift of selection ''You are an idiot!" angrily exclaimed a domineering wife. "So my friends said when I married you,' replied the husband. And she became more infuriated than ever.

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.E. Ingalls. Concord, N. H. Price 50 cents and $1 per bottle. Sold by .Stewart tfc Barry, Indianapolis. Why Wear Planter? They may relieve, but they can't cure that lame back, for the kidneys are the trouble, and you want a remedy to act directly on their secretions, to purify and restore their healthy condition. Kidney Wort has that specific action, and at the same time it regulates the bowels perfectly. Don't wait to get sick, but get a package to-day and cure yourself. UNLIKE PILLS lad the. asaal Part; atlvea, Is pleasaat to take, And will prove at once the moat pot ant and narmleae Kratern Reaevater and Cleanaer ht ha T't beva brought to public notice. For I pay tian, BlllMaaM. If eulaMhs 111-. and ui dwonier arUta? from an obttructeil Halt of th tym, it i incomparably the belt curatir extant. Avoid imitation : intt nn pettina the article tailed for. THOPIC-FKt'lT LAXATIVE ta put p in bronzed tin boxes on It. Price 60 Cent. Ask your druceiat for Deacriptive Pamphlet, or addreaa tbe proprietor, 1. K. HETHERINUTOSj V 36 Park Place, New ork. Before Puhchasins ANY FORM or So-Caued Electric Belt. Band, or Appllanctwrweatefto core Xervoiia.Chromc and Special Difeai.., ent to the PCLVERMACHER OtLVAXIC CO., NawTork, K. V., Cincinnati, O., or Pan Frandeco, Cal., for their Frtt Pamphlet ami 'The Electric Review," and you will aave time, health and avmey. The P. O. Co. are the only dealera in Gennine Electric Appliancee oa the American Continent. EXTRACT the Great Vegetable Fain Lef troyer , ana &necinc for innam-. mat ion , Hemorrhages, " ' Wound. Cat, limine. Burn. Sprains, Ac Slopping the flow of blood, re lieving at once pain, aaodaing inflammation, healing and caring diseae o rapidly a to e xcite wctv KJ Vi U O der.aiiiniratlqn, gratimde. endorec, recommend and prescribe It. It will cure , Khcomntiam, Catarrh, Menralgla, Asthma, Lnmbairo, Sore Throat, Diarrhtra, Headache, Dyeentery, Toothache, Broken Breast, Earnche, Boüi&Sore, nie, And etop allliemnrrhaces from the Kom, Stomach or Long. sicians Portrayed t Immediately relievcM jmin in any place wheru itcan be applied internally or externally. For cut, briiiM, sprains, Ac. It la the very beet remedy known: arreptine the bleeding at once, redncing the swelling nnd inflammation, stopping the pnin and healing the Injury In wonderful manner. Vegetable. Itiaharmlesa la any case no matter how pplled or taken. Is never sold in bulk, but only in cur Dottles with Fold's Extract blown in the glass and onr trade-mark fn uteido buff wrapper. Xewartof Imitation. Try 1: and yoa will never be wlthont it a slnple day. Sold by all Druggists. I I URELY 14 WEST FOURTEENTH 8TREET. New York. ATTC T treat Betnratjv oC UUuGKNKaATivK Power aar R. ant (. Kcmovea nervoue timidity. Impotencr, and aexuai deUMtv. and reoutre theenenrv. are and vtirof ef-nuth In rwent ml nute. PTH-e. 11.00. aiklreaath' NCW EMiLAND MEDICAL lhbTlTt'TE, 1 Tramoal lbtw H-ton Ma. ERRORS OF YOUTH. . "Saeia Tr9 for the speedy en re of Semini Weakutäw, Lost Manhood, and all diaeuiee broneb on by yeitrUihil Indiscretions. Address DAVIDSON it CO.. 7 N aau street. New York.

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INYIGORATO

For Diseases of the Horse rm "FROM HEAD TO FOOT.' . If K00FUUNE fails in effecting a curt m any of the following horse diseases, tht money will be cheerfully refunded. This offer is meant in good faith, and every dealer i authorized and directed to comply withit. It will surely cure: tjuittor. Burns. furo. Fracture, Fistula, Thrush. Scratches, fprains. Influenza. SoreBbina, Tumor, thoe Boils, Froat Bites, FourKier, Greao Heel Sand Crack. Poll Evil, Proud Flesh, QuarterCracka, Epizootic. Pumiced Feet, Contracted Hoor. Collar & Saddle Scalds, Inflammation of tbe foot. Capped Elbow or Hock Suppurated Corns, And all diseases of the throat and lungs. tJ7Hoofoline is far sale at all Drug and Harnest stores. Price (i per can. Will be sent to any adding by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of the price. P or sale to the trade by ail wholesale drug houses aac EE BOGLE EOCI CIL CO, ProjU, 66 LüfcMt, flxas A discovery which rnroi bv tue natural process, AlM01tiT10., all diseaiiea of the Kitiitey. Itladdor, Urinary Onrarj anil Mervou tein, when nothing clue can. It is comforf&hle to the patient, positive in its eflncts, and the first en re for those painful and uini h dralel aflVvtiona, Diabetes antl llriflit's Disease, while its rnrcs of travel, IJropsy, Catarrh of the Illadder.IlrirkduM nepoKlt. l'alnful I rinatlnx, Hlsh-Colored Irinc, !Vrrvou Wenkno and Tain In the UCK eccra mora like miracles than cases el natnral healing. DKI.ICATI2 I'HHAaLTOI prostrated by irregular habits, the abu of nature and menial or phyrical over-excrtion, find their preatest relief in the use of DAY'H KIDNEY . I' AD, which strengtbenn, invigorates and restores tho vigor of health. PAIX IX THIS IBACK. Wo say positively, and without f!ar of contradio. tion, that DAY'S KIDNEY PAD is the only corUin and permanent cure for every form of this prevalent n J distressing complaint. YOSJX; 31E. snffcrinR fromnervons snd physical tie'bnity.lomi of memory, or vitality impaired by tho error of youti or too close application to work, may bo restored and manhood regained. Avoid all kulney incflirincs which are taken into the tritem by way of the tomach; it is an old treatment, well tried, and proven inefficient, though sometimes effecting apparent cures cf ono complaint they sow the seeds of more tronhlepomo and permanent disorders. The price of onr PAD brings it within the roach of all. and it will andually save many times its cost in doctors' bills, medicines and planters, which at best give but temporary relief. It can bo used without fear or barm, and with certainty of a permanent cure. For sale by draggista frencrally, or sent by mail (free of postage) ou receipt of the price. Itcgnlar Pad. $2.00; Children's. Jl.f.0: Special (ojtra size'. $3.00. Our boo. - How a Life was Saved," Riving the history of this new discovery and a large record of most remarksbleenrcasent free. Writefor it. Address. DAT KID KEY PAD CO.. Toledo, O. fllTn?l Owintr t the many worthiest ÜAU I lUIlt Kidney Pads now seeking a salt On our reputation, we deem it dno the afflicted t warn them. Ak for DA V UIBMEY AIa and take no other. STEWART & BARRY, Agent. Indianapolis Indiana. KNOW THYSELF. THE untold miseries that result from indiscretion In early life may be alleviated and cured. Those who doubt this assertion should parehase the new medical work published bv the PEA BODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE-. Boston, entitled T1IK KCn-INCK OK LIFK; or.KET.K-PKKNKItVATIOJ Lxiiauieuvitality, nervous and phyrical debility. or vitality impaired by the errors of youth or too close application to business, may be restored and manhood refrained. ' Two hundredth edition, revised and enlarged, Just published. It is a standard medical tvork, the best in the English language, written Cy a physician of great experience, to whom was awarded a gold and jeweled medal bv the National Medical Association. It contains beautiful and very expensive engravings. Three hundred pages, more than fifty valuable prescriptions for all forms of prevailing disease, the result of many years of extensive andsueceskful practice, either one of which is worth ten times the price of the book. Bound in French cloth ; price ouly f 1, sent by mail postpaid. ' The London Lancet says: "No person should be without this valuable book. The author is a noble benefactor." An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt of six cents for postage. The author refers, bv permission, to lion. P. A. BISSELL, M. D., President of the National Medical Association. Address Dr.W. IT. PARKER, LILT AI No. 4 Bullfinch street, Boston, tH äMass. Theanthonnay be con- TNVQPI F suited on all diseases requir- I rl I OL.L.1. ing skill and experience. McDoxald & Butler, Attorneys. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the "lerk ill the Superior 'ourt of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Henry II. Cook 1 plaintiff, and Harmon Woodruff et al. are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of three thoutand two hundred and seventy-nine dollars and seventeen cent, with interest on raid decree and costs, I w ill expose at public sale to the highest bidder on SATURDAY, the 27th day of November, A. D. 1880, between the honrs of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. to., of said day, at the 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 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 aritl costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple 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. JOHN T. PKESSLY, Sheriff of Marion County. November 1, A. D. I&no. Kew sad Very Attractive btjles are aow Iteady. MASON AND HAMLIN ORGANS BEST CABINET OR PAKLOR O KG ANS IN THE "WORLD, winners of blgheat dintlnctlon at SVKKT ASIAT WOBLD'S KXIIIBITIOW Tot THIRTKinr TS AB. Prices, 5i, $57. tÖL 84, IK, to S600 and upward. For eay pay. meuta, 8.S3 a quarter and upward. Catalogues f ree. ilAPOX & HAMLIN OKOAN CO.. 154 Tremont 6t lK)8ToN, 46 taut uth 6L, Union 8q.) NEW YORK; 149 Wabash Avenne, CHICAGO. ONSUMPTIO Can be cured by the continued use of Oimnn'i Cod Liver Oil and L&ctoPhoajhat of Lime, a rare for Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, and all tcr.aloaa Diseases. Atk your druggist for Oam art's, and take no other. . If he has not got it. I wiQ Send six bellies anywhere on receipt of J 5. ' CILAS. A. OSMUN, 13 Seventh Avenue New Vorn

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AM O '..A SURE CURE . for CotiRlis, ColdM, Moro Tliront, jjronemtl, AhLIii.iu, Cohhu mptlon, Ami All Di8ea8H 0f T11KOAT and HXG8. Put up in Quart Size Bottles for Family Use. Peientifienlly prepared cf ftalmrnajToln, Crytliaed Rnek Candy, Old Rye and other tonics. The Formula is known to our best physicians, is hfehly commended by them, and the analvsi cf oui most prominent chemist. Professor . A. Mariner Iii Thicapo, is on the label of every bottle It is kuvw,n ned,oal p pofession thnt TOLU ROCK AND RN. E will afford the jrreates-t relief for Coughs, Colds, laflnenm,-Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Weak Limps, also Consumption in the incipient and advanced stages. Used as a liEVERACK and APPETIZER, it makes a delightful tonic for family use Is pleasant to take; if wenk or debilitated it rives tone, activity and strength to the whole human frame. Ä TTTTrYNT "'t deceived VX. U llVJiN . by unprincipled dealers who try to palm on" upon you Kock and Kve in pTjice of TOLD ROCK AND RYE, which is the only medicHted article made, the peuuine havicr a Government f tamp OTl eRcn boue. LAWRENCE A MARTIN, I'roprietors, ia Madison Street, Chicago. Ask your Druggist for it. , Ask your Gnicer for it. Ask vour Wine Merchant for it. Children, ask your Mamma for it Sold by Druggists, Grocers aud Wine Merchants everywhere. Wholesale Agents in Indianapolis. Stewart & Barry, Browning & Sloan, A. Kiefer and A. Ftont A 8on, - wholesale frrocers, Mill ' lurnish the trade at manufacturer's prices. MEDICAL. PRESUMPTION FREE fjVr the apeedT I are T .Verrma WhIimi, Loet Vitality, Premittare Uvblllty. Nmoj.nru, Penpowdvoey , Cr4 ef ldean, llefeellre Meai. ry umd dUnrdt-ra b rotier at n by ver-w url. ttnd Ee' rw Any drcKbt nax the linn dlewl. !! ia ptalu Mvalvd ttawl.ip. iUru UU. W. K 4 A Cdt IS Wo4 Utb Street, (WIbbmU. Oalo. 37 Court Place, LOUISVILLE, KY., A regclartr rdueaml and Mvciltr qualiM (ti)tkiaa autl th loont eaafut, bis pneua-c will ymr On res all form of PRIVATE. CHRONIC and . SEXUAJL 2Hfci .Spermatorrhea raid Impotence, aithcma1! of wif-asiue ia yraUk. eidai iwuv. in mafnwr year, r e'Jwr un, umI .loeiD aojcf tkr UU a. wing ctfvcl: Net vtM-.nc, b.-minal Khumou. (u:tUT miasfca by drcaotr). Dinuw- of biKht, HthctiTT li r. . I't r. BwalDmay, Pifupitwoa Fare, Jtvermoci ttacirti f KK.r .'V, ixMifuftna of lue. Um f beawavl Por. 4c.. rrua- rio arnnfc hupropw or unhar, rr thnruhlv bu4 $ rt- - Mil; cured. SYIHIXj IS Turr'J "d '' ' - .SC-1 Mr., Gonorrhea, VlxL.i.T, rUrietire, Orcbilin, Hernia, lur Infinit,, PtV aod uuf private dtncaix atULkty curci. It iaiielf-cvklrril'hv aph, iriBbpTpr!lttct'.!n tetieruiacMoi diemmi, bm treaiiua tbuunudB un-j. ally, arquine sat mk.il. tuy.-ian iik iiift ibi oV a nxKMBCK-Bd pnwot lo my care. Wbm it t incccrrn lit u Twt tbe city hr tnmuuen. medvciiMt caa La acut nvai.: rBd safety by aaail or expr auywher?. Cures Guaraatood in all Cases undertaken. Oauauiuuoua rucialty e -ur fire ac4 trv'.'-d. Cbargaa raamalilo ana correapnBava auv.il cmi '-an .I A PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of 100 pajrea, arat to any adrlrm, arcsrely arated. tt tbrrty Y! cnu. HlHWld be rräj br all. A4dmt at )e. Oca aoara rraca IA.ll.toir. ii. Sobdaya, s to 4 P. M. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY Gray's Specific Medicine. im MiBK.l 'especially re-rAOfc cuiujueuueu as an unfailing cure for fee mi n a 1 W e a kness, Spermator rhea, J in potency, and all diseases that follow as a sequence on Self Abuse, as IOsi oi Pain in the Back, Dimness of VMon, Premature Old Age and many other diseases that lead to In sanity. Consumption and a Premature Grave, lull particulars in our pamphlet, which we de sire to send free by mail to every one. The Spe due Medicine is sold by ail druKjri'ts at (1 pe package or six packages for p, or will be sentby mail on receipt of money by addressing TUE GRAY MEDICINE CO., No. 10 Mechanics Block, Detroit Mich. For sale by Joseph B- Perry. 60 . Washinelon street. actl-ry Mrs ad pmitiaely rltectiia Rested fai tbe tiwadr and rra.iDM "vaa wniMi ÄmiHiani ana impotency t tbecr1 wwm,, m., ppbnu. k ii, prMjullHi .1 ita bau. TS W m, himWhIm p..a,iri i.a,. .a. mämt dM Bat ' wiik lut anlaiary pununa 4 Ma. Taw araaa W imubu baa Std ib Bt ia awy warn bb, md e BtainiiaMa mnm. Ttwn at inalil tbm t. airpanaa. PraMvaJ abamaur taalrtf w XMn.l faaraiBta that a BUI aiaa fernt bmhImiim It ta a alaa ky Ika BMical rna a ta Ik. am wal y aianaBaa BT rmkim a nnag ataa an inalia ula. TW Krmray mV lk.l'WHiM'.B;h.lra wlimaBaa ,ni .alw KVt Jk 1 im,m . am a, a. , aaat t (BB B . IW-iiB., P.aiaiia awi.a IiiilhiI tl dm m 1 alw, MM I ' Mipl Hl I. tk-, .M W 1.. M ,1 m.t t. mmd fc f B Im k. Ma Ma. i a-M 1 n,i. B-.VMI-I B. .- M HARRIS REMEDY CO. Wf'fl CHEMISTS. Marartawd Wih treet, NTMfl, M. A aw aad ronr.- CriDR TO WED LOTE, caalaiaiac Cbaptrr aa A Canpcicat Wma. bood. bekrclxuk f ilc, Evidcacc ef VlnraKy, Taatperaateata, BltT. A4jk to itrida. , PMaa, a. ana !., 4 kilnat r 1 a 1 1 a ill. Ktmmrmt. U.iJjii ,. U,. J. H.r. Ii ia aJM a" Privat Idedkoai adnaer diium ra Mhiac fraai hapsr ariaal aaaoaulwaa, aad OB arlf-abuM lha . Bank UM rf 11 M ml a. An B Ma, uibibi aB Um. Lm b1 V mi. B... bU ai.kiai 1 ! I 1 m 11.1 1, B-ta; Bawa uk hh la A Bk B mM ad H iali .1 i.mi m IkB a. Ba B. r Buk.B. a , 1 1 ibm. biIiji ai a..! a , ! bmI BT bWi-. N bj-m.m Bart ikB aa -j BW lank, BBt kaiBB Baa, aak aat Ma PBu kranaa, a ÜMlnB Bw.aäafc.tl. (. a-B 1 , t.aiaiakrTTCttaai ha IWmn h a "frla! "Sal" 44 " 11 a a ua aaua. 1 Ps'-YoTTS' P1smTsillTi 1 a- K St. l-aK WAMTCn ji"T.r.bwi.n Tea, IrBrtt, He, try aaar4e, b Umilru Prof d. Ouikl Irac. PeayVk Ta to, boa aCJJ, M. Uu.a. Ü. STOPPED FREE Jtarvtiout turtxst, frwane PersoM RestorfdX V lt. S fj R E A I McmiC r 1 -r- rt r r-m OT OU UBATH FSVR lilHBAan. Otily 4.1 Lira ra- t'.tt AV7nii Wm A r. t,-.. - m .a -''-a awa i'W rfirtwi'ii. IwraLLiBLlif Ukenad dlrertad. A'o FiUafUr rtfdapiuit. Treat I ae ami Ki trial bottlefree t t itpatienta,lhey payin ex prvi;e. Fond nanii P f I anf BWMM-M -.lu.. . - I.- I I V 1 . n- . v . . .firi, auilir.1 i lR. nil.lb,V. Area Su Philadelphia, I 'a. Ä r, cizkudrrit't. mm i Irweat prices ever known on HreerJt Loader,. 1 niaea, ana ttevoiversa OUR $15 SHOT-GUM" at rreatly reduced rriee LLLJUjiI . henrl stamp for onr NewBi -bbbv- 1 nutraiexl Oatalocno ( B) P. POWEIA A 80JT.3S Maia mret-i, CINCINNATI. O.

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. McDonald &. Butler, Attorneys. SHERIFF'S 8ALE Bv tirtne of a cert-d copr of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Henry II. Oook is plaintiff", and Orpheus Everts et a), are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of twenty-nine hundred e.iid ninety-three dollars and eighty-seven cents, with lntereston said decree and routs, I will expese at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, the 27th day of November,. A. D. 18 0, , between the hours of ten o'clock a. m. and (onr o'clock p. in., ot xaid dav, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding sever years, of the following real estate, to wit: Lo number four (4). in Woodruff Place, a suburb ot the city of Indianapolis. Marion Countv. Indians If such rents and profits will not sell" for a suffl dent Bum to satisfy said decree, interest an costs, I will, at the same time and place, expoa to public sale the feesimple of said real estate, oi to much thereof aa may be sufficient to dischargt ' said decree, interest and costs. Kaid sale will be made without any relief whatever f mm vsJuatlosv or appraisement laws. JOHN T. PREfsSLY, Sheriff I Narkui Caunty. November l, A. D. iwo.