Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1880 — Page 6
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL,. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER ( Q7,? 1880.1
THE H0ÄE.
i " It U not doabtod that mm hara a kom la that viae wbercMck od hu tblUhd his hearth od th iom of kit potMloM at4 fortaoas; whnc ha will ..I Ja..ri if notMnv ra.Ua him a w ä. f '. whMM If k hu depart! b t ba a vudtiw, ud if k moras b cm to wander. Itonoiuoa iron vitii L4V. Thsn stay at home, my beart, and r"t Tb bird Is aafa-at la itm Mit: O'er all that flutter their wings and fly A hawk it hoTeriug In the iky." Longfellow. OCT. YOO'G FOLKS. The Ten Little Katydids. BY M. C. D. There were ten little katydids, Who lived beneath a Tine. But one got ehoaked on cabbage leaves Aud so there were but nine. Among the nine little katydids Was one a busy pate. She ventured in a chicken coop. Then there were but eight. The eteht little katydids Sang out till after 'leven. And one took-cold upon her lungs. Then there were but seven. The wen little katydids Built a house of stick, A thunder-storm eaine up one nignt. Then there were but six. The six little katydid Lit upon a hive, A honey-bee stung one of them. Then there were but five. The five Mttle katydids Began one day to snore, A sjeckled pullet passed that way. Then there were but lour. The fourlittle katydid Were hungry as could be. One ate poison-ivy, Theu there were but three. The three little katydids, I'm loath to say' 'tis true. They came, one day, f rora words to blows. Then there were büt I wo. Two little katydids Sat chatting on a (-tone. A turkey swallowed one of them. Then there was but one. One little katydid, Oh, so sad and lone! She nani; too loud that Katy did. So now there is not one. Two little birds started out to sing. When fopsy was the weather: Thev cleared their throats and whetted their bills, And coughed and wheezed together. They wheezed and coughed as hard aa they could. In this dreadful foggy weather. Till they spoiled their notes and split their thront. And turned up their toes together. Some Things Money Can't liny. BT RKV. R. W. LOWKIE. Some Loys and girls have an idea that money can do almost anythic;, but this ia a mistake. Money, it is true, can do a great deal, but it can not do everything. 1 could name you a thousand things it can not buy. It was meant for good, and it is a good thing to Lave, but all this depends on how it is used. If used wrongly, it is an injury, rather than a benefit. Beyond all doubt, however, there are many things better than it is, and which it can not purchase, no matter how much we may have of it. If a man have not a good education, all his money will never buy it for him. He can scarcely ever make up for hia early waste of opportunities. IIa may say, as I have heard of men Baying: "I would give all I have if Phad only had a good education and a well-trained raind;'' but he will say it in vain. Iiis money alone can't obtain it. Neither will wealth itself give a man, or a woman, good manners. Nothing, next to good morals and good health, is of more importance than easy, graceful, self-possessed manners. Ba; they can't be had for mere money. A man who is what is called "shoddy," who has not taste and correct manner, will never buy them though, he would, no doubt, like to They are not to be had in the market. They are nowhere for aale. You might m well try to buy sky, or cloud, or sunbeamä. Money can't purchase a good conscience. If a poor man, or a boy or girl any onehas a clear conscience, that gives off a tone like the sound bell when touched by the hammer, why. bless you. he is vastly richer than the millionaire who doe not possets such a conscience. Good principles are better than gold. All the gold of Golconda couldn't buy them for a man who hasn't them already. Money k very much sought after, and it can command a great deal of comfort. Uut it is very wrong and verv incorrect to peak of money as The Almighty Dollar that is, if we do eo in a really serious way. The dollar is not omnipotent. It is mighty, but not almighty. There are thousands ol things which it can not accomplish. During the Revolutionary War, a Britbh officer offered a large bribe to an American General. The General looked him in the face and told him that his royal master in England had not enough money in all his kingdom to pay him to do the mnn thing he was wanted to do. And there have been, and are, thousands of such men men whom no amount of money could buy. Money is not almighty. It may fill our houses with fine pictures, but it can not alone give us a true appreciation of them. It may take us abroad to fee foreign eights, but it can not give us true taste about them. It may buy us an entrance into better society than we are used to, but can never, of itself, purchase ease of manner and fine power of conversation, and all those things that come from other and higher sources than a pocketbook. Thousands and thousands of glorious things are beyond the reach of the hand of gold. And the beauty of it is that if riches should take to themselves wings and fly . away, why all these better things, as they do not come from wealth, do not disappear with it. There U, then, a iuatlet, and a wide one, in which money has no recognized value the market of intellectual, spiritual and other high and holy things. Use the Bridle. ' A bridle is very necessary in guiding and restraining an unruly horse; and it ia very needful in controlling that unruly member, the tongue. "Don't go without the bridle, boys," was my grandfather's favorite bit of advice. If he heard any one cursing or wearing, or given to much rain and foolish talk, he would say, "That man has lost his bridle." Without a bridle the tongue, though a little member, "boasteth great things " It is an unruly member, 'fall of deadly poison." Put a bridle on it and it is one of the best servants body and soul can have. "I will keep my mouth with a bridle," said King David. Be sure and keep a bridle on your appetite. Don't let it be your master, and don't neglect to have one for your passions, or they will get unman ageäble, driving " you down a headlong course to ruin. I mean the the bridle of elf-government. Go d parents try to train and restrain their children; ami you can generally tell by the children's bebaTior whether they have wiie and faithful parents. But parents can not do everything; boys and girls mutt have their own bridles; they must learn to check and govern themselves. Self-government Is the
most difficult and the most important government to teach tu; bat it become easier very day, if we practice it with a steady, resolute will, and a firm trust in llim who alone can teach us wisely to rule our own spirits. The Boys of Cape Town, fT E. B. BKHSAR.1 Cape Town, as you know, is a town on the sea-coast of the Cape of Good llope. and the Cape of Good Hope is the southern end of Africa. It is in a beautiful and quiet valley, where the sun shines brighter and clearer and warmer than in England, or even in most parts of America. J tut above the city there rises a mountain, which is more than 3,000 feet right over the sea, and almost straight up and down like a wall for more than half its height.
They call it Table .Mountain, oecause u is wide and broad and fiat on the top. n can be seen a long way at sea, nearly a hundred miles and then it looks like a great square block rising out of the ocean. Often when all the rest of the sky is quite clear there will bo white clouds hanging over this mountain. They are a sign of the southeast winds, that blow very hard there, and, when people see them, they say, "the table-cloth is laid on the Mountain." At the foot of Cape Town there is a large bay called Table Hay. Where the town is built is called Table Valley; so there you have three tables Table Mountain,' Table Valley and Table Bay. Now we will sit on one of these tables and sec what the boys do in Cape Town. There are a strange lot boys here. I suppose you think because it is Africa, they are all negroes such as you see in the pictures with hardly any clothes to wear. No; there are plenty of black boys, to be sure, but there are plenty of white boys, too as white as any boy in America; and plenty of brown boys, yellow boys, olive boy, and nearly red boys, and boys of all shades of colors. The fathers and mothers of these boys come from all parts of the world; not only from England, Scotland, Ireland. Germany, Sweden, Kussia, Trance and those other countries, but from Arabia, from India, from China, from the Malay Peninsula, from Japan, from tSL Helena where Napoleon died and, in fact, from almost every place, except from among the poor Indians out West. And there are some boys there whose fathers and mothers used to live in New York and Boston. And such funny clothes some of these boys wear, here in Cape Town. There is a white plaster house, with a square top and a fiat roof, and the boy setting in the door is dressed all in bright red. Why, he looks like some little boy in a circus. His red cap is small and round, with no peak on it, and no trimming, except a black tassel on the top. His red coat comes down to the bottom of his red trowsers nearly, and looks like a nightgown trimmed with yt How cord. He gets up and turns round to come out, and we 6ee he is quite olive colored. What country is he from? Uis grandfather and grandmother were brought here as slaves about a hundred years ago from the Malay country, in Asia, many hundred miles away east. " hy does he wear that kind of dress? Because his peoplo are Mohammedans by religion, nd he has been with them to Mecca and Medina, in Arabia, where Mohammed lived. r Many Mohammedans iu Cape Town go to Mecca aa pilgrims, and when they come back they wear long gowns, to show that they have been there. They are then called a lladjie. How proud this boy struts up the street! You would think he had been all round the world, and to Mecca, too. We see him go among a crowd of boys at the street-corner, and such a crowd I All sorts and sizes and colors. There is a good-looking white boy, well dressed, and fit tobe your cousin, talking and hob-nobbing with a boy as black aa charcoal, but well dressed, too. Some white boys would not associate with him, but this boy does, for the colored boy and his people have always lived here, and ho is well-behaved, and goes to school and to Sunday-school with white boys. Another boy among this crowd is nearly as black, but his skin is very smooth-looking his features regular, and his eyes large and bright. lie haa no shirt or necktie under his coat, and is barefoot. He seems shy. and does not feel at borne among the others. He is a Kaffir, and has not lived long in the town; that is why he is bashful. Perhaps he comes from the land of the Gaiikas, a tribe of negroes who were conquered by the white people of the Cape, and many of them captured and brought down to Cape Town, where they were compelled to work as servants for two or three years. Or perhaps he is a Kaffir all the way from Zululand, the place where King Cetywayo lived. By-the-way, Cetywayo is now here in Cape Town, a prisoner in the "Castle," where they keep the cannons to defend the town. In the crowd there is a dark brown lad. like an Indian, with straight, black hair and black, sharp eyes, and thinner nose than the rest, lie has a small, round cap, too, and ii dressed nearly like the boy in red. And who is hi? V ell, his father is what they call a "ccolie" that is, a native of East India, who works as a laborer. He came here from another country in Africa, called Natal, where they work in the sugar plantation. Now there is another boy, standing by this coolie boy, that might be his brother, they look so much alike. But yet this one comes from St. Helena, an island in the Atlantic Ocean, about 800 miles northwest from Cape Town, and not north west where India is. And here is a funny little fellow, with face pale-yellow and body as thin as a ghost. His hair is curly, but not jet blac$, like most of the .others. His nose seems flattened down on his face; his lips are very thick, and his mouth rery wide. J. here H a queer kind of wrinkle down his face: his cheek-bone sticks out very much, and. the skin of his eye-lids seems to be folded somehow over the corner of his twinkling eyes. Perhaps you know by the picture-books who this boy is. He is a Hottentot, Some would say he is a bushman boy, but he is not. There are' none of tbeae bush boys here in this crowd, but we could find thera if we walked about the town. But I can not begin to describe each boy in the crowd, there are so many different kinds and colors and races. - There seem to be mixtures of all those we have noticed. Perhaps one of these lads may have a father who it a Malay, and a mother who is a Kaffir, or negro. And so they are mixed of many races, and it is sad to think how ignorant and how dirty and idle most of them become. But that is the fault cf their parents. They live in poor houses, most of them, and in some quarters of the town they sleep like thfc poor people in London and New Yorh, twenty and thirty in one room. Tu is, of course, is a bad way to live, as the breath of so many people will poison the air in a room and 'bring sickness, -but they know no better . . Now do these boj ever have any fun? Do theyever plaj games?. Yes, plenty of them. They play two or three Dutch games,
and most of them talk Dutch better than English, because the people who first lived there were Dutch. They play a kind of base-ball, but pitch-and-toss is their great game, among little boys. And at night they get together in hundreds in the back streets, and in the light of the moon, which shines very brightly there, they play some sort of a game in a ring, singing in Dutch. The police allow them to do this, and only punish them when they begin to gamble with cards, which the Malay boys are very apt to do. In the evening or the morning, many of these boys go down to the shore of Table Bay to bathe, which is very healthy for them; but the best fun they seem to have is with tho goats. There are pleutv of goats of different breeds here big and little, white, black, and
brown, jlany or the boys have harness and carts, and make the goats draw them or their little sisters about town. Sometimes they use them to carry groceries from the stores or vegetables from the market. I mean that the boys use them for this purpose, but the men use donkeys and carts as well as horses. Some f these boys are very fond of goats, especially when they own them, and two or three colored boys may often be seen leading the goats en the hillside above the town to pastures ail the day long. It is often a very pretty sight indeed to see groups of Malay and colored boys and girls, dressed in all sorts of bright colors, such as orange or yellow, or crimson, or pink, or green tho boys bareheaded and the girls with oraage or yellow silk handkerchiefs on their heads and to see them romping about and playing pranks with the animals, as they wander over the hillsides. These boys and girls have a kind of candy there they call tam-a-letjee." made of boiled sugar poured ii a paper in the shape of a small square cuke. It is not so bad to eat as many of our American candies, because it has no chalk and no poison colored stuff in it. But I am afraid I had better stop here, or else I will have half of you wanting to go off to Africa and buv a goat and cart, and live on "tam-a-letjes." Little Folks Abroad. Willie a$ked his mother where the stars came from. Her reply was: "My son I do not know." "Well, I do," he said, "the moon laid 'em." Fond Father: "Well, my son, how do you like colleger Alma Plater has turned out some great men." Young Hopeful (just expelled): ''Yes, 6ir; she has turned me out." A little boy in a suburban school, who had been listening to n less n on bipeds and quadrupeds, was asked, ''What kind of an animal is a goose?" "A goose," he replied, confidently, "is a sort of fool." . "Now, Jimmy," said a Galveston mother to hercroupy boy, "just take this ipecac, and I'll sav you are the noblest boy on Galveston Island." "I don't mind the ipecac, but 1 can't stand being nauseated a second time." Galveston News. " When I was young," said Mrs. Scoldwell to her little girl, ''I used to love my mamma too well to act as you do. ' And did your mamma," replied Bertha, quickly, 4used to be all the time telling you what she did when she was a girl?" A little boy visited his uncle on his birthday and congratulated him. He then asked hia uncle if he had washed himself. "Why so?" asked the uncle, patting the innocent little prattler on the head. "Because papa said it' you did the clean thing you would give me a dollar, at least." I must tell you of a conversation I overheard at Manhattan Beach between two children who were playing in the sand together. The small boy said to the little girl: "Do you wish to bo mr little wife?" The little eirl after reflecting: Yes." The small 'boy: "Then take off my boots." Obeying . Orders. "Edward,'' said a mother to her boy of eight, who was trundling a hoop in the front garden, "you mustn't go out of that gate into the street." "No, ma, I won't," was the reply. A few minutes afterward she saw Edward on the street, engaged in manufacturing mud-pies, and at once went out to him. "Didn't I tell you," she said, angrily, "not to go through the gateT" "Well, 1 didn't, mother," was the very satisfactory reply; "I climbed over the fence 1'' The youngest daughter of tne King of Greece is in disgrace. During her father's recent visit at the Vienna Hofburg something happened that she did not like, whereupon she left rovalty and hid herself in the top of a tree In tho court yard. The vpung lady will soon celebrate her fifth birthday. A little girl of five was watching her mother plant several flowers in the garden. 'Wll'y do you put the flowers in the ground?" she asked. To make them grow." The child said nothing but appeared to be in a deep study. An hour or so. afterward her' mother missed her from the house and after calling t: her without receiving any reply, sought her in the garden. There she found her with her feet buried in the ground and the dirt packed tightly around them. ' What are you doing, my child! " "Why, mamma, I'm growing." From the French. Iternhartlt Reception. special to the Cincinnati Commercial. New York, Hoy. 13. Sara Bernbardt's private reception took place this evening at the Theater of the Union League Club. TJje theater was gaily decorated and crowd ed. Bcrnhardt's twenty works of art in oil 'and 'her works in sculpture, four in marble and two in bronze, were displayed and the xnnch-admired Bernhardt appealed on the stage at 9 o'clock, onifd the strain of the Marsellaise March, and was greeted with an outburst of applause, which lasted for some time. She oowed gracefully. She remained in the theater about an hour. Keassariaj. Boston Tostl The' fact that a Democratic Conetrss counts the votes is a guarantee that they will be honestly counted. Homeopathy. New York Sur. Weaver might be sent to Constantinople as a special envoy to reorganize the Porte's finance. Complication a. If the thousands that now have their rest and comfort destroyed by complication of liver and kidney complaints would give nature's remedy. Kidney Wort, a trial they would be speedily cured. It acts on both organs at the same time, and therefore completely fills the bill for a perfect remedy. If you have a lame back and disordered kidneys use it at once. Don't neglect them. Cincho-Quinine cures chill? and fever. Indigestion, Dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and ali torrus of geneial dcbilitv relieved by taking MeS'rman's Peptonized 15f.f Tonic, the only preparation of btf containing iu entire nutritious properties. It Is not a mere stimulant, like the extracts of beef, but contains blood-making, forcegenerating and llfe-susudnlnt? properties: Is Invaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, aervous prostration, over, work, or acute disease; particularly if resulting from puluiÄary complaints. CASWELL, HAZARD i. Co., Proprietors, New York.
4 3 Tears JJefore the Public THE CEMUirJE Dr. C. jHcLANE'S LITER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy " fcr all tV ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyi pepsia, and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, thev stand without a rival. ÄCUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can b used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. As a simple purgative they are nnequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. . Each box has a red-w ax seal on the lid with ite impression, McLANE'S LIVER FILL . Earn wrapper bears ihe signatures o C McLane and Fleming Bros. BSS Insist ttpon hsving the genuine Da. C McLANtTS LIVER PILLS, prepared bj FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of. the name JIcLane, spelled differently but Mme nronnnciation.
HOW TO CURE Consumption, Coughs, COLDS, ASTHMA, CHOUP, All diseases of the Throat, Lang, and Pal. nionnry Organs. USE ACCORDING TO DIRECTIONS ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. TOTT . IPBLL AS AN ANTI-BILIOUS MEDiÜÜ, are Incomparable. . They stimulate the TOBPID IJV.imriKorate the N EBV bUS SYSTEM, fe tone to the DIQESTIVE O RQAJJ3, create perfect digestion and regular movement of the bowels. AS AN ANTIMALARIAL They have no equal ; acting aa a prevent ive and cure for Bilious, Remittent, Intermittent. Typhoid Fevers, and Fever and Ague. Upon the healthy action of the Stomach and Liver depends, almost wholly, the health of the human race. DYSPEPSIA. It Is for the cure ofthis disease and its attendants, SICK-HEADACHE, "NEIlVf ÖUSNESS. DESPONDENCY, CONSTIPATION, FILES, &c, that these Pillshaye gained auch a wide reputation. No remedy was ever discovered that "acta eo speedily and gently on the digestive organs, giving them tone and vigor to aaBtmilate food. This accomplished, the WERVES are BRÄCEDthw DRAIN NOURISHED, and the BODY ROBUST. Try this Remedy fairly and "you will gain a Vigorous Body, Pure Blood, Strong NtrvtJ, and a Cheerful mind. " Price 25c. 33 Murray SU N. V. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. Grat Haib or Whiskers chunked to a Glossy Black by a tingle application of this Dte. It in part a Katar I Color, and act InotaotaDeonsly Sold by DrumstaoTBentby eicMsonroeiptof $ V Office, 35 Murray St., New York. TESTIMONIAL TO MR. FELLOWS. o "YT7"E, the undersigned. Clergymen of the Mcth- ' odM Church In Nova Scotia, having used the preparation known as Fellows' Compound Sybi'p op IlYroPHOspHiTEs, prepared ty Mr. JameS I. Fellows, Chemist, St. John, Jf. B., or having known eases wherein its effects were beneficial, believe it to be a reliable remedy for the dis cases for which It is recommended. JAMES G. IIENWIGAR. Pres. of Conference. JOHN MCMURRAY. Ex-1're. of Conference. VTM. SARGENT. JOHN A. MOSHER. JOH.V W. HOWIE. STEPHEN F. HUEPTIS. RICHARD W. WEDDALL. ALEX. V. NICHOLSON. CRANSW1CK JOST. ROWLAM MORTON. JOHN JOHNSON. FELLO "W S COMPOUND SYRUP of HYPOPHQSPHITES Speedily and permanently cures Congestion of the Lungs. Bronchitis, Consumption, Nervous Prostration, Shortness of Breath, Palpitation of the Heart, Trembling of the Hands nnd Limbs, Physical and Mental Depression, Loss of Appetite, Loa of Euerpy, Loss of Memory, and will rapidly Improve the weakened functions and organs of the body, which depend for health ufon voluntary, semi-voluntary and involuntary nervous action. It acts with vigor, gentleness and subtlety, owing so the exquisite barmony af its ingredients, akin to pure blood itself. Its taste is pleasant and Its effects permanent. Look out for the name and address, J. I. FEL LOWS, St. Jol.i, N. B., on the yellow wrapper in water-mark, which is seen by holding the paper before the light Price, 1.50 Per Bottle. Six for S7.50. Sold by all Druggists. CELEBRATED ' . Slti STOMACH Meets the requirements of the rational medical philosophy which at present prevails. It is a perlectly pure vegetable remedy, embracing the three Important properties of a preventive, a tonic and an alterative. It fortifies the body ag-rinst disease, invigorates and re-vitalizes the torpid stomach and liver, and effects a most salutary change in the entire svstem, when in a morbid condition. For sale bv all Drnggists and Dealers generally. McCOSH'S GUIDE AMATEUR BANOS CMtalntM ElwlT - Itrvcuou si4 pMoa tor prt-i lu, timlM for all ltrnd tteoorUMlkL and .. ck. ttxaiioa sa4 Hlmm la.itrannU, A DtrUoMry f M wk&l Ttrau. tmtbar with 'variety af vaiaabUtalonnaaMa wtitch k wl.lrd Pvtaaai! Drum Mapr TarUa, Kw aa Eaavgaa adlü. Mali ,ot 2 . , ' LYON HiALY, Unm Su, ChloagG,
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2 WaKhington St., Cor. Franklin. CHICAGO, Chartered by the State of Illinois for the express purpose of giving immediate relief in all cases of Private, Chronic and Urinary Diseases in all their complicated forms. It is well known Dr. James has stood at the head of the profession for tho past 30 years. Age and experience are allimportant. Seminal weakness, night losses by dreams, pimples on the face, lost manhood, can positively be cured. Ladies wanting the most delicate attention, call or write. Pleasant home for patients always readyMCRUIMP Pll I QAfter forty yenrs' practice I am oatUfied nine-tenth, of the trouble and Hull V lilt. IILLu trials in families has grown out ot a lutent sexual fceliiiu on the part of ladies and pentlemen. Thousands, without knowing the real cum-, have mude life a weary wate forthe want of proper means to make it bright and humy. XKUV1XE PILLS, eompoundfd of root and herbs, will make the weak and debilitated tronp That which you Have loat or never had will cometo make home happy. Life is too fhort to waste away in a dull, torpid home heu a SI box will please yon and six will cure you lor jo. Seat by mail, sealed, on receipt of price. Lucorrhueah or whites positively cured. -A. BOOOKFOR TIIK 3XIIL.lliIOINr 3rtirriero Guide, Which tells you all about these 'diseases, who should marry, why not; 10 cents to pay postage; or large revised work, 25 cents. Dr. James has 60 rooms and parlors. You see no one but the Doctor. Office hours, 0 A. M. to 7 P. M. Sunday, 10 to 12. Dr. J ames is 60 years of age. Bubber goods, 2 for $1, or $4 per dozen. Ladies', $5 each. Female Fills, $1 per box, 6 for $5.
SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue or an execution to me utrected. from the Clerk ol the Circuit and ex-oßicio of the late Common 11 eaa Court of Marion County, Indiana. I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, the 4th day of December, A. D. 1S80, between the hours of lOo'clock a. ra. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at Ihe 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-wlt: The cast half of the south half of outlot one hundred and forty-four (140: also, the south end of the weft half of lot Xo. nine (U), in square No. sixty-seven (07), described aa commencinff at a point one hundred and thirty IW) feet south of the north line thereof: thence running south to Kentucky avenue, being the same lot described in the decree of partition In the cae of W. K. Gillespie and others, recorded in the Recorder's office of said Marion County, in Peed Record of town lots. Book 11. at psiie :)", as set apart to Anna R. Maguire, wife of iKmglass Masuire ; also part of lot one (Din Austin V. Morris subdivision of the northeast part of square elghtyeißht (SS), described as follows: Heginniio at the northwest corner of said lot one 1) aud running east seventy-five (75) feet, and thence south fifty ("0) feet to the northwest corner of sni.I lot to the point of beginning: also, twenty-five li") feet off of the west side of the east half of lot five (5) In Merrill subdivision of out-lot nineteen (19), and twenty -five (i) feet running back one hundred (100) feet from the south side of South stret; also apart of square one hundred and one (101), described as follows: Commencing one hundred and thirty one and a half (131 ) feet from the southwest corner of the west half of said square; east on South street, running thence at right angles from said street one hundred and five (Ui') feet north; thence east along Toon's line twenty-six and a half (2t'.) feet; thence south to South street: thence west along said street twenty-six and'a half (26) feet to the place of beginning; the same being arU of lots eight (8) and nine ('.') in said square one hundred and one (101.) Also, lot number nine (0). In block or square eighteen (1), of Drake's addition to the city of Indianapolis. Also, the undivided one-half of lot three (3), in Little's subdivision of out-lat eighty-four (&n, except sixty (60) feet of the south end of said lot three (3). Also, lot nine (9), In Hendricks' subdivision of out-lot ninety-nine (W); all of the foregoing real estate being in tho city of Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana. Also, the west half of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-two cai, in Township fifteen (15), north of range four (4), east, containing twenty C20) acres more or lews; all of the foregoing real estate befng in Marion County. Indiana. And on failure to realize the full amount of judgment, interest and costs. I will, at the same time and place, expose at public aale the fee simple of said real estate Taken as the propertv of Winslow S. Pierce, at the suitot William O. Rockwood, and at the suit of Deloss Root et al.. for the tK-netit of Henrv 1). Hcrce, assignee of the jadniientsiii their favor. Said sarc will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws in the Rockwood judgment, aud with relief, etc., on th Root judgment. 4 JOHN T. PRESSLY, Sheriff of Marlou Connty. November 9. A. D. 1KS0. Nov9-3w MISC?EIiI.A.'-NEOXJS.' rr rr rr A year and epenaea to ajrenta. ' OutO I I I fit free. Add s P. O. Vickery, Aaguatau Me.
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I a Terrible Dine. Its fearful effec cui i upO runninit aim uia uinmi, wtma rjr, aeainrfa, HXäl OX TOM loa of anirll, diagusting odora. nasal defonnitiss, and final consumption. I ntra first to last it Is ever aggremiT. Ort nary t'estinents am worse than nse). If nrrlected wtÄ deiop int qnick consumption. Ths mt thorough, im Dr. XLX. "V7". CJV-JS" 3? " Q The Toilet Articles from pur Pomade V&seliae, Vaseline Cold Cream, Vaseline Camcno" ice, Vaseline.Toilfct Soaps. ax. MBHln t. aar alaUU. mrm. TÄSEUNECOMECTIÖXS. An agreeable form of taking Vaseline internally. 25 COTS A BOX. Treatment cfl WOTODS, BURNS, CUTS, CHILBLAINS, V UTTTTTia-iTTeM and TJinhtheri. t of all oar goods. FTPOITfAV. for any case of Blind, PILES Bleeding, lti-blnr. Ulceraled. or Protrudinr
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Let 8ol4hy all dHiKKuts. lYeparedoolT bf J. P. Miller, MJ) oor. iota A ArEu Ha., Hul.. I"a. CAUTION. Aane fnwrt unlet the warper on bottle contains kit sirnature and a Pile ef Stones. , All druecists and country stores nave it or will cct it for toil
JAMES' WINE OF HOPS, The Best Known Remedy in the World Nervous Debility, Lost Energy, Lost Hopes, Imprudences of Youth, Lost Vigor and Ambition. FER QUART BOTTLE, SIX FOR S5. DR. JAMES' LOCK HOSPITAL,
McDonald & Bctler, Attorneys. SHERIFF'S SALE. Bv virtue of a certified copyof a decree to me directed, from the (lerk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cans wherciug Henry II. Cook is plaintiff and Thomas C. Moore et al. are defendant., requiring me to make the sum of three thousand one hundred and thirty-seven dollars and seventy-seven cents, with Interest on said decrae and costs, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, en SATURDAY, the 27th day of November, A. D. 18S0. 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 reut and profits for a terra not exceding seven years, of the following real estate, to-wil; Lot Number Fifty (50) in Woodruff Place, a suburb of the city of Indianapolis. Indiana. If such rents aud profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said deciee, interest and costs. I will, at the same' and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of sisid real estate, or somuch thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made withont any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. JOH T. PRKXSLY. Sheriff of Marion County. November 1, A. D. 1S0. I WILLIAM A. lowe, Attorney for Plaintiff, STATE OF INDIANA, Marion County, ss: In the Circuit Court of Marion County, in theState of Indiana. No. 2, MO. Complaint William W. mith vs. Kmma Smith.. Be it known, that on the 23rd day of October. lfiW, the above named plaintiff, by his attorney, filed In the fliec of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Marion County, in the State of Indiana, hia complaint against the above named defendant; and the said plaintiff having also fcled in the said Clerk's office the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendant. Kmma Smithy is not a resident of the State of Indiana, that a cause of action exists against her, and that the object of said action is to obtain a decree of divorce, and whereas said plaiutiff having by Indorsement on said complaint required said defendant to appear in said Court and answer or demur thereto, on the 23d day of December, lt0. Now. therefore, by order of said Court, said defendant last above named in hereby notified of" the filing and pendency of said complaint against her, ana that unless she appears and answer orderonrs thereto, at the calling of said cause on the 2id dav of December, IS-), tl Mine telng the 16th-. judicial dav of a term of snid Court, to be begun and held at the Court Hou in the city of Indianapolis, on the first Monday In December. ISfcO, said oomplnint and the matter and thine therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined ia her absence. DAN. M. RANSDELL, Oct 25-3 w Clerk. THOSE who contemplate going to Hot Springs for the treatment of syphiilis, gleet, scrofula and all cutaneous or blood diseases cun be cured, for one-thiid the cost of such a trip at the old reliable stand. I have been located here for twentythree years, and with the advantage of such a long and succenKful experience can confidently warrant . a cure in all cuea. Ladies needing a jperiodical pill can pet them at mv office, or by mall, at 51 per box. Office, 43 Virginia avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana. : ' DR. BENNETT, - n n Kwin. $66 out a week in your own town. Terms and tSoutfit free. Addresa EL UALLETT k CO Portland, Maine. - '
