Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 29, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1881 — Page 3

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1881.

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TIIE HOME.

It 1 not doubted that hav a aom la that plae where each ens has established his hsarth od the na of hi possession aid fortan; whence he will not depart, if nothing call hint away; whence if ba baa departed ba seem t be a wanderer, and If ba ratnrat ha to wander.-Definition from Civil "Tha stay at Home, my haart, and rait. Tha bird ia safest In it neat; O'ar all that natter their, wing and fly A bawk i hovering la tha thy." Longfellow. oin YüüG folks.. How They lUxle Down Hill. BT MARY D. BRISE. The slel u new, all red ami yellow. And little Dick was a happy fellow, When be aud his titter, one bright, clear day. Went out on the hill for a merry play. The snow was white and smooth and deep: The hill, Dick said, waa "jolly steep;" And the tun in the sky hone merrily. And Dick and Iaiy laughed cheerily. "Now I mnrt steer:" cried Master Dick. "You're only a girl, you know. You sit behind, and see how quick I'll make the old thine po!" So Daisy, the dearest of little girlx. Clung close to Dick, while her golden curls Kiew out on the breeze, and her laugh rang out A heartily as her brother's shout. "Hold hard!" said Dick. "In a minute more At the bottom of the hill we'll be. For steering straight and running true There never was a fellow like me! Hurrah!" But ere that shout waa done A stone, that wanted to see the fan. Poked up ii head, and I'm sorry to say That sled slid empty the rest of the way. Then Dick crawled wearily out of the snow, And Daisr uttered a Krcat big "O!" And the other boys laughed with hearty good will. And the sled stopped short at the foot of the hill. 'O, Dick." said Daisy. "O. Di.y." said Dick. "I toM you I'd make Ths.t fle'd go quick." The Knl of My Monkey. Jimmy Brown in Harper's Young I'eople.l I haven't any monkey now, and I don't care what becomes of me. His loss was an awful blow, and I never expect to recover from it I am a crushed boy and when the grown folks find what their conduct has done to me, they will wish they had done differently. It was on Thursday that I pot the mon key, and by Thursday everybody beran to treat him coldly. It" began with my littlest sistcr. Jocko took her doll away and climbed up to the top of the door with it, where he sat and pulled it to pieces, and tried its clothes on, only thev wouldn't tit him. while sister, who is nothing but a little irirl, stood and howled as though she were being killed. This made mother begin to dislike the monkey, and she saidjthat if his ronduct was such he couldn't stay in her house. I call this unkind, for the monkey was invited into the house, and "I've been told we must bear with visitors. A little while afterward, while mother was talking to Susan on the front piazza, the heard the sewing-machine np stairs, and said, "Well, I never.that cook has the impudence to be sewing on my machine without ever asking leave." So she ran up stairs, antl found that Joc ko was working the machine like mad. He'd taken Sue's nightgown and father's black coat and a lot of stockings, and shoved them aAjtinder the needle, and was sewing them all together. Mother boied his ears, and then she and Sue sat down and worked all the morning trying to unsew the things with the scissors. They had to give it np after a while, and the things are sewd together 3"et,like a man and wife, which no roan can put asunder. All this made my mother more cool toward the monkey than ever, and I heard her call bim a nasty little beast The next day was Sunday, and as Sue was sittting in the hall waiting for mother to go to Church with her, Jocko gets up on her clvair, and pulls the feathers out of lier bonnet He thought he was doing right for he had seen the cook pulling the feathers off the chickens, but Sue called him dreadful names, and said that when father came 'home. either she or that monkey would leave the house. Father came home early Monday, and seemed qnite pleased with the monkey. He paid it was an interesting study, and he told Susan that he hoied that she would be contented with fewer beaux, now that there was a monkey constantly in the house. In a little while father canght Jocko lathering himself with the mucilage brush, and with a kitchen knife already to shave himself. He just laughed at the monkey, and told me to take good care of him, and not let him hurt himself. Of course I was dreadfully pleased to lind that father liked Jocko, and I knew it was because he was a man, and had more sense than girls. But I was only deceiving myself and leaning on a broken weed. That very evening when father went into his studio after supper he found Jocko on his desk. He had torn all his papers to pieces, except a splendid new map, and that he was covering with ink, and making believe that he was writing a President's Message about the Panama Canal. Father was just raging. lie took Jocko by the scruff of the neck, locked him in the closet and sent him away by express the next morning to a man in the city with orders to sell him. The expresman afterward told Mr.Travers that the monkey pretty nearly killed every -rxdy on the train, for he got hold of the signal cord and pulled it and the engineer thought it was the conductor and slopped the train, and another train just behind it came within an inch of running into it and smashing it to pieces. Jocko did the same thing three times before they found ut what was the matter and tied" him up so that he couldn't reach the cord. Oh, he was just beautiful! But 1 shall never see him again, and Mr. Travers says that it's all right, and that I'm monkey enough for one house. That's because Sue has been saying things against the monkey to him; but never mind. First my dog went, and now my monkev has gone. It seems as if everything that is beautiful must disappear. Very likely I shall go next, and when I am gone, let them find the dog and the monkey, and bury us together. . ' The Lad and Ml Man. New York Tribune. ' As the boy begins, so the man will end. The lad who speaks with affectation, and minces foreign tongues that he does not understand at school, will boa weak chromo in character all his life the boy who cheats his teacher into thinking him devout at chapel will be the man who will make religion a trade, and bring Chrsitianity into contempt; and the boy who wins the" highest average by stealing his examination palers will figure some day as a tricky politician. The lad who, whether rich or poor, dull or clever, looks you straight in the eye and keeps his answer inside of the truth, already counts friends who will last all his life, and holds a capital which will bring him in a surer interest than money. Then get to the bottom of things. You see how it is already as to that It was the student who was grounded in the granimer that took the latin prize; it was that slow, steady drudge who practiced firing every day last winter that bagged the most game in the mountains; it is the clerkwho studies the specialty of the house in off hours who is to be promoted. Your brilliant, happy-go-lucky, hit-or-mis8 fellow usually turns out the dead weight of the family by fortyfive. Don't take anything for granted; get to the bottom of things. Neither be a sham yourself, nor be fooled by shams. A Girl Charmer of Birds. There lives near Harriburg, Ohio, a very remarkable child only five ayears old, who seems to have the power to charm birds at will. Her mother first noticed this strange fascination that the child possesses about a yearago. The little girl was out playing in the door yard amomr a bevy of snow-birds, and when she spoke to them they would come and light up an her, twittering with glee. On taking them in her hands and etroking them, the birds, instead of trying to

t away from their fair captor, seemed to ! hiehlv tdeased. and when let loose would tly away a short distance and immeuiaieiy return vo me cuuu uum. one took several of them into the house to show her mother, who, thinking she might hurt them, put them out of doors, but no sooner was the door opened than the birds flew into the room again, lit upon the gi'l's head, and began to chirp. The birds remained about the premises all winter, flying to the little girl whenever the door was opened. The parents of the child became alarmed, believing that this strange "ower was an ill omen, and that the much-dreaded visitor, Death, was about to visit their home. But death did not come, and during the last summer the child lias had many pet birds. The child handles the birds so gently that a humming-bird, once in her hand, does not fail to return. Last winter a bevy of birds kept her comjany, and she played with them for hours at a time. Every morning the birds rly to her window, and leave only when the sun sinks in the west The jarentsof the little girl are poor, superstitious people, and have been reticent about the ruatter until lately, fearing that some great calamity was about to befall them. Little Folks Abroad. A little girl in Sunday-school being asked why CJod made the flowers of the field, replied, "Please, ma'am, Isuppose for patterns for artificial flowers." Young America in Chicago: When a Chicago little boy is bad and his mamma orders him to stand in the corner he edges toward the door and remarks: "Say, ma, is it a corner in land or a corner in pork?" Teacher with reading class: lloy (reading): "And she sailed down the river" Teacher: "Whv are shijw called 'she?'" P.oy (precociously alive to the responsibilities of his sex): 'Tecause they need men to run them." School teacher giving out the spelling lesson: "Divorce!" Hoy "D i-v-o-r-c-e." Teacher "Whv, don't you know how to sjll that? What is it? What does it mean?" lloy "I know. That's what my mother's got." There is a great deal ot natural tact in children. When a little one was asked by her proud mother to read her last composition to the minister, she began: "The cow is the most useful animal in the world." and then, remembering the minister's presence, added, "except religion." "I know who made you!" said one six-vear-old to another. "Who was it?" "The Lord; He made me, too." ' Is you sorry He made you?" "Yes." "What makes you sorry?" "Just because." "Oh, I know; it's because He hurt you when He made you; it hurt when He was cutting your mouth!" The conversation was not carried any further. The other day a bright three-3'ear-old boy, who has "been around some," was taken to Church to be baptized and christened. Although tlp litt le fellow's parents are Church people, tlley mingle much with the world and are juite regularly at the Theater, where the little three-year-old always accompanies them, lleing taken into Church there was some delay before the ceremony was proceeded with, and the unregenerate youth becoming uneasv. cried out in a loud, impatient voice, "Ma, why doesn't the curtain go up?" Detroit Free Press. Juvenile Jay Gould: Jimmy Tuffboy is a modern sort of a youngster. He has formed a "Hello Tlione Company," in whieh the boys on his street are taking stock. Shares are booming along at five pins premium; preferred stock, seven pins and one needle with a good eye. After he has "bulled" the stock awhile longer he intends instituting a bear movement, to scare the ltoys into "unloading," after which he will consolidate with the "Wake Me Up at Five O'clock by Pulling My Toe With a String" Company and increase the rates of shoutergrams. He is already looked upon as a monojolist, having three sleds and five pair of skates, two "club," three half-' club" and the crossest dog in the neighborhood. POPILAK SCIEXCK. France imported during the first seven months of last year .V8,17" tons of iron minerals. A solution of oxalic acid is the best for scouring and iolishing copper. Finish with whiting. Mica has been applied to a new use, that of fashioning it into middle soles to boots and shoes. A sheet of mica is embedded in this coatings of cement, and placed in the boot or shoe under and adjacent to the insole, the upper leather of the shoe lapping over the edges, or next under the tilling, or between the tilling and the outer or bottom sole, and covering the upjer space from the toe to the instep. In regard to the use of salicylate of soda in rheumatism, Dr. llouloumie communicates to the Paris Academy of Medicine some of the results of his recent investigations. His more important conclusions are, that it is in the case of young men patients who have not before undergone attacks of gout or who do not present any tendency to nervous depression that the salicylate may be used without danger; second, that it acts chiefly by deadening pain; third, that in thus treating acute articular rheumatism in children the salicylate is perfectly well borne by them, even in a daily dose of six grams. The almost proverbial healthfulness and freshness of butchers is attributed, in an article in Les Mondes, to the fact that thev absorb, by assimilation through the respiratory passages, the nutritive and vitalizing principles of the meat volatized in the air, for it is a generally observed fact that butchers have small appetites and do not eat much meat Assuming this to be the true explanation, it is argued that young people suffering from deficient or impure blood, and especially children of a weak or lym phatic constitution, might be subjected with advantage to hygienic treatment based ujton it A French physician of eminence commends the idea, and offers a plan for a plan for a kind of gaseous baths for patients, the air to be charged witli vapors of the appropriate vitalizing principles, and thus, he thinks, arrest the progress of tuberculatum. How He Kecognixed Him. An amusing story is told of a French actor who went into the country to study a new part. He was waiting at a lonely station and thinking of his part when quite unconsciously he began to act it in dumb show. French actors think more of the pantomime of a play than we do, and the comedian, while waiting for his train, had gone through some of the principal scenes of the new piece in this way, quite ignorant that his efforts had been watched with the keenest interest by an attentive rustic sitting on a box in a dark corner. When the actor suspended his task the rustic rushed up to hitu quite eagerly, asking in anxious tones: "And the lovers, Monsieur, were they united, and was the villain discovered?" "What do you mean?" inquired the actor. "Oh, Monsieur told the story beautifully!" "luf. my good fellow, I have not spoken a word." "Ah! Monsieur, I could see it all by your movements, and I know Monsieur from the photograph in the show windows." ' The Lard' Prayer Revised. The following are the changes made in the text of the Lord's Prayer in the revision of the New Testament: REVISED VERSION. COMMOW VERSIO.X. Matthew vl., 9-13. Our Matthew vi., -13: Our Father which art In Father which art in Heaven. Hallowed be Heaven. Hallowed be Thy name. Thy king- Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be doiu come. Thy will be done, as in Heaven, soon done on earth as it in earth. ilve us this day In Heaven. Give us this our dally bread. Aud day our daily bread. And forgive us our debt, forgive us our debts, as as we also have for- we forgive our debtors, given our debtors. And and lead us not into lead us not into temp- temptation but tfellver tatlon, but deliver us us from evil. from the evil oik. J

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SPIUN'O. The genial days of spring have come. Now blow the sweet east breeier; We welcome them, these zephyrt strong. With coughs and colds and sneezes. The street-band comes to cheer our hearts, After a winter's stillness. With wheezy horn and dismal flute, And other signs of illness. Soring poets rise in large array, I And seek the daily papers: While from the slush of mud and snow Arise miasmic vapors. The orpun-grinder. too, thaw out, And play with fitful spasm; Thev dwell upon "Spring, gentle Spring,"

With delicate sarcasm. Musical Herald. MRS. NORMS' TEST. A Story of Wedded Life. BY MBS. 8. 8. ROBBIX8. It had been a painful breakfast The room was bright with sunshine, flowering plants, pictures, statues, and the ineffable charm wealth, good taste, and good housekeeping impart The table was faultless; every dish was cooked to perfection, and served on dainty china in the daintiest way. The lady at its head was still in her youth, with a piquant face, upon which each shade of feeling was instantly photographed. She was inimitably dressed. Worth, in his moments of highest Inspiration, never devised a toilet which so erfecily bespoke the character and taste of the wearer. She toyed with her breakfast, rather than ate it, and ended by playing with herteaspoon, balancing it upon the edge of her cup, while she waited for her husband to finish sipping his coffee. This he did in a most leisurely manner, with his eyes fastened upon the morning paper, w hich lay beside him on the table, lie was also young; but he looked old, careworn, and unhappy. His forehead was drawn together in deep wrinkles between his eyes and his lips were sternly set. After lie had finished his coffee and paper, he rote, pushed his chair slowly away, walked to the window, came back to his wife, and, stopping near the table, said, coldly: I think we have had enough of this. I shall see Went worth this morning. The sooner it is all over the better for both of us." "Yes," said his wife, without turning her head or looking at him. "The sooner the better." He left her without another word; but when he reached the outer door he came back, and said, more gently than he had spoken at first: "Katrina, you understand fully, when "Wentworth his once been spoken to there is no going back." It was the first time he had called her by her pet name for months, and there was a little quiver in her voice as she tried to answer, bravely: "Yes, I understand." "You accept it as final!" he asked. "Yes, as final!" she answered. He turned quickly and went out again. She listened with head upraised and strained nerves, "Would he, could he go?" "Yes, he went. The door between them he Jiad closed softly, but it was shut "shut forever," sUe said, with a start. Then she went to the window, and watched hiai as he walked swiftly away. W'hen he was out of sight, she sat down, still by the window. It had come suddenly at last, so suddenly that she was bewildered. Everything was in a whirl. She put her hand to her head and held it as if by that action 8he sou Id bold and steady her thoughts; but relentlessly they trooped on, faster and faster, until, as with the drowning, there was no past or future, only the vivid present. There was their first difference, after only a few months ot happy wedded life, when she wanted him to wear a pair of light brown gloves, and he preferred the dark and wore them. Such a trifle, oh! such a trifle, as it seemed to her now; yet she was hurt and vexed, andshowed it. Then his refusal to go to tea with her at her aunt's. He disliked tea parties and he was not cordial with this aunt Then her refusal to go with him to concert, on the liearingof which he had set his heart and his coining home happy, humming one of the airs he had been listening to. Happy! that was the panp. Trittes, trifles all of them such very little things that loving each other truly, as they did, they ought never to have had a feather's weight with them; and yet Then came a more serious difference. lie wanted to sjend a short vacation from ahard working life among the mountains, where he could hunt and fish; and he wanted her to go with him. Hut she preferred the seashore; so he went to the one, she tofche other. Separated for the first time in their married life, they wrote letters daily, and the happiest hour for them both was when the mail came in. Then Eddy, dear little Kddy was born (the tears are on Mrs. Xorris' cheek now), and every difference vanished. Heavens! what tie could bind them more closely? But he only staid a short time, and in their desolation they began to fall apart again. She was restless and miserable; he was disappointed, and did not make allowance for her weakned nerves and aching heart. Now they began to look critically into each other's nature and its developments in character. Very late for that; but it is an inevitable point in the dividing lines of intelligent and thoughtful people. Had they made a mistake? Were these things obstinacy in trifles on her part indifference and neglect on his the outgrowth of traits which had always been there, seen by others before, by them only years after marriage? Love was proverbially blind. Surely, they were not only blind; but, like angef, it had been a short madness. Mr. Xorris could not blame himself for what had happened. He never wished or meant to be anything but the best and kindest of husbands. He had not only supplied all his wife's real, but what he imagined might be a want, with a lavish hand. He had always been proud and fond of her. He was never happy away from, but alas! he had come now near to never being happy with her. Mrs. Norris was equally sure that her husband's home had been well kept; that she had not failed in any of the wifely duties; that she had loved him, did love him more truly and devotedly than any other living being. Whence, then, had come all this sorrow and trouble? The immediate cause of the crisis had been Mrs, Xorris' refusal to go to an entertainment with her husband; and her determina tion, against his expressed wish, to attend some revival meetings which were then in progress. She was drawn toward these, by a great want in her nature, which she could not and probably would not if she could, explain to him. Life had come to her, as she had thought in its most attractive and satisfying forms, and she had found it what? If there was another that promised something different, something better, surely, she of all li zing beings most needed it. Mr. Norris misunderstood her motives in going, when he suposed them to be from a wish to annoy him. and he did both a weak and foolish thing when he ventured to command her never to go again; nor did she do justice to her true reasons when she answered him with a bitter . and cutting sarcasm, he felt he could never forget or forgive. Over all these separating incidents, and many more, with a minuteness and fidelity which seemed to set at naught all the usual psychological laws, went this unhappy wife now. That her husband would see Mr. Wentworth, as he had propose J, she did not for a moment doubt; and that the able lawyer would accomplish just what he was requested she was also sure accomplish it in that careful, thoughtful, almost tender way, the very sympathy of which she felt would be more than she could bear. And

yet she would not raise a finger to prevent it, if she could. It was better as it was. If she intended to be a Christian and back to this point she found herself constantly coming what a hindrance her husband would be. Indeed, with him, would any such change be possible? But Mrs. Xorris had too acute a mind to knowingly practice selfdeception. She saw, at an unwilling glance, that it was not a step in the Heavenward course to break a solemn vow made in the presence of the great (iod her God, whose help and care aud love she so much needed. "Until death you two do part. So help me God!" "But this has been death!" she said, tremblingly, to herself. "Death of happiness, death of usefulness, death of all that is worth living for. Xo cold hand ever sundered lives more effectually than ours are sundered now. God must see this as 1 do, surely. He who is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart reads mine and knows what my true motives are." Item by item she went over the changes in their lives which this great change must make, until she Came to one little spot no larger than a baby's grave; and to this God's guidance, so often evoked, had led and held her. Whose would it le now? When life's fitful fever was over, and she laid her down to her long sleep, suppose, just suppose it might not be under the daisies by Eddy's side. All the strength of love and tenderness she had lavished on her boy came rushing back upon her aching heart, "Oh! not this! not this!" It wou.'d be the one thing she could not bear. He washers, and not his father's, by the great right of maternity, above which God had never set another; yet this father loved his child. And then such pleasant memories came to her of the boy dancing in his great stalwart arms; of his gentleness and lovingness with the tinv creature; of his pride and joy when a baby-look reminded him of her; of the plans they had made together for the wonderful future of this wonderful gift Very tender she grew at the touch of this little dead head. There could not have been a better moment chosen for her husband's return. When she heard his foot in the hall, she went as was her wont in happier days, to open the library door, meeting and welcoming him. ' lie was not a little surprised at her abrupt reception. "Edward," she said, "have you seen Mr. Wentworth?" "I have," he answered, briefly. "There fs one thing," she went on. "we had better settle before we go any further. Whose will be our little Eddy's grave?" "It will be ours," he answered unconsciously. "Ours!" she repealed, with trembling voice. "I mean," he said, remembering himself, "it will be mine, unless," pitying the look of ngonv in her face "unless you wish it If you do, I shall not hesitate to give it to you.". "Hut where will you lie?" she asked, tearfully. "I don't know," he said, carelessly. "I told Wentworth I wisaed you in every resect thoroughly and handsomely provided for. I shall go to Europe as soon as I can wind up my business matters here.'" He spoke so coolly and quietly that it was not difficult for his wife to answer. "It has come so suddenly that I hardly understand yet what it all means. I don't wish you to think of me. Only provide for your own happiness and comfort. "Happiness and comfort?" he related, with a sneer. "Edward," she said, not moved as she would usually have been by the sneer, "I want to say further that I am very sorry for all causes I have given you of offense. Forgive me, and let us, at least, part friends "Friends!" he repeated again, contemptuously. "Yes, friends," she answered, calmly. "The happy days of our past, when when we loved each other, surely, need not all be forgotten. I think God has been showing me wherein I have done wrong wrong when 1 never su?iected it I want to say again: Forgive me for it That is all." "Katrina, we have both done wrong." he answered, looking down into the pale and agitated face beside him; "but that don't help us now. We have tried theexperiment of living happily together, and have failed. It is of no use." "It is of no use," she related, absently. "I only wanted to say I was sorry for my part of the wrong. I never could have fell easy unless I had." "We are probably neither of us saints," he answered, coldlv. Then, with one of his rare smiles: "Perhaps, Katrina, in1 Heaven we may be married again, when we are, both erfect; only you know that dreadful verse about neither marrying nor beinggiven in marriage." She smiled too; but it was a poor ghost of a smile. "I know," she said; "but I shall never want to marry again." "We none of us know what may happen," he answered. "Ten years ago, no two jeople in all God's world would have less expected to stand where we stand now." "Edward?" she said, abruptly. "Well?" he questioned. "I thank you," she went on, with seeming irrelevance; "but I can not take Eddy's grave. You would be lonely away from from him. God will give me my boy, just the same, in Heaven; and to you, too," she added, her true love forcing itself uppermost with her thoughts of their child " 'Whose wife will she be of the seven?' " he answered. "Don't, Edward," she said, smiling like herself. "I say. Katrina" he took both her hands and held them tightly in his own "now we just can't We have both been idiots. Go to meeting all day, and all night too, if vou wish. Do anything vou please, only don't do this. That's all. "Don't" "But Mr. Wentworth, Edward?" trembling toward him. "Wentworth's no matter," he said, drawing her close to him. "Katrina, I am as hungry as a bear.. Let us have dinner!" "Simply a married quarrel" was it? It was something far more "serious than that. It was little disagreements, trivial, superficial antagonisms 111e.de much of, until they came near shipwrecking two otherwise noble lives, "If she knocked mo down every day with a broad-ax, I could bear it like a man," said a tormented husband; "but to be driven to death with pin-pricks is more than I can bear." These were pin-pricks on her part and the broad-ax on his; yet, had it not been for that one little grave, shame, sorrow, and a lite-long separation would have been the result Moral. Beware of differences in trifles.

Andrew Jackson on Courtiers. Recentlj Published Letter in the Richmond Dispatch. To G. W. Campbell, Esq: City or Washington, April 28, 1804. Dear Sir I reachad this place on last evening. I have been detained on my journey since I had the pleasure of meeting you, four days by high waters and an inflammation in my leg, which has in a great measure subsided, but I am not free from pain. The President is at Monticello. He lias lost his daughter, Mrs. Epps. Xot a hint who is to be appointed to the Government of Xew Orleans! I did not call to see the President. My reasons I will concisely state, and leave you to judge whether they are or not founded uion premises. I was not known to me whether he had made the aptointment In case I had waited upon him, and the office of Governor of X'ew-Orleans not filled, it would have been perhaps construed as the call of a courtier; and of all characters on earth my feelings despise a man capable of cringing to power for a benefit or ollice. And such charvrters as are capable of bending for the sake of an office are badly calculated for a representative system, where merit alone should lead to preferment These being my sensations, and believing that a call upon him under present existing circumstances might be construed as the act of a courtier, I traveled on. engaging my own feelings; and let me declare to you that before I would violate my own

Ideas of propriety I would yield np any office In the Government were I In possession of the most honorable and lucrative. Who the choice is to fall on is not known here unless to the Secretary of State. But I have reasons to conclude that Mr. Claibourne will not fill that office. I have also reasons to believe that if a suitable character can be found who is master of the French language that he will be preferred. I think that a proper qualification for the Governor of that country to possess, provided it is accompanied with other necessary ones. I never had any sanguine expectations of filling the office; if I should", it will be more than I expect But permit me here again to repeat that the friendly attention of my friends, and those particularly that lam confident acted from motivesof pure friendship to me (among whom I rank you), never shall be forgotten. Gratitude is always the concomitant ot a bosom susceptible of true friendship, and if I know myself my countenance never says to a man that I am his friend, but my heart beats in unison with it Permit me here, with that candor that you will always find me to possess, to state that I am truly gratified to find that your constituents alone are not the only tart of the Union that think highly of your legislative conduct; it extends as far as your speeches have been read, and you are known as a member of the representative branch. May you continue to grow in popularity on the basis of your own merit and as long as you are guided by your own judgment this will continue to be the case. This is, in my opinion, the only road to a lasting jopularity ; for the moment a man yields his judgment to popular whim he may be compared to a ship without its rudder in a gale he is snre to be dashed against a rock. Accept, mv dear sir, my warmest wishes for your welfare. Andrew Ja ksox.

Skipped With n Fortune. A Chicago Times special from Quincy, 111., March 11, says: David F. Howell, station agent of the Chicago, Burlington and liulncy Railroad at Colchester, has left the place and taken with him y.,VK) belonging to the Quincy Coal Company. The money was delivered into the keeping of Howell yesterday forenoon, by the otlicer of the Coal Company, to be by him retained until the afternoon. It was the monthly waes of the men employed by the Coal Company, which they were to receive at the close of work later in the day. The Com pun v hag paid its employes regularly on the 10th of each month, aud for several years past Mr. Howell has had the custody of the money for the pay-roll during the day of its payment. Howell was a man in whom the officers of the Company bd1 all others who knew him had the most implicit confidence. He was the apent of the American Kinross Company at Colchester, as well as of the lUiilroad Company. The esteem in which he was held is evidenced by the fact that the Superintendent of the Road had already decided to advance him in the Company's employ by giving him a more lucrative and responsible portion. The fact of his absconding wa therefore a source of utter surprise. It is presumed that he has been contemplating this step lor some time, otherwise he would not have been enabled so to conceal his movements as to avoid prompt pursuit. It was remarked by Mr. Osbom, President of the Coal Company, that had he taken last month's pay he would have secured ?12,uu0 instead 01 y.i.ouu. iioweu is a nue-iooking man, about six feet hhjh aud twenty-eight years old. He has light hair, blue eyes, and smooth face and light complexion, and wore dark blue clothes. He bad been in the employ of the Railroad Com pan v a long time, but has been agent only about four years, he having succeeded Mr. Smith, under whom he was working at the time. The money of the Coal Company was delivered to him at about 8 o'clock ana he put it in the office safe as usual. An nou r alterward he went to a livery stable, hired a horse and rode away from the sta tion, carrying his overcoat on his arm. When the oiiicers 01 the Coal company went to pay oil their men. the agent and the money were both missinc. What direction Howell took is not known, but Mr. Usuorn is of the opinion that he struck out for the Mississippi River and is headed wet Jt is not improbable that he will be overhauled. A Graceful Action Honoring the Con fed er. ate Dead. Suiiday an impressive ceremony took place in Greenwood Cemetery, Xew Orleans. About 11 o'clock the Charlestown (Mass.) Cadets, Captain Phipps commanding, went to Greenwood on cars, and, having alighted, marched into the cemetery. Drawing up in line tn front of the marble statue to Southern soldiers, the company "presented arms" and came to "parade rest" The hymn, "Xearer, my God, to Thee" was then sung by the entire company, after which a beautiful shield of the I'nion, made of tiowers, with a crescent and star in the center, was offered in memory of the dead and placed on the marble bust of Lee on the monument Then was Sung "Sweet By and By," aiter which three rulties of the drum were beaten and the Company marched silently to the cars and returned to the city. Commenting on the above incident the Picayune says: "This act on the part of the Cadets was entirely unexpected, even by their hosts, the Continental Guards, the matter having been kept a profound secret. It was a ceremony conceived in the spirit of amity and performed with imposing dignity." Apropos of George's birthday : Mrs. Washington, the mother of George, was going to make soap. George and his father arranged a large cask with some straw In the bottom of it, and on top of the straw they put some ashes and then leeched them. Mrs. Washington got her soap grease all ready, and in a short time the house was filled with that beautiful odor that betokens the process of soap boiling is going on. With all her skill she could not make the soap con.e. On invest igation it was discovered that some of the ashes used were from the wood of the cherry tree George cut down, and no lye could be prodsced even from them. This shows the power of truthfulness. Heart-felt are the many testimonials we receive from those cured of Heart Disease by Dr. Graves' Heart Regulator. Pamphlet on symptoms of Heart Disease free. Address F. E. Ingalls. Concord, X'. H. Price 50 cents and $1 jer bottle. Sold by Stewart fc Barry, Indianapolis. PREMATURE DECLINE, ETC., ETC. Premature Decline; Consumption; Bronchitis; Asthma; Bleeding from the Lungs: Palpitation, Feeble and Interrupted Action of the Heart; Dull or Slugjjüh Action of the Liver; Dyspepsia; Flatulence, nd all Wasting Diseases; Weakness and Trembling of the Limbs, and Want of Vitality in any Organ, or Disease caused by such want of Vitality, Are Successfully and Rapidly Treated by this Remedy. , DR. HOWE'S TESTIMONY. PiTTSFiELD, Me., March, 1872. Mr. James I. Fellows: Dear Sir During the past two years, I have given your Compound Syrup of Hypopbosphiies a fair though somewhat severe trial in my practice, and am able to speak with confidence of its effects. In restoring persons suffering from emaciation and the debility following Diphtheria, it has done wonders. I constantly recommend Its use in all affections of the throat and lungs. In several cases considered hopeless, it has given relief, and the patients are fast recovering. Among these are consumptive and old bronchial subjects, whose (licenses have resisted the other modes of treatment. For impaired digestion, and, in fact, for debility from any cause, I know of nothing equal to it. Its direct effect in strengthening the nervous system, renders it suitable for the majority of diseases. I am, sir, yours truly, WM. S. HOWE, M. D. Do not Le deceived by remedies bearing a similar name : no other preparation is a substitute for this, under any circumstances. Trice. 9l.HO Per Bottle. Six tor S7.C0. Sold by all Druggists.

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OS. Ulli L FIXIEALL. CF LTXX, PIBCOTEBXR OT LYDIA E. PINICHAr.VS VEGETABLE COMPOUND. The Positiv Orr focall tfca Palafal CaplalBta mmi WmImmn MtMMi tmr best trmm ppaUtlra. It wilt cart entirely tho wont form of Female Com r taints, all erariaa roubles. Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Pteplaeementa, and tbe conarqnent Spinal Weakness, ana is parUenlarly adapted to tha Chang ofUfa . will diaaolra and erpel tnmort from tha nterna In . a -early Mage o( deTFloptneot. Tba tendency to eaarous humor tbera ia checked Terypeedily by ita am. It removes faintneiw, flatulency, destroy all craring tvt stimulants, and relieves weaknea of the stomach, it cure Bloatinr, Headache, Merroaa Prostration, Beneral Debility, alvepeteeneea, Depression and Indigestion. That fecllnn f bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, la always permanently cared by It use. It will at all time and under all circamstancea act In harmony with the laws that gurern tbe female system. For tha cor or Kidney Complaint ot either sex this Compound is unmrpaiised. LYDIA E. PIXKIIA.M'8 VEGETABLE COM. PODUli preoarea at pa and 15 Western Avenua Lynn.Uaaa. Price ft. zoUleator 8 nt by mail in the foraa of pill, aim In the form or loaeopea, on receipt cf price, tl per box for either, lira. Plnkham freely answers all letters of Inquiry. cVnd for pamphlet. Address as abov. Mmtum ri Vipre. Wo family vhould be without LYDIA K. 11 VK HAM 'S Un ITLL3. They cure constipation, billousneasi Ad torpidity ot the lWer. 8S cento per box. OLD BV POND'S EXTRAGT Subdutt Inflammation, CeuiroUall Hemorrhage Acute a nd Ch ranh. I "rttvxs a nd SI teems. IXVALUADLK FOR Ecus V. ana v v IntazinatioiLS. vy - 1 "V f lisclarsES, Cai'iMSilS. AIIEÄICLS fl HIB NV,Ä Lengs, lyes arl TM. ICIIEI'JIATISH AND NEITRALKIA. FcrsenMtive r.nd severe ca-es rf CATAltltll ire our CATAKUIl Iti:, 75c.) In ttl Cis-. use our NASAL SYKINC t;t w;c.) Ary of our preparations will be sent i.ilclicf 3 worth, m receipt vi price. Fred. C. E'tNC. Dtrrtr, Col. " Astonished at Is wont'crfiil eflect." AicthVh Vi Ckowlev, Washington, D.C. " Prerrr.ir.enth' the be." SAML.'k. J amf.s, Schenectady, N. V. 'A family acces-.ity in my family. ' R. H. TfctsTED, New Yorii " Have derived grtat benefit from its use." M. M. Cohen, A '. Crapkic. Simply invaluable." lir. C. Thaver, Falmouth, Ma-. "One of he bct remedies in my daily practice." Hos. Jno. C. Spencer, late Secretary of War and Secretary cf the Treusur)', wrote as far back as 1848. " It is a remedy perfectly invaluable." CAUTION. PONU'S KXTRACT is rold itnly in bottles with rhe name blown in the glass. t It is unsafe to use other articles with our directions. Insist on having POND'S EXTRACT. Refuse all imitations and substitutes. .if Ou.t New Pampmi et, with History of Ot a Preparations, sent FREE. I-ADIF.S Read papes n, 18, ai and id. POND'S Iv XT It ACT COMPANY, 14 Wet 14th Street, New York Sold by all Druggists. If tou are a manV 3 It yoa are a V B .weak. I man of let- I -ainof 1 I ten toiling over nuti- H avoid I nitrbt work, to re- I w of busm, ened by tbe strain Tour duties avc tuuulantvand uso tore brain nerve and Hop Bitters. Tf yon are young and diwrvtion or tliwupa ried or finple, old or poor health or Ui.ruiah ness, rely on Hop waste, use Hop B. suffering from any In tion 1 if you are ma rfoiinfr. suneriinr from rsr on a bed of atckBitters. Whoever you are, f. Thousand die annually from some form of Kidney diveae that miKl't have been pretenud by a timely use of whenever you feel J t um, y M M r .J IH M. needs korwintr. ton- t mir or nimuiauiiL't withoutlnroxicudny, I SKA MOP Bitters. Have )W1 rfi D. I. C. is an absolute or mrituirueomlaint, Ulneaw.' of the sfoHWA, bntrtlM, blood, lirer oruervt 1 Tos will be cured if yoa use Hop Bitter HOP and IrreaUtKjtile eure for idrunkenness, use of opium, tobae eo , or narcotics. Rold by drags (rlxts. Send for Cin-ular. bop Brrrus TO CO., whiter, 1. T. Tomato, Out. IfyonaresfmJny wean ani o spirited, try iti It may save your life. It has NEYER FAIL saved hu dreds. W1LLARD HOTEL LOTTERY POSTPONED FOR A FULL DRAWING To April 7, 1881. The Drawing will take plare at Louisville. Ky. under authority ot a special act of the Kentucky Legislature, and w ill be under the absolute control of disinterested Commissioners appointed by the act. LIST OF PRIZES. The Willard Hotel, with all its 1 fhOrfl flfin Furniture and Fixtures jJpZOU UJÜ One Residence on Green Street. ..JI'j.OuC One Residence on Green Street................... 15.000 Two Cash Prizes, each fcS.OUO 10,000 Two ("ash Prizes, each 82,000 4,000 Five Cash Prizes, each f 1.0U0 6,000 Five Cash Prizes, each f.XO 2.SO0 Fifty Cash Prizes, each 1100 5,000 One hundred Caah Prizes, each IV) ft.000 Five hundred (sh Prizes, each tJO 10,00c One Set of Bar Furniture 1.00C One Fine llano 500 One handsome Silver Tea set 100 400 boxes old Bourbon Whkky, f. 14,400 10 Baskets Champagne. $33 8T0 Five hundred Caan Prizes, each flO 5,000 400 Boxes Fine Wines. t 12,000 200 Boxes Robertson County Whisky, JU0. 6,000 400 Boxes Havana Clpars, 1 10 . 4.000 Five hundred Cash Prizes, each $10 5.00T AMOUNTING TO $369,850. Whole Tickets, $8. Halves, $4. Quarters, $2. Remittance may be made by Bank Check, Express, Postal Money Older or Registered Mail. Responsible agents wanted at all points. For circulars, giving full information, and for tickets, address W. C. 1). W H I PS, Willard Hotel, Louisville. Kt. NERVOUS DEBILITY Vital Weakness and Prot tratlon from over-work ot Indiscretion. UnMC UR U " radlcalls and rtWknirkf I rilUlliLUI n I II I W Yi cured ty it is the rnont success- WtUINi; N0..ZÖ, ful remedy known. Price! per vial, or 5 vials ana lanre vial of powder for S sent post-f re onrwceiptot price, Humphrevs'JIomeo. Med. ra. tllimt.. f ataloo-ue fre- I IH Fnllon st Äi V , , ..... i ; . . VERY ISPORTAYTJO HORSEIEI. 1 Bottle of English Spavin Linlmentrvlll completely cure and remove all hard, callous Lumps, Pufls and unsightly Tumors from any horse, such as Bog or Blood 'Spavin Ringbone, curb, splint, and every other deformity caused by callous. It also cures all lameness from sweeney or old sprains in the conin joints, etc. You may save t"0 by the use of one bottle of this valuable liniment. Hold by all druggists, aud at wholetale by A. KJeier, Indianapolis. janü-ly

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SURE CURE FOR Co u r lis. Colds, Horo Tliroat, lironchltle, Asthnia, Consumption. And All Diseases of THROAT and LOGS. Put up In Quart Size Bottles for Family Ute. Scientifically piepared of Balsam Tolu. Crrstalized Kock Candy, Old Rye and other tonics." The Formula is known to our bet physicians, is highly commended by them, and the anaivsi of our most prominent chemist. Professor G. Ä. Mariner, in Chicago, is on the label of every bottle. It in well known to the medical profession that TOLU ROCK AND RYK will aflbrd the greatest relief for Coughs. Colds, Iiyflnenra, Rroiichitiit. ore Throat, Weak Lungs, also Consumption ia the incipient and advanced stages. Tsed as a KEVKRAGK and APPETIZER, It makes a delightful tonic for family use. Is pleasant to take; if weak or debilitated it gives tone, activity and strength, to the whole human frame. O A TTrTvrrl"T In't be deceived KJ.J J-lvJ-l-N. by unprincipled dealers who try to palm oil' upon von Kock and Kve ia place of TOLU KOCK AND RYE, which I the only medicated article made, the genuine having a Government Stamp on each bottle. LAWRENCE & MARTIN. lYoprietors, In Madisoa Street, Chicago. Ask your Druggist for It. Ask your (Jrocer for ii. Ask your Wine Merchant for It. Children, ask your Mamma for itSold by Druggists, Grocer and Wine Merchant! everywhere. Wholesale Agents In Indianapolis. Stewart & Barry, Browning & Sloan. A. Kieff and A. Ptout & Son, wholesale grocers, wl furnish the trade at manufacturer's prices. MEDICAL. PRESUMPTION FREE For tue aperdy t are af Nervona WeaknvM, Lot Vitality, Premature Ife-Mllty. Nrnnaw, l)ep4nleny. ('nfu! of i dem, iM-fW-tlte Mem. wry and 4iMr4r bruaht ky at rr-.rL al Kiffwfc Any flrnaalat has the ItirrrdlrM. le plain -all lpr. A ldr,,. IK.Y. K J AQl ES, l1 W M.tb KtPrvl. Im-IubmiI. Ohl. S7 Ccurt Place, LGU!SV!LLE, KYM Ji rti!arlT Mimp! tat 1-c1't ou!:f.r. Lfh ia ui y .ot wx''m, 'ii i wnt Iii I Cares all iaruis of PHI" CAT IT, CHRONIC and. EiiXUJL iiliLASE3. .Spermatorrhea anl Ircvolerr, bv e.c rcn'.t e' wlf-inu-s lu TOuili. fev::.l . . tvt rear, or rhr LW.ric . nv;t-: Nei v.-i.;o-.. c-3,irtt r.r.u..ii..ii. kwi ilfim). Limu. if r-tfM, dir.-' V. i . : (i 'tl U"".v. Pipi Irjon Vwt, Avtr-i-i ."-. t .! I .u Coufu-ru cf Iii-, lif uf ful Vir. ..r-:.1-tx-nllv cjrid. SYPHILfiS l"""' tut k.l -a. 5r? iTUti'1 iuw . n.: Gonorrfc?, VtLjLLI, Sui-tire, .m.i.ij. IWrjia, (vc k-,-.. Fik-jt ui.l uUr pnrmte 4i?ae qi.i.'k!v cured. It le se!f-vtOut b.' ph, rirUa f'.rs '(wtidi'-r -i toacrruia C4u at li Tux", n. trr .t.i.r tb.xi.mJt .. ... ally, acquirer ,rrt iVtMi-tnr tu ir tl.i-1 : ..i j r-nin.ru 4 perMiM to hit M'hn it b iurtir-i' v 't Tisit the :it fo" trr.uuvnt. HHi-rie. c.a he eut iri-t.'j t ad ulelT itj ami or e.r" aiirwbere. Cnres Guaranteed in all Catt undertaken. toii-uiutiou pranoa!)T or t. Jrtter frr a4 I rV Chaiges rtaMrbable aaii ourrrioileB-.-, ftncUy cm.!. A PRIVATE COUNSELOR Cf JOfl pafct, tit to acr ad .Ire, arc ort It w-tk-d, f.. Cr-J cdu. Should be re.it br aiU AdareM at Oat hour, (rua a A. U. to ti P. M. SuBara, t to P. k. AND SPERMATORRHEA. A ralaabla Discovery and New Der Kara In JW cal fcciooc,aa amirnly New and positively sttctiv liomedr for tbe spoexly and permanent Care of Seminal Emissions and Jmputency by tha only tru way, via: Direct Application to the principal .-vat pf tha Disease, artinr by Absorption, and ef rtio lto sueeitie Influence on tbe Seminal Vesicle. E aculatory Ducts, Prostate Gland, snd Urethra. The) usa of the Itemed? ia attended with no pain or lacoaveolence, and dot not interfere with tha oriinxrj parsuiu of life; It is quickly dissolved and soon absorbed. producing an Immediate soot bin and rwitopatlre enact npon the seznal and nervous onraaizatioos wrecked from self-abuae and eicesscs, stopping the drain from tha system, restoring tha mini V, health and sound memory, removing tha Dimneia of Sipbt. Nervout Debility. Confusion of Xdeaav Aversion to Society, eta, etc., and tbe appparaac of prematura old ajra oaoalJv acrompanyin' ten trouble, and restorlnf perfect Bexuai Vigor, wber it has been dormant for years. This mode of treatment has stood tbe test la vory severe caaes. and ia now a pronounced success, Drugrs are too mucb prescribed In these troubles, and, as many can bear witness to, with but lit tle if soy permanent nod. Tbero is no Nonsense about this Preparation. VractWl oSerratton enables na to positively guarantee that it V.U1 Rive satisfaction. Lrurins; the etbt years that it has been in seoerai one, we have thousands ot turaonials as to its value, and it is now conceded hf tha Medical I'rofesalon to be the nmt rational mean vet discovered of reacbinjr and curing; this very prevalent trouble, that ia well known to be thecaaxeof ua'oll misery to so many, and npon whom quacks prv wit 4 their useless not-trams and biff fees. Tbe H3i?y is put up la neat boxes, of three lzes. Na l.eoui to last a month.) 1 3 ; No. S, (sufficient to eitert permanent cure, unless in severe cases.) 6; No. 3, (lasting over three months, will stop emissions an! restore vigor in the worst cases.) 87. Snt br ro.ti.'. scaled, in plain wrappers. Full PXXLCTIOXä tor UEirnr v.'ill accompany EACH BOX. 1 let gtrinp A natomirnl i iltfflraltunn I and Tef imN w. rhtrH ertl rotirim-f ft H tha tnoßt ukrptirut that they ran h H rmtoml to jtrrfert ma n howf.aml jt- a 1 f et for f lie du lie af life. Mine us if f aerer ajj ectrtt . aokl oiXt oy ' HARRIS REMEDY CO. MFC. CHE&S3L Market and Cth Sis. St. Louis. Ma. A Ft rd complete CI II! TO WFDUM K, rooUicinr Chapter, oa A Competent Womaai hood. Election of wife. Evidence- of Vtre-t.-2 rty, Temperanent. Sier.htv. Arfrice I bnf slsws. W.fla, FWiaMMa, a tBia CwV at Ma - CeMml Dvuam, CiarsiUs. C , L fa-rf iaus..sa. Um. rt. tW- Steve) tSafla Life La 4 Maun 'MJ. it u a M Privat Medical Adnaer " d sem rJ mar W. . aultinf (roai lanpttre aciaal net tion. and oa !i-at-ie tha reu as wilt 4 Mv Abrt a sfW life, na Kt4', f .. L mf .few. .. mat srnist laWB-sas SW ssSsft. ' tree-' aJ ear )aU tmwiptm. A fc , Urn ns iie ia1.u 4aK -- -i IsssjC bb) sMfiM M tfcss, sjl irw taw ft assi af miw. t ewaulb im s sf eaa W. awsi 1 mmm, Mit mm Iwca e1 VssBsWsWe. - - " ä l. Itw awiw a assrasM ewrTnaT tv I ms aaWWaa, mW Mai f Uaa UMV tk5 I Vi. KU swvm all ssyraa efte-raj fvwssi ITTT t sW Vm Ve fJM.v. I X Tt ns. AeVt'ee. EH. MTTV HSHHSstT, 1" - ft. lwU, Ufa STOPPED FREI Alurrritim $u-t.-i, tsne rrsre PnVt-s DR. KLINE'S G8EAT Nerve Rfstor?? f(T all 15 A F.avR L'isr.F-K. uhu r eureirr '.. i'Dilmtj and Aerre Jkrfi. r lr LLiRLr. If taken aj d.rec:ed. A Fils afti r .rtrjiday'iti. Treatise s:.d 12 trisl potilef:t r itpali-rtta,they paring eprfsee. 8rd ftarti . P. U. and i.re ail.tres. lo la. Kl IS'K. I Arcb St. w'WiH,,a ! . itt.i''r..i)t WOSTACHt AM WTSf CM. IWfc e tser) t...a. ks ia.es BMat U 4m e, a Wa ftessa U Im, r "a Mi u i fr 2 M4 vwvaa mmA ssr Ws2u.lfL -jisq s mc r.yWaa-i,a.. wm4 I p. . h wf. H..I. iiiisi M WsfWi, Fa fax riiMi-i, im 'easae sMaw. fwh sV Hm ANY GENT; Or lady that endanä theiradcJrts? a ill receive omethtne er bu Mail, thi may prove the tteppinir-stone to a life of sucre. It is especially adapted to those who hsre reached tbe foot of tbe hill. Address id. VOCNli, I'.i Greenwich Street, New Yorklowest prices erer know? on street h - lAa4en KlOea, and itevelten OUR $15 SKOT-GUH at frreatly reduce! price.. Send stamp fr our Ne 1 1htrtcw1 nntalmrne iHl KPOWELL & SOX.S3H Mats ftreet, CI Ncl.NK ATl.O. n A MONTH-Agenti Wanted-75 tet se UJU lug articles in the world : 1 sample Irl a dress Jay Sroasoii, Detroit, Mich.

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