Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1885 — Page 7
THE INDIANA STATS SENTINEL' WEDNESDAY 3IAH0II 18 8!
TITZ HOHE.
Ik la net doubted tht men hare a borne In that Jflace wiere each one has esubilaiied tils ceirta and tba mm of his pofeM-;oa and fortunes whence he will not depart if rcthlnjr; call hiua away; whence if he has departed he seems lob i wanderer, and il he return tie ceases to Winder. Condition Irm CiTil Law. T:en stay at come, my heart, and rest. Tag bird la safest la tn nest; O'er all mat flntter ttieir win and fly, A hawk is hoveruu Lu tnj sty." Longfellow. OUP. Tf Ol''- ir.K3 Jerry. ".Bay a paper, plaze ! She l frozen a'most, Here's the Commercial, and Sun. and Mail, And here's the Exprt and the Evening Post, And lvery one has a terrible tale A ahipwrict a niurtber-a fire alarm Whicniver yoa loike-have a paper, mann? Thii bay it, plase. av ttiia bit a a gl mil, She's new la the business, and all of a wMrrul; We roust lind her a band," said little Jerry; Them's a plenty a? thrade at the Futtoa rerry. , -"She's wakely for nad3 aT the tay and the toat The price aT a paper plaze, sir. buy a Post? Thrue as me name it is Jeremiah, There's a foine report av a dridful fire. And a child that's lost, and a smash a a train; indae, sir, the paper's just gro&nla' wld t ain I rake op. little girrol, an don't beafriid! I'd rchraichhi' lor two till 1 start yer 1b thrade. v hile I yell, yon can sell," said little Jerry, fccietcLlng for two at Fulton Ferry, Twh New Year's night, and the wind was r.lh. And i Lurrying crowd went shivering by, ADd pome boujnt papers, and some bought none, P.ut the boy's shrill voice rang cheerily oa : Buy a Post, or a Sun, or a Mail, a j ou choose. For my arm just aches wid the weight ay the uewp. Fxvrff7 Not a single one left for to-nisht But buy one av this little eirrul, sir; all right, She's a reg'lar seller here at the ferry, And I rickomind her h'sh." eatd Jeiry. la the whirl of the thron? there paused a man "The bell is ringing I can not wait; Here. girl, a Commercial, as quick as you can! The boat ia startin don't make me late!" And on through the hurrying crowd he ran, The wee girl following close behind, A f ter the penny he could not find: While, wi;li a spring through the closing gate. After her money bounded Jerry, lugged and panting, at Fulton Ferry. "One cent from the man In the big fur coat! Give me the change, or I'll stop the boat." Lp from the deck a lauen and a cheer. U taunted to a shuddering cry of fear -As ru bent bts bead for tn fearful uprtn?, a lid then, like a wild b'.rd oa the wins, t t the whirling waters swung, , . f',d the boat with hts bunas, and dun?, r and white, to the raii, and cried : Ü re Is that mean old nan who tried 'i o 'tal cne cent from a itirl at the ferry A i'cor Utile fairl, with no friend but Jerry ?" Over the side went a hundred hands, v ruui a hundred mouths run. forfi command: "Pa!? hiraia!" "atop the buat!" "Letuibuy ! histockJ" "Send htm home toaetdry !" ''o im-ade." ta!d the boy; "that's net what 1 meint: 7 Cen't wait ycr money I want that one cent Kjom the n-mi In the warr'ra for coat an' hat, W ho oo'i-rt shteel a cent from a girrui lolae that ! At Iver he tries that game ein, "3e'd better take me, aiid ot Manery Flynnl" Then ctter oa cheer for litt.'e Jerry H&nt acron the Fnlton Ferry. Loa aro. my youthful rea-Jer--. Hsppeued this tnat 1 have toid, Loa a?o that sturdy zewsboy All his daily papers .old. And the pluck thit dared a duckln To set right a weak one's wrong. tierved btra well in every f'ruisle; And his life, both kind and strong, Is a blesslns snd a comfort To a world of needy boy?. Who, like him, must work in play time, "With boot-brushe tor their toys. ButaroUDdtne Fulton -erry Btiil the newsboy ulk et Jerry dt. Nicholas, A Marked Youth. Years ao, there lived ia the interior of jSew York a boy. the sen of a farmer, who a'&o worked at the trade cf a potter. The boy was a marke i 3 oath, because he would do with might whatever he undertook. Lie wuj a leader in the ordinary (parts of bsyhood, and whenever the firm or the pottery lelased their hold upon him, he would be lound reparian some damaged article, or devi'ns a new implement. Hia father was poor; the farm was small axd could only be enlarged by clearing up the primeval forest. The boy was anxious to acquire knowledge, but hU services were so cectasary to his father that he could not be rp&ied io attend the winter term of the common school. Bat the boy was in earnest "With the aid cf his brother, oue year his junior, he cbop-ptdf-c4 cleared four acres of biroh aal maple woodland, ploughed it, planted it with crrr. harvested the crops, and then asked Zf b 3 cotrjpentation, to be allowed to attend sclto dcrirg the winttr. Ol course, the fall r granted h!s wish. When the boy was seventeen, the father's pot 1 try business had so increased at to demand a more extensive factory- A carpenter was hired to bniid the new building, and the boy assisted hira. So familiar did he become with the tools and the trade, that he determined, with the aid cf the younger bro'-her, to erect a twostory frame dwelling hoase fcr his father's family. The two boys cut the timber from the for est, placned and framed the struciure, and th6n invited the neighbors to asüst at the ."raising." They came from far and near to Bee what a lad of seventeen had done. When every mortise and tenon was formed to fit its place and tbe frame was seen to stand perfeet and secure, the veterans cheered the yomg architect and builder. From that day txe äs in demand as a master-carpenter. Tba boy was Ezra Cornell, the founder of Cornell University. "?ee t thou a man diligent in his bustnir he shall stand before kinu'i; he shall not s'acd before obscure men." The meaning of this old proverb is that the it. a n who has done well in little things shall b tdranced so tbat he shall not waste himself cn work to which obscure re en are aiqsat. Ez-a Cornell illustrated the truth of It e OrienUl raying. L ke ruotit cf the strong, efficient and goDi men w bo have made this country what it is, he wss brocght up ta ue bla handa,as wall as his biains, and was early inured t labor and ftcccerorned to contrive". At the age of iwer.ty. with three 01 f mr trades at his fingert' ends, a few dollars in his pocket a spare sroit of clothes in bis valise, he walked to Ithaca, forty miles from h's father's house, and scon found curable m ploy meat. He was one cf the first men to believe in Professor Morse's telf graph, and made a very large fortune in constructing the first lines and organizing tbe earliht companies. Prolessor Mone saw his merits and gave him a cplendid chance, which he improved. He Was just the man for the work. The IM Girls. ; Amanda B. Harris, in Wide A wake. 1 That mfk young teacher hr grea'est trisi as with ths big glria whi were as tail as th was and not many yearn younger. It wajthi-ir dtlisht to do thiii which they knew be wouid not dare try to punish them for. One forenoon one of them rose and -a'ked to go out, she wanted "a drink of wsttr," but as it lacked only a few minutes Of recess time, the mistress refused; upon -which the second one roee, with the same -worJa. and then tbe third, fourth, fifth, sixth, tevLth, ose after another, stringing the iustion rijjht along, "May I go out? I want ilnt k of water ' "May I go out? I want a 3ri; k of water?" till nothing else was htard in tie schoolroom except the aided mut erioe. "I'm raott choked to death." t he shook ber head ti etc a, with the tame answer that it weald be recess in a. few minrites, and kept about ber duties, but with a look on her face as if she knew there was limnder in the air. Well, recess came; and recess was over; and the pupils were all kick in their places except the great girls. Their teats, which took the whole tack row, were vacant, and there was an ominous hush, broken at length fry the door being thrown wide open, and in Talked, with the Imperious mien of an in
jufed but defiant Zenobia, one girl, bringing a tin pail of water, which she set with an eoi-phat-is on her desk; at a measured interval caae another, with a tin jaii foil of T-ater, which, with equal vigor, she set on her de-ik; eo, haughtily and elowly, with impressive pusss in the proceEsloa, come they, one by one, sevan in all, tin rail in hand; and on the long desk was ranged the row cf glittering rails, drawn np es if in battle array; and the girls behind had a gocd deal of mutiny In thtir eyes. Ficdirg that the mistress took no notice, except tD turn pale, thy made a grat show of drinking in concert and tben setting the pails down with farce; but there must sinae-
I tima come a limit to drtnaing water, even it one be choked almost to death, and finally, after as mtch desperate hard drinkiag as they could endure, feeling that it wm jroor sport to fight where there was nothing to resist, the ringleader gate a signal for the ji to give over, and as it wss never at any time even eo much as alluded to bv the person they meant to insult, they eventa&lly sub2icf d into well-behaved scholor. There was not a little mischief of a mild kind going en, and what to the parties concerted was only mcderata naughtiness, whenever we happened to have an easy teacher. In the winter a man always kept the echool: occasionally a severe one, who announced in the outset that we were all to "cbey rnles. and toe the mark." or we should see trouble; but the mild ones were comfortably interleaved, as one might say, eo that the terms alternated somewhat lice tne reasonsif we had a rigorous period it might be followed by a temperate one. 230TTT rKOIlLESS. 012 readers are Invited to I uralaa crtxlnal cabanas, charades, riddles, rebuses and other "knotty problems," addressing all communications relative to this department to E. B. CSiadtvoara. '.wlilon Ualns. No. 1132 Who Aral? My name snepets the rfawninz. The wild sighing of the breezj, Eut I the day-break scorning, Am a sky-lark at my ease. I'm an artist ever sketching, And my easel is the sky: The moon Hb ht and the starlight Are my brihtet company. Like the mconüght coldly beaming. Or like a brilliant star, I FCintiiiate In glory While clouds my beauty mar. I an radiant as xeornln?, j y mytell in flame, A? i'n teavity last adorning 1 it the letter lights to shame. Ep.mima S. "u. 1133. An Inscription. Deer reader, do not torn from this At.d tay you tan not guess it; Ycu krow fome people never can, Ahd may as weil confess it. J net tske a fish, a monster of Ti e deep, and look upoa It side, and Here you're 6ure to see. If jou have eyes, my one. If jest as eay. bonet friends, My little two to paint: The simple truth is. tnat it Is, Lattver isu't, aiu'L Now. take an accieot volume; look It's fc il tace upon : You'll lind a headstone broken down, b lanked by a setting sen. 1 ben underneath this neat design Just let jour gisnces fail; Ana you'll perceive the sittfng sun is setting on my all. Bobi, No. 1133. A Syllable Acrostic. L Initial Syllables I re'pned, with r - ltapi'ted r!ght, A famous kint old: But force iUell oil yields to might, And soon my days were told; O'erpowered and dmen to the wall, 1 showed the hero's trait Ur bravely giving etf and all Unto a wretched fate. Croaa-words. 1. Please read my initials; you'll find I'm the same; A beaten, unfortunate sovereign's name. 2. lied the Venetians who joined the crusade; 'Mid Ssracen warriors I fougut,undismayed. 3. A warrior of old. in the heroic ages, My needs yet survive in Uomer's bright pages. 4. You may find me In history's books, If you will, A Corsican, famous for bravery and skill. 5. I'm not found in Mstory nor history's rela tion: I'm merely to purify, purification. Clem V. W. No. 1135. A Charade. Upen a cold and stormy night 1 heard my first till quite enraged: When ruihing out with all my might. To do my second 1 engaged; It to my whole you chsnce to stray. You'll find they're mountains far away. Geo. II. Donham. No 1136. An Anagram. Consumption's ravages are seen In features pale and bed j lean. In haggard looks and panting breath, The harbingers of coming death; And such forerunners, grim and grave, Suggest the thought of "our sad rave." KaLsosniif. No. 1137.-A Riddle. I am honored, be sure: for learned men place ile their own brilliant intellects over; Atd a number of faulti-or of failings I mean I with wonrterfal charity cover. Robin. Nu. 1 138. A Double-Letter Enigma. In "breaking waves;" In "darksome caves;" In ''every land;" And "every strand;" Jn "DUz' halln:" lu rociv wslls." This tame is given, and not without reason, 1o a part cf our land quite famed: Abide there awhile in any teuton. You'll agree 'tis rightly named. Milvia May. The March Offering-. For the bebt lot of answers to the "Knotty Problems" of March will be forwarded Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield," aicely be und in cloth. Each week's solutions thould be forwarded within six days after the date of the Sentinel containing the puzzles answered. Answers. 1118. A stove fire. 1119. Hand-box, 11LU The atmosphere. 1121. Advertisement. 1 1 22. Tom-big-bee. 1123 E M in E nee; eak; del; ade; ess; DA yb It A 8 ph O E 8 ca P D A mp N MCdaW ell; A R oa A tic; ME di C ate; P A la T ial. 1124. The teeth. Ueset on All Bides By malaria, how shall we escape the dread infection? is the question which the denizens of fever and ague districts ask themselves. The answer ccmea from former sufferers who for years have eecased tbe visitations of the periodic scourge through the protecting Influence of Uostetter's Stomach Bitters. When the necessity for using retentive measures arises, use this means of prevention at once. It regulates the liver, facilitates digestion ana liberates Impurities from tbe system, when such exist, by promoting healthful action of the bowels and kidneys. Act early. In all regions where mlamatic vapors breed disease It ia absolutely necessary to be provided with a safeguard, and this ii true, though a sojourn in such localities is destined to be brief. to one can a (lord to breathe malaria for a short time. Tbe Bitters is a sovereign remedy for rheumatism, debility and nervousness. Keep it on hand.
TDE NATIONAL CAPITAL.
Washington Gossip - UenorkU Joe ,I hnton,' KoicrArjM od William thll Thompson, Ktc. 7a8hi5gto3-, March 12. The rush for offices is bringing tithe surface a large number of faces which had cot been seen In political circles in Washington for alongtim. Msoy who have been oat of politics for years, others whose secure seats in the Hou?e and Senate had rendered them indifferent to to politics and personal relations; others who have been buried in the legitimate work of CoDgress, are comlrg to the surface with wonderful rapidity and snreity. Everywhere yoa see them faces that wc f -.miliar here jears ago, or that have o ily bsen seen In Congress and not in 1 ibbies of the hotels or loafing around the political throne. It seems odd that men who have tteen Congrissmer and Senators at salaries of $,000 a year, and who h -e in all that time insisted that a man can't liye In Washington ou a ealary ot that size, should now be turning heaven and earth npside down to get places that pay much less; even the positions of Governors of Territories that pay but $2,C00 per year, are as eagerly sought after as though they were worth fortunes. There are but twenty places in the departments such as Assistant Secretary, EX-DELEGATE MAGIX5I3. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Com-jnis-eion-r of General Land Office, Conmlstirnrr cf raten ts, etc., that pay about 51 003 to 54 500 per year, and to these the average Conrecsrusn seems to aspire. Only s fes of tie n Offt daring spirte, late members of Onrress, teem able to apire to tbe foreign missions, which pay salaries of 512.000 to $15 (.00, and in some cases u. ore. Many who were aspirants for Cabinet positions erenaw reports d willing to accept places under the vi ry men who were chosen over their beads for their places. Many of these men have represented that they cjuH make much more money in the pursuit of their profes'ices and that they were losing very much by staying here in the service of tbeir country, yet they are now quite willing stay longer, and at greatly reduced salariei. Let us run over the list, or rather a psrt of it, for to give the entire list wouli bi very tedious. One of the most prominent nzares brought to the surface by this political upheaval is that of General Joseph.E. Johnston, of Confederate fame. lie has been living here for a long time, in a quiet way, acting as agent for some insurance company, living in handsome style, and understood to be do'ng well. EHe divides his time between trave'ing aoout tbe country, visiting the omcs of the Comrany in New York and his home in Washington la summers se goas to the "spr'rgs." where ail his old friends from IheSonth congregate, and seems to be having a g-od tin generally I remember calling at his handsome residence on Connecticut avenue, the most fashionable residence street in the city, last snmraer. and in im wer to my isqu'r'es of the sable attendant secured tbe sententious reply. "Gone to tbe Sprincs, sah; won't be back till fall,'1 and yet he is among the most prominently mentioned applicants for the position of Comroifsioner of Railways, a place which pays j'l 000 a year, and rnaks its occuDant a target for every newspaper and chronic growler in the West. The General ia not doing much personal work in tbe 'matter himself, but his friends are very basy. He has many of them, and very earnest ones, too. A nether man who was prominent at Johnston, in the late unpleasantness, but oa the other side. General Roeecrans, is one of the meet active seekers for place. He was an avowed candidate for Cabinet honors, telling anybody that asked him about it that he CIKIRAL J0K. X. .I0HKST35. wanted to be Secretary of "War Now that le is net in the Cabinet, he is williag to take whatever he can get. His latest ambition is to be Architect ot the Capitol, he havii ft discoveied that his military training makes him an architect as well asaaenfireer and General. The p'ace pays about 51500 per year, and is not cousidered anything in particular. Qaite a drop from the vaulting ambition that looked for a place in the Cab'oet. Another man who yolnntarlly retired from CoDgrers new finds himself willing to bs a martyr sgain, at a les rrice by half than he served the country in Congress for. This is Martin Uaginnis, who wai for ten years Delegate from Montana in Congress. is now candidate for Governor in Montana, a position which pys the beggarly salary of $2 CCO a year. He has been ten years ia Congress, and has caused a little paragraph to be inserted in the Congressional Directory, to the efTVct tbat he refused a renotninatioa ; but, unless there is a good deal of ta'l lying done about him he ia about as anxious as any man in Washington for the position named. Ee has been one of tbe rcrst active Delegates ever in Congress from a Territory, and has a good many personal friends; Jives in good style at one of the leading hotels, wears good clothes, and is withal a popaUr gentleman. He will probably receive the appointment he asks From the position of Senator of the great Uniiel S'ates to tsat of Commissioner of the Lend Office, is a pretty rude fall, bat one that is cot despised by some men. Senator Slater, of Oregon, it is ta'd, is a candidate for Commiesioiier of tbe Land Otlice. Indeed, one of the local papers says he is "just humping hinifelf" to get there: and this seems to be tree. He was. it will be remembered, a Senator of the United States only two weeks ago. Ex Congressman Singleton, of Illinois, is An avowed candidate for Commissioner of Agricultu-e. He has a farm in Illinois, "Boscobell." where he entertains a great many friends, raises a good deal of fine Mock and keeps a small quantity of very fine whisky. . .Sing'eton is a good story teller, and has a good stock of interesting iucidenti of a pretty long and useful life. "Tell us about tbat good whisky of yours. Singleton," said a member of a group of people who sat in a cczy rcom in the Arlington Hotel last spring, while tbe Democratic Committee was In session at that hostelry selecting a lc cation for the meeting ot the National Convention. The air of the room, was thick
with tobacco smote; ther were nmj bixe
tf tiL'srs and some bottle? ot whisky up;n the tsble, and every bedy bat the ne3ji?ir n en. ho were waiting In the news frm tie committee, felt good-natured. "That whuky," enid Singleton, with a 6igh that ferr.id to come from tbe bottom ot his iiarf. "is pretty near gone. It was more ihtu twenty years &zo, curing the latter part of the war. that I as going along ths street in St. louK where 1 hved, when I met a friftd in besiness there. 'Singleton he taid to me, I have got some very fine whisky at my warehouse that was stored with ma, but I have got orders to sell it. Now, it is the very best yon ever eaw, and you ought tj buy iL' Well.' said I. "send a bottle of it around to my hotel this venlr- nd I will see what It is like,' P-- : ' . . w rxake a long st""-' .. i .i.d it j is: at be said the bei r siw; so I just wrote him a note, i v. ling him I liked it and would take all he had of it. I thought no more about It until a few days after I received a bill from him for 120 barrels of whisky. I was astonished, ot course, but on inquiry I found that I had sure enough in saying I would take It all contit cud for this amount, so 1 simply cal to lake it. Well. I sent about halt of it'.) Memphis for sals. The war thickened, and through iti incidents I lout about ha'f of what I had sent there, sold some and g3t a few barrels back. Meantime, I had sent the remainder to my farm 'liDscobell, and stored it in the cellar. I had a giod many friends, atd was pretty liberal with it, giving a bar rel here and a halt barrel there, ten gallons yonder and S3 on, making pretty f res use of it in a good many ways. The result is that out of fifty or sixty barrels that I stored in my cellar, where it has been growing better as well as less from that time forward. I have lets than one barrel left now. Bit I wouldn't be afraid to bet that it is the b?st whisky in tte country, what little there is left of it." Another retired Senator who wculd be willing to serve his country further is Cerro Gordo'' v ill) arcs, of Kentucky, lie wants to go back to tbe scene which gave him his title, to be Minister to Mexico. Hehistiia support of most of the Kentucky delegation, and. of a good maay others, especially among the Senators with whom ha has served for six yars. He ia a big-hearted, gmleless old fellow, easily imposed upon, always giviDg to men who pretend to be exsoIdierBcr Bcmething of tbat sort, bit hot when he learns he has been imposed upon, as must be tbe case with one who gives freely. He had occwion not Ion? since ta prosecute a fellow in the Police Court here for irt peeing upon him with a story of war experiences which were entirely untrue. "Cerro Gordo ' will have a pmty hard fizht if he gets there, for there is a large number cf CAEtlidatts for the place. Of cenne, everybody knows that Pail Thompson is a candidate for the Internal Kevenne Commissionersbip, a place whih rajs fo.oco a year. Ex-Delegate Oary is said to be a candidate for the Governorship of Arizona. Lx- Congressman TalDOt wants to Ii "CERRO ;0RI'0'' WILLIAMS. be Assistant Postmaster General at a salary cf $4,000. so doea ex-Cot gre8nin 8tevnon, of Illinois. Ex Congressman Sparks ofthat 8 ale, wans to be Commlsjioner of the Laud Ollice. Ex-Congretsman Marray, of OhH would b content, it ii said, with a $3 5'j place in the Treasury. In fact, it appear thst the average ex-Con gre raan is never tat pv unless be holds same othce. even it 11 pays no more than a bare living. SOCIAL G03SIP. If the sun shines, make the mo it of it; if it rain 8, let it rain. The first morning yoa forget to be polite to your wife the honeymoon is over. He who is most slow In making a promise is the meat faithful in the performance of it It is now the fashion to braid the Langtry acot of hair worn low in the. nape of the neck. There is no man so great as not to have tome littleness more predominant than all his greatness. The right to rebellion is the right to teek a tigher rule, atd not to wandar in mere lawlessness. George Eliot. Three things come not back tbe spoken word, tbe sped arrow and ths neglected opportunity, say the Arab?. The only comfort tbe doctrine of "election" has is for the benefit of those wbo regard themselves as elected, and are snre to bs saved It was Sidney Smith who poetically 'vd that to see the handwriting of an old frie id was like the print on the saad seen by K jdinsen Crusoe. An esteemed contemporary says tbat woman's heart is always open to a smile. There eie Eomq men's mouths aCe;:ed in the same hieEEor, and t a greater degree. CLrir-tiau Remitter: Jacob's r!d dream was cot an Knreouaole one. His angels did ret My to Heaven; they went patently up ecb round of the ladder, and they began at tbe bottom. Pxeachera tay, do as I say, not as I do. But if a physician bad the came disease npan him that I have, and he should bid me do oue thing and he do quite aaother, caid I be ieve him? Seiden. "Is your wife acquainted with the dead lar.,uages?" asked the Professor of a North bide man. "Maybe ehe is,'1 was the reply, ' bot tbe language she uses is entirely too warm to have been dead very long." Except in cases ot necessity, which are rare, leave your friend to learn unpleasant truths from his enemies; they are ready enough to tell the ci Good breeding never forgets that amour propre is universal. Holmes. Silk was never cheaper in Eogand than at present, owirg to the heavy shipments from China, cn account of the threatened war. As no war is threatened in Alsska the price vt teal-skin eacqn.es has not been aifected, Minneapolis Tribune. The growirg good of the world is partJy dererjdent on nnhißtorlc acts, and tbat things are Lot so ill with yon and me as they might bave been, is half owing tu the number who lived faithfully a hidden life and rest in unvieiitd tombs. Gecrge EÜct. "What on earth can that mean." asked Hicks of Thackeray, pointing to an Inscription over a doorway, "Mutual Loan Orhi." "I don't krow," answered the novelist, "anlets it means tbat two men who have nothing agree to lend it to one another. Wben Sydney Saiith was Informed that his daughter's marriage wus annonncsd in the London papers under the heeling of ' Taihlonable Intelligence," he exclaimed, with a merry twinkle in his eye, "How absurd! Why, we pay our bills." Life of Sydney Smith. How little do men know of one another's lives after all! Broker William Hutchinson did business on Wall street as an old bachelor, and died, and was buried in the supposed sanctity of single blessedness. But after his death it was discovered tbat he had lived.at lied Bank as a married man nnder the name of Austin, and had left a widow and grown childred there. He willed his estate of a million dollars to the widow, and then made a second will leaving tbe bulk of his property to one of hia married daughters,
K
apd throng the fight cvar these two wills the troth has ccme out. Give not thy tougoe too great a liberty, lest it take thee prt.-uer. A wjrd unsoiken is. like the sord ia the scabbard, thins; if vented, thf owcrd ii in another's hana. "A dsy thatl s too fall usually hohl many questionable duties, but its first positive one ia wisely to cbooe what we will allow to be crowded fut. That our strength shall be as onr day, i a promise for the days as Gcd sends Uem, and cot as our pride, ambithn, cr impatience xvakes them." It is said that a piece of lemon bound upon a corn will erne it. Tbe lenon must bs rsnewed night ar,d morning Tne proof is in the trying; bat bow d'-.es this remedy azree
with the U-kaown fact that a piece of lemon has baen known bsrorenowto' corn" a uan? The pacred page With calm attention ecaa! If oa toy soul, As thou dobt rcid, a ray of purer Tglt Urea tn. oh etieck it not, give it full wope! Admitted, It will break the cloud which long Ha-e dimmed thy siht, and lead thee, tid at lavt rotiv ction like the t in s meridian beams 1 ruminate thy mind. Samuel Hayes. London Truth, discussing Princess Beatrice's neuralgia, recom trends her to "try a pill of plain rhubarb and a glass ot wk whisky and water every evening. This is an old remedy and probtbly would be ecofied at by modern doctors, but it is alike a royal and a radical road to a cure of rheumatism. For neuralgia there ia only one receipt a dry climate." Two shall be bom the whole wide worl 1 arart. And epeak in dilltrent toagnca, and have no thought, Kacb of the other's belnz, and no hod. And these o'er unknown seas to uutnoa land 8b all cross, escaping wreck, defyinir death. And, all nnrontciously, shape every act. And becd each wandering 6tep to mis oni en J 1 hat one dy out of drkne-s they snail meet And read life's meaning ia each other's eyes. On dit tbat if a person would bathe tbe face night and morning with hot water, wrinkles would entirely disappear. In that case youthful faces would be the order of the day, and a body wouid bs puzzled to tell the grandmother from the grandchild. At preent wrinkles are about the only landmark we have to Btetr by, the attire of a child ot six and a caaoe of sixty differing so very slightly." Dartholdl's btatcte of "Liberty Enlightening the World" Will be a reminder of personal liberty for tgfstocorce. On jnst an sure a foundation Ls Dr Fieice's "Golden Medical Ditcovery" bten placed, and it will stand through the tjc'tsof timeasamonuaieit to the physical mancipation cf thotsmdj, who b its use lave been relieved from consumption, contiinptive night sweats, bror.chitis, cousbs, ipntii'g cf blord, weak lungs and o.her threat and lurg affections rrrsi All Fits stepped frja by Dr. Xiins a threat 1- erve Rfitorpf. fo flea a:vr first day s r.ie. Kav v ilno cur?. Treat!- and ti trial bott'.e free 10 Ki ojir-. tend to Dr. Kline. 1 Arch n. Phi ... P Young Menl-Uesd This, Xne Voltaic Seit Company, cf Marshall, Aich., offer to send their celebrated ElectroVcltaio Belt and other Electrio Appliances trial for thirty days, to raen(young or o'.d) afSictnl with nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred 4 r-inKlffs. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, juralyst and many other diseases. Com- : 'e re; 0 t ion to health, vgor and men- . i-i LDHrin:t?d. No rifk is incurred as ' , ty da' trial ia allowed Write thsm at - f'ir illustrated pamphlet free. Kheumatism Quickly Cared. Tr-erf hss never teen a medicine for rheuraa--t:r introduced in thia State that has given sucn I uutifal (-atMacticn as Durang's Kheumatic I'ir cdy. It stands out alone as the one gre it II n tdj that actually cures this dread disease. It i-us en in terns lly and never has and never can ;.i.l to cure tbe vort rase iu the shortest time. It r-nji the irdort-ement and recommendation of b sry lesdlrg t rnsicians In this State and elsev 1 r. ll in Fold by every drugeiM at $1. Write f --! fr,e fo-ty-TBge parrjbiet to K. K. HtLPHES. f '1'V. I'M'fjjpt. sshiDff'on D C. The formula by which ilishler's Herb Bitters is compounded is over two hun drei years old, end cf German origin. The entire range cf proprietary medicines cannot produce a preparation that enjoys so high a reputation in the community when it is made as 2fl 11 U It is the lest remedy for Kidney end Liver Complaints, Iyspepsia, Cramp in the Stomach, Indigestion, Malaria, Periodical Complaints, etc. As c Hlood Purifier, it has r.o equal. It tones the system, strengthening, invigorating and giving new life. The late J udge Hayes, of Lancaster Co., Pa., an able Jurist snd an honored citizen, once wrote: "Mishler's Herb Bitters Is very widely known, and has acquired a gTeat reputation for medicinal and curative properties. I have used myself and in my family several bottle, and I am satisfied that the reputation Is not unmerited. MISLTLEB HEBB BITTEB3 COM 525 Commerce St.. Philadelphia. Talker's Pleasant Worm Syrup Never Fails r 8 f ' '4 rl, ' e if u Si m u efs a liracle t some people la really only the result of the t- m Knowiengo ana common-sense, juanv jvrsons KufliTlntf from ', HEUnfJIS": and NEURALGIA ! rotate about taking a remedy fearing It v.ül ne t help them, and they doubt whether It really did do as much for others as 13 elalmed. This is hot the way Mr. C. B. Bruner of Urbana, Ohio, did. lie writes: " Athi ophohos Is tb bert I wr tried. I wid"wu iu bed so bad that I had to be turned on s bft, and so I got a bottle of Aihlohho1:0s anrt b-k-n taking it st9ovlock, and I was utrtt-niiir everytbiiiK' a man could niitfer. I four low tri it, and I frot out of bU myvif end ate my sup; -er, and the next morning I walked out to breakfast without canes. IT I W-OKTII ITS H EIGHT IN tiüLU. !s not n miraculous thin?, but It I the only sure 1'i'i'C lor Kheumatism and Keuralgia. md It vlllcure nsf as easily and certainly, as It has thousands of others. If yon cannot get Athlophoho of your druggist, we will send it express paid, on receipt of regular price one dollar per bottle. We prefer that you buy it from your druggist, but if he hasn't it, do not be persuaded to try something else, but order at once from us, as directed. ATIILOPHOROS GO. 112 V ALL OT, UEV.YOIW
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YiThea the weather grows warr.wr, that extreme tired feeling, v.jxit of a;.j.::te. dullness, languor, and lassitude. aClict almost the entire human family, and scrofula and other diseases caused by humors, manifest themselves with many. It is impossible to throw off this debility and expel humors from tl:o blood without the aid of a reliable medicine like Hood's S;irsaparill;u " I could pot sleep, and would get up in the morning with hardly life enough to get out of bed. I had no appetite, a:;d i:iy f ;ice would break out witTi p::ii;l's. I lxuslit a bottle of Hood's Sarsararilla, and soon began to sleep soundly ; could get up with out mat tired ana Iungu.d feeling, wid r.iy appetite improved." R. A. Saxfoki, Kcnt.O"I had been much troubled by general debility. last spring Hood's Sarsajv-rilla proved just the thing needed. I derived an immense amount of benefit. I never felt better.. II. F. Millet, Doston, Mass. Hood's Sarsaparilla Fold by all druggists. $1 ; six for 55. Made only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar 1T3 TU S Established iSm. I ritil 2s:tl Cinchuiati, CLio. f Vine Str. F-S-Sir" ""I TherwRTilaroldeBtaMIshÄd FlZfii Physician and Surgeon DR. fe' t.-U'JCLAEKE, at the old cumber S V-- ? ' "J 3 continues to treat with his usual btV riS" kli 11 private, ? V jr-y .'Schronic.ncTVoci and special KX-jdiseMes. Dit. CLARKE is V' 4 the oldest Advertising Physician, i J'-- rq-i" files of Papers show and all old Residents kcow. Aj;e and esperienco Id . portant. J37" rierrotis diseases (with er witho-jt dreams,) or debility and loss of nerve powei rented scienUfkal'.T by new methods with never failing success. t5 It makes no diSercnce wlaat you hve taken or who has failed to cure you. Younj; men and middle-aged me a and Sil who sutler should consult the celebrated TDr.ClarVeatricc. C2!f The terrible poisons of all bad bloo! &nd akin tlisea-s ot every kind, name and nature completely eradicated. Xlemem ost, that one horrible disease, if neglected cr improperly tmrd , cnrwi the present and coming penerutions. C3f7 Ulaeased ctisch&rgree cured p.-omptiy without hindrance to business. Both teres consult contidantially. If In trouble, call or write. Delay are danperous. "Procrasti&3tloa Is the thief of time.' A written warranty of core given ia every case Undertaken. CPm Send two stamps for celebrated worTcj fij Chronic, Nervous and Delicate Diseases. Yon have an exhaustive aymptommtoloirr by w!.kh to study your own eases. Consultation, '.rsonally or bv letter, free. Consult the old Uocior. Thousands cured. OfTices 2nd strlors private. You see no one but the Doctor. ief ore confiding your case consult Dr.CLA llKC A triendly letter or call may save future suffering and shame, and adu polilen years to life. Medicine rent everywhere secure from exposure. Hours, Sto s; '-n i.i?, y to li Adresa letters: P. IX Cr.AIS:tL., KI. No. 250 VINE STn : XCirO'ATI, OHIO. SCROFULA VaDderbtlt's Money Couldn't Kny It. IbeAcworth Kews and Farmer or this week Rsys: Mrs. Elizabeth Baker, residing within throe miies cf Acwortn, remarked that Vaoderbilt's fortune could not buy from ber what Blx botttet of Swift's specific has done for her. Her statement Lb 6 follows: For thirty-one year I have suffered al "08t death from that horrible disease, scioiula. :-"or years I wu unable to do aiytnine in kefpinz up my domestic aäairs. Last October 1 was induced to try Swift's Specific, and used two bottles, and was so rauch benefited by it that I purchased four more from Messrs. Nortbcut b Johnson, which bss almost entirely relieved roe. 1 feel like a new person, and can do all my own loupe work. Before I took the 8. 8. S my life was a burden, as my entire person was covered with sores, and in this raiserabte condition I did not tare to live. I tad tried every known remedy, and ray cflee was tzenerally regarded as incurable. I hid been treated by the best physicians to no avsil. I most heartily recominena swift's Specific U the afiltted. M-r-r. Ncrthcut & Johnson, merchants at AcAorth.8as: We know Mrs, Elizabeth Baker p-r sonally;we are familiar with her cage. 6he it LiMy e-teemed In thü, community. Ithuuiattiaa Twenty Year.. I bave been a suferer from rneuma'.isra for tvtnty years, attitrts with almost tuiolerable fin. I Lad the best medical treatmeu, Rnl took all sort of remedlef, but without relief. Being re Jueed almost to a skeleton, and not tein able 1 1 wajk even lib rrutehes. I ns iuduced to try Switl's Bneoifie, cd it acted like a enarm, audi a ji to-day euti rely relieved. Kare thrown away my cruu.'be, snd am in excellent heaUb. I behere Sw ift's Specific will cure tbe worst cases of rtentnati'm. MKS. EZRA MERSnOX, Macon, Ga., Aug, 4, 'St. Coromuuiratlou. Wetumfka, Ala., pt. 28, 1S.S. About six years epo I beame dieted with, a very diEasireeable siln 01-eaee, with large, dry sores and many crusted I mples on my face, hands and shoulder. Tbe sore i n my shoulder eat out a bole nearly an Inch deep, and tbe cancerous appearance of one of tne tores near say eye alarmed me very much. I tried all kinds of treatment, but found nothing that etcmed to afket the disease. I finally decided tu try bS. S. on advice of a physician, aud 1x1 a 6tnrt u.i.ethe n-aos dropped Irom tbe sores snd left ray Fvin tu ooth and well, 1 cout-ider ö. S. S. tue r atest blood medicine made, snd tbe ouly tninit t st will cure the disesse with whica I was f.irted I think my trouble was the result of a I-rrible attack of malarial fever, eoairacud while limine in the Tallapoosa Kiverswitmp. lean be f. i.nd at my oflice in the court-house at rt'etLiopka. You can refer to me J. L. RHODE9, Dep. Sheriff Elmore Co.. Ala. Treatin on Blood and Bkfn Diseases mailed free. THK6W1FT SPECIFIC COMPANY, drawer 8, Atlanta. Ga MOTH IXOK INTO TH: ML'ItlTM OF THE )K 1V TO I ! rK vorn no vs. They C7 -A i' " ' A ; UKAT LATINO P .-vijl in .IO and your boya None erjuina 'tsAI I f)fT.Ii:T with TTIF.Si' S.'Tf)"'-.'' r ti.,y .-(- ' jood as we reirrfc-i.t ltu, t.l jour '.. r uUiywtoa TEPiBROOK STEEL PENS Uads-sg No&x 14,08,130, 135,333,161. For Sale by all Stationers. nil tSTEREROOK STCtL PCM CO ttorka. Camd. KS. 25 ?-H v--ranr. nSTOrPED FREE fvVWM Uf4 r jprjcun-BSKxir 'ArMZzrimimrr btacAsaa. ?Z,Z5rZZ a.4 .rtal kd. ka . U At LfWMifk.
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At no other season is the system po susceptible to th beneficial effects of a reliable tonic and inviorant. The Impure state of the 11 d, the deranged digestion, and the weak condition of the body, caused by Its long battle with the cold, wintry blasts, all call for the revivin?, resulit'iii and restoring influences so happily and effectively combined iu Hood's riarapari!la. "Hood's Sarsaparilla did me a great ilea' of good. I had no rarticul ir disease, Lut was tired cut iron' overwork, and it toned ir.e u;'' Mi:s. G. E. Simmoxs. Cohoes, X. Y. pari 3 3a " For seven years, spring and fall, I had scrofulous sores come out on my legs, and for two years was' not free from them at all. I suffered very much. Last May I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and before I had taken two bottles, the sores healed and the humor left me." C. A. Arnold, Arnold, Me. "There Is no blood purifier equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla. E..S. FuEi.rs, Rochester, N.Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Made only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar THE INDIANA ft Tin set 0 isns f;j Iii w m The 2:ecognl2od Leading Bemocraiio ITewgp&pcr of iho Btate. 8 Pages 56 Columns Tbe Largest, Best and Cfceaf est Wrtkiy in the Webt at only OME DOLLAR. As heretofore, an uncompromising enemy of Monopolies in whatever form appearing, and especially to the spirit ol subsidy, at embodied in the PEESENT THIEVING TAP.IFP. TO INDIANA DEMOCHATS: BInen lsnina our last annual prorpeuua yon have achieved a Florians victory In your Mate and aided ma erlally la transferrli g the Kational Government once cicre aito Democratic handa Your trlumpb baa been ss complete as your faithfulness through twenty tour years wss beroic In the late campaign, as In former ones, tbe EijiTiKEL's arm baa been bared In tho fight. We sicod shoulder to shoulder, as brothers in the conflict; we now a?k your band for thecomin year In onr celebration of the victory. Our columns that were vigorous with fight when tbe fight was on will cow, since the content la over, be devoted to the arts of peace. With lis enlarsed P&ronae the Sintinkl will be better enab.ed toan ever to give an Gcsiiipamd fites iti FaElij PapEr. The proceed In kb f Con(cre and ot our Demo CiatlcLt(i6!ature end the doings of our Demo a alle National and Stete administrations will be duly chronicled, aa well as the current events of the day. Its Commercial Reviews aud Market Ke porta will be reliable and complete. Its A jrri cultural and Home Departments are I the beet of bands. Pithy editorials, select literary brevities and en teruininx miscellany are assmed features. It shall be fully the equal In general Information of any paper in the land, while In lu reports oa Indiana aSa.4rs it will have no eo.ua!. It is 7 8 sxfi will be devoted to and repi-vnt Indlana'e lQ"esis, political, industrial ana soclai, as no rorcipn paper will or can do. Will you not bear this in mind when yon coma to ttke snbscrlptioru and make up clubs 7 A copy of the Sentli..-: fenonlement. trlvlnf full proceedings in Pialne 1 suit, furrjUvhtd eacH nf w or renewing tn t.c ritei when desir&l Now is the time for every Democrat 'tho in Btata to sabBcribe tor the Sentinel. TS JEZjJjL 3: WEEKLY. g'D jlc t:opy wttkwat i 're rat am.. s l.ce t'ltili. of 11 for . I0.C0 t iohi..f to.re Ci "- Of T I, i . - r .".. DAILY. lki iy Od Tm ....... .. -. StlO.oe One Copy, Six Months 5.00 :. Copy, Three M o o t h a I.OO Oa Copy, Ost Month , ,, SB eUNnAV RENTIKFL, BT MAIL, t. Agents making np Cluba end foi ny infermstion ilesirwl. Addre.' Indianapolis Sentinel Co, GRATEFU C0MF0FITIN3. SPPS' COCOA. CREAK FAST. "lij a thorootb knowledge of the satoral Is w mich govern the operations of direction and rtitniion, and by a crefal application of the tc cropert'es of W6'.l-seloctod Cocoa, Mr. Ipp ha provided onr breakfast tables with adedcate:i Savored beverse which may save ca mar; ceavy doctors' t ills. It Is by the Judicious esc o! fach articles oi diet, that a constitution may ba gradually built np until Strong enonch to resit every tendency to disease. Hundreds ot subtle oalaCle are Coating aronnd ot ready to attaci herever there is a weak point We may Caps aany a fatal shalt Toy keeping ourelves well for.ICed with pure blood and a properly nourish! Tsne'-CivU Service Gasette, Mac'e ffipply with boiling water or milk, 80. .-ty r baif-round tins by Gi:zr Ubedsd thaa: I A Uta tPFSCO Horaaoopatnie Chens. lata. London. Enal?
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