Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1885 — Page 3

THE INDIANA STATE uSENTI NE t, WEDNESDAY, JULY -1, 1885.

AT Mjt:T.

Tb irit r,f the :orm have wrought all nay,' Ami n . from butt!im utof awful hcighi Th y Ljrl di -fiance, w hiie the .sunct Jight Kitid'f u luile-tire on the turrets uray. t fvje their threatening brnth tlir lorests sway, fcrwe;y reitiiifcr. .W-Mtr'i Us iu their fright ru.ti M-r'fcuuug to the iunl in rapiil flight. Furth i a turpi fur the j.N ut l'lay. A r-T'il jriiii! K:j::uitie ton-lie flare. Wl.ile :mUl the urs brum I Ian niters arc 1111furi.d: Xl-mI- iiitaiifcidlc to earth nrx hurlsl. Tfcat x-zit the pine ami '-oreh their bristling thir. Iii y Mime! their chariot t lie tornuilo jjranj ; .vi.r Ij nie titan liu thi troli lumiel. Ilomu Joumnl. THE BOTTLE. "I lelieve I'll liav a j;! f xmuthintj nifrrtl'le,'' .ui! Tom Iturnutiy. TVm Iinrnaly wits nit a member of any it ir cranio Hicty whatever, :uil hal no !ilikf to the tate of lienor. Not that lie wa a ilritikin man. oh, leitr, 10! Never wyhuiikin Iiis life; never even .slightly rfi!ie by lujiinr. Hut Mill well, still rvery nrw a nil then a ni e :!a-s of someL'iir i-in fort able struck Tont in a i'Iea-ant I'bt, iirl I e penerally took it w hen it JM. To-n'.rht it waseold ;:iil eliilly anl gloomy, fci,l tie vi ml raith-.l the shutters aixl rr4'i!tl lown the himtn y, ami made a Vaiish-e of !tt-lf alonir th street, ai:l Tom, v.l-o w.-i ik'T very I'iiikI of remlin, eoiibl not 1 )'!::- ' in k or nu.azine, anl there .a no ore to talk to, the5 resolution :ile re-orlel mil to N' the most natural tl.injr in the worbl. A ;;l:is of oine t binjr eomfortiible,"' sail Tom, "ami a biss;it, ami then 1 11 turn in.' Then Tom went to the clict to lok for a veI in which to brini; the iice-ssary lienor for the comfortable something from the corner store, and sjieil (man n-ier shelf a green 1 ottle, ith a fat ImmIv and a long neck, which liiid nothing in it. and smelt of nothirg, uil lie set it niMiii the table, while lie tirred the tire und jait the kettle on, that verythinsj nullit Ik? ready on his return. Mr. Tom was absent from home, and Tom was kc j.iii hotie for himself, lie was on bis knees ln-fore the stove, raking it, when he heard a groan. It was a faint, far-away Mundil;; groan; but il had such a ghostly Mtiiid that be tartel: "What's that'."' he cried; and something trswered : "uly me." A nd jumping to his ti-et, Tom lkirnaby !il staring alsmt ; for there was nothing in the rM'iii that oiijrlit to have had a voice lut J.iii.M-lf not even a kitten or a canary bird. "Who i me?" cried Tom. "Tom ought to know." said the voice. Anl tlii time Tom saw that it came from the green lottle. "Hanged if it is't the Kittle!" said Tout. "I" it sj.'rit, r what".""" And the lttle answered: "Yes worn' luck. It i irit. Ikid spirits, o. Oin, rum and bramlv whisky and id.ho!.' !,, that kind:' said Tom. "Vs." -lid the Im.uIc. "Five devils. Fve I eei! jmsM-sM-d by them all. Year and years they led mi' such a life that I wished I was t-ina-hcd ; years and veas, until your wife pt tne ami jtit blesse! vinegar in me. Nice, sharp, respectable vinegar, that never did vorx- than give some r cabhatre eat-r the die. And I thought 1 should end my days in a decent inegar 1 it tie. and here I am :tiiig to have one of t he de v i Is back. I know, oh, what did that dear woman goawav for'." AV by d i.l she go ." Tom. who had grown ued to the phenomnu.l; öl" a talking luittle, and did not mind it. at ail by this time, nodded his heud gadfly. Ki-bt there." lie said. "Its exceediimly nric iHforraiMe to have your w ife away, but Voll are very fooJNii to talk as you do. What harm is there in u luoderatcdr'.iik? A II you'd l..bl wouldn't ha rin a tly. You've liccn li-'-ler.ing to teetotalhr." "1 haven't lccn l:1eiiiiiir ti aiiyi-ody." said IhelH-ttie. "F- forine-l my own coiicluioll. 1 h re wa- a tiie when I thought as . It w;ii wJnii I w a a brand new Im.u1, with a gilt lab. !. J'fst Holland J in.' on me. Mal in ov.iier. the liquor dealer. tM.k me out of niyia-c and handed me over to Jack "Marker, who had jut tinihed painting the tore. " Ihre. .Iak.' says he. "this will help yon eep hriM ma-. "'Thank ye.' Niid Jack; ond ofl'I went un!er hi- arm. ".iiJ ili-re. in a l.riirht little rM.m. with a 1 n tly wife and a nice old grandfather, and . njo inniiiiig little babies looking on, he filed me. " 'What a nil e -iuelI!" s-aid she the pretty Wife. "And then he made me st nil" with lemon ami su r. and th-y all lraiik some; and the IcileeH hmkiil at the light shilling through ji:y green siiles atnl the gilt label tin me. A ml lit' old frruiidiatbcr aiil I he Irink lial j:ii t Iiis iiead, and he should Jiave to lie arrieJ njtairs, ami they laughed at that, i.i au' it was such a good jok. "I liktl my'lf then and what was in me. "llelore I was empty the iird tune I felt ) 1 :is d to le such a favorite as I was. "Ah. dear, I wa tilled up again, and again, t:d again; and after a while I liegun to si-e thintrs changing about me. The w ife's face wa.s not so bright; the old grandfather never laughed: the baby's tin's were out; and one day Jack staggeared in, took me up, drank the last drop from me. und tumbled into a I. air. The wife liegan to erv. "Oh, Jack!' says he. Oh, Jack! howl l.ale that dreadful lottlc! We were so happy lu-fore il aim into the liolie!' be blamed me, but I knew it was the evil j-pirit in me that she meant. 'Yoiiv'e lost your place, Jack,' says be. 'Kverytliing has changed. You don't love lue any more. You don't care for the children. It's all that liottle. "Jtut Jack was too tip-y to care what she il lb wl'ti'erfd ni'iir til tlui tiblu fiuiL- . '4ln V'Ti " tu'ri., I'lTR in-by the iifi-k. ainl carried me to a liquor sinn-. There they put another evil into me. That one drove" the furniture out of the In .u-; bit by bit it was awned. "Then thev left the hou-c it-elf and were in a cellar somewhere. .Hit took in wa-hing; wme of the money she earned went for nunc v:l -pirit- to till me. Iboii't I loathe myself? One night I sat n the table and saw the old grandfather lying dead and Jack drunk on the floor at the f.ti)l'tlii' luil. Ii.ln"t I loathe my-slf? I tri il to topple off. but I couldn't manage it. If ever lottle did de-ire to smash itself, I did. Hut it was no u-e. Happy lioitic, 1-cautiful cut-clas ei.logne iMittles, innM ent waw-r lxittles have been briiki-n w hen they most deired to la.-t, no doubt; hut I, w ho luil liooinc a dwelling place for devils, 1 !a-ted. "Thy carried the old grandfather away, nd his poor thmghter got a black dress, -oiii Ikiw. One night Jack went sneaking I 'IIVII. III.. II l l I l tJt nil IIVIIl' llllllv I i.'ll ..lit . .1 1 I i.. IvllllkA VB'llll 1 l.llll.l 11 llhilAF nun arm and in under the other. I he bundle was his wife's mourning dresi for lier father. Ife took it to u paw nshop and awned it for noiigh to till me twice. The toor little woman never had a decent dress again. "Hie was in rags. Hie was hungry. I've Men Jack clutch her hand and wrench the money she'd -arned for her children's bread from h and then go off with me. Think of it! I bad to aid and abet him, and hear her ay things u'nout me that were very natural, wring that "lie did not know how I hated the devil-, that lived in me but that were hard to lar. I'.uf he fell down stairs with me in bis 'lw 11 ir.il liri.Lu ,'u Imiil lnlt ili.lli't l.r-. iL' I ' i v in ii'f. Jill . i'i, !. n 1. n ' Ttf. He hit iiieutrain-t tilings to tiieir iiijarv, in t min'. J inu-t have had a guardian devil, I lvfiiU,. -ne ly it wastiicb a bitter day, ice and w aiii j"ct vtrjrwbcrc just iive jtarj

fr m the rbri-tmns I'd b(n made a recent Jack, he Mood, raggsl and dirty, at a bar-

riH.m Move, with me in bis picket, rny neck sticking out. l"p came the proprietor e propra lid he, "Now, Jack Harkcr, sai wh don't yiu go home lie was a-hamcd t have liim there, you see, a ragged crcaiture with bis ttie out anl a black eye ami a broken nose. He used to be called hatid-iiiiie Jack iV.rkcr btforo he took to tilling me. Think of that. "Now lie looked up w ith a miserable, aject w hine. '"Co home w ith :f!i empty bottle on a 'liristmas Kve'." says he. 'You didn't use tr sav go home when I came litre with full Jmekets, Mr. JoUes.' "Well, no, 1 didn't,' said the man, 'and it would have been letter if I had. I'll till your Lottie for you, Jake 1'arkcr.' "He Jibed it goodness knows with what and the tstor wretch staggered home. Oh, the wretched cellar, the miserable straw Im 1 in the corner, the wife lying sick uion it. I rem nder them so well. "She was very sick, and there wa a little haby In side her. Ju-t think of another baby tbei'e. " "Happy 'liristmas!' said he, as he staggered in. "Happy t'hri-tmas, old girl!' 'Happy!' said she. Oh, tip's dn-adful day! That Ittl came to us f;rst on t'liri-t-nnis.' "It take- so little to put a drunken man in a rage, lie answered her with an oath. "Anybody would think I was drunk to hear y.u taliv.' said he. And the joor woman answered: "Oil. go- 1 Heaven, are you ever soU-r? oh. Jack! Jack'.' "And then he flew at her. He took me by the iii'k and beat her over the bead with me. Thetork fell out and the lhp;or -Hirt"! over her breast, and over the face of the little baby lying uimn it. It mingled with her bl m d. "At lirst site creatned. Then she lay still. Her face grew w hite. I knew 1 was a murderer. Oil, let me break!' I cried. 'bet mele broken into fragments!' Hut he r fair flesh was mashed to pulp, her delicate lmnes broken, and 1 was sound as ever, when Jack. led by Heaven knows what mad fancy, left Iiis victim and staggered into the street again. The snow was falling. The air was white with it. He staggered along, muttering to himself. At last he came to a wharf, und stumbled across it. I lielieve a tal lay thereon which he had beu-once In-fore, ami where thev have given him drink. "S-a-I'.ird. ahoy!' cried he. 'Hullo! hullo! Sea-l.ird. ahoy! "N'oIhmIv answered him. "I'm coming aboard,' he muttered I'm omiiig alHiard. I -han't stay at home to be preached to. I'm my ow n ma-ter.' "Then he t-Hik one step more. Splash crah! lie was through the thin ice under the wat-r. "'Thank Heaven,' slid I, Mny miserable career i- ended." " Then I turned cold as ice myself, and then was a roaring in my neck. "Next thing I knew it was broad daylight, and I was Moating on the water. " There's a Im.uIc.' said some on. It was a ban-legged boy. He stoojied over the side of a lioat and caught me. " Then was a man drowned here last night." slid he to another boy at his side. "'Hid you sis him?" said this one. " "Yes," -aid the tirst. 'He was drunk, and killed hi w iff. They've got an inUst on her, down in the cellar over there. I ay. I'm going to - II ihi lottIc to Hill, the junk man.' "'So. I was saved, and much against my will stiswl in the junk shop window for a week. The water had washed the Mi mm I oft" of me. I had no smell of liquor left, and along comes yourwife. 'What a nice, flat bottle!' says she "jiM what I want. lbw much for it ." "And Hilly charged her four cents, and home she brought me. "My career of vice has begun again.' said I. "And I ex's-ctcd nothing el-e; but, ble-. the dear soul, she put vinegar in me nice, sour, innocent, resectable vinegar ami I've 1m i'ii a go.K' reformed liottle ever since. And iniv y ou you you her hu-hami, are going tu put the devili-h spirits into me again. For heaven's sake, break me first. I don't want to destroy another household.'' "You shan't," said Tom Harnaby. '-Here you go hack on your shelf. I leave you to innocence ami vinegar; and I think 1'lf make a cup of strong cofl'ee."' "Slight,'' said the iM.ttle. Ami so the liottle stands still be-idf the cruet, on Mrs. Harnaby's dresser and Toin Haruabv is still a sober mau. J.iil Hamilton's Oversight. St. J.ollU .ibe iH'llUM'Mt.I (ail Hamilton's article on 'Prohibition in Practice." which we reproduce to-day from the North American Review, is highly inter- - ing n-ading. St. John and other fn'aks and frauds of sditics receive due attention, but we must say that the article would 1k .n more attractive if 4'ail hal. in addit ion to the other 'mints made, explained why "J! in" didn't vote on the prohibition juestion in Maine last fall. Want' a Strom; Tarty 1'ress, 1 1. i UCiil n tXelO lH'HUKTHl. Why could not a Hn-tiua-ter or any other ofticcho'der become a Mocklmldcr in some 1 leniiwratie jiais-r? Iinh'sl it is the duty of every J ciiiocratic officeholder to sirenglhen the Heniocratic press, and he can do it w ithout in the lea-t subordinating hisofJiceto theg'Wid of bis party, and the U-tter und purer the press the ls tt r for the sop!e as well as for the orhceholin rs, who will have laid the foundation for it. . lHii;f cons Cms. "" " K'n iiksti k, June 1, lss-2. "Ten Years ago I was attacked with the mo-t lntn-and death Ij' pains in my back and Kidneys, "Fxtending to the end of my toe and to my brain! "Which made me delirious! "From agony. "It tik three men to hold me on my bed at times! "'the dot-tors tried in vain to relieve tue, but to no purjsise! "Morphine and other opiates! "Had no effect! "After two months I was given up to die! 'When my wife beard a lieighltor t-ll w bat Hop Hitters had done for her. She at ont got ami gave me some. The lirst iIom ca-cd my brain, and seetm-d to go bun ting through my system for tin' pain. "The second do-e cased me so much that I slept two hours, something 1 had not done for two months. Hcfore I had u-sl live bottles I was well and at work as hard as any man could for over three w eeks, hut I worked too hard for my .strength, ami taking u hard cold I was taken with the mo-t acute and painful rheumatism all through my system that ever was know n. "I called the doctors again and aflcr several weeks they left me a cripple on crutches for life, as they said. I met a friend and told hi in my case, and he said Hop Hitters had -u red him and would cure me. -xihed at him, but he was so earnest 1 was induced to Use them again. "In less, than four weeks I threw :Tway my crutches and went to work lightly and kept on using the bitters for live weeks, until I became as well as any man living, and have In-en so for six j'ears sine. "It has also cured my wife, who had Iw-en sii k for years, and has kept her and my children well and healthy w ith from two to three Imttles jer year. There is no ins-d to le sick at all if these bitters an: usrd. J. J. Uerk, f.x-Suiervisor." "That jioor, invalid wife! "Sister! "Mother! " r daughter! '('an ti made the picture of health! "With a few bottles of Hop Hitters! "Will you let them Miner?" Xiitii genuine without a bunch f preen Ifoj-s on the white Lil I. Main all the vile. ojonous stuff with "JJop"' or 'Hojs" 0 titvix iiiiiiC

THE HOME.

H is not dnlpted t'nr.t rrieti have n home In that p'see w here etieii cue lais established his lienrth aid the mm t his xis-es-f,n bihI forum-, whence he will not depart if nothing calls him 14 way ; w hence if he has deported he seems to tie a witinierer, aim it he returns tie ceases to wuuuer. Condition fmin ivil Ij'.w. "Then stay at home, my heart, ami rest, The bird is safest in the tie-t ; )' r all that Mutter their w ing and tly, A l.nuk is liMvcriiig Iu the sky." Longfellow. YOl'Nt; t'tI.K. Tin- Ijtiifl of Coanli-rpiiii". When I tsiis Mk and lay a-lnil, 1 had two pillows at my head. And ait my toys beside me layTo keep lue hll py H the day. .rd ometiiur for an hour or so 1 wn-hsi my leaden soldiers iro. NVith lifi'creiit uniforms and drills, Amer.g the bed-clot he, through the hills; And sometimes sent my shis in fleets All Uli and lin vii among the sli,vts; tr brought my trees und houses out, And planted chic, all Hlmt. I w ns the cinnt grent and si ill That sits iisn the pillow-hill, Atnl ms-s Is-fon him, dale and plain. The pleasant land of "oimteriM!itc. I It. 1 Stevenson. The lluttcrflies. lsik nt the butterUies! lMirtMiseles tUings. llow idly ihey lioutou their gis.-inier w ings! ver the ipiies and iver tl.e grass. l.h;htiis the down of a thistle they pass. Where sre they poing, and why are they here In the heut of the day and The noon of the year? They Untier aw hile iii the brightness and then They ure l-oi;c from our sight and they come not l:L'l.:ll. And we we are wearied with fever and frost, W huteAcr we do, it nni-t lie at, a cost; We hear, us we journey, the lro)iiing of tears: We bear o;x our foreheads th stamp of the years. I'.ut hvik at the butterflies. WauJiful things, IV l'iii-e ns iin: over us tla-iiiiig their wings! It may 1k the Maker who fa-biom-d them thus, Ihii si ut the gMy creatines on errands to us. Perhaps w e g. slowly, when we should Is- swift To follow the si-cnt of the rose, that drift Their pink show about us; more oft we might play. A iit yet iinish our tasks by theend of the day. 4 h. blest are the eyes that are clear to liehnlj The wonderl'al glow of the butterflies' gold. Wiih leisure to follow their flight as they mss So gmcefully. silently, over the grass! Ellen M.'JI. iaies, in St. Nicholas for June. Ncliool-ll.-iy Over. lYouth's Cninpntiion. The long summer holidays are lHgintung, and in a very short time the cirtitv stdiool-go-ing world w ill be enjoying the summer vacation. As it is every year, so now this season will b the last of its kind to a whole army of Imys ami girls. When this vacation has ended, they will enter, not "the more x-riotis business of life," for nothing in life is more serious than the manner in which school-days are employed, but that jHTinancht oceuation for which their st hooling has fitted or failed to lit hem. It seems a matter of little moment that some loy whom we live know n has left school, uul is now to go into a store; or that a young man has finished his college course, his medical terms, or his law studies.and will nt once begin to clliow bis way into the ranks of a profession. To the I my the young man it is not a small matter. Xbr is it an unworthy subject of the noblest imagination to follow in thought thoM who now cease to 1k under masters and teachers, and begin to challenge the world as men ami women. Cast a glimpse forward a score of yccrs. We have reached the year lüO". Among the Imys who this month bid farewell to school-lmoks. are some of the merchant-princes of that time. American colleges nre about to graduate voting men who w ill then be eminent pro lessors, eloquent lawyers, distinguished clergymen, skilful physicians. Tbig-e slim young fellows, with sprouting Ix-arifs, will Iw the active politicians of the first decade of the twentieth century, who will jauntily push aside the middle-aged men if to-tlay as old fogies." They w ill be -n-f ring t ongress by the score, and w ill be Imdily assuming the leadership. unless, in-ds-d, the dretmi of une enthusiastic reformers is realized, and the (Mtlitical as well as the social N-eptre is wielded by women. Hut whether this threatened revolution takes place, or the lords of creation continue to rule, there is n grand future for the "sweet girl graduates."' ;iud for the voting misses who .simply get through school ami leave it. Whether as w ives anil mothers, or as the ministering angel of the world, or as performing whatever duty (hid has asigncd them, they will then Ix-a part of the inst vigorous and helpful class of their X'X. J'crhaps that self-reliant young lady who reads the valedictory, crude and school-girlish in thought and expres-i. in, will be toned down, siml declocd into a famous writer. who knows'.' Who ciin guess wiiat the lit eniry ta-tes of the next .generation will lc, and why should nut women guide ami control in deciding the matter'.' Alas, how many disapjmintments are in More for thes- spirited young soul-! How these lresh fair faces of 1mvs and jrirls will ho wrinkled with care ami sorrow ! How many will ncgh-ct duty, bow many will Im tempted and fall, liw" nianv will trv earnestly ( reach the goal they have in sight, but will fail, how many will have their ambition cru-hed by what will Msm to them an uuappreciative ami stony-hearted world! Fortunately for human progress, none of lis anticipate failure. We can look forward philosophically and say of that class of fifty tmys and girls lcuvingshool forty will 1. very hundrum ssiple twenty vears hence, jmd only two of them will Ih known beyond a narrow circle. Hut each one of the fifty intends and cxjssts that .some other fellow and himself shall be the two who are destined to le famous. That is well. Hiscouragenient conies smn enough. Failure need never come to any one. What is failure? Not inability to w in fame ami fortune, but the neglect to do faithfully that which Providence- places liefore us to be done, and a cowardly refusal toliear the burdens, whatever they may lc, that are laid U)Mlll US. Whoever, la hi- intellect and his energy however cotispi. nous, throws aside his Imoks this month, und is de-line.l to Im among the great of the earth, will win his name by steady and unfailing discharge of duty. 1st--! I'm iimu. K. F, Hale in Wide Awuke.l The truth is that Hutnam was by no means a great man. If -ver anylwidy was unlit to l' a Jajir (Jencral, it was he. Hut he was n thoroughly courageous man, and he had the giMal luck to have his story told by Humphreys at a time when the js-ople of this country were wild for heroes and stories of heroes. No story sutl'ercd in Humphreys's as the Imivs and girls will guess who live near Horse Neck, and w ho have seen the terrible picture of I'litnian's ride in Mr. Lossing's iMsik in which he lmiindson horseback down the hill there. I, who tell you this story, have gojie into the Wolfs J)en, and I needed no rojic round my waist to pull me out. Hut whether I should have gone in were a wolf at the other end, I am not sure. Mom than this, when the wolf was there, it was winter, and the ro-ks were covered with ice, and were "exceedingly Mipiiery." If 1 told the whole story as Colonel Humphreys tells it it would take up all this pajs-r. Hut hero is the critical passage: Cautiously proceeding onward, he came to the asemt ; weich he slow ly mounted on his hands und knes until ' he diss)vertsl the glaring eyeballs of the wolf, w ho was silting at the extremity of the cavern. Startled at the sight of lire, she gnashed her teeth, and gave a sullen prowl. As soon as he had made the necessary discovery, he kicked the rojic as a signal for pulling him out. The x-o-ple at the mouth of the den, who had listen1 with painful anxiety, hearing the growling of the wolf, and MipNsin their friend to lie in the most imminent danger, drew him forth with such celerity that bis shirt was Mrij'i'Cd over his head and hU skin severcly hiceratd. AftT he had adjusted bis clothe, and loaded Lis gun yjitu niaj bu(k-

slud, holding a torch in one hand and the musket in the other, he desiMided the second time. When he drew nearer than liefore, the wolf, assuming a still more llen-e and terrible upM'arancc, howlinjx, rolling her eyes, snapping Iter teeth, and dropping her head Wtwecn lier legs, was evidently in the attitude, and on the point of springing at him. At the critical instant he levelled and I'rcd at her head. Stunned with the shock, ami sutTocatcd with tb smoke, be immediately found himself draw n out of the cave. ui having refreshed himself, ami erniitted the smoke to tlissis-ite. be went down the third. Once more he came within sight of the wolf, who apis aring very passive, he applied the torch buch to her nos-, ami jHTcciving her, dead, lie tmk hold of her ears, and then kicking the rojn (still tied around his legs), the jveople aliove with no small exultation dragged thelil Iwithotlt together. "You ks p saying, 'Colonel Humphreys,' with a sort of muh r, paia,'' said linos. "What is the matter with Colonel llum-phn-ys'.'' Hi father acknowledged the impropriety of his sneering, ami said he would try t laugh. Colonel Humphreys was first an aid of rutnain's when he probably had to see to his .jH-lling. and afterward was an ail to Washington. Humphreys hal a certain literary turn, and is one of the i arly American authors, of the era after the devolution. When Mr. 'fait, Knos's father, sjHike light ly of him, just w hat lie meant was tins: Humphreys had heard dear "Cid Put ' spin tiu ee yarns over and over again. I believe that after tieneral l'uiman bad a stroke of paralysis, and was living at home like a caged lion, Colonel Humphreys went and visited him. Then JM-tor lbigcnce Waldo kindly sent him anecdotes w hich "Old I'ut" had told him. From such materials Colonel Humphreys made up the life, of l'utnam which he sent ti the Sa-iety of Cincinnati of Connecticut, and which is the reservoir for the stories which have made him a Imys' hero. When this was duly explained to Mrs. Tait and to ( harlotte, they said that it was jn this way they preferred to have history written. It made it much more entertaining. In 17-V), when he was thirty-seven years old. Putnam took charge of a company of voluntis-rs in the Connecticut contingent which joined the Knglish army against the French. It was in the campaigns which followed, that the adventures took place iu w hich he saved the magazine of Fort Kdward. in which he and Hurkee were so closely pursued, and tumbled together into the si'nte place of refuge, ami in which he found fourteen bullet-holes through his blanket. Modern criticism has shown that the blanket must have been folded w hen strut k; hut the Tait children agreed that one bullet which bad force enough to -ut through an old-fashioinl home-spun blanket fourteen times, was an. uncomfortable neighIm ir. The war in Canada ended, virtually, by the fall of Quebec, ami in 17bl I'm nam was again at home. Hut he volunteered again in the Connecticut contingent which joined the Kuglish force against Havana. The arrival of the reinforcements from New F.ngland saved tin- Knglisb exsdiiion, and the capture of Havana sMn followed. Had it not Ik-cii returned to Spain hy the treaty of the next year. Cuba would probably now liclong to the Cnited Statee or ircat Hritatn. And now he returned t his farmer's life for twelve years. He took part in the protest against the use of staiiiied pajver. which, in fact, kept Connecticut me even from the presence of a sheet of it. He went once to Natchez, where land had been granted to the survivors of the Havana xjieditioii, ami he sent some lalMrers and tiMils there. Once and again he was in Hostnii, and met there (Jage, Co'.oncl Small and other.otticers with whom he bad served in the French War. He also met Iord i'ercy. With these gentlemen he had friendly converse on the threatening statcof affairs. Hcingone, in particular, asked ."whether Te lid not seriously lwlicve that a well-appointed Hritish army d live thous;in'd veterans could march through ihe whole cunt inent'ol' America'.'' he replied briskly, "No doubt, if they behaved civilly, and paid well for even thing they wanted; but" after a moment's pause added "if they should attempt it in a hostile manner (though the American men were out of question) the Women, w ith their ladles ami broomsticks, would knock them ail en the head In-fore they had got half way through." Meanwhile, at home, the militia were under regular training for sen-ice, ami such men as he wer' of course chosen commaud--rs. The news if I.exingo.-n found him plowing as the picture shows which Knos Tait had seen ami without changing his clothes he set out for Host on. He was at once apsuntsl a Major (ieneral by his own colony. As such he probably gave ominamls to the Connecticut regiments at Hunker Hill where be was present. He was not the eoni-luaiider-iin hief. for Ihe exM:dition was -cut out by (ieneral Ward, who bad a Massachusetts commission, and had directed Colonel Pres -ott to fort if v the hill, which he did.

Putnam bad meanwhile distinguished himself iu a skirmish, in which an Knglisb vessel w as burned at Ho;r-Iland; just beyond what is now Fast Pmston. The newsof this reached Philadelphia in time to pucken Congress in bulking" him u'. Major (ieneral on the Continental establishment. If ('oiil'"si were to light battles, it would not do t' ave a general from Connecticut, who owtdio allegiance to a generat from Massachusetts. On the very day that Putnam was trying to fortify Hunker Hill, to cover the retreat of Prescott and his men who were on Ureed's Hill, Congress made him a Major Ceneral of the United States. It was in the name series of appiintments in which Washington was mimed ( 'omnianler-in- 'hief. When the Knglisb left Hoston, Futnani was sent to New York and assisttsl in the effort to defend that city. Just Ix-fore the fatal battle of Long lslaml he was uipointed to the command then'. I lie failure of the American troops has been charged to bis incomis-tency, but )crhaps be had not fair time to make projier arrangements torecl the attack. After this beheld the command at one time of the jMists alnive New York. It was when be was in thisonnniand that he made the Hreak-neck ride, and that he wrote the note, with "P. S. 1'. M. He is hanged,"' which so pleased Mrs. Tait for its brevity. I'.ut. inlVeemW. 1770, the fine old fellowwas struck with lmralysis which di-ahled him, and he resigned his command in the army. From that time till he died he lived in 1'omfret telling bis old stories am lighting his old battles. , The critics may make as much fun as they 'choose about thes stories. Hut they give us by far the lest picture we have of the details of campaigning on the frontier in the "old Kreuch War." Mo It sl or MIit !? INcw York World. "A sad sight a very sad sight," was the remark of an elderly gentleman who st.Mxl just inside of St. Tliomas' Church yesterday morning when the two Collins containing the lmdies of James H. Kutter and his wife were lvorne in and placed in front of the chancel. Yet, why sal? Then is always a mournfuliK'ss lio'ut death, although it is the irrevocable diM.m of all who live. Hut is there not .mething touehingly lieautiful in the thought that those who havt gone through a b.ng life us husband wife preserve their unfrm iu death, and am Imrne to the grave as they left the altar side by side? Tli Cenrlan Dprriilloii sueeHf ully IVrfornird. T'uii.AtiKi.riiiA, June '.'T. The I'res to-morrow wi? publish un article Muling that Professor It. K. Kaur. of this city, several days ago erfdrined kiissfully the OesMrian oH'riitioii ujioii a lady fifty years o'ld, who had lieeii nfllicted for thirteen years with what was stippose! to Im a tuinor In the. icritoiicHl region, but w Rich turned out to be a dend infant. The woniiiu wns from the interior of tho State, and had ln-on informed br her attending physician that she wm siifb-ring from a tuinor. tin the 1st h of June. I'rof. llin-e. fn the ireence of sevi-ral iromliient physicians, abstmcted, by w hat is known us the ( a srinii oix nitinii. a 'rfeetly funned child, w hii-h tool irrov u to lis lull size. I bo paUeul is tVW Ofing weil.

KNOTTY PROBLEMS.

)ur waders ure invited to furnish original en'gms. charades, riddles, reliUMf and other "knotty problcnis." mlilrv-s-ug all tsiinmuniculions relative to this lcartincut to H b. Chadbourn, Ion, Miotic. No. 135. Anagrams I. All seek success, but those who 're plucky Ar. fin: ml to tie most often lucky; Yet home, in spite of !1 endeavor, struggle on and prosper never. Such always hope that, oon er late. The tide n'uty ebti that -turas one's fate." II. A word 1 tale iu which 1 ss A dread prodm-lug quality i ne that suggests h cause "for fear, I'erchaniv a danger lurking near. r something llml obstructs nic's cour-o With a supreme. r-sis:!,.s force. Yet obstacles may tie ideal. And seeming one's may ts-lmn-al; yoine to imagined ills siu-eumb. And shadows friglil and "fear blinds some.'' XHsiM.W. No. 1'i.llS. An Knigiim. In Congress hails I'm ta'ked about. There my defect are pointed out. Sometimes my Haws they try to iih-ikI, Sometimes I'm totally condemned. Hy motions I am known to go I inn a law in embryo. lu traflie 1 am useful found. And often 1 am pas-M around: Yet when presenttM 'tis my fate To rouse otl'ense and sometimes hate. A kind of wen i on 1 may 1', 1 sink with anchors iu the sea; Hi fowls I'm seen; I am the note That issues from a warbler's throat. .Nif. soman. Xo. fJrlT A AVII l il!l Pleasure. Matheniaticiansunirm that of all bodies contained under the same suertieics a sphere is th most capacious, hu. surely they have never miisid; red the amazing capaciousness of a Imdy whose name is now rctpiircd, and of which it may la truly said, that siipimsing its greatest breadth is four inches,lcngth nine inches and depth three inchs,yet in these IIim iisions it contains a solid foot. Mils. L. No. I :H. All Old Kiddle. Many years ago a prominent merchant of Taunton, Mass., is said to have promised an eccentric old woman, named Lucy King, that if, taking her subject from the Hihle, she would coinjsise a riddle w hich he could not guess, be would give her a certain prize. The ridlhi is given below. Who can answer it? Ad m, ind niride out of dust. Hut thought it best to nuike me lirst; So I was made la-fore the man, To answer his most holy plan. My lxulv lie did mnke complete. I'.iit without arms, or legs, or feet ; My ways and acts he did control, Jtut to my lxnly gave no sajuI. A living ls-ing I Infame. And Adam gave to me a name. I from his presence then withdrew, And more of Adam never knew. I did my Maker's law oVy. Nor from it ever went astray: ThousHiids of miles 1 go in fear. Hut seldotu on the earth fcpicar. For puriose w iso which Jod did see, He put a living soul in ine: A soul from me my üod did claim. And took from me the soul avain: Kor when from me that soul had fled, I was the same us when tir-t made; And without hands or feet or oul J travel on from jole li io!e. I htltor hard by day-and night. To fallen maul give great light: Thousands if jn-op!-. young and old, 1 n by my death great light behold. No right or wrong can I conceive. The scriptures I can not Ix-Heve; Alihou!li my name th rei:i is found, They are to me hut empty sound. No f.-ar of death doth trouble me, Kent happiness I ne'er shall see; To Heaven 1 shall never go. Nor to the grave, nr to hell "nclow. Now when these lines you elosely read, io search your Hible with ail siced; For that my name's rcis.rdcd there honestly to von lecl.-tre. No. 1j:. Kind M- Here. I paint w tthoiit isiloiss. I tly without w iiigs. 1 pinp!e the air with most'fauciful things. 1 hear sweetest sounds where no sound is heard. And ciojucii-e mocs m- nor utter a word. The last and the present together 1 bring. The distant and near gather under my w ing. Kar swifter than lightning my wonderful flight Through the sunshine of day'or darkne-s of n ight : And ihoe w ho would ee me niu-t find me indeed As this picture thev scan and this poetrv read. Mus.'VV. S. V. No. I 'Mo. Ways of Darkness. m-', a pers-v- riug simple ereature, is very jiliable. readily nilai'Ung- himself to tho most winning ways, lie is ;m unsurpassed itrchitcct of two, in soft or hard material, and al-ino-t monopolizes his own workmanship. Yet many twos exist which oxks never made. Two pleases and tits onk, la-ing a sjH-cial os'ning for his ordained progress. The wiioi.f. is uhvavs a Twt. Two js always, and yet not always, a w iioi.c. 'J he w hoi.k, which is simplicity itself, is yet often prfoumler far than .sujK rlicial folk would think. Skf.mkk. No. 1241. A Kriend. O'er nil the world niv empire I extend. The joy of childhood and the mourner's friei I Hatter all mankind aud oft de-s-ive. Yet when again I promise, men lielieve. W ithout me earth were sunk in endless gloom, I ioiiit the wav t realms lx-yond the tomb. AS. To It Won In June. To the reader furnishing the liest lot of answers to the "Knotty 1'rohlems'' of June will be presented Rev. Alex. Fletcher's "Scripture Natural History," a ftnely printed volume, handsomely Imuud in cloth, and illustrated with many full-juigt engravings. The solutions for each week should la' forwardisl within six days after the date of the Sentinel cntaining the puzzles answered. A Mr. I -."jo. (on-tcmpt. I.'l. Hatrachomyoniachy. '21. Three lolhirs. 1 '.. ( ame-lot. Har. 12-JÖ. The required words are: Drawback, claimant, braggart, fragrant. ltS. MitMlen. Wiimnii'ii AdHiitjige tin n Home lkr. Col. T.W. lligglnson In Harper's Hazar. After all, lot men ltoast as much as they pleas, ami women complain us nfuch, there is one immense advantage in the jMisition of women that they can create a home for themselves unaided, as men can not. How independent seems the life of a young unmarried man compared to that oi' a young woman! How the sister usually envies the brother! Hut by a s-ilent compensation in nature, as years advance, the balance changes, and if tbej-are left alone in the world, it is the brother w ho has reason to envy the sister. "A bachelor's life," says some one in Hyierion, "is a splendid "breakfast, a Hat dinner, and a most miserable sujukt.' A single man may have an estate.ta principality: he con own a great hotel and till it with guests, but he can not create a home without a woman to help him, and that, too, a woman w hose service is not for money. When it comes to a home, there is not a solitary dressmaker in the land, esconced in her one little room w ith her geraniums, her canary, ami her sewing-machine, who can not completely eclij.se him, this being the result not of his sins, but of his sex. Undoubtedly each reader will think, or try to think, of some exception to all this some single man w ho is happy, some "jilly bachelor, some t heerful widower. No doubt there are those who can le happy, specially during the lirst half of life, without the sense of home. A, w ith his wealth and his jHiintings and his yachts and his delightful monologue; It, with bis jht et mil journeying; ', w ith his nix do?"; ami our lato Cambridge professor, with that family of hens which h p iidel, like hvrd-iiian, w'itü I long Bta.tr,

and which be frünl to take food from, stas stück in the ground instead of scratching in the r!ow( r-lssls all these may doubtlss have foetid a bachelor life not inconsistent with happiness; but where, after all, is the home? Neither yachts, nor picture, nor steamer tickets, nor !ogx, nur hens, can supply that. '"Home," says the proverb, "is wber the heart is;" but if so, no man seems to Lave heart enough to lit out a home without a woman to help him. A woman can do it for bims If ; there lies her advantage. It may te harder for a woman to make n.eney; undoubtedly it is harder. She maki-s u dollar is rhaj w here a man makes twenty: but when it comes to purchasing )sow er, her dollar goes the farthest toward the maintenance of a home. S long as she restrains it she is strong and s'lf-respcting; and even if she part w ith it, so strong is the instinct if home, that she can sometimes reconstruct it for herself -ven in a Imardiiighouse. If the home is combined with a little fr edoin in the use of money, it gives more local prestige than a lone man can win by a fort une. The truth is that as people grow older it is the man w ho 1k-coiu's dejs-mlcnt, and the woman the central and essential figure of ihe household, since site can do without him, ami he can not do" without her. The proof of this lies in the fai t that we ss- all around us self-suf-ticing ami contented households of women, while a house that contains men only ist a barrack, not a home. In youth it is easy to ignore this, to s;iy with Shakesjiere m Henry v., ' 'Tis ever common That in i: arc merriest w hen nwiiy from home;" but the merriment is shallow, the laugh is forced, and yiurs and illness ami sorrow smti bring man buck, a iv'iitant prodigal, to his home Mid to woman, the only home-maker.

1-inane Li I Oisis 1'a-sed. N ass .if. X. Y.. June. 'S7. The h'tiam-isl crisis has sulisnrtiiiallv pa ssi -d, a new bank cashier having arrived l.y ihe ia-t Mi-amer fpini Iiudon. and the public bank I'.av rug lesuined business v ith funds -.nt out from bngliiiid. The deficit iu the hank amounts to alsiut siTo.tMi. Know thyself, by reading the "Science f Life," the l-st medical work ever published, for young ami middle-aged men. Nervous Debilitated Men, You are allowed a free trial of thirty days of the use of lr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Delt, with Khs'trie SusKMi"ory Appliances, for the sjK-edy relief and jk rmaucnt cure of Nervous lability, loss of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred troubles. Als, for many other diseases, t'omplete restoration to health, vigor ami manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illustrated phamphlet. with full information, terms, -tc., mailed free by addressing Yultaic lJ"lt Conipanv, Mar-hall, Mich. Why snrVcr with malaria? Kmery's Standard 'ure Tills are infalible, never fail to cure the most obstinate can's; pure vegetable. '2Ä cents. llliemiintisin Onickty Cured. There never has In-en a medicine for rhenma ti-in iutroduecd in this state that has giveu such universal sati-faction as Durang's Kheumatie bejnedy. It stands out alone as the one great MiK-dy that actually cures this dread disease. It is aketi internally, and never has und never can liiil t cur the wor-t case in the shortest time. It has the indorsement and rc-oiiiiiicndation of many leading phjsicinus in this State and elsewhere. It is sold by everv drugsrist at $1. Write for free forty-pag- phanilet to It. K. HKLPUEX.STIXE, l'ruggist, Washington. 1. '. THIS IS THE GENUINE! SOJ.D ONLY IN" BOTTLES WITH BCFK WRAPPERS. SEK THAT STRIP OVER ORK IS IN BRÖK EN. Our trade-mark anumd every bottle. In sickness E ery Drop is Worth Its Weight in Gold. It stibdue and henls all Vinds of Inflammation 'ATAKRII. fl.lS. D1AKKIIEA. KHKLMATJsM, XKl I'Al.tilA. has cureil more cases than anything ever prccriled. I'lI'IlTHEIM A, SOKK T1IKOAT: il-,. it proinptlv. delHV is dHiigen.us. wi.i: lu.iNn. ki.i:kiin.)Kit iiin(.: ri.i Kits, t 1.1 oi; NKW WO I NHS. BlU'lsKs, bfKNS, T)TII Af 111; KAltAt'Hlv, SOKK KVl-js, .SCALDS, sITCAIN'S; the gnatest known remedy. font mis IIKMOKKIIA'.HS FKMaLF COMI'bAIXTS. t'.LKKDINtt Nose. Mouth, stomach, Lungs, or from anv cause, stopped s l.y a charm. It is called the Wii.NUKKOK llKALlN'lj. I'sEt) KXteusai.i.y and INTERNALLY. We have an avalanche of testimonial". Send for our liook (Mailed Free!. It will tell you all alsnit it. lT is' ENSUE IO VSK ANV PREPARATION EXCEPT hie .KXL1XK with otR niuixTio.Ns. Prices joe, 1WS EXTRACT CO., 76 5th Ave, New York. KO FEE j rUbliihed 1SS1 1 1 86 So. Until Better CHICAGO. ILL. Clark St. The rt srular old ettab lUbfd Physician and Sur. fee on DR. CLAHKK, t the old number continues to treat with his usual Treat, skill all private, chronic, ner. you and !-tat I ll4a.a.a. OIC. CJLAKKE U the oldest Advmiiri2 Physician, as filr nl Papers show and all old Residents kuow. AKQ and experience Important. tr" Nervon dlcsea) (with or without dreams,) or debility and los of nerve power treated scientifically by new methods with never Tailing success. It makes no difference What you have taken or who has failed to cure you. rrYouner men and middle-aged men and all who su'fer should consult the celebrated Dr.ClarV-at onr-e. t?FThe terrible polsousjoi all bad blood and akin dlsveaae of ever' ind, name and nature comple'.ely endicated. Remem be r, that one horrible disease, if neglected or improperly treated, curat the present and coming generations. Cp"IMeoed discharge cured promptly without hindrance to business. Both neves consult confidentially. If in trouble, call or write. Ielays are dangerous. (tProcratl nation I tbetfalefortlme. A written warranty of cure given in every case undertaken. I v Send two stamps for celebrated works on Chronic, Nervous and Delicate Diseases. You have an exhaustive symptomatology by which to study your own rase. Consultation, personally or by letter, tree. Consult the old Doctor. Thousand cured. Ofileeaand Fiarlor private. You see no one but the Doctots. iefore con tiding your case consult Dr.CLARKE, A friendly letter or call may save future suffering and shame, and add golden years to life. Medicines ent everywhere secure from exposure. Hours 8 I t; S uuday, 9 f 12, .Address: P.D.CLAniIE,!ri.D., 286 80. Clark St. Oücf e, IB,

SEEEJrT'8 I ALK By vlrtiis of sa execntlea to me directed from the Clerk of Uts fccrerior Cosrt of Itaxion County, Indiana, I vUl expose st pnbUc hjS, to Us big heel Udler, oa BATTED A.T. TH 11 U DAT OT JCLY. A. D. U83, betweea the hottrt of 10 o'clock a. m. and e'doek Pw m. of said day, at tbs door of the Conrt-acna of Marion County, Indiana, tb rents and firoDia for a term not exceedlnn seven years, of tie lol lowirg real eetate, to-wit: - I'art of outlot number one' hundred, and tXxty (ISO; of tbe Donation .Laada of India ia polls, la Marion ounty, JndisDa, descriDed as lollowa, to-wlt: Eeglnnior at a point io tbe north line of aid ontlot, ncmbsr one hundred and sixty :iC on tbe Lafayette and Crawiordarille road at the northeast corner of so eleven 11 fox alley at tbe oiituce of cue AnDdred aud forty -t;i Hi feet and nine 9 invbes south sreatwardty from the northwest corner of said outlot, a ad running thence south on the east line of aald eleven 111 foot alley two hundred and forty-five 1 2ib feet oc thereabouts, to the aoutheast corner of said alley, which corner Is one hundred and aevenzeen (U7 feet east lrom the west Uns of said outlot. theuoe tat on the north side of atwelTe 112 toot alley one hundred ! 100 1 leet to the southwest corner of aa eleven ill ( foot alley, tbence not in alooK vs west side of said alley about one hundred and sight r five ! 15 , feet to a point In the north line of s&id outlot, thesoe northwestwardly oie hundrel and twenty six 126i feet and nine 9j Inches to the place of betinmnv, except tbe following part of tbe above described real estate, to-wlt: Beginning on the west line of Indiana avenue at a point two hundred and seven and five twelfths 2u7 512; feet sontheastwardly. measured alone Indians avenue from the east line of Blacxrora street, tbence south one hundred and ibiiry-threo Vl feet and seven 7 inches to s point one bundred and Jxtj-tbree 1163) teet and alx 6j inches et-t of the east line of Blackford street, thence east thirty-two 32 feet, thence nortn one hundred and nine llOi feet and three i inches to Indians avenne, thence northwestwardly witb. said avenue thirty nine (9j feel and ten (16) lnctei to tbe place of beginninr. And on failure to realize the full amount et judgment. Interest and costa, I will, at tbe asm I; me and place, expose at public sals the fee aim pie of said real estate. Taken at the property of Smith Craft, at tbe suit of William J. Holliday et al. Said sale to be made without any rellel what ever from valnahon or appraisement laws. teae 0.33,505). GEORGE H. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. June IS, A. D. 1SS5.

Biker, Eord A HE.M.aicKs,Attorneyi for Flauff. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified cr of a decree to me d' reeled, from tbe Cert of the Superior Court of Marlon County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Jdenry B. Bond, Trustee, is plainun; and Nathan K. Elliott et aJU are defendants, (case No. S3,2. :) reqnlrinc me to rcike tbe sum o! three thousand tnree hundred and eighty three dollars and sixty -eicht cents tt-.os fcö). wiLb. Interest on said decree and costs, 1 will expose at public tale, to tbe bis best bidder, on EATUEDAT. THE 11th DAY OF JULY, A, D. 1SS5, between tbe hours of 10 o'clock a. m.and 4 o'clock p. m of said day. at the door of tbe Court Eon so of Marion County. Indiana, the rents and profit for a term not exceeding seven years, of the lollowiQK real estate, situate in tbe County of Marion ana State of Indiana, and described as folio ws, to-wit: Lot number three T31. except fourteen fufeet off tbe west end thereof, in Coffin & Landers' subdivision of lots aeven 71, eight M, nine ;s and 1O1, in Gregs's subdivision of outlot number one nundred and seventy-nine 1170, In Uie City of Indianapolis. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient rum te satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sals the fee simple of amid real täte, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discbarpe aid decree, interest and costs. Baid sale will bo msde without any relief whatever from valuation or appraiaemeut laws. GEORGE H. CARTER, Sheriff of Marlon County. Jane 15. A. D. ISSs. Baker, hoed A: hembh ks. Attorneys tor Plaintiff. SHERIFF'8 BALE Bv virtus of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from tbs Clerk ot tbe Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Heury R. Bond, Tnutee, la plaintiff, and üeorge A. Bpabr et al. are defendants (case Ko. 81,212). requiring: as to max tbs sum of four thousand two hundred and ninety dollar and forty cents (H290 40 i with lniertrst on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on 8ATCEDAY, TEX Uth DAY OF JGLY, A.D. 18S5. between the hours ot 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock! p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court-house of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, situate in the City of Indiana polls, in tbe County of Marlon and Bute of Indiana, and described as follows, to-wit: Lot number twenty-three 23 In James E. Buddeli's subdivision of tbe southwest quarter of lot number twenty two 1 27, In tne east half of the northeaat quarter of section thirty-six (So in township sixteen 1 6 ränge thee I ö as subdi videdl in a partition msde in the Common I'leas Court of Marion County at its February term, lfcfc', said subdivision in said partition suit toeing known aa Jobnton's lieirt addition to the City of Indianapolls tbe plat of said Kudlell's subdivision be ln recorded In plat boo So. at pigets in. the Recorder's ofbes ot aid county. It sued rents and pro flu will ni sell for a tofflClenuum to t&mfj nid decree. Interest aii costs. I will, at tbe same tima and place, erposo to public vale tbe fee simple of sail real estate, er so much thereof aa may be sufficient to discbargo aid decree. Interest and costs. Said sale will be mads without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE H. CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. June 15. a.D. lk V. B. lln:ii. Attorney for riaintifl. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of un execution to me liroetel fror.i tlieVl-rk of the iinrjor oiirt of Marion 'otmty. liKliiiiiH, I w ill cXu-c ut llUJlicak, to the bi.-lR6 bidder, oil SATURDAY, THE 1-tli BAY OF Jl'LY, A. P. iw,. Between tbe lion rs of 10 o'clock a. m. and S o'elm lr r. in. if Miil ilny. at the iliMir of the t'ourt llotw of lMriiti County, Indiana, the rents ami prntits for a term not exiveilinj; Hven year., of the follow inn real tau ti-wit: The un.lix i.l.-.l one-half of loti numbere! 011, two. thn-. four. five. hix. wven. eiirht. nine, ten, eleven. tw'lve, thirteen, fourteen, til teen, sixtei-n, H-venteeii utiil ijrltttu. in stiav or block num-iK-ntl four i-li. in Wo. I "a lirt ulxlivi-ion of t'revs' adilitioii to the t'ity of Iniliauaiolis, Marion County, I nil ia 1111. Atnl on failure to realize the full amount of judgment, inter-! ami -ot. I w ill, at the ain time arid ila-e. -ximik- at public sale the fee iinilo of said real state. Taken as the troiicr!v of Charles E. Clark, at tlio Miit of Kraiii-i I". llor-l. ."aiil sile 10 In- iih1. w illiout any relief whatever from Mtltiatioti or iiiiraieineut laws. t.KOKOE II. CARTHR. Hierin' of Marion County. June -M. A. 1. ls. PROF. HAIUXZS' KERVOUSDEBIUTY obKoradinuM. bst fling- tbs skilled rap smarts, remit iroim ronthful tndirtMioav ft RADICAL CUWC FOR s?t-TTTrrtiTTg 100 trw islilmsM, oe orsr brain work. Are tt1ASW I DE3ILITT, TV-vl tn impooitioB ot prsn nous raneai ior ine troubirs. Gt our ns Circuior and Trisl Parh. W.ud Imti faneorUBS fcu brfora takigt Qui mrTit c.vrvbere. Tkt a SI RE RrncPVthatDAa CI RED tlMMManda, soas not iDtrrftr ua sitration to boiiwa, or oaiu p:a or ioco tract tJ srv srty. FouooH sa ciin: fte wdil jpriiaHPM. By dirctftPficiOs Cianic Weakness, fc DECAY. InYounarAISlddls reo Mn TtSTto roa oven 8ix Years err usi in many Tmcusamp Qaaaa, " i t the 01 tiiwa it .thout deiar. ThsaaU irrml functions of the h ma a omnwn ia rMtoroa. Th an unauna inrah ot life, rhicli na tms vsatrd art .n back.an4 'He ptiratbfeoiiMchr fill and rapidly ( bHJs tmftk sad wati ros. TWIAU TS EA T3LCST. Oos Venth. tS 00 l) Two Months. a. 00 Tbros Moaias. 7.00L HARRIS REMEDY CO.t HrfjCKiK371 ooevf iv. Ttmtn mu. ot. lajvim. su. DIIDTURED PERSONS! Mot a Trusa. iWr Ask for trrns of onr Arrhanes. sanaina Proreatar Ioay. Aon läannood. Ac.havina- tnoU in Tain mrrrr rvmsdy.bti disoorvrril a simple mssns of seif-cnrs, birh bs will fond V RKK to his fe!lownf?rara. 4UrsJ.U.UkisVtA.w'Jtiaam fckjw Vsca.

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