Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1886 — Page 4

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THE INDIANA STATE . SENTINEL WEDNESDAY FEBRUAKY 24, 1836.

SCALL-HEAD

Milk Crust, Dandruff, Eczema and All Scalp Humors Cured by Cuticura. LAST NOVEMBER my little boy. aged three year, fell against the stove while he was running, and cut his head. and. right after that, lie broke out all over his head, face and left ear. I had a good dot tor. Dr. , to attend him. but lie got worse, and the doctor could not cure him. Jiis a hole head, face and left ear were in a fearful fciate. and he suffered terribly. I caught the disease from him. aud it spread all over my face and neck, and even sot into my eyes. Nobody thought we would ever get better. " I felt sure we were disfigured for life. I heard of the Cuticura Remedies, and procured a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent. a box of Cuticura, and a cake of Cuticura soap, and used them constantly day and night. After using two bottles of Resolvent, ftur boxes of Cutk-ura and four cakes of soap, we are ierfectly cured without a scar. Mv boys skin is now like -a tin. LI LUE EI'TINO. ö"7l Grand St., Jersey City. N. J. Sworn to before me this 27th dav of March, lsö. GILBERT 1. KOBINOX, J. P. TUE WORST SORE HEAD. Hare been in the dru? and medicine business twenty-five year?. Have been selling your Cuticura Kemedie's since they came West. They lead all others in their line. "We could not write nor could you print all we have heard said In favor of the Cuticura Kemedie. One rear ago the Cuticura and Soap cured a little girl in our house of the worst sore head we ever saw, and the Resolvent and Cuticura are now curing a young geutleman of a sore leg, w bile the physicians are trying to have it amputated. It will save his leg, and perhaps his life. Too much can not be said in favor of Cuticura Remedies. 3. B. SMITH A- BRO.. Covington, Ky. Cuticura Remedies are a positive cure for every form of frkin and Blood Diseases, froi-.i IMmples to Scrofula, sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, fWc; soap, 2Z: Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston, Mass. Send for "How to Cure skin Diseases." Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases." CITTJ Blemishes. Pimples, Blackhead. and OxvAIti Baby Humors, use Cuticura Soap. FULL OF ACHES AND PAINS which no human skill seems able to alleviate, is the condition of thousands who as yet know nothing of that new and elegant antidote to piin and inflammation, the CUTHTfU ASTI-Pain-Past tK. CT. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24. TERMS PER. TEAK. eingle Copy, without Premium ... f 1 00 Claba of six for .. 5 00 We a&k Democrats to bear In mind and select täielr owa State paper when they come to take anbecriptions a d make tip clubs. Agents making up club send for any Information desired. Address INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. GOOD CANVASSERS WANTED. The Sentinel wants live men to represent It in every part of the country. No township in Indiana should be without a good canvasser for the Weekly Sentinel. We offer the best of inducements, either in premium or cash. Write for particulars. Adress, Sentinel Company, Indianapolls, Ind. DOUBLING UP AND MORE. Many thanks to our friends generally for their kindness in sending even one new reader. Some are sending fire, ten and more. Friends, let the good work go on. See your neighbors and induce them to join your lub for the Sentinel. We have good reaso n lor promising that the Sentinel for 1330 will . be far more valuable tnan any previous volume of its entire years. Six Weekly Sentinels for 95. t a tingle instance of color blindness Las been found by Swarzbach in an examination of 2. ( Hottentots, Malays, Melanesian?. Acstralian?. Maoris, and Polynesians, and he concludes that the defect is confined to the white race, and is due to intiueuces connei'.ei with civili2ed life. Send In the claba of all Sentinels for 93. The Paris News says that at the baby show in tnat citv is an infant three and a half years old, born near Dieppe, which weighs eighty-six pounds and is three feet ten inches in height. He is posseaced of great s'reagtb. and promises to be a giant like his andfatbcr. although his father is of rather i.;3 than ordinary stature. Six copies of the Weekly Sentaael for S3. J. Feank C'e'xkktt, Master Mechanic of the Boston and Lowell Road, paid a brakeman $l.S0O for injuries received while setting a brake which gave way. The victim had obtained judgment against the company for $1 1 but the Supreme Court set it aside t- fixed the liability upon the Master Mc-..-nie. Wanted, l.OOO clubs of six Sentinels for S3. Jlcs S. B. Shoeev was nominated for the School Committee by the Republicans in Lynn, Mass., at the last election, and she was the only candidate or. the P.epublican ticket who was elected. Mrs. Shorey had served on the School Committee before, and the voters showed their appreciation of her services in V '. most practical way. ; . Sentinel and the Farm Guide for S 1.23 A leading editorial in the "Sprite," a 1 y's paper published in a New York town. ys: "To keep a boy after school "is very -J for his health as he does not get enough utdoor exercise. After awhile he becomes morbid, then runs away from home and ends by committing suicide, which is very bai for the constitution. Moral Don't Keep Boys After School. P. S. The editors of this paper never get kept after school but say this out of pity for those who do." Get Are of your neighbor to take Sentlns) Sad your own will be paid for. Sam Small, the converted Georgia journalist, who is stirring up Chicago preparatory to Sam Jones's advent, is described as a plainly dressed, tall, slender young man. Uehind his gold-bowed eyeglasses are small yes, and above his heavy sandy moustache is a rather long thin nose. His forehead, high and narrow, Is surmounted by very carefully smoothed dark bair. He looks rather commonplace, bnt when he speaks he once shows strength.' The lie raid fays: i voice possesses that subtle, tremulous ity which makes men listen. It is a ce which invests the merest common tce with interest." Mr. Small will accompany Mr. Sam Jones when the latter

mores on the bulwarks of sin and Satan in Indianapolis. . . " .. We call special attention to our new club terms of six "Weekly Sentinels for S5; twelve for SIO. Sam Small says that a man can not he a mugwump in religion any more than he can be one in politics. The Ohio Legislature has passed a bill requiring non partisan Election Boards for Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and Toledo. Six Weekly Sentinels for 3. Friends Give us 1,000 of these neat little clubs within the next thirty days. There is getting to be an abundance of room at the top of the ladder. Grant, McClellan, Hendricks, Hancock, Seymour all great in their several callings, and .all gone over to the majority. Earnest, active Democratic friends, yon cant secure the best ewspaper in Indiana easier tban to take tbe subscriptions of ttf of your neighbors to the Weekly Sentinel. The S5 will bring you x ' pies.

"Whex a few postal clerks can go on their usual runs, and in a very short time check errors running into the thousands, it is very evident that somebody else besides the Journal and News are getting "scooped." In the general shake-up of Burt's 03-100" efficient service, we imagine a few Democrats are getting left on their mail. A RAY OF LIGHT. Unmanufactured lumber timber, laths, shingles, salt, hemp. jute, iron, sulphur, lead and copper ores, and coal, potatoes, corn, dyewoods, earths and undressed building stones are to be placed on the free list in the new tariff bill introduced into the House, particulars of which are given elsewhere in this issue. Material reductions will be made on warps and some varieties of cotton goods, ircn, steel, and iron and steel rails, and sugar, besides many other articles of lesser importance. The bill is conservative in character, and studiously avoids conflicting with American labor, except of that sort of labor required in the very coarsest productions. Should induced cheapness lead to greater consumption, the articles as bar iron and steel, that are the groundwork of so many industries, would require a greater quantity of skilled labor to work it up and make it commercially available; and the same may be said of the balance of the articles on the list. The doctrine of taxing raw materials has led to such a wholesale destruction of many of our resources that the country Las been impoverished. Our timber, for example, has been wantonly wasted, and if to remove the tariff were not necessary from aa industrial standpoint, it would soon become an absolute necssity, caused by a timber famine. All the materials above recited are necessary parts of our industrial system, and our mechanics should be enabled to buy them as cheap as the mechanics of any other land, and if they are to be handicapped by continued exaction of a tax to the producers of American materials, they cannot compete in the trr.de of the world. It is nearly needless to argue that our participation in the trade of the world is essential in order to dispose of our own surplus productions. It is also needless to add that our prosperity depends upon such a disposal of our surplus. It hardly requires argument to substantiate that our surpluses can not be disposed of unless we remove the obstacles that prevent people from bringing a loaded vessel into our ports and taking a loaded vessel out again. In our past policy we have virtually said to a foreign merchant of ship owner, you must send your vessel to us in ballast. We will not agree to take goods of you or pay freight on them in order to induce you to take our goods away. Of course our goods have piled up on our hands. Merchants have rone elsewhere and taught other people the arts of produc tion that only a few years ago we nearly monopolized. Our protection idea has proven that we can make the goods, but it has not taught us how to use them or to dispose of them. The bill before the House is an encouraging hope that we have begun at last to drift away from the fatal shores ot communism, commercial paralysis and industrial distress. BUSINESS PARALYSIS BY INDUCTION. There are two theories relative to the decline in prices that has been continuous for several years, one of which attributes it to the appreciation of gold and the other to overproduction. Reflection would convince us that both have an inductive bearing upon the question. That gold has really and relatively appreciated may be shown by the fact that of all commodities it alone stands upon the plane of its former value, while all others, including silver, have depreciated. The question of overproduction is relative, while the appreciation of gold is an artificial life created by legal enactment that compels its active employment, and consequent active demand. If tbe present industrial deadlock were somehow terminated, we are inclined f to believe that what is termed overproduc tion would disappear. Underconsumption is a better word to define the cause of our business depression, for the poverty of large masses, and the forced economies of still larger masses of people Is notorious. They are in poverty, or nearing it, not because they can not produce, but. because in large measure they can not exchange what they do produce. They can not effec t these exchanges because prices m continually fall that people can not buy, except for the most absolute momentary necessities, without effecting a loss. Here we are brought to the induction caused by appreciation of the standard by which the values are measured, and it is here that the money question partakes most all of the significance it has. The quantity of the commodity which is taken as the measure of value, in relation to the demand in its use as a medium of exchange, is, in the matter of gold, notoriously too small. The result, in case this view were correct, would certainly follow that it would appreciate in value in the same ratio that it was used in exchange. That this Is precisely what has happened is strong evidence of the correctness of the view, and the most critical observation. This view would inevitably lead us away from gold as a measure of value in a political policy, leaving it to seek its own level as a commodity of exchange, subject only to such restrictions as would be necessary to make another standard operative. As a matter of the present, it would lead us to adopt silver as the standard of value, ad inch it would la effect become under tie operation of a

free coinage act. Should this occur, it would naturally reduce the value of gold, and its own value would be enhanced in the ratio of its use, until the two would, in a measure, reach a uniform level. As an abstract question, we regard the use of either of these metals as a standard cf value as being far from performing the functions of an ideal currency. As standards of value, they are very Liable to fluctuation from various intrinsic causes that a paper currency without intrinsic value could not be subject to. Thee fluctuations, that of late "have been appreciative, decrease prices and produce industrial paralysis. A paier currency based upon the Government's income, which, ia effect, is the sum of its taxes a3 expressed in the many commodities with which they are pratically paid, is, theoretically, the best, based as it would be upon the very products it would measure. It is not at present practicable, but silver, that now is upon the same level with other commodities, o:Ters a close approximation to it, sufficiently close to cause a free coinage act to have an e3ect of stopping the downward ana disastrous tendency of prices.

THE ISSUE IS JOINED. "The issue is joined' between the President and the Senate. The same issue was joined thirty years ago, when a senatorial oligarchy, after years of struggle for the control of all of the powers of the National Government, at length went out and organized a great war to destroy it. There are a great many side issues in the present controversy, and the trie tendency of the movement that has grown in force since the Republican party llrst went into power, is as studiously covered with hypocrisy 33 it was in proslavery days. The old oligarchy attempted revolution when it could no longer legally control. The new one, more powerful in wealth, and strongly intrenched behind the powers of our vast monopolies, is ready to follow the same fateful path that will lead to the same fateful conclusion. Kve?i In its concrete aim, the movement is one for political perpetuation of power by the Republican party, as the civil war resulted from a similar instinct on the part of those who controlled the Democratic party. It is a very pretty scheme to keep an army of 150.000 Republicans perpetually in orhce for the purpose of affording that party a perpetual lease of power. Not so much the partv, but the wealthy monopolists that have captured and controlled that party in its later years, and through which all the great avenues of wealth have been stolen from the people and given to the few. These 100,000 Republicans were not pia- ed in ornce on account of their ability or fitness, but solely because they had been ardent partisans and skillful wire-pullers, and it i3 very evident that this army of skilled politicians is an invaluable ally to those optimales of ls8G who control them. We can not, of course presume to say how this war will end. Possibly the Oligarchy may win in the opening skirmishes, but in time the side issues will be disposed of and when they are there will remain the sharply defined issues of monopoly versus democracy; representative institutions versus an aristocracy ; of law versus anarchy. It is a dangerous move the Senate is inaugurating and it will certainly crystalize oa the real issue. The jopular mind is somewhat inflamable and will inevitably form oa the side of its interests, which it instinctively regards as hostile to the monopolists who largely constitute the Senatorial Oligarchy. A Profitable Investment Can be made ia a postal car, if it Is used u sea l your address to Halle A Co.. Portland. Maine, who can furnish you work that you can do and live at home; few there are who can not earn over t". per day. and some have mode ever IV). Capital not required: jou are started free. Father sex: all asje. All particular Iree. NOTES FROM ABROAD. The Princess of Wales is said to be resjonsible for the enormous buttons which are worn on jackets. She wore them last fall on a roundabout, and now the e3ect has reached around the world. Miss May Tift, the daughter of a New York baaker and the pupil of Marchest. has made a brilliant success at private 30irees in Paris and Cannes, and has been o tiered an engagement at Her Majesty's Theater ia London. Isaac "YVvatt went to Dosberville Gardens, near London, and while there was feeding a bear in a ea.-;e. He turned to speak to a friend, and the bear seized his hand. An attendant tried to beat it ofT, whea the animal crushed the bones in a terrible manner. Wyatl was awarded $2,000 damages. Colonel Ppfjevalky's facts throw Jules Verne's fancies into the shade. This famous Russian traveler has fought his way through Mongolia aad Thibet with a party of seven teen soldiers and a host of other attendants, spent 43,000 rubles, killed 400 people who barred his way. given a number of Russian names to places nominally in the dominions of the Empire of China, and shown the portrait of the White Zar to enraptured crowds of Mongolians longing to be taken under his protection. Tin annual meeting of the Royal Zoological Society in Dublin disclosed some interesting facts. The cash receipts from visitors were about $o,000. Twelve lion cubs had been reared and six sold for X-V Ln cash and the same value in other animals. The sale of hoa cubs since the opening ot the garden has amounted to about $1 1,000. The President, Dr. Ilaueliton, claimed that the garden stood first in the world as a lion-breeding establishment. Amon? the dogs is a Thibetan mastiff whose peculiarities and habits identify the breed with the griffins descriled by early Greek visitors to the East. In Krupp'a Essen works there are 1,553 big ovens, 459 steam boilers, 4 0 steam engines (representing together 13,500 horse power), 1G2 machine tools, eighty-two steam hammers, twenty-one rolling trains involving a daily consumption of 3,100 tons of coal and coke by the 1,6 furnace?, whose draug'it is through chimneys of which one is 230 feet high, with a diameter of thirty feet at the bottom. The production is enormous. When the Emperor William visited the place in 1877 Mr. Krupp caused to be set begore him the productions of a aingle day 1,800 rails, 100 wheel tiros, 120 axles, 100 railway wheels, ISO railway wedges, 1,000 bombshells. A Card. I wish to return my thanks to my friends for tbelr aid anl sympainy in tbe late Ions of my home by Are, and especially to tbe Ohio Farmer' Insurance Co-(or their prompt and full payment of toy Iom. Mr. Oakea had draft ready for me in two weeks from the time of ay loa. - JOH A. ÄARGKWT. Castletoa, Karfoa County, Indiana,

THOUGHT OF THE HOUR.

. Dr. Ceosbt defines a crank as a man who has a capital idea but not sense enough to carry it out. A single great thought, originating in tue mind &1 a thinker, is as good aa a diploma. The School Journal. A g?.eat many people who turn up the whites of their eyes aad cry "God help the roor!" never try to help God. Philadelphia P.ecord. To provide every man, woman and caild with a home Li to lift the world up out of vice, ignorance, misery and desyair. Chicago Sentinel. No interest i3 sl3 important in this country as that of rail transportation. We are a traveling people, and comfort and safety ia making long land business and pleasure journeys are essential to our welfare. Jarne F. Rhodes ia Magrazineof American History. "As to loving a God t'aat is unconceivable unthinkable, unknowable it is preposterous. A morning-glory wants something that is solid to run upon. It wants to twine; but it will not twine oa a shadow. Human nature, too, must have something substantial to twine on." Henry Ward Beecher. It is to be regarded as a hopeful sign ia the affairs of the United States, that an increasing amount of thought is being given to the organization and history cf our local government. The study of State a:id municipal governments,! either from the historical or analytical point of view, will inevitably lead to a better appreciation of their importarce. and suggest meaas of rendering them more t'dicier.t. Sernsrd Moses ia the Overland Monthly. Many people have noticed a likeness between the revivalist aad Abraham Lincoln in their ability to aptly illustrate a point by a story. Lincoln possessed a wonderful faculty ia this respect, aad he never made his thought clearer than when he expressed it ia a familiar parable form. Ia this Sam Jones is like him, and if he does not make up hi3 stories a3 he needs them he must have a fund of asec dotes which is practically unlimited. Cincinnati Time3-Star. Thkee years a?o seventy-f.ve Sioux and Modoc children were sent to the Normal Labor Institute, near Wabash, Ind., to be educated. When they arrived at the school they were in a barbarous condition, but in the interval they have become proficient in English, ceography, arithmetic aad other studies, and acquired a knowledge of farming. Forty of them have been returned to the Indian Territory. The hoy3 will be put to farming and the girls be given positions as teachers ia the Indian schools. Possibly it might help to solve the Indian question if these boys were to be appointed Indian asea'ts. Chicago Current. That feelinj of extreme debility is entirely overcome by" Hood's Sarsaparilla. "I was tired all over, but Hood's Sarsaparilla gave me new life and strength," says a Pawtucket, R. I., lady. Hood's fearsaparilla is sold by all druggists, H a botale, or sii bottles for $.100. PERSONALS. CoNcr:F.s-.MAs LrrrLK, of Ohio, is one of the biggest mea ia the House. Feank O. Dame, who died ia Boston last week, had a life insurauce of $110,0J. What if Senator Jones, of Florida, should get the widow and'lose his seat ia the Seaate.' Peivave Seccetae v Lamont has been summoned to his home, in New York, by the serious illness of his mother. Sixhetahx Ekoicott has been suffering with a severe cold for several days past an t has not been able to leave his house. Mas. Sahv Dvidso of Lower Boulder, Mont., shot a bear, and with the bounty received for it sae paid for a sewing-machine. Jet s Grast. President of the National Trotting Congress. ha3 not a child of his own. bat has raised twenty-five children nephews and nieces. M. Pastbi-r has just received a gift of 40.000 francs from M. Herve to be employed ia the furthering of his experiments ia inoculation against hydrophobia. Charley Mix was one of the Government's Winnebago scout3 during the war. For years past he has been blind and begging in Nebraska: but the other day he received $4, 03 back pension. Ma. Whittiek says that yellow is his favorite color, because he can always distinguish it, while the red apples and greea leaves on a tree all look alike to him, as far as color is concerned. "With my own eyes." said Dr. Theodore L. Cuyler to some Yale stu Jent3 the other day, "I have seen Mr. Gladstone kneel by the side of a common street-sweeper and pray for the salvation of hi3 soul." It is not generally known that Ward worth; the poet, sot to Haydoa aa a model for his great picture, "Christ's Entry into Jerusalem." But he did; aad Hadoa's original study of the poet has just been sold in London, i Sebge Ivaxhofp, who has been arrested for; nrhilism by the Russian police, is accused of having had a hand in almost every plot since 1?70. He is thirty-one years old, was occe a medical student, and had been sentenced to exile In Siberia. He was also one of the ringleaders concerned in the murder of Alexander II. Thomas A. Edo.v is thought to hare cleared $2,0" "0,000 out of his electrical inventioDS. His purchase of a rural residence at $400.000 cash, to take his forthcoming bride to, is regarded by his intimate friends as no great extravagance. In appearance he is a clean-shaven man. youthful in face, and so nearly deaf that a talker has little fun In mating himself understood, A tocno Englishman who lately visited Tennessee expressed much liking for this country, and wa advised to settle down and take a wife, the adviser adding that there were many pretty girla here. "An," said the young Englishman, "I have no wish for a wife." "Why not?" "Well, if I was to marry, my wife wonld expect some atten tion, and that would interfere with my dogs, and I can not give them up." Tor will of Commodore Hayward, V. S. 'S.', who died recently in Egypt, provides for the cremation of his body, and adds: "I desire that my ashes ' be placed in a suitable urn of copper in her (bis wife's) grave, at her feet. If it were possible. I should insist that they 1 be placed inside Wcoffia, Ia which case I

6hould not wish . them to be inclosed, but that they be strewn" over whatever may remain cf her precious body." Losa Wolsexey says that his campaign library consists of the New Testament, the Book of Common Prayer, Shakespeare, Tliomas a Kempis aad the Soldier's Pocket Book. Whea going on a distant expedition he could add. in the history, Creasy's "Decisive Battle," Tlutarch's Lives, Voltaire's Charles XII., Froude's Ciesar and Hume's England, and ia ,'Iiction, Macaulay's "History of England" aad bis essays.

CONCERNING WOMEN. Miss Lorisz Imockx Gcixev, who has a growing reputation as a poet, is very fond of out-door sports, aad is a fine walker and rower. Thj: Princess of Wales is said to be responsible for the enormous buttons one sees on jackets. She wore them on a round-about last autumn two or three time?, and now theref is an eruption of them all over Christendom. Lady Ditkerix takes a personal interest in missions. She is now studying Hindustani with Mjss Troburn, an American Methodist missionary, and pays the expenses of several persons in America who are studying for future missionary work in India. Mes. Scott, the widow of the lae Thonia A. Scott, has presented to the Washingtca and Lee University a three-quarter life size portrait of the great railroad magnate. Mr. Scott gave the University $i0.o00 before his death. The painting is the work of a LonOoa artist and cost M.uOo. A viMLAxcE committee of marriageable young ladies was formed in Fremont, Neb., sorue time ago to investigate the habits and character of eligible young men and bachelors. The result of thtse inquiries were recorded alphabetically hi books prepared for that purpose, and guarded by a muscular Secretary. Mme. Patti had a curious experience recently of the enthusiasm of Roumanian women. She had just finished one of her most effective arias in the opera house at Bucharest, when a number of ladies suddenly rose to their feet and threw white pigeons with ribbons oa their necks, upon the stae, until the singer was surrounded by the fluttering birds. Mrs Lovev Au:Mf, of Leslie, Ingram County, Michigan, born in ISO"), is the widow of Caleb Aldrich, born in 17t, who served in the Revolution, and, as such, she draws a pension. A portrait of Lovey not Lovely in the Detroit Free Press, represents a woman of sixty-five, still hale and hearty, and the last surviving Revolutionary pensioner in Michigan, if not in the United States. The Soldier. I Communicated.! I will ask for a space in your widely circulated paper. I was a soldier myself, but I see little legislation in regard to the soldier, excepting about those who are on the pension roil. I am not going to ask the law-making power for anything but what is just. They make laws to compel individuals to pay their contracts, and I think it is right for the Government to pay its soldiers according to contract. We were promised $13 per month, and received C3 cents to the dollar. Men that enlisted late received large bounties, while those who enlisted earlier, and did th hardest f ghting, and most of it, have suffered, and should have been the ones to have received the largest bounty. Congress should pass a law to equalize"' the bounties, and should also increase the amount of the soldier's pay to the gold standard. I notice that the Government has not failed to give the bondholder gold for a 33 cent dollar. I indorse all that Congress does for the soldiers and soldiers' widows. Jons Taxkkorj. Warwick County, Feb. 20. ISeautiful Roses for All. We have received the New Guide to Hose Culture, published bv the Dingee fc Conard Co., Rose Growers, West Grove, Ta., (see advertisement) and take pleasure in recommending it as one of the handsomest and best catalogues of the season. . We have aeenred the following unusual Indeed, most extraordinary, clubbing arrangements with the Cottage Hearth, one of the very best of homo and fireside monthly magazine: We will send the Weekly Sen tin el and Cottage Hearth both one year for 1.75, only 25 cents more than the price of the Cottage Hearth aloae. I cheerfully recommended Red Clover Tonic to those suffering from troubles of the stomach and liver. I am now on my second bottle, and it makes me feel like a new man. C. M. Coanor, Nashua, Iown. The Weekly Sentinel and the American Agriculturist for S)3, only 50 ceata more than the price of the Agriculturist. W m. B. Walls, Attorney for Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy' of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk ot the Superior Court of Marion County. Indiana, in a cause wherein Henry Berinan is plaintiff, and Joanna llynn et al. are defendants, (case No. S4.712), requiring me to make toe um ot seventyfour dollars and feixteeu cents ($74 M, witn interest on 8aid dec ree and costs, I will expose at public bale to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE 20th DAY OF MARCH, A.j D. I, I between the hours ot 10 o'clock a. ra.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 exVeedins seven years, of the following real estate, smutte in Marlon County, la-: diana. to-wit: Lot number five (.")), ln Charles A. Hardety's subdivision of lot number four(t). in Jesse Jones'i fubdivision of the north part of the southeast quarter of section number twentr-seven (-JT), in township bixteeu (16 range three (3) eat i If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient tun to f-atii-fy fcaid decree, interest and costs I will, at the same time aud place, expose to public sa'.e the fee fcimple of said real estate, or so mnch thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and cosU. Said 6ale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement lau s. ; GEORGE If. CARTER. Sheriff of Mario a County, i . February 2i A. D. iso. 1 Rand L Winters, Attorneys tor Plaintiif. SHERIFFS SALE. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk ol tne Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, Ja a cause wherein Mary Iersonette ia plaintiff, and Wilson pray et al. are defendants (Case No. S4.S71), requiring me to make the sum of eveu: hundred and 6ixty-nine dollars and forty-nine cents (7C.4'.. with interest on aaid decree and costs. I will exp loose at public sale to the highest bidder, oa 8ATCRDAY, THE 20TFT DAY, OF MARCH, a. i. laso, , between the bom of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m., of Mid day. at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the renta and profit for a term not exceeding teven years, of the follow in? real estate, to-wit: Thirty feet off the north iide of lot nam ber thirty-two (S2), in second Miley addition to the city of Indianapolis, Marion County.Indiana. If tuen rents and profits will not tell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and cost. I will, at the same tine and place, expose to public sale tbe fee simple ol said real estate, or M much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge aaid decree, interest and coats. Bali sale will bs) made without any relief whatever tram valuation or appraisement laws. t OEORQE H. CAJCTK3, Baerl C Marios County. February 22, A, D. IK.

Hpmnrrhnnpc i5166 Kose, or from aa.7 causa is epeedUy cootroll od tut stopped. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds, Sprains and BruisesI: is cooling, cleansing and Healing. C"ctYv mo3t efficacious for this dieVrffcll.cn 1 II, ease, Cold in the Uead. &c Our "Catarrh Cure,' u 8pee!air prepared to meet serioua cases. Our rVav al Syringe is simple aud iuexwnsira. Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Ko other preparation 'has cured more cases r.t the-: ditretins; complaints than the Kx tract. Our Plaster ia in Yah. able in these disoaw, Lumlagu, Tain in Back or Side. ic Diphtheria & Sore Throat, Use the tlx trait promptly. Delay u dangerous. Pilar Bli". Bleeding Itching. I A IllOf the greatest known renwdy ; rapidly curing when other medicines have failod. Our Ointment is of great service whor the roiaova! of clothing is inconvenient. For Broken Breast and Sore Hippies. SSSS used Th Six tract will never be without it. Our Ointment id Uw beat euioHieai that can be applied. Female Complaints. femolr diseases the Extract can 'be used, aa is well know u. with the greatest hnMht, r "ull directions accompany each boltld. CAUTION. Pond's Extract S the words Pond's Extract" Mown ia tho glans. and our picture trade-mat It oa surrouiidiua butt wiapiK-r. None other ia genuine. Always insist on havirs; Pond's Extract. Taka no other preparaAija. It is ncrcr sold in btUk, or by measure. Sold very licre, Prices, 50c, $1, $1.75 Preptred onlj by P0XDS EXTBACT 10., KEW YORK AEO LONDON. TUTT PILL TORPID DOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. From tucsa sources ariao three-fourths Of the diseases of the Luman race. Thesa symptoms indicate their existence : Loaa ol Appetite, ltowel costive, Hick lleado acne, fullness after eating, aversions osertlou of body or wind, Krortatlon of food, Irritability of temper, Law plrita. A r-elin of baving neglected aome dmy, IMzzitieaa, J-'lntt rint; at tha Heart, Dots before the eyes, highly col ored Urine. t'O.YSTIPATIOX, and do tnandtlieuoe of a leiup.ly that acts directly nthe Liver. jVaaLiver medicine TUTX"a1 PILLS have no cjual. Their action on t29 Kidneys and Skin is also prompt ; removing all impurities through those three "caw engera of the. aystem,' producing appo tite, sound digestion, regular etooU, a clear 8klnandaviroiou9bcxly. TCTT'i PIXLS cause no nausea or gi-ipinij nor interfero With daily work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. fioM ererywhf re . c. Offii-o. 4 Morray Kt mot, X 1. Rittes Si Ritter, Attorneys for PlaintiX SHERIFF'S SALE Bv virtHe of ccrtifled copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of Ihe Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Franklin Furber is plaintiff, and Fielding Iluston et al. are defendants, (case No. Sl.S'.C) requiring me to make tne sum of mx thousand seven hundred dollars 96,700). with interest on ha id decree and coms, l will expoce at public sale, to the highest bidder, oa SATURDAY, THE 20th DAY OF MARCH, A. D. 1S36. between tbe heurs of 10 o'clock a. m. tad 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 folio winjt real estate, to-wit: Commencing; at a point on the north line of M ich i trau street, one hundred and eight (10H) feet vest of the intersection of Indiana avenue sad said Michigan street, in block ten (!0. lot one (1), running: thence north sixty-three (601 feet, thence weM seventy (70) feet and one 1) inch, thence south sixty-three (6:;) feet to Michigan street, thence east seventy (7üi feet and three (:: inc hes, to the place of. beginning. All in Indianapolis, Marion County and State of Indiana. It fcuch rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient turn to satisfy said decree, interest and costs. I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee'simple of said real estate, ot so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. iSaid sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE IL CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. February 22, A. D. 1S86. Jacos.' & C, Attorneys for Plaintiff. SHERIFF'3 SALE Bv virtue of an execntioa to me directed from the Clerk of the Superior Court oi Marion County. Indiana, I will expose at public sale, to the highe; t bidder, on SATURDAY, THE 20th DAY OF MARCH, A.D. 1SSÖ, Between the bours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock m. of said dav. at the door of the Court-house of arion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, to-wit: Ixts numbered thirty (S0. thirty-one ("1. thirlv-two (32), thirty-three (Si), thirty-four (31), thirty-five (35), thirty-six (36. thirtyseven (37), thirty-eight (3), thirty-nine (3.). lorty (4). forty one 41). forty-two (42). forty-three (4;t, forty-four (10, forty-five (45 forty six (4G), forty-seven t!7. fortr-eignt (4S). forty-nine (49 and fifty (50), in Indianapolis Car Company's second addition to the City of Indianapolis. Marion County. Indiana, according to the plat recorded in the orlice of the Recorder of said County, ia Plat Uook number four (4). at parent;. And on failure to realize the full amount ot Judgment, interest and costs. I will, at the same ime and place, expose at public sale the fee simple of said real estate. , , Taken as the property of William C. Smock, at the 6uit of Brown Rotary Shuttle sewing Machine Company. Said sale to be made without any re'.ief whatever from valuauon or appraisement laws. (,cavc No. 13,S71)' GEORGE H. CARTER. Sheriff of Marion County. February 'J?, A. 1. Ivi6. ! A. W. Wisharo, Attorney lor Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S 8ALE By virtue of a certiflei copy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of tbe Superior Court ol Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein the Franklin (Fire) Insurance Company of Indianapolis is plaintiff, and Carrie Wood et al. are defendants, (case No. 34.001), requiring me to make the sum ot two thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight dollars and forty cents (tiSCo 40), with interest on Mid decree and cost. 1 will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, TUE 20th DAY OF MARCH. D. 18S6, j between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m., or said day, at the door of the Court House of Martoa County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a terra not exceeding; seven years, of the following real estate, situate ia Marion County, and State oiln diana. to-wit: a ; Lot number twenty-one (21) ln Martlndale s addition to the City of Indianapolis. i If such rents and profits will not sell for a sumclent sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to puh lie sale tbe fee simple of aaid real estate, or ao much thereof aa may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Interest and eosts. Said aale wid b made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement law. 0E0RQ1? CARTER, I Sheriff oi Marian County, i rcbrotrySO.A.TxiMfc

RtrrHoiOxFw A Siuoti, Attorneys lor PlainUlT.

SHERIFF'S BALE By virtue of n execution to me directed from tiie Cterk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, I wiU expose at public sale, t the lushest bidder, oa SATl'RDAY, THE 20!h DAY OF MAECH. A. 1). lsv;. between the bonr of 10 o'clo( k a. tn. ail 4o"clocs: p. m, of said day, at thedoor of toe Court House of Marion County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding ievefi years, of the following real estate, siu.aie in Maiioa Count). Jadiana. to-w it : Commencing: at a point oa Virginia avem three and one-half i?i feet southeast from Um; southwest corner of lot n;i?n?ier nine (?) in Kin dcr's subdivision of square nuintie-- scvcaty-eirftit (7i in the city of Indianapolis. Uience uo-tiici.: at right anes to snid avenue thirty-two fee', thence north parallel with the west line of su J lot number nine C.'i twe:ity-eii?ht . feet and f'.vc and three-quarter (ä-'4i inc hes to a point two feet and five and three-quarte'- ('i iuehet en.-t from the west line rrf said lot ni.mber nine (r'i, thence east ten 10 teet and six mid three-eurrjU itr') inebe to a point, thence sor.Ih ia a straibt liue uutll said iiue iuter'-rct'- a line drawu at right angles with Virginia avenue from a point insaidacnue tifteeu l.s teet southeast o( tbe pointf lcjrinnin tairty-tw-o 2 feet from mi! a vcd ue. thence southwest thtrty-nvo t ri) feet t( Virginia avenre, theni-e northwest on the line of said avenue fifteen lb feet to the plae of beginnirjr. Aud on failure to resüje tee full smor.nt ot judgment, interest and costs. I will, at the arne time aud plai-e. expose at pv.biic sale the fee simple cd said real estate. Taken as the property of John Henry Farmau at the suit of l.lizabeth J. Carmichael. Said sale to be made without inr relic! whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. (Cause No. ;..). ' GEORCF. If. CARTER, She tifl of Marion County. IV.ruarv A. D. lX-si. W. R. Hin.-ui!tr. for pisia.iff. CHERIFK' SALK.-ly ;rt :c c.r au cvcutioti r to iue dhveied froiii tho C ierK of the Bueriwr Court t Muruvi C'oti.ity. ludl.titi. 1 will expo,at public sa'.e. to tile hi j.ie-t lidi!t r, o l .ATI' P.DAY, THE Äth DAY OY MARCH A. 1. is-. I et v ceii the Lour of 10 o'c'r ' a. to. aud 4 o't.'ock p. in. of sai l day.nt the dowr oi the-c-ourt Houm. c-f 'arion County. Indian, the rent- profits f r a term not exceeding seven yea:-, ot tbe f .ijvJ4 real estate, to-w it : Part of the east half of the so; tht . quarter of section ten !10 . township sixteen (16. north of ranee tbrt-e i3 cast, dew ribed as foilows. to-wit: Beginning al the southwest cot uer of the ca-t halt ot the southwest quarter of section ten lOi. township sixteen 1 16). north of ran?e three Uli cast, runniug thence north with west line of said tract tvnentv-uine "!' chains and thirty (;oi link, thence east ten i lOi chains and ffty-i.ve links to the center of Michigan road, thence south nineteen snd one-halt (is.-:. degrees cast with center of sa d road nine V chains and sixteen (K) linlu-. thence south sixty-nine and one ha:f (W'i'i degreea est. eleven ill i chains and fifty (V))liaky, thence south nineteen and one half (U1) decrees east to the south line f said section, thence west nine ti' chains and eight (H, links to the place of beniuning, containing, twenty-two (J acres and thirty-nine :Xi rods, more or less. Also, ten OOi acres off of the south end of tbe west half of the northwest quarter of sectiou ten (10). township sixteen (Iß), north cf range three tS' cast. All situate in Marion ouuty. Indiaua. And on failure to realize the tun amount oi judgment, interest and com.-. I will, nt the miuo time and place, expose at public sale thefeesinv pie of said real c-tate. Taken as rlie property of smutl H. Hogshire at the suit of the Equitable Trust Co. for the uee ot William K. Iloir-nire. T Said mie to bo made without reüef whatever from valuation or appraisement-law. (Case No. 21 MS.) GEORGE II. CARTER, Sheriff of Mai ion County. I'tbruary Itr, A. D. 18-vi. B iRTiioioxkw fc Speaci f., Attorneys for rhtiatlX SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution to me directed from the Clodi- ot the. Superior Court of.Marion. County. Indiana, 1 will expoeat public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, TUE 2dth DAY OF MARCH, A. I. 18i, between th? hours of 10 o'clock a. ra. and 4 'doe p. m. of said day, at the aoor of the Court Housa of Marion County.Indiana. the rents and profits foe a term not exceeding seven years, oi thefolrow ing real et täte, situated in Marion County, Ind., to-wit: Commencing at a point ou Virginia aventie thirty-tLree and one-half (:K;;p feet southeast from the southwest corner of lot number nine (9) in Kinder's subdivision of square number seventy-eight (7x in the city of Indianapolis, ladiana, thence northeast at right- angle to eatd avenue thirty-two feet, thence north parallel to the east line of said lot number nine ?1 fortynine (49) feet eight and one-half (si inches to a point twenty-three (23i feet eight and one-half s;.t inches east from the west line of said lot number nine i".m. thence west ten (lOi feet six aad threocightbs i.6 S-h) inches to a point, thence south in a straight line until said lrne intersects a line drawn at right asgies with Virginia avenue from a point iu said avenue fifteen (U feet northwest of the point of beginning, thirtytwo CTJ) feet from said avenue, thence southwest thirty-two (S2) feet to. Virginia avenue, thence southeast on the line of said avenue fifteen (15 feet to the place ot beginning. And ob failure to realize the full amouat of judgment, interest and costs. I will, at thesaaoe time and place, expose at public sale the fee sinipta ot said real estate. Taken as the property of Owen Edward Far ma a at the suit of Elizabeth J. CarmichaeL Said sale to be made witbout any. relief whatever from valuation or appraiiemem laws. (Cauäe No. 8U.CS0.) GEORGE H.CARTER. Sheriff of Marion Count. February 22, A. D. 1SSC Charit M. Ziox, Attorney for TlaintiflV SIIERIFF S SALE. By virtue of an eiefl'Jüoa to me directed from the Cleric of tbe Hoooe C ircuit Court d Boone County? Indiana! wül expose at public sale, to the oighest oidder oa SATURDAY, THE 20TH DAY ' A. D. is;. OF 2ARCR oetween the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Mariou County. Indiaua. the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following real estate, to-wii-The norteast quarter of the southeast quarter of section seventeen (17 . township seventeen (17). north of range two (2 east, containing forty (4o acres more or less. Also the north part of the west half of "the southwest quarter of sec tion sixteen (lt. township seventeen (17). north ot range two (2t east, teing and situate a est ol the center of the v hiie River and Big Eagle Gravel Uoa i. supposed to contain twenty ( JO acres more or lss. excepting four ) acres in square form out ot the southeast corner of the last described parcel of real estate. All situate in Marion County, Indiana, And ou failure to realize tli full amouat of Judgment, interest and costs, I w ill. at the same time and place, expose at public sale the fee simple of said real estate. Taken as the proterty of Amanda Calrert at the suit of John M. Kradlev. Said sale to be made without aay relief whatever from valuation or sppraisemcut laws. G EX) RGB H. CARTER. Sheriff t Marion County. February 2 A. D. lsse. Morris & Newbeb&ek. Attorneys tor Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of 3 erecutioa to me directed from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion County. Indiana, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on 8AURDAY, THE 20th DAY OF MARCH. A. D. l&K. between the bours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said dar, at the door of the Court-houac of Marion County, Indiaua. tbe lee simple ot the following real estate, to-wit: Lot number thirty-two IS.'), in Ilibbard. WcCartr & Martindale a subdivision of lots one (It. two (2), three (X), four (, five (M. six 6. arveu (7) and eight (Vv, in square twelvo (12). in Hubbard. Mccarty & Maxtiudale addition to the City ol Indianapolis. And lota number eleven (11. twelve (12). thirteen (V.) and twenty-six CJ6i. in Vagen s 8outl Brookside addition to the City of Indianapolis. Also lote number sixty (00) and sixty -one (6,'i. in Tilford A Thrasher's east addition to the town of Irvington. All it. Marion County, Indiana. Taken as the property ol Frank Ii R. Co Urn. at the suit of Max Gundelhnge r lor the tue ot Job O Briea. Said sale to be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraise meM laws. (Oa&e Ko, OEORQE H. CARTSK, Sheriff el aUriaa Uauaif. February tUL a 1836,