Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 8, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1886 — Page 3
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY MARCH U 1656.
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UffllMl VEGETABLE CURE . All Bilious Complaints. They are perf ectry safe to talr, betas rrm Vegetable and prepared with the great ert car from the best dn,a. They relieve the guflerer; tnce by carryirg eft aM Impurities tfarotigtl Vv4a Ail druiiiista SLaabox. THE HOME. It la cot doubted that men have ft home in that place where each one has established his hearth and the uxa of bis posessions and fortunes, wheace be will not depart if nothing calls him war; whence if be has departed be seems to be a wanderer, and If he returns he ceases to wander. Condition from Civil Law. 'Then stay at home, my heart, and rest. The bird is safest in the nest; O'er all thst flutter tneirwings and fly, A hawk is hovering in the sky." Longfellow. YOL'SU FOLKS. Kelly's Receipt for Indian Cajte. I'll tell tou what I can make (and I'm ten years old). It is a love!y Indian cake, justjplendid to behold! "The t hildrtn cry for it," you know, because it Is so pood. They think it's even nicer than my mother's "Angel Food." And our little darling baby, O, she does like it so! She eats it wi'.h real cow's (not milkman's) milk, ). no. And l'il tell you tow to make it good, because I think That you'll be glad to have It plainly tola in printer's ink. You mix a pint of sweet corn meal dry, with as mm h of flour. And don't forget the salt. Of course there's plenty in the store. A cup of "sugar, if you like to have it nice and weet, Tbor.eh less for those who don't think that sugar's tit to tat. Tut papa 'and he knows a lol) declares that people should Be sweetened thronen and through at times, to seep them kind and good. Your cream of tartar you must ne of level spoonfuls, two. Of soda only one, and then the next thing yoa must do Is this, to stir in sweet milk, with eggs fresh as day. Atd a tablespoonlul of butter, melted (but not all away), Iben stir it about as thick as you make mush, and see If you and your family do not at once agree That it is just delicious! If not, I'm very sure That you must have dyspepsia which it is so hard to cure. And I'd pity you, indeed, for the dreadlul pain and ache. But it. ore than all because you could cot eat this lovely cuke C. II. Thayer, in Good Housekeeping. Carlo. Eflle S'iuier, in St. Nicholas for March 1 How well we all remember Carlo! He was a dear old do?, and belonged to Mr. Ilhodes, the constable of our town. Carlo always made a point of attending all the tires in the town. He could mount a ladder like a fireman, and well do I recollect the last of his adventures. It was toward evening on a holiday, and few people were in the place, as most of the citizens of the town were absent on a popular eicursion. I remember feeling sadly disappointed at baying to miss the eicursion myself. At about rive o'clock the belh in the churches bepan to rine very loud and fast; and Carlo, who had been lazily sleeping and watching the place, started up, and, with two or three expressive growls that summoned his mast er ran with all speed to the tire. . The dog was very busy and intelligent all the time, dragging down the stairs, with great speed and care, things of every description. As the last house was burning, the cry of a child was heard in the upper story. Of course it was out of the question for any one to get up and expect to come back; but Carlo could take in the situation at a glance. Knowing in his dog mind that the lirst stories were already in a blaze, he leaped up the ladder and jumped through the window. The tire and smoke soon drove him beck, but his master, who appeared at that moment, shouted to him to go in, and the people cheered. Whether he understood or not, he again entered the window, and when all hope of his return had been given up, a loud shöut announced his arrival. He was terribly burned, and fell before he reached the ground; still holding with wonderful firmness a little babe. The child did not prove to be greatly harmed; but Carlo's injuries were fatal. The brave dog received every care, but he died the next day. The Boy Backhand. Popular Science Monthly. His early years, as described in his mother's journal, reflected in minature his character in maturer life. For facts, especially of natural history, he had from childhood a most tenacious memory. At four years of age he began collecting specimens, and at seven be commenced a journal. Earlier than this, at two and a half years of a ?e, "he would have gone through all the natural history books in the Radcliffe Library without leaking an error in miscalling a parrot, a duck, a kingfisher, an owl or a vulture." "When he was four years old a clergyman brought to Dr. Luck Und, from a considerable distance, some "very curious fo83ils." They were shown to the child, who, not yet able to peak plainiy, said, "They are the vertebra: of an ichthyosaurus." At three ears of age bis mother could get him to learn nothing by rote. His mind was always at work on what he saw, and he was very impatient of doing that which was not manifest to his senses, yet he was not considered premature. He excelled ia apparently strong reasoning powers, and a most tenacious memory as to facts. He was always asking question?, and never forgot ' the answers he received if they were such as he could comprehend. And he was always wanting to see ererj thing done, or to know howit was done; and was never happy unless he could see the relation between cause and effect. At Winchester, he was known as "a boy utterly indifferent to personal appearance, but good-tempered ana eccentric, with a rmall museum in his sleeve or cupboard, an xtert hand in skinning badgers, rats, etc., "and also setting wires at Bine Gate, for cats." A school-fellow who slept in the next bed to him usf-d to observe him "to get up in the middle of the night, and designedly in halfdarkness carefully bind two fagot sticks together, for the purpose, as he said, of accustoming himself to be called up as a surgeon, hall , asleep, to do some professional duty under adverse circumstances." So we may follow him during bis four years at this school, extracting the poison-fangs from adders, dissecting cats, and even successfully attempting the eye of the warden's dead mastiff. With his good humor and spirits and his uniform amiability and obligingness, he became the most popular boy in the school. -Fond of Khool work he was not, but he did hia duty fairly, got through bis 'construes'
TWW IT (g
somehow, and ground the regulation grist of dreary Greek and 'Latin verse. Neither did he care for games." Toward the end of bis school days his anatomical studies enlarged their scope, and he undertook fragments of humanity, which he obtained secretly from the hospital and secretly disStcted. Of his life at Oxford, Dr. Liddon observes that there hung an odor of physical et ience about his brooms, "which increased as you got nearer. If you passed through the outer room into the study, you found the occupant surrounded by friends and playmates, irrational or hum'an, and deep in scientific investigation after his own fashion, which be it cbsf rved. wa3 as industrious as it wa3 irregular." His fellows did not then appreciate the reality or vaine of the work he was
jecgaged in, "or that he was in fact educating himself much Letter than most 01 us were doing." Baby Salmon. Youth's Companion. Bess, Lil, Nan and Greta stood at the corner wrapped snugly in their winter coatSj mitlens, leggins, and nice warm hoods. There comes an empty ice-s!d at last," cried Uess, pointing down the street. "It only has one horse," observed the tender-hearted Greta. "It is splendid sleighing, and all the way down hill to the poud. Besides, we don't weigh half as much as a .load of ice," argued Les.H. "Here comes Mr. Bridges' double team, right behind, and it is ever so much nicer," said Nan, the peacemaker. All this happened in a very little town, where everybody knows everybody else, so the teamster kindly stopped his horse as four little figures rushed into the road and began to clamber np behind. He was quite, willing to carry smb. a light load on his way back to the ice'-fields. "How did you ever think of such a lovely plan, Gertie?" asked Lil, clinging tightly to the side of the sled. "Oh ! I drove out to see them cut ice the other day, and the road goes right past tVe fish-house, you know. 1 happened to think what fun it would be for us to go in, this morning in school. That was what made me miss my spelling lesson," explained Greta. The fish-house, as Greta called it, was a long, low building, rented for the purpose of hatching salmon, with which the pond above had recently been stocked. i It was a tedious ride to the pond, but the girls chatted like magpies, until at last the new shingles of the hatching-house gleamed through the pines. "Thank you, Mr. Bridges!" chorused the four, as the sled stopped for them to get oö; and the driver promised to call for them on h's return. After walking across a little bridge, they timidly tried the first door in sight. It opened upon an unfinished stairway, so down they went. A long, low room stretched before them. At the opposite end sat a man reacMuga newspaper. "It's Mr. Iale!" whispered Lil, delighted. Jlr. Beale put down his paper, and came to meet the girl-. He would show them how things worked, or let them look around themselves, he said. It was agreed that after he had explained a few shiDgs to them they might take a tour of instction alone "The water from the pond runs in here," showing them a spout. "Then it flows through troughs on either side of the room, through strainers, then over and under the wire frames the eggs reit on." He stooped and lifted a cover. "How pretty!" said Nan. ' Such a lovelv color!" exclaimed Lil. "What are they?" asked Bess. "I guess eggs'.'' cried Greta. "Yts, they are salmon eggs,'' assented Mr. Beale. "Do yon see the tiny black spots in each? That's the fish." "Exactly salmon color," laughed Lil. "Did the color name the fish, or the fish name tie color?" "What is the white egg?" asked Nan, making pood use of her eyes. "That egg is spoiled," said Mr. Beale, taking it out with owe hand, and lifting a second cover with the other. "Ijook closely, and you will see the fish coiled up in the egg," he continued. Yes. there they were, plainly visible under the transparent shell. The back-bone was a slender black line, and a dot showed where the head would be. "Ugh! The nasty things! See them wriggle!" shuddered Greta. In the next row was something stranger yet. The eggs had become littte fishes baby salmon, Lil called them. The egg isn't all oir yet, is it?" inquired Nan. "Not quite," reblied Mr. JBeale. The little salmon-colored pouch on the under side is the yolk, and contains food for the fish until it is large enough and strong enough to get its own living. The sac is used up in a month or two, and then we put them in the iond.'' "Hew do they swim'" questioned Bess. "I can't see that they have a single fin." Mr. Beale laughed. "The 'single fin' that you don't see, is there, nevertheless. It surrounds the whole body and divides it at the proper time." What a gcod time those girls had. running Indian-rile in the narrow walks! What fun it was to hold their fingers under the gushing spout! . How proud they were when they found out all by themselves that the strainers were made to keep the eggs safe from frightened little fish which the swift water brought in. At last the time to go came. Mr. Beale completed their happiness by giving to each three of the pretty eggs placed in a tiny glass bottle, filled with water. 'Tot the eggs in a shallow dish, be sure to change the water every day, and you'll soon have some baby salmon of your own," were his last words. .Out of the dozen eggs nine healthy little fish were reared. After the tiny sac disappeared, the shallow dish failed to hold within bounds the restless little fish, which would jump out. So one day four little girls in solemn procession walked slowly to the brook with the three remaining fish, which by this time had all their fins, and were more than an inch long. " We are obi iged to In order to preserve their lives," Lil explained. All that summer nothing could persuade them to taste the tiniest morsel of aalmon, for, as Nan expressed it, "I wouldn't want to eat my fishes a bit more than I'd like to eat my dolls." O. C. S. The President' Forty-Ninth Birthday. "Washikgtojc, March 18. The President is forty-nine years of age to-day. Tnere was no celebration of the occasion at the White House, but this evening the President, accompanied by Miss Cleveland, Miss Van Vechten and Colonel and Mrs. Lamont, attended the "Mikado" performance by the Kmma Abbott Opera Company at the new National Theater. The Presidential party occupied a private box, and upon their entrance were warmly applauded by the audience. Horrible Accident. Special to the Sentinel. Tutos, Ind., March 1!). A gentleman named Ilains, sixty-five years bid, father of II. C. Ilains, fell backwark on a circular saw last evening about 6 o'clock at his son's mill, three miles northeast of this place. The saw cut through his back, ribs and into his lungs. He can not possibly recover. Ton Who Lead Sedentary Mves Will find preat relief from constipation, hfidache and nervousness, by taking Simmons Liver Regulator. It is a simple, harmless", vegetable compound, sure to relieve you, and can do no injury. Persons ot sedentary habits often suffer with kidney affections. If they would maintain the strength of the digestive organs and improve the quality of the blood by taking the Regulator it would restore the kidneys to health and vigor.
KNOTTY PROBLEMS.
Oar readers are rnvlted to furnish original enlarBaa, charades, riddles, rebuses and other "knotty rohiems." addressing all communications reiaive to this department to E. B. Chalbourn, Lewis on Maine. No. 1512. An Enigma. I hang beside the western gate, A seeming peri, shut from heaven. And hanging at its portal, wait, While then my light to earth is given; As if in pain, my being throbs. And burns and melts like liquid flame And men hare given my glorious form A half forgotten goddess' name. No. 1313. Palindromic Signs of Age. The "crowfoot" marks of age Sball aow our thoughts engage. The furrowed marks we seek, Time plows on age s cheek, Which round the mouth and eye, Or on the forehead lie. Alike to left or right. Two words in phrase we write; Two lines divergent run: Two streams converge to one. Those separate are begun; There lie 'neath Afric's sun. J. K. P. Baker. Mo. 1311. A Charade. Mv first, beneath the mould is hid; Hut enger anglers at the brook, W ill dig the wriggler from his home, And stick him on the fishing hook. My second's where the wildert dwell. And eke the sweet-breathed i.iink abides; And there the raccoon roam about And there the cunning opOodUin hides. My whole, U what, the poets say. The mourner drinks instead of wine; And 'tis no wonder that he mourns, For 'tis as bitter as quinine. JOK A0RT. No, 1515. A Doable Acrostic. If you will read my primala down, An animal they'll give: The finals then to you will show. Where it delights to live. 1. Most ladies like my first to get. '2. A town in France for this one let, 3. For this find out a Russian town. 4. And to break loose, you here put down. 5. "Tis the great question of the day. To tell if he is what they say. Adam Yoder, No. 151 0. An AnagraJU. "To copy poems' you must trace The lines upon the human face. For in such hues this art will find An index of its wearer's mind. J. K. P. B. No. 1517. A Carious Wheel in Cog. By a baek-scarf-weld, I appear firmly held, With my head to my heel. And I thus form a wheelIn fact I am seen -Two others between Whose motion I guide Toward the same side. Tho in cog I must be. Yet you'll recognize me. J. K. P. B. No. 1518. metaphysics Involved. In arms of father stretching wide, Two things are closely clasped iuside; A female bird the first we tee, A portent next of things to be. All as "appearances" are shown "Distinguished from their cause unknown," And the intrinsic substance lies Not in the mind or ears or eyes; And as in this no portent dire Is really found or bird or stre May not all things to miud or sense, Be but a fiction or pretense? And all men victims of their dreams Not of what is, but of what seems? JTlie March Prize. To the sender of the best lot of answers to the "Knotty Problems" of March will be awarded a very desirable and interesting book, finely printed and handsomely bound in cloth. Kach week's solutions should be mailed within six days after the date of the Sentinel containing the puzzles answered. February's Award. The best lot of answers to the "Knotty Problems" of February came from Maggie Bishop, Indianapolis, to whom the prize is awarded. The list of Alderman Carlyle, was nearly equal to the best, deserving "honorable mention." . Answers. -Hope. -Semitone.' -Imagination. -Peach, each, ache. HOT.-1500.-1501. i:02. 1503. -A Jbic I. I yran T. O. Jl ann E chio N. N ervi L. A rian A. -Tom Thumb. -A charade. 1504, 1305. DEATH OF A FAMOUS MURDERER The Imprisonment and Escape of William Howard Iiis Subsequent Career. During the summer of the year 1852, says the Louisville Commercial, this city was visited with a scourge of cholera, whick caused the death of hundreds of citizens. Ideas and energies turned to some means and care looking to disinfection. In tke following year everybody was anxious to cleans his premises and cause his neighbor to do (likewise. It was in June, 18-53, that William Howard, then a well-known auctioneer, entered the saloon of Henry Driehauss and requested that gentleman to purchase five cents worth of lime to sprinkle in a gutter about his place. Mr. Driehauss remarked that he already had a barrel of lime in his cellar, and suggested to Howard that he had been in the habit of sprinkling lime in his gutters, and expected to continue doing so. This retort brought about words between the two men, which resulted in Howard's making an assault upon Driehauss with a huge knife. The knife was sent three times to the heart, and the saloon ist was killed instantly. No tragedy that had ever preceded this caused half the excitement in Louisville as did this one. Howard was promptly arrested ; in fact, be made no effort to escape, but so great was the popular feeling against him that a change of quarters in jail was easily granted, but he was removed to the Oldham County Jail, at La Grange. While there he was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree, and a day was set for his execution. However, Howard broke jail and made good his escape, and charges of bribery were freely put against the jailer. This so worked on the latter's mind that in a few weeks after the escape committed suicide. The newspapers were filled with reports regarding Howard's escape from jail, and every effort was made to secure him, but without success. In the year 1859 a letter came to Mrs. Howard, whom he bad left behind, stating that he was located at Adelaide, Australia. It was afterward learned that after escaping from La Grange Jail he made his way to Brandenburg, Meade County, where he employed himself on a pair of floating coal-boats, which were bei a piloted to New Orleans by Mart Dickens, and worked as arordinary hand. After arriving at New Orleans Howard engaged in the crew of a sailing vessel and eventually laude 1 in Australia, where he re-embarked in the auction business. In the course of time it was learned that during his voyage from New Orleans to Adelaide he met and became infatuated with the wife of the vessel's purser. Finally hex husband abandoned her, and the result was a continued l?ison between the woman and Howard in trie city of Adelaide. She bore Howard two children, but one night, while he waa ont i n a drunken carousal, she entertained other company, and he, returning and finding her in a questionable attitude, plunged a knife through her heart. As Australia at that time was an asylum for thieves and murderers from all parts of the world, he wa3 tried by a jury of his peers and promptly acquitted. During all these, yean of Howard's residence in Adelaide he accumulated wealth with the same good fortune that had met him here. He saved a half million of dollars, and reports say that he became one of the most influential men In Australia. His
successes were such that he had no hesitancy in making the second alliance with a woman, and this one was acting as his wife when he died about a year ago. By this last woman, whom he claimed to be his wife, it is said that three children were born. One day last summer Mr. Thomas Howard, of this city, received a letter from an attorney at Adelaide, Informing him of his father's death, and that all relations herd were cut out of an inheritance in his estate by his will, which bequeathed all his property to the woman in Australia and his heirs in that country. Yesterday Tom Howard received a letter from one of the Australian claimants to Howard's estate, notifying him that the heirs over there expected to contest the claims of the American heirs to any right in this celebrated murderer's estate, and it in more than probable- that in due time the records of the lower courts will be filled with litigation that will follow the many romances set forth in this article.
SOCIAL, GOSSIP. Fell reverence, self knowledge, self-control, These three alone lead life to sovereign power. Tennyson. Failure, after long perseverance, is much grander than never having a striving good enough to be called a failure. George Kliot. Kew Jersey, New Hampshire, Nebraska and Massachusetts have laws prohibiting the selling or giving away of tobacco to minors. Sight hours is about right for other people to work, but the newspaper man will have to stick to his sixteen hours as usual. Chicago Inter-Ocean. tTse well the moment: what the hour Brings for thy use Is in thy power; And what thou best canst under , und, Is just the thing lies nearest to thy hand. Goethe. The damsels of the "New Century Guild" in New York, advertised to sew on buttons and mend clothes for gentlemen at cheap rares. One wedding has already resulted and several others are expected. Young men and young women who have got all the routine of fashion at their fingers' ends, and who would commit suicide before they would commit a solecism in dress or in the i'tiquet of fashionable life, are frequently guilty of degrees and forms of rudeness which would utterly taboo them if they moved in most of what they are pleased to regard as "the lower circles of society." A young lady of an epigrammatic turn has long endured the unsought and appreciated attentions of a young gentle dude so tall that when he goes to a masquarade he simply chalks his head and passes for a billard cue. In a melting hour the youth asked her if she could describe him in a siDgle phrase. Before be had time to takea fresh breath she informed him that to her mind he was "an attenuation accented with a mustache." He will live but looks wilted. Buffalo Courier. "I know a young boy who is being simply ruined in his education by his mother. He is eight years old, with all the noble instincts of probity and obedience which generally characterize a boy's nature. This tender parent has instructed him that whenever he gets on a car, the appearance of the conductor to collect the fare reduces his age under five. Last week a friend of the family was displaying his ii.terest in the child by inquiring his age. The little fellow hesitated for a moment, and then looked up at his mother. 'Mamma, is he a conductor?' 'No, child.' 'Then I am eight years old." Good Cheer. Lawrence Hutton, in Lippincott's, for March, has an interesting article on "The American Play." He begins with the assertion that the American play is yet to be written, and is unable to explain the absence of anything like a standard American drama and the non-existence of a single immortal American play. The lack of American plays, he notes. Is very remarkable in view of the fact that the Americans are a theatre-going people, and more journals devoted to dramatic a flairs are published in New York than in any European capital, except perhaps Taris, "During the single century of the American stage," Mr. Hutton continues, "not two-score plays of any description have appeared which have been truly American,. and which, at the same time, are of any value to dramatic literature or of any credit to the American name." The Springfield (Mass.) Republican savs: Superintendent J. J. R. Randall of the Rutland schools, started a scheme a month ago in the graded school district with the object of inducing the pupils to hord their spare pennies in the savings banks. It has worked so successfully that he makes public the scheme and its untold advantages. At the end of February f 195.50 thus gathered was deposited in a savings institution. When the roll has been called in each school room, any pupil who has an offering to make, cone es forward and gives it to the teacher, who credits it to the scholar. The savings bank will not take a sum under fifty cents, so when the day of depositing these various collections comes the teacher learns from the account book just how much each scholar has handed in, and those having over fifty cents, have their money salted down in the bank and are given each a bank-book with their account. The question of the disposal of the cash in bank or how long it shall lay there, is left altogether with tho pupil. The children, however, will be advised to let the funds remain in the bank at least during their school years. One of the results is related by the proprietor of a chair factory, whose chairs are mostly cane-seated by children out of school hours. Since the savings plan was started the children eagerly work much longer, and many who before were idle are hunting employment in his factory as well as elsewhere. IT WAS THE RIGHT HOUSE. But the Lost Brother Game Failed to Work. New York Star.1 A Westchester farmer was standing at his gate the other day, when a weary looking tramp came toiling up the road, and halted and asked: "Is jour name Simmons?" "Yes, sir." "And your wife, before ma'iriage, was a a-?" "One ot the Black girls, sir." "And her first name was Mary?" "No, sir, her name was and is Elizabeth." "Ah! So it is. But fourteen years is a long time how is my sister Elizabeth?" "Are you her long-lost brother?" "I am." "The one who w ent to Australia?" "The very same. Perhaps you have beard her speak of me?" "Yes, I have. She baa often spoken of you." "Ah ! the dear girl ! She will be so glad to see me again. And you, my noble brother-in-law, let us shake bands." They Rhook, "I I bad thought of stopping with you for for the winter," observed the wayfarer, with an anxious look. "Y-e s, I presume so," replied the farmer. "And my dear sister has spoken of me?" "She has. fche was expecting you this very day, and she asked me te stand at the gate and watch for you." "It is so kind of you." "And I am now about to give you the allfiredest pounding an old liar of a tramp ever got. That's what your dear Bister recommends!""I I believe I'm misti-Xen!" gasped the tramp. "It must be the ncit house!" "Oh, no; this is the houso, and here goes for you!" When the tramp finally got away, leaving the ground covered with shoe pegs, buttons. old hats, crusts of bread and. pieces of cold meat, be halted at a safe distance and shouted back: "Is my game an old one in this locality?" "Well, some one tries it on me about every day, ' replied the fanner. "All right. I'll try the next house with a recipe to make fireproof paint out of soft soap and brick dust. Much obliged for your potting me, and give my )ve to Libby dear!"
RELIGIOUS, INTELLIGENCE, AND INCIDENT.
fJod's Spirit falls on me as dew drops on a rose, If 1 but like a rose to him my heart unclose. A missionary writes from Ceylon that while on a short pleasure tour she addressed nineteen bands of hope. They are conducted the same as in America, and are doing much toward the education of the young on the subject of temperance. We barter life for pottsge: sell true bliss For wealth or power, lor pleasure or renown; Thus, Ksau-like, our Father s blessing miss. Then wash with fruitless tears ourfaded crown. Lord! I have tried how this thing or that thing will fit thy spirit. I can find nothing to rest on, for nothing here has any rest itself. Oh, Centre and Source of Light and Strength ! Ob, Fulness of all things! I come back and join myself to Thee! Arthur H. Hailam. The New York Observer says: "Itisonly too easy to misunderstand. When Bishop Bedell preached in St. George's church his memorial discourse of Dr. Tyng. many of his hearers were puzzled when the modest bishop Etemed to say: 'There were giants in those days; now they are nearly all gone only Lee and 1 are left.' His sermon, now printed, furnishes the explanation, for the bishop said, 'Only Lee and Dyer left.' " The American Church in the Via Nationale, at Rome, baa just been decorated with a stupendous Venetian mosaic of a cartoon of Burne Jones, representing Christ surrounded by the celestial company, as described by Isaiah Kzekiel and St. John. In the work, which measures 862 square feet, there are no fewer than sixty figures, some of them three yards high, while the reproduction of the grand coloring is regardet as a triumph of masaic art. The correspondent of an Eastern paper in giving a report of the recent annual meeting of the Connecticut Temperance Union and Humane Society says: "It is no wonder that a warm-hearted Christian minister gels stirred up once in a while. Dr. Lonmer, of Chicago, in a recent sermon on the power that Christians should possess, said that he wts poor enough, but if any members of Ids congregation were helping pay his salary with money received from rentirg buildings for rum-shops or worse places, he wanted them to keep their money, for he was not poor enough to take that." Religion cuts very little figure in the matrimonial allances of kings and queens ; that is, when they are not Catholics. If Christian IX. of Denmark, who is a Lutheran, in a few years hence should gather his family, including his son-in-laws, about him, he would have before him Lutherans English High church, Russian, Orthodox, Greek Catholics and Roman Catholics. The Earl of Cumberland is a Lutheran, the Prince of "Wales is a High churchman, the FJmpcror of Russia is a Russian Orthodox, the King of Greece is a Greek churchman and Prince Valdemar's children are to be Roman Catholics. Western Watchman. The Rev. J. L. Scudder, ot the First Congregational church of St. IVd, is reported as having this to say on a popular sport: "Tobogganing is a cheap and democratic diversion, and any one who can summon up the courage can take a whiz himself. It stirs his blood up mightily and makes every hair stand on end. By the the time he has reached the end of the slide and drawn his toboggan back again, he is in a warm and physically hilarious condition. He feels his youth coming back to bim again, and is suddenly seized with a desire to make some kind of frightful noise. Thank God! I say for tobogganing, that drives dull care away. God smiles upon such scenes as these, and if we are truly his children we can serve him as well by sitting on a toboggan as by kneeling on a hassock. Then let us go on and enjoy it, both in the name of health and the name of the Lord. The late Dr. Samuel Wolcolt, the eminent Congregationalist minister, in his later life wrote many hymns, and has left on record an account of how he began to do so. He was fifty-six years old, and had never put two ryines together, and had taken it for granted that ne was as incompetent to write a hymn, or even a stanza, as to work a miracle. "However," he says, "I resolved that I would try to write a hymn of five stanzas, and proceeded to plan it precisely as I would plan a seimon. 1 said, the first stanza shall lea recognition of God the Father; the second a recognition of Christ the Redeemer; the third a prayer to God the Father; the fifth shall blend the two in one address. . . . A more perfect recipe for wooden stanzas it would be difficult to frame." The result was the hymn beginning, "Father, I own Thy voice," arid the author was much surprised to find that he bad written what could actually be sung. Many of his hymns have become favorites throughout the country. The l)el of an Insane Mother. Cincinnati, March 18. A short time ago Esquire Bohrman, of Avondale, a suburb of Cincinnati, lost a suit involving $500. This so preyed upon the mind of his wife that it is supposed she became deranged. This morning Mr. Bohrman heard a noise in his bedroom, in which his two sons also slept, and' attempted to enter, but found the door locked. Everything becoming still, he did not at once force an entrance; but when he did get into the room he found his wife dead, with her throat cut with a razor; his son Albert, fourteen years old, also dead, with his throat cut, and another son, Arthur, severely if not fatally wounded, by a blow on the head with a hammer. Arthur was able to say that his mother came to him some tiiüe in the night and told him to go to sleep; that he did fall asleep, and was awakened by a blow on his head. He ran to the door and found it locked. He tried to remove the lock, but she struck him again: that he heard hia father at the door, but could rot give the alarm; and. then his mother killed herself, Ayer's Sarsaparilla will do aw7 with that tired feeling, and give you new life and energy. Better than gold to a man is a cheerful wife. But he must do his part toward making her cheerful. "The leprous distillment, whose effect Holds such an enmity with blood of man, That, swift as quicksilver, it courses through The natural gates and alleys of the body," and causes the skin to become "barked about, most lazarlike, with vile and loathsome crust." Such are the effects of diseased and morbid bile, the only antidote for which is to cleanse and regulate the liver an office admirably performed by Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery." HUMPHREYS' Manual of all Diseases, Byr.HriPHBEIS,.D. EfCHLT BOC5D ZS CLOTH and GOLD Mailed Free. LET 1 9 3 4 fi i .2 . .2 .25 .2J .2i Cry In s Colic, or Teething of Infants. Ilvaenterv. Gripinir, Bilious Uolio.. IMarrncaoi uimreu or auuiui....... t 'I. . 1 llArkiM. Vntnitinff ........ Coughs, Cold, lironchiti........ ........ euralCia, looiancuw, io.hiub..,m. Headache, bick HeadH;he, Vertigo.. HOMEOPATHIC UilioDB htomncb.. . 2j nr fain fill lArlnda. ay( 3 too Proine Periods . J i F.rvalpelafl, KrapUol b- 4S thenrestio Pafnaw. tH 9 KeverandA-'ne. ChiuMalaria.. file, nuno or oieeuinim n Itt urt iaw.....a..w.......... w erTOa IebUitT....""''i.-'t"'1'V(! I'rinarr Veknei, Wetting Red.... JM Dine aee of the Heart, Patpiut.oaul.00 711 lUu. H4B L) P E C I F I O G . Hold by Imrits, or sent pwtpiiid a receipt of mriemuiit SUMM' UBlUlüt tlW I 0 Bt, Utm
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P.HB1 When the weather grows warmer, that extreme tired feeling, want of appetite, dullness, languor, and lassitude, afflict almost the entire human family, and scrof.ula and other diseases caused by humors, manifest themselves with many. It Is Impossible to throw off this debility and expel humors from the blood without the aid of a reliable medicine like IIocJ's Sarsaparilla. " I could not sleep, and would get up in the morning with hardly life enough to get out of lied. I had no appetite, and my face would break out with pimples. I bought a bottle f Flood's Sarsaparilla. and soon began to sleep 6oundly; .could get up-ith-ut that tired and languid feeling, and rny appetite improved." Jl. A. SAK0KD,Kcr.t,O,"I had been ranch troubled by general debility. Last spring Hood's Sarsaparilla proved Just the thing needed. I derived an Immense amount of benefit. I never Celt better." II. F. Millet, Boston, Mass. - Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all drnppists. $1 ; six for J 3. Made only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar . STTEEB. wniwil rfc . -i BITTERS cures I; ALlDlSEASESCFIREj KIDNEYS STOMACH AND BOWELS. ALL DRUGGISTS rRICElC0llA3.j. Dyspepsia, General Debllltf Jauadioe, Habitual Conttlpa ' tloit I4ver Complaint Sick Headache Diseased Kid Beys, Et-o.t Etc. It contains only the Purest Drugs, amort which may be enumerated F2XZL7 AS3 8121 m:8zsuz3, virxizx, izzsi, czm, its, It cleanaea the system thoroughly, and as PURIFIER THE BLOOD I Uneqaaled. It ia not as Intoxicating beverage, nor car, It be used as auch, by reason of its Cathartic Properties. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO J Sole Proprietors, ST.iOUISJINO KANSAS CITY. Swift's Specific Is nature s own remedy, made from roots gathered from the forests of Georgia. The method by which it is made was obtained by a half-breed from the Creek Indians who inhabited a certain portion of Georgia, which was communicated U one Of the early settlers, and thus the formula has been handed down to the present day. The above cut represents the method of manufacture twenty years ago, bv Mr. C. T. Swift, one of the present proprietors. The demand has been gradually in creasing until a $100,000 laboratory is now necessary te supply the trade. A foreign demand has been created, and enlarged facilities will be neo essary to meet it This great Vegetable Blood Purifier CURES Cancer, Catarrh, Scrofola, Eczema, litre, Rheumatism, Blood Taint, hereditary or otherwise, without the use of Mercury or Potash. Books on "Contagions Blood raison" and on "Blood and Skin Diseases" mailed tree. For sale by all druggists. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. K.Y., 157 W. 23d St. PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH.-. Tb Original and Only Genuine. ?kfr u4 OvttTi BclUM. Brwtn f wHVU Imiutlocs. Mimlw'H LADIES. A all joar Uranlit fcf "( kkkMtrr'l EMBlLkP" aud U. ao otiter, or LwM . (tamp.) - particular in Ittur t retara aaali, NAME PAPER. C'hlehaMer CkemlcAl CVoM fcy Dra4aU Trrrvktr. Ask ft Thlchea tor's taallai" fcaaj rj si l'llla. ak a umc $t nnn kkwakd for ant case of IjUUU private disease, lpermaterea, Nervous Debility, Rheumatism, Syphilis, Scrotal etc., which DR. RICHAITS GOLDEN REMEDIES FAIL TO CUBE. No Mercury, no restriction of diet. Circulars sent Correspondence answered promptly. Ad dresa Dr. D. B. RICHARDS. No. ÜS Varick Street, ISewYork. Wenüon this oaoer &fkPrVrma. . waH a IU COT. Trial PSA" ?T0r. WARD & CO.. WllSUÄif BBC AT.
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Ii At no other season is the system so susceptible to the beneficial effects of a reliable tonie and invigorant. The imr-ure state of the blood, the deranged digestion, and the weak condition of the body, caused by Its long battle with the cold, wintry blasts, all call for the reviving, regulating and restoring Influences so happily and effectively combined in Hood's Sarsaparilla. " Hood's Sarsaparilla did me a great deal of good. I had no particular disease, but was tired out from overwork, and it toned me up." Mus. G. E. SmaiONS, Cohoes, N. Y. For seven years, spring and fall, I had scrofulous sores come out on my legs, and for two years was not free from them at all. I suffered very much. Last May I began taking nood's Sarsaparilla, and before I had taken two bottles, the sores healed and tH humor left me." C A. Absold, Arnold, Me. " There is no blood purifier equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla." E..S. Phelps, T-ochester, N.Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla' Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Made only by C. L HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses Ono Dollar
n n rTW"1. rr coia woaai, pans, ibzu. LLLLVii) IT ii OBo Favorite Numbers, 303, 404, 232.
351, 1 10, and his ether styles, eld throughout the World. Teellk &. Taylor, Attorneys lor Plaintiff, SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified opy of a decree to me directed, from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein Mary N. Dunlap et al. aro plaintiffs, and Arthur L. Wrifcht et al. are defendants, (case Jo. 30,00.-), requiring me to make the sum of one thousand one huudred and sixty dollars (Si, 100), with interest on said decree and cof-ts, I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, THE 10th DAY OP AFRIL, A. D. 1SS6. between the hours of 10 a. m. and A p. m., of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and proflu for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate, situate in Marion County, and State of Indiana, to-wit: Allot lot number niDe (91. in Robert' Patterson's subdivision of bloek number one (1), in the City of Indianapolis, Indiana, excepting seTen and one-half (7?) feet front off of the west side of lot number nine (9), previously conveved to F. M. Drown, more particularly described as follows: Coromenclnit at a point seven and onehalf (T,) feet northeast of the southwest corner of lot nine (9), running thence parallel with the line between lots nine (9) and tea (10) for thirty two (;"2) feet, and continuing on a straight line until it intersects the line between lots nine (9) and ten ( i0i, thence west and northwest with said line to Massachusetts avenue, thence with the line of Massachusetts avenue seven and one-half (') feet, to the place of beginning. Ji such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fecrsimple of said real estate, er so mueh thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement 'laws. GEORGE IL CARTER, Sheriff of Marion County. March 15, A. D.18S6. D. M. Bbadbcbv, Attorney tor Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of. a decree to me directed, from theClerkof the Superior Court of Marion County, Indiana, in a cause wherein George P. Bissell, Trustee, is plaintiff, and John Caveu et al. are defendants, (case Ko. 34,847), requiring me to make the sum ot seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-three dollars and eighty cents (S7,'J33 8D), with interest on said decree and costs. I will expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, ou SATURDAY, .THE 10th DAY OF A TEIL, A, V. 1SSC, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of faid day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana. the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven Tears, of the following real estate, situate in Marion County, and State of Indiana, to-wit: Block number one (1 . in Cven & Rock wood's East Woodlawn subdivision of said Caven fc Kockwood's subdivision of lots A, B, C, E and ,- of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad ComEany's snbdivit-ion of the east half and the north aifof the wer-t halt of the southeast quarter of section seTen (7), township fifteen (15), north of range four (4) east, (said BailroaJ Company's plat is recorded in Pint Book Ko. oneili, pape &i4. and the Caven & Rockwood plats in Plat Book No. seven (7), pages 28 and S7, in the Recorder's office of Marion County, Indiana). If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy nud decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said deeree, interest and costs, baid sale will te made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. GEORGE H. CARTER. Sheriff of Marion County. March IS. A.D.IKS6. O. B. Orton and Van Vorhis & Spencer, Attorney NOTICE. Probate Cause Ko. 1,117, Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of an order of the Marion Circuit Court 1 will sell at private sale, at the law office of Van Vorhis b Spencer, in Boston Block. Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, on Tuesday, the 30th day of March, 1N6, lor not less than iti full appraised value, one-third cash, one-third in six and one-third in twelve months from date of sale, purchaser giving bankable notes with mortgage security, the following real estate bei od ging to the estate ot Thomas Bair, situated in said county and State, to-wit: Lot five (5), in Athon fc Elliott's subdivision of block one (1), in eutlotone hundred and fiftyeight Of), in the city of Indianapolis, a recorded in Plat Book Ko. one (1), at page 199, io the Recorder's office of said county; also, the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section one (1), township sixteen (16) north, range two (2) east; also all that part of the southeast Quarter of the southwest quarter of said section lying south and west ot the White River and Big Eagle Creek Gravel Road, and if not sold on said day the sale Will be continued from day to day until sold. SAUNDERS HOLLIN GS WORTH, Adminif tratcr oi üie ecUte of Thomas Bair, deceased. February 10, 188. IF YOU WANT TO KNOW 1,001 Important thinrs yen ievr knew or thongnt cf a boot the ha man body and its enrioua orrana. Jioui UeUprrptvaird, heattKtarfddtteaff induced Mow to avoid pttalli ignorance and indacrtixon Mote to awly Home-Curt to all form of Mote to eure Croups AA fvea, Jtupture, fkimorit, tte U array Bill Pab.Co.; uEZasth SWaAcv Xork. A NEW FRO CESS. Eendrlcks'i Patent Elec tric Soft Pad Truss and Treatment Cures Rupture! In SO to 90 days without the tse of knife. We guarantee a cure of all accented cases or money refunded, and in addition will forfeit ' 11 00 if we fail to cure. Our treatment cures about 95 per cent of all cases; docs not pre vent attending to business. We also guarantee to retain all cases red urable. Hydrocele and Varicocele successfully treated. For circulars and terms address DR. HENDRICKS, FURNAS fc CO. 79 East Market Street Indianapolis Ind acriar u all elk era tCatkrtf!. Dontwast mooey on warlklrsa BOOther AbaUtly lar.llalr. i-j-UcuUia(Vrlj WILCOX MÜH C Al. OO. raUAdUalA, J'ttib MANHOOD, TOUTTLFTL IMprudenee, Nervous Debility cured by Botanic Nerve Bitte rs 60c. Hero Med. Co., Phila., pa Sold by Indianapoua Druggists,
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