Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 September 1889 — Page 7

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 25. 1889.

VOICES GF TUE STREETS.

HUMAN TIDES THAT EBB AND FLOW. Xr. Talmas' Mnnon-Work Sane to th DrammlDZ of Mill od tu Fifing or Meam Whistlei A Great Field 0i For Charity. The Rey T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D.t preachs 7 the tabernacle last Sunday to a vast congregation on "The City Streets." His text was: "Wi? lcru crieth without; ehe uttet.-th !icr voice in the streets." Proverbs, i. 20. lie taid: We are ull ready to lieten to the voices cf nature, the voices of the mountain, the voices of the eea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the etar. As in some o the cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at either end of the building, and the one instrument responds musically to the other, eo in the great cathedral of nature day re6j onJj to day, and night to night, and flower to flower, and star to star, in the greid; harmonies of the universe.- The ing time ia an evangelist in blossoms a . a aching of God's love; and the winter (. .-, j.. o . VI -11 J 4 hJWa to the voices of nature; but how few of us learn anything from the voices of th noisy and dusty street. You go to your merchandise, and your mechanism, and to your work and you comeback again and cften with an indifferent heart you pass thioughjthe streets. Are there no things for us to learn from these pavements ove which we pass? Are there no tufts ot truti? irrowing up between these cobblestones, Leaten with the feet of toil, and pain, end pi -a.are, the slow tread of old age, and the qu;k step of childhood? Aye, there are treat harvests to be reaped, and now I trust in the sickle because the harvest is ripe. " Wisdom crieth without; Ehe uttereth her voice in the streets." In the first place the street impresses me with the fact that this life is a scene of toil and struggle. JJy 10 o'clock every day the city is jarring with wheels, and shuttling with feet, and humming with voices, and covered with the breath of smoke-stacks, and a-rush with traffickers. Once in aw hile you find a man going along with fold' d arms and with leisurely step, as thotich he had nothing to do; but, for the most part, as you find men going down tliei-ft streets on the way to business there is anxiety in their faces, as though they had some errand which must be executed t the first possible moment. You tire Jostled by those who have bargains to make and notes to sell. I'p this ladder with a hod of bricks, out of tins bank with a roll of bills, on this dray with a loud of good?, digging a cellar, or shincling a roof, or shoeing a horse, or building a wall, or mendine a watch, or binding a book. Industry, with her thousand arms, and thousand eyes, and thousand feet, goes on rinerinc her Kong of work! work !" work ! while the mills drnm it and the steam whistles fife it. All this is not because men love toil. Some one remarked: "Every man is as lazy as hecan afford to be." But it is because necessity, with stern brow and with uplifted whip, f-tands over thera ready whenever they relax their toil, to make their shoulders sting with the lash. Can it be that, passing up and down these streets on your way to work and business, vou do not learn anything of the world's toil and anxiety and struggle? Oh! how many drooping hearts, how many eyes on the watch, how many miles traveled, how many burdens carried, how many losses suffered, how many battles fought, how many victories gained, how many defeats suff ered, how many exasperations endured what losses, what hunger, what wretchedness, what pallor, what disease, what a'ony, what despair! Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of the street as the multitude went hither and won, and it has seemed to be a creat pantocaine, and as I looked upon it my heart broke. This great tide of human life that goes down the street is a rapid, tossed and turned aide, and daf hing ahead and driven hack beautiful in its confusion and confused in its beauty. In the carpeted aisles of the forest, in the woods from which the eternal shadow is never lifted, on the shore of the sea over whose iron coast tosses the tangled foam, sprinkling the cracked clills with a baptism oi whirlwind and tempest, is the best Dlace to study God ; but iu the rushing, swarming, raving street is the best place to study man. Going down to your pl.ice of business and coming home äcain, I charge you look about see these signs of poverty, of wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereavement and as you go through the streets, and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all the losses, all the Buffering, all the liereavements of those whuin you pass, and present them in prayer before an all-sympathetic lod. Again, the street impresses me with the fact that all classes and conditions of society must commingle. We sometimes cultivate a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect despises ignorance, ltelinement will have nothing to do with boorishness. Gloves batet he sun-burned hand, and the high forehead despises the flat head, and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to do with the wild copsewood, and Athens hates Nazareth. This oujrht not to be so. The astronomer must come down from his starry revvlry and help us in our navigation. The surgeon must come away from hia study of the human organism and set our broken bones. The chemist must come away from his laboratory, where he has been studying analysis and synthesis, and help us to understand the nature of the soils. I bless God that all classes are compelled to meet on the street. The irlit- : i. i. ,1 - : t v illhi Luaiu nucri lio-iuw akaiuiti, liiu a veneer s cart. fine rows run against a peddler's pack. Kobust health meets an sickness. Honesty confronts fraud. Every class of people meets every other rlass. Independence and modesty, pride and humanity, purity and beastliness, frankness and hypocrisy, meeting on the same block, in the same street, in the same citv. Oh! that is what Solomon meant when he said: "The rich and the poor meet together ; the Lord is the maker oi them all." I like this democratic principle of the gospel of Jesua Christ which recognizes the fact that we stand before God on one and the 6ame platform. Do not take ou any airs; whatever position vou have gained in society, yon are nothing but a roan, born of the same parent, regenerated by the same spirit, cleansed by the same blood, to lie down in the pame dust, to tret up in the same resurrection. It is high time that we all acknowledged not only the fatherhood of God, but the brotherhood of man. Again, the street impresses me' with the fart that life is full of pretensions and ham. What subterfuge, what double dealing, what two-facedness! Do all the people who wish you a good morninar realiy hope for you a happy day? Do all the people who shake hands love each othfr? Are all those anxious al out your beaith who inquire concerning it? Doall want to see you who ask you to call? j. all the world know half as much as it pretends to know? Is there not many a wretched stock of jroo&s with a brilliant show window? Passing up and down thefc-s streets to your business and your work, are you not impressed with the fact that much of society is hollow, and that there are subterfuges and pretensions? Oa! how many there aro who swaer

and strut, and how lew people who are natural and walk. While fops simper, and fools chuckle, and simpletons giggle, how few people are natural and laugh. The courtesan and the libertine go down the street in beautiful apparel, while within the heart there are volcanoes of passion consuming their life away. I say these things not to create in you incredulity and misanthropy, nor do I forget there are thousands of people a great deal better th;n they seem ; but I do not think any man is prepared for the conflict of this lifo until he knows this particular peril, Ehud comes pretending to pay his tax to King Eglou, and while he stands in front of the kinyr stabs him throusrh with a dagger until the haft went iu after the bhule. Judas Iscariot kissed Christ. Again, the street impresses me with the fact that it is a great field for Christian charity. There are hunger and suffering and want and wretchedness in the country; but these evils chiefly congregate in our great cities. On every street crimo prowls, and drunkenness stagers, and shame winks, and pauperism thrusts out its hand asking for alms. Here want is most squalid and hunger is most lean. A Christian man, going along a street in New York, saw a poor lad, and he stopped and said: "My boy, do you know bow to read and write?" The boy made no answer. The man asked the question twice and thrice: ,;Cau you read and write?" and then the boy answered with a tear plashing on the back of his hand. He said in defiance: "No, sir; I can't read nor write neither. God, sir, don't want me to read and write. Didn't he take away my father 60 long ago I never remember to have seen him? and haven't I had to go along the street to tret something to fetch home to eat for the folks? and didn't I, as soon as I could carry a basket, have to go out and pick up cinders, and never have no schooling, sir? God don't want me to read, sir. I can't read nor write neither!'' Oh, these poor wanderers! They have no chacce. Born in degradation, as they get up from their hands and knees to walk, they take their first step on the road to despair. Let us go forth in the name of the Ixrd Jesus Christ to rescue them. If you are not willing to go forth yourself then give up your means ; and if you are too lazy to go, and if you are too stingv to help, then get out of the way, and hide yourself in the dens and caves of the earth, lest, when Christ's chariot comes along, the horses' hoofs trample you into the mire. Beware lest the thousands of the destitute of your city, in the last front day, rise up and curse vour stupidity and your neglect. One cold winter's day as a Christian man was going along the battery in New York he saw a little girl seated at the gate, shivering in the cold. He said to her: "My child, what do you sit there for, this cold day?" "Oh," she replied. "I am waiting I am waiting for somebody to come and take care of me." "Why," said the man, "what makes you think anybody will come and take care of you?" "Oh," she said, "ray mother died" last week and I was crying very much, and she said: 'Don't erj-, mv dear; though I am gone, and your father is gone, tho Lord will tend "sornelody to take care of you.' My mother never told a lie; she said some one would come and take care of me, and I am waiting for them to come." Oh, yes, they are waiting for you. Men of great hearts, gather them in, gather them in. It is not the will of your heavenly Father that one of these little ones should perish. Lastly, the street impresses me with the fact that all the people are looking forward. 1 see expectancy written on almost every face I meet between here and Brooklyn bringe, or walking the whole length of Broadway. Where you find a thousand people walking straight on, you only find one man stopping and looking back. The fact is, God made us all to look ahead because we are immortal. In this tramp of the multitude on the streets I hear the tramp of a great host, marching and marching for eternity. Beyond the office, the 6tore, the shop, the street, there is a world, populous and tremendous. Through God's grace may you reach that blessed place. A great throng fills those boulevards and the streets are a-rush with the chariots of conquerors. The inhabitants go up and down, but they never weep and they never toil. A river flows through that city with rounded and luxuriant banks, and trees of life, laden with everlasting fruitage, bend their branches to dip the crystal. No plumed hearse rattles over the pavement, for they are never sick. With immortal health glowing in every vein they know not how to die. Those towers of strength, those palaces of beauty, gleam in the light of a sun that never sets. Oh, heaven, beautiful heaven ! Heaven, where our friend are. They take no census in that city, for it is inhabited by "a multitude which no man can number." Bank above rank. Host above host. Gallery above gallery, sweeping all around the heavens. Thousands of thousands. Millions oi millions. Blessed are they who enter in through the gate of that city. )h, start for it to-day. Through the blood of the srreat sacrifice of the Son of God take up your march to heaven. "The spirit and the bride say come, and whosoever will let him come and take up the water of life freely." Join this great throng marching heavenward. All tho doors of invitation are open. "And I saw twelve gates and there were twelve pearls." THE WEEK'S NEWS.

The kin? of Tortuzal is very ill. Spain is to build a cable to Porto Rico. Fort Wayne, Ind., now has natural pas. vVomen will be allowed to vote in Wyoming. Maj. Warner will not accept the pension comniishionership. Heavy rains have extinguished the forest fires in Oregon. A Russian officer predict war between Russia and Austria. Jadz Edward Lewis died suddenly at St. Louis, Saturday. The new dry-dock at Norfolk, Vs., has been formally opened. Two men were killed at a railway crossing near Chicago Thursday. A saloon-keeper at Dupont., O., was whipped by White Caps Saturday. Th sultan of Zanzibar has decreed abolition of slavery after No?eiuber. The loni? strike at the Columbia (Ga.) rolling mills has been declared ort". Tuey Gwok Ying, the new Chinese minister, Las arrived at San Francisco. The Ohio democratic campaign will be formally opened at Waverly Oct 1. Samuel Murray was shot and killed last Friday by his son, at Louisiana, Mo. A child was killed by falling slate iu a coal mine near Ironton, O., last Friday. George H. Sheldon was arrested at Columbus, O., Saturday, on t charge of forgery. General llosecrans has been reelected president of the aroiy of the Cumberland. The Ohio, Indiana A Western railroad will hereafter be part of the Big Four system. Clara I'latz was convicted Friday at St. Fault Minn., of the murder of John Dougherty. Two women held up B. F. Kauial in Cincinnati, Friday nifht, and robbed him of 18U. Large numbers of Chinese are landing at San Francisco in spite of the exclusion act. The increase in the French array has aroused the interest of the military authorities at Berlin. Ten thousand dollars was stolen in a mysterious manner from a i'acilic express car last Friday. Military writers are of the opinion that there is a strong probability of a general Kuroptau war. Preparations are being made for a vigorous agitation of the control of the London police force. The movement in opposition to the Liverpool cotton corner is assuming lormidable proportions. At Ripley, O., Saturday, a colored man named Frey assaulted John P. Parker with a dirk. After his trrcst bo atlackc J the jailer, cjcapei.

and was recaptured after being shot down by otlioers. The work of dieting out the victims of the Quebec wreck continues, but many are still buried. Bishop Fowler denies predicting a war with China in ten years, but 6ays something very similar. The engagement of Margaret of Prussia to the crown prince of Denmark is lemi-ollicially reported. A fourteen-year-old boy fatally shot himself with a Flobert rifle at Lexington, Ky., last Saturday. The total number of persons drowned in the Japanese Moods, Aug. 20, is estimated at ten thousand. The atnonnt already subscribed as a guarantee fund for the Chicago world's fa r is over Sacrilegious thieves robbed the poor-box in St. Columbia's catholic church at Youngstown, O., Sunday. Two Chinese highbinders are under arrest in Knnsu City. A murder conspiracy is at the bottom of it. Suit has been brought to compel the railroads Iu Waco, Tex., to build passenger and freight depots there. Trof. George II. Cook, state geologist of New Jersey, died at RutgerV college Sunday of heart failure. Thomas Brown was hanged at Moorhend, Minn., for the murder of a policeman earned i'oull, Friday. John Lister, jr., the son of a Chicago millionaire, has been convicted, at Duluth, Minn., of grand larceny. Louis Westergren of Rockford, 111., dressed himself in his best clothes last week and then killed himself. A Chicago police officer arrested a girl Saturday, one of a gaDg of thieves directed by a woman to steal. Dick Gannon was arrested at Wichita, Kas., Friday, ou his own confession, for the murder of his stepfather. Chauncey M. Depew has been chosen chairman of the legislative committee of the New York world's fair. P. M. Matthews, a prominent and wealthy St. Bau I man, died in an opium joint at Butte, Mont, last Friday. The Cranburne clnb of London was raided Saturday night and thirty-five arrests were made for gambling. An old farmer named Avres committed suicide, near 1 1 illsboro, O., Friday by hanging himself in his barn. Three men were sentenced at Portland, Ore., Friday, to terms in the penitentiary aggregating eighty-nine years. The officials of the Mr Donough county (111.) fair have been indicted for permitting gambling on the grounds. A little three-year-old child has been murdered at Rosalia, Kas., and a man and woman may be lynched for iL The Cincinnati, Washington fc Baltimore railroad has been sold to Ldward IU Bacon and associates for f,000,(KX). An engineer on the Wabash has had a warrant sworn out against him for murder, for running over a deaf mute. It is now said that the Northern Pacific has outwitted its Canadian rival and seoured the Northern Central charter. A passenger train was derailed near Leon, Kas., by spreading rails Thursday. One was killed and a number injured. I'd Aliearn, who is charged with killing Thomas B. Jackson in a prire rijjht at St. Louis, was bound over without bail. The Iron Mountain has been sued by insurance companies to recover $S0,0G0 for a loss paid on cotton at Little Rock. Mary Humphreys was found dead Suuday in the earrct of a tenement-house at Columbus, O. She had died of starvation. Considerable damage, but no loss of life, resulted from the bursting of a large dam at Springton Forge, Pa., last week. P. S. Deputy Marshal Eugene Byers was jailed at Birmingham, Ala,, Friday, for the murder of a negro named Ware. Consul Gen. Kdwards at Berlin charges that German dealers are in a combine with Americans to under invoice merchandise. President Ingalls of the Big Four is in New York. He says the purchase of the O., I. dc V, railroad is only a question of time. The body of John Briody, an old soldier, was fonnd in Frink run, near Mooresville, O., Tuesday. There are suspicions of foul play. A New York jewelry dealer has been sued in Chicago for $ 10,0J for mistreating the wife of a salesman unavoidably kept on the road. The French conservatives are said to have changed in their attitude toward the republic because the people are not found against it. John Allen and E. H. Piatt, who left New York May It to cross the continent on horseback, arrived at San Francisco Saturday evening. Amas ITardman surrendered to the authorities at Marion, Ind., Saturday, claiming to have shot Robert Shaw at New Lisbon, O., last June. At Phillipsburg, Pa.. Sunday, Seely Hopkins shot his wile and mother-in-law fatally, and then made an unsuccessful attempt to kill himself. John Alexander, a prominent oil well contractor at Washington, Pa., committed suicide Saturday by shooting himself in tha head with a revolver. Near Harrodsburg, Ky., last Wednesday, John Conipton shot and killed William Gregory, whom he suspected of undue intimacy with his wife. The attention of the masonio fraternity has been brought to the mysterious disappearance of John A. Greenlee, a prominent mason of Kearney, Neb. A deputy U. S. collector unexpectedly appeared at Guthrie, I. T., last Saturday and arrested twenty-two liquor sellers, such sales being prohibited. A woman named Addie Wilson is in jail at Menaeha. Wis., for atten pting to entice three young girls from home tor shameful purposes at Republic Mich. Henry F. Schmidt, jr., of Cincinnati, the defaulting ex-treasurer of the Jewel building association, who skipped out several weeks ago, has been captured. C. G. Sayle has been granted letters of administration upon the estate of David S. Terry, lately killed by Marshal Nagle. The estate is valued at about 100,000. The trial of Mrs. Robert Ray Hamilton, for stabbing her child's nurse, Mary Donnelly, at May's Landing, X. J., ended Thursday, the jury finding Mrs. Hamilton guilty. Mrs. Robert Kay Hamilton, on trial at Mays Landing. N. J., for stabbing her child's nure, Msry Donnelly, has been convicted and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. The yacht Leo was lost last week in a storm on l.ake Erie, and seven persons were drowned. Two of the bodies have been recovered, and a vigorous search is being made for the other victims. The shortage of the revenue collector at Richmond, Va., is abont $K),'XiO. Owing to the failure of the auditor to make his annual report, the bondsmen will not be required to to make good the loss. During the absence of t,c cashier Friday nicht a bank at Hurley, Wis., was robbed of $10,000. The money was left with the bank by the U. S. express company, which will suffer the loss, as the funds were not regularly on deposit with the bank. A young man giving his name as Robert J West, and claiming to live in Chattanooga Tenn., was arrested at New York, Saturday, on a charge of presenting forged orders on the Goodyear rubber company. Harvey Gurley, whose wife is in the Joliet penitentiary for the abduction of little Annie Redmond of Chicago, concluded to take unto himself another wife, law to the contrary notwithstanding, and has been sentenced to three years in the Wisconsin penitentiary. C. P. Huntington, the American railway magnate, who is now in Paris, denies the sensational story that he went there to break oä" his daughter's engagement with Prince Hartzfeldt, which, he says, never existed. He thinks the prince a pretty good young man as young men go nowadays and doesn't know what his future relations with the Huntington family may be. At the close of the week there was fair business in produce circles. Wheat was in better supply and easier. Corn was dull, with a declining tendency, and oats were withoiTt much change. Flour was in good demand and firm. Sugar wts weaker, but collee firm. Dairy products were unchanged. In bankin? circles the demand for money was moderate, and the discount market easy. Eastern exchange was strong. Sfrlin? exchange was lower. The New York bank statement shows a large decrease in all iteuis, and the reserve is only a fraction above the leal requirement. Are you weak and weary, overworked and tired? Hood's Sarsaparilla is just the medicine ti purify jour Ihnei ua J fivd you straaii.

IN THE WORLD OF TRADE GRAIN. Local receipt' show 43 cars insferteu the psst twenty-four hourf, sgainst 31 ar inspected the preceding day. Wheat A small but strong demand maintains firm prices. Xo. 2 red, 77c; Xo. i red, 7273c; rejected, C4c f.r oor up t Tie for choico csinfles, the ruling tigures being 5f?iC7c; fent.. 77c; U-t., 76-jc. Grn Ileocipt' are light, and tho deoiand is limited. No. 1 white, $:V.c; No. 2 whit?, :3c; No. 3 whito, :2-yiXc: No. yellow, 3-'c: .so. a yellow, .".IV.jc; Xo.2 mixed, ,.;:j',e; So. a mixed, 3i'c; car, Oats ORrrin" continue More frp. sn.-l nrii'i are

barely steady. No. trhiic, ."Äl'oi;; No. 3 whi 2 1 ?-... sales and bid; No. "mixed, 2c; rejected, 17'jlc; iiniii-ri'liantiihV, 1 1'.i Bran Lu al d":il.T aro bidding S:'"; shinpers Viddine, 7.7-V-s. llav There i a fair demand for choiee and No. 1 timothv: otiier kindt reil tt'uwlr; thuuthv, choice, SH.M; x.i. 1. illf.il I. .'.; No. 2'fa.,; l'riiirie, Xo. 1, 57(jS.KJ. Mra, i-lperton. tirain In Stove Heyt. 23,1889.

Wheat, j torn. Oats, j liye. i:ieator A. lf7.55n j 3,77. Kitvator II Ol,.'.1 9.412 10,474' Capital rievatnr... 4,('l l.i' o.ihhi I.,I. AW.Klerator S.oooj 3'i,(Xi(V 8,iss)'...!.!.U". Totnl j 2tK3i!)! 40.412' 24,71:' Cor. day Iat year..! M7.&03' O.H A .r , 1 i 47'J

INDIANAPOLIS WHOLESALE MARKET. The Provision Market. fMOKID MEATS. Below sre ths present lolblnz prices: "llelial.le" brand-Sugar-vured hsma 2S lbs. arerage, atoek exhausted 2J', lbs. BTwatr, stock exhausted 2 lbs. areraj-a lr 17 lbs. arerms 11 15 lbs. average -llV. li lbs. average -..n1. Boneless him California hams loto 14 lbs. average 6 KnK'lish breakfast bacon, clear Jl Knglih houlders 12 lbs average .. 7 1(5 lbs aeraga... Pried beef hams io Bejf tongues 40' Bacon Clear sk'es, 29 lbs. average.. Clear nies. 4ö lbs. storage " Clear bellies, 13 lbs. average. 7' C lear bellies, 20 lbs. average 7'J Clear tucks, M lbs. average . . (' ' Clear backs. 20 lbs. average 6;, "Porter" brand, rholc sugar-cured meat Breakfast bacon, clear .. 91g K. Y. cut shoulders. 10 to 11 lbs ar rage .yj "Morgan 4 tirey" brand Hams of this brand in limit -d sunplv. Sugar-cnrrd bsnti, V-fi less than price of "Railsl e;" English shouldors, 4o less than tha prios of "r-elisbls." ' Bonsless ham g English breakfast bacon- jo lmcd beef hams g Bologna -skin, larse or small, 6c; olotb. 6c I. 8. sd J Pickled Meats tnirllsb cured clear sides, English cured clear bellies, Kngtish cured clear backs, Jic less than smoked. Bean pork, (clear), per bbl., 200 lbs 514 .r-0 Ham ai.d rump pork, per bbl.. 200 lbs .. i 00 Also in ona-balf bbls., containing 1W lbs., at half the pre of ths barrels, adding 50c to cover additional cost of package. Corned Beef, boneless rolled, in one-half bbls, 100 lbs., $7.00. Lard Pore kettle-rendered, winter. In tierces, TJic; pure kettle rendered, summer, In tierces, "Jo; also in tu hi of R3 lbs. net, saiU4 price as tlerov half barrels, 'io advance on price of tiercos; 60-poind cans in 100-nound cases, Jo ad vanes on price of tierces; 20-notin.l cans in 80-pound cases, i sdvsüceon price of tierces; 10-pound cans In 60-nound rape, yic advance on prico of tierces; 6-pound cans In So-pound cases, advance on price of tiercos; 8-round cans In 0-pound caies, c advance on price of tierces. "Central" brand pnre family lard. In tieirces... &t "Martin" brand refined lard, In tierces , Also In tubs of M Us. net, same price as tierces; 50-Kund, 20-pound and 10-pound cans, at usual advance. No smaller than 10-lb cans of "Central" or "Martin." Frh Meats Tenderloins. U are ribs 5 Sausaao Link 8 Bulk, in 20 lb. pails. 1Yt Trimmings. 6 Groceries. Sugars Tlard, S-Vrt 'c; confectioners' A, (fi-ic; ort A, S'taHc; coite A, s'.tfiSc; white'extra C, tö.c; extra C, 7 '(77.c; good yellow, 7,'ofJ 7J4CJ fair yellow, 7373,0; yollow. 7!4u Coi'.ee Common to goo.l, 1!' ac; prim to choice, 2J('i'J4c; fancv, '216v; gnldnn B!o, 2.'V.(t27V'c: Java. 2SV4 i-il)- Haaner package, 23'c; Schnull A Co. "s standard, We; ArbucklVs, ZVAc ISUrcb--llefined jearl, '$i't'c per pound; chmuf lion gloss, lrii3!b packages, lnl4r' champion gloss ump, 8 jt4c; improved coro. S7e. Miscellaneous Rice, 656Vjje; coal oil, '4'(ll4o. Beans, navy, ?Z4Vi'CJ.50; medium, JZ4 rjj,2.M; marrowfat, f2.f0 a2.V5. Canned goods B'arkiierrles, HA I 9c; peaches, 8 IT, 9i. 25;J2..W; pets, ?1 f. 30; salmon, lb, 81.9Wft2.2A: tomatoes, 3 lbs, SliJI.lu; sugsr coru, S0c(aJI.60. Raisins California, London layers, new, Jf2..'0rt42.75 per box; Muscatel double crown, new, fi.6D($2. Prunei, old, 435& Currants, 6dt7yA Molasses New Orleans (new crop), SOlAe; medium sirups, 2 .Jt30c ; choice 354 to. 8alt In car lots, 7c; small lots, 9.Vfl. Spices Feppt-r, 1920c; allspice, 1213c; cloves, 2630c; cassia, 10312c; nutmegs, 753S0C por pound. Fruits and Vegetables. Grapes At better supply; 10-pound baskets, Concords, 2-H3"Oe; lelawares,"4"fVt.'i0c. Sweet Potatoes Baltimore, 82.75(3,3; Jerseys, 3..V)f(S4 per bbL Pot,;toea Sl.lOfrjl.25 per brl. Pears $10033.50; choice Bartlctt, 4.50(55 per bbl. lemons SfiiT.SO for cboioo to fancy. Cranlerries Cape Cod, I2.75f7i3 p.r bushel boxes; $,rs.fin per bbl. Peaches Fresh ripe stock very firm, 40;$'0e; fancy, 9oc3?l per ) bushel boxes. Nutmec Melons Indiana, 81. 231.00 per bid. Watermelons Market weak; sales, 810312 per 100. Bananas 5Wdifl.75 per bunch. Tomatoes Home grown, 2A30o per bu. 8iu;whes S i(540c per dor. Cslery 20330c. Poultry snd Produce Market. Foultry liens, r3lc; spring chickens, 8fv, roosters. So; turkeys, toms. 6c; hons, Oc; geese, full feathered, SR.fO per doe. ; durks. 6c Butter ltecelpts ar fair. JJealers are bidding for choice 9'310c; common poor, ."Sgile. Efs Candled, per dozen, lAc. Feathers Prima goese, 35iJ38c per lb. ; duck and mixed, 20"12"3 per lb. lloney New noney, white comb, 17313o Per lb. TiVool. Msrk.H strong. We quote farm lots tub washed and picked, JUc; unwashed and medium and common grades, if In good order, 2V; nnwahel fine, 17(a2uc; burry and cot ted. according to their value. LIVE STOCK MARKET. Usioiv tSToric Yards, Indianapolis, Sept. 23, 1S39. f CaTTi Receipts, light Market steady on all choice grades of both shippers' and butcher' cattle at quotations. Common grades, dull and slow. Farfiy export 3 4 2534 80 Choice shipping steers of 1,400 to l,t'00 pounds 4 1534 2 Good shipping steers of 1,100 to 1.S-0 pctnds 3 "534 00 Fair shipping steers of I.IXH) to 1.2o) pounds S 6Ck, 75 Fair atockers and feeders of (too to 1,004 pounds 9 503 25 rrime heifers 2 7.1..43 00 Fair to good heifers 2 Pm.tJ 7 Prime butcher cows 'I Tti 75 Fair to good butchercows 1 7.Vfi IS Common cows... .. 1 t0f,l AO Prime besvv bull 2 Oo.ti i3 Fsir to good bulls I 50-2 Ver.ls 2 00 3 60 Milch cows, calves and springers. 15 00315 00 lloos Receipts, light. The market was slow and 10c lower on all grades from iNtrurday's close. Not euou;u in to cau much Interest. Good to choice heavy and medium 84 00-44 2A Fair to good mlied........... 3 90fr4 Hi Good to choics light 4 S." .4 AO Houghs. 3 75 G rasters 3 50;.4 10 fiiKKP Receipts, light. The market was alow on on all grades. Prlmesheep S RVf4 25 air to good shep 3 2tl 75 Common to medium sheep 2 5 t;l 00 Kxtra choice laiuhs. A Ml Fair to good lambs M 4 2.Vf4 75 Bucks, per hea l 1 50 ji 5J Elsewhere. BUFFALO, N. V.. Kept. 23. Cattle Receipts, 177 loads through, ü'jO sale; active and strong for good to extra grades; slow for common; choice to extra steers, f 4.2i.t 4.".; good 1st. ?X7.V.4.2H; choice heavy butchers', $-8..Vira4; light, $:i.2.Vu.j.3i; poor to OHiimon mixed, 8i.V." ' 2. 75; Mit hig.m stockcrs, fair to extra. ?2.75( 1.:?; Canada do., ?j.5'fffi2.75; stock bulls, f2ia2.Pl; extra bulls. $:!c:i.;.; eons and heifers, common to extra, il.7.V.vl.;!.": milch cows and springers, common to extra, ftj.v.iti; cnlves, grnssr-rs, '.:) c,;t.-Vi: Teal, f '.fi.Vi. Mieeu and tainhs Uoceipts, 7 loads through, f.0 sale; active; strong ott sheep, easier ou lambs; Iambs, good to lest, f' .tfi..vi; fair to good, ?o. A" :"'; common, JI.Ai'mö.äO; sheep, good to Ust, J4.6i5; fair to good, &l-i 4.60; common, $ .5ifi,;t..".0. ilo(;s Receipts, AJ loads through, luOf.il; strong; mediums and heavy, .'J5 (.44. 6' J; mixed, Sl.ioei'i; corn Yorkers, 4..V.r4.6"i; pigs, fx Ad ;d 4.23; assorted graspers, 4.:ro4 .V); roughs. $.l.2A(f3.&0; tags, :;ü;"..o ;. CHICAGO. Kept. 23. Cattbi Itc.-elpU. 15,000 ; shipment', 0,000; market weak; choice to extra boeres, H5"( 1.70; steTK, t:i"tt4(i; Mockers and fewlers, 81.!ii'.3; cows, buils and mixed, ?1.2.V.i2.t0; Texans, Sl.Wf.n :i; western rangers, tiXlX lluir KecaipU, 18.0O0: shipments, 7,'00; market closed trouEer; mixed, J:i."34.r,3; heavy, fJ. 701.15; Children Oryfcr

Bheuraatism,

BEING duo to the presence of uric acnl in tho blood, is most effectually cured by the use of Ayer Sarsaparilla. Le sure you get Ayer's and no other, aud take it till the poisonous acid is thoroughly expelled from tho system. "We challenge attention to this testimony : "About two years ago, after Buffering for nearly two years from rheumatic pout, being able to walk only with prcat discomfort, and Laving tried various remedies, including ruiueial waters, without relief, I Raw by an advertisement in a Chicago paper thnt a man bad Den relieved of this distressing complaint, after Ion? suffering, by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I then decided to make a trial of this medicine, and took it regularly for ei?ht months, and ara pleased to state that it has effected a complete cure. I have since had no return of the disea.se," Urs. K. Irving Dodge, 110 West 12ßth st., Xew York. " One year asro I was taken ill with inflammatory rheumatism, leincr confined to my house six months. I came out of the sickness very much debilitated, with no appetite, and my system disordered in every wayi I commenced usinjj Ayer's Sarsaparilla and began to . improve at once, paining in strength and soon recovering my usual health. I cannot say too much in praise of thin well-known medicine." Mrs. L. A. Stark, Nashua, N. II. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, rBKPABKD BT Dr. J. C. Ayer It Co., Lowell, MassPrice $1 ; six bottles, t5. Worth $3 a bottle. light, t3.95(4.75; skips. 83.50(54. Fheep Receipts, .Oil ; shipments, 2,000; market stoadv; natives, 1501.6.; western, tt.70(4.1S; Texans, S3.2Of34.30; lunds, 84.50ati. NEW Yoi'.K, Sopt SX-ReeTes-RcceipU, 4,KM, making ll.SjO for the week. Fresh arrivals included 135 car-loads for horns-trade slaughterers direct, 0 car-Ioa ls for the market, and 53 car-loads for exportation; the market was fairly sctive and firm; common to strictly prime steers sold at S3.öfV4.80 per 100 pounds; a few eitra do at 54. 85, and some poor stockers down to 3; Texas and Colorado steers went at t.3tif,:i.K. Calves TUceiDt, I.hM, making 5.4'0 for the week; slow and easier at 2$ i3c per pound for grassera, and at Äso for veals, bheop Receipts, lM'O, making 43,200 for the week; a trifle weak at !3..Vi(.V50per 100 pounds for sheep, and at J4.."Ofj 7.M for lambs. Hogs-Keceipts, 14.100, raaklog 7,100 for the week ; steady for live hogs at 14.00(33.25 per 100 poun.is. EAST LIBKKTY, Pa., Pept. 23.-Cattle-Roelpta, S.720; shipments, 2,140; market steady. Thirteen cars of cattle shipped to New York to-day. Hogs Receipts, 6,400; shipments, 4.SO0; markst firm; best light Yorkers, 84.S0frf4 60; light Yorkers, 4.40 (rtl.4; medium and light I'hlladelphias, 4.60(4.70; heavy bogs, S4.4oft4.Ml; ten cars of hogs shlpied to New York to-day. Sheep Itecoipts, 3,60o; shipments, 2,600; market firm at 15(ät20c better than last week's prices. MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. Produce. CHICAGO, Sept. 23. Wheat On Saturday 12 cars of wheat gTaded No. 2 out of a total of lt0, which was a slight itnprovemeut over the previous days of the week. To-day there were only 6 cars of contract grain out of a total of 207 cars. The market to-dar was active and strong, but unsettled. The crowd was dNnosed to light shy of the near futures, and September was again suspiciously regarded ou account of the stnaU- warehouse stooks of gTain in contract. Offerings of May were light early and the premiums were acain narrowed. At one time changes were made from October to Iiecember at lc diflerenee. The market oneued strong at about the closing quotations of Saturday. Under good den. and Irora the shorts and some investment-buying, there was a bulge during tbe first hour of the session of o In Iecemler, a few trades being made In that month as low as 7'.)JNf3H1)c. together. Miortly before the close It tou bed at 71c. Pending the aonounoement of the visible sttpplv figures, business in the pit was rather fight for a time and it was the rwtinfr of an locreave of only 1,499.000 bushels, when 1.750,0uo to 2,000.000 was expected, that gave - the market iu closing htrength. It closed active and buoyant and at a net gain for the day of Iji in September, y. in ctober and year, ia December snd in Msy. Only a moderat business was transacted fn corn, fluctuations being narrow and transactions mainly ol a loeal character. The feeling early was comparatively steady, but la'er a somewhat easier tone was manifested. Influences s fleeting the market were in the malu local. A prominent local trader was a moderste seller of September snd October to-day. The market opened a shade under the closing figures of Saturday, was steady for a time, then sold oil' t, ruled firm end closed steady a shade higher than Saturday. Oats were active for May. A prominent operator bought that month everytime the market weakened, and sold on all strong spots. Prices were slightly higher early ami the advance was fairly maintained. Very light trading was reported in pork and the feeling was comparatively steadv. Prices ruled SriklOc higher and close 1 steaJr. Nothing doiog in lard and prices without material change. Very little business was transacted in short ribs. The feeling was steadier and prices ruled 5(10c higher. The leading futures ranged as follows: Articles. I Opening. iiigbest. j Lowest. Closing. Whfat Sept.... :t.... IC May. ... Corn vt .... Nov Iec May.... s iwg M j 84, 70' i 80, 7"; TS' 1 '"-4; SO I 33 74'l "7 84 ' 31W 32 91J4 3;s 19 10 93 9 30 81 "si'ii OlTS Oct Iec. 19'; .1 19-f 10 85 9 20 9 15 l!'7ij 24 iV o May... : Fork Oct Nov... Jau Lahd Oct Not.... Jan..... 8. Kiss Oct Nov.... .Ian

10 95 10 83 9 30 9 20 i

5 8 80 6 nyi 5 :j . -5 5 rO j 5 75 4 8:'s 4 C2j4 4 70 I A COT ' 4 67 7'S 4 b2'-5 4 . :i 4 60 Cssh quotations were as follow: Flour Steady and unchanged; No. 2 spring wheat, 79 gc; No. 3 spring wheat, C7('"i6.c; No. 2 red, W,4c; No. 2 corn, Ke; No. 2 oats, l'j'c; Xo. 2 rye, 41Vc; So. i barley, nominal; No. 1 liax seed, $1.23; prime timothy seed, S1.2.V.Ü.26; mess pork, per brl.. 811; lard, per 100 lbs., 85 !".; short rib sides I loosed, 15.03(43.10; dry salted shoulders (boxed), 4 :t7J.ift4.8'i; short clear sides iboKcdl, n.2Vu':.3;'-.; whisky, distillers' hntshed goods, per gal., 81.02; sugars, eutloaf, unchanged. Retwlvtt. Shipmm'i. Flour, brls .. 15.000 19,000 Wheat, bu - 7,000 si, 00 Corn, bu .- :i'.VMJ0 303,000 Oats, bu - 211.000 7!',000 Rye, bu il.tKS ,o0 iiarley, bu - M.UOU 42,000 On tho produce exchange to-tlay the butter market was active; faney creamery, 232:1' je; tine, l.VUI'e; finest dairv, IK'n'JOc: fair to good, OyjlOc. Iggn, 15a NKW A' ORK, Sept. 23.-Flour Pcelpts, 88,663 pkgs; exports, 11,717 blIs, 2,367 sacks; moderately active; firm ; sales, 1S,4"K) bbls. Corn Meal Maady; yellow western, 2.45(12. 73. Wheat Receipts, 14,460; exports, 51.H.0; saies. SiU.OüO futures; los.tioo spot; sjHit market firm ; moderately active; Hcio higher: No. 2 red, 4. :i iTic elevator, dHjHWe atloat. f4,iftxfic f. o. b; No. 3 red, flVjfc; lia. trailed, Tifn'&ie; sU'ainer No. 2 red, 81'c; steamer No. 8 red, 7i!yC;Nov. red, 73c; No. 1 bsrd, 93c afloat; options dull ; ;Vj" higher; strong; No. 2 red, Sep., 4Vi.".'h closing X.5c; rt., 4 5-16e, closing ..''4c; Nov. closing ofrkc; Dec, M 13-bv 8750, closing S7V,o; Jau., cluing Klj:; Mav, 01 S-liieVmUe, closing l.'e. Stocks of 'grsin, store uud afloat, .Sept. '.'1 : Wheat, 2.03S.M1 bu. ; corn, 1,1', 196 bu. ; oats. 430,323 bu. (.',rn Receipts, 132,700; exports, 40,."v!; sales, 64,ioo futures, 1 '"0 spot; spot market fairlv active; chiefly exjiort; steady; No. 2. 40,' itdre store and elevator; ivfyilt afloat; No. 2 white, 40'.,!n4lc; ungraded mixed, 4,',-2((i ll?4'c; eptiotia quiet; stronger; .Sept., 40".jfT closing 4014; Oct.. 40 ll-li;f i41c. closing 41e; Nov., 41'341:'llo. closing 41'.',e; lec., 41(ijlfe, closing 4i;-; Mav, 4lTHC4l2V," closing 42'4c. Oats Receipts, llt.ooü; exports, blauk; sales, lVl.OOO futures, 1 16,OjO spot; apot market firmer: fairly active; options quet; tinner; Sept., 2-"?h92Cic, closing 2t.c; ict., 23a26c, closing 2c; Nov., 2H' ,2(i' ,c, clo-lng 26'ic; spot No. 2 white, 2V-'V; No. 1, 2r; do white. 3r; niixtid wesU'rn, 24c Ss' jc; white do, S'.ll'Jc; No. - Chicago, 27is 27,ic. Coffee Optiuns opened stesdy ; 5(10 points down; closed near months steady; fair; barely steaily; 15 .I J5 points down ; ssles, 52,250 bags; spot Kio, easier; Inir cargoes, l&'c Suar Raw, nominal; weak; lair refining .vc; cenirifugsl, 9-tcst, 6) ; reline l steady ; moderate demand. Molares I-oreign, nominal; New Orleans, dull; Kegs Krmer; fair lemsnt; western, fresh, 20i,t2lei l'ork Quiet. Cut Meats iSlea.lv ; pirklej belli.. Vi pounds, 6'4o; sales do, 9 pounds averag, 7'4c; 14 po'imls average, nfic; pickled shoulders, 4L'cj piekled hams, 10V4lo'ic; middles quiet. Lard Firmer: iuiet ; sales western steam. 70'; Kpt., 8.82;Oct., closing 87.3o; Nov., 6.20; Dec., fs.l; Jan.. KIH bid; Feb., $0.22 lid; March, f0.3' bid. Huttnr Fine in demand and firmer; wester dairy, .SliVJc4 to crwamcry, l-(SJlc; do held, li'a-O; do factory, tfl2c. Cheese Mrong; quiet; western, CJ4V.1SC. ' It is astoniNhintr how rapidly the feeble and dtbil'tatcd gain strength and vigor when takln? Ayer'i ars.iparilla. For what' are called "broken down constitutions," nothing else has proved to etlective as this powerful but perfectly safe medicine. P Itchcr'o Castorla;

j "THE LIONS

By R03A

0WKV ' jrv'i itC a r-c Z

A 8 an aDlmsl pilnter P.o Fonhnr hss rn nnsl. In the reproduction by photo etetlifof this gTeat tn98terplece, the eneraver hs Mlthfullv followed the wonderful pencil ot the artist,. Each lion H sltve. and we seem to be looHne at these noble beasts In their xtattre lair. Strength In repose characterizes the trro'.ip. The in8Mve snd finely proportioned bead and neck of rhe lion, with hl8 shnzzr mane, hi fomildJNe Itmbs lazily ptreched out In the forev rround. with rhe claws drAwn into th softly pndfled psws. are r.iarvelously rendered. The lioness Ilea rrxide Its) mate with her bind quiffr fnllr extended, her bead erect, tint watchful of her wheats. Repose U Infused Into tbe face of each animal. wblit a dreamy haprtner and softness o; the eyes fitly portrars the Drn st nome. A crpat deal has been written both la poetry snd prose of mother and of family tie, but we seldom nee thes ideas spplledto thefiercest and mightiest of beaar Vet all nature la akin, and when we lrxik at. this picture, wsj see she artist has portrayed the sums lnfl'ien',e at work, which mskea the ronir man gentleu The helpless whelps are there, and the Instincts or lore and protection m the noble beaste Is told In a novel and elnrmlnsr story br tht nature of the Monarch and hl Qrjen. The marrelotis tone and beauty of this trreat eompisltlon, "The Lions at Home'' Is the work of Ros Eonheu rs miturr years, aad Is not eau3Uled aa &a animal picture by mythlES yet cIt to toe artistic wortThis masterpiece will be given with each new subscription to or renewal o( Till WEEKLY SENTINEL for only 1.15.

For said by PEARSON &

away mirtnr the Ttet OO Sava. W also shrift Owe Conntrr IItn Hire tnoiiihu fc.no ron who will answer this Overtiacment and et.d ns t le ad'Ir- ol wwt.t re.l.-rs f rom rt'tT-ivnt fmilie. tVnd ISrrali Silver or stamps, to holp pay cost of advertising, and n-niemlier we sn-i every eluhrslser, or for th. In of S)S n STilters, a I.ovcly Ten Net, lust hit every home will t pivct it0. V sre hound to distance all comrttton aad rrsUeoar Country Home, known In everv qunrter of theglols. If vouwanta nice Tea 1 Set "lid lreBl tVrii7roÄ Our Country Home, 8S I- niton St,, .

2,100 DOZEN A. A , . 1 ' (iiv Down pairs L8ues V" . ., . inw rmu bui, iuu)r nsiery given ahsol.itelv frretointrod ucet lie llMrliill('tiipsi.p . jncy are Heavy, warm" well Biade. faskleaablet sia, in solid Colors, stries hciu, all tu popular shades of eardlaal. sali klar, cal trssm blaek, slat tan, in fact styl and color to putt all tastes. lOD't paySät t&rta. for a pair of Fall and Winter iuwa ' w heu you can (re: a docan f of notlilnr. Th old reliahl lloae. kl4 4aaipaalaa,of New Voile, is a com Diet e (auiilr naner. rieh I w Illastrated. Coiitainliiir serial and short at one, romances, Jcetchea, wit, humor. fasMon, household hiuts.storiesforehiidreii, Ac. fc ranks atnonff thatrat Metropolitan Journal. Paa. Itlvrty th Mit Ira lot i.n0 dos 1 to be' riven away durinir the next So days. V biso aena ine iiausekoltl t vrapaalna Casnathsfree to MW persons mho will answer this advertisement and send us the ad 1 reo of an newspaper readers rrom different families. For lü cts.. In silver t autiupe. vo neip pay poMaire, parkim, sc., w urn a every uoscrtoer I fine hosiery described shove. To the club raiser, or for the l:et of 0ubTtheia, we send 1 dotrs rntrsof these heautiful and Dsefnl articiea. U .- are determine! to lead tha race In premiums, hence this liheral Inducement. It isacoloMia otreran l will not apear ajrxin. If you want a dosen fashionshla. flnej hoierr send löeta. and names of 80 newrperreaier. and you will rereiia tlie paper and hosiery premiums accord I nir to above offer l.y return mail. State riie ttn color waeted. sddrea lloascbeU Ceaapualoa, 857 BroaüwajvN. T. VHY! YODB LIVER IS OUT OF ORDER Ton w-m hure ET CK TTT AD ACTIOS, PAINS TS TUE BIDE, DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPJETITK.foel lisUesa and unable to get tnxontrta your dally work or social enJoymenUt LXla will be burden to yon 'Tl. -t 4-ria v ti, -,r fnn enr jwu drire the POISON Ott 02 5 (rar eyatem, avnd muke you stronic and well hrr cost only S5 cents box and may save r-fur lue van do uu at aujr jug owva Äj-Bcwaxeof CocKTrx7srr3 xstdo In EL Ixuis.l Perfumes the Breath. Ask for it. FLEMING BROS,, - Pittsburgh, Pa, THIRD You should read tbe Chicago Daily News because it an indtfnuUni nevafpafter. Thcraaretwo sides to esrery political question, and Thk Daily News gives them both with equal fairness. A parry crjan magnifies one side and dwarfs the other. No sensible man wants to be trifled with in this b&hion. lhe time has gone by when American citizens expect to Inherit their political opinions. Tbry want to make, their own and to do this they want a paper to tell them the truth, recardless of their own personal preferener. If you are an honest man. independent and self-reliant in POINT, thought, read an honest and independent newspaper read The Chicago Daily Nirws. Rt member Its circulation fs t20,oro a day over a million a week and it costs by mril 25 cts. a month, four months 1.00,enectnt a day. GonlsSlQJSS :m- 9 " i L w. o CT IIV OXE VAX. Writs for neserintlvctstaic'nie eon. ttTilrtr t-9t imertinls fretn anred ,t pecple el la4 Mwe4 ! 4 I 9 Cords dallr. o.lXV n w t.ie'f ul: uol Aifeney csii he had where there is n vbik-v. A hKT IW.MIO.N for tüintt' ssvs s-rr free wit h rncii at salar, hy the use of tlila tol evci-lody can tilu tiiejr own ms now aud do It tetter than tho irreuteet exts rt run ii flout iu Adapted t. aJl cmea-etit mq a l'r.T.7 one fiwnp e mw Mionld hovecnt.. AK vonr de r wr:t hh.imxj saw io m acuiSk: tuavs tctu t'oath t nasi 61 ret t, Chlcaico, 111. 1 1 4 n K i 'i a a r r. ;i 1 J w av b w & a aa c at u tiaA With this Hanger on tho Coati. ISJ mu mit 1 JS 11 111 . aaa-wif ys. ,. sin ' k'-- ly,' -w-... - '. i --.. in. I v PLAY fin Plsloanee. Tst'les'is. PuesVei. for &..h..ul.i:iiir farl.r. l-i.ul.l"n!.-

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ÄT HOME"

BONHEUR. WETZEL, Indianapolis, Ind. S.000 TEA SETS GIVEN AWAY. 6.000 Lovclv decorated M piOM) Taa Fu (riven ao-oiatrlv free totntr4uoOwr t auulrv Uime to new subMrilMtra. Foh t ouottuns & pieoiwof rlcbly teorwd ware. Lach pitjoe is richly decorated to e0ora. In ta-tl ul nml and flower patterns. Tha aaaucs are modem ajul arUsUc. Our '- . try II vino stands to-clmr aa one ot Ut IrmA1 ing and most ppiiisr farm and home pp-r h AtiH't. Every onels fleighta itftii. PnlfivelY theenttrelot (i.OnOltobeglvsSj SALE OF STATE LANDS State or Ikdusi, Ornt E op Ai'pitob or :tate. j Notice is hereby pit-fn that in pursuance to the provisions of an act of the general as-embly of the state of Indiana, entitled "An act authorizing tn sale and conveyance of certain lands of the state of Indiana, disposing of the proceed! thereof, and proTidinc for the recovery of the possession of any lands of the state unlawfully held, and for thw rent of any of the lands of the state until sold, repealing all laws in conflict therewith, and declaring an emergency." approved March , 1&9. I will oiler for sale to the blühest bidder at the court-house dO'r in the town of Vet Shoals, at Irom 10 a m. to 4 p. m. on tcUl.er 11, ls.j, the following descril e l real estate, situate In Martin coui.ty, belooi Inr to the state of Indiana, and author ize-l to le sold by said act: The southeast quarter of northeast quarter, section 1. township :i north, range west, forty acres. Appra somen., Jüi. Iho siuthwst ouarter ot the southeast quarter, section 12, township 1, range 4 west, forty acres. Ap pratsenient. ?IVl The northeast quarter of southeast quarter, section 12, township 1, rane 4 west, forty acres. Appraisement, The northwest quarter of southeast quarter, eotion 11, township 1 north, range 4 west, forty acres. Appraisement, SV2. The southeast quarter of northeast quarter, section 25, township 4 north, range 4 west, forty aores. Appraisement, f J S. lhe southwest qusrter of southwest quarter, station 25, township 2 north, range 3 west, forty acres. Appraisement, f 100. 1 ho northwest quarter of southwest quarter, sentlon Z't. township 'i north, range 3 west, forty acres. Appraisement. fllXi. The southeast quarter of southeast quarter, section 21, township 1 north, rsnge 3 west, forty acres. Ap praientent, 8100. The southeast quarter of southwest quarter, section 20, townAhlp 5 north, range 3 wet. Appraisement $11x1. The northwest quarter of northeast quarter el section 2:i, township 5, njrth rsoge S west, 40 acres. Appraisfm nt, ?12.". The noithwest quarter of northeast quarter et section 2i, t..wnli:p 2, north range 5 west, 40 area. Appraisemeat, flf'O. lhe southwest quarter of northeast quarter, section 24, tos nOiip 2, north range 5 west, 4 i acre v .ppniement, ?10l. ail tracts of land shore described will first ha offered for cash. If no hid for cash is received satd tracts of land ill imtin diately 1 t ffered for sale on a trinlit not to exceed five years, interest being paid annually in a.i'auce; no bid lor less than the appraised value thereof will be received. BRrcE Ca, Indianapolis, Sept, 21, 1nS!. Auditor of SUU. STATE OF INDIANA, MAEION COCN'TT, 85i In the Superior Curt of Marion county. In tha .'täte of Indiana. No. 4H.04 1 Koom 1. 4'omplaiaS to foree'oae chattle mortgage. Dennis brvaa va, IJiatieth M. raTd, John W. bpayd, Abner R, Hyde et al. He it kuown, that on the 17th day of Septem ber.lSSJ, the iiIhiv named i.Iaiuliil, by his attorney, tiled ia tho ottice of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Marioa county, in the state of Indiana, his complaint agaiDil the above named defendants, and the said plaintiff having also hied in said lerk'a office the affidavit of aconietent eron, showing that said defendants, .lohn VV. Spayd, hlizabeih Uatbawsy and Elizabeth Hathaway, tru.-tee for Myrtle L OTVU, are not residents of the Slate of Indiana, and that said action is foHnded upon a contract, and ia for tbe purpo.o of t nlorcing the lite of a chattle mortgage, and that said defendants are enh necessary parties thereto; and, m hereas, said plaintiff hsvine.br iodorscuient on said complaint, required said defendants to appesr in said Court and answer or demuf thereto, 011 the 2d day of Ieecniber. 19. Nfiw, therefore, s ild defendants tut above namwd are hereby notified of tbe tiling and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto at the railing of said cause on the 2.1 day of iN-ceinher, 1S9, thesam being lhe first jadioial day f a term ot said Court, to be bei; uii and held at the Court House in tho citv of Indianapolis ou the first Monday in iJeeernhor, ls8:i, said complaint and the matters and thing, therein contained and alleged, will be heard and de tcrinined in their abscuo. JOHN R. WILSON. Ork. AI.rd.RT T. BFCK, Attorney for Plaintiff. Z-1 HI I PP?1TIVT ForLOSTorFArtryo HAKH00T); M I w s 1 1 Ilk Oeasrsi and SERVO US EXSILXTY CTTT T1 ess of Bodyaa4 Kind: Lfrti J KJ JlJ of Srrera or Exeeeaes ia Old er Tanas'. auaf. Sohle BSNiMn folfT Retee. Hea aalaer a4 Itremrtkea WKtk.l .MrvUr n (.S A raBTSar iot. Ihtolulrlf astltllli lllla tKrtlBI!.?-PeaeSaj la aar. lea lestlf, fruai 41 Hist, Teeellarlea. aa4 Faeesra f aaateWa, I a writ Lsee . Ma-vtr. fall e, ftnuntUm, aaS fraaea aiatte4 keeai fTM. .lr IRil MtfilCAl CD.. tUH Alt, R. 1. SHORT-HAND. Tho "Reporting Stylo," by Lldon Moran. it th rsuie of the !cst bock tor self-instruction ever published. 1'itman system. Prii. (1.50. bam pie pf es free. Lessons by mail. Addreas T1IK MOKAX sllor.T-IIAXD COMPANY, 1S22 Ulive-st.. St Louis, Mo. Asr 12 A MOSTH AND BttARPrMn. orhirhest coniuii sion and 3d DAYS' t'Rl 1IT to VJVJV- Ag nts on our NKW rfKJlv. J. S. ZI KOLK! A CU, IU AJims rhit'ajjo, 11L W'WTFn T"' r,'1i",e energetic agents. II 1 Ll' Salarv fr mi start or corunilss sious lor local tnan. K"r. THCf"rt)N A. CO., Auifir Nuinti.ss, KOfteakir, 1. V.

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