Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1893 — Page 10

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 30, 1803-TVvT.LTE PaGES.

tlppl, who denounced democrats for assisting: the repu oilcans, as he put It. lie made a bitter attack on Josiah Quincy. During his speech Mr. Tracey declared that a majority of democrats would vote for repeal and Mr. Williams called forth some applause by declaring: -Never, sir." Sliver Parrhnff. In response to a resolution of Inquiry on the subject of silver purchases under the act of 1850. Secretary Carlisle sent to the house of representatives today a letter setting forth the following facts: Frona Aug. 13. 1SS0. to Aug. 16. 1S33. thn department purchased 161.521,000 fine ounces, costing J1..G39,459. The highest price paid was J1.20V4 an ounce on Aug. 20. 1390; the lowest. cents an ounce on July 24, 1893. Treasury notes to the amount of 5150.115.9M have teen issued in payment of silver bullion, of which $714.3i have been redeemed in standard silver dollars and retired since Aug. 3. 1893. Up to Aug. 1. 1893. $49.184,160 treasury nctes have been redeemed in gold; 38.087,185 standard dollars have been coined from bullion purchased under the act of 1890. On the 14th Inst, the government owned of silver purchased under the act of 1890, 133,161.375 ounces, costing $121.217,677. Silver Jump. Silver took a Jump upward today, the London quotation as sent to the treasury department being $0.7631 per ounce. This 13 2 cents higher than yesterday's purchases by the department, which amounted to 150,000 ounces at $0.7425 per ounce.

Memphis Wants Hepeitl. MEMPHIS. Tenn.. Aug. 22. Today resolutions were ador-ted at a meeting1 of the cotton exchange demanding the repeal of the Sherman law. HOW TO HAVE A PLEA"AXT VISIT. Pointed end Sennlble SuKicestlons to Oamt and Heute". Avoid controversy and argument. Do not monopolize any pond thing. Do not overd-j the matter of entertainment. Do not make a hobby of personal infirmities. Go directly when the call or the visit 1b ended. Do not forget bathing facilities for the traveler. "Make yourself at home," but not too much so. In ministering to the guest do not neglect the family. Conform to the customs of the house, especially as to meals. Let no member of the family intrude In the guest chamber. Do not m?k? unnecessary work for others, even servants. - Be courteous, but not to the extent of surrendering principles. Do not gossip: there are better thingsHi life to talk about. When several guests are present, give a share of attention to all Introduce games and diversions, but only such as will be agreeable. Better simple food with pleasure than luxuries with annoyance and worry. Have a comfortable room in readiness adapted to the needs and tastes of the guest. A guest need not accept every proposed entertainment: he should be considerate of himself and of his host. Learn the likes and dislikes of those who are to be entertained, but not throusrh the medium of an Imperative catechism. Good Housekeeping. A Plucky Little Farmer' Hoy. " Jlmmle Bolvin, a ten-year-old lad, living in western Canada, was leading a horse to put in a hay rake when the animal became unmanageable, knocked him down and broke his leg in two places between the hip and the. knee. The accident happened out on the prairie, many miles from home. Notwithstanding the agony he must have endured, the boy crawled a considerable distance to where he hoped to find some of the haymakers, but they had gone farther away. He l..y down exhausted, huping for some one to come. How many hours he lay there is not known. Night was at length coming on, and he feared he should die if left much longer without help. The horse meanwhile was feeding net far off. Jimmie's untested luncheon was Still in his pocket. He called the horse, gave him a biscuit and so caught hiin. The little sufferer then led the animal to a rock a few yards distant, dragging himself slowly and painfully along, ?s before. He crept upon the rock and from there managed to mount the horse. Once on the horse's back he rode two miles to the nearest house or tent, where he found the haymakers, who made him as comfortable as they could and then took him home to his parents. An effort to set the broken limb, made by a neighbor, proved unsuccessful. And after nine days of misery the little fellow was taken to the hospital at Wlnnepeg, where the writer of this account saw him and heard his story. "He's a brave little man," said the surgeon; "he never complains, and we shall give htm a pretty good leg again, I think." Youth's Companion. Alleged Care for Hn ttleannke Ilite. Dr. W. J. Hoffman notices in Science the employment by a Pennsylvania "mountain doctor" of a id.mt claimed to possess virtue In cases it rattlesnake bite. This plant Is sanicula marylandica or sanicle, termed by the natles 'master root," becauses it "masters the rattlesnake venom." The fresh plant and roots are pounded and soaked in boiling milk, when the mixture Is appl'.ej to the wound as a poultice. A decoction of the same plant Is also taken Internally. The decoction is said to be more efficacious if made with milk Instead of water. Dr. Hoffman believes this Is the first Instance of bringing this plant to public attention, at least, as employed by the Pennsylvania Germans and for the purpose stated. Turkish Proverbs. The dogs bark, but the caravan passes. You'll not sweeten your mouth by baying "honey." They who know most are oftenest cheated. More is learned from conversation than from books. He rides seldom who never rides any but a borrowed horse. The fish that escapes appears greater than it is. Trust not the whiteness of his turban; he bought the soap on credit. A lw Maxima. Out- of ten men. nine are born to work for the tenth. Kesolve to be the tenth.' Without trampling the cleverest cannot get rich. Dives is never an example, because nobody considers himself really rich. If you cannot become rich, remember the many miseries of the rich. The consolation of those who fail Is to depreciate those who rucceed. Women and Mnalc. The convention of amateur musical clubs at Chicago revealed the existence of a great number of ladies' musical clubs. No less than thirty-four of such clubs took pirt in the program of the convention. Nothing can be more delightful, more aesthetic or Improving, than a musical club made up of gentle, refined, enthusiastic ladies. Coeoannt Hatter. Cocoanut butter is now being made at Mannheim, Germany. The method of manufacture was discovered by Dr. ?chulSr. a chemist, at Ludwigshafen. It 1 said that the butter is very nourishing and will soon be placed In the London market. Better Time. It was Benjamin Franklin who said: "So what signifies wishing and hoding for better times? We may make these times better if we bestir ourselves." Is your biood poor? Take Peecham's ni's.

60 SPIN LIKE HERCULES.

MltS. FRANK LESLIE GIVES SOME ADVICE TO nACHELOHS. Some Maltlena Arc Two Kml V Jlf for the Early IUrd A llaclielor's I nrommon Opportunities The .Muaked Ball aad Dane of Death. Bachelors are usually young men, or at least men with an ambition to bo thought young and marriageable. Now a young man should be well up in his classics and know the story of Hercules spinning among the maidens of Omphale, but I wonder if any bachelor ever meditated upon the wonderful opportunity Hercules enjoyed for studying the female character, and had he been a marrying man for discreetly choosing himself a wife. The noblest study of mankind is man, or so all say, but certainly the most fascinating study of mankind Is woman, and woman can never be perfectly studied except by watching her among other women. The man who is fastidious or really earnest In the search for a wife, he who feels that a life's happiness or misery is bound up In the choice he now makes such a man. I say. should imitate . Hercules and go spin among the maidens in company with the object of his attraction. . Without intending to say anything derogatory of my own sex. which I sincerely love and honestly respect, I must set it down as a truth that most women are different in their demeanor toward men from what they are toward other women. Just recall for yourself. If you are a woman, some occasion when you were in an assembly of your own sex and some stray specimen of the other presented himself. What a pretty little stir and flutter passed through the flock of doves! How they plumed themselves and gently adjusted attitude and draperies into more becoming fashion! How faces that had been listless and weary took on an incipient smile, or at least a sweet alertness of expression significant of a readiness to respond to any appeal for sympathy or conversational advance! How some little jest on the part of the newcomer elicited trills of laughter or smart rejoinder, or approving glance from those who had listened with listless indifference to utterances quite as witty from th-Mr sisters! Now, I do not mean to say that there is anything wrong in this, for it is simply the sweet stirrings of nature visible throughout creation. Look abroad in the pleasant springtime of the year. See how the little feathered maidens twitter and tweet and dart In and out among the half clad branches of the trees, displaying all their little airs and graces for the benefit of the male bird who In his turn swells his throat and all but bursts his loving heart in tuneful efforts which he never would dream of undertaking If there were only other males about. Does not "the sunflower turn to her god when she sets" and also when she rises, her face of broad admiration, while she never so much as glances at the moon? Did not the gods and goddesses of Olympus hate and persecute each other all the time in a very human fashion, simply because they were not all of one sex? And do we of the nineteenth century, who, as Prof. Totten tells us, have reached the end of all things do we claim to be more perfect or less human than the gods and goddesses of Olympus? No, indeed! And this being granted, the other statements need not be apologized for. It may be stated boldly and bravely that women that is to say, unmarried and unattached women are different in the society of men from what they are when alone with other women. But. and here comes the other side of the proposition as It affects our friends, the bachelors. This change of demeanor is symptomatic and not organic. It only lasts during the springtime of the year. The lady birds, after the nest is made and filled with eggs, busy themselves in domestic duties and no longer twitter and dart among the branches or dress their feathers beside the mirror of the pool. In fact, after those eggs are hatched and five or six little gaping mouths call for the early worm, the mother bird is sometimes heard to scold her mate pretty sharply If he ets some earlier bird get ahead of him and catch that early worm. And he where are now those dulcet songs, that swelling breast, that melting sweetness of not?, that lordliness of crest and bravery of glittering plumage? And the human birds is not there such a change among them? Does the wife of half a dozen years put on that air of sweet alertness, that gentle readiness to admire and applaud the coming remark when her husband happens to enter the room where she and some -of her friends are gossiping over their afternoon tea? Does she put on her most becoming attire and her most charming manner at the hour of his expected return and exert herself to attract and entertain him as she did before he selected her as the woman he fain would make his wife? Well, don't all cry out and clamor that my quasi-accusation Is false and calumnious and that you at least do take as much pains to make yourself attractive to your husband as you did to your lover or your admirer. Perhaps you do, and you, too, my dear, and you! But where there are three who do I am afraid there are thirteen who do not, and it is on account of these thirteen that I am advising the bachelors to go spin with Omphale's maidens. There are plenty of wives and good, true, conscientious wives. Into the bargain who are just like the Jenny Wrens. When once Robin Redbreast is their husband, they lay aside all the little airs and graces that made him believe them different from every other wren and and not only "wear their brown gown," but'don't take the trouble to put a clean frill In Its neck and sleeves and a bit of ribbon to brighten It up a little. They simply relapse into the indifference and apathy they used to show among their girl friends when there was no man around. . But as there are wives and wives, so there are girls and girls and so it would be a splendid thing for an expectant husband If he could study the girl he fände to be the best girl of all when she is alone with her girl friends. I have seen in companies of women those who made themselves Just as agreeable as they would to the other sex, who were ready to sing or play if they were asked, who talked blithely and Intelligently about books or public amusements, or even - politics and the Russian news, with other women, and both gave and received pleasure from conversation which was neither personal gossip nor millinery. I have seen girls who, when the card table was to be made up, cheerfully took a hand with three ether women and did not hold back, or slip behind the curtain to rescue themselves until some male partners appeared. I have seen girls who did not break off their chat with some middle-aged lady when the men came on the scene, nor assumed a vivacity and sprightllness of demeanor quiet foreign to the subject, nor cast glances toward the newcomer to ascertain If he noticed how good they were to his mother or aunt, or spinster friend.

but who really, unconsciously and unaffectedly went on Just as if only another women has entered the room. I have seen girls who when some one had to stay at home with mother or grandmother, who isn't very well and musn't be left alone to fret, while the rest went to the theater or to a reception where all the Robins were likely to be present, would volunteer to be the one, not without a little natural smothered sim. for they are not monsters of perfection, these good girls, but nevertheless with true and sweet readiness not too conscious of itself. Those are the girls who are the Joy and strength of their mothers' hearts, whose marriage makes a gap In the home circle which never quite fills up. whose little sisters are heartily sorry to lose them rather than glad to have them removed to leave a place for them. Those are the girls who become to their husbands of value "far above rubles" or any other earthly possession; who, if a man be fortunate enough to win, he may spend the rest of his life in trying to deserve. In fact, to put the matter in a nutshell, the wife is apt to revert to the type of girl her girl friends knew and her own family could have described. This statement does not contradict that with which we began that there is a difference !n the demeanor of most women to their own sex or to the other sex. That is still true, but the important question for the bachelor to decide Is In which Is the real woman lying folded In embryo within this lovely, ever changing, ever charming exterior. What sort of bird will It be In later summer and autumn, this flitting, chirping, coquettish little spring bird? She Is sure to be different from what he now sees. That is a point he had better grant at once, and possibly he may be very glad to do so, for most men perhaps all men and a good many women have sense enough to perceive that a lifetime of courtship, with its uncertainties. Its struggles, its doubts, fears and jealousies, would be more fatiguing and unsatisfactory than delightful; In fact, the very delight of it is exhaustive, for ordinary human nature cannot live in extremes for long at a time, and "the harp of a thousand strings" cannot be tuned to concert pitch and left standing there without danger of some of its finest strings either snapping or stretching until the whole instrument is out of tune and its ecstasy of sweet song becomes a discordant Jangle. No. The marriageable woman and the marrying man must ever meet like the figures at a masked ball. Each is d rested to represent some character which Is perhaps his or her beau Ideal, and one which he or she would fain Imitate, but which is by no means the true character of the masker. A commonplace and very unattractive young woman chooses to call herself Mary. quen of Scots, and may in the ball-room encounter some well meaning but mistaken youth who Is posing, guitar In hand, as Rizzio, but if they try to speak with each other it proves that Rizzio cannot sing and Mary cannot charm by voice and speech and glance as her great exemplar did, and if the acquaintance thus beq-un should be carried out in the calm light of day each will find the other a very different character from that which each had assumed. There is a vast deal of masquerading, moreover, which does not give itself a name and does not exhibit Itself, or, as one may say, advertise Itself, In a ballroom. It Is. In fact, so difficult for a good many of us citizens pf the world to do without a wardrobe of domlnos and at least half or quarter masks. It Is so dangerous sometimes, e?peciilly for a woman, to show her face with its undisguised expression to the world about her. and often fhe very truest sympathy we can show to a friend is to make believe that the mask he or she is wearing Is the real face. We know that it is not, and he or she knows that we know it, but on both sides it is felt that it must not be pulled away. There are emotions, there are situations, there are dilemmas that have no words. We feel, we see and know the truth, but we must not utter It. Each excepts the pretense, and we part with an understanding far more entire than any words could have brought about. But when two people are once married and well domesticated together the mask and domino are inevitably thrown aside, all pretenses cease, and either with an Increased satisfaction or with an ominous dismay each looks upon the true face and genuine figure of that fantastic masouerade called courtship. How many of those who read these words have in their own lives proved the truth of them! To how many does the knowledge of that truth come too late! How many a sore heart sighs bitterly as it is reminded of that masquerade which now name itself bitterly "the mask of death" and only hopes for death as its solution! But there are the bachelors, to whom in the first place I dedicated these few remarks and warnings, and yet having warned them that all is not as it seems in some cases, how can I advise them to guard against mistakes? "Well, I do not know exactly how it is to be done, but the object to be effected is to try and see the girl whom they admire, as she is among other women, with no man in the question. In fact, I must revert to my classical formula and bid him go spin among the maidens of Omphale. How it is to be done let him find out for himself. but do not let him fancy It is to be effected by questioning other women. We are as a rule v?ry loyal to each other when no personal jealousy Intervenes, and it Is a very dishonorable woman who will betray the weaknesses or the faults of a sister woman to the inquiring masculine. Even a man's sisters are not to be trusted In such a matter, and, furthermore, there is every probability that the man In undertaking a deep strategic movement will find himself led into an ambush and suddenly exposed to a pitiless fusillade of ridicule and scorn from the enemy who had for the nonce masqueraded as an ally. After all, having shown the danger, I do. not exactly see how to formulate the remedy. Perhaps to do the first Is as much as could be expected from one who Is herself most sincerely a woman. MRS. FRANK LESLIE.

Origin of Ihe I'enrh. Nothing is now more universally accepted than the fact that the peach Is an improved variety of the almond. The almond has a thin shell around the stone, which splits open and exposes the stone when mature. This outer skin has simply become fleshy in the peach, so that is all that gives it its specific character, explains Meehan. It seems now clear from investigation in the history of ancient Babylon that In their gardens, now nearly 4,000 years ago, the peach was cultivated then as it is now. It must have been many years before this that the peach wa Improved from the almond, ami this f.ict goes to show the great antiquity of the fruit. The Popular Bloaae. Was there ever such a variety of shirts or blouses and such diversity of j color in the same? borne examples are: I A lilac blouse with green- frills, a green ! one with black, a lemon with blue and ' pink Introduced, a pink with delicate : blue and green, etc. All have large I sleeves, most of them drawn fronts, I fastening at one side, and the generality with folded waistbands, finished off ' with an erratic bow, either at the front or back, which is always awry and outstanding from its parent band. üpaimndle Croup. According to Dr. Brubacher, spasmodic croup In children, coming on suddenly at night. Is often due to impaired digestion brought on by eating some heavy food Just before retiring. If the stomach in these cases be emptied by an emetic. It will be found that the croup will also disappear. William MorrU. William Morris, the poet, is described as a short set, broad shouldered man of robust build, with keen, lustrous eyes, a curly mane of tangled hair and a full flowing beard. He habitually aifects the roughest apparel, his general getup being decidedly nautical.

SCENES ON A PLANTATION

GEORGIA'S FEMALE PRISONERS LADOIt ICi I. THE FIELDS. They Work an Male Convleta Do Curlona Trait of Southern Civilization White and RIack Women In the KiDgi-Thf Slavery. lVorit Form of Three of the five female convicts who escaped from Maddox's camp in Elbert county ten days ago are still at large. Two of them were caught In South Carolina, and locked up over night in a tottering port of a caboose. The next morning the building was found broken all to pieces. One of the women who had been locked up was the Lea girl from Rome. he is only seventeen years old and is a comely yellow girl. Capt. Maddox, the lessee, wrote to Col. Jones, the keeper of the penitentiary, yesterday that he hopes to capture all the women. He is sure that they have not got far out of the neighborhood, and believes that they are being secreted. He has always recaptured all who have escaped until these last three broke away. Maddox,'s plantation Is one of the most beautiful In the state. It comprises 6,(W; acres, lying along the Savannah river In Elbert county. About half of the place is under cultivation. Capt. Maddox has been working convicts only eighteen months. He made arrangements with the other lessees to take all the female convicts off their hands. He has to pay the state's lease price, which is $12.80 a year, and h pays the other lessees a bonus. No male convicts are worked by Capt. Maddox. Women bring just as much as men one of the few instances in which female labor brings as much as male for the same kind of work. These women get to be as expert as men, too. They plow, hoe and dig and make a good day's work at anything they are put at. Capt. Maddox plants cotton, wheat, corn, oats and grass. He has a fine grist mill on the river and makes a great deal of flour. The women go to work at sunrise and go back to their quarters at sunset. Each woman has her mule and they take great pride in their mules. Free labor attends to the stock and the women have nothing to do with feeding them. In the morning early the mules are brought out and the women lead them up to a rock or log and Jump on their backs and ride to the field. The women are not shackled nor are they fastened to a chain as' the men are at other camps. There is a guard for every ten women. A gang of women will start off plowing and a guard will follow. Another gang goes behind hoeing and there will be a guard with these women. The guards carry pistols In their belts, but do not carry guns, as do the guards who follow male convicts. Capt. Maddox has given the women a little more liberty than some of them appreciated and five have disappeared within the List month. but two are back In the stockade. When the work Is near the quarters the convicts are taken there for dinner, hut when they are a mile or more away dinner Is carried to them. On returning from werk at sunset the prisoners, who wear a striped gown all day, go to supper. Each one has her sent at a table and the meal is before the plate awaiting her. After supper the convicts go to the building where they sleep. They have an abundance of water and access to it. Each prisoner has a cot and a change of dress beside it. The favorite headgear is a soft, round hat, much like a man's. This year Capt. Maddox has averaged about sixty-three female convicts at his camp. Of these only two were white women and they are the only -wnile women who have been in the penitentiary for a long time. These two are Pearl Pendergast and Alice White, both of Savannah. They were sent up for enticing a white girl from home for immoral purposes. The Pendergast woman was a noted character in Yamacraw. She was lewd but had good tralts. On one occasion when there was a riot started by the negroes she gave assistance to the policeman. She has been on her good behavior since she was sent to the penitentiary. . Some time ago she professed religion at one of the meetings held at the camp. She was baptized by a white preacher and entered on the membership of a white baptist church. She is employed at sewing and never has to leave the quarters. She helps make the clothing for the prisoners and keeps their limited and unfashionable wardrobe in repair. Pearl says that she is happy and she does rot have a hard time of it at all. She has grown fat and is in better health than when she was a free woman. Alice White was not so much disposed to be orderly and she was put to work in the field as a punishment. She watched her change and got away, . but was captured and taken back. Many of the negro women are ns strong as men. They can dig a well or quarry rocks and handle a fiatboat skillfully. Last spring a canal had to be repaired and the women did the work all right. That knowledge of the flatboats Is ureful in escaping. The women strike for the river and there throw the degs off their trail. They go up or down the river on a boat and the dogs can not tell which course they have taken. Speaking of escape, a tough negro woman from Rome broke away one day when she was about to be whipped and ran under a house. She disappeared very suddenly and the guards knew that she could not be far away. They searched closely for her and she, seeing that she would be caught, called to a woman who was washing near to tell her what she must do. She was advised to run and Jump in the well. The fugitive slipped out and unobserved ran to the well and jumped down. Directly the dogs were put on the trail and they went straight to the well and would not leave. A man was sent down. The woman was nearly covered with water. She would not give up and fought like a tiger. She was strong and whipped the guard and almost drowned him. lie crioi for help and another man was sent down. The woman turned on him and the two men had all they could do to keep her from drowning them. Finally they got a rope around her body and Ehe was haule J up with the water draining from her clothes in streams. Capt. Maddox pays as much for an escape as the other lessees pay for a man $200 if they are not captured In sixty days. Sunday is rest day. The women get breakfast and this time of the year go down to the canal for a dip. They have preaching later, but do not have to go. However, they like . to attend service, but they are not so demonstrative about their religion as the men are. Male convicts are often very religious and many a convict Is a "zorter." The women do not say so much about religion. Most of the women are in for bad crimes and have long terms. They are usually In for murder or arson or some serious offense. The term of the women are longer as a rule than those of the men. , Capt. Maddox has a beautiful home. It Is an old mansion with broad, double piazzas, white columns and green blind. The grounds are picturesque. Tall trees shade the residence and arches of evergreens cover the walks from the hou:e to th road. The lessee is a kindly, hospitable gentleman and his guests are always charmingly entertained. Atlanta Constitution. 100.00 FORFEIT. If It does not cure the effects of SelfAbuse, Early Excesses, Emissions, Nerv- ! ous Debility, Loss of Sexul Powers, Im- ' potency. Varicocele, Pimples on the Face, ' etc. Enlargement Certain. 1 will send I FREE the Recipe of & never falling cure. Address. with stamp. O. K. Tuppar, J Sportsmen's Goods, Marshall, Michigan.

der. You You You You "The Sentinel" How You Can

The Ftatx Pkntis el, which ever alma to keep abreast of the times and to promote the interests of Its' subscribers, bas Jnst completed an arranseraent with the leadiug watch manufacturers of the country bj which it is enabled to offer the best watches made, to its subscriber only, at the same prices which jewelers and watch dealers in the cities and towns have to pay for their good In some cases we can sell watches to our subscribers for even less than dealers have to pay for them. ' - - Every man or woman, young or old, who reads The State Sentinel ought to own a watch. Every one ought to have a good watch a watch that will not only keep time, but is handsome and showy. II you take The State Sentinel you can, for a limited time on.y, get a firet-clans, handsome gold watC-h, with the very best orks manufactured, for much less than poor watches with silver or brass cases are commonly sold for. Our stock of watches will not lastalwavs, and after the present stock is exhausted we cannot promise to fill orders. Thoss

! who order first, therefore, will be first served. The American Standard Watches the best timekeepers in the world are graded as seven, eleven and thirteen jeweled, full weled and adjnrtei. Very few men not one in a thousand carry either an adjusted or even a full-jeweled w.itch. Thk State feNTiNEL uses only the celebrated gold-filled cases made by Joseph Fahys, unless distinctly specified in special ! ffers. They are the best made, and selected for that reason. His ten-carat cases, called Montauks,, are guaranteed for fifteen refits. His fourteen-carat filled cases, called Monarch, are guaranteed for twenty years. WLeu ua aad fourten-carat cases axe ma! ah l 4 V nv 4s An 1 fsrt Aiilra in. f Ana s Vi m

The cuts represent Joseph Fahys' celebrated Montank and Monarch cases as above. Cases will be furnished either plain (engine-turned) or beautifully enzraved ae the subscriber prefers. No. 18, size for gentlemen, are Elgin, Waitham or New York Standard movements, and will be put in such casei m de Note carefully the descriptions and prices below. GENTLEMEN'S WHTCH6S,

No. 17. Size No. 18. No. 17. Bize No. 18 Waitham or Ejrin movement, seven jewels, beauti- I lully engraved .Montaus case, ühö. lnis watch would cobt from $28 to $35 at jewlrj stores. The above No. 18. Size No. 18. No. 18. ize No. 18 Monsrch case, twenty-one years guarantee, 14 carat, Waitham movement (engin-turned),$20.25 No. 28. Size No. 18. NO. 28. ?ize 18 MontsnX caw (engine turned). New York Standard movement, seven jewels, SI6.25.

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Please send ing address; Name Post Office County State Inclosed find

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No. 14. Size No. 13. No. 14. ize No. 18 Box case, Txnl XIV. Btyle, Valtham or Elgin movement eeven jewels, SI9.75. These w&tches art sold by retail dealers at from $30 to $3ö. fifteen years. No. 20. Size No. 13. flO. 20. Size No. IS Monarch com with wida Vermicelli border and engraved center, Waitham movement, eeven jewels, S23. This is the finest watch we oHer and is well worth $40, according to the price! charged in jewelry stores. The caees art warranted for twenty-one years. The readers of The Sevtixkl never had an opportunity to get first-claßs watches at any such prices as the above, and aftef this stock is sold they will probably not soon have such a chance again. This offer is open only to subscribers U The Indiana State Sentinel One of these watches will make a hand some birthday or Chrintruas present fof your wife, your sister, your daughter, ot your sweetheart; for your husband, youi father, your brother or your son. In order to avoid confusion and mistakes the watches 6bould be ordered only by their numbers. Thus it is only necessary to eay: "Send watch No. 3 (or whatever number is desired) to the following ad dreea." Write the name, town, co inty and 6iaie vnr plainly. Tiie cah muet accompany every order. We should prefer to have our subscribers use the following coupon, which can be cut out, filled op and sent to The Indiana State Sentinel with a draft on Chicago, New York, lnd:auapolis br Cincinnati or a poetotiice money order for the amount. 189 one watch No. to the followdraft (or money ordor) for I