Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1885 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1885.

THE INDIANAPOLIS NEW& AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER, rbusied rtiKT imiiww txcrrr wlxdst it JOHN ■. HOLLIDAY * CO, TV> Nf»sBmww* No » w. W ««his«to» St. [Intend it t*e podoflk* ■< Inrlisnspolis, lid., as serand-^** mstlcrj

served by esirieis In IndisnapoIIs »nd •nrroundfn* towns at ten cents jwr week; slnjle Buh, »ny cents per BK>r.tta, or 16 per year paysWc In adrsnce. Small advertisements, one cent a word for racl> Insert ton: not bins fcm than ten words counted. Dixplay adrertlseinetits vary in price, a^irdit* to ti^e and po-Oon. No adverts ments inserted m edttoriai matter. Ppepimen umbers atnt ftse on application. Pomace an ai>«W eoplea of Tub News, in Trapper*. «» cent - , Corraspondetice emrtalnlni news of Interest and Importance I* desired from all parts of the •tat#, slid will be paid for If used. No attention will tw paid M anonymous

Tic Maws baa a larger avenue daily circulation than any other dally newspaper published in Indiana. Persons desiring Tib D*n.T Nrws served at their boases, can aeowe it by postal card rest neat, ar order through telephone No. 161. Where delivery la Irregular, please make immediate complaint to the oAce. Tha date printed on the wrapper of each paper denotes the time when the aubserlptfon •spires. Remittances, drafts, chocks, and poMoffice srder* should be mails payable to the order of JOHN H. HOLLIDAY A CO.

TCt.KrnONR CAUA. Editorial rooms „..6731 Business office..,

MONDAY, MARCH ad. MR.

1 Lord WoLielEY ia gdinE to Sunkim'. From recent reporta it would seem that General Graham needed seme one to help him let go very much, and as Wolseley’a Khartoum effort allowed that he was a good “quitter” he can doubtless afford the needed assistance. . The Jake Thoropaon episode has loosened th# bloody shirt to a dqgree that nothing in years has done; nevertheless to do not believe It enn continue. There Is not enough in the act for people to remain indignant over. Lamar has made a fool of himself, and doubtless democrats including himself wish he hadn’t, but there will be no votes made or lost. t|IE heathen are behaving in most outrage«M fashion. Here are the two eminent Christian notions, the French and the Englith, each engaged in the missionary efforts of pacification, the one in China, the other in Egypt; but neither the brown men nor the black appreciate {heir efforts, and persist in fighting at every point. What is worse, they fight to conquer, and they are smiting their Christian pacificators with a perfectly reekless disregard of consequences.

VaK Zakdt has “weakened” and the Paris howlers triumph. The merits of this quarrel are very obscure, and it has attained a dignity doubtless far beyond its worth; but since It has become a topic of talk in two conti■ents it is to be said in dismissing it that almost anybody must have a thorough contempt for the French people, or the Paris people, at the display they have made in this thing. It is so unmanly, so puerile, so infinitesimal. Fancy, London or Berlin or New York making an issue of such a thing as

this!

. . .■■j-jh'" -wurt "'■ i —

England continues her war preimrafions, although nothing further appears that indieates war, unless it l*e the tone of the North German Gazette, which is a semi-official paper. It treats the matter with affected surprise as being of too trivial a nature to fight about, and significantly fails to understand bow England with her Soudan experience should want to assume a hostile position lo •o warlike a state as Russia. This means, if it means anything, that Bismarck doesn’t care how soon the trouble begins, and, all things considered, it is much more likely to begin

than not.

raying Legislators.

Our esteemed contemporary, the Kokomo Qaaette-Tribune. becomes unduly excited at our suggestion that a good way to keep the kind of mediocrity out of the legislature which “makes merchandise of its membership by prolonging its sessions" would lie to cut off all pay for such service. It avers that “medincrily” exists in a* great a degree among those who, desiring the “honor,” are amply able to bear the expenses of an tippaid legislator, as among those who could by Ro means afford the expense both of time ind money to make a campaign and attend tbs general assembly without remuneration. Let it be granted. Did our contemporary ever bear of Profcssor Seclye, who was elected to congress without a moment’s interruption of his foliage duties, and at the sole expense of the postage stamp on Ms letter accepting the nomination? Is it not quite possible to reverse the older of things, aud instead of having u iuhh "campaign” for an oSce at the cost of much time and money, leave the people to do the compaignlng? That would be the logical exercise of our theory of office, that It is the gift of the jieople'bestowed upon a man Who merely becomes their Servant or agent for the performance of- Us duties. If this be ■0, then It is their proper business to do the "campaigning,” ami so, carrylhg out the republican doctrine of government, make au ending of the present nnropttblican notion which attaches a price to place and leaves men to scramble for it. It is highly probable, Were we to put the true klea into practice, that worth would lie utilised irrespective of its financial condition. The idea which underlays our suggestion—and it was a mere suggestion—was exactly that, not thatoflke by separating salary from it should become the property of the rich, bnt that it would thus become, for one thing, unattractive to the sort of men of which the present legislature is full, who value It for its per dim, and for another would arouse the people to its importance and cause them to reo to its beetowal without expense upon men whose qualities they should hold valuable to them ia an execution of their trust. Our contemporary’s remedy, “first, to pay the per diem teethe regular session only; second, todeauttid the attendance of every member upon the extra session, imposing heavy penalties if not complied with,” is but a step in the direction of our suggestion. So we are not so far apart after all, and knowing that it equally

with wuaelvea wishes to

quality of legislature service, what does H think of the suggestion to ehange the per diem, either hy a reduction to a limit to cover bare expenses, to that it would be no money temptation to anybody, as it unquestionably is now to many members of this legislature, or to increate it to twenty or twenty-five dollars, and so make it a salary something like adequate for the command of irst-elass ability?

CTBRENT COMMENT. Steady progress is made in music in this etty.—fiJiueinnati Coiamcrdal f.an-tte. It is Inferred then that the -sock-ty lor the suppression of musk-'' has failed. "The Bad I.amis Cow Boy” is the nsme of a IiskoU newspaper. The edit.a- writes with a dagger dipped in blood and punctuates with pistol shot*. He has no Hbct tsiits. If there is an Anglo-Kussian war America will sell to both sides with strict Impartiality for cash; and the orders already placed by England show that a big btednesa will be done. One fencing master in New York nnmWrs Sxr mg his pupils over a hundred ladles well known In society, who practice the art for health and the development of suplc and graceful carriage. A resolution was offered in the New York legislature the other day asking for an Investigation of the Tontine plan of life insurance, and when H Is called up for vote a lively debate Is expected. Aud now it i* asked, if, in the case Jeff. Davis dies. Secretary Endicott will order the navy department dosed; if not. maybe Ijtniar will still close the Interior department, as he was that arch-traitor’* senatorial defender. Cleveland ha* “weakened” on the 8 o’clock breakfast hour, and now eats at 0—and not a month in the White Hons? yet. We'll soon hear that he puts on a “clean hlled shirt” and has his boots blacked every day. Thus doe* eflete notions Insidiously sap sterling democracy. It ia Mid that the English tr.m|>s in the Soudan are dcniornilzed. Strange; they say they kill ten to where tltey lose one.—{Indianapolis Journal. Maylw that’s the reason. The English are are such lender, gentle, considerate xml*, especially When they are fielding “niggers.'' Irving was asked to give a performance for the benefit of the BarthoMI statue pedestal fund, and replied with a check for ESO but refusing to give the performance on (he ground of lack of time. He ought to have refused It on the ground of the riieeklness of the request and kei>t his money Into tire bargain. A friend Is troubled because we sj>enk of the “British'’ in Egypt, and at the same time speak of "England'*” policy there, and wants to know why. For convenience, dear friend, convenience. "British” Is the race expression for the composite people of the “BritUh” Isle, who are made up of Jutes, Dane*, Puxons. Angk-s, Celts, etc., while “England" is the political term ti»ed to describe their government. As a matter of fact, at all of the principal letH'lons sotnc one connected with the embassy Is familiar with the kinguage of the country. In Austria, Wm. T. .Strong, the secretary «f legation, 1* an accomplished French scholar, quite able to hold his own in the language with European diplomates.—{Washington dispatch. French l«n't “the language of the country" In Austria: Oermnn Is. But this sort of information about the great abilities of the assistants in our foreign legations always comes along about tha time of a change of ministers. There is a brisk business done in wine corks In New York. They are gathered and used In filling bottles with native wines which are palmed off as the product of the foreign vineyard as named by the stamp on the cork In winedrinking countries when bottles are ordered for dinner they are frequently filled when the order Is given, scaled with wax, stamped, dusted and cob-webbcd and presented as Wine that has been bottled for years. On one occasion this happened and when the waiter drew the cork behold the first thing poured out was a fly not dead, still kicking! The state geologist of Indiana has been making a study of the great ice agejuid says that there are proof* of two glacial periods.—{Pittsburg Dispatch. Jes' so. The second, or Mauriccthompsonlan period has given such ample proofs of its exis*ence, that they who thought the C’ollcttian period was the only real old genuluo-without-the-name-blown-ih-the-bottlepe-ridd, are acknowledging their error. The Mnurlecthompsonlan i»eriod Is accompanied with well defined Isancgray marks, aud a spoliation development which Shows that It extends not only over this state, bir a wide region of cdhntry. Too much polities is at once a disturbance and a menace. Nome dav there will he a deckled popular movement for a limitation on elections.— [Kansas City Star. The new administration would do well to bear in mind that in resj«Ct lo this mutter of appointments a higher standard is to be exacted of it than was required of its predecessors.—{Bradstreets. The Confederate flag half-masted over the pension office would have been the appropriate thiug. and there should have l>een appended to it a yellow-fever shirt.—[Clucinuatl Commercial (iasette. President Cleveland’s nominations continue to Ire equally "a surprise to the politicians" and a gratification to the people. The candidates who press themselves the hardest are "left out.” It Is said, and "applicants are beginning to think it is fatal to their chances to he much talked Of.” That was the ease with Mr. Cleveland when he was governor. It is a way he has.— {Boston Herald.

Against whom lie fought. Twenty years of rapid national evolution, hqwever, have wrought such changes and so completely healed old quarrels that from ocean to ocean and from lake to gulf there U universal ghsnu at the slow but sure approach of the inevitable.—(New York Herald. The Commercial Traveler*. The Indiana branch of the Commercial Traveler*’ Protective association of the United State* held a meeting at the Grand hotel and revised the standing committees, tnnking them to consist of the following gen-

tlemen:

Hoard of Advisers—.T. B. Pugh, Wm. L. Baker, ft Co W, Geiger, Bruce Carr, C. W. spencer. <’. K. Vamlervoort. H. II. Makepeace.r. 11. Miller, C.

aud k.

twII, l M. N

orth*

Never to Hear Their Voice*. [Written for The Indianapolis MewsJ Never to hear their voices. Never to speak reply. Ever to miss their greeting k!*» When evening hours are nigh; Never to hear their voice-. No* one ‘oft loving tone. I *rvm to stand on desert sand In darkness and stone. T<> think of one who love* me And long for her carew. To fondly trace her sun nr face And stroke each golden tress; To iiet'd her wa -h? d presence — So often reason errs— And vet among the passing throng To meet all eyes but hers! To muse on Jessie's questions And I-cslie's bn«v hands. Or Lula's pUvs and quaint oid ways, And Bobbie's arch demands. Yet never give them counsel Nor join their merry games. And foci that speech can never resell The siieticc of their names! Away from wife and children While months from days u<-cme, Until it seem* hut in tny dreams These absent forms I knew; Never to hear their voice*. Yet fancy that they call— O thro’ my heart such yearnings dart Tiiey turn my blood to gad.'

BOOKS AND MAGAZINES.

’’or joy of love to sip.' Never to hear their voices. Never to sjieak reply. To uiivs tiie Whe of one warm kiss, Is this to live or die? —[Richard Lew Daw=on.

“SCRAP*.”

K. Vsnderviairt. H. B. Mnkcpei L CrUttfiMeu, T. J. Cook, 0. Thornton, Ureenwnud Preble

' Indiana Prc** Committee—Wm. L. Baker. IndlaunpolU>: E. J. Robiumti.Warsaw; T. P. Kcatur, Ft. Wayne; W. j. Ruble, Richmond; F. 1>. Ulln,

Terre HstiUq J. A. Fisher, Kvahsvijle.

'Bus and daggiuto Committee—P. M. ftallulmc, Indianapolis; I. Cilery. l.nKnusfort: A. M. Fitch, scymour: c. K. Mureii, Evansville: elms. Falk,

Ft. Wayne; C. A. Meeker. Lafayette,

Railroad foiumlUee -I. 4. ttordoii. ludlAunpoils; J. A. McBumey, lliUlnuapol!*: j, W. JVlernou, Rleltiiioud; Amos Klcille, Ft, Wayne; 11. A, Stewart, New Albany; W. M. Purse!I, Terre

Haiti*.

Il was derided to hold a date meeting the first Saltmhtjr in May, for the purpose of taking action for the good of the order, and the presa committee isaned annddreas, setting forth the purpose* of the &*«oeiatiou, which are to promote free trade between state*; to secure a reduction of railroad rates to commercial travelers, and to obtain a fair allowanfa for Imggace. They invite the aid and co-operation of the wholesale men of Indianapolis in these undertakings. A Theatrical Company Attached. Late Saturday night John II. Martin, district passenger agent of the “Big Four,” attached the baggage of the Rhea company playing at the Grand, for breach of contract, the agent Mr. Stone, having agreed to purchase tickets amounting to $191 over the “Rig Four” aud Baltimore & Ohio to Washington, and on the strength of this he got passes for himself aud wife clear through and then tickets were purchased by another, route. Mr. James Morrisey ; manager, compromised the matter by paying two fares to Washington and the costs, In all amounting to $4V.50.

lu Favor cf that Kind.

To the Editor of the Indianapolis News: I reed with pleasure your article, recently, on

the management of the state benevolent institutions. If the governor and legislature would ignore all applicants for posiikxis in these institutions and select only first-class men, who, as a* ruk‘, will not apply for Mich place*, but w ill serve because of their Interest and pride in the mccessftil management of them, then we won Id be rid of the biennial scandal* we regularly have

improve the in regard to (he management of our stale instllu-

what tious. I am a firm believer in that kind of civil service reform that ignores all proty#ionnl poli-

tician.- in such positions. R. L. it.

PRINCETON. lud., March 27.

Change* In the Eoo Theatre. The Zoo theatre was closed up on Saturday Right, and before being opened again it will be entirely rebuilt. Manager Gilmore says it is his intention to do away with ail the teatores that have made the piece objectionable, and to depend for patronage entirely upon th« aerits of the entertainment given.

Philadelphia has an oil export trade of $4,000,000 a year. New Jersey sends wife-beaters to the penitentiary for one year. The counterfeit cent is reddish, aud being soft, the edges are w orn. Handkerchiefs of very sheer lawn, with deep border, are the style. A New York belle is under treatment for enlarged lijis, due to par ting. Mr. Arthur intends to take a European trip, and lie is to sail on July 18. Whr is an escaping prisoner like a musical eat? Because he scales the wall.—{Burlington Free Press. It is authoritatively stated that the percentage of short-sighted children in Gertnony is as 3 to 30. Bi*marek remarked once to a friend, “I was a fairly well-off count, but I am a dreadfully shabby prince.” The late Henry P. Dudos, of Hartford, Conn., made liberal provision in his will for the maintenance of two horns, twft dogs, one white cat and one yellow cut. Because a man happened to lie i*>sse*sed of “a consiitution of a horse,” it by no means follows that his physician is justified in treating him like an a-s.—[Life. Parisians ate 13,000 donkeys, mules and horses last year. The academy de medicine has awarded a prixe to an essayist who strongIv recommends a -more general use of such diet. Upon his return from the Orient Lew Wallace is expected to produce a sequel to “Ben Hur.” It will be entitled “Ben fhar.” Sunset Cox has a subject for a new work, “Got Thar.”—[Chicago Tribune. Too much toexjiect.—Farmer Wurxe (reading program): “A year elapses Vtween acts 1 and It.” “What! do they think As I’m ngooin to sit in this yere theaytre a’ that whoile? Why, they must take me ter a born fule!” [Exit in disgust.)—Judy. Guzman Blanco, the uncrowned king of Veneznela, can not be made president because the constitution'prevents anv man from holding the office twice, but he has had a tool of his elected president at each election since 1872. He has had three bronze statues raised in his own honor. A writer says that “Europeans in India rarely suffer from snakes, the boots protecting the feet, which is the part of the body most frequently struck by serpents.” In this country the Doots would have to come up over the month in order to afford a protection against “snakes.”—[Norristown Herald. A few days ago a jury trial occurred in one of the courts of justice in Clvde, N. Y., and after the jury had been discharged the following ballots were picked up in the jury room: “No caws of aeshnn,” “no cause of action,” “no cans action,” no couse of action,” “no cause for action,” “no cows action.” A gentleman who is well versed in regard to'cattle says that after the sap rises in the spring, cattle driven from north to south a distance of thirty miles or more are sure to die, and those thriven from south to north will not die, but the cattle they come in contact with will die. Driving them east'and west lias no effect upon them. The New London Day, which has twice recently erred in announcing the death of people, announces that hereafter anv young man bringing new* of a death at an hour so late ns to make verification impracticable must be accompanied by the remains, not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.—[Hartford Times. The mother of a family, consisting of two grown-up daughters, living in Goffstown, N. If., recently died, and when the undertaker came to perform his duties, the father was asked the name of his wife. His reply was, “Mother.” No other name could he remember. and the daughters were equally ignorant. having never known their parent by any other name than “Mother.” Who would thiuk lhat ex-Secrctnry Chandler would permit himself to be bothered by such vlsionarv influences ns counting whit* horses for 1 nek ? He counts every one that he sees until he reaches thirtv-nine, and then he begins over again. Speaking of this once, he said he had often wondered why he did so, for his reason told him that it was nonsense, yet he felt uncomfortable unless he did. Workhottfc hoy who had been apprenticed to a small farmer, brought up, as lie had run away. Guardian—"Did they beat you?” Boy—“No, sir." Guardian— Then why did von run away?” Boy--"Plenae, sir,'soon after I got there a pig died; tin y salted it, and we hud fur to eat it. Then a calf died, and they salted it, and we had !W to cat that; tlien master’s graiidmother died, and I nert! ’em taking some salt up stair*, no 1 rim'd a way.’’—[London Topical Time*. An item is going (he round* of the mcdlca press t’ at forty year* ago Dr. Wilkinson Kins studied one thousand autopsies at Guv’s hospital, London, to nwrrtain tno proportion of jiersoii* who have Intent cancer or cancerous growths, but who die from other causes without the suspicion that they have the hidden germs of that disease. He found that "of all females who die at about forty, nearly onehalf have cancers; of mules, one-eighth'. Of males alxive sixty-five, one-fifth of all are cancerous.” Hattie Ketchum, a five-year-old girl living near Syracuse, N. Y., is said to be hopelessly addicted to the use of tolwcco, and has been so since she was two years old. When la-tween one and two years of age the girl was afflicted with what is known as wind colic, and at the suggestion of a friend, tobacco smoke was blown into milk and given her. This remedv proved effective, hut created an uncontrollable desire for tobacco, and by various subterluges the child has ever since found means to satisfy her craving for the weed. Lord Wolseley has the sight of but one eye. When lie was doing duty in the trenches before Sebastopol, a shell exploded in a gabion full of gravel, in moving which he and two sappers were engaged. The sappers were both killed outright; Wolseley got so severe a peppering with the gravel that he was literally stuck full of stones from head to foot. Thera was not a square inch of his face that had not a eravel pellet embedded in it; part of his shinbone was carried away and his eyesight was in «o great danger that tor weeks he was kept in the gloom of a cave near Balaclava, and so missed being present at the fall o? Sebastopol. Appointment Versa* Disappointment. [New York Run.) Photographer (displacing some photographs)—You wonhl hardly think those two pictures represented the same man, would yon? Gentleman—No, certainly not. Photographer—Well, they do. The one represents him before he went to Washington, aud the other after he came back. And a Minister to England. Vennout boasts of a profitable gold mine.

HISTORY OF THE PRESENT TARIFF. By F. tV. Tutissig. New York and - London: (f. P. Pntim.u's .-on*. Indianapolis: The BowenMcrrill Company. The title of this book suffieiently indicates its scope. The work seem* to have been performed in a careful and thorough manner. The appendix contains important tables. THE I/XT TRAIL. Bv Edwarel 9. Ellis. Philadelphia: Porter A Coates. Indianapolis: The Bowon-Merrill Company. The first of a proposed “Log Cabin Series.” tills boy’s book, as its name and the name of its scries ind irate, sets forth pioneer life in | the west, > Of moving accident* by flood and field. Of hairbreadth sea[ies i’ the imminent deadly breach. And all that sort of thing, wherein “rad- i skins” are encountered and foiled by the su- | perior acumen and daring of the “pale face.” j Frame’s Unrivaled Family Atlas of THE WORLD is the must perfect and complete work of its price ($3.75) ever published. It j contains two hundred pages, nearly half of ; which are new mniw, eighty per rent, of the remainder being valuable statistical matter, folly indexed, and tables giving the | location and population of every pliu-e in the United State*, with an ingenious scheme for finding instantly any desired place in the map. The maps have been brought down to the present time, all the geographical changes that hove taken place up to the beginning of the present year'icing carefully made. “HENLEY BKATES”—PRICES REDUCED. A fine assortment Rink and ('lub Skate Satchels. ju*t received and for sale at low price*. Can fit you now with Skates and Satchel* I'oinptcle. *t reasonable prices. Cull mid examine our Mock. We alrei have in stock the New Henley Monarch t'lub Skate, and repairs for tioth Kink and Club. Hii okbkand A Kt’uATR, .V> South Meridian rt.

NEVER SAW SITU A RUSH!

It Seemed as though every person in

Indianapolis was Barefooted. How they went for those Bargain Tables! How they grasped the Splendid Bargains displayed!

-

GERManrMOY

rj^Liisr.

Rheumatism^tfeufalqia, Sciatica, Lumbago. Backaebo. Headache. Toothache. R«ro Throat. R wellln**. hprolo*. Brolaoo,

•onto. »ej»l«D. Fro*I Bile*.

ISO AU. OTIIXA BODILY ritXt AID ACHES••14 bj D^Vftr *T«rT*b*r«. Fifty C«Ua tottfe,

la li LtafuhffM

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Steam

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fly ofl': until your

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_ _ nvone iiottleofSAN-

fobd * Radical Ccrk fok Catarrh. Complete Treatment, with Inhaler. $1.

One bottle Radical Core, one box Catarrhal Solvent. and one Improved Inhaler, in one package, may now lie had of all druggist* for $1. Ask for

Sanfoki/s Raiiicai. Cork.

“The only absolute specific we know of.”—[Med-

ical Times. “Tlic best we have found in aliictime of suffering.’’—[Rev. Dr.Wlgrin, Boston. “After a long stnlgg'- with f’Htarrh. the Radical Cure* has conquered.”—(Rev. 8. W. Monroe. Ix-wisburv. Po. “I have nut found a case that it did not relieve at

once.”—[Andrew Lee, Manchester, Ma«s. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston. v're'*v.:i sz tea. Coughs, colds, weakBac •' "'ps 8t*.:nach and Bowels, shooting -T ^ ^ n„lnc Vnmtinnw Mvctnrln Ff-

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Gas"

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REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF GAS. Notice to Gas Consumers and Others. Your attention 1* called to the marked reduction in the price organ, which took effivt on the 1st day of March. The company 1* now ftirniahIng gn* to all conMiincrs at 11.Wiper 1,000 cublo feet. Till* prte* I* certainly within the reach or all for both lighting and cooking purt**"*. The convenience aud comfort of cooking by ga«, c«jicclully during the summer months, where * Ora I* not otherwise required, can only Iw thoroughly appreciated by tlm** who have had exnerieiuM in it* useful application for that purt*M). T he company ha* sold lor u*e lu this oity during the last four yearn a large nmnlicr of gas stove* •and i* satisfied, from the many testimonials from its patron*, that them) Btovc* “till a long felt want," STOVES AND GAS ENGINES FOR SALE AT COST Gasoline Stove* changed to Gu stove* at small expense. The Indianapolis Gas Light and Coke Co., No. 47 South Pcnnaylvania Street. 8. D. PRAY, Secretary.

Wrought Iron Pipe and Fittings, Gas Burners, Gas Brackets, Gas ( joks, and a complete line of Broas Fittings, Gw- Tongs and Flyers. Rubber, and Leather Belting. Lace Leather, Machinists’ Taps, Drills, Reamers.Wrenches, Babbitt Metals, Copper, Tin, Antimony, Wiping Waste. All at manufacturers’ price, In quantity to suit the purchaser. We do a general Steam Water and Gas Fitting business, mid fttmlsh competent workmen. Your business solicited. Knight & Jillson.

COLLEGE SONGS Ot the American Colleges. BY HENRY RANDALL WAITE.

none better ot me size exist. Air. \\ aite, wtio has already compiled three College 8ong Books, condenses intotnisthe cream of cither collections, aud has brought together something that will be welcome In every household, as in every college. Seventy-four pieces of American,‘French, German or "African” origin, nonsensical, comic, pathetic. musical aud all sparkling bright. l*rice bnt 30 cents!

Modem Singing Methods; ’heir Use and Abase. By Y. Uotume. A short iportant essay, with valuable advice to all ire studying voice culture. Price, 36 cts.

Their Use and Abase but important cssi who are studying

Send for lists of EASTER MUSIC containing 170 flue Chorals, Anthems, Songs, etc. WELS'S 3d MASS (05 cts), and WELS'S MASS of ST. CECILIA (05 cts), new works of great merit. Public School Hymnal. By Irving Emerson. 281 well selected Hymns and about half as many Tunes, all appropriate and well fitted for devotional exercises in schools. Price 00 cts, fo.so per dozen. *5, Mai led for the retail nrice. OLIVER DITSON A CO., Boston. LYON & HEALY, Chicago.

Wall Papers.

A large Hue of GILT PAPERS, at 15c.

HERMAN MARTENS, 40 South Meridian Street

TKEAHURY DEPARTMENT, OFFICE OF J. COM PT no LI. Kit OF TUK CtKKKNCY.

Wamiinoton, March 12, IMS.

Whereas, by SHltsiUctury evidence presented to the undersigned, It lias been luutle to appear that "Th" tmllulm National Bunk of Indiunanoh*.'' In the city of Indianapolis. In tlm county of .Marloa and stale of Indiana, lias complied with all the prte visions of the "Arts Of Congress to enable nalloiml baiiklng assiK'latloiiM to exteiwl their isirporate existence, and for other purpose*," approved July 12,

Now. therafora, I, X*nry W. Cnniion,comptroller of the currency, do hereby certlf)' lhat "Tiie Indiana Nnlloiial Bank of Iiidlniiaisills, tnihecliy of iiidlutia|Hdls, til the roomy of Mitrioa and slat* Indiana, t* authorised lo have succession forth* iutIimI specified in It* amended article* of ussoclo(Ion, namely! uiiiil close of buslm* on March U,

1105,

In testimony wliereorwltne** my Imndaud \ 12*. • seal of oitlce, lids 12th day of March, 1*3 ' l —^ H. W. CANNON, Comptroller uf lit* Currency. No. »M.

Reduetioa in the Price of (k Notice to Gas Consumers and Othei’s. Yonr attention is called to the marked reduction in the price of go*, which took effect on the 1st day of March. The company is now furnishing gaMo all consumers at 11.80 per 1,000 cubic foot. Thi* price is certainly within the reach ot all, for both lighting and cooking purposes. The convenience and comfort of cooking by gas, especially during the summer month*, where a fire is not otherwise required, can only be thoroughly appreciated by those who hare had experience In its useful application for that purpose. The company has sold for use in thi* city during the last four years a large number of gas stove*, and 1* satisfied, from the many testimonial* from its patrons, lhat these stove* “fill a long felt want” STOVES AND GAS ENGINES For 8ale at Coat at Electric Lkhting and Gas Heating and Hluminating Company. Office: 68 East Market Street; HENRY DECKER. Secretary.

LYMAN VAPOR STOVE! Most aueccsaftil operating Stove In the market a. 3, OK 4 HXJKNKR*. One generator supplies the gas for all burner^ each burner being independent. As easy to light os a gas burner. THE NEW LYMAN OVEN, JUHT OUT, An improvement over any other oven. ’ JOHNSTONinjENNETT, 02 East Washington Street. ■W" Country dealers supplied. Write for circulars.

Now for the u Top Knot 1 ' of the Great Sale. ToMorrow, the Fii-st Saturday, the HI MI f «ItU! Come early in the day. M e will sell 1,000 pail's Men’s, Women's and Children's Shoes, all kinds, from 10 cents to $6.00, at just

Ten large tables loaded down! Buy all you want! Buy abend ! Ask to see the Bargain of Bargains: 2,500 Pair 1^1^ Kid Baton : : : tf}1- QA Worth $3.00. <51. COME TO THE GRAND ‘PHESTE.’

E

ochester-Buffalo BARGAIN SHOE BAZAAR, GG East Washington Street. G6

YOU SAY

IT WILL

PAY!

But Will It ?

The Drew & Wasson Mining Co.’s Jackson Hill and Garteherrie Bl’k Coal.

MART T. 0HR, 14 N. Penn. St. 126 Indiana Ave. TELEPHONE IS®.

BEST MOQUETTE CARPETS, - BEST VELVET CARPETS, - LARGE LINE BODY BRUSSELS, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS, - - EX. SUPER INGRAIN, - - - 2-PLY INGRAIN, -

$133 1-3 - 1.20 - .95 - .55 - .60 - .20

W. H. ROLL,

• 30, 32 and 34 South Illinois St

18

EAST WASH. ST. FOUR BARGAINS.

18

Ladies’ fine Kid Shoes, silk-worked button hole*

$1 50, worth $2 00. *

Ladies’ cut Kid Shoes, silk-worked button holes, French fly, $2 00, worth $2 50. Ladies’ fine cur Kid button, $2 50, worth $3 00. Ladies’ German Kid, hand turn, very fine, $3 00,

worth $3 75 # See them.

l. e. mo uni SON,

18

E.A.ST WA.SEE. ST.

18

IT WTTT P^AY!

IT

WILL

IP-A-^y *

Best Boiler Scale Purgative. TO TRY IT IS TO USE NO OTHER. J. I*. SlillYrG-ES Sc PEASE, Office 21 Thorpe Block. Individual, County or Bute right of manufacture for rale. «r- Thb News boiler uses thi* article.

TO VISIT THE

“BEE-HIVE” CARPET STORE,

Where, for example, you can buy:

Best Moquette Carpets for * • * •. • • $1.33 Body Brunsels—large line—at 1.00 Tapestry Carpets—au elegant line—at - - • . .60 All-wool Extra Super Carpet* at-- --•.,60

’XXr ATT T> A "DTPTJQ. v ▼ -X.%—I.—i ...X j x x\.jL ..JlIjJlv O»

Brown Blanks, fo * White Blanks, iQc Flats. - 15o Gilt Papers—a rich variety, • - * - 15 to 20o

WIISTDOW SHADES.

Window Shades, with fixtures, complete, - - . 30e

60c

Dado Shades, wiA spring fixtures,

Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc.,

Etc., ..Etc., Etc.

Drunkenness and Opium Habit

BKKRS, M. D., well known here. Mend stamp for •vidence, or call at* residence, 41 Appieten street, Borton, Him*.

jiee to tboaebeoomliig agents, iso risk. W sale*. Territory given. fottisfacUon cuar&u Address DK. bOOTT. *0 Broade ay St.. N. Y.

The “Bee Hive” Carpet Store, NORTHWEST COR. WASHINGTON AND MERIDIAN STS.

PAPER. JL w\r n Ttovi

INDIANA PAPER CO., Manufacturers.

WM. 0. DeVAY, President 23 East Maryland St. 4te-The paper on which Tax New* i printed is fornished by thk Componr.'Va