Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 January 1898 — Page 4
£ 'l'i'i'' SATORDAI, JANUARY 29, 1898 -jt :.- r. • «rt*ex, jjero'if- - **'■ »’•**♦■ •’
f’ !, r::::: ‘ ®Slf® . a si aer 1 Eat*- fable In eff ct November 28th, 1897. jOUiHBCW). -- \.5 Lou -ville ail, Daily 10 5.)a in • aJ Indianapolis Lad, 1 ,i plu « 39--Milk »eo ~ Daily, I ',’ l V P - m No 3- Loniivdie x; re s Daily 111- u No 45 -Local frf sht, - 4U north bound 4 30 a m No 451 - i ■' No .(• M k .ccom.Duly, •■} u xo 3- -t-.s. Had, xh< ( 3-(m. to Chicago Vestibule,b ... j» n» No 6 5i il and law-. Daily. 3 • - 31 F J 0 ‘ +— 930 a m • Dany excert San lay x Sun.lay only . No 74 carries p is mgers between Monon and Loaell , Hamnouo hue bee. u-ftde a regular atop foi No 31) „ . AV. H. IWAM, Agent. <,hureii Directory. PKLsBi U.. AN. Sabbath School, 9 “• *“• Public oorsiiip, “• “ Junior p. X. F. b. G. E., P- “• Pui.iic w oreuip, i:3u p- w. Pl .yer Meeting, Thursd. , 7:30 p. m METHOD.Sf tl’l CUPAL. K V. U. U. I'm , Pastor. Sabb tu School ,J :3O a. tu. puuile Wnraui, , liis.> >.ul. CUs Akeliug. '“■ “■• _»p«O'lh L.ea,ue. uu .. in. Bpaiu. be ' c G: .< ;.. , u . Puoilf IVor-ul ,: 3v p. ill. Ly •OKU League, I£S - . 7b"p. m. Pi.kj xr aleetiug. Al- ■' 7;JO p. m G'iUilSi lAN. Bible Sor-col, 9:30 i. ni V>. i iVoiauip, H:-sa, m. Ju tor uueavor, 2:30 p, in. X. r S. G. L., 6.3 U p. m. puuiic ‘'orsuip, 7. ;o p ni. vi i leeiiug, Tliiir-iiav. 7:3° p in.
WHAT THE LAW DECIDES.
A license to sell intoxicating liquor is held, Ln Voight vs. excise commissioners (N. J.), 37 L. R. A. 292, to be a mere temporary permit which does not con- I •tltuto property in any sense, and its 1 revocation can be made, without any- ■ thing in the nature of a judicial pro- i ceedlng, on proof by affidavit that the licensee has violated the law. A landlord’s duty to use reasonable care to protect the property of his tenant from injury by the elements while repairing a roof or putting on a new one at his request is held, in Wertheimer vs. Saunders (Wis.), 37 L. R. A. 148, to be one which he cannot delegate to an Independent-contractor so as to be relieved from liability if the contractor is negligent. The disqualification of one of the three members of a town board to sit ! -on a hearing for the revocation of a ; license is held, in State ex rel. Getchel re. Bradlsh (Wis.), 37 L. R. A. 289, to make a decision of the board revoking tile license invalid, and the chairman Is held disqualified when he lias procured a person to make an unlawful purchase in order to get evidence to revoke the license. An Insane delusion is held, in re Kimberly (Conn.), 37 L. R. A. 261, to be a false belief for which there is no reasonable foundation and which would be Incredible under the given circumstances to the same person if of sound mind and concerning which his mind la not open to permanent correction through evidence or arguments. The numerous cases on the question what constitutes insane delusions are collected In a note to this case. The driver of a truck in a procession, knowing that a temporary superstructure upon it was built by the hirer for the occasion, although he was sent by the owner of the horses and truck, who had agreed to furnish a driver, is held, In Hardy vs. Shedden Co. (C. C. App. Cth 0.), 37 L. R. A. 33, to be a special Ser, ent in the employ of the hirer for that particular occasion. With this case to a very extensive note on the question which of two or more persons is the master of another who is conceded to ba a servant of one of them.
BITS OF KNOWLEDGE.
ttxty languages are spoken In the ■mfklre governed by the Czar of Russia. The largest winged insect in the *w®rld is the Atlas moth of Central Brasfl. Its wings extend fourteen inches Iran tip to tip. An average of three British seamen Ims their lives every day by drowning, and 300 British steamers and sailing vessels are lost yearly at sea. There were only 500 miles of underground wire in London, England, in 1868; there are now 13,000 miles. In 1869 there were five and & half miles as pneumatic tubes, compared With forty miles now. A bricklayer can lay about 1,500 or 1,600 bricks in a day of ten hours where the joints are left rough; about 1,000 per day when both faces have to be worked fair; and not more than 500 a day when carefully jointed and faced With picked bricks of a uniform color. The human brain Is composed of at iBMt 300,000,000 of nerve cells, each an todepepdient organism. The lifetime of * nerve ceil is estimated to be about «txty days, so that 5,000,000 die every 4V. about 200,000 .every hour, and Marly 8,500 every minute, to be sueeroded by an equal number of their progeny. Thus once in everv sixty days • aaan has a new btaln. most renwrirable case of a letter MBBMd in theMMaMtiMroket nf ■ am
■with a short memory lately came to light in Nor h Carolina. The wonder is that the overcoat, the letter, the owner of the coat, the Writer, and the addressee all outlasted the interval of thirty-two years between the lapse and the restoration of memory in the oblivious custodian of the letter. It was written in 18'35. When discovered,'in 1897, inquiry was instituted as to whether the addressee wci; still alive, which being found to be the case the letter was duly forwarded.
NOTES OF NOTABLES.
Hall Caine has been ordered by his physician to go to Rome and abstain from all work and worry. Mme. Emma Eames, the great singer, said recently that though she lov. 1 America no singer could live there long because the constant rush and htirry soon told on the voice. There is a relic of Livingstone in the Charterhouse school, London, in the form of an old battered coat given by the great African missionary to one of his native followers. When President McKinley return d to the White House recently he foil 1 that one of the alterations was the lilting out of a hitherto unu 1 room as a handtome smoking room for him. Mme. Nordica recently had an expensive silk gown ruined by the d’rt cn the stage of the Auditorium in Chicago and declares that the next time she sings there she will wear a bicycle suit. Pampeluna, his native town, has established a Sarasate museum, to which the violinist has given all the presents and jewelry lie has received from royal personages during his career. On the last occasion when rumors of his resignation were rife Lord Salisbury is said by London Truth to have observed, “So long as I am in public affairs I do not intend to be the Dowager Lord Salisbury.”
FOR EVERY TASTE.
Glasgow lias a population of nearly 1,000,C00, and has only 494 doctors. It is expected in Tokio that Japan’s budget next year will show a deficit of 25,000,000 silver dollars. In St. Louis there is enough vacant and unused land to make a strip 125 feet wide and nearly 900 miles long. The number of young fishes transferred last year from the hatcheries to thewatersof Wisconsin was 77,000,000. A telegraph and telephone line between Chicago and Milwaukee is owned by tiie (citrons, who pay 5 cents for each message. Many English accident insurance companies charge an extra premium when their policy holders travel in Canada or the United States. Denmark has labor unions comprising 88,000 members. The Swedish unions have a membership of 7,000, the Norwegians of 12,000 laboring men. The King of Korea has sent thirty young men to Russia to learn the languages of that country. On their return they are to be employed as officials. Pitcairn Island now contains 120 inhabitants, the descendants of -the wellknown English mutineers and Tahitian women. Only forty of the Inhabitants are men.
AMONG THE WORKERS.
A prominent Brooklyn unionist, claims that those unions that have labels are more careless about asking for union label goods than those who do not use labels on the goods they manufacture. The action of the building trades council in pressing the heads of the departments to put into force the eighthour law relative to the employment of mechanics and laborers on public work, is to be carried into court. Jacksonville eig.u makers struck because all the men employed before the shut-down were not given work when operations were resumed. They asked that Hie work be divided in order to provide work for all. The National Laundrymen’s Association, at its convention in Boston, took the stand that it would not recognize the Chinese. This It did by tabling certain resolutions which sought to establish a boycott of Chinese laundries. “The Free Labor Protection Assocmtion” is the title of a new organize: i of capitalists started in London. his institution is to fight trade unionism and assist in providing non-unionists when strikes or lockouts occur.
FACTS LITTLE KNOWN.
A chestnut tree at Torworth, the residence of the Earl of Ducie, near Bretol, is probably the oldest tree in England. It is 1,000 years old at least, and measures 50 feet in circumference. The average age of the Presidents of the United States has been 56. Grant was the youngest man ever elected to the Presidency, and the first Harrison, who was inaugurated at 68, was the oldest. A fish exerts its greatest -propulsive power with its tail, not with its fins. The paddle wheel was made on the fin theory of propulsion, and the screw propeller had its origin in noting the action of the tail. Hyde Park, the most attractive of London parks, covers 400 acres. The Bois de Boulogne, the most distinctive of Paris parks, covers 2,200 acres. Central park, the most distinctive of New York parks, covers 840 acres. Rev. I)r. Thomas Gallaudet, the veteran instructor of the deaf and dumb, ■who recently celebrated the fiftieth anniversay of his marriage, is wedded to a deaf mute. Their six children have perfect speech and hearing.
Didn’t Want to Meet Her on Earth.
I A traveling medium who recently I gave a seance in a Georgia town began by saying: “I have been requested by some of the men present to recall the spirits of their wives, who have gone before. Keep perfectly quiet, friends— In one moment they will be with you.” “John,” whispered an old man In the audience, “Gimme my hat—quick! I don’t mind meetin’ Molly In heaven, but I’ll be durned of I want to resume business on earth!” It is one of fate's decrees that lovers must fall in Jove before they can fall MA
1. J u is what many a mother is looking for; sornetLi •; .jl.it'’y safe and reliable, that will disarm her terror of t’at dread rattling, strangling cough, so fearful to tl.o mother, so fatal to the child. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is a croup cure that can be relied on. Thousands say so. Mbs. W. J. Diction (“Stanford Eveleth”) writes from Truro, N. S. :■ "That terror of r: ;hcrs, the-startling, croupy cough, u; ." .r al: . Ime so long as I had a bottle of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral in the house.” “We hove u=e-'l z\y<fs Cherry Pectoral in our family for 0:..e v.!:tn our boy had a severe attack of croup, wo thought that he w. 31 ci-j. I ,:t we 1 ■ ke up the attack by using Ayer’s C; . y Tecmra!.” R. 11. C. .X, 1 1 lucheville, La. r- > / ) is ptit up in . li-she bottles ai half price—30 cents.
FEAR IN BATTLE.
ThcColonel Says No . nWent Through the War Without I'.x perieiicing It. They wi re talking about a soldier's feelings in brittle ai 1 some expressed tile opinion (I.at man nn n went through the civil v.,:r without ix ing frightened at any time by their personal danger. It was tile < plouel, who had gained honors < ii the battlclicld. who answered him" as follows: “When 1 s’arted out I felt sure that I would never ki'.ow' what the feeling of fear was, and e: j erience taught me that ail soldiers went forth with the same impression. Gad, how 1 changed my niind during my first skirmish! We were behind an embankment ami I was In command. It just rained lead across our hea Is. Every time a man raised his head above the breastworks it came whizzing off his shoulders as sure as shooting. I got scared. I could feel iny.-elf growing colorless. I couldn’t articulate. My arms grew rigid, and to save me I e6i:’Jn’t Lave put in a load. AU of a sudden it came to me that t.lio men under me know that I was si arid. Ti.i-. th 'iigiit.’mo<em dup my tongue and joints a bit. Then it Hashed over me that it would never do for mi l to let-my men know that I was afraid, ami that 1 must do sometihing to prove that I was not. What could I do? The man next to me poked his head up at that point and a minie ball took him right between the eyes. A cold sweat broke out on me, and I was re.' ly to collap e, when all of a sudden it came to me that ail would be lost; that I should bo ruined if 1 let my men go on thinking that I was a coward. I seized my field glasses and with a shout leap i J ;o r ... top of the breastworks. i raj.. ; ( (hose glasses to my eyes, au i for a s ' [ our enemy almost stopped firing t.liey were so astonished. I look-. 1 from one end of their lines to the other. “ ‘Come down from there, you d d little fi ill’ said a rough voice behind me, and I was jerked Baek into the ditch by a powerful force. ‘Do you want to got killed?’ It was my colonel’s voice and bis hand that saved me. Vi hat did I see through the field glasses? Not a thing. I was too seared. A blind man could have seen more. But I saved my reputation. Many times after that I was frightened in battle, but never so much so, and I never shirked. Eroni that day until the war closed my men adored me, and they thought 1 never knew what fear was during the whole of those four bloody years.” “V» hat did they think ailed you that day?" “It went the rounds in my company that I had an at.:."-:; o f trouble,’’ answered the ( with a laugh, “ami I never took the trouble to cor rei-t (he story. It w:.-- time in a way, for 1 was so frightened that my heart almost stoppi d besting. It’s bosh to talk about air,' man going through the war without D eling fear. Any brave old soli:ter \i! toll you of experiences such as I have told.”
DEVIOUS DEFINITIONS.
Cipher—feiuet 'lug that a man can always got for nothing. Jackpot—A ve -el sometimes used for the cocking of “g;, cns.” Ignorance—S m>< :;r.-.--s it's bliss, and sometimes it’s blisters. Ambition —The f ling that you want to do something that you can’t. Clove—A scent times used to disguise the breath of .-ur-.picion. Cheat—What the other fellow does when you get mo worst of tin; bargain. Compromise—A n agree mem ;>y which both parlies get v. hat they don’t want. Egg—Soniothim.r that a hen lays simply because she is unable to’stand it on end. Miss—Something that is better than a mile if she is neither lob old nor too young.
Rapid Turn of Fortune's Wheel.
Good for:une lias come to James Wil--n after eleven years of penniless ’.'.anting on the face of the earth. Wiion was ilie son of ;i v/< tiirliy New York banker ami broker. In 1.873 he t lurried a nurse in the f t ttily, in spite of parental objections, lie went to Australia and lived there for sevexgl .rears with his wife. In 1884 his father lied, cutting him off without a cent, e tried to lirc-k his father’s will-, but i ■ ..-fill, aml'mmrp KA:> lie il l ife of at. an . i. :■ has re;ly r ... 1 n. tvs in San Francisco .mat the I ailed States Luprc-me Court haadeeided in his favor a suit Lhat wiM
give him a good portion of a 115,000,000 estate. Witeon Is partlculariy bitter against hia relatives, who, when he was sick and hungry, refused him money or food. He is 52 years old.
A Chance for a Match Company.
The Papuans of the Malay coast of New Guinea are still In the most primitive state. Tney are wboMy unacquainted with metals and make their weapons of stone, bone and wood. They do not know how to start a fire, though fire is used among them. When a Russian asked them how they made a fire they regarded it as very amusing, and answered that when a person's fire went out he got some of a neighbor’s and if all the fires in the village sfhould go out they would get It from the next village. Their fathers and grandfathers had told them that they remembered a time or had heard from their ancestors that there was a time when fire was not known and everything was eaten raw.
A Straight Tip.
Trainer (at the track)—Bet every cent you can raise on Tippet. Hs’ll win in a walk. Friend—But the track's muddy. Does he like mud? Trainer—Does he like mud. Why, that horse positively refuses to eat unless he’s standing in it.
YERINGTON’S COLLEGE,
-t Lqtis. Michigan, will open its tev enth yeoi Sept 27th, 1897. courses:rcacbeas’ Gommeacii l, hortband, Pen -nanship, English, Music, Elocution, and ysical ( u lure. tuition; For any or 1 ‘udies iu tiie college, 12 weeks sli>; .v. . kssl6; 3tt weeks $lB. The Gemanclie- Aritimieiid, Giammai and GJe,‘£ -iphy] w ith Private Lessons in Music t-.; 0 Ail Free Glass Drill;, to above ’tuitioL The Gominou Branches with All Free k/biss Drills [without Pri> yrte ' .. so "J w Eusir] only £ls a vear " j Drills are Plain ; and OrnaPentnanshtp, Reading,'Spelling, L Writing, Music, Elocution, Plrysiea. Culture, Debating arid Paillanienta■y Doik. Students may club where 'hep have use of Boarding House complete tor 5" cents a week and furnish tbeir own provision for a trifle.—All •studie3 in the college bundled by proiessionals —Our Gommercial and Shortbond graduate hold the best positions m our I n.-t cities Not one from our Teachers’ G< ur.-e has f illed at Teachers’ Ex.-.iuinations dining the past two year? Drop a card for fiee catalogue to
C. W. YERINGTON
S Levis, Michi an
HOBBIES FOR ROYALTY.
The Empress Elizabeth of Austria is an accomplished horsewoman. She also delights in her fame as a pastry cook, and her daughter, the Archduchess Valerie, is proud of her accomplishments in the methods of ancient and modern cuisine. Queen Victoria, whose especial hobby is music, has educated her daughters to be useful as well as aecomplisthed women, and they may all be said to be efficient and artistic. The queen herself likes to study Hindoostanee and to see her favorite dogs and ponies. The queen of tthe Belgians is a clever nurse and a good doctor, having not only studied medicine, but having frequently applied her knowledge in emergencies. The queen of Greece is at the head of an association of women Whose object is to the moral regeneration of criminals. The queen of Portugal is more frivolous, having the reputation of being the “most dressy” lady in Europe. Her pale complexion and her auburn hair permit any colors, and she often appears in astonishing colors. The Princess Waldemar of Denmark ranks among the most fashionable of royal ladies.
About the Size of It.
He —The sum of woman’s happiness may be put into three words—“l love you.” She—And the sum of man’s happiness may also be expressed in three words —“Pay to bearer.” It is hard to convince a schoolboy that summer vacation days are longer Mum winter sr-hool days.
z. • LA- ? s W 4■ ■ s ’ saa T we &. w ■. .. % r vw.. aWIW-. ■ ' ■ '' ■' ■■■ J ■as® .-.j. ■ ' I- A* A A co : .e If you want to raise colts that will be the best for general purpose or that will bring the highest price on the market, go to the Lafayette Import mg Co 33 North Third Street. end he. their «„e hrt ot German i ions just imported, or if you want to buy a stallion on terms that he will pay himself out, call on or address THE LAFAYETTE IMPORTING CO Lafayette, Ind. F. A WOOBJN &CX9, Real-Estate ./Ygeriti oresman. No. 76: 280 acres finely improved, 5 miles southwest? Xft pe V rSe eWrable '* UP; be Bold '. ;, 6 ?. a i ? rrs ' w a U t miles from loun; lone- tirm it r d- en,! mile from pj>. town; Hi m>< ade ( 11Jra ‘ yo ' P n oe $lO per acre; will lake 606 in g()O1 '6. ]6O acres, all fenced, tovn site cn the f ; rni ] arce r S ldl " g ’ hay on 3 1 a'bargain 89: 80 acres, unimproved, two and one-h-df miFs R-,v to s : k,: 12 '? k ix >.)t t-e.ai i-t p . vtf1 ’H ''b m ‘cwn: Pieper.: r " fcd ' 4
Itb to U&t I The bt ate of Indiana. Jasper County: ! lu the Jasper Circuit Court. January Term, 1898. Norn Lynch ) vs > Complaint No 5454. Edward J Lyneh. Now comes the Plaintifl. by James W. Donthit her attorney, and tiles a complaint b'eem, together with an affi av«t that the dtiendant Edward J Lynch is not a res dent of the bt.n.eof Indiana. Notice is ibe es re hereby given said Defend n l , that unless he be and appear on January* 15’h, 1898, the same being the Izth day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be Lolden on the first Monday of Janua y a. d. 189 c, at the ( ouit House in th" ity of Renss.l aer, in sei Couniy -nd Stae, and answer or demur to s id comp>aint, which is for a Divorce, the same will be heard and de ermmed n his > bsence. ( ——— > In Witness Whereof, I Seal. > here -nto set my hand nd —’ affix the «e .1 of s»id Court, at Rensselaer, Indiana, this 13th day ot November, a. d. 1897. Wm. H. CCiOVER Clerk. James W. Donthit. Att’y for pl’tt. ImTmraF The State of Indiana, ) Jasper County j In the J asper Circuit Court January Term, 1898. Jennie Tree, 1 vs y Complaint No. 5460. Andrew li. Tree. ) B order of Court, in said cause, the following de.endant was found to tea non-iesident ot the State of Indiana, to-wit: Andrew H. Tiee. Not ce is therefoie hereby given said Defendant, that unless he be and apt oar on the fi.s< day ot the next term of the J a-per Circuit Court to be boldon on the 3d Monday of Ma.oh, a. d. 1898, at the Court House in the City of R nsseUer, in said County and State, and answer or demur to sa.d complaint, v hich is tor a divorce, the si me will be . card and determined in his absence. .— — i In Witness Whereof, I J Seal, > hereunto set my hand and affix the sea) of said Court at Rensselaer, Indiana, th s 13 h day of January, a. d. 1898, "Ji. H Coovfb, Cl rk. James W. Donthit, Att’y for Pl’ff. Jan. 15, 1898 00 YEARS’ . ■ ■ n . ■ J 1I a k g 1 >i M ImSI wk A Tr<*DE Marks 'TvfKaaMW* Designs rvTvw Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific Jfinerican. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific Journal. Terms, S 3 a SSV. : .I2? r »!• Sow by newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 36 ,Br ° adw ’h New York Branoh Office W F «t Wastiufti-n, D C. i MS CALLUM jflwrasWl (“THE STYLISH PATTERN.” Ar- A fistic.' Fashionable. Original. Perfect- f T Fitting. Prices IO ana 15 cents. J I None higher. None better at any price. I I Some reliable merchant sells them in » ? nearly every city or town. Ask for ? fl them, or they can be had by mail from fl ’ us in either New York or Chicago. V Stamps taken. Latest Fashion Sheet ? sent upon receipt of one cent to pay L postage. i MS j J MAGAZINEW j a Brightest ladies’ magazine published. T I Invaluable for the home. Fashions of | • the day. Home Literature, Household ’ a Hints, Fancy Work, Current Topics, T I Fiction, all for only 50 cents a year, in- I • eluding a free pattern, your own selec- ’ Jtion any time. Send two 2-cent stamps T for sample copy. Address A S THE McCALL COMPANY, 8 A 142-146 West 14th Street, New York. A • . 189 Fifth Avenue, Chicago. ’
The finest line of box, calf and winter tan shoes for ladies and gents, also the best stock of boots ever brought tc t! is city, at Judge aley’s, tne “fine culd Irirh g:n~ tl te -n,’ who will take great plea.'howir g them to you. Bane of Beauty. Beauty’s bane is® : ,a. the fading or falling of the hair. Luxuriant k tresses are far more a the matron than to the maid whose casket of charms ia yet nnriHed by time. Beautiful women will be glad to be reminded that falling or fading hair ia unknown to those who ase Ayer’s Hair Vigor. PlOiiEEßjSEfeT'hf RLLtT] B;jEF, Pen 4 t Mutton, bnusage, alogna, et< w quantities to suit ...urohaters at tnc a EST PRICES.--None but the best stock slaugliteied. Eveyody is invited to call THE HJGHES'J 1 BICES J AIL FOR Good C’a tile, J. J. EIGLI SBACH. Pionrietor
Rensselaer Narirle House MACKEY BARCUS —Deale* x*s Ir. — AmeTs'cem ard I'Mai. 2MONUMENTS, TA BLE’. S EE£lh TftJ . , sIiABS, si ATE AND MAKBI.E MANTELS ? wo*/# rjsuKA Fn.oit St, st. f'Hisselaer Indiana. —— JI,!, ll—— MA IMO HftIRNiHIfifWAIiEIOOMS
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Tbo Indianapolis Daily and Wook Sen* inelcirculation has leached immenae r o-Mrttiona by it. thorough service in receiving al) the latest news all over the Stkte and irom its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in India should take a State paper, and that Ths Sentinel. LARGEST CIRIULATION Of any Newspaper TEH s- OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily o year . - s6.'* Weekly cne year The Weekly Edition Has 12 PAGES! SUBSCRIB row And make all re . t* . oeg to j i.E INEliliiPOLis) SENTINEL Co=. Indianapolis, Ind. Thks paper wii? be furnished with the weekly edition cf The Indiana Stato Sent ; nel for $2 I*o. \ >hon« 1J54.A Blaekford Block, Indianioolis. Largest and best | shortest time | lowest rates) posltienr secured) enter any time) Illustrated catalogue free. HERVEY D. VORIESi Ex-State Supt., Preeldor*
