Indianapolis Journal, Volume 1, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1872 — Page 1

NIN JOUIRNAJE VOLUME 1. NUMBER 257. INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1872. PRICE, TWO CENTS.

THE

WILTCEISTS & CO.. Mannfactnre SOFA BED LOUNG ES, SPRING AND OTHER MATTKESSES, And all kinds of FURNITURE REPAIRING, 78 Eaat Market Street. may? 3mlstptoplstcol PALACE BIIUG STORE, 22 North Pennsylvania St.. INDIANAPOLIS, 1ND. MORRIS fc TIMBERLAKE, SUCCESSORS TO WITT & SURFACE. jytSlstcollstp 2me ' JOHN" OTT fc SON. Manufacturers and Dealers in FIRST CLASS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE, LOTZ'8 PATENT SPRING BED FOLDiNu LOUNGE, .AJNTD BLODAU'S PATENT BARBER AND DENTIST CHAIR, And the best SPRING MATTRESSES. Wareroom, 196 Weat Washington strreet, Indianapolis, Ind. P"Art work and repairing done to order. may8 3m TAKE NOTICE. HAVING Bold onr Pennsylvania Street Drugstore we will contmne in business at onr old stand, 14 Wett Washington st rwt. A larjre stock of Paint., Varnishes, Bnuhes and Window (ilass on hands, in which we ort'er special inducement for the next 00 days in order to reduce stock before moving into our new room. Remember the place, 184 West Washington street. WITT & SURFACE. je'27 2me PARASOLS AND FANS, LADIES' UNDERWEAR, FINE EilBROIDERINGS AND LACES AT GREAT BARGAINS, tST STORE OPEN EVERY EVENING. M. II. SJPADES' ap51yl?1plstrolnrni "INDIANA STORE."

A. DARLING, Dealer In GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS, GO North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis. Indiana. SHIRTS A SPECIALTY. SPECIAL SALE OP Gray's Molded Collars. Stanley, 25c per box, Montrose, 35c per box. Clarendon, 30c per box, Shirley, 20c " " Stratford, 35c " 41 Exeter, 20c " Cloth-faced Cuff, 30c per box; paper do, 25c Cotton, X hose, 10c per pair and upward. Men's under-shirts, c. jyl3 lstcol lstp 3me EVENING JOURNAL. INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JULY 19 1S72. A ROUSING MEETING. A correspondent at New Castle sends us the following: New Catlb, Ixi., July 1 172. To the Editor of the Evenins Journal : The Rev. McCary andJ. S. Ninton, colored orators from your city, had a rousing meeting here last evening and by far the best pleased audience of the season. They insist that the Democracy never did a thing for the colored nan but oppress him and hunt him down, and that there is no danger of the colored voters turning their backs upon the party which brought them out of the house of bondage at the very rlrst election after their deliverance. The speakers ridiculed most scathingly the proposition of Hendricks & Co. to have their past records forgotten. The Greeleyized Republicans are a forlorn Bet, mostly of a class who have got tired of waiting for something. They won't count much at the ballot-box, though they make considerable noise. The Republicans of the State can rest assured that Ges. Grant will receive a larger vote in Henry county this year than he did in 1S08. Yurs, IIkkrt. To the Editor of the Evening Journal. After reading your article in the Jourxal of the 15th instant, in regard to Mr. Hendricks' nose, as represented iptho cartoon, in the show window of the City Book Store, the question occurred to me, is it right to make sport of or call especial attention to the'peculiarities of ny portion or member, that goes to make up. the y "human . form divine?" The conclusion was that If the peculiarity, deformity, or whatever you choose to call it. is the result of natural causes, it would be highly improper; but, if it should result from too much whisky,"(which is utterly out of the question in the case of the nose we are alluding to,) or too much water, ai ia highly probable in this case, then it would be excusable, especially in one of the Hon Thomas' victims. By the way, if buttered watermelon and cherries have such a terrible effect upon the brain and iansrds of Bhj Gat Brown, and too copious imvvrs (in the financial sense,) of water affect so seriously the nose of the American Talleyrand, what would be the result of a mixture of Hendricks' water with Brown's buttered watermelon and cherries? Would it not be "fearful to behold ?" m. v. Indiaxapous, Ind., July 17,182. To the Editor of the Evening Journal. I noticed in yesterday's Issue of the Xetet a ard from one that boards at No. 171 Park avenue, stating that he had been a life-long Republican voter, but now gave his support to the (mongrel) Greeley ticket. For the 6ake of the fair fame of ths house he should have added that he stood Alone, and that eight Grant men to the minor born board at 171 Park Jlvzstte.

HASH. Senator Thurman, of Ohio, in in New York City. Prof. Agrsiz and party were at Pana

ma on .1 une Hj. There is a prominent Russian female 1 : T-k , -r t ? V lawyer ai m. i etersourg jiauame rvriei.un President liners played the devil in a printing office forty-odd years ago. So did we. A Poughkeepsie man had bad luck. He died the day he. came into possession of They don't propose to let poor McKean Buchanan's body rest in peace. Suspicion ol poison is to be datermmcu. Bobbing for eels in the Boston frogpond is said to be preferable to the situation of a newspaper correspondent. They have an old fiddle in Paris, valued at $8,300 francs. Here you can buy one for a dollar ana a half. . It is now reported that Josie Mansfield is going to San Francisco to live after the trial of "her man." If comfort were the only consideration to be thought of in dressing during this weather, one could get along easily with a pair ui suppers ana uniDreiia. In Jacksonville, Florida, grapes are 35 cents a box ; peaches sell readily at 40 cents a do7.cn, and rigs are 20 cents a'riuart. It's not growing hot down there either. Suggested title for the next sensational noval, if anyliody is to live through this hot weather to read it : "Three weeks in the Tropics : a Story of Boston in July, 1872." Colonel Forney found It. E. Lee's likeness in every house in Texas frequently at the side of Washington's, but poor J. D. is nowhere. The practice of wearing eye-glasses on on the bridge of the nose is causing an alarming increase of cancer in the nasal organs of New York. A German tailor in New York who was called a fraud and a swindler by a Roman Catholic priest, has sued for five thousand dollars damages. One would think that editors were more numerous than men of any other profession, judging from the number of editorial excursions that occur. An Iowa woman ha3 realized fifty thousand dollars from the insurance on the lives of two husbands, and they weren't very good husbands either. An idiotic Alabama parent didn't favor his daughter's lover, and bet him five hundred dollars lie wouldn't marry her. The parent lost. The cooks in London are as much puzzled as the dressmakers on the invention of novelties. One of the latest importations is cold asparagus served up with ice and eaten with cold lamb. The Jacksonville, (Fla.) HepubUran says : "Duvall county, with a population of less than twelve thousand persons, has during the last forty-two months, had fifty-two homicides and suicidal deaths, and thirty-two accidental deaths. Only one murderer hung." A Tennessccan killed a rattlesnake the other day that he had been hunting for during sixteen years. He estimates that he had consumed three months of his time and had walked twelve hundred miles in pursuit of the reptile. MURDER WILL OUT. THE FERrETRATORS OF A HORRIBLE MURDER AND ROBBERY DISCOVERED AND ARRESTED. From the Louisville Ledger, 13th. On the 15th of May last, as a passenger train on the Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad was passing a point two miles north of Jcltersonville, the train men discovered a man lying on the track. The train was stopped, and the man picked up, when it was discovered that hi3 head was horribly crushed. 1 le was taken to Jellersonville and medical aid obtained, but the injuries were fatal, and the man died in a few hours, without ever returning to con sciousness. Deputy Coroner O. O. Steeley summoned a jury and began the work jf investigating the matter. It was found that the name of the dead man was Samuel Williams, and that the night before he was found in a dj'ing condition. He had been in a drinking saloon in Jeffersonville, with plenty of inoney in his possession. When found oa the rail road track there wa3 no money on his per son. A postmortem examination satisfied the physicians that the wounds had been made with a club. Other circumstances con firmed she belief that the man had been mur dered and robbed, and that the murderers. to hide their crime, had placed Williams on the railroad track, in the hope that he would be run over by passing trains. 1 he Coroner s jury had the matter under consideration until Mondaj- afternoon last, when the following verdict was returned: "e, the jury, impaneled and sworn by O. O. Steeley, deputy coroner of Clark county, Indiana, on the 15th day of May, 1872, to inouire into the cause of the death of Samuel Williams, find that the said Samuel Williams came to his death by blows, inflicted by a club upon his head, by Walter Eversole and Joseph Ilinton, and wc chanre mat aiter jversoie ana josepn ilinton fe loniously, purposely, and with premeditated malice killed and murdered said Williams in said county of Clark, on said 15th day of May, 1872. "burned IS. II- Jewitt (foremanl. James 31. Moore, Mat Carroll, It. II. Heiskell, I). Kennedy, and Dr. VY. Hoerr. ' As soon as the verdiot was rendered Mr. Steeley issued a warrant for Eversole and Hilton.and they were arrested at Port Fulton. just above Jellersonville, and they were iougeu in jaii. in me aiiernoon they were taken before 'Squire Moore and remanded to jail to await trial on Monday next. uotn are young men, and have resided in the township all their lives. THE POLITICAL .WOMAN. From the London Anthropological Review. A State with a hermaphroditic form of government, if even it could exist for a generation, is, by nature, doomed to extinction; it may, however, be worth while to consider what kind of being a woman would become who should take an active part in the election of a representative. As an . energetic member of his committee, she would have to fight the tattle, foot by foot, with his opponent of either sex; she could not always sit at home and restrict herself to the use of a voting paper, because she would tacitly admit her unfitness for political life with all its hard work, and its turmoil of speech making; she would be like a foreigner giving a vote from a distance, without a knowledge of the qualities necessarv for success in Parliament. It would qq neces

sary for her to be thorough prepared for the fray, breeched instead of petticoated, with a voice hoarse from shouting, with her hair cropped c lojc to her head, with, her deltoid muscles developed at the expense

oi tier bust, prepared with syllogisms instead of smiles, and more ready to plant a blow than shed a tear, blie hurries from her mis Landless, childless hearth to make a speech on the hustings; with hard Incepts and hard er elbows, she forces her way through the election mob; her powerful intellect fully appreciates all the ribald jests and obscene gestures of the British "rough;" she knows the art of conciliating rude natures, and can exchange "eh all" with a foul-mouthed cos ter-monger; or, if necessary, she can defend herself, and blacken the eye of a drunken bargee. She has learned all the catechisms of politics, and when she mounts the plat form she can glibly recite her duty to the world according to the side which she has chosen. Experience has taught her the value of invectives, and she denounces her opponent with a choice selection of the strongest epithets; at first she speaks loud m a tone of contentment Jtud self-sal isf action; she ends by losing her temper, and brawling at the top of her voice. 1 he crowd, never very indulgent, has no mind to respect a sex which makes no claim and has forfeited ail right to forbearance. The hardened lines of her face were battered with apples, brick bats and rotten eggs the recognized weapons of political warfare. Perhaps the very place where she stands is the mark of a storming party, and after enjoying an en counter with a prize fighter (it may be of her own sex), she is at last brought to the ground by superior skill and strength Then probably she retires to her home; but I, for one, had rather not follow her thither, or into that House of rarhament of winch she is destined one day to become an ornament. TERRIBLE FATE. A WIDOW AND FIVE CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH. From the St. Fanl Despatch. A most terrible calamity occurred between ten and eleven o'clock Saturday night at Reserve Township, about three and a half miles from the city. Joseph Wessinger formerly lived and worked a twenty acre tract ot land in Reserve Township, llis house wa3 not situated on any traveled road, but was about midway between the Reserve road which branched off from Fort street and the extension of Summit avenue. Three years ago hist fall he died, leaving his wife, Madeline Wessinger, now forty-eight years old, and (MM children. The widow and children continued living and working the twenty acres until Saturday night, when the terrible calamity we are about to relate came upon them. The children were Charles, nineteen years of age; Catharine, seventeen; William, fifteen; Tracy, (a girl,) thirteen; Joseph, ten; Christina, eight; Madeline, five; Mary, three and a half. The house in which they lived was a one-story and a half frame, having down stairs, a kitc hen, with sitting-room opening from it, and adjoining the sittingroom a bed-room. In the bed-room down stairs the mother, William, Madeline and Mary slept. Up stairs, Charlie, Catharine, Tracy, Joseph and Christina had their beds. They retired about ten o'clock Saturday night, and half an hour later Catharine was awakened by a stifling sensation, which she found to be occasioned by smoke coming up from the kitchen below. "The stairway from the chamber led into the kitchen, and she found upon opening the door that the means of escape was cut off. She aroused her brother Charles and sprang through a window which opened upon a shed, and from the shed leaped to the ground. Charles jumped to the ground from another window, thinking he might arrest the progress of the fire, and Catharine broke in the window in her mother's room and aroused her to her danger, but she and all the children with her were considerably burned. Charles, finding that the flames could not be stayed, climbed back into the chamber to save the children. He found Tracy and dropped her out of the window. He could hear Christina moving about the room and groped about to find her, but did not succeed, and finally, after being terribly, audit is feared fatally burned, was compelled to abandon her and Joseph to the flames. During yesterday the charred remains of the two children were found, and such portions as were not wholly destroyed were placed in a coffin and buried in the Catholic cemetery. From the location of the body it is thought that Joseph never awoke, but was burned in his bed. "HORRORS." The details of several horrible murrWa in London appear in the correspondence ofthe Xew York press. This seems the echo from across the ocean of the terrible tmcrprii which have exhausted the vocabulary of the . . . ,i . i , . i . reporters, amiu auineir guasuy paraphernalia of sensationalism to describp in vnrinna parts of this country. A saturnalia of crime and insanity seems to be flagrant. Double, treble, and quadruple homicides; murders bvnoison.br the knife, bv Klranornlntionmurders by women, by children of tender age, uuu uy ociogenarians; muruers oi Children bv narents and of rmrents bv rliililrnn of wives by husbands, and rice term. Then men we near oi suicides, the most outre and most nersistent in incontion nml pvpph. tion; with explosions, railroad collisions. uueis with Duicner-Knives, Indian incursions with the attendant incidents of scalninc anrl fiendish mutilation, lynching, shooting Durning anve ana burying alive for we have had instances of cverv onu of thoso fantasies of horror which make up a chapter that reaches any possible imagining of him who wrote "More of horrible and awful. W hlch even to name would bo unlawfulBeau Brummel had one friend, who was a clergyman, and when the latter was a cuest at his table he was accustomed to say grace a formula generally dispensed with on other occasions, "lou may always know whether we are going to have champaign," said Brummel, "by the way in which Plymby asks the blessing. If he sees only common glasses betokening claret and sherry, he will content himself w ith 'For what we are about to receive,' iVc. ; but if his sight is gladdened by the tall glasses that promise sparkling wine, he will shut his eyes and commence with 'Bountiful Jehovah.' " A wealthy merchant of Brighton. Eng land, died recently, and his wife, a beautiful East India woman, went secretly into a temple she had built on her husband's estate, erected a funeral pile, and burned herself to ashes. We earnestly trust this practice will sever become common that beautiful widows won't do so any more. AVhat would this world be worth without beauti ful widows?

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THE PRUSSIAN IMPERIAL BAND. REPUBLICATION OF SUMNER'S OLD LETTERS. I IL GREELEY WONT SHELL OUT. SUICIDE OF A PROMINENT LAWYER. ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OP THE KING AND QUEEN OP SPAIN. . NEW YORK CITY. OLD UTTERS OF SUMNER REPUBLISIIKD. New Yokk, July 19, A Washisgton dispatch says me letters recently published by series. irooi oenaioroumner, were written a year ago while Greeley was in Texas, and when he was talked of a the possible candidate for the rresiaency. ' " "" ' T--GllERLET DECLINES TO DISBURSE. ' Greeley recently declined to furnish money to sustain a newspaper in Washington, saying: "I do not consider that legitimate political expenditure. If the people will not support a newspaper mere iavonogmy election, we must gci vu miuuut it us uesi we may. THE LIBERAL REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMIT TEE say they are receiving letters from prominent coiorea men promising to lavor Ureeley and .Drown. SUICIDE OP A I.lWntR. Alfred 8. Dusenberry, a lawyer, suicided by suuoung cimseu at uis nouse last evening, llis mind wa3 supposed to have been affected by i i . i . - buu-biroive eeverai aays Bince. GREELET rtATIFICATKVV. The Democrats and Liberal Republicans are maKinK arrangements ior a grand ratlttcation meeting. GKIEI.EY AT WOUK ON HIS ENCYCLOPEDIA. The Wurhl savs Mr. Greelev is hard at work on his Enceclopedia, which will be published ooon. THE NEW ORLEANS COLLECTORSHIP. A Washington dispatch says that the difllculty about Casy'a holding on to the office of Col lector at is ew Orleans 13 that the Administra tion failed to recommend any person to take bis place, and the President has therefore kept ins resignation in ms nanas. SALE OF THE STAXDAnn. The sherifTs sale of thi pffppta r.f ihn v.,,.'ard yesterday, brought about one thousand RIDS FOR A LOAN. London papers received by the last mail have an advertisement oi the United States Tele graph Company for a loan of a million and a iialf. for the erection of a n.ew bnildlng on the corner oi liroaaway and Ley streets. A nAimiSllURO INTERVIEW!. reports Cameron as saying that the opposition vi rorney ana ms press to Jiartranit lor Governor does not amount to a puff of wind. Now. rorney, ne says, is seu-reproacniul, and be therefore nurses fancied hittpmona aomfner everybody else. He feels anitefnl Inward llartranft because of an unpleasant admission ne was compelled io mate in ine trans fraud examination. Cameron, after dilating on the couneetion of the Forriev family with th tv. ans case, said he believed Forney would find some reason for deserting GraBt. He does not think McClure or Morehead have much influence, and says the latter has been a sour grumbler ever Biuce he left Congress a few years ago. TUE BARNARD CASE. The main point to be raised by the defense in the Barnard case, at Saratoga, ia that the Judge's impeachment wasn't regularly ordered by the Assembly. Brown thinks he will be fully recovered in & week, though he could not make any more epeecnes at present. PHILADELPHIA. rOXCERT BV TIIK PHINST1V Tri'irntiT uivn Piiiladelthia, July 19. The first concert of 1L ft mo rrussian imperial uana was given at O 1 A. 11 1 . . . " . 5cnui7.en rarK. yesieruay evening in tne presence of about 10.C00 nertinns. Th hand ovnVo1 the heartiest applause which, at time, rose into me most, wua enmusiasm. FOREIGN NEWS. SPAIN. ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OP THE KINO AND QUEEN 07 SPAIN. Ma nit in. .Tulv 111 At m!Hiilrtit loot ovuniiK an atteraut was made to nssnssinato tha k'in and Queen of Spain. Their carriage was fired d . . . i . . . . . . . uu. uuu ui iue assassins was Killed and two captured. The King and Queen were driving home from the Palace Garden when the fiins fired on them. Withpr nf thm won in. jured. mere is great excitement in the city. A NEV ARTICLE OP AMERICAN MANU FACTURE. The reDort of Colonel Eada. the pnirinppp of the erreat St. Louis and Illinois hri'd has brought into prominent notice an article oi American manutacture known as chrome cast steel. This steel is an amalgam of chromium and wrought iron, and is produced by melting the two together in the steel. Chronifi Ktenl has rrrnrtl9 and niUontorr. cs entirely its own, and is especially adapted for tools of all kinds. It can be worked at a white heat must hf liardpripd at a vprv tow neat, ana "can not be injured by oyerheatinc." It can be welded to iron nr tn it self, leavinsr no tram of the weld? it. ran h v. orked and re-worked without injury, and wnen made into a tool will do at least fifty per cent, more work than anv other steel. not excepting the highest priced and cnoicest oranas ot loreign make. Bv varviner the Dronortion of rfirnminm any requircu gratie oi steel can be produced, and when the nroner formula a nnrp nwr. ... . . taincu ior any given purpose, tne same can be produced, ad in finitum, with the utmost certainty, thus making it perfectly uniform in rata gniue. It is said that near a quarter of a million of dollars had been expended and lost in the eltort to produce certain bolts and staves re quired in the bridge above referred to, but nut uniu iue inventor or enromo ra;t-Rtp-i was called into the arena was the work successfully done. when, as annpars from Mr Ead's report, everv bolt and stavi nrndnrpd from chrome steel was successful. Crome Cast-Steel has a tensile utrpntrth tar exceeding that of any other. In a series of experiments, the hisrhest tensile strain ob tained was 198,070 pounds to the square men; me average result or twelve specimens was 179.C80 pounds, whilst the hiVhest strength of steel given in Perry's Metalurgy is l.T 000 imnnila r cn.i9 bJ In its lower trrades. therefore this new steel would seem to present a material for bridge building excelling in tensile strength any metal hitherto known. In the higher (Trlpu nf -k1 efanl ?t ta equally excellent; the ease with which it is orseu vat mucn higher heat than carbon steel will bear) renders it very profitable to the manufacturer of tools. If these statements should be borne out by further practical text ti em tn h no reason why this new metal should not ultimately supersede toe use of carbon steel,

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JETTER LIST. Letters remaining unclaimed In tha Post Offlc at Indianapolis, Indiana, July 19, 1871. PSTTo obtain these letters the tppllcatit mast call for "Advertised Lttler$: and lv dat of this list. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN'S LIST. A. Allen Cyrus Andenion Chat E Asbell Edward O Aabell mra Jan A aient mrs Tillie B Boger A J Bennet inian Dora M BnrnctGW Bine Harry S Bryan O Bryan II C Bonnie nusi H&ttie Ball Jas A Son Birk Jno Barton Jno Q Bolder Wm Benckn8 Butler mrs Bath; Bainnon Oscar Amtesa Adam Asbory Chan K Aker ml?g Ella Allen Dr J Auftin J B Adams mrs Louia BarnhAm, Clark Jfc Co Bnrnette miss Annie Booker Darld, 2 Benjamin E D BU Geo Brennier miss Uattle Biice II A Baldwin Jno II Barkley Ja Bovey Jaa Bricbin Jno Boker T Back 8am II Bradshaw miss SaTlie Bandy Orlacda Burfn mias Mollis Bacoff'Ml'ler TTellef " ' Brtsrovrmian Motile Brown A Johnston Brown David Brown mrs Charlotte Brown Jno Chadwick miss Lottie Coadlie Thos Cly Sam'l Crawford M Carter W D Coflhian Wm Conklin Joeephien CoK'nbarjrer Sam B Canpen Henry Cohen miss Hannah Brown Jas P a Cox Thos Cool Sarah Camft' Michael Cummiugs mrs Mary Cain Wm Comes J O Combs J A Coates Jas Cassill Harry Criso Geo, t Caldwell mra Emma Coffia Edwin S Colwell miss Ermar Palhoun R B Copua Bash Cane mr Clabe Geo Charles lizzie Crift. C Caylor Chas Cleland rars Bell Caudell A J Crals Robert A Church Council of the Lutheran Church Dye Andrew Davis Albert Dean mitg Lizzie Dumever Andrew Davis B O Don6on miss Lizzie THlle miss Minnie Kvais Edward Engart mrs Nora Foley Wm Fitch Jno C Fletcher mrs Ann eGateral Chas Green F P Gleenor Geo Gooding Wm H Garret Marnard Gullkey Oliver Hunt miss Ellen Hardesty GeoW Hiles Ilenrr Hathaway it O Hollette mrs JJ M Ham Jno Hebel J R Horse Jno Ilendes Jas M Hamilton Saml Harlln Rev S D Hans Peter Huston miss Mary Hnrlbutt Wm W Huntley Joa Hughes Jas J James Paul Johns Wm i Jacobson Christen Johnson mios Addio Jones miss Emma Jones Chas, col K Kirkpatrick Dr . Kester David Kirk Geo Keys Jno A Kistler mrs Minnie Xj LeeJesoicT, 2 Lynch Jas Lear Levi Largetmr . Leach Johua Locke FM Long Isaac Donopher Master Jno Evans Beuj Engart Will J, 3 FordB Foley David Flack Jas Gleaon miss Annie GirardD V Guthery mit?a Elizabeth Gottwalls Jas Griftln miss Majjle Graham L Lewis noffman miss Lizzie llearly Edward Hazen Oeo S Harris II n Hustis Hiram Hedrick Henry Haectis Jno Hendricks rars Jennie Hnnt Jno Hartley Thos Ilohbs mit9 Sybil Hallard Oliver Hollman Wm nerrington Wm Horsin mrs Josic Hunt Johnie nantly J II Jenkins mrs Alice Jennings mrs Mary Jackson mn II Johnson CS . .Tones Lantla A Jones F E Jaqoes JnoB, 3 Keller mrs Keller mrs Kate Kin? ITory C Kimncn E M Kenton Mollie Luther Carlisle S Lagrange Jacob R Lnrnan J F . Lark in Tom Lee Wm M Llxhtford miss Ellen Lonz Geo Legate nrs Geo iVL i Miner mr, 23 Davidson st May mrs Louisa Mood L Morgan S W Mason miss Phebe Myers John Wes ey Musser Jno Mathews Jennie R Moffltt miss Ida Morrison C S Moore Aletha McWiliams Asbury McChesner R E Manion Jas Mills Jno Allen Marlow Jackson Myers mrs Elizabeth Miller N Meeg C D INIaoks McGreer Zrilda McMahon Mary Mclntyro W O McGrath Dennis McKay Geo McQuarter L McLea Wm McGlanthlin Jas McMullen Julia A McGlothreu Greeny McCluir master Colman Neff Chas Newby mrs Mary NIchol Rev I O Nichols mrs Victory O Owen miss Lizzie J Olney nirspebora I ' Powers Thos PobyWm -Pearson J F Petibone Mrs E A Ports Fredricks Pary A Price I; Randall Mrs Mary RickerDoc ReidMiss A J Reynolds Dr Rode IInry Rock H H KolenderEli Ross E A 8 Sorgent Mrs Stella P stoodard S S Salsbury W M Stout Miss Namie Spaulding W tin son John Steman Joe Stogdall John R Seeley John E Shank Jos -Swan Miss Emma Shelby Frank (Col) SipesMrs C R Swope A A Smith Marion T Thorpe Mks Emily Thomas J M Thomiaa Wm A .Tlmons Patrick Owen Harris O'Keefe miss Jane Philips L K Palmar Thos PistorJohn Parks Jonathan Phalps Misa Kate Porterfleld H P Parker Robert C Reed Miss Lou (2) Routh Miss Marzarec J Randall J C Ryder PS Rlblet nJ Richards Harry Jiober Frank RiDpey E Steele T Shaver Salvater Snlvan Pall Sulivan PaufrO Ktephenson N W Spauldin?WF Stooaul Jos Swarm Jos Snoflbrd Miss Julia Serage J B Shelton II Scott Mrs Elizabeth Sparks Mrs Fannie Simons Mr Squires Mr Smith Jennie Thornbronsh Datid Toub Jas Toll John n TnllWm Townley Mr WentUnar Levi L Warren L E Walters Wm Wilson Miss Louisa Walkennan Sophia Walkins Wm S White Wm Whitney JasL Wallace J H Wilson Miss nattie White Miss Lida Welch E D Weeks W Williams John Washington John Washington J AI Watkins Ekward N Wright Mrs FannieS Wii Miss Kate Wilson C A Warner Miss Alice Foreign.. McManus Bridget Keef Hanah Hector Alexander Anderson David W. R. HOLLO WAT, P. M. Wade Ben Weedon F Norris Thomas Judge John Clark R L BTiATSns: BOOKS FOR ; BANKERS, MERCHANTS. COUNTY OFFICERS, CORPORATIONS AND SOCIETIES, 9 ' FURNISHED AT i - - - i ' . i FAIR "PRICES.

WANTED.

w 'Vfp-GIRL at 29 C-brlstiau avt dm. WANTED TWO DINING-ROOM GIRLS-ALd WAnnlA &M,,X rl t0 t( housework WEtI3,R,IrInht! at Eat Ohio atreet. Small family. jyJij 4te . ' - w . I V 1 i 4I( Vsr - - - - v f T tent to do cooking for hotel in country low.. Address J. K. MOOltE. ITinceton, Iud. j 19 Ste ' WATED-A PARINEIt-In a well estaUM,e l aI -.B'"e.B;iw"..can ePPJy fl.OCO, cat.Ii. Ad Aiiuiit, mis ctuce. jyr.4tc iyANTEp-GIRjri a tmM famil , . .If. l Ulllm? DrK Store, corner of MasJ?t huactts avenue and St. CUir street. jel., 4c WAnnTEPi,JRCIIASKK-For a n'rw tuna ??llnt nP boiler. Address A STING8.'care of this office. jylS lwe Wi?DrtrCA'l'l,jS-A "t.rtor-; ina wholesale hnnut aaa.. t.Tm,ni . v. at thia nffl " "5 - VV. . . .GIL-To do hor-ewurk lor a Knrth J of four persons. Inquire at N.. i!7 orth Meridian street. ivl lcif W ?r1riarMeJItadi:8 tocaH or sa'j rvt7nT n&iSS"1 Markct ; WnwrDTT"a PAUTYWhocir7i,dcff"a lawoffli Jiim. felU yefterday from a well-taiowa 'omv njinsion House bv a vonth tfi m GtKXl F jyieTte" SiVeD' Addree8 "c- s-" care l journal AV" TED Everybody traveling by No. 44 H I J,r-dian avene, to stop at J. W. Iniow's fur Ib. ir cigars, smoking and chewine tobacco, and jt.wt. The best goods for the leaet money. Secin: is believing. Call and see. jj-15 3ine WANTED-SITUATION-A boyn years oil wants a place in a wholesale or retail houseS 'efnn P4!.""16- Can rfve Rood recommen. Rai10w ?ail,raddree9 "T- w- B.," room No. 4 Blackford's block. jylSSte TirANTED-BOY A pood stout bov, mu?t w at least l.vcars old, to work in our Stereotype department. None but those who are wil'ln to work and leahx need apply. Jyl8m&e2t I NDIANAPOLI?? JOURNAL. "VV'ANTKD A House with from live to seven M rooms, within four or five suuares of WnsliIngton street, by a family of four persons and no ohil?rn" t"114 DOt to exceed $30 per month. Adrtresi 1. 1. N.. Journal office. ic8metf Wax i -i Ki VKTERS Five or sm EeniiHd .. . wrvetingelthe- boiler, saddletree or other kind tit viva-tin i fon 1 , . . - - vvrwil cuJi;iUi Alii UL I'll application at 30 South Illin' is ttreiL So on need apply Hnlees accustomed to above mentioned J 1 " 1 ' my m v in- iimriru ill a i:iuu:i'-il UJnferpnse miring little attention, wherebv f 10,000 may be made in a t-hort time. N.:ie hut honest mrp-V in hnnnat ham1u ... 1 . 11or call on, after Monday the 22d, fc. Ill ATT. jjfi.-iuo.ciw 17Jf irguiia avenuo. TTTANTKn A MXi " uur'iijr.r'5 vaIHIH lilt J V?J80to40yearofa?e,(Mftrrirtl preferred J i8uuuauurew,uMfl to olliee onties. corref!onrtSuch a person can have a desirabl e f)t:ltion ami oeraj salary by addressing in own liandwritin-. "A. B. Journal office. j l a m e 2t AA7rA.TKMEN-The Domestic Scwin- MaII chine Co. want ifiii tmnA reference and security, to sell the "Domestic.'- uth ' ' vuuuJ- liioci ;nera! inaucementS Oflercd. A rrnnA nnnnnnr,. .. i . HLap.5lTLem-hT?- App,T 10 r'addresa"at th! office, 212 East aehmgtou stret t, Indianapolis. Ind., jjrn uauw itw.LU.NUy. Manager. WANTED GOOD RELIABLE MEN As city and rnnrtrr nti.itr..a ,ka 11 Machine. To men who will work verylibertl in" Jnrpmciifa will 1,(T....J -n., win .- .,m uC uucr-u. jneicrences ana eecuritv required. Apply at '.0 West Washington i-treet Indianapolis, jnd., at tbe office rf tt.e Howe Mai cbma Company. a. K. JOSSELYN. WA,NTED-rTIIE PLIC-To know that wo . . . " ' ivcvjJ, a Hill HOCK OI ii Ti ' ,men;aild cottn threads, and macliine uo ,hj uen quaiiry. in?w gooi will bo sold, at wholesale and retail, at tlii 1 prices The Howe Machine Co.. 70 West Washing ton street, Indianapolis, Ind WA?TK?TIIE PEOPLE TO KXOW-That a Sons Of Honor will take place from Indian Jpolis to vV""' V'i'j ioi. Arams will leavctne Lnlon Derxrt nntm th .Tuir v.ii.i . - - . 'o.u. laiuvou wt i-uiiesH'av fvening,Juljr3lst,atlO o'clock p.m. Tickets foV t&e round trin 4J and ininwi . . tram until August 4th. vlSllrp WANTED Good Salesmen : men who have had experience as Salesmen in Drv Goods itore or In similar business. Those who write a ood hand and thoroughly understand book keying proforred None need sddIv nnlesa th(v an m. l lk' reference. Security will be required. We want raen some of onr branch offices, where a number of men will be under their rnntrnl imi. inu-.. , Machine Company, 42 North Pennsylvania street. In uiauaiis, luuiaiia. Jlvl3 mie Iw FOR SALE. F)R SALE ENGINE A second-hand, portable engine. Inquire at Ea;;le Machine Works. it TXR SALE BOUSES Several desirable bouses n""d fauna. T. A. GOODWIN. Jylo 3t TDH)R SALE HOUSES Two new houses cf three A rooms each, cellar, well, all comp etc, northeat. Price fl300-f200 csh, balance f25 Vermont This is cheap property. i .i JOS. ABDEN A CO.. 3yl5Jtm4e 74 East Washington Street. "CVJR SALE HOUSE New house of fonrroomT. X well, cellar, wooa-house; lot 40x100; rcrae fruit alley fide and rear; nice place and cheap; well leva! 1 2d; bare lot is worth $o0 per front foot. J'nce n,r aU 3,000 f 1,000 cash; will take 80 acres of land in Butler, Coffee or Lyon counties. Kansas, it a fair price, or a good vacant lot north of eft v, by , n J. AKDEN Jt CO., Jyl8mJke3t 74 East Waslungton ttreet. FiR SALE FARM A No. 1 stock farm of lu) acres, ISO in cultivation; soil warm arid Dark loam; has one of tha best orchards In the county eood well and eprinjj water, 2 good dwelling houses) two good barns and a store house; con vtnuut to both schools and churches; in first-rate neighborhood, on very eauy payments. Also, two otli. r line biock rarms oi kai acres each, with never failJn? ipring water; near the city. Will eive a barsain. w East Washington. BOGGKSS & BUCK. yl5 me4i FK SALE JOB TYPHL-WehaveetiJl cn haJd a number of fonts of Job Type, whira at leea than half the price of new material. Much cf this type is aa rood as new. and all of it Is In eocd working condition. Send for Specimen SheeLwtui prices for each font attached, marts tf INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL CO. F K SALE MILL A gcKMl mill In a wheariSow ing nuehborhood. Large and small propvrtii on time. City lot north, on fmall ait cunt down farm located on Eagle and Sugar Creek. Cheau timbered land; that the timber wnl pay for the iund Westarn land and euburbal property G. K. & 4. HORNADAY Jyl6 lv No 31 West Washington s'treeY IX)R SALE OR TRADE HOUSE Large brick of 10 rooms, with line lot, on good Hreet north to exchange for a well improved piece of landofSi or 80 acres within from 2 to 10 miles or the citv If you have land you want to trade, come and ni'me Our place ia worth about $14,000. i, . W. ALEXANDER, Jj3w X WestWashington Mreet. FOR RENT. 1LE7K? A "OUSE-Ou North quire of C. B. INGRAIIAM, llyc East w!! L Jnaireeu it.Vl.:. Jtoii FOR RENT HOUSE a bouse of eleven rooms w wga.8' Ce Ac- Mississippi ,t,e! t KSS Market and Ohio streets, by H. J. HORN. 19 nS Illinois street. jjn TO LOAN. r) LOAN-MONEY ON JEWELRY ClOTH taifnnltue.eit.itthe City S'oS 63 North HlineU street. jynanic