Indianapolis Journal, Volume 2, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1872 — Page 2

THE EVENING JOURNAL: INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24r 1872.

EVENING JOURNAL.

Market Street ana Cirole. INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL COMPANY, FBOFBI1TOR8. INDIANAPOLIS. THURSDAY. OCT. 24. 1871. TERMS: Single copies, per week, delivered by carrier,... $ 10 mau, payable In advance, per year 5 00 M M " per month SO ADTHBTI8IH8 &ATSS. Locai, MATTxaa. NotieeB under this head will be Charged 10 centa per line for first Insertion, and 15 cents per line for each additional insertion. Marriage Notices BOeentS Funeral Notices 60 cents Displatsd AoriBTisaxKHTs, Wants, Fob Sali, For Rxnt, Lost, and Focjto, five cents per line for first Insertion, and two and a half cents per line for each additional Insertion. REPUBLICAN TICKET. TOB rRESTDENT, ULYSSES 8. GRANT, of Iluhois. FOR VK'B rnEKIDENT, HENRY WILSON, of Mass.. FliEiftltrWTIAT, ELECTOR FOR THE STATE AT LARUE. JONATHAN W. GORDON, or Marion. JO-EPN S BUPKLKS. of Delaware JOHN SCHWARTZ, of Dearborn. ISAAC S. MOORE. or Warrick. DISTRICT ELECTOR. First District DANIEL B. KFMLER. 84-cond District -CYRUS T. NIXON. Third District JAM" S Y. ALLI -ON. Konrth District TOIN R G"ODWIN. Fifth Dirict-GEORGE W. GRUBBS. S xth District .TAME T. JOHNSON. Seventh Distil t .JESSE 1IARPEK. F qhth Dietriet-CAI.VIN CO WO ILL. Nluth District R BEUT S rAYLOR. Tenth District ERASTI'S W. H. ELLIS. Elevent" Dist ret SIDNEY KEITH. THE ritQFlT OF FFXCFS The cost and inconvenience of fences has been frequently made the subject of disquisitions by agricultural writers. The Virginia rail or worm fence, which has been laid up in all the woodland State?, has cost millions of dollars in labor, and from the plow an aggregate of millions of acres of good land. As the country has increased in wealth, and timber has become valuable for other purK)ses, the neater "post and rail" and board and picket fences have taken the place of the cumbersome rail fence, but still costing an immense sum in labor to build and keep in repair. In most of the Middle States all the States east of the Mississippi except Illinois, the timber by which the fanccs are built ha3 not been included in the estimate v cost. It cumbered the ground anyway; and the pioneer worked with abetter will in wording it into a useful shape as fence than in simply destroying it to clear the ground. Yet under all these circumstance, the fencing of the country represents a large amount of labor and material which i3 now, at least, the representative of a large amount of money. When this money is summed up, certainly not less than five millions of dollars a year in all the United States, it is assumed, as a matter of course that this is an unnecessary expense; that it is so much ma tcrial wasted; and that it is only necessary to enact that all stock shall be kept up or herded to save it all. The practice of the farmers in the prairie States, where herding laws were a necessity because fences were clearly impossible at lirst, seems to Indicate that the practical economy which condemns fences as a useless waste of capital is erroneous. AYith laws that forbid cattle, sheep, or hogs running at large, and a single furrow around a field or farm is a legal barrier against all encroachments, the people arc voluntarily building fences or planting hedges as fast as their means will allow. Why? Because a farm is more convenient when subdivided, so that part may be tilled, while the rest is pastured; and it is cheap to spend a few months in preparing inclosures to care for one's own stock than to spend all the time in herding it. "With thick settlement and small farms herding becomes almost impossible because the stock is always in sight of the temptation of cultivated fields. Experience in prairie land has corrected the erroneous idea of no fence, which came from the trouble of fencing in old States, and the pity spent on the fence-builders of the old States, is shown to have been thrown away. "With no legal necessity for fencing, and with the certainty of having more to pay for it, the prosperous farmers of Illinois and Kansas arc fencing their farms, and subdividing them into fields, and those States will soon be as thoroughly fenced as Ohio and Indiana. The much-abused fence is being justified. Instead of being an unmitigated cvil, it is proving to be a profitable servant of the farm, paying back with interest the money expended in its cost and repair. THE LIBERAL FALL. . The chief occupation of the Cincinnati Km'tiirr is to extol the activity of the Liberals and deprecate the inactivity of the Democrats of Ohio at the present time. The latter failed to profit sufficiently by the aid of the former in the October election to create any very great obligations to them. So the Democratic love for Mr. Greeley has suddenly ceased, and the Liberals left t paddle their own canoe, it is rapidly backing toward Salt river. The Ehpiirei however, does profit by the aid of the Liberals. It gets the Hamilton county sherhTs advertising, and La bound to keep up a show of returning liberality until November. Therefore it scolds and frets, yet in such a way as to make it a good joke to the Democrats whom it scolds. In this State the Democrats seem equally indifferent to the result in November. The Terre Haute Jon-nol which was for HexI ricks, but against Greeley, chuckles heartily over the fact that ' 'no Democratic speakers are on the war path in this State," as it did over the election of Hendricks by (be aid of the Liberals. Possibly the Liberals who did not want to help tho Democrats, unless helped by the Democrats, will soon discover that they have been swindled. At any rate every one else can see it, and it will be a matter of general rejoicing that the Republican scamps who sold themselves so very cheap failed to pet the little pay promised them.

PHILADELPHIA.

The Democratic papers have been rilled for some days with articles on the Republi can frauds in Philadelphia. The St. Louis Republican, the other day assuming, or having heard that the vote was over one hundred and sixty thousand, (100,000.) took great pains to show that, according to the population of the city, the vote should be a little over one hundred and twenty-nine thousand. Well, the official vote has been announced, and it is 118,119, a little less than two thousand more than it was in 18G8, and over eleven thousand less than Democratic authority shows the city enti tied to give. On this vote there is a Repub lican increase of 8,293, and a Democratic decrease of 0,333. The Republican increase is more than made by the colored vote. The Democratic decrease is due to the members of that party who could not countenance the Greeley fraud. Of the other eleven A I A 1 or iweive uiousana voters wno did not vote, one-half were probably dissatisfied Republicans, and the other half were dissatisfied Democrats. At the Presidential election the dissatisfied Republicans will vote, because their dissatisfaction was with Hartranft, and the dissatisfied Democrats will not vote, as their dissatisfaction is specially with Greeley; and the Republican majority will be five or six thousand greater in November than it was in October. By the way, it is a remarkable fact that the people who do not vote at elections are fully as numerous elsewhere as in Philadelphia, and might reverse the decision in any State by all going to the polls and voting. If all the stay-at-homes in Pennsylvania had turned out and voted the Democratic ticket, it would have been triumphantly elected. There were enough of this class, also, in this Congressional District, to have elected General Browne, if they had gone to the polls and voted; for it seems pretty evident that the stay-at-homes here were Republicans. LIBERALISM AND JEFF. DAVIS. The Cincinnati Vuinmereii.d prints two columns of Liberal eulogy of Jeff. Davis, by an Ohio Liberal, who .argues that the mention of Dayis as an "arch-traitor," or reference to his sleeping-car adventures, is "diametrically opposed to the principles of the Liberal party." This gentleman is a consistent Grcclcyitc, and would doubtless take pleasure in voting for Jeff. Davis for Pres ident in 18TG, because he "has filled such high positions, and has had, and still has, the confidence of so many millions of peo ple." Well, this is natural enough. The step from Tom. Hendricks to Jeff. Davis, is much shorter than the step from Lincoln to Hendricks. Next to the approval of a man's own conscience is the satisfaction he derives from the appropriation of the good and wise. There is a kind of popular applause which, easily gained and easily lost, is little worth; the evanescent popularity which is the ambition and the "reward of 'the demagogue. We fear that Mr. Greeley is receiving the lat" tcr almost exclusively. Supported by Democratie politicians, KuKlux and the Tammany ring, as a reward of his trick to se cure the nomination of the Cincinnati Con vention he will be apt to find his popularity too evanescent to . withstand the blasts of the October and November elections. EDITORIAL NOTES. Brigham Youno not content with being Prophet and Governor, now adds to his laurels the honor of being the President of a National Bank. It is 1 3 be called the Deseret National Bank, Salt Lake City. Its capital is $200,000. Brigham is rather old, etill not too far along In years to "go it while you're Young." Ills de posits, for the most part, have been kept with the Bank of England? That institution is not willing to look upon his deposits as personal, recognizing him rather as the agent of the Mormon corporation. The cheese-making interest has been greater in Kenosha county, Wisconsin, than in any other portion of the State. This county yields about 900 cheese per week, besides large quantities of butter, cream and milk. The dairy business began here some eight years &go,when Mr. W. C. White introduced the first cheesepress. Since that time this important branch of husbandry has been so fully developed by the enterprising and intelligent farmers of the county that to-day the cheese made in their dairies has an enviable reputation. Another insane asylum horror comes to us from Vermont, concerning which the Commissioner, who has been investigating it, says: 'There are kept in a damp, dark, underground basement, from fifty to one hundred ef the most hopeless and incurable persons, in a place where the atmosphere they breathe must be more or les impure." Considering the heartless character of many of the managers of Institutions of this kind, would it not be entirely appropriate to organize & reformatory institution for managers? It is hard to believe that there should exist a wretch bo low, so utterly lost to all feeling as the one described: "A father who had been deprived by death of a daughter, just blooming into womanhood, bad hung upon her tomb bIodc in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn, a wreath of (lowers, but upon revisiting the grave a few days later, found that the flowers had been removed, and in their place had been substituted a garland of living toads tied together on a string." One almost regrets that the rack has passed into oblivion when he reads of such utterly inhuman conduct. The Republicans of New Jersey promise that the vote in the Republican counties will be much greater than ever before, while the Democratic counties will show a falling off. One of thcraperssay: "On the whole we regard the outlook in New Jersey as very favorable, and although Governor Randolph, with an excitement of feeling unworthy of his dignity, may charge Importation of negroes, we can assure him that the konest Republican vote, aided by the disgusted Democracy who refuse to be sold out, will place New Jersey in its true position io the Republican column. Four years

ago, but for the frauds in Hudson County, her electoral vote would have been cast for Giant. Two years ago the State went Republican by nearly 4,000, and in 1S72 will add to those fig

ures. The Republicans are making it hot in Ptnn sylvania for Forney, 6ays the Cleveland Htialtl who now seeks to come hack into the Republican ranks after having fought the Republican State ticket. The State Republican Commltee and local Republican committees and the Republican papers declare that Forney shall not be reinstated. And that they ought to carry out that resolution. Forney is a first-rate Republican Just so long as he cau be considered the big Indian, but, like an Indian, he ncvei remembers favors conferred, but turns scalper the moment he thinks it fer his personal interest. The Chinese language, which has some fifty thousand characters, has been a source of gnat perplexity to telegraph operators. They hive surmounted the difliculty in this way: Afcw thousand of the characters most used are cut upon wooden blocks. On the opposite 6ide of each block is it s number. Duplicates of such numbered blocks arc at each telegraph station. The Chinese merchant selects the blocls which express the thought to be transmitted The operator telegraphs only the numerals designating these blocks, weich enables the receiving operator to 6elcc similar blocks at his end of the line. At the California State Fair, among the great display of vegetables, the Chinese produced several new varieties. Radishes, raised by a Celestial gardener, averaged 13 inches lonj and 3 2 in diameter. They were very crisp, not strong, and a superior radish. The Chinese cut them into convenient 6iz.es, and dry what they do not have occasion to use green. They then cook them at any time. Chinese cabbage is a plant of the mustard species, resembling lettuce, and use as a salad. Chinese beans grow in pods a yard long, and were criep and tender. Cabbages the size of a load of hay were not on exhibition at the State Fair this year. The Saturday Review says of the incoming Lord Chancellor of England : "It is, perhaps, to be regretted that, in many points of his career, he too much resembles an admirable model which is too perfect in itself to need leproduction in duplicate. Except at the time of his hesitation in the matter of the Irish Church, Sir Roundcll Talmer has advanced step by step with Mr. Gladstone. Roth distinguished at Oxford, both High Churchmen, they have, by a simultaneous deviation from the doctrines of their youth, advanced far round the circle of political belief towards the opposite extreme of pinion..' What is cercbro-epinal meningitis? is a question which has long puzzled the physicians and the public. A New York physician has answered it so clearly that hereafter there can be no excuse for ignorance of its character or improper treatment. He says it is not "a 6imple or idiopathic intlammation of the membranes of the bruin or spinal cord, nor of typhus fever, nor of pernicious paludal fever, but a substantive disorder, consistent with itself in all material point, with the coristant symptoms produced by a constant cause, and is entitled to be described and regarded as a distinct disease, whose proper nosological place is among general diseases born of an external morbid poison." It will take two or three more GUinore jubilees to reform Boston. The arrest of "the boy with the white eye," whose practice it was to entice small boys away and subject them to all sorts of physical torture, has already been noticed in these columns, as well as the extraordinary increase of murders, and all descriptions of crime. The Boston papers now contain an account of a party of boys who lately got a little fellow, seven years of age, 60 thoroughly drunk that he died from the effects of it. The revolutions of the wheel of time are evidently carrying Boston through an era of barbarity and vice which her boasted educational and religious privileges are powerless to affect. The architect In charge of the restoration of the cathedral of Strasbourg has just published his report, the details of which will be of universal interest. The expense of restoring the masonry will amount to 240,000 francs, and the repairs of the roof to 187,090 francs; the replacing of the glass and inside fittings will come to 143,000 francs, and other accessory repairs to 28,000 francs the whole amount being 598,000 francs, or $119,600. The cross has once more been raised, and the damages to its apex are being repaired. The great astronomical clock, which is familiar to every schoolboy, was uninjured during the bombardment; and, after it is cleaned the Twelve Apostles will be in place again, ready to resume their semi-diurnal procession, as they have done in years past. HASH. Blanqui is very ill. Sheridan is at St. Louis. Water-spouts Temperance lectures. Offenbach has been lately rcsticatlng at Spa. .... Froude has no faith in home rule for Ire land. 1 Barney Williams has leased a house on Lake Como. Garibaldi calis Thiers the "6courgc of humanity." John Morrisscy lost $35,000 on tho October elections. Dr. Neumeyerhas written a book about the South Pole. The Prince of Wales is hunting harts in the Highlands. The KanBas City WdUtin denies that it is about to die. Robert Bonner will erect a monument to Fanny Fern. It is now stated that Tom Fields Is still in New York city. Justin McCarthy has been traveling amonjf the Highlands. Millais Is in London fitting up the best 6tudio in Europe. The horse distemper prevails in Rutland county, Vermont. It is estimated that there are 80,000 Jews in New York City. Mr. Seward never took a case against a wo man as an attorney. Ole Bull leaves Liverpool for the United States on November 1. 8t. Joe has a man so bow-legged that he has his pants cut by a circular sa w. A new style of ear rings is a single pearl or diamond, with a fastening like a screw stud. It Is screwed by this Into the hole of the ear ,

bo that the stone Beems to rest on the ear with no support. The submarine telegraph between Jamaica and Panama is now in workim? order. Jai?aes Gordon Bennett, Jr., is, it is report ed, about to issue an edition of the Herald in German. India rubber weddings are now proposed, since so many useful articles are made of that material. The Philadelphia Council are discussing how to expend three .million dollars on Fairmount Pari. Two of the Duke of WeunDKton'8 nouse8 in London are reported by the ptce fls Place3 f improper resort. An elderly gentleman is shock e ' leara that every fashionable young lady carries a paper to back her. "Little girl thood be thcen and not .Heard" lisped a three-year old when asked to n Teaf her spelling lesson. At last civilization has become a living fat.

In Jersey, and the people have gone to burning other people's bams. Kaiser Wilhclm is still cogitating over the geography of 8an Juan Island and the British and American boundary line. Almost every borough of note in the State of Pennsylvania either projects or has started building a railroad car factory. "Keep 'em alive, boy! keep 'em alive!" said an old physician to his young brother practitioner. "Dead men pay no bills." Archbibhop Ba3-ley will lay the cornerstone of the new St. Patrick's Cathedral, of Washington, on the first Suuday of November. Sara Stevens, who made a favorable impression on the stage and then married John C. ncenan, is about to return to her first love. The dry goods clerk6 in Cincinnati threaten to strike, and the Enquirer wishes that they would, and clear out, leaving their places and wages to women Wm. M. Evarts, late counsel before the Geneva tribunal, and Miss Neilson, the actress sailed from Liverpool for New York last Saturday, in the Java. "Onida" is declared to be a Miss Dc La Kline, a cross between a sorceress and a lunatic, a keeper of irregular hoars and of eccentric habits, and a Londoner. Queen Victoria has written the Duke of Sutherland that the happiest perioft of her life since her great bereavracnt, was during her late visit to Dunrobin castle. Schweinitz and Miss Jay are married. He is Ambassador of the German Empire to Austria; she the daughter of our distinguished Plenipotentiary at the same Court. An exchange says that the correct answer to the gentleman who wrote the song: "Why did I marry?" would be "Because you met a woman who was a first-class fool." It is her skull on his library shelf which enables Alphonse Karr to remember that he had a lady-love; he likes to studv under her influence; it makes him abetter ekuller. Dr. Stillman, who testified to Mrs. Fair's insanity, was asked if he had ever read Slobel on Insanity. He said he had, and was then told that there was no such author. A silk quilt exhibited at the St. Clair county (Michigan) Fair, claimed to have In it pieces of dresses of Queen Victoria, Princess Adelaide, and other ladies of the British royal family. A book of American humor has recently been published in London under the singular title of "The End of the World." The Athene num announced it under the head of "Theology.," A Bethel man discovered that a stranger he rescued from a watery grave was not a long lost brother, but a party he owed three dollars and a half for turnips. The Bethel man retired in disgust. The latest invention for travelers is a combined compass, thermometer, and barometer the latter measuring thirteen thousand feet and the whole in a solid silver case about two inches in diameter. The Michigan Central corporation has accepted and assumed control of the Jackson, Lansing and 8aginaw Road to a point nine-two miles north of Saginaw, and within one hundred miles of Mackinaw. For the twenty years prior to the overthrow of Louis Napoleon in 1872, every human ailment was attributed to him by the Paris correspondents. Now that he is really sick no one takes any notice of him. A Japanese student, now studying In Michigan, has determined to give up the studies prescribed for him, and is about to devote his whole attention to the Fine Arts, for which he has displayed a special fondness. Hyacynthe's example is contagious. Abbe Bauer, Chaplain to the Empress Eugenie, will be married. His wife may discover that although she baa taken up a right Bauer, she may find that she also has taken up a knave. A base ball of midshipmen at Annapolis, Maryland, wear beautiful gold lace sashes when playing match games, but this does not prevent them from doubling up like ordinary men when a hot ball takes them in the stomach. Miss Minnie Lee Swasee bless the dear girl, she bears a name with poetry in it, whoever she is made a political speech at Cooper Institute, New York, on Monday night, td4 consTderibTe audlencer Minnie's ways are wa js of Greeleyism." -j-Foesll remains of some enormous animal were found ,the other day near Malheur City, Oregon.' The . tusks found were four feet In diameter at the base, and fifteen feet long. A portion of the head shows that the animal was two feet wide between the eyes. An American painter named W. Bradford, whose pictures of Arctic scenery re now on exhibition in London, is receiving the highest praises from the critics; and he has in preparation a work on the far North, which will soon be published with copious Illustrations. The English journals mention a case where a milk dealer, on a second conviction for diluting milk with water, was not only fined but required, in accordance with the provisions of a special law, to pay the cost of a notice in a leading paper, giving a full account of the transaction. xV woman of Lawrence, Mass., lately had to get an extension of time for paying an instalment on her sewing machine, because her husband had been and married another woman and brought her home, thereby increasing the family expenses. The long suffering creature remarked, "It ain't just acting right by me, anyhow." "Tne fair women and brave men" in the country towns of California amuse themselves at public meetings by voting to each other the prize for beauty. At Petaluma, lately, a committee of five ladies were appointed to determine who was the handsomest man in the audi

ence and award the prize. After a careful tour of inspection throagh the aisles a lovely editor was singled out by a majority of the committee. Editorial life In California has its amenities. An Oregon Sheriff attached a show in that faraway country the other day, and while tacking up a "sale" notice on the elephant's hindquarters, which the official mistook for a small barn, the animal swung his tail around and now when that county wants another Sheriff they will have to elect one. A minister once told Wendell Phillips that if his business in life was to save the negroes, he ought to go South where they were and do it. "That is worth thinking of," replied PhilHps; "and what Is your business in life?" "To save men from hell," replied the minister. Then, go there and attend to your business," rejoined Mr. Phillips. It is said that in her new lectures for the approaching season, Anna Dickinson has one which is descriptive of California life and scenes. Her description of the wonders and

vhunders of Yos smite would no doubt be in eating and eloquent. It will be remembered that 6ue injected the Valley in the saddle, riding er little mule clothes pin fashion. The et. 'cr evcnmK during the playing of 'Yankee D- dle," an ioamense American rose on his seat in an aceompanin. entv The mu61cal tic says it sounded very m uc4 llk lhe Zn? cJy i? a tomcat held up by ' Je ail ,or4a do i.Vf.B after kicking. On i be termination of his little bark arolle, or else hS c& scream he sank in his seat overcome, cclaumD. "Hurrah for the United States." VOTE! BY CONGRESSIONAL TRICTS IN 18. DISriltST DISTRICT. NiblackPoeoy 2.211 Vanderburg 3,257 Warrick UjO Spencer 2,21! Perry 1,335 Pike. Gibson 2.08 Knox Daviess Totals 19,2 Niblack'e majority 132 SECOND DISTRICT. Wolfe. Hcilman. 1,783 4,4 1.7i5 S,107 1.487 ' 438 2.1. 2.00 1,913 19,127 YojU'F. 573 1,081 1,94 1.&V4 2,371 J87 1,574 1,230 957 1,(531 Dubois 2,(82 Crawford , L Harriuon 2,100 Flovd 2,825 Clarke 3,l ftrott , fW Washington WW Orange i,414 Martin 1.2W Jackson 2,434 Totals l!,:ti Wolfe's majority 5,W34 THIRD DISTRICT. ' llolman. JcflVrson 2,6-0 Switzerland 1,328 Ohio 5!0 Dearborn 3.18i Ripley 2.2C4 Jennings .. 1,0:! Ttartholomew 2,l23 Decatur 8.153 13,52 llerrod. 2,75 1.4B1 K20 1,!M 2.040 1,834 2,121 2,81 Toal 16.367 llol man's majority 1,323 FOURTH DISTRICT. Wilson. Shelby 2.208 Rufh 2,205 Franklin 1,467 I Won J2( Fayette 1,4 2 Wayne 4,750 Hancock 1,531 15,039 Gooding. 2,810 1.U32 2,775 718 1,0W 2,9 S 1,860 Total Wilson's majority. . . .11,4'Jtl . 380 11,119 FIFTH DISTIUCT. Coburn. Brown 460 Morgan 2,111 Johnson 1,725 Marion 9 505 Hendricks 2,861 Putnam 2,. 02 McNotf. 1,70 2,817 8.3S8 1.756 2,G57 Totals 1 18.704 18,001 Cobnrn's majority 793 SIXTH DISTRICT. llunter. Voorhces. Sullivan 1,336 2,22 Greene 2,116 2.124 Owen 1.467 1,725 Clay 2,534 2,363 Vigo 4,025 3,769 Parke 2 320 1,589 Vermillion 1,339 DOl Monroe 1,723 1,485 Lawrence 1902 1,650 Totals 18,792 Hunter's majority 657 SEVEICTH DISTRICT. Mansou. Fouiiti&in 2 1 tJT Montgomery 2,912 Boone 2,787 Clinton 2.337 Tippecanoe 3,809 Warren 1,007 Benton 676 CarrroU 1,975 18,135 CaBon . 1.897 2,743 2,W0 2,008 4.120 1,482 792 1,905 17.927 197 WhitcfirtcK 1,674 2.97S 1,813 1,497 1,415 2,45 3.027 1,899 16,798 Totals 17,730 Casern's maj EIGHTH DISTRICT. Tynr. HamUton 3,098 Madison 2.269 Grant. 2,538 Tipton 1.297 noward 2,398 Miami 2,611 Cass 1523 Wa ash g,y8 Totals , 19,737 Tyner's majority j. 2,93!) NINTH DISTRICT. Shanks. Henry 3,402 De'aware 2.704 Randolph 3,318 Jay. 1,700 Blackford 673 Wells 1,260 Aams 658 Allen 3,343 Ncfi". 1,722 1,578 1.662 1.641 801 1,724 1,M7 6,434 17,082 Total...... 17,058 Ncffs majority n TENTH DISTRICT. Savior. Kosciusko 2,750 Whitley 1.434 Hun ington 2.207 Noble 2.353 DeKalb 1.886 Steuben 1,847 Lagrange 1 KA Elkhart 3,000 Lon-T. 2.215 1.823 2,0 io 2,277 1,930 97 1,016 ,891 15,149 Totals 17,334 Baylor's majority 2.185 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. Packard. White Newton SIS Japper Pulaski 652 Pulton 1,310 Marshall I4 52 Starke 393 St. Joseph 3 279 Laporte 3.005 Porter 1,S3 i akc 1 532 Total 16,813 Packard's majority 935 15,828 PLENTY OF WOOD. KEEP AVABM. Having made arrangements with one of the railroads to furnish us with wood for the season, we can furnish our citizens, at FAIR FIGURES, With wood, full lenstb, or sawed in quantities SI they may desire. ALDRICH & GAY, octll-e6m Corner Indiana avenue and Caaab

Ilcunck. 1,281 Ma 95 1 1.447 2,17 474 2.8',2 3.19 1,-. 920

John S. Spann. Thos. H. Spank. Jno. M. Spark. JOHN S. SPAM & CO., REAL ESTATE AGENTS, 50 XCast Washington Street.

LOOK TO TniC SOUTHEAST as the beet field for the advancement of property. FLETCHER AVENUE has Inst been graded and graveled, and so has FOREST AVENUES. HURON STREET is a fine, improved highway all leading direct from tho centre to HPANN & CO.'S WOODLAWN LOTSDILLON STREET, a very important north and south thoroughfare, now teing improved, lies Immediately adjoining, west of this popular addition. Many houses are in process of erection in this part of the city, and as nearly all the lots are now occupied, except the Woodlawn Lot, it requires no foresight to be Kure that money will be made by buying lots here. They are etill cheap, and must advance. They lihigh. and many of them have beautiful native foreet trees on them, the right size to leave for shade and bcanty They are selling rapidly. The great sewer In Fletcher avenue and Bouth street affords perfect drainage for all this region, and tho new bridge and tunnel over the railroad tracks afford, perfect eafcty in paselng from the centre of the city. No objeition can be made to these lots, and if any of our customers intend buying, they had better come at once, before the advance is put on. ACRE LOTS, near th city, on the line of the street railroads. Many of the lots have fine forest trees on them. First-class property, at a moderate price, and on easy terras. BUSINESS PROPERTY, on Pennsylvania, Meridian and Illinois streets. Also on Delaware and Washington. We have made several large traneactioions in first-class business pr petty, recently, and we can say to our customers who may wish to invest, the longer you delay the worse it will be.

noUSES AND LOTS and VACANT LOTS in all parts of tho city. JOHN 8. 8PANN & CO., logs ctd Real Estate Agents. STATE SAVINGS BANK, No. 31 Bouth Meridian St., In the Meridian National Bank, Condil'8 Block, INDIANAPOLIS, INT). Paid dividend of TEN PER CENT, per annum, Julvlst. SURPLUS FUND equal to the dividend, and held for the benefit of prtseid and future depositors. All profits over expenses guaranteed to depositors. Dpoeits made by the 10th of January, April, July ahl October fhare in succeed ing divic ends mado ecm.'-annually, January and Juh 1st. The Trustees arc of the principal bueine men of this Cit'. Aro salaried officer, except the Treasvrr CUAltLES MAYER, Preeidcnt. JAMESM RAY, Secretary and Treasurer. jyl9 d6ni2taw M&FJkeTu&Tbur BY FRANK SMITH & CO., Real Estate Agents.

SUBURBAN OPPORTUNITIES. 2 acrertf, V.l miles eat on Fletcher pike. 20 acre, mile southeast. 20aurc8,jc'inlngcity pn east 120 acres, tin00 c'3 north. 50 acres, two m. Uesoiorth. 2 cotaes of ei'h and ,linc room, good cast front lots on Xorth Tcnu& ,fCC street. 5,500; cacy terme. FOR TRADE. Is Clifton 5 to 20 acres' trads for city property; Street Railway to land; give or take difference in money or payments. Hardware and Cptlert Stock in' New York City . Will take real estate in this vlciui ty. N. Y. Si-Bi RBAN Residence. Will tal'ce property in this vicinity. Timbered Land very line on railroad, 100 miles from here. Good Dwelmxk en Liberty street and cash for one near University. ' Country Stock about $2,i.0O doing good business, for city property. Will pny cash difference. Nine At kes, 3 miles north. Will take city prop, erty. East Market Street 40 or more fect, one mila from Tost Oflice. $ 10 er foot. FRANK SMITH & CO., 76 East WashiL'Cton street. BUCKSKIN u N D E R W E A Heavy Shaker Flannels, Spiral-Seam Drawers. English Cotton Undergarments from 50c to $4 00 all tizes. Cloth" Shirts. Heavy all wool. Extra Stout Merino, Full line. Cardigan Jackets. Boys' Undergarments. Winter Hosiery. $2 Opt-n-Back Shirts. 'Mechanics' and Work ing Men's underwear. ! Gloves for Evcry"Kdy uu wpen-r rum Shirts. R! THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR SIIIR.X and FURNIBHINGS IS AT WALLACE FOSTER'S, scp21e3m 22 EAST WASHINGTON ST. NO BETTER PLACE TO GET RAG CARPETS OK CAKPET WEAVING DONE, THAN AT HOFFMAN'S, 901-2 MASS. AYE. oct21 3me USE THE AMERICAN FIRE-KINDLER, KANCTACTCRID BY P. JOIRDAN, Headquarters at Fruit-Stand Corner of Dclawar and Washington Street. Orders from Grocers Pn d ptly Filled . sep27 elm SINGING BIRDS. I have jnst arrived In this city with a larjre number of EUKOPEAN SINGING BIRDS, men as CANARIES, GOLDFINCHES, MOCKINGBIRDS, TALKING PARROTS and PAROQUETS. Also birdpeed and prepared mockingbird food. At No. t9 East Washington street, for fcix days oi ly. lJc3t L. DIEt'KMANN. NEW B A. KERY. HAV'0TITTED VV A BAKERY AT 88 FORT WAYNE AV , I am prepared tt imiish families with Eread, Cakes, and all articles osniftlljr kept by a No. 1 Baker. oct23 3me PHILIP MYLREA. HODGSON & BROWN, ARCHITECTS AKD SUPERINTENDENTS, 14, 15 and 16, Martlndalc's Block, Indianapolis, led.' and 134 South Clark street, Chicago, EL WE WILL prepare and furnish designs, plana, specification and full working drawings foe all classes of buildings, public and private, and jrtva special attention to convenience of arrangement, architectural effect and economy of cone traction, both in fire-proof and ordinary buildings. We haw a well organized and efficient cerps of draughtsmen, and can promptly attend to all orders, and will give personal and particular attention to all work entrusted to us. aaaS em6m BILL HEADS printed neatly and expeditiously at the JOURNAL OFFICE,