Indianapolis Journal, Volume 2, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1872 — Page 2

HIE EVENING JOURNAL: INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1872

EVENING JOURNAL.

Market Street and Circle. INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL COMPANY, FBOFBIITOBS. INDIANAPOLIS. MONDAY, DEC. 9, 1872 TERMS? Single copies, per week, delivered by carrier,. . . $ 10 D - II VI - - uj uaa, pay a Die m aavance, per year a uu " per month 60 ADVSHTUSIHO HATES. Local Mattxba. Notises under this bead will be Charged 80 cents per line for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each additional insertion. Marriage Notices ,, 50 cent! Mineral Notices, BOcents DisrLATBD ADTlBrrBZltlSTS.WXKTS.rOB Sill, fOR Rest, Lost, and For?n, five CMits per line for Irst insertion, and two and a half cents per line for each additional insertion. POSTHUMOUS HONORS. The assurrance that the daughters of IIorace Greeley have ample provision to supply their ants, will be gratifying to the whole people who have been aroused to a high state of sympathy by the peculiar circumstances attending the death of their father; but it is to be hoped that the money intended for them will be appropriated to a monument to him in Central Park. No man bet ter deserves such a tribute to his memory in the pleasure grounds of the people. If it is done, it must be done while the public pulse is quick; for it is a national trait to soon forget the honors of the dead through the contentions of the living. Notwithstanding the esteem in which he wag held by all the men who fought under him, and the matter specially taken in hard by the Society of the Army of the Cumber land, less than five thousand dollars have been contributed for the monument to ilaj. Gen. George II. TnoiiAs, the hero of Chicamauga and Nashville And there are numerous political and military favorites of the people whose praises were once in every mouth, and whose valuable services seemed about to be commemorated with monuments so high as to pierce the clouds, already forgotten, and the contributions stopped before enough had been gathered to set the foundation on which a monument might be reared. There are excuses for,thi3 condition of things. Events follow so quickly in this country, and new interests grow so immensely, that the all-absorbing theme of the last decade seem3 a secondary matter compared with the questions of this ; and the accomplishments of the leaders then, are tricing in comparison with what those of the day are striving to accomplish. In like manner the great schemes of the present will be dwarfed in the retrospective sight of those who follow after U3 ; aid except in very few cases, the monuments of our public men must be built at once by their immediate associates, or not built at all. DUE WARNING. Ppesident TniERS began his remarkable career as a newspaper editor. Mr. Robert Lowe, Finance Minister, in the Gladstone administration, was a principal writer in the Times for several years. The late Lord Campbell, successively Chief Justice and Lord Chancellor of England, was & reporter on the Morning Chronich for many years. Sir Tiioxas Talfourd, author of "Ion," who literally died on the judicial bench, at Stafford, as he was chargingthe Grand Jury, alsj was on the staff of the Chronicle. Mr. Stanley, the discoverer of Livingstone, received a letter of thank3 and a diamond snuff" box from Queen Victoria, and a gold medal from the Royal Geographical Society of England. IIorace Greeley has had the honors of a public funeral and a nation's regret. Sir James II annex one of the Judges of the Court of Queen's Bench in England, has been appointed to succeed Lord Penzance as judge of the Probate and Divorce Court twenty years ago he was a a reporter on the daily press in London. Vice President Colfax reported the Indiana Legislative proceedings and edited a country Dewjpaper for lei3 pay than any body wu'd do it bow. Mr. Wilson, Vice President elect, was an editor, and bo is Mr. Blaine; and Warmoth might have been if he had not quit the printing business. We therefore warn the members of the profession around town to be on their guard or they will havo greatness thrust upon them unawares. Batard Taylor, who became fame us for his roving disposition, has become quite a stay-at-home man, only he has iuade his home in Germany with his wife, instead of in Pennsylvania. lie eeems to Germaniie more readily than she Americanizes. This may be on account of her having been of the higher cluss in Germany, and unwilling to become as one of all the rest here. So, too, during his long sojourn in foreign lands, and getting admission into the select circles, Bayard is fascinated with the seeming su periority, and prefers it to being elbowed by tbe plan farmers who were once his boyish companion. Hon. Lewis D. Campbell i3 probably on his death bed. He has been seriously ill some time, and on account of hi age, his recovery is hardly prjsib!e. "While many will remember him as a favorite leader or a noted opponent, the majority of the young voters of the "West will need to be told who Lr;vis D. Campbell is, so quick does the memory of great political contentions pass away. Elder JonN A. Lewis, one of the Mormon saints who is proselyting in England, seems to have settled Prof. Tyndall's problem in regard to the eflicacy of prayer. lie says: "I felt at the close f a ineetlrg in "Merthyr very much impressed to pray for the saint who are tngacjed iii the pi and Iron work. The language of my h-a;t wast, 40 Lord, let not tha flesj or the

bones or any of them be broken; neither let any oi them be killed.' The next morning I went t Dowlass to see the saints. The first house I went to was Sister Ford's. She has two sons in the works. When I went in I observed tears in her eyes. I asked her the cause of her grief. She stated that the engine bad by some means caught the trousers of her eldest son, and had torn them off his body, bat he bad escaped unhurt. His brother had jast been home after another pair She said: JI have Just coma from that little room where I have been thanking God that my son's flesh U not broke nor one bone In h'a body; that he is not killed. Brother Lkwis, your prayer ia answered.' The moral of this story is 60 plain that the Mormons who run inay read it: to look oat for their trousers when the Elder prays for them. LIFE INSURANCE. The managers of the other Life Insurance Companies are making a genaral onslaught on the Mutual Life of New York City, which

has reduced its rate about twenty per cent. because its experience has demonstrated that the average rates have been too high. That the public has paid too much to the persons who have been handling their deposits for the benefit of their families. The public will probably take the side of the Mutual. A great change is impending in the life insurance business. The successful working of Masonic benefit and other associations in which classes of insurers are established, and assessments paid on the death of a member, ehow that there is equal certainty at less expenses to the insurers, and in a few years all large societies will be working together in this way. The association by a community of interests will naturally bring the whole membership, who desire insurance, into th relief associations of the order, which can be managed without the army of solicitors, agents and officers who cost a3 much almost a3 as the drafts on the capital by deaths. In every State there will be Mutual Benefit associations among the Masons, the Odd Fellows, the Knights of Pythias, and all orders, railroad employes, and in great cities of the numerous trades above. m It now appears that August Belmont, the Chairman of the Democratic National Committee for twelve years, was the agent of foreign capitalists, and only temporarily stopping in this country for his masters' interests. The money which made him the great mogul of the party, was the money of foreign bankers; and when they found that the party was dead and that the chairman could do them no more good on account of his political position, either in New York or the Union, they recalled him. Belmont has returned to Europe to stay. That other controlling power in the Democratic party, the Free Trade League, was also kept up with money contributed in England. A New York LTeratd interviewer failed to get the Governor General of Canada to confess that it would be a good thing for Canada to be annexed to the United States; and the great man (the Governor not the reviewer) expressed the opinion that the long and steadily cold winters of Canada are preferable to the disagreeable alternations in tha States before the dry summer season is established. An interviewer who would allow a Canuck Governor to talk so in the columns of an American newspaper is a fraud, and Bennett should banish him to Africa. He might get some sense by the time he ihould find Livingstone. Tns Indianapolis people are stUl moving slowly In the matter of buildinj that "coal road." When warm weather reaches that unhappy city the excitement will abate. Terre IlauU Journal. That is pretty well understood now; therefore the friends of the donation have diabolically picked upon the ninth of January for the election. It always freezes hard here on the eighth of January, and wai never known to thaw before the tenth. Tue morning Journal's proof reader redueed the coal road investments of Cleveland and Louisville eighteen hundred thousand dollars in its issue this morning. The fact is that one million dollars is the sum voted by Louisville, and one million is the sum proposed in Cleveland, instead of one hundred thousand dollars in each city as published in the Journal. HASH. Mrs. F. W. Lander will soon return from Europe. Madame Ratattl purchased Eugenie's pri vate library. There are Ave hundred female postmasters ia the United States. The Baltimore Home for Aged Methodists has thirty fcappy and healthy inmates. A New Orleans boy has a burnt district. He got it by carrying powder In his coat-tail. Weyauwega boasts of a girl fourteen years old who weighs two hundred and fifty pounds. Jennie Llnd has been singing in the choir of the American Episcopal Chapel in Florence, to the great delight of all listeners. A young lady of Gratoit, Michigan, at ill a minor, has two husbands living, to each of whom she has been married twice within a few months. Amedfed gentleman sent the following note to the Board of Health: "My servant girl has tb small pox; I am very thankful, send the ambulance to tike her to the hospital. Taree hudred young Prussian women have appliel for admission Into the medical school at St. Petersburg, which, we are Informed, accommodates but seventy. What are they all to do? Miss Polk, of Tennessee, is not only a 'on ce ded belle In Italy, but the special favorite of the Princess Royal Marguerite, and a frequent and cherished guest at the royal palace of Monza. Mrs. Prescott, of McGregor, Iowa, secured the premium for the finest baby at the Northwestern Iowa Fair. She is twenty years old, and her seven months' urchin weighed 31 pounds. Gail Hamilton Intubates that it is 'Heaven ly HeathenUrn to attribute the big fires and such things to God's anger or narrow escapes to his special love," and says: "It is good to b religious, but It is not good to make God ca pricious."

It was rumored laEt night that among the forty tickets of the Louisville Library Lottery scheme purchased jointly by Thomas Smith and Robert C. Pate, of St. Louis, is the number 6,450, wtich drew the $75,000 prize. St. Louis Globe. The Herald and Presbyter has discovered that the ordination of Rev. Jackson, a quasi tjnlvefealist, by an Orthodox Congrcgatiotal Association of Kansas, was accomplished by packing the council. Very well Now let the packers be whacked. Children "play horse" with great attention to details. One Very young woman uptown cut up her mother's toilette cushion, ruined a carpet.nearly scalded a confiding young brother to death, treating him to a bran nia&,h for a 'play" epizootic. All the railroad yards are full to overflowing with coal, and on some of the roads orders, have been Issued not to bring la any more until some means can be devised to empty the cars" already on hand. The price 6tiil remains at the high figures of la6t week, and owners are not anxious to sell to the people here at all. St. Louis Globe. A young minister wished to impress his Sabbath-school with the dignity of life by reference to the tact that men had souls, while ordinary animals have none. Striking an attitude he asked, "Nowj children, what is the great difference between a fnor.liey and a boy?" "The tiil, the tail, the tail S " came from all parts of the house, and the minister w&3 satisfied. A little girl was one day reading the history of England with her governess, and, coming to the statement that Henry I. never laughod after the death of his 6on, she looked up and said: "What did he do when he was tickled.' Il Henry himself could have heard this question it might have brought a smile, at least, over his troubled features. The Figaro has the following upon the character of Verdi's music: M. X. had become deaf by degrees, so deaf that he could not hear the sound of a pistol fired close to his ears. His doctor was in despair, when at last a brilliant idea occurred to Lira, ne called upon his patient as usml, ar d appointed a meeting at eight o'clock that evening on the Boulevard des Italians. The patient was punctual, and the doctor took him to the Ita'ian opera, taking care to place hira In a stall near the big drum. The opera was "II Trovatore." Toward the fourth act the invalid manifested symptoms of considerable surprise; the terrific noise of Verdi's music had unstopped his ears. "D3Ctorl"he exclaimed, "Doctor, you have saved me! I bear again, I hear!" The Doctor did not stir. "I tell you," repeated M. X , shouting in the Doctor's ear, "I can hear perfectly pray speak to me." The doctor appeared unmoved. His patient was cured, but he had become deaf himself.

FASHION. The new dress color with the golden tinge is called "Aurifyro." Gentlemen are beginningto wear the "gantB Suedes" as well as ladies. Very short wedding trip3 ere in fashion Just now and very 6hort engagements. Our belles are all coming out in their wir ter suits, and very pretty they look in their furs and velvets. Velvet is more worn by our fashionable young ladies on the Etreets tbU winter than it has ever been before. A complexion which keeps its color in cold weather is the most desirable possession a young woman can have now a-days. It is very noticeable how plainly ladies dress on the street now-a-days, in comparison with what they wore two years ago. Business men in New Tork are quite generally wearing double-breasted, pea-jatkt-fashioned coats, made of dark, mixed cloths. Church weddings have lately come to be such occasions for vulgar display that the best people have dropped them altogether in New York, and get married at home. Gentlemen are reminded that when the delicate neck tie is of other color than black, gloves must Invariably correspond, in peatl, lavender, "or the faintest tint of ashes-of-roses. A great many gentlemen wear little bright colored feather tips ia their hat bands, and some few devote what seem like moderate sized feather dusters to the same ornamental purpose. MuSs remain email. Young ladies, particularly those who pride themselves upon what Mrs. Mantilini would call their outline, affect boas either flat or round. Collars are left to their mammas. Brides in good society now-adays avoid most strictly the traditional grey and brown travelling suits formerly In vogue, and dress as unconspicuously as possible so that all creation needn't know we've just been married." Belts are worn with all kinds of waists, not excepting basques. Chatelains pendant from the walsteband, are universal; when made of finely chased silver, they are considered appropriate with opera costumes ; the vinaigrette, a tina opera glass, and the fan, are attached to the fanciful chains. Feather flowers are the latest. They are made in Florida, and the new branch ot itidus try promises to become very remunerative. The flowers are made of the beautiful plumage of the white heron, while the leaves are taken from the paroquet. They are already very fashionable among Southern ladies. Seal-skin coats, overcoats and doublebreasted jackets for gentlemen are en rejle and very costly. Caps of otter and seal-skin -re extremely fashionable and becoming. A charm, ing cap is called the Canadian seal-skin turban The crown of this is high atd soft, with an upturned brim, something like Rabagas bonnet. Gentlemen's Ecarfs ehow several novelties. raise gentlemen have a new scarf made with a sort of square knot or fold from which depend two broad ends. To be in good taste, the Windsor ties of twilled silk are recommended. Fine and very elegant mufflers of cashmere, and f-ilk and wool and all raw silk, with 6ilken borders, are quite cheap, only two dollars. Sleeve-studs e re still square, and are superb in their marvellous cuttings of antique stones where, upon foundations of burned ceramic are carvings of onyx, in jasper, and chrysoprase of mythological designs in intaglio. Also, In cameo, of sardonyx, topas, and emerald. Upon a base of vivid green, for instance, is an exquisite Hebe ia white, for a Bcarf-pin of chrysoprase. Cheap imitations of ermine ere so common that the real fur is banished utterly. The Hudson Bay sable, through mere caprice, for it is not less beautiful thau the Russian, Is also somewhat under a ban, and sets that two years ago would have sold for $3,000 can be had for about half the money. The sea-otter, an exquisitely fine, soft fur, Is made up into costly

sets, even a muff and boa sellirg for $300 to $4.ri0. AUraehan has lost caste, though it is still popular where warmth, comfort and economy sre desired. Camera-hair shawl? can s'tfii be found costing $5,000, but there arc loDg shawls of antique design and richest coloring reduced in prices from 150 to 1250, formerly longed for at $1,500. The real Decca is as low as Reversible camel's bVir shawls are especially popular, as one's friends arc thereby cunningly deceived, and the Owner crtitod with beinft the possessor of two. Seal-skin sacques are exceedingly popular, and prices are consequently advanced over those of lahu pe?on. A garment of good quality is held at $200, unUiromcd. Seal sacques are sometimes trimmed with blue fur a fur ofiener seen on the boulevards than on TTa6hlngton street; it is a fluffy, elegant fur of a brown color, which might, to gratify a dealer, be called blueUh, anu cse might linally be persuaded into siying It really was clt-c:olor.

YOUNG AMERICA AIJROAD. MATRIMONT IKPEit DIFFICULTIES UNATTENDED (.IKLS. Par'n CorrcMtuJence of the New York World 1 A levs chcri 'iicd alH.mee between a Katsian nobleman and n American 'Trince" well known In Wahincton society, was thh week consummated lu the Russian Church here. It was an illustration Of perseverance thct all American damsels, er.ger to cntcb n tit may take to heart. However, as Count nwd Jiarquist and Barons are as common here as captains and eolcnti were in America after the wdr, it Is somv.what tiiet!t to undei st md the furore for titles. But to the bride She went to the altar in deep mourning, ci'jped like a catafalque. She was engaged tonielicne ago to the nobleman, having made his acquaintance during some romantic r.dventure in Switzerland or Germany. She went home, prepared her trousseau and her wedding, but the nobleman came net. Then slip wore out her wedding finery while the nobleraen was convalescing from the severe illness which had prevented hira from attentfi"g their anticipated nuptials, and which had left him in so debilita terl 9 erumioi that-1 ii physician forbade him taking a sea voyage. Alu c Hit- preliminaries of many months, the bride-elect and her father arranged to come to Paria and join the trroom-e'ect. When ready to sail the father died. Then the daughter came aloie. She ordered a magnificent wedding-gown from Brustel?, but when it came it was found to i too Froal!, arid, was sent back for repairs. The repairs proved to be unfortunate ones, and so, wi!h the courage of true independence, she walked to the alter in "beauty like the right," ai;d never before in her eventful life looked eo handsome. It is to be hoped that after bruvirg disappointment, death and ncl-ifortnne, ehe way find the office of Countess a happy ore, Although the state of her husband's hc;l'h is not such as to warrant very extensive matrimonial arrangements. The unmarried and unprotected American girl hcreis a never erieliiiir tubje:t of discussion among Americans and E:;t!li?h. The Parisians seem to havo boeome accustomed to the 6elf reliance and self protection of my young countrywomen, aHiiOMirh mvaiiMy addressing them as "Madam" if they are unattended, no matt er how youthful h ei'piararce An English maiden of forty or nice summers was declaring the other day thnt the never went out in Paris wiihout her mail she had done so once or twice, but always with very unpleasant results. As her age tud plainness would have seemed sufficient protection, her remarks dr-jw forth some lively remarks from a young American, who declared that she intended to go shopping and walking quite the same as at home. Whereupon au eldeily laatron asserted that, even In America, o!ily the strong minded went out alone, that class whs greatly intb minority, and confined to the middle c!as6. "Be 60 good, madam," said the girl, as to tell me what you mean by 'strong-minded?' " "Why, I mean those women wbodaru go out alone, and would as soon be without a iain as with one." "Oh, if that is being strong-minded,'- laughed the girl merrily, "vou my count me in; I've walked alone ever since I was ton years old, and xpect to do so until the end of my days, unless rair fortune befaH3 mo,"twirlit3g a gold ringon her finger meantime. "Have yen loeg been separated from your busban J," asked an Eng'.ish lady of her a moment later. "About a year, madam," she an-v swtrad calmly. "I'm not going to rejoin him again," she added. "What, you arc divor:ed thn?" l 01i, no, madam; I got tired of him and left him; that's one of our peculiar American customs." When the general surprise had subsided, the girl, twerty years old, perhaps, cleared away the mist by saying f he was not married, nevtr had been, and was so vexed at being eo cn.stautly addreesed as a married woman thut she feared that sho never would be. The natural perversity of the unregenerated American hecrt is often tempted while abroad to indulge in similar exaggerations. A 10-jearold girl, if she be a madam instead of a niadiiEoicl'e, is privileged far beyond the unmarried woman of f jrty, and may chaperone ft partv of eld maids from Hiwre to Venice with perfect propriety. A resident American giil told me the other day that it would bo q lite impossible for her to take a gentleman aequ tuf a ice with her an .l her sister in her ovn carriage; to rid .-, uuless one or the other was cugiged to be married to Lioi. A WASHINGTON SENSATION. From the Capital.! The social life of Washington is agitated by the rumor of. a 1 iw suit brewing, wherein a gay, dftshing widower, after winning the affections et a young lady, had the day ngrced" upon and the trousseau luiehased, suddenly turned up with a wife that be had married Lu an adjoinirg city. The mortification of the young lady au official, by tic bye was made more pninful by th publication that had been piven the h flair. Not only .had the day been fixed, but, as we havo said, the trou6eau obtained and the guests invited. Her mortification is somewhat moJitled by learning from general rumor that the poor girl is not h.Iouc. Tiiis pay deceiver, it seems, tlng bis promises, if not his aflec tions, about iu tke most promiscuous manner. It has been suggested that the sufferers hold an indignation meeting and 'resolve. There is great comfort in your resolutions. But the 6uit for breach of prcmi?eis more substantial, and generally ends in bringing upon the head of the offender l.'ie wrath, contempt and indignation of the virttiou community, to say nothing of daraagc3 tlut will be assessed. The defendiint in these cases has generally two suits one with Ms w ift tnd the other with the disappointed. The w ife is generally very much disappointed, then in iignaH a 'storm arises. What! thiilate lvei of hers, now her loving husband, to be in sucn a scrape! Trifling with other wi. men's affect ioijj bps he not been trifline with hers? Bat the storm dies out, and the wifa fn m being an angry cuemy becomes an active ally. Oi:e can imagine the poor devil of a husband pleading pileou.sly wltb his better half, by law and the sanction of the church, and then going exhausted into court to fight that other f iir one who can not be captured. A man f.11 into the Hudson river from the wharf at Newburg. the other day and went down 'ike a s!:o Byf.tarders looked for him anxioutiy for Lxlf an'lu-ur, but he dul not once come to the surface. Then thev grappled for hlro, and found the body just where the man had gone down. Upon examination it was discovered that the man worearound his; body next his skin a heavy chain to which were attached sevei. 1 metallic boxes or pouches that were made secure with padlocks. In one of these boxes was about ?50 in money. The man was a travelling chair-mender. He was subject to fit, and h:id been robbed once while faln in a lit H tb a made himself robber-proof as above describe 1, wbich was a eutllcient protection ngaiast thieves, but the contrivance proved to be a very poor life preserver when he fell into the river ia a fit. At a meetiug of the New York cigar makers on Saturday night, it was resolved to obtain signatures to a petition to be presented to ComTets, asking that the tax on cigars be abolished, or reduced, so as to encourage do-. : mestlc manufactures. . '

PLENTY OF WOOD. KEEP WARM.

Having made arrangements with one of the railroads ti furnish ns with wood for the season, we can famish oar citizens, at FAIR FIGURES, With wood, fuU length, or tawed in quantities as they may deeire. ALDRICH & GY, OCtll-e6m Corner Indiana avenue and Canal. ACADEMY OF MUSIC. RUBINSTEIN CONCERT. RUBINSTEIN AND" WIEHIAWSKJ. MONDAY EVE., DECEMBES 1 172. Mr. GRAl"has the honor to announce s above the First and Only appearance here e f jvnton- RTJBKisrs'.r'Kiisr, Th Greatest Livhur Pianist, and one of tha mo-t profound musical thinkers of the sgc, with an ensemble of Emlntat Artists, Including HKNRY WIKNIAW8KI, The World Renowned Violinist, and universally regarded as h "ocly rival to the memory of Paganinl." MIjIjE I.OT7ISK LIEBHAET, The Celebrated Soprano. 2VILiIjE. lotjisk obmeny, The Favorite Contralto. Accompanist Mons. L. Kemhielinski 5-Stemway Panos are used at all Icubinstein Concerts. nov2Wl:amcol INDIANA WEEKLY STATE JOURNAL THE LARGEST AND BEST PAPER IN" THE BTATE. SHOULD BE READ BY EVERY REPUBLICAN FAMILY IN INDIANA SUBSCRIBE FOR YOUR STATE PAPER. SPLENDID PREMIUMS TO CLUBS RARE CHANCES TO AGENTS. THE WEEKLY STATE JOURNAL FOR 1873. The proprietors of the INDIANA 8TATE JOURNAL are determined to spare no pains nor expense to make the JotmNAt the Best as well as the Cheapest Republican newspaper in Indiana or the west, and for the pHrpoee of securing such a circulation as the Importance and value of the paper deraanI, tbey Offer the following liberal list of premiums to Agents for obtaining subscribers: PREMIUMS TO CLUB AGENTS. For a Club of Five, at f 1.75 each. We will give a No. 7 solid Gold Pen, without holder, worth $ 2.M Or a st of double silver-plated Tea Spoons, worth 2.50 For a Club of Twenty five, at f 1.50 each, A silver-plated Dinner Castor, worth 8.50 Or a dozen double plat d Dessert Forks, worth 8.50 For a Club of Fifty, ot 1.50 each, A fine silver hunting-case Watch, Jeweled, lever movement, worth. . C5.00 Or an elerant Rnssja-bourd Family Bible, or other books of same value. For a Club of Seventy-five, at 1.35 each, A flne silver hunting case Watch, fall plate, lever movement, full jeweled, warranted, worth 45.00 A W-lson nndcrfeed Sewing Machine, worth 45.00 Or a silver Water Htchcr, worth, complete with Tray and Goblet 45.00 For a Club of One Hundred, at f 1.25 each, A Sintrer or ITowe Sewinpj Machine, worth 70.00 Or a enlendid Mlver hunting-case Watch, full plate, gold hinge, warranted, worth 70.00 For a Club of Two Hmidrcd, at 91.25 each, An elcgmt gold hunting case Watch, lever movement, heavy case, fall jeweled, warranted, worth 130.00 Or a Lady's Watch of sime value. Or an elegant Howe Cabinet Sewing Machine, wjrth 130.00 CASH COMMISSIONS TO AGENTS Who prefer a cash commission in lieu of the foregoing premiums. On application Commission Rates will be f urniehed. THE PREMIUMS, Such as Watches, Silver Ware, and Gold Tens, are of the best makes, and are manufactured expressly for the Journal Company. The Sewing Machines enumerated are well known, and need no commendation. We guarantee them to be as r presented, and each article will give entire satisfaction. TERMS. THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY JOURNAL. By Mall (payable in advance), per annum. $12.00 " " for six months. . 6.00 " " for three months 8.00 " M for one month.. 1.00 By the week (payable to the agent or carrier). .25 THE WEEKLY STATE JOURNAL. Sinele Copies $2.00 Clubs of .Five (each) 1.75 Clubs of Twenty-five (each) 150 Clubs of 8eventy.flve (each) 1.35 Clubs of One Hundred and over (each) l.5 Specimen Copies of the DAILY or WEEKYY JOUNAL will be sent gratuitously to those who wih to examine the paper with reference to subscribing or raising clubs. Circulars and Posters fur nished agents and getters up of Clubs Clubs should he complete before sending, and re mittances made at one time. Add. tions may be rnnde at any time, at club rates, after the club has been raised, provided only that a full year's subscription is taken. Single subscribers, invariably, $2 in advance. The money must accompany all orders. The above prices are invar'abe. Remit in Drafts or Postofflce Money Orders, if possible, and where neither of these can be procured, send the money in a Registered letter. All Postmasters are obliged to register letters when requested to do so, and the system is an absolute protection against losses by mail. Give full address. Postofflce, County and State. Address, INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL CO., ndlanapolie, Indiana,

John S. SrASS- Tnos. II. Spank. Jno. M. Spank

J0TI5 S. SPANK k CO., REAL ESTATE AGENTS, SO JKaat W; xahlncton street. THE WOODLAWN LOTS on FLECHER avenue, HURON street, and on EN-Gl'JSH avenue, SPANK avenue, and HOYT avenue, aienow the nearest to the center of the city, the be it located and the low tbt in price, of aoylot6 on thns market. There arc more improved t tr cet, on and leading to this plat than any other part .of town. There arc more bouses in pro cess of erection in the south-eaet part than any othar. There have been as jnany lots ei ld here as in any other part. The chances for qu'ck profit are quite as good here Jjany where else. For present use for HOMES for people in moderate circumstances It is un surpassed by any thing in the market. Uniform price $20 per'fro ut foot. One-fifth down, the remainder in 1, 2, 3 and 4" years, with interest. JOHN .S. SPANN & CO., Real Estate Agents. 1u29 etd IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Can be given of an en tirely new and elegantly furnished brick house of twelve rocHns.Inside Blinds, Double Parlors, Grates, 3ramJes Gas, Furnace, Water-works, Stable, &c., The lot M largei fronts east and is in one of our most Iishionable northern localities, contigious to street railway and an easy walk to business. The owner will not sacrifice the property, but sell at a fair price and accommodate the terms to those desiring to make a small cash payment. Also twenty acres, adjoining; the city on the east, $1,500 per acre. Best bargain in market. FRANK SMITH & CO., No. 7f East "Washington. Street. LEVI WRIGHT. JAMES P. WRIGHT. J. A. C. M'COT NOW FOR BARGAINS LEVI WRIGHT & CO., No. S5 1-2 East Market Street. Have ten acr." s land, choiee, improved, beautifully located jr.et north of the city. Great baigain, email canh and long time. Twelve acres 2 miles north 0 the city, bmall cash paymei t and Ions time. Twentv five acres eouth of city. reat bargain. Small cash and leng time lloiucs and lots in great variety. Sin.U cash and lcnp time. tircat bargains in vacant lots in all parts 01 tne city. Farm of 170 acres northeast of city, flCO per acre. Terra eay. Farm of lt0 acres eontheaet of city, cut fj per acrc Terms easy. CALL AND SKE T78. t3F Carriages ready to show property at all times. JAMES T. WRIGIIT, Attorney at Law, formerly of Jackson county, will practice in all the loiirta. nov.vlyo CALDWELL & SON, REAL ESTATE AGENTS, No. 7 Ulaolcforl Hlook, (Vor. Washington and Meridian Sis.) For Sale or Exchange Twf -stery frame etore huilrting in Carthage, Kush county. Indiana, containing six rooms and ware room two store rooms below and four rooms above. The building is nearly new, with ulate roof; price, $4,500; won d exchange for a stock of salable merchandise or a good farm; will pav di'erence in cash. For Sale House on W. Nrrth street; price, $ 3.500; rents for $25 per month; will take, as caeh pav men t, vacant ground in north part of city. Lot 4iixlf5 on Columbia t. south of Tinker, near Scwinz Machine Factory; price, $S00; very cheap. CgIf you wnnr to buy a house acd lot or vacant lot in any part of the city, give us a call. scplle REAL ESTATE. FARTIES dcbirinz to invent in property that will double within t-ir months should call on J 031 All SMITH & CO. Entrance: Nos. 51 & 57 West Washington St., or 12 Kentucky ave. WE have Lots in all parts of the city at low figures and on long time. WE offer grep.t barzains in Washington Street Property. WE aleo represent several of the best Life and Fire Insurance Companies doing business in our city. octl7 e3m EXTRAS FOR HOLIDAYS. P!LK MCPJI.EES AT t'- TO f 1. S CLOTH, KID. CALF. HOC BUCK AND OTIIElt GLOVES. D E P O T Robes Do Chambre Cheap. II I I? CARDIGAN JACKETS. Plain nnd Fancy Hem-stich Handkerchiei'. BOWS, TIES ANOrCARrS PR03I IOC 1U CUFF BUTTONS AND SPIRAL SI1IRT STUDS, Great XSarfrains in Dress tehtrte. FULL LINE OF FURNISHINGS AT FOSTER'S SHIRT DEPOT. , , 1 Hi EAST .WASHINGTON STREET. Dr J.W.CULBERTSON sss OCULIST 4- AUR1ST, EYE AND EAR, FOR ALL DEFECTS OF SIGHT AND HEARING, AND TREATMENT Of CATARRH. Office, 13 North Delaware Street. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. prSend stamp for lefereBce. Artificial Eyes constantly on hano. jylS-Ca