Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1884 — Page 8
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THIS WEEK OTST OUR Bargain Tables! WE PLACE ON SALE Ladies’ Muslin Underwear, Chemise, Drawers, Night Gowns, Skirts. Slightly soiled, hut splendid quality ami elegantly bade. Also, all odd pieces and styles; must be closed lot before inventory. The prices will close them |uick. L. S. AYRES & CO., INDIANAPOLIS. N. B.—Our Special Sale of Hamburg Embroideries, our Pinal Mark-down sale of Cloaks, our Remnant Sale are in full Ida.**. and will continue until all are old. Come and get the bargains. HOLIDAY GOODS. Fine Perfumes and Toilet Articles; Hair, Cloth, Tooth and Nail Brushes; Combs, Dressing Cases, Nail Sets, Fine Cologne Bottles, Fancy Goods, and all Articles Wanted for the Toilet. BROWNING & SLOAN, Apothecaries’ Hall.
CHEAP! CHEAP! BIG SALE IN REMNANTS op FINE EMBROIDERIES! AT WILLIAM ILERLE’S, No. 4 YV. Washington St. CHEAP! CHEAP! THBNEWYOHKSTORE (ESTABLISHED 1853.) SHOE DEPARTM’NT ' LADIES’, MISSES’, BOVS’ aad CHILDREN’S tote, Shoes, Slip and liters AT LOWEST PRICES. TVe have the finest goods made; also, medium and hw-prieed qualities. Prices Always in Plain Figures. Pettis, Bassett & Cos. THE COUNTY SURVEYORS. Conclusion of the Annual Meeting—The Election of Officers. The County Surveyors* State Association continued its session yesterday morning, with President Fatout in the chair. Th.e following new members were recommended by the ex ecutive committee: T. .T. Smith, of Mount Vernon; A. R. Smith, of Grant county, and Q. M. Allery, of Allen county. The by-laws were so amended as to provide for annual dues of $1.50. The discussion of Mr. Fa tout’s paper on “Responsibility of surveyors and engineers” was resumed and participated in by various mem bers, and the subject of drainage was also coneidered at length; the discussion was opened by J. C. Pulse, of Greens burg. The following officers were elected for next year: H. B. Fatout, president. Indianapolis, Ind. R. R. Spencer, viee president, Glarksburg, Ind. James C. Pulse, recording secretary, Greensburg. Ind. L S. Alter, corresponding secretary, Rensselaer. ind. U. I. Morrison, treasurer. Kniglitstown. Ind. Executive Committee —Walter A. Osmer, Lo gansport; R. H. Walls. Grecncastle: R. R. Kpen cer, Clarksburg; J. W. Craig, Greensburg; H. B. Fatout. Legislative Committee —W. A. Osmer. R. R. Spencer. B. Fatout, Alexander Polk, Princeton, ami R. H. Walls. Printing Committee—James C. Pulse. H. B. Fatout, R. I. Morrison. The president introduced L. E. Gurley, of Troy, N. Y.. who addressed the association on the manufacture of surveyors’ and engineers’ inwith especial reference to the solar attachments. The association adjourned, after the customary vote of thanks Frozen to Death. An Associated Press telegram from Buffalo, dated yesterday, stated that the body of a middle aged man, frozen stiff, was found in a car load of wheat, at Niagara Elevator, to-day. The car left St. Louis, Nov. 19. A letter was found in his pockets, dated Columbus. O , Se.pt. 13, and addressed to Frank Roddey, cave of S. Berry, Indianapolis. It began, '‘My dear husband,” and ended “Josie Roddey, Windsor House, Columbus.” Roddey was some time employed in this city by Samuel Berry, as a file maker, but left here four months ago. slating that, lie was going to Coinin'. is, <> . where his family lives. Le v useful presents at King A r Eider’*.
THE BEE-KEErEKS. The Association Addressed at Length by Governor Porter. The morning session of the State Bee-keepers’ Association yesterday was devoted to the general discussion of questions relating to the bee culture interests, the members giving their experiences and observations upon all questions which were suggested. The information elicited was interesting, and the exchange of ideas was altogether quite beneficial. In the afternoon the association was addressed by Governor Porter. In examining the agricultural reports of other States, the Governor said that he had found none in which the subjects of bee culture and the production of honey were discussed with more intelligence than in the reports of the proceedings of the Indiana Beekeepers’ Association. He had always come to their meetings to be instructed, rather than to impart instruction. He had proved by examining the State statistics that for the year ending April 1. 1880, the production of honey was 1,097,634 pounds. In 1881 the production had declined to GOO. 141 pounds, and in 1882 it had declined to 420.201. It further appeared from the statistics for the year ending April 1, 1882, that there was a loss of 38,357 stands of bees. The decline manifestly came chiefly from the destruction of bees, owing to the insufficient supply of food in certain parts of the year, from unfavorable weather, and from the destruction of bees in wintering, it being essential in winter that bees shall be kept warm and dry by proper ventilation and shall be supplied with plenty of honey. It had been said by the president of the association in his address a year ago that the best lessons in bee’ culture were learned from failure. Obviously, the Governor said, the * chief attention of bee-keepers should be directed to producing plants for the food of bees, with reference to withstanding drouths and other unfavorable conditions, just as prudent stock raisers cultivate a variety of grasses so as to meet the conditions of drouths and a too great excess of moisture, some grasses flourishing in very dry seasons, and some flourishing particularly in wet ones. Improvements will have to be made in modes of wintering bees, so that the loss in very cold weather will be less. It is probable that the production of plants for bee food to enable them to withstand drouths and other unfavorable weather conditions will be made by those so largely interested in bee culture and the protection of honey. They cannot afford to lose m unfavorable seasons so enormous a proportion of their bees. The Governor referred to the production of a better quality of honey, and said that the sale of oleomargarine as butter has tended to the production of a better quality of butter. A superior quality will now command as large a price as ever, while an inferior quality will command only the price of oleomargarine. Thus the counterfeit secures for us a better quality of the genuine. So the counterfeit honey, from which the poor quality of the genuine cannot be distin guished. will tend to give us better honey, by making the bee-keeper endeavor, by supplying his bees with food that imparts a high flavor, produce a finer quality of honey. The difference between honey produced from the best quality of bee food and the poorest, is as great almost as the difference between the best butter and oleomargarine. An interesting discussion of the Governor's remarks followed at the close of his address. The association adjourned at 4 o’clock.
A COMPLICATED CASE. A Plaintiff in a Petty Sait Ts Discovered To Bea Bigamist. Various criminal and civil cases, arising from the troubles of Albert Rusch and Emil Whinka, have kept Justice Feibleman busy for several days. On last Monday Rusch desired to institute surety of the peace proceedings against Whinka, and left the court room, in search of a lawyer. By a mistake he got in an insurance office, and instead of getting out a surety warrant, he got his life insured, and came back triumphantly exclaiming: “He can kill me now' I have my life insured for $2,000.” Whinka, however, brought suit against him to recover $12.50 on account, and the defendant compromised this by paying sls, but did not show liis receipt in court until after judgment had been taken against him and a lien on this for $lO for attorney’s fees. The wives of the two men were involved in these transactions, and during the last trial it was developed that Whinka had a wife living in Germany, and that he had married here without going through the formality of getting a iDvorce. He explained, however, that Mrs. W. No. 1 was about eighty years old, and “played out,” whereas he is only about thirty. His new wife, when she heard this, left himr, and he has left towm. doubtless, to avoid prosecution for bigamy. It is said that his first wife is about to come to this country in search of him. In excuse of this conduct he stated in court that No. 2 knew of No. l’s existence, but this is denied. Amusements. “The Rajah” concluded a successful engagement at the Grand last night, and to-night an! during the remainder of the week Anson Pond’s military drama, “Her Atonement.” will be presented by a company of forty-five people, under the management of Brooks Dickson. The Richardson Zouaves, who are interested in the engagement, will also appear in the play, which has been a marked success elsewhere. The company will give a street parade at noon to-day. To-night, at English’s, Mr. Frank Chanfrau, the well-known character actor, will appear in “Kit, the Arkansas Traveler,” and to-morrow’ night Mrs. Chanfrau will play the “Bankrupt’s Wife,” which will be followed at the Saturday matinee by the new version of “East Lynne,” with the author. Mr. C. W. Tayleure, in the cast, and the engagement will conclude on Saturday night with “The Octoroon,” with Mr. Chanfrau as the leading attraction. The advance sale is good. To-night and during the remainder of the w r eek the Park will have an excellent attraction in Hanley’s “McSorley’s Inflation” Company, which made such a hit at Harrigan & Hart’s theater in New York. It is a clean Irish comedy, during the production of which several of Mr. Braham’s latest musical successes will be given, notably, the “The Charleston Blues,” “McNally’s Row’ of Flats,” “Behind the Bar,” “Market on Saturday Night,” etc. Kloped with a Scenic 4 \rtist. A letter has been receive by the superintendent of police from Mrs. Anna Wesley, of South Bend, making inquiries about her daughter, a young woman whom she describes as of comely appearance, who has been living with a scenic artist named Frank Cox. Mrs. Wesley says that Cox has a wife and child, although for a year or more he has been traveling with her daughter, whom he had induced to elope with him. She asked the superintendent to place Cox under arrest and hold h<*r daughter in custody until she could come after her. The superintendent finds that Cox was employed at the Grand Operahouse here a year ago, but his whereabouts are not now known. Marriage Hells. Miss Lottie Lloyd, formerly of this city, a sister of Mrs. M. V. McGilliard, and Carlos H. Preston, a leading society and business man of Richmond, were married last evening, at the residence of M. V. McGilliard. The floral decora tions were choice, th 6 couple standing during the ceremony under a large yoke of white flowers, with initial monogram of tin* names of each at tacked to the yoke by wire in such manner as to deceive the eye and appear to be hanging in mid air. The marriage was conducted by the Rev. i. v G. Hall, of Lima, O. The Rev. J. 11. llugh s, of Richmond, having to perform a siuii
tiie mniANAPOLis journal, Thursday, January it, issj.
lar ceremony at his church in Richmond on the same evening, was prevented from being present. About fifty of the friends of the bnde and groom were present and participated in the pleasant event and a bountiful repast which followed. Mr. and Mrs. Preston left at Up. m., for St. Louis and other points, on a short lour. ENFORCING THE LAWS BY DEGREES. What the Police Commissioners and the Superintendent Say of the New Departure. The arrest of Philip Reichwein. proprietor of the saloon at the corner of Market and Noble streets, for selling liquor after 11 o’clock is re garded by many of . the saloon-keepers as the initiative in a movement of the commissioners to enforce the law against the sale of liquor after 11 o’clock, without relief from considerations of policy. Commissioner Murphy was In the City Court, yesterday morning, when Mr. Reichwein was fined, and, when asked if there was a determination to enforce the statutory law in regulating the saloon business, remarked evasively to a reporter that if anything was learned about the matter it would have to be by absorption. The superintendent of police was reticent, and nothing satisfactory could be learned from him. It is said that the object in making the arrest was in the nature of a ‘‘feeler,” to learn the position the Mayor would take, and how it would be regarded by the public. The disposition of the Mayor evidently is to apply, the penalty of the law in all cases of its violation. When questioned last night about the significance of the arrest of Reichwein, Commissioner Frenzel was not disposed to talk freely, and very carefully avoided saying anything positively about a strict enforcement of the law or what degree of laxity would be tolerated. “The commissioners have been working gradually," Mr. Frenzel said. “They began bv suppressing the wine-rooms and then the gambling. They are working gradually.” “Has the higher law been suspended, and do they now intend to enforce the statutory law?” “There has never been any higher law.” “Was not the 12 o’clock order from the former superintendent of police authorized by the commissioners?” “He probably did the host lie could.” When directly asked afterward “if the statutory law would be strictly enforced in the future?” Mr. Frenzel answered frankly: “I don’t want to answer that question.” Superintendent Lange, when asked about the matter, said: ‘‘We will arrest no one, you know, who has not violated the law.” “But will you arrest all who do violate the law?” “That depends on whether or not we know that they violate the law.”
THE STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE. The Delegate Convention To Be Held April 17, and the State Nominating Convention June 19. The Republican State central committee met yesterday morning and ordered the holding of a convention in this city for nominating four delegates from the State at large to the national convention, April 17 being fixed upon as the date. It was also ordered that conventions be held in the respective districts as follow’s: First District —Evansville. Second District—Vincennes. Third District—Jeffersonville. Fourth District—LawTenceburg. Fifth District—Martinsville. Sixth District—New’ Castle. Seventh District—lndianapolis. Eighth District—Not yet fixed. Nfilth District—Tipton. Tenth District—Logansport. Eleventh District —Marion. Twelfth District—Auburn. Thirteenth District —Plymouth. At these conventions two district delegates and two alternates will be chosen; also the member of the State central committee. The representation to the State convention on the 17th was fixed on the basis of one delegate for each 500 votes cast for Porter in 1880, and one for every fraction over 200. At this convention, no other business is to be transacted except that indicated in the call. The State convention for the nomination of a ticket, will be held in this city on the 19th of June, and the basis of representation will be one delegate for every 200 votes cast for Governor Porter in 1880, and one for every fraction over 100. It was requested that the county conventions for the selection of delegates be held previous to March 4. The committee spent, considerable time in the discussion of various proposed measures, and in the transaction of the routine business. Tlie Armory Project. The committee having in hand the project of the new armory met yesterday afternoon. The matter is now taking definite form, and in a few days an address will be issued explaining the objects of the committee, and the conditions upon which stock can be taken in the enterprise. This address will contain a cut of the proposed j building, and figures explanatory of its dimen- \ sions. The proposition is to issue $75,000 in | stock, that amount being required to purchase j ground to erect the building, which will he ! divided into 1,500 shares of SSO each. The building is to be two stories high in front and one ; story in height in the rear. The rear portion is to be 135 feet square in the clear, with galleries all round, the ceiling to be twenty-five feet high. This hall is to have capacity to hold 7,500 peo pie. There will he a movable stage and eight exits. This will give it sufficient capacity to hold the largest assemblages ever brought together within walls. In the front portion of the building, there will be in the second story tw r o drill rooms, each forty-five by sixty-five feet, with company quarters below. This will furnish sufficient room toaccommodate all the military companies of the city. Th<‘ entire length of the building will thus be 195 feet, and the width 135 feet.. The floors to be put in will bo of the strongest, capable of sustaining artillery drill. Utigatfcnn Over Mr. Spotts’s Peculiarities. The trial of the suit of Robert 0. Grier A Cos. against tlie Capital Elevator Company began in the federal court, before a jury, yesterday. A car-load of wheat w T as purchased from the plaintiffs by George W. Spotts. the circumstances of whose downfall .are still fresh in the minds of many, and at his order was delivered at Elevator C, w’here Spotts obtained an advance on it. The claim is made by the plaintiffs that the elevator company had no right to pay Spotts. and therefore they ask judgment for tlie amount Incorporated. The Stiii City Electric-light Company was incorporated inder State laws yesterday. It proposes to operate the Van Depoole system of electric lighting at Lafayette. The capital stock is $25,000. and the incorporators are N. T. Gossette, of Chicago; F. J. Cullman, of Freeport, 111.; R. J. Randolph, of Rockford, 111.; F. B. Caldwell and J. A. P. Van Claim, of Lafayette. Mets. Dismissed. The metropolitan police commissioners have dismissed Patrolmen George Baxter and Harry Thrush from the force for unbecoming conduce • Baxter has been a policeman for years, and has j been regarded as a good officer. i Thk doc tors arc very much displeased over a competitor who is gradually stealing their best. | practice; we mean Dr. Bull s Cough Syrup of | which a 25 cent bottle does better work than a I dozen prescriptions.
THE LOWELL BANKRUPT BILL. The Board of Trade to Consider It—A Business Man’s Statement. The meeting of business men called for 2 p. m. yesterday at the Board of Trade hall, to consider the Lowell bankruptcy bill now pending before Congress, failed to meet with sufficient attendance to make the meeting advisable, and the matter will he brought up to-day at the noon hour on ’Change, when it is hoped a large and representative assemblage of business men will be present and discuss this important measure. “This is a bill,” explained a business friend to the reporter, “that every man ought to understand. It is designed to protect the mechanic, the farmer and the wage-worker. It is for the protection of the honest trader. It seems to have been the intent to. frame this bill so that it will be in the interest of every honest man who attempts to distribute goods—of merchants all over the country, of the smallest traders in the most obscure hamlets, and of the farmers and laboring men who finally consume them. The bill presented, if enacted into law, will be in the interest of the consumer, who will, from its operation, be able to purchase goods .at a much lower rate than if, through the whole range of middlemen, from the raw product to the final consumer, the present feeling of insecurity prevails. The prices of all articles are fixed by merchants upon the principles upon which insurance risks are taken. Prices are made low or high with reference to two things—certainty of payment and promptness of payment. Allowiug rascally traders to obtain goods and cheat the merchant out of their price is allowing a civilized brigandage which will certainly recoil not alone on the merchants, who as a class are strong and c#n in the long-run protect themselves, hut most, of all upon the farmers, mechanics and the laborers, who in the end always pay the cost of the goods they consume. They also pay the cost of bad legislation and the failure to secure good legislation. It is of all men ‘the final consumer who is most interested in all forms of cheap handling of all things, for he finally pays all the costs. The country needs a bankrupt law, an honest one, and the Lowell bill will, I think, meet the requirements. At any rate our business men ought to meet and canvass its merits and take action upon it.”
PERSONAL MENTION. L. W. Study, of Richmond, is at the Denison. O. B. Maples, of South Bend, is at the Denison. J. L. Worsham, of Atlanta, Ga., is at the Denison. H. M. Carter, of Lafayette, is at the Grand Hotel. H. A. Root, of Michigan City, is at the Grand Hotel. C. S. Chase, of Buffalo, N. Y., is at the Grand Hotel. R. T. Me Donald, of Fort Wayne, is at the Grard Hotel. James T. Johnson, of Rockville, Ind., is at the Bates House. W. E. Crurae and J. W. Sefton, of Dayton, Chare at the Bates House. R, P. Davis and B. A. Chase, of Terre Haute, are at the Bates House. A. W. Binford and Miss Bessie Biuford, of Crawfordsville, were at the Bates yesterday. W. O. Wheeler, manager of the Clara Morris combination, is in town, among his old friends. J. W. Faulkis, Wm. Case, Frederic Taylor, C. T. Boal, Chicago; J. B. Sherwood, Staunton. Mich.; J. W. Watson, E. B. Wilde, A. S. Alfred. New York; C. H. Preston, H. C. Starr, Rich mond; A. J. Hunter, Grand Forks, D. TANARUS.; A. M. Stewart, Cleveland; O. P. Merryman, Baltimore, were at the Denison yesterday. Mr. Jacob P. Dunn, jr., has returned from the free and untrammeled West for a brief sojourn among his friends here. It is credibly reported that Mr. Dunn is about to marry a California heiress, whose father was one of the Argonauts of ’49, having pre-empted a considerable part of the Pacific ocean, just outside the Golden Gates, which are now ajar. J. E. Jeffers, Cincinnati; S. Snider, Kokomo: W. C. Lantz, South Bend; E. M. Chaplin, Warsaw; Enock Fuller, Bloomington; J. A. McDonald, Chicago; Oliver E. Fleming, Fort Wayne; J. J. Harsh man, Canton. O.; George Fitliian. Philadelphia; S. Canter and wife, New York: E. Hawks, E. G. Herr, Goshen; George W. Greene. Waynetown. and H. H. Doyle, of Chicago, are at the Grand Hotel. W. H. Coleman and H. J. Huston, Torre Haute; W. H. Boersch, Richmond, Ind.; George Parrett, Dayton, O.; E. F. Yokel, Chicago; L. D. Mayhew, St. Louis; Henry D. Gatcli, Oxford, O.; James N. Sims, Frankfort, Ind.; E. C. Johnson, Michigan City, Ind.: R. H. Best. Buffalo: Joseph J. Sexson and George 11. Molten, Lafayette; A. B. Bucli, Anderson: S. A. Hoover and J. W. Lee. Frankfort, Ind.; S. O. Beach and Cyrus Knapp. Terre Haute, were registered at the Bates House yesterday. Mr. W. S. Lingle, editor of the Lafayette Courier, has just returned from a two weeks' absence in New York city, where he has beo*n in attendance upon his eldest son, Willie, who lias been lying at death’s door from diphtheria. In a few days Mr. Lingle will be compelled to return to accompany the convalescent son home. Mr. and Mrs. Lingle will be heartily congratulated by their friends upon the prospects of Willie’s , recovery. The sad death of Joe, the gifted and eldest boy, is yet fresh in memory. TJIE CITY IN BRIEF. Thomas William Brown has been appointed administrator of the estate of Sylvester Sullivan, bond S4OO. The residence of Edward UMg, No. 466 West New York street, was damaged slightly by fire yesterday morning. Lucy Johnson has applied for a divorce from Charles Johnson, to whom she was married in 1877, alleging abandonment and failure to provide. The damage suit of Abraham Stein against liezin Hammond for $5,000 on account of injuries sustained by being bitten by a dog, is on trial before Judge Walker. In Judge Walker’s court, yesterday, a jury gave Miss Ida Pomeroy $175 damages against L. S. Ayres & Cos.. in a transaction growing* out of the purchase of a sealskin sacque. William A. Teal, the Greenfield counterfeiter, was released yesterday from serving the term necessary to the payment of the penalty of fine and costs, amounting to over S2OO. Rev. P. B. Williams, of the First Church of the United Brethren in Christ, on Oak street, is holding a series of revival meetings. The meetings are growing in interest, and so far have resulted a number of conversions and thirteen accessions to the church. The art school is growing daily in numbers. The new casts have arrived. A class in painting will Ik? formed to-day. The pupils are of all ages —from eleven years up. Several professional art ists, appreciating the advantages offered by the school, have enrolled themselves as scholars. Tried to Shoot His Sweetheart-. Frank Freeman, a negro, last night had a quarrel with Sarah Sails, his sweetheart, and fired several allots at her, after which he jumped through a rear window, and. although closely pursued by Patrolman Brady, escaped arrest. The trouble occurred at No. 110 North Delaware street. The shooting was wiki, and did no harm. Two or throe hours afterward, however, Free-
man returned, and poured kerosene about the premises, with the intention, it is-supposed, of setting fire to the house, but was frightened away by a call for the police. Week-Day Services. Rev. Dr. Marine preached a strong and effective sermon to a largo audience last night in Cen-tral-avenue Church, upon the virtues of the spirit. It was one of the best of the series which the Doctor lias been preaching for the past ten days. The meetings have steadily grown in interest and in attendance. To-night the subject of the sermon will be “Paul’s Prayer for the Church at Ephesus.” The services are held in the lecture room, which is thoroughly comfortable and commodious. The public is cordially invited. Forbidding Their Marriage. County Clerk McClain, yesterday, received a message from Martinsville directing him not to issue a marriage license to William D. Weisse (or Deweisse) and Malinda Allen, who had started here to be married, and to arrest any person who offered to make the affidavit regarding the young lady's age. These precautions were unnecessary as the couple did not present themselves at the clerk’s office. Installation of Officers. Indiana Council No 128. Royal Arcanum, installed the following officers last evening: Regent, James 8. Campbell; vice-regent, Charles T. Btone; orator Charles M. Cloud; past regent, Thomas M. Clapp; secretary C. W. Overman; collector, Ernest Duden; treasurer, George H. Rehm; chaplain, W. C. Pyle; guide, F S. Walker; warden, R. H. Lancaster: secretary, George Sellers. Damage Suit fol- Loss of a Hand. Mrs. Hattie Dean has begun a damage suit against Charles Lancaster, demanding SSOO. She alleges that he employed her son to attend to his cows, solely, but that the boy was put to work in feeding a cutting machine, and while thus engaged '.had his hand caught in the cogs, mangling it so badly that amputation was necessary, on which account damages are asked. Examine the $1 shirts at Parker s' Lundborg’s Perfume, Edema, Lundborg’s Perfume, Marechal Niel Rose. Lundborg’s Perfume, Alpine Violet, Lundborg’s Perfume, Lily of the Valley. Ice Tools. We have in stock an assortment of Woods’ celebrated ice tools, consisting of plows, sawbars, chisels, forks, hooks, etc, Mail orders shall have prompt attention. We are also agents for the Howe improved scales, the Norton check door spring, and the J. Burton Smith’s celebrated files, every one of whicli is guaranteed. Hildbrbrand & Fugate. 35 South Meridian street. Indianapolis. MARRIED. PRESTON—LLOYD—At the residence of M. V. McGilliard, No. 235 Ash street, Wednesday evening. Jan. 1(5, at 8:30 o'clock, Mr. Carlos H. Preston, of Richmond. Ind., and Miss Lottie Lloyd Rev. I. G. Hall, of Lima, Ohio, officiating. B AEG .A. I]STS GOOD SECOND-HAND PIANOS We continue the special sale of PIANOS that have been rented or taken in exchange, at prices far below their value, as we desire to clear out the entire stock. D.H. BALDWINS. CO. Nos. 64 and 66 N. Pennsylvania St V Stein way & Sons, Decker Bros., Haines, Fischer, Vose. and other Pianos. Kstey, Shoninger, Hamilton Organs.
H. 11. LEE’S TELEPHONE CALL is 688 688 NO SCARCITY. We have plenty of Uncrushed and Crushed City Coke, and full supply of all kinds COAL. Best quality at lowest prices. TELEPHONE and LEAVE ORDERS. Offices: 50 N. Delaware St., 140 S. Alabama St., and 458 East Ohio Street. C 01313 & Im A. IST HAM. ——— —■ ———l ■■■■■■■———————M—■—— D A DCD INDIANA PAPER COMP’Y, A j-*' H rv MANUFACTURERS. JL Ax A A—J ■ WM. O. DrVAY, Agent No. 23 E. Maryland Street. J paper upon which the JOURNAL ib printed in furnished by this company. OUR TELEPHONE NUMBER IS 129 129 DREW- & WASSON, COAL DEALERS, 14 N. Pennsylvania Street, 126 Indiana Avenue.
THE COLD WEATHER Does not interfere with the continued display of beautiful goods at our store, nor the continued demand. FOR 1884. We shall not only carry our usually extensive and elegant assortment, but shall keep pace with the tide of inventive genius, and always place in our cases the newest and freshest goods procurable. Vacheron & Constantin and Patek. Philippe & Co.’s Watches; also, Diamonds, Fine Jewelry and Silverware of the newest pattern. The public is cordially invited to call and inspect our stock. BINGHAM & WALK, JEWELERS, No. 12 East Washington St. o HAZELTON PIANOS. We have just received a fine variety of these superb PIANOS, whoso beauty of tone and perfection of action make them the choice of the majority of our leading musicians, both for concert and private use. Buyers of PIANOS and ORGANS will find that our prices on corresponding grades of instruments are much lower than can be got elsewhere. We are now offering a HANDSOME ORGAN for $().”>.00. payable, SIO cash and $5 per month. No such bargain has ever been offered in this city. PEARSON’SMUSIG HOUSE No. 19 N. Pennsylvania St. GABLER PIANOS. STERLING ORGANS. TO PRINTERS: We keep on hand the largest stock of printing type in America, which we sell in lots to suit purchasers for cash. We also deal in all kinds of new printing materials. GEO. BRUCE’S SONS & CO., 13 Chambers St., New York. N. B.—This paper is printed on Bruce’s 21st style of Nonpareil, Minion and Brevier, with their patent figures and fractions. THE CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER IN THE WEST, THE Weekly liana M Journal. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR.
