Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1884 — Page 5

THE LATEST FROM ABROAD. France Willing to Treat with China if the Latter Will Talk Indemnity. Facts Learned by a Marseilles Commission Concerning Renewal of the London Conference. FBANCE AND CHINA. flie Former Ready to Resume Negotiations on Certain Conditions. London, Sept. 30.—1 tis again stated that the government of France is willing to resume treaty negotiations with China, provided the latter will strictly observe the treaty of Tien-Tsing, and pay France an indemnity of 90,000,000 francs. Admiral Courbet left Matson to day. His destination is unknown. The Viceroy of Canton has been ordered to issue a proclamation urg Ing the Chinese to resist the French, forbid any attempts at poisoning food, and to refrain from unduly exciting the populace. THE CHOLERA. Facts Ascertained by the Marseilles Investigating Commission. London, Sept. 30.—The cholera commission appointed to report as to the epidemic at Mar settles have completed their work. They state that they followed the progress of the disease by hourly examining the blood of persons stricken. They found that in each case, at first, a few of the globules presented an unhealthy appearance;then one third of the globules were often affected; then one half; then two thirds, and finally death resulted. The important fact was developed that all globules are not simultaneously affected. Reports of the epidemic in Italy for the past twenty-four hours show a total of 421 fresh cases and 229 deaths, including 122 cases and 51 deaths at Naples, and 60 cases and G 7 deaths at Genoa. A Naples dispatch says the cholera is increasing in Terre Anhunzelta. Deputy Zerbi visited the town and organized four hands of Neopalitans to assist patients. Health officers, who had been sent to Vicaria to disinfect that place, were assailed by a mob with sticks and revolvers, and one officer wounded. One hundred and forty orphans in a temporary asylum at Naples have lost all their relatives by tho plague. King Humbert in Naples. Letter in London Standard. Walking through those quarters this morning. I met processions of women with disheveled hair, carrying pictures of St Roeh, whose fete it is to-day, and who is worshiped as the patron saint against infectious diseases. Other strange revivals of superstition are taking place. Walls of houses which were once adorned with shrines or holy pictures, long since covered with mortar, are now being re exposed. Eager crowds watch the process of their reappearance, and greet the view of the picture with shouts of joy. The police as yet have taken no notice of this injury to house property. The Canocchia Hospital is not only full, but even its staircases were crammed with the sick yesterday. One unfortunate inmate threw him lelf out of a fourth-floor window, to-day, and •nded his sufferings. - ,'cThe royal carriages with the King, Prince Amadeo, Sig. Depretis and the syndic left the palace punctually at 1:30 p.m., and arrived in half tin hour at the Canocchia hospital. Such enthusiasm was displayed all along the road as has never been witnessed here before. At the entrance to the hospital the King was received by the director, Prof. Ruonuomo, and a little higher on the staircase by the Cardinal San Felice. Without delay the King passed, ciosely followed by his suite, through the wards on the first story, without haste, calmly conversing and making inquiries of thoso who were in a state to answer him. He shook hands with many who coaid not speak, and noted down immediately any request gnade. One of the bystanders offered a cigar to the. King as a safeguard against infection. He smilingly declined it, saying: “We must not spoil the air for the patients.” The round having been made, it was intimated to his Majesty that nothing more was to be seen, but the King said: “There must be a second story; let us go there also. We are all equal here.” Here, indeed, were the more severe cases, but those also were inspected with the same pa tienco and kind attention. Before leaving, the King expressed his warmest acknowledgements to Cftrdinal San Felice for his services, and those of the entire clergy of Naples. He was equally warm in his praises Os all engaged in the hospital service. Trio royal party visited next tho refuge at the Cristallini, where poor families, chiefly mothers and Children, bereaved by the cholera, have been temporarily lodged at the expense of the town. The King was not tired in listening to All the requests made to him. and he seemed to he especially touched and interested in tho many little cribs and their inmates. On his leaving the place an immense crowd had collected outside, so that the curriages could only pass with difficulty on their way to the Grauili. GLADSTONE IN SCOTLAND. Beenes and Incidents of the Great Meeting in Waverly Market, fimaliey’s Letter in New York Tribune. Nothing could have been better than the device for getting Mr. Gladstone comfortably into and out of the market. In [order to do it, the whole of the western gallery and half of the southern had been kept vacant. This sacrifice es space gave 'Mr. Gladstone a clear road and a tlear view of the whole meeting in whose view nd not far above whose heads he walked for two or three hundred yards. Just underneath the gallery the floor was bare; beyond and on either side it was full. The gas was blazing, twilight still gleaming faintly through the glass roof. The yellow glare fell full on the faces of full fifteen thousand men, all turning to Mr. Gladstone, all cbeeriug. There was a rush toward him across the vacant floor; happily he was high above it. To say that this mass of people began cheering as they saw him expresses nothing. The air was rent with the explosion of sound; the glass root shook; I saw two or three ladies of the party actually put their hands to their oars; in the most literal sense of the word, the noise was deafening. It silenced every other noise, you could not hear what the man walking next you In the gallery said. Nor did this hurricane blow itself out. During all that long promenade it beat pitilessly against the gallery; it was scarcely staled when Mr. Gladstone vanished for a moment from sight; it burst forth afresh as he omerged once more to the general view and took his place on the platform. The faces and uncovered heads near you and far in the distance were the faces of men under such a stress of emotion as you seldom see in one and almost never in many. There were the wildest gesticulations of Uncontrolled enthusiasm. You cannot look into these faces at all without seeing that the vast majority are workingmen of the most genuine kind. They have come here to offer their homage to Mr. Gladstone, and the measure of proud dovotiou they offer him is without stint; the expression of it is as various as the units who make up this great assembly; the sum and immeasurable accumulation of these individual loyalties such a tribute as no English minister, or English sovereign, has often received. As the cheers subside they are taken up again, and by the time you are persuaded that tho countless thousands before you have no voice nor breath left among them, they are cheering Lord Roseberry as they cheered Mr. Gladstone; cheering as if they simply could not help it—it is merely tho readiest safety valve for the energy of passionate affection which their hearts cannot contain. I defy ?ou to sit an unmoved spectator of this scene. t is nothing that women are carving—among : them two or three of that fair company on the j front seats of the platform whose lives have been one long lesson in restraint and repression [9t fefUps the practice of stringent reserve

in every social relation. They are crying with the most touching simplicity and openness. But look at the veterans of the platform all about; men to whom every demonstration of public life is hackneyed; long familiar with the caucus and all the machinery of politics, secret and public. T’hey are shaken liko reeds by this tempest. Look at Gladstone. He has bent to the storm. Mr. Gladstone rose, and for some minutes it seemed doubtful whether they meant to allow him to be heard. It is curious how an audience gathered to listen to a particular speaker delights in the continuing sound of its own voice. Mr. Gladstone waited till he thought his turn had come, but had to begin in competition with some of the more remote of his friends. Once again he makes a supreme effort to send his voice to the confines of this concourse. It is all but impossible to discern the expression of tho furthest faces, or to make sure whether they reflect the thought of the speaker—whether, in a word, he is . really heard on the edges of the crowd. But the greater part certainly hear easily at the beginning. It is a marvellous voice; more marvelous still when you think of tho speaker's seventy-five years; still unequaled in England when at its best, but not quite at its best to-day. By the end of ten minutes it has grown a little less sonorous than at first; the effort to maintain the tone is obvious, but to the end it is made to do its duty, and if the freshness and force of the mere voice are impaired, the undaunted resolution with which it is used is all the more admirable. He speaks for exactly twenty minutes. Most of this time he devotes" to a close argument on the franchise bill, some of it very like what he had said on the same subject the Saturday beforo. The points are made clearly; there islittle which goes over the heads of his artisan audience, and very little which goes straight to their hearts. It is as if the Prime Minister, because he is Prime Minister, disdained to use the rhetorical art3 of which Mr. Gladstone is master. There was hardly a sentence which was addressed to the workingmen because they were workingmen. There was a want not of sympathy but of the assertion of sympathy. Plenty of recognition of the welcome he received: but the return Mr. Gladstone made for it would have been equally acceptable to other classes of men. Yet there was nothing in the applause this speech elicited to hint at any sense of disappointment among thoso to whom it was delivered. Neither in its course nor after its conclusion could you perceive any falling off in the ardor of the audience. FOREIGN MISCELLANY. A Hint Concerning the Riches To Be Accumulated outlie Congo. LoNDOjfr Sept. 30.--Henry M. Stanley was given a banquet by the Chamber of Commerce of Wolverhampton, to-day. In response to a toast Stanley referred to the trade of the Congo country, and said that in cloths alone, at 2d per yard, the manfuacturers of Manchester might realize £26,000,000 annually. He said the way to secure this advantage was to urge upon the British government the necessity of sending two cruisers to the mouth of the Congo river, pending a decision by tho European powers of the Congo question. Probable Renewal of the London Conference. Berlin, .Sept. 30.—1 tis positively slated hero that the great powers are discussing the question of a renewal of the London conference, in order to finally settle the Egyptian financial question. It is stated, also, that Germany is willing to join in the conference if there should be a reasonable prospect of bringing the matter to a successful issue. | A Gloomy Outlook In Spain. Madrid, Sept. 30.—Heavy rains, floods.and maintenance of cholera, cordons and lazarettos are paralyzing trade throughout Spain, and the working classes are suffering greatly. It is expected there will be a vast increase of suffering during the coming winter. A Proposed Franco-German Alliance. Paris, .Sept. 30.—The Journal des Debats says: “If England persists in embittering our relations with China, and in violating our rights in Egypt, we will be compelled to accept dependence on Germany.” Fanny- Ellsler at the Point of Death. Vienna, Sept. 30.—Fanny Ellsler is dying. Cable Notes. The increase in the population of Paris since 187 G has been 251,122. The total population is now 2.239,928. In 1876 the total was 1,988.806, M. Kummer, the chief of the Swiss Bureau of Statistics, has calculated what the population of certain European countries would be in the year 2000. if the . present rate of increase continued. He produces the following figures: Italy, 58,142,968: France, 64,* 189.400; England. 129,176.145; Scotland. 13.289,776: Germany. 164,678,076; Austria, 54,296,168; Hungary, 15,694,340. BUSINESS DIFFICULTIES, Failure of Mitchell & Scruggs, Heavy Dealers in Agricultural Implements. Dallas, Tex., Sept. 30.—Mitchell & Sci*uggs, well known and extensive dealers in agricultural implements, are financially embarrased. Attachments aggregating SIO,OOO have been laid against their stock. The assets are estimated at $200,000. The firm hopes to resume shortly. An extensive line of country credits is the cause of tbe embarrassment. Their branch establishment at Fort Worth was also closed by attachments amounting to $15,000. Failure of Henry McCullom Cos. Pittsburg, Sept. 30.—Henry McCullom & Cos., carpet dealers, confessed judgment to-dav, and an execution was issued against them for SIO,OOO. The firm, which is the oldest and one of the largest in the city, had been carrying a heavy load of debt for years, and is at last compelled to succumb. The liabilities, secured and otherwise, will aggregate over sl-10,-000. This evening the sheriff took possession of their extensive establishment. Assignment at Denver. Denver, Col., Sept-. 30.—A. M. Levy, a clothing dealer, has assigned.. Estimated liabilities, $35,000 to $10,000; assets, $20,000. M A RISE INTELLIGENCE. The German Steamer Martha Disabled off Beaver Island—Assistance Sent. Halifax, Sept. 30.—The German steamer Martha, from Stettin and Copenhagen, bound for New York, with 150 passengers. Is reported to-night to be off Liscomb, in a disabled condition. The chief officer landed at Liscomb by boat, with the information that the ship's engine had. broken down last night, fifteen miles off Beaver island, and he telegraphed to Halifax for assistance. The steamers Newfoundland and Tiger were dispatched, audwill likely reach here early to-morrow morning. The Martha was lauuched a few months ago. is of 1,600 tons burden, and owned by G. H. Shultz, of Stettin. Steamship News. New York. Sept. 30. Arrived: Moravia, from Hamburg. London, Sept. 30.—Arrived: Frisia, from New York; Bulgarian, from Boston. An Electric Elevated Railway. St. Louis, Sept. 30. — A model electric elevated railroad, run by anew motor, invented by Dr. W. F. Adams, of this city, was put in working order at the Exposition Building to-day. The power is distributed from a central station, and runs along a wire laid under the car track, similar to the cable of the cable road, and gripped in a similar manner by a wheeled grip which communicates the current to a revolving armature set between two magnets under the body of the car. The armature is on a 6heave which revolves and communicates motion to minor wheels ingeniously geared inside the track wheels, which they in turn rovolve, check or reverse at the will of the conductor. The Liquor-Buyer Must Be Indicted. Muscatine, la., Sept. 30.— Judge Hayes delivered his charge to the grand jury to-day. In the matter of indictments under the new prohibitory liquor law he chargod the jury that, while selling liquor is indictable, buying it is equally a violation of law; that all persons testifying to having purchased are subject to indictment. It is thought to be next to impossible to enforce the anti-liquor law under this ruling. Educated housekeepers, who have tried all the Baking Powders, say that Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder agrees better with tho stomach than any other made. The best test of its purity is of its being used to day, as it has been lor years, in a million homes, and the best test as to its nicety and strength is the tost of tho ovea.

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, ISB4.

SIIE TOLD HER SECRET. A Clergyman Accused of Hugging and Kissing a Lady Convert. Ottawa, Ont,, Sept. 30. —Asa result of a revival that has been going on for some time past at Queensbury, New Brunswick, the residents of that town have been treated to a scandal with which tho name of Rev. S. E. Currie, tho Baptist clergyman, is associated. It appears that Mrs. Charles Heustis attended the meetings regularly, and became converted. She had a secret, how ever, of which she must unburden her mind before she could experience full happiness. To relieve her mind, sire concluded to take her husband, a prominent resident of the town, into her confidence. There was, of course, a man in the question, and that man was no other than the ltev. S, E. Currie, who had been ministering to the spiritual wants Os the neighborhood for a great number of years. She charged that Mr. Currie has frequently placed his arm around her waist and kissed her. Mr. Currie, who is well advanced in years, denies the story as a gross attempt at black mail, and, to vindicate his character, has brought suit against Heustis for slander. The Gilniour-Cowles quarrel. Cleveland, Sept. 30. —Bishop Giliuouv prints a card in which he insists that Mr. Cowles denied his daughter freedom of conscience in the exercise of her religion, and declared that, while withdrawing the charge of inhuman and brutal treatment, he reaffirmed his assertion that freedom of conscience was denied. Fast Time. In its edition of Sept. 20, in an article entitled “Speed of American Railways,” speaking of comparative time made by lines leading from St. Louis, The Railway Register says: “AVe find that the Ohio & Mississippi heads the list with its express train, which leaves this city at BA. M. for Cincinnati. The distance is 341 miles and the average speed is 32.22 miles per hour. The Vandalia maintains, with its BA. M. express, a speed of thirty miles per hour while it traverses the 240 miles lying between St. Louis and Indianapolis.” The O. &M. not only “heads the list.” but maintains its supremacy for a greater distance and period of time than any of the lines mentioned. The managers of the Ohio & Missisippi railway have established this reputation not only in St. Louis, but throughout the Western country it is a recognized and conceded fact that the O. &M. leads the van in regular and fast time. A Good Hotel. The Palace Hotel, corner Sixth and Vine streets, Cincinnati, Ohio, commends itself to the traveling public on account of its central location, its first-class appointments and reasonable l-ates No better stopping place can be found in Cincinnati, and Indiana peb“'° should patronize it. Advioe to Mothers. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup snoutd always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, quiet sleep, by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “bright as a button. ” It is very pleasant tf> taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is tile best known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Those accretions upon the scalp which are termed dandruff are promptly removed by Glenn's Sulphur Soap, which, by opening the pores, pro motes tlie natural moisture of the hair. Take fifteen years from your age with Hill's Hair Dye. The finest mayonaise dressing for all kinds of salads, cold meats, raw tomatoes, pickled salmon, cabbage, etc., is Durkee’s Salad Dress ing. It is, besides, more economical than homemade. The “Rough on Dentist” tooth powdor, fine, smooth, cleansing, refreshing, preservative. 15c. (utiGTira A POSITIVE CURE For Every Form of Skin and Blood Disease, from Pimples to Scrofula. I have had the Psoriasis for nine months. About five months ago I applied to a doctor near Boston, who helped me, but unfortunately I had to leave, but continued taking his medicine for nearly three months, hut the disease did not leave. I saw Mr. Carpenter's letter in the Philadelphia Record and his case perfectly described mine. I tried the Cuticura Remedies, using two bottles Resolvent and Cuticura and Cuticura Soap in proportion, and call mvself completelv cured. L. b\ BARNARD. * Waterford, N. J. ~ ECZEMA TWENTY YEARS. Cured. Not a Sign of Its Reappearance. Your Cuticura has done a wonderful cure for me more than two years ago. Not a sign of its reappearance since. It cured me of a very bad Eczema which had troubled me for more than twenty years. I shall always speak well of Cuticura. I selj a great deal of it. FRANK C. SWAN, Druggist. Haverhill, Mass. BEST FOR~AN YTHING. Having used your Cuticura Remedies for eighteen months for Tetter, and finally cured it, lam anxious to get it to sell on commission. I can recommend it beyond any remedies I have ever used for Tetter, Burns, Cuts, etc. In fact, it is the best medicine I have ever tried for anything. R. fc>. HORTON. Myrtle, Miss. SCROFULOUS SORES. I had a dozen bad sores upon my body, and'tried all remedies I could hear of, and at last tried your Cuticura Remedies, and they have cured me. •I No. GASKILL. Hebron, Thayer county, Pennsylvania. Fvery species of Itching, Scaly, Pimply, Scrofulous, Inherited and Contagious Humors, with Loss of Hair, cured by Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, internally, aud Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, tho great Skin Cures, externally. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 50 cents; Soap, 25 cents; Resolvent, sl. POTTER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO., BOSTON. gflypHjl mrnM |!SQLD WITMJTHEE lOF BEING THE BEST| H THAT CAN BE MADEr the-michigan-stove.company?” g- •DETRDIT-CHICAGO-BUFFALO/ S' -SOLD-BV. Sr JOHN A. LYONS.

DYSPEPSIA Causes its victims to be.miserable, hopeless, confused, and depressed in mind, very irritable, languid, and drowsy, ft is a disease which does not get well of itself. It requires careful, persistent attention, and a remedy to throw off the causes and tone lip the digestive organs till they perform their duties willingly. Hood’s Sarsaparilla lias proven just the required remedy in hundreds of cases. “ I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla for dyspepsia, from which t have suffered two years. I tried many other medicines, but none proved so satisfactory as Hood's Sarsaparilla.” Thomas Cook, Brush Electric Light Cos., New York City. Sick Headache “For the past two years I have been afflicted with severe headaches and dyspepsia. I was induced to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and have found great relief. I cheerfully recommend it to all.” Miss. E. F. Ann able, New Haven, Conn. Mrs. Mary C. Smith, Camhridgeport. Mass., was a sufferer from dyspepsia and sick headache. She took Hood's Sarsaparilla and found it the best remedy she ever used. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Made only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. lOO*DoseS On© Dollar. AMUSEMENTS. DICKSON'S GRAND_ OPERA-HOUSE.; GEO. A. DICKSON Manager. Tbe HANDSOMEST, BEST LOCATED and MOST POPULAR Theater in tbe City. THE TALK OF THE TOWN. AGAIN TO-NIGHT. Wednesday and Saturday Matinees. The Grand Romantic Spectacular Melodrama, in Five Acts and Seventeen Scenes, entitled the ROMANY RYE! Under the Management of BROOKS & DICKSON. THE ORIGINAL COMPANY NO. I New and Magnificent Scenery, and all the Grand RealEffects—‘The Gypsy Encampment,” “Craigsnest by Moonilgni," ' ton Rasp Cofir;;,'’ -Thame; River Embankment,” "Vvree.u, sue .^Saratoga,'' FjffB’Popular 8 ’Popular prices. Seats on aaie-at the box-office. Monday, October 6—“ SHADOWS OF A GREAT CiTV." ENGLISH’S OPERA-HOUSE. Will E. English, Proprietor and Manager. Largest, Best and Mofet Popular l Theater in Indiana. GRAND MATINEE TO | LAST PERFORMANCE DAY AT 2. | TO-NIGHT AT 8. THE HIT OF THE SEASON! Do you laugh f Then go see DAN’L SOLLY’S “CORNER GROCERY I" The Funniest Play on Record. Three 'Nights, commencing Thursday, Oct. 2. Engagement of the FAVORITE COMEDIAN, GLUTS WILLIAMS! Presenting his New Plav, CAPT. MISHLER. Orchestra and orchestra circle, $1; dress circle, 75c; family circle, 50c; gallery, 25c. PLYMOUTH CHURCH The Ladies, of the FLOWER MISSION have engaged 1 JAMES I 111 To deliver- his Lecture, ' A Little Attcnualcd Gap'abilitj, TO-NIGHT' At Plymouth Church. Tickets on sale at the Book Stores, Paul IT. Krauss’ and R. R. Parker’s. Reserved seats, 25 cents extra. Theatre MONDAY* SEPTEMBER 29. 1881. Matinees Tuesdav.Wednesday, Thursday. Friday and Saturday. The. Great and Only Leonzo Bros. Combination traveling, headed by the celebrated and only LEONZO BROS., in their New and Original Play in five acts, DOG SPY! PROF. H. M. PARKER, in his Wonderful Mastodon DOG AND CAT CIRCUS. 20 Variety Stars. 20 best entertainment in the city. IVioes, Matinee—lo, 15, 25c. Night—ls, 25, 35c. PA RKTTI EATIII MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. MATINEES AT 2 P. M. EVERY DAY. Production of the Gre^jt > Sensational, Romantic, Equestrian Melodrama, entitled The New BANDIT KING, Revised and rewritten. Five times greater than beforo. Special Equestrian Features, introducing tho original Jesse James horses, BAY RAIDER and ROAN CHARGER, the Most Wonderful Animal Actors on Earth. The Ride for Life! The Ride to Death! The Kansas City Race-course .Scene. Escape through the Window on Horseback. Great Duel on Horseback. Note—The Duel on Horseback is novel and now, never before produced on any stage. JAS. H. WALLAOK appearing in his origina creation of the BANDIT KING. IdT Trices—2sc, 35c and 50c. STATE FAIR! Parties attending the STATE FAIR should not fail to visit the GREATEST ATTRACTION, namely, the LARGEST and FINEST DISPLAY of TOYS, NOTIONS and FANCY in the United States. Our Departments are full of NOVELTIES, aud well worthy of a close inspection. CHARLES MAYER & CO. Nos. 29 and 31 W. Washington Street, WHOLESALE and RETAIL. C. E. KREGELO & WHITSETT, FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS. Telephone 564. FREE AMBULANCE.

TAKE ADVANTAGE Os the LAST WEEK of LOW RAILROAD PASSENGER RATES, ' and visit this market in person. THE JOHN SHILLITO CO. Offer a great many SPECIAL BARGAINS in all Departments THIS WEEK, with EXTRAORDINARY VALUES In FLANNELS from last week’s Auctions. Wholesale Dry Goods, Notions and Carpets. TUI? TfIUM QUIT T TTfl Pf ..llij tl uilii OlllLLllU uU,, C 11ST C TUN IST A. T I. ——mbb——a—b—gawi——iVii i■! wnrau iwiiimiwh imi.tsi . AMUSEMENTS. j * ir a tWTMiaer. Scoop, PAPER FLOOR RINK •‘‘infill WS* l HflMiTn Stra.’ner. Twelve Open TUESDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY JSrA j.fiMLU article.' u one. EVENINGS, and EVERY MORNING. /Ml jv, 3rclt;;t m W 1< lii nation Kaovu. OPENING OF THE REGULAR SEASON, WbLJh •*, - *... MONDAY Evening, October G. P r R' e Sifters and Mix rs Engagement for that week of PROF. BALL, of L r . ll: L n '* an d p°wer. ... • Write for catalog * WORCESTER, MASS., who will give exhibitions of p r The Hi nterSiftcr Mfg FANCY SKATING every evening aud Saturday mat- k - Cincinnati, 0.. qj fa Canal St., New York. mce * i 1 C | Kr Agents wanted for our FAIR WEEK!. r E S' Hunter Sifter Cook Book nrr n uFaT/~D TU I/ T |BRUSH KLECTIUC LIGHTS \A/ lITW AVI n Vfl I Are fast taking the place of all otners in factories, If XU ll l \ XiX llxll lx • ; Foundries, maeniue shops and mills. Parties having their own power can nrocure an Electric Generator ■ Rink open Every Morning, Afternoon and Evening. °R taiu mn ? h more light at much less cist than br ~ JT-.any other mode. Ihe incandescent and storage ays* MORNINGS, from 10:00 to tern has been perfected, making small lights for hou-es AFTERNOONS, from 2:00 to 4:30 and stores hung wherever needed, and lighted at will, EVENINGS from 7-30 to 10 30 day or night. Parties desiring Generators or to form ****** . companies for lighting cities and towns, can sea l t>> Popular prices. New beats, New Floor, New Skates. t h e Brush Electric Cos., Cleveland, 0., or to the underB. KIRCHMEIER, Manager. signed at Indianapolis. J. CAVES’. Will do more grading and ditching in a day with same power than any other implement. Ata trial of Rodd Machinery at Nevada, lowa, in June last, it received the Highest Award over s:x other machines. Including throe Ponnocks of latest improvements. rff-Send for circular. Capital City Show Case Works. CHA.S. RUEHL, successor to WIEGEL & RUETIL, Manufacturer of SHOW CASES. 6 West Louisian i street, opposite Union Depot, INDIANA POLLS, Ind. All Kinds of Show Cases constantly on hand. German Silver Sash Moulding br Store Fronts. Improyoa Sliding Doors ou all our Showcase's. Manufacturer of Celluloid Cases. Sole Agent lor Universal Melal Poli-h. J A.MISS 1L ROSS & CO., Wholesale Whisky Merchants, No. 184 S. Meridian Street, Indianapolis. BEAR I TNT MIND That I am making GREAT and POSITIVE REDUCTIONS, in order to reduce my stock, in Lace Curl®, fiiidowMs, Carpels, Oil Hollis, Ik Come and see what I am offering in WALL PAPERS. BROWN BLANKS, WHITE BLANKS and FLATS at FIVE CENTS; reduced from 10c, 15c and 25c. GOLD PAPERS that were 40c, 50c and 60c I have marked to sell at FIFTEEN CENTS. Magnificent Assortment of Beautiful BORDERS at FIVE CENTS; finer grades at less than Half Former Prices. ALBERT GALL, 17 and 19 W. "Washington. St. ,

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